iiiNi I OLDIE 19. TILE WEEKLY OBSERVER. ERIE PA: SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 12, IS IS FEIjEttAL 411,SEI1001) NAILED The folloa:fig communication to the Louisville 'Jour self The statement of which it is a co,tun, retutation, has been published both in the Gr Octer: •,:,,!• mat, and now we call the sheet on of i lito Edw , of these sheets to the facts eet forth in the% lcttci tftllthey do Gen. Cass the justice to give it a ',Lice in respecti%e volumes I nuttier comiment is mimic but let the pcopie rca.l,and see to what desperate , :e ? nsthe Federal lemlet3 m e divotedto result to dekat (An. Ca,,%. Dm tmrr, Jul) 'l9, 1$ 18. To the Editor of the I,o.:ieeille .10:., mil : S IR ...,-Your p a p er o f the 20th instant has just been put i_ .nto my hand )vith its Mtortal article headed, " ennui- Jai operation of Gen ( ass." .. , As ,I was the Agent of Me Western Land A , soeia- Lou, 90 called, whose operation. are alhuled to,'it is an n et of Iti,tica, not less to Gen, ('a,, than to irt.elf,-that I should publicly expo , o the falsehood of tho article, which I shall do be a vet) brief statement, not permit i .14 in)self to doubt but that a regard to truth will ensure t. admittance into your coluninq. _ . In I-36, an association was formed ht SVa.shingtb, 11, for tl.e purchase nod entry of Wt•stern ',ands. Gen.! Cass i „ a s one of the company, and upon his recoMmentlation, :.•he a a, a western man, and had knon n ;ale from t with, I •4-•• appointed the agent for malcim the looations, and int e bond in a very heavy penalty for the faithltil per iginain cof my duties. The llon. Henry llnhbadd was ..' T ai , sur er, and to him all the assessments iverci to he pd. t wept thoss; of Gen. Cass, the fund , for which be- jaz at Detroit, were to Inc. paid to Inv direetly, agrevahle lathe al iicles of the association. They were sci paid, and credited lw ine, and were charged to me upon, the 1.,u15 , of the Treasurer, and accounted for on the st-;(tIC••:• .' , Shall you be very latct to-nigl4l" 'amt. From time to time, as other funds were required 'vas asked • a soft . ~ •, , ~# 111 disk yi•re remitted to me by the Treasurer. It 1, riot very swi et you ng creature, as se tru;• that Gen. Cass had tine control of the whole' hipti.. , nes& lie had no tuerc to do with it than nay other] stock- hushatid in the street, hoillcr. 'The purchases were committed to in .hart e, '"I do not know that I shall," he refilled, some and I ree,isLd my iustructions 110111 1.% Alarkov, jr. fisq. w h a t c o ldly, u s replacing his cig r between his lips, the corre‘poipling secretary, and from - the Ilon.jlleirry h e turf ee-a,,,,ei,e 'fiery wni, e., ielesstiess rather Idalihard. die 'freasurer. (err. Cass left the fasted , t ,,, :.4tat••••. as minister to ds.rance, in Oct., 1F4:31i. and 'did not ; - " It ."" ki; " Ilie ' •••s i ' it his manner ' an d' she It ' nkenl 81- rouru cal . 1 ,; . . ;1 . 2, king a f ter the dl „,,, iii , ion of the ~,, s bocia_ ter him more in sorrow than repr ur ch. Taking the Pon, and lie rower directed tire in the, execution of in hand of her little boy she slokily bent 'her steps dines, either before or after his departure. ' , l homeward, With that dropping if the head which '1 ea. responsible to tine officers of the a sso c iati on an d.- bespak t sadness.of the Impart. ] It. was a Saturday upon int earliest retaimmendation, its affairs were closed nrithit she had been marketing, A - 11.her little per- W al Asbllluton,da Oct. 1x37, at which time I Was re- chases were contained in a bark t ei'llich hung upon, T ette: to appiaise the property, which I did, and it was f her arm. Din reaching hinne, tie very uppermost :HI into forty-two sham s ",,ilil, assigned in - i ? L ' i the lots floorlif a house to a Poor bur (11.1,cent . tie; Ohhorlitiod, 1.,1 , 1,./ . drat% 11 1/ ' ‘' the lion. It • it. Fulton, of ...triirnetris to be ech share-holder, arid I have the recoups in my posses- I. `lee it, him a seated l _•• , , , •,on, .sbowilla the delivery of thesth•cds to all thc parties 1. ' she reused the lire, seated Plillq, her little son. be :flee it, g a ve him a piece of Dream and hurter fur his supper, atid began to busy hers' if in putting away swept to thr lion. lloriel \ I'i:li-ter, whose conir..yance. t•ii, delivered t o W. It. Thomas, Esq., his attoYnev.— (ht' few necessaries she had be ight. By the lime 'l'lll, closed the business of th e tc•sociiitlan undetithe art- ,his was done, tire drooping head of little Phillip told ales of agietfliment. The property of each person, at I tier Inc was ready for his pillow. II 0W tenderly was, Is, p•iiiteid„,rentaiired in my hailds, for s.de, till August, in t a k e n to his lonely - muster's lep—his pretty face I-3s, when the whole was siirceirdert :I up, and niy re- Washed---his britele hair brustoel and he array eil iii It •pdedbility ceased. , his snowy bed-eown. P r e,set to her nos iiii, she Gen. (:a ''''' a '' I have stated, Was all this timi ' i n warmed this little feet, her band returnitio• to France, and he did not receive his proceeds of the pur- them . *:tin •- renal the lire. lit , ol jo , she every now e a ire, t rhetes till after his return , and then in mop( rtv. at a 10-s nod then held her (men palm. ili it pressing the soft of more than one hail of the amount paid. hesi his inte rest. That the whole operation cva, tinfortima e fo r all I' fool, she kissed it playfullyand Provoked tire laugh liiiieernetl, no One [egret, Inure than I. do ; hut it Ilall cx- ter so sweet to a mother's ear. I These were Philip's rue 110 surprise when the history of the Imre:me sof Lad first charming lesson-; thus c, ' ere gentleness and or the western tolltary in 18'36 and I"I:17 i, •rot olletqed, l ove aw a k ene d i n hi s i n ih n t, sp v it, •by jos c ap a bl e , lot:ether with the hitzh Prices eiveli and (Inc "inet' L 'e 1 but uninstructed, tins ssist ed mit her. How fell a fall in the value of property which ifilet ' sliate lY aft ' t i meaninct Watt his smile—bow lifull of annitnat ion! wa i l's took pl ice. At any rat.:, I alone mu re. 7 poniolifo t thi:i . is ! r ; tul ashen ' kne , dino , in her inp,6l.she joined hi.e_lift'e 104 the poi chases, arid l• Karr yt t to ly?iii thatj the first allegation I did not actin good faith. ? au . a ie t t r i ads, IlittLl/i1k....11411 ask 111,1 11 left vei l l y -rather to toe are “nuthoritred to make this :gatemen!. •hv a awns- • bless his earth!): ',areal, how i lss mind helically he her of dial Association, a gentleman who pai;l 5x10,000 1 eanadit the sweetly serious 10.11;Hhe calm tel holy into the hands of Gen. Cass co. Id, agent, and who has I tone ,if his instructress. When his little prayer I,..}er received any 111111 g 111 t'oll.ldef WWII Of he- wore , t. " ' sells , a id be thine his arms alpmt her neck aft] cheek; 1 -11,111 lint I,lop to tt. laee the d 41011e.d Of a 11iall Wile, tu'ev murmured toe-other the hilli lull song. which con in in thing such a ehar t ro to otter t a pol.tieal on;ret. qa . :, , :: cit,th.,d this lithe d rama: f or hi-4, e ye s sl ow ly closed, 11•• p.iid that aniunat to I .leti. t''ltS, or his .1 2 -eni. , rlivp iii• arid the smile s••ftly nas , ed fret 1 his l'ace, and then 1.,•1 : kniiw ',ent r y tly wt II that I pas the .I c p rit of the •he • . . _ , 1,. . ~• e I to fie. '. lt ies and '_trawl' bed. 1••••• nt.on. and not of :Inv ind:‘ Mu il composing o. " B„.' , ' 4ea ', pun ~• ' ' '"; , " ',' '„ 1)•••. he mean by the disjunction hero us, il, that he doer, So Gar till ens sweet • emilid t it 'mete he sail an lion I ,I I O W to WIWI) of thorn Inc paid that large -urn, or' was calm:hut the aching )aid up to-air's heart 'Sas h, lie no voucher either to show for its, If, carte mit e k e n- - nit calnines , , it was rather a craving fin that men I•••• ineinuiy, or does he use Gen., Cass' !lame when lie ' a l a n d social aliment• Which ta. necessary to (eery fet t esii - e - ines it falsely ' breast. and ea unot Inn', .1.0 healthily denied to any. I •1,, unit know w ho your informant i-, but who. ver he•l'lle more energetic spirits Bea u !: -nett' nss elation , nu n be, i ddloW the stateliteitt.lo be Misc. 1111t1 I Challenge rim , ... timid:let , it si. elm ~,,, , „ rese l l „ them; the! gentler !sun to the pee)l of it. - t o m e an d stlll;‘r_uften pet isli'—in silence. I hake alrcatl c3plain•t2 1 .61%* 111 e ri.iti. Et- y. ere niade, • _ •n'i the leed s arch. A.-ei-iiiiii,ii mid tin. ;ii, ',ant , ol the Susan pie n Hint fuel seelyeen the lire, trimmed , , , Tr. 1 ,111. .1 ill e mi tir m m y a c,..,. t : ae , if his m m was a Iler C candle, ll;ll s:11.1dtA111 :VII if 1,11 , 1.1 ioimiy I.VOIIIIIII 6 tinaishuldcr - ,aild p oil In, tatiney to theTreastir, lit could e „,, i pa 1 , 1 , el , her e O , It ha -lief, .11 A i dttep sigh elide net it ik it i t :el, use el- e. lit li id either sold out prevhnis Iron) her' bosom. Slid the l ea reless netefle was to the thaisi•ln. •r le received les shore at the time the I idle,!. No,. and t h ee s h e pa „ 1 .,.,1_ 11 wits to %% t ie , thio.lol 'I , lil,olt . a 1 ..6.1tV the trarri 1 1111 1 11.00(1 ga her oil her la-Imes. 1 Ielo•tt 10.. eliall •eze le him. Let Lim .110-. v I . ev. r ,„.„,, - ~ •, , ~ ~1 t• \ „101 an d had b eet , f ew . reeeit• .1 a dollar of ins mom. i and did not arrotiat for it ' "'' ii'L'r i l". t "ett•L' -,` -,.. - 1 , i n I i ol d'il.llllr all Id I.IIICII 11e, WWI Ike tad he shall he I. paid, ci iih in, •re•-t. :::: ‘OOll it , the r.- v''''.: t heni. ' ',. lm in n ,•,,,, h e emmi ,.,i ,i,,„ i ,... it will 1 ,,, iiiii i, m i t n _, un d o .- brief except itin . 2 1 a fop' xeekstprtik inn,- to their set try at In, ci lei kimes fit n. C ~., hyt ee t. thyou!you! Ili-tleilit'lit In town, she hid thus been lett. night alter I .• . .o.utt has had a just id ii, intl at ; tinst hen for wit or I n ight, in iiinc•itriess. l'itiltip ;11i l t,rris, her lio.,bancl, 12 "r'' fur the !•"!!! 0'.$ 11) : 1 "'• 0 0 “ 11- " it ev'''' "sl'imr l rO, an honest and industrimis! map, so it la a iiiindred sun to pay it. Ile has not. mile •d, ovineed iiiiieli tihrowd- ~,,,o l goal:tie:: sober, and soli" it ilous of securing to .••,•• in lii, story but lie is .••• rt.,inly sinew(' ceolieleto his id way all t h e c ,,„„f„ rts hit, „ wow , s te,,,,t e d t h e , l , e- tire sip it adi lit e. •xottli t ote ttelition; ste 11 ell bear- tir, , iitz ht. iii , „ceittly t „.„-ideer,,lWitli ii vely _small re -••f it-, If, a kaie re tit. ' , \N li iwtien, Cass' pre •i ition a, Secretary of VT7ir h•id to • , . .. , , servatitin for some Ir:tiller indulgences fur himself' et mita Its Interest l in shah a Companv I our ci itainlv at to Iris us If''. and "1 i i •st . trust ° i 1 her man e•itli tint ii in r l. 'llc , to conjeettlre. rortamis the hoitoral I. men iVith agement and econiony, left \vth'em to her dii.iimail.— l i' Meao he it. t resonated e. enld have spurned Ili; nil aof But SA 1111 C II Itl CIS trUstlng Mid nil, he seemed to estiez with him in a Comproie, in order to t :1::: adi.mi-I en t i,..ider that h e acquitted hiiikeir of all that Susan tap , . of In• oilleitil influenee and position, and your in night d eman d o f urn. 11%1;11'r ffe sought improve isna int lon reveals a trait of character th e more l 111 ../1.1- meta fur Ininsell, it tie% er occored to him. that It Was t. -lie; in m'_inchfate his partieiroin I '_inchmotives.l - '. - ' dice equal ri•• lit—would be her equal adv autage.— But he tired riot fear any riuno -se of conscience. Geit.• ( . 3,, as Serretnry of •VVar, had no man' to do with the 1, , , ,, h :le h esought, the iiitereh , i li ege of thelight wit h vie aid', piddled-olds than is ith the sale of land in tin other minds, he never rellecte, on the utter prik a r.0,,,0. 0"5 did his rifileidl situation give, him the least li o n o f such comimitiiiin he iad entailed On her.— . . rontrol ott r the ,ibis et. There is no law, no usage, 'no Ile had taken her from the I tioine . , pi her hither, a propnet!. which prohibit = any member of f, 'onores, in of- small lartnkr w here her inoth i tr, a pains-takieg wo firer of tOe (;ayerninent from purelnedno: public hunk, math had hi ought tip Susan atiCd several brothers a rid etetettia tr. those threctly controlling the sale, and from i sisters, for their aunt ion, reitarkably well. 11er the toe m ed,te m of the eVStelll thele has never !wen army l at h e r s heart ki, as mie eker tithving wall the milk of 1 tetettion epon the sideei t. The public la, is sold in hem . th e re`T'' (live districts where it i, situated, •alld he who. —....a1l .k111d!let:• • , , and . tints bided by the cheerful spirit; of their cherished children, a moral sunshine Pal , hi , money diet e hits the right any unsold tract. l'ltt - ' only itrobib.tioil as to porelia.,,, is in resrmet to the he ll had ever lighted tip that lowly home, and given to it grater, who keeps the books' and ['revives the entries and a thousand claims upon her 'hive and meirunty. At he can milt make ti nt ro "M• apple-di - on in writing to till , moments Susan would' look back on the brief lime :•z ureePtr General," and in t hat manner ke even can buy 1 that had been employed to e, atop bee from it as a till ille land Hi his Districts.' ` - dream; the worshipped words of love—the promise,s As to die Reeetver, tire other anker ilia'rged with the. 1 of devotion—of endeavors far her happiness—the ' , lc" he is Wider 110 prOblbltiOli, and these °Meer; have triorl - Tll city in which - she wa ll s to dwell (which now "leeks purchased as menet. as they please. I a maze of mud and stone, ill l eechanged ler the dai- I know nothing of nue such letter as von state Go •-. IliMaril wrote, nor de I believe he dint w;ite such aon . sled fields, With their sweet breath and - bright at - Ile can -peak for himself. AIL I know is, that a lett r nmsphere)—had all tended to an undefinable die.ap in those terms could not be truly written be any one. 1 pointnient; yet, in the ignorance of her heart, she Very re , pectfolly, Your obedient servant. '-- ' could scarcely have stated of what she had to coin le B. IeEII.CIIEVAL. i plain. She loved her husband; she was proud of his superior abilities: and made no mean estimate of his high moral character. midel( l ased, in the slightest degree, by the gru-;e vices; which, secluded Jts -was her life, she could not but 11 , receive, marked many 'around her, subjecting their w i ves to brutality and Privation. Compared with ;! stich offence, she per= seeded herself that Philip's, neglect was a very light and venial fault, and blaming herself for reeling it so much. Btu Susan was I ,i.une of those flowers of humanity that would have 011ie) , repaid cultivation, and that needed the stinshilie of eynipathetic 'kind nese, the art of the social at i pitisphere, to keep them in health and life., Daily It lids was scarcely more necessary tor. her physical t nature than the inter change of thought and fiintßin i ees was to her spirit ual nature: all this her hush ad's Iturntedaud the un sociable plans of life in L'lgtand, and eepecielly'm London, denied her. It is rue, except morally, sh e was uneulti k uted, bet had mere and temperument that world soon have repaid a little kindly care.-e- Too timid, too ignorant to repaid her own cause, or urge her chums to him who? had precluded appeal to t • ethers, she uneurnpluiningly lived on without change, without stimulus or excite!tent; shut up within the i four wells of her humble he tae, walking unrelieved the dull unvaryi g round ,of her domestic duties, with her spirit full of capabilties unexplored and un expanded. She grew nervous and hectic, her appe lite atid spirits failed, her fr i ame wasted, while, quilt CATIOL!N t.-TllO Telegraph announced r S'alinday afternoon - that this State had grille for the whit.V4-. a reduced majority. We think the announcemeht IN premature, as the election onlY took place on Thuri and notwitheanding the facilities furnished he li g i t hing. it was impossible to have received returns enough to announce the fact po4itivelv. AVe may hear something tArther by this afternoon' h repot4, in which case it will it tumid tinder the proper head. OJ - The New York and Lake Erie road is going on completion as fast as the magnitude of the work will potion. There are over -7000 men emple)ed on the w , tk. Half a million-dollars of their bonds have re ,enth twi n taken on English account, and half a million the Savings hanks and capitalists of Connecticin. "I ' I ' ll! XN NiL . Y.,01Z, —At a recent town meet ing, held by the "Whigs" o f Ileasant Valley township, influtchesq county, which wax numerously attended, fullol‘in g resolution was unanimously adopted /4 , 0/re/. That we have no confidence in Zachary l',o o r, and cann, as northern whigs, conscientiously , appurt hint for the Presidency. And in a company of thirty-one, assembled in the town a,a- Pow in that county, upon taking a vote, it wab WI, 11 111 tt tifq r. Wet, Im L I Are, • riyinr rnen present. . .) ---,'. , .... , ' , :i , . ' - i. .:, :, , . :=.',. - ..i.; t ., ' - v :. - - .0 AA liii la Poettp, 111isccliann, Potiti M4:•4:i+,`[4:l.},ir4 From the Dublin iOlllll Black sla may nc.tic below a rreq, And crime below a crown; As grad 'neath a fostiOn Aq under a silken gown; Shall I ale,. he ford of the ehietii'whosnld ' Their tquens 1J ertedi and hill, And never a nor,' be 'Fong of heard Of the [llea who reap and till I I bow and in thatlks to the sturdy thr ug Who greet the young morn n, ith tol; And the burden I give nit, earite.d. sods thall be this—THE KlNnS'Till, 11.1. sing -lir n haVell( crown— Ifut the bile •tky Own" heel— Ow heel— 1. Never Sultan Or 1k y powe To a ;who'd or to offer bread. Proud ships may hold both silt er an rld, The n ealth of a distant stra t td; But ships n‘ruld rot and be valued n t, Were there none to till the land. The wittle,t heath, and the wildest b ake, Are us rich as the riche• t fleet, • For they gladden the wild birds whin'they wake, And give them food to eat. - And n ith it Ming kind, and spade +I plow, The gladdening hour shall come, 1 When that which is called the ”wastrland" now, Shell ring n ith the "{littlest Iloilo:" Then sing for the kings who have ti crown But the blue sky o'er their head— Net er Sultan or De} . had such powy i ii as they, To withhold or to offer bread. TIE NEGLECTE M I Ry catur and' unrepining, utmost unconscious of malady, or its cause, consumption was.rapidly developed.— She was deemed delicate; medical advice wits sought, and medicine and cure essayed, while none guessed the_ quick feeling that flowed beneath the ttwel• hearing of that Subdued, decaying woman: it Wore the channel through which it made its seeralway, but - seemed to brighten the spirit it to ex linguist). t Susan, after a time,' felt that she was passing through thelralley of the ShadOw of Death. This conviction (Ed not depress her energies—it awaken ed them. She had communed with her own meek heart, lifted /to her Maker, and remembered with consolation that it said "those also serve e, Ito only stand and waif." She struggled on from day to day in the performance of her duties amid many priva tion, the worst of all privation, that of Inelltil i j „de velapement and social cheer, yet had she a consulous account 111 her own heart, and Her sjacere and unas sisted endeavor had do doubt k register amid the higher achievements of inure favonihle minds-- Milt the certainty that she as not long 'fur this scene, she redoubled her exertions tit put her little huu-ehold in order. She repaired and made clothes for her child, and she tail Omni, away, embalmed with tears. lii the stone manUer the needle toiled fur her 'husband, and the savings which her frugal ity e ff ected were employed to purchase him sun dry' iittle comforts. " "These will keep him warm when I am mild," she thought; he will little think tlikt while lie will for get me, for_better chnipany, 't is true my only hap piness was to remember bin, and that I shall scarce ly be more solitary in' the grave to which 1 ant go ing than 1 have been in the home to which lie bro't me." and Nowt. £1011:: as they, Sometimes a little ink tenths was taken from the mantel shelf, and a sheet of pa er from her little ta ble drawer, and then, waft ell'Ort, a tew lines were traced, and the paper hidden (Ai - frilly away, as if she had conimitted a criine. One night she made more endeavors of this kind than n-ual,, and the strug 7 . gling, unassisted spirit of inteiligence was burning in her bright hazel eye and glue, ing on her beauti ful cheek, when she was startled by an unusual anise. The paper was hurried into the drawer, the ink bottle restored to the shelf, and taking the can dle site wont-out to the landing-place, She beheld her husband, aufsisied by two IMsn,sloWly ascending the stairs. Ile had met with ton accident: had bro ken,hisarm; it had been set—he had fainted during the operinion—and with the gastly aspect incident to•such circumstances, appeared betore het This event . prostrated Philip Morris for some time, during which Susan our-ed him with unre mitting care. It was long before he was' able to return to work, but his eappleyo,s were liberal and considerate, and did nut target in his weakness the man who had toiled for their athantage in his days of health and-strength. But although unable to pursue his manual labors, Philip Morris soon made an effort to get-abroad in seurCh of mental occupa tion and social employment. le went to his club, to the Mechanics' Institute, to the coffee-shops where he could find the best se poled books and the newspapers. All this was we I doini; he nobly de termined to rescue himself inn t becominir the there machine of toil and drudgery 'fi ur so much" trash as can be grasped thus." Alas! tad he thought of her I whom lie promised to love and cherish till death should part them; had he' conlsidered whether she '-had not a soul or (von tante-lath hi., 0..r0 p v,l,-..,,,, I an intellect - as capable of repaving culture; and then -1 [ he %%as tit icelblessed, in the act and in its reaction. But 'selfishly devoted to his unlit objects of purl•atit. I hairnet:ll6d to tit.. tan looks of his quiet wife, ,he failed to perceire that het cheek' grew paler and her Il %oice weaker; not that he had seen insensibleu ' differi:tit to her care and anxie_y during his illitess; ' but with rento.ated health, lie •tetillated to his old habits, and seen-tome(' to receive sacrifices witiosin making tiny, lie sinned against grit au Lu and good 1 feeling :wiped litieot-Ciously. Gradually; tiiiii4iii f mod livr,ell unequal to et en the daily utilk with little Philip, tlr the effort of going no and (limn [ stairs: and then there ass simi l e talk of her ietur- sv , . nog home for a Woe, and trying the efrects of her 1 native tor. She smiled feebly us tli.a was :Token of, yet kit It ittentempted; she knew that she %ids going to a farther and a belle- home, and often did she wish to say a- much; but she was 'not Chuqueta _of words, nor sufficiently strmlg in spirits, and alter two or three fruitless attempts she desisted, awl pursue I, as far shi was apie, the evens tenor of ip 1 uay.. Philip Morris recovered hi health, and was, re stored to work nail till ange l ; again be talitd.l of I the country lon Susan, and tint-red on her trying a I new doctor; he sought to te l mpt her appetite by such rarities as he could all4l, butt still he could tutu re-tiurn his own peculiar I lions inel enjoymoniQ, and inn ung the evils these etuailed were lute hours. One night he returned home a, usual about midnight. j When, on opening the room I door, instea.l of the small bright the, the trimmed, candle, and t lie pale, patient worker he um, acculowned to behold, all %vas larkotvis and silence. Ile tiattAtd a [ll"lnent— an indescrioah e sensation o cold crept over has frame; and leer, like a paraly as, iinudel his ,wait; at ['outwit he exclatnied:—"S snit: Susan, nay' dein.; There was no reply; lie stOpj.cd farther into the room—he repeated her memo yet louder—all was still. lie groped his way to the' &enlace—fin the mental shell lit lotind a butt t f Lucifer matches—ob tained a light, and lighted a candle. Ile now ne held Susan, With her halal resting on tho table, seat ed in her tisnal place. Ile approached • and tot k her hand-0 Heat:ell' its icy col Iness! flu flung i himself on his knees on the ,floor„ and looked up [ into her face; there was a sWeef Placid Sniile upon her lips—for ii forgiving, geinle spilt , hail passed from them—but the eyes ‘ l [ere fixed, 'and—Susan was dead—had been-dead Dine hours. The dis tractedi man rushed (limit s airs, altrming all the inmates of the house art lie passed. A mellicai man was soon present, and the chamber in which that young creature had almost iced and died ple, was thronged by a crowd, any one of whom, inspired by a better social system, would willingly retro sus tained her to a longer life, or cheered the brief time that had been allotted her. All were horror-struck, and one heart-struck; parti:iularly when the child, awakened by the tumult, scrambled out of his little bed, and rushed for;prutect on to his lifeless mother. 'Not even that voice, elocution as it had ever been to her, could awaken her again! The surgeon de clared that her death had been sudden, and frump natural causes, but that it uas a case which de manded an inquest. An inquest was held. Aiming the evidence was a singularly affecting ineir l ortal; it wm the littlet journal which Susan had for some time kept, like: the poor dungeon prisoner, who' daily notches a stick that he may be able to number the amnia°• nous days of his caPtivity l The angel of deitth had arrested her hand just as it had feebly traced the (following words:—' .. "It'will not belong now—my child-,--my pour little Philip. lie who calls away your 'nether will care for you. Philip Morfs, my husband, my dear husband, lis ish you wentbe-ide me now. You have been good and kind, and genisrous, and I was not the wife you should have had. Be & kiwi father to our child when I net gOne. You wulf—yes, sure ly you will one day take another wife. Philip! that which,you never gave to me give to her—your society, your counsel. If she has been leintaught, teach her—at least do not leave her to continual ,oneliness. Your never knew it, and therefore w rit tell low sad the long boors.—..” ' 'As the reading of this little paper proceeded, Philip Morris struck his heart, us if he sought to crush it within , his breast. That heart, had not been fashioned for sever i rary, mach that was mild and generous mingled y or, unkindness; on the i cciev in its formation ; but the second, nature induced by habit ,had encrusted his:mrigtnal feeling and- facul ties—he bad grown up to regard women as the mere machines of domestic life, with neither necessity nor capability for h:gber things, and which to "spit- D WIFE. This yiest ion a very pit but ee parted from her SATURDAY MORNiNG, AUGUST N NWAR D , lis 1113 :elliine" be tJETIneI/ LID e5.14111i1l mach sacrifice to secure cultivation Too Law conviction dawned upm came accompanied byla contrition (hal through the remaindtt of his life; t moment he felt the prpmptiugs of eel saiiefaction which the self-taught an (tunable to compare himself with the, and nacre endowed) id apt to do, he th and felt- humbled; he thought of h around hitn_wfth_a_desire to participa priate, the feast that has been funds London People's jouijnal. - - Ott Thursday last, there arrived at a piOsenger from Ilatiana, in the bark ed man nattied John livtle, a nail% e ul who returns to his cdtintiv after an or 14 }ear:, witlun hich period Id been a singular and i iterestibg one. I.ifioviing accuunt'of the ease Imni Tribune: Some Aim time ako a gentleman while unveiling in the island of Cul the ingenio, a sugar l estate of a wel l mimed Don Gaspar Hernandez, about ) Matanzas. ‘Vhile examining the no' sugar works, he was addressed in E . , of the apparent staves employed aln the result of a guarded conversation t to inform him that the slave was it American citizen, wrongfully held in story was this: Ile I had been ship years before on the coast of Africa, ter, employed in thti service of thi Society; With - the iest of the crew his way along the coast for about 13C slave station at Galimas, where IM ceiveil by the propri tor, Don Panchi (~ proiniseg him a puss gt. in the lirst J 1 -front Which ,Island aNvould be eds United States. Tit eddy e cargo - accompanied being dolyi landed iii thi of Muntanzus, Lytleltvp cooped wii his color in the "ba , raconos." and si sell at worlt..as a slae ou the estate" thus found by a stra wayfarer Bum try. ' Ile had made enure than OfIC th tempt for his freedot ~ and had at thi the thought of it in despair. Con ! cv was the first con ition of succes to procure his hbera hip in that cm soon would have disippeared irree.♦ out trace, the genillman thus prow acquainted with his -dilation, abstai burn any other hope hat a general would' nut forget /1111„ The result was, that, after farther inqinties li the case was laid lie_me the Secreiai tullyeniered int,arid readily r mode ude upon It Ito demand the t i i i l man—and to urg - =_t, if necessary, vv gy of the gover 11l t i l eta and natior trounds as though its subje, t had In in the land, instead of a poi') and 4 Our popular and excellent otisnl al R. B. Gimbel', of 11.1uuth Cu ohne, a (.? the spirit of the, imtructinns whi frOm the Sfate DePait mem, with lil zeal and ability. , Gr_at cannon anii mired, the danger hio_ligthatho 0 tonna on inquiry; It :I. mig7 - Acti - m it 'Laid hove preed the 04 1 , 9.laill.iielir"Yla6 to be sect "hole I as been the arrit in, at thi port, as above sum ,if money of 14..,,t111 33, as his the eLeceti=years.oli bra servitude, Wi side his expenses Ii nue. ' . re( tie u. t. 11 fl An; INutixiom; C i f.r.a.k.—We - ha% an ilk! ,Noi iil Cll,llllrliall, 1%110 . I.'k 11$ 1 , trate, shelitr and '‘vreckinaster, I'M' country stare. Like all such sti ren i1'7.% 011 S 01 all the loafers in the tellows used to be here every nigh night, , laying po,cr. generally ch i I:, and hm,ides drinking the 01 spend his- money, I irnished ti) the t (Ihl Billy suspecte: %%hat it as goin them suddenly imentirlit, and hehn 1 1,,, m . e lveq, got Into the room. je.Nse, hue Wll6 forgmeji, proinisini , • ; "Nehemiah?' ' ' salid Btily. .:ne% again after eight /'cloak." Nehemiah promised obedience : the crcmil %%ere at f wnrk as' usual, he would go and s e how matter, matter.; . din' v he went do , %n, and knocke , "W 110 . a I hPro r cried Nehentia l "It's site, Mr, r . , ; open the d . ''No, dare }our head, (a Mr I Vild me Timer tit l i Ft run °nein lir and I 11111 . 1 tigoing, to do it." "nut Nehemiah, ' scot." ".No, dn., l 1111,11•••-• Vial round down, ro travel, you a sh.o. With tl I illy Waited to' the %%ind, conlidel wan, and next da. Diseu - ran Italy pnh o'ttes the. toll of n 1 al<r or itu "For some we I exist itig in Heave: tempts of a wan 11 county, to past fo Prllichelt, florae.] Commis-1011] , r, tv and died in the II hurled. Old 1. ceived by a slielti ceive hint into h . ti easily imposed up in consequence. divided as to the "he woe; Mitchell, but now it strt othersdenouce It father still hugs honors be d i t ri o ,T he 't a, el C p i t c l i , r t s t e n d i g , as he 4;1 Nparagraph that Mitchell. at Beaver jail for hi caie will be trier OUR 6)U.VIY. to our fliends ate ty is alljight fig will ae, an inc. mny ( 61111 our Dee they please; the that our school rebuilt; they ma! from Pittsburgh to rote, and Intim cracv from thelt this is done, we with our full roll predict ion .—C/ ITARO CASE. returned vultint • w hot f-f -enlist it-t-tonsht the f-f-f-f»et p 1 e-e-city, 1:d lib! wrhu, Jo the the Recorder. "That's j-j-j; about. In th: c-c-cnm friun, c l w-w-wontet f , I've been b-b-b' old d-if-d-droo, 1%1848. AN INTERESIING CA , we: open n your trend, nr niglolly like hu r dr.(' rol )otir otri birinderb. bear no mqre, b t !,11rri. Nr•ltt‘iniu 'doql,lo4 hi rxt .—Th C state meu )(witU 11 Its past Much r lid armmd it, mined-1)v:1u, or Dzohl fly of Centre ho was one oft I Iu mull att!Pueb Mitchell W'as re.emblanc ton, is raid to I For a time, identity of Day c hers as %Alf ngly against ti an infar he delusion, an jof 'this claim Ky essentially nuw that he I, another part as Davit?, has s fraudulent i a, the next lel •—• e take plea 'home and abrou r the Democrat freaQe.l majuri .niocracy by w_ tmay publi,b, ilitses . wqre Int V send dieir et land Erie, to te r to turn the o republican pri Iwill meet Berl iio—sny 1300 t fir ion. Democrq , 41-h-here i•er ye.terday, or? Isn't th ns in thia'ere Ind pleq j-j to know'!" third time you w•w-what S•s•etate they never Ir the s-s-samel ought up 444 Levi' that l i he made r hinkelf. hitn but it attended him nd if ut itoy '-eoncentratol kolated Dolt, We publish, witii some rt it l a picture of human nature—Ll in It to be despised, we give 1 exposed to temptation. We high—lle give it, however, ai mere gifted I mg4 of Sit•till 'r nut appro• ,ted fur -all.— "Oh mother! are the Gtith Gray, as silt their flushing light anti er rarely did mirror rei tth or without adornr i apt:'' Soddenly lahe linter over her cheek 4ilter and said, INB New York, as ,Rapid, a color- Philadelphia, b,ence of 12 is history ha, \Vc copy the he New York ! "Shan I interpret tI are thinking of Fitz!) %Ndl attract his notice The color deepeoe beautiful eyes %%era v, i 7 he replied, "You are right, ma me; what a - noble air and—" of this city, stopped at ; mithy planter, :10 miles from cliinery of the iglish by one on them; and ,cat ensued was "Stop, Emma! ,I thi love already, v, ith.yo i "Surely, mother, to—" "Find out «•teethe ingly replied her mo her forehead, File Fait] of your heart, till you of it." troth a free slavery. JJie vreeked many tie ship Colonization he had made 0 miles to the was well re ,lo Jta mon, who !esz , el to Cuba "Never fear, dear light step 'she hounde no guile there!" Take a peep with t c into the ball-room, fair rend er. Thmair is laden•with the perfume of countless flo..vers; "soft eyes look love to eyes that speak again," fairy forms and gliding feet keep time with the - "voluptuotts swel l f" of music,, while nod a blaze of light, the attraction of all eyes and hearts, stands our lovely Edith. Her eves need not the aid of dia !minds to-night, while her raven locks fall over a neck that mocks her snowy robe. Fitzhugh is by her side. '‘Vith a per wt of matchless beauty, a tall, commanding figure, faultless features and a manner perfected by intercou se with the best society in his and foreign - countrie , added to a voice of singular sweetness and power was not hen dangerous ae quaintance fur , our b vely, warm-hearted friend?— ".Vo wile there!" 'God" help thy trusting heart, Edith! And now he delicate waist is entircleitby to reach the Which he dins • ie neighborhood Mt _the rest of :on found him ' where he was his o« n coon msuccessful at tittle given up twos that secre • in any attempt tdry, where he !rattly and wit It denttally made ted from giving •ema tit that he of the matter ad been made, try of titate, who 'sponded to 'the iberation of the with all the (trier +, on the same teen the highest tliprest.ted itegro. it Ilattana, Gen. 4ltio entered into ich he receit ed !.; characteristic it prudence were Mcli Slave would tt the - - object: is Lair() Action by tired. The op -al of the man, his arm, in the gidd flushed cheek, whi heard on all sides of Fair reader do yo' nlmoei concealed by nre,l with climbing, may well look op at and turn away but 1. 1 Lure. is there not h' at the rich, black 11 1 forehead, the lips of trims eves: but see! how it lies like a ge l t hat fair boy whose ; Mot her, itl child who nestles in u u ire I God help lie "Look again! she er and thicker—the wipe them away, pouting AiLIA to kiss through her tears, p head, and murmurs, agony of tears elas • he has no more. young, so beautiful, toed! stated, with a 'wage , ., &ring th ulterest, • storyTßg of I I proprietor a a 10s, it tva; the The-c and often all ohl .8111 y ., Id coatis ottlidential ( let k. on, and cattle on e they could Ilije But look again! stars are keeping w —the merry birds nothing heard but will, as he sings hi. God fur sleep, the now at those fair , thrown about m he feared to be part Hushed and gfowir she, wirh a tear-slit lashes, her lips 1 shg like a veil ult, i mt side. But look agt i restlessly about, an holy dame of IMot longer a mother, sorrow to the gray is at) inlioeent ctrl laid, ‘i•ith u blestdo Sh•ters and brother air air uAeal with t' and will not Fin.? \eiu•miah got 19 tcm uo more. r u soul iu The next night and Bitty thought went , ou r aceor- I at the door. !ME .rile onili,) Billy cr 'eight o'clock, the' doer a rno , ne of your gain n, o : it wasn't ad if I don't gi e you liumbog!" ut Armed off hkk I: %%a.= a. reft.rwed !ary. She rives n ihtly holy stets whose q mhzery, shrottdi he fulling on he! knee ' , God pity me! I, The eye that "n down upon - th e e. F the cry of a hrealtit that is always out. extended to p thee. thee: Gdand sin shu rgh Dispatch: 1;1"a s;ngulue , ca -P itemrnt relative to the at- - o - merly of Fayette !MI, son of (jet). couniy,) ex-Canal c Duquesne Gr.vs. a. where lie fiat; so completely iile 7 hiv son, ac to re damfhter not, so ,at e left the house With n prayer f babe Itliith lay e,a an Eye above that A yenr passed dents, were saon streets. "By the way," I ject for di.seetiOn has-been betrayed Site died at the ht friend to claim come"in and see It Edith's face wt of agony Fitzhng "Vengence is a, \Vin Tits i Cit says: "Captain ed us yostrday," giment ha ye repo Cass and Butler; only one was for Ile went to Alexi repudiated the pa. of the Mexican a war and in favor were scattered p i co, to prevent a ri bile opinion ',was lit, some, in•is:ling Imently den) it `m; Col. Back nod ous impoMer, the d should not be lot of dead mews ly imbed—keen and us been so fully ex- if the Disputelrsays been imprisoned itt tnposition. and the m of the Court. sure in announcing that Clarion min n. c candidates. She y. • Ihe federalists mtever hard names as they have done, a in '9B and neVer I • ussaries, as in %Id, ch the people how d and young Demo nciples, and Aen all s and Westmoreland Injority. Note this Ansv.Ncy. oY M dow n easi,who fin ing ono of ihe h in its place, he up. Atter coni faction, he was caske, and with cept through th m a g-g gin," said n o the liecorder, "nnd ba n-a-n.nohnvs'or cp:Place? Isn't there ITJustice _in this' ere A IlnAtrristlr.frienotNT.—As the volunteers were passing up the B)werv, on Thursday, says the N. V. Suer, a little blue eyed, rosy-cheeked. golden-haired girl, ran from ore of the houses, and singling out one of the brave spirits of the gallant Ist, handed him a Levin of flowers with "that's for you, God bless you all." The tear started in the eyesof the youne hero, but he caught her with one arm before she could get away, end expressed .his gratitude with a hearth.' Of thanks and a kiss. Those sweet flowers will wither and decay, but the recollection of the gift of Ott, girl will foreverlive on the bright est .page of the Olunteer . mernoty. have been here," said I was a t-t-t-talking w-w-where I t-t-t-try a man but ufrence; but h-h•here •hee times:for tho same Reveille, Is CITLAY: EIDIT etance, the following, it gives so had t as the picture has too tuttelt of truth 04 a caution to ail who may he altke siAt the coloring sari not quite so . it is. • "She NI as II!. ;ctry, tlitit nmv nr,t A dream of exceedingly teautiful." Written or tol se diamonds reatly for meE' eflew to the ‘nirror to adniire her-dark ringlets, (end Her !ilea a lovelier fuce and figure ent. How kind this was of stopped, while tv bright blush T her mother looked atuiliugly at blush for you, Edith? You grill and wondering if you t the ball to-night." I on Edith's cheek and her I lied by their king lashes, as confess he fascinate to has; what speaking eyes tk you are more than half in r acquaintance Of a week." i t needs nut months or years a man / is handsome," laugh her, Then rising, and kissing "beware, Edith: have a care know whether he is worthy other," said-Elith, as with a from the room, "there can be valiz, his breath is upon her murmurs of admiration. , ww lot'ely! how surpassingly! bat low-ioofed collage scu uxurio us elms—its sides cov ed honeysuckles? You II window, as you pees, gain ut that lovely pic thut female head? look obes a hat sin ) look a auto air, waving over the polished and the- large lus a tear Is sparkling there! and in ainhi l .rins en nu mu her bog the elth,tcring_euris of IWe her neck: Yet— e traces nt age than the in.' A mother, but nt,t Inot=har tears fall fast % his tiny hand tries to and then puts up his he mother gazes at him tai r front his broad fore his father!" then in any her breast, and weeps sited. Poor Edith! so ing, so wretched, so ru- lices us boy nd now, her. 1, trts the ' 1"so s hint( tears tt so trust night has come on. The holy •ateh alike over saint and sinner have hushed their songs, and the cry of the ‘vhippoor ` melancholy song . . Blessed be friend of toe wretched! Look dreamers! The boy's arm is n.het's neck, ns if, even in sleep, from her; his little cheek is as it rests upon her breast; glittering on those long, dark lily parted, her rich bairtloating ier face 'and figure, lies by his tit! she throws those white arms thoe parted lips murmur the ter"' Alas, Edith thou halt nu ter "trey hairs have gone with litit still in her dream, Edith . A father's caressing hand is kg, oh those clustering throug about her,-and make itie merry.shouts. Poor-Edith, ein tot the? iron) her pillory, gaOCA at those det beanty seem but to mock her • face from their pure light, and by her child, subs •convnlsive:y, 'oil lie mercil•ul to me a sinner!" ver slumbers nor sleeps" IrMlts •Ifc that is never deaf to g heart. heareth thee. The hand tretched, to save the penitent, is '.Dingliter, thy sin is forgiven no more." • i T 4 41 hr her betrayer and a I;i4s for, her 'llly down to deep but there_ giro. sittnthere I not. - Two young men, mmlical,stn ering along one of our pincipal aid one, "we hare a s plendid sub- - ,to-day—a beautiful creature who and deserted by sonic scoundrel. E pita' of a broken heart, and not her. By Jose! she is beautiful, Cr." s uncovered, and, with one groan t fell lifeless to the earth. ' !inc.. I wilt repay saith the Lord," rasp,—The Louisville Democrat IcDougal, of Indianapolis, inform hat nine Whig captains of his re diated whiggery, and are going for and out ot-tii.eikty•six lieutenants, 'Taylor, at4,he Was wavering.— ico hiinself; a - whlg, and has utterly ty: says he has found, on the slain tiny, documents against,' the the Mexican cause; that they ofusely through the city or Mexi itification'of the treaty of peace." tin.—My friend tells of of a cooper consideroAe difficulty in keep ads .of a casket he was finishing, Ina his soh inside to hold the head Ileting the work much to his satis rstenished to find his hoy inside the art a possibility of getting out ex hung-hole. il NEW AND IMPOIITADiT DISCOVERY IN TIMCOP rnit Recoort—AmsnicAN A:STU/VIM—We were yesterday shown some curiosities teken from the Minestota Mines un Lake'Superier,. better knowtt as locution No. 98 oti the Ontonagon. Last winter while the snow was on the ground, Mr. Knapp, the • agent of the company, travelled the sinking of the giontid for a great many miles. After the snow had cisappeared, by digg itg into these sinks, they found them to have been made by the hand of man, It appears that the ancient mintes went on a dit ferent principle from what they do at the present time. The greatest dee h yet found in these holes is thirty feet—after gets ng down to dcertain depth, they drilled along the rein, making an open cut.— These cuts have beets filed nearly to a level by the actute lila tion of soil, and trees of Pei largest growth standing in this gutter; l and also tkeef a very large growth have grown up and died, and decayed many years since; in the same places there are now - standing trees of uter fuer hundred years growth. In diggitig down on tips river, they have lately discovered a mass of pure copper estimated at seven l tons weight, milled out a nd laying in the vein some 18 leet - below the eurlace, resting on skids six feet Item the lowest depth of the original excavation.— In the bottom of this ex ettation ;there Was several cart loads of ashes aid charcoal, showing that whoever worked it befor , bad attempted to eeperate the mass of copper by M i sting and probably dealing on cold water._ There h ere a large number of ham mers found made of rstot le," weighing from one to twenty pounds with a roove encircling them to secure a withe to use th mi with greater advantage, mid also copper chisels winch -had probably been used, in detaching the reek from the native copper. 1 ' This piece of copper ik as pure and as clean as I new cent, the upper surface has been pounded clear and smbuth. It appears that this mass -of copper was taken from the bottom of a shaft, at the depth of abbot thirty feet. In sinking this' shaft from whefo the mass now lies they followd the course of the vein, Which pitches 'oneiderably; this enabled them to raise it as fur a the-hole tame up with a slant. The excavation are on an era of some three Square Miles and widen I the modern improvements - at the.present day fur 1 ining could not be made for ili c srvcnty jive thosand doll f tra. .The old Indians say that the work was neter i done by their race. To eunitemplate the great ength of time that must lnecesearily elapse ham . vegetation could start in these excavations, and t ees of hundreds of years grottill come up, blow down' and decay is a theme full of interest, land leads the immagination thousands of years,back• without a response to show what race of beings were the miners or when the mines were worked. The hammers l and tools found are of the stele workmanehip of those found in the mounds t iroughout the western J country, and it requires no great stretch of the tmagi.nation to suppose that the same race that left' pose monuments to com memorate their existeiice,_ worked the Noes on Lake Superior. Mr. Knapp has shown us some rich spe imens of copper and silver taken from the vien and also the tools, wedges, and pieces of the skids usediby these ancient miners. This Is but-the commeitternent of 1 discoveries that may lead to matters of great inter est and importance.—Detroit Free Press. LIFE IN N The New Orleans corr spondent of the Concordia Intelligencer thus sketc tea - mutters and things in • the Crescent City: k happy liberality of sentiment in all things, has long characterized this;eoihmtinity. Conscience is essentially more free here than elsewhere in the United States.' People! worship as they please, or , omit all external forms if they prefer it, without comment. Men live poorly or luxuriously;-• in a three-story house, or in a hired room, without being subjected, at every turn, to an inquisitorial eye, and ill-natured tongso. In New Fe gland, in the true spirit of the blue-laws, th6y fine a man for driving his own wagon through the streets on sunday. lu BaltiMore I have knowti a Jew fined twenty defiers fur venturing to patch a traveller's unmentionables on the Sabbath. - In ih'e city of Brooklyn, and only the other day, three thousand persons spontaneously assembled to sympathize with unhappy Ireland, and were dispersed by the Mayor, because it happened Ito be, by n conventiourd chronology, the seventh Iday If the week. Heiv, things are quite the re terse. Devout people have churches, and minis ters are paid to preach to them to the tune of 810,- 000 a year. Gay people have their amusements lalso. The theatres and bail-room are open. The rich drive id stately erPiipages oh the shell road, to breathe the breezes of the lake. The poor with j hearts full of gratitude for health'end abundance, go to the numerous gaelens to drink their beer, smoke their pipes, and romp With their children, or waltz with their sweethearts; Our militany -eontetiMes turn out on the Sabbath, and if a brace soldier Who has fought and suffered for his country chat - ices to arrive, it is considered no offence to burn a little gunpowder, or to •sound hie welcome on the spirit-stirring drum. People at , n distnece. will, doubtless, turn no the whites of their eyes at all this. and_perhaps be kind enough to, pray that the fate of Gemorrelemay not be ours. I ;;ice them thanks. !mt, if it will afibrd Jcomfort, I venture to say. that there ,ist as- much of genuine piety here, ofbhnrity rind good will, the very essence of religion, IA there in any other city, and in no part of ottKUtintry. so large n community, is there so little crime. It is rare, indeed, that the infractions of the criminal law are charged Open our permanent citizens, and scarcely an instance where capital offences have beers-brought to their doors.' -Ninety-nine init of every hundred misde meanors, are committed -by strangers, and even am mg them, such islthe conservative atmosphere that seems to float around us,' crimes 'of the first magnitude occur onl l nt long intervals. We have a fixed population of at least a hundred thousand, troops and upwards, have been, at different periods, quartered among us, ;with more or lees licenser yet we have not, for twelve mouths, heard Of a Ma der. Assassination Is unknown, duels are becom ing rare. Offences against chastity and public de corum seldom occur. The seductions, violations, crint. cons,, Onderdonk-ings, and other domestic crimes that disgrace the Eastern cities, and exclude many of their priests and bishops froM every place but the pulpit, are nevdr heard of in New Orleans. Here it is not considered an unpardonable sin to kiss a pretty woman, ifsshe be willing. In Boston and Philadelphia they will fine you five dollars every smack! Here, where people dance on Sunday, that inestimable jewel, female virtue, Is safe and unsus pected. There, to protect it, men bar theiedoors' at night, against the very minister that' has preach ed to them in the morning. go ninth for the social restraints and savage sectarianism that prevade cer tain portions of our country. We derive the eleva ted and liberal tone and the pure morality that exist: Isere, chiefly from - the mixed and peculiar charter of the ancient, indigenous population of New Orleans. They have long understood the nature of social and political freedom. ' i Mr. Gayarre's very interesting notes on the history of Louisiana, will show you, ,-that they were the first people on thil continent to ' draw the sword for a free and repub'ican form of government, and the blood they poured out on that early altar of liberty still cries from our streets, and will sways nerve the arms of Louisanians in the bat tles of freedom. The New-York Globe thinks that the great tidy of the, Northern whigs will support Mr. Van Boren. Very likely. The enemy of the regular candidate of tho tienwerattp party ought to look 'to whigs for s upport—%t here r eke should he look? No true dem ocrat 'could oast his vote for a branded traitor, [l3oslon rIXThe Boston Post says the only authentic information wo have copeernin! "Old liihitey, is, that when asked if he would consent to run for Vice President if selected by the Philadelphia Oonvention,his answer was "Neigh," A sensible old bore that. • !" +~ { NUMBER 13. W ORLEANS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers