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I 1 ^#w & -jrt* ?) ?** k'v * ** **?' *> **>?i(i)j^i !* / l J<.';r i t\ ' ^U 'T 1/ lit JL% I ^ #wwfefp- . " I ; ^^fmrtjlfrn Cirtfrprisf, I n A IHSIfl.BX X>P rOI'ULAU KVKXTS. ' Jb? ^ > tj?r4fe)*.i ajh ip. jpuuj oa, ' farron and proprietor. ^ n 4 ^ .i'f v?t' ^ |l M, pmM? in hItmm ; $2 if Wnttl tJLUIIH ih FIVE ?n<i fepwftrih II, th? irfwej , In KIWI lartnnm to Meannaav tk? nr.l?r I WWlHWfltiTW tlHwWfc conwpn?u<>ii?J v ?t j 3ati:vjs^ar <? tMi for Jf?rly 4rertt?iii){ made rcMon*ti)K I aoknth. JI c;H. CAM, S. W. wr. ?f Wslnut *n<l TliirJ-?t, ! PhUadelphis, I? nnr urthoriwl A^enf. W. W. WALKER, JR., s. v. i A. M. PEOtN, K.nil'view |?. tX, OlWDTiltt PUt ' WM. c. IAILEY, ll'WWt ?rori>, Greenville. i' (APT* R. Q. ANDERS3N, Cedar Falls, Greenville j1 ? - 1 J- 1 -- H 1 r." |>eltrttiJ ^ottrij. A Thought Suggested by the Hew Tear. av THOMAS CASirDKl.t? Tb? mjws w? lire, more brief appear . y <h* life'* nucrcediug stage*: a tm to childhood seem* m jmr* Aik! year*, like |me?ing ages. <; \\ ? I The. gfcwfctome current nf our youth, > j, Kre |Mission ret disorders, ,li Steals, lingering, like a liver smooth Along it- jjm^y Imrd.-rs. Mat as the earc-worn elierk grows wnn, Ami S>rro?'s shafts llv thicker, Iht.t measure life to man ! , Why wthm your cmutm? ijuieker l.-r u .^urJlW i>uia }< sii-n. ?.' i A* ') WluflU joy A l?vf lo?t their bloom and brent It, 1. A?*d life itself is vapid, . d -? ..i<* /?/u4i Whr,'tn) we reach the fall* of death, |1 Feel We its tide iimre rapid f ^iweessjws1* * eu Xw t ajvl ? '< il<? It may he strange; yet who would change j Time's cuurMJ to .slower ^Ht*liug ! When, one by one, our tricud* have gone, Awdlrft our bosoms bleeding I |> llenveitgive* our year* of fading strength liwliihlifeing rteelnewe j - -M And thus* of y?m?h % warming length, | lUiifortioftni to llirif (SrrtiiM. ! Msrrllnnrons T\ railing. SiJIU b^qfntrg. J Tit* following thrilling account of an mt*4 Venture ?itl? a lion in lite wild* of Southern Af.icO* extracted 11 out a record of an Afrinan tiwirliuo ftnaliliiin ?wwM?tl?' mikli.Ld.1 magazine: , L WJ.iUt hrenkfi*t was propming, I pr*>eeed^d lutnko a saunter down to the pool, nr* wit limit some faint Iiojmm of a hath,. though. I feared o??r horse*, to mw nothing the other animals who had vhitrd it during the night, might have muddled it too , nmcll fiiir that. However, I resolved to try, and throwing mv Minnie into the hollow of , nif hrtrt, and Coeking*my wide awake over my eves, lounged down ft path among the bw*h^?, wow well beaten by the feet of man and horse*. The latter 1 found up to their , bellies in the pool, enjoying themselves a* ; completely an the flies would let them; hot , the 3 water looked unoommonlv turbid, I thought I would skirt along a little to '.lie Ut fin! Iodic for a cleaner spot; and so climbiog WWhert Steep, corered with long graw ami underwood, I dashed aside some branches ' which hitervefted betwoen me and a small clear *pece ot shorter turf and?to my very 1 intense'astonishment, though I must say not g| that luoroent to my dismay, I was used to the sight of them?found myself within a 1 few yards of one of the finest male lions I f?er taw, and who was engaged witii a look gi grace patriarchal interest in watehing the 1 psovsiiwjiis dtiis iiO'rwi? uOaUitiS i1 om for his breakfhst. Have you not seer 1 |na*d*eer's catching of the lion in the old I Tower Menagerie? In exactly the same at tliude, stil) and tin moving, like a noble sut- \ as, stood this neighbor of mine; and, for a 1 few moments, I remained really lout in ad- 1 nitration of the grand beauty of the tableau' (> pcamnted. It mm, however, necessary to decide en flftjpejhs? of action immediately. I could , not WMp bitting him, if I oliose to fire, hut if < IM lot kill him rijjjhtout with one shot, km trlitch iiH^jjSron w Si * -?.{j 1. ffm*n."TT., .r?i iirw i - IV? <*2&/|{iA. /dDk;/S^3k/BS3ik 'SEQ?$Q GREKKVILI * CT. '"} ? fmi }j ^ Y? li.J-JJ. --., short xtsrtled (jpowl, the Uirti?Mi| hhraelf round, and in a second, whs staring at roe wul. n look whfck "unit "Halloo I ubo * you I a*, plainly as look could peak. Jo- j linvtivtlj I threw my rifle forward, cocking it at the **nte moment, and ?oiue seconds of perfovt iroroovabletiess on each ride ensued, during Which I wan trying tp make out whether he would charge or not. The Mtidv of physiognomy t* doubtless plenum! enoughr on the whole; out when your subject is a male lion, and the question depending on I he study Whether you elndl he summarily smashed or*|tt sleit?^ erlt^, I c* hi few k becomes (as Mr. Wcller *aj>) too exciting to be pleasant. Hoar I studied every feature, trying to dc-' toct a change of sotne sort which gave me a clue ! Ft came At fast; he gradually lowered Ids head, and bv tit* *?#' hi* hind quartern, which 1 coufd just spy over hi* shoulder*, I m? lie was gathering hi? html legs tinder hitn?a Mire imlicatioii. What odd thing* come into people's minds' in momenta of peril I That movement! brought to my recollection most vividly a! bitterly parallel scene in inv aunt's garden at ( Harrow, where 1 watched her cat gntheiing , herself itp in an exactly similar way to pounce on a wretched sparrow. The next moment he dashed at me with a hoaraa snarl, w^ticii sounded as though a giant had drawn the bow suddenly across lite strings of a stupendous violin cello. I fired MM lie rtt-diAf in. aiming as well as I could at the middle of his forehead. As I ' ilal so, I waa swept down with the force of mii ex|?re*a train, and for a few seconds !o.?t ail corns.iuu-neas. The first thing ( was sensible of, as soon j an | Icgaii to get my sen -e* together, was | the clear, strong voice of N . calling to mciii the moM placid, though earnest manner : Lie pc;foctly still, Walter, ii's your only rhancc. How my heart leaped at the voice ! II dp waa at hand, but the Very words that announced it at the same time pointed out my extreme danger: it needed onlv the mo t moderate exercise of my retun ing facr.l ic* to undarstniid why. 1 1 was lying on my faco among the long irroM of flio tfrfk ?l*o l*s*L- -*?? * *?- ? d ?"|? v? miv iiuv A IIHTO | mentioned, iron til. am nothiug, but ( could . feel the lion oloao to we. I could hoar liia j deep, short, angry brrnth, like itwctnto purr* j of mii enormous cat?-could detect n smacking iumnc, which I afterward* fouiul arose fr??>n hia licking at n stream of blood which llowcd flown the side of liia no>?c, fioin a deep sure on Id* ftwvhead given liitn by my l*atl?nay, 1 could feel hit huge tail, a* he I roiled il angrily across from aide to aide, rest j for a moment on my hack now and then. j The billoi anguish of thorns few yearn ofi momenta?well, you can guess all that.? ' Presently I heard the crack of a ritie on my I left, a ?hni]> whiatlc close to my head, and a| third on my right, a* the shot told among the fur, succeeded by another short, sharp *narl louder ilian the first?another crack, a , sensation like a red hot wire serosa my neck, (being at the liotlotn of the slope, they could but jtu-t sight the lion over my head, and N - had tired a quarter of m inch too low,) another furious snail, and then a ro?r?and such a roar?within a yard of my tympanum. I never heard such a sound out of m\ything, living or dead; then three or more shots close together, and a bustle at psy side, which sounded like my neighbor settliug down among the grass and bushes. 'Now roll! roll for your life!' shouted X dear voice again. I was saved the trouble?the dying brute, in his convulsion* giving me a kick with his hind legs which sent use flying down the eteep out of reach of further danger. i &irtti)lui}ift** flftd Clritou. What fills the alin bouses and our gaols! < What hangs you trembling wretches upon the gallows! It is the drink! And wo j migtit cull upon (be tomb to break forth : 14V? mouldering victim*t wipe the graveduet crumbling from your brow ; stalk forth in your tattered shrouds and bony whilenees, to teatify against the drink ! Come, some, from U?e gallows, yoiVpirit, maddened m?n*tay*r! gi*? up your >4oudy Unit*, and talk forth to testify against it! crawl from the slimy ooze ye drowned drunkards, and, with suffocation's Idas and vivid lips, speak out against th* drink! Unroll tho r%oord of the past, and let the Recording Angel read out the murder indictments written in God's book of remeinbranfe; aye, let the past he nnfolded and llie 'hnafc I'M vietima wailing be borne down upoifjlhe night blast! Snap your burning chains, ye deniaans of the pit, and come up Apted in the Are, dripping with the flamePof bell, and with your trumpet tongue* testify against the deep damns lion ef the drink." Some are living to day; and I should like to aland now, and sea the mighty enterprise w it rises before them. They worked hard, l'bey lifted the Aral tori?prepared the bed in wkieh ta % the comer stone. They storm. Th.py byti5^%the foundation *bo\* the tur m I(H" IW -il Ir4?i v?v^ wmmimmm\\\\m)* m* ?, . n. i i. u'ji. p i ??!i ?.. ^ s' * V. .': 1 'f st'i T'> "?( i?? ??WA LE, S. C,: THURSDAY , .- t M * ' ?<>. face, nn-1 then commence*] another storm of persecution. Now we see the superstructure , piHar after pillar, toWer after tower, column ! after coltwnn, with the capitals emblazoned? ! "Love, truth, sympathy, and good will to all; men. Old men gaxc hpoti it as it grows m> { before them. They will not live to see it, completed, but they see in faith the crown-' ingeopestoneset npon it. Meek-eyed wo-, men weep as it grows in beauty ; children strew the nalhwav of the workmen with flower*. \Ve <lo nut rn iti beauty yet?we j do not see the tusgiiificcuce of the wnporstructnre yrl-Uwwielt i* in cour*e oOfw-J lion. Scaffolding, rope*, ladder*, woiktnen ascending nnd descending, mar the beauty I of the building, but, by and by when thei host* who hare labored shall come up orer a thousand battle-Held* waving with bright grain, never again to be crushed in the di* j tillery?through vine-yard*, under trcllised vine* with grape* hanging in ad their purple glory, never to be pressed into that wliicli, can debase and degrade mankind ; when they shall coino through orchards, under tiec* , hanging thick with golden pulpy fruit, never to be turned into that which can injnre and dvbnse?when they shall come np to the last distillery and destroy it, to the last ttenin of liquid death and dry it up, to the1 last weeping wife and wipe her tears gently away; to the last little child and lift hint up to stand whero God frrcnrrt dint rrmtt IismM stand ; to the last drunkard and nerve him to burst the burning fetters, and make a glori mi* accompaniment to the song of freedom bv the clanking of his broken chains?then, ah! then will the rope be set upon it, the cafftdding will fall with a crash, and the building will start in its wondrous beauty before an astonished world.?Autobiography of John It. (rough. I b e I too Spirit*. Tiik spirit of the world and lite spirit of the gospel are in direct contrast. To tree uo harsher terms, the first is selfish and inhuman ; the latter is benificent and philanthropic.. The spirit of the gospel is 4ipe?ee on | earth nnd good will to mcu,r the spirit of 1 the world vents itself in struggles for pre-eminence and contests of cruelty. Missions of 1 mercy flow from the gospel; tiro history of the world is a history of bloody fends The | reclamation of the degraded and sinful, and 1 their return to God and happiness, is the object of the one; but where the gospel has no influence, "man's inhumanity to man, makes countless thousands inourn. Tire spirit of Christ and that of tho world , are not onlv in contrast, but in hostile opjosition. While chri-tian tiiiwk>naiies are penetrating the darkest regions of the world, with the benevolent de-ign of elevating the condition of men, and inspiring tliem with new hopes and pursuits, the doinoniac spirit of unregeneratcd humanity originates wars, wields the weapons of death, and gluts itself with savage slaughter. When we turn our eyes to the Crimea, and see the millions of money expended for the destruction of life, | and the multiplication of human misery, we are constrained to conclude that a spirit so savage could exist only in the absence of that religion which enjoins love to our neighbor. And ret, while the christian missionary pursues his heavenly mission unnoticed, and his benevolent efforts to carry hope and salvation to the dwelling of the lost are attributed to fanatical delusion, the wholesale murders of war are justified and perpetrators applauded. A canting world may affect to ptty the superstition which can contribute to send the pure morality and the immortal hopes of the gospel to the heathen, aud yet lavish countless millions of treasure in battering down fortress and carryiug woe and misery among thousands of thoso who are, "bone of our bone, and flesh of our flesh."1 * j When the history of the existing wari shall be written, its comnrelioiuive mmms! | ry will bo, iliourtutui* of human lives sacriti-i ' ced and millions of money expended, and so1 far from any proof that the high destinies of i men have Wen promoted by It, a contrary effect will be seen, embittering of national jealousies, and the deterioration of man's moral condition. The workl will be tlte < worse for it On the contrary, had half the; money, and one half the energy and talent; been expended in diffusing knowledge and , promoting the spiritual interests ot men,! how many wretched habitations would bare I been lighted, and how many groaning vpir ita cheered ! llow earnest should l>? our prayer that the spirit of the gospel may uai versaliy supercede the spirit of the world, and the peaceful dominion of Christ exclude thoee sickening scenes in which devils alone can revel!?J*re$byt*rian. That was a keen reply of the buxom lassie to a lit lie pigmy of a roan wbo solicited a matrimonial connexion; "O. no," said the I fair ladv ; * ! can't think of ?t for a moment., The foot is, dob a, yon are a little too bio to put ikto a ciusu and a little too small r<? put ib to a mo." ? t ?. . "Tincture <4, ia the tUUe o( one of the nujneroue newly named drinks which i are liberally patroniaed in. Boston, since the passage of the prohibitory taw in KUssnchn,svttx i Hi 'mi " ' 1 ?ii gin i . BM4 i H I BiA&m9I( a 1 ( . . I *<4^1 \Ui V: "'-' " -ll - 'I, I - - * MORNING, JW'I AI! From the Home Circle. a - !? $ i g h 0 P Cipetfi. BY LIVIE mRfKDOM. Afar from nil the former association*, of life, in A new home in n strange and distant land, n newspaper brought to me the pml tidings of tho sudden falling of this I 1'iince in Israel. How tnv heart throbbed at the announcement ! while memory begun to retrace those scenes of the past in which Moenerable form hud been uefcarweny eye, and" his gentle teachings in my ear. From earliest childhood I had looked oil j him with n peculiar reverential lore. When in friendly intercourse, he used to enter my father's house. I delighted to sit within .1-:? ?: ? ? wimu v? inn m^rimn^ TWUX, UHCriJI^ WOrtlf of wisdom, and watcb tlie changing light of J his b*wutifui eyes?(for who that ever be-; held biin can forget those melting tones, or those eye* of starrv brightness f) lint the princijml jH>int of bin apjiearance on which I loved to dwell, was that high and ample brow, so statue-like in its whiteness, so saint-like in its purity, llow loved the white locks that floated around it! and many times ; only my childish timidity kept inc frotn steal-1 ing behind him and laying tny hand rever-1 enlully upon tliem, as if some virtue could l>? imparted by the touch, llow little did fcWor others the feelings with which he inspired the quiet, silent girl whose fires- j mice was oflen unnoted in their mills*! \\ hen he was ereatcd bishop l?y the voice of the ' Church he had so long and faithfully served, i I recollect one day hearing frotn a visitor the > thought loss remark, that it was suspected j that he would now consider it necessary to: dignify himself with a' w ig." The bare idea J shocked me; lo iny cnthusiath: mind it 1 seemed almost anciilege; fur I hud often! imagined that a halo of light like a lambent flnme, played around that noble head, and 1 could not have borne its obscuration. When I rend an account of his interment, and of the passing before him of the friends who had known and loved him in life, to take a last look at his aiill features, IUiought I first (and my tears flowed at the recollection) j of that holy brow, resting with its white! loeks in the quiet of death, never moro to , throb with aching thought or wearing fatigue fcr the "good of Israel"?its calm never more to 1? ruffled by the cares and trials of life. Oh ! when "this hotly shall be clotl ed afresh," when this "mortal shall put on j immortality" that noble brow, freed from the stains of life's warfare, will wear a gloii- ' oils crown, glittering with many stais, jewel* gathered in his eartldv ministry 1 Froin my eariieat reaJing* of Scripture I have drawn for myself portraits of all liible characters, each witli distinct features and peculiar traits, according to the ideas I had formed of the personages described. Peter, fitnt as a rock, stern and uufiinching in (be Kill of dutjP'with bis muscular frame and and shoulders, ready for any bunion tlint might lie laid upon liiin,?Peter as he was after the ascension of his Lord, with his martyr spirit growing strong for the Inst conflict. St. Paul, with his holy seal foi Cluist, firing lip,' and eye, and brow with burning eloquence,1 nerving bis slight frame to enduro "bonds' and itnptiacument," the torture and the scourge, and even in their midst to sing the song of victory. St. John, holy, gentle and mawk, leaning on the bosoin of his Lord, or seated in his chair, when age and weakness j ren<lerA<l him Iwili.U.. -??? ??' ' ...... mvij.WW, jMrniMHg IVIIUCTIV with fain flock. **Little children love one! another." These ?nd many more become \ hs real beings to my fancy, while I follow-) them through their sacred histories and. writings. Ami j, delight to coui}Mu-e them w-ith those who now pursue their holy cnlling. j In my niiml Peter ami Paul have their liv-' ing representatives, but the St. John of my imagination, with his child-liko simplicity ' and earnestness, his purity ami gentleness, his thousand loving traits, winning hiin a place irresutably in the secret heart, is removed from our midst f Never more shall we behold his vcnerablo form, his broad brow, his eyes beaming with heavenly lustre; never more shall we hear his voice of melody, nor list the loving teachings of his lips. But his example is with us; and oh! m?y his mantle descend on one worthy to bear it! oervaui of vruti, well uuQ?! Ke?t from thy earthly toils ! Kntcr thy Master1* IIouso A conqueror with his spoils! Lay thy worn armor by. Thy shield and buckler down, Thy sword unneeded now, The final fight is won. Thy life-robes cast off here. We tenderly uplift. I>ear to the loving heart* Now bleeding and bereft: n*!.i - u mi reverential care. And hymn* of eoleiun aound, We ley them jjcntly there Within the onfet ground. Church of hip rodee, no moro Marat thou eo'klly ahvp; Thy Watchman i* removed. Who wi)| the vigil* keep ? Who now will afar The coming of Um cloud* And. hid. thy aoue yrepT?. J aouud. the *Um uta loud J: # * W ,TW; * iimnn| ii in tmm) t nr i iyg >. -=*1 *mm ah t :r tt ? * ? fJLf.l 5BJ4.': f /\ LA ** ^f HyLJI/ BA-4 isw m Y 17, 1856. Oh, gird tlic armor on Of thy departed chief, Nor mourn hi? .victory won, In thy lieait mi it-ken grief, Look on the line of light Hi? earthly track lia? made, And trace the course he trod Ere the bright radiance fade. 2 ike Sketch. Tt?i.L mc where the Biblo ia, a? a houxehold book, and where it i? not. and I will write a moral geography of the world. I will show what, in all particular*, i* the physical condition of that people. One glance of your eye will inform you where the Bible i*. and where it is not. (in to Italv?rt?n-uv degradation, suffering, meet you on every aide. Comnierco droops, Agriculture nick ens, the useful arts languish. There is a heaviness in the air ; you feel compressed by some in visible power; the people dare not speak aloud ; they walk slowly, and armed soldiery are around their dwellings; the armed police take from the stranger his Hi- i hie before he cdtem the territory. Ask for) the Bible in rx Itook store, it is not there., or is in a form so large r.n 1 expensive ah to be beyond the reach of common people | The preacher lakes no text from the HiUe. : You enter the .Vatican and inquire for the j Bible, and you will lie pointed to some case, ' where it reposes amougxoine prohibited liooks, side by side with the works of Diderot and Voltaire. But pass over the Alps to Switzerland , and down the Rhine into ilollaud, then , over the channel to England and Scotland. | and come over to their descendants, the |>eo-' pic of tho United States, mid what an amazing contrast meets the eye ! Men look with ! an air of iiide|>endenee; there is industry, neatness, instruction for children. Why is this difference } There is no brighter sky?there are no fairer scenes of nature, but they have the Bible; nnd happy Are the people who are in such a state, for it is righteousness that exalteth a nation, and sin a reproach to any pcnple. JifcJLilico ilibeir. It was Sabbath evening in summer. T sat at a window which looked out on New Eng land's largest river. No human form fir sound greated the eye or ear. All was quiet and still, as earth ere man was created. 1 said to myself,some men find "sermons in stones, hooks in the running brooks, and <r.xwt in nt-drvll.;..*." Wl...? l? /I J.. v? vt^? tmn^. ?? lint ic^n/ilt v river, ost thou touch ? Methought the river answered : Behold in me n mirror of thy life. My birth was the bubbiug spring, my infancv the little rill, my boyhood the winding brook, tny dawning manhood the rivulet, my meridnn of life the resistless river, iny old age that same river broad and placid, my death an approach and entrance to the ocean, and my buiial being lost in tbc abyss of waters. Like thine are the changes of my life. Sometimes I sleep for days among level meadows, and sometimes am borne headlong over rocks and precipices. Sometimes 1 move faintly in a narrow bed,and sometimes ' am hurried by the swollen flood. Sometimes angry winds agitate my bosom, and then my ' suifacois smooth as the brow of childhooti. Like thine my courRe is ever onward.? j Front the moment that I leave tny mountain birthplace, till I reach my ocean grave, I know no rest. Winding among hills and vnllcys, like a thread of.silver in a carpet of green, I render a thomand homes attractive, and make this valley the loveliest in the world. Four hundred miles I wander, and _ll ?i ?.1- i; I .-<> ??u iuuiiiv mi niKHjj 111JMIIII. I IIHTOKf I the beauty of the landscape. I leave h< alth niul fertility on every side. i give drink to j the cattle of a thousand pastures. I send up to tlic clouds the material for dew and I ami rain. I nourish in my bosom countless: fish for the sustanence of tnnn. I cleanse | the shores of all impurities. I furnish an . easy transport for the pioducts of the earth ( to other climes. So anxious am I to be useful, that I lometitnoH change my course to assist ingenuous man. For him I drive the J saw, and grind wheat and corn. For him I turn the spindle ami throw the shuttle. To serve him I labor day and night. 1 have too much work to be weary. Life is too shuil for diseourgement. I cannot b* tool old to do good. Look at me and take j courage. J. Nkwton B. The oldest book in the United States, it j is said, is a manusoiipt Bible in the possession of Dr. Witherapoon, of Alabama, writ-j ten over a thousand years ago I He des-1 enbe* it as follow h : The l?ook is strongly bound in boards of the old KnglUh oak, and with thongs by which tho leaves nro also well bound together. The leaves arc entirely made of parchment, of a most superior quality, of nnenena and smoothness little in fvrior to the best ?atin. The page* are ruled with accuracy, mid written with great uniformity and beauty in the old German text 1 hand, and divided off in to chapters and verse*. The first chapter in every book in the Bible ia written with a large capital, of inimitable beauty, and splendidly illuminated with red* blue, and black. k, sriJl in vivid colon*? and uo two of the c ipit ilk-for* in tile book are jfrechely alike. D I I vl . -S 1 B'tPwI 5 jb* 1 L ,- in rfVtWi' <-A f.i'nwfl .w4, i .. in jjiii.ill ii in .ii mm ii ^ w* a- ^ I 1? ieJifcpip* 'i OpuBi 5 "? "* " " ?" ,. NO. 36 f i JLL.. Jj 1 l(IL*y Mb(j i9 90 touch $?*-. e**e u? v Ukcaihr, in nnmWii of thing*, we d<?; just what by our natures we were oeveriti* tended to <lo. For cxHtnple-? ' 4 1st. M:tn i* intended to draw frcth air every tttne lie breathes. Almost all peopl*,. when in their shops breathe the same air over and over n?'ain. To show the neceasitv M.t i. I liMfilMM f -? -I- ?J " ' . . v. -> ?n ?? I1CWI nil uqillllUHIiy lO IflMT living room*, and tUe bad air to Is m.\ v be aai.od Uu?t evury person, daring e*Nb minute of hi* life, destroys a quantity of jtir twice a* large as himself. i ! 2-1. Man ought to breath pure air every breath. Cur sewer* and drains are *o bad i hut the vapors and foul gasse* rise, and we breathe thvui. 3d. M;in wuh intended to take exercise every day. Neither his heart, his stomach * nnd bowel*, his liver, his skin, his hHigvhit kidneys, nor his brain, will art rightly without walking exercise every day. Most * of us do not get any walk, or only a very short one, which b scarcely of any use. * 4th. Mini was formed to take simple ami wltolcsotuo food. lie eats all tarts of ? things, which do not only do him good, but do liiin barm ; and drinks large quantities j of beer, spirits, and wine, which burst bis I stomach and take away the proper use of his brain. 5th. Man ought to wnsh himself all over with water every day, so as to cleanse the |H>res of the skin, else they get stopped up ; lie cannot perspire rightly, and his skin canHot breathe. J lie majority of people only wash their hands and faces. Oth. Man should wear clean clothe* next his ;>kin, became the body gives off bed fluid*. At present, many people wear Xhm * same thing day after day, for week* together. 7th. Man was intended lo live in the light. Many, very many, have scaice any light iw *; their rooms. . , , . .. . i : ,1 *. J 8th. Man in tin. climate, must wear warm clothing. Many have no flannel, ami are chid with heavy and useless thing*. Ibe Scries of topefrjj. Roman Pontiffs are known to be both kings and priests. They unite with the tie* m the !iit]x*fi*I diadem. They hold the spiritual sword of Jesus, the tcniporial sword of Caesar, and both the keys of St. Peter.? With the two swords they have cloven I down the spiritual tuid teraporial rights of* mankind. With the two keys they have locked up henven and opeued hell. They have disp sed of crowns and kingdoms, lorded, for twelve centuries over God's heritage, and gotten dt unk on the blood of theaaiats. Their principles and their practice* have ever been destructive to the civil and religious rights of mankind. The most ample lime has been afforded for the trial of Popery.? After a reign in Italy for twelve or iifleen centuries, no good fruit has ever been born*. Freedom of thought, of speech, and of religious worship, is crushed in the very seat of empire. On his own duughill, and at his | own home, ihe head of (he anarchy mock* : at the sacred rights of mankind. He rettiicU and punishes them systematically,pur1 posely and avowedly, upon the principle* ? liis religious corporation. No predecesenr . of his has ever done otherwise through ! agps upon nges. If tlie long series of <R*? pots were truly commissioned by Jcstu ashead of Ims Clmrcb, the? is Popery di.vine, the Declaration of lndej>endence is a lie, aod? he constitutions of America are usurpations on the divine rights of king*. If the princiIles of our constitutions are correct, every 'apal pontiff has been amcie usurper and a tyrant. No heart can make a distinction between his kingly and his priestly nature. If the kingly part of him were beheaded, the priestly part would hardly be spared. It i?impossible to detest and pay homage to the same person. Wo cantiot revere in man the priest, while we hate the tyrant. The sanctity of the Pontiff is utterly lost in the atrocity of the despot. Fqe liftie* for Qoclot$. Tint following i*presumed to 3e tlie soliToquy of a young physician, who hopes by the multiplication of diseases to get into) practice : ? "Considering tlie damp, muddy state <A the street* at this time of lite year, I ant equally amazed and delighted to see I lie br~ die*. almost uuiversallr. imin# slios* W. its , - ? - VI o ??mkr shoe*. Thia elegant fashion beautiftiHv dh;>!.?> - tlx- c??iifor-mat o i of the Mlkle joint ;. J l>ui to the aurgeou it h ? another iweoihmendatum. 1 behold the delicate foot, aepcratetl scarcely by the thiche? of thin paper from; the mire. I ace the exquidte instep, nude- 1 fended but by a mere web. I meditate eat. the influence of cold and wet ujKmtilfl.frame. *? I think of the ealaeraha, cough*, pleurm** * pneumonic*, con -nmpbon, and other inlet* e?liug aH'cctiona, that neeewarilv mind reau | from t' eir application to their feet; and then ' I reckon up the number of pill*, boioae*, powder*, draught*, niiiuirea, leech?*, ami tdiatew, which will cm-eqnently be ?nmt into the fnir Mttft-rer*, unhwiaea what they tnttet conic to, :?inl ?d*h I had the 'amount, iu U?;.' J'< '> kfc'l." ? %