II lIM SIM J: u._ Ella SINGLE' COPIES, VOLUNM - POTTEIi JOURNAL ; rreasuets rrear ruce:iair stoliurey.se' ,Thos S. Chase, rre whom ail Letters , and Communications should be addressed, to secure attention. *erine—lnvaillably in Advance : $1,25 pei AnnErn2. • , ..Tei•ms'.ot' Aciyorti,sin.g. 1 Square [lO Hues] 1 insertion, - - 1 H• 3 w lE'=.4 subsequent insertion less than 13, :25 Square three months, 2 50 iI - " six ". 400 1 ". nine - 5 50 L " ' one . year, 6 00 intile - and filcare work, per sq., 3 ins. - 3 by. Etrery.su4sequont insertion, Column six mouths, - - t•t, tt It • 50 18 00 10 00 1 Si 41 700 11 a ". per year, 30 00 3 ~ ,g 4/ .16 00 Administrator's or Executor's Notice,. 200 Auditor's . Notices, each, 7 ] 50 SheriTs Sales; per tract, • - 150 Marriage Notices, each. 1 , Masiness or Professional Cards, each, net, excedirikB lines, per'year, - - - 5 00 ,Special add Editorial Notices, per line, • 10 Isar All transient advertisements must be paid in advance, and no notice will betaken of advertisements from a distapce, unless they ars accompanied by the money-or satiSfaaoty refers-see.. •. •. uisints,s Carts. JOHN S. MANN, ATTOR'NEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, •Coudersport, Pa., will attend the several Courts in Potter and 3PKean Counties. MI iausine , ts entrusted in his eare will receive - prompt attention. Office ou Main st., oppo site the Court House. 10:1 F. l W. KNOX, .ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport. Pa., will regularly attend the Courts in Potter and the adjoining Counties. 10:1 ARTHUR G. OLMSTED, ATTORNEY S: COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend toall business entrusted to his care, with promptnes and fidelity ; Office in Temperance Mock, sec ond floor, Main St. 10:1 ISAAC BENSON. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Coudersport, Pa, will attend to all business entrusted to hint, with . care and promptnesS. Odice-corner of West and Third sts. 10:1 L. P. WILLISTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Wellsborti, 'togs. Co., Pa.. will attend the Courts iu Potter and Iffaan Counties. 9:13 A. P. CONE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Wellsboro', Tioga Co , l'a., will regularly attend the Courts of Potter County. 9:13 It. W. BENTON, StiSVEVOR AND CONVEYANCER, Ray- Mend P. Q., f, Allegany Tv..) Potter Co., Pa., will ati,,ntitl to all lousiness in his line, with care and di'Apsteh. 9:33 W. K. KING, SURVEYOR, DRAFTSMAN AND .CONVEY ANCLA ,Stnethroct,li.vall Co.. Pa.. will attend co business tbr non-resizictit itpOn :ra:oushle S.—Mai,: of nu oa.rt of the ColllliXittic to order.. 9:1.3 0. T. ELLISON,' PRACTICING PliViilt2lAN,Coudengtort; Pa., respectfully infOrms.th.: citizens of the' vil lage and vicinity that he will promply re spond to all calls for professional services. 'Lame on Main st., in building formerly oc cupied by C. W. Ellis, Esq.. 9:22 p01.1.11i II SMITH. Z. A. JONES. SMITH & JONES, DIALERS IN DItLGS, MEDICINI;S, PAINTS, Oils, Fauey:Articles,Stationery; Dry Goods, ._Greceries, ie., Main 3t., Coudersport, P A . 10:1 D. K OLMSTED, 1nf,4,11R IN DRY GOODS, READY-MADE Clothing; Crockery, Groceries, kc., /lain st., Condor/port, I's. . 10:1 M. W. MANN, pkALER IN BOOKS & STATIONERY, MAG AZINES aad Music, N. W. corner of Main sad Third its., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1 R. R. HAR.RINGTON; ./gIitLLER, Coudersport, Pa., haring engag- . Vs window is Schoomaker 4; Jackson's Ptorc will eazry on the Watch and Jewelry, Pusiness there. : A line assortment of. Jew gr7 constantly op WatcheS and Jewelry' ogreftaly repaired, in tke best style, pa the shortest notice--;-all work warranted. 9:24 - PENRY J..OLMSTED,' (seccassoa" TO J/31T3 W. sums,) jIEALER IN STOVES, TIN A; SHEET IRON it..10,E, Main at., nearly opposite the Court ' Rou.se. Cantlersport, Pa. Tin and 514ect Iron Warr made to order, in goad style, on . 'Lott notice.. 10:1 - COUDERSPORT HOTEL, D. F. GLASSKIRS; 'Proprietor, Comer of Kai% and Second Streets, Coudersport, Pot ter Co., Pa. 9:44 ALLEG/LNX HOUSEi thillrE.T.. X 11. ILL, Proprietor, Colesburg, . Potter Co., Pa., soy.'" gales north of GOll - osis4e 9:44 . T*zzirr-tivi west of Fart Lira pie, *la:is - 8444 at laty per lineflrea, weight. That'a- whet , we,cll4 ft high ,lid• Ibg is the rind distriita .":: -. 4 : - :.i . • ---- - .1...7 . -1 3.4 . ~ ).L.f..i4ili;, : , :. i.,L1 , 2 0:1t:.,11 -0 1 , 4 0 . 1 , A .;,, .r.;-::); ~ , ;-,1iii,2;,,;,:,--,11, '..r.i.= .1 J,'lr - • 1: . T , .i ... ." L ~.,4 . - -" ,....... .. -- `.-. , 7.ii,-...; ; ;J:!....-::' , 71 4 J.:J:I,T:- 1.,,x1:-.1 ::- . 1 . ,-,, , , .... .7_ . -..11,t , yr. f*-,i •:.'.' w 1 41 - 1 -; ,i..;,;;;1:. , _11r-2 ,- - .;;L:' , - ~:i;,,, , : - • 11117 'll li tc. '',l r .,,: : ,.., !. g„ 1 , ;. - ‘ ,..i„,:y,, , - :. - ,‘1,,, -.-'.;-;.: 1i - A : '-. ;',' , l ;., -.. • I ' . i- .i .". :..., '!j f ''...- 1f - - -•'', :- :•:Tti!: ,- - , r-‘' - - - - -- - , t 4 - . 1. -- , f::-iii..)--- , ;,, , - .. ~..,-.v . , '3"k . ~ ~ q , , c r i,... , ,. f ., :.5 r . , , ..: ~ :: .1. t: - „ :,I .; • .:" 1 .... 1 ~. 1 1" -„ • •• , .... -,,(-• ,:..... ''. *l 0:• A . A , . .-1-' - 'r , ' • l ir '. - I-- ~:' -t,"_:`..•• -: ' G - ' 9 -- - .'' ~._ . :, . , . . , . . 1 ~.,. oittotre. ._. Ettattig . .. .. . . LITERATURE A4'4l) THE TINES. A E, . • Delirrred at the muarterly Meeting of the • Libiary Assdeiation, Ce;ialeroport, Noveriiber 7th. 1857, by . REV. C.:14. BLAKE: [PUBLISLIZD' 11442*T.] - 60 --- $1 50 In 'beginning addrwi , yon,! Ladies and Gentlemen of the Association, a 1167 me first, a few moments; •-• I I. Ta remark upon the TlMES—the world-Wide Panic and revulsion in busi ness. circles and interests, which ;now so occupies the' minds of men. The times ;are portentous. Thoughtful persons i have fancied that they saw shadows pass !. mg over the sworld's great dial some time [before the great crisis approached us.— And like a vast .eclipse it now holds, not lour laid alone, but the eiviliz.ed and com- I menial word beneath its pall. •I I Exchange 'curthenUnited States in Chi li, formerly At a discount office and even ten per cent.; last yearat_par, and at the beainnina• of this year'at four per cent. premium, went up to,twelve per cent. in July last; and at the latest:dates in Au gust, could hardly be - obtained there at any price. That country after a sit ybars' calm, was on the eve of a revolution. = What was this but one of the fore:shad owintra of disorder And it 'SI bi no means our own country alone that is af fe,eted and involved in the disorder,' Eng land with-her vast business transactions, not only with us, but in (every part, of, the earth, at the latest dates was beginning to feel the afflictive stroke._ France, with her credit »tallier—and a very motile and uncertain scheme bf busineas it Seems to be, was 'yielding to the pressure; and throughout all the chief capital's/ of Eu rope similar results were ensuing. / A bri sis, an epoch, of no ordinary interest, ap pears or:cc more to have come' over the', affairs of nice. (Note 1.) 1 i believe in Epochs, lieriods,as, the word signifies, which'arrest attenti . on, and cause thinking men to hold an, to pause:; and re-f- / re flect. An epoch is a readjustment of a fairs, when it would almost seem that the complicated machinery of the Great Uni verse was wound up and set running again, or overhauled and refitted for new er and more surprisirig developnients. = Like Prof. Babbage's wonderful Calcu lating Machine, mundane affairs some- / times appear to go on, with all their cent plea movements: The great pendulum I for long periods wags backwards And for-1 wards with perfect regularity, no jostling, , no friction, no loss, no -hindrance; • until it appears that the mechanism is perfec: tion itself. • 3lea think it will rnii . on so forever. It does 'scent as though it would. And thus it goes 9n, and on, Until it, reaches the three hundred and -thirty-nine' thousand -billionth, -oombination, ;perform- I ing all its. difficult calculations in, figures, and its varied adjustinents'.with 'unerring l exactitude ; when—prestd uhange! 'A readjustment occurs in a /moment. No one dreamed of, it. No One but the in ventor knows how it was dbne; ; or when it will- take . : place; but, at this precise point it takes on new powers. , All the; old movements are lost. All the old sys tems of combination are no more. It de velops itself in entirely a. new, series o 1 1 numbers, perfosais altogether anew and more brilliaut set of examiiles, and thus goes on with like unvarying uniformity as with 'the first series ; until a new' read justment,,Which, together with / the form : er. was all provided for in the original draft of theocalealating machine. Such an epoch, in some degree is the present one in buziness, But /its effects ;are not limited- to the affairs. of , trade • alone ; nor need we feel much terror at it. The Great Architect, who attends to the readjustineuts all for us; and provided for I them alt in the outset, who. ,knows Per i fectly their limit and power/ and mean : ing, affects now the world with His match ; less Wisdom and skill. ' Wei feel His / hand hold - of the meehanism; and rejoice to kunw anti lelieve,that irriereth all thin g s well,'; - He ,touching some o f thehigher laws of eaugationi and is abont setting, in motion some new com ' binatibns of His Infinite- mind: ; /: 2d. Here then,- we have somejessontf to learn. We are at , this time sent back I to flFst principles oneo,more; andiby the commercial cnsis, no less then by:the sea son of the year, the long evenings, the clecayingloliage, and the- wealth of hap-1 pineal_in our own hearts and homes, if we- will seek it there ,from: God, are we Temilided Of the new datioe,..eoeupationi, &Ueda, which the bountiful Creator has . ' placed within our reach. :i.Honte, :tha t] magi Anglo-Saxon ,--Word,_ Ankuowo, in all the..laag,uages_ springingdfrom Latin unknown, too, tbewhert Ithroughoutahe World' eteeit ~ in; oul . , , owe,ilear.imother dsister tongue an la nzaegee; the ,Ger, man & e.=• —ioii. ~rum e -let no :taithoe-f - • . 71 111111 q,ebotea fo:fi ? a rigeiptes of - Dile lic.ii)o:V4ql, 3,126 .11)i 'D;sseig;q4tioq of qlO . • r . 7 'COUDEASPORV POTTER COUNTY -PA.I . TIIMISDAY istoEittra 24.-1857-i "0 friendly' te the'beite putiaiti tif•man ! Friendly to. order, rirtue, Joro,ttod peace; Few know thy beauties and few taste tby , sweet,!" ' - .• ' Our quiet dornestic life' and joys; ladies and gentleuiery no less ;than the world without; - the re . mukdons in. trade,, the dis appointments business; the storms and crude blasts . .of aPProachiug . winter, all conniel to use that beautiful pious phrase of the Friends, to look ioitlrtn. Let'us. do it. • Let us seek _here, audiwe We shall.find; knock and it shall be open." ed to us. Let, us : come hack willingly from _the . inad strifes of, the • world,, and find peace, arid 'love,' and 'home:' ". Let Mi be willing to take up again witty simple things, and learn again first Imi/tot:pies. Go to your books, I say. Not as a frown ing master to his pupils, do 1. - say this. But as one with you, I 'say, let us go to our books; friends once more and see what we can learn ;here-With them. Let us then turn to a second topic pf remark --to . • IL LITERATURE; f as this AND TILE TINES is the subject which proposed -to-myself to bring'fbeforei-you . , more fully this .evoning. .1-have already spoken of the lattetOf the - -"tlmesi"7--and.now wish to apply my iliOnght.l tii,th6fohner. Cicero bas - well 'Said of Study and literary pursuiti :-:"TheY deligh tin at licinie 63 , do not hinder us :abroad. , • They -accom pany us in our- travels; ,they abide. with us by night and by day, wherever we re main. In , prosperity they make us . thoughtful, and in ai:4ersity they comfort !us." • And a crreater than CicerB—King Solomon—has, o said-: "That,- the soul be without•lnowlesige it. is no tgoocl," I conic," says Paul" to tirnothy„"give at tendance to reading.",. But we need' not -"lie writers of antiquity, sacred or pro i/ne, for warrant as to the necessity, pleasure, or iiiipOrtaime of the objects of your Association: To thinking beings, "life•without letters is death;" as the an cient orator has rightly styled it. istence without .duties is a, blank; and. a soul witticiut , lin'pivkdge like's line 'with out' in s liabitant-ILa waste to ruin- runs. • us 'then look' at ionic of the as pects of Literature at the:present iimoinent, as connected-with the' times - - And Ist. I would remark upon its ilylation. I mean by this the cast bulk it bccupies; and which'has beeoine so 'enormous that we cannot if we would, read everything. The literature of. to-day tieeds:c.ondens incr. We need lea books,-less .perlodic a4.lessj newspapers, than we have—less' by three-fourths; and bettet 'ones than'. the best 'of tlieui by onelitilf, as 'we should then hie. The tuasS - of what -has been written and published in this country thej last ten years,- and especially during the last five years, has not been worth the pa per on which it has been 'printed.• Let! 'me say to your Don't read it—don't try to read all that is printed, Mar the quar ter part of it, if you could. • It has been.. boasted that. this County is intelligent; that vast quantities of newspapers and.: petio - dicals are taken here,' • It is true, believe, that there is Much intelligence in Putter county; and that'. the quantities of mail-matter distributed Lem and wide-i -ly elsewhere, throughout our country, arc truly astounding, But :T. don't believe that it is salutary, so much and such kind of reading.. It is the rank over growth of the, swamps and fens of the world of letters, exposed to the fierce heats of a tropical sun„-'—so • much poli-1 tics' and so many "isms" 'and so• much party strife as we have in literature, are;— rather than . the: modest and .tasteful ar-: rangements of horticulture, which would malto the world as the "Garden of the ! , . . 1 • Veit floods of prurient fiction,, the 1 merest .shams of sentiment , truth and' . . i love; heavy tides from dream-land--litcr- I 1 ary and philosophical nonsense; have 1 . agaiii .and . again overflowed and deluged the. land, and subsided like the Nile, i. 1 leaving int thiek , covered with . the slime, I. but not the fertility of El.lpt ', • What , . !shall we do with the like another time? 1 We hope . another . such time will • never come upon us to curse.us. It is the ebb 1 nosy. :.. ..Far:.out . towards.. the. pea, on . thel long, reaches of mud:flats, now bare of the tide-wateri lie the riehlY freightlid argos ies of dream-literature and , liOniense; , whiokilave:foraierly floated over the . inis 'l tY deep 'to us, ' all: 'stranded . nowt " And l• [the ~Whole , shore is strown .Over with the. l. f.wreeks ! Well! let them• lie there ;'and land let thereflux tide cover diem; until the next ebb sweep them . out -into' the fabyeSes of the vasty deep. -- It is a pl6sure 1 to-think, thatWeliave net, even to.beliold, the face of many, of thein, again.. „. .. ; .. ~ Without : 4.lllo444mi, then, let Me Pay, 1 that. 'the world of - letters • 'Wilt suffer - no 1 loii, it 'seems to - me, "by . the "fifiltire,"' the 1 • , utter minilnlation r whieb.the present times .viill.cume, of a great portion .of,tlie.trashY literptur,o- of the day, whether. 44, tiewspa- , perk, ,periodicali, or book;, „.. , .!I 2iid - . Int" Whit - bin 'We, 'and 'W:hat anglit .f we to reait 13onettjug, to be sure. ' -Sur Aitedin4 diMO4 "10 haYPIIeS hithe 4, I top-w44•fafr - f.*'fes 3 li4illiePakeisacf? .ll4tlfOniql..aadlatOt4 l !:4 l o vf.)Pio':' ceeed•-to try,' to. accomplish a cure ?,,." .shall ure4ead pldllipics: on- the_causei of.the present. evila,'and write ourselves alidown ;d4tikeysst,",, fools and as. some have been duing of late,ry This: will "not' do the, : w - ork .- OF i deriee of the Mania. which -has . .bbed iipoir us.' Sober , seeond thoughts !viill folloiv this; _"I. Will,' arise and go`tO My. Fatlieo'. saidthe.prodigal,ylien came to himi self. he "has bread. enough"' house," and to !spare," Why then shall we either. 4,4(1. or stay, w he ..c,WQ are 44.. perish ,with hunger.r rs. I arise and haSten lee, *, let all. I see YOtilig people here . 1 wish to speak to them to-night.:.; Read Triith. The universe. is .full of truth,; and .tlae world is full :of. error. Nye eannot stop 4) busy ourselves-with .the latter.. • Let us seek ...after . the:. former: In newspapers, politics, att„. religion; rectil'iuth Neither one has the whole truth.. Hear the other party, "one thing 'is good till you - hear the. Other." Read both then. A good progresaive, and a good conserva tive newspaper, itis the duty of e.very.mart of jutOligenee to read.• ,Trutkilges not lie ire?he extremes; .Thesnicitlie:gioiind is safest. It is the tinly'saieone. The - need. the 'extremes; howeVer,•. always- to .eriable iisAci find-the mean.: The cOntlict of prin ciples, is a necessary one, to . eliminate Truth. After the smoke_ of the battle is over, and both parties have . retired from'. the fteld, - peace with her olive-crown and sober joys is -soon in possession. of the spoils; • .Neither party gains all the ad van tages.. Man, gains . them.We children of the Victors andthose of the vanquished enjoy, them together, - each one under his own -vine and . fig-tree With - none to Molest or to make them afraid. It often takes a generation; though,' to accomplish., this, like the . Clearing up of your, primeval for ests; ,the resouading of sturdy strokes of axes,Lthe crashing of - fallen trees 'through the deep old woods ..trust first be heard._ Then 'the' smoke, 'arid:black log 'and stunips; and .grittie;and Sweat•andlife-toil of a whole .generation,:iare necessary. be fore we -can; -see. the smiling, farMs,. and loiring cattle upon, ii.thonsaud,hills,• and sheep, and tilth, and p ., knityleierywhere. So in .literature; there•iia.eoriflict-Of Prin aiples first to be -encountered: , -Hard ar crnments- are I to be -used'. ILard • names , may -isOrnetinieS have been 'called.. But when this is over; there is Peace. _Let no, perpetual animosities be waged. Let no eternal • warfare be 'cherished; for bbth belligerents are in part wrong, and it is not for war-but peace that we contend. • And !there is' Truth enough, remark , again, to be read. The great deep sea. of i Truth has not yet been sounded. All the navies of the earth. may fiPat in it foreVer, and rarely meet, each other. Beyond our horizon are Other ships; and still beyond. ' others, and others 'still further on.. And as we sail. On over life's solemn, main," how little do. we, know.of its.tide.s and, cur rents, its storms and Calias; - how here the compass -Varies to 'the 'east and - there to-. 'the west ! 'How -little do we know toci of the history . of - these about.uS, or ob i own mysterious craft in, which we sail ! How little again, 'do weknow of ,the strange depths beneath us—of the deep Sea sound ings of the.sea of life ! Or,-aouit, of the still stranger and vaster depth; above US; of the silent stars and worlds, and con-. stellations in the ficavens Over our heads, all of which we can see and sonic ,iti:ribr- 1 tant part of Which ire are ! And then the Infinite euknotriv-:whenithe pagan A.the- I niaris . worshipped by .erecting- a. dumb ,al-,! tar to. Him—how, little ; do„ . ive,..know t. of Him.! . Read .tr'utlieri. There is no lack of t History, Travels, Bi ographies, Researches in Science ; as touch as you please- - BuOgieware of . men," as Mir Saviour - cautioned His apostles. Do, not pin your faith-10- any man!s sleeve. .Go to God for this, .and to Him alone.- .And beware of philosophy—"oppositions ,of Science falsely. so called." This is of I Men. True wisdom comes frota God.' ' In,! all yOttireading•then lightly esteem the opinions'of a man, as such. - The opinions. of, inerithe.‘. 4 ,:voice of .the _people,, which. is the voice, 0f„G0d,7. 7 . 7 if. yen .can..distin-, 1 guish this , uttering, , ioid all 'the jargOn . a:attending; Oitatii if it 'fates' . With - ifighti- - ca,`Sort-inlour soul,. and with- revealed Truth'as , it is in -the Holy -Seri ptures, hear - them,., , Besides the right, _Books and .Newspa pers., then,_ let, me say, yeu sliduld read something of'ReViews•• and 'Periodicals. These 'hold 'a- -in iddle ground- between -the two former;' And betweemthe , Oviian ef fort lia'S been Made to crush them out... A part.of.-them ; might been crushed pat: long - age... Putnam has - ;al; ready line.if consolidated "-410.'linerittri ;- and the Knickerbocker, Deintieratic v%iv, Atlaitio Atouthly;(just started) aud'; Hat:pees- ?iiagegite4 with, Giodey,Little's I .4gP.) stud I,yarimm,,other American Kuril"ieations, .all' patlOgethe 6i,'0i;03 cis or - Jai:eta tiro:::--vriiiildtilis r ittaf, These . ltwo,l or: three, with, the. L.ClArbtiakupPvivilr:r.iang MENU I several Religions 'at4 ! ..oiietilii.sieal Re -1.-icifs,:trtiking six or eighti4t .41, instead; of twenty. Or•thirty as,weliow lave them; would well represent this. departMent.of American Literature. •, ' AS in. Great_ Brit-1 sin, the four Reiiewi.,'(Follaburg, Lon don,, Westminister, and Ndrtli .British) ' and Blackviood's Magnine-.-r — oe'in all— !epreSent - all the phases of B r iltistt thought; so here, amOng •a 'hirger cOmnintiity of readers,,some six or eight stei/fiag publi cations shOuldisuffiCe for all - Our wants.. And it must and will come Ito that. Ast, I among the Juveu Hes already,pncle Nerryp.f 31 - useum '.aild VPOdivorth, and tinele Cy; rus, and- Phillip and Abot's• Stories' I, 1 believe, -have all united 'into one; so among their.sitdort;, the pondrcius wheeli will nut long revolve -until there is a new Combination. The times favor the change, land the consolidation will undoubtedly 1• I take place. . , I • • Let me c ommend, to the• Library Asso ciation then the propriety Of subscribing to thelteviews when thus combined. Por Years past the four British) Reviews and Blackwood have been reptinted in New York, ott that and u seful scale, that 810 has been the, price forjthein all, Cost ing:B36, 'or ove'r in Great Britain, ?mho: bly you could not obtain' sO' much and se va.ried, and so useful reading any, where, as by subicribing for ' these. A . shailai amount of money-810 ($2O in all) would furnish your Library every car with need ed American publications and thCsame remarks and even stronge ones could lie made as to the value ad necessit y of t i these. ' .American Period cals you must have. '1 h, nope you will be willing to do some thing continually for the Increase of your Library., You cannot bay everything it is true. Buy then the most necessary, 'the best. I am happy to see on yolir shelies, so many and El, owq selected bookS. 1 I ani'delighted to 'hear f the origin of the Libiary.. They who were last at the !Cross and' first at the tom of Jesus, hale 'been 'patterns for us tun' ore thin twice. Cali- we the men, ncii.aid . n.inlarging and eniichinthivliat has so w 11 been begun. Let theien; clt ftfteeii su seribeis in this place- to Ilarpees.Nagazi e, unite in.tak ing, say tteo copies of the „Ind give the surplus -to somethin g .• else. Let every read er then Alispatch the sam , in - the first pe- - rasa! in'one day, -or less, and how much more good _could be accomplished with the same amount of moray than at pres ent. And this leads me :o speak of 3rd. How WE SHOD D READ? As we cannot read everything, and it . becom es important to know what to read ; so we need to know how to reaii. I will speak now to the younger perso.s present, and give thew some practic• I directions on this point, drawn from m own habits and experience.. hope it m y prove useful. Let me say, then.under t uis head: Some books should be read fast. The_ newsPit pers always be read hasti we have no time to waste upon them Other books should be read very slowl and thought fully. It is iMpossible to read a baok full of thotishts very. rapidly. . A.nd such books J_Lo'f thought you need o. read. Then we should read sometimes ast, sometimes slowly, according to the subjectin hand. Again, we ought not to pass over por tions-of the book because are cannot fully understand them. Read i .over again un til you do understand. B t pass cursori ly over portions of it very • y to, under stand, or in which you le-I less interest becau.se of its'Unimportan, e. Again, read by 'subject One, thing illustrates or unfolds 'auoth r. Keep this n 1;04 as you. read; Conti' u - ally. , - - , ~ Make . it alse, your endeavor .to," learn something from everything you read. I do not doubt that something may be learn ed froth. a very poor' book. If shut up to it on a long voyage,, as have been, ,a book otherwise worthless, ill afford you not only amu.sementbat ins ruction. Out of all the,Faass of trash .6 which I have spoken, something useful ay be gather ed, As thelee:extracts swe is out of most , noxious _substances and pn rifying-bodies. 1 But as.you can in ordina lite, read "but little, at,,,mosi a fewhundr volumes out of all.the thonsands; and Millions . Tinted I wouldnot advise you tewaSte Much tune ~:64 indifferent literaryigrod deti,Ms. 3lake note ef.what youread. - I do not say,spenik Much: time, in Writing out the, contents of YOUilxialta. - Utikeep them - I in mind while you are r "ng, that you I may digest-the whole mas of it together when you have:done with t ebook..Read then with pen; or pencil, i hand. - But do not expect to re ember all you read. ~This is not the oh& ct of reading,, anymore than.the object f eating, is tort keep-forever:bathe stow what we put into tholnouth and swallci as food,Un denitami; then, that. rea ing is:- taking foedPand 'Meditation; no lit down the e P aints in it;,,refeeiinultipb, it - ,, are diges-' ;don- , Digest whit you d. 'Assiiiiilate tithe pcni, it b at:which-y - 6u dppro'v'e and love; f, ink* PO' t erra mentalltructure; and. cast - I 1111610, Ad - rause,,iway: Always think I 114 je.i,itinliee: ~"tro notftt' others think," iferlou..:..'Tlius,willy - eli. VOW -iiit; ;Miral='; ; ..,,•;•i•ti ~•••• -- .':•:,--: •• .- ^-' - :I - , - -...' lij I I. I':1:! t ' 1 i , FOUR CENTS le edge and,.every. mental and more; gra:ed , and beauty continn.slly. The , 04 4-a the good of, past; ages Will look down upon yen from their bight's above withfitvntanil, affection. You Will be their asse4tes t aUd, they, yoUra. _ You wil l, ing more and more, ever, More ,and More,. like , them. • Franklin- and Washngftni 4 . Newton and Bacon, ShatespearealAlii-, Ali ton, Montesquieti Fenelon, Aide' 'e don Stael, Socrates, mid the - blind old'Bard!,ef Samos, no less than those."holitiMUWliii apake as they were movedr:byl Wiest," will then be youfihstrtietiirsa n d friends; and in every lineament yOl'iy spiritual nature will be feund,the.Sirokei; and featurei of that Great Masteflibul; who first raised these men ;uplte be , lyour, teachers and kindred mid companionsfor ever. One remark more, as to 'hoW you Ought to read. Do not read merely'fortheipri:l - pleasure aud grutifieati,on' of it . Hartk" a high moral aim in it, that you may be made by it, good and 'wise; and d i - it please God, 'great also. Read' that `you may know how to benefit nthers,lend not merely for self alone. 'Read thakyoul Viai become .a model of excellency in yoninirn person, wiser and`better nienand.women than 'those who have 'gone before yon liiifti been'; and knowing God anti!His'llniveria better than . your •:preticeeiseri, - -tat .In lall this he not proud, but humble, ' nisei:; I ken tle, - without guile, or deceit. -- Preieite , your innocence and always remernhertli, he that humidethliimself, ; in learning as Well as in society, 'shall be exalted:-Take not then the , uppermost, rannat-tlii feeS:t of intellect. Let-politicianw_exalt. thein-, selves and boast of their merit!!! 'and achievnients: Butho.notlike'un6:i . hem . . Verily I say' unto you, they:have their reward. I\ , 4th. I ought to say a feit words las to - HELPS"IN"HEADING. The greats t and best help that I knew of is a:genuine.tia ger. unquenchable Yankee ,curiesity; 7 4in awakened niind, a grotringnppetite—L ',, The wish—the drearn-4hewild d eta;- ' Delirious, yet divine, voir:Now.', , • •-, ,-, :• i lf you have 'this; I had about saltri; ylu I have enough;', But. it is , not' ite - so. 'There arc certain books yen oug htto Own !--yon must own them; anti have.t*iby you and consult' thein".Perpettialkt', I .' Lit. me name,any of these which Yikfare'not Ito go to any library for, lait tO YOut • etVi,n, 1 however small that may be: - First;ithcen, have a reference Bible, 'Then - a r . gob d , Dictionary of Words and Definitifins . pi'oper names, Geographical, ; Historical and Personal—a full vocalmilarnfihenk. 'Then an Atlas of the World is indhip,"en sable. 'A Biographical DictinnarY, a Die ' denary of Dates, (Haydon's is the.;hest, and. it Li almost unkriowninthis country,) a Gc..,graphical Gazetteer, and a-good Outline History, are all' needed. -'11; 'be sides thise, which I 'regard as indispenia ble to e7ery One who werild 'underitand what he r reads, you can have in ionie iiLi brary n ar you; a good Encyclopaedia - to consult ccasionally, I do not -see 4 What. would b lacking.. And, then; the' bobka I have named are not eXpenstve..- They would post $lO to $l5, perhaps.'- And .ea how mapy centre-tables, in lorceld'qind rarely peen parlors; 'do. we . meet-with trunipery in gold and blue,-if notbiker, which has cost twice that - aniount,.and4s worth tthing either as matter of tasteful m °aim tor literary excellence. '. *-1 One word" tory6u, ladies` ntigentlemon of the Association, as to an ElVCieLdPit- DIA, of which I have spoken, 'and whitih it seeaa4 to me is well worthy-of :yoir at tention. i A new Edition - of the Xacyclo- podia Britanniea is now in ;course: of publication in Louden and Edinburg:- It I will prebably 'be completed within- the next taio years, 'before -1860: ?_Fifteen volumeS' are already published; - , Twenty one volimes complete it ... ltiabv far the best work in existence in any ILiguage. Tee firs edition, published fifty yeam-ago, was so, iu the opinion of: Wilberforce. !Stoutly and handsomely bound in cloth,. royalee avo, it -will coat-Imre:about $4.- -per vol we. , The whole in—twenty-One volumewill then stand.ycluat.BB4,ivhich you wil . be obliged to raise.:betweetithis s , land , 18 O. ' With, the narrew_rosautees at my ommand; I should be:glad:to:he one of the twenty one riersoilswielsheuld purchase this great and excellpnt wexklor your liihrary—a volumejapiece .1-.1:M,10 will- busii, the other twenty teliitues? ,.- - - ,One hundred-and thirteen -tuen *Chili, :Eng lish and -Americana,. had. each 'of them bought a aet of aria EneyclopMdis,forlis' own use, before I left that imuuttt. - -mlit cannot we in.Putter.County, all of, aM, do as much as to •pgreliasemle copy' fee, or: selves ?i pee note- 2:1.: ~.: , ;: , i. ....!..-L -6th. It is fitting . on :sti,'oequsion like. this, tha something should be said-on the advantages of `reading; literarymalture, paste, and refin anent.- "i These pftenewhe *ould - bestiiplireciateteMarks-ittpoliAlis subject; are tne ones 'of hitotheitmho.sre not in need• of them. - - r- - In this Vigefitt: is litetSllktiue'tfiat '.0 .. -. they : that be:A/11 4 °10 i iieed 'net i . pliyeiciati r ibut-tthey-Ftliitz.nre 1 aole."=. Nit thetti-itell*** ivinegnv l t 1 -enfit-iclii.;Ai 'festival =who neettefiftad I MO = gam ME 11111 1 - '4 I, t ME IN ME