The Beaver County Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1853-1859, September 02, 1857, Image 1

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    II
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VOLTAIE 37.
7 - 1
FEINTED ASD• PIIIILISRED Et-
.
the bosom of I ts wateniifill the•mind t witb
adminition. About-sun - down we en tered
Long Islaud.Snond, when the, land/grtidu
ally recedes until quitelost to *few, while
; nothing remitiiis upon which 6 gaze, but
hundreds, of, , white 'wing vessels,' that
deck its surfierec which,' e a mighty mir
ror/
, re fl ecting in /more hues the arch
I of bine above;
. as night comes on each Star
; comes out andiamiles upon 'the scone. We
leojoyed a beautiful moonlight, delightful
sea-breeze, - so i l 'very social company, by
1 which,means : e passed the evening to plea-
I sure add profit : '.• r _
ArriVed at tall• River; took the cars, and;
'at 64 - ;'cloCk ate e t the Parlor Houser, ' '
f. , ; ;
why did I leave thee, My own loved Immo
•
To wander -so fur from thee I nk:kw, . jy,outti.k. Beiron4 . A ft er ample justice to
, good breakfasti't sting digestire ap.'
The hind of my childhood, blest - - scenes of DIY! paratus to do its marentnth work, in coin
- _The lionie of in,fjkoyhood'a first vow. • " pany with Drs.liala*.ivad Lord, of N: Y.,
1.1 tic ng at*, n . a. -sod o lIS n, o s
' - --
' I ' '' '3 ki 'll` . t lii r J "ft to r
I ton for off and deprived of all I bold clear.
• And My heart is so sad all.the day. • (etow;•i Va., enjoyed af rid ;14_ an open carriage,
I lone; for the enjoyment which thou ettleet be- I with an intelligentl 'driver, who drove' .us
Pleasures wither when I am' away. -- ' through ' . the tnnst 'beautiful_ and business
.
I wniil4ll Were home in the Wilde of I the - trees, 1 parts of the city, among/wMat was Boston
That stied hy my own fathei's door, I Commons, .cor4aintng one hundred acres
To rear.the :west music of birds and of bees
,I enclosed with railing fence tastefully • or-
Lich - I fear I than never
hear morn. P
' ranged, and slatted with various kinds of
And 40 bear the Sweet.Cioice ()lmy mother — i trees,)but chiefl'f elm; many being two and
• ' Thin fill; an aroma with delight ! , ' three feet iu diarneter.• Near the centre of
'Whose 1 re,sen.se grim gloom soon disperses , the Oxtail:on stands the Great Elm Tree,
,11 , 1 makes all around her se bright. .
. - whose inacription 'awards to it the dignity
~.- ,1
• It iscarefully
_kJ:were 3 tres.lino• the path that lends to my seat': of a trent!' the year 1623,
Far down through the orchard and len, . . i preeir
se byiron bands and chains atta6ted I
hours Where for long with,my I F ister's r.7/43 sat Ito the nittin trunk, thence to thebrane es
In the lkale of the old elm tree. l
.; <to support them,
I- ,
on top of
And there's the old , :cifool : hou . sethe hill. 1 Next we virOed'Bunker Hill Monument,
l'i > ni,i I Were at it once noire, , ascen d e d to its l op,
T, a height of 365 fCet.—
Where the I inh• warble them sonlga of rich malodY,,: you may j:;.ge;
, i
Uel 1 the scene was worth a visit.
} oe the inows that grow
,1- , itlio door. , i
I The prospectus 'delightful beyond &scrip
d • ' .
Aud ftom ylstu y window. could. distinctly be: tion. There y ,behold cities; groves,har
peen • i ; j hors and Wand ,as far as the , eye can pen-
A rdqit littl&cottage in vie,
,vi,, I. t .. . , . -,... ,
e rate until it Imams in the enort torasp
And the .windbinee encircle rit,round likes I 1
lite scene. •l• '
,
1 wrenthrr 1 •; 1 -\,,,, [ - i .
Twined bylports. that are Wvlngand true. I Hazing enjoyed the ride and been ranch
._ 1 1 - ' ..! interested in the 'sights,' returned .to the
Jle're a maiden—land , Irp i en down in the I ji 0 -
0 e to prepa for otherduties.
wildwood- i
The third ;antral meeting of the Ameri 1
fijined rou wreaths , on iny brow,
the sky has more blue, the birds' songs t can Dental Con ender' was held at Tremontl
- more sweet, ,
inc
(Texulite. About 200 members were pres
re
The air purer than breathes on e no* I ent, represeuting nearly every State in the .
..: • I
There's;trbere I first whispered my young love's Union. - The lending object is to elevate
ii,,,, ,
.. I the standard 04 Dentistry, by divesting it 111
There's vitere we paried, there's where . We of false assuniptions, 'making tine merit
,
• met, l
31v memo ' has treasured I I L ; alone the rule by.rvbielf to try every teem.,
ry up scenes that trre- ! ber of the profession. The dentists of Bos- I
.., .
.1 ' s i red- I
My heaft - eeps an image I,cati not fOrgeti. , ! , ton feeling deviions of extending to their I
iq • i
- _ i,.- professional brethren from abroad, n nt-
Ci. why have rleft thee,'mid ple.ssures like these, : tendance upon the Conventioc some assn-
Andf so for in a: strangti land to roam, I,
. d 1' ld •
• I ite, ,nn i possi e, memorable eeurtesy„
, I:sigh—and my lestreefilled with , sorrow , . ... k :
1 , ; projected an excurs i on down the harbor.—
fer leaving my open loved home. ;
_ _ , - - 111, ; Accord o incdy on yesterday (Thursday) a
I •
` . company of ablaut 309, including the Den
i tad and Medical, profeasiocsi and Chemists
I of' • , P
Boston, • went ;aboard the liNeptune'
• 31. &J. WENAPID.
t•
„:Trints—ONEDOLLAR andirtyrr\Csirrs,pc
annum, .ADVXVCS; Otherwise Two 'Douala!,
will be charged. No' paper discontinued; until
all arrearages_are nettled, except at the option
cfthe Editor*.' , : 1 i• ' .
•Advertisements inserted at the s rate of SO cti.
per square, of fifteen fines for ane insertion—
eabh aubsequent insertion 25 Cents. A : liberal
discount made to yearly adverlisers.l
Itiiiii'Letters rind communqalions, by- mail,
shall have prompt attentiOn.
For the Beaver Argu
0 M EJ
~; ,
BM
'ghe
mere
the Denver Attie"-
*TES OF TRAVEL.
, .-
, etplipped with pshing tackle ae - for *thing
land such amusements at the occasion -tnif
„ m i..; afford; after 'calving/the wharf and devt
„f a d v e n _ Ong 0n.e...01. "Settbs" best 'chowders'
• ; ' luck at - fisbin fter
4g in New ; came Co a tstaje still,' some t 3 try I
fttllng an *ant.
that tt. was a.: ,- 7 . - '
.. ,0 tin . 6, rith se._ i r osti and ' only tiveksenlpins were caught,
Th e ;sidcring that nearly every man on beard nb
,nes t place '
~r.oa-awav, which'may I taint his living by drawing, their ill luck
oinglintil night, is about may he . put doWn in the boo of marvels.
.4tuessed in ,the streets of _Then hauling 'up linen p ceteied to the
n the ;lay of the Frtinout Cod- t Neirkntllruse, whcie an hour was spent in
Ai that iiir.who saw_ Pitt j
sburg that roacing' about "f; the peninsula and various
n form au idea of:Broadway, ~•sT. 1 Fither aMusements, leaviogNahant proceed
' -''ed by a cirtukous ratite to 'Hull' a place
. on s h a , lay morning , the . snip:e:minl3 j af ! which.has beceMe tamed as the true pail
business and
,comp:lnttive stillness •of the I icel-'- ln-dx of slag g t the' she only Pas 1 7
fig;' fr qll business day's, is
like tile st i l l aeas ' votcs(alie , addage is, "as goes Hull, so goes
'ef,tl e ocean Jilieu ;he storm Las passed.:
the State." i I.ci•aving Hull amid cheersand
awal . 3, while it ft iheiu
rur of voices, is isx""
1
achag• 4 .haridkerchitfs by the ladlei,
the ti ~o i n gs ,f the ,i ) j ug stur ,„,! . . 1 1 'Neptune' toqlcl her coarse homeward; 'the.
As the hour for Oivine service:approach:l excursiitif- wal, a) pleasant one and all enjoy
ed I deeidanpen,hearing the Rev. Beech.; led fl te(ltte titinpst. - ' T. J. C.
er,/and aveuraingly went over to' Brooklyacil • - ---- -- - '-' -'---- but-as eat ices WeTe suspended.' 'for a few
weeks, I - was much , psappoiritcd for I an
ticipated an intelleetual feast, combined
with rare eloquence, !where the sold looks
out in every, word, and stuilesl on virtue
while it frowns-on vice. , ;.• - -
- -1
In looking over this great Metroeoliszi
with its lofty steeples that'pierce the clouds 1
and reflect the sunlight
_like a 'itlibuiand 1
flashing mirrors, while from their heights)
pen.l forth the Chimeof bells, like eireling
waves upon' the placid Mu, that widen, j
blend, then lose themselves in one harem
!lions abole,while within! and beneaiL its
'Gothic roof and Grecian walls; ;worship, in
sajotly pomp, the rich, and groat, whose
contribution list:of 'foreign missions' foot tip
to thousands; whose prayers are long and
earnest for the time when the ‘linglootsofH
this world shall become the kingdoms Of
our Lord,' &c.;' yet in their city are Multi,
tudes not only II moral darkness, but sunk ]
in degradation and crime,becoming a mighty 1
• tide in whose devouring waa,. , ;- thousands
are annually eniulfett„ Xtie thought arose
might not this fie somewhat, 4tbated? could
1.,., it.— .t...:;,, ....___.
,a...--trec : neighbors be
elerated? and. does not charity rightfully'
begin at_home - r • I have no -dottl4: by an
Ernest desire and piayer, with acts corn-
Ansurafe with that - fdesire, but every city
and town might - find,,,a, spacious field from
which to reap Ito abundant: haiveSt. Th
contrasts between'tbe high and the low,the
rich andlthe PO, and theltirtnouS•and the
fidlen,laie,., fearfully it tv
. qpiesse. !While the
rich are luxuriatiog in weslo, the indigent
poor, haggard and - distresse suffer' trona
w- mat and,Many die : ef sitOstion, While the
virtuous and good litielkon the 1 services
u , nal to the Sabbathp the vicious and fall
; to ale revelling in infamy" Bow necessary
that every city and 'town l ' i l liteuld. labor to
re tore to all its4nttabitiints at equalized,
I . , :ilthy,moral eirculatinimedium. ; '
‘londay I employed in tvisiting thi3,Bat
trry, Goverr.eifi island, aid the shipphlg,
uLtil 5 o'clock, :whetr,in company with the.
Philadelphia Dentists, leffoh the steamer
'Empire State," ; for i
alostoit• 1 The 'scenery
tn East river is Leautiftil,!iint stick as is
imhlim e in gratideur,_btit 7,that! which fill*
the eye with tranqui: beauty, as thisoul
drii ks in its loVeliness wittl a holy calm,
hke the eloie'o a summeredey.-:' - Palatial
rt-i leoees line , f its shores: its' ninierons
•. ‘ , ! , ..t , of islands that rise up - like little
i2. ,,, ,i-is, the (muntles white sails that speck
• ,
BOSTON, Ag. 17...
3.IE:;F , RS linrrott§ . ----In y.l:Tt f Frail--
0 you iluiii c SuiiLlay iell tione!and adven
tures in New Y 4 -- On rrivittg in New
f
Yurk, I was led ,to m' d- cone' that it Was
..a
'au ivirig town,' '4UNt? . : .. ' oo fin. fromßin
'lover to" become - a' bu ikest place',The
throng of travO on Broadwlay, which 'may
,
-Le scen from ruprainollitil night, is about
. (goal to that W,ituessi4l in ,the streets •) r f
' l'lttsLaigh on tlie'ilay of the Frtkuout Coii
- leutiait, so that 'Oll - who .9aw_Pittiiburg th r at
a 25, eau form au idea of. Broadway, New
•
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_
EXTRAOREIT ARY FREAKS OF 'A LUNA
; TlC.—A'yonrg Mania Mercer county, 's.,
I named Davis, has for some time manifested'
Byrntoms of linsanity. I The Pittsburgh
Dh ateh says: I, , • -
•• lieimagines himself a -be a seconds Dan
'lice en. nit he aught
ed in getting up a circus. On
ibtbeitli tght a snake, which :4
;I I
t - fijok to Belfs' s hoot-house in Abe neighe ,
borhood, lira re, 1 6 . I he had a 'grand
lie says,
performance; 'After getting through which,
he swept the phase; and broke ill, the win
dows with the 1400 in stick. HO then pro
/ceeded r
to the.esidence of Mr. ' Win. Cuiry
. A
a mile from town, in the abseme of the
family, and destioyed nearlY everything in,
' the house. Ile says • •
,he went there *“to t i
1 have:sonie fatet'briike a gmi,•-with the bar
rel of which•he k limashed the crookery,dish.
I ea, glassware an) wiUdovri• look•t° pieces a
clock and tvr 3 iwatehes,trindiug up ' the
I works in a cidervress. It then-struck him
that the ground . where the house stood
, would be an aditprable location, for, a circus
wherenpon he:built a fire on the 9der, and
it was soon in'fLimes, from which be.riarotv.
I"15 e 's 4 - 11 Pe 4 1 -.). s”,'moing'from a windeiv, cut
-1 ring faco and hinds in getting out, - and
leaving a broadcloth coat, which , the heat
induced him to-throw off,--a 'prey to the
fames . Considering the bees appropriate
performers in hitt.new eireus„be upset sev
eral hives, and undertook to put sleigh--belle
an the inflects, in which "performance" he
was very badly stung. When the-neig,bbors
came running tt4 the t fire, they found him
under aishade tree, congratulating himself
that this was the "best performance be had
bad y it broilhi the largest audience!" .
l e,,
The b use was entirely:destroyed, and .the .
poor lunatic *Ted and taken to Mercer
jail. i • -
a r
1 _ {v . . ,
1 - • TuM - Extravaganom ,-.
A Paris letter aye
ays the Sultan of Tur
key has order 4 oment Mettrice to make
him a,spiendiX-mirror, set is diamonds.
-It will cost liboire $lOO,OOO, and , is desti
ned for the favarite,of the harem, a beauty.
Who not only exliausie. the immense allow
ance given her 03 , her lord, but managiirto
runup . 1131:18 an ConstantinOple to; the'
amount of ha lf million of dollars Year
,
ly. , . .
sW a r and ove are strange compeers,
war sheds blood, ad_ love sheds fears:- war
has spears 1 • and love , bas darts• WI! ' brooks
heads and love• reake Oarts.
, . i
-gm
BEAR, PA,
WE
CorrespOuciencq;of the Pittsburgh quetti,
ratrTgß. PROM"BISHOP IntEitOt
„editors Gaiette —op. Monday .Jolt 27,
the Committee CM - Education•assenil)44---
This being ane of the most importitiecoin
mittoeP, was largely ` attended both`, by min=
asters indlaymen. The Edneatlenal
sys
tem of[Great Britain,' instead of furnishing
, national schools for the whole people,
speotive of .denominationat views, arms
chiefly et aidin4 the schools projected alid
sustained by private or denominational en
, terptise. Thisip; one of the fruits or the
Established Church. For 'controlliog an it
does, through , thtilloutte of Lords,lthe•Eri-•
sish 431evernment,,i1 fashions the , educatiqu-,
al operations as well as other eiterprises;
so as to throw all 'possible” inlllollCe luto,
the hands orthit Church: 'This 'filarreomE
pets, thevini'as.flenciminatiOns to n do wind.
they tan 'to educate their, own' obildren
their nwnsehoole. In every place - there rise
church schools; but where others are nu
niorous and- tho Church schools do' not filtr
nish ample acenuiniodations . for all the chit
dren,,the government committee allow the
establishment of additional. schools. The
Government contributes certain -propor
tion; prObubly near ono half, to the erection
of the buildings, and then aids in the sup
port of the teachers, reserving the •rightjo
inspect, and supervise the schools. `
The . Wesleyans, under this system have
I established at Westmiuster,..London, a
,large
normal or training school fur teachers, at
the head of which is Rev John Scott, a min
- of• very superior abilities. This training
school enjoys a high reputation, and is pro
nounced by the Government inspectors in
their reports to bo of a very superior order.
Its fine building is wholly free from debt,
and its prosperity is annually increasing.
The number of schools establiihed under
this system is reported at 434, being an in-'
Crease of 13 during the year. In them a`ce
52,650 sekolarb, being au increase of 5,497 E. •
But the small proportion of . day seholari is
seen plainly in the fact that more than eight
times as many attend the Sabbath schools.
These report 427,814 scholars, being an in
crease of 22,046 during the year.
A number of interesting speeches were
made On the resolutiocs offered and adoPt
yed.and a general feeling of delight prevailed
in the committee. ; In the deberationi l .
Mr Fariner,-Mr . Heald, Mr Kay,and oth
er-leading laymen, took a very - acti i part.
On Tuesday the Missionary Comm ttee
of Review held its Sessions. Thisl is ilitk
, largest and generallY the most interesting
committee of the conference. It kesented.
the appearance of one of our annual confer
ences. The report preacoted a whaar of
interesting facts, such as thecommedement
by Mr Cox in the Chinese lati
ring of goverameatal a's-
Nools in Madrip=al.4-..
pm ; ergnig the %/overa
wing liberty in
,e matter would be ful,
Ay that instructions hid
been given to protect missicinaries and their
property. The report states that the S3ei r
ety had received last year 1.119:000, dr
about 6575,000, and that now, it was free
from a debt which had embarrassedit far_
several ycars.
Dr floele, one of tbe Secretaries, gave a
very interesting statement of a conversation
held with Dr Bunking, who is too feeble to
attend, showing his deep anxiety to arrest
the movement now looking towards re-open
ing 'th.e African slave trade. Dr IH. sta
ted that be had received authentic infor
• motion that 6000 negroes-were' assembled
at
; ago; ready to be transported by French
• merchants—that of these 300 Kroornon had
signed an agreement, as they thought, to
gp to the %boon river, but found that• they
had signedin agreement to go to the West
Indies fbr eight 'years. : That the Wesley
an missionary had'been compelled to leave
Lagos on acconniof ill benith some time
before, or he might have aided in '(saving
i• these poor Teo* from the trap into which
they had fallen.
~ He urged the pecossitv
of immediately sending a successor, :as' the
missibnaries were the only friends of . the
negroes there. This scheme, started bythe
French Government, for colonizing their
West India Islands with African laborers,
apprenticed for eight years, is destined;yet
to exercise a powerful influence, as I fancy,
both for good and evil. '_'lt will be eviL‘ in
deceiving the negroes who are induce& to
enter into it-- it twill teporarily rrest h e
civilizing' process o th e coast of a Africa=
it will increase-the power of slavery in , Af-•
rice for-a time—And a large proportion of
these apprentices will not live ; to see the
day of freedom. i On theother nand, it will
bring a large number of Africans into con
tact with a higher civilization; and if the
French Government keep its faith to them
‘,.... ..at im wimularea ny me - ttope Mele
vation—it will fill the ialands with ; labor.
ing popalation.who will compete with slave
labor, and multiply those products now in.
sufficient for the world's demand- 7 —will, refl.
der it impossible,,by the overwhelming num
bers.of the colored population, ever to re
setablish slavery!--will,eiercise a powerful
influence on contiguous islands and coun
tries, which our own southern. States will
powerfully feel--"and finally willbsik
into Africa, civilized and elevated &borers.
But if the French Government sh ld break
its faith and establish slivery, then a long
lour
dark, dreadful night shall envelop • us in its
gloom. " • j 1
A number of interesting speeches were
delivered, hut having an engagernentln
Manchester, I'was compelled to hasten a
way. --.- 1
'On Wednesday, the Conferen.- .m_
bled to hold its One hundred and fourteenth
annual session. The first business was to
MI the legalrighuidred." This is a corpo-.
rate body, established by Mr . Wesley, and
its• powers and (lades are set. forth in the
Model dCed. It. alone can give legal sanc
tion- to ... the sots of Wealeyantem, though,aii
business is transacted by, the o Oundred."
Eight vacancies ticeisiioned by death and by
inpersnouation, Were fillticl—six by sebiot
ity two by ballot. Conference then pro
sErrpslß ° 24
ftiodcaio btif r'lit 'President; When Bev.
'F'li, :rept, Cflitrirlv i atkieheivet2ll Otos,
and ''Joseph ..11hvrete I af,Aftidsbrery Unclog
:cal- 'SebooVit*ilind ! 7:1. , Mr Waa l
bas'been a ..viri actlite , arid efficient minis
ter for itudifyisaii,l.ind ha greatly aided
the connectiart b . , idirdeio ion to its inter
ests, and he iro;y:l;high) esteemed as a
il
preacher sal"• 4‘4oltalellor: -IDr liasnah .was
re-electhd Seerhtlityt A public peayet meet-,
ing was held f ;42' , to 1. cr :lock- The
evening! seas' Irr* principally devoted to
w ient
revolutions of itults,to ( li e 'retiring office!s,
al waYil!esPoirgby..naai, speeehesi l :and
to theintr4 ' P-9trkitorf and dekegatee•
iTlivOld 1i,y.*404, ate ..l)l.o'cloek, spoor-,
dkug 4 4rev44351§iampge,thpilt i Dr M'Olin•
icick,,,P
. pkyfeltitfrS.l4,l4lly introduced
i t 7 if , k l " A -';,'' - ' g hii , -' 7. „contOmee.-7,
Or an ess '.., i.,, ., a occasions the confer
eum li iWilli:4l : d doers: ' A largo" audi
/
eneci w#4-preeeil - itu4,we! ere listened to
kindly and - ; 0i elfrterlill we gave a nar
rative of ALAI m'. fa' , America.' Our re
ception 'honld' • 'hap beetal More cordial,
I t ,
and 'we Grnet t ai oar miision, may , aid in
strengthening t _ 'b on whi h already unite
the great Weslhyan fainilji
Liverpool, ii *itg. 1. 1817
• I - 1 . -, - I
The Ca at Wiiihington
it L.tH ,T
The new Fla i. of the aiouse of Reiare'
7
sentatives will d eccupy - the centre pf the
south wing pfthe Capitel and will he ree
tangularJ, one ; tindred add ,thirty nine feet
long from cast to west, !quay three feet
wide, and, about thirty, six 'feet high.: It
Will be Ilighte•by sky-lights in the ceiling
ar.d a ,glass i f, andlat L Uight by' large
chandeliers and tided between the (telling
and the roof i
a l i ebe Speakerla °heir will be
...,„
situated on h senthiside of the hill, .and
the members' Skits, three-hendred in num
ber, arranged ire eemkirctilar form fron t -.
jog it. IThere will4e a centinuotts gallery
on thre '; aides ,M.ltall--i-the north, east •
and Wes di r liiiii"hf seating twelve bun
-I_,
dred.po ' us, e kseparate' gallery for re
porteis, , behindthe fEiptudier's chair The
walla of the-h; 1, ender the galleries, will
contain' panne for• paintingit; • and above,
niches for eta ' ry. The hill itself will be
a ic n ini ca nwv r gl y nid i r ,o, 4 ed m. ,,, ca y t ore iGni i i de i re th ,
t a b ff e or p di o ng t :
011ie, the rethlog rooms, and the collimit
'tee roe: ' The public galleries will be en
tered b ye conder surrounding theta in the
second story, A , hich. will lb e reached by ti
splendid! Mai ' y. . ' ,
~- The new S t o Chamber is situated in
t i a
the cents r ief th north ; wing of 'the Capital,'
and \ is- etonstnic • An 'a sitniio plan with
that pf the of the House of Represen.
tatives; only iltitalleri. beieg. Pile hundred
and tweliel.el: by . eighty -two wide. This
leaves mere ,',"'.'.. in the building for cord-.
dory andjothli .1 4 _itutentii,i. The Senate re
-1',./.-11 i'' ' ' '..* AI-north-leant of
the wing, is to 1 ~e a ~ giillicent apartment.
It. will i l be tliirty . eigtltstet in length by
twenty one and a half in 'dal, and nine-'
teen and a half ! in height. 1 1 4 .e ceiling 111
to be ofjp•ire ;W h ite Italian ' m .le, ' and ,is.
to be supportediby polished i m
Corin
i . ian. col
inns and pilasters of. the, same . erial,
rth 'richly carved capitals. The walls. re.
• be made of the richest of Tentative.
marble,. islet Width large plate-glass • mirrors,
and at'each end! of the room. are to be nich
es filled with statuary. The other rooms
on the not, th and east side of this wing are
designed dor Private reception rooms for the
Senator S.— ifat:h. Union. 1
1 ~......-___!..._ .
the Li b rary of COigress
-1
The' Library of Congress w a s first estab
lished during the admisistrat on of Jeffen!
son, at his seggeition, and by his exertions.
,It at firat contained about two thonkaod five
hundred l',lvolumes, and 'i, was deitroyed by
fire when' the Nitish burned' the Capital in
1814. In tlialkine year a kesolutian was
introduce:dilite Congress , to l!Purchase Mr.
Jefferson's private library, which 'was 'past.
Jed; the books bought and brought, to
'Washington, and the'LibrarY of Congress
again organized; Varines valuable addi
tions being made from time to , time, the Li
brary contained in 1854 55;000 volumes.
During that year it accidentally caught fire,
and 35,000 volumes were destroyed, and
the roonriveti &Ouch injureC This [mei
,dent finally . resulted in the- ioout , being
make perfectly ( fire -proof, byll'. i conatrinstiog
the alcoves andc'ehelvei - of oast-iron. Soon
after this fire ad appropriation' of 875,000
waismadel by. Congress, for the 'Purchase of
new-books.' This . fond was judiciously' ,
laid ont,H 1 .
and a moat eicellnt collection
1
made of standard and - rare wo rk.. The Li
brary note contains about 64,000 volumes,
exclusierelpf a large number If pamphlets,'
and about 50,000 public demo:mate; and
a....enutil appropriation to the Library is'
$5,000 for ' , miscellaneous, and 82,000 for
law books. - MIA Union.- ,; ,
• i
I THE OLDEST 31itt.A. correspondent of
1
the St. Louis . Republican, writing from
Elwood, R..'T., says: ' - 1' •
- One who lives on his claim, near I the,
edge of - this-city, is, perhaps, the oldest
man ic - ionerica., - If not, I____vrilll venture a
small-wager that he is the most , active 3f
his age. ,Ho is Mr. James O'Toole. He
was:born in the, county of Dorregal, in the
North ofp Ireland, somewherla abdut the
year 1.730 He was an old man in the
Irish rebellion in 1798, when frecomicg jar!
plieated With LODI Fitzgerald, ii he fled Ilds
country, to' seek freed3m in our dim young
republur. !LEW life has been ono of
many changes. l' He has 'been tossed about
among various scenes and by many diverse
o t trees. ' He moved to SL Loris
thirty y Tea ,- - d - established the., firri,
brewery there. He movedttl f fcrlthe Platte
Purchase ffn 1838;and livedra Buchana n'
county, neir.Bloomingten, until two' years
ago, wherOte came: to-I4nr . rro lend made a
l /r pre•emptiort, and' catr . tOW walk eight or
;
ten miles With ease. o swit.bis friends or I
attend so !business 'a . e says his
age is atuAit one hundred\an twenty-fire
years. . 1 1 . ' NNi s , '1
soiro - oiJ nui
v -
Sailing d;;Orri . tit -7D-77- evrowdea , iiireett: g :i
Scraping every one they eet,
.1 1 '
Wipe; r u O lr W.4 4ll ?fwi , 415 ° 11 'it , 6' --
they ;
' Mttfilitthelfeiazatindabannii, L --.•''' ,-.
,1 r I
Hoop: -1100 P 1 # ° °ll.'' . •1' I i
,
What a vast, expantiveawoop !
Hoops of Whalebone; sh ot and ei
ROops of wire, thin ',as al . ;:lala •
ion;
Hoopsof brass, thirteen Ards ion;
Hobps of sieel, otaftim'd and strol
!boil otrublier 'SO and
Hoops of roping ,! tangling thick; 1
Hoops' of laanprioheol4l,•4l4l,k4t
Hoops that langaiiih„in w e t Weittht .
Hoops that spread olit lille'ea . ski t gs; • '
Hanging off frbniiiiitilias flirts:el Lk
i • •-• . 1 , 1, 1, -4-1
Sweeping off the Piblic nds, -L : i
Yarning over apple- stead ;.• - ,"I.=
hi
rell!, . 3 . c/4 Mr a 4P l ofF! ° `' 4 * 'HI .;
op . ! hoop! Hoop.! -- -
Wfult a vat, eiPanitivaistroOp ?, ''
1
Jolly hoops, that wriggled round, •, 1 I
Sober hoops'that I:way Pi3faleilt ',
OininitY-haelis that ihake and wag
Broken hoops, that op and drag;
Monster hoops, al nvergr?wa;
Junior lltois, o sm aller bone; l
.i .,
Hoops that ravish loVes i ?s eyes,
Hoops that rend their breast with
Hoops thatrahoCk their fee ble legs
Like a crowd of giant ke I 1,
s
,
What gallant shins !: what swellini
How they resit opposin g gales! i
t
With whiy,.ii fall; relentless waft,)
They overwhelm each sasiller crag
,Hoop ! Hoop! Hoop !I
What a Tad, O.2p,DISiIO'
3t. a.
What will these persons who have been
accustomed to consider-five hundred tteres
,a largefarm think of the following?''-The .
editor of the "Spirit of .the Agrictilfuial
Press" has recently been on a visit to 'the
farm of M. T. Sullivant, .ESII., in the south_ ;
eastern part of Champaign county, , 111.
The farm contains over twenty th o usand
acres, and although only about seven ,Ithou
sand acres yet under cultiVation, employs
over one hundred . men ?Iree thousand,
acres aie,plinted in corn an the editor es
timatesjbat the farm will prdude at least
15 - ,1:160 bushel of wbeak titiYear, besides
large quantities otharleyotes, . th i x,&c.
ltq 7-
Mr. Sallivant emiloya different rispfts. „
this season and threshes foineediately after
cutting, employing* steam engine as his
power in the latter operatidn. A. black
smith's shop is loaated on the Nrm, add
employed continually in repalring . farm Im
plements;”a school is kept nis for, thel, edn-" 1
cation of the children of the spiklUen.—
One hundred and tvrenty•five yoke of oxen
and nay horsiiiiiit iiiployed. ,It Mint be
acknowledged that, this-.is s omething, of a
farm, and— that Mr. Sulli vaut possesses
much execUtive ability to succssfully ;;man-
age 1 ouch a stupendous el:niacin; yet w e i are
informed that everything moves ' on as reg.
Mari ; as thn.click ial a chronometer. !,This
is 'ant ono of the many large' farms which
now grace the broad, prOrte of that ; ';an d
'edit:ening omit:ales, dent of= whizh are '
la ike as this,"--but lar:ge'enough'io excit e_
the - 'lWender and admiration or outsiders,
r
who kkw. nothing' of th magnificent
Weil— ,A. , avitie Courfer. ' lAI
id Far We '-ditorial - inctum. ,
I
The Kansas oorres. o ident of the• /tie&
mond Enquirer, in a re. •nt I l letter to, that'
paper, thus describes the °tam of the
editor of the : l` Weekly Hera! prints in
'l\
'Leavenworth 'city, at the tap e he made a
visi ' . \i i
I will not be anaissherel to give you a
sket hof the o ffi ce is presented to the eye
of a stranger from Louisiana,. . "4„,trieit to
the rintinglo ffi oe alierded a rich treat:' On
I
ente 'n ` ': the first room on thc.right hand
thre w "shingles"' were oc the door; on -
.one
.one I i e wag a rich bed— ?reach I l laq.:t
kaki,' s eels, table cloths, shi , cloak;Land
f a
ruga l ,l all together, on the seal hung hails - ,
mapsl o. venison aneriCh ehgra ings, onions,
portraits and bootf; on i the floor were a
side iolf bacon, carved to the
_, ne;cern land
Is
potaOesl ? stationery l and; boo ks; : . .on a nice
dresAngaise..stood a wooden ay, half 'full
of dtiugh, while crockery rice . pied the pro.
fsssion4 desk., In the room on the left—
the sanctum—the house Wife, cook and ed
itor living in gldrions,inuty one person.
lie was seated on a stool; wit. a paper be
&a him on a piece of plank. w . rit_' :n g ....44.
Owns kiockliown. to an articl. in the• Kic k•
,
apoo Pioneer, a paper of ari • . city. The
cooking, stare was as his,left, , and tin' kat:-
tles all round; the corn cake 'a doieg,'•
and instead of scratching h' head for so
idea, as - editors often 'do, ' .e turned: th , e i
cake and went ahead." ' ,
, Kansas' and Her Cal; .. . . r
tos. .. 1 .. - _,
1 i 1 i. -
Iniiddition to the 1 lettere Published ;te l .
cent from Gen. Atchison, we beg t leave to
say to our readers, that from other letters
received from Bengali we are i inforted ; that
the Pro-Slavery party( in' Kansas is rem
lute in its determination of &acing Kan
sas a Slave State. On the 21 st day of last
month they were confident of success,l and
would' form a Coustitutiea wi t h Slaverylao
knowledged in' it. 'if this onstlintiouje
i
referred te , the people for rat;ation, it is
intended to refer it only to- e registered
voters, who wilt doubtless ratify it. 4ir,.6
have more h 3pe efKansai th 1 . We I have Ov
er had , We have great fait s in the 'tight
ing capacities of the sett. enr me ne ...
Charleston Nereuryi
,
/Loon lintz BmoraisO.—The Novi.
)fenee (R. L) ourwslis info med that gli
Thayer kiss ght of' the Hies, Steam
Engine -COM y, Seven s m engines
/
eqoal t0'540 h me power to be "used; for
airing saw a d grist-raids, on hods pu r .
chased by him ud others; iu western Vir
ginia. , • ~, • r .
1 '
OOPS;
EN
An Illinoii F .
-
_
r 1]
7111.
l i
1 0
m g
I h 1';
a d
111 L.
1
'
They '4 Like to Try.
General. —7=--, of isl'issiPPis ws 'A a
planter-of the old sehbol and the best stamp.
hie - treated his slaves kindly, gave them
abundant provision and clothing, and for- 1
bid his overseer tectaatt them without
'life permission., The Gen ral Was a ohureh
member, and daily' had ffamily prayers. Be '
sp, • ' h ave. L , 1 r
~„/ 7 as &amens • t o uts,sgiires attendlam
• '-' • sly worship, gogati..tnioY ofo them did so for
t s time.' - 4.1i 1 length he was surprised and
1 griered toi see that they ail absented thew!
Selves from family worklip. "What.. it
Meant he Could not cotjecurec; All his of-.I
forts to get them In prey abortive. They!
seemed determined not to 'ome. The Gen-. 1
eral ' load!'i trusty • &dal oleo, 'who was
the wifeof - i min - toildttgi g - to a acighlter 7 I
!ing- planter.t . This mans ' name was Isaac.
IHe was a fitthrut, trtiity . anti and was
'promoted` by,riiis solo - ,
irethren to , the
dignity of as extiote .. !' lsaac was permit.
ted :aattilly taigo to heenertiragtplents:
thanOn Saturday' bight, - ' d b i ) e n a r t h elal"
li
-bath with , his wife. On Sunday evening
'fie went into Pr& pia erel, but none ofl
Via Wei , After 'p yen s he-general- said
'
twin= that he W 29 much grieved that tiffs
servants , would not cede to prayers. "Ying
see r litaaeo, net one is iil. Now, there must
`he some reason, and F ; want to know what
lit is. I thought Polly Might • haVe told
you.". Isaac was a gooddeal , embarrassed;
said ho ,was sorry_it.Was ! * he told Polly 1
thei sought to come in. 1 -18 13nt,” said. the
General, 'Hyon knew, Isae, what is the
matter. 4 . won't insist . o your telling me„ ii ,
,but. I would like to ha ve Ion." sWell,
Massa,' I will tell you, . but you know II -
think they do wrongin pt . coming in. 7
They say they don't believ e yet! are a gins
thin.' 'Why,' said the General, sI ata sur
prised they think" I'm not a Christian:—
Don't I treat them well, feed and cloth e -
them, and frbid the a; crosier to abuSe ,
them?' les, Nassa,' 'i said Isaac, 'I know
yon an all this;- but they thiik there is
something, farther haekr—t ey say if Massa
wogs a_Christian, he wo uld 'give them their
freedom.' 'Why, Isaac . what do they
mean; they emiloVnt t care of them
selves' 'Yes,'' • .S.fassa," id 1 Iseaci• 'but
they'd.like to tr:y!—:-.Hostori Post, •
E
Jr,
ng; , _
ther.
1 -
, size,
!E
!ailsi
1
ME
Volcanic. Eruptions. ,:
,
We learnlrOni a gentleman who letl'the
Saialwiqh Islands about *fly. ..days „since,.
that just heforei he look '..hil 'departure; news
was received that the Volcano! of Mauna
Lea, on the' island of Hawaikhad again bc.
come fearfully, active; and lasshe lava — dia . ..
charged at the - lase. eruption --
,IpprOachid
within about seven miles Of the'village for,.
'Hilo ; filling up - the unotenness of the surfanO
dawn to that pointi - a distahOt :i!f . 60 [ or 70
1 miles from tho crater,. there was - gteat .ap.
:prOhenSiOns that the preseit eriiption:vrosild
I either burp' that villsgoenirely, or ' imder..
mine, it! and car ry:ii4nin_:[tho. Hai -, This
last 'apprehenaion" - resultolfrom. the actions
of the.-lava at die :lastertlptiou; it having
in several instances appeared. , toi stagnate
for awhile, but afterwSrdab urst out lower
down the mountain! an 4 tiled all ] before
it.. Forests were broken dow n and destroy ,
In it !like hullrushei. .! The village of
: lb contains' population o abort - 500 per=
sons, including. perhapa ado zen white fam
ilies. . Ilia situated on the north-04Sf side
of the island, and such is the:surface . of .the
ground, that if the !lava e4ei finds its way
to the sea it must - b>, aPpliVentli,'!Over the
ruins of this village,' : The Present eitip.
tion„is Irom the sa me
. r,,
irat,
as' im last,—
It is not on the extrime:spoi of
.theM.O.nO,
Lain, but from a . .'position' sbmettliiiC!lovier!
down, on the east gr north - east elope, look,
ing Cowardi Hilp i —Jouijza/ of Commerce.
Cheating the ' , ,ter.
The other day, says the Dayton Journal,
we observed several_ Irish laborers trying
to decipher a written notice headedi‘Public
Sal."- ,The notice, althoughwritten toler
ably plain, could =not be bei r ea d by the boys,
and:they s asked.us to read ifto them, which
we, ,of course, did.. l At,the conclusion, One
of them turned to his coMrades,and 'remar
ked in a very impressive tone; 'Well, be
jabers, I'll nary buy of It Man who's so
nagirdly w
that he on't'get Ws ,advertise ,
meat printbd—he's icherateld ,the'lorinfor t
and he'd cheat Me." I TLey iLI acquieiced in
the decision of the spokekman.
; ---- .
A Pood Pieture.of st ' a yor. 1
The Mayor of Chicsago at thus deaciij
bed .by al correspondent of tblejlosio , n jour4
t i
//obi 1 1 . -.. ! - '1
sgffe stands six feet.two i ills. stockings.
Old latlaW but turned down u mi.a, like
a cotton nmbrella—no neclt cloth—short
ttid.,:fitting linen 'coat--lootte , numentiona
bles;' which look as if he had jumped tco
far inte r thenl, and' hadte,t-ti.ine to get hack,
wahlaelied,;—untied sheet - 4-4ree size's too
large--and a slight.. stoop Ito the tall' fig ,
ure,! and-the picture its complote.. ton see
him '7 'Well, air that shabby,. elephantine
individual, who looks as ifr he had not a
cent in the world, is Johannes Elonititus
Mayor of Chieago,—.and hit is voila five
hundred thousand dollars,"l i 1-
A Gaoss ' EW/NDIJI:-- 'ork Snelling,
rendered useless nngovernm 14 'outpost by
the advance . , of eivilizationk Las• recently
been sold
_hy the'governmenl for the sum of
890,000: The sale included ,1000 acres of
surrounding land, the wbolelbeautlfy . lli lo:
limed at the lunation of dm' Mississip pi and
Minnesota rivers, near St: Anthony's Venn i
It is a magnificent site for ajgreat, town, in
one of the most , valuable ' nd! rapidly rising
sections of Mindeaota, add. kid thU proper
ty been opened to_ public biddixig would
have brought many House' the Paltry 601
which administration faioritee have bum,
i v
permittedld 12 , the prisel ie • at. Ililf
a million dell s wiuld' have ' `Wen a small
figure for the p yeity Simi licaeted l i fer
less than a h d , thoundd.l' Who are
the lacjiy holds s under this swindle, and
may eb of lin wby what reasiog f fin
gers the thing as aceomphshed?—Boston
givrcller,
ESTAkA§ITEI)
11111
"Be ".;still male no not - —let
r •
. ine'-
di
ii[ qutetl .' Tice T 7 ce P rest V eitl "mg
"Ile still !",- ,The hour o 1
the Soul's I . e.
I
1 parture is at hand; Earth is ailing froth iis,
vision; Time is'gliding fi out its preseneel 7
Hopes thakcluster around y, ung,,life;‘"thit
' swell in the bosom of nufnlitiod t f,lave 144.,
en, front' around' it like the forest leaVeS
when the frosts of Au/tona have chilled ' ,
i them inito death. .Autbition"with
_it* hol-
I c o r promise=, and pride withliftflofty lo Ite,..
have vanished away. The world with its ,
.
deceitfuliness; pleasure with ,its : gill ed
temptations are gertev and . 1
ode in pLer -
destitution of all time profaned it, t . lte- seta,
must start °nits selemu jimene3; acreeslhe
;to.
valley of dui shadner of-.d at I 1 .
,_ „„t,
"Alike no 'noipe !" het' t. le ittinult '
~,.
life Mae. •Let no 0 0 1 1 1 1 441 f kr„, , s i
communion ornit,:Ado qO. ~.1,4,4c*
less flight._ .-; Tro t Ati f t,44 114:44 icoegtfrei
Forrdir - 4 ,, Woit - om,ahlua .still on '
.!bo ..
oksekialsaasedisitz'.ill344,o4o 41Riraitril
of'grief break' the it-itleOti 4silence of he.
death scene:l , Let it gather the accents kat,
come, from within the dark shadows of fger
nity, laying, to it, come home. A= far off
music comes, floating to it on the air. 'Tin
the sound Of the hea v enly Tarps toncked
by viewless fluiers,---mar not the harmony
by the discoid of earth. If L
.1
"Let ins die quietly:!" The eommotiona
'of life, the itruggles ofamhition, the atrife
and warring 1 with human 'destiny ,are oier:::
Wealth laccumulated must [he scattero f ?
‘
honors Wonimust be resigned ' and all the
triumplui th4t come within the range of kU. '
Man achievements must be town aw a y.
The past; with its, trials, its posgreasiontl i
iti,accumniain g respoosibilistes, its chug.
log• memories,; Iti vanished hopes, is reader. ,
ina up to the future ace i,not--disturb riot
the quiet of that awful' ecliOning., Speak
not of f4dinimemeries, of affections wh i osil
objectsip'erish in their love4ess i - like the
flowers 'Of spring, ,that withes in h - slow 'de-
cay. :Talk not ef - an earthly home where
loved-ones linger, where a seat will sooMbe
vacant, a cherished voice Itilshdd fororpt,
or of the; desolation ' that-will seat ihnikby
the hearth stencil, The soul at peace • wi th
God, let iti psi calmly away. Heaven is
opening upon its vision.. The bright tars ,
Tete, the ,tall spires, the holy domes of the
Eternal City, are emerging from the sOee. ,
tral (Whitens, and the glory of the , Most
Highis ;learning around then? ' The whits
throne iiiiitsteningin the di4tnee and ,ber
White f _robed angels are beciro log tile w ry
spirit to its everlasting ho e. What is
life that it ehonlel be clung t ? lop,ger --,
What the joys of the world thaUtheyshoukt
be regretted? :What has earth to place be
fore the spirit of a Man to t mpt its 'eV _
or turn it from its eternal res ? ' •
••• ,
rlglif
1 , How HE LosT His 'Urn:
piper tells the followleratory
and Jonathan A - UWE, were on It
or potties - tan rat ~ in al unl,
the fight between them—thell
for ,Congress—grew !v ery wan
rate. One 'day , • when they
stump, Uri; whose head wt
'should, therefore, howl been ' 9
midst of biS indignation turn.
athan and Said: '
i "I IhirikVsir, you Inivo but
your bead, and that i4 very 1
it'would swell, it wo 11.4t1
Whereat Jonathan greww7
and
and looking , for a maitre
r t ~at
:,)
venerable head of ins (Ippon
he , shonla say *hat he thmighl
I -"Say on,' i
:said Uri. 1
I "Well II think • you haven'i
bead, and never ,had; there
saiitchini around on the outsb
getin, ti l ttl has s:...ratclied all
but it's never ' goLin and - new
Urimai silent. '.. '
Ilion WATER IN Tim LAktm.---The Ind.
ter of Lake Michigan Is 'now saidi to - be
higher thatk it has been ever , Icnown since
1838; wheat tho rise was so !great as to
kill trees ever' one huhdred yea r n old. 4, The
level now islfourteen inches bilew that of
1838. .: Thetfact is not idaceordanee with
the'suppoeed periodical pse and fall . knoirr
as the . seven 'years theory. The months
the conipletedj city sewers al. halt fttl
with water which dornonstrat a. that' 1
hay.e not been constructed tqo high.
01
heavy northeast blowi raising the Water
foot and aittalfligher, might do Co'nsidt
able daMage to goods stored id many of
cellars in - theleity.--dhicayo Times
OE
-
' ;,'
'rasa Ir'xcess.—A fireman ' e t : the N.'. y.
Central- ILI It. asked the Superintendent,
for, a Pars, i which he declined t cive sair.
ing,"'" The 1 company- emp oye Youi - -,-
1
and pay - yotioto much for y ur eerviee l ( l
and , there our; trade , -entie. , , you, We e
at work for Wfarmec. for a 4611 a day, and
had ',to go Ito arratoia, mould ou ask Mitt
I
to hitch ; up hik team and talti) you theici
formatting r!, , /The Sremao anostcred: ".11
sir; Ana lifiho h ad his' team bit hed up, anti
mai ;goingdiieet:f to Sarato , I should
wit; ~
thick he; , 4 , bog if b's didn't 1, 'toe ride.ri
Tir
1
. ELL rut - When .; au' a ttem p t tt Nag
made in Congress to iuduee Wt. Banks to
answer certain misreOesentaticns of - -his
antecedente, the then candidate for Speak- -
ership replied: '.'
I I„
“Gentlemen i My rec o r d ir before '
t. d
1 r
country. I'' hive endea oted. to. do
~ my i
whole dtity.to my friend', My . &marten,
my constituents, and my onittiy-,and my
acts and speeches are families to you ..aad
- to those intereitted in . Me and Mie. I deens
i:, folly and a waste of preciou stime 'to ex
pend one-half of a man's life in explain
ing what he may have said andidone during
the other half: , ',l ' • I 11
we.A. cotemporat7 exclaims:in au excg. ,
dangly Closipetit piece of writing,• . "If til l ,
i
dead Jsould 81)14 from.
,their 'rave's, witT
would the Nay 1'
• ,
R' - t• gue s th ey wool , l De vry ltkely I,
sin I'Ltt Iths ' i out." I
OE
11818
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'iSoier,
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vum J 1
one idea
mall one,
in the fa
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nt, aske
of hizu?
t one-in y.
.sheen
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the hair .
will:"
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ho
nd
he
in
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1