. friend——of a mere coinpanion in arms. \ PUBLISHED ON lllllllllllll S’ {t},®fiiflii‘iliii?«3;tTi?i.Mi S. A J 1;. *:.’.‘»--M EVERY T‘fllltti‘iltill0l(l'iVll, P. E, ixlaiiil. l’llt‘i(ll]i).\i(l21.',i7.‘L‘l t‘.'g‘iit‘llillt‘l‘ it, i i«~':”i5. i I '.‘...i i.ii'aDNiis.DiY & SATURDAY. “Nair Series. M. 273. Establisiieii I823. LORD RAGLAN- Let the dead rest in peace! Let not tllt‘ cold blast of scandal swerp over tllc gt'tl‘:0 of a coon .‘\h\.\', but rather let us “vine chaplets to his liotior and drop a tent‘ "fl sorrow to his memory. Vices he had none,‘ then let not his vii-tut.-s be forgotten. ll success did not crown all his elliu-t-i in the great existing struggle, it was owing t0.'_l|lll° culties uirforesiren either by lIIHI~'C1l. _“l' other.-. lfhe conquered on the ;\llllIl.—ll ho vanqnisliod his foes at llll{<‘l':tli1ll, and failed in ilClIi<‘\'lllg ii linal victor)’ at Scbastopol-_— it should he reiueuilii.-rcil, that he lost his life in the attempt, and his counti-_v could hardly require more ofhiin. ‘ But it is not all who lay -'16-.‘.lI-‘flllU||S against him, for it will Il0\’(‘l' be ailinittcil that the chosen man of the great captain who triumplied at \Vatcrloo could fall llllt)‘ the errors that tliougiitlcss \\‘l'ltt‘l‘S have attributed to him. No! the ()lll:.'t‘l' selected by the Duke of \Velliugton to cai'i'_v his most ‘ important orders, to know his secrets, and i share his confidence in all the hard won fields of the Peninsula, we niay be assured \vas not a military blockhead.. (')n the bloo- dy plains of \Vatei-loo, he lelt his right arm as a pledge of his devotion to his leader and to his country!-—-to I<Zng|and—to that coun- try whose son he was, and who sitting_en- tlironcd in the bosom ofthe ocean has tor a thousand years " braved the battle and the breeze." It has been said that he differed from his French colleagues, in conunand; that Go- neral Pellisier scouted his abilities and wish- ed him out of the way. But let us read the eulogy pronounced by this same Generalv Pellisier to his memory, intlie general order to the French army alter the hero's death; I let us read it again and again and ponder) on it, for although short, it says much. ltl breathes an eloquence and a pathos not less honorable to the pen than to the heart ofi the noble French chicliain: "Those who have known Lord R.aglan- l “ who have known the history of his life, sol “ noble, so pure, so full of patriotic services I H ._[ll0S0 who were witnesses of his intre- u pidity in the days of Alina and Inkerman “ -—who can rccal the stoical grandeur of “ his character throughout his rough and; “ memorable campaign—in a word, all men “with hearts will deplore the loss of such a , “man. The sentiments which the Gene-, “ ral-in-Cliicfliere c.vpre-.=ses will be those; “ oftlie entire army. lie himsclfis shock-. “ cd by this unlook-ed-for blow. The gent.» V “1-alls griefis increa.-‘ed with him in finding’ “ himself for ever separated from a compa-= “ niou in arms whose cordial spirit he loved, ;‘ “ whose virtues he admired, and with wliom “ he always found loyal and affectionate “ concurrence. " I It may be said that this is the voice of a Be it so; but who can gainsay its truth and its justice’! Yet suppose it to be only the voice ofa friend, let us hear the opinion of a foe; let us read what the Russians say:-— “ Lord Raglan has died. During the en- “ tire pcrioil of the command of this noble “ general, he succeeded in conciliating the “ esteem and respect not only of those with “ whom his nation was allicd, but also of ' ‘ the enemy to whom he was opposed “ He was one of the last of the heroes of ‘ ‘that glorious English army which, under “ the command of the l)uko of Wellington, "illustrated the English name, on so many “battle-fields, and of which the few remain- “ ing veterans bore on their breasts, til] ‘(lone him justice. l Lord Rag-l “ lan was on several occasions distiiigiiislieill ‘" by the late Eiiiv,-cior Nicholas, as also by 1' “ lately, the honorable I0l\'(‘.l!S. C IIINESB INNS. lug tea. and llllllhlllg _voui-st-.lf with little‘ ti-illiii_~__r (lllllllll‘:§, the coolis (or, <_-;ivv tlirin,l fa inure .\‘lillt'l_‘y’ :iiid appropriate :ippe.~ll.=itioii,l _ _ _ ‘ithe “ iiiaiidai-iiies of the ltctllc ”) llil\'t‘ tiiiiel ' “ ating the l|I)l)li.‘ll(‘..~'.~‘ ol his scntiiuciit.-' and i 1,”. “K4,. c,,l,,,,,,.y ,,p,_.,.,,m,"_,,.. They [,,.,,,,_,l l “the tIpi'l',:lIl||€‘==‘1 01' l">‘ .‘3l'lll'l“3l°l'- A5,‘ ll ltlii: ilislii-s Ul'tlifl‘«.‘(l in the lll(I.\l osteiitiitioiisi * ” -“'ll’.l°(.‘t. ll‘? l"”‘li"’“'_l'“.d ll” ill".-li by "l'".l’lll.'-‘J iiiaiinrr, and vrlieii the waitirrs ofthr cstab-l “ the (‘IIlll':|2lll(l of his 2"t)‘\’t¢|"¢_‘l.‘-.’llv "ml "5 ll l li-=liiiii:nt put down the dishes before the " -"“lllll"' l’." "illlllllllli ‘l,"l°l”l"li5 llll’ .l"’ll°l'_ ;::lf':=ts, they sing out the lltllllt‘S in it loud “ ‘tllllls llllf-53 lllll l"'°ll ll‘ lllc l"'fl"5llll"ll ‘_’l ' voiei-, so its‘ to he heard by every one. 'l'lii:s- ‘‘ hie duty, lib‘ |"'l’5‘-‘l"'l"l 'l_lll’l,°'lll‘ll"‘l ll’ ll'5_l is, as inziy he supposi.-il is found veryl “ ‘l"?”l' lll-"' "W" l’l'l"“"“‘l dlglm-V. and that U‘ useful in t-:\'citiiI‘,' the viinitv of tlic glicsts, " his cnuiili-_v. lie had liillvtli lll‘l’ S“ '“‘”l.‘' ' ' , “0llItl‘.~'. :1 \'i(‘lll|| W llll~“ ‘ll-“ll‘ill'”ll" “inl"llli|llt‘_fw‘. that ]H‘l'l|il[)S thev would \villin::'l\'l “ llouoi'l'<l be llii "'°l'l'~.‘l')'v llllll l'CSll0cll'idll|£l\'1.‘ done without if thcv ll’.l(l been tlinini'= “ be his‘ ‘.!I'1l\'t‘l '-“l"“—ll “’lll ll“ "5 ‘‘l‘3”’'l "“ in privatti. '\\'hen the i'i-ipztst is finished thzi “the soil ofl{iis.<i=1 "5 ‘lll lllm Ul-_ Ellglilnllx illtliltl-\\’itll('l‘ oftlic hotel t'U!llt‘S to tho clout‘,- “ and, while pointing! to ll "0 R”9~“”l" ""'ll W‘ and t.'Ul.'tltt(1llCt.S a kind of St-lltl‘, of whicli the “ fuse to sit)’--S58/4’. 1"."/<"’» ]l~""""'" C(l.,cas'”l>‘lll)j(,'(,'l. is the iioincnclatnre iii’ the dishes, There, Ellglislllittll, Willl llll‘-*9 ll'll’lll‘-'5 and the burden the sum total of the r.\'- of l~'i-cnchmcn and li“>‘5l“'l ll’ Y“l”' ll°l""'l'~'ll_f p:en.~:o.-'. \\'|ii-n the gursts go oiit—aiid thi" GOD‘-‘Nil, "ml "‘—‘ll‘—‘°l llllw °l'lll'll)' -“"l'll" “l it must be t)\\!lt.‘(l, is a critical and solemn you have sl«1iH5Ul‘Nl 51 t-{Will ‘l"‘l Sl'”ll "ll"l- ' inoniciit—-tlioso who have dined economi- Bill his C"""l".l’ llllcw ll” .“'mlll' mlll llllsl all," diiliart with an humble and cuntrite l“|’0"| ll” -"”""'l'¢‘l§_-‘ll _ll° air, and II'\ to avoid the notice of the coin- lreceivcd lioiinrs, from his coIIntr_\' his tumily ; [,m,_,.; ,,,1,,'‘,, the Chim,S,_, hwds’ Mm have iliavo received i-e\var_ils., and he was ei_npha- .~ mm.“ s,,,,,l,w(,uS]y’ and of high In-iccd vi- ltically, a man whom the Queen (l(IlIgll‘d I ands, march outiwith their pipes in their lto honor. Of noble birth, 0l lllgl‘ llllll ‘_lll' . inonth.~:, their noses in the air, and castin lcicnt lilwugv. he ll\‘f—“l_ "1 ll0"‘{“- will dlediprouil ‘and disdainful glances‘ all around ‘the patient and Cliristiiiii solilicr. I’euc6:1i’tlic fushioii were adopted in the taverns be to his ashes ! i oflfltiropc, of proclaiming aloud what every 4 body had taken, it is to be feared, that many OBJECT 05' S-‘LT lN Tl”: '5"-‘A’ .‘ it guest would give liimself an indigestion lzropessnl. Clmpman of Uni\'pr§i[y Co)- ' out of pure vanit.y.—IIiic’a C/zinrsc Empire. . - ~ - 2 lege, l‘oronto, has published an interesting: He will he pi.-r-l It um niiirnino l‘:|||l)Lll‘tIl' -‘J —" , . “ soiiallv i'cgi~i-tteil in ltiissia bv all who but ii‘ an uppiii'ltiiiit\v oi hiiowing and appreci- ‘and inducing them to ask for i~.xpi~nsive‘ l .-\s it re cit-.touiai-v to l:0illl.'|(:XlC(3 bv (ll'llil\'-j '- - _ _ ' ' to ltnow snitllt‘llIlllg about the ile.-‘ti-ucttve HOW TO BE HAPPY. paper on the object of sea-water being salt, and after giving his objections to the usual- l_v received opinions, he urges the theory that the object is to regulate evaporation. lfany temporary cause renders the amount of saline matter in the see above its normal T. F _ . ,, ,l,_ b _ value. evaporation goes on more and more '0 Inst _'s’,, ,, Ey -“ll” est la ""ll‘?, slowly. lfthe value be depreciated by the nllmrs mill)?‘ .. H llmer was happy’ addition offrcsh water in undue excess the smd-a ccllaln kmg’ . "ll .1 began lo wk" evaporating power is the more and more lllwsufe m lhe lliclllllle ‘ll ‘"3’ l’°°l’l°3 lllll increased. He gives the results of various ell" smce. llllill’ m the ‘l‘“‘,lf°"l day’ I lll"° , experiments in reference to evaporation on lmd Sunshmc "' m-ll he,a_"' . . l weighed quantities of orilinarv rain water, second rule '3’ Be wmem wllh lll' , and water holding in solution 52. 6 per cent. He‘ There are "la"-V ;g°°d rellsolls for “"3 ,0‘. salt. The excess Ono” 0,-the min Wm" rule. We deserve but little, we require but compared with the salt solution, was, foi- the lirst twenty-four hours, 0. 54 per cent ' at the close of forty-eight hours, 1.16 per cent, and soon in an increasing ratio. which may help you to become happier than you would be, without knowing them; but as to being completely happy, that you can never be till you get to heaven. little, and “better is little, with the fear of God, than great treasures and trouble therewith.” Two men were detcriniaed to be rich; but they set about in different ways, for the one strove to raise up his means to his desires, while the other did his best to bring down his desires to his means. The result was, the one who coveted so much was always repining; while he who desired but little, was always contented. My third rule is, “Look on the sunny side ofthings. " o O Raiini.~io.—-Ainong the prizes at Har- row on the '2~5th ult., there was one, for the first time, adjudged to proficiency in good reading. It was the gill oflhe Rev. Francis Trench, an old Harroviun, mid the success- ful competitor was Mr. Merivale. The prize was very popular among the boys, and excited much competition on the liigli- Look up with liopoful eyes est form. Though all things seem forlorn : The sun that sets to-night will rise Again to-morrow morn. The skipping lamb, the singing lark, and the leaping fish, tell us that happiness is not confined to one place. God in his goodness has spread it abroad on the earth, in the air, and in the water. Two aged women lived in the same cottage; one was always fearing a storm, and the other was always looking for sunsliine—-hardly need I say, which it was wore a forbidding frown. or which it was, whose face was lighted up with joy. How To invs No \\’iar.us T0 PULL.-— Stir the ground often, and they will never get big enough to pull. A loose top-soil can be stirred up half a dozen times with a hoe in the time required to go over it once in the pulling process. The i-owtli of all plants will also be greatly promoted by the frequent stirring of the soi . TURKEYS AND Gaiissnorrr:ns.——It is stated by farmer who have tried it, that there is no way to get rid of‘! grasshoppers more effectually than by keeping a flock of turkeys. Farmers that have been perfectly overrun with grasshoppers, have, by this means, been thoroughly freed from them Muss’-r Do Ir.—'l‘he Scientific associa- tion havc decided that a man has no busi- not only for the time being but for years’ “"9 to marry hi’ °°"3i"' Loni) l)L'.\‘no_~iAi.n’s Hizci-.i;'i‘ l{svr..u.i:D. As inaiiv [lt.'0pl(,' are extrcinily anxious agciicy pi-oposi.-d to he emplo_\ied by Lord llundoiiald, there can be no harini in indi- cating the nature of it. And we beg to obs: no that, in doing this, our object is to coininciid the humanity oftlic Government in rciitsiiig to adopt the ageiicy ot fiend:-I in er!-n tho lll0.:§t direnl of hum:1n conflicts. ' \Vlien then, Loril l)uiidonald's plan con- Sl.‘<iS in creating a [H‘.~‘illCll(2L' within the t':mgi' ofwhich nothing huuizin could live. lli‘= luiiilship assert:-* that he has iliscovered ii Cil(.‘llll(‘ill ll."t‘[)'ll‘l|llt)ll cipal.-le of being projected at a great distance, the bursting in ‘wiiich would be followoil by a stench so iiitolrrabli- as iniiiiriliiitcly to produce pesti- ('!l(‘(f. N4'llllt‘l' titan, \\'¢mian, nor child could lltti within the l'ltllfl(‘ ofits iiitlurnce. .'o\\', \‘l‘t_‘. llil\‘I- our doubts as to the reality ofthis iliscovery. lint, were it otlii-rwise, nothing in the world would induce us to iiivc.-‘tigate it practically—wliich is the only- uay it could be so iiivi-.~'tigatcil as to arrive at a certainty i'e.<pi-ctiiig its siicccss. it is worse than wcll-poisoii—woi-so than any system ofwholesale iiiurderrver yet devi- scd by man. “"0 look upon it as most creditable to the Uovernincut that no atten- tion is piiid to plniis of warfare in which an agency so infernal in itsvery conception is recommended as the principal feature. Lord Dundouald announced some time ago that unless his plan was adopted within a given number of days by the English Government, he would make an olfcr of it to the Emperor of the French. “We have not heard that he has done so, but we have I will give you two or three good rules been told upon good authority that he would not be more successful in Paris than he has been in London. Louis Napoleo.mav be bad enough, but be is not the fiend iti- carnate implied in his willingness to adopt so frightful a mode of making war upon any portion ofthc human race.—HnIl ./1d- i.-erliscr. --——————j-—————:. Svrsinoa PAH‘!-Z.—-l.)iss0lVc an oaiice of alum in a quart of warm water; when cold add as much flour as will make it the con- sistency of cream; then strew into it as much powdered resin as will stand on a shilling, and two or three cloves; boil it to a consistence, stirring all the tinio. It will keep for twelve months, and when dry, may be solicited with water. CURRANT 'l'iu:i:s.—-Currant bushes may as well be made trees as shrubs. In the spring of 1831, my father set cuttings for currant bushes. I determined to experiment on one of these cuttings, and as it grew, I pinched ofl'all the leaves except the top tuft, which [ let grow. The cutting was about fourteen inches long, and during the sum- mer the sprout from this grew ten inches. The next spring I pinched off all the leaves to iibotit half way up the first year's growth, so as to leave the lowest limb two feet from the ground. It brauclied well, and became a handsome little dwarf :tree. When it ciiine to bear fruit, it was more productive than any other bush in the garden, and the fruit larger. It was less infested with spiders mid other insects; hens could not pick of the fruit, and grass and weeds were more easily kept from the roots, and it was an ornament, instead ofa blemish. Now, I would propose that current cuttings be set in rows about four or five feet I art each way—lot them be long and straig t ones-.. and trained into trees—.MicIia'gan Farp)cr_