SINGLE 'COPIES; } VOLUME L- ,NUMBER. 34. THE POTTER JOURNAL, rgausur.D ETHRY THURSDAY MORNING, BY Thos. S. Chase, To whom all Letters and Communications should be addressed, to secure attention. Teems--Invarieibly In Advance : $1,25 per. Annum. smusuatiuutrnsunintsmumnion:imanginurne Terms of Advertising. I Square [lO Hues] 1 insertion, - - it IS .3 41 -r?.anh subsetinent insertionless than 13, . Square three mouths, " six " " nine " --- - - - " one ' year, fade tad fltaro work, per sq., 3 ins. 3' 00 re;very subsequent insertion, :. --- - - 50 . Column six moutlis, :-. . 18 00 A. A. " " a 10 00 II 41 11 700 1 ~, per year. 30 00 1/ ' 16 00 Double-column, display-0, per annum 65 00 " " six months, 3 00 aa three " 10 00 fl " • one month, 600 - 4 EI 41 per square of 10 tiete3, each insertion under 4, . 1 00 Tarts of columns will be inserted at the same EIM Administrator's orExecutor's Notice, 200 Auditor's Notices, each, 1 50 S'ueriff's Sales, per tract, 1 50 . 341arriage.Notices, each, 1 00 Pirorce Notices, each, 1 50 ,Administrator's Sales, per square for 4 - insertions, • BaSIDE:S3 or Professional Cards, earl], not exceding 8 lines, per year, - - 500 Special and Editorial Notices, per line, 10 a i—.lll transient advertisements must be paid in advance, and no notice will be ,tal:ou of advertisements from a distance, unli , Ss they are accompanied by tit° tummy or satisfactory reference. itsiltl'ss Car b 5. - JOHN S. MANN, ATTORNEY AND COVNSELLOR AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa,., will attend the srveral Courts in Potter and Counties, All basincgs entrusted in his care will recefte prompt attention. Office on Main et., appo site the Courthouse. 10:1 • F. W. KNOX, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will regularly attend the. Courts in Po:ter and the adjoining Counties. 10:1 ARTHUR G I OLMSTED, ATTORNEY COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Cowler3port, Pa., will attend to busines, entrusted to his care, with promptues and fidelity. Office in Temperance Block, sts.c -(lnd door, Main St. ISAAC BENSON ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., Will attend to all business entrusted to him, with tare and pro:nptness. Utiice corner of W'zst hml Third sts. 10:1 -L. P. WILLISTON, 4TTOItNEY AT LAW, Wellsboro', Tioga Ps., will attend the Courts in Potter and .31'Kean. Counties. 9:13 R. W. BE TON, SUSVEYOR AND CONVEYANCER, Ray- Mond P. 0.; (Allcgarty Tp.,) Potter Co., Pam w•ill attend to all ousin.ess in his line, withcare and dispatch. • - ,t3 , Ws E KING, SURVEYOR, DRAFTSMAN AND CONVEY ANCER, Smetliport, 11'Kean 1..!0., Pa., a ill • attend to busines for non-resident land holders, upon reasonable terms. Refeten- Ct.:: given if required. 11. S.—Maps of all part of th 2 County made to ordpr. 9:13 0. T. ELLISON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, Coudersport, Pa., respectfully informs the citizens of the vil laze and vicinity that be will promply re spond to!all calls for Kofessional services. Alice on Main st., in LaiNiug 'formerly oc•- . eupied by C. W. Ellis, Esq. 9:22 C/01.LLNS 211111'11. SMITH & JONES, DEALERS IN DRUGS, MEDICINES. PAINTS, Oita, faticy Articles, Stationery, br,y Goods . Grtieeres, Main st., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1 D. E. OLMSTED, P/ALER IN 'DRY GOODS, BEADY-MADE Clothing. Crockery,-Groceritts, &c., Main st., 'oaderspOrt, Pa. 10:1 M, W. MANN,. PALES. IN' BOOKS kSTATIONF4RT, MAG - RZNES and Music, N. W. corner of Main wad Third fits., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1', R: IL ITAIIRLNGTON, -- jziv - ELLgN Cpudarsport, Pa., haying engag ed a wiridFqr in §chusruaker 4 Jacktion's iStora will ea : iry pd the Watch nd Jewelry business there. • 4 fins assortmierit of Jeri:- elry constantly on hand. Watches add Jewelry carefully repaired, in the - best style, en the shortest notice—all wOrk warranted, .D:34 11CCU OL3ISTED, • (acccasson TO :AMES w. smirn,) !MILER IN STOVES, TIN & PILL'ET IRON WARE, Main at., nearly opposite the Cpurt Rouse, CoUdersilort, Pa. Tin and ,Sheet Iron Ware made to order, in good style, on short notice.. 10:1 COUDERSPORT HOTEL, A. F. GLASSHIRE, Proprietor, Corner of Main and Second Streets, Coudersport, Pot ter Co., Pa. - 9:44 ALI.EGANY HOUSE, M: : MILLS, Proprietor, Colesburg Pow', Co.; Pn., seven miles north of Cou dersport, till the Wellastlie Flood. - 9;44 gjEtrtt6 grtstrg. TIII.I - . . zx o. noLks.i. Yaw; by the Paphlan Queen; Who 'loaves the breast of sweet sixteen— By every name I cut on bark Before my morning star greW dark— By Hymen's' torch,-by Cupid's dart— By all that thrills tho beating heart— The bright black eye, I cannot choose between the , two. 50 , - - - $1 50 25 50 4 00 5 50 . . had a vision taMy divaiMs'; - I saw a reef or twenty heanis •, From every hesul a trope was-hung; In every rope a lover sivuug:4" I asked the hill of 6 - cry eye. That bade each luckless laver die, Ten livid lips said hetive'nly plus, And ten accused the darker hue. ; I asked the matron which ',she deemed With fairest light of howdy beamed; She answered, some thought both were fair; Give her blue eve and golden hair; ' I might have liked Ver jtulgnient well, flat as she : spoke she rung. the bell, And all her giris, nor small nor few: Came marching in—their eyes were blue. I asked a maiden; beck she Piing The locks that:round her forehead hung,. And tamed her eye, a glorious one, Br'ght as a diamond in the sun, On me, until beneath ire reys I felt as if my hair would blaze; She Eked all eyes but eyes of green ; She looked at rac—what could she mean? 6 00 1 50 lb ! many lids - lore worlistbetween, Nor' heeds the coloring of his F.creen ; And when his random arrowßtly, The ri.slim falls but knows tint why I Gazp not upon his.shitsld of jet, T4ersliaft upon the string is set; Loo,t not beneath its azure veil, Though every limli were cased in mail. Well both might make a malty: break The chain that bound him to the steak; And both, with but a single ray, Can malt our very heart away; And both, when Itlunetd, harcil seem To stir the scales, or rock the beam; But that is dearest all the while That wars f,,r us the sweetest smile SMILIEB l'o2t 110,31 E. EN T. E. Artriim " Taite that himpe with you, dear,". said Mrs. Lewis, bertuanner half smiling, half s.n-iotts. "Take what home, Caddy ? And Mr. Lewis turned towards his with curiously. Now, Mrs. Lewis had spoken from the moment's impulse, and already partly re m-ow:A her remark. " Take what home ?" repeated her hur. hand. "I don't nt.derstand you." .4 That smiling race you turned , upon Mr. Edwards, -when you answered his question just . novi." Mr. Lewis .slivl4ly averted his bead, and walked on in silence. They bad call ed in at the store of Mr. Edwards to pur chase a few articles, and were now on their way home. There. was no smile on the face of Mr. Lewis now, but a very grave expresson instead—grave almost to sternness. The words of hi 4 wife had taken him altogether by surprise ; and al though spoken lightly, had jarred upon his cars, The truth was, Mr. Lewis, like a great many other men who have their own busi ness cares and trcublcs, was in the habit of bringing home a sober, and tod often clouded face. It was in Nain - that his wife and children looked into ihis face for sunshine, or listeved to his words for tones of cheerfuliess. " Take that home with you, dear." Mrs.' Lewis was already repenting this sugges tion, made on the moment's impulse. Her 'husband was sensitive to a fault. He I could not bear even an implied censure' from his.wife. And so she had learned to be very guarded in this particular. "Take that home with you; dear.: Ah me ! I wish the words had.nOt been said.{ There will be darker clouds now, and gracious knows they were dark enough' before I Why can't Mr, Lewis leave his' cares and business .behind .him, and let I me see the old, pleasant, smiling face! again. I thought this morning that he had forgotten haw to smile; but see that ' he can smile if he tries, 4h !, Why don't he try at home ?" So Mrs. Lewis talked to hers' elf, as she moved along by I,lm side of her husband,' who had not spoken a word since her-re dply, to his query, " Take what home?" ock after block was passed, and street after street crossed, aud, still there was silence between them, "Of course," said Mrs, Lewis, speak ing in her thoughts; " of course he is of- 1 fended. He won't, bear a word from me. I might have known,: beforehand, '''that talking out in this way would;only . make ' things worse, (?h, dear, I'm ;getting out of all heart !" ' • "What then,Caddy ?"- . Mrs. Lewis amost started at the sound of her husband's voice, breaking, unei, peetedly, upon her ear, in a softened tone. " What then ?" he repeated; turning to wards her, and looking down into her shyly upturned face. ! MEMM! ; llebotewa fo ?kiNipits of 1.1.4.: "befilochap, flit Disieiiiiimiiom of iljo'rplifg, igta Web's. I= IEI tftrti tli. COUDERSPORT, ,POTTER COUNTY ! PA.i THURSDAY, *ARCH 41 1 1858. "It would send warmth and radiance through the *bole }anise," said Mrs. Lew is, her tones all a tremble with feeling. " You:think So ?" "I knbw so ! Only try eit, dear, for this one s evening." "It isn't so easy a thine to put an a smiling 'face ; Caddy, when thought is op pressed With care." "It didn't seem to require much effort just now," said Mrs. Lewis, glancirg up at her husband, with something of arch ness in her leek. . Again a shadow dropped down on The "face of Mr. Lewis; which . was again part ly turned away—and' again they walked on in silence. "Heis so seusitiVe I" Mrs. Lewis said to herself, the shadow of her husband's face darkening over her own. I have to be as careful of my words as if speaking to a spoiled child. No, it did not require much effort on the part of Mr. Lewis to smile, as he passed a few words lightly, with Mr. Edwards. The remark of his wife had not really dis pleased him; it had only set him to think ing. After remaining gravely silent, be cause he Was undergoing a brief self-ex amination. Mr. Lewis said— " You thought the smile given to Mr. Edwards came easily enough ?" " It did not seem to require an effort," replied Mrs. "Lewis. " No, not much effort was required," said Mr. Lewis. His tones were slightly depressed. " But this must be taken in to the account; my mind was in a certain state of excitement or activity that re pressed sober feelings, and made staining au easy 'thing. So we smile and are gay in company, at coSt . of a little effort, be cause all arc sniiiing and gay, and -‘7(.! feel the CO:1:11100 sphere of exc.:lenient. How different it often is when we are. alone, I need not say. You, Caddy, are guilty of the sober •face at home as well as your husband." Mr. Lewis. spoke with a ten der reproof in Ids voice. "But the sober face is caught from yours oftener than you Imagine, my hus band, replied Mrs. Lewis. "Are you certain of that, Caddy ?" "Very pertain. You make the sunlight and shadOW of our home. Smile upon us; give us cheerful words; enter into our feelings and interests, and there will be no brighter home in all the land. A shad ow on your countenance is a veil for my heart; and the - same is true as respects our chi!dreu. Our pulsea strike too near ly in union, not to be disturbed when yours has lost its even beat." Again Mr. Lewis walked on in silence, his face partly averted, and again his wife began to fear - she had spoken too freely. But he wen dispelled thb,imptession, for he said, " I am glad, Caddy, that you have spo ken thus plainly. I only wish that you had done so before. I see how it is. My, snileg have been for the outside world— the world that neither loved nor reo•ardec.l me—and my clouded brow for the dear ones at home, for whoM thought and.care arc ever living activities." Mr. and Mrs:Lewis were. now at their own door, where they `paused a moment, and then went in. Instantly, on passing the threshold, Mr. Leivis.feit the pressured upon him of his usual state. The hue ofi his feelings began to change.- The cheer,' ful, interested exterior Id put on for thosel _he met in businessintercourse, began rap-I idly to ehan .. ;-e, and a sober hue to succeed. Like most business men, his *desire for profitable results was even far in advance of the slow evolutions of trade; and his daily history was a history of disappoint ments, iu souse measure dependent upon his restless anticipations. Ile was• not as willing to work and to wait as he should be; and, like many of his class, neglected the pearls that lay here and there along his life path, because they were inferior in value to these he hoped to find just a little way in advance. The consequence was, that when the day's business excite ment was over, his mind fell into a brood ing state, and lingering over its disap- 1 pointnients, or looked forward with fail-1 mg hope in the future, for hope, in many( things, has. been long:deferred. And so' be rarely had smiles for his home. . " Take that Home with you, dear, whis pered Mrs. Lewis, as - they moved along] the pa.sage, and before they. joined the! family. ! She had :in instinctive conscious.l us that her husband was in danger of relapsing into his usual state. The warning was justin time. " Thank you for the words," said he, "I will _not forget them." And he did not; but at once rallied himself, and to the glad surprise of • jen ny, Will and Mary, met them:with a new face, covered with fatherly smiles; and with pleasant questions, in pleasant tones, of their day's employments. The feelings of children move in quick transitions.l They had not expo led a -greeting like this; but the response was instant, Lit, Jenzley 'climbed into her father's arms. Will Will came and stood by his chairan'Swer ing in lively: tones, his questions, while Mary, order by a few years than the rest, leaned against ter father's shoulder, and . . laid her white hand softly upon his head, smoothing backlit:3' dark hair, justShofr imr.a little frost, from his broad !manly n temples. -• ,- ..i A pleasant group was this - fur the eyes of Mrs.'LeWis, as she came forth, from her chamber to the sitting room, where she had gone to lay off her bonnet andshawl, and change her dross. Well did her hus band Understand the meaning louk she gave Min,* and warmly did her heart res pond[. to the mule he threW back upon her. " VlTordsititly spoken are like-apples of gold in rkareS-of'silver, l- said Mr. Lew ti,.speaking to her as she:eat:le in. • . " What do 3:ou iiip:iii by that ?" asked glary, lonking curiously into her father's face. `. i •-_ , . • ".3.lotheri understands," said Mr. Lew is, smiling tenderly upon his wife. • " S:3lnetli c rg pleasant must have 'hap pened," sal Mary. .. 1 • " amid:lung 'pleasant? ! Why do you say that ?" sked Mr. ti.tvv,is. "You and motherlook ,so happy;' -an swered the child. . _ . . .. ; . . . " And ye have cause to be happy," an swered. the father, as he drew his arm tightly around her, " in haYingthiee such good children." ; Marylaid; her cheek en; his, and whis pered: " If you . are smiling and happy, dear I father, home will be like heaven ." Mr. Lewis kissed her, but did, not re-1 ply. lie felt a rebuke in her words. But j the rebuke did not throw a chill over his ; feelings: it only gave a new strength to ' his purposes. . " Don't distribute all-your smiles. Keep a few of the warmest and brightest forj home,", said Mrs. Lewis,, as she parted with her husband on the next morning. ; He kissed her, but' did not promise.' The smiles were kept, however, and eve-; ning saw them; though not for the ,. out-1 side world. Other smiles,, and the same ' happy home. And was not Mr. Lewis al happier man? Of course he was. And so would all inen be, if they ,would tall a m home with em the illing aspect they so often exhi it as they tuft their fellow men in busin i ess intercourse; or exchange words in passing coiii Om en ts. Take your scales and cheerful words home with you, husbands, fathers, and. brotherS. Your 1 hearts are cold and dark without them. ,For the Potter J.;urnal SUORT SA.YINGS. There are Many complaints of the great number of phices where ardent spirits are sold. What occasions the supply ? The demand. Were there no BUYERS there would be no sELLERS. "I like a g ood glass of liquor,?' says one. What does he mean ? Why one that will do the• most speedy execution: l l The bestlway to encourage sobriety is toff set the example. Your bill lot. spirits.was large last year. Add to it one hundred per cent for loss of time, bad bargains; accidents &c.; and then calculate 'the amount. Ardent spirits were formerly plaqed'up on the shelves Id the apothecary and sold , by the dreclun, which was considered a dose. Could Our forefathers vier our dram-shops, wliata strange idea they , would have of the hej lthof this generation It is reason which distinnuishes man. from the brute. What madness and fol ly, then, to indulge in the use of. that which .destroyreason, and abolishes the most important distinction between men and the beasts that perish. • . The most appropriate motto for a-spirit retailer's sign i4;` 6 .l3F.GoAns / MADE HERE." If a young ;woman wishes. to destroy herself, let herivred a man who frequents the tavern and the grog-shop. . - As well might the butcher cry, at, every stroke of his . knife, i‘ Live," as for' one man to .drink to the It'alth of another when in the very act 'ef destroying it. Cannot friends meet without throwing fire down each othersth+tal Isit:friendship to ri assisn killingraeli other 2 . -- Ardent spirit.l as a drink, like the needle to the pole, always points !the Prison, the: asylum, the fpoor house and the grave yard. i , • , A glass or. two. it 'is said will do- no harm; neither will the fluttering of a moth around the flame of a . eandle. But, alas - '. how_few of eitht escape uuburrit If all drunkards were once MODERATE drinkers, what Security has any moderate, drinker that he 'shall not became a drunk -I. ' I ard,. I • • L. L.- - —•-- • - To KNIT HEnns.- - --To knit the heels of, socks double, spithat.they may last twide as long as other Wise,. skip .every alternate stitett.on. the. wreng side,. and knitlall on the, right. Thisi'will make -it double, like that of the double plj•toOla carpet. • • - . •- I 1 gstltrto TRUT ,vs LIES. - [We find- iu -an 'article entiled ."The i Autocrat of. the Breakfast-Table, or "every Man his own -BoSwell," ine the - Ailantie ifoiltHy for Miirch, the foll Owing beanti-1 ful illustration of the. effects 9f habit; • .example and education upon the minds ofi children. worth a c_areful;red-I by parentsteaehers and ehildret4 - - • L, 13p. JOUICCAL. '—Listen, Ben j amin Franklin'''. "this islfOr you, andkmeli Others of tender as as you may tel F-1 it, - •/I "When we are as yet', small children,' before the time when / these two 1 grrwu ladies ofter,u the choice 'of flereu les, there etnts. to us a youthful. angel, holding in his right han,d cubes lino dieh, and in. his left splieres,likemarbleS. each cubes are of sta444 ivory, and en each is written in letters :4)f gold--,-Titilli.-1 The spheres are Veined and. streaked and spotted beueatli,/With• a dark crimson flush above, where the light falfion them, and iu a certain i a.4p6t you eau make out upon every one, of them the three letters L, I, B. The child to whom, th 4 are offered very prebably clutches - 'at both. The spheres are the, most convenient !things in the World ; they roll with the !least possible impulse just Where' the' child would have them. The cubes will not / roll at all ; the'y have a great talent for standing still, alid always keep right side up. But verkscron the young phi losopher finds that things that roll so ea- Icily are very 4t to roll into the wrong ' corner, and getout of the way When he Imost wants the ii, while he always knows j where to find th others r whiell stay where they are left. Thus he learns—thus we learn—to drop the streaked and speckled 'globes of fidsehood and to hold fast the white angular blifeks . of troth. But then comes Timidity and after her Good-na ture, and last of all Polite-behavior, all insisting that truth must roll or nobody can do anyldng lwith it; and so thel first with her coarse rasp, and the second with her broad .file, and the third with her 'silken sleeve, doi so round off and smooth and polish, the snow-white cubes of truth, that, when they have got a little dingy by use, it becouies.frard to tell them from, the rolling spherleS of falsehood - , "The schoolmistress was polite enough to say that she Was pleased with this, and that she would 'weed it to her little flock, the nest. day. But she. should tell the children, she said, that there were bit er, reasons for truth j than could be found in mere. experience' of its. convenience and the inconvenience of lying "Yes,—l education- always begins through the senses,and:works up to the idea of ab.tolute right• and wrong. The first thing the child has to learn about this matter is, that lying is uuprof itable,—afterwards, that it is against the peace and dignity of the universe." • - , S3IALL TALK.;;,---But of all the expedi ents to make the heart lean, the brain stanzy, and, to thin life down into the con- I • . sistency of a'cambrick kerchief, the most, successful is the little talk and tattle! which; in-sonic . Charmed circles, is eon:- I teously styled conversation. - How hu man beings can :live , pu such meagre fare! —how continue'existence in such a Earn- inc of topics and on such a short allow once of senseis a great question, if Phi-I losophy could only search_it out, _illl we know is, that such men and women i there are, who will:go on from fifteen to Ifourscore, and never a, hint on their tomb stones, that they died at last of consumption. re the head and marasmus of the heart :II The whole universe of God, spreading ) out its splendors and -terrors, pleading for t their attention. and they wonder "where; I MrS. Somebody got.that divine ribbon to! !her bonnet ? ' , - The, Whole world 'cfi lit-I I crature, through its- thousand trumps ofi Lfitnte, adjuring !them to regard its gat :l inlered stores of emotion and thought, and i I they think, "It's i high time, if John in-I When, I" tend4 to Sarah, for him to pop 'the `question ' to be sure, this frip , f pery is spiced with a little envy and Mal- 1 lice and_ prebares Its 'small dishes of scan ' dal nice bits of,detraction, it becomes,) I endowed with a-sli g ht venomous vitality, win -- _ch dogs prettyl P well, in the absence of soul, to carry on the-machinery of living, if not the reality Jot life.--LE. P. -Whipple. A MOTHER'S 1,04E. 1 411 7 - SWIM . Spring freshet, a river widely washed . its shores and rent away , a bough whereon 'a bird had built a cottage for her summer hopes. Down the white and leg stream, drifted the green branch. with its wicker cup of unfledged song; and fluttering , beside as it: Went, the mother - bir,d. :U3- I heeding the roaring ricer, on she kept,' : cries of agony and fear - piercin , i;the pauses of, the storm. Bow like, the lope of' the old:rash ioned inother,*WlM follotVed the child'she,had plucked from her; hart, all rkVer the - . world. Swept away by passion, that might be, it Mat, tered not; bearing away with, him,- the ,frag wents of the ahattered: roof-tree. though, he did; yet that mother! Was with him,' a Roth through: all his life, and &Rachel at his death. ...Larearthe. - • . • 'I c~NTS i FO , I 5.4115 - PEP - ANNITE. I LOW NECIC.Fp Ditssus.--The Of the Honesdale Dentocrgt is. rather s(3 ; vere on tuts style ex areas. thu! foll4winifrout his last - issue: "By 'an old - Pennsylvania oidinaneC, wasknado a penal offence for any famale - who' was over tea years'of age, and could afford to purchase suitable gasmen& ' to viewa low necked dress. By way ofdis. . tindtion hoWeier :th e Wonian bring-proof. could that ;he was a dePraved char- , acter, : fine , the waS remitted. -How.this , ' times anti fashions ichange." Vre area little iiclined to believe t f.' if the old ordinance wasirevived, a iaat: amount of mortification* to-fathers; broth. : , ors land husbands; would be lirevented7 now r .a-days. Real 'as well as false eliariits; to llte attractive should be 'hidden, - ,uet 'exposed . , TOB.A.cco INJurexcirrs.—A writer (Df- Hohnes, wo bi.s.lietre,) in. the-Atlantic': Morithly - for Aldrch, thus speaks of tivi' effects of Tobacco.. , It•is wholesontontl- CMS "I am' not unacquainted with that fits; iforM, spiral-wound bundle , of 'chopped: steps and iucouilius, tibles, , l the cigar; so called, of the shoPs,—which 6 "draw' asks , the suction 'owesof a nursling in..'flint;ercules, flint; Hercules, an to relish, the leathery palate Of an old Si onus. I fit) not advise you, .yonag, pan, even . if my illustration. strikes your fancy, to consecrate the flew- , er of your life to painting :the bowl ora . . pipe, for, let me a sure. you,- the stain of a reveric-brcedin narcotic may strike deeper than youlink . for. I have seen. t tile :.•:eon leaf of early promise grow. brows before its time under such Nieotion regi; men, and thouub 1 the cambered meer schaum was dearly) bought at the east' of a brain enfeebled a d a will enslaved." ANIMALS IN INTElL—Fanners do not Sufficiently su -diiide their yards:in winter. Large a d small animals are turned in promise ' onsly together, and,, as every farmer kn ws, the large ones .arti very' ferocious and domineering towards those 'much—infer' , areful:not to , , provae the carat of such as are nearly equal. Turn thos •together which are of similar size, and t ey will -be more quiet all viand. Calves renerally are too much, neglected, and co- e out poor and puny in - SPring. Ago d manager has. con strocied a spacious t:tillef/r calves in one of hil sheds, moder tely lighted, and %roll sheltered from all urrents of wind. This apartment is kopt c can, the calves fed on, good ihay, and sup, lied, with "good water.„ They, present a verY different appeartee . from : other calves in spring.—Tno4er's• - • Annifeel Register. , - LIFE.—The nier lapse of Sears iis . yrot life. ',' To ' eat, r drionL and Sleep; to):ie - ex.'-' posed to darkness ad light, to pacearound in the mill of habit and turn- the.inill. of wealo., to - make re on . our' book-keeper, and Nought an iinileinent - of.tradtlii.§' is not life. In all his but a poor freetion' of the uneouseionshess' of . huicanity is -. awakened, and the 6anciities still sinuibee which make it worth - While to be.' itriptil edge,l truth, - beauty lore, goodness' l laith, aloneleran give vitality to the ruechanioiam'_ of existence; the l..ngh of mirth - ',Which , vibrates through th heart, the tearwhicli: freshens the dry wtes within, thenitisia'• that hrik , s childh od back, - the Prayer, ' that calls - 'the future near;thideath Which startles us with z 'story, the hard Ship. which forces is to trunk, the :anxiety -. that ends in being. Chabiti'rk:' - - : , F, SdUNDING BC;AADEL, ;dors who hive; never.. 1 h e t aumuc... In a m e - ceiling, directly over:, without the sight the old nieeting_4house-,' Into-that i'eaerable steeple, with a,;poreli square bannister-: lead pulpit---into that en, moody oldrtalier- ary, in seeming ;grief. sin its day-and, gen,-. 1 , -ysu: may Mater, sounding board "aite.Statei ;-six leers, and i neyet 'a minister's_ head,l as d lies : feared.-00, . - T.IIF. LAST 424 T e —Those of our r , . seen. sounding-by inshieuse- from thi the pulpit, will die less they soon visit in Canepton, X. H. old edifice, without on each end, with pews l and lofty-hons rustyi waatlicr-a , . nacle4 standing soli l I that 411 -itE associat ! I eratiOn ate no me gaze upon theLoul hangipg in-the G has hung- for, flit •. I6s fallen upon . I - many; a childish: Id gregrzrion Journr. The best pa nf human qualitieS:nrei the tenderness and d.liesiey of feeling. 41 litU matters, the desire to soothe and pleato.Oth,,, ;,. „ ers - the minutiae of social 'virtues: Some iid iettle these fethinine attribntes, which out oilmany: men's natures; ,butliniveltn wa the brave, the intelfecittali the eloquent., 009.. , . sess these gentle qualities; the .hraggur,c;thet weak,inever BenevOlence and. feeling enneT . „. bie the'most trifling ne:tions:' • have' heard Maity'iotren* of their hnstiands' neileet of hetine•i!kipocilf; ! '"7 ful of heney will'keep,more ,bees in ttie Also ••:. than ten of vinegan::, - 'On Friday evening last; a: iTotho:. dist- olUireh in . Cineinputy- :was detroyed. by ar explosion of :Several ierforts vote Injured. -••-• . , Mal mm