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',. ..'"!'. ~, •-',:. ' ' - ' 'IJ ::, •..• .V. • - . i ~ ... ' . .;':: :‘,•. - , • ' ' - - ••• 0 \ , ; 7. ,„ ;; , ,. :_ . .-: : ''';.,,: '. '• *4 , _ , .', . ' ,‘ . • ',. , ;,...... - „.... %, • ' , l ('''''' ' ' '.- 4: , 41••• • ..• -. • ::::- '...,:.,. .. , , , 4..- , .. ....,. - :-.,,ka i .... .. /,.-.- , 4 -.-: -,-, 0 4_ -... .49 •-..:.i.-.,.. .;- ..:- 4 * •'-4 ' 1 . ,'''•-•- , . . ... . . . ...... _ S. B. itiE, il, cpsg, _PROPftIETOIieS IntrAU. Zoe the DeMOCTIIt. 111 Think of Thee." TO C. W. W. li think of tHee, friend. when the dews of the mor- ning, Like dierocade, are gleaming from leaflet and • When the ;TIM of Beauty comes forth with the dawning, • liesth her sway I will - yield me to Memnry's power; The fat:stain of pleas= and sadness unsealing 0, 'Lie bliss that nein satiates—a banquet of feel- I'll think or thee too, when the day-light is wan. ing, And sheds its last glory over woodland and hill ; Then silence profound over nature is reigning, - Sane the sigh of the brceze, or the streamiets low•triU; rhea the take's crystal mirror, in moon-light is beaming, And a thonsand bright tamps from its bosom are I n clouds and in smdight, in mirth and in sadness, • %Thu Fancy lives over thtqoys of the past; Thee nlusic as...shams wild thrill of gladness Till its tones cesseto charm, shall thy memory hat, Thal image shall float In the nights brightest via- lii lilt to thy ton: amid-'sbadows Ely sign. ad aft as II welcome the'Sabbath's returning, Or jelowith the throngin the temple of prayer, aKlfwill he near, to the spirit's discerning ; A: in days that are gone,i. will meet with thee. - there. Thyrune w:tiPthe sauce. of Gobi 'will e'er blend, apt then live for Ifni glory—His honor defend verb= in Zion, 0, ne'er be found sleep. -mg, tamid the alarm .when the toe draweth nigh— !tray cot , thetrust Maven yields to thy keeping, raldttr, be ready to "conquer or die," • vehet, sod triumph—o'er Error victorious, rep dratit ina contrat so noble, is glorious. .t 1 now, may 1. ask, %rhea curtain is closes, And thy heart and thy voice are aplifted in prayer, or the watch-care of Heaven, while Nature re- poses, At Go she at Grate,—voil L thou think or Me ' 6en aud there let the ferreat petition'ariae, 'bee tramported from earth, we may meet Mil* skin. KATE'. July, 1851. Ildsrm:on, ET 11. ti"). LONGFELLOW The rising ninon has hid the sines Her level tarn, like golden bars Liesn the lond;cape green, With shadows brown between And sileer white the ricer gleanni, 4 As if Diana in her dreams, Math drop! her silvet bow - Upon the meadows low. Oalnich a tranquil night ne !hi; • She wake Endymion with a kis; When sleeping iu the grove, He dreamed not of her lose. LlieDianti's hies, rounshed, unsought, Lore gives iteelf, hut it is bought, No voice, nor sound betrays Its deep, impassion e d gaze. 'lt comes—the beautiful, the ftee• The crown et all humanity— - In eilenee and alone To seek the elected one. nth& the boughs, %Anse shadows deep, Are life's obtiripu,lhe soul's sleep, Aud hissesthe closid,eyes Of hini who slumbering 0, isear7 hearts! 0, slumbering eye, ! 0, drooping souls, whose destinies • Are fraught is_ith fear arid pairis Ye:shall be loved again: Fe cot oo accinted by fates 0ne,1.3 utterly dcsolttEr Eta Bzne heart, though unktipmf r Reopoodo unto 64 own. • • Re 6 7 6 nds—as if with unseen c,inge, Au asg4 touched its quivering stringti ; And whispers, in its song, "Where low thou strayed so longs". _ . • 'e eehesl . I .4. l **The: velvet moss will grow on the te bm re eks the mistletoe flourishes on the naked in% , the ivy clings to the mouldering the pine and cedar remain fresh and ee,u amid the mutations of the receding Y e r , end, Heave n be praised ! something green 'teerlitt; btnatiful to see, and gratefpl to the ! ° 9 l ttelli, in the daliest boar of tate, 'still 4.111 e iti tendrils tend the crumbling altari td broke_arehes f the desolate temples of. t4.i9inali heart! • • ktat Rtcnr.—' Ah ! geed, fellow, where lave von been for a week "busk?' `Fors a tack back ! I have not baen-trottbled_ win a well tQcI.,I thank you: • No, ne. where have 'ou been long Back r `. 1 .447. hack! _don't 3 call me Jong 1144 k; 14/ tountleel.' desire 1194firriaffeen deSaid:43k. %Prodigal on Ilieleirrif a P UI I" 14 , 11 49 gems meg womate• boa.rd• . EIaCBI I IAS7I. A FRAGMENT, ET LIEUT. ROBERT CLAT 4oGins, 11. S. . Pepita is a dear iemobbrande even now.-- No new face, or tie of friendship; or change of seene,, havothrot her ipieture from the bests plate in memory; to ode of its oitit. .lumber-1 galleries; where ate sttired - odds and ends, only forgotten. No, no. . Thrice no. I keep her portrait in the most accessible me naory.smit, whefe.tiftentimes.l. go to anise ever her and the strange mks that broughOm to-1 tether. You Cannot see heel with .my vision, deaf teader,-Would that yoti.couldl—zas it is, youiook-at her in - shadow' - only—an a' half I night For %Oen could the Mostartistk phia- I seam- describe animated things, which are indesmibable—living life with its Wondrous energy .and expression!' Words are dead thiags in any hands; and as shadow differs from s.ubstante,' so - does :language from the Real it would figure. . • . Yet ; l'epita should be painted here, what though Life shames the coldi ColoiS the . artist' must use! It may be, one lucky brush-line,l one happy exprosioh. give a..semblancej As sleep is life, yet life half in death; so,shad owyriiiin, and vague,is word-matter that would.l -,. slut*. out the actual. I- P epita hadjusi . tuTed sixteen when knew ;h n_ era age in her' Milne. that develops the perfect woman.. GirlhoMlirdd-well-nigh gone —the spring iose that,- had Nil f-bint . though a simmer's sun was oVer: it growth was well high complete, and'she had 'burst forth, opening in the full iloWeri and - .similar. indeed to a slender-sternirredjilywas she. -She was a dirninutive—and - diminutive irk Abe Spanish ever nonveys the idea of tender,—yet in her diminutiveness what grace and beauty I Het eves were blnek, Mrci so were the overhanging hishes. In their luminous depths there Was a. strange fascination such- as . never had seen hekre,. They were bright coruscating ever; yet soft and ; drearoy orbs canbe, end in that dreaminess taytheir glory.' The iris find that strange property of dilation -iand -contraction] which gives tf.) eyes a meaning and a' mystery j —a-something' that shadows, visibly the un seen: Her mouth 'Was fike arose-lipped s:,ell thdt one :mu/writhes lincli oh Pacific Island ; shores, and-her voice was lnWand clear and sweet—almost a sibilation.ittl its commonut terance. And In 'ln oon-lighted nights:in the great Pla za of the of Alexico, hoe I henid its: soft intonations in the pauses 'oflmmic from the band near--whispering in plaintive minor the Smooth liquids and deep vowels of the Castil , ian tongue- 7 , - Pcpita banging en my arm reba-1 zo-wrapped, unbonneted, as Mexican maidens i i always are ; her . blnek braided hair in a halo ! 1 tamest in the sheen of Pm soft moon -rats;-•-- I I and those nights,are ever to -lie remembered. IThe Grand Plata is the night-resort. fo'r nil , classes at the capital., On its east - Side stretch- I ies the Palace, its hundred windows throwing I' out light from the chandalierslwithin ; opposite I is the Port I Portal with its columns and arches and !co nfeetfoners' shops ; and on the right the ca- i 1 thedral with its great domes-f-dark as darkeSt ; I night, its deep niches wherein:, stood figures of I mitred priest and eroziered Saint;—the pro-' 1 jeering corbels; the heavily-enwrought win- I I dews and the massive mouldings: • ' i I, It was there that Prpita ' and I have often I ! wandered—when I would tell', her of My far- I an distt home, my past history,and together we I would ponder on-the future-I-Wondering if tare' I present fate that frowned over km like a thun- I I der-cloud, was to continue dark and end in I i complete faothingoess ' • .: ; Bright and joyous hi the terhilia, Or evening 1 party, W .as soul-eyed Pepita.L Thrcuiza the' 1 mates °rifle \fordradanze she: went, flashing like a sunbeam in that silver star-spangled dress I so well remember; White from her I shetildefdrooped the deeri-frinered rebozo, that floated, gossamer-like, -behind; and the light foot-falls went hand in hand' With the guitar harmony-,--in perfect measlurand surround- Mg eyes showered soft praisesimiles over her ilithe and graceful..figure. -- ; : I i, Now fot a surprise -eninipassionate . feader.— I Did you, think I 1111$1 hymning' a creature off my own lore? Of Iny Jove, yesl—but of' mine less limn that of ;mother. She wrote words of hope and aireetion and remembrance; 1 itl my heart-book—ilitiminated words that. ill:, I - remain bright and undimmed through all year - 44 :—Snch a record, thhugh, :IS ;_a 'au*: would write; and as only such Wal.Slie to me; — Net see had a loser—art officer, ii, gallant fellow, I very =dike most of his Countrymen. liowit 'was that 1, becanie'dearenough to lief for such heart-revealings as she made ;to.-awe .of Don • Carlos, my modesty permits not a relation. I had done ldni-a service, and 110 'flare -it be- I comes me' to add, and it is not. strange .that I beautytand tendernesi mid sensibility like her's i shooldffind an 4idruirer, and that She Should he giateful to me That I had steed . .between her: admirer and - peril-,'PerlhapS liregretted - I Was i a fordigner—aye,trorse--an enemy over whom .swooped it destiny, seetningiyjnexorable; like the old Greek Fatalism. . And this very inci dent, WS. Undommonness: of - ,'event, together i with the - ftfe-serriee ` done her loser, broke I down all cionventional cored and phrase, ,and I made as soon ' ' .-:• '' . - ' ' ' . . "Kin as fiorso 4 s ear and eye?' have-thui introduced - only-the common sight of two :lovers—not home, ones, to: be sure, but of another elime,,and iri`the midstof terrible and extraordinary °venter; and because I they were scdanger;girded and foreigia,. la, I think, of greater attnietivenesS than if they had been of us—even at the -Echool.times - of any of us, attaining maturity, witlaus.:: Yet I have -A sequel tliatislratight melancholy "end ing in -sadness. -' . Three months after' had,filst met.Fieptai:/ : I.was again. with my,cou ntrytnen, and- out of the hands of any eat}tors, l- • •• Alt - of us linoW,ile ifory.'of.:..the , l , ctunpaign 1 . in the valley of Mexico;:. :But that, campaign evoked' :many individual :.hetolstri „that history,,eliich only deals of the aggreifitte,Will never notice and which nianyitonxted "rumor.' ; even, has doubly : poised over.?, Voiceless and: dead tie they.as nionyot-th& . )enter than - Monumental marble . ; 'hat then arliiebalionld immortalisprings,not scibigh as the flowers, that wave in the .otooning, wind , Ott the graves 'of the gallant Men left . ' Mexico. And for obscirity end 'death Slur* turtbed forever in A:strange- 140 ; web t - teatiy A chistilreneleart fromwife: land :mother":—. --Glory. which , elitud.eaetlel . wer ,Op in the oks , . or ::beautiful woven . YY.faitOi was stronger thatfhime-lOye and liettie,hoPex - sand eager - mind that :dared; .4544114 t, rie,rispes,of than Who ,felt ware bleat with *An' kle 4:44' calledti leer. 11,0$11•ei UlegaT9s Nem o , MatiTZNIZZ ellgTeZtgetiltl ATOZTC anV gZovrit(C.q land ihen men preached morals.from it, radio the ithldier's r 'guerilori. - • Yet, - Oh, People of American! that campaign was crimplete heroism. Every 'foth.fall over those high mountains and' the green-spread Valley; brought your,brothcrs nearer to: death, - and every'footrfall *as a hero's: 'Who knows their names ?' I Who 'that drag; up front oblivi on, deader than death itself, the title:et nnyl If, by chance, there is-one, it is Writ'as small end hung as high:as ,Nero'.' tablets, that no tnan'could read:. Centreras,,Churnhusco, ke line ad Rey, Chapultcpee; and Mexico, ; are cynothires for . posterity÷-brave lessons for fu ture readingsto those who lisp infancy now, and all who ate : to he., Heaven rest the souls: I of,those,who upreared with their bodies 'such monuments as make our country groat and rcH eoWned! . - • • • On the - evening, of tne- 13th • of. kleptembei, I our arms that had been engagthr - sinde early' morn, laid down to rest. Death and desolation ; Were orthilul,,hut the, exhausted' soldier forgot all in his drealtha. On the morrow 'it was known; that- tik last bi6w Would - tie struck 'that would girt us the city. that lay . quiet fore ns hushed ia:the quiet- Moon light,, That morrow came, and after a desul-1 tury warfare froth street to ;street, and house- i top to bonsn.top, our flag went up over the! -Palace, amidst thousands of huzzasiand thesl the goal was wen. That.-same eveninga mes-1 sage came to me that Perya, was sick and dy- t ing,'and wished-t 6 see' me. went to her house. It was near the Pas -1 j c,o r where, the day before ; was suelt . h scene of carnage and death. , :Now thel'o was no flut.! terino• mantilla from lite Baryon ribee, _as in times gone—nO tender eyes of welcome turn- 1 ted 'down tome as I-entered - the well-remem bered Sala, but all ‘Vas quiet and melancholy, and gloomily prophetic. I ; 11 - er_rnothernet mo-at the door, and in al few words told me that during.the conflict of I the previous day, Pepita had been near her I •i lover most of: the tithe.- During the noon when the American forces hail tnedethe attack oh the 6mi11:4 San Eden, the same ball ;. that sped_Don,Carlcis to ‘ Dcath,, wounded • Pc-1 She Was• brought home lir' some eoin-'i mit - erating, soldiers, and lier"medical attendant I bed said that she was beyond - recovery, . She Wished to see me ere' Vie died. • I passed within the'room end sat rattle bed- side where lay the Pciala of many a 'moon-lit. Walk—many a gay , tertutia 7 -yet so won and. i'weary, and deeth-ereibiteed new! She looked tat me intently, Some tears' gatheredlo the eye, bht there vas: no-utterance from the lip - which.' i I struggling With voiceless feeling: • Her I heir was loose and lay in: ends :6:int ;the pit-. 1 !Ow and half hid her Thee, and that face was ipale and thin, and more beautiful thlin . everH i for I Saw On it.that hole - light ,which • heaved , i sometimes - lends to the'dying: Sad sightit isl ! see on young cheeps that languor wbich is the sure presage of the death-coldness no love warmth can.chase. away. ,It appears hard to-. hide away in earth the grace • and charm of I youtio. fife, and I wondered then at the myste: rious - Providenee that could . give . such beautil to reft it away so soon:. The arm that tau stretched outside the Sheet was raised and laid on mine=l took her hand and leaned ever it in voiceless sorrow; The mother at first stood at the bed's foot and then came nearer and kneeled • down—hiding the tears Jhat,Were on her cheeks in. the hair that lay robe-like near. "It is well nigh orer-4 Shall go soon,"— and Pepita's voice, as she saidlitis, was trem ulous, but eiear, low-toned - and inexpressibly plaintive.could . not reply—l: only looked with teal-tut eves op the 'meek face that, was turned to me. • - "Ih has gone before;' she resumed. "find Something whispers to me totollow. Nay,tio tears! , I would not live, now that - all is over with-hope and loV6" Here . slie looked to her mother, whose weeping 'was audibly painful. Pgila turnedto ber, and strneglim , to reach her,.said I "Kiss mei:mother" and ° then there was silenee.hgain,broken only 9 by the -sobs that coOld,not be stilled. , while after a priest arrived , arrayed in-an habiliment ?if white, on the' front of whieh was embroidered a searletcross. I had heard the tinkling ~of the bell :that announced the coming of the Host, and as it.eeased atthe door, I knew that the impressive viaticum was about to be celebrated. - . . „ , , • Kneeling all, the solemn rites began. •• Pe. 1 pica's face wore a strangely-serious lool:, yet 1 smile struggled through r —richr in promise of I the irnaiort:dity to : which she" was hastening, than creed, or eross; , or priest: Solemn eon ; signinent of tho peer; • imp:die:at bark 'to the ! sea of Eternity, teas that farewell !--rind oh! lin that other world, I. believed !battle love the creature knew, here wer r urcl he perpetuated for. ! ever—holier, and dearer, and intoner,.-and it was more than mere belief to 'the sad; hopeful i,heart that struggled before me; - It was cer i tainty, that took all terror from deathi , making, 1 it the truest good angel `w us—though human fear and mystery and ignorance give to it the 1 proportions of a DeVil; that must necessarily (.be encountered :. 'Strange ! that men :Should. make'a horror of that which, is the supremest • The iast•act - Wei • Performed that liOinisli . i Faith requires' that the deVotee should believe' as necessary to the repose of the soul, and we ,werej,agaikalone--Tepita, her moth er.and 1. -', Yet why should I lift, higher the Curtain to diSelose the last interview 4 had With' that dv. 1 inggirl—;althoughso touching and sad in :ill i things that make life *beautiful I " It. was,'-a; 1 scene of conuttien tragedy, and Yet. the solemn: i est that humanity,is called upon to act.' Whati t reader is there that' has not witnesied an Occa. I a on not all unlike I • That bosun knows leatti ofjciy.that has - never.•felt.• the.sorrow of 'al friend's departure frtmi this world.-, t . pity the I heart that has no tio that tends hBaVenward,- • , I'-: Pepita talked , nnielitoMe of that one ‘rfibse ', life - Aims the ell :of ' the joy-promise:that' earth offered her; he had gone and she wished 'not to - lim,rer. on ~ surviez.him . .... ;She She. Calmly- I of her own death, in tones that. were only N- I oretfal when, She looked at the . .bent form, of L her Mother.' • - She gavotne a' memento 'other; i self, and-in accents Of,- , :do . eN'eitteif feeling, begged me never.forget:".Poor. ;Pepfta."! , :-: l• -. The night was 'far gene:when I uttered lay farewell. 1 gently: kissed. lier,forthead,, Mid' so we•partcd forever. -••; - -', r . , ' . --• - TWO' daYil nilerward' her' X ea*r iaid, in.fhe silent grave that , hr4been prepaied foi - 114.-:- . . - diti I strewed flowers upon 'the-sod, and:- - !:lash., ed the tears Awny' that gat4pred; rig. iintnaigul: ..- ly-to tor oyes,.l thought thatifearth had:jest , 'one. So beautifuf,,hehven'hurl. - galited an angel.! ,- j- kali:n*4ra 'fif": . liet.i . l , preserve: WI 'ln •nitmuiry of I' ' '..zt.- tr-He 'gettil.to - the *er:d may botter. it About the .11ead - . mitt life ilk *0 facztlY-xiingt, i ) qtatxt . d#Y. 70A Ytilk ;Put frfigh Ma VI:00)142U r.vr AIONTROSE. PA,, tfEJRBDAY,-AUGUST 21,1851. ;Pron.) tilci Dakota Friend. .Dakota Legend DiARIIATIVE. Or EAGLp.EXE: AN ,ScAULET! poyE,--Eitgle-kir, was the riatde of a Dakota whO liVed'lntere - than a century :ago. Ile - was . the only son of a noted' war Prophet.' At: the early uge !of twenty, he had distinguiShed self on the field of :blood and earnage u , and waa- admitted to a Conspieuoris plhr e, in that ceremonparound the 'painted board, Where the Dakota 'warrior is permitted boastful* to nar: rate his military exploits. On these occasions four,quilla the, War Eagle; crested, his proud brow, while in the Midst of the wild war yell ofd hundred savage voices, he ielated, in the hearing of astonished spectatora, the'exei ting curcinnstanees .61-those - dating -aids .by - whielihe,Won thew. When- wending the war pith, tagle.BYe, carried a heart of stone that could meet any danger, ordeal), tinmov'ed,-toar. the, bleeding scalp from the-head of the shrieking:, victitm and sheath his murderous knife in : IW heart' of his foe,:and feel no pity. Young handsome, swift, and brave, he "was hundred by the' hon. orable,.and all courted his favor. His hatred • - . . j to his eneOes was deep - rooted and obstinate, but he loved hisfriends. - :His bosom was the dwelling place of those gentle iffcetions, tvittme blossoms nre jdv and whose fruiti,nre,felieity, SucceSs in War. though it gratified his stilt:age nature and rendered him completions ; among the . brave, did not render hint happy ;'but he ever felt an anxious longing—a pant:rut ',emp tiness, which at times beclouded all his joys. At length,lthe strong, struggling affeetiems, at' his lonelytieart.fixed upon the Orphan daugh., ter of a diStingnished MtkWukardonwati brave, whose name was Scarlet d&e. She waS young and fitir, and reciprocated "his love . ; and they were joined in 'Wedlock achording to the most honorableeustom of the Dakota : - Searlet-Dove' tilled the Void of Eagle Eye's . soul;- and she entered.nO other dwelling place. ,The eagle quills whieh he had won in deadly strife. hand to hand with th'e enemies of his tribe, and the long raven lochs from the heads Of the Chip pewa ' Winnebago, and Mandan, which dangled from his dres4, he now spurned when his eve rested on the form of his newly acquired DoVe: • A feti-thort niodns /tiler ilia it:etebration of their, nuptials Eagle-Eyo and Searlet-Dore, with 'their people.,dropped down the Mississ ippi to Lake Pepin, in their canoes, and then proceeded by land to their hunting grounds east of the,river. It charmed one day,as Engle:Eyeivai ing up to an unsuspecting deer under • cover (if the thick foliate of the.under bush, an ar row 'piearced his heart. Ire only - piOn'onifeetl the name "Srarlet-Dove," and expilt(L. • The cruel arrow had been driven by the. Gaining boustring of the comrade of Eagib E y e, ,who, aIICO,LISCiOUS of the presence .of his fried, had aPprLached the deer from the Opposite direb lion. We shall lehre the gentie ieader, to initiirig ine what were the emotions of - Seariet-Deve when the sad:tidings reached her. We may not attempt to speak such lier'S was; her own acts best express thoe lug elnotiong ' which well high barSt her- tender bosotiu=--Af-• ter a few days and nights of fruitlesiivailing and Selftertare; despair settled .dowft upon her and drove her murderous Miens deep intn her wounded heart ; and in silent agony, Which only theyoutlifutuiclote - .I . n‘ appreciate, she whipped the cold' remains :of tagle-Eye in the ornamented shins of animals whieb he bud brought Iron] eliase.rind placing 'them upon a temporary scaffold,crected for the purpose,Sat down under them.- - She still followed the moving, party; cari'ying on her back - the - dead 'body of Eagletye—all that was dear to her this side of the spirit land. At overy encampment 'She laid the body up in the manner. already -Mentioned, 'end set down to watch it and mourn. When she had ; reached the. Minnesota , rit•er, a distance of more than a .hundred Scarlet-Dove . : brought forks Indplles frond the, woods and i erected a permanent scaffold, on that • heautf ful hill opposite the site of Fort ,Snelling, I the rear of thelittle town of Mendota, which is known by the game_ of Pilot , Knob. Hav-4 ingadjusted the re - Mains of the unfortunate . objeet of her love upon this eleiution,with the strap, by which.she had carried her precious: burdern., Scarlet-Dove heti& to the ! seadhld and died. Her highest hope was to meet the .beloved - spirit of her Eagle-Eye hi: the wcrid of sp:its.' . - -7.: - What ' kind • of , Boo k s shall - I give .to nisr Children ? - - . jilt° can daily estimate the beneEts Width 'Avonl4 flow it' upon us if parents even but for . one year, -would withdraw -rem their thildren's bands all works of fiction; and substitute those . which contain only the truth? Long and gen eral habit has corrupted Out: intim enfeebled I our minds, ptrverted our judginerit, Mid 'de-- I throned in our hearts Vint high regard fdi Utah 1 which is so generally found in the human mind , until counteracted by edneation,.• ' ' • Let us consider what a change ivoald be I 1 Produted in any family taught' to 'value truth, land to - reject• fiction as netetwarily inferior in . INnlue: The marl, unnatural. anti Often, inju riot's. Worts of novel writeth,' large and email, would ;rive place to books of history, .travels rand seienee. The mind would be troined to 1 coutemplate - the:chnnatters, habits and deeds of men : and the varied, tistrul,Wonderful and nicrions works of God, ns well as the power's lof mut own minds, andoar relations , to our e ' - "• • • !Maker nrid ter: each othtr: -Nett, host many ofus enter upon seeries .of dtity, ignorant of „,w- , ' c m/incises; ourjetto- men, _.and -the_ objects ( around us--tvith false id.etywerioncond prinei- Lilies, and unfounded exptctations 1,,. If ,We would hist - ire - to_orti thildien * ti life of tliaappoiniment; mortifientleit and unhappiness, a downward-611113E3 to the grave, and -the toss of hope beyond it,weJnaght tench.thern. to pre fer the Yt4aries of fietion-writcrs to' the oh: Striations of smile, the discoveriet oflstiente and the: of Gods; But if.ive would' i regardthe mindawOordin4 to ibt naturt- and cap:Leith% we should beldong the adtotzttes, .of sound taste , useful truth, and ;het_ men of loathing r•.rtd 'labor ,Wittr, have "elaitni on our high' regard - -;and;above all, adherentil ttillie [Bible as the richest-treaSureikeeerth ect - Attila s, Brought to _thili as the -ttnachatone; how T soon will the.briztn counterfeits oflatte and .learn ia,g expose their svoithlessii and the: t . otroding :canker, which would poison 'itit'and” tau • chit:, &en! ' . ' - --. '• - - -•-• - ' ' •P- - - 5 -' ' - ' - 1-'- :OA this subject we have i fUnd at i rdeetiona. to mrske, of arguments la diep;ity, .and: of in tertering-examples ja 4uotsy, _when. opkolitt7 nitylhali Prtsent. ;'We amt.oaly. - Add a .svan iish,to sea ' - our - itnititiyinetrieskiiii ee - the Pernicious bellletont':Of , 04 . , ,pitnitillitme -taste * . , 11 ,4 1 ); tfticlo4ol:!illtei vitriNpV-1073. 'Otolltilint . fflt-:.;..-, ;..-.• -: . . REIM voy . rmEss.--.Th e r e are few .subjegt&apon "which more erroneous nations prevail thnihup ii that of poliimess:" Tandoxiant ni 'it May seetn, thti Oputinnk - of the thing thus sWeitare • of the mast vulgar-snit..'.Themtiss-of people seem 'to funny that it is altogetiMr an out Ward thing:—.lt 'Matter of forth and - .eeremonytitd that its eSSeneelies . . anew of eat' uotte—itithU. elegant bOW, the five minutes' eal hthe courteous and polished spei:elt the gracefUl restoration of a.Jan, the • qUick presen - Mtion Of a - dropped handkerchief, and {.other forms of Osterior behavior.' which rimy .• I indicate trknowledg,e 'of "fasitionahlehife,".vet, I spring frOf alicartfull Or. the intensest 414 f. 1 ishness.. But tree politenesS is not atlting of, fortnalityand ceremony; it.t..onSists in no art field smiles or preci4e -bli#izige of the body, hut an l enniest and Sincere .deifire - to'po.. mote the happiness of those With whom. one. conies in, willingness. to sacrifice one's nwu wise and Comfort to the enjoymimt of (Ahem, The poOr negro %wino, who fond 31ung,6 Park perishing •undkr the pn m rees of Afrieti, mid who led hire, to h h er nt, and; .sbp plied 111ln : with food, an lulled him to ; sheep! with. her simPle songs, it has been justly sand,' was truly:polite.- A sitirv' is told of a poor drover, who wan driving his cattle to market one day, and ',met a lady Whom the, drove etim pelled;to turn out frntn the path intoille deep snoW..'';`•.kladam,r said he, "if the cattle itheW as welhaS 1, what they Should do, you . woidd not Walk in the . snow ." Here - was genuine politenesi. Such a man, though rough mind awkward in his manners, coarse in his speeelt mod clad iii homespun, is, in the truest setnr,..l: gentleman; while ninny a financial andstairk ing 'apes, who 4vides . himielf upon the immne- Mate purity of his n bite kid gloves, and the! graceful - air with which he - enters a drawing, room, or lifts his Mt as lie meets nn acenaint nnee; is an incarnation of rudeness amid • v.ilittr • 1 Tile truth is, mere.etertinl peldeness ót!-. i ly. the !Milt or shell of true politeness: it i 1 j in fact, so far as tile essence of the think' is concerned, no politeness et all, though . with many it is the, hinge upon-whieh all. their so cial conduct turas; while in mingling with oil:- ers of a different temperament.. they freeze does the wintry air in nature,,the kindlier feel- I 4;gs:of the the heart, and reduce everything to smooth surface; polished buteold, likes sheet of lee. Many a tnan, who is rough and even boorish in ntannetiOnni n *aim and. generate; J heart;. - and many a iie,.who is reckless of the Comfort of others, seel:s by it scripalous servance of etiquette nod 'Money, to . hidd: his re:.l indifference to the hbppiness of his felloW men. When we see it persoujWito evinces 'oil occasions a delitiate regard for- the rinGis j,and-techngsj of. others, however jin irealth;jdress, or statihn; .who Ltrays nti'ans•- : iety to engroSstle;hest seat§ at the-puiiiia ble, in'thticar,,Oran the concert room; who tit, his menls; prefers. O carve for othert 'the. rieliest rather th'im for himself,; ivlio speaksjas respectful to a.peasant as he wbtild tO st . kingi.and is as prompt to elter la in Itiztinntorm to an bid lady as tan. youhg one; when, in sliort;:ive see a ilersent. noting ahttys upon-the golden rule ef. doing unto, others " whatsoever he Would that they , Shonld do ti:t_him-dlutzt we feel that We are looking tipbn it-illy polite man I . So thinkS and sags the Yankee Blade. s ' • ' • ~ lil/TATI37O Tlii Rich.—Theiiratiee of ing the amount of, other people ' s expenditures stanthird'for Our own; is a very . unsiifei iii well aa ridicailous one; and it hat ,be'en . the ruin - ofmany a Lindy: :.For-it never: happens thatthose asho . adopt _this. rule look to :.the more disereet and eliononifeal than thetthielvedi but only tci,the more vain and extravagant or, perhapS; to tech as possess means far more ample. • . , Mr4. -- --:- - 1-, the *ire of.o hiiiiiiile 'mechanic, I has taken for herher pattern a lady, possess ; inn,from her husband's -large propel:Le, ..,, aside,.. i a fortune in her'own tight. • The difference lin their cirautnatances seems never to have, I been taken- into oonsideration • by airs._ - everything else Is swalloWed up by the aiiilii• i TnE CElCii'S s of 'rut enti; - xii S•iii•ES'itrip rtion to equal in point of Style her rich ileigd-; ENth:Alcu:—Frighiful Decrease of Population lbw% -' • ". .` ' ' . ' I an - keland.—The last- census of the - - United . Never an article of dress or" furniture earl States and .Great Britain . was • taken almost 'the latter procure; but the former is on thornsli,bout the game time:. and front; the Partial re , i till supplied with_ a counterpoint. Never Met! turnS.Whieh.have-seed the light, an estimate the one be known even to have in cornea - 11)14.f. ;Ippralitliiiig very -near the truth may be form; ' .pleasurex.' . ' • -* " •d ' ' 'of Lion a .e minion sir a %Mt abro,:i_ t but l IA -the tomparatiVe inerebse• - of", the - tiro 1 the other is at'dnee - ffelied -iVitlf the necessity - { Countries in puptilationi - • In: both .the United I of setting Off for , somewhere Without . delay-. iStates and Greta Britain proper, the intrease no matter, she. Mat a thiag iti ‘ view, bey and ; since the precious' eensuri, has,been very grat. 'Joni ig her chosen copy. -• ,--- .- - '.• ; ifying,. especially in the former: We Publish.; SuchlfollY- on the part of 3.fitl: - ..-=- - ; at . may,( ed. the figured on a former ociasiOn; Showing well lie suppdsed, invites the shafts_ of rid icule the exact ratio.' :- ' - • --- : i • win every quarter where; - sheds known.'_ It ! t ; But while the returns of . the lad- census chanced, recently; that the evil lady; 'lancing Isllow. an intnease of population, in. England lost her naturalr teeth; 4r:dried:ill artificial set !and Seothind, they show an extraiirdinary de-', at the eXperil.ie Of U. hundred doll Or,ther& t i Crease in that'of Ireland: .- We . learri that . in' aboutsf , People 'cronderdct whether_ 4.l:;ailpir• 1 i 841; the Population id that country •• waS. 8,1,1 ing rieighbdr :would tarry • her- itnitatiie pro=( 179;338 ;, and-recording to .tiro ratio of pro..' • pensity so far es to knockout-her own.eounci I greys.4vldeh formerly marked its ,growth, 'the .1 oneei and cause their plao to be supplied_With 1 ipuitition in 1851 shciild'he;9,2Bi,ooo„ In, mineralit,, She did nut do. that exactly,-but I stead of its a • teozultiag to sdintitift,. liotVever,', managed it in thiS Way. She iiiiiiited. en ,beA,l it is averred en goad authority, that.itreacheS, in; allowed a Sinn of owner equal th the edit !Gull: tf,9.3d;u00; just .about, what it:Was thirty 1 ',of the teeth,:to spend for her own ~ individual: year.su,, , oinalting.a ditierenee of three null- i bettefit i ;as.sho might Moose:, . :. :.. . ', - _,' 2 ions! This is indeed startruff , ,,and .one . in in-' - Few, it is to lie_ herd, are Fie iitale..iiiindedj,dueed .I. i 3 'reelect upon - tine aut7jeet, And- Aster. k at' to go tO Vo great extremes as' this female, ; twain What has eausiaillik Iriglitful decrease in 1 yet 1617 many there ate, who stiff,: i theritsielt e,, the ppulation 'at a eountrY efilebt.,ted thr the 1 to be tneasnrably itlfluented.by those- arminddluesease of the dpeeide, possessing- one of the regardipg mutters in which - ft is the .part . af . i h e al t hi i , st e ji ktia p4 . th the .. w u rld, - i mil & g a it on. wisdom. to act with perfea. - independeni - e:-. 7 -.1 eq nal ien..for prOdindivetiesaf " . 1 . No itiider de What is there in the eirmamaatieeS.Of Miss A. I ice enter upon :the inti Mir, thSti thataiture of having a tieW,lit; or .111 r s - ;- B : -a, new eatpet4 the potato crops; and tho - .fattline whirlCsuer whielt calls- for eitnktspenie - on the. part of I teededi Stare ttS M the them ..;.tlizking; all' due their neighboaq-,i allowauees for the..inereasekemigration- be. I I , In - regulating ye/Lir entnendltdrei, leek fdthe itween tire Years.lB4l . and '1854 Wo . find that- welfare :Of 'yourself ' Sind raialp,..:..: no t; to' . the Onwards ei tWo millions Of.li Com n beilig - ivere: loyes . Ofthe',people: tylioSe-, interest bk. in no destroYedin that 'tenetrY, - --hy ; tinaine, tit-the i wise nt ,40ie, ~.13utteily tilAregarditilig the ex- •eentse,of too Year.:...tfint - thictiumber.:tiled i ample of. otiiat let your . Styleotliving . torre-: front.attual Stay:nib& There is tte other way,' !.spond to your tendititm, ho it ever atz hem hie ; oieteolihting for. it;- for; ellltneglt n- ,htajoritY'l tires' . Wil I yon_fre certain' pi gajo the reSpee(of of the, ptople ' live . uluin the 'pbtatn.. atone; a ! I hill who in torn deserve your respect; widely ,str . onger, or heartier .neveriesisted ' - than 1 is surely of fart 62:dee Werth - than%. the - Maud...jibe irigfr: -! They : hive always been edelirated; ishmentii : of sI I 0 ms; only ..e,ani , te batik :in, theado; . . - ilifilittireasin„l,; - io 'poptilatiOn land•- - fpr. sunihrueef nicaillif:enee- and ..whin should. ad-istrength - bud .muttele.—N. -1.. 11e.ta14.:, .. . . . . . , .. , . . versitv . toirle to the: °Vet . of thefr . profetsed fried:dill'', ::%Viiuld ily . P:oirtificii , shin Met , birds' 1 tiom'a northern clime at the ApproselVet wig.' Itun •- - ._ ... . , . _ ''lloiii;-4 . lCirivi:of ea 'I:Oil& tlaesia litc44turo -1 : mote thieuti rut . anti - erecting thin AVhete-Xectephoti,ifkliietieubfisis,deeeilbet the .predueedon. thurremnant- ot tee daiigerA without fir jetgtti."pera.' tended . e.eaesll: tudun tile; end: rititi• 4Tioak bight :I!):ishipt. deitti:b l sPideP.4 :with a 1 0P - iorjoy i ..o(ot raPtb. t44lfaillietei - JA.theiede3lfiddiplieelliet;othetil JinigheCcuid ,routers, little fluitting . iiea,bit‘ds,:tlit; inemorials of their homes •cante and, fanned. -their—weary souls.:. All the perils Mori had enennfitered r tall the companions they- had lost; ,all the mis cries they had endured; int - Erin an instant for ! gotten, and- naught wee withlhein but the gen tie phantoms of past and j future joys. One was again -scouring fleet steed across the hoof trodden phdas of Theisafy;'unotlier. aroused beneath the finiver!efowned : roClis of ArCatlia, ar`d'gnied into dreamy 'eves of , her whose inrw , amid battle acidbiVolllld, was ever Wm . :* a third:Cc-called -proud Any. I when tefore the dreaming gyes of .his : over joyed pariffittyand :Mild: th e' ntielnmatlen-of all Greece, li bore or frotn the-konipetitors the j I laurel wreath of the Olympian victor. •: Oh rboine,tungieal spellall powerful home: bow strono must have been thy ; *hen thy ftintest - memory could . cause these. bronzed herne Ora thong:Old fights to - weep like tearful: rvonteit ! With 'the Cooling fresh ness of a iiesert filuntain, With the sweet fats gratiee . :of it .Ilower found in - winter, you tame , across the great waters to 'those ,Wandering mein, and tenentlithe peaceful shadow of your I wings their souls found rest! - .. . , Bixonawrosingnatuton, el ightful Bing hatotun! liovenest . 1.4: the Taney !-;—, Where cr.n . be feund one to exeei Thee ? Search from the lake-hound States of the 'North, to the sunny, Shuth ; from the, •surf beaten shores of-the atlantic', to the wilds' of the fa went.; and in that wide range, may be toan:l thy equal,,tnodest Binghamton, but none that sin - pass Uhl": in, beiiiitk or in worth. Thou bast been almost unknown; these pine Clad hills that environ thee, have Shut thee wit fur a tini t i frui t) the gaze Of ,the World. Thy pe -Culiar attraiibes have long laiti concealed from many eyes : but only to burst forth upon the eaze of the astimishe.d world,- With .great er efibb , etwe„ But persevering enterprO;and untiring exertions, have brought - the at length with the first, . • iWhii have ever spent a day with thy liiispi n table 'inhabitartts, that do net remember the kind Cttet.tions bestowed tiptin them, by tiost I or a equaint-,alees ?, _The Cetintenances around, .banning "With happiness and • intelligence, telt of the rileasmt dothestie circle, and refined So ciety. in thy given - encircled -dwellings; are found all that renders - life worth enjoying.•:= There, Combined with teat love which is en -1 shrilled in the pure heart. is that .beauty. whieh - j eaptivaies, and that youth so: much desires. 1 There d‘% ; ull9,:ls a Angels dropped - frearlieaV, en.: loviii7,, • cOnfiding • woman ; - Lord to : Meg and reiider happy, htherwisetalAcrable Man.' -. latt• let us for a monteUt look at odd of thy prominent beautit:s. -In a beautiful and love- - f intakin,T„ trove, where' fofuierik ,the feathered !kiirwsteric poured forth their sweet, - Mid, en-, - --- - eliantm . gotes; utidist urlind execlit , by tlid.:Oc: ett4ional .huntsinail ; now,, as; by .magic, rises roue of those fairy palaces—reminding - otie of , these - Created by the,Gut ii. iThia,adoined by I all the art of nm, Is di, enhad in nee be:;.u-, ' ty„by the lavish hand,ornaturt;and the Plea sant associations Connected. tfierewitb,•;, There; in the Spacious grOunds iit the gerierilus and pdlite owner; can the pleas : tire' seeker; pass a few agreeable ,tnomeritg.,_ Under ,the kurdant drapery of the ‘ 1 : heaven-kissitereei, listen ing to 'trine music, mingled with,. the -gurg ling of the Water fountt. , There, lio,atignain lances are nlways sure of a ifappiy reteptiOn, meeting with a s*eet : Smile, ',and • ivelionie.- One st iris to go away, yet lingers, as if held entranced to thig Paradisical spot ; and never leaves; but long ,ientembM•s, i the celestial at- I MO4Pitere Whitili Seems 'to permeate - thus-ft 1 abode for fairit4. „- ' :: • .-; '- -.'- ' , Hapi)y (Vonld be the iiefititi,lf-hving, that kelected thiS felicitoUs place for the site.of this chalming village:. Nature - seemed most prodi: gal in ; Spreading around it. her Magnificent seenery; Varying from the sublime, to. that vhiCh - mire 'pleasing to the eye, the beanti ful nivi picturesque.' Here ttvo - meandering riven.) , blend their' waters, an d in' one glad stream, flow nriolneonscleud be tlieir teaks& mired splendor': ' 'Rirratno. Gems- Worth - PreServing( am of t,lM,opinion tbst`timi - 13ibin'aititainis 'mare irtM,sublimity,, morn sAuisitia bendy', sinre.stre mortality, iMpOrtintr:bistory, and fiusrstriins,"or posit!: mid elogbeitesolon Mn'bnc - olletted...frnm .tutiei rroults s in *hitt or lu(ignage 010111 We been', • c .once.;-_i itazaid liSioitio'N that • no man 4rer. didor 'oot will botome truly kbighent, ?YitholiChtling-acoustult tstfifer °COG Bi4le, and thii4miret orthhPurtti sM 4 sublimity 'et fte lativageH. ; Pilfer Ames, - - ' he - Pil.)l4i' ft a,book worth' film then, ell the tthit 'tiftlkelreie erir,,Ortntort . : : : 04 - h. : O - i*iii: ls Olitik'll-t . 4 Young tnan # attend, to the Tolee otione tv);4 hes poisemed.a et:rutin degree "of firri , thi, vs-dila:and ifhti ihhtilir ailkat hie Alrker. Beadihis Bible. every lat. of you!' lif e; • JUL B:•Jiitineon. If a Petvori.iv.ould Alitain a trinikneivledgo'' of the , Chrietain ,let him star:lv-the Holy Scripturespecially the New' !reeti4 ment; therein'areeontaiadd woribi,of eter. mil life. it‘hai God for, its - author .ealvatiuo. for its end and truth'without any inixiiiict of error. ."' 1 ' [John or In the "Recolleetions - and 'Anecdote' , of the Presidents of the United Statci„" pub:- H . 3IA In Arthur's Witte Gasetie. a very gr4plt-- e and stirring account is - given tifthe titans is tlie Hall , of tne Rouse' of RePreseetatives,on, the eventful and exeltink ()easier) of the elec.:. tion by that body of lc Pfeiddent tot the United - States. . After ifescriblng the: intense sorbing,interest evinced bY eltery'huMan beini in Washington, and the successful upfiosition of Mr. 3feDuffie to an attempt to exelade thei the people. fro - o stituming the,nett of thrii representatives,ihntgentleinith Pledgl;•d self for their orderly, dePortment. 11 , Yhllc looking' oit such a speetaele the Rau,' proteedst ' ' "At length the Stiesicer'S lisle - Met I dead sile - hee instantly prevailed; and' the re speetive (ielegutione assembled afid took theit; seats around the tables Itwareil- for them : -.4 It was my privilege, the elevated PoSition on, the right hand of, e ehair, to ehjoy , "view 'of ell.the groups; and I hate preseryed f rude and hasty sketch - Whieli I eanglit rirtheii I positions whilethe fiat balliit wait prolfeedhigi" I Each - delegation appointed one Of their nut !ber to act. as Chairinan,eolleet their votes, snit. report the result. • The' delegatilitik-viited pluralities. Whoever, in calls; reeeiv,ed . Clot most, veteti, *as reported as the eboice th..t, delegation. There Were twenty...Nur (if groups; rind iv hen the t'otes had been gathere . 4 in seat+, they were ,railed upon tb report,Whiell' they dit‘illanteession,:rira-coce, eouitneheind: at Maine:. The, scerie,%tid , ikerthitt:of sop: .I',ifartr breatlt.w::.s salvable . * State «ftei State ut 4 ered its videe. - and 4111,turn ever forget thetnoment Whila the Speaker, S'h,ndilid. • up in his Ogee declared, in a eleitr aritiorieul voice, that.seenied topierce throtigh•bene, hod marrow, that 4 JolitiQ: Mains; haring; reieived majority of tho votes'eutt, WarsAlule elected Presitlent-of the united,Statea tor- folio Veal 4 from the 4th day of Match nest enaning. ; • ,"Then arose Such a.sitotit limn, the gaper: . ies Skteemed to lift the..very doine th‘o Hall: , IfeDeffie; twhoSe eandidstis been defeated, .whese eager hopeii - had Lied blasted; ntid .whosa personal •Idetige; }'Jr the good Order of the assembly was remeinbered., by all,) spningb in p much exeltinient front tine ground, and in a t'isice that ran e rriibin'et I,nll toss truth ultuons plaudits .icif :the SPectators; cried Mr. Speaker, I •rnove the &allele . Ife blearer , The huestion Wai'putand earricik . a foreign ,ininister to ariotiibr, his aide,-'but ho*are yotr going'to It? A manful question enough- fbr EnFetiertn, norsrit of ;the-country and the people:: 'Hers were, ne gnards; no gens a - COOStabie ; how - wila the Order to .be ea; forced! • - • , 4 110 soon Sate,' unit gazed seeth: . I ed.pentirated with speeclifeas wonder. .Nd ; sooner haiithe speakei:giveit the order, Sergeatit-atardis tviirclearthe galleries,* thr.ll . active, ilehder yormg Mei, of graieferforbt and *ith brilliant blank :eyes, defied from place; and; mounting, (I did riot' see . hove;) the broad atone cornine Whieh runanil around the hall ,iri front of, and belaiv thii breast: work galleries; ,thotilined .With is arm, to the dark: dense; ,and...alciiest mash bein g's before hitt exelaim. ing, Ventleined, the Speaker - oiderit the I mien to lie Cleared; Inn tiled retire4aliiiti the gallerietV. And at his wofd,.like e l , flock . , , or quiet pas Sire sheep, when the este of their pen is throWn open, out the entire ero,wd without -Woni of toruPliiiiit; hr remonstranii, and, in - an' incredibly short tittle Mat a. soul was left . behind... The foreign . minister up his "hriinle - antizetnent . and 'What a government! What God's ` Willi Though. l'admit this '.wbrid is infilelentli-- sorrowful, 'and to. a eirfafilcheat 1 1 . 0 iTrit tattled ! a Yale " of teirs,' jlet. 'dit - hat,ialtir idympathlieln those - Brat? fe tt ipingli of its,trits: erica and slanities, nnn boonli ;di:tutted - but frtrilif 'the littlnii;•the world ;is a; I workmariship of tiod,luld'it la horresponitent; Ily beautifur; Beautiful inutile:Wag deaeliptien; ' kits tactriataitis andvalleyiti . hilld and itlaitikz oceans; its infinitely -divan!: fled fermi and' OolOri—fos it inti:met% , hues of the, rnintfatr, iarithitly and , combined—all ate beautiful.: Then thi Anti pours doted: tiptin it 11 flood Of gloit Asi and tlto niobit Outtlea it With a iatlisni • ey night ; 'and. oh lis no the c.nniipy beau tifitl wheri it is adiatilating:withiti'-tuillitin at:wit...and there 14 much of "moral in this inneli - atitiskd Tied, of Ouni t , n 1,1110411, that the biglitand the evniekr philosophe r - day' to the elititeaft.:'. face ,for in - tit:wed nal like 'ditong-as death: Ari' - ifeildliiker th braille infuney, and the death,, - of rilillost o li; see hearts united by. inuidid, afreetion caliy itistaining_eneti b;herlthibugiflorig; Wm/ yeani' of - : trial : and - auffeillig;.; so- in lithObeti of-hutnitri wliich-gloomir theologians ;tie'. wont io dwelt; there -ure, a thouttanti,.S6enes , l4l , engage the ..aPproiring-_,notiOe Of. all.seeing: lieavent thik is 'a hoafiliful , worict„—' Foc'r - erf. - - : , , Horrid Deprav't ' - i y. , A tione wretch in thh rorin of n roan, im" i' few isecks ainee. intrtideCed lo a lore V A nd confiding girl of sixteen;' Ile pressea bpi hand and said- in "tt thrillin# tone, il.ti Ihi thought. the I, reeent• lino *wither find render: ed the ladies niore liniely Otto over." , ;" . .Sini hlushed.niid sad aseiy." Hei introits con:., sidered the rthdter , willed, Tail ho hanelk Ar. netted the,young ladyy after . nddrolning Ilk tgointid inngdagO , to her. and hiss ne:er called, Int her bonnet abbe:" Ws are' gli i d. td i on i. , Iflint ber Mean bayo.tiltert tho.hiEllrlll Feted; a m t a - to lo the flienstiir -to :lie arrested in s" i snit for , bread: of pritaatianar,eti laid 'it ,. 87.000. Thci scamp *Hi licentious in Iv tare heiv he trine'', with their lovina finial-. , . , ditor _ The;tefthotei-hikrty_liaiiiitolairint ;qoestOirbrittlith ,110 - 14(Cditor io - one wh !reaect*Eld *ids ' sigke,temistell4. write , or**, Eta - Ate - itypo.;= te44o prooriccOltet :PlNNtr.6l4 l ..tePodti; rst .. f ailtrastopperk - El44 , oo44ltcceei • .; .:.~~:. _
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers