-611ist • & is ..ltropittoo3-. ,stittt , Ask Pie Not To Slug. • • • Oh, ask me not toaing to thee • . That well remembered stmin— I would not Wake those slumbering chords To melody agent; Too long they've tested 'neath the damp Of hope long since grown cold; I would not call them back again From Death's pale icy told; For long ago, when all was bright; Ere happiness grew dim, . One evening, in the twilight gray, I sang that song to him. Oh, ask me not—l cannot That hallowed song to thee, Though friendship's silken band connects. Thy noble heart to me; - I love thee wen,yet there's a fount Within my inmost art That not a living hand can touch, To bid its waters roll. I gave thee all thou asked for— A heart from earth's love tree; Then ask me not to make again The buried harmony. I do not weep-- 7 my heart is can, I'm not bowed down with care, But still a blight hangs over all 'Div young hopes once so fair; And thou alone bait powei to make' 'My `dark life bright again; • • " But ask me not to sing to thee - That well-remembered strain ~ And when my Soul away is borne O'er Death's tide, cold and grim, Then, in the golden light , ot Heaven, - I'll sing that song to him. - 6uminuiralions. For the Democrat. Ned Lopez Journal, No. 3. Prairie adjoining Dallas City, departure for home—riew ,of Burlington and Salesburg, arrival in Chicago,—Afichigan Avenue,— route through 31i chigan,- Canandiagua,— cross the Suspension bridge by. moonlight =view 0/Niagara/ills nest ,ntorning, Tonawanda, Canandiagua and flinne,—Adieu to the , reader. Dallas City as I. have before remarked, is situated upon a rising and level mount of the' Mississippi,—back of the town is a noble for est of Oak and Walnut, some two miles in • in width, extending many miles up and down the river,—as pass through this luxuri . Atilt growth of timber. from Dallas we arrived nptin one -of the most beautiful Prairies, of Southern Illinois, covering an area of some 80, or 100 square miles in extent. Often have I gazed - with rapture upon its broad bosom, as the rising sun shed its radiant beauty upon I the scene, and the smoke of an hundred cot tages ascended to the heavens, resembling as many Steamers upon the dark Atlantic. In fact the great Valey of the Mississippi, of which this is a part, for richness and fertility of soil, cannot be surpassed by any - ursin the Globe. The time had at last arrived when I was to bid adieu to friends I had acquired after s five months sojourn in their midst. • To me they were months of happiness, and - now I was about to leave for, my distant home, the thought of returning was not to me one of joy ; but of pain : but _ fortune so decreed it, and we must all b?w to her stern man date. Who does not love the 'hallowed as sociations of the past, as they' cluster fondly around memory's purest fount, and awaken the gentlest emotions of the soul. - How true it is that the ' immortal mind cultivated by noble impressions, and surrounded by the sweet endearments of friendship glows with, Heavenly beauty, and reflects its cheering sunny rays upon 'our rugged pathway. - As we pursue our Weary pilgrimage through this earthly vale of \ sorrow and tears. Nol ewe never can foige t the past, it is to us a sooth ing balm for the spirits troubled waters, it, calnis the fierce passions of our nature, and lulls them to rest. Softly and without a mur mur, as smooth and placid ,in their beauty as the mirrored bosom of "Heaven's own blue clime. j . The past bright 'vide!! past, How quickly tbifleeting hours have flown, And 'round my path the loveliest fl veers are east, To cheer me on to my distant home. Adieu dear friends, perchance we thee . o more 'Mid earthly scenes of joy and tears, But. wendour way to that spirit shore, Where joy knows' no sorrow, nor 'no 'fears. Left Dallas city, on Wednesday,.-March 15th, for Burlington Town, the nearest stw tion on the, reat Railroad route to Chicago.. Our way lay along, the bank of the sweet Mississippi, my cousin being, my companion and a goocl horse and vragon, to convey us to our destination, some twenty miles distant.— And as we gail t 3 , trotted over the Prairie, we had a fair view' Of the scene around; To our right was a long and lofty range , of ro mantic bluffs, with now and then a small duster of dwarf oaks, 'scattered along their sides. While you, could almost imagine pin see the wigwam's smoke aicending up -I!ards, from.sorne lovely vale in their midst, or some grim warrior gazing in bOld defiance ready to pour upon you, themissilei of death, amid s the thrilling echoes'of the savage war whoop,--:but let us panse, such is only a fan cy of our own .creati, The red man of the forest no more plies hit bark . Camx upon the Great Father of Waters. 'No more is seen, the cabins smoke cnrling gracefully upwards from some flowery vale.r--the bier no longer woos his lovely bride upon . her Prai rie shore, nor adorn her raven tresses with bright flowers of love. The last echoes of their savage war-cry have died, away long —long ago. Their bones now repose upon the banks of their loved Mississippi. At times some stray warrior will revisit the'buri- J , 1,,.i, • . - .. . . . . . _ .... . ~ . - • ''l , Rif.,P72re , r7,7//",,, .• . . . --0. 5 , - p-riA.y•- „vi - • ~' , : -.,! .. .. - ~ 1 .. ~- .., ' . -4 ,>4 ..,... 1., , . - -. -- . . ' • . ... 1 ------_-447 4 _.. _...,/,„,,_. .. A, , , 1 , A . ;,.,•. . , -, . . • 1 4 '''''..i ' • „ , ', , •-: .. _ - „ ~„ •-1 g t :,......, - „, , .. • • - 7 ' . , , , 1 - ' .A • . \...---"• . . • It ~ f Ilime l - • ',4 ' . .t ' I,' A. 4 ' l 4 •. ;',' , 7L-: , .2./. - .p • . . , ~,, 7, , , - :. .•\ ,„ •\ ~ , -•,, , , i • ~ \' , 7 `.• , - .!; ' ' h "-': f' , -r :' r ,,.f. _ , , .4 , . ,X t ,;, . Fir ;11 p I , ' . - PP' - _ , Y - T K '-'%; ; 4!, - ' - 1. -1 4. ' , (•' : •-•-• ! * 0, • "-) i: , ' 1%, - • ' ---... 1 4% '''' - 7 4 0 .'- -• •, 1' . '' ' '''. • • i ••• ' /4 / , 1 7. ' . 1 1 , . p ~.), --. - 10 . -' . .. •-,'. . -1 :. .:-- .. • - ;,. _ • ..., 4 . I I • 1 -- ' &, 0 . . - ' e , . - 1.i1. , ' • ' - : - ~ 4 1 , I, 1 15,, ,.. .., 1 % - k .."9- vi • ...eg l rtlo, : • -•••,, /A. \•ro• -"', 4 2 . '- . ../ , . -,. •, ,11 ; ~,,, .:., I( • ... 1., • I,Z I N V• '-• • • • r ✓t '. . • 41 .1 • - "547. - - ''''Z'' • • . • • . . . •- • . • ' • t . . .. N.. .. .. . • . . • , . N • • . - - • . ot • i . .a . . : N.. . . • . . • - . . . . . . . • . . . - _ . . ',.• . . . A WEEKLY JOURNAL-7DEVOTED TO POLITICS, 'NETS, LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, SCIENCE, AND MOREITY. al place of his racej and salt° gazes upon the, silent mounds of the departed , tears : bedew s his Olivecheek, and flow; silently over his care-worn features. He has come. Inim his distant hunting grounds, to pay this last trib ute of his Jove.' Sadly* be - gazes, then burn- edit' brushing away , the unbidded,tear; he wraps his mantle slowly „about his no - ble form, and soon lost from sight amid the mazes 6f the forest. Such is the lot of the poor Indi an. Th& mighty waves of civillization are rolling Westwsird with gigantic strength, bearing in their - grap the destiny the un• tutored savage. Soon the golden rays of the morning sun, will no logger gild in beauty the red mans wigwam, butlight the burial place of their many nations, and the mighty.waves otthe Pacific as they dashi proudly against her rook liOund shore, will tell their sad and and lonely requiem; througtiout the vast ages of the futfire r ' ' - • _ INzor red man I pity thy !sad fate, ' Yet know thoii mast lealie the•fo test shade, The pale face,alonerkgreat, . . . , He wields thn,fien ane*wiarrors blade. Arrived atthelßa - irx+isti stationepposite Bur- 1 lington at 11 A. *foiled that no train would leave for Chicagountil - . 7 the next Morning ;as soon as the Ferry boat cage over from Bur lington, we tsiirk • passage back with other passengers going' East, as . there was no lodg ings to ibiprocfred on the Illinois side. On our lanaiug wnregistered our names at the Barrettiouse for the. night.. As 'I had no .companion with me, I asked the gentlmanly 1 i 1 • Proprietor for a room by myself,and was shone to one by one of the Waiters, being some what fatigued,'" retired to rest earlY in the evening, after taking.the precaution of turn ing the 10'4 and raking all safe air "suppos ed. I soon fell intd 4 a deep, and heavy slumber which last+ flir several hours, When I was suddenly teFakenefl by, the glare; off a lamp full intny face and the noise of persons in conversation, starting up "in bed somewhat 'frghiened Lb be sure, I saw a man at the door while.upon• the fa i krle stood a lighted !Imp. I then hailedi him when the following' dialogue ensued beteen us. Myself acting. the part of . complainn4—What are y+ - doing there— Trying to lnek the door--Wliat business hare you intnY room—Tour room t this is my room sir. I would have you tounderstand sir that this room: is mine, procured fOr my own con venience, as I wished to be alone. An expla ation ensued'in Which be infprmed me that he was in trouble and residedpn the State of Ohio, had behn purchasing land near Burling ton and was now on his wayihome, but bar itg some business to transactlin that place he hoc, procured the dispeted ,reken for _his own sccomodation iu which I by la mistake, 'had been placed by the - waiter,—tite whole mys tery being cleared - up we both fell into a hear ty fit &laughter over my unlucky fright and Enspicion of his being' one of the light finger ed gentry; irfter which there being two I,beds - in the apartment we'both took aurslves to rest when I forg4 the robber like intrusion in sleeps soft and refreshing slumbers- - 1 -The next morn ing all wasealm clear and beautiful, the King of day in, robes'of gorgeous majesty, arose in the clondlesti Heavens' and shed its golden lustre upon the ;broad face of Nature.—Has tening on boardithe Ferry 1;oat we were soon wafting our way; over the. Mississippi, while Buriington_ lay at our feet. ;The city is finely situated upon a lofty and undulating bluff that in places rises abruptly front the river and in othersof a gradual and easy asseent,it is hand; sorely built of brick and stone, and contains a Population of over 8000. inhabitants. On ward glided the boat the passengers busily conversing on various topics of interest. How beautifulit must appear to the tourists on some lovely Summers day as be !stands upon the open deck of the :splendid steamer as she glides prnrwily along to gaze upon the gorge ous'scenery that every where prsents itself to his view., No, wonder 'that millions of the - old and the new world have gazed enchanted tip: on Banvardslmmortal work,t ,e sublime Patio., roma of the MisSirsippi, h umerous lovely Isles covered with a s ,of golden flowers, her lofty' cotton-woods, tfre; stately Sycamore and Giaut Oak inteOpereed with willow and the Locust can be seen spreading their dark foliag,p in graeful festoon r over the daik Wa ters. I - . Farwell Mississipiri and till loved Prairie shore Where oft 1 haveigazed .dri thy dark rolling tide, I trust:that yet 1 ipaylsee tee once more - And thosteatnersithat o'er thee in beauty dotb glide 1- I • i , Left Burlington Depot for Salisbury at 7 A: M., our I routelfor a portion Of the way led over sunken mashes affording nothing of in terest to the tratCler until we were, some 10 miles from the river when we.emerged , upon they broad prairie which to 'me lis always II ' t ' I A "if - It' beautiful; reached. Salisbury'at 1 . , .0v rch by the way ir. 'Trite a pretty . place, 'contains twolourishieg :Literary Institutions one of.l their under the patrimage of • the Presbyteri- ans,lthe other of thelUtriversalists---left soon' after, oir arrival ter Menaote,our route kading us throinrh the most beautiful portion of cen tral Illinois and the best :farming country ir. .the State; witli the exception of tlielliliseissip. pi valley, arrived at ,tifendote, 'at -3, P. M. ; changed cars there,;aird were soon on our' way to Chicago,passin throbgh in our route , the City of Aurora tliewtation where 5 toontys' :before'" took the caps for. Rock Island City. When we arriv.!d at I e junction of the ,Chi= i cago; and Salem Railroad, we were detiined I by icolliaion between two freight trains 'just ahof us until il in the evening. To pass swa ihe'tiraeras ' agreeably as poisible, two eft. yourg gentlemen whom Thad before noticed' , Cantro e; c%astiuttanna Cantu., treun'a, Tkurshgz Denting, aizlg, 5:, 1855. with instruments of music by them, were call- ed upon, and after , some urging ono of them „ commenced in a clear and beautiful voice the best of all songs—do they miss meat home; acecompanied by .the -soft and bewitching strains of the silvery guitar and all listened . with the deepest pleasure to• the singer 'and at- ita close was highly applauded and called upon for another to which .he, and his com panion, complied by striking upon a beautiful air Which:was soon interrupted by the entrance of the Conductor,Who,in not the kindest man ner possible, forbade any further proceeding of our musical entertainment, to, the no small surprise of-the company. Some contended that it was another Nebraska swindle to de prive ;not* our enjoyment ; others cried out, "popular sovereignty," go ahead, while Many a sparkling jest was. cracked at the Conduct or's expense, amid the greatest merriment and roars of Inughtzr. • For my part my tiyMpathies were with our young musicians,who had kindly and hap pily entertained us,,and .not with 'the Con ductor,•whose reasons for so doing was that persons in the adjoining cars wished to obtain a little rest., all this was well i still-we contend that such soft , inspiring strains as our enter tainers afforded, was just the. thing to bring arbund their couches, soft balmy ,rlcep,- and waft them to that sweet elysian land of dreams, where all is bright and beautiful.' The obstruction having'been .removed from the track, we ere soon on our way: and at twelve o'clock entered the streets of Chicago: Pushing and elbowing, my way through a dense crowd-ofl Omnibui drivers, Cabmen, kc. who are always anxious to show the weary traireler a rendevous for the night. Entered with several others going eastward, the City Hotel, anti : c fling for a n apartment, was shown one by a, waiter, and was soon lost to earthly care, in the, blissful armsof morpheus. The next morning finding that I could not reach home, without laying over a Sunday on the - route, I concluded - to make a• short visit to Downersgrve, 'my beautiful prairie home; for the first five; weeks of my sojourn in Illinois.! Left Chicago accordingly on the morning; train, arriving nt my destination at 1 P. 11.1 After spending a pleasant time, and enjoying ; a good sleigh ride with a whole bevy of rosy; checked lasses. I returned to Chicago on Wednesday irOample• time to. take the nine! o'clock train On the Michigan Central Road.; Having several hours at liesure in company With my\ friend Frank dates, 'brother to one! of the Firm of Jewett, Gates and Johnson, whom I have before , mentioned, we set out, to take .a stroll on Michigan Avenue, the greats est place of fashionable resort in th . e City. It was indeed a fit season for such an excursion. An hour more and the glories Of golden:sun set, would bathe the spires and domes of the gay Metropolis with a rich and mellow light, in noble contrast with the scene around. ~.Vchigen Avenue is beautifully laid outon the shore of the Lake, where majestic waters stretch far away in. imposing grandure and beauty. The different walks along its sides, are elegantly adorned with noble shade trees, which in the summer season, spread their, 'dark foliage-in gorgeous!drapery,., affoiding to the wearied man of toil, 'the Princely Banker, and the poorest Artisan, its 'cooling shade as a shield against the hot and sultry rays of the noondays sun. Fronting these beautiful side walla; richly pavCd with handsome gran ite, are some ofthe most elegant spetimens of architecture imaginable, comprising splendid villas and residences of the wealthiest men in Chicago. Conspicuous - in their midst by its gothic style and marble ornaments of the richest discription was the elegant private residence of Col. R. K. Swift' the - Princely Banker. Adjoining these splended mansions are lovely flower gardens, set out with every kind and variety of b4utiful 'flowers, which in the balmy months c. f summer, • shed their Sweetest fragranCe tipl n the passing breeze. Ali! 'could they but speak, *mild they . not tell you many a thrilling tale of the past l = YaS methinks they would tell you of the dar ing schemes of the deadly altsassins, who at the silent midnight hour, sat' plotting the butchery of his innocent victim. .They would speak gently to you of the lovely maiden, with the consumptives hectic flush upon her fair cheek, clasping them softly -in `her snow white fingers, and pressing them to her 'rasp lips with joyous delight. But she is gone •now, they would say in sweet accents of sadness, gone to a' brighter home, where flowers of majestic beauty grow along these bright celestial vales, and Shed their Heavenly. fragrance throughout the ceaseless ages of eternity. Left Chicago at nine P. M., taking the great Western route through Michigan and Canada,. arriving, at Detroit, the Metropolis of Michigan at ten, the next 'morning. :From what could be seen of the plaCe daring ._our short' stay in its midst, I . should be led to judge from its fine Situation, that it wcitild . at no, distant day. become a large RA flourishing sits~. It contains at the present time a popti- - litOon of near 40,000 inhabitants, which is rapy increasing. 'id! There are some incidenti _ . of 1 Arnericaia 'history connected with the Phice that are worth mentioning. Here it was that occurred, 'in her earlier-Settlement and progress, that memorable siege of its in , habitants by the Indians under their skilful and Celebrated chief Pontiac,- in which. they we're - only saved from famine and the savage: cnteityofl tlieir invaders, by timely succor and rei4forc,ents. from ,their eastern twethreti. Hera was also,witnessed. the ignotainous sur-: tiader of the American General jidll, at the henoinf a t reatii superior force, toVie Brit- ish under the veteran commander, General Brock. But this foul stain upon our national escutcheon, and which foia while dimmed its proud lustre, was cast to oblivion at the fierce and sanguinary battle of the Thames, where six hundred British and'lndians, with their renowned war-chief TecuMseh, lay cold and ifeless in the arms of death. Crossed in the erry boat . to the G r anada side, and then took the train in waiting en• the great Western railway for Niagara Falls. The day was warm and plesiant without,—our route lead ing on through a fine groisqh , of luxuriant timber, forming a dense an massive frone— Pas&ad in our : way. a lane village called Chatham, i nhahited entirely by fugitive slaves, which 'produced from several of the passen gers the remark that the underground rail road bad beendoing a prosperous business for the past few years. At about 3J P. M., we entered the beautiful and thriving town of Jordon, which by its fine location, must in a fe l w years make a large and opulent city.— Around Canada clusters associations that will over have the deepest interest to every Ameri can. The Weedy battles of the war of 1812, were principally fought within her borders. lJpon her broad expansive- plains.the brilliant gictories of Lindy Lane and Chippeway were ained, by Winfield Scott, the conqueror of Mexico, and enrolled his name among the list of the greatest military chieftains of;med ern times.. Yes, heie it was that American bayonets creased with those of the veterans of Waterloo. -- Veterans, who under the Duke of 'Wellington, caused the imperial Eagles of Napoleon to 'trail in the dust, and _banished him to the lone and solitary isle of St. Helena, there to languish out a miserable life, far from the wife and child of hia bosom, and his beloied and sunny France. Yet those invincible heroes of Britian were met hand to hand by American valor; backed by. Amer ican steel, amid the thunders of battle, and the shohts of victery, the proud British Lion lays quivering in agony at Columbia's feet. Night now began- to draw its silent shadows over the habitations of men, and the moon, lovely queen of eve, shed its soft and mellow' light upon the scene. , We were now within a few !miles of the suspension bridge, over which the different trains bad been _passing for near a week. All was bustle and confu sion among the passengers to obtain a view of this magnificent- structure of art. Those less courageous than the rest, preferred walk ing over for fear some accident might befal us in our passage. The train stopped for them to get Off; as each passenger has that privi lege granted him by the Company. I had before this taken my station close• by the car window, : which being hoisted :gave me di fair view of the work, ankthe noble train com menced slowly.its passage to the other side. if neath us to the height , of 250 feet from the water, rolled Niagara's dark current in beau ty and-grandeur. Onward we glided, while not a vibration was felt to show that there was danger in our midst, and soon-we were landed safe upon the American side. The Suspension bridge is over 800 feet in length, and is so solid and compact in its construc tion that it is estimated to bear a weight in its passage over of:000 tons. The average weight of the diffeient trains that pal ses over daily, is from 150 to 200 tons. This great and majestic work' was built by an American citizen, Whose name I have forgotten and has identified him forever with -American genius, as_ one of the greateit engineers of the age. The regal coronet blazing with jewels or diamonds, may adorn the queenly brow . with joyous beauty, yet it brings not that halo of glory that surrounds nature's noble-. men and the architect of so great a work as Niagara Fall's Suspension Bridge. What an important lesson to the American youth! Does it not teach them how greatly the god like powers of the mind can bo increased by mental cultivation' For such men are the noble ornaments of our land, and the true pillars of a nation's glory. Put up at the Franklin Mouse for the night, and the next morning in company-with a gentleman from Flpira i ye set out on a stroll to see the Falls, about half a-mile distant. : As we passed along there was one contin ued booming sound that seemed to jar the very earth, while over tho.dark foreit trees that surrounded it, hung a dark midst of ri sing vapor. Soon we were by its side And gazing with rapture upon its majestic sub limity. Above the falls are the grand rapids formed by the river surging and. breaking around the rocks in its midst, forming a truly noble and beautiful scene, before making the daring leap of two hundred feet in the depths below. / Niagara's dark floods roll silently and majestically onward, with scarcely a tip ple to be disce.rned on its smooth and ex pansive bosom, and then in majestic glor . y, this mighty column of moving -waters, rolls,- like Etna's firerylwave, on to the awful gulf 'beneath. But kirk, hear yim not that fear ful sound, as it comes Telling up from those mysterious 'depths, that thrill the soul with terror, its if some +mirk r of the departed, was to appear clothed in the habilliments of the grave. That sound is the,voice of Niagara speaking in tones of mystic thunder 'from its snow capped throne of mighty waters. That voice{ was heard upon a lovely summer's eve, upon the Iflood-stained fields of Niagara. Its , thunfler tones rung far above the din of con flict. and the shouts of victory, and as the smOkerof battle gathered its , midnight. cur tain 'over that sanguary scene, Veiling .from sight the glory of the -heavens, Niagara's thunder, no longer blende4 with the Ain of arms, spoke.in a ceaseless mighty voice, in thrilling contrast with that scene of death. res, hew wondrous are the workings of Na ture, in their grandeUr and sublimity? how majestic must the vast and boundless ocean appear When, lashed into fury by the winds of Heaven.. All at once it becomes; a sea of raging foam, roiling , and tossing like the boiling crater of Hecter. Vivid - light nings dart along the Heavens like blazing meteors, while belching thunder send , their fearful echoes over the face of the deep.— Mighty navies are dashed to and fro by. ler resistless strength,"and at last submergedi i or sh4wrecked upon some 'distant strand, while many a gallant fleet of merchant-men sink with their golden-treasures, upon the coral beds of the ocean. But Niagara boasts not of being the destroyer of Navies, nor fleets of I'merchant-men, but stands proudly enthroned in kingly majesty.. Roll on then, thou 'nigh tly cataract, created by that, Mighty. Being, as a work of His wisdom; and clothed with georgeous sublimity, and armed . with 'all that is grand and beautiful, a work unsurpassed by the proud fabrics of art, and calculated to awaken the most thrilling admiration of the soul. A wonder to past generations, and to those yet unborn in the greattuture. Left Niagara city at 7, A.-31., for Elmira, our • route leading through a delightful section of country and by the side of Niagara's noble stream. Passed Tonaw and a.a t about 11, • P. Ni., a beautiful and flourishing town, situated on a wide and extensive plain, through which passes the Niagara. Falls and Elrnira Road: -Arrived at Canandaigua at 3 P. M. Were. detained here near two hours—passed away the time in looking about the place; which bids fair by its fine location to become quite a flourishing inland town. Left Callan- - daigna at 5, P. M. Arrived ,at Elmira' all in the evening. Missed our connection with , the_York and Erie, and Were obliged to stay 4in the Morning. Elmira, by its noble I sivation upon a beautiful pit, and its cen tral position upon !_the Erie road, mnst be conic in time one Of the most flourishing in s land cities of western New York. Left on Ithe Dunkirk Expreis at 4,• A. M., for Great Bend,—ariivedthcire at - 7 in the morning. Here we were agai detained until 3, P. M., and then took the passenger train for Oakley's, arriving there 'at 4, P. M., ,I once more, found_mysell amongst friend's of my boyhood, who welcomed Inc as I steppedfrom.the cars, with friendship's ever joyous salutation. Once i'more I was in the Midst of the rugged hills 1 , ,0f my native Susqnehanna. low different, tbougb, in contrast with the vast Pairie ocean. L'of the West. Still it was home, sweet borne, —a name ever joyous V;:o. the wander's ear.— one' when far away that • will steal with its sweet visions of the' past around his couch, and again will he roam as in days gone by, through themeridowed lawn, the sunny glen, or sitting by the side of the pebbled stream, listening to its sweet murmuring sounds. But • one link had been broken that bound . me to the home of my childhood. No math= er's voice was there to Welcome-her-absent son to the parental abode. Cold and lifeless she lays in the arms of death,--censigned from sight gin' d the dark portals of the tomb. Ab, who can tell the extent of a mopier's love=a love as boundless as the migty ocean whose deptht has never been sounded and whose heigh is loftier than the heavens—an. origin heaven born—flowing pure from :the fountain of the Great Eternal, and by its no ble influence, the moulder of statesmen and the elevator of mighty nations. And now, dear . reader, I must araw to a close. You have, roamed with me the boundless pairie, when lighted by the glory • and majesty of. the heavens. You have seen the great father of waters as it rolled in stately beauty, to the Mexico's blue sea. You have stood with me by Niagara's majestic cataract as it rolled in imposing sublimity into the awful chasm be heath. All this you have seen, as described by a boyish pen, whose oniy aim has been to please and knterest,•and if such has been the result, it will be to him his noblest reward. In conclusion permit .me . to indulge, a hope 'that we may yet meet , limier more_ favorable circumstances as author and reader,_ wherein we will roam like kindred spirits the various paths of literature, striving to enrich the mind with noble, gems of thought, and the eleva tion of pure and noble principles. With these, my best wishes, I bid you all a parting adieu. NED LOPEZ. POINTED RcruAer.—ln one 'Of the Rev. E. H. Chapin's pennons is the following. pointed passage: "Many a man there is, clothed in resptetability and proud of his honor, . whose centres] idea in life is interest and, ease, the conception that other men are mere, tools to be used as will best serve him, that 00 has endowed him with 'sinew and brain merely to scramble and get; and so in the . midat of this great universe, which is inperpetual,ol-cilia tion of benefit, be lives like a spongeon a rock to absorb, and bloat, and die. Thouiands in our great city are living so, who never look out of the narrow c,ircle of their self-interests:: whose decalogne is arithmetic, .whose, Bible is their ledger ,• - who have so constructed and hardened and stamped their nature, that in spiritual estimate they,, would pass' for on ly-so many bogus dollars.' •' • • AV' Dobbs says ibe first scrouudrel _who attempts to dissolve this glorious Union, ought to be ground to death .in a bark. mill without ibe privilege of -To pirdeeet the constitution; Dobbs sleeps with it-under - his every night • • _ . , tir The man who run up . a coluinit of fig 2 urns thmbled . down anti was badly'hart:` or The man who lately left town-said his mother would not Ikrtyfe Wee; auy °relation to him, If hie father - h • not her. Ittir fork Correspodent. Nsw-Yore, Friday, June 22, 1855. The 'desire of the Allied Powers in the gura pean war, and specially of-England, to conciliate , the good will of the United States, and divert the sympathy ct f our people from Russia, \ whither they are so shocked to see it. tend,has received, more, and some rather ingeniont exemplifications recently. The .11ctssian Government having .pro- muld, for the purpose; undoulecdly, of effcc t on the Americans, that the -Enesh - Government had renOunced,the principle adoPted previously that the nentralliog protects the carp, the First 1..0rd of the Admiralty, .ta the Hop s of Com. tnorks,and , several Peers, jo the upper house, eng- urly deny the calumny, and assuro tho Americami, expressly, that the Government 'hive no such ff 3 design, ands rm; moreover, iheir full coneurrenCe in the Ameri an principle that " free bottomimake free goods." . What a change of poOtion is this for the - English ministry compared • with the doctrines of 1805-15! , But what is particularly ingenious in the advances made for at least the moral alliance of this country, is the .alleged interpolation of a fresh demand by the Western poweri, as one of the cenditions of peace,viz, the abrogation of the! Solna dues paid by fereig,n vessels entering the Baltic, as lately asked by the United States. Now, although Russia is interes ted ske well as England, or any other commercial power in the navigation of the'Baltic, ,this is a matter ol' Danish revenue alone, and no especial concern of Russia, The United States preferred their demand to Denmark alone, who exacts the objectionable toll under her own statutes, and pockets all the proceeds.. There is soinething very shrewd in the movement of the'Allies. Den mark has a sort ofalliance with Russia for the man ,agethent of their common concerns in the Baltic. Russia is to be - forced into the . support of -the claim of Denmark, and thus brought into direct hostility with.the commercial inteiests and aims of the United States. ` • . Allies, in such enterprises as• that of France and 'England, very often indulge is a quarrel among . thensseltes. 'Many people have believed, in spite pf the present wonderful entente rordiale between the ancient enemies, that occasion of i dispute would ere long. breakout. The incipiAley lof such misunderstanding already - appears in the quarter where it was to be properly looked for--:' I in Turkey—and among the people most , likely to brow n quarrel—the resident displomats. 'By tho intrigues of the French charge, M. Benedetti, the Turkish cabinet has been broken. up and re. modeled—Lord Stratford, the British minister, labors strenuously to effect the restoration of the Aispbeed ministry, and loudly complains to his Government of the Frenchman's underhanded . work ; - the Emperor Naibleon roundif -apProves Benedetti's operations, and promotes hiM to a nominal embassy to Persia, without. re r; ocing him from Constantinople, Let them qu mil as they will—it is all very interestin,g to poor Turkey, who wilt be still more gratified .to. 'ck'r ' d the 'semi-official proposition in the London rims, to take from - her the. principalities ;of ' N- allacliia and Moldavia, which it was the pre tended object t s,if the war to seeure'to her, and to form them into an independent pourer! • Notwitstanding the splendor of our grand Ocean Lines of Steamers, the profits they pay have `much less brillianeY than those: of many i enterptisg''of less magnificence. The agents of the Collins line, as everybody knows, have for- some ye ars past been 'annually engaged in boring Congress- for stniunificent Charity, to. enable the' proprietors to i keep their vessels above tvater There are sent persons, it is : true, wholeonsider the pretense a mere iropositien upon the national pride of those paardians of the Republic's inter ests and honor, and ridicule th e idea that shrewd men would continue inch ,vast capital.. - as that company has employed, in a losing brininess.- 'lt might be necessary -to , veply - seriously to :this . -arguineet,were there no other affairs than Ocean Steaming into which. it is a good deaVeasier4o,r ;opt° to enter than; being in, to get safely : out. again. . : There is no reason at all to doubt; taking all, things into view, that of theii own - proper earn ings, the Collins floating palaces have not been ejt..;, Coed ingly good' property, and that it 'Selene owing tothe patriotic spirit, or the individual sympathy, or indifferenee as to the'diiposition_ofthu.publie plunder, or the hope of a free passage to and from Europe, on the part of members of Congress, or to the, genial influence pf geolt,syppers paid fer by : Collins-that thevalking-belims ofthe OAUna line are kept in motion. , ' . : • . • ' . ~ , - , The Ciiifornia lines 'were at first exceedingly re emunerative, and ' many suppos3' their fortunate. ! proprietors to 'be still' driwing in'-- their gelden ' 1 harvjst. One of these the publierhas before' Seen — 7 ,.. the' : other Was prieented In the4tite anneal re' port of the Preaileitt of the Pacific Mail.- Stearn - shiPCompani. - The _report disclosed: the ,nri....., pleasant flu:Al:that noo - dividend could : e'en be madefrom the earning .of the year. , A corn:nit tee Was therefore appointed to ; investigate the et:; - fairs of the Association, and see if the case Was. actually thus bad,.and-if ' so, Wl4?. and 'further, , _what ; should be donel.. The 'report of 'this ewe _ . - - ~ • Inittea Was listened to by - the . s to ckholders,': on :. ~ Wednesday, and the very-teleran enunciatienint the :President, . : Were;riiest. solemnly confirmed:- The company was found .to : be :indebted..to . .the -1 extent Of 84,568, 684, and tobave aisesta amount-` ing to a leuitum, vii,f11,427,70 1 the ictital loss, by mock of its oek titrinntin" - Si4o, 915,-1 the stock.standing at nearly four percent. below its'Pni vilite; (Which i l iS net so low -a' - Pointins.., Many' Other stocks hi e deservedly reached;}glin _dry financial' Scheib e !! for improving'the statl-_:Of 'affairs were .. reemenreedediralio.•the --.proptieed rv.ilitiqUishment-,oflite agenctly.lifeears_klevi land &Aspinwall, who seem tole ; tired :-of ,the.. situation : also the sale of four Steeiner4 ; net re- 1 quird for the use' of the _Company : also,: that, ‘ , .iii.reituiiiiSeffertie' bat': ihafi' ta airtiatati'''imic?a-'1 tile 'arrangenientii=; With' the - Nicaragua `Transit i Company:ft:m . oo prevention of rititionScompe., titititi:•'Tliese measures are still ender: coiled.: likaticin, , and will : probably bteadopted ;La future-' 'Meeting. - . , !.- ... , e.... : ' ,;] - , ;,_ ~ ~,. , :,.. ,.. ,. . 1 .., 'hire isitclips ef'uiea in this city .erlto „have very sharp test b,ro;(k like,, the , letter, : bind _ of watch. doga„ are yeryapt to bite ,stra ngers' . :E T :. cry efoO,bai,been niade;_str Ik'siappe3esd:to yaire been:triade,:to'idd the city' of theiedaegereita titt ,- . - imijiltaxiiril by the itarnii•t - ixtitinslcsit to - ' the ears' etitientwbehave.eortiateitelilrorlife teez - , 1:::-- •., -:', ':'... -.1 . ;": , 11 , i.+1 it a'':: ?Ttitlne . . 12:,::"{nritli,o.. ._-:2.7., riosltiee r ,of " Peter Punks... Somptim • one these speculater4 in rural Himplieiti . abd _old 14-ass,is brought upend made to disgorge the mouthsfuls ho has taken out of his victim. Bat this is 'undoubtedly a rare ease, or they :would find no induceinents to . continue in tbebusieitil• • • and tun thetazards of law and personalrevenge... Boys were at onetime stationed in front. Of 'Abe most noted of the, pep ots" for this species' - id' swindling, to wai've. Off the uninitiated with tar ,ge banners, dee - or:4od with black letterSofwarning. Butthe country people sppposed the warning re. ferred to the ocupants of the City Hall, 'and to the policemen; who , were the most Funk; ing persons they met. The the terms, of the. , auctioneers' liceases are now about exp'iri'ng. and . an'effort is4o be made to keeP ail the Funks from obtaining a renewal. But how is it. to: be• proved who are, and who are not, of the Fmk family, arid where is the line to be, drawn be• tween the mock and the genuine in the auction business of this city ?" Does the order 'Mesa =simply that the lesser of. the Funks, 'orinpyitig seven by nine roems, and dealing lain worthless watches, ar.,to be 'alone denied the privilege -of whittling the green ones ? 1 ; • From.Petersoies Magazide. MT. GOUSI3,\* _ DAT :C ApAY:STAirLEYi: Author of ." Aida Lester's Sirason - in New York." . - - CHAPTER I. .f. . , . "And this; I suppose, is 'to be my home - . for the future," thought I, Of fpaned forward - " to view ini the twilight the old-fashioned / house . before which the carriage drew -up ;- - and in spite of the buoyant spirits of fifteen, • I shrank from that, future. - - • 1 - To live forever with,-two old maids; • and their cats, and" lap-dogs; and Worsted wink l• it was tog herrible to contemplitte, an_ men- - , , tally resolved to escape from sach smgle bless- , edness as'soon as possible. i' , / .• '. - . 13ut the door opened, and ,I,,,::'wes , already in a well lighted hall, warmed/4 the 'farther ex tremity by . a huge stove ,which seethed.to be - nothing but fiery eyes,,a's the 'red coals shone through the isinglass/that lined the;elaborate- - ly cut fancy workzOf 'which tie upper part was. composed. /Before, the servant had,tinie to, close the one door pellied Me, another bad opened, an- / a kind Voice, in the parloi, said, - " This / way, dear, do-come t the fire and get warm, it's a bitter cold night, and wel have/lea. This is . your aunt llfargaret," lead ing me up to a tine, elderly lady by the fire side, " and rm•your aunt Patty, dear; though we're not much of relatives either, I believe;;' • •-'-/ And I'n,your cousin litiry; dear"' • a. mocking voice from the corner, _into' , I had not haditime to peer.' i .. _. A '-',;mellow little laugh from aunt Patty, ,- that seemed to say that the speaker was a - privileged person, and a "'Harry, don't, you'll frighten the 'poor child," from 'aunt Margaret, was all 'that I knew of cousin Harry,: at that - time for there was no lamp in the room; and be sat in tqo ebseurel _a corner for even the -;:- dnncitig, merry light of the hickory fire to ' ilfuminate. How cozy and comfortable everyt mg look- e(i, after the piper 'flowers,-and Wax' flowers, o arid dilapidated- annuals of the large, tawdry . driawing-romn of- the boardihrr-school. The wenderful twisted legs of the' old:fashioned . fn nitureseemed to be dancing quiet little . ji as, the firelight flickered on them ; a li- • on's paw wa s-now and then thrust forward in . a kind of rough.play,..grasping a' 'rnarvelotts- - looking .ball; s from some clitur, - table or. eseru, 1 toire. The curious, black old cabinet, in - the I corner, stood grim and prim, scarcely. deign- ing to smile as the,rtly firelight played hide 1. , - and seek - Over .its , rO ltitudinatts doors and; drawers, making one 'think of lost wills, and eecretsprings, locks of hair and faded flOwers ''-• 4nd all the oilier -romances connected with .. - old cabinets. ,But the firelight lingered .the beeriest aroand the table in the centre_ of-the loom, With. its snowy damask cloth, its old-•• ashioned glittering silver, - .led - off by the - pla- - lina tea-urn, witli its grim lion's heads, blink- , ag, inoffensively at one, as.'they 'grasped • the thesilver rings which served 'astinidles, and , the tiny egg=shell china cups; 7 almost -trans.: l ' - parentin their•deleniite.beauty.. ---•, • ' . '1.,-,Orplian and strap ;eras I Itas, a ll this do inestie cOmfoit, after three TORN 111:11 * pinched; - !genteel :boarding-school, owned my heart to ' - 'ly unknow .. n relatives.. ' I_' I , In the _meantime, ,my , b nnet -aid wrapS ' had been movedby aunt.Patty'S own plump . hands,„the bell rung. and lights and tea were -. Ibrought In. .. -1 ' . - , --- ' • Aunt Margaret' drew her \spectacles 'dosin • to her eyes rind scrutinized me for a-minnent. - • . "You are,veryinuch like'youf mo th er, Is-, abet," she said *at. laat. , - .. "4ezebel.l whitt, a, name for 'a woma " put in his Harry, now' came f ward , - his saucy face' lighted up with irrep - 'hie, - 11 1 mischief. - - 1 . ' . . . , Aunt Margaretwonnu net yarn tip , :'sate= matically to,thb last Web, stuck the t lortg nee dles through the ball, arid' laid it upon the little work stand;beside her. 'Aunt ,Patty buisied herself 'with the brightl7 pelittlnanott per,kettle, Which Was brought-in over a errant liMtp, bubbling away in its merry,- domestic manner ;•.-lierself, it seernatirMe; a - Aind of human kettle, with her 'cheery fireside- hn m and bubble of content then the servant placed, muftis; * tmuftis;:6 brown its - an .oak leaf in. autumn,and the strangel::twisted silver toast-rack on the, table,iind - ive took our seats. "Thisii;_pooiTtire, - Wt it, after the „Sump tt ous table Yen hive been necustomed to at rditigisehool 1". asked Harry, 'as 'he lan dme a second muffin: 'f You 'don't l seem '. • . lt was tnn had 'for now 11-new my. .nriichievonS , cousin could , have =enumerated eVery monthful 1 had eaten; and I witilttertrly starved yet; but I answered - as 'cOmpoiedly as possible, ",like.,.ittao 'well that 'Pot sorry - ; to yogfeeding yetirdog!'sO stoon,ifett'm not ,rye trlf. done yet,"'and I Passo&trty taay :cup to aunt Patty fir some More of ler fragrant tea. - • Ainit•lfairgi4et'dremii,t4fliPs oier ber tee:th whicli I attorwarirs ili near, dignity 'Would Permit 1 -'l:',io corne to.a riiie,.wtkite:Aartt 14, tt,T.silighed gtberal lyt'eaxiilg; i`•.s3; Lo, - ma3ter fmpitdenae3,youu have got . yout:niatch:Fitope,' and - thti , yonfig gentleman •ilisraisiett the dog; which was -tins, on hie haunches; - watching, 'Willi wag. , aging tail 'and 'anxious - (mei.? i,fiiizitithrtil 'winch Harry took . ;.i When my schoolgirl aPPetit4'l""PP°l4' ,~. ~. ,:a::~4,:..