II B J. M. IVEAKLEY.I J. M. WALLACE. J TVO,IfAN'S.IiII7," ~..41:Ing little stockings, or restless little foot; {Welting little fIiCCS,.. To loop theta clean and sweet; Hearing Bible lesseni; .—...,Tedching catechism; Praying for salvation Vieth Heresy and Schism— Woman's \ rod, Sewing on the buttons; Overarming rations; - ' Footling witit n kind word Others' laneututtons ; (luidleg eluntny Itridgets, And cots lug sullen cook 'Entertaining corimnny l And readily, resent tout.= Wututuis uorl4. Burying out or al:.lth Her own unliall.pipanartn; Letting In the sonslduo On other clouded Itearot; Itlnding up Mc %Minded, • And healing of Om Fla ; Ilm,elyinarchlng onward, . Thratlgh dangers clad; and Odd,— ' Wolnah's work. hauling little children, And Wl:tiling tottnliotnni y,nrs: :bowing to the it :ifs! H01y:44,13's (61.4n - envoi Arc.; Fr:lt - tering mccet rose+ Along anothor'n path; : 4 “,iling by Illu rvny,ide, Content will, ulna Ono lutth— Wow ttu's work, liuglll. I her own tears Where only (hurl ran sec IVlplng off imatireex With lender,symp:ithy ; Learning liy . exporionee; by example; I'A niug for the gufrway, o°lo., Di= =9 A duy of dop ezii..llll; biltith• 1 1.),..11 her Liens( it r.e; Lushes renting ftuntly I.llhll tho nnn•hle. clout' A look of I le,tul pew.° I rril LL.. roteltva.l 1.41.1,:t .1s '..:Sly fultlo Tito 10.1 y pnl.e. lb.• lip, know soli log. et , ,14 111. 12111111=211 =l=l Wlll4Ol 110 10,130112.1-111010 I re , ll ',aro !rot rn r•y. Train, II tter .5 irgre That Abe za:; Dot target Face fere:car bidden,. forwo. run— dtult,” 61= A FRENCH SOLDIBR A7' =ER MA M.Y. I= The trumpet, resounding, tlubfigh the whole camp, awoke us as usual. It was the day destined to become as that of the battle of Inkermann. My. cohu•ades had begun to milliner that' they had no opportimity to show their courage. They little know how terribly it was to be tested. The weather was not of a kind to raise our spirits. A 'heavy, dark sky- of. lead .bent .over us, such as I have never seen except in the Crimea. Our tents, grouped amid arid hills so long exposed to tempests, had caught, the gIOOMy color' of the clouds and looked as gray,fts the smoke which rose from the points where the cooks were preparing our morning repast. After breakfast we were to conunenre our daily labor of building batteries. Our heavy' work yr as not made Ilion. agreeable by a steady rain and a biting wind. "It was a prosaic dralna ; but not destined to last long. Suddenly - the news flew lilcf; wildfire : the Russians were advancing upon .us on the other side of the ravine of I nkel:- Mann. 4 . zu oughtto have Seen h e w we rushed to our tents. My friend Robin, in his ardor, run against me so that I fell at full length, and the blood flowed from my nose. On rising, my sergeant cried : - "What is that ? hiood before' the battle? 'Keep friend, an hour or two longer. You will want it on the field. It will ho there worth its weight in gold:" Ho was right ; and with a vow that I would scll it dearly, I thirty, leaped with entlusiasm at the idea of actually going into battlo. In a few months we wets called to gether by the rolt of the drum. 011 r oiliceraxiade short 311.1 dresses, exhorted us to roVso all our courage and •to show ourselves worth of the name of Anna- We waited with impatience the. order to march. Each second appeared an .hour. The general•agitation had filled . us with excitement, and we panted for the moment of action._ 44 length the reveille! The masses began to step fa ward. 'lt was a sublime anti:tient - , ais WQ felt ourselves advancing. Never ilefore had I, soon so many soldiers together. The sight of those majestic columns, _ _ moving forward with a proud step,. and their resounding, heavy, measured tramp inspired me with' strange ardor. It is not possible to express xnyalelight at be ing permitted to take part in the battle, and to sharp tke glory - that would follow. •Prosently, I could distinguish - nothing . in the distance but the innumerable shakos, high fur oaks, and - lint:duds of - my.momrades, --who-marched- toward plain, whence our cavalry was "moving, In order to Om position on our loft. I quite lost sight of the English. I not oven know .whether they were taking part in the battle. ,'Wherever I looked' saw. only blue coat and red trewsers. alio power of our beautiful France had • 'never presented Itieg v in this form to my eye. My pride rose higher than over at the idea of being ono of her children. ' For. some time we marched steadily. for , ward. I could see, now and then, divis -* ions of 'Russian cavalry before us in the distance, attackind'our avant-poste, who • received then}-'with rolls of muSherLy which resounded through all the 'Heavy clouds of ,smoke began to ,fill the • apace which sonarattid us from' the eneJ `The nearer we.approaclied the'hre, the more we thrilled with-impatience, • ' Suddenly I was sOized'with a horrid ':'at the thought Of ;killing my`felloy: crcit • tunes. An irrepressible - shudder passed _ through my heart, The rattling veliayti, •• 'crashing around me, prosimted the fright ful image of. it battlefield. It is not inm . sibleto &Sean thisMinetion, which mn ,, feehled my courage. t'struggled with - I • prayed -:With fervor for , ' what I required, in order.to be a good soldieV. • I triuni - phed.• The idea of `shame and • . dishonor • restored to inc my, energy.: - At this, moment -the word Nall t - arrested ,:nraftoi. fr ma 'tik of :half an ~ . . ~ . . .. , • ....„ I . ..., • ~ T , . . • . . -- • .. . , . .._.: .. . . : , .. - HE • ..., . :.::.....,.., .. _. ... .. :. • ...-• . .... , ~...,... ~• .. I„:,.. 11 , ....,-,......,,:,...,: •..__ . t .. , ,,, ... ... ~.,.., L . , ~..., -...,' ' 11 ” . .. .. . . .• :•' . • i s, _:_________-___7 - • ______ • . . . . ~ . . hour. General GanrOhert passeed directly befoio us, his splendid ' brown horse prancing and champing his bit. After having passed and repassed several times before on line, the horse• reared and rose upon his hind legs, as if about to throw a sealers° t -backward.. The ehapealtof the General fell to the grOtihd. stepped out of the ranks• to pick it up, and stroked With my Band the beautiful al-colored plume. The General smiled at my action and said to me-: "If thou art brave, thou wilt-.one day merit both plume and °Pnulette, and I will present them to thee." I bowod respectfully in token of grati tude, cola cos te - a - glance of triumfill at my comrades. From that Moment, I thought only of plumes - and epaulettes as rewards of my courage, and resolved that it should not be my fault if did not, gain -them. We hail taken our pbsition upon a wide plain. I stood with my comrades in the front line. It was our glory to commonec the Battle. We were to dis play the first courage. We were to grasp the wreath of victory. But there 'we stood, with our musket breeches on the ground,_ like soldiers of lead, doing noth ing. This moment was unsupportable. I cursed the tedious preliminaries. sighed at being unable 1,6 - advance a step. Robin pulled me by the ear. "Bow long :u•e we, going to remain planted lucre?" Ire swore like a - dragoon at the General-rin-Chief. -As for me t I thought of the plumes and epaulettes, and remained silent. Suddenly . a-erash shook the earth. A heavy' cannonade terminated his male- BillOws of white mare • rolled over, ur like,an oceati. I heard the in :.i.pring cries of the ollirers, !"-, fired. Everywhere the volleys rolliA .wound me. - Presently,,before us blazed a sheet °Clue. ' I felt the heavy shock whiFeh thinned soil rabkv. I ran ,folward with our rel.iiment. We were. ordered to knell. • Tlid volley from the enemy was :ICS.01111):111ied by savage cries, shrieks and shouts. Thick smoke nearly hennaed At length T saw Ilussian uniforms. cgs with lingo boots appeared, and through the sinokeclouds we advanced still 7;iILcF, Sindel:s, shouts, groans, mid the roar of cannon mingled together. Suddenly I found myself face to face with n Monster, win) ilunged his tayouct into the body of my adjoining comrade. I saw my cottntryman fall into the agonies of death I sprang upon the tiger with my drawn saber and cleft =EN=EL=I . • - imy whole frame, on secin~++liis'head fall -back ill death. We closed ,our ranks. A new cannonade of the enemy killed our officer and earned away our shako. AL t h e same moment the wind wafted away the clouds of smoke -and revealed hundreds thousands of giant forms and savages faces , with gnashing teeth and flaming eyes. We rushed upon them. At this moment I felt an immense shock. IL threw me off my legs and pre cipitated me headlohg upon the bodies of the dying, which rolled on the gi:ound. The feightful crash awl roar of the battle resounded in my ears. I raised my arms to cold Mite the light. But a blow with he but tend of a must: et bent theni down. knottier blow struelc my head. I bc •amc-i6:.ensiblc. do nut know how ip,' I remained S. On awakening, a Irenililing„kirking movement shook all my limbs. I tried to open my eyes. My eye lids seemed of lead. I would not waste time in endeav oring to open them. I thought I saw the Russians' swarming around me. strove to continue the battle. My hands were empty. I had neither im i tsket nor sabre. I struck around me with my elenehedtists. It seemed to me a dream. The noise had ceased. 4.heard now only groaM. A dreadful idea then flashed upon Me. T had been left on the battle eld with the wpnded, the dying, and the dead. But then I was conseimni of a nicatement fbrward, as if in some kind a carriage. That puzzled me. - At length I sheceeded in opening my eyes. I found myself upon an ambulance cart, with many of my conn•;ides,' all aud covered with blood: - 'l;liep ew and'more horrible idea still& me. I was with the dead, whom they were transporting to the pit for interment. I strove to rise. I uttered a cry, in order to -how that' I was yet alive. I imag ined I already felt the cold darth shov eled down upon nfe. With an immense effort, beyond my strength, I lifted my head, in order. to see whither wd were going. ' I perceived we ..7isalrein, one of mrobeti - M .— carts—ri&wing eithli other upon an unknown road, an filled with the bodies of my wounded comrades. My head fell feebly back upon a body, whose knees brill served-me fora pillow. "„Friend," murmured he, "Where are "On the road,'' said I. "On the road to our last home," co-' joined he. "They are taking 'us to the hospital. Loijk 1 I have only one arm. .1114; right has been carried away ; but the victory is mus t " - "Sergeant," said I (for I now recog nized him), "they have put 'me here among, your wounded. - lamuot wonetied; only I ean , t, 'move,' because one of our comrades is lying on my legs. God be praised I lam not mutilated.'', Friend,". said lie, " I saw the doo tors examining you. They have had yOu in hand, I rather think' you will. find ion are wounded." I had no time to reflect - upon this pos sibility, which would doebthiss have drawn from me a sigh. For how could I then gain the plume which the General had pro • Mitald me? ' But4fiineditations were. interrupted by tho stopping of the ambulances. We were iiinmediately surrounded by an ani mated throng of persons regarding us, with "liVely. curiosity: Several soldier's .I`i:Proached-to-assist-in-bearing us out of the'earts., I felt 'a now pleasure in the thought that all those people were press ing around us. to see the 'Mayo soldiers of Ink:ln . :lam A white headed old man looked Mtn my cart; and said : 'Pour 'cripples.? They will' see no More battle fields. They have' finished career:' • no,". replied 1.. " Yowaro lats. ! taken, sir. I have not finished. mine. As soon as I' recover from the blow of the, musket, I shall go back tb the battle .Hold and • gain any epaulettes . .. Thank' Hea n,.1 ant tio,eripple." • . They lifted ,me out of the 'cart d transported .= to,a little dark barracks, There was a - confused Murinur of voices. French and English soldiers; convales cent, issued from the dobr. Some of them walked with great difficulty, and on reaching the outside of the hilt they all inhaled the fresh air with obvious -de light. • The atmosphere of the room was pestilence:. My heart sank within Me. They carried us to couches of straw 'which covered the floor: When they laid me upon one of those little beds, my legs were very painful.. The weight of my gigantic comrade had benuinbed them. 'They were, as we say, asleep. I felt also atrocious cramps darting thrhugh them. " Friend," said Ito the zouave, who aided in trausportingpe, and wholooked kindly at me with. a smile •of pity, " shall soon be able to march again ; but I can 't walk now, beeiv. se my-legs are asleep." • The surgeons, who circulate 1 tfirough the barracks, stopped' at the beds near. 418. I saw they were performing - varlous operations, but I did not hear i single complaint. ,My brothers in arms showed admirable courage: Towards evening several lamps 'were suspended from the beams of the coiling. They shed but a feeble light through the spacious apart ment. An English soldier expired on the conch adjoining seine. Me had ad dressed to me a few words which I sould not understand. .He gave a deep sigh as fie rendered his 'last breath. My com rade on the Other side -fell into a sleep, sometimes broken by groans. As for me, I remained perfectly quiet and silent. At , last a woman dressed in black came to nre with bandages. I Made her a sign to put something upon my head to refresh me: She bound my forehead with awct f , linenmapkith r 44hanked—her, and she left me. She hail not the hardened ex-' pression and the vulgar look of our viean dicres. Her sweet and thoughtful face touched me. Iter look of compassion caused my heart to beat. She reminded me of my mother and her ways during my infancy. ' At length the surgeons approached my _bed: Oneplacet his hand a ion in • fore head, and said : " Well, my. good fellow ! How :u•e you getting on ?" Atmld lie- up now, if my legs were not asleep. One of my heavy comrades has 'been lying On them, till I can't move them." . . " Your legs are asle6,_ are they ?".re 'mated lie with an inquiring look and a glance at 'the other surgeons, ,Who all smiled. -" :A.r(3 your legs subject to get asleep when you'get fatigued?" . "Oh, no!" Lanswered. This is the first time in mylife. It is the weight of my heavy comrade. In my own province (I am a Gaedgne of the Pyrenees), before . I became a soldier, I rased, without effort, to carry'Cheese on my back, over the mountains;to sell on the plitin ; and, in the long march which we soldiers made fMni Bareges to Toulon, where they ay.' riled pevfeetly exhausted with heat and fatigue, my legs (lid not refuse, their service. I danced after it, in the same night, on the Place de 11 Arsenal, and we sang : ita~a„n. 10 1,100. re drape.n ,rlll/11111'11,. ; car !6=l=l 'rhe surgeon'had lidened to me with a look of Compassion, He seemed .soft ened. Withdrawing his hand from iuy forehead, he turned away, saying: " It is wonderful. Ile has not the least Ilea I" , 1 thought his.words might refer to 'the issue of our battle. Pahang something has hiwpened tir our. neral I inquil'ed of our garde inalade, who just then came " your .General What. General I' " General de Loiu•nud . " Lournier r Ile is dead, wag tho re- This unexpected reply was too much for me. Great tears rushed from my eyes and fell into my hands, with which I covered my face. They were the first tears I had shod since I had bid adieu to my mother. • Our good, noble Ocueral—; who always spoke to us in a kind way— who ever wroth letters for us home. Ito used to call us his children. That - fine fellow is dead. I should never see him again. Tho curgoon again approached me with his colleagues and a awl.* maladie. " Patience, my frjend," die said. " I will now examine your leg. I will give you a remedy. - You will soon Ue yell again." " Oh, the Cholera!, our dear General e it true that luris killed.;" "Hush ! hush I" said the surgeon,- there pro false reports about the General, keep - quiet Smell this remedy ; and he caused me to breathe in the odor mf a liquor stronger than brandy. It mounted into my Presently I was overcome by a desire to sleep. I fell into a kind of rev erie, in which I waailmost unconscious of what was passing around me.. I' felt them taking the bandages from my legs. I saw linen saturated with blood. - T did not know what it meant. Then I fell in to a deep Shimber. • . I dreamedl,was in_ Prance, near the . Baroges. I recegnized my valley. My heart beat with joy, and I marched with a flrm_and raffia step; .knapsack on my back, musket on my shoulder, and a Ca ,bro swinging at my side. The sun was jest sinkingbehind a giant oak upon the summit of a bill which I had ciintbed, in order to descend into'the valleY.' fo- lingo had taken the-4.•illiant - lutireri& son coloring of autumn. Its immense trunk rose from' rich green sward. I recognizedit. Ilow,matly tittles had . rested beneath its shadd. I threw ,my self down upon ono of its messy roots, which lifted their rough bark Timid the •dents-dc-Yon. It was not fatigue that ,caused me to stop otrthis_apait._ It_was a transport of joy.. I was overcome ,by' a thousand solaonira ofMyliappy child hood,,and-liy-the sight 'of a landscape •aio dear tti'My heart. * Seated upon this`very. spot, (oh, shall I recall that'stery 1..) one overtifig,—Ahe sweetest Only lifel---11Wa line, singing, kept herfilock is thiiivalley. She was thti most Modest young , g girl' rn the village keit and,loVely as [mania, 1` desired to marry her, by :.•the.l.2 . lessing of God ; Returning, that- eveeing . :fr9zu -the plain, on mounting :the - ha s . I sww MO. McclaiMod I tc! ( I wi to hor to-day t Como -Madeline,", CARLISLE, PENN'A, THURSDAY; JANUARY 27; IE7O. said. " conic and sit here with me: NOw ° She blushed. Slie turned pale.' Then it was all said. But she died soon 'aftemyds, , and I I becaine a soldier. • • • , Now for rife,' there is only one woman in the world. It is myMothor: It is that mother•that waits for me in yonder cot tage. 'The 86.urenieof this story is asso ciated with yonder oak.- I took a piece of its bark while murmuring how Iloved it. Everything that happened to me, subsequently, appeared a dream, from which I had_ now awakened. , I could hardly tear myself away from the old tree. It had been the witness of a , hap piness so pure—of our sports, our laugh ter, our songs. At leilgth I resumed my way. I took the passage. to our cottage. ,I was about tube reunited to my mother. I should like to have .something— some compensation for those years of ex lie. I hail nothing. Even my clothes were wormand torn. But I wore upon my breast=an order, a sign of hon or, accorded only to the hrave. brought to my Moth''r with the heart of her child. ' .Arriving at the opening of a grove,l caught a view of the village. The hum ble cottages where grOuped at the foot of a fill], richly cultivated. .011, trans port ! oh, joy ! oh, beloved home of my childhood 1 I enhaled with delight the air of the trembling woods which wore on our hills. There they are at last, tic limpid cascades which gurgled and broke over the moss covered rocks and watered the rich paSture with their WO - giving breath. One moment more, and I shall see, touch, hear, drink all the BW9CiaICI3B of my home I ' , tread -lightly; along the winding path, whieb, escaping from the .grando route, meanders through ar-• omatie ledU I hoar the, warbling of birds, the eries.of goats and lambs which gambol• around, and the bells of the herds of cows ascending from the deep valley. Ai ! here is the brook extend , tug into a little.lake'by the roadside and thence passing into the meadow. Kneel- , big upon a rock I drink from my hand that pure, ice cold, silver water, in which - 'l,B reflected the earth and sky. Grass is. growing in the pathway. Silence Tcigns aronnd - the - house:This alalma ` me""foi a moment. But the windows ingarnishod with flower pots. I approach and 'peep through the verdure and flowers, into the interior of the room. Ahl there is the„Oill oak table—thM.e is the chair of my dear•,, good fathor—the spinning wheel of iny mother, and in the fireplace, the portrait ofiNapq.leon, _all „blackened witlfsmoke. I heard the ticking'of tho old clock, which thrills thr?ugh.my soul; bat she whom I sought—she is not there. It woman with White hair is kneeling. Mer hands are joined. "It is my mother. She is thin and pale. She raises f y hands. I hear.her murmur : . "My son I my son !" " " 3fy mother !" She thins toward me. • She extends her arms. 'Elise to rush into them—but the movement Titleh I maile.eatised. meatro cious'pain. A cry of anguish restoreeuuc to reality. Alas ! I could not fun. I .had no legs They had boon amputated during my dill , rtm. I attempted to sit Up. But two iron hands had grasped my shoul ders amid kept the in. my position. They reMored a linen napkin hum the' ace and said : " It is tiniblijd !" Then I saw a man going out, carrying a bundle enveloped in linen. It was my two legs borne away to be buried. Tw•o wooden lege, possibly designed to replace them,, were lying near me. At this nuent I did not feel most keenly the loss which annihilated, at a single blow, my brightest hopes., What affected MC most deeply was, I had not, received the kiss of my mother. With a heart rending pain, I beheld disippattal the 'sweet illusion. Alas alas ! I cannot now titbit toward her. I shall not again ream through toy valley. I Sloth not tread again with toy feet the gratis of my pastures—never ! never I Butnevertheless, I shall sag it again. shall fool niam my forehead tho hiss of those lips. I shall hear her 'call we, sen!" Then I will die ,contented with the conseiousnOtrof having donit my dm ty. I will die Artily- of the name of a Frenchman. I will bequeath to her 7ita reoix d'honncur—purchased• avith m • The best charity irinot that which t iv el.h alms, but,. that which prompts us to think and speak well,of our follow. Men. It is a. noble charity, i,f. they be con-• demned, not to gall their wounds by multi Plying knowledge of their °nue°. c aKe ashamed to confess that our quickest 'instincts are to think ill of oth ers or to inai s :Mify• the ill of which we hear. There is a universal shrugging of the shoulders, as much as to say, "NVell, I suspected as much,!' " It's just like him,". ..have stOpected her sonic time," " I could a tale unfold," and so on through an godless chapter, with which every personls more or less f_amil ia}•. He who nays, " I could, tale unfold," yet.holds it back, leaving the. 'lleauev, 4 to 'infer any and-every evil,-stake with the meanest, deadliest blow. Yet NOV; is there that carries not this ever ready weapon, this poisoned dagger ? TIM charity that gives to help, and not to humiliate, is good, but the, charity that Makes us think no evil is much bet-, . Lot tim'sook to liossess this oharity.aind praeiieo it,•for it alone is the " charity that coverreth a multitude of sins. - Dr. Lyman Beecher once said : "A' great many professed Christians have no, other idea of religion, than, that - it is'the means of getting heaven when. they As to:do any thing for God — Nvhile they live it :doesltot enter' into their plans. I tell you, my brethren; that; I do not believe that there hi' one in litindred'of Mush prOfessors that; en ter heaven,' for there is, a inagninantityin true religion that in above nil .muoli con temptible meanness. ' , JiMoti o tl3plippso irtnt have Lean, tolook at Texas? Did you oto iinything of our friend Smith Out thoro?" :..; 4 `loiOnoio gotiedorangod.". • : iiidoeal . ;llo doesn't hnow his own hogs from those. ofhis I Mark' Twain sayb, is a. - descriptive" vein "Saeramentp is fiery summer, - always,. and you .can -gather roses and eat Strawberries,' and leo cream, and wear white linen clothes, and pant and perspiris at 8 or o'clockin the morn ning,. and take the ears, and at noon put on your furs and your skates,' and go skimming over frozen - Dewiter ]ale; 7,000 feet abOve the' valley; . among snow' banks 15 feet deep; and in the shadoWof &Old mountain peaks that lift their fr ty crags 10,000 feet above *level of the. sea. There is a transition for you! Where Will yon find another like it' in the . ..W . 6lora Hemisphere? And 'I have swept:around snow walled eutVes the Pacific railroad in that vicinity, 6,000 feet abbvo the ice; and looking flown as the. birds"do, upoil the everlasting summer of the Sacramento valley, with its green fields, its featherfoliage; its eilverstreana, all.slitinhering in the melloW liaie . of its enchaTnied'atmosPharo, and all infinitely softened and spiritualized by distance— rich, dreaniy, exqUiAlte glimpse of . fairy landonacle all the more' charming 'and striking that it wascaught - through a - faz bidding gateway_ of ice and Snow and sav age crags and pretipices." 'Tiyenty-seven 'Years ago Harrisburg wls withmit railroad communications. Stagg.coaches_ and packet boats were then the most available means of travel. Now, Harrisburg hits the Pennsylvania Central, 'Northern Centi-al, Lebandn Valley, Cumberland Valley, and Schuyl kill and Susquehanna withdads. In 1842 Charles Dickens, the great English novel. ist, visited the State Capitai,' The Hon, Ellis Lewis, of Philadelpl4 in a letter to the WillianuiPort Gazelle, lipeaksthnit . of it and its attendant circumstances: In the year .1842 Iresi'ded in IVilliaipstlor,t~;)ry~, coming Co: - - I had 1;eon and on arriving from that city, at MOM; er'S , Hotel, in Harrisburg, I fOund- qitite a crowd of people in the house and sur rounding it: News was arculated that, the celebrated Charles DiekenS was at the hotel. Some alleged that ho hint gone to the Capitol - to witness the proceedings of the Legislature, then in session. There was a gfeat desire to get a sight of this dis tinguished man. I confess that my own . desire was to get away from the crowd and tvhich our citizens generally show to pay court to distinguished strangers from abroad. Accordingly, I wont immediately to the packet boat, then lying at the wharf although its time for starting to William!? port had not arrived by severatlibtirs.--1 found in the cabin of the' boat my old friend, Samuel 1L.W.00d,-a - gdaker gentle man of Philadelphia, in company with a lady and gentleman. To these laileemy friend Wood honored nce by an introdnc-• tion. They were 'Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dickens, who had' come on board the. Packet boat with the same object that brought me there—to avoid the crowd and the intended display oLattention. A secrbt touching the fall in printed muslins-bas jpst leaked on't.rtigtie-. of- Providenc.6,lnts in' hie employ German named Pratt', who not long ago invented a method by which the printing of cloth in the Providenco mills is done at a saving of from one to tiro cents a yard. While engaged in his experiments, he made a discovery of still greater import-, ance, valereby the bleaching, which now requires forty eight boors, may be thoroughly completed in Much less than ono hour. These discoveries. enable Sprague to undersell all other manufac turers of calicoes. and - give him virtually the control of the market. Prafrsindus try and practical' Scientific knowledge have already been liberally rewarded, but it is said Oat his sloire in the result of the valuable discovery he has made will be little short of $4j100,000. A. luau who has a strong mind can boar to be insulted, can boar offences, be cuuse is strong. The weak mind snaps and snarls at a little; the strong man hears it, like a reek, and it hioreth not, though a thousand breakers dash upon it and cast their pitiful malice in the spray upon its summit. ,ItTlie lady principal of t school, .in her advertisement, mentioned her GAY as sistant, and the " reputation which she bears ;" but the printer loft , out the word " whicfi," so the advertisement :wont 'fortivi:onnueluling the lady's 'reputation -firflenehing she bears.' " The candles you Sold me last, wore vory'bad," 'said Jones to his grocer. " Indeed sir, I am sorry for that;" "1 ce sir. Do you 'know'' they :burnt to the middle and then would barn no longer ?'! in O . ! Oley go out?" " No, sir ; they burnt shorttir." " Peter, what aro -you doing - to that boy ?" said a schoolmaster. • " He wanted tti know if - you take ten• from seventeen how many will. remain So I Cook temof his umbels to shoW him, and non , ho wants that I shoUld give , them ‘i Well, why do'n't you do it, thou ??' 'CauSo - air; 7 ho - *bold then forgot how, wilily la loft." . , The days come and VIM, and: BM is soon ended: Is it 'worth while 4 to hate.Whe icemuity . with each other? Life haS little: enough: to •giVe,• ited,wo 'should giVe our follow 'pilgriniS ~F l l ll the charity and love . poor huniadity iS. Gaps ble of. • Time Will klido.stLiftly and the Young and Bain' Us knoclr , ink at the gidoiny),portilif! of 'the imid„or oion6y, will the' initd.wandor, back - ' nit thiOugh the, famished years will gleam the Widte . faces,'of those Wo hated.; retrosifo r etaoOpiOOUrlajAyalire,. •Tto.. - Then 'ls it 'Mit bAtor - to" loyo the*. ,to hate. ' • Why said. a beautiful, young • lady'," angi* . to p,•, stranger, rCparty, an evening; 'or tiro beg YOk ,re; pliecltho wit,; ;; ! 4 I wink as, au,a,do.yrliou. lookingat the Sun '; your splendor .lo(1 my eyes" • t mtu3t,,cortriluly, t l;l3.tgpttiliig - i,top tho luxnbertbulAnt9Bo , NNlkel Ph PlntOo t f?trft ( spniao ypuponno og, Wilom, 40 1 4 k it., art:At ',ilea'. ~ . 1 I:• ; MR. BAKER'S RING Mr: Baker himself told us this story. He said it was true nor is this unlikely. I have known Mr. William Henry Bako'r perionally 'for a number of years, and I am inclinedlo think he has hitherto nev er in.all his life told the truth. Now, it is so Manifestly ('improbable that the Most consistent man should' protract .a lourand useful career of story tolling to such : extraordinai:y limits; . .without at some ,period tolling the _truth by sheer misadventure, that it isM.ilte likely Mr. Baker may have-committed himself in OAS in.flance. At least, the time has ar rived for.humari nature, to assert itself, according to the doctrines of averages. ," Only once, gentlemen," said M 0.., "have I been deceived. W m. illiaHenry open in „ keeps his oyes open in a general way ; William Henry. also take : Er the liberty of. seeing olit of therm He uses theira;as a rule, for purposes of observation, gentle= 7 Mon: Still, I admit I/ivas once taken hi' by as dead a swindle as. could be ; not ashained - to. own' it. I made Money tyit after all ; but I was swindled.: It "was about a diamond. ring: • 'I kner't,lig fellow who, had it for many ; years in the way of business. He was commercial traveller, ; and used always to flash this ring about whepover he came. round on libijouriniy; A jeweller friend of mina, who happened, to be in my office once when Mr. Illock called, asked, I re member, to be anti : wed to e i kainine it; and liad pronounced the .stones to be - diamonds of the purest water, tolling ine after:yards 'the ring was worth abqnt seventy . pounds. Mr. Block's initials were engraved inside the hoop of the ring, B.' ; and besides that, it was a ring of peculiar and rather old fashioned make. Indeed; liairitig::;cino,„,seep the yingiTU66rie would-be.likelY-fo it for another. Well, Mr. Block got into difficulties, and Iwont so entirely to the 'bad, that I never saw or heard anything more of him. But_ tviO years afterwards, whilst walking down a back. street, my eye was talcen by a ring exhibited in a pawnbroker's Window,- 'A'aft:.,,Tock's ring,' I exolainied — difeetly iivVar' to it.' - It was in a tray with a number of vory seedsFl63king, rings, and was a-s---dis colored and dirty as they wore. I wont into the shop and asked to look at it. Th - o — yawiThrokr.l7 --- an - ,old --- Jewi — said; Yesh, rmiglitsee.hi § ringsh ; but he didn't know`nioSh about ringsh They-wosh unredeemed_ pledges—thash what.. they wosh,-,and they wosh all marked at the monieli advanshed upon them, with ii, verykmalLovexplush for inteiesh—thash all Ito "There was no mistake about it. _lt -was Mr. Block's ring, and_bis initials in• ißuthow did 'the .Tcw'Oltli Ho would 'soon tell, rue. book, be found it had been patred two years ago in the panic of Smith. 'Thal& all he'knew. Would• I buy? It wosh , dirt slicap—three poirndsh twelve, and costTiim all .the mOnish "'Three ]founds - twelve?' f repeated, thinking, he had Made a mistake, for the ring :%vas , worth twenCy. times that niioniit f " ' Well, if it wosh too dear, ho had sOlllO sheaper ones—beautifid ringsh, lie dare shay ; but ho knew sho little about ringsh,_you sbeo, exsliept that ho aluitys advanslied too 'nosh Monisli on them. One couldn't understand everything in his bisliness, you slice, from flat ironsb 'to diamonsli.' "I bought the ring, after beittiuttho Jew down half a crown, partly to pre_ vent his suspecting its value, and partly —.well knowing the disposition of the peculiar people—to oblige hint. "I wore my now little purchase about, with no little inward satisfaction at hav ing bettered a Jew at a bargain. In my own mind, 1 accounted for its coining into his possession somewhat in this way : Mr. Block;Must have sold the ring When in difficulties to softie QUO else. It was quite eertain Mr. Block'had not pawned it at the Jew's, or the dew would have known its value. The ring,mitst, then, have either been lost by, or,stolen from, a. subsequent possessor ;'. and the finder or thief (whichever it happened to be,) being ignorant °CIO value, had taken it : tope Jew, who knew no better. "There. is a,certain drinmercial club inn our town. which I oettasionally The members : aro of an easy and some what lively diSpOsition ; generally given to indulge in that playful style of banter popularly known as 'chaff.' My diniuond ring came in for a good share of it. I can 'stand chaff as well as most men ; but, I put it to you; if, When ytitt know very well your brilliants i are real, it isn't At - little annoying, for the chaff' of a whole bOdy of people to asSume the / character of persistent 'disbelief in the value, of your jewelry?, For instance, the waiter, answers the bell. any gentleMan . iing " 0 'the members would retort • it was the gentleman with the pasth diamonds.' • "-'Again, them arb kinilS of sham bril liants known as Irish DLamOnds;aild Isle of Wight DianiOnds:,' The club (not ono or two'memberS,lnit tliCWholo body) ro-; fused to and, „insisted on s designating the whole class. of shames , ' Baker's Diarnoialsji L'ot's 'rasto' . '4,goniS wore' alO.derMin iiiiited,--_,_7ley-aettially Sentine-t&-post-a ,eircular of Somebody's Baking •Irydor, adding"to it, rittho ead,r,WhOre !Ws, the public- is respecifnly Cautioned- against siinrf one iniitatioris, .titOro iiartion -ITY a ;specions yro l i o rfvtion deopive the kinivary;lcoW.ii as •" Baker's; Now, aiter;two or thiie;wooksi„ this be pains" tirOSOMo. I' took ito ' ' notice; and affeete o , t, ti le re. : marks intooded fos me. hardly kaOw'What made mn gd and ntll ni,f friend, ',,feWoyer: It was 11iOt that I had anyavoat , of 'grionino. ipary tilitilltinAiiidit. eq)Oe'inll4 , RS ho *441.11 - 44'i , or i tt411 Who 'Mid bbforo valned 'But it )tail boon sO'diniied ilitl my head. •thoy .I,:c4Ofe &lie; that I,wantodjMiti a for 'and 'eordirinlitiOn of thnOiltimat he .hrid Thrilled of their worth' • rori;'!said 'niY friend, the agriiiidireotl3l..:Wani 'tO 'lOl What'l4Worthi''','(Flt'n,ut it' in to tlio " Wolf-r=Ltillout soy-, 'e`n-maid-twohty'shillings for old gold,' ' 4 r. gala Palo turnii4 a WO)" ' (lloh a f 1, 4)4 ton me it ) t , as -Worth, 'iiii4i4ininnids ''i t • . • ! it ',lad • ,dtaniondi it',44i14, 1 414n 1t triO . ,"Talking WC; ixfiittiii:4ivO'r'tlxl i u 3 jr,.,1 suggested that on Mr. 'Mock getting into .diffieUlties, the first thing ho did was td sell the diamonds of-his: ring, and get their places supplied with paste r whilst, finally he . had pawned it himself with the Jew as a paste ring. " IlerirY,'. said . I to myself, the Jew has jawed you,.and the club line chaffed you, and you may con sider you self trod umin, after tho man nor, of speaking.' "But the worm will turn, .. '"'Did the jewellier lot out, diamonds on hire?' I asked. "Ho did. '• ' Would he have a certain alteration, which I * suggested, made in myijng in a fortnight's time ?' " lle would. , • " ' And keep it a secret?' " !Qeitandy—husineps was ,business: '• For ,the whole of,that fortnight I mayor went near the club ; prObably thag. was the reason why my appearance at the - club-dinner was greeted with-such lively sallies about Baker's Paste. One would be wag-recommended - me, whilst heltinig:a tart, to keep my fingers out of the pastry.' Believing him to intend .somu allusion to the gems on my little finger, I thought it time to open fire. "'Gentlemen,' Said I, for some aveeks • I have listened to casual observations in which the.pame of Baker lias been raft: - worthily associated with paste and pas try, but have refrained from making any remarks, having been firmly per suaded they could only apply to indus trious tradesman employed in the menu fictare of home baked bread." Oh, ohl" 'lt glow occurs to me that such remarks were intended, in allusion to the ring I wear—a ring, I take this opportunity of infoTiimingyou, which, millke the wits who have amuso&themselves at its ex pense, is indebt4for eta iwilliancy to my- "They hooted they heaped,op probius epithetes on the name of Baker; they laughed and talked me down, " • I'll bet him,five pounds it's paste,' saQ one. 0 ,4 4Ki50 mill I,' waid another 'And I.' • " - "So-s-aitl - eleven of them, " 'Really, gentlemen,' said 1, • 1 am sorry you should take the matter so much lieve my ring to . bo a diamond ring, and this, notwithatanding I will freely admit, I only paid a very small sum for "They laughed 'and hooted me still more at this admission. They said that settled the question, and that, it was "I hid them didn't think it was "I would rather not. "Mere hooting. "" At length, very reluctantly, I over came my- scruples. The name of Baker is'a, name too closely allied to the gentle bred (arms, four loaves,. 'ppr—sejanr, quartered—crest, the doe, levant) to al low it to be wantonly sullied. I' bet, . ”Wo adjourned:to _ 'Without . imastiOn they -wore dia monds:' the jeweller deeidect, — 'and - aomo of the finest he. had over seen.' He ought to know as they were his prop erty—hirod by me' for.tho-occa:Sion. "'Eleven rives is fifty-five, gentlemen -.Having established the value of my ring, and freed the name of Baker from suspicion, I paid for the hire of the real gems, and the paste stones: reset in their places, believing, after all, the reputa tion for diamonds to be as good as the possession of them, and free from the anxiety. '-:It was talked about and noised abrgad ;it even reached the little back street where the pawnbroker lived. You should halve seen him. . • " Real slitones ! (J my heart ! See_ enty-ilve poundsh—dead robbery—clean gone. omy bootsho and bones ! not to know that folksh shometimes conic and pawn real diamondsh for •paste, sho as to have less interosh to pay for taking care of their ringsh. omy Washed heart, only think of it.' . "Ile came to me. Ili) grovelled and wriggled, and Iviisted Minima: before use. Ile prayed me to sell him his ring again. '0 my tore Mislaer Baker, you must shell it to me, Or I shall be a ruined old mambo. The time wosh 'not out, and Mister Sma has come to redeem it, and ho shays that it wosh it . lispoy, and if he aoesh'uot get it by Shaturday next he will ruin me—sh-help him, he. will. Q Mislay.. Baker, think of it ;' twenty Pounaish—all • hi gold—sholid. money. Now, my taro, what au you shay ? thersh a good maitili I" '" What did I say? Could I - turn a deaf ear td the distress the old Huai? There are people who might do it, gem tlemeii;hut not people of the name. of Baker—not W. 11, 'Baki9r. • I certainly did ask him for Moro money. We coin proMised'it'all lase 'at twenty-two ten, paid r .pisrt Sixpence and cop pei and owes me'• fourimnee-half-penee . to this day. •, • ' • , • • • "Twenty-two • nino and soxenponen- balt , pimny, fifty-live pantile, is seventy-Sei•eu, nine, 'seven and a half, It 'just paid for the real diamonds ; for; bought the ones I bad previously hired them sot in a ring the of Mr. ox= copt that the initiates inside are W.II. B. "That, was the only time 1 'was over swindled, gontlinnen," . Mr Baker con cluded'. ' The input is the man. Tho body, is simply the instrument through which the mind • Manifotts Itself whilo oti, Tyth.. - The-nunltifEtitiffttlitotiglqortror - More - , organs. • Each is pilinary and in., dependent in its function, doing its own Work and, 'not doing Um' work of, any , other. Each'ef thOsopoWers is manifest ad ''by Or - thi;ongli partioul4 'organ or portion of-the brain.- .ThO power of each Vrg,fin;'*ll other things being equal, in in' 'exact proportion to the Gino' and quality of that pOrtion • of the brain through wliidli • is' MenifeSted. ' !. The mental POWJrs - aile'possesiod originally in differ: .ent 'diigreSeLbY different individuali, and nlsti tliciliarrie - indirldual. , pos. .sosees Ittlentid; 7 .'autither! five, another, • -one. talfjneittalPOWer groWs'strOnger '64(l.becOmtis f telbre 'skilful by Proper ()- 'direlse: - necountabilitils just in pro- portiOn•Mi'wif Mike stood c o rid.ixiii).9l: tlieso'_tn~oiite7 - ' Edon mental. power Was forllll3- I PUrPOse of 'doing gook boPiOinnly usbcto IVTIA - T MAKES A - GIITTLEMAN? The conventional idea of gentility_ is so intimately connected with riches, that wo find- it difficult to think of mere sii tue, honor, education, , and good' breed ing, without wealth, as the propet attri butes of a gentleman. It it easier to say what is not gentle manly than .to discever what is, and we commonly find the vulgar. acceptation of the word gentleman admitted, by the world in preference to a higher standard of honesty and honor. The idea. that money makes the gen tleman is exemplified every day of our lives, and in all manner of ways. Try it by a cheap experiment. Give a cent to the beggar who waylays you in the street with a professional draWl about hunger and cold, and you are overwhelmed - With a torrent of thanks; refuse it, and you go. home with a curse upon your head. Assist an infirm Old 'lady into a street car,—" You are a gentleman, sir,"'she says, in a grateful whisper,- Give up your seat in the front box at a pantomine 'to a couple of noisy children,—"Sir, you are a gentlemmi;" says the d tificd fa ther. Refuse the customary extortion of the' obsequious servant of the hotel at a watering place, and ho tells you by his look that you are no gentleman. Somebody has cleverly said that in every block of marble is concealed an un hewn statue ; and so we earnestly believe that in every true and noble nature lies the germ and spirit of nobility, no mat: ter what the merely worldly condition of that nature be; but for ono specimen of the true Carrara there are half a-dozen counterfeit imitations in mere chalk and rubble. Your true kaLueman is not a thing of purchase and sale, anti can no afore be manufactured than a diamond. It is a hard thing to say, but half your' gentlemanlyjewels—bright and polished, and well set in gold and silver, though Alley, lie—are paste, sir, mere paste 1 "A king can mak' a belted knight," sang Burns, 'r a marquis, 'duke, and a' that," —what a poor notion of manufactured nobility the unpen'sioned exciseman must have had When he wrote that sung. But the're's no bitterness in it, not a mor sel ; he merely felt, as all true natures feel,' whether clothed in velvet or fustian,. that,"a man's a man for a' that." And I.' I mind, of being thought a gentleman ; for, if a high standard of morality, an unflinching love and - v tactiee of truth, - honesty unimpeachable, and virtue and justice untainted, constitute, as I believe they do, the true signs by which, a gen tleman may be known, then- is there hope for every one of us ; and if we pos sess not these attributes, we must strive to gain nein. . -There is 'erected in society an invisible standard of gentility ; and, if we possess it not ourselves, we have within ns a se cret talisman by . which to try the true' from the false. F,verybody knows a gen tleman when he is encountered, though a black coat and kid gloves go but a short way in making one; and many a " Paris nap" covers a snob-. "Wliat is it?" asks ThacloirOy, -gen tlest di — critics; tenderest of satirists, sharpest of cynics, hardest just as the mood - takes him, "What is it to be n gentleman? Is it to have lofty aims, to lead a pure life, to keep your boor virgin, to have the CAteelll of your fellow citizens, and the love of your fire side ; to bear good fOrtune meekly ; to suffer evll with constancy, and-through evil or good to maintain truth always? Show me the happy man whose life ex hibit?' these qualities, and him we will salute as gentleinan, whatever his rank ,May be ; show me the prince who pos. sesses them, and he may be sure of our love and loyalty." But; lest any of our readers should be in doubt as to the true gentlemanly met al, it may be as well to say, that though a gentleman may possibly be a little "fast," neither a liar, a cheat - , a scoffer at other mcii's religidn, a loud talker, a showy dresser, a boaster, a trader upon philanthropy, a drunkard, a swindler, a hanger on at taverns, nor a frequenter of gambling houseS. . When ever you are in doubt, aseertain , if your 'acquaintance be any of these ; -if he be, thou you may sen,epd-F he 4. yentle ma P. . • A bright youth, lvho is is guilty of some offence, was: told by his father to go into the next, rooth and prepare himself for a severe flogging. The parent, going into tile room to chastise him, found tlmt the youngster had an immense hump an his back. "What: on earth Lacs you got oil you batik asked the wtindoring sire. , "The bally!e, bhinket," replied John, "three double. You told me to prepare myself for a severe dogging, and Llve done the best I, could." - Very many Virginia overseers could neither read nor, write, yet they managed farms and negroes much more jndicious -ly and profitable than, 111 r., '.Tefferson or any other'spholar, philosopher, or agri eultumlehemist. Too Much learnihg had not taken away their 'common' sense or *ln them marl. - Many Men around us, who oan neither;read , nor write, hro made handsome properties, as farmers, many sucli as captains of "vessels,and - ir few oven as merchants. Nothing so in capaCitates a man for making money as profound and various learning. Litera, taro is a luxury in which the poor cannot affdrd to indulge. Iu additielt.6 the fact that ice is light er than watch, there is another carious thing about it' which many peacins Flo not 'perhaps know, viz.: . its purity.- A lump of ico - iiielted will become pure dis tilled water. • Water in freezing turns out of it all that is not water,—salt, air, .coltiring matter, and all impUrities. fro zen, sea-water makes fresh-water ice. If you froozo a basin of indigo water, it will make ice as clear and as white as that made of pure rain water. When the cola is very.suddeu, thedforeign matter's luive no time to escape, either by rising or sinking, and are thus entangled with . tho ice; but do not make any part - of it. 11 Frotiph*writor has said that to dream gloriously, yen, must act gloriously when you aro ralto ; and to bring angels down to httad converso with you in •your sloop you Must labor is the canso of virtno 'during the day. • , • • • { ADVLIIICZ, SLUO gear. Many who arc too Liu or too stupid to raisc themselves, seek to 01314,0 posi tion by pulling - their superiors down to their own level. Make no vows of enmity while you are smarting uniler 'a sense of neglect oicruel ty; pain speaks" with • little propriety. Busybodies are almost always idlers. Tlie less business a man has the more ho . meddles kith that of his neighbors. Make a note of this. Never suffer your courage to exert itself in fierceness, your resolution in obstinacy, your wisdom in cunning, nor your patience in sullenness and despair. Whatever parent gives his , children good instruction, and sets them at the same time a bad example,, may bo considered as bringing them food in ono and poison in another. Not long since, our friend Brown was on avi , it to Lookout Mountain, Georgia, and was much struck-with the fact that a fine jet , of water vmsthrown , up above the top of the eminence on which the hotel stands. Wall:Mg:mound the jet _admir— ingly, lie accosted a plain countryman with: "My ['timid, is thiswater(Oreed up by a ram?" meaning, of course, 4 the hydraulic contrivance so named ram r , exclaimed the cOurtryinan. "Yes a ram, I say." "What on airth—no, sir; it's"k darned big mule ! . and it's tremendous hard work for him. Come — here and I will show him to you."' Brown saw the mule and left. • I never saw a ganneitt too fine for man or maid; there was never a chair too good for a cobbler, or cooper or king to sit in; nevcra house too fine to shelter the human head. Theseelemetits above-us, thogor geottS sky, the imperial sun, are not too good for the human race. Elegance Sts man. But do not value these tools of housekeeping a little more than they are worth, arid sometimes mortgage a home for thosake of the mahogany wowould bring into it. I had rather eat my dinner off the lead of a flour barrel, or dress Otter thofashion of John the Bap tist in the wilderness, or sit on the rock all my life, than consume all myself be fore I got to a home, and hike so much pains with the outside that the innsside was as hollow as an empty nut. Beauty is a great thing,:lnitheauty of_garmente, house and furniture, is a very tawdry ornament compared with domestic love. All the elegance in the world will make a home, and I - NF0111(1 - give moio - i . a spoonful or real hearty love than for. whole-shiploads-of-furniture that-all the. - upholsteiers of _the World could gather together.—Theodore Parker. "Set many, weeks since the advent of a lady irrthis city, in search of a truant husband, was noted, and in the measures taken by the police to discover the run away described. Yesterday morning une of oar Recorder's . courts was ate scene of explanation. Two females had been arrpsted for lighting and dis turbing the peace. “Witntris your name?" inquired the Recorderof . one of them. 3lrs. IL, sir." and what is yours? • _lira. 11., sir. - "Why, aM drop of the same name ? How is that:'" Both of them immediately interposed an ex-planation. They were each the lawful wife of Mr 11. Each alone, :te em-ding to the account of the speaker, was entitled to. wear it. , , The Recorder scratched bead in perplexity. " What did you fight :theta lie at a.t. inquired. " Mr. H., - was the reply. "Where is he ?" he demanded Here," responded a small squeak ug voice from the far corner of the room "Here, 'your Honor l" and a poor woo begone looking article mado kin appear anee:, unable to support one who in stead of two. "Do you clrdm both of these women Is your wives?" the Recorder asked. " Well ! arry one of 'em'll do !I' "Why do you have , two.wives?" ',Well, you see slien one gets obstrep erous I kin go to Caller, and slur most generally pities metre And 31 - r- 11. looked as if he'd hit upon a most happy solutirin of the often vexed question of domestic felicity.—Nem leans rimy u se. In the retired villages of our land, the pastor often becomes a source of eivilize lion and refinement to those around him. His simple unpretending manners ; his house with :its modest ^oniaminitri ; his garden, tended riaciecked by the hand of taste ; these impart sonic relish for improvement among his poorer and ruder neighbors. But further, he is ever at hand to - relieve, to instruct, to advise, and to COliSOO his •flock. Hie purse, scanty as it often is, adininisteres to their temporal wants ; and ho -is yet more their benefactor by organizing and conducting plans more systematically formed for their relief. His influencemay arrest the heavy arm, or soften-the hard heart that would oppress them. His su perior knowledge grades them through difficulties; where no' other friend is near to give them counsel. His authority composes their: little fends and jeal ousies. His words of syrnpatiry - : and-. consolation.soothe their distresses. His vigilant eye marks their first deviations from"rectitirde, and brings back tho yet u nhardenctland-reclaimablotransgrebsor into the path of innocence. Ho is, in the great maiority of instances, aided by a partner, whose co-operation is by so Telidi - the more yaluable, as her habits qualify her for every task of gentleness and mercy, more cdpecially when she has to deal with the sick or thordilicted; the ignorant or Um ,vicious, of her own rex. Wild pigeons eo darkened tho air in Morgan connti, Tennessee;• ono day 4st Wei* that negroes, young . and old, thought that . the wdrld was coming to an end sure. ' " ' . Philadelphia's expenses last year were $14,013,124, The cdslain the treasury on tho first instant amounted id sl;so4,ol and the' funded debt of tho city to $42, 401,033. • litaind has a mail carrier now 76 years of age, who has carried the mail daily from North Monmouth to Monmouth Contra for twenty-one years, and missed but ono trip 'during that' time. CI ----.- I-