The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, December 07, 1854, Image 1

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past ttrop
Vgett
' ' ' [Yon. '7,v. ronat
. ... _ .
• rillithstee. ' •
- It la glee-oft e inserted year.
1 °co g m ', all utdovelY an thou.seetri'st,
And dreadvit!is thou tark,", ! ;=.[ Thompson.
to: _swiftly borne on. icy car,
)Forged in polar climes afar, •
ri
Old Winter from , his northern ho e,
Arrayed iri fleecy robes heti, come
LAnd rudely seraYshis, sceptre here
' ' tient visaged monarch of the year.
At his approach, Sol trembling fled
. • And'et;ased his wonted beams to s
: . When, felt - shenot the - warm entbri
- A palor spread o'e r Nature's face;
While soon was bound, with icy"
Rivers, hamlets, fields and plains.;
!And hushl y the cataract that fell
From era rock, in mountain-dell
E'en the siliery, gurgling rill,
..
ilpspringing . from. the' rugged hill,
No longer urgerl'its tiny flow
To mingle with the Waveo below,
-But nestled inns pebbly bed, •
With frosty mantle overspread.
Tho' desolation reigns - :trolled, '
Tho' from, the grove-no murering
: Of rustling vertlizre greets the ear,
Nor gay-Winged songster's carols et
The' vegetation moulders low, -
(Vectored -by the pearly snow, -
Tho' perished are the lovely flower
That bloomed in aromatic bower&
- . Else deep in tangled wild:weed's n
Hidden* from Sol's withering gaze,
Tho' the brook, meandering nigh,
Flatli ceaSed its gurglirgietiatiy;
Yet has rude Winter t till - no joy
That, may, the restless mind employ
No alluring, winsome charm '
Which can the season's sting disara
"Ah, yes," young swelling heart's r
" And e'er too swift its pleasures fl}
'When flay its fleeting course has rn
And evening shadows veiled the sui
' What happy groups, with joy and int
Assemble round the blazing hearth,
And though without the chilling bias`
an mournful cadence whistles past,
With sparkling eye and blooming c 1
What health and happiness 1 espeak,
'They while the merry hours away,
'Their,liearts all buoyant, light and
'Oh, if Thu happinessthere be, - •
Earihside oftiread 'Eternity ; ' ,
lit it were.given,man. to knew - -
.Cf..Ratven aloretaste while below,
Thatprieeless been is - found not hen
af not wipiin.the social -
sphere .
• - ILVia . ere pfwents•with their 'children Mel
And friends with foy each ether gree:
j.
..Where line exerts .its destined power
Am( eweet contentment rules the hog
Bat say, has Winter no delight'
.1
Save*ln'the social circle bright?"
' , Answer Ye who jay to go =
. . 4 0'erthe sparkling driftedhow, .
31nil 'swift on bounding sledges glide,
Itflawn tbe rugged".mountain's side,
'Mocking fear with laugh and song,
-A mirthful, ever joyous throng.-
Answer ye, with whom tosirtar, .
The merry tinkling sleigh-bells near
is music sweeter than the lute, •
The viol or the mellow flute.. •
Answer schoolboy, blithe and gay,
- Fresh from labors of the day, •..
Dust thou not enjoyment find, ,
' Aside_from culture of the mind, .
•%.' to innocent andhealthful. sports, . 1
Rearing snowy mounds and forts,—
Else gliding with companions, gsy, ,
. . O'er frozen river, loch or bay?'
When howls the Winter, bleak and
' Who's happier than the husbandman !
- The golden troaieres or the fields,
Pernonia in her bounty yields,
Which brings she to his siniling door,
And now securely laid in store.- ,
- Ye pampered sons and dang,hters, too
Ofluzury, who neveritneW
The
wealth of toil or sweet employ,
Envy not the farmer's joy.
' Your sumptuous banquets richly sprer.
',. In halls where wealth and fashion trH
Where music sways with magic art, i
The feelings of the human le4rt ;
Where beauty sparklesln the throng, ,
That whirls in giddy maze along,
• .
eau twee welt pure delight afford
As lingers round his ample board: -
- But Winter soon will- take its flight,'
- And rosy Spring with footsteps light,
Clad in - robes of liviiest green, t
Briparitling eyes will soon Le seen,
Dispensing, with prolifie hand, -.-
-Ben choicest blessings thro' the land;
1
89 now, stern King, tho'powcr thou hat'
We hurl de fi ance at thy' wrath: • -
\
_ ante ! a way thy rod from shore to shore,
Tell reign is short, 'twill soon be o'er.
lATIIROP,Dec. - 1, 1.134.
OREAbL—We onoe heard a
isst*Wll4,joke„which-a henTecked hush.
got ipOri Ills Mrs. Caudle: Ile bad bornel
railing, for many a Jong year, till one in
itit he was - tlasitering awarabout the w I
Short'of viti6es . ,lloitr; &c . , he remarked
pathetically':
‘slerttsli;l haft itlrearn last night; a r,
mer :orie,•aild it gives -me some uneasin
•rdrepmed that I was taken' sick and di . 1
",)Vjell, if it Was no more 'than that,"
erusl4 . "1 "kiste ,had been more tha " !
Amato." •
,
:Bnt thisis not all," said the hustiatiii
to hell, and when I got there, I
quiredifor one of the Amps of the ol,d 4
'filmic/it and - was: Showii into hia:piesene:
The old fellow meognited
,me - at „ tdiee,
said hi:mitt-are you come - hero rto stay!"
- told him I - bad. " Well, I ean't: have'
'2 l herel”.: said '11.4' 3 %11f you stay, when
,-*ush'dies 'bowie; and then -14 will
Sai in 'itproitill ;the, 'timer
'Soon after thii completion ofihtiarra
it the iiirenni , there e .. 1 1. M showe r e t a I
therxiitello)eihend,w.!
inide. tit* ohlita eisevyh'
stittedded:
in!' Live up to: your rngn4,reruents.
4001.
. . . .
. j •I ?.
• , .
j:,:•..1. - RA t
IS ti c i kons'. 1f •
•, 1 ,
• . _____ ~,.____ ._., ::......- ~..
The young D , ke of It
itchstrstiS.,
ANjIiiifiRESTING AN D AFFECTINO STOl4.i . '
AI The Story - of th life of NaPoleon's .sott as
'it is lola, jn.aiticle f entitled, ": Tile. I3Onapa,tte
Family,f,' I.)y a writ r in the: . Arm; tis Bri toll
.-' 14 1 vie7,0,1 cop hardly fail. to be read with deep
1
interestr . Says an a le contemporary of the
'. *British press. l . Whi - 1 ttever relates ;to the Bo : -
:
naParte faMilY, is a waysitnbued with excite
tnent-and; the romance of history, iningled
with the truth - - of
.biography and' ehroutilo
, -
' gy
- 1' ' •
Ile fate - of the. sou of. Napoicou, has tad-,
veiSally been d ep l oyed .by the'tnore coli q. ralit-
i
.ened, portion of the; civjl ized -world ; and ; ,it is
to In reraibtted that, lie did 'not lii-e to realiz e
• ...
fraitsde7i,Sable from the. tichiefetr gloriesi:. of
• hisTillustrmtisaneeStor.. We f tney there lire
few whe,4 - ill read the annexed j•vithout re4li
,l .
i •
zing a painful emotion.. .• -
N
Only three y ears ago, when le came, with
~..
Ili* mother, to reside at Scliond urn, the yeting
' Deice of lieichstadt spent the Whole reinaiu
der of - his dire either thereof aOlenna';.otily.
-oil one ortwo . oecasions . travelinra fromi ..
~, u
, iI
tne.,r beyond the diStance of a f' iw miles. BY
lii*lgrandtather; the emperor, well as,Vy
allilthe other-nietnbeis of the r4yal fainilvlie
t ..:b
seemed tolhavo t Always been traced wit h . ex
treme kindness.' After die-departure Of ;his
!nether to: the Italian States, he was-cotnnitt
tett to the . care of various 11111*.ES, under ,{lie.
' .
1
superintendence'af an Austrian Noblenfalt . of
rank,.the Count
.ltfauricede p
ietrichstet4
Rtlrarding hiss early education,l,only two facts
of any interest ore. : mentioned,.; his excessive
relnetance at fi rst to learn Gertnan, whidt,
however, soon became more .his. own. Own
French ; and hi,i4 .fondness for Historical rend
iti,V and especially for books relating to the
career of hisfatiter. A, ii. bob - , he was,ilon
the' whole, dull,'grave'and - worthless; but.do
'l'. ttonate •
cto and atrec . ,
. I . l.'he news of his father 'death, which i)c
eurred when lie4was ten years of age, i's said
toihave produced a risible effect upon him..
Ito, vas evident, Andeed, that the boy,, yottng
as he - was, had inen brooding- over the-tuys- .
ter;:e of his owlllelianged condition, and cher
ishing ,as well as lie could, the .thought!..of
his connection
. hvith. the
_extraordinary. hu
man being whofrn he could dinily. recoiled as
, his father, wh0.43 bust and portrait ,Intehlil
'still see ;, and 'wild, as they ttied to explain to
bin), was now shut up on an / island to the O'tll- -
!
onside of the earth, whither the nation* or
1 Ettroin had corispired to send him • for their
on - n sa'rt y . The thdught, qf his father be
carne the boy's 'pimple passion . ; and Wheulhe
'I 4 could no lonraer.think of that father: as still
L
. 1 in '.existence on earth, his respect tor id4tin.fn l
rory amounted Ito
,a _ worship. - 'F',.ery -bqok
1,t114 could tell him anything of his father,! he
.1 dej, - ourett. Wirtt-4,..,-,..,1-1-.„
, •--; ,. .....,,, 1
I,to I,tear_ a the a rival of any one at Vienna,
wlibbad; peron .1 relations with theetitpetor,
- • . ti-„, . h a d
I : tie was uneasy H ilt Il e seen him': ~
1" . 11 1.+1.-Si 'to raratify this an-iety•for inforin' a
, -fl - ‘. ~ t, , . . . - ...•
,
tion his tutors, (it his: grail4fathel:'s command,
. i 1?
ibegati to instruct him systematically in rn4d
lierd history-and polities; concealing from him
lin4thing, says' M. de Moulin% that could-ren
. Iliohten him,as to the real course of his fath 7
11.er'Slife; and its effects' on' the conditiod of
~ . :
BE4rope, and Only adding suchOothtnents and
TexPesitions as might make him aware, at lie
same time, iii what point his father was to t I}e.
iepiPliended. '.lPerplezed by such lessons! . ru
jihistory, according' to iNletternich; the Oor
!bos did , his best to come to .the right his In
t
:tors re ,, arding What he was !a li ght to con4id-.
k]. 0.. .„ . . • : .-„. . ,•
ler !his
.father's errors and excesses, Ia -all
' 1 .
;cakes of . feeling and instinct, however, iis rev
ii
•erence for ilie.mentory of his father prevailed.
ITI very books -which his ' father Ind Liked,
Sug .l
has Taisti and o.,sian,' became. for - that
' i relSoil his . favorite - s. His father's' campaigns
and dispatches he made a subject-of dilligent
• sttidy; using them 'as a text for his Olin inili
taly lessons...,ln - short, before he had attnn
et! r :i llis seventeenth year, he had - read - and 't
-e
-.
rea'. l . everything that had been .written rega`rd •
iog.Napoleui and fixed in his memory 'Oll
. the most minute' partienlars
„relating to . fis
.Military ort political lite, the names of his gen
;Oak his chief battles - and
,the various bid
denta in Ins._ long 'career, from .rhis - birth in
COILAca to his burial in St. Helena: ' 'C, ne
point, in his, great history be would dwell On
• with,special interest-,that where amid tun
:yet4 acchimatiOils, be hiMself had come )11-,
to the world the unconscious heir to a nii4h
o
II ty etuptre. : . . ,
This brooding on the past naturally asStnn-.
il ed the forth o f a • res tl ess anx i ety re;pecti'n.•
' iiro
II thelfature. I,That la, .the - son of ',.'apoleon,
1 waSi.eo common pefSon ;that as the "owner,of
ap,ieat, name, superior actions • and Au al i tie'a
tiotiSwouldl be reildired of him ; that insoz;ne
wayi Or other be muSt take part -in „the hifit;rs
:9f Enippesitch was the idea 'that, inevitably
took possession of him. - The pednutry 'of his
!teachers seems to hkve fostered 1 it to an nti
idne, extent., , : If,. for'example, the 'poet youth
'contra'cted:an.admiration for the poet Bklia,
his teacher* imefe at band to criticise the lie- I
• et farhim, and reduce his opinion to .the-justl
shapeand standard, lest th e signal imPropr i -.
etyidf exaggerated praise: 'lf again,
, he was
seen - Ifti,...be' falling in hive '%i.itii 'any
,of iii ? ;
grandfather** court, they . u:c:ra at hand to re:l
-son'..hine_Ont, of the affair, by, pOnsiderations[of
What * as his peCuliar, situation;
..a 0
his importance in the public . 46 . ._ Milli this
notion of the peeidiarity ;of his position brain- I
dished !before,. h im from. Morning till - night, he I
would go moping abOtit: the imperial• cou r t,,
an outtable,Amt, unhappY . youth. - • ''" i'
• .A,.. 44 ;What t after - all; was the peculiarity ref
`his Sitaatioti,sexeept ex trethe ..insiginifieange.
k . Peh*ioner,'in - the meantime, On the imPeci
al h+nty", ultimately the titre pos.sessor of
sonll.o4emian estates,. (his mother's seeM:id
matt age 'ln:l'6l9;'with the Count Nipp e r , havi 'sei•ered him from Italy still 'more:colt - 1 7
plete yjthan: hefore,) doomed to-inactivity bY
the ; iSfortune of too great a battle, was tlere
not.althoekery in all that solicitude of which
he, fo und, .' himself .the Object .1., :Haunted,. $t
would ilpixiar,..by. some such feelink„ and .yht
(.-tarr,tedrforlyard by: the restless sense that he
musti do soMithi lig or other ta.nitrit biittain,e ;
he.k ; eiostehaire - 147 i s W_at the only chit,.
thati-vits, Ptese_... atoll to, hitatMilitary progio
lioli,:tni 4* : :g r *lftitlie . 4,viervlce..;lleneo 1.1! e .
aasidn4y:'.!ith which: he 00'14 hismihtery
etudiesi and the regularity ;viii, which he
presented .himself at:..4ll„...reSie*S find : parade,
- the V
,dotiese Pc4 ool 4lhin:i.- 6 4 OA. A. 137 7-
sibie' 'ili4.: l. k . 0 . ....V.,,,aj01eiiiit..;,,,..V1,e . N '' atti4:., ,
;
after git tlamtilt " at: grades, lie w 4,5 14.
mitred by his grandfather to P . - ' 4 .4 raiik 1
.
. : :• ",
1
. .
VITEIVF JettiltlTAL.--DEvoTED Tolpounrs
Donfrose, c'ttsqueilaitna QL4iita, qiirestin Itica
.
and uniformOf . 1 teutenant colonel,' hi t s' de
light was uni:•Ounded. For three days the
two!' youth appe;'ared at the head - of his Jegiii•
ment, givinglhe -word of command, oh the
feUrth lie was laid aside with loss Of volet,
- and loarsenesi.; -
, - 1 . 1
• ' , There was etin'quarter of the horizon,o how".
ever, to which'
the on of Napoleon would 'oil
tph wistfully loOk—that• France to which Vt.
belonged -.. to which hiS dying father had be!-
Atteathed itirn!wl,ith . such solemn injrinCtieni.
that - they s . hoUld be true . One. to ' the otheo,•
and where event yet there' were mYrilids,of
veteran heartsi that beat high at thatatria 4
Bonanarte. Ili's Austrian education hid :in'
: .. t- , . , ... .
deed-isolated trim from • all, mean's of .direct
communication with his native country; 14
had made hiirt,iiii; many respects, alien to it,;
but certain cords there were which ;stilL ie4:-
cretly bound hint to-France. "I know no One
at' Paris," he-Said .to a - French oflicer,!, that
was., on the Polnt of returning..home OS, - it
vlsit to Vienna,' i'`t` but •salute for
_rue the Cot.,
umn Vendome.l- On the other hand..iif he
Was personally forgotten or unknown iii.o4
city which he thus knew only from the: , marl,
o(3re-were at e ast principles and then, tli4
were ready to ! nrst out'in•his behalf.' . Sio,lat
event - 4, it itppeared-; when .the •revolUtiOn id
Jhly; 1830, came to be transacted. ILidthe
young Napolebn been in Paris,
or !noire A,
When that revOlntion occurred; how different
qght have been the issue l " Alocineits,
Was," says Loni 4 Blanc, if an. old gendrallor•
the Emperor had but pronounced h i is'rnarne
•teithe people.l vhent . Lafayette and; 6144
‘‘ . :l - e chafferingi for .Duc d'Orleans F,ravi,,i..!
Might have lad - -a %Napoleon 11, it4stead'; cif
Liittis . Phillipp'e.i Some timid Bonapartist nt,- -
.1, 4•
.tcraipts, it appears, were.-actually nund.•.•liii
Paris one Bonapartist came to a meeting cif
th'e leading lifililiciansith the name Of••tU-
Dtke of Reieli ~ W
stadt .on his lips, was degteit-•
cushy locked .upiiti• a- room till :thelbasinesu
Was over, :Chnununications were.- eyetre64-•
1. .
VeVed to the Mike himself. . r • 1.
Nt i
'ltet% the news of the revolution reache4
Vienna, the vOnno• man could not conceal 14
• • - ;..,•
issaid, ' ir
agitation ; he even requested, it ln the
flutter *of a mhnient, to be allowed to go -,tlii
the assistance: Of.:charlt;,4 X. But viith tli
news of the - nceesiOn of Louis . 11tilliPpb,.oi1i-.
ertlMughts suCeeeded. • One evening - "as lip
wars aseenditigia!staire* in the imperial pat
are, a young wcitimu enveloped in a Scotch
plaid," rushed finivard from a landing!'..plice,
where she- seeriwtb have been waiting, and
,--
taking hishanil.!pressed ii eagerly - tcillter lip!,
ffiS tutor, whh Was 'With him, asked h4r bus ;
.irrdss.- - "May I hot kiss," she said, " ilut Mind
of, iny sovereignl4; km ?" and itntnediatelY dig ;
appeared. - For mine time theiriehleht,Pottld
not be.explaii+L but at length no doubt to
mained that - the!fair stranger: tea's hiS Cousirt;"
the. 'Countess qatnerate, a married daught 4
of his dee - eased jinni Bocchiochio. - 1
....
- :On a visit try ; Vienna ; "the Countesti had
.....4rait33.±1.1.44.5i A 1f the niedium..of.cOnitutra
eattoa between the ifonapartists and . h(4-
y..iizig• cousin, - t.,,!: tiliona sbe ;oven ventures:
some months after the revolution, oflJetiv, 0
ad d reSs a let ter,lencduraging. him, even, then .
-to' assume a decided 'part. •From theso, nn, .
all overtures of the,same . kind, the poorNeuth
seisms to have Shriink With a kind of clutietkl .
ho'rror; and . Mf4xcitethent during the rev -
utien of 1830, - Isocin subsiding into a ealmer . ,
mood, he begatri We'-are told, to. writddowli
in ;the form-of an essay, i series of very Aus
trian reflection'si ' hiS.own life,_ atidt, the re
_l . -
. , IV'
lations in whlcli. i pe stood to .France lOnly
once did- his a4itation return- 7 —on tho over
shin, namely, of the political movements of
his mother's state orl'arma. -When the new
'of:titese movements . teached Vienna „I lie wa's
anxious to .be alloWed to go to -Italy to his
mOther's a.ssistance.;. but neither,..on :this 0e!, 7
. :. .
castors, could his i l fislies be granted:
•
From the fir,'Stl; indeed, it had been seen
that the young Icapeleon could not live long.
Undoubted syMptomS of the presence in hie
constitution oflthe SeOs of that tnalridY thai.
Carried ,off his fii s tlier, early presented, ithem
sefves,:t and. to these Were added.othei
the
toms too clearly i rnarkini , him out as the prey
of: , ;constimption.- - -Frem 7 being a . handsome
delicate boy, he had Suddenly shot up beforfl
his eighteenth,j,iiitp i a; tall - feeble and Sieklyi
-though handsonie yonng man, "lite constant
,-Care of the imperbd physicians. ' Towards till
end of
.the year 1831,1 e bec'arne rapidlyworse
and vas of;ligellrolabStain from his military
exercise, and from nil active Aertions*lta i t•t
ever. During : eVwinter of that year, and
the spring of-182, 'ihe livid at Sellonbrnm4
t i lt
ahnost wholly confined- to ! his- chamber. It
had been resolved tO remove him to rilaples,l'
situld it be possible to do So, in the autumn
of 1832 ; brit thedi4e.ase had made such pro.l
gress, that before; that time the fittai,result'
had taken place. L' 1 . _. 1 i
•
For Many weekg he had
.been in great pain
an l l incapable Of knichange.OrpOsitiert, save''
that of being wh4eled -to a ',window :,.bralcony,.
.overlooking the garden:of s.citonbrunti.! Even;
this qas at last beyond . his, strength ; arid;
stretched on hit; bed; in - great Sufferitig,' lie
waited anxiouslY 'pm.. tis release. karia Lati4
ise'ar.rived frotnl lal :only in time to-see him
die, . It was oak ae g , j(i of July, 183,2; and;
in the Very room that bad been occupied - by
his!,father on hitt faraotis_ visit to SChonlirtitm,..,
that..be breathed - hislast.. Some dayti infter4
the:re was :t funeral 'procession •throligh the]
'streets of Vienha,and . the body of Nal;olon'e
sen'.:was coinntitted .to - the imperil iatilts... ',
The people of'Vienna showed tnuchifeeling!
.. .
on the, occasion';' the'. cholera had juSt been
thinning their Oiva itc.inseholds:
. '
!rho Destrueitioii. of Pomrapeiii i
not
' . ~ I. • •
,! •Isisianlaneous.
Pompeii was ittOt . ';:cotnpletely
.- buri at a
single eruption. . pAilt, Aucaessi re layem have
beep trataxl aboVeite ruins: In - the in Ovals, -
thOnlitibitants tnnst. have - returned to secure
thetrynore'vaitvible 'prorxr.rty. .'Sir William
Gell. Mentions that.e.. skeleton Of w Ponipeian
was found, "iwhia, la pparen tly,- for sixty Oil's; ,
i turtall - plate, •a ;saucepan of silven had. re
mained in his Ito*iitill the streets. Were ni- I
ready filled with soli:anic:rrtatter.7. - The . poll
sitiOn of the skeleton . indicated, - that : he had
peritledin the act of eseapingfrotti.hia win-'
doer'. - ...Other inetelehts -Of- like 'eharact4r-are
not-less striking.i . iThe - skeletons of .11hmaii
sentries were found in nrioreHthan one iristnne-e
at their ,posts, furnishing a remarkable'proof
Of the - stern inilitay J . .diseipliite: --of: ItnPerial
Rome. _.' The skele on of.-a . :priest was! found
in'OW.Of the To • s .Of tile Temple" •oflisis.---
Nati 'his rernii nit . 1 yi he axe, with. wWh: - he
ou i t
laid-,been trying t 'break through the . iloor.
...: -Wrondeifui , rliings,;by2 : Priensarei: Bd.:
wxuil , s; :p:ri 1 ,i...4.., 1 __ L ..., ; :.- ~.- _,,,.... :,., ,i
t e r Never soe4c tightly of relgion.
MIZEUMI=I
NEWS,
- 1 -
'l'Mitn)Jaß•
The Hour
‘L,
4y God, isuny hnu
'Frorn blush of m
t' ils that which.ealls
' ' 'Fuel
5 5 Aslest- be that tramp,
And blest that so
NVllefilm the win ,
1 ..1• The •'
For then n
. , 13righter than !no
And richer dews de,
.
• Than;
.“ • t
t ;Then: is my strengt
,
IThen is my Asinx
'Then' dust thou theth
by thpren4wed;
4 theq forgi*en;
ey my solitude . •
hopes of hera - en. !- -
r • -
. -
.• - .
i Wer4s cannot tell; lir t sweet .re'jlief
f . . 1! Hero fur my eveo want I findi! • , --
;;What strength r.)r carfare, bllmitor grief,
'i•'-J ! • 1 !
. - Wlta peace' of miqd. • - .
1 i
~ i • - .• ; ~. • • ,
Hushed is each don ii t, gen e ever) fenr i ,
•',
A Thi spirit seems.ln heziTen.to tity,- .!
,nd ...
e'en the penitential tear , • ' .'
;i• ! Is w . ipisl away.. ' ••
/
. W • Comin it 4; tries'es'
col ; ,uou it -
. i .
il,t is the little every xlay courtesies of dtfe
~ ~
,whitill betray the true [ Christian and gentle 7
'mariL---those kindne4s, and forhearanis;
whiCh he. haS an oppnrtuni6- topractice e-v
-vrY1,.....i his life. They. tire the unfail u ir
t,
indieesof character: l'ney tiremoi4 eh n tit
.of virtue than all great actions or high sotin
ding - profassienl. -11[1e. heart .from tiltil,
thee do' not continually .floW, like Isparkling,
str&lms :blown the bill Side,) is bar;ren 'of all
irti4ekeellence. Thlrt. religion. %%Veil C6ll
- §io merely ini gifts. o! the eltureli I treasut& ;
,scruPulous attendanea"pipon.elturelimeeting%;
unqualified adheremiedto creeds a'nd creed
,nrikers ; firm belief m origintd sin (whibli
,is gist so original a thing .after all;) bash
judgments of the *hiked ; and gfleat deio
ticar:to-the far off heathen ;en but wtijeli se.t.:at
•
-naVght the sweet cliaqiies of life,
.tind makt.,.4
noAccount of the conimonametitheS of o
dietY, is, but -rts° Seundi t rtg, brass and tinkling'
,Cy:Uthals. ' The hearty' `, , ,lloihr (rye lo," " r'ut
glad to see you,
.' l- ii:TOw's yOur f[ wife: 1"1--
" 6,,d0d luck to you," and all other; greetings
whielt areinterChanzqd by passi'Ts-hy,fall tip
'oOlte heart like ...00c! seed !and cri'Ye groWth
alltoi those gentle affeCtions[and hilmble %lir
tneji, - which. are to theiraind :m hat .the I uxuri
.ant,;nnder-growth of shrubs and 114wers-isito
the:;earth. The smilel, a kiridnet:s iYhieh yOu
bestim upon the care-iworn laboreri falls like
sunshine upon his h i edrt anti wartns all' his
fanhittes into new lie . - and heanty. The
"ivci 3 O'of
.comfort • wh eh vciu . :speak .to the'
h w
Oriteless .anderer g)4_ 110 p info his seal
c
.••i1"; oktts ~. .. 7 sre -.-4 4 , m0ng:...it.4 detaying •
etnifers. The mark of t:•steein and irot 7 arade.
whielt you extend tO the.agq . manion whose
brOW is written, in detp characters; tire histo
.l7* nttunty-pi-TE:t-ratt,-.1-6-ttfa;.mirrti--1.4m---
faddil hopes and joys Of youth, •
and'causes his
, -
ptd4e to beat with -renewed' i vigor' , l and his
~! -
eyea l to glisten with unwonted brilliancv.--
114 look of sympailly[shed upon the child of
sorrow, or the lt'ind of.consolation , whispered'
into` his ear; extracts the poisonfrom_ his Cup . .
Of iOrroW, and tinges with the golden hues of
'hope the - cloud
‘ which I beshadows :his
,path. '.
• • .0 the hallowed •prk , cinc'tS of, Nome,' how
natfelr depends upon tho cotintless aid name- -
lesOlets of a kindly spirit ', • US W soften a
kind word-or a. reproving sit - 61in.. Will extin
•
guiSh tho spark of bash t fi.‘elint syltiel, else
14![been fanned by t e rude breath of pas
-sion[lntw,a devouring 'flame!! By Warding
offi..nntintkind expressiit of hasty W i ndt' with
a forbearing - and forgi 'lag look, how easily
I)
we'disarni all anger aO• restore the - ,soul to
serenttv.a . nd love. ' ..these a. q ; uarrel—a,
Berne dispute—a war , f words in the famil.V''
cirdle; how easily one gentle spirit] will,sttli
ir
dunjhe rude elemenfs,..and make the tbouglit•. I
lessidestroyers of domestic peace bitng their
heads with shame. -
.1 . .
_..,.. -•',10; it is these words of kindly retnem-•
bratfee, sown along ilfe duSty thoroughfare
of earth, which - make i the pt.'etry oft life ; and .
wltio,lalling upon a•heart c‘ - liielt.•'iltas been
(liken •up by vieissitudes, take deep i'oot,and
se - on garnish the mitidl with tidWers of peren
nial beauty. 1' - i • .. : .
Short and
4,9 we no man apythiug.l' lieeP out of
Avoid it as you would 'war, pestilence,
and famine. 'Hate it ;with k perfect hatred.
AblliOr - it with an• absolute. abliorre4e. Dig
potittoes, break stones i i peddle ' tin bare,. do
•anything.that is honest - and u4ftil, rather:
than run in debt.. Ai yot u i value icornfort,
quit and independence; keep out of} debt. =
• Debt is the hardest_. of all- ta,kinas : ters, the
moat cruelof all oppressors. amillstone
about thelieck. It: ii!.an inculaisi` on the
heart: It spreads n clOad . oVer the firmanent
of man's-being., It eclipses the sun, it:blots
out!the stars, it dims and defaces the beauti-,
ful blue ikv. It breaks up ;the barinonv - of
.. .
nature, and turns to diSsonance all /thesvoi
eeslOr its melody. .It furrows the forehead
wit premature. wrinkles; it! pluek.st the eya
. out,.iir its light; it drags .all .nobletiess".and
kiniSlness out of the port and ibearingiOf man.
It takes the soul out 'df and-•all I
stateliness and freedom from ibis-Walk. Come
notitinder its accursed dominion. s•
,
• A BeautiftO r Figure. '
Uf is beautiful compared to a re)/ lain fed
by >i lhousand streams, that.perish - if ono- be
dried:,l It is a silver curd 'tWisted within thou
sand strings, that part asunder: if one bet broken.
Frail thoughtless mortals ;tie surropuded by.
inneiretralile dangers, which mike it moh • mine
strahgo that they almost perish, suddenly at last,
%Ve i tire encompassed with aeidents eet;ry day,
to . cl' h the mouldering tenern4nts whiA we in ,
htibitl'; The seeds of disckse are planted- our_
comititution by nature. The earth, atmos.
ph ! e4:4l whence we draw 'riur iltvath o , life, are
impi f Otiated with.death:hraltb is Made tioPerate
its O,Wn destruction. Thefumt that it nprishes,
contiods the elements ofd ! ieay;,the sou tithat an.
tna(k4l vivifying firat, tends to we* it out
by. Its, pwn action ;death inrka r inantbuSh along
the paths." Notwithstanding this is the truth,
palOhly confirmed •by the daily fixates be
foreidtir eies, how little .dp -We lay it to eart!-=
Mr*" our friends and nighbors 'among as die,
but4iiiOr ,npldom does it to our tbonghti
itat 446klinItlintit'inirhs. , .''ii4eiho neit
, t
lete 4-traing to the world .1 • t
•
.„; z..)
'ERZEURE• AGRICULTI7IIE, MOB,ALTPV
tabng.
.of v
• so sweet,
hth to ovenin# star,
mo to thy rept—
our of:prayot.7
11 htinr of niprn,
omn hour•ofeve,
,of proyei up:borne
orld 1: lenrel
shines nnime, •
rthorist - glow
end from tfleo •
earth ran Vnow:.
lib Praier.
tt 4settmber
,7,
Pletures Illoakses.
Wire
•
not'leit the influence oc picture
room Those of our readers Who trany hap- :!
pen to he a'ofortunate - ris to lire Artthin - stitih
a world; know -till; about it. • The:followine
from the York .Musical World is not.:
only strictly true, ,but finely expressed :
room h Ipic,tures, and a . room Without pia 7 ,
tures, -differ - by; :nearly as :noel as a 'room
with WindOwS, and room without windows..'
Nothing, we think, is, more. melancholy, . par-,
ticulatly.tOa persen,who. has. to pass much
time in ItiS room, than blank walls, with noth- . : '
ing on the:li ; for pictures are loopholes of e5..."7'
cape tit - the stud, 'leading it to other spheres.;;
It is spcVaniinexpreSsible . relief ..to a person::
engaged in writing, or even reading, on look-?'
ing up, nett tOihave his-line . of, vision aliop=
ped -squarely off' 14 . an odious white
to find his soul earping,. as it were, through:;*
the frame "of an exquisite picture to other
beautiful, perhaps; Idyllic scenes,. where • the ;
fancy'ty for w.ritoment revel. ; . refreshed and..
delighted.:, it is 'winter ix4our
haps it is suthinerin the picture world ;. what
'a charming Momentary change and contrast
It_is long zinc e you saw a beautiful face, anti.
do you hi ye a longing to see one which many
persons haveiheen,lditg.deprived of it '=from'
the breathless amass there smiles doWn ups
on yoUrpee of ideal' loveliness ; and in your
awn (t:otiei tut' perhaps) faticy, you - nre-wor. 7
thy ef flip loVe and the :smile of that -beatitii:
fulbeing-is he not your.? And tlitis-pic,
titres itro ;consolers . ' of loneliness: .They are
Sweet iflattery to the soul ; they are - a relief to
the jatleOnind, they are windows to thesim''.
- priaorled thotight, they are books; they .are .
him(alesi. of 1 iernions--r w lti ch we' can read
withont Ithe trouble o' f wining over the
T 1 OF .1 ) 11E4C111.11C.it, XVMS
a beautiful_ ctitic4m made by Longinus upon
the eftectS uf, the Speaking of gicero . and Der
-
mostlronei. :lie says : The people woidd, go
from 'one, of CkWrO'S orations, ex . eluiming,
W
"hat a:heautifUl speaker:: Whatia rich fiue
voice I Whal, an eloquent man
They jtitlkedlVOcero ;' but whtna they • left
,Demosthenes, they said : "Let us . fight Phil
' •
tp: I..L.tisltig sight of the.speaker, they were.
xll'abs in the subject; - they thought
not orDein*henes, but.of their country.—}
So,. iny '1 brethren, let us .eudeay . er to send.
away train lour ministration the ChriStiati;!
with his Month full of tlic• praiSes, not cif:l
" our PreaChe' r,',lit.Of :God ; and: 'the sinnq,l
not descanting upon the" beautiful tiguresandl
well-turtle& periods of . tile discourSe, but!
imtitiing, with the brakenness . of It ..penite4!
'heart; - " What;Shall Idoto be saved r Ship
shall We be bles:,tfd in Our, Wert: : : and .when
called to leake the .
watchtowers of our pirit4,.l
ual Jerualeni, through the 'Vast serene, lik ii
.the_ deep nieiody of angel's song, Heavens gp- - 11
proving . voice shall be heard:—.Dr. Clarks
Scrlapit, i .
• • •
ru , .
49unt'proug *cubing.
‘,; Seeking, after a "Sign,"
BY' .Dl2. ' ra.t.S. - ,K A. HOWIG.
..- W 4 have many . times in our life heard of
.1 persons requiring to be "hooped" in order,te
r.pievent ceriain portions -of the body from
partinc , asunder; especially when the subjeet
Iwas °rte. that; excited.the i " risabilities" to an 'y
great 'degree! But -never recollect the time ,
we needed the services of a-cooper only when
i the fullowina el incident: occurred - : t 1
~
1 ' Tile circumstances' transpired -in the State
of Ne& York, and as it is to the
letter4i, we'are much mistaken if it would net
4.4 well to ,
enact the same scene in. many pia
.
1 ce.,, tile. knowi,of. -
.•
-,
•
.In a - certat9, High-School there were some
ten yOunf7; rnb'n,' who;-(as it is - termed)-roomed
roomed
in tbe: L ln - stittition.: Some half a dozen of them
1 were not only "old cronies," but perhaps no
!Masonic fraternity-eVer -kept each . others_K
i
crets ,better i than . they did, or antiCipateo
each' (tilvt's A`islies with,as little preface. . .'.
NO any high game y t.
excurst
lOTiC ever Undertook ' ci
.. - y I
onar ramble alone ; like the links of
a chain they were .loeked.within. each other.
1 To'bestire they had aleaderi arid One of therit
did officiate in, •that; capacity. . .
. - ~
Varry D-1,---- 7 was. perhaps as wild and,
ronglOt-young man as could hdre been found
-within a .day's ride, although as the pupils all
said of him, be had itheart . .trii big as a punig 7 -
kin, and .no one eves opened his heart or purse,
to the tieedy'sooner than he. He sytiipathi4.
eil with all;-- in fact Was . belpved 'by all, 04'
alwayi=so wild and rude. , . 1,
Barry wrisl-Withal well educated, and whet;-
ever.he chose to, de so, could argue, with th'e
best . of tliem.land it 'mattered . not , tolim up= on wait SialOct. . ',. 1 '
1.3111., 1 , Harry! also detested real vice as had 4:
he did! :t, snake,. and these he would 'itop-tO
kill by the . 14'aysidelet his haste be ever, so
great, It haipenedthat a small grocery wan
erected, within a-few rods of the
_Academy;
wherlr",at terthin limes ninny of the pupils re , :
paited,;to ' purchase nuts, 'candies • and sttel:t•
other iweettrieati as were usually kept' for sale'.
'Mirkhad never peeped inside the door , but
once, and then be made up his mind that alit,
sign over the deori- `°•Grocery," , wan a typo;;..
al - anhicafor brushograilical error, and that .
" Groggery,"]waS intended; or 'at leasi. - Watill'
. have 'been- more appropriate.- BC of :counte
expres4ed his pelid to his companions a they;
were seated in 'their - room on the'. following
eveni4 1 - -:I
4 ‘ WOll, iV.l)'
alt trq done," said one of the
.eompatiy, mistake shotild be reetified4,
"Joe," said 'Harry, • add ressing . one of ;tia
ntitnber,.," let's go this very night and bririg;
into mfr. town, and .to-morrow night ,we dill
. alter . the reading and' return it. I Hite . t 4
have . eYeiyiliing read AS it, means,- and th 4
they dO 'retail :the 'good . eritteY'aver thereirrl:
self-evidentaxioin; • that needs no deinintstra
tion froin either Davis or-Johnson., wag,
• then Mid there
. agreed that, they gcif
and bil,n'p s • the isl, e rrn tn. •their ,abont: two
*o'clock that . .It mig . 'task- easily ne 4 ,
iind before' moininglt
ly stowed away iundei ; one of :the bibdi in the . '
ropm. •:1 thirry,..agreed io hire .sq
vtint p'9t,'994 j)rush "During ,t.he day,.niiii the
work - s.Louhl progress L iapidly• - on tlieeinning
evening. :• , - - - •
Brenkfitat'beit* crickling - tir4:
blizingi in the! • little •fire,place, the - jolly Ira=
ternity .'!vero seated_ an:mod:it, - tejoicing: henrT
lily over their huit. night's .advatituie, wileA
their faces suddenlyassum ed
priitrittiiii,"Vi Obi:erring tine'ut
along' whom [were distinguished the grocet.
nod villaie . COnstable, inteiing . thelstril in
front of the' Academy. •
" Saints protect us!" exclaimed [tarry; "as
sure as Daboll's . arithmetic l they are coming
with a search warrant to.loOk aftei that sign.
What-in the name' of.hooks and stationery'
shall' we dor -
Burn it !" - suggested one. .
"But they will - U . o4u upon - us beforeit4ill -
consume" said nmither,
" ) I ; 7 a, therP's - tri`litilia - to .be lost," said'
Hariy; "our Principal will expel us'all, ifwe
are discovered. Pitch titan the fite , aa'soon
as possible. I'llman* some'Way with
Limn. . „ •
.
The .words.„ were •. hardly opt: of - Harry%
mouth . hefore . the said wail,,enyptoped:in
smoke apd \ flatne; and'the. enipoany 'eagerly
am;aiting for thW neft Word from-their-lead-
• "Stir the fire briskly, 'boys,"' said Hairy,
"let it consume 'lariat as it-will, liut.be very
quiet' ' • • ' •
Elark ! they are coming. I'll pray, bays.
They won't come in- during• pyayers and
when the blamed thing has burned up — One - of
yell just give a poke in the ribs, and I'll ta 7
per (Arend let thein in.: Down' went -ITerry'•
on his knees as close to the-door as possible,
l and began praying in'a loud v.oice. The nett
instant the officers without were at the door:
Stop, said one, as he laid - his hand on the
inich,..they are at prayers--weihouldtiot.dis
turb them.
...A...that:fire so, said
•
:I wish they wOnid'at 3
the grocer, we :might, hear what' ttbi.z rAa kei
is saying. At this juncture the-noiS4 tensed:
Harry was 'given - '.the d6ired poke,"• and
noneluded -his prayer. With., the following
words :•• • : • .
" And 0 Lord, thou knowest that a,irick:.
en and peyrerse genoration I's Without Who
seek after a sign, but no sign. sliallrhe given
thern, except the sign : of Jonah. tile Prophet."
The officers then entered, but "Lo! the
sign they sought after was not," and infact
little search was,tnide, as the grocer 'declar
ed that such good and pious : young .men
could not be guilty, of such an offence.— Mi.:
rp . riy Magazme..l
A Ilight•Uatider Badly. !Invaded.
„ . .
. .
• ',Think you, don'ecareif.l dp,” ,said a
faSt young inan,l with a large ; pressed, brick
inhis hat as he eturged up is the Indian that
stens in front of.Vait Cott's tobacco store . ; _ in .
Broadway, With a bunch of Castironeigarsin
his hand. "I'l 1 tke one, I siuoke soetimes,'"'
and he reached 6 t, to take the proffered Weed,
but the Indian w - uldn't give - it up. He htinn ,
on to .the - cigars like grim_ - death.. "Look
here old. copperh lad,' said. the'
,fast, young
man, "none of tat, no tricks upon travelers,
there'll be a Otis!, you .and I'll fill out ;
ii m
Somebody'll get a punch - owthelierid." . - •
. • The 'lndian said never a:word, but' held
. on
tti . the cast hen 'cigars': He. was ealtni,digni
fied, unmoved as lan Indian shoald be, looking
his issailant. straight. in the, :face, and
.no .
nfuscle-uieVingi Tingle hair: ".I es I - - yeS
x. ,, -4 ,- .. , ... , -, -- ‘ 4 4 - tentherliend f - I'm one - of -'enk
I'm around,. I'm ton ....,: 0 .t.„, m A tac, mPasure;
heaped up," and-he placed himself in a 'po
sition, threw back his coat, and 'squared - off
for a fight. - All - the time the , ../ndian: said
never a word, loOked without, theleast alarm
unwi ukingly straight. in to the face .of the , fist,
young man, still .out the cigars in 'a
mighty friendly - sort of • Way, ' ' The 4oUng
man was Plucky, ind just in a condition: - to
resent any.sort ofiinsult at all. • He was ready
ter" go in," but-the calmness and inaperturba-..
hility of the Indian rather cowed him, and he
was disposed to reason the. .natter.. . _-• - _
"I'll take one,l said he,-" certainly ; . t said
so,bcfore: - I free*e to a good cigar, I'm one
of the smokers. - !Ali father was l one- or the
smokers, lie was ;lone .of. the old' sort, and Fm.
edition number :two. reVised.. and - . Corrected'
with notes, anthoi's hand writing on_thetitle l
page, and_copyr;ght secured.',. es, IV tale
one. All right old red skin, I'll (aid' *one."
Bilt-theindian said not-it void, all the time
looking straight iin the face of the fast young
man, and holding on to the .cigars. 'Look
here, old gimbletleyc ' rii . A getting. riled; my
back's coining up, and you aid Ili . have: .a
turn; smell orthat old copperhead," and he
thrust his fist uniler the nose of Abe 'east' iron
Indian,:who said not a word, moved , not- a
intisCle,.but kept right on,' looking straight
into the'face of the fast.yeiing . inaii, as if not
caring a fig for his threats or taking it at all
the of his fist. -i, -' • - ''• .-
!"Very well," said the - fasf - YOnng Illitn,'"l'in .
. agreeable; I'm around, look to your uglytnug,
. old pumpkin-head," and lie;let - Itt . a
.404, -
hander, - -square against the nose. of- the east
Iron Indian, who never moved' an' inch,,.nor;
I
stirred :a - Muscle, lookinithealM, ang
t.n-W uttelt•
ed,tlignity,.as beforl ; , ‘ - ti ite.ftiee lot' his ene-,
my, "Hallo," (lie fast young man,..; in
utter bewilderment, as he reeled -bak 'half
•way across the Side_ walk, with the blood
dripping from his;skinned - knuctie; "IlallO I!
,here's a . ge," here's na ere-openei, .here's : a
thing to hunt for round a'corner.,_l rim, antis,
tied, old - iron -face, I am. i Enough . •said - be
."• . ;
fween gentlemen - ' ,; , - ~
1
'."Jest then he en ti erb t sight of the fomahaitk,
and sealping-knife in the hilt of the saimge,;
and -his Lan _beg:4i to vise. i The Indian seem
ed to,be.making,up his mind-to use them,— ; ,
;" Hold on,".,cried; ihq, fast 4. otieg nut - pots he
dodged round the, awning post.: '-'Sl.told on,-
none of .that—l'll apologize,--,:I squat, I knoek ,
•tin.ll7. , llold on I sav,",hc continued, - nS Ate . ,
Indian 'seemed- to scowl with peculiar fierce-
neSfi,:" Wild on !.. - .Very Well,: rtri-f, - otT; 13.tisi-q
, Tie . % doersi the street.; people at • ii4rae:waitei
jag forme; e. at, n' ay." , And . he- LW ted - Ake ..
a gliarferlherse downl3roadway,, and hisen . ,
Of bold on, died away, as he Vatitsh;ed . beyon - d
the iiiinP-light tip'Cloltind;lia 4thief.
An inOnious!DpvAgli. ..::
A sea., Oa tam on, a voyage, ~- W ith thirty ;
PassePassen
ngers,. ~'&16,,, r . ; oVertot,en. -- ' I,y , ' "it' ' vl4)l6rit
tempest;tba ' '•it ;:tee6iia?..titilkiitiii Ifiiirfe
,41
them oierbearik in ;:order to- lighten,ilus.-vw,
!f , el.::fifteenof thet.passengerse:ivem i Christians,
and_ the other ; fifteen wer,o,,Onbkliover4 hnt.,in,
this '4-igeneif they.. mianiMousli •
the _pgh*d; . lit
Captain's
.4 pi to on, -- th t%; l t ' tie" , sliont - d'fitnen"
the'vv, licil& , thirtys . :in ri! ci fel-0, and tlirali' thilif
Male niiiil,Tol 4 ar -till imlf r ilfmen,,4 - orti left - ---K-
T'?" 6o fk..6 6 4; l ;r4ii!it":: - 00, COPtajPiPlittiff ‘ ll
hie,thi!ly ,pk-twpgeri..lll tto:ctrO,rolzicomi
Ohrh'tlan SI V 4 5 -: pilbelieveiti;;:tt!ii. ph Kati ant:, ,, ,;
one thiheira4`:ilti&efiilititiiK oiii riOxg
1i ever : t. 'orte ;Ohtiktiti - 44** - -igtilielieferii; tivii
Christisns i ' three Vabelieverti v;oini,:ehriatilllii,
two UnbelieVer.atjWC,(C!4 6 atiliqr' ;011* , U1_
Nvai:. , oo began :o nu 041 - 1r.0m..t liio _ ills of.
thelotir :Christi* elute;" '- ,` :::t -- ;- ,-- -' • ----,
COCO, 131X1:113' CO: - tttCd:!l3, - ' t; ' ' Ott'
.' CC,,1.R.1U, 0, WI 'OD, U.
. ,
ii:,:l , 4ilr-.t.-li>zza.;.4
'llnielinisiglOteignitilice:
~ ...
_,,,
'The citizens . of ;oil* baXibli iii *i i i ;i ll ' il
Slis to tiiit'their city' On Ilip Atli 7,were
,gh l
li i ple'd'ili..a Prlightili.4.biltliiith%.#nit
sPeeab; delivered,ofillighjineiqnn,4l4.47.
Tile orator - said; ''' '' :-;., • -i t --:,,,,"':,,,',.-,,
,-
'Fettir,:ridzer4::-.4 - ain'itw .„ - oia: fc, ti f i
with id ' ll Otkliiii ' Vay - •it Is noir 41404 -
, . , ,', _ ,
hundredliitid''.4 . ye.srs:Seni,t4e , ,piliptiz) F: 9 l.*
fathers. 'eoino'Asho,7re-'e,n`pFtteftiOfk, 7
And Walloped
Ic.this is - One titotitatid'eiehti Ilundeili, #4 - .
istliinnireri'aiiVit that thie: -- `..t", ;"; ; ',: - '.l . ,'' •
Soon after-t hat
.. Daty - atm gisiitiOtieci; Ran-
eral larryettomo:Over
Ii *etii4e4tikied:it the Battle et buiethil g
'l,pn ii
My to 'A total Ront. tinno vista - e4 - Ais
in. the Citylog of i ßriiliant iteliperients;" And 4
here the Gallent warren fell4' Btip - it - Itid'it.'
hurt him a • great- Sight, and - Springint - bilri ;
Agin, sex - he. "Come Olarltsedutfr"atyl,
mackdurdid Cunt on, -a ri d Warren . eiplim Y 1
Blastination iminejit, and litiocketibiin'ac*, - -
and Stamped on him, which' give - ilea iii-- -
Stamp Act; Arter the 'vials had - Meihrit;
ili 'at ,very ciuz, and. DestrOyed 'thek Guile:
and Aminunitidui of War, 'the, inlinf-fould -
We . was Bound to Lick - ,teiri'and they : S4tilfri:,
kid. -- old 'ethaii ellen set be, 4.tritisherii* ',ll
Settle for . 75 cents and the Diiiks.!2 i See tire
head britisher,',"- i i'll givis' -- J.e 50 .7 - Iwtit, At
it," set etliani and-lie ; pitched into . .ent.llB..
till they was gladtuiFork , over = 87 led:, 4
itSquare. - r-
~ .-,. . 1 , 1. , ....... ; ,.,. .„, , , _
..1
Stich was" the tins ' MY frietitistlint - Ertilit
tfien'i solel,'.! but the 7 ate past irii,"anst IVA( -
4irl, Caine,: as lbe-Sa' ora teini - 1 - 4 1 iif the; Itigt4
1
of'ten riiiie' - ir 7 Not : f 're4 , ; 'OM' .citrie*itii .
Are living iir'sich -ii - llir,iii lyinfniiiiirlisiiii
Atoka and neviViit'ilt be See*-4 - dtil:#f
great improveihents44 Dayoftelr, - „NeitJ
raligy and Reddy Ik4de clothitil ':: itilii,: - .lltet
the of 1 Siteltiat, rp-SpOliii ai : iti -= 'tba")Sa-,
ginning .of int ipee6,': that 'we 'shoitid Be;
stieh a Nation, with I.2s::millions ; of People
Besides irishmen - andNigiersiniiiiineralile:-4
sliakSvelly' was
,Rigik. when-set he, ,m'theraill
gliSatiksins is Botind -16 Slcifo'bk "eat l"' lief ;
looked Backward on Corning Erenti,iiiiisee:
jest how it - WitS.- : 1 - - • . - -: : -."'"•-'
bat i shall l
Wea . vour . Patience, , feller..:-.
Citizens. I , Shall Conclude With the Sublime
Words of Miss Ha4ierinotin,=—"set :tun Up
,on the Gtliet- alley-. ,: -' 1: :- ' - - ?. ~ r• .
There is a vile sta4det id circulation
_here'
that the orator was Sprung' on.' this occ asion.'
But hiieitteme nertoustiess, , which:' caused
the rumor,-he.,' explains by" the fiiet that' his
mind was.on•thiklibel suit now pending be
A:weer' -hirnself r and - Dbortili,: .. his- wifi. l —ltim
ton Herald. - `- i ,- - -
--
Mow they IS wmpatilefik;. ..
ff - id Ive
' It is a proof of thq great variety of liuniati
develoixsnent to no "ce , :perionc -reading a
newspaper. • Mr. neral Inteligentei: firs t
zlanees attbe telegraph;Plell nt thereditorial -
and then goes off iuto the cormspantience4. :ti
: Mr. Sharper opeos withstoelmland' nlirlt . 4
and ends with the advertisements-. for4itutiC;
hoping to find- a victim. : Aunt -Suksw.:4bat
macit.'the storiee ; i aid then looks to .tutelehikli
married. mir Trim looks, at theriparriage
column first, and then-reads the stories:
_, -::;•
Mr.Marvelus is, zurions'*ietr theliat of:
accidents, nin ders, and the like. '.-I.3itele Ned:
limits. up 'the funny', things, ; and sanokei.and -
laughs with'ri -will., Madame Gossip toma
to the lOcal department:for: 'ber'thunder,and '
haring obtainellthatpihrowa the paperBl;lde:
~ Mrs. Friendly drops the first. tear: Ofsyrit-t'{
-pathynrer the' - death,eolinno i ana-neSt nver
the marriage, for says sheoine is aboutasimd. .
as the other. Mr. Politician dashes into:the
.
telegraph. from, that, , intor the, editorial, midl
lug s with i
lhe speeches alluded to: . Our lter
ary friend is eager fora nice eon3POsitiert, (iv ini- ,
th'e Edito9 or some kind.corresponderit. !;... Af
ter: a nalizang the - rhetoric, grammar,. and - Uri
-ic of the production, ,4., turns -, a careless
glance at the , yews department v ;and takea':l4
InS. Greek; perfectly satisfied. . The pleasure
seeker,examineilhe programmes, of publict
en tertainnvent,and decides which,: will afford ;
hiti-the greatest _amount, of:-amusement.
The - luboter .searches= among: the wante gill'
a better openingin his
.; buisnesa, -and-but,
enough. There is just is 'much difference, iti.
readers as - in,;—as in anything. ` :. --
~...i
But the Woritis Yet to: come If eat.4t,doer,
not'find a:eolutnu or less of his : peculiar lik-:.'
ing; the EdiOr Ism, Of course, beett.leay i . : atidr..
is - unworthy of patronage.„ Olorho ,agnicrat, •
be an Editor. -- ..o44.Knickettoctfer=2- , ':.--,
Jar A young
_ciciitsll.zentlenlan - relates'
Jim following anecdote of one
,_ of c hia Dutch
brethren. The pldrielloT was about, .. con pf
mencing his sPiritimi, exercises ii 11 9 , 0**3.11,-.
when to liishong.s little near, sighted..sras
sicded the dim light of a
.cOnntry chntvt;;;-
Afto• cietiring Ilia throat- and, giiing • 40e
hymn,,prefaclpg jt , with.theApolegY7- 7 - •
• The
.ligOistl badentine eyetislt :;t
I scarce .Iltsee . -tc! rel 4 c-:
The-clerksupposing !vas this first stigma. )
of tho hymn, struck up 'to the tune of mu,
mon niche.. , .::..
The old feitew taken , sonteniuticabserhi l
this turn of corrected 0/e.tuist*lE)
snyiriv . _•-.
- I didn't mean te; shit en* •
I only meant 11
The
of the eciuplet,finksbo ittOeifnieding , attain. -
The - old man at thia; . winedfarratli f tiad-Ox-•
claimed at tire)hip.oChiwonibi.i. - - , v
-
-1 tditik the debtr ht
i . 3. 2.! '
bat• ralik 11% hymn to eintat
••_ 4l , „,* -
- • A Juror ;who bad
the...went trial orrorttnan‘stOn t
inZton, of the juirrnewreutitted fist y
asked b . the prosiecutiim.k:hikba6l-any Ont.:
44:tenticats.tinroples nboutiii4lo,!iktr: Abe death;
mt. :14 ,11! 't •
“S.-qtifkiekr -; -41.1 ." ; • • "-Yesi pousoientioffit sou** ; T
1\ -. :
The jurytwin :scratched Is* head, ani,thetti
(1 9 0 Pl9foritrrIONellt::: ;:.: • -',- .4rl
sir: ,1 haYO them -
....! . seplp!ef l / 2 - susgetled.!tha . ititorw:74. 44t i
•,...Yeit*,ol4,l.lloA4,gobscientiPutt rienli#Eo.l7'
n 1 7 0 114 *ALA the, DAM 940141-*ctui-,
pti:gAst tlla P0prtr, , 1444
-- . 41 /KVlSTiry•PW;PaklAbit , jutypii-,;:oing)
Etpp.,ogothltilk Oki
6 ,c - AluMiAls4l. lo- 1010 1 -444
;;./4 6-, TtitAPribm4e-t9,!tfitimi 4000.1ffitqlnoWn
• -
Keep lour-44-41027
11 1 114ndyib-a, butelbeig- bog. h ' -' Mtn - - .416549g,
said .the fur
bier:-,:.:<::.;
I IN" Alf,Y , speak the, truili:
E;M;11
t - i14,:; - .
;'.:-,'4'.,.
Wan
ii'
•-, 'i-- -..-;. ---.;_-.:',. ig.' -:
. _-. ..
''-./' •)2 .' if ''t. : 23. '-
'4
cos, •:.:4 - -::; - % !
=MBE
:iT z~..
~r0, j, .
=MIM