. ; ' 1 \ . , f . , , - I % ' • i -. i Y .. b. .. .. . . i ..- . . 1 . • . ,r. I ~ . . . . . . . ~ . t ''. .• , ':. .' : - .:. .1. , ' L .' _i 'l, , ' 1,. . . . .. • . • ... , ..,. , .• ...,, ~ . . • .. .„.„ ..... ... ~....... .. . , . . _ ... .....,, •, __.iii• , ...: ... ~„t.. ..,,, .•.,_ ....., . . . . , , . , . • ~ .. . , , ... .. . , ~..,.., II t .. ~ .....„................... .. . :__,... . .1 VOLUME XVIII. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BY A. DUBLIN &B. F. SLOAN, STATE STREET, ERIE, Ph • TERMS. One coey, one year, in advance,' 8,1 50 Otherwise, two dollars a year will invariably be charged. These term will be strictly adheredin all eases. I 7. Advertisements inserted at 50 cents prr squrire Or the first iniertion, and 25 cents for each sub sequent insertion. ' Job Printing, of all varieties.' such as Books Pamphlets, 1-landbills,Show Bills, Cards,Steam .beat Bills, Blanks for Notes, Receipts. 8:e. exe cuted in the best style and on short notice. • - T. W. Al OOR E. Dealer in Groceries, Provisions; Candies,Trllir ise. No. I. Perry Bloey,. Stitta street, Erie, Pit; • MARSHALL SI, LOCKWOOD,. Attorneys al Law. Office HP - K t :14.44n the Tam I many [lull building,florth ortheI s cothottotan's Office. . SMITH JACKSON. D ea le r in Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Qiieena NVare, Lime, Iron, Nails Sc: No. 121, • ri Cheapsnle, 10, Pa. - - - JOHN H. MILI*R; County and Borough Surveyor; Lillie° in Exchange Buildings; French JOFIfrB. AT T 0 E Y ATI LA. Has removed his (Ace to the *Public Building near the Court house, up stnirs. in the room occupied by the Sheriff rind .?irectly over the . Commissioner's Office. x Prompt attention will. be given to all businenq en -4 trusted to his ,care. E. N. nui.uttp.T 'at CO. BUFFALO, iN. t. I STORAGE, FORWARDING AND PRO DUCE COS1.1111SSIO?t A NI) Dealers in Lehigh AO Erie Coal. Salt -and Produce' generally. Tarticular- atten tion paid to tlio sale of Product anil purchase of Ilcrthn ' No. itzt. 4 Coli,urn Square, Solid. :Mag. E. 11ULItyltT, U. DRIGGS. Buffalo, N. Y. 49 BENJAMIN GRA.NT, Attorney and Counsellor at. Law ; Office No. '2 State qt., oppositntlie'Enjo Hotel, Erie. Pa. GRAkI AM 14 THOMPSON, Attorneys & L:nte, Otriee my French . street. over S Jackson qo's. Store, Erie, Ap:it 24 , 107. O.L. ELLIOTT, BURG Has peruninentiy local( ii iu resideme on ,the conrner Street e. it z. ROSENZWE k Co. Det'erg in For;eion and Dime;lie Dry Goode, Ready : I .lodelClotilidz, I; in :4 awl ic., No. 1, 'Flemming Stat 6 Strem, Eric, Pa, r I • GALBRAITIIS tz. LANE, Attorneys end leoun , ellers at Lttw--Oliice • on Nth street, •est side of the Public Equare„ Erie, Pa. , W. A. CAI nn AITIT. V. LINE GT - Etl6l%llS tr. CO. Dealers in Wati.dies, Jewelry, Silt Cr, G ennan Sil o ver, Plated tlirittannia. Ware, Cutlery, il itary and Pane C4oods, N 0.7 Reed House, grit. Pa. "WILPIAMS C. NN'RIGIIT. Wholesale and telaU Deah•rs iii Dry Cloor1,nro• series, Ilardware, Crockery, Cxlas scare, !rot Nails,fLeath r, Oils, etc. etc 4..orner p 1 State street and the Public Squa, opposite Old Eagle Tavern, Erie Pa. WILLIAM RIBLET. • Cabinet Mah.r, Upholster and 'Undertaker, State Street, Erie Pa ICKINSON, M. D. lorgeon, office on Seventh Street, ethoffi.i. Chireb, Erie. Pa, P,hysiviin and west bf the tLKER & dOOK, din t r, Commission, and Pr'ilco ed Wore House, east of the Pub• General Forwa MereliantF; lie Bridle, E SEIII KELSEY, of Tin, and and Sheet-Iron (French Filth streets, Erie.' Nlnnufacturers NVlge corner ENNETT Sz. CIIES'fEII, , LESTER, Iron Founders, ~Stoves, Hong wholesale and retail dealers in w-ware ke. State street, Erie. Pa 11. BURTON tz, CO. EETE Wholesaleand o.l.6llle:tier:in Drittzs,Medieinus Dye ' Stuff'. rocerics, fie. No 5 Reed House P.rie, Pa. 1.. .M.4TIBBAi4S, - Dealer in Dry Goods, groceries, re. No. 111, Chcapside, ric Pa. I iiool WIN Et: VINCENT. Dealers in Dr ,Goods, Groceries, No. 1, Bonnell Bloci , State st.,Erie, Pa CAR ER & I3ROTHER. t Dealers in Druos, Medicines, Paints, Oils, Dye, stuffs, Glass &c., No. 6 Reed (louse, Et ie- B. T Forwardin.7 a French Suet! , son, also den OMLINSON 'Si, Co I d Commission Merchants; 109 Erie, end at Gth Striet Canal Ba lere in Groceries and ProvisiOng. H Deale n Hard east side of it the agle U. iNRY CADWELL. rare, Pry Goode, Groceries, • &ie. l e Diamond, and,ono door ceel, 'of tel Erie Pa. - OGLE llo' EL, own, corner of Slate street and are, Erie, Pa, Eastern, Western, Stage office. , , By Hiram L. B is the Ptiblic sq and Southern LYT f Fashionable \I Square, a feu Pa. E kz. HAMILTON. •rchant Tailors, on the, Public doors west of State urea, Erie, -/ Is,, Sunday 3 , %, etc. Ott. Dealer in Theo and Classical ' Noi I I I, Fran )EL JOHNSO * Igical, 'NI inellak9out chool Book; StatioVar; hStreet, Erie, Pa.." I P. Attorne}• and C. W. T. practi Grant and Ito • lowa Terri to A. R. BRACE, unsellor atlaw, Prairie' !es in the coonties of a, W. T. and in Clayt WANTED i V ter, Chee exchange for Goods, Wool, nut .e, and ail kinds of Country Pro . H. CADWELL. duce June 6, 1646 ARDWA H the cheap store' November 21 ilardwarg and Hoare I s Can always be had4ery the pat of. 8. AC IiAON 4- 0. 1946. • CC' scribers Fott ; scribers wi , thy teed. IMOTHY SEED.-:—The vit) pay cash for :mod clean Time B. TONI LINSQN EL CO. S GU • FFE S' series of School Books, 1,2, ..LYJL 4, 4 and ; for sale at No. 111, French St. Erie, May 6, 1847. ; 51 ' EMOVA L. ' f r- ' - '; . ' _1 GLOOMI • & Co. have removed their stork' e of CLOC ' g, WATClitt, JEWELRY, FANCT GOODS, etc. etc. No_ S, People's Rea, Ste te street, nearly opposite ho Eagle Hotel, where they will be pleased to re their filen& call as until.. N. B. A lai o addition to their stock in trade will be made in li short. time. ,'• ' • . Erie, May I 1947. - 1 Gu' will be lo Stewarea self Allay and vatic! Aprill6. e have the best assortment That ,his market of all kinds, Inetudibg mpetted and', limey KW, %tad Silks and China Linen..* • WILLIAMS & WRIGHT. The sky bath its star, the deep mine bath ith gem, And the beautiful pearl lights the seal But the surface ofearth holds a rival for them; And aluao morn brilliant fur me. I know eta drop where the diamond now shire; Now the blue of the sapphire it gives; It trembles—itchauges—the azure resigns, Aud the tilt of the ruby now lives. Anon the deep emerithldwells in its glear. 'Till the breath of the south wind goet by, When it qttivors a6miu. and tho diish of beam Pours the topaz tune swift on the eye. ' ' , Look, look on tho grass blade all fretbly.impentl'ilL There are ull of your jewels in one; , You may find every wealth-wirplined gem in We world India Pew-Drop tlint'akiar'd by the sun. Apollo's own circlet is matchless, they say; • Juno envies its sparkles and light: Far 'tin formed ofdrops lit by his own burning ray, And Olympus shows nothing so bright., Romance of American History. g. Under the title of Romance of Louisiana 'History, the Now Orleans Commercial Re view) of the South and West publishes an exceedingly interesting article thesubstance elan address delivered by the Hon. C. Gay nrrie, before the People's Lyccimn at New Orleans, in April last. It is History clothed in Poetry, and is sparkling with graphic des criptions 'of early 'events in Florida, and along 1. the 'Min of Waters from the'Cridef Mexico thro ig,h the inland rivers and setia to the gulf of the St. Lawrence. The first discoverers and adventurers who'penetrated the vast and wild interior stand out personally before us and the incidents of peril and progress, from their extraordinary and varied nature, posses absorbing enterest. The writer has open ed' a mine of rare historical richness, and we know Our readers will thank us for the liber al. selection of gems. w hick 'folloiv: Three centuries have hardly °lensed' since that immense territory, which extends from thC Gulf of ,Mexico to the,Lakes of Canada / and which was subsequently known under the name of Louisiana, was slumbering in its cra dle of wilderness, unknown to . any of the white race to which we belong. Man was there, however, but man in his primitive state, 'claiming, as it were, in appdaranee at last, a different original front 'Ours, or being at best a variety 9f our species. There was the he reditary domain of the :red man, living in scattered tribes over that magnificent .coun 'try. Those tribes earned their precarious subsistence clifefly by pursuing the inhabitants of the earth and' Or the wate'r; - they : ',:Sheltered themselves in miserable huts, spoke ' different languages; observed contradictory . customs, and waged fierce. war upon• each other.-- ; Whence they came none knew; ndne knOws with absolute certainty to the present day, 'awl the faint glimmerings ,of vrigue"traditioos have offerded little or no light io penetrate in to oltheir inystt4iotts origin.— Thns it wide field: is heft Open to those dreamy speculations of- which the imagine= tion is so fond. - p i Whence came the Natchez, those whorship-' pm of the sun with eastern rites? How is it that Grecian figures and letters are repre sented on the earthern wares of some of thoSe Indian nations? Is there any • truth in the supposition that some of those savages whose complexion approximates most to ours' drab/ their blood from that Welch colo'ny which is aid to have found a home in America many dentuti6 since? Is, it possible that Phmni rian adventurers Were the pilgrim fathers of some of the aborigines of Louisiana? - What copper t colered swarm first - issued from Asia, - I • the• revered womb of mankind,' to wend , its untraced w i tty to the untenanted continent of Ainericra What fanciful tales could be weav ed.on the powerful'Choetaws, or fhe utu:aunt-' ed Chickasaws, or the unconquerable Mobil iens' There the imagination may riot in the poetry of mysterious migratkons,. of human transformations; in the poetry of the forests, of the valleys, of the mountains, of the hikes mind rivers, as hey ca , e fresh and glorious 'from the hand •f the Oreator; in the poetry ' of.barbaric ma iners, la vs, and wars. What' heroic poemi t ight no a future Ossian de vise on the.red monarch s of old Louisiana!---- Would not strang.,hrstory, in the hands' of a Tacitus, se as into esting ae that of the ancient barber an tribes of Germany, describ 7 ; ed'bjr his inun rtal pen Is there in that pe- i ON DENTIST. ,rie. Office at hh= Sk.renth and Peach 49 riod of theii• istence precedes" their acquaintance ith- the s ns of Europe nothing which, ;'vlieit laced in ntrai3t with their In 'tpre fate, appeal - 31;th° ':•inkrination of the moralist, of the plilosph r, and ofthe divine. WhO, ivithou? feeling h 4 whole soul glowing with poetical emotions, ould sit under yonder gigantic oak,-the growt bf h iliOusand years, on tNetop of that hill of giells, the sepulchrp , of man, piled'up by Ilia h nds, and overlooking 1 that placid lake where a r would bp' repose if i 1, • • 1 t were not for that solitary canoe, a moving speck, hardly visible in the distance, did it not hoppen to be set in'hiold relief by . being' on that very line where the lake meets, the hori zon, blazing with the last glokes of the tie parting sun? Is not this the i vory portyOf landscape--of Louisiana landscape.' , - When diving into the mysteries of the creation ofh at part of the sou th we'aterri world which was once comprehended iiithet limits of Louisiana, will not the 'geologist h moll pause, absorbed ih astoniament al•the nurit bar of centuries which must have been leces !4ary,toform the delta of the Mississippi! When he discovers sticcegaive strata of forestlying many fathoms deep on the top of each thek when he;Witnessed the exhumation of t e fos sill) bones of tnamm 6 ths, ' elephintit,'Or huge ati imale of the'antediliivitin race; wheir Ili reads the hiemg,typiin reec?rd_s,ef Igature's . tfonder- Ail doings, left by herself og_the very . .- - fie, ember granite end calcareous taidetauf this v°uritrYr 3011. he not clasp his. handy in echtt-: cy, and exchiimi ,NO4! , the . :dry,tess cif -. my .atudy.bes .1104 tbere- ie:,,,pcletvg: the Nary, foundation of this extraordinary •14dI g ' du Chien, Crawford on county, Fromiho London Literary Gazette THE.' DEW-DROP. 1 Thus I think that I have shown that the l l' I spirit of poetry was moving over the face I fof Louisiana even in her- primitiim. Mate, 116 d i still pervades her natural history. Buil halm • , . 1 EJ dwelt etiough on Louisiana in the dark a es z 4., i a, es her existence, of which we can know no, It lug save' by vaguetraditions of the Indians. Let us approach those times where hist [ l li= cal records begin to assume some disti in i I shape. . • I bathe 31st of May, 1539, the biy,of S , to Spiritu, in Florida,• presented i n curb l snectacle. Eleven vessels of quaint t slitii bearing icii road banner of Spain, iv l road moored close t the shore; one thousand i of Infantry; and three hundred and, fifty of cavalry, futlly equipped, were !chided proud ariay, under the command .of Horn do de Soto, one of the most illustrious' c panions of Pizario in the conquest of P• and reputed one of the best lancers in Sp: in. "When he led - iri the van of battle, so pot or (1 fel was hit, charge," says the old chroni'ler of his exploits, "so'broad was the bloody as sage which he carved out in the ranks of the enemy, - that ten of his men" at. ' arms c uld with ease follow him abreast." He had ae ,ght quired enormous wealth in Peru, and mi have rested satisfied a knight of renown the Governmerit of St. Jago de Cuba, in! sweet enjoymeht of youtfi.and of power, bs ing in the smiles of his beautiful wife, lan la de &hadn't': But his adventurous' scorns such inglorious repose, and now stands erect, and fufi of visions bright, on sandy shore of Florida, whither he co with feudal pride, by leave of thedting,' to tablish nothing less than a triarquisate ni miles Ipng by forty-five miles Wide, and t to rule supreme a governor for life of all territory that he can subjugate. Not mindful he, the christian knight, the hater conqueror of Moorish infidelity, of the s of his future vassals; for twenty-two ecc astics accompany him to preach the wo l God.- Among his followers are gentleme the best blood of Spain and of Portugal ) Don Juan de Guzman; Pedio Calderon, by his combined skill and bravery, had the praises of Gonzalvo de Cordova, 'yc !'the great captain;" Vasconcellos de S of Portugal, who for birth and courage k nitsuperior; Nimo:Tobar, a knight above and reproach; and lituscosode AR-arctic), w that small host of heroes rank in their 'nation next teDe Soto himself. But l en which; if t did justice to ivould to too long. - s.7filit." niaterialio for romance!' Her chivalry, with all its glittering tonap soul-stirring aspirations, in full ma tch, its iron heels and gilded spurs, towards unknown and hitherto unexplored so Louisiana. In south, it must hard be , splendid sight! Let us look at the glo pageantry es it sweeps by, through the vistas of those pine woods! How nobly bear themselves, thosehronzed sons of S clad in refulgent armor! How brave music sounds! ' how fleet-they move, Andalusian charger's, "ivith arched neck. dilated nostrils' Bet the wholeltraln an ly halts in that verdant volley, by that tiling stream, shaded by those venerable with gray_ moss hanging from their bra in imitation of the whitening beartrof a Does not the whole encampment rise di: upon your minds? The 'tents, with gay news with armorial bearings; the proud whose impatient foot spurns the ground; men, stretched on the velvet grass- at cruiting their wearied strength by sleep singing old Castilian or Moorish round others musing ,- on the sweet rulers 0 souls, left in their distant home; a few ing before the officiating priest, tit, the which a moment sufficed ler their jaimi • to erect utuier_yonder secluded tower; burnishing their arms, others engal. mimic . warfare and trials of skill or str De Soto sifting apart with his peers in not in command, and intent upon develo them his plan's of,conqnest, white the faces of some Indian boys and women background , express wild astonishm a 'None of iho i Warriors of that race ar seen; they'are reported to bo absent o t.ant hunting excursion.' But methin 'at times I spy through the neighborin _ ets the,fierce glance of more than to sparkling with the suppressed fury-of paced revenge.. What a s! j cene! and w not afford delight to thepoet'simagin to the painter's eye? n two ponderous volumes, the hi, Gare'llaSso relates l'e thousantyncich that 'rot antic expedi tion. What morl eating than the reciption of Soto at th l of the Princess Cofachiqui, the Dido wildernesir - Whtit betties, • Whet, v over the eleMents theMielvcia,l', and endless abstaclea throwri out by rebell' ture! What indredible_ph}' ..slhal di overcome by the•advancikag, host! roic is the resistance of the Mobiliens •the Alabama!! With what .hdadlo these denizens of the &meat-rush upon clad warriors, and dare the thUnders whom they take to, be the- Childre, sun!: How splendidly, described id t of Mobile, where women fought like wrapped, themselves op in the l flames destroyed city. rathdr than surnder. invaders! i. .• , • But let the conquering hero_ beware, A he is _encamped on, lie territery ef.. saws, the;most - ,ferk:kcious 4 the Ipdia And lucky, wad it t4,at.Soto: r y as As; . was ,bravellttn4`.oePt,quallY; defence and Atie.attnok Hat dead of winter's night, When t i e cold the, porthiltithe Month pfJaneary, 1 (iowlitig through; On leafless trees, turieoc4niyl was jinni - J . , amore' bid valee'pf,tiln tempest. %vith :Are - tIaP 4 P I, - ttitckea Fenfa.,w(ilqh ahniterepho are soon on hie, threatening them alif I • WI E IS - _ TuRDNY, diate destruction. plunging in wild affr; from their ligninents lards, hail naked, str touring element and desperate deeds, of his companions; .th St. Jago and Spain t hf the r, threw of the Indians light i of die flaming highly exciting to th indeed must he be w in the strange cßntr of chivalry on one s ed courage of man i EMI It would be too lo peregrinations durin of Alabama, Missis: At kit he stanthron •sippi, near the spot Egyptian named city yes the . mighty river to the White river, territory of the Arks termite hospitality a the Indians,.he arriv Red river;within thi State of Louisiana. close his-adventuror Three years of inl ' mental excitement cogstitution. Alas droop within, him! shore of the North high hopes, &earth' thy nattontr t are had, lagoons, 1091 eca continued con* r ets estintakhArkti: i ' who in SpainliAl by the songs V of the contest with `,.a ninivess, with the n he whohad reeled Incas of Peru, and princely wealth: he, courtshad been rof ho, ',von dept Iva, ow fear an immense ,teritor; none but half nakt miserable huts, ign pared with Castill Grenada's fantastic imperial dwellings; wealth was gone, companions were , them could he ren d He, the bankrupt itj could he withstant Thought, that scowi consumer of, man, is searedltit deei waste his is wean] on the couch of sic The Spaniards clusi [lately look with de l l tain, and at the omit ver, Itriown at this River. But not lie havoc' within the s outward mien; no vulgar herd, the 1 1, wail: Witt stni4 he cheers his . ctli them, one ley one, t cross lin hi 4 httud - ; whorri he designate andv perseverance, long as the breath do not falter in the taken. Spain exp ry and more ample 4 These were his Is Blest be the soul the true Christian in peace within the his companions, a thorns deep' in the The Spaniards the death of Soto they felttkhai there lief of his existanc , to their grief to of their beloved el in their camp lief place of repose necessity, they smiling faces, co the burial ground crated spo, the m conjectures of the subterfuiekvas v with, signifiCant I each other the pr' white warrior al Garcillitsso descr plunging of the ME Is i top an, sith the 11113 LCM CUT they that lose and len bnb- naki dies ME! ti net pen .teed, those d re- Faille days; MO ESE altar ardor some ed in ngth • • nk if • ing to 'dusky n the !tn.-- to be a din s that GEM e eye lantici MIT tion or - torian nts o 12313 Mall of the of the Great Fath ctories 'ver the Then comes on Odyssey of woes. ' The nt-, tempt of the 'Spaniards to gol by land to Mex ico: their wauderilog as far as the Rio Grande' and the mountain us 'region which lies be;) tween Mexico au Texas, and which Wail des tined, in after yea s, to be id famous in Amer can hist3ry: thei return to the mouth of Red River; their building of vessels capable of nay. ' ' igating the sea,the tender enmpaisiob 'and affectionate assi tance of the gaud Catiqutj . Anilco;' the leagu or th e other Indian princei, 'far and wide. un er the auspices of the , great King, Quignalta qui ; the Agarnemnon: of the' i - confederacy; , the iscovery of the plot; the'rtit treat of rill' the Indian chief save the indomiT table Quigualtenqui; the fleet of one•thousanil' canoes, mounted by twenty thotisind — inek with 'Which - he pursued the weary 'and des pairing iiiiPartiarda'fo'r seva nteenionir days, are', sailing them with incessant fury;,the giving , up,of the c,litierinly when the - aen , v , kma. nearly ,itr, sight; the fterc i f parting worlam the,n, difr nns to the Spaniards:_-"Tell your cntintrytriep ihn4Co'illict been intsued . by 4,;10,464,0 1 One• ithe litid been better aiBitited 'bi hi l r 1i , none,of yen would .haVnenry!v,edtote, I: the_taler the f54#011 ri es with,which ilAct* . r thotMand canoes ivete on the witprx the ri :nue na "ieulties •w he and of fury he iron .1 those of the e beige enond of their o their Now bide tribes. pradeat .repared in the lOW of 1, was aiptul ons far Indtani nd the aniarde h OHM- 21221 • • D o', u .ft , UUUST 28; 1847. horses reariug and , and breaking. loose ie undapnted Span- Oing agalpst the de ; tinsparibg foe, the 4 execute by Soto and , .. ~ leepton / shouts of i . ierescueqthe demon -4.,,. I arrots; t final over e hot pursuit by the 'age—form a picture nagination, and cold does nut take delight , f the heroic warfare and of the untutor savage 'state on the ig to follow ,Sqlo in his tWo years, thiugh 4 part ippi and Teihissee.,l the banks of taMissia hero now nourishes the of Memphis.l and onwardlh :toes, up hile roamin' Over the Afeeti with al d hostility on he part of ait the mo h of the • present lim;is of the There he Wa fated Ito s career. .ease f Aigue and ad undgmined the hero's well . might the spirit He had' , landed on the merman cuntin:nt with Ig of cottiluest 'or r weal , gniticent cities. What [minable !fOrests, endless .1c- marshes, • sh irp and with meti4ittle s perior, ithelbrotiA creatk n. - He tee:l..d.by beauty's glance, i,trels, wheit he sped to versaries wo!th or his ble and chivalric Moors: n the hulls of, the roperial who there had massed the . )wer of • nightly ming I . vagr.nt over where he'haddl d savageS, dwt bly repulsive wh 's - stately - darn palaces, and wit massive with gol two-thirds of,li eat. 'What ac r to their noble f ifiime and in fort+ d the gibes of urge of life, that • acks his brain, I 4, anguish; ask rame, and he sink ness, never to rise again. ter round NC awl alter -Ispair at their dying chief tious hue of the bloody ri day 'under the na eof Red t % the man to allow the wild caul to betray its II in the •ie, in common vith the p an to utter one (word of ig lips and serene brew climpanion, and] summons to sw'ear alleg iaiice - on. the :to Muscoso de Alvarado, as his Successor. • "Union my friends," he says; '.so f life animates your bodies, enterprise you have under cts a richer harvest of glu t omain from her children.", t words , and then'lle•diea. .f the noble knight and of Rebt. his mortal remains • t oaken trunk scooped by nd by them sunk many fa, Jed of the Mississippi! „,,, - - t first hid tried to conceal, from the Indians; because 11 , was protection in the be-, e. What mockery it was initiate joy on'the very tomb lel, whom they had' buried re seeking fur him a n i c e ut when, the slaves of bard ere, With heaVy hearts but using in tournament over and profiiining the conse7 I re effectually to mislead the, Indians, they saw that their li in, ankthat the red men,! glances, were .pointing to ,vise spot u liere..the•great pt.. How dolorously does be the exhumation' and the y ody into the turbid,strearn 3r of Rivers! • . , , covered ling n .n co wi Peru's ! Him s brave pont A' milies! ne e how •my ! inward is heart r lw fever Is at last on the day they ceased theirt pu I the risinig still and saluted him thanksgiving for the expulsion of t, the hair-bredth escape of the th 1 Spaniards wh o . alone, out of the b their former companions had mice . 1 ing from the hostile shore of Lou toils during a navigation of ninot port of Panueo, where they at la.' astute of utter destitution, are all i cident vonneeted with the - Mato' iana, and replete with the very es try. When Alvarado the Ulysses dition related his adventures in Montezuma, Don Francisco de M son of the viceroy, broke out wit admiration of the conduckof Qll "A noble barbarian," exclaimed est man anti a true patriots'.' worthy of the high lineage and tral fame of him whO spoke it, is to the Louisianian - chief and is logue tole recital of those roma meats; tb nature of which is . poet's peiltivould be more at ease that of 0 historian. ' One liiintired and thirty years way since ;he appar'ition of Sot. of Louisiana, withoht any 'forthe the white race tO penetrate into goin,„when on the - 7th of July, 1 band of Europeans and Canadian: MiSsissippiovhich they had come the, far distant city of Quebec. bad two leaders, Father Margu t .' and Joliet, a merchant, the prods great sourceiOi l f.power, religl I Me l r Cr', - which, in the course o' destined to exercise such Witten i4ation of the Western Territe. by the mighty river which they; ed. They could not be ordinse adventurers - Who in those thiy.Sl expi•se themsel,:es to the fatigue; ti journey through unknown, s i the 1 1 34 Lawrence to the Misei huinble monkisk gown of Pith': concealed a hero's heart; anti , chant's breast their dwelt a sok have disgraced no belted knight Whether it was owing to the ih which they had presented the some other cause, th% Indiatie showed any of that hostility wl e l r xhibited towards the armed inva Joliet and Father Marquette flo. river ivithout much impediment ' ttrkansae. There, having rect.) vtdence that the Mississippi di f i to' the Gulf of Mexico,,they t l ay back and : returned to Cam that ..fraii bark drifting•down t the 'Mississippi, anti 'in which j- loddiug merchant., with the de thought and foiecast on his' br schemes:of trade with unknowi iurieying with curious eye t territory which Beetned,•as he :%% stretch i n commensuate propo I Infiniteness of space; in that fr. i ivhere mused over his brevia w here mused monk, ?caning on that I 1. mounted wio) the silver cross I coMptiting the souls that he, I I still hoped to save from idolatry, .tnuch poetry as in the famed Ve i galling in quest-of thelgolden ' I not their hearts as brave as-thos ait j entureil wore not their den .na was not.theobjectlwhich t • i ' I much superior? The grandeur of their enterp at that time fully appreciated, turn to Qiiebee; and on their gi tion that they had dis Covered th pflwhich the Europeans had kit wledge 'conveyed to them'b and which, from Ilie account. 4i, ~ .., 3 anul length, Was consid ottlie greatest wonders of the fiall admiration was expressed, Cathedral tolied.merrily for a, [ I the l bisho?, colloWed by -,his c 'wl Ole po i ulation, 'ling a fiolei thfoot o, the alto . Thus, .o nu intance 'of our uropean th gr at valley of the Mississippi li present State of Louisiana is i was an inStinct.that told thet that ;the seeds of empire and , sown. 'Were they ,right in th which - pushed them onward spot thr ugh. sir many °tunnel , and e ire were there, and t futbre elements of poetry.. . Joliet and Marquette were di yet had been done to take pc,. newly discove'red regiops of. I I the . impetus was given; the , nation once begun could not, r 1 , mighty traveler, with - ,legien was pushed onward by the ha, the , same spirit which had driv 1 to Asia, new turned the attenti the 1 continent of America.- T had concealed the Mississippi impenetrable forests,-and, as i of , trees, was , broken, and 0 1 'claimed-its banks as their her were now fated to witness thi sion of ' irresistablelntredeis, fileven years since the exp: .quette end Joliet had, rolledby ier; de. 1a 9aile, in the.mooth of feasted his eye! wit's► the far-f. pi. i For his companions he ha' three monks; and the Chevalie ,received the education of been destined to the cloister • tutor, of c.tnldren in n seminor ttd order of which . he 'wit; to , . ber. But he had thit will, an ! end that intellectwhfrh e&nn. &contracted ch&nnel :of :aiti l ied a pleblan, he wished to b 2.1011 obscure, he binge4to be - nett Man shakes hie own de • imameogimiminammi fortitude of le soul corresponds with the %ig-i panitinti ; ordus orga izatiou of the *mind. When the they heart da • a prompt the execution of what gen-ited-hor ius conceives; nothing but , to choose the field i longer of /mcees. That choice Was aoon made by I his des La Salle. America was then exercising meg- I. , (!r,rn netic attraction upon all bold spirits, -and did net fail to have the same influence a:1'11k own.l.W.rokl Obeying the impulse of hie limbition,,,b: cross ed the Atlantic withinit aikil land ed in Canada in 1673. I ult.' adored with Weir .0 invaders, eo hundred light host ; • .ed in fiee- !slam; their I days to the arrived in hrilling in y of Louie- I • nee cif poe- When on the continent of America, that fond ohject of his dreams, La Salle felt that, ho was in* congenial atmosphere with his tem-1 , per/linen:i f Ilia mind seemed to expand, his conceptions to become more vivid, his natural I. eloquenCe to be gifted with more persuasion, and he was 'acknowledged by all who'saw and heard him to be a superior being. Brought Onto contrast with Count Frontenac;who was! the• Governor of Canada, he communicated to him his views and projects for the aggrandize-1 ment of France, and suggested to him the gi-i ,gantic *ll i of connecting the St. Lawrence!, with the Mississippi'by,an uninteirtipted chain 1 . ha v e beenforts , 'Prom the information whidh I have , been a tleto collect," slid he to he oust, •I think I may br able'to affirm ,that tile Missis sippi dFttWs Itt source iiomewhe!re j the Vi- cinitY of theta lest ial E npi re, and 'Ott France will be moOonly`the 'mistress of all the territo ry bets Feen the St. Lawrence, and the Missis sippi, but will, ,command the trath', of China, l l flowing down/the new and: mighty , channel which I shall Open to the Gulf of Me.xico."—,; Count Frontenac was seduced by e magnif-1 icence of the prospect sketched by , the entliu- ; , siast, but not daringto incur • the expenses which such an undertaking wound have re- 1 quired; referred him to tho:itrtof France. To France, then, the adventu'rer returns with increased contidenee; for he fold:gemmed' one thing, he had gained one point—intrtiduc- lion I . the nollie anal to the wealthy under the auspices of Count Frontenac . The s pirit 1 , of Columbus was in' hipt, and, nothing abash- , el, lie would have 'forced his way to the font r of 'the throne and appealed to I%lajesty 'itselfir) Stith assurance which ge6itisTitifparts. Bef sufficient was it-for him tO gain the good gicil ces of the royal blood of •rtince, the Prince de Conti. lie fired the prince's mind with! his own contagious eothoSiasin, and through him obtained from the King not only an ire,- meuse concession of land, but • was clothed ' with all the powers ina privileged Which he required for trading (with the Indians and for ! carrying on has medpatedlplaris of tie:=corery. Nay more, he was etntobled by letters patent, and thus one of` the, frost ardent wishes of his" heart was gratified.' - At lacit hews no long er a plebian; and, with Macbeth h could ex- claim, “Now, thane of Cawdor, t ie greatest is behind.'l' r La Salle recrossed the. Ailantie!with one worthy ll of being his: ./lehafes,_ and capa ble cif understanding the workings ol'llis,mitid ' and of his heart. That man was qt. Cliec l ie.l Her De Total, who, - its an officer, 11:(.1 served with diatinctih in lyittny a war, anti wholaf- -1 terwards becaine Nm q us. among the Indians for the iron hand with which he had artificial , ly Supplied the one fiwhich he had lost. ~ On the 15th of Slpteniber, 167 e, ,iroul and erect with the conshionsness of sti7,coss, I,a` . Salle stood again in the' walls of Qiiebec, and'' stimulated by the cheers of the Wliu‘ pop,ulat thin, he immediately entered into the execu tion of his projects. Eger years after, in the year 1682, he wt,t at the mouth of the illisiis-`, sippi, and in the name, (as 'appears by a nota rial act still extant) of the- most •ptiiisant, victorious Prince, high, most_invincible and victorious Prince, Louis the great, King of Frit nce, took possession 'of all the country ichieli he had discovered. I how his heart must have swell-- ee with exultation when he stood attic , mptith of' the great river, on which' all his Impel had centered; when he unfurled the whiNbanper, .and erected the stately column, to !which he appended the royal escutchon of France, amidst the shouts of his comptinfonis,,and the .1 diseharo , c of fire arms. With that deVotion , o he attis hate joinedlthe sole m7e Thant 'slw onithe, tnemo'rable Recap t! 1 1 I . '7 1 , ~ , To re ate all the i I eia t-thrill . ti 4'a ventures 11 r , • whiell' cetulterrto La Salle rtiring the four years which elapsed between the opening end' conclusion of that 'expedition, would be to go I , beyond the limits which are l allotted to me.--I Suffice it to say, that at at this day to over- I come the l hundredth part of the difficulties which he !Indio encounter, would inithorialize I a titan.' - Ali! if it be true that man is never greaterthan,whett engaged in a genero us and unyielding struggle against dangers,and ad ' versity, then it be admitted that (lurid* theSe four years of trials, La Salle was pre-erninent ' ly great. • We's he not worthy of admiration, when to the camp of the Iroquois, who at first had 're c eived him like friends, but hadgiteen i - ' converted into foes, he dared to go ~alone to I 'meet the charges brought against him by the subtle MarSplio, whose words were so persua sive anti Whosewisdefu appeared so wonder ful, that it waS 7 attrilu i ted to his holding in-1 tercourse with spirits() another world. How intercling the spectacle! How vividly it pic tures itself, to my mind ' How itwould grace the pages of a Fennirnae. Coope r, . or of one liavingthe magic Penl of a Walter Scott.— blethi' , lts I see that Areopagus or- stern old ,India IWarriora listening with knit brows end ti n ~ , compressed lips to the passfonate aceusation eo diallfully- urged against La Salle, and in the prediction. that to .the white race,_ was the anti' forerunner Of destructiorrte all -the Indian tribes.' -La-Salle rose iu his turn: *how eloquent, how pathetic hj,,s• we.-ahem ,ap 1' pealing to the better fealittS:of the !Oleos, and how deserving of the verdict rendered in his favor:, -', • • . - 'But the enmity, therambushes of Indians Were not to hien the only sources of danger. These he could have stood 'untnoved!,.. Bet nest have beep _hie feelingi when helm 3Onscioul of the poison which hisd been .' I,6tered to him by some one of his cem7i thatexpe he lions of • ndozi, the r passionate gualtanqui: s e, "an lion pis remart rf the annea -1 • , Jost tribute lan apt epi tic achieve ch that the with it than • , lad(passell on the eall attempi 'of hat fair re .l3, a small reached the to seek froin That band .tte, a monk, 'types of two ,n and coin- • time, were con the civ v, traversed ad discover men, those 'undertook to and perils of !Modes, from BP" i 'That r Marquette lin the - mer ;l nit would,. • 1 eaceful garb mselva, or to had hardly ich they had ion of Spain. ted down the , i&e far as the 'ved sufficient charged itself etraced their ada. But in ie current of sat the hard .p wrinkles of w, planning nntious, and at baatitilc;is lint albog, to tion with the it bark, I say, y that gray ng shift; fur -1 Christ, and aJ saved and s there not 'as .sel of l Argos, leece! Were . of the Greek : era us great? y had in view ISO was, oven On their , re i ing inform mighty.riv but a, vague . the Indians, given of its ir ; reel to be one , ortd,. uni ver -6 bells of th i e tole day, an rgy and ith Te DeUrn t the fil i stla - 1 , lens wiittit e l of . which our le heart, there it was lhcrc . reittneeo were Se divinat ions o th t favored lel 'realness t 1 , erefere all the lad and nothing 6ession of the [he West;, but arch of eivili= krograde; that lor hia guide, d of God; and "n . t he crusadera n or, Europe to o spell which midat'llitherto were,-an ocean i Indiaue Who ditarydomain; rapid succea- edition of. Mar. RobeftCaval, January, 1682 mod ,4ississi p l• forty soldiere, do Touti. Ho esuit, and. bad qd Ao L beeogie a I ° F. that Clellia laeome rt . mem. , , • those passions, I t be forced `nto 1 ItOra Onor both *loge and maw. 1- Why tides when; the I 1 • What Came adlni NUMBER 15:, who thought that by destroying him, t old spare to themselves the anticiw, rors of an expedition which they no had the courage to prosecute! What' lair was, is attested by the name - pf Cirur" which he gave to a fort he I bison tinu l l after.' Th l e Fort of the Heart!" But let us turn from his I S to the more graceful spectacle of his '/.,8 he returned to.Frauce, and found_ famous. lie, the poor boy, the igno-, birth, fo p alhom paternal tenderness amed n6think o , higher than the - honor of miser ovalio , In I hitnßel ble_by had dr being . teacher In s seminary of Jesuits, was presen ed to Lottis:XlV, amidst all the :plea- I] dors of his "Court!: That Jupiter among the I, kings f the earth had a smile tobestow upon ; the h' rnblel subject who came to depoalte at the fu t of the thrOne, the title deeds_ of such i: broad domains. ' But that smile of, royalty was dstihed to be the last smile of fortune. i Thelf, vors which he then obtained, bred noth-i log liu "revers r. Everything, howevei, wore 1 e brig t aspect, and the star of his destiny i appeared to be Cultninatin,g in the geavens. Thus' a fleet of four vessels was put at his dispiis'ai with all materials necessary to es tablisli a colony, and once' more ge left the , IF shores of his native country, but.,this time in vedteL, with high command; and hoping, per haps to be the founder of an empire., That, indeed, was something worth having strug.. Sled for! But f alasl he had sttug.gled in vile, 1 the meshes of adverse fate Were drawing close' around him'. . here is not the place to relate his misunderstandings,, degenerating into bit ter miarrets.with the proud Beaujeuovvho had the stborinate cOrrinirind of the fl eet, and who thonlit himself , I d(shonored; he, the old cap tain of thirty years standing; he,' the noble r man, by being placed under 'the control of the fessional, of the plebian, of _hint whom' iled l a pedagogue, fit only to rule over `en. The restilt of that conflict was, at Salle fuuud himself' abandoned on the,' unpr hep l child that shore of the Bay of St. Bernard in 1685, and , waS - ' educed to shift for himself with very Ifni- itedesonrces. Here follows anothertperi d 'of th ce years of great sufferings, andiof b ld andj i cessant wanderings throughthe present state of Texas until a long I serieS of adven inr . cyle•was basely murdered by his French companions, and revenged by his body 'Ser vant attrmgliliman by'birt%. I le'died some where about the' spot where now' stands the city f Washington (in Texas) which ewes its I roundution to some of that rage to tsbich belonged his avenger, and the star spangled banner now proudly waves where the first pi- oneer of civilization consecrated with his blood the future-land of liberty. rlie rapid sketch which I hale given, shows thati so much of La BNe's life as belongs to history, occupies a space of fifteen years, and) it is 'so full of incicleritsthAf it affords mate rial lenough for the prolicfon of arvoliimin- Ous and iiiteresting b00k. % But I think that May safely close my, observations With the r - maik, that he`who will write the life of that extraordinarylman, however austere his turn of-mind may be, will hardly be able to prevent the golden hues of poetry from ov,erspreading the pages which he may pen, where history is so much like romance, that in many respects, it is likely 'to be classed as such by posterity. A Goonlirr.—A noted caricaturist hits off the attempt Of the v-higs to•pile • their party duds on "Rough and'Aeatly," ,as, follows: i The old penerril is prepared to lead his col- limns to the attack of a Mexican force') and toe Whigs have tied their "gocart" filled with' Cor'witi's speeches to his coat-tail, and are I, i repaying to jump iii themselves; hogWy sat - isfied, thus far, with their trick. As lt starts, lifs coat-tail brings him up with a jerk, which necirly thre:Wa him off his legs, and he discov ers in great rage, the cause. Turning upon them. with his sword he cots the rope, avd knocks them right anfi-laft, crying out,' "Y at. rascals! you are wors'e than the Mexicans'.'' the Roston Atlas, New York Expressf, and ty banyi Peening Journal, are running I away.o fast ,ic their legs can carry ihem,'atill yelling . out to their ,comrades, i•Let. the old foorgtil he w i on't work in our harness!" kis it deci-. decytit, and will make the litho;graplier's for tit ne.—Xelo lin yen Register., ,_ j . - -----V--:-:-::.----- -- ---- "Tric Nl 7 / 1 3.1EN."-.-Some editor - nho de 'es to he whipt for his impudence, is out in tin article shawing'how the-women "time the 'grand s'y pints" over the men—or, in other . _words, what advantageS they enjoy that re denied to the male bipeds: He says-.-Ile , sauce-box—that_ua itoman may say whatlahe ' likes to you without Ole risk of getting knot ea down-forii. She can take a anoez e after dinner, while, her husband leas to go to-wOrk. She can dress herself in neat and filly shoesf for a' dollar, whicfr-hcr husband has to earn • •and fork Over to her: She can take a Wahken t i a pleasant day, Without the rear of being ask edto, treat at evrylcoffee 7 hOuse she paases. i She can paint,h r face, if toofilale, or fyi l tr it, . if too red. She can stay at hem in time of war, aqi ' wed again if her inishand is 'kilt: . She can wear corsets, if too thick, add other, fixins, if too thin." „ I:OA:Mi.—The term Infantry is issid to .. tike its origin rim one of the infante of Spaitt, who finding that the army commanded bithe king, her father, had btn defeated by Ithe" Moors, assembled a body of foot Soldier's, and .? with them engaged and. t totally defeated the enemy. mehiory tilts event, and to hop -or the foot soldiers, whofl were not: before beid in much consideration, ihetTeceivedtite of Infantry. , ' In Mexico, .amall pieces of enap are circu lated as moneyanswering the purpose or small coin. ---Exchange paper.' t 8 mit was the case until Tonr - Corw, apeech appeared. The inhabitant, ulate that—it-being genial so, anddecli ly small coin.—:Huron Observer, 11 ECM ;infer 04 ded4