.1 .ic.i. cd r .i ;i j VCrt 1 -4 7 '.t v '0 van i s ; aitr b.-.i NO. 20 )ir 'J Piibliblied by Theodore Sblioc ft! i,.T.?'lvI5 Xo.lolliirspor anniiniin advance Tun Wnll'trs an 1 1 mt-irlcr. hul f yc:trl- ;nd 1 1' no! paid oei.irc.the end f the year. Two dollars nrftU half. No o i-isrs UscmUiiiiicd untilall irrcaragcsnre paid exoent ie. the option of the Editor. yS. X U erHsfeinetitf not exceptjihj; one square (ten jjiiieO will he injcrtcj three weeks lor one dollar, and j.wenty-Uve cents for vcrvsubqucnl insertion. The ASh-irrfc Tor one and three insertions the same. A lib- r.i: iiisentnii ma'ieio ycariv advertisers. r.il tilseount ma'le to ycarlv ailvfrtfscrs. iC?AllicttcrsiddrtfsscdtotheEditor,inustbe.post paid JOB P'RIRTHG. IT.v injra general assort men I of lrirpe, elegant, plain a ltd ornamental Type, we are prcpa red , .to cxcciiteeverydesoiiptionof ......i. niMir!,1i.snt.ninni nprpi f t I I .11.,.. Il...nlc n.n.nfilat. f. r. ict Hunks. Pamphlets. Ac and xlcspatrh, on icasona- pnutcil with neatness ble terms, AT THE OFFICE OF T H E J E F.FJK U t ON I A IV. Hyd.o phobia. Tho following recipe and remarks, Which are taken from the Lancaster Ex tir.'ss should be preserved by every house- press hold. It has been effectual in preserving the lives of mauy, a- attested below .1,1 uvea u, uw,0, Dr. Stay's Infallible cure for tie litc of Z?fcr. Take xinc ounce of Red a Mad Chick Weed and'Tiut it in a clean earth cn pot; pour on it a quart of Beer; place the pot over a gentle coal fire, an ! boil it until it i reduced to the half: strain it hot from the pot through u clean linen cloth into a pewter dih, and then, while still hot in the dish, add one ounce of Thcriac, and stir it will, until it u thor oughly mixed. Give the patient a do-e luke warm in the morning, the patient be inr duly sober, that is to say without any thing having been taken that morning; after5 this he mu-t fast at leat three hours, and during that time driuk no cold water, and uiu-t take great care not to eat any pork, and everything which has any connection with pork; for fourteen days tbe patient mu-t not partake of ?ny animal rood, not even the ti-h kenuel. To children of P2 years give the half, and so in proportion with the water as above mentioned to be observed. X. 15. Vrou mut rut the weeds in 'June, when it it in blo-oin, and airdily it in the shade. The weeds to be fried in ire-h butter, without salt, and then put on the wound three time, by rubbing the cab off with an oak ehip." Chid; U'ledU the popular name for a 'Vpecics of Stellaria, and that with white Tjlo-somx affor a remarkable instance of the sleep of pi mt; for at night the leaves approach in pairs, and inclose the tender rudiments of the young shoots. The leaves arc cooling, and are deemed useful for matnmalb. Thcriac is a name given by the ancients to various com pounds, e-tccmcd cfneacious against the effects of poison, but afterwards rc.-train-ed chiefly to what is called Venice treacle, which (says the Cye,) is a compound of Hxty-four drugs, prepared pulverized, and reduced by tneanof honey to an e lectuary. Both the-e article- rati be bad at the drugjii-ts The beer will probably he more difficult to obtain in thi- regiou, where beer houses are prohibited by law! Lancaster Express. The Middletown Journal fays in rela tion to the recipe; ''Mr Youn, who was so badly bitten by a mad dog a few clays since, an account nf 'vhich we gave in our last, is getting well from the offsets of the bite, lie with a number of others procurrcd medicine from a lady at Leb anon, who li3n the original recipe of the late Mr. William Stoy. This medicine is rcry strong and operates when first taken like an electric shock. Those who have taken it, declare that they felt it through the whole system. After rcuiainiug on the stomach for about two hours, it acts like an emetic. When the effects are produced, the patient may be considered eurcd. Stoy was not a doctor, as some papers state but a larmer, and-at one,, time he published bis recipe to tho world. It wns nnnied into the Almauac;?. aud newspapers; yet, strange to say, there are but few who know anything about it. We read a recommendation, a few days since written on parchment signed by three men who had .been bitten by mad dogs. The document btates tbat they were all perfectly cured by Stoy's infalli ble remedy. Oue of those men had ex perieucd symptoms of hydrophobia be fore using tbe medicine. ,n. i-i i. i.t,: nf cmo i iig iiermaus nave a uiv t--.. .. t !i otiff 'liprxn. which :-..ii?. i, A',.i.,Ar, i.inrn.is. I A German minister being invited to of- t... : ,i:a rr. .nt;n snid. ,riV. r 1 lady, one night at a party, was vines, for the piazza was her favorite af .much annoyed by tbe rude and impudent ternoou resort. Bravo was there, wink remarks of a coxcomb who sat near her. jDg and half asleep, his shaggy bodj At'lengtb, becoming tired and vexed, she stretched, out in tbe sun but Lucy was turned towards him with an angry coun- , gone. t ienance, and said: ''Be pleased, sir, to j I pUess she has run out to. thc.ficld to nase vour unbecoming impcr.tineuce " meet her fatber apd the boys,' I answered The fellow was astonished at so sudden a rebuke, and could only say, "Pray, Ttfies, do not eat me." "Be in no fear," ( eho replied, I am a Jewess." i j fell me, ye winged wiuds, that round my pathway roar, do ye not know some quiet spot, where hoops are worn no more? Some loue.and silent dell, some island or i .ur" roolL- tliron m n Kiivn wnere wouicu uau - abreast, along the village pave .u.w. T Tho ,ce, and, 3t I loud wind hissed around my face epickering, answered, "nary place OTJE LOST LTTOY.; ; BY MARGARET VERNE. I . v It was, a beautiful afternoon :' ;'! June. Mother had flunir onen thp si'tHntr room window- and beide one of them we sat together, se,wing anil talking.. The climbing rose vines had begun to i i i 'i mi r .t j -bud about tho pillars of the piazza, and i toe pan.-ie.H mat, run in a iituc border T a 4 long by the path to the gate were open ing, one uy one, their purple hearts to tbo summer. Littlo Lucy, the pet and plaything of the whole household, from onr stern .fath - cr dnitn tn ihn rnnnf .nrl mrtJf krt:c. - - 'J tcrous Df our brotiior- unt nnnn tho mr lu-uus ol uur url"i-ra, sat. upon IDC car- pet sorting out a lap full of wild violets not. snrtinfT nn n Inn f..n rtf xrMA nnil i.nr.,..r w..oL io ti, .i. t,j :.... v. .j v uuut i . ubuiu niuk. rue uau iusb . brought lit from ,tr houc-dog, laycurlcd log her as she threw her flowers with a queer trayagauce and fastidiousness. Once a while be would prowl and snan his jawi as a malicious fly buzzed about his io, fields. Bravo our 'ainer scarcely sp.oKJ .aurin ine '.meai, . uuiuru iiiui eyeuiug, seiuea upon'ino witu , cars-or wag his tail gr.atetully as Lucy;"" Fu0Mu.,,tjr u. u-ru, auu wuu fcu uc-.- , wouiu tiause in ner uaintv cum ovment , (Q lrah flw tornfini(ir!f and ,troko Uu , silk ears with her diu ,ed fiu. All at once tho. muic of a hand organ j came jn ,ur0ugh tb0 window.. Lucy, sprang to her feet, grasped her apron of flowers, and ran out upon the p.iazzo; while Bravo, shaking himself, and tread ing with a sort .of doggish disdain upon those she had discarded, stalked leisure ly behind her. We stopped sewing aud leaned forward to cateh a glimpse of our entertainers. There were two of thein, a, man and wo man the latter carrying in her hand a tambourine. 31 ay I dance, 3Iaggie V called Lucy, as they struck up a lively measure. I nodded assent, and the. next moment she was tripping across the piazza to the music of the organ., It was a simple dance I had taught her for amusement, aud sho could execute it without a tingle misstep. A pretty picture she made out there, where the shade of the roses, aud the sheen of sun were plaited together so. lovinglj; 'her long, yellow curls floating, backward from ,ber shoulder.-; her neck aud arnss bare, plump and .dnzzlingly white; one hand clasping the broad, rib bons of her hat. which had half fallen from her bead in her breezy motion, and the other holding up her white funic with its wreath of blue aud scarlet blossoms; .g'cam up at me fromthe cool, dark wa ller cheeks flu-bed to crimson with ex- I ters- ut 110 ! they were clear and. glas- citcme.nt.an l her clear, brown.eyes, s'park- linii with delight. I noticed that the woman watched her with evident admiration, never once ta- king her eyes from her until she stopped, exhausted and with a coquetish courtesy threw herself down in the cool portico, lcauiur her bead back, against one of tbe pillars, till her hair looked like tendrils J could se0 tbe g'eam of the gray pebbles of gold droppiug through the emerald . anu the music of the water as it rippled vine.a. jover them smote my heart like a dirge. I tossed a small bit of coin out of the 1 leaped tho brook aud walked twiftly window to ber, aud she, with a gleeful' ar,a resolutely aloug the narrow path laugh, put it between Bravo's. teeth, and that led from it, for every moment the bade him carry it to them. - ; fear in m7 ,,eart grew stronger and more The man shouldered his organ with a terrible tbat Lucy was surely lost, and I low bow, aud had parted to go, when his must lieIP to utJ(i her companion touched him on the shoulder Before me stretched a long strip of and spake a few words to him in a for- ' woodlaud, and beyond it lay another vil- ci.u, jarring langua"e. He turned and looked at Luoy, and then auswered in the same low, and rapid, indistinct tone, which I could not under-tand, while an ' expression, strange cunning' and almost- cruelty, passed over his face. For the first time 1 scrutinized them closely. They were an evil. looking cou ple. The man was short and thick set, with bu-hy whiskers, eyes almost hid un der wrinkled, shelving eyebrows, and thin wide lips, one of which was ga-hed with ; a long, crimson soar. t The woman was a dark, mulattoish looking person,: with crisp, black hair, aud ltttlc, sharp gray' eyV6. Two square, yellow teeth projec- ted over her lower hp, and her chin was long and protruding. They wicre both ragged and filthy in appearauce.. I shuddered iuvoluujarily as I looked attbem and as if an instinctive knowl- ; edge of my sudden aversion hod influcn- ced them, they both litted their eyes to mine. There was something in the inso- ' lent stare tbey gave me that brought the , nnrv blood to my face. Mother ba'd t already withdrawn from the window, and giau to escape irom ine i i , r .1 uncomfortable feeling that had come over ine, i loiiow- fe ed her. 'Where is Lucy!' -" " , -"V J j . anu we were laying and we were laying the tauie lor tea, when mother asked the question, Iwent to the window and looked out expecting to see ber asleep, with head among the in reply to mother' inquiring look, 'she isn't in sight !' Nothing tnoic was said until tbc mcn;-r folks came into supper. Lucy was not with them, nor had they seen her on their way home, 'I'll rui out and find her while father is aying grace,' shouted Willie, snatched bis cap, 'tbat'l save time, and I'm hungry' Wii all nmilpd nt. hiHidpa nnd econoaiV. ' " - j but no one offered any objection and he went but. " ' 'LucylL U'C-ylL-u-c-c-erweheardbiro IV" J cal.,wtijtu a voice, as sharp and c.le,ar as, ' A'oubff av.age's. Soon bp came , in. out, ! breath, but without Lucy. .. , I 'I'erbapsbc.Jias gone intp some of the,, neighbors, and they haye invited bor into Jueo s eai supper, auu iueuu,c puu come, wen uun t ucr ,up, spoao uuieu mv nidnr hrnflipr WJ 'mKa? Droiucr 1 . g, we .took our scats that was an unusually .Tacitly consenting at, the tabic., 13ut u"". uu.vuuiw.uu l,uBt.ui - ( r.cnce to mfss the, golden bead, frora foot; M the table, and the vacant high J cha!r dra;vn UP'S0 6ti before tbe un - , used pjate andtue untouched tumb.er ot freh white milk seemed ominous of des- , , 0,at,0D' J here was a shade of anxiety olation. J here was a shade or anxiety on mother s natural! v. scrcnecountenancc: , - -ri v" ; - , - j ; trance of a little dapping Ggur.e, vhjch lis ye something told mef forbodiugly. wpuld i Dot come- Only my brothers, thinking of u,ji " U1 K'v'k u"u wum - ing boys, Suppei fcrei.t pa ing boys, ate with avidity. cr nuer thuv irnnt mil tnlfinw dif - r , V 1 n t paths to the neighbors, and after clearing away the tea things, we seated . ourselves to wait for them. Tho faint shadow of early dusk' was beginniug to fall, when Willie returned lingeringly toward the house. ; 'Hasn't she; come yet?' he asked as. he came within hailing distance. 'Then 1 must go right back,' he added in reply to our anxious 'no.' 'Father and Caleb arc waiting lor me at Mr. Gould's. They thought they would send word before they went any further' and j be ran off without stopping to ans.wcr'.our I'nrrnr pnnnirinQ 31 r. Gould's was as far as we had ever known Lucy to go alone, and T knew by the distressed look on mother's counte nance that she was getting seriously a iarmcd. I could not bear to sit there, with the dreadful uncertainty of ouo darling's fate weighing on my heart like ice, and throw ing on my bonnet and shawl, and bidding mother keep up good courage, for I was .sure wo should find Lucy, I went out in to the sober twilight. I thought of the well in the bapk yard, , and went t0 ualt expecting, as I leaned j ov6r tllc ni0U. boards, to see the, white frock aD(J 'bining hair of my little sister sy, anu silent as ever. t went into the orchard. It was do- i i j serted, even by the robins which had sang ! ulure Jl" lue uaJ- 1 wanaereu uown to I tDe brook, i here were the prints of tiny shoes in the sand, and a few withered violets that Lucy had i-cattered that af ternoon: but through the shallow waves I lago-the twin to ours, as we illton peo pie used to call it. Perhaps Lucy had rambled out there, and fallen asleep, iu j lorest. 'PU r .i. . i. .i ue puiuuhi U.USIC oi me trees, as tneir leaves ru-tied in the evening wind, and me gray gioomy light that pervaded the noou, ci.uicu me witn an overpowering sense of loneliness,- but I hurried on per severingly. A light pattering step among the leaved by my side startled mc. I turned, with a. quick outstretching of my arms, and my heart leaping to my throat. .1 i : 1 1 j . i Lt OI,,y oravo, who had followed me iaui iar. For a long time I wandered about, searching amoug the trees, and calltug Lucy by her name. Weary and dishear- tened, I was about retracing my steps? when a few drops of raiu upon my bonuet caused me to lookup. In my baste and eagerness, deceived by the obscurity of tl,e ; wood, I had not noticed the gradual 1 gathering of tho torra which now hung j black and threatening. i I had reached a litth clearing among tlie trees, where some wood-cutters had rearcu a temporary shelter. It was al 'mdst night,' yet I knew by the looks of the 'clouds, that the storm would not last long.' Whether to wait there until it sho'uld have passed over, :br hurry home in the ram 1 could not decide. At last l concluded to do the former. Quickening ' my pace. T soon reached the rude "but1 that stood like a rough her mit alone in the wilderness. What was my surprise, as I stepped upon the thres hold, at hearing voices. Seated on the ground, with their backs to tho entrance sbme su-picious looking food snroad up at her feet.watch- raDd A cou,d DOt UC,P glancing QUeii a.iitl ' a iorce that 1 could not shake on; and i away and selected WK-tfully at tbe open door, hoping every mu.t he cralty ' .-.. I moment to see it .shadowed bv thecn- 'I hone my nbod peoplersaid I. in a a "i filled pipes laying beside them, waiting to be ued sat a man, whom I at 'once recognised as tbe orga grinder and his mate, who had stopped at our house that afternoon. . i -f 'Gite eou. ye haste j' screamed the wo - man ina sbrilT, angry , voice, as1 Bravo went smelling around, and stopped with a amalj, rough wooden chest vvhich stood jnear. , f ' Neither of, them .bad yet perceived mp, but as the man-aimed a cold bono be had been picking at Bravo's: beadI'sprang ! forward. UpOn their laps, and with acoupleof well.cn,inn e.arrind on between mvnniimni.ioos. luff look, of mingled iiiallgbitjr and confusion tbat . crossed his features, TriabtCncd me. ' II would have retreated, but the rain ws now pouring in contents' without; and: t,uy tiiau aii a quic& uvi nueumii mi- , vwuu uat,aeu. acrosa my ididu, x,ucj nan not been seen since they. went away, and whoknew but what they bad stolen' her.' Hooked all around. There was'no' " - . uuiiwuiiuuui, ""'"i n a mis chest, and by that Bravo was sHIl linger Mng. soratcfiing it with bis forb paw?, and jWbining moat pifcously, iih thatinsiinctive cautiousness whu-l couioj- to persons m sudden emcrgc"rtij- tij fi.j ij. . ,r iK..;.. I called Urovo away;, tor the convictio leaned urovo away: tor the conviction that I was nearer Xiucv" than r had'vf'en . - . . i ' molifying tone, 'you. will excuse me ;if I 1 intrude'; but as yod see, I am caught in ; the shower and caunbt go on. May I sit . - a uuuh;u iuuu mutuisk. They had sat staring at me while I 'snokc. and anhnrpntl v no 'mnrn than half v r ' II J " : c6mprehcnding what I said; but when I maae a movement toward that the wo man, with a ferocious Scowl, aud an oath worded in bad Euglish, sprang to inter . ...... cept me. She was too late. I had already taken oucernedly stroking my seat, and was uncoucerne the head of Bravo, who couched, still whi- f ning at my side Thrown off her guard, by my apparent listuess. slid returned to her nlaee and a ae jcaprd'to n.i teet, anu tbo looK .o ' I could bardly rcstraiu my agitation within bounds. Doubtless she had heard. ieitber my voice or the whining of Bravo, and had taken the only method in ber power to manifest her presence. Even then her little heart might be aching with its burden of uncertainty, terror and de- spair. What could I do to save her! A tbou-and plans darted through my head in' an instant 31y first impulse was r faces, and bid fhem ' W mf to acuse them to their face release heron the .-pot; but desperate as they would become on the discovery df their guilt, what iniht they not be'tempt- ed to do! If they should murder me and bury me iu the woods, what chance would either of uH bavc'of being found, so long as our whole family "aud perhaps half tbe neighborhood' were r.uunlng hither in search for Lucj; I knew by the evil ex pression of their faces, they wodld not hesitate to kill me, if I stood iu the way of their plans, and it would be the height of fool hardiness for me to attempt to re sist or retain ihem if they chose to depart, for either of them could have mastered til three like me, nerved though I was to took up her pipe. EvTdeutly, though she ; V lien t came back to consciousness, eyed' uie uarrowly, she had not recogniz- ! tbc d'm ra's of a lantern illuminated the ed me. j hovel, and , Lucy, white, frightened and And now I heard a movement in tho sobbing, was cUngihgto my iieck. Path box beneath mc, that made my very heart ' er Caleb and Willie, with two of our standstill to listen a movement as of ; neighbors, were standing over mo, and in some living object, confined, and feeling i one comer of the room, bound fa.-t to aboutin U prison. I turned my eyes ; getber, were the man and woman, whose carelessly, while stooping down, apparent-! vel7 presence made me shudder and grow ly to caress Brao aud discovered two or j "'t again. threo rows of holed in, the side of the box. i Going home that night, with Lucy by They seemed to have been newly boared, niJ s(,. Willie in front, carrying the lan by the little ridges of Sawdust that sur- .ter.n- i1"'1 father, Caleb and the neighbors rounded them. Nothing more was need- bringing up the rear with the prisoners, ed to "convince me. Luoy was there, and Willie told ine the story: those holes were for ventilation 1 1 Bravo bad reached home about five medt the worst emergency that offered it- covc,i ,,cr imo tne wooos. l ney nau m SL,jf ' J tended to travel that night, to escape de- l'Bravo, my good doggy, do you think you could do an errand tor me?" I said playfully checking any expression of my emotion by strong effort of will. Bravo Wagged his tail aud barked joyfully. I took a sin all piece of paper from my pofket, but found I had no peucil. I had noticed as I came in, a place where fires had been built outside, aud going out I fouud a bit of charred wood, with which I returned to my task. My com panions were eyeing me suspiciously. "P 1-c-a-s-e, 'please b-r-i-n-g, bring," I said spelling aloud as I wrote, that they might her mc, "m-e, a-n, u-m-b-r-e-l-l-a." I spelled the note one way and wrote it another. It was to my mother and:rau thus. "Send father and the boys to me with out delay. I think I have found Tticy, a live and. well; ' For Heavens sake tell them to hasten.' Bravo will show them where to find me." Folding the almost 6lligible missive put in Bravo's mouth, tidling him to car- 'ry it home As if he understood- the er- rand on which :be wa g6ing,-aid - the re suit depending upon the faithful fulfill meuti of it, he started on .a bri.-k trot homeward. Tbat was a long long time -I sad there waiting for his return., Theevcuing gathered slowly,. till the darkness in the littlo cabin become almost impenetrable. The rain had leaked down through the i loose board roof, till I was w,et aud; chilly The bobbing sof tbe .wind audjrmu among ths trees, and the low mumbling couver- the only sounds thatinterrupted my .dreary flow of thought. Wiot if none of tl,p men folks had returned hyu.e! What jf 3rav0 slon)i j0,e Dqte, ,aud I was forced either to,jetiLain tbere all night, iu 'that desolate. aud uncoijiforfable position, or grope my way home alppp, and leave Lucy where she wasl .That I was deci- ded. pot, to dp ' At last tbe stprm broke "away. The cabin lightened a .trifle, and, shivering between, cold aud fright, Isaw, with a great feeliug of dinmay at my heart, that " tbe man aud woman were making prep IT 1 ea siecp, cieterminett to delay the crisis' afc long as possible. ! -" 'Presently tbe w0- man-camt and: took meiby the .'arm. giv. ingmo a rough feljuke,-and mufteriujr to the purpose that, they .iuu4 be moving, Uud I ought as well let them have .tbe rations to resume their journey. Ifi.i.Vii. rcs of their duds. ' of steel, to aid the ladies in spreading' 1 stared at thenv stupidly; ribbed my ' themselvu.,-. Several floors in a large buil nyes. and relapsed again into feigned se- dinr arc exclusively occopied to' their mi-uueonspious. Another, shake. . I did full extent with persons engaged in'cut-" not stin Still another and this time it ting cloth, tape, bone and steel" and man lifted me squarely upon my feet. I could ufacturimi small metalic pieces used : io hesitate no longer. The worst'had come, J constructing the skirt, for all of which and I must face it courageously. ' 'process, cunningly devised machinery is "Go about your buMnesslv Isaid r.oo- employed by tho-o who are engaged in' lutely, -standing up firm , and unflinching adjuring tl.e-e parts to each other, and before them; "but leave this box. If you brinino; order out of apparent confeVibnV carry ii oue inen.irom uere you will have to uiii me nrst. ' She stepped back a few pace3 and glar- eu at me with the malignity ot;a?,ueud Dut though I trembled from head to foot with fear, I did not quail or falter at her! while it conduces to comfort and beauty gaze. They looked at each other under.- j To illustrate tho difficulty experienced in' standingly, and then, as if some sudden f obtaining the exact desideratum, rattan, plan bad becu silently matured between j.cord, whalebona and brass have been sue-" them, they both sprang towards me, cesively employed and rejected, in whole Quick as. tho movement was, I had timei-or in part, as too brittle, too rigid, two to comprehend it, aud as the woman came 'flexible, etc., and of cour-c, much valua-' forward with the bound of an enraged treble machinery had to be thrown aside as ger, I stretched out my hand and plant- useless, with each chanue introduced. ed them full in her chest o forcibly that .Now, a kind of English steel is substitu- she reeled and staggered back.against the board wall. The next, moment the fierce, and suddenly plunged into cold oil and: ' brawny arms of her companion 1 feltjagain transferred to a bath of melted lead' 1 his strong hand upon my throat, hiii hot;' filthy breath in my face. I gave a quick 1 s,lei,t prayer to. licaven for protection, I 0I,a ew noiuins? more. .... . ro'ntes after they bad returned from . fruitless search. They had deciphered the ill-written message, and started inl mediately to the rescue. Tailing in with a coup'-e of tbe neighbors, they had asked the,D lo accompany them; and what had seemed such an age. of waiting aud j.suspense to mc, coujd not have beeu more tuan torce-quarters ot an hour -lut-y ua.j louno me jut alter I had fluted, and had1 no difficulty in overpow- lii- .t . ' er5n? and binding the wretches: who as- . Til- i sa,,eu me. mooing escape impos-iblc, , and bopiug by that means to obtain their release, they bad cotifessed to the abduc tion ol Lucy, and told them where to find her. When they opened the chest, she was lying tied, upon her back, her tunic I was torn off and used as a gag, her hands j fastened by the ribbons of her , hat, aud ber ancles bound. They had stolen her because they tho't she would make a valuable addition to , their number, and attract money by her j beauty and dancing. They had motioned alar wm - k fttrv urt.nn IM i t II f I n 1 nuui .uu iii&&a, uuu uu-jci ihvh.uh. of showing her some pretty immages, de- 1 ... - . i rit- t i tectiou, aud. uot compel her to exhibit herself tijl they were safe, from pursuit; but their plans were thwarted, and they were punished by imprisonment. Many years have passed since then. Father aud mother are sleeping side by side in the churchyard. Willie has just graduated honorably at college, and Ca leb aud f shall occupy the old homestead. A little Lucy, with blue eyes and brown curls, now sits upon our Lucy's kuee, and calls her mother. The New-York Boy Preach :r. . We have a new prodigy iu this city, iu the person of a boy preacher. lie is a- bout hlto n years of ae; His name is Cranmond Kennedy. He is a Baptist, and belongs to the. church of tho llev. ; 31r.. AdamSj-on Christopher sjtrcqt. lie is a convert in the late jreyivalj has al ready been licensed to preach by At j Church, and is just now attracting 'arge I 'i crowds to hear him. His style" veho- ment: his sermons have iu i'iC,u mueh ,method; he speaks wholly extemporanc- ou-iy, anu nis svsiem 01 ""-"'yrj -v.- nj. . .1 to be miitnie and nfler ttC School of ; iii. i.ni.rwlAi-;! 'otid more COtlSCrV- 1 ialivc schools'-of iA y 'He pfeaches j and speaks, imnrly ev,;ry flight. Ilia hou-e-Tare "crowded to overflowing; and I A pint of water will make 216 gahons' lor ! scroll he will 'be the great attrac- jof eaiu, which will supply force enough tron of our city." t1-"" " tto.caiie a Wright of thirty-seycu toos a fN. Y. Corretipondence of Boston Jdufnal.t fopt high. New Count.V A bill has bceniutro-j . Strawbcrrrics are vended in the streets' duced iuto the Legislature, prbvidiug for of Augu.-ta, Ga , tho crop is said to be a-. tbe formation of a new uounty, to nc can-, ed '?Maiiou," from portions of the 'eouh- ty- of Erie, Crawford, and Warren. IIlGUbi' COMI'LIAIENTAHV. TbeLy-: we re tuey uake, sin ii uai s a prew eominVGuzettG S:,ys:-"That exceeoing- "jP "A place where ihey brcw,, ly useful body, tae Pennsylvania Legisla-j "What's a gallerylj 'Ti bi-a. placo turej adjourned on Thursday. Last year where there js gals. . . it sold the best of "the public improve-! .. j ments of the State, and this year sold the! A Luuatio once informed his physician balance. If it will sell the Capitol next who was classifying ca-es of insanity, that yoar. we do not know qfanyt.bing else be- he had lost bisits by watching, a. .poli-- longing io me oato.io sen .uiejjcgiaitt- turc sold itVclf many years. ago." The 'Hoop Tradj ' Douglas & Sherwood.-tho hoop-skirfr manufacturers, turn out 40(H) skirts eve- ry (lay a()!j constantly employ five, hue dred hnnds. beside- 1H0 sewin.' mnnlnnPR? so suys iho Journal of Commerce. There is used each wet-k not less than olie tbti Uoop-skirt making is a science, and one on which patient study has been bestow- cd, till by successive ttimrnrnmnha i n is. thought tn !. fnrnr.iMn m Jipnlth 'ted, after being subjected to a hih heat. to give it the proper temper and elastic! ty; Such quantities of tho material thus prepared arc u-c"d, that the railway tram winch lorwards the weekly instalment . - from Connecticut to the factory in New (York, is yclept the "hoop train," and of course, is regarded with more than ordtT nary, considt ration. The factory, with its industrious population of 500 young women, is an interesting place to visit,. leterday was hydropatbieally ' horri ble, liquescent, lymphatic, oozy, humid', bilnastic, drizzly, sploshy, rainy, stormy, .regurgitory, in fact wet. The heavens were adumbrated and obtenebrated with caligneoiis clouds, through which ftoVcin tillation, coruscation, fulguration or even slight lucidity could reach us from the luculet.t and ffulijent sun, eclipsed as he alwaS bv the onaeitv of r(.i.iiTnlir:fii. nbn. I - r 1 j - j...w nomena. It was a beautiful day for the study of hydiodynamies, and the rearing of juvinile ol the genus anser; but for auy anthropomorphous being, except mer maids, it was unendurable. All day long it was im inanely stormy; every brcezu brought tbe flood, as though the larth was to be converted into an aauanum as . complete as that which distinguished the days of Noah. -Late at night the storm I . - c was keeping it up and'pou'riug down dis mally. -, Salmon. . There is, perhaps, no fish in the cata logue of the finny tribe, superior to our Susq'uehauna salmon, and thy appear to be unu-ually abundant this season. Wo understand that over 'Z thousand of these fine fish were taken from the outlines of the different fishermen, between this -place-and Selin-grove, on Wednesday night Soa.e of the largest of these weighed o ver ten pound.-. Suiibury America?!. The expenses of our Government,- un-' der Mr.. Buchanan, are said to be half a million of dollars more a week than tbe revenue. This it running iuto debt pret ty rapidly. A Hint fou the Season. Th'o sim-" ple-t and best way of preserving woolens through the summer from tbe destruction of the moths, is to wrap them well up af-' ter brushiug and beating tbeui, in cotton or liuuu cloths. The moth can pass neither Two covers well wrapped around, and secured from the air will be effectual. An old sheet will answer, and savo all expense of camphor, &c. Money IUturned. The Seceetary off the U.S. treasury received ou Tuesday a week, a"fteen hundred dollars iu Treasu ry iotes from an unknown individual fn Jvrfiv York, who states that ho bad cheat ed, the goierumeut. to that amount du-" ring Geueral Pierce's Administration-- ITas good olfactories the young lady who "can smell a piiuter two huuJrcd, vards. ' i r t....i : e- - t h iuui.j., sun.pvi u. i.hu. ' 'J' iuiui-, (jcauug uia uuiuv uicu ic- r i i c i i.:. ,i:.wi . tly at Lne, Pa Duudaut p p..fihitions from a new school-book: " i'John, what's a bakery?" "A placo" 'it turned hisain, nnu.., . 4 " ""r.vr." - v IU I; !! Hi J