Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, March 04, 1857, Image 1
II =212 LMEM ES .7:'l:'f. ;sit " ' Effn ME NIFTII3 • , • • • 1 4,( 4ty • • .4*l„ . owa* Rirtnunn, - Imit OVItiVa4ION DRMOONATIO; NUNN. op .440.4 t1541 -I ri °ENTRE COUNTY. ~1141101..111;4,lim, wswissnAir,"l.l iffear , "l o : HOOVER,: ' • TinPifig-41, 5 6 In arlvanee, or If paid within six $l,OO will be charged on all subsorip lifestrantiag to the and of the year. AeIfaRTIBRIMICNTB and Business No!Joel's Insirt. *di at kite usual rates, andaveryftesoriptinn of • ' SOS mes , we. x *xi x ExaexTßD In the neatest manner, at the !owes Prlowat and with the - utmost dospatoh. .pourelpared a Burp collection of type, we art pre. .partd,to satisfy the orders of our friends. ..6417AlbeR,ATIC 011N,ED Brat isud exaci_katies to all man o 4 ooXitisoir'staio jnltnnimon, al • ~ • brat. „No. I. Peace, tosiameree owl Isogrot fryew teeth AU uttibte ; 'atones . " gallAaeor with NOM. S. The right of Srales sad Territories to adioutini*** their oorse-detsestio aJralos. No. 4. Pnituiews and &pusher , the sovereignty of 0h people, and the right ef the 'mien*/ to Wes whim theit wilt eottetitittiewalit expressed, Etprurniy 4* trio exptjudity.rfa, 11.6.4..re_s_rtesratitio fai th . •• v. Irreitliiiibr ern, MAW/Hi! Nr ati rlloo sad gsoettral diffusive. of information. ' No. 7. apparition to all secret political agars. istatioas. and iOOlll7 COrritplialla i/rlOO/illy• No. 8- A tesered preservation of the Federal ClMltilafiooollo4 PM religions tests fee Oleo. Nex 3. No bigotry. or peas bf di7 its, or dis missible' x ofloirtk owes, American *ammo. .10. pooped and protection the rights of;l. 4:11: Therressrattion elks fiat Itralittailost Mar opteopolies 1 _Corrietetb.lonstlateleood aster good will all--aspeeially to those of, the homeehold of faith. MAICE,RB ! tumid there kithe world be found *one itttle spot of happy ground, Where Wisp pleasures migth go mod. Without the village tattling! ago* doubly Meet that plase would be, 'Wbstio all might dwell in liberty, . *roe Mtn the bitter sleazy - Of gpidp's sailer proling. If 'Rik a hpot nerd really lusawm -Deem Pews might elahn it ow her own ; idlni,lkahtheriseight nix her throne, isisehrer, and brewer— 'no" like • queen, niight teign end lhe, VIVI* every one would soon forgive Irrillftthi slights they might emigre, 'III4M Wendell never 'TIN taloOklef-makors lief remove Vim fro *schrift, tie wit:l3'64 love, And lied us eU t disappoovo ""Ininl y ry es another pleasure:, s tieji seem (Oinks onset pitri-bdt - iittlin 'Ta n en heard oor 0404, unkindly then ''!They WPM retak theta opt agpda. . salt their pulpiness" weraeure, „ ....WO' • Olad Olen there* suit a esening way 0f Selling ilt•mesnt Wes - they say 1 . Don't mention what I said, I Irsi— tlifelitid net tall another;" Otealght to your neighbor's heat. they go, Nattitiag everything they know, ft break sae peessi.DLlOth. . 1 . 1 4 103, • wits, hai t bia, friend and brother. UM the arkehlof reaklacerew Wens all rode* to one or two, Aid tier were pointed red or bine, Thai orsrLowo.naLikt know thorn rherirreald oar villager, forget 'To rage and qoaml, fPme and fret ASIA Sate en angry pet ~ „ W tldegi id Csali Wow-Ahem for tem • sad, degrading part, to sake another'i boom wart, bol plows a dagger la the heart • •• Wiwi/he to love and eberlah! Min led am 'verniers be found erilletnese with alt around, While Mendehip, jet and pesos abeam), Asir angry (Wimp perish NOTHING MORE. ii • valley far I wander* ear dm Meadow pathway Pelt Whine • shigiogbrook weltering, Ora th• spirit, of the wean !, • AM I saw a Wei' maiden, With a beet brimming o'er - With seta bads, sad an f eked be Ng a fkret,and nothing mere. - • I abated an beside h.r, , Asad. I praised h.r bar and oyes I - Jare mos from bar basket. WUrber gild looks down glancing, , Bib said, would I Just pass before I a. i add that alt I wanted. I Was n'tnitie and nothing more: - . Ihtlkokihyly Wailed twin um, a dlral LI BWI kept wands:lig On ',.,_,1 Wiwi** 81011/11411.78mIling, ohattlii, • Boot a Witt Warms was gone, Iffiliaanho told vier 4 poet Wave her, .-. sikellilli ea her soilage doowg 1 - 1181Ioiruld net till I rifled -Zatiti ides aid nothing md're.... . /p . ~..' a I oltro Mat the maiden, • Al the twilight's Toying hour WM We ffnutmer'a offspring ladon, ; hinadlibe drama dower. ;Op irk *4 epp what; wished for? in klif bolder thps Magri*, Allsgmaiopod pronto I iturrworwl, ' L • . 1 , 8018118 sad oohing more. *Alio 44 siontle 4, mr:4i ber, 4 ' . • 4 ... ....- . .Ihltkie thill4 4l a t l / 4 0 ,k 1 ,91, . - 1 . "...r,. nloldriasphoto Qi arguer; . I? : ,,,,llworweikorwialing aligiso.oarth. 10,1krigtit epoiolog at the altar, -. :17-414 wkita,bridai drcoi she wore; 1 .-- .. ,11140 4 . 1, proudly made her, • , .1811111.wde troaothlug more . , ...... QIINESTION at a country toa-party tur riini.aq the impropriety of mixing' up Cake arilkiiiineh of snuff in the lingbre; tiled re. t he-had seen his mother do it a 0 ti Tiyr dyep a bit of snuff. re' , ',.. at4rhy,, my son," said the lady, "how oali h titOe so I" ' - :4-7-01141.1g 'lie replied, "maybe you . 41!4: 1 ,/lopjust • tiuie.''. • rit" (dr your loilg ipittki 4,440 5 6,..6. 4 Rood. a *spy stranfor with thi contribution box. . . . . . • . , • • . , I` ....- . •. . - . r . • --- n . . • • • . •I . • . ' - - / •-- -. . - 1. • • . . , e4ollrl . yowx.../..... re , . a.,.r. r. •-...• ~.,......,....- '.....401—. , "mg...IL 4.- r..... 7. 9.0 . .n0v-o ~...?........, ...• , ..... .., , ..‘ . .. ~ -- t • '; ' latr . _ al ... . - . . . _ . - •,. • . .. THE' VERMONT COUSIN; , * CAPITAL 43TORY., . "It is too provoking, ien't•it; that tither will ineilit upon inviting that Yankee eotprin to come and stay it—our house and go to fleh9ol ! I don't see, for my. part, bow he came to 'savannah countryfied relations ; but since he h*, I think he might let - them stay up, among their OWn green mo • r instead of bringing them down to—mertify nein the eitiiiith' their awkward tiiya and eeild twang P' TBue spoke gut Mies 4 lnite Acton; to . her yoUnger nister,„ ffelen,:actar they had retired • ..tir...roolu ;thich expeotei . • •• • • • ••'.' • • been one tbbme ,of rsopydreetien. ' 4,oo:aime.LimmottrPlTAlNM Ite mor tified ' than you r Julia," tnewered Helen, " for I have to walk with her to and from school, and of course I cannot conceal from them that she is my cousin,. and I know they eineWriteithr heriand make allmannerot fun of her. Brother Nod stopped there last year, when' ho was travelling through New England, and he says they all say. ' neow,' and • abcout, r and ' dew tell,' and I amioure I shall sink if she talks so befbre the the PAO._ " Wen to drei4 Julia... ha whatfilo you guaon wiltsay when lie tinde we have each . I n horror to everything unrefined. I . wfnuld not wonder if he should desert me altogeth er, after she comes to the house, rather than be brought into contact with anything so vulgar. lie has been' more than usually at tentive, too, lately, and mamma says ho is ..Well, now, I havellosid that Herbert .Ferguson cares only forintelleist ; that he thinks nothing of looks in comparison. I can tell you, you are. mistaken, Miss Bolen ; if he has no regard for looks, ss you say, you ought to knciw what he said to nee lately; bat no matter. I wen't tell you. I only wish father wasn't so obstinate, sad mamma is quite as mach vexed abOut it as we are : why even the servants will laugh I,at her. !Anew ; Thomas to so excessively genteel.' , " Well, well, it can't be helped. lathei feels sander great obligations to Luey's they -; the broth'ers all - speed' that' Tallier should be sent to College, and theCttlie.ra re mained Ohms° and worked on the farmund provided lhe means of his oduccitlon,-and now he behaves tie aught to undid them is toturtii. But one 'Thing I'woul‘ mintiest,- Miss Julia, aad that is, that you have your party over Wore she comes; or cultured Mtii wit not go out, as she is only a sohool girl, but I kne,4v father ',PM insist epos /Laving her in the room, if we have oothpany home." , . " thentht of &len ; let's nee, f sat engaged every night for aweelle. to coati oirlitinireininetipM an eironing WI the. Atr ter part Of next week ; oh ! I ain so afraid she gill come before that time ; it wiii-luet spell - all my pleasure; and I expected se much." Tho invitations for Ml•tiluiii i s perky were all sentimt, and the. extensive props rations were proceeding most - swimmingly, when the very day before that on which the party wets to be given, a stage loaded with trunks drew up before the door of Mr. Ac tor's` mansion, Prom this, in the first place, alighted a .stout sua-burat young lerentr . , who was immediately followed by a siene*girifit aimut sixteen years of eigei this fatter being nen. other than the much aritided Vergront Cousin. " Well, if this isn't a little toe much !" 'acclaimed Kiss NW been drawn to thevi,inAow Meth ; " here is • clodho4er of a otost-murri, too ; that is rather more than we bargiinadJ declare," she continued, half-crying with vexathm: Litexitixr - Mid copitermand the invitations to toy • -, - .':." _-:L^.: . Qousin . Arthur llolmee proved to be a Yeti diehient youth, and sue dinner among IMah fine folks as the Actona was all he could stand. Re Was on his !ray to Yale College, his uncle having, flora his own 'observatiorus, And from what ha -had heard of —the young man, bdeu convinced that terkeep him Is boriscupon a farm Without, the advantages of education, would' be to - hide under • bushel, a light which, if trimmed end fed and.eutfered to -shod its beams, might shine fOrth for the illumination of its own and fu taro generation. And with this expectation he. sought and obtetnod a willing consent from his elder brother to itis..preposilplan of Joking theliducation-of Arthur under his rote- 1 - 1..a.14.,. • ' t:5..... :.:,,.. I * 'As 1 said hdore, Ailhur witiTh — rio aTat'etten among !tin (LT reintivS", who, with the ex-- cencion of his uncle, took no paiiisi6 - make hinifeel so, and, therefore, - to Miss Julia's great relief; lie took his defier:taro that seine evening for tstcw Itive:n. . - . Cou,in Lucy--tint 1 amatliid : you will sot her down as ugly if I snopl describe her features, and she is such a • avorito of 'mine that I could wish her to.make a favor i;ble-impressiegii—iipiinTroaderft trent tire first. Nove.l cannot deny that Lucy had bright nuburii hair; Julia called it red, but Julia wad not always good natured, and did I not always adhere so closely to - the truth as site might. Lucy's' nose was slightly Ira clued to turn up at.tho point; and her:zoin plexion. was °paint:l44e • exceedingly • fair ousts which mraWireekla. . But glee 'bad a pair of tote loveliedt, bingiting, deep blue ESE im;;Es catcA in town." ItELLEFONTE, PA:, W eyes, t►nd the.iwe'eteet sink And the Mat teeth, and Wiien .she spoie dr Wiwi (and alt's she seldom Aid one witkout tie pilfer.) Uwe was a chart* about her whole feed Wtifeh-Mide you forget heir, dad nose, and ‘fre2k4;'atl you only looked upon it as a fate to love. , True, she had what Julia called a " Yan kee twang," and she was not dressed.iier the. height of the lice f fasbitni; but in spite of lhcse drawbaak4l44 lid: still—it least aome-people hem was • great:. deal Belo about Othiiilikr - Lucy, too, to 0111114 reaped and admiration; but this' will Ail come Qot in,time. As she - Wite, she had comb, and'slieln4st, appear it the party,sand be IntiodiiBed as theAblialp_uf die Milbietit - ami:ll - iiiii- Mortifyint-At itse was,no help fowiknoti. The evening of the party proved clear and bright, end as it was well known that the entertainment, at the Acton* would be one 91,,thie,most billi t taz.of the season, none_of lite invited- who favulti get-ibenr remained ii home. lly.tei3b'idock, the brilliantly lighted. rooms were well filled. Cousin buoy, sitar_ ply attired in white capbrjc, (tor,. she had rejected the ornaments And embelliAments with which her cousins, for their own sakes; would hoi!e d ederned, her,) set alone, in one • to- merit of The ..iant , sep In hour 'after the other pests were all assembled, there sauntered in leisurely; ae if for a call, with his hit tinder his arm, and his slight little cane in his hand; an ox. quisite of get first water, rejoiciug' in the euphonious name of Mr. Mere4h Fits Henry. This was one of those 5 , brilliant youths Whose sole time daring ids day, which begins, perhaps, at 12-4thdoek, is spent tonne, ng tiPlealoonit, aiii*tg the fashions, sanuterlug up and dowartßroad way, and staring_at tho ladies, or driving do thspishionable thoroughfares ; a in the evening dressing Cor-thot. public en Meat, and attending thus. atitni it " The glau of haddlon and the mould of and hai ito higher ambition than to be stu died and copied as the perfection' ot Arens , Be fancies himself a Beau Brummell as to_ manners, • Cana d'Orsay,in point of beau ty and grace:- lte- may be baisisonee-.w" cannot tell —lbrthe immense amount of haPri about-bit file* renders it .fiiipassible to dis tinguish any feature s except a pair pf Vest rennd light nisi; and a skortatid destansle Dore.. 4Ceasionaly be causdaseandad to !Sinn°, and then him whits teeth gleamed through the sr sung hair surrounding the 4o*depart of his face, like lightning from a aloud. . Mi. Meredith Pits Henry, unfortunately, sets up for a wit; snit hir ray lipeceites are la ~ .eiri- t ,a— a — r clitia- a d hysillier young trafee, tilt he lit really deluded into the bo• -they steerorth - On entering Mr.' Actotr's parlor, Mr. Dior adith Fits Henry, with his gbms to his eye, Stared kboat c Ans With viola nondhalanoe and hniudenee, tit at length his attendee was attracted by the Vermont cousin, ait ting so quietly in the corner, utterly uncon scions of his otwariration. " MI what Vision of loveliness and grace is that I see before 1120 I" exoleimed he to Mies Laura Wilton, • very young lady, en joying_ her AM Wintew out.. , _ This br i lliant speech was greeted with the usual titter by the young lady, who was ex ceedingly:Pattered by even this mark of at, tendon from the retuned end ,I;esihiskeiea exquisite. • " Oh ! that's a country sonatina tho Ar tons, from Vermont ;. 116 eamet.'it d} fi ghter, exceisiratTerdant, I assure yout,"*uswer ed the prodd•ladT. " From Yarns/nose f is she ! I suppose I must pay Varmount • little atten 7 thnr - .1 wmdarithcorilt. 1119 N.U4r._°l7. 'erlaating obligations by giving'me an intro duction to ea fair a creature 1" - " Oh, I will Introduce you," answered Miss LIM in great glee, and then by signs she telegraphed those near her to •drew up to the sofa, as gret fun might be expected. Gradually the crowd thickened in that part of the room, all pretending to be engaged about something else, but all eager to hear the witty ideredith Fitz henry quiz the Ver tno rat cousin. Herbert Ferguson sat quietly looking over a.book of plates at a table near the sof", on which the introduction having now taken place in dde form, the perfumed exquisite himself with his bead thrown "back, and his delicate little shining boots thrust out, determined to show himself oil .16 his adinirers, and have rine'fun Out of the un ties nu,;i.Luxeounery girl. " Ahem 1itt,431 arrivoi„libclieve," said t`itz Henry. • Yes, sir, I . .came yesterday," anstvaied Lucy very simply. A few more questions were atOcod, to which Lucy replied in a perfect lady-like manner, thinking all the , time that . sho was covoising with a 'Varysuti, gated coroomb„ but being too Igo natured tVlettrinnee how greativ:fool-eke liiintgrifigELL-Att the etquisito remarked: " Everything's very green up there in Ver mot sin't-it yvittioism was toltowed Ayt:dtiah giggle flat Lucy casting her eyes gidakiy around en — dio - gtioap bot:9in her. and seeing the Irk of eager expectation on almost ayery face t Understood at once that the sil ly fop at her side was intending•to make* • , li. :, . --- 1111, I . -----. . • ____t . 6 ' • . • . . • • . , • . • • . -,. , • . • ' •••••• ' •.- .• .. • . •• , - •-•-••.- •• • :• -'•••••• ---••• •••' •••' • -• 7:7 . ..7 • .. .-, 1 '• , •r 6 •7: - 1. . . • I • . . • .. ; : ' . --- - . . : ••• \-1 ' - q . • ! • • . • . . .. • ‘ . .. . ••••••••.•••• .•••••• . , --...._- ... . r I - . . . - the a- " ' E x o of t.t• I A SMETCII CV:JOSEPH' SMTIV. ifilt4 y. - co taut 'or . . hal of her, standeri3 ; gan to take and rvided= " Oh, yea, we haio green things there, but I. have seen greener mictitalielidy slice I came to tfie nay." No wolow sait* the 'line utipicious dandy, imitating Lucy's Avis or p ridife ; 'low's wheat now " Well wheat's pier," rui4 Lucy, appi l'ently. With much interest. • is it riewriehat I-What's thi batter ill' it," • " Wh they say it kit runs to two* OA year, yeer, an d wtma this is the cAiY their(' is la gs- or no head—end iE h e re; $l, it listsen't tnyttiartn • •7t firwjangited tiatitity imirforho bid not 4dg/fed biiteio; ind Fier* reNtiffnd: ing down tedia, fli s a Ids - eyes 'ph the Vermont cousin w if hj impeded , some stuusentent. " They young fop Chan* tiltuod and laughed a 1111$ laugh s u 'if he did not knowf ui irhat to make;or_the_ shl, and theia said " Now I 'Oppose you theatre aud opera wit , - • pa 1 planet. parenti did had better not have such 'amusements, am was at school." . '• Wcll, it is bad foi so, and pa had to pro' places at all. , Here come i perfect Mr. Fititeniiii " Ah t 4; answered thought yttu , wore cliutei cifthat, kind I minagetiter - No ! mg„pa won!t. he keeps miree~ ~_ _ Ah," .41 Lucy in • — :!Valionizing tone, should not think that, ibeil hurt you. We Lad • very flue one thalaiiiih our country Village this fill,..atlttliiiperfectly delight ed with it." " Now, dew toll ! w 140,41 1 .41 you see 't" asked' the dandy. . Why, I Raw babealiXtoseed np like me man, a regularibporen kill; and really," said she', eicitriiThrtrrhef kio • ii3fr. Pits Reiwylrom bead tqlbot i “realfy the likeness was _so perfeettlat I ikinid barony have been die to MA .whiohterae which ; it was-teeny perfect, mew leye-ghias but never imagined that one of - -the exhibitions I should me on miy arrival_ in New Yore city, would be thaxef a man en deavoring to see how much lie ooald leek • • actilksa halm Lt." - , - Theossompow fairly rat; tAind aciesame of lagghter t and as he loon es he could bo-heard,'lerbart Fergus 4, who had enjoyed the wig& thing mighily called out!: •• NOw, Fits Henry, you lad batter beat a retreat an soon as . poosible, for_mn are only getting deeper iato-troublo." And the disoomfitted coxcomb, who had just begun to pereeive that he was caught in his own. trap, mattered something about anothei engagelneni, and snoSked riff, all that amid be *nisei ins face-left of -the deepesLerimson. Prom thence the Verbrett cousin was quite tiara from his attacks, in.. dad Be deestetti6 therluighly uneasy in her preemies, that Wain even came to the. same - aide of the room which .b seMaiimes didlo mud, him, he always had iom excuse for changing his sett. "Why pioyloa wetrualfirhaK4.9.ll.* young mass to4night," said Ur. Acton to his mice, after the comps nir hid resirct.l, " • • ' irnrst -turns set-the hadiatecaase he' rd ISo euturlnstio •• • - wise ladies." " Well, uncle, all I can say is ho brought it upon himself. It is. very unpleasant Iq me to hurt the feelings Of any one, and t was perfectly civil to the young man,though it was something of a plots of self•dosial tel talk to the poor creature, till I" found it was his tam to hold ma up to ridicule as an un sophisticated couatry gird: I thought ittras only fair to turn his own 'weapons against him." " I think a° too, Logy, and I rather think it will bo the last time anyone will attempt , to quiz you.'' ti Helen Acton and; buoy Holmes bogie; I school together ; the nen term, at one of die' first4whools in the cliff bud it was not 16rig before those who had Lucy's eduCation tin der their care; becamiponeineed that in the Vermont lady they had ni>eardluary mind to knowledge, whilo malt of the girls in the duties with her looked-upon - their school HA:, as a sort of ordeal through which it was necessary to pass before they sould come out as young ladies, and avant their litho iii. novel reading, trusting to the chance of eheitingfor the manner in which they should eoltitt.thernoVves before the classes. pucy Applied, herself intensely, and goon , olffittripped'all her chisses; and was obliged MO on. with'her studies herself' At bvety eiliniinatio-she was the obstirved of all ob sertes—,excelling 'in every branch of study and akin; het first prise in every depart ment:. her ounipoidtions in particuter were reOrded'muter pieees ; and iie 'short, Liwy was the pride of the sehecd. During tvvii years of her life in New York her manners, too, had acipired A polish only gif9ll kly newooiatian with peoplounfiOdhui. inert, and even was prondito bitter duce her cousin Miss lb:limes. tnoy2w: ex; ample and ashistwece, wins:Rif:great •ue-to Delon who • proved under her Influence , a very different c hirsute r from What she have been if left only to thegdidinde bar gay and fashionable /Water lipra.l:iTtuktitb inferior in intellect to lincyPirwsitilifarint parlor to some.4adies with Wliom ciated ; and really lnarne4 to love knowledge for lit own Mato I and to be pre'pared on leaviiig school to relish a style of more improving than the light trash 'works of the di r, which form Die .only reading of .„ • many of nur,youtig tallies. liteleh ally - s --- veryfla glrf tractive ifind interesting. ' ' . - 'During the two yea rs Lucy made - her hbine at her Uncle's, Derbtrt Ferguion eotitimied Co be a cimstant visitor there,. and Julia often wondered that he. had made no declaration. bbh thibking on the aubjectihe "strange! unaccountable !" many a time and duting those two years she wondered, CU* thiffierbert seemed to 13;tuktibttsnelt to ; bitt Atilt her itelf-cdmAteency was never in the bait disturbed by _the _thought of Lacy as -a v:ioat to grace the wo4enee, don't -elide,* his sister did in hers. ding A young menof fine principle , as welt as splendid intellect, he wg s determined to hillier his uncle that he intended to make the most of the advantage be had furnished him, At the end of two years 40 graduated with the highest honors, and.wes immediately offered 11 professorship in another college. Who would no* recognise hr the easy and elegant Arthur ifolthes, the dfiklont young "clod hopper" who bad slighted• from the stage years before, kt his uncle's door. /tough thet,l ihatTexteil by Illy while I I found it going to such delight how should bave !safe from any ever go W lielentind Levy hid graduated, the lett. takiniall the prizes, and Helen-coming Only lebatil-tiaber,_and thnnext day wet to leave for the Vermont/home, when quite early in the morailtg, it least early foirtleitors, ae it was not yet twelve o'clock, in-looking from the whulaw•Julia•aaw Mr. Ferguson aacend ing the staple,. ' Cie nitre either " Strange! said she ha never - calls Aso rarly, and oh deaf I int Olt dressed ! he I must have come for something . special." And in a Balm of exciteMent Juba began to primp leer hair. lint Pir hair . iiria_irt ralta.4 of het IlliihtiTztodbidotsid, and ,ne messenger had some 4- II ifilliftol2 her to the park 4- - • . . Pulling time bellyshe called Thomas and asked him if Mr. Pergnton hS4 not milled. 'Yes Mrslo' 7n6rnas answered. " And why did ytsi renal me l How can you be so stupid I" •, Because he asked ftithlistfAcy, replied Thomas.-,- „. "Stringe,usaccapipitleP! egglaimed Jo lis, an she wanted up and down the room her cheeks flashed with agitation. 7 . What can he want with Lucy i .perhips he wishes her to make iuterest for him with me, or, to ascertain my sentiments towards him ! But the minntes went by, and Julia ax. claimed "strange ! unaccountable !" a doz• en timts and yet no one came to call her.— Preseney her little brother came rushing tip stairs, having just come from school. _ Just hike sae I" he exclaimed, "alriYa blundering where I ain't wanted. rat must I d just now but burnt into the libra ry,. and there sat Mr. Ferguson on the so k with hiadines around muslin Lucy. The, tried to jump away from each other and looked as it nothing was going on; bur:li was no go I siw through it all." !, iulia bad now more reason to exclaim strange! uniceounialle !" than - ever. Ar- r cams for his ander; and lierbert too ao companiod her hotel: , as her aillaneled lover; - •thiis Masa al.lifisa • Julia'alopes•And. xp al— ectat' • • ions. "Isn't it odd, Juliet" said Helen one days; few mouths later. " You were se afraid to have Lucy come heron -lest it should drive Herbert, Ferguson from the house.-- 7 SIN hse Liemi the dam) Of IL; clesertitig you to be sure, but not-from to her, or mortification et being , connected with her." i am sure it bt nodess strange," answered Jells that yon ay...engaged to that same awkward, shy, 'man Ciiiiirii;'er'Whem we were both so ashamed two years ago." It only teaches us, said, Helen, " not to Judge too hastily from first appearances:— ho would ever have thought that vim hottld 'ever- have so much reason to be 'Proud. of them both. .Heibert.l 4 eriguson tad his wife no,w' have brio of the most elegant establishitients in Vie city, Artigkr and Melen went to , tis_oPT.ri . . directly after their tosiriage ; Arthur having been sent on hushiess for the college; with which he is still Connected. Julta stillllees in single bless loess . Mr. Afore& its Henry may still be Seen any tine day unging up or down liroadwax at. the hour when ladies most do - congregate there, and onq of the highest objects of hid inuidtlortneyati an invited gite'st at the ele gant and much talked of anterTitinmOids - . ' the once ridiculed Vermont cousin. .., Orld tiayt;,' , ltove Well it is, it sorter "knocks A.N 400rmitaga's elork being directed by ediployer to advertise a copy of r b fresto,. y Raphael, wroty, frestreow by raftie." arnvtwsutu. rArsti. lihirty.yesirisgothere ilved,fte:ar ,Patmynt, Wifyfic caaaCy;, : 111:1 Olineure indt-' 'vidual, Whose Millie has since become famil iar 'to the world. That individual' was Jo: seph•Httaith, the 'Hermon prtipliet. 4 L .A.aleittch teibittpsesotis lifb is interesting, not Lemma we find ;nightly in his chantetn r to admire, Stutbectuzio.it pres Ats terour view are brigin of Mormonism—one of the most extravagant hutitbugs that the world hail ever witnessed... The idea of a , new religmnorigipating is a person possessing lees ttitr• Ordinary shill upd ingidly •inereitsing in number- till both tile Old and, New 1 4 /061'cent/tilt multi. tines or .roselyies,A interest. To'gisa-the reader an idea. of- the origin of this singular sect is. til'o;,o:),Oct of the preient essay. The family of which Joseph was a mem ber was large, remarkable neither -for intel ligence nor industry: • His father possessed visionary mind; and cherished the notion that a prophet would arise out of his family. is hard* to say why he Should arrive at this pottelwsion; yet the means of accomplish ing Ids wishes were ovidelftly in his own powet, tor it was soon announced ty, blab AO serious's; mistake 'could not 1111 ;1 afehYred, for . the prophet suddenly.-died— died of surfeit—of eating too muckaar. nip ! The hopes of the ambitious father were not to be blasted by this . . unfortunate Occurrence fot It was boon known to tho pcc,- ple•ofSta@ord street, where they resided, that Joseph iris the successor of his broth et... In ord - cite obtain a clear idea of the preph-, et's career, It will be necessary to refer to his early years'''. The boyhood of Joseph was passed nn s farm with his father. bur l . ing the winter months he attended the dis. trust school, where -ha-Acquired the little knovilndso which he possessed. Ile is re- Membered by his school jilates„,. Ise king idle dsorneWhat vicious; and was re'gardeil by all as - a scholar. v As iyougmari, his prospects were anythin but - cheering. s' Ile was in no steady ituployment, and might often hive been found -lounging wound the bar-rooms of Paid:lyre, in amps - ny with perilous ,Ott worthless and idle-es himself. This was the general cheracterof Jeteph Smith np to the time of his prophetic oltreer..and-na on* wrong( have surmised dst. he was to become the founder eta new reli glen, bf ttn Inglotions martyr at bruurtx). ‘ JoAeph's prophetic- powers wore first di reted Id" the"acquisition of wealth, and Money digging soor; engaged the attention of the family, and a part of the neighborhood. Night after night those fanatics labored, urgetton by visions of untold wealth. Ex cavations were made in hillside and valley, but Fortune, the ficklegoOduess, refused to SIAM on thorn. Their golden visions were fruitless ; the-prophecy was false. At this /tags of allairsoi circumstance oc• curved which retrieved the waninibopes-of the prophoh, and gave a new difectionito 11 . genius This wits the dieboilts7 orthe book of Mormon, or 4ho Idorinon bible, .Thls event proved to be tho origion of Mormon• ism—the feeble genii which produced the the of &tat proportions, whose branches have extended over a large part of the known world. It: *tut pretended by, the prophet that this record was fouqd on a hill, below them/thee of the ground, written on plates of geld:, TM/timing trinslibed by a my.- terious preneas,-boosine the workflow known s Mormon Bi ble . This is the fabulous ac count of its religion. Its authentic history is as hollows : It wets written by a Vernicint ' 'clergyman named Spalding. It was intend edmerely as a work of fiction, nntl was en titled "Th e m anuscr i p t nond." The au thor died. before its circulation, and after iefell into ateo Joseph Smith, who at once made it accessa rytolds ambitions scheme. It is probable that this book had its origin in that sentiment kli prompts us to ven erate old manuscript which contain_ansto cOurit of men and times long since passed away. It professed to be the history of /I people 'which had its origin at the time .of the confusion of tongues, and whose proph et's paint, wtis Mormon. The style' O f 11* hook is in imitation of the holy Bible, but in point of beauty otthetatitim..iiithlindty of charitctet• and divinity of its . autlisit;, it holds no comparison . The only work with which 'the Mormon bible can tio compared is the Koran, Each is the omole,of &hie reli .gion, and thpa,uthor of each was an impos • • • - Well may-Mormonism blush at its paren tage. The life of its founder exhibits no 4;ature worthy of imitation, and his chitraii: - ter s is as:vociatod with all that is violet's and Mormonisin itself is but a *a clouts humbug; whose vital principle is poly., gamy. Bitch is the men--such the religion of which helves the ,thuniler. ' Tun Mouse.—lf you have the care of berms, - remember that a horse ismtioh note ' easily t taugithy-geretlo4lutall reinr,h usage. k ayo use him well he will be grateful rho lull! listen-for, and show his pleasure it the sound o , your foot,step. As „to hid Rood, do , by him es,by yeursolf—llltir As for weqi early, and then you nand. not hurivan`74tonatthar, A is,po ~40 Mkt Afikh4 i 4,l"t. sphils Many a truii-hoarted hand: ;'~ T ' %, ANA ilik% • • % ' :•'-'-• , i•Z"ft , • • , . • 7.:•ik...1/4 lial MEI • _, DR.FRANKLIN'S etIV.4I7:4C,Nri:I r 110#1044., prtgrifneefly Wiwi, thepulpt,tifittmt. neetion with • the celebration .. itt May be Intefeating tit:give:o;in* apeounit, hie son, William, about whci'm tidaftit -tittle is known by the community ,it Unlike tho father, whose chief claim to veni °ration ie for the invaluable sem* be MS• deraciide s conntry in• tier greatest need, . son %rad, from to last, a devoted, ioyal isp.! *fore the Revolutionary wai t be hatd . several chill and trillitai, offices 'of impel.« taace. At, the commencement of the t he held The,olllce of (loveroor or Sew which appointment p native,' in 1.7,d1. 4iob.ititiett between- thenteniaint qtolitr,y srd - thirmblettaL were I:Tali: to s ~crieis, he thieve his tchole influence *fiver of loyalty. and endeavored to ptigt7tim Likialative Assembly of New a -froiai sanctioning the proceedings' of. the litteard Congress at Philadelphia, These `atif hontever, did but little -to stkit 'We tide et popular tonitiment in raver' tyranny, and 'soon involved him In dificet 7 ty. lie was deposed front Ales by the Whigs, to. give plate to Wilflarii UAW' tit * and Sint i prisoner to Connt In 1778, he was exoht went to England. There fp6nt tie re mainder of his life, rdeivftte dens n from clieritritish government for th e e lbsseshe bad unstained by his fidelity., Ile died in 181,1, et the age of eighty•two. - As might be eg, peeled, his opposition to-the cause of Liber ty, so dear to the heart of, his fattier : pro duced an estrangement betsreeu them. For , • ears they-had no intercourse. When in" 1784, the son wrote td his tither, in iepll. Franklin sey.s : "Nothing has ever hurt Me tio mane • std affected me with suck keen sentiation4llo_ find myself deserted, in my old age, by my only son ; and not only deserted. but to find him taking up arms against me in i cause wherein my good fame, fortuncandtifersitilt . Ilis diit. also, he ',laden to the-part his. studied, Acted._ Atter - some bequestai, he adds: “The pa if"' No acted aoinsrme in the late war, Irit*hl of public notoriety, will account for 4ti , • jeering him no more of an egtati he entice, cored no deprive me of. SOWINO rna ‘Vrt:u.--Tite fists of New Jersey, hare aseadyitiglitlithi* . ed the Proidential leant that ihiy had a. large. addhotsk i llio .- otlier'night in Burlingtonr. Ther1114 4 ,4 04 ringr6 wench to recite, a must - pitiful, bit* most inflammatory address. prepared fer,BW ocidatdon. It 4iitai*ed• of course, a fulgoirte laudation of Strommer.'k`, hp 1. may, indeed, have been its author. *Jute ft in understood he furnishes Wilson's recite. tions. And it made exultant allusiMn to the thinasacre n of St; Domingo, anti thitisiiiiiglifif of some forty thousand of the whites, in cluding the grey-headed plantcr,apd the un conscious. swilling infant. Among the Aber. [Monist who hail the negro Woman in keep. • ; . and hottwOh4 the contributions, it was . ••• • at one of the drawing =stirs of the College went amend with the heti i And so these non combating fanatics hare dater- . milled to:throw themselves into the breach. They must abide the chanees of war. They - sow the wind, and must,not expect` to tes cape the whirlwind. 'They wonld.roblbeir neighbors, and they must be prepared to' .-thor own property. On the night preceding the recitatiop f lina. within less titan half an arrow's 1110t-,101 thC dwelling of the leading Abolitionist, a poor white woman, linable to Bpd mite sag to a friendly hearth, perished miserably' in neighbor's privy. We linnet thitetak*g actually occurred.—Eicnist AipZ 4vb Tffirttottoraint-ow-rsts-Fmitemt. Spirit of the Times saytii6 . 7follosrintlot passed between two city belles r ilear Anna : Please tendme the And:a4 - ore at Mrs. l'—'s last ttight;ital get one like it. Es4,Mt Dnat - Mit :T make, it or ffillifew - o ---- Tot any of thy *Tafel pi ut of the bowie wo= lead worn by n3yectf. 7141 .'"" - ASITA P. ,$. If you come round to the bowie, yhu. may look at the boiler ag, bibs '. - tnt Aitat please:l. it, few4loys attorwaidd iiimitAinntrAatt - a want of her own and a:v.B244'ft 411'MM! • I folk ws : ' Dear Ellen: Chive iin'engigeil'aiint.ii'tak o a ride on horseback tills evening: , war Yo n ." Lelia um your maddloy, , , neat Anno:. Linakt444.ll3b OU'r my saddle go eat of the.boullw sn by' myselli_ roan . house you may ride tha saddle amphoras you ploasmidn an Woo Alaraafbis.V4lll l - ) a•colbred ch 44 jePrinOo Qeempe.eilitr. • ty, a few miles below this eity,•agelt 'threel, • months, that has. already its perfect teeth, and can talk quite 0.44. The reit _,,,,4_e•f • Yotr want a ,flogging, that'd do," maid a' know it ' 43714' blitnalM ll 44l4ool2o ll / 4 4 41 1 t AlOregiad.4llo brikto' I,44todiot 14' =1 =MI . 4.644.1'014. •. • ri -141% 1 .1 ftliP ME