;;;-, •-; • • • • .•• , . _ - r . . _ • • , _ , . I. „ _ . • . . - • • ,• . _ . . • _ ••• . - • Stli,othurt Crritson, tiro#rittors. ~elacx a¢xrfl. THEIK)NG or STEAM. llamas& um-down- with your iron bands; Tie Satre of your curb and , rein.: For I scorn the power of your pun'y hands, As the tempest scorns, a clam I llow I laugli'd as I lay coneeal'd from sight, For many a countless- Lour, .. At the childish boast A:nun:oar' might, And the pride of human power! When . l satyr an arms upon the land, A nary upon. the - seas, Creeping along a snail like band, O r waiting the wayward breeze;- When I marked the peashnt timely reel With the toil which he faintly bore, As he feebly turn'd the tardy wheel, Or tugg'il at the veary oar: When I measured the . pantine courser's speed The, flight of the carrier -dove, 'As they bore the law a king decreed, Or the lines of impatient love : — I could but think how the world would feel, As these were outstripped afar, When I should be bound to the rushing keel Orehained to the flying car rfa, h, ha! they found rn,. e at. last; 'They invited we foillizat; length, And Lrusled to my throne with a l'tta n d e r. • blast, And I laugh'd in 'My iron strength . Oh ! then ye . saw.a wondrous change On the earth and ocean wide, Where nowrurgery armies range, • Nor wait for wind an tide. . , Hurrah! hnrrali !Abe tvater's o'er, The mountain's steep decline ; • Time—space—have yielded to my. power ; The world—.the world is mine! The rivers the sun bath earliest blest, Or those where his beams decline; The giant streams of'the queenly West, Ana the Orient floods divine. Tha ocean pales whe.re'er I swaep, • To hear my strength rejoice, And the . monsters of the briny deep Cower, trembling at my . voice. • . I carry the wealth and-the lord of earth, The thoughts of his god-like Mind ; The'wital lags after my thing forth,. The lightatng, is left behind. to the darksomedeptbs of the fathomlessraine My tireless arm duth play, the.rocks never saw the sun's decline, Or the dawn of the g i loriona day. • •• . bring earth's glittering jewels up Flom the hidden care -below,. And I make the toirtain's granite cup With a crystal wish -oertlow. lAlow . the bellows, I forge the steel, lc. all the thops 'of trade ; I hammei the Ore and turn the wheat _ Where my arms of strength are made. I manage the furnace, the mill, the mint— I carry, I. spin, I weave; And all ,mv doing I put into print On every Saturday eve. \ rce no muscles to weary, no bregst to decay - No bones to be laid "on the shelf," And soon I intend you may "go and play," While I manage this world myself. But harness me down with your iron bands; Be sure of your curb and rein : . For I scorn the strength of your puny hands. As the tempest scorns the chain ! ,Alistellattants. From. Stutip'sMagazine: A RA riv. F - E VEXING. A plea:ant little_group was gathered round Uncle Ned's domestic hearth. He sat on one side of the fire-place, oppos%te Annt Mary, Ivho with her book in her band, watched the childrenseated at the table,sorue reading oth ers sewing, all occupied but one, a chili of large growth, a young lady, - who, being a. guest of the family, was suffered •to • indulge in the pleasure of idleness without reproof. , Oh! I love a rainy evening,' said, little Ann, - looking up from her book, and meeting 'her: mother's smiling glance. his so nice to sit by a good fire; and bear the rain, pat tering against the windows. Only I pity the poor people who have no house to cover them, to keep off the rain and the cold: And I love a rainy evening„ too,' cried George, a boy of twelve. , I can study so much better. My thoughts stay at liome,_ and don't keep rambling out after the bright 1130013 and stars. Ify heart feels warmer,and I really believe I Jove everybody better than I do When the weather is fair:' Uncle Ned smiled, and gave the boy an approving pat on the shoulder. Every one smiled but the young lady, who, with a lan guid, discontented air, now played with n" pair of scissors, now turned over tho leaves of a book, then with an ilbsuppiessed yawn, leaned idly onher elbow, and looked into the tire, And what do you think of a-.'rainy even ing, Elizabeth asked Utrete is k t.L . Ls.h.ould like to bear your opinion a 150.% ;, 'I think it ever dull and uninteresting, answered the. lal ways feel so stu pid, I can hardly keep_ myself S wake. One cannot go abroad, or hope to see Company at. home, _and one gets so tired .of seeing the, samelatres all the time. I cannot imagine, what ;George and Ann see to admire_so much ilia disagreeable rainy evening like this' .! Suppositig .I tell you a story to enliven you?" said 'Chicle Ned. 4 0h l yes, father, please tell us a story r *Zelaitned the children, simultaneously. Lit tle Ann was perched upon his knee, -as if by Magic, and even Elizabeth moved her chair, as ifescited to sotne degree of . interest.— George still beld,his book in his hand, but his bright eyes,sparkling with unusual ani mation, were riveted upon bit uncle's face; I run going to tell you a story AISOUL.4 talny evcrung: said Vtrcle - Ohl • that will be _so pretty r cried Ann, clapping her bands. ,Ent .Elisabeth's: couri tenanceiell below zero. It was an 'ominous ann, . unciation. - - `‘Yetti,;:eieltin!ted Uncle Ned, 1 / 4 ,rainy•even-- irsir: , But thouglitluutis ,darker that — 't 4, - viAlCii_ritir Arguate tbe sir :were tivrefieg abroad and the rain fell vier' vier met faster -„ , _ the rainbow of my life was drawn most beau tifully on those dark clouds, and its fair colors still thine most lovely on the sight.— It is longer however, the bow of promise, but the realization of my fondest breams.' George saw his uncle cast an expressive glance towards the handsome matron in the opposite comer, whose collor perceptibly heightened, and he could not forbear ex claiming Alt ! Aunt Mary is blushing. I under stand uncle's metaphor. She is his rainbow, and he thinks life one long rainy day. , Not exactly so : I mean, your last con elusion. But don't interrupt me my boy,and you shall hear a lesson, which, young as you are,l trust you will never forget. When I was a young man, I was thought quite hand some- 1 Pa is pretty as he can be now,' interrupted little Ann, passing her hand fon dly over hiP manly cheek. • Uncle Ned was not displeased with the compliment, for he pressed her closer to him, as he continued:— ' Well, when I was young I was of a gay spirit ) , and a great tiiorite - in society. .The young ladies liked me for a partner 'in the dance, at the chess-board, or the evening walk and I had reason to think several of them would hove made no objection to take me as a partner for life. Among all my young sc-. quaintances, there Was no one whose com panionship was so pleasing as that of a mai• den whose name was Mary. Now, there_ are a great many Marys in the world, ito. -. .,y0u artist not take it for granted I mean .yoirr mother or. Aunt. At any rate you must not look so significant till I have finished my sm. rv. Mary was a sweet and-lovely girl, with acurrent of cheerfulness running through her disposition that made music as it flowed,. It was an undercurrent, I•oweeerodways gen tle, and kept within its legitimate channel. never overflowing into boisterous mirth or unmeaning lenity. She was the only date-,,b -ter of .her mother, and she a widow: - Mrs. Carlt2n-such was her mother's Dame—was in lowly circumstances, and Mary had Done of the appliances of . wealth and fashion to decorate her psmon or gild her home. A eery modest competency was her portion, and she wished for nothine• mote. - I•have seen ben in a simple white dress, without a single or, nament, unlese it was a . natural rose, trans tend all the gaudy belles who thought,by the attraction of dress, to win the admiration of the multitude.. But, alas, for _poor - human nature. One of these dashing belles so fasci nated my attentian, that the gentle Mary was for a while forgotten. Theresa Vane. was indeed, a rare piece of mortal mechan ism. Her figure was the perfection of beau ty, and she moved as if 'strung upon wires, so elastic and springing were_ her gestures. 1 i never saw such lastreus hair—it was perfect- I ly black, and shone like burnished steel—andf then such ringlets! how they Waved and rip- j pled down her beautiful neck! She :dressied j with the most exquisite taste, delicacy, and i neatness, and whatever .she wore assumed a peculiar 'grace and fitness, as if. Art loved to adorn adern what Nature bad made st, fair. Fat -. what charmed me most was the. sunshiny Ismile that was always waiting to light np I her countenance. To be sure, she sometimes I laughed a little too loud, but then her laugh was so musical, and her teeth so white, it was impossible to believe her guilty of rudepess , l or want of grace... Often, when I saw her it, the social circle, so brilliant and smiling, the life and charm of everything around her. r thought bow happy the constant companion ship of such a. being would make me— whatbrightness she would impart to the fireside of home- e what light, what joy to the darkest scenes of existence! : _ Oh ! Uuele,' interrupted George 'laugh ing, if I Were Aunt Wary. I. would i not let you praise any othe- lady so warmly. You are so taken tin with her beauty., ou have forgotten all•about the rainy evenin' Aunt ,Mary.smilecl, but it was more than probable that George bad really touched one of the bidden filings of her wornan's , ,,heart for she-loooked down, and said nothing': Don't he impatient;' said Uncle iNed, and you shall not be ebeatdd .out of your story. I began it fur Elizabeth's sake;_ rather than yours, arm I Fee she is wide awake.— She thinks I was by this time more than half in lore with Theresa Vane, and she thinks more than half right. There had been a great many parties of pleasure—tiding par- . -ties; calling, parties, and talking parties,— and summer slipped by almost -unconscious ly. At length the autumnal equinox ap proached, and gathering clouds, northeastern gales, and drizzling rains, succeded to the soft breezes, mellow skies, and glowing sun sets, peculiar to . that beautiful season. For two or three days! wasconfined within doors by the continuous rains, and, I am sorry to confess it, but the blue devils got complete posse , sitni of me One Strided upon my nose, another danced upon the top of my bead,, one pinched my ear, and another turn ed .sotnersetts upon my chin. You Jaugh little Nanny, but they are terrible • prettres, these blue gentlemen. and I - eould not endure thin any longer. So the third rainy even.; puton my overcoat, buttoned it up to my chin, and taking my umbrella in my hand, set out in the direction of Mr. Vane's. Here thought I, as my fingers pressed The lateh, I shall' find -the moonlight smile that will illuinine the darkness of my right—the dull vapors will disperse before her radiant glance, and this interminable equinoctial storm be - transforrned - into a mere vernal shower,.tiaeliingt away in sunbeams in her presence.; My gentle knock not being appa rently heard, I stepped" into the anteroom, set down.my titnbrella,.took off my drenched coat, arranged my hair in the most' grace , ful manner,and;elaiMing a prisilege to which perhaps, I had - no legitiniate right, opened thedoor of. the family sitting room, and found myselfin the presence of the handful Theresa! Here Uncle Ned made a very provoking' pause.• : • 6 Pray go On. How was she dressed 1— And was she gladtosee 'our assailed him on every -side. liowiras she dressed repeated be. I am not very well skilled in the technicalities of a lady's wardrobe, but I eau give yon the general impression of kir personal - appear ance._ In the firxt place, there was a jtimp. ingep, and - an of hand sliding step towards an, opposite doov u tts c=entered, but'a disobl!. ging chair **sin the way, and - was Jos king-my lowest bow-liefora she bad an oppr;- , tunity if disappearing.. Confrased -sod on jr-. tined the 'scarceir returned nal salutation, K WE AUE ALL EQUAL 'BEFORE GODARD THE CORSTITIGTION.It..Iiames Buchanan. Montrose„ ,11.51111e1111111 otottittrr, t)urshl Darning, Agit 4, 1857. while Mrs. Vane offered me a chair, and ex pressed in somewhat dubious terms their gratification at such an unexpected pleasure. I hare no doubt Theresa wished me at the bottom of the Frozen Ocean, if I might judge by the freezing glances she- shot at me through her dark lashes: She sat uneasily in her chair, trying to conceal her slip-shod shoes, and festively arranging her dress about the shoulders and waist. It was a most rebellious subject, for the body and skirt were at open warfare, refusing to have any connection with each other. Where was the graceful shape I ',had so much admir ed 4 In vain I sought its exquisite outlines in the folds of that loose slovenly robe:— Where was those glistening ringlets and, bur - rushed locks that had so lately rivalled the tresses of Medusa. lier hair was put up be hind in a kind of Gordian knot, which would have required the sword of Alexander to un tie. Iler frock was of toiled and dingy silk, with trimmine•. of salloW blonde, and a faded fancy handkerchief was thrown over one shoulder. y - 'ou have caught nie completely en • dia.. habillie, said she recovering partially from her embarrassment; Out theevening was so rainy, and no one but mother and myself, I never dreamed of suchtjgtillantry as this. She could not disguise her vexation with all her efforts to conceal it, and - Mrs. Vane evidently Shared her daughter's chagrin. I was . wicked enough to enjoy their confu sion,- and never appeared more at ease, or played the agreeable with more signal suc cess. I was disenchanted at once, and my mind revelled in its recovered freedom. My goddess bad fallen from the pedestal on which my ititagination, had enthroned her, despoiled of beautiful drapery which had imparted to her such ideal loveliness. I knew . that I was a favorite in the frnilv, for I was wealthy and independent, and,iperitaps, of all There sa's admirers, what the world would call the best match. I malicibusly asked hen' to play on the piano, but she iniade a thousand excu ses, assiduously keeping hack the .true rea son:- herdisordered attire'. I asked her to play a game of chess, but She bad a headache, she was too stupid; she ttever conla do anything on a rainy . evening! I . At length I took my leave, Inwardly bleSsing the moving 'spitit That hod led me abroad that night, the spell which had.s so long enthralled my senses might be btoken. Theresa called up pile of her 'lambent smiles as I hade•her adieu. iNtNer again on a rainy evening, said a! e, Sportively lam always so wretch ed dull- .1 believe I! was b . Orn to live among - the sunbenms, tbe• m .l oonlight.' and the stars. Clouds will never (I,d for me.' Amen ! I rilen4 responded, •as I closed tife door. : While eras patting on- my coat, I overheard,withoutlthe slightest intention of li :ening, a passionate . esclarnation from Iny Ther'i,srt : - • 'Goof gracious!*other wits there ever any thing so unlucky ? I never thought of see ing my neiglib)r's:dog to-night. If I have not been completely-caught.' I hope. you Will mind my advice next time,' replied her mother in an ngrieved tone. I toll yciu not to Sit down in. that slovenly dress. I have no doubt you have lost him forever. . i . Here I made god my retreat, not isi,-11- in , * to enter into thepenetratia of family b [ - . .... se crete. - • The rain still continues]. unabated, but my social feelings were very far from being damp ed. I had the curiosity to:make another ex periment. The evening was not very far ad vanced, and as I turned from Mrs. Vane 'S fashionable mansien, I saw a. modest light glimmering in theidistatee. and I hailed it as the shipwreked mariner hails the star that guides him o'er oceans foam to the borne he has .left behind. Though .1 was gay and young. and a passionate admirer of beauty, I . had 'very exalted ideas of domestic felicity.— I knew that thereiwas many a rainy day in life ; and I thought that the person who ~was bora, alone" for Sunbeams' and moonlight, worffd not aid me to dissipate' their gloom.— I I bad moreover, a shrewd suspicion that the daughter who thought it st sufficient excuse for shameful perSonal neglect that there- was no one present loft her mother, would as a wife, be equally lregardless of a husband's presence. While I pursued' these reflections, my feet involuntarily drew nearer and still nearer to the light, - which had been the load stone of my opening manhood.. I bad con tinued to meet Mary in the gay circles I fre quented, but I bad lately become almost a stranger to her home. ...Shall I. be - a wel come guest ? said Ito myself . a s crossed the threshold. Shall I find her en dishabille likewise, and-discover that feminine beauty and grace are incompatible with a rainy ev ening!.l beard a sweet voice - reading aloud as I opened the door, and I.knew it was the voice which was once music to my ears.— Mary rose at my entrance laying her bock quietly on the table, and greeting me with a modest grace and self-possession peculiar to herself. She looked surprised, a litte embar rassed, but .very far from being displeased,— She made no allusion to my estrangement or ntlect, expressed no astonishment at my un timely visit,notonce hinted that being alone, with her mother, and not anticipating vhitors she thought it tinucceary to wear the hi- bilirrients of . a lady: Never in my life bad I seen her look ed lovely. .ller dress was . Nr fectly plain, but every fold was arranged - by the hands of the Graces. Der 'dark brown hair,' which halo natural wave in it, now uncurled by the dampn e s s. was put back in smooth ringlets tiepin her brow, revealing a face which - did not consider itri beauty .wast ed ilectiuse-a mother's eye alone rested on its bloom. A beautiful cluster of autumnal roses placed in, a glass vase 'upon the , table, per fumed the-apartment, and a bright blaze op..' on the hearth difflised a s p irit of cheerfulness around, while it relieved the atmosphere of its excessive moisture.: .Mrs. Carbon was an invalid,and suffered also from an intim/dim of the eyes.. Mary had been reading aloud to her from her . favorite book. What do you thingjt.was 'it was a-very old frill= .ioned otui indeed. No - Other than the Bible. Arid Miry was tiot..tushamed to have such it_ fastioriable young g entleman as I then wan ; to see *bat to occupationled been. Whit . a -cacti-aim to the see:n.)l)3lo just 'pitted =flow I toadied myselffer the infattiatien which - - liisdled - ntie . to . posrets the artificial graces - 4f a lie :beno - this pure child of nature drew: ' 'my chair to - the •: table, • and, .entreated - that they 'would not look upon me is -stranger; bat as' friend-Osnxiousto be restored to the forfeited pritiler3 of an old acquaintance.... 7 I was understood in a-moment, and without a single 'reproach, was admitted again to confidence and familiarity. The bourn I bad wasted with Theresa seemed a kind of mes meric slumber, alAank in my existence, or, at least, a feverish dream. ' What do you think of a rainy evening, Mary ?' I asked, before I left her. 'I love it of all things:. replied she, with animation.. There. is something so bornd drawing, so beam-knitting, in its influence.— The .dependence which . .binds us to the world, seems withdrawn, and :ritiring - within .our selves, we learn more occur own being. Mary's soul beamed from bee eyes, as it turned, with a transient obliquity towards Heaven. *She paused as if fearful of unseal ing the foutains. of her heart. I said that Mrs. Carlton was an invalid, and, consequent ly, retired early to her chamber, but I lin gered till a late hour. Nor did Igo until I had made a full confession of my folly, re pentance, and awakened love; and, as Mary did not shut the door in my face, yin - may imagine she was not sorely displeased. ' Ali I i know who Mary was. I knew all the time?' exclaimed George looking archly at Aunt Mary. A bright.tear, which at that moment fell into her lap,showed,that though a silent, she was not an uninterested auditor. - "Yon haven't donelather I' said little Ann, •in a disappointed tone. * i thought you i were going to tell a story, You have been -talking about yourself all thCtiine. ' - ,I. have been something of in egetfst, to be sure Illy little girl, but rwanted to show me dear young friend here bow much depends on a - rainy evening. Lift is not all made of sunshine. The happiest and most prosperous. must have their seasons; ofgtoom and dark ness, and woe be to those from . whose souls no rays of darkness emanate to gild those darkened hours. T bless the God of the rain as. Well as the sunshine. I can read his mer cy and his hove as . well in the i tempest, whose wings obseltre the visible glories of his -trial. Ilea, as in the splendor of the rising sun, or the soft dews that descend after his setting radie,te.e. I began with a metephor. I'said a rainl;ow .was drawn on the clouds that low ered on that eventful day, and that it still continued to shine with undiminished beau ty. Woman,. my children, was sent by God to be the rainbow of man's destiny. From the glowing red.; emblematic of that love which warms and• gladdens his existence, to the sielet, meltitig into the blue of Heaven, symbolical of a frith which links him to . a purer world, her blendieg virtue?, mingling with each other in beautiful harmony, are a token of (sod's mercy here, and an earnest of futere blessings in those *regions where no rainy evening-, will ever come to obscure the brightness of eternal day. .. , LEGEYD OF XETV 'EXG L XD BY JuLIN G. watrnErt, "Shrieks—flendisb yells—they stab them in their sleep." One hundred years ago !—the hunter, who ranged the hills and forests of New England fought against other eeemies than the brown bur and panther. The - LuSbandinan, Os he toiled in the plain, or the 'narrow crearing, kept closely at his side a loaded weapon: and wrought clilligently and flimly in the midst 6( peril. The fit:Tient : crack of the Indian's fine was heard in the still depths of the forest-the death knell of the unwary hunter : and, - ever and anon, the flame of some devotid-farm house, whose dwelhas had been slaugh:O4ed by the merciless foe, rose _redly upon the darkness of night time. The wild fiery eyes of the heathen gleamed through the thick underwood of thelore.st, upon the _passing of the worshippers of the only true God : and the war-whoop rang shrill and loud under the vets walls of the . sanctuary of prayer. Perhaps no part of New England affords a wider field for the researches of legendry, than that portion of Massachusetts ITay, formerly known as the province of :quire. The fero cions Norridgewock held his sem council, and there the tribes of the Penobscot'-went forth with song and dance to do battle upon . the white 'man. There, the romantic and chivalrous Castine iminared himselt in the foresl solitude, .and there the high-hearted Ralle—the . mind gifted Jesuit—gathered together the broken strength of the Norridge. 'rock and built up in the great . wilderness a temple to the true God. There, too, he per ished in the dnrk onslought of the Colonists —perished with many wounds,- at the very foot of the Cross ; which his own hands has planted. And there the Norridgewoas fell —one after another, asking nor giving 'guar- I I ter, as they resisted the white spoiler upon the threshhold at their consecrated tilace of wor ship, and in yiex" of their wives and children is The followingone among many Icgends of the sttange encounter of the White Man 'and the Indian, whieh'are yet preserved' in the ancient records and traditions of Maine. The simple and unvarnished narative is only given: It was a sultry evening towards the last of June, 1722, that Capt. Hermon arid the East ern Rangers urged their canoes up the Kene bee river in purutit of their enemies. Four hours they_toiled dilligently at the oar. The last trace of civilization was left behind, and the long shadows of the skirting forest met and blended in the middle of the stream, which wound darkly through them. At/every sound from the ndjscent shores—the rustling wing of some night-bird, cr the quick footsteps of some wild beast--the dash of the oar was suspended, the ranger's grasp tightened on his rifle: All kite* the peril of. the enter , ' prise; and, that silence which is natural of Jeopardy, settled 'like a cloud upon the mid night adventurers. Hush—softly, men I" said • the watchful tlertnon, in a voice which scarcely rose above a hoatse whisper, as the canoe swept' around a rugged promontory, "there is,, a light, ahead I" • *- An eyes were bent toWard the shore. A tall Indian fire gleamed up amidst the great oaks, casting a red and strong light upon the dark raters, For A single and 'breathless moment the operation of the - oar was sus pended, and every ear listened with painful earnestness to catch the welbknown sounds, which seldom failed to indicate The pro• pinquity of the savages.. But all was now silent.. With a slow and fainCtuovement of the oar, the canoe gradually approached the suspectisl spot. The landing: was.alTe4ted itt silence. lifter moving cautiously .fOr a con siderable distance in The dark abadosi; the 'party at length ventured 'within the broad circle of the light, which at_ first attracted; their attention: Hermon 'was at their head,' with an.eye and a hand, quick as the savage enemy whom he sought. The body a of fallen tree lay across the prab As thelangers were on the point of leaping over it, the_ hoarse whisper of Hermon broke the silence: " God of heaven 1" be exclainied, pointing to the tree. "See here P'—'tis the • work of the cursed red skins!" A smothered - curse growled on the lips of the rangers, as- they bent grimly forward in the direction pointed out by their .terri mander. Blood was sprinkled on the rank) grass, and the hand of a white man lay on the bloody log. There was_ not a word spoken, but every countenance 'worked. with terrible emotion. Had the rangers followed their own desperate inclination, they would have hurried recklesi, ly onward to the'woik of .vengeance; but the example of the leader; who had regained his usual calmness and self-command, prepared I them . for a less speedy, but more certain triumph. CautiOusly passing over the fearful obstacle in the pathway, and closely followed by his companions ho advanced steathily and '.cautiously upon the light, biding himself and his ,party as much .as poisible behind the thick trees. In alew moments they obtain ed a ful view of the object of their search. Stretched at their length around a huge fire, but a convenient distance from it, lay the. painted and half-naked forms of twenty sa vages. It was evident from their appearance, that they had passed the day:in one of their horrid revels, and that they were now suffer ing under the effects of intoxication. Occa sionally a grim warrior among them started half upright, grasping his - tomahawk, as if to combat some - vision of the disordered brain, but, unable to shake off the stepor from his reuses, uniformly fell back into his-gentler _ _ The rangers crept neater. f As the} bent their keen eyes along their well-tried rifles each felt perfectly -sure of As aim. They waited for the signal of nettnen• who was endeavoring to bring his long musket to bear ' upon the Lead.of the most disthut savage. "Fite I" he at length' exclaimed,- as 'the sio , ht of his piece interposed full and distinct between his eye and the wild scalp-lock of fi!e Indian. " Fire, and rush on The sharp voice of thirty rifles thrilled through the heart of the forest. There was a groan—a smothered cry—a-wild and convul ,iVe movement among the sleeping Indians.: arid all was again silent. • The rangers sprung forward with their clubed muskets and - hunting knives; but their Work was done. The Red Men had gone to their last audit before the Great Spirit, and no sound was heard among them save the gurgling of the hot- blood frog their lifeless tiwoms. • They were left unburied on the place of their reveling - -a prey to.. the foul birds of the and the ravenous Leasts of the . wilderness. Their scalps were borne homeward in triumph by ths successful rangers, whose children and grind-children shuddered, long after, at the thrilling narra tive of the AfIDNICUT ADVENTURE. HO TV S.J.N - D'USKY WAS . SAVED • F.R.O2IIFAMINE. One of the most agreeable duties of jour nalism is to chronicle the heroic deeds of these • whom chance or unusual natural de velopments have rendered benefactors. to the human race. It is it part of our legitimate. province to rescue such individuals- from ob livion, and by enacting the part of a histori an, to . hand their names and the record of their achievements down to the admiration and gratitude of future generations. The vil lage philanthropist, or the benefactor of a lo cal community, is as much' a part of the his tory ofliis time as ,the - heroes of a State, or as the sacred geese whose gabbling at the 'rock of.Tarquin saved Rome from the horrors of a sack. Our duty in the present instance is to relate a similar occurrence, which trans •pired much nearer home. Years agone, when the course of trade ran, in a counter direction to what we now be hold, owing to a severe drouth, the city of Sandusky underwent all the horroriof a pro tracted fctuaine. The water on the bar at the mouth of the 134 y, was •so low that vessels were unable to reach the port, and there Was noland transportation at that time which could be relied upon iu case of sudden emer geney. It appeared as if - Providence had forsaken the place eutirely, and that its in habitants mast soon petish. For days and weeks their stock of provisions had been gradually disappearing until all Was gone, and their obiy reliance was upon the fesv : fish they were enabled to obtain from the waters of the Bay, and an occasional meagre supply of game from the neighboring forest. • At the the time of which we write, the woods in the vicinity, and, in fact, through out the Western Reserve, were frequented 'by vast numbers of wild hogs, which obtained a bountiful subsistence and grew fat upon the shack which -every' where abounded. The I hogs were doubtless °strays, but the sparseness of the population in the interior; and the rapidity With which they multiplied,' render= ed them strangers to man, and extremely shy of his presence. During the drouth, of . which mention has already been -made, large droves orthese.anirrials wended their Way to the lake, in the neighborhood of which they con tinued to remain. - Sandusky Ilay, in particular, was a 'favor ite resort for them, in the waters 'of which they were accustomed to wallow,after slaking their thirst. Those who are acquainted with the locality of whicli..we speak, will remem 7 her the annoyance to . which the earlier settlers were exposed, in the .shape of fine red sand, Which covered the beach, and which, In high wind, was not only exceedingly 'troublesome, but dangerous. .Thousandi of hogs, in cOn aequence of frequenting this spat; became to blind; but still, with .all . .the: cunning Which ItelongslO thiri perverse race in' their natural state, they Continued- .tocelude the . -hunters. One day .when the famine in the city was at its height, and when it was apparent tluit even the strongest must - suenuMb, Joe B— took down his gun, and resolved to ake a last effort to tanne.his wife and little ones from a fate the most horrible of which the Mind lie 4 any conception. All day long had tbeiiaunk : en eyes and shiiveled hands implored him fot byead-- 7 and„ alas the knew ,too 614 not within 'the whole eity wati'there, mouth ful to be' had, - though he viere,fo in -a change thrice its - weight in gold. Nervtal'to desperation. by this reflectioL, but still With feeble steps, be took, his Way to the forest, re solved not to return without relief in some, shape. For a long time he travelerfin vain, trav ersing milelt of weary- pathway, without so much as seeing a single evidence of animated nature, until he was on the point of yielding to despair. At this moment- noire , as- of approaching footsteps, arrested his attention,. - and he paused, with every faoulty" rendered keen by hunger, to listen. Nearer and near er came the trampling, and just as Joe, to sateen himself from observation, took, shelter behind a tree, a wild hog emerged from a thicket, advancing directly towards him, fol lowed immediately by another and another still. The hunter, trembling with excite ment, raised his gain- but"suddenly paused with astonishment at the singular phenome non before Lim. The drove (for drove it was) was approaching him in Indian fileand head ed directly for the Bay. The secondhoar -held in his mouth the tail of the first, .th e third that of the second, and so on, to the number of sixty and., upwards ; 'each was holding fast to the caudal appendage of his predecessor, and all were being led by ,the foremost of the drove, and he being the only one that could see, was* tbus cenveying his afflicted companions. The hunter comprehended the scene in moment, and instantly decided. upon his course. Raising his gun deliberately, ho fir- I ed, and severed the tail or the leader close to " the roots. Ilia affrighted leadership, with a loud squeal, bounded intda thicket, and dis; appeared, while his companions came to a dead halt. Joe quickly divested himself of his boots, and crept stealthily up to the first of the banal, who stood quietly holding in his mouth the amputated tail of his former cony doctor. This the bunter seized, and commenced gently pulling upon it: First, one, hog star ted, then another, and another, until soon all were in motion,'and, without pausing to test fora single instant, Joe led them quiitly into a. bilge r en *near his residence, where .'they were soon slaughtered, and the city was, say , eil.—Bufalo Republic. THE Within a few months, no less 'than foltr_ persons have mysteriously disappeared from. New York, some, if not all of whoin,, his feared, have be.cn murdered. On the 15th, of November, Mi.. Charles E: King, left • the. counting room - of Messrs. Pettibone k Platt, - No. 228 Pearl street, where he was employed as book-keeper, with the intention. of lashing bis friends in Waterford, &iralega county, Y. Y. Ile never reached hislriends, arid not the least clue to him has ever been obtained, although no means have been .left untried to discover his fate.. He.carried a gold Watch, and must have had $BO or $OO with hint on the day of his disappearance. Ile wasii" per-, son of good address, and bad been.cOnn!e:cted. with the Cincinnati Gazette and with the Al- - bany State Register. • Mr. Erastus De Forrest, a young man who inherited al ou t • $25,000,a rri ved in New . 11ik from Watertown, Conn., , on the 13th of.Jah: Ile stopped at the 'Metropolitan .11o:el, and was last seen there on the morning of Wed relay, the lid]. He had about him a val uable gold watch, and some $5OO in money. It is now two moths since he disappeared; and no clue as to bis fate has obtained. Whether be was murdered, or whether, in some attempt to pass from South • Ferry to Fulton Ferry , by the Aver side, ho Tell, into the river and was drowned is,still a mystery. , The next case, says the Nei? York "Times, concerns a Brooklyn family, though the miss- - ing party was a Penns Ivanian, Mr....lattn . es A. Waddell, drug mantifactuter;of Commerce' street, South Brooklyn, sent his son, a lad .of seventeen years old, in. May last, to manage a farm in Pennsylvania, a few miles from the Lackawanna Station on the Erie. Railroad. The son had been living there with a laborer named McGurk,untilrecently, when the father left New York for the farni, (Feb. 13,) but on arriving found his son missing, as well as .the laborer: Suspicions was at once fixed on Itic- Gurk, as the son .had frequently complained in his letters of illAreatnient from Min. 'Every' availahle means have been taken by his 'fami ly to unravel the mystery, bit without suc cess until ono.day last, week, when :Mr. Wad dell,'senior, received a telegraphic despatch front one of the officials of Milford jail, (where the man McGark, is held .on su,riteien of murder,) requiring his presence there inure lately. The summons was, of course, obey- . d ; and it appeared thatAloGurk offered to ~ ake a confession, which soon- converted the ill lingering hopes of the poor father into an agonizing certainty of his son's fate. Ile was. told that all further search was - useless—that the borhad heen shot. in his bed; and the body together with the sheets on which he. lay, had been burned and the . ashes deposited in a creek close by the house., MeGuik, how 'ever, denied all participation in the: act, -and. charged another with the.. horrible . deed. The accused was. arrested; but was subse quently .discharged for . want of 'Sufficient testilnotiy.. In the fourth eke, : John E. Vedder, a-resi dent of Chicago, left.the Metropolitan Motel, where he had been stopping_ for.severat days, on the 4th ult., and has not since been herird from. - 'When about going out, at IC o'eloCk in the morning, be mentioned incidentally to the office . clerk that he was giiiing .tel3rocrk- . lyn to collect a sum Of slo,oooine.hint there; but did not mention.the names Of the parties from .whoin he . expected .to receive the money._ As yet, no clue= is known to 'exist which may lead: to the - discevery of his fate: . Veddeiswoa mastic:nen of property! oa cupied a respectable position in.aocity, and, of regular habits. Ile was formerly engaged' in the forwarding lisinessort, the _Erie Canal, arid for Several 'years past hat resided at the, West. Taking thori as apeeititeni, Now York, is not particulite• safe Thin- to *idol's. Strangers who - bare looney Owl. tbeni,, On, not be too careful.—;•Bicknell's Repor!Or. Tux New SzsissTrow DESlllOlTira AGENT. —4he new agent, Ainylene, for the -resew. tiou of pain during surgical operations, has been recently used for the first, time at-the Bristol General linspitakßoglatid t and with complete success; 'The operation - was one well calculated to test'the'powers . of the : drug; being Chopert's.amputation of theiuOt; Mut surgeons at the Dristol.'.flospital. soak; of the insensibility 4,1 6 in underthe- an 27,4 4 0 - 44,4-, infi,Peiteat;: .says _ thatiti aroisthatictet . .- , feats are, 4 shorter'duration than th ose; , of - Till Ciifitil ' iitt r t- z NESS AT. ifASIII:nit.TON;;;RE.,,, PORT OP TAW tti:OilitaTTAFX:'-',' The Committee- appoiu eti - to'rbal_to vestigation into the_ganseq the ItTational: made a &por from. wt1411.-Ire tithe !O .?' I¥n extranti: From the testimony of Dr. j..C.,11e+11. a -__ Cornelius Boyle, :we, learn 'thrit'thedlifinsof,"' - _, made its appearance about;the_lattie epa,4--nt '''-'- -: the month of January, awl coritinuade 4 larilit - the severe weather, Wet ~4 eeareed for 06' tele two weeks during =id weithei in' , Firbialieye,.- - -_-,• - • ' owing, as they suppose, to ;the , _ house - , being-, ,-,-11 , - , - 11 . then better ventilated; .atid;that it,,, again; baj.e.--.-.t. -- cot/Avery-rife during 'the cold -Weatheregtnee,e-e i returned on or abnut - the fi rst of• Mara. * . -e '• : e. -- This disease, 'a.cordiug , to DrA 3O / 4 ei*all,'": '. different' from the,ttreal (erne ,ot, diet treti; .-- i. Both of these physicianS intim ui,,A40f...Ah0 . :,- - attack came on suddeulf,generally: ntirlYe'l* the morning, that the operations 'Were 'fit- -,- , quest: and thin, light colored,- and friistyeeet , , yeasty. According to Dr liall, vomiting ._ came on When the diarrhea wakeheclo4l4 - ' '- vice verear The thirSt was eseallYgreat - s ank.. !'- the patients often desired neid d - rinkfC' Irsetlir'.'2, of these physicians further -teitify -thate:*4 - ..e. disease was never cured at Once - baV ceetitin• ' i ued to return at sh'ort interval;forkreOMfitte ' ,`•- erable length of time. A removal .fro me Art hotel did 'not ~ein, to ecintribrrtOleefinreiaryee ~ • ery of the patients; as the disease ',WiLVldakee ; - latter continued as 'violent and foiaslinits-* - ' - time as among those who confined eitreehae, --.' -, ' building. Thera,was no evitietree,inetbegeeee - ' ~:'• ' pinion of these gentler-4r e of anything ; ; lilts, ; mineral peison having'been taken into Alte, . ..'. stomach ; there was no• evidence of the iti' -` damnation ilamation of the ietestines. Both cilineift- . 4ii, i regarding the did mdse as one -Of a. bleed: - pile. son," produced by the inhalation..okrs'..treie..i onous iniasm„ . g . nerated by animal and:74 4-2 atable deedmeTeseoti, which` entered theleatete . - through the sew &conneeting with Milk [ street sewer.: te ; r - • . - - , ` . " .- ' - '",'''. - ' - ' t Ai a further corroboration :i f this friete*ere ere assured - .that a peceliee and offeasieree odor pervaded the premises, and . 3virich,,,wase - , - more decided in the hallS thaiiiii the ii;at'EQ":. - e elosete. 'this odor caused one Of the' feheisie' - - cians to-become - nauseated: The' donatin-; tion of the " stench-trap . : at.', the corneefot '" i f Sixth street and. T,'euneylfeteia Avenue, by:e preventing the gas from eecepiere, i i 4 e 4 e. street, is considered ~• the - principal -tante . Of - ' , - the noxious gesee passing into the 'Deltas' of'' j I the hotel. The boiler in the 'Cellai n, iteciatil ing to Dr. - 11;p11, ~aided in distribui.,inge the: I noxious gest*. theoagh . the. building. .-10.. e ' room (second .itory)- Not:O.' in ,which the l =__.' _ committee examinedthe witnessee,n tegistem ' .. WAS f 011.1 1 ,1, which was said to ,communicate-: '' ----' with the eelhir, and from this- an.` efforts - 1* ' odor cotibl i.e dietinguisl. ed rentering,„thse et -- room. Two' of the eominiuers have.freq,uente e: 4- '- i v recognized the offensive oder,:epe)tei- ot - , - ''- try Drs. llall and Basle of different pnitit'ar -- - :---..-- the building: - - - .'-- . -- -T --- • _ i , The committee sought in vain forevidenia 4 ~ of the water or food having ; 'been- polionoti'-‘:I 4 I by weenie or any other mineral -aubstane.et ee - Drs. nail- . and BoYle. both state thitAltey ,i . I drank the waZere- - --Dr.lllll . says " friefylpiih.:4' 1 out being affeeted . by it." " Joiephe Gatitiee: - I chief cool, and Alfred. F. Geis, 'steward;botk- testify that the water wed , when the dieeme . appeared for the seecnd time was not'qua:,,.. . same as that, used When the'disease was . pte ? .., . alent in JanuarY and' early in Fehrtia4c'llfe latter asures us that the water-tank•lShailC - ' of brick and lined with slate, UomPletelyt _ ~" closed, so theta rat could trot heve poirsibly e e entered the tank. • The steward ferthertstates e i that when the disease: first appeared; it:ilier z. suggeetion of some of the boardees;'• a: fresh "'= supply of cooking Utensils, of tea, angar;'tit-- 1 . fee, flour and milk were obtained.: _lte ? - ns - ee-i„, sorts that the copper - vessels • Wgr.e well ; lime,i ee ' awl perfectly clean, and in better orderethenl- 7 , .. he had ever seen theia "heft:4e ' he had; bieint'e house,steward of the Revere Bostou'll,ai five` and a half years. - 'One of the greatest tsufferers seems ter-heeep-e. . been the chief cook; he was: (40 efithe , 44,,,_ attacked by diarhea ; he, continned Aujineire e:! it, more or less, fOr seven weeks; :,loreetinies, twenty Operatione - per day; although not: eityi .- . jeet to diarhea. . lie sleeps in the horteeetai '-, avoided water as much reveioeiitele, rand, lire. pared his own fend. None but the cook; grog ! pre.ent when the feed is - .tieing. eirepared. All the cooks (five 'in iittmlier) have been - - - sick; and according to the' statement'Of iltii.''! tGoss, there was much siekness....anitinethrs servautsescMuch so, that at one e ‘Airee.,Ahne; regular duties of the house wereinteteeptA l ee W. P. Joa*srote M. If.; - C. -L. Cotelfere - Cites. F. - Fonda:M.. D.,' -,-.:',' `;' -3 - \ . - ' . ' - .,..ojeimeeleee-!..lie: Mr. Chapin, the postmaster -at..springfieTd ee , Mess., writes, that havilg contrefetedil .. iedirr'e f e - ease et the National flotetearly,in 'Mariii,beil,,,, Ifni Suffered severe-and prOtrack‘d'itidlit*' :- sition therefrom. - I'- -- e-- - - - ;::' :?"-`'‘-• The hotel:hes since been elesed - .• ~ • : —,----e-sere-, ease -,-. 1-‘. ~_ -......-: , - ,'-••.... e :e .104 Baines Ledge re e --Tlreni isler•Agiers.:„;,7, istan, a country .- abbundieg '.'• iii - .legeide,' ; ', - one tie this - effect t That- SitalT entitedinto ii: l •=:' - .- compact withhthe - peOple to teach ether* e6 , 4 : 1 --, cultivate : the, earth". and- bring forth: itreftaitaiker.e the produce to be divjded hettreen7thni*, Thkii, -- propo4tion being aceeded te, - : the soil rasi:.., - prepared by the labeteri et 'the . yeaphi:;:fitalir i , then 'fir:One:o - 14e steedi - whiehin'fithisciiiiiiirOc 4 -":' of time - earner up earnita i turnips:sainll l -4thiiirl4 ) vegetables." the triklue . nt , ,whiell lie behehtleiterAT . _. ground, When . qv; time of div,igon-afihari4.,_,- the ignora n t people tc'olc. 1 6 4t• - : 4 44 0 14 1 :***-,- , Anita - tilo•stii:taee: , Disoottiring:ttitfillifijikk ,, ; they -- eetloplairied%icittdlf. '`Bitaelitiiiit Milt -",„.." f' lamentings with soni:th4tlinglitaitir* . , : z them,_ blandly, promited•AliaCie e - ‘464t e tieee l e...ee different next. year.; 11 1 6pe9p . ler'7-ete:ipittilA7;.:. all - the Prcancebineath.theisell*lie_" . 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