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T e u co that the Spring is Ualir. bat thoir hertz itiem, tehtle one? post tire see the4intifounzfuo: highe'r in the , shy, As diy. Rani by?' ju! beyond yol . s,drict of subi Sil!eviteut,briginly, flow ; Smiling it cods and,fields ore seou, gioUOd iaa,robs of green. lab tiliNeir, and biooke, and btiwein, Ten hots .;, ,Tbery ths birth; are weaving lays, For ilia happy Spiing•time says . . Springy ,breer.es kisses 'tiring . From the ruby lips of Spring— . p --* Maher choir, - of iirablera made, Soon sun give a serenade.' ' Look! oh, look!—the southern sky Mina» flowers of every dye; Trip*: o'er your flowery plaio— spriog is coming - back again Winter's toggery is old, Rotten in its every fold And our Portion of the globe boon gill don a fairer robe Spring id coming—shoat for joy ! Mao ao'd woman, girl Mid boy ; Soon yon'll hear her busy hums— Yes,she comes! she comes! albs comes! F,X SIT EtriliC.P Bomanba of Real Life. lartentfal and Bemarkabie Person. al History. [The following tuarveltous and interesting as:retire is given in u letter from Paris, under date of the 15th of January last, from the cor respondent of tha St. Louis Republican.] The venerable Abbess of th'ecllrstiline cen tett of Nerers whose life'perhaps was tine of le tow eventfol on record, died last weekat tie advanced age of ninety-eight. For fitteen Jean she hail been an inmate of the convent, wirmingtiss love aad respect of all who ap- preached her. In the summer of 1693, there broke out at l Pais a disease very similaf to, what is now. callecholera, and which was quite as fatal ; in ; alma:wit:arcs: Although not contagipui, I the ira IMtI 1 h L'` nti tt* r of persons attacked by; 'it led the people to think it was so, and terror took hold of the minds cif all. Mothers aban doned their children, wives their husbands,' esters their brothers, and almost as many per ided by flight as by the disease itself. In I ten months thirty-one thousand persons were 1 toCed in the different burial grounds around lb say, The hospital was crowded—so' ovaded that the physicians and nurses pass-I . cd tit. f fi celts =wag the 'beds, and the de mi:tit ; ndmission were so great that every 1 day a i g file of sick might by seen at the! daar,she supported by relations, but, the mon urt lying-on' the ground, waiting until! their turn should come to be admitted, but of ten Wore night many of them were carried! to the cemetery instead of the infirmary. As 1 nay cell be supposed, the task of tile physi- I can easno light one, and finally, • they were i obliged to organize their labornad force them-1 :elves to repose a certain time every day, and take the service in turns, in order to bear up ; dole the extraordinary efforts they were call- i , eh epoti to make. . . , (he day, as it 'young physician, he whte - ; twenty years later,was known as a celebrated!: Dr.Soulie, Was leaving the hospital to go and ' tie his torn of repose, a servant man,, breath- i i hit end pale, met him at the gate, and asked !I hi:ill s was a physician.. The doctor an-' steered in the affirmative, and the man begged I lam for God's sake, to go to a house in the Ii neighborhood to see d sick person. Though I arilmi the rule they had established, the doe-1 for consented, and was conducted to the house i by the servant, with showed him into a large, I handsomely furnished room: In this room 1 the doctor remarked first a tall, handsome wo-- man, with her hair all in disorder, and her flee P ale a " a Corpse, standing near and screening , I schild, who lay upon a ?sofa. Around her ' ru collected a group of twelve young girls, i Ithi Jooked to the doctor to be of nearly ; te wine age, and made him suppose it_was a t hztling school, particulvly as these, young ; MIS all wore dark silk dresses, and had their I , Ilotid hair braided and tied with blue ribbons. ; l aa d aatar could see • no difference between; 14 / . °I. them; the/ all • had fair skins, d small, i Olze eyes. light heir, long noses a lcAllt 3 ; kot before lie could ask and goes. 11°. „ 11 ' 13'131111 e; ile • woman advanced hut.- 'alTi and seized him by the arm led him to 1 1114atiakchauntid,,in a_helarae voice said: " Look I Til , edoctor _looked—before I 4 1,a7 a beautiful girl a about tenof Eat ~ nut utterly wears o i diff;rent front the others. Her ittanaeet, etib.,.4jarc_l:_haa_ouin;ced.r.sni;g,hhet,raeldeshuwnegreienlorinsegd: kr eel h awe u d c u tiez aiP t ieatea and .contructed ;fen alma her. ;the dreaqful disease had " Iz al ti,,,,*(tthewindow," said the doctor,—"arid ; ,hlillTr„magar ithmediatelY to rub the "What 'trierl the g ot 1 4 14. v :e e woman, " she has not 1 `lVhii ceria lalY; d'd ' I you not knots it?", ned the doctor 1 4h..,,,,,..T.,,,takve. her away, take her away.-- i it t L": o °! be: to kill ins all. Come, my I eid,il-1;11, Labe..y quick l• Oh ! the wretch-I ii,. aa ';; ed y•l , the death of you .m tend' cit ed 8 4 r e „iweive girls out of the room, / ttilcde e t l e 4em '. .„ • - . r sPraag• after het. tlyou the mother ofthat child ." he a le' I e' b t ' • - h,, t , , e -take her away—slie shan't:stay. ` tOP3 th e ~ C e d ootor ti3 ~ Pat 4 , bed and taken care of." I abill hot k at e i'l o toy. n 'e a bed - ill thili house_, I ; P ee ir aere 8411 I, take ber?—behides, she' removed" 7+drial ~ ' -• 'r tieef take)) r—to 1h ' • • oly t e h • e- - ' 0 aVti ol ; any „ e her awl front this houee.”. I) kl,...chborrifiedly-thYe 1.0011017 exiit""d 4a:lral mother, the doctor , tried a • moment to persuade her to" do soinethink -yo l t her child; but finding : it' uselgs, !Ind. 'eeeing that. if the little girl -;remained::-in 'the . _house she Would die - from neglect, be took her in his artuSl"wrapped her in a blanket; end. ,carried her to the hospital,' where ;he was fortunate enough to find. 4 vacant hed lotthelittle suf.; feral ' The doctor, then made some: inquiries concerning her parents, anctlearied•that-Mon- I steal Docner,gae was a ,manafacturei‘of,large tneatiN and. hie Wife - really the mother -titl.thir., teen Childm, all daughters, and 4luirregittef' ed at the "Mayor's efts; 'losing -1 been-borrt. in selien - Yents. ' ...'„ '.. - - ,•,!. -. : t - ',;! - - ; ` - -7.• ', - Six times Bladanim'aimierguei'brought a palttnto the 'World all wonderfullyiresembljpg each Other, light hair, bltie;eyes; . 'fant altin''ind sharp:.,yentur e s. 4' The &other :a themthem ia and her pride and joy Wits at ittr heat' Isle* she found:her, famili tagiin , !tboitt,;" to:. liMan. creased. -But; tilatit this time -tides vas disaPJ pointed,. for a little; girl • arrived,, but-'without any companion. ; This elone;wOuld havetiere 'enough. to have turned :her -.lnotber'a- heart &Om ,her, but besides this she was entirely , dif: ferent from tha twelve , others., .. ..The. mother could see. ito -beantY im the elearbrunette*ont plesien, her. .hlack,,earliiag hair,_ dark eyes and 1 exquieite-features, and from ~t ba. moment of ;her birth, little Esther was an isolated _being, unioTa and encored for. . -. .While her sisters were dressed le eitk, she Wore , cotton, and while they were fed , upon . he dainty food, she eatwith -the,serrents in tha kitchen. k-A-if, she grew.she gave her mother freshest:Me fetid's like.' tor - .whereas her_eistent , were< endnwed 1 with intellects of the most; mediocre order;and learned the simplest things With ~ the greatest ditliCulty, Ethers talents. arid; quickness of I pereePtion made her the won der: , even. of her sisters. Boeing this; that; her twelve Pelt were hl ely to. be thrown in the, shade, Mact r . i I :me Hoinergue stopped; Estbees lessona en; !tirely,lanci the most the poortirl could" obtain. I was permiSsion to remain fit the room: while I her si s ters were with their tachere. .BY this Lleanal she was enabled to learn la !great, deal, andas she afterwards - often -said these were her only happy' hours. ~, The father. of:this large family, though;a.kind-lie, Man, was exceeiditigly weak, and the slave of his wife: Sesickis, he was much from home, andwhert in the house, never dared to interfere in the! 1 regulations Made. bihis wife. , -1 • , i All these particulars the doctor heard from the servants and, the neighbors, and the inter est he ;felt for the child thus singularly phideci under his care, Was donbled, and he determlmt ed to use every means to save her ; life. 1-1(!) liaccerdngly watched her himself,himself, night and day and &nftily found his efibrts_crewned with sue: ! Icess. The child got- 'well. I I ' , , It was just three Weeks after his first visit Ito the house of Mon4ieur ElomergUe, that the ldoctor returned, taking With-him the little girl i who hddheeri- almost mirachlously eared froth i death. I When. reaching -the - door some men rwerojail bridging out two etiffi4tOlyt.plaeed ion a hearse Which-steed iii the street, Ti. , doctor 4.nd hisprotege ascended the stairsien- tered the parlor , and proceeded, ,to unother I I Tonna' without seeing any body .or ,earing stay -noise. ,A deathly silence pervaded the whole I house.: But Esther in the greatest alarm push-1 led ope n a door and led the way, to the room • where slerand her twelve sisters had s l ept to it gether. ; The door was'open, bat fopr beds alone occupied= the room, and two of them were empty. Oa the others lay two ,of the 1 (fair haiied twins, and by their side stood Mad , ' woe Dokergue /ookingiat thein; gi.if stypi fi ed. i I Esther,wi_th an undefined dread of something ' ~ frightfol;_rushed up to, her mother and threw' her arms aronnd her. !But as soottlas Madame Domergue saw her, she threw, her' from her, ' then seized her again and would h.ive - torn her to, piece's, if the doctek had .not sriatched' her from her grasp. As it 'was, the poor child's fie wa4 all scratched; and bloody, and she i fainted eleaost immed,iately. -. ; ' " Whir do you brim , ' her here;" cried :Mad-! .. , ame Ddtaergue. “Shy~ is the cause of all 11/Y tnitsfortiYie.. Thera lies the • only - two 1 hare left. Tithe the little demon aw ay' ; or ...I. will , kilt herFn spite of you." ! - i : • i ' AlmoSt troien with ; horror,:theldeeter an , swered not a word, bat bore. the insensible and bleeding child from the room, out - of the hofise, and placed her ia".a carriage whii!h he situ- passing and , stopped ; : ":: ,He - ordered the to drive to an obscure litho street, where li'ved,,in the Moat humble Manner, the: doctor's veriemble mother.. She received the ; unhapp y child, gave her, all neteasary., relief, ; and instidled her in .:a; „Small room-neer her 1 otin.• ' . , , . It waS,as Madame Dpmergue had said, in three weeks ten of her idolized daughters: had . fallen iictime. to 'the "terrific disease, and' the :day after - the deeter'S;Second- visit the oth er two, ed,, tiiid.. were' buried like their sis ters..-Afew days more, 'and the mether her ' self followed,. and when the !doetnr, '-- bear- , t .ing of it, returned, he found that house, once lao noisy" with young. voices, and so hill of the i joy and pride'of a large family,' aileet as -them, tomb, necupled only. 144 premature old'mati,i left alone in the' world and prostrate with i bis! !grief. *few _months afterwards; M M. Domer gue j ;died in opelessinsapies. , - ! I I I Esthe r, brought up.under'the motherty care ; !of bladante &mite; budded - inti) womanhood' I as lovely a youngereateli as -.Could possibly' the seen.., . : When of her - eighteenth year*he , (became e. wife of the doctor, ,whM was now beginning to be known lin the world; 'and !she made her appearanee inl the , saloons .'44 Paris:, and was; for years the Most adm i red woman of the timer She became the mother of childr en —four. sons' and one' ,daughterwhout she broughtjup and educated . to be on - hamar to i herself and ornaments to the -society in which I they lived.. - Dr. &mile became in time one of I the phytiicians of the court of, Louis XVI, and when the Political troubles began to break out, I he, unfortunately, wrotett ,patriphlet in .favor . ofthetourt,' - ancl thus became a marked Man: I In the fall, of 1792,5 t three o'clock one zero mg, the people forcibly entered Soulie'shoutte, { dragged and hit.. - two eldOit sons from their beds, and in spite of the prayers aucten 'treaties Of the. oor. wife' and' Mottier, Carried' them 0i1'.., It was nearly a meek ,beforte 3lnd . ame Solite could hear any-, news of her, lived ones, and . themr:.they__ltad already beeti dead lfour.dayt4the guillotine had demi its work 1 for theni.. ' Madame SOBS clasped' her three remaining fit 'her, armsi two . bort of, 1 seventen'tind„,,iighteen s ttnd a girt of fifteen I [years . eflage:.: Ant ati : ibe strained .theni,- ;to, 1 her in the tt,gony of her gri6cfreel trattblelttatt 1 PrePerie#, for ler.' ' Her Sons ' vowed within thetnielrea to'avenge theiturderof their lath efand VrothPrs ! ' lt ±irenidtake3ao tenet) narrate all the,!eireunistineett-Whieb followtid; big these.two young, men placid ',"ltte3*** at the head of.a sonspirioy againat.thegovel* men and &le yeattpreeisely fromlthe day pa, slab 4 e h a d Jel,rned” the ;bath -a tier ' 'hi:* • .. - , taeuzi. to , ,Salgtli;op,/1 . „4130.. p - ~; u _'. 1 _ __ • , • • ,- . birad and two eldest bole, 314d4oteSP41/42,1. wiived a - short cote, as - f011owi; .• '_ .... ._ Coacrueolatt, Thu y Arson. "Mother, dear triother.- T W* hews conspired tigainst,the - tevernineritive haisi: Igen he. trayed and are to din' tO4notrati,;' Beer it bravely, s mother, - we die fee Ourfethit. and our Itothers. ~ -- Abtter' Vreeve. i `What =words can describe the despair lif iliat,poor mother! „ At, first she prayed God to take her or her reason. : Bata.ray of hiijm diiwiteck upon her. - Sid/Might, Perhaps, rave her leyst• • the•-tribunal'Which bad - con. fdenanedlheM could'nekhedeaf to * Motheets ! P l l l --Pi..r•atncither's dPair; Buti'Ainti7 ld*4- mtne Soulio liftlelnew the men upon Avtiose eintipassion She'eentited. - le - Vila shi iu_ppli, :Wited,'int stain she prayed'; they - by re fusiegte listen to her tint longer: VrBll4 '.- did ' 'aitthat 'would -P 0 .4. 311 4-1)0 done.,to,SaVe - her .boys from death -t,She even, after the example of 3fadameChaliiii, tried to bribe -the execu= tioners.- But they accepted-•r her money - and then betrayed her: . . Finding; all her efforts useless, she tried•ta resign hertelf, and 'deter. mined, as elle could not obtain-her suns five4, l , at least to, get permislion to aid:them to,die,' This was with great difflenity granted her, but at last she received it, and a couple orhoori ,before the excOntion- was to lake place, she presented herself before her unhappy boys.H Then all the grandeur Of her soulLthe deco: .tien, the.rasignation whiCh Was ie remarkable intefter life, shOWed itself. No useless tears, i ndrepreacheS, no larnebting,s Orie short burst ofi ; :tgony, which the eight, - ,Of. , the manacled limbs of her children forcedrom her in spite of herielf,':Ond she was done - With this world. Every moment Was precioni,`i God' and the eternity into which these two'boys were soon i to enteraormed the"Siele subject of the con versation between the' mother - and her chil. dren, nail the jailor came to announce that the moment had arrived to *lv their last pray ers. , Madame .Sonlie stood by while: the chains were knocked off; she knelt and prayed with the priest, who had been sent to accom. I pans the prisoners to the scaffold; and then 1 she took , an win of each of 'her beloved boys nd left the prison with theni. • .. - The public plaCe was crowded with people. Theymould not help pitying those two hand.l some youths abwit to be executed, but teals run down the hardest cheek at the sight off that noble mother, still 'in mourning for her usband and two eldest chilaren, and now law eompapying her two remaining sons to death. She, ascended the scaffold with them, embraced thete tenderly, offered up a shorkprayer with them,'and then allowed herself to be had oil by a friend. But she was not out of hearine when thOehouts of the • multitude announce d to.her that'' all was over. , . - Well, id '95 slie..waS herself rondemeti to I deathon th e charge of eonaealing her hrOther.l in-law, a political prisbner , who ''had' eec49611 from priwiii.. - "A'second. •ti'ine she I ascended the scaffold, and was preparing to die, When an order crime . for her .raleese. She then rel.. tired to a little farm she owned near Bloismnd soon'after:married her daughter to a roan ee.' ery way Ik;',orthy of her. - But misfortune Was to be her let through life. Ifer only child; all i that time had left her to love and h w erish, died id child birth, eleven months aft r her mar. tinge. It was then That 3tadaine Souli turned her eyes towards the cloister. After tonsiderable delay she was received into the Urauline Owl vent of Neves, and in 2825 was made Lhdy Abbess, which place she held until her death. Her just elements were soothed by the pres ence of those uon whom she had conferred her benefits an charities, and she died as calmly as an in n ot falling to sleep, her, lips sealed the crucifix, and her eyes turned to that heaven to which certainly, if afflictions accord the rightlto enter, she had won. 1, HOLKING LESAIVED Bonms.--The broAdest and most laug,hible- attempt of this kind we ever heard of, is related by the 11ev. Matthew Carey, of Judge Dreekenridge, the elder. The. 1 JuOge, it seems had a mortal antipathy to phil. osophical societies; which was the more re rnarkable from his being a scientific and well 1 read man. 7 But at length he explained the mystery by . stating that le had been rejected by the Amen= Philosophical Society,of which he was a candidate for membership, m revenge • for the Democratic 'v_ote be had given for the Logiilature of Pennsylvania, ag,ainst what was termed the f Province Money, and resolved to be re'yenged in return.' He not only wrote sa.' - tirical work' called' Modern Chivalry, bat he petaled off upon that body some ridiculous d&.' cepti6ns. Among , other 'things, ho took his grandtfather's fan, and having ingeniously twist-1 ed, gummed and painted, and repaired it, sent fit to the society as the wingof a bat! Matthew Carey says : 'lt was received with due solem -1 nity,!and a vote of 'thanks was passed to the 1 donor. A- debate arose as to the species of the bat to which it belou,nl3; and a committee of seven was appointed to ascertain whether it t was the wing of a 31adapsclr or 0t0 , 741 bat - 1 The:Committee sat thrke weeks:, and;after con-I kultineßnifon's Natural History and Gold.l smith's Agmaied Nature, thev reported that i it must have belonged to a Muammar bat. • It Fwas,pronounced the greatest curiosity in the I museum, exeept a largelsheet of brOsvrt paper which was hung up .in ; the Chimney and die guised in soot and dirt, land palmed, upon the society as a part of Dramin'sshirt." , , !EDGCATION or Cixszoaxtri.—We would rather, infinitely rather, see a c did six or seven years. I hale and strong,- with a clear ruddy skin, ; and tither - shirks' of 'a ).sound physical education Who had not beep tent to learn his letters and ioald not distinguish A froniS, than we would to see one pale, delicate l looking, lethargic in his alovements, --- even though he - could repeat whole pages by xote, aye, or even—and we once knew such an in tsanee—lead Rosner with he rather. In :looking forward to their - future lives—giving _theta the Caine facades,- for acqiiiing information of the,brain to be much the same in them both;: - ...ive would tinhesita. tingly give it as oar opinion; that, in the.long run, the, former would distance the latter in mental capability and distinguish himself more whsiteVer path ofintellectual usefulneis he might bepleased. t - • , Or Mr. Daniel 4'. lblame, of the Sopho• more elms of YaWCollege i 'New. Haven, v'ae married at few evenings since, to , Aims Ezilda L. IL Pitunb.- 'On the evening following this .event; the Sophomore etas Met and adopted suitable resolutions, one ot *Mel wee: - - Eeseived,:That in consideration of the crying aili whizh zidurally result -from iamb anions, we present him, with a enzdifi, which, like the purse of Fastwutnb, wo trusS may never be empty." etTtralUlTc, iNglraTtaigo3= 9 ATU'WC,I* 9 . anZ PA;„ Tffu;t6DAY, APRIL - 29 1 1851 =I4,ONTA -Atvalumetamo. Thuile*ELl:dein the Sang- 'lt day ite.twhs . efuee; While seated'in'tho ed. Italia) filePartrattkrt of4otir establiahment, post-' Ings books,,Ondednr, 'Over debts due •• us, by, doibighota t 'apti k howeeipg left.handed : bless. , I E 4I oh -- tlO - . - tredlisystere; our reveries ituddimly• broke:fin uptd-by , the entrance elf a '' '-subhcelh e r wbwbsitskert the Standard for sev., l eri.Yeam - doring i r whiutt tide • he: had.paid on, account esrena*o.o tents.!. -' Halloo e thet we, .`,v'ers'e = i - pihmitte 'to pay one of thes e , ,di ' -- A - tidetiskri SP the conversation proves: . L ' l - 40.rater , 441k.PtitIttlro'l believe-I Mive.ta ,o, /So- peper about -4 et. , me' see .....;ah; yes abo Literati.. vaars.; sad; 41 that time, too. I liae 'teed' et liii 'Portals Road ; how SOU .lit tilii ' llieit I'dit - iiet knoi4 but'precious little - , of t'mone*assf. yid. fingered. However. ! in Me anti; receipt ado, and here's your rtk° er.- ' --- - , ~i:,5 ; ~ ' ,'' . I ‘.. [:ubscriber deposites .844 on thO table; whi .11' the editor'grasps iiirvouslY for fear the an , - riberla mind will change, and tills out a :lpt.—Exit subicriber.) .1 'might nat,uralty be : supposed, tno tiler.' um e eter of the oditor'efeelinza 'Vent' op into ~ sun hien 14' Per 'Cot.,:-Another rap', at the - deo 's - ' ' ' ! ' 4 ' onisie - - ' - '[ 'all countryman enteral , -! ' , onntryltuut—Well .filr.;;Newspapei-man dyie do? • Been taken your paper ding i.n while. and I; is alting , tithe since I Paid hing. ' Wouldat hiUtithout it no how—as list of _market prieie saves me fifty del a vear. Redly too bad that i havn't at. ed tw it aquae:- Row much is it? itor (running his eyes over the Ledger) —0 , here it is—two undone's tifree, and two are ye—ten dollars. . • • f nntrymen deposits a - saw horse, takes his receipt,- bids - Pditor .ai affectionate. good-! bye and vatnoses.l . 1 A other rap !- What; iot another customer ? —A 'I live it is? . ''', - • ' ' ' I 1,11 ( der Irish sabscribet front the 'Mountain.) Irishman how are veep I . Rid luck to men. self, but its owing this paper, for a Imp , time ,l a and snre - aguod wan it is;,--sorrn a"bretli er, iri-thim from thevould Otranthry. Fur who am I endue yeses 'V '' • . f ditor refers to the. book.). . . ' itor—Two years and' six months—five 1 dollrs. ' .. . [I ishman depositor a tellow coin bearing the impr a:lion of the Atnencan' eagle,' pockets , the ' raysait: he calls fur, and . is oft] S clam becomes pleasant, everything in it wea a brilliant hue-ev e n the rattling of the sleet against the window 'panes has acharm ing s und: By Jove; nnpther knock ! ',Walk in.!' 31av Ibe shot if it Isn't G., another 814 , debt r, - Oh , it rannotlkposaible that ite is I goin to:Par. ]ca he .isi—by the beard of I the rophet, he jerketh his calf skin ! .1 .1 ! G. Well, oldlellow, you have dunned me prett, often, but of course I couldn't begin to ' blamyou for it. I 'determiried to mit it out I of your power to dun me again for a whiie, whe Capt. West made this Nivmerit; Let me see, urteenldollars I believe yoisaid it %vas, ; eh? Edtor <rubbing his hands. with glee) Exact- i ly, w ie.!) pays up to the 15th of next April. G. Here'a fifteens dollars—just credit 'meal della in advance. (Exit subscriber.) Ed tor (solus)—A weight transferred from yourconscience to our pocket,- 1 [E itoeprOceeds to enter a credit, and sings i, !' Oh us may it ever be—' when the song is i cut' s ho rt by the entrance of a German patron. ] 1 German subscriber — Veil, we-gates, Mr. Drint r, heh ? . Owe you for ter baperss,-heh, how i nch! Can't rent mode, mineaelf, but [minechildren say tor musht hay ter b-iper, and gess rf icy mosht haf him, ter old man muslit bail:let.? (German subsriber, who is some thing of a wag, chuckles and gives the editor , a dig in the ribs. . is Rditor--Squire your bill only five dollars. I ,German subscriber pulls out an old stocking and counts down enrol jt twenty bright half' ;defiers.. Editor's eyes dilate. lie becomes ex- I eeedingly nervous, and shows symptoms of flying off the handle! Exit patron. I T sky is clouded, but it never looked bet- I ter -t he light was never stronger. The hoe.! rem' a long Irinter are forgotten; and sun- I shinereigns in the heart. Even the accordeonl Vin the bookstore underneath, which a few me-, I trient4 agO made an execrable noise, is now makitig passable Music. 16 the exuberance of his'spirits he could have shaken hands'. with , -his bitterest enemy. ' (A _heavy step is heard l on Me stairs! What! eat if possibeli The) I streak has been so good that it must be, a call' on thS other aide. , I ! • ' (Door opens; enters I) ; ' ' ' ' ' Jerimalem! if he pays, the millenium is at band,`and the next sound will be a final trum- Pet t i j.-+-Well my heartY, I have jnet,- suceeeded'i .In collecting' accounts, and as I owe I 1 you etinsiderable of a bill,! thought Taould do I Ino batter than let you have a tril'e ou cc. I !Count' ' -.. ' Editor (strongly impieseed with .the..sam e opinion)—Under such circumstances in the ! language of Dummy 'Allen.' —t• - I .1-hippy to tneet-:-happy to part—and al- i ways happy , to meet again..'. [J.,4eposites two X's on the table, sees t h e' entry made, and - leaves.] ; .- Editor has reached a state of perfect bliss, and whistles Dolly Day; with variations, when , the sanctum dooragain opens, and a prominent ' I Whig enters. s Whig-=Believe. I owe yen LOcrifoco prin. tins a'small'bill for advertising. Don't like the principles you ndvoiate, but i would jusfai soon da business with one party an another;' besides .I know you' heye much the largest..dr-I CulatiOn in this vicinity; and in short, I know what, what. - • _ , • Editor-:-GoOd. Yourbill Is 89;00. I [Whig pays , hands over anew adveitise. ment and leaves.] . • - - _, - • Andther knock ! 'Walk fors • . , s. !! , (Enter_a lion, long, lank, eadriverdis look- ing, Middle aged gentleman:dressed in hu tc h, with white neck cloth; :Editor takes hid for a preidher, and btiws deferentially. .- -, , Stringer—l am - th e 1 Traveling Ags o t o e l Doetek Julius,o, Eillemofrfl Uoi s 'emd Regent dating DePilmtiie Retturrettion Syrup s w hi o b I wish to advertise`in your paper. - - - [Editor lights a cigar, cocks his figs up .on' ' the.tableand.feels very fedependint]. f. E._' We don's-advertise Arad medicines at Ibis establishment unlees paid for in advance. ho% nati anyt you lara ten i Tra'veiling itgent—EZettse itte; b'ut no quack medicine; bat only highly iteetemel. d W - by the faculty. What are Our tertes for bait aro ham a pear? ' = . - Editor—rwent7,dollani , - • ' kAgent does not appear to I>e a , bit talker/ I aback, ails usual Cid SUOh 0;64)11*, bUt draws Lis Portmonaie.] • • ' • - - Agent; -Here's five, ..arid Eve. BO ten,•and ESeins. andagrili datum; fiditariil room arm lank agent lade away; Editor final hi m . sulfa; home in bid; wife shaking hitn.) • Wife six Vclock. Ain't:pm going to market? I • ' - • Editor 1 (81 iglitlY filed)--Everiasting perdi. tierfseize the market. Didn't I . tell you last] night I= had tio - market money 1 [Editot turns'over ataltrles to continue the dream, but the charm broken, the spell is gone, and, ell that remains Is . an . uneasy doze, which is interrupted by the inniovrof the fam ily bestriding him for a' 'florae,' and clutching, his hair for a-bridle rein.) • • ,- {Scene changes to breakfast table.) . Wife—tl should like to know ?;What. you were dreaming about this morning. Editer—.Why ? , Wice—Because when I you, on continued grumblin g in an-nnintelligiblu lan guage. The only thing! could tinderatand, was, it's an infernal shame you didn't wait until it Was :a hundred; -enough to buy per? . • .1 [Editor gives a ghastly grin, se izes his' hat, rushes out of the louse, goes to tin, Office, and —works off the outside n • " The Tn *it's Appeal. 'ln the year '1836, the inhabitanis living in a . diStrict bordering ott Reck River, hi the northern part of the State of Illinois, were much incensed by the depredations ofa band of horse thieves who infested_that portion of the Country. Every exertion had ibeciu made to discover the men engaged in this nefarious transaction, but hitherto in tido, and valuable animals were stolen, and lost to their owners, in defiance of the utmost vigilance and care., During such a state of alfairs,.the citizens residing in the region of the thieves became thoroughly excited, and went Wound up ttt such a pitch of indignation, that a body of men were', fordied styled Rangers, • whose explicit duty ; was to expunge the district of all suspicious charaters, and endetwor to put a stop to the depredations of the horse thieves. Shortly after this bond commenced opera tions word was conveyed to the lender. of the Rangers that, a valuable, horse which bad been i stolen the night previous, could then be found I on the premises of a man named Burt, lockedi up in the stable. Althciugh Burt ha — d' hereto- ' fore been looked tipon as an honest -man and an upright citizen, yet, the Captain deemed his duty, to at least exiinitine his feral and learn the truth or falsity Of the report. • Accordingly he summoned some half:dozen of his Rangers to meet him at a spot not far front Burt's house, and before.morning, set out for the same place himself. Daylight was but bardly disCernable. in the east, and the borzy. ili;ght of coming dawn had not yet 'Penetrated the bottom, where the suspicioned man resi ded, as the Rangers, charged with their, fear ful mission of life or death, silently a'jproadlied and surrounded the dwelling. Leaving three of the band to guard the entranch, the . Captain proceeded with the others to the stable, broke , open , the door, and found the missing horse, as had been reported, safely stalled inside. I ,hot', a lingering doubt_ now remained '4l Burt s guilt, and with a stern determination to make such an example of him as would deter others from, a like transaction, the &urgers re turned to the house. In the' meantime, Bprt had arisen, and upon, coming to tho doer, was seized by those in waiting; and upon ,demand ing the reason, was informed that the stolen animal was found in his stable, and that he was considered &thief: Muttering something. about he 'knew *'would come to this at last,' he quietly submitted to whatever his captors had in store for him. ' A short consultation was held, and it way resolved to hang the criminal upon a loge elm tree,. that grew in front of his own home, itbe int!, deemed that such an act would strike ter ror and dismay into the . 'ranks tho horse thieves. • ' - . • Burt had asked half an hour to prepare for death; and the sun. had risen in All his golden majesty e're the fat.al moment arrived which would launch him into eternity. In vain had his grey headed father and mother pleaded for his life, with trembling.tongues—tho old lady tottering forth from the dwelling, And kneel. ing in suppliant mood to his apparently rnerci-' less captors. In.-vain had the,Wife of his ho: sem knelt in tears° f agony, and entreated them as hisbands to ripaio his lifb—foieach Ranger had Suffered ;more or less in person, and they deenied the examplo',absOlutely. necessary: to, deter and it seemed as though Bart must Surely 'die. -•- The dreadful' preparations Were completed —the half hour had expired-and the criminal wasierrayed_under a limb of a stout elm, over which a rope was thrown, one end being noos. ed around the prisonees'neek, and ' tho other' held by three of the Rangers. ' Themeamo a moment of dreadful silence;' that Awful stillness, which preludes the launch. ' ing of a fellow being into a future existence—. whili the three Strong men who.held the rope gazed'fixedly upon the Ceptain for fatal I signal.' It was given by raising the right Arm; and already the noose was tightening around, , the doomed man's neek, when the wire of Burt, issued forth frotn the house, fielding an infant,] a litho more than a year' old in hei arms. Rushing forward, she fell on her knees di. ' redly in !pant of.,the Captain, and instantly , raising the child, with arms outstretched; to. wards him, she exclaimed, in tones that would have pierced a heart'of steel: , > 'lf you will not s'paro him for !then Sake of his grey haired sires, or. the wifo,of his bosom, spare, him in the name ofpod, tor the'eaktv of his infant buy!' • • - Another dead:silence 'reigned like &pall over the spot ; then, as though inspired by heaven itself, the child also out-stretchedite little arms full towards Ito parent, and eicleimea, in a voice heard by 414.6o:single word 'Father:'_ ' • ' I The - muiscleS of the Captain'e face quivered lin every fibre, and the men who held the ropO I Slowly relaxed the pressure mural the. peek of Burt; when again the infant uttered, In dis 4 tinct tones: ' _ • ' Fathirl father! ` .• And thin, as though &wall; tag.: of euecese,i huddled Into Ite mothelN Wont, and , buret in.) to a sobbing„ery. . ;;. _ It was more than the Atmiere „Could ataid.l and; after` a Ebert - consultation, • the rope was i taken from the eriminel'e:Meck t and the baud] left The_spot; and Burt -became's .reformed' road, through the- preen! effecta'a las t Iu 'ANT'S fono:--Colanibiarn and Oriatt West. , Wo7lllls . 6io4lotauebforepf the saiaa bUt a Ato the SOUS of tbb sour. ' =ill isTipoleion llonapatth. ... ~ _ Napoleon Bonaparte lerleitteertriltlirebeee to tremble. r Without a VeetoeteirePletithem. or a friend, he had ralsedhimaelefroto ge hat; ble situation in life. to Abe. suentdt of leen:int' grandeur- and: power. ,eTlie re,O3V fore:dad& princes live been .tetopelled: - tie' bew Act— the mighty:co:4nm/. leiter e. Shelf careetyof unprecedented-proeperity; eire'reeistlieleialese warrior, blinded by guar:es:eta glory; haStine ing to oft mine. :comp eting ,hie own dovetail. The' leitais inSieiable anibitionerehich prompted hittete - extend' hire•docabeiona vier the earth, wait thee, sere means of t his &mite don. ' ;We see h i ts who had 'Ulla uniVeisallY acknowledged iiihrentist4eitteifur tionakh that eVer existed; aintost entirelyy` disetted' by the few remaining "friends whlethhe victorious allies hed'lnft;lbroving himself upon the gen enreity °this enemies, and receiving-from them a prison for his .home. -,, _ • Far different Would • have been-his fate had the powerful energies of his mind been exert. ed In promoting' the best interesteof his coun try. His peculiar Intellect fitted; him to occu py a station - 1r above the lot of ordinary men. Hliwas consclinas of his own power; and, .In stead ofinaking nn, effort to establish the lib ' erty for which France led been' deluged in bkod, ho chore to become a ruler of reflation delves. But how is the ken* reversed.— i 'rhe roar and ditiof battle with him have coal- I ed. Ills glory and power are no tuore, and the consul, conqueror, and emperor, became an exile on-the sca-girtlsle of-St. Helena. Severe indeed was the lesson of - submiselon to him—the faiorito of fortune, and on whose ifort:m.llk she had shewered so tangs v hie ings. Yet hie proud spirit was still 1 uncon quered..ln the school 'of aeversity he was no !docile pupil. 1 The lessons there taught him 'I were received ',with a sullen resolution ,to de., rive no profit frOto their teachinge. If a ray of light ever shone to cheer the midnight gloom of his mind,. it was when he indulged the hope I that, he might again be restored to his coun try; foraven there, surrounded as he was by rocks "arid waves, wild dreacr-s of cenquest and ! victory still fitted' before his imagination.— He did not wish—nay. he even teemed :to be resigned to his fate. His thoughts' were con tinually wandering beck to the shores: of his own sunny France-to the time when Europe's monnrchs were forced to yield to him in. the ; , council and on the field, and to the withering liner when ho was hurled from the throne and 'forcibly taken to the desolate isle which was to be his heure and his tomb. : - I If he had !been willing to cast from hint his' crown'and his glory, and devote his talents to that greatest of vietories—the comineat of his own proud ;spirit, half of his misery might have.been arrested. But the same stern spirit that was eonspieuoue in the emperor was alike prominent in the exile, and imbued him to spurn• crervthing that 'would have alleviated his eereteliedness. , -Ho had made self his idol in all his actions. • However apparently gen erous and amiable, still could ever be traced . his predominuM t principle, se lfi shness. It was this which - prompted him to soar into cold and dolate regions, far above all his contempora ries. - . • When we reflect upon the harmony of his purpose—the untiring, and ' unceasing vigor with which ho pursued all his plans, our admi t ration is excited. , But,' alas! we cannot for , getthe fortune lost, the lives destroyed, the hopes blighted,' and the hearts =de desolate to gratify his ambition. In his hours of lone liness and solitude; were there no sad Totem broncos of the miseries he had caused? Or, had ho learned to think, that nothing could be wrong which would promote his own aggrart , dizement? His unhappy state of mind aggra. rated the diseast3 which was fastened upon I him, and , death wOs soon to open the gate of that prison,for which "hope had ceased to pre sent any other, key." The destroying angel hovered near, and the last words of his pass. ing spiritindicated that he still clung to hopes Of earth. Yes, eiett then, in imagination, ho steed in the van of the battli—saw the flash ing of musketry, and heard. the clashing of! swords. Then was the. proud one subdued by 1 a greater Conqueror still, and in the narrow I ghere of the lonely isle slept the cOnqueor of EllfoDo. • Long will the voyager and strimger pause to gaze upon the dreary sepulchre that once contained him before - whose 'mighty prowess so many were forced to - .yield. The desolate rock, swept by, the fierce tempest of the ocean, rearing its held in the midst of the broad At. lontie,ts a - fit embleni of tho stormy life and unfading faMe of Napolion.- As it rises amid! the ocean , waste, so will his name rise cheer- Tess, desolate and Cold, amid the vast , ocean, of • L subjoin a few lines, supposed to havo been, written by him a short time ~beforo his death. They have been in print, but may;bo of interest to the reader. They seem to beta true picture of - his' aspiring spirit, and show that' his 'ruling passion was strong even in' death: . “ Oh !- bury in e deep. in •the 'bound less sea, Let toy heart, have a litnitless grave; For. my my spirit fit life tuns as fierce andlree As the course of the tempest wave. And so,fai from the reach of llortal corittol Were the depthi..of,my fathomless mind, I That.the ebbs and:flows of my. single. Bout.. Were the tides - of the rest of. mankind. Then my brini pall shall , enqiidle the world, As in life did the voice of my fame; • And each mutinous billow, that is skyward curled, Shall to fancy rerecho my name. , That name shall be stored' in.record sublime, To the uttermost, corners of earthy—.. .: Oh! renowned, till!the wreck of exiting time Be the glorified land of , my birth. Yes! !jury my heart lathe boundless sea, It would burst from it narrow tomb, Should less than an 'ocean my sepulchre be, • . Or if wrapped in less .horrible gloom." VALEDICTORY or AN EDITdR.--The follow , in; is the valedictory article of an editor out West: • ' • 'The undersigned retiree the- ,editorial chair with complete convietion.thatrell ty. From the boor he• started his pnper, to the present time; he heibeen.eolleited.to lie, upon every giVen Subject, and can't remember ever having' told a wholesothe truth, •withnit mioishiog .his subscription list or _calking . an enemy. Under these circumstonees of trial, and having a thorough Centempt for' himself, ho retires in order to recruit his t oral cOlieti tutimir - = Madame Otto Goldoebto (Isto Mao:ow Te 4 241 givoltor Coooerta *Nor , rk, the ISth, 2tzt Rott - 24tkofltray, • ~. ~: . =~ Vagrag - 77 - 7 .7, • . s ' s 10 pipg.,, - ,, ,:. , -,t L i '--_- • ._ , -- Erpirsiocloi ) d t ,.- 4 :t074.44 ii*ei,nftheri s oitie44;th*-ita s . criv‘i s top , .;:now.i..' eternietrifdlyin: ,Winter turns beck up, atitheitiliat . ;Sad; ne his.last detlencettp:.= orailiiithintatkre,.. ti or, to doge the..l4. nriVINVIA . ttie.:' , ir.like -, e _Unruly. tenant -elit , 5 funtiovtto - t r :tefuses. viote.thc:prendsee . at, ' 1 Iliti*vitathitinf4 liii leasleiteld knoWintthis pestms4oiiis rimo r tenths. of the law, declitaw. I Mot* entlT the psi co is Made -- too het int.::: 1 hini:.: la still. Moreno iherly climes - the thsiagi-; is.:; effeetedra*lThyMagie,, as in a Christmas pantotnimo; at th e Wave .of:the enchantress"- . wand, iceherga atal.sitow4tills - diebtppelki, ind; - : - gardens and gm•es'arlse intheir - place:: imam .- the, ice fetters etrickeir froni the streams; Oa the fields-clothed .wititsiidure and. the ',114 . * -branches, with 'foliiidt, in .the fat:44oml • • , . But with.tue there.is a pleasingimeerteinti:' about - the'. spring - ,westher, - - which . imparts *- vivid Interest.to the vicissitudes of thesoason." The almanacs are . far too lenient; . imordingtn , - these: voracious. - chronicles. the • first day .of March is the first. day of Spring. . Thisla a downright exaggerstton,.unr.-erthy of seiense; The, boisterous. month is often ushered in by a dr iving inow :Stortn : . fir as -the eye. can reach,' the hills and Leldierewhitel; the trunk* : Of-:the_meis groni4,:optla arises are emberred . with 'spotless. bas rc/feft, the gate poste weer, , whitecaps: the air is,. full of living, frathere. , This iano time,surely, to bresSaforth Thom... setes-ineation:„ ~ ' - • .-- -..- geptle Eyrinz e thrtlalmlldzrex, L'• Still, in, spit( of the_surly, rough, and riot, ous character of Maiv h, there is occasionally !something encouraging . and -pacific • halm - ae. meaner. If he comes in liko a lion; be Is, Apt to go out like a lainb, He. is like many la blustering fellow that we meet, who begins life "all sound and fury," but tales a sensible' view of the matter before he ends his eamet. and subsides at last into a sober. well-beharsa citizen. He is the rough herald to a gentler mate. April- follows, hire the lady of yocog Lockinv.ar, - ~n ast, a smite an her tp, and a tear la !trr ye." April is, a very perplexing body-Lnow she titters, and giggles at you, like a = boarding. school miss of sweet sixteen; now she pont,. and frets, and weeps, like a neglected "flame of thirty,• and yet very.dear is she in all her moods and humors,. forshe brings ms flowers and music, violets and birds, and is withal AA emblem of existence. • "For Life is but on April thy, Of sunalgrta and of shibwer," Last comes May: she is the type, the ctn.. bodiment of spring. The , other Months, for her sake, have done battle with: thS Wilda; the field is free to her light footsteps, for sho knows her advance is covered with ithe wafts artillery of Sommer smiles. it delitte maid• en is our charming bray.; 'Her sadles Mrs not the fiery voluptrumsnpsi of summer; her breath is not the hot blast that vivifies only to I wither. No, no, she is tender and gentle. our cherished May: the flowers that she acts- I have, no gaudy beauty; they are as tender and I gentle as herself. The soft peach end appl6.: blossormq, the fragrant hawthorn buds , the twit daisies, these aro woven in the wreaths, • that bind her sunny brow. Welcome, then, thrice welcome, daughter of Spring; the heart must Ibe cold and passionleis. indeed, that does not. open at thy coming, that does not kindle at thy smiles: ' . - NVidow Jones' Cow. • , Widower Stslilt's wagon stopped one morn. fag` before widow Jones' door and me lb* usual-signal that ho wanted . somebody ht tho . . . I house, by dropping the rents, and tuft/1%4°11M0 with his elbows on his knees. Out trip* the; widow, lively as a erinket, with' a tremendekto black ribbon on her. snow.whito cap. , , GOOd morning,' was soon said on both sides, and the 'Widow waited what was further to be said. Well, ma'am Jones, perhaps.you don'twant to sell ono - of your cows, for nothing, no - way. do you.' • 4 Well there, Mr. Smith, you conkl,not,haro spoked Inv mind better. A poor lone worn= like me, does not know what to do .with so many erCatures, end I - should bo glad to trade if we can iix it.' So they , 'adjourned to the meadbw. , Farmer Smith, looked at . R4ait-4.thett at the `widow-. I then at lirindk-thon, at the widow- , -then ut ' tho downing coWtheti at the widow again, •and'so. through . ..the (whole forty. The same call was - made cverY day for a - Week, but,Enr. met. Smith could tilt decide which eow he wanted: lengs on paurtlay when the. widow Jones was in a' harry to get through her haidiag for Sur.dayinalhad ever so much. to' dci lit the horse,. as ail lartners,wives and widows have en . Saturday, the was a little Un patient. Farmer Smith was as irresolute as 1 1'hat Downing earl is ratty fair mature -=fiat=- , ' he stopped to glue e at the widow** I tacit, and then walked around. hor not the wid. otr but the, cow— . • - That 'ere short horn Darixam Is not a bad looking, beast, but I don't' know--' another look st•the widow. • , The Downing, cow I knew' before the late i Mr. Joqes, hoticht her,!- Hero he sighed at the illusion to thilato !'lr. Jones. She elghed,aa• they both looked at each other. It was alder. ly interesting movement. '- • • . 'Old Roan is a faithful 'Old milch cow; and so is Drindle.....but I have none better.' A long I stare preceded this speech,: the pause was get-, tin , * awkward, and at last Mrs. ;Jones broke ' La? Smith, If I'm tho'cow you nod* ear so r - • . ; • • . 'The intentions of the widower Smith widow Jones wore duly . published the : next day, and our =dens can judge the rest. • • PIES IN T/TEtiroxAcn.—The, London pried records the tleaticor E trailsman's wire :under: pecullarcionimstonces; which rendered* poet • mortem examination necessary. ' The stotastial contained; in its lower half, Woe ounces offline of 'a ,porple_bleek color, not oorroded, all bent or brokettanany very pointed. , Tbs ootl• toots of tho,ifoteoch were.very tightly peeked . sationslthißes, similar to , those - loud Ia i the atotbach; snd-Whelltalmtructing the Vibe..' ;Their we); ht. was abort a ponildet .The:' . ' MAU not - of the deeepsecrhos never , seen het: put'Oinalinte her mouth ; hut her -$011 'he had observed-his slather:biting' pins, qui :" • netted that she swallowelktitesztl,auCetge4 tereeeee, that -.he 'had catiist eli ylaisteet 4 her with the , fart, , when slier carriettaChttn. Ii ippeired that her 'appetite Wits *flew coy. fictotm - oerastonally ery lteavi:aveitee• ahtlee taformed the dactor thiamin% a chll4, *he vest Ar_thrt:toblt cf. eathig starch and este peticP. a:e'.that tint itad: Seca het Uttar ..~:.;; l Ji~.l. ~,tiF~ Elm MB,a
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers