M EDICINES - DR. STEELLTNG'S ONART-S . YRUP, • TA,Great Palacedjqr ,CaltsuMition 1 : ! ! lAO Asthma, influenza, Moping Colinli, Catip, /C Scarict•Fdvcr, Maslen, difficulty of llrcathing, i Silknchilis, Spitting ofilluod, Vains in the. Breast, ihnd atrother discuses of the Luqrs, - • CONFI:IiIED. .• • , , Estraordinari lure of-Asthma, by Steelling's Pul monary Wrap, attested to by Capt. Samuel R. Buns- Melt, merchant of Potter's Creek, Pdonmoutb County, New Jersey, the father of the unfortunate young suffer _ . • . porrzus'CßEEß, June 6th,1644. STERtma—Dear Sir :--I have the pleasure of tieing - able to state, that..-my 'daughter, who had been suffering under se.ve re Asthma for 5 or 6 years,has been entirely cured of that painful disease, by the-use of Biz honks of your Pulmonary. Syrup: She was when firsVattacked with that complaint, only nine years Of sge, and suffered with it beyond all description, for the period of near six years, having an attackabout every three or four weeks. It was to all appearance, confined and- linthrivable—we tried many medicines without any relief whatever. =About this time; we beard of the superior efficacy of your Pulmonary Syr up and deterinined to give it a triall4we procured a dozen bottles of It the . first bottle relieved her very mach, and by the l ime she had taken six bottles, she wan perfectly cured!!! It is now three three years 'since then, and the has not had the slightest attack of the Asthma. 'She suffered so much when laboring un der those attacks that we could hear her breath dis- tincily over the whole house—she was frequently near suffecatin:, and we hatlquitc despaired of her recove . Rive you the above statement of facto; that others who may be 'afflicted with this awful disease. may make use of the same means, and:we feet ai‘survd that I I with the tilessiig of Providence, they will find perma nent relief. i Yours reaper:olllly, SAMUEL R, BUNNELL. lyud..l:tiic; froin Philadelphia!!! ,Read the - .following, strong testimony in favour of 'Steelling's - Pututonary Syrup, given by the Rev.. V. 0. Douglass, Pastor of the Mariner's Church, Philatlel )pr* July Nth, 1944. Steelling—Sir :—I feel much gratified in being able to say to you, that the Pulmonary Syrup you sent, has been used by several persons with great success.— , The first person who took it, had bent confined to her bed for some time with a- seVere cough—W - ler taking only 02te ba tile. she was almost entirely cured. A tin lint' • was greatly dhuressed with a cough, 31111 could not find 'nothing to relieve him—lle took one bottle and called o say that he was entirely 'cured I t f —A -member (Witty • Church, was taken Willi the prevailirM influenza—He . ' took six of your Antibilious Ptlls, and ahottle of Syrup, and fella:moo entirely restored to his 'wanted health. While at WomUton, N. 3., a ellort time since I found Mrs. S. W., labouring untie rn serereee k, and scarce-, • able to•sit up through the day—l felt :confident that 'the Syrup would 'relied' her; accordingly I sent her 'a bottle—within a . Low days, ;heard that site was greatly benefited, and in P fair way of a speedy 'recovery. I -' can truly say, that ahnost 'leery one that .has taken it, has tten more of less beriefited, and, I inn-Cordially reccontmend it to all who are in any way amicted with -a cough. Yours &c., ; • 0, DOUGLASS. 'The fidlowingis'from a distinguished Couneellar at inßcidgton;N. J._ EItIDGTON, Decembere. 1811 tr. Wm. Stec cives me pleasure to hare it in my, power to bear testimony to your invalna ble ,Pulnionary Syrup. For several years when any one ofmy family, has heed afflicted with a Cough, —Hoarseness, Asthma, Influenna &c., &c., we have n sedlt 'with- very: beneficial effects--It has invariably afforded relief. In October last, I was attacked in , the night, with a continued paroxismof coughing--a dose of the Syrup immediately stopped the rough, and he tom. I had finislied the bottle, I found myself completely cured. The cause of philanthropy. most certainly owes you a debt of for the acquisition dfa medical compound skillfully prepared, pleasant to the taste, containing so many excellent properties. and made aesessable to all: Milt had poor, by its reduced _prices. • ]cur Obedient Servant, ' IsAAt.w.vrrs C:IIANE. • DiViZdarated Tal'.l mom,' :Extract of a letter received from the net - . Ilei- Paitor of the Lutheran Church. Abbottstown, Pa. . Annterrszows,Jan, 10 1812. !Dr. Win Steelling=Sm take plensiire in inform ,ce you that I have been numb benefitteiniy the use of your Put.mos ART SVltUr—inytlirolt which has been sore.. for better than two years, and which was cOnsid erably inflamed, witeo7taw you last, 'has.been kreatly relieved—l thing by using a few more !bottles, a radi cal cure may he effected—l ran therefore- recommend it to all who are.similarly afflicted - Yours Affectionately, WM, Sa mot !Swam, fast Master at Evesham N, 1, who • is upward. of seventy )(tars of age. was cured of a .severti Influenza and relapse by a few botths of my Pulmonary Syrup. . Samuel Small, of Pemberton, N, J, states that his wife who was Mali unto sallltcwiop with a cough was rrstored to sound health by the free use of my Pithuninary zirrtity The wife of Reuben Mapcs.ernswirks,N . ,l was en tirely cured oft colt,gh of near THREE YEARS buntline, by my Paltiotury S) rue. , Elizabeth Dubois, of Phila. who was subject in a cough of three yaarestandimiz,nlso spitting of blood and who could get no relief frOm_ the many medicines On. had used, was reheved by :one bottle, of my Pulmonary Syrup. Rev. W. A: Roy, Malaita clergyman, Imlaystown, N. J, states that :if •s. Fanny Eniley, age t upwards ssweuty, had been afflicted for several 3 ears with _a_most distressing antral:it-ming Cough aid had used triatti medicencs with hole relief,' has been almost entirely cured by three b'ottlesfor sour Pulmonary svrup she thinks another bottle will be effectual • , :-Itev.o. Douglas:. Pastor or the Mariner's Chtirch. fihilada: gave a bottle hf toy ruttnnioiry Syrup to a lady who was confined to her bed v.ith a Cough, arseetakidg which she was ahnos,t mo.dely relieved, lie also gam a bottle to' a''satloi who was 'greatly distressed with a comb, and emild find nothimr .10 relieve him—after taking which he ealied to sly that ii, perfectly du red him. -Mr, mtireuver says that a meinh' rnf his elmrch wit:* was labour. ing„under severe Inflenzi . was:cored immediately by six of my Antibilious I'd:surd a' battle of my Monary Syrup; also Chit while no a visit to IVoods 7 tnwn. N..L recently. Mr; S.W. of that virage, was scar able to sit up through 'he day, from a sew...ff. Cold, ne sent her a bottle army Pulmonary Syrup, which gave' her immediate relief. Par Pale in Pot isville, by • . JOHN. S. C. MARTIN. 'July. 13 Reduction Pourfod in Prices, ,Or Nothing if the User es not Delighted with it ' _ o A N arliele that every Family mug nsiderindispen ,rl sable, when they know its pow nd- value, and which has heretofore been sold ton hto reach all :lasses, has now been reduced Fourfol in price, with a view that rich and poor, high and low; and in fact ev gry human being may enjoy its comforts': and all who get it shall have the price returned to thenr if they are sot delighted with its use. We assert, without the pos- Aibility of contradiction", 1 hat all Burns and Scalds, every :sternarSora, old or fresh, and all external pains • and aches, no matter where, shall be reduced to comfort by 1t in five minutes--saving life, limb, or scar. ' No burn :an be fatal if this is applied; unless the vitals are de 'strayed by accht,nt. ,It is truly magical, to appearance, ,in its effects. Enquire - Tor "Conners Magical Pain Ex tractor Salve." Price 25 cents, or four times as much lor•SCI cents, and ten times as much for $l. • . All country merchants ate requested to take it to thair towns on commission, as the greatest blessing to inankind,that has been discovered in medicine for ages. Thil is strong language, but you may depend its poWer will fully justify it. Sold at Comstock's Branch House, No. 2 North sth street, Philadelphia, and by. J. S. C. MARTIN in Pottsville. Feb. 17 EMI "Wrigbt's Indian Vegetable Pills OF THE NORTH AMERICAN , ' COLLEGE Of Health. • f' 0 MI:DIMNE has ever been iritrOdUced to the A , merican - Public, whose virtues have been more - ~Cheerfully and universally acknowleged, than the A ibove named , • . WRIGHT'S. INDIAN' VEGETABLE PILLS. • . . • „ . To descant upon their merits. at this late day, would seem ; to be. wholly unnecessary, as very few Indeed ' who read this article,Will be found unacquainted with ;the real. excellence of the medicine - . But If further proof were wanting to establish the credit of this singn 7tar reined, it might be found in the fact that no medi cine in the enuntryhas been so . •, . SHAMELESSLY COUNTERFEITED. . . Ignorant and'unptincipled men have at various pla.- • eel, manufactured a spurious pill ; and in order more e,9mpje!ely to deceive able public have made it in out ' .hard appearance to resemble the true medicine.- -These wicked people could never pass ofi their, worth tess trash, but for the assistance of certain misguided ' 'storekeepers, who because they can purchase the spu :gious article at a reduced rate, lend themselves to this monstrous system of imposition and:crime.' ' The patrons of the above excellent Pills, will there _fore lie-An their guard against every, kind of imposi ;,;ton, and remember the only genuine Agents in Potts, ville.,Are Messrs. T. &J. Beatty. ' . ' The following highly respectable store keepers have „been appointed Agents for the sale of W.RIGIIT'S INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS, FOR . . • . l - ' SCIIUYLKILL COUNTY, ,andcif whom it is confidently believed the genuine .eledicitie can with certainty be obtained: . - , T. &.I. Beatty, Pottsville. Rickel & Hill, drwigsburg. ' Aron Mattis, Idahrintango. - J.,-IYelst, Klingerstown. - Jacob Kautrman, Lower Mahantanga. Jonas Kauffman, do • - ,John pnyder,-Frio.denshwg. -.. Featherott Prey &co. Tuscarora. -,William Tag,ert, Tantaqu.i. - . „, cletniblaurer, Upper nabantango. IM. Ferrider, - West Penn Township. Caleb Wheeler, Pinegrove.. P. sennyier, &co. East Brunswick Torliship... • C.•ll—DeFmcd, Llewellyn. •., • , ; , .. , . E. 0. &7: Kauffman, Zimmermantown. - ,Bennett & Taylor, blinersville. • :." ~ -' , '• "-George Reifsnyder, New Cattle. , . 'llenty Koch' & Son, kleßeansbarg. _ . Abraham Heebner, Port Carbon. , ' jphri Mertz, Middleport. . - - Samuel Boyer, Port Clinton. , - . • - j . )Shoemaker It Kauffman, Schuylkill Haven. . - . • BEIrARE OF COU I NTERFEITS. • The onirseenrity against [reposition Is to purcbaae ;from the regular advertised Agent', and in all cases be ,particular to ask for Wright's Indian vegetable Pills.- Office devoted exclusively to the nAle of the medi cine, wholesale anctreatil; No. 169 Ritce street, Philo, dpinl4. ... .. ' . . , . • ai•llEMMinber. Mine aregepnine except Wriiiit'f - vrtßlA,m.viiiiritiVi . 5.'24. , - - . NI . , . . • . 11 :,:-.- - '• ''',-- - 1 . -- , -- • 6 • ,: ••• f-; 14; '', - it : . ,-:::,. :, , - • : . -. :::-...; ..... .; ': %,.. .1 ~ ,: - 4 . , , •..... ,•:-, i.. 'i: - - I 1 ' - - A ;'•'. '. Z2 ':: t'. ....,•• • •., •••••• r- .• : i- : . '•••• --:,.• .. "•-' •'..i {y•,(., . ~, • . i,Zi . ::- - -- —.-.--- - I • . - , . . : . a. ;.ria .. "I WILL 'TRACH TOO TO PIMCCE Tiik no*zia cur:TllE:Calait Alio maisCi :ooT; ritoi. Ttig CATIq i uES Or isptikrass,rrtus• wit= wir.t: Oli/C Inill 4,. iNOTEL,TO 0.1,141 , 198- AVID stauscr. ALL TiATOir .TO OVIrtfTZ - INV 04.9DAZ —DC lONNSON • ; I -':,', •, • : . . ;. _ . _ • 1 . , WEEKLY BY BENJAMIN BANNAN 2 A9-NT F 94 TIMPROPRIETOR sOuirmaLL COUNTY, . PA. VOL XX THE CHEAPEST PAAESGE AGENCY EN THE , Joseph inciflorrors ' • ~. , Splendid Line o.i',_ Packets ! . • i • FROM Liverpool, Landon, Dublin;lLon liht dmiderry, Cork, Belfast, Waterford,New . is . 4 rk ry, Colerain, &c., to New York, or Phila delphia. , ..This Line consists of the following Vessels, Which' leave New York, on the Ist, 6th, 11th, 18, 21st an4.26th of each month ; and one every ; five days ,from Liver pool, to New York : - -,1 • , George Washington .r Unite d StaSell4i' • Garrick, ' l' Patrick Henry, • Sheffield, 1 Lucius 2 Independence, , l• Virginia,. „Ssti; 1 ..:„. s 1 1 640i f yh of ifa r ,' ! coy and wen sne pm:melon • 119pFP11111cf , ottndtht ions mein. . 'ice. !VikiuniniiiViror."!'. . . MIEN A VERIISER ISIM here long enough to do it: LOniiiilld Is the nest pliee of linPOitenie, and a fine place it 111.. The , canal is iliiiri;bui the 101 l is long, 'i6j . $1 50 on a - g*,.. alle'; teat , :and charged not aaaanling' to freight but tonitaie: Here, at the lower end of i of . ..the catiSl is the Kentucky 'giant, tending a eery and provision Store, height 7 feet 8 inches.— And h'ere 0. , little below the rapid. we:Pais' the Lae,' Walker, and a sad , sight Sheia! ißleuriz up burnt and su n k, her Wireel'hOuie; and som; part o f her hirrricaneideek : above the surfaCe, and t+s cold; turbid Waters, CoVering , over and whirling past all the reo. How much of youth and beauty aid Virtue. and talent; of hope and ambition;are there chilled. end n'tiettehed for ever: • A ' salitary . boa; . moored istern!with a few men aboard are search. int fin' the deid bodies. Exclamations-of pity and sadnesti escaped from many on board of out boat, . and rnany o One remarks that his relations and friends . will fear, 'When they hear , in their. distant homes, of tie lad ,disaster, that he too was i on th Lucy Walker.; Every explosion is the result o carekuneis. Put -here is St. Louis. and 'as we appraach her the scene is beautiful, encha'oting. and but rattail not have room here to:Aiieli upon it—.o I Ong hurry You along into tne Mi. noiira placid ;tretm with lOw, shelving shores, and clean sand' bars, abounding• in fish and wild fowl.. In iseentling we see no- considerable, placie until we reach I''eoria, a handiome village of about 2000 inhabitants, where I nave located my hoirse. hold . Crods fcir the present. A handsomer site for a city . could searcely - be found. • A broad _ eXpan• Rion of the ricer is spread out before me. A few rods from niy.d?relling are daily landing or deparr ing more -or - lOs steamboats. At this moment four are here. And wl.tit a sight is here fOr ; lov.. . er of Ash! An ; old flat bottomed boat is iunk at the'edge of : the-water and in it is a muftitarie of fishes. , There stands a man with his scoop ready to wait on you. i . .. Step on to the plank and iefect for yourself.' 4 I will take one of your latiest pike: Haan% got any large ones just now,ihere is *one {rain 8:0 10 lounds, if that'll do: !And pray what do you call a large one r -4% by 25 or 30 pounds!!' I.HoStr much for this oriel' 'Two bits.' I'll have him.' My first purchase of 'fresh fish here' was , ten cents' ,korth, for: which I go' four fine bass, weighing, when — completely clranf ed, five pound two cents a Pound for fresh ssh!! Who can boast RC a better fish market than:Pen. nal Echo alone can answer o! A good sad dieof fresh venison costs $1 - O. With my best respects myan and alt my friends and My 'Memo !egret that Henry Clay is not'elee' , ISPIIOVEXESSII IS THE MASCSACSITIII/ Or ILlrf.--110 attention of the Ironmastem has been attracted to a ProcPss of considerable importance lately introduced into their manufactures. IThe application of electricity, to supercide severer of the extenstvo, processes,. has been tried in the Welsh and Derbyshire furnaces with satisfatory results. It appears thafthe' costly labor reqoired for the purification of the ore from sulphur, Phos phorus, and such !Sabtle elements, create its high Market vzduo, ; and these. being all electro-nega tive, have induced the new process, whereby the impure stream Of , metal; after flowing from , the blast, is, in its! Moment of - consolation, subjec-- teal. to ` 14•vialeift, • votaic battery, Which - so; die engacEfeit theirOure components that in the pro.. cies of:puddling they are readily extracted. The London blacksmiths; it is stated, have tested, this iron after aeh:ile re-heating, and pronounced .it equal to the !befit !metal in She market. By, , the same, process, ad experiment was tried by Dr.lire, by , whom` a 'soft rod of iron - was held in contact with a moderate !;!ed heat, and that gentleman is understood to. have stated that in a few hourrithe metal was converted into steel. ; Should these facts prove whatshey!seem, they are calculated to effect most seriously dila important branch of our trade. IttOT!l7 MOllllll4 appeani ' by accounts received at Albany, by Virgil & Co's. Express, that the anticipations of the •Montreal Courier have been realized, and that that city was the .scene of electiOn'riot; in which three persona at least save'bern shot. On Monday the blindeiPafeleetiiinidok place lnlifentreal, and on the Saturdai evening previonv, young man nam ed tolbiorne,` a 'Member of the Protection Society; was attacked by an Irishman nailed' ee nin:whilePaiaing ,in the street, when he dreW a pistUl and shat Fenizyttnotigh . ,theheart. 'On . Sunday handbilbt were posted in the streets beaded 44isider, 1 '4ltinfer,' &c., calling, upon the - Irishmen and Frenchmen to meet , at the flay Market and avenge the blood of Penis, • ' • At 4 &dock ; Stanley - afternoon a large number assembled, and`.tlie ruiliiary' were taled . out and Oispersed the - ! On Monday, the day detection; two men, Mein.. beriutthe Protecticst - Society; were shot; one by *timed Griffith. in theneck, who 'was atnuott—the paiticulara not known in re. gwd to the othir. Thentilitary were calledonob dispersed; aid cannon postedin the street, .Ortlet was restored, and the election proceeded at n00n. .. a' recent speech or the newly el e c t ed firesith;neeethe tr. States , at Nash' . vile, that gentlemen said— • i !A In the position in which I have teen placed, bytha ; T0 41 1 0 7* Traueit, fc l o i 7 l RI.; my relloTAti*.q 34 oYs l4 , 9rae _ful•!ioY! sul it "IP. bellildSciFocit -41i)!_4.9113!:!1,94 ho l y b3 c re t . irP.i4P.Px4.m Wriftmen!' ofthe Ooverpment i tpa,pnncipjes antirtjci-Pt the s oo4o4 l l , 4 4 .l o l anß rf i i- A sTr e4o #;: Itiviviqve;s 4l "4l4.o.girsi. trflge mild e poky of ihit-GoutUttlenkina..Y.Lat such, as to ,aststual, atiappinessAndroveritY cofAsvo!i.#l - 111 arktiki!lltitti 3 4 l ollO4ll ll 44 l 44 1 113 14' *Valcep to it-6itlt Malt • OtAlitig* 4 1 ki li tM fdrinitt drainslaith -4.hatputytinetc . Miiiii:'o4lo644 l loltieltalonflitioit 10111 ihsvispuitr , l; Pi i:TOK4 an, NM 3 •:. s s lIIM I aiU ;ruly yours, JOHN PORTER d'~_T~s~"~' . ,h.'+9:'.'ts-. _. 'S~S3d€~lfa. i ~m WlYy)~ ~:~ M CniinnomS.--Whit can be .s truer picture .of man in creation than the position of a child in its own horn& How silently, yet hoW surely; doer; the domestic rule control , him, dating his rising . and his rest, his going out and coming in, apper honing his • duties; his mirth.rorilering secretly j the very current , of his thoughts, whether it sparkle `with gladness' or overflow with :tears. Yet how ' rarely has . he any painful sense of the constrain ing force which is every moment on hum: ';•Heni. med in on every side by a power, More vigilant than the most jyalous despotism, yet look at his open brow, and say whether every creature was more free: rind why? - Not because childish minds are destitute of self will—that would se duce them into transgresion-;-but because ' where reverence and ; love make melody and in the heart, the temper is,charmed andsleeps. Light, there_ fore, as the weight of the circuMbientatmosphere upon the body is the pressure of home duty upon the child; easy by the constancy and complete ness with which it shuts - him in; inseparable from the vital elements of his being. Ilia life i s an exchange of obedience for protection ; he give s submiwion;arid is sheltered. Folded in the arms of an Unspeakable affection, be is screened from the anxiety of self-care; and yet he is left alone upon the infinite - plain of existence, to choose a path Lty the dim, sad lustre of his own wisdom ; but it is , led gently on by the unextinguishet lamp of a father's experience, and the meek star -light of a, Mother's love. In strangeness and danger, how elm.he keeps'to the hand that leads him ; in doubt, hose , ho looks up to interpret the eye . that speaks to him; in• losiand loneliness, with what cries he sits down to lament his freedom.-e-, •He asks, bht claims nothing; his momentary foi* Hwerdness stilled, perhaps, by a mere word ; and if not yet, his spontaneous return, after an interval to his. accustomed ways, confesses that in the or- • der of obedience is the truest liberty. Prom the Metropolitan Clara bernen: or elje Mpostate priest A TALE My parental believe inherited nothing but an, honest name, and a pretty little cottage, with its acre-,of land, in a small village, is the south of Ire land, where I was born. The Infancy and child. , hood of the poor are, unfortunately to much alike; cruel oppression and want often attend their advent to a life of wee, and cling firm as the ivy round their, path in after years. When seven years old I was sent to the village school, and their first met Morgan O'Neil, just eighteen months my elder, and poor friendless orphan. His Mother died m giving him birth, and father he' had none to call him child, although the seducer of his Mother regularly paid, a small pit' tance to 'an old lumen the parish for his sup port ; and she had placed him, ill-clad and fil-fed, at this school, to save herself some trouble, and to, enable her the better to make a little profit out of the allowance Of the poor boys's parent, who had never seen his son. What melancholy thoughts have since rushed through n.y brain when I have looked on his handsome and noble fate ! a man without a name. degr4ued from', the moment. he breathed the breath of life; not recognized by the law or the worll'a (which vi'Sits on the helpless babe ensnared but often truly, lo7ing and faithful mother the sins of the base villian who has been the cause of all their wretchedness ;) wherever be turns, the bend writing on the - wall yzoclaints him .a bas tard i 1 • From the diy we met we became friends—such friends es children and school mates ate : we were - companions . in every sport, and our lessons vvere ; never so well said as when we learnt them side by side, strolling, along the village walks, or sitting in my father's arbor; for Morgan soon be 7 came my . visitoi, and many a hearty meal had the then famished Child, received in our humble cot ' One. „ , Years flew by , and I was fast changing from the phiyful and romping girl io A W' °min newly ripened. , • We met less frequently ;. ho became an apprentice to a conntry cobbler,'(the meanest occupation id, always chosen for the unntentunate offspring of the licentioni passions of the rich,) and I worked with my mother to. eke out a scanty subsistence• Still, in the summer evenings, front a sympathy of tastes or by accident, perhaps, we not uncommon" . 13, walked the same road, and together admired the 'same wild scenery. Then we were happy. He • had eiver spokin "of love=such foie' as woman ii anxious to reciprocate, yet fears to have declared ; but we;each well knew our hearts were united by a_ tie . which forms and ceremonies may rendr gal,bui. can never strengthen ofniake more. hell, Then: !short She Sabbath came round, and the week's tail was imar, we met iu God's own house; and after thanking him for our spared lives, and l i all his heavenly goodness, went forth to admire our Maker in his works, and pass the day he has; set apait for our rest in the Innocent recreation such an aP.Painuael4 m*tifestii !esllPizaa? I looked forward to Sunday 1 None but the pour who cant their. daily bread by hard work, can tell with what delight the, aebbatit,ilat is hailed by almost the only mark, which di. fuletrand .distinguishes us from the brutes which , perish ; and . yet'thia last remaining privilege is • soughtito be.ahridged, if noteatirely cutoff by the evangelical refonnepr,,who,. not corterit with dia. totting their ovraleatuteat .P4arP 61 41,3 /the Intel lest Henverklunt bestirred upon them, with all it. , dignity...will impiously ; strive to convert .the poor mans day of relaxation anaenjnytaeatkne atitre of, fasting and ;restraint. Vat 9.1 10 . 4 ' 1 4 080 h!PaaOtaal . 'lZ4 2 9gadia 4 i4Pslitammitlita' aminart cy %krthey cots we mete Mottref. fal*.belrfir ettdm Silldinle 464 gad It deep Fligenr4 4 10 Pi* geed 45TW 2 , 11 2:0.11 1 P,b0 iret*jr.e... - .A141.1 bin c• •• ‘!'"eßea stootnite, „ ..; -:Thosky wo clearAnOtighl not sk,clopa. ob. 'atraeteit_ *Progreskofitya Atimen. nial4 OF! , 111 9 4,161 1rbsivel!.r throTwaltsgonOirs , s4elicp* kon4+ 41**Cagt9,tbRoany 4Yr* Ai ang 1 44 0 14 '-k644714194' Itona.tlso tars area istradsit *diets% is Ertl self eteOPlng awn ra7; 4 :O:PA4 end when Admit& 1 . 4 hie ten th , and Lack 4 St him ones dart, al; was oserC7isit# puolo#l4quit of grief 11611 hit *nut and in hystriio °obi lost Iltotwhilo aq aniireoferzistenesc Qep itaifysnissfunttstaitt* sad in the first mornartOe' re•twatening . rife, 44. honaligt words Passi4 of lot% Of . bope,':, Pilma my ittl• lin** /nippy !Mit et tears„ and our tips seileillius ragsgenent nor tiro* zior 'client:Wan= tan *tinge; z I war!, not long in di Bring the canes love?,:s dejection. Ti islOido of birth-conld note bitiok the insult end thiintumelyithieksisiiled him every day; and, reel f tleas aids Consequenceer, he had left his home, isgdstood along in thiwide, World era exile from co:rlyiraisenttion ! ' indock was hie . lot,' the orph4- of the beggar will - Miter want—charity wiltkesilxis brood warm and- folk the empty stomach: bitt'Ar him, what, hope ter, ' mainok what redress I:6l2.4leathi From** worbb he was Stamped with Ontiny; as &babe:lied*: cradled in shame and scoim, and only grew orarnx to feel more acutely the l kwry.he could not escape% Still, , God tempera dic:' l / 4 0 . had to the shorn laintrA and atter a little though. Morgan determined lila c:dist at, a soldier. I li,rani the resolve with *leer; rut foreboding,. and ycifie knew it was his only: course. • Could we part t.f i l I paused but el inoininti• and then, hanging rou4o . bis• neck in all the tees joy of requited love,l aomiscd—what be was fraid to ark.—that I w4ill become his companion: and is =The lest orthe.Anoon Was disapi pearing.rand dark elou4kwere , gathering around.., Can the revolving skr'tcal the reacts of the fa, Wm. or g.A.e W man a *wing of his fatel , . '- Evil tidings ever . trafg swifter.t, and the too frad.. report soon reached me:s.iiiit my lover had entered; the king's service, and pis already marching to the: next town. I will 1110 y to tell what I felt; it every word vrhich . ean4 l / 2 iiresi the woe of woman, =EMI NO. 51. . was condensed intotmel4ief syllable, it should uo , Pass my 'ups: so 'EI isii4t!ly week would be throw likeness to the origin's M Such terrors mane! hi' depicted ; it • Ploughs deep farreirliin the check of hearty! and lesies its wrotchktictint the ghpst of whit' shewas—n li.ioi moil ant of nines dtslioneele" 'tending forth in bold ir4dief to worn and guide this"' unwary. • ' The breath of time'fb4el op my tears, but. my heart still bled, my cheep were blanched, the (rap% ne of youth was gt;i3; m; ,- and all hope well nigh vanished ; when one lo'ng evening es I eat at Om'. I casement of our colt*,'listlessly watching the: return of my father ludriuother from a Wake in the village;; fancied that' heard a step near, And tie another Minute a insni4 iri the shrubs col:minted; me that en tntruder Wrtli* hand; and risinr front!, the bench I was hastd:Olosing she window, whelk I heard My' name rathel'whispered than spoken aloud, but in the softeOccents of that voicetheretT, , was something too,fairiqiar te'tscspe detectiort, Could it be possible 1; ant before I heti, !Iran flit conjecture, toy own dear Morgan stood beforecriK Neither tipoke; we wcr too full of joy 4 too riCh in "the enjoyment of thi)Jimment to permits the'l of past or future to c1i,,41t the pent up suet= of youth's first love. lltfr.iould not spare one Worl , . to purify the air, or vv4l:the perfume of theherues, pure incense back to itiitativilbeavent • At length broken.a4olhurried sentences told they sad'storY. .My father'fi'ad refused to' alloW marriage, and IVldrgaiVid not trust himself with, me afier• all hope wduyieztinginslied, but imam:, diatelY jained other rev nts marching for tbo, der pot in Dngland. IdOiy of his comrsdesi Were ; light•heauctl and.gay,.i n ore still happy 'in the O m ticipation of the futiire; Not so, with Morns silent, even to moro#ness, it must be Suppsse .... s few long tried to gain is friendship; and;eick:ei, heart, and disgusted;44ith all around bins, ho : jumped to the only reverse (bad and useleio ecit i 4) which ie allowetfitia the poor when Dram succeeding reason ;::h4 then it shut the door e l rOhe past—thickly etudeleili as it was, with recolleC4n of love Unrequited And, destroyed, life and riaui spirit all , blasted in the: summer of existence- uld not but conjure up a, rf I s Seen, hell of ea u n, perhaps,• through long vista, of mans changes, and some not neat" but still too surely tern‘inating in madnes*--4nsin: itl i . et :- Ittast gorotts''‘iiiii . chr i es ' the pious, Atte% thew pause a raomentEere he condemns ilk Warr endeavoring to stifle 191;tick coating fancies' 'of a y distemperedbrain. - l'hilosephy sounds iyfell fromtho pulpit; is id: mirable in the abstratCond '...may be the ,panacea, fora multitude of evil's ;!,btifit!cannot. minister to a mind diseased,. or lre4the broken hearti ,nought: but the hand of God, tfiik.' influence' of true religion can avail in such a stir el; Morgan bait oftert told me since that the copromplation'to terminate' his weary existence by'hifsevin hand *as at this time' constantly recurring ae with difficulty - misted. Is it not a strange rl, sion which prompts maw, to self-destruction 1 *eh prompts him; IMSUM; MOLICe4 to rush beforii;treaccn's high tritninal, tho: gory on his harillgiving damning evidence of his guilt; his own WO calling fur am Eternal- Judgment on his sonY What. strict . Nati . she: . , has been it much painis . '''to lay down fot the gaiil:: slue of the suicide horrid deed I - Tbs. roan whose every liciieripts been ruthlessly nipped in the btid whoMOCIIi4 a wife or daughter viola. ted; some happy ar:4 l ,,eheerful'fireside converted into helligh • reminiscirs ; and area crowding, around him on every - 17, e noughtbut demon epee' tree chuckling over h . 4trreie . nt si . %uish' and inv:o7. claiming themselves*henthls lat torments atil to come:—sueh a Itti# may, in a moineat - eui shOrt the thread of lif4,l,:detcrmined tittle:, to hoz. ardeverleiting bliss this longer . - submit to earthly; misery. :13.ut it will (Isitinul On the humanity of a jury, whelliblesso:l*the rites of Christian btl"... vial the Seu:lces'Y'Sfiall seeli its native:Sikh or lie unniourited in Ane lone spot unhallowed .. by human oriiinance.' : litot so with , the bcdd peo.. petrator of ixtreo dartfoyho having wickedly earned a deep dame atung tiy,fhp, reer-apeaking, but dal 4iee ofootiarkeoceoiill tho fury Of ileapair,.ruoit to tho front uf,ther battle," embiachiii death, an 4 Ay the world's • own epitaph on the an4ls of fame. But kapst . hurry "9#, ; i with my- ; story: Igono\ half-bour after wo, diet I was • INalking 11147- hie ,aido . exile fiAtaty home, with no friend, but whose crime penis ined him en 'euilewep." , The goys witetht4 nig* our couch the !atlas' drew ibeir cintaide ouila us, and dattoca on hiich fwat4aa over qd dun b r5 , . 11 4114* rent of i ho ictweenti*i'llY indeed 4.. 0 4_1 10 ' 0 Omni Wiwi 'an look b*nd the'woilirkeektftt 11 0te' t ot e ""P' 11 1. 4- 14, ‘" l . l i n i P l t c ‘ • would not prefes,o OM*, • 43 'cir 0 14 14 1 0ii - : tEl 4it r- -- qui!oriudeiwnt 180 of, down ontramoddise: Vona Our e itinifOoi ,sweet; for, 'Ottitotisti 10 % 1 4 0- :: 6 4,4. 6 4 , wow** g uided no fon4l4;rr,; Yet we were bars in - :fiareyeat webnationetierev' Ws ; klhid July, wee !ottouggio to g‘'Cigatiribiltiiiikr-tii4toif"aKi44l En ]