II v 4404 - " VOL. L fht Wbiattitiniin. kve.►6 AND /MAC? lUstlch it Li, 11EN)tY HAYfI, tnitokn, PORNEY) VIE ONLY EN(IINO DlCMOR',vrio NEWS , PAPIIII IN CENTRE (OUNTY, in rattinit) AND tteLtmtan 11( AVERY WHI)NIIS3IIAr kOhNttia, ET E'EN/a RAYS, 1111.144-41;be in•e.dreses, et if raid within el: months, 1111,00 will be ohargod on ell ettiverip• lions ronning to the end of the year, , ,ADVilltTlßladliNTS and Business Notice' Insert- ed at the usual rates, and ovary dosaription of elr CO IE3 3' XI. I\T IV C3r. EXECUTED in the neatest manner, at the lowest prince, and with the utmost dempatoh. 'Having purehased A largo collection of typo, we are pm pared to satisfy the orders of our friends D7Moontio County Standing Committee .1.411# foistr—J MiIRR IROX. 80i,q,,--411111M 81110r1C. JJam nor .1" thing Jlor, rarg tison —.l S bfeeormacK. (7rrisg—.J. li. FirirtrAt. (i. K I.RTZ. ilostrard—J I'. PA CI( RR. Hat fmoon—J . II Atarris —S *must, Mirton—W EfiLey A. IdEr.x. ha* * sr ssnr lartos. IY le•--71 IN avior.rass. Afar, ort—.lon 11.(1 Anetttick., Patron—TnoiAN It. 81Gidiss. Pfllll-4 ANN POKSIL. RUA —.bump: 1,, _nisi. iIAIIXIIART. . l'lMuit./hoe—Jony T I.IOOVRR TayIor—WILLIAM McCoy. Ilyison—fitteortur, l'itfrArn, {Null,—Wl 1.1.1AY WALK F,R. • Waller—Joni vat Demoonatio State Central Nciy 1149% I'OIII2IIIT/'l4li, 1, 11 42.7: At • Meeting of, the Dettosantle State Central Committee, destrt—Nerreteher bee, tlsidr, :a the ?der— eliant'• Hotel Philadelphia, the following heeelur Men wan adopted : R*softwf, That tha HeisteeraHe Pale Convention of NM, be held on the 4th day of MIVIOII next, lu Harrisburg, at 100'elork, A 111 In purnnaeoe of the Ml6l{ll Iteokaiee th e (l „„,„„„ Ilan adH arssemble at Harrisburg. for thepurpose of selecting I)s:deg:ace to the Derneermie N e il em a C oe . vendee, soil ~,,, ideating acne:l:date for Canal Com. affllwAlegin:, Auditor fleneral and Sumer, tleueral. • ""y AMES P. .1:1/1444TON Chairman Stale Gent ral Committee, tA. Otters, Seeretaries er,* ZIIIOIAII, IJIi L.LE Pli N NA WICDPIISADAIT. FERUVAIRV ?7, 11,136% TEE DEMOCRATIC REVIEW To give our friendszn idea of Aix manner in which this palbd tr iiinifteteti: • Relent the following artiehs. 1114 is well-writ ten, terse, and evinces an ability ample to control thu pages of a 040 Pumocratie Review Two months have elapsed since the 114 7 , ty-fourth Congress sumembletlidWashington Pity. Not a step has been taken in the de partment of legislation. The people have looked in vain to their law-Rivera or gueli action upon the great questions of the day myseemed to be absolutely demanded, and, Mil( months ago, universally anticipated. The news of the delay of the organisation of L'origreas has travelled over the wean, and the circles of legitimacy abound in the wel gem° gossip—Tux stISSI-5 Ux TIM a BEAT RIC MOO MOVII NOT. In the Senate, innumerable petitions have been presented by naval officers, aggrieved by the decision of the late board. Whether that board acted moot jiiiliciously.in the premises, time nitiht determine : the allotted task was a diffilcult one to perform, and no ono would have been surprised at the omis sion in a teat number of instances to do email and exact jostler. We incline to the opinion, however, that much of the action of the the naval -board was hasty. partial, and contrary to the spirit, if not the letter, of thCir delegated powers. l'hewhole qucatlon will be subjected to a rigid exeini natiarrrand a vast number of the errors com mitted, will, it is hoped, be correeted. For the present, we forbear comment. Our relations with Great Britain, it is evi dent, from the discussions in the likinate, are of a very delicate character. The subject louralready been handle+with masterly abil ity by Me l:l4.9l l l4tliQ , 9,Per.o 74 .°therN , who bare proved- to the setisfsction of the American people that it Is time 'r U 8 to as sert our rights on this continent as oppottd to the enrolled/A tlfMtiTmtionm of the wyerfb• meat of Britain. As an inherititnee, Ventral America is ours ; whenever the title to this vast region shall pass from the natives of the soil, we intuit see that it pass into no other hands than our own. What right has "fs4y elliance," or an Anglo-French ahiance, or any Tither European alliance of despots against the people, to prescribe the Bounds of our territorial progress, or the character of bur domestic policy 1 If population and power--as is the creed in tho . old world—confer ,the right to "balance" the destinies of nations, certainly - the United +itateircarrelaiirrtlic privilege of regulating the agkirs et:continental Ainerioa. It is too late in the day for us to kneel like suppliant slaves at the foot of thrones, and ask "what we 5h,440 to bo savedl" We have the power, and it is to be hoped we shall not long he wanting in the spirit to declare Ourselves the judges, and the solo judges of our rights in the western, world. It is enough tlu Eng ;and possesses, or is ixrmated to postcss, a title to all this land between Lake Eric and Pm 'open polar sea ;" ithe should not task our Aorhearaince by an tatempt to limit our inareb towards the distant... South. We have never gained anything by concession, and haing nothing ',elope for but in a bold'and manly policy, such as every Democratic Presi dent has urged us to pursue. Lot us plant ourselves upon high ground ;• lot us rewatte the laws of nations ; let us abrogate,,by an / 7 1' . . • • . .. --1 Ir.,— . - , , _ . • . i'V 4 - •• . .• V. - %s • . t - , . .... ' t . . . 4,____„., , ~, „__,_ .__ _ . . ::`, • —.'"..------ .. A-1 . . , . . . ~ ' • . . , * . 9 . 111, . o • t 4 . •• , 1 .-.i , • • ,„ . .. , . _..,_ , ... -. , 0 .• _ ~. . ' • ' - - ~ . 1 • ~. - . ' - - ... . . i 1 . .• . 1.. .1( .., ' . , .1 • . ~ . , . ... . . ...t. ... . • -. • ,C* ... ch , • r- - ,' , , , 7-1, ~ ' ' -•- . ' e: ; , .„, . ..... : . . ~., , ,:,'. , , ~, , si. ~ : , . . i. ,..., , , , ..., , ::::,: ~,"1 .....1 .I 'r, : : :4 '. • .- I . , •' 7 ' I 4 , , .____ ~. , . .! --t- ..,.;;;,,,:„,.... , .., . •' . Hil Iri , . . I „ or ) •: ~. . • .4,40 - vr , . , •-• •• , *., "". .. . " . ' • . - 4 ~ , •, , t$ , ~. ..,.., ... , 1 4 , .s kl '? :'-':.• .:'''. ''',,, . ' ' ' 94 I' . -... . , , • ?, 1 ,o,' . ..1 at: .. . ;". ~tll 4 41 : 4 1 4 14 . .: A ipiar i 4 t •'; 'i • . ~ , . "44* ..._.,- . . , _.. _.... . 1 American dash of the pen, the dull and time- Went rescripta nf constitutional and tno h „ nar \ onicat urope. 'fho American people are ripe for a revision of the stale anginal it the long !Mitt ; we rdl desire a new text-book- 7 sotrietifing that is not motireaten, and damp front' the UnfreqUeitted cretki'Cis of ancient. castles ; we have had enough of documents, which, repudiated at home, crosS the At lahtic in south of a market. America seems Weil to become the - receptacle of all the trans-Atlantic political heresies of the world's Itisatiy ';" Our' evyn, ILIAC anti bt, and common sense is Just beginning to be wrought. Our Revolution was the result, of an or ganic convulsion, which defled.a:ll the rules of books and all the wisdom of kings ; it was an isolated instance of refortit unheralded by yoliticiang, and unstained by ambition.. .The great moral oruption_nf 1789, in France, was, it is true; a consequence of the storm_of.l.776, but in the former case the tipper classes Were humbled, while in the latter, the lower clas ses Were elevated ; in France, there was a leveling down, while in America there was a leviAing up : the Flitch agitators designed to destroy kings an ho nobility ; the revo lutionists of America labored to make men arobs sit the masses. ;But this is not, the place for abstract PO , flections upon our policy as a nation. We have confidence in the Senate. Strongly Deinocratic, its action, upon every great sub ject, will be distinguished by moderation, but also by firmness—by that sound discre tion and that progressive wisdom which have I won for our national counsels the admiration of mankind. Two months hove eittilsol, anA tho House t - ftriwesentirthresirrnatyrtmanized: • indulge a just pride in referring to the con duct of thePemocratie members. The gal lant seventy-four hare not surrendered ; 'neither the threats nor promises of the ma jority have availed to place them in the Atti tude of suppliants. Well can these men afp font to maintain their position ; their reeord thus far is unsullied, and will be one of which their children in after times will be proud ; let them stand, as did the Senate' of Latium in antiquity, and defy - the surrounding tem pest. 'Why should the Democratic party— that party which does in reality "carry the flag an 4 keep step to the music of the Union" -why should such a party, lifter having tit* steno of • • • ~ 1)(4 the knee to the gotidpits of faction No ! Demociacy has won more laurels upon this continent than she can Wont tO p serilice ni•on the-altar of disunion. Let the tempest rage, lint let patriots be true. — Tux EPPKOT OP RAILWAYS on the msterial prosperity of a State is visible in the recent censmi feturiiii of Illinois. Before the con struction of railways was commenced there, the progress of settlement was comparitively slow. The tide of emigration had acquired an impetus in other directions, and Illinois seemed to struggle along with a speed fa behind that of some newer States. But with the construction of an extended system of railways in the State, a wonderful awaken ing of enterprise seems to have occurred. In the year 1850, the population was 851,470, and in 1855 it wa51,300,000. These figures speak louder than Words. A city of 22,000 inhabitants in 1850, has now become a me tropolie of 100,000. *hole wildernesses have been put under cultivation, and flour ishing towns have sprung up whore none 'be fore existed. Could Pennsylvania complete her railway system with the same rapidity as Illinois, we also should see our interior wilds peopled. But, slits ! wo tarry by the way, and are outstripped even by those whom we once thought far behind us in enterprise. We must bestir ourselves while we have such formidable competitors in the field against us : , MA BUWIANAg AND TUN l'uNiumNcY.—rho Pennsykatuan publiahea the following ca tract of a private letter froni'Mr. Buchanan, iir whieh he dtatea WS position in regard to the Presidency: •• This I neither• desired nor expected. The mosioment in,my favor has, thengfore, originated without my previous knowledge or consent, and I should be quite maligned should another be selected. The next will be the wait important and responsible Pres idential term since the last war with Eng land, or, perhaps, since the origin of the govcrnpient. Both our foreign and our do mestic affairs will require the guidinicc of an able, Wm, and skillful pilot tuateer the vessel' of State clear of the breakers. I pray Heaven that the best man may be se lected fir the crisis I and to rue it ire a Mat ter of indilfervirOe whether he CONICS from the North or the *nth, the EaSt or the Weser' _ • 4.114PU# A Or. Andrew Jcohnsea, the present 4Aovernoi of Tennessee, at the age of thirty was a joutnennan tarot, andeould neither mini :nor vrlite Sensihle-of hie- noranee, he !nide his wife read to him while ho was st work and she at leisure. An hour each day she taught him his letters and the use of hie -pen. PO cothitantly improved his one hour a dey, although very poor, and pot ai4o to spare the time ; and 4 little over two years ago at the ago of forty he was nuxqo Governor of Teimesseo by .11. large mit jority, Wei yno IN Sunnioa et;orulwo. 7 —The Tri bune states that in ono portion of the city of Now York there aro' no'hani than four " bo gus Sunday Scixpola," with a large number of collectors who raise from $lOOO to $5OllO per annum " to carry on the operatiOns of the schools," of which about ten per cent, goes 0 keep up the schools and the other ninety to support a sot of lazy hangers on. or - I, or- ...-- 0 e Q. W n, t 4 t • Bow ItaNtlAg tit Ilsixd Sirerf.vin.-LA phy sician named Bowen; who has been to Kan : . -ass-end beeolne It citizen of that ,territory,, • t who is now in Ulster county, N. Y.,itet thee, iip lug business in order to return there • • i his family, writes a long letter to the New York I'rrhunr, relative to the condition of affairs in Kansas. Ile says that the Em igrant Aid Societies have been so miserably mismanaged that they have proved humbugs, and as a means of colonizing tbo territory and influencing its, votes they have failed. !lie says that" plenty of Irce - ligste num go there to get homes for their families of their own freo will, uninflueneed by Societies. Much the larger portion of them arc from *a Western an South Western States. They are opposed to negroes both free and slave, and this fact became manifest at the recent election. He says that they receive constant accessions from the ranks of their. oppo nents. Their sufferings have been unparal 'tiled since the early history of the original Atlantic Colonies:- Sickness to an extent which in a ten years resideice in ic new country he had ' r.el , er seen ens p elled had borne heavily upon them in ieneo of the unusual severity,of thew ra ter, aggrava ted by the miserable house they were obliged to live in. Many of these houses were deficient in even the poor defence of mud chinking. Ile was the only physician on his feet during the sickly season in a large portion of the western settlements - of Kan sas, and,he witnessed an amount of distress from distinse, privation, want of attosulance, and lack' of the most ordinary comforts of "life, which he says " was enough to move a heart of stone." From what lie writes, it would scent that the course of settlement .. . . . . . far west as the Buffalo range, thus" indl - eittik„thitt the people keep iiii:far as possible from the vicinity of the border ruffians. Ravi:Nos OF ,A ;OVSS-a-CUTTING °PIP r A GM'S Nusa.--We have learned from. Mr. Warner, says the La Cosa (W.s.) erat, : some of the Rwrtieulars of a moat dia bolical outrage, that occurred last week about three niles below this landing, on the Misaissippj. it appears - that a Dutch wid ower hying at that place, has a family of grown-up-girls, which he is anxious to get The "oldest, a gond-looking girl of 24a:stiffing m ith a neighbor, dint has lately 140:144t; aLtrofinu.of tats la staying about there, sad wanted to many her. His suit was booked up by the old nuAn, but the girl has steadily:refused tu marry WWI. Last week tha fellow* called at the house, and requested to iti;e_otier at the door; when she appeared he seined her lry the end of the nose, and alai his pocket knife cut it oil' close up to the bridge. The poor girl screamed and fainted, and while the family rushed to her assistance, and tried to staunch, the brivz: the ruffian took leg bail across the Mississippi, and has not since been heard of TOBACCO PACKED IN LBAD POIBONOVII.-4t ACOIIIB from regent medical imstarclies (see American Journal of Meilscal Science for January, 1K41) that the moisture contained in Tobacco will oxydiie the lead with which it remains long in contact, forming a4igne liar poisonous salt. The tobacco becomes covered with a layer of acetate, carbonate, chloride, and Sulphate of lead, amounting Lb from six to thirty grains in a half pound. The presence of had in tobacco is detected by burning the tobacco in a crucible, treat ing the ashes resulting with hydrochloric nen?, then evaporating the mister°, and treating the redo solved residum with the ionide of potasium, sulphate of soda ,and sulphurated hydrogen. A Nsw bone.—in one of the interior towns of Mehigan, a grocery keeper was triedafor violating the liquor law. On the trial several witnesties weroealled, who tem tifiedihit they had drank brandy and paid ten cents a drink, but they considered them selves partners, and put their dimes in as so much capital, and there were about 44:141sub scribers to the stock of the company to the amount of a dims and upwards. The dodge wouldn't go, and the defendant was made to suffer the penalty. Us Daman LION.—In the COMRICIICO - of the American revolution, when ono. of tbo British king's thundering proclama tions made its appearance, the subject was mentioned in a company in Philadelphia ; a member of Congress who was present, turn , Aug to Miss Lovingsfonc, said, " well, Miss, are you not greatly terrified , at the roaring of tAe British Lion ?"'Not at all, air'" she replied, "for I have learned from natu ral lilstery that that User roars fowling sewn As is - most frightened." - -A--Witsternit Pttoritnrron,- - -A large 'por tion of tko rich valley of GOllOB/100, in Now York State, is owrusl by James Wadsworth. lip owns 8,000 acres In one town, as many Moro in llencsace, about 6,000 moro in the ouljoinlini town of Rush; 8,000 or "6",oooAtt 'the town of Caledonia and a great many thousand in other towns and counties. liia fancied possessions exceed '50,000 acres : it is early all g00q1,44.--41m.beg t in iheStitte, tind constantly incrvuting in value. CITARITAAV lIEQUic.BT3, —TIIO New , York Legislature has passed a law that no reli gious or benevolent society shall receive any bequest or devise, the annual income of which is over $1.0,060, and it must have been nuido at-leant two montha before the deatkrif the tbitattr.g In no ease shall the bequest he more than ono-fourth of the eatite. • s'EARPErIS(4 Tzt - In the heart of a table-land that over looks many square leagues of the rich 'sce nery of Devonshire, the hest scythe-stone is fond. The whole face of the enormous cliff in which it is contained is honey-combed with minute quarries ;half -way, down there, is a wagon road, entirelY • folmod of the sand cast out from them. To walk along the vast soft terrace on a July evening is to onjoy one of the most delightful scenes in England. Forests of fir rise overhead like cloud over cloud ; through openings of dies& Were peep the purple moorland stretching far south ward to the Roman Camp, and burrows from which skulls are dug continually. What ever may be undergronall, it is all soft and bright above with health and wild flowers,' about which a breeze wll linger in the hot test noon. - Down to , the hand road the breeze does not come ; there may we walk in calm, and only NCO that it is •quivering among the trees. From the camp the Atlan tic cab be seen, but from i thp sand - road the view is more limited, thug ninny a bay and headland far beneath, she where the ocean (if:aim/it age rolled. Foss t and shells are almost as plentiful within` the cliff as the soythe-stone itself, and wondrous bones of extinct animals are often brought to light. All day long, summer and winter, in the sombre fir-groves may...be heard the stroke of the spade and Click.of the hammer; hundred men are at work like bees upon the cliff, each in his own cell of the honeycomb, his private passage. The right to dig in his, own burrow each of these Men has piAlms edloca trilling sum, and he toils in it daily. Though it is n narrow Kisco, in which he is not able to stand upright end can scafeely turn - - , :though theitir itrit - he breathes is damp and deadly—thong the color in his cheek is commonly the hecti of consumption and± he has a cough that t vet'lptt es him night or day though he wi himself remark that he does not knowamonktit his neighbors one old though allsnarrying early, few etre'r see a - father with hi, grown up song yet; for all this, the scythe-stone cutter works in hiamecustomed wa,t, and lives his short life merrily, that is to say, he drinks down any sense of AM thehe may juive. These pair men are almost o without excep tion, sickly drunkards. The women of this community are much healthier. It is their task. to cat and shape the rou li-hewn stone tofu ~iage plempi* wh tbo incur& whets his scythe." The.partieles are perni cious to the lungs, but, as, usual, it is found impossible to help the ignorant sufferers by aii . 01 , 644 dine lam of an idea from with out. A number of masts and respirators have been more than once provided for them by the charity of the neighboring gentry, but scarcely IMIC w oman has given them her countenance. Thu • short life of the seythe-atone cutter is aiiii always liable to be abruptly ended. Safety reqiiireS4 that fir-poles from tho neigh boring wood should be driven in one by one on either side of him, and a third flat stake be laid across to nuke the Walls and roof gofo, an the dirge'''. push uphis Toliffburrow forward. Cheap as the r-poles are, they arc too often dispensed Rh. 3'hosc is scarcely one of theliundr mined entrances of di'snied'enverus here be seen, through which some crushed or so (sated workivan haS not been brought but dead. The 'ease is common. .A man cannot pay the trifle that is necessary to buy flr-poles for the support lir his cell-walls; the consequence is, that sooner or later, it unistalmdst inevi tably happen that one stroke of the pickaxe shall produce a fall of sand behind him, and set an impassable barrier between him and the world without. It will then he to little purpose that another .may be working near him prompt to give the alarm anW get assis tance ; tons upon tons of luavy 'sand divide the victim from the rescuers, and they must prop and roof their way at cury dep. lest they too perish. Such accidents are, therefore, mostly fatal. It the man is not at once crushed by a fall of sand upon hair, 'Tithes been cut off from the outer air, and sullocated in his narrow worm-hole. Whiteknights is a small village at the foot of this cliff, inhabited almost en tirely by persons fhllowing the scythe-stono trade. The few agricultural lalxwer.s there to be met with may be distinguished at • glance from their brethren of the pits ; the bronzed checks from the hectic, tho muscu lar Amines from the bodies which disease has weakened, and which dissipation helps to a more swift decay. The cottages arenot ill built, and generally stand detached in a small garden ; their porches may be seen in Fn everting thronged with dirty, pretty clhil •4ren. helping rather outside his cavern by carrying the steno away in liftlp baskets, as be brings it out to them. lleniden the Luta rivulet, whiehJias pleas rillAr hooks, more flowery banks, and 'falls more musical' than any stream in Devon ; be/lidos this brook, and portal by A little wood of bucohet and wild lenrel from the village, is a very pearl of cottages. _Honey. suckle, red rose and sweet briar.hold item tangled in s, network; they fall eves the lit, tlo windows, making twilight ett **mon, Yet nobody has ever thought of cutting thom away or tying up q single tendril. Urand. father - , Alaricham and his daughter Alice, with John Dreait, her husband and nntstor of tho house, used to live there and they had three little children, Jane, Henry and Joseph. A little room over the porch Vvitli'eltpecinl-• ly neat.. It was the best room in the cot tage, and therein was lodged old Markham, who had, so fares the - means of his ohil , • Went, the best of board ire well. }le was not, a very old man, but looked ten years older than he really was, and hjs hind shook through infirmity more grievous than age. He was a gin drinker. Johii Drewit had to work very bard not only to keep k,kis' own householdl l n food` and clothing, but ainohis poor father-in-law in drink. John was a hale young man when T first knew him, but ho soon began to alter. As soon 'a6 it was light he was uway to the sand cliff by a pleasant winding path throuAthe beeelutoml, and np the siiiiot Which his own hand hail Cut. Oue or two he hod made broader than the rest, at intervals, where one or two IMO; willingly sit down to sur e cry the glory spread beneath; the lOw, 'white thatched farm-houses gleaming like light amongst the pasture lands; the little towns, each with its shining riser; and the great old city in the limey distance ; the bright Beacon hill, the woods, nod far as the tie could gee, the mist that hung, over the Mnimise Atlantic. This resting .. on the lip ' ward path, at find. a pleasure, became soon a necessity, and that, too, long before the cough haul nettled down on him ; few men in Whitekuights hove their lungs s whole that they can climb up to their pits without a halt or two. • The old man helped his BPn'in - laW some times ; he was a good sort of old man by na ture, and not a bit more selfish than sdrunk r anl always must be. Ile ground the rough stones' into shape at home, minded the chil dren in his (laughter's absence, and even used the pick himself when he was sober. John, too, was for his wife's sake tolerant of Markham's infirmity, though half his earn ings went to gratify the old man's appetite. Atiastneootsity compelled him terdre r -as lw thought, undutiful. .Print after print had vanished from the cottage walls r very little ornament, ndtactually necessary furniture, was sold ; absolute want threatened the household, when Juhn atlast slated though tenderly, that grandfather must, give up the gin bottle, or find some other dwel ling. Alice was d'vercurne with tears,- but *hen appealed to by the old man, pointed to her dear husband, and bowed her head to his wide words. For months after this time, there were no more drunken worth nor sngry tongues to ho !mint within John's plestat,nt cottage. Nothing was said by daughter or son-in-law itailtrOrrelcAr thelnablio hosmis that was being paid olf by instalments ; the daughter looked no Ringer at her father with reproachful eyes, and the children never again had to be taken to bed before their time—hurried an ay from the sight of their grandfather's shame. At last, one Sunday mmiing .lily, the ruling passion got again the mastery ; Markham came home in a worse way than ever ; and in addition to the usual debasement, it was evident that he was possessed also by some maudlin terror, that he had no power to express. Leaving him on his tad in a lethargic sleep, John sallied forth as usual at dawn ; his boys, Harry and Joe. carrying np for him his miner's spade ; and basket.. lleavy-hcarted as ho was,'he eould not help being gladdened by the wonderful beauty ,of the landscape. Ilia daughter told me she saw him stand so long looking at the country—ho seemed un willing to leave the sunlight for his dark far-winding burrow. His burrow he had no ma/km to dread. Poverty nmerdiad pressed so long upon John Drewit as to induce him to sell away the firm propethat assured the safety of his life. Often and often had its voice been hind against those loci', who, knowing of the mortal danger to which they exposedlei their - 'ghbors, gave drink or money in exchange for them to the foolhardy and CM= (treat, therefore, was Ids horror when ho went into his nave that morning and found that his preps had been removed. They had not been taken hem the entrance, where a passer-by Might have observed their absence: all was right for the that twenty yards, but beyond that distaneardownlto the end of his long toil-worn libyrinth,tivery propwas strip ped away. Surely, ho knew at once it was not an enemy who had done this ; he know tho wretched did man, who lay Attepifled at home, lad stolen and sold his life-defence fur drink. All that the poor fellow told hit boYs was that they should keep within the safe part of his digging while ho himself worked into the rock as usual. Three or four times he brought out a heap of sevthe-stones in his basket, and then he was seen alive no more. Harry, his eldest eon, was nearest to the unpropped passage when the sand old felt When lie hoard his father pap out suddenly, he ran at once eagerly Giver& the candle where the miner worked, batons sudden all was dark ; there was no light from the candle or from the gun—before and Nthind wait ut-. ter blackness, and there was a noise like thun der in his earth Tip) wholti hill s'aiii - od - Lo have fallen on them loth, and many tons of earth parted the father from hitt child. The sand about the boy "did not press on him elnsely. 'A heavy piecilof glut that held 'fp gether was supported by the narrow walls of the passage, minis fate was undetermined. lie attended mil) , :to the muffled 'ttounde witliiirthe rook from which he knew that his father, though ihey might ho the sounds of his death struggle, still lived. Tu the people outside, the alarm had in stantly boon given by the other child, tend in an incredibly short spare of limo the labor- ere from field isnd csvo camp hurrying up to ; the rescue. Two only Weld dig together; two more propped the way behA *raft by foot eigegtY waited them, at ytt rano e ; and not an instant ittif* In re. placing the ehaus urk t rieo, Every thing was do/was, qnlekty, and at the Same time as judiciously, as possible ; the sur geon had been ridden for at full speed to the neighboring town ; brandy and other stimu lants, a rude lancet—with which many of the men were but too Well practised opera ntors-ibandagem and blankets, were rill placed ready at hand ; for the diSasterwas so common at IVhitekaights that riTry man knew at onto what was proper to be done., Those who were not actively engaged about the cave, aura daisy in 'the cometruction of a litter—perhaps a bier—for the unhappy vic tim. How could this hale happened I was the -whispered wonder. John was known to be far too prudent b Man to he working without props, and yet fresh ones had to be supplied to.the rescuers, for they foubil none as they advanced. The poor widow—every moment made sure of her bereavement—stood a little way imide ; having begged for a spade, and been refused, she stood with her two children hanging to her apron, staring fixedly at the pit's mouth. Down.at the cottage there was an old man invoking Heaven's vengeance on his own gray head, and reproaching himself fiercely with the consequences of his brutal vice ; he had stolen the poles from his son's Pit . the previous night, to provide himself with think:, and on that very'day, even before qui le reeovered from his yesterday's debauch, he was to see the victim of his recklessness brougltt home a lifeless heap. lie saw John so brought in, but with the eyes of a mad man ; his brain, weakened by drunkenness, never recovered froMi the shock. - • Basket and barrow had been brought full ont of the pit a hundred tiinea; and it -was almost noon-before from the howtds of the very mountain, as it seemed, there came up a low moaning cry. "My child, My rbild." murmured the mother; and the digging 4e came straightway even yet more earnest, almost frantic) in its speed atut violence. Presently into the arms of Alice little Harry was delivered, pale nu& c.orpso-like, hut alive ; and then a shout ail of 'an army was sent up by all the men. - They dug until after sunset—long titer they - had lost all hope of finding John alive. His body Wail at last found. It was placed upon a litter, and taken under the soft even ing sty, down through ,the beech wood, me. Area wilar4 bylla ilae; Twmgite hand in hers, until after her father's death, how her dear John was murdered. She used to wonder why the old man shrank from her when she visited him, as she often did', in his confinement. The poor widow jc living now, though she has suffered grief and want.- Her daughter Jane has mnrrie a field laborer, and her sons, by whom she is well suppOrted, have never set a foot in a pit since thB day they lost their father, TEE DEAF AUNT AND DEAF WIFE,. I had an aunt coming to visit nie for thn itirsttime since my marriage, and I dont% know what evil genius prompted the wicked ness which I perpetrated toward illy le and ancient relative. ''"My dear," said I to my wife, on the day before my aunt's arrirat "you know Aunt Mary is coming to-morrow ; well, I forgot to mention a rather annoying circumhtance with regard to her. She's very deaf and al though she can lwar my voice, to which site is accustoilial, in its ordinary tones, yetyou will ho obliged to' speak eletremely loud In j order to be heard. •It will be rather innOn venlent, but I know y6l still do everything in your power to make her stay agreeable." Aim S. announced ,her - dereuinatiou to nmkelierself beard, if possible. I then went to John T------, who loves a joke about as welters any person I know of, and told him to he at the house at 6 P. M. on the following evening, and felt compara tively happy, I went to the railroad depot with' a carri age next night, and when I WM on my way home witk my aunt, I said ; "My dear aunt, there is ono rather annoy ing Marini ty that Anna (his wife) has,which I forgot to mention. She's very deaf, and al though she can hear my voice, to which she is accustomed, in its ordinary tones, yet you iU be obliged to speak extremely loud ul order to ho heard. lam very sorry for it." Aunt Mary, in the goodness of her heart, protested that she rather liked speaking loud; and to do so w?uld !fiord her great pleasure. The carriegirdieve up—on the steps was my the v‘indow was John —, with a face aautterlisoleinn as if he had bur lied all his relatives that afternoon. I handed out my atint--ithe ascended the steps,_ alpdeliglited to see Yon)" shrieked wile, and the policeman on the opposite side walk started mid my aunt nearly Ml down the t.tetT. "Kiss me , go , dear, " howicd my aunt, and the hallyanip clattered and the .windows shook as with the fever and ligue. I looked at the window-40a badviiimpured• __lfg mail nature could stand it longer, I poked my head into the carriage, and went into trong . convulsions. When I entered the parlor My Wife Was helping Aunt Mary to take' oir her hat and cape ; and there sat John with his ,sober facty Suddenly, "pit? you h;ve 4 e !cp,stiat jour i nay ?"- wont oty my wife likojw „pistol, said Jot ,4 warty jumped to hi/ feet. ' .Jl4ttier dusty," was the response in , e. wsrwhOop, itnd so the conversstion contin ued. t'ho neighbor 149 C): Fo*aitisit bFye NO, 13, heard it; en int Jai the • • aw the betiding I heerd otery Tied In the coarse of the evening pig eitit tteik occasion to soy to me—, • "Plow bud yout wVe 49,11,'11,4 bort CEE I told- her AU Jdeaf mews tailke4 and that my wile beim nat4 to It, wig Nei affected by the exertion, VA thgt Attptibli was getting along very itteelY Wltk 11 0- ' - Presently my wifo-eald, softly— " Alf, how very loud your wont taw'? Ycs, laid T, "all deaf person* getting along %hither she Wiwi San ry word you say." AO I rathitr think ft did. Flitted by their gpccess at beipx_ Roder., stood, they went at it Wolper mad tou., till everything on the 'tnantio-piece de ties>4 again, and I as aeriniudy iteritid I," mop{ 4 collecting in front of the house. Ilut the end was ne a r. lay snnt Wolff ^ ' an ineentigatin4 turn of mind; wilt 4041 1 11011 of Anding out whether the eertion ?IV A" so load wag not injurious to nty wife. Sit—. "Does net talking so loud Amin your • lungs I" said she, in an tinenrtbly whoop, lbr her voice was not as inuskal ost tt I when she wss young. "It is an et rrtion," shrieked Ssy yr*. "Then why do you do it was des 3mty• veering • "Ileeipme--bectume-7,yma wet Mkt 4f (km't," eque*led my wire. "What . 1" said my *qt. NT* Oralig 4' - railroad whistle this time. I began to think it, flee tq email" $ premises, and looking round anti "win gone, I stepped into the back pasies there lip lay, fiat on his beak, with Ws at right anglus-to his body, rep* fisis! • ta side, with his lace ppked intp 111411-10,-- a most agonizing expretunqn ofeartitp but not uttering a !mind. I ipoolo4lllo and involuntarily Resumed la ,ligiliurptitoile,", and I think that, from the fel** 11Plidall• • of our feet and head, and our attettottp Yr,* strain our hingliter, ariopleety dap hpialkilse , • evitably ensued, If ; bonittlo ISPINR., lOW John gave vent to in his federal' ttl EPP press his rissability, had not betrsyeat Attsilsk ing place. In rushes my wife and wit, whet, lor tbdig time, comprehended the Mite, and lack II welding as I dim Pt I never Pt WlFlk# ll 4' hope never tg get wain. . - _ i inowersala Oast tine ewe sianillissiiiallia.! if John, in his endeavors to pppt tainaiesbn( fld and sympathetic, had ant giris .l lo 4 / 1 " such a borne Isagli that aiihphiPS • ity was onset, and we screamed is aelpirt t I know it was sery wrong. amid ant*. if tell such &Nebo* : but I tbkraf 610 ()pie herself wouhi hate *OO4 Ifslas had seetilkunt Mary's expression wheat alb vos Inliwnied that ker hewn* was delyati Dom ♦ MM.-4 hare a atqa4ll4l.ol# you," said the pertiwitan looking qpilielhor, he_entered the etore 0! one Film, 114 quired the cheracter of et hard erostolper. '•Fes sir, q very line clay irviep4." W GO GM "I am not speaking pf the weashisr, your bill," cppilled Peter in s loud hp it,rould he better if sre had slittfriahLiv "Ounfouni the 4in," contflpild tiorteal l lector, and raisins his yokel - 4We y NS" money to Noy pn the bill I" BB our Psalm, PIP lam ofd f hiia maiits mie sok tP Pie 147 01 1 110FIC Ittluerri , .and I really de= ' orm eolleetqr ibr the satteuu!ebet t eie. wet I 00 1 40lle . : you," persisted the (iiilectetr iEC Ws his voice, producing the hill 194 *WOO into the face pfhis tlphtter. . _ _ ‘ 2 I ye 4.4ermige4l to eqdorap for you may put that note fork b! ToiFF # 4 44 book, I really can't envkinse ft," • --. "Confound your endorsements '"T( 1010 PsYlt." "You'll pay it, nq dant*, air, 110 ti always a risk abqut these otteti yopir.o,`' so T must ileelitie it." "The money must he mine tp-47.'T - • . 1 0h, yes—ninety days, lo it I vu 14 *IS endorse for you for a week : fp likpopi pit my Acme.' It's seldom that No prtioNlT opir ' for au endorsement, even by my Ortt.ulA II 0 11 1 the part of s stranger, sir, your - tql4llo inexplicslde, Do not force me to Fitt post out ; leave the preteises." - And the NI was returner! V guisher nifloe, endorsed —"so, egailollloo4 deaf tliot he oouldn't untleralast4T ' - MILITIA IN ma CLOTS,' STATIIII. —Mt PA ' from a document from the Wad DITI= . • n Wel} was laid frfore ti lo !foes. 4 gentativea yeaterripty, th4t em piiiityt44 . llll, Staten and Territories a Notoite# tgi t) illr .„ gate of -2,4119,V0 frien 1 1 4 4. * * Mg blue UM twthit4. of the epfte Of IVotlt iff i _ ill° I revritorien of Oregon, Wrillans634lW briviku, !Como, and Wow IfeoOtt, 4004 *Moh r *I 4- PfttuP lll ! no-5t 21 4 8.1311 4 1 t4, ;received. The returns 40 44 141 4*- 14 --- AA fit coloplete, sa Ure WI of thaillkofoie o..4owitio of the Stales are blued _iiipoil 4* ' - r ighed, eercr,i mrs anicin 006 *4llll. ipeottlehorere—malhz - bait IMIA The militia itireo of . the ttistrict Jot ~,,„,, bit is fain n rqr Or you l' 1 8 4; # l 4 ll, "fr . - . ted at 43,201.' _: ' DA n non Eni.s.—The Natairttft• AM** says the mantra cold infAtberjoiltiltell PaitICIA I !AY !One upon tbook4M ON. coot, who had not anfl!ciantwarning to mt, i . kto Otair Iginkr—quirkali 9f nuall**l loo4 ' • kvideatly write 0rg51014.11.0 4 :Z frozen Rafru npikosi,Abroirldmi, ' • . of tham were tkixaltaiKet , o4 tha boa* 44 aor Al* solloikkit %Om TA6.OiPpl4 up 04 #l4Ol, II