Z. Muir Terms of •Subscription. )f paid in adve.noe,or within three-months, SI 25 If paid any time within the year, --1 50 If paid after tii;e expiratton of the year, -2 00 e ariu;, Terms of Advertising. Advertisements are inserted in the Republican the following rates : A - 1 Insertion. 2 do. . 8 do. .% ) .51 11176 , ( 1411210 ot) $ 60 $ 76 $1 00 't w o egdares, (281Ines0 1.00 150 200 brae squares, (421inee l ) 166 200 2 50, months. 6 mo'e. 12 mo. Square, e :$2 60 $4 00 $7 00 Ibtosquateso t t : 400 600 10 00 Three squares, tit: 800 800 'l2 00 -Ater squares, It I t 600 10 00 'l4 00 Reif *column," t tb 00 12 00 18 00 One column, r : sl4 00 20 00 85 00 Oyer three weeks and less:than throe mo a the 25 cents per square for each insertion. Besineds notices not exceeding 81Inee are In. Sorted for $2 a year. klyerthiements not marked with'the number of in i ert iate desired, will he continned•till forbid AIWA accorX.7s to thole terms. .1. Jl, LARRIMER. ihtni blig MISS2VMS3I imaimais P. W. HAYS, DAGUERREAN, Nelaineotypist, Ambroty . oet, and JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,— Roney, Elk County, Pa. DENTAL CARD. A . M. SMITH offers his professional services 21., to the Ladles and Gentlemen of Clear field and vicinity. All operations performed with neatness and despatch. Being familiar with all the late improvments, he, le prepared to make Artificial Teeth in the beet manner. Ogee in Shaw's new row. Sept. 14th, 1858. lyl. • :14 . !tied ' 'Ato are Otte 'l Ol 7 g • 7 . 2 AV.: DR. R. V. WILSON, TrAVING removed his office to the now dwel l". ling on Second street, win promptly answer p rots sional calls aniheretofore. JO; p. LARRIMER. I. TEST LARRIMER & TEST, Attorneye at Law Clearfield, Pa., will attend promptly to Col- Mons, Land Agendas, so., &a., Clearfield, Centre and Elk °aunties. July 30.—y from Aria ANY JOHN TROUTM AN aTILL continues the business of Chair Making, 11 and House, Sign and Ornamental Painting, at **shop formerly occupied by Troutman & Rowe, state east end of Market 'tweet, a short distance west of Lits's Foundry. June 13, 1855. THOMPSON, HARTSOCK N CO. Trot Founders, Curwensville. An extensive suortment of Castings made to orderer Dso. 29, 1851. buy a id by `244,0( erect. L. JACKSON CRANS, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Oleo adjoining Ila .saidonco on Second Street, Clear! ►ld, la. 'Juno 1. 1854. _ verity trrae• length I •te. It r ef Its • 7 ar. sato. aq (0" H. P. THOMPSON, nhyslclau, may be found either at hie Oboe at Bootieid'a hotel, Curwenoville, when to prolog:busily absent. Dec. 29, 1851- ELLIS IRWIN & SONS, A. the mouth of Liak Rif, five miles from Cleirfiehi, 11$1101 1 / 1 1 , 1 S,' and extensive utseturers of Lumber, July 23, 1852. ' T $ chey .fkeo.of elyln 4t from J. D. THOMPSON, Blaellurmith, Wagons, Buggies, do., de., Ironed on short notice, and the very best style, at his old stand in the borough of Curwensville. Pee. 29, 1853. from .to ibo aides M. WOODS, having changed his loca If Lion from Curwonsville .to Clearfield, res *trolly . 6ffers his itrotessioned services to the thine/lot the latter place and vicinity. 'Residence on Second street, opposite ti it of J. Cries, Esq. my , na ea Other , a be -I,ut up or oho •naive :wain 'enter ths P. W. BARRETT, MERCHANT, PRODUCE AND LUMBER In DEALER, AND JUSTICE OF THE MCA latheraburg; Cloutleld Y &d' of the Oohs; ~ t 4Ye' di he the . J. L. CUTTLE, Attorney at Law and Land Agent, om ' , adjoining his residence, on Market s tree Chatfield. March 3, 1853. A.•B SHAW, B. WAILER of Foreign and Domestic Pderch. `sadist', Shawsville, Clearfield county, Pa. trill% August 15,1855. evert or the front 4 eli• D. 0, CROUCH, pIIYSICIAN--01fies in Carwennille. May shy ; the kelp WM. P. CHAMBERS. fihiSitiES on Chairmeiking, Wheelwright, and ICouse and Sign painting at puvonevillo, Cloweld co. All ordempromptlyiittended to 5,1858. • OAIRT 3. WALLACE, • TTORPfIa AT LAW, Clearlleld, Pa., Oflioi4 Show's Row, op. the Journal °Moe. • - D i : deo. I:lB4B.—tf. kmLASTEIIING.-.-Tit ~ ittbseriber, having located himself in tb, * borough ofClearileld infirm the pliblie that be is prepared to ,_,lcrk in the above line, from tildieglYol7l6l3loo. 640 rIniy description in a workmanlike Drainer. llis whitewashing and' repairing dorie in I Deaf %Der and on reasonable terms. • lkset' _ 111DWAT COOPER', yid, alprillt, 188. Jy." ' - ' 1 11 - YOUR TA r ib. k lAA 9 4 , frIFAIP I H. tiliis; d l egiles to animation' tb . Jit di end Pare,* dull lid 'Li now Ag•- % ; (:i 'Af> tlnte trooratiOile in Dentistry. ineicing bib serilkee will'Orid wtlilw ‘ 1 4 4114 41)i1ip reeklenee at innerly all times, Misp s qn 1 'itiios and SatOrrelays, naafi to the oginlinry bo glviitt thri - totiti:li±i- Ute week previous. 8. All workworrip k toil to boillittefatitory. W - 11eirdeld, Pe. SO MI, 1858, ,• '- • Allioco V to emigrate 0 ;( 4 - mila CUMaW. . , 1 11 flnaIket, aep c*er" &email ef litikWartna, ddA ockertia'artent 4,1 - -;. -,, '',. ' . : , , , , l, „ .., ,-:. q • ,":- -..-.. : , _ ,' 1.. -. '.. ,-, ~ . , i ; : . .._• r .. ~.. .. . , . . . • . . . • . , ~ . . . . .1 •.fa: . . _ . . • . ._ .. .. . . , . ........ , . . . . ~........ , ..... Where, where will be the birds that sing, A hundred years to coma ? The lloweis:that now in beauty spring, A hundred years to come ? The rosy Hp, The lofty brow, The hearts that •beat So gaily now I 0, where will be Love's beaming eye, Joy's pleasant 'smiles and sorrow's sigh, A hundred years to come ? Who'll press for gold:the_crowded street, A hundred years to come? Who tread the church with willing Net, A hundred years to come ? Palo, trembling age And fiery youth, Au childhood with • Its brow of !rutb The rich, the poor, on land and sea, Where will the mighty Millions be, A hundred years to come ? • We all within our graves shall sleep, A.hundred years to come; No living lout for us will weep, A hundred years to come But other wen Our lands will till, a. And others then Our streets will fill, While other birds will sing as gay, As bright the sunshine as to day, A hundred years to come. Farmer's Hiyh School, April 11, 1859. While the greae powers of Europe and America are engaged LI regulating their future intercourse with China, any infor mation in reference to that Empire will be received with increased interest. It has been the custom of the Western world to ridicule Chinese civilization and to look upon it as undeserving of the consid eration of our statesmen. Yet that civili `' zation stood the test of thousands of years. The same polity that governed China two thousand years before the Christian era, governs her this day. -Our sages who told us that, founded upon the grossest mate rialism, Chinese society was without any moral basis, have been sadly puzzled to explain the secret of its stability, while the varions social system of Europe, which claimed the superiority of moral truth did not last. The_key to the-solution of this problem is furnished in a recent work on "The Chinese and their Rebellions, -with Essay on Civilization, - by Thomas Taylor. Meadows." From what we glean from an article in the Westminster Review on this work, which is the result of years of practical observation, and philosophical inquiry into the moral , that underlies Chinese society, it completely upsets all the preconceived notions of the west. In reference to the usual charge that the Chinese are sceptical, mater.alistic, itc.. Mr. Meadows remarks: "I would askmy English, American and French readers what is it that the hun dreds of thousands of our respective coun trymen, who hurry daily through the streets of London, New York and Paris, are after? Are they, or are the 3 not, pur suing wealth and material enjoyments with ardor, absorbed in material inferests, • utilitarians, industrious and gain seeking? Why have the English been called shop keepers, the American dollar hunters, and why do these names stick ? Why are there eighty thousand women in the streets and public places of London ? and why is there an enormous- organized prostitution in Paris?" He arguesthat this monogamic West is not altogether free from the vices of poligamistio nations, and that the vices and crimes prevalent in both the Orient and Occident are identical, ip • lind. He assorts as the result Of long and indepen dent study, and' , Close observation. that the great mass of the Chinese are sunk in, material intereSts and enjoyments, just as are the great' mass of the English, French and 'Americans, and that as there exists • in the West, among its gain,•seeking ma- jorityA_ large amount of generOsity,pUb lic spirit end right feeling, which may be , appealed to with-confidenetywhen a-great cause is imperilled, and which them is es cable of unsparing self-sacrifice so there exists ii Similar. public. spiritin the Orient, and that there is in both. hemispheres a minority actuated by higher feelings, aim ing at. higher objects.. The ' author com bats with convincing .arguments anct bets', the assertion made by-ether writers•of the non-existence inChineof such a minority, and the latent publietitirifcif the niajority. They _portrayed. a ;people, Ike 'says: ' that I could! have Ino.exjstencei any More..thart A nation of. centaurs; they depletedii peo ple,nitit liiitnipi but inhuman.. 'ln 'ariautri big " this f OellitiOn .the - anther.. maintains nothing more extraordinary than that the ehinese are a nation,• composed , of men 1 f igil eyetnen exhibiting the _same varieties i cif. ~,orttsti:r ,in degree • and quality, than .ett [ o: Nry -n' s i ntiA,ns'of men 'and women call 1351AIPAIRR.8. 1- 7140_: bingo that the Chinese 1 are scopt!;w.._eaw4t,e-of moral feeling, he iefutesloy,Oktilcig #.', the feet - that every 1 l'neivklitiiitir. , and 'OTC's!. decument •of • the i Ch'h#ollo; ,its•X4r,4 1.44*( 4 4 inOtrit 4 -'i ! Psr .- ehkii.g . '#ittA: slid. .41.itiO, itiot!'s -. o* . , t ( giThiii.644g4,13...%)44y..144.0.": 40, viitu.: , , oils thing '. .triao. l .l:te: cfr3e.". '; ' e proves. [philoophicailydhat -the whole•sollerrielif Chinese society, is a splritna} ppodneki whrisiteraiWtONte IP air A - m g o h tto , : riorti tni Vs l ib irbatayer the Otter ~. . ~ gattill °du. A HUNDRED TEARS TO COME. BY BARRIE. niisttilantous. Chinese Civilization ==lM==2 brought it intOjeopardy: The author tells us that :While the Christians start . with man's fall and redemption, believing min born in sin, the - Chinese believe that Man is born perfectly good, and that from this belief the political peculiarities of Chin a are directly derivable. "For instance, the doc trine that man is radically good, sanctions an appeal to the mass of men whose de cisions Must be ' right,. as truth or good neis is their common point of agreement, while divergence proceeds from - individual want of harmony with the whole. Ac cordirisly for a thing to be publicly done is equivalent to its being right. Hence the publicity of appointments and of all social transactions in China." Publio of fices in China, we are informed; are con ferred under a process of severe, public examination, giving an equal chance to all men,_ to the ablestand. most. worthY. No distinction _kis _made betweemintellectual and moral qualification. Education is generally diffused by a system of public schools in which the same lessons were taught four thousand years ago. The sys tem of training youth for public office has worked very successfully till lately. We have seen it stated elsewhere that the re- Tent practice of selling high positions, which is regarded as one of the causes of the 'let rebellion, was theconsequence ef,the. plo t embarrassment of the gov ernment, occasioned by the British opium .war, and opium tariff. Chinese revolw, tions are never ciirTeted against the prin. ciples of government, which have been authoritatively decided on as the best, but against the rulers who are not mas ters but seryants of -the form of govern ment, and who must be removed when they disagree or pervert it. Their corm mission is then considered at an end.— This doctrine explain; that while so many rebellions have swept over the Empire, deposing dynasties, the government re mained unchanged. The following rules, we are assured, form a solemn part of the instruction of every educated. Chinese:— That the nation must be governed by moral agency in preference to physical force." "2. That the services of the wisest and ablest men in the nation are indispensa ble to its good government." "3. That the people have a right to de pose a sovereign who, either from active wickedness or vicious indolence, gives cause to oppressive and tyrannical rule." So far from China• beting.the,.untnitiga ted despotism which we bold it to be, even the succession of the throne is under the above rules better and more rationally regulated than in any European country. While it is usually restricted to the mem bers of the reigning family, the crown is awarded to merit within that family, in stead of seniority. The writer contends that the centre li zation of the Chinese empire is not an evi l deuce of despotism. ,He proves by the condition of England that freedom and self-government are -not always thtteltrie thing. it was to be remembered, that the appatatu,s of government in China, is not one of physical force; but of intellectual superiority and moral persuasion, and that under a doctrine of the radical bad ness of man there must in all consistency ; be a govornmeut relying more upon force ' and less upon trust, than under the oppo , . site doctrine. The practical evidences which Mr. Meadows , give us of the freedom of the Chinese, agree with the observarions of former travellers, who failed to explain, the reason of it. He says : "The China ; men can sell and hold landed property with a facility, certainty and security which is absolute perfection,--compared with the nature of English dealing of the same kind. He Can traverse his country through its 2000 milei of length, unques tioned by any official, , and in doing so cart follow whatever eccupatinti he - pleases." This and the practice-of annual public ex aminations of candidates for office, under a free competition, contradict the opinion prevalent here and in „Vutepe of caste ru ling in China which opini4n may have arisen from the fact that Children gener ally 'follow the occupations of their parents, but they are evidently not obligated to4o so. Mr. Meadows further remarks that the Chinaman can quit his country and re..enter it without passport or other hind-1 ranee; that the inhabitants of the inte rior hardly ever see an official except once a year the tax-collector, and that they,are 'prompt-to resiit-every-kind of tyranny; : that, in fine, they enjoy a larger amount of 'practical freedom than European na tions in the disposal of their persons and property. Another traveller, Lieutenant Foams, testifies to the same effect, .-The. Chinese, be says. "enjoy a fair_ portion of liberty, and more happiness than falls to the lot of most ,nations.. The empire .is one fam ily, and if the Imperial father sometimes visits severely the error ofa member,of it, yet is he slow to. exercise, his sthopity; and though death be the penalty that the law awards for many offences,capital pun ishinents are eitremely'rare, and the bent of legillation'_aims_ _ providing' against the ills of humanity relieving its wants, and Preventing rather than punishing crime. For, this purpose, education is general, arts are encouraged, gigantic un dertakings are completed for facilitating trade, agriculture is held in honor, and every possible means adopted for feeding the people, and preventing and allevia ting famine, which, without some such regulations would perhaps oftenter occur." —"lf some of the above particulars do not squsre with European notions, amongst their fruits may be mentioned that tie Chinese are the most contended, good humored, well-fed, industrious and happy population, that in the course of sixteen ,years - of service in the navy;, and rambles in most parts of the globe, I hat% met ,With." • 'lt ins to us, that whatever' the for .. ofgtimientido;rde hi 'towns ig-0'20140h merrier affair than we have 1340T3 led to. vWl , t* - " . .EXCELSIOR." believe by persons who had seen nothing of it than what presents itself to thestran ger on the dirty _wharves of a sea-port s -- The Chinese farmer is represented as liv ing in the midst of "fruity gardens, leafy lawns, flowery conservatories, fish-ponds, poultry -yards, etc. ThwtOwns of the in ferior display "rich and gorgeous shops, fruit-shops piled with grapes and melons, and pine apples iced fit command;; eating houses at the elevation of observatories for the sake of and the view public gar dens with jugglers, fortune-tellers, dan cing and Singing girls, tight ropes and dramatic interludes; while at every cor ner, and in every open Space are itiner-. ant tradesmen, from the restaurateur to the dentists, and all except the lowest la borers and coolies strut .ab.mt in dresses composed of silk, satin and crape." All this contradicts flatly the long tales of Chinese misery, poverty, degradation and famine which reached us from time to time prindipally through the medium of British literature, and it would scorn that the British, if they are bent upon converting and civilizing the world. had better begin at home. They evidently cannot teach the Chinese much, nor ame liorate their condition by reducing them to-the level of the people of India. The policy to be pursued by the Western Powers in China should never become one of conquest or occupation, but should be strictly commercial. ' About thirty years ago, Mr Joseph St,. Clair built a cabin in Arkansas, far up to ward the head water's of White River.— It was then all a wilderness around, and game was abundant. There was no lack of bear, catamounts, wolves and panthers. In fact, that country was, at that date, a nerfect paradise for the practiced hunter. Mr. St. Clair had no family other than a young wife and one infant. He was fond of hunting, but he cultivated a few acres in corn and vegetables At first it was fully ten miles to his nearest neigh- bor's, but . during the ensueing Spring, a man named Williams made a settlement, within half a mile Of St. C., and the two fam ilies became neighbors and quite inicautte. Mr. Williams was a man in humble eir cuinstanees and a large family. mostly of grown daugters, and no small children.— Otte day in the moth ofJ uly, 1829, (the , first Summer that: Mr. St. Clair lived there), . his wife was at home . with the chid. and Mr St. Clair was oil with his gun. About 19 o'clock in the morning she :ell her ba by asleep in the_cradle,_and_weist to the field - to gather beans for .dinner. On her return the _child was gone. She, however, felt no alarm, because she supposed that ' her husband had come home during her absence and had hidden somewhere about the house with the child merely for a little fun ; so she busied herself in preparing din ner. In an hour or two her husband rem turned_fronl, _the_woods__bearin g his gum-. and a young deer that he killed, and on inquiry declared that, he' - knew 'nothing; They. now suppoied that-=one= of Mr.' Williams' daughters had come in while Mrs. St. Clair was out, and finding the ba by, of which. she was very fond, She carried it home. This theory was to them quite satisfactory, for there was no other neigh bors, and.the child could not go away,-un less carried. How else could it have hap, pened ? • Dinner being over. Mr.. St. Clair walked over to the neighbor's, to bring back bis treasure of a baby that Miss Lucy said that she had not borrowed the baby—she had not; seen it that day. Mr. St. Clair was hard to be convinced that no one of the family had taken the child, but all as sured him that they know nothing of it. . It,was.now time to be alarmed. ' "What has become of the poor child ? " was his • exclamatiOn, aiid :he: ran back ' great agony. The mother, in like manner, was almost frantic. They Could not con ceive who had. taken away , their child- Mr.Williams's family joined in the grief. but could afford. no aid; no nonsolatien. They could invent no theory, nor devise any plan. by:which' the child had, , vi ,•1" any degree of ~ p robability, diSaPPPared- WhO was to take it atyay? Why would any ono wish' to Italie - it:l - They -were utterly at a loss. Finally, it remembered that occa sionally there were parties of: Cherokees hunting throggh that country. It was trolv surmised that they had.happened to come to the lionise While Iztr, Si." C. was in the field and , had stolen the child and • carried it away. This was; at once received plausible,and qtritep . rebable, galier next mornmg, Mr. st. Clair and Mr.Vfillitilis_set out to settle_ for the fedi- . an canw, dad lift J.St. C. Was left alone athome. • Shemae sitting in silence, wee-,_ pieg . tegra biger anguish, strOh As none bet mothers ever, shed, and wondering in bei heart what bad become of her darling baby. ' Itwas now ribebt the -hoer of the day on ,which;' she,: the day . previous, had gone otti.-.-Ere. she was aware, 0 . large panther, wrthateilthy tread, Mine to theidoor arid locked" in [toward, the cradle. Dirs.St. Clair screamed and he ran away. The truth;was now apparatet, and no new light has'ever been past upon the subject. Memphis appeal. TOBIATOES.—As the season jor this whole some and delicious vegetable is rapidly ap proaching, we give the following recipe for preparing them, froth the Scientific Ameri can,-which we are assured by one who has made the eleeriinent, is - superior to any thing yet discovered for their prepara tion: "Take good ripe tomatoes, cut them in slices,and sprinkle over them finely pul verizta white sugar, then sprinkle claret wins sufficient to cover them.. Tomatoes aresometimes prepared in this way with diluted Vinegar. but claret wine -imparts to tiumr‘alticher and mere plemanttavOr. nuKe.,arly ,v9seroblit?g. the strwbeigy Mitt: thyiblift • A Tale of Horror MEM The Northern SIM It is remarkable time from , the earliest ages, among mist races some . singular , feeling or association of mystery attached to the North. "Out of the North evil shall come, " says the inspired writer; and it was to the North that Runic sorcerers turned to the great source of incornpre hensible lore. And the mystery has 'not diminisheil in late days. The question of the Northwest passage vexed the world for years, and now that has been solved, one in every way of infinitely greater impor tance to science, has been raised in the in quiry, "Is there an open Polar Sea?" "What difference does it make to any boit whether there be such a sea?" cry many. The same class of minds' decry appropriations for astronomy, don't quite see through the coast surveys, and, in short, howl out at every dolltir devoted-to art or science, "Why was not this money given to the poor?" Yet even such know that all - practical knowledge is Nis.. ed on science, and, that science must mas ter the great laws whioh pervade the whole earth. A question of polar magnet ism and the center of cold may be of this utmost importance in determining practi cal points of electro-magnetism and manu factures. At any rate, until science has completely satisfied every question it is interested in, practidal, daily bread, man ufacturing and' arts have no abosolutely perfect foundation or future. There is good reason to believe that North of a certain latitude, climate be., comes warmer. With this theory are 'as sociated many unsolved scientific prob lems. It is believed that there 'is a vast Polar ses, and that this is the great rerort of whales, the observation of many wha.m lers coikfirming this. All the principal whalings grounds are just in situations which seem to be the exits or doors of such a sea, and the singular fact of whales going South from them, and the . manner in which they disappear or reappear, all confirm the idea, flier° are also scien tific observations innumerable, to say nothin. , of the Kano' expedition, which should be deemed almost conclusive. There is another class who say, "there has been suffering and expense—let u s e have no more of this.Polax exploring."-= Such persons are not aware that thou sands of whalerncn annually suffer little less than they, probably would in a well appointed expedition ; and that pinked men can easily be obtained among them for such a voyage. In short, if men who are perfectly familiar with the perils of the extreme North, are willing to en counter them, and if the whole scientific world approves of the project; (and gives glory to America for having those 'who dere do it,) the question simply is, wheth er America will raise the money requisite? That is all. Dr. Hayes, who has with Dr. Kane en countered the worst perils of the. North; is novr occupied in organizing sue i ,an ex pedition. We command the considere tion of it to all our readers. If lte..and others are willing to go' cannot taise_the thirty thousand dollars requisite to send them and solve the last great Northern poblem? The true chivalry of the Nine teenth century ; the risking of life for, tru ly honorable distinction, oentres nearly all around science. And it we oome to his. , tory, to progress and facts, we shall find that one new scientific fact is well worth a thousand lives, though it were a very small fact indeed. Generttions may - come - and go without doing any thing for posterity ; but dne scientific fact is an eternal and alp. solute acquisition to the cause of progress and from it may grow a new scource of happiness. ~1•To one can , say how; but. we defy a man to•atudy thelistoryof science and human culture, and - .not agree with us., To those who extend, a helping harict to all such ehlialricrandl,. ruly io effort, the higheit'ltonor belongs.= Theirs are the truly , enlightened minas who look beyondpetty, narrow limifs,, and coming generation will do them how. or ; for it is the true -, scientific era which is now dawning on , the. world. The 01d Swedes' We wonder how many wayfarers, who are whisked past the Old Swedes! Chureh; on the out-skirts of Wilmington; in. the cars of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Haaread—we wonder how many of them think, as we did the othet day; of the doings - of the Swedes at , 'Tort Cans tab," ail recorded in that most comical of all. historiep ; the "Knickerbocker His. tory of New. York?' It will be remain:. bored • that Jacobus Von Potienhargh, Commander-in-Chief -of 4he arm Y-of the High and Mighty New Netherlands. was signally discomfitteci by the said Swedes, as.there set forth, after which Jacobus rer turned to NOW Amsterdaui, "witha crew of hard swearers at his-heels,--eturdy bot tle companions, whom he gorged and fat tened; and who were ready to'bolster him in all courts ofjustice—heroe.s of his own kidney, fierce-whiskered, broad shoulder ed, Colbrand-looking swaggerers, not'one of whom ,but - looked , as though he could eat up an oz. and pick his teeth with his horns. ' The -same veracious chronicle also describes the wrath of Peter the Headstrong, and now he murdered the warriors of New Amsterdam for another attack upon the Swedes, And how the fo ray ended and Peter came home from the wars more wrathful than ever. All this , was long ago. The Swedes are all dead ; the fiery Peter has gone all to dust, and the city of Wilmington, under far other than Swedish auspices, stands by the Cristiana. Should a live Swede rise from the, grave yard of the old church, and look from the hill on which it stands, he would behold a' city devoted mainly to the service of skilled labor, and his "loamy ears" would be filled with the sounds of the hammerana the engine shop. There are at least dome ettortoire mar chine and engine - shops,. with* iron -Abip t °: Y. {.~ ----- I factories; car wheel works , and mint! ufactories which give Wilmingtop the dis tinctive character of a Manufacturing City: The railroad shops alone employ man& swarthy mechanics, and the' only weirder ' is, that the city is not.powerful enongh„llo / free the little State of Delawara-yfrom silt traces ofthat slavery which la the de.. ' est insult to the Free Labor by which 'it lives and which it so practically tten`iiii4 4 ', But we need not g o, from the 'greictalt Manufacturing City. to Americato; tatik. about labor, so we turn to the Old Swegee, Church, which dates talk to A: D."; 169 N and which still stands, tinlinptilied time. It now belongs to the , EpiscopalVe ans, and is now called. "Trinity Chtirpli:', , • The original building of the,old Sivedae t , Church, , Southwark, Philadelphia,_____' ifrie 1 erected-twenty-one years - before four years before the arrival of Will' Penn—but the Philadelphia Church Rut [ rebuilt in 1700, so that the WilMingtofit Church is two years older. ln shape - 'both Churches resemble each other very muttle. The Wilmington Church is builtrof deal stone which age has only darkened ,etilk. More, and the walls are at least,two,NlK six inches in thickness. 'The' roof has et very steep slant and'the projection's Alt* ends of the edifice make it lottli t .vatt queer, The interior contains a very, dam • • gallery and the walls are vrhite-tvpsh- Unpainted benches supply the' plat* 0 r pews, and the only coloring skint the tics is the red of the plain pulpit e , , 'tl, Our guide to the plae,earat,,L,a,_ v,,,,,4. „ ilk .. girl, with bright hi o- ' ' gr . i t pinned over her diii - -, hatr. ',1100" , ' ', o, have stood for a icture , of "ifittle'' ''''/ I, as she vainly en deavored to- , surselkkokr fashioned lock, which ,we fintkllY oPenek giving, by her direction r , lire' turptitrit, you please, sir. 'i It being kendiy,,the, church was yet warni *froin4 thiCiiiti ithialt,,, is lit in the old-fashioned - sfOn'to ttiteilf . the Sunday School children,;(4lassetibew.: ing regularly held, fis our little ciperftltio told us,) but still the chttrch - laokeci 01'4 1 ; After our little friend' bad given the date, of the erection of theedifice'endlitplidtt4 ed that regular .gpiseepat:servicesAutne: held there until - two months agot,M4llll4 the new Chtirdb up the Braridyalp eit.. finished, she conducted 47 iiirie Ifiii 0111 tombstone-in'the church - yard; , '•',,••= 1 I. l s l Here was matter for antiguerianjhbiloi . lion. Ve sat down on the fr9seillotrilig: as eagerly as' lir. Pickirick *ditiat sow done before the "Bil StunapeiZiffiitlitilitm_ relic, and, without- much idiffletdtyt*Ad... phered the following inscriptio n,; legible except t,:ie date of the, .4eatitk: which being close to ther'grotiiid'istr ink,. fared more from time than the viol., I*. was a simple head•stotte;' suatl4lo MM. thicker than is the presentvinftelAc,,,,n, On one side was frig Rom 6. 7, B.—'-"Ac ate shat if 4 41 aitiair‘gc. from sin: llow itiii bit ;kid OA' ariiti: ye , believe that we guild & l i ve atiollrsial.' ' 1 nhe other side of thb ttMaeltbJi ttyp 3irszAer..Nratki ll iv , ..,.. ~.. All Eueopean traces in Amerlea seem 4 k yestarday Imide the entiquitiesof .tatstatit,.. world, but eprtainly ,it .. walk 4uzmething t hg ii see thegraVe of a man boil) in 1850.. * tpr. when there -were not thirty du:WA& whitey,, where now over thirty-4mtle; tthOlYo ~., three empires. (how Marty EitittefAirli...„ - there?) cover the cuntinent.Lf., ~. „ L ., ~k. We pass around' the church yar d itrui*„ going out saw-11- sunken grate:4lthbie,. clay frozen in its freshness., Mere Wiiilt. contrast I This- latter - grave:Wat that of man, who was said to hate, P*s ll 9e , d Itioi,, sellin, prison a month or two's/ix:Wie - relatively in =the spheres weriltheiatilt L , those. two,men witWnearlyAme.Aban ._ yeariVeiweenAheir deaths, ,and-'40% . two 3 hundred" , feet between the, resting,lkh4l4- their bodies I A grave - iardrig . t‘ O i Cs;.. Ogee. for- contras ts--thaugh, Mt* 00 ' by -no means appear on the stcinh4to3lo2 - —Evening Bulletin. ' .• . . i ' ~ -ILI • OA. - 'Ts z D vnro Nivea WX IP. 'ltia astrilsfli ft fact —the d i visit!fever weep. The sobbing, agonizing hoots arountlipmluett„ not one tear. Is it that he is imeee*,,bit stbdsitiffialreiuly, in, the chill disolnticuiPm r . Thatecennot be ;ferrite asks EbehisfathertiL hand, as, if to gain , strengthin , the thortd struggle,And leasson the breast of motheri: hiether, or sister with still conscious stfort._ tion; and just"befere:ekpiring, atove, after ; &long day's converse with the An l e Summons, he says to his oldest bro ther*%, the last audible good n igh tof earth- , -"Kissi„ me ,kissme ! " It must be because. the., dying have reached a point, too deep _,fOr ir our earthly crying and weeping. Th,o_ are face to face with higher anci holier be l _ ingsolvith the father in heaven, and his sit.- gle throng, lei" on by the Son himself,, ; and what are griefs of a morning, tearofiltt a dying fare well --be it that they are she 4 „ by the dearest on earth . —in that vision,_ bright of immortal life and everlasting OM union I A Yilyl , lo 1.1,41 at Niagara havlpg lbefm, _ crossed in love, walked cut to - the - pice, gave one lingering look it the pit, beneath him, and then went hoist% _ body was found the next morning bed. A very sensible young, waani think. ria,.. l •Satrimuy, my son, do you know; you have broken the Sabbath 2'? • "Yes, daddy, and mother's' big ir,cizi too. in five or s i x pieoes,' - said his - littUisl sister. • . . Vilir"Well, &lick, how's jrcittr , brpthAr y Ike getting on these tiniest" -44 0141itine t rate. Get, a start In the worltl-. 4 41104114111 a widow with nine ohildren.:: lbe-Lti . Stone Eiye "thelit'isiiettesi - the ears Men, and„hope in the 11, 9444 1 P,." Atinty,heesgn the OttOtOtif . wrong plus this time. i®l TERMEI.2IS per •