At.r, KTY.I47) ws2fir - 401, TILT pill whna add l Mil War Egiti ant mews edT deem Imirt far& tagi ." 3419 saltrili 3412 : - '1 4 ' 4 '. 41 . - ,513 . 10 to. . • . Al I, etkfir: " I nr" . " 1 ,4 51:141 isr2l Eh - b - r -"` aafia d - • -•• I hwseigaio - ••?rwr. • ) 4 u t cri t a r y,ll . , . 2. G 7 WSW/ s " t • lan •wcwi MM. 1 • c..ci bit s .... • . ti ryr.S. • Id to :a --. ti z- L L. 1 4 , 42 „ '4 4 1 " ge4k 1;1 3 t . w • Trig w 4 ,-,10117? w - , • g 1, , t „,• I 111 34 3 .3 11-4: • ' , 111 EJ 'J ang, ttr,,D • 5 ; • ktf ; 1 71 bil.3 ' • • . tt, i‘ t %Jar, At. •••• g - •.: .• • c I Ala I >bd ttl of i -14 S , volwat SkOfal r,4 4 11 .11; tO ~0 tkro, .1? A. 1. .$ $. 11144, DI Tokracum =c;.: EMI TOWANDA: . _ Sao Alotainp, 3minarr THE DYING YEAR. 'the dirge of the year *ill soon be sang. The lased of his dead is already riig, • lies'ootstreteh'd otifiis icy bier, Monad his hroiv is a chaplet sere, - And Time the seston.rwith hurried tread Prepares the turf tur his narrow bed. BM now ere the funeral rites ire done. The mourners are greeting his yotatal son, Forgetting the sire, so lately dead, With garlandA they deck the infaors bead ; As if in a bridal hall they trod, Their footsteps trip o'er the new-laid sod. Yet whit bath the old man done, that he Mould surer such groSs indignity 1 What foul misdeed hath his life time shown, For which, in his grave, he should thus atone I Alas! I fear that the revelling strong Ware dime to hi§ ailiiitriffotitlredtig; • His life was a mineledtale, file ours. Of sorrow and gladness. sus and showers, Of the leafless woioif and blooming vale The breeze taf siwing . !end the winter gale; Like mists mat fled at the dawn of day, Or the breaking waveb-;41 pasied stray. 'Tis said that he kept a secret scroll, A record true ofthe boidyp 3601, Wherein he graved with impartial pea The actions, feeling and thoughts arrest ; • And few there Are but would fain- elT.ice "Soule lines Ins hand has been known - to trace. And therefore in idle mirth they tread The turf that covers his lovely head, And quaff; with shouts of insensate joy, Rich goblets filled to the blooming bly-ti Jost sn, when his age sire was young- Around his cradle they danced and song. But long . ere youth's bright locks are gray Or the bloom on his cheek shall pass away, Hearts joyous nOw shall be sad with fears. And eyes now bright shah be dim with tears Hopes blighted for ever--affections lost. ompanions seveigil and friendships lost. so-let us live that time's onward flow May leave, as it passes, no pang of wo ; That whether our lot be dart:or bright, The heart within tiray be true and right, And its future records exhibit not A single line we could wish to blot. THE AVENGER OF. BLOOD : A Tale of the Allegheny Notantahen, EMBRACING A SERIFS OF WELL AUTHENTICATED FACTS • --BT A CITIZEN OF TENNESSEE. In lie year 1812, the weAtere portion of the great Sate of Pennsylvania, embracing the mountainous n•gioni Iretween Chambersburg and Pittsburg, pre• selite,l lode more than an tmsubdued and unbroken wille,iress through which the great road from Phi ladelphia to the head waters of the Ohio passed— and- ;11 that period, it was a lonely and dangerous p.c.liway, to all wayfarers between the eastern ci. ties, and the great western wilderness of Ohio and Kentuckv. To the best of my recollecions, this road passed over five • distinct and lofty ridees of I.nountains, AN ith here and there a sparse settlement of haul} ipnuutauteers and hunters and with racar,ti.iiially between the inlant settlements, some solitary and remote booths of the wan 'erieg hooters, deserted, ininons : arid.ferlora, exceot during the hunting sea sons of the year. Of,all the s3litudes in the mil verse, ihose seem the most deserted : chilling and awfully alone, which bear the marks of human ha. bitation—xtril havirr.; been deserted by their fur mer inmates forever. Of the five ridges of moun tains, over which the road just mentioned passed to the westward, the middle ridge was by far the highest, and was called by the wagoners,. the " Backbone" by way of pre-eminence, and because the word " Allegheny," in the Indian language, means' "the parent or father of mountains." From the eastern brow of this lofty middle ridge-l-where resided, at the period I speak of. an lioneit, weal thy, Pennsylvairia Dutchman, whose name was tottler, who kepi a public Inn—in viewing the rugged and precipitous landscape to the eastward, the eye was lost in a bed of inferior am' barren ridges, which seemed to extend to the very verge of the horizon, like the waves of some vast ocean beheld from a bold head-land, or - towering motin tain peak. In fact, to make use - of a poetica) figure, the whole surface of the eastern horiion, viewed from the eastern brow of the Allegheny ridge, Seemed like the billows of a tumultuous ocean in a. storm, suddenly arrested by the fiat of Omnipo tence, and fixed forever in their rations positions and attitudes! The whole scene was indeed sub. lime, beyond anyower or language I can corn. mand The house in which Stottler resided, was em phaticallyo Dutch house, one story higiywith a porch along the whole front, and, dormer windois in the roof. * * * * 4 Daring (he winter of 1812-'l2, on a journey be tween Philadelphia and Pittsburg, f Stopped at this orderly, trail regulated tavern, to remain over night. There was much company there, in additioWto those who arrived at the time I did, bat it was of an orderly travelling chante.er, composed 'chiefly of western merchants, and we were not much in the way of each other: It is a characteristic of the western porkpie, not Only to congregate together, when in.a land of strangers, borto be comnnseica. live with each other freely, in hope of diecoverimg any aneient friendships, or even distant relation. ships, that may exist among them-,and to hear the news. And besides all this, your real westerirmea unlike - the sullen English euekney, who refused to save a 'inart from drowning •hecaurat he had itot been introduced to itiro, , ittut inquisitive and inset ligible animal, merely korthe sale Of imparting and et:ceiling . 10kkination* on subjciets; in the words of colinselter Correia, who applied them to the Irish people, the western man is proverbially bild and fertile*, ',lid he therefore OsonStfetrirroth er, without hiesitappn.i xAmigog difouits who sir rounded the fire' eller L itnpOr i 'karattiott4tban i tif aPPaMlikOWerit" seethed ft° mach of a literary charaEtei ; ,atria; 'gig ',e4"44400,51 M WW3 1r.4 In f dal; 4.110:1. -- itkif n,O c.• xs-d) rt 3 cr .1 •fg st i, we, i".),"* ,- 1119!, ; hi 4 ••411"0 J 2 r a4 ,, d •IfF. iP) 171;61 fr.{! :. . • • • ItTeIVWAIIDA,_ -1 1:11 .3„3„3,3 1 A m • y„ 11, inktoligaawstoolootinik Mudd Aitt*perty, the s3Bovrikftnanaisre; widttdieuremensit 'drip IP sibuttratiillftrtie,Wsid4W triNt,r4tteg` 4VRkir-r1- ' t y. , 1 a-4 f: 4 •." AbOtli leftr nth" timid thee; --- - ."-* fr;tudeutua arellardied, from the direetiodef Pittablargien6 at * 'm actrielr ixt crinetry;stho b odm -aitli'a large it;ittZtif Ettene4 bullocks tor 00114. ladelphia and *Wows markets, Who,staid it. Was bisinteutiod to bring back -the :proceeds ht recateyii• to pay up his connucts-and that be tortrO prow bly return, in such a length oftir?,,eamitagtheAte: rind. Ilia name, and titelkentl also thit-piSce, oh his , residence, thave now -fiegottes ; but he•rude white Imes:, of a *trey Superior spirit - lad *tart: and I mention - the patticular Colo? b 1 )als,lttirse, be 7 cane it was that wtdeh efterxrardot , saved his life., Some weeks after haired been gone, and . about the time off& expected istere; taro Carradiasi French-' moron toot, well dressed ittid well armed, one ear:, B.y :tag . * brace of pistols, and the adieus rifle, came from the direction of Pittsburg, and stopped it , this house for 'break - LAW •they told 31r; Stadler ditey had no money; that they were ,thottlling..tb r t:ititas deiphia-an xyariay of ,other. matters.,-and that they bad Lost Ile itnmediamaly:aider ed breakfast for them, amt, thetatii heard!y-L-doti; i versire a , t the Woe time Fe dt cri tairi l igt l mat' •in an 'under tone. One (l d. - . was a large,..opet man, and the other was a person Ititesamite; they ba t h h a d maetrthe air of geatlereen. , • " After they tread breakfasted they started east ward, iii the Phtadelphia . ; there was a light, soft snow on the ground, and the walking was somewhat heavy and difficult. .They had not proceeded mote than tlire miles xi , hen in the dis tance, from a rising piece of ground, they tliacoe• seed a traveller advancing toward them mounted on a white .horse. • Mitt wayfarer and his white steed, they ima , ,, , ined, were the object of their long ing and anxious pecsnit;•and, no sooner was this Gimlet' discovery made, than they suddenly tented their feces again to the westward, and appeared to be travelling in that direction. The solitary travel ler on the white horse seen overtopk-and accosted them in the most friendly mower. On being ques. tioned, they told him they were on their War to Pittsburg, and were destitute Otthe means of defray ing, their expenses, and desired him to easist sham onward. His reply was what might.have bees ex. pected..—it was precisely what always my brief:- peeled, by any destitute wayfarer, travelling in the great west. He told them he was a poor ma him self, and borthened with the heavy charge of a nu merous and helpless ef children; that his name was PoLiAxat, a laboring farmer by prefer. goo, and that he lived on tented-land, not far frum the resilience of Gen. Arthur St Chair, in -Ligonier valley: that he had but avery small Sinn of motley with hint, but that he would ohne it with them, in beariwg their expenses to the 1061 cent. Conversa tion on this and other themes, browght the - tiro va gabond Frenchmen, and their generous end noble comrade; Pollock, back to &Dulcet' house of enter tail& ment Here poor Pollock ordered,refieshments, for his stranger companions and himself, ardpaid for theta from a leathern purse, but very poorly grid meagerly supplied; and the travellers 'started tau their way Westward in company. Dunn; the two visits the straugers had mate at Stouter'' , home, their appearahee, conduct and cha racter, hail been narrowly and closely acrotiujzed, by a brotlier-m-law of Stouter's, whqte name was John Lambert, a blacksmith by. bade, and with whom. I afterwards took some pains to become ac quainted. * * * * • After the departure of the two French foot-pads, with Mr. Pollock in company, burden xentarked to his brother-in-law, that he did cot like the op pearance of these twir Frenchmen : that he distrus ted their intentions, respecting Pollock : that their countenances and characters seemed to bun to be mysterious, dark and sinister: that be had eon:tete the determination of following them a few miles. Stonier dissuaded him from this resolution, as be ing futile and not well Wended: told him that no harm would result to Pollock from travelling in their company, and desired him to dismiss his sus picions, as he was himself convinced they were innocent and worthy trim. While Lambert and his brother-in-law -were debating these points on the front porch, Pollock's horse suddenly turned . a cor ner of the road, and advanced towards them at full speed, without his rider! When the he's,. came up to the porch, the whole tragedy was fully ex plained; the horse's neck and shoulders, 'as well .as the 'addl., and eaddle-okrib, were covered with blood, and no doubt could exist as totoUock!s mur der! Thuservattts and 'yinHtng Men of the house were Immedituelt . mounted on hotel-bock, and sent to summon the reeighbers_to assist in recover ing peer Pollock's body, and assist, if pos! i ible, in capturing°del:W*li. Neighbors in seck a, country as th 4 was at that tinni,.inclutledall who lived within ton or twelve miles of the place desig nated, • " A little : idler 'the middle of the' day, 'tin or G twelve of the hardy driellers of the mountains~ bad collected themselves on Solder's porch. * ; 211 ' With Lambeit as their chosen leader, who hiffd made a menu, vow to capture or destroy the mur derers, the company started on foot and well SEW ed, in pursuit of the bloodstained fugitives; horses, 'however active and Oowerfid o could be of no use among the rocks and precipices of the mountains covered ns,they, rite di When the compasreame to , the seen of the murder, no doubt could exist ,as to the faet's i the wow was much- tramplekend ready - discolored with blood, and disclosed traced of irditailly Stag gtervfiifer - and - teithrftenrie Astrum le mast havei!beelirlFsg and evmce4 the *1**101:AiieildlIlk=111 of iitsaiusination mail have cgoispdok . which rash ol on theitihWof t the I n n , l7 and . derc- T 4 -iK* el 444 tplilyeludrlgeot4t:.:liii id* ham Abildowq NlNO eafy, the cold-tittiMiirslittla eieveNteerieeAlratfost tirierfire'rael *A I 3igteis irel thq • ...a atunr: physical lee! 11.41,105 94.11SMIt ling pangs, can helm iMeethingreattch mental ea ' feringspimbreeidibinperstint who , telietbestrniko retedirbiii the utter. uncopidoespeas eud e jtilihe whole. series of the evems.oftheiar• reeFseetsed sesisally tray be anti e 4 tUa.bli Viiit (lain ; i rtioAio or ordinrup Ii n 4 ,ling¢r loutou the conaues of I f ile r okyr 7/ 1, , "irtris e Aden t btibbet' in& tali croljp . eeri that die' 1;4 o f ifieteCinu4 . COOtd fir!/07. alarm% from the wawa death :'ittalit h few Min utes' search the-coepte. *at t.tiscorerett. • lit was we t ted in , befween•liitite*;4 , l itbinal been rolled oat brilikix4o, and `l 4 ;r* w i lt th,e lash or leace4, .biesbweedrAilmi . ranee-pieces- of wood, and bawdier marks atm most taanguinar3r t butchery. TTap balls ftentoc&il tlattmerilie lady; and tfilitti breeist'end.itagt ovefs s aind, the "marki Of several . vilut offirtoiel* heeter'sinife. Pthictef4he handsel the .deceased *el horribly disfighred e* , 'tteetritilliti if the 11fr1 1 the 41o6d ; ',P' . 41ipalCipallri ior aiarg,okilifiivaechltadbeen draw ibly throagh his hand,aod, newly . seTered.the &onus of his an gels! His Chairing was auteli;rant and tont io the combat, and-his cotatenance,exhibited the indica lions of greet agony idles lastinotnetiuk " " A cenneit *tet nrrar - held* the cornpray,, wlint,was lOW/ Acme,: pod, age; having rout the dead body-back to Suatler's - housei Lambert pro. pored an instant-ant vigorreis Portrait -or the Mur derers, before their trait (tout-trakkit) would be et faced from the soft sna, The propositioa teases seated to by the whole company ) and in' 'Luba' dm*, the •of the -mutdersva was -iliscovlwedi bearing a little Wist'Of nor th : the show 'was *hi and turpacketl:enti exhibited their, fOot Pants With great clearness and certainty. t • ; • , ; Whencthe Company started antra trail its was , late in the eeen,h4 l the tom - riot being more than two hours from the borlion, and die" alai country over which {hewed of the fitgairas passed, kndwn only telittaten, *Mtt it wild and' itackless ii il.ler`- gess, tanglUd with an ufder7rowth of , latind and breslaworri. 'The plantners,itowerrer,keptihetreck with , industry, persevennwe and resohnion, until sunset and the approach - of Attriofeiss. The' moan tam now begin to taisurnein mcrebleak autl dreary aspect: the } sound of ihit whid through the 'calicos tougbitand bouithes'of the trees, seemed to be fraught withthe load hotel ofthe wolf, and the shrill scream of the pinther, andf the distant and sullen roar of the tern:attain totrents, seemed ominous of solitary and unknown imagers., To the ignorant and uncultivated mind, the sublime and inkrufable mysteries of natnre, are always the cause of snper stition audterror, arid more.particularly so during the hours-of night and darkness. " Lambert now discovered, as the night begun to set in - , that the courage and resolution of his com panions were lasi ebbing, and that they would soon be brought to a dead stand still, and he called a halt for further crinsulration. The result of this de liberation wasthit each individual forted or framed an excuse for returning home, and Lambert was left alone to puma his dangerous and lonely enter- Prise• Ile was, however, doubly armed : ,first, with the justice of his cause, and his consciousness of rectitude; and second, with a good rifle, tomahawk and hunter's knife, and with-there he pursued his precrnions journey—not ;ra,prdless of consequen ces, but prepared to meet all event* that might oc cur. With the assistance of starlight, reflected from a bright surface of snow; he Was enabled to trace the foot -steps of the murderers: and when the moon arose in fall splendour. a little before midnight, be found no further difficulty or uncer- tainty in pursuing his way. " After travelling in a north-western direction twelve or fourteen miles he came to au old and nearly disused rued, running nearly parallel with the nne he bad left; this was celled the " Old Penn sylvania true," between :Philadelpilia and Red Some Old Fort, situated on the waters of the Men onmthely river; it wastber tint mad - ever opened between Eastern Pennsylvanitiand -the bead wa tens 01 , the Ohio river, and the ancient land marks, " three chops end a blase," tram still •visible by daylight on the old trees .-These ancient toads'iuul lazul_niarkss_inivelrmWprmedoitire, &rived, by the 6 9 1 7 4 1 01 0 and °petters. of road's is the Wed, to propitiateAsseen in &enrol *the Arm set tlers of the gloat )ltrissiern 'ltltlercess: "Mid' bents° the arst ebop was for .the ; ,PitiserT- 1 411 san-..--aa4-the third.korthcaply Gionst; and the blue mac merely deifigned td 'Want thefeye of the ober,' et: Wftek berthed sit•tkitstlioldtraeareiti, his almnierell'in4sinietit" cabin, nearly opposite to him,' oa the north side on thiadilapidatewt and solidity rond..; The Moan Aura now nearly -[mined her Mericliimv stlxl hearted WWI fill and mitiondedviendeipiiihe stitiwyllealui of Qiq distaialiPtuitsq*Awd 4 9. 1 41 • *et before him: -rThere -siood,lia set. can silence and seeming desertion, the but-vslerels 14infrim' ea; piribigt, the abject of Giilr ltfng iisd la borious pursuit; and, to satisfy the anxiety of his -mit* respecting the actual meteors of-the -mut derem Mithwtstdd be ottthe alert ati pretablakka defieitiee ill,l6l4i4Per*lse.algaders 4 0 3 boa .to authi;p.eilimt and cautious *mit mond thaluit, et aametfistkillistaners from rimmed aifar -air dui" ‘ri io r. tprsuia! thirlitatctie Wad lodeor die WO iiiruatia' - the 'Nor etthe home, end that there-wdrir no loot *rink -4r6h4ebeeithin Mt, dkeeflen. 4 Theiereirenat # l 4 o ot ist,i4 i•OV-4 ,6 4 1 #41 11 t 4 ** ### ti;44i10441444/ 1.01 0 1 . 44 ' .t to 4ftili-..14 lad'aeenitefthiseanpiitary anew,. appours-thil murderers or lel:chi= ,4- I vr27l' A 27 fir • • • ;IP !OR • . ' Cido4 6 # *WA 41.0 1, 4 0 6 c in#afi 4 1 007 1 4 1 iii Vie - W.4k phgelbokomor coowthippl.: , Thy hoedir isxailiumb of ,bot tirtylif Bdgm!w, whka veitie Isithenittnypinitind otdrilis kin tie iiekiniiir' r ta;i'iin_24e me% wholterfor yeata asra , thie deseded Nadi ind if!red tflreNitrreikik midi:raft to visited frivte 4 r4•Ariiiriii AO*, #,46 . 471figa, be cfAY ,199. ( 7i 1 .4P- 21 orNolsfia:o ll ikand the east room containing eoe:bed, nett aleneards appeared, wee `aoiltpied by the' VA* - villiahir of whironambert irair ircpurscrit:' 'After' gel: f iring a feAr . ,parres intro the,, door tatibett_ gave /oud cough ot. awaken -11teroid ovotatail boldly 'advancing to the vier/ and tamping the freat his leet,dletticed adrojnance in a kri,gned Tpicet . tl iellin iiek at ; the 11p1130 time shit he was a 'Amager . who had fast his tray—that he was nearly how to death in wan lathe; about—ond that he irisAied her to ni:l4hll4e fire, to warm him selr u.Stut-initnetliately obeyett-and soon replenish ed and re-lighied.the the, whilst he remained ma shie the, door; under pretenen of disro'bin,l, his !pet of the aucw.r--44; mat obOet listing to .await the ei t tbe-fint, that he teighilairty etteelle, -the whom he had jag beard talking, in on alarmed lid startled - tone of voice, in . the" tower ropm. 1,7;14P4be Map* ov 'dm door, ill, into the bright light of the fire, his first salutation was theibodsepert of a awakes front the luvre! room, the tiro balls itere'whick !truck the Joni pest;:an icOi or twiarain his head! _No.tinie Was now to be lost.. lieservisg his fire r he sprang down to the lower mons let reeking with the -smoke of -the burned:powder; and rising his tomahawk with dex terity ' and etket, knocked the villain senseless Who had jtlet,Aredopon him, and whom he believed he had killed. In the interim, while them events were p.vtising; the smaller villain of the tvro—for Lambert had Gillen the larger one on the floor with the heavy blow of his tomahawk—had crept through a small outdated window immediately above the side of the bed, and was running off in the bright moonlight, directly towards the north. Lambert soon.diaeovereAl him, And mounting on the bOrl, as the fellow was running directly from the window, in a straight line, clothing in hand, brough him down on his face, with two balls from his own rifle, planted precisely between the shoulders of the horrible miscreant ! Then, seizing with • giant grasp, the sturdy - villain whom he had felled to Ate floor, and who seemed. Jo bereviving for further combat, Lambert placed his knee on tare fellow's breast and asked the old woman for a rope. This she furnished by caning a bed-cord front oue of the bed-steads. With this Lambert bound the fellow, and dra gg ed him to the fire place in the upper room. Then, absenting himselflor a tevr moments only, he brought in the dead man on his shoulder, and placed the corpse side by side with the living murderer! When the day dawned, the word of death be.- ing finished, tambert prepared to return home, having accomplished in a few hours with his sin gle arm, what would have immortalized any hero of the ages of chivalry.—When deserted by Lis fainthearted companions, among the mountains, this man of knit resolotion and lofty moralenergies, never faltered or betrayed the least hesitation of (rt e, • * * • * vs • " Lambert now acceptpd the loan of a horse, from his aged and venerable friend, the poor old woman of the mountains. He - neet placed his liv ing captive on the animal, after having pinioned his arms behind him and secured Waled bellow the horse. Aral then fastening the dead body of miscreant he had killed, across the shouldersof the horse, and firmly lashed it to his companion in in. iquity—he gravely led the horse, atilt its burden of murder and carnage, to the house of his brother. in-law. Here he found many persons assembled Stern all section oldie adjacent country, and among them the chop-fallen deserters of his heroic and seccemlutadventnre—who met, in the coreemptu ous corintermnces of the assembly, the disdainful reward of their timidity and cowardice. " The captive murderer was soon sent to jail, un. der i strong guard, and in the course of time ex• piated his crime on the gallows. • "This was the last robbery and Intirrier ever perpetrated nu this wild and lonely road.—lnstead of the rich plunder the murderers had expected from the " diover of the white horse," they, found buiihree or font dollars in the pocket of poor Pol lock, whom they bad mistaken for the venerable rich drover who arrived at-the place a few dayi 'alter the•tragerly, - With hie money safely deposited in M 1 Onitnienteati.. When he had been informed of all.the particulars relating to the -murder of the decesandr..md that he had left a widow mid a lame fonlailyof ehihltent steeped to die:vety yin id poverty and,d.eptiintioncogipassioa,atonesprver. fully in his bosom. Being wealthy, and having no Wetly of ha awn, be commitned hinutelPthe pas- Twit pt ter, and'fidthfifilriend-rxr Prolleoael be raved and destitute Wail) , apd fade d e nt Ma It *,ems whisk hammed mow ' i after ward. , ... • tt I regret," 'said the ,opeaker, in minelcision, it thailmutaiot giro yin; the name or ' thiagsnerous and noble :Hp irited ; but .kar,so doubt; arrived hit; great manthi be9romi the grave?' a After a short pause, t asked therapeaker rrhetb er Mr, tauthert,, the hero Of titratereeillig uara tire, visa still living He reified-0 Yes air ;la is ma the , chair -Remo your own !"—and took occasion to' 01- 1101rif 'ittA ajipe44tuy:e.., .thit It Might deeplY hipmaredrou my memory, • liVhf is a. wound's taagueliap a thanamclataill %CO& tigibeimd the taidtbl . . ref!rit,4olt 4gif 0 4 0. tr. kbefib tt j ftu...)o .7 %, tz; 41.11121134),..••, rslio —.--44 - NtAstwo • • - _ • 0 , 1 .::/e-rF 4 1e.i :0944 ,Etkeys• '110.21=2101113 , 11111kt L,T 4 , 4 • ...r.rivr—rez +-A Prt , .4.114 ye tr I !) „ f- ! ME MEP i;ftapi 4i,"ra1.,7" ,. .5. e 1 4 ,4 MARI' COMUCte"--4-;) 0.7,4 1 3 , •• • • p . wff ddi KM= 1 . ..• He tries, he eopses--the Feasts pirit*iweV -- t°lrins afisrlrade'hiiisitifildplirsiOr ) Pqr:: , I I: 0114 * . On she naked woods and blast. 6e)44=';' 41 11 ' 7 ' 4 ' 'Mid thelonisra Wei isitheitell!:' 1 1, BetialtrywaluewikelleitiewellheirniAdd - ' ••16 herwthentpitissant-greetreatnal .. -;-` • Asd•she - win' ds that -Miry wheierii he eaita•-;?3 l, :'' Lificrwskiken then' down to essikrviiti.:Lc , ,,, e,. ,„ • . 1 •c.} , • , J• 1' Ho coma. he‘Aules•-iliel . f.*APECiffmlW. • Truk Flit tC 9 Zeit .1 rtiqthe icy bridge (11. ngfrArilf •4 .here the wbiteliiiiittutOrs Where gr. thhertnaieZ std ati tit Anil pie inekle;sforina .7 Ca the suptesi c.olOot the 7,7 ' marbto itatnet Heihmel, be eotnra--the Prom Spirit &Alert •i Attd the quiet - lakerbttail teal • • The.torpid meta otitis grazin breath; And nag to the skater's heel ; And Me streams which danced on the bittheniock s i n Or sang tothe.lea tog grass, - Shall bow 10111 tot 'irmintershain e. And in isettrafut from pane. • lie comes. he eptnesi-.tae Foust 19pitiOnmes.! Le( its meet hitwas we may. And tarn witb i the t)te parlor fire His evil power And gather closer Me circle round. When the firelight' dalicis SO. .._ And lan 'b it 'the stirietr of the lagleitl i .netid;. MI sounding laving goes WO ' bigamist* of Asia. intim " After the Mexicans bati.faii,...l in their a‘ki r on Buena, TiAa, they made a determined effort Wince their way to the road at a point nearer the plate-int. They.twought down' froin near the mountains op posite and to the left of the - baCieethc s fresh bri- Bade of cavalry, ooryred by intanly is all its pas sages of ravines. With this they adVance . l to en gage the Mississippi riflemen, the fragment of the 2'l Indiana Volunteers, and the Id regiment of the same, who *eve twill acting agetri and who had near them one howitzer under C ,pt., Sherman.— The position of these troops wasacima fivehendred yards nearer the mad than the point where Col. Davis' regiment was flow engaged in the morning, bet farther down the same tdv it le.l, As soon aii this new btiguAle.indicatod, bv.4ha ,umnite;pf its ap proach, its determination to charge out riflemen and infantry, they were vapidly formed to receive it. The Mississippi regiment, in line ofllattie, ex tended across the,little plain twat which theY.now were—their right being near thetavine, their-hoed toward the mountains; the Indiana troops•wert formed so that their reftlested Oa 14e ! Jot Davis' regiment, their tight open the iaxiiie higher up, their from being also lowan! the mountains,.bu more to the north. hr this way, an obtuse re en tering, cutg,le ryas pretreated towards the cpproach :ng cavalry, &ennuis howitiel ribeirt on it§len. The enemy *se formed in close COl4lllllll of squad cons, and came down the slope at an easy hand gal hip. His ranks'w6re welt closed, his troops Habig, li.nee to knee, and 'Aiming handsomely on theii guides. All the flags and pennons were fly iug— some fifteen hundred of them—the teen were in full uniform, and the horses 'elegantly caparisoned. Every lancer sat erect, and, kept his chanter well in hand; and the whole lxigade. preserving exactly. ' us intervals and - the direotion os its march, moved forvrard with the ease regularity of the hest drilled troops on a field-day. Had,the .ititnroander of this beautiful brigade desired to win the.applause Of both armies; he could not hay* pat it in bluer order; or led his men oil with more professional style.. The tout assemble of his, column was most aimirable. • It hada sort of air about ii,—an easy, nenchalantmanuer of going into the work—which could not but recall to one's maul his :ideal pictures Uf the cavalry of olden days. Those fintiMlows were the chivalry et Mexico, and with the (meet" tions of the President's pereanaigeard, tbernintent of Flossars,—they were this most desttingtroops the Republic had ever sent to the It 'Uld. O ppose.! to them were our men cat foot,--a mere handful in comparison, and haring *boat them unroof the pomp and circumstance," the,glitier, an 4 gold, and feathers, and tassels of their antannlits They stoodyahnly and fearlessly sttU, with,, their . , pieces at a carry. But they, too, had aa air; one that had mimhief in it Their ranks had been thinned out; some of their best, then ,hed There Were even fathers Needing, there, whose sons had Bone down by .their sides,--tbeir.pst• boys, whom they bad rearedend terought forth" blight for their coun try. Anil their Sods; too _whose , clotheshad. been baptised with their filters' blood, not ,yet dry.— Brothers, who had stood shoulder trrshoolder in the morning, stood 'so no mote; btlt, while 'one lay stark and meGlialesa upon the etuth, tri, ether was near,by to mom him. Them were neighbors, too, and friends, who bad •grown op-together in school boy days. They were - not yet eepareleil l ,-717st. 11,Orrirors snod there,,Ehile thomt who bail home ell these tender relations to them were stroim, dead or dy ing, on. every heir& Yet all in sight they' ley the familiar forms and faces of thosiie whom they bed beenileeply.altathed r ood Fiona , they Paled by.lbeir fins name from hammy. It cannot be wondered, then, that these men Mood fins. - ItWari a stiblimeratid terrible - sight. The troops on b a r!lA Alias Were so cool and determined, that all knew ibetstrmlemost be sanguinary and despe rate in the extreme. Not e.wortl was spoken; the din of the suno , upding battle, seemed lortit itoment, hushed`; irke Molding sound of the ; as, the brigade swept-mnrani4like a living tluandatimlt, appeared - to berth's 043 ,1 audible marrifestatico of the appidadinkfitinage. , therftexicabe came anorak y eteleattypdo Asa bebef,that they soold,iimw the beef asymewbefore conkl be .vetydroMmetivii, and' timorthliti, Whikr eyepieces f# 4 "t l o7r,, it: e X iS ag eme r a i"R 411 OW iat itif44oo,llolln; '0 . 4 1- ail c i)LOtei t r }tie : loom • Botninditills , OlvAhe thedllurnithal acs at. pliparvriptisellingatnerafible " ia - e 5e , !!" IPOReArM. 14.4%. ► . ei it CZMZIM al!' 8 , 11 ."-Piljuhe*C!hiTg 6.0 APIPP44 . tbFdheig attittifey affearancetatti-gailant bearing. Finally. J11441011E4 *award in a `lima / n*44 bait grilikbt araikirlikTiio'imetinte it, thei' ratilpititriiiiirit few" kipiregi criPaibtlik•ofibeiWd litie4 offire. 'Tlte inatatp mite down on tolib l fitelll4 atigNiit Ettahe same Mite Fithlinil Nothltibeiesinintlek noted pkiwlritir tre4ticti man felt for his aim ; then ibei seallett firm atibailloi •attiel." o Now, we ail war trompetyWritalfol-Wobi was .lioatkiii c Two Atka 'etrAinteti i•otivertrA Ittat4 . r td bgielatle• It *if: Vez4l* he :4 the column waerpetnretli:ae,, multitude, - Witt treirtilion Catania!, Amami from E ME FEM El raa ..P.:%-lc:000 0 .3 itirCeverridineetintr: ! r Before the Mexicans couldrecov4W from thur:ei. feetsof :his blow, Sharman out them up widi grope and canister. Then .carne thc , trapisk and deadly firing brae, of our -riflemen , alnd, intantry::7 Xs' troops in the world could have fitted if:without the mirat awful sacrifice ofdife; mid untler it the whole brigade gave vray t and (led malteds the alOantiliN leaving the ground literally covered with Oa. dead, lo this *flair, bed ti i,e been for ;hat unancoimla tie and suicidal pulling up to a ball iheletere betlY ofibtt beit'eterksmett . In the wollti v and dirasud uu ly eighty yarde;-4nal thiii compact Male 0 chiv• alry iu room el.doiug.dur, dashed's *peed iotallre angle before , diet% they Would , have ,kost many men, no doubt, but it is difficult to conceive ?what could have saved the Missiserppi and Indiana troops from total dnairticliite 'And, had so huge a force broken ! through our lines, wt.,. al. gained the mad between Buena Vista and Le k ?Vt.- gostura, the forums of the day would again .have been placed in tt jeopardy mtko . pahrful to coutem plate. Age of the 11Wse. The method of judgi/ the age of a horse is by . elamining the teeth, winch imamate forty :when complete, namely, six aippens ; or incisors, as, they are sometimes called, two tuslies,.and six,grindets on each side in both jaw*. • A foal, when firstborn, has in each. jaw the first and second - grinders de veloped ; in about a week the two.eeetteo nipper. male their appearance, and within a mouth a third" oritider. Betweeli the siinertAa 'ninth month the wholeof the nippers appear, comaphstiog the sol r =Wk. .At the completion of the first year a fourth grinder appearsoutd . a fifth by the end of the se coed year. At thus period-a pew proses/ commen ces, the.front or first grinder gives way, ibigh: is succeeded by a large and permanent tooth, and be tween twolrma and a half end three years, s rlie two middle nippers are displaced, and succeeded by permanent teeth. At lure years cid the sixth grinder bas either made or is about making its 1- peamnce. In the fourth year another pair of nip pers and the second pair of grinders are. shed.; and the corner nippers, towardsdr end oche fifth year, are succeeded by permanent teeth', when the mouth is cousideredaltncint perfect, anar the salt or filly becomes a gorse or a mare. What is called tile mu* of the teeth by , ,Fbich p iudgmeut of. the age of a horse, for several years may he funnel, con sins rof a portion olf the enamel bending over and 7 .forminta little pit in theosurfaie of the nipper, the • initide , and •bottOM of whichbeeinner b!ackeneil by the food. Tbis seam begins to wear down; the nark become"; shorter, and wider, and Ginter. the wad of the first - year the mark in the two. mid dle teeth ii *ide and faint, and becomessfillitider nod fainter till the . ertil of the third year, by tibih tinted* centre nippers have beendisplaced by the permanent teeth, which are larger than the others, though not yet so Met, and the mit is long, nit row,'deep, and black. At kno years, the st;coliid pair of.penniutent nippers will be up, thentark of which Will be deep, while that of the fine pair. will be somewhat fainter, and that of the corner pair nearly ellaced. At tide age, too, the flashes bek,in to appear. Between the fourth and fifth year, the comer nippers having ceen shed, and the new teeth come quite up, showing- the long deep Onto, tar mark, the other nippers.bearing evident tokens . of increasing wearing. At six years the otaskini the centre nippers are wool oat, but there •is ,Rill a brown hue in the centre of the tooth. At-;sere" yearn the mark will be worn from the tour :cane. 1 sippers, and will have 'coniptetely disappeared t eWyears from them all. It may he added,ltnit it is the lower jaw of the horsethat is naciallY : ea:- ambled, and which:ll.Year described. The &an gettof the teeth taking placein bialtiaWe about the same time, brit the Cavity-ofthe teeth in the upper I . .tio! being somah ift d eeper, titet:lihirk. jasisiOieri though Abe easel p er iod •is .sanatier nflixtotrowenty. According to what may be conidered good author ity, oniever, it maybe stated' thaklit nine' ism pie ruarrwill. be *ern from 'fthe okille nippers, from this next pair at tea , sad:lrmo all•ihe• upper nippers at eleven. During, all this time thenohes (the extremities of eitieli'areitt first tkontiolitted and curved) beeomes z goidially Sauter, .shinter and rounder. . , Dm rr ox Posross.—An honest old fanner had an unruly bull, which had a remarkable loVe !or him "in a kom",and a singular pesdamt for gv.• big his friends and acquaintances a' 9 lift in the wotld." One day the old tanner was driving the bull home muchwpinst his hielinaitiottoiatd get• tag ea:aged he seddeuly: the' Alt Man 'detest' i the 'fence into thn rixid,"oo.4o*. slightly hurting him. lie 'Old siikri - gained his fna. th e n bttlei M irnal l4}wing the 4, * 0 14449.4. 1 41 01 4:514.W.1141 the ground. The old man looked steaddrat Munn .than shaking *his fist at him, ex cliitunstki "411-iirn..your, hpillights.—yee weeil'Ut theaclast t4at.critser as bowinival s /kir ' tit bi-kaiiisl: 4 !,4 ou :Aug taimary itth, 1846, • • - EfiEl T Mil IME3