(Iburatianal lt|mrtnirai 
MOORE’S EURAL KEW-YORKER : AN AGRICULTURAL AND FAMILY JOURNAL. 
lligent reader will readily see the wide | ^ntllrnl li^taflT naiueal histok^ 
3rence there is between Education and J/ZUtUtLlt .- 
WETHERELL. 
WHAT IS EDUCATION? 
“ Education,” says Bishop Potter, 
intelligent reader will readily see the wide 
difference there is between Education and 
Knowledge: —that neither reading norhear¬ 
ing lectures, nor listening to instructions im¬ 
parted by the most eminent Professors of 
science, art and literatui-e, can mrake a 
the Development of Mind and the Formc> ° ifi-^portant 
tion of Character.” To educate, according judiciously employed in the busi- 
to our notion, is to train and discipline the education; but when suffered in any 
mind so as to give it the power to know and 
to understand truth relating to all subjects 
within the province of human investigation; 
or in other words, the mind should be so 
waj' to become substitutes for training, for 
discipline, the end sought will not be attain¬ 
ed. May Teachers as well as Students, feel 
that, the growth of the mind, so to speak, is 
THE SEA STAR, OR 6TAS-EISH. 
NATURAI^STORY. 
The great body of people in this country ^ ^ 
may, with truth, boast of their superior ad- i 7 r ■,. . ■ ] ^ ~ 
vantage, and in some pointe, superior intel- 
hgenceover the population of Europe.— -- - 
There are other points again in which the For tlic Rural New-Yorker, 
contrast is unfavorable to us. GEOGBAPHICALENIGMA 
We are unpardonably deficient in our t , ,rrr.;— 
knowledge of the Natural Histoiy of our ml i 4 T/To 5 m i r'Ti ■ in ■ . • < 
country Our scientific naturalists may be Nol yI.' " ‘ ' 
well_ informed m regard to most of the My 2, .5, IC, ll i.s a river in Europe, 
species of the three great Kingdoms of Na- My 3, 23, ii, 7, 21, i.!> is asea in Europe, 
ture, animal, vegetable, and mineral; and My 4, 7, 21,15, 7 is a city in New York, 
in some instances will bear off the palm, 5, 10, 20, 2, 17, 4, 18 is a town in which the 
flO'Jlinst. oiTYiilov .■!_ 1 ,1 „(• n.;.. r’-:_,■ 
“ Look to the end, nor stand to doubt. 
Nothing so hard but search will find it out.” 
For the Rural New-Yorker. 
GEOGRAPHICAL ENIGMA. 
I am composed of 25 letters. 
My 1, 4, 24, 10, 5, 16 is a village in the interior of 
New York. 
My 2, 5, 16, 11 is a river in Europe. 
My 3, 23, 11, 7, 21, 1.5 is asea in Europe. 
My 4, 7, 21,15, 7 is a city in New i^ork. 
or m otJier words, the mind should be so k — ^ . ’ These eiirimis -minvih Ini, -Lit ti,^ enn ■ 1 ^ ^ tl‘' 
trained .and disciplined as to promote tlm -*in »„d not from rvithout-that it and'^" ;““f“nd » the s'md::;: girWoridtttm MrC “TaAira 
highest welfare of the soul, and, also, so the ag-gregating process, among r^ks, considerably below low water pared with X bulk if mnid«Hon1nr!°“; "v 7, hsi, 18 is ndivi»iono7Africa. 
sl^Stt thet^^” “it and .Set Mv -th“i.l t.-eSL" 
rin-j ,. „ . , „ Pkinck OK Abyssinia; by Dr. Johnson, from a centre, in which is situated the The most hiimblo onrl ilUinvifr. ir Ti b 22, 13, 19 is a county in New York. 
“Education,” said Dr. McVickaR, in his ^e- York: Robert Carter & Brother. 18.50. pp. month. ' A prodigious number of tcutacula, man will know My 13, .5, 9, 19, 22 is a river in Kentucky. 
address to Mr. Kmo, who was nuitoreoent- this, thouoh cb„„i.,„., .. „ v„... r,.,r !>-hy tuis, which seem .at cnee Zidi" tT 11’ U’“’A:»bh« U. f 
subservient to the mind. 
“Education,” said Dr. McVickar, in his 
address to Mr. King, who was quite rccent- 
NEW PUBLICATIONS. 
Rassf.las, Prince ok Abyssinia; by Dr. Johnson. 
New Y’ork: Robert Carter & Brother. 1850. pp. 
My -j 24, 10, 22 is a lake in the United State.s. 
My 9, 11, 4, 16 is a celebrated Island. 
My 10, 24, 1, 22, 13, 19 is a county in New Y'ork. 
rtuuitsis to ivii. rviNG, WHO was quite recent- This, though chronicled as a New Pub , ^e^m at once animals and flowers of his native place’ 
YorkUniversitja licadon, is .an old phil«mptic.al tale whose aniZfto t fwhile nine-tenths of our peoplcdonot kno; 
y a.aueriesmenroii>ew 1 ork Umve.-s.ty, lication, is an old philosophical tale whose ahiraarTotm rocks f "•‘“'"'“•‘“‘'''"’‘'o” P^oplodonot know "iy i»,sa. a, l, 15, 2, lo, 19 i..„ „„cio„tcity 
r^Z^rthTu U “‘horwaso„eof..';hebr|-htest«namrt: “inhf b9i7a,„y,„mepLrLt. 
^vbg Id notX “4- -ntury..._the effect of LTh . Our atteZon was attracted to this sub- 
It IS sent to operate; and, therefore, lookino- uj ■. ♦ n ■ , star-fish, (yls^mas rubem,hm.) which Natural Plistnrv in tUn run,rni i at r i 
not to what is, but what ought to be in the Checks the vai4wLshynd^calmsBiSo^^^^^^^^^ species here represented, has five an- College, and designate by tlieir common 
community. O er the dark mmd a light celestial throws, rays, with prickly protuberances at names all the Eno-lish birds mivnil with 
Suchiholdtobethetruenatureofallsound SwiilJ"^^ -pierous other species from 
PflnefltiAn_nocrar-. + i.5lb- o,,. _ .___ mund the bark the .swelling surges sweeo.” ^ ^ ^.4*^ CO 01. in one of these, of the ulobc. He COllld dpseviEn tUpiv 
My 15, 10, 5, 21, 6, 7, 9 is a city of Ancient Greece. 
My 18, 25, 5, 1,15, 2, 18, 19 is an ancient city. 
:ir common 
mixed with 
I education—essentially an aggressive power, 
making man what he would not be—an an- 
tagonistic power, fighting everywhere against 
man’s natural propensities— in fine, (to use much p 
f < holy word.s,) ‘ the salt of the earth’—and we 
' i teachers, of whatever grade, must hold it ^ ‘ 
I our mission to watch, lest that salt lose its 
(' saltncss. While I unite in the congratula- ^4Sn 4o 
I , tion, that a ‘public man’ is placed at our ^ 
< $ head, .1 yet do it with tlio more confidence, 
My whole is the name of a flourisliing and essen¬ 
tial Institution in the interior of New York State. 
[HP Answer in t\vo weeks. c. m. 
ASTRONOMICAL ENIGMA. 
1 am composed of 24 letters. 
My 2, 4, 1, 10, 15, 16, 6 is a star in the belt of 
Bootes. 
.„ uiuwiHsu wnite color, in one oi those nf thn a-IaKa ir^a u i .: Jt; : , ijwu-s. 
cts, mammalii’ the Wolf near 
find much pure thought, which will both in- ^^ZrdTZ’'''I'Z"’? tWs‘mWmZ^Z th. i 
tcrest and instruct, in Imlac’s philosophy. of the sun, they float to learning — he Avas one of those “debased Mv l-op- 
For sale at E. Darroav’s Bookstore, Main forth Vwn^d^rsVdnt^fi they send and o'ppressed operatives of the old conn- stelladon whididoeL no\ rise above ouVh^^^ ^ 
St., Rochester. hat of nWhorn ^ ° ’ resembling about which some of our politicians ^ 
V. , tnat 01 pliosphorus. talk so much, and ho Avim ErAi.o-Ui Ua „ My 21 18, 8 , 17,22 is a bnglit stm-m theconstella- ^ 
talk so much, and he Avas brought up in a 
b in schools of another mark—in the schools 
b of our ancestral land —Avhere solid learn- 
I) ing and laborious study and careful training 
} intellectual, moral, religious training—is 
? made to lie at the foundation of all other at- 
( toinments in education. I say ‘training,’ 
I in contradistinction to mere imparted knoAvl- 
! < edge—not learning merely, not science only, 
not dogmatic opinions at all—but that quiet, 
solid, unobtrusive ‘training,’ Avhich consti¬ 
tutes, I may say, distinctly, Anglo-Saxon ed¬ 
ucation, AvhereA'cr that race is found. 
“ In my own sun^ey of foreign schools, 
) some years since, deeper learning I found in 
) the schools of Germany—deeper science in 
andZHria“''W“'' ■■“'‘S cottou factor; from his d.ildhood. 
This is a uow aud improved :di4 of a ^mir‘ZrEu1 ^4^“ cor^4v,trruZ““’“^^^ ‘ 
a;k;„ws;^iM;z::,rZu::;Z™ ^ 
in schook Af .haiLa,-, aa.,.b ^ by one of the oldest and most emi- throuh that Hall and pick out and h^p . . " 
ent teachers in Massachusetts. Long may bf IptJtW ^ American .species in the same ca 
tion Cassiopeia'. 
My 17,10, 21, 21, 19, 12, 8, 23, 1, 7, 9, 8, 15, 19 24 
is a small constellation wliich lies very-far 
south. 
My 8, 15, 10, U), 7, 22 is a star in Ursa Major. 
(VItt- 1 C)1 t O C ft •y • . . rt .. j 
bchools, by one of the oldest and most emi- rnany yoai-s entire; but if they 
nent teachers in Massachusetts. Lono-may bf the mlluence of the air, they are, 
the veneivable Entliov Ib-p ia aI ° i- fram four and twenty hours, melted 
uie Acneiaoie Datfiei li\e to cheer on his dnwn iniA UrpAAri .,,0,1 aGv,,.-; .r....- 
tiieAcneraoie uatlier live to cheer on his doAvn into limped and offen^tA^A^t;;:^^^^^ to 1 
co-laboror5--a.,d o rcoc.vo their th-anka ia In .all of thi^ species, none arc fotmd to and b 
letiiin for his book, so Avell adapted to the possess a vent for their excrements, but the in after vears Thov nm tlm tbAvva A"Ar+T“ 
end for which it w.as made. same passage by which they devonr their earliest 14; he Is tmnZ to a“ 
By the same publisher: Crass Book of l4seZlT4^4aTs1ld"t4''“‘d“‘'®' “"‘1 P^servo them. Their 
ri^yof, figuAthai it is im'possibTe'tod;. 
• 0710 nofovTYYinofn chnr%/^. il--.:. _ I* 1 , I 
A.XCU 1 ciuu picK oiu ana name 
the American species in the same cases. 
The attention of the foreigner is draAvn 
to natural objects, early in life; a taste is 
iMy 8, 9, 8 is a constellation situated under the Scor¬ 
pion s tail. 
My 12, 10, 9, 19, 20, 24 is tlic briglitest of all the 
hxed stars. 
My 13, 2, 1, 7, Sis one of tlie jirimary planets. 
is constantly cultivated. U t7, 18^ lO is a star of the second 
magnitude in Draco. 
My 13,14, 6, 11, 21 is a very briglit luminary in the 
Jieavens. 
Mj 19, 16, 7, 8 is tlie letter name of a double star of 
the 4th and 7th magnitudes in the constellation 
ol Loo Major. 
^ b 11) 24 is a constellation in the 
Milky Way. 
in Parsing, for the use of Common Schools scribe them under one determinate shape; their rustic rhyme? and^^mS'?n7^^r 1" MilkyVay.^'^’ constellation in th 
and Academies. Teachers desiring a work m general, their bodies rcsemblo a trun- book of Natund History from’"’The Ses ‘''''' 7 .^’,"' ®' b i> a star of the third magnitudo i 
of this kind will be pleased with these ex- “4 mThHA W “.‘■‘PU'fA'’ ‘l“= ''foods'’ to "BLiek’s Birds” and My inltTi, 8 , 9, .9, 2,1 ia . star in u,». Minor, 
cellent selections, made from the best Eno-- p,i i ^ ii ^ Histoiq^ of Selbourn, scrAX*s to con- g, 21 isa (jnadmple starof th 
lish and American authors. a44dZf £2;S4oZSSi4 "T^o T ftPt 
Reviews AND Essays; hvE. G. IlArr AVI) t.n o-vPAn caa-ip +a i-aU LSOt so AVlth US. V\ herever the Amen- Hi® UurG to the fifth magnitude, and then in 
RjfviEwsAND EpAYs; by E. G. IIoLi.AND. Boston; 
Crosby &, Nichols. 1849. 12 mo. pp. 400. 
are found of different colors, some inclinino’ 
My 1~) 18, 5, 15, 10, 8, 21 is a (jnadruple starof the 
tliird, seventh and ninth magnitudes in the con¬ 
stellation Lyra. It diminishes in 6.i days from 
the third to the fifth magnitude, and then in- 
tn o-j-PAn CAAUA +A ...art r, X 1 'r -'-“iixoii UP. rriicicvcr 1110 nmciT- A® HI® uitu ma< 
caJ + to led, some to Avhite, and can people go every thiiio- in nature no m c*'®®,*®® “S®’" to the third, 
some to brOAA'n. In SOmCv/dieir colors an- moHAr bAiir b-inAAra-ax 1 ,„ P ’• My whole is the n.ame of a coi 
ox fMCnOIS. iO-iy. mo. pp. 400. CJAmA fA LvAiirva T A • 1 - V V UIHIP' IP 
This kind Of Literature, if the numerous pear diffused over'' t^e'^whofo''s^fk? k 
tLp«Ai,AU- rw " 1 XUS KHiu OI literature. It the numerous pear diffused over the whole surface- in PitLA,V:iA4.r7r“’TTT’ 
the schoo s of France, and more precocious late re-publications be any criterion, has be- ^ome they are streaked, and in others often to nrofit ^ Bp?? U or gives way 
and versatifo talent in our oa™ .o^p, a7w nopular. Tlie author in t^ spotted. V-e possessed of a a^^ ^ l?ieople “h^ ^ 
men - 0 na ional safety, that best product volume discusses great subjects, as Avill be fine Aveather, to tlm land of Gold— evm-v Epn.tof..] 
of education, the union of the gentleman, seen by the contents. Beview’s-.-Conhi- 
c scholar and the Christian, I found no- cius; Channing; Natural Theology. A's- 
Avhere more truly worked out than in the )9«.ys - Genius; Beauty; Rising of Thought • 
higher schools of England. Nor do I deem 7^/. e Infinite Harmony; Sorrow; Thelm- 
such praise of English schools an unfilial or mortal Life; Human Freedom and Rio-hts- 
fishing for their prey. 
GROWTH OF PEARLS. 
Pearls are deposited in the interi 
lUy Whole is the n.ame of a constellation whieli lies 
due soutli of Hercules, 
AnsAver in two weeks. 
POETICAL ENIGMA. 
•‘'TwiMi whispered ia Heaven, ’tvvas muttered in 
Hell, 
down, every beast and bird destroyed — And echo c^ght faintly the sound as it fell; 
CA Cn CA ery little harmless and amusin®* mon- V** ^ confines of earth ’twas permitted to rest, 
ke}' along the Avay lias been Avantonlv shot presence confessed. 
We alfiidp to t.Li« rnnHpv IIAI rJxZ _ nV!ii44""4*‘,th®«P’i«r®'vhen’tis riven asunder 
^ tinpatrioticeiilogium,anymorcthanlAvould Justice; Supremacy of Heart; Life an°Ori- ®^Popsovglobules, instead but Avith a hope that the cvil?vhtal'?Iics ‘’j^h ®nd uav^S^^ 
; the prmsesofShakspeare or of Milton: for ginal PoAveig The k and Ncav. T bLorrected.' J 
Anglo-Saxon education, in all Its sterling We shall recur to this Avork m-ain Dkr non? T i ®‘?^sing the I be remedy should be fii-st applied by n‘®y 
• virtues, is o«rheritao-e as well as and sale hv TY at n a ? ST pearl oyster to deposit its secretion in this the mother in the nursery - the father aS 44 ° "that expels 
to that same deep Inbred strain r4t ng Sj4 pr!4od ‘in'i'ut‘4aV""“'^’ 
front it, do we of the New World, owe onf POWEK or TEACHEBS. and^44.;;‘irble‘‘p4 ^tothZZ 4o"stf “'! ‘"“l ^ ““ 
nat.onalgk 9 ry,as they of the old world do The following letter from the State Su toatTn P''** 'X'ltoceli- Then, what wtottU &l made" TmaMerTf i'> 
thetrs. With them of England, it has not perintendent of Schools may be of intor4 h s and ““ ™f »'* ‘’f f™> ''“bit a matter of '■""'‘I'o »> h «rtlv, it dies in »„ h„„, ” 
< only made of a little island a world-wide and use to Teacheis and Trustees: 4the Ynowledne to To T I T'”? T “'"I ““ of the in- (D"A„,.ve, in tw„ weeks. 
) empire, but it has based that empire on STATE OF NEW YORK. dealers for a considm-ihlA Pearl dmdual througlUifo will be augmented.— —-- 
! foundations too deep for the currents of ^i^^retary’s Office, Dep’t. Com. Schools, ) ev'erv snecies of bivnlvA .sLaII^? i ^ ble or she will, in fixet, become a naturalist. Lo^ie Rural Ncav- Yorker 
noTH.I'ir r-invlAA xa a-a d r f.? January 25, 1850. ’ biva VC shell fish sccrcte Aiid to conclude, will you gentle reader MATHEMATICAL QUESTIONS. 
I. popidar caprice to overthroAv. The Avhirl- Dear Sir-—T h a iaoaU a,. aF A. ^bis matter more or less plentifully. The show im r i.v„a , w„ _ .TT— . 
empire, but it has based that empire on STATE OF NEW YORK. dealer ^ rSnsfoLbirsul A^^ 
fonndattons too deep for the currents of I T‘T W™lvo shell fish secrete 
popidar caprice to overthrow. The whirl- Dear Sm:-Thc teacher of a School has T'”," The 
AAind of 1 evolution Avhich has of late years a right to determine in what manner he ®fr®‘Mus, or corn- 
desolated the fairer lands of Continental shall conduct the exercises of his school, and ^ produce ver}- 
Europe, has passed harmless over the sterner to insist upon obedience on the part of his pu- 
soil of England. The storm has unrnotorl P^s to all his reasonable requisitions. If they , 4 ”^bi!^S’ these crea- 
dl of ehallower growth than the ofd fash- ™1 pS^^4“‘“a44 
loncd English oak. Learning could not save se cure such obedience, the trustees may ff to the shell and the mantle or 
Germany-science could not save France; they see fit, exclude the offendino- pupils that coa'ci-s the body. This 
but the old Anglc-Saxon education—educa- fro^ the school till such time as they may a nucleus, and is made to increase 
tion interpenetrated by religion-could and ¥ disposed to submit themsetees to his ^^'tne deposit ot pearly 
F or the Rural New-Yorker 
MATHEMATICAL QUESTIONS. 
No. 1.—.4 farmer gave his son £100, N. Y. curren- 
Unio of our fresh Avatev ^ ^ naturalist — that is not com- T—A farmer gave liis son £100, N. Y. curren- 
Aion frA-li wntA a 1 ''^tei streams, or com- passionate and humane, and does not enjoy "i cash, to buy one hundred head of creatures, 
a .7 ^ Pi’oduce vei-}' more happiness, than individuals of similar ^ P«,r head for cows, £i per head for 
J1 CLLV DRrll’JS. -^71__ . •. T - »Krvy-i%'^ _ l-Ml.V. 1 
Avalks in community Avhere sole attention is 
directed to the accumulation of Avealth or 
the e^oyment of grosser pleasure. — Fam¬ 
ily Visitor. 
THE SUMMER BED-BIRD. 
Tanagra astiva, Wilson. I 
I pray to God may Huinority. iney should do this, if 
J they are of opinion that the requirement is 
sheep, and one shilling per head for geese. How 
many had he of each ? 
No. 2. Two thirds of six are nine, 
The half of twelve is seven, 
One half of five is four. 
And six is half of ’leven. 
No. 3. How many cannon balls are therein an 
incomplete rectangle, whose base is 60 balls bv 24 
and whose top is 40 by 12 ? 
O’Answers in two weeks. 
.uy xuHoiun— could and . , —bnumauives 10 ms TLa r T> -x m I vvnose top IS W by 12' 
did save England, and I pray to God mav authority. They should do this, if 7 ^« to'7 es of color which this bird is OAnswers in two weeks, 
long save her ^ of ojnmon that the requiremeiff is i^hnll k t producing pearls: subject to, during the first year, have de- --- 
5 ■ . . a proper one, and that the teacher has ex- great care, ee^^ed European naturalists so much, that Answer to Enigma in No. 8:-/2icW Hrm/w 
Let me not then, m this be misinterpre- hausted all the remedies at his command- atoid injuiing the animal, and a small four different species of tanager hat-e been ^ 
1. What I here stand to praise and plead ot^ienvise they must either dismiss the teach- surface of the shell fonued out of this one. The female differs Answer to First Ghxr xmv , • iv □ . r,- 
ted. What I here stand to praise and plead othenvise they must either dismiss the teach- a “4 surface of the shell formed out of this one. The female differs 
for, is not English schools or Enqlish nm require him to resort to such further ll • ' e F 7 inserted a ®o^or from the male. The food of 
.-.I..!™.... j'lz •£”'«, ■s'/.s-s SE-'r.rini.txs 
in our land nnri wTlAVAArAV vIaao...),! Xl- I -1- OUIO, 06U, BAI-VAO OO A Vto.A A,. 5 . . . l.'lA' I .. , Af,..L„Tx1.1 _• ,1 t 3 XVX 
j in our land and Avherever decayed the res- 
\ toration, ot Avhat may avcU be termed the 
^ scholar’s birthright, the common Iuav of our 
< race, our Anglo-Saxon inheritance—solid, 
i classical, religious training—coming doAvn 
Christopher Morgan, 
Supt. Com Schools. 
There are three thousand six hundred 
and sixty-four knoAvn languages noAv used 
in the Avorld. Of these, nine hundred and 
^ H does from the time of Alfred, bearing u . JaSS ^ “l “d Tl 4’ 
eighty-seven E„ropcai,,’two hundred 4 4 “do, 
cindstcndingsidebyside 111 English history seventy-six African, and one thousand six sneai n fi 
with the Magna Charta of John and the lumdred and twenty-four American laii- « n.Vk J 
Bin of Rights of the Revolution. As no Suuges and dialects. 
Ameiican Citizen fears to defend the prin- u’ , -<-ra.rnja.-urv.run_- ^ 
eiplcs of the latter, because avriltci. in Eng- menTairdmdgLZaie Tic tSbtr and .•.““'““tf 
land o annals, so let no American scholar, counterpoises of the clock of time, givin®- ' 
the former, because best c.xemplified in the pendulum a true vibration, and its hands . - 
old English Umver.sitics now standino'.” regular motion; apd when they cease to 
We have thus briefly attemnted to ntw. the wheels, the pendulum no The sti 
serves as a niicleus, on Avhich is deposited whortleberries they seem to live almost 
the pearly fluid, and Avhich, in time, forms entirely upon them. In Pennsylvania they 
a pearl.”—Toi«-. of Com. are rare, but in Ncav Jei-sey they may be gen- 
na ,-W"-- arally found. The note of the male is a strong 
lALKiNCv Canary'.— This phenomenon sonorous Avhistle, resemblino- a loose 
Avas exhibited in London in 1839. He trill or shake on the notes of a fitCfrequent- 
was taken early_ from the nest, and reared fr repeated; that of the female is rather a i 
Answer to First Charade in No. 8 -.—Bigamy. 
Answer to Second Charade in No. 8 : 
My first is Mai, wliich sounds the same 
wi •4^-’ latest Spring mont^h’s name; 
Which IS the same, in sound and spelling 
As May the verb. My next, the dwelling 
Of animals, that is — a den; 
Is deep like dungeons made’for men. 
My Avhole is Maiden, or a lass; 
Y ou ladies see it in your glass. 
itiier a Discontent.— Discontent is a sin that is 
any to Its own punishment, and makes men torment 
-tuckg- themselves; it makes the spirit sad — the 
u-oach- body sick—and all enjoyments sour; it 
^ne IS, arises not fi-om the condition but the mind. 
ite, and Paul Yvas contented in prison—Ahab Avas 
ic CO or disconted in a palace; he had all the de- 
tlxe 10 - lights of Canaan, the pleasant land, the 
' '® Avealtli of ^ a kingdom, the pleasures of a 
1 seen coiu-t, the honoi-s and poAvers of a thi-one; 
diborhood of her nest. 
amono- the oreon lo-ivo^ Ua l.,. x tuo huhui-s anu poAvers oi atfii-one; 
beaut4td®d:4t Xoait^ 0„“4 .‘Z'.“‘'“S; 
We have thus briefly attempted to ans- lo?Sr''sCiig^te?l?!fo • ’4'^ study of Natural History is both shores of the AtSX both’s vineyard. Inordinate desires expose 
wer tbe iiigufry avitl. u-Hel. ,20 began. Tlie t,ie“c,„ek ^Svruf'’"^ 
Georgia, and Florida thej 
in the northern states verj 
lo flaA-,- „ -- oxv/xxexxxixcxx y k 5 .vaUUIiC 5 , illlU UCHlg UIS- 
‘'SA-ei-vrav^ posed to fret, they wiU alAvays find some- 
“ ^ thing to fret about.—A/a«/<cw Henrg. 
