Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, January 10, 1849, Image 1

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TOW AND A:
Itlebnesbal Manion, Antilap 10, 1819.
BE TRUE TO YOURSELF.
IT I. W. ctrnlrcraTt.
true to yourself--though the struggle is hard,
And the contest be doubtful at best,
Let no labor fatigue, no exertion retard,
ICo failue one effort arrest.
`Though poverty shackles each project that rise,
Though adversity frown for a term,
Misfortune is only success in disguise,
To the heart that is; steadfast and firm.
Let affliction o'erspread its dark curtain of gloom,
And keen disappointment succeed ;
Yet the cloud is but transient,for even the tomb,
The free spirit can never impede,
Mind cannot be still, though matter is dead,
Nor sleep with the body behind,
For the soul by corruption no longer is led,
When to sense nä more is confined.
Rest not then; but forward press dauntlessly on, '
Nor despair until beats the last pulse;
By blighting discouragement ne'er be overthrown,
Till death shall the heart-strings convulse:
Let slander, the poison-tongued, sully the name,
And jealousy strive to outvie,
But an innocent heart is worth mote than all fame,
And integrity never can die.
Mary Mclntyre has 'Arrived
BY T. W. THOMAS, EfQ
On my way to St. Louis, safe and sound I arriv
ed at Louisville, on the steamer Madison ; ion'
years agorae. The falls of the Ohio, at Louisiille,
Were so low, that the captain resolved to go round
by the canal, which was cut to obviate the neces
sity of unloading vessels to lighten them, so as to
permit their passage over the falls. At 10 o'clock,
A. M., we reached Louisville, and the captain told
me, upon inquiry, as I wished to pay my respects
to a friend or two in that hospitable city, that the
boat would 'not leave mull 1 o'clock, as helad to
take on board a number of Scotch immigrants, with
their baggage, who had been brought thus far from
Pittsburg on a boat that was returning. I therefore
had ample time to make a morning call or two in .
passing, a pleasure of which I generally avail my
self on our western waters, whenever the boat on
which I happen to be a wayfarer• stops where I
haveiicquaintances
I resolved to pay my respects to " Amelia," the
swyttest poetess of our land, in whose society I
speni a most agreeable hour, which I would wit
have prolonged, but the admonition that the
boat started at one o'clock rose to my memory.
I therefore repaired to the wharf half an hour be
fore one ; determined to be in time. Lo! as .1 apt ,
proached the wharf, I beheld the Madison lumber-
tag along in the canal, stopping, every moment as
it to take, breath, being in fact retarded by some
obstacle or other, which she could not surmount
without the aid of poles and ropes and a fresh start.
My only remedy was tci ride round to Lockport,
where the canal terminate% by passing into the riv
er, and there wait. an indefinite period for the arri
val of the steamer; or get on- board a row boat and
have-myself transported after her in the canal, and
thus reach her, which I was assured could be ef
fected in half an hour at furthest.
I accordingly feed two youths who were pad
dling about in a boat, to convey me to the Madi
son. I. was soon seated astern, and they pulled
away for the 'steamer. We soon entered the ca
nal, but owing to the waves the steamer threw in
her confined track, and her lumbering movement
from side to side, it was with difficulty and delay
that we approached her.
The Scotch immigrants were what are called on
the western waters, deck passengers—of that class,
almost all of whom are very poor, bat often vitly
respectable, who in the packet ships in crossing
the Atlantic take a steerage passage. Among the
immigrants on the Madison were many females,
among whom there were some young and beauti-
ful ones. ,
As I ripped out a strong western oath, ( am as,
hamed to write it, for I have not pronounced one
in a long time,) at the captain, for breaking his
word with me, and leaving before the hour, one of
these Scotch lassies said to me imploringly—for
our boat had trot immediately under the stem of
the steamer, where she stood—
"Oh! sir, please don't swear so."
Struck with the tone and beauty of the Scotch
maiden ; my impulse of anger changed to one of
adoration, and T instantly said to her—
Well, I won't again—and you must be like
Steme's angel when my uncle Toby swore ; yon
must drop a tear upon the word in the high arch
iveg, and 'blot it out forever.
As I said this, I stretch ed
u out my hand • to reach
the railing of the s team er, but failed, as our boat
gave a lurch at the moment. Again I made the ef
fort, and would have failed again, had not the pret
ty Scotch girl leaned over the vessel's side and giv . -
;. en me t i er hand.
Thus assisted, in a moment more I was on the
steamer's deck, beside my fair assistant. I thank
ed her with all the grace I could muster, which she
received with a blush; and said :
"But you forget, sir, that ray uncle Toby's oath
was to save life."
" But it was unavailing," I replied, "yet your
fair hand stretched out to me, may have saved
mine : therebre, as I live and may err,
Nymph, in thy orisons
Be all My sins remembered.'"
" Poor Opbelia !" ejaculated the Scotch girPsacl
ly ; " she went crazy for love."
" Ah," thought I, " here is Intelligence, as well
as beauty, taking a steerage passage—and not the
first time, for which poveity they have been com
panions before, and love, -too, I suspect, is no stran
ger to this party."
Impressed with these reflections, T enteted into
conversation with my new made acquaintance, and
soon discovered that she Was remarkably intelli
gent. as well as beautiful. It seemed to me that
hair waf never braided on a fairer [NOW*
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Her neck and shoulders were exmiisitely tuined,
and added to the charm of features which were de
cidedly patrician. There was a naivette in her
manner, too, that bad caught its tone from a posi
tion, I thought, evidently above her present one.—
She had also nothing of the Scotch in her! accent,
which was broad enough on the lips of her - C=2..
panions Though she was comparatively poor,
there was not only great neatness in her Mimi:4e
toilet, but a style that was above the "tlay-die
gin." Serena little trinkets upon her petson—n
ring, a breastpin, and particulaXy a maisive gold
cross, attached to a handsome gold chabt--etract
ed my attention, especially the latter, and indicated
not only from their value, but the manner in which
they were worn, her superiority to her companions,
as well as the - fact, to my mind, that she war a Ro
man Catholic. Her companions were rigid Pres
byterians, I soon learned, and my fair assistant into
the boat, and reprover, did not attend, I observed,
when an old Scotchman in the afternoon read. the
Bible the group of immigrants gathered, about him,
but withdrew to the side of the boat, and looked
over pensively into the water. .
She interested me much. Being myself, at that
time, a wearer of a large pair of whiskers, and an
imperial to match, my humble travelling compan.
ions' were rather shy of me; but soon observing
that my fellow passengers above stairs knew me
well, and that I was not unpopular among them,
the Scotch folks grew rapidly familiar and frank with
I learned, from a solemn and remarkably pious
old Prefibyterian, the history of the beautiful Scotch
gill, whose name was Mary Mclntyre. He s'ghed
'heavily when he told it. Her father was an hum
ble- farmer of the better sort, and lived in Ayrshire.
An old Roman Catholic nobleman who dwelt in
Edinburgh, had a daughter who became a:cll:paint
ed with Mary, and treated her as an humble friend:
When the young lady returned to Edinburgh, she
took Mary with her, who was affianced to a young
miller in the neighborhood, named McClung. In
fulfilment of an old Scotch custom, which Burns
and his Highland Mary practised, they at parting
broke a piece of silver over a running brook, and
on a Bible plighted their everlasting faith to each
other.
In the process of events, Mary, to the horror of
het lover's faith, became a Roman Catholic. Her
lover wrote her what she thOught a harsh and un
called-for letter on the subject. Her maiden pride,
as well as her religious prejudices, were aroused,
and she returned him his letter without a word of
comment. Both were stung to the quick. The lo
ver, though he went to Edinburgh, left - for the Unit
ed States without calling to see her, and wandered
away up the Missouri river. Mary grew very thin
and absent-minded. and exhibited all the symptoms
of a maiden sick for love. Three years passed
Mary's friend had died, and she had returned to
her father's, the while wasting away, when lo ! a
package came from the far western wilds, from
Mary's lover.
He implored her to forgive him for his conduct
to her, in the humblest terms; and in the strongest
he expressed the continuance of his passionate leve.
He stated that he had thought of nothing else but
Mary since he left Scotland : that knowing every
Sunday that he was worshipping in the Catholic
Church, he went to one himself that he might wor
ship with her, and that he had become a Catholic,
and sent her the antique cross she wore in testimo
ny of his love and of his faith. He furthermore
told Mary that he was doing well in the New
World : that if she said so he would go for her, but
that it would ruin his business, (he was a true
Scotchman,) and concluded by begging Mary to
come to him. These immigrants were on the point
ofleaving Scotland. Many of them were Mary's
especial friends, and she determined to embark
with them. •
How I felt interested in the Scotch girl! In proud
saloor.s since, in gay and wild Washington, I have
many a time and often felt all the impulses of my
fitful and wayward nature aroused, l and,concentrat.
ed to please some dark-eyed - one from the sunny
south, or some lair descendant of the Puritans, or
may be some dame of high degree from over the
waters, cynosures of fashion in the capitol, but re
member, I saw not a woman yet 'who more struck
my fancy than this bonnie lassie fmm the land of
Burns. She could tell me so many things tradition
al in Ayrshire about Bums and his birth-place,—
aud then admired him so, and could sing his songs
so well ! We had a long passage, and she kept
herself aloof from the other passengers, I was all
day and half the night by her site. She half made
me a Catholic. I have since, with uncertain steps
and some' short comings, been trying to filmy con
duct Where diy first faith bird bope and" heart are
fixed, in the humble ways of Melhodism; and 1
know that Mari will think none the less of me
when she sees the tome. Then I was careless
of everything but the enjoyment of the hour that
was passing over me. It was just this time of year,
(May,) and the beautiful Ohio never vas more
beautiful. How many simple and fituik questions
she asked me ! and as she did not know that I
knew her secret, I could so plainly trace in all her
thoughts the image abet . lover,lhe controllinT, , , one,
as the bright moon above us was the contrcilling
light.. Several times, when she knew not that I
observed her, I witnessed her devotion ; and I
thought, as I saw her clasp the crucisfa, her lover's
gift, and pray, that some earthly adoraticia mingled
with her heavenly yaws.
PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA:, BY. If.
One day, as we Fa chatting together with more
than usual reservedness, I observed :,..•‘ Well, you
will soon marry some rich American!"
" No," she instantly replied, "I prefer a poor
Scotehman." I must hare felt a pang of jealous
of her love at the time, for I rem
" Mary, you have asked me what t was
thedifference between a Scotch Woman and an
American. I will tell you: an American would
make tier lover come to her; a Scotch woman, as
you know. would come to her lover."
Her brow awl bosom etiou4otied in an instant,
r • IV, I
atailiVirni dr' 111:31IINCtillOi111011 QUIRTII2, Ss
•
and rising from my side, she:lll4nd at me, and
said—" Sir, you have no tight thus to wound a wo.
man's heart" and, burattng into teats, she walked
away from me.
Whatever may have been my misureltenandinp
with men—and , they have . been few—l certainly
never bad then bad one *MO* woman, and; my
uncourteous and walled for remark sting my own
pride as a gentleman as much as I had wounded
Mary's womanly nature. I. instantly followed her,
an I used every Won to reconcile her, but without
effect. She Walked "away from me with • a haugh
ty inclination of the head, and entered her bumble
apartment.
I learned that one Of her thief objections to her
voyage was this coming toberlover instead of wilt
him. Her refined education had taught her this
refinement of womanly del;eacy. I could not for
give myself for thewound I had inflicted on Mary's
feelings, and I soon began to feel that I should not
forgive her for not forgiving me.
At bun we approached a paint not far below St.
Louis, near by Jefferson Barracks, where the Scotch
immigrants were to embark, and they Were all beis
de and preparation. I sat smoking a cigar on the
guards and watching them. Mary in the certainty
of meeting her lover, was with a natural snidely
practising all the arts of the toilet, to make her min
ty wardrobe do its beet. I mild see her arranging
her hair and shawl, and consultingotie.of the-Scotch
girls as to their arlusnment, whom opinions, but for
her own anxiety, she would have disregarded,—
Doubtless, she Often thought, years maybaxe Akan
greil me much, and he—how will he be disappoin
ted ! She may have fancied that her very educa
tion, which give her it i dilemma air and manner
from what she had when bo wooed hat =Wit make
an unfavorable impression u?on him.
I never in my life thought I could easier read a
woman's feelings.
At last we reached the point of the pilgrim's rest,
and the boat rounded to; but whin Aherlanded,
Mary's lover was not there I She seemed Firm'.
ed; and the others were so busied with themselves
and their own concerns, that theythought qol. of Ma
ry or her lover.
She took a seat on her trunk, on the shoal , amid
the baggage, which the immigrants were getting
oft, and looked the very picture of despaar—as,
with her hands clasped in her lap, she gazed now
here, now there, as if she thought that from some
point or other be must come; but be came not..
My provocation at Mary for the unforgiveness
was gone. I arose from the guards of the boat,
threw my cigar overboard, and went ashore. I had
often been at this point, on pleasure excursions
from St. Louis, and I saw several persons that I
knew. I went up to a young Frenchman, whose
employment was calling wool to St. Louis, and af
ter a profusion of compliments between us, for he
was an old acquaintance, I asked him it he knew
a Sco c.hman named McClung,* miller, in the neigh.
borhood.
" Well, Monsieur—ah,
" How far from here does he live I" I asked.
" Ah—about two mile."
"1 will give you a five dollar gold piece if you
will mount a fleet horse and go lo him and tell him
that -the Scotch emigrants have arrived"—and I
showed him the glittering coin.
"Instanter, Monaicur," he replied, with a danc-
ing eye.
" Stop r I exclaimed; and taking one of my
cards from my pocket, I wrote on it with pen and
ink, which he got for me from the boat, the simple
words, " Mary Mclntyre has arrived."
I saw my Frenchman, in a few minutes more, at
the top of his speed, on a Canadian pony, dashing
like mad through the woods. As 1 walked towards
the boat, I met Mary's eye: but she instantly avert
ed it, as if she thought I was taking pleasure in het
grief at her not - finding on the spot to welcome her,
the lover she had " tome to." What strange Imes
tures we are! I felt a proud thrill through my
heart. No, my bonnie lass, thought I, I'U have •
braver revenge upon you than that—you shall for•
give me. ,
Time flew on—the baggaie was all landed—we
were preparing to depart, when some °nee:claim
ed--
"Look yonder! there's some chaps coming to
the boat, or-else they're racing it, for they've got
all steam up."
We looked and sure enough two horsemen were
bounding towarde us as if with such intent. One
was my Frenchman, so „I supposed the other was
McClung; and soon I knew it, for I amid see his
miller's clothes.
The whole boat was excitement, and the captain
ordered delay for a moment:till they should arrive,
not knowing what their eager haste. meant • I un
derstood it. McClung wan Thinking of his Mary
MAtityre, and the Trenchmax of 'his fivelloUar
gold niece.
" They come on beavely," was the ay.
a Yes, and the miller is ahead," exclaimed an
other. .
I was glad to ;see LOCgaheaa•PCATAlucs, but I
suspect it was owing more to the steeds than their
riders. • • • •
I locked at Mil. At the cry, of " the,toer is
ahead !" she bad , risen from her 'girders posture,
and was gazing intently at the horsemen. -
In. !
a moment the millet's horse was bounding
home without his rider : *he 'had not thought to
tasten:him as he-threw himself from his beck. :Be
rushed towards'Mary,itnd its an instant they were
in eactLother's arms. Such a wild embrace of joy
1 - never witnessed . . I thought their kindred beasts,
like the " kindredrdropa" of the poet, weal. liter
ally mingle into.orte; • •' , •
"Ab, Urn liienr ezcliitned Frenchitien
from the shore, for the captain bad ordered our de
parture,: mad at the delay and we left. " Ah, Mon
Dieu, my Avis dollar gold•pima—Asp_ chatt!"- , I
•stuck it in an-apple, thieve it on thereoentibad
the
satisfaction of seeing the Freudians tionadlownids
it, like the miller towards lifirY, and
and I laughed heartily, Mate manner.rs§cageyiutd
1. '- t •
yet so gendey bolding it between his compressed
legs, io which be made, the laicism pippiOillayr
ge its golds treasure. . • .
The lad thing which attracted ;ay .atterotton on
the sboreriwas the Frenchman, wan stood 'beside
Mary ind the miller-, with one liana 'festering 'the
gold piece tOlts lustre, by nibbirig ilint his *lit;
loobs;and In The Mier holding the pippin, fr i om
*blob wai taking la* imatribotioas,.whie
gestulated with thaw:mbar whoa, not applied* •la
his motah•towatosthe steamer, evideady tryisc•to
do a good many, things at acme andatrung the Met,
to explain who bent blin on the 'roast
Air, Maned 1, I'hive had my mysettl%
Years after this I was again..inlt Louis a
very sickly Partaking, may be, too free
ly o(-its hospitalities—for Inever saw same hos
pitable people &tin those of St. Louis and Wing
anima%) the Olidiate, was seized' 0)44 1 !
fewer-411AM it,was the yellow Inver. I was in a
boarding-house, and in-a Tatyconfined room, and
the ptiysietim Mid ifTebedd nabs Igloo into the
country I weld _ . 1
I bantam tmcooscions, I awoke one morning at
last, with a dreamy impassion of existent*, but I
hid not the slightest conception tif for leeafitiM. I
discovered I was the country, Ind as in the pro
gress of days, returning life grew keener, I . found
myself in a pleasant chamber and a ,laar gentling
to me.. Slur would - not let rue talk at fin", bat Y M
Last learned •that I had been there a week delirious;
sad further, from a black servant, that her mistress
hal, without taking 'off her clothes, watched on me
all theA time. I was about questioaing * the black
girftamr,'when, frtm a moment's absence, her
mistreats returned, and after remarking how mach
better Versa, aged me iF I did not know 'her s I
looked at the beautiful—though she looked wan,
from bet attendance upon me, Imposed, and re•
plied :
" (ndeolk iny clear mnOnm, clo no know, yop,
thinei f '"
•
ong a. never
She stepped to the ntsatle.piece, and took from
it a small richly gilt frame, which looked as if it
contained a miniature, and showing io me, 1 be
held within it my card given to' the . ihrnalniXn'.`
"Mary Mclntyre has arrived." Mr. Meriting had
greatly prospered in the world, and Mrs. McClung
was what the would have been in bid in any Pima
lion—st lady in the land, and nose, acknowledged
and received lady. She seldom visited St. Louis,
but when she did, sise stopped at the house where
I was so ill, and hearing my name mestioned, and
learning who I was she had me conveyed to her
house in her own carriage, supporting my-uncon
scious head all the way herself. Lucky forme was
this last arrival.
I may speak again of this Scotch lassie, for we
have met in other scenes, were, beaming the
"• bright particular star," fashion, and rank, and in•
tellect, did her homage.
Tar. Dania Ilma.—Tboughts ever occurring_
amid the din of business:and the stillness of repose;
are beautifully caramel in the following" para
graph, which we clip from the Auburn Daily Ad
veneer
"Toll—toll—toll. The grim king of terrors is
again among us—the death bell :imp out, and its
iron voice speaks of its triumph. Some mortal's
brief sojourn in the vale of tears is ended. Who is
it—the high or the bumble? Is it white-haired
age, with its burden of years, and its heart of gar
nered griefs and faded dreams—or youth arrested
in its strength, its glowing frame robbed of its man
liness and vigor, its cheek of health, and its open.
ing beau of its brigh t young dreams? Or infancy
—some fragile bed withered at the first contact
with the winds of life, its wail changed to an 'an
gel's hymn—transplanted to bloom unfailing in a
better clime I Toll—toll—tolL That heavy peal
vibrates sadly upon our heart—how much sadder
upon those of the bereaved? It adnumishes the liv
ing, while it knells the dead and heralds an unfet
tered spirit to the shoteless world ! And yet un
heeding;the tide of life flows on. Tramp, tramp,
tramp, moves the living throng—toll, toll, toll, says
' the bell for the gathering dead ! A world of life,
and a world of dead. The earth is passing away !'
Erma-rum Wives.—From the time of Romulus
down to the present day, the difficulty of inducing
females to emigrate to new regions is sensibly felt.
Romulus stole wives br his eormtrymen, and in
1620, women were exported to Virginia from En
gland. " The enterprising colonists," says Holmes
" being genetally destitute of families, Sir Edward
Sandys, the treasurer, proposed to the Virginia
company to.serukovdr wives fortheidanters. The
proposal wrm applauded, and-ninetygirl "young
and uncorrupted," were sent over in the ships that
arrived this year,• and the year following linty sore
—handsome and well recommended to the com
pany for their virtuous education and demeanor.--
The price of a, . wife, at fiat, wan we hundred
pounds of tobacco but as the number became
scarce, the price srusinctessest id one hundred and
fifty .pounds ?
, tha value, of which , in money, was
three shillings per pound: - this debt for wives, it
was ordered, should have the precedencyof all
other debtei: and be did removerabkr." Another
writer; ‘ Says, ma "it *mild hive dime a trien's
heart good. to lee the lallarri JOON; Vifgata
hastening to the watevaide- when .a ship arrived
from Linden; each carrying* befalls •of thehest
tobacco,under his arm, and _eachlnitittgrbach with
gni 'beautiful and virtuous ,
To marry a sake, in the IMO of tieforliing him,
end to Wets **wean, in the hope of whom
tirt two wily dooprousespotimonto and
yet I kliow .14 whit bowies Ate has loocedded
Wale one; gall the wollathiews a' ervine Who
4410aglaWed14 is Or Oter`i
Cu.tom bat'? bond, 611 0 0 icifY oat
/Ad friisiiTtriii Fox. Whenli
q.oo.aSa~Pf* , 61 10 040t.11,9,17, it
asoleso, mod befog &good drolowsti*hoi.wept op
the bill to . wake /111* drawing; oftho: fire t• timbal
stance of philoseirty I everilfiiio of.
ME
f- . • , ,
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flta.lloL.
'es /r.sanrolearsit..": ' • •
Eree-Soil! Free 00p.,1,0. ram,
0 watebiles of mit •
Tke der, the beer *littered, i5c01414610 -
aT a steraiarbrestigapecer.44. , r. n-3
,Selibid*ititte t 'ObeiVarilL r " -:1 "
'The peetiit
Andoridkate:eurgillraltresll 6 .,•Pletent .- .Y . 1— •
• TlNFAcigialPVe. 1 , 4 4 3.FP10.1 •
- Free Soil! 'The broakerideslielle.itheirooo-,v-4
IPS•thi ON inn toircklik • L _
Slave foil! , „
' Vies *trader
4 11 .041 0 3 1 04 captive 's 0t4.1 1 1 11 79 0 0 m
'AU : liars into his brans:
Yet shall their witheihii
Wisololge OE captives' chain.
Vein& though high telweres wrath it WWII;
Huth Venteilnite on its track-- .`" •
And ill youarie the Soil with Staves
114 Soil ' s tir/ft tii6e you butt! ' . s
Tri t e!loilt Jt skali j be free tEven now
God's angel greets our 'sold, ;
And, train RIC seinilehir of Wo •
Thastowa orelavery
•
"Lararai came fOrtitt % The dead min walies!
His iron sbniod is . rent ' •
lasanu p tome feral' That toddtper shakes
Earth. air sad Armament!
Tr NOW ay .ire Iliaes•
A great many curious aid tacesiOus things hove
been-told of • atioanuts, and their eecial carriages
'ycleptbalkmus. A ballooo..making a. Amman 01)
or sea:people who have never seed each a flying
machine, tuupsestionably looks* ladle " super-nat•
ural•lilie," and, nodoubt, make their hairvise abou
as sadden as ig bread stuffs" do eeini obcatiionally
The Penneyteanians
. are great - on ballooning,
that State having produced about a baker'. dozen
of aria! experimentalists, ;whoop performances
have been attended by ntidisasterii, some plecunia
efiF
ry udearttagsw4o the aaronauts—and soa r .
addition 10 the general slack of awful '
Bonin years ago, alsalloonist, named 'kV made
several voyages to the upper regions from tbsrown
of Lancaster, Lancaster county, Pa. A ..*t the
same period, a Dutch farmer from the m o or of
New York State,-Dutch as sour trout took' it . into
his head to pay a visit io. icomii 0f his equally Dutch
flints in the' aforesaid Isuscaster county. : Nick
Morgan was the old farmer's. name—simple and
hottest he was as the day is long—with mot ten
consecutive ideas beyond the daily routine of his
Sum ; a railroad and locomotive he had never
seen, and as to Om patter of bap/sons, they were
altogether such contrivances as ha had never
dreamed nor heard of. Mounted span his old sor.
ref mare, with a few edibles, and a clean shirt or
two in his saddlebags, old Nick started as bin tour
to Pennsylvania .
The crow had proceedel old Nick some few
days in his visit, and-he bustled along to join. her.
Jogging along- quietly and unsuspecting, not far
from his journey's end, the old farmer and the old
mare were crawling up the slope of a hill, when a
voice bawled out-=-
" Hurry, on, old men! I want to pitch my grap
ple into diet bill side—burry, Meryl° • •
The old sorrel pricked up her ears, and old
Nick's eyes pouched out" considerable, sod he
screwed and twisted them behind and before; right,
lett, and down below, yet nothing could he see,
when still louder and more stentorian than beim,
came the same awful voice—
" Come, come, old codger; hang you, ride on,'
ride on, l say, or I'll pitch equate on to your
The old man wacbewildered, alarmed, borri
fied ! He reigned up the old mare, and the poor
old "critter;" as terrified as her master, trembled
like a leaf! Old Nick's eyes fairly hang oat in eve
ry direction but upwards—bot not the first ghost of
a thing could he see, pave the hill on which he
stood transfixed, and a few-old stumps close by.
To these old stumps, West, the arronant —who
was some hundreds of feet in the air, kW' over the
Druclurian—wished to fasten his grappling iron and
stop his balloon ; as night was approaching, and no
better spot foul& be easily found, there and then
West was extremely anxious to alight. But the
old fellow and his horse materially interierred with
this arrangement. Time we evarytbiajjast then ;
the remnant did not with to hook op the traveller,
nor lose, his balloon, so, r gitthig vextd at the Dutch
man's delay, down West threttibisgrapieliattack
est to many fathoms - of esongermiebat which, pier
ing a Defile too shertlost lit mein the hind quarters'
of the old sorrel, hooked the Ibiiiihresn'i coat tail,
and ebietpria the beck part, et. Abe . iiddlet)igla as
watt .At this critical Octant, a pelf of wind
bounced the balloon upwards, and Shed the mare
clean and Clear of hey hied. legs, at but ' Ace the
flookulmdi rtiOunui anal
all, might have been carried bodily. oll! • The old
mato-toned Wier:eyes jest es the 'girth of die ,
paddle bpskit, end, espying tberentit balloon over'
Lead,. abe baked as if A the Veritableri . dd tnev
himself was after •
Poor Niek Morgan] his ewe tail earns oat by
1111-"4.41. and lie and llts - olkilh , Were hitched end
heeled kflY-ic l 4
.;Airei a ll
the breath beicked.cult of his. ormay,, , the poor _old
iman lay *embed coot, likes spreedwegle.
le Ifiettcioiinfenial old, donkey,
i yartr. bawled
the =maw, as alms was nailing!, away; 401 you
ere, earrytto bow •
Old-Ifiekreritedie time de bear tbbrinrilelic
-104:114.0t tine sfimpee - at. the flying leschine.
when np he barineed, sea dens *are bi we nt
ten miles en bowl
`O4 on beeplitgetykitilitte twelitMees dies' al
4!1 bin rerthu 17: 6 . the , Pl*
of f& reistire'avotrada Nirelraw, 4WD up eke Lana
hrtteelled, bailed kW the bersei4sented,
11. . 1 4 i f*0=r alid " ,* 11144 iia , l l. /lat
11*A beritte4A9lol.o-44. 4 0.
load) .1.
Litum dr quil.,-the poor•ald.iellow
ser demi 'ow the bed, - and** . all
IiMMBIIM
re; : :}-•i';=
MEM
elloorehhiefriends, the tongue of-Nitit-Mtewat
refiteettto aping, and vativeet the atraft:pt,
lettOthitreverreittiied
. . .
- .'l l looff4xl.o4l'ds „Walter 'ail. Y .. **l"tutP 6 i
. f r dpeekolidieil 3roar sifeece deereatterisioaiclil"
- Allatallt•bet
,tilainig WWII over t antinekias
11 0 ( P e15405 . c fr e li : 1 0* 11 0 16,6 1**
iP1064414,01g- tthe
cd4: 1 04 - 14- 0 4e4 4 .1,
beinptildefel gram , • rff
minetete hteitant;vat ilent
-4LIO 144. P "
Anotherisit, end another leediaigrame,
Nichaies,•?nohidiOry denN yeltelittetatit de
ties me* * 44 1 kc.st** 1 4 meant;
****l4old,a(iiiii wifeietana 111.118614 hiaseltlitat
Ai tier demi, Ined an& t!kioil l their; jet iviiice
1 1114,4 FP*, t B6l lklrdag aße•deep eatainiti a(
his keliege, be spike—
si rie-eeett---itetat-44'veletien him !"
• ,
Th e friends )41)1014 Nov), the old trout
leaned over limbed, learutith a woke of weenie
ansiety, asked—;" ' • .
" Seen kita.f—ottlutios4 rot you seed!"
"I—l've seen him,
whor cried alkthalitiands.
• •
"-Der .
"Der &oar' echo the *thole poop of hataataia.
"Yaw ! an oh! mine VW, oaf a pitpgt
ries on his shistiVersr,
RtLES ritaGoeramito Exeicia .
your authority as aeldoes.aw possible; . Missal at I
employ kind, persuasion and defibecativersisenins
but when you exercise it,, make it, itratible.
2. Be careful how you threaten, bist4tever Se.r.
Threaten seldom bet atm* fag to. remote , Tiii
parent who is open-mouthed tetbniattrtt,
em hastily, is irresolute to pani.!h, - M4wileit tke
child is nal subdued by this first threat repesto it half
dozen times web a auk*: Of •Meritisint vioienoe.
and with many . ritakes and , twitches 01'1114P.M:1e
culprit, wal certaialy press po antOsity,
3. Avoid tones and gei . sionss emiteiiiiv• ei SOW
MIM
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i.
ME
EMEI
EIIZIEII
Ell
,- ir - IC
Lion for trivial matters,indieraiie at rsydepreinlyr ,and
exhibiting only heolleinness or fiezeitufeesail
no hing more is commas to all young mama* than
to love to use their limbs. li such eases ihts:tenes
should be kind and persuasive, rather than stator
hive, and even the gravity 'of sethinilf should be
reserved exclusively for eases of disobedience et
depravity or for OM preventing ofverious , evil. A
perpetual fretting at children ix lithe thinp - will in
evitably harden *sir Imams and totally destroy
Il a i r
parental authority ' influence.. Them sever
was a fretting parent, bo often threatened and
seldom perfo rm ed, had 1 Pinkie cf elliscieM
govemmenv . ,
A GREAT Monte !—lt is a fedfmg too prevalent
among the young and inexperienced, Sri mere
personal charms alone—of which by a kind sfurm
sation of Providence, no one &odes
cient—are sufftaient to secure perman= ft
tion
and respect. No midaire can be moprtatal. How
many fair stars, who haste burst as it were on the
world with only their beauty to recommend them,
have, when the novelty of their appearance wore
off, beet doomed to suffer the darkest neglect !
"An 'accomplished woman can never become an
object of poem!: She will always command dis
tinction among her, acquaints:se: es.. When she was
young she might please more; bat all even then
she pleased chiefly by her mind, she will therefore
continue to please. When, declined into the vale
of years, she will still, from the seperiority of her
rlntracter, , stand forth en exalted - figure. Sense and
capacity, joined to worth and eweetneas are &neap
ted from the condition of 'all things else, which is
to kw their influence when they lose their novel
ty), •
NWT mum artu..—lf you do yon will be ran
over. Motion, action, progress, these Mew wonls
which now fill the vault of heaven with thew stir
ring demands, and make lunisanky'abeart pelsate
with a monger bound. Advance, or stand aside
;-do not block op:tbe way and hinder the career
of Others : there is too mach to do to allow of ina
ction any where or in any one. There is something
for all to do; the world is becoming mere and
more known; wider in magnitude; cloaer in inter
nist more loving and more evenly than of &I.—
Not in deals of daring; not
. in the ensangsrined
field' not in blood, and tears and gloom bat, in the
leaping, vivifying„ militating impulies of the het
ter blab of the cool. Realer are you' doing your
part in this work 1--Ikiroil Free.fsmar.
• Svoierio Nswersvcar,—A cattails. man bit his
toe against a pebble stone end fell bendletig in -the
ground. lie was -vend; and ender tbe- indiums
atangerind active esitesikiency, he kicked old
Bother earth- right- saaelly. - With impertarbgle
gravity; he looked to see "the just glebe itself die
sels.' " and come to aught. Bat the earth resnrin
edi a nd only his poor foot was injuteCin the en
conitter. This is the way of roan. Anerticie in a
sewspaper touches' hint is a weak place, ad
straightway he sends word to stop hi paper. Wilk
greataelfeonsplatency be looks on to see a Cash,
when the objectaf his epleeni shah , eraite ie. be.
Toorfooli he burly hit hie toe grind i• wedd
that doesnot perceptibly feel thesbock. sad injue,
to no assents any one bet himself.-41 ;Wye.
' Tam meat'precioni . diimpontimi..idintliti*Miimi
iii our reputation maid our Me. Bat its
,rnitOt; tolls
i ai Dented that the mat eantemeiptilia tit** . may
delimiter°. of one, and the'Weakeit WWapati'otthe
other. A wise man, thereforim,' . will r be more sum;
lois to deserve a fair name, than to Hire, Minot io
t all. " , -
The greeted difficulty in pabile 'betimes,* le
gibe the subject all the dignity k so idly denaver,
without rettaching Inky. immune , to-Oeuvelsee—
asse• preschels ravens As thing; they give se
touch- importance •te thesuseives, that they-helve
one le(t for thssubject: - •
pasant riementiolook al, but
II
MEM
1 ) It
..) 0 1
IMP