a SINGLE COPIES,I. ••VOLUME XL-NUMBER, 31. THE POTTER JOURNAL, FEWOBED EVERY TUUBSDAN MORBING, BY Thos. S. Chase, a ..chow all Letters and Communication: , Mould be addressed, to secure attention. cans --Invariably in Advance : SL•24 per Annum; satnOrt iiiiiiii Terms or Advertising. :s q uare [lO lines] 1 insertion, - - - -n 3 .4 - s al)Fequent insertion less than 13, q usretlinit months, nine " 4 , (Dile year, le and figure work, per sq., 3 ins. 300 cr y ; 011):02,10ent insertion, LO Co'Wan six months, 18 00 10 00 " - - 7 00 rVI" . yenr. 30 00 16 00 ;able-column, di3played, per annum - 6:5 00 " six monthg, 35 00 ~ . n three " 16 00 •• one month, ' 6 DO " .. per square r!lu line , :, each in=ertion under 4, 1 .00 ,rt., Qf columns 1611 be inserted at the same g:aini•tratnr'.a or Executor's Notice, 200 Noticei , , oath, 1 5u per tract, 1 .50 „ rr i, if re Notices. each, 1 00 :Torre Notices. each, 1 sti iminkrator's Sales, per square for 4 insertion?. 1 50 Profe3sional Cards, each, eot excelling 8 lines, per year, - - 500 prcial and Editorial Notices, per line, 10 All transient advertisements most be ~:din advance. and no notice will be taken 'Advertisements from a distance, unless they veorupauied by the money or satisfactory ,firmer. •,, - ZUSiltfss eittils. plllllOlOOllll3 1111111111111111111111 l JOAN S. MANN, rorsEv AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Uotylsrvort. Pa.. will attend the several Courts in Potter and M'Kean Counties. All bu , iLters entrusted in his care will receive rompt attention. Office on Main st., oppo site the Court House. lU:1 F. W. KNOX, TTOPSEY AT LAW, Coudersport. Pa.. :rill rigularly attend the Courts in Potter and the adjoining Counties. 10:1 ARTHUR .G. OLMSTED, ITTORNEY & COUNSELLOR AT LAW. ivudrr,port. Pa., will attend to all business entru,ted to Ida care, with prompt ues and Etc ite. Otliclt in Temperance Block. sec ,2l loot% Main St. 10:1 ISAAC BENSON. " Ini S6l ' AT LAW,. Cuudertiort. Pa.. will it:einl to all littsincas eqtrusteil to hint. ith are 2341 pronilitneis.. tillice corner of Wezt Third st. 4. 10:1 L. P. WILLISTON, •• 't•Tolisin... AT .LAW, Wellsboro'. Tioga Co.. will attend the Courts in Potter and Eican • 9:13 W. K. KING, RITSOII. DRAFTSMAN AND CONVEY ANCER, tintethport. '.',UKean Co., Pit.. gill litond to hu , iness for nott-resident la nd'- toidtrs, upon reasonable terms. Referen t, given if required. P. S.—Yaps of auk of the County_rnade to order. 9:1 0. T. ELLISON, ' kCTICINCI PHYSICIAN, Coudersport, Pa.. I.ectnifly informs the citizen. Of the vil nod vicinity that he will promply re . 011,! to ill calls for professional services. , Ice on Main st.. in building formerly oc -4pic,l by C. W. Ellis, Esq. . 2'2 LINS iOIITII SMITH & - JONES, 7.ALPAIs LN DRUGS, MEIACINES, PAINTS, Fancy Article,. Stationery, Dry Goods, t;ruzerie,i, sc., Main st., Coudersport. Pa. 10:1 OL)ISTED, 'ILEP , IN DRY GOODS, READY-MADE nothing, Crockery, Groceries, Maidst., c , !:.k.r..port, Pa. 19:1 M. W. MANN, Lki.ER-IN BOOKS & STATIONERY. M AG AZISES and Music. N. W. corner ,of MAI La , l Third sts., couderiport, Pa. 10:1 GILLON, , late from the City of Stop oppo,ite' Court Potter Co. Pa, attention paid to CUT -10:s5-1y. Li. I). KELLY & KELLY, TIN & SIIEET IRON irly opposite the Court Pu. .Tin and Sheet order, in good style, on 10:1 lIT.IIOTEL, Proprietor, Corner of reefs, Coudersport, Pot , tf:.1.1 HOUSE, Proprietor, Colesburg en miles north of Cou .llsYille 1t ad. 9:44 iI.O.UBE ) , Proprietor, corner pf t's, Olean jra . "..l id from all the Passenger York and Eric Railroad. [11:22. I 1 / .... -- 5,;...!, 1 ~'; il vi.- A - l,, , .. _ • .. 4 , , i .o_,_ dle , .4., ..._ . 0 k it K-- i° IA b T nt 1 4 t : . . ...... . .... .. , . . • , 1 • • , Ntals Cum. • NEV 11-MIND. EV DAVID BARKEit.: Should roi:3fortune dog your track, Never mind ; Makb no rainbow of the back, Never mind. _ - Turn not to the left 'or right— . Quail not at a menaced blow, Onward, upward in your might, Shout.this.motto as you gn : "Never - mind." Foes may frighten friends away, • 111EI 2 JO 4 00 3 7,0 G 00 Fear not what traducers say, Never mind. Single-handed tight it through ; Trust not in the countless throng, One a legion may subdue, With that legion in the wrong; Never mind. Should von meet with pointless slurs, Never mind Every fool by inxtinct errs, Neyer mind Let spawns scribble if they will ; Men of nerve nre never slain By one's firing through a (mill "Paper bullets of the brain ;" Never mind Each shall get just what he earns, Never mind Roads are long which have no turns. Never mind Yeilding up the other cheek, Dropping humbly on the knees, , Clncing lips when dared to speak • Will not do in times like these; Never mind MEDT.E.I :- i:' - ROM THE POETS Some " funny feller," who does not fear or respect the copyright laws, " mixes pp" the poots after this quaint f:,shion : Thelmo4 was shining Silver bright, All bloodless lay- the untrodden snow ; When .Frt.!edom, from her mountain height, Exclaimed, "sow don't be foolish, Joe!" An hour passed on—the Turk awoke. A bumble-bee went thundering by, To hover in the sulphur smoke, And spread its pall upon. the, sky. His echoing axe the settler swung, He was a lad of high renown, And deep the pearly caves among, Giles Scroggles courted Molly Brown. Loud roars the wind in constant blast, And rloudb , ss sets the sun at even, When twilight dews are filling fast,, And rolls the thunder drum of heaven Oh! ever thus . , from childhood's hour Ry torch and trumpet fast arrayed Beneath you ivy-mantled tower, • The 1301-frog croaks his serenade. My love is like the red, red rose, , De bought a ring with poesy true; Sir Bartley Bodkin broke his nose, And. Saxon, I am Roderick Dim I C~ ~iAll : albin . now we may Judge Friendship. 1. True friendship can only be made between true men. licartg arc the soul of honor. There can be no lasting friend ship between bad men. Bad , men May pretend to luve each other, but their friend ship is a rope of sand, which shall be brok en at any cunvenientiseason; but if a man have a sincere heart within him, and be true and noble, then we may confide in him. Spencer sings iu hue old English verse—. •• Se, vertes can that friendship long endure, flowerer gav :Ind :rood i.e the style, That doth ill cause or Civil Civi enure. For Vertu*: is the baud ttiatitindetli Harts most sure. • ' * 2. Faithfulness to us in our faults is a certain sign of fidelity in a friend. ' You way depend" upon that wan who. will tell you of your faults in a kind add consider ate manner. Factuing hypocrites, insidi ous flatterers, are the sweepings and offal of friendship. They are but the parasites upon the noble tree. But true friends put enough trust in you to tell you openly of your faults. Give me fur a friend - the man, who will speak li.nestiv of we before my face ; who will not tell first one neigh bor, and then another, but who will come straight to my house, and say, " Sir, I feel there: is such-and-such a thin& in you, which; as my brother, I must tell you of." .i. hat man is a true - friend ; he has proved! himself to be so; for ,we never i get 40)-1 praise fer telling people of their faults ;1 we rather hazard their dislike; aintin will! sometimes thank you for it, but, he dees not often like you any better. P,raise is a thing we all lave. 1 met with :Allan the`` other day who said lie was impervious to! flattery ; I was walking with hitii ht the' time, and turning round rather sharply, I said, " At any rate, sir, you seem to haire: I a high giftim flattering yourself for you, are really doing so,,in saying yail are ina pervious in flattery. " You can hot flatter tne," he said. I replied, "I - can if I like to try; and perhaps may do so'before the day is out." I found I could not tatter him directly, so I be , ran by saying what a flue child that was of ° his; and he drank it in as a precious draught; and when 1 praised this thing and' that th;nr; o belong ing to him, I could see that he, kvas very (easily flattered; not directly, but indirect ly. We are all pervious to flattery ; We I like the soothing cordial, only it must not be labeled flattery; for we . have 4. religious abhorrence of flattery if it be 'so called; IliMMil3 "*(iptei) to i i iliqaiples - of SW haillort•qep, it?, PisseiTgrntioi? of bjoi•qiitp, qqd 'Haw. COUDERSPORT, POTTER -COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 1859. ball it by any other name, :and eve drink it in,. even as the as driiiketh in watek. a. In the - next place, 'there arc some, things in his friendship which render us Sure of not,being deCeived, When wei put bur confidence in him. Tine friend Ship inust not be of hasty growth. As qUaint old Master Fuller says, "Let friend Shi p gently to a height; if it rush to it, it .may soon•run itself out of breath."; It is even so. I think it was Joana Bailie Said— " Friendship is no.plant of hasty growth Though planted in esteem's deep fixed soil, The gradual culture of kind intercourse !dust bring it to perfection." Never mind In vain thou trustest the gourd over thy, head; 0 Jonah ; it will not be Of much use I to. thee; it came up in a night, it may wither in a night. It is the strong still Oak, of ages' - growth, which shall abide he tempest; wnich shall alike put out its wings to shield thee from the sun, and shall afterward find the a hovel in its heart; if necessary, in.its grey o d age, when its branches tremble in the blast. Friendship is true when it begins ; but we Must have a man's friendship long before We can say of him that he w stick closer than a brother. * * * * 4. But note, further, the friendship which lusts dues not take its rise in the Chambers of mirth, nor is it fed and fat tened there. Young lady, you speak of a dear friend whom you acquired last night in a ball room. Do not, I beseech you, Misuse the word; he is not a friend if he Was acquired merely there; friends are Better things than those which grow in the hot-house of pleasure. Friendship is to more lasting plant than those. You have a friend, have you ? Yes ; and he ikeeps 'a pair of horses, and has a good es tablishment. Aim ! but vour,best way fo Prove your friend is to know that he will he your friend when you have not so Much as a mean cottage; and when, houseless and without clothing, you are driven to leg your bread. Thus you would make true proof of a friend. Give me a friend who was born in.the winter time, whose cradle was rocked in the storm ; he will last. Our fair weather friends shall flee away from us. I had rather have a robin for a friend than a swallow ; for a swallow abides'with us only in the summer time. bht a robin cometh to us in the winter. Those are tight friends that Will come the I nearest to us when we are in the most I distress ; but those are not friends who speed themselves away when ill times come. * * • '5. Again, a friend who is acquired by Ply is never a lasting friend. Do a foolish thing, and wake a man your friend; 'tis but a confederacy in vice, and you will sum) discover that his friendship is. worthless ; the friendships you acquire by doing wrong, you had better be without. how ninny silly friends there are springing up, the lucre fruit of a senti ment:ills:in, having no root whatever, but like the plant 'of which our:Saviour tells us, It :sprang up because it had no df.pth of earth!' * ** Under this head may I likewise observe, that the friendship qf ignorance is not a I - row desirahle one. I desire no man to !call hiwsulf my friend, if ,he cloth Rut! know we. Let him love me in proportion to his knowledge of me. If he loves we: for the little he knows, when he knoweth more he Way cast me aside. "That man," I says one, "seems to be a very amiable [ man." "I atu sure I can love hiw," says another, as he scans his features. Ay,- hilt do nut write " friend" yet ; wait a wee bit, until' you know more of him; just see , him, examine him, try him, test him, and ! not till then enter him on the sacred list! of friends. Be friendly to all, but make none your friends until they know you, and you know them.. Many a friendship born in the darkness of ignorance, hath died suddenlyin the light of a better ac.- quaintatice with each other. You sup posed men to be different from what they Were, and when you discovered their real character you disregarded them. I re member one saying to me, " I have great affection for yup, sir," and he mentioned a certain reason. I replied, "My dear fellow, your reason is absolutely false; the I very thing you love me for, I ant not, and ' hope I never shall be." And so I said, " I really cannot accept your friendship, if it he founded upon a misunderstanding of what I way have said."—Spurycon. Front " Street Thoughts," by the Rev. Henry Dexter. - The Old Man and his Son. I say, Frank, who is that old fellow with a second-hand hat, and a great scat that looks as if it had been wade by the Queen of Sheba's tailor as a present to Solbmon's gardener, and had been in the family ever. since, who keeps eyeing you so closely from-the other side of the street ?" "I don't know, Late sure. I never saw. him before.". " Well, I hope be ain't a policeman in disguise, who is after you fur sowe of your pranki. Take care,—good .by," laugh ingly Said the first speaker as he turned off into a side street, and left his visced friend' to walk on before us. From the movements of this "unex ceptionably got-up!' youth thus preceding us, we very soon became satisfied that, despite his denial,' he hail seen the old man on the other side before, and was in momentary expectation of seeing him again. His eyeshot uneasy glances across; and as that venerable, 'and fine looking, though ve;y plainly and unfashionably dressed person, began to show symptoms. of crossing over, be cast a hurried look up and down the street, apparently to see if any of his boon - companions - were in sight anywhere,—to witness and report the dis grace of the impending interview. As the two faces, young and old, were thus projected in profile betore us, as they ex changed stares, we made up our mind that the same blood was in both, and were_ querying the reason for their singular de meanor, when we heard a loud voice ap prqachin-g fr3in the middle of the street. Francis Ebenezer, my son, dew tell if that are's you. I've been a watchin' on you this half -hoar; and you've got on such a kind o' spruced-up riggio', and so much hair on your countenance that I couldn't tell, of l'se to be,skinned, wheth er 't was you or not ; and yet I 'most knew that are nose couldn't be 'nobody else's. ' How de dew ?" I A fine young, man that, coolly to deny ! that he ever before saw his own fatherbe. cause that father happened to be dressed! mon sensibly (though less a la onoile) I than himself ! But there are some men —and women—who appear to think that the attention of the entire universe is con centrated exclusively upon them, when ever they show themselves upon the side walk. As a matter of course, a proper respect on their part for the said universe, I and for themselves, requires that they exercise the utmost care as to costume, conduct, and companionspip, that no sus picion of commonness of any sort may at tach to them. Three bundled and sixty five pairs of gloves per annum, are essen- . itial to their peace t,f mind. Their accu- Hulation of pantaloons is prodigious.— Their superfine bats are renewed or iron ! ed with a frequency very gratifying to the hattes. and extremely encouraging to that branch of domestic industry. To see one of them, when he has been fully prepared, and indulges the town with his society for a promenade, you would sup pose that one of tha..f!, dummies—wooden within, and waxen withbut—which Paris ian artistes use for the display of their handiwork had been animated and endow cd with locomotion, or that Oak 1-Tall had sent forth . a promenading advertisement; i - and you feel a well-nigh irresistible inclin ation to pin a label, calling attention to 34 North Street, to his coat tail. dun omuiapossumus onines,, says Vir gil. We cannot all do everything. It is a great truth. Peacocks have more tail, than brains. And if we have read natu-1 ral history aright, those four-footed beasts, and fowls, and creeping thing's, which have , the most astonishing outsides, compensate therefor by internal leanness, insipidity,) and uselessness. The same great law pre vails in regard to humanity. We have seen old books wherein, by the similarity! in the shape of the sixth and nineteenth letters of the alphabet, the words Appy and supiw could with difficulty be dis tinguished. It struck us as. au instruc tive fact. A fop-head and a "sap-head" are much alike in several other things be side their orthography. And that a man who prides himself. mainly upon "a good port and beariiig in society" should nore his own father, if he happen to .be I unfashionably dressed, is a thing to be naturally expected, because love to pa rents is an affair of the heart; and a dan dy has no more heart than a dummy afore said, which the carpenter knocks up out of common stuff, without much regard to the interior,-out merely to furnish a scaf- Wing to support the goodly and simper ! ing.outside, upon which the tailor, and the hatter, and the boot-maker can Aver tise their wares. .13ut it is a said thing to see a young man given over to the clot he:s mania. " Once a coxcomb, always a coxcomb," was a maxim of Dr. Johnson; and he who be gins life by, fearing to go into the street in any comely, clean, aud common-sense clothes, lest some fool or other should think ho is not as well dressed as he ought to be, will be very apt to die, eventually, leavint , c the largest part of his assets in the shape of tailors' bills, the largest part of his influence among the old clo' men, and the largest part of his memory among the denizens of the street. The Doctor says he Wont Die We heard this on a door step. A blue eyed child said it---a bright, glad-faced, beautiful child. She smiled as she spoke. Her little hands came together in glad clasp. There was a look of heaven hi the sweet expression told of more than one joyful heart in that house. g. The doctor says he won't die,"- Was it the babe ? the tender lisping babe ? If so. we saiv a vision of the cradle, and the watcher who had sat wearily beside it all through the long night. But in each cheek there was the crimson touch of hope, and in either dim eye . a'tear up. springing 'from the deep fount of joy.— That - was the mother. In what' other face on.earth could blend that mingliag of awe—of joy=-of tenderness? And the babe—his lipS were parted and moist —and the color _of the rose bud faintly struggling • out of its green sheath had crept .over their delicate outlines. The darling hands. no longer lay in rigid rest; the glazing ot•disease bad ' ; fallen from the Dine orbs = and - he had smiled his fare well to the angels who had come to carry him to their. children's playgrotmd„l4here ' blossoms never fade--litit had been the Mastees will. " The doctor says he won't die I" Oh what a throb in the mother's heart when these words were speken. She will press him again to her breast—watch bim in his fitful sleep—bold his little hands in her bosom—make the White robe—but not for leis cojfin ! Did ever. footsteps sound so gentle as those of the kind phy isieian as he moves softly from the room ? I Was ever a mother so bk r ssed before?— Did God ever seem so great-•—so go:Al.?• " The doctor says he won't die I" . It might have been Übe father—the' strong Man. He came home feverish— said iris head felt strangely : he could eat no supper. lle .pushed I the babe from his knee—he was not wont to do so. • The wife looked on wondering—and when she smoothed the pillow on the lounge, felt an unnatural heat. The 'morning come; he said he must go to work—but hand trembled—his limbs ref Used to 'do their office—the coat was not; taken from the I wall that day; his cane Mood in the cor- I ner--a carriage before the gate. Dawn !after dawn whitened the heavens and•the earth—there was no . chaOge. The wife slept not—her love watched and waited, and cried yearningly to qod for his life. But there arc glad tidings; rejoice even as you trembled, sweet wife : • roe doctor says he won't die !" Perhaps we did not hear aright. It may be the child exclaimed': " The doctor says she Won't die !" If it was the mother ! She upon Whose hands, whose feet, whose heart, whose every faculty a little world depended fo its sunshine, almost for 'its continuance, doubly -dear the gentle assurance of the good doctor Did you ever feel .a silence more op pressive and omenous than reigns in the household when "mother's sick ?" The babe mourns at his play—the children look about absently in a hopeless kind of .way—the, very furniture seems mutely asking where she is whose care it has so long known. Every footstep echoes hol lowly, every heart sighs involuntary, and seems asking of itself if it has done that which the sight of a green grave would condemn. There are prayers going up .all over the house—the husband comes iu hurriedly—asks no questions—answers no queries, but goes stealthily to the dark ened chamber, and there, perhaps, when heart and hope almost desert him, he hears the blessed words : " The doctor says she won't die !" 1 Ile looks just as grave when he goes; down; he tells the news gravely to the! children—but - seems brighter as he leaves ' the house. There is not -a man he callsi his enemy. He smiles as he enters the! store; there is a blessedness within his bosom such as he never felt before, and . strangers say as they ,leave him : "There is something unusually pleas ; ino• about that man." ''S'o there is 'They are right there.— That vision of a grave has gone, and flow ers, are springing up in its . stead. He rdoes not shiver as he passes the window where the coffins stand—" The doctor says she won't die !"—and he has faith. - Thus light springs up in darkness— ; and after,the sorrow of night, joy counth. —Peterson's How to Cook ,a ilusband. A lady reader sends the Boston, Olive Branch the following valuable recipe: ' " The time has arrived in the year, for the preparation of many good things, and I ha,ie no doubt but that the followirg. will prove to be one of the most valuable in the catalogue of recipes. Tb cook a husband, as Mrs. Glass said of the hare, you must first catch him. Having done so, the mode of cooking him, so as to make a good dish of him, is as follows:: " Many god husbands are spoiled in the 'cooking; some women go aboUt it as if their children . were bladders :and blow them up; others keep theth constantly in but water, while others freeze them. by conjugal coldness; some smother-them in hatred, contention and variance, - and some 'keep them in pickle all their lives. These women always. serve them up with tongue 1 sauce. Now 'it cannot be supposed that 1 husbands will be tender and good it man -1 aged in this way ; but they .are, on the . jontriirv, very• delicious when managed as follows :—Get a large jar, called the jar i'of faithfulness, ( which all good wives keep lon hand,) place your husband in it, o.nd I riet Mit near the fire of conjugal 'love let 'the fire be pretty hot, but especially let it I Jpe clear, but above all let the heat be eon-1 FOUR CENTS. TERMS.-$1;25! PER ADIMP!'.').: sta nt. Cover hini with affection, kindness and subjection garnished with modest, becoming familiarity, and, spiced with pleasantly, and if you, add kisses and.oth er_confectioneriei, let them , be accompa nied with a sufficient portion of secresy, mixed with prudence 1 . and moderatine. We would advise all good, wives; Wiry this recipe, and realize what an admirable dish a husband,jonakes when properly cooked.'" [We highly approve of the above meth od-L—especially the confectionery. ~ I t : is our opinion, however, that wii,es will;be equally delicious, if managed in the same way. We would ike to, undertake . the mana!nment of one—provided the supply of confectionery was proportioned to ,the cost managing.—ED. P. Jouitrim..l . THE Pittsburg Gazette in weontroyet sy with the Catholic,: of that city, Makes the following pretty allusion to FlOrenee. Nightingale : ~„ "The. Catholic refers to Florence Night ingale, and we are willing to take as, in this respect, a true:type of Wiamuntiod. She sheds a genial influence around :her wherever she goes; she delights:the hearth by which she sits; she enjnyi,the beautiful and contributes of that enjoy, ment to, others;' ; she 'wears no 'repulsive weeds; she liveS• in society, to blessit and to adapt herself to whatever condition. of life, so she may, make the.world better:- She Aloes not force her benificencOnto one channel, but permits it to flow' one s :oi all sides, as the mountain that lifts sun, crowned head to-the skies, sends abreact to the extremities ofcontinenti its 'glad' tributes to bless : , and. fractify the earth:. Her good deeds are not done in accord;, ante with a "creed" or a "ritual!" ,Pita. needs . no "veil," no new name, no sition of priestly handSono peculiar midi,' no vows said before men, no stone, walls behind which to withdraw and, beyond which to push the world she•was born to live in and to bless! Bell, book oi,can . ,, .dle, crucifix, beadsaud genuflexions, stoma cells and mourning weeds are not.for)nir, but a glowing heart. a'pure inind,nieady, hand, a faith in the Great Creator and in, his Son our Saviour,—these, which are the gifts of God and,which - need no',con7 ruination of clergy or church cereineniA: to sanctify or to render effective, are:hers, and their influence is everywhere,,i6 7 : spirinr , the good to nobler deeds, soothing, , and cheering the brok 'n hearted, and en-, I touring the weak and fallen. To dim or I conceal one ray of this effulgent character Would be to deprive this poor world of wind it cannot well do'without. Put her. in a Convent, bind her by a creed and the world loses .a great deal of her influence. She becomes a' sort of machine, - doing good by rule, according to certain re,hilf tions and in certain ways marked out by men, whereas she now labors in her Lord's Vineyard, doing whatsoever her hands find and as her true heart dictates. No Con-. vent could contain her; for such,:, the world is the field of labor and the; free. heart the director." . THE NATIONkL S. S. CONVENTION.- The interest of the Convention continued till the last, if we may judge of the Tfitirs- - day evening froM the report of the Morm- : iug meeting. A great many speeches were made, of . which the 'papers give us .a close abstraCt., The resolutiotis, which Fere all adopt•. ed, were as follows :- Resolution I,declares that the Sunday School, in connection' with the teachings of home - and the pulpit, is able to bring the youth of the country under Bible influences. • 2 declares the teacher's love of his work to be ind4ensable. declares the. teacher's preparatory 'stn - dy of the weekly les6:on to be essential to success. 4 urges punctUality and regularity both' in teachers and pupils. - 5 declares that order must be kept in the schools. • G deelares that every moment of school hours should be appropriately occupied. 7 urges frequent visits of teaohers'to schol ars at their howies. . 8 recognizes the Holy Spirit in the schools. 3 states that the teachers should set a good erample: lu urges that the early conversion of chil dren should come nearer the Bible standard. This resolution livas widely discussed by Rev. Thomas P. Hunt, of Philadelphia, Mr. Taylor, of Portland, and Mr. Thompson, of New "Jer sey. 11 recommends weekly prayer meetings:: 12 recommendS weekly lesson reviews. - I 3 recommends frequent Teachers' Meetings, Conventions and Association; and local book depositories. 14 recommends the preparation of lessons before scholars come to schooL I 5 recommends the committal to memory of the Scripture leissons. WEIAT fits RthNKD TEM KING OF Paussietr- , Champagne hag been the ruin . of the King of Pr . tissia. When he first ascended the • throne he was an; elegant, accomplished gentleman. His amiability, high' moral character and his acqiiiremeuts were known throughout Eu rope, and in Pritssia he was as popular as a.. Monarch could be. In- 1848, he commenced drinking champagne, and is now an idiot.—Ex. The King of Prussia is not the only man . whom- '-f ha l s hurled into idiocity. The world it of Such folly, and will be so long as Mone: interest suborn reason in law making n legal and GOCiel practices. M 11