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Frienda.of his youth—sh where were they 1 Harks,the low answer—passed away! . His eye eras fixed :—mithin his mind *NM Wei.mairinithe dim ppii t Toners; xame nal bitaikt,'Ame installed Were &neigh its hhambers harrying' guts Anon—his theughti with laity poilYers Had irandered back to childhoo Ca hours. The farthest stretchtsras when he hawk A child his mother's knee beside ; And when, each night's return, he klt Her lips press his with fondest pride; And faintly he recalled the day When that loved mother—passed away! Neat, to his mind his school-hop days With 41 their fond endearments cams. His youthful friends and cheerful plays-- A thrill shot through eaCh aged veins In those dim eyes bright sparkles gleamed. A mockery, though, almost 'it seemed. Now memory tarns awhile to view The hearth-stone where the dear obes met Father and brothers, sisters tog, As they were then, be saw them yet. But why ■o bright a vision eta' Since they all ail bad—passed sway Now, to that sacred day when he, • -A love:}• otaidep et his astir, Vowed fondly vowed, foreer io be 'toe to hi% almost angel bride, Ht.-thoughts passettnne. , 4 cherub child Wis his, so lair. so sweetly mild! Again that old fllBo ° l4 eyes grew bright These were of ta , l his happiest hones BUT Stan had cone their meteor-light.— He saw each fade with autumn's flowers; One grave received both with that day His hopes, his all, had—passed away I Yet memory still brought to his, mind The aftetsgrenent—ghis native land He len, thinking a Salta to find .By wandering on a foreign strand, That should possess the mate power To soothe his heart in sorrows hour. And after years of roving vain— And aching void, his bosom still -111,, former home he sought again; He saw the mountains, giver. "Those that I knew, alt. where are they I" A still voice answered—" Passed away !" As the stern north-wind shakes the leaves In autumn from the withered limb, 8o recollections .ad, like these, Par, fv., too wrongly came o'er him One gasp'--:an.l the cold, lifeless clay Tutd that he, t 0.., had passed away ! Herrick, floe. It. Ru,so. ;4 EIGTASOLED tiiiip.--Not long ago, a friend antl'myself were walking through an orchard. when our attention was attracted by the loud and incessant chirpinge of ,a pair of house sparrows. which kept fluttering over the top of an old ivy. covered tree. So peculiar were their notes, that we at once conjectured that they were in dstress, and watche.l them for some. time with much inter se. Retirin.:, from the '.por t we found that they rei Ilex to one projecting branch ol lbe ivy, and there continued Ballerina for sometime Our. cu !Kathy being elicited, we reburied and climbed up the tree. vilien we found in the blanch of ivy before rewired to, a young bird hanging -over the nest, rt suspended by its leg. Its loot had been entangled in the hair and other materials of the nest, and there the little prisoner was chained. From the fact of its being full-grown and feathered, we presume that-it must have been a captive fur marry days and - nights, and that the old birds mdet have watched and fed it with care. Tn its simples to cape. the entangled leg had be c ome much lacera ted, and theltiocir littiicreature must have suffered great pain: Its .cornpanion nestlings had flown, and left the little captive to endure a painful fate.— But the solicitude. May not humanity leant some thing from the crimple of the two house sparrows! It gave us much,pleasttre to eel the little prisoner free.—Peoples Journal. IT —'• dEIIrt see; where my children learn such things," is one of the moot common phrases in a / mother's vocabulary. • A lit tle incic ens, which we happened to he an eye wit ness to, may perhaps help to solve the enigma.— We smile) a little at the time, but we have thought a good deal of it since, and we trust aot without profit' -1 "Bub," screamed out a little bright eyed girl, somewhat under six years of age, to a ycninpiter who was seated on the curbstone making hasty pudding of the mid in the goaar; - "Bub, yougood• for-nothing little scamp you come right into the house this minute, or beat you •tttl the skin coines off. "Why, Angelina, Angelina, dear, what do you meant where did you learn such tslk 1" exclaim ed her-mother, in a wondering tone, as she stood on the steps conrte4ing to a t friend. Angelina I poked op yeryinnocenily, and an tvered—`• Why, mother, yen see we am playing and he's is my little tiny, and• t am 'scolding kiln, tut as you did me this mn ing, that's To FOLD 110a363.410 - rabould bi fed with COn hay among their oily, end some cat 'oat straw is a good mixture. This makes diem chew their oatt Never let a h .4 - feed get" sour, nor feed "way hay. The alkaiid be fed der. Ott' The Bentiflai :of society are ,various; ba the tact that one musi thrtter-awet9 .bat 6r cowl because it is unfitehionablevii , co peculiarly consolatory to people of small Inte!4•• - . CVs have heard of a folloyaleho way deiensdO. ed b .commu suicide even if,he perished lithe tempt, 4 : 4 •writ .rtritz,z-', , ~: ~ ... ~. ~.. V , "i °err: • 4 1 TX Y re .: lln t o ° o 9' " c ipek l 11 25 149 - 1 4.0. 1 111 1, 40 ii B / 1 01 1 2" lOW* /Os: 11114114111 sett otekesetting to bar husbead in & 'tow which bordered strongly on copplaint. "Wino hal blnoTled to them n°4!;94441V”- 4 1 # 1 15 1 iietoiSPOOding 1 110 4K4, 41 0 op• W ith ay:anger maw of. interest in his wiloNo-kalinlisi however, then in his neighbors' fortunes: ti Han you not heard, Philip, dua 6 cousin of hie has died in India, and ioft him eii or leprOn thousand pounds. Only think of 'receiving each a legacy frost a permaa we hat sever Nan, mod scarcely ever tumid of." rr 1 irti,glad to hear it," roplinti Alt% 144 Ono m* congratulate him on hid lICCON4OII, of molds without fear of giving. rims to, painful no- gmts. sis thoosainfliounds *gold notedneele sue for the limit Of • veil dear . frietia." ibouaan4 pouods would,be very *Sam to inherit, Philip," replied the lady in atone which seemed to implp•that it:wonkl . txmsole her for a greet deal "1 wish somebody would Leave ae mach to you: how happy it would malts sir "t am not moo of that I such an addition to our income might possibly make us neither happier or richer than weare at pieienf.y “Not victor ! Why Pbilip,, you aro joking.— Would not three hundred a min— and; if properly managed, it would produce that— make ilia great deal richer? What an advantage it wouldiber tt What do you need, Sophia, that you do not at present possess, that you are so extremely desir• otti of a lamer inesime?". " Oh, a dozen thirty& at least i we would prltEd ward to a first-rate school, sad have a capital pis.- °mess fir the others. What a pleasure that would be? I should be no more tied to teaching, as lam now, but should be as independent of the nursery as Mrs. Andrews and theti, perhaps, you would in dulge me With a week in London ; and I am dying to hear an opera'? lam sure you conk) itficird that once7in a way." " I hope we shall manage to put Edward to a good school, my dear," said her husband rather glirvely ; though, as to the tuition of the girls, I think you must still be contented to act the part of a mother towanls them. And permit me to say, that I trust your desire of going to London is as vtgionary as your expectation of a legacy. Your happiness does not depend on either event, I should imagine ; certainly not near so much as on the cul tivation of a cheerful and contented sprit, such as you have always hitherto exhibited." No mme was said on the subject, and Mr lien dencir trusted that, as the lust excitement of this intelligence subsided, his wife's inclination to dis c..ntent would like Wise die away, and that she would gradually resume the use of her reason and her habits of active usefulness. IME ~ '~' •{ I ~ • H , '• . „ " K• :I" ) - 1 7 t r irity WEDNESDAY AT - TOWAND • `„ , A, BRAIWORD. COM— - Br . Es. O'NEAU:OOO • Nat _ 4 ' • " , ' • • • .• • * • * • - ' C . L4 r- •-; 1.! I=E3 m .. L ~~ ~ - - . t THE' The inheritor or this unexpected legacy, mean time, did not view•the affair in the bright miens that dazzled 61st. Henderson. On the contrary, he had marry and serious thoughts, on the subject. He was at the fine moment, it is true, much pleased with this sudden accession of property, but when he came tO consider the matter, he experienced a great revulsion of feeling ; and be began to doubt whether he was so lucky a man as his acquaint- times iinivecially denominated him. It was, after all. so Small a sum--tinly six thousand pound's—it would to his income Cr increase his credit. Why had. it not been ten ihonsandl He would. he thought. have been quite satisfied With that ; that would have been a handsome legacy, a :-omething worth talking about, a gilt to be grate ful for Perha,rs, hail it been ten thousand, he might have risen a step in the world, and from se nior clerk of the exienz.ive firm to which he be- longed, ne might have been admitted as partner; a change which he ardently desired. Why could not his cousin have made the legacy larger ? How pro;►oking that, eithir from •% ant of in erect in his wedare, or from any other cause, he had stopped *-noit of .a som which would certainly have procur ed him, as he imagined, perfect happiness. The earn wh,eh overspread his brow was not namarkial aflectionate ; and *supposing ;hat he was over-wearied with his work, and stand. Mg in need of relaxation, she one day proposed ;hat he *should. beg a *short holiday from the office, and spend it with them at tin sea-side. / cannot afford any such extravagant pleas ures," was his reply, somewhat impatiently, to her soneitinti. " I thouglit , this legacy you have received would have enabled youl" replied she rather timidly— then paused. " Legacy!" repeated he ; lam sick of -the . legacy. after sit the congratehtrklats with which f am pesteried, as ill lad inherited half the Indies, to be owner of only six thousand pounds—it is too bad !" " Nay, dear Georgie, I cannot agree with yon : six thousand pounds. is a large sire for us, and will make- a meat comfortable addition to our income. I em sore I feel grateful for it." Grateful—pooh! BAlwit'd Davie wished me to be grateful, ha ehould have lea me some thing worth naming. 1.11. cm my wont I was asham ed to awn this-legacy, which has Made so much noise, was only . slit thoniantl.p*di .When the dent Walker asked me aboutittaday. :How eon- . temptible it must appear to him; who makes mor e than that clear profit every, ism " But these things are all by comparison, Geco l and a suuMbo would be nothingto yourimploy era may be very important's* yon. :You woeld not . lam sore, like to lose this thousand split, a/- though you speik of it new so sligiluimily Ike did answer, =Aube, atter wailie r itaracNmentr ventured to continue Yoe are templed to take, this gloomy view of 1111Inetli, George, because you, fiat more than usually harassed With' biedereiT am certain that is il 6 ILI*1,0 0 •• :tray; .for Ogee . sny advice, and try , K the AM. tat:menet :sad little holiday Ipopose wecdd not Os yes rte sewed !ttegfidi and '* l ll o i fef . /WO.: .01 *1 .C.` " 1 " 1 ' ,,, t .`" =Zt=l al-Minner Or--21ISM="1-1.rA*,116::-7.' MEM Tee in Ike nest Dade-ma persi6ivirikeuts, they vivre (*Wan leoly , -bin Andrews,. age ,yeeieil the soocs'.lbi Nan lainews, lemeed himself agile by his . wile, mod mid teniaki her widimieuel the ambition projerte be bed Relebt , al!d. th e Peat frieatieb bs4., el he hed so sanceilY mined. ißfWehe wet Ace clear-righted and wellitrincipied . to encoange:vis loom pt ecla t - whit% tended only to disquiet, his Miady atd: ',prevent him aajqi4 t ht which wens lemony ats. To hisidalko.t.blYraoll the whole of this addition to their Image she did not of coarse objeotOf 'it iffiti to offablo . l hor hos baa_ .4-a; aa Ware trag# : min but to wish botooois Ropriotot oftoo ittiocom so w.hicb be belonged node .ber. sigh, es she Tul l thOught of the increased ' sibility he desired for himself; and she dreaded. the auddep_ pas. Mon •for accumulation which now aeiied him, might kid him hmhir in the mad of contototoom thinite at all anticipated. But his project was fix ed, S e nd he resolved at all Simi ts to becomit pos• sewn of ten thousand posisils, a reliminary stop, as he imagined i to his great adrancentant; and seeing that thi must kibosh, she iriseltsubtubtad with a good grace : wid resigned her: pos' ot clung. of air lot 'hatred and children gibbon, a murmur. Mr. Andrews and Mr. Henderson were eterksin the tame aancem p bat the former, both in t wain' to and _income, was considerably the seniorom&Mrs. Henderson had long been accustomed to eye with something approaching to envy the superior cOm torts and even elegancies which Mrs. Andrews en- joyed. Not that there was anything approaching to cenentatmo in their manner of living; and in truth most of the indulgenciee which Mrs. Hender son commented len orcoveted were purchased from the comfurtable portion which Mrs. Andrews had inherited from her lather. It was this which ena bled them to send their eldest son to a superior school, and it from this fund that the. excellent go verness was paid, who shared with the mother the task of educating a numerous sad increasing lami ly. That people already possessed . 01 so much should inherit more, seemed an unnecessary addi tion, and almost an unfair division of worldly goods to the jealous apprehension of Mrs. Henderson.— But had she known the truth, her envy most have subsided into pity. From the possession of that fatal legacy was the wife forced to date a melan choly and most distressing alteration in her bus• band: his whole nature seemed changed, and ev ery honorable, generous, and even affectionate feeling appeared smothered in a passion lot gain. Quickly to accumulate the (leaned capital was his .thought by day, his dream by night; and to accel erate this object, he tried in every possible way to curtail all expenses not strictly unavoidable. Grad ually, but surely, Mrs. Andrews found herself de prived of numerous trifles which her delicate health seemed to require: their household was diminish ed, subscriptions to charities withdrawn, their pleasant and commodious •house exchanged for a cheaper abode in a less healthy situation; and when it appeared that it was of too much contract ed dimensions to receive them all, she was told that she must therefore give up the governess. By degrees the whole expenses of the household were reduced to the sum which was in truth her own, and her husband was not tb be prevailed on to ex- tend its limits or idiow her to touch his salary.— Had honor, honesty, or prudent:a dictated this pro- ceeding, Mrs. Andrews would have submitted without a remonstrance; her zeal in economy would 'liken have exceeded his; but to feel herself and her children deprived of those advantages to which they had been accustomed from birth, only to/gratify a fatally increasing disease of her hue band's mind, was bitter. Bnt bitterer far was the loss of his affection and confidence—the painful coldness which had insensibly grown up between them. It was after a few years of such •a system that a new prospect was suddenly opened, in an offer of a partnership from another and a rival house. The prospect was altar:lig in every re spect, the concern was supposed to be peculiarly flourishing, and the terms in which it was made were as flattering as they were advantageous.— Eagerly war the proposalgraspedby Mr Andrews, it being superior What hopes, and mach• beyond his expectations; and the important step was ta ken which raised bim tram servitude to • master's place. The vacancy this change occasioned was eller ed to Mr. Henderson, and by him thankfully sad gratefully accepted.; but his *lkt, thengh now tide-, ed to the situation which she had long coveted, band it by no means replete With ell thifedvimta.. ger she had berm a wn:maw 0.00d1 1 40,..ii5d she sighed as she reSeCteahere Olds' piababld it was that Any legs 4 Would Tier bestow an them the happiness which she believed Alm :Andrews to enjoy. Satisfied with his, own lidvaneed posi tion, her husband paid little ,regsfd to her mur murs, for he was now enabled to procure for his children such additional advantages in edocatia' n as he considered useful or desirable; mid he pur• sued his daily advocations with increased attention and sidistection, is `alike of the restlesmess of his wife, whom he Thinly triad to aspire wilts like contented RAM, by reminding her of tne eoperier advantages they now enjoyed littlest, teith . vinich they commenced life. A single glutei into km.. Andrew's mind would hue .rmeletai. his Mu meats a wark,of surtimmption, sod done more to convert his wife is his way of thinking, than MU year's lomoring. ' ' Being a woman otquick peseeplion of,cloreo. ter and great.penetration, poor Alm Andrews - cosh* not, from thelintoivoid feeling - some degretrofmis trust for her husbend's partners. Lavish in their mit expenditure, indeed indulairig in ai tmbiren -40P0.12*, thes. 001 1 lIOAIS 'Mite of George Andrei* pinkie( . Idrsloal,set h i s ti mig9 l 9"o 4, 11 4 1 0 2 ,14-* *l t . 4 inowa.tt`dis *100 164 * illd" 2"; .„ . etaliAiefor•oll4. - 1 0. B °Telt l 4l# l , B 1 4 1 /:frk" 4..1,4 1 ,i0.4 1 /14 1 4Sliais 161 4 • IL . onosAis own. sollgippeofat o ass hkeuremptair hiciliatraniabiamapaniess.' she was to jodtpe an 7 cf4 o WAIL Ibe wife anddie - tthigareswably Onteieis who'd= fostered *lmmune", or radmv a Title, eo complete ly atireriaisee with his best interests and the hap piness ofall those eausamid , with him. Sufis* the liallvsava, though tinithie tedivini their mods* and being now more than art &Ovid of his .husband's sosietyolse stymied Ismael( solely in -directing-bur household and given herchildien the beet tiducadon in her power that hirbiliend must ling ago have tislised the pm 'or ten thousand . panda, bad maw* Would Wise went of his ambition; yet she sew •no symptom animation in his writ:loos habiti, tliii * l P e r wHird 1 9 - hammy in her own situation..— All Ines grasping;grind ing soon= y, rendeivd more bitter brtheownst which her husband's sampan ions inhibited. . Bata styling and ocmplete termination was at' length' put tb their Willi and sortirfra,. Par it sudden ly became known 'tit r e the two senior partners in the business were fled, taking with them sem round on which they could lay their gra" and leairing the whole comsat in, a state et eosisplese. ruin. Debts to an enormous amount appeared dee on every side, and it Wis evident' thatihirbitslitese had long been on the verge of bankruicy, which bad only been kept off for a brief interval by the capital Andrew. had brought them. Of cows*, though cleareftbeir guilt, he was involved in their ruin, and at one blow the labors of the last site years were destroyed, and the money on which he had eel hisheart swept away for ever. The le• gacy, the spume alike of pleasure and of pain, was become as if it had never been ; and the vain de• sires and ardent hopes which bad been founded on it had proven vanity of vanities. But it was happy blow for him i be awoke 'asfrem a dream, and with -the demolition of his ambitious projects there came othef and betterplans and- feelings. After honest• ly giving up eveily farthing he possessed to , the creditors, he looked around for employment to provide bread for his family ; nor did he seek in vain. A situation was once more offered him in Mr. Walker's house and here he began the world again as at the first. " Well," said Mr. Henderson to his wile, " I agree with you in thinking Andrews a very forma; ate man. It is true that he has low the legacy, but be has gained a lession which he Will probably nev er forget. And when I see him now so quietly pursuing his business, and his wife with a content. o: rather a happy look, I must class him amon the most fortunate men of my acquaintance." DOMESTIC HAPPINESS.-Ah ! what so refreshing, so' soothing, so satisfying, and the placid joys of home ! See the traveler—does duty call him. for a season to leave his beloved circle! The image of his earthly happiness continues vivid in his re membrance, it quickens him to diligence, it makes him hail the hour which sees his purpose SEEM plished, at d his face tamed towards home; it com munes with him as he jmnneys, and he heats the promise Which causes him to hope—" Thou shalt know also that thy tabernacle shall be in peace, and not sin." Oh the joyful reunion of a divided fain'. ly—the plemunes of .enewed interview and con versation after days of absence ! Behold the man of science—he drops the laborious and painful re searcb—closes hitvolume—emooths:his wrinkled bmw—leaves his study,, and unbending himself, stoops to the capacities, yields to the wishes, and mingles with the diversiohs of the children. Take the man of trade—what reconciles him to the toil of business!—what enables him to endure the fast idiousness and impertinence of customers f—what rewards him for so many hours of *lona confine ment! By and by the seasons of intercourse will behold the desire of his eyes and the children of his love, for whom he resigns his ease; and in their welfare and smiles be will find his . recom pense. Yonder comes the Isbener , r—he has borne the burden and heat oftheday—deieending Wallas 'released him of his toil, a)til be is hastening home to enjoy repose. Half way down the Wm, by the side of which stands his eriniqw.his children run to meet him. One he carries, and one he leads.— The companion of his bumble is ready to furs ishhim with his 14411 . repast. five his toil-worn countenance enema as air of cheerfulness! His hardithipe are forgetten—latipe vanishes—he eats, and is satisfied. The evening fair, be walks with noorwered head around his prdes—mateis , spin and teems to rest ;sad ash* test eta Mating mac is !west, whether bat eat fiats or istutbP !abet,. link,* this !Orly lira* who esti be imbiber entice thy eowtforat Pasee.beea thistssessi—lke W. Jay. - • hrogging2 or istaGlasusans,The Unii stow Animal • -the ibllowieg interesting statists. ins • an *malty. it wig tin seen howliniely 934 indexed lo this rinsof,paple Joe many of most useful inventions now in toe arnoopt nef—the Nativists, who would ends& thew hug our sharers, to the anntraty uatwllbntao ing; :" • A.b. 950 saw trains; 9911 can di* ; 666 Va. log; 1070 tillagg of hope; 1100 wind' mills, oil *dings ; 1720 speetiel, we; 1300 paper of linen tags; 1512, : 1 i pins; Islik _ito*dite, cannot,; • 1250 wire making; 1235 • bats; 1579 pins; UM pia silk ;1-14111 wood engravings; 14211 printing; 1439 pridlir r qg miss; Menem: plate ettgriving; cse iing ink; 145$ east types; 1457 dilating of bells; 21210 pails or mall., oirh ing; 1500 bolting appanage ; 1527 goal:As; 15,35 spinning wheels 1546 almanac stove% nesting wax; '1590 telescopes; 1010 wradion bellows; 1620 sninnriput; 1635 dmettasimates; 1610 smial.-,ll l .oinci -1 650 a isuniPo; 1656.-Peade lant ; 1656 clarions.; 1706 wham align Waal 1707 mike Wej 1709 ; 1715 171 0 : 0.4 4 . 3 510! . .*1,1 7 114 *Ali* • NOE • , * 011,41isinossost.,00 olnttltifT,Y4oooll4 • - siispetsl. ; • Oal not Albs.* srlsersiides - your • *-Isagii astipetsonshasmit; Wight; iletsliestilir"sisisidroisislferies,me , • ilhilistess , ssr my to sigfd t — - Toe liikliti*lisegsremy bur Ste:. Is.tbsorowSled old sunlit wsegq,• • ANS bold at• yiist portia bs illoasir For smiimmand find so sit., • . . klmw•hit ialkeidlesawadetarved sad eoid. And the sue* whisks through the chinks; dot aeverjte hoanieth his least untold ? • VOr 4eargrwhat his seighborthlaks. ' the Aad sever he *brio m tormod. Waint.oeatility sutras for bread ; And iodidag be knows of the wearisome ma -Mho ieeretaledle sad *med. The beggar is houdelesa, outcast, farina, ' Too wretched to used yar dna; ' But he knows dun and fears not tbessom That waits on the empty pars& . The beau is kin—west man* lan so. • Pajamas' Washita" to shrink. Dot nothing be reeks of the braiaerasdnig - Of poveny's slow, pea end isle. Mass for the seediness prideorestnined From the woolly-mhos" sneer wedread.. For the pride hire the ardent anninall. chained The living unto taidead. Mas ! alas! for lileatllites bele. trammed is voiimoday thrift. Whore p Woo is poverty, striving And saysi And to live . by making a shift. Ma MU lbe Mime Trader-0 kW with CIL TWILL When the Mormons settled in Missouri in 1833, an enthusiastic young man named Mills was their most popular and admired preacher. Indeed so great was his fame that whenever he held meek.. dugs a crowd of the saints were sure to be present. A strong and violent body of lynchers was about this time organized to put down the Mormons, under the command of Colonel Turke—on. of the most dangerous men that Missouri, or in truth, any other country, ever produced.. Some of the Mormons were tarred and feathered, some were' scourged with long knotty hickories, till they - fainted from the excess of torture and the loss of blood. l -others were forcibly deprived of their property, and reduced in a day to thicondition of began—while others atill shared a doom of moreinerey and were shot down on the praire like so many wolves. At last Turke resolved to take some of the conceit out of the young preacher Mills, and he gave notice to his men accordingly. It was a dreadful cold night„in mid-winter, 11133, and although the sky was cleaning, and the f9l moon shone out in all her-splendor,. the, ea;th lay in that Freely radiance, chill and dreary ass frozen ' tomb; for a thick sheet of snow crusted itsfurface, and the north wind howled over its dismal dirge. ft was a night to drive oven thieves and outlaws into barns and stables for shelter, and to keep-hon est people by tholgazeof their !mu tossing health.. And p 1 sump saYvis i large log-cabin, within three hundred yanls attics) Mislouri River, then fret" from shore to shore, at least one him dred'peo* had assembled tohold a religious mee ting. They were Mormons, youi may be sure.— No Genetics of old faith would ha le turned out on each a night ; they most be besfizealots, with some new idea, bat at its birth in their hearts, and Rant ing like a meteor in their imaginations, or they never conbilavetentured to face such an icy blast as that: Thecongregation irtcluded men and wo men in about equal numbers, and many of the for Trier carried 'rifles, which they grasped with one hand; Sven when kneeling down in prayer; such, was the imminence of peril, either real or Win bury, as they deemed pending over them. The preacher-4e enthusiast, liills..had ad vanced to a thrilling head of his eloquent discourse, and was paintingin horrible fire-laniptage the bitter persecution which has ever followed the footsteps of all great reformers since the beginning of time. Never before had be been half so animated or half so effecting. His blue eyes gleamed late a star.- his voice pealed likes trumpet, shales the wind which whistleginier the housetop; andidakard lees lip seemed literally lea* with rnoaktier* tams,* wild shrieks frosnlthe audience, peeved the cheitotie power Obis beelines. - Suddenly three rifles inpkided in quick meow sink bikini and throe sentinels, shaking with terror, rushed into the team, crying oetP The _ _ _ mobl Save yourselves fro* Coked Tides mob!" No pewee csa depict !het scene of 'dismay sad osefssiou that sasoed. . *ms bawl*. imemeid *food, as Hall bops bid doporad. &heal of , the UM 'pang out of oho wlndbwa sod flod, Mil OM Py,_ii,legiowof &RION_ !Odle moot of th ose wbo i reman od igipearod stopfdlookand totally pomade., either in swaps or make ready for mimosa In. deed there was We space stowed for promotion., In a few'inoenents a mob 'Mounting to hundred. bad surrounded the baildbui, and the muzzles of My cooked pia and pistols were Menu in through the dome and windows. DR none within filed "a 'lw for defenas...fear Selma tolave tamed bens hobo stone. Pereamtion bad not yet bonitos. ad the a Latter Day Saints" into vetmans,-and tbs afterwards immoss" Merman Leponneziaadthen oily to the imaginatke al the prtipher. Presently the lynchers, headed by the all-driedy and *Boo cokedlo*l, nwho and ba min heat the people loriollsly with the boa now , eede . of their dike, with wery hale dheinetiM I art 'of mercy eta to the wie or sea. The Otis and vain' setreatils of tbe poor Wrenn* tagged at a wail wilder than the howling of dutwind wiebeet. At. Wirth 'Colonel Turk. romed.m. - - di Tarn v oat the wo men , the men, kit Di MINI the bioitory air** . and tbe titrUnd batheesPl - ' and, the dnmkettlenob *NM I rod.lllolool esetwN the WOO allitdPel. liegielha. 311110ilt NUMM = • 413' -^'‘." 2'3 14. lietwidtlict tibia It( 'tirsitintinwHiAtisibohili 4.l—u*nill PO* 01 4***Ilifit*Wei ii.. "Ming, hi. iseb chinsited; sad- litil'adolil-1 8 0 6 Oilmiliall 112 a halo of fire, Sodding; kiliahre bound forint apace window; •Cdnoteidfm***ll ntate-thatt twenty andeaforad triceiaa idtp!Atal." ,. Arad Pi latipilwart • thin hots".l . , _ _, -.--. ' . -- ACittaw-hins.wahoot -iiis....lo4..tgoir: or dcadln eried,Tarki, in thumper of nitta, *Olt tikt 'ample bp eianaisociag ear Vomiter niateelf. The it of Milts was ditesed in ashalintlisse fdr %inver t and hill taarralloits atriikk, isdditik-ab the start be Sot; exar:placed hint at ease liiimma ahead. - They fired bath riihrwandeboiliatticilbira as hi ran, and happily_ without enact.. ritheitifia came‘ rite riteseitioAi ihq - "T'':a . a.iti-PD0.40 - ly hiii;ti' ed'oria Pair ‘ of ikatts4 - irtichteshoidiarde - ed hi hicpockat,for *whist few dap id be ,cpady far ady ortaardinaryemegracy ; and _inert *Mr Ina*, akinnned over die herrn attepitoOklbc ' whines of the wind; • , . - ,..,_-_-1 I - filnianothmiy a pair ofaihuitar 07 4 0 ,C, a 741 h 7 Tat striking his fathead with • item ofsw,te. , sosation. • - -- - "I Uri" answered act of diti son; abed I iibill ciataidy not try-them on the ke nob a ciibt as this:" • : Ottirtiglve them to titerottlAdOrtettreqr, is!t? The skate, were prodeeed the etegeverliiriel tiedritemeri _end Igen, sweiagicir# vierior; teat that be limad tiring beck the stiteltirte,teelit ;rir leave his own, he began the iseriloos chase.: .Oh there is no daring ilke the courage lealare.d_bi .the pasilon for *lenge f In the meanwhile, Wished approached dicier ther shore, when he diecovered the sbetlirOg 5 1r 'anon ofermed men on 'the bank. Hit knew et ft ~;lance what it meant. The mob, to prevent any of the Mormons from escaping, bad statipneil sit d beyond the river. Ile instantly turned his copes down the stream. when a whole platoon let oilitelr rifles, but the distance was too consider**. •A. hail of bullets rattled around him on the ice 11 611021 injury. " I will foil the fiends yet," be . said to himself, and put forth all his speed: Mills flew away, when he became conscious that some one am pureeing .im. He slackened his velocity, and gradually wheeled about to obtain a view of his enemy. But • latter was still too remote for an accurate son. ey, and the Mormon uttered aloud a mod payer —" God grant me that it be COI. Turk, and I em w illing to die I" ; . On rushed the pursuer—on, still on, like , en . av alanche. The noise of his iron skates could be heard abate ti e " roar atthe northern blast, end his dark fano twined irr the glittering moonbeams, large in stature as a ,giant. As he drew nearer, the young preacher smiled venomously. He rec ognized the arch persecutor, Col. Turk, and be outright a laugh that rung over the fimen river like the wild scoff of some demon, when he saw the other noshes/tit his gleaming knife. Mills then immediately pilled his ;own from its scabb• ard, and started off, so asto avoid the coming shock, which might otherwise prove fatal, by the -mere . force of the collision, to both. And thea began a aerie", of rapid and atoning evolutions to seems the adrantap in this nirti meth od of combat, the most terrible ever coneelved.-. They marked the smooth surhice of theirs with circles, ellipses, angles, squares, parallelogranis, and almost every possible figure of plain geometry ; but each seemed a perfect wetter, end geoid not find the other - at &akin lake him onpreparede.- They passed repeatedly within three test Of each other, and made quick thrusts which pierced to the bone! And still the cold grew mom intense, and the wrathful wind howled on, while theirman counts and nights somehow carried thrint farther down the river, where the crusted ice was thinner, and cracked fearfully beneath their tread. Finally, the Mormon took the &Smote - resolve to terminate the strife by sactifetrorhisows life tio as to make ewe of that of his foe at theism time. In the fallowing rush, be no longer tummieside to avoids direct collision, and frustrated the 'attempt of thtlytteher to emend by swerving 'slightly ia. ward" from right line. -, They met at full spetia, and•the ADA .was lite thatof the crash of advert, comets. At the mo ment of their fall the quaking Joe split beneaditheir weight, with a deafening rear, and the wild waters, boiling end hissing like .a bell, swallowed them forever—the persecutor sad his victim, both. aisles* now ! But the wet will rolled an its way to the sea ; the stars all shone as Wen and beautiful see Ad in the morning of creation, when the sagslatif God ohannted their birth sew aid the wrathfel, wiod of winter howled es over the by gains of the etas. sties minors sh-Swarkry Ttenmso ex Detur.TitirM talllotta lit- Us incident that occurred in Georgix. many, years ago. . Judge "P, a celebrated dasilist, who has lost Ittg, *A who war known to be 'ideal abet, chid bonged Colonel D., a gentleman of (mat Immersed attainments. Ms !Hinds tried to prevent the mei. tam bat to no effect. ' The mese met en the viand, when Col. D. was irked if NI tel weedy. Ne, sir, ,, ha eeplied. • - a What am you waiting tot, than?' inquired Judge V.emend. - , . . is Why, sir," said Cot. t. 1., " i bard_oant my toy bate the woods to hum a boa vita to pat my 'Sir, for I don't intend ioirico th e jot* say ad. Calif ma Taira, has alroodarilue whole party roared iib Wiliam, i ad Go was in ridiculous that it beatfirp tholight... Co ait& waa demi* told - thit **aid tiulc hio l lidatika • " Wall," l he rapliad, "it MO STA ala km 'thief& bOlet len s ?' - • " Bet," nit* his Miti4 lql SW about 3,56?- acidt-I,W OI O i*: "I would Whir Illiiky pa. -„y".4oAeviiviagottheNeswaktuot. •••,- - a====EiliM t..