Pe , WillikW4l6 4 4#o= Term,. Publication autc--14,6444, if- pnld wittrhrtirrne mneThe Kdetaysd eit inottbe, arid 112,50 Irina paid prate the Soar,. These tams will be rigidly ad bored to. ADVIIRTIBIIII4ENTIi and Dugan! Notions Insert ea at the usual rater, and every deneeintion.ol • JOll ,PRINTINO 42.111013 TED la the nealeallmantter, at the lowest prices, and with the utmost desinttob. flowing purohasod a oolleollon of typ e , we are pro plirsti to sedgy the orderrof our aohde. alisttliantous., MUNGO MACKEY, TILT PRACTICAL JORVR Of all the mad devotees to the science of - -rwiitistai4siting.- - allthaitweterst 4 anu Ate:- Wrens Ofjnischief in Oils line of acting, the most system - 00'1)y troublesome that ever I hoard of was Muego 'Mackay, of the town of 'Boston, on Massachusetts Ilay. Otherefol lowed--siwirt as most men follow the hounds, or cuitivato music as a reereatiott ; Mit Mackay might Oro said to follow it as though i4-were his trade. With them it is the by-play—with him it was the istsinosit oflife. It was food and raiment to lUM ;be could not exist without a plot against the tranquility of his neighborhood, he laughed Lot when others were in a rage, and enjoyed life when those around him n ere suf ; fering from the results of his inventive get". Ills father died just as be had rown 'to a Ofii OfirlailOgliOritaireagiable • independence ; snd from that p‘ riod he pass ed his days and nights in a erin,ade aviinst the 112114:41 of the good people of flo:toti. lie was au lalitricaltii , ll a tt ; fir truly hand was against every marl and ever) inins against him," and the hand of every woman too, from tic Uhartes i firer to booth Boston, and for many mil. s around the vil lages, by a semi circle of n huh the ancient capitol of the laud M ',lead) , habits is .0 . 1- closed. One cold, raw Not ember night in the Year the a uul bleu as though it would Wow don n old ranuid !Lill, and the rain fell in such tormits that J.lttoker INII wen nearly washed away. The sky nas RR black "all around my hat," and the air WILS ‘tornimund ed of that delightful nurture of frost and moisture in which there is enough of the lat ter to open the pores, he former goe , , directly to the heart. , In the maim. of till, rinaldiag of the elements a tall figure inoght • WOW" ntreets, and lonely ;Ole) s, wRh a pair of fisherman's !mots, aid erwelo put art a }rugs pea•jacket, for indeed rnbliera and Marken halted tinder the window of n Tandy cottage at some ditgamptfratill . he town. Lull atte family having been - giiine time in bed, knock ed Violently at the door. At first the rude IiUITIUIOII9 was unanswered: but after repeated thumps, a bed-room window was thrown up', and a voice deztonded who wee there. "Pray acid Mackay—for it was he " will you be kind enough to till me if a per eon named !Cult liven in this neighborhood f" ••To be sure he does," replied the NOIVE. at the %Wow, he lives here.' K " I ant glad of that, for the Mak is very stormy, and I have sonwthing of great tin zeranssief4o rominimiratc to him " " Of ;?reat importance'—of great i tam* did )0u say I I know of nothing very important that cm colleen' sie at this hour of the night ; but whatever it 14 pct us hear it. lam the personsou *ant." " Speak a little louder, if you please," saiditackay—“l am somewhat deal, ami. the spout makcs such a noise. la;llou say year name eves Nutt I" ,—..C,eetainly I did ; -amt I wish xou woad make haste to_ poiumuuicato, wherever you hive to nay, for I have nothing on but my shirt and night-crop and the *ind is whist ling through me nation cold " " Him you gut an uncle in Begot) —very old and childless—worth ten thousand dol lare4 Atthrsyuastion along pointed white night-cap Was thrust out of the' window ; and in an instant, tnether with the shirt collar that followed it, Has natured Kith rain. " What did you say about an uncle and ten thousand dollara I There is my uncle Wheeler very old and vgy_riCiti; but. /chat "Of nothing as yet, till I Aar certain of my man.—There may be a good many Notts abort here. It is J. Nutt I want." " am thi "said the voice in the night cap.—"there is no mistake. There is nor a man for twenty miles round by the nein° of Nutt but me ; and biAides my christian name is John ; and.' have in uncle in Boston." Hy this time the whole back and sleeves of the shirt were out of the window ;. that towel at the And of the white night , eapsneari ly touched the green palings lo front of the house Atui had there bee; light enough to have soul; a painter might have - caught an Attitude of anxiety; And a taco, or rather two laces. for by this time there-was a himile peering o verNutt's shoulder beaming_wi - thirelldiciPitio - iid - g;ad fortune to conic. " Well" said Mackay. very dfliberately, "I suppose I may venture to speak out; but mind, if there is any mistake you can not say it is my,,fatilt." " Ito";certernly dot," cried two voices from 01% wiudoit. You aaryour name is John Nutt do you I" " I de." • "We than, all I have to bay is, u3ay the you t"• 'The twp mos wore drawn in like light uing Aux riirk ; u the window wail slammed gown ivith.a violence that bespoke rasc and dtkapprhntmerit, a loud home O.WM.m.aa• , M.M•vm. o r -intrMociß Apu. 7, BOTH LIBERTY IND PROPERTY ARE PRECARIOUS, laugh rose upon the wind, and the lover of practical jokeillirrned on his heel - to - trudge hernowdrdlhrolgh, the mist, as the good woman-inside wasioing in search of the tin der-box, to enable her to hunt up dry shirts and night-caps. The story was many years afterwards done into verse after the manner of Coleman the younger, by a clever student in Harvard University. One pleasant Sunday morning 1 4 :faekay went to church by times, took his seat in a central pew, just under thcf shadow of the pulpit, and sat bolt upright With his arms extended with an apparent degree of unnatu ral rigidity down by his 'sides. lie was presently stwrwrrnic& - by hulf-a rbrzeir-ier males, nearly all of whom were strangers to his person, and in a little time the whole church: was full to,overfl.owing: The psalm ' was sung,' the prayer was said and the son mon delivered hi the preachers best style. I lie dwelt particularly, on the requirenients of the great precept of brotherly love, upon the beauty of universal benevolence; on the pleasure which arises not only from cloth ' ing the naked, anti feeding the hungry, but from attention to tile minute and graceful courtesies and charities of life by which the thorny path Is softened and adorned. In the language of the critics in such matters, " there was not a dry eye in the place," the appeal hadj'eauut,il3._way... to 0 setioboad.: NI hiftc:kay's • immediate neighbors, were sensibly affected t ho Wept with thenr; the keg tears Onset' each other down his Weeks- But it bile ever.) one else was busy %%lib their handlterehiefs wiping away the eater, that the orator, like a second Miles, had by the strokes of his eloquence caused to iguhli from the flinty hearts, Itlackay held hie arms stiff and straight, %hilt:half a glass of liquid suffused his face. The dried eyes of the female friends were not slow to ob serve this :ler fn addition to the evident signs of deep meling exhibited, his face was rather n handsome face. Ile wriggled, fidget( d, looked confused and interesting, lint raised no hand, searched for no hand kerchief and seemed to be in distress, At length a young widow lady, who sat beside him, remarked that he was ill at ease, and (Heaven Mess the female heart! it always inelts at any wy tit eno ux sorrow,) aftfr one er too downcast looks and fluttiTing pauses, she said in an under tone: _ "Pray, sir, is there anything the matter with you t You appear to be unwell." ! landau)," breathed Mackay' in a w hismr, 4-1- am xpomrlSiiTaTyTic, acid hairi., hint the use of my aims. Though my tzars may have flowed in aoswen Uc the touching sentiments of the pia* I have not the pow er to wipe them away. In an icodant a fair hand was thrust into a reticule and a white handkerchief scented with ntto of roses, was applied to Mackay's eyes, the fair .sannantay seeming to rejoice in this first opporturntrof practoong what had been 40 werttly preached, appeared to polish them wttli right - good will When Ishe had done itfackny looked unutterable obligations. hilt %tempered that she could increase them a thousand fold if she would. as it wanted it very much eondelised to wipe his nose The novelty of the request Iwo, Thou g ht nothing of: the widow was ' proud of the promptitude she had display rd ' In succoring the distressed ; and to a person who has Alen° one kind action, the second ROOM always easy. Iler white hadd and Whiter hatikerchillwcre raised to Mackay's t'eut-weter, but die moment it was completely ` enveloped In the folds of the cambne, he gave such a sneeze, as made the.--whole church ring 41. was. in fact, more like a neigh. The minister paused in giving out the hymn, the deacons put on their specia -1 cies to see what could be the matter ; and in i an instant every eye was turned oft Mackay and the fair . Samaritan, the latter of whom, . being so intent on her object, or io• con founded by the general notoriety she'had ac quired, still convulsively grasped the nose. There were hundreds of persons in that church who knew Mackay and his propensi ties well, and a single glance was sufficient to convince them that a successful hoax had itecu played off -for- their sinusenortft: A general litter ran around the place, nods and becks andlvreathed smiles were theAfi der of the day. Men held down their heads and laughed outright; and the 'ladles had to stulT the scented cambric into theihnouths which had been so recently applied to the sparkling founts above. At length something like order was re stored, the hymn sung, the blessing given amidst stifled ionises of Various kinds, when the congregation rose - to depart. The widow, - vtip to this point, feeling strong in the con eiousnees of having performl.d a virtuous ac tion upon a good looking face, heeded not thii.gase of the curious, nor the in trfilit - ' - 'iof the mirthful ; but what was her astonishment when Mackay ioso from his seat, lifted up •; no of tkin_persJylic !muds. Atha toOk-hil hat,' from &peg above his head, and with the othe'r btiau,soarching his cost' pocket foft his gloves! 'Though the unkindest cut of all was It tb come, for Mackay having drawn them nn, and opening the pew door, turned r and put this 'question, in a tone the most insinuating, but still loud enough for fifty pc;ople to hear ' • " Is it not, Madam, anaueh greater pleas ure to operate upontlt 414 looking Roman notes like wino, than upon such a queer little snub ''as you have ?" Da. Wtiltam Etosa,—of Philadelphia is 'nowOigageft in writing a inernoir of tho hat! Dr. rriblia Kent Kane. -- BELLEFONTE, PA., M,ViESDAY, JUNE' 4, 1857. FartraceiV44. ry Trial of Strength. t The Troy (N. Y.) Times, of the 6th, re counts a singular trial of struigth which took place in that city on Saturday evening, be tween James Madison, "the cast-iron man," and Professor Carl, "the strongoli. man in America." The challenge. for a trial of strength seneby Carl hiving been accepted, a largo assembly Witnessed the performance. 'Previous to the trial, Prof. Carl give an exhibition of magic And tentriloquism, per formed his Mei:witted guitar and druM solos, balanced sixteen chairs upon his chin, and performed other feats calling for an 'exercise of strength, which must havo wearied bin) aninewbat. jiir. Madison then appeared - - 111 • - omit - IWO* tkr hundred-Iml fourteen pounds upon his breast, wMle two men struclenpon,it with sledges; held an anvil upon each ktipe ; broke a number of stones with his Ilst ; hen• a bar of iron quer• ter of an inch thick by striking' it over his arm : and held an anvil weighing about two hundred pounds upon each arm, while men struck upon them with sledges. Prof. Carl then appcn`red, held the anvil upon his breast ; bent thehar of iron almost double , upon his arm, held the anvils upon hi s arms, etc., for a longer period than Mr. Madison had.done. Llo then took the large flint stones which had been rejected by his rival, and, hammered them to pieces, signalizing his onisupft crv*ing fty twd a fikeverne about large enough to serve's a stepping- - block flie a (Moe After this he held one of the h‘stvy anvils over his head for forty-one seconds : lifted a NI xty poimil weight upon his little linger and swung it aroundhis and held two men on his ante while he whirled them around top-fashion, until their feet...stuck out at an angle of folly-five de grees. '•Mr. Madison nail then called out by the audience, and requested to give an account of himself. Ile excused himself in the mat ter of the stone, by sa) ing that hie rival was con;nant ni practice, while he hid not brol.en a moue fir a year. living urged to swing the weight about head, he declined to do it, on the arum of inability, and as Prof. Carl had not held the All% as oil Ins knee -- lit skirt, he virtually neloain lodged himself a whipped man." The Times of the follow ing day adds : “The cast-iron man, 'Air. James 111aaIsom • r y state - till that lie performed 111 Ilk contest of feats of strength with Prof. Carl. It is true that we forgot to mention that. a paringstuna_ was View{ iipSa:his breast, and broken aid' sledges : but this was no fiat of strength, it was a reckless luazarrlef his life it-frith - we hope ho will never t- so foolish as tcreti)eat again. V k 11ou CiuultAZ7l\,.No.., Wnintr.- The attention attracted to this subject threatens to cliort strange diseluaures. The Mexico ( Missouri ) Led.vr says There was an unprincipled man who sold receipts or direelions to the distilleries through Madison- Coutro , Ind., a :Lemming that fur every hush( I of meal distill," they should have a yield of lice gallons Of proof whisky : and as no bushel ',imams over Lao and a half gallons of proof whisky, some false remedy had In be resorted to, and that ri Ingdy was DLIX,VOIntga, or sir) clime una tobaceo-juice, and those putsonut s sub stances being pult. In V% 101 OW mina i 1 hen slop ass let to the hogs, so powerful was the poison that every hog which got to the slop died-in art hour afterward. El.ol3l:23loll.—lghxtuenco consists in fuel ing a truth yourself, and in making those who hoar you fool it. Oratory is not vocife ration ; it is not stamping a bole in the plat form, nor beating all the dOst out of the cushion of the pulpit; nor tearing oft your coat-tail ju Ore 'violence of your gtsltCulii thins, a la Olvezzi , it is not holding the breath until the face is purple and the eyes loodshot ; it is not hissing through the teeth like the fizzle of a squib, nor cliouching down, thou bounding upward hke a wild cat sprigging on tt 'posslan, nor ranting about from one !ado of the rostrum to another, un til the skin ix dranclici4 thaliody weakened., AO', helPlestitiess ; you are noi eloquent in all thiiquiasst i ft be for the grave, for it • A QUAKER WOMAN'S Loalc -no follow ing is an extract from a Quaker Woman's sermon . " There aro three- things l very murh wonder at. The first is that children should bo so foolish as to throw up stones, clubs and brickbats,tnto fruit trees to knock down fruit ; if they would lot it alone, it would (all itself. Second is, that men should be so foolish, and even so wicked, es to go to war, and kill each other; If let alone they would die themselves.. And the third and last thing which I wonder at i f , that men should be so unwise ae to go after theyount - ''itrotevat - iir - fliey'is;Oula stay at home the yoang women would come after thorn," Formerly " college" and " professor" meant something: now an ordinary private school is a•college, and every dancing Mis ter's professor. But in this lowest deep there ih still is lower deep—a rum-shop ItZam er In Cincingrati.liaving dubbed his •saloon " Slereck kWliege." We thinkthekettom hasheen touched. ' 4 oov. Walkerof Kansas, receives ly salary of $1,560, out which he hail° pay his private Secr‘taxy and all attedfifk.- pens'es. The governorship of Kansas irk evi dent', no sinecure. . ' . . . 44 - - • - ' ...,_.. v MINERIMINOV.IIM P -111.111.1.0111._ r"= - Z" IWt•r - _ _- : - 7 - -,•••.P.'"MI • TfUl - !SSESSOR HAS SENSE AND -stun ENOUGI I TO DEFEND TIIEM:" .no N6lo*rallijiliZait Loaf-. Calm and &Mat wide air, Thep lea elle AIN ; And in .one If any calm, a calm deep* glare on the seas, and silsleep Andr.wavei that sway th elves in rest, And dead calm in that n le breast, Which heaves but with the suing deep. I s TVINYBOI.7. , It Was evening—a Veautictil•auturtin even ing. The red , leaves yet dings& Molting in the mild air ; the yellow sUnthine yet gilded the lull tops, and the soft shadows of twi light were, creeping silently ut the yell, the gentle' widow Leedom,wi i &lor child in er arinsT — weridZiMer way htinewliT: SEC . w'aa tired:ire she 111 day in fir : . tm;Wood's kitchen, and though it was Sat urday evening, she had tot been paid for her labor. The kind hearted housemaid at far• mer Wood's had urged' her tti• wait rot her supper but she could not alai. She had no eye for the glory of that Moiler sunset, as she walked wearily on, her tired arms scarce ly able to hold the little joyous creature that laughed and crowed, and ever and anon peer ed into her bonnet, lisping his sweet toned "rnaninia,mannua.' She though) only of ber expeCtant little ones, and mesas of oh thing brew d for them to last- over Sunday.— As oho nearodAlho vill . :a l .&. she pluto whether to miler nor pass vision of her lonely fast* chi Wren-. mac up before her in iniaginaticin, and she stopped, her 111,5 inveil a minuto or two as if m pray er, and then quickening her step • and hurry - lug on like ono who bad nerved herself to a sudden resolution, she turned into the main street and was soon standing before the counter of the baker's shop. The baker was an austere man, but it was not in human na ture to resist the widow's pleading totte and touching expression, as she falteringly asked him to trust her for a loaf of bread for aday or two. The man handed her the loaf re , Inclatitly, and was about to ntsi-it on prompt payment, when s glance at the widow's dashed face 131111 embarrassed manner, de terred him. With scarcely audible thanks she conewiled the loaf under her tattered shawl, and drawing her babe closer to bier bosom, hastened home, •.:11uthei's come !mother's come," cried a enuple of young. oisger 7 waierst- wrshe entered tho gate, and Mer SeVila year OH Robert and his little a ster /AMC running to meet her.— They w( re pretty children. Thu little Itl.try rinheritrtherliliillierif. ml d bins eyes and delicate cumplaxioumnd this boy-his father's handsome face and honest, brown eyes.— Poor children, for they were accustomed to being left alone, for the widow went out to cork daily, and the night was alivriya w / cam, that brought their mother's turn. They had a thousand things to alit and tell, which ft II pitheaded this tinie on this ear of the sad mother. though she instine. tively ansvreredithem ies and no, as occa sion required. plie gat e the loaf to Robert, and taking little Mary s hand,. they...entered 110-house together. The table was already set out by the expectant housekeepers. but there was nothing on it that could be con structed intlitanything eatable, save a cup of molasses and some salt. The mother cut a slice of bread for each of !lie half famished children, and sat quietly hy, nursing the youngest while they etc it, fur she had no heart to eat hers df She oas very sorrow ful as she looked at these depetultiabeinga, and tb6iight of her failing sired:4sh, and shn ding her eyes with her hand the tears stole silently down her pale, patient face, and fell among the bright curls of the tinconsciou: head pffloweii so peaceliiity on her bosom. She had boon sorely afflicted. Thu husband of her youth had been stricken down by a 1 felling beam while attempting to issues itiek 1 child that had been overliMked in the hurry and panic, frinst a burning building. The child was saved hilt he who perdled his A life for it, tholtßing bravo hearted, „has perish ed. The fruit of this 143310111, her eldest horn, her pride of heart, the noble boy %those every movement and expression bad been so many titimilels of his buried father, se as a wanderer she knew '4Years after the boy hid left her, in Sobert, Leedom came often to sts:hor in her loneliness, and ventured to tell her at length how he had lovedidier from the time they had played together at school, and how he had remained single for her takc,' - anil CArlie b4ek to the same old port that he might breathe again the genie air that she breathed, and besought her to let hint sustain e md shield her, to cdmfort her in sickness and sorrow, ske gladdeNasthe honest sailors- faithful heart, by consenting to become his wife. No wonderthe - ypungin:dtirThlied her, Abe was so neat in her habitr, l birgentlo and so indus trious t. and her calm, sweet face and holy eyes shone ever will; "the beauty that dwelt: in her soul." She hid learned to love her second hustpaud, and h. tb w uj i ji ll .thr tj a-fid r children, when the sad news cante, that the gallant vessel le tt';l),ifib he had' Failed was wrecked oh the dangerous coast hear comb, and fp his generous efibrtii to save others, Robert Leedom was. lost._' - ',Rhe had teen a widilow the second time only six months, and now, as the thought other ut ter inability to support her ilitherloss chil dren, ()veil in the summer time; and, saw no other prospect 4 before her whiChever way looked, and know that the cold: dreary win ter as coming gradually on, hor heart fail e=r.iitterly, and she could only weep.-- Tho wondering little ones.triod by every en deaiing art they could think of, to attract her attention but in -vain. • Impressed by' their mother's mournful modtphey 4te their broad ahnost In silence ; find when they had ftniahed, she arose mochinicalry,.and haying her babe In Its cradle; put Atari, to, bed.— She heard thim say their prayers, and bade them goodnight, and God blesri them, care folly and tenderly as usual, but with that subdued, spiritless tone, that ertleriates from • heart without hripc. She continued - ing at their bedside long after she had pray ed with.them, and wept. • Bitterly she wept, but there was no pity ing eye to see now, no render hand to camas, no loving voice to aooth, as the cry from her overburdened, despairing heart, "My God. why bast thou forsaken me i" went up over the unconscious heads, of the sleepers in Ati say I . The eye that never slumbers nor sleeps was there, the loving kindness that has said, "1 will be a father to the father. lens," was about her even Ihrn, .though she knew it not. In the power of the spli it cape the blessisl'assurance,,, in answer to her desvairing cry, '•1 ndl never leave thee nor forsake thee ;" dad her soul grew calm. all her old trusting faith returned, and she arose from her knees tranquilly feeling that "the Lord iv a vary pleasant help in time of trouble." She took don n -the little worn Bible front mantle, and she read on through the elosolg clinliter of St. John, au ex ressiou orpeace ineffable, '.the ,penett.that • iiinderstanding," settled serenely on her sweet face. Putting the Bible rever ently back, she took sonic mending; Iron: her basket, and soon the clear tone of the hymn sounded through the stillness of the little 01. 7 . tage : and "Ilow firm a foundation," oct , whet: pealed from lordly organ, and echoed through vaulted dome, never ascended more accept-ably.to Him who sated' on the great white throne. But other eyes beside the All-seeing had been looking in through the low casement at the lonely sufferer, and now the sweet /ones of the holy hymn were interrupted by a knock at the door. Tho widow opened it and saw before her a weary-travel-stained man, vrho only asked fora crust of bread and a cup of water. Tho widow glanced at the loaf which still lay on the table, and then at the sleeping children, and hesitated not a moment i• there was something in the tone of the stranger's voice that came grate; 'Addy to her soul-as a breath or hpriug over violets, and she thought of her on n beloved 1 boy asking for chanty iu some distant land and she hastened to chair mtit, reach Bur - TBUIFO - 4 tr.istinkto MB2 " who causeth it to rain on the earth whore no man is, to satisfy the desolate 'and.wasts ground,"-for her orphans. " My mother Lpt,,¢own precioim mother'." cried the familiar voice, in broken tones and 'spring - 114 Forward, sLu Was caught and strained to the heating heart of her long lost son. "My son, my son," she could only mornmr, while ho exclaimed ; ^ I 311 n rich. my mother I have plenty for us all ; I have been to California, and have come hack rich, lre)ond all I ever lioped for or dreamed of— my poor fain shed mother ! I inn just in time—thank God ! thank Uud !" and inotil er and son knelt together in one glattear-, nest prayer of thanksgtriug. How To Piumoss.—A few nights back small party of ladies and gentlemen mere longing over the supposed awkwardness at tending a declaration of love, when a gentle opan rernarkial that if ever Lee (roved hrinself he would do it in a reflected and business like manner. " Fur instance," hd con tinued, addressing himself to a lady present, ".1. would say, I have been two years looking for a wire. lam id the re cemt of a thousand dollars a year from my . business, which is daily on the increase lof the ladies of my acquaintance, I ad mireyou the most; indeed, I love you, and would gladly make you my wife." " You flatter me by your preferenee," good humor -1 idly replied Miss'S—, to the surprise of all pressiit I refer-you to my father." C' Bravo! bravo !" exclaimed the gentlemen. " Well, I declare," said the ladies iti chorus. The lady and gentleman, good reader, were ' 4113141614-90011" -after %nit earl 10 way of •• coming to the pointr and a lady like inatlea -min it-his ward H Iliauatrrt_Woitos.—kiroid, as far, as pos sible, the use of ivordxto which, an indecent Or equivocal meaning tins become affixed, but do not falLilltd the other extreme of pru dery and squeamishness. There is no more harm in speaking of petticoats and shirts, when occasion requires it, than of stockings or gloves. The indirooney and vulgarity consists44the awkward attempts often made Tailtordineutioning these and simair exti- Pies of attire. MARRIAGZ OUSTOX.—It appears that in New Zealand, when h e marriage ceremony takes plaice it is w . veri old satekm thlliiiiirsOhhe bride suit the bridegroom together pievious to tbeinenOm— Chrtqlon lands It ian't ee ; The bridegroom and the bade To loggetheada but leldom go Until the hoot la tied. -POWER OF KINDN6SB.—NO man has OVer l e 4 nasuredit, for it is boundless; no man has ever seen its depth, lier it is eternal. In all agelPof the wbrld, is every clime, among every kind, it heth shone out a, bright and hosutillil star, a btorninif glory ! kgood book Aid a' god woman are ex cellent thingafor those who know how just ly to appreciate their value. There atrium however,' wh4 judge from the beauty of their corering. • English Women a#FolitiOialis. " Female influent° heA been turned into a I new and novel direction In England. Start ling as the news may be to mgresgive Bro ther Jonathan, it is a fact nevertheless, that in staid, sober, conservative England woman has taken" the stump polttieal. She has brought her " nisi:nutting ways" to hear upon the ballot-I,sta,• She has trade politi• cal speeches, or as the papers have it, " dressed the mob." (The mob means an as , sernlilage of male fellow-I:dire!' voters, u presume ) The following paragraph ex- (dams all !In the 'recent parham'ols7 elections in Ent/ l ivid the women gem tb hare beeii un- mniattr adtt - fa. - taffy Pi-n-ifu7:ol6intri bulecl much to. lk.r husband's re-election by eiffitinfr the different c pollingd.orii •.,with litr iqnllcts mitt •ttirlesi , 3 nmnng the ckte 'tors Lid/ iv brine'. d to liner arrii il the t lemon of her for Nfaidilutte dill no/ ettintt.3 fu: Ittit ill thrt,u:ll the (Icte;:tt• Ais , . constantly dz.% rg about the ton she itls'n was most a, the at the norMiration and during The polling : and at the close, unable to restrain herself any longer, she threw up the is iniloSs uj, her hotel and addressed the mob in a speech is Inch every bids agreed was better than her lelsbantra delivered im .medintely afterward from the same place." Our good brothers and sister• on this stile of the water arc sufficiently shock, d at the idea of women voting.. Is it any nn-se to rote quietly end silently than to 'aide and make courtesies, than to be acti% a accrual the polls, than to dully( r harangues publicly I This is an interesting problem Mind, cdo net take knden' Wu do riot now say that women should vote, or should not ter rise spvechrq. Itut e a ouhnike vvry :midi to have quesuou discussed by abler pcus than ours. —Li fe Itteatratcd. Nearly Buried Alive A letter from Cleves, Panellion county, , Ohio. says , ••Wat Eckman, a wealthy cite- I zen of this I.lace, was taken violently ill on the morning of the 15th, and by having the prompt and kind see-. lees of tun erudite received hits 'quietus' at about five e'cluck, the same day. Next martini; tltedefunet Eckman was kilkEy S:ONYCA away in his aoffin and jolted in a market wagon tat, the Berea church, a (testae - a' of two milts, te he se a funeral sermon walpieullett Lce. The solemn thing was about coneluked, the Ns( hymn I and the chdt Ivisittptiait. ridilariW'whea they were suddenly annoyed by discordant and very eininusienisoundiand kicks, which it seemed obvious were going on inside tiere I coffin. You may possibly imagine there was sonic consternation in that meeting house about that time—well, there was nothing else for tt ft w minutes.. At least half of the congregation broke for - the door, and the I bidanee were about to 'follow snit,' when theltete. Arr. lie descended from the pulpit, and in a Mud voice ordered the coffin to he speedily npened, ortliqr was done, o hem it was found that Wet. was not only alive and Laing. but wassetsmggling manfully to free himself lioclt lltis -to 'him mysteries; cow. finetnent. The blood was flow tog ryo. ly from his mouth and nose, Ind in a very few imp utes he ee as aide to speak. lie was carried to the hom.c. of Abram Patterson, Esq., about two hundred yards from the church. and a) physician Suit fur, who remained with him until the nest morning, when he was ahle to walk about the room." An Anecdote A long lean, gaunt Yankee entered a drug store and asked • "Be you the dragger r' '•Well Popov, SO : ir sell drugs . " Wall, have you got any of this cr scernin' stun as the galls put on their hank &oilers 1" ' 0 yes." "Wall ottr Sala gw me to be married, and she gin Inc ninepenco and told me to ini est the hull 'mount in scentia' stuff, AO ' S to • •et stink awertrif - I c.nttl Ira inTrii• to 'mit, so if yotSte a :uind I'll jea smell mund,'Z, The yttillico smelt round I,itliout being suited until ll a " drugger " got tired of birth and takiiigdoein a bottle of hartiliorn, sail] " rye got a scentin' stuff that'll hint you. A single drop,. on„a handkerchief will. stay for weeks, and.,you can't *ash it out, but to got the strength of it you' must titTe s. good.big smell." • " b that so`, mister;l — Arali:jesi hold on a minute, till I get my breath, and when I. say new, you put it to my smeller. The bartibornwor course, knocked the Yankee down, he gol up and attar Tolling up his sleeves , and doubling tm Ms fists, said, " You made me smelt that aie tarnal • WAD' elefr, mistcr, n. w smell fire and brimstone." Basurtruntss.—Ease, confidence, and self p.ossession are essential to your success ass: converasigorust._ If you are, baandil..:and' diffident, and consequently embarrassed and awkward in coinpany, the difficulty must be mahfully met and overcome. That. it can be orerConie the experience of titctiniands at tests. A strong determination and a mode rate degree of persevertme9 will'accistrfiffiah it. • I'ultivate 5s:lT-respect and ,selfireliance. Estimatilyourself as, correctly hs yois can, and insist,' by taking the position pligh,you feel belongs to you, upon aline rsoognitlon of your clairea. If you set y9kurmtr *Ash is a body t ", society TO les very. likely to take you at your wortt: I= F. 1.50 ilf • VOl.llllllll *4 Ssfyird - Taylor's apdaiii Or FillMinig VntIVIO Ot, rES Tiaitaid 'Taylor w4tingftwalt Jifilash hi • . the Frigid Zone, on the 6th of Jammer, tells% of a nurse named Fredries, who sitteWie to his case when ilidlering the horrors ofoth adv., andinalies vitae rontirlits of wolitan kind iu general, in the paragraph stinexed This pod Inarted girl was a genuine spa. eimtn ilieNorthern Swedish female. Of , mediym plum!), stoat, with a rather ilender waist and erponatio hips, and a foot which Mewed firmly anfrnimbill at the mune time, she was as cheerful a body, as one would wish to tie. Her hair was 'of I v Mende re_ equation in , Staidaiu her ey,ea a eh'ar, tale tilne!lhey nose straight and Stillltin - ed, her elieti-of- the delicate pick of a nre !ref, and her teeth so te, regular end perfect that I am Mtn they would mike her fortune in America.— Ahl aye cheerful, kind, and active, she had, tn. i r thi Irr., n ha rd hre of it : she WWI alike cross mistress to boot. She made our fleas in the moaning darkness And beought ns our early coffee while we yet lay in our bed, in necordance with the !flatirons habits of the Arctic none Then until the last drunken gncst von silt nt.totetird midnight,there was no respite from labor. Although matting from a distreming cough. she hid tbs' out &or as well as the fn-door duties to dig: charge. mid se aw her in a sheepskin jack et, harrussing horses, in a tempenimivat of 34.) degrees below zero. The reward of such service Wll3 pOSAII/ly about sight American dollars a vest. When, on leaving. I gave her about ss much as one of OUT betel ser vants would expect for answering a question the poor gill wee overwhelmed with grati tude, and (yen the stern landlady was so impressed by my generosity, that she initia ted en . letiling me a sheepskin for Mu feet, saying wt wertl'goZliten." There is sumething exeeedingly primitive and nnsophisticatttl'in th . o manners of these Nbrthern penpie—a straightforward honesty hich takes the honesty of others for gran led —a latent t indness and good-will which may at first be overlooked, because it is not derr.onstrattrc, tqtl a total uneonseiommess of what is called, in highly cultivated circles t• ' 1 TI ev • • fre edom of mamiers proprie ,)•• I IT) which, ra ~ onie countries, might denote lax tsr2r-Or morals ; is here the evident stamp of their purkty.___ thc-thnn • • ottetereenr. ' red to me --which is the meat truirmire end virginal nature, the Nitidioni:Ainetliall!erl is hltiliteraf-skynight - ni - alli ontsiao a gentleman's bedroom' door, aid who requires that certain untilTending_ parts of the body grid articles . of clothing should Tte design:UE.(ll)J delicatelj , circuniloctitions terms ; or the simple r.lintlea• Swedish wom en. vrho come into our bedrooms' tar?th oak.. and make our fires while•we get up and dress coming and-going durieg all the various sta ges of the teiht, with the frankest tmcon- Reiourness of impropriety? This is modesty in its healthy and natural derelopment, not in these morbid forms which suggest an ima gination rvey on the alert for prurient images. Nothinfr has confirmed. ins impression of the virtue of Northern Sweden snore than this fact and 1 have rarely'relt more respect fbr woman or mor ,, fnth in tho inherent purity/ of her ttat Ti;e)Cakt,t_ire of Cltilflp itIMMONRI-ARALST OF 540. raktY. I ... }From the bt. LOUIS Leader, May 2i• About two mouths ago, are publuttwid an aeeuuut of the ithillappiog ofseeetriasittilthen by the Mormons at New Oriesne : -The father. IL U. MeLtlan, trax absent at, thd time n 1 Culd'ornis, and th'u mother, who had heen..leliohd by the Saints. lent herself to • the infathowi ectleme..by which te t t:An t ° tlreu were to he ruined. Thekideoppees slat ter] It tilt the children front New Orleans to go through Texae, Arkanasts and the In disc Nation to the Salt fake trail, but. were fortunately iuterc.ptcd by the father; Who having mart if the affair, had returned-sad surtkd in pureitit of thcm. The following Is an ex.raFt frontligLie city', and gives tunic of the partieulers of the arrest FORT GIBSON, FIIERIKRZNATIOY, May 7th, .1847.' Dear Pc is ntri-: I hare just arrived from 4 sore tromp. on which I succeeded in cousiwr up with Eleanor and the children, and have taken the children from her by-force. I bare placed Eleanor in charge of the United States Marshal, and hare succeeded alio in arrest ,n; Pratt, who is now in the guard-hot:tie of the Fort. The (7. S. 11farshal will start with his prisoners for Van Auren to.dowitirotr, and sill, by a different mute, in Conapitor,of Capt. Cabil Rhd Ipdy, leave wiattlukiddldwin, - - for the same place. '1 Amsted Pratt:lSL on vi charge of larceny—in steali t oribe clothing the-children when ki. eryairwriiiTaltia onlyigwr I could reach them in these Tarritarlea,:4lVhaeL I fail bef?re the U, 8, Commjaakmer ai,t. Van_ Burtm, I mean to halm Pratt irraiitaf having fled •ffnin 'justice from St. Login. MP— • and e l e a ilivoiiaition from -,-Ida i‘lissottri for him. Yop are fairly goattate— See Strong, and inform me flytlawltll 01-11111 best nianncr of proceed/it. • • A ,bliow4 went, 4 few w6Ekit hinee, Into Cho atm Of.a feehionahle any.nicirts V' asked be. , • 4I Plenity kinds." • "11'-',hot d 4 youtsles.eidtTf"' the ohap. A cotdl" , rojillealbe4inlitt 4 I. “Yee, Ilwant oboist a cord: bird thin , sings the petticolits:hr 'gin At. I 'awl . you tokirtino tiai , dtiirtriris,''enlythOoght rorhend, woo in,: whei conitnrup."Z.The onlliner feinted; " 0 CI Mr
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