• • AV ) . ..„, • 1. ) . . - I - • ; • • .• • 01, . ( 1 / 4 ,•, , • • • la MN VOL' M BY L. F. D sfA D EVERIt RUN & 821tEEZT, T EIR M year, in adv. dollars a yea terms will b. One copy, 'on= Otherwite, tw ar"ed. ' inserted at on, and, Advertieement . for the firciinser f oment insertio job Prbitine, PamptiletsMan b o at Biils, - Blank votedcutedin the best I.f all stifle bills,_Show 1 for Notes, tyle and on - ROSENZWEIL Dealers in Foreign and Don; Beady Made Clothing, 800 tic. No. I, Flemming Blu Erie,Pa, • • L. GALL r !metier it L I mmanv Hall I 1 ,10 porney and Co and story; of. T MARSHA I gilled up stliir ing, north of Elie I JAME .1 Attorney nt Lau l many Hull buil t office: GALB Attorneys and C -Siiih stre et, we Erie, ea: I CA AITHS Si unsellors of t side of tlt 12133 Vklersin 'Watch P j lated and ilary andiortic 100 MI & 11, Jew liy, Brittonoia 'Goods, N 0.7 • WILLIAMS 15t. W l'holesaleand Retail Dialers i t e ries,lllardwale, Crockery, Leather, 'Oils, etc. e street yid the.P bile Squa, 0 Tavernf Erie. a. WIL Cabinet State ~tree:, E lANI RIB Ilpholeter ie Pa S. DI KINSON, and Su e,eon, office he' cthodiet. Churl JACKSO odds, Groce b. 11TH ;Tilers 1 Dry and Queens - Pa. rare, No. 121, Est ClS,arwcOtliinr,Cominis rite; jteri Ware Haa General F, Nlert ha lit 111 ta \JO' Slane farkurdrai, o ware after of *NJ KEL Tin, Copp renal and 1;' MEM LEBTER,' Ir9n Founder'', Stover' !Hollom.l holsale en; ware Ate. fit, JpIIN II.'BUILTOI Kholesaleattilreiaildcater:in Bye Sta's,OrOccrice,&c: I` Erie, N.l, ) ,_ '--- T -,, C. A k , 1 I. TIMBALS, ' Dealer in I* y ' ooda, Groctlicsl, 4.c.' No. 111 Cheapdidd,, Er e Pa. t • '• - GOODYVIN , R4 VINC.F.:NT. Peale," ,;” Ay Goods, Grors,' &c.,,N0: 1 M 'andl Blokk, State et,Erio Pa - ----I CA6. 11. It.r.. BRO Qealers in Dini! ~Medicines, btulTv, Glass, c., , No. 6 l• Pa. 1 . 111. TooLIN " sion Forwardinm and_ Comm', French Street, Erie, and' I 6: onThillick, dealers in Groc ric• ENRY CAPW NaleiLil Flur warp, Dry Goo( east Fille of the Diamond, 'an the Eagle hotel, Eric, Pa. EAGLE, HOT 4 Hiram L. Brown, iterncr of the Public equarc, Paid, Pa. and sOotheril Staac (Ace. b LYTLE tr-lIAMI I ohionbte Merchant Tailor &111d11,• a few doors west of Pa. JULY l,\ tiler in,. Theologi •al, inc ind Classical Set pl wilt; S No.- I I French Serccl, Erie, P. A. R. 'BRA ::crney and Counsellor at law W. T, practices in the coun r;rllit T. and i lona Te'ritory. 13ENJAMIN GR Vneyland i Co'unaellor -at La% Stye s oliposite the hale PR SLEY ARBU d i .11er in Dry clods, Gkocerifrol vire, Me., No. 3, Perri HI i Erie, Pc 1 I ANTED in exchon2o for lei, Cheese, ; and all hind. 'e• I 1-1 • hne 6, 1416. :I" . l II,VE.Et AMl.—silver Tu l l J Salt and Mustard Spoons, Butter and Fruit Kuiv, :d Ind fur sale by, 'G. LOI ' No. EMI IRON, STEEL AND LLeizeSof Eastern and 1, Nails, jint received and w quality. for salc Orly at mite the Eagle Tavern by - IV ILLiAMS !Imlay 9,.1847. KFEP YOUR FEE' HE - sitabaeriber has just astern cities a Inrs o tof RNOES of all kin& pri Thick double scruled),Walk Gaiter Boots, Rid Buskins, do Slips, Seal India Rubber Over Shoes. 11 iFseaSflps , and Buskins,' Children'i Shoes of all kind &large lot of Men'a an . tualities frorn 12 1.2 tents t articles shall be sold at r • la webilie min small profit. 'I and aim! H. T. 28,1816. • DY,E STUFFS Loges ,• Indigo, ; Footle ' . Tincntloeal' nt Cawoc,d, Niewood, -Crea m Tartar, • iltazih Wood, ied Tartar. • Red Sanders, Copperas, „ lu , etc. Madder ? I for sale by I. H.I3II.THN & Co. 'ov. 28, ISIG.-28 No. Reed House. • ' t i MI PRICES R, EDU B_. r. i NEW PALL'AND WIN E At the Aint Corner.opporik •hr_zo 'iLLmms ¢ WAIGHfr their castomers n et those I i, that th y are no openiv ii stn cities , hoir FA L L and Ath in eerie y, etont and chca imp assortment in this city, I kt* 'atos or ctuu mar rd at decl i ne in the c a nte en a kt st l thein to offer extra induc l errii meeN„. 4 o Oct ob I rr. ~ ~! . Mitt• a for the Ene'tlhser►er. TO AN AIOOENT ,FTISEND. • BY ARCRRTTPA L. LtRDAyt SLOAN, MU When dark congictinl sorrows rend, And, one by one we I/se a friend, • Ah, ivho can tell, save those whose heart Hay felt affliction's bitter smart, How sweet it is again to trace, ' In fa y Mirror, some lov'd face, . Whose Jim smile of runny sheen O ligh and bless our midnight dream. 'rhus,iLa v, oft in lonely hour j On i'arie swing I'm borne to thee; Nor yet regret the mystic pOw'r . That spreads a shadow thus o'er me; Fortwemer thoughts within my breast, And lourer feelings makes me blest, , Until, too soon, alas! 1 - find, 'Tis but a visia of the mind. , Si 50 :ME will invariably be striely, adhet ‘ ed to 0 co tE) I per square cats for each sub- ies, such as Books ards,Steam tecei .IE, tic. exe- 'hors otice. tr. (I VO. ' ' .liefdi Dry Goods, s and ShoeP, &e. etc, r otate Street, • Ti w- Eri flies in sec But even so, how great the bliss, \ l To' feel thou alit where thou art not; For 4'ry visian Sweet like this, Still adds a.pleasuee to my lots Ali, would it were the same with thee, That in thy mem'rr I may dwell; How fondly would I bless the spell ' That wrought so 0611 a boon for me. in the Tnms rothonottity's LAI La w P —Office on bliu-Square„ E=lll CO :live' are,lße; ',German Sil Cutlery, M il , louse, Erie bithc.F. qßsnowcoD. • I REA Ida t I have sat some- minutes, with my pen ,stispended in the air above my yaper. %I havelbeen debating a delicate point —I am in a po,ition. You will perhav re collect thtit one of Fanny Forester's exqui site sketches Was entitled 4,1,4:Dutt0n." ' tow it happens that the ;real name of the / heroine of the "over true tile" which I am ,about to do myself the . honor of relating to you, was no other than Lucy Dutton. Shall I rob her of bor birthright—cOmpel her to wear a nom-du guerre, because my sister-au lhoress accidentally gave thetrue ' name to one ef her ideal creations? Sh . I I sacrifice truth ~ to delicacy? that's the question?— "Nay" You•said no, did, yo not? Then Lucy, Lucy Dutton, let it be._ Some forty year since, in the interior of my beautiful nave State, New ,Yerk, lived the'father of our heroine, an homist[ and re spectable farmer. / He had but tWo children) —Lucy, a noble irl of nineteen, and EVen,l 4" a rear or two yo wen The firstinamed ( was winningly, rather chau strikin 1 41 beautiful., Under a manneeobservable for i s seriouiness and a nun-like serenity, Were concealed an im passioned nature, and a heart of the deepest capacity for, hiving. She was remarkable from her earliest childhood for a voice of thrillingand haunting ,sweetness. ' _ Ellen Duttonwas the brilliant a iipedes of \ her sister;-a "born beauty," wiles -..preroga tive of prettiness was to have her irresponsi ble own way, in all things t and at all times. An indulgent(father, a weak mother, and, an i iildlizing sister, had all unconsciously contri buted to the -ruin e of a nature not at the first re markable for krength, or generosity. Where,. in all God's -creatures, is heartless ness so seemingly unnatural -- is selfishness BO detestible; as in a beautiful woman! . GOode,Gro sswOre, lion, lion r of State l ite he Eagle undeitoker, event h Street, ie, Po.' CO. China, GIIIPS capeitle; Erie I and Produce st of the Pub- !tit! Sheet•lron streets, Erie. [ESTER, ail dealers in rent, Erie, Pa CO. 5 • es,Medicines Reed House HER.! OilA)Dye cud (loupe, Esse Y.ICo. Mercliante; 109, i 'Erect Canal Ba and Provisions.' I.> LL. s, Groceries, Stc one door cunt, o Lucy possessed a fine intellect, and as her parents were a c ell reared •New Englanders, she and het' sister were far better educated I. than other girls of their situation, in that then half-settled portion of the country. in those days, many engaged in school teething, from the honor and pleasure which it afforded. rather than from necessity. Thus, a i few months previous to the commencement of bur sketch, Lucy Dutton left for the first tine her fire-side circle, to take charge of a school 1 , 0m,e twenty miles from tier native town. noir some while, her letters home ere ex liive only tillhe happy contentment \ which f - 1 sprang from the consciousness of active use fulness, nf receiving, while 'imparting gond. taut anon there came a change; then were those records for home cluiracterized by fitful gaiety. OrdrearY sadness; indefinable hopes and fears seemed striving for supremacy in the writer'stybubled little heart. Lucy loved; but scarcelfacknowledgeditherself, while tci , she knew,not that she was •kr d; so, for a time, that betiful v secori-birt of woman's nature was liap a wart, s i florin struggling , with the, l cold mists of morning. State s MEM 1 TON. I-, on the Public State tired, Erie, b N. laticons 3 l Snttdtly edema , etc. etc l• a. • , Pruirie du Chico ics of 'ruu•fprd il Clayt.n cupnty NT,, v; •Offi e No. 2 E ic, Pa. LE, ockciy, Hard , Stite etre( ogle, \Vool, But of Country Pr', CADWELL Dessert,Te „ pltongs, Ladles, constantly on INIS &Co. ' Reed [louse. But Mie day brought a letter which could not soon be forgotten iq the home of the ab sent one--a letter traced by a hand, that trembled in sympathy with a heart tumultu ous with. happiness. Lucy had been wooed 'and won,'andilut waited her parents' ap proval of her choice, to become the betrothed of young Edwinr a 'man of excellent family and standing in the town where she had been teaching.' The father and mother accorded their sanction with many blessings, and Lucy's next letter promised a speedy visit from the lovers. To such natures as Lucy's, • what an ab• ' , irg, and VAt OM ,em Iron and :uted to be 01 brick corner 'LIGHT , RY. ' ved froin tlfe dies and Mis. 1 Shoes I ' sorbing, and yet what a revealing of self is a first Paaston—whale a prodigality of giving, what an incalculable. wealth of r ceiving— r =what a breaking up is there ofill e deep:wa ters of the, soul, and how heavien descends in a sAden star-shower upon lite! . If there is a season when an angel may look with intense and fearful interest upon \ her mortal s sister, 'tie when she beholds her heart pairs from the bud-like innocence and freshness of girlhood, and bikini to i.s very or e the fervid light of leve, glow and crime lnto perfeq wom anhood. , , Boy's CAPS, of o 4.2 50. All thb tremely . low pri aid quick soles. C DWELL. N. last the plighted lovers came, and wel comes and festivities awaited them. Mr. gave entire satisfaction to I the fath4r, mother, and .even to the exacting "beauty." He was a handsome man, with some preten sions to fashion; but in manner, and appa rently in character, the opposite of his • be trothed. I \ 1841. i'' GOODS, • • k !laid. would Inform at aril buyinit direct from the NTER stock, nes!, will ex. - omprising all since the very ta, which will Ma to perch ar 10, 1846. It was decided that Lucy should not again leave home, until after her marriage, which at tho request of tbe ardent lover, wro to be celebrated within roontbe, and the Front the Golden RON, A NIGHT. OF YEARS. coming birth-day of the bride. 'lt was there fore:,, arranged that Ellen should' retUrn . with Mr.--, to y M----, to take charge of h sis ter's ties school for the remainder of.the.ter . ' ) The bridal birth-day had came. I n had been ushered in by a May-Morning of sur passing lovelinesx—the busy hours had[worn away, and now it was nigh sunset, and neither the bridegroom, or. Ellen, the first bridesmaid had appeared.. Yet; io her neat little cham ber sat Lucy, nothing doubting, nothing ,fearing. • She was already clad in a simple white muslin;, and her few bridal adornments lay or} the table by her side. • Maria Allen her second bridesmaid, a bright-eyed, affec tionate-hearted girl, her chosen friend from childhood, was arranging to a more graceful fall, the wealth of.light ringlets which swept her snow y neck. To the anxious inquiries of , her companion, res l ing the absent ones, Lucy ever smiled uiett,)and replied: - "Oh, something has happened to detain them awhile---We heard from them the other day, and all was well. They will be here by= and-by, never fear.", Evening came, the guests were all assem,. bled, and yet. the "bridegroom tarried."-= There were whisperings, surmises and won derings, and a shadow of 'anxiety occasionally :passed over the fair face of the bride-elect.— At last, a carriage drove rather slowly to the dpor. "They aro come!" cried many voices, and the next moment the belated bridegroom and Ellen entered. In reply to the hurried and confused inquiries,of all-around him, Mr. W— 'muttered something about "unavoid 'able delay,". and 'stepping' to the sideboard, tossed off a glass of wine, another, and an other. The ompany•stoed silent with arnaz !nett. Finally a rough, old farmer exclaimed "Better late than never, young 'ttan—so lead out the bride." Mr— strode hastily across the room, placed himself,by Ellen, and took her hand in his! Then, without daring to meet the eye of any about him, he said: "I wisli \ to nmke an explanation—l am un der the . painful necessity—that is, I have the pleasure to announce that 1 arm already mar ried. The lady whom I hold by the hand is • y wifer . Then, turning in an apologeticat manner t° Mr. and Mri. Dutton, he added, "I found that I had never loved, until I knew your second daughter!" And Lucy? She'heard all with strange !calmness, then walked steadily forward and confronted her betrayers! Terrible as pale' Nemesis herself, sh&stood before them, and' her look pierced like a keen, cold blade into their false hearts. As thougit: i to assure her.: 'self of the dread.realjtv of the yisinn. she laid her hand on Ellen's shoulder, and lot it glidd down her arm=;:tit she touched not As those cold fingers met hers, the unhappy wife first gazed Ifull into her ester's facet and as she markdd the 'ghastly,palkir of her cheek, the dilated .nostril—the quivering . lip and the intensely mournful eyes, she',covered her own face'with her hands, nod burst into tears, while the Young husband awed byt.fie terrible tilence of her hehad wionged; gasped for breath, and' staggered back against the wall. Then Lucy, clasping her bands on forehead, first gave voice to her anguish .and despair in one fearful! cry,. which could : but ring forever _ through the soula i ofthat guilty pair, and fell in a deathlike swoon at their: feet. After the insensible girl ha/1 been removed to her chaMber, a stormy scene ensued in the room beneath. The parents and guests were alike enraged against W—; but the tears and prayers' of his young wife, the petted beauty and spoiled child, at last so ftened somewhat the anger of the - parents, _and an opportunity for an explanation! was accorded to the offenders: ! A sorry_explanation it proved. 'Re gen tleman affirmed that the first sight of Ellen's lovely fice had weakened the empire of ;her plitiner sister over his affections. Frequeht interviews had completed the conqueit of t his loyalty; but he had been held check by honer, and never told his love, until when on 'his way to espouse another, in an unguarded moment he had revealed it; and the !avowal had called forth an answering -acknhwledg , meat from Ellett. They had thought it best, in order "to save pain to Lucy," and 'prevent opposition ;from her—and to secure their own happiness, to be married heforetheii arrival at Lucy remained insensible for some hours. When she ;revived and 6,1 apparently re gained her consciousness, she still maintained , her strange silence. This continued for many, weeks, and when it partially : passed away; her friends' saw with inexpressible grief that her reason had 'fled—she was hopelessly in sane! "But her madness was of a mild and harmless nature. She was gentle and Peace able as ever, but sighed frequently, andrseeen ea burdened with some great sorrow which she could not herself comprehend.: She had one peculiarity; which all who knew 'her in after years, mulct recollect ;— this Was a wild fear and careful avoidance of men.l She'also seetned,possessed by the spirit' of i unrest.— She could nit, she would not be confined, but;as continually escaping from her friends, and oing they knew m whithc While her parents jved, tI watchful nit , e and unwearying , el measure controlled this sad pro s whet they died,- their strtcken child became a ~ Wanderer, b melees, frienlitesi and forlorn; Tliroughl ughing Springs and rosy sum mers, and golden autmns, and tempestuous winters, it was tramp, tramp,, tramp—no-reet for her of the crushed heart' aiod crazed ' brain. I remember her eti she was in my 'early childhood, toward the huit of her weary; pit,' gmage. - As my father and my elder brothers were frequently absent, And AG my 'mOther . neve claed her heart or her door an the mi. forturtats, "Crazy ..ticy'loften spent an bent or two by clir fireside. !Pi appearance . was i ,:- • - i , "TIIE,,WORLD le GOVERNED ToO. SA.TURY, AP ,IL 24, I.s very singular. Ifir gown was patched 'with many colors, and her Shawl, or mantle,'• ' - vrot‘ and torn, until 'was all open-radi i and fringe. 'Elio reintiinder _of .her miserable wardrobe she carried on a bundle on hmairri, and sometimes she number of parcels of old rags, dried herbs, lite.' • In the seam) of flowers, her-tattered bon net was Profusely decorated with those which. she gathered in the woed,(or by the way-side.. - Her love for these and her sweet voice ' were all that wore left her of the bloom and music' of existence! ' :Yet no,—her meek and Child like piety still lingered. Her God had n forsaken he'; dovin into the dim chaos of, her spirit, 'the" smile ' of Ilia love yet gleamed faintly—in the waste 'garden of her i heart she still heard his voice at even-tide, and she was not "afraid." Her Bible went with her everywhere,—a torn and soiled volume, but as holy_still, nd it may be as dearly Oerish ed, rey reade , Mahe gorgeces copy rie'w 1y E ? ing on your table, bound in "purple and old,' and with Oiling untarnisbed*on it deli cate leaves. A 1 ; I - I remember to have beard my' moth, late a touching little incident connecte one of Lucy's brief visits to us. *, The poor creature,once,laid her han the curly 'head of one of my 'brothers, ask of him his name. "William Ed he replied with a timid upward glance. eaught away her hand, and sighing he said„vis though thinking aloud, .1 kne Edwin once, and he made me broken hot; This was the only instance in s whic was ever known to - revert to thes'ead whth had desolated her life. ' 1 ',1 , ••• • ,‘ Chirty years from, the time dill cement of •this mournful iiiittory , It autumnal evening,• a rough e. on drove into the village of C-- 7 —! l pad at the alma-house . An attAn ni was lifted out' and carried in, an riron • ' rumbled away Thuswas Lite 9 rought to her native town to die. 3 e had been ! hi a decline for some m the miraculous strength which sustained her e in her , yeary • ande i i st forsook her • utterly. H;er slat 1 some time before, and the wi owe had soon after removed with his 1 I he far West;—so Lucy had nofrie, I he but the alms-house. ' ut they were very kind, to her th matron, a trueman,' whose soft i the hourly emit inplatiOn of huma i r could not harde , gave berself with ryi og motion - to jt l e:7 o 3 l :2:th o au erer. ' With the. eye 'of ,Christian sh'e watched the shatteretefiaik of'tha as ,borne•adown the tide of time it'near : great deep of-eternity, with ,an in °reit tenZe as though it tore a royal g 11e$?. Ono day, about a Week from the ti 1 ht 4 \arrival, Lucy appealed to suer gr i and \those about her looked for h r t Mee most impatiently; but at night silo wri dandy better, 'ad for/the first time, slept to* until morning. 'The Imat)on, wh by Per bed-side when she awoke, was et •by the cleat andeanweit gaze which me, Ow —but she smiled,, and bade thaq 4ig morning!" Idcy lcpbed bewil bu the voice seemed to re- u 1 her, a , exOlaimyd, , gOh phat a long, long r been!" Then glancing tour, slit added. , ' 'Where am whd a • i l. not know you." J 1 A wild surmise flashed sere s the j mi did matron—the long lost rifle n - of 'the ilde er had returned! But the gob(' oli ma i n replied calmly and, soothingly, "Why, you are among your friends you will know me presently." -"Then maybe you know Edwin and E rejoined the invalid; "have_they• comet I had stick a terrible dream! I dreame ey were married! Only think, Ellen I riell to Edwin!'—: le strange , that I sl dr4m that." • • and Ion! at I die' ban to t ho I 1 aMy poor Lucy," said the matron, w gu h tor tears, ajthat wAkno - t a dream . all true.", . X 'All true" cried the;invalid, "then mi st be untroe—and that cannot be,.'f. , loved me—we loved each other Well, an. I i • leul sMy sister. Let me them—l go to them!" [ She endeavored to raise heself, , , ( I be c k fainting on the pilloW. 1 , a Why, what does this mean!" said' wat makes me so weak'!" • I ' tha t old her eye fell on her own he that old and 'withered hand! She gazed 1 in blank amazement. ~ I . 4 f Something - is the matter with my si she said, smiling faintly, "for my band to ale like an old woman's" , ' I 44 And so it is," said the , matron, ,gi Ha 'd so is mine;-and y?t we had fair, •pi be de when we were young. Dear Luc{ yo not know met I ii i m Maria Allen—l l to ave teen your brid.srnaid!" , . • t can no more—l wi I not , Make the ) att 'apt to give in deta t all that mounifu ye ling—to "reduce to taexpressive words d d sutainatiof thst hopeless so rro w.' o the Wretched liattcy, the last •t I ye 'vs were all at though they had never li i Of not* scene , not an incident, had ali all htest remembrance, since the night c th recreant lover . and the traitcress s I - at before her, and made their 'arribl ' no neemein. l I ~_ _ _ • The kindination Paused frequently, in sal& narnitive of her poor friend's ins. and wanderings, but the invalid would with'feerful nabonesti,"“p on, pen," th • tbilbeaded drops of agony stood. upon foObead: ',When 'she asked for her sistnr, the at replied: 'iShe hes gone befo IN “And my toOthe said Lucy t with a oddly raj t hope. *Tour mother) bas. bean dead fo years!” •• "Dead! All gone! Alone,old, d 4 God, my'cap of bitterness Is full!" wept aloud. Her friend, bending over herand mingling team wilt)* hers, said affcletionaMly: , you "Ant iteu know who d4nk th at euti,,befOro • 1 .", Lucy I ked up with* beivildered .expres sion; ande matron added: t . • if "The rid Jesus, You remember hiMP, -A Isrok Ike sunlight breaklpg through *a cloud, a I k which only saints may We be wear, it . mdiate* be tearful face or the dying woman ad she'replied: "Oh; , es,l knew Him and loved Him . be fore I 'ft, asleep." - i . "The an of ,God was called. A few who t had know Lucy in er earl'' , days, mime also.; Th re we . muchjre renti I wondering, and n/ iii so e wee mg aroun her ath-bed. Then ros the voice of pra er.. At : ~ her lips' moved, as her weak dpirit . joined in that fer vent appeal- 7 -then they grew still and poor Luck was dead—dead in lA.r gray-haired youth! , , ilit,those who gazed upon that pl, and membered Icy harmless life r re 'with upon and r win," 1 patient is Hering, doubted not that t of an ete nal day had - broken can he OF YEAR . . I . „ She avily, -w an rted." I h , she event Too LAT2.—Some men tirealwayi and; therefore, accomplish through Ili ing Worth naming. If they promise you '4. 'ltch an hour, they are never till thirty minutes after. • No matter, poitant the business is, either to.you to him, he is just as tardy.. If he tab sage in• the steam-bolt, he arrives jui bo4 has left the wharf, and the is started a few moments before he ai His dinner has beeO waiting for him, that the cook is out of patience, and om on t =EI 1 uated d the Dut- time is obliged to s: course the character way i s s puraus. • He clidich, at a place o or in his bed., Perk nths, d so inge, I had hos roily sob cannot but despise. I Much ;rather w have a man too early to seri us,' and ready—even if he should carry , out h ple to the extent of the good deacon, following to thr! tomb the remains of band - and father hinted to the bores i r ow, thee, at 11 --P M'..qTri% ha eheuldi to thiiiii der. li e deacon•wite just h for scarcely had the relatives and frit tired to the hou e r before tfie parson, ic , same proposition to the , widow. too late," said she, ` - deacon spo (1 1 at the gra+'" Scores have lost pl ties of maklng fortune's, receiVink f v , obtaining husbands and wives, ( by bei. minutes trio late. Always speak in , and be ready at, the irppointed' tor would not give a fig for a nran wh) puctual to his engagements, and sQ I II mate ir up his mind to a min tours) time is lost. Those who han gback, antitiletuble—who are never op • Itant jouney, al trade, a sweetheart, or *aril' else, are poor sloths, and are ill-calcul get a ivink in this stirring • 'ld. re.— heart Ws- faith,lifer; :d the a id- 'ne of a ly, ,e al- MED WA§ rtled her valid .eyed d she -, i ight IR !d inqui has 1 ~.eilvaurin oFir A 5 1 1DE1NA1.......1( stork 1 morning an Irishman, r i ecently' ended on -our . shores, applied tole merchant on the wharf for work. ' Willing to do him a kindness, the latter handed him a shovel, ' I and pointing to the backof his store, tald'him to I'shovel off the sidewalk." Occupied• with some opera tions consequent Upon the arrival of the Cam: brie, the-merchant forgot all about the Irish- - man until the lapie.of an . bour.or two, Teddy thrust his briatling pate z into theo,counting room, (which was up stairs,) and ' inquired— ' Piliayhap ycos 'ud be havin' a pick, girl" El I do e you? 1 id of wan- inno and len," Oh, that • "A pick 'to get the !noir off V' said the merchant, smiling. 1 , • inhe snow ''ud be arf log since," replied Teddy,. /!an'the brhicks too, fur that matcher, but it's the ail (and) 'at sticks!" mar , ould h a Waif In some alarm the merchant ran to his bacic'wlndory,pnd lure enough, ;the fellow hadlihrown n4rly all the ylavoinent into the street, and ma de quite la holed "Good graci us, man, I only wanted you to shovel off the noir'!" 1 ' , "Arrah, sir,' said Teary, l "did n't per hon or till me to shcovel arf the sio(etoalkT l —Bas t. Bee. . .- ~ 11 . i -- • 'dwin CM 1 A,Puoti.tanc Gstoiasi r —We heard from a goUtleman, lately from Monterey, a , good story about one ofoUr v.lmiteer brigadiers. The General happenend ne morningto be present, dressed in a rather shabby, suit, wherei some teamsters were. harnetUting their horses; and pot liking the Way in h t filch they fixed things; intefeved, end in a rat i authoritative Mariner,' told theinqt was al Wrong, and they didn't know what t ey were about. Thereupon, one Of the teem era tol the General that ho was an old ass, nd had etter go about his busi ness, wittio her Co pfmentary phrases adapt elf tu the canton.. The General, not used le let loch c inpihne is Irma unnoticed, cooly took °lntl Coat, a ti isaid to the aggressive teamster—" Now, sir, you must fight;" and I tt Pitching mto him, t ey—the General and :the, teemster*.ltad a glo oustight, but the general came oirvictorfous. , Another, teamster' who interfered' in, he fig ,iwas u'ixt walk.ea into) by the Gener I, aced knocked into 1 a cocked.' bat in leas then no me. It must° have ) been a salvo to the'tnorti ed-feelings of the licked teamsters to , &mos r, es they very soon die'.;!t e , covered, that they b d been effectually ' whip-J' peol,by a Brigadier-Gt . moral' in the United States Army.-;...W. O. Delta. • . - Goisrowr ltut ,El ht," ooks imp . v do was CM the hen ster the 'eau say ugh her 411 odependence Ex positor Goys that the Ink mood at the Santa Fe Wisp to prhithirthit Occuunt 'of the itracko flght r was made from gunpowder. The devil bed °, howl is preparing it. Mi t 41011 your C u r !t, the table aga' 1: we have den is never In se busine/vt, hi one of such h. ilil • ror i r, , I I Romantic Lose Tale. face Itt That the.cour4 of true love never , did run ,iimpotlh . bas been proven again, by a circum stance .!, , ,ith whicb.wo were made acquainted a few days since: For some time back a wid ow lady has, resided in the upper part of our city, •whose quiet Ind retired mang ers led her to avoid society almost • e n tirely. c` She , was only- knoivn to her neighbOrs, en 4 by them but 'slightly. She had . no children, was scarcely thirty in appearance, and was re markably 'good-looking, with a face of mourn ul east, which novelists so -.often choose for their heroinee, and which lends such:lt charm to the features of the pensive order. • ft was known 'of her that she bad been married to a man much older than herself, who had died rand left her in comfortable crcuinstances.— About t tor , i Lawrenceville and oinnibuck r, n ehe stepped into the v, qrpOse of ,visiting lie villa, ivit one other 'pas- wza rig! Oh r a 04 , senger, a gentlemen about the same age as herself!. ; t A, few minutes after the omnibus started, the gentleman made a remark [which attracted thcattentio'n of the lady, and, throwing lack her veil toginswer, enabled the 'stranger to° catch.agliMpie of her features: Au ejecta- , Wien expressiveof auiptise escaped him,,and; a scream from the lady proved, also, that she' was startled .: in no slight degree. "Mary!" "Charles!" and in a motnent a, scene rarely oWitnessed off, the stage, was performed high° mnibus. The people who had entered in the Carriage as 'strangers, were in each other's arms, the lady ingests, the gentleman exhib iting-by his voice end - caresses, the extreme of joy. ° cid face, and her e morn 'Ntuirr i _ too latf re noth r to meei. present howim- In .two days from that time, the widow was no longer a widow, nor the Stranger a bache- ?uric or . e a paa ae re hav The secret of this sudden change of cie`. 7 . , umstances is thus ,explained. tfifonte twelye ears ago, the two persons whose names we lave given as Mary and Charlei!, resided in a' 1 the toll in Western Penneyinnia.. The ormer was the belle of the. Killege, end the latter, some two or three years her senior. her, `Layer: The match was perfectly satisfactory to the friends of both parties—the. young man , bearing an excplient ebtracterL Beforeihe time fixed fur thcir =nine, yowever, me- ) fbrtune came on' the loiter, red&ing him from' comparative affluence to pen 4 OrY, and at the .1 instance of her relativei, the edgiagement was I Postponed'and finally broken.. lufepreased in r:ii,—C: 7 -444....!....440..4044mr1. 1 .._thav0init I ff his home, no one knew whither. , . . A year or twP afterwards, our heroine, still dittonsolate foqbe loss'of her lever,"attiacted t ie attention offa rich old felloty who nobbled near the i citY.' ':.lle walla bachelor, and had neither-chie: npr child of his oWn."iinliffer- ' e s t as tO.Svhat became of her, the girl suffered h r relative - to dispose ~ti her hand, and she ade whatis .called a , . successful' match in arrying the rich old bachelor. Three years after her marriage, her husbanddied, leaving her every dollar of his estate. silndependint now of the world, she determined to'spend the relit of her-life single—a mourPer for the for tune which luid so destroyed the happiness of her young love's dream. I She removed to this city, where she has resided' s een years, un knowing and unknown--living in the,world of a Mournful memory, enlivened only h3r an ee -1 , *ions' thought that she might yet meet with liCr heart's chosen. t. Dy a singular coincidence he hapPened to ble int'ile . City; where he arrived a few days before from New Orleatis, and was about ey ing a visit to the'garrison on the day she.e. - 4d the omnibus for the purpose'of an excur- 1 sign in the; nine neighborhbod. They recog nized each other in a moment; mutual expla nations,: ensued, he was still unmarried, and hPr wildest'hopes were realized 'by h r union girlhood's I with the hassband of her gi choice. We han the names of the.partiPs in this r little romatice,.in our possession, and w il'd give them' were. .it necessary . 1 The by de groom had gone to the South success had crowned his efforts, and he is, by this tim , on ;his way with his bride to hie plantatikin 'Louisiana. Theirhistory affor s material for a dozen novels, with proof that romantic at tachlinents are ,still extant the this hunt-drum world of our. / We . hope the parties-btay 'en:. jvr, through long years of happinessi the ?c -ard of the 'fidelity to their, rows.:—Pitta burgh OM. Auriga. so •long alf the This ibed al son—at meals, ; bite we uld we aintays s princi wtio in a hua- I. ed • harim season; as re,- ade the ou art to m Tortuni- ors, and I g a tow seaso fa not o novel• 1: till the =1 for a thing 1 ated to ,Cser. ALnuarts.—We are Pained to find the naine of this worthy officeearnong the slain 'at the investment of Vera Cruz'. , lio gained 1143'esteern of all who mode his acquaintanetb, i whilst - he was hero with tho ieginient coin mended 'by Col{ li.umr. lie Wes a practical printer,, and once published a newspaper in Arrlg ', ioln. ' Wo \learn that he Wati seated at th root Oftrtree, when a ball struck- him, car ryi g away nearly his entire head: The same messenger of -death, after leaving him, broke a dritinmers' arm, and took o the leg of a private.— f luff _, . . A &KONG LIIMICHES..—The, a 4%. two sis ter% in Massachusetts, twins, Vitli are ea mach alike that each of them roccasionally —lr mistakes the other for herself. . C. Delta. One is now dead—shocking t relate, She saw her . sister 'daily at the table ` and-suppos ing herself. to be partaking of .food, she did not discover her ever till she t wished ,and died. .It is mild that_hersister n w lies night ly upon the grave, declaring tha it is herself that is dead.-...805t0n Bee. • . , Na rnasi, Co Texasiti little • which, under' change of west variably turns north. If a so his way across a star to guide finds en uperri , and be follows Pot mislead bin 11111 ♦ss:—ln the vat prairitts of ant, is always to J i be font& 1 _. II circumstancee 'of clim ate' 1 er, rain, frost, far f ;insithte, in it. leaves 'and ire,* to . the , 1 . itary traveller we i rs leaking these ttachless leihis With Out or compass to direct him,' he • Inonitorin an Ihumbla plant .guidance, cer in that it will r I t . NUIMBEII. 49. thi Bitttk. The following "letter from Saidllo we copy from the New Orleans , De Alareb 24'1847.- In a letter which . ' wrote a few dais 'slier, 1 • Five you a very tuff account.of the unpin y affair of Duent Vista, (pronouneetr.Warte sta,) ad will flow give you a few acettes hicig I I e witnessed, not mentioned inibat I ter. • , • The kflibt view that we caned of the entity when they had turned the leftof our lines, and were pursuing theilyili Illenk g Infacdy arid Horsemen. Column after column sue-, seeded, until they C olumn a dense mass nails bering something like 12,000 men. No stands can convey„to you even a faint idea of their imposing appearance. Their arms, buinished, reflected a million times the daz zling rayaof thtf sun—their rich and gaudy uniforms stood out in bold relief aga i nst the soiled and tattered garments ; of the 4 sufrering yolunteers"—their Cavalry (Lance:l) diawa up in beautiful style, in numbers froo 2to end in lineathe" heatitY of which tie most accurate military observe; cotild have found no fiAt'vvitb; and, added to this, that y were for the time, victors, I assure you we,di ion look upon them with contempt.—• 104 w n il ejtilek, sharp ringing of our ri fless ended the death-knell. of score after scare of them thre'e hearty; 'Mississippi cheeis told full, well luit no cowardly fear Psralyie,l that pith) b . * Rushing on, Mirsmall force would have scattered the retreating foe in all directions over theileath-serewn field; had not Our watchful leader, Col,,bavir, Perceived that, we were about to be stirrounded by an overpowering force, and'orderid usito'retire and rally. . - • 1 Here an amusing cireuniance tordr,place. Maj. Bradford—who is probably the most im petuouslybrace officer Who . everfrew ' 1 sword —perceived us retiring land thought nr were defeated. He disthounieJ from his horininxl followed. on slowly after ur, . exert:dining— "Shoot me! shoot me!," some 04. Out— ; . ?What the devil's the matter, - Bilkirrt ! Tie 4iii4issippi regiment hits run, anct - le don' Ocisntito Jire aneherminetter I I Id . ajo`r wat quickly unde n re-formed, ancialtheogb ribly thinned by the killed again was heard 'the deep !Davis, ;:fortrardf Guido The commadd wee repeat., ant with more sfeadineta t. n the carelett fell n ws were hcd th a drill, they eturned st. But it is not y infect- . I !Hive already aiitlea. • , • I. . • , 44 . , But the gallant ceived, ftir we s.. '1 our yanks were te ll and ivounded, yet, voice of the noble centre! March."' ed by - 11y"voices, and,preoision tha ever known to evi to the bloody cont lion to repeat wha At one thne du over the ground (n 1 charge. We the of our fallen cow by the excitemen passed, and the waa tob was not a heart:ail ing the fight, we returned which w,u' make our tirst;• saw the monglad bodies deli, and although animated of the fierce contest just =Sedge that that contest renewed, yeti think there song us which did. not for a eat on beholding ;hat bor er his straw hat and a few. ilothipg which the ruffians Lhould have failed to ricog loon(' Eggleston.. lie was otherwise abused. This ate of all whom man named Couch, gout only persons,whose bodiei. moment cease to rihle scene. ,litGt otherrarticles of_ had left oti him, I nize the body of shot, stabbed an , was, indeed, the Lieuf. Moore, and, collikpany, were th I eosilyrecognize rode over the whele field. ed 'in burying the ] dead— _ hundreds of bodies lying no covering save the scan hing which thrirobbers of , o valueless tIo take from Inman body pierced in eve xpressed in the fades of the passion end feeling. Some d execrating their enemies y~ith their last breath—oth- dacid and resigped l expres?, red to hare died Orending to the last, While 'oth ers last werdstin supplicating lay yOuth and mature ago i untimely death. . i this part of the bloody r to the plain literally tor bodies of those whO hrid a s.: ' This beene was horri4' nons—bnt was'diyested of by the fuct,t that not oho of), 1 a was either robbed or st' ing, nor was Otre the' I the bodies hiving been wounded. This, Indeed te "barharoissvotun cent' of .f tW North,",tiS th Mex-. After Vie 'Static! Parties were enga' but there werO-sti stifr and cold, wit ty remnant of clo t the dead found t them. I saw the ry place.. 14ttw dead almost every seemed to have di( / i and cussing the y ers had the mos p' sion. Some ap e their lives bray .1. evidently used t i ci for mercy. - H r , calmly.reposing n ? Passing 1 tin fro goound, I went ov ered With the dea recent been our fu ble eninigh; God h soine.ofts holm the Me ll l ido.n so striped of his ci least appearance allused after being speaks mach for tl the United States . ._ leans style us. ' ' I - . l• ni , Among the hun refs of dead l who I saw threre,'l was trinclii touched by the appt i mrance of the corpse of a Mexican,boy; wlois i e age I 4ould think could not have , exceeded fifteen yeari., A. bullet- lad struck him full through, tl‘ breast and 'mu t have occasioned AWOL_ ineOtit death. H was Lying oe his'brt,his face slightly ipclurd to ; one Side, nd, - .1- t eent though colJ, yet • ‘, , ing within bright and, gunny 'smile, wine eloquently told the specta tor that he' bad!. len with his &reit° Me' country'ti, fpe. - ",. \ L 4 , ' • •1 ' • - blaltillo is on'a.iast hospital." iksides one own wounded, (four or five hithdrei, it' i num ber,) General Tayilorhas, collected a I the. i i Wounded Mexicans who *ere le ft by their ar-, , my, and put them i hospital.' It islewiatdia.. gusting to visit 'on 'of those places. All of 'them (thellexicen ) are•badly wounded, 'for those that Were all htly WounAed weetleff;:-.. They are dying eve y hour i the dip (1' A WART SUM than T.thoueands‘ halien in Balti se nit poor of i l will merry, to. their mirth. • .—There were gh -few • slops present at a . * . -...4tut` ore fotthe bensilter the ' land. It' is well, Ifpeople erneulbet the etilieted it; , II II , vitt ,