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RADWAY'S READY RELIEF. Lt. R. R. A SI.3lPLE SOLUTION OF A SCIENTIFIC: MEDICAL PROBLEM. IIA1)\VAY'S IRELI, E1l1' Wili prevent and dire h o- I,]1M NA NT FEVERS, whether on'tag s or - ,l ,1,,4 il¶ ! u ', :lLi oi r wpilll A, AND AtEl L i ' 'FHlil': NtrýT T,0 TU:RN(1 t)1 PAINS ANI) ..v IIPI . I 'Ji,~io :'II: g ,or Jih TiI r *lllln I I uyria In~ l i "rlll fl., ".v u.. I, lil I1III it 1, 1I·U t ," " iia vLlt pullllilir "n'il pviii',~i i.~v vv, ~ ,: 111 li,:vlllill 1ncully, "'Nat w l~"~ll 11 il. 1 y do 1 kl In· i ' ., 11 pulvtI 1","1.,io1~"." Yn n Z" i. .. · i " ;I. . " . . , , , 'I'I.;·. 1!1.1I ll '.u""iti ll -).III . ','11..: i ;. L'· ··ii· I ." . "1' 11, .. .. p. ·rIr I:·i! llra , , i-., . 111'. I·Itl11,Tli lIli~'r vnnl""l..ý",,,e, ~ ... ~I.. . . 1"1 ,rn:. ·.·~1 tll.. ·.· 111,:::i; . ,.,. i : I' . .t "1 .,R,.,.I" ,.t., r.,fl .:., r" 1t ,., ~I f~ l l~i'.,,.l~w; :ti. 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C:. 1L' o., SIftY AXGWNTS AND (1DM ·I IISS;ION ]f Y.I'IIS NT:%, i2 t:11111 1)il ec. _ 00XL LlUtbUY, U A I'X FRNDYS-A'TI'-L.A NA.GW 07ARTFZr& CO., .L. 11I. ENI·IRS (N 114(1 F V au Bsuiry (mantic' of all &:ndxl, corntlT Cuorluull aid 4lo lgiln lr 411 41. , ___ . Gy4y IAZL 14" W, \LWINI:S, IIHANIFIiS, ('IIMI IIFRV CO t ( ( 11(il f 0411. 1TT1.( t1. Y AND 11(lS(0 1(, . flI)NVEIfLI55MAI S C . WIIIII.S.( (11 111.111 (F .treet, over thfl I',mtý(IfllH" 4IIf15.Y.4,1( 1141(1. WY. 14. I;U .iQSI.S. f ((1(1l0r I(N (3u and Altsriic of illii~j.c ~raar~t,:c Or. IlUB7:Vs& I[4LARRIINCTON'S DM111 (:1(110"1 IL J TY l' on rn uer(: mp u! nnxl xti eto, (up x :irx.) xl D AI &IS N{}t]$ .U (041 '.ý:1AIE ('A EFFY Ul3'IGIIL'V JII'COD P., ATT'II.NSY 04( . y.; Mtý.l·*. Slark, Swufior k co.; lioll. G. or;n; Io. E fl lUOI.It. UI., (1 \ F I('F 'I N4, N4. 214 .114(0 ritilluc eft, :t i .. IoUlllrt·r v dIf , 'k ( 444(45 or IS'. Xari y a(:i l.4.5' 144a, d I 411 11 S1n F rllc rut u": T l lr -d N iltxK " nI.I's4 d v.pai¶d. IEN Fclw-i.'n IN 414,0joy:51'- of xh ki Ill ' llU to IN-. S((F ITo, 5U1(11 4,4, n(( IUJEI X1EM;}%, .. Ni. C L R, (44c1 IIIn~( ~x o. (144(4 (41 On41 n'1 444. Jv t l ">4, (I1ILI.1' 1: x:14a P~t)41141(w1. n~tc~xd i , C S o, 1111. 111 145( AI·lll j~l IIII~N ll ~xtl,,rutc~ u~~cr .x11; ,"n ,, u'v ý~ 114145141'i 1C(4115114. ANDK:ANIý: 0(4(154, trr jjFNx:_ ·IORN 4IFS455I44 f.15'l.I(S r {Ai~,tb4'.. hORACE, 4(10141 \ 41. FANC )I: (4_ ItW. K-LL' & W. A. CI( 1NULAI, D4EN4 G' L341,. *(114.11I. 1115NM1.111(41111(ND GLiLU 7'LL ý. F'.,NVPL:IF N E~ ue,:cr to f Bl I'euilry Atttcler, confer ilrsl xild Sc, chxrlen (ý ILj, (; b;L.5:.1 AfPi!+U ý, 'I.F. AND FANC I)RY lT i; ,n~i of "l:"et nElu: utiou, So. . 19 linrl " tr,:rt (`AIVF'ti, C. . Si~o., fIf [u It'CFF S AN I)I";.PK - I.V H lJI ; IN f11Rn WA t~E, l; c' 11 f er I. Nc·:2 n1nl - L7 I Wi:+' El t yfll 1,FNo 14\ew ý2rnS fHt iL1I1', 11UltACP;, o-A'LE AND P'SN`' DRY 11 -. i· tu lbr::,:tvri.-. etr.. :"n ]rh I"uilp uiriil· 1 _ jItiY Y:LL. I. K., AIIoi:.\,NlY-AT-LAhW, Nn. f; Ii ('a i. ···i:. ", [ . hl r , h"4 if r7 ITc.3 i -. ]i - .:R N( -'F tlf? ll Dt::c,(,1, 11AL, A E , t. 7 u 7 co I I.D, 2t _ , ;u L GAINE', 1):, f.,1:' its. IY t;!1. I. j f71 &) G )lltlCI, f JF: :I.. , ýEW ,ler CnnEl ,lT L- "-'"" BE" "- AL' f .N, uI , AN 41111.7 1 ' C, 'lIa', ' N'"V' NI' LA'TW'ICE< AN JiAJA iN C. '" "['-I 'N T LI"E 1 : I L)Y, 4 ., F:. I ie 1 " tII t.r N , . A-f.."? \ A.`IIII ,N Il \J iOff: NfA J C "A "A N !C.' T" T FiT()V"l l -! . \ (A U''", CI.- . F:r-l'.w, cor.,.r IS N .L " .x I3. . l y. .- :. I "A ,.",'-,, , At . ND ':, .: I IiIN TI A AN.TIlI. 'N P IN IIAVF AFlTAN i'EA.N C 11. 1 1 ll' lfl' 1, (F,,q!': F '.IIV"I INlc , S I .t'1 . . : i'; ', :, A TIC l,,:-,. i " -'1" :'V I N- A ll . -' A N- ,! N. 1 A l't ft, ..'.. . .......... ...... N IA'tli'Wý 'IN A. Ii 'I'l' IN'AAAr, I.- . N.1 A,. ,- , 'I7, I1.: 4 1l. ". 11' S07 4T1 1 1 1N' IAN 8 I('4 ()l ý.Ft iN " 1i' 'I N AND l'''I"A " INIII S 1,11 r . .' 1 '.,r , A. I "II: , ,. i t- 1,1: 1,r 1 . ':i ., II.1mA!,IIE AND I Al, IINA A'. `ItK , . l l A.' A 'l . I' ISA._ t " ,_ l r".. N' " .'Il, A. IAA. !Hl I*- .. IA I4) :-. F l.' iII , ,,\HI . i' l: . ',\, V,'.'' , t '''' ,i S'I r 'Ip bP::., . ..:.... . TI !IS, • DRY GH, I. ! . i; L M !I '1 i ,tl :(,, Tau. ,! "I :T - · ' . . .. .. ' ! ,L o 1, w.:"..: (ul·., no , RY g.I('llil,].J4 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ··~_ , '.,Il",,5,lqTl':,S i Vt1OI Xl ItUL, W "FIV ii T.INTP'!'iF. VL)OHIIII, 1I:\ C }: im {: I > 13~kE I . a (t " C '. JI - N I I .5 1 l.' B JI! (,i i',1i S 1 1 I I i. `,( -7 ýUE F'; d, '"' L'·; .`·· ·· r ( !Ir {-,,A; E': G 13 ! .. 1!1' i 'lI s \ r1 l I 1:'C I, TTitK ' 1 r~lTill I1.0.o.F. Grandc Lodgee of Lonlwinlla. F., rnoelr ·r nl-a llllll Ilr tlrrlrt l ..··i ·ii.i;ll iri 11I 7(li(1 , 1 . f . 41. N) W. of C1 ion L .o)f TA , No. G, \J. W. (1.6)"I 6)4. ,2; 62 r ,,4l 6)6. '.Tm1 p Jolrlll- No. Ill.r It. Wt!SI. /I.Ilrpxre (rnntlMw tr: (:a-, 1. ( )( . ll Shims id., of I nlu (ad X,; Nn, 6, It W. (, r; Jd Sr:"r,"nd ry; lro y olh a","ru urn lrrn No. 4 N, . 12, P, .. t. the I t Urxn~l fo. 6:kv I'l.llN,. 46, ýl I ..; ( ,,4 W . 11 11 1{nP l~r nll- l· No. 4,\V. Irrri d N So h l; G. . Marion, of Corn Pnlll Unio Ilr l ;vNi , f, \}",(; rnn :u1 u ixn; . 1 rxx t'urd of (:rc.;~jI IIIIIe ~ " 1- N.l..rllllllr C nl 16, . P1:1.1 ..1 1,,,,,,,,, 66 A r Glilnl rr· T xnY Nont. 11...64 N.f. 9, ', . ;, li llit N . J t. lt k",nt.1<""r.. . ors, S uinrrflnntc 7 Li};ers. t.l)1'ISIt1: ,Ir)U!!:F: `: NIllieýte curry FrIdxv rreni -In room iý :l ,. (rr· l l Fl:llil,' Ilxll. ,I I I .Ienni"" I· I · 9lrL- .l · S_ (;· .,41,1 t !:.: "I. 1 -,11,11 I I I-, ;,, N ,riy:II !k r t N I. nn:, i'-l il· .i' ew Aýr IIIC` O1 ( .( LOD GE \ol . 3 n el~ fs · ¢evlrr Ttllrr~a y r even Wnr.; !u II:-·ltln, l r l ee ,.tN ; T. Jung., t'. !;. ; !'. , Secn~l·l·. c~retr l:): F. P" . S c,:wry, U'+1!! Ir )11,:1: \ , Fi m,", . rvri v undnv r rrin; "n no Snr t I t . tt . .9 I N -n rr,, . G.: u. , . -,,n . N-I \'. !. : r1. I t,.t:R ,n . ISiir ' rrrrre ,r, N;tr ; ' Fn. i. ii ee O-,-Irr Fr:-n nt,-tt' N v, In,,,, iyinrnl. n ;:u I, (TIN , Nel h·I . if CT- ..t ttt-tI11,N-,t 1.1ý~!r, \'. (;.: :,"ý..ý .moor . rr ns,· l.. S.r rrc~th ·· 1 i.r. rn, rt-tttu i l:tIl, Funrt h I- II-II. N, V. 1i .", . N. !;.:. 110rr %'Itll :. t 'tot-ittN I . tt,,.--t -.,n-. Rolie.-, . 9. r `I''VI I,. Iili f1 In111: Vin. 2111 meet!, -1y -I1-11IPII IP - ·Fi'n In morn :, r~.'II N;;-s : I '·!·· 11 !'. F' inli«, \, !:.: '.·.l~i c nn? Ycr S,·. i .··: y: I '. , ·L :c· ·. ,'Fr-·:-:; !I·I IIAC11- LedgDI. DR, ?8!f, NL D ih \N.; .n,..:.,!.t .,tN Rotn ,,, T'I.,-day N 8888801)i1' N,. 2,-a, RiAIi \:TV TNIiITND \.?-,"a 111111'nr on21.TITI!IT.. '-TTTI ýla N*y "7 ,.. TI, h \ . TI 18 N>Itt-. T!:'I IT' LT IIIIO N\,. 12 T-`t, ti TiTiiry ., 811 81.0 n oNo. 11 118 o.tiT1iITT-ni ant k1IT NTllh 881111n 8 N .:t N.11 oTS,. (,.uon o. ,iI: 11lfii Ifi, F N ý. 1 1 I :t, ",. CT No1.oI .. l tu Odd I'bllows' Hlall Aao.'or 1,011, tiTTON, , IT 1 1T01' ,.t 'TT ai T lll! TR IlT 'T.T.T1'S T 1 11, R mnd 88''INi'>)' RIO)!> I I~T)'TTTOI *ud lI-ITT' o lok.l THE''.-!.·:lr 01. III 0.,, II OX. L~ I- i, t n~ : , II n I' 81, ,.'oI N ,.IT IT .,, IV. It IS n:d:^r: lm ITT at.l II IS. IIrrf IT tr TTT-Tl No. I T,-, \,( )',1~: Sl,. olrl,.lltu l 'll~~lrllnmiI S t • i WT1,T .',liS 11.1 mee110t 1,fir-:l ll'I tirdatnl Pl live 11 (llen mrlr ii )! 'rl.l· 1 l 1 · I' i l +.,!,? + -: ,In i '.;l !l i ] . I Il, . ·. fI \I.N N 'IN . \N V.; N 11. I ; i , T .lur,; J lnt, I OARl ortir ill ,l . , l . ,ll , '., t N ', ' ' i .1 l + v . it, - , r r. , J. \,.\ - '.J. ,1: 1 . . ·, ," ·l r'~" 1'.rt Ah,1 Ihb lt ,l\ n,, in eaW '" ,- ) , . . I', ,N N .' , liN' ,I:..1. u . t t' W A IS lN " -N ' . . . tl ''cI l l flh ,lI In ; ,,T M ,,l ) ll- i + S' . . . :. III, N I '<':N1 . . ii , .ri ,' ~ ii 'il rm-f'.' , . ' I' : I I ;l· " [ i 4. )D-,N'N INNt N-u t N I I " ' t+ 'h " . , r :. IN + .' n, ý N'.,t, ,,I'ý,, e'- * -. h,,', II li·, th ý ' . D "it i i;. . ..; fi," I I, i,' ,, s' n- 1 l.. I/:, . r 5" F. ! '.: t 'b:.. .t ; . ',+'. ".;it;.. T '. 1' 1l. c ;; ,:_ th - t , :',hrt ý. ·I·· ,: ,,a'h • -.. -' ,, ,,,, t'. ' .: 1. ,",.<, I-.. I'.: ,' t, 4:,; ,. .:. ;," . ' ". : . u t', p lyirO'i ·iUr; .e- ! :tn E rt t x,. . \t'.'ll \\v . l1t n, ": r. :1 I r ,,1 . id , lt yil n u$ . , i .. . .. .+]1 ¢, ], ] { < 5 ,:,,, ; '.+ ~niu Orlaens , tilh rrscent. POETRY, MISCELLANEOUS AND TALES. The Pauper's Death Bed. BY MR9. SOUTHEY. Tread softly--bow the head In reverentoilence low: No pacing bell doth toll Yet an immortal soul Is pa..sing now. Stranger however great, With lowly reverence how ; There's one in that poor shed, One in that paltr hbed, (Greater than thou. Beneath that beggar's loof, Lo! Death doth keep iis state; Enter-no erowda attend; Enter-no guards defend Thil palace gate. That pavement damp and cold, No smiling conrtiers tread; One silent woman stands Liftinz, with meagre hands, A dying head. No mingling voice sound; .n inl'lnt wail alone TA sob upprensed-again That short, deep gap, and then The parting groan. 0 ! 'ha .ge- ! unIknown change, Burst oin the rn'i-on har- Tlhi nmonet thele, so slow, So agonized. and now Beyond the c0tar. O! elhane-rtnpendolos change, There lies the sale clod ; Tile so eternal hr"eakh The new immlnlotal wakes- Wakea with hi, laod. Little Graves. Thcre' many an empty cradle, There s malny a vacant bed, There's many a antely bosom, Whose joy and light i Iled. For thilk in verly raveyard The little hill,ek, lie- And every hiillrek reerehents An angel in the sky.' A TWI<TER. 4081 A twi-ter of twist. inte Once inttwrited a twi-t, afte And the twist that he twisted upo Was a three twi ted twist, stro Now in twniting this twist, s a If a twi-t -hould nntwiat met The ist ts!t tht wa twisted tas Would untwist the twnit, And the twist that was twinted Would all tie untwist. ct The followitiz curious inscription has been capied thea from a grlavestone in :s-ex ounty, N. J.: cur " lese lies the man Piehard, Ig And Mary. hit wife: : tir sulrnarle was Pritas hard ; i They lived without strife. of] And the reason was pit in- ra they abounded in ricles; had They hld o cart' or pain, and Alnd his wife wore the breeches." A lawyer. driving thrlogh tle town of Worcester, at pped at a eittage to inl1uire his way. The lady ofi ' ,tehopell tol d im he n t keelp on .traigilt for Some time, then turn to the right : iut said that she herself th Swa I.ing t ipst the rlad hie inllt take, and thalit if a to:' would wait a fete mnlomnta, till she eould get her ha lor-c readye, she would slhw him the way. " \\ell." mi said ilie 'had co emany is letter than none-m-nake s ha-te." After jogins .n tlive or six miles, the l en1 fail lemlan asked if' hte had not come to the road he must cot take. t " Oh, ye" said ihe, we have passed it two e r mile ila-kh: but I thouight bad eompanyiwas taS better than none, -) I kept you along with tme.I i h you have a lawyer or a nrlxt dour neighbilor,s a 1u I h oad bitter not thruLiv your weeds uver into ht gar- fr deli. an, What is the diilrense letween aer confirmed -inner tid and ai beggar? ne is a mendicant, and the other a' msend-i-wonat. l It i, with a faded beauty as with a cl,,ck: the more the face is enameled, the more clearly we see tihe pro gress of time. fol If you want to kiss a pretty girl. why kiss her--if you can. If a plrtty girl wants to kits you, why let her-like a man, . nwift uaed to sayt that nivierisal asa eastlhelas tice of lying, he did niti;t rememler to have thearcd three tl osl liea- in all his life. A good reason why--a' lies 're bad. in Nnl an for anay eonsideraile ieriiol int weart ne ne Iiore the worlst sd all nolther to hi-elf, withllt fiaully getting bewildered as to which may be the di must tnue. A vwife e.intt mnak e h i mfortab lewho i"dear t" aid "nly iloves" and "pi s't" lher htNltatnld, lt d.n't h, sew the buttons on his slirt, or tape on Iths drawers. A llshionable lad 's dre-s is like the lord Mayot nit dinuer ; it may be detined-an immense s-pread. A sailor had wandered into a cNrchyarly , and was el amusing himse'lf y reading the incsri]tion on thes gravestones. I'resenatly he came toone on which was at Inscribed tile following : t"Wee, nat fe,' n.e, my nhare t ,lear, s -i not .a,, ,hio , s I lii h ra," 0 Thi' was tat much or .lack. Shifting his iadil. hes Sjat tedit " Well, I've heard say that lihee are easces in which a man may lie; but illf was dead 'd own it." i In thie sine barrens of Michigan, not a thousandi miles from ;rand iapid,. but four miles away fromn ani other dwelling, is a miserable -shanty of log shin Sles. bearing the following sign: \oha , e ,.,, i ono lf I io , ioinv ; loan'; h" Iwat ultt : lurr." A elergtlman who was reading to his engtregation - cltalter in (heneuiss, fad the Iaht senltence to Ihe : a -" And the Lor1 gave Ninto Adam a wife." Turnin over twao live tagether. , hefond writtel, and itrea in sill audible vohie, " and sloe sias pitched without and witlin." lie had nlnhaplily gat into the tiddle of a description of iNoah's ark. i Sits matll e scaree ti N icaigua. A eorre~po!d eat o the iranata newspaperi sisgning hitsielfft'" l'it lrieliles. say : " l einsi very ' u'xias oto lear'n Si ish. i I have lbegiet it to boa ntivt tie's house. Iaetore I Iws there many days I ltea'atte aet'laitited with n l very plesaant native WONlan, who s ave nt i to lnler a t t-led that Alie wahilod chlthlies, iaN isisted utp Iit StsinLg i.t shut It i told er ias wtell at I c lld that i I-aniy di d iit ni self at tht ehe wre 1 nhle slie c il the water sntil" it d ried, under the pretence af bath a iN. Women hs., l\ays been my weeaknes, l gave hins tile 'hit l t dsas ; oh.. sl has nt reaued withd Sit. 1 t-l lot tell yon hlow feei; t lying abed I fon' dayt is no t lltake" v' onite a oke haltened tot one of lthe dustr craft tue little time aiI. le sadetas asite sv-sc iowa, Il t mc edi-ine f- a si boy, and the flither, not-lihing the s tsearace lo it forced it dowcn tile cats tihrat.- I ihen the dotar called agein, atnd inqired if thea Sow tei had ired the bi r tile ither re lied, " o, a., tile docntor,"ia t ile l ivini?"' "'e. buit the clat I ain't-n-e gave it to er."Ti'lTe ldathr slitoped. 'anny Joe sc's h h -i' ws ihai tisei slic caa i lovet lie fiI Ias It-l b hint its . Int11 l lll ih all ,it oIflif 'is t ilt - ii,-le i o tt h I ay. .linlick sa that~t wlen le wa./ in .oveti e ft il'thtit he were hia l--and haitd a at in his t ll it tpieck of btt ill ae heec iltlltr his waicat. Sila fta--tai'.-aifst were iln a boweto ' ,'nlOO [·' a braze ofr balm s~ita u; t i the to t ti tf l ot:s t it ·lsC t . worthy mini-ter, actd f r ihat wia tiI ai.dn -I, itted it li d 'f it iper a- thte aaite of Mr. -j - s t'i ''tltied-, i '" I wi t gve s -f ' tit tar granl tll II tl slaa ,r it ` ,r . ,u ' i ite ttie wa t rlieno ltd for his fturnt it -a o1 fr u s a sl , ti roa , " 1 d o nl u' k ti e , " .sa id t' tro re , " ;h u t i- he is, [ alC l a oite sa re he never a was ju-t bef-aeC. h,,o- l,,kl b,ler\'ed Mrs,. Suool.-. \XI :a-rjoNll' -' 11111 ealr.--t~ Wen liblthda i }c;, l l tltl l laccred iltd llnll l "ttll lllle l ll lnt ol i lln I~ll"~ il- 111111lrru. 11dIir, tI11 i~~ Lr II.1; llltill'·l 1.( 111' ltlllll11 lllltlll ~i~llltll.~rl~l. Il IllI!titlA t! ti II II 11 IlilIlt Alhl itr nIA-llllll wltl.tljl ll llll Tonle of tilt, la vtne~t plantation, in the i au; tile ey ul the Thi, Xti" I'l-nr I I of thellt iai dll o Ii¾ heinA R1 d Illl It il ?l. tio licet Oti , t'iini l d nlallh tl~e tltli ell l ll the AiX o IthiI. fiten - tie Inrsim n ,wl t u egtd~ie t Opening of the Dykes of Holland. GERlARTD VAN KxANPEN, Drop, dl,, drop-drip, drip, drip--a hopele.sly, htilple-sly, wet afternoon. All that July day one un lruken, unmottled sweep of cloud had stretihed across the sky. You might have painted the landscape with chalk and ashes. Over rich pasture and sluggish ca nal, over the Zuyder Zee and the German Ocean, the same dull, wearisome, nnvaried shadow; for our scene lies in tHolland, and it opens in the little village of Maiden, a league from Amsterdam, and on the harders of the great inland sea. When the sun comea out again, its long street of iow white houses, with their formal garden plots, and their still more formal trees, will look pretty enough. Now the same dull rain confuses all : the place seems dc-elted; uboy may occasionally croue the road on some errand, a drenmhed fiwl may oceaiooally he seen in the lane that runs down to yonder white farm; and then they retire, and again leave the place to its desolation. That high hank tothenorth, which shuts out all view of the Zuyder Zee, is the great dyke, on the ltreneth of which depends the very existence of the surrounding country. It is towards that I am going to take you ; for our busineas lies at the cot tace ynder which nestles at its foot, elose to the enormous sluice gates that commands the tides. A neat little place it is, to be sure; like the rest, low and whitewavhed. save that there is a broad yel low hand of paint round the windows. The walk I throughl tile garden is paved with bick, now slippery and hiing with the wet: the t te garden itaelf is laid out inl e, are, or star-shaped, or octagonal beds, neat Iv trimmed witli box: there is a yew tree on each side of the outer gate, the one bearing the form of a lion ranqiant, the other intended to represent a pea cock witl spread tail ; and, in the green moat that -airo, ds the awhole, avood Gerard van Ktampen-for that i- the name of the owner-has erected one of those buildings, half ship. half summer-hon-e, where Dtotcmen ale wont to enjy their piees till sunset, and tihen leave the apartment to the poi-aesion of fros and tyiphus. A well-to-do man is mteter Ger ardi keeper of the sluice gates, near which he lives, andl oiwner of live or six acre, of the bett land in the Sti'ht. IHow the whole country, as we go in, seems choked with water! ditches over-brimming, furrows tiern-d into ciirretlen.u rivulets, every horse-hoof or iiatttcnui. rk in the road proving the sataration of the earth. It in enough to remind one of Butler' nerees: "r; ,.> ay, ply thv pa .,L - tud ne-er tihir.* Alll h" Whl. nho'r di c r e n l nr," r,,wn'd. A hAn l'hitado* at ahcl~or* anlrlis mn"O,'d; Let us go in and ,ee what the interior of the cot ta.e can ehow .o. . comfortable little kitchen indeed : the fire just suilcient to makie the goeat lit that hangs over it simmer: the tire-place lined with blue and white tiles, inteoded to represent Scripture hlitory as mindeed a cort they do. There is Isaae bound and lying the altar, while Abraham level, at him a mon blunderbuss. into the pan of which the angel is to empty ajug of water. There is tie judg meni of Sohmon--tle king is attired in a full bht toled wig. while the officer wears the habit of the Amsterdam burgher guard. There in the marriage of Toblit. celebrated Lby a gentleman in rouff and hands. As to the dresser its pewnter dishes glisten like silver; the red tiles of tile door look as if it were an impos-si bility that a speck of dirt should ever have fallen on them. while the great black oak table, with its culriously carved legs, shines with a brightness that sugseots hours and years of patient rubbing,and gen erations of deceased housemaids. There are one or two engravings snell as they are: the burgomnaster oft siden ,iering his body for tile food of tile en raged and o.mishing multitode, out dceloring thst he had seorn not to surorender tile town to the Spaniards. that Ivby cid's grace he would keep his oath : the murder of William of Orantge, by Belthazar Geraarts: and a portrait of tile then Stadtholder, afterwards o Willianl Ill. c'isnland. e llt it is too had to have been so long in describing If the icm, and as yet tl haveaid nothing of its vyoueng if istrc. w ell is working by the fireside. Elojoe van anl elmn isc thie olil Waterwai rdlen's only child : her nlother died at hier birth : and she has indeed been a in that little house. Iather tall, with her fair brow and fkir complexion, and blue eyes of her there is a lsigat eso' in lier eye. and an narch nclss iti her omile, which savesiii her fromnt the besettiog fault of the beauties of lolland, tameness and in sipiditiy. ut now her thee is rather sdi, and well it may be. Her it is thrown inl very troublesomne tines;. iv ,le s oad da;nger are gathering round her; tlhree ir- mths l sof IHolland are in the hands of the enemy, two or three dlays at the tarthest lmay send the tide of war intotMnislen itself. There is a step on the a .lrden walk : she starts nip, and tile door open--a tall. cstlng tlilt iman enters, throws off' his dripping cloak, and folds her in his arms. re ' 'Well. I:thcer 1 "t It is t tre." is the reply. " The trcnchb are in advance on Naarden. They say the place cannot i hull out a da, and then-it is nor turn. it " I wwhai do vo mean to dot " S" 1 stay here, French or inso Irenh. It shall never be said that old (;erard van Kampen left his plIt ce without torders. ut you must to Amsterdam, and ce that by to-morrow at latest." ies ltt.father. I cannot leave you here; I will not, If it is y,or duty to stay by the sluices, it is lce ine to stc y with you." t YoU mst nost think of it. Elcje. The French sol he sre devils in lhuman firen. I have heard of doings of theirs at Woerden, which makes one's blood run a cld. t1 co i nnistt and that bly daylight to-e nrrow: ; sdand oI shallst ouit alnd hold eneocel with the rest 't how we may best send the women there, by land or by sea. B. noon to-lt-rrow there must be nothing but i1" men inthe place.' I mlout top amoennt to explain nias briefly as nlay he how aflirs thell steod ill Ilolland. Ioiusa XiX, s eclaiming the United Provinces il right of his witi, a e a portion of the Spanish monarchy, poured as arsly 'sis of it.00i men under Conude, Turenne anld lxenm bourg, firols theisoulth-east. tlnelderlaid, Overycssel and the province of U'trelcht were ovenrun. The cite of Utre'ht sened its gates. Town after town, fore he ress after flrtress was captured : scarcely an hour but arn brroulht inteliegence to Loais, then keepsing his courn it a villa in tle slelsant village of Dnrkelgn,of 'son, d new conquest. His ally, our Chasrlles It, was strininf ,no all exbast-d excheqiicer to eqllip a fleet canpaIle o sin- nsathi hn that o ,f De Ryllter ' and tke terms-if teerm: they can be called-w-hich were. proposed to tilt I ai th. cnmost involved their annihilation as a sepa rate pr,;de. Willi I of Orange had an army, such as it was, of ; 70,0l0 men. bot the greatcr part had never heen unI ler lire, and tile whole were demoralirzed y sur render uponL srl'ender, and retreat after retreat. The llin, tried to brhibe hllt to deslert tile cause of h country by oierling hiom the independent crown of the province of Hollalid. ' You cannot hope," said they, S' otherwise to escape seeing ttie ruin of the United Provinces" " That:" he replied, "lie in my orwn t rnlmd : I shall die in the last ditlch before that ruin comes.. Grieved, terrilfied, perplexed. IGerard was a true IHolllalder il one respect; he never lost hi appetite. r I itlelt ir tr had toor tljrfiotler Slcpper that r nin; !ut her faother 0.atie hinrirf rlt creot dreliicrtrlion at tlhe table, aind fortifying him-elf by his accustoned I drort, rnlnlnelced a 'eatrful attack oe the good lirown Sirrad and wrell-cured bart wcirihich adorned it, cotting e lice after slice i both one and the othtr. replenish-t ig his tntlard mllr e thla ooce. anod eoicludoie his lrepal with a still vigor.us asnault on the e nrteroed rli'. (rolnp Else." said he. " yr , niust keeip iyour pliritO atn the la.i that we have a refuge or Irea att h.ad. Ilov I,,ng Am,.terdant itcli will he saf'e. God ,,ly kllowe : but it is safe at least as yet : vour c ,tood autt will Ie g lad to give you ; hoeoi, 1 klt, e tillI lnd lodgin gsi fillr s both tlere." It it oi t1 thlinthing .. frlther. ih those terri e ie Freth ollme tlelre--whl l rt will ieorme of yout tllt I hare taken rare oretf l he fore. n'lhen they le fr r r itilt i ntel tiad erou iarden. I shalll be t" ndt tlat trt i l there e r S why. till rh tl it.le ntis hiere. ret hLt tlhingsgyoiu wantto it s i ut, andreitIer that ritn will m.1 t likely neveri tryae lain whet y left rehand 1 dare say I shall be out f.,r a couple of hourt tdr' t o h roW lat thlll s.o tioe. altd ilrt ho very filrom Sthat rale place, ther ie raie who wsti o Illkirl- So how trondha adl anxioil !--r E-ie. And .ood h riglt r1 i;ert \ tudietrvehltoct t his tlouighti wtn der to e ctt t hat Iav at the dyke side, and thle lire-llace wuitl its sritituira i ter ir1itie t ledear rioe Stree. -of holt, i L,.r tiwae s rhe lot his own afliaoced cirllee And. when peace should he made, wat s i e nlt lto hin her ohack t Iris snug little taisl near Wtebes, idto l i, t iool r-irletllherethlat e hatl Ieen iu tle cot ta.,e of her hhl' I et notWi was he irol that for a.; fa of the trneti cetianol usttlce the dar.lneio. It ty :n ll rdIo l i thre road to Ar.teldtiln rllteetn tio.r,1'.trt l I ters alllnd oluW ,ose ullllt.l t!t e lIui " tilt, little t. Ion were rs-eillcd, and hIe lldillllide- t it Vld.....e!ad, ,,- ........g i.... Ti he l.ight had clear ed. i t wir , d i llr aftin ireittT atirc t flr ire hatly I , t I dle r t tle i thkct m !;tpe tihiw hilt:itie -hadows O " l tirl l aud ti llat iat lbtlige board o tio*le stlrl* lld ocliivie te -ointcd f n horse hoof on tile t aar lre den riold. Fi e tiois s llice th brilne in tilet rtler ie ol tt toll rhe towt- N lrdUil th oliler. hti if ci.t tiery nni..ilt thleattocitie- of.\tc.ertou ,lOie the hi; aled al ver inlerie e \\'It lh could S ".o u o f d ne 'c o' ity e th i tis tre t i,- n irr ey rhiol e ,r - ill r e i tc e h ab o r doe til e I er ed h ; b y th is tim e th e c - a d i ;t a l ir to in r ilro w , Atietb trd . n l ttseof. ,-!tI ylidtl . .. . o ml d l ..... idle at \raesp. 1Ie had a t .I tr. re t ereli lec 0 e.0 la eir o iin his ryes tha ll O tile rttal illateroaln. le wr uldI ride aII i! il e. lit- hir r-t oa- ill the little inn of the towllti i l. it le oc ite ii ,l thel lt cide l.et i.uw, anld a hrle ret J r.. 'o:te dallel and creaked backwlards and forward. ill v the atrtrlor ach. Letr utlers tthe whrt core hethey wo~lh of Ituroes, or ioney, or goods, lie wiold -eer tlje ud tlierared at.h.nrstdedai0, as .rtIr as humac relrgo caoukt ctrryt thorn thither. It is early5 noidrig ht ie rides- out of the little of twn. 'Nw thee illnt sight or sounld save a ruddy -ow ill tile noreh-atc.t. No, that is not te Ireak oft div a t though day will hreak i that qrnarter. It is tle ,10 rioe if tie d.me-r even then tutio tlgtrtah fniters h- ' re caa ',rit r san iightrati up sneent i which nt m ol ou l dl har] dly elieb\er t e xist on t!hL c side ef hell.i I Acr,.,s r,.h pa:sure and I.rs:"- aib: arley tie'.ds, r,ver polder and ten, still he prneaes onward, trnvers inI that low flat strip of land protected only by the dyke from the waters of the Zoyder Zee. * " Master Kampen! Master Kampen" The old man was in his frsit sleep. There had been a long and anxious eonsultation. Everything was prepared for flight. Men, women and children were to start for Amsterdam at the dawn of day. "Master Kampen ! Master Kampen l' and a heavy hband shook the cottage door. The lattieeoperedabove. "Whoisthere? andwhat do you want "An order from the Statesr Come down at once.' The old man in sablnding on the doorway, and ha. broken the real of the envelope. "What! open the Sdyke gates?" "It was so carried at 10 o'clock in the Stadhois. 'Let the sea have the cnntry rather than the French!' was in every one't month. "Tenit I must go and get assistancer we shall want twenty men at least. God help this miserable Scountry !' a "So He will, m.ster Gerard, if we help onraeives. SHave with you to the village." * * m t * t Alls expectation on the edge of the dyke. Before a you tihe calm watemr of the Zuyder Zee, rippling in Sthe moonshine. Behind you, the rich, fertile paitlres of South Holland and the Sticht of Utrecht. At yeur feet the wonderful erection of timber, heams of thirty inch oak, braced with cross riviters and studded with masyi nails; flood-gates hanging on a moon A tainous mass of Norwegian granite-bolts and bars, hand under-girders-the very triumph of the carpen id ters art. Mlen, and women, and children on the great t I dyke: closer to the gates, Gerard van Kampen, a ch ponderos mallet in his hand--the village blacksomith a and his men with crowbars, and the sturdiest young yugsters of the village with piekaxes and spades and mat ant totks. for "At it again, ladsI" shouted the Warden of the of dyke ; 'God have mercy on the man who is on Die re mermeerpoldernow?' et, " Amen, . said a venerable manwhostood by. "In of half anhoor it will tbe twelve feet under water. e- " Twelve, Master Van Heit'? Work away lads, a en good lifteen. So I say again, God have mercy on the he oan who is there.' m ' hYou ought to say amen to that prayer, dear Else e esn you have the deepest interest inthat polder. Foreven or now its thick mist is rising above Egbert Vandenvelde, of and forming in the moonlight such a halo rounnd his r r bead as that with which we encircle the glorified. The brave dyke resists stubbornly. There is heav ing and pushing, and hammering : mighty strokes are rained down on staple and bar: axes and hatchets bite fiercely on uprighlt and cross beam; saws cat into tihe Iheart of the English oak ; but the great mac quivers noat yet. :ot- "Itwill be daylight before we are through," .id Gerard Van Kampen. "Try again, lads, with a will w'a rut A wild confusion of clamor and atroe,.-yes, it it trembles now. More than one bhunge timber has riven les, its terrible death groan. More than one staple h.n red been snapped in two. It shakes in good wrreat. ing Hereandthere a little cataract of water goshersout en- through the wounds of the erection. "Now, stand ,el back,all ! Back I' Van Erckel! It is going!" d. One terrible straggle of the yet palpitating timbers, hot- andl then, with a roar like ten thousand wild aea.ts,. the Zuyder Zee leapJs through the breach. A stream forty of feet broad and twenty deep, rashes into the country. ds. Down go cottages and hay rick : carts and cattle and cta tihe wrecks. of fanns are dashed along by the flood: aein the land is as the Garden of Eden before it, and le on hind it a fnaming waste of waters. The dyke i.'dea its crmnble away it is as though the Zuvder Zee were hat pouring it elf at once over tie land ; women and 'n childrern shriek with terror ; even the boldest of the men look ghastly white in the moonshine. ter And the roar of that water proclaims to the Great e Monalrch, " Thts tar shalt thou cone, bht no, fr thur 171 Egert Vandenvelde is half way acrodt rticr-mrcoe-r polder. The spirited little pony has borne him ctoutly on. Suddenly, he grows restive, turns from the road to the triht, will obey neither rein nor pour, takes the bit in his teeth, and starts offat full gallop. "Why. what alts the beart now?" said the rider. And vigorously hex plied both whip and spur. ane right heartily he pulled the rein ; it was like trying tortop the wind. On, on. on still. TThey are out of the polder. To thle right is the rrin oe a castle, capping a rise of the softest turf. Thilller the brave little hors-e gallops, and there at the summit, he tops. "Why, the beast is bewitched !" again excIaimsn th:e iWhat is that dull, distant roar-like the wind on a st tormy day upln at wsoded hill ? Theair is terretly calm ; aa d tlere is neither hill nor wuod to the Nortil. e A singular, fearful noise. A rushing now, rather tha ta :oar. h And cwhat is that glare through the moon's haze on tiae polder ? It is water. Now he sees the truth. The Zoyder Zee i. let loose. .oal. and lowland will be blotted out from t the continent: will the rise of the Castle of ZebLt stial peer above tie inlalnd sea? Yes : doutless the Angel that stood in tile way of B talamn as aldversary stood in the path of the hder t now s a frieda And often, and often, in the long esummer evegings, e would Egbert and Elsje Vanden velde be a-ted by their children for the story of how ,t they cut the great dykte of nnarden, and 'honw the isgood little pony weoaed go to the Castle of Zelst. And this story of that never-failing providence of our Father, which ordereth all things in Heaven and in earth, is strictly true. Stick to Your Business, There is nothing which should be more frequently ut impressed upon tihe minds of vouang men than the importance of steadily pursuing one business. The Sfrequent changing from one employmgent to another is one of the nost common errors comnatted. lnd to it a may be traced more than half the failutes of men in business, and much of the discontent and disappoint Smcnet that render life uncomfortable. Itis a very com mon thiner for a man to be dio`atisficd with his busi l ness, and tao'desire to change it for some other, and ty what seems to him will prove a more lucrativtive em rut ployment ; but in nine cases out of ten it isa mistake. eeloo k round you, and you will find among your ac E huaintonces abundmt verification of oner asertion. gHere is a young man who commenced lit! as a me chanic, but from seme cause imagined that he onght tea have iccn a cdoctor ; and, after a hasty antd hlal elow pre1paration, has taken upt the saddle-bag only to find that work is still work, and that his patients are no more profitable than his work-bench, and the oc of cpation not a whit more agreeable. Hnere are two young men, clerks : one of them is r-content, when his irst term of service is over. to con tinued a clerl until he shall have saved enough to Scummenne abusiness ont his own account : the other lhe cannot wait, but starts without cnpital, and with a limited experience, and brings up, after a few years, e, in a court of insolvency, while his former comrade, Sby platient pertseverance, comes out at last with a fur ftune. That young lawyer who became dishenartened Ieeouse brietfs and cases did not crowd upon him r wtile he was yet redolent of calf-bound voiumes, and eCehad stmall use for red tape, nwhlo conclded le had te. his calling, and eo plunged into politics. tiaelly settled down into the chauacter of a meddling e ltongger, s tcrambling bur his daily bread. SThelrisau honest farmer who has toiled a few esn Sears, got hlis far paid for, but does not grow rich vry rapidly, asn much for lack ofcontentmenat mingled S ith his ileaustrv aan thing, though he is not aware of it--hle hears tie wotderolel stories of Calilbtia, ad iand hew fortunesi may be had for the tronble of pick lug thlem ep : morteages his farm to raise montey, sa goes away to the land of gold. ad, after many months of hard teil comes hone to commence again at tile bottonl of the hill br a more weary as:td less success fe- fil clmbinggl up aagain. O - the men int every community who are nntori rioils fo r lability, and equally notorious for never getting ahead, -t d yot will auuielly find them to ie those who never s tick to any one lbusiune s long, hat areal te ways tosaking their occupation just when it begins nt it e profitatle. Still Youne mai, stick to your bueses It may be c.ot o- have mitnakteln your calling. If so, find it out'as qaick 1 as ol)siblC ca nd'acha nge it ; hbut done t let any unea-sy di be dec-aleto get alontg it. Or a dislike of your hlunet callinea lead son te abandon it. Have some holeet aom Llli, anl tihen stick to it ; if you are sticking tylae, stck away. at themn if a yon are selling ovster, keep eod on .e!ling them ; if you are at lawn. held'fahst to that profession;l pursue the bnsiness you have chosen per tasistcatl induastrious anlyad hlopfietlly and if there is atslieaything of yoi, it will aeiaar candurl tor account in Sthat ats well r Ilet lter thaetn any other caelina ; only c if you area - oaferi faf aketha tht line of life asauilgkiv ce a` lossibie, Lr the llnger yoaa stick to it the worseit will lstick" to yuo:.--[B Ilcat's Mterchaents " agalzine. lll ell, a;;. ld,; rllr d r, :re ltar to extract te . at lt', no it tr as ar a m.rine. o-.,e size, t i pa"ert y sound, ano d so firmly seated that it brtoke ithie ef rt of it.s rewero . t ietame iag that br tio 't te toth which came off wirtthtie in-truanent, je "r" extraertdiatr wormi haptled livar animal ale I lani tdheadring tl tai center tf it. t. u being care t eigFhs of au inch ionn, livehly na au eel, and of a I tiedld r cr.t ain altut therthililkt.r of it w\orolte S"threa tIn · Oie i g it thrag i at llititcrleoe o lir Sitad " rae it troe ra to be rtingtl ro ointe ine ito n1 atNarlia. o leg i were vioii!e, and it moIel by ere, ring its body, arc.-like, in the center. and pre jeating either eod at pleasiure-forit appeared to have a head at each extremity. One of the hcad: wa, large, iatr, and broad iln troportiou to tie crearratts t iz., ,rilh a capaicious ntouh, ndl tot 1lacl- eyes, at Iveav widely aparta and projectina from the ulperi ,.ýr Itof the hea'd. The other head wao aimllerl. with a r ltntheaned snout, and ar mouth opening fram lllder tAN EXPEnanE JOatLIFItA.TION.- A tompany of atI ileian gellntly it Saratoga oulaty, N. Y.. lect!te so e elated, Wednesdat. at the re-utlt in iennslvai niia, tihat they reraolved to buildi a tonfiae. Trt e t the tIrish inttintt for "blttdering belterimtte.t.' they Sbuilt it on aa britdge! The bridge took tire and thei Stried to nt it art by throwing water on it ifrom the Id creek beaow 'Thin Corkonian caper with cost the a town about t 1X00. l li editor, in speaking of a dritnkh he tta once had dt odterrrtu to indulge in, told he could trot tetll whether it was brarindy or'a torch-light procssion gtiag dlow itr hi throat. 1i _a COInt'Onta aCO --tl.A A iicat atomnaoer iteill', asked if Ile had donae aoythig la:ttely. rtep!ied that this. to, i i.-t wrat wag a eompoSitoII n--wtrCt his ccreditora,