33,p VOLUME TINT, ricommito4oca. NARK TRU. WATOCATI:D, TO PAIL sszisolneod; AND OTUER COP , . ' Brand them On their foreheads brazen,: Sink it deep! Let the traitor's shameful blazon Never sleep. . Brand them e'en as Cain was branded, Through the'warld Let their serail of abatis& be banded, Broad unfurled. Brand them in the public highways With your scorn, Hid the mark in private by-ways !Still be borne. From the board, where true men gather, Drive thtm out! Fill.the tenet 'With atrdngere, rather Thin,thie rout. Trade with foe or sup with stranger, Pass these by; Who, amid their country's danger, Bid her die! Plotting treason foul, inhuman, liainst their land, With such traitors let no true man Strike his hand. Through the coining generations, .Let their noose By-word be, for execrations, Scorn and shame. Brand them deep, though direst rain On them fall, They who plot their land's nodding Forfeit all. No time this to prate or palter— : Mark them well! Sink them, .patriot, without falter, Deep as hell! WB 808 UT. We have met, and we have parted, We may never meet again ; But as o'er life's troubled ocean Toes our bark upon the main. Thoughts will come of that MI Lighting up the weary way, Like a beacon 'mid the tempest Or a btar's mild beaming ray. We may meet no more in earth land— But when death shall close uur eyes, Let us gather with God's children, Round his throne in Paradise. ~=~3C7~LLA.NY. If You Mean No, Say No. When a wan has made up his mind to do or not to do a thing, he should have the pluck to say so plainly and decisively. It is a mistaken kindness—if meant as a kindness - to meet a request which you have deter mined not to grant, with "I'll see about it," or, "I'll think the matter over," or, "I can not give you a pusitive answer now; call in a I'm ifiry - sTuid - 111 - 10. - you know." It may be said, perhaps, that the object of these ambiguous, expressions is to "let the appli cant down easy;" but their tendency is to give him useless trouble and anxiety, and possibly, to prevent his seekiug what he re quires in _a more propitious quarto' until af. tor the gulden opportunity has passed.— Moreover, it is questionable whether the motives tor such equivocation are as philan thropic as some people suppose. Generally speakii.g. the individual-wioa-tlrturavaii.• direct refusal, dues so to avoid himself pain. Men without decision of character have an indiscribable averSiou to say No. Their cue think Nu—soinetiaiev wheii ,t would be wore - creditable to their courtesy Wind benevolence to think: Yes--but they dimike to utter the bold word that represents their • thoughts.— They prefer to mislead and deceive- It is true that these bland and considerate people are often,spoken of 'very gentlemanly:" But is.it . geutlenianly to keep :Olean in sus 'peilse-fer days, and perhaps weeks, merely . . o itAby a stritightfOrward declaration? lie ouly la a gentietuati who treats his fellow-wen in manly, straightforward way. Never seem by ambiguous words to sanction hopes you do not iuteud to gratify, if you mean No out with it Every Man's Life a Plan of God' Every human soul has a complete and perfect plan cherished for it in the heart of God—a Divbie biography marked out, which it enters into life to live. This-;-life, right fully unfolded, `will be a complete and beau tiful whole; au experience led on .by God, and unfo:ded. by ..the secret nature of the world; ;11,Ar t una cast; in the mould, of a per fect art, With no part wanting ; ' Divine study for the man himself an d others; a study that shall forever ualbld, in won. droua beauty, the love and faithfulness of God; great in its conception, great in the Divine skill in which it is shaped.; above all, great in the momentous - and glorious issues it preiiirem— What a thoughtls thai for every human soul to eherish What digui ty does it add todife! What support. Aloes it bring to the trial of life 1 'What•ittistiga den does it add to send tts in everything that constitutes our eami !—We fill a place ia the great everlasting plan of God's intelligence. We never • sink below His Imre ver dropout of iiiir" , 4lol. —Dr. " A l'oditrioksbnrg coirespin ant ertbe following prides sukantrest, Own ; and-ratateis that-the. troop* - aro on half rat: coffee; .$5 pg : pound; Sup; $1 kl;loogir- pet - ratter; $l7 per butihel;',''. , AIEV. ponud' • • . • • •• • . •', .• ',.....,-..,': %;•''' ' . . . ~ . • . . i:, - .••:; . '''''a" l4 ,_•..-. ', . . , , • 'fi. '• :, '''''•• • '''i• "';' . , .. - . ' , ':',".",::" :•'';', ; • . . . ~. . , . . . . . . . , • • .. . • , -',.. , , . . • • . , .. . , . . . ------- . . - . , .. • \ -, •,. . . . , • . iliirtg r , .. 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'/ F !11/ ; : 1..—.• • t"...-- Rellgion , inSuid, 'Fides The utneig4t metropolis .of, Judea contains about 20,4)00 r This a very small number if we ptimpare it with its for mer. greatiiess,,butyre .must,mat forget .that Jerusalem - has been ; dick, devastated,, yhioed and burned, , and-that it is now under a cruel and servile Oespetisin. How long will it be before the day.of deliverance shall diwe on this city where,tho Son , of God Was cruci fied? . • Among the 20,000 inhabitants, 10,00' are Jews—a degraded and urifOrtunite race, who are strongly attached to the walls of this city rendered sacred by their fathers. The 'Pol ish or German Jews area little b ett4r edu cated mad wore moral than the Spanillh Jew but both are, for the most peat, groi;l,:y ig noran t. They , read the Talmud a great deal more than the OW Testament, and , imagine that they are performing a inerito- Fiona work before God by . studying the rabbinical traditions. They live principally on the alum which they receive from the Jews in Europo, Asia and America; fur they believe that the prayers, ana readi lig of the ' Talmud,. performed in the city of David, help to atone fn the sins committed by A braham's posterity throughout the rest of the world. The Greeks or ehristians of the eastern church, number 4,500 to 5,000 within Jeru salem 14. Gabot, after a faithful investi gation,.gives,a sad account of their religious, moral and social condition. No knowledge of the Word of God among them; the wor ship of images and relics, the mingling of spiritutal things with political and material Interests; tyranical find covetous bishops, ignorant priests, fanatical monks. There are exceptions, and some Greeks; ecclesias tics, laymen, willingly listen to evangelical preaching; but the mass of this sect are un enlightened and degraded. The Latins or Roman Catholics in Jerusa lem compose a congregation numbering a bout GOO. The patriarch named Valerga, displays great pomposity in his dress as well as in his pastorial duties, and pretends to control the ehristians of other denominations These Paptists, wha are mostly priests or monks, have frequently quarrels among themselves. The Franciscads possess large revenues, and are not disposed to obey the orders of the patriarch Valerga and the Ital ian .riests. ht meeting The' Protestants compose a mall commu nity of from 450 to 500 souls. They belong to various nations—Germans, English, Swiss etc.—Several aro converted Greeks or Jews. They enjoy full liberty in the exercise of their religion. Lastly. the Massa'marts, 3,000 to 4,000 in number, constitute the remainder of the mutation of Jerusalem. They make up for their numerical inferiority by their niili tary and social perogatives. The governor of the city must be Mahommedon. Lie has under hitt command an armed force which maintains public order. The judge and other magistrates are also chosen among the disciples of the false prophet. These Mus autumns respect the lite and property of the christians, because they fear the great pow ers of Europe. Bat their hatred toward the disciples of Christ-is-always the smie -, and if any calamity should come upon 'them. they would be ready to imitate the horrible massacres of Damascus and Mount -Lebnn- In the other. provinces of Palestine, the Massalinens are more numerous. There are however, christians and Jews at Nazareth, Bethlehem, in the remote mountains, etc There are thirty Samarian families living at Nablous, the ancient Capital of Samaria. hey paruatz* believing_th_u_nount Gori zia' is the most acceptable spot to the Lord sacrifiees. Their priest, or spiritual lead er, is a well•meaning man, who has consen ted to read the Bible through attentively ; but his hereditary prejudices have as yet prevented him from accepting the Gospel. Seed-Time and Harvest. - Life is see d.time : the harvest is to be rea ped hereafter. In this world we sew; in e ternity we shall reap: This is aeording to the analogy of nature. We always sow be- oro we reap; so o space o lute' in ei venes between seed-time and harvest. We never expect to gather a crop as soon as we pit the seed in the ground. •The harvest follows seed-time after an interval; it does not proceed nor accompany it. It is so in this ease. Some think we reap as we go a!ong— that harvest and seed-time are all together -that we are punished iu this world for our sins; bat it is not so This is coutiary to nature. • This life is seed-time,; the harvest. is not yet, but will be by and by, the judge ment is to come. It is appointed unto men once to die pbut after this the juilgoinent The judgement is not'before death but after it ; just as the harvest is not before the seed time. but after it. And it is well to reniem bar that, the hirvest always follows seed-time, and partakes of its nature : for whatsoever a wan soweth, that shall he also, reap. If he sows wheat he. shall reap .wheat; if he sows tares he shall reap them. They who spend their youth 'and priino in idleness and vice, cannot be happy and respected in eld They who waste their swoon tit imprevement, instead of improving for.the duties of life, 'end lo 611 With'hen:or the sphere in ,which they maybe called' id move, cannot -expect to be honored and,. useful: They who Jtovi idleness tope bSTrennetis. `T-he same analogy holds in.sprOttial thhiga Tlle Slug- IRO taßqf blgjft-,4q 03 ,15,,atkci,, 6age . Rothipg. A. woman wilineyerneknowledge a defeat. You. may coaquer, her, you may hung her on ; her knees, you may wave ,ornr her r head ,tho very flag of victory; but isholkill not aoknowl. edge she is , beaten-- in the same rot, there are Frenchman - Who will not 'admit to the present day that they have lost the bat. tle , of , Waterloo. , ;)4.: e,i(yy alit% ESO A.it • -t • • • . • VitAINESIIO4O' FRANKLIN 11 1 10i74/181tLirANIA , • .:(11001,ING, APRIL 31893 i i - '' 0- 4 ' tl " e 4 , 7:4^PP:T Tri;Zt 4 - 14.1 ;ff den. Siegel:oil -the Wai. During the 'meeting di' the 2 .Loya League at New York, letters .wern read froin 'Gener als F,retriont and Sigel, and were received with "great enthusieami - Gen,' Siiret wrote as ~• , . WASOINGTONi D; C., March 20. "Leannot be presebt . at inatiguratitm of the Loyal National League, anti evening, but I setid 'my best wishea, Mid/request yott to 'enroll - thy numb atbong its members. I believe that the self preservation of the North and the preservation of the tepulioan principles :n this cootineht; have made this war. on the 'part of thO United States-Govan.- meet necessaryittud there can be no rest un til our arms have triumphantly established the rights of matt and the majesty of the law over the whole-South. Atthil taleut and energy, the Wealth and resources of the people should be laid on the albir Of the nation ; and if the Government would employ all these agencies and trust in mch of energy and character, unfettered by petty jealousies, to break the ranks ,of the enemy iu front and at home, this .war, will bs speedily ended. e must ,have the Sharp sword as well as the sharp pen ; the strong arm as well as the strong aad fearless mind,.to help us in this terrible strug gle. The people must awaken_ those who s leep, and stir up those who are creeping along instead of marchicg onward with self-relying boldness., I believe in the Monroe doctrine, in the Butler code, in the President's proelania tion in'the good will and perseverance of the peo ple, in the undaunted courage of our volun teers, in the final vindication of the honest, the just and the brave; in the liberation of the down-trodden and the slave, and in the overthrow andideath of the Southern oligar chy. Respectfully, F. Sioat., Major-General. The Doctor and Dirty Feet. Dr. H— J , of New Hampshire, was one of the most able, talented and eccen tric surgeons of the last century. His prac tice embraced a large circuit, and his• fame extended to every part of the State. The doctor was one morning sitting in his office, pouring ov'er_some medical work fresh from the mother country, via. Boston, when a loud rap at the door aroused him. Come in, said he, abd an old female hobbled into the apartaient,-who-seemeit-to-he-the—very—em bodiment of dirt and negligence. 'Doctor, I've got a desperate sore foot.— Can you help it ?' I will try. Let me see it., The old crone proceeded to divest her un derstanding f the apology for a hose with which it was covered, and displayed to tho astonished doctor a foot—and such a foot. Heavens ! exclaimed the man of medicine, throwing up both hands is amazorneaVwhat a dirty toot ?" 'La ! doctor you needn't be in such a won derment about it. There's dirtier teet ;n the world I'se warrant—and a dirtier foot than that in your own house, as proud as the young ladies, your daughters, are for all that; and the old lady cackled for her pleasure at the doctor's astonishment. 'Woman ! if you can find a dirtier foot than that in my house, I. will give you a guinea and cure your foot for nothing.' Whereupon, the old woman stripped off the stocking, and displayed a foot that beg gared all description,_ and grinning in the face of the astonished doctor, exclaimed : '(ii' me the guinea, me the guinea ! knowid it—l -know'd-it washed Anther_ foot foie I come hero I Unconscious Influence. The very handling of the nursery is sig nificant, and the petulance, the passion, the gentleness, tha tranquility indicated, by it, are all re-produced iu the child. His soul is a purely receptive nature, a-td that for a considerable period, without choice or selec tion. A littlb farther on, be begins volun tarily to copy everything he sees. Voice, manner, gait, everything the eye sees, the mimic instinct delights to act later. And thus we have a whole-generation of • futuro men receiving from us their very beginnings immorality. They watct. us every moment, in the funtily,.betore the hearth, and at the table: and when we are moaning them no good or evil, when wa.are conscious of exer ting •no infillelee'over them, they are drgol lag from us impressions and moulds of habit; which if wrong, no heavenly discipline can wholly remove ;. or, if Tight, no bud associa tions utterly dissipate. Now, it may doubted, I think, whether, in all the active influence of our Jives, we do as much to shape the destiny of our fellow-men, us wo do in'this single articles of unconscious in fluence over children .--fluahnell. TEIEOZT AND' •PaAartoE.-=-Words do not reform the world, else they are a g rout while about it. Seneca wrote long h omilies on temperance during the day, and wont abed. drunk at night: • A "high old" moralist, therefore, was Seneca I Socrates also preach ed temperance.and sobriety, ! hut often as r ' graveled the by no rpeans,smWe temper of his sponse, &Intim, by coming home late o' nights "as tight as a briek." The.learned 'Parson, oF modern times,' disposed of, his pints and quarts per day, and drank to,such • prodigious• excess as often ,to , beCload his great .faculties. Coleridge, the immortal wit titer of the ,"Ancient Mariner, and. Christ's ! . bel," and thoroughly sahooled in all the bps of mind and 'natter, completely wreekedllis nervous system by the use of • opium. The 'great. essayist. historian, _poet and, orator, Macanly, went in the same fatal. path. man harkno more right to,utteriritratlis to his own disparagomont than to his own praise. Truth is absolute. It is obligatory under all eirminstanees relation=. =EH The man who thinks he is above his bu siness is really below it and in undertaking it has shown himself a cheat. Be is in no sense degraded by a really moral and respec table work; bii), for the time being, he should not expect or desire to be treated as other than that which he has undertaken to be. The Atlantic Ocean. - The—Atlautic—Oceatt—includes—an—area—of-, 25,000,000 miles. Suppose an inch of rain to fall upon one-fifth of this vast expanse it would weigh 360,000,000 tons, and the salt, which as water is held in solution in the sea, and which, when the 'water was taken up as a vapoi, was left behind to disturb the eqat lihrium, weighed. 16,000,000 more tons, or nearly twice as much as all the ships in the world could carry.at a cargo each. It might fall-in-a-day-;-but occupy-what-time-it-might , in falling, this rain is calculated to exert so mu; 11 force—which is inconceivably great— ' in disturbing the equilibrium of the ocean. If all the water discharged by the-Missis sippi River during-the year were taken uri in one mighty measure and east into the ocean at an effort, it would not make a great er disturbance in the . equilibrium of the sea than the fall of rain supposed. And yet, so gentil are the operations of nature that movements so vast are unperceived ! THE MAN " WITHOUT AN ENEMY.—Efeav en help the man who imagines he oan dodge "enemies" by trying to please everybody. If such an individual ever succeeded, we should be glad to hoar it. Not that we be lieve in a man's going- through the world trying to find beams to. knock his head a gainst, disputing every man's opinions, fight alb: • I : : I / differ from him. That again is another ex. treme. Other people have a right to their oFinions—so have you; don't tall into the error of supposing they will respect you more for turning your coat every day to match the color of t/isirs. Wear your own colors, in spite of wind and weather, storms or sunohme. It costs 'tho vacillating and irresolute ten times the trouble to wind, and shuffle; end twist, that it-does honest,, manly' independence to stand its ground. Take what you please to make rip your mind ;• Mit - EMBALMED BODIEB.--,SOtD4I time since, in clearing out.she ruins of an old chapel in 'Warwickshire, England, several lead coffins were exhumed, containing embalmed bod ies which were-buried more than two hun dred years ago: :T h e coffin which , contained 'the body of Lady Audrey Leigh,,buried in 1640, was opened, and the body fond per fectly embalmed, and in entire preservation, her flesh quite. plump, as if she ,'were alive, her face very beautiful,, her hands exceeding y small, and not wasted; she was dressed in fine linen, trimmed all over in old point lace, and two rows of,lace were Laid fiat across her forehead. She, looked• exactly, as,if she, was lying asleep, and seeped, ,not, more ; than. six teen or seventeen years,_ old. Jler beauty was very great; even her isychishen . and eye brols were quite pe rfect, and her eyes were closed ; no part of her,face or figure was at; all fallen in.—English „z , old Writer has t fully that' we iitisr My what we please, if we appalt through tears- Tender tones prevent severe trtiths from offending. Renee, when wou're inost - tender' at ,heart, our words are most _powerful, Hence One groat reason why our words , have ,sa much mum, power during a, revival than' at 'other, tithes. Our hearts are ' more • Wilder: than they usually are—wo feel more, and it is ea sy far the iii peniteatosuit , and feel that. ca lich r hearts are iuterestn their, behalf.— r '!'hey feel thus, oar- words are' net' mite lip- Words, but heart:at-tads: • A senaible vethemberol tong after the buffoon, who seta the • table Afar is foinoutteii, ,1 ,1 7 to , Selecimijor. ;44' -Rpcdr4 ''`BRBV~RIBI9.-~ l'he 'Matt' who could mit'ex,preWs liii .fbel. in "s apiii(ed•lti'Adaftksli I*, .rrho ragreed . to ~, . ,f do it for him. . " ' - -, 4.1 ~ -4 nr , , , A inan.ylici_shosi'rs an.i Oesiro tn ;do, iimid is at once :wade 4.,plekhotse ; ,ancl . ttiOsOsiiio' cannot useFiiin4 pail , iiip.a byingiite.`, „ It is ti Common'obsOrinition, that- rid man is content with his dwifbodditiem; though ie be the best; nor-'disatisfied' With his •owa' wit, though 'it be - the worst - - A poor widow wan asked how she beearrin so much attvelmci to a certain neighbor ; and replied that she was bound to litniby sever. al cods of wood which he had• send toi her during a hard winter. Either.tve grow wiser, as we grow", ,oldor, or there is no growth at ail—either we ad.' vaaee as we walk•or we. vanoot well be said to stand—flumanity is progress, or it :13 sot Would you have noble offspring see that you choose for them a noble mother, since she alone must fm . their only seacher in that early period, when lessons are but acquired through the sympathies, and when the heart seems rather to strive against than to obey the understanding. • • "My brethern" said Swift, in a sermon there are three sorts of pride ;of birth, if riches, and of talents. t shall not now speak of the hitter, none of you being liable to that abominable vice. When a witty English government derail' ter, after his recall, was,asked_on_his_arrival home, if he had left India on account of his health he replied ; "They. do say there's' something wrong in the chest. 80nooL.A00*-Mrfil,lNE, Read bkroreihe KV fig l" n' - e .7 21, 119033.1 • , School teaching basionglheen ticitnitlete . 4 ; ati Viihealthy'buinfe4.4l "It eituS'eti esisEs us the school-rnoriewhichlptertdati Mtn health pi . ..the te , te)lect...thqi..lPWla e#ll3Ps. piupt ,affect ,the health of the pupils, The ecitli tieris,i4On'Whiidli giAl'heUlfh nre t the same the t Seheobi 4hat, 'they :are where. ' - '• • "The comfort nod lAtrieal,. well-being, of the tiniiilS - sholibt einthiae . tettlii Elie eon struetion . and iiirun - Oeinent. of tle'Slts'Aitift. benches; These , should , be.• of ~Okiroren,t heights, scats ranging front 11 to 17 inches,, and tleslis frinii,lll; &ding itiiiihi.front s.te 17 gears riige:LtL; When itpils'are uneomftirtable, retlessness and uneasiness follows us a consequcuce, and will mostly end.in dislike for school. Petty acts of 'mischief, diiiitrhing theqiilder of the ;dim?! are also fruits Of unconifOriableneki.. Pupild who attend school regularly_. muck of the year,-more especially girls, should, be, directed how, to sit, proper) y at their des, as at writing. pupil's sit eruct: . ft' i§ cominonte see pupilis leaning updit, or ov their dindcs while engaged -in study. This is not objectionable on account of• upgrw 7 fulness so much ps odaecount of its tenden cy to render the chest riitrce contracted: I once received a reproof, indirectly, from.one of the teachers of Kishacoquillas &injury, who Was in niy Schoi): us a visifer.' kii sis ter, a girl seventeen or eighteen years of age, was also tpreseut as-a pupil. The geneeinan inrquestiou went to her and,,reproved her a loud for the improper way she sat at her desk showing her how she ought tO sit, and spoke something of "Physiology" in regard to thematter. )Thus I was reproved„. for I had said nothing to my pupils in regard to this. A high writting ,desk may nal° so objec tionable as some suppose, provided both shoulders of the pupil are kept equally ele vated while sitting at' it; but where one shoulder is elevated while engaged in writ ing or study, and the other not, the spinal column is curved from side to side, bj the position, and when this position is long con tinued the tendency is to produce a perma nent curvature of the spine. This will be indicated by one shoulder, higher than the other. Should it amount to deformity, the mere deformed appearance wilt - not be of so much account as the consequent distortion to the chest, thereby interfering with proper breathing, aad so tending to ,bring on dis ease of the lungs. E— was an interest ing pupil of tea years. who attended the district school. The Girl ' s right shoulder was• higher than the left, es but the teacher hadn't noticed this until Mrs. the girl's mother told him of it. He was careful af- terwards to tequire - this - pupit - to‘keep -her left arm elevated as much as convenient, • while in school, as in writing to have both arms to rest - egually•on the desk, to sit erect, &e. How- mach this growing deformity weakened' the child's constitution te cannot know; but when the disease passed through the neighborhood, "death marked her for his owe." --irocal-niusio-is-condueirto_healthin_the school-room, as elsewhere. Rxercise of the lungs in singing is strengthening to them, and so "tends to ward off disease" of the lungs. 1)r. Rush stated that . "the Germans are seldom afflicted with consumption, nor have I over known" says he, "but one in stance of spitting blood among them.' This he believeti:to be in part oecasioned• by the strength which • their lungs acquire by exer cisiug them trequeatlY in vocal music."-- Teachers who tian'sneceod in introducing vo cal tousle into their sehoo s, , • t tin , find it a:useful auxiliary, tuo, in school gov ernment. The most important thing in regard to the healthfulness of the ackiool-room, is proper ventilation. /1 the romp is adeprope6 or sufficiently ventilated, the health' of • die teacher is almost sure to suifer •frout. it, more, or loss,: the .popils will also be,affected by, it, the school may prove more troublesome .to manage, and the pupils will not progress so. satisfactorily in their studies. ' ' *: • • II I I . . . per supply of lie& by blood is required.•—•' The blood is the life." Without a _propr supply of 'fresh aigor breathing, the chat ges iu the blood as it "passes thrOugh tb , lungs, cannot be effected. The lungs,. Ma' be considered nature's la ioraWylbr -- bloor making. In the lungs the impure blood the system comes in contact with the air w breathe, and parts with its impurities. Tht the lungs.are constantly thiowiug off tha which is poisonous to us to breathe over a gain. Any one may have noticed the 'breath' of per Sous on:frosty mornings. When min gled with. the frosty air itn4trins a little puff of vapor: This moisture is cotisfantly pas siiig from the lungs whine breathing, though we cannotalwnys see it,. and, with it go im purities of the blood- 7 --waste tnatter of the system. "3. 1 ,11 e air thus 'becomes Vitiated with animal effluvia. - It is this-which gives the' disagreeable, sickenine. Smell to crowded, rooms." ° The more' immediate effects to then system fro breathing iiir alias vitiated, are said to 'be headache; languor, &c. Some' times 'digestion EC. impair' et; thereby, and a teachir may suffer Xruni dyspepsia before a uy noticeable effect is prodeced upon the lunge thus'entrtipted En geed eyspepsia , it.iestated in Bombe, s Phy siology, is a very usual effect - prtithichd by lireathing impure , - • The :teacher of adhutrietrseholatates. t .049 - taught is a school, ,house, the' 'japer work of which: had very cure, ful Wok The 'moat iris led* elatiei: arid without any .11102111:1 of veutilatton other thin raising.the;lowor wiles-of w uplawa: ing . the door. The school watt . large; and. the teacher igaeritut of kha • tupottistieri of state* thei-horm lora ...m..........m... , ~•:,:f1.,-,,,,„.,- !•,,ti."- - . .i. , -.t.. , , . .. R 562 members iMti‘ing . the -selidol.:room wall sa damp in the kiiteliiiriVitttelritelm&nweis,Kdis miskd,°llitit upon' no to on.first.-enteringilieliohoolgoi4Witityi'Morn ing. the (.14);Ittfl,ible smell .caused by the, re maining impurities fiVini" fitihninkry ekfialu tions &e. of the"d6Y'befiii6.' lli zlB-Otp - health octWat teacher injured in that ,horiie l lni"tneY' 1-:do tint'll6tibtalliat twitil for the time; at. :least.) He .Mentione haviug, : riotjeed,at tiates n a Ault headache, an& sometimes a swimming seri"str: ticrn in the hbitdr , cispeeially..tWittd9-eveoing, Sc, es to.requi'C;t4i!kl4.l l 9la,_oc,,,VlLle.s4PP ‘ ort near • . ,What t tat Ve:Mie tine they agAillAtr quire I reply it was Soniething,--lerbaps a good deal te - thom:.TA teacher wl o wor tied &id not b'eing i, Coed bealth:Atiniaelr not , iis likely i6'tenetr as well; as , whe.o he is-ebeerftil. Bat how, i mm a teacher be cheer- ful who is not . inzodd iteAtit 'l ti PhySician igluhaiigiten it ° trxica'deal if attention"te this inritter,Lremark'ed , ltettrit int stitistaneez-A‘lf had known ,wlion.,l taught- school over whet- may.. be learot from that book of Professor 'Hares, or fii,nM that hook (4' yours in the'haiketiSe,-Vviintilit not the' Qe referred• to: the. information, , those books . in regard. to ventilation„autl. its `iw portance. I think I have dicta that blidly Ventilated schoolrooms ere inj tirions to the health -:of teachers and pupils. t have said that achools inay,be more troublesome to manage when taught in Such, rooms. This rimy be apps rent When 'the 'effets 'of tireathing the un healthy air Are 'considered— The, pupils become wearied, restless, not inclined to study, and, cousegriently, are more, or less idle and mischievous. The same th'lng af fects the teacher, and he, too,-becomes wea ried and 'inpatient Thus the pupils become more Ungovernable, and the.teacher less tit to govern them. So all are „relieved when they get out into the fresh air. Some selniol-rooms are sufficiently venti lated ane Way and another. To mend ,mat. tens in those not property ventilated; let the Tupper sashes of four windows, two on oppo site sides of the ,room, be male to lot down. if no pulleys aro attached, the teacher Chisel out an ineh or so' under each said ) . Then let a trap door be made in the ceiling, ifthere is not one there already.. By menus of thesis, arrliigeinentg, _tlie_achouLroCM, properly whie-washed and Sertibbekiitrihe Made Wore ecithfortable: • lor Atady,'Atud • its • healthfulness will - be improved , . „ - The earth is exceedingly dirty, but the sea is very tidy. What is that which works whop it ilays, and plays when it works fountain. It takes but a rough — tailor to st , a — man with a suit of tar aai ,feathers. ory unrilailke(Ylacty of forty hat 4 passod.- hie Cape of Good In uttering a great thought, use no wort that doesn't weigh •a, pound. • • • • al " ltbrace as many opportunities as, yon p ease, solaier.saves his own life by slaying his enemies. He kills for a living. Wornah sherild lio proteeted by me as the rose is guAr'cled by its thorn, the, hooey defeßded,,by the bee., Nothing so 'arbirns the famas eficerfulneis When the heart 'sin fluvial', its blouin, anal beauty pass to.the features. We may be in far better health to-day than we were yesterday, but we are nearer dissolution. The best pilka the- world hi a grain of commonsense, but-it is iwt to be ; bought at the apothecary's Or it is not a drug in the market. • A witty rogue ; brought before a Fusion tribunal for a drunken riot, assured the bench that ho was not a diunkard, but xi childhood 6 was bitten by a and dog,' and "Well, for ray , part,, soonor than do thatl would Inapt a widOwer with nine children." "I Would.prefi3r that inyself,!" ward the et ye ply-; "kat whtre..is the widower ?" A SrntE CIIttE P6S EttYstPkim..--,A.cor respondent orthe.Providenee,Jourotd !tar in uitetraizie eases out of a hundred, eraeber ries applied as a poiltice iiilleireetuallYeure the Erysipelas. There is not an instance lib on whereat has: failed . effect, .; ours whop faithfully applied. heirs tho surferer wes s iOa d.ying,stsiu. ,:strti or threeapPlica tioes generally dUthe werk. ' A mut lately repeiNted twenty lashes, well 14 c a r d Alim wh i pping -post , in.sal English, town: The enifirtt, Instead of belloeing when the innatebitippliesl:the mob, laughed i!nuko-lerat,e4y, whieh - tuade the angry, officer gi alt4ter ay an With hartlei' etir#3. Ve, nog hint the.riatieth Mott theentegeole - enuld stand itrile longer. ,;.‘IVeU,„ le*;' ' , v ' said tbekOffelidettoeey4,3l,l• hale =done my (buy, and I omi do, tur. alai., bit Lid feat like ~ 'to knoW *lint it its that , bine fnny, r' "Fnu ey," Alp* thato*r,,"why,.; it excellent. ,Yearie 'get. the wrest . Strath. i 'ON the :AIM that 014 1 4. be IthiPPedi, it 4 1 the - otos , 'NW:, Itootithfo s i ttl:' , 4 * ° 34 r- 81 4 1 ' "A