2a2Q TOWANDA: Eiaturban 11arniun, titan 28, 1853. _ ,ititct6 Vatirl MY MOTHER f I.llVVAlillr ri WOMB. Tray Sabbath evening, calm and still 14 nett satCt was heard but whippoorwill 0,,,e pima tire st W rains the soul_would hen mother died D e n gathered friend from far and near, Then cheek met cheek, tear met tear, A:,!:a;turito the form so dear— When mother died. A.. er denr with tearful eyes, t j,„ :ne d forth Nuch holy, heartfelt sighs, seraphs cauyht them in the skies— lAre're all alone, A brotherheld her death-like hand. Reed her gentle last command, -I'm plug to a better land— Do right my con. v- 13Lli closer Full around her pressed An angel hand iroin regions blessed, Uar het weary soul to rest. From earthly toil. F. r-longer life hhe did not crave, Nor feared the silent gloomy grave, Bat yielded unto (-; it who gave Her •pirit soul. Now, as the trier:lid zephyr breeze Glides through the weeping willow trees. It mournfully yet sweetly breathes Her requiem. oh. rather of the orphan lone, Elul sinful earth scam claim Thy own, That a c rany kneel before Thy throne. And sing Thy praise. ctlert alt. Endicott and the Red Cross A n,, 01 an aoturnal day, more iban two cen• :::1 , 1,q), ;he Eng!Leh colors were dißplayed by .es•Ljard-bearer of the Salem train band, which i,lrrn.l-4.red for marital exercise under the orders 'John F: ,, d,n01. It was a period when the reli. •;IsevYs , were oleo accustomed to buckle oil -,eir, armor, and practice the handling of their wee war. Since the first settlement of New Eng •-i is had never been eo Charles the First and his , 4't,t - c, , ,nete Olen, and for several years after, con z Se it of Pwiianieut Tice measures of (Gliiis!ry were rendered more tyrantit •,:•, I,o:ew be an opposition which fiad not yet confidence in its own strength, tr-,,t di it jiis: . ice with the sword. The big. =II v primate, Laud, Archbishop a L,a.rwr‘, cot.troiled the reiigious aff.4irs of tl.e aad WaS COtif•eqqt.r:!)y invested with powers m t. ive wpia4lit the utter ruin of the nil, Pc.. au eu;ol.:ee, F. , ymOu'ti and Massachueetta e.iuerice nn record that our foretachers u!,:t,;:er ; Lut were resolved that their , :ant (nit ory et•ou(ii not tall widlout a struggle, e , Vr. btTheal'h ;Jan! streng.h of the king's right SnO \rd.; :he a ,, ,wct of me times wnen the folds F..14:.-11 Li:Later, the Red Cross in i:s we.e Hun.; nut over a company of Puritans %elf lethler , ;It: fanJus Endicott, was a man of evil arid resolute countenance, the effect of which was :16.!!!!rne,1 tly a grizzl.ed beard that swept the 11 ','I•tt;••: i-n oi his bleast•plate, This piece 'of zimmy As so lit4hly poh.shed, that the whale sue :rnundir.; scene had its image in the glittering steel. The central obyct, in the mirrored picture, was an ethriceot humble architecture, with neither stee plc car bell to proclaim it—what nevertheless it hon.e of prayer.• A tokert of the perils ‘ii;dettiess was oaen in the grim head Of the iinoul. had just been slain within the precincts e t :lie:own, and, according to the regular Mode of c`aiming the boutity, was nailed on the porch of mee tog house. The blood was 131111 plashing .he door step. There happened to be visible ; 4. die iame noontide hour, so many other charm:- Ensues of the times and manntyis of the Puritans, ihat ire mast endeavor to represent them in a Eketeil, :11011gli far less vividly than they were re timed iii the breast-plate of John Endicott. In close vicinity to the sacred edifice appeared tam important engine of Puritanic authority, the whipping post—with the soil around it well-trodden by the teet of evil doers, who had there beendieM. Pluteil• At one cornerof the meeting • houlse was the Ptitory and at the other the stocks ; and, by a A ingafer good (online for our sketch, the head of an Episcopalian anesuspected Catholic ivasgroteqiie. ly ezelsed in the former machine %late a fellow criminal, who had boisterously quaffed a health to the king, was confined by the legs:in the latter.— Side by side, on the meeting houseineps; stood a male and a female figthe. The waetall,,lean aild haggard personification of fanaticism, beanng on his breast this label : " A Wanton G o PPetiors" Which betokened that he lied dared to giter inter. preiseionsof Holy Writ, nnsanctionett by the intal hhle lodgment of the civil and religious rulers. His aspect showed no lack of zeal to. maintain his he teiolozes, even at the stake: Time woman won) a cleft slick on her tongde, in appropriate retribution for having wagged that unruly - member against, the ;bete of the church ;•and het - countenance and ;enures gave much - canoe to 'apprehend that _the moment the Stick should' be' removed, a repetition at the offense walld demand new liiginuity in chastising it. The skive-mentioned individuals bad been• yen 'eueetl to und;sigo.ibeir 4stions modes Of ignorni -I,F, for the space of one hour at vrocraday. Rot aniong the crowd were -sayers,' Winue-Pi#,Oililent would be life•lryag ; some. whose cars bad been milt like those of puppy dogs •,others whose cheeks . i t v.gra 9 zi 41r; 1 .-- d;::,,,ii • . :;- :- ....- - 4.- . , - ?..- 0 - . - ,..,-.z. .._,.., ~.., ~,..:;'... 1-:., ~,,, 4: - -r c.,z li D.:•••.:. ;.•,..... : • . „,__., • ~,•.„ -: •,,...., 1 •, . . „ • „.• ; • , i _. : , : f , . . . -...,...,, I 1 I - .'• . ' ''' -i - ,' '' - -_,' ' ' . ... , ..... - , , , . •.' , : ' i . ' '.- '..- -• :,- 1,%, ..: I'' , %. ~ • 1 ' - ',•,.. 1 - ' . -..t . - ' ..1 • ft ' t; -3 '' - • • /. -• 4: ; ."' . -' .. • , .. . . . . .... .. , . - , had been bran-led with the initials of their misde meanors; one with his nostrils slit and seared ; and another with a halter about his neck, which he was forbidden ever to take - off, or to conceal be neath his garments. Methinks he must have been grievously tempted to affix the other end of the rope to some convenient beam or bough. There was likewise a young woman, with no meaashare of beauty, whose doom it was to wear the letter A on the breast of her gown, in the eyes of all the world and her own-children. And even her own children knew what that initial signified. Sport ing with her intamy, the lost and desperate crea ture had embroidered :the latal token in scarlet cloth, with golden thread, and the nicest art of nee dle-work ; so that the capital A might have been thought to mean Admirable, or any.hing rather than Adulteress. Let not the reader argue, from any of these evi der.ces of iniquity, that the times of the Puritans were more vicious than our own, when, as we pass along the very street of this skefch,;,we discern no badge of infamy on man or woman, It was the policy of our ancestors to search out even the most secret sins, and expose them to shame, without tear or favor, in the broadest light of the noonday sun. Were such the custom now, perchance we might find materials for a no less piquant sketch than the above. Except the malefactors whom we have describ• ed, and the diseased or infirm persons, the whole male population of the town, between sixteen and sixty, were seen in the ranks of the trainband. A few stately savages, in all the pomp and dignity of the primeval Indian, stood gazing at their specta cle. Their flint-headed-arrows were but childish weapons compared with4he matchlocks of the Pu titans, and would have rattled harmlessly against the steel caps and hammered iron breast-plates, which enclosed each soldier in an individual fort ress. The valiant John Eridieott glanced with an eye of pride at his sturdy -fattotrefs, and prepared to renew the- ma;tial,toileti of the day. " Come, my stout hearts !" quoth he, drawing his sword. " Let us show the poor heathen that we can handie our weapons likemen of might.— Well for them, it they put us not to prove it in earnest !•' The iron-breasted company straightened their line, and each man drew the heavy butt of his own matchlock close to his left foot, thus awaiting the orders of the captain. But as Endicott glanced right aril left along the front; be discovered a personage at some li ae dis:ance, with whom it behooved him to hold a pitley. It was an elderly gentle man, wearing, a black cloak and uand, and a high crowned hat.. beneath which was a velvet skull cap the whole being the garb of a Puritan minister.— This reverend person bore a staff which seemed to have been re.ceritly cut in the forest, and his shoes were bemired, as if he had been travelling on foot through the swanys of the wilderness Ills as pect waa pettedly that of di pilgrim, heightened al so by an apostolic dignity. Jost as Endicott per— ceived him, lie laid acide his staff and stop( d to drink at a brig,ht bubbling fountain, which gushed into the sunshine about a score of yaida from the corner of the ineeting house. But, em the good mart drank. he turned his face heavenward in -thankfulness, and then, holding back his gray beard with one hatl,let scooped up his simple draught in the hollow of the other. What, ho Mr. Williams,"shouted En dicott. " You are welcome back again to our town ot r pence. How does our worthy Governor Win throp? ,Ari what news from Boston ?" " Th3,Gbvernor hath his health, worshipful sir," answered Roger Williams, nOw resuming his staff, and drawing near. " And, for the news, here is a letter which, knowing I was to travel hitherward to day, his Excellency committed to my charge.— Belike it contains tidings 11 much import ; for a ship arrived yeslerday trorn Er,gland." Mr. Williams, the minister. of Salem, -end of coorse known 10 all the spectators, had now reach ed the spot where Endicott was standing under me banner of his company, and put Ate Governors epistle into his hand. The broad seal was impress ed with Winthrop's coat of arms. Endicott hastily unclosed the letter, and began to read ; while, as his eyes passed down the page, a wrathful change came over his manly countenance. The blood glowed through it, tilt it seemed to be kindling with au internal heat ;.nor was it unnatural to sup• pose that his breast plate would likewise become red hot, with the angry fire of the bosom which it Covered. Arriving at the conclusion, he shook the letter fiercely in his hand, so that it rustled as loud as the Bag over his head. " Black tidings these, Mr. Williams," he said ; " blacker never came to New England. Dobbtless you know . ttele pnrport V' ".Yea, truly," replied linger Williams; " for the Governor consulted, respecting this matter, with my brethren in the ministry at Boston ; and my opinion was likewise asked. And his Excellency entreats yon by me,'-that the news be not suddenly noised abroad, lest the pepte be stirred -irp unto some outbreak, and thereby give :he King and the Archbiahopa handle against us!'- " The Governor is a wise'man—a wise man, and a meek and moderate," said. Eudicon, setting his teeth grimly Nevertheless, meat ;do according tn. my best judgment; There is neither. man, wo. man nor child in lsieW England but has concern as dear as tifelin these tidings; and if John Endicott'] voice„belend enough, man, woman and child shall heat them. Soldiers, wheel into a hallow square! 'Ho, good people! Here is news for one and all of yeti." The soldiers closed in and around their captain ; and,he cud Roger Villiamsatoodpgether under the banner of the lied Cross; while the wonien and the eged.reempressed , foulutril, and iben.motbera beld %tro theirchildren tots* Endicott 'in the-face. A . few 'laps of the drtiM`gavi l liignif for eilenesitnd at. tention.-, , " Fello w-sold lets— le I lqw ex files," began -End! PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWAND4, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " REZAILDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM. ANY QuArtatur" con, speaking under strong excitement, yet power. fully restraining it, " wherefore did you leave your own country? Wherefore, I say, did we leave our green and fertile fields, the cottages, or perchance, the old gray halls, where we were born and bred, the churchyards where our forefathers lie buried I Wherefore have we 'come hither to set up our own tomb-stones in a wilderness? A howling wil. derness it is! The wolf and the boar meet us with in halloo ot our dwellings. The savage lieth in wait for us in the dismal shadow of the woods.— The stubborn roots of the trees break our plow. shares, when we would till the earth. Our children cry for bread, end we must dig in the sands of ihe sea-shore to satisfy then,. Wherefore, I say again, have we sought this country of riggid soil and wintry sky? Was it not for the enjoyment of our civil! rights? Was it not for liberty to worship God according to our conscience?" " Call you this liberty of conscience?" interrupt ed a voice from the step of the meeting house. It was the Wanton Gospeller. A sad arid (pie% smile flnted across the mild vissage of Roger Will iame'?Endicotr, in.the excitement of the mos ment,likak his sword wrathfully at the culprit—an ominous gesture from a man like him. " What has thou to do with conscience, thou knave ?" cried he. " I said liberty to worship God, not license to ridicule Him. Break not in upon my speech, or I will lay thee neck and heels till this time to-morrow ! Harken to me, (item's, nor heed that accused rhapsodist. As 1 was saying, we have sacrificed all things, and have come to a land wl‘ereof the old world bath scarcely heard, that we might make a new world unto ourselves, and pain fully seek a I . )th from hence to Heaven. But what think ye now This son of a Scotch tyrant—this grandson of a papistical and adulterous Scotch wo• man, whose death proved that a golden crown loth not always save an anointed head from the block—" " Nay, brother, nay," interposed Roger Will iams ; " thy words are not meet fur a secret cham ber, tar less for a public street." " I-fold thy peace, Roger Williams said Endi• colt, imperiously. " My spirit is wiser than thine (or the business now in hand. I tell yo fellow ex• des, that Charles of England, and Laud, our bitter est persecuter, the archpriest of Canterbury, are resolute to pursue us even hither They ale tak ing counsel, saith this letter, to send over a govern or general, in whose breast shah he deposited r‘l the law and equity of the land. They ate minded, also, to establish the idolatrous horns of English E v iscepacy ; 60 that, when Laud shall kiss the Pope's Ice as cardinal of Rome, ho may deliver New England, bound hand and foot, into the pow er of his minister A deep groan from the auditors—a world of wrath, as well as fear arid sorrow—responded to ;his intelligence. Look ye to it, brethren," re , umed Endicott, wish increa‘ing energy. '' It this and this arch -prelaie have their will we shall briefly behold a cross cm the Fire of 'his tabernacle which we have budded. and a higher alter within its walls, with wax tapers burniug around it at noou•day.— We shall hear the paering bell, and the voices of the Romish priests saying the mass. But think e christian men, that these aboininat ions may- be sof fered without a sword drawn'?—without a shot fir ed ?—w;liont blood spilt—yea, on the very stuns of the pulpit I No—be strong of hand, and stout of heart! Ileie we stand on our own soil, which we have won with our swo r ds, which we hive cleared which we have tilled with the sweat wi:h our axes of our bru.v=, ult;ch we hive Bath:till:A with Our pre) era to the God that brougid us hither ! Who shall enslave ns here?. What have we to do with this mitred prolate . --with this crowned king? What have we to do with England 1 1 Endicott gazed around .at the excited counte nances of the people, now lull of his own spirit, and then turned to the ntaudard•Uearer - who !toed close behind him. Officer, tower your banner," he said. The clficer obeyed; and, brandishing his sword, Endicott thrust it through the cloth, and with his !eh hand, rent the lied Cross cutnpletely out of die banner. Re then waved the tatteted ensign above his head " Sacrilegious wretch !" cried the higlichrrrh• man in the pillory : unable I ,ngcr to restrain him self thou hest rejected the symbol of our holy religion !" '• Treason ! treason!" roared the royalist in the stocks. "He hath defaced the . King's ban ner !" t , Before God and man, f will avouch the deed," ansvrered,,,Endicott.:"Beat a flourish, drummer ! shout, soldiers and people !—in honor to the ensign of_New Eigland. Neither pope nor tyrant bath part ohit now !" cry-of .triumph, the people gave their sanction to one of the bloodiest exploits which our history records. And, forever" lionoted the name of Endicott ! We fook back through thu Mist of 'ages, and recognise, in the rending of the fled Cross trom New Engfhatt's banner, the first omen of that deliverance which our fathers consumma• vd alter the boneri:of the stern Puritan had lain trioce than a century in the,dnot. A FAIR RitTORN:"A. pariy,ol wits. once sopped at a tavern. When the feast was over one of the number called in the fonteee. "Angeligae," WO he, " I am •going to give yon. a lesson on astronomy, Have you not heard of that great pa!atonio year s when.everything must re., turn to Its first condition t. , Know, then that in sir. 'Pen thousand 'years we shall be here again on the ba Me day and at the sung liou. Will 'lon 'Ova u%cradit Wilton . • The hostess howevelt,- tuul-her tepiy. .. • " i am perfectly. itilling," ehti4ercitill': 44 !but it is 'rim sixteen ihottaandlears since you were here bet re , Eti4 . sol left.4ritheut paying,, ! eteideihe old scote and wilt •' BORDER SCENES ON THE SE*EILINNI tErom Cist's Cinciwiati ealvertiser My readers have doubtless noticed in the Adver deer, some years since, a narrative of the remarks hie escape of John Harris from being burnt alive by the Indians, on the spot where Harrisburg, the seat of government of the State of Pennsylvania, has been since built. That publication, has been the means of banging to light several interesting incidents connected 'with Harris and his wife, one of those pioneer mothers in whore the dangers and exigencies of frontier. life, tlevelope the highe,st de- - gree of dal ing,compatible with the exercise ot that sound judgment which is of,yet greater importance in that sphere of existence. Hurls, as has been stated in the narrative re ferred to, was a trader among two or three savage tribes, whose head-quarters seem to have extended along the west branch of the Susquehanna, even in this day of improvement embracing some of the wildest mountain and river scenely4ii the United States The wolf and the fox still dispute posses sion of extensive tracts in this region with the set tler, and even the panther and the bear are occa sionally tracked to and shot in their retreats, by the mouutainoers, who vary the toils of husbandry with relaxations—as they deem it—of :he chase, tender ed here, by the character of the country, the 111LIzi arduous species of it in the world. One of these tribes, believed to be the Nluticies, an off-shoot of the Delawares, had built their wigwams and set tled their [mollies, at the junction of the west and north branches of the Susquehanna, tin the t.ite of the prestent village of Northumberland. The towns oh t. a others receded farther into the wilds along the west bratioh. It will he lecnVected that a chain of posts was established during' the provincial govetinnent of Pennsylvania, probably in 1786, by Gov. Forbes, extending from Philadelphia to Fort Pitt, now Pitta- Mu ¢. One of these was where Harris resided, who occupied a trading house, and had rendered him sell, it those early days, acceptable to the Indians, %N IR) found it a great convenience to trade their pel tries for po.vder, lead, and such , other things as they needed, in their own neighborhood. Here he had brought a plow, rile first ever seen on the banks of the Susquehanna, with other implements of hus bandry, and made a little clearing sufficient for a kitchen garden, and here was born John Harris, the hounder of Harrisburg, believed to bd the only in. dividual ever esistiog that laid out a town at his birth, place, and who, as the'first child of white pa. rents, received horn that circumstance, a grant of four hundred acres of laud, offered as a premium by the ri:: - ,prielors, for the seldemeht west of the then t.oicier parts of Eastern Pennsylvania—Berke. and L ateasfe; counties., Al'er B is.idoclee defeat, one of the British offi cers, on his arcar to Philatitlphia, called ut Harris' station, for tho purpose of Stayina all night. Thro' o eeglect ct the person is hose :4,31y it was to ot tel.rl chisi,ig the portholes at sundown, they had been oil that day left open. The officer was en gaged in conversation with Airs. littlf,lF, With his back to the porl-holes, and she facing them. In this pusincie, and looking over his a .otilder, t its Mean! the click and saw the flash of a rifle. IVigi mit any exclamation of surprise, or saying anything to interrupt his discourse, she leaned to one side u here the candle awed, and blew it out. The next day the dither fell in with an old Inethaelnet and hia attendant, who acknowledged to him that he had aimed at his life, but the weather being drizzling his powder had got wet and the piece hung fire; andthe was unwilling to repeat hie fire afer the candle was eklingnislied, for fear of injur ing Mrs. Harris. At a somewhat later date, when Permsylvanians had extended themselres west of ill?, Donegal set. Clement, in Lancaster county, and had formed a set•lement on Paxson creek, the Indians - bec.tn to entertain greacapprchensions of beiog„.linally, ex , pelled:from' the country, and concerted measares, with their usnal secrecy; for the eitirpatiomof the whites. Hiving ascertained that they 'collected once a !Net* tor religiuu., worship, they toady their arrangements to attack- Paxton nieeting-house., and cut off till the inhabitants at a single blow. They rendezvoused in considerable mumbera on a'spot west at the Blue biouutauta, and poured in on, the the settlement throngli 211onada Gap, about fourteen miles from the Susquehanna, with such celerity ainlsecrecy as to station therOselves in the thicket around the meeting house, without the least sus picion having been formed 'by the settlers of, any stetsterSesigns. • They had, however, missed one day in 'their recitOnitig, and taken Saturday in place of the Sabbath, fur their ambuscade,. As the esuat hour palsied without any of the whites flushing their appearance, the fridians began to suspect that they had in some way or other been plifort , their guard, and, fearing injury to therpeelveir, they= broke op and maili their way home iwitbaut loss of lime arid - as , quickly and seereillyasAhtity bad found their way into the settlement. The next day theturn ber and chatecter s of tbe hacks ; around, revealed to Ittesetilerlsthe, threatened dsitger; as vvell as the hostile intention/i f generally; of their savage neigh bore; il 'Wei hell on the- spot, am 'it was , deterrnihetl to disparch. [lards, with seine r forty others; well alined; the ludian villages, and aseertain,:if possible, their purposes. , : The ;cdiiipagy ; itetbnt nc4 day; aria On reach in' the town on the oppatiAtt bank uJ flit, Susquehanna; found a war poy, assembled in cup.i t cil,.polittekl ansk turoyeki wt+4ll war,clubs, no siont4„taftthcaijkos4,4e,riers,cks, but in tfae,fsce or Itume sk,nalo, iha t ,ittll tans .disolasmad,a4y r unfkiend: ly feelings towards their.white neighbors r an4 ; as. iflterted ,;tkeir : planjao julo,o(kons r ibe4lesign,Perag, if poiseiblerffl pgßlhem p -44 4 1tic,&4 11 14. The party of ttileklePolled:oo eqe!i!ifJe o 4 ll . l 4e l .o Plu#Pla• Lions, but p.tepafeo-klcalei!';fcppll;lbeil tbe. fag well-known to thobludions.- They had to crow lbetivec silmirtlistatreb below at itur mouth of cr I j • I 'huff whefif San's, G '4 ifolirlu ill; Hai; ll= IMEIMIII a=M ris had wilidrawn for a short distance from the camp, and was:rettnning to it, when.-he met an old Indian whom he recognized as an , individual that had once been indebted to him for his life The mirage, wirhont halting or turning his head, or e'en glancing, at Harris, for he was aware, on ac count of his friendly:feeling to that individual., jhat he was narrowly watched, passed 'him, and in a harried manner said, "John Harris, don't you moss the river 1.4 1 Ater starting for - home, Harris mentioned to his company this warning, as, he understood it to be, of a meditated embus:n(le on the other side, and sug gested the propriety of gotna, down on the west side of the Susquehanna. The party generally judged it rather a decoy to intlace them to tusk into the danger, a hich they supposed ,was actually on' that side. Harris then explaibeil to his friends the re• lation in tclt ch he stood to the Indian,. avowing his conviction that he was sinceicand appealing to the party whether they were!. not convinced that , they owed it their thorough preparation fot battle, that they had been permitted to leave the Indian camp,' instead of fi)iitAV 111:4 the fiiendly advice The par ty, however, were obstinate, and rather than sepa rate from them, Harris, against his better judgment, , accompanied them on their mute. Scarcely had the first boat in which they crossed touched the opposite shore, when a Llestractive the opened en them trout the bushes which lined the bank. Iteris was the only one of the party that escaped -to' tell the tale, the residue being either shot down in the bout or overtaken at a , disadvan tage. He swam the river across three limes to baffle the parson made in his case. • Parris generally rode a horse which was weli known to the Indians. Ott another occasion, while the whites and Indians were on untriendly terms, he had been with a party of the Bettlere hunting on the west side of the river, who had imprudently, by some circumstance, became separated from their rifles. The Indians attacked ,the party, after de taching a few warriors to intercept their retreat by a narrow defile. The bank of the Susqnehanna is very precipitous iti that region, and this afforded the only opening to the land oppositO the settlement. Harris was a: usual mounted, and making his way down to the pass, when he found himself confront ed by an old chief, well known to him as Indian John, who stood in the pathway with his rifle lens ed to shoot. He was compelled to risk the shot. Leaping instantly to the ground, he unginhed the saddle, held it by the girths twisted over his arm, and vaulting on his horse's back, stooped forwards, raised the saddle, and holding it in front, so as Id form a shield, he rushed at his enemy at the top of his speed. The Indian sprang to one side, dis concerted by the Lel l !en morern2nt, end, learfukf miss:ng, reserved his fire..i As soon as Harris pass ed the foe, he swung the Addle over his head, so as to lurm a protection for his real, undimmed his way to the river. "The Indian fired, his ball taking effect on the aitdi'le, the rider and horse escaping unharmed. One ol the party; whose horse had been shot down (a little Dutch doctor.) had reached theedge of the river, and when Harris overtook him there, begged with E ueh earnestness, that he would take Lim on ballad him, that iirriis euuld not resist his entreaties, although tearful of encumbering his pro gress through the writer with the added weirxhf.— Lie was accordingly taken on behind, but they' had hardly got Idly yards into the s'ream, when a ball :quick the doctor, kifling rum instantly. The In dr•.ns were at the horse's heel., and the humanity. of IlatriA, in pl.rce of endangering his escape, had proved the means of saving his tile. A short time before the massacre at PACIIi, ilnr f IS ' house had been made a depository of powder, to prowl it front fallieg into the enemy's hands in case they should penetrate into the Lancaster Set tlements. It was stored in the garret of the budd ing, one barrel havint., been unheaded and left open rue retail purposes. Ftis negro; Hercules, hatt been sent.up to get,aornegiaiii trom,the brit , and, having soecassion-to.ret the eatidle•down, stuck it.,into the open powder, which lie took to be flaxseed. Fear. ing an accident, Mrs. Harris hollowed, and cum ptehended the danger- - ata -- glante.' Reptoving•him simply Fir slaying so 1(14 Site took dteeandle be. tween •her open• fingers, and sie,wly wi . l)drew it hum the powder. Tne FlTllEtt. He is appointed , hesil of the fami ly. Ile may rule by love, but it . is iris right and duty to rule i and to hint, as the monarch of that little state, moat he the.last appeal._ Ilene's lie ap pears belore his children invested welt authority-- the divinely appointed 'representative of the law ; and if he worthilx strays the acepire over his little realm, he developes in his children acme of the most desirable traits of charaCter. If love is oue of the elements 61 family happiness, order is another; and it is ids, in the lust appeal, to support oider.-- II the sympathies and affections of children shoukt be developed, so shonld their fpicit of obedience M the rightful authority ; and itis his to develope that spit it, _ 'camp meeting a ntim her. of Wales etsutinetNi. iandliig on ths:l.l,sneit . es, notwititsrandingi frequent haste from themtinister to sit down. A reverend phi getsticintin, noted for his gond humor, Mset think if those ladicp ptandin; on Ma benches knew the,y had notes in thc/1"-socksugs e:oula,s'p That address Juni rise Jest/ erl.ellect—sbere %%11, an immediate sinking into the'seato. A jodiig; IstOT standiit tiehrnd him, 'lnc! bh hingtq the'l,em: plph said, " Oh, biotherhow spuh.lk'op eitxthatin rt Say that aaid•the old gentleman i 'if they hadn't 'holes= in their ettickingeplktlite to knOvy hbw they oii,t 1 ) 4 • " " ffave ion ;aa r 'itl your nrayiinl • , `q49lßear9. .w0.04.i„11111--105 the pfayarei and toba,:urkeig 4gree4l „do felines l - ootne6 stoners" t.: innonitcat youlfi = WEN 1trt4,,h.U4.7.r.%..Vt .,- Na‘,:.. , - • nt.:Jt -.4 00. • • -;. 6 A PaaslMl Tnoueni —Rothschild is limed to ccatcothirnmelt with the same sky as the poor newspaper writer, andfdre-great bankereannor or tiera private sunset, or add one ray to this:meant& eence at night. The same air swells all lungs,. Each one possesses,:really, only.his earn thoughts and his own senses, soot and body—these are the properly which a man owns. All that is valuable is to be had for nothing itt this world. Genius, beauty- and love are not bought end sold. You may buy a rich bracelet, but not a well turned arm to wear it—a pearl necklace, but not a!pretty peek which, it shall vie. The richest banker on earth would vainly oiler a fortune to -be able to write a verse like Byron. One Comes into the world naked arid 'Foes out naked; the difference in the fineness of a bit of linen for a shroud is not much. Man is a handful of clay, which turns quickly back again into 'dust. l'Aitrrri. CUT Lsconlimei—ln Notes of en Army Surgeon, • we find the following : I remember one day,:!trisking . , my (hospital mantle, a patient, just arrived ) presented me an am putated lore.arm, and in doing,,so, could scarcely refrain a broad length; the iluelwas constantly ou bis tape." " What is the matter this does not strike me as t he:pubject:of laughter." " It is not, doctor, but excuse me. I kW my min in so funny a way ; that I still laugh whenever I look at O." " Our firsesergeant wanted ehavlng, =eget me to attend to it, as I am a corpor4 We weal to in front of hie tent; I had lailkared bimpoic him by the nose. and wee jam about \applying the razor, when a cannon batl came, and that was the last I saw of his head and my arm. Excuse me, doctor, for laughing so, but 1 never saw such a thin.; before." This occurred dating the siege of Fort Erie. SplarroAL Fhcre . -- That:Whixtey is•ibe key by which mangy gain an en'rance into our prisons and nimAonsea. That Brandy brands the noses of all those who cannot govern:their appetites. That Wine causes many to take a winding way MTI That Punch is the cause ,:of many unfriendly punches That Ale causes many ailings, while Beer brings many to the bier. That Champagne is the source of many real pains. That Pat slings havii tamed" more than A* slings ol That the reputation of being fond of rectal* is Inn iteater in any man's rap, That, the money spent7for:Pnri.that:is:supped by portly gents would support many a poor family. -' That Porter is a weak supporter for those who are weak in the body. . A Dis - rtNourstirDAuvuon.—A ygeigssapegace, who had run out a:fortune, and fallen into bad ba• bits, took up his residence in a country village on Long kland, pretending 'to be an author. His shalt. by c.ppearance war, therefore, accounted rot) and as his eddies., was good, end marks of personal beauty remained, mans• a romantic village maid sighed aver the " cruel fate cf genius." Sths would not pay his landlord's bill, and when a month had expired, he was dunned in good earnest. At length the landlord told him he never saw any of hig productions, and wished to know what works he had beenthe auSur of. Being thus patibed, he rep lied : " Why, sir, I call myself an author, and SO I am—the author of lily Olen iTritfortunts..t" VIVES,..- Doer, jr , the eaten ' trio preacher, in allusion to the exclusion. oc many woold.be church goers from the sanctuary, by rea son of the enormonsly high pew rents in our lash ;enable churches, characteristically remarks :— "There's a high dory- on the waters of divine grace, and you have to pay a penny a piece kr' a nibble at the breaof life. To go icrohnrch in any 'kind of tolerable style, costs a beap•of money ovary ,year, and "Virnow very well why a majority of i yeit I go to Betzebub , because you can't afford to go to l•herreen at the present exorbitant prim." pr.l.l.liic Lesiox.-- 1, John come tip with year leseott. What dues g-I.4kas Fpell " Well I knew once—trot I'm darned it I Jou't fu yet no*"." " what is in your mother's urindew earktieel" a There's so many things-, that darn me if I can 'remember 'em all. Let me see ! Ther's the•hoss bitnket one place ; brother Job's white bat in an other ; sister Po tietice 'a bonnet in another, and dad'e old trowsers in the smash that Zeb and Made yestertlay." "That'll do, J ; you may go amt piny Ile while." The herring is so delicate a fish that it is killed by avert' small degree of violence. Whenevei it is taken out of the water, evert.though-ii seems • to have - received no hurt, it gives a'sqneek slid Im mediately expires; and though it be thtocVe in. instantly back into the water, it never recovers. My bruiders " said a waggiA eoku.ed nian• to a croo4-- 4 in all infliction, in alt 4 your hubbies, dur is one place what you can always tital - oympathy .41 , IVhar ! whin!" shouted se.- " in ae dierianary," replied Samba, and ;oiled his eyes skyward. , kr Does it follow dna a man raised ou ginger ginger•bred 1 Let some of our young ly ceums discuss this. Tho subject will n.tinil• of a %vac Els debase. I • I " • ear, agp blie. rattingion, “Itow I hate the abdonainfiblivpssaicit . o lic4dilig A pew thortzt e.ctc:Fnittatten one &fad boa} ! ES =Min =I 272/3&113