T:,2„.7/.IM TOW A NDA: tilebncebon ftlorninv, September 19,1819 ,I',::4< Brad:ord Rerormt fragments from a portfolio.—\o.:. El PANT FiItS.T A A r nunste h•• ',sec! live was Irmraing, ,nrr.rg 'west rums trom rarer rrerM. , log string; And w.th those lend rig— It •own !.er% V. u-as I.4 rUtiit g And lho,ils 1 tmrnldid{ luarstrei d.c s.ng, 011.1 tr r:v-7 hoer seem• br ngng, Upon ••, pa.,,ng '< wry new de I quo : And nature • be•ut.rs a ; around as spr rig rig. F. , .c;lttu! nx.wockt. ec s.ght. • Sr _ 1 , ie. , 4g-Ti the grore's recca•ss. A.d t !het:am:og r Their w•nfis they lace ; r.1..< cults are Si Cr ng with Lilt 8011, COJcAnts r 2-1: sOnit. .gt! ,ned. .at .u: Zr ph eSliVe. Oh. i it s WrvOnfr7.—(oce ri c dna,. rs are Wnert,ll.rzg, Ar , 1 vc“ rat.)) a • t1 , )1 ) fragrance sled, ro.,:ers roar Ge roam.ng T ". 4 .; ‘ ,....inrsa is round .al spread dear w.th nature Lording. • W, r. rrertre rwr , or Anr , rly ar!tor rest. „, ..tro.;• he putrrner bad, unfolding Wake!, sa*arc.: s :'ee bags in tt? breast' Cl• • J • rryst a orh ef*. flnen, , re.n n.. 6 .'r loneie vale and yore, ronn. •OU:1111 n 111611111611,1 g her vespers, %% .6"es •(6.111.,i me 04 uC ave r , we .1, t•,,.. 7 0.1. .9 ourbol.on6 r 101161.4 b-ro and flo . war, and stream. C A, a. L enr.4 :s round us throwtug, ;• t— a dream' . c W be. Isere , eve tones eteel.egt A. ir ,;yr g.. .e.: cal , broudvhe • 87111— A 1•7 , 1111•11SI:re hg. nc n. the son! of mirth n.tel • adsonte hours are fleeting, , n r . of P!es•a re by st- u ` m rn ncrec:,cm - the atitel tabcsung. , • .trtima o cares ro 13/21 . IrSt:‘.ty, sa.—Lncrd ones round arc am • m re. and Leant) -moo And twn. 0,, 4.43 co.up.e:eqs 61111 g X • : s lf 'on !CPI pArest tee! ulm warm. -a. raec , •t lo . br ma a aqab, aadoesa ; I 4.5 thl'U.l• a few.— rnal, :•• t: oar so. s wxt..l g rs..arsa. •••' 7 ..• •,rO4-ams tramt,!e .n out wars' AL,: 31 1...-41 3 Rommo A Story of the Press Gang, 77 , %I . FIC`X OF A AvlrE AND TAIE FLT:VENGE OF OF A HUSBAND P.•• inatlied Fate: ‘Voosifor,l, the .r.f J.),Z)r z Iti o.nihma, who way U, . tn Plymouth dockyard. of which he =SE 'X t' T an. Hen n• had loved Esther when she •.‘ as .1 Z t:. bU: she had. in a jealous pique mar :e,I the death of her husban.l. she •, en: :.• : • ::er-in•law, taking wt h her an only %V:' oy a sweet boy, 'brit of weak imellect . 9t• - e !l.e lore was revived, and !leer; Mason, I.ld become mate of a first class merchant man. tv;onguT. to the re house of Aleitsirs. 'ens. of London married the widow Esther irr:-.ts of their subsequent life are thus reha!etl Notes of a Dirtinguirhed Barrister. - was'Airout eight months alter his tnarria-e— -^-:zh he had been profitably enough ;asevl interimz—that Henry 'Mason, in consecnei.ce welcome annOuncemet t 11:1.4 !Ix ticw / as a: last ready for her captain and cargo, a:1:%e.1 ..) L0r..12.1 to enter upon his new appoimment. " riee '.othgings, Ether," said be, as he was zo out, soon after breakfast on the afier his arrival, " are scarcely the thin,g; and as I like you. am ft a stranger in Cockney . -land, Jad utter consult some of the firm upon the slat.- before we decide upon permanent one& In njeaalime you and Wdlie must mind and keep .:.,loors when I am not arith you, or 1 ihall have one or the other of you lost in this great vrildevnew ' a city. I shall Tenant m two or three hours. 1 c!,ler something, for dinner as I go along - our puree. Good-by. God be merciful, ar.,l you both." fr.quiring his way ecerr two or three tr.Hu , es, Ilason presently tonna htru.se:t in the vh..clty of Tower Stairs. A beatfle ►n front of a public hou.,e .r-lt2ntel his attention; and his ready tcm•+at`ttes were in an nistant enlisted in behr..l, a vourz •. vainly struzy„liniz in the grasp of sever.tl afn f.Fc men, and crying lemuly on the gap:ng tly 5 in, , ers for help. gason sprang forw.?ril, eanhr - -t - • of the assailants by the.collar, and hn•led him same violence against the wail. A fierce ou:. •-••• ;7 - ,-ezeJ this audacrons m:erference ti . r:h gen who, m these g4ca times, ra-ese but exe• - .rang he law in a remarkably g?nd okl manner Lieu: Domaghen. a soMewhat celebrated snap. r‘f loose mariners. emerged trpon the scene, „a few minut e s was ertabied to esat in the `eet - e poesftsion of an additional prize in the nn ilrzt-ate Henn - Mason. who. too taw, dusearered x he embroi!ed: himself with. a preys gang Despera:e. frenzied were the efforts he made made • t•i. cve him:Leif from the peril in which be had r.-;red himself. In rain! His pro:es:a ., that he a - as a mate, a captam, 'in' the mer serrice, wai unheeded or mockeil.at. To a:1 hts . reutonstranum he :Nnly you the profes ''•tLzal ansa-er—" His majesty artukm you, and cleat . 5 er•eh . so so come along and no ?more about Irtfed exhausted. aim:et mad. he was borne triumph to a boat. into which he arm , . throit 1..:11 several cebt7,s, and swiftlr rowed off to a m elting ship in the river. Even there, his ;mer lons and protestations were of no avail. Nothing -of an Adentraitty order the officer in command r:hildlytoid him, should ellerr hrr s majesty was to wait of emmen, and he was -rklentiv too smart a one to be deprived of the ;.or of servrag his c'iuntry. " You ntwa there ; concluded the officer, as he turned tits heel, t• do as tholzmands of other fine nave been cotopeile.l to do--" gnu aria -rr a in about three weeks from the date of raprisontnent, Mason found himself sernn .ne, Mediterranean, ern board the' Active" Erie r- a7.atn Aleaar.der Gordo% without having 'le-- permitted one opportnniry of comarmicating 'cch the shore. This eras certainty very sharp, g e ms net th e less very coirfenen 'melee in Treat daps of triumphant battles by land and • dymnly passed the time Tab the bereaved ' 4 e- Ref host and had promised to seed home . r o- _ . - ---- ---. --- 5..... .. -•+l27:l7:sert, s..a•ze went,. vi-racicz,-7 6,-1-.r , • . . „ .. .. • . 1 :.• ,- 1- t- - 1-g , i ffirlfp , z x „... 7 ;..\.;• - _ ,--- , -, -- pc y z • h .,, 4,6 . _,, ;..-.‘. •• -4. 7. - - , ... , 0 , . v.- _ 3 ,_ 1 ,2 e• 47 1 , .; . 4-a . _,„.: .‘! . - 0..? %, ..7.,;, - ,: z0 , ,,, z8-;- - -: -- :, - . • .. . . , : :: .... _ .-....,..-, 4. -..4 7 7.... _ N ,,, —; *,.. ..7 1 .1 e, - Stlg , ./ , A r ' T.'? ' ' lt . - L t^\` , . ---... 7 .,,,,X • '' , T, -.^-, . 3" , •' L.t...41 - ,*l -- . . 7 -_ ' ''.. ."..,„. f ia'%'. Y. ' . ' , kr e*.:: - , ' . 4- -, i it - ' - ''-' 4 t;r•' ,, .., . . . . . . .., something for dinner, and vaiious groceries : vet hour after bour,went past. and nothing srrived.— Slorning, Hushed into noon, gay faded to twihgtir, 'and stillitie well known and always eager step sounded not upon the stairs. Whatcou!d have de tained him from his wife, shot up, imprisoned. as it were, in that hot, hurryiinr, stifling city ? She feared to listen to the suggestions .of he boding heart, and with feverish restlessness ran out upon the landing, and peered over the stairs every time a knock or ring was heard at the street door. This strange behaviour was it seems . tit , ticed by the landlady of the lodging-house. and injuriously in terpreted. A knock Caine to the door, and that person entered to know.at what time Mrs —, she had forgotten the young Woman's name, expected the dinner, she, the landlsciy ; had LicJertakca to cook. 'Fo-ther timid:y replied that her hnsband had pro mised to return in two or three hours at least, and that she did not comprehend his corniuued —was indeed quite alarmed about— Your husband!'' said the woman e!ant-ingin rderily at Estlier's figrre " Are you sure he is your husband r' The hot blood sntiosed the temples of the rant Trite ns he saM, "This apartment, madam, I telit,ve, is mice ?" eenairly as long as yon pay for it:" and ratlely Piammin 7. the door. the landlacty- departed. wretched nicht WA over, Esther rose t:le h ht , and after giving her son hi, b r e a k. fast from the remains of that of the day before. setoff w h him to the pl.l'te of b” , 'ness of Ntesrrs R It wasyarly, and one ele:k only had yel at-r.‘ed at the cff He ir.lormed bet: that Mr. Henry :11as:on not been seen. anti that the partners were greal annoyed about tt. as his imrric•diate pre.e: - .ce was assolriel) nece,sarv. S:Larte,!. ter: r, fie,' bew .taered by the fligh . ful calamity %%loch sho believed had . ..befallen her, .she telt cenvitter.l that her husband had been entrz:a -a:•...! tr . e cf the m. - ”lcy . I:.e a re:,•itc.l iscquali 101Lcied to her lodging , . and threw herself on the bed in ,le-, , air. ‘Vhat was to be done for fond even for her boy Iler husband had not only %tali l.im contaming his larger money. but I.ad taieu her purse! Stie was alone and penm- IKrin a straoee coy! The hungry . wailing. of her witless chi:.! towards ever..ng at letizzli aroused her trom .t'ie stupor of despair into which Ale had fal len. Tl - e miserable resource of pawning occur red to her'. sl.e could at team, by pledging a . 731 of her watdrobe, proctor sustenance for her child unlit she could hear from her si.ter: and with nem cling hands she began artanging, a bundle of such things as she could best spare, when the landlady obrubtly riveted the room. n - ith a peremptory tle inand—as her husband was not returned, and did not ap:lear ILkely to do so—for a month's rent tl aJ ranee, that 'veil rz the term 114 "apartments were engaged to. The tears, Ent:ea:les, espcwulattons of the nitseratt!e wife were of no avail. Ntit one a-ticle, the woman declared, slamtld leave 'her house tdl the claim was settled. She affected to doubt, perhaps re g ally did so, tliat Esther was not man ied ; and hinted coarsely at an enforcement of the laws nra inst 'persons who had no visible means of sulx,istet.ce. In a paroxysm of despair, the unhappy woman rushed out of ttie house and ac companied by her hungry child, againß(lo4.h , t the counting home of the .151.mws. Roberts. She was now 411 much too late as she had been ton early to the merninis. the partners r;..1 clef}, had gone, and she appears to hare been treatetl unit some radetis by the porter, who was clo.in_ the prem ises when she aarced. Pcestbry the wittiness of her ;cooks 7.71 d the incoherence of her speech and ala•,cer . , p-zxl:.:ce.l as intiression, cafes - on:hie t,l ;ter. Retracing *cu.,- steps--penntlemi., hungry., sick at heart—she :hcaithi. as she afterwards defared, -he recognised my wife in ore of the numerous ta s , -..tcd before the corn-ter& of a foihionah:e shop in one of itiorocurifam.„ She catered, and not till she approached close to the lady, discover ed her mistake. She turned despairingly away ; when a piece of rich lace. is ing apparently un needed on'ttie counter, met her eye, and a dread ful suspicion crossed her fevereit tram here at least was the means of procuritt^ food for her a - eh 2.1.. She glanced' fearfully and hastily round. No eye, she thought, observed her and, horror of horrors! a moment afterwards she had concealed the lace beneath her shawl, and with tottering feet was beatify linsing the shop. She had not - a/ten half a dozen steps when t bevy hand.was tail open her shoulder, and a voice. as of a serpent hissing in her car, etreamanded her to restore the lace . she had stolen. Transfixed with shame and terror, she stood rooted to the spot, and the lace fell on the floor. FeLch an °dicer; said site harsh voice, &dims ing one of the shopmen. " No—ao—no r' screamed the - firetebed wo man, falling oo her knees in wila ani;:pticanoo.— • For my ckuki s sake—in mercy of the innocent babe as yet unborn—hare pity and forgive me r' This han , li cutlet was venerated; and Esther W SW. Unite* with shame and agony, was convey ed to the pitisin in Gihspor street The next day she was fatty eommted to Ness ate on the capi tal charge pt privately itealiog in a shop to the value of five pounds. A new hours after bee in racrerattou within these terrible wags, she wiv- Prematurely delivered of a finale child. I have no moral 'doubt whatever, I never have had, that at rice tune of the commits! of the facet ious act, the intelthet of Esther was disordeeed Any. other mipprwition in t e r visieur with the wikole tenor of her previous life and titanichm— " Lead CS not alto temptation : 2 is indeed the ho. iron. became the benoblest, prayer. Ttuee weeks has elapsed tekce the fist iotitna tion of these events teached me, inworitektestAse chiplain of lime gate, ea eacelhmt, kialheelted roan, to whom Mn.s Pdseowhad etterided her sad gory. I immediately hastened to thiptison; r end is a lon interne 74 - >rPb ben-, elicited the :mewing PIiBLISIED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. 0 1 11EARA GOODRICH. " IWGALDLLY% or orstrscuriox Fs= A3l" orAcrsa." i•tatement. I readily airsurcil her that all which le gal 41;1 could do hi extricate her from the as ful po,rion in ull,cir she s r, e ,f, ihe,i4 rav o- of nhrr:h I did riot e (1..1•1 in , •-•lic sliou".l bd. donc. Ihe tit.- fence with which she was charged hard supplied the scaffold with numberless victims; and trades men were more than ever elasnruous for the stern execution of a law which spite of experience. they still regarded 1111 the only safeguanl of their proper ty. My wife was overwhelmed with grief; and her amid) to save her unhappy fnetei-siser, caught, with my knowledge, art interview with she prose cutor. in the hope of imlneing him not to press the Ilcr etidrts u ere Etna% ailing. Ile had suf fered much, he. si..4d, from such practices, and was !, upon principle,'' determined to make an:example of every offender he could catch. As tothe plea that her hti-barid had been forcibly carried oft by a press gang, it was absurd.; for what would become 'of the prnpery of tradesmen if the wife of every sailor so entrapped were to be allowed to plunder shops'uti•t - i impuni:3 ? This magnificent Titon so:dir4 was of cJu7se unanswerable: and the re buked petitioner abandoned her booless errand in despair. Messrs. Roberts. I should have mention ed, had by some accident di-covere4the nature of the misfortune which Lad la:lan:heir officer, and had already made urgent application to the Admi rainy for his release. The o'.l Bailer sos-lan ndreorne on for some ;fete ; I, however 1,301: care to secure at once; art did not practwe in that court. the htghest talent %chid& Its tirr florde(l. Wady,. who had been plao. ed it a wet khonse by t!to•suthorities, we had prop er v taken care of tdi he couli be restored to Ins rr..t.ner ; 11 the event of tier court - let/y:1, to 1./3 reLitiVe.:3 PeVOnbiare. The ses....sion Avere at 13-It on •a 'c true ag-ainst E-ter Ma. , ,n for shop lif inz, as it was popu lady termed, was unhe , ca . .n . n.:ly found, and wiih a heavy hea: t, I wen Jed my way to the cowl to watch the iwo,-ee,inz. A feu- minutes aher I entered, Mr. Jusiwe I.^ BlAnce and Mr Bart , rl W,-,od . wh o h a , assi.eeJ at an case of stakk :we; COll - ;ea the ',en( !t ; the teamed recor der being doutrieea.. considered quite equal to the of a rr ere capital hare of the it. The pri,,rmer %vas in the Jack ; be ry as Imight I could not 1-ok at her. It tiappened to be a cairn bright summer (lay. the air, as if in mock ery of ;hose ileath- ,- e.si•srif, hemming kith busy, les ty life; sr, that, sctit.g wrh my back to the prison er, I could, as it were, re.ul :her demeanor in the shadow throw:ll , y her fizare on the opposite snn lighted wall. There she stood, during the brief moments which sealed her earthly doom, with downcast e}es and utte:ly dejected posture , her thin fingers playing rnechar.:ca::y eh the flowers and sweet scented herbs that lie scattered seatitili: before her The trial was eery brief: the evidence : emphatically conclusive, was confideudy given. and vainly crows-examined. Nothing / remained I.:: an el.ibc rate ad :ntierw.)rbi-z7n, wtsaiice- de fence which hail been prepared by me, and which the prisoner begged her consul might be allowed to read.: This was,of course refused ; the recorder remarking, they mig•tit as well allow counsel for felons to address ji.n.ef.., as read defences; and that, as every prac:ical man knew, would be utterly subversive of the due adaiinistration of jiistice.— The clerk of the court would read the paper if the prisoner felt WO agitated to do so. This Was done, and very vilely done. The cLeik, I dare say, read as well as he was able ; but qtd, near-sighted, and possessed of eeerythine bur a clear enunciation, what could be expected ! The defence, so read, pc:Ai:iced not the slightest effect•cither.on the ,court er . ;ary. The recorder briefly commented on the ofihe evidence for the presectitinn and the ,ry. 1.1 same brief, La-ines.s hike mar:- net- ft-to-lied a ver...ixt of ge::;y. " What Lo%e you to say," dernanJed the clerk why the sentence of death shotdd not be p.o.soun ted upon you_ accor3ing to law!t' The shatlnw started courukzirely as te territsle words fell from the mad.l. lips ; and I saw that the si.-ddealy ;vivise c t eves of the prisoner were fasten ed on tie lace of the fearful questioner. The tips. too, appeared to move ; butno sound reached my ears. " Sneak. w,oman s " said the teconier, <• d you hare anything to urge before sentence isproneunc ed." I nailed op and ft:min to the prisoner, besozqbt her in, horned accents to speak. " Rimaind them of the mbint it your breast—your husband"— " Who is that cenfernagwith the'prisceser I" de manded the judge in an angry reice. turned and coufrented him with a look as cold as haughty as his own. • Redid not OM* , proper to pones the inquiry fe 4 rther and sifter Mevering stnnething about the necessity of not interrupagg the proceedings of the coon, again asked, the pris oner it she bad anything to urge, " Not for myself--not ler my sake," at isstfainv ty murmur& the trembling woman ; " but for that of my poor dear infant—my poor witless boy ! ido not think sir, I was kr my right mind. I was stir. ring. I was friendlem MT husband too, whom you hare heanr—She stopped abruptly; and a choaking sob struggled in her throat ; and - bat for the supportix*, arm of one of the trenkcys, she wouhrhire fatten - to the ground . Lt Unhappy, /platy woman," mid the recorder, with the coolness of a demon, "the plead Marti ry you would set up is utterly untenable. Year hmband, it seems, is serrate his Majesty" in the roys! nary; defending his country, *art his wile was break Miles laws, by a eemseissirm of a came which, bat for the wan repression of the law, would sap the koundatials of the security of *P etty, anal" 1 weld mime, sess,reore.: The atemerbere of the cow. seemed teed& me ; -and I garbed keret fiel c inio the open air. Bebe". bewerev I 'dad read* the Meet, a bog, Rirteresteeteste eteaseiLdtat the hooted iadirt had thweart No edlogt wasipared - dotimg 1 iiiereatverith etopsett Eireoa'z to the rentder,poieilliot !rs port to the privy council—a peculiar privilege at that time attached to the office—to produce a miti rorioa of the sentence. A petition, :teeing, forth the - peculiai et rc u rnmauces of the care. via, careful- ly prepared . and by the ulfaiigable exertions of an e'ceilena Quaker gendeman—whom. as he is still afire, and rrt;bl not choose to have his name bla zoned to the world, I will call Williain Friend— was soon very numerously signed. The prosecu tor, however. obstinately refused to attach his name to the document, and the absence of his signature so strangely did men reason. on such matters in those ilays—wonkl, it was feared, weigh heavily against the success of the petition. The amiable and enlightened Sir Saniii-1 Rowdily not only at niched his name, but aided us zealously by his ad vice and influence. In short nothing was omitted that appeared likely to attain the desired object. Tea darabefcrre the petition was to be .forward cd to the proper quarter, Henry Mason arrived in En.-laid, the exertions of his employers having Preenit'd his diecharee The " Active" was one of Captain Hostels squadron, which obtained the celebrated victory nil Lissa, over the Franco Ven etian fleet commanded by Admiral Dobourdieu.— Henry Mason. it appeared by the testimonials of the captain and officers of his ship, had greatly dis tinguished himself in the action. We enclosed these pavers with the petdion, and then, having, done all in our power. awai:e.l with an tionsirritia tience the rerj!t of the reeonler's report. It wit's ara.cuaced to me, as I was sitt...aq, some slat later than usual, at Chambers by Mr. William Friend.— The yudirrnent to the was confirreel ! All our representations had not rat:heed to clannterbafance the supposed necessity or exhibiti.w, tei.ible exam:- pies of the fate awaiting the pc-Fiera:ors of an of fence said - o he greatly on the it:ideas. , Excel fen! Wiiiiana Friend wept:l - c a child as he made the annnu cement. 11.r•e arc may a!ive who recollect this horrible trau- :y—t.hts nitionat rtis;:vre--this art of gros:- barNittty 'n the pa-' of the :Tat person age oho. first having , eirtte,l ct 7 rho poor woman's hurl.-and, lea her to rite for at act :he very conse qnence of .hat robbery. Who among tire spectators can ever ford; that hear-renth.rmg s.-ette—the hatrOnan taking, the to!1 , trom the b;ca.t of the wretched crea:ure just before he put her to death ! But 'let us not rake np these terrrble revnint- , cences. Let ns hope that the rt-t•ly rui!re arc for;:tven. And let os take enti:44.l:ion from refiecdrig that this event led the great 11....mti1y to eater on his celebra ted career as a reformer or the crimmat krw. - The:ernains E-iber.llason were obtained from the Newga.e officials. and cuie iy interred in .5.1. Sepuie!tress churvh-ya-d. A rta.a gab, with her name ol.ly e'dieged upon i . , was some time a f - etwards placed above the grace. A few years 22%1 I ane•nled a funeral in the _same church raid, and after a search, ilneoveredthe spot. The inscription, though of worse much worn, was still quite • I had not seen henry Mason since his return; but I WS% glad to hear from Mr. Wiliam Friend that, after the first passionate burst of rage and grief had =Wiled, he bail. apparently at least, thanks to the tender and pious expostulations of his wife —with whom, by the kind intervention of thealierr ifs, be was permitted long and fiNuent interviews --settled down into calm:mist and resignation.— One thing only he would not bear to hear even from her, and that was any admission that she bad been guilty of even the slightest offerice. A hint of the kind. however unintentional, would throw him i::to a r.roiys - m of fury ; and the subject was consequently in his presence studiously avoided. A few dayi after the execution, Mr. William Friend called on me just alter breakfast. accompa nied by the bereaved husband. I eerec saw so changed a man. All the warm liminess of his na ture had vanished, and a-as replaced by a gloomy, fierce austerity, altogether painful to contemplate. Well, well, sir," said he, as he barely touched my proffered Irma : they hare killed her s you see, spi!e of all you could say or do. It much availed me, too, that I had helped to wia (heir boasted victories;' and be laughed with sava g e bitterness. " Ileary,—Heni7 r exclaimed Wiltrarn Friend in a 4eptoaing accent Well,'well, sir," rejoined Masan, impatiently, Ton are a good man, and have of centime your own notion on these matters: I also have mine. Or perhaps you think it is only the blood of the rich and great width:sired unjustly. brig forth the iron harvest! Forgive me," he added, checking himself. " I respect you both ; bat my heart is turned to stogie, You do not know. ever knew bat I—bow kind, bow loving, bow gentle was that poor logv sulkning girt" Re tamed from tr to bide that terrible agony which convoked him. . " Henry," said Mr. Friend, taking him kindly by the- band, awe pity thee rineerely, as thou knowest, bat thy biller, revengeful expressions are uocbristain, sinful. The authorities Whom thou, not for the firm time, Wein on so w a ddly, acted, be Irani of it, from asensaraf dray !it mintalrenone : in my opinion, doubtless; stilt"--- " Say no more, sir," intemptedllasan- n We after in opininanpon =hirer. And arm gen demen, farewell. I wished to see yea, sir, before T left this encwry, Swever, to thank you for your kind, though finders elections.jar. Friend has to promised be steward for poor illy, for all lean remit for his owe. Farewell. God blest yea both !- He was gone. Wii some afterwards brake out with the risked State' of Jmaica, and 3tr. Friend_ discovered that one of the most active and daring officers- in the egmbrearintrty , was Efecti7 311 min, grim had en tered dm &eeriest§ envies in the elaiden mine hierviiilinidthat the latgelainisfla hict Testl!fed k . 4 1 04t0 for the me ,o 4 Wily, *es. : parriWniumuseasiatairgedaticsa at Balk, nemeses. ibitimmiinvite.leriesatinedikalial‘ ehe deeris'ilian 6 rAle!NP 2 c/ iiii4 6l • - 04f Mai* Nir-wilit,"-.7iisitivedAtizeiii4 some other channel to the.. Daviera, A-na whom toe boy had been placed ; and le rapid- improvement in their circumstances _was toen Tiede remittance s ce.asej about the .midd Le of 1814 : and - 4 a twelvemonth after the peace. with America, we as. eertair e d that Henri: Mason bad been killed it 4.1 battle of Lake . Champlain, where he bad guished himself, as everywhere else( by the tech. I less daring and . furions hate with which , he fought 1 against the country which he accus.eil oft e Mur der of his wife: He was recgQiised by one of h:s former messmates on the Active,'' who convey ed a prisoner on board the American Commander Macdonough's ship, - recogiized him as he lay stretched on the deck, in the uniform of an Amesi 2 I can naval officer his countenance, even in death; we:rin4 -the same stormfal defidlit elliression w inch it assume.l on the day that his beloved ties- 1 trar peri.Dhed on the scaffold . -.}.4 1; • vve were (rim lc struck latelyi(says the kora erbocki-r.) ;n reactime-, 'Dimes' f , Shores of. the ghareehlly tblii-witartristed &re:4 to.end rcturnut. , frtrot Werarteo." The ?leo - sesoitol.it,wpthai -Vaelmitc4. We saw twoe„urriur, cittesphint galloping each. with 1 4% bop= They insinieerildtiegglM MaWlia a vanity. `..theseirlitlitgalifesifil league's distance from us- .Then we set on .run fling tuwifinhe thwitiertect'ErlitV4FoiEm: pereur. T..' We a rriYetl breauhleas and mill Feted - mg the geripetorltlebmitareigiVes. I thought he woulJ not atopi.whatevpr te!gli . t , be the crowd awiiiing him ger' 4tb lr post hou,e. when I.3l=k...dealt half, dead...wititlite run n.re ; but at any rate! was there. In s moment arsea'red, turning *Center of tritie . the foaming I iiOlS i then the postillions - aal/ covered, width. 0)- Tut Loss or Hosla —lt is stated in Laitig',: nos 1 buns, !het the coinages thewelNes,; thnt idence in N'orway, that the prmistunent of dealt . l people f .I nw i ng t h e can -j ogai!. Ihn Ant , f i ngea. was abolished in that tithecot about the latter eri4 gatapped at the post. I saw Napoleon L Was of the last cen•ury. punishment which is I in a green coat,. with liute apatidefs, sod' the most effective, and which affords eonensice s wo re the officer's cross of the legion efimucn- Ic proof of the high tone of thought and.teeling peril I, „,„4..‘sa, his b un frant,,,Lits the %ba i t "! th n.546 ,.., ding a whole people, forming one of the most ffiitiage window. Hi:ibises' tell optai hiseheste4liat tingulshing characteristics - of that country, is fha t . et f el:pima wec t a w, b eat k e g, t b e _ o l4, : ft" E loper , Loss at Honor. This from the eatriest time was a (AS. His forehead fell totward; twotwervim speciiied effective puni , frment fn.the criminal law ! movable, were of the yellowish This of was; on. of liar-way, standing next in ~?riee to the lir=s ofly his eyes appeared to be alive,,,ticei nom. on life. The Theeof honor is not regareed by this per- his•left, was Ponce Jeroule,aling withoin a king p!e as an onmeamag and trivial pun Aliment, as it dam. hs:t a f n i t t iti n ix, 4 er n ji n , nan rhat . penind would by the poi)) and ignorant classes 'cif society ; a fine young man of airrAnd..tvreoty or thirty yew among alrno.. every other nation. but it is viewed of o his features regular sad welkinnutdi- :his n ith jrcal, as a ter - rib - 1e viiital , 'n • Many afftc" beard black. his hair elegantly artangerkir-: atifi and trusts. as committees, for carious purposes, val. I ared in place of his brother, whose vague Wanes, ':atnrs. arbitorc, or jorymeri; to say nothing ofm,re seemed lost in thefiateleflitiin the pro.— ei•uations, devolved at tf e pevle unapt Opposite the Eutijeoat was:Luton Alta Auditelatup e sope:internlance of. the legal au•norities. The an d ardent sokliert,...whe seented:atteallylP 14 0 4 e.N . citi,‘ion from these affairs and hav-tioris, which t h e , an. of low, an was w i lling ton, the.p ; 00 , 04 . oticnree, the !ern! ~• n!ct,-e of the loss of honOr l too . , a. he , i ntd l ong 43.0 1 ire All g um h at . ro.!uces, n, a Vinist e:rt Se rCre.y felt, dint ' ed . for a b out minute . Then the wahip. eaaukedi stancr , e alter that portion of : t u g 4o , ses ne i g b e d r and all d' red p , nst-vm_: in 4:airy for 3 cellaiirt Ile- I, riaLort. i La.! been cornp:e . *.e,l. ietirnineto their chains. I '' s. • is , 11 - e nnanolin; name pert nfferree. rather thav !Ire as outcas.s u• the :sentence of .'u:.onor ; among ttleir rormr.r f::en•;a A Fitlf.ll D Bnitatte.---We - end Islifni." mg in the Bahimoie tipper: a k gr.nt'ernan recently retUrne3 front %Ilrnftet as a trimuss., al the trial of Thai User, thpa:Au; at Chestertown, Kent County, relaxed tows Me•fol; :owing moo amusing eircoingstive, whicb meet'. rfl at one of the principal ltotejs iu thkPlacr..:-- Arr.ong the causwaily large ZMajlei - 6 13 9 - ailitea4 there was one whose appetite at the table seemed to know no bound's every'dish Fa his vicinity *al a red 1 . ,y him be f ore any nue else. could get amain. The la: .Itord very ca . iently bore it lorseteraldays 111 silence. indalpon in she hope that his boarder's appetite most certainly have-au era.« Anithishops' proved delouse; as every meal los appetite seem ed, if possible, to sharpen up; till at length •the landlord, unable to stand it any locger,yennated to remonstrate.with his boarder, and reszticed. •• Ilifriend, you eat so much that,l 4tall certainly have to :harge you an extra half dollar 1 . ,' '.4n elicit half dollar !' replied his boarder, • with a countenance the very picture of despair:—"lce zoodness' rake don't do tha i ti Ern most dead now. eating three dollars' worth; wartif you put an extra ball dollar's worth on, I shall mann* we yea it maxmlaeghter.'" - . Caliscrma_--There is hothiog which adds E 0 welch to the beauty atickpowet of arici, as a gook] character- It is his wealth—his indueceo i.e. It digaiftes bun ,J3sery sothsni—ex- tt:-s tm to - every condition = and glorifies ulna at ' every period of life. Scch a character is more to be desired than everydung else or. earth. It niskm a mar. free and independent. Yin . sersife tool.-no crouchi.tg sycophant — no trimcherOus hnnor-seeker ever bore.such a character. The pure joys of =h and rigbteonsness never Riling in such a person.-- If young men but knew hoer ankh a good Cliarae. ter would ilignFr gforiottsit would make their pretpects, even in this fiki me. er shoal we find them yielding to the grulietir..g and base born passions of tniinan nature.. Du inim Womite.—Nine times Out of •teri, wound will beef quicker if done up in its own blood, than in any other stay. As for a boM;whit ever will entirely arclade - tbW sir the quietest, is the' best. - Conon will de Mi.. So will plied silt, if spa darniat thi edges by any kind' of -kick ing sabres. Port nothing On ID heal it Na na, wffl seen do tbsg when the air is •eieluded and the'pairwill almost imarediaviy iesse. The son cf the poor die tieb—wbilwacce of The rich die poor. Whateramoningthrtmgh Fife aeqttire wealth 7d mitt our children! Serer to make me of oar money as we go sliwq:::-Mhs eate our secrettre their virtue lto 4abier 'ef Irr duatiy,arid atodyjand let them take care of them selves.- - • To Bon. Coas;ina fir.Fi.-Pnt the beet in, isaier' enough to mask, and let it heat slowly, ar . isbnil do*, and be carefal i to take od tae gunt,le. tbink it miach . intptoced by bon*, p . olabaits, tosnips'and cabb age with it. In this case:the yeg etabies inont he peeled, and all the grease, can:fol ly skimmed as fast it rises Allow about twe n ty minutes of IxotTing, for each ppmd of met. A g ea g e *Ai% CIPIXI agiellenialre AXlOMS ratios, expressed his surprise m thasnmSmisels ib nistaof as Esselhantho lYiekeifs; Hoses itc3/1*" i t** fropien, ofillifrataorehas !Mir bear roamed to a Mr. Pyft t-t.ele o4 : l l_ =tik-Twilestimofjc#olr4ls4 - ,_ • to b e a h ou thd i skik t7A4f 4s g e -1 3 4-74 . *: 4 :serer that Mr. Pyion terrify. - ' ~i„,KIIVaLini ISM . , , Wattveb.gam. 4 * * * ••• `it ~:,;41 it Three clays lifter:rani, loward'efinft, -se - rmsa people 'err iris: freitASl libretitirt; 'diet-Add tbirai theymitnetstra, they heard carnio.lpThe 'itiii‘ i gof tie seventeenth-sr erteritiotuffed-Airseeil teted all-sdoug the soad,•,theurnoriciffory'• The ettdeenduieshing., Thotridetiesedoddirg; only segostitisourwere rabstedporiiiiigaiStAris knew 'whence. At wassaid, tied ettre at Brussels. The tWerniethAnieinen insugt,sl.l wounded, and ridin jades:l_ooes allecivervisrith foamientterird ,the.towai , and.eretecjititsAfriar: rotnided by-the whole pegs:dation, as tel-ptaiedialle the court-yen: of the towsteenter - Theee: stair hardly spoke , stench. Thee bete,- , 4 basuiß Westphatiara, bekgior. sontehow.to ow ertnV4. To all oar gammons-they oultshook• theirlbeadi -sadly, and ended by confeerhT that they had quit , ti.,l the fie id of bade of Waterier) at eight o'clock, rod that the battle warioetrwhen daytime; Sway. I wall-the adianceit-pard of the fegitives:.'•t%lie .se d not believe them •- , Wesaidflieemeneretta inns spies:;. ?iapolecaralidd a be 4heithol. • t fine army utite&Ww•fierreteet . clitestrold not b degassed MO wanted triirtebwroorkhotia nins mixer so quittly bed wo torgrrea 7 t3 and 'l4, to Nevem beirthe4eanceincli hid gone before! *mother sac to, the foss, wherershe as the whole day,..know linri was thetwthertseinc= Omit arrive, trhatever it were. Dorkur duktintei !oak ed out in the maps fori*atinfooitheitarreiwaidt even I could not findiaad begneroa;thinkitlitrplare was imaginary ; : was the nuas/tr- MlNlRlZellefthe battle. , At bor. o'clock, marerlagitiveirderitrit, who confirmed, the news of the finitecone These were French, and could gitwa/Pthe deb& which weaned for. Theyveyeatekwhatthe eth ers had amid, only adding that Napderisfrand his brother were killed. This•wa wooldwilf tlertetroP: Naporeau =tin not- be invneciblehr&Smthrerible he certainly ohm Fresh news asereurnide and disastrous continued to rams is ma, tint agekek at: light - • • - - -:. •,..4 , ...1 - At ten o'eloek. at eight ws-heard the ansiorefik minima It stopped, and the Pistroastet went MA with a light. We foticored ‘ hitn, as he-ran-le the doorto ask for news, -Then he started astsptisek and erieck." Ifs thegamette Pik l garcark:simits be and hooked over my mothessintiderz4 was indeed-A-Nspoissit; seised in - terouniattanbe, in-the some anthem; his _head as hirbiesitor be fore. -Perhaps* wart:nit alinteriew7titthere mot net n. llama his eonntenanee, not tin-stitied femme, to mark what wentetheiselktor gtesa gambler; whetted -joss staked-intilloskthe world. Jerome and Leton we not withltint to bow and•'sae in his place. Jerconeirss" gsabG ing meter the remains of thew/sr Twit: and been main two by simausan bal. • ?lapoistiableil Ms head sanely, kite* mood - as if ram Sem a dream; mid then, wit blo, brieklifidtairringe, place is. ihiiiPlat saidetiV4lkiettokeen, "How marjr-Isegnes PT= Femti o ssiar - veNisiinatiel-orell die - post-bnyaboaniquidqtantmore think hinted:kis& Mos the conter—of eels to bill: hi - band-IsLost his chest. -ite - horses -eundairetti alralf limey - bad winger • - Thewortiltnaurs what4tod taken plaes*ltiA4 thesatvroappacition,olliipolitant'4=l '/'*-4***r To Bois. A Tre4tr , --Bialtak-A-ainflia fonotat csaer,..of chopped bleat-.24115na„...-c andrikia -4301 rit *OP *lig over the nutty ate petit to hail. in, told ''unimr, with a voceduaokiatt in it, anatenoagbe WSlOrilk oveHtweit: Ant itlaintnitr lintterninianiNiiii a . OnielOgOil - 4 11 oskrzie# 4 1sikkeeluir'dohitotlieilk A-1: - • • t'i ii is the idea;sase of teeing Eter at themiiiineo.7? -.41 • , S , a rk.s,t7ll .?; ; - ,.:',4`::, t''' 1.