Sunbury American. (Sunbury, Pa.) 1848-1879, February 28, 1852, Image 1

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J - v- i " ' ' v " f ' 4 ' ' ' ! ' 1 " ? ' ' ' ! 1 ' ' - .
; Ii: B. MASSER, EDlTOtt AND PROPRIETOR.
OFFICE, MARKET STREET, OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. '
1 jFamflg rtosflapcr-Dctootcir to JjoIWcs, aftcrnturr, ioralfts, jForefoit anH BomrsHc iictos, Science nni the arts, sicrlculturr, quartets, amusements, Set
M5W S15JUKS VOL. 4t AO. 41).
SUMJUKY, NOIlTIilLiniRIiANI COUNTY, PA.. S ATUUI) A Y, VK H It U A II Y 2 IS.T2.
OLD SKIUKS VOL. 13, NO. 93.
"e " " TERMS OF THE AMERICAN. '
TIIK AMKRIOAN in published every PntnrAay tit
TWO noi.l.Altt per. milium to lie itl litilf yearly in
ndviince. ' No jwh.t tit'initimietl until all arrcnrnpi aro
puift.
All fiimnnninitiins nr Icltern on lnicinow rr!titing to
4h offie! hi Imare attontioni mint lie l'(ST PAID. '
, TO CI.LM9.
Thre coniet to one aildroM, - 5 (K)
Povoii D Do It"'
Fifteen Wo Do an (HI
Five dollars in ilvme will pny for thrre ynt'a anb
tfcripttouto tlie Alilviidiil. ;
One Pawn or 1A tinea, tt tiinva
Dvcty nuliwqnrnt inaerlion,
Hk PqiiarO 9 tnontha,
3ix niontliS
ne your,
Knaineaa CmM of Fitre line", per nnmim,
iMerchanta nnd otliern, ndverli.iiiir by the
year, with the privilege of iuKiting
difftrent ntlveftitenieiit. weL-klv.
1 1 on
8.1
3i in
sim
Kl
Ullll
10 no
if Mrgei AiivertiiuiuonU, a. per agreement.
A TTOUN R Y A "l LAW,
UufiviO!' Bll'.'ndcd to in l!ie (Vuiiilii-K of iCor.
fhuinlH'rluiiil, Union, I.vconiiiig nnd Colunihia.
Ilrlcr to I
r. & A. UovouJt,
J.owrr tc Iinrron,
n.it ad.
ItcyiioMri, McFnrlnnd tc Co.,
rj.cfin, Good &, Co.,
J AmCS J. NAXXiXiB,
' " Attonicv pnrT Coimscllor at law,
... . STWLUIIY, I'A.
"ffTTIU. nttcnu faithfully nnd promptly lo nil
' profession t I'lisincss. in o-liuinl imIiiiiiI
;nd Union romitii-s. Ho is familiar villi "tlic
iormiiti lauirunBO.
Ol't'ICE :- Oppocilo tlio "iiawromc Hjubo,"
4 few doora from tiie Court Houki.
Kunhury, Autr. Hi, 1831. ly.
.SPRING AMD STUCMES CLOTEII'TG-.
EVEllVBOUV flionld rmlir-.pn tlii o porln
liity to buy CliOTHINO for Men. Youth
:and l!on, nt auch piii-os n lii'vp nrvrr yet lw.-n
Jsiiown "in 'Vii Ci'V, "t fJMOIJ(3B CI J.I.VS
i.orniNJ r,sT.iu.f iiM v.st, soutii-Uimi
''oriier of Murkrt nhd Pccond Ht -ecls. rhil.uU !
iliia, finlirnrin; a clioico of tlie Iirst, most dccirii
Jhif, olid fiichioniililo
.... DRESS AND 1T.0CK COATS,
3Ialiit Cloth do., I.inrn )Jril!iiiB do,, Twcnla,
Ac, &c, logclluT with u great variety of
'. Ecy3' Clottuij,
. 'oniiislitis of Snrk Coats, Polki ,T:ie .ts, Slon
'.ey JiirkotH, Vests nnd l.'omiJ Jackets inndo of
'Tweed, I.inrn Drilling, Cloth, Alpacca, Keren
'inier, Doeskin, &e., &c. -
I'artiriilnr eare lias lieen t.iken to procure the
new atylea for Men mid Hoys Summer Honls,
J'Hiitnlootis, Vests, &.C., to wliieh lie woulJ iuxile
jiee.iiil nlteiilion.
Furnishing .Goods,
Consisting of Shirts. StocUa. Handkerchiefs, At.;
till of which are ollcred nt the lutnst rosnblr
tHish I' rirm, nnd as cheap a any oliier Clothing
Store, in the. Union.
I'arenta v;ho deire T?ots Ciothiko are far
tiestly imited to examine the Stock.
Country Storekeejieia ean le. areonimoJulal at
ery low ralca.
" - f:noKf:s cn.ix.
S. E.'Corner 'of Srcnnd $ Marlft Sis Philn.
April 13, 1851. tf.
LIGHTNING RODS.
THE nli.ritwr h eonstrneted LIOIIT
NINU KOD on true Philosophical prinei
jdes, by whirh buildings supplied with them ro
rendi-nwl perfectly ae.curo nirainst destrnrtion by
JiKhtniii't. The eonneetion and insiitalion of thn
Tod, wcll HsTTprcparatioii of tlu ground roil,
is on nn entirely new plan, making a more per
firt eondni'tor than any heretofore in use.
Measures hne tetn taken to secure Letters
I'atont for the improvement. I
Teraons deairous of scciirins their lives and
irowrty from destruction by liuhtnimr, can have
couduelors put up to their building in t!o most
p"erfei't and Hijlulniitial manner, by spiilyimr ei
ther personally or by letter, to the undersigned,
lit the following prices: " '
Yox 40 ft. with a good irrr plated point $10,00
For 40 ft. with gold plated point, filuli-
' 11 a dp, ' 12,M
And twenty cents for every additional foot over
frlv T. S. MACKEY. .
a'l'on, Pept. G, 1SS1 ly.
Condensed Reports of Tenna.
.Published, and for sale by the subsrri-
lenatliv Secaiid Volume of Allien' Cou
last lusylvaiiia Keports, rontaiiiing tho
lirat Wtiiues of Yeiites' Reports, and two
unie of ,f lltiiney t beporta. 1 he lirstvot
iiiiim i'VcontHiniiig Dallas' Reporla, 4 vol
liand, am.lea' Keports, volume I, U also on
roinplete v. The almve two voliiiiics are
t Dallas' Kiiji hmiselves, and contain all of
Keporta, wvoluuies, and all ot lvates
nf Binnry s h besides the two first volumes
nd will be pu. The third volume ia reudy
is immediaudv.
i Bunbury, Aujf. U. MASalKB, AiienU
0I.
ATIOi
Northuiube I
wounty, Ta.
I E subscriber reaps .
nd the public geneunfonns Ins friends
ear llotul in the toliat he has oaui
lurlnnd county, on tlr-diamokiu, Nor-
. lomiuerce aireeia, nr oi oiiaiiioaiii
"ihe formerly kept Unposito to the
aet-oimnoilate his guests, aq.!l prepared to
with good stabling. He triulso provided
and strict attention to business, experience,
sons visiting the coal region to induce per
eral patronage he has heretofore re tho lib
WILLIA.M!. Bharaokin, Apra 19, 1850 tf. yER.
HAM removed from hi old tstaiid,'i
Vine street, to J18
Ap. 53 Xiiiuit St., (btt'n CaVkill $ ft
wkara-ha baa constantly on hau l, . )
- BROWN STOUT, PORT Ei
Ale nnd Cider,
1
l
v
for home consumption or ainpriNo.S "Gad, Colonel, I'll do it ! Here's yotir
H. DColoring, Bottling, Wire and Uottlai' , . ' . ' -
Vinegar, Ac. For sale as aWe.
PUiladelphia, April S, I8ai.-iy.
Lyooioing Mutual Insurance Company.
, 1 H. J. U. MAKtiUK ia the local agent for the
' liisurunca Coinuoiiv. lu JNorthuniher.
y, and is at all time ready to
against bra on real ar peraoual
L..: ..i;..:.. r... l. -
prii , itai-tf.
cau's ectebrated ink,- awl also
lr alv, whulcale and retail by
1S00. II IJ MAbiXlt.
SELECT POETRY.
THE 1EACE CP ETJROFE.
! BY J. O. WIIITTIEB. '
' frrenl pi'are in Kuropn ! Older reiens
From Tibet's hills lo Dannlie plains !"
Si ay hur kinas niul piieais ; su uy
Thrt lying piophuu ol utir day.' ' ' '
Go lav lo rnrth a lislening ear ;
Th IraMip of mnii.nileil marehes hoar,
ThH rollin" of 1li cation's whorl,
The ehotled iiiuskel's murderous pnel,
Tlia niiihl iilar.n, lha nunlry' call,
Tho qniek-puri'd spy in hut unci hall,
Fiom Polar si'ii to tropin fen, .
The ilyiris proans of rxih.-d mm,
The Imllml cell. I ho palley' elKiins,
TIim seallnlil Bitiokina with ils sluins,
Order the hush of bioodimj shivea !
lVanc in ihe diingeoii vaull.i and graven!
Oh Fisher ! wiili thy world wide r.et ,
And snares in every water set,
Wlinse laliled ki's of lienven nnd lit'll
Bull ha d ihe p.ilriul's prison cell,
And open "vide Ihe tiantinet hall
VVheiB kinsrs ami prions liold carnival !
Wi'tik vassal nicked iii royal guise,
Buy Kaiser with ihv lip nl lies ;
B iso yaiiililer lor Napoleon's ciowti,
B irniieli on his dead renown !
There, Il.iiiitini Nt-apol it ian,
(.'iinveed senudal, loiilhed of God nnd mail J
Ami Ihnti, fell spider ot tho North !
S'reiehiiip thy ginnt feelers fn'ih.
Within whose wed Ihu fieedom dies
f)f nalions, eaten up liko ilies ;
Spei'.l;. I'riiicH and Kaiei-, Pii'-si and Czar,
If this be Penoe, pray w li it is War ?
White Aimel of the Lord ! unmeet
Th at soil aeeuis'd loi thy pure feet,
Never in Slaver) 's deseit (lows
The fountain of thy charmed reposo,
No Ivran'.'s haml thy chaplet weaves
Ol lilies and of olive-leaves,
Not with the wicked shah, thou dwell,
Thus saith the F.lernnl Oiac.le ;
Thy home is wilh the pore nnd free,
Stern herald of thy better day,
Before thee, to piepare. thy way,
The Baptist Shade of Liberty,
Gray, searr'd, and hniry-robed, must press
With blrrdhir; feet the wilderness!
Oh ! that its voire mifiht pierce the ear
Of piinces, trernhliii"; w hile l hey hear
A cry as of the Hebrew seer I
Kepknt ! God's kikcdum ijraweth near !
nr 7 :,
Numerous SiittcU.
CCL. CRICKLEY'S HORSE.
I have never been able (.nys Paul Crey
ten) lo ocertain the origin of the quarrel
between thn Crickley'siind the Drakes.
They had lived within a mile of each other
in Illinois, Ibr five years, and from the first
ol their acquaintance, there had been a mu
tual feeling of dislike between the two fam
ilies. Then some misunderstanding about
their boundary of their respective farms re
veuled the latent flame and Col. Crickley
having followed a fit buck all one after
noon, and wounded liiirt, came up to him
at dark nnd found old Drake and his sons
cutting him up! Thi.i incident added-luel
to the fire, and from that time there was
nothing the two families did not to annoy
each other. They hot each others ducks
in the river purposely mistaking for wild
ones, and then, by way of retaliation, com
menced killing of each others pigs and
calves.
One evening, Mr. Drake, the older was
returning home, "with his pocket full of
rocks," irom Chicago, whither he had been
lo dispose of a load of grain. Sam 13arstow
was with him on the wagon, and so they
approached the grove that intervened be
tween them and Mr. Crickley' house, when
Iip observed to his companion.
"What a beautiful mark Col. Crickley's
old Hoan is, over yonder !"
"Hang it!" muttered old Dodge, "so it
is." , .
The horse as standing under some trees,
about twelve rods from the road.
Involuntarily around then with a queer
smile the old hunter took up his rifle Irotn
the bottom ol the wagon, and raising it lo
his shoulder, drew a sight at the Colonel's
horse. '
"Beautiful!'' multered Drake, lowering
his riflt with the air of a man resisting pow
erful temptation. "I could drop old Koati
so eay !" .
"Shoot !" suggested Sam Earstow, who
loved fun in any shape,
"No, no, 'twouldn't do," said the old
hunter glancing cautiously around hitn.
"1 won't tell."' said Sam.
"I won't thoot this time, any way, fell
or no tell. The horse is too high. If he
was fifty rods of instead ot twelve, so there'd
be a bare possibility for mistaking him for
a deer, I'd let fly. As it is I'd give the
Colonel five dollars lor a shot."
At (hut moment the Colonel himself
stepped from behind a big oak, not half a
dozen pace distant, and stood before Mr.
Drake!
"Well why don't you shoot ?"
The old man stimmered in lomo confu
sion "That you, Colonel ? J-I was tempt
ed lo I declare! And as I said, I'll give
you a V for one pull."
Say an 'X and it's a bargin !"
Drake felt ot his ritle, and looked at old
Roan. "Wol's Ihe boss worth V he inut-
J tered in Sam's ear. " "
'DOUi iiuy.
v i he Col, pocketed thetnoney, mutter-
' Hang'j if I thought you'd lake me op.
fjtb high glee, the old hunter put a
anapon his rifle, stood up in hii wagon
jjw a close sight on old Roan. Sam
befo.chuckled. 'i he Col. put his hand
Gjj face and chuckled too. ,
out atwent lb" ' Thn hunter tore
Sam W, outh which I will not repeat.
Old liatonished! 'The Col. laughed.
' Drake : stirred ! '
3 Otht JUrl a' hi with a face Hack
vll'ect
pr-
r
Con -
"What's the matter with you, hey I
Fus' time Von ever strved me quite such a
trick, I swan !" and Drake loaded the piece
with great wrath and indignntion.
"People said you'd lost yotir nack o'shoot
in" observed the Colonel in a cutting lone
ol satire. ' ' ' .
"Who said so? It's n lie!" thundered
Crake. "I C8n shoot"
"A horse at ten rods ! ha, ha !" .
Drake was livid. Look here, Colonel, I
can't stand that !" he began.
"Never mind the. horse can," sneezed
the Col. "I'll ri.sk yon."
Orinding. his teeth Drake produced an
other ten dollar bill. "Here, I'll have an
other shot, any way," he growled.
"Crack away," replied the Colonel, pock
eting the note.
"Drake hid crack away wilh a deadly
aim, too but the horse did'nt mind the
bullet in the least. To Ihe rage and unut
terable astonishment of the hunter, old Koan
looked hitn right in the face as if he liked
the fun.
"Drake," cried Sam, "you're drunk ! A
horse at a dozen rods ho, my eye !"
"Just yoti shut your mouth, or I'll shoot
you !" thundered the excited Drake. "The
bullet was hollow, I'll swear. TIip man
lies who says I can't shoot. Lust week I
cut oir a goose's head at filtpen rods, and
kin dew it agin. By the Lord Harry, Col
onel, you laugh, but I'll bet now, thirty
dollars, I can bring old Roan at one shot.
The wager was readily accepted, and
the stakes placed in Sam's hand. Elate
with the idea of winning back his two
tens, and making an X in the bargain.
Drake carefully selected a perfect ball, nnd
even buckskin patch, and beaded his rifle.
It was now nearly dark, but the old hun
ter boasted of being able to shoot a bat on
the wing by starlight, nnd without any
hesitation he drew a clear sight on old
Roan's head.
A minute later, Drake was driving
through the grove, the most enraged, Ihe
most desperate of men. His rifle, innocent
victim of his ire, lay with broken stock on
the bottom of his wagon. Sam was too
much frightened to laugh. Meanwhile the
gratified Colonel was rollin? on the ground
convulsed with mirth, and old Roan was
standing undisturbed under the tree.
When Drake reached home, his two
sons discovering his ill humor and mutila
ted condition of his rifle stock, hastened to
arouse his spirits with a piece of news,
which they were sure would make him
dance for joy. -
"Clear out," growled the angry old
man. "I don't want to hear any news:
get away, or I shall knock one of you
down !"
"Hut father, it's such a trick "
"Blast you and your tricks."
" Played on the Colonel "
"On the Colonel V cried Ihe old man,
beginning to he interested. "Clad, et
you've played the Colonel a trick, let's
hear it."
"Well, daddy, Jed and I this afternoon
went out for deer "
"Hang the deer, come to the trick."
"Couldn't find any deer, hut thought we
must shoot something; so Jed banged a
way nt the Colonel's old Kuan shot him
dead!"
"Shot old Roan 1" thundered Ihe hunter,
"by the Lord Harry, Jed did you shoot the
Colonel's horie V
"I didn't do anything else."
'The devil groaned the hunter.
"And then," pursued Jed, confident the
joke part of the story must please Ihe fath
er, "Jim nnd I propped and hossed him up,
and tied his head back with a cord, and
left him standing under the trees exactly
as if he was alive. Ha, ha! Fancy thp
Colonel going to catch him ! ho ! wasn't
it a joke ?
Old Drake's head fell upon his breast.
He felt of h'13 empty pocket-book, and look
ed ot his broken rifle. Then in a rueful
tone he whispered to the boyi
. "It is a ioke; but if you ever tell of it
or if yon do, Sam Barstow I'll skin you
nlive! By Ihe Lord Harry, boys, I've
been shootin' at that dead horse half an
hour at ten dollars a shot !"
At that moment Sam Barstow fell into
the gutter. Jed dragged him out insensi
ble. Sam had lau-jhed himself almost (o
death. .V. Y. Dutchman.
Mai.aiu Raisins As soon as the grapes
begin to ripen, ihe vine dressers passed
through the vineyard and cut the clusters off
from thn vines, and leave them on the) na
ked ground, turning Ihein over daily, until
the heat of ihe sun above and lha" warmth
of lh earth upon which they lie, have
baked an I di-;d ihem, when they are galh
ered up, pot into boxes, and are ready fur
use. Cate lias lo be taken, however, that
Ihu fruit does not gel wet while undergoing
this process. .
A voung bi'ck, who belongs to the inde
pendent driiik-oi-let-it-aloiie-jii8t-a-l-please.
without signii:g-thu-plede.fralHrnily, jnjpcd
the question to a pretty girl of out acquaint
ance a tdiort time since, who brought a still
deeper blush to his always blushing counte
nance, by replying that as she had signed
a pledge to neither drink or tiaffio in ardent
spiiits, she- did not feel at liberty lo traffic
herself off for a hogsheal of brandy.
: Mr. Press married her second husband,
not because she admired the sex, but just be
cause he ias the size of her first proleclor,
and would "come so good lo wear his old
clothes out." Considerate woman that, Mrs.
Press "can't beat to see anything go to waste,"
as Mrs. Mullenay observed when she fried
her potatoes with an end of a candle. .' - , -.
When a dog gets his head fastened in a
fence., it i i uiibafo lo extricate him, unless
you enjoy the jikaaure of his acquaintance
THE POWER OF THE PENCE. , j
The Rev. J. B. Owen, M. A j of Bilston, in
the course of a valuable leclnre, recenlly de
livered in the Liverpool Conreii-hnll, in con
nexion with the Church of England Institu.
tion (and which wc are happy to see publish
ed in n seperate form) upon "Popular Insu
lance," related nn anecdote strikingly illus
trative of the power w hich lay in the hands
of the workitiginen to promote their own so
cial comfort and independence, if they would
only exert it. A Manchester calic.oprintor
was, on his weddinr day, persuaded bv his
wife lo allow her two half-pints of ale a
day ns her abate. He rrfther winced under
the bargain ; for, though a drinker himself,
he would have preferred n perfectly sober
wife. They both worked hard ; and he,
poor man, was seldom otil of Ihe public
nonse as soon ns the factory closed. The
wife and husband saw littlo cf eacli other
except at breakfast ; '.nil, as she kept Ihings
tidy about her, and made her stinted, -and
even selfish, nllowance for housekeeping
meet ihe demands npon her, he never com.
plained. She had her daily pint, and he,
perhaps, had his two or three quarts, and
neither interferred with thn other, except nt
o ld limes, she succeeded, by one little gen
tle artifice or nnnther, to win him home an
hour or two earlier at niuht, mid now nnd
then to sppnd nn entire eveninff in his own
house. But these were tare occasions.
They had been married a year ; nnd, on
Ihe mnrniim of their wedding anniversary,
the husband looked askance nt her neat and
comely person with some shade of remorse,
n ho observed, "Mary, we'n had no holy
day sin' ve were wed ;' and, only that 1
have'nt n penny i' th' world, we'd take a
janut lo th village lo see thee mo'hcr !
"WouldVt like to go,' John ?" asked she,
softly, botween n smile nnd a lenr, In hear
him spenk kindly as in old times. "If thee'd
like to po, John, I'll stand treat." "Thon
stand treat !" said he, with half a sneer,
"hast cot a forlun, wench 1" "Nay," said
she, "but I'n potton thn pint o' file !"
"Gotten whatl" said he. "The pint o'
ale !" was the reply. John didn't under
stand till the faithful creature reached down
an old stocking, from under a loose brick in
tho chimney, and counted out her daily
pint of ale in the shape of 365 three-pences
(i. e. C4. lis. 3d.,) nnd put it into his hand,
exclaiming, "Thee shall have thy holyday,
John." John was ashamed, astonished,
conscience-smitten, charmed. He would
not touch it. "Hasn't thee had thy share?
then I'll ha' no more," he said. They kept
their weddin;-day wilh old dame ; ami the
wife's little capital w as the nucleus of a sc
ries of investments that ultimately swelled
into n shiip, factory, warehouse, country
seat, a caniage, and, fir Blight Mr. Owen
knew, John was mny ir of his native bo
roiT"h at last.
Goi.n Silver, and Tis, in New Mexico.
A citizen of New Mexico has exhibited to
the editors of Ihe Washington Hepnblic spec
imens of gold, silver, nod tin, found in that
territory. The gold is in small panicles,
and was found mixed with copper. The sil
ver ore is of a very fair quality and appear
ance; and the recent discoveries of it in
New Mexico, the gentleman asserts, give
reason to form expectations that a very
large quantity of il may be obtained w hen
suitable exploration and examinations are
made. The tin, too, ulthongh seemingly of
little valuo w hen compared w ith the more
precious metals, is believed In exist in latge
quantities and, from its general utility, it is
thought will add greatly lu the wealth 'and
resources of this legion. . - .
riKi.icioV is Onv.iios. A writer from, Or
egon, hi giving a sketch of religious mallei s
there, bus the follow ing facts and figures ;
Populatiou of ihe Territory, '29,000
Methodist F.piscopal Church Ministers, 15
Methodist Protes'ant Ministers, 4
Congregationalist Ministers, 6
Baptist (Missionary) Minuter, 5
Baptist (Anti-Missionary) Ministers, 6
Presbyterian (Old and New 1 Mmibler. 4
Associate nnd Associate Refoimed Mini-
lers, ' " 3
Cumberland Presbyterian Ministers, 4
Protestant Episcopal, . . " J
The Directors of the Bank of France have
jnt had constructed in the middle of the
garden of that building extensive cellara
the niasomy ot which is nine feet In thick
ness. These cellars, which, al Ihe slighest
alarm, may be immediately filled wilh
water, and Ihe entrance to which is, besides
secured by thick iron doois, nnd intended to
receive ihe immense mass of gold and silver
both in coins and bars, w hich forms the re
serve of the Bank.' '
. .New MrmoD or Ampctativa Limbs.
Some operation hare been performed lately
at Vienna, by mean of platina wira heated
red hot, which hat been found to sever the
flesh with as much ease and celerity at a
knife.. . Oue great advantage offered by
tbit method, it tba very slight effusion of
blood caused by the wire -as a dividing
instrument. , . ,-, ; t . ' .
No Room "oa Both. Soma ona says
The ghost of Charlotte Corday flits through
the chamber of the Tuilerie.;' If tbit ba
tiue, Louii the Little had belter step out at
' People should not think cf courting repose
till thev have ' done conrtino the girls.
Love it a much a'sitanser lo contentment
a ruuiJer,
POETRY.
NEW ENGLAND.
by wHiTTira.
Land of the forest and Ihe rock
Ol dark blue Inke nd mighty river
Of mountains reared aloft to mock
The storm's enreer, the lightning's shock
My own green land forever I , ,
Land of the beautiful mid brave
The freeman's home Ihe mnrlyr's gtave
The nursery of giant men.
Whose deeds have linked wilh every glen,
Ami every hill and every stream,
The romance, of some warrior-dream !
Oh ! never may a son of t hint,
Where're his wiiinleiina steps incline,
Foraet the sky which bent above
His childhood like a Jream of love
The stream beueuih the green hill flowing
The broad-armed trees nbove it growina
The clear breeze through . Ihe fuliuge
blow inir :
Or hear, unmoved, tho taunt of scorn
Breathed o'er the brave New Kuglatid born;
Or mark Ihe stranger's jaguer hand .
Disturb Ihe ashes of thy dead
Tho buried ulory of a land
Whose soil w ith noble blood is red,
And sanc.tilied in every part,
Nor feel resentment, like a brand,
Unsheathing from his fiery heart !
Oh ! greener hills may catch the sun
Beneath ihe glorious heaven of France ;
And streams, rejoicing as they "mil
Like life beneath Ihe day-beam's glance,
May wander where Ihe orange bough
Willi golden trnit is bending low ;
Anil there may bend a brighter sky
O'er green and classic Italy
And pillaied fane and ancient grave
Bear record of another time,
And over shaft and architrave
The gieen luxuriant ivy climb J
And far townrds the rising sun
Tho palm may shake its leaves on high,
Where (lowers me open one by one,
Like stara upon the twillight sky,
And breezes soft as sighs of love
" Above tho broad banana stray.
And Ihroiiith the Brahmin's sacred grove
A thousand briiiht-hued pinions play !
Yet unto thee, New England, still
Thy wandering boiis nhnll stretch their
, arms,
And thy rude chart of rock nnd hill
Seem dearer than the land of pulms ;
Thy mussv oak and mountain pine
More welcome ihan the banyan a shade J
And every free, blue stream of thine
Seem richer than the culden bed
Of oriental waves which (jlow
And sparkle with tho wealth below.
Qistoriral.
OEK. AKTIIUK GO It GEY. .
In a "History of Hungarian War," now in
course of publication in Frazer's Magazine,
we find the following reference to nn officer
who occupied a most prominent position in
the Hungaiian nrmy, nnd whose conduct ex
ercised a most powerful influence upon his
country's destiny. He hud particularly dis
tinguished himself at the unfortunate battle
of Schwcchat, fought almost under the walls
Vienna, at w hich time he simply held the
rank of major. The tinsiiccesful leader in
the battle, Gen. Mora, was compelled to re
sign, and Kossuth immediately placed the
chief command of the national forces in the
hands of Gorgey. The writer then goet on
to sav t
Arthur Oorgey, formerly a subaltern in the
Austrian nrmy, resigned his commission at a
time w hen no patriotic motives could have
ptompled that step. Poor nnd unprotected
as ho was, il is to be ' presumed that the
slowness of a military career jatred upon his
impatienl'nmbition. 'Though no other pro
fession was open to him, he resigned the
scanty pay of a subaltern with Ihe same syn-
ie.nl' indifference , which he displayed, on
other moinentona occasions, and he devoted
himself lo a life of misery and piivalions.
Ill-dressed, fed, nnd lodged, he passed sev-
pral yeais in ihu chemical laboratories at
Vienna and Prague. Even at that lime, his
military bearing, tall and active figure, sa
turnine aspect, the roughness and studied
bintality of his address, his neglected hair
and beard, and the torn and filthy raiment
which uppeared a , matter of choice rather
than of necessity, awakened the curiosity of
strangers, and nmused and perplexed his
friends. He preferred, or pretended lo pre
fer, the coarsest food, and even of this ha
ate sparingly. He would leave his wretched
attio to sleep en a stone floor, or on the hard
and fiozen earih.' 1 it all this was much dis.
cipliue,. but aUo much temper and affecta
tion. He. delighted in appearing mysteriout
unaccountable, impf nelrablo. The obtrusive
contempt wilh -which he affected to regard
octal' custom and the opinion of men be
frayed his desire for notoriety.
When Jellachioh invasion threatened
Unnsary, Mr. Gorgey offered bit ervice to
the B uihyaiiji cabinet. They were readily
accepted, and he was charged witn tne or
irauiaaiinii and the commaud of a free corps,
and instructed lo cleienn ine vauaavi uo
Danube, near the island of Carpel ; While
on this station, hit troop captnred Count
Zichy-, a wealthy nobleman and descendant
. . t . i i p.i...
of an old Hungarian family. .Tbit man waa
taken under cireamstance which warranted
the Bravest suspicion. On being searched,
docament wore found upon him which left
no doubt that be carried on a treasonable
eotrespondence with the enemy, and thai he
was in the habit of informing Jellachich of
the plana and movement of the Hungarian
The practice . of. espooung the palionai
cause openly, and of continuing ecrol com
munication. , with the cabinet of Vienna, 'or
tbu Croaliau invaders- had become general
So great was the iadifferenee or daplicily of
the Austrian ofncei, who then commanded
almost all Ihe native corps, that an extensive
system of espionage wa carried en by Hum-
ber of officers, noblemen, nnd gentlemen,
who, doubling Ihe end, wished togriithe
good opinion and to merit tho thank of
either party. The rules of war of all nations
know but of on? punishment for a tiailor
and a spy. "' In the present instance,' the
culprit was a nobleman, a member of the
emperor' household nnd the scion of an il
lustrious and powerful family. The Count
Zichy was tried by c.ourt-marlial condemed,
and executed. The government nt Ptsih
confiscated Ihe condemed traitor's posses
sions, and the result proved that Major Gor
gey' act was as judicion a it was jnst.
It terrified the double leaders, and drove
them to Ihe imperial standards where they
did no harm whatever to thecaus'e of Hun
gary. Hence Majnr Gorgey had a twofold
claim on M. Kossuth's confidence. Hi en
ergetic operations against Ihe Croatian re
serves, which he captured, and his gallantry
at Schwechat, showed that he, at least, was
not inclined to dally with the enemy. The
"murderer of Count Zichy," ns the Austrian
journals called him, was a doomed man, un
less Ihe Hungarian struggle proved success
ful. No other native officer, had given
equal proofs of zeal, energy, nnd devotion.
M. Kossuth's selection of a commander-in-chief
was, moreover, highly fluttering to
the national Magyar party, and lo those
Hungarians who had served in Ihe Austrian
army. This class of persons received an
important additions to their numbers by the
w holesale desertion of Ihe emperoi's Hunea
rinu noble guard, who at an early period of
the struggle left their splendid barracks nt
Vienna wilh the hope of greater licence nnd
splendid fortunes in the ranks of iho nation
al army. The services of these young men
were highly prized by M. Kossuth nnd the
parliament. Favors and promotions were
lavished upon them ; nor were Ihe motives
ever suspected which induced those military
adventurers to discard the Hapsburg colors
for the Hungarian tricolors.
Mr. Brace, in his work on Hungary, gives
the following sketch of this extraordinary
man, and in many respects takes a simi
lar view of his character to that given
above :
There i much truth in the remark Gor
gey never had the least smypathy with ei
ther the virlues or the weaknesses of his
countrymen. A man of cpld, etern nature,
of few words and tremendous deed, he al
ways laughed over the Magyar fire, and
eloquence, and patriotism. Despite the
falseness he displayed nt last, there is
something striking about his character. If
he was a traitor, he was no common one.
His career commenced in a characteristic
way -by his hangingup, where he was
only a major, one of the first noblemen of
Hungary, for treachery, ns sternly and in
differently as if the man had been a tun
away drummer. The affiir made a great
noise, and brought his name very promi
nently before the public. His after course
was consistent with this : as cool in a dis
charge of grape, his officers say, as he was
at the council board. They have told mo
they have often seen him, in the midst of a
fearful charge around him, silting quietly on
his horse with pistol in hand : but not for
the enemy. The moment he saw a man
flinch, he shot him as unrelentingly a if he
had been a dog. He seemed to others utter
ly cold and indifferent to what men usually
Ion" after. He always professed, amid his
most splendid achievements, he would ra
ther bo teaching chemistry than leading an
army. When Kossuth sent him, on one oc
casion, 200,000 gilders (.100,000 dollars to
make a provision for hit future, and, in or
der not to offend him, enclosed it to his
w ife, he sent it back with ihe remark "If I
fall, 1 6hall not need il, and my wife can be
governest again, as she was before ; if we
are conquered, and 1 escape, I can be pro
fessor abroad ; if we conquer, and I survive
the victory, I need no money now !"
After oue of his great victories, the min
istry tent him certain decorations and orders
of honor ; be put them aside with a sneer,
that "such gewgaw were not the thing for
a republic !" People have told me that, af
ter the storming of Ofen, Iho only words on
the lips of the people and of ihe army was
'Gorgey ! Gorgey .'".but wilh all Ihe de
monstration before ihe quarters, he never
even showed himself, and remained coldly
wilbin, indeed expressing himself that "this
very bombardment was the ruin of Hun
gary !' He always sneered at everybody
even the friend that idolized him ; and
win almost , iho only man in Hungary who
wa perfectly indifferent uudur Kossuth'
eloquence. Amid the splendidly dressed
Hungarian officers, he always appeared in
bit old major't coal, and in boot which he
had not taken off peibaps for a week. ' A
lady told me she met bim, aftei the taking
of Ofen,' in a vile looking coat, wilh a great
hole in one of the elbow.' She remonstra
ted with him for wearing tuoh a thing. :
"Pooh !" he said, "1 ahall be known
through all my rag '." i T v '.
. 'Ah l"1 said she, ' pointing to ihe rent,
"see the Diogeuea ' peeping through the
hole !" at which be eeroed very unusually,
disconcerted. . t .. ; , - ,. ; -;
And I have no doubt the lady had hit the
matter eiaotly. Il was not that he was in
different to people' opiniouv He look ;tb
very couse to show hi owu pride ; bis ru
ling trait teem to have been a mean, nelfi.h
pride. 11a wa unspeakably jealous of
Koisuth,' and would lather ee Hungary a
hundred time tinned,' thaii that it shoulJ
conquer under him.
THE ORLEANS FAMILY.
The decree of Louis Napoleon, ronf seating
the Orleans estates, it i known o our read
ers, has created no little dissatisfaction in
France, especially among; those whom the
tWpei had railed lo hi confidential coun
sels. The Washington Globe supplies the
following statement of facts in reference to
this matter, which w ill be read with inter
est : .
The Orleaks Family. Loni Philippe,
who was an ambitions man and fond or pow
er, was still fonder of money, and always
kept an eye lo the main chance. On the day
before ha mounted ihe Ihronp, in August,
1S30, he executed a deed of gift a dotation
the French call it in faror of hi children!
of all his vast property, amounting lo about
two hundred million of france, reserving to
himself the usufruct of it, by which ihe con
veyance remained inoperative unlit after hi
death. The rponson for the deed of gift was
this: By the laws and usages of France, for
a long lime back, a person coming to the
Ihrono ceased to own private property, and
nil thai he was in possession of previously
became, ifsojacto, vested in the Crown ; that
is it was annexed to the sovereignty, let that
sovereicnty be where it might. This law
Louis Phillippe disiegarded, and thought that
by his dotation he would secure to his family
all his enormous wealth. , There was some
discussion about his proceeding at Ihe time,
but no resistance to il, as the "Citizen King"
was then loo powerful and too popular lo be
resisted. And so things went on during his
reign of seventeen years and a half. When
he went into exile in 1848, his dispositions
wilh regard to his propetty were respected,
nnd continued so to be until Ihe 23d of Jan
nary last, on which day Louis Napoleon, by
a decree of about a dozen lines, confiscated
to the use of the State Ihe whole of Ihe es
tate of Louis Philippe included in hi dota
tion, on the around that that act was illegal,
and lhat on his accession, his estates vested
by operation of law in ihe sovereign, with
out respect lo the person. The lawyers dif
fer about this; but the usage and ihe prece
dents are against tho dotation. Henry the
Fourth attempted to do the same thing lhat
Louis Philippe did, but his designs were frus
trated by the Parliaments then judicial tri
bunals and he finally acquiesced in their
decision.
S3000 Reward. A Mr. J. W. Ray, of
New York city, offers to mechanics, invent
ors, nnd others, in view of the many acci
dents occuring on railroads, and with a de
sire to promote the safety and comfort of
rail-way passengers, tho following premi
um : . ,
81,500 for the best invention for prevent
ing loss of life from collisions, and from the
breaking of axles and wheels.
$800 for ihe best method of excluding
dust w hen in motion.
J?400 for the best railway bieak.
f 300 for thn bent sleeping or night seat
for the railroad cars.
Quail. A Detroit paper states lhat with
in a few weeks Rowe & Co., of lhat place
have shipped to Philadelphia, and other
eastern i-iiies, the enormous number of
eighteen thousand five hundred and seventy
six quails, near five thousand eight hundred
g roust) of prairie chickens beside several
thousand partridges and other tare tit-bits of
the feathered tiibe. To secuie this for
Messrs. Rowe & Co., some four hundred
person are employed in this Slate, Indiana,
.Illinois, Wisconsin, &c. ,
WEATHER WISDOM. ' -
.The following are a few of the 'old taws'
relating lo ihe weather, which abound in
Great Britain, viz: . , . . . ,
'A rainbow in the morningr,
Gives the shepherd warning J '
'A rainbow al nighl
Is the shepherd's delight."
"Evening red, and next morning gray, t ,
Are certain signs of a beautiful day,'', .
"When the glow worm light her lamp,
Sure Ihe air is always damp." - ,
"If the cock goes crowing lo bed, '
He'll certainly rise wilh a watery head."
"When you see a gossamer flying,
Be sure Ihe air it drying."
'When black snails cross your path,
Black clouds much moisture hath."
"When the peacock loudly bawls,
Soon we'll have both rain and squall " ' ''
"If the moon show like a ilver sfiielJ,
tio not alraid lo reap your ueld."
. ''When rook fly (porting in the air,
It show that windy storm are near."
Br far Ihe greatest plank road project in
this country, says the Detroit Tribune, ia
that from Milwaukie to Mackinaw, through
the counties of Saginaw, Midland, Gladwin,,
Clare, Missaukee, Omuna, Calkusea, Antrim.
Charlevox, and Sheboygan.' The line CJl
said road is tome two hundred mile long,
extending through an unbroken wilderae.
'Archbishop Huohu intend to deliver'
lecture on the subject of religious liberty, a'
connected with the Cathnlie religion in that'
United State. We hope lhat he will' not"
forget Ihe condition of religious liberty In'
Europe, and routiaat lhat condition wilt re
liyiou liberty in t fc.it country, m- f . , , ' ,f
MoicbooESA, er Yellow Seat, ' tW
Oinaha Indian, asked if he ' had" not' a nan
lo speak to bia Great Father (Preeidertt Fill-
more,) "for, when had he ever stolen )'
or a home or a blanket from hiro V