11 NOLITME 'M.-NUMBER 251 j THE ~. POTTERIS HE JOURNAL PUBLD BY M. W. WAlar*ey, Proprietor. $1.50 PII YEAR, INVARIABLY [N ADVANCE. * AI - *Devoted tdthe cause of Republicanism, the interests of Agrionitnre t the advancement of Education, and the best - good of Potter county. Owning no guide except that of Principle, lt will endeaver to aid in the work of more fully Freedomizing our Country. ADVERTISEMENTS inserted at the following rites, meept,where speciaLbargains are made. 1 Splare LlO lines] 1 insertion, - - - 50 1 ":*. 3 " - ,• 51 50 Etas sabsequent inaertion less than 13, 25 1 Sqna•re three months, , 2.50 1 ifix . -•--- - 4,00 1 " nine " ;5 50 1 " one year, - 600 1 aolumn six months, - ‘, -- - 20 00 If ';10 OO " - - - 700 II • pei year. 'AO 00 I « .11 1 , it 2O 00 Adminiitrator's or Executor's Notice, 200 Business Cirdi, 8 lines or less, per year 5 'OO Special and Editorial Notices, per line, -10 * * *All transient advertisements must be paid in advance, and no notice will bqtakeri of advertisements from a distance, unless they 'are accompanied by the money or satisfactory reference. • • , * * *Blanks, and Job Work of all kinds { at tended to promptly and faithfully. i‘ BUSINESS CARDS. NOLALIA. LODGE, No. 342, F. A. STATED Meetings on the 2nd and 4th Wedne sdays of each month. Also Masonic gathier ' ings on every Wednesday Evening, for work and practice, at their Hall in Cotidersport. Q. S: COLWELL, W. 31, &Nun Hang, Sec'y. JOHN S. MANN, . ATTORNEY! AND"COUNSELLOR AT L.ALW, • Coudersport, Pa., will attend the several Courts in Potter and M'Kean Counties. All •business entrusted in his care will receive prompt. attention. Office corner of West and Third streets. ARTHUR G. OLMSTED,.: , ; ATTORNEY & COUNSELLOR AT • Coudersport, Pa:,, will attend to all business entrusted to, his ',care, with pre inptnes and fidCity. Office on Soth-west comer of Main end Fourth streets. I ISAAC BENSON ATTgßnsi . AT LAW, Coudersport, 'Mt.,. v4il attend - to all business entrusted to him, Date and promptness. Office on Second st. near the Allegheny Bridge, 1 - . F. W. It.NOX, ATTORNEY 'AT LAW, Coudersport, PR., will regularly attend the Courts in Pottr and ' 'the adjoining Counties.' O. T. ELLISON', I . " PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, Coudersport, Pa., respectfully informs the citizens of the vil lage and vicinity that he will promply re spond to all calls for professional services, • Office on Main st., in building formerly Oe enpied by C. W. Ellis, Esq. C. S:&;;E. A. JONES, DEALERS IN DREGS, 3180CINES.-ZAINIIS Oils, Fanoy Articles, Stationery, Dry Groceries, &c., Main st., Coudersport,i Poi D. E. l 013 STED, HEALER IN Dlr4 GOODS; READY-]LADE Clothing, Crockery, Groceries, &c., Mpn st., Coudersport, Pa. COLLINS SMITH, EULER in Dry Goods,Groceries, Provisions, Hardware, Queensware, Cutlery, and p.ll Goods usually found in a country Store.: Coudersport, Nov. 27, 1861. , - COUDERSPORT HOTEL, F.- GLASSMIRE, Proprietor, Corner Main and Second Streets, Coudersport, Pot ter Co. Pa. 2:Livery Stable'is also kept in conn'ect lion with this. Hotel. ' MARK. GILLON, TAlLOR—nearly opposite the Court House— will make all clothes intrusted to him in the latest and best styles —Prices to suit the times.—Give him a call? 13.41 IL J. OLMSTED • OLMSTED .& KELLY, 'BALER. IN STOVES, TEN' & SHEET IRON WARE, Main st., nearly opposite the Court House, Cotidersport, Pa. Tin and Sheet Iron Ware made to order, in good style', on short notice. Mysses Academy Mill retains as Principal, Mr.E.R.CAMPBELL, Preceptress, Mrs. NETTIE JONES GRIDLEY . ; As. aistint, Miss Ane Wetaran The expenses per Term are : Tuition, from $5 to $6 ; Board, fromrsl'.so to $1.75, per - week; Rooms for iclf boarding from $2 to $4. Each term•comme4ces upon Wednesday and continues Fourteen 'weeks. Fall term,Ang.27th,lB62;Winter terni, Dec.loth; 1862 ; and 3pring term, March 25th, 1863. 0. R. BASSETT, President. W. W. GRIDLEY, Sect'y. .I,ervieville, July 9, 1862. • MANHATTAN HOTEL.' NEW YORK.. T B s Popular Hotel is situated near' the Corner of Murray Street and Bread way opposite, the Park within one block of the Hudson River Rail Road and near the Erie Rail Road Depot. It is one of the most yltasatit'and convenient locations in the'city. _ . "Board & Rooms $1.50 per dray. . • N. HlMGlNS,ProprietOr. Feb:lBth, 1863. The Rochester Straw-Cutter. OLISISTED .Sr KELLY, Coudersport, have the exclusive agency for' this celebrited itriadtine, in this county. It iecoyenietit, able; . and CHEAP. • Pee. 1, 1860.-1 118.,,N0w is, the time to subscribe 16i your felinity Patier:=THE JOURNAL. BRAND TINE LIARS. Vallandigham, the chief Of the Cop perhead. tribe, :efforts' . to Aid: U . ,* Rebels by perjudleing the people against a Union Government, says : " THIS wicked' Admini.stratio7), IN CITED and PROVOKED Civil War, as a PRETEXT to abolish Slavery in the States." .' And this is repeated by all the Tories, for the purpose of deceiving honest men. Now, st•ho ever heard of an- Adniinis tration, .against itsel 1' Why should Old Abe try - to turn him:- selfout ofthe-,White House? And, what cap _an, ."Adthip,istiation" do bef..re it comes into - existelice? • The - vile 'charge is r,idicutous in argument--prepostbrously absurd and wantonly, wickedly, design edly untrue. • What are the facts of history 0x the point of TIME? • . The leading Rebels boast that they were for THIRTY YEARS PAST maturing the Secessiou they are now striving for: Now loOk at the FIGURES ! While James. Buchanan was yet_ Pres dent—before "this Administration" bad a being in point'of fact—the following acts of "civil war" were openly perpe trated : ON NOVEMBER 10, 1860—before the vote for President was fully known— hostilities were virtually inaugurated by bilis, for arming troops and denuuncing the United States authority passing in a Southern Legislature: and by open revolt, sedition, and treason, at numerous public meetings there.' . . On the 20th of Dec. &et/t Carolina in State Convention declared war by her Secession Ordinance. 25th, called upon the Slave States to form a Confederacy. 18th, tore down and trampled upon the Union's flag, and by force seized the U. S. Custom House, Post Office and Arse'. nal at Charleston, and also captured For: 3loultrte and Castle Pinckney. Dec. 25, the U. S. revenue cutter Aiken was betrayed into its enemy's power. in 1861-2 d January, Gov. Ellis of Arortit Carolina took Fort Macon at Beaufort, the barracks at Washington, and all the U. S. prope'rty at Fayetteville. Same day, !Mississippi commenced war by setting up another Government with in Ibis this "supreme" government. -- The same day Georgians took posses sion of Forts Pulaski and Jackson and the U. S. Arsenal at Savannah. On the 4th Jan. Fort Morgan at Mo bile Bay and the U. S. Arsenal at Mo bile were seized by 9ov. Moore of Ala bama. Jan. sth, the steamer Star : of the West sailed from New York, with supplies, for Fort Sumpter, and on the Sth leas fired upon by Rebel Batteries at Charleston, and driven back to sea. = On the 11th, the U. S. Arsenal at Baton Rogue, Forts Philip and Jackson below New Orleans, and Fort Pickens on Lake PonchartrAn, were seized by the troops of Louisiana. On the 16th, the Rebei Col. Hayne demanded from the President the surren der of Fort Sumpter. Same day, 216, sick and feeble patients were turned out of U. S. Marine Hospi tal, at New Orleans, to make room for Rebel soldiers. Mil . . Next day, Florida seeedei, then takes possession of Pensacola Navy Yard.- Jan. 19? Georgia secedes, and, steals all the remaining property of Uncle Sam. On the 31st, Louisiana seized the U- S. Branch Mint, and' $511,04) of money in it belonging to the-Government. FEBRUARY "Texas revolted, and Gen. Twiggs betrayed.over to it the Union troops and a million and a half of arms or other Union property. ' On the sth, Arkansas takes arms from the U. S:Arientil at Little Rock to figla. the Union power. On the Bib, the Rebel Government was fomented at Montgomery, Alabama —7th, elected * Jeff Davis' President— and, 19th, inaugurated him as President of a hostile and seperate Confederacy. 8. D. KELLY On the 23d, the President' elect thwarted the plot to assassinate bin by going through Baltimore without being announced. Freedom of speech and of the press, the right of peadeful assent blage, , and ha beas corpus, were suppressed—U. S. Of ficers were insulted, and driven from; pow. er—peaceable,,. law-abiding Union men and woman were abused, fobbed, impris• oned, mobbed, ( driven from home, *or killed, in various ways, in great numbers ; In short the Uonstitution, laws, and pow ers of our Goveinment were under the iron hoofs of b military. despotism, in defi ance of the will of several of those States, as expressed py their honest votes.' All was a "reign of teTror': by. a, armed 'Aristdcricy. • S' ON 4Tir of the above and a hundred other acts of war, treason, roWrg; murder, and crime were committed, _ P resident-, Lincoln was, inaugurated, and with Cabinet began Debotoa to the, of ,lINe orp) ffle Dissellgoglioq of Wolling, COUDERSPORT, POTTER COUNTy, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE•IO, 1863, to roll back the tide of - they foulid raging. Look at the dates, again. And yet we are unblushingly told that "ram wicked .11.dministlation incited and provoked civil tcarP If the Devil don't roast such a liar, he fails to get his own dues. —"As a PRE 4 TEXT," quoth Vallan : digham and his mfederate Look at - the dates again. The RebelS began their road game in the Fall of 1862 —through all 1861 they used Slaves to destroy our Government—and not until the end of 1862 (two years) did , the President restore Freedoin to the Slava'? of ._Enbel- masters; as "military neces sity," not as's - "pretext" devised Worn hand. • -- Reader! cut out the above dates and post them up for reference against liars. —Lewisburg Chroncle. Arrest of a Woman Spy. A correspondent of the Philadelphia Press gives the following particulars of the arrest of a woman spy, referred to by our Norfolk correspondent yesterday: Yesterday (Wednesday) morning it was made knewn to a single individual that Mrs. Webb had a parasol in her pos session, in the handle of which was a mi nute statement of all the men and means in Gen. Dix's department. From her hands this invaluable parasol was to be intrested to the careful guardianship of Miss Hoosier, who was to convey it safely through our lines at Suffolk, and carry it to Gem Longstreet. Col. Boyer, with the skill of a 'Jonathan Wild, permitted the lady to depart, so he might see if she carried the pretty little shade, which cost $B, Federal money. Everything was co,r-. rect. A telegram was immediately sent to Gen. Peck to have Miss Hoosier re turned immediately to Norlolk. Miss H. was riding swiftly along, every moment, as she thought, nearer freedom, and in her dear little parasol was all the reqUi site information for recapturing Norfolk, and driving the hated Yrnkees from Stif folk and vicinity. It was her lot, per ehance, Ito deliver' Virginia from the* who vexed her sorely. All alone she sat, feeling 'happy as Lady Alicia, when, at the side of Lady, Mandeville, she attended the first "The heart's delight: did like a radiant lamp bight the sweet temple of her face." . At length the cars stop :.t Suffolk. A quick, brief ride, and she's home. • No, not yet ! She is stopped ere she leaves her seat, and politely requested to return in the same train. Expostulation lows .; then entreaties; then she grows furious, and at last a soft, betraying air steals overher broad features ;She flatzers, she cajoles, but without effect. Mean while she clines to her parasol, like a be reaved mother to her deformed child. Soon she is back to Norfolk. The par asol is'taken frOw her reluctant grasp.—' r The handle' was one long, hollow iron tube, and in this concavity was closely concealed- long rolls of paper, closely written on. There is scarcely a quarter;• master in this 'department who could give such a correct, minute, and perfect ac count of the' number of men, nieans of subsistence, stores of ordnance, &c., as these papers contained. In regular order was set down the whole number of troops in Gen.• Dix's department, cavalry, in. fan try; and artillery, and tediously•defined and described each place where they were posted; the correct number of those disc charged whose term of service had ex: pired; and those who would soon leave for their homes. Every man sent from Suffolk and otbeti places to re enforce Yorktown or to occu py West Point was there. Great,Bridge' was graphically described ; Bower's Hill Deep Creek, and the .‘inirenched were all mentioned as being weakly guar ded, and none of them further than eight; miles from Norfolk. The force stationed; at Kempsville was fairly enumerated , at, fifteen - men, and the weak and strong, points in the fortifications around Suffolk taithfully portrayed. Los ;street was instructed how to make, a Morgan-like raid through all this coun try, and the sure means of a safe retreat made plain and clear. He was infOrmed of Gen. Viele's residence, and how he might be captured; where Gov. Pierpoat resided when in town, and how' strong or, more properly, how weakly, these local ities were guarded. The secret ennuis-, sary earnestly hoped they might succeed in capturing the "bogus Governor of Vir ginia " The number of gunb?ats st tinned on James River was given, with a correct description _of their_strength, and the position they occupied in the stream. Tha Other paid Suffolk was to be evac uated soon. The . Yankees could not spare a sufficient force to hold the , place; and that they. meant to retire ,-0 Bower's Hill, a place located on the Seaboard and Roanoke — Bailroad, within abOUt seven' miles of,Portsmoutb. . The long seational rolls thus found in' the handle of the par i asordbuld le...worked into a perfect mini tary encyclopedia by the ingenuous Long; street, and, while they would have been of incalculable benefit to him, would have brought irretrievable disaster to thb•De partment of Virginia. I= I .For the Jourital MR. EnixoP. : Here is a description of a western home, which perhaps may in. terest those who are fond oflevel country : "E. , says I may have the privilege of sending you a description of thienountry, and as Ithink it will not bediffmult,l have taken a piece of paper and am out doors sitting on a log, so I can survey the whole world and give you a correct picture of it. In looking around here, one 'would think this might borthe only place irAhe verse, for I can see the "end of the world" in every direction. On the south, as far as the eye can reach, are prairieand sky, which appear to, meet on very' friendly terms—they seem quite glad to, see each' other. The prairie is the greener of the two; I cannot say which is the On the west is sky and prairie, and I think the prairie looks a little nearn to the sky, than the sky 'does to it,—such little differences are worth nothing where everything looks so plain. On the north is sky and prairie, interspersed with a black-bird. On the east it is quite difler tut ; it is sky and prairie wtih a few trees standing up against the sky, but they look very much out of place; I think there was a mistake made in the arrangement, there are so few it is only an ag g ravation. However the scenery: is very fine here just now. It has been raining a litee and the clouds hang : beautifully in the sky. They are,.of all; colors, and I pro , sume, are sent to show 'us that the west has charms as well as 'the east. The sky is the handspwest thing in the country, but it is too far off to suit me. 'lt is the only thing I can see anywhere around here to hang anything on, and it is rather inconvenient to reach: Can you 'see this county now from my description ? I have. not told you about our looust trees and 'the grouqds about our house. We have very extensive grounds here; indeed: This ia all the paper I allowed myself to, deserite this country on, so will close by saying it is a bewitching place. , X. ANTIQUE SLANG It is not "generally knoren .that 'the phrases "Bully Boy," "Bully : for You," so commonly used in the street, are not of modern coinage, but have a classic origin. As a stimulus to martial exploits, the Romans honored a victorious genpral when lie entered a city with a 'triumph. He was placed in a chariot drawn! by four homes, preceded by his captives and his spoils, and followed by his army,and thus escorted, he passed along the Yia Sacra, and ascending to the capitol, sacrificed bull to Jupiter. An inferior trium was balled an ovation', from the . practice of', sacrificing a sheep instead of a bull. In the case of an o;ation, , the victor entered the city on fo6t, attended.by a small ret inue and a band of flute players. .It is common in our army for the soldiers to ` manifest their appreciation of a gallant officer or soldier by exclaimipg " Bully for him I" (a bull for him,) but no man who wears an epaulette would consider it a complitnent were his soldiers to shout "a sheep for, him." And yet we give ovations to our conquering heroes. In the tale_of Ivanhoe, Sir Walter Scott puts, the following words in the mouth of Friar Tuck when he entertained the Black Knight Come, trowl the brown bowl to the, Bully boy, bully boy— Come, trowl the brown bb-v1 to me, Ho I Jolly Jenkin I I spy a knavo in drink ing. Come, trotvl tbe brown bowl tome, Bully boy, bully bbyx--,._, THE SACRED VoLum.e.—oome writer gives the following analysis of 'the book of boolts the Bible: It is the book of truth ) which detects all human errors., It is the book of life, that shows how to avoid everlasting death. It is the most authenic and entertain ing history ever published: It contains the most remote antiquities. the most remarkable events and w onderful occurre i nces. It is a complete code of law. It is a perfect body of divinity. . It is an unequalled. narrative! It is_a book of biography. It is a book of travels. It is a book of voyages. It' is the best covenant ever made, the best deed ever written. ' It is the best will ever executed; the best testament ever signed. '-- It is the schoolboy's best instructor. It is' the learned man's master-pieco. - It is the ignorant man's dictionary, and every man's - dictionary. But that_ which crowns rail is the author. He is without partiality and without hypocrisy. -With whom there is uo variableness, neither shadow of turning. elpi. OUTLIVED HER IJSEF Reverence for age should bi very early into the minds of and, like .all seed sown by a hand, lit will take deep root the will the virtues of the aged s brightly before the mind; and thi ides be looked on with. with ency 4od pity. Next to the d children do the "stricken in yea our syiunethy. • , Nod longsince ; a good lookin., middlelife, came to.our door . a the tOniste;r. When informs was 0111d:town, he seemed dis land aiiiitiroi. 9n being "queiti I bis brisiiie.so ' he replied: • "I iiave ;l ost my ' -'mother, a place (used; to be her home, a father' lies here , we have Come besid ! him .l." 1 1- Our heart rose in sympatb said, 9'you have met With a grea "Well yes," replied the str With hesitancy; "a mother is a in general 'but our mother ha: her Usefulness --she was in h childhood, and her mind hedi 1 weak as her body, so that she w fort to herself, and was a burde : body. `Mete was seven of us, daugtters,ind as we could not body who" fas willing to boar agreed4olteep her among us a ye But IA bad more -than my she for she was too feeble to be mo , lily time was out, and that was n three inonths before her death. she Was a good mother in her toiled very !hard ko bring us all Witheutl looking at the fa heartless man, we directed hi. house of a neighboring: pastor, turned to eor nursery. .We gas merry little faces there, which grew sad, i l tittritatien Of ours, tie ones tel w ose ear flows no our language half so sweet as "1 and we wondered if that day w come itihen they would say of has Uutlived her usefulness—s ecnnfOrt to !herself, and a burden bodyeise.” l And we hoped be day would dawn, we might be obr rest. ] God forbid that we sh live the Icle of our children; r us die whine our hearts•are a . par own, that our grave may be wat their tears, and our love linked hopeb of heaven. • When the bell tolled for the burial, we went up to the san pay our only token of respect to stranger; fo r we felt that we c her memory a tear, even though i ohildlen had none to shed. ! "S ip l was a g ood mother in and tvled bard Co bring us all she had outlivecther usefulness no cdpfort! to herself, and a bu everybody else." Thes,ei cruel, words rang in our ea r s; we < ffi conlborne up the aisle. The b long end loud, until its iron to i 1 ohroeicled 1 the , years of the 1 mother. One, tiro, three, four, clearl and almost merrily eac told of her once peaceful sluinb mother's bosom, of her seat at ,•. on her weary father's knees, Sik eighq nine; teri, rang out the tai sport upon the green-sward, meatier, and by the brook. twelv , thirteen, fourteen, fifiee, more gravely of school days, a house old joys and cares. Sixt•l eaten, eighteen, sounded out 1 E tured visions of ruaidenhoOd, a dream of early love. Nineteen I ;ore a happy bride._ Twen ] 1 youbg mother, whose hear irstingl with a new strong lo .1 hP" . - us be of the to hu, , God bad awakened in her bosoL And then Stroke after stroke told of her early womanhood—of the love and Care and hopcsl and fears and toils. through which she passed during these long verus, till fifty .rang oat harsh and loud. i rom that to sixty, earth stroke told of the, strong warm hearted mother and grandiuother,- livingiover again her own • joys and sor rows in those of her children and her child en's children. Every fau.ily of all the .g oup wanted grandmother hen, and the , o ly strife was who shout 'Secure the p,ize. I But hark ! the bell tolls on I Seventy, seventy-one, two, thre , four.— She begins' to grow feeble, requires sonic care, Is not always perfectly patient or eatisfiid, and goes from one child's. house to anather, so that no one plate seems like Lorne. She murmurs in 'plaintive tones,' that after all her toil and weariness, it is lard she cannot be allowed a home to die in ; that she must be sent rather than invited from house to housu. Figlty, eighty-one,ltwo, three, four, five, ab, she is now a second chil'd, "she has outlived her- usefulnbss ; she has now ceated Ito be ti comfort to herself or anybody ;" that is, she hits ceased to be profitable to.ber earth craving and money grasping children. Now sounds out, reverberating Ithrtugh our lopely . forest,, echoing back from Our "hilts ;of the dead," eighty-nine! There ahe lies now in-the coffin,:cold and still; T*U!l_ l o.--$5O 'PER ANNUfIL she makes no trouble now ) dema'nds nd. love, no soft words, no tender little offices: look, of patient endurance, we fancied also an expression, of unrequited love, eat on her marble features. Her woe, there, clad in weeds of woe, and id irony we remembered the strong man's . Words "She Was a good rootha het day." hen the bell ceased tolling, thd strange Minister rose in the pulpit . . Hie form waS erect and his voice strong, but his hair ;was silvery white. He read sevt eral pas Sages of Scripture expressive of God's co:mpassion to feeble man, and esi pecially of his tenderness when gray Baird , are on him and his strengt h failetit. Hit then. made some touching 'remarks di biti, man frailty, and of dependence oh God) urging all present to make their peaed with their maker while ,in health ) that they might claim his promises when heart and flesh should fail theta. • "Then," hit said, '"the 'eternal God shall be thy refuge) and beneath thee shall be the everlasting arms." leaning over the desk and gaging intently,on the coffined farm before him he then:said reverently : "From a little child I have honored the aged ; but nevet till gray; hairs coveted my own head, did I.know truly how much love and sym: pathy this class have a right to demand of their fellow creatures. Now I feel it. Our mother who now, lies in death before us, was it stranger to me, as Was all these her descendants. All I know of her is what her son told (me to•day—that she was brought to this town from afar, sixty; nine years ago, a happy bride--that herd she pissed the most oilier life, toiling as only reothele ever have strength to toil ) until she ?Nand a large family of sons aod daughters, that she left her home here, clad in the weeds of widowhoed, to dWell among her children; and that till health and vigor left her, she lived foe you her descendants. You who togethet h&vo shared her love end care, know ho* well you have requited her. God forbid that conscience should accuse any of yott of, ingratitude or murmuring on account of the care this has been to you oflatd: When you go back to your homes, bd careful of your words and your exampld before your own children, for the fruit of your oWn doing you will sorely reap from them When you yourself 'totter on did brink. of the grave. I l ,entreat you as triend, as one who has 'himself entered the "evening of life," that you never say the presence of your families nor her& eu, "Oar mother outlived her ussfhlness ) eh wad a burden to us." Never, neverj a mother cannot livo so long as that !=== No • whet: she can no longer labor for her children, nor yet care for herself, she call fall like a precious weight on their faith: , ful bosoms and call forth by her helpless; uess all the noble, generous feelings of their natures. LNESS. instilled children ; mother's e. Then ine very it itifirtu- reat leni otherless s," claim I .(g man, in sking for that .he , ppointed .ned as to Id as this d as my o Jay her and we loss." inn man, :rest loss outlived -1. second Igrown as s no loom ! to every sons and find any , her, we ar about. e of her, • ed when ore than klut then day, and 11, of the to the and re• 'd on the wiled or hose lit word in other;" uld ever s, '!She le is no to every ore that taken to uld out ther let of their red with i l ith their other's tuary to he aged aid give Iher own Adieu, then, poor, toil-worn mothet.-- , there are no more sleepless nights, ed more days of pain for thee. Undying vigor and everlasting usefulness are pad of 'the, inheritance of the redeemed. Fee.; ble as thOu wert on earth, thou wilt bd no; burden on the bosom of Infinite Lives but,there shalt thou find thy longed fot rest, and receive glorious sympathy_firout Jesus and his ransomed fold.' IN Lc ri,: MHO FOR "TAKING SOMETHING." —A spoudent of the Philadelphid. ( 1 . Inquire , with the army at Falmouth, has bee 6 visiting one of the Provost Mar= steal's prisons. He tells the following anecdote '.• One of the prisoners, a Unfori soldier,- a droll-looking fellow, is also on hoar& thit barge. I accosted him with— "Weil;fine follow, what are you here for ?" "For taking sometbing," i be replied; "What do you mean ?" ."Whi," said he, "one morning I ditil not feel t , ery well, and went to see thb surgeon.! He was busy writing at thtt time, and when I went in he stt.pped ausl looked at me, saying, "Well, you do lotile bad ; you had better take somethinB;'" Ile then !went on with his writing, mitt left me standing behind him. I 'Doha ardund, and saw nothing I could teket except his watch, and I took that thattst what 1 aiu in• here for." Flis explanation was satisfactory, WI dropped the subject. TOUCHING THE SNARE.—The NIP 13. mented Ea-Gov. Briggs was a stauut-li advocateof the most rigid abstinboce frein all that ,ean - intoxieate. • On one occioion ho was arguing, "that the only safety Vas to let itentirely alone as a beverage—;--tat a little occasionly was not necessary; lout injurioqs,"When he gave the followitigifls. tration ILA rattlesnake lies here uti the floor. Be is quiet. One man says, fan tench him without any harm ; Ise sr , m't, bite mei; I'm not afieid.' [Eels tidd to do it.t there is danger if he touChet; ifino; he is safe if ho lets him alone.' He ret4tes: 'II can take care of myself; I'm nes' e , ffiiiti Of the snake; and I will touch him.' Re , monstrance is vain. He atoombe 'reit:Ars' him; the snake strikes hia baud is iv:;.• fang; the 'man dies , ==ii