CHRO unit Sliirinftejiettbcnt Jamilji lj)Ap:i' &cuoic& ta Ncute, Citctdurt, Politico SigtiaUhivc, Science anb iUoralilji.-.' . i Ml i . -- - ... ., . - - ' ll. C. HiGKOK, EDITOR. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1850; V0L.VI.,N0.5-312. EG .171 , The Lcwltbarg Cbroeitcte inri every Wedweedey morning at Lewieburg, Uniaa county, Pennsylvania. . Team. 1.50 pe.year,Tdr ea-h actually In advance ; $1.75, pud within three montae; ft if paid within Um veer; 9,50 if not paid before the year ei ptree ; etngle number. S cent, sub' KriptMna fur i moallM or lea la be paid in erivanc. Dwconlionanoaa optional with the I'tiblisher eicept when the year la paid op. Advartieeaaente handaoenely ineerted at SO eta nr eqoar ona week, f 1 for a month, and $5 for a Tear ; a reuueeu price ror longer aavenisarnenui. Two square, f 7 ; Memsenlile advertisement not ticeetling ores-foarlh of a column, quarterly, $10. ('Mini advertisement and Job work to be pud tor when banded in Of delivered. All eomniuniealiona by mail an come poat pid. accompanied b the address of the writer, to 1 retire attention. Those relating eicluaively to the Editorial Department to be directed to H. C. ilicaoa, E-q , Editor and all on bueineae to be adJreawd to the Fubluner. Otfica. Market 8t between Second and Third, O. N. WORDEX. Printer and Pobluher. For the Lneilburg Chronicle. THOUGHTS srOGRWKD T TUB FAREWEIX 8KB- W) Or luv. U. luwvtiun, from II Cor. aitt. U Rnall y, brethren, IkrtweU." Go. brother ! go where GuJ invites. And warn the world of ain. Hie Spiril'e eoiea thy call indite, And ehede ita peace within ; Twe God that called thea first to preach, Go eound th' alarm afar ; 'Tie God who telle thre what to loach. And what hie precept are. Go. brother ! go. God telle the where. Hi purpoaea dired, lie aiwwara yoor enquiring prayer q A ud ill ; our routae prutect 1 ran oVmand jour greatest privet Applied where needed moat. Then hie you to the Goapel tower And make the Cruae your bo!.- Oj, brother ! go, though weeping fneo.de Uoeef yoor way with lean, God spam the Carietiah aear who bend Hie path for weepeia' (vara. 'Ti had to pait. but God clairua fiitt. All elea mutt own thia claim. And tbouah the deareet bond be buret Vet follow on the aame. Go, brolber ! go,' and tell anew The theme you now repeal. Fear not. though ealumniaa pureue They never can oVfret. The council of oar teas' dechM, Spare neither friend or foe. Let not the world yom feel aoenara. Or languor o'er you grow. Go. brother ! go and. bra thai waB ( Not finally, we troet. Bat may we meet in beaten to dwell When duet haa p eased to dual ; There change. Ciila, and team are o'er. And heart i joined to heart. Sorrow and aighing eoana no mote, And taint abail no mora part. NOVITIU8. Lswisscao, March IS, 1850. From a Hlner. termed fm, a IsIUt to aW Editor (a Liotmrg Ckrumk," daud Sacbamirto Citt, ) California, Dec. 18, 1840 J My Dear Friand : Your letter of Febru ary 2"th reached me u 1 u about to leave Sao Francisco to test the reality of Caliroreia gold. You cao not tell how much I appreciate your kindness in writ ing to one wbo haa ao few claimaon your attention ; and theae feeling induce me to thank for the delicate eoosideralioo which prompted you in aending a letter to meet me in California. Perhapa if succeae will allow me to leave thia country so soon, I aliall be able to meet you within a year or two, and we can then go over together the time that has passed aince I saw you. But California must be more interesting to you than this personal gossip, so I will endeavor to write briefly, of what I have seen since my arrival. After enduring a specimen of the sailor's rough life by sail ing around Cape Horn, I at last reached the exciting end of a sis month' voyage on the 8ih of July, and was glad enough to touch terra firma once more. Some goods which I brought out on commission detained me from the minds for a lew weeks, and occasioned me some loss though an op portuaiiy was thus afforded me to become well acquainted with San Francisco and its vicinity. I found it composed mostly of ranvasa houses and large tenia, nearly all occupied as stores, and populated by a shifting variety of race from all quarter of the world. Money waa plentiful a ber net on uncle Thomas' farm, and gambling by thousands a respectable profession Situated on the crescent-like curve of a bay filled with island. surrounded by mountain blue in the distance, am) shot from the ocean by ao entrance only two miles wide, San Francisco offered to my first view of K the most Beautiful scene 1 had ever beheld. All that has been written of California eceoery is correct, but long months of drought render it comparatively barren in thia upper part of it, although the soil is really good and pasture rich on the plains along ita river, la August, after being etched by the most enticing reports from the diggings, leH San Francisco refusing apporl unities of receiving monthly eateries of $90010 sail up the fuiwoua Sacramento for the mines. The river glides alaaeet impercep tibly through a drooping fringe of low folr- te, here and there tcstooaed with vines, which open occasionally to reveal a glimpse of tinted prairie land bounded far off by mountains and dotted with wild rattle. , At latt.lrees oak and sycamores rise from the banks and spread back a short d: st ance, and amongst these our schooner sailed tranquilly till we reached this "city" of Sacramento then consisting; of a few large tenia in the woods, where trading waa prosecuted, and miners - came for supplies ol provisions. Our little party of four, bought mules, and engaged learns to convey our freight to Mormon Island, situ ated in the American River, 25 or 30 miles east of this place ; and we proceedeJ to the diggings, full of gool spirits and. vision of big lump, tramping in the beat over dusty plains and hills, undaunted and cheerful. In two dnys, we were digging amongst stones, and wah ug out dirt, with all the energy the prospect of a golden reward could inspire. Well, we found gold, and I mentally dispell d your skepticism as to its eiisieoee here,but we found it in quant ities so small as to discourage us. Howe ver, perseverance through failure and sick ness gave us egerience, and this taugbr us where to look and how to work. I have made a few hundred dollars, and am now awaiting spring to work where I can be certain of an ounce per day, with the Chance of having the greater success of others. Mining is certainly bard work, but leads to wealth, and with this recom mendation my degradation 10 a gold difger will be overlooked by those who win their riches by respectable shrewdness in business. The precious stuff which has drawn to this country like a magnet ao many thousands, is found in small, round ish flakes or scales, in the banks and beds of every stream, while it ia heavier and lumpy in its character when found in ravines, or amongst rocks. It has lately been found in quartz and granite when exposed above the ground, but everywhere it ia pure and beautiful. The geological characteristics of the country account to me for its richness in this metal, for it appears to have been ejected from the deptha of the earth by the aame mighty throe that forced to the auiface those gran ite piles, half imbedded, which ate peculiar to this part of California, and the elements of which are found more or less through out the world wherever gold has been dis covered. I have given you no further particulars of the country or ita riches, because I think you must be already well acquainted with them. I have had much of the hard expe rience of a traveler.but been perfectly heal thy aince I left New York. For some weeks, heavy rains have been frequent, rendering a camp-life rather uncomfortable and swelling the streams so aa to atop miuing on them. At present, the Sacram ento threatens to oveiflow the City, now large, populous and wealthy. I have been writing amidst 'noise, and hurriedly, ao beg of you kindly to excuse an abrupt conclu sioa. Yours, itc B.P.AVERY. From Godey't Lady'e Book. I hear the Windi whistle." ST a. T. US, CAMUS C- I bub the wind vhieUe, I bear lb loM A I alt by mj hearthel and tbiak of the gw ' The tftm that em (UBBen, th brow that an cold. The Up Ibex en aWed, th abroad end the would. Tbe fagot tram brightly, bat derp In toy heart Dwell a epirit ordutaea Out will not Stpert ; And K call ap old awe, and look tbat tbey wore. En the BTim robber, Daalh, cart hi abad at mj door. Wtxni hi dark Wow Ml cm Toa thrvahoU Egaio, , I absJl snath in hi free a I yield to hi chain ; for my old eye grow dim, and I ao longer cue To b watching th Btgot that' flickering them. I bear th wind whiatle, I hear th lend wave, 1 Aa I art fey lay haarUxtooe and think of th gran, - Th eye that an ranken, the brow tbat are eolii, . Tbe lip that an tailed, the alirood and the mould. Of Xorthaanberiand, Ta. Oaltftnila Gold. 1V0 tVew DUcoterg. From an inter esting letter from Washington, in the New York Journal of Commerce, in regard to the gold of California, we lake the lollow ing, which goes to show that the mmes in tbe quartz region are not a new discovery '"These'mines have undoubtedly ' been worked some period far back. Mr. Wright states that an opening was lately discover ed in one of these quarts hill, and it was found to be a shaft very deeply , sunk.' Upon exploring it, three galleries were found leading from it through the rock, all which were regularly and skillfully propt nn the sides, and skillfully rooted. The rock waa found to be very rich in gold and tbe amount taken from it must . have been immense. ;. . This fact goes to illustrate some ticxv can and Spanish traditions, and, indeed histories of individuals, wbo hate, fa times past, acquired vast and ' untold treasures, hot from what sources Spanish jealousy and cupidity would never allow lo become kaeaa. The Country Press. There are only a few of our reader, we apprehend, who are in the habit of reflect ing seriously upon the moral, sociat, and political influences exercised by the con due tors of the country press. They are aware, it is true, that almost every village and hamlet within the eitended borders of our free and happy country has within it self one of those potent levers, and gene rally under the guidance of a single indi vidual, who is often impelled to the perfor mance of his duties more by the regard he entertains for his profession than by the encouragement or the rewards that are bestowed. But they do not nlrtCys fairly appreciate the control which that single individual hold over the opinions, end over the passions and the prejudices of whole communities. They do not at all limes fully recognize the importance of those rsys of light and intelligence which emanate even from the most Unpretending of the co-workers in the wide fluid of let ters, because it is not in their power to trace out, at one view, their effects upon the minds of numerous persons. When, however, they look abroad, and contrast the intellectual, social, moral, and religious cooamon 01 tne citizens ot mis entire re public, with the enslaved, ignorant, and degraded condition of the people of almost every other country on the face of the ... .. globe, they will not, they can not hesitate to do justice to those who, by their efforts, have done so much in preserving within the bosoms of our people the pure spirit of liberty, and in establishing and maintain ing that regard for individual rights, and that implicit obedience to the laws, which form the true foundations of our national superstructure. It is in this view, if we would estimate them at all, that we must consider the po tent influences of the country press. And, thus estimated, who that has an interest in progress of intelligence.fand in the preser vation of constitutional liberty, will deny to the press in their immediate circle, that support which can alone enhance ita use fulness and extend those Influences for good ? How frequently are we pained and mortified by the perustl of appeals made through the columns of prudently and ably conducted papers, for the means of contin uing labors whbh have for years been al most gratuitously f-'rformed for the benefit of the public .' It is sad, indeed, to see men of genius, and men of industry and perseverance, in such a dilemma as this their pride of profession subdued ; their in tellectual energies yielding under the p As sure of neglect ; their generous hopes, and their warm ambition to be useful and hon orable, destroyed by political malice or sectarian prejudice! Such wrongs, we fear, are too often inflicted upon the con ductors of the country press, notwithstaod. ing the professions of liberality we hear on every band, and notwithstanding the uni versally acknowledged importance of sus- taining, in the midst of every community. an independent newspaper. We may say, indeed, that we know, personally, several such cases as are here referred to ; but we hope that they are all tbat ever have or ever will occur. As, however, nearly all the country pa pers that come under our bsoervation and they number some fifteen hundred, hailing from every quarter of the Union are conducted with a view to the instruction and the advancement of the familv circle in morality, literature, and science ; and, at the same time, present a synopsis of the stirring events of the times in which we live, we can not imagine how any judicious parent can withhold his support from such publications, struggling in his own vicinity, and, at the same time, bestows his patro nage on papers from a distsnt State or city. If it is true that charity begins at home, our country friends are bound to support their country prtujirit, and then. according to their means and the generos ity of their dispositions, to extend their charity abroad, and render it as diffusive as possible. We have lately Witnessed, in the rejuvenated and cheerful appearance of many of our old and valued country friends, tbe most gratifying evidences ol the "march of improvement,' as well as of the favorable estimate placed on their characters and services by their immediate neighbors. This speak well for proprie tors and natrons: and we hope to see these evidence of mutual confidence and 01 , . public spirit increase an hundred fold, until all our exchanges shall look as bright as a cold dollar In conclusion, we do not believe tna anv well conducted ' eastern publication entertains any other opibions, or 'would auffsest anv advice that would not fully accord with the sentiments here expressed S . t If there are any who do not agree with us, we are happy to say we are not on lh list cf their confidential friends. Godej'j Lady's Book. J The State of Milne. FROM TUB 8UMtlT Of MOCST KATAUDI. BY THE BEV. JOHN TODD. D. B. As yo'i sit down on the top of Ka'ahdin. with the eye aching a ou try to pierce the interminable forests, or follow the no ble rivers beneath id the immense valley not able to see the footsteps of mm, or re alize that he has cut even a walktngttick out of the forest your mind beco'nes crowded with new and strange thought You ask yourself, Is it possible tbat the iron pathway will ever come up these val leys, and the scream of the steam-whistle ever startle the eagle in his lonely ey rie, and morfee in his trackless swamp 1 I it possible that the sunlight will break in up on these wilds, and towns and villages ever spring up here ?" Ferhsps in half a cen tury men will wonder if their then beauti ful valley of the Penobscot could ever have been as wild and as awful as it is flow des cribed ! The fact is, that the Slate of Maine, though old enough to be celebrated in song and story, is yet in her infancy. Among her thousand islunds, sparkling along her rocky coast, she will ever find the treasures of the deep to employ a multi tude of hardy fishermen. From her for ests, for a long time to coma, she will send forth lumber over the civilized world. But these are not to be her ultimate reliance. Her town and cities and villages hang like beautiful fringes on the skirts of ber forests. You might lav all the restof New Eno-land. and other fine Stairs down upon her terri- tory, and she would have forty thousand acres left ! You are amazed to see how very small a part of her territory ia jot occupied. At Bangor, you are in a city, large, rich and inviting ; a walk ol twenty Hvtoutcs will carry you into a lorest never yet cut down by the band of man ! The wild deer has broken out and rushed into her streets within a few years. When we read of our commerce, of our cities; of our population of over 30,000,000, of our in creasing desire for more territory, of the amount which our cultivated acres pro due, we are apt to feel that we are almost an old country. But we forget that the greater part of our country lies just aa it did when the eye of Columbus first gazed upon it, and just as it was when the May flower firat beat round Cape Cod. While our flag is known and respected the world over, and our Republic has already a name that can never perish, we are only as yet on the shores of our possessions. We hardly know, aa yet, where our mighty rivers take their rise. ' While the great teamboats are moving up and down tho Potomac, the Penobscot, and the Hudson, you can not visit tbe head water of these i rivers without an Indian to guide you, without carrying your canoe for miles on ! your back through unbroken forests, and sleeping on the ground wherever night finds you. The bear and the deer and the moose, with the wolf and the panther. have their home among these wilds in numbers almost as great as ever I The moose and the deer have been entangled in the shipping of huge vessels as they attempted to swim the enobscot ! And while we have stretched the wires of the telegraph from Halifax to New Orleans, a part of the way, and that not a small part, they run through unbroken forests ; and while we have leaped across a continent. and are building up cities on the Pacific, we have led a terra incognita behind a vast unmeasured waste where the buffalo goes in herd miles in length and where the Indian must rosin on horseback to catch his prey. When will all this great territo ry be subdued and occupied 1 And what is to be the history and the destiny of this uncounted race?. It strikes your mind with greai force, too, when it occurs to you as it will be tbe most likely to occur on Mount Ktah din that almost all the northern part of the earth ia yet unoccupied by man. The hills and vales of India are worn out and look as if exhausted. Asia, the cradle of the human race, has a warm climate and eenial soil. From the center and home of the human family, man has been working his wsy op toward the cold wilds of the north. In proportion as they move north ward, they become more hardy in consti tution, more industrious to supply the luck of plenty and exuberance which a warm climate affords, and more skillful to meet and overcome the difficulties-of nature. Thev must have warmer clothing; more nutritious food, and a greater cnttitnand over matter, in order lo live in 8 cttlrj cli mate; have the intentions, the elffS; the skill, the industry, the hardiness or the northern races of nen And as mei et down the forests and move up nonhward, nay we rot expect generation more akill .ill, more industrious, more endurig and more untiring in labor ! Has not the hor- hem part ol the earth been kyt, by me providence of G jd, tilTart and hid so 'ar advanced, that they know how to make ik unjenia! soil to be fruttful.and the snort eummer to jield the nrressnries of lire, and the long, dreary win'er to wear smiles even upon frozen lips? Was it, that when the i ii great work ol converting me vona to Christ should cone to ocrupy the right place in the hearts of men, soldier of the cros should coTie Irom the northern parts f the earth, fine d Iv education aril con liiutn.n to go furth lo great eedjrance 1 It ia remsrkable, that when (aod. in histo ry, has called for the overthrow of mighty empires, the region of the Black 8ea, or some other unmapped region of. the north, has poured down legfocsof armed mn, able to do mighty arts in war. til not the Prince of P,e?e go to the same territo ries for bis soldiers f Has all the north ern psrt of this con'iiient been thus left to the bear and the wolf, till the time should come when Oud should De reauy to use ruch men a could and would occupy these regions ? You can not doubt that the population who will occepy ths vast terri- tary of Maine aill be industrious they must be, to live here ; that they will be in telligent and educated the destiny of Nfw England seems fix"d in this respect ; tha' tliTe wiil be schools and churches, acad emies and even colVgirs far up among the ild lakes of l.er distant north ; nor can doabt that many a young man will j he raised up from these places, who will be loremost in the great work of didnring the mercy of Chris! to the ends of the earth ! Maine has already sent out many such, who are but specimens of a multitude who Will yet come out from her borders and take their places among the foremost of those who gird on thoir armor and do bt- tte valiantly for the Lord of Hosts. Now York Evangelist. From the New York "Home Juurnal." The Life-Book. Write, Mother, write ! A new, rjnapotted book of life before ihea. Thine re tbe hand to trace upon it page Tie fir-t few character ; to live in gl'ry, Or lire in ahame through tun; unending age ! Write. Mot'ier, write ! tbw hand, tho' woman', mart nt faint nor filter. Tbv lot i on lliee nerve thee then with care; A mm her' tracer; time miy never alter lie it fiiat impreo, then, the oreain ol prayer. W Hie, Alotaer, wntm t Wiite. Father, write ! Take thee' a pen plucked from an eagle' pinion. And write immortal action lor thy en ; Teach him tbatjman forgeta mao'e high dominion, Creeping on earth, leaving deed undone. Write, Father, write ! Lem-e on hi Life-book a fund lather' bleing. To shield him from temptation, toil, and tin. And he shall go to glory's field, posesing Strength to contend, and confidence to win. Write, Father, write! Write. Sister, write ! Nay, shrink not, for; sister' love i h.dy Wiite word the angela wnifper in mine car ; No bud ot aweet ailrclion, howe'er lowly. Out planted here will bloom in after yean. Write. Sister, write ! Something to cheer him. hie rough way punning. For manhood lot atemer far than our ; He may not pauae he must ba op and itning. Whilt-t thou art idly dieaming among Bower Write, Suiter, write ! Write, Brother, write ! Strike a bold Mow upon lhee kmdrrd pag- ; Write .Shoulder lo houldei,brnth-r we will go; Heart linked to heart, tho' wild the conu-st ragr. Wa will defy lb battle and the Ioe. Writs. Brother, write! Wa who have trodden boyhood' pa'hs tothef, Uenealb the summer' nn and winter ky. What matter if Life bring u some foul weaihet? We may le rtrongei than a(!reftty ! Write, Brother, write ! Fellow Immortal, write ! One GoJ reign in the beaen ihere i no ether, A nd all mankind are brethren : thua 'ti rpoiten. Arid wboao aid a sorrowing, struggling bio.her Bv kindly word, or deed, or frirodly token. Shall win tae lavor oi our neavemy w nun, Wno iudsea evil and reward tbe good, . And who bath linked the race of man together In one at, universal brotherhood. Fellow Immortal, write ! The oldest biak in the librsry of Cou gress, is an imperfect ropy of the second edition of "Higden's Polychionicon," prin ted in black letter, by Wynken de Worde, 1495- The work consists ol 348 folios. The first 7 folios, and all after 332, in this copy are supplied by manuscript, ihe colophon reads as follows : "Thus ended the thirteenth days of Apyrll the tenth veer of the reign of Kinge Henry VII and the incarnation of our Lord MCCCCLXXXXV. Emptynted at West mestyte by Wynken de Worde.' A Sublime Thought. Somebody spe king of the Ojean, called It a "cemetery without monument. How many thou sands ileep beneath the waves,whoaegrae are marked by no sculptured marble. The population of the Sandwich Islands, according to the census recently taken, is. hativei J,S.8i4i foreign, 1,87. Total, Bir4tr Why I left the Anvil. I see it you would ask me what I hive to say for myself for dropping the hammer and taking up the quill, as a member of your profession. I will be honest now, and tell you the wh lie story. I was transposed from the anvil to the rditer'a chair by the genius of machinery. Don't smile, friend-i, I it was even so. I had stood and looked for hour on tnoe thoughtless, iron intellects, those iron fingered, sober, supp'e automa ton, as they ca'ucht cp a bale of cotton, aud twir'ed it in the twinkling of an eye, into a whirlwind of whizzing shreds, and laid it at my feet in folds of enow-white e!ilfi, reidy for the ue cf our most vulup- t ioti an ipooVs. They were wonderful things, tr.ose looms and spindles ; but tt.ey could not spin thoughts ; there was no at tribute of Divinity in them, and I admired them, nothing more. They were excess ively curious but I cottld et.mte the whole compass of their doings and desticy in finger power ; so I am away end left them spinning -cot'on. One day I was tuning my anvil benra'.h a hot iron, and buy with the thought, that there was as much intellectual philosophy in my hammer as in any o! the jenginery a-going in modern times, when a most un earthly screaming pierced my ears; 4 stepped to the do r, and there it was, the great Iron Horse f Yes, he hid come, loo king for a'l the world like the great Drag on we rfad of :u Scripture, harnessed to a living world and just landed on the earth, where he stood braying in surprise and in dignation at the "base use" to which ho had been turned. I saw the gigantic ncx ibed move with a power that made the earth to tremble for mile. I ssw the ar my of human beings gliding with the velo city of the wind over the iron track, and drovrs of cattle traveling in their stables at the rate of tuenty miles an hour toward their city slaughter-house. It was wonder ful. The little busy bee-winged machinery of the cotton factory dwindled into insigni ficance before it. Monstroew beast of pas sage and burden ! it devoured the inlerven fjjU diteice,and welded the cities together ! 'V for its furnace heart and iron sioews. it was nothing but a beast, an enormou aggregation of horse power. And 1 went back to the forge with unimpaired rever ence for the intellectual philosophy of my hammer. "Fussing along the street one afternoon I heard a noise in an old building, as of some one puffins a pair of bellows. So am, mAn. I aeDPcd in. and there, in a corner of a room, 1 saw the chief-d- ce'Jvre of all the machinery that has ever been invented since the days of Tubal Cain. In its construction it was as simple and un assuming as a cheese press. It went with a lever with a lever, longer.stronger than that with which Archimedes promised to lift the world. I' is a printing-press," said a boy stan ding hy the ink trough, with a cuslew tur ban of brown paper on his head. "A print- ins-press?" I queued mu-'ing'y lo my self. "A printing-press? what do you prhit ! I asked. ''Print !" said the boy, staring at me, doubtfully, "why, we' print thoughts." "Print thoughts !" I slowly repeated afit r him ; and we stood looking for a moment at each other in mutual adi miraion; he in the absence of an idea, and I in pursuit ef one. But I looked at him the hardest, and he left another ink mark on hi forehead, from a pathetic mo tion of his left hand, to quicken his appre htnilon ofm7 meaning. "Why, yes,' !ie rei'f r.tcd, in a tone of forced confilenee, a i( passing an idea, which, though having t beeo current a hundred years might still be counterfeit, for all he could show on the spot, "we print thoughts to be sure. "But, my boy.' I asked in honest soberness, what are thought, and how can you gn hold of them to print them ?" "Thoughts are what come out of the people's minds,'" he replied. "Get hold of them, indeed ? Wbv minds am t nothing you can get hold ol, nor thoughts either. All the minds that ever thoucht.and all the thoughts that min Is fever made, wouldn t mtke a ball as big as your fist. M nds,they say, are just like air ; you can't see them ; they don't make any noise, nor have any color ; they don't weigh an thing. Bill Deepcut, the aexton, says, that a mnn weighs just a much when his mind ha gone out of a he did belre No, sir. all tha mind that ever lived would not weigh an ounce troy. "Then how do you print thought ' I asked. "If minds are thin as sir, and tho'ts thinner still, and mke no noise, and have no substance, shade, or color, and are like the winds, nnd, more than the winds, are anv where in moment; sometimes in heaen, and sometimes on earth and in the wstfere under the earth 5 how tan you .riwt how cart voo seer them v. ...- - - hr n rsnght,T)r show them to others! Ezekiei's ej e grew lamioou wiib a new idea, and pushing his ink-roller prouJ ly across thj metallic page ol the newj.-, per, he replied. -Thoughts work and talk in things hat makes tracks, and we lake them track and stamp them on paper, or iron, wood, stone, or what not. That ia the way we print thought. Don't you under stand?" . 'The pressmen let go tha lever, and looked interrogatively at Kaekiel, be ginning at the patch on his stringles brogans and fcliowing up with his eye to the fop of the boy's brown pa?er but! cip. Ezckiel comprehended the felicity cf his il lustration, and wi,ing hi hards on hi low apron, gradually maamri an attitude of earnest exposition, i give him as sccour ag'tg wisk, and 50 he went on : , "Thoughts rr.ake tracks," he continued impressively, aa if evolving a new phase of the ida by repealing it slowly. Setiuj vs assented to this prorosition inquiringly, hn stepped :.i tfie type-case, with bis eye fisd admonishingly upon us. "Thoughts mads track, he repeated, arrang;cg in .Ya left hand a scrre or two of metal slips, " and with these here letters we can take the ex act irr.presak.B of every thought that ever went out' of the heart of a human man, sci we can print it too," giving the inked form a blow of triumph with his fist, "we can, print it too, give us pnper and ink enough,' till the great round einh is blanketed around with a coverlid of ihoughts.as much l.ke the pattern a two peas." F.xeki'l seemed to grow an inch at every and the b.-sany press man looked first at him, then at the press, with evident astonishment "TaU about the mind's liv ing for ever 1" exclaimed the boy,poi&xcf . patronizingly et the ground, as if mind were lying there incapable of immortality until the printer reached it a helping hind, "why the world is bfimfn! of live, bright, indus'rious thoughts, which would have been dead, as dead aa a stone- if it hada'; been for boy like me who hrt run' the ink rollers. Immortality, indeed ! why people's minds,' he continued, with his ira aginatiou climbing into the profanely sub- . lime, "people's minds wouldo't be immor tal if 't wasn't for the primer at any rats, in this here p'aoetary buryiog-ground. Wa a re the chaps that manufacture immortalil y for dead men,' he su'Joined, slapping ibe pressman graciously on the shoulder. The latter look it as if dubbfi J knic-'it cf th legino 01 honor, for the toy had put the mysteries of his profession in sublime apo-. rs!ypse. "Give us one goodheallhy mind,' resumed Kzekiei. -to ihink r 4 . will furnish a dozen worlds a big as this with thoughts to order. Give us such a man and we will insure hi life; we will keep him alive forever among the living. Us can'; die, no way you caa fix it, when once we have touched him with these here bits of inky pewter. He shan't d e, nor sleep. " e will keep his in.r.J&t work on a'l th mir.d-i or. earth, and ail the aniod that shall rorTH here to live as long as tha world stands." "Ezekiel. 1 askeJ, io a tub u-d tone of reverence, "aui you print my inougni too!' "T!, that t will, he replied, "if you" will think some of the riht.kinJ.' "Ye, that we will, echoed the pressman. And I wen! home an I thought, an l En- kid ha printed my th i'ight-tra?k' ever since. Ei.inv DvaatTT, the " LearoeJ Blacksmith. Thirly'Tiioa-Bnd Landlord own Eng !Hnd, "8000 own So tland, 6'.0i owo ai Ireland, leaving more thin 25.000,000 in habitants or those countries without a fout of God's creation. "Mr. Brown, I owe you a grudge re member that." . - "It is hord!y worth while lo rememher it fur I never knew you to pay anything you owed-'' "Have f hjsicisns tiono more) to allevi ate the ill of mankind, or no ?' asked a friend of an eminent Dr. "If you except the old women, they hnve not,"' was the enndid ree'y. Robert Wallack, Esq., a eivil engineer, as, just before the mni! left Panama, mar ried to Dona Maria Aleman. Thi is the first step toward the annexation of New Granada- "That's what 1 call a repe:ition.'' ex claimed friend the other day. "W hat' that Toml aid we, "Why. look . at that ,.gn screws the way J. E. Wcller. JewaU ler." . The City of Lafayette, La., ha got up a scheme for making the city corpora-ion a grand Insurance Company, to insure against f.r all the building in ihe city. jC7See next rg-'