COL DEMOCRAT, LEVI L. TATE, Editor. AND BLOOMSBURG GENERAL ADVERTISER. "TO HOLD AND TRIM THE TOKOII OF TRUTH AND WAVE IT O'ER THE DARKENED EARTH." VOL. 15-N089. BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1801. $2 00 PER ANNUM COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT.' PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY, BY LEVI L. i'ATE, IH BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA. OFFICE h lAf mw Uriel 'IU Court Unit. "Dtmecratlc lltal Quahtri.' TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. II 00 In advance, for ono copy, for ili monlhl. 1 7 In alvance, for one copy, one car. 2 00 If not paid within the first three raontln. 3 55 If not pa d within the first all monthl. i 50 If not paid within the year. C7- No subscription taken for leu than ill monlln, ana no paper discontinued until all arrcaraios shall have bsen paid, Sj" O'dlnarvAnviRTiiiMiaTi Insetted, and Jod Work lecultd. at the eitabliatiuJtmcoi. VOLUME 25. liis. If a schoolboy Lave the organ of do structiveness, you may whip hlin for kill, ing flics, but you must not wonder at him. If a youth but this brings mo back again to my subject. I never could t:ll how manv of l!in Z&'ui&'&M"1 ' 'Jl03 Vled had a ercat , no doubt. no was a sau dog a Don Juan a sort of Giovanni in London and he bade fair to be a Giovanni in but that was his business. called back by an anonymous note, at nine the same craning, Select lltocirn tYathing Ion torrnpondtittt cf tht Prist. Poem by the Late t'ul, U. I), Baker. Oh, the sweet woman I It is almost in- credulous. He must have dealt in magic. It was a perfect blessing to bo near him ..I. .... ' lu vatsu me ngnt anu neat of the thousand glances which fell upon him, and of which you caught a few stray ones, though only Dy accident. Lovely women fell into his mouth like ripe plums. He had Olu In my comments upon the lamented Col. thew' rhoy a11 lo"'l him, and ha Baker, I stated that, in addition to his lov0(1 lIiera H. His soul was as huge as many other intellectual gifts, he was a fine St. Peter's, poet a remark that Was rnriim-nil lit? tnnnu 1 with surprise. I am permitted to publish one of his fugitive pieces, written by him twelvo years ago, and now in possession of an intimate friend in this city. Observe how the last verso applies to his fate A WAVE. TO Doit thou seek a itar, with thy iwcllinf cren, Oh I ware that leaveit thy inuther'i brent 1 Ueit thou leap from the priioned depths bslovr n icorn of thelrcalm and conitant flow t Or art thou aeaking some distant land To d i In inurmer upon the strand I Mai Ihou tatei to tell of the pearl-lit deep, Where the wave.uhrtmcd mariner rocki in sleep f Canit thou speak of navies that lunk in pride lire the roll of then thnndor in echo died I What trophiei, what banners are fronting free In the shaJony depth) ol that silent seal II were tain to aik, aithou rnllrj.t afar, (Jfbanner. or n.nrin r. ihip uripai : It were vain toseck in thy i, rni) face Some l.ila (jf tho sbrronftil pa.t to trace. Thou art in-llui-u:li. tho i art rlathiiig r-, How nl i are the questions no aik of III. u! I to am a nave on a stormy sea , ltoi am n wanderer drn-.il like dice ; I too am seeking u diatant laud To be loit and gone ere 1 reach the strand ; For the laud I seek ii u wnvelers shore, And tlisy ho once reach It shall wander i.o more. afuuviE Select Stovn. HUSBANDS VS. WIVES; OR, THE GREAT PRIKCII'LE. Ono of my peculiarities is a strong ten dency to differ in opinion from ether peo ple upon almost every possible subject. 1 never mouth the matter I come out roundly " What are jou thicking cf Fred ?" said I. " Caroline,'' he answered. " Ska who sailed ycsteiday for Enc land?" b " Yes I love her." " And she ?" He rose and opened an cstritoire. Is it not beautiful '' Tho sweet relic of golden sunshiny hair lay curled charmingly in a rose colored envelope. It did look pretty. But " Has Caroline such light hair!" asked " I never know I always thought I was observing only jc.terdav that surelv jou have made some mistake see what is lhat written in the paper ? "Julia." Fred hastily looked agaiu in the little pigeon holp, and drew forth another roso 1 oolorcd envelope another and another. I smiled so did he. i " What a vile, narrow prejudice it is," ! laid Fred. j "What?" I " That a mau loves only once. I have loved twenty, fifty, nay u hundred times. I always love some one. Sometimes two at a time sometimes twenty." I " Heartless 1 exclaimed I. " This is not love! Love is sole, absorbing, pure, constant, immutable.'' " Hark ye," said Fred, "1 seldom cease to love. Adding another aurrcl to rln. w n - I have no doubt the reader is fond of Jocs cot ia" tha striking out of any roast beef and plum pudding. Now, I detest them. .Nothing could bo more gross, earthly, stupifying. Besides, no wan tound of such stuff, does, ever did, or ever can, sit down to a meal without ran Ming into excess, Ibon comes custard, ot the others. I here is no limit A mm of soul loves just as he happens to be placed in relation to women. 1 am warm ed by them, as when I stand in the sun shine. B;causc I have s garden here Whcio the beams ol the god of day fall on . . - i i.i ., ice cream, fruit, almonds, raisins, wine l"3 -"""'"eia mm a piuasnig ardor must You riso with a distended ftomach and 1 not fccl tlju warmth when I stand in heavy head, and stagger away with brutish your garden yonder? It is agfeatprinci apathy, I am for light diet milk, rice, fruit sweet, harmless things of nature. No lamb bleeds for me. No stately os is slain that I may feast Old mother earth supplies my slender appetite. Tho deep, deep spring, clear as crystal the innocent vegetables ethereal food. Thus I am as pie-should the object of my early love die, must I be ever thereafter dead to tho most exquisite of human passions? Death is only absence. I know twelve pretty women. They are better than men. Na ture made them so. They arc all differ ent all excellent all divine. Can I be deaf? Shall I deny that their voices arc !.bU as air. I am keenly susceptible to , wy moral and natural beauty, which i Ewoot -their hearts tondor their minds .1 .1 enthusiastic beef caters are I clear and intelligent? No. I love them 1 differ from every body in another all Julia, Mary, Fanny, Helen, Henri iiiug. I believe in love at first sight. ,ctta J1'"' 1 cover think of them without iVo ought to be able to tell in a week stations oi uoiignt. whether a woman would do for a wife. The judgment of truo love is intuitive j a glanco and it is done. A mau ot genius has in his own imagination a standard of the object of his love an uuexplainablo ijodcl the prototype to which exists somcAvhero in reality, although he may never have seen or heard of her. This is Wonderful, but it is truo. Ho wanders about tho world, impervious to all the deli cious, thrilling, and soul melting beams of beauty, till ho reaches tho right ono. There are blue eyes they aro tender, but they touch not him. There aro black thoy arc piercing, but his heart remains whole. At length, accident flings him in to contact with a creature ho hears tho tones of her voice ho fecla tho warm streams of soul shining from her counte nance. Gaze meets gaze, and thought parkjes into thought, till tho magic blaze is kindled, and they fall in love. It sometimes happens, that for one mod el in tho imagination of this man of genius there aro accidentally two cr three proto types in real lifo j or, rather, he has two or three differtnt models, It is a great mifortuno for a man to have more models than one. They lead his ostray. They involve him in difficul ties. Thoy play the yory devil with him. And yet metaphysicians and phrenolo gists ought to know, that it is no iffsir of Fredrick felt a hand upon his shoulder. i He looked up. It was Mrs. B. his wife. I " The d 1 1" said he. " I am thunderstruck 1" exclaimed Fred to me. " The world is at an end. The sun is out. What I Kate my dear Kate?'1 Tears gushed from his eyes. " I saw it myself," said the servant. " Kiss her !" " Six times," said John. Frederick caught tho pistol, and point ed it at his head. I wrenched it from his grasp, " Come with us," I said. "Fcrhap3 it may be a mistake.' Wo opened tho door toftly. In tho next room sat Mrs. B.j at her feet a richly dressed young soldier, who kissed her hand, received from her a lock of hair, swore he loved her, and left her with an ardent embrace. " I am suffocating," said Fred. " Hush !" I exclaimed, "see there is another. How familiar hs seats himself by hor side takes her hand" " I shall strangle to death. " " Patience 1" " Dearest I'oloncl !" exclaimed Julia. " The other was only the Lieutenant,' whispered John " I am ble3eed with too few euoh fuith ful friends.'1 I held 1' red still with tho grasp of a giant. " That I love you I cannot deny. A woman of sonl loves just as she happens to be placed in relation to men. Sha is warmed by their noble characters, is when she stands in the sunshine. It is the great principle." "Loveliest of thy sex," said her com panion. Fred burst forth, levelling both pistols at tho Colonel. Hu pulled the triggers but they did not go off. Pistols loaded with saw-dust seldom do. The C!olor.el uttered a scream, and fled " Madam,'' said Fred, swelling with in dignation, "have you any more of these aflVuionute friouds ?" " Only eight, my dear husbaud. Why what puts you in sush a rngc " Perfidious wretch 1" " Hear me," said Mrs. B. solemnly . " When we married, I intended to devote my life, my actions, my heart to you irom you I expected tho same. 1 can sco no distinction in our relative duties towards each other. Love must exist on both tides or on neithor. Whatever may bo the opinion of a heartless world, a 'man of sour and of virtues makes his wife" " I am not to be preached to, traitress,'' said Fred. " I leave you now, forever ; but not till I take vengeance on my new militany acquaintances. M'hero are thoy ?" " Thoy are here," she answered. The door was thrown open, and the two officers, with ihcir chapeaux off, were heard giggling and laughing in a most uumilitary manner. Fred soon discovered the truth, and I read to him his moral. Hnsbands, all, remember that wives havo equal anguish and shamo with your selves, in receiving a share of affection, though thoy do net possess your despotic power in extorting it. The slightest dere liction, even through only the carelessness of a moment, on tho part of a wife, stamps her forever with ignominy and pain j while tho absurd customs of society allow to a man a greater latitude in slighting, nc glecting, and deceiving her whoso happi (!rl)otcc iiXisccllcmm Tho Chargo of Murat at Eylau. It is at Eylau that Murat always ap pears in his most terrible aspect. This battle was fought in mid winter, in 1807, was tho most important and bloody one that had then occurred. Franco and Rus sia had never before opposed such strength to each other, and a complete victory on cither sido would havo settled tho fate of Europl. Bonaparte remained in possess ion of the field, and that was all ; no vic tory was ever so like- a defeat, The field of Eylau was covered with snow, and tho little ponds ,hat lay scattered over it wero frozen sufficiently hard to bear tho artille ry. Soventy-ono thousand men on ons eidc and eighty-ono thousand on the other, aroso from the frozen field on which thoy had slept tho night of February, without tent or covering, to battle for a continent. Angercau, on tho left, wvs utterly routed in the morning. Advancing through a snow storm so thick ho could see tho one tie, burned with increased lustre, while his ral station houses. They make their ap- A MAN Killed nv a Suaiik -On clear and steady yeico, heard ab.vo the pcaranco at tho bar wearing an air of in- Sunday last three seamen bo!on,inC' to tho turmoil of strife, was worth more than a jurcd dignity, and in a censcquontial tone American ship T. W. Sears wero bathinc thousand trumpets of ohcor on his follow- demand the cause of their arrest. Habit- alongside tho vessel, when ono of them wal crs. At length length seeing a knot of uatcd to seeking tho station-houso as a seized by a shark. Tho monster first Russian soldiers that for a long time kept , lodging-place, thoy aro under tho impress-1 seized him by the shoulder, bnt tho f, a devouring fire on his men, ho wheeled j ion that thoy went there tho night previous with which he rushed on his victim causod oi olioico, and indignantly repel the chargo him to loose his hold, driving tho unfortu of being found drunk and asleep on a eel- t nato man several feet out of tho water., lar door. Thoy listen attentively to the ', Tho shark again seized him by tho back suamuoiiy oi me ouiccr wno arrcstod mem, ) and nnany by tho neck, and disappeared at tho conclusion of which thoy look into 1 vfilh his prey. All this happened within the officers face, and remark, 'you're a plain view of his shipmates, who immedi- perjured man,' or perhaps, in less chnsto i.;n I j i ,. .. .. ma nuiau una urove in mil gallop upon their leveled muskets. A few of his guards that novcr allowed that white plume to leave their sight, charged after him. Without waiting to count his foes, ho sei zed his bridle in hs teeth, and with his pistol in ono hand, and his drawn sword in tho other, burst in headlong fury upon them, and scattered them as if ahurricauo had swept by. Murat wa3 a thunderbolt on that doy, and tho deeds that wore wrought by him will furnish themes for tho poet and tho painter. " llio Buraruor." Tho word 'Bummer' is a late acbuisi- tion to our lauguago. Neither Webster nor Worcester, in their respective lexicons havo noticed the term. Nevertheless, it is , ,, . , , one of much insignificanc, and is comprc- my, tho Russian cannon mowed down his i . . r . i . ,t i . o , .. . hensivo m its mean ng. It is used by ranks, with their destructive fire, w h lc tho ,u , . , . , , ' n. ', , . , tnosc aro ac3cbts m s an!? terms to do- wiiu nuru orucrcu to Cossack charge, came thundering on,almost hittin the French infantry with their long lancos before thoy were visiblo through tho storm. Hemmed in and overthrown, tho wholo division, composed of 10,000 men with tho exception of 1C00, wero captured or slain. Just then the snow storm clearing up, revealed to Napoleon the peril to which ho was brought, and ho immediately or ordcrd a grand chargo by tho Imperial Guard and tho wholo cavalry. Nothing was farther from Bonaparte's wishes or expectations than the bringing cf this ro serve into tho engagement at this early stage of tho battle, but there was no other resource left him. Murat sustained his high reputation on this oceasion,and prov ed himself for the hundredth time, worthy of the great confidence Napoleou pkced in him. Nothing could be more imposing than the battle field at this moment. Ranapartc and the empire trembled in the balance, while Murat prepared to lead down his cavalry to save them. Seventy squadrons 1 making in all 11,000 well mvuuted men, bugan to move over tho slope, with the1 Old Guard march sternly on behind. j I note a wretched, forsaken, dissipated man. I Whenever a man has become lost to a senso lofsh ame, destitute of tho means of living, I is an oojcci oi aension to the thoughtless, and of pity to tho compassionate, ho is styled a 'Bummer.' While tho 'Bummer' may occasionally be found in the country 1 village, he is peculiar indigenous to the city where ho and his confreres abound in 1 great variety and perfection. His haunts aro tho lowest and vilest localities, where his bestial appetites aro gratified to excess and where the lowest depths of degrcda tion aro reached in tho easiest possible manner. Hundreds infest this city, and can bo daily seen creeping along tho street pleading for alms in tho most importunate manner, or sneakingly on the lookout for ness is in iiis keeping. Of these customs "tho man of soul" will never tako advantage. fiST " Fellow Citizens !" said a stump I had withdrawn, of course. I am a bachelor myself. Curtain lectures are not iu my way. Mr. B. did not come homo to tea. I did not get up next morning to breakfast. So 1 could uot know what was the result. iu.s. j is ono o. tue very iovciiest wo- world) and the bcst g0vernment What charging on infantry, but squadrons of ,v" uwmro i nam peoplo cn the face of the globo enjoy more horses galloping through broken hosts that met, two or lureu . n rs u.easant enougn privileges than wo do ? Here we have ' gathering into knots, Hill disputed with but then every rcse has its thorns. f jiberty t0 spea! and libcrty of th(J prc3S) I unparalelled bravery, the red and rent " Only thiuk 1" said she to me, her eyes without onerous despotism. What, follow 1 field. moistened with tears, her check crimsoned citizens, is more desirablo than this. Do with shame, bur bosom palpitating with Y0U want anythinz more, my countrv- somc article which thoy may steal without the probability of arrest. Tho Bummer thrives best near a market house,and there are several localities noar the Centre mar ket where numbers of them rendezvous. No description can adequately convey a correct idea of tho Bummer. It is nec essary to visit his haunt to fully appreciate him. .Mrs (J keeps a groggery in a littlo weather-boarded shanty.that has withstood tho Storms of linnrK n nontitrv Df nn,.. ,f I - ' J j J t VUUldC ""'.""'i " " a,u' ,raa nl"0 agitated t has been neeessarv in rnnnir ., I,iM at this crisis, than when a mnnient hnfnrr. 1 : : n ., .... ' 1 i"g ucciiaiuuuiiy, auu tuis uas ocen dono nc was so near being captured by the in the most homclv m.nn,r Rr.,n,it Russians. ,l , . . . . ouuiiiv tuuao us iuuuuu L'usi oi wina Uut as he saw thos seventy squadrons ! would tnn.l.ln i .i, rn,l ,! uuu uu u IMUUglUg iroi prCSSlllS' na v t , nrnlla imi !!,,, ,) l,r,l ofi i, ...v.:.. .,t fir..". ... . J "fa"' I , I"UU1U w uural lDal, tions have tho apnearance of a bed quilt, Ctrnnllinri filf.ll.nlt tl.n r-hm f . . ' vuu .u.n OfcUilU IUI IU ,n nr. ftnnmneflr Af nnI1.nr...T,lA H.U. 1. ..v, . r uwcouustiuaBce. ; Tho rooms arc dingy in the extreme, and ' 'l,r n.H, nM.nn J , Ut-.l - ' . ' v...... b.u.,Uwi4 uuu ucaiUICU 119 the floors hlflrir w rri rlir-l T in fnnnt rr,nn. they passed, and the sabres, above the ;s Mt 3part as a bar.rooIn. One or two dark and angry mass below, looked like benches afford the sitting accommodations, thotoam of a sea wave as it crests on tho I Behind the bar alamls Air n i,.. c deep. The rattling of their armor, andi acd bioatcd. At timcs a3 ,,, h aj fifteon tho muffled thunder of their tread, drown I or twentv Bummers nrr, nr,r.r(,l ! od all tho roar of battle, a? with tho firm Uho small anartment. Thos who I, set array, and swift, steady motion they, bccn fortunate or unfortunate cnot.r-h lo bore down with terrible front on tho fee.- 6CCUre duriug tho day a sufHcicnt amount 1 he shock of that immense host wan like a of p0;!onou3 whiskoy to stupify them, arc falling mountain, and the front line of the I stretched on tho floor, amid filth and dirt. ilUsc,au au, wcui uown ituo irost worjc The others aro buisied in cursio", indulg beforo it. Then commenced a protracted iD!? ;n 0wCI,itv. or nlli r,iM, m n fight of hand to hand, and sword to sword, I for whiskey. Sho generally manages to keep all in debt, and as soon as successful begging secures a few ponies they are ban ded over to her, and credit is given to tho paid. language, assure tho witness that ho has sworn to a lie. To the magistrate, in iu dignant words, tho Bummer protests his innocence, but on finding that it is tho de termination of tho Justice to send him over tho falls for a fortnight, his demean or changes, he acknowledges tho justness of tho chatgo, and besccchsngly bonj for mercy. Over ho goes, however." Tho cells of tho third and fourth corridors of the prison aro set apart for tho accommo dation of Bummcts, and generally thoy aro well filled. Not unfrcquently more than half the prisoners confined arc of this olass. A visitor to tho jail, in passing along theso corridors, h stopped at every odl door by the occupant, who begs a chow of tobacco, and if the visitor is not addicted ately lowered a boat, and after taking on board tho two other men proceeded to drag for tho body. They had been occupied in this way for somo time, when the shark was observed to rise somo distanea from them, still with the body of the helpless man in his mouth, shaking it, as is de scribod, aa a dog would a rat. Tho mate of tho vessel armed himself with a board ing pike, rowed toward tho spot, and the shark was so much occupied with his vic tim that he allowed himself to bo stabbed sovoral timesboforo di appearing. Think, ing the animal had recuived his death wound, the boat returned to the ship, but scarcely had sho arrivod alongside, when the shark roappoarcd as before. A bar, poon was now taken into tho boat, and the shark allowed himself to bo apnroachod sufficiently near to bo struck, whon he to tho uso of tho weed, ho is blessed with aSa'D disappeared. Lino was now paid a curse, and told to 'get out of this.' Un- oul aD(J the boat was towed fomo distance less committed as a vagrant,tho Bummer's till, assistance arriving the monster was term of imprisonment is over in two weeks. 1 k'dkA by repeated stabs of tho lance. As rapid as his feet will carry him, ho j JIos' of the contents of his maw wero dis hurries from the jail to his haunt, where a gorged while being hauled on board, and few more days are spent in wretched and on '"g opened some fragments which woeful dissipation, and he again finds wcro unrecognizable, an eight poun tin of quarters in prison. This 1Kb is continued, 'preserved meat, wero all that was found, with occasional, but brief, lapses into so- 'ko shark was of tho species known as tho hricly by the survivors, whon the coroner ground shark, and about ton feet in length, checks their downward career for a few Tho girth of tha body was immense, and days by holding au inquest over the body , is stated to havo been eight or nine feet. ot ono who did not wake from his drunken otravs limts Smgaparej JiugusiZl. sleep, or who, staguering along the dark ness of night, stepped ito tho dock and found death in an clement whioh he had scrupulously avoided tho use of for years. Sleep. Ten- Men Starve to Death in rnt Arctic Keg-ions. Tho whaler Alert has arrived at Peterhead from Cumberland Straits, whero the was frozen in the whole tarn, winter, tne crow havinfl suffered as m the cavalry action at Eekmuhl. Tho clashing of steel was like tha ringing of countless hammers, and horses and ri ders were blended in wild confusion togeth cr ; tho Ilussiau reserves wero ordored up, and on these Murat fell with his fierce horscmon, crushing and trampling them down by thousands. But tho obstinato amount paid. At night tho miserable wretches stretch themselves on tho floor.or driven from tho houso, scok lodgings in tho police station, At oarly dawn they aro abroad, going from door to door, begging a mouthful of victuals,or besieging persons Tho first sensation of drowsiness is na- great privations, and ono-half died from turo'soall for sleep. Walking shows tho cola aI"l scurvy. Tho Alert left Peter- hody is rested. After tho degree of . last SuramW not intonding to Wjn. strength of which the state of tho system ter in t!i0 'or'a hut, after several unsue- is capablo is restored by sleep, longer stay eesfful attempts to get out ofthe Gulf,was in bed only re. axes. Ho perrerts reason obll'SC(J to but back and boar up for Kit- who by a habit of artificial exeitoment, tsrtoa Here the sufferings of the keeps awake so lato that he i3 not ready cre,r iur'lD5 a '"g Arctio winter were such to rise by daybreak nature's undoubtod as cannot to described. Unexpectedly signal for quitting repose, obonienco to Jcta'no3 iu that dark and desolate region which secures a desire to rest at the fit and ""provided with the comforts necess-r hour. Somo pcopla close their shutters ory aT subsistence in the intense frost against it. George III, consultod, his nhicl1 provailod, one after another of the household physicians teparately, as to the crow succurnbi'd to the combined effects of modes of life conducive to health and Ion- colJ and bcurvJ'i UQtill tho half of tho crsw gevity ; as to the importance of early ri- (ten) ero dd .leaving only the other ten, ting there was full doincidence. did pea fflui:l1 eBfecMed by disease, lha horror pic, examined cs to tho cause of their Ion- '!aous Winter maybe conceived, ar gevity, all agree that they have been in 83 ,ho motions with which the lurri- tho habit of going to bod early, and rising ors would hail the appearance of this early, in debilitatod people, a degree of Jlar 8 1 U'P' me uniblo to bring the fever, or something rcsamblinr- it. eamoi vos'01 ho!ce themsslvei, tho Cantains of on toward evening going very early to an1 -l'ctiei ol Aberdeen, generously bodisofgruat consequenco to them. Ri. ,cnl two Doats ew on board tho Alert to sin? an hour or two earlier than usual of- ""iist tIle remainder of her arew, and ar- ten gives a vigor which nothing else can mcd M ws haT0 Mated. Dundtt Ai- producc. Many people, at waking feel e, , url,S(r- r Sententious and Sentimental. distress, " twelve I ho loves twelve, he says.1' " A wholo jury," said I. " It is monstrous," said she. " Monstrous indeed," echoed I, " What if I should love twelve officers !" Slid she. "Tit for tat,"said l. " Or six," said she. " Too good for him," said I, taking her hand. " Or three," said she. " Or one," said I, drawing her towards me, and kissing her soft lips. She was my only sister, and I always loved her. The plot was arranged. Frederick had meditated i journey or two dajf bat "rat Kussians disdained to fly, and rallied rtrofrr. "w,A IlOTrrt li Vict nniinl.n llirnin Art tlt ir iit.i Inn... I i . O O " " """"" ' "o UUS" "'va.ry on the streets for money. Frequently they wnrlll. find thn line rtAi'ft.wm.,nt UM.. nlmrnMn, rtn infant,.,, -r . . ... . . rctuan to the groggery with pockets filled with cold moat and bread, and after satis fying their appetites, if auy food is left, it is ecereted in somo crevice, and in somo cases, when fears aro cntcrtainod that it will bu stolen it is buried. If by accident or otherwise a respecti bly dressed person outers, the Bammors throng around him, claim an acquvintauco and insist on being treated. Mrs. C. is suro to put in a word, and in a sympa thetic tono assures the stranger that tho "poor creatures havo not had a drop du ring the morning." Tha Bummer knows no refusal. If tho stranrer attcmnti in leave, ho is seized by some portion of his I garments, and finds at last that to treat is ' men?" "Yes, sir cc I" sung out a red I Tnn.I In-fn- tl.to !a ,1. n.t- T o suck out of that 'ere flask sticking out of your pocket." Tho man who was lost in slumber is Mid to have fcund his way out again cn a light-marc. AVhen does a farmer act with great rudeness toward bis com ? When he pulls its can. A public speaker, like a hunting dog, should give careful attention to his points, Fanoy runs most furiously when a guilty It was during this tlrango fight that Murat was seen to perform one of those desperate deeds far which ho was so re nowned. Excited to tho highest pich of passion, by tho cbstacles that opposed bim ho seemed endowed with tenfold strength, and looked mora liko a superhuman being treading down helpless mortals, than an ordinary mau, Amid tho roar of artillery and tho rattle of musketry, and fallin" of sabro strokes liko lightning about him,that lofty white plunio never once went down, uisposmon to rise ; thoy loose it by maul- ging in a lethargic stato, or lolling awhile. Wo losa vigor by lying in bod in health, Custom in infinay bsoomci t habit in longer than for sleep ; tho mind is ei: eld age. tranquil ; the body is less disposed for ro- A man's name pauu around moil free freshing skep ; appetite and digestion aro y when it has a handla n lessened. After long or lata mental exer- Tokc tho word e fc t;on, sleep ,, a watch ; tho though s con- bj tLc world m tinuethcmsolvcs, effecting useless fatigue. u, . , Some peoplo cannot go to sleep ; they hope " 0 m W6 f raw's character by to find refreshment in an additional nap ; j what h0 loTC-at pleases him. anothnr and another leaves them moro 1 Small faults, indulged, are thieTes to languid ; they fancy themselves unfit for !" ln greater. exertion until they have taken a breakfast which they make no effort to merit. Noth ing breaks up the strength sooner than want of sleep at tho hour nature obviously designed for repose, marked, as well by tho regular return of day and night, as by our own feelings, if not prevented by or tificial habits. Labor which is light in the day, is burthensome in tho night. Tho accumulated stimuli of the day are suffi cient far the temporary exhaustion of the system ; the rest of tho night is requisito to recruit us for each successive day. Queer kind of lore a neuralgie affec tion. Moving for a new trial eourting a nc ccd wife. State's ovidenco a wretch who is par doned far being meaner than Lis com rades. Friond a person who will snist you because be knows your lovo will excuse him. If yon do good, forget it. ; if evil, re member and repent of it. Love is a compound of honoy and gall, Some peoplo aro 60 obtuse that ono mixed in various proportions for customers whilo over and anon it was seen clarini? 1 cho ahennr.t n.,rl .,.; , . -i... would hardly think they eonld have an ! Fnctiinna V.1 nfnnla r .-.I i. .i - a j - -.. jr iu k:s wear. ,. ' - .j.. ,u iiaiic through the .moke of battle, and the btar I Many of these poor creatures once oecupi- louU dueal"!- their bsppine.i.in order to feed Ibrir u. uvlm u, napoicou, anu snowing that bis i ed rcspeetablo positions in society, and not u I , , . 7, "r ir-ht arm" still nnlin ,j o..a:i ,..'.., 1 ... . . uy' ana not These who heed not God'i writ are often uu.requ uuy roy.rt their former condition forecd to boed tbe sh9rifrs, s a puliation iur misconduct. Not a day I right arm" was still uplifted and striking far victory. He raged lik'a an unlcossdlion ureld tV vanity, Why is the Utter G like the sun 1 e&us it ts thr nri;-i.i