AIMIE 19. TO AND MISCELLANY, TEED INNER LIFE. =I rho OnIV, Mit World that to•tni ni tiva le not )(la m tt 111 , 11 o. IR% di; Tiin Intwr IVorl,l T 1 1 ,111.! is rcar— 41'0011 nelttier buy t10r',,,11 ral saa ,, ter of all outward thingq; Within my,tmul 1 take my seat. And Nature comes iti perMincd.rolms , And 1.1)2 her treniturMi at may rect. All thing+ I have ithin my wit . , Senn i.cixatid u Janis 1107 warn ; I hie within bright palace aallo, - .Itr lied o'er by lovely Jewel'il 1 e.inc and gu, a wamicrine, bee Th it ruallll each llou cry,ccistg.l field; otml tremmres tip Om imdlcit wilts yli daily timit . ghte and pa,time , ) I I.sn6 :it things, no as the) I the Father's Cline, All WWII,: is a part of Ilia.: Thin Isniinlina sky is ili• breatir embalm., iho ding hunt er4, 11, mak, the 11, t,,e:e 1 hear lh eter, Ideeze, Ilir ndailti I sec iu r‘Cr) llr I,llliq his altar Met . . tt hete,-- ti n inter) bran Ills Jena distill: Ile:lien r 5511. the inure jut heart, Is o , l.o—bite , thehtitnaii I turn away front beaten paths , IVhere trade and l tolutca ilerett . e. lul httr to rant rant two., and glen, 'thit [el tily-lirew.t it tilt rapture heat V. 'Ow u oriel it auto wit that It hieh I hat e, INu-nll I love Inner Life. nought call tempt heart ninny To mingle t‘u lbe ceette‘i of istrtfe; I a ,b ep in 'thin I have a tell; Hari rich than gold that t eicei the earth ATI deep it 'thin are hut lug thought., gnu to joy add trust their birth. 'lit it Inner 11'ortil, 0, be it mine. u,l nom: to tread each mere hall, It. COLITIS i" " M " 111, ' Perfect : 4 oul of All A‘ IDOW. BY BREVET. I= . • lie Introduce the eorteuu. reader to two lad:es Piekiln, a tall young lady of twenty-one, near to good looking to permit of a delusion on the (of %%lurk, however, she had an Nuke moilopol) ~ I ,..iltea)s red in a small spot, lips not so red as •40, and rather thin, sharpish nose, and waist oder; dad last (not least important,),a terr long 'cabled on either aide into a r esemblunee to a shriveled parchment, which might or might not idered as a mis-fortune—ser ring her as a title renty-thousand dollars. The scald was Millet ' the fortune loft in consequence, by a maiden aunt the babthoo I of l ' Picklin, attempted to cure d's't.ore throat by an application of cabbage-leaves in but vineglr. Itiphernia Picklin, commonly called ['betide— humored girl, rather iiichned tp be fat, I tit gifted coral point 4 of beauty of %Illicit Ate tea.; not at all vety much a pet among her female rictids, and, tug, With perfect sincerity amid ,othitti4don, her ids. elti..ive right to the admiration of the gentlemen r acquaintance. taitt lentoh Pickho, the father of them ladiec, wne shoot of t;aleto, no importer of figs nod opium, nod taster of the It ig "Smip! l o Swan," which etill plied it him warehouse nod ('onstantitiople—nails and tho cargo cum utd. t l have trot Mtss rielskt'e siott to meottott ltto precike date of the e vent, I am to record, owl leaving that pint Moue to the ,ii r not of the render, 01..11 set don n the other partia -1 nd impedintente i t her "f00r ,, ., of into love" tv:th enl r since shn had been of sufficient ago to turn her on exclusively to matrimony, :11iss Pickles had i hed it pre solltllllollt that her destiny was,erotic: to soil of Salem was too poor, and the indigenous too mean; and that, potted in her tWent thon.und •, sho was a choice production, set aside for flower s foreign chine, and destined to be transplanted by 'gut lever. With this secret in her bosom, she hod d nue or two gentlemen of middle age, rceom cd l.t her father beside sundry score of young gen n of slender revenues in lia.r own set of actpiaMtan till, tf there had burn anything beside poetry itt (.care's nneition thia it it— "Pr .11:00%1 Ili° oh•liii , -4.3 r•," vighboring '•brtinli barren,'" of S:itign4 would have ii lot, at n pie-111111TM It tilts bon' the want diting:oo4, ttt v,hoge complaining noteq the gentle of Verona "hinted his distresses," that the discard ,Silent preferred li t e consolatiOne of Pheinie !ws to the Pickllll3l ITa.san Ketti, (116 FOO of oil At). Wati C0111:11g out in (ho "Simple Susnn!" A live Turk—nyoung' Turk, and the von of her is rich corresponduint in TurkQ "AfflnO!" tho't I! captain himself was lather taken aback.' lle had old Abdoul fpr many 'rears, had traded and einok •o.ll 11111 1 in the cafes of Galata, had gone out With on Sunday, to lonugo on tho tombstones at Scutari, ' had nee...r shoot trt ieo about his yellow gown and .roo sets; but what" the deuce would he thought of II In Salem' True, it was his son; but a Turk's tea deseetid from tether to son through three genera , he know that, from remembering this ver' boy all ' , mothered in a sort of saffron blanket, 'With slo'eves polettcases—his first assumption of rho toga riritis that old Piekhn know Latin, hut such was "his sen ,mt better expressed.") 'Then "he land never boon d to (Ito house of the Stamboul merchant, trot intro id to his wives nor his daughters (Indeed, had forgot.' that old Keui was Boar cutting his throat for asking r them ~—lint of eourso it tuns vet y daerent in Salem. In t z K. to nio , .t he the Pleklin guest, fed and lodged, due gads B'ould want to give him a tea-party. Would ton a chair, or want cushions on the floor? Would COln' to dnwcr with his breast bare, and leavo his t. etre.elea Would he eat rico-pudding with his lin t,' think it indecent if the girls didn't wear .en elotlip, Turkey fashion, over their mouths and no ho bring his pipes? Would he fall on his me Ot t lits prayers four times a day, whether he al , ll n dean 'deco handy?) .kWhat would rho ••3 "rile (-amain worked himself into a vio ,,;-.11,1r-Mon merely thmlang of ell this. ; 4 %!eootes Invo II famous mu cum. and know uf thing is one erne° but a live , v4..,;(1410 Capkin et'is'et tho town in a r Ln„ an indelicate opening fOr a conjecture us present age, wore t Lli stato whether or id of tho "Simple Startle' we: reported by • S!in nn in with nfair wind on:Sunday morn *;.,: 11 intlitedialdly boarded by the harhoi.rnaster l'lckftn; and there, true to the prophotie tho l voting Turk sat cross-legged on yr , r44, , leck, in a white turban and scarlet et releras, I. pipe--no other, the captain i.,% , do:n hit with! 11\7 % , ;1,•11 informed who was his visiter, THE ERIE 01ISERVER and taking old Pieklin's hand, put it to his forehead.— The weather-stained sea-captain had bleached in the counting-honse, and he had not at first sight, remember od friend of his father. fle passed the pipe into Isaiah's. , hand and begged bim to keep it as a memento or Abodotd, for his father had died at the last Ramat:au. ii:tssan had come out to see the world, nud secure it con tinuance of codfish and goodwill from the house of Picklin: and the merchant got astride tho tiller of his old craft, and smoked this news through his amber-mouthed legacy, While the youth went below to get ready to go . ashore. The reader, of course, would prefer to share the first impression of the ladies an to the )oung Mussulman's personal appearance, and I pass, at once, therefore, to their disappointment. surprise, mortification and vexa tion: when, as the bells were ringing for church, the front door opined, their father enter t ed, and in followed a young gehtlernan in frock coat and trowsers! Yes, and in his hand a hat—a black hat—and on his feet no Yellow boots, but calfskin, mundane and common calfskin, and with no shaved bend, and no twisted shawl around his waistt nothing to be seen but a very handsome young man, in deed, with teeth like a fresh slice of cocoa-nut meat, and a very deliberate pronunciation to his bad English. ' Miss Picklin's disappointment had to be slept upon, for for she had math: great outlay of imagination upon the pomp and circumstance of wedding a white Othello in the eyes of wondering Salem; but Phemio's surprise took lint live minutes to grow into a positive pleasure; 'and never suspecting, at any time, that she was visible to the naked eye during the eclipsing presence of her Lis ter, she sat with a very admiring smile upon her lips, and her soft eyes fixed earnestly on the stranger, till she had mado out adult inventory of las features, proportions, manners, and other stuff available in dream-land. 'What might be Hassan's impression of the )oung could not be gathered from his manner; for, in the first place, there was the reserve that belonged to him as a Turk, Alld in the second place r there was a violation of all Ori enql notions of modesty in their exposing their chins to the masculine observation; and though he could endure thud expo s ure, it Was of course with that diffidence of g ize which accompanies the consciousness of improper objects—adding to his demeanor another shade of timid ity. Miss Picklin's shoulders wore not invaded quite to the limits of terra rognibt by the cabbage leaves which had exorcised such an influence on her destiny; and as the scalds somewhat resembled tu•o maps of South America (with Patagonia under each oar,) she usually, in full dress, gave a clear view of the surrounding ocean—wise ly thinking, it better to havo the geography of her dis figurement well understood, than, by covering a small extremity (as it wore the Isthmus of Darien,) to leave an undiscovered North Amerioa to the imagination,— She appeared ucoordingly at dinner in a costume not likely to diminish the modest embarrrsament of Mr. Keni (as she chose, to call him)—extremely drcolletr, in a I pink silk dress with short sleeveil, rind i,t n turban x itli gold hinge—the latter, of course, out of compliment to his - nountry. ••)tones is power:" even in family circles, a id it was only Miss Picklin who exercised the privilege of full dress at a mid-day dinner. Phemie came to the table dressed as at breakfast, and if she felt at all envious 'of liar sister's pink you n and elbows to match, it did not appear in her pleasant face or sisterly attention. The captain would allow anything, mid do attigt,,i dying, forhis rich daughter; but rlll to dining with his coat on in hot weather, company or no company, he would rath i er— Lr -ot Awl Lott 11. Ito t!...ttli it!' runup*—" though that is not the way he exp}essed it. The purti ran e, therefore (for there was no Mrs. lheklin,) was, in the matter of vit.mine, lather int:011;41110ns, but, as the Turk took it for granted that it was all according to the custom i l l' the country, the carving was achieved by the shirt;slee - veiptapt, and the pudding helped by his bare armed daughter, with no particular commotion in the el mints. Earthquakes do nut invariably follow violations,' of etlywite—particularly where nobody is °Gilded. After the first day, things took their natural course—as near as they were able. II assail was not very quick at . conversation, alwa3s toldng at least five minutes to put together for delivery a nentent o of English: but his laugh 'did not hang fire, nor did his nods and smiles; and where ladies are voluble (as ladies sometimes are,) this paucity I of anninition on the gentleman's part is no prelude to discomlittne. Then Phemie had a very fair smattering of Italian, and that being the business language of the Levant, I lastian took refuge in it whenever brought to ft stand-still in English—a relnge, b .) -tho. w a y, o f w hi c h he seemed inclined to avail' biro-elf oftener than was con -1 sistent with Miss Picklitt's exclusive properly in .his at tention. Rebellions though Hassan might secretly have bacn to this authority over himself, Phentie was no ac complice, natural modesty combining with the long Nat i } it of subserviency to make•her even anticipate the ex actions of (110 heiress: and so Miss Picklin had "Mr. 1 Keui" principally to herself, promenading him through the streets of Salem, sod bestowing her s Tetness upon i him from his morning entrance to his evem g exit;;Phed :, mitt relieving guard very - checi luny, while hcl~t sister dres , sed fur &niter. li was possibly limn being permitted to i converse in Italian during this half hour, that IlessrM i'mado it the only part of the day in which ho talked of i himself and his house on the Bosphorus, but that will i not account also for Phemio's sighing while she listened —never having sighed beforo itt her life, not even while that satno voice was talkin: English, to her sister. Without going into a doscrhaion of the Picklin tea party, at which Hassan was induced to figure in his Oriental costume, while Miss Picklin sat by him on a cushion, turbaned and (problibly) cross-legged, a fa :Sul tana, and without recording other signs satisfactory to tho Saleinitios, that the young Turk had fallen to the scalded heiress— doe. the ospra) to the fish, that take,i etetwity of . unitire." I most come plump to the fact Oita, on the Monday fol lowing (one week after his arrival,) Hessen left Salem unaccompanied by Miss Pteklin. As he had asked for no private interview in the best parlor, and had made his final business arrangements with the captain, so that ho could take passage _from New-Yolk-without returning, some itceple wean Inclined to fancy that Miss Picklitt's demonstrations with regard to him had boo n little pre mature. And "swap people" chose to smile. But it 'was reserved for Miss Picklin to look round it church, in in about one year front this event, and havo her triumph over "senile people;" for she was about to sail for Con. stantinoplo—"sent fur," as the captain rudely expressed it. But I must explain. , The "Simple Susan" came in, heavily freighted with a consignment from the house of Koui to Oicklin & and a letter from the American consul at Constantinople wrapped in the invoice. With - the careful and ornate wording al an official epistle, it stated that Effendi pas son'Koui called on the consul, and partly front the mistrust of his ability to express himself in English on so delicate a subject but more particularly for the sake of approaching the object of his affections with proper de ference and ceremony, he had requested that off Mer to prepare a document conveying a proposal of marriage to the daughter of Captain Picklin. The incomplete state of his mercantile arrangements while at Salem the pre vious year, would account fot his silence on the subject at that time, but ho trusted that his preference had..beten sufficient manifest to the lady of his heart; and as his SATURDAY' MORNING, MORNING, MARC,' 3, .1849. perity in business depended on his remaining at 'standup*, enriching himself only for her sake, ho sure that the singular request appended to his °f i rer Id be taken as a mark of his prudence rather than presumption. The cabin' of the "Simple Susan," tiptain Picklin knew, was engaged on her nest pas oto Constantinople by a party of missionaries, male female, and the request was to the intent that, in o of an acceptance of his offer, the fair daughter Of owner would come out under their sufficient protec b, to be wedded, if she should so please, on the day of arrival ill the "Golden horn." its Miss Picklin had preserved a mysterious silence On subject of "Mr. Keni's" attentions since his depart and as a lady with twenty thousand dollars in her u right is, of course, quite independent of parental ttrol, the captain, after running his.eye hastily thro' 'document, called to the boy who was weighing out a intal of codfish, and bid him wrap the letter in a brown )er and run with it to Miss Picklin—taking it for grant- pro. COll =i od that - She knew more about the matter than ha did, at d i would explain it all when he came home to dinner. In thinking the matter over, on his way home, it oc- et red to old Picklin' that' it Was winded as if he had but one daughter. At uny rate, ho was quite sure that neith er of his daughters was particularly specified,ieither by name or ago. No doubt it was all right, however. The girls undeptood it. "So, it's you, miss!" ho said, n 4 Mists Pie Min looked round faun the turhan'shewass trying on before the glass. "Certainly, pa! Who else should it be:" And' there ended the c'aptain's doubts, for he never again got sight of tho letter, and the tutinoil'of prepara tion for Miss Picklin's voyage, made the house any thing but, a place for getting answers to impertinent quebtioini. Phemio, whom tho lieu's . had 'made silent and thoUghtful, let drop a hint Or two that sho would like to see the letter; but a in, sterions air, and "La, Child, you wouldn't understand it," was check enough for her' timid curiosity, as she plied her kncedlo upon her sister's wedding-dresk with patient submission, Thu preparations for the voyage went on swimming ly. The missionaries were written to, and willingly con sented to chaperon Miss Picklin over the seas, provided her union with a pagan was to ho sanctified with a Christian ceremonial. Miss Picklin replir:d with! virtu ous promptitude that the cake for the wedding was al ready soldered up in a tin case,, and that she was to be Married immediately on tier arrival, under an awning on the brig's deck, and she hoped that four of the mission aries' wives would oblige het by sianding up, as her, bridesmaids. Many square feet of codfish wore unladen from the "Simple Susan" to make room for boxes and bags, and one large case was filially shipped, the contents of which had been shopped for by ludie.4 with families —no book of Oriental travels snaking may allusion to sale of such articles in Constantinople, though, in the natural course of things, they must be wanted as much in Turkey as in Salem. , Tho brig was finally cleared, and lay oft in the stream, and on the evening before the embarkation the mission aries arrived and ;veto invited to a tea-party at the Pick lins. .Miss Picklin had got up a little surprise for her friends with which to closo the party—a "walking rbleau," as she termed it, in which sho should suddenly mike her apparition at one dour, pass °Olin's!. Ow osor.v• and go out at the other, dressedlas a sultana, w WI a mus 4.sos and e.u.. ts‘iwrsis. ,miss meappeared actording ly half an hour before, the breaking up; and, conversa tion rather languishing in her absentee, the! eldest of tho cnissionaries rose to conclude the evening with a prayer, in the midst of which Miss Picklin passed through the room unpreceived—the faces of the company being twil -1 ed to the wall. The next int:Truing at daylight the "Si, nide Susan" put to sea with a fair wind, and thlo dsual hour fur opening the store of Picklin & Co., sho had dropped be low. the horizon. Phomio sat upon the end of the wharf mud watched her till sho was out of sight, and the cap tain walked up And down between two pducheons of rum which stood at the distance of a putt -dock's length from each other, and both tallier and datiglder;were si lent. The captain had a confused thought or M a o besides the grief of parting, and Phentio had feglings;Lquite jas confused, which were not all made up of orro v for the . loss of hersister. Perhaps the reader will be at the trou ble of spell-lug out their riddles while I . try t let him softly to dowathrs catastrophe of my StorY. '• - , 'Without confessing to any ailment w l hatever,le plump . Mimic paled and thinned front thelday of h r sister's departure. Her spirits, too, scorned to keep or flesh and color company, and at the end of a Month the cap- min was told by ono of the good dames of Salem that t tl ho had better ask a physicianwhat aiied her. !it'he doc tor could make nothing out of it except thtit she might be . fretting fOr the loss of her sister, and he recommended a change ascetic and climate. That day, Captain Brown, au old mato of Isaiah's, dropped in to eat l a family dinner and say good-by, as he was about Elailig , in rho new schooner Nancy for the Black Sea 'his wife for his only passenger. Of eourso he would be obliged to drop anch or at Constantinople, to wait for a fair wi l ed' up the BoS piton's, and part of his errand was to offer to take letters and nicknaihorits to Mrs. Keui. Old Picklin put,the two things together, and over their glees of wine he proposed to Brown to take Phernie with Mrs. Brown to Cinistan tinople, leave them both there on a visit to Mrs. Koui, till „the return of the Nancy from I the Black Sea, and then re-embark them for Salem. Phemie came into the room just as they were touching glasses on the agree-. ment:and when the trip was proposed to her she first colored violently, then grew polo and burst into tears; hut consented_ to go. And, with such preparations as she could:make that evening, she was quits ready at the appointed hour, and was of with thij land-breeze the neu. morning ; taking leave:off nobody bin her father. At this time the old man wiped his eyes 'very often before the the _departing vessel was "hull doWn," and was heartily sorry ho had let Phetnie go without a great many pres ents and a great many m i re kissers.' ' A fine, breezy monde at - Constantinople!: Rapidly down the Bosphorus shcit the calque of Hass an Keui, bearing its master front his country-house at Donna-batchi to his ware-houses at Galata. Just before the sharp prow rounded away toward rho Golden Horn, the merchant motioned to the caikjie to rest upon their oars, and, standing erect in the slender craft, he strained his gaze long and with anxious earnestness toward the sea of Marmora. Not a sail was to be seen coming from 1 the west, except a man-of-war with a crescent flag at the peak, lying off toward Scutari from Seraglio Point, and with a sigh that carried the cloud off his brow, Hassan' gayly squatted once more to his cushions, and the caiquo sped merrily on. In and out, among the vessels at an chor, the airy bark threaded her way with the dexterous swiftness of a bird, when suddenly a cable rose beneath her and lifted her half out of the water, A vessel needy arrived *as hauling in to a close anchorage, arid they had creased her hawser as it rose to the surface. ;Pitched headlong into the lap of the nearest caikji, the Turk's Snowy turban fell into the water and "witi carried by the eddy under the stern of the vessel rounding to, and as the calque was driven backward to regain it, the bare headed owner sank back aghast— i —Stmet.Onsas or SA• LEM staring him in the face in golden capitals. "Ph! Mr. Keui! how die you do!" cried a well-ra membered voice. as ho raised himself to fond Dinky the rudder of the brig. And there sN eteiod within two feet of hie Picklin in her bridal veil, waiting below ONVTARZO. in expectant modesty and though surprised by his peep lute the cabin windot •s, * excusing it as a natural impa tience in a bridegroo'n coming to his bride. The captain of tIM .usan. meantime, had looked over the tafferel and recog sized his old passenger, and Hass an, who would have! ivon a cargo of opium for an hour_ to mimes: hintseif - mounted the ladder which was thrown out to him / at d stopped from the gangway into Miss Picklin's arms! Sho bed rushed up to receive him, dressed in her muslin kirtle mid satin trowsers, though. with her dramatic sense of Propriety, sho had intended to remain helow till summoned to the bridal.— The captain, of course..kopt back froM delicacy, but the missionaries stood in a Cluster gazing Ori tins hnppy meet ing and tho suilorslooked over their Shoulders as they heaved at the windlass. Air Miss Picklin afterward re marked, "it would have been a tableau rirent if the deck had not been so very dirty!" • Nassau' wind his eyes, for ho had replaced his wet turban on his head, but what, with his oscapo from drown ing, and what with his'eurpriso and embarrassment (for he bad a difficult part to play, as the reader will presently understand), he had lost all memory of his liitle stocll of English. Miss Pieklitt dreW bin/ gently by tt o hand to the gunner -deck, where. under an mim i ing inged with' . l curtains partly drawn, stood a table vqth a loaf of !wad ding-cake upon it. and a bottle of Winn and a bible. l' She 'noddeil to the Rev. 'Mr. Griffin, wholook hold of a chair and turned it round, and placing it ogainst his legs with the back toward hin, look steadfastly at the happy couple. "Good morning— good night—you sister—ospeta per tuner' di JAW" cried the bewildered 'Hassan. giving ut terance to all the English he could remember, and seiz ing the bride by thei rain. r "These ladies are; my bridesmaids," said Miss Picklin, pointing to the initodonaries' wives' who stood by in their bonnets and shawls. "Vilma say he expected my sister would comae as my bridesmaid!" she added, turning to Mr. Griffin to explain the outbreak as sho understood it. Hassan heat his hand upim hre is iohend, walked twice up and down the guarte - r-deck, looked around over the Golden Horn as if in seal ch of nn interpreter to his feel ings, and finally welked up to Miss 'Picklin with n look of calm resignation, undaddressed to her and to the Rev. Mr. Griffin a appeCh of three minutes, in Milian. At the close of it ho Made a' very ceremonious! salaam, and ' offered his hand to l the bride; and, as no one present un den•tood a syllable of what he had intended to convey in his address, it vrat received as probably a .welcome to Turkey, or perhapitt formal repetition of his offer of heart and hand. t any rate, Miss Picklin took it to be high time to blush and take oft' her glove. and the Rev. Mr. Griffin then bent across the hack of the chair. joined their hands and went through the ceremony. ring and all. The ladies'eanne up.; ono ohm-another, and kissed du:bride, Mid 'the 'gentlemen shook hands with Hassan, who received their good wishes with a curious look of un happy resignatiOn, and after cutting the cake on per mitting the bride to retire fur a moment to calm It r feel ings and put on her bonnet, the bridegroom Made rather it peremptory movement , of departure, and the hippy couplir,tvent elfin the coigne toward Dohria.batchi amid muchrwavin i g of ,htandkerchiefit . from the imissionaries, and hurrahs frons - ihe-sabant hands of the ,Simplo Susan. sAinr now. Wore giving limo retitle!. a , trahalation of the smelt of Hassan - It - Mir OlVidiliiig, we murit t go back 14 shrine little evoistaitioli had taken place aro month previously at con. tnntinople. The Nancy orri i •ed off Seraglio Point after a very re markable passnge, having still on her quarter the north west breeze wide!' had stuck to her liko a bloclhomul.l ever since leaving the limber of Salem. She had brought it with her to Cot stand nople, indeed, for twenty or thirty vessels which hat been long waiting a•faVorable wind to ' encounter the ad getting cant ut of the BoSphorus, were loosing sails and getting under way.4lnd the pilot, know - - Mg that the destination of the Nancy was also to tko Blaek Sea, strongly dissuaded Captain Brown from drop pine anchor itt llie, Horn, with a chance of losing the good hick, and lying, perhaps a mouth, wind-bound in limber. Understanding that the captain's only object in stopping was to leave the two ladies with Kett' the opium me:chum, the pilot, who knew his residence at Dolinn. hatchi, inn& signal' fur a coigne, and kept tqi the Bus. photons. Arriving opposite OM little village of which I lassan's house was one of the chie l f ornaments, the ladies were lowered into the calque mid sent ashore—expett• ling, of course, to he received with open arms by Mrs. Keui—and then, spre'ading all her canvas, the swift lit tle schooner sped qn her way to Trebisond. I las - satt sat in the little pa vilitin aids house which look ed out on the Bosphorus, eating his pillow, for it was the noon of n holiday, and Ito had not been! that morning to Galata. Recognizing at once the sweet face of Mimic Or; the caigue came near the shore, he flew to meet her, siipposing that the "Simple Susan" had arrived, and that the lady of his love had chosen to come and seek hi tn.— The reader trill understood, of course, that titer was no . • "A! rs. Keui." And now to shorten my story. Mrs. Brown and ninnies were in Hassesn's own house, with no other acquaintance or protector on that side of the world, and there was no possibility of escaping a true eXplanation. Tho mistake lees explained, and explained to lirowfi's satisfaction. Phensie was the "daughter" of Captain Picklin to whom the oll'er was transmitted, and as, by blessed hick Oho Nancy had outsailed tho "f_iimple Susan, Providence seemed to have chosen to set ; right, for once, the tr4rerse of true love. The English embas sy was at liurgU il rln, only six miles above, on th - i Bos phorus, and II assa and his mother end sisters, at d Mrs. Brown' and Pheinie were soon on their way thi s ter in swift coignes, and the happy couple were wedded by the English chaplain. , The arrival of the Simple Susan was Of course looked for, by both Hassan and his bride, with no little dismay. She had met -with contrary winds on tho Atlantic Mid had been caught in the Archipelago by a Lev:lnter, and lions the d image Of the last, she had been obl i ged to come to anchor a the little island of Pares and sepair. This had been a job of six weeks, and meantime the Nancy had given them tho go-bk and reached Constantinople. l,l Hassan was daily ob tho look-out for the brig ifs his trips to town, and on the morning of her arrival, his mind being put at ease for the day by his glanco toward the sea of Marmora, the stumbling so suddenly and so unprepared on the object of his dread, completely bewild ered and minervisd him. Through all his confusion, how ever, and all the awkwardness of his situation, there ran a feeling of self-condemnation. r i, well as pity for- Miss Picklin: and this had driven him to the catastrophe de scribed above: Ho felt that he owed her - some repara - - tion, and as the religion in Which he was educated did not forbid a plurality of wives, odd there was no know ing but possiblv she night be inclined to "do in TUrkey as Turkeys dii," he felt it incumbent on himself to state the Ilia of hiA l l previous marriage, end than off; her the privilege of becoming Mrs.-iceui N 0.2, if she chose to accept. As he had no English at his command, he sta ted his dilemtna and made hisofler in the best language he had--ltalietn—and with the results the reader has been made aequainted. • 1 Of the return paSsage of Miss Pielpin, formerlyi Mrs, Kent. under tho charge of Captain and Mm. Brown, in the schooner ,Nancy. 1 have never learned the particu lars. She arrived at Salem in very good health. hdtr over, GM' has since been distinguished piineipally by her sympathy for widows—based on whet. I cannot Very pos itively say. - ,Sho resides at present in Salem with her " " I father, Captain Picklin, who is still the,cons house of Ketn, having' made one voyage out children of-his daughter Phemie and strengtl candle connection. His otd ago is creeping distinguished by anything except the little m reading the letters from his eon-in-law at I, dred times, and theu wafering them up over of his cuunting-room—in doubt, npparontly, rightly Understands the-Contents. THE PATENT RAG.CIitIVE Ix a village not,many ,hundroil miles frot there is establishud a paper mill, which att • • tsharo of attontion from the ,curious, and e visit, as all aro of course anxious to eco tl converting old rags into paper'. It soinotit that those crowds of • admirers of the marvel . among thoienumber some of those real rr. kind of fellows who like to know sonietbin well as (acct, which may be illustrated by h dialogue:— "I say, strangor, how do you get thorn la enough for making paper?" "Wu hSvel mon omployod to chow thorn, a the paper man. "To what! to chew , them; sir?" "Yes, to chew theM, to bo sure—did ybu l of chewing rags to intilte papiir?" "No, I never did, aiul would like tolinow ybu give, case I got a little the best set of toe d d see," said the green'un, grinning, pas , same 'time, in' the i war of exhibition, with made the jesting preritter (rake, lest the turn upon hiinself in the fOrm of a persona' •"I see. I, see," replied he of the paper mil b i ek; 6.1 never saw a bettor set of teeth for th Well, we give experienced hatids $1,50 pc now beginners we give sl,oo—do you think ko the business, sir?" "Yi.s, air-rue, and the wages too!" replied with (Wight. "Very well, sir, you may set in now for, a n t the expiration of that, we no doubt wilaa'si ges. Hero, you may commence at this"—h i l l old stuldlo blanket to his much delighted appi took and sat down to his task, with as much) as an epicure would to a well roasted piece of "1 say, old yard, do you think that 'ar bi stand Inc any of my time at all—why I could 1 smash up, and swallow it, before you coult time the sun sots by Elton's 'almanac." - tie set to work like a juvenile steam engine, tooth grinding as if they wore millstones. - the but desperately intent on earning good Ur though tho labor was decidedly bad living. , V rarity of a Bengal tiger, and Iqpirit worthy cacao. the martyr to\ the progress of science cm taak. wondering beyond expression, in his how 'many hands; or rather how many eel took to do tho chewing ofthid' "tarnation bi it was in vain that the heavy jaws waggefl an; ed i tooth crushed. the pile of chewed rags d i to grow very fast; and f tuld to the .machtne's rising feelings of indignation, a ruwd began to gather round to witness the singular spec mete ;of a human 4pposition to the rag breakers, shakin the Wholo building from itioth . departinent: :' ' '' ; I . • 1 • - ' "What in 'tarn:Rion at you l gapin it?" at last exclsffna. edthe'rag-ehesier throiigh a mouthful of rags iu a state of mastication. "Drat ye, that' is fifty rag spilin' ma- Chines like me up stairs, all in a bunch—why don't you ,o up and see them! The crowd-looked very much delighted and expressed totilsolve4 highly pleased %vitt' his performance **l know that I can't go it like titer fellers up P tears, for my,grinders ain't used to it yet; besides, I don't bit lice° horse blankets is good to ;,tart on; but 1 tell you strangers, when it comes vittals, or tebaker, that." The fun hewin to rise, and with it the rag-ehewer's in dignation. "See here, stranger." ho bellowed. spitting mill his last attempt, and hollowing at his emproyer, who hadjust appeaietl—*'blamed to (damnation, if Pm gel% to sit here and be laughed at in this ere way—if you don' put me up stairs among the rest of rpm, I won't chew u another blanket, dated if I dor, • yhatl",exclaimed the employer. with a sober taco and vil.r),indginantly, "is that all ,you'iegot chewed up And Wet, too, by thundtir? Get out of this—you'll neve. do fa this business in tin) world. There's a blanket ru hied to all eternity, toil: for yhu'i%3 wet every mouth ful, and how can we make dry paper out of wet rags? / . .lonie, move 'outsell in a hurry." Tie victim did not await a second invitation, but wen t MT in all spei d for ( fear he bhould be called upon to pa for the blanket, hilly determined hereafter to stick to bill lawful busines:, and let paper mills idone. ILT Pnrstor lido Box te twee. has granted a pension to t widow with litio children wiltose catio is an interestin• one. Sho is tl'r 1 . 9t10w of Ilio only man in tho Fusile.r regiment who vas net killed in the retreat from Moseou: One day Captain Jumontier came to announce to Nap , - loon the arrival of Marshal Ney and his corps. Natmleo ordered him te rejoin his regiment.i An hour or two a - terwards, Napoleon perceived Captain Jmnontier stan - Mg near a soldier, whoic singular dress.attracted the Emperor's noice; his head was covered with a sort of Cossack bonn t, and instead of his uniform, a tom vest, 1 which Reared covered his shoulders . Tho captain and the soldier w ro marching steadily onward. Napoleo called to him in a tone of itnpationeo and ill-lattno , "What are v I doing there? liVlly have you not erjoi • 1 1 ed your regiment, and token your place at Ili& head your compant?" "Sire, I liatenot lost an instant in obeying your o ders." "What. do "Sire, I r an "Your regi YeS, Sir: Guard." . "But weer, Then a ho ! "Present, Tito voice the widow sti this soldier. I•ou s'ay7 You don't understand me." . with my regituont." intent?" . he regiment of Fusileers of_ the Imper 12ZEIM BO Vu CO nty Emperor!" ?vas that of the isoldier near inmontier; nid iccored tit Louis Napoleon, is the widow of .6•L.. THE Bl.llr. DEVILS. to beliofre a merry companion tho happies world and envy him, perhaps, his ugh apirils; but men have hours of - molancho y sink, and a gloom comes over them We aro ai fellow in thi heartland niq when th 4 Bp? deeper and arker than is over known to their leis ex i / I table comp jowl.' A man may ho cheerful on pa per though he has a heavy heart. and - brilliant in comps ry though infliiently wretched when left to commune will his own soil. The extreme of high and low spir; , . which occur in die same person qt different times, r happily illustrated in the following, related by Dr. Rt s "A physician in One .of the cities in Italy was consu to by a gentleman who was much distressed by a parex) 4 of the inter t initting state a hypochondriacism. He nd is oil the mel ncholy man to seek relief in convivialc m pony, and recommended to him in particular to Sad o . a eelebnateil wit, by the name of Cardina, who kop the table. in - the city, to wh i ch he was invited, in a of laughte4 and tb upend as' much limo with him as ... Bible." "A l ta.! sir." said the patient with a heavy s g. 'I am that leardina." 1 eo of the see the tho mer hitn, uu menia of a bun fireplace other he In the azure arch of Ileayen, Stan are keepingtvritett tomight. Fleecy clouds, by light winds driven, Sailing on their silvery lightf • . And I think, ae far in ether I behold the inoon' great shield!, They ore flowers thb angels meat!' her, Culled from earth's deserted field. • flouers that once have loved to linger In the world of hionan love. , Touched by death's decaying finger For a better life above; - OW ye atty.)! ye rays of Oar); ;. , Gem lights in the glittering dog i te: Could ye not relate a story 0 the spirits gathered !ionic; hi" place, Ito small := 'mewls of happen. . contain Ye have teen life's t%eatled sailor Sink inSientti 'the ritortn-plonised Hutto, Do your beams grow never paler) Arc not dews the tears ye ram? When my 'dearest hopes are broken, Awl my world ha drirkiless Ilea, f Still shine o'er true or a token Of the land 'beyond the skies. _ 0 er-of-fact o , CAll9q as o following rags fine 111" replied I remor»ber meeting this sketch in the Course of my I ewepaper experienca, several year. a l ga; it has been I c edited to various papers, and I kno w not to whom it blelongs; but it is most excellently done, full of intereal. n l ncl I only wish' the precept of it was a little , more faith ? iliable.- .t L A young lady of rare mentelondowments and oxtracv limy' personal attraction, had five suitors equally asidn us in, their attentions. Unable to •decide upon which l ho would bestow her hand, she gave them notice to call upon her ata certain hour on a stated day, and each abate his claims in the presence.of the other.. At the appoin ied time, the lovers arrived. Four of them were confi- • ever hear what wages th von ever itig at the fury that ko should EMI steppirig butane's. duy, and ou would lent of success, but the fifth had a downcast look, and ighed When he behold the object of his admiration. the other, "Gentleman," said sho„ you-have honored me with ho proposals of marriage. I have, as yet, neither ro• used nor accepted any of you. 1 now desire. that each .iontli, and se your wet • • nistling nn icant, who an y ; froid [, ,, beef. Ittititet 'chew it al) 11 ton what f you will state your claims to my hand, in order that may knoW upon what grounds 1 May be justified in be• Lowing it." A answered as follows: "If you marry mo you shall live in a splendid house. mave servants and carriages at your eotnmantl, and en-- boy all the luxuries of fashionable life. I amrich." B spoke next:— "My rival has said very. truly that ho is rich, and ha Went you a strong inducement;, but I am of noble do .cent. My grandfather was a duke; and, although not wealthy, I am of a family, `with whom en alliance would be considered an honor, by the wealthiest heiress of the land." C stated his claim thos:—. his heavy duet Wages,tllying 4 Vith the vo l'of a better intintiell hie own mind,, of teeth it "I am a gentleman and have now i reputation that old• or persons envied. Next yea i r I shall run for Congress. and I have no doubt of success. By marrying me your name will ho handed down to posterity." D twisted his moustache with the air of an exquisite. and said:— I mill." But tl i the sharp id not seem "Angelic creature! 'Pon my soul I think you have already made up your mind in my favor. You know how i ineffably lam admired. Who is the most fashion able dresiet in town? Who rides the finest horses? Who frequents the most fashionable pla4s? Who is a better judgo of the opera? !tumor nays D r ibt4 'pon honor, I'm too modest to insist upon it." When it came to 8•d time to speak, there was a palm. All eyes were turnel towards him: Poor fellow: he was dr adfullv embarrassed. "lA' lt II," said Cie beauty; "what say you, Mr. E?" "Al. s," was the reply. "I yield to these gentleman.— They I eve the advantage of me in every respont."--. And h. took uo his hat to leave. Sto )." tilt, lady. "make, your atatemeat, no mat- i ter hot humble maybe your claims." "} kl poor—" sum "L am unknown to the world—' "I have meithsr the taste nor the moans to dress fesh. ignobly. I work - for my liveliboodi It is hardly possible that i can make-you happy, for I can 'oiler you none of the inducements held out by my rivals." "I am to judge of that, sir; what next?" I "Nothing, only, I love- you, and I take a newspaper." At this, Messrs. A, R, c and D burst into a loud laugh, and exclaimed in one voice—,"So do we'—l love you to; distraction—l take four papers! ha! ha! ha!" ,--"'- i "Silence," said tho lady, "in one month you all shalll hear my answer. You may all withdraw." - in- • ' I At the end of tho month the five suitors again appear ed. Tinning to each in succession, the lady tints am swered: • , _ -"Riches are not productive of happiness. Boasted nobility of blood is the pools* of all rebommendations.-.- Fame is fleeting, and he 'hat has but the outward garb of a gentleman is to be pit ed. I have taken the trouble to find out the n +lnes of th newspapers for, which you all subs2ribo, and 1-have strortained that none of you. who have boasted of wealth, nobility, fame or fashion. lure paid ere printer. Now, gentlemen, this is dishonest. I cannot think of marrying a man who would be guilty of each an act. I have learned that E not only subscrib es for a`paper, het pays the printer in ruiraned. There fore, I say ho is the man. I givo him my hand. with the full conviction that he is and every way calculatad to f make me happy." Need wo extend our narrative? The disappointed gentlemen disappeardd quite suddenly, and the lucky suitor was united to the object of-his devotion and, in • few years, , by honesty and industry, became not only • distinguished, but a wealthy man, and esteemed by all who knew him. Young men. lie paid the printer. la I there no moral in this.—Odd re/low. .. ). IFT.Ono of those fussy, inquinitivos, meddlesome poke - your-nose-into-every-body's business little fellows, - of whom wo 'sometimes read, took a sent near us, in the. Baltimore car, on Tuesday evening. . ffo made himself Igone rally entertaining for an hour, with hie droll remarks and funny questions, when an old womafi Canso in; whereupon our little fellow started toftis feet, and iriquii ed: • • "Du yon live hereabouts, madam?" t ''No. sir." t "On a visit, I presume?" , "No, sir." , "No? Come, now, that's queer." - "No, Itaint,lcome down to attend a burying." , ...13h, oh, yes; a funeral—somebody dead„eb?" , "Well, commonly. we don bury folks down here un • lee. they are dead," drily replied the old lady. The fussy gentleman began to whistle the finals to a "Lucia," and talked hut tittle during the remainder of • the journey:--Phil. City hem ID - Jones rind Jenkins were riding along in a buggy. when they passed a Gold in which a groat number of crows were creating "noise ant) confusion." "That looks to me" said lionos "like a dolored mus ' t convention." • I "Well" replied Jenkins, "from my knowledge of Crete Sr mangy, I should set it down as merely as= ens." 3- The party stopped to water their homes sf the tavern at h, the next cross roads, but there's ne record that Jenkins paid any bill. NUMBER 42. TAE STARS. DV C. C. VAN zalityr A TRUE WOMAN. EMI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers