P2ll ", • . ' -4, 4:r.W14. 1 '":1454' ? r" ' , '•`:t 4 t.l7 , • , frt•::"' ~T KYVijA~ t: • 0 A? , - ir Ag BEE rt =l 4 'l' 4 • •• om Od . if B dtti f itaid a s:: h ;46 t il l ir•ort e p P al . thl re,the ir. Then tenauftill pe aad bored ie. ADVERTISIChiRriIIi and Huninon Notioes Insert ad at the usual taloa, and every dearrlDUon of ' JUB PRINTING EXBOUVID la the neatest manner, at the lowest prim, Brat with - the' unmet detract 7Theleg purchased a large oollection of type, we are pre pared to malls& the orders of our blends e ibusiniss glirertorp. CEIABI. d 1p DALE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTIg, PA Mai with alio ion. JILILICIT Hale Nov 15,185 -a SW O. L. POTTIES, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON ELLI.W.PONTS, CCKTIIIL Co , rA, Ogles on high Street Old office ) Will attend to paufainional culls as heretofore, and respectfully offers his !cervices to hle.frientle and the public Ord 28-'5B-tf DR .:J. IL mrcus ELL, PiIYSIC(AN t SUIMEON, ssa.Litrotrin, Crt. Tait . ° , r•, • Will attend to profeastonal ealle as heretofore, and respectfully offer. hi. sereieee to hid (wools and the public Omen twat door to ht. residence on Spring street (lot 2!4 :04 tf L. J. CRAMS, ATTORNEY ATI-LAW AND REAL litaATE AGENT taAprieLn, 4 1 FATUALI ,PA Bap 30 'OS-O e. J. 110CIICTIAN. BURVEI Olt AND CONY EY A CCF It JAMES H. RANKIN, ATTOIANILY AT LAW, usit.t.st U. I, Pltvn . A• Oflie• on High :ttrent opposite the resoloose of 3'4L• DUTIIII4O WILLIAM se. 81.4111, ATTORNEY AT LAW Wks with IL,n .1 limy" T H I LTe I Lg""F " " 44 IMMINICCI LINN 41tr 11.1101 , 11 ATTORN LI S AC LAW Ore. on Allegany street, lb the butitbng fur morly neeepteal by Mule., Nl' Aflutter, Ilale A Cu Bankers August 10.15-Iyear Dn. JAIIIE6N. 111."I' 111601%, or to Dr J M. Istio trt, .1.,. 1.0 prufesstoottl tort Iltos to tho ottitoos 1 U Ell's MILLS and rtrinit Witte at Iht Eutaw Hoop" AMBUOTTPUS, rh? paALLualtArmi 1.)...11. I ILD.I:OTYPI:m nkon daily (except ` 4 un.layr) from k If to 5 r.O 1W J BABNIIAItf. In his Went/A 1,1tn./1, to it, Az Iv It tulding Bellefonte l'eun ot J. D. WIND ATE, 111,SIDENT 1)1 Nll,l Office and residence on the Nol ih 1:ael Vas Diamond near the Court }lowa re Iv ill be found at his ofit t ev•ept much month, eommenetng on lie t'ir.t :Worldly of the usouthowlien he will Im aany filling Males GEOIIII7II W. 6 Vl' :LUTZ CA k n aLIVATCIIAIAKER 3 JEWELER, Rooms one door L'oo of Y C Hutto, .1 Ben Pion, on MI.. g•hroy Ntryet Cl,Mkt, W AWL.. at! wstry I. •..• Aug -Wbb4l t • E=l ePPONITETIIakp r BRANCH RANK =I = X B —An Omnibus udl run to and from the Depot and Paclaut Landaugs, to t lon 11 , tel, free of ~barge dept 3-37-tf ' ADAM ZIOV, ATTORNEY AT LAW DELL.I . I)-IIL. 1•1.3 V J. It 111 attand promptly Mall legal business Intrusted to him Special attention bill ho sit en to the Orphans' Court Practice and Sem ening His office is with the lion Junes T linla, %here he can Always be consulted in tlio 1 rush and German labsuages J IL lITOtIKU ATTORNEY ANL) Col'tisELLoll AT LAW P1.L1.L1 . 40 1,, 1101 4 Will Kletlee hie protessimi in the euveral r Centre Comity, All burnt were intrusted to loin will be faithfully attended to Particular attention paid to collections, and all most. proinittly re milted Can be consulted in am (lumen us well as In the lioglish language ,01111 iii se High mt., formerly occupied by Judge purl:midi and D C, Dual, EN REITCHELE & HUOIII ATTORNEY'S AT LAW, 11E1.1.11,IONTS, ream Ira C Miturban and D 111 Bun - have entered in Into copartnership in the praotiee of the Law, un elsrthe name of Mitchell & Bush, and will gls, proMpt and proper attention to all busing., en treated to them Odloe in Reynolds' Arcade, near dm Coot Nouse Bellefonte, November 211-484 f - tr. P. GRICIEN, pituut/IST WROLVIALS AeD RETAllb&Lien in Drugs, Medicines, Perfumery, Paint+, I'or niches, Dye-Stuffs, Toilet Soups, Brushes illit r awl Tooth Brushes, Fancy and Toilet A rlicleA, Trussels and Shoulder Braces Garden Seeds Customers will find iny, stock complete and fresh, and all sold at mmlerite prices LarParmars and Physicians from the country are nvited to exawnlimany stook , DENTAL CARD. /LB. Parry.--ScitalCoN DENTI.ST. (Lars or LANCASTrit, PA ) Ifik,t' located permanently in Bellefonte, are County. where- -he prop...a prootie. log MI the cartons branches of his profession in the most approved manner, end at moderate charges 01Bee and residence in the house occupied b) Mrs. N. Banner, directly pposiie the residonoo of the late Hon. Thomas Burnside:. CARD. We take planner° In recommending Dr II B !Salm to our friends as a thorough and at rout plished-Dentist, 0 11. BItIiSSLER. M I) , JAMBS LOCKE, M Q, March 25.1,3-'5B FARE BEDITOED. STATES UNION HOTEL, aoa a 608 Stirkat Street, abbvt; sixth, , PHILAPAI;PHIA, PA 0. W. RIME, Proprietor. TIMIS 26 W. DAY. 14 , Carpets, Rugs,: Travel ling bes- Ul% . kets Hand Trunks, Le , ho., at the oheap core of Bellefonte, Oct, itt-tf TONNER•a STEEL _ - _ Mill 1 „ , . . gt, ,:, -- ..,(..,.. ..,::-.,.-, ~ ... . . .A . - • . ~ t .. ~ ic ). '.y. -: , ih• f 1 cr4 IS 01/4. --' ' BE The wind in moaning Reels along Came sighing threugh the rustling leaves, Then moiling to n hurricane, J It shook the loftiest forest trees. I=l (lbro Defaulter. uho Decamp, 1 h .13 I lUII if (;01, ,11 , rnerj .Ind an other Man 14 Ifr and 1)411,...hter, haw The iftillido Commerclal has the follow 1:1 regard to one of the most extraordinary ca• Ci of ‘,IIIIIC and It, Cl/W.(101'1W l'S" an rl cord The n ads nt of Buffalo add, ex s ed ny Mr. F. is nu doubt Ex l'rexident In i %11/Ilk: . • Some tu elve or fourtet n year ago liar lon Case was a respeetahlp and ed. rood eituyen of Buffalo. Ile held the plat, of As- Vostmaster under Air Dosheimei and was for many years entro,ted otth the mote important duties I,ftlio ollice. A mem ono of the lia phi,' churches, upright 111 eery oalkof I fr, married, and the fade ei of a faintly. he acetic d to be as the straight fora ard paths 01 virtue as any oil, r K. inA. mg to Saudusht Ohio, he te relyed the appointment of Colleador of that port under Air Fillmore. The ammo mint nt ult.: one universally approved, and the nu merous friends of Case ut this city o ere re- I= Juiced at his success to life While holding that office he was intimate in the family of Mr F , one of his assistants Mrs F aas ) oung. beautiful, and a fatal attachment grew up between the to u, a 6,11 remained unsuspected until the truth uus made known by the sudden elopement; of Case and with ohs F and the simultaneous discovery that he had absconded with goy et-1=ot; funds to the anionut of some $3l,- 000 troth that time forward nearly nH trace of the guilty pair was lost Thy fain ly of Clic, bereaved arid }tetra) cd, ed hopeless 111 their grief Mr F engaged in a long but fruitless chase of thangitives And now from off the sea comes tidings, a broken. half told story, of lonely uandering in foreign lands; a lull recital of a never ceasing remorse, with pitiful solitary deaths in far away islands and on the stormy wint ers of the Indian OCCAIII. Both victims of unhallowed passion are asleep —the mother 111 the groves of Cey'on. the little cltild ur the coral formal; of the sea The betrayer still wanders the earth, the heavy hand of an avenging trod upon him, he sends to Ins abandoned home Ins message of sorrow. We give first the letter of Mr. F ton res• ident of this city, and follow that with the two letters of Harlow ease, the first letter to the father of Mr F., enclosing a second, directed to Mr. F• 111111Rdi It 18 wile. "cessary to may that the letters of Case are genuine, his chirography being readily recognized =I To Dana Siit you be pleased to par don this new obtrusion, after the lapse of so many years f You knew me. (not, per haps, unfavorably) in 1851). and nearly twenty years previously, when I used to Irate the Baltimore Patrol at your office. Your memory mity YaIY to recall mcil-om that (or period. but you will refill) yrecognite me when i name my former connection with the Post Offlee Department and Mr. Ilarlit'w Case, at Sandusky, Ohio. It was the writer who was the victim of that mis guided inan's unlooked-for vilhanny, and it it was illy unfortunate and erring partner he seduced. But the most terrible affliction which Ilk crime brought home to me, arose from his robbing me of my little daughter, and only child—the one who once. with comb in hand, climbed in a chair at your side, at your visit at. my house, and essay ed to comb your hair. But where is now that young and once buoyant spirit I In Waren, I truntaud the lovely teuament that =I ll=ll Fur the Watchman Change—A Life .Thought. IT ILLISABETTAT .-- - 6 It wee a Rata end lovely *a, All earth lay hushed in sweet reppse While bright in you bind BrMlllleLle The stars In silvery lustre rose And gliding through the roalms of spare, The queen of night pursued her wav, While calmly Anne the landscape fair Beneath her pare and tranquil ray Who could have deemed while gnaing then Erwinlured on that gloriona might, That aloud, would over rare to dim A troene so beautiful and bright Alas' too inTon the radiant sky ' Was darkened with the tempest s hue While gloomy shadows thickly rase Upon the !leaven's delicious blue That lovely sky, so 50011 n'eroast, I• but an ...blew of my life , Its fleeting joys- , Illuatro hopes— Its anxious cares and feverish strife— The fait and claaaling dreams of yt olh— Hare faded like the moon-heam's ray, And hopes that, onee my lamotn Have pareakike that sweet e‘o away And what remain, '—a night of Wm.., Without twit atar 4 , 411,1 the soone— One moonligLt Moth to light the way, And cheer (be wanderer with Its beam ' would that In the quiet grave. This weary heart with care oppressed. Werehiinhed In Its last dreamless sleep Within the green earth's quiet breast • A Tragedy in Real Life up -- Romanr , of ihr WIB., Nov 28, 1858 g . tl,_ trks,c. held it, reefs deep beneath the still or tilor my waters of a far Indian sea. “Sttli na 1 olnap lide burning brain A (loath !wond rushee to my sight It mos o'er and o'er again " Both these fated victims of his guilt have looked their last on earth, which he their worse than murderer, still walks unscathed of the vengance of tiod anti human justice. I followed the fugitive to the isle of Mal ,- ta, in December, 11t53,% end Ids( all traces from thence lat last have tidings of their fate, in -the enclosed letters, which have lately reached me from over the sea flow far entire reliance may be placed upon his statements I cannot tell, but fear it Is too fatally' truein its leading announcement that mother and child are gone to their last ac count. After twiny years of suffering and suspense —which wrung my brain and drove me at times, du-mg the first two yearn al ter the occurrence, to the very verge of dis traction I had at last regained, to a great degree, my tkontoned elasticity of spirits, had sought a bill legall) (leasing the fiont my-deserting spouse,.anil indulged new vis ions of future enjoyment. a hen those sad tidings of most fetal import %%helm ore again n wretchedness that knows no hope. Ac the best part of the life of the misera ble man was passed in Itullalo, under } our intimate acquaintance, and as he — fias for some twenty years trill 31111 In orably kn in o to nearly all the emzens 01 inTrich city I also learind rqy trite in Illmot square (the printing office living once di redly over the Post viii ••• %%here he ii as em ployed) --I have thought it proper to entlitsc his communicatitm to y iii because, also I wish to ask the Lour that you %ill certifk to the genuineness of the letters as fin fiom his Ac A hundred of In. former nc (Fruit:limes in Ohm might certify Iris its rding plat as readily: but my remlttnee ri Won to changed to Minnesota, and I wise to 'laic the genuineness of tin se papers Established by some 't out her re , id log in HOLM Most truly, your 101 I. ill% ant. • ()N 11 , 1A111 0 SHIP 41 k I.nt Itl dug odlg 6a dug rtod Atigwit 20, SIR • - -1)n not. I un't, at lon, ullow the jii.t indignation %%Int h I himw ii sigh! of tat hand writing Bill au.e m, In prv,ent ton flow rending thy: c•tolii11111 , 11,A111111 It VA, 11111. he wort, painful or 1/01110 Iseerre that, for Tile toe rate. Wel 1111111ing lOW n 1 1101 1 .0 or . 111 1 411, 1,0 you. and a t, •In ton tiouw, mach 10 the dontl, could e Inc to a I harrais ynn 11111 040111/. 1111 , li I tt,i4 enter p_ ,t int no tittliec,....ary (1,1a114, nur Wl'.ll"‘ nor nit , gn,t. you Wllll fl/11' prnt,1.1 , 1,11, ur i‘v.,,,t• =I 11,1 lui‘e SIMI. ft, 1 111 lit .I%i I/III) 1.110,4 I hive xulP nd :11141 if 3 our crdcl I.c ryas . ;no, that cu..... Icarfully fulfilled kn.i, ,a.lll In 111 e nn happy task of telling you, vi hat I hare s o solemnly engaged to no 511,1 to fulfill the last doty to thnae Your former wife died in (•,:yl i v n . ,t t o l s 1856 01 a de:, ase of the clonale nlio‘l) TM aggravated by a pillions olio from stitch she suflered xhde in Nlatiratiiis In that Island both her arid myself were very ill of the fever Itiv own recmery was tlin't hopeless and indeed it ens repot 1,.1 that I was dead ThN, or ,ourse, rooting to her I knowledge. had a severe and injurious of feet iipon„ber. lAlf tis thesb particulars are of less consequence, I n 111 say II() more on tins point In conrec of time we both re coy urea, and on gaining sufli,ent st rengtli. again took passage on a bang y, a,el to Ceylon, In search of a better climate We went to the mountaitmus tegions of that tropica l ) Island, near the city of Camila, where the air IS cool, and. to Most peOple, !within, r than most parts of India There we lit ed many 'inoidlin in comparative quirt, hit the fever again overtook her tt ho was the pother of your dull , and though lingered long and suffered much. no human means could restore her Der moral hnrl.lle bllli lea became more Amite as she failed in strength, and with the loss of hope of re emery. she became aviously distressed to seen re the testers tiontr her odic dear little child to its bereaved father She wax iti• cessant in exacting pronnscs front ate, that, rf I lived, E , should be taken, or sent hark safely to )ou. From these demands I hail nn ish in escape.. My only anxiety was to do anything in my power to afford a small con solation, in the strongest 11,11Ininces I could make, that her wishes should be carried out, although, after the mother was gone from me forever, the poor child became dear er to rue. She was all I had left. rot ak I had promised her poor mother ; and as that mother lad sacrificed the world and every thing on earth for my sake, I had not the slightestilltought- er wish to neglect .the dis charge of the responsible, and to me, fear ful duty. During her last illness, she re gretted !ism; brought the child away, but having, then much hope of the happiness we might enjoy, and anxious to be less alone in the world, bite could never think of leav ing E , behind ; claiming, ac, her mother. that she had a stronger I.erion.tl right to a daughter than its father, whom site was a .ut to leave forever. -.n After this sad and dreadfut time, I con stantly and anxiously sought an oppotttn4 ty to afFiAl the child to you, or her graql: father's family, where yon would eventual ly obtain her. My object was to flnd,some good, trusty, woman, ors family going to M=E!!!!1!MI A I JR ,EIENN'A., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23,1858. , Amerada, but such a chance never offered in a single instance. Before Igo further, or into still more painful results, I beg yOu will allow mo to say that I have spoken of the anxiety of C , and her constant efforts to renew my prom ise to her, and which was repeated only two dlays before heir (tenth, In the hnpe that you will exercise more charity, towards her memory. Lot me4Rust that you. well do so, and think and feel less severely towardlter She paid a bitter penalty fur all the outrage that was committed upon you. In her last Illness she spoke often feelingly and tendor• ly of you, with how mach regret I noel not say, but wishing to acknowledge to the that ton had always treated her kindly and care' folly. and that on her and myself' alone rested the responsibility of that how fatal separation You will have perceived, are this. that I havo yet more to cointnunicate, and of a still sadder character, to you I have writ ten purposely in the •p,st tense,' as it were in order find you may be less suddenly drawn to the anticipation of my unhappy mirrtitile, as I cannot wide but once for ob vious reasons. And now comes the most paiiiltil part 01 my duty. I hardly dare tell you how cruelly severe the, poor child took the death of her mother She never forgot it. Although her own health wool always delicate and she stiller ed inuollwet from this tone she seemed to, beeoine more sensitile. and grew ... weaker no she grew older anl taller But were it not,,,- for the occurrence) of what is to follow I Bearing the Cross. Dw. II touch and often under the, bliadow Amild not have attempted to write yon un nd it will lead you to oil E., was within vnnr reach, and on the "W ILLL ' airA4.4".B4l think lightly of your own ' If na gave ut m point of being restored is )on, perhaps not even then I terance to but one murmuring word, elitist ruin , complain •, If we were deeper stu- A s before stated foiling to find any suit- Llinis of his bitter anguish, we should Lb ink able opportunity that I you'd trust to take 1,. I sof, to you I it last started uiili • her l e " " r the tip flying of our wares aniltiaf his horrible tempest," The saints cross mi self determined ink going to Eng as•etimes many diverse Shapes. Sonietinriea land fir the purisise, 111-re to seek some it is the bitter trial, the (noshing pang of monied pair of emigrants t wh itn I , tr.od her, or etnnloy a suoilde pAroin to gn ' bereaa itnent, desolate household, and ach with her. She had been ern ill before ing host is. Sometimes it is the erucifixion starling, but I thought leir sollluently re. 'of sin and detarmined battle with " lusts covered and her physician nlao thotrzlit She war ngainst the soul " Sometimes vronlif sod, nothing in going to sea but 'nn .11 es the resistance of eyil maxims and prac fortunately all my hopes ig this last ((fort , tires of a lying n orld, vindicatieg the honor were iloonuol to the same blight that has of Christ in the midst, it may be, of taunt and obloquy and shame And as there are thii+ fur d tar A relap.i. set 111 OtV ,111Terent crosses so there are dilTilent ways Riling to melt and however much I regr'e'tted ii it unit too late to retr ice or return of beating them To aotne (hod says: "Put The s h ip had been nut sire, ti day , e " your shoulder to the borthen, lift it up, and bead it ; work, and toil, and labor u lien tic%vete met lo a dr.osilft gale, such i'l ac t6r Ind-, in);t•nnvlono eon exint ,, t. Ana 'fu OtheTS he styli "Re still, beat it anti ne it ere , illoett before a Itorrielne for six , sun.' day, and nights Moot of the sills and one Bile% er ! thy cross may lie hard to en of the itta..ti. oue earned Ana), and it l. , dull*, it ou) involve deep struggles, teats 010001 'nearly ship, rt. keel and iliire I hack ' -1 .lay, It atehings by night ; bear it meek - lion' I ,200 io I .IdO 1011, s, we found morn IN pato ntly, Pistil . % log God's n-itfotn in fit or aide weathi r * I 111011001 tilit to show laying it on Repute In the assurance-that %./.11 how tilted) it %la, out of my power to Ile Etas not 011 e stem mum of earthly tnal help or relict e the pior, sulleriti4 child than Ile stem to he really needful . not one The eile• , . of tit Worm was only injurieec, rtolundant thotn pierces your feet In the tint to in Ow the ltd lido ab or t, O n , d ear , very loafing of tho cross for Ills sake there 'cliatge %horn I - wits anxious to reatern cel eirt to. nughty eumpensattona. . What neve faunll4 eh() 0 0 11111 liming her praill,prely :10 votes of yew Sarum', lore' Ills truth het father to wittAs lot-yr )4 ~ d i d„, mi d Ills promi,es, Ms sustaining grace lii hut . - wean ninny 'tumbril tittles front a n y land, fenngs, Ills glory,!, 11 hat new filial near and there was no altNinative, no hope but ' uess, increased delight or pasys i r ; nod toner to 01111mn0111 to the Caletolll, the necessity, arid , sunalone it lien it a darkest without The inueli as it pains tile to st..te It, the sea he. i w'll vet cot er you,' but underneath them all came her tomb. '1 hi, occurred MI the 19th I are '' the everlasting smut." ul Ju ly 'I he nocerlaint, of the nine n'tinite4i fnt thh paegagq , of trading rcgceN, cod, nn tinn one on winch 1 writ.), will, 1 fens, cause mu( fh la) before t eseb I '4 1 orM I might stop li, re, you may say that I hat I , tortured you enough, but I am not lost to all hi. Ilse of propriety, fouling or duty, not ttAll my 8104 against you, to s 9 nothing of the vtul ition of the ru t “ sneted nes 0r hre. 410,f1,00.., (hat I ft , l it deeply and ax fully I hat e debated long and anxiously in my ea n mind it heftier I ought to re-open a la maid in ;our heart; whichcan never heal, but. k feeling as I do severely, that suspense the cruelest of a!! conditions ; that a cer tain evil, et en f.xt,ility, is better thin .„Ixope - 11-us uncertainty, and that (fits sad avowal is all I can do--all the reparation I can 'cube I have been induced for Giese reasons Lo Li rite. It in better that you know it, than einem fur life in uncertain suspense - An intelligent English sailor, to whom I had shown some kindness in the far oft, and al most ssvagio land, M which I 11.11 , 0 resided fur the last year, has prioni,eil to aunt ey this letter to some European seaport, and mul it there. lie also has undertaken' to get the two deaths adverthed in some Eng bull or American newspaper, so that in case this letter never reaches you, her friends may mt always remain in ignorance of her fate. I now-tluuk it beet to addreSS this to the most probable peron I esti think of, to know your present place of abode. I_mean your faqier, yylierti he, or, iionst of your bro thers in Wisconsin, will ho most likely to find it, as I shall inelove to him. with an urgent request that he will semlit to you, uliercver you may be But I must over ie.- main in uncertainty ns to whether it ever reaches you, or whether you &rein the land of the living. As to my °an family and tuerifiaicts; - 1 hare-po-wish re•all my self to their memory., And to poor C's., outraged parents I doinot address myself. if thlgover meets your eyes, let mo beg of ysiu to believe that however much 1., have olbageil your feeling awl NOW your life, I ever had the strongest regard for your high moral worth, and your integrity and goodness of heart and the bitterest rellcc• lion I have ever been made to feel thus far, Lis been the anguish and regret of having forfeited your fortner,good opinion frocever ; and now the ruin I have brought upon all, and the fate that has fallen to nta 6y . the decrees df•a just Porvidenee, comes heavier anfl more dreadful to my prospects of the future _ _ Painful as all thin tn, and however disas trous it is to me, l cmnot feel at rest until I have "done what little rermuns in my pow er, and when this-packet leaves my hands I shall have discharged the last sad and melancholy duty. I now sutler only from feelings of remorse and blighted hope in the fate that 1, henceforth my lot to endure. -- But I u ill add no more, and all I can, or could say, may only disgust you the more toward, me. Fur obvious rett.Bolll3, it is not, and Can not be my purpose to speak of details or particulars as to the past or the future, or indeed , lif-mrelf in any way., I trust you may n ver boar (rout uni again and Only wish to hope your futnre life niay afford ydu, even you, less of anguish than the past few years. If my life depends upon my present health, or my now limited means, my memory must be blotted out %cry cacti. But I yet: remain humility, your unwor thy, IlArmow CASK The Royal Invilatioa. •• Come unto me, all ye that labor and •re— beery laden nod I will tyre you real." As the trickling of water in the midst of the dei,ert to the traveller's ear ; as the pat tering of drops of rain upon the roof in time of drought , as thu welcome sound of the coming home carriage to visiting friends, so is the dilute promwe to the o'er wearied . spirit: Come unto me ye that labor and are heavy laden and I mill give you rest." Not the great, the titled and the honored of the would, only are bidden to the royal festival of ~ the King of Kings," for it is written of "Come unto aue, all ye that aie heat's, laded." "Tim poor in spirit," and the bowed in heart, they to whom life's pathway is like a rugged road ; traveled through the darkness of a whiterl i k night, painful and cold, and dreary, on whom the. sunlight of affection sheds not his kindling beams, and who arc ready to sunk weaned with the toilsome journey ; to them is sent the Herald of the Prince of Peace; mid as the lost wanderer amid the Alpine snows aeon the light—it may be fax off —cud hears the voice of thosii coming to Ins rescue, so do they behold through the gloom the iising of that dawn " which is to shine more and more in the perfect day and, as they listen, hear a voice above the tempest, say ing. •• Faint not ;" and- they know that ■id is at hand. And lo! the words of Jesus Christ our Saviour,_"jjoine unto this Mt ye that labor and are heafy laden and I will• Vgive you rest," rest froui all the cares and sorrows of the world; rest from the cease less strife within ;" rest forever and ever with the angels in the very presence of the Incarnate God !--Rural New Yorker. The Lieutenant Governor of Itlinnessota lately delivered the following speech to the Senate : "Gentlemons of this 'ere Sim ! Don't crowd this old hose too fast ! You hadn't orter expect this 'ere cheer to settle more nor six pints at oust. It ytr do; yet. still barking up the wrong saplin ! 111 esn't he airl QM 9 ' , ) Stray leave, from a Country Girl's'llutry IN°. 3. ) WEDNk3D•I" Those dreaulays of November . how sad• ly their farevffil song fall on the car. The sky bes been for some days shrouded in those dark lowering, clouds, which always wreath 4lie retiring brew of treatiom afternoon the light-footed Wind.aml, swept 'away the gloom. Pure and unsullied, the blue vault of Heaven expanded itself over the 'e arth. The Mellow sun beams crept throogh the frostbitten vines, still clinging to the old c isement. But soon jealous Juno spread out her sable curtain and wrapt earth in the enibraco of her sombre shadow. Thus it is in life. The dark wild temp est long of trial. ruddy sways his sceptre around us Then, the gentle goddess of peace wafts the light sunbeams of joy around us, and while we are yet bathing in the a eters of pleasure, or basking in the ray s of love and friendship, the evil tongue of slandee, or the dark pall of misfortune, or the withering curse of disappointment, again clothes the horizon of onr existence in one I unbounded wave of care and sorrow. SABBATH In looking over my dairy. I find that some might judge by its tenor. that I am an unhappy, foreboding creature, always looking at the dark side, grasping life thorns and never wreathing her laurels into the radieitt tiaras of enjoy molt. Not I know the world is full of le•auty and life is full of love. There are brilliant treasures on earth, worthy our highest admiration ; sweets in the cup of pleasure, long to be re membered, and heartw in society, open to all the inttuerwes-of friendship. Yet, wino the ills of life grasp our hands, we feel de. je'cted, and the cold world, lacking sympa thy, our old and tried friend; the pea, drinks ni our'thoughts without a word of reproof. - 'What a"raliii, holy-stillness seems to reign around the close of God's sacred day. The wind sighs more softly; the war= ha murmur more sweetly. Heaven's starry crown tvi ankles sail increased brilliancy.— The fairy clouds and glittering constellation the white candled Luna; wing-footed winds, the dense forests and their choristers, the rills and the (lowers that they mirror, all seem to be being preachers. whisperl4 that There is a (iod, and that God is lore." MONDA T My heart almost sank within me this niornmg when I went to the school house, in which lam to teackthis winter. An old log house. with no benches fit to seat chit circa, no corifort, no means of sentillation, except those allinded by broken doors and windows, and amid many other difliculties. I knew there was 1111 , 11 Ch opposition to female teaches, and before I can govern. i.roperly. and teach 'correctly, I must try to undermine the prejudice of parents. • Good morning," at last came from a bunch of milling little faces,as they gallicr• el round the stove. There stood Martin. with a bold, daring look, and Harrison, with a high polished brow and a beaming eye., which betokened a soaring ambition, and Ilugh with ••I don't care" written on every feature, while Thompson gazed with a mild look from Ins deeply expressive eye, which told that a volume of childish love was writ• ten on his heart Slightly repelling the pre sumption with which Laura addressed me, "Lest too much familiarity might hireed , co•i• tempt " I tried to win the, conll knee of Ama, who scarcely dared look at we While little Nklke, all radient with smiler, lisped a polite 'yetli inith," to my inquirioc Who, surrounded by so many such Canon.' diapositions, will not moot many trials I -- Yet, if, in all dlir labor, wo implant in iinf Arad, the seeds of virtue and knowledge, or leave on record one line that ma! lead a mortal into the paths of duty and religion, wo will In amply rewarded for all our trouble, WEDNE•DAT ' - To day, received a copy of the Press (from one who knows I love newspapers) in which I and an 'code, on "Werner and Home," in which the writer says, "a labor saving institution, the' seWing machine ought to be purchased for every woman having the care of a family." ,'Twould he' well indeed, if those whose cares lave in the house, might, enjortho smile advantage as do those who have the earn of the farm. '7k well if the earner sex awake to their alty, and furnish us with the means to lighten the weight of household cares. for we feel confident that overtaxing their -mental and physical facul ties, is bearing thousands of women to the grave. But, there is a greater evil than this, which while it wastes the physical or ganization, and impairs the mental facul ties, it gnaws at the heart, and paves the Way to the tanit) with the thewnw, of sorrow, - the weight of disappointed hope. 'Tie this. The affection of the lover is unbounded ; and reciprocated. The maidern leaves a home of happiness a circle of friends, and embarks on lifes rough sea, with him who has pledged her a life-time of' devotion.-- But the lover changes into the husband, and with the name varies his attachment.— I Warm affection cools into formal kindness, and even that is often suspended. The heart' which was created for the fire of love, is frozen by the frosts of unkindness. If bard labor bears thousand this sweeps mil lions to the grave ME I= A Toubh of Reality and a Bit of Ito- • manes Mr. 11 . lt . S Williams, of Hickory Springs, Fayette county, Tennessee, sent the follow ing interesting couhnunication to the Rens. phis Avalanche, on the 12th ii it On one of those cold, rainy nights just passed, a couple of iiprightly .and batty looking Halt: 'trait/tee boys, bare footed, badly • lad , and without budget, about dee co and thirteen yenta 'of ago, calling theni- Tohn and Thonian Anderson, brothers all the way from the Norh, came to my tee. idence ;n'search, as they said, of a home and work, and readily (hiding both, they arc now wtoh nio, the happiest little fellows you ever saw • Their sioty is as full of adventures as it aflicting. They hail from the tow:: of Patterson New Jersey, and sal• they ars factory boys. and orphans, that their father died a lung t•nte ago, their 11117ther nearly two 3 ear since, leasing thou working in a cotton factory n ithout friends or relation! thertabouts-- having no brothers and an on ly roster. Martha ; who marned one !miler id. Green, of whom they have heard noth ing for a long tune, and know not where they are that about two months since being badly treated, they struck out South. without a cent of money, and work iheir.way s'ong, assisted_by railroad conductors and etc:lllll,4a captains, until ruching Miiiiphis. whet o they tarried but a little while, starting out on fiot on the track of the Nletnphas and Ohio railroad, where they followed up the Wyllie depot, and meeting there a small negro boy of mine, who, hearing their story. politely, and in the spirit of true Southern hospitali ty, invited them along with himio his mss• ter's hodse The accounts these little fellows give of themselves I believe to, bo true; and they are welcomed in the South—to my home— shall hare w e ,prutection, and an aided fu ture. It ha s been suggested that, maybe, they are run-away .Vorthern-apprenliCeS. -- and by this discovery of their whereabouts, a requisition, or om,thing of the sort, will be attempted To this I will take oc casion to declare, in advinec, that in each an event. I will resist at all hazard and to the last extremity the fugitive-dase if sought to he enforced for the reclamation of the poor enslaved factory boys of the North, who fled South fir freedom and friends. My little black slave ee, who brought the fellows to my door, would doubt less some under ground, railroad fur their es• cape should daiger thresteo. A lunching case was preisent‘d ye,terilay to the consideration and charity of one of the Good Samanitans who now take cant of the sick, relieve the destitute, and f•olt the starving A boy was diacovered in the morning, lying on the grass in Claiborne street, evidently bright and intelligent, but sick A men, who has the feelings of kind -11(41% strongly developed, went to him, shook him by the shoulder, and asked htm what he a as cluing there Wutiug for God to come fur me," said What do you mean I" said the gentle man, touched by the pathetic tone of the answer and the condition of the Loy, in whew_ eye 4 DA angled CIICASISSSAW UN-ate. • dente of the fever. God sent for father and mother and lit tle brother,' said he, and took them away to his home up in the sky ; and mother told tne, • hen she was nick, that God woula take rare of Are- I have no home, nobody to give me anything, and ao I came out here; an I hare been lot.king so long up in the aky for God to come and take care of me, as mother said be would. Ile will come, wool, he ? Bother ne‘er told me a lie." Yt,s, my lad," said the man, overcome with entqlion ; Ile has sent me to hie cirri; of you." You should bare seen his eves flaidi, and the mile of trimuldi break over his bum as be said.—" Mother nerer told me a lie, air but you'irelecn so long on the way."— What a lesson of trust,--and hype this inci dent Attunes the etlect of never doksiivintehili dren With idle talcs. As the poor mother expected, when'ahc told her a9ll,"Clod would take care of him."—He did, by touching the heart of this benevolent man with own putelion and Wye to the little stranger.—)V. 0. [Data. The CqaT'or TO3OTii.—Ats important slander sit had just been dcci• ded in Waukesha minty. Wistmosin, fin which the plaintiff claimed damages of OM. and (veneered 53000, 'lin the most outrageous slanders against the daughter or Air. John Williams. Trteatinder anis pct•. petrated by a man named Poe, sevend years , ago, when Miss Williamel was only 10 years of age. Tia as Psauntiwo.—ltevenge ie longti lived than gratitude. Indorse Mr. thuith't note to keep him fnem bunting' and he wiir forget all about it to a pionit. Pun If!: :Smith's nose. and ha Jaiil oberiab a secret, des re to burn your botaratwu. for the fel maioder of hi smt . ltim mge pmehnts4.— Gatlin& appears to be only a imatimpiat.—. We pan all bate . ; but It la tllllette. laud*, • haidrod tbal.poaeas sense enough to In thankfbl. i WILD RII3E 12 El Mil : It b.PI £)T VOLUM An Orpban Boy