1113 EOM 113,171E1l .110 lakimatiap glotning,Veptembn 19, 1849. ' Mot the Ittetilbrd 'termer.) 1101111 CW, from a flomfolio.—No. L LINES TO A MAONOUA. Magnolia! so lovely. do queenly and (atr— ia green-mantled West Or blooming pauTre. Than art darling of riatare Toro' Summer's bright boars; And pride of this South-clime, This land of gay 9b rem ! The rose may - exhibit Its bessuMl hoes. Like a maiden's soft cheek Which a blush doth aniline The violet and blue-bell May pnde on their dyes. Whicn will rival the dep.hs Oa clear summersk es; The pink and the daisy And dahlia may tell Of - delicate linings. Like those of • shell , Though gleaming with beauty Their rainbow-hues bright I would choose thee. hlllignol Arrayed to pure white. How rich is the perfume Ofall flowers in this flower'ind Thy redolent bresoh klagnolia!—thou'n fairest; sends forth as I bind thee Voluptuous in fragrance-- The queen of-my wreath j That fragrance the rarest! Twits this that allured tile. Oh ! oft In sweet dn'l'lltlen Past gay oars to seek. rye strayed through the,path For ;hy charms. where thou Where thou bloomers t o thy screen'ilat them. beauty "Seath green !rimes so meek. With angel-like breath.. thou &dot waken within me And thought as I milled thee, The writ of song flow •to un co one. Sweet dower !—as upon SiSeet. radditto ma den .. 'lffy r en mint I hung; V, 1,.. wt dm- t upon. And am I shut wage/men - Ch td o , tne. same , m.l el me. Wuh exanwy quoted. I; r- se: air 'at IN Iv I, thou art ; I envied not I evelfirrh dear-'oh ! bow dear!— His ambrosial draught! I to wy yuuth,hl heart Written at New Orleans. . Rolm, A Legend of the GraveNord. In the year 1571 there lived at Cologne a rich buredinwiter, whose wife Adelaide, then in the prime of her youth anti beauty, fell sick and died. They lived very happily together, and throughout her fatal illness her doating husband scarcely quit ted her bedside for an instant. During the latter period of her sickness she did not suffer greatly ; but the fainting fits grew more and more frequent. and of increasing duration, till at length they be came incessant. and she finally sank under Uteri]. It is well known that Cologne is a city, which, as far as respects religion, may compare itself with Rome—on which account it was called, even in the middle ages, Roman Garmunica, and sometimes the Sacred City. It : seemed asA in after times, it wished to compensate by piety for the misfor tune of having been the birth place of the abomi nable Agrippina. For marry year nothing else was seen but priests, students !tied mendicant monks ; while the bells were ringing and tolling from moms_ ing till night. Even new , yon may count in it as many churches and elaistots as the year has days. The principal church is the cathedral of St. Peer one of the handsomest buildings in all Germlny;' tbouth still not so complete as it Was probably in- tended by the architect. The choir alone is arched. The chief altar is a,single block of Week marble, brought along the Rhine to Cologne, from' he Nu mur upon the Mass. In the sacristy au ivory rod is shown, said to have belonged to the apostle Pe ter; and in a chapel stands a gilded coffin, with the names ..of the holy three kings inscribed. • Their skulls are eisible through an opening—two being white, as belonging to Casper and Baltesar --the third, black, for Melchoir. It was in this church that Adelaide eas buried with great splendor. "In the spirit of that age, which had more feeling for the solid than real taste —more devotion and confidence than unbelieving —she was dressed as a bride, in flowered silk, a motely . garland Upon her head, and her pale fingers silvered with costly rings; in which state, she was conveyed to the vablt Icif a little chapel, directly under the choir, in a coffin with glass windows Many of her forefathers were already resting here, all embalmed, 'enk,"figth their mummy forms, af forded a strange contrast to the silver and gold with which they were decorated, and teaching, in a pe culiar fashion, the difference between the I erisha ble and imperishable The custom of en.balnsing was in the present instance, given up; and vt ben Adelaide was buried, it was settled that no one else should be laid there for the future. . With a heavy heart had Adolph • follott erl hr wife to her final resting place. 'The infret-bells, of two hundred and twenty hundred weight, lilted op their d ;ep voices, and spread the sounds of mourning through the wide city; while the monks carrying tapers and scattering incense, sang requ • ems from their huge vellum folios, which were spre-id upon the music desks in the choir. air the service was now overi the deal lay alone with the dearl'h the immense clock, which is only wound up. only once a year, and shows the cuun.e of planets as well as ihe haunt of the day. was the only thing that had sound d motion in the whole cathedral. Its monotonous tirl i ing seemed to Mork the silent grave. It was a stormy November evening. when Peter Bolt. the sexton of s'. Peter's. wits returning home after this splendid funeral The poor man oho had been married fog, years. had one -child, s danghter, which his wile hmtethi him in the .econd year of their marriage, and ff.tie was again expect ing her confinement. IC was, therefore. with a heavy heart that he had lett the church fur his cot tage, which lay damp and cold on the banks of a river, and which, at this doll reason. looked more gloomy than ever. At the do 'r he was met by the little Maria, who called out, with great delight, " You must not go pp stairs,. father; the stork has been here, and brought Maria a little brother!" a piece of information more expected than agrees hie, and whickwas soon after confirmed by the ap pearance of his sister-in-law, with a healtbrinfant rn her, arms. His wife, however, had suflered much, and Was in a atate that , required _assistance fat beyond his•rneans to suupply. In this distress, he bethought himself of the old Jew Isaac who had advanced him a trifle on his old silver watch, but now, unfortunately, he had -nothing moto to i - J e. , '1 :+, g'zrjl4.l , .. 4. . XI Yi. 4; ' .3"-IL 9 ' l ..-t - f ' .. *- 14 ''' -1. 4-c. 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Thou'st a ehann4 blest charm In each booted end - That steals o'er-the bean With a fairy-like yell; I've felt Thy pare influence To soothe, and to Mesa— Bat so sweet an eli101:41111 i Post.oeler eould express: Unit has many • ebsna To gtvejciy to life's boon. Of whieh.aot the Imo is Possesled by frail Bowers. Like sunshine and dew-drops That brighten the field They to the silk balm A soothing balm :t1 POLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY S AT BRADFORIY - COUNTY• •s, I 0 1 • L ' hi/1j ,/ • . -•-••• i :•••• • ••• :•'. ; Pledge, and-was fortakfititrifinid ill hishetieW - out -the Jerrie compassion-4 Withdoubtful 'Nepalis sought-the house of.the miser, and told•his .&te amid teats and eighlryto all of which'teibtr listened with great patieriee—ets much so - that Bolt begin to flattei himielf With a favorable asumaer to his petitieo.. But be was dig. appointed; the Jet having heard hinimet, replied/that" he could lend no moneys on a child —it was no good pledge." With bitter execrations on the usurer's hard heartedness, poor Bolt rushed from-the door, when to aggravate his situation, the first•snow ol•the sea. win began to fall, and that so thick and : fait, 'that in a short time the house-tope presented a single fiel d of. White. Immersed in his grief, he misled hie way across the market place, and when he least expected such I thing, found himself in front of the cathedral. The great clock chiined three-quar ters; it wanted then a quarter to twelve. Where • was he to look for assistance at such an hour— or, indeed at any hour ! He bad already applied to the rich prelates, anti got trout them all t h at their charity was likely to give. Suddenly a thought . struck him like lightning: he saw his little Maria crying for the food hit could not give her—his sick wife, lying in bed, with the infant on her e:bausted &nom and then Adelaide, in her splendid coffin, & her hand glittering, with jewels ibeould not grasp. " Ot what use are diamonds to her nowl" said he to himself— is there any ski in robbing the dead, to gee to the 'Ming)" I would not do such a thing for myself, if I were stalling--no, heaven turbid ! But for my wife and chile-.—ali I that's tanhe another matter." Quitting his Conscience OR well as he could with this opiate, he hurrieJ borne to ge*. the necessary implements; but by the time he reached his own door, his resolution began waver. The sight of his wife's d istress, however wrought him . up again to the sticking place; and having provided himself ' with a dark lantern, the church keys, arid a crow to break open the coffin, be set out for the cathe dral. On the way, all manner of /srange fancies crossed him; the earth seemed to shake beneath him—it was the tottering of his own limbs; a fig tire seemed to sign him back—it was the shade thrown trom some column, that waved to and fro as the lamp light Bickered in .the night wind.—: But still the thought of home, and event the bad ness of the weather, carried this find with ithe was the more likely to find the street clear and escape detection. He had now reached the cathedral. For a mo ment he paused - on the steps, and then, taking heart, pin the huge key into the lock: To his fan cy it had never opened with each-readiness before. The holt snot back at the slightest touch of the key and he stood alone in the church, trembling from head to foot. still it war requisite to close the door behind him, lest it being opened should be noticed by any one passing by, and give rise . to sus picion; and as he did so, the story came across his mind .of the man who visited a church at mici • night to show his courage. -)For a sign that be had real y been there, he was to stick his knife into a coffin; but,-in his herr, and trepidation, he stuck it through the skin of his coat without being aware of it, and supposing himself held back by some supernatural agency, dropped down .dead from terror. Full of these unpleasant recollections, he totter ed up the mtve; and as the light _successfully flashed upon the sculptured marbles, it seemed m il tbe pale figures frowned ominously upon him. Bat desperation supplied the place of courage.— He kept on his way to the choir--deacried the steps—famed through the long l aarrow passage, with the dead heaped on either side—opened Ad elaide's chapel, and stood at once before her coffin. There she lay, sti@ and pale—the wreath in her hair and the jewels on, her fingers, gleaming stralarly in the dim light of the lantern. He even fancied that he already felt the pestilential breath of decay, though it was full early for corruption to have begun its work. A sickness seized him at the thought; and he leaned for support against one of the columns, with Li. eyes fixed on the van; when—was it real or was it illusion!..." change cattle over the face of the dead ! He started back; and that chat.gte, wo itule,cribable. harlpas.ed sway ut .ati it scant, Iptivin2 a darker shadow tat ti e f attrom ‘• It I had only , time,' l he said to himself\ '• it I had only time, I would rather break• open one of the other coffins, and leave the lady Adelaide in quiet. Age has destroyed all that is human in thesemummies; they have lost 'Let reiemblanee to life ishieh make the dead so terrible, and I should no more mind handling tnetn than so Many dry, bones!. It ht all nonsense though; one is as harm lessai the other; and since the lady Adelaide's is the eitliiest for my work. I must even Set about it." Bat c coffin did not direr such facilities sus he reek, ed upon with so much certainty ... The glass win 8 , were secured inwardly .with iron wires, leavi _no space for the admissiOn of the. hand, so 'hat h tumid himself °blps) to break the lid to piece., a task that, with his. imperfect implements, cost both time and labor. As the wood splintered and cracked tinder the heavy ,blows of the tron 7 the cold perspiration , pouted - IR strearns - down his lace, the sound assuring him more than sfl the To 'that he was committing sacrilege. Before, it was only the place, with its dark associations, that had terri fied him; now. le began to be `afraid of himself' s and- would, without doubt, have given, up the busi ness altogether, if the ljd had not soddenly flown to pieces. Alarmed at his very success, he started round, as if expecting to see some One behind watching his sacrilege, and ready. to Bloch hips; andao strong had been this illusion, that, when he. hand this was not the case, he fell upon his-knees before the coffin, exclaireing,-" Forgive me s iudYs if I take frOm you what is of ow ass, M., Palmas while a single diamond will Make- a poor family qp happy. It is *not for mytielf. Oki tio!.it il for my wife and children." Flo thought the de a d looked more kindly at hint =Mir • • 4g. iiscaanu mix e r vicavia.noi he spoke thes,-Mtdesti.telnly the' liiridlliadow had paned away sl:ra !WO*, more delay he raiseilthe colitland..to• draw dm rings from its finger; butwrhat was his honor-when the deed:reit:weed his gralir [his band was clutched, aye fintilp Clotatied,though that rigid face lay there as motionless as ever. With a cry Of horror he burst away, not so much presence of) mind, air, to think of the light, which histeftlitiining by•the els& fin. This, however, was of little and fear can find its way in the dark, and he 'rushed .through the vaulted passage, up the steps, through the choir, and would bay* band his wa•otit, . had , . f v he not in' his finny, forgotiten Ore,itone, allied the gone, -which lies ia the middles)! thechurcb, and which seconding to the legend, was cast there by the devil. This-much ea - Hain—it had &lien from' the arch, and they id6l show a hole above, Omagh which it is mid to have been. burled. Against this stone the unlecky sexton stuMbled, just as the clock struck twelve, and immediately be fell to the earth in a deathlike swain. The cold, however, satin brcnight hint to -howl', and on re. covering his senseale again fled, winged by ter ror, and folly convineed that he had no hope of es caping the vengeance of the dead, except by the confession of his crime, and gaining the forgive nessOf her family. - With this view he hurried across the market-place to thelinnioneaster's house, *here he had to kneek long before be could attract any notice. The whole household lay in a pro found sleep, with the exception of the unhappy Adolph, who sat alone on the sofa where he had so often sat with his Adelaide. Her picture hung on the wall opposite to him, though it _might be said rather to feed his grief than to aflani him any con solation. And yet, as most would do under such citrumetances, he ilwe.t upon it the more intently, even from the pain it gave him, and it was not till the sexton had knocked repeatedly that be awoke from his melancholy dreams. Roused at last he opened the window, and inquired who it was dim disturbed him at such an unreasonable boort "It is only I, Mr. Burgomaster,' was the an. ewer. " And who are you I" again asked Adolph " Boit, the sexton of St. Peter's Mr. Burgomas‘ ter; I have a thing of the utmost importance to din. cover to yoc." Naturally, associating the idea of 'Adelaide with the sexton of the church where she was buried, Adolph was immediately anxious to know some• 'thing more of the miner, and, taking by the wax. light, be hastened down stairs, and himself opened the door to Bolt " What have you to say to me I" he exclaimed. "Not here, Mr. Burgomaster, replied thee:Woes sexton—" not here; we may be overheard." Adolph, though wondering at this alleviation of mystery, motioned him in, and closed the door; when Bolt, throwing himself at his feet, confessed all that had hams:nett. The anger of Adolph was mixed with compassion as he listened to the stamp recital; nor could he refuse to Bolt the absolution which the poor fellow deemed so essential to his security from the vengeance Of the dead. At the same time he cautioned him to maintain a profound silence on the subject toward every .one else, as otherwise the sacrilege might be attended with @o rlon consequences; it not being likely that the tee clesiastics, to whom the judgment of such matters belonged, would view his fault with equal indul gence. He even resolved to go himself to the church with Bolt, that he :night investigate the at. fair more. thoroughly. But to this proposition the' sexton gave a prompt and positive denial. " I would rather be dragged to the scaffold than again disturb the repose of the dead." This declaration so HI-timed, confotmded, Adolph. On the one hand, be felt an undefined curiosity to look more narrow ly into the mysterious business; on the other, he could not help feeling compassion , for the sexton, who, it was evident was laboring under the infln ence of a delusion which het w; Utterly unable to subdue. The poor fellow trem ed all over, as if shaken by an ague fit, and paitited the situa,icui of his wife and his pressing poverty with stich a pale face and such despair an , his eyes, that he might himself, passed for a church yard slu t *tre. The bur gomaster again admonished him to be silent for, fear of me conseqeences, and, giving him ae.uple of dollars to relieve his immediate wants elect him to his wife and family._ • Being thus deprived of bis moat natural Of on ehia occasion, Adolph summoned an Inkl confides Sal servant, orshose merger he .coal have no doubt. To bis qttesdOn, " Do yonTeioduidead r Huts Etoetl~ replie 4, 4, They ate out ball so den gernsi its the living." e 4:1 " Indeed I" said the burgomaster. "Do you think s then, that you havereouragesmorigii to go In to tht church at night" ; " In the way of 111 duty, yes," milli! Hans; " not otherwise. it is not right,to trifle with, holy _matters." " Do you beams m ghtets, Hanel" continued Adolph. " Yes, Mr. Burgomaster. " Do you-fear theml" " No, Mr. Burgomaster. I hold by God, and he bode me op; and God is - the strongest." "Will you go with me to the cathedral, Bans I I have had a strange dream tonight. It seemed to me as if my deceased Wife called to me from the steeple window." "I see how it is,"anewetred Bans; "the sexton has been with you, gni put ibis whilst into your head, Mr. Burgomaster. These grave-diggers are always seeing,gbema/' "Put a light into your lantern? mid Adolph, avoiding a direct reply ,tri hit observatio' gi.of the old man; "be silent, and follow me." " Um bid me," said - "-Imam of mums obey; for yellers try Misiatiate as WUU se my master." • . He then lit the eitalein din finnan; and AO*, ed his master without limber eesemdtion, Adoipitharne' into*OkMh t iM1.11,4,10 1 4 0 .; but the °Mow* weathefitniket:lo sbol! the Way, delayed him with his reflections—so that that progress was bet stow. • • • • - ' Eyettat:the threshold he stopped, and flung iho tigial. of hia lantern upon the gilded rods over the door, to which it is a custom to add a fresh one every year. that people may know _how long the reigning elector his lived. "That is in excellent custom," said Hans; cr one has only to count those staves, and one learns im mediately how long the gracious elector bas goy erred us simple- men." • Not monument woukl.he palawithottfirstigop pingo, explain/ t it by the lantern light, andreques ling the burgomaster to explain its inscription, al thoogkhe had spent ,hie three-and-sixty years in Cologne, and, doting' that period, had been in the habit of frequenting it almost daily. Adolph, who well knew that no misrepresenta tionswould avail hbo,Stubmitted patiently to the humors °the old servant, contenting himself with answer:l* his questions as briefly mrpornitne; and in this Way they at hastgot to the.high altar. Here Hans made a sadden stop and was not to bebrought arty farther. •-• Quierreselabeed the burgomaster, wbo Was beginning to lose his petit:ice ; for hishmutthrob bed with expectation. " Heaven and all good angels defend us !" marriturrd Hans through his cbattiring teeth, while he in vain felt fot his rosary, which yet hung usual a! his girdle. What, is the matter now?" . cried Adolph. "Do you see who sits them?" asked Hans. " Where?" exclaimed his master; "I see noth. ing;. hold up the lantern." ' 4 Heaven shield es !" cried the old man; " there sits our deeeased lady. on the altar, in a long. white veil—and she drinks out of the sacramental cap!" With strembling hand he held up the lantern in the direction to which be pointed. It was, indeed, as he had said. There she sat, with the paleness of death upon her face—her white garments way inheavtly in the night wind, that rushed through the aisles of the chard', and holding the silyergob lei to her lips with .her long, bony arms, wasted by protracted illness. Even Adolph's courage began to waver. Adelaide,? he cried, " T conjure you, in Ilse name of the blessed Trinity, answer ma— is it thy livingiself, or but thy shadow;" Ah!" replied a faint voles, "you buried me alive, and but for this wine. I had perished frian ex haustation.. trine up to me, dear Adolph ; AIM no shadow ; but I shall soon be with *harlots., un less I receive speedy succor " "Go not near her !" said Hans; "it is the Evil One, who has assumed the blessed shape of my lady to &atm!' you !" Away, old man !" exclaimed Adolph, bursting from the feeble rasp of his servant, and rushing tip the steps of the altar. It was indeed Adelaide that he held in his eager embrace—the warm and living Adelaide i—who had been buried for dead in her long trance, and had only escaped from the grave by the sacrilegious daring of the 'warms or Cowart. These " girls" are all a fleeting show. For man's illusion given ; Their smiles of joy, their tears of woe Deceitful *bine, deceitful flow, • There's not pis true io "smut &ass rar. NaroasxlliND or Man.—The great Roman naturalist, Pliny, in one of the most beautiful passages of his elaborate history of nature, observes :—lt is the earth that rake a kind mother, receives us at our birth ) and sustains as when born h is this alone, of all the elements around, that is never fintnicl an enemy of man. The . body of wa ters deluge hint with rains, oppress hint with hail, and drown with inundations; the air rashes on in storms, prepares the tempest or lights op the vel cano; but the earth, gentle end indulgent, ever subserves the wants of man, spreads his walks with flowers, and his table with plenty; returns with intents eve.y good donimitted to her; and though she produces the poison, she still supplies the antidote, though constantly teased to furnish the luxuries of man rather than his necessities; yet. even to the last, she continues her kind iadul gence, and when Weis dttr, she gloriously:hides his remains in her bdsoth WOOLEN RAISE klinuar--file waste of woolen factories and woolen rage make a-valuable manure they may be made up into compost and remain till rotted, or may be died by themselves. A cor respondent oldie Ag Gazette gives his mode of us ing the raga He mns them through a straw cutter and that. Vreads them on grass-land. On some adjoining land he had applied lime, and.also bone • dust at a greater cost than the rags, bat the latter prculdtied the greater results He has tried mizinz them whir lime but-finds they are not so goad " as the greasy miner, and injareetheir fertilizing qual ities." Perhapi sales, or potash,, by. for Ring a a soluble soap, would do barer. ,Tog Four OF Itivescg.—There is no foolish nese so prodve its of misery to yourself as revenge. Danish all maligant retengertol thoughts. They make the best free look ugly. If your revenge be riot satisfied, it will give you torment now; if it be it will give you greater bisreafter. NOM, is II grea ter selitormentor than' a malicious and revengeful person who-toms the poison of bis own temporal>. on himself. The Christian precept in this ease, ts. "Let not the ran go down upon your errant?' and the precept Plutarch tells us the Pythagorans .prac tiled in a literal sense —" If at any time, in apse site they broke Cot into opprobrious language, be: forerthe stm set !till , gave one another their bands, and with thetu:a.divciutript horn all jnjwies, and eV with a mutual recooeiliatioik parted friends," • ,A.LszA bnutpdepsods so mach ou expries iw tbat if that be spoiled, tatowell to all bet ebonies; -awl *Mk aotbing toads more to-bring about than - a - teitnitausueo rim* cails; - **lo kio: l 4 n ig h463li Nl* 411 9kilil' neviforinhm mbl. blessings. • d• MEE /MEER === One - of the' eithstithdiatannta of Boston has Ins. nishetl the follow ti 4 . old '6 - oiernor Leverett, elan iiirmir= n. nf 'thi-force of *courage and ingenuity. upon-sainadatanL: $ c _One morning, manyyeats aro stontbarly built maniac, in a piuniyant of msanitYybarst o u t of dm asylum r sed on his way a loaded ian fell into ins hands. With this , formidable weapon, mounted with i terrible bayentiti tire Madman rushed.out in to the city, mid pretty effectually cleared the street es to was inatOlfing along. 'Turning a corner, he suddenly came upon Governor Leterati; and was on the point of nutting a point blink . iharge upon the vitals of the old giovernor, who comprehended his danger,-In 'Rag& stance at the klbitt„ and drawing himself up squire and firmly before - antagonist, he bailed him thus: a Ho I brother soldier, Gave you Teemed your exerciser • " Yea I have r said the friloar with a terrible oath. "Then, brother, said the Governor, "Amid to your arms, like a vigilant *Wigs, while I give thit words of command.': The madman seemed pleased, and stood bolt upright, with his minket . fitted up close Ito his shoulder in reg u lar , drill order. " Poise riu: &Week," the fellow did ,so;, keg your Reebok P'--the fellow obeyed--" Ground your firelack Pi—this be 'did ; Face to the sight•abont —March !" says the governor, and the inaffmin wheeled and stepped away. The governor quick. ly ran up behind him, seized the poworfnl fellow and the musket, end held him, until several look ers-on—standing at a sate distance and watching this curious scene—came to the Governor's alaist ance, and the madman was secured and carried back, in• an awful rage, to his clatters. This, anecdote reminds us of a similar one. that happened to the famous Dr. Physic, an eminent medical man, now dead and gone of Philadel phia. The doctor was visiting physician at the lunitic asylum, near that city ; and one morning going his rounds among the patients of the institution, the doctor strolled up stairs into the top gallery of the large rotunda of the building to view the city and the surrounding country. While absorbed in the view from his high elevation, a robust' mad man InOo had eluded his- keepers, came suddenly upon the doctor, to hie no little astonishment and bodily fear. But keeping it perfectly cool, he bid the maniac " good day," and was taming about to go down stairs. . "No you don't," said the madman clutching the doctor es firmly es a viers—" I *int you to: show me something; they say you do everything—cut off hew* legs ; araisavut them together again— take a mad all span, and then mend him up as good as ever.; and I know you can too, bat I want you just to jump do ati this hole:—(the opening of the rotunda, surrounded by the long spiral stairway) away down to the pavement. Come on .do it you must!" • And the fellow exerted blinself to drag the doctor up to the railing, to - which the poor doctor :lung with the tenacity or a tick. The mo ment Was one of peril to the doctor, but his pre• ewe of mind completely floored his antagonist. "It would not be very hard for me to jump &tun there, sir," said the doctor; bat I can do • great , er feat than that for you, if you wish to. seie me try", " Can ycnt ; eh, old fellow' Well try it. What is it r Why, air,l will ft down thole to chi bonotn, and with one good spring, au, ritjamp clear up hem" "Ka, ha," laughed the maniac; "that would be worth seeing; go down; doctor, and jump upon oath yogi what pm tam 4)' The doctor lost no time in goinsdown, and send ing the limpent, who nabbed the ***laded. A similar instance to the ones just related, occur: red some years ago hi ,England,, A lady was sit ting in a well famished apartment ] whet a mad man mailed in with an axe in hand, and told her he was going to out her head off. Knowing that resistance was in 'vain, she told hint to intit till she would get a cloth to lay her head on, to prevent the blood from lolling her beautiful carpet._ 'The mad man willingly consented, and the retired leaving bite lb possession of the room. The lady haute diately gave the ilium,, and he was secured, and confined in his proper aparubent. The moral of these anecdotes shows that is far more wise to menage Maniacs by an *kW kind neva and innocent stratagem, than V tornpnlsive ii,i threats and acts o id:lance and that a man can hardly be placed any situation in which be can not, by coolness courses extricate blaself. - To Ras is Ruxiii.A4Lolergyinas having indul ged too finely in filling up his glass, went one Bab bath into a pelpitimd having given out the hy m n. to his congregation, sat down ; the melody of the sacred song Soon lidled him to sleep, and he con tinued to pliy a trOlti bass symphony with his nose. At length doe of the deacons ascikied' the sawed desk, mid told him the hymn was aut.—, ct Inv sa y s h i!, I ! . jta upag ,„ &e , . . No.—John Randolph, in Me of Malone= to a young relative sap :—I know of nothing that I am so anxious you fi l oold acquire as the faculty of mimeo. You um calculate on cureesciable . regimes being preened to you every 414 of your ve t life, and mm etaleavor , to with as muck k My as you :ame. 2l -- . . --. . „. . Re:tam " Res bfixt."—This.446e, is produced b y, from mum isiiiiitvilibe blood vemels irc it WWI gnakkkvilmriViilk is wawa* this 'rtetia' 1 blodt, - :_ - ' ~..._;., Milk with iitarekda* tbreikiss .s.itai r sid wash ill..mitosis "add r pore: ' -- 411014a1l OW M.the skaair' will - Its eildimatind its efficiency as an applicatiemitiv-- , :- "`. • 3 - I= r• • - The follon4iiilrelo„friisliailowitt4 do, P" bf the Giticitar*Or Andre:: is 61 : iibtif (Tile, though but little khakis: Thefinali is iciaehed kr by a writer, in Airisworell'itama g a z i n ii , ic a "'Major Andie,the cycoinstane , ea of Whose la mented deatk ore _too trelt kniniri to a mum" Sarnie to deteAlierti iervi, trUid of Miss Seward's itruf p!eyioutly to ,einharking for America, he made a• jotirney" int 6 Velliisidie to pay het a yisit and it wtor Tanatiged .: _AV they should ride over to-see 'the *Were deptik, and introduce Andre to . .Is:tri; .. trtiliet )14unrelAit she. called gni, alt enititt''tifhintif i * curate, who wackleo a poet. •r- 4`.a arrival of the guest; 6f *base intentiiiiiilhityjasd apprized - Mr.. Cunningham tncndonitd . ta. litiwton that on the proeeeding night lielatiazary extraordi nary dream, which hettuald nett gel2at of hishand. Re had briefed himself in alum..rpm' place Watt ening* to hint, anti whilst looking 'Am- he •per. ceived a horseman approaching at greatlopited,rwho had scarcely reached .the spot wham .the dreamer stood when three men nulled ont of the thicket-and seizing ids bridle, hurried him sitar, -Mier closely winching his person. I • • "The mmutenerics of tl» strangeebnintvety teeming, the umpithy felt . by Ibialleper • fat - Lis apparent misforttme awoke b/in bet be presently cell asleep again, end dreampuhat be was emitt ing near street city, among- ihoossnds-ot people, and that he sa* the same pedim he bid been seiz ed in the woods brought out and.suepended on a gallows. When Andre- and bliss Seward arrived, he was borror-struck to perceive that his new ac quaintance was the antetype of tile man in the dream. A Liectuat es Turt & gentle men ! Allow me;thiii 'evening, to introduce an animal called the Elephant. He , is thagrirafirit of all tread mill animals that helps to keep the globe in motion. Among the Anglo-Saxons he ie known . only by the name of elephant; bat with all baba :row and half civilized nations he is unanimotaly dubbed the &diipkba. He is about the site of a two year old omnibus, and In color dpproAchets es near to a black mho possibly can withnutabsolute Infringement. To look at him* net tee .severely one neurally supposes him tote a . small moan- Wail of India ribber., or a. line competition of glue and molasses, The elephant is one of the waives of theltast In dies bat he has been met witbin various.perts*of Mexico, and is frequent!) seen in the great• city of Nei York. It has been essencd opist both righieous and profane authority, that he is indigent ous,to the diggings of California—however . asser tions as Jet , .goes at begging for confirmation: It is my private opinion though, that the Unbind ins• bikini himself to travellers in all parts of the Todd only they entertain a monstrous reluctance to cons (easing the fait Ho always estrinshis trunk With him Wherever he goes bat sower keeps anything in it, not Mai a change of shins. When cousin Ichabod first saw him at a show be exclainied with incase- wittentsh meat : "'hen that's the rale Menagerer—the identical criiter bieself! I swine would's:St two of 'em make a team to. draw stun with I dollop, aint he a serenest" Ichabod went home and related what he had seen. " I seen,'? said he, "the pan- Witte Iftenainer, the deredear biggest lump of finsh but Bier surfed. - Hi bad taw las i taw; ewe o tre hind and tether before He pat one of his tails in my coat pocket, and hauled oat kit giappt brand „ S 1 hewer. What dre - yak ail* he does with it. Why he stack . Hilt hie Otrupeeket, and be pa tofemble for sereindarn hituP , . Ora MennArlhoniples run pa* skit in making' fan Of old maids. 4 Me ersinglargion world teach them better. lame of the kindest, truest and best wining Weimar ever boon ware Id sztaidt ft is a pitywdavy, it is sew mai to *vends the feelings of any anosea Wairtans bean Would not stoop to itdantore oaf'isssio4 if dial ono be a woman. Alas hoer little do we know Of the trials and.eufferings of many who are sneeringly denominated old maidal Perhapi the cantata/ of youthful affection—the porn and deep &ratio' a of a arstand only foie has kept many a woman single of life. '• A CnaussoL—A little fop coneeiving himself insulted by a gentleman who had:induced to give him a little trholesome advice lamed up to:him with an air of imptmariee auk% t.—el Mr, you or. 'nogendeman--bere kayoed; conaiderymmtell ehalkaged: .Should I be from hope wile* Yea honor me with a eall"Vehall Nave wool with -* friend to settle the preliminaries to, year =iliac- To which the other replied—el Sir, yertfiue sk fool —.here is my card, end should I not be‘ et - kixfor when yotkeell on me,you will find thu I hase,,left orders with my serrazit to kick you intotheirreet." The Comm . MAN Erriwr.—We'beard of a Man the other day, who, while the CaMoonlit fm• er was at its height r eery gleth.aid. annually protoulgatedbh sentiments sonsiralatkt this WIWI is If I wash poormin, without a busily; and didn' Own any house or a spot of hind, harms birrisese, and was without a cent'in the world, and no father nor mother, nor sister, nor brother- wouldn't go to California;' He may eafely - be'eass ei in no dagger of catching the infection.—Sefeußsgirkr. O- It's quite too bed for you Darby : Our wik 4 r 3 r. o loa,P 4 10 ,T197, 41 U. - "An plow* Your r ev urrulorS____/ , foil% icriptmL ,pidnk Your.. two!!! ; Yo.OuVirq• 1 1 3 Yo 4 WM") ta ou, thit i ' . l,o Plui*lbi Anil be is!' Now ii I rata ml 11/„.7.7 The per idia aillaltimattitiatuitik4 the *Kr** orld 11104t000, 1111112 e:P' rf.l. - 4 - , - s 4koa • .:Agrum- MIME IMO •A;< >:. '~'~~;~t. N ~ . MEM=