RAVEITEL WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXIX, NUMBER B.] PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY !MORNING Wit:a in Northern Central Railroad Ccnt pang's. Building, north-westcarncr Front and ,Walnut streets. Terms of Subscription tae Copy per annum.:! paid In advance. •• :I' not pold within three raantha tram commencement of the year, 200 Cc.ra.toss Ccsi:-3r.. Igo sabscriplion iceeived foe a less time than .ix months; and no wiper will be di-continued until all arreseagesure paid, unless at the option of the pub . sr her. Mr - Mosey may be remitted by mail attlmpublish ar•s risk. Rates of Advertising * square [G lines) one week, three weeks. 4 CaC.ll.llllCl•llllenflnSertiOn, 10 " 112:inesj one week. 50 tt three weeks, I. 00 41 0111 . 11 aulasequentinsertion, 25 L a rgeraattertisement-In proportion. Abend likrount will he made to quarterly,htilf• yearly or reßrly Ldvertisers,who are inrictlytonfinen to the IT iIIIRIIICO3 intrii. The Deacon's Masterpiece: Olt TITS IVONDERFL'L -ONI3-110SS-StIAY.,, DT OLIVET: 'Wti:NDELL lIOLSISI Have you heard of the wonderful omahosa-shay, That was Will in such a logical way It no, a hundred yearn to a day. And then, of a au 1110,11.-0. but slay, VII tell yon what happened without delay; Starling the parson into fits, Frightening people out of their wits,— HIVIC you ever heard of that, I so)? Seventeen hundred and fifty-five. Geergi us Second its was then alive,— n airy old drone from the German hive! That W 421 the year when Li-bon town Saw the earth open and gulp lier 110VVII. And nraddadn• army ryas done go brown, Left without n scalp to its crown. It was on the terriWo Earthquake day That the Deacon finished the one-Loss-sltny Now in building of chaises, I'll tell you what, There is always somewhere a weakest spoi., 7 - In hub, tire. fel'oe, in spring or [hill, In panel, or crossbar. or floor, or In screw. bolt. thoroughbrace.—lurking still Find it somewhere you must and will,— Above cir below, or within or without.— And that is tic reason, beyond a doubt, A chaise breaks down, bn doesn't wear out. But the Deacon swore (a• Deacon , : do %VIOL un "I dew vain " or an ••I tell yrou. - ) He would but4l one •hsy to heat tea• tnowu 'II' the keounty 'it' till the kentry raount'i It should be to built that it eati/dit' break d ,01+411 —"Fur." said the Deacon, •"t'- intality plain Thin the wenkes' place inns' ,tatt , the mraitt; 'a' the way t' fix it. at. I 111111111:1111, ouly je,t To make that I. nee ea won. ez the rest" So the 0.-neoll inquired of the village folic IVltere he could luta stn oug.e,t o.nk. That could Ibe -pint nor boa nor broke,— Th it was for .popes m d floor and sills; He sent for .aneeevoed to make the thibo; The cm chars were a -In, f‘oan the 5tr..1,01e.1 trees; The panels of whitewood. runt en:. like cheese, But itto. lice iron for thong like these; Tile Innths of logs from the -Settler's Ellum," Last of its tiniber.—they couldn't orb 'lent,— Never on axe bad .e., their clops. And the Wedge. heir ,rout between their lips, Their:Punt cods f.i/zled like eelery-ups; Step nod prop trll, bolt and screw, Sprung. tire. axle. and linchpin on, Steel of the fin , ot. bright annul bate; Thorouglihroee tluel: and wide; Boot. top. dasher, iron, tough old hide Found in the pit when the hunter fined. That WV, the way he - put her tlirough. , — , There!" sand the Deacon, ',mow she'd dew!" Do: I tell you, I rather cztte‘s SSe was :1 Wonder. and nothing less! Colt; prow Lines, beards turned gray, DenCOn nod denvolly.. , dropped away, Children and grand-children—where were they? Bat there stood the stout old one-lio,q-shay As [rean as oil Lisbon-earthquake-day! FavarracN acsnara,—d came and found The De.tecni. ina,terineee strong and sound Eighteen hundred ineren,ed ten:— "Ilahnsum kerridge they called it then. Eighteen hundred and twenty came;— Running an usual; ranch the sante. Thirty mind forty at IllSt arrive, And then came fifty and fifty-five. Pule of all we value here NVakee on the morn of its hundredth year Without bo It feeling and looking queer. In fart, there's nothing that keeps its youth, So far as I know, but a tree and truth. (This is a moral that runs at large; Take it.—You'ra welcome —Pio extra charge.) FIRST OP NOVIDSPER.—IIie eurthquakeLdny.— There Are traces of age in the one-Loss-shay, A general flavor of mid decay, But nothing focal a= one may any. There couldn't be,—for the Dencon's art Bad made it so like in every port That there wasn't a chance fur one to start. For the wheels were lust as strong us the Mills, And the floor wa+ jug a , . strong n•:be sills, And the pannelsjusi as strong as the floor, And tile whippletree neither ies , i nor snore, And the back eras-bar as strong as the fore, And sprung and axle and hub encore /Ind yet, as a whole, it as past a doubt /n another hour It will be worn out! Pint of November, 'fifty-liv e ! This monting the pa rson take< a drive. Now, small boy+, get out of the way! /fere comes the wonderful one•ho«-.hay, Prawn by a rat-tailed, ewe-necked bay. °iluddup!' said the parson.-01twent they. The parson was workinn bin Sunday's text,— nod got a fifthly. and stopped rrerplrxea ft; what the—ftleses-14,1S comur,r, next. 4% I/ at once the !tease mood still. Clove by the meet' s '-houve on the hill. e—First n shiver, and then a thrill, Then somrtlaum decidedly bite a spill,— And the parson was sitting upon n rock, half-past nine by the meet's -house Just the hour of the earthquake shock: ,--What do you think the pamon found, 'Wien he got up and stared around? The poor old dative in a heap or mound, As if it had been to the mill and emend! You see, of course. if you're not a dunce, Dow it went to pieces all at once,— All et once. and nothing Graz,— Just as bubbles do when tney burst. End of the wonderful one-hams-shay Logic is logic. That's all I say. bar"' wish to procure the Biography of Pollock," said a student to the bookseller at the corner of Water street, Boston.—"We have it not, sir," was the reply.—" Can you inform me where I can obtain it?"—"I can ikOt, sir; but I dare say you will find it in the 'Course of Time! " My godfather was a man in a thousand. He possessed an iron will and a degree of perseverance which impelled him having once resolved on a thing, to execute it at all hazards. Hiscareerwas cited generally as a wonderful example of luck; but the word "luck" ought never to have been used with respect to him, since no man ever owed less to mere good fortune than himself. He had worked his own way, literally by hair breadths at first: and I believe one of his grand elements of success was his determi nation never to owe to the aid of another what he could, by any amount of labor, ac complish himself. Self-dependence, perse verance, steady resolution and industry, were the various component parts of which my godfather's "luck" was made up. I can see this now I am old and grey; but who reasons thus on his eighth birth-day? I did not; but having heard the above abused term "lucky," so often applied to my god father, I regarded him as one favored by some good protecting genius, whose invisi ble hands removed everything calculated to obstruct success. ECIM $0 39 My godfather always dined at our house on my birth-day. On its eighth anniver sary he filled his usual place at the board, and to this day I can see him exactly as he looked then. His hair, white enough by nature, was powdered, and tied in a queue. He had a wide and also high forehead, with thick, snowy-white shaggy eye-brows over hanging such keen black eyes. His dress was always handsome; his shirt-frills like very snow-flakes, his htickles resplendent with diamonds. He dressed becomingly, because he considered that, like everything else, worth being done well if worth being done at all. On each succeeding birth-day especially, though not then alone, I received substantial proofs of his good will towards myself—always wonderfully appropriate, generally something I had actually longed for. Doubtless his keen appreciation of char acter and habits of observation would enable him to guess what .Would afford me most pleasure. I thought an invisible agent I need me, and reported accordingly. I therefore received his gifts with awe, and cherished them as I did no other of my early possessions. It was after dinner, then, on my eighth birth-day. I was full of wonder as to the corning present; for, contrary to usual cus tom, no outward visible sign, no parcel her. aided the gi t. "Has he," thought I, "can he have guessed what I so much wish for?" I My longing, be it known, was, that the se cret of his "luck" might be revealed to me. I could feel my heart throb, though my breath was almost suspended, a., in ! ance with his request, I went to his side.— "Francis," said he, "hold out your hand." I obeyed. Ire placed an antique guinea in the extended palm. “Francis, that guinea was given to me when I was eight years old. Had I not noticed the care you take of my gifts, I should riot, after preserving it more than half a century, now give it to you.— "Yes," ho said, "that guinea was the found atiou of my fortune. I had never before owned such - a sum when it came into my possession; but I determined to gain more. Some people," he added, "would call it a lucky guinea, and if it be, I am :atisfied to transfer it to you. May you be as prosper ous in your career as I have been, and from the same cause! Pray guard it carefully; and remember, as hang as you possess that you will never be in want of money." I did not see the stately smile on my godfather's face, or understand the laugh of my other elders at the old-fashioned com mon-place which concluded his harangue. I was absorbed in an awful feeling of re sponsibility—in the thought that my god father indeed possessed supernatural power, bad divined my wish, and not only revealed to me the secret of his "luck," but had placed in my hands the talisman which was also to secure my own. For many nights after I scarcely slept. I exulted in the ros session of my treasure; but it was with trembling, for if I should lose it! A cold perspiration covered me at the bare idea of such a calamity. I was sorely puzzled where to find a safe repository fur it. At !cog-till persuadedmy mother to make a little wash-leather bag with an outer covering of silk, in which 1 placed my guinea, and hung it round my neck by a black ribbon. Year after year did the feeling that its preservation was es ' sential to my well-being continue predomi nant; and lung after the gentle mother who smiled at my whim and humored it was dead, the guinea hung by the black ribbon in its usual place. My career at school and college proved successful; my tutors praised ray industry, fellow-students said I was the hardest reader in the University, my friends sang my praises as a genius, and I smiled, and played with the ribbon whence de pended my godfather's guinea. How could I be otherwise than fortunate? You may laugh and call this weakness, but it influ enced me; nevertheless I laughed also, and with good cause—l won. At twentythrce I left college, free. Free from all care for the morrow, since those who were "born before mu" had taken that upon themselves; free from control, since my guardian's juris diction ended at the usual time, and his death—for my godfather was the individual [Allantic Monthly gthttiints. My Godfather's Guinea. "NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 28, 1858. —happening soon a fter my majority. greatly increased my already abundant means. I bad been a great student; but now r re solved to see something of life; I would spend sometime in travel before settling down. But first I must go to see Dr. Carle ton, an old friend of my father's, resident in Derbyshire, whose eldest son bad just taken possession of my vacated rooms at Cambridge. Most studious men are awkward on en tering society—l was extremely so; but Mrs. Carleton proved my good genius, fn• she had the rare art of making all domesti cated under her roof feel at home. When I saw her, with her group of olive-branches and genial-hearted husband gathered round the hearth, I was a very boy again in my delight at forming one of the social party. Dr. Carleton's profession engaged much of of his time; but weariness or ennui was un known under the roof of Mrs. Carleton.— W ith her I was a lad; and On my return from a ramble, she invariably called for a relation of my doings, when forthwith I flung myself on tile rug at her feet, and gave a full and particular account. I ran sacked my memory to tunu , e "mamma," as I called her; and, amongst other things, gave her a halr-je , ting, hair-earnest, but wholly whimsical and itturginative, history of my godfather's guinea. She in turn told the doctor, and the same evening expressed a wish to see the talisman. I drew out the little case, still suspended; but that was nut enough, she must see the coin itself. I hes itated, but her merry laugh conquered; and after fifteen years' concealment the guinea again saw the light. I scarcely liked to see it in any hand but my own, though I was in a manner com pelled to submit; and it was examined, duly compared with a new one, and replaced in my hand just as a visitor entered. Next day, Dr. Carleton and I went for a long drive through the most charming part of that romantic district "the Iligh Peak," and combined the agreeable with the useful by calling on such of Carleton's patients no lay in our way. 'Wending homeward to wards evening, we stopped at the house of a gentleman on whom he had lately been in ttendenec; but the pati cm was emir:descent ; and the call—the most agreeable a doctor eau make, at least for the patient, and let us in charity hope fu• himself also—a friendly one. I awaited his return, sitting ill the gig; and feeling chilly, enveloped myself in the servant's cloak, byaccident brought with us. I was running over in my mind all the lovely bits or scenery I had passed through, when a smart tog at lay cloak aroused my; and a pretty damsel banded me up a glass of beer, accompanied by the whisper, "1 have brought you something to drink." I had the affair in a moment. The pluck at my cloak, and the verbal intimation that followed, convinced me I was mistaken fir the servant; so I determined tuba% e a laugh ut the expense of my generous Ilebe. I readily accepted the brimingcup, -0, thank you; I gust wanted such adraught, and lire lieve Providence has sent you with it, for I see you are an angel." She tried to nut 011 a frown, but the pretty face would not ac commodate itself to the needful lines and angles. She then looked up slyly in my face, pouted out her lips as far as a strug gling smile would permit, and replied.— ..1101d your bother, drink your beer; your master will behere in a minute." I readily complied with the first and most material of this advice; I drank the beer—no difficult task when arnan is thirsty and the draught good Derbyshire burnt:brewed; but hold my bother, I did not: on the contrary, no I re turned the glass I heaved a deep sigh, partly to revive suspended respiration after my draught, and partly—l like economy even in sighing—to express the state of my feel ings toward herself. I was sadly puzzled how to say something complimentary, not being used to that sort of timing, and at length blundered out amdrardly enough, "I wish I'd never seen you: I don't beliese shall ever be happy again; and if I'm not, won't you have something to answer fur, that's all." "How you talk!" answered she. "Why shouldn't you be happy? I've done nothing to hinder you." "Do you call it nothing to come giving a fellow beer just to steal his heart?" "You're wily- poking fun at me," was the reply; but her pretty coquetish air and con chins half smile, which, try as she would she sould not screw into a frown, convinced rue my compliments, though clumsily ex ecuted, were duly appreciated. "Now do," said 1, "be serious, and tell me if you have a sweetheart; and if not, if you think you could manage a little shop. To my fancy, you're just the right sort of article; for I know lots of customers would come for the sake of being waited on by such pretty smiling girl." Again she looked in my face, but this time as grave as a judge, and with an ex pression on her own of the most complete innocence and candor answered thoughtful ly, "Well, to be sure, there's Jim Allen has followed me this good while; but if I look at any body else he quarrels, and is always Raying he'll go 'lint for a soldier; so there's no depending—and—and—l always did think I should like to keep a shop." At this most critical moment a stop was heard and the noise sent off my fair enslaver with the speed of an antelope. Little was she, or for,tho matter of that was I, pro pared for the approaching denouement.— Carleton bad accepted for both of us an in- citation to dinner, which meal happened to be an utmally late, a , his friend: , had company. After the best toilet circumstances would permit, we entered the dining roost. Front my knowledge of our host's family habits, I felt sure of seeing my shopkeeper in per spective; and the first bustle of introduction over, I glanced round, and soon exught sight of her. Exactly opposite, still as a statue, her mouth open to no gre;.t width, the said feature being of most moderate dimensions, with her eyes round as bird's, she stood the picture of astonishment. In one respect she was unlike a statue, for she was as red as scarlet—face, neck and arms all in a glow. The instant she caught my amused look she busied her.•elf at the sideboard, and vouch safed no second glance. We stayed very late; and when about to depart, I went to ask front her a light for toy segar, taking the opportunity to slip a little present into her hand by way of atone ment for the ttick I had perpatrated,telling her in a quiet whisper the while, "It NVIII help to stuck the shop." At breakfast the nest merniar , I told the joke to Mrs. CarICIOII, who gma humoredly rated me fur cheating the damsel, though she laughed at the speedy discovery of my imposture. Two dayc afterward, in parking up tny goads and chatfles. pre imr.t kft y to icpinure, I missed tny gm:father's guinea. .1 ransackel every place: examine.] every article again and again; the ri1,11,11 aml cu-e were roumi my neck—the gaisra was vit.. At first I thought 1 . -c.C.irleton had c osarit ed to psse. , s herself of it, in onler to have a latigh at may discomfiture; but no she assured me she knew nothing of my lost tref sure. At this distance of time I can viva bow much 1 was affected by its distil:ram:We; than I Mi , ashamed to let it be known. I sat down on a portmanteau, and surveyed the test of my possessions vvitlt at species of calm dispair. I half expected they would vanish from hefore my eyes. Begin with your nursery-books, dear reader, and gaze in fancy on dery pic;ttr :if despair which your upward c ants: , f reading has presented to your spiritual visions. Fancy Mr'. Blue betu•d When 1.1,C1,100a Mihlf( l C come off the key—Little Red Riding 11::::d when she found the waif wa, not her atothiotLer.— Pooh; these :ilea mete notldng; _Vaddin, when hir. , lamp 55a. , gone, v..uld 1. twarcr the thing: btu I Crql;:ilt tn ()late , rig -t a ge. lie did not feel lii 110 , o!ntioo more than I ,11.1 the loss of that I . .taine.l. W.lll it I was a perfect Saza,ou of st tet,gth, ready for any tmdertal.,,ing; without it I was the hero shorn of his locks, and vonseopamitly powerless. "Absurd!" say. Well, it was. But it was tar pet absurdity; and which of you is without Otte? Who can look back and say Ire has not been at some pet iod of life in fluenced by a sitherstition equally I bels:we there are ICIC Who, segr e hh ig into the memories or Cady dap, cannot recall smite incident insignificant in itself which still retains the power iNflurntee their ac tions; or a sentence, tittered pet haps thought lessly enough, which po:tsesses at charm for them which only death Can dissolve. If the child lie indeed ft:Alter to the man, ao arc the imple., , ions received in early youth as a strong man to a puny child i n comparison with tho-c of a latter age; and I frankly confess my superstitious feeling with regard to the "lucky" (?) coin, increased tenfold after I had lost it, I declare I was not onebit surprised when on the morning fixed for my departure from Carleton's, I received news of a very seri ous change.of fortune. I expected a blow from some quarter and was almost:indifferent whence it should conic. Just after coining of age I placed in a certain individual unlimited confidence; and in additidn to that I trusted him with a sum amounting to many thousands or pounds.— The man was honest but imfortunate: and my one lost coin was immediately followed by all these thousands of his golden breth ren. So said a letter I received. It was e. great hut not a ruinous loss.— Strange it affected me lecs than the disap pearance of my paitilier's guinea. I con sidered it only as a beginning of my mis fortunes. I started fa• the continent two d ays a f ter leasing Derbyshire not in quite the same style I originally intended and very far front feeling in the same spirits. I left England at twenty-three; I was eight and thirty when I saw . it again. As to giving a detailed account of my ill luck during the. , c year , of wandering, it is more than I dare do. Imagine all the evil fortune you ever read of happening to a solitary wandering adrenturer,gmming table excepted—and you willha‘e about hit mine. I never did gamble. I felt too sure I could by no possibility win to risk my cash thus. I had a disappointment in love too, which I also attributed to the loss of the guinea.— Some of my friends sayitwas not the disap pearance of that coin. but of the number which followed, that did the mischief, and doomed me to old bachelorhood. Well. as I said. I returned to England: and though I knew . Carleton and hi. family had long since left Derby.liire, I felt a great longing to see it again. I resolved to go to the old place, take up ins abode at a country inn. anti indulge in long rambles as I had none fifteen years before. It tens dark when I desended from a stage coach at the hotel door, where, if I found the nrrangements to my liking I intended to take up my quarters, about four ram from the town were Carle- ton's family lived. Out,ide it was a cold evening in eally Spring;imidc a bright tire, jovial-looking landlord, and a smiling comely landlady. As the latter bustled about I could not help thinkingthere was something about her strangely familiar to memory; but I vainly turned over all the faces I ought to remember, andcertainly hers was uctatnong them. - arned, dined, and carefully praised the provisions and cookery to the landlady; the \vine I lauded in her husband's presence, thereby winning the hearts of both. Dinner past, I begged permission to sit in their parlor rather than my own apartnent, and invited the landlord's aid in consmning.ome of his excellent wine. Finally, I completed my conquest, by stating, that I never con sidered tea was tea unless poured out by female hands, and bogging the landlady to undertake that oilier Ibr me. Ilayin g thus got all in trim. I artfully al luded to the sign -board, and in le•s time than L shall be able to write it, I was 10 possessinn of the history of' its adoption.— could linrdly believe my "ears n9ucn the comely landlady gave an aecoutit of her baring fifteen years before received a guinea 21 ,, a pre , ent from a gentleman to 11 11 , 1:II sh e had given a ,g,lty-s of beer, mi•taltiag 16111 fit I)r. Carleton's groom. , SitiTive it to say, I heard the story I haie told ab ne, only she teas the recipient, I the giver of the guinea. I now recollected a hat for fifteen years had never entered my mind—that on receiving my g,otlfat her's guinea back front Mrs. Carleton, I .lid nttt at once replace it in the case, but retaihed it in my hand after the vl-itor's entrance, in a fit of ali , Price I had slit , iie.l it ittt , ) lily pocket, and thence tran , forted it to the damsel who brought fate the I)2er in the gloaming. '.after r got that guinea," said she. "I don't know how it Nvas, but I began to put a little money by. I sopr,, , e it starte. I no' like: for a servant .I..es'llt .lien get so much given her all at one... I told Jim— that i> toy ho,batl—altout it, and the joke the gentlemen played on me, pretending he wanted to marry toe and keep a chop,— Well, Jim nn. aq (fro—. tt , tltiag—he never could hear Inc tit look; the side any other 11111:1 NV;lq on; aml wltevoner v,e ii - agreed abmit the least trill.% he would :moor a , k Nvlten the tine gentleman was coin inz, to ,tart shoplteeping with me." “Don't you beliete her, sir," inte:Tosed the said .1 im. "She u•-ol to ‘ 1 ,00 1 ., an d torn up her nose at tar, besides flitting langiting with all the chape about, till :dm toniiy drose me crazy." "Do quiet now, and let me finish. At Im4 be »Imie no' iris;—he Si::' so jealous— and I declared whoever came. I would'nt marry dim. When he thought I was in earnest, and I would neither walk out with him nor let him come to sec ine, he got quite desperate, and one day he 'listed for a soldier, as he often threatened to do when I veNed him. I only meant to punish hint for being so jealous, and never dreamed he tvouV take on like that, and a fine way I was in when I knew. This was two years after I began to save. I had a tidy bit of ;mtey; for I had many a pre-eat after that fret—'the lucky guinea,' as I used to call it. I had lived four years in one place, and the mistress was very kind to her servant': sn, seeing me in troubleand fretting, she a•:ked me what was amiss. I told her: and she said, 'ICON Cr Mind; lie mu , t l,e booglit off.' She gate me a good talking to for teasing Jim; but she sew' I was sorely grieved, and she spoke to the master. Ire got to know all particulars for me, and all the family gave me something toward taking my sweetheart out of pawn, as they said.— Would you believe it, I had just enough and that guinea to spare! After that Jim and I got along well enough, and in time took this place, and got married. Jim said, though the guinea made us quarrel in a way, it had brought ns together better friends than ever: so we would keep it, and call our house the "Lucky Guinea." There WaS little more joking between the liu-band and wife, after which I asked if they still kept the guinea. "Yes," was the answer of my hostess; "and we shall live." From all that I heard I could draw lint one conclu•ion, viz: that I had transferred my godfather's gift and its accompanying luck to Jim Allen's "missis" fifteen years before. I was bewildereel at the whole con cern. That I should after this lapse of tune, and when all hopes of its recovery had long gone by, bear tidings of my trea sure, was to me little short of a miracle.- 1 sougot the privacy of my own room to think about. it. It was certainly fmtunate I had not told them of my former visit to this part of England, and I knew I could not be recognized: for not my own mother would have been able to trace any likeness between the pale student of twenty-three and the weather beaten v isage I now owned. But what need of concealment? Simply this; I was resolved to regain that guinea or peri , ll in the attempt. I could see mine host and his wife, in their way, attached as much importance to this as ei.er I hail done in mine, and would not part with it on any account. However, I argued thin.: vvlieii the coin left. my p os , es tion 1 never intended to bestow anything but simply a guihea: and having inadvertently transferred my luck along with it, I had a perfect right to reclaim the latter. It would take too long to tell how my stay in Derbyshire was prolonged from weeks to $.1,50 PER YEAR 121 ADVANCE; $2,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE months and how I listened to every word whiclr might tend to diseoser the hiding place of the treasure; or how I at length overheard a conversation between the hus band and wife which resealed the secret.— r had previously taken considerable pains to procure a guinea of as nearly as possible the same date, with the intention of substi tuting it fir its "lucky" brother when a fa vorable chance fur purloining the latter should present it-elf. But before this occurred I was placed in a tantalizing posi tion. My landlady being in an especial good humor one day, unlocked the old fash ioned bureau—her domestic hank—dreg oat what she called the "secret drawer," and unfolding a piece of paper, which, how ever, proved to be a bank note ten pound ,, „bowed me "my g , olisathor'sguibea. - I know it was the same front a yanicolar mark I had my-:elf maJe upon it. and had I only had the other in p reltet hate found little difilarilly in cfroning the eschange there and then; hut of cour,o, usual hi tht,e vats ti , Jl/tel to a rap had I about mc. It was like draining the cry t.) replace it in the owner's (.. - 1 hand; bet I did it, enduring the While a true Martyr dom. “I :ass oys,•' she said, as she ref.l,:ed i(; wrap it up in one of these notcs;" and coiling the dirty ti-itte round it. ,ey guinea was under lock and key in a trier.. There hol..eter, sumo eettiliqt. thOUght. it I noes ,hoes t h e e s. ae t- ,pit 1 :1 w hi c h it li c e ; I e ot; ',l tilid it ill the dark; what a comfort they do not keep it in their bed-room! I had ertre• dully nnticel the key belonging to the bu reau; nod that %cry night I hot rowed it in this wise. Tim landlord not being revs trill this 'sac Mrs. Allen's way of con eying an intimation that he had taken a diop to h mach—went early to bed. Just before retiring, I catered my landlady's pe culiar sabettnn, and noticing . her keys un the table. I ;1.--i:ea Ibr s unetlling which knew obliged hor to lease the room, and during her absence detatelic-1 the one I so ctneted the loan of front the hunch. I took from 110 r bawd. the article site had been. to fetch, bade her "good night - to before up hack was turned heard her clatter tin: rest of the keys into her capacious pocke , , whore I was well convincel they would rest till morning, anything 'tory nn- My landlord continon oeeurred io pretest V.. 14 :111 Cady n rills. I 110.11r3 hint :1 , - cetoiell the •tatt",; and in hi: happy emidi tioll there Ira , little fear of total-in, him by anything short of a vigorous in[t. landlady, wotimn, worked hard du ring, the day; and when she sou tt ht her a t a , leep ranee, and paid at ention to it. I ltnetv thi, (.tat yell, hteatt , e nty room NVVI , their=, by a rather thin partition: and at ti n ter the con- jupd. Knorers wcre inor powerial timn agiccaLlc On this neea , lon I hailed the addition of her nasal treble to her husband's smturou , bass as the most enchanting union of sot:nd , that had eier sainted uac earl. The ser- Nant , slept in a distant part of the I hail no fear of them; and living in Om hotel as I did, anything, short of being caught in the act of — pri.:,•ging the cash" nos prepared far. Softly, 111d , :eie.Q91 . v, tole down stairs. The moon was shining through the, window. iron-barred bat shut and gave me light enough fur ;ay 1111 T p 1,04 I succeeded in opening tile bureau. I took out the the little dirty-looking parcel. replacing it by the other guinea duly wrapped in a ten pound note as dingy as the one enei:,sing my guinea. Again baked the bureau, and finally deposited the key on the floor close to the table where the bunch had lain, three hours before, that it might seem to huve been aecithwitly dropped there. I enuld Lave shouted and committed all sorts of absurdities in my extravagant delight at recovering my trey Sure; loll} I was compelled to re-train my self. I did not unfold the paper, I was tor, sure of my genie to need the confirmation of sight—lmt hastily pushed it with the. guinea into a new case prepared hefurrhand• and stitched it up. slept not: I was too much exeltel: and ii lren mr,rning: P3:110 I feigned iilness, a n d lay in bed fir fear toy intro-e delight shoula manifes.t it , elf. As to describing what felt, it would be ridiculous t o a tt em pt it.— I a week after recovering toy trea sure: 1 witnessed the finding of the bureau key by my landlady before she was aware of its loss, and be nee pretty well convinced that dote lion was impossiMc. Then, pre tending basiness‘, I bade fare:veil to the Lucky Guinea, its hotly landlord, and sinn ing landlady: niel leaving "the Peak" in its Antonin beauty. I journeyed to London. Arrived there, I chanced to take up a news paper, and in it , nn; a piece of news which deserced the name of a ''s;a:rgeror." It iia:; to roe e:To,:t that my fmooer 1,0:11,cr, haling Leen f .rtunato. in hi , sec .11 , 1 :start in life, Ni-:i. in a p i-ithm to ;».:ke ronends to those who had seared by hib firA Lilze Sw•L thin.e„. had 1, ,, en done I knew; lin+ i‘hen I saw the printed requQt that his old creditor; would assenilde and receive their ~ivn, principal and interest, I rubbed ray eye:, believing they deceived me. Happen ing te, touch the ribbon of my guinea cage, 1 felt it was all right enough, and I Went to the meeting and reeeived my ca , l,, which made me really a rich man again. From that time very cautious. and began to [WHOLEI\I 7 3II3Erb, 1,465. I be c•tcen:ed a lucky fcllu;t• also: "Indeed," slid I to myqelc, "that nmil be: have I not oir: , ,e inure •miy Gutifathur's! Guinea.'" Stephen Girard thz, Moriey-rds.ir.er b tut the year fg.eventeen hundred and 1 . 1 fry, in the ens irons of Bordentm in Frtmee, thore lived an old yea-captain, Pierre Girard, wwith Madame .I.,trfavg,tie. his wire. They had already four children,— no matter whether male or female, for they Bred and died in the .olt, mirky in which they were born. But in the year sec:et:teen hundred and fifty, nn the twenty-lir:A, of May, another child c h ime into the world—a bG.y, named Stephen Girard. Up to the a:2:c of too or twelve. there is no record of the life and pr grey, of this boy. At that thee he Wl3 ilionth with one eye, eini,al;,cd a: a c tliin-boy. with no other ae— ilil:reanee:3 then an 1.113 pm-rect. I:now/edge of of the element" of renting r.:l I writing. on Huard ipiund fir the ',Vest Indies. lie. one cye 7.-;19 nl,le the suljtatt of r:di i•cie innon..7-it his cianpardim and Lk tem fir life. Witit th:s L16)1.111'0:7. .withent friends, vttrunaz....,'or t.O wus up. 1.1 CI V 1 .i I Ile uil not n2ion'in 1 , 4t4 in the West In dia,. kit bound apprentice to ship. master, in •xliose se a nce ;IC coot in ,i.e Mot t lif abaut the year sev enteen litindied arid siat:,-four. Morose as Step:len Girard was, lie gained the confi dence emplayer, and ho was tartars mate of the 1. essel in NI hiell he sailed, anti afnerwards captain. triont his eta ter left the -ca. Ile .i..}iago.l oral times stieccs.sfully to and from New ° c lea ns . I n this po .,; ; ; ; ,„ Ito lint be,;mti to accumulate means, and to t;ade un 1.1.; cam account, and he scam be came, plat Owner k.,f the ship and cargo which he commanded. A. large gap in the pre e 4To`a of his history now OellUrS, but in SeVeli/Cell hundred and sistymine Gad hint an obscure, itioddit g. quiet, thrifty trader in 'Water street, l'hiltolciphia. At this period he ti.ok a likin.s to one Mary, or Polly Lum, the daughter of att old ship caulker, who lived in a vrater side house down atuntigsit the ve-,els that traded. to that city. I'lle gill was idain. lint comely. :mil employed as a domestic son ant in a heighboring famiiy. Stephen Girard dace nat appear to ha:e been Linked upon with favor by the parents of the giri, 1 tr thcy for bade him the home for Slnne time. They were eN en / lia Ily married, but the union was /1 ,, t /Nippy Inc. She ti as neglectful of her duty; hixt as morose aml :lllSlere. At length lie applied .to the I,egislature of Pennsylva nia fur a divorce, all , / Ob/a/llell He still continued to rent the smell hence in \V lter street, to ulikh he had taken hb4 wile when they were married, end he indus triously pursued hii combined occupations of sea captain, ship-owner and merchant.— A hou t it iv Cote he catered into partnership with one hatte llezleltorst, of I'lliladelphia, and pureita , ed two ces'-elc in it Lich to trade to the island of Saint Domingo. The 11 . 01'0 c.cl urod by Briti-.11 men-of'-war, and •ent to -Jamaie.l: a iniZortune which iiii- , - , ;(I(ch the short partnership. There is an((ther („7,1p it, the story (4 Stephen Girurd, extendib,(4 "r. 411( eventeen hundred and i.(isl ttv.l to rf';enteen hundred and .Feventy-siz. It is probable tint during this time he con tinued Iti‘i td ,1 1(u-ines-. tra rhip mastf(r atul Indreliant iu Nir.r Orleans and Saint Tho war pt/t an entl to tl.O sea enterprises f Strltiten t.tirarti, :ant he Iras competed to turn his attention to tlin hind. lie opened a small grocery store in Water street. joined ;iih a bottling establi,liment, where Le worked hard with his own hands at the occupation of battling claret anti About the year seventeen hundred and seventy-seven, upon the allege , ' ap proach or the to Philmiciphia. hu puretet.eti a small tract of land from his former painter, Mr. 11.1.:Ichurt, at which there was ali ,u-e, to whit hhe remot el tiricearly acti late, in prep.atiog chi: et mai eider 1 r the market, a,, , 1 thcat t.t. a icr:e it to the, Amer/eau near Lia Ilere lie temaluea until I e Vellte,(ll lit:mired and se‘enly•lll:le, s onetimeq mul;- irn.: a in a a water-ye-no . t.D Phil:11-.11.111a, W di-p--e if appcm:lllt2C wa, not mini, in ill- ht , , or. IF.; skin wa, dark . elinizy; Liz+ ,rll.l Was •11--rt and Clio::: lie Nra: rough, vul gar, and on-:-,11,1y: one e::e glarol 111 , •i-miers. lie met with jeer, an-I tem.:. c try ;'Licit Lei 1. - ac with ; 4 7: - ‘4 1 .41 4."4:iiiir;i:ty 4111 , 1 c..:17; 1 4 , iiro. He Lac] 140 4 , 44( 1 4,ll:ect ill S lew, wideh Ite f. 110, 1 -01 'with all the steads enrrc.,3: of an iron That object was , . to make mency. Iraq evacuated by the Priti•h is sc‘ei.teen hundred anl seventy- Stcplwn C reed again f,ntrol is Water :-treet, tilt, time a:cup:Ong a range t•: ft acne , torei upon thc ea.t-,130. lie Ara. to, nto:e than tweutvsnine years of n;:.,•e„ but t o I,ldin. grate and repult‘iNe in appearance, that lie was known as "Ohl Girard." His hm.ines; could not have teen vLrs prosper ous ut this period, e.,n-idering the disturLed and tlepre. , ed *tate of the c. , untry. Ile teas filde:ly biding his I:nte. Ilk -tore was well lilted with old 1,1;:olts, sailY, pieces of cord age and other materials mcful for ship Imxit ling In F cccmtcan han,lre3 and righty, Girard azain comra, , neol the New Oricatos l and Saint Domingo trade. In two year: he had prr , gromsed so far am to be able to pur-