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Terms of ,PUblioation 'TRIMS -41,50ets if paid within three Months $2,00 if dlayed Ms months, and $2,50 if not paid within the year. arise terms will be rigidly ad hered to A DVERTISHAENTB and Business Notices insert ed at the usual rates and every description of .108 P RINI' ING EXECUTED in the neatmet mikhner, at the invent 'rim., and with the utmost ilempatoh aiming purchased a largo collection 01 type, we aro pre pared to aatisfy the orders Of our Mends usiness pirettoq. E. J. INOCKIMAN, HURVEVOR AND CON LI A , :CElt PP,N ma.ALcuirstit a- BEAVER, A vrou N LYS AT LA 11, Itri.f,Krt,Tx.. ,5.,1 WILILIANI 11. 111.A111, ArfORNEY AT LAIV OrI.IICrO , TE, PA "rititrii in the Arend°, neennil JA $E$ R. RANKIN, ATTORNEY AT ' J AW, UELLIerUNTF, PSNN'A Omen, on the Ittentetel, one deer welt or the rug Other 1.. J. CHAIVII, AT 10 Rti TV Al TAW AND REA l• BEIM r LL.kariei 1/, 1 PEAR! IN 1.11 t 9 PA Sep 30 .ig 1l CU A (MEN U HALF, ATTORNEY AT LAW, 1110.1.EF1)NTFC, ,Nlien with Iho ❑on JlllllOl 1' Hale Nov 25, 1851-tf AMBROTYPIKIII, BIIOTOORAPIIS A DAM; Etch EOTYPF,H, Taken daily (except Sundays) from S A a to 5 r BY J S BARNHART, In his splendid Saloon, in the Arcade Building Belhafunte, l'enn'a De. JAMES N. lIIPTCIIIIIIBOI 4 I, PHYSICIAN A SVILUEOri, Soceess..r le 'Dr Will .1 MelC4i , , re ,. .pectfolly ten liken; nrofeentonal rersicrl to the e 111.1121 of POTTER'S MILL'S and vicinity Office at the Eutaw Minim _ J. IRVIN, PRACTICAL SURVEYOR, OAK 1141.1. MILLS, PE' , " Will attend losurvuytng forms, roads, Re All •ppllenlions addressed to lioalsburg 1' 0 , vein m ealy,' prompt attention. Fob 10'60 WILLIAM P WII LINN de Vl' I 1.110141 t ATTOIIN ET'S AT LAN Or, on Allegnny etreet, 11/ the betiding fw overly uocepled by Humes, MoAlheter, Hale Co ankers August 10.35 lyear •IMUIL LIIN D u nusija. ATToItNEY AT LAW, =I altellti to all profeAstonal bumnesit entrusted to his care Parttcular attention paid to linen o Office lo the Ao,orreadu, second II with Wet 11 Blair January If IRA C MITCHELL, ATTORNEY AT 'LAW, I= W ilt (miltinue the prectiee of hiq profeseion, In the office heretofore occupied by him nn I will 'at tend promptly qnd faithfully to all tt.ll.cas eo I.IIIUIII 1./ 111111 Del 23, Itlhd —ly J. P. WEINIWATIC, RESIDENT DENTDRT Office and ruald•moe on tho North Etter Corner of th e Ith, t uond near (no Cnurt Ilouso _ . ur Will be found at tun Office except two weeks n each month, cornmenolng on the first 111 lay of tbe mouth, when he will be array filling Hof erfOonal duties r r 10111{011011i W. SWARTZ, AT K ER & JEWELER. =I Rooms one door Emit of E C Heiner, ,t Bro etore, on Allegheny street Cloeks, Watehee and Jewelry newly repaired end warranted Aug 12 SM-tr DR. G. I. POTTER I'III,ICIAN A Oi LLL PUNT Y., rY.:f . ritt CO , PA, OM re ou Iligh Street 101,1 office ) 15111 atientl tr) 1,,1158111i,11511 Calk a. horntofor., ind reeyeetfolly offer, his Hers lees to his friends and (ho public ()et IN- :intl.' DH. J. IL DITCD EEL, I'IHSICIAN A SUROEON, ‘ llEl.l.ltriiiirrE, CAMPIt MPO Pt iii - AttOnii to mdcnninu it Calk nn tirrotoforo, and rospootrully °Dors los 110IV1001110 him fnxnda and the public Ofllon next door to his rosidonco oo Spring street_ ent 58-if A r•Aas nor, ATIIJRNEY AT LAW, rrNm'A Will attend promptly to nil legal busier, intrusted to him bliteini attention will be KIS Oil to the Orpb ens' Court Practice and Sent ening hue office Is with the Non Junes T Hale, where he min always be consulted in the English and German language. N i'ALLISTIR. J T 1111.1. A 9 CUMIN DEPOSIT MI 4 K, -ur I =331 hIcALLISTER, HALE & Co CIOITRI (0 , PA Deposita Received —Bills of Exchange and Note. Diecounted—lntereet Paul on I-imolai 11eposits Collections 15tade, and Proceeds Remitted Prompt ly—Exchange on the Enst oonatently on hand June, gad, 1859 J lE. STOVER, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW BRLLSYUNTN, PENWA W 111 praelioe hie profession in theitivoral Courts of Centre County, All butanese intrusted to him wail be faithfully attended to Particular attention paid to oolleotions, and all 111013i08 promptly re• emitted. Can be consulted in the (Jarman as. well as in the English language Office en High et , formerly occupied by Judge Burnside and D C Boat, Beg BANKING MOUSE, _OM- WM. F. REYNOLDS & CO., • IitiLLEPONTIC, (NINTHS 00., PA. Bills of exohango and Notes discounted. Col- Isetkina made and proceeds promptly remitted Interest paid on spouts! deposits Exchange in the eastern Oka eonetandy on Ixondjor sale. Depos it!. meelvea April 7th, 1859 E. P. GREEN, DRUQUIST. WINGLIIIIALIN MID RFITAI4 DICAI.IIIt IN Drugs, Medicines, Perfumery, Paints, 01le, Var. Dishes, Dye-Stuffs, T Met Snaps, Brushes, Hair and Tooth-Brushes, F•11,11' and Toilet Articles, Trusses tad Shoulder Braces. Garden Seeds. Customers will find my stook emnplete and fresh, and all sold at moderate prices -liarms te and Physicians otn• the oountry ere "tilted to examine my stock. Lny the gem upon my bosom Let me feel her nn set, warm breath, For a strange chill ~'or Inc passes, And I know that it in death I would we upon the treatture &tervely given ere I go, Feel her rory, dimpled lingeni Wunder o'er lily cheek of I OM pnartng through the water?, Mit it bhleti ,bore appenra• Kneel betide nu•, 111,10114 4tearert Lai me kian away thy team, Wrentle with thy Ki lyf, ray litvoltand Striv, Ivan itildaight until day, II may hate all a ,igtd'a When it Inhibit, away Loy the gem upon my 1,,, , 0utt, 'l't+ 1101 long 11110 01111 10 1 111100 Sr.' 11011 to my heart clue nestles, 'Tic the pearl I 11 1 10 111 NOllr If, In after yeare, beside thee RUA nnothii hi 107,ohnir, Though her voloe be sweeter muck, And her face 111.1 n mine more fair - lln thee father,” Far Dior° beautiful than this, hone thy Ii rat 6.111, 11 my hinibitml 'I art not from ti, nlloll°ll4 rs Toll het soinet lin in 14' her mother, 00 %Ili call her by iiii ' Shield her front 0111 1•111 ill of 40renT, If she err oh • gently blame Lend her momelinit, where Vllllileeping I will enewer dshe cane And my breath Will stir her ringlets When Iny VOll, 111 114,1111 g (alb., And her soft block 1.y..t will brighten With minder whewr it came, Ili my twirt, whew year. s•r I,r, find 111 I //10011.1 a mum• ft i. Futhi tent every. enrol IV ali, In I wei ti tee /111 •Ok , One reeirrile the i l l but blots If hi fore the 11101[110u drone relientelli if n. 0.10001 ietl, 'FOOS] Ito soul. it for • k Anil Ole right hold angel weepelh, .leniinig low nob veiled ryes I will he her rirht :.fl angel, 8. alini up the B'r at rri, Str),lng Met the Isll.lnight watch. Find nn ittl.d. uulorgn.•n Inn al!l not fo rgi t IV hen I'm nl. epnig e m atH the real Oh lova the jea el vivo, 114, 4. I hie tilt it/ This loke in also kii,w it in the gonpi 1 3- 5•4 the Sea of Merlon. RI 111 tiennesareth anti in the old Tem anti ni no the Sea of l'innner rth Il In about Hurt, ii miles in length, and six In breadth ; and Is formed by the Jordan, which traverses it from north to south. and then flows on to tin; Dead Sea. sixty miles south Sio other sheet of in ater in the world in en denred to the Christian by so many pleasing fILSSOrIRIIIIII4 Some teo tittles to the went lay Nazareth the house of Christ during Ina •thildhood and youth. (in its western shore lay Caput-mum, Chornzin, and liethsida of I)ahlet, whore -most of his mighty •werks were done," while the other Bethsida was but a few notes 'north of lIS northwestern *tore Around this lobe a large part of the Savipur'ft public life wan spent. More than one blind man there etperienceil his triiraim• lous power, and opened his eyes to behold first of ail hin F betiefactm's face, and then the blue waters of this charming lake. Hero the majority of his disciples lived , and by its side, sitting, at the receipt of cus tom," or "mending their nets," they were called to become ••11.shers of men." It was on these waters, sitting hl Simon l'eter's boat, that: . Christ preached to a mul. 'Rude on shore. 1., pon one of the neighbor ing hills he taught many thousands at once, healed their diseases, and fed them all with live loaves and two finites. Here too, on tsto i l occasions -at the commencement of his min istry—and after his resurrection—his com mand filled the nets of the apostles with unprecedented draughts of Ashes. Aomewhero on the southeast side of the same sea is the "steep place" down which the frightened flardarenes saw their whole herd of swine plunge, and perish in the waters. The Sa viour often crossed this lake in his labors of love : awl twice ho had occasion to allay the tears of hie disciples by calming the storm-tossed waves': once waking from his quiet sleep in the hinder part of the boat, to chide them for their rack of faith ; and once coming out to them by wt lk ing on the sea, in the fourth watch of the night, as thtr were "toiling and rowing." Thus the whole region is renderedsacrod by incidents in the life of our Lord. The traveller irresistibly feels that this footsteps and smile haverfomver hallowed those hills, that llis voice yet echoes from these shores. and His “Peace, be stilt," yet rests on theme pure and peaceful waters. In many respeces, however, a great change has here taken place since the time of Christ., Then the the shores wets filled by a teeming topula ; towns and villages crowded the looks, and boats swarmed on the waters. BPILILIONTS, P• Now the only remaining town is Tiberias, a city in ruins, containing about 2,000 inhabi tants, and wretched and filthy to the last de gree. rt is a coinrnon saying; that " the ,Stltti lottrg, The Dying Wife. glisullantous The Sea of Galilee BELLEFONTE, .CENTRE COUNTY, H'ENN'A,, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1859. 1 King of the fleas held his court ikt.Tiberins." Tnatead of a large fleet of fishing boats, only ond.can now tio found on its waters. ' The round ICUs that coins Molly down to the sea are now bare of trees, and though cw ered with a delightful verdure after the win• try rains, became parehed and desolate tin der the summer Olin. Yet this Rea and these hills are the same that our Saviour himself beheld ; the main features Of. the scene are unchanged. The)ake lies eutbos , meti Uts, f- deep basin, ranee Oran three hundred feet below the level of the Mediterranean, 'and enclosed on all sides, except near the inlet and outlet of Jordan. by lulls that rise steep ly hundreds of feet in height, while in the background on the east Ride are mountains over a thousand feet high. The range of heights stretching around the seaptself is bro ken by orenitional shady ravines and water courses, end here and there is separated froth the sea by a level and excectintly fertile plain. In one of theme plains Capernatun used to stand, but now it has , wholly disnW peered Far away in then 3rth Mount Ile). mon lifts its snow capped crown to the sky, with a majesty of a summit that has looked down on the coining and going of a hundred generations The region of this sea bears marks of von• r'ni.• action,. and hot springs still I vat on the shore south of Tiberias The waters still swarm with fishes, as I days of the apostolic fishermen The whole scene is marked by a grand but serene beauty, and the Christian visitor reluctantly tears him self away from it A recent American trav eler, while out upon the sea, encountered a tempest like those described in the gospel : sudden, swift and violent, it swept down on the 'sea from the upper hills, Rini threw it mt. commotion as in a moment. lie was unable to make headway - againit it, and was dnveti over to • the coast of the Gadar- MEM 'I he same traveler bathed several times in its clear and sweet arater4, and was remind• ed of the words of an old Scotch friend of his boyhood, who said to loin " When ye graw up to ne a mon, rnavhap ye•Il go wan up and down the hills of the warld But (10211 ye forget that gin ye're thurstv, there's the sea n' Wllee : and gin ye're hungry, there's the loaves that fed feeve thousand there by the Fell and When ye get tired and tired out, and want to lay your 'rad door on any ,town and rest it —but the sutur; are a' hard- there:s [kern that kayed on the some sea, ..eome unto rile, all ye that latter and are limy laden, and I will geeite y7orest ' A Yankee Trick r iih ic i n he r when we were living down s neighboring farmer hiring a jolly %,ho wit , ; very fond of learning trio k 4. One day log employer wilted him :f he nouldn't like to learn a V inkee trek -- The Irishman of eour , ar was anxioom to lam a Yankee trick Bringing him to the end of a brick barn, Jonathan laid his open hand aga.mat the wall, remarking— '• Pal, I'll bet the liquor you can't hit my hand " '• It's done' says Pat, making a vicious blow at the palm of the hand, but it being quickly withdrawn he succeeded in peeling the skin and flesh oil he, knuckles. '• That's a d nasty thick "'.roared Pat, " hrtt - howld on, I'll chato somebody else." - A rect months passed, and Pat'a brother came over :rum Ireland, as greed as early peas. They both labored together, but l'at was uneasy till he would have learned his brother tli Yankee hick. " Jun, Jul you ever larn n Yankee trick!" lazi • Pat finding himself in the centre of a large field, thought it would he a great loss of tune to go to the barn, and reaching out 1114 open hand he cried - o..Sthrike that if you ran '" Quimby one morning perceived that the milk he was pouring into his coffee cup WAS none of the richest. On this, he said to the hostess, •• haven't you any milk that is more cheer ful than this I" " What do yod mean by that 1" replied " Why, this milk teetne t 4 -have the Mues 7 " was hie ready retort. 0119 6- " Hale," said s brother Senator to the New Hampshire man, " Do you know what Casa says of you r " No !" r " lie says you are a granite goose," ..,JUst tell the General for me, that ho lit a Michi-gander." " Mother, it strikes me you are very lazy 'just now." Ilow darn you Say so ; why, don't you see I'm making broad I" indignantly return ed the lady. 01 True, but that's more or less than loaf. ME " reuppose, Jim that 11 4 I were to jump into the water hero, I should and it over my head and ears." " Over your head, Frank, but probably not over your cars." A Priater at a dinner table, being salted ended if ho would take some pudding, repli ed : "Owing to a crowd of other matter I am unable to mako room for it," Hie " aide"-was already full.- - - - 'terrific Fight with a Rattlesnake We have hitherto supposed the day long II since past for chrome hung n big Sake fight ) 1:1., in the vicinity of the Central Citi', ut Hoch, it appears is not the case, from a see] which recently transpired within a short dri e from the court house. Some of the 01 resi dents will remember a building wii4ll for. merly stood on Prospect llill, a INliit sit. , miles distant from Peoria, run' was il l egitiov eitsomosevrornr eight j•i 7 ars since: t t ur,,,,,, the petit season another hoe Se sins 014101 11111.1 the same location, and all that has re mained atirejoeg of the old hotel was it, par tially Ilymfriexeitvainin for a cellar and ~.t wo well preserved brick- cisterns, which had been kept covered up. Last week, thelpro- Floor of the place, a bile liir.y with his wife in preparing tiwir Hummel flower garen, found himself in the a ant .if a few brick,. for the edge of the %%elks. Rem. inhering the cisterns, he once , . ere.l one of them. and finding it dry at the bottom, and only about sin feet in depth, lati . -tatiipeil in, and com menced throWnig out some of the best brick he could wk . from the malls. It seems there was a piece of plank .1 ith one end par tially imbedded in the emit that somea hat incommoded Mill : so, 11 , 17111:4 it is ith sortie exertion he pulled it out, and thrt a - it to the top. What.was his horns and sot prase at the next moment to find that he had un earthed PM enormous rattlemalie, amid 11111%- 1 self a ithout a weapon in lii , fiend As* the cistern Was round, and onl) about five feet in diameter. lie could maintop out, and the snake, bristhng with ringer and rattling de fiance, was ready for battle Ills screams bronchi his air,-to the seen°, lea Slle'S Wll4 '- 1 so Overcome with fright that she _became I powerless to render any assistance The , stmt.!, in the meantime hail commenced the fight, making repeated spring; at Mtn, but fortunately he managed on each occasion to hit him on the head with his loot, without receiving n bile, the smite all the tune be coming more defiant And eni aged. ' Dui mg the whole scene, which 1e.,0d several nun ', tiles, the man did not loose his presence . of ' mind, but, watching his chanee, made sev eral frantic eflorts to jump bodily from this , seemingly pit of deiwtruction. AL the last trial he fortunately grasped a brick, which gave way with loin, nod renamed in 11 Ili hand no be again stool faring his hissing enemy. Alto a few more kicks, and watch ing his opportunity, he threw it, making probably One of the fie^.t shots on record, ha it struck the sualte ',ll the head, and between the one Felit and the wall, he became a • pretty-%%ell.useC,l-up sarinnt. " Weak and exhausted, our heto, by the assist ttice of hin wife, was C11,1b1 ,,i lo climb front the but when once tOOI e upon the earth he faint ed an ay and it WAS toOncilme before he could be recovered fir several sacceednig days he wai Talk. ii i it The Snake was afterward taken from the cistern, when it was (0111111 to measure , even feet in length, and contained thirteen rattles The latter have been -preserved, and are ',laced in Shoatl ' s Museum for exhibition —Pcoila (III) Ira Clerical Customs in Scotland A writer from Edmhur gli, in the N. r Preshy terian, gives wine information on tine point which will be new to not a few on this side of the water : We hate another co:dome wliicli as I ant noticing•oddv and ends, I may refer to that seems strange to such Americans as I have come in enntaet wtth—the ete.lttine of the clergy. Perhaps you Ire not Aware thot cc ary man who wishes It, t erend before hi, 11 nine is expected to dre,-, in black with a White neckerchief. 'luring the n eck, a lit• tie license is given, and one n ei is less care ful of punctillio, may tie a strip of black silk beneath his chin, but be must doll it when ho officiates. So universal is this, that. I never Saar a preacher in the pufid t otherwise dressed. Then ordained flunk term have the Geneva gown. which is made oi black silk, and Is tolerably capacious, on the whole comfortable, especialy when un derneath it there is the cassock —a close fit ting jacket of the same material, which al lows the preacher to throw aside his coat and leaves him more at east. But what is the more peculiar and seems to have struck two Americans, whom I met lately, with As tonishment, in the hands, which aro only Worn by o ministers who are settled. and are never in any circumstances put around the neck of an mordained ma i n They are two strips of floe muslin, about a two of inches broad, tied around the neck, and lying on the chest —some being, say six inches long, and some more se, and diverging more from each other as they get nearer their lower ex tremity. My &met iean friends fancied they Were a part of the preacher's neckerchief.— aowns and bands aro never worn by Inde pendents or Baptiste, but they are universal among Presbyterians an& Episcopalians. If I have been rettuling what we call Pilwe l e news in this country, that .is, intclligenco known to every one, I haiM been 104 into it by the wonder of your countrymen. A lady once asked a minister whether a person might not be fond, of dress and orna ments without being proild. "Madam," said the minister, "when you See the fox's tail peeping out of the hole, you may be aura thafaxis. _ A Predicament ,bast evening a handsome looking woman was passing down West Water street with a little basket 'oi l ekgs, in her hand, and when a few yards from the NlestStnenee barn, was knocked down on the sidewalk. Fee cries brought a gallant widower to the res cue, who saw, to his horror, nbilly goat that evidently, had a horn too much doing his best 1.41 put an , enil to the poor. woman's Misery The v‘illower tried to scare the goal away, but he i%ouldn't be soared. Its tried to In Ip the Indy up, when butt ' come the head of the goat against himself , and two /mut logrtilvt; Came, for the goat gave 'Vim another. and down he fell crosswise the lady, to the scrams damage of a dozen fresh '•IIelp '" cried the lady ; '•get ofl of me you villian,•' said the injured female. ••Itnt good woman,—•• and hot went the rough horn of the goat, and *polled an e itht dollar pair of pants to the worst place they mould be spoiled. '•Help !•' cried the woman , my eggs'" (.011, my pants '" cried the man •' But never mind the pants ; get up " cried the lady ; end just as she was trying to get up. but( came the goat and down mane the man rue. of the two victims brought quite a Yrowil to the spot, where their lay the wo man and there lay the man --“twin pregnalt with danger" and there ad' vanying and retreating. butting first one and then the other. the Yon found -01 gnat .last hut/ he made, one of his horns caught in thy basket, and ho ILlft the scene of action with the basket hanging over one eye, and the yolk of two or three eggs drizzling down his maginfievnt beard 'file man bfff 1,r.1 011( till ileyollll the rear•h of ihe eyes, when he turned and rail like a (pull irr horse, swearing at all goalt gentral and this one in particular, while the lady sat down and with the aid of a shinglo , and a few pins, cleaned and repaired the badly damaged dress. Power of Prayer A minister, whose name it is not. neces sary to give, had a son who was quite a rogue. and withal something of a wag. One day the tiny had been guilty of some misde meanor, for which the father called him to account, when the following diologue took plr.re • .• John, you have done wrung, and I niu.d. punish you." Very Hell, ar, pit exactly as you Then take oil Your coat ()Handy, sir ' •• Now take 011 Vi u- vest." • .11i,t as you please " " Noo my 4 in, It 18 lily duty to flog you." •' es sir, but lathe', would it not be best lirst to engage in a short prayer 1" way too much for the lump:ter the wair,gery of the 4011 conei,letely overcame hnu, tin thal, without prayer Or flogging, he dismissed the hie, while he turned aw•ay Lo relitte tits !is:Wes A l'ars rt OFFierc A \ IWDOTE A young English lad. Jost " eorne over," becitne an apprentice in a prhiting olli•e, to ‘• learn the trade." When. learning the letter boxes in the " he asked the printer's ' a onschlevous young vamp, where the E tern was. Thu .• ile%il" pointed him to the L tern. After having studied over the .• caw" lon enough to know all the ' Iron es . ' of 1-6, al7thowt, the forern.to asked lino over . ' Ilwm. !mining eaelr letter box, lbreinvende John Bull did so, and got thew all right enopt E and L. tt You ve e . ot thoio two mixed te• worked the foreman. Welt," repitied the young lingle,hei “In a.ke , l that party (pointing to the 'devil,) where HE was, and 'e pointed 'is linger to HELL '" The foreman gavo tho " devil" a sharp kmk, and he grinned oalanically. FRFINVII OPINION ON TIM WAR.-A little while ago, the proposed w.ir in ftaly was de cidedly unpopular in France, or, at least, ft was so represented to be by the Bnglish journals, to which, unfortunately, we are confined for the greaterpart of our continemi tal news. But the French are essentia'ly a martial people, and the first tap of the drum arouses all their' courage and enthusiasm.— The description which Job gives of the war horse might be applied to them withoto lit• tie propriety : " lie saith among the trump ets. hA ! ha' he smeleth the battle afar oft the thunder of the captains and the shout ing." To MAZE Goon BRNAD —POTATO YEAST.— Try it an4proto it; Take half s peck paired plitatoe's, throe largo handfulla of hops, ii a bag, to be boiled together with potatoes un til the potatoes are soft. Then mash and rub the potatoes through a cullettder, and add all the water in which they were boil ed"; put in two tablespoonfulls salt, ono tea cupful white sugar, ono tablespoonful ground ginger. As soon as -cool enough add one pint of yeast and stir it well : then 'Bet in a warm place until it rises and is stitred down three times ; then keep it in a cool place for use. Ono toacupfull of this will raise five or six lames eitunatL. The itt6t4er's Lad Leeson .0' Will you Mann loam Inc my verse, first class sonsawin story. It gravelitella mamma. and then kiss me, and bid me good of a HMI,' living lout' months in the sewers night ?" naiil little Roger L of New It gives his name as Leo. opened t h e door and peeped cautiously into poll Myer, originally a Paris ••Chefloiner." the chamber of his sick mother. t. 1 sin who.lost n !mini! competence on the Bourse, very sleepy, but no One has heard inn say emigrated, and resolved, to explore the ALlT ray Imayers. " etets of New lal,, in 3enich of wealth Ile M. 1.-- "was very ill • imieod , ber'.PnLred aseaer wlttchemptiiv on Houston, attendants bettered her to be Arm s , . • She t f*" . * 4l tl"wit 11.0"144**Y• billed * enetty +V . ; (he 'should have kept hint for reliaiting,) met sat propped up with pillows, and strult;gling toi breath-- her were white -- her ems a monster ledtitir whtch he feasted, pas - p nr . r tiltup street relit, ri'ed northward, were growing dull and glazed, a n d the pie blood was st•ltling at the end , . of 11,r• tine 12,t ard.flont Broadway. and cold, attlinuated (lop.' 4. She wag a widow, I foam! lu i woe to fifth Ai emit., • 111111 there and little Roger was h er only dsrling, child he fairly puked up a ,mad fortune in about Every night he had been in the habit of a month's time Breastpins, bracelms, COIIIIIIg into her room and 'Wing upon het Intl,, emetics, sous enirk, kimes and ( S ocks, lap or kneeling by her f,de, white she r e peat- I clultiren'keorals. w 111 , 11 es heads, ed to him semi+ passalles from' 110.1 a I Ittly , : lay gitioped together in the slug- Word, or related to him stories of the wi se Wish streams of .e. el street a. The poor and good men spoken of in its pages 111111'S eyes fan danee.l n,tit excitement had been in delicate hoitlVl for many years t•ocli ainhh had net or dawned neon his but never to ill to learn little Roger Ma imagination 41124 wire sack was tilled ; his verse and hear his prayers. I pockets welt. filled : his hat wait filled. tic o Hush t h us h sai d a l a d y, 'who wes tooth off his boots and strung thew across watching beside her couch ; " your cl ean Ing back, and these ism'' , filled. lie had mamma is too ill to hear you s a y A mur bagged countle , s treasure, and yet countless prayers to-night 1 well pit y o u In bud," treasure remained uuliag,ged !however he and ns she came forward and laid her hand I Must now get out of the sewer+, wall his gently upon his arm. as though she would , u enNut and then he was all have led hint from the mom Rogei begin tight lii Iwohly re traced his steps to to seh as if hi; heart would break llonston street, and passed alum; (fraud to ' I cannot go to bed ttithont saying my ravers - indeed, I cannot '" The ear or the dying mother caught the sound. Alt hough she had been neatly in senstbh. to everything trans;uring wound her, the sound of her darling's sobs ..rot'sel' her from her stupor, and turtling to n friend. she desired her to bring him to tier couch and lay him on her bosoui Iler requi st wan granted. and the child's rovy cheek and golden head nestled beside the pale ci I face of his dying mother Alas, pour f f low ' how little dui he realice then the irre• parable loss v. hi h he was soon to sustnin ' " Roger, my son, my darling child , ' sod the dying mother, '•repeat this verse after me, and never, never lerget rt--• 11'/i, n 11111 father ant: mother forsake me, the Lord will Inky me up • " The eluld repented ti ii,a ttnetly, and said his little prayer. lie then kissed the cold o *Jrnost rigid lips before him, and went quietly to his little conch. When he arose to the morning, he sought• as usual, his mother's room: brit he found her cold and still'—wrapped in her lvind- . ing sheet ! Thnt was her last lesson' Ile has never forgotten ' -he probably never writ' He has grown up to lie n man -a Lrood man—and now occupies a post of much honor and distinction in Massachusetts never could look upon him without seeing the faith so Lsaut4fully saint/40J Lv his ay ing mother. It was not nnspineed The Lord has taken her darling up. My little reader• if you have (:od for your friend, you need never fiat . father and mother may forsake you —the world may seem to you 1... e adreary• waste, full of thorns —but Ile can bring you safely through trials, and give you at least a golden harp and snowy robe, like those the purified wear m heaven Ito ran even surround your death bed by angel visitants Ile is all powerful an ever present help in time of trouble you not, then seek Ills friend- a':ip and kvvp llis enmintindments A new 41)4 Am' has MI& its appearance since the introductlnn of hoop, ft exhriots its. I flinty ill mild weather, and then it is on ly (IWO , ruble 111 COW , : where the 1,11,1(1 , Q )4 .4 are warmed with furnaces. Two ladies were standing over a regNler the o'her day, talking and laughing, when one enileavoring to so Wll4 soil holly attacked and ticreamed violently The other also tried to sit, and was attsekeil ul t h e same manner. The ex planation Is Chit by standing so long are r the register, their metal hr hoops herniae heated to such a degree that when they at • templed to he iaated, it Wag like sitting•on a hot grid iron. Of course they wero not a great length of time getting up again, and naturally enough uttered screams—all of which would be very mysterious to a looker on, uuacquainted with the mysteries of hoops. In a jolly company each one was to ask a question. . If it was answered the proposer had to pay a forfeit, or if Le could not an swer it himself, he paid a forfeit. t'at's question was • '• flow does the the little grnuml squirrel dig his hole without showing any dirt about the entrance 1" When they all gave it up, Pat said : " Sure, do you see, he begins at the other end of tho hole." One of the !not exclaimed • But how does he get there 1" t' Ah," said Pat, " that is your question and you can answer it yourself." . 17xo. CHRISTY, the negro Minstrel, lids been arrested in-New York, for contempt of Court, in hoisting a permanent injunction issued to retrain him from giving any fur ther performances within a hundred miles of that city. Ile Wlla released on ,bail of $250. The only web: to cures boy of staying out at nights, is to break hi 4 logs, or else gct(be calico ho runs with to do the hdinework. The last invention in_ hie is an India-rub het Diefti JAW, PriareB- ii:a le' - - TICK $1 50 in AntANCI VOLUME 4—NUMBER 24 Trim Niti7\ll'ons Sr. of Friday contains the I: r lire the lie :11 lilt.; siit the water I.loh to such It great (Nteat, that on three difTio tint occasions ho narrouly escap ed suffocation Anil this (14114 the up hill part of his car Cr-- how to gi t out. Ito wait (if one vrio k two -three and four Pro% eoons were scarce ; the ventilation Wag poor, no more tin ties around : only a few seahhe 114411 1 4 4 . 111 lire' in, nod so M)er like to have got al 1try4 4 41 wuh all his wealth After a while, however, a low (1410 came '-egress to the East Riser t‘ as opened. and he got out After crnerg•ng, Myer soon found that he had no good legal t.tle to M. street treas ures, that they were the property of the own ers,and sulip•ct to be grabbed by the la lice A kind friend, to whom he had ren dered many I.lvors, and therehy cont , erted tool to just the man for 'the purpose, gave the requisite hint to the Metrepoiitans—that of dividing the plunder —and Myer lound It Would be better to leave the city The next afternoon env...corning out ftorn his suliter ranenn life, Leopold took the N.irth flavor steamboat for Albany, bound westward, and among all the seedy fierinm coats which had stand a hard sea voyage through all the incidents of a trtp front the Fathertind. and a seedy countenance As well, that of Myer was the most conspicuous. And )et tho glow of $lO 000, or thereabout., made in a few inontlis time, gave him inward liausfac tion which male his poor suit-and poor ap pearance more welcome to him than the tied sC "1 ui,wy a brighter day reevious Ali' Pennsylvania The follevi mg account of the origin Of the name l'entigyivains is extracted from a let ter written by IV:ll,ain Penn. its founder, dated January 5. 1441 •• Thu: day, after many watchingg, wait mgm, hole ning,, and dispute 3 to counml3, my rwantry was confirmed to me under Om peat heal of England, by the name of Penn ,vlt 1111:1,1( oem•• the I , ing would give it m ra y. "d my I tthor I clio,e <