FRANCE. On Saturday the 29th, there was a grand military fete of in, entry into Paris of regiments from the Crimea. An t .mense crowd throiiged the streets and banners and Flumplial arches were abundant. 'I‘lie troops marched, amid the enthusiasm oftlie citizens, and tortned around tlte Column of July. The military consisted of the following regiineiits :—'l‘lie twentieth, thirty-iiinth, and fifteenth regiments of the lnie, who distiiigiiislied themselves at the Malakolf; the first Cliasseurs Zonaves, two regiments ot'Voltigeiirs and Artillery of the Guard two regiments of Grenadiers, and the Gens d’armerie oi the Guard. The Emperor accompanied by Prince Napoleon rode to the Place de Bastile, and pronounced the following oratioti: “Soi.uii-:its,—-I come to meet you, as formerly the Roman senate went to the gates of Rome to meet its victorious legions. I come to tell you that you have deserved well of your coiintry.—-My emotion is great; for the happiness of seeing you again is mingled with painful regrets for those who are no more, and with painful disapoiiitment that I was prevented tiiyself leading you to battle. “Soldiers of the Guard as well as soldiers of the Line, you are welcotne—you, all of you, represent that Army of the East, whose cotirage and preseveraiice have once more glorified our eagles, and rcconquered for France the rank that is due to her. Your country is attentive to all that is passing in the East, and receives you with the tnore pride than she measures your deeds by the obstinate resistance of the enemy. “I have recalled you, notwithstanding the war is not yet over, because it is just to relieve, in their turn, the regiments that have most suffered. Tlius, every man will be able to claim his share in glory, and the country, which keeps tip a force of six hundred thousand men, . interested that there should now be in France a nume- rous army, inured to war, and ready to march wherever ‘ it may be necessary. Preserve, then, your warlike habits, improve upon the experience you have ac uired; hold yourselves iii readiness to respond, if need e, to my call; but on this day forget the trials of'a soldiei"s lifc—thank God for having spared you, and march proud- ly amid your brethren in arms and fellow citizens, whose plaudits await you.’ The troops afterwards defiled before the Emperor and Empress, Marshals Magnaii and Canrobert, and the court. . Every soldier in Paris received two francs grattiity. Admiral Lyons and General Marmara are in Paris. f.‘Do you really believe, Dr. Johnson,” said a Lichficld lad ,“ in the dead walking after death?” “ Madam,” sai‘ Johnson, “I have no doubt on the subject; I have heard the ‘ Dead March in Saul !’ ” NAUTICAL Qui:nii:s.—Whether the white caps at sea are worn by the mermaids? Whether fog is mist when it is seen? Whether a ship is more intelligent when taught (taut)thsn otherwise? Whether a sail is necessarily crooked when it is “ bent?” l SOUND M1ixius.—Pay your debts, so that others can pay theirs. Quarrel with no man, and then no man will quarrel with you. Send your children constantly to school, and look in now and then yourself to see what they are doing there. Keep your children in at ni ht, for the evening air is bad for them. Feed your min as well as your body, for that, you know, must go into the scales at last. Soiissonv complains that he has not the pleasure of Sal Volatile’s acquaintance; nor does he know whether Salt Peter is addicted to drinking. ‘A rouse COQUITTE. A friend asked it pretty little child of six years old,” Which do you love the best- your cat or your doll?” The little girl thought some time before answering, and then whispered in the ear of the questioner, “ I love my cat best, but, please, don't tell my doll !” LAUGH on.—Lsugh on, and never mind the censure of cynics. Joy is one of the greatest panaccas of life. It bra_ces the nerves, makes the dance to pleasant music, and the very seal ring tignin,with harmonious sounds. It is the delight of the good, makes sunshine when there would be all fog and gloom, promotes domestic happiness, drives awa sorrow, and prepares the mind for the exigencies of the iituro ;.so laugh on, but laugh discreetly, and in due season; Eirliberant mirth does not become anyone. ‘,"_'I.‘iii-: fire‘ is. going out, Miss Filkins.” “ know it, M ri.(i‘iroos, and if you would act wisely, you woiihuollow its oasinple." It is unnecessary to add that Green penci- HASZAR.D'S GAZETTE, FEBRUARY 2:» How ENGLAND is W.umr:n.—ln noticing Lieutenant Maury’s “Physical Geography of the Sea,” an English Review thus illustrates the benefit which the climate of England derives from the Gulf stream. Those who heard the lectures of Prof. Giiyct will read the extract with peculiar interest. “ Modern ingenuity has suggested a well known me- thod of warming buildings by means of hot water. Now, the Nortli-western parts of Europe are warmed, in an ex- actly similar inanner—by the Gulf stream. The torrid zone is the furnat-.e: the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico, the boilers; the Gulf stream, the conducting pipe; from the bank of Newfoundland to the shores of Europe is the great hot air chamber, spread so as to presenta. large surface. Here the heat, conveyed into this warm air chamber of mid ocean, is taken up by the prevailing west winds, and dispensed over our oivn and other coun- tries, where it is so tiiuch required. Such, in short, is the influence of the Gulfstream upon our climate, that Ireland is clothed in robes of evergreen grass; while in the very same latitude, on the American side of the Atlantic, is the frost bound coast of Labrador. In 1818, the harbour of St. John's Newfoundland, was closed with ice so late in the season as June ; yet the port of Liverpool, two degrees further north, has never been closed by frost in the severest winter. The Laplandcr cultivates barley in a latitude which in every other part of the world is doomed to perpetual sterility. The ben- efit thus conferred on our country by the Gulf stream is a remarkable accident in our condition. It obviously de- pends upon the Gulf of Mexico continuing to be a gulf, which however, it might easily cease to be. A subsid- enco'of the lstlimus of Panama to the extent of a couple of hundred fcet—-and such subsidence has taken place in geological times all over the world——would allow the equa- torial current of the Atlantic to pass through into the Paci- fic, instead of being reflected back to our coasts. Britain would then become a Labrador, and cease to be the seat of a numerous and powerful people.” Tut-2 C0l..l.lF.ltY Vii.i.iicss IN THE Noiii'ii.—Outside is coal, dirt and gloom ; inside all is sprightly and showy, at least in the one best room, and in times of tidiness. The one best room on the ground floor commonly con- tains aii eight-day clock. a good mahogany chest of draw- ers, and a fine four-post bedstead, perhaps with carved posts of old mahogany. A newly-married couple con- siders these articles as indispensable to matrimonial feli- city; and they will begin life witha debt incurred by these luxuries, which they dearly discharge by instalments. Good living is no rarity with these people. Coals are ob- tained for nothing, or a mere nominal charge, and large fires glow in the cottages. In the fine evenings of sum- mer and autumn, the visitors may watch dozens of pit- nieu wending their homeward way after work, disappear- ing into cottages,—then re-appearing with washed per- sons: and, having cast olf all marks and garments of blackness, forth they sally in cloth coats to a neighbour's cot, or not unfrequently to the Wesleyan chapel. We were at a friend’s not long since, when a girl 0 two summers stood a full half hour by the wall in the evening, and grasped at the shadows, as our rocking chair cast them swaying before her—Eagerly the child would clutch them, as they glided from her hands, she would shout and laugh in her wild glee, till the room rang again. It was amusing to see the child, and pleasant to hear her laughter; but like a shadow, the reflection came, that it will be so through life. Hope will lure to reach for that which will elude the grasp, and at an age when disap- pointment will be deeper than now. We remembered one, too, himself a child of two summers, grasping at the smoke wreath from an extinguished candle, and his look of wonder as he found not the curling vapor in his palm. Life itself was but a smoke wreath to him, curling up- ward in beauty for a moment, and then vanishing from earth.—Cayuga Chief. murders of this century, has lately been perpetrated in the city of New Haven, in the State ofConnecticut. A sect calling themselves the “Wakemanites,” led" by a woman who appears to be mad, were in the habltof hold- -ing nightly meetings at the house of one Christopher Sly. The widow Wakeman, the loader, professes to have risen ber, also held to the same belief. A short time since she ed with antevil spirit that would take her life and occa- sion the destruction of the .wturld. Mathews belieyed the ssrrietliing, and appears to lsivc been willing to be.put to ‘l'°.'l&'='!.PK.P}2l!I5fl§ .t!i°. tiiir-.Ii°n to. that ititl min- death, rather thsinlfat-the propltstssstslioiild boisjurocl, A Cuiuous Muii.nii:a.—One of the most remarkable from the dead, and her, followers, about a dozen in num- ‘ imagined that Justus Mathews, one of the sect,was haunt- . by the evil spirit that was in him. Accordingly, our night they tied it bandage mi lilgfeyes and fastened ht! hands behind his back, and aftfivgprnying, Sly tool! I hiizel stick, “ witch liaze|',"‘wns pr red for the purpose, and struck him a lieiit'y"blow’um the hciid.—He fell without a groan, Sly then took a knife and raised up his head, and cut his throat several tinies across, then plung- ed a fork several times into his breast and killed him. At the examination, all the parties gave it full account of the particulars, with the utmost unconcern, being under the impression that they had acted perfectly right in put- ting the man to death.—al| of them appear to be insane. The widow Wakeman is 70 years old, has had [.7 child- ren, nine of whom are living, and has been a widow 30 years. She states, that her husband killed her—tliat,she was dead seven hours-—-that two angels raised her and took her to heaven where she saw all the di-.ad—-tlial on her return to earth, she saw her dead body lying there, and felt very bad, because she had got back to this wick- ed world, dtc. The whole account affords a horrid pic- ture of the pitiable state the human mind can assume while inflicted with derangement.—Ottawa Citizen. A Dead Horse is worth 33!? 1-2 in New York. lira hide is sold to the tanncrs, his bones are burned and sold to the sugar refiners for refining purposes, and to the far- mers for manure; his meat is pressed and the grease _is used by the soap and candle makers; while the entrails and remnants are fed to hogs. to make food_for home'cot_i- sumption. The average death of horses in that city is twenty-two daily! HiNrs.—lt is as clieapto raise one ton of grass or cl0Vel’ as a ton of burdocks or pig-weeds. It costs no more to raise a liimdred bushels of ‘ Baldwins,’ than a hundred bushels of cider apples . _ A ‘cheap plough ’ at $5, costing in one season 33, in repairs, atid $3 more in losttime to teams, men, and by retarding cops, is a dearer plough than one at $10, requir- iug no repairs. . j ‘ - A cow bought for 3310, whose milk but just pays be! keeping, affords less profit than one at $30 , giving dotible the value of milk afforded by the former. A common dasher-chiirn at $2, used 100 times a yea! is not so economical a purchase as a. Kendall churn at $34, requiring but half the labour to work It.‘ A ten-acre field costing $50 per acre, atid improved at $21) more, so as to give double crops, is much more valu- able and profitable than 20 acres unimproved. costing the same money. ' _ The man who loses half an hour of time worth one shilling, and wears his wagon and team equal to two shillings more, by going over a long and rough road, to avoid a plank-road toll‘ of a sixpence, loses just twoiand sixpence by the operation. To the loaded wagon, the loss is much greater than in smaller loads.-—AIbany Cultivator. Tin; Four: POlNTS.—I find a scamp robbing my hen- roost and address him thus:-—“You, sir, loose that black cock out of the bag; give up those eggs; put down that stick : and come out of that.” He resists; Icollar him, and take him before a magistrate. On the road, we meet a tritsty friend of the captile, Who H{&k€§ ‘I10 appeal—“ Did you not,when you first saw this gentle- man whom you are treating so rudely, profess a specific purpose, stated in, foitr points; and now‘ 'unbIu'shingIy discard your orginal avowal of definite intentio'n,and elated by unexpected snceess, drag an unfortunate young man before a brutal justice. Upon any further mi31ln- derstanding with gentlemen of our class,ecan you eves be believed?”—iS))ectator. ' ' A contemporary, speaking of the report on gentlemen’: dress, says: “ There is not much change in geutlemen’a pantalooiis this month. An eniinetit painter was once asked what be mixed his colour with, in order to produce so extrordinary an effect. “I 'mix them with brains, sir l” was his answer. “No man,“ says Mrs. Partington,“ was better calculat- ed to judge of pork than my dear husband was; when he was living, poor man, he knew what good hogs were, for he had been brought up among ’em from his child- ‘ . t‘ He who stiys all he likes, will often hear what he‘ does not like. u . I really can't express my thanks,"~ as the boy said to a schoolmaster when he gave him a threshing. v s . What do we often drop, but never stoop to pick uflI— t .Answss.; A-:lugt.. . ... _ _ ._ , , .,.