1:M1=1211= VOLUME 22. brie tlitritiq 011,5trutt A: P. DCRLIN & CO. PROPRIETORS' B. r. SLOAN. E d it or. OFFICE, FORNER STATE ST. AND PUBLIC • SQUARE,' ERIE. TERMS of THE PAPER - - . C,ic snbrir riber. h? the e a rrier. a t it" N. mad, or at IIePOITIrp, in advanre, , 1.611 I, f I f not paid in advanee.or within three months from the t itue ors,ibscribine. two dollars - % ill be eharge.l. ? :_r All common ltaliOlie mast be post paid. • RATES OF ADVERTISING. rirdst cit exceeding I inc.ls one year. $3.00 Owe square •• •• 10,116 • do. do. six months, 11.00 - do. do. three months. 3.0114 nt Thanstent advertiseenw,So cent. per square. of fifteen I I or les., for the tint insertton: 35 cents Mr. each sutisequent amen on: I I Yearly advenierts have the pm 1 lege ot changing at pi. re. but at no time areallowril to oeeupy more than two squares. a dto /t lamled to eerie entasedsate issoirsa. Ads rrtisetiients not having other ditections. will be inserted till forbid and charged accord ingrt. . 1:1s/*1 Ik • :Al 1) 1: Dcil kl):Vi %V.. H. KNOWLTON. ~_ Watchmaker and Rena ner. Ilealer .In Vatehe.. Clocks .7c.relrY. Minical Imo nintents. Look ma 1:61n. is and other latic i ir Goods. Stow one donr wesrof the Reed Iluu . ~ . l7 . . ARROCKLE & KEPLER. ." lira, tit in Ibr) Goods. Groceries. Hardware. Crockery. So ', Verr) tine, I'a. NI. JUDQN, M 1 1 ,41" kT LI/W.—Wife In the Chronicle Office, ID Wright'. Mork. J. W. DOUGLASS. A ' , TOIL IrtT_ AT 1..w.-01ffice over Wllhatute & Wright' spanking Ectaltltshtnent: 'entrance fir-t door a e,a, on the Public Square CONWTON & 1.1 A% EftsTR:K.. Le•t.eas in Ury Grmxis. Groeerift.. Limrs of nll kind*. Crockery Nails. /kr . one door south of Louth Jackson's store, French threet. Erie. Fa, .1. Comriog. G. ANDRE..'i- Agent ofJ. A.tdre Offenbach —Depot of Foreden Mtlitleatid gnu- Merchatime. whole-Ale Alla retail / No. Ilk b0. , 30 st. r at% t'lleotnnt btreet. DR. C. BRANDES.:. ric.scs• and Scitnarov—trtire corner or State and Seventh :4trree•lße...lence mr Eog,lab :Arm"- betiqcn French and Horinnil. Edw. V. - -•- Pt . tr.' ~1 C; roee r les, rrov mon.. W Ines. laq I/ Of S.. Candle.* Frialq. ii.c., on.• I )00c i.Sow 'Loom.. /k. (Vs Rate street, Erie. !Dealers !n Cold. Siltet, Bank Noies. Srertilicains of De- Aar; !tight Exch:ttige on the I rin' al e tiles constantly for sale Other in Iteant,'s Rlock, Public Square, Erie. T. If EltON—Sll-:-ART. F , 1tn1 , 0 , 1 Vitt PriyinriAri--tither., corner of French and Fifth idrei 14. over Slow* korh'ii *tore. - kesit.leure on Fourth street. onr eaSlot tie old Apoilseeary 11;01. It. T. ..4r.n.RETT Q. SONS , II eon-lantl* on hand afa .upplv of Grocerie4, Liq.:oh, ship ..1011..rn.1116e. Ace Ace : and .01. Mot i vate or Retail as cheat, rot the ellen te-t. NO. lip, Cheap.Hte Erie. • • {pl.:S. LANE. Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Fin ds h unary, ally and Nat Pensidl,i Bounty Lands and e I othir extra aiiil all Lahr r eiartieled to tue shall - Totrit innitlnl and f.olliful a lleniloll. nlicif ni ‘rfigl.t . b 1110(kt:in Slate .tteet. over 3. 11. Edlletton's Erie Ott. ID. •. . • LAIRI)SE Itt;ST. 11 . 1 , 1).0.17.,•tn7 Beivi l /rale,* in Dry.Goodi.lirneef ;ram pr... Flour. did,. Salt !cc., Nu. I, tVriglit'ii Illlxk fur. n. . f 4.1 Oh .11,d Sidle Strati.. vviis...% I Anti.. GALttN Tailor. moniS ver the -lore of - emit/1 Jackaon.Cheap Side. 111:TaVII: done •U shOrtnOliee. OLIN'FPAFFORI). ficaltrelkmr and SLatrOt;ersfiind Manofi - Atzref . of Blank [kooks and Id riling Ink.oofuer UI l ie Lhamond and Smith st•ecC. J. li t NICKLIN. Ferri LL andgencral_Arniky and Commission tiusinesil, Frank lin, Pa.. . RUT .'S REED. , • DirMEI a in Friglfiti.Gryillaii titi s d Attierienti Ilardwarram r.ttlery Al.o. Naito , . An* Iron and Steel No. 3 Bi rd Ezie. Pa. I.IITITCP.I: -- Co 1.)11(in.l. ITU! C:1111.1gf• and Wa4un Hu I len., State St.Fcet. be tweeu 'et rail' t.IFLW, tree. L. sTa(YNG. m. I). one Door nr4 of 4'. 0. IVrGht's etore, up xx"r. . J. 1. S'l E%V A RT. Qrrif 'it, n...p.r. SA...safe - 1P IX eh .1 de/ ira. one door _north of entli C. SIEGEL. Wile t t.ate and Retail dealer Ili Gnomes. Proviiiiont . Liquor.. Ynni. Eke.. Am Corner of French and Fitih Streets, upp...iie the h .inhere' Dote'. Erie. ? JOHN SIcCANN, nn 1 Retail Dealer in Faintly Groceries. IL:rockery Glaviware, Iron, Sask.. &e.. Cheap Side, Lem. rm. f {`the higliem price paid for Couidr} Produce. itt . J. GOALDING.. ►lrkriu Tstr.oa. and liabit•Ma k er.—suare. Nu. 3 Reed's Bloc' It. •opt.osoetbe nonnen Block { Stale sweet Ern . • J. W. WETMoRE, ATTORIVEI AT LAW, 11.1Vall..re Office, on seventh Street. U.r.e. Pa HENRY CADWEI.L. Iser , vre,s,Johl.er. and Recall Dealer in Dry Good.. Vroccroe., I 'r,e kery. one. rari4•ting. linrdn ore. Iron, Steel. Nana, Spild P. &c. Einnan StOr. a State Street. four doitss. below Urns n's lime% L:r le, l'a. Al..—Anul.. ICe',lkllou•+,A:leArcns. Springs. atos g.eryeral a.e.os meta of Saddle and carriage Tr itoniiiiifs, 8. MERVIN SMITH. AinonnET kT Low and lustiee of the Peace, the Kee Stone Mutual late Insurance Company .cqot WilehtS store. Erie. Pa. GEORGE 11. CI.II,ER: ATTokry Crsl,An, Gatard, Erie COU116", ofinq tn,raw,w aninlded tow «h nrcloinneva. and KELLOGG. For ward m.& 1 17onnutu;ton Mere hant,.on the Pub P.l.3{e• nttret. ('oal. Salt. Pia.aer and May. Fitts. eonatantly fa . - -a - I. ItO.IiENZNVEIG & Co. Wain! ram r •vri RE:sit MALVIN in Foreign and Donioatit Dry Good, mid) nom. ('lothing. Boots atid Shoes. BC:. pio. I Wriglit's Mork. 1. , 11.2iP Meet. Erie. - WILLIANIS & VCILIGHT. It oilier and I:v.11111r Broker. Dealer in Bill, of Ezebanttr. Dr.ift., eprtille:tir. of lii-po.ote, Cold and silver.in. Stet. kr. tiflice,lliltiaib' Bkek. corner of State-st...an Public Ou4r6. MARSHALLI: & VINCN . „r in .._ . Air , r.rs... i Lan —Othre lip Matra in Taninian) Nall bull ding ern di of ill.' Prothonotail'a of fi ce. Er i e . - - MURRAY WIIALLON. . Tr. , II•gT •VD rOl vrrt.n.it •T 1.4 R—l /Ince over C. B. iVriipwr vtoir. entrance one door west of State street. on the Diamond. 11,6. • M. Ti ii ICA Es: Ilia wit 1:00.1%, Dry Grorerte..rrOckery. Hardinkre. So. II I.lLvalrufe , Era'. SMITH JACKSON, 7 PPE•crit in Dr) Goat., Cr,..rer irik. Hardware, tlueens Ware, Little. Iron. a 12!. i'lbrap.i.te, Err, Pa. I LLIA3I KiiSLE'f, I ( . 41 , 1.11 %I .14FR I "vtioldter, raid Uodertaker, corner of `State and ott ova•+., Enc. 1.1)bli I N J. KELSO & CO. Irttrivardttic.Proltor and Cohnnivon Merchants tlealers tt. room and tine snit. rtia I, Pluster,lShingles,,kce.Publlc dock, wrst xide Use bridge, Erie. WALKER & COOK, ar art.! FOlllrlffling. eon sawn and Proluee 'Merchants ;Pim owl Ware-house east of the Pohl* Bridge. Erie. ' G. LOOMIS & CO. Dr ' , UM , in Wale hen, Jewelry, Silver. German Silver. ratiVrin' d ‘V ai re. 'nu ler% Military and Fancy Gooda..l3lntiO, yen. ne,dl. ) opposite the Eagle Ilutel. Erie. T. M. Atiwraa CA RT Eit & BROTHER. Wirer Tr?. t.e and Retail dealers iu Drugs, !Redwine", runt,. (Ws, Dye-stutl., laa.e , &e , No. 6 Reed llouse. Erie. _ JAMES LYTLE, r MM . ( !MIA Lt Merchant Tailor. on the public square. a les" , ikon; ~t or State street. Erie, LARK, Y•Ai Ailp RETAIL Dealer in Cirticeries. Ttovi.id Slup kiy. Stone-ware. ar. , . ate.. Yo. S. Donnell Black. Brie. 0. D. STAFFORD. la 1 , , to Law. Medical. school Miseelleheotts Books stationary I , 4kr. e‘tatelL, four doors below the Public square. , DR. 0. 1.. ELLIOTT ! , iit D•nimt, (drieeand dwelling in the,Beebe Block. on the 1 . , •(•. , 1 , •ot the Puld t e 'Square, k:Ete. Teeth Inserted oil Geld OW' to au enureeeu. Carious teeth filled with pure ( .J1 , 1..11111 r. tared to health•apd useftilness. Teeth c;catied woh i r , trutstent. and Detlithze so as tfit leave them of a pethibid All work warranted. •S. DIC • lAs ••nft , ant:lo.--InIiceK.ERSON It his reurleuce on Seventh street, ~; .1, , ,•11c the Methodist Church, Brie. JOHN H. BURTON h CO. • , • • • D R Sr. it. dealers in Drugs, Medic inc., Dye Malik I .rotetir.. &e. No. 3. seed Hou.e. Erne. Tr'Wrei:R —MI Kelp Rifle. Deer and Blagin` Pprinier, Just rrer,v,,i and for %ale by the keg or len viantai. bq Jut, ut,. R T t , TEERVI7 t Boca. . . . . . . • • • . . , . Ett I F . : i 1 1! • 0 • .1 . . . ... ,i .. : SE . • .-- - • „ 1 ,! . A . . . . . . . . .. V I E . R • . , _~ - H n: HAVICKSTACI n , w4Pr•r Llett T : , E LAKE SIDE. • • • T /MIN 0. witrrTtelt. • • Th• shadows clung the inland sea Are deepenin into night; • Slow up the sloi of Osilipee. These 'chase the aliening light. Tiresfof the long da s blinding heal. I r/st my languid Lake of the Italia: whe • cool sad, sweet. Thy sunset waters lie Along thesky, in wavy Ii • , O'er isle and beach and ba . ' . Green belted and eternal pi - • i The mountains stretch aw ' Below, the maple masses sleep • Where the shore with water 111 • ds, While midway oh the tranquil dee. The evening light depends. • So seemedl - n hen yon hill's red Crow ()fold, tblndian trod. And through the sunset air, Worked down t'ponthe smile of God, • To him of light and shade the law's No fo'rest skeptic taught; Their Hy ing and eternal cause • , His tiikr;instinet sought. • is He saw th4ie mountains la the Which nbw across than shinesi This lake. ;n summer sunset bright, . - Walled rpund with sobering pines. God nitaeliim seemed; frotit earth had skies His loving voice he heard, ' ' As, face to face, in Paradise. Man stood before the Lerd. Thanks—oh, our Father!—that like him. Thy tender love I see. In ra haul bill and woodland dim', And tinted sunset sea; For not in 'mockery dost Thou flil Our earth A 4 ith light and graeei; Thou had'st no dark and cruel w it BelsiNl illy smiling face! Cljaire 311i5telltuq. ALLY SOII.ERS. A TAtEs OF THE BRITISH OOAST GUARD. When !joined the Scorpion sloop of war. then (1810) on the West India station. there were a father and•os amongst the crew whose names, as horns on the ship's books., were John Somers. and John ...11ice ,Somers. The oddity in this country of g iving a boy • female baptismal name, had been uo doubt jestingly temkrked upon by l thus., who were aware of it , but withithe Sailors, the lad Passed, as A plly Somers. The father wis ap roach•ng fifty, the sou could not hare been more thin seventeen yearis of age. The elder Somers, who had 'attained to the rat ing of • boatswain. was a stern, hardOent man, with • look as cold and clear as polished steel, it'd 3 cast-iron mouth.tudicative of pallexible. indomitable firtnness of will and resolution. The son, on the contrary, though swim what- resembling thee. father in ontlide of feature, had • nidd, attractive, ahnost feminine appeal. and a alight graceful frame. I was not long in dreorering that, ob durate and self engrossed as the midi appeared, the boy was really the idol image in which Ws affection, and his hope* were . centered. Ilia eye con stantly followed the .notions of the tad, and it spreared to be 6is unceasing aim and study-to lighten the duties :he had to perform, t and to shield him from the rough usage to which yoong- szeis in his position were generally subjected by the mot- , I• ley crews of those days.' ( One day a strianglinstanee in proof ibis master-feeling occurred. Ally Somers some time previou.l:, went on shore with a part .lilespatcheirto obtain a supply of wa ter. had during the temporary absende of the. officer: in command, been r i 11 , r oeverelt- ropets ended by one,of the seamen for eon e trailing inisconddet, and a few alight marks were let od the lad '.‘s back. 'rho rage of the fa ther. when inform/d of the eircumshince, was extreme, i . nd it was with di caltY that he Was !restrained from in ti Riming instant chapti.ement on the cdterider. An oppor tunity for partiallyreaking his hoaiided vengeance oc curred about sax •eeks afterwards. lind it was eagerly embraced. The sailor who - had dl-tiled young Somers. was sentenced to florets -a two dozen iiiohes for drunken ness and insubordination. lie was elem.& to strip, plac ed at ihe,gratings; and tho punishment began. Somers. the knit or sour tempered is he might be, was by no Means harsh or cruel in his °tee. and has assist ai.ts, upon whom the revolting office ,of flogging usually devolved, influeneed by him, were {Aleut the gentlest ; handed boatswein'a mates I ever swe l l practice. On this occasion he was ir another and very s dillerent mood. Te • blows mill Had been struck when Somers, with an angry rebuke to the mate for not doiig Iris duty, 410101. i ed the Cat from his hand. mid himiel lashed the culprit 1 with a ferocity sojterribly effective Milit Captain Boyle, a merciful and justkerceir. instantly renlinted half the num ber of lii.lies. and the man was rescukirons the unspar ing hands of the itrindictive boatswain. • ,Other logistical' of the intensity affection glowing within the stern tnan's breast for his.onsparatively weak and delicate boylmantfested themaeltres. Several times' I 'team an unintenitional auditor of wraps of conversation ' between the two pi/UM the.lad was oft the 'tick list, from I which I gathered that Ally was the Isola issue of a- trar riege which had' eft bitter memories' im the mind of the father: but whe ther arising from that early death of his wife, or other caUses. I did not asce4tain. Somers was, it appeared,'• native of the west of F.ngland, and it was quite evident had rececved a much hotter education than usually falls to individu+la ofhis clasls. At the elate of the war, Somers aiid his son were with thou.ands' of °theirs, turned adrift from the royal service. Spine months artier yty appointmentito the command of the revenue cuttiir(l chanced to mitet,ithe father in the village of Ta v7 iyedii about four miles act Southampten , ou the Me Forest Road. He had r Ilfound, reentered the nar.","but chancing to receive si hurt by the felling of easy blockion his right kaitaliha l ci been, invalided uh a small penaion. 'upon which he teas now living at About a hundred tyards from the spot Where we had acci dentally met. Aply, he itifointed utiiras the skipper of a small craft trading between Glum and Southamp ton. There w•e.Jittle change in the itppearance of the man except the crippled condition o 'hi leg appeared to, hive bad an effect the reverse of so iniiing upon his stern and rugged aspect and temper. Whop paid off he was, I knew, entitled to a considerableluni in prize money, the greater part Of which he told melte bad recently re ceived. • t I About a couple of months after this meeting with the father. I fell in limb the son. I wiis *trolling at about eleven in the forenoon along the ft pt piths Southamp toe Custatit•houee, when my eyes qtll,stpoi a young man i• a iseanian'a these, busily engaged . wlth three others in loading a cart with bundles of babe, which bad been landed shortly before from'a smelt vessel alongside', the quay. It was AUy Somers. cure etlough; and so Much improved in looksaince / last saw pis, that but for a cer tain air of fragility—einherited probe ly'froris hie mother, he might have bees prououseed a haadeeme flue young fells!. The laths (upwards of tWo hundred beadles) which he was so busily ambetiag to leak: ha had brobght from Guernsey, sad wera a very domino imporMaion freers that Mind. • Chmemey osossing the • 4 1 1 of SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 13, 1851. sending its own produce custom free to England.ailight 'duty. only tantemottnt to whet the foreign timber- of ' whieb the laths were made would have been liable to. was levied upon them, and this was ascertained by the properoffieer' simply nfeasoring the leagth and girth of the bundles. This had been done, and the laths nark ed as "passed." I It struck me that All Semen -Rua greatly flurried and excited, and when he saw me n#proaching. evidently 1 with ea istention to accost him. this agitation percelpti bly increased. lie twilled deadly pale. and absolutely trembled with ill-eoueeitled apprehension. Ile waseome what re-assured by mtj frank salutation; •atl after • few common-place ingiiineL I walked away, evidently to his great relief, and he wits his sailor's continued their eager work of:loading the cart.. ,, I could : not help suspecting that siiniething was wrong,though I could not make up my mind to verify the surmise his perturbed and hurried m . r exuded. Ouee. in • skirmish oo sharable fa. , thee, the boatswain,' had saved tar life, by seeding • timely bullet through the head of a huge negro, who held me for the moment at:lois mercy. Besides, I might be wrong, after all, n and , had uo right to presume that the cf°Me who had passe the litho had not made a suffici -1 rut examination of them. The flurry of the young man might arise from p:lsCeal weakness and the severe labor 1 he was perfor gin 'roach hot weather. These reasons, or mare truly, these excuses for doing nothing., were passed through my brain, when I observed the hasty sp. ' preach 9f the collectolof customs himself towards the an, followed by metal of his subordinates: Young mere saw him u q ickly as I did , and the young man's fl impulse, it was q Ile plain, was flight. A thought. no d ht. of the hopelessness of each at attempt a ted his ate a, and be stod quaking with , terror by the side 'his right and grasping for of the c TusupPort at one of i t the whee -spokes. "One a -on lend tee a knife," said the collector, ad s officers af custom. a 'quickly opened and handed to him; he a g cOrds which bound one of the Wadies and they flew asunder, doulasing a . 1. arca! Aud the other build'', cos i, i its; and so large was the ;quantity I 7 0,.... t hus unexpectedly Mille Inert 1 I was assured of not i.es than s Wen made by the andacions i i in his bold and ibgeuions undies had been filled up t I. except by the process • o detect that the Cargo i declared to be. Thi I. dared hinutelf liable 'a (sited, and the no t rey of the Crown. 1 • • I felt assured .on Ilan. , i settle dozen Ike some - ted, and 4 , ester. tad if 1. - . k 1 • dressing the A kuife wa severed the etre of laths together. 1 long tin tube of to Weed a similar de of - the heavily timed ful erica of, that a pet& -0500 or £6OO woul4 hair smuggler, had he succeed attempt. The °attain, the with short pieces of lath, so tti now adopted, it was impossible , ' waernot bone fide w ; at it had bee\ penalties to which forcers bad vet were immense, the vessel also was fo\ fortunate young nay's liberty at the rlll4 Ile looked tas very pic:nre of diSpair. ai. that ruia, utter nod Complete, had fallen I lie was led oil lute custody, and had gen\ paces when he 'toppled shortly, appeared to I request to the officers by whom he was ese.. then Wining round. l i otimated. by a supplicatory that he wished to amok with me. I drew near., my request the otlici.rs fallback out of hearing. ! lit so utterly prostrated by the calamity by which ,he I been so suddenly trWertaken, that he eouW not foe soviet lal moments speak iatelligible. I felt a- good jleal sae.- canted for so mere al boy, and one too so entirety unfitted by temperament au l tree to carry through each des perate enterprises , er up against their feuloWd. ! "This is a bad bm has ess," I said; "but the winters It i de with your own or u t r father's money?•' ' I: "Every penny o it," lie replied, in • dry i fainting voice, "was our ow , Father lent me all hispriati mon- 4 ey, and we are both miserable beggars." i --_ "What in the eerie of madness could lauds you - to venture your all elm a single ; throw in so ban , dons a game?" ••I will tell you.'llia went on hurriedly to say, in the satneeehle and tree:Ming tone. 1 skin not fitted for a sea-life—not strung; not hardy enough. I Imaged for a quiet, peaceful honik ashore. A hope of one Offered it self. I made ; the ahuaitstance of Richard Syvetoter. • miller near Ealing.l lie is a ried man, b ut . griping as - far as money is conCertied. I formed an attaehment for his daughter, Mans; a+d he consented to our union, and to taking use as a partperiu his business, if I Could pay five hundred pound. 1 was too eager to wait i lloug: be-, ts sides. I thought th t perhaps—. But it boo not to ], speak of that uow. ' set more than life upon its cast: I have lost, and afh ow bankrupt of resource or hope!— Will you break thisl- news to my father, and see"—. His remaining &nine's gave way as the tliought lie would have utteredistruggled to his lips, and the meek hearted young nian l burst into tears. •nd wept piteously like a girl. A number of persons were collecting round us, and I gently urged lion to walk on to the custjem house• 'A few minutes afterwards I left him there whit a prom ise to comply with is request without delay. ; I found John Se em at home, and had scarcely utter edll twenty lords w In he jumped at once to the woo conclusion. j ' "Out with it, iirj" exclaimed the steel-nerved man.— "But you need notif I see it all. Ally has failed—the to bacco has been se,irid---aad he is in prison." , Spec of himselfis breath came "thick and short and he presently added w is h a fierce burst, whilst a;.glanee of are leaped from hi eyes: ' , qte has been betr4'ed, and think I know by - wiloin.' • ' • -I_7 -......6011 0. "Your suspicion Ithat he has boenin formed against is very likely correct. (but you will, I think, have Pome diffi culty in ascertaining hr whom. The custom' house au thorities ifre careful not to allow the names c4' their in formants lo leak thtough their office doors." "1 would find fill were he hidden in the c :intro of the earth!" rejoined th ea-boatswain, with another 'venire full outcry, which s tartled one like au explosion. "But," added the 'veer aid fierce-willed men, after ai few mr;- • useless prating of the matter hie A i pert company at (mat , . I 'thank yon, iiiq yen have called.” I imentmeed 4do by hi. son. "That hi a Toter' be paid. "Ally'V chance iiover there. I to waste of time to call on the old man: ird and unyielding gone with the fi a b unyielding at his! own mill iitt pester itudred iargsined fork and the 'gilt 's teem if bruins be dry. I 'earned Ily of the course in life by the deciptive light bus 'miles and vanities; bet he, pour, led boy, heeded me not. ;I may not II be anxious to see me. 'Snood day. t media' ellence.•l%) wench. We must oil. • and will tell .11 the other requst n plank to hold by." I sod it would be mei his resolution is hi stones. Maria 5)1 pounds her father k she shed soy:will peril of steering ha of w'omau's caprici flexile. gentle-mini longer delay: he w , air." • . ! The consequenet a which I chiefly feared casne to pus, even more speedily, than I apprehended: It!'being im possible to liquidatel the penalties incurred, Aide Somers was imprisoned aria crown debtor; end at that period. whatever may bet a ease now: pantiles could / net beget rid of by issolvensmeonrt 'childish*. 1 The pros pect *fan indefinit term of imprisonment, imprateaaat. tenth other causes of grief spill depression. broke down [the always fragile health of this' prisoner. and be died. 6re yet his youth was well begun'. after about sin moodM• coaSse maul oily. i i, The tidings were:brought me by the old MIA himself. J was seated inJhe babia of the awe cotter. "ben it was annoommd that Jab s . Somers was alengaidel,in a boat and wished to ass no' . I directed that be shoold he alfr ad Id coalkatroard. ad presently the old asiuJ. wi" pair visible in owe line of his csuoienan4 Maass of his nistleso. Illamdag eyes. eatery' "1 am come to till you, air, that Ally II re 0 PT W A RD 'I was tomnorhat prepared for this bad news, Mr. Somers," I answered. "It's bawitopots You. b 0 it should ho bravely borne with." l. lle laughed sage's. ••To be sure, to be sure." hs said. “that s wise counsel—very wise; bat that which I want now more thin wise coattail is ten pouuda--tet potted., which I shall never be able to repay." i I "Ten poundii!" "Yes: you trtay remember that I once saved your life. If that piece of Bernice was worth the rpm I have men tioned, you eali now discharge the obligation. I hive parted with everything, and Ally's last prayer was to be buried beside his -. Beside • gratre,.an early lad nntiniely one, like his owii, many miles away." understand: it is a natural and pious wish, and you shall have the money." "Thank you. The funeral ewer, I have but one more thing to db in life, and that is to assist you in' tweeting Coquerrl, Whllit running one of his most valuable Car goes." "CoYquerel.lthe Guernroyman, you pool" "Ay.so he call, himself; but I fancy he at one lime Iteil- Id from soother poet. He is the man who sold Ally 'aey elet to the r officers!" '•Are you surer' "As death!lewas Ally's only confidant, and Ally'a father is now in Cilicquerel's confidence. It is bat mu ral," added Banners, and a bitter, deadly aneermirleibie ashy lips—”itlis but, natural, you knew, that I shotild be eager to assist! in pillaging a government which caged my son, and hFld him under its iron bars:iill life bad fled. Cocquerel understands this, and trysts Me fully; but that which he doennot understand, know, or suspect," eon tinned the fierbr old man. %inking his voice to a whisimir, and leaning feirward with his rice close lb wino. "is 'hat JAMS Somers 4a. found out &twit was that sold his !My'. l ifol ll,d he knew. thai.‘and know mu; ion, 'Mere would be sounder sleepers than he to these dark nights." : »What do You mean?" :Nothing titoretit „canna." he replied in a More clabehed and guarded tank 'than to retort the trick he pld Ally, 4omething after hicowit fashion." That is a tairsoveng• enough, and I'll not balk you. Ni, then; foe your plan." Tarioas detils were discussed; andiit was settled ',ha one week fro that day Somerrwas again to commkai ea* with me.. lie thee took leave. ' at the app. inted time Somers returned, and appetired to be in high ;et flighty spirits. Everything was.he Maid, arranged, alumna all but certain. His scheme :liras then canvus cl, and anilly agreed apes, sad he again la( the vessel. the arrangement for the surprise and captors of Con tinent was 'him : That notorious smoggier intended run nits a large cltrgo on the coast ofDorsetihire.'on the north oft ortland. eit . a place where the cliffs are high. precipi totiraud abrupt,aud at that time very insfilcienily watched by the shore force 7 Near the spot selected is. or was. a kiwi 'of cavort' worn by the action of the sea in die chalk stratum, erliA it neap•tides was partially dry.and at the' time of our enterprise would effectually conceal a boat , from the observation of any one who did got actually !peer ; its mouth: Cocquerel nee to,lea_ve Gaeta day in a large boat. with two lug-sails; but iding for epees: upon its sweeps. It wan cat be would reach his destination about *kid- Pre hid undertaken the duty of shore-aeinil linger were apprehended, wire to warn the it hivrks were abroad, by burtung a blue ' , light., manner of running the cargo wai to be this: Soiniti op , with ilt provoled with • windings sod sufficient iii length A kind of sopa cradle at the end -pot. in which \i an could sit; or a couple of kegs be Mot i le to ' The -wilidlesi he was to secure firittly i ei two or 'three of the men having been diaiwn wes were to be fixed, by means of Which s\ hat in about half an hour the enure', car carried off by the carts which Sooist.s ve toady on the spot. The signid the scene of action, the poiiitive ild be that agreed Dijon far the \ —the Sudden ignition of ig blue 'to cl possible moe of, in which we were to con sirds northward of Me l spot Id Somers promiesd lie \ the smugglers wire in }lies accidents (141 not 'be able to vicar tie. be'ouging to the cutter quietly rA ve Colshoi. we 'ight air", and our iddiug the eve- was rnd. in directly at ley the next chiefly dopes 'eelaied that I iglaL ;m Som e if , t glens thi The reach tho te tha - clitT. and tie. other wie it was catcall go would be had undertuk for our appeit old man peri Ivarui lig oft light. This procedure; oral oursiehr marked out would only i full work. I ed h isfel) . ten to o rance o ;isted. sho i esmuggler - did not seem . at as the *aver s was but'a few ... for the landing, I ice the signal whe. . tad little fear that, if • t, capsize ourtheme, they would not .e The next fternoon the largest boa Rose was fully manned; and leaving t • e ancfior in the Southampton river just a , , e pulled withthe tide—fur there was but a 4 that favorable for the smugglers, not fur us— • place, which we reached about eight o'clock i . ning. • Midst the hour' crept - very slowly and d:smally away Midst the darkness and hoarse echoes and meanings of (II - ar m, into which the sea and wind, which were gra4u 117 rising. dashedsind howled with much and increitsidg •:- olence. Oleasioniil peeps at my :watch. by the light era lantern car fully shaded seaward, warned us that ten. eleven, twelve, one o'clock had passed, without bringing the 'hien& ire so anxiously ex4ected, end fears oft ulti mate disappointment were chilliug us far more thin the cold night breeze. when sa man in thb bow of .thq boat .said in a whisper that he could hear the dash *ricers. We all histoily listened with eager alloution ; but it was not till we l ad brought the boat to this entrance if the opening, thl the man's assertion tiva verified. There it was clear 1 enough, cud the near approach } of a! large boat, with the regular jerk of the oars or sweep, was distinct!) atidible.• The lud, cleitr hail of their here signal men ,answered by ha " all right" of the smug glers,:left n doubt that th expected prey was within our grasp ; andhad a mind to pouuco upon them at'once t but was wi held by a promise which I had been obliged ,li several tim s to repeat. that I would not under and cir cumslancesp do so till the signal Same sent its light over the waters.l a i , • As soon i s the noise and bustle of laying in the Sweeps.- lowering di s h sails, and untitepping the masts, had s ob. sided, we hfrard Somers hid the boat, and insist that the captain shld come up before any of the others, mi th was a dam Ity about the carts which only he could de. The reply as a growl of assent, and we could , u hi the click o the check . to the cogwheel of the Millais. ill that Sonieri was paying out the rope. Prem. sly COcque rel was heard to get into the cradle 1 ha spoken, of. tb which a line was fastened iii miler t steady his iiseeet from below{. The order was giver tern away. 'e belt. click. ennopaced that he wail 'ding the face of 04 , cliff. , I amid hardly cumpreh d ibis mipaoneer. which seemed to iadicate the este ief the man we were most ' p s i ''' to aa a are, sod order to shows off van last on my lips. lobes a pew. ful Idne light flamed soddeely forth. ae4npasied • y a floral bat indistinct about, or rear rathe4 from .•: • mere. The glow replied by la loud cheer, andere of smartly oat ; but - having, to mooed a line of roe row in a straight direction for 'about a ea blies lea • . the smugglers, panic-stricken and basil .dersd y * were. bad time to got way apes their log ger ad ere plying their sweeps with d esperatel east.- ; before myosin beat was fairly thread Jo ,direct pursuit.he frantic effort te osespe wen vale, end so was the et II mere trestle slim at resistance ofterediwhen we ran arida. We did set hurt them much ; sets or two w re knocked down by the sailors' beam inittdd pistols : d after being secured; they had leis.. ID not si r their rage, ta pelyirlet muses, part Tread. part Estreb, du la *wiry cabin. dead." I=ll and pert Guesses patois, and I began to look around sad see what hid become of CeequereL The blue-light still shed • livid radiants all around. and to my•inexPressible horror and dismay,' Isaw that the unfortunateiman was 'speeded in the rope cradle, within about a 'fathom's le•gth of the brow of the'clifr, upon which Seinen was standing and gazing at his vic tim. with look* of demonise rage and triumph. The deadly trap conlrived by the inexorable old Man Wu in steady apparent, and to Coiquerel's frenzied "resins for help 1 replied ? by shouting o him to cut bluing loose at once, as his oft chance, fir the barrel of a pistol gleam ed distinctly in i lthe hands of Somers. Listitinan Warneford;" cried the exalting 111•Oille —he was nothing less—.- hive caught thin Cocqubrel Meet* for yon— ' ,got him swinging here in the prettiest cradle he wee ever rocked" in hie life—ha ha ha !" **Cut loose It once !" I gain shouted ;- and the men, al terribly ienritesseid as yself with the Mirror of the wretched smegigler's positien, swept the boat rapidly to ward the spot. Sooners, if you shoot that man you shall die on the gallows: 0 1 **Ceti hiassell too", do yOu say, lieniennut?" "reamed Somers, hesdkiss of my lst observation. "He can't— be has no I ha And- if he had, this pis tol would be +icier than that; bat I'll cat him loose preisatly, nevolrkftsir. LeOk hers, Jacques Cecquerel," he continued, riving himself Bak down on the cliff, end , stretching hii 'tight ewin our it, till the mouth of his pis tol was within b yard of Cotquerel's head, "this contains payment in full for your kindle." to Ally Somers—a debt _which I could In no other "inner completely repay." At this neeMent the blue light suddenly expired, and wo:were insulted in what, by contrast, was total dark ness. We could still, hoWevere hear the frantic laagh ter; and exulting gibes of 'the merciless old man, in an swer to Caequnrel'e shrieking appeals for mercy nerd af-' ter a whets,- when the figures of jhe two men had be come pirtial4l visibie, wei could distinguish the words, '• Oni, two, Ores," follewed by the report of a pistol, and a half minute afterwreds • dark body shut doe n the wbits face of ti ps,liff. and disappeared beneath the wa i tars ! 1 ! ;The body of Criquerel:rieverre-appeartd. and the on- Ip tiding Levier heard of Owners, were contained in the following parley/rapt', ilvhieh 1 read some year. afterwards in; the tlainpe4ire Tclegrapis, a journal at that num pub lished at Portia:oath : **The body!of an ,a4cd,i wretched man, was found fru. zero to death iii the churchyard, on Wednesday morning last, near two Idjoining gruves. one of which, Alice May !‘ ward. recalls the painful irciimstances conuecte4 with the sad story Of the deeth!of that ill.fated, and. es we Yef lieve, entiretylinnocent parson. At the inquest Noll:len up Friday. it liras ascrtained beyond a tloubt that the deceased is Jcitio- Maynarid, wile, after his . wifti's eatime• ljt &oath. aminined the u4ne of Somers. and was, we be; lire. the perilw who shoi, a French smugglerovith whom hp had quarrelled, at the ` beach of the Isle of Wight. nu • dpr somewhati peculiar ci cuinsiances, about seven years ago. , 14 silui buried in the grave which contains the .thy of his son. John Ando Maynard, which was interred ere shortly Before the cinnmission of the homicide just alluded to. There has waver been to our kuoirledge any regular itorevilgation of at affair, but we 'have that then, iiii befone, Maynard's pistol was pointed y a frau- J tr andlcausadass jealousoi."—P/yassittilapoper. A "Verdant'! in's. Cotton NilL • 1 A raw, stfew•h i atted, sandy-whiskered six-footer--one of the purely hninitiated,lcame in recently from Greene Kith a load or: wood fora factory company. Not satisfied ith contempl ating the •1 poetry of motion" at a safe di.; lance. oar hello must needs in:roduce himself between the cards, to /et a nearer view. This move brought his •inether habil mews" it+ dangerous proximinty to the ' O r en card. snit .• thereby hangs a tale." , "Non I wily. she gosi pooty, den' t she, Boa T"-said Jonathan inqUiringlv [ " She don't do anythisfg else," responded the stripper. 1 But yogi millet be verylcarefut how you move around 'mongol this !borderers. r'Twas only-last week, air. that 1 promisingtoting Irani from Oxford , a student at the caderny her., vas drattn into that very card, air. aid before anylawliotance could reach him,he was run through Ind manutilured into lio. 16, super extra. cotton warp yarn." 1 " I a--is--Itiwow ! I believe yuer joking !" stuttered be lieve_ .Jonathan. ; : 1 .. Fact; siri" continue .stripper; " and his disconso- Ire mother clime down qr." days ago, and got five bunch. Os of that Facile, yarn, as Melancholy relics." _ it By the piiker, that c 'ceche true !" ' •' Fact, air v fact ! and actr of his fellow students pur- Chased a ske4n apiece, t be set in lockets, and wore in remembrancd of departed a lath ls,' 6. Is that k 'fact, now T' Was he really carded, spun. end set in 14kets T" i t i',A sense ofipersonal daurr here Aid MOSS our hero's trind ; holwpgn to retrofit precipitately without waiting Ihr an answer. But the e was not much room to spare ‘ietwixt • himkelf and th egearing of the card behind. Another step backwards completed the cereal my of in. rlnction.. His untelti4eratiles being of large callibr \proceas of snarling mit. m into a hard knot was no '- Our hero .• race4tonguo" instanter. 10-1-r•d•o•r! Let me go!—yor ti plicter! Let !go! Aint ye sib atone An nte--‘cau't yel—do!" • 'tripper three of the belt. ' - kept it reaolviug. ar 'ration, bhrst out !. stop her, do i t‘ \wants! the' .t t t , • , ys •..t mad! Gel The car , , • P 1 i•I, J . \ Itll I tar.: u. „,, atcipped 'a ed is the geerl , • e Illad it was° I *invested tcrritor," tha , aukee Bitade. I 4 I Blest v din! Lt if the eyboo, • ipg it in full pp, I "Oh, etopi ha et home, raithet to bake! SS op the. *int. ye got do feehn be eartre4 and *m! How tw; The card *ere so for to extrity o l f thr A Winntit TRoost t+ " Pray tell the cants 0,110806 e tearer' "Oh. P deli a disgracer "What disgrace?" "Why. ...Why, I ifave openednne of year addressed hilenyeelf. CCrtainly it Tool titan Mr." "le that ell? Whet barns can that lag her hus*id'e letterel" "Ne her mi is itself. glut the cool grace!" j "What! Nee any ono gored to writ ftek road by oily wife?" "0. Do. tit is coochid itl the most flat thescontents!" Here the, trite honied her face in hi •onsmeneedi sobbing slew& when It laught op i the-tettei and Commenced that bad basin the meson's( nfearly *tan. .It whis • billies's" the Printer orniptiew.. 1 toil The deed world of the ,rld ofthe ha trifle.. A Itle enirbetmilimen Citarfrs lota L i mo s ight have {brokent ' o l a n a De birh id Napeleo• sad the bat tevalat.• • Tee; dial .stoat. gl;ppelee "a it f eh ptaee betwa Adam as r}e! Whi Aisertisor.'i J r the momentum our heru, euppos- r l •iut won. and I oder be steers. and mother's loin nrl masheen, can't ye?—do! efeller in distress? Oh, deer! ; ) &1141 made in lockets! Je-ru-sa \to Greene!" ' lan, but Jonathan's clothes 'that it was no slight test ly by en I ling out the whole . he was Goally released. 111 SO ♦ TEAR. is - "Z.. • NUMBER 18.. PAROD-OXICAL-A PSALM OP mix WHAT THE HEART or THE YOUNG WOMAN BAll THE Ck:..SORIOt: OLD MAW. Tell me not in tdis Jingle. .• Marriage is an empty &earn !* k w tbs• girl re dead ,tbat 7 n single. Anti tlirn,gs i a re not what try sew/ Life Is real Life is earnest! Single-blessedness a fib ! " Man•s thou ass, to man retnenest," Ibis been spoken of the rib. Not enjoyment and not sorrow is our destined end or way ; But to act, that each to-usorrow Find us Deaver marriage-day. Lige is long. and youth is &elm* And our hearts, though light add pp; Full. like pleasant drums, ate betting Wedding-marches all the lady. In the world's braid field oilman. In the bivouac. of tirt: f • Be not like dumb. drislen cattle ! Be a hen?. be i aWite • Trust no , Future. howeer pleasant! Let the dead part bury sts dead ! Aet—art in the 'icing PreaCTlt • Heart within and hope ahead. I Lives of married folks remind of • We can live our lives as And, departing, leave beditid ua such example as shall.* te11.".. Such example that another, .., Wasting time in idle eport, A kulorn. unmarried brother. tiering. shalt take heart and court. Let u., then. he up and doing. With a heart on triainpboet Bull yonut. tug, 101111 paniure, Learn to labor and tO get. Granite Rocks and Granite tat History - and philos ly have long agb ah. was alecretiufhtenc In particular. localiti . ed•the mental stamp 1 mankind. Gram particular have alway seemed o he pantie to produce great and istinguii.hed men. State of New Hampshire has Sept forth A mama upou her soil, who itood re-emine men: There 14141. her Masoti, now dead; her iVebeter, uow passiug the meridian of moo whose ma.stive corms eotiteineti the g loots situng his fellow oleo. Nor a the to. in Massachusetts, a less striking proof of this hit , perhaps it is the stronges \ t ,that can be uamed. H one rocks are well known; nor are her grenite zi, renowned. There were the Adanzses, John sal Quincy, both born andrreared upon her sizil- . ' been Presidents of the United States. John H the President of the first Congressional Cour' first signer of the Declaration of independence, ed among- these rocks. Here. toe, Thotnai H founder of one of the largest banking-houseX in t was born. The Quinceys, the Crutches, and Freeman Hunt. the prcriecto; and editor of l chants' Magazine. have all, in their boyhood, ed ainecg these hatdcoeks. where they firstalre Mr. Hunt is the youngest of all, and bas not ye his prime; he is, however, uot less widely throughout the commerciakworld than theth .the exception of Mr. llope is hvhe went to E ro .aioboy,' he the only one of Quincy's tamed ne found distinction iu another field than political the projector of the Mere/ma's MagaZine, he h way and established among men a literature of ed of the highest order. We have been led to that tiops by noticing an article in the' Quin/ Pai, pressing the pride and gratification which wash pliee. - ai Mr Hunt's unexampled bat deserved) That journal; among other things, layt. ! "Mar readers knew him in his but hood, and cannot that, after many vicissitudes of fortune, he is ref reward that ever awaits upon patient; perseveril directed. talent and indostrv."—.Sun. commanded much notice. 'lt seems: howeve ./is still alive, an load health, and inhabiting th tcality that he (La when his deed, of daring !much fear among his Canadian neighbors ac ver St. Lawrence. A correspondent of the N • , geli,t„ under date of June, INSI, writing fro. Jefferson County, says. in passing from K French Creek : . ! "Taking a sail boat at Clayton. and etwoi aii i Johnson. the her 4 of this wikkroass of beauty i•thii channel of the river , for an excursion Itr ' , ,I frequented narrows. ',Ms man, with wheat' ' come well acquainted, was a hunted outlaw , ,ferret tinte:for years. and Is wary now about' her Majil li sty's dominions. lie is seventy ye .yet hale' nil active. Ilia lawkss life has blunt al nensibilit!es, bulk ft a perception of propri• venteittlie use of profanity while with ma. th orally File indiopousitile language by way of • i firkpaiiiiii. lie speeds much of his time on IC tress. Seiltirki a few miles from Oa) top. His ' •kand painious tit delay of rev i luring the wig' i mud io island—o iisath the driving i sought his sot'' darkuess. Shoo, 4 • - a' • " (, in.'l Ihs orlat e ligi !arty a l l The t i us, he pl am • and t bin a sates I n of 12 limey s nem: or gm loo ler Jona 11 ham tleoek. and SS fiat /s pa, tiro o world I t own ; ,„, A•tf• brie ' boards. I bed Iknows With .si pear ho has fe. As r led•th• Mei CIO regime. EX73 In that lIIINCO.I. e. of ear a woes -0 war• gather- 1 ic,ll. fora los into wed his etrer.of ed by mint the wend visited g *thia min of of the *ton fare. vial. H• its bay. .that Barna 410- .:cited so M the ri- Y. Esau • Adam!, DipLOta le • 4 Bill 1 entered gb its on- hey. b►- an at di!- 0 34" i l! I of age. his mor- s cr pre• " / p *Cie M. )y7 lee would swas. Ip. Irbil. t parsait a sat all aad a is bar atadied as beep remark, id the subject 1 by a wri- H. that $ as. Illasy aid bays heir taw- children br icol tom home by it, ,bonds. It soon • way dor * tied it IL mare yea • r. aad hearts at • O Soo a . • Yew I IneY aad .LIMO . lit slit/ sad law ha* OnY Ited sat "aypte ad *air Ming prepares 't your temper. pr if you *cold. ih u have become. iding alienates th Li it, they tumult. in as they did be abesa cub deiaio, decimate to War oil vour coadact. cad bats acoldiug.- ..isee your weaken Especially at sir Newts should i lases', that they et lore mealier i U