1110 , 0oilfollUXIBLER. • 7-,0 , , t , t ;; ‘..l' I A SONG. ME,THEOENTIMNIAL CELEBRATION. .114%..EVA80 COLLEGE. . 'Astr'sh se4 nomeu. Whet did Peißahl clime bier ' flat hills and 'main* to elect, 1 .. The moods nein catamounta, • • , And red as data and scalping kukroo . That mike kits' hinds look queer Q ! ~q a j i 4w i ri.f roa4 England used to firing trigs a year , The crow. cane dewing through the air To pluck the pilgrims' corn, The "Peers tame snuffing round Medan. Wltene'ern babe was born. The rattlesnakes wore bigger Tonna Than the but of the old runes horn 'Tin dawns Wes at meeting time On eno Pstlanth morn. • ~..ButiltelltheY AM*. kllf• wiswg!n" °°", And pine tree trunk and limb Sprentt anew* tho leases In shape of alosplis slim ;. And out the little whinres were stretched , Along the ocurn b a rim, And up de little kind boater shot TO .kOCR OsilAwffP in brim. Andwhen at length the Culler rum. The eschinn.cocked his eye . 'At km"' tutoes maitre Alm Whose toil tail whisded by Hut, when the Greek and Hebrew words Came tumbling from their javti, Thel copper colored children all Raw scseeming to their squaws. —Andmbmwal . When College was begun ! Test nephews of the President, And the. Peafeasn'a son, (They tanned a liule Indian boy, A. indwn as any'bon ;) • Loral ! he*, the senior knocked about The freshman clan of one ! They had not thou the dainty things Tat commons now attonl, • 'But socenosk and , dessweesp . , Were smoking on.the board , • They dud not rattle roupd in gigs, Or'dash in loci tail blues, Butsilineys on Coreenenreenint Jeri The tutors blacked their shoos. God bless the ancient Puritans! Their lot was hard enough ;' , Bin bunt beset* made hos sneer, And tender maid* era tough; $O love 'nil faith have thrilled and fed One true borne Yanke whiff, And keep the kernel on the eholl The British found so rough , WHAT IS CHARITY I 'Tis not to palms when at my door A shivering brother islands, To ask the canoe that made him poor; Or, why he help &moods. 'Tis not to apunt that brother's prayer, Por fiats he ones had known; 'Tie not to lemma him to despair. A u ,i ma y thm I two woo. Tie voice of Chanty is kind, She thinketh nothing wrung; ToAwry fault she wometh Nor rauntoth with her tongue. in penitence •he placeth faith, Hope euvileth at her door, Relieved:A first, than safely sayeth, Go, brother, sin no more. THE OPEN HAND IT J. A. wierracmi. "HA"' wpm/offal the commit:on street; ha tutnalt its Wong, The htitryitiii dr the thonsand &et That bier Hies cares along." For the love of Heaven, good friend, a penny," said a feeble beggar one night to a wealthy merchant in Chestnut street. Bat the proud man, wrapping his rich mantle around him, turned scornfully away; and the beggar passed on. You would scarcely hive noticed the seem, yet there was is it a whole history Oldie ; the calm, unfeeling coldness of an inhuman apathy, and the agony of a break ing heart. The one went to his lordly home, where music and gladness, and the bright facets of his happy children were around the- hearth-stone; the other totter ed along with trembling steps to the wretched hovel, where his pale-faced wife awaited his return. The light flashed forth fives the rich man's mansion ; but the beg gar's home was desolate. Follow now and tell me which of the two was above the other; the one in his wealth or the other in his rags ! Through the whole of that weary night, did the beggar and his wife sit musing ,over the past, and looking for some light in the future. Above, around them, on ,all sides they beheld nothing but the gloom .which do ray might penetrate ; nothing 1 Int,the impenetrable obscurity which is .ever resting upon the: wretched 'and the aaseemS.!. For. God knows, God knows, if .ern do it* *CM all times, even at this Ammon., in.asspy• at desolate: home, by ,tom niebeesiorte hearth, thete ereclitoug Awentirturettlmemitthe weight °fan Oval Avhottlidltir douptict Atutobliugrwontett,pl. ,plat 4tirei ~ iti-, treat . deipondeucy t. , and itorighwijied-Huie i children • growing 'pale alkiiirhilidlt 11 1 / 4 inil Went 'Of brelid ! ' ••• • 40d lino w 4, .tiod kaowil, that ovenupon t apioseighbore .and our friends,.possibly r 4, i 4 the Otte next door; there is reeling ' l l *elerittese hand *of povertY, that rwkif of velyieh we can form no true .gesolionicut, until we shall find ourselves ilk them over dic last dead ember, and illitqllitit like them for Coed. " r tjtiif kttows that in the crowiled city, dioneends die and are buried without an 4-epitaph, , whose path through life was lornOofitorrow, who struggled on bravely • i'le"vhiligi Eta cheerfully, and nbvei carne op ttgiiili'd darkitess about them, but of .nsti Ir, . tor , r ' bltcrMy, h ear t. ~,.,,cod. we enter into the homes so near ~uati.i g o like the angels into every haunt of •we and grief, niiil touch the lips of the wretched one there, what toles of agony ihnuld we hear, one would tell us of • ,sweet dreams of his sinless boyhood ; tell us how lie started in Web all gladly and ge y, pug nrjth no - l'ear oiibe:unkitOwn Cu. tares how, for a time, the breeze was fair, and the sky blue; and the ocean calm, and, with his flag thrown' out 'upon the gale, 'he sped along bravely and rapidly, until his voyage was nearly over, when, just as he caught sight of, thede,aiy4pert ; I saw * temples and apirmtglittering in the sunlight; heard the mead of the hop, and the voices of the singers-wafted. hum its streets- , -juirt as the list billeow'was bearing hint upon its bosom to his destined anchor age—just then, just 01811, alas I the storm came down and the billow dashed him back, and the rudder gave way, and his gallarit vessel was carried out again, all crushed. and broken, a4housand leagues into, the sea. He would toll us, perhaps, how that storm passed by, and the sun shone out as brightly as before, and the sea became calm' again, arid that once more with blue sky above him, he sped along toward tho haven, But again the storm came down, and again, anii until at length his brave andgallant barque was thrown high up, upon the rocky reef t and left, a solitary hulk, to moulder is the -Another would tell his tale of love.-- How the sweet being whom he worship ped, die idol to which his yearning head gave homage, loved him and blessed him for many a long and pleasant year ; but that before long her cheek grew pale, and her eye dim ; and that now his only solace in life is to go at the twilight hour, and bending over, the grave where she lies sleeping in death; hold communion with her spirit, and pray to meet again' in the BOW Still another, an old and feeble man, leaning upon his staff, would tall per haps the saddest tale of all—that of a boy hood unblinieled, of a manhood waited, of I an old age comfortless an .wretc ted He ' would tell that from his youth up, as the days and weeks and months passed slowly on, the gloom had deepened, and the guid ing star gone out, and that now he was on ly waiting God's good time that he might part and be at rest. Such suffering ones ire all around us.— Such tales of wo have come so often to our ears that—God forgive us—we palm them by unheeded and leave the starving to their untold agony, even as the rich man did. Through the whole of that long and dreary night, as we have said, the beggar and his wife sat musing thoughtfully. sometimes cheering each other with words of hope, then again giving away to tears ; at one time lured into forgetfulness of the sorrow, at another. utterly desolate, as the full sense of their situaion burst upon them. A vision of the past came over them, and in its light they looked again upon the pleasant memories of old, and heard again the love-legends of their native valley.— Once more the woodbine wreathed the cottage window, and through its leaves the chequered light stole gently in upon their home of joy. Once more the roan was shedding around its rich fragrance, and the meek lilt( bowed in the summer breeze ; and as the lily bowed without, and the 1 light stole calmly in, they heard the prattle of their child and were blessed. But suddenly, amid their dreams, there came a ghastly phantom form—the spectre of their present and most woful poverty. How it followed and haunted and cursed them, peering into their very faces, driving the warm blood back again to their hearts, reminding them that the cottage was des erted, and the window broken in, and the woodbine blasted, and the rose withered, and the lily trodden down, and their sweet babe lying cold and lonely in its little grave. Thus passed the solitary vigil—and as the grey light came, stealing through the casement. the beggar started up, imprinted a kiss upon the pale brow of his wife, and went forth into the silent street with the spirit of sateen resolve upon hhet. Cows now , withmo ;to the hoine of the nun who hail iWaioritfully refused , him a pittance in,tha bqur of ltlicitrCninrieCes situ. CelPe, sit hy, the Amide, odes*); the rod lightilash back . frowthe polished furniture 1;;look apon;all , .thejlorgenas apt, of health khe' e*k i fratil theollellq# ll Peallerir b 0 1404 unbounded wealth can pn f rchaset.;:thiln jutl~a,rebolhtir , r►~t~t'ill. hi wenieb,, 444, blessing nwtedlepon that Oond Ind Wait. leitUnlub, , Theo next, morning his magnificent coach bore WM away to his eiliiiiintkOlitt: 4s palused - do*n the itiSY street,' he caught 'sight *for,a momeiiiOf a men cloth et . in rags, yet knew not it wee the Nary one be, had !punted from him the night be , foes. Again; as le, stood at his.desk,' that form • went' by the window—and again, and again, until at length it became a fa miliar sight to see that same forsaken, sor rowful Man go past to his hunible'daily toil. Ileforo long the merchant could per ceive that his rags had given place to better clothing, and his look of borrow changed to ono of joy and thankfulness—yet all the while he knew not the friendless beggar. Meantime a change lied taken place in , his own fortunes. Silently, but surely, =MEM , day after day wealth was les.vipikhim. His ships were ]oat at sea—the banks bad failed-411s speculations were unfortunate and ruin looked him in the Ike& The curie tmd come ' • 'tiara passed away; when One winter but, a few weeks Since, a beggar stood !OP Ole, 4 0 9s.. 0 (ihai proud dwel ling, and was admitted, and. clothed, ruid fed. and rendered comfortable.. By some strange magic s moat• wooderful. change had been wrought:- The door which for so long a dme had been dolled to every form of human want; Which had 'a thous and times denied atinaittance to the wretch 'ed And the outcast, was now thrown open to welcome and ,awsist then.. . They Wws greeted warmly and cheerfully, and the best robes were put upon them, and every disponding man and sad woman, and for saken little 'child, as they 'crossed this threshhold, prayed (Sr a benison' upon that house and its occupant. , The miserable man who ,now stood there asking alms had stood•there before, but not as a suppliant ; had looked around .upon the lofty walls a thousand times, but not 'with his present tearful gase. was once the owner , of that stately mansion, within which be now so humbly honk ?ei. bread; and the man to whom his urgent appeal was wade, was the very man from whom. in the days of his prosperity, he had turned so carelessly away. Their circumstances had changed. God's bles sing had gone forth with him : whom men would not assist : Gpcl's !urge attepdcd him who left his fellow man to-die. Axed thus it is, forever. • Say what we will, deny •it as we please, the blessing of God does • vest upon • the charitable ; the curse of God. does 'folio* the unfeeling. The bond of biotherhotsl may' not be brd- So Heaven help us, now and ever, to boar the bti . rdens of she poor-.-and do it joyfully. For so shall' thousanda look up from their wretchedness, and thank Clod for the angels he has 'sent—the cheerful heart—Tne OPEN HAND. RESI4OI ATION. "Amid the varying acenatei ills, &XII stroke amne kind designs fultille ; And shall I murmur at my God, When sovereign love directs the rod I" Resignation is an exalted Christian vir tue. It is a plant that grows not up from nature's soil. It is a grace that must be cultivated like the rose tree, that it may flourish and shed forth its sweet fragrance amid the passing scenes of life. To pos sess resignation, calm 'and settled, under all circumstances, is a high attainment.— Yet It is attainable': and blessed are they who live under its benign influences. It will shed a holy balm over the mor a l waste of life. and cheer us amid the dukest hours of our pilgrimage. Life his its' cares and its afflictions, Its crosses and its conflicts, its disappoint ments and its sacraficee. But in every scene of earth, resignation, like the strong and faithful anchor that holds the ship in safety till the storm is past, secures its pos sessor peace and quietness, till the dark nesse and danger of the tempest are over, and the sunshine of tranquility and joy again beams upon it. Nothing is ever lost to the just by the exercise of this virtue ; but it will secure to the anxious, the im potent, and heavy laden, usuth joy, blessed ness, and consolation. It will render our afflictions, blessings: and crosses, plea sures ; our disappointments, unexpected good': and our sacrifices, either for our own or the well-being of others, acceptable oblations to God. Then, Though Heaven raid, Fit not repine ; Bach heartfelt comfort still is mitre— Comforts that shall o'er death prevail. And journey with me through the vale." Solomon miya ; ..There js modting'new under the sun. ;" and X , may , illustrate this by showing that, Ai probably Paley. bor rowed ninth Mint the 44Edifes"'bf Ariatm boviii*ed from oth. er ileums, A, Jew, siS k4t came one day to my roomy to oxiiibit bill of hie geode.' He saw a volume' of A risiOtla icing ipoii‘ the bible=tettok 0 , 104*d,k 4 #0**4 6 ,03' Aga by*. 1 4 4 *, ; ,60i..Rivi,A 1 4.9, minters were once,very•femiliat to merit Does ft 'Oak" •Itel continued, iiisometiMer strike you thil 'you 106 Ygad much ofthis; ib vie**, phi4s r t ., i liSinelittionl -think tliat3lol§Are Prti lir the, Bible very, like what I occasionally•Meok with in'llsitt-botoke!' so;" istd he, "and 'n6' Wunder I 'When Alexander visited Jeininfteeft,it 'is:not 'probable that biwould fr i srpl hisAttiorlikilestio send ItIM the leamed:':woilts' of the nations, he conquered. ;We may, therefore, readily, suppose that Aristotle was not ignorant of the writings of tdolosnow; and there. are obvious reasons why 'he should not, ye knowledge the sources whence ho derived whatever he might choose to borrow front our sacred books." I have frequently, since thought of the Jew's remark, and it seems very possible that he ins not far wrong.--Church mid Mite Gazette. Yon oiler hear of s man itbeing in ad vance of his age." buryou never heard of a woman being in the same predicament. ArrTylipivg-91::-r.A.,..y.UPAX.:..11.',Isfili% "J-. 0 L;Y7:13i,„.15,4-!c.; ARISTOTLE AND SOLOMON of EARLESS AND FREE?' YOLTAIILE , ~ ,HALYBUFTON. I will contrast 4,oselings of the prince of infidelity with,lboie awl humble, yet learned and *ea alereet of (lod- • Voltaire says :AA Who can, with out hooi ror; consider the *bible *mid as the em pire of destructiimir L lt &ballade with'won dent ; It sheen& :aliikwith victims. It ii a vast field ofeavitgre and contagion.— Every species is witlicatt pity punned and torn to pieces throulk.lke air, and earth. and water- 4n, 41141714!reji mots wretch edness than in 44.1 Other animas Put to• gather. He loves alfe, and yet he knows he must die. If Jay enjoys a modem I good, litratillbneenehier evilwand is -at 1 last devouredbyati#lo. This; knowledge is hiee - Nal liiiiiiii*. ' Other inintibi harn it not. Hi tiiittids the transient me meats. of his existesee .in _Aliening the Wearies which heAllefers ; ut muting the throats of his follewihmtatures for pay ; in cheating,'and beineefksted; robbing, and being robbed ; hi eitteing, that he ;night command ; and in rang alrhe don. The bulk of mat* are nothing more thane crowdef.. ' equal)! WW l ' nal and unfo c * *l 4 the globe ens taint rather ' *se ones. ' I trent ble at the - ravioli Oftlitis dreadful pieurea; and find that it conlei a complaint evilest Providence itself.' , 44; I had newer been born." This in; a testimony of him i t whom kings ,courted, nations flattered. This is, the sum of_ to him, G , I wish I had never been born. • Tura we now to alybunon, a good mail, whcelornd liiiildaker and his Ma ker'i 'veiiril. lif th midst' of pain,' he said : “ l shall slioitlTget a very different sight of died from elf% I have ereirlted, and ;dual he made toeitto Faint him foe. ever and ever. 011, , ilia thoughts of an in carnate Deity •aro st4et and ravishing! ' Oh, how I wonder-army-self that I do not love him' more, thitrl do not adore him more! Whai a 'welsh' that I enjoy such composure under all my bodily pains, and iu view of death . itself ! .What many. that, having lilo usei , nfremion, 1 can de clare him goodness to My void I long for his salvation. 1 blase his name that I have found hini, and I diqroieing In him.— Olt , blessed be God' Ma' 1 was born! 0 that I was where hp;! I have a father and mother, and ten brothers and sisters in heaven, and I shall be the eleventh. 0 there is a lolling in this providence, and I shall be tolling it forever. If there be seeh a glory in his conduct towards me now, what will it be to see the Lamb in the midst of the throne ! Blessed be God that I teas' born I " Here is a contrast, indeed—a contrast n which the blind themselves may dis- cern between'the righteous and the wicked, between the matt that downs, awl the man that hates the word of God.—Rco. Dr. Plumer. GIVE ME YOUR BABY The .Cincinnati Commercial tells tbo following We saw a_ poor woman sitting on the steps in front of a hotel on Fifth street, the other morning, holding a pale yet beautiful infant in her arms ; in one hand she held a saucer containing a few pennies. She was apparently about thirty, and neatly clad, although the dress was of the cheap est material. Ono could see that her pas. sition in life had been better, and perhaps a happy one for years. Our attention was arrested by a crowd of well-dressed ladies, who were standing around and endeavoring to beg the baby. "What a sweet child !" said one. "Poor little dear !" said another, "how I should love it if it was my owe I" The mother drew her shad clam to her bosom, but said riot word. Allotln:lady. in. whose foot out could sonar a glanse a fountain , of charity and lave, "earned mare latent on thee:had than an,* othei. ' nie your baby" aid she, o•autd I will mile good care oiler The poor woman looketinp forthe firm lime, with' a Sam, so luslotosholy. mut the ,uwre trembled in bar eyes.. madam. I thank- yowfor your Bud leslingu; but I cannot: *ileitis*, emit thing I base left on earth t" d' Thy. ou'ipoih r *tidy drappes Walt eag(b ietu,the sanyie l 480 - ,iiijened *war teneer,ttn Oleo .91 1 44,4 their Pur sos, aptlOactot*air cdreinlPiis chizilab4 scobiabilitypith ttle gold piece.- We added our Might,inand-vrillned , away - s happier and Aro, 'tare ettatalnad in a Paßaga frata ,a Pwet, suotetl by,Sit.iY,. Jones, the Imaginal of Atha* is embodied .itt the following Wes • Thesandni tree perinmeitehes riven The axe that laid it low : Let man who hopes to be &mime; , Firgive and rola* his lie.. "Jet yorir house warm !" risked a man in Remelt of a tenement, of•n landlord. "lt ought to be, the painter gays it two coats recently," was the respomm. i is onty necessary to grow old to be cause more indulgent. Ime no fault com mitted that 1 have not eousmittod myself. —Godhe. A 111011WATMANi CinirtEISION Boise twenty-diwyeara ago two young eintiWire hung at Baltimore for robbing the gmat Southern Mail and killing the driver. 'OM of the'highwaymen was a boy bet nineteen years of age, the son of a repeatable 'physician it Utica in the State. The other' was an older offender. Th& following is an extract from the WSW( of the latter;whicb wig published at the time In a pamphlet Pay, fast exploit on age was to nib an obi flootclunan whom I,4gad perceived in the afternoons. from my lurk• ing place s d Dg s flitted obw"•td a »efgh• boring market. wu littleut ,wey Sod waited hita with• oGood 4tvealog old ullow Ma rote ootr , ,ab „,, (Hicielift)l, • "How moth t" • :t NToo lee*, up ketle ; only twenty .a: ver dollars." mw.n. shell," "libell 1' wYem shell antis and di* it.qukkly; or l'U make daylight •abitta .throaglidyott with an tame ball.“- • '" ' l ' • "' "Ok! rot.ooi sake; - J-Itt •` ..) t 44 OKI "Na but fix my own aake--to. bithwief, I am a gentleman in &trate, and will take year money as a ham from_yno.' s " sweat. awed; Abell iiiiriMe; 4 'aitid apparently sobered, "midi ,Neel emiet.it ou t ta ye." . I So saying, be pet•bid ihitid. Inds' tar coat Pcbg behind= 3 0 546'ini, - ,iii*P"9 ready cocked , he Prelpeuo b meat ob verting; vely cooly— • • lice !emit 8 ' eitli browin' folk t ae ye T iteie Devi; and sae id w' ie rea4ylsw PlaPi *d !4 0 14‘,"' .r 7 „,r.i • Such a noviewinia I. Writhes Ails% bogie, nese that hid net iikent Pldtblithert my belt. *bele they WertiiiMfi&l'lihtlar:i . : a buttoned enati besii4e ß ifiltie),, , ll4l.9Ao not have availed ale l / 2 .19C1 badttegletsdlo provide flints far-theta. ; "But:" continued be, "as vie atty ye ate( a pair redeem°, (and putt tilMyglb9uat!, kegs,) just step sir a ikw,y,a4,,i14.74, po t dance a Scotch jog. or a, hornpipe t.stid make the musk we yere airr‘whaitle or rem a deed men.' ' ! my friend. itupottsilde;serely you do not insist on my dancing p, jig itt 144 half way up to my knees r , I ye client at it we a' ylciret might t less time than I eau snip my lingetkihreit times, by the sea o" Elihay (wile l'lnfend to thenk they (tied' mosiles the' o' a gold load o' Niel:shot * to' ' 1 '44 1 , many boles . through ; ye asycootdd iot l 4 in as said tea huithorne-44m1.111 make, hot led ran through ye, fors' ;the , world) like queek-selver tlirout,th' te, Scotch fan, an ye ditto* deuce right .tir,the reel, •like a hen upon a hot, ceddle. l ) -Nuw What could do Feeling It • was 'tin time to trifle. and alitiost fancying die', buckshot was already perforating pte,,l. bethought me .of a waltz..and whistling it in less than three minutes,. belabored my self into a perfect foam of perpirinion in the deep sand. Tired to death, I paused to breathe, and asked the old tyrant if that would not do for this time. "Na, na ; dinna flash yourself, dear.— I am na tired o' lookin on, gif ye aro na ti red o seollopin. Sac gao us twa or three jerks more, and when ye Imo done, I'll re ward yo wi twa or three o' the sil l ver got larl renewed*, dreadful *meet etace.ottr i with a rooful.beortiood, whoa I *tapped spinout of wind, be , phoned thiVellviVui sue, owl rocatoinortsdlitantibotiit mating borrowing bide on.e Oci i .,KY!!!lfr 4 , v : l o it is seam is pay 144 ~,, :.0 It was ;sow dook,.stod 1 tuniodiotto. au road that led lato tho'iotoilOtV llt h' it M[ 0'804144 irtreiliNiiiriii*iwn'ir, t rir , by nom. puwincitioxy tin , l.k..*:tho.fr 0 ; , grasp of two itiotham goodouout of, (up 8. Stand inidilidliirei," abide Stahl illicc: «, I 'bate kat Been lielfiireir olYsett" uttit.t "lrealtgault ; Mid hy Wy , honesty, you may as soon draw blood from a tur nip, or milk Ironie stone, as enrich your- IN:bpi withopoils from me." 6 No palavering," said my bleu* in cognito, talkie name , time quite uneareme. 1 nieusly thrusting his itsilds into at? pack ets, while the other held me, until deliber ately drawing forth tho fruits of Atwell Prim have a few of the tiltinerv,", “ Yes--atad if you have uo objections, 1 will make doe of your gang. . . . - •• None or yourtiekt uptia l ottesi lc:Ar abia," said he. • . 1 however gave 'them rhuptlait .pFostbs of my sincerity and wait admitted, We were is an jun,tYie trat eittaiutf in dig lags 01--.---,ift4 * lifemOrsiolga arrival. It required -'but half the, inns it I was ehangiotto push out hall a mile on its rente,badd a fence gated the Oced, anti Ancert *aims, other meitsurdi fur the robbery o f the mail: 'by which we 11:untr ied ourselves with fortunes. • In the mean ; time, my comrades entertained me with a ' bricf.itount of their course of lift. ; and 1 beautiful =IEEE could. perceive many similar points to those of my own short histOry ; and prin cipally springing, in the first instance, from Parental unkindness and mal-administra lion and example. The mail was carried iu a coach or stage drawn by four horses. There were, we knew, six passengers and the driver to content! with. Fearful odds, bet nothing to bur cool and determined daring. My comrades were informed by advices the daY'hefore, reeeived by nn accomplice' in Philadelphia, that considerable remittances were, expected there from Lancaster about thin time, ' • It whts arranged that the instant the IMMO should 'stop at the fence (it was dark) one of my comrades should present Mittel:lf on ,either side of the stage, with pistolaleady,:whilst I kept, driver in chock•lvidt , mine. . "DOn`t fear, gentleman," said Clifton —for fiat was our leader's name—. we intentl,to subscribe for stock for the ha protement of these roads; butbeing rath er ittOrt' Of funds, are , going to borrow a sinhil t eist frOm'the mail; so condescend tetttepottl, one at a time, and I will tie you to separate trees. But if more than :ono ofyiuu appear at a time, or it' you lies-I MU ono moment, or make as much noise ali 4 4lMltt be heard from the mouth to the' eir.l.ll s e ed 'a coupleofof b .1 . ~ - shetamong you that will not leave one of you Well the tale." . out s . 7 tumbled in dumb show, one at af tithe; and while Clifton tied the last, I tiettl't`itreiiiiiiiiig driver. We now elmve" . . . theetage off into the wood, and availed oh:Mello of tho contents of tho mail, by .the help 6( a daritiantern, while Smith— Othlitl4e.pt; guard outside the coach. This par. Of the business through, we un- : Iratisjiltr of tlio horses, tuounted them antl,..stntelt ,pir throqlt i the wood in'a by path,,at a. sound , gallop, After riding all thelbre. pan o'f the night, we turned the likiniiii'lhoittend footed it., A,,tioi:iiio.l,)l43ry, vv , l would disperse; pro- 1 Med•to some city, change our disguise for au•entirely ',different 'one ; and after spend- itig4' toilt .of:our funds, meet at a preemi es Vied iiini,t,' and 'proced as before: I will :-:,f .. y , 1 , , t t i s . . t hul'?" iotOr ~. lint ter , l'opeted ae 8 such .514.1-havojt,*44:liogibol, I discovered such inlipininarindncoeUchearing,.. that, my as-, ' - imane'it' i vbintibirity :apritibmre — nio their • cA pf;q4,t tihdOrt` . eni inontentit'of drunken . , . .rgitt4y,iitt 4 certain e Aep,: .. ;dark. , cavern . ,whielt•iimat WV, citiel4aCOMElrefug° and, rindezvous; s tyled _ Pm .h - thet , Reurrend list• A d l eo::t N.q,.., , ,i ~ ,',..n :it 4 ~,, i. ;' :,I:fi i .gl4,sl k. l l 7,,lril ,, ,?f lt i i f i ca ! 6 ' . /. l , JURA ~ /.110i1 10 1 4 , 411.410,40 i 4 4 4 t, u l4, ..sulky) i 1 ~,,dkiniphip,wimi Amti•doy, wit daub*. Mt !Of Ilittitottifo ll TIM imon&illitinis.'itill y tiyi,, ' i,..r . iii4 , 1,60,1: 4 , '1 0 ;11664,, ~,t i d; : t 61)44, - lic4,FFOilAilz,c4iiiiiViiiiziii(vitiefi 44,3„.0 ~,k, tc r overe.i ~,t ,I ~ ~,t', . ~. „ Stop,' said Pl•toe•yoacmoooy oggynor, life.. l 3!s•Withoututterimg , za:orlalAe,. Wit in tile meittevillent altiritt; the old men made ii iiii iv ti , b i.... 0 ii g : in o:i.:niOilt, antl'seented to grasp something,in the bettont of, the Se hicle. and fearing '1 liad.another Scotch prize to deal with, for the first time in my life, •I tired on a lone • man. •'' • . 'Witt acorivuli;ive and:shivering:me‘ve. ment, accompanied by .a . groan, hp pitubed 'from the carriage ,a lift:lel* trunk. al, ,tay r. ' t t My•tiotior arm,' onotterably InecincelTva. lit!rtkea ? 4 found 1 tku4 ifnPr4g4 i fattealosit Old team. •Llvanine the.body-to one side, with the view offeiatingit in the OTthelnilelitOOW Tell rr.M l- 1.c . °4 4 i 6 i 1 74 h1. 1161114 (:;? boitiOrttln dificavere,4l lt was my aged ,fi k ihur.l4A ,tt , iTighnr trib'coonnott enough in Philadel lible.:bet"the:banses and occasion for fight it Babe n'ebirming variety. The follow ing. ease is by no means a common one and may be thought worthy of oommomo ration. John Dikeman is a "practised phreuolo gistc and his an office, we think, in some part of the Arcade, or somewhere else in the neighborhood. Andrew Mead,—a stout middle-aged country ' gentleman, see ing an announcement in the philosopher's window that the character and capabilities of any man would be sifted out (or the moderato aunt of twontY-five cents, enter. ed the sanctum and submited his poll to Philosopher Dikeman's scrutiny. The, . Licw,,oler. ,4ating,4iapieruts, payment in • , advance, and receiving the specified sum, prOcceded at' 'Chic to busineas. . 4. Yuliliti4l; a Very:bad head; sir," said ~ ItO,t6Mr. Mead. '"A very villainous head, sir. Facial angle almost as low as that of a 'Monkey, ' dir ! . l'Signifitis that' yon are t;eo,•ll,nod,, sir, 'ainl. very foolish. You hatqt etwygi; , conorpFtiv.enpis to make a 1 pig yokeenor.cuough.w it to make a conun drum. nor enough judgment to know the differtece beititen pea-sour trodcider-ror , 81, 'Aiid what's all . this haek here, sir?- 'Phase busignify that you will cheat, tis lie. end a worse titan a Louisa nig ger. Iw. dn't dn't trust you with a mom hill of scrap-iron or a yard lull of mill moues. t 4 uct, .t ,counditny he.id I ,5,,,,, PHRENOLOGY TWO DOLLARS Pl= ANNUM. j INN SERIE Sid handle since I was a professor. lett pose you came to hosexatnined in order to know what pursuit you ought to 'take to. My candid opinion is that you had hetet' start at once •to California, where ther.ii's, no laW,—for if you stay where thece!a judges. juries, state prisons, and gallowses, and these sort of things, there's no chance , for yon.' Why, can't Ido any good at all e' *A- f.., al Mead, with much seeming anxiety,,, "Good 1-.-not the least," answered the e,^ ' philosopher. "Stop I.—let 'fleece. Cun biitiveness, large. Yes ; you canfigAt.l then Lean flog an itnputlentltutabug on occasion- 0 4 guess," said Mr. , Mciatl.-- , •.I supposo you might," answered Pro lessor Dammam "Well, if that's all I can do, here goes," and Andrew r immediately applied his feel ers to the professor's cranium, crowding on' more btimps than Spurzheitn ever found names for. Here was an affray odd enough in its origin but quite common-place in its termination. Mead was arrested and bound over, and the professor was supplied with another proof of his science. "For," said Ite, in his evidence, "I knew the man would mike me, as soon as I saw his, head ;—his bumps of combativeness were almost as big as rutu-baga turnips !"-- Penury/run i a n. 'NOTHISO is LOST.—The drop that min gles with the flood—the sand drop* on the sea-shore—the word you have spoken, w ill not be lost. Each will . have its in fluence and be felt, till time shall be no more. Ilah4 you ever thought of the ef fect that might be produced by_ a single word f l)rop it pleasantly among a group, and it will make a dozen happy, to return to their homes and produce the same effect oft a hundred; perhaps. A bad word may arouse the indignation of a whole neigh borbood ; it may spread like wildfire, to prodnce disastrous effects. As no word is lostbe careful bow you penk-- , speak right—speak kindly. The influence ynu in . ay exert by a life of kindness—by words dropped among the young and the old—is incalculable. It will not cease when your bodies lie in the grave, but will be felt, wi der and still wider as year after year puss es away. Who then, will not exert him self fir the welfare of millionst—thislon Olive Branch. PECNTICIANA--Prentiee; of the Journal, is responsible for the follow ing, squibs : The Washington Union says that oittie democratic party was never iti a better state orhealth than at present." May . be so. Exercise on foot is said to be favora ble to' health, and we perceive that some of the prominent men of the patty are twain. errry day. • , 'l'lleDoyleslOWllVDeinocrat makes itself merry at the idee, that the choirs `s tliditot-inalte its appearttriceiiiihis einift try Andm , Mr. Administration, WS suddenly broke out under Gen. Taylor's: Why - - do you not thank God;" said an Arab'chief to his subject, dun sineu have been your ruler, you have never been afflicted With the l'hagoe I" •• God is too good. to send two scourges upon us at once," was the reply: ' • . • FOOTE ON BENrrom. 'MN Senator Foote, a gentleman who has acquired some distinction since:his ap pearance in the - ptibik :coutieds: ten a letter in reply to , Mr. :Denton's' re coat tqatecti l i which occupies nearly as many columns of the, Union as the Tro jan wisr did , years. 1t is chareeterristhi of and'ainde:a ireit deal Of 'Olio Imo yen, me wf upon r. effort. ,wp. consider .it only fair di t. M. -wlicrisy a °Democratic" Senator,. should have his opinion of its merits demon& 'The following extract (umiak-, as, a tolerable idea of the temper in which tholetter is conceived and of the clastdeal elegance with which it is indited. Refer ring.to Mr. Benton's speech, Mr. Foote says; . "It is evidently a long-meditated, labor otily-preparml, and diligently-memorised discourse, upon certain national topies most surpassing interest ; and yet do I reel that t can observe of it justly and without the smallest exaggeration, that its feeble and confused reasonings, its tawdry grau diloquence in some places, its coarse scur rility in others—its awkward and clown ish attempts at a sort of Ciceroni° face tiousness—its unmannerly dogmatism— its nauseating egotism—and that infernal spirit of malignity which it breathes throughout, and which would have been far better suited to animate the outcries of some "goblin dantard," or devil broke loose from hell, than to give grace and dignity to aught of human mould and tem peratnent-.--would be sufficient to, extiu guish, the glory and blast the fame of the most distinguished orator that either an cient or modern times have afforded," It would scent from this frank criticism, that our' Democratic friends are not .did posed to mince phrases, in meastiiing each other's ,merits. Mr. Fouts aserilns . the motives of this opeeelt to a &aim rat • the Presidency, which he prtdirlir - Vol. Benton will never realize tttf lu *hick dnion we fully ------• Tits l'usNrr.R's Sapia..driiir falknitiog huts IMAM Med down esitai• art ir tieryldsa".. Oant liulnotitular kor a ptiotei'eAlei4 - it•'to Alt ife bit tout ie We music of •diet jOiglisif at d o om* :-.. . I w •I - W . ..‘VO ' ll sagy char Junco» awe', ••,.••: ,• And b.mioli every swop— t ' ,•., . etri.vfilwro fly 'our tea w 4147, And nvll ply our'. uk.toutro....' •