MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YORKER: AN AGRICULT [J RAL AND FAMILY JOURNAL. 
AUTUMN. 
The sky is soft ami beautiful to-day, 
Screucr than is Summer’s fiery reign •, 
Deepening along the woods that rim the plain, 
A league beyond the city dim and gray ; 
Unseen, but felt, the Winds are sailing past, 
Slow-veering through the trackless azure seas, 
Heaven’s Argonauts, with each a golden fleece 
Of clouds, suspended at its winged mast 1 
And Earth oblivious of the Summer’s bier. 
Her calm great forehead bound with Autumn leaves, 
Sleeps in the richnessof a thousand eves, 
The sunset of the year ! 
Sweet-scented winds from meadows freshly mown, 
Blow eastward now, and now for many a day, 
The fields will be alive with teams of hay, 
And stacks, not all unmeet for Autumn’s throne 1 
The granges will be crowded, and the men 
Half-smothered, as they tread it from the top; 
And then the teams will go and come again. 
And go and come until they end the crop, 
And where the melons stud the garden vine. 
Crook-necked or globy, smaller carts will wait, 
Soon to be urged o’erloaded to the gate. 
Where apples drying on the stages shine; 
And children soon will go at eve and morn, 
And set their snares for quails with baits of corn; 
And when the house-dog snuffs a distant hare, 
O’errun the gorgeous woods with noisy glee ; 
And when the hazels ripen, climb a tree, 
And shake the branches bare 1 
And by and by, when northern winds are out. 
Great fires will roar in chimneys huge at night. 
While chairs draw round, and pleasant tales are told; 
And nuts and apples will be passed about, 
Creep off to bed a-cold 1 
Sovereign of Seasons 1 Monarch of the Earth ! 
Steward of bounteous Nature, whose rich alms 
Are showered upon us from thy liberal palms 
Until our spirits overflow with mirth 1 
Divinest Autumn 1 while our garners burst 
With plenteous harvesting, on heaped increase, 
We lift our eyes to thee through grateful tears. 
World—world in boons,—vouchsafe to visit first, 
And linger last along our realm of Peace. 
Where Freedom calmly sits 
And beckons on the years !—Stoddard. 
BY D. AY. BALLOU, JR. 
comes more hidden and evades our research, varying from ten to twenty feet. Bed- 
It i s _we know it by its miraculous effects clothes are suited to the width of the bed, 
, , . . . , , , ., by sewing quilts and blankets together.— 
—but what it is, in, of, and by itse r, we rn , & 1 , , __ 
uui, mieniiu i, , , j _ , The occupants, as a general thing, throw 
know not—it tells us not though it shows 0 fy their outer garments only when they 
us all things else. Man may use it, but he “ turn in ” for the night. These hardy 
will never be able to say that it obeys his sons of the forest envy not those who roll 
will as some of the other elements do— ? n . beds of down '’ their slee P is sound and 
, „ , , ... j .. invigorating: they need not court the gentle 
only God, who made it. can command jt- £ umlb fn / mside t0 side> but> q b uiet |_. 
It is enough for man to be guided by it, submitting, sink into its profound depths, 
and well will it be for him, if, when it shall Directly over the foot-pole, running par- 
finally fade from his dying vision, he shall allel with it, and in front of the fire, is the 
be able to awaken in the purer and bright- “deacon seat.” I think it would puzzle the 
er effulgence of that higher and better greatest lexicographer of the age to define 
world, where neither the light ot the sun «» wor < I ’, or ( *•« its etyroclogy as applied 
° to a seat, but so far as I can discover from 
or of the moon is needed, and where dark- those mos t deeply learned in the antiqua- 
ness and death never more will come. rianism of the logging swamp, it has noth- 
IIow often have I wandered out in ’ n S more t° d p deacons, or deacons 
, , , with it, than with the Pope. The seat lt- 
thoug it u one ines^ enea l le spang ec ge j^ though the name be involved in a 
dome of the overarching heavens, and com- m y S tery, is nothing more nor less than a 
pared the feeble glimmering of the first plank hewTi from the trunk of a spruce 
stars that appear to the faint light of knowl- tree some four inches thick by twelve inches 
edcre which the early generations of men w | de > tbe lengtn generally corresponding 
f ,, , , • i c , with the width of the bed, raised some 
only could have derived from the surround- eigbteen inches abovc tbe fo „ t . polo _ alld 
ing works of nature; and then the resplen- made stationary. This scat constitutes our 
dant train that soon follows, to the clearer sofa or settee, to which we add a few stools, 
and brighter beams which the light of which make up the principal part of our 
prophecy shed on man’s duty and destiny; cam P furniture. 
and finally the approach of the king of day Should any of my readers ever be situ- 
to the rising of the Sun of Rightousness- ated beyond the reach of cabinet-makers, 
„ „ , , . , . , „ , . , ... but in the vicinity or the forest, I may in- 
“ W1 orbod an4 br, g hl -gloriously illu- lroduce them inl £ tbe secret of chair .i ok - 
minating with the rays of Divine Irutb, the Di£g without the necessity of any tools ex¬ 
moral pathway in w’hich God would have cept an axe. Split the top part of the 
his intelligent creatures walk, during their trunk of a spruce or fir tree in halves, cut 
journey through life, to the mansion’s of a stick ° f the ri g bt length, upon which 
. . . .. , , . three or four stout limbs grow; trim off the 
blessedness m the skies above-cheer,ng , imbs of a sufflcient len | tll t0 sult oir 
our existence in this world, even amid the f anC y - smooth the piece of timber to which 
sad ravages of death, with the sure prom- they adhere by hewing, and your seat is 
ise and well-founded hope of endless Life completed. I can assure the reader that 
beyond the grave, where the past and the the instances are rare in which it becomes 
... , , • • necessary to send them to the cabinet-ma- 
future will be merged in the conscious en- . _ V . . ,, , , . 
GaYy* (>& ,ieve but what Charles B. really thinks of 
U vJ •v-l'-vliP-VllJmaking a wife of Susan”—( now by the 
—— ■■■-■- — way you know farmer B. is rich, and has 
MAY LYLE. settled his eldest children and is going to 
by Florence wilde. give Charles the homestead farm) — “but 
- I don’t see why he can’t have me instead 
Don’t you remember the days, May Lyle, „ T , T , , 
When we were together at school, SuSAN. I know I am not as good, nor 
And our roi^n, with the windows that looked on the lawn, do I know anything about llOUSe-keeping, 
Where the sweet summer breezes blew cool? , , ... , r . 
The trees on the lawn arc still waving ns green but then there IS time enough for me to 
O’er the roses and lilacs below, learn when I am obliged to.” Another 
And the violet blooms by the broad meadow stream aavs _« J yisitsd at Mr. C.’s a few days 
As fresh as it btoomed long ago. J # J 
, since, when he came into the house and 
Don’t you remember the forest, May Lyle, 
With its tangled paths, flowery and sweet, spoke very unkindly to Ills Wife, and I don’t 
Where we carelessly strayed in those hopefui young hours think they live happily togetlier.”—(No 
Through the silent aisles, sunless and deep ? J . 1 1 J ° v 
oh, that wood was an emblem of life, for us two, doubt he wtis tired and weary with the cares 
The entrance was sunny and green, 0 f fife, yet I would not justify any One in 
But the farther we wandered the darker it grew, . , . . . 
'Till nor sunshine nor blossoms were seen. speaking cross.) Our young fliends of 
Don’t you remember Grace Rivers, May Lyle, course must relate all the ne ws when th ey 
The Grace who was always so gay? return home, and by that time good neigh- 
She had learned for the grave’s rest to pray i bor C. and lady have actually had a quar- 
Some others of those who completed our hand rel, and very likely in a few days, yOU will 
In those school-rooms, three summers ago, , , ,, , , 
Like her have lieen withered iiy sorrow’s cold hand, hear talk about a dlVOlce. 
And under the sod are laid low. Now, I ask, ought these tilings SO to be ? 
Our shadowless days are gone, May Lyle, — and can we expect to improve the mind 
Their dreams are fled with them for aye ; ,, _ c ___ „ _,,r 
, . , .. . or the morals ot our sex so long as we sut- 
And wearily, drearily, over life’s road < _ to 
We tread, and look back with a sigh. for ourselves to be guided by such a spirit, 
’Tis well for the heart that it reads. May Lyle, instea(1 0 f profiting^ each Others experi- 
But a page at a tune, I ween, r 0 J l 
From the book of its fate ; for twould never smile, CflCe ? Many of US clfG prone to forget that 
Conid it never hope and dream? [Aib. Dutchman, thought in a oreat measure determines our 
GOSSIPING-A COUNTRY SKETCH. 
BY A FARMER S DAUGHTER. 
actions. 
“But there is a balm for every human ill, 
’Tis found alone in Heaven.” 
It is a truthful observation that has often j°)' ment of one eternal ™ e sent. 
, , , , , C 1 1 Lockport, Sept. 15,1851. 
been made, that the most powerful and _r uwuvu-m 
constantly active agents of nature perform A LUMBERMAN’S CAMP. 
their offices the most silently. Tliusgravi- The foH 0W i ng graphic sketch from “For- sometimes cups ana saucers. Formerly, 
ty, the mysterious force that upholds and . , T a a the deacon seat was used instead of a table, 
J ’ . . - . . est Life and Forest I rees, by J. b. Spring- , , ... , e , 
reo-ulates the revolutions of numberless sys- , . . , TT and a large frying-pan served for a platter 
terns of worlds that move with so much or- ”?* WOrk f“ ed by ^ the whole crew. Around this the men 
, . , ,, c e i , ,r . will be appreciated by many of our readers, would leather, each putting in his bread or 
ei m ice op is o space ar lj on ic u pj cture reminds us of many scenes in potato, and salt fish, to sop in the pork fat; 
most reach of mortal vision-makes no wh i ch we participated in early life—when aad never did king or courtier enjoy the 
great noise, no astonishing display of might ^ ^ ^ and we handled the luxuries of a palace more exquisitely than 
in any of its operations, but with ceaseless , , , , , , , do our loggers tins homely fare. On the 
constancy it continues to attract all bodies. ^ a "d handspAe, ate pork and molasses, S t. Croix'river, lumbermen generally ad- 
both great and small, without the slightest f d ^ .* ’“ g , S . "‘ y ' . ^ . WOT “ h f e - ! Vom f cho ;f • !°. lhe orl g lnal 
r ., ™ 0 • i i • -x happy days, and the life-like picture of our of eating from the frying-pan. Bread and 
perce,vable effort So, too w,th electricity, ^ ' thcm bcfore ^ ^ ^ ^ beans are baked in a | argc ,. Dutch OTen » 
in producing the wonderful results that to yividness of the present ._Eos. Rural. whlcb ls .P laced m a hole du g m , tbe « artb 
us are so strange, but which are becoming . . by the side of the fire, and entirely covered 
so familiar. ^ HE P r(dirninanes being settled we com- w j t ] ll ^ coa ] s and embers. In this posi- 
w Do wnul-inty iIipcp tvm nDnrAw mence “right merrily our camp. I he t[ on jt is allowed to remain untilthecon- 
Wonder working as are these two powers, top strata of leaves and turf are removed tents are done, when the ashes and cover 
there is still another equally as much so— from the spit upon which the structure is are remove j. j need no t presume to in- 
light— that which fills the world with inef- to be erected; this is necessary, as we should f orm t j ie s DUlf u l cook that this mode of 
fable glory and gladness, and without which otherwise be in great danger of file ft pm baking is unequaled. 
„ ,, , , i • • the dry turf. While this process is going ~ , 
all would be gloom and contusion. - \ e ir ° ° Our camp lire is made on the ground 
forward, others are engaged m felling the , , v , „ , . , . & 
Thick darkness is brooding over the face trees on the spot, and cutting them the nes , t tb lbe , fron . wal ■ , wh,ch “ 
of the world. Noiseless, but not viewless, length determined on for our ediOce The Xfinshu.^ we^lp^Mup^o rfiort 
Light comes to give animation and loveii- l vor eommences y rowing ^ ic ar gei stakes, against which enormous back-logs 
ness to nature, and unveil the works that lo gs ,n o a stjuaie, no c ung le enc s o- After supper, each night unfailingly, 
’ ... . o-ether. I bus one tier after another is laid , a d , a J 
God has wrought, I he sable curtains that until the walls attaia the proper height, a /^ y lar ^ fire 1 ® b . Ullt skie P by ; . f S °; ne 
hung around the earth are withdrawn, and the smallest logs being used to finish out the , wood , u .. sec ! s b0 V*®? 1 ^ ° te ° 
... ... .,. T - , , , , ,• & burns twenty-four hours before being en- 
with inconceivable rapidity Light spreads the upper tiers. __ tirely consumed. The amount of fuel made 
over space, and the blackness of the “ noon In form they resemble a tin baker, rising uge 0 f j n building one camp fire w'ould 
of night” is exchanged for the gorgeous sorae eight feet in front, while the root SU pply an ordinary camp-fire a week. 
, , c c , a n ,1 • pitches down within two or three feet of 
splendor ot the noon of day. All this won- , . ., . , ,, . -"— ---- 
derful transformation has taken place with by pVtling two suet ^Zs IHE INFIUEN ° E °— TORP ° SE ' 
no herald to proclaim it, or tremendous con- foce to face, with the tire in the middle.— The philosopher knows how to under- 
vulsion to mark its course. The spruce tree is generally selected for stand the paradox, that it is oftentimes ea- 
jept an axe. oplit the top part ot the _ q^be Great Teacher is ever ready and 
trunk of a spruce or fir tree in halves, cut Mr. Editor : —I, too, have been a read- willing to assist those who come to Him 
three or four stout limbs grow; trim off the er of the Rural > and have lon S had a de * an humble heart and a prayerful spir- 
limbs of a sufficient length to salt your s ‘ re t0 contribute something to its pages, it. Then let us ask Him to aid us in culti- 
fancy; smooth the piece of timber to which but hesitated—fearing the space I should vating kind and amiable dispositions—to so 
they adhere by hewing, and your seat is as R might be better occupied—until I saw fill our hearts with love and good works that 
completed. I can assure the reader that l ucy > s letter, with your remarks. there will be no room for evil thinking, then 
the instances are rare in which it becomes J ° . 
necessary to send them to the cabinet-ma- I am gbid to see manifested a desire for there must be less of evil speaking—to give 
ker for repairs, especially to have legs improvement, not only among the farmers’ us wisdom to guide and direct our steps 
glued in. wives but the farmers themselves. May t° enable us to clothe ourselves in the gar- 
lhe luxury of a temporary table is now their progress still be onward until the farm- ments of Meekness and be richly adorned 
er’s calling shall be estimated what it really with the ornaments of Humility. Then 
sometimes cups and saucers. Formerly, ^be noblest in which men can be em- may we reasona y lope o prove le as 
the deacon seat was used instead of a table, ployed, and the farmers’ wives shall be the sertion false “ that women are incapalue of 
and a large frying-pan served for a platter most sensible and best educated women in reasoning.” Adieu. Laura. 
for the whole crew. Around this the men n „ r i. inr i „ ~ ~ ~ 
would gather, each putting in his bread or ^ ^ , . THE “ LITTLE WHEEL.”-FLAX SPINNING. 
potato, and salt fish, to sop in the pork fat; 1 not take " m S P e " *° ] , -P r0Te L °- A thc premiums awarded at the 
and never did king or courtier enjoy the cy in her arts—I have not had experience , , . 
THE “LITTLE WHEEL.”—FLAX SPINNING. 
Among the premiums awarded at the 
i r ,i . u x t x* -xu. Berkshire, (Mass.) Fair we find one of 
enough for that ; but I want to write about k 1 
Q 7 -% r t r\ _.1.3 r _ 
in any of us operations, but with ceaseless 
constancy it continues to attract all bodies, 
both great and small, without the slightest 
us are so strange, but which are becoming 
so familiar. 
Wonder working as are these two powers, 
there is still another equally as much so — 
light —that which fills the world with inef¬ 
fable glory and gladness, and without which 
all would be gloom and confusion. 
what Emma Jane calls “ the usual amount 
of talking.” When our farmers’ daughters 
—and can their wives always be excepted? 
—meet for the purpose of visiting, how 
little of rational conversation and how much 
of a gossiping spirit is manifest. After com- 
to Mrs. John Osborn of Pittsfield, for some 
beautiful linen thread spun in her eighty- 
third year. The Committee remark : 
There is about a pound of this thread, 
and every skein of it should be kept as a 
precious heirloom in the family of the ven¬ 
erable lady who spun it. The “little wheel” 
baking is unequaled. 
Our camp fire is made on the ground 
next to the front wall, which is sometimes 
burns twenty-four hours before being en¬ 
tirely consumed. The amount of fuel made 
pliments and the topics of the weather are as the machine for spinning flax was called, 
discussed, commences a regular routine, which used to blend its tiny murmur with 
and friend after friend have to suffer in their tbe loud hum of the gieat wheel, on 
which hand-carded rolls were spun into 
turn ‘ woolen yarn, has shared the fate of its more 
Perhaps I could better illustrate my mean- pre tending sister,—the merry music of both 
ing by examples. Let me introduce you to is drowned in the din of the factory. This 
Susan D. She is a farmer’s daughter and little linen thread runs back into the time 
though she mav not read Latin nor Greek g™i»others sat, with foot on 
, & ' . , , treaddle twirling the shining black spokes 
and was never taught to play on the piano, of the Uttle whee ], and with busy fingers 
yet she possesses what is far better—a good dipped ever and anon in water contained 
home education, and has learned that there in" a tiny gourd, teased the flaxen fibres 
is something to live for beside folly and fash- from the distaff ; while the sturdy matron 
ion. Her father, who was well qualified to or ^ buxom maiden, danced a lively 
. . , , . 1 . measure beside the spinning wheel, trans¬ 
use of in building one camp fire would superintend her education, instead of pur- ferino . with nicegt art> the° fleecy rolls to 
supply an ordinary camp-fire a week. chasing the last new novel or fashion-plate, t j ie filling spindle. Modern manufac- 
~— -- — procured for her books of useful knowledge, turing may have its compensations, but 
THE INFLUENCE OF A GREAT PURPOSE. .^0^ t h e y might be old-fashioned as the those scenes of cheerful domestic industry 
Tiie Dhilosooher knows how to under- Bible itself. Her mother taught her, that w ‘ d . ever J ema ’ n ara o n g tbe happiest i ecol- 
1HE pnuosopner Knows now to unaer • » . lections of oar youth, and we can not re- 
stand the paradox, that it la oftentimes ea- to make home happy she must acquire a a feeli if regret that with so much 
GREAT PURPOSE. 
no heraia to proclaim it, or tremenaous con- face to face, with the fire in the middle.— The philosopher knows howto under- Bible itselt. Tier mother taught her, that f * ur ’outh and we can not re 
vulsion to mark its course. The spruce tree is generally selected for S f an d the paradox, that it is oftentimes ea- to make home happy she must acquire a GCtI ° n a feehno' of reo-reTthat^itirsomuch 
Do you wish to witness the influence of cai ) 1 P building, it being^ light, straight, and sier to accomplish a great undertaking than thorouga knowledge of domestic aftairs ; f} ia t is tender and beautiful, they must pass 
J ^ quite free from sap. lhe roof is covered it i s a smaller one Historv is full of n -ui *u i x . J r 
Txio-ht, unon creation 9 wander forth at the i i e 1 f c * • 1C . V , . y , and Susan, like a sensible though not per- avvav forever. 
Liignt upon creation, wanaer iorin «w me wlt h shmgles from three, to four feet m t h e illustrations of this deep principle.— . t 4 6 y _ 
solemn hour of midnight, when all around length. These are split from trees of The world is full of them at the pres- fect 8' lrk bas endeavored to profit by her 
is hushed in profound repose, and no sound straight and easy rift, such as the pine, en t moment. Had Alexander propos- parent’s example. Perchance you may vis- Man and VVoMAN -Man is the creature 
ib nuaiicu in jpnjiuuuu iauu uuouuuu “ v » ^ ent iiiuuicui. i±ciu ^LiuAcuiaci piupus- r— .i- —.. j —- j — f.. a i ornhitJon His rvitnrF leads 
of human activity breaks the dreary silence, spruce and cedar. lhe shingles are not ed to conquer only Greece, Greece w'ould it her, and though you may find her in the . , struo-gle and bustle of 
and nothing distracts the mind as it con- aaded 01 J’ bat secured m their place by have risen up against him, and defeated him workroom, striving to lessen a mother’s care, the wor ] d . Love is butThe embellishment 
. laving a long heavy pole across each tier 01 jr» self-defence* but when as a Greek him- i *n u i i . . . 3 . , 
templates the scene of august but gloomy J ur £ T hS roof V finally covered with se ff, he offered’to subjugate the world, two- 7 ^ she wifi be ready to welcome you with of his early life, or a song piped in the m- 
grandeur! Watch till gray twilight dimly the boughs of the fir, spruce, and hemlock, thirds of all the Grecian cities were con- asmlle ’ By assiduously cultivating an ami- tervals of the acts. < He seeks foi fame, for 
tinges the. eastern verge of the horizon, and so that when the snow falls upon the whole ver ted to his design by its very greatness. ald e disposition she is loved by all, and en- fortune, tor place in me worm s tnougnt, 
behold as it lightens, how all seems to ihF warmth of the camp is preserved in the Had Napoleon laid down a plan of redu- vied by those who think Nature has given an d domimon over V s e , u a 
i * * it i i coldest weather, lhe crevices between the oin^ n few of the sniull governments like tn Dpr pYtrnnrflirvirv whpn in fart ^ ^ ^ , 
awiikcn into life, with renewed energy and oonstituting the walls , are ti bll Beteium Ihich l ^s adopled iouD- ? . «**tao' d "™7 talenB-when m fact fections The heart is her world; it is here 
freshac-ss. The b.rds begin to warble thetr iked with m«s gathered from the sure S tiould have ten eilamed^ut of so they . h “. Ve beCn 0nly by C '° Se her ambitton strives for empire; .t is there 
sweetest songs, the many-colored flowers to rounding trees. inglorious an effort When he told his | application to study. 
lift their drooping heads, and all nature’s The interior arrangement is very simple, countrymen, however, that the good of his Now listen to what our gossiping friends embarks 1, her whole soul in the 
countless forms are radiant with new beau- One section of the area of the camp is used country required the reduction of all Eu- would say of her. “Do you know our t ). a qjc 0 f affection and if shipwrecked her 
ty, Light—mysterious Light—has made the for the dining room, another for the sleep- rope to the supremacy ot I ranee, the trench young Minister takes quite a fancy to Su- case is hopeless—for it is bankruptcy of the 
wondrous change-imparted the different ing apartment, and a third is appropriated heart was touched, and he had only to gAN? He thinks her a well-informed girl, heart .-Irving. 
1 to the kitchen. Ihese apartments are not speak to call up around him army alter 
appearance which every thing now wears, denoted by partitioned walls, but simply by army, ready, at a moment’s notice, to run one calculated to do much good in the —- “J""l_ W hat 
making joyous and grateful the heart, and sraa il poles some six inches in diameter, every danger. Had Washington, in the day world, and an unpretending Christian.”— with ^us J shares seems scarce our own 
diffusing blessings over the universe. laid upon the floor of the camp, (which is of our own great struggle, attempted only “ Well,” says one, “ he shall not have her if qq^ W re s ence of a one 
In varied colors of matchless beauty it pure loam,.) running in various directions, to resist and reduce, or otherwise to modi- I can hinder it—though I have long since ie presence o , H 
. . , . and thus forming square areas of different fy, the misrule of Britain over us, there • t i f i - 1f , “ The best beloved, who loveth me the best, 
presents to our admiring gaze, earth in her djmensionS) and Appropriated as above sug- would have been nothing in the effort worthy o lven U P 1 ie 1( ea ^ 8 e ^ tln a nm ' is for the heart, what the supporting air 
most charming dress, and enables us to dis- g CS ted. The head-board to our bed con- of the nation, and no man would have felt Another sa<s . oung awyer A., w io p rom w ithin is for the hollow globe with its 
cover in the far off realms of illimitable sists of one or more logs, which form also any interest in it. When, on the other lately moved in town, made some particu- SUS p e nded car. Deprive it of this, and all 
space, worlds that the unaided eye could the back wall of the camp. The foot-board hand, he and his compeers resolved utterly lar inquiries concerning her—but she is not without, that would have buoyed it aloft, 
never see How wide-spread and benefi- is a smali P ole > some four or six fe6t from to exterminate British tyranny from our to be his wife, for she will not adopt any becomes a burden, and crushes it to flat- 
cent is the emoire of Liuht. The Creator the flre ; 0ur bedstead is m ? tber cartb ’ so '}> at once and fore Y e . r ’ by de fl a ring our- - new faghion unless she thinks it becoming, ness .— Coleridge. 
F O nnnn wnnsxi <>r>nl rml. matDnial nncnm eplrpc a srtvprpiirn sinrl npnnlf>_ - ^**+******^^*+* --- 
one calculated to do much good in the 
world, and an unpretending Christian.”— Necessity of Companionship. What 
- Well,” says one. » he shall not have her if °" c ' vilb us0 abares ' f scaree °’ tn - 
’ / . , , _ , , . The presence of a one, 
I can hinder it—though 1 have long since , , , , , , ,, , 
® ° “ The best beloved, who loveth me the best,’ 
given uo the idea of getting him myself.’’ . i .• 
. 1 , f . J . is for the heart, what the supporting air 
Another says Young lawyer A., who frQm within igfor the hollow glube with its 
lately moved in town, made some particu- SUS p en ded car. Deprive it of this, and all 
, . , . , T - ix mi n x the fire. Our bedstead is mother earth, soil, at once and forever, by declaring our- 
cen is ic empiic o 'g i • ie rea or U p 0n whose cool but maternal bosom we selves a sovereign and independent people, 
alone can set bounds to its dominion. It strew a thick coating of hemlock, cedar the whole land was roused, and victory 
seems to reveal every thing to us but its a nd fir boughs. The width of this bed is soon sat upon our standard.— Rev. Dr. 
own nature. When we try to solve it, it be- determined by the number of occupants, Tefft's Inaugural. 
new fashion unless she thinks it becoming, ness - Colerid ge. _ 
and you know a lawyer’s lady should be a j F there is room for but one virtue, or 
pattern of fashion as well a of ‘ grace and f or one vice, the virtue should be strong and 
loveliness.’ ” A third says—“ I don’t be- the vice weak. 
