NWININVOtt." I. Ennuis, iditer and ►n►ddor, Ti 1 114.0.41041.1411 IYY 111111 , OMIT. • pow, awl • yearmilim ••••••••• ••••••• •• 4 1. 1 .1 Ims YaaNYNM Ito mai Iv* dimmia.l••lll ••••••A•• ••• PAL 116•••••• ••••••••W••••• A ••••••••••1••••••••••••••111• twat* 1 .•••••1••••peatlaml, lay imny Adnlison(••• gywwp ILIF I VILlsoirli l°h O.; mesh, N.. favorable m.o. VONT* AND ADE. * I often think.. sh Whoring lens Thal limps along in life% Joao., Ose• her.. • heart . y.., se want. As fall et idle thoughts ...Da! Alta eaeh has had iY Deana Gl*, fit• asesealled pow ran.. ; Cenut..l. -hen the Duetting try Finn ed lovely woman • glance. Awl oath mold AA his Ude al WARW . think to mese& of logo swim*, Moro pawls, ewe mamihly truth, rano Amy WO bathe. et n. yes! they meld 1•11 of leredie: At Miall{Shl pes.4 alamis *mime, CA day. mono Wight ANA modern dayA Abi maid. mor• fair #gaq modern mole or whiyrle is • willing ear , Of hi.... on • 6:lnking e l • Each each whimpor; fallos ' doer Om modern Lp to gim no peak. Ofpmehm• Int untimely embed, Or And po ng mad or bet ed Inni mir mg, 6.07, r And bob that en, Wm.. but to fade. Of beaming ayeto, asd tem. gay, Elmtle fern. and .64 beow. AS shams Mat hoe all pommel away. AS left them • bat re em tbam new Veta = l ;:gl.Tatdrea7l n a i ll:ing? And last youth's br.gbfeet ririoas move Forever melte. wing? Mast all Ike eye. that still aro bright. And all the liq that talk of blo., And all the farms w fair Insight, !forearms only seine to Mi. Then what.are earth'. best vision. worth If wet at reach must loos them thin , If all am made moot on earth Era hog moot lade away from us , *ONO OF T.IIE EAGLE. Fin king of the ....nisin. Fo2 kid al the plain ; And my h. - a at the m oo Where the whirlwinils reiga. On the mow -boarded ale, Dn tho lightning's and mine. 0. Wm waves' plumy Iwo, la eny threno—ls my throne. 'Mut the ohm, es they roll. In their wildest career ; the ham. el the thuder. I otar without fear. And the geld•tinisd cloud. As it hairs me dew., To OH dititnnnutled earth. It nut ereten—le my army. Where the avalaael.• Fromm t leer Fall MsNOMM pny pona When the lighlsem•lsl Stead like malehilre. le ammo Fem. the dark erne el* A leer—them a my yam.. 1 3 1ECetr111,317g2. Tim Power of lbw. •• Dear father," said alary'Edwarde, " amid go out this evening," and the yaung girl, who had namely oumbered fourteen yeark laid her hood upon the arm of her pa rent. But Mr Edwards shook her off imps ghostly, mattering u ho did so— Can't I go where I plums r Oh, yes, tither," urged Mary, drawing up to his ospin, sotwitlistsoding her re peso. ono' there is going to be • Mena sod I wouldn't go out.. Storm! Nounoso! That's only yr, prams. Bat 111 be hams mon—lose .. font the min, It It comes sr, • sit." * And saying this,lir. Edward; taro from hi. daughter, and left theA. WO. u she mama Mouse, sea t down and awn ""a 'ba re" m had boon end Awe*. sum; iee was ten3wara old. in 11 . 0 : dud het father had halm Into habits a' o ::soperaneo, sod not only wasted his inidlenee, lost Mused his Welly ; and sad der Hill, her mother had died braken-beert ed, laming her sloe* in the world with drenkes father. The young sure Welt, swim them pals fel arestmeteeees wen groan Night saw eight her father would n 0... hoes Itsonl• *Mod, and it wee ee rare s thing to get Mad ward from him, that • tom of elle. lies den ble lips would mom her lommuly to team Daily Me work of dealeakon west es. Demitasse led to Menem seed ;gradually llt. Edwards and his child oak bow and still lower le the male of comfort The plenum lama where they bed lived for =m i s gimme lip,sm sod to mall, poorly form they hid thommhse hom elmorvatioa. Aloe this change Et Ed wards moved aloes his downward way more rapidly; sande' lees ant dtinkleg Mary mew old fut. Under were lA ale ea aVisthes her mid aspidly mada el sad bee elbelions for her balm grew etteoget sad Moore. OA she malted wee ddly the dreedta sates and rldseale See &Noy et. the hotateslim by whet he wee let At lesdin she espied of bet maims, ehe mama* epos romementles This beeegla egy easy espetes. sit Mag sew le the wep of "sermw. The to shish we ham SWIM, gast 4ll = 110111011 for orgies her Asher used te soma Hew her mmoestrame wee mind be Men nee. While the peer girl oat wom bs Me distant reales of Meader Whaled the apprefosh el the Mom le whit& de bed nelbreed. Ent she owed little for it now. Herlisibit had gem eel. She had only spokes of It with the hope that he mion have been Wheel be mime MN her. New that ha wee away, the miltellem within wee em gm, le hem any 00110111111 he the leile• dela eimhowir Mehena os limbs his Mem lilillef4a vim had Set lobes may brier far three et her berm sad whose esSte Memposed liet W seemelomed w zalked sable. ly le Medleselise elf is Mem where M mealy wee lib emeeksp. o• Wet lag be limed thee then alas hole wassma• the in the ber-reama' • weals Whited set waitWly m wamle, boil Wee. t Intrust mit Idueed himself; and, his character being known,, the iumates were disposed to bare a little sport with him. now, "M o untfelld ont jum as Hdwarda tame In. " this table and make • Ant ado teraperanee speech." " Do, sod I'll treat you the ffem glass of whiskey toddy lb.. l andlor dl min," molded another. r. Or perhaps yond Ilk. h mint Julep or gin smitten better.— Aeytking you phassa. Make a erweoh and tall for the liquor. I'll mud the treat." " What d'ye say landlord ? Bhall he Irak. tho g t rpm!. 1" said another. who was *err for he ead. "I'lomo Yourselves," ronlied the land lord, "mind you'll pleats me. ' • " Very well. Now for the Blurb, old fel km I Here mount thin table.' And two or three of the most forward took hold of hi. arms. "I am not In the humor to make • imenteb," mid the tomperanee man, " but If it will please you as well, I win sing you • ming." " Give • song, then. Anything to se- , eommodate. Bat come, let us liquor first." No," said the other finely, " I most sing the song first, if I sing at all." Don't you Think your pipes will he clearer for a little drink of some kind or other ?" Perhaps they would," was replied.— " So, provided you have no objection, I'll take a glees of cold water—if mud a thing is known in this place." The glass of water was presented, and I then the me, who was somewhat advanced in years g. . , prepared to give them the prom' ed son All Hood listening attentively, Edwards among the rest. The voice of the old man was low and tremulous, yet every word wet uttered distinctly and with pathos which showed that the meaning was felt.— The following well written temperance song was the one ho sang, and while his voice ailed the room every other sound was hush ed : w Mariana the Carafe that to IRO lame.. door, As'ag .I. — kwe• IM[ aryi Wham are op. that my beats mod to elver Imta, •IM—lwn MM Friends that I loved h. thr grave ant %Id kew, live. that I cherished am from me new, I am degraded, for rem lay my fee, lea[ mg( no! Sadly my wife lamed hot beanital head— Lem. Img estt—laag, lose aim Oh, hew I wept w t hen lfoogae e a d mho arm Lad, M* ws o anenv k i —m 4— m ehe my(Md.-11:ly to araaoZan sit l btsz t h..rt„. ot • died .. Lel one look back on the daye of my youth— :w I mt. ao ag, bug ago—long. long aro. mane, • ael Oh, for the hopes that sere pan as SW toy. I. Oh, . the ppye NU won purr then tMy . °h. ("' ..14, ./Zd t 1 ” Tho silence that pervaded the room when tho old man'. voles died, or might rather be said, sobbed away, was the eilenta of death. Ilia two heart was t ooc hm, t or he wiped his oyes, from arh`odi tho tears had Matted. Pausing ww.ronly • moment, he moved &lowly &ore the room, and loft his audience to thair own reflection.. There wu not 011... of them who was not more or less effet'tedront the deepest impremion had Wm` made on tho heart of Edwards. The Song mewed ne if it had been made for him. The second MM, particularly. went limit ! ling to the Tory war* of his feelings . Midi, pay life bowed her beaalital hoed- , How soddenly avow before him the nor- row-stricken form of the wife of his youth of those words; and when the old man's voice faltered on the line— . . 'Ora. ibut i. 41.1.1 r I ths anguisb of his spirit was se great, that' be only kept himself from sobbing aloud by a strong Ant at salt sootrol. Ere tbs spit briikso, sr a ward sitarist by say one, Is *rose and haft tbs boom. For minas niter her lithe?. eleparture, May at weeping bitterly. Teoy did ea loos bar anat. but this love woo oely • •00f011 of the /11•0•14gnieb, for elte ear his swiftly rain/ g the reed to de arest* without the r wee hia. Gad wastes *elf by its ewe Ifialleee. Bo it wee I. AU *moose. The tears of *ay wore at *eh doled, her sobs ...o bashed, sod she era &bola risiag boa her thus wan • Wain dub of lightning glared into the room, followed instantly by • deefitieg pr of tantder. " Oh, if haw wen am," she autwae ed, *Wiping her bade together. Ens while .b mood in this stands, the door owned quietly eed Ur. Edward, en tered. " I thought you mead be slag btery, sodwl was haw," mid ho a had vase. Mary leas& a him I. rerprlos. This woe wan asered to Joy so she areaved tat he was sober. .011, haw etre sobbed, nue* te senteelbee adage, ad Iran her ewe en h*haw spoke-"t( you ovoid muff TeSelrtirtbe huh. any his sat resod Itie *gig ehild, sod lased her run baba& " Kay." odd he. calmly to he amid mask " ter year methat's oslor—bet amid set Ma the tutagese. Ms was gamed wed Meuse IworMoninte. Iletualy I. the ahem of bit ewe beat did the haw, a he stead ther with his AU is his was, sari as van he hid &waft aka. ARA be kept his ana Worked is as power et mw*! It ti• morms et hhe sat stme he II hesaitoef Ole s r ed gift hum ham% eud sold sew he amain • gad aim lbw" balm, bow seam , salUli W moor be row* Jump igpmaisele di ~eh Is saw Asiavhb. Woo arii yew ___ _ _____ ._......... Stbstbfir to aDelidtate, Nttgas, Marimba% AgrEtialitomr. Sktroatt. cal alEateatllng. The Dollar, ?hi hint - - - wo k ht him a Dollar. He it.elotehed it is his loos okinny doors. Uhl its sound net the bed post. and th, n gaged all it long and Wendy with his doll kaden eyes. That day, in the hoer)) of buoinem, Death had struck hick even In the street. He woo hurrying to collect the lastmonth's mat, and was on the verge of the tnimirshie mart where his tenants herded like boosts in their kennob—he was there with bank book in his hood, when Death kid his grasp; ago' him. He was carried home to his splendid OnlefioEl. He was laid upon a bed with • I satin coverlet. The Inwyer, the relations sod the pi smoker were sent for. All day long he lay without apoeoh, moving only his right ',and so though in the not of seam ing money. At midnight he spoke. He asked for&dollar and they brought ' It to him, and leen and pant he eat op in his death.botl, and clutched it with the grip of death. A shaded lamp stood on • table near the Isilken bed. Its dim light fell faintly around the splendid room, where chair., and oaf pets, and mirror., silken bed and lofty coil ling, all said Gold! u plainly as boson lips ean say it. His hair and eyebrows were white. His cheeks sunken, and h el ips thin and Bur- I rounded by wrinkles that indicated the pas- Ann of Avarice. As he sat op in his bed with his neck bared, and the silken cover -Ist wrapped about his lean frame, his while hair and eyebrow. *entreated with his muted and wrinkled hum be looked like • ghoe• And there was life in his leaden' eye—all that lifeless centred on the Dollar' which he gripped in his elenclied let. Ilis wife, • pleasant-faced, matronly wo men, was mated at the foot of the bed. /fie son,. young man of twenty-one, deem ed In the last tomb of hellion, not by the lawyer. The lawyer mat before the table, pen in hand, and gold emooteeles upon his nese. There was • Imp parchment spread before " Doyoe think he'll make a will ?" asked the a0n..0, " Heftily carmine wogsyet," was the whispered reply. Walt. He'll be timid after a while." •• My dear," mid the wife, . Hod no I bettor mod fora preacher ?" Sim rose ad took bur dying husband by the hand, but be did not mind. His eye Iran upon the Dollar. i a He V . a ro 11 . : :Olt linuesttot eilt:eo7cnedandiherel: n l . 59T t .f. in Akt porkirti, He bad iron in Cationic His name was bright upon the revery of lonely hook.; ho armed Mock !d all kinds ; be hod hada dozen pa pmc in his pay. Ha keen but one edam—to be in debt without the power to tee. He knew bat one rinse—to get stoney. That crime be had never forgiven—the virtue he had never forgotten, in the long way of thirty-go years. Tibnot down • debtor, to dietrese • tenant, to tom • few addition.' tbousa•de by a •harp •peoulaiion—thew were the mafe whieveme•to of Mel& He was • good sun—his name was upon • silver plate opus the pew door of • velvet cushioned shush, He war i bwouslont man—for um thousand dollars that ho urn from lb* iffllllllllll of his snorts or Dna As dlobtors, who writhed bough his Usk he p.. tan dollars to some bouvolsra institution. Ho was a jut awn—tbo Gallows mid the Jan away. found in him a faithful sad I ounswerlas denote. And low Ito Is a Arlan Man—on ! As ho sits %mu the bed of daatla with tha Dollar in hi. dueled hand. 0! holy Dollar, object of his lifo•loop permit, what swami hest thee for him now it, hi i s ithia of death 7 At lm the re dyios awe revived led die . Wed Wm M. It ass Waage to the the mother and son cod lairm thattoclop—nod sometimes Irnteplhaft—thtclde that led of death. AU theirldS the Testator eletebed the Dollar la hie-right band. While the Will vthe hal _that* We Preather esthe—ethe be who M W the par Orel ahem' of the great ehereb, wheth few doors hare saintly same oe diver plates, sad whose male on Sabbath de premed beneath the weight of rmpmettbiity, broad cloth sod satin. Ho arl. sad said tacyas—doisareas- I LI dm " tin saaa Ida: lila hold of lb. t -- ;iiitiet iris rood no som lo mlitog, siiy— qMoti, don' me T. aog r et looph mid tho viii= poi trushor Mettoosil took tinned IM TM prombor, TIM* Irma ma of am libitiot. took • book Oho olooNtoos o mutat id& Ad M nod x "Ad I iusy unto pm It is Prim mad to go arm& tM opt of • molls, Am dm • risk tom to oritor loto Os Hier don ot GeV Who rld ems wordo—wits—who— obo Way shridied tb. dpiti moo. obit- Hog do WM Welk Ameba the Dollar, at tile protodoeo Mai TM prosier lewdly brood ever. lb. We sod did mid nody. Whydldl.M.rNil me ot des M. Ise I Mil /WI pot osco on I ..tto poor Morel r TM rioallair Moot if* Nowa otr maw loot. Ilmt . dlidd qMq lio; omoi ot Nogg milk Om IN lila am to .Not No Itioeln d NA bolOl-4Nok NOW, to toospo d moot Aso I sot NA Who ho alstir sem, Mb eld I stet **we 1141 yo* dip Illorlos 'rig poositoll to se,' land never aid one word about the camel. Not a word about the camel." The preacher, in search of a oonuding Forage, turned rapidly over the Inn!, and hi* confusion, came to this passage, which he read : •• Go to, now, ye rich men, weep and howl, for your miseries that shall mane up on you. Your gold sad silver is eankered and the rust of them shall be a witness . sgsinet ou ; and shall eat your fleeh it wi s h fir e;; ye have heaped treasure togeth as I er for the lest days. Behold the hire of the laborers who have reaped down your field., which in of you kept bock by fraud, icrieth ; and the cries of th em which have reaped are entered into the as of the Lord of &beoth." •• And yet you never preached that to I me!" ehneked the dying man. The preacher, who had blundered awe' the plumage from Jame, which we have quoted, knew not what to ley. lie was (perchance terrified by the very look of hie dying parishioner. Then the wiredraw near and strove to °mean him, and the eon (who had been reading the Will,) attempted • word or two of consolation But with the Dollar In bis hand be sank into death, talking of stock, of rent, ere.- per mi. and camel, of tenant and of debt. or, until the breath left his lips. Thee ho died. When he wad cold the preacher rose dad asked the lawyer whether the dammed had left anything to such and sueh • charitable society, which had Item engrafted upon the preached's church. And the wife cloud his eyes, and tried to wrench the Dollar from his bend, but In vein. He clutched it as though it were the only saviour to light him through the dark.. of eternity. And the son eat down with dry eyes and the% of the hundreds of thousands which were now hie own. Neat day there was a hawse followed by a train of carriages nearly r mile in length. There was a crowd around sn opengra re. and as legant sermon apo r time rirtaes of the deeeaed by the pn~chh~a There wee fluttering of amps badges, and rolling of carriage., and—no team. They left the dead teen and returned to the pal see, where sorrow died even as the crape was taken from the door knob. • And in the grave the dead had still elenehed the Donnas. TWO IN A WHO. Nod and Charley were two room-mates, hut they occupied different bade. Ned's sleeping apparetus we. so situated, that be could get In at either aide—that is to say. Can night Ned a Charley had heen out, and an retinal g, which they dW new morning, both were wonaiderably elevated.' However, they walked up to ...their room with an sir which seemed to my, " Not so very danced drunk after all," and sought long and patiently for tuateltes and a bump. After knocking the pitcher of the wash mend, and smaahlog the looklogilass, they finally gave op the search and went to bed. Went to bed, —yes, that'll the word, but owing to the darkumw, and the slight son (lotion of their senses, they made a slight mistake. In short, Neff. bed had the hon or of reediting the two Monde—Charley Wang in one side, and his omapanion roll leg in on the other. I my, Ned," ended Chuley, tooehing masebody's elf, "than'. • follow in my bed." Wonderful rtoimaidenee l" eselakeed Ned, feeling • strange elbow fo tb. neon of bk ribs, *. then's eornebody in my bed, tee l" "I. there, Omagh retied Morley ;•• let's kiosk thew out I" "Agreed " add Ned. And seeLnlingly the two Meads beput to kiek. It lasted about • minute and • half—Nod was sprawling to the door— charley u left in possession of the bed. Pat • nolimmt aftergbe fall, all was silent. " I say,Ned," erfal Charley. " hot Milted Ned, sulkil. ry. kicked my fellow oat." "You're • *nay Night leakier than I an, then," mid Ned, " far sine has kieked es oat." A Bsoar &roar av Dvesans—Dlok. owl tang the Mowleg story or as Amad eu mos esptele On Ws lad voyap bons, dm: bad co baud a yowl' lady or nr rk =tstasetioss—s Oran I see on we ardy now, sad one you Myer owl, with in the newspepon. Thin young Wily was beloved Inteasely by eve prang gen thots l ooo mfon , sod la to% de WY in love with the all soy ardeatly, bet wish ost pude:lke podowaro to either.— Not kowtow bow to solo hp tor dew:W. nodes Is thin dllsonert old dossitod 15 7 Mod the mph*. ,Ths :odd* Wog • W ilea elload bead ads& rusted' yesas lady, ...how lowbosed, sal worry the woo who pope tem yoa."--The cat lady, shred with the ides and be wowed, had at bathing, wwwially is warm weather, se It don was took the ad vise d tiweantale, who had &boat @Assay nomad le ewe et welded. seat osocalag, tholes hoed Wises Wok ood-lodiZ i , r o% l y dents* e dos yeurne hay, Oho We do ass hail aort. moot if Ws lowa loaarusedy jeered Is odor Mr. Rhos do yam Is al. :Zola laws gen dot ad mi. sogi oarialw " solar es wid blows dory ow sa war Boys do Tabs doy Ihe mai ydii, sal elavid /be epilog eetseilhilie 91.1118,0001 es wsk =1 emerleas bee the _le I MIR (ma savaty-sts firm) bora est mom FOURTH OF JULY! '''lNF` Declaration of Independence. Wiles, in the attun of Inan events, becomes necessary for e onepeople to die sola., the political bands which bare son- j inected them with another, and to assume,' among the powers of the earth, the sepe- I rate and equal station to which the lawn of! Inature and of etature'• Clod entitle them, docent relipett to the pinions of mankind j 'requires that they should declare the emu en which impel them to the separation. I We bold these truths to bo self-evident., I that all men are created equal; that they jore endowed by their Creator with carted° unalieneble rights ; that moon these are, Nte, liberty, and the pursuit of happinees. That, to enure these rights, governments, are instituted among men, deriving their! juet powers from the consent of the gun erned ; and that, whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the tight of the people to alter or abolish it, and to institute a new govern ment, laying its foundations on noel. prin ciples, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness Pru donee, indeed,will dictate that genre- ! meets, bog oatabliehed, should not be! changed for light and transient causes; ' and accordingly, all expetiettee bath thOWII, that mankind are more disposed to suffer; while evils are enterable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to labia , they are eecustomed7 But, when a long I train of shone, and usurpations, pureeing' invariably the same object, evince, • du- I sign to Sdeeo them under garnets des- I Taoism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off each government, and to provide new guards for their future Amity.— Such to. been the patient earnings of theta colonian, and snob is now the named ty which eonetraielleshom to alter their for mer velem of government. The history of the Komi king of Bred Britain is a history of repeated injuries and Aurae/kale, all having, in direct object, the Atablish meet of an absolute tyranny over these state.. Tu prove this, let facts he mob mittal to a candid world, . , Hs has refused his assent to Inws the most wholesome and necerwara for on unless suspended in their operation:lll his anent should La obtained; and, when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them. Be has refused to pass ether laws for the accommodation of tarp distriote of people, unless those people would main . qmsh the right of representation in the legialature ; a right inestimable to them nod formidable to tyrants only. Aa hae culled together legislative bodies at plasm unusual, uncomfortable, sad Co unt from the repository of their public records, for the sole pimp.e of fatiguing them into aomplianee with his measures. He has dissolved representative houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly Bent- DPW, hie invasion on the right's of the po- He has refused, for a lung time after Pah dissolutions, to come others to be elected; whmeby the legislative powers, incapable of annihilation, have retorted to the people at loge for their exercise; the state remaining, is the mean time. exposed to all the dangers of invasioo from without, and eouvubdone He has ondemored to present the popu lation of them , Males; for that purpose, ohotmetieg the laws of naturalisation of tondgaem, raising to pans others to en mums their migration thither, and rah tog the oonditione of new appropriations of hods. He has obstrustod the administration of justice, byealbsieg his assent to Owe for establishing judiciary powers. He has made judges dependent on his mill aloes, for the tenure of their Mises, and the amount and payment of their valo rise. H. has emoted • multitude of new offi ces, sad seat hither swarms of officers to ham* ear poop* and eat out Moir soh- MOM. He bee kept among es fo time of pow, humanmeta, without the sosuret of ow leateletures, He hes sleeted to roomier the toilitory ladepesdeet of, sod superior to, the eta He Ms seettised. with Wien, to Y to • jetiedietiou b air Om sod sue by our lewm; "iv ies his muse le rte et pistestlei V ilm qu . srlorteg Iry band Of erred imps smug nu Yoe reotoodig Awe, by a nook ithlL tress seehitseet he any sterdess tato they Aoold essmit ea the labehissete of Huss statm Yee ausleg of cm Hods Mb ell pots ONO *NHL Par bramillas Napo as es wilbsal for Pet/. I. lar ay ray way at the Mods held jury. Par Ea bared era Is be, Wei bp alma i a lt o iii • go lbs• figl4 . l , : m t :a l lbw* Ts a r it r U' aa bau rr " " ' " i. " a; istrobit e r bra alualata role Me War tails may awe abaft* able& ing our moat valuable law., and altering, fundamentally, the forms of our govern ments: For suspending our owe legidakures,and: declaring themselves Invested with power to legislate for IN in all Casts whatsoever. He has abdicated government here, by deelarinit; ri tiut of his protection, and wa ging He wa net us. has p under. our sees, ravaged our coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people. He is, at arts time transporting large armies of foreign merosnarim to eon:pieta the work. of death, desolation, and tynin• j nv, already begun, with circumeances of cruelty and perfidy scarcely paralleled in the moat barbarous ages, and totally un worthy the hand of a civilized nation. I Ho has constrained our fellow-citizens, itaken eoptive on the high soak to bear 1 arms maned their country, to become the lexamitionets of their friends and brethren, it, to fall themselves by their hands. Ile has ezeiteu &mouth: insurrections amongst as, and ha, endeavored to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the !merciless Indian savages, whore known role •if warfare is on undistinguished de- striletioh of all ages, sexes, and conditions. In every stage of them oppression., we ' ,hase petitioned for redrew in the moat : i humble terms Our repeated petitions have been ,',.woad only by repeated lulu- ry.prince, whose character is time marked by every ad which may dell. a tyrant, is unfit to be tho ruler of a free people.. ot have we been wanting in on ,to o ur British brethren. an We hen wa atten rntied them. from time to time, of the attempt. . by their legislature, to extend an unwar rantable jurisdiction one an. We have reminded thetai of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have , appealed to their entire Pittive and mag nanimity, and we have conjured them, by the ties of our common kindred, to din vow these usurpation, which would inev itably interrupt our connections and corre spondence. They, ton, here hen deaf to the voice of joetiee and of consanguinity We most, therefore, acquiesce in the ne cessity which denouncers our separation and hold them es we hold the rest of mankind, enemies in war, in peace, friends. We, therefore, the Reprementatives of the United States of Antenna, in General Congress assembled, appealing to the tht. preme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the onto and by the authority of the good people of these colonies, nolenndy publish add declare that - connection between them and the autof Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved; and that, ae free and indepen dent States, they have full power to levy war, conclude poses, contract alliances, es ! tablish commerce, and to do all other acts and thing. which independent Staten may of right do. And, for the support of this declaration, with a firm reliant:le on the pro teed. of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to ouch other our lives, our fortunes, nod our sacred boner. To complete • direct Wl* of railroad communication between Boulogne and Ven ice: and Aneone, and, consequently, between London end the Adriatic, one only, obsta cle lime in the way. The °Lain of Monte Coal and Monte Bebevre, would ernes , mach • line, and preeent, with their glove ' tion of 11,000 feet an insurmountable bar to any direct and continuous railway.— From London, as far as Uhambory, by the Lyons railroad, all is smooth enough : nay that rail la about to push further, amending to Moot Meilland and Bt. Maurienne, and by an ulterior effort, it will reach higher, as far as Modena. * But onee there, farther progress in ar rotted, and no train non hope to reach the. Iltalian aide to Sam and Taub?. unless a oubtorranoma paeans he 'domed through the snow dapped barrier. Stroh • problem boa boon actually made under the eonaid *nation of the Sardinian Government sineo August, 1145. Tine pomibility of baring throe/eh Mount Comore, and of linking Chambery with Sum, north and South of that maim, it • deommetrated truth. The great I of tho Alpo is about to bo oms*. malty, under the novice. of Victor Ilmaauel and the Piedmontem Parliament. The author of thin gigantic scheme is Chevalier Henry Mau, Honorary Inspeo ter of the Genie COOL After liva yams of iheament etody of this qumtion, Baia of leer mad* hie Anal report to the Govern- anent OR the lth of February, 1849. A Commission woe thereupon nomad on the 18th of July, 1140, to !moraine mad gwn their opinion on the mature and fent bat, of Chevalier projeet. Thad Nmaila oit the Ist of Nov. lam, deei dd seisinieUfy and entirely in favor of lb. project, An opplieitton for the pert of tbelmuld repaired to banal. the great Wised will ho mode In the Chambers forth with, awl the work, whieh it is _oupeoted will soupy low jean, wM amt 14,900,000 C Th• great towel itself will umeoura.l2,29o I mine, er adm= nearly iron English Whom in 1 h watrar eel l of Tft li A g ile* of rell. Zkvois vele. wboshomvur, obe in ill alum everboll to OWN , 84 appears lis soft aft lady a- , Whom 1.4 414144 be .rah.. Lar` 1 sais. 14 levied in* alho* bet oftlimal Mestir :Wen' ono mosb,sod Nes prhod in 4 tb• tones .11446* 1444 loursed• abs riabig ing. jar Dli yes wier Ism • 'elm lad 011 essibet phrbersie• a.. 011111111 if Tit Ala. If all that hes meetly twee mid of the diaiontry, by Mr. Reny 11. Paine, of the demespositioe of wMar, and the pnolu“ oleo inftrantable gm, that is nee and sa pull nity weave! mid see be applied to domes tie mu be true, thee this must attain par eminence the rank we habit &Wined it at the head Otitis 'rink A couple of n itence of thht city, a few daje sinee, g ad_ deemed • letter to Mr. Paine, making in quiries. the subject of this pat. In reply, he, with numb counesy, invited them to come to Worcester, when he would he hap py to ;Mow it. operation, and give them any information they might &Me. On Thursday treeing, these gentlemen risityd Worcester ; end their report is that they were well mpald for their journey. They learnt from Mr. Paine that be had dieroweil of the right to lAN Li. invention in the C. E. toparties of gentlemen pat Boston and New York. Ho we. very eourteints, sod Any° the gentlemen all the informatioe he could, without infringing on the right of the now proprietor.. A fortnight nine. ho would have been Ideated to have shown the entire instrument but as the matter now Mande, be did not feel at liberty to show it. We undersmed that mops have been taken to neurepatente in Europe; and when seethed, the right of um will be offered for ale .t a eon Maio the means of all. Mr. decomposing d w o a es e r, o w c h la icimh the edhnony of Oft yensa new lout he doe. nein the dloovery ofprinciple of eleotsieity, Ey which the decomp,wition of water is eery rapidly produced, end at • mere nominal oom. An hour was spent iu hearing him discourse upon the subject, and if all ho Maim. for the diacovery is verified it omelet fail to revolutionise many &meningitis of modern Commerce. To two the meat dame., m ;clear that the faintest tint, 4 blue and green eau ho readily distinguished, and of seal. a quality, that the eye is um pained in gating en it, certainly speak. tall for the impel iority of the light. It burn. with an Oven mid s h ady consumption, about one *ebbs foot in the to four honer, maiden/ to light a oommon-prod room. Than is no emelt or smoke in the pc The demob. o paque, .and the power oldie jet tremendous. During the last wiater, Mr. Paine erected a light-holm upon • ME in front of his house, from which he direeted the rays, by • redector, to a village opposite Worcester one mile and • sixth diateet in an ;sir line. the light was ea powerful, that persons iu the village could read by H. Another illustration of the eltaracter of thin light is in the fact, that an excellent Daguerreotype has hewn taken by it. Mr. Pane exhibited the move, which warmed hi. MM. it i• about 14 lochs. in diameter, composed of Iwo circular ;dome of *heat iron, beam*a which a game hump, and sold air ruahing in, it give. forth a moss delightful heat. The ego*. may lie used for crookiag, media fact for all purposes whore heat and light are required. the I entire Jabor required to make • day'. sop. ply of gas for a common dwelling hones dean not occupy two minutes in turning a emelt ; and the machine takes up 'about ea Muth ... ~. . . most completely annihilate.. Thin is nos supposition; we taw the lights, followed I the pipes to the cellar and taw the tippers , tot employed for the deeemposition of the water; and must say we cm hardly IS words to express our Winds/ meat at the simplicity of the mediae, when et the same time we think of the greaten* bed grandeur of t h e discovery. Ti, mitt Moir, if not above certainly equal, with the greet - ett dieoveries tied Invitations of the sp.— Wood and teal, slid lamed field, tug ell be dispensed with, by the he. of Mr. Mee, tpparatim. Mr. Murrilt further mos : ..Twit jets, such as were burning is his house would int t l sivir\ tufficieet to light a emigrate sisal so ery eight, et an tapesse of the in en the root of the amehine, (about, ode o par annum) with only the little Mehl& emotionally filling the water otters." It is understood that Mr. Paine bat dis posed of his property right to his &mitt, for a stun Which in first my mein Iniredi . hie; but a moment's oopelderation will .her that the minimisers will have got 1 good bargain if all that Ii wild of ate espabilitles and cheapness of the fight man be attildlek. od. The terms of Immolate It. reported to . 'be five millions of dollars—half a Manion down. Mr. Palos is st.otheg • Alit floes the eonnoittee on gas of our atty. 'assessment at Worsens. to-day, to look into this out. tor —Boston pelting Trourcript. Sierra O'llatme, race Intim Parater.— The Dablin Natio.," of the list Dm ea* gm Diemen in the mom earnest terms to interfere by remonstrance and time dm life of Smith O'Brien. who, according to that m r d is a slowly murdered at Mateofend . Cruelties as .— maet terrible—ermities which It maddens to thigh of; end Amite Ito mention—eta Initiated on thi. detente less man by the executioner of Nitta .Mn. ranee. Ile Is Modill the cloned Wk., wr. dnement. His food is musty and loathsome.. U. has no manfort, she ettendenen. lie attar meet the few, our bears the rake of (dumb lie he deeded die memo. "t -itillates of dowse,. 'or moieties be lam not bete allowed • she* of mime, or permitted to abase his*lms. This win be mastimaid, ditputed, Alba Hewed. No weeder; for it is monernas tad Inermilbk. list we wile eery atilt ' I& of it ea the maim* of one as Imam. hl. of feisehood or enuerathill all at mu - ,ler. is is lb. Stwul well,. Ie soliteds. le pries** is slth. In rap, liris this lAA putisesa—nhis molds woes —who lest liberty. her. fswil,y,—sli—be Wood. We beer, Weed, adds We raw ded the Osseo of Ileplesd emus eipbk issiwer—Mr (or evade. Nes wiesasehe lwe fie s peeled slaver. Ike ye were bee eel ide Ilielebem lied is esseW es die wee See es 1.1 . p wide &Who Is Ass toetared sad ed. is may, 'Wens she Pus h W some Is shoe; bred Is her sors, as a wriedludon—se san d shall his blood be awed Is has hoe.— nil means ire wilt see NM&