TERMS OF TUB " AMERICAN." II. B. MA8SEK, JOSEPH EIsELY. ? PllBLISHF. ARB S PHOraiETOKS. . It. n.1SSRH, EMtor, Office in Centre Alley, in the rem- of It. D. Mas ser's Slore. THE" AM eTuiI" hTpublished every Satur day at TWO DOLLARS per annum to be paid half yeurly in advance. No paper discontin ued till all arrrarugea are paid. No subscriptions received for a less period than six mouths. All cominunicationa or letters on business relating to the office, to insure alU'lilion, tniiM he POST PAID. You Itrmrmlirr U Don't You I py TIIOS. 11 A Y.N ES rtAII.Y. You remember the time when I first sought your home, When a smile, not a word was the summons to comp, When you called me a friend, till you found, with surprise, That our friendship turned out to he love in dis- old. SUNBUffiY AMERICAN. AND SHAMOKIN JOURNAL; Absolute acquiescence in the decision of the majority, the vital principle of Republics, from which there is no appeal but to force, the vital principle and immediate parent of despotism. Jarrnnsoit. II)' Master & Elsclj. Siiiiburr, IVorllnuiiborlniitl Co. Vi. Saturday, June 13, IK 1 1. Tol. IXo. .IS M hole No, lft 4. MOBSE'S MAOXKTIC TKI.KOIt A PH. Tho successful illustrations of Professor Morse's Magnetic Telegraph, during the sit tings df the Baltimore Conventions, and the ra pidity with which questions were sent to Wash ington and answers returned, a distance of for ty miles, have awakened curiosity as to the nature of the invention, and the applications to which it may be directed. Scientific persons understand perfectly the tnoilus operandi, but the great mass only witness its wonderful ef fects, without comprehending tho manner by which they have been brought about The in vention may not bo considered original with Professor Morse ; tho principle, it is true, is But the Professor has been many years guise. You remember it don't yu ? You will think of it won't you ? Yes, yes, of all this remembrance will last, Long after the present fades into the past, employed in bringing to perfection the applica tion of the principle to the purpose under con sideration. Fulton lost no reputation because the steam engine liod been invented before he applied it to the propelling of bouts, and for na- Yon remember the grief that grew lighter when , tional nnd mercantile- objects, this rapid trans sllilre(l; i mission of questions and answers may be spc- vviin me uuss, you ren.emuer, i-ou.u u..s.u u- c:b11v .,sflfll, Trll ;, . ,- , compared , inmrovenienl likn tlm ttnnm mminn . l,;l. ., You remember how fond was my earlier vow ? Not fonder than that which I breathe to thee now. You remember it don't yon ? You will think of it won't you ? Yes, yes, of all this the remembrance will last, Long after the present fades into the past. Railway Actihents. The annual report of the officers of the railway department of the lnard of trade, which has just made its appear ance, with a copious appendix uf statistical mat ter, furnishes a beautiful illustration of the safe be applied to a great variety of useful objects Rnd purposes, manufacturing and locomotive. The principle of this telegraph is the same pre cisely as the electric or galvanic machine. Many of our readers have surrounded the ma chine in the museums, each holding on the chain, and each receiving n jtortion d( the shock from the spaik. The spark, running with the rapidity of lightning, may extend a long the wire thousands of miles around the with some of the departments, before- adjourn ment. Wo add tho following from the Balti more Sun. This is proverbially the lion of the day, and its performances have won for the inventor much applause. Its practicability and useful ness have been fully tested. No sooner will the country hear of it than they will demand its extensive introduction. It is a happy cir cumstance that with the latest improvements it is erected with little expenditure ; even a single wire will answer for communication it tho ground is used for half the circuit this is nil that is now used between Washington and Baltimore. It is well, however, to put up two wires, to insure n circuit, if one wire should be injured. The whole expense of this Telegraph is within $'200 per mile, exclusive of the pa tent. The question crises, why not make- immedi ately on appropriation to extend tho Telegraph during the summer el least to New York, and thus sec how far (it may be added, how trium phantly) it would sustain itself without aid from the Treasury ; aflbrding Government and in dividuals the opportunity of making the termi ni and intermediate locations, places of con stant communication. It is said that a few hands will put up easily one mile of Telegraph per day several gangs could, if required, com plete the Telegraph to New York in sixty or ninety days. Who would hesitate to expend .isiO.lHHJ for this laud ihlc object, and this sum is fully adequate I Railroad companies seem willing to allow the privileges of setting posts From the Rochester Democrat. TMK Olltb WITH TIIK TIX TAlt.. Some seventeen years ago, I was a 'prentice boy' in the then city of mud, now the goodly city of Rochester. The business of which I 'vas obtaining knowledge, was conducted upon Ex change street, though I biardetl in one of the streets in the western part of the city. In roitiij to mv tea, I was in tho habit of meeting almost every evening, for many weeks in succession, a small young well dressed and good looking girl, with n tin pail in Iter hanJ. I soon afterward took my leave of Mr. and Mr. II. and their interesting and happy family ; and not n day since then, has my mind boon without its remembrance of THE dlRLAM) 1 1 nn TIN PAIL. MY I.A.5T I.UVK AFFAIR. I beliovu the admission is general ; that no boy passes his nineteenth year without having experienced, at least one tender and 'eternal,' (of course) passion, and that very few girls gel fair ly through their sixteenth year scatheless of a romantic love. The tender sentiments is pecu At length my curiosity became excited, and I ywf () lccnSi B( jsJ something 1,C the mumps mid ineuscls it comes only once in a lifetime. Just as I was entering the laat half of my nine teenth year, (it matters not how long ago that wn) and beginning to think of whiskers, tobac co and other modern cvidencce of manhood, I fell desparately in love. I knew at the time that it was the maddest thing in tho world to voluntarily yield myself up to a passion which is very cleverly caricatured by French cooks, when they put a live fowl before a slow fire am) roast it gradually, for the purpose of swel ting the heart ; but show me a youth who lis tens to reH9.ni, if he had any when his head and other 'rixins' ore in a broil of tenderness, resolved to ascertain if possible, the daily cr rand of the girl. Having met her the follow ing evening, I tuned upon my heel and fol lowed her at a distance that would not ex cite suspicion in any one. I at length stw her enter u small shoemaker's shop on South St. Paul street. 1 subsequently learned that the shop was owned by an industrious young man, and an excellent mechanic, and that he was the girl's husband ! Ho had been married a few months, and possessing no other capital than a good trade, n pond nninc nnd a robust constitution, had rosolved to economize in the orticlc ol rent, by hiring a house in the suburbs of the city. His breakfast was always ready for him, by dayhrcok, and taking his dinner devotion and romances, and I confess that I was world if necessary and the great ingenuity of near their tracks, oud might in return have the ty of railroads under good management. J")u. 1 the present improvement ia tho application of j benefit of placing on the same posts a wire for ring last year, S 1,000,000 persons have been carried an average distance ot 15 miles each, and out of them only one passenger has lost his life, namely on the North Midland Railway, on the PJth of January, IS 13. Tho state of the accidents for the last four years stands thus. Kill tl. 140, last five months of l 11, for the year, il-l 1-1' li:j, B It appears that ninety-four and Injured. 131 i -11 electricity to the rapid conveyance of intelli- their private use. genco. Colt's submarine battery is on the same And would not tho superintendence of this principle. A copper retort of powder is float- work, under the general direction of Professor ed under a ship's bottom, from which a covered Morse.be well performed by officers of the army, wire is appended, and the powder ignited at some of whom need active service, which any distance by galvanism. The turningof the would cost the government nothing additional glass plate or cylinder in an electric machine to the present pay. May there not be danger produces c.cctricity, which, liko air or water, in delay ! The people will have a Telegraph seeks to establish on equilibrium. The inven- If the Government refuses to establish it, this tionofthe galvanic battery by the immersion dangerous monopoly may fall into the hands of ot different metallic plates in acid produces e- those who will not only make cxhorbitant de half miles 'ectricity as by friction, and this is the simple mands upon the Treasury, but upon the people of railway were inspected and opened during UHU raPlu "gemot communication. One ofthe Ought not the Government to secure, belore it connecting wires is always immersed m a cup is too late, the right at least to use the mveri- of mercury, into which other wire is dipped lion so far as they found it expedient! This whenever a stream of electricity is lobe sent privilege would shield them and the people also a late number of the New Orleans Bee. Com- j along the entire line. The agency is perfectly from an cxhorbitant tax (or communication of ment is unnecessary : I understood, but the method of uniting or ab- I important news. A single instance of T A bull right between a ferocious bull and a , brevniting, of sending a message by mere lines graphic despatch is given. The vote for Polk, number of dogs, will take placeon Sunday next, or dots, is a species of handwriting novel in as nominee tor the Presidency, by the Bulti ot o'clock P. M. on the other side of the ri- application and in whicii there is grcut merit I more Convention, was sent to Washington, 1 13. English paper, We clip the following advertisement from (a) . ,1.) (c) . . Id) (e) . if) . (s:.i) tlo (iv (k) tl) (in) (n) to) . (P . . . iq) -to . . . (s.) . . . 0) (u) . . -iv) . . . wi . ix) . M.Mi;rtAi.s. ver at Algiers, opposite Capal street. After the j and ingenuity. bull fight, a tight will take place between a j The following is the Alphabet used : bear and some dogs. 1 he whole to conclude) by a combat between an oss and several dogs, j Amateurs bringing dogs to participate in llie j fight will he admitted gratis. 1 Admittance Boxes 50 cents ; Pit 30 cents. The spectacle will be repeated every Sun cay, weather permitting. PEPE LLULLA. A Maukki-Man. A convict has escaped from New South Wales, and is thought to be now in 1jinlon, whose outer skin is a picture show, being emblazoned w ith figures of Adam and Eve, tree am! serpent, B. S. T. S., a bust of a man, mermaid, halt-moon, ship, George and the Dragon, man, birds, heart and darts. Hope and anchor, T. crown and flags on the left arm; seven dots between the finger and thumb of the left, man and glass on the back of the letl hand, ring pricked on the middle finger of the lell hand, two pugilists on the centre of the chest. Ilia name is True-love Smith, and he is about twenty-four years of age. He was tried at Cam bridge on the 15th of May, lH), and sonten- when three cheers were given for him, and three more for the Telegraph and Mr. Morse, and all this scut to Baltimore and exhibited in writing to the Convention, before the presiding olliccr announced the official result of the bal loting to the Convention. Tho distance tra versed was eighty miles, besides about half a mile between the terminus ofthe Telegraph and the place of the Convention. The velocity of j the Telegraph is, at tho lowest computation, two hundred thousand miles per second. with him, he saved the hour each day, which most persons spend in going to, and returning from that meal. Many economists would have been satisfied with the saving of as much time as this bet ween the rising and going down ol tin; sun ; but not so with the young shoemaker, lie also wished to save the hour devoted to ten and therefore had that meal daily taken to him by his pretty wile. This arrangement enabled him to spend the whole day and so much of the evening as he choose in the shop. The industrious habits ofthe shoemaker were soon discovered, and met with a due rewind. Customers soon flocked in upor. him, and he was obliged not only to rent a larger shop, but to employ an additional number of workmen But the increase of business did not wean him from the plan he had early adopted ol saving his time his third meal still having been taken to him by his wife in the little tin p.iil About this time I left the city, and did not return for some twelve years. 1 had not, how ever, forgotten the shoemaker, hav ing from my first knowledge of him, discovered the germ of success in his manner of life. I visitc.il the spot ' where his old shop had stood, but it had given place to a new brick block. In vain I looked about for his sign it was nowhere to ho seen I was at length informed by a Inend, that two years previously he had removed to Ohio. "Do vou know anvllim" ot h:s circuinstan ccs ? I inquired. "I do. In the first place he took to Ohio a Unit rive thousand dollars in cash, from three thousand of which invested in real t state near Cincinnati, he has alroodv realized three tunes that amount. The other two he put uitoa puk establishment and that sum hasjirl.led linn a lame profit. But even had he not resorted to speculation," added my trieiul, "he could not but have suseecded in life, so ihoroie-h wen his business habits, and especially as those hub its were seconded by an industrious little wife. I have recently returned from a visit to Ohio and have again seen the shoemaker and hi wife. He is now in the prime ot life and pos ccd to transportation for life itself in his tenth i ami uv i,0 combination ot these two, all the vear. We do not, well 6ec how such a mark- i cd character could long escape detection. The Moum.nu Adveutinkr. During the last fitly years the 'Morning Advertiser' has distributed from its profits to charitable purpo ses no less a sum than tteo hundred and thir. ty-tico thousand, six hundrtd and sixty pounds ; a fuct unparalleled in the history of tho press of this or any other country. We bay so. Cattcrpillars enicrgo from chrysalis and become butterflies ; but when our butterfly girls get married, they go into tho ehrvsalis state, and become catternillars. Old bachelors are mere grubwornib tho same to day they were yesterday, and will be the 6amc to-morrow they are to-day. Varieties. The Good Old Times. 1MI. Paid 1 Is. fid., the expense of bringing a here tic from London ; and lor one and a halt load of wood to burn him, 2i.; for gunpowder, Id.; audastakc and staple, 8d.-AVcorc of the Corporation of Canturbury. An eccentric divine, in speaking of the ava ricious and grasping disposition of man, remark- cj "Jf t farmer possessed the whole world, he would want a little piece of Venus lor a potato patch." Bear L'p. Never cry for spilt milk. If you have done wrong, or made a miscalculation, be more careful in future. You have taken a leap in the dark, and plunged in the middle of the ditch. Fool that you are to remain. Out with you like a man. To lament that you were in- g0SM,8 ni, Buq!e fortune and nil unsullied repu considerate and hasty will not help you out, or ; atj for probity. Never having had any per make your situation more comlortable. Call OIK, I acquaint-ince with him, I inquired hiiuout 1 he operator lias betore him the two cMrc- (or help, and people will laugh ot you as they a,i itro,iCl.d mvsell as a Kiahest.-nmi. This initios ofthe wire traversed by the electric flu- pase on. The only course for you is to gel out : wa iltc j ,lC 0li rnonii, and I very cheer in. "Uy bringing tin: wires m contact, auu in- of your situation the best way you can, ami J ,-uly 0,.L.,.,,t,.,j invitation to lake tea wiili stantly separating them, a Hot is mane ; ny u,cn you are out say as little about the matter ; ,lh)i Improving a moment of silence at the la keeping them in contact tor a little tuiio, a iiusn; as possible. 1 he reason why thousands pr rish on the threshold of life, is because they are not philosophers enough to hear Willi magnanimity the little trials and perplexities which by care lessness and indiscretion, they have brought upon themselves. They go about from one to another, and relate their mishaps, when they should wear a bright face and keep up good words in the lungunge, and all the numerals, may bo written and read." Communication by telegraphs is a very old invention. Wc find the remains of old lowers all over Europe and on the sea coasts, which in ancient times, were used as modes uf rapid intelligence, and communication telegraphs spirits, and expect bi tter luck in future. There on shore, and telegraphic signals and commu- ncVcr lived a man who never saw a dark day, nications amoni; ship of war of .ho same nation, iid whoso path was not at tunes tilled will .i are now in general use. Lines of telegraphs thorns, from IiOiidon and Paris to the naval citations and Look about ye, ye men of little faith, ami re- sea coast, have been many years in operation, solve, come w hut may, rise from ymir desxn ble, I remarked : "I fear, Mr. II., you are not so much of an economist el lime, as you used to he." "Why not V be inquired. "When I first lu eiinie acquainted Willi Mrs 1 1. , you could not nlliiid time to go to Ua, and she used to carry it to yon." "Ill 1 little tin pail," said t he bur-ting into h laugh. "Exactly '." "Indeed Mr. W. have you know u Us i long!" I then made myself known as the foinier ap prentice of .Mr. It. ami was iuiuiediau Iv recog nized bv Mrs. II, as one ot her taihtbl ac- a greater fool than the majority of my sex and age. The 'course of my love' ran Binooth enough tor a wlnle; but tins ilnl not deceive me i knew 1 should pet to the rapids and whirlpools too soon for my comfort. I was like the drun ken Indian in the canoe alxive the falls of Ni agara, I just look draughts of delicious nectar, and allowed the little shallop of my tatc to take it. own way ami make the best bargain it could with the treacherous waves. My resignation, however, did not make my suffering the lighter, the crisis came I stood on the e Ige of ihc pre cipice I looked pilcously around tor help I shrieked in the most pathetic and romantic tones; but u would not do, over I went into the maihleniu Hood. I felt tor an instant that it was all up with us and then there was a blank. When I awoke again I found myself in bed very weak ami very wretched. The doctor told me that 1 had been threatened with inflamma tion of the bi a i n, but that a rheumatic fever had stepped in instead. What a cold bath to ro mance. I who was dying ot a broken heart to be labelled 'rheumatic' 1 hated the man from '.he moment and bwore to be revenged, nnd I have kept my oath his bill is unreceipted yet My young readers and 1 am now writing especially to them, w ill know what the forego nig intans without nny further explanation; but lct some sore, crabbed old maid, or fussy old b iulielur, should accuse me of putting non sense in type, I will just add in plain terms that after a niu-t tender season of love, which com menced in the w arm months mid lasted till the cold. I w as very politely informed, by a very po lite mother that I was a 'wild rake, an unprin cipled libertine,' and that she looked upon my atlciitiouH to her daughter with displeasure. I lere was a da.nper. I a rake! who had never dared to read ceutain chapters in the old testa ment, for fear of knowing more than a modest young mail should ! I a libcrline, who had ne ver hoked in a lady's lace without blushing! The rharge astonished me; the Virtuous Sur li t e with less reason was not more indignant ; but astonishment and indignation did no good ; both ended, as belore, with the rheumatism. When I recovered, a most devoted friend of 'lli! piriies' handed a pretty three cornered note, tin1 st ! of w hich was white wax, of course, represented two hearts, very barbarously run through with a skewer. It (the note not the skewr r) wasi from 'my ow n one,' and was full of lender terms 'broken hearts,' 'crushing af fections' 'blighted hopes,' 'oigliuiit regrets,' undyit love,' &ic, &c, !cc.; every hotly, knows how th;se strong expressions are sprin kled in. The P. S put new life into me. It ran thus : "l. c lui'hs at locksmiths. Come to my lItl i:s OIAVKIlTISIJ. t f'piarB I insertion, . fO CO I do 2 do .0 7'i l do 3 d . . . t on Kry tuheiiunt inmrtir.n, OW Yearly Ailrciriiapmcnt: one column, $25 hlf column, f 18, three munrps, $18 ; two squares, f 9 ; one square, $5. Half-yearly : one column, $1" ; half column, $12 ; thrne iquarei, $9 j two equarre, $5; one square, $3 AO. AtWertioemnnt left without directions a to the length of time they re to be published, will be continued until ordered out, and charged accord irisly. (j-J-Siiteen lines mako a squire. lar importance. 1 did get up and found herself in mine I forgot which it was all the same though. 'My own love, (a pretty appellation; isn't it,) was in raptures, and so was I, she wept, and I sung to her "O, why is the cirl of my soul in tears." (tlo I quote correctly !) until she wiped her eyes and began to talk. Then 1 knew she had re gained her composure, for I have always obser ved that a woman never talks when she is ex cited it is a yell or a snifHe, and cither is not pleasant. We laitl great plans that night. Elopement, hasty marriage, prayer for ma's pardon every thing was fixed Upon. In the binall hours of the morning I prepared to leave. 1 approach ed the window and looked out, it was unusually dark. There is on especial proverb against jumping in tho dark, but I did not think of it just at the moment, more's the pity. Tho farewell kiss was burning on my lips the soft adieu ringing in my ears, as I took the jump. Powers of mud ! I found myself immersed to the lips in a hogshead of warm meal slush a compound which, however good for fattening hogs, is not exictly calculat ed for a hot bath. How it got there, or how I got into it, I did not ascertain, for the bark ing of the dog called my attention to a new danger. The beef I held in my hand as I leap ed from the window, and I now contrived tt draw it out ofthe. meal, with Ihc hope of si lencing the dog, here I attempted to cxtricato myself from the unpleasant situation in which I w as placed. But tho dogs tho' they like beef well enough, arc not particularly fond of Indian local, but, as I soon found to my cost. The enemy came on with a fierce yell, as I held out the beef, a ctiddcn flotl of light, exposed tome. and two or three grinning servants and a host of 'family friends,' tho ridiculous scene in which I was figuring. 1 attempted to rise and explain as Mr. Wise did a few months ago in Congress but the dog decided that it was out of order, and compelled mo to 'duck' my head quite un der to avoid his spring, arose but to hoar peal of laughter and dodge In the same way again from the vilo animal who continued lo )uap over me with the agility of a cat and the fe rocity of a tiger. I thought my lime had come, and was about to resign myself to my fate with as much dignity as it was possible for me to ex hibit in a hogshead, when my persecutor, re lented and called the dog oil. 1 was then taken out, scraped down, and allowed to depait, but llie story of my mishap became know n and I was greeted with laughs of derisijn at every corner. Against this however, I bore up bravely, till I was informed that that tair one for whom I had encountered all these perils, had played ma false by marrying a cousin, then 1 swore sol emly never agiin to dabb'c in love or meal slush, and thus ended my first and last love af- tair. Sir Walter Sxu i .--When the volu nin ous author was near his end, he expressed u wish to Lockhart, his son-in-law, that he would read to him ; and when asked Irom what book, he said "Need you ask 1 There is hut one !" Ixtckhart then read the 1 Ith chapter of St. John's (Jospel, "Let not your heart be trou bled," iVc.; to which, says tho biographer, Sir Walter listened with mild devotion, and then replied, "Well, this a great comfort I hasu followed )ou dihtiiicily, and 1 feel as if I wcio yet to be inysill again !" Sidney Smith, hearing a person in company boad of America as a very healthy place lo Ine in, could not uliaiii from contradicting it by thu following remark. 'Healthy, sir ! why Amci ica is the fert.lo soiuce of all sorts of complaint, and to my ceitain knowledge, a precious lot it PcmisvU anions have got the tic-Joliur-ou-e. Him i llmsiwni.s. Domestic older, like theatrical Machinery produces the griatcd pleasure when the strings are concealed. Some oi:e savs a ladv never ioohs 80 en- and questions and answers are transmitted and dency. l'p out ot the ditch anil tax your j qnaiutances in Km hesier. I received in the space ol a tew minutes from sta- powers to the utmost of your ability. Never I Hon to station ; but it is Iho rapidity w ith w hich j, never remain w here you arc but push orders may be transmitted through the magnet- forward rise higher and you will yet bo some- ic telegraph, particularly in tune ot war, winch t,ig in the world, you can win honors make constitutes its greatest value. For the trans- your fortunes, and die in peace with the world. mission of orders to purchase goods, the rise or fall in stocks or in cotton, the drawing ot lot teries, and other speculative objects, it is ques tionable whether this mode of communication, managed by private individuals, is at, all desira ble, as it may give advantages to one class over another; hence the vary great importance of its being connected with tho United Stales Government, and under tho control of sworn officers. Congress will undoubtedly see the importance of this suggestion, and pass a law cutabliahipg a telegraphic bureau in connection Will you do it ! Mr. Eddctar Supposo one man licks ano ther and is sewed for Assail and Battery and is bound Over to keep the piece, and llio tiller w hat sewed him licks a friend of hiz.en ami is licked agin by another friend oftoihcr's and to ther is way lade and licked by a whole gang of 'em, a'nt he jeftified in licking the first one of 'tut when he conies Acroos Yin. Please an swer thi in your next paper and very much o- bh.FC A Co.NbltNl KtLDLK. But thut pai! what do you think lias be come of that !" "That, I suppose washing since numbered among t lie things that were," I answen'il. "By no mean.-," raid he, at the same time tipping a wink to Ins wile. She orose from Ihu tabic and left the room, and soon relumed Willi the identical pail, as they both assured me. I need hardly say that it bore palpable evidence of the ravagoj ot lime. "But what is your i bject in picociving thut pail .'" "Its associations. We hmk upon it, as one ol the earliest inntrumenU w inch contributed to our niece in li'e, and as tucii w e shall ever tlicn.h it.', w ,n,low that look into the l.ule garden at 10 j rlliclluUs. as when she attempts M to-night. In scaling the wall look out for the j turU.a lUfM&h ull biokeu glass embedded on the top ; and don t j orlJ, pu,it.w. toilet to put a beefsteak in your pockets to pa- -- - - eifv the do.", it he slio ild attack you. lie is Ilird Uoi!td eggs oipsaiu to do a cure r r very fi-ncious, and nu ImJ his tetth tiled yes- , love; they lie so hard upon the stomach so to t,.r,'ay." i make the Miller r forget the weight upon his I wax in rapture.-. What did I care for tho heait. wall ! I would eat through it, gl:isoj and all and as for the dog, with his filed teeth, w hy my ace its at the butcher's should answer for the faithfulnesj w illi w huh that job had l ien per formed ! TenoYUk came, and I was oil to the n il dezvous. The wall I yot over at the expense ol a rent m my coat and a sli-hl scratch on my person; I caied for neither- llohlm,' three or four larjje slices ol beef I threaded the narrow walks and gained the designated fcpol beneath t!. The iiiht was very dark; but , lie thut in ver changed any of his epin n, never corrected any of hi mistakes ; and h , who was never w i.n' enough to find any mis.tul.iH j in himself, will not be charitable enough to tx ' (Use what be reckons nn!akes ill others, i . ......... ! M in, w it.i ali In- ekiil and iut!u-tiy, u lo lit ! told thut in skill and indii-Uy he is outdone l y i the humble bee, w hoc-e lulmrj hie regular and iiicts -ant. Why ix I lie It iiii l like a m iwo bnjiht eyesshiniiig from the casement, told It. cu.ise it make M i m.ol. Wliv me ail that I was anxious to learn. I low I got V like a jxui.jj pt iiilihiitt ! lh.t in the window und thtend it, is ol" nopatticu j ' p. v. Ilrtllllljj It I I ' is the t. nt r tails, it liiukes