BT ions B. IBATTDN, VOL; ser factual. SPRING Spring I« coming-Sprlng Is coming 1 Willi licrsunablno opd her shower; Heaven is ringing, with the singing Ofthe-blrds fa brpko and bower; Buds arc,filling, leaves,aro swelling, Flowers on’field and bloom on tree; O’cr'thq earth, and car, and*ocean, . Nature holds her Jubilee. Boft then steal ing'cmrice a fooling OVr my.bosom tenderly: Sweetly I ponder, as I wander, And niy musing* are of thee, 6prlngls coming—Spring is coming! With ber mornings fresh nnd light; With her noons of chequered glory. a Sky of blue, and clouds of white. Calm grey nightfalls, when tho light falls Frum tho star-bespangled sky. While the splendor, pale and tender. Of (ho young moon gleams on high. Still at morn, at noon, at oven, Spring Is fiill of joy for mo, For I ponder, as I wonder, And my muaings are of thee. SlUl on Hire my thought* are dwelling, VVhatao’or thy name may be; Beautiful, beyond words telling, . Is tfiy pretence nnio mo. Morning's hr'cnhmg Amis thee tvnhlng Wandering In the breeze's flight; Noontide’* glory mantles o’er thee In a shower of sonny light; Daylighl dying leave* then lying In the silvery twilight ray ; Btai o look brightly on thee nightly Till (ho coming of tho day. Everywhere and every minuto Feel I near thee, lovely one ; In the lark and In the linnet. I can hear lliy joyous tones. Bud i;nd blooming murk the coming - Of thy foot o’er vale and hill; Ami thy presence with life's essence, Makes the forest’s heart to fill. Low before Ihee. I adore thee, Lovn creative. Ihee I ring ; Now I meet then, nnd I erect thee, Uy the holy name uf spring ! 2UlCoCcUinmeoiio. Prom (lie Boston Olive Bratieh THE PROMISE FULFILLED. “When shall U be?” asked Charles W ■ ■ of a lovely girl who sat beside him ; “when shall it bet” “When shall whol be, Charles, and what do you mean by that question 1” said Florence N., as she turned her lustrous eyes towards those oi her companion. “Florence, dear girl, why do you reiterate the interrogatory 1 You must bo aware that, in a few days, 1 am to leave this place, and go to other lands, far away o’er the blue waters of tiro Atlan tic; and yet, knowing this to ho true, yon pretend not to understand that short sentence, “When shall it be?” We have known each other from child- hood,grown up, os it wore like brother nml sister, but now we are endeared to each other as lovers, and I only await your answer to my question in complete our happiness. “Do you understand me, Florence 1” and the youth paused, while his keen black eye eagerly scanned the countenance, of his fait companion. Florence N did understand her lover, hut as young girls ere apt to do, wished to draw from him a conversation before giving a reply. After musing a short time, Florence raised her large blue eyes, and met the* inquiring glance of Charles, who waited to bear his doom. “Charles." Raid she. I nt» bo vexed at whal may be considered an answer in your question. You allude to our union for life, and that is a serious contract to enter upon, more serious than many imagine, yot to yon 1 can and will speak plainly. You are anxious to know when we shall be united in wedlock, and I will answer. At this juncture it were belter still to remain In a state of celibacy ; in a few days you will leave mo, but prior to your departure we shall meet again and I will tell you when we may hope to be united as husband and wife.” Charles W—— thought that tho days would never end, Indeed, ho wondered if the hours had not lengthened, but, like the majority of lovers, lie tfris jmpatiqnl, and longed for the morning when he was to see Florence, and hear front her | ps i ,e words that were to consummate his fell city. The day, the much wished for day at last dawn’ ed, and iis sun had not set, ore Charles hud arriv ed at N irton’s collage, and stolen a kiss, yes, ac tually received an impression from the lips of the fair Fl nonce. We shall pass over the interesting colloquy that resulted from the and notice Charles, as ho leaves “the girl o’ his heart.’ 1 . , , , , “Now, Charles, you have heard my decision; upon your return every thing shall have been ar ranged. I shall be yours, and you will be mine. Charles gazed long ond earnestly In the face ol Floience, and, as he took the parting embrace, said In lender tone : . “Farewell, Florence, until we moot again, and may kind Heaven preserve thee from the hand of the destroyer; 4 ’ then, mastering the emotion that smuggled in his bosom, ho strode rapidly away, but how powerfully attractive is woman—turned again more than once to age if Florence had reitr od from the gate. The collage vyas soon hidden from him, and Charles sighed as ho look the path leading homeward, saying : . ... “Shall she bo mine? shall 1 ever behold her again 1 God only can tell. I am afraid that some thing will intervene to mar my happiness. The day that Charles had fixed for his depart-1 lire was at hand, and many hours had not elapsed oro ho stood upon the deck of- one of tho ocean Fm'uno smiled upon tho voyage. No Occident occurred lo creole confusion, and ; W. would have Imo* truly happy, bed Florence N. stood with him upon lire vessel s do k ond will, him admired the sublimity, iho grandeur of he mighty deep-, but poor fellow, bo thought of her and of tho owoel 'cottage whom aha dwe t, unti ho was half mad with himself for having left h °Two weeks had glided op, and wero lost In the ocean of olejr.ity, era Charles arrived at Ms desti nation. Soon after his arrival, ho sal down and wrote lo his parents, also addressing a otter to Florence-, ami day after day did ho oogorly await Iho ramming answer. At last it came, and ha wna cratiiloa to learn that Ills patents worn well, K. delighted with tho nows from Florence She was in perfect health, and what more could hi hero desired 1 Tho reader would say. "1 o sea Flotonoo.” Well, wo think so, too. j Chatloa prospered in his business, and gained ilm confidence of lltoao wish whom ha associated, ind aa tl.o lima draw nigh for hie return, they gave him many lokena of their caloom, nod wished him " hcwnlid I am.” said Charlaa W . \io traiod Upon tho “cradle of th# deep.” They X'n apoak of homo, and 1 have hoard my dear H over iq,hutuble.' them’* no l''“ c, llko , . L.c.i vanrnfi towardathol placo, and | W.UWD that homo i. tho dec,oat -pat. after .wav tovrotde hie father's hottaa. * cfiatloc toon reached tho homo of Mo youth, and embraced his deaMnother and father. Flor- Moonlight Scene on Balt Lake. A Sharp Justice* ence was not there, else we opine that she would Captain tslanborry,'whllo uumylng Great Sail In one of iho remotest recesses or ihd “Mountain ha oh-H» r - d a ,T ilBt f!U ,f' • ... L » k ”. sometimes compelled by Iho beauty sod P is '?P' L ” ° f !!■"« reside. .o community Charles sal down and entertained his parents , -,, . , , J ; ,n winch there lives but one sohtnry Whig. All the with a recital of what ho had witnessed during his B randour of Iho scenery to turn from science to joe. rest belong to the unlcrrifiod Democracy, believing absence, and the night was far spent, ere that hap- following is ono of his descriptions: still that Gon. Jackson is President of the U. Slates, py family retired, to find in “Tired Nature’s sweet “ The evening was mild and bland, and the scone and voting for him once i'n four years. Well, this restbrer,” 6 peaceful repose. ~ I around us was ono of exciting interest. At our feci ” Idg h® 8 * for the last twenty years, it is said, hold The sun had not passed out from the eastern lon cnch e,do ,a * t,l ° wa,ora of the Great Salt Lake, d JO offico of Justice of the Peace in this community, hills, before Charles was up and dressed He wl,ich wo ,lad 80 l° n g and 80 ardently desired to oy a-sorl of common consent. Bulthis year politic ‘waited Imoailenllv until brenkfafti wno rnidu nn/t BCO ‘ They were clear and calm and slrolchcc for a! excitement being quite stirring, a project was .h.n .Kn^.r fi l'h3 i?o saTd SUh. I 1 '”, S °r" “f nd W ,° St ' Di , ro bofo r r ° “V" d K I'uZlZ?' °“ l ° f ° ir " ! °' pr «»T am ftnin/r in i ... distant only a few miles, an island arose from C’glu dag 10 a Democrat, * * «ti * Dp 0 1 ° 1 !f Col l ,B ? Shai * * ’ w,t |j hundred to one thousand feel in height, whilo in ihe 0n 1,10 dn y ° r die election, Iho people assembled , . , mother, but Charles was oIT, and distance other and larger ones shot up from the las. nnd die voting commenced. The election was held wnen she looked out at the 111110 gale, ho had cm of the waters, their summits appearing to roich In an old log distillery, and the ballot box. was a turned Irom the beaten path, and was lost to her the clouds. On (ho West appeared several dark largo gourd. The opposing candidate wus the own v,evv* i spots resembling other islands, bul the dreamy In- l or of die distillery, and there was whiskey enough Charles arrived in good time at the gale of the collage, we say In good lime, because Florence stood in (ho door of Iho collage, feeding a lew chickens. Hearing a slight noise al the gale, she looked up, and Ihe food, lo the grcal delight of the little fowls, dropped from her hands as she ran to hail her lover. Ii wore useless to attempt a description of the scene thatensued. Tears ofjoy flowed abundant ly, and the old widow, Mrs. Norton, came out and shared in the general happiness. i One week had not passed away, before Norton’s cottage was filled with an interesting company. Charles and Florence were about lo be joined in holy wedlock, and as they stood up before the vil lage curate, many were the benisons invoked upon them by the admiring assembly ; and when those solemn words, “I pronounce you man and wife— those whom God hath joined together let no man put assunder,” were spoken, ihe villagers cron ded about the lovely couple, and wished them much joy. 'i'lio old widow pm her hands upon their heads and blessed them, and so did the father and mother of Charles. The father wished him to bring his bride and her aged mother to his own home, but the old widow shook her head, and Charles determined to make Norton’s cottage his home, (or he told Florence that there she had pro | mised to bo his, and ihero was the promise fulfilled. The Rng-Piekcn and Bone Culhcrcrs of Sew York, The deeper ono descend# in t!io gradation of social position in this city, ilio moru iippuont imw '< «»<- come that “ono hit If of tlio world don’t know how the other half live.’ Tho bono and rug g i therers , answering lo the *Chill*>ntors* of Paris—arc almost exclusively Germans, and aro mostly congregated on the Eastern side of the city, and from their clannish disposition, peculiarity of language and habits, fuim communities of'colonies'us distinct ns (hough no other surrounded them. Withdrawn from inter' course with their fellow men, they only emerge w'nli their hooks and pokers, to add lo their filthy accu mulations. Under tho escort of Capt. Squires, of tho 11 lit police district, wo were favored wilhn glimpse of "real life” among the degraded creatures. For dwellings, they generally select such ns are constructed for the accommodation of numerous families under a single roof. These are put up very slightly, at a small expense, and tho revenues nccru tng lo the owners, from rents, form a large percent age on the capital invested. Ono structure on Third Street, owned hy a late Slate Senator, is calculated lo yield a monthly income of SIGB, equal to 92 UIG per annum. It is separated in the rear by a court from another building of the some dcscrip'ion, yield Ing nearly the some amount of revenue. Eicli floor forms twelve appurtmenls, filled by ns many famil ies. each of which nava fin fiflwftd fiQ Sfi nor monil* , according lo the loc ilion. ilioro is no pecuniary | motive for pulling op bouses of any oilier descript* ion in Ibis locality. Though they ore often filthy in the buildings of a better quality would bo filled by the same occupants, with the same habits. About daylight Iho colonies are in motion, and (ho able bodied, equipped with baskets and pokers, sally forth, each emulous to anticipate Iho rest in reaching the field of gain. Sometimes tho city is partitioned off inlo districts, and it is as much n trespass to overstep the boundaries assigned, as for a fire engine to run out of its district. A few, more favored Ilian tlie rcsl, have carts with which to col 1.-cl the refuse and offal of kitchens and butter shops, and the wife and a good dog, well horncscd, exert themselves in concert, in urging it forward. At the close of the day. when tho circuit has been com pleted, (ho boskets, bags, and carts are emptied, and a pile formed of their controls. The latter arc then carefully sorted, ond generally afford, aside from the rags and bones, both fond and fuel. 1 lie rags arc sold lo shops adjacent, for two cents a pound for cotton and linen, mui sometimes less for woolen, , suitable for carpets. The bones arc sold for thirty , cents a bushel, after having been well scraped and boiled, lo secure the nulurious portions for fond.— Tho bones from the gutter, after being washed, suf fice to provide for the necessities ofthe family P™Pj er, including the canine dependencies. The food and fuel thus secured are tho emoluments received, over ond above the income from bones end rags, end ore incidental lo the main purpose. Iho processes rendered necessary by the transaction of o business so various, all conducted In the oppartmonl used a« kitchen, bed room, sitting and store room—imparts a peculiar odor to the atmosphere, discernible at some distance. It con easily bo Imagined that llio uncleanly mode of living thus described, with un suitable food, ond contraclcd and ill ventilated op- ( parlmcnls, arc not promolivo of health. 1 ho accordingly, in past years, made fearful havoc among ■ those people. - . ! Notwithstanding the cxlromo degradation ol iho Gorman rng pickers, they appear happy, and exhibit no signs of discontent. With many, the Western ; Stales Is tho promised land, and every effort is inido lo accumulate sufficient funds to enable ihem to cm-; igrato. A colony of three hundred persons Is men tioned, which occupied a single basement lust year, living promiscuously together with a common bono heap, to which all contributed, and from which was derived a pottlon uf their sustenance. Though scorn ing to bo In utter destitution, they nil started Lo the West, lost Spring, to settle on farms. Snow storms arc among tho worst calamines tha can bofal the rug picker, as his means of livelihood are placed beyond his roach. In such emergences the girls turn out cn masse to sweep the street eras sings, asking each passenger for a penny, and three ■ nr four shilling* per day ore often thus realized, per ( head. A mild winter like the present is a blessing they can easily appreciate. . .1 Tho youth, both males ond females, sro marked ( by an unnatural precocity, resulting partly from the , early ago at which they arc compelled to assist in , gaining a livelihood, qnd partly from their addicted ness to vice. Though young In years many of thorn ] aro adepts in vice. Destitution gives temp anon an unwonted power, and they oarly learn lo yield to it. It is gratifying to know that some benevolent and philanthropic Individuals nro Interesting themselves n behalf of this wretched and long pegloclcd popu. : Inlion. A mission, established by tho Mercer street Presbyterian Church, has been fur some time In op. oration In Avenue D.. and other p ans are on fool, having in view tho intellectual and moral benefit of these people, and others like them. Among other things, a Sabbath school for boys has been establish, od. at which IVom 130 to 200 boys lisvo boon In at. tendance. Judge Mason superintends It personally, and there is much In tho of an enoourag- is ono of Iho few police officers who have interested themselves In movement* of lu* kind, though their peculiar duties them. In nipuy respects, lo oo T™* 0 ull? a klnS efforts. It !• now contemplated to establish a kind of work house, In which boys may bo kept fro'" Idleness, and hoallhfbl instructions.and dosoipHno be admiiiistered.—iy-Yi Times, PcBTUUKV.—An article llial indolent young ladle* ranko ui* of If aupply lb« P taM ° r Wttl ’ r #nd BOi P* ** OUR COUNTRY—MAT IT ALWAYS BE RIGHT,—BUT RIOHT.OR WRONG, OUR COUNTRY.” CARLISLE, PA., tfHURSDAY, MAY 5, 1853. ..ruling ou.w -.—jus, bul the dreamy htzo, ■ /i“ |,u . r, • r . hovering over this still and solitary eoa, thro* its 01 ’ lho prom’isos lor them all to swim in. hove done the tilings for which ho is thus cursed dim, uncertain veil over the more distant fcaturci of] Tho Squire was early on lho ground to wnlch lho P' h,s race, but by the power with whifch he was the landscape, and prevented lho eye from seeing I proceedings. I!o came on the ground barefooted,) endowed. Haynau, then, was but an exponenlof any object with distinctness, while it half revealed I Bnd unincumbered with any other garments than his a system—-a necessity of the remorseless purpose tho whole, leaving ample scope for tho irnagiootUn I#hlrl1 #hlrl am * pantaloons. of the Austrian throne. A creature of European of the beholder. The stillness of the grave seemed l A^lor eyeing the proceedings far some lime in si- despotism, ho is hut o prominent illustration of U* I to pervade both oir and water, and excepting hero l enc ®« ho roso up and luld the crowd thai'ho wanted real character. Ahd while the ghost of Haynau | and there a solitary wild duck ’ floating'*motionless ( lo them a sliort speech. ‘Agreed,* said they 1 passed by, the liberal and enlightened “people” of on the bosom of the lake, not a Jiving tiling was to accordingly mounted a whiskey barrel and Europe and America will lavish their Indignation bo seen. The night proved perfectly serene, and the COl ?2 n, , ncct *. : . in vain, if they forget that the spirit which anima* young moon shod its tremulous lig'hl upon a sea of * fclow citizens :—I vo been looking on here, and Je j iho dead is still living—active, earnest, reao -1 profound and unbroken silence. Inm surprised lo I« c plainly what’s going onihcre. Fellow citizens l u i e , and all unchanged—upon lho thrones of Ru find, although >a near a body of Iho oallo.l water, ' b ™» 1 ° r >•>» p »‘S" r lwr « r " r 11,0 ropo lo this day. Atislrltt, of whom Haynao woo none of Utttl focling which is olivayti ottporioncod I" '" d “ B ood , m!,n r ”L yi !“ Jjj 10 " bul the most faithful and devoted servant, stands when in tlio vicinity of lho ocean. Tho blank and »vo B tvcd you from gotn lo iito Ponttenllary. and tho head of tiie svtlom* Riislninnl bo Rns.in naked shores, without a single tree to relievo the now you are trying lo turn mo out of office. Bull J* h ead 0 J ,e J-wm, sustained by Russia, eve presented a picture so different from what I had j° fll w#n * lo l °h y° u ono thing—l’ve got the Con- ,^ e - /Zar ’ l * lo exercise of his accustomed pol pictured in my imagination of the beauties of this ■Btuiion and Laws of lho Slate of Tcnnossoo, and i £7- would share the spoil but evade the shame, far-famed spot that my disappointment was ox _ just ns sure os you turn mo out of office. 111 burn But this cannot bo.ho wbole monarchical sys ' lrcmc n 'em up—if I don’t, blame mo, and you may all go tern partakes in different degrees, of tho spun by ! ' 10 rum together." [which Haynau was moved to aciion; that spirit is j 1 The MORMONS, The effect of this speech woe tremendous, and lie herediinry and essentially so. It is modified by A problem of singular difficulty, and everyday was ro elected by a n overwhelming majority. j circumstances, restrained by civilization, and dis-j growing more and more prolontous—than which, if Tho Exooutf on of Major Amir.. j gttised by policy. Dot lo what extent soever it wo except Airman Slavery, uouo la more difficult of T |, c pr ,„ oi „,| „ ulld offiocr , who ... constantly ! al “"f lilDo bo "onstdored necessary lo in : solnllun —la rising in tlio dl.lant Wont, bcloto tho in tho room with tho prisoner, relates ihol when Iho Volvo Its oharac-lor and resources, there la not a Amtrican Government and people. Ere long they hour of lira execution wait announced to him in lho i monarchy in lho world, not a throne or system . will have lo grapple with it. Whether it can bo morning, ho received It without emotion, and while 1 temporal or opinion!—resting upon other basts peaceably soiled Uto future alone can tell. a H proscn | , vcro „(T e clcd with silent gloom, bo tc. ' than Ills popular independence, bul lo that extent I A new territory carved out of tlio recent conquests uined a linn counlcnonco, with calmness and com - 1 will do it. 1 from Mexico, stretching from the summit oi the p D aurc of mind- Observing his servant enter lho I Some of our Blalesmcn ocrn>innnlly entertain . Rocky Mountains un the R ist, thirteen roum i„ icars, he exclaimed. “Leave me (ill you can | the public with encomiums upon ilu* British gov-1 degrees of longitude, to the land of gold.. A branch 6 i, ovv yourself moro manly." His breakfast being (Tninin nr m Aug-’ !of the Indian family, the Pah Utahs—roamed its - onl lo f rom t i lo nfiipont-vi • r“'W T ’ urtUYittrais good in tiniuin nr m aug , prairies amU«Hcd it ns ihcir own. But a now trii- 111 mTf°avT 1 " 9 confinement. [ tr in, \vb may wisely appropriate; hut with mir ex-, , ...j -x.x.l rrom oiato to Stale, Hoeing, before |, e par tuok'or it as usual; and, having shaved and |p Pr j onrPi W o shall at this age nf our history find on indignant people, frofff Ohio, from Missoni i, and dressed himself, he placed his hat .on the table, am) , |j lt ] e to n ,j m , r/ » j n the policy of pit her. In Austria Illinois struggling with cold nnd hunger, and on- ohcarlully said lo the guard officers. “I am ready nt j wf} j )aVQ l[|fi nvowr( j ahsnlmist, and the ral.mllnsa ' countering the most fearful hardships nnd privations, t uny moment, gonllomcn, lo wail on you." The fa- j.j Qt j n K ntr | an ,J « 0 fiave lho ambidextrous ' daring the ferocious savages that dwelt along their lQ | | lour having arrived, a Urge detachment of troops , nrchlßt u " d l 0 , hfl practice of a two fold I ~01110, and drugging slowly olong their children, wc[o paraded, and on ; Imiuonso ooncoi.r.o of pen,,lc j „ r „|,, !Bin „ Iffiornhsm, yet hnlding power goods nnd domestic implements, nl length make Q9Beill bled ; almost all our general nnd fic.d .ifficcrs, I _} nn „ nfl B i lft darns Thev are lln-ir tedious way to the homo of the Utahs; and ClC( .pling his excellency and his staff, were present P ■_ 'i,.r rp J. ln Itnviog.o. Mu, t.o doubt supposed, resehod tho; 0 „ „ P or ,/ bach . mE | on eb„ly end gloom pervaded .11 »l>k" ««»» '" b J H'« "'"'■.’P''' “'"if™ '‘°’ ■ .oi.tcd .pot, .O for Irom oil orgtimxod society Ihul rnn Us —lho scone woo olfeoMog nnd owl'ul. Umes, sml both Imvß cptmUy belmycd llm tltspo-1 Jlhcy would be free from disturbances for many.i j waa bo near during the solemn march to the I Biunn to exnit It to excess, ns occasion demanded. ; 1 m-ny years, they sci themselves down in the Valloy fatul snot, as lo observe every moment and partial- [That the prar.Uce of F.nglund is in many things, jof the Jordan —ln li)o “land of the 11 oncy Deo"— | p ulo , u c vcry emotion which tho melancholy seme governed by it to this day. ta apparent lo nil who I plant llicir obsurlHkllh and begin ajiowr nation.— j wnfl calculated to produce. Major Andre walked are familiar with the entrant history of that enun j Some six years have since elapsed; and the census f rom ( | lo fi tone house in which ho had been confined iry, at homo and abroad. And its humiliating in |of iho Ureal Silt Luke City probably enumerates at I between two of our subaltern officers, arm in arm; (Inence lho lower classes of life. In ' diiti day. some forty or fifty thousand people—while | t j lo C y CB 0 f iho immense multitude wore fixed on him. ,j nC( J j| deecends from class to class, In porcoptlble lin other pirts of the world, two hundred and fifty r j B i n g snporior lo the font of death, appeared gradation, and all are subject to it, in degree, ac ! 1 hmisnnd more embrace iho Mormon Lith. In this ■ QB jf conB cious of the dignified deportment which ho c or djng lo position. A writer, Moran, of Phila far off wilderness, ho recently known only lo lho ■ dlspljycd. Ho betrayed no want of fortitude 5 but d,.|phid, in a work illustrative of English society, moccasin, the arts arc floui ishing in a high degree. ro iuim'd a complacent smile on his countenance, and ( | IR result of a Idle Kuropean lour, aava of the rural Woolen factories, lo be supplied by fleeces from the l politely bowed to several gentlemen whom ho know, c j agg . Jordan valley-sugar manufactories, to bo fed with whlc , l W(|B respectfully returned. It was hie earnest ..ciowniahnpas ari ,i stupidity are tho natural ro beets potteries and cutlery cslabl.shmcnls, send dcsirc Io bc photi Hi being the mode of death most , f the BoC]al nn(l po | lUc al condition of the ■ their hum through the nstunished land. No such conformable lo the frdings of a military man and nom ,Uun„ n( RnvWk-aarUalflP" V noise did it expect to hoar for Inlf a " ; ;nin. -- Uio <t l»«j«o that jiU Mto of s conlcmplalod university L ia tflroady laid out suddenly m view of the gallows, ho involuntarily t [ on 09 but liillohslter than swins, so long will nnd enclosed School bouses arc springing up, and B turte<l birk, ond made n pause. ‘'Why this onto- 'ho farm hands of Great Britain bo hold in their arc sutM'hed w tth competent tcach-rs from a central i lo n. sir 7siid un officer by bis side. Instnnllvro- present condition. Normal School, (I ig Inl io prep 1 tut inns are in pro covering 'ns com pose ore ho said, ‘ 1 amrconcilcdto And ngnin, speaking >f I lip demoralized condl (rrcss lo build up a Temple, which is intended lo m y dt-aib. bul I doiest tho mode.* lion of the operatives of Liverpool and Manches s'lrniss every ousting nr historic structure in spten- VVlnlc wailing and standing near the gallows, 1 ter, ItP says: ] dor and magnitude. 'l'ho city is Ia id out on ascl le observed simie degroo of trepidation —pi icing hi* “'Hie poor arn a Gerv ili 1 , crouching race to their 1 of m igntficcnl proportions, lo winch, hitherto, iho *f HO i on n sfone, and rolling it over, and choking in employers, or mrufer.l, as they call ihntn; and the! world lias been « stranger —a scale corresponding |us thro >l, as »f attempting to awaliow. Bo soon. jr rpa tGf part nf the grnornlion just arrived at malu with the breadth oftorritory on whoso bosom they ! | loW cvrr, •* lie perceived that things woro in rondi. ['jjy aro indilfttrenlly eduenied. numbers of them , dwell—corresponding with their expeditions of ncß s, be stepped quickly into the wagon ; nnd at this bcino wnahln to road or write. Their leisure hours growth, ond compared wilh which Iho narrow aven-1 moment hn appeared to slirink; bul. instantly ©leva- jj fo 7 aB9C( j al tllo a le-liouses, and it is not unusual ties of modern and nnctcnl cities, arc but mere m «lh-1 ting Ins bed with fi.innass.ho said It will bo a , 0 gpo w „ mon an(l mon silling together in those ormlical lines—already three miles in breadth and momentary ping;’ nnd taking from his pocket two o • in n four in length, its streets arc regularly diagramed. w | lU . lundkcrclucrs. the provost marshal with one I w , h » t h> , 9pd , hro h England.however oovl, vein rod. wide, will. ..do walk, of twenty | OMC |, P ,,,,„„cd 1... orn.., and will. M.o 0.1. e . tho | u! ilel | lol[l , l | lo | m f ce i overv hluok forty rods .qu.iro, conltunlog o.ptil taking ofT 111. lint nnd .lock, brtndigod i.asinj, . k. il,i, nhinel scr. I„°. ofonJcro ond. quarter ..oil. and ovory .one- hi . 0 „„ t ,c, will, pc,fool C.rmnc.., which mol.ed l*? r "er a P' b » 1 . And Is, bls ” b "" raenl oldiood by law lo rotroat livonly fool from tlio Uiojiciirl. and nvui.loncd lho cliecko, not only of In. ' 110 slal( ' "f b " P P" 1 - 11 ml no ™„. ™o„, lino, in in iko room for a dclmhlfol margin of ofMto ll.rong of .pocUlor.. The ropo lho monorchiool .y.lem-lhcoMolopCP or a power shrukberv and trees. A perennial stream flows being appended to the gallows, ho slipped the nooso lomporal or spiritual, one or bolh, absolute and through lho city, and pours its pure waters down over bis bead, and adjusted it lo his nock without arbitrary, qb it Is over the mind, if not entirely so both sides of every street, and carries irrigation lo QS Bi»tincc of the executioner. Colonel Scammel over the person of lho subject wielded by lahablo their bounteous gardens. A wtfrm spring'bubbles no w informed him that ho hod nn opportunity lo men. nnd directed by human ambition, from the mminlains. nnd following pipes reaches a Bpo ak. if ho desired it. lie raised the hankcrchlcf Monarchy is lho Haynau of lho world. And mibiio bathing house. A roll of exuberant product. f bi., eyes and s»id,“l t>rny you Vo kont me wt\- W eAded Xo Cbtttob,iiroapon- \ i ivcncss slrcicfics around tliom. Compariiivcly little ness that \ tpocl my fate like a bravo man !” The 6 ,b| o power over lho bodies and minds—aye, the lioilotion 14 necessary from J/iO band of-man.l» botngny* remorctl from orlder him, ho woo vef y aou fo 0 f men—/* tbomonolrouo offspring of j bring It* groins and frail* to perfection nnd matu- BU( , P cndod and instantly expired,— Chamber a Kfpos l}jo un j, n j| oW ed union. Education, knowledge, rlty. Twenty miles to the north weal slumber the' Uory. _ light, truth, and iho energy of lho popular will,, | heavy waters of tho great S.*lt Luke. Ibis vast A Dcaailful Institution, aro slowly but surely involving on antagonism i body of lho purest brine—so denaly impregnated whjpl) gha ,| n f t | ma ( C |y triumph undor tho benign ib.il men cannot sink in it. If they iry-hlls a basin jnfll) ences of “lho falhorhood of (»od, ond the of thirty by seventy miles, and will, doubt css bo brotherhood of man.”— Uallimorc Sun. tho veeno of lho oxhaustlcsa salt manufacture for those future generations that will inhabit the Im mense domain between the Rocky Mountains ond the Sea. Already a U. Slates mail route roaches from this city to San Diego on lho Pacific coast, near which tho Salt L ike Mormons have, thus early, established a colony. Other ond out post settlement* arc planting around them, on the*Wobor ond the Timpanngoos. Mormon mifialonanos are pronely-, linn ,),o world, and converging their converts lo the city of Utah. Tho unconquerable mountains o I Wales are sending their hardy sons to preach and oroclico lho Mormon ctcod in the Wcslorn World. Ami hors, between Mm Rooky Mounlolno ond 11.0 Siorro Nevada, over cloven hundred mile, from Son Fr.noi.oo, nnd nbmil Iwo Miouoood four hundred mile, from Mm oily ofNow York,rapidly B rnw.lln. incipient ooramunlly-bound together by » burning onMiti.io.nl ond a common f.llb, onmp.olod by per .ociillng., wedded by Mm nceewily of eelf support ond oolf defenoo, —ito founder n oot, .ndjtlo Diblo o MmA-ono nf Mm .irttngo.l phonomono to wli.oh | llm pro.onl nr any ago, liao given birtb. Ihw for WHO it from llm thought, of Mm mlnl.lor, Soli mon Spalding, when at Cliorry VMloy, In Non, York, ho compnood bl.lm.gln.ty ...lory polled M.o -M oo.i .oripl Found,” ll.al it would bo .oiled by nn gnornnl and tniMilro. drunkard, proclaimed to have boon on. graven on golden ~Into., booo.no lho Soitplnro of o Sow and nuroori.no .oot-m thirty yo.r. trull 800 - 000 zealots in its wako—count Its worshippers in England. Germany. Sweden. In the mountain (ml of Wale, in Normandy, lho East Indtao and lho S.mdwicli 1.10. —end found . grout City ond Stole in that Territory, which at tho time ho wrolo, the fool of white mon novor trod. Tho President of n Utibolinß eooioly out West lately decided (lint 11.0 “milk of human kindness literally meant milk punch with a litllo nutmeg in It. ‘ , If yon wish to make a good looking girl lakoto intellectual putaulls, push her down alatra eomo day and break her noso. Beauty 18 n allocking enemy to hooks, and has no tnoro mala for study than it has for wrinkles nnd cow-hide hoots. As a general thing, girls don’t take to Algebra till hoautc ceaso to take to litem. Friendship is » sweet attraction of tho heart to wards tho merit wo esteem, or the perfection wo admire, nnd produces a mutual Inclination between two or more persons, to promote each others into resta, knowledge,.virtue and Itapplpess, , DevoTiox.— Standing up to your knees In slttsl alnglng eongs to a bed room window. Wo wit nessed such a scene lately. And wlial is that beautiful institution 7 the most bo mifnl of nil noni.il contrivances ? Ou* answer Is The Family ! To our mini), Micro is nothing in tbo universe, not oven llio gorgeous planetary system, which boars more distinctly the divine impress, than iho Family Arrangement. And in truth it is noth jog less than a divine contrivance. God lias chosen that the whole race should bo di vidod into so many little communities, each of which i la under the suporinlcndunco and government of its I plural head, and all its members bound together by the tics of nalnral sympathy and affection. In or. I dor to do this, wo ore brought into the world help loss' and dependent upon parental care; nut created I in a condition of solitary independence, but so that 1 opr very birth Is a bond of mutual interest and on j dcarment, and a band of friends meet us at the very entrance upon life. The parent ia invested with absolute authority but this authority is guarded from becoming orbi Itry and harsh by being tempered with love. In every parent’s heart is implanted a love for bis off. spring, whloh insuics lender treatment. rhongh the parent mqy never have loved a child before, the moment bia own child ia laid in hl» bosom, a foun tain of affection ib felt gushing up toward# H • An. this lovn is disinterested, being ifro-peclivo of nl considerations of personal profit and advantage. and contemplating only the happiness and oomforl of his tho guidance of paternal eulhorily and lovo the ehildrfrows, and its heart yields in return, revorenoo, submission, lovo to tbo parontv. In pro. oce. ofllme, brolbor. and .later. "re added to tiro family group, and now offoctions ore called forth all '.round ll>" oirolo. Al fi "‘ lhl * ‘'"T 1 * " 11,0 wU ?. IO . world lo H« momboro, bul wbon Iho proper lonli m.nl. are Imbibed, .ltd lb. right .(Toollon. ore eg low in tbo boßoma, limy roneb out and attach thorn- Bolvo. to neighbor., friend., countrymen. Homo baa oduoalod for wld.r fluid* of tbooabl nodl action and from Ilia bn.am of familial onmo forth Iho neighbor, tbo citizen, Ilia patriot, llio pbilanlbroplal,|lbo Cli. a llan All oilier encial intoroala depend upon tbo famllv as the stream depends upon the fountain, and as tbo cbnraclot of tbo one, «o wi.ll bo Ilia doo. snob .lowa of tbo wiadoin, bonllly, dlgblly' and utility of the family. Id not our read.™ bo Bprptlaod or weary if «» often dvvoll upon tbo theme, und .trim oaofully nor miaaion a. od or of n Family Companion. Wo loro tbo family , tbo '"'J namn of homo worm, our blood, and wo lona lo .on all our follow men appreciating till. 11. no and blcaaod Inalllulion, and helping In makei It ivl at God intended it altuold bc-tbo nuraory of all that la good, and nnbKjtml glnrlona Ip liiinninUy, Tbo Melhodiilo of Uil* country hara built oliufolr ea nearly Vt tbo raft of ooa per week, during tb» olghtynivon year, of Ibelr cil.lono. aa a dcnomlnk Upn. HayDQo and (lie European System. Haynau is dead, and his perturbed ghost seems to bo making the tour of the civilized earth, af flicted by the execrations of humanity upon every side. Haynau, a name v that has of late acquired a featfol notoriety in Europe and America; desig nating a wretch foredoomed to ignominy and scorn and death—forbidden to conceal from the living! victim the fate which awaits him at the hands of posterity. Haynau, the cold blooded minion of power, whose name is written in blood all over the Austrian dominions; whose devilish deeds are festering still about the Austrian throne; and whoso infamy will be a cherished legacy with the Hun* garian people throughout,all time Yet Haynau was but one man. WORK! WORK » » Yos.yonngmun. work. Work oarcslly, determin edly, biavuly. li is the only way to gel along m lliifl rough and tumble world. Who in it Hint gets station, honor, emoluments—who occupies the high and golden places m every community 7 The worker of course. It couldn’t bo otherwise from the nature of things. ..... , That man don't work 7 Who is ho 7 Almost the shadow of nothing—loss than a cypher, a mere bond stone on tbo neck of humanity. Mon of sense shun him. Women of brains col biro. Society—the vital and solid part of It—jjlvca bun Us hardest kick, snd properly too, the man Hint won't work nos no right to osk the good will or word of any one, not a bill of it—not duo. Wltoro would l»*va b#oo your Franklins, your Washingtons, and your Tullons, your Whitneys vour Ducons and Newtons, nnd La Places, Hum boldls and Morses? Whore a host of kindred worth ies whoso names are enrolled on the imperishable column of fame, if they hod not tmled and worked 7 j Never one should wr It ivo had They worked slur- ( dily, manfully, hopefully, courageously ; and to day science, government, philosophy shed on the world n I ighl and warmth us gomnl us wonderful. Young man. who knows but you may do as much 1 Every ouo has unlimited enpneitios planted within him. Work will bring them out. Who knows but a Franklin lives in your brain? Try and- soo— Work, dig. struggle, reach and push it. You eon do it. Will you I Yes, then work. Tho following description of a good wife is giion ( by a dawn coaler : “She hutln’l no ear for nimif, Snin, but alio hnd a cuultil oyo for dirt, nnd, with poor fuilia, that « much boiler. No mun never Boed «• much dirt in my ; house oe a Hy could’nl brnah off with hie wings.— Bunion gala may boast of their aplnnlle and Omit 1 irviaro. and eyaUlion aira, and their cars for muiic, Lul give mo tho gal that hae on oyo fur dirt} ebo e tho gal for my money.” Emcrot orCuißAcrita.— I lovo the energy that lasta until tho end. There I* something nobfo and dignified in It. Tho man that poaacaaca such a Ire 1 ofcharaclor muat bo roapeotod, when hla energy ia employed in a good and worthy euuao 5 and when the biiev mind alnlia in it* louden aluop. aoionoo ahull 1 wcc|. over departed glury, and racioly mourn an Irrcpurablo loaa. * “Bonos,” said Ginger, “which had* you rnljinr rido in—□ filngo coach or aleambonll "Why. ' !»d rather ildolnocoach, bokaae. if U upooia there * you but If de Bteambool |>low» op, tvhai le you I” m NAPLES AND ITS ENVIRON** Tho Gcautica of (bo Bay of frsplea hava not teas exaggerated. Tho harbor was tondh amallsr thia X expected to Hod it, and the shipping does not aq’nl that of Boblod cither io tho number or alxa of tho vessels. A considerable. pari of tbe bay ia 100. abtfe low to afford anchorage oven forkmall VesUbhUdll is occupied as tho rendezvous. of fishing boats and ploaiure boats, of which therb art many -fattadrUa lhaa clustered together. In its nisocitttoqs irJlb IB* commerce of (ho world, In sweep and aebth; and mojosly, in tho roll of mighty riven and Ibsirstrag* glo with ocean tides, in Us floating forest, badapkad with tho streamers of every htUon, in Us jptdplad islands adorned with palaces, and Us sptamdlog olliaa upon citlier shore or bay, Now York very .let aft ceeds the bay of Naples. Dot Now York bay Is not a UDll, ibk aH'whhbl take it io a glance; from no point can Us WboJaaedpa bo seen from tho Hook to (he Battery t it bta l|S upper and tower; it is broken by tho long roach of Staton lefand ; it is formed on the soils of lbs pkh« i orama rather than of tha picture—m bCaUtlfo! pl6^ I iur« ono that you can look upon ms m Akets frotn md | point and another and (hen examine it in'dstsl), with* out being oppressed with Us vaslnelb, and wlibbnl losing its diversities in (he sense of its oomploUnaas. In this respect—as a picturesque object lo,ba omd 1 ' snd enjoyed (ho Day of Naples altogether IrahiCtifids' that of New York,—largo enough to meet ths eotf* ception of fastness, swelling outward into the ass,' and, in that direction bounded only by iit faorlioo, and yet compact and definite enough to mast' Urt* eonsn of beauty. It has tbo further sdvsnUgh of being flanked on either hand by massive rootidulbft, while its islands give to it • pleasing variety with— ' out breaking its impression by their own promt* nonce. Me could not Tbo city, too, spreads gracefully around it Brooklyn. New York and Jersey City formed one continuous circuit*about tho harbor—and rtlsk OTit it in tiers of buildings crowned with foils end lowait. From whatever point it is from 'tbo bold promontory of Mlbcdud) oh the Wait or tbo smoking como of Vesuvius on (ha- HUst, ffMi' (bo castled heights of the city, from Ihk long pros** cnada (hat skirts its Western margin, or JrOtn ibfc f ‘ deck of the retiring steamer until it is sealed biblbfl the island of Capri, it is still tho same same plolnfsa* quo, bcoutifbl, imposing sheet of water aljlßOUrtfH iMtfl fldro 'shines, through an atmosphere of crystal purllr. From some points you Command st view at »nco of Vesuvius and of Misenum, with city and its suburbs girdling tho Intermediate bay and this coup dail of (ho Bay of Naples U the iQoet enchanting picture that immaglostloo DID SUggail or art portray. Tho diameter of the bay is about 19 milsi tod Id 'surrounded on throe sides by an amphUhealtd bf I hills which at either extremity shut down close ttpbti I the sea ; all along this range of hills oft the loner Of I Northern margin of the bay elrotobee (be city of | Naples, wiili its dependencies, covering on extent of S at least 13 miles and embracing • population of hsaf* Ily hair a million. Yet tho city proper Is ograptoilV built, and as in ail the Italian oitlei, Ilf population M \ su densely packed that it docs not appear to (ho tyt to compote bo nearly with Now York In Us census Tho street Toeing the harbor, free from >ll Iht nuisances common to report, broad, well-etaed, and in many parts adorned with elogmt buildings of • cream colored stone, is one of lbs most magnificent slreeis in the world. (lore is the foysl pilase/A building of good architectural proportions, moffttbtif 400 feet long, but so connected with it’ and with (M forts as to afford all requisite facilities fo*, event of . popular revolution. I« , . i? mo »wo prime ide>> oofenco and escape—the luxurious bollishment within only making It a more wearisome priannliousc. Every palace is a guard house sod % prison. But thin sea-bird palace at Naples, with all lie ad juncts of barracks and artillery, is a beautlflil object notwithstanding. All tho princial hotels arc boill along the same street, Toeing tho bay, and tbira too stretching for neatly ■ mile (bo along yratsr'e edge, ia the public promenade, wqll abided and adcXQod with statues and with cultivated flowers. But lb* beauty of Naples lies mainly upon this one atresia and upon two or three others In tbo suburbs. Tbs rest are narrow—many too narrow for sebiolse, and interrupted by flights of stops, they are noisome «Ub filth, and teeming with a shiftless population. Tbo bußiners streets are thronged with out door sstssmeo and mechanics, and in this luxurious climate tbs whole population seem to in tho open air. Gafsly* elegance, poverty, filth, activity and sloth here sxlst in constant juxtaposition.— lndtpendtnt, ' John,’ said a clergyman Co bit man, ‘ TOO iboobf become a toototallor, you have been bricking ag«lB»* • Do you never lake a wee drop yourself, minis ter 7" 1 Bui John, you must look at my circumstance# and yours.* . M * Very iruo, air,' sa\fl John; *\m\ can you lilt mi lioh’ ilia streets of Jeruialom were kept *o olsant* •No John, j" cannot taUthmt.' - - -r*r • 1 Well, sir, it was just bccauao every one kept hft own door clean. 1 Snooks possesses an inquiring mind— always wania lo know somclhmg about something. lie it al present prosecuting the Inquiry— ■ Who will honl in the treat human race V This is a question of groat Importance, and sboultf engage the allonlion of our scientific men. Two Dutchmen once got Into a dispute about the English language, each one contending that ha could command the host. They made a bet at length, aod appointed a judge lo decide— • Veil Chon,* said the first, ‘ did it rain to-morrow V • I Ueca It vaali,* said John. Waan*l tint judge In a quandary 7 A priest was called to pray over the barren fields of his parishioners. Wo passed from one cnclosars to another, and pronounced his bsocdlolloo, until hi came to a moat unpromising case. Ho survsysd its sterile seres in despair. n Ah !** said he, f> WetbreO' —no dm to pray her®—tills needs manure I Ike Marvel says, after hearing a dull sermoir preached by a dandy, ho asked a friend wbal ho thought of (ho sermon 7 Ho replied in his usual, quaint,queer stylo—“ if they go on preaching [bli w »y, the grass will soon bo kuco deep in hoaveu. A wicked wng of a lawyer,ln & country court,t** nci)Uy scandalized tho bench by putting the follow - I hit query to bis professional brethren Why I* Judtfo -- like necessity 7' The rooipberg pFibo bar proaont quickly answered,' because he MnoWe Ofr law.’ Tbo London T'imtt itatoi llio ealraordlnary ftet, 1 1, at nipoly Ovo out of every hundred letter* *Ot»l from the United Sluice to Ireland", contain ramitUo oca of money to pay tho paanga* of relative* to .Uu* country. A quaint old gont, who I* withal one of 6ur moil active, stirring men, hod a mao at work in hi* gar* den who waa quite tho reverse. • Mr. Jones,' said ho to him ono morning,* did you over boo a snail V ‘ Certainly,* **\d Jone*. ‘ IWJ. said iim old boy,*you mini have met him, tor you could never overtake hlm» > _ .A, distinguished writer ssys There is bat one. passngo hi llio Bible wham the girls are commandid to hiss llio men, ortd that Is tho golden rdlei Wbat suvover yo would that men should do unto you, dd, yo even so unlo them.’ . 1, - .11 If n man be gracious to strangers, It shoW* lie I*l a niii/cn of tho world, and that hU heart i* no Inr* Idik) ~„i -IT from other lands, but.a continent that join* thorn. * Hello I mister, have you golaOygriln 1,6 sell ‘No. Why do you *»k 1* ■’ • • Because I see you hayo a t«y Wry ’ il as 00 ME umt NO. 4s.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers