SINGLE COPIES, } VOLUME X.- -NUDIBER. 37. THE POTTER 'JOURNAL, ETBLISIIED EVERY TIIERSO&Y MOUSING, EV • 'rhos. S. Chase, To whom all Letters and Communications should be addressed, to secure atteution. Terms--Invariably-in Advauee: sl,2s . per Annum. 4IIIRIIIMISUMUMUMUMUUIIIIIIIU mnwuuutu Terms or Advertising. a Square [lO lines] 1 itsertiuu, - ♦4 44 3 44 Each subsequeurinsertioulesstlaau 13, Square three muuthal, 11 " six " • 400 a gi nine " --- 550 1 " one year, COU Mile and figure work, per sq., 3 ins. 3 00 .Every subsequept insertion, 50 Z Column six utont!ta, 18 00 1 .64 -64 " 10 00 „ 64 66 SI 7 01.) a ~, - per.year. ----- ;- 7 - 30 00 A 6l 14 ~ 16 00 tousle-coluniu, displayed, per annum V) 00 • six months, 3 00 16 ' 66 three " 16 OU ic ti one month; 600 it 44 per square .of 10 lines; each insertion under 4, 100 _Part.: of columns will be inserted at the same Administrator's or Executor's Notice, 2On Auditor's Notices, each, 1 50 Sheriff's Saks, per tract, 1 50 Marriage Notices, each, • 1 Ou Divorce Notices, each, 1 50 Admiuistrator's Sales, por square for 4 insertions, Business or Professional Cards, each, not Equeding 8 lines. per year, - Special and Editorial Notices, per line, ft - I°'-111 transient advertisements' mast be Paid in advance. and nu notice will be taken of advertisements from a distance, unless they are accompanied by the money or satisfactory reference. Ciuts. 6.l32Mumusmummuusassunsmnu ttttttttttttttt muumuus:sus' JOHN S. 3IANN, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Coudersport, Pa., will attend the several Courts in Potter and Al'Kean Counties. All business entrusted in his -care will receive prompt attention. Office on Main st., appo site the Court House. lu:1 F. W. KNOX, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will regularly attend the Courts in Potter and the adjoining Counties. 10:1 71 BNB. MSTED Ult G. OL, ntEs xif erarL -ATTORNEY S COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will.attend to all business entrusted to his care, with promptnes and Office it, Temperance Block, sec ond floor, Main St. ISAAC BENSUS ATTORNEY AT LAw. Coudersport, Pa., will attend to all business entrusted to him, with care and promptness. (Ake earner of West and Third sts, 10:1 14. P. WII4I4ISTON, ATTOIINEY . AT LAW, Welisburtf, Tioga Co., Pa., will attend the Courts in Potter and WKeau Counties. it, W. BENTO.X, SCSVEYOP. AXI) CONVEYANCER, Ray- Mond N. 0., (Allegaoy Tp..) Potter Co., will attend to all business in his line ; with care and dispatch. AV. K. KING, SURVEYOR, DRAFTSMAN AND CONVEY ANCER, Sraethpilrt, M'Kenn. Co., r 24, will attend to businessfur nun-resideut land holders, upon rea-unable terms. Referen ces given if required. I'. B.—Mrips of any part of the County made to order. 9:13 0. T. ELLISO.N, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, Coudersport, Pa., respectfully , informs the citizens of the vil lage and riciniq that he will promply re ; spond to.all calls for professional services. Office on Maio st., in building formerly (lc 'Cupied by C. W. lisq. 9:.92 I=! SMITH & JONES, DEALERS IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, Oils, Fancy Articles, Statioucry, Dry Goods, - Groceries, Sc., Main st., Coudersport, I'a. 10:1 D. E. OLMSTED, DEALER DRY GOODS, READY-MADE Clothing. Crockery, Groceries, &c., Main st., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1 M. W. MANN, • DEALER IN BOORS A: STATIONERY, MAG AZINES and Music, N. W. corner of Main r.ad Third sts., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1 . IM, HARRINGTON, JEWELLER., Coudersport, Pa., having engag ed a window in Sehoomaker A; Jackson's Store will ealry on the Watch and Jewelry business there. A tine assortment of Jew elry constantly on band, Watches and ' Jewelry carefully repaired, in the best style, t o g the shortest notice—all work warranted. it:34 lIENItY J. OLMSTED, (UCCESSOff To JAMES W. SMITII,) DEALER IN ST(.111; TIN S SHEET IRON WARE, Main st., nearly opposite the Court House, Coudersport, Va. Tin and Sheet Iron Ware made to order, in good style, , ou Ftlort notice. Ina COUDERSPORT HOTEL, D. F , GLASSMIILE, Proprietor, Corner of !lain and Second Streets, Coudersport, Pot ter Co., Pa. 9:44 A.I4T4EGASY HOUSE, SAMUEL, Froprietor, Colesburg Potter Co., Pa„ covet} Voiles north of Cou dersport, ea the Wellsville 14lad. 5:44 ~ ... . 0 . . . . ' •••4 z .. ... ..r ~. of r 7.........i. ' t \ 1 , dl ikz l •- v - o ,- JO & • i - 110 • $ . . / . . , . . i - grigiOt I,of.t.iis. [Below we give the second rithruetie effort of little Eva, and regret that we have nut time and room to point out, fur her :benefit, ,some of its errors ; but we are compelled to place it before our readerS with a few of its most glaring faults' hastil:r modified.—Em] for the Potter Journal., THE ORACLE. . 50 - - $1 5U LOSS' on the Pine Tree's moss-:grown feet, I sat, one pleas4nt summer day: I leaned against his lP•east, and cried, "My joy bath parsed away " I've left the dreary cot below, " To sit Mid muse at thy 'brown feet ; To hear thy loving' ; voice, and learn If Life, indeed, is sweet. • "The hills stand bhthed in morning light, Below. in peaceithe valley sleeps, While, brooding:oVer tranquilly, " Its watch a shadow keeps. "I am alone; the blab sky bends, la silence, over leaf and tree ; The flowers smile Upward to its face, But that.is nought to nie— "l am alone; the green mends watch The light cloudgitloating by ; The wild wind sings amid the trees, But where, in life, am 1?" " Alt: child !"—the' °Mete replied— . "Who walkest blindly on thy way, Praying that o'er thy path may fall One blessed gleam of day, And see'st not that the sky above Is lit with glory evermore And where thy weary feet move slow, God's angels tread before : "Thou dreamest of the pillar'd fire, And vet forgetest that, as well, - Across the desert's burning sand The - Cooling shadow fell. "As to the wither'd autumn leaves Thu blossoms of the summer cling, With blessings from thy faded past Shall the rich harvest spring." The brooding hash of earth and sky The presence.of the spirit told, And west the sunset shone as gloWed The burning bush of old. ME 5 00 10 Baptized with silence, still and white, The blossoms of the forest Shone; The Hymn of Nature an>wered me— stood no more alone.. Mitten 15. 148. Eva For the Putter Journal A WEEK IN LOUIS. It snowed and bleW and sleted until the earth was all glazed over, and--all the I commonest trees and bushes were flashing with diamonds, and anybody could skate along the high road to the railroad station, where I. wlio had no Skates nor skill iu sliding, brought mySelf to, after a slippery walk one bright February morning. waited and waited, as I had done the day ; before, for the train that had run off the track two days before, but which the offi cials insisted would certainly come along by and by. And along towards night it did come poking along pith au engine in such adie away condition that it had been losing six hours in forty miles for want of ability to get up steam. I went to the next station and tried there to do some business but failed and waited for the three o'clock passenger train from Cincinnati to ; St, Louis, It came at five, and then I proved to' be a freight train, as the Ex press was demolished. — At length we were ingloriously dragged to the kink of the Father of waters at the end of a slow; !Freight, .and landed. No Omnibus oil baggage wagon meets the, freight, so we had to lcavo our baggage, and crossing! the ferry, find our way to a hotel the best way we could.. By an industrious system, of interrogation I found the city Hotel to I ! which I had been directed, and went to ; bed and waited until day light to set out I on the several expeditious 1 had laid out. Next morning my first raid was on the. !Post Office. fasked several clerks for letters but could'nt find any,- I followed the Directions of the Directory to find Mr. M's. office and oould'ut find him, as he ! had moved away. My letters having been ; directed to his care, I was in a " pickle." I Flowerer, I had another errand for a lady in Illinois, and set out according to agreement, in search of her mother, from whom she could get no letters although she wrote every week. I observed that the hotel was on 3rd street, and the Post Office on 2nd street; so I concluded that like Philadelphia, the streets were num ' beredwestward, beginning from the river, and with this guess for a guide I started for Bth street. I folloWed Market past (the Musenm, (which I dant enter, the' I strongly tempted), and whp I arriveit at Bth street, 3 / 4 had no idea which way to ;-turn, so I stood there and asked the first woman who came along, which way to go Ito find Franklin Arcnue. ..It lay north !ward, and to time north I turned, and went across a good many streets until I found the yight one and - began to count the num bers, but found the houses numbered after I a fashion of 'their own, the. numbers on one side bearing neither relation nor. pro.; portion to those on; the other, and as I was on the wrong Side, of the street, I went farther than necessary before I dis- M=!! ~ . (yotea to tip of Dila'j)cipoeNie9, Ito tig O . : I ;:da4ftl,l',a aid ifell),s-, COUDERSPORT, POTTER COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, APRIL ,1 1 . 1858. , covered the unique labelling adopted on Bth ;street. I fOund the house at last,. and the lady to whom her daughter's name. was a ready pairsport. Here again I learn ed wore of the..beauties of, that delectable " - circumlocution office" on 2nd St latly.testified that not more than one let- ter in five which she had posted this Win ter had ever reached those to whom they were directed, and as for those. sent her she could'ut get them at all, and had been for two mouths full of anxiety concerning the daughter in Illinois, from whom she heard nothing until I came. There is a model system for you! Others how ever say that they have no:trouble, but another lady who had been absent six weeks told ine,that not one of her letters home during that period had ever reached her family, though they inquired almost daily. A member of my new friend's fam ily hunted up a Good Templar who put me on the track to -find my letters, as I pocketed. my present disappointment and with a vetbal direction I started out to call on everybody's AUNT FAN :sir. I was told to take an omnibus, but I had no notion of entering that animated cooper's shop, to run the risk of being punched on both sides by the unmannerly hoops of the ladies, so I used natures lo comotive aparatus, and walked a mile and a half up Broadway, as the north end of 3rd street is called. Here I followed the untranslatable directions I had received and found the home of the transplanted Buckeye poetess, authoress, and oratress, on a swell of land overlookin! , the " Mound son of this pretty sobriquet whicla found on various Bakeries, Breweries, Groceries and Mechanics shops through the town. The name '‘vas bestowed in honor of cer- taiu sightly bluffs . or eminences which have been dug down to fill ponds and sink-holes with, so that the really pretty natural advantages for beauty and health are nll sacrificed to the carrying out of the dead level, Philadelphia chequer-board pattern, which is the plan of most western cities. A very convenient and economi cal plan too, but as there is needed in every city, parks and open grounds for breathing places, x‘Flty did'nt they leave the ponds and mounds for a picturesque ' , common" like that in Boston ? A " mound city" without any mounds is rather a flat affair. The town is not built ;up city-wise as far as Mr\ GAGE'S villa-like residence, but the houses are scattered about, village fashion, here and there as it happens, on ttreets which are laid out, but not made yet. A drive to town takes one past mul titudes of " sink-holes" which it was sug- vested, wore the places where the missing mounds had been pulled up by the roots. They hear an unromantic resemblance to old. cellars partly filled up. Fissures thro' the limestone foundations of the city and country here, have allowed the water from above through the course of ages, to filter through and carry the soil with it, leaving hollow inverted cones to show the way to the subterancan water-drains through the rock. A little work would transform them into capital cellars ready drained, but this cannot be done unless they. happen to stand in the right place for following out the arbitrary chequer•board pattern. They are big enough sometimes for castle vaults, and have the " underground paSsages," and " secret chambers," and all that kind of medieval fixings, ready done up. • But romantic arrangements take' room, and room takes time to go around it, and a full-blooded westerner could'nt afford to circumnayigate anything which takes room, even if he had nothing upon earth to do with his time. A lady left three circular parks, like three chain links, as a! legacy to the city, and as they happened to stand a little above the territory aronnd! them, the city is digging them down in stead of doing the cheaper and prettier job of Walling them up. But I'm a good while getting to Arrr FANNY'S. I did get there however and spent a day instead of Making, a call, and wished that every canting croaker about the slovenly and shrewish propensities of "strong minded women" could see and appreellite that home, beautiful as only a o•reat-hearted and strong-minded woman of good. taste arid fine feeling .could make any place. A writing table and its ap ,purtenances, a piano, a sewing machine and a cage of canaries, were some of the features of the sitting-room. A middle aged lady with soft curls threaded with silver, shading a pleasant face, talked I cheerily in an uncommonly agreeable voice with old and young, at home alike with either, and not seeming to feel older than. either of the six big . men who call her "mother;" and I couldn't help thinking that the fair, pale daughter, though her • brown curls - showed not ono faded thread, felt older than the mother. • • • I had promised to visit St. Louis Lodge , cantile library4mildings, would be exhib• of Good Tomplars that evening and start.; ited RosA BoittEun's "Horse Fair," so ed in search of it with a young Son of: I. didn't go on morning . train, •but Temperance who had to hnntupthe Hall !staid to see this wonderful painting,: • it met in, as, they had recently moved.} Mrs. Gage told me.that Miss lIARRI- Leaving me in 'a drug strore he ,went in! ET llosmit's statue of "Ornone" u;ts,in search of ,information and returned with the reading roOm—that it belonged there. the cheering intelligence that it net over' No 9110 is allowed to visit the reading a neighboring Brewery. We came to the building and asked a' Dutchman we met coming down stairs if the•Good-Tengilars were iu session above. . ze Masions, ze Druids, meets. Masions to-night." •. • . " But," said my guide." time 'Sons said this.was the plane; we'll-go up and see!" and up we went,. smelling the impish broth of abomination 'up. three flights of stairs. The Outside Guard told us that we - Were right and ; let us into the ante room, and finally my guide, being assured that: I would be taken eare•uf, left. Inc ti.) spend a very pleasant evening with the Lodge. Mil One of the sisters informed me that my guide had beau misinformed us to the go ings on below, for instead of it being a Brewery it was a Di4illerli I Being call ed out for a speech I took fora, text the epigram some wpg wrote upon the door of a-Hall used as an Episcopal Church in New York, the basement of which. was Ltented as a.drieking "There's a spirit above itnd a spirit below, A spirit "f joy and a spirit of woe; The spirit 'above is the spirit divine, And the one below is the spirit of wine." Some members of Schnitzler Lodge were present and invited me to meet with them on Monday eve, which I would gladly have done had I staid in town. They assured me that their Lodge didn't meet over a distillery, that only the ante-room was river a Lager beer saloon!. As.the order don't own the buildings they cannot con trol the basements, but as they can't well divorce the garret and cellar I hope the " Spirit Divine" will 'get down low enough to neutralize the spirits in the lower re• gtons. , Tice next day was Saturday and I had resolved to go - up to Alton, but was pre-' viously forced to go and hunt up my trunk which I had had marked fur the City lintel, and left at the depot, for rea sons already given. As, it didn't come to me I went to see if I couldut find it. Before I got to the' station-house I met the baggage master who accosted me with, "Are you looking for your trunk. It was sent to the depot ou the 'corner of 4th and Chestnut Streets the day after you came. As there was no cheek the bag gage-man wouldn't undertake to take it. to the Hotel, for if it should be lost he would be responsible." So. I went right back and crossed the river for the third time, wondering hovir that baggage-man should know me after several, days, when he saw car loads - of folks every day, and how he should remember my particular trunk and its history, when he had han dled several hundred others since. The day was bright and tolerably warm and the ice - running in the river was dimin ishing rapidly. The west wind had blown it in long "winrows" against the eastern shfire, where it thumped ominously against the sides of the ferry boats, and then went under, coming out edge upper most, gleaming like crystalized rainbows in the sun. twas in nowise struck with the appearance of the majestic Father of Waters. It is only half a mile wide at this place. It formerly was a good deal wider, /but they have built a dyke to turn the whole body of water into a narrower channel, for the sake of deepening the road for shipping—or steumboating--- more properly speaking. A bridge is a great desideratum of•St Louis, but the Illinois side is all mud and sand, and au abutment that wouldn't wash away would he difficult to build. presume somebody will get it done some time or other. After hunting up my trunk, I was _ . told that the regular Alton cars didn't start out on Saturday but that an accom modation car Was appended to the freight. I took my.trunk and went over to the Al ton depot. Here after waiting an hour and a half ; the' gave out that the'freight couldn't. go, so I - had my trunk securely locked 'up, and returned to the city.— The teams rushed on board the boat as they do every time, crowding and jostle ing to ,get the best place, and running !foul of each other O got into a fight—not the teams but the teamsters. The crowd above looked down and commented. One man leaned over and called out the obvi ons truth, - "That's whiskey fighting down there!" • One grim old 'codger "wished he was d.lwit there Co take a hand with them," and swore lie to see men tight." I found he was a regular llissis sippi boatman.! So „I. had to spend Sab bath in St. Louis. .t 4 AtDrr F.xx - ri - sent me n message and • the messenger look uie, home in the rock away, and therp I spent the day, going to !church in the evening,- and hearing a pretty good sermon and haying a nice ; moonlight 6410. 1 ,- 1 The mornim; , papers announced- that at ten o'clock, in lesser hall , of the mer- roam eampt meishers. of the Asso6ation and persons introduced by members: Fortunately Mrs. Gage was a member, awl we went "Ornone" is very find. The marble so nure ,that the light shines t'hro' the hands and feet. . lam not very. much skilled in such matters, and have "seenbut one piece of statuary which could be compared With it. Powers' "Greek Slave" ruse in my , mind, 'and I compared them, : to the disadvantage of neither. "Ornones" head, hair and face are much more graceful and beautiful: The "Greek Slav's" figure is far finer. The expressions' of counte nance are entirely different and each per feet( in its way, and such hands! -, iy lady in the world would be glad to 'change with this slave and shel.therdess„ ~ The "Horse Fair" was in a da& room, occupying one end of it. A screen came down from the ceiling as low as the top of the picture, and behind this screen the gas was lighted, throwing all the light in the room directly an the . piettire. A cord was stretched- ruund so that the .spe'eta _ tors could not g"t within touchino• tance, but there were a number ur large glasses to look thru' which magnified the whole to life size,- which, most paintings !would not be any the prettier for,. but which seemed necessary for th-develop ment of all the thervelous beauty of this. could compare "Ornone," but the "llorse Fair" is incomparabl. - My mind ran over whole galleries of paintings I had seen, in search of anything - akin to it, in vain. I thought I appreciated art before, but I. had never had 'an idea of the magic illusions it is. capable of pro- ducing. You look and see a magnificent paint ing and are riveted to the spot, but the longer you gaze the more certain yuu be come that it is not a painting at all, but a real road full of - horses and men. You can see the leaves in the pale,' yellow •een spring woods almost flutter with the jar of the "trampling troop." You expect every moment to see the- rider jerk back the head of that vicious white horse which is trying to bite his neigh bor ; and you watch that wild black one, trying to throw his rider, with a breath less interest, hoping that he will rear no higher but come down on all fours again without hurting any body, - You believe if you had cult-comb you could strait en that sorrel pony!s tangled mane and foretop, and you think you have seen that sober pair of greys "lots of times." The perspective is absolutely faultless. You know it is near noon by the short round shadows on the grouhd. You know if that rope was not in the way, you could walk right between those animals. You can scene to see both sides of them—an illusion 1 never dreamed of in - painting. I remarked, that Enwm LANDSEER when he saw this painting, .said he had found his master.. "Yes !" exclaimed the proprietor, "I stood by him when he said it. Au Eng lish friend of his, jealous for his nation's as well as his friend's credit, said to him that he was the head . of that 'school of painting, and • one could rob him of his crown as king of animal painters; but LANDSEER loved. his art more than his own reputation as an - artist, and almost resented the flattery. lie turned to the speaker and said : 'I tell you if I could paint for a hundred years, never could produce such a work as that !'" • That reply was better than any picture LANDSEER ever painted ; great artist tho' he be. An out-rivalled artist is seldom so magnanimous. Ile told several anec dotes otilosa which - I had never heard before—said_ she was .exceedingly shy and retiring among . people, put perfectly dauntless among beasts. She keeps a whole yard full of outlandish pets, and the speaker said he once had the Misfor tune to enter the wrong gate when he went to call on the great Artiste; and to his consternation found himself yarded iu with six huge bull, and other beasts too various too - mention. "I c ! ..nfess" con tinued the little man, "that 1 was afraid and wished myself out of the serape, but Rosa saw the trouble and,came to meet me,_ and pushing her great horned pets to one side, made a lane for me to the house !'" Yet he added, she was so quiet and feminine in her. manners, that when her painter's dress was off nobody would dream that that' shy, abstracted, absent minded young lady was the greatest painter in the world!. Reluctantly were we obliged to leave the hall at last. - I wonder when ever I shall again see three such• manifestations of womanlioodin one day. FnANOF.s D. GAGE and her home, lIARRIE'r .110S MEE'S "Ornone," and ROSA RONLIEUR'S "Home Fair." Before I left S. Louis that afternoon, I picked up a newspaper and my eye fell on the advertisement, of three slaves for life, to be sold by the:Court House door that day. It was the first -thing I had seen to remind me that I was iu -a slave State. -COlored pepple.we - re far fewer than in Philadelphia or New York. All the porters, draymen, scaVengeth, waiters'and Wt cRIVO IS TEP11.:51.2.6 FEB. ANNUM 1 servants that I -a* were ,Gertriatiit.'or• t Irish. Idon't t ink I saw a sloimi : in the whole city, tl oughpit it A together it , must have eta ked';i. 'aim -. miles of streets there. I,llteli 'e - there are 'More wholesale liquor-tore a Second . . Street and the'Levee than th - re are . slaves' it: the city. If the4e two great curses'werc removed, St. Lciais could ..hardly" - set - tti bound to her Calses of wealth 'and pros 7. perity. - . . • As my time is-' fragments, 'and 'MY lap is 'my writing-de.sk s ' -please pa'rden blots' and blunders for the sake. of 'the good intentions of Year friend, • THEREVIVALFINCREASINtL-110 Re vival is extendiug. In 'rue less than •"sf teen churches in this city are neon . prayer meeting held on secular_ days, not 'to speak of Burton's old theatre,-which is so crowded that neotiations are_ pending to obtain some larger building, like the islu seum. In, Brooklyn.. atso, an increased nuttiber of churches will be opened .for those ivho are concerned on relirlons . mat= ters, .and all tha 1 signs portend' that .the excitement has nOt reachedits culmination. , Legislative prayer-mectim arc lad . at the Court of Appeals 'daily in Albany, merchants and lawyers littVe prayer-meet .in.g,s, ladies havf. their . up-town prayer ' meetings : and there is some talk of.: a brokers' prayer-tuecting 'at the Exchange, between the First_and Second Boards: 1 One great auxiliary tolthe spread of the Irevival is the n,. tice taken, of it by. the secular press. olumn! after column is' devoted to the record of, religioUs experi-; ences, and ReviVaL Intelligence is made i ls much " a featUre" as .financial or pollt !ical. news. . 'rhis is 'rjuite 'unprecedented, and shows the extended usefulness of the Press of late years. . . • Certainly never was religious propa- . gandism so thoroughly carried out. Print ed hymns, tracts, plecards„ everywhere remind the inattentive of their duty. Girls and young iron visit families by the block, giving their tracts, urging them -to !repent, •olferint , !them free. seats in, the neic , hboring citUrch, and taking an -in -1 ' ber and yen'tory or spiritual cenaus, of the nu condition of thedhonseholds. Aml together the revival may bp, pronounced' the most strikinq phenoinetion of the day: —.N: Y. Ere. Post. 1- : THEY SAY.—We ;find the following. burning words of truth—hkiving mucli local signifi.; cance, too, just noW r —in ure. iieritz's "Ernest Linwood.' They are hitter; bitt just: " 'They say t' !Who are they? who are the cowled monks, the hooded friars who glide . with shrouded faces in the'pracession of life, neutering in an Unknown tongue Words of mysterious import Who are they? the mid night assassins of reputation, who lurk in the by-lanes of society;with dagger tonguessherp ened by invention and envenomed by malice,, to draw the blood of innocence . , and hyena like, banquet on the dead. Who arc ON"'— They are a multitude no man can number, black-stoled thmiliars the' _inquisition ".of slander, searching !for victims in every city, town, and village, 'Nvherevet= the heart of hu-: manity throbs, or the ashes of mortality find rest. Oh, con-ard, coward.world-skulkers Give me the bold brigand, who thunders along" the highways with. flashing weapon that cuts' the sunbeams as well as the Shades; give. ma the pirate who unfyrk the black fiag,•emblem of his 'terrible trade, and' stiows the phink which your doomed feet most tread; but save me from the they-sayers society, whose knives are hidden in a velvet sheath, WiIOSO bridge of death is Woven in flowers ; and wile sprcad,.with invisible poison, even the spot less whiteness of the winding7shett." SPURCIEON, the pOpular Intl on the occasion of I.the reel] preached to a congregation in the Crystal Palace; Load the Gospel : I . ". If any man heir should be in doubt _On account of ignorance, let nu:, as plainly as I can, state the Gostiel. I bel i eve it to be wrap ped up in one word —substh iien. I have 'at- ways considered ;With Luthr and Calvin, that 1 . the sum and subtsLance o . the Gospel . lies in that word substittition. ehrist standiki,in. the steacrof man. If I under Astrid the Gospel it is this, I deserve to be l and ruined.; the' os., only reason why I -should n'• t be damned is this, that'Christ was punish .d in my stead, and there is no needio execute sentence lecke ; for sin. Christ took di r t cup in' oth hands, and '"' At one tre endous T.:night of We, Ile drank danniation down'"' ' • . S.tmao ON Wo.uzi..—" Day women as much as"day like, against dein. Ihi b" dem tube fast in lib, lust i de dance; de lust in de ice-c de fast, hest and hist in de would we do widont dem ? young, as ugly, and as helpli and a woman's arm am opc She it am Who gib' us our f i , oil, and puts clozel ou our liiubs. and cuhbersi i up our f long flannel petticoats ; and i grow up, fills ourqinner-ba.. nuts and apples asi - e start t us when we tears par trowSi young Jiedy at ti rc to the hoacm of lic't dress oak which exhibitom 4hve fastei when they want t i c, L'keep . %vas wearing'a lou4'necked .$Er . A A phriend niches the 'ph ,- )ll , ..itri 4tuitously 4bade 4ty 4cos. ' Iffl EEO dpit orator, :who,. 'nt national fast, fp f 7.4,000 persons, don, thus' defines May- rail against dey can't set, ma in my life• found a quarrel, rust in eam saloon, and ck room. What Let us - be born R 3 .s-us -we pleiist:, 'U to receibe us. ' 0. dose ob castor eiplessly- naked ots and noses in if am she, ns'Avo . ket . ivid dough, seboof, andlicks. nt fide pinned the placards tit to their wares rinds off.". 'Shia k•if heeling p . , ng :--tty 4 Corn le -Ixeigne )igurative, phnr '4tauite 4esterzi, 4eibly 4ming