wroiili' ItepMicaii K. FENT WARD, Jr., Edltor Polishers. r-i:rini;. J TERMS - ( i'l S3 per Am, VOL Villi. NO 'JG. Of republican. Terms of Subscription, fnnid In sdvnnoe. or within tlirc nniuthn, $1 25 lftii my time hhin the year, ... I ill If pid fwr 'In expirat'u-n of the year, .2 00 Term of Advertising. Adrrrtl'tnientt are (averted in the Republican -t iht followine ralei : 1 Insertion. 2 do. fln,iqure,(H lines,) $ 60 $ 7S Two square., (2? linen,) 1 00 1 5H Ibree iquaro, (42 lino,) 1 H 2 CO 3 mmilhs. o mnV line S.iuare, all 14 UU 3 do. $1 00 2 00 2 50 1 2 mo. 17 00 10 00 12 00 14 00 15 00 Si 00 Twosquurcs, : : : : : 4 00 Three timre.-, : : : : 5 "0 Four J'limri'., : : : : 8 00 Half a column, : : : : 8 00 One column, : : : : 14 00 fi 00 R On 10 Oil 12 00 20 00 Orer three wei-ks and lens than three month; 25 ecnti per square for ea li insertion. Bjsiucj. notice not exceeding 8 line are in- jertod for 2 a year. AilTerliseint'iils not marked with the number of! ioiertionsdesirud, will bo runlinuod till forbid and ; eLirired according to thi-se terms. LAUHIMMl! A WARD. Lexington, Concord and Bunker Hill. nv ckorcr i:.s( RorT. The j'eriod embraced in this volume reaches from the arrival of fiencral fiage in Boston. May 17, 1774, to the battle of Bunker Hill. June 17, 1775. Of the events which precipitated the crisis lurin:t this vcar of FU-rense nnd strupgle, the liM i was the cl'isinp of Boston harbor, accord ing to theprovisions of tlie port bill, which j mor : but di-tress and horror gathered had been enacted by l'uiliameiit in March, , over tlie inhabitants of the peaceful town, and reached the devoted town May Id. j There on the green lay in death the gray Duritig thetitm which intervened U-twcen haired and the young; the grassy Held its reception and execution scarcely the was red 'with the innocent blood of their space of three weeks the whole eonti- brethren slain,' crying unto God for ven nent was moved in sympathy and indipua-' geanee from the ground, tion, and as "one" great commonwealth-' j "The 'riti-h troops drew up on the made 'he cause of Loston its own. The i village green, and, after a halt of less than immediate consequences of this measure ' half an hour, marched on for Concord. may bo easily imagined. j Cpon their approach children and women , "On the first day of June, Hutchinson died for shelter to thehillsand woods, and embarked for England ; and as the clocks 1 men were busy in hiding the military in the Boston belfries finished strikiup l'J, the blockade of the harbor began. The inhabitants of the town were chiefly trad- ers, ship-wrighta and sailors ; and since no ( ncuor could be weighed, no sad unfurled, no vestd so much as launched from the' stocks, their cheerful industry wns at an end. No more are thev to lay the keel of the licet merchantman, or strengthen fhejingly to an eminence about a mile to the praceful hull by knees of oak, or rip. the north, w here they waited for aid. The well-proportioned masts, or bend the sails! British entered the village about seven in to the yards. The king of that country j the morning, and at once proceeded to has changed tho busy workshops into search for stores in different places. Mean scenes of compulsory idleness, nnd the I time tho minute men of Acton, under the most skilful naval artisans in the world, ; command of Isaac Davis, with small hand with the keenest eve for forms rif beauty of husbandmen from tlie neighboring and speed, are forced by act of Parliament to fold their hands. Want scowled on the laborer, as he sat with his wife and chil dren at the board. The sailor roamed the streets listlessly without ho e of employ, ment. The law " as executed with a ripor that went beyond the intention of its uu thcis. Not a scow could 1 e manned by oats to bring an ox. or a fhi ep, or a bun dle i f hay fiom the islands. All water CM';ii:;p 1. cm w! rrf to !: r". thenph but of h.ii;! c : or In ieks, rr line, was strie'lv forbidden, i be bouts between J'..strn ; nd Cia.lie:ton could pot f.-ny a li'irei of gnmls r.' 1-0 s ' h;.r!cs Piver- t! c fi l.evmrn of M.v.-h'.i head, when '.rem their 1 av.l suits they bestowed quintals ' f !:ioi f h Uiicn the poor cf Bo-'on, were ol '.,'( d i t'-an-pnrt their offering in wagons by a circuit of thirty miles-. Tlie wnio-houses of the thirty merchant-- v.eie nt erne made vnhicle-s; the rf :lv wharves, whicil extended far into t'.e el r.nnol. j.nd were so lately covered with M.e ) roduce of the. tpic and with DigH-h fabric--, were be cetr.'.np solitary places; the haibnr, which Lnd ie-ouiv.ie.l iiicessmitly with the ciieer ing voices f pro- erons eimnierce, wi s n'l'.v distm bed by mj soimds but firm llriiish ve-se's of war. "At 1 hih liclph in. the bcil. of the cliiril.es vveie muf.led a:id tolle 1 ; t!.c fciiip in j 01! hoi.ited their c. ii i at 1ml f lniist : ai.d nincteii: h ; of t ;:o !. :--...'.-' cqt thn-e of the Friends, we:e -h'-t d i!' i'lp the niemoriable Fj-.-t of June. In, Virgii.ii, the population thronged the: churches; Washington attended the ser- vice, and strictly kept the fast. No firmer ' or wore touching words were addressed to the MiH'crcr. than from Norfolk, which was the largest placeof trade in that 'well- j militia, in double file, trailing arms. They watered and extensive dominion,' and went down the hillock, entered tin- bye whicli, from its deep channel and nearne-s road, came to its angle with the main road to the ocean, lay most exposed to ships of land there turned into the causeway that war. 'Our hearts are warmed with afl'ec-; led straight lo the bridge. The British tion for you.' such wns the message; 'we began to tear up the planks; the Ameri- address the Almighty Ruler to support you m your affliction, lie assured weeon sider you as miIIV rinpin thecommon cause. and lock 11 1. 011 ourselves 11s bound bv the niost sacred ties to supper t you.' 'ed. A volley followel, and Isaac Davis serted intrcnchmeiits. "Jefferson fi'om the foot of the Blue ' and Abuer Hosmer, the latter a son of "The Americans within the redoubt, at Ridge of the Alleghanies, condemned the the deacon of Acton church, fell dead. tacked at oinj" on three kldes by six bat act, which in a moment reduced an an-, Three hours before. LXivis had bid his wie talions, at that time numbered seven htin cient nnd wealthy town from opulence to and children farewell. That afternoon he died men. Of these some had no more want, nnd without a hearing and discrimi- wns carried homeand laid in her bedroom than one, none more than three or four nation, sacrificed prot.ertv of the value of niil'ions to revenge not repny the loss ' pleasant in death. The bodies of the two self- session increased with danger. He him olf, be insisted on them saving them of a few thousands. If tho piilse of the either of his company who were slain that directed his men to wait till the enemy selves, and remain to dio for the good people beat calmly under such nn t xpci i- dav, were also brought to her house, and were within twenty yards, w hen they pour- cause, which he sol ved in counsel and in ment by the now and iill now unheard of executive power of a British Parliament, aid the young itatcFman, 'another and another will be tried, till the measure of desuotistn be filled up.'" Passing over the anxious counselsof the I next ten months, we come to the battle of! Lextngton, AjtiI 19, In5, which is de- scribed in a singularly compact narrative. of which we give a few paragraphs of the equel: "In the disparity of ntirabers, the Com mon was a field of murder, not of bat:l; Parker, therefore, ordereel his men to dis perse. Then, and not till then, did a few of them, on their own impulse, return the British fire. These random shots of fugi tive or dyiag men did no harm, except that Pitcairn's horse was, perhaps, grazed, and a private of the. 10th Light Jnfuiitry was touched slightly in 1 1 i . Icy. .loniu J arker, tho strongest and het w restler in Lexington, had promised never A nm Iri.m m.iii t. ........ , . . .. i iiu-ii ininpH, and Kept Ms vow. i nuimu tuougnt luin on Ins knees. ..i.uiS msiiiargeu ins gUr)i ll0 ,vas pre - tllll'lll'. 1. t I t II.,..:.,.. i . . . l o " "". ii iign ui, wnen tin sound a ncwi as ever throbbed stilled hy a bayonet, and lie lay on the post which ho took at tho morning' drum beat, fell Isaac Muzzpv, and so died me jigea Kobert Monroe, the same who, in 1758, lind lieen the ensign at Louishurp. Jonathan Harrington, Jr.,' wns struck in front of Lis own house on the north of the Common. His wife was nt the window as he Jell. With the Mood pushing from his breast, he ro.-e in her sight, tottered. Jell again, then crawled on Ins hands nnd knees towards his dwelling: she run to meet him. hut only reached him as he ex piled on the threshold. Caleb Harrim.'- ton who had pone into the meeting limine for powder was shot as became out S mi ne Iladley and John Brown were pinsu ed and killed, after ;l:cy lial left the I preen. Ashahel I'orter of Wolmrn, w ho IJnid heen taken prisoner hy tlie lfi itish on the march, cmleavonnp to oseape, was shot w ithin a few rods of the Common, "Day came in ull the heanty of an early spring. The tree were budding; the grass growing rankly a full month before ti e time; the blue bird and the robin luddeninp the penial reason, and callitiL' lorth tin beams of the sun, w hich on tlis-.t 'stores. The rural militia of Concord for- mcd on the usual parade pround near the village meeting house. About two bun - divd npj'enred in nrtns on that day. The minute company from Lincoln and a lew men from Acton, pres-ed in at an early hour, but amounting in all to not a quar - ter of the British. They retired accord - hamlets, had increased the number r of A - mcrlcans on the risinp pround above Con- d bridge to m ire than four hundred, The w hole was a gathering not so much of officer Mid soldiers as of brothers and equals of whom every one was a man wi ll l ie.', n in his village, ohsVrved in the mee tmp h u-e on Sundays, familiar at town Hit 1 tlllgs, il lo'lucl's in j'Uti- dlesj, -.11.' ' ted a a freeholder or 'l saw before them trooj s in possps- 1'ii ;i-h I lid ill toe oi-t. ,c ii-ying li.eir ' ' ?". 1 e. seen tire ; l v.-n cv v. 1. 1 in WI I. ir 1 .a 1 l- i 1 :-' . :i 1. 1 e etdi r !' - aiiaM.ed. M'lli.l ii ill dviinc". 1 Tbe c.:l. i.'.t. : 10 ir.es of e.n ' I ; 'i'CM'll'. s'l 11 D.n i-. 01 v. n se'10.1 Acton, :i).l-tcr be. a. ie; who iv ,e ti n'- c Mva. , 1 il to ex; li'.:- l oiv !:;s f 1 word of command. I e re , p. have in D.vis. l . d. aw :ng . . to . i 1 ni 1 hat i a'r.od to ; I he li.en of A-. .. i o ere 1 -M lie: Sill 1 . and !!.- c. V, n '. ,1 . , 1-1; the ng'.t. e 1 . , 1 id o. he l.iiiiM-lf i.t t their ' iin Bllti'iek o" C -lie lis side Maior .b,i,n with. John j;oi, in in en ue-i'oid, i..,-, ate- mint Colonel ill Prescott's repinir nt. on this dav a volunteer without co:um "Thu the--o three men walked to; er in trout, followed bv minute men b: 1.1. e'i and cans to prevent it, quickened their steps the British fired one or two shots up the river; then another, by which Luther , Planeha-d and Jonas Brown were wound- His countenance was little altered, and the three were followed to the grave yard ! by a concourse of tho neighliors for miles a;ound. God gave her length of days in , the land which his generous self-devotion assisted to redeem. She lived to see her country touch tlie Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific, and when it was grow n great in wealth and power, tl. ie Unitexl States in .. . Congress paid honors to the husband's martyrdom, and conitorteet tier under the rcenuin. a emgie ai unery rarmuge iur double burden of sorrow and more than ' nished powder for the last muskets which ninety years. I the Americans fired. For some time long- "As tho British fireel, Emerson, who was er they kept the enemy at bay, conrront looking on from his chamber window near' ing them with the but ends of their guns, the bridge, was for one moment uneasy,1 and striking theni with tho barrels alter let the fire should not bo returned. It , the stocks were broken. The breast waaonly for one moment; Butrick leap- works being abandoned, the amunition all ing into the air, at the same time partially expended, the redoubt hall filled with reg turning round, cried aloud as if with hi ulars and on the point of being burround- CLEARFIELD, PA. WEDNESDAY JULY' 7, 135:3. ' country' voii e, 'Fire, follow M.Miirs, for ; God's sake ;' mid tl,e ci v 'fire, lire, fnc.' 1 v;m frr m lip to lip. Two of the Briti-h , fell ; severi.l were wounded. In two min- . , . men nil win hushed. ho i'.nti-li retreat- ! in disorder toward their main bodv , . " 1 the countrymen wore left in po-ses.-ioh o! 1.1 1 n .. .'. I tijp nriugo. I mi is the world renou'tiec gineourt or lUenlieim." I The retreat of the liritish from Con cor 1 was attended with lavish ell'u.-.ion of blood. During '.Uo day the loss of tho British was two hundred and K-enty thr e in kil-1 The British, who had turned tho north led, wounded and missing; while on the ; extern end of the breastwork, and had Aneriean side firty nine wore kill-(lM .,,0 (.,,10 ronml t he anirle of the redoubt, thi ty four wounded, and live mining . j wei v t much exhausted to u-e the havo Th' next night the men of Mas-achu-ctls ! uL..,ii,vt thcin wi'h vii'or. utel ni first strenmed in from eveiv ouartcr to tl number of thousands, though ".ithoiit nv-tilli.-y or warlike Ptores. I ui with brave hearts, determined to rescue the liberties of their country. Tho spread of tho alarm is described in one of those opi-odes of poetic eloquence with which the historian occasionally ilkoraiiies the course of his nairaiive. "Darkness closed upon the dimiliy and the town, but it was no night for sleep. Heralds on swift relays of Imrsps transmit - ted the war-message from hand to hand, till village repeateii lttowhage; the sea to the backwoods : the plains to the high lands : and it was never suffered to droop, till it, had been borne north t.nd sou Mi, and east and west, throuphout the land. It spread over tho bays that receive ihe Saco and the Penobscot. Its loud revel broke tho rest of the trapper of New Hampshire, and ringing like bugle notes from peak to peak, oveiieapt the Green c,ny field piece that was saved. I'oiuo Mountains, swept onward to Montreal, rov walkerl backward, facing the encmv and descended the ocean river, till the res-, an'd brandishing his musket till he was rouses were echoed from the cliffs of Que- t-trucl; and marked by a ball. The re bee. The hills along the Hudson told to doubt, the brow of Bunker Hill, and the one another the tale. As the summotn passage across tho Charlstou causeway, hurried to the south, it wa one day nt were the principal places of slaughter. New York ; in one more at PliiladclpLin ; ; "Putnam, at the third onset, was absent, the next it lighted a watch-firo at ilalti- j employed in collecting men fur a reinforce more : thonce it waked an answer at An- nient, and wai encountered bv the tetreat- napolis. Crossing the Potomac near Mt. y ernon, it was set lorwaru wiinoui a unit toVilliamsburg. It traversed the Dismal 1 Swamp to Nansemond along the route of the first emigrants to North Carolina. It moved onward and still onward, and thro' boundless groves of evergreen to Newbeiii ! and to Wilmington, 'for God's sake fur- , ward it by night and by day, wrote Corne- lius Harnett by the express which sped tor rrunswicK. lamoisoi 0011111 union, mght. na caught up its tones at the border, and "Repairing to headquarters, Present of despntehed it to Charleston, und through fen-d wit'- three fresh repinients to recov pines and palrr.e'los.J and ni' s?-?lad live- Pr his post. Hut for himself ho sought oaks, still further to the south, fill it re- neither advancement, nor reward, nor sounded among tho New F-npland settle- ments bevond the tsavnnah. Hillsborough l nnd the Mecklenbera district of N-Caro- 1 roso in triumtdi. now that their wear- j iome tineertaintv bad its I o II I, .-.-' , ....... . . nd. The Blue Jiidpe took no the voice and made if heard from one end to the other of the valley of Vii L'inia. 'I he Alleghenies. a they listen ed, opened their barriers that the lo id call' migin ra-s through to the liar' ly rifle mr'ii on the Ilol-lon, the Waiauga, and the French Broad. Ever renewing its streiipth, powerful enough even to ciea'e a Co .. Wold tbar t i 'on .vciiiii, ; 0) tne li.'-l sf lie i.tll tel V', b i li-' 1 i;s ins S of K1O1.IIC!. 1,0 m. ice 1 1 'I I.; .1 the 111 ret le.s v;;l!. v tn-'-i r.e l th'1 ''.o'i tl.e:r eficaaip'.'i' i t T." I tie filief I elll :: .1 : in i:.e v.'l.r.io !- ; ! II. 11. 'rom the vivid 111 c t foment om.'s" ' .'1 irt.on. " rise royal to my ex i.o: be 1 : an etumv ' t 1 itnr c' wi o t 'V'lJCI: ,c-r,' l), I.e. S ; fessed 'o de 'se. -,n 1 nv tti. nv hitn bed- ol tiioir men w or bleodilli OH lbe g Ulill'l, renew the em: r.wiai'iit. V. I IV piei :iie t nt : .e !'' .'.mil" ,,..ii" 0 . , o t.i. .r. d 1. nr.. lett Ion. IV an-' : 1. Hi IfoVl a n ; ft': ir.e the at!.;.-! tiiiiC'-ir.i.it.'d foices upon tne 11 d mot. broil J. I 10 be. i,- in si;oh a 1 ake ihe hi-id.' ' t In' lee o .e en I of it to t be other, meiivm; w-ie obliged to d o the ! .: t. I hen the l.iltl-1. '., ..; i. - lu uiubi-icd theinsfi.e i 1 iiipsaeR, adi ailced ill c.i. 11:11 1 .fi'ii , 1- ' b..vone;s. Ciinton. w ho Irom Cop; 1 1 .:! had watched the battle, at this .- i:i. :! moment, and yvitliut orders pn 1. I 1 i " in a boat, and put him-olf at tho head of two battalions, the 111. nines and the 17t.i. which oem to hesitate on the beach as if uncertain what to do. Tuese formed the extreme left of the British, mid adv. n ed from the south ; the 5th ami 4-'!d bat tab ions, formed the centre, and atta -ked from the east ; on their right was the aid with preiiadiers, who forced the ltotv de- round of amunition left. But Prescott's ed upon them a deadly volley. I he lint- ish wavered for an instant, and then sprang forward without returning tho tire, The American fire slackered, and began to dio away. The British reached the rampart on the southern side. Those who 1 first scaled the parapet were shot down as they mounted. A7ajor Titcairn fell mor-1 doubt, but as he was descending Bunker i i ....... ... ,t tally wonnded, just as he was entering the ed. and no other re-etif trcements luiving nrrived, at u little before four, Tii'scott give the word to retreat. He himself w m liiel.it to leave the ', i t ; escaping unhurt, though with rout and waistcoat rent and piereed by bayonets, whi-h he parried with liis sword. The men, retiring Unoiiph the onllypost rv Icatiin;' over tho wulK undetlie'r way throiigli their enemies, cu h for himsolC'without much order' ami the dust which rose from the dry earth now rlouded thu sun. nnd tlie smoL-e rtf tl(, rmimrenieiit t'ave them aome eovrtrinn the part ics wore t o.sclv lnteriniouU-d j to admit of In in;': ital'o appeared th-;t a : supply of bail fur the artillery, sent from : Boston during the battle, was too large for I tlie lii ld-picces which accompanied the de tachment. I '"The little handful of brave men would : have been cHi otuallv cut oil, but for the iiiit'ailinp courape of the provincials at the rail loiicc and tho bank of the Mv.-iio. ; -phev had repulsed the cnoniv Iwic j ... j1(,i,i ,1(,nl ;n (.i,eck. till tin they main hodv had left the hill. Not till then did the Connecticut companies under Knowl t m, and the New Hamshire soldiers un der tark quit the station, which they had nobly defended. Ihe retreat was mud.) with more regularity than could have been expected of troops who had been for so short a time un'lcr dioipline, and many of whom had never before seen an engage - ,;1Pnf. Trevett and his men drew oil' the jnir party on the northern declivity of ,f Hunker J i ill. Actmp on Ins own re '.( I) 1 TTOl ' sponsibility, he now for tlie first time a- huir.od the" supreme direction. W onions from any person, he rallied s W lthout person, lie rained such ol fugitives as would obey him, joined them t,i a detachment which had not arrived in season to share in the combat, and with a rpKnec-able force took possession of Tros- ,rect Hill, w here be encamped that verv prui.se, and having performed the best ser- v;c,-. never thought that he had done more than his dutv. It is the cotemporarv rec inn his duty. It is the cotempornry rec- nrd that durin? the battle 'noone nnnear f.u (0 )1UV uny command but Colonel Pres- cott,. and that his bravery could never he rnoiiph acknowledged or iipilauih'd.' Th" camp long repeated the story of his self-collected Viil "i-, and a hist, tian of the war. who best knew the army. Iris uvent !v awarded the 'hi gho t ri.:e I'l'glo.y to Pre-cott and bis i.unipanioiis.' "The ',- it isii w 1 re iin.ible 1 1 contiure rir--!iir hevoiel tlie i -1 ! 1 ni : I -. Tlo-v ! vd a' fi'l 1 -eai'v mor : i 1 or p. I'l OH I 1 1 -1 1 ; h t' I till .tr 1 .1 ol tie ' 1,. ' n ,1 bill" :i; a: 1 ' ' 1' .lin: 1 I 1 : 1 i ml 'ii.it.'.'ii si'i'.i one lieu "ii n;--Mi : W'i'I'i t :he-e hei e 11c: iwi, iiiajors, and seven cnpiaim. lorn half an hour, tl.eie hud been ac;iiii:vi 'd .-!; T-i of fiefi-i-.i the Provinci.il. ; and the : tion was hot for 1 mbte that perlo 1. .I.- "IS d V.l". soon the b t : j 1 Ii w. 11 l.eif l 1 1 llt'ne.ii, man. officers as j , nil but! i.v r. 11 1 11 ii. if on i.'iit 10 v. ; :e:i g ue l no;hiivr but the pi. n e.oireiieet. ' Sir V.'iiii;.''! lb who was tin 1. ve I en vo . ".'.-.!. w.:s mitouehed, '' .1 !l h s wlf'V '"': slockill 'S Ve':' staill- o ft hih hi- '.valsin.' through the tail tics, re 1 with the bio id of ni- soldiers. '; !.. ie did not fall was a marvel. The 1 ai-es be.-to ed on his apathetic valor, o-, il.e g.il.'Uitiy of I'igoi, and the the con d'Kt ol ciinton. lcfleetpil honor on the un trained farmers, who, though inferior in numbers, h id required the display of the mo-i st reii nous exert ions ol their as-ai hints before thev could be dislodged from tho tlclcllCPS w ine h thev had but few hours to. juepare. rim u-l.nlo Wn of the Ameide.nnan. l.ioitnted to Hi killed and mis-ina. and ;;04 woumled. The bravo Moses Patker, of Chelmsford, was wounded ami taken prisoner: he dieu in jsoston jan. .vinior l . . ' . l,n .;...! in lUitnn nl f-.;,' Wlllard .Monro repeived one severe wound at the second attact, nnd soi.n after nnoth - er which he felt to bo mortal ; so, bidding farewell to tho who would have borne armor, i'.uckmastcr was dangerously wounded, but recovered. Ihe injury to Nixon was so grert that he suffered for many months, and narrowly caped with lis life. Thomas Gardner, n Member of . Congress from Cambridge, was hastening w ith some part of his regiment to tho re- 11 ill, he was mortally wounded ny a ran dom shot. His townsmen mourned for the rural statesmen, to whom they had unanimously shown their confidence ; and Washington gave hitn the funeral honors due a gallant ofiiccr. Aneliew MoClary, on that day unsurpassed in bravery, re turning to recif noitre, perished by a chance cannon ball on the isthmus. "Just nt the moment of the retreat, fell Joseph Warren, tho last in tho trenches. In him were combined rclcrit, coiaa.'e, endurance, and manners which won uni versal love- lie. opposed the Jiritish (iov eminent, not from interested mot ivei, nor frbin ro entment. A guileless an 1 inttep id ddvocnte of tlie riihls of mankind, he fought not to appear a patriot : he was 'characteristic anecdote that occurred !:ir'. one in truth. As the moment for the up- ina the battle of I.undv's I.ane, in the hist j.eal to arms apjiroaelied, he watched with : war: In the very midst of the battle hp ,oy the revival of tha generous spirit of attention whs arrested by observing vl a New England'rt ancestors ; and where per- little distance, where a whole compm- of il wns greatest, he was present, animating jrifli men had just been cut down bv "the not by words alone, bat ever by his exam-.terrible fire of the enemy, three dnvvne pie. His integrity the soundness of judg- boys quarreling fora single drum r.;1 i f,t n-.ent, his ability to write readily and well, was left to them. Soon the two 'ft, his fervid eloquence, his exact acquaint- ones wont to " iisfcufbs," while th" tl, ? n ancewith American rights and the in- quietly folded his arms and awniv-' O r f'ringiwnts of them, gave authority to liis issue of the contest. At that mo,,,"-; " advice in private, nnd in the Provincial j cannon ball struck tho boys, nnd'l 'i-d Congress. Uud he lived, the futureseem-j them. With one bound tho 'lit'le feilow ed burdened with honors; he cheerfully . caught the drum from bet wen them nml saorilioed all for his country, and for free- with a shout of triumph, and a loud ' i t dom. Sorrow eon Id now no more come too,' dashed forward to the thickest 0f the nigh him, and he went to dwell in men's fight. Said tlie general, "I so admired the memories with Hampden. little soldier, that I rode after him and in- jn enemies i . i oii i.e. i ins nuiiu ay their omltatioiis at his fall. By his conn- nil... a. ; , : .... i i . : . . l. .. nj men lie mis iuosi, Miicoieiv aim um - vcrsally lamented ; his limthcr would not be consoled. His death, proceeded that of his wife, left his children altogether or- phnn , till the Continent, at the mod m of Samuel Adams, adopted them in part at least its ins own. 1 ho (.onpress of his j native State, that knew him well, and had chosen him to guide their debates, audi I recently to high command in the army, ! j proclaimed to the world their 'veneration ' for Joseph Warren, whose memory is en- , dcared to his countrymen, to ihe worthy in every part and age of the world, o long a; virtues nnd valor shall be esteemed among men." The Last or the Randolphs. On ti e 4th inst., died nt the Court House of Char lotte county, Vn., St. George Randolph. By this decease a great lineage becomes extinct, and a large patrimony is divided. ne was the eldest son ot J.ichara iian .1,1.1. ,rt; 1 1 .1 1- uoijiii ui uuiinc, aim nqilicn 01 U1U COlt- ).,-fn,l T.,l,n l'..n,lr,lv.l. ,,f t!nnni, .,l reparded him with an affection as sincere as it wns in his wayward nature to feel to- pencral it may be set down Cs an incorde--wards any human being. St. George had tible fact, thut whsn a man makes a Ion. peculiar claims upon uie tenuernes 01 ir.s kindred, fur he was destitute of the facili ties of hearing and of speech, and could only manifest the quickness of his intel lect in that untaught but expressive pan tonine which is instinctively acquired by the deuf mute. Losing his father at an early age, he was affectionately cared for by his nearest relatives and was pent to Fiance for an education, that could not at that lime be given him in the United States. On his return to America a sad - 1 dispensation fell on him reason left its - 1 throne. The circumstance gave Randolph of Roanoke the most poignant grief, and he retort sadly to it in h:s letters, i hat w as forty three years ago, and since then St. George had remained hopelessly insane. Yet (says the Petersburg F.jrc-s) there -was a certain nobility in the appearance of the old man, as we have seen him wander ing about the fields with .his leonine bcjird falling in white masse over his bosom, and his hie, 1 est less eye, in;pr,r!mg animi'i m to a oouii'i-tiimee of sin; uhtr nnd striking ;i'0:e-t veil in its pboiii. Kind 'i his pillow. and hi- mi v.a-i s d;ed 1 he L.si o'-li,p K in. Iian peat o-n-iit rrrni Ol Mi . 1 1 i'W 1 Ui r ."'.' . I,f ti: ,-illl I.:., 1:1 Ol" 1 t.ny :', in bee u dnp to . -vo t!- il 1,11 Icng t ! 1 ey iive . -1 ' .' 1. r 1. 1 l he -i:; 1 it -ee: .ip pro., cii ii iirhk'ii. II. a. HI it V. .': '.'- der.fj'.i I v.-.it. r i ;i:,.i - I'.-i m. i'.ud ' sink ,0 t i.e 1:1) the ly tiioy cine 1 is .! ..' .11,1 eauio a i ln v-...: -pec. lie pr,i il v ov W.ll .IS ii.eie e 1 01 01 .:.' wii'.'U il I V O'l. i.'.l an irjtt bowl. A lev hoar only ei.. sli .', Ida. k n:.:o or h.i'.r w.i! i'.'- rv . id'' "I each, tiii il as-ii-of a ciitcrpilhii'. 1 !- -) e.tiir inp thus cjiiiiter.T'teil, it w.ll to 1 lie ii fai e, and U w alio, ol the boivf by the sii.ii'.cst I In 11 shoit time a Ilv w,ll bo ii 1 ilv 1 ll.'o itli 01 died ill!'. uid escape, leaving its tiny house upon the rur faco ol the wa er. Any one who has had a cisiem in tlie yard has doubtless ob-ervod the .".ime ef fect, every summer, although he may be ignorant of the heautifjl nnd simple pro-ce- s ol dovi'bpemont. If a pitcher of cis- 1 101 n 0I' 0l."c'r tcr containing these nin- hiaicut.es i placed in a close room over night, Horn which all mr-qintoes have "cell piCVIOUsly excluded. OllOUgll lllOS- ! ''U breed from it during the night s-lvo ""' s"'i?':li;l"r.V amount 01 troul.lo. ! 111 " ""m? " , smuiow half sta dav. t,r " '.',' 1 ' - ....... .... I'.OI .;....l... ,-. 1..., ..I , naied tiooi ana mid summer - ! "l u"'r"" m ' . "" 's: tails" to the mosquito state can be wit I "cssed, ami mo. origin 01 1 11.0 disiuioors i"1 night s sliimhers thus lully ascertained C'Ts.A Je-v in Cincinnati was making handsome gains by the sale of lot tery tick ets, nnd investod bis said g.iin in real tate. w hen feat ing prorecutiun and lines on account in' his illegal business, I e eon eyed it (o his wife. After awhile he glow jealous of his wife, and, satisfied of her infidelity, he resolved to take oi-n t but was dissundt-d by his friends. At this juncture, his wife, with ull his property in ( ner possession, nas commenced .1111 lor a divorce, whereat he feels uncomfortable. . , . . . . . period 10 di'oh n s ori-i'.ijinp lo:' , U.v-tiu.. 6tTAn American in Lngland; tho pre- a niinu'o. valeric ol duelling summed up : j Til cnl comprehended wiir r 'rhev even fi.'ht with daors in room onoo and fined the defendant fifty dollar. pitch dark. - ' "Is It possible !" excl-yimod a thunder-' tCyFraikk.n scheJ lightnin? bv fi. track Johnny Bull." tail, held it fet and ta-nad it : Mn-'e p "Possible, hir, (roturnel the Yankeo;) clothes on it, tuid taught it Low to reai why I've iKva 'cm. ' . cud writo aud da ranu. NKWSEME.S VOL III.-NO :. Tin: I'im virii Ur or I.im.v' .Major in-iiciui Winiidd N-ntt. v. I i! the In nticr dining the borijcr u'AY.i ui at the time of the Canadian lebellie.; complimentary dinner given hm t cilieiis of Clevehind rehiind (1 a f..l',. quired ins name, winch was an direc.ed him to find me at the close of tl . il- ... ' and if ioaitie; out J never saw him afterwards " At this moment, Mr. , one of the most respectable merchants in Cleve'nnd land with a smile and a bov. informed tli , company that he was tlie "Drummer bov of I.undy's I.ane." rrrenrs Mr. Jifferson gnid he had been in deliberative bodies with Gennai Washington and Dr. Franklin, nnd that be had never heard cither of them ma!. 15 r fpf cell more thnn fifteen minutes h and then r.lwtys directly to tho point He adds that there were no rneml ,,-is Wno possessed more influence, or wdio were hi tened to with more profound attention. iir. ucicrsuii jjimseii we believe. v.;ir never noted for much speaking, alth' i;..:; every speech he made told among U.a members. One secret of Patrick Henry's idmost super-human eloquence was that b" - r- 1 . 11 1 1 ,. , .. never spoke unless he had something ti - . sav, and alivnv-stopped when he had ire; . ., , I! .. . . "."f-" ten I llt'OUPIl . ..1 r. M ii.-l'll an and Chief Jus tice Marshall, were famous: f,.,r the idrenpfl and comoresaion of their tii,,.ti.-,t 'l. speech, he has not dije. 'ei 1,14 sulr prepel'ly, either fr r.n indolor ce. from of time, or fi run lock ofenpicity. Cor; pres.sion requires study, and is the mo ' difficult of all the arts connected wit,1 either writing or speaking. Mr. Web- te: . in his famous speech in the Indian K'iblc cae, apologised to the Court for its leu-.) , on the plea of want of time to condcn. i: his ideas. An Honest Confession A farmer and his son Hans havi;,; bc-ct. to market in the next town, and dis'Cw.'. of their load of potatoes, got ready ui turn home. Tho farmer laid hi':, , 1 comfortably down and commenced ing while Jhuis drove the horses. Soon Hans-commenced thinking the big pis ;uid pork his moth i .. ' lromij.f(i to keep for him until hi r t :r . siiiin ki d his lips and druve the I, .. - ,: ter. J The bow ni oil ram lifted himself up. -. )... d exclaimed jOI'K's t-0 i:-.-t. lis r ori.li. ,' "j'ans, do-. 1 thev bad (i efod V. t in in 1' ad t :. . 1 si 1 A i 'skovor i..u mm: 1 ovrr-s we: : timm. hi ag!'.':i ' i"id imaginin 1 tl' d up the ho.,.e; t,.t tii. : .11 a-.a a-u,;. i e eld 1 1 toe T hi.v r: i:e nd ti'.iie and e.-chiiTird : "II many times do vo'i want 1 vc; net to ib :e the;.i hr hp.vc fionc .ie , SO sor bo 11 i w ,u; he devil of a f. t d Ii.;:. i. .'i..,t. ' t'. ti".: :j..t Let- .or yoq 11. 1-, A 7:fj it re.v .Ti V l'.'O detr Hi cn oo; tnOiP to '.;.;? "O.i i;cli disgrace1.'' "What ciryvnes '' "Why i opened one cf ro-.tr b" :s J-o.-ing it addressed to mycrlf. : ); more like Mrs. than Mr." "Js that all? Why, what ha :". tncie let t er be in a wife's opening her h:;s 'No harm in itself. But tiiecu::: such a ui-gi ace. "What, has rt.y one dared to v,:ife a letter unlit to be rend by mv wifp ?'' "'Oh, tin. It is couched in the m chaste language. J'ut the conteio : !" Here the wife btirrie.l her f. handkerchief, and comiuence 1 aloud, when her hnsl aml c.ipeil in b sobbil un t hp lptter nil ,1 erirmnoTicoil v.. , ,' , , ", ..l.lwtlo flint l.orl l.n .-..r...,. , i ' ;", - brenKing his wiles heart. , j,vm im. j , - ,rrs f."v Hr'.rA suit, eauie tf tho other di,-. which a prinicr namc-d Kdvv, we .1 .. lies,- Tiie e iso ti ns an assault ai )1 . Unit caiuP e tl' between two 1110:1, 1: Brown .1 n 1 1 Hendcrton. Mr. Kclvv, did you witne s th: ; f.-rred to?"' 'Yes, sir." "Well, what have yon to siy ni;..;r. it. "'I'hat it was the be t piece of j.ur.ctu tion I've seen in some time." "What do you mean by that?" Why, that P. 1 (1or50r.''s'eves. fr .vhldi Hend .rs :.n p i: I.r- v. i if, at H