il Aronatrua TbW ANDA 11:1cbttestran illorninn, Map 10, 1848. The 'Grave of Bonaparte. 6r., a lone barren the wild raving billow, Ve a h " e s ro tb fie s .: e . rn till ro fttil a e n t d he t dew -drooping willow, Like road weeping mourners; lean over the grave. The lightning may &ash, and the loud thunders ratUe, tte heeds not, hears not, be's free from all pain ; lie sleeps higiast sleep,he has fought hislabt battle, Nesound ban - awake him to glory again. Oh, shade of the mighty, NV bere noir are the legions, "'bat-rushed but toconquer when thou led'st thearon! Alas.! they have perished in far distant regions, Anti all save the fame of their triumph is gone. The trumpet may sound, and the loud cannon rattle, They-keednot. %hey hear not, they're free from all pain Whey sleep their last sleep, they have fought their last No sound' can awake them to glory again. [battle, Yet, spirit immortal, the tomb cannot bind thee! For like thine own eagle, that soared to the son, Thou /1116 ngest from bondage, and leanest behind thee A. name,, which before thee, no mortal had won. Tim' nations may combat, and wars thunder rattle, more.on thy steed . writ thou sweeli. o'er the plain ; Thuu sleep',4 thy las; sleep, thou hast fought thy last Nu sound shall awake thee to glory again. [battle, I faced about again. The foremost Indian eras wattle - ten feet, rending in his bones' stirrups, in the very act of plunging his lance at me. Quick as thought I fired in his face, and sprang, or rath er. tumbled over the stile into my yard.. When I picked myself up I heard the hoarse gnashing of 1 their disappointed rage, and the clatter of retreating I , hoofs: _____ _One bright morning, %%lien most of the men were I, • This was a pretty dose grate ; nothtng serval ma off on a mustangekrive. a 'number of boyi—chil- , but the last charge of my faithful double barrel, and, Alien- of my nearest neiebborse--bal collected to ' as it was, several of their confounded little arrows bathe. in a pretty lisle basin, formed by an eddy of i were striking abatt me for mementos, the rieceopposite• my house. I heard their Merry 1 The whole scene ; long as it takes to give you an ' N - ell l4, and taking down my gun--a precaution` idea of it, could not have occupied over ten. min e-- • • brown as habitual, before going out, a_epulting on ! tees: but in that paltry fraction 01 time hew tierce- My cap-44 walked listlessly down_to the river balk ify vivid had been the transition from the very poe • to look at them. - I try of rural quiet to the stormy and terrible reality . - , There were five houses within hell a mile atewe of savage war ! But this was not the lust of it by a and :below me. The women. with all'eir sun-bon- i gad deal., nets on, Were tripping across from One house to the 1 I climbed to the top of the stiles again, afterload oiliere pay neighborly actesipiiig visits : the house- itily. my Min, just in time to see the scalp torn from deem lo` 'eml hieily aleng belend them ; the goats , the head of one of Our men who was returning were frisking ai d . butting at each other outside the from - a hunt on foot, and was so hard, pressed as to Picketing; a man plowing was whistling a sleepy •he compelled to fire his ride. He had been instant : . roundelay : groups of cattle in sight were reclining I lv borne to the earth by a dozen lances, in fall tet the grass. slowly grinding away at the eterlast- view of his own house. Their failure and loss of iiie end : and the thin wreaths of. opaque smoke i rr• case bad greatly infuriated them, although poor from the cliirmieye were clearly defined against the i Thompson had been steady and cpol, like a-'rete intensely brilliant transparency of a cloudless blue ran frontiersman as be was, yet they bad rushed , sky. The whole sane was the very ideal of quiet, upon him in a body, determined to ,have a scalp if delicious repose.it cost a warrior. It did too, and oneef theirchiefe, , . 1 remember being partieuhuly struck with the at that ; forehe eye and neree otthe gallant fellow happy and harmonious calm that had fallen upon did not fail hint in that fearful moment, When they teresemetimeS stormy home. and of thinking how closed so madly, das.hing, around him, that their - -eerfectly the poets dream might now be realized; latices met, grating in his bud}. A chief, whose ./1 -1 / 4 7W pleasant here, • - _ lance first touched llim, tumbled stilly forward amid 4 • t e -I•ltti I,.r's sunny acre. be quitectpte morn, the trampling hoofs, and the hunter was avenged. 're et and ant.le w‘th joy .' Orm•of the women made a veer narrow escape, when suddenly the sound of a gun caused me to j attic was only raked by the courage of her doe. turn my head.who sprung at the noee of the Camancheat horse. The tire object flee met my view was the w hi st- and made the animal shy just as the rider was •- ling .plowman scampering, as if for dear life, to- about to trarietix her, as she was climbing, the pick , wards his home. - yelliiig, "Indians! ludiane!"— et stiles. She got over safe, and the baffled ra.eal . Further on. around the most distant house in sight, p id tae gallant dog into the river ie where it also I could distingui:sh forty or - fifty dark riders, who e eeeped, much to my gratification. '. were galloping az rued fro with great rapidity. gash- f)uring these scenes a portion of their number erne2 together our horses end mules. I sent on the had been busily engaged in collecting all our mules ' wanting cry, at the 'arm of my' hems, to the women :t horse., that Were loose on the prairie, and now and then such co4ternation. shticks, and splashirig they started after the frightened animals, who were as there was among the little scamps in the water. tearing ofl like mad fir the direction they wished you ran conceive if ever you have seen a hawk them to go. In a few minutes they were out of thee-down among a corer of duAlt. i tight, all, was soil for a little while as before; bat, e •-e , ' 1 called to the Items to run to my house. which feremately, we had not been quite so silly as to was a b ou t tout his .paces oti. for I saw some have turned out our favorite riding horses, and in a of the indians were comieg towards us at full seer time there was a gathering, in hot haste, of , ' weed , an t i the• little fellows., -shaking the water all the men who were at borne. They gallemed up from their &tipping hair, some stopping to pick up to my house from every direction, mien in hand. -a shirt, and other.. bare as they came into the weed. with hot brows. flaming eyes, and curses deep- Seramblinz up tin' bank and plied their tiny feet. breathed between their teeth, eager to be led in eerambleee ell the way to the piclemieg Otte , or pursuit for vengeance. Still more fortunately, just I wo of them weer outcome theance iii the stream, t ae we were starting on the trail, the' very party and were delayed by their. fright in getting up the which had been absent on the mustang driveCarne. bank : ix) that by the time they reached me the in- breathless and foaming, up. It seems that they .anus were too doee to permit them to escape to had met with the Camanche trail, rid s suspecting the house unaided, aid but for my gun they would what had occurred, had run their horses in at full hare lost their scalps. speed. With a few hasty words... explaining the . 'Vim foremost Indian geopect up very close. but but= extent of the mischief, and a wild shout of ven i, me raising rtiv gu, w heeled to avoid m y tot:_s geanee tor-poor Thompvie . we off on the chase, and w i th my l ac e turned 'towards the s avaee to zionibering thirty determined men., . . k ee p him at e ar —the tittle fellows. almost frantic i Of course, there was . no difficulty in tracing the trithitrieht. clinging to my It commeeced my trail, which was broad as aevazzon , mad through the b ac kwart retreat toe eels thelwase. The Cantan- emes; and we followed at the best pace of tearher; ches will seldom rueh upon an .\ re ceca:;—lrlio ses; for ,our seeress Mc/caning up with them elide ., let's a :run in his hand, and shots?, by his aelibera. pended upon the speed of our animals. As we tia tharhei • perfeetiy cool—;mill he has tired : swept by the farmed old Hicks, one of the earliest after that; they viil swoop -upon him before' he- can settlers, who had posted himself on the very out load again. It i therefoielzery eaey to keep 'a i skirts of the grant, the gray-haired veteran was seen eer t e er of them,at `i .l ,.very• tifspectful distance by urging hts'horse acmess his field to meet mi. As resol e your med as if to seroot. whenever they lie approached we could see; froze the eagerness r ene too chi Four of the savage rascals had to of hi geseires, that something was wrong. We tint time come up, and were terrie , around me, l f halted for an instant, acrd the glare of his eyes e and enlearort;l:z. by,their yetis clamors. and threaten- e nsJiy pallor of his rigid fare, as hejained us, were ...: _e-:ore , . to draw my ti r e I we. aware teat if .'-even more eloquent of his terrible news than the I fae,i , I luej e t , be sere o f t e e: m e death. and s o i few words. he with difficelty gasped out from be t-at-end -towty-aoa steadily on toward the picket- tweerhais clenched teeth- . . .• e.., The little boys clung to me so desperaelv -.' My children! „ . . it ,ei their naked limbs as seriously to impede my "Great God ! which r • " John and Mary ! they've carried them off!" 'Nothing was spoken, but bending forward With a perfect bowl of fury, the rangers lashed their hor ses, like madmen. Such an incident was suffi ciently calculated to arouse a deliriums ofwrath, in their fiery natures. In addition to the other mere gee., these two childred had been torn from their old parent to be drugged off to a horrible captivity in the distant hills, unless we could catch the bru tal spoilers ,before they had gabled a covert. No marvel that horses were goaded even when faith fully at their utmost speed : that swollen veins were knotted along flashed 'empties, and cureeeand yells burst Z intervals from tightly drawn lips, as the im. 1 age of those fair vourr, children, wreathed in the black, naked arms of a filthy and tenacious warrior ; would rise befinius. For every body loved little THE ICAPTERED CIULDREN : on THE CA MANCHE MIA V BY The AUTHOR OF ' 4 OLD GUIDE," prcrzrec• The sarztes. with tufts of horse -hair streaming. frern I‘.leir limt. , and circlets and plumes of gaudy leathers ti.itnitin- , from their heads and manes and tails of then horse. , whooped. yelled. and clattered 'their long lances a... 74 :Ist their white shields of butt's hide. as they moulded amend me with the stilt ness-ot a sea bird t beet - lining more and more ea ucr. and , loftr.- thentin:le nearer as I at iiroached the picket . • • f , w.una...elvi was a liCtUNe tFAfTer 1 i.neu- they would make a twat and - desperate at tempt to prevmt my e• - ape. We were non- wit t. reds of the picket _wiles the. naana body of the Indians had nearly reached us. and there ttrne to live. T sy 3:kharm who :teemed to tale their rmrtiort , .. ...• „ . , _ . ... " . . . ~ ,rt_t - 5.10 - 1 1.0". t, r 1 -. 1..; i . . • - . .. .• _ . . .. . ~ .s •'. . _ 7 . ,-,......- , •:',-t._,... f ..= .7 ",.. ; -...- .., -, , . . . . ..., ,II '...--. . R ...„ . . , ' .... 1. . - .. . , • R, - ' ' -ex A) , - 1,-r .0.- ‘ 1 ' . .. ~,, ....v A . . •.7 . - • ~,. , 7 ,A.A.- '; ' - czi:* - - -- , c, cA ..cy ' , 'cv •• '' " ` .. '-', 9 _ ... '' • ,-"' '. 1.. f--; - s..- • . . . , ,-,... 1-• .."....- with the design of maintaining it, were between us I and the stiles. I walked steadily towards them and levelled my gun. They swung themselves down behind the bodies of their horses, leaving nothing exposed but the legs by which they eking to the saddle. I told the boys to run toward them, intending to fire as they raised Themselves in the saddle to ittike ; but ,the ?muting rascals were watching mefrom under - their horses' necks, and seeing-that they must catch it if they raised them selves to shoot, wisely started their horses, onshorr ing several arrows without changing their position, and wounding the boya,considerably. 1 saw my young charges reach the steps. Now was my time to run for it, for flair Carnanches were within as many paces of we, thundering ,on at full speed. I started for my precious life. There watt a general Bowl and rush toward me froth every side; and I felt the prick of several arrows. It was only twenty paces now to the stiles. I wheeled and tired at the nearest ; a few desperate bounty ; and my foot was on the low stile, when a lance whizzed past my ear and quivered in the post, while a deateaing, furious roar burst Own every throat. ~ Mil= PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, -AT TOWANDA, 'BRADFORD :tolrfitt, O'NEAR GOODRICiii • . •. • • I""( ''• ' = r Molly Hicks, " *P. the licit-white locks," and John. nyiras Et second " Benjamin, the child of his old age," to the hardy pioneer. As he rode in front, which position he somehow maintained, with all the leading eagerness of the younger member', of the party, with his features - so . stiffened and see his eyes fiend on the distance be- !as M htsee:ket our presence of mind to one fore him, and his long white hair streaming from ; meat; but instantly, as he spoke, a., teen mfr his uncovered head I thought I imd neveilbokedl smangeff-andrauto where our horse* fOld" been upon a more striking picture of stem, mute ago.' left, for their syersgounls. ny. It was enoug h to have-strung the " me , o f a The boy grasped one with a famished eagerness amfard to reddest, daring. onelotik at that silent ' it isiatlgneible In erinveYv and Amok 4 ; 4 :V 10114 9 -- old man. ln a moment the color began to return to his blue The trail was leading, in the direction of the den- lilts andlight to his glaribg esie. seat portion of the Came Timber, where, too, among This convinced ate that' hie-wound was not so wooded -runt broken ridges, the bead waters of the deafterale as we had feared. No one had ex's"' Trinity- took - their origin, breaking ,in minnerous fined it; for there was the lance leaning ageing the springs from dark gorges ; and in this rugged end I treeSwith the red staidupon its blade for severe! extensive tract we supposed they would endeavor ) melte° i and that, we had thought, was cunclusive if possible to conceal themselves 'by throwing ns ' enough. . off the MA As I was *ovine to bathe his 'feverish temple Seen we were-scudding beneath the shads of the , and examine the wound, little Direly turned her tall forest. There was no underesrs'owth, but the t vuiet eyes upon my file" and said with a solemn shaft-like trunks rare dark and bare to a cmisidere i imierteue e that thrilled me stmagelYt "That bad ble height, leaving long open vistas between them. 1 lnjuns wouldn't kill me !" As if she felt that gee- A chill awo came over us at this mill transition anus injustice had been done in selecting, Johnny from the sunny expanse of the prairie to the so- e instead of her. I could not resist catching theletle lemn gloom of this great nomad temple. `creature in my arms and Itiefin,g her while the hot " Contrary to our expectations, the trail, instead of tears binned over my lids at this' touching exhibi diverting north, toward the bills, kept on west, di- ' tion of forsetfulness of self in the sister's love. ree d y t h roug h t h e b e l t of the CrosaTimber. These, On examination. the wound looked bad enough, Indians have an unconquerable ave r sion t o th e :to be sure. There was nothing for it, however, but brush, and oqr hopes were greatly elated to find to prepare a litter and geehim borne- This the th a t. true to t hi s i nst i nct, t h ey were i teep - = , i n _ t h e j men soon did with twies amid buffalo ttbes which open woods, and probably making for the plains . the inirfinithrOFlfi r roietr aertr i rogerfres 'lneatreretr beynnd the deep fame- This course offeror us I aranti in, the died , much treater assurance that we should be able to ! • peer little boy ! his plaintive "Mina were eery keep the trail, and finally overhaul them. But it : distressin g , -T he rudest of the men. with all the was nearly six miles across, and our reckless haste ' flush of fight upon them, seemed to be greatly MO* was beginning to tell upon our horses: so that, with red; atelasentle Molly was carried with as censi all the tumult and intensity of our exci'emene ire derate tend!tme" as if the crowns of all the world were obliged to check oar gait. For several miles had been her heritage. Strange r incongruous ani we continued silently galloping d e ns r , t h ose di m, • mat is mant ! We were Melling oter the corpses leaSfretted aisles, the old man still retaining his e.,,,.. 1- the slain. A few minutes before, these men had , position in iron' , never - tor an instant' turning his m i n wilder than starved 'tigers for blood and their I eye to the right or to the lift, but staring fixedly . eyes were now moistened at the sight of theca two ahead. " . elfildren and their old father. It is asustom, never Suddenly he raised himself quickly in his stir- 1 , de v iated from by the Camaecbes, to kill their male 1 rups, and wi th a sharp. shrill shout, " There et— ; prisoners, of whatever age. when they see a pro. p l unge d the spurs i nto his horse. I looked ahead I &ability of their being retaken, flit be a child, as i 1 and mild just distinguish objects g l eam i ng m i ll i, I, in this instance. they say, with stem foresight, " It past the trees far before us. With a shout that l is one future warrior out of the way 1 " Pori as made those tangled arches shiver again, we all fob. 1 their "hand is," emphatically, "against every limed bite. ' The wild vital of maddening excite. t man, and every man against them," all mankind ment was beyond any description. The men fair- I are alike their enemies; bin there is toe much sa lts shrieked with the exultation of savage jog. Our I rage chivalry among them ever to kill or misuse a h orses caug ht t h e sp i r i t , r i n d seeme d ener s ze d ! female prisoner, a thing they have never been with simematnral speed, as they fled b y the trees ;,- known to do. They will kill them, and take their so swiftly that the trunks seemed run into each oth- ! scalps in atateking a town or settlement ; bet when er, and to form a continuous wall. Now and then, i they. have once spared them as prisoners, their per though a wider opening before us, we would get a , sons are forever afterwards sacred. full, but momentary view of the spotted horses of : There is a deal rust of rode nobility about these the foe streaking acrom it. Then such a burst of Cement-hes; and it they should ever learn to use shouting from our men ! rifles well. they will be far the most formidable In this way the chase hail continued for several a enemy ma race have yet bridle dispute the pre miles, without lessening materially the distance be- I ses s ion of territory with. That they have not vet tween US, and we were beginning to fear that our overeome their enperstitioas dread of fire-arms is horses would fail us even, when the old man, poet. the sale reason why we are still able to cope with ling ahead, laughed out with the exultation of a them at such advantages. fiend ; and, as we swept pest the object. I saw it We learned from little Mary's story that the hid was a horse "of one of elle warriors that had drop- W I " havingherself and brattier in ehaegehalli when ped dead from exhaustion. How the men yelled we rushed into the timber after them—although she 'at this sight . and her brother were standine. hand-in-hand --only Their horses were giving out, and we were sure struck him down with lance, and left her uninoles of them ! Another ! and yet another ! laid by the ted. " The bad InJana uvula" Jail lee itrail ! I saw one of the warriors, on ken, running i We hail lost two men in the skirmish among oil' chten#h the weeds! But on ! on ! lever m i,,,,a the timber, and had sevar2l wounded._ There ...vie. him ! The main body is before ! j ten Indians that we knew to be slain. We recovered Suddenly we burst upon the dazzling light of the all our horses and mules, and in addition. secured prairie. There they are. The whole body of them, i forty or fifty Indian horses, with all their quaint within a quarter of a mile, strung winding along the aceoutremetets. Some of these horses were noble deep grass like a great make. animals, and most of them curiously and beautifully The clamor of pursuing wolves never sounded marked. more terrible to a herd of exhausted, deer than did Our return hone was a painful blending of sail our shoot to those frightened thierets I ness and triumph; but it was a prodigious relief to See how they look behind. They are uncedain us all :wlaen we beard; next morning, thatlittle what to do. Johnny was doing well. Indeed, in about two Hal they make to the timber again. The rap- months he had almost entirely recovered. pid tramp of the avenger's treed turns too. They are panic-stricken. The old man, with the. un earthly wildness of his mien, looks enough like a phantom of wrath to strike In army With terrors— They ruehed to the edge of the timber, and throw themselves in frantic hurry from their horses' backs—acme head foremast. We, too, having dismounted quicker than thol; theetesek when are ranged, and the platoon bees a leaden nail among them before they reach the trees. Such -staggering and tumbling; but not a sound from them. With clubbed guns we rushed after the old man in the timber: and neertheetm gie is hand to band, and foot to foot, with the tithe, desperate wretches- They turn at bay a moment behind theenvert of the trunks; but the fury of our charge veer-bears 1 everything. For a moment the rustle of struling I feet, the dull ring of crushing blows, the low groan and limey fall are the only sound that break the awful silence ; and then the peal ofnur victorious s ellout proclaims that they are flying. The pursuit is caatinaedacene diseince bet they are too swift for .ni; and one after azwels* of the almost distracted members of the ecatteQ party, panting and•exhansted, make their appearance on the prairie. " The children ! the children ! Have the -been seen r Usheated. ' tHere they are !” replied a deep voice from a distance in the woods. We all moo in, and never shall I forge the scene. At the free of a large tree the old nannwas bending over his boy, who had been piffle*" by the lance of a Camancire, and lay pleading for water, writh ing like a trodden worm. Little Mary, with large, blue, tearless eyes that looked as if they would ne ver wink a s mirs stood fly hint, holding his hand.— si The slimmed and Melody gen of the old man lay on the ground by him, while his nearest neighbor, a tall, powerful man, stood off, in respect for the =6l= OF wwwwertobi ritch)..-Aigx gabarritAwl saerednesi . of grier,:gazing 91cni the' trxiii'Veilt dimmed* eyes. . • _, i There was a heavy pause. , The o ld an looted up with 1400d-shor ers, safum, 1 . "Water, mum I `ater i crater r Ice hail aU been' , much shocked b the scene thr ; A Boa Facroar.—The Harper r of New York, are perhaps, me greatest manufacturers of books in the United Stales. Their establishment is quite a curiosity. One of the buildings is fire storieshigh, with lire isiadowsier each story, and extends Gem 1 Cliff street to Pearl Two other buildings. as we learn tram the industrial aent, join this on Cliff, and opposite on the same street, are two bad'ulgs ' more, of vast size, in which the type-se.ning and stereotypingere done. There are nineteen Adams and three Napier presses, worked by steam, which throw oft 70 reigns of Paper per asy—that is to say, 0,000 sheifti—Mating 301,600 sheets per week, and 101,433,200 per year; which it equal to 1000 octavo vots. of otter SOO rives each; per day. 6000 per week, are:1,312,010 per year. We understand that during theipat year the number of voltunes,of all sizes, thrown off, was not lees than 1.500,000.--r The fizturesiitihe bindery ate valued at 513,000.- Here 52 barrels of flourare used per year for pane; of glue s 45 bursts ; 750 paciLves of gold leaf are used in the same period for lettering, ornamenting Sm. Here likewise ire mid , 700 pieces of muslin, 440 square yards each, ami 60,000 of pastebolde. - 11 , 400 sheep rlalikper.annmn to sup*. skins for the ertatiliSkiess* the immense vaults mkt the estatiolment sire atritor3oo,ooo poxmas of ster eotype plebe' valued at from 7 tog cuts perpouud. 1100.popirefsef meta.= used N9 - Aelly for casting, making 41,000 pounds per annum. In thecompos ing rooms :re from 80 to 90 ; 000 pounds of type-- The stock in trade et essimated at V,000,000,-- They employ of 400 persons, Slide less than one qua Mer of whom are females. About 1,600 per sons are supposed to depend upon this establish ment. The sum paid to persons employed is about 200,000 per annual. Messrs. Harper & ftwthersi havupaid to =dime immense SUMS of map— . Sistems has received from them $lO,OOO Pres cos, 20,000, arid Dr. Anthoe, 100 must hirreveceiv ed a fortune at their bands.—Biareffs E•Site. ws!.xoa.ar_h~.+'S'~aoS a7,9pr•m~`c • 0 1 4 -116 Neal the Igreilallsodl - Ilantr. A ssar.saint. The fountains serenade e flowers. • Upon their . sitter int w And, nestled in their tea boVre , The forest birds are ate i The bright and giitteriis h osts a ve, ' Utibar their Olden ~'' - ' While :galore holds her coutrta of lore .4nd for her client it4ls. rhea. lack, Ira ke—in iauty rise t "Ns now the rtrotaised hottr,, • When torches kindle in 'the skies •.‘ To'figin thee to thy bower. 1 The day vre dedicate to care— , To lore the witchingiaight: For all thaen Des atifur end Fair is hours like ihelke iitsite4 E'en thus the sweets to. rets given. The mosinlight on thy tree. ' And all the bliss of earth and bea‘ren, Are mingled. lure, id thee. Then, ladl, trgke—in beauty rise! `Tis now the Treanked hour, When torches kindle its the skies To light thee to thy - bower.' FKMALF: Awrim.—The New York, Est sa:fs '— We have been informed that several female artists in thiscity are preparing tb dispute with the other sex in the province of wood engravitui. An emi nent painter of New Yotk, to whom tile- art of cepa? ing on weed in this country is under great obligations for his gs.lianteatki instructions, main tains that they are more likely to excel in• it than men, on account of the peculiar adagmaticin of their organs to tasks which require an eye for minute lines and delicate shadingsiand for greatly superior dexterity of hand and nicety of tough. Abroad Mere are many fetaalea en-plop:xi as rood crii,r• a- ' vers, and perhaps the mist extraordinary progress which, this art has lately made in the fineness at d priCision of its- execution may be, in considerable degree, owing, to them. - The Academy of Design. begins to harp its fe male pupils who attend regularly upon the instruct -1 lions of the .professors. Last winter they 'fined about for a cis of ratan' ladies sufficiently ad vanced in the arts of des*„m Labe admitted as pupils of the arts Academy, but were not able to find them. 1 This winter they hare a Oass of air. i While we are speaking of matters connected 1 with the arts of deign, we take occasion to remark that an idea of their, importance in a utilitarian point of View seems to be gaining gratmd in the community. The advantage of knowledge of draw ing in aiemeehanic 4 atis is well illustrated in ar. 1 anecdom'which the artist referred to in the cora -1 Menrement of this article is fond of relating. He was applied to not very long since by an artizan, a worker in the prer.iout metals; fa; a flawing I' intended to be a model for a spoon, He executed several, from which the goldsmith made his selec tam, and asked the artist What he should pay liim- The asuman' wag., "Nothing at all "Since you insist upon renintrz e a matter of business," replied the artist, " you mar give me thirty arl!lars." The I t man was paid,. the goldsmith took the drawing, and sometime afterwaills meetidg, the artist said to him. " I shall make ten thousand dollars by your drawin4. The spoon i made according to your model cannot be frmislied as fast as I have orders for them. I have fong 6d the idea of a spoon made somewhat like your pattern, and if I had been able to draw ; I might as well bare made the ten thou- sand dollars years ago as now. THE DTNGEOr.—Tbe following . —which isbnmen , sigma to our mailection as a paragraph melting the round of the papers—has always seemed to us one I of be most affecting records in language. gteme's , roptive watt 'qlie iron entering his soul" loses in terrible significance beside the picture in the last I fine. The passage i 4 from Count Confalonieri's account of his imprisonment—" I am an old matt now ; yet by fifteen years my soul is younger than my body ! Fifteen years I-existed (for I did not lire—it was life) in film tielhurne dungeon 10 feet square ! During six years I had dcompaninn ;—dur ing nine I was alone ! I never could rightly dis tinguish the lace of him who shared my captivity in the eternal twiligiik of our cell. The first year we tallied 'memos* together; related our past I lives, our joys, over and atm again- The next we. commuicausd to each other our thoughts and ideas on all subjects: The' third year we had no ideas to communicate; we Werebemn; ning to lose the pow er of reflection. The fourth, at the interval of a month or so, we would only open our lips to ask each other if it were, indeed possible that the world went on as gay and hustling as when we formed a portion of mankind- The fifth, we were silent The sixth, be was taken away, I t4rer knew where, to the execs:* or to liberty'. a nd I was glad when be was gone,—even solitude wasbetteilhin the grim rake of that' pale, I , rtscautt face. After thall was alone. Only one event broke in urn my nine inane rangier. Oae day (it must have been a year or two eller my companion left me) the dungeon door 'was opened and a Trice- . whence proceeding I know not—utter these words: —"By order of his Imperial Majesty, I intimate to you that your wife died a year ago." Then the 'door was shut; I beard no more. They had but flung this great a„lony in upon me;—and left me aloueArith itastia2? ftrerf TREES —A single tree in front of Thar home will confer the following benefits will increase thwitalne tit frarrMe/iite :•••—it ) Iffard a shade - in ran - ChM* to play in 4 wgl:lie folio the passim manger it will invite the birds to its branches, who will repay you in rich gushes of free music; it will add fo the bsatny-ef city or talto ; it will prove yono be a person of wisdom taste, liberality anal public spirit Will yoe Pot, then, do the simpleidend which seeuresthesegreat benefits! Now is the season to prepare . for it .to to purchase your trees and select your positions.— The frost is fast leaving the ground, and everything is getting in madmen,. Sterne places the ti planting of a tree" among the kut cardinal virtue*. Lain govern thetnaaemeataooOldlogld% • Tat'climat of fitgaionindiffemoce has mitred, Wirml a woman don't cage how Ito looks. P===M 11' ; • .14; al'T PI, .1.14,442k# . ' .11 It) 4atilo ."1 r• SAOri,of • 14.eaPlrear• 'Sam Smith *tt Ft. batlike an New Ws apr, in Was unriracesV,iis hair Was Uncombed, his boot* were imbhickedi and; he was leaning back in-a t ricatresque attitude t with his the rims piece i!inek4s . Sam thought to bhnself that h wasi,leap yearj and how.gloriou:4 it wobid'he if the latikhe mold only tie induced to pop the question, their ancient privileges t As he sat teallePiug.,"* ,xmoke wukt, so grace-tally orded," Iris fancy glow: , ed with the idea. How delightful it: be Id hare:se cfpnluos. foidlitig gin and with tender glatietia emlerreming. to do the agreeable! As he meditated his heart softened, and he began to fikil'd-SlllMAMl4l,4oiiiallish'ierilli'llity 'diffuse itself over his felellitgi/ and *noel he would faint kith propriety, the first time a young lady slionlif squeeze his hand. liaP: rap, rap:" sounded alaW-_ Saw peeped through the Venetian tlinils o et< e„*elaitneil if there isn't Illis4mes, and I all in 'a etsitabiqe, and footling like a tright-- , goodness gracious! I mast go right away and fix egscif up." As be left the room Miss Jones entered, At with a composed air, intimated that he should Wait. Miss Susan JOITS CMS a firm believer in Woman's rights, and now that the season was prcillitious, she deter mined to tale advantage thereof, and do a little courting on her own hook It was one of woman's privilege whitb had been usurped by flip_ tyrant, pan, and she was determined to assert . 13e! rights, rn spite of lice hollow formalities :of a false system of society. Meanwhi!e, with a palpitating heart, Sam wept through a series of personal adornments. the last twist was given to-his collar, the last, cart, to . his whiskers, anil with white cambric in 6nti, be de.. !vended to the parlor. Mis Jones rushed to receive and graspirtg his , lialid ii oli feriot tic - iird'st i how beantifulyou look 1" accompany ing kin ttonis with a look of undisguised -admira tion. '" Spare the Lushes or a modest young Juan," said Sam, applying, his cambric td WS his d3rifit.; =ill 4 Nay, my lore, why so coy!" said Susan ; "turn not.away those finely eyes, dark as jet, but sparkling us the diaftione. Listen to the voweof fond affection. Here la its rest" said she, drawing hirn'to a sofa ; " here with my arm around thee, will I picuest my true affection." ° leave me, eh, leave me," hittribuied Sam, "think of my youth, my inexperierited—Spare, spare ray palpitating heart?' "Leave me," said Susan preying him closer to her, " never : until the story Of restless nights of on quiet days, of aspirations„ fend emotions,and undy ing lose is laid before thee. Know that Tor years] have nursed for thee a secrei passion, seed I tell hoW each manly beauty mired me.-how I wor shipped like the sun-flower in the lurid light of those scarlet-treases ; —how my fond head was tramped in the meshes of those magnificent Irrhis how I was willing to yield up *the government of diat " imperial," thy Manner; so modest, so deli cate, enthanted me—joy to me—for IV joy was My joy—My heart is thine--take it-WV - filet let me 'snatch one kiss from those , ruby lips." The over-wrought feelings of the delicate youth was toorstroN, and he fainted from excess of joy. Meanwhile the enamoured maiden hung fandlyov er him mad Slowly the eyes of Samuel Smith opened--he ga zed wildly around him—them meeting the ardent -gaze of his "loryer, - he bl6-..hed deeply and behind his 'kerchief faintly faltered out,-- : " . Ask my pa !" Goomess.—To be constantly in the presenee of a good person--of one whose words 014 acts tend to purify ani explt—how pleasant and useful it We have no disposition to speak an impure Word, to perform a wrong act, or even to think of evil. The presence of the good Is a guardian angel to keep and preserve us from the sins and temptations by which we are surrounded. .Suppose that being who mores alien" to bless, shouli be the compan ion of our bosoms---the one to whom we can make' known yerjoysand sorrows ; what a povretfol laths mice for good it could have ever our lives! We should rejoice daily in feeling bow blessed good ness is, and be so elevated in all of itgrmhts : that it would become a Micah task for m .Wo maw! can you not merri.e such an inguence over Iyour erring husband ! If he loves the company of I the idle and partakes of the inebriating glass, ran inot Va." draw ham by love and kindness away from sure destruction. If his breath is polluted by profane words, who can be so service-41e as your self, to break him from his wicked habit I **pray you, let the antiosPhere around yon bethat of -good ness and truth, and you will be ministering angels to save the log. , Poticr. Porntr.-4 Maser John* (Mauer, a man of no bettor, went oat with-Miss Brady. a nice little lady, and treated to brandy, and sponge cake and candy, and more !Map so dainty-- BM at length the sal *How grew dirEnify mellow ; and as he was walking and kissing and talking, stab may Miss Brady, the nice hale lady, a fuse NI of rhino,. (I wish it was mine, oh,') he wbipt from her pocket. and dearer like a rocket: Bat sotto be was taken, while hacks be was making. and lodgings, assigned him, wherejonicemay find him. lint the maid on the morrow, myna forward ink eterrev, her hide