,- - ~ • . . • , . . . . . . , . .. . . . . • • , • ' ' , ..... . . _ . ... • . • . _ , • 11, Steam ?mng ffie l -. - . -..-- . - k - - - -, •'.- i ---• •• ' - ..- -..- --,-•• . ' '..- T •'->•-••••• - '•-•::,:•_•- ' •,:• : •'-?-• .-' . 1 ,• , ,••••—• -:•.;•,-•,-: - . - •'..i ..- ~-, -,- - ~- .- • '.. , . , • 1 - - .... - - -- . „. .. . - i - ..,.. • • . r & Lathr4st Buttaing,,up o.4im' I 1 . ' -• :-/ ..• • 1 .." ... • • , -.- . . .. -, , • • . . --- - w 1 - ••' X . r I ,• .. .. . ~..... . • • . • . lePillati# ilePqbhdtilis . - • :. • • i : ' . . ; - -7 -. _. •.. „ ...t ... . . _ . . . . . . ~ . .. . . . • . • . • • . . .4T - TIIIMIDAY, AT 1102111Wili, ifFSQUI. . - ' J '- . - 141 _.• cor.K,6aub-rr, PiNN'A., Di . . • - . . . . l ---- :!.. • 1 - • ~ f ill F ItA ZLE it, • . - , I. . ~. . , . . --:- • ‘• , .. •-- -- • .......: ,• • RAG A TIAS, II ADT'INCi• : I i • ' ' . , " -.' - •-1 •. 1 _.! -i," •. . ' ' . / I . • . :• , _ .... •-•-•, ,--41.11 , . 66. . . . .. : _ • ',INES4 CARDS. ,:.-- :• : ' • . :: .- - • ' ••FR 2 EDO n'a E CD - ROOMY' aln a D.E&37•ltLA,vgi - , - ,ry: 'n, Di D ~ i r p 0 H a 99 ~. -..-. .- • ' . 0, . . • , . . . 1)r. W. C. Hull, •• ~ vot ,.. 5 . -.... F . . ~,, . ~. .. ~ _ . ._ - • . .----- . .CD S EON.b.sring bested _.imallf 14A.n. ,t ~. _ . - TA . , . . . ~•1 • • ! . MONTROSE •PA ,'.. THURSDAY ' SEPTEM yJR .15 - ,,18a9. -- • .. ready n attcml;to all the calls nt his tof on. .; • . ',. ' ' - 1 .. Oven the t ifttrannt.ntehnsnleplasslooL •. '-, ': -, 4 - 'a_ " ''' • ' - 1. - .e, .- : •. f . :NO: -v. c ra...5.44.1..18:9.-6cap i '.-,. ...6.......m..........;;__-' - i • • , . . ,-.. ilttkr ‘, 5. *groan( - -- ____________ _ ' gml Republica =I EC! ~he',~~a prniissio kv - rdu nix _ • • • H I, Ai to BUS: , lorirtuczAw Am) , E burn C tre. La mss l/ . ln:cuts! . attention' Or Auburn CentraSung. • Drs. IC ~se4ee 4 9 .1: Brush, • Tr As t2gerVkti th er4;-,, " i 'l l i h o e n. ab " e n t __, f4 r Pg= protoolonal ernion to the lorelld public. Office at. the o - odonee,,g 'pt. Blakeslee, nAltwar between the vlllogre of Sieogyilli .t Ditn9et. r: : :t. • • •J. Dutoii, TrsTicncirTlTE PEACE and C O MMISSIONER OiBEtTIB. ifor the State of Belo York, at dreg Bend, yuiq. Co., Pa. Great Bend, Aug. t.4,lSa.aly . A. L :11-AAhAlicTUE.R„da,,A.744.l'u d l kinds of 1 Mi N 14 \.•wlton% Ps, Ang..24, R:44f • Bacon'& Weeks. -1-kEI9.ERS in all:kinds of Groceries Doreian and Domestic 11 Fruits. Inanges end Leinots, Nitta tyII kinds, Med Nara.- es. apples, 13erries, Prawn, Dickies. Preoetrart, . Wolsestrer 'hire nonce, Flour, Dirt. Lard. Tallow, Pork. Solt,'..te,. anaeaa ' ~,, a. L . Niareica.- = I .=EIMEI • , . . • ! 1 _ • P• Lines, . . 1 • H ti./...SIIIONiBLE TAILOR, Brick . Sloes, over - Roadr .I.' Co's Store. Ilootrom, l'a.. . SlNstrose,Julyl7, 19.5.9.41' , 1 • Henry C. Tyler,. • . d• IIEALER in Dry Goods, Groceries rmixellos, Yates Notions. Bads soul Shoes, Shoteht sad. Forki, Stohe Ware, Wooden e and Brooms. lied of Satiation, Public Avenuer Montrose, N.., June n,16-46,,c,- - - • William S. Cooper & Co., .i i BKERERS,. Suceerinore tri POST. COOPER & CO, Monts*, Pa. Office une door calm from Posts Store, Turnpike *tree - to . line. porrnio coots, ',. . Rau tiarla. ' - .11nan. , 64., .funk k. 1.64...t.f.^- • 1i• - a 1 Gairatt, I. I IDrEIOLTISALE and RETAWDEALER In FLOUR. GRAIII, .ST MALT. Ac., Naar kfltroan, Pa. ..Sllea morn. Pritt‘siOfflce XI!I keep constantly on Itand the ~best brands of Flow. by the Peck or bender.* barrel., at the !dreier nrartei piles% also' fait by .the single Barrel or Load.. All orders from Merchants sad Dealers will be promptly attended. to. , LT Cash pold for brain. WoOLPelta. .11,Intles, nodal! kinds of Farmers produce In their season. ! • :Nes, Mllford. Ps, March N. 1b.59.-1y - • I -- 0. *P.4ordham„ IItrANETACTURER o: SADDLES. HA RNESS,7k TRENKS,&CARRIApE TRIMMING DI et its tr., Slurp one door.betn! Keeler & Stolidartre" Montrose, March L IS3V. • • • . . - J. H. Fmith, ' 4 " . 1 I►[ANUFAtttIIR%R ofHARNM,SADDLYZJunITRTNKS. .01. lie. Mutore., suiroxamsau County, pc - fi New Milford, January 19, 1.•.-13, • H Keeler :A Stoddard . : TIEALER...: In BOOTS .4 SHOES, Leatber and Flddlnp . Afton Main M a., fast door bait... , Searle's Hotel. - • O h l 1 11/01t01 =W, Montrose, Pa, Jan. d, ISSS.-rtal C. N. izonnsant 4' 1 :• 1. • E. EL Rogers, - Q TILL continuo] the lIANVEACTURIC of WAS. sisr:l 1.7 ecriptioro el SLEIGIiS,"CAItR/AUES• .• (. I: NS. le- in the beet style of Wortemnahipand of- the heat materfala,•,at the Well Known nand, a few rude net of ttoolei Hotel, In Montreem. :here he will le happy tereeelye the Wia of a:1 Who Want anything in his line. li• ti '• , ontrose, September TS. IS:141.-ly , . . , . - —,---- , • 11. - D.' Bennett. • ' t , 1. B 00K BTNDER, lizsllty, 'SuppeLusts Dom. t•-, ra.. rspeerlo:ly Ir.forens.the people of 430 z c,:elli,:ns ace, ester: torlag crilltaira dad heols pre , 3 1 __ .-.. , 1 p:lred to bled reoloolmls Pod inookt. aLi/ Repalt ."' "." ..." ,1,1, trookl. E. W. i's...e/eis selli receive Pesiodleass, 1..4.0., ~ke..l f , li. D. Benne tt -=--- __ - Gilaon., Sept. E, l - sl,-I..tf l' . ~. .. --- , . • , • • Williamll. Simpson, - i . - , Tr ATM" REPAIRER, hiring worked Ico the past .... : 4 T • aloe year. with the molt skillflal workmen, he 'eels * ein i,t t lent tin4,e eals .10 the most dltlenit :Joh , on short . ..x 1 - [oe. All wo k 'warranted 14 givesallsfa.Alon. Jewel. an on icILSALAbleArrn,. • I 1 •' rY L. ; tlh . op t nd :Bo ' ld tk a lVeteter'snew Strire,orpner of Maln - aAdlTuria• play Street.. belay Sesrle's lintel, Montrose. Pa. : : I- lissera To , Wm.Elwell i E.rlV. Baird, F... D. Monts yne, iE. 0. GN.lricli, B. Klngsbery, Towanda: B. 'S. Bentley, L. Stalit4C.D. Lattrop. J. Wlttealwak. Moritkose. 'i ; Montrose, Sept. IS. 18M.-0 . • • . .. Wm. W. Smi th MR i r - --- - -- - - = co., .. CABE'S= AND CMA IR ..MANCPAC- toren. Keep constantly on haractall kit& of Casorrr Frarcrrt - ra,_ yirrolatted at al,rt. totlce. FAlopaad Wart Rooms Rot of A , - 11 MRCS.. 1 Moutrosa Pa., May 26,16:4.41': • • Hayden Broth rig, • . Ay 1.14=1.1;.D.1.AwLE.7....4- rG: I4LNIC't.E SOTIONA,Warhey, a- Mrichaatsnnd .14e; TorkJobbbnid - PAces. ter alill'ont, May, la,M,-1y .• • William & William H. Jessap, ATT:)ll.l7fifS AT LAW. Iturraoar, Pm ctlor P Fispaer hanna. Bradford Waite. Wyanriag a , diarzell,e coat 'es. Wm..H. Jessup, . I A TIT/ ANT:S At LAW, WCSTART rt - BLIZ, AND CCIMISIg- N IONE!: OF' DE.EDb, for tbe Ststesof New. Twit will **tend m . l business entrusted to him with promptness and QfEct on Public' Splize, otrapted by Ron. W111:212 J. • , , Bentley . & Fitch, 4 TTORNETS AT-.LAW, AND 1201.—NTT LAND-AGENTS:— IL 0117ce wog of tke COUTtilklit, IiarITOSZ.4 . I. 4 ' ! c.s.jiziritir .- • ' • ' S. / ITTFII. • . . :Albert Chtunberlui, TTORNET AT LAW, AND uencs OF THE 1.14,CE Act Office orer I, L. Pod & Co.s Stem, Mormon{ P 4. -- . . A. Bithimell, • Al_ TrORNST & COCICI;ELLOR AT LAW. °Mar -tmet L B Wests brig Stay.; Smarr/us - AA, Dirt-z, Pa.-1131 f . -----,----. ' . •• • Grover, si t LoNaT AT LAW. Lora, Mu m a i & tr .,- T. J. e"... "13,..!inese " al.r.z.7 . l4l4:reach e pnnn si teLtioc. 011410 E No. 46 ebtsti4ul Street. 1.4. Lois, 1)642:Lb& x, 18:4,17 • Boyd &Webster, ! DEALERSIrt gloves, Stove Flpe TYri , Copper. And li*t. Inn Wars also, Windnlr Sann, Panel Ifoors, hr. Lnralrn. and.all kinds of 11=11ding „Materlals. Tin Shen Sotto sf,,,s4 n 's Marl, and Car,,rutqtiop neat !Intl.:4lst ellurch. • 1/07714 A. WZN/FFL. unranas, -41 ' John - W. Cobb, M. • BrING =nit l l 'rni , ed to rrartlee MEDICINE and SCZCZ`RT. LI% located hlease.: it Montewe, and wfil Rtrictly *tent t•- , tee eti. wgh :witch he "slaT be favored. UFFRZ over Z. co,Nn s store, opposhe Searle' . 'lnto, , on-nbei. Snag. Fe., Pa., Math 9,1&'.9.11 • ';‘ • Dr. A. Gifford, • • CrnczoN IMCTIST. (Mice over F. B. (tandler's -tEktn;e. F•Aicular - ittentioa beta veu to inserting Teeth on G o O. or pLate—ateo oa • new ALI ppeestionr•rsetizted. Good - IcereLces ern, 1r requ.trelL* Sept. p,l.sv.J.-t.f. -• . Dr. • o.' Z Dimock. .' • • -. PnrsiciAN Arm SURGEON, bas penusentlylocatedigmaelf ItNIAMI3O 4 3e. SUKIMIIIISIM LAMate. PE. O FFICE ~,,, Wilson & 5.,1 . -1 Start. Lodging. .1. bore ).{C4ti. . . .. I Mot,trane, Much .14.1NR. Dr. Wm. 1 Richardson IVOZILD ntspettittily tender his proreezdowl servier-1 to the la T I habttaat• ot,Mootroee 1114 Its .4e.tritsl OFFICE over Ida] fo' . .tlf Store. .LODOINGS at the Ei , yet.r e Hotel; - • lion:ran. Ott. 4. 15:44-Iyp - Dr. E. F. Wilmot.; ; • ••i : . ri P. ADVITE Of the A Ic Y athie and Hozneepdhle Colleges et Mellteine, to now pennanently loaned In Brent Bent, Ps. 0 tee, e+lrsier of Maine nr.C..EßreLeth St., ties:ly %vette the M. K. Ccurh.l. • May • . 7 , • Dr. H. Einiith • , 1. ... - 14T:13.GFON DE? TINT. Rea'dem* and ogee. li l i ese a "Pidt; thillaPtiftgVairekgejtil"rt: ttitaneth onOtom 1.1;d Su.vsa plate, and to El dvurin: ,• . ontmar....lanuary A.l '"8.4. r .11,1 • . ] ' C. D. Viigil... 1 -?'" 17:ESIDENT DE TIT" PA. !Of' °i tem -. aka ' 1 ";,..,..,,'" " ':: 5 19:.', ald of Zr: ,Ll'ilf.. in in. I..lol.t.tvisl. uf th I F Q ?!.., r- 411)2 bi wansated. . , , Alcar:agar. Apnl ...laid.-tood . • • B. 'Thayer; VOITEICtiIf AND EZEGEQN, Morsicas, Oltc' -- . Fanner:a atom . .-./48 • - Abel Tnrrell, . • • DEALEII IN HEUGS, MEDICINE& CHEMICALS, YaintA , olll6. Dyewture, Vsrusairule, widow uksasjaq. Crorkerr. ClAwirarr i . Paprr. Jewelry. Tanr y Urvedt. redden', burgle& Innrumentm, Truism rirwthektdc.—and Avatfor of then aw pormlar wualt • . - - • Chandierll: Jessup, . DEA LEM+ ES EMT GIOODS.I Ready Made Clothing Gruarpis liwks cud Btationery, el,c, Public Arenuf. MC , Fr.ASZ. r • - • • Post Biotbers, • -- T - Tk LA LEM Di DRY 00018. oce+ itl.Creker7 Itareoriv. ex•vf I.ftther. Flour. comer of Turokai meet #lad Public A.!ve gwluns. . - . :/...Ltrons. & Soh:, • `:. - •• 1 • T 1 r.nLins ART Goolis Groceries, Iluduate.. eVoakery: a." Ttnatam,lcocka, Mel...demi. 1.1 Nbe Maeda at-: also. clam ,-;t.- t:mrlturnutu Walnut—Public Avenue, Murmur. Pa- 1 1. LT01!.." ' • T. A. 1.70.118. . . . • 1 1 „ Read At Co., : - . i • .15 z.u.Ens'm PRY G 001 0 1; Dr ti" Medielthot. Pants, Oa, G ,-, 6teies, fisztivrart...4. , rockery. Iron, clocks. watimraes , .1• s " i " . "r s Doe•ns.rezfuwery, Ac. Rriek lits 4, Movransie. •• r. W . .Pa r l-tio ; I With., t • MAD -.....___ Baldwin & Allen, • ur 11 0LESALE and Raid: Deslns - la 'Flour. Sgt. Poik.'rwa. ' TLard. Gra4,7z - .4. VUndles. (lover and Tlnuthy pad. Akss. iV. '" OR .- e:t11 MS. such MO SGairl, MIIII.IIOIL SYMOL T11,4 -•Pff.f• " Let. yM . Puhge Avenue. one d4ut law sr J. Eiberidgeli , - ... 1 1.41,1, 04.40.1853.-tf . - - • • . e . ' : Z Cobb, ' • - , , • i • . , hYALEI: IN GROCERIES. ilbr.,al tioston recentlyoeCiPli,d ..., • rce-Az M uch vera. Slclatruse., Pa. , . . *wrires, 17,:p.K5.41 - _ • ' - NEW'S. OFFICE._,' '.• • ICSEV YORK CIT 1" ILIMBTRATED. ATIVISPAPKIaK ]IAA. 4 . 115 Z &.. dkr-, 4 oak stit!e Wawa Boot 11110 *. Oa! 4 fill, . • ''- : 4. r j . uza 414 ) . • ', For tkeibulepAndritt RepuMican. rotetpu4 , Fiqi,t'--Tifike RI es. . ..:Enrea swittmeteor shot along the sky, , the falcon's\wing doth cleave the ambient air;; The Fight is darkt , l„o" it hurtles try,: . Nor heeds • its' 8 tness in the andden'glare ; ri \ t soars/may in a b 'i-ht line orlight, • , - :'. Far in ' the ether, •M ntiod dsn ways; ' _ ;Till the blue depths shu out tbe hidden flight; i So - ,Tirde (loth come, ;an Svanish, while we gaze , std ' et And,ciraling monthsra eugulph the swill& ~ • days. • • ~„ ~ i \ , Quick as -our thoughts, or as a cortser fleet, •si Time Sweeps along to Its eternal goal; The Past—the Present—and the Future meet, - ti Ere we -can count the minutes is.theYsroll; •Now 'tis the Present—new 'tie fled away, .s Immerged in deep abysses of.the Past; \ - for for:en instant will the future stay, il li ' • ,ovi,e'er imploringly our gaze, we cast, -,_ . . . R Orpray,for a brief space, the Present time to last. ~. Think, then, that Tine, though fleeter than the bird, May yield . sone'moments of enduiing good- That present worth-must ever be'preferred -,, To future bliss . , which oft our hopes elude ; Solet us live that age May but reveal f. Minds wide expanded , thoughts serenely fair; ' That onwani r lime with noiseless step any steal, :- And find ell joyous, while we still prepare . , Far in immortal state, our being's hope and prayer, Sept. tlnd.,. ' . • S. C. N. • -1 facture . es tirlsmptranctt, DIELITIfiID Br C. WATICR, 'f *fore the Priendsville Temperance Society 11111111 . . ..,ft.Lconot., subtle poisoner of hum'n hopes! man, thy victim, calli thee to account before 'the - tribunal oil enlightened and quielteneepercePtions! Suffice s' ~ , • - to;tsav thouart'ciindemned. — i , !temperance is called a stale and wMm-out subject ; bi notby.those who have felt ,its full significance; an'il investigated its rengtb., and breadth, and, depth of import. Here, ere' may hope to have it.iteld up to . i . , vitm in different lights, while , we at Ate , same time *4 :bidding one another be strong in battle asinit ; thii hydra-headed monster. aittagoniam • cresting hettrtlen - intemptrictli? an3tTst"dciigns of Creqeire Wisdom, is the point of. vilv from which I.weuld _ask 'you - to- consider-the .suect with me. r say—the antagonism existing betvecn intemperance and the ,designs or Creative Trlichani, is the point limn whiCh I would ask you to coisidcr the subject at the present- time. _ tinst we may aSk, what did God design man to be, eight what did he design him to. ultimate ? V iese, though questions of vital importance, could be Answered differently, according to our ConceptiOns of itiod and man :'vet these differences of view are blithe result Of conditions, therefore we not ms 'e them the testimony on which to base Mi l t , con cl:lions. If we *ok to St. Augustine, he will regale itslith a disiertation on'the hlighted majesty of 'nature Calvin will paint man as unprogressiv, nn4pansive, arid :fallen ; while Chinning .wiii his.boundlem capabilities'and endless growth. of individual, then, not a 'nation, .even, xe , n'ter f rogate, tint that sea' of living 'souls whose wri+s Break upon every shore: . Looking-to .. them, we Vsk, what:did God design man be? in4bat did he Design him. to ultimate ? Tile answer is imprinted in their strncture—in their • espe,bilijies. As the crowning achievement of crest ! isdom; as the highest .unfoldment of mentality; te truest representative of delfie attributes; it is evi Ltent that God inten(led man as the- tOier of the editVe of material exristenteas the:very spire of all he flying creations with which be ii-rrourlCd,.- 'lfaurs Soulls.capaple of pure emotions, lefty purpo se/s iymmetrical-growth, and, unceasing unfoldment. Thrsj i he is deeignqd to aellieveto become a epodes; enal4em‘ofpuri. life,. rnsity of purpose, ' an 4 Symmetr.t of ions; man iss Cothbination of ascendin% 'hose future should be higher mad big the tuth be-a social companion ; be *al existence ; to be i the teach er ot ri to be a happy slid hump.. nieu# being moving serenlinshis orbit ; not a cog wont machineOrhose bobbling gyrations a drunken .manlo strongly resembles. Man is mot designed - to l id:huge in a warrier ; a stateimi ianie ar a fariliei; these are simply charm. ch he truly fklar4 7 eurrenta ulth'which he :a .ut iuto the -seat spiritual life: Man,•as des.oed, the apex of. e i arth-tite and the basis • of spiritual 'exis ence.— Man is de.: - .:ned to, ultimate in in_ indestructi e . - or gan*,to become one of the fratereity abo're 7 a citize4i.Of lands beyond the vietr . of Mortals ; - to upolan interminable existence, leaving behind 'that ( curithersome garinent, the material hotly. cal,' we look upon intemperance-and make it: bar- Mon rie with Such designs as these?: 'Nay : it IS 'di :. solut4lymntagonistie. an, . the superior of all other liringl formai - man, :the concentrated embodiment Pr' beaufi„ind intelligence;' min, the Social companion, ;the either of inti4ml existence,. the teacher of ris- Oriemtions,the ottident in the schools of Time; prep4ing to enter the life-field ofleternity-...5ha1l be inebriate! , 'Shall be drown his Superior inteiii- . geul in the 4estrnctive cup, ancFmake Lodi a ,pictiqs of dire dis4se; imbermonx, and woe? Man 'is ati id of promise4lnrhat shall he unfold. and hlootA? Is be-but a poisonous upa's to infect the at irtinSrfere of social life? ; i Is he but a swine.hke at he should:walla* in. the slough* of filth 'wher'4.firunketiness would send him prostrate? Man . 13 a bad of angel life; nit thus should ye blight ids fair p'roportions.. The !Jung aroma of divine ele ment; should be exhaled frainthe blooming Cower of his uifolding nature. Attributes of Diviuity:—glanc ;es or*he all-loving. Father; impulses of the all.iner iful filature, and . utterances of aep eriading. purity, e.alorous - exhalations that May bless all humanity In their social commerce: • I/mak-but the poisoned draught- f -where z then is the Gild in plant actiie„. Conltious, speaking? Mau, )man, art thou drunken? .• Will not the pure . I :-piriqt -the Father above, calling to' the .spirit xith in thee say—"Soul.where art thou?" And can the ' • • . • . soul Unblushingly answer, here, Lord, the iar •eu of inteinperance."! " , S4iglit of truth is hateful to the deceived,, yet-4; otter it disposer the lie then haat, Ireliered—let it hii.e.,ihinder not its rays; icir they are' divine; and lriu venerate the souL ! . . - - . Intitioperance h a deceirei, *hose foul breath eon tomin4tes its victim.. lnteMperanee is an enemy, !those: subtle arrows fly with deadly an. then:per lainvil a tempter, that wins' an from his high es tate,ft spins and hurl him down the precipice of 'Crimes discus, awl delth. Intelligence finds the in- Ibietur• deauly as an opiate: it cheers but to dismay, it enli'rens but t o kill --, I . IW—the germ of spirit, the oiropril' "g 'of 12eity— phoo4wingeti thoughts are permitted to ascend atni -12 12 desccold upon the ladder of hitelligence in - the coni mercetof heat Is choicest blesoinget, will, if iritem 4ritte event y find !ISt he is bat ousting these itrgelOof his b n loul—,his thatights; the mnpanions Zi . his life-4, a' Into the deepest mire ,of, a sense ,. ...... Cps rreuence. Noble sa.li the ghat oak, • whirl= itied krzes its wide:spiedd arms, emikes Its defiant itonkAoss Ito lofty heitd, siklindilt Onistrati ai the grouti n :l. -Low lies ' its proud beauty; to perish un. noticed a id those trees that remain unrcathed by the tem. ; but, oh, how Many tender sap. Hogs dill it erush,in its fall.! And, too ; the 'brother, hoo4 of reel is broken—theline •of defiance Inter rnpted fall another., and another, ever weakening tie • of resistance, and strengthening the de spoiler's wer. • Buckis intemperance, such its re- . links. I is antagonistle—aggretialve upon the.devel ()meat !. min.. It impedes his ,upwitird progress; ay, more it lays hie lofty thoughts and 'desires low in the d breaktroll companionship . with brother man; bra ka of communion with purity, love,- genre, an . • God, threugh the higher- capabilities of hia natur.. But is this all? ..th no! It is - as but one stroke of the stoini.kin' g's vengeance: Oa' others fads the .low, with the same crushing destructive- DIMS. • • . The In sot intercommunion between present and - future : , erations entail the woe on them. ,Ofold it has been id that "God visitaithe iniquities -of the fathers u.on the children, even.unto, the. third and fourth ge • erations :" pot thecruel visitation of per, serial yen:open—the torturer's satisfaction—but the ever calm and dispaatumate lew of cause and effect. Man mighi as well attempt to deny that maudlin° warms the earth, as to attempt to-deny that each generatioi inherits spiritual, mental,' and, physical Mew., corresponding to those conditions in jts epees . - •try. National characteristics, and. &mill character . Wks, are like results'of like 'causes. -'-••- : Instrumental in bestowing tho.gift of life-upon oth ;I er-individ itis, man cannot escape 'cOutsminating them with his diseases ; end contributing to lent his inherent d ects,,by implanting in them the germ 'of like dsvei pinent. God hail designed the ' scope of man's powers'to be, growth-mwardt the beautiful-= the good: And pure, and true, and noble—each soul has a righto be born with these desires;' they' are its, due, . nu ll it is defrauded it otherwise constituted. T You maya 4 the Declaration of Independenee, you may asters that all men are born free and•equal, but does this c press it? • No: for they are - not in one sense, thotigh.ii should be so. • . . Now, as lintemperance Is one of many • causes that blight the evelopment of mart, so are ite results' in hiiited as blighting influence:upon others . If Wier; al and men 1 energies are diseased and .dwalfed by' _growing be etith The flood of alcohol, then' re- their 1 ailments tagfen.s around the : fireside , and perpetu-. aced in the cradled: infant . - Ilusbands, think of your wives! I! rots, think of yotir children! Reineni berit you sta in fila every debasing habit, if you lilt . 3 -our ao 'op in their true-dignity, and seek that culture w • h unfolds, the beautiful and good - of every Sind ; I sa.-...-when you do thus, you strengthen them . in Ithe'same bold defutnCe tb teniptstiodiblists; and with interlaced -sympathies you can withstand its. fiercest tempests ;- but: hill a victim to.the. despoiler, -tient of devastating tower, mid in your all sh to the• earth your loved ones also, Its, and judgment. is dethroned,- Man rove is bate. - Ilan' drinks,Nand. brutal ure the lovely, sunlit landscape of his soul, r on his boa*, and gloomy shadows stalk dreary-darkness of his soul. Han drinks,. slimy 1 disgorgeinerwi of his brain are aiiin. foul-and. sickening language—in ume.s ,, contaminating or repelling wife, rcods,:and neighbors.—all. There is ae tion too.; .-Ife 'drinks, they:, frown.on 413, they hate—brothers and sisters. tho'... et iu a cu you ,drip' drinks, find looks . dis 4. oloutia gatli about in th and all.the thrown ab paititentiai children, f Lion and re him ; h ROM Qh, Inte l brotherh.. kindred, of those. tie , for those it. sympathetic) of mttilari, happiness i. ,Sich are souls:that.G! peace. It is tenet.; and cation of so. generations I • and in; horrors" ' -- unspeakable.' All . this is in antagoa : ism to ' he creative intent of the Author of man's 'ex, istence. Ithot only subveirsire of *hat triiin Was intended to e, but it Is - alsoprevelative - to. his reach ing the ul ' tettestiny thatawalts him. - - Can ama in the illuive light of a disordered • un is mind, drink`n those heavenly truths, and enjoy those sublime:eon ptions,•Allich - the world of knowledge affords to th 6r-reaching perceptions of the ever aspiring soul! Nay. Ii the ion] fed on husks 'or steeped gradation,while on' earth, - at all fitted , eichy for e future _life which is entered upon th , gin the ten of death! '-i,Nay. . IntemPeranie -often urls an through this gite, hut oh, how:un preps - .t, . my - friends, thinkrof a spirit educated c i , a in the Bch ' Of intemperance. : May we dare pie -I,Ure its dims Xin entering the' society of - spirits?— May we dare pie•urit its Unfitness to enjoy the , tither itance c..,1" P e? ooled in the art self-desk-4c tion-ssuici skill - , wly administering the fatiii.pol \Fox, son—admissi nis gains beyond the gate - whiciCaoi- . • es he mortiiii , hell We sew blintz he standshere an intruder . the broad fiel of - eternal life; - Shall we-look den clOwn into his so to see ittidesclLvtion ? f• • Ah !is Lb' an opening bud of gel life.? 'IS this a flower of it Divine =fire, wh. ... unfolding petals display the a tributes of Deity? Look I Can ye see' I rayene of 1) vine Love, one raiof Godlike complus- - rion„. one spa kling eortieption of the blesset t ia of ezistence - ,,,0 e comprehensive 'thoight,• emb eing the`Aisdom .e so much needs in spirit life ?. ' r ' desolate wanderer I Ile is, in .pne N sense; `destitu 1 andlarmless ; for the _doors of a. glorious inheritance' DI are closed egitinsS so unnatural st . child—one is), prof- ligatc—one 4deitructive—one-so meager in his Ils• oy - talons. I this a soul - matured ' for spirit life ?---- Look into its deep chamber... What see jou ,there? . Seared sensib sty, blunted perceptions, shrunken pro- - I I portions, m ger desires, paralyied energies, and 1 i ideated mop cts. Oht littletof angel_ coloring,, or proportions a erne this being,'Yet, this is the' germ -I of eternal lif the cankered bud of , promise. An I enemy bath tienc.,this; it J 3 the' work;of the ineindi- , try',' man's deadly foe.- Undeveloped resources and devastated treasure Attend:the, footsteps 'aki Intern .l3ers.nce.• - C4bearer, filling the chalice of regret ; ' pallbearer, i stowly hearing away man's precious op. portunitiei ; Soul's secret antagonist; slowly yeftmre-. ly enticing it into the snare--euch is Jutempeance, its influence ever in - antagonism - witl; . the ultimate ! - destiny of man's inth 'picture. --a It is 4 sad picture , , —a mournful . lay of truth. .The , rnelenchely'. owl I - I.•, - . hoots sweeter, ,music- - has less diectir' d in - its not".-- 41min the harp of a thousand stringi:which Intemiler. • -- ' i . •,...---' . .. time 0444 witifits hugc.iron 4tviumer, thus Ihrealt- Ing asuridtr tite..most . tensel.! attuned-strulgs, One ing!the'sweetest-eltrains ofsoUltuusiethat mail Might pont. forth 131/1/. the worftitti;ond him. _ . ..1 •-: -- Such truths, fall with leaden weight upnn - hin who . in tile.weakill.mOtnents of he life .suirenderst.the 'sweetetringed instrument tothe ruthless despoil er of his peace. .1t may be he expects to hear sweet, - mu sic, to drink Inlty,and beak in.sonshine: btit 0, the horrid sluitlut of madness and furj, the bitter dtstisht of pala, at the : lowOriot clot& or di Iperauce is the destroyer of thq 4 iies of -1 that bind the human family in, bonds of ~pathy; and love. No, not the destroyer ; not Che destroyer. of those obligations, not destroy ; ;-but te the'destrOyer Of feeling--of,harmony in the great family the antagonist of mace and progressive the race. - fie effect's of intemperance, in - defacing bni intended u temples of . purity and destructiie tiebealth,:paraVzing to In : ebasingto morals. ; It iS ,g 11141.10 COSqS: 1 endnwznentii; It Li piracy upon unborn 'iLla entombing the living, not the dead, _ ation; as 'surely lie in the poisontlled chalice. 44. .tagcilsm, ev - i pf.bltter antagonism to - his nature and destiny—array/I itself In thionflovfing results .of in temperance.: .The soul of man is not amen chime' of the imagination, but a glotioue'reallti 'embodying all the-charniteristics . of his :IndividutilitY, • Bearing thls.in mind, thi written life Is of the utmost import ance, in accomplishing that soul's development, rnh. ing its.tendebeles, and - deciding, its - future irfale'._+. -There is a Parnassus and a_tradesilf development tic. Cessible to-man, but whether elevate'd on the_ InplM talp or. sunken in the depths, he Is still„Man 'the ins. Mortal Spirit. Ifhltemperance hurls hieidown,erush ing his energies, tenipemncilifte r KM up, wipes- out the stains of e e rror, - expands the / wingi:of asphatiot ~ and bears him upward . and ohward; - the - true man, strong and-self-poisesled in the exercise . of Watsp - bilities. , Alcohol, like . a battle, SweePstiver the del, , and human victims, lie. pnasirate before him. But his biertied arrows shall be removed, he puison, e'.. triected, and l thisvound healed. The.. " mighty. lali- en"thall rise:np strong and powerful; in love to God I in lovO l to - niten, in love to truth and piiiity. 1 Thrmigh the slough of Despond, Li a by-path Thai you sliouldriotleavel. to reach the castleof, Delight' for soiled :and weary the traveler comes up from 1 these dark wateis. lie hesitates, - he loiters, he turni. back,-he eceii not the castle lu the . distance, - ,theret . fore - his weary soul cries out in anguish, "all is V - Itun ity and yexation of spirit." -Not through this * path 1 not through this path, my brother . , I begeecb you I . is the counsel with which. you most meet the lost tmleler; if von will win biro bachlnto the paths of ascent, if.vou wilimin him to live in harinoi ' ny,fith 'the design of his existence. God's gifts arn not hedged in; the paths of upward progress am open to his children; `uncl_good angels hover , over t them in greeting to the approaching ihrong;.of . mor.l,- ' talg.l.- „_ . _ • "Turn from your !ins and live i" " repent and bel saved; " seek and ye shall . find;" _ "knock and id what! be .opelied unto you"—ail include to man prornide of release Par the captivity of wrong-dolbg,' when. thatreleaseis demanded by his Pwu soul; that is, :Shen demcilided ,5.1 kis aspi rations end his efforts. Until theft hkretudins in bondage to sin. Untii ; then he sows the seds,of b4ter.anguillt, wind, resps theit fruits in agony ‘ of 'What is it` : to turn_ frOmi our sins,,Mit CO - lay aside the inclination. to transgresa the laws of our physical and spiritual actinic.° - • This i is repentance, that we mark mit arid follow a new line of, coudml c in accord with. contic-I lions of duty. Thuica thousand times May—ye re pent, a thousand tunes may ye knock at the gates of a higher wisdom, seeking the paid of'great price. . New life Mid • vitality ye will ~ feel circulating ini your Innis; ' as. ye turn from, iour transgressions against-tlutt sotil's peace. Repentance:l)rings salva tion from the deforming influenCe of sice j Newl truths lootn up in sparkling splendor, Irlien ye are seeking them in the :cloudless day of a harmonious Mid well-ordered life. . . .• Moods ofilearen's sunshine—whichi is truth-..fa1l upon the soul that is upturned to receiv . e Its. warm rilYs- - i - Can internplerance be reconciled with thc serenity) end glory of espiretfcm ; with the dignity of a true manhood—a nisnhciod-that lives to utifold:jts capa bilities? Can It: be, reconciled with tile• duties that . man Owesto hithself and to his race ?',Can it be rec onciled w.itli the fulfilling of the dutiek. of the= rudi mental life, so as to unfold therefrorn-k capacity for the supernal state? If - not, then, 0 man, make thy selection;; Which hillyou'serve, God or Mammon,. the God . pf your spirit, or the mammon orappetite ? Which ye shall be 6ticified principle Or incline: , , tion—the savior or enemy of your souls ?-. Christ or BarrabbaS ?—is the tiuestinn—which shall it.l be? The, .Christ in • this - connection is the di;i4eimpulle implanted in man's spiritual nature— f tfi l i i " design of Creative Wisdom destining man to becOme an- s.n -gel of light. ijarrabbas, or Intemperance; is the des perado,who bath made ins . rrection in 'mati'S innerlife, destroyed his peace, a - d murdered-inn( tims. in ~illoodthirsti rag . Innocence, ,T., Aspiration, the three angels of mans iiine 2 • . -• bleeding under-his reeking sword: "Noiv . him bound eaptilif i no more his arm shall ➢n conquestover yd,u unless . ye so will. So brought accusation alao against the Sivior; you t 0 slay him in blind. haste .though • no prove' aught against him. L Will' ye do i Barrai)bas .be released and Christ crucified ire all say no! '-Loud .. , is the shout eryin; with intemperants ! Reason lath . 'counsel!. huth deemed tlat, much trouille Will come lonsehiAd if,the," just:man" sacrigccd=j ng influence, of temperince is wrenched inanity: Reason, say, bath - coups - 40, bath pretalled. Louder, and louder still, shall be the elm cheera us 017 tti.victory--the rickpry, of ri wrpag; the rietory of truth corer error; th of principle Oyer inclination; the victory. over body—of spirit over matter.' . No more antagonism to God ; no more to.duty; no more injury to ourselves ;. and . . aiiituosity to .We interests of immunity, shag us et intemperance, it we .but keep our plig, as given to this cause; if we builive the perance,.a9d har,rc , iopy, and. love,; if we hut. yard to. God as our Father , and outward' to r* as MS cbildien ; if we but live. as eye, and.work as for the interests ofal4 who Father—soul 4usweritig to soul; in *Love. 1: spondin.to spirit ininoiement o zaidnem all. . Where think, you the vibrationi. of - sus wouid.ceahe to be felt? o,nry where. God is not !--: ply Where utter nothingneta p co . ' 119 . 6 imposagde • q. ;us let it 'be I Lift up your defireerto!this• onnummation, and doubt not the .i!ding rof Spirit++ will fall as dew upon yolk I- • • • -4.-.411111..-- . • o. 'y tut, &How; of the Fit% •.` lartyrn - ct.-+ not position that. givs ence, it is character. What ruen are, -de t ermipes their•power over others, of where they are them, selies,.not the phices they tend Iti. -.WhenT-Dioge nes'had beeti captured by pi as, and . was about to he sold as -a glace- inorete,.he pointed to a (Itorinthi= an, very - carefully dressed,saying ' Sell me Ito that moan, he - wants - a. Master."' -His -wis yea 1 6anced him.;- and' -thn event demonst!ated,:hl sigaeity.t > Character overtatne• position: that )inight''a master-in boying-Tiogenes! • • . Eiso him harlei irWards; ie spoke atiper- A. wee ibit of a bri - y" aistoniSlied - a few dais Singel. She had pc4sion to chast slightly for komOotTenoshs - hqd committed. sat,wery"quietly pt",llB" z ehair for sometime aft . no doubt ihinlddlyery profoundly." At hest ont"thtts ::.! . 3fuizer, I wish:Pa .wcnild get s . tkousokeeper ; prif got tired seein' you 'routt.i I tar We luiv* all.belid of asking tor . 11 receiving a . litinbut a young - gentleman oonsidered to a great, deal Worse' treato4 w sake for iyouoi lidfo home, and geti,ker I ~•DT mums L. izActr. , The, late March a ft ernoon it weird and gliy, The crazy wind,ln monotone most dreary . ,,,: Whispers Its halttold tale, andlies away • .11s if aweary. - = Low rifts-of snow He cowei:ing in the lane,. [ing. I Where yesterday spring's golden fee't were dane- Aipl from the skies that woo'd her good i reign . • !Black clouds are .glancing. . • I it 'within my sewing chair am) dream— Illy work the while falls idly from my fingers; ; Aked. where the firelight.drops lts'isselloweet betm • Hilly gaze long lingers. . . . My little boy lies sleeping. Stirless now ;Are the bare feet, so - quick and rettlesslately ; And the blue eyes beneath his thoughtful brow'. , fAre closed sedately. - . . Onehand lies hid among the lockS that float • . • lin ,careless grace upon the yielding pillows;. • The other on his breast rides like a boat • On Sumner tiilloßs• . About the couch, where . they hts waking bide,, . • Mil whilont playthings fie in rare confusion ; Ai4l underneath the shoes bethought to hide . In safe seclusion. . - • Ile calmly sleeps! -The Wind moans at the. door, And in the room the firelight'efitful gleaming Makes pleatiant shadows on tho crimson floor— - I sit a:dreaming. • ••• I see afar theveiled o .uncertain land,- . That in the, future waits hiethanhood's coming, And strive to dissipate, with Tore's strong hand, its 'mists. benumbing. . • . And is.he of that race of Inurelleri kings, •-• „- The wearers of the purple of the Poet! - Orlike the heroes whom the Poet sings.! Ills life wiq shOwit: . • : Arid. if he be a soul froth falsehood free,: Though.ho should wear no lautel,,sing no story, To bear his part with honest men shill be Enough of glory. • • . e The dusty twilight round the casement clings, The wind lifts up its voice in louder wailing, And dreary evening folds her sombre.wings, • The daylight • . Familiar footsteps linger at the door,. • • And in the room the last faint day bearisquiver; dreams glide silently toward the shore'. • Of Lethe's river. pritbodutent of cfloninoton. ..Mstit accounts haveheen written of the bombard ment 'of Stoningtort. But we have never, read • one so.complete as tyre following, which . appearedin the glistio Pioneer of. Jitly 2d: --• '. • - • On - the afternoon of August 91 t 1814 the seYenty- • four gun' t ship B l autilies, bearing CMamodere fiardy's , . Sag; ;tle forty-four gun frigate PaCtolus r the brig' Despatch, mounting twenty guns, and the...bomb thin' Terror, - lying off the Hammock's, Weiglicd anchor, and ran -doWn !towards Stonington Bdrotvh., At , about ran o'eloek they anchored within about ix mile and a half of. th'e place, this being its: near as the depth Of water rendered it sate for them to approach.' Commodore taYdyr now sent a boat on shore with a , 1 .. flag'of trnce, conveying the following message ad dressed to . thc Magistrates of Stquingtott:, ' "An.hourParrd a half - is:given to. the •Unoffending inhabitants:to leave the Borough, after which we Shall destroythe place, -for which' we have ample means." To-this! eumtnary and.lnsulting demand, the - - citizens immediately and' nanimously replied:' - ..-. "We shalt:defend the place tcithe last extremity ; should it be destroyed, we :pall perish in its'riiins." The boat returned.' The Commodore wars - excited. But theshipswere as yet too far.froin the Borough to commence an ant effective • netion.ll At about t•evcn . o'clock in the evening, the bemb-4.wirped . down . towards the .place 'and commenc d throwing :shells froin two huge mortars, one , thirtcen and the other fifteen inches in idiabitter. At the same time Eve' barges and a launch carrying i citeronades in their bows, put off from the ships, an came in toward - the place. They not - began to throw4-' o gr . ,ve rocket.. The rockets anifthe 'shells made 4 iid and aZvfia,l illumination. ' Women and ebildik ith noti afew g,. ^ tender-nerved men, now.tledint 4 )el couch ..- But a number OfeoolSpirits stood holt by the ' lace.— There were in the place one six-Pignl and t o eigh teen-pound guns.!-One oftheeig*,n-pound ra and the six-pminder were drawn dowi4ippn the &trctrie • point,to - theck tiie . approachingitilics_witiri ronni . shot. The othereighteen•pouollOiis norY i lin the battCry on. the southwest part, wig,. ;I'dilif,l near where the present breakwater letlthe- kidte: , it t was ;low night, and the barges! lnly belicen by , . .., ' - zirAf; the light of the rockets and al ;:: , 4,.s.they came 4 up in.line touirds the place an Ruth-east Of the Point, the guns on the Point, m:e . o4 . y loaded and' aouble-AhOted i 'iave thein etettftcception. The fire tore up one of the"bargesOlitidly that . 7, , -. 2'she could only be held tit; by her etteMns on either numberside. The mber of lines los' -. hewer definitely' ascertained. .' , - i' (. 4 ', I ' ' By daylight - on the morning o 2 thd 10th, the brig Deipateh and 'the frigawPactolll made sail, and be-. gan to beat in' towartisThe placilto.opett l a regular action. The FactOlus grounded4eibre getting with in reach - of the place. • The : coat:fir! around 'ha d'noW becomethoroUghly alarmed, antkuten were pressing in towards a Borough .., ,cry Few, boweyer, - dare,d, teentexpe pace on.a . :ccount oftie . flying and huil st: ing bombs, - whieh-comnienced Isom with the daWn . of=-the mornik. , •:: 1. • 1 •1. • The little battery was now plain order,.. . , as far ;ins posslblejo meet' the brig when the came within reach. The first Men, so far% as remembered, that took stationsinthcbatterf; were four, Williatn I.erd,- Asti Le4George Fellows, and Amos Denison.: But as - ye t t they giatiotregUlarly operate the gun, : though_, they red a few'timed to' see how. far they could Just befureaix o'clock, six yolunteers from Mystic, Jeremiah ilolmen, Jeremiah Haley, Ebeneier: Beni-. son, la.iac - Denbion; and .Nathaniel Chit; reach - C . 4, the . place on foot, and ran Immediately to 'help tc(oper: . ate the.gun inlm battery. ' Captain Holmes was a: 1 maskernes*. with s cannon ; 'for, ae,:the. fortunes of war would have it, ihiriiig his- three yeti's Imprison m - .. . ein : on board of from which hchad escaped only 4, f s eli year's before: he hs'ii been educated in gunnery-aunt had been captain of a sun. on the lowei decli, in what is called, from:he ex-, \ poe6d pwsitlen, the Slaughter House. _ As c aptein - Holmes entered the'battery, the-men in ft hid jest I. sled the gun with double, 'shot; and were prying: her around to bear upon' the brig ; the brig'isa , jest - conilng about in one other Leeks; . be 'sighte the g un tul ordere.l her fired. ' Moth ahote „atruck the 'brig in- tle.hufi. The brig now dropped her anchim with a spring upon her 'Cable,. and opened her bread bides.. The bade noWeo.mnsenced in eainesti - Thu, Despatch' worked- with iirotiJiaities, throwing' twenty lour-pound shdte, and with her- pivot gust : throwing 'twelve-pound Abota. She was 'answered by . the -sin gle eighteen-pound. gee. isi the hattery, but winch wasralways dOtibleshotted. 'The Terror, meanwhile; weedolusgber beet 10 fire the place with - her shells.. Thebrosidaides hoes-the brig poured A terrible' rain of'shAt around thshittel. The, battery being:melt, hut i feW inett,cbuld work. In . it,- sind At Ws time it was opirafed,,4o neatly - 14 TemeteberedOsy'Jtmenliah 11011fiel4iititi0dHiliy, hrinnidt•lisley, Itiacilad• Went .11c- ore, and life. lie eu have ,e raised MIMI 1 . . and ask .an can ? 'Shall y more? ¢, Away led:. She pon heir the sac- hu and abet 'lout that, slit over p 'victory. lof soul ntipathy no more Cottle to i ted faith of tent; ook up brother ath his call him. )irit re aim of EMI y , be err 14 fitllieei Sketch. ' , , son, Isaac Miner; George Pellows, and , Asa • Leis.—. Nearly eferj shot from the battery hblled the bit. Hut shortly powder filled them, and about 8 o'clock, a. m., they were obliged to suspend their :Lakin. .. , ' At first theism, was spiked, !eat the English'lnight land and turnit upon the place, bui,ltwes shortly 'after•drawn from the . hattery. The B orough had ,been'ransacked, for powder; steret and dwelling, were searched in vain. • Snits E. Burrower 'wits: sent as en expicis to New London for. a supply.. Round shot bbonnded,bad they were now coming into` the placeln superabundance. Bet the ahot sent, as they ' Were afterwards In tho course of a, few, hours tried; were found to be toolargei to be. returned:to the brig? The Place was noir, defenceleas; for Though there were many armed men In it, they . 'could •!e-' camlishinothlug with small inns; still there was but little disposition to give up the defense. sA.-citi zen=we choose not to name him--:suggested the .necessity, and hence the propriety of * surrendering; Captain IL Indignantly. .replied : - "Nol that ~Rag den't come down While I am , 'alive." ATa the wind nowdying away, so that . the colors trailed .to the.' .flag-stalf, Captain H. ran and Thrust his bayonet through them, and held them out-to the view of the _English, todenoteThe'disposition, still Aminmending , the place iiand,whils he thualield the Colons, they were pleri'd by the'enemy's,Shot: So, great havoc Was now being made in the Borough by the bursting of Shells fiomithe Terror, and by the broadside's 'tit tle Despatch. - Most fortunately, before the expreS a retritnedfrom, New Loudon, which was 'not till noon or after, , and' , which even then only brought a wagon load of thus-i• ket cartridgett, the search foil powder was Successful.; Six kega.of powder, lately taken kin the 'privateer Halka; and belonging n Thomas Swan, had been de posited, for safe keeping, on the east ' side of the point,. near i States'e - Pottery, behind a large rock; and covered withisea- weed . ,As-Mr. Swan hail left the Point, inforMation was given'by a Lad, and-this ,pow der was foittei and immediately made-info cartridges, It was now pest 9 o'clock; a. m. A blacksmi th , Mr; Cobb, drew the, spike from the...'gun, and Mr. Joshua Swan's 'oxen -were obtained to draw. the giap to the battery for renewed action. So the battery again opened its fire. Every gun - was 'double- shot. _ ted, and -nearly every shot bulled the brig,- smile . ' of them piercing her between wind and water. The action was now.hotter than in the morning, and was • conducted-with the greatest possible rapidity. ,The , match rope being old Would not , hold fire,. and the • gun W es repeatedly fired by Captain IL by priming his musket and anapping.her lock just over the gun's flee. The gun wal ninally, fired \ by Simeciii Haley ivho.cniee fired her by a musket's lock' when, the musket was loaded with -two balls'. In the midst of the-action, when abet' were being mined like hail around, Frederick, Denison, a youhg Man of nineteen Years, while eutsidkof the battery, on the perilous errand of relighting the match-rope; was 'struck 'in the by a shotlrom the I:iirigi' and was carried off by his brether Isaac and Isaac' Wftliants,imortally, 'wounded. Soon after; the cannon became' so hoe fromirapid werking,'%tliat She primate - rely took fire, and'injuredaevirslof . the operators;, one of them, John Miner never wholly'recerered his • sight. The men in the battery' became nearly as black as: the poicider they used, Which, however, they continued to burn as fast as They could, giving the brig two shots plump in- her'side at nearly every:tftseharge.= Once they cut away her trysail-maid. andber colors a the main gait. r And now, as her breaThing boles were multiplying,, he began to imbibe the brine too ..- freely for her putniiii. , .The - -firing continued till abon t'Lnoon, :when the . Despatch became so badly bruised 'and perforated. that she Concluded to quit the action. She there, fore dropped-her spring, cut her cable, and turned' from the fight. .But pintini in a round charge ,snid two_More shift, they gave her.it parting salutation. I ' The shot went into the brig's sta,rboard quarter 'and . ' Oct at her larboard bow, killing and wounding eleven men, as afterwards testified by-her captain. ~ ' - -The action now canted except from the bondinship; tliaticontinued the Min of her mortars with some et feet Uper'ctlie buildings of the gorough, till evening. The'Despateb"careehed, plugged ber 4hot: holes and ;manned her pumps to, the •utm....;sit to relieve • her of the'five,firt of water in, s lier bald; She had 'nal : therie;urage norstrtngtli 'to-return to the battle. - ii- Tire ships 'could-not come up to confrent the little ,singigunned, but heroically malined`.l.4tterk; ,and ins ~lie batie,rv,could not reach-them, things now be. i came somewhat ; quiet. During the afternoon, a -boat 'with a flag of truce passed bet Weer. the Boriotigh and thd Ramifies; but nothing was eireeted.l The Cogi, moiloredenianded the surrinder of Mrs. Stewart, wife Mille British Consul, but The requisition was refused: The Terror now restune4 her work' of projecting' shells into. and over the . place. As the buildings were fired, the alert citizens stood. ready te- extini. guish the flames,. And during 'tho assault of the brig, while grape and twenty pound shot were- rain ing upon,the buildbigs With the shells, - maily'l dar ing deed was performed to - save the dwellings, Dur'. ' lug theeftenicted,and the night following, -military companies from various-quarters, and crowds of men werg pressing into the' place. - ' ' On the morning of the 11th, - as .the ComModore :„frair that furtherefforts would be worse than truyess, he ordered three tremendous !roadsides fired by the Ramilies as n parting eipression of hi; chagrin and. 'wrath, ond•then ditected the sijuadronioweigh in cher and return td their former station off the. Ham :mocks.. , The:assailing squadron contained a force iff 'about fifteen hundred Men:, The Borough was de :fended in' reality by about twenty. men, tltougk the "show ormilititry companles had intimidating ef fect. Tholcserof Cm retmrted by one of their officers, was about twenty Hires, with over 'fifty wounded, and ncost of about ten ihdusatid pounds .nierling. On ,the part of .tlie Americans, several buildingS were ihattered r and a few persons were In jured, and one was mortally wounded. It Wits, cont.. .ptged that theships threstfieut their guns about fifty fella of;•tsi - ital. Songs fifteen tons were sited and toldlomutkovernmenk The,ti4Olus,ephile aground, di opped one of 'her 'at T.,- • inch threw overbdard large quantities of altei. - Tha.alielloini,of the Despetch and Pactilus, With 'the shot piekad'up„and the eliot taken Op 14 the di,ink bell, netted the Yankees quite a little sum be way of . .s indeninification. . . • Upon the whole, this was one of the bravest and moot successful actions of defense that occurred dur ing the witole of the war.. So far as the •bouts of war are justifiable, action Stoningted . has no small occasion fur gloiy. Her. chore has become bk. toile from this signal display of patriOtism and coui , age. And•an enduring record ought to be made of the ounce yf those who acted the-noble part In - the perilous metre t such, names as Jeremiah Holmes, Georg? Fellewi,, Morin' Haley, Amos - Denison, J. Demo Gallup, Isaac Miner; Isaac . Deolson, lloritto Lewis, Joint . Miner, Jeremiih 1;to LonkNathznicl ZEN Ebenezer Denison, Potter, Isaac Williams, Frederick Denison. • . Doubtless other deserving names might •be added gruris to deb, ba mum. it4fOs:_ Of . : ftabtiiiilii9.., ' • 1 w 'Ari ;wim'm ; m Om _y_ , friolo vs 100 2 61.+915401890 t squax 1 00 150 200 2 150 5005 00 900 15 00 S squares, 1 5012 • Vifli 0013'1516 00[1 40 19 120 00 I 4 Nun's, I COI* 0018 75(4 50IS 00J9 50 1 . 5 00 2400 Ws column, . . - 18.00 80 00 One column,. „ Twelve Ilnea orals 16 iypej make.* num I rbat bats eit Ms du type.—Aptb, ) Tau)/ Advaltbien will ham the ptattio 0 or ibeggiii their aavert.betaaata oesupadlyllithent additlaaal • 1 liptaais Cada bat atteedity Iva Ws lauded at 111 mama& dayAdvenlatattatajolrtaart labatito. alba Oa laadat ta. by Tula montag. . • .. Job-Work.—Thor °Mee of the Lintrwroarr Spesucab b: plevid. aritb three"laitag PINSK li MGM' POYTER.PRI,S4 a Imp 11.91) Pitzs, pul a CARP rates. WbVons, th aa ' Cards 3l"atirtsagulandbet. Pampbteta, se., will Pub= poly eat PapPW. Blaisko.--Jastlees! and • Conatables' Blanks. &boot BMX; NOP, Nada, Loop Ipal (laatatta. ea, lotia ea Pad PI tar male at bp linnumpart Rartazzaaar Mee: El 37. 1 _ THE LAWS 'OP LONGEVITY. " As age,' so anold schbolmaster, ones well lamien In this city, wax wont to say , "is the aviiage duti r Mort of humanlife, - .oritbout thirty years." • For s longtime the world has held, held without doubt, to this esliisnatios. ;The average duration of 'znan'i life . is about thirty years, consequently be is s ludky fella% Indeed, and'one getting,tnore than hts,ehars, • who :does better thu this tatiaties are, however, beginning to show that:„hununalty-in general is 'bight nintick "do better..:',.. Rowena has gaud (vide his Human Longevity and AmMult of Life on the Globe, London, 1855,) (hat,' according lathe great law which - deterthinea the life of 'mantqnd, man absuki live to a hundred,'and would do so were biefhabiti u simple and healthy as those:of, other animals And as the civilized world has been for a century or more .grad. sally recovering - from the p*tstration inflicted on it - by .the . filth , asceticism and corruption of the Midda Ages, Se find indications,of a retoio to a- healthier state of life and increased longevity. Tide Taet, firist called to : tub' attention of the . by the historian, Macaulay, and subsequently by ma-', ny writers on statistics, bas'beep oflate well stated • and. illustratedin that ezollenZWork, Bing* Toward. PAysical Fel:re:ion, by . DAL Jacques, containing avast amount of intbrtr.ation; which it would be well if everyone would'acquire in&redace to prietlce. decortling to Jacques, after making all allowance for the vast amount of'premature mortality of the '.pres ent day, statistics show that ''the length of ilfg 'has been steadily it trensing !inect thi sixteenth century, when, according to Dr. Iluchar,an, its average 'was only-eighteen years.. 'Male cver,r, alforrhtie for tlif fereqce in 'climate*, new eocisl conditior.s, and learit *Wide margin for e errore, and after all, bow Wonder fully does this contrast with tho calcidaqons . of the present day, which give at the average duration of Ittunan life in Europe actually forty-Mire Stra . rs! \ The,ancient Romans were !tinier Died than their _ - Italian descendants of a later age but the meau du ratihn of life among them, not including- the servile elassetcaeco'rding to tiplau r wee only thirtiyeArs.— Yet,'as a large: , proportion of them died by the sword, l or by the enecnyi:we„may raise the standard off heal. '' `thy domestic life among them. The e . indent Ger . -, ,mans,-is:descritted - by Tacitus, were-much longer fiver!, than their smoking, . heavy supporeating de scendants. Life Was - shortest during the Middle ;Ages, because men were then cooped up' in towns, fed principally on pork and mustard,, salt fish, and -bad:fireitd, censurging much wineandewereisingvery . little; We know thatthis conflicts with the popular ideas of those knights" and "faithful squires;" but the knights and squires formed e very small part of the; population. Scrofula, leprosy:and a host of uncleinly anises amicted the Majority of the .peo pie; Everybody lived in- towns. whose , walls, were • contracted to render defence easy , ind the result Was a degree'Of filth, darknesi, andwrdreting, which the,. student : Auciders over - when reviving their, . horrible details: Very few persoei r even farmera aid_ their - ,men, could be-raid to live in the ceountri :at all," Ai they always hitddled together in fortified- tilLaee,tar • towns, walking daily many miles to theln , agricultnial laimazi' *a custom still kept up in Many parts of Eu rope:.; Notre of tins appears in Walter #cott's novelle , or Terinyson's Idyls. The writers who are to Blew us-thelldiddie Ages as they- really were,. itt ill their strange mixture-et beauty, sentiment, atul l eistinese, - are yet to come.. . • • •. . The; average duration of life in Great Britain, at the present day; among those in good circumstances, fifty yeers; for the whole pct . pulitioilt is about forty- , rive yeers. For-France-it is forty-two, • end for the li7ired Stated about forty-three; a very Icrw'rete in edwitert we consider what it:might be. . Therne.factililuettete, ilia rery enticing' Mariner,. the infltience oficivilizatiorietnd an Increase of knowl edge and the comforisof life in, promoting 'physical; welfare-. ' The `Poor and la s boting dynes in most coon.-. tries (p,optilar li lief to - the courier! notwithstanding) are sfiencr fived - by more than One:fourth , than the. wealth! A comparison made for France, by - M.Vik lemenee, and based on'actual Statleics, shois that the wealthy live; on an average, twelve years longer than the poor. -The proportion :will be different here, - however,, as ever those whom We call poor possess most of the conditions etnenLial to IteAlth and long life es largely as' he rich, and are free front some, of. • the unfavorable Conditions to Which . the latter - are.. subjected. • JJ The large,proportlori of.deaths of cbildYen , in our tis the most ten iblc drawbatk to longevity:— This is owing principally to, the fact that they - ars, in :- cities. Fresh' air, pure milk, absence from the fever.' . . • • • . ish, irritating ineuence.s'of cities, close - Jodgings.and',. unhealthy'luxuries;.all act favorably both. on mothers • . • - arid children, Future ages, lb looking- back to the bill, of :triorudity of there; days, Wilt wonder thatpeo 7 plewhOhnew better, arid werteb'eing contirmally.told sia by'the presit, could persevere in. what. looki like deliberate'murder, i• e/tieliberate torture of beings,' when they ttadit)teiheirlirpter ti).l:lrt their livell • Lifels shortened In infant , prlnzii-1117 by "Impure " air, lutproper foOd; . civer fe.dint:,-rtickbig and 'Janne...r ing,' Imalanum..paregotic, - -casto(oili and tight - band j • .-... a g it":" To this we may add, that so soon as a.•ehdd it'oersti little older h is generally dressed up - like a . ' sht;w•monkey and'admonished to keep perfectly . qni- -. .... et j and 'ha tier purposes of-exhibition, in flatter' the ;Idiotic vanity of parent., who seem to think that this • . I . perfect, easitand restlesl activity. which Ueasth re..' - quires, are of no conseque n ce yrhatever, compared to' "looking - pretty." Nith-those - who arc older, the.: - coniliticitin which coinfer.;:t long life, and ;Yiutt is more' 'important, a healthy and generally a happf • one, are thus stated by Mr. Jacques : A soinid s physical -ant- Ititutioe, „ lePending in a great measure ortthe prop. er treatm ent of infants ; ajudiclous,physitil educe- • lion ; simplicity, wholesomeness,_amt regularity . o di:. et, acid-Ithe efficient action of all thenuatritive oe re- , , atorativh functioni; euclentffi pleasurable exerelse in t . the open air to Promote a healthy circulation, immu nity from hanssidlii eatie and anxieties, and expeee- ea of every kind; constant moderate activity of body.. and mind—no Idler ever reached a 'great age—and finally itappitieseor enjoyment, which,,its.Dr. South- - i• • wood &Mitt' says', " is not only the end of fife, but It - I eti - i . Is the o . y nd dor **life compatible with' a .pro. tracted kern of existence; The -happier s human being lk the lot4er he lives; the More tie suffers, the - sooner he dirs. Todd to enjoyment IS to lengthen ': Ulit ;Ilit inflict Pain la to eltorteri existence." . ~. - .Every man caw' judge tin himself as to the degree in which - he fulfils these conditions, and how far he ht.reallyi able- ttihonitly with them by making an eft . .fort. 4 t 'eknowlthat in eouversation; millions of ex- cuses - May . be alleged for, not foEsiving the laws- cf . , health, ut we Would beg,,the reider to settle •the 'matter ith,hlmielf,inot witit - inother. The , Anteri- ' can. In geneialtniy be detfged as a feverish; worri lug, idaCk.broadeloth wearing,' tolateakehewing,Aled - meat ..eitting; tioteeiernising,: enjoyment, negteegg • individual, who dire; used up, - at forty•three,' after: . wastitria vast ationtnt'of steam and 'gas , - when hit might.-easily havetllied twlcetts long, iceomplistted fintr times as Itsu'eb that was really good and useful, and,belie liconeidirelly happier; aid he only °beers- •.. ed the l i ewe - ot hltiieing; and 'eilluay't!ireed his atill• Ideiln iiilht:difbaktfl•—,Phik. itethtis.` -. MEM