Ciyase Vreprittors, *elect Vortt#., The Old. Old nome. DY REy.. EDWARD _C. JONES. When t long for sainted memories, Lila angel troops they come, . • If l foldinty artns-to,ponder ' • on the old, old home. The earth has many, p assages . Through which poor feelings roam, `Bet its middle aisle is. sacred To the thoughts of old, ohi home - Where infancy was sheltered, • Like a rosebud from the blast; Wbere.boybood's' brief elysium, • i n joyousne*s was past - `-To that sweet spot, forever, I . As to some hallowed dome Lies pilgrim bend.s his vision, the obi, old home • • A father sat -how proudly!— " By that dear hearttistott,s ray, And told nis children stories Of his early tnanhood'ii'day . .And one soft.eye was beaming,— . From child to child ‘tWould roam; . Thus a mother counts her treasure,. . In the old, ()billow. The birth-day gifts.and festivals, • The blendcd 'vesper hymn, (Some dear ones who were swelling it . • • Are with the Seraphim.) - `,The fond ".good nig,hts," at bed time,' • • flowqUiet_si eep ulouki come, And fold I.llfl a together. In the old, . Id home. Like a wreak oc scented flowers, Close intertwined each heart. Bet time and change in concert, • Have bloWn the wrealli apart, Bat sainted, sainted- memories, **Like angels, ever'kime,- if l fold my arms and ponder' • On tile 01d,.01d home.' . • ; F - Alisrelianton,s. The Brother Mutters: roplt TOM'S FATE. - I‘ . .it the foot of the OzarlOiountains,Abere, t;lie rocky slopes extended far into the eultiilt, ttd iettlements; - and at no great distance !not the bank of the Mulberry,_which . foatn-., 41 and roated against the sharp ridges of ice xiith which the-. extraordinary severe Winter 4ireatened to imprison it, two white hunters Talked wrapped in their blankets, along the stream, and seemed to Le looking fora place ihere they could cross to the other' side - . They were two powerful looking,fellepws, they walked on with their rifles on their , hoirlders, and 114 elegant fringed. leggin, .V.ae closely-fittiog and carefully soled nioc ns showed that-they had 'assittned the hali g4 the woods and not of those " land htin ters" who, especially UT - that day, had begun: traversing the western part of - the . State in order to find out the 'most favorbly situated iFtric*., and purchase; or at least" layclaimto them. "Bill," one of them at last said, as - he stop -1 "our searching is of—no use—you see I f 1 rag right t the stream here is too wide for us ed ~0 find a tree laying across it, 'and. if I really. I '4ent to work with my little tomahawk, and felled one of the nearest plane trees; it would not be longn -ugh e o , . Besides' a heavy - storm s gathering behind' us and Ilhink we shotild ,not do wrong were we to make arrangements. ife,r passing this night better than the last; it Li ill be hi tier] v cold." . i; 'lt's rem- anoying, though," Bill answer -10-bis brother, crossly,' that we should not beach the ravine over-there to-night, for in the first place, we should find fatimus quarters in one of the numerous caves, and then, besides, Ishoula have liked to looked for bears; there r.? sure to be some there. The- wafer's-too cold for unto sivitn . across, and thestorm will net be a trifling one • so thin, to work; here re old trees enough ' lying about, and a hark , f can be easild made." "There are almost too many trees lying 'hunt," Tom .replied, looking all around-him, i`ant-1 those "standing seem rotten and tads to fall. 'I do not Much like the thought' camping here; for yort know' the story ta llier told 'once about such a 'place." "'Nonsense 1" Bill said, laughingly. 4 Can ire fitid'a b c tter-ca l it i ii fig place? -The little Itream runs-along at our feet, there's =plenty f wood close and handy, the 'young treess ill furnish famous poles, and the bark there first rate for roof." • Torn made no rurtker'ajecti" ; the sPE't. , xled to inviting, - and they were both soon engaged in raisipg'a rongirthelter for that ihight at least, which -could afford then ref '‘ne 'against the' collecting storm. '- Under. ,such good bands the work was easily aCC01:0- plikhed; and the ext half hour foundAloth tinder. their 'quic - kly • erected •toof, watthing the 14eps of -me broiling in-the fire. I " i t's t.tra ngt ll bOw -cold-it has suddenly I turseil.' Tenn - tit! , lingth'broke the , silence; f"osly look the water in the tin pangs frozen 'quite hard, and the,wind has cho i ssi mind {to the north east ; ' it blows - confoundedly sharp too" - ':'''. ..' h"Let it tlow, -13111 yawned, as he wrapped imself closely'-:in Abe folds of his hlanket; "tam tired and want to sleep, Toni, lay a couple of boughs oWlhe firelefore you turn in, and the one first awake - to-morrowiriust - ,- . , r,.. 16 arouse.tlae.othe " . - ". - . - ' ' ' 1 3fidnight was I) t, tittd' the' ffte" Iti& nearly expired,'Vat the wo brothers slept:firmly ; and the icy north wing -that liosrled - over the sno*-eltid hills -into the' valley, could' - uot disturhe their slumber. , - Heavy' maaww of clonds'htid f loweVer, collected together_fretn various qtitfrters; darkly threatening they brooded' iifiii-the - iittstlints -forest, and, the stately tees ‘-ishook And bowed 'their leafless branches:ELS if in titnid fciebodings of the ap proaebitigatortit.:-:- &bright Mash ofiightning suddenly turSt from the black heavens, and a: terrific' peal:-OfAhttnder almost instants iteouslyfollowed the messenger of destine tion. l c itie'ofthe terrible winterStorrns was impeptt: tug, Ad the'Unchained•truilimne hOs4e4 and tore tlaioUgh•the itarrow*untaits•rsiyines. - 4 4%1117 • eriollo - m; spii at* , g op ift hortor, "Bill, 'get- up; we. dare aayd not -,Vowit ; see .flow the-Old' trees quiver;land' , 're- hear, there's one of - them erackistfr-.i , --i( - - . 'Bailor aill r4lied ail he quickly tin** Itti his bhinket;" 4 ‘•hitS.Alo,./taUgilt iiS 1' '-Hi 1 ' Tom,. laf hold af the4ooff, I'm blessed if-the confounded northwester Won't take it along wall it" ' . . . . .. ,• ' . . : • t . . . ,- - ': • -• . ': -.. •PesPIPAN , . 4 _ ..• . t "i" ', I i' , , -- t. - mvzo.v4p, r ,„ g e.-:. .'.---- .:••—•-.','.--..--"''' " • .1 . •."'!: - ';' . : -- ;..'.' ---.' -","' "-':%:, '"• f -t!" , 1 ' ---- I.'. -- .. ""'. ":" - • 1 :" - ? ;.-- - ' . i ' . ." :' • ' ' -•:!''-'" ' '---,- •" • ".:--;- -'.---,,,. -' - • . ..'... ..- - 0 ....,.:., ~.. ~ . .. " - f .." •4 - ... v.. ,---- ,-- 4 . ; ~ . •:;...„ • 6' . % . :-.'.•=v:. '4 l . - .i ..:' / '''.' ' :i; — : .:;::., ' -(4 . — ..-.. st, -:: 0 ?.--,'• 1, .'., „i : : : -.1 ;r1 ...,..sg, —.I, 19 .:- '? he - ‘; j IP'. --." ~- :0 _ 1, ~. ) 0. , ._ i,, 4 ) - fl, .:--' -',7' "--'=-' --: ~# .-„,- , ...p.q.,1 ,:-. - ii, 41 - _ .. , 1 s , ~, ,- '.?: pps.;_ - -.-..A i , ..._ i , --; •p. :,:: ~. ,i. 0, : ~....... --. ,- , - ~,,,, ,' , -,' ;• . :,.. --.-.. H, ,! , :,...-4.-c., i ~. ..,..43,4 ~ ..--_.4 A . i; -, - A ... 4 ...t - • i., --:. - 6 —.. -.'s . ... .. , -- , "- • _,-,.-- • .---•- , "74 • •.-'. -'4 -0.; ti ~,. 1.., .. 4,, -.... 1.,7 , .„. .—. L - 5 1' , • _, f • y l ' :-.' '. ' ‘ ..' y - ',. :,', -.', '• •i— ': ..! - ,..:•1,..,..< i..... , •.. , ~ i • ;;,. , ... •!..; i i . 1 ,, , ,,„ • r . 4,, ,, , :„ 0. .j0 .,.. 1 -,‘,.. s , ~ 6; i x i, ... ' lb , ) I - . ~,. 4, , • . ; .i... . , , ~. - ',/' . -... ~, •k&b,f.,,_,. - ... ..,,.. .. 4 / 7 g, • .. ' 'Z' ''') .,;9,. ,; " . .. . 1 -,. . . ,;, , X e rll l tlf..- - , , 4, . _ .: : i. .' ~ VA;.- -.' ' . 4' .. - ..`"‹,..' ,„,:„ , , ~14, e , ~ I • ..,,,..,..„, ~ . „2c.mzr:7 , . , . • ; ~</. ~- • - ... \, , ' \,, . • -. N., - ' --.:,./‘ • ~ Y: . ''-.=- ..' , ' , :.':' . .- 2. ~... ' . . . - •; . f - • • • • • . . - ... , . : .0 . . . . ,', .2 ~ • , • ' r . . •• , . i . . -•• •• : .fi -, .. ": .. , -- - '1 r - i -: -...,. • : ; - . 1 =EN Ms feara-was was. entirely unfounded, for at the - same instant such - .a furioui :blast burst. from the opposite valley. that it: half_tincov-. ered their resting-place. in a secend,.and bur 7. ning ashes:an& Spar6s:wire carried far away, into the' gloom iofnight;. A lighting flash again, burst fort4i-, from the elduds and the thunder deadened the sound of ,the - -howling storni. Then . it suddenly seemed as if ,the whole earth NV torn-from itsfouudations; far,.far away - ion it came, .like the crash of.a thousand Cannons; then nearer nrl nearer it' roared, spreading wild .audt.errible overthrow and harrowing desolation around. _ "Altnighty GO, a hurricane f" Tom cried, starting up ia terier_, for at the same moment the storm reache4.l them. The-giant trunks, which had '..witlistood centuriep, bowed like thin twigs, and %Wolfe blow,l that .struck terror tothe heartsor the listeners, the whole forest was mowed level,with thq earth by the - hand of the Alnfighty.- ; The hurricane -caged further and furthet with "frightftil Veloelty . ; for miles around it overthrew the tall oaks,: and huiled them like. reeds to the" ground; '-.lfor miles around it marked its pathl with desolation and deStruc tion ;- but silence, grave -like silence, 'followed in .its track, and Tested over the widely-scat tered trsk\s:._ . ; not a. breath was stirring, and the calmness- of t death,;after this horrifying outbreak of the elements, affected. 'the poor heart of a mortal with a ri:lore. agonizing s der than. it had felt even in the most tet fury of the storm. . bill :had miraculonily, escaped,_ without even , the 'slightest. injui,y ; 7- clining tightly .-to nn immense tree that had.previously fallen; another oakthat,had i'elriacrOss it only serv ed to save him, 'as it guarded him from the "other continually falling. branches and snuffl er trees; but now, as - soon its the first most pressing danger .Pass.ed, hp jumped up and erred, tilled with terror, to Lid brother:. "Tom—brother. Tom—doi answer, Tom. Great God! :has sUebajerrible end fallen to your. sbare."l , No! it Would .have been Well for him if. that .had heen his lot; he still lived,.and. his weak v6ice , at .-nO•great distance, struck the hunter's attentive ,ear,• , , " 411-mereiful Ifeave.ns I" the latter cried when le had quickly leaped' OVer a couple of trees lying in 14 nays and kith a blazing pine.torchin. hishand, stood before him lie. sought.. • "AU-merciful Ilea,Vens I." he repeated in 'almost naaddening agony, and_ covered . his face- with his hands;-for close to him pale as a corpse, with both his thighs hurried beneath an immense. Oak, , Whiel Was . shattered . from top 'to bottom, lay his - Tom, his brother, the playmate of his Youth, the darling of his heart. , "It's serf ; cold," the unhappy man whis pered, and looked, up imploringly to the bun ter, who appa.rently incapable or anyl further movement, stood:near i him as if hewn out of stone—" it's very cold, Bill; can't yen bring me_fire- These Words broke the charm whic seem ed to posSess his half.uuconicions brother. . -"Torri,' l Torn P i he cried, as be threw him self with groans ba the mutilated body 'of his dearest companiOn. -"You :hurt the latter,en_reated; my arm,Pains me, and it so cold." "Wait, you, shall .have fire--in a few sec onds," Bill notv cried, as he sprung hastily up, "lie ;there a minnte longer, and fetch you some ache-4. and then help you tip-only a moment's patience;" and- in haste he flew back to the still burning camp-fire. Ali! he did not notice the features of the unhappy man, is Ile begged hini to have patience. Ile hurriedly collected all tbe.ashes and burning wood his arms could hold—die . flames seoreiiirig his;. bunting shirt and, hands--. be did not, notice it, and flew back to his ,brother's side, plenty of drift Wood lay around, 'and iri•a few, Moments a bright, cheering. fire flared by the ',side of the tree, under whose . giant weight the- peior fellow laW hurried alive. - - . Bill now regarded with a - shudder the ter .rible scene, and madly threw himself on the tree, which la,bundred men could not have raised and tried- his utmost, strength on an, • impossibility. - • - "Bill I" To,'m gently begged him, "come here, come r g,ive, me . your. "hand-;,-, that's right. And now, yon really lo‘'e rme ?" ' 1 ~s • ..X.fe,onvrilslye hasp of his' brother's . hand answered the! 2 question; speak he could not, for the tears be b:i'd uppretsed with:diffieul: ty suffocated ie . vei soiund. "Will ypkdo rn:e 4 service!" Toni implor ed,aintg' the t,. unresisting _map 4..105er to him."_ ... • " k seriine!". Dilhwlispered--"a', service! What, can you asif. 'hat I would' not do for you_if it was in my p Wet r' ' c. "You prnmise to, oit r . - "Nirhat„is it r .t,b l hunter asked, in terror. - "Take :.- i rr rifle,; E :Tosu,begg - ,ed, ",and put an end to ; 'y.4ufferiligs." . ..--- ..1.7 Tom!" lthe..4r4,er trisa, as, lie syruog up in horror. "Put an end to my /sufferings," the unhap py man entreated. F' Bill! brother! if you ever loved me pniireilt•now. Do not let me perish 'here, slo, stud horribly," . ‘ "I 'will save yoti-if it cost The' my life," Bill cried. i" I sill *turn with assistance this very night* - ii I. .. . 1 - - - : ..,, "That is: not itt.4Sible,wthe poor fellow. re- ptied; torrewfully shaking his head. ,"Thit next settlement is by; the nearest road, at least fifteen Miles frdm ..;:bere; but the road-you would have U,'lsket/ go round' the "rocks and rarities, is twenty ; rid if . „•oii corne'haelr; if you `brought fi fty` en %cub' yon, ithift. help -eotld they'give . iner , : Both ;by' thighs are Shatt&ed, and' the riiarest ?deter lives at tit tle 'Rock; filitutrel3* inneis frOtirkete; acid whither we scarce flifsvittli rikeetion. -131.11 vill,yott lee' in'e lie !Sire fori &T O; and itftet'- ; n'ardis - see me periish'` mise ' 7 " 2 . ''''' - - uicsk`,.'ini Ovo l i tre; and !pm al4,ll . lsivc . it :WWI, pleasure ; tut iliOn't : requi r e ' midi a tii *rible,tbipg .iron MV; ,it, - "dust bel;:o_btf:4 , ii.ve.you—i -! _ha e" lily ithinibitark—/ an a`' . Tim this tree thr964- 4 t can ' "'' - "C/Ft you p4i.e tpunds ' _ ateser TOW *erupted bitu,intut point ,'wit bia,biiticrio' 1tia..4 1 1".:. It was 4, waive, oi g ht,,m,:o. I q o o l er-f .en iiflOn LIS 1 -' l .',ell - ' 4 ith illgrßaP••• -' I cannot. umider yeu, 4be go/44 aisid...' "A.PI 43 . A? you ea4l that Muria r et I . lrk, .Pintr. be ,te0414114; , " ,„efuld.."yim fai eply . ,,gy,Ae now4/ 14 4- I !'enn.T.tti fl..erilf low 11 , 941altate ~poviou- w -::ouhi.zio;'lgt me 14:4) ,vain.,", • 4 will give you , a rifte:ildon't, make Me' my &other's murderer," Bill griqued. A' WEEKLY 30151,NAL-7DEVO'ED U POLITICS? NEWS, LITEILIATIIE; AG CULT SCIENCE, all MORALT "My right aim is., alsolbroken; I cannot even if I would," , ToT r' the - powerful mon sobbed, as thyew himselrby his brothWo side what is it you want of me?" f! 1 - '" What did yott lately:4g) tei - lestor when the bear-had torn him , so teiribly !' • • " Lahot ," • 1. - • "Ile-Was your,faVorite dog." Bill only answered with Isobs. 'I • . And gm. loved him ;.' inore than me?"TOrn now. Ita"ta; almost rero:wilfully . "Oh! why. did I net . ]iced vout warning when we, last night reached ihisj unhappy spot I Why' did I not avoid] the decayed trees that threatened us onlail sides? Why— , • hill r. the. unhappy, man interupted him, do you mean to free me from my tortures?" " f will!' , the. hoo f fellOw sobbed on his brother's - neck. 1114, hetil one another. in cold. embrace for •a( long while,"hut when Tom tried to unloose hilt hold, his brother only held hitn the tighter. Dakiat length broke in the ezniti and the? . sun sliOne on the eliaoi of wildly scattered gees ardund: "Let us part," TOrn . Whispered, "be a than." • • He quickly puSlied l ' hisjibrother - back, - and he, at leuelt 'stood up' ?, • " Well, then, ble . it so!. II see you are right. It is impossible to . iave you. I know, too, that I should have 'asked the sa.he of you in a similar cage, and you wkitildi not have refused me. Pr:,fy 'ter God for the last time, and pray too for imeothatiiie may forgive me the murder Of my br4ther',". I Dill tottered away Ito fetch his rifle, but he turned in a few Mornents With a firth and cer tain step. With biS sett in his hand; he swungrbitnself with !his right hand over the scattered trunks' i and soon stood again by tile side of his . brother, who 'poked affectionately in his Thee. • "I am ready ;" saidlthe ball, with a smile, "do'not tremble, ,and God reward you •for your kindnessgood4--,bye lie offered him his band as he r turned his face lawar.• . - - "Brotherl" the tortured_ hunter cried, in agony and threw himself again his breast. Once again . they•held each other in a close embrace, till Toni entreated gently, "Do not delay any longer." •Wi;li hasty Pound the hunter stood r on his feet, raised his to his (leek, and lay the next **Lent unconscious by the.side,of the brother . lie,liad shol. What more hare I (o tell 1. Shall I de-. scribe how he awoke and piled britneli upon branch on his Tbrother'si Corpse, sol.that• wolf and panther might not fasten their - greedy teeth in the beloved remains-4°W he totter, ed, away; and wrestled with death for many months in. the wild dreattis of fever, carefully nursed by friends I—No enough of This sor rowful tale: = His Ibroilier's blobd-covered filee did not long.trouble him in his nightly . dreams .or cause him to :Spring in terror from his beil, and tiy: to tl5- , --on an "expedition against soineplundeliug . Creeks a compas sionate bullet put an end tohis - life and -friends buried him 'where he fell!! life, his memory is still retained in thai , neighbor hood, and when .'a hunter camp at night, and turns an enquiring:lglauce. towards the giant. bunks which *mincingly surround him, then a gentle prayer of even ! the rough est and wildest of the baud 'arises, and whispers; " God pmerv(4 me from ..! Tom's fate.' • . A TRUE • INCIDENT ist lIIS HISTORY. - The distinguished .William- Wirt; within six or seven months 'after his first marriage be came addicted to ithenterance, .the effect of which operated strongly •on the mind and health of his wife, and ina few months more she was numbered with the dead. 'Her health led him to leave the'corintry where be resid ed, and he removed to Richmond'. But his habits hung about him; and occasionally 'he wa§ found with jolly, frolicl7brite spirits in Baechanaliari revelry.' , His true - -friends ex postulated with him to convince him of the' injury he was doinghittiself. 13uthe persisted. His practice began to drop off„ and many' looked upon hint as orithe sure road to ruin. He Was advised 'to get; married With a; view of correcting .his habits. This he consented 'to 4o if the right - petticur offered. He ac cordingly paid his advrinces to Miss Gamble. After some months. • attention he asked her hand in marriage.. She'replied:-+ "Mr. :Wirt, I have teen wellriware of your attention some time back, and 4liould have .given you to underAarki that your visits and attentions were not actieptable, had I riot. re ciprOcated• 'the affection' which Vou evinced towards me. But.l catincit.yieldinay "assent until 'you make 'a pledge never to taste,louch, or - handle any intoxicating drink-: l '. . • This reply to' Wirt Wit* as .ttnexpected as it wfts•novel.: His reply was he regard , ed that propoSition a bar to all further con -sideration of the mattr,-_and ho left her. Her Course 'towards - him was the name as ever- r -- hitt, resentment and 'neglect. , -- In the -course of few weeks, he went .agairrand solicited her , hand. 13lit- her reply Was that her Mind was Made up.. -He be came indignant, arid iegarded the -terms as inaulting.to honor,' acid avowed tit, 'should be the last meeting they 'Should ever have. He took to drinking.For4 and worse, and Seem ed 46 run headlong to: • ... ._ Ono day while lyitig ist the outskirts of a oily, near a little grocery or gs og shop, drunk, a young lady, whom l i it is not : ,I necessary to name, tras•passing that way to her:house, not far off, and beheld hid). with his face upwards to the semcshing sun.i She.took her hand ' kerchief, with her owfi name !narked upon it, and placed . it:over hitt facer.= . . I • After .be 4i ad rembined in -?that way fot some hours' he " was awakened; and his tbitst being so:great, he went into a !ittte-grocery 1 to - get a drink; when Int discovered the Land losrehief, at , whieh heilooked at 1110.121ne: up on it.:: After . pausiugi he esekiMed :-... .- - . . -i . "Great - God! ,who!. left, . this'. with nu),— .WIM iilieed -.thin on :Mylailei i = = ..= --- - ....-No..onAt kncsie. n, . dropped ithe.glesa, et- . ltd 1-,-1- : : : 2 , .-- 1-- :' .' .'. .:. 4 iEnought enougiir 4•- • ,„ .. ~; ; -.. ' -He retiredinstank,frourth store, forge:- ling.! his=: thirst; lout: not-his: #ebauch, ;the Itanditerchie4 . *: of , :t4 'hidy o rowing , that:-if la ilott* 'v. hinF' strength, never 44 taste ;-- touch, or h ' ridie any - iti tbri4ating.drin,W . c.... , ' , :- t-tt ' ineetifilik Gimble was tile hardest; ef fart-etre tife.' : !flit met her , in - , her owe-. `rine or' on- roa:betoOpptillotirid therneareet• 'corner;' - ' 1- ' ' ,',' . ,'. ''.' lh` r''''2 . "' - 'i l :l44ut:list'addresied Min a4lote.utuler her oil: band, inviting Bin] to hir 1R:44; which ontrose, jr.ttsipttlyanna anntir;ll,,tltn'tt, porning, "Aril 2a, 1855. , --- • Reformation of ;William Wirt. ~ he -finally gathered: - ennrago eno u gh -t o ac cept. fie told her if she still bore affeetiOn for him, he would agree . to - hUi. 1ej . 1..1*. - . a . er reply was: --z . ' . ~ . ‘.'lly Conditions are the - same, now that they ever hare, been:" ' • • 1 "Rieu I aoc4k,t,here." from , .. TheNsoon iihiftied • that day he ie!pi , , • his word, and Lis affairs brightened, . - while honor and : glory . g,ithered thick upon his brow. - - i • .- , .. . His name. has been enrolld - high iii . the temple of fame; .While patriotism and renown live after him with ituperishable Were. -• The Reid 4 The death of the Czar is like the fidl 'of a planet from its place. There' is something . very. aOulin.it, and. beyond the common chances' of liutn.au accident--this'aitnple mid; den figure of Providence, that intervenes at such la moment to disturb and:Complicate eventi so - mighty and mysterious;, and flings the sliade of one man's death oyer'it troubled world. :Never did mortal fall at such a zno ment.,! The great conquerors. and rulers of the .earth have always run- their" race,'and made, their Map before death called Alexandp,. Casar, Charlemagne, William, Petei 'Napoleon, had fulfilled orexhausted . destiny, ere they sank. But, mask the o menU at whicli - this.tnan's brain stood still! All &trope stood ht bay before hip, colossal figure, more awful and glorious . than the old Odin':-of the heathen North. The ; breath of his Will was law overone-seventh of the globe I and 'Over sixty millions of men. Patriarch, I Emperor, Pater Patrice, - over: a hundred tribe's from - the perennial snow of the Pole to the-fdtioming beauty of Georgia. Think what an empire it is—fit for a detnigod ! It. keeps the keys of the two great seas of Eu rope, . Its most distant gates open over Ja-: pan:and over Oregon.. Its Ifrontier menaces not one kingdom, but all - Europe-:-Tiirkey,' AuStritt, P.Tussia, into wick by•dtploraricy,.or4 by relations of. race, it bus lapped-as by tures. Franee is far away, but the Cossack's steed has: watered in the Seinet:- England! rule's the seas, but Constadt sue gieaborg area, to her cowed fleets as GOdwin and the Eddy- 7 stone are to the channel Mariner : J:lEs coasts• .are lined with cahuon—his arrhies rover the-! earth with a crop of bayonets. 'qiie might-4 iest rivers of the Continent are but arteries of; Autsia: - It has absorbed and assimilated the! mot viitiono.and.unlike raees----tbe Lap, the,' Fin, the Save, the Tartar,:the Pole, and the: Greeks; so that there is not, and never was,_ an empire so homogeneous-and- of such na- . lurid growth on the earth. Its attractions have amalgamated the most suitable intellect and the most brawny physique of mankind. At the one side we see . the Russian of zation withthe gift of tongues, at another the Russian of barbarism, whore' it is very hard' to kill, and who never knows-When he is•bea , ten. On the map of th'e world, ire regard. Rns-ia like some huge sea perpettially-bulg ing -against fteble batik*, and, W;.., erough to overflow the whole weird. Anti the man who is dead,was the master of alget - migh 7 ty monarchy, and ruledlit' so • t hispres , ence was felt from its nearest to its nether most end. And totall . at such a moment, - with all Eu rope at bay before him France and Eng land had forgotten the enmity of centuries in that shadow which the;destiny of his sway seemed to spread to thei very confines of their. coasts. For fear. of him, Christendom - had united to defend Mahotnet. The Power's of Europe—of whose immitigable wars his an--1 cestors had been spectators for centnries,froM , •theirlbarren realms of snow--seemed to be- I come coherent, when be, an enemy epual to 1 thetit all, struck the note of Cdr for the world.] - And for a year ho had. batilid all their wiliest statesmen.. Their hosts . ; had touched his coast, and had been stunned in. the 'shock, or were-rotting on his soil.. The statesmen and the soldiers of - barbarism overreached theta' both. Behind. them the autocrat stood like j the centre of a system, untiring, inexhaotible. His glance was pervading, his industry im mense enouglefor it - all. Round segments of the globe be moved his armies- like balls along a billiard hoard. He had only to drive aahour or two from his capital to see such 4t fleet ias 'Nelson never led, grinning - in- iinpo tent ;Malice at -the "rock which is the. sentry of hiiy capital. Ele played the Prussian spina, the ustcian, and. delued the Whole Congress by has finesse = by his frankness, too. Mean; while,' along thelaisir's frontier, - his armies gather like rolling thunder - Clouds. Sebastopol grows stronger every day of its Beige. ,Meanwhile, the Legitimists begin to lift their head in Franee, and the two 114- pot4ns . ' are at daggers: Meanwhile, Turkoy Imi:become the'spittoon:of its Allies'scorn._ lide:Mwhile, - EnglishCabinets ) - crumble, the English navy is disgraced, .the English :.artby destroyed—she is • in-sere dread -for India, Australia, -. the Cape—she mourns her Irish surplus; which .swells the 'tone - 'ofßusSian sytnpathy froth the States. • Bni lo! - -the hour has corne,which strikeit for thci Czar as Well as the vilest Cossack of the Don... Suddenly, awfully that face oti which the gaze of the world is fastened as on a planet, is dark with the di* of deathand -mankind is presented. with another mystery by Providence. Did he (lie as.the Gins dioihowalk . with "their father's murderers before them, and with I their own by their „side,"." or merely "go nt top" asAfto . mortal who aims to be immortal I almost al ways .does-?. WAS aconite-or I apopb;xy 1 , - The solemn Music of his, requiem seems to. aivirig over all the earth. What'notedoes it tell to, the .armed kingdOMS! :Is it, In terra pax filmiriittai bona' votilltati,!? .. .lsit rather, Excirfati_o/i4ais .! a . Osiris • and . gauntlet On; down,l: by nitwit Co The north .wind over Muieoyy nitie'thOriths'Of the year., lea . ow g. back ,me Czar r . 11 . ' will (Aim back on WOuld':!toat'it ! rtiO4:its . ,easy: to itilVtbe`lipliatii'italo kia4at othOii 1)00 rating darkest bound witJi;~,itic breath of nag,' - Covered with moving armies lid. e.c!ouda, Careering over "tote; firintlinent:: - Thei i -efore 'the new Czairiv first mores to los iiihects'ilfe,-: that le - will purne ocif4is. OF Peter, and, 'of and; ha pa }:Which; lie raises( Wore - time world is a b oodlied bin*. sways" valpifr' people ' ac cording' to their ''races._.To kroeth tiieity -thou - liana they = bow low as to•outi who duly' claims to hare -,;five thoisaid. ' If you 'watil an - -iguoramoui to respect. yon,'" dress to death" and 'wear watch seals about th e size or brick bat: ' Artidts. amore Proof: .The editor of the . Cliarlottsvillo Ad voca .furnishes his readers with the followin sketch of Gov. Ssunt's speech, delivered at: Orange, • Sutra. is a Know-Nothing candi date'fOr Congress. The .Advaeate says: `fHe argued the necessity e7f.a change in . the nattiralization laws. He showed that the native population of the South increased more rapidly than . that of the North; and de- Glared that the preponderance*Of the Noah : ern Jepresentation over . that'Of the 'Seuth,_ . was owing to the r flOod of fOreign emigration that. was 'constantly pouring ill upon the North. . That this vast influx of foreigners bad-already given, to' the North some fifty inore reprentatiVes than the South had, and that if the tide of emigiation ,continued o' increase to the - ratio as it had for the last four years, we would find in taking.the ,riext.cen- - sus that•the North' would have a 'majority of 'upwards of one hundred Representativo: Now, is,not this a startling fact; that not-'1 iwithstanding the native . population . increases 1 much more rapidly South, and that t4e sole 1 arf.tdomlnance of the North, over us is derived i trom a foreign people, from aliens, who 'are ! notoriously Abolitionists, and yet we refuse 'to t. 16 anything,,to rid ourselves -of this stupen dour wrong ? How tali Southern . men: be L sincere in their' denunciations of Northern 1 abolitionists, and yet refuse to unite in the effort to ea off this rapidly augmenting anti slavery power LoOk at :it; you men,of the .South, who prize the Union—you who'desire your own 's . afety,' and see if we have anySe turity of our institution, if something is not done , to resist this atolition movement:" .Free-SoOPS have evidence in the above, _ o,hat Know Nothingistrt is destined to be a great lever in the hands of Southern 'politic ' inns to aid in perpetuating. slavery. Here ib I N the or „. the Know-Nothing Organs are-en=. deavorini to make, the people believe, With (Mt a' why or a - wherefore, that the Demo! erotic party " is pro-slavery 'to the back-bone" Was ever inconsistency more glaring I .Per- Li haps some of our Free-Soil friends can unrav j el and eliicidate this palpable game 'Of decep tion.—LOirrisburg Still illore Proof. . . The following,. which goe's far to prove thnt Know-NOthingism is endeavoring to bol§ter . up the peculiar institution of the South, we clip from the American Organ, published nt.,l Washington city :. ' ".Gradually, but surely, are these classes of new born : American citizens:, working. ; their i way into - the interior,of the country, South : I and South-west, as well as . North and West.,l By fari,the -greater portion: of them reineinil north of 'Mason and Dissou's line. -. The' Mir 1 them and, western Statei ere 'Mete cursed byi their presence in their midst, than the . Sonth ~1 610 how stand's - the South, on the score of -at-i, tua/, imminent, certain &anger from the yr; Mica pow . er and influence of the ,whole for-1 eign population ?., -.- - .' • - - • "Is there, .or is there not, a fix. ,L andniii alterable antagonism of opinion, ,!rsal . lYi prevailing between the whole Irish . pOptila 2 , i tion, and :•:outhern slave-holders? -A- 2 s afinSgi are . not-the European. immigrants Opposed tc, the institution of slavery? When half ill million of iminigraLta are intim:illy thrown into. the country at . the: present day, with ni prospcctiVe increase Which will reach 'a - Mili ion . of Si, i alls per annum within ten years, ar e the Sonth to be told that they need have tiq fears front this immigration ? - .... -, ,' . - " With. an . annual immigration equal .t 4 the whole population, of Louisiana; and more. than that of Michigan—a number Sufficient to form It large State, and with a prospective increase.which would, within ten years, make in the aggregate twelve or fifteen such Stated . \ what Would be- the condition of the South even under - the- census of 'lBOO I . _ Would they not be in - - hopeless minority! And'' what inigbt_ be the fate of their- peenliadn stitutioni under the census of 1870? 'Before. , that year; if the tide of , immigration should col:al - mid to increase, ‘';•ithout check, the feni eign population would under the, prosPectiOe increased ratio, - equal the native popiation! Is not the whole canonry, and the South mite especially, interested, deeply interested, in elieeking immigration .and in excluding . all future immigrants from the polls? - ! ! "ThiS is the " Anierican policy—this 'is the purpose of - the "American - party "4 . while those who oppOse us- are .for °pontiff . wide the door's to all the world;nnd'even . atr reitting.foreigners at'once to' the polls ; u pon their taking the oath of allegiance - . • • - In:the above extract front the ;Organ, the, national paper of i the : Know-Nothings, , the Northern people,• : and especiallY the people 'of t 1 is see the tendency 'of KnOW- Nothingisin. :It is tin .order to perpetuate and (weed slavery and to claim with an impious hand thciie republicaufsentiments whichixtre - existence- to Our governmen± The South has bedome wedded .to this -uqw order.and-forgetten her _former tenaeit:y_for . nstitutional . _priticiple. _ - She :' made. use lof citf le Northern .deinocracy.-to -.prepare .tli,c round for another _erop.of slavery in the. ter ritories, and nowtbe adopts, Know-Nothing ism, that under: its care and by its help the accursed seed may: be sown. -Go on. - f-Tbere is-a power in the..Korthern , rattsseswitieh has 'pot yet been ivialdetL - , !The tinie is i coini ng,: and theme') • who,, in.-this .State eannbt, VII ''find see-the Otnineinstigni which leteken..de- - eisiva action on the part -of.. our,' peOple ;en thisspiestionis one whiaiwill,noCeee-aibkthe, l. the truth.-6:-/IcirrfslitirrUnioti. - ., "1. ,-- -I''''i - 1 '• 1 , . : t ' 410., 11 1 012!_ _ . . ..' / , • ; .... ~t l LigittElT ..Law. . ..„ , -... ~, 1,.., , That' frOm maul after tile first daY of crkp., 2 lobar next, it shell-. be ,unluvittil zto . keep ; or . •maintstio any boost, room :or place,whereivi= nous,spiritotts, Malt or brewed liquors. or .any admixture therof,lcan ha sold._or drok. Jot all- persons aftio iiolate this,saation ,abel;:he .deemeignilty-o .- a misdemeanor s atul,, own conviction, strait it seatence4l9'PaY 6 fine.P9-1 excediniefifty d Lars,... att4 f. 44_ uu,4ergpikti iniprisoninent notAxeeding etio Month. ,t-‘hrtt for asecotidor any aebeequeat otWooeithe Ow ally shall be a fine not ail - Reding 4m)e. 41911,t45. -That :it :Atli' be , ualawfai „fur, -*ay 'PelOn t° 5e11110 . 1401111, maltiof -brewettAiquere -,_in quantity._ than; one. quart; and oven thou Poetise must be obtained from the Court of quarter 1 ..`.x,:~ , Sessions ; _ and e. lieinie' shall be . grant to i.t thekeeper of an hotel, inn; tavern, resturant; eati !tiouse,th liter; oyster-house' cellar, or other place"of ntertainmeiat, amusement or refr6liment. - Tat'no license shall be grant ed without the ayment to the Reciever - ot ic. Taxes, of threetimes the amount now• fixed by la -, and in no case shall a liceise be grant ed fo a less turn than $1,30. That the license shall conspicously displayed in a frame glass udr s.. all any licensenuthorize a sale of spiritu ous4inousoer malt, liqnrs on Stinpay;that pro visions of the act as to appraisment' or license, shall not extend to iniPorters, to commissioned auctioneers, nor brewets ordistilers selling in-' qnantities not -less than five -gallons. . And finely, that this act AV not intefLre with any persons holding a- liC6ise heretofore granted, until the time for which the wane was granted' shall have expired. NOnshall any license which may be granted befOre the Ist day of July nektr s authorize the sal' of said liquors or ad mixtures 'after the Ist day of October next. in brief then, after -the tirne jiist specefied, it will be illegal according to this new law,to sell vinous, spirifotis, or malt liquors, or any admixtute thereof, at; any. : hotel,,inn, tavern, restaurant, eating-house, theater, or other place of entertainment in "any pardon of the State of Pennsylvania." in=:=ll=l Civilization of 'Knorr-Nothingion. The civili woild* has - . for' %years found great fault-with China and Japan Tar shutting themselves in nninvacied seclusion."and.deny 7 ing access' to nll strangers., It.was universal-ly agreed that - by so doing they - violated the comity that should iprevail among the broth erboOd of .nntions4-because - they . • inhibited I thesecommercial, teligins, .and tional interchangeS, essential to - civilizatiOn and the - development of the resources of the world. As in every enlightened nation laws lin restraint of tradd are odious, p in the great i:Court of civilized nitioni, laws in restraint of i : international interChangesare likewise deein . ed odious. - It. matters not -*hat may. have been the . jcause or causes - of the Tonz.isolation,th.e.lime -I.some seclusion and the obstinate . .teserve' ruaintained-by. -those two nations ; their_ poli cy was an-offence against the world,- ciiilizas tion, and - religion. It was - universal ly - held to be so. Their reason, no doubt, .Was that their rulers 'and despots saw tile inferiority of ! the two races, and -also saw that if the ,viger ous and:manly ideas of stronger races shena be iutrod uced, - .their despotic power would' he at air end. : Hence they.. laid 'a. strinzentrand inexorable embargo on intercouse wlitb-other nations.' , - • Oda .things happen, in' this' woad, lin& stranze coincidences smnetimes turn up. .One such has occurred in . this couniry.., - Just as we have,. after-much . .patience, soft parsua sions,and many efforts, succeeded in estab-. lishing intercouse and interconituunicatiOri be tween our and China: and Japan, a new party has sprung . up amongst us, ,which maintains the self-same proscriptive, secret, barbarous, • exclusive doctrines of these two countries.- ' This party proposes .tliet. weikall exclude or disfranchise all-foreiguers. They. pay a poor. compliment to. honestY; , • That is open: - ,They are secret and. clandestine.--r-- They -nay a. poor - compliment to tho.Arrieri can nation. - ; . They nractically 'declare 'that this AmeriCan nation is..wik and:, imbecile, and that if it • suffers foreigners . ,(who are at hoaiej •to come here, and after 'na - - -turalization,.under our present laws, - to ,vot4 that our intellects and our characters are . much Weaker than theirs• that they willrnle. Atheriea.. . They declaie, .in • effect, ' TIIAT 'WE ARE TIIE :WEAKER RACE.! This is the obsolete Chinese And Japanese niption.. Just as it has„become obsolete in China and Japan; the.self-styled "Patriots of America" seek to introduce it here. Are we . a race of- tnen, or are we babies? .41. ave. we intellect, character and: sttength, or are we idiots,• profligates ,and paralytics,? IDo we, in thia"the enlightened nineteenth centu ry, require a\ChineSe wall to proteet us from the inroads of foreignefa I _ls, the 'greatlight of our liberty tO s be " hid'under a bAliel," or are, we tobe " a.eity set upon II hill r . ' . .. .-. Langilage ca n not ' convey ,the deep:cort tempt that we feel_fer, the , bastard organiza tiou that teaches suc h humiliating doctrines. ‘ye are of the angle- xoti race. We , are a free and a great people) -, We have fintiideti a great Republic. We founded that_nepub lic against the , fixed.ideas of the whole world, We have preserved it in spite orresistanci from abroad and resistance at home, and .when it is firmly established, :it mis- -; ' e y sneaking, clandestine party, a SPO " 411.: TY, has sprung ,up in our midst .. ich , says that we cannot maintain it,becausea,strong er race, or stronger races will pour into our domain.and control us.. It is .a low farce.and a miserable: folly. Americans' have always ruled : America, and they always will. —.. kilow - NotffinP 6 We find in the South CiroEnka an 'able tick ea the Know-Nothing mox . emeut, from which. ; ive .'4.xtrac,t, the .following statements of ' . ' " ilas , any. mind shed greater lustre nn ii lustriotia-Atitens than Aaristotle! Aristotle wasn foreig,tierntid mune' to Attica -,*11133 1 ' seventeen y_ears old. Was there any Spaniard incite-Spanish than Columbus was- a Genoese. Hut there .been.Frenchinatt more French than Napoleon and Puvier, .and. Cont;tantl--- Napoleon ,was art Italian; Cuyier, by, birth and ed tiea ti on, a, Getinan ;,:Constant a ,Swi&s. ; Who *OW Alm Netherlanders through the ilirest., war of independence on ; ;record, and wh9 , foundetl,the-great Republilinf.the Neth: erlands? : ,Williatn, of Oninge, 4, German., ilas, England over had a tactr9 English King than , William,nui Third; theNethiiiiautier,: iitt.s Ger - many titer ha c tl ; ayapr4 Gsocnan:teati er thfill;Eugebent Savny I,Y,to)*wa.i,dat4a, ciao, of ,Russia, dad mad() WAS- a', Qerinatl. ford aver-114 gMator vrofOlior th.au grall 1/Mocif.,Rotiardinn ',Tlia-jery, ,couatry whiab reviles " the foigigtiet" was4liNtoveyl by Cabot„ a _Gaily= ,eisb, la 24: seiyiae ,E:44 , 14101. prow* auttAY'r the 'Amara:pa . Xt.e:v9lutiop was 'iAlinitgogteri,' tau TirialtgAtni; aB,- jailed. the, roller _or the 4ffierican navy ;. s and Taal...Tongs, -the hold and early Pop Pin WiM . a *re 400,:thillatin, - *Mt Americana! of . aignars% au4 Aie4 110%!nkanY:. !Tv' kiln cm:4llo)lu° and-orPaguitst 11 , * lane ragtit ; tiqUiVs! .vibeur , 9 o l: l ‘44 ietved , for fop:vowmai ettpwy.::, • nr Buy tfle, truth;au .44 lqiots.-!. .--. - 1 ,, , ,',' iltitutte.--12;:-:7Stinkr*,:17::-;,__: ANIBRICAN NATIONALITY Why dor - yeu. obstinately refuse to-join tbeAmencanmoyo-ik tneritl7 asked a friend of.apither... "Because lam an Aidetican,"' '644 curt reply: " Do you mean to say tliat "asserting:-oui •. nationality is anti' 7 Aijienciiii" dernanded the other wraith "To assert it no? To narrow it; 'to: eircnt& - 'scribe it, yesr 7.. "Nobody wants . to - narrow or circumscril:l44; American nationality:" • " Yet you and 'your friends do so r' - "How r • - " Listen, and,l will prove our nationality from an, obscure tribe, the Anglo-Saxton. There; is .-5 ness in number one: You give u:s 'fclr fathers only the .13riti4i?:There is ue.ss in nunibet two. And you would._ Make our developeme t at .gn,gliste only. "There la'. narownet.s number three. In Europei ality means one religion, onkrrace; _one guag,e, eating alike and-tiressiug There they have nati9nalitieNbotmded ers, lakes, and mountain 'ranges./ Such :nationalities used to - existin'ourcont: try, too' aiming the „Indian:4 ; but ,to'.'confitle e people living, between 'the Pacific - and :die' . Atlantic, the and the Gulf of Itlexico-F- a people whom - neither - the AlleghiMies, net. the , :%.liissippi could divide or stop.:l-.-a. poi): ple among, whom almost. all -knownlangua gel are spoken—to confine such a people' the national - straight-jacket of your- Know-Nothing lodges, is falsitying, everthis torical record, and is belittling the American people. Such a nationality may suit an In-. dian tribe ;_it may be hatched in the, ram of men with narrow European sieltt-but 'to an Ameiican, a true__Americanit is -revolt- • • And Still They Co. The Know-Nothing organ st - Pittsburg, Young , 4ink.,riean ' . has expired... - want of support. This paper" was shCit E lived,.., It C'cantne.nced its, career very, 'boistertuiity;' , supposing it was going,to hare ecery thing its. own way-, buts immediately atter.. the; :defeat' of the 'tnidnizht asspssinsof that city . .for 014cers, it became so caltu•that it could .not. even speak , at all. -=Dent: . (Thion. A Brief Discourse.. Test—" There -is, a way that seemeth tight. untoCman, but the end - therecr' &c. ..We hope it, will not be deernixlsa.crilegious ki'qUote here this, sublime 'Predantion from the oracles-r of divinelruth, as a- - text to' .die.= course froni in the manner-that folloWs, 'al though iu aid of subjects of - a somewhat -sec-, - ular nature, appertaining ,howerer to mO4I-, • ity. , 'lt may - 'seem tighUtta inan to' neglect - 1 :v paying his debts fel_ tit& sake of lending - ,or.'. speculatine upon his money; but . the. end , thereOf,is ,bad paymaster., It may .seem right to a man ,attetupt to live upon the fashion' of tho tines but the' end thereof is disgustinkto_all,sensible folksy - and ruinotts.to health,_ reputatiort and Ftt It may, seem right to a. tnaZto Veep bOr- ; rowing of.his_neighbers hut the end-thereof Is, ery cross neighbors. It mar , seem right to a' Man to - .trouble . .. hithself. about, his neighbor's ,businessr but - the end thereotis the neglect of - his - own. It may seem _right -to a man tO be:11/; Ways truzu lino' his own.tiune : ; bat - thet,end, thereof i . s' fame don't extend-J:l'6(y -far. ; • • "' It.may seem right to man; to indulgebis child:en an every thing ;'but the-end, theml is = ltis children will indulge, in „dishonoring - It i nlay seem tight to a man to h einistat ly slandering his neighbors;the end-them of is) nobody believes anything he says.- frnay sworn - righttei'd - man' to - attempt to pleae ewer) body '; but the end thereof ta, , -be., pletieee nobedy. ' Itimay seem right to a .ati to rn excel...his neighbors in extravigance. and,,,luxury.; but the end , thereof is—he only, excels thera - jo _ foil'- - . •-• .-Ttnar seeniright toanian.ibititataVealleii!; paper:,; out the end'thereot is at7aat `ai_ ma's haan'rain Idea of 'what is righf,nfid his fain-, fly are totallYignorant of:the: ordinal:V4- . currences of the day. - 7 _ It runy, seem right for a:rnau to 'worship creature store than the Creator, but, the e d thereof is—an idolater. , . -, It may seem - right for afmart to obtain • s news by boriow,t tag Of his neighbors f but e end thereof is—fraud - upon the print4r. - --- ' - .It may seem Tightzto a 'man to be inc - santly occupied in hoarding' tip treasures-1d this world ; but the . end themtiti— r he 14$ none, in the world to come. :, , It may seem -righi_tb us to 'further :extend this discourse at the expense Of', ; the' yea' lid; but the end thereof is-i- 7 -heri. - '' ---:,---'' •,-.'-',.= -- Bi - " , ....tr., ..NParly tbirtY Parfr. Ago, a Yoiniglio..o 2 .e sixteen years of ,age, native or .Ic4"4lnari3P shire, was Jearning . the art of punting bra' small - village -Verm pay: Wat-Tor ty.ctollars a year and.board , - liebailllintgo.ne suit; of clot4es,- and boine-made cloth; riot , cut tolt.:iery.-14,e1y. ll.e-,.wus studious du ring - hia,leisitin. honia,atid - taking- part in a 'Debating Some ' !'began n distinguish bint.self infarmetit - „and able in argument.,e.rostchkattended the..4e balerand on one occasion in Associate ..slig ,,ested to hini the propriety Offarniihing self with a snit Of clothes:. --. that' wear`-he had better earl what he had than get in to debt. That person is now at the head:of an - eitablii3hineqiur iN,Tew York city,,; ; ot up by Lis onn tability--and industry, !that, brings -in weekt, ftkiiii4hree.zto liveetho)itind'dollars. The outsets,. to be. sure, - are' coitiderabh4 I itis a concern that..pays, Tribitne;offic_N : odit i Or;is -the Jerson guit..W4s,.snennnotinetil in yOiftlii' and so dilig , ent by - storing Ili mind w i t h .k. obw ro gv , : s :There <are yofing men vol!,,tAthiLNiitikto a few years have *boat 119 mat:lb.:l44s per. mouth the_sabcts% sl ,*.‘t wbo Time el alit nearl£g'' pint nth "_er" things. l. NViihthirtheir:nrilf'ilse to "iricli imirienenatritlio one nanied ,'' telnains :: tail. . seen.--Neu4-Letter. , - ask- : - :.per:ria**4,r no 44n gun' ;iihia throWit`tiiill - ketitti*A - ton a distance of fo'e "miles'll6 : `netinli lrijp 10;tr0 tons aboho ; elrBohiiitopati v itS his gun 'ob .4int:lStour t egit iay_da s t ror he place . withota w 3 ii' os,. ~~,t. - , -..-. . „ . , . ~ -„ '.-.-,.--,; t -- z. - . 7 .. - Y- - ..fir ...,. ~,,,,e . ; ''.; i'.=.-.: - .... iti,..-" ''`l ,;:.‘.7,.,0,.-- 't: ' ;',; Q' ' - ;
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers