v. v-V J t .AN. INDEPENDENT WEEKLY NEWSPAPER-DEYOTED : TO MATTEES 'OF ;GENEEAL INTEREST .TO THE .COIJMUKLIY AT L AEG Tl BROifTOVILLfe OLuarE i. nu: j- i-i-j mSJ AT ITBLISHEI) EVERY SATCRDAY.BT W. FURNAS, ;ai Etreet, let. llaln aad Water, (Lake's Clock,) . BROWN VILLE, N. T. me year (invariably in ad ranee),' -ix months, - . . $2,00 10 RATES OF ADVERTISING: mre, (12 lines or less,) one insertion, iiitional insertion, carp, one mnth t'.trce uionlb?, " eix monthn,- - " one year, is Cards of eix lines or less one year, !imn, one year, : If Column, one yaf, - irtti " " ;hth u " u 4 urnn, Eix months, if Column, six months, ;rtb. " " . . hth u . u " ! a mn, three months, . . If Column, three months, .rth " u " ' 3th . . . " rir MTnliilntfv for office. 0,50 . 2,50 ' 4.00 . 6,00 10.00 5,00 60.00 35.00 20,00 10,00 35,00 20,00 io,oa 8,00 20.00 1S,00 10,00 6,00 5,00 : a advance will be-required Tor all aaveruse ' xceitt where actnal re?po?ibility is knewn. -r cent, for each change be ftdded to the .Ins'Uasiacss Cards of fire lines or less, for r, $5,00. . , ;rert;ements will be condcrei by the year, tpeciScd on the manuscript, or Jrevionsly upon between the parties. riiements not marked on the copy for a f peci r.ber of insertions, will be continued untjl or ut, and charged accordingly. !verUcmenu from ttracse or transient per- be paid in ftdTance. rirPecre of rerftlT advertisers will be confined to their own business ; and all advertiiemente th.rnti. to be naid for extra. . charged doable the above -tisementf on the iaiide exclusively will be 1 extra. TjK" M7D FANCY B '.PRINTING! Blanks, VIA ' Bill Heads Labels, P1KG BILLS, BALL TICKETS, fry other kinl of work that may be called for. r.g purchased, in connection with the "Reflec Sce,a5 extensive and excellent variety vt '.atet style?", we are prepared to.do any kind of .entioned in the above auuoue,-:wiwi - d dispatch. Proprietor, who, having had an extensive ex e, will p ve h is persoDl attention to this branch Ties?, and hopes, in his endeavors to please, the excellence of kis work, and reasonable to receive a share of the public patronage. BUSINESS CARDS.- . BI1 OWNVI LLE. riiOMPSQH & BUXT0IJ,' ; rrOBNEVS AT LAW, TiLrnr i?tjt3IjIO, LOT AND LAND AGENTS; . BROWSYILLtf, N. T; attend the Courts of Northern HissoEri, Ke nd Western Iowa. ' 3CAR F. LAKE Si CO., GKNEUAL' n x tin t mi I HTil u.-fliu air PICE on Hfiin, LeU lt atidai Kt Erovraville, IT. T. . S. HOLLADAY, 1L D. GEON, PHYSICIAN LROWNVILLE, N. T.; .is a share of public patronage, in the various s of his profession, from the citnenB 01 iJrown d vicinity. .'. . ; 3. 5c J. p:IT..THOI.TPSOIT, TTDOLSSALE XXD RETAIL DE1XEK3 If 237" . Goods .rare, Qneenswarc, Groceries, and - fouutry Produce - " BP.O-WKTILLE. N.. T., . ' . HOBLITZELL' & CO., DOLES ILK JlM RETAIL DEALERS lit '. GOODS,: GROCERIES. Queensvrare, Hardware, ' toves, ZU xxrixitxi.ro, UNTRY PRODUCE. BROWNYILLE, N. T. KDIXQ. C C. KTICBOTGH H. F. TOOJtEE :dh:g, kimbough & co,, ntifact mrtrt and Wholesale Dealer . , CAPS k STRAW GOODS, 13 Haia 6treet, het. Olive Piae, ST. LOUIS, MO. " Jar attention paid io manufacturing our :IISS HABY.W: TURNER, ' .xxcJ. 33rop:a T.XvL.cx- Street, bot-eea. 21&ia &nl Water, 13HOWNVILLE, N. T. U and Trimmings always cn haiid. XT. WHEELER', UTEGT MID BUILDER - IISlII r-pxrixxrillo, 17 . L. RICKETTS, PglTER AIIDJ0I1R, EBRASSATEKEITORY, ' - rs. am m ' JAMES W. GIBSON, Bli A-CItS BI-T;T- ..-'Second Street, between Main and Nebraska, n ' BEOWN VILLE, ; y.:T A. L. COATE, : I COUNTY SURVEYOR, BEOWNVILLE, NEilAHA CO. ' yetraski Territory. - i - K M. I'COMAS; : PHYSICIAN, SURGEON - AND OBSTF.TIUCIAN,' Two Jliles .from llrowi.. -lc,. ocrclaha -war V.t. CritJixics: Tcndex-s Lu prfeijiional services to the citiicns of Nemaha county. .-' . SPBIGMAN. &' BROWN,. RAILROAD A!!D STEAMBOAT ' AGENTS.. " ' . ; And General Commission merchants. No. 4.6, Public Landing.. CINCINNATI, OHIO. C. P. BAILY. -B.T.Tt'aKKIK. BAILT RANKIN," iuu:wQ lbfiiyiA OMAHA CITY, N. T. : o. r. MASON, Attorneys and Counsellors, at. Law. And General Land Agents, NEBRASKA CITY, N.-Tv WILL promptly attend to Land Agencies, collea tions. investing money, locating and sollinj land warrants and all ether business pertaining to their profession, in Nebraska Territory and Western Iowa. " S. B. MILLER, B LACE SMITH AND WAGON MAKER. First St, bet Main and Water,' BROWN VILLE, N. T. JOHN S. HO YTr County ..SaiTcyor and Land Agent,- OY Richardson county, will attend promptly to all business in hU profession, when called on: such as Pavir.2 Taxes. Recording Claims, Subdividing Land, Laying put Towti Jx)M,.Lrai ting Vity 1 lais Residence and ad Jre . ARCHER, Richardson eo., N. T. - fr NKLIN .. i' TYPE & STEREOTYPE FOUHDRY ffo. 163 Vine St, het. Fourth asd Tifti, ry. CllTCINNATL 0. "-y - '- C. T. O'DIUSCOLI, & CO. r,- : Mannfacturers and dealers in ews, Look ana Job Type, Printing Presjes, Case tiallics, &cT &i. Ink.s.and Printing Material of Every Description. STEREOTYPING of all kind Books, Music, Patent Medicine Direction, Jobs, IVood fngreving?, &.C, t - '. ; , Brand and Pattern Letters.varions stvles, WS1 H. THOMPSON. - J. H. . THOMPSON & TAAFFE, (Successors to Burrows & Thompson,) Wholesale-' Grocers, r . v And Commission Merchants,'"-. Ifo;13, Pearl Street, Cincinnati, i ; "Particular attention will be given to order j foKiroeeries, which will always be execated at current market prices. . ' . ' , ' .,, - L: FORSYTH & CO. ' ... COMMISSION MERCirXKT3. And J?reiglite- Agents,- BALTIMOEE AND omQ P AILKOAD. V -.. i rrJ nv.L aU h tLI 'iK ' J rr irun ' . I A. MUDD, G I HVG UES,-' a ; . J. '3, riXrin f- rirraa rrV PRODUCE COMMISSION 1 fTTTVTi A TTTT'l TTT n . Ko. .S3 Levee and 6 Commercial i Street - ST. LOUIS, MO.. NUCKOLLS, RUSSELL, & CO. : Ilocltport, Mo. "VTEOLESALE. AND RETAIL DEALERS IX ' ' TVRV ' POOPi? PBfini?T)TF?: II- 1 1 HY.- Illi iSuilr:!l TTAT?mv'AT?P ANn PTTTTPRV HAlvDWAlih AhD O U lLrjlil, ' MfidicinCS. Dve Stufe. MSptt-. '"RAnts fe'Rhnw'-'irafe & f!nni QTJEEXST7AEE, ST0XEWAEE, HHWA2E, .Jf.T l. z3 IRON, NAILS, STOVES, PIX) WS ii Also Furniture of all kinds, "Window S3sh, &c A. D. KIRK, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Land Agent ivA Notary Public, Archer, Richardson county, X. T. Will practice in the Cou by llardmg and iiennett m OREGON, MO; - - ItOB'T. I. IIATTEN, Proprietor . N pains or expense will be epared by the.euWri- ber,to make hia gaests comfortable in erery resTel, at this well known and highly rerutftble House. The very bc.t attention given to animals by a good and attentive Hostler. -i Ti nt . FvOEERT h. EATTKN 73. ESTAEROOH, ;,TjinTET) states; Distr Li Ct A ttdISl C yi Oil All A CITY NT p EQurr.ED t Ve :n nttendaneo ciSciaiiy tPm all i the terms of the District and Scpremc Court oT as need them. IIo flatters himself that his facilities ror gaming a knowledse of the practiee in each Dig- entrust their business to his care. ' Omaha city, June 7,iso8. ; . - ' josi'iii JiUKniv, ' : V Attorney find Counsellor at Law. And Solicitor ia chancerr. : Sidset, FrnoxT Uocxtt. Iowa. ' . OScc in the Court House; up stairs, TiftTiTnnn a t M J MM i .cbra.kantj. . arj(j ttway vre' went' dad leanin' , - . Trom the Spirit of tha Times. . BY S ' Lt OR) TENNESSEE. -"Hold that. ere hoss dWn to the yertrth.', .'He's a. spreadin' his tail tb H3- now Keep" him '"whor he is.' 'Vo., VoJ Shavetail.' ! , 4He's a: dancing a iirt'.' These and lie expressions, were acureased to a ( ueer loqiiing, . ianK- lciirsd, : short-bodied, small-headed, white-haired, hoi;-eye,. funny sort ol a renius, fresh from some bencn-ieggea Jew's clothing store, and mounted on Xlirpke,' a' pick-taye;dr:.bQw-neck-ed, long," .poor,, horse,' half: dandy, half devil, vand enveloped ; all' over with a perfect network of bridle reins cruppers, martingales, , straps, cir cinsles,' and red fcrretin, v who. had reined'up' in front of Pat Nash's gro ccryj among a crowd of mountaineers full of -fight and mean "whiskey. - ' 'I say, you durned ash cats, jist keep yer 'sliirts on, will1 ve? You1 never seed a. rale hoss till.Iridup; Tarpoke isjist next to the best hoss that ever shelled nubbins, an' he's dead as a still worm, poor old Tickytailjt r Yjo y . 'YyTiat killed him, ' Su?'f say3 an anxious inquirer. ..-''. ':' .1 4"Yhy, nuthin', you 'tarnal fool; he jist died so, died a stahdin'up, at.that. Warnt that good pluck? Froze stiff; no, not that, adzactly, but starved fust, then froze arterjfafds,o'sitiffthal when dad and me pushed him over,: he jist stuck out so (spreading Lis arms, and waited seventeen days turmm to thaw afore wc could skin .'iin; -' -Well, thar we wasH-Dad an. me (counting on his fingers) Dad, an me, and; Sail, an' Jake (F.oclJake we call inmj for short,) an. rJonass," an . Thineass, and me and canine jane, ana onanoiteean an Sl,n .Sa He,nr CIa u4 XJa. yit a" . , trie twin gals,; an Catharine .becond, an' Cleopatrv Antony, an' Jane Lind, Tft -OiiTlTon: nnrthft hnhv . an' tLa . f .v '1 11 -.l l pfCSpCCl an mam herself, all , Without aia 3 tOCrap 'With. That Was a . - ' -1 r .1 nice IlieSS -for a. Spectable White family to be slashin about in, warnt it? I be durned if I didn't1 feel :iike sorter stealin a 4 ho?3 sometimes, Well, we waited, ., an' .rested, an'- wished, .-an wuited, ontil' well on into : strawberry time, hopin, some strayhoss mout eome alon!;;but dog eat my c.atjef 'eny sich luck as that ever cuius whar dad is,lie's so dratted, mean, an aazyan, ugly, an cil.-one nit'ej dad he lay awake all nit e "ii snortin" ..an';; a", rollinV " ah" a blowin'. ' an' a ' cr'atchin,' and, a ,whis- perin'. at mam, iindex'. mornin' says he, 'But,, 1U tell you, ynat ,we II do; I'll be hoss 'myself,; arid pull the plow. ; . v 1 ' . ' wMe you drive me, and we;a break up com pound, and the old quilt' (that s IllitXLLlJ it JO. VUy M JAtAV Vi AW Aid nlAnft.'.iist as thev d n rjleaf?e. So out we goes to -the pawpaw thicket, an ' v "... pealed.a rite peart chance of bark, and meraade .geers for, dad, 'and fhey. becurir him mitily; and ho would nev a crmie, boigaaau uiu umuereiier what L'd found, its aliftlo bit of forked piece of iron, sorter like; onto a pitch fork,1 ye know, and we bent an twisted it.sorter intu a bridle bit; snafil shape (dadi.wanted.it kurb, as he sed he hadnt work'tfor sum-time, an' mite sortcr teel 3 oats anago to cavortm. ) Well,when wc got the bridle all fixed on dad. he chomned the bit list like a hoss (he allers was, Complicated, durn'd .L'.ji rivi ... 'i r, i' a Oiuioyi, J" , so when no warn s aooui,; men put on the geers, an' out dad and me goes to the field, I a leadin' dad by the bridle, and a totin the gopher plow on my iback." When we cum to the fence, I let do wn a gap, an - it- made dad mad: he wanted to jump .the- fence on all UlaUC'Ciuaiu via turn-- lite over the sprouts and bushes same as a rale boss, the only differ was he went qj xTO legS. Pesently We Cum to a cc-nfmi. "hnih- and darl. to kepn rin his TT? t 7 7 ' , I 7 e s k'ar-a'cter as a boss,, bulged feqnar intu it, and thru it, and tore down a hornet's ! nest uizu ouiu as uil as. a iiusa a xieau an' all the tribe kivered him rite strate He rared an' kicked onco or twice, an fotclied a squeal wnsnoTara hoss in the district, an'rsct in to runnm' away, jist as na.urai as ever you seeu. i lei go he lines and hollered, Wo'i dad,1 WOa bllt ye mOUt as WCll Said .'WOa . tO a locomotive. UewhllllCansI IlOW he run M hen he cum to a bush, he d clar the top "of it, gopher 'an' -all; brap he thought' there mcught be: another settle-raent ov 'bald .hornefei in it' and ttat yur .safer to go. over'than thru and quicker done; every.nbw and then he Q paw the EiaeS Ot hlS hed Wrlth tUS rtsof Nebraska, assiited four3 liOS3 Wav. ? rl hitched him to the - i T"vfc!pf3 forward tu, his pullin'' right peart," and one fore leg and then t'other, then he'd gin hisself a' opcnhnclc l slap, that soundedlike a, tt aggin whip, an' a run in' all the time, an' a kerrin. that gopher jist about as fast an' as high from the yearth as ever a gopher was , carried, I swar. When he cum ta,he fence he busted, rite thru it, tarriadowri nigh onto" seven pannels, scatteriii' aild a breakin' the rales rnitily, arid here he left the gopher, geers, singletree, and klevis, all mixed up, not wuth a' durn. Host ov his shirt stuck on the splin'f tcred end ov a broken '-i-.de, end nigh onto a pint of hornet's staid" With the shirt a sungin at it all over, 1 the bal- ence on 'cm, about a gallon and a half, kept on with dad. - He seemed to run jist adzactly as fast as a hornet could fly, for it wur; the titcst race I ever did see. Down thru the Ecdge gras3 they all . went, the hornets making it look sorter like a smeke all aroun' dad's Bald hed, and he with nuthin on yearth on but the bridle", an nigh onto a yard 'I seed now that he was aimin' for the swimmin' hole in the kreek, -whar the bluff is over twenty-five feet per pendikelor tu the: water, an'; hits ni onto ten feet deep. Well, to keep, up his kar-acter as a hoss, whenjhejgot to the bluff ho jist leaped off, or rather he iist kepCon a running Kerslunge into the ? cf eek.f he ent;- X seed the water-fly plum above the bluff from whar I was." Is ow-rite, tharVboys,- he overdid the thing, if that was what he was" artcr, forv there's, nary" a hoss ever foaldedidurir'd fool enough to lope over into sich a placej a cussed' inule moiit a don it, but dad war'nt acting mule. I crept up to the edge and looked over; thar was dad's bald hed,-- for all the yearth like a peeled onion,; aT bobbin up an down, an the, hornets sailm an a circlin -round turkey buzzard fashion an'; every; orice in a while 'one, ;and sometimes ten, . Ud make a dm at dad's ea. lie Kept up a rite peart dodgm under,- sometimes i afore they -hit him ana someumes .arcer, ana tne water was kivered with drowned hornets.-- What on yearth are. ye' doinm ; thar dad?' sezl. 'Don t (dip) yer see these cussed (dip) infernal varmmts (dip) arter me?' 'What,' sez I, 'them are Hoss jle$ thar--yo ain't4 ready feard rjy them-, are.yef r llos3 Cies," ' h 111 sez dad; 'th eyre rale (dip) genuine aid hornets, you (dip) infernal cuss! Well, dad, you'll hevu stay, rite thar ill nite an : arter they go to.rpost you cum home t and I'll feed ye ; I sorter hmk yo .won t.?ieed eny curnen for a week or so.' 'I wish I may never see to-morrow (dip) if I don't ruinate you (dip) , wheii I. M geti put: sea dai-4 Better say ; you ; wish youmay never see -another t bald, hornet, if you ever play hoss agin , sez I and knowin' dad's unraolified natur. ' I broke from them "parts, and". sorter, cum to the copper , minOs. : ,.1' staid , hid out til next arternoon, ,wnen i seea a teller a ravelin; an sei.L ,'What 'was goin on at the' cabin this side the kreek when you, passed "it?Why7"nuthih' much, 'only a.:":man Ay'as sittin' r in -his door withr!nara liirt on) x ant a woman was greasm' his back an'-arms an his bed was .about as big as -a ten gallon keg, an' 'he. Hadn't the fus't'sigh ov an PTP nil mnAT TTliof mon iro 3 mil dady sez i. 'Been mucK'fitin' in this neighborhood, lately?' sez the, traveler, rather drylyir': 5Nun wuth ; sp.eakin' pv pussonally orjparticularly, 'yseiT; N?w, boys, I haint-scen dad since: and would be feard to . meet him i in the next ten years..Let sdrink..: And thd last x saw of 'Sut, , he was stooping to get in at the doggery door, witu is, Tuigutny iuIavu- viuwiT ut nls 1 - V neeis. TThe '.value of the" bird business' in New York is computed at 50,000 per annum. . It may not be 'amiss to cive a few hints to; those who .would like. to keep canaries, but do not know now to manarr them. Put ' them - in - roomy cages of wood and plain wire "Painted metal cages are injurious,' as theL-bird pick off - the paint and eat it; Svhen they become sick. Feed them upon canary and rape seed, and water; and now and then a slice of apple, ' and a lettuce 'or cabbage' - leaf- btrew - coarse- brown sand on. the bottom" of the cage," and hang a piece of cuttle fish in the' cage, for cleaning their beab3 and crops. In very hot weathergiye; them a small dish of water to bathein. September and October the birds moult; at such times a little maw seed," with:. a pinch of saffron in their watery is - beneficial. They begin to breed atqut the middle of larch," or-tho first of April. " In Europe it' is customary Ito "place one male with two female when they do much better than withcnly one female. Clean out the cages twice a week, and three broods a year are easily obtained. More than that would not be good for anything. -; If. the bird jis very uneasy, frequently picking itself, it is troubled with lice, from the dirtines3 of the cage, f Clean the cae, thoroughly, and rub a Winers, iln two hours it will bo Tree! . .... .! front them.'. If it should rufle its eathersj and draw itself into a fuzzy ball, a little saffron in the water Trill relieve it. ' . . : . , When' you mate birds, give them - a ittle.villow basket, , which you. can obtain at the seed stores, a little cotton, the shadow of the vine, the lung cn a lock of wool,; and V little ' Manilla gaged in a lion chase, and af:cr in the hemp, . und they; will soon -begin- to act of pouring forth a libation There build their nest. - When the nest is completed, the female will lay an ' eW every morning until "there are four "or five in the nest, when she will commence settmg. In thirteen or. fourteen days the young are hatched. Until they can crack seed.' which will be in about - . .... . bur or live weeks, they will require to be fed on hard boiled erirs. One-third of-an e 22 crumbled fine, should ha I placed in a small cup, and put into the . . . rr - cage every morning-until the young can feed themselves.; Sometimes, while laying, the hen will fall from her nest egg-bound. Assistance should : be rendered early, or she -will die. ; ' The best remedy is to rub a little sweet oil upon the lower part of the abdomen: By. 'following'" tEese ; few simple .direct tlOnS, yOU may increase your StOCk OI birds almost at will, arid you. may rely upon it for Wur slight care they will repay you with pleasure arid amusement a hundred fold. - ; . - - J : . ; . Moore saysr Vthe; five most remark able instances of arly. authorship are those ot Urope, Uongreve Uhurchill, Chatterton and JByron." r The first of these died in his fifty-sixth year;: the second m ms fatty-eighth year;1 the paper on the niinds of a family of chil third in his thirty-fourth;; "the sleepr dren, writes to the editor of the Qgdens less boy" committed suicide 'in; his burgh Sentinel as' follows: ' ' - . eigiueeuui, uuu djiuu , uicum : aub thirty-seventh.' ! - . ' -- ,Mozai-tat the. age of three years', ii. .3 t . jrJ 1 ir. began to display astonishing abilities for music,' and in the two following years composed some -trifling ; pieces, which his father carefully preserved, and, like all prodigies, his career, was a short one he died at the age f thirty-six. j - -r ' ;. ,: , : : lasso, Irom intancy, exhibited such quickness of understanding, that at tn. ag offivelie wasjsent toa Jesuit edge of "geography, in almost half the academyiand two years afterwards re- time it requires othersas;thenewspa cited verses and: orations, of his :own per has made , them familiar with the composition.. . He died at fifty-one. Dermody was employed by his father; who was a schoolmaster,! as : an assist- ant in teaching .the Latin and Greek languages. in his ninth-year: He died at twenty-seven '.The, American pro- digy, Lucretia' Davidson,--was another melancholy instance of - precocious genius and early, death. Keats wrote sevcmtpei;t;3 uuiure; ua, wasjiiueea, and only reached his twenty-fifth yeati auc aiuut, vi Aiiuie s.iemptrameuuff e are lorn, was manuesxeu in nis emia- hood. The lady he celebrated in his poem, Under the name of -Beatrice, he fell r in lovo with at HheVagb of'ten. Schiller, atHhe age , of fourteen, was the author ot 'n epic poem.-' Hojdied at forty-six. ' Cowley published a, col- lection' .of "juvenile poem's, called ?roeticai. liiossoms, , at , sixteen: ana died at sixty-one. - Wordsworth was hincteen . years " completing ."Peter Bell." . ' : ' i . -1 y ., tus inyEHALSVWE EAT T7EAT 0XTB BODIES AEEHAES OF. of. brass in their composition, but per haps all are not aware' of 'the variety of minerals that enter into and form . & part of the human system." A writer ltipicTcen? 'IloWehold Words thus tells the story? ; TWrntnrl rX w iA with tVa JnnV--'RWr.f nro'Af are taken up into the fabric . of the animal. "And to us they are as impor- tant as to the meanest veretahle that grows I, who write this, boast myself living flesh and blood- But lime strensthens my-bones: iron flows in tTpq in- ho'.r- sulnhnr and nhoinhornns nnivflrTn flesh. In the human frame the rock moves the metal flows, and the materials of the earth, snatched bv tha divine power of vitality from the realms of inertia, live and move and form part of a soul-tenanted frame. In the very secret chamber of the brain there lies a'gland, gritty, with earthly mineral matter, which Descartes did not scruple with .a crude scientific impiety to as- sign as the residence cf the so"ul. , You could .no more have lived . and grown and flourished without iron, and silicia, and potash, and sodium, and magrie- sium, than wheat could flourish without phosphorus, grass without silicia, cress without iodine, or clover without lime, We are all of us, indeed, of the1 earth, earthy. ;;J . . ...:'( j.. ! .; ; : ; 5 A friend that' you buy twith presnts nu u uvuv aauua juu. : - ... . AAllknow," says the PortlandTran- ? tal board; Ve, have, .met with mp,.that many men have a great deal m who were too ofcy for. small talk; . 1. THZ .H3 C It M.Aal nvea irom icnaon wim tne ll con If T 1 .,1 "I signment of Assyrian antiquities from the ancient Nineveh.1' They co ;ist ot about' fifty cae3 cf tho nest s scintturcs yet discovered in th; earliest post-diluvian city,reprcssritir the Queen of Assyria feasting under is alo a splendid and almost unoroken huntng;. series, comprising net omy lions, but wild asses caught in a nocse or las so also a procession cf the pcrt3- men . bearing away birds, hares, &c, with their dogs', nets, and other imple ments of capture and pursuit. But : .... .i ,i . - sun more interesting than these treas- ures 6f antiquity are the slabs bearing the famous inscription on the " winged M nt the entrance of the Palace of lci i. .i v. , i' n. oenacnerm, reccroing ms jnemoraDie expedition against Hezckiah, the Sove- reign J udah, in which 180,000 of hh warriors, -unsmote Dy tne swora," in a single night, "melted : like snow . in tne glance of the Lord," ! an event so suonmeiy uescrioea m ine -iicDrew melodies'' of Byron: ; f And there lay the steed, with Lis nostrels a'J wide, Pat through it there roll'd not the breath of his pride And foam of tij fvins 7 wtit oa tte tttrf f"!4" the of the mk-beaten urf. ( ' ... , . . . . , v. i"tV ft itu buy w tt vu ii J uiyi m.nj iuv au.w.i uio uuui And the tentj were ail Bile&t, the tanners alone ' The lances unlifted, the trumpets unblown cased a Ions time in his profession and IJX scuooi xeaciier, vino lias ueeu en- k ' 1 1 xL 1 -1 1 -IT. - T 1 witnessed the influence of - a news- t i r -j ... ... . i x nave iouna i& xo De tae universal fact, 'without exception, ; that . those scholars of both sexes and of all aces who have had acceS3 to newspapers at home, when, comparecT.with those. who have not, are: , -t . 1.' Better readers, excelling in nro nunciation, and consequently read more understandingly. 1 2 They' are better spellers and de- fine words with ease and accuracy. .v 3. They obtain a practical knowl location of the most important places, nations, their governments and doings, on the globe.1 ; f 4 They are; better gramariaW,;for having become so familiar with every variety of style in the newspaper, from the commonplace advertisement to the finished and classical oration of the statesman; they more readily comp're nena the meaning ot tno text, and consequently annalyze its construction wuq accuracy. , ; j . . " SHALL TAL2. Nobody abuses small talk anlesshe be a stranger to its convenience. ' Small talk, is the small change of life; .there is no getting on without it. . There are times when ., "'tis" folly' to " be wise," when a little nonsense is very palatable, ana when gravity ana seaatenes3 ought to be kicked down stairs. . A phfloso- "pher cuts a poor fipire in a ball-room, unless he leaves'- hi3 wisdom at home. Metaphysicsjs as intrusive in the midst of agreeable prattle, a? a death's head orthe; weather.; j They 'would never condescend, to play with a ; ribbon or flirt - a fan. - They -were -abore such trifling': "in' .other . words, they were above making., themselves ' agreeable. abo ve pleasing and above being pleased. lhey.wereall .wisdomall gravity and a!1 tediousncss, .which they, bestowed wiapauy vun moronan Iogberry s gcncTOuty.-A: nan.:who cannot talk has no more business in society.than a statue The world U ma.ae nP " ot tniles,; and:he-who can trifle elegantly and gracefully is a val uable acquisition to. mankind. .He is a Corinthian column in the fabric of 50C15,V i A Lesson roaTHE GiaLS.3Iy PrettJ nttIe dears: lou are no more ht for matrimony than a pullet 13 to look after afainily of fourteen chickens. The truth is, my dear girls,' you want generally speaking, more liberty and iess personal restraint, more .kitchen an(l iess parlor, more leg exercise and es? oqk modesty, more breakfast and less bustle I like the buxom, bright- eyed, . rosy cheeked, full breasted, bouncing.las3, who can darn stockings. make her own frocks, mend trousers, command a regiment of pots and kettles, m'dd the cows, feed the pigs, chop the wood, and shoot a wild duck as well as the "Duchess" of Marlborough icr the Queen of Spain and be a lady withal m the orawing-room. Mrs. Ellis. AirOTSi: l wno wouia never swear at tneir servants :3 tl awfect th highavr ayrdaw?' asked un erquisit3 of: a celebrated physician 'Xo,' replied the 21. D., bu. it's death cn focb, ad you h?.d tetter 1c?.to tin city immccliately. - JIho fclhw slcpcd ?m,i ff' V""" i - ....... r The oldest son of President LdTarcJf congratulating a fricr.d on harin' a family cf sens, said to him with nubh earnestness, "Ilcmcmbcr there is but ono mode of family government. I . hive crcu ..t up, ana eaucaied losirtenn oys; two of whom I brought, cr rath'cr1 saherea to row ud without the rod. One of those was my youngest brother', and the, other Aaron Iliirr, my sister'a' only son,", both of whom had lost their parents in their childhood.' "and from oth my observation and experience, I tell you, sir, a maple sugar government will never answer. .Beware how you let the first act of disobedience in your nuie Doys go unnoncea, ana, unless evidence of repentance be manifest, unpunished." ' Ut'aii'the sermons'. 1. "have, heard. long or short, this has been among th? most useful, so far as this world in con cerned. It 13 a solemn lesson, t . be1 prayerfully - pondered by all parents and guardian3. ,ihe Bible lay3 dovrn four great rule3, -involving the four; great elements of the successful re ligious training- of children praver! instruction,' example,' and restriint- And it 13 doubted if a solitary case cari bo found .-where all these havs been united, where the child ha3 not follow ed in the footsteps of the pious paronti .while, on the other hand, if but onlr one, of the four has been neglected." it , may have been the ruin of the childi 1 Ilemember, Christian parents, it ii not enough to pray for, or even with your children, if you do'h'of also in struct them; and it will be in vain to instruct themj if your own examplo contradicts your teaching; arid in vain! will be the prayer, the instruction; the. example,' if, like Eli, when your chil-" dren ; do wrong, you "restrain them not."-' But let all be found united, and all be. found faithful to your duty, and you may trust in God that he will ful fill, his promise, and that your children will grow up-to serve him, and toble83 ycu for your fidelity to their' highest interests. 1 1 ' ; . ; ;-, .. cons.; .,; . ...' j. . Dr.- Hall, in his Journal cf Health, makes the following remarks on thij subject: : -. I - ' : :, Nevef let any thing harder than you f finger nail touch a . corn; paring it 33 certainly makes it take deeper rootf as cutting a.? weed .off ;the 'surface, Tha worst kinds of corns' are controllable as follows: : Soak the feet in quite warm water for half an hour before going to bed; then rub on the com with "your p t : i . . - nnger, ior several minutes, some cosi mon sweet oil. ' Do this every night and every morning, repeat the rubbing in of the oil with the finger; bind.cn the toe during the day,-two or throe thicknesses of buckskin, with a hole in the center to receive the corn; , in less than a week, in ordinary cases, if thcr corn does not tail out, you can pinch it out with the finger nail; and weeks, and sometimes months will pass away before you : are 'reminded that ycu had a corn, when you can repeat the", pro cess.' Corns, like consumption; s,ro never, cured, but may bo indefinitely postponed.. The oil and soaking soften3 and loosens the corn,- while the buck skin protect it from pressure,' which makes it easy to )e: pushed out, by the unucrgrowtn ot the part3, ' - I Ah . T) r, . Ihere ; are now" in . California four thousand, five hundred and ninety-three miles ' of canals, ' while . last year . the number of mile3 was not: jeo 'great ij thrc ; thousand, four "hundred ,aul twenty-nine. Added to-.'this great in crease', one hundred and '' twelve more ' canals have already been commenced, "and they will probably bo completed within another year ' Among these 13 the Sierra Nevada' MountainCanaU an immense work-ten feet in width at thq bottom, fourteen feet wide at tie top, and designed, with its branches, to extend over about one hundred aiid fifty miles,- The value cf the cana'j at .present," completed' in the state. 1? estimated' at 6,241,700, an increase over last year of 4,047,700. There are fifty-nine quartz mills in in opera tion,' crushing two hundred and twenty two thousand tuns per annum, and re alizing 4,082,100, . '" , .-APorsTZDRzrLYOne of the most remarkable, replies we remember, ever to. have heard 13 attributed to Mr Oulton, the barrister. Some one in his hearing, used the hackneyed sarcasm, that between the Churches of England and Homo there 13 but a paper walL.. "-True," said he, "but the whole Bill 13 printed on it. 9 t