i i i h. I Lovn To LIVE. '- 1 love to 1m." utid a proï¬ling toy. A“ I“ Esil)‘ played with his deal-bought. toy, And a dldrry laugh wonlie'choiné forth From a bosom titled with joyous mirth. “ '1 low to titre." said a ‘st’ripllng boldâ€"- " I will seek for tameâ€"l viril~ toil for gold,†And he turmetlin ‘his'pleunrp many a plan To be carried on: whonthe grow a man. " I love to kiwi said a lavbr‘truc, “ Oh, genth maid. I would‘live for you; I have'labuur'ed hard in search of fameâ€"- Ihlvo found it but an empty name." "‘l‘lbive to live." slid a'happy sire. .As his chi‘xdrcn neared ihu winter fire ; lot his heart was cheered to see their joy, d be Alinoat wished himult' a boy. ",I love to'llvo." said an'nged man, Whose hour of life was well nigh ran-â€" Think you such words from him were wild. The old man was again a ch‘ld. And‘uvcr thus in thissfullen world Is the And only with hope of life on high. Can a mortal ever lo've'to die. ' “I LIVE to LOVE.- "1 live to love,†said a laughing girl, .As she play fully tossed each flaxcn curl: And she climbed on her loving-fathpr's‘knce. And snatched a kiss in her childish gleo. " l lite to love," said a maiden fair. As rho twincd a wreath of her sister’s hair; And death alone could these sisters sever. “I live to lonï¬pnid a gay'young bride, Alley lovedâ€"oueâ€"ntandiogsby :her PM “or lifo told again what her lips had spoken. And never ms the link of ufl‘uctiun broken. Isdivo to lovc’." said a‘ mother kindâ€"s “ I would live a guide to the infant mind," “or precepts and example given. Guided her children homo to Hbaveu. “ I shall live to love,†said a fading form. And her cheek was bright and it was warm A As she thought ofthcbleruod world on high. She would live to love and never die. And worth!!! in this lower would, Simild thchlnner of hire be widely unfurled, And when we meet inthe world above.- May we luve to live and live to love. [From the Dundee Advertiser-.3 A TALE 'O'F‘LOVE. DUNDEE SHERIFF ,.. COURT. ECOTLJSD. . - anmu Ilaâ€"'7. rs. Margaret 11â€"9. ' ‘Jarnic, tho:ison'iof‘yvc_llâ€"to;do pair- opts in li‘flfpshirc, fell acquainted, some years .ago, with Mnggic, a brisk yobng‘l'tts's,‘ the daughter of'a ncighbourihg'thmily.‘ In the hey- day of youth, and ‘ favoured by the proximity of‘tltcir homcsrntheir ,in- titnncyï¬grcw, apace, a softer and kindlier feeling for each other grad- ually :l'ostered' in them, and for about ltittcyteurs previous to 1855, Jamie ’clicrishcd the fund" hopc thathc ~truly'thc beloved of his ovum dctfr- Mat‘gal‘ct. A wright by trndc,vand evidently a’ hard-worl- ing and painstaking lad, he was, in 1852,'induccd to emigrate to Aus- tralia, with thclintcntion aftér a five years,‘ stay, ,of returning home to Wï¬rk upiotmhc capital he ‘cxpccted to have acquiredtin‘thut fattoffclimc. The broad expanse of ocean that ï¬now intervened did not interfere with the hopes Of the loving couple, or abate the fecling of attachment entertained by each for the otherâ€" the correspondence being steadily kept up, and tokc‘ns of regard intcrâ€" changed on every available Oppor- tunity. Thus smoothly rolled on the swcct. waters of love for the ï¬rst thrcc years of his absence ; a Jï¬ght ruffle, it is_trnc, maturing for a; instant now and then, occasioned by the clashing reports of invidious tongues in the old village at homo. Lattcrly, however, symptoms of distrust on the one side and diff.- ilcnco on the other bccamc gradu- ally manifest. Jamie was prosper- ing in his business, but Margaret thought. he has getting careless about her, and warned him that she could “ turn the chase as well as be.†This terrified Jamie, and he could not be satisï¬ed until she would conic out. to him, or engage to abide true to him, till the time when he should return home. The latter proposal was declined, as she thoaght sbchal waited long enough. She was willing to go to Australia ‘ï¬witlt him immediately, but he must come and take her ; and “ if he did not think her worth coming for, shc / could, with pleasure] remain at home," and the correspondence could cease. Jamie continued his cntrcatics, and in November 1854 enclosed to her a cheque for £40, “ so as to enable her to come out to him if she had a mind to do so." Margaret was inexorable. “ Mo- ncy (she replied} could not tempt her. or she would have been tempt- cd long ago.†licproaches, follow- ed by explanation and rccrimination, were now given and received, and an irreparable breach was commit- syed. The result has been. not only ‘the breaking up of the courtship, but an action in the Sheriff Court here against Margaret, raised in September last by her quondam unner of hope to llN‘ breeze unfurled: They were bound by the cords of love together. lover. now a married man, resident in Melbourne. 1 by'hcr of the £40 remitted “ for the express and avowed purpose (as the, summons cxprcsscs it) of paying hcr passage and other expenses :0 Melbourne, where he intended to marry her, as they had been pre- viously on matrimonial terms ; but which sum shc illegally and impro- perly failed to apply to thc purpose for which it was sent, she having not only refused to go out to Aus- tralia to bccomc his wife, but hav- ing retained and applied the money for other purposes than that for which it was sent.†In dcfcncc, Margaret atgucd that the money was sent to her unconditionally, as a present in the prospcct of the marriagc ; it being entirely optional to her either to go out or to remain at home until ho returned ; and that it was not her fault that the mar- riage did not. proceed, the pursuer. having broken his engagement with, her by marrying another. She also , plcndcd damage from injured fch- ings, and loss' qf market, “ having suffered scvcrclv in her fc‘clings' and i prospects in lifc" by his jilting her. \Vthcrc so murh oftth intercourse took place in writing it was csscnliut that the letters themselves shhnltl bcz-prnduccd, and accordingly a few are in process. Love produced are uncommonly rich in[ their terms. The tone of Margar-I ct's, throughout, is dccidcl, yct frank withul ; and the following extract will show how shc used to speak hornnind :â€" “ I will marry for love and work for gold after. I won’t lcavc my native country before I gctmnrricd, so I might give over thinking of you, Jamie. lhavc _no thought of sit- ting up here all my life waiting on: you to take me oil, for that will nevér come to pass. I think I have kept up myself too long before this time. Many a good marriage you, madc me lose, but I will not wait‘ longer than anothct‘ycar ; so I lcavc you, Jamie, to do as you have at mind. You might think me very, crucl, Jamie, but I fch obliged to? speak to you plain. lam cxposcdi to a great many dangers, andl now no longer go out at tight, as l have: no one 40 take me home without getting too friendly, and then I, would not be keeping true to Ja- mic.†Jamie’s effusions, again, average about fifteen foolscnp pages each ;‘ He asks repayment, ‘IO Inc. 1 ,said good bye, and you ncv'crspokc. lcttcrs arc‘ always interesting, but some ofthosc. AND had a letter from M.â€"-â€"Il.â€"to-niglit. =IIc is lamenting the loss of his wifc. It was a sad check for him. poor follow, but wc must all submit to idealh. We must try and prepare for it, and then we will be all right ,and safe. Often I think ifl had the 'lovc for Jesus that I have for you I would be a happy man. My dear. 'I must away to my bed. I bid you good night.†*5 * 5“ March 9, 1855. “ And ,Olt, Maggie, ifl don’t get you, pity me after. [would not for all the gold in Australia that this should happen. My dear. I would not do any ill to mysclf, but I rather doubt it would put mo wrong in my mind. * * * Oh, you dear lammy, what would l do for you! Lilo is swcct, but thou art swcctcr by far lam like Annic Lawric, I could lay me down and die.†June 4th, 1855 * * “There was never a man thought =k =ll= if: is more of a woman than uhut I do of you, and you should know that. Bclicvc me, my dcar,l have not been in a young woman's company since I left you that morning. Oh, I oftcn think how I took you by both of your hands, standing before ithc drawers. Imiud the words I said to you. I said I must go, so I ‘I sccd you go up the hcdgcs. I looked as far as I could see you I sccd you look back oncc, just be- forc you entered the hedgcs when you wont out of sight. The tears came ovcr’niy checks, and I said to myself, will I ever see that dcar las- sic again? My love, I 'nnnot say any more just now, my heart is too full. ldon‘t know what I am about, so good bye, my dour, dcar lassic. 011. Margaret, my love, what would I give for a shakc of your littlc hand, or a kiss of your swcct lips 7.†But there is a title in the affairs of love, and if Jamic had reached the climax ofhis affection, a relapse oc- curred with extraordinary rapidity. On the 24th June. 1855, he bids her farcwcll :â€" “l am Very sorry," he says, “at the loss of you, but. I must not let! down my spirits for the loss ofa You are only a woman.) \Vnmztu. l’crhaps itis for my good ; no one knows. I may marry soon, and I may not ; it alldcpcnds ifI see one, to suit me. Incvcr had a lass but you, and have none; so, as the old saying is, ‘Iam on the Session.’ And on the 2d July following : “I have burned all your lcttcrs,‘ and, as gspccimcn of thc rapturous, cndcarmcnls and clatcfhopcs thatt proceeded from the cnamourcd soul. , and Ihavc sum all that l have got. tlt ll. belongs to you to I’ctt r; so l have no more to do with you ; and, followud in the end b a strain of V . 7 .y. . . God be thanked, for vou havc bccn the thc taunts and bitter Jecring of, v . . . a cst to me for manv a ‘ear. I the d.sappouttcd woocr, we give the P , - i - expect to be married vch soon as I allowing extracts :â€" . ' see one to suit meâ€"pcrhaps next week. I won‘t do with the rest as fl have done with you. I have used . . . , .vou too well, and that to my loss. with mmc. When I .am vvalkzng;LC, a“ no“, say, . You are free and alone by myseu' Mflggw’ I nmysay ‘I am lrce.’ I add no more. I am, my Cheeks are dryâ€"a†r0" you’jvour affectionate wcfl-wisher. dcar. * * * If you never don’t,' “J B ,, come out, my dear, and are going ' I to wait on me till I conic, would you! send me out with the first opportu-t nity one of your pocketâ€"handcr- , chicfs which you have used, for I defender Imblc' would like something you havcuscdl H Dundcev 30!!! January, 1858-": The “ulc silk napkin you sem me, The SlicriffvStibstitutc having con- win, your pornni, in it9 1 would no,Fidcrcd the closed record, corres- givc to any one for £20. Often ppondcnce between the parties pro- “Oh, Margaret, you don’t know how I ‘fccl at this think you would mingle moment, or I tears Parties were fully heard thereon by the Sheriff, who has just issued the following Intcrlocutor, ï¬nding YORK RID RICHI‘IOND HILL, FRIDAY, NIAR paying her passage to Australia, where the marriage was to takci plncc : Finds that dcfcndcr was tilt-l willing to go out to Australia to be there married ; that pursuer was so situated in Melbourne as to bc m.- ablc to come to this country to be married to defender, unless at much loss and inconvenience: Finds that no marriage took place between parties, and ultimately pursuer mar- ried another woman in Australia, and dcfcndcr retained the money which had been remitted to her to pay her pugsngc thcrc : Finds that the point to be decided is, whethcr defender is entitled to retain the pissagc money now sued for, on the ground of her disappointment, and as a compensation therefor, or whether Said disappointment has not been occasioned by the defend. er refusing to go out to Australia, on which condition the money was remitted : If defender has suffered disappointment, it has arisen from: her own fault in having failed to comply with the conditions on which alone the money was rcmit- ted to, and received by ltcr, and, therefore, she is not entitled to rc- tain the money sued for, but must pay back the same to pursucr‘: Finds pursuer entitled to expenses, dun JOHN l. IIENDERSON. “ TOO Ml R'I‘HFU L.†“Do s‘cp that g'rl’s laughing! It really makes me nervous to hcar her. From morning to night hrr mouth is open, either laughing or singing, just as if there was no trouble or sin in the world. I‘ think the ln't-lhren were in o. lmtry when they admitted such a rattle brain thing as she is to the church l†So Hefty was made to supprcss her glcc, and to sing low. This was the utmost that llCl‘ rulers could accomplish, for the girl’s heart was light within her, and overflow it Would. But chock after check was given her; and month after month she was told, with awful seriousness, that she was too wild, too merry, too imaginative; that it was her duty to measure hcr steps, her morals, her very smiles; to hold down her imagination; always to tl.ink “ kitchr-n†when she wanted to think “parlor, pairtiug, and music ;†ttlwaystoturn ltcrthoughls to ‘.\’tl rd s mending, and Srwing societies when she caught cooking, them starting off for a rcch in the regions of beauty and delightâ€"for the fair fair skies of fancy; and al- ways to wait till she didn’t can: whethcr shc rnnvcd or stood still, 8)ch or. lick] her tongue, whcn she glowed with a quick impulse to do or say somethin“. Well, thcymunagcd to tone lIctty down somewhat; but shc never could be made to become exactly serious and proper until the hand of sorrow took hcrhcart and pressrd it so hard, so vrryhard, that the joy- ousncss which had so long dwelt singing in it was crushed out, and went, none knew whither. Many burdens were bound forpoor Helty’s heart, and it bore tbcm bravely till the spring of joy was broken; then each additional load prcssed down with more hopeless weight. Now she is what blindly they tried to render her when she was a child. Oh! [ctthc children and the maid- put it next my heart ; I fch as if it filmed. “lid “’llClC Process. and ha“, was comforting me. “'ould you, ,lmg hei‘ld flames WWWalors orally! my dear, make a white shirt for mei ‘ “lemon: and made at’izamlum : I and before sending it, put it on your- , Fmds ‘h‘n “’9 Dames had Come to! self, and sleep with it on, so that I a mmunl understanding 1h!“ they may have the same on that my dear ‘ were to. be married 3 b“! “‘6 Pur'i lammie has slept with. a as r; suer. bcmg resident in Mclbournc,i There was a little girl came to me, i" AUSlmlia. and the dcfendcr resi- and slit: said she would give me a dent in Smil‘mdv ‘1 dllï¬f‘L‘l‘Y OCCUP- kiss for a penny. I gave her the 'ed “3 ‘0 Whe‘e “‘6 marriage was 10 penny ; but I said to her, I thought wk†Place: Finds “"11 in Order to- too mach of them I kissed last for Obvme this difficulty, the pursuer to give it away to another, and she I remlllCd from AUSlralifl forty told her mother what I said, so Jipounds to the defender. which stun have got teasing enough about it." Sl'e received- ‘0 enable “'0 defender to pay her passage to Melbourncfl where the marriage was to take place : before pursuer madc rcmit- tance, he fclt assured that the de- fcndcr would apply the money in Again :â€" “Oh, my dear, when will i see you again? I could give all I have for a sight of your lovely face. I Darkness and disaster, sooner or‘ ens laugh and sing. Du notâ€"oh! do notâ€"be always checking and re- buking thcm for being gay. Little . timc enough have they before care will begin its gnawing, and grief its pain. They will grow old midi gr 1V0 anon. Their, glory will soon enough bc darkened, ! their buoyancy cease. The cankcrl and the blight will not pass by them. Never fcar. later, shuts down the morning light‘ of all. Scions young! Ohâ€"thc fated, thc uncon- But lt‘l them, while, the impulse yet is in them, laugh and play,and daucc and sing. And, if, pcrchancc, crc thc merry days, are ox't'r, any 31801), murmur not. “ Happy the early timid." .fcsston by pure merit, pesscssing .lish army ; another, a gallant youth, ,qucncc, we shall say a few words, :clticfly because it is in itself rather ‘fought a pitched battle for the pos- I SII'E TC]! SIR COLIN CAMPBELL. ~ From the London Times. This soldicr of fortune, who has, raiscd himself to the head ufhis pro- many friends, but no patrons, is pro- pcrly a native of one of the remote Hebrides. the Island of Islay, in the county ofArg-ylc. his birth in the City ofGlasgow having been purcly accidental. At eight years of ago he came to England for his educa- tion, so that he is more indebted to England than Scotland for the cmin- once he has since attained. One of his uncles died a Colonel in the Bug- aftctflom lnLis natnctlklost ILisJife in our piteouscontcst with America, scalpcd by the rod lndians, a foe loss savage than the Scpoys, for they kill only in battle. 0f Sir Colin’s pcdi- grcc. although with such a man the matter is one ofthc smallcst conso- cnrious. At the period ofthc RC- v.iluti0n the Highland clans were still troublesome, and two of them, the Macdonalds and the Maclcaus, session of Islay. the fairest of tho Hebrides, as well as for the adja- cent island of Jura. The Govern- ment of the Revolution mndc short work with the combatants by confis- cating the two isles in dispute, and handing them over to James Camp- bcll ofCalder, a near relation of tlic Argyle. This powerful chicftuin, like a feudal conqlucrcr, took possos- sion of the islands, planting in them a colony of Campbells, his kinsmen and clansmcn, and partitioning among these the best lands on a tenure, at that time nearly equal in value to the fee simple. Among the f’urcmOSt ofthc families so planted were the forefathers of Sir Colin Campbell, and thus, as such a podi- grcc can confer the distinction, he is of' gcntlc blood.’ Lotus, ifonly for more curiosity’s sakc follow up the history of the place of Sir Colin's nativity. Sir James Campbell of Calder, the ancestor ofthc prcscnt‘ Earls of Condor, unable to get from A the two islands sufficient revenue to pay his quit rent of £500 a your to thc Crown, sold them to a prosper- ous trudcr ofGlnsgow, also a Camp- bell, for the sutn of £12,000, which is about one-half of the amount of, their prcscnt rentall In the family of this individual, a very distinguish. cd one, the principal continued for ï¬ve generations. but a few years ago it was again purchased by a London .. W/ ,_ \.’\rv~\.~\ \A/.. ,. .4 on on, [858. Lyncdor-h, in his dispatch to lllC Duke of IVt:lliugtun) to recommend to your Lordship, Licutcnant Colin Campbell, of the 9th. who lcd tin: forlorn hopc, and who was suvcrcly wounded on tho brunch." Licutcn- ant Campbell’s section consisted of twenty-five, and with one cxccption. every man ofit was cithcr killed or wounded. In the long pcriotl of five and twenty years which ham clnpscd Sir Colin Campbell llllS scr- vcd his country in almost every quarter of 1h" glubc,â€"during four- tccn ofthcm in India and China. How he l(.'tl his column at the Alma, spared his men and defeated the enemy opposed to him, is fresh in tho rctoHccticmâ€"of lltC‘ft‘lTbllC, as is also his conduct ’at Balacklava. 'I‘hosc far surpassed by his rclicfofthc gur- rison of Lucknow, his retreat from that place in the face ofau orgnuiScd force of fifty thousand men pustctl exactly in the position most favor- able to native tactics. These must- crly movements were instantly fol- lowcd up by his forced rnnrchcs that enabled him to rcpair the errors of a lieutenant by dcfeating an enemy flushed by a moment’s success, num‘ baring double his own force. Mili- tary men will, we think, he prepar- ed to admit that in the conduct of these enterprises Sir Colin Campbell, has displayed an amount ofstratcgic skill perhaps never before exhibited in our Indian warfare, from tho sub-l limc of Clivc and Cootc down to the! opposite prol'oundofGough of Ellen- borough. Wc cxccpt only the two, battlcs of Sir Charlcs Napicr, but not one battle of the Great Captain who wanted when he fought it, for it was his first, the quarter ofa ccn- lury's fongcl‘ cxpcricncc of Napicr and Campbell. Our Indian battles have too often consisted in thcmcre hurling of British battalions against artillery in position ; the reliance being on the heart and arm of the soldier. and not in the head of thc general. The pluck ufour forefath- crs bclorc the invention ofgun~pow- dcr, have enabled them to win such fights as tf.cse with Asiatics, cvcu with tho cross bow, the pike, or the broad sword. Sir Colin has done already a great deal, but he has not only to conquer a kingdom more populous and incomparany more full of rcsourccs than native country, swarming with a warlike his own p0pulatiou and bristling \\lllt fortres- ses, but he has n orcovcr to raise, organize and discipline a loyal and effective army in the room of one mctclï¬mt, tlrc hrtc highâ€"ly IIIIerll Mr. James Morrison, likc Colin Campbcll, sprung from the pcoplr‘, and the founder ofhis own great for- tune. The sutn paid for it was £450,000, which is about seven-nud- i t years ago. The Campbell's we may add, wcrc always a very loyal, vcry Presbyterian, very diffusive, and a very intrusive brood. They were originally, at least their chiefs wore, French or NOI‘man invaders, who. coming through Engiand, seized all they coull lay hold ofin Perth, and nearly possessed themselves of all Argyle. In both countries they be- came quasi-IIighlauds,speaking good ' vernacular, and, by way of accom- plishment, now and then had Scotch and worse English. No country comes amiss to the Campbells. One of thc chiefs. the descendant of the aforesaid Campbell ofCaldcr, is now a \Vclshman. A good many of them are at present English mien to the height of being Peers and Chicf Justices, while many are Yankees, Australians and Anglo-Indians.â€" But to rcturn from this digression to the man who is engaged in sup- pressing the mutiny and rebellion of 100,000 trained soldiers, and in put- ting down insrrcction over an area ofa million and a halfofsqunrc milcs- Sir Colin is now sixty-four, constitution and with the activity of forty. He entered the army in 1808, and his first feat of arms was at San Scâ€" bastinn; he led the forlorn hope in the assault of that place on the 25th of July 1813. “I beg (says lmrd that was formidable only to its cm- ploycrs. The country prays for tho iprcscrvation of a lifc so valuablc, land perhaps rather too frccly expos- ‘cd to danger. are most carncst, as, if Sir Colin The popular vows titnpossible to see furor ncttr, it comâ€" .mnndcr worthy to SUCCCCtl ititn. ‘ tho Woo, and want and wrctchctl- ness, which awaken our compas- sion; of all the scenes of misery which call so loudly for sympathy, there is none that so barrows up the feelings as tltc drunkard’s homc! 'Look at him who began life with love of friends. the admiration of usefulness ; look at him in aftcr years when he has learned to love the draught, which \vc Slllldtlllf while we say it, reduces him to tho lcvcl of a brute. Whch is now his usefulness! where the admiration, where the love that was once his I Love! none but the lovc of a wifc. or a child, can cling to him it. his ldcgradution. Look at tho woman, who, whcn shc rcpcutcd " for but- tcrfurworsc" would linvc shrunk with tcrror had the faintest shadow of the ‘ wursc’ fallcu upon ltcr young ltctltl. Is that shc “lift on ltcr bri- Ilitll day was adorned with such ncut- ncss and taste? Ah, me! “but a ,‘sud change] whom hc thunkcd God at their lJII'lll, the little ones of whom he had l)t‘t:tl :so proud, whom he had dandlcrl on {his knee, arid taught to lisp the on- :dcat‘ing name of father soc thcm lrcmbling bcforc him, and endeavor- iiug to csr-apc his violance. Look at thirty fold what it fctchcd about mormmpbcn Should unhapplry run, It IS' Till-2 Dituxtmuu's lIoun.-f)fallt society, the prospect of cxtcusivc. YOUR U'ORLD EXACTLY AS IT (:'(}I§t\'.â€"â€"liymn.; achievements, however, have becn‘l [,0 the case 'dizcncd, bcfixcd, and bcfoolcd! @ffbltttt, rivers GAZETTE. pr. .z-AA’Va); - , HOW TO TAKE LIFE. Tukc lifc like u manâ€"ï¬nite it Ly thc fore-lock, by the shoulders, by the spinc, by cv‘cry limb and part. 'I‘ukc it just as tl.oug,h it wasâ€"as it isâ€"zm t'urnrst, vital, essential affair. Tukc it just as thouglryou pt-rson- ally was born to the task ufpcrform- ing a merry part in it; asp though the world had waited for your com- ing. Take it as though it. was a grand opportunity to do and, to achieve ; tocarry forward grout and. good schmncs; to help and chest :1 sullcriug, \v -nry, it may lic lit-art- sicltt‘nt'd brother. The fact is, life ‘is'tmvulucd by a gr ‘ttt majority of manktud. It not madc half as muchofas should 'thrc is the man or woman who accomplishes one titbt- of what might be (lone? is \Vho can- not look back upon opportunities lost, plans nnachievcd, thoughts crushed, aspirations unï¬lled, and all because of the luck of tlic neccsâ€"i sary and possiblccffort. If-we knew better how to take and make3 the most of life, it would bc far greater than it is. Nov and then a man' Stands aside from the crowd, labors ('ttll}€>tl)’, steadfastly, conï¬tlr-nt ly,1 for wisdom, intellect, skill, grant- ucss of some sorryâ€"Tho vworltl wonders, admits-s, itlolizcs; and yet it only illustrates whntcuo‘h’ may do if he takes hold of life with a purposeâ€"by flat: head and should-l follows it up by the rightcllbrt, thcrc is nothing in. mason he maynotcy~ poet to accomplish. There ‘ is"no magic, no miracle, no sccrct to him who is bravo in heart and dcth mined in spirit.â€"Baslon JlIirror. BELLES AND DANDIES. The editor of ttht. Louis C/u-is- liuu .th‘oculc has bccn “on the rivu,†and in what he calls“s‘eam- bunt editorials," he describes some people he met. Look upon the two pictures : ? “Now turn your eyes towards the other end of the bout, and watch, fora few moments, that spe- cimen of humanly (if, iudccd, shc belongs to the genus Inn/to) vi/hich Wt: are all want to call a ‘ fashion- I.0uk at her as she rises from her soul and fltuuts ablc young l-tdy.’ across tin: cabin, and you will til: must involuntary cxcluim. “ Hoop, How docs shc manage to pass through the door of lump, Itttrrttli!’ That's nonc of'our busint-ss, however. But only see how slit: is bcfrizzlcd, bedrcsscd, bc- Sec :1 state-mom? how she twivls that gaudy chain that no person of refinement \vuuld Wear, and displays that cmbmidcrcd ltandkcrcl-ticf. But stayl Nowshc is languishing. Isn‘t that‘look ‘ pcrA fcctly lt‘illing 'l’ “le0 could with- stand thatl There, she speaks. or rntlu r drawls. 0, what Don’t shc remind one of thc fox in, the ‘ I’rctty 'things, i tones! visct"s shop. prttty things,‘ said the fox, ‘pity they have no brains.†And the children, for dupQ nril lit-inn: to Turn we to a t' otvra lilV of a 3P 1: l . dandy : “ Now louk yonder at that llaslr lug hairy~faccd youngster, who is ‘playing the :tgrccublc' to the ladies. llcur his ‘ srnall-tzlk' about parties, fairs, fashions. etc. Listen to his twatltllc, as with the \‘oluubility. of a young crow or magpie he runs on,: all about nothing, precisely the very thing that fills his ltcztd. IIcnt' it all, anl thcu rcmcmbcr that he ttluiuis to li.‘ a filSlIltJlttlllltt, \vclI-lu'cd young man. lint ttntit'c hint chm:- ly. and \\‘tulc he is so twmpldis‘ant to those ftmt'tlcs, llu is cvidcntly dc- sirnus of pl.,-:x.~ing.scc how in) st‘tt“ is, :11 that |.tnnltlcâ€"lmukin,-1,}ltmlydrt ss-’ ed, and null-behaved \vnmnn nrfilt‘, llt: thinks sin: is )(or', sliv- ‘ lut'lllf‘l l \ht'lv'ly). hint. a; lJ-E nutltrrslunds ii; llt‘lll‘C sin: Ia: to bc ‘suubbcd.’ And yet ho pm- I, l'csscs to he a gcntlcmnn. and would, 1 llt'l‘llt'lliS. bc ‘ full of fight' wore :tnyi _nnt- In tlL‘n_\' those cluttan tlcny tltcm. Ilr: Is no lm ts nut wvll mnuuorcd. and struightway becomes famous . , ANTIJI‘QB.\CC( ttzrottit, (.‘lll‘J-IRING FACTS. is a Factâ€"~Tltat many I. It ,rlergytm-n see the evil of using to- bacco in a new light, and say so," and more rlcrgttncn have renoun- ccd its use within seven years, than any branch that Educational Socicty has educated. the ‘2. It is :t l“;u:tâ€"-Tltat Ecclesiastb cal Budics urn bcgtnning to (lw trounce tltc usc of this Fashionable. Poison, as thirty years ago thcy ‘ dcuounccd lutoxicatiug Drinks. , 3. It is :t It‘uttt â€"'l'hat many l‘ttlâ€" l pits have :tssztil'nl this habit as :1 SN â€"â€":t Sin which wastes Property and Time, which poisons the body and I‘ ‘ demoralich the soul. . 4. It is :1 Factâ€"â€"â€"'I‘|tat many Douâ€" tors, Lawyers, Tout-hers, Deacons and others, a grcat company in all. have dropped the habit in all its.â€" forms, and are right glad they have done it. i ' 5. It is a Fact-«That Store Ktif‘ily ‘ crs to some extent, have rclinquisln 3 ed the sale of this pernicious article. rcgardiug it as immoral as to trailic. in Strong Drink. 6. It is a F:tctâ€"- Bequests to 'I’nblic lnstit‘utinns, now made, are often restricted to students who ru-c plcdgcd against tobacco and kindrcd 'cvils. 7. It is :1 Fuckâ€"That Books and Tracts in unprcccdcntcd quantities. showing the frightful cost, anddcaztl; ly cï¬iwts of Lbis N‘fllL‘QLlC ltuamdu-i-ii spreadâ€"â€"spr_cad as for pus, there has bccn adollar f0 doll with. 8. It is a Factâ€"Tint. chvspiu pcrs, religious and secular, rcLLk: this nuisanco, witlt'hmrb frequency than afurctimo l'l‘ltcy begin in treat it as no joke, but a. national minsma and crux-m 9. It isa Factâ€"That thoustti'ds ,of Schools have been addressed, and a Gracious God be praised, a grunt. Army of Boys. are .cort‘ng on an ' battle intcrupcranuc, who have net:â€" or been poismtcd by mm or Lebanon. 10. It is a f"uMâ€"~Th:rl manyhnm 3 found this Drug a powerful absor.‘ bent of rcligious scnsibility, an idol ’ in thc placc ofGod ; :and on giving' it‘op, they have become happieraud more actrvc‘Christinns. â€" ‘ II. It is a ,Fu'ctâ€"Tfra’f‘prcacliirig t'rs. if a man but say he wit], “my Fthc truth on this subject, has been ,‘ blessed to many; in some c_ cs I'v- . ».'_'.“, productng convictions ofsin, .Wltlt'l.) have sunk dot-per" nhd' dc'cpcrinto the soul and hopefully rcsultctl in .v: salvation. - It is a Fuckâ€"That what has ' bccn done, much or .littlc, has been ' done without prohibitory laws, or organizations of' any Stirt. It has ' been done by individual effort and self-sacrifice. So far as money is concerned, it has chiefly bccn done by tucagcr contributionsâ€" contribu- tions in no your amounting to hqu the salary of‘many a' city organist or city clergymanâ€"Uncle Toby. SATURDAY NIGHT. “ Beautiful, excccdiugly,†used to be the approach to Sunday in old, times, with its threshold made of Lt, Saturday night. The. tide of pas- sion and the glow ofalnbition went down with Saturday‘s sun, and life’s fcvcr followed by a. sleep. The blacksmith’s bellows grew breath- less, and his hammer lay silent upon the anvil; thc ï¬tful tickling of a bell dt-notcd the last wanderer of the flock safe in_the fold ; the mill’s “ big wheel†stood still, and the upper and lower section's of'itsibat- toned door Were closed ; the “ iron- ing†of the old-fashioned mother was aired, and folded, and laid away ; the last loaf was drawn from the glowing cavern ofthc old brick ovcn ', the boys had come back from the creek, their brown feet ‘think: ling lighter in the grass, and their damp hair a shade darker than it was ; a light glimmch dimly through the great windows of the church ; young men and, maidens go in by pairs, and pretty soon, through the shadowy air, there flo’a‘t' the blended voices that we used to lovc, in \Vindham, Mearand Silver. Street, “ Dundce’s wild and warbp ling measures risc,†and sweet old Corinth ftllls upon the car; the moon snrmotmts the woods, Ilfltl ridcs a, moment like a ship upon thc leafy warns, then bcarsau'ay forthc blue waters of God’s {Egan}, and over all that scene the night it rulcs. 'l‘he (lt‘u‘s grow radiant and rest» less in the grass beneath it, asif carth were our mother, and she really lrcnthcd; the mist of grey t‘. stream, are silver, and the memory of that hour is gold.â€" Chicago Jour- zut with the willows fringe the Wall. nu]. gcntlcmau ,l A mtt'ltrt Insults, says a modcru philoso- the empty basket. and full bottlc {dressed m grandmaâ€, '15 a mutevfm- plicr, ntc likc connttifc't money; lllC natural craving ofa depraved "Pl"’!!!e' OiGOd- have Pity “Pm! juncer do nut the drunkard’s homo! .ull that; so fun: (lttllN‘S and costly change that man‘s l nature," ‘ “'0 can’t hindcrthcm biting offered, ibut \\'t‘ urt‘ not contl t‘llt‘tl t Malia ,tbt'm.