WBY JOHN I PA! EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. on IMC t In Street, ONE DOOR SOUTH OF SADLER'S HOTEL. OF THE TERMS OF THE PAPER : v Ctoo gollars a gear, in ubanre. Having recently visited New-York, and se lected from the old and elegant Foundry of Geo. Bruce, Esq., A QUANTITY OP 3Sfm nub asljionnhlf (tqpe, We are now prepared to Execute In tno Best Stylo, 'JMuitipty Hie titans, and you tnulllpiy the ncsulls,' Is one of the eatobfiahed maxims of business. OKDKKS FOR PAMPHLETS, HANDBILLS, CARDS, CIRCULARS, LABELS, CLERKS' BLANKS SHERIFF'S do. CONSTABLES' do. MAGISTRATES'. ATTORNEYS' do. OR FOR Required by the business Community, WILL BE EXECI'TF.D WITH K1HEECTKESS, DISP1TC II'- AND Various is.lxxc3.is of 1 (Bko)U) txvl Mcccllod $cuAj ALWAYS ON HAND. $x (trttuffb to (DrbtrXSD WW..,. mjMw By MILLER ov ORR, HAS been refitted in a style of neatness not surpxssed tv any in tie Southern States, and where can be found the l.-irgrst stock of Wine. r;-' '-Cordials, Brandies, Gins, AND ej?ars, EVER BROl (HIT TO Tills MARKET. Thankful for past Ekvora, tin y would solicit a con tinuance of the we from all tbeil friends and '"the rest of mankiud." Pnirr Pun : Puir: We have no allusion to a newspaper puff, but to a puff as is a puff, on a genuine imported Ci gar such as you can find at the Eagle Saloon. Old Crescent Brandy, Vintage of 1810, to be found at the Eagle Saloon. Pinett's Old Castilian Brandy Vintage of l-l'S at the Eagk Saloon. P. H. Goodwin & Co s Brandy A superior article for medical purposes, for sale at the Eagle Saloon. "Wines. Madeira, Port, Malaga. Sh. try. and Teneriffe, of a superior quality, can always be found at the Eagle Saloon. Albany Cream l.i: and Newark CI DEB (A superior article) to I"' had at the Eagle Saloon. Sardines, Lobsters, Pickles, Catsups, &.C., &.C., For sale at MILLER V ORR'S Eagle Saloon. Charlotte, Feb. 20, IgBg tf FRO.tt SKBISIOPOL. THERE is nothing new from the Crimea, by the last ar rival, but at S bastopol. on Trade Street, thixe is something; new. The undersigned has purchased of James Briant, his grocery and Liquor establishment, and invites the public to give him a call, assuring them that be will accommodate them with articles of the best quality, and in a style to suit the most fas tidious taste. Give Sebastopol a call, and judge for yourselves. WM. PHELAN. Feb. 5, 1856. tf Bass Wanted. HUGG1NS & HARTY, at their Store on the corner of Main and Trade streets, will buy cotton Rags, and give the highest market price, rhulotte, March 4, 1856 ly ALE KINDS Or mm mm m iff 1 A Family Paper, devoted ROBERT GIBBON, M. I. OFFERS his professional services to the pub lic, in the practice of SURGERY, in all its various departments. Dr. Gibbon will operate, treat, cr give advice in all cases that may require his attention. pgOffice No. 5, Granite Range, Charlotte. lb. 19, 1S.-JC Jy ROBERT P. WARIXO, Attorney at Law, (Office in building attached to the American Ho tel, Main street,) Charlotte, N. C. Jan. 29, 1 ?56. tf S. W. DAVIS, Attorney 6c Counsellor ut Law, 4 II. MMlEiO TTEy JT. C. Jan. 1, 185G tf FEHALE TI1E second Term, or Summer Session of Miss Sarah F. Da vidson's SCHOOL, will commence on the 3d of March next the 1st Mon SCHOOL. day of the month. Charlotte, Feb. 96. P5fi. tf URS. WHEAIjAJV, Opposite the Iost-Oflice. ALL DRESSES cut and made by the celebrated A-I5-C method, and war ranted to fit. BONNETS Trimmed in the latest style, at the shortest notice. Charlotte, Feb V2, 185a tf 3fl$S. W. A. Yofng will be pleased to give instructions to a few pupils on the Piano FoRTE. Terms made known upon annlieii- I 4 tiontoher at the Mansion House, (lormerly Sad ler's Hotel.) March II, I-Y.C 3m g2? ast Notice. PUBLIC WOTITE is hereby gi ven, that all the Notes and Accounts ot ftpratfl & Allison, ftpra tl, Daniel A Co., and Allison A I:inel, are trans ferred to the undersigned, for the benefit of the I creditors of said Firms respectively, and that tney are in the bands ot J. ti. Daniel lor imme diate collection. Longer indulgence cannot be given, as the debts must be paid JOHN ALLISON, J. 11. DANIEL. Dee. 25, 1855. tf c.inn. K8. SAM E E. & JOSEPH W. CALD-M-W WELL have this day associated themselves iu the practice of Medicine, and one or the other of them can at all times be found at their office, next door to the State Bank, up stairs, unless pro fessionally engaged. In all dangerous cases Dr. P. C. Caldwell will act as consulting phvsician fr.-e of charge. SAMUEL L. CALDWELL, JOSEPH WT. CALDWELL. Jan. 2-2. 1?6. ly fFDlt. P. C. CALDWELLwill be at the Office of Doctors J. W. fc S. L. Caldwell from 8 to 10 o'clock, every morning. After that hour, he will be at his own house, subject to the call of any of his friends, unless prolessionally absent. BOOKS For Sale AT THE CHARLOTTE BOOK STORE. T HE NEW PURCHASE, or Early Years in THE FR Wi st Rtf Itohi-rt Carlton. THE ADVENTURES OF HAJJI HAUA in Turke y, Persia, and Russia Edited by James WMoru r. STANHOPE BURLEIGH, The Jesuitrs in our Ummts. One of the most interesting Novels that has been written in many years by Hdtn Dhit. THE MUSEUM of Remarkable and Interest ing Events, containing Historical Adventures and Incidents. BLANCHE DEAR WOOD a Tale ofModern Life. EVENING TALES beinff a selection of wonderful and supernatural Stories, translated from t!ie Chinese, Turkish, and German, and compiled by Ht nry St. Clair. LEXICON OF FREE MASONRY, f.V Containing a definition of all its communicable terms. The True Masonic Chart, by J. L. Cross, G. L The Free-Mason's Manual, by Iiev'nd K. J. Stewart. Mackev's Ahinan Ream of South Carolina. The New Masonic Trustle Board. THE ODDFELLOWS' MANUAL, by the Rev. A. B. Grash. LOWEIE & ENNISS, Charlotte, March 4, Book-Sellers. ROBEKT SHAW TAKES this opportunity of informing the public generally, and all who intend going to Kansas in particular, that he intends to con tinue the Saddle and Harness Business, At his old stand, in Springs' Corner Building, where he intends to keep constantly on band a eupplv of Saddles, Bridles, Harness, A. Of Every Description. n:.s friends are respectfullv invited to call and 1 .. , i - ,: supply themselves, as every article in nis uiw will be afforded on the most reasonable terms, ltd A IKIVG done at the shortest notice and with neatness and dispatch. Charlotte, Feb. 20, lo5. tf J. B. F. BOONE, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN IBOOi k &B0I8, Sole Leather, Calf Skins, Living a Bindixo -Sins,Shoe Tools or Kvert Description, CHARLOTTE, N. C. Oct. 20, 1854, tf Sit to State Intelligence, the News CHARLOTTE, MECKLENBURG COUNTY, (Siiural ntelligenrc. MOUNT VERNON NOT FOR SALE. The following letter, says the S. C. Spartan, addressed by the owner, John A. Washington, to Mrs. M. S. Wofford, of our village, brings out the startling fact, after all that has been done by the ladies of the South, and the greater labor and means they are still willing to bestow upon the move ment, that Mount Vernon is not for 6ale. How is this? What is the explanation? At the instance of the Ladies' Mount Vernon Association of Richmond, Edward Everett delivered his great oration on Washington in the Capitol of Virginia, realizing for the funds of the organization over $800, and it is to be repeated at various points in Vir ginia and elsewhere, for the same purpose. In addition, stimulated by the advent of Everett in the Old Dominion, the Legisla ture of Virginia passed a bill incorporating the Ladies' Mount Vernon Association of the Union, and yet patriotic ladies, ready and able to stimulate the sacred purpose, are told "that Mount Vernon is not for sale." Mount Vekkon, March 14th, 1856. To Mrs. Maria S. Wofford: Madam: I have received your letter of March 6th, respecting the purchase of Mount Vernon by the ladies of different parts of the United States. In reply, I respectfully inform you that Mount Vernon is not for sale. I am, most respectfully, your obd't serv't, John A. Washington. THE UNITED STATES AND ENG LAND. The Mayor of London recently gave a dinner to Mr. Buchanan, our retiring Minis ter. In response to an address from the Mayor, Mr. Buchanan, in the course of his remarks, alluded as follows to the difficulties between the two countries: "With regard to the two countries, what a dreadful misfortune it would be to the whole human race if they should ever again be involved in war! How it would injure and throw back the cause of civilization and human liberty! How it would delight the despots of the earth to find those two nations destroying themselves, and in that way destroying every hoped progress to man Kind l I nold it that tnere can be co political slavery wl ere the English language is the language of the country. It is impossible; and, so far from there being any jealousy, so far from its being proper that there should be any jealousy in either country as to the honest and fair extension of the frontiers of either, it ought to be considered a blessing to mankind that they should have the opportunity of extending their freedom and liberal institutions over all the un settled parts of the earth. I am sorry to say that, with all these feelings and senti ments, from the first separation of the two countries there has unfortunately always been a group of unsettled questions. There is a cloud now impending over their rela tions; but I trust in God, and I believe that that cloud will be speedily dissipated, and that the sunshine of peace and friendship will becomo more and more bright between the two countries, until all the dissensions which ever existed between them shall have passed away, and shall only live in history as a record of the folly of two people who could fir a moment suppose it possible to engage in a fratricidal war." A SHOCKING SCENE IN THE WEST. Captain E. Stevens, of the steamer Ohio Belle, was murdered a few days ago by a man named Jones. The Memphis (Ten nessee) Newsgivesthe sequel of the terrible tragedy . The details are truly awful, and well calculated to cause a thrill of horror. The News says : The murderer was taken abaft the shaft of the boat and lashed to a stancheon, com mencing with the rope at his feet, and wind ing it around his body in continuous folds until it reached his neck, where it was drawn very tight. It was then passed around his head and across his mouth so tight that it stretched the corners of his mouth back considerably, cutting them so that the blood run down his jaws, and leaving him in the greatest agony. A lady, hearing of the manner in which he was being treated, went below, and begged them, for God's sake, not to treat a human being in such a manuer. At her solicitation he was released, and bound fast in an arm-chair, and the chair bound to the stancheon by a different rope. In this situation he was left. In the meantime a cabin passenger was mak:..ig himself conspicuous by boast ing that in California he had helped to hang over fifty persons that he had hung men for as low a sum as five dollars and if they would give him a chance he "would soon dispose of that scoundrel." A short time afterwards this "hangman extraordinary" and a friend were missing, and soon after our informant heard a splash. He and some other passengers then went below to see the prisoner, but when they had gone aft they found the rope that bound the chair cut, and the man and chair both gone. His fate can well be imagined. He was thrown overboard. It is said that a bar of iron of almost anv size may be instantly sundered while m m hot, by the simple application of a roll of common brimstone. of the World, Political Information, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, WHO WOULD BE A QUEEN. It is a queer thing to be a Queen or an Empress, and it strikes us not altogether a pleasant one. There is an aim ut of pub licity attached to certain little lomestic af fairs from which a lady of delicate feelings must be supposed to shrink, but which those placed on thrones cannot well avoid. The bulletins about the Empress Eugenie have, for months past, been as regularly published as those pertaining to the siege of Sebastopol when it is to come off, and what the sex is to be, ha? been canvassed as coolly as any other stave question. In Paris nearly everything is a spectacle, and the most recent and attractive spectacle has consisted of the Imperial baby clothes, to a sight of which the public are admitted by presenting tickets, which are freely given to every respectable person. Such is the crowd that a line has to be formed, and kept moving, under the management of the ubiquitous police. In order to be fully prepared, there are two complete sets of baby-clothes, masculine and feminine ; for absolute as Louis Napoleon is in France, he has nothing to say in determining wheth er it shall be a prince or priicess. The Paris correspondent of the New York Daily News writes that the magnifi cent juvenile Wrardrobe is under the pro tection of Madamoiselle Felicie. There are napkins, caps, frocks, jackets, wrappers, hats, bonnets, shoes, drawers, cloaks, man tles, mantelets, capes, talmas, muffs, col lars, socks, stockings, flannels, rattles, pil lows, and boasts of nameless articles per taining to a nursery, enough to set up a foundling hospital. But when the costly material and delicate workmanship of eve ry one of these articles is considered, the mind, perplexed to think what they can all be wanted for, might fancy that some poli tical convulsion had driven all the sove reigns of the world to 'one place of refuge, and that this was the common and ample wardrobe of all the royal babies in existence. The colors of all the habiliments are white and sky-blue. There is a very pretty cra dle (not the one given by the city of Paris, which is not yet quite finished,) with white lace and blue hangings. The imperial crown is embroidered upon every article. The ladies examine every thing most minute ly, and the c-onstant of the guaids on duty, that "touching is not allowed," are all impotent to prevent the curious fair from taking up the fine fabrics in their hands to look at them ckser. Some of M'lle. Felicie's assistant artistes walk a bout the salons and answer all questions in a very graceful manner. Although everybody will have it that the child is to be a prince ; and although the statistical decline that the chances are fully equal, that it will be a princess is scoffed at. I suspect (says the correspon dent of the "News,") that Md'lle Felicie would not be greatly disappointed if it were, after all, to be a girl. She seems to have more especially lavished the cunning of her art upon certain darling little blue bonnets, which, it were a pity to think, would never be wanted. I should state that the toilette, whether for a boy or a girl, is complete with everything that can possibly be re quired up to the age of two years. The entire cost of this toilette, is unprecedent ed. After the above h id been put into type, an ar rival from Europe brought intelligence of a son. Mademoiselle Felicie will probably fall heir to the female wardrobe out of which she will no doubt be able to realise by sale many thousands of dollars. The reading of the above has reminded the Editor of the "Wilmington Journal" of a mistake made by a candidate for some of fice, "out West." The office-seeking man rode up. towards the evening, to a small log house, where lived one of the sovereigns whose vote he was anxious to secure. On entering the house, he found no one in but a lady, exceedingly ill so ill as to be con fined to bed, who told htm that her husband had gone to the next village for a Doctor, and that she feared she would die before his return. Anxious to comfort her, he as sured her that there was no danger ; but she refused to be comforted. By way of a final effort at consolation, the unsuspecting politician told her that he had been in the same way himself several times and got over it. As he did so, the busband and the doctor, accompanied by an elderly female, entered the house, in time to hear the last remark. The doctor, the husband, and the elderly female laughed, and even the sick woman laughed some, if she were dy ing the electioneering gentleman mizzled. That evening the county had an inhabitant the more, but next day a candidate the less, for the joke got out. and the poor man was laughed off the track. He could not bear to be asked about how he felt, etcM and finally put off to California, where, somehow, the thing followed him. At the last accounts he was on the Fejee Islands. Militia of the United States. We learn from a document from the War De partment, which was laid before the House of Representatives Thursday, that the Militia in the States and Territories amount to the large aggregate of 2,479,725 men. This does not embrace the militia of the State of Iowa or of the Territories of Oregon, Washington, Nebraska, Kansas, and New Mexico, from which no returns have been reoeived". Southern Rights, Agriculture, NORTH CAROLINA. 1856. THE BEAUTIES OP CREATION. BY JOHN BROWNING. Ours is a lovely world ! how fair Thy beauties, even on earth, appear ! The seasons in their courses fall. And bring successive joys : the sea, The earth, the sky, are full of Thee, Benignant, glorious Lord of all. There's beauty in the break of day ; There's glory in the noon-tide ray ; There's sweetness in the twilight shades ; Magnificence in night Thy love Arched the grand heaven of bine above, And all our smiling earth pervades. And if thy glories here be found Streaming with radiance all around, What must the Fount of Glory bet In Thee we'll hope in Thee confide, Thou mercy's never ebbing tide ! Thou love's unfathomable sea ! NAME TN THE SAND. BY G. D. PKENTICE. Alone I walked on the ocean strand, A pearly shell was in my hand, I stooped and wrote upon the sand My name, the year and day ; As onward from the spot I passed, One lingering look behind I cast, ' A wave came rolling high and fast, And washed my lines away. And so methought, 'twill quickly be With every mark on earth from me ! A wave of dark oblivion's sea, Will sweep across the place Where I have trod the sandy shroe Of time, and been to me no more ; Of me, my day, the name I bore, To leave no track or trace. And yet with Him who counts the sands, And holds the water in his hands, I know a lasting record stands Inscribed against my name Of all this mortal part has wrought, Of all this thinking soul has thought, And from these fleeting moments caught, For (rlory or for shame. OUR HOI&ES. Genius hath its triumph, fame its glories, wealth its splendor, success its bright re wards, but the heart only hath its home. Home only? What more needeth the heart? what, mnrft oajl i t gain ? A tvua t to r- than the world more than honor, and pride, and fortune more than all that earth can give; the light of the noonday sun may not yield, and yet the tiny flame of one pure beam of love enkindleth, and sympathy makes it burn forever. Home! how more than beautiful thou art! how like an un taught religion a golden link between the soul and heaven, where the presence of a pure heart makes thee radiant, and the music of its affection floats like the chorals of unseen cherubim around thy tranquil heart! THE SPIRIT OF KINDNESS. Show me the man who desires to make every one happy around him, and whose greatest solicitude is never to give just cause of offence to any one, and I will show you a gentleman by nature and by practice, though he may never have worn a suit of broadcloth, nor never heard of a lexicon. I am proud to say, for the honor of our species, there are men, in every throb of whose hearts there is solicitude for the welfare of mankind, and whose breath is perfumed with kindness. The exhibition of kindness has the power to bring the irrational animal into subjec tion. Show kindness to a dog, and he will remember it; he will be grateful; he will infallibly return love for love. Show kind ness to a lion, and you can thrust your head into his mouth ; you can melt the untamed ferocity of his heart into an affection stronger tiian death. In all of God's vast unbounded creation, there is not a living and sentient being, from the least to the largest, not one, not even the outcast and degraded serpent, that is insensible to acts of kindness. If kindness and love, such as our biassed Saviour manifested, could be introduced into the world, and exert its appropriate dominion, it would restore a state of things far brighter than the fabulous age of gold; it would annihilate every sting; it would pluck every poisonous tooth; it would hush every discordant voice. Even the inani mate creation is not insensible to this divine influence. The bud, and flower, and fruit put forth most abundantly and bountifully, where the hand of kindness is extended for their culture. And if this blessed influence should extend itself over the earth, a moral garden of Eden would exist in every land ; instead of the thorn and brier, would spring up the fir-tree and the myrtle; the desert would blossom, and the solitary place be made glad. Bishop Upham. THE DEAD CHILD. Few things appear so beautiful as a very young child in its shroud. The little inno cent face looks so sublimely simple and confiding amongst the cold terrors of death. Crimeless and fearless, that little mortal has passed alone under the shadow, and explored the mystery of dissolution There is death in its sublimest and purest image ; no hatred, no hypocrisy, no suspicion, no care for the morrow ever darkened that lit tle face ; death has come lovingly upon it; there is nothing cruel or harsh in its victo ry. The yearnings of love, indeed, cannot bw stifled ; for the prattle and sadle, and all Literature, and Miscellany. the little world of thoughts that were so delightful, are gone forever. Awe, too, will overcast us in its presence, for the lone ly voyage ; for the child has gone, simple and trusting, into the presence of its All wise Father ; and of such, we know, is the kingdom of Heaven. " THE OLD WOMAN." It was thus, a few days since, wo heard a stripling of sixteen years designate the mother who bore him a venerable woman, whose face bore the marks of the conflict in all its furrowed lines. The most griev ous of the ills of life have to be borne by the mother ; trials untold and unknown on ly to God and herself she has to bear inces santly ; and in her old ago her duty done, awaiting her appointed time she stands more truly beautiful than in youth, more honorable and deserving than he who has slain his thousands, and stood triumphant upon the proudest field of victory. Young man, speak kindly to your mother, and even courteously tenderly of her ! But a little time and you shall see her no more for over ! H eye is dim, her form is bent, and her shadow falls graveward ! Others may love you when she has passed away kind heart ed sisters, or she whom of all the world you may choose for a partner she may love you warmly, passionately children may love you fondly ; but never again, never while time is yours, shall the love of woman be to you as that of your old, trembling, wea kened mother has been. In agony she bore you through puling, helpless infancy her throbbing breast was your safe protection and support in wayward, tetchy boyhood she bore patiently with your thoughtless rudeness, and nursed you safely through a legion of ills and maladies. Her hand it was that bathed your burning brow or moistened the parched lips ; her eye that lighted up the darkness of wasting nightly vigils, watching always in your fitful sleep, sleepless by your side as none but her could watch. Oh ! speak not her name lightly, for you cannot live for so many years as would suffice to thank her fully. Through reckless and impatient youth she is your counsellor and solace. To a bright manhood she guides your improvident steps, nor even then forsakes or forgets. Speak gent- j , Ibvoi CLUU i c v ci truLij' urjuui mumu , nuu when you, too, shall be old, it shall in some degree lighten the remorse which shall be yours for other sins, to know that never wantonly have you outraged the respect due to "old women." THE SOCIETY OF WOMAN. No society is more profitable, because nonemore refining and preservative of virtue, than that of refined aud sensible women. God enshrined peculiar goodness in the form of woman, that her beauty might win, her gentle voice invite, and the desire of her favor persuade men's sterner souls to leave the path of sinful strife for the ways of pleasantness and peace. But when women falls from this blest eminence, and sinks the guardian and cherisher of pure and rational enjoyments in the vain coquette and flattered idolater of fashion, she is un worthy of an honorable man's love or a sensible man's admiration. Beauty is to them at best a pretty plaything, Dear deceit We honor the chivalrous deference which is paid in our land to women. It proves that our men know how to respect virtue and pure affection, and that our women are worthy of such-respect. Yet women should be something more than mere women to win us to their society. To be our companions they should be our friends; to rule our hearts they should be deserving of our minds. There are many such, and that there are no more is rather the fault of our own sex than their own. And despite all the un manly scandals that have been thrown upon them in prose and verse, they would rather share in the rational conversation of men of sense than liuten to the fully compliments of fools ; and a man dishonors them as well as disgraces himself, when he seeks their circle for idle pastime and not for the improve ment of his mind and the elevation of his heart. THE WANTS OF THE AGES. It is a man's destiny still to be longing for something, and the gratification of one set of wishes but prepares the unsatisfied soul for the conception of another. The child of a year old wants little but food and sleep ; and no sooner is he supplied with a sufficient allowance of either of those very excellent things, than he begins whimper ing, and yelling it may be, for the other. At three, the young urchin becomes enamuor ed of sugar plums, apple pie, and confec tionary. At six, ins imagination runs to kites, marbles and tops, and an abandonee of play time. At ten, the boy wants to leave school and have nothing to do but bird nesting and blackberry hunting. At fifteen, he wants a beard and mustache, a watch, and a pairof Wellington boots. At twenty, he wishes to out a figure and ride horses; sometimes his thirst for display breaks oat in dandyism, and sometimes in poetry; he wants sadly to be in love and takes it for granted that all the ladies are dying for him. The young man of twenty-fire wants a wife; and at thirty he longs to be single again. From thirty to forty be wants to be rich, and thinks mere of making money than $2 PER ANNUM In Advance. VOLIJME 4. NUMBER 38. spending it. About this time, also, he dabbles in politics and wants office. At fifty he wants excellent dinners and wine, and considers a nap in the afternoon indis pensable. The respectable old gentleman of sixty wants to retire from business with a snug independence of three or four hun dred thousands, to marry his daughters and set up his sons, and live in the country ; and then for the rest of his life he wants to be young again. IMPROVEMENT OP YOUTH. Youth is the seed-time of life. If the farmer does not plow his land, and commit the precious seed to the ground in spring, it will be too late afterwards ; so if you, while young, neglect to cultivate your minds, by not sowing the seeds of knowledge, your future lives will be ignorant and wretched. The soil of the human heart is naturally barren of every thing good, though prolific of evil. If corn, flowers, cVc, bo not plant ed and carefully cultivated, nettles and brambles will spring up ; and the mind, if not cultivated, and stored with useful know ledge, will become a barren desert, or a thorny wilderness. The Rev. John Todd, iu his Student's Manual, a work that every seeker of knowledge should read, very ap propriately remarks : "Those islands which so beautifully adorn the Pacific, and which but for sin, would seem so many Edens, were reared up from the bed of the ocean by the little coral insect, which depoaits one grain of sand at a time, till the whole oi those piles are reared up." Just so with human exertions. The greatest results of the mind are produced by small but contin ued efforts. Wo have frequently thought of the motto of the most distinguished scholar in this oountry as peculiarly appropriato. As near as I remember, it is the picture of a mountain, with a man at its base, with his hat and coat lying beside him, and a pick axe in his hand ; and as ho digs, stroke by stroke, his patient look corresponds with his words, "little by little." "The river roll ing onward its accumulated waters to the ocean, was in its small beginning but an oozing rill, trickling down some moss-covered rock, and winding like a silver thread between the green banks to which it impart ed verdure. The tree that sweeps the air ..i ... iMa uiauuucs, auu uiucjlm UL the howling of the tempest, was in its small beginning trodden under foot and unnotic ed ; then a small shoot that the leaping bare might have forever crushed : it now tow ers to the heavens." As spring is the most important part of the year, so is youth the most important part of life. Surely, edu cution has a claim to your principal atten tion, and demand the morning of your days; then, as we said before, why do you throw away your young and golden hours? Why don't you go to work serionsly, and in such a way as to briug honor upon yourselves, your parents, and your friends, and not wretchedness Rockinghan Register. I HAVE NO TIME TO READ. The idea about the want of time is a mere phantom. Franklin found time in the midst of all his labors to dive into the hiddon re cess of all his philosophy, and explore the untrodden path of science. The groat Frederick, with an empire at his direction, in the midst of war, on the eve of battles which were to decide the fate of his kingdom, found time to read and revel in the charms of philosophy and intellectual pleasures. Bonaparte, with all Europe at his disposal, with kings in his ante-chamber begging for vacant thrones, with thousands of men whoso destinies were suspended by the brittle thread of his arbitrary, pleasure, had time to read and converse with books. Caesar, when he had curbed the spirits of the Roman people, and was thronged with visitors from the remotest kingdoms, found time for read ing and intellectual conversation. Every man has time; if he is careful to improve it as well as he might, he can reap three-fold. Let farmers and mechanics make use of the hours at their disposal, if they want to obtain a proper influence in society. They can, if they please, hold in their hands the des tinies of our Republic. Meanness. The Detroit Tribune re lates the case of a man who fell overboard, from a boat on the lakes, in that vicinity. His life was saved by throwing out into the water a bunch of shingles, upon which he caught and floated until he was rescued. When taken on board, without expressing any gratitude for his deliverance, he told the captain, with considerable agitation, that he should expect pay for his shingles that he had thrown overboard .' Capt. Ward replied that he was very sorry that if he had known the shingles were his, he would not have done it.' VW The above equals the case of Bill Johnson, the constable, who levied on an old lady's ducks, to pay a small grocery bill. He wanted the old woman to drive em up and ketch 'em for him. She told him to ketch 'em himself, and bo he phased 'em round and round the houso, and every time he'd ketch a duck, he'd set down and wring its head off, and charge mileage!" EF" Mrs. Partington says : "Know No-thing-tm is the worst ism on e- rth, except Reumatiam. "Ike," hearing this remark, looked us and-said "Yes, ma'am, but they are beta very similar 'tis painful to get along with either of them "