: tr. T.,. 1.11'4.11 .':./:1•4, f .111 ii 0.-'7:!:A.., - *,,i4.:*i0,4*" 11 VOt . 1 1411 . ' 40. I 'We sitertuit the krtletWing belled fel *crap of pb. etri neetli trltirif Matins' ' new journal,' 4 .ll,:nite. holtWeirds." It is rifreehing to catch s gent of such eitititilte beauty the present day of son g : waiiiide Well. Oh ! the pretty wayside well. Wreathed about With rowel; Wbere, beguiled with baothing open, . Weary foot reposes. With* Welcome fresh and green • :Wave thy border grasses, BY the dusky traveller seen, 13!ghing as he passes Treads the drover on thy sward, Comet the beggar to thee, Free as gentleman or lord Prom his steed to wuo thee. Thou from parching lip drat earn Many if' murmured Mewing; ' And enjoyed in thy turn Inneesat carrsaahag.. . Foir the'irridthig ties ascends Like a Naiad thritutdot Wben'the peasant lassie bend/ To thy trembling water. . When she leans upon her pails Olanelitco'er the meadow, `Sweet shall fall the' whisper tale, lice the double shadow. • IttliloWt' thy chrystal cup ; gat, Seems to pet thee ; Seething Summer's fiery lip klith no power .to fret thee. Cooly eheltered, WI from emlreb4 thy (tavola shady, oYor thee io • silver birch Stoops, ti Forest loAly Ile thy Oar the eta/ or eve Shyly dares to bend her, Matron Moan, thy depth receive Glutted in mellow splendor. Illeitoteoue molly. I forever owned, linvbetorbed by station,— Not to thinoy lips &louts.. Serving mild clonatioS7 Never come the newt or frog, Pebble thrown in malios. Iltid,rx withered leaves to clog Ur defile thy chalice. THE WIFE. Sim clung to him with Minter?, tows, I.ikeisy to the oak ; While o'er hi 3 howl with crushing force. Earth's chilling tempests broke. When :the world looked told on him, And blight hung o'er his dame— She soothed his care with WOILIILII'S Core, And hade him ride again. When care had furrowed o'er his ram And clouded hip, young hours, thin wove anionchis crown of thorns A wreath of love's own flowers. And never did that wreath decay, O'er one Might ilowret wither ; Fur woman's team e'er nourished them, they might bloom forever. 'Tis ever thug with women's love, True till hfc's storms have passed ; Anal, like the vine around the tree, It bravos them till the last. A. :dimmed Voica.—The editor of the Cincinnati Atlas, after a visit to the Asy lum (or Met Deaf and Dumb, at Columbus, Ohio, relates the following We inquired of an intelligent and mo- , deft young lady, who had become deal froth Isickneas when two years and a half old, whether she could recollect any thing of sound or words. She answeeed that she could not. ' It•octurred to us that there might have beettit, least one sound which might he re• membered even from than tender uge, and we vereutoed to inquire whether she had no recollection of hermother's Voice. It wilPlie long before• we forgot the sweet, &tiller smile which shone upon her fea tures, as, by' a quick inclination of her the anawered, - yee. What ta , ivtirld' of thciught end feeling clusters around such a fact I In all her I,ttro "therebut ry is . ,one sound, and that is tier mother's aoice. For years she has ciweltin a silence unbroken Itow withous, but those gentle tones of love still linger in her heart. There they can never die ; and, iffier about() be prolonged to three 14204 *0 Ind try en, o'er, the 10, silent track of 'her l i fe,iltmpfuory or that voice will come, in loieliness and beauty, revi ving theisoal of weary- old age with the frelhOuvely sounds of her cradle hours. Ramie* IR4 gARLY I.tra.-6-Noone at the eldse of an .advanced life has ever re gretted thin . his early years were spent in Nifoi°lol,°° Of 04* But thousands 'have regretted when upon a dying bed, that the morning of their•days were spent in rebel linn against the King •ofl kings. ..If," says, die eloquent, and pious John Angell be,true honor in the universe, 4441141 n ltliglen. Even the heathens were sensible of this ; hence the Romans halt ..the .temples of Virtue and Honor elb.e together,' to teach that the, way to hicWit'uots by virtue. Religion is the im• japf_God,in the soul of man. Can glo ry tteelraiellig t her. titan thiS 1 What a distinetiou to have thillaitre put upon the 'character iwyouth I 11 was mentioned by rehl'aitt siagttlat- honor to the believing 4,15 Ora. they &rat trupted in Christ; and fe,„re.4l,,tp,A.dronipus Jump, he inentsona tt to their praise that they were (brisk before , him. !To ,be a child of arid, ad hibir 01 , 0160, a disciple ot Christ, .e warrior a(*li Oros*;'' cltiaen , of the ettrln i 4 l l o : ll-41 ffiiirOa tt q lt i ltdbrlis the iirlolll of tame. A person nosserted in youth, is aikt din cssafrieictg.OftAwlllullgiflefirerl ittio;thalS 'AMU, iLlegg ' .)3yright . 11114_ higkrelporoos, itionforted Ante .tn,lifts.jutlike dimitosoi*Voutrol Agway, (h,s,ll rise coatiaplition,,,OPL . appearing isicliwieg, and then bat for a little While. !ii4;:r 1 ....r.—..... The wanit poqupifkonoir one or the deepest winli f Within notttire. lie who /e t ihaXWMAR ° , IO °P . 5- ,: t 4 r goeit A wbF,E ,- v Vi p ii i) ll l m • if. like" yet„ 4 1 0.' 4' 1 a 44 ttimter . m l,- pi nOO4l, 4E4H:dation what otht•r- OrifiniA4lo:SO,*llciale of place iit'd'hiao - • aredotudy for the comneinity, 1111600111 r ta,thstri friends, and aolliotently Arc thioutelm. • i'OtANotfotil=t i b tfiighi'lliat ushers in lb. thing sun of Liberty. MESE A SF-NOMA. rATIIBIL The' Norwalk, Gazette of Tioniday hist contains a long account efts romantic of-, fair Which recently Occurred pertly in that neighborhood and partly in this city. A young Brooklyn lady, about fifteen years of age, and an ardent : Norwalk youth, it seems, became desperately attached, and as no other way of terminadug their sus pense appeared, planned an elopement.— The young lady awle away* early dawn, crossed the East river,. foiled her lover, in waiting, and; took the first train to Nor walk. The, father missed his daughter at breakfast, suspected the cause, and follow ed in the second train. On reaching Nor walk he found the fugitives had left for %Uteri and thence for. j'oundridgc, the Gretna ,green of Pairfiejd county, in com pany ,with ; their groomemen and bridert mettle.. , Just ail he oame in sight of them, his carriage broke 'down, But as it hap pened, they had all taken the wrong road, and the wedding party were obliged to turn hack. The rest of the story we give iu the Gazottriti words : "The old map concealed his face to pre vent too hefty recogaitioe,, aed with his driver, set about repairing the broken wheel. The wedding party came up, con sistiog of two strapping groomsmen and the same number of bridesmaids. They stopped at the broken wagon, and inquired if any aseistariee was trained. *Yes; said the father. Out jumped one of the grooms men, and the next Mutant in jumped the father into that groomsman's empty seat. The consternation may be imagined. The lover swore, the groomsman showed fight, and the old man kept cool as a cucumber. *Going to get married, eh'" said he.— , Well I'll go along ; a man has certainly P right to attend his daughter's wedding. ' So sending his own conveyance home, lie kept his scat, while the discomfited grooms man got np with the driver. "ii process of time they arrived at the magistrate's. They alighted a nd we nt i n . LattooßAenv is the art of printing from said the father to the Squire, 'my stone. This process is based upon the little girl hero took a notion to get married, I fact that printing ink, being largely emu pa and, While her mother was looking anoth-! Bed of nil, will notadhere to any seduce er way, sli?ped alit and came up here fort whirls wet with water , • that purpose. The last part of the way Every one knows holy utterly imprissi- I have accompanied her, and now , s i r , 1 bleit is to mix oil and water. To litho am going to take her home.' •Gertainly.l graph, then, all that is necessary is to draw sir,' replied the dignitary ; 'by .the revis e on the smooth surface of a dry atone, with ed statutes, no minor can marry w i l h„ ut a greasy craven, whatever is desired to be die paternal license, and if you refuse that pLinted. A weak solution of nitric acid toy services cannot be rendered.' H ere ,is then rubbed over the stone, which ram. f o ll owe d ni „, 1 1,„ scene o f cr y ing , Swear -, ens the drawing so that it cannot be rub bed oil. Alter this a solution of guin-ara mg, sad the other usual accompaniments of a true love crossed. At last, the father hie is passed over the surface, and then turned to the disappointed lover : 'L oo k the stone is ready for printing. here, young man,' said he, 'when I've got By means of a sponge, water is now a daughter old enough to be married, if you . rubbed on the smite, and while yet wet will behave yourself end get her consent,, the inking roller is applied. The ink, of why, you shall have her ; but don't be course, adheres to the lines of the draw guilty again of carrying of children who ing„beeause they are oily, but to the wet don't really know their own wishes or stone it does not stick. The paper is now their own interests. You may „ me laid on,and with the stone, passed thriitigh back to Brooklyn with me, and may visit the press ; the result being a beautiful and my house whenyou please, but no more exact copy of whatever is drawn. of this work.' Such is the process by which the lithe " Th e: last we heard of the party, the graphic prints, that are sold in•all parts of lather, the daughter, an d t h e l oser w e re on our country, arejnaik% The colored ones their way to New York together, in the! ;ire painted with water paintsafter the print afternoon train." tog is completed. The stone employed for lithography is of a peculiar kind of lime and clay nature, resembling in appearance a smooth, yel low hone, yet possetoirm the power of ab sorbing water. • This stone is known as lithographic, or compact lime. It it; found chiefly in Bavaria, one of the German states, though there are quarries of it in England, The Bavarian stones.however, are those moat universally employed, and their im portation is a considerable object in com merce. In New York these stones are worth from five to ten cents per pound. THOMAS PAINE SILENCED A. gentleman of New I urk, who perso- , natty knew Thomas Paine, and was re-1 1 peatedly in his company during the last years of his life, gives the following ac— , count of a eonversa:iou with him respect- 1 ing the Bible : One evening I found Paine harrarguing a company of disciples, on Ike great mis-! chief done to mankind by the introduction of the Bible and Christianity. When he! paused, I said, ••Mr. Paine; you have been in Scotland ; yob know there is not a more rigid set of people in the world than they are in their attachment to the Bible ; it is their school book • their churches are full of Bibles. Whet; a young' man leaves his father's house,bis mother always, in pack- ing Pia chest, pens a Bible on top of hie clothes." Be said it was true. I con tinued, "You have been in Spain, where the people are destitute of the Bible, and there you can hire a man for a duller to murder his neighbor, who nevergate him any otfence.", Ile assented. "You have seen . the , manufacturing districts in Eng land, where not one min in filly' can read, and you have been in Ireland, where the majority never saw a' Bible. Now you know it is an historical fact that 'in one 1 county in England or . Ireland there are ' more capital convictions in six months than there are in the whole popelaiion of Scotland in twelve. Besides, this day there is not one Seetchtuan in the alms house, State prison. bridewell, or , penile*. tiary •of New York. Now, then, if the Bible were so bad a book as you represent it to be, 'those who use it would be the worst members of society. But the con trary is the fact ; for ; our prisons, alms houses, and :penitentiaries ; are Alled with men and women whose ignorance Or ..un belief preveatatitent from reeding the bi ol.", It was now,, near, ten e'eloeli et night. Paine,, answ ered ant a word; plt taking a candle fro, the , table, walked up stairs, 'caving hi s (rinds and myself ita l . ring at one another. " To Youtvothisif..4—lt should•be the aim bf. young men tlo igo inui good society r we mean. not the' rich; , for the proud, Imp the liphionaide, bet the imcietty of the Wise. the imelligent and the; good.. When ;you , find men Who know' Move , than you do. and from whose conversation yon can gotta, informatiom its is 'always safe to' associate wiik t h olat , 1 • • tr lu• t • - Ittcribroken down many a. man ,to sus. social* with the low and vulgar* where, the ribald song waa sung and the indecent etm ry toweeiterlaughter or influence the bed passions. 'you with •t 0 be wise and keel:mm.4 *sloe kite sri the intelligent and "P?,7PO tt e t ..ttlat i f2ng, here , doing nothing nPif e4;iP 494 i ° 4 : iho other der. -"PP; ; 4001; 1;0.40' "I'VbY he Is a Milettlt On other It is iodinated Cluittherfe ate iaght perittmcin Pmglandtimd W4wir• who cannot read or write. GETVYSBVII A SKETCH FROM MY wiNpolov. -• DV LYDIA 1. PiaasoN, It is ra. sight to make a hard heart'weep , poor okl -man, in,--mean-garments. with haggard features,- and white locks,. seated in a wagon with a small quantity of wood, drawn by a horse lean and mis erably old, like his master. We looked upon thein, and the dponta neous cry of our heartwas, Clh G6d I Pity. The whole picture was so desolate, so void of hope. When we see the young suffering, we al ways see hope beside thorn,' speaking of better days to come ; but the aged can-only look to death, and heavens How many lovely hopes have perished in this, old mates pathway ; how has he striven, and been defeated; how has he , I aspired and been disappointed ; how has he struggled with fortune and been cast down; how has he suffered beneath the I contumely of gilded baseness, or the die. I honest rich man ; how has he been forced Ito put bounds upon his spirit, and subrilitil to oppression and insult, lest he be forbid den the privilege of toiling for his daily bread. lie has been unfortunate, for he exhibits no token of debauchery, or intem perance. Now lie is old, and poor, his heart is full of the memories of sorrow, and want, and wrong ; and his future is only privation, toil, and endurance to the end. And the world is full of such.-- Life to them has been a bitter gift. We cannot see why they are so unsuccessful in every effort, but we treat that he who formed them disciplines them in mercy.— The gate of heaven is open before them, and if amid their toils and cares, they re member God, and in wrong and oppres sMn, endure meekly., relying upon his mercy and, justice, they may find rest and glory at the last. This is their only hope, and between it and them, lie years of pov erty, and pain; and the agony of death. Lord be pitiful to all such. VALVAULE lIITEWMIIII. — Tho editor of the Horticulturist in answer to the quer.' ies of a correspondent, gives the follow ing receipt l'er a Whitewash. WS have published a good many receipts before, but we believe we have never published one exactly like this. He rebotnmends it as a most excellent, cheap and durable' wash for wooden fences and He thinks it owes its durability to the white vitriol it contains : 'fake a barrel end slnck n bushel of freshly burned lime in it, by covering the lime with boiling water. After it has. slacked, add cold water enough to bring it to the consistency of • good whitewash.- , .. , Then dissolve in water, and add one pound of white vitriol (sulphate of zinc) one qtiltfrt of fine salt. To, give this wash a cream color, add one-half pound of yellow ochre in powder. To give it a fawn col or, add one%fourth of a pound of Indian red. To make a handsome gray stone color, add one-half a pound of French, and one-fourth of a pound of Indian red ; a drab will be 'nude by adding one half a pound of burnt sienna, and one fourth.part of Venitian red. . litorrrav mr,tiszusTen.--4 ne vrierame Jay, in one, of his sermons at Surrey Chapel, a few 'Years since, glue: trated, his views of bigotry among differ- mit branches of the "'househol'd of faith," by the following' anecdote. Sprite time agoa ciiindryman said lei Me, was enceoitigly i rrtfiotl sirVthis morning t I was'going dOwn to a'iOnetie place, and 1 16 , 901'1 saw at a distance a' liegp martian'. leerlied In' motion, but I weld not discern the tdrei'lif 'it. I did not like to turn bitk, yet lig he a rt beat ; asul,the Mer l e looked the more. retired; but`tiii , wea~►pro lied ach other, law it Wite'nnly : a *id Illuil'Who de you think sir, it Was t "I'kpolf net" 4 ,0; it'araaaiy:brOiliei :bhp:" eta' tie away froie hi h, Its lie - addedll, Vat e a rl ' in' the mining ,inif 'vire ra gg y.,,to I, said alitylace and' itifniky s{iron hale, ther 3ohn,'been taken ke foe t ,billy'tipirotich nearer each °that.; and see Olearer, a n d you will find in niinthiiirdeliinliutnces, Whit you have dread ad se, a, inepeler, '' a brother—and, your •Ve•oesse ilium our owls characters so much as when we attack those of others. OFBARLIIBB AND FREE." A. ilitiii::Ettitti .• NEIGHBOR NtritOClNS' HINT..., .'.' .. ~ U NWIRE'.I.IIOI: ' i i ''. ' t i A men - having purchased a worn out ,The follovilng.ams a , fb* at the chaise* farm,. and invested Ell. hie .money • in his : ten conting,onder !Ida head,:, real estate, tried hard, by severe lobar * , to . The jealous man-who poisons his own make it produce , a, etap._Vim . a laborious banquet, and then - - summer's work.he signa lly railed.. His The miser-.who mama , .Aintself to 1 crops.of corn, onto Au 4, buckwheat were death, that the heirs may feast scarcely worth harvesting. Winter,came The Menu' Med- who bites off blsowit on, and with it disecnirogement and ties,; nolo to desPite' l "eighbOr• • ' • ' ll pontlenCy. lle ;net his nikhbor; add In The angry.' men-‘who sets . hi s o wn 1 the hingusge of gcrifillite, htquireil, 'Aivhat house OD fire,that ha Easy barn up' moth. shall Ido r Ills ditiOhbitit in reply,' in'i er's. , , . Yankee style; intsdettieflide question by The statideler-who fedi taleti, endives asking.titether; • ''Neighbor Wilkins; have his enelny ii'bh4fice to litode'llint a like.. you ever kept a hirod'eitamen your firm?" 'rim Alf botibtillitd''mluiLwho - attacties'` Always." "How; earl yoagain the great.. more tondequeiteeto didfilty'than to . entew est amount nflatiorin.ine season from his..mon sense. efforts?" .lufthe first .place gise .him a The pretuktnanirrrarhe faaa.in the esti plentiful supply of food--full stomach for .m a tion, ,p 1 tiritte , ible,,„ col:Terve*, ie, propor a laborer is ajewel knext.begin the day ear ! .fien as hertoes to his evro l ly, and keep iteady , et,it." , .Youhave an- the eniidtia mah-...-whu .canned enjitty . swere4, truly ;, u i guitge 4 ypqr farm .as you life and prosperity, beeidst others do. do your hjred man. .I. eed It iiiili 'nourish- • - The dishonest m0n.....W4i0•-ehesti hilt meet for vegetatieni feed It full, and keep 'own soul snore vitally than he does his fel• it fed. Then go to the next let and feed 1 low-men. .•; . • ~ in the same style. Such' fields recollect The robber+-who,, for, the . considers the kindness of the . owner, and they pay . tion of dollars and cents; gives the world him for it 'more :than fifty fold. Then liberty to hang him. ~ . . _ . •, plough and dig, and:the reward is' sure.-- The drunken man--who not 'fly malts!, Neighbor Wilkins opened kis eyes in as- himself welched', but disgusts his Men*. innishment at his own .igtiatanee, and said, The 'hypeehondrtite---ivhose highest ' .1 see, I see! A feeble started Bien can- happinees consists iii rendering himself I not work much. A poor starved field i miserable. ' cannot bear much:'' • Common sense i The inennsiderate'mim=Avtio Stoitiii might have fought him ; hut it had not.. TO PAY THE PRINTEE: - Thousands like him * sc rat c h gravel' for 't nought all their days. Neighbor Wilkins saw where he missed it. The next year he plinteil four stereo . of corn, after hi had c oated the field with every fertilizing Material that he could gath er during one short winter. He told me that .lie scraped alf creation.' tioventher told a true Enry. Two hitruired 'said sixty . bushels made him laugh. His wife made puddings without grumbling, and his chil dren toe with pleasure. Thus friend W tl kins went from field to field, and, led it as he went. In its turn it fed ititit, his ,fam ily, his cattle. His barren farm became productive ; his nak,ed fi elds became cloth ed with herbage. _He became rich. His farm was rich. Vence &Welt in die hoiiiie: hold-plenty filled his granaries, and for tune smiled upon- him. Are your an unfortunate farmer, cursed with poor hinds - 811d Alifillti ("rope ? book at Mr. Wilkins, and in the language of the Bible, "Go thou and do litewise.'L-DoU. News. ERUPTION OF VESUWII , F.—Ahout the 6th of February kit, an eruption of t his moun tain occurred, which lasted about five daye. It is said to be the largest and most splen did eruption that has occurred for many years. A new crater hat bean tnrmed, and the amount of lava, or scoria, ashes; and stones, was so great that it descended in streams down the sides of the mono fain, extended some seven miles, and spread from one and a half to three miles wide. In some places it was thirty feet high, resembling the embankments of a railroad. It covered thirty-two houses, one or two churches. and destroyed no itninense num her of vineyards and farms. The direc tion of this stream was on the side oppo site to Naples. The roaring of the moun tain was such as to disturb the iehole country for many miles* around. Ih Na plea the trembling of houses was sensibly felt, and the windows shook during the e ruption ; yet there Was little apprehension of danger to that city. Immense crowds went over to the other side of the bay, from Naples. to get a near er view•of the eruption ; and several acci dent occurred in consequence. A young Pole wie struck on the leg by a burning, Biotic, which cut through the limb; and lie died on the mountain froin loss of blood. A young .Ainerican officer, son of Mr. Bayard, ex-senaunr of Delaware,•reeeived a blow lion, a falling Monti, which cut hie arm so that It Intng suspended 'only'hyia hit of flesh: Amputation wee or tiered, which resulted in, luck-jaw anti death, 'rho ashes from the voicputo wore ear riedtwenty miles. At night, during the e ruption, the sight was truly grand end ter rific; While the immense masSes of rock and red-hot, ashes were. thrown up, amid the flames. ROMANTIC IRCIDENT.- - •Thle CifiCinn4ti Gazette states that about four years ago, a lady of ; that city induced ,a street-strul ling, intemperate woman to give up a child, a little bright-eyed' daughter, of six years of age, to her guardianiship. ,The'womatf compliedand disappeared; short time since the Wily recetved a message from the woman, .requesting her immediate at tendance, as she was dying, and had some thing of importance .to The lady went as directed, and found the poor women in a, miserable hovel, :nil in the agonies or death. The inhumation she had to.give, was, diet the child was to a cuswitierable estate, left by its father, Chid that the father's brother,• whoa han'the disposition of the property, lived some. where i down'thik river. This' was father, dying mother could stale. made.; and her dead), inquiries were made.; and - it has recently' been discovered that , the uncle is a wealthy-and repecuible chit Zen orliMilaville. lie has claimed . his ward, and the little uqforlymke is# 001i4' joying an income of tourteen hundri4doP lam per annum, bequeathed to herby her own fair • fiction," says the tea are ail he wli Atist irAr evitablysL_ ,iaw tletle uot Omelet astd; punish hie% the mural, law, wltieh'• will 'have 'oiled ismiise,'l will follow to Ide 10 . 4 **jai.) ik*ertipnit. ' 641 toi a Oititiee, witlitqfit of, IllituYtt ; Persenal pleasure ; au just de stirefiteif God goveros,the uttivetse.sio surely does a brims, Although amteeidekl, destroy the, happiness of the future. ~= No matter how deeply laid have been' ? the plies of the cilium's!, or bow desperately exeCuted, de tection pursues him like a bloodhound, aild tracks him to his rate.. We olten censure the eowliiesef others, when, under the same circumstances, we might not have acted half so well. ; nif lAT 17, 1850. - , - IEXPOUNDINO TIIIE LAW .—A..epte upan called at the Moose of Lawyer Fletcher, Of Vermont. to eanenit that legal' gentleman professionally. olle•thil t3queer it hoinef" . he inquired of the laWyer's lady, who Ow pened the door at •Itis riunintens. He' wee answered negatively. Disappointment wee stow added to the trials of Scotial. sou, bat after a moments consideration a new thought relieved him. "Mett4 yenrsolfctimgis the the mew vary information as well as the Squeer— seen' yc're hie wife." I The kind lady readily promised,to do so if on learning the, nature of his igicul ty, she, Wil d it in her poivet, and the qth. I ervocceded to state the case as ;follows : . ."Spose you was.am sold white mare. and I should borry ye to gong to mill, with a grist on yer *back, an' we should,' r t nn farther than Stair hill, when'all at wormer: ye should back up. an' rear up, an' pitch up, an' break yer (learned a l uld neck, whe'd pay for ye? not I, tithe me if t The lady smilingly told him, Se he had himself had passed sentence upon the case. - advice would be entirely superfluous. A traveller once related with all Ettriniw ness to a company of persons, that he had passed , through 1416 five Avis'Ons of the earth and that among other enriosities,t he had met one Of' whicri6l4her write► had as, yet made mention. This %fond; was, according in his acentint,a huge ra bage, which hail Drown shi broad and high. thitt fifty armed riders might have station; ed themselves tinder a single leaf, and per fOrineti their mantruvOeS. Marne ones - who heard hirn, deeming this - exaggeration not worth any confutation, said - , with muck self-command, ant etmlinnes,:tiba t t he, too, had been abroad as tar ill! Japan, where• to his astonishment, he saw more, than three hundred CopPerainithe at WorlehpOn a single kettle, and 'within the.same were five hmidred men polishing It. ”What could they tin with !melt a mon strolls kettle?" naked the ottiveiter. "Cook the caliber therein, of which you just now told tie ! A Gcsatitoos Damn.—thi the morning after the deliveribg of "fled. Brigges ad. dress before the Seamen's Widow and Or. phan Association of this city, a -colored man called at the door of one of lady managers of the Austlciation„ . Left what ap peared to be a note, and hinted quickly 11. way without a word of explanation, or gi ving opportunity for fora envie inquiry. It proved to he a siMpla eyveliiipKericleiting a one dolldr bill, and tquin"the 'inside of the inatiription,' in brief but ' Significant characters : widotbs and of mariners." This was undoninedly the• voluntary and liberal offering from the scanty• earnings of ,the •beirer- 4 -probably some colored sailor-e-a,noble example of modest kintlueas and. generonity. The duller of this colored, sailor. beistowed,un• der such eirennlnixtteen Oa it, was, must be i regarded as,moat praiseworthy oc,thc sib eral contributione of the hat, allPiYernerY of ihis excellent SocietY. 4 .50 shines a good deed in a, naughty world. ,---Stitent ( Vass.) Remisler. STRINCIIIMT LIQUOR 1.4 , 11g.-.—The sachusens Legislature ham passed a , atrin. gent license law, prOhibiting the aisle Of all. spitituoua or fermented liquor in a leis; quantity than twenty-eight galloni. except for niechanica and medicinal purposes.— It authoriers town to appoint suitable agenu for the sale of liquori; who shall be paid Ibt 'their iervices from thel corporation treasury. 'rho 'penalty for infringement of this law • iiiimprison. went in the's:nasty , jail, .oer hard labor in' the hone) of catrection,from los to thirty days-41130„dollar line end eureties. to— keep.44 Pe"el °V! 4itlenr, law. for Ycor- ,For, siidy d l 9l o !.Y l lo o Ti ti P c o ., Otlitli •11*. Vaisorrrogr.Wo ihad,been husy during the. ,day mooing:Atm lino through a thoase,piisee.of troodlitud., old wttreiD,Jelle., 4 l,fot Air OM” in. silence r ftll.,ll,l,F,,ahe, Wented.mente! into conversation and none, with the ek ception of:poyself,.,wiehed to Ice,tirY, hr t r" - .1 - I loon cmhtheiteed 'dieloOte on vithhtte eubjedhi and'ihinga; 'end, n aa it mutter Or, cotirse,'Vput myhestlegfertormfr Strocki ~with=toy languige,t she exclalmedi 'in sr tone quite fluttering, to 'anyitanitylx..l44: how , damned lon ,tare." A But, the meat received a Aleath. blow. "If Lyra asAtigh lamed ~all • continued , she. 0•1'd quit eniineerin' and go, hatpin' a lit- de grocery. Soinebudi has sent us a lottery ticket from .Baltimore. No use—we newer had anything that would draw. short of a blis ter. Once tried to drawer' inference (for a lady casting sheep's eyes at us • and gbt our ears boxed for out paius.—N. Y. Day Book. t•• ' • nodaaniOtt; ,Initirg s lnit dont knilw h 64,1 ias , Coked: • ' vholmi 'bad bitioKaiikiid ale lite whtih dothl'initti a , Itordin''' in a Bide iSpiat 'mini births ' Tina! ootn:diti. 'oo tAont siih.doWit t nano my tin pilijand and Vito Mee al** A* 'km Welt. Meal &anent' rill grk 1 ,14 if dein!" a 1 11 t. wfpit derititilhitinniihnd th'idfreatid &Mei , doSin ride 1414[4161 liiiffin—didtitiinik, on lin tin. l iind *tient ; • Ohnirftle stattle,renbbllTgiabbioul-•,:. I.' -0 %Via Me& en , iron amides WNW] if. n::, 4114ita•Ihntol rear koala' ilotiniao.ses , i i i Wit% -de 0104 (Deo jiiiair lAnr&- into der o 14;1. MO avia4+. 4 i • .-'• ,-'' ' i . ' ' . id' 01 dis('.sit thildtbiltilliii '. ' . ' • '' ' 00, lona, mass"! I hear'iliniethini f grooloin',l looltPp ip s der , *is. free Pr 41 'eni T -Snie of tkeorOleit li ' esnO, nialcW mutioe'ob dstlere.. ,:T' A t ; di' rlit , . . rekri . • saY, athany?it . ree i,,'/Yl . tir.,,;Yei i'e r- 4 4 :lle 4 F' . 41 11 .41, lirlill'ill.ie b4t oio,op afore, o r I y p4fAi, find .yr;i l ; ' O I trip to •Itit.p tip; !Nip ~iiiiii,d'enclit,' hut oty, beart was up, in Antinohif an "my feet was heavy as lead ; ae t idl I 'could 4o read to litep fink a tiok:a jitthi"orqd ' kin. At last I alone del folk I little back; so . ' den toddits kesti;bymity,l, got -s aide' hied to -r Dia liolcolor, did 7 4 1 0 ber'_: . .. , g 0 -",t "All die while; 4em tleol l 4 l theffejeere looking at ine. ivid.ile bloott:wwiale'reet eb 1 dar nittufs. Welkin's'', I kept out link i a frig ter ; did you Mier I an' A h tm baako um lei and fauter.• tuna I slip by t‘el Atoms Mt de alearinl t an anti isaase. , iril9l l elm did see lightnite.coase down a deadpine tree, sae how du nigger streak it. I run all de way tO John% bones, ito' der 11 feWdown mss' dead. Wall, din • I 'lay • ?atria' :and " Wain' till John emus oat se; gir,n;e. a amorist oh brandy vine liyaiby, , l got , beef emit' to 'Milani about it, an' be's gain' , to get folks to turn out for a re hunt* but if hitituterilitruhiht • . lielitiG;',.-1 -7111.0311 TAKIN 4 k ) 1 6V 1 ,04 1 .47 1 0 14 ' TASK: hoop, istfl!, l l . One following ease from Dr.' .../jaqi#l l Wayne, in 140 C O9ll , 1 . 1 0 4 1 11 M the Pn!naal , hilt tea: Ygl; March 13 '04 Of••-CiFitY;:r 4 01 11 40, 1 6 9 V 1 4„ 1 e• aged . .about.. thirty.. ravingg r!.!PMr I . I , some two or three weekia, prepuce a sliroi decant oe .of the )larkef dr ." 1 0441 1 !.c, • k ry tree, (przetes girilin#s‘o:.lkitth4Phtshll added a few epooneful*Ore.as drank tot bout half f3beLiot,4>mlia .c a me , Mak ,antl,crlisily4Afe4. Arffll Boors. When Winn my, , i4r 1 17,114,14 1 • 41 °' :44 * nearly dead ;..tho pupae o • in ayas dilated to, the, uteret 'far. Air facta,e4ll4, tied•singular:disyos h 4 F014 • mined: , odu r of-rutlit i a£4 4 l:ll was th§:ACid,-!OWR••11- CI*. I . II AP L. t, /4' species. of thOl c4ro .;*!c! tused *Sher' We hare ,50411 freely of this bask iega,rnee4entlempobp4 l ,o tamp, costeeat.4a4 4l : doo o ls*.if . 06.-414104 (NO....c..wrIPAT.c. Chtettunearriet . 'dive heard some very eitiiiordi niinicateit (gilt& der tried. rentein, .bor in o M l o l n is oguniml,fdr &Jong-PT° , V 404 not mono to oucli die Prig°, DOA,* 1.1 MA he. Joshed abnot, hint With , tholoPir) Pfrk'T unconcern.lnnetOint 10 think , hiPPOlg TOO safe. A t last , the ,suripson was , pitB4., b.; stated that the dorsusaml 44, bust ititieti a gm, a iforpahoh ;in , tit° tinnAp ::114 3,144 produced the matted hair.;li i4ttotOr e4O, `from and taken out of the wrund. A basin of 'Warns' wail broughNinto daffeotittretfoin, anti-as thahloodipadual 4 , 401=144* piece , of priated: import ippeareki-Ithe: arethileg, of the gun. 'which prose& to be ball +or a ballad.!: The other half bad .beea long :to the man's pocket- w hen, he mat takenw tlie , was hansed.—...Lortf Elder's Note Book. Mattoonri's ilisesennres.‘--His' defloi. lion'of Arkin ernbiaded the wide circle of kindriest. 0 vitt Owl lat.°. lie would sel4.4iii chin ii: 'Your smiling in lour brother's Weil. lie , efiai:ity pont eitthortotkm oilthpr .flarr.,!,llftto virtuous dionie is e qual to almsgt9ng ; your . Rold:„O,$ : wail direr in the ugh* road is eiinty,; ittir wi°4lg the iiiu i ciPArlri t g' °ut '7i, sing stone, apd i pitiros FR h!th) 10 ,: lions from the road is olooliki I yourgi ving water to the thirsty is alio* 'A" man's trop meal* hereefepr, is tact god he• dim , in this wodd to his fel4tr i mon."- %Vireo b4it 44t 5 .; poopre will. gay. 'IN 1 0 1 property low he loft behind. , • litho r pu,, the +meth , who nnonooe higt.th Offkgror witioudtoWirst good docile kati thou no b e f ore time t' '7"..ircinhiniffol4 irvisig +! Life of Molomed-i , , , ) Three student* . spa** me ah a contury Man. and "li tle ono with him thee *edema ''birb:"''The first'eaid.atiniJ nterikiitith'pi Abralitb6;"' 'the second, "goad momani: father heiiik;"' sod the thi4.1300 moritlol.lojherAeco¢.'!- .Tfr, phi gentleman lrylied! rotiti, Aittl4M. l 4Nuft ItPr"1"40; I"i4 S li 4t, thelon,olliaml..y(no,,yrWmlx!!seelt fs- AV' Isegrs*P ll, S° 4 o Orfi 4 APIPh =MINIM= Al ' usuite Titiovortr,)--Sesiiiperefin, siiiiiktii* "oV'tbii '1341e0h.411W iesi 6 0 1166- teiY ititholit 'I titf i nteK" . M 4 Moir tha thOttkuitstelfi l 'di the Yizsiveki. 4hone grOeb ir!'pliarka lli ir saiipthrellttrui ble: ''' 2 ' . ~, ' , l - • . An infidel remarked, within the hear int of litre girl of thirteen, that all thinga eadrifik* chance,. and the world,' like h rouithrimm. spring up in a night: • ml eheitild like to know, air," she asked, "where the seed !came from." ECONOMY.-A man who chews Four. teen Dollars worth of Tobacco autinally, and stops his newspaper because he-cannot take it. The reverse would be wisdom. BCAUTY.-"T110 divine right of beauty," ssyaiuuius.• , ia the, only diouie sight a wag can acknowledge. sad a pretty woolen the only tyrant he is not authorised' to resist." TWO VOLLAIIIB PER :41,/$4,11#1,114-' INEW A TIMIS h 4 Sr Aga , will oci; swerve from the path of 4ntr to gain a mine of wealth or s world - of hOst' ors, He respects the feellogsof rich and the poor, the hOnurable anti OHI humble. He is i.e careful not to speak an - unkind or harsh word to Ins serum** p, hie lord. Ho is attentive to the wanted* slave, as to a prince. Wherever you Meet him he is the memo kind ercommodafing tuvalnnatire bumble individual. In his embodledihe elements of pure• religion.... Nowtsp Is Won which the law Of God Condenni....no word ie spoken that, taloa dorm of than. Be thou like him. thus yriowlabit prepored to live ordie,teaersir Ood'olt serthtor in heaven. Malloracrosty.—lhero, to .ap Inmett,se Otarcb Factory at (11sWego, 00. dweg, the following results colt, •woes t,OOO bushels of ripe corn,.per week, and ,manufactures 40,000 pounJa. or, loooi hnitee of starch during the same tune..."-- There are . 1.!, furnaces, with cortespoud. Ing drying rooms, and 200 ciaterni foe re ceiving the starch in the fluid 'form.— The number of men employed is aboot. 70, and the 4altre.of 'the starch annually man. ufactured exceeds *124,000. A bum Ltrx.--insernit,generelly,touat lead, a, truly jovial life. Think what it must be to lodge in a lillv.. lamina t e, pod- , ace of ivory or pearl, Wiiii;pi!itirs of paver. and mital. of gold, all exhaling, ;web, a ppeerfume As never rose fr o m human censer. Panny.pga in, the fun of sticking yourselves op the night in the (olds of a rotte,rpek ett.to alaep by the gentle sigh! of summer air, nothing to tin when you wake but to wash yourself in a dew drop, and fall to and eat, your bedclothes 1 , , .tok;NE! Sighed Mrs. Purtington, ere have have been sullerin' the begamies of 'deal!, three mortal weeks. Fos', 1 was singed with a bleeding phrenology in the lekhomprthire of the brain, which w ea 'creeqletl,by..a stoppage ol left ventilator of the. heart, 'flits gave me an inflame lion l i n.the bora:, and now l'm sick with digg chlOrXorip .morbus, There' is no bless e ttirti of health, partictilarli when ' Y4113* ill k. 71rHk 'PEIIPPCITON OP MACillNglitr- it#intie steam hammer, the largest ever Amide in England, snit weighing ma tons, iirbelng manufactured in Liverpool for an esiablisliment in New York. The' 'ma chinery 'by which it will be worked is brought tormell perfertion, that a thick bar of iron can be sundered by one blow of die hammer, or an egg placed in the • wineglass min be chipped at the top,with • out breaking the glass. 3V01111.r 0.0 RE SPIRIT The Mehra telOahilip 1 Morney, prithe minister to 114ry,,the.'loth of Prance,, one. of the ,llTAflt ll# rat,,lqatealt!Bt l 2 end the moil vivo. I P'4 lll l, t ia il 91 , lye age, being asked a : Hitt" for e hie death, if he atilt retained thgA Maured hope of future bliss, eopt . e 4te'he4 ao eoutfortably enjoyed du ,vinlo), hp vide this ipionorable reply t"I Ont, said lte ? ..as,coofidebt of it firovo Oup t :ipearitestilde eyetliettee of the 13imit'Oetket I ever was of ;to mathe opalTol trutit ,from all the demonstrations ,of Auggit,to ;77 - . • llesniterwrizi.eiritatsb.—A man who had purchased IV pair of mimeo, finding the ANWNI WIC rather a rough one. he conclu ,ded shoes under hie arm. and wulitlod,frollte,harefooted. After a while .11441040 hie, great toeouking the lead Ni clear at a, whistle." !mute r said he--"what Im mandop fink that wuuld hare been fur the eteigyiniani praying at a eampmeeting in **nit lisrietit . itiunnet fur this politer of lb be doitailed, a zealot'', old ne , 'gra' hii*NY ' • 4 / 4 ment yFe: bless de Ler, cut he tail Erna *mein ye of t" Atinstiver sincerely endeavor's to do aU tite.gootille , eany will probably do. No h More tinsels iMagines, or will ever know loth. day of judgment, when the seeress 'qf Idebeartgetiall - ba toads manifest. P4V.lctigio•—"l womick 'hnW they mske luoifcr matches r said a yobbg lidy'fti ha husband with whom she was 'alwayi quarrelling. • • oTheiinotess .is very simple-• 1 oaae made one:' he answered.' , ittiow did yob manage it t" 03y .leadingyon to church." t Mrs. Partington is or the opinion that 'Moont,Veaulies.shotild take Townsend's 'figappsrilip, to cure itself of ertOt lops 1. 1 , 90 14 la4y thinks it hes been voß!iii4 / * 0 , 1 P16. n9qlll'¢ eibe , won 14 1 st 4 tYI• stomach. tilit;lgno pqraone Ilikve a, oilly rafibion 01 ridieuliog,the ottirr_kago 'tote. rtortting 211 . .' w111;0 ihikt theY: are piping lk.P°4" ,rootplitoont to tlosiir inceators. 'Ay! exeellent epitaph' was given many y ew cif , Ott 0 0111 • ti i t - 1 r • th I b sti?'‘le ahletly lady vvai ,wa s Eiway a,iul always quiet." ' Irlehj edge said, when addressing a i priewaer :convicted of intirdee, . 4 you.sto beliangeiL and I hope it will be a wanting DIEVESIEZ,4CIS. -- the differente he. tween a generous man and a miser ie, the' one {ores the specie, the other theepeci.e. To wipe all tears from off all fat l/ is a task ti hard for mortals ; but to ilteyi ate misfUrtunes is within the loos, {flitted • uwer. To 'expect to be great .ivithoP.thiyist enemies, is to expect tree 51,19. 14114 Itteir freit,withelli being "pellet/1'7.4: Every one owes obedience *0 I I "..x ' but a still higher obligation g t dtie to Milli. slay, 'sod it it,sohapi!ens both eiorKO' be complied with. ti,o! ,§o o :it!ii de to 11. tegal 110, th an an ituntontl_L Thera is oo olaisokono 1 11 0,114 11 , the stidroo. or Iho. bat alto It charms the itnewsing. h irtrititlt the iguana° , of foolish, sea ' ' r t . . " 41‘ 41,) ==ll
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers