••, , , 41 1 0 i.: •., •,,. 2 •' *4-,..4%-u'r . ..* cht,4l l . t ir,.l •prt tt 4-* , . , ,rsj• -,r., i -,-.,,,, .., %,.... 1- i•:- „- . ,i'r -F.. i : • - 4 Itiel •I , 7c •!" ' ' --» . . ';1 A. v ". f.'4 ', , • • ,-- s- 4 --- —• .. ,t. ' 1:1' /, -rt.. 9 , 'il ,, ii, - ~,.. $ ;1c..4 - 4 . • .„ t ~, ~? ~.. .4. - [2 ) . -1-.r..h.,. , e. ~, ~..,- . ; :,,..., I , , --• • , .. 4 , vlis, i',o4 - „.. ~., „., . A '''"" 1, ' • ..,, ,- •'••. , , I -I': I\ ;,, , ,)k . ..,- , '4. • 3 •., ~; ,~ ~, , hr'ir ,) A:, • ...,oi. , 0, , ; , 1 ti P - ,. 4 + ~ . I • 1:,,,• 4,, . f . ' D i „, i ill t, • • -------1--- _______ io# t:l4 , '4 *Aid ; 1 ' ; ; ; iii - g':i,'.ks.o.:..'n.itoriL,tt - VO,LIJME XIIV:t AVTIJOING BY LootAttiAlip Oh ! with whet glory comes end fines lb* Yea" The, bullsof lipring—tbmattitrautilul harbinger*, Of gunny skies and cloudless tiMes,...4njoy. Lire's newness., and earth's garnitnee'sprenti out; And, when the skirt hal)kt 414 clOl4 1 Comes dnwp upon, the autumn sun, anti With A Potter tdaditese tba'nld year ilikea up Ilis4tright inheritance of golden' fruits,' A pomp and pagartnefinitter golden scene. Tlisre,in a beautiful !mita breathing now Ito melicWeirrlelineas on the ettpliWint trim, And, *out a brake fall of richest dyes, • Pouring maw glory on the autumn woods., • And dipping in, warm light the palsied clouds. i"nrn , on the mountain, like asurnmer bird, Dna up her purple wing ; and in the valets The gene* Wind—a trivet and Mundane te'woner— KOMI* the blushing leaf, and mire np life Within the solemn woods of ash deop crimsoned, And silver beach, and maple yellow-leaved— M'hette Autumniike a faint old mart, elm down; liv the way-able awoary. Through tha tree. 'riot golden robin unwire I the purple finch, Thou!, wild cherry and red cedar feeds— A winter bird—comes with its plaintive whistle, And pecks be the witch-hazel; whilst aloud . From the cottage roofs the warbling blue bird sings, And otetrili, with aft repeated aerobe. Pounds from the three:Wag-floor the busy flail. Oh. what s glory dollt this world put on •r him who, with ■ lenient heart. goes forth l'uthr the bright slid glorious shy, and looks On duties well perfdemed and days well spent ! hini the Witirl''aye;stitl the yellow leaves Shall hired II seire sod give hint eloquent teachings He shall So hear the solemn hymn that death lie■ lifhtl ar Wall. that ho shall no Tot his long mating place without a tear. From the Litrrnry rmnpaninn. BOLT AEI/SWEET ALICE. BY AMANDA MINNIE DOVOLASS. •.•11h, dohs% you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt, Nwrrl Alter, Who., hater wee s. hrown Who bluebell will' delight when 4u gave her a omits. And ormblod with Irar a 7 your frown? lo tho old churclk•yard in thr valley, Bolt; Ina owner secluded and lone, 11141 have fitted a ol.di of uranne an gra'', Anti sweet Alio* net under the stone!! 7'. Dann English. thin't you remember ! Are those Aim riegie words it key wherewi,th we miry htek.the flood-guten of the heart, and send t tit I sweet waters fit the pat over the plains ;madman the hills of that fair land, known i , t _Our halos' experience as by gone Even so. There rises Were n visions of n time when the bright, deep eyes of the pang Spring canal shyly at us from be neath the et•initit's manila of winter-W heu he blue.vinleiat knob) iliac lirtt tint from the Mal sky Above ; whorl ,t he, cowslips of sunny May, and the gf I,llin hearted butter -4,lpai first jewelfsl tho slender blades of pruss ; and thu hawthorn grew white with its blossoms ; when wo•rmuntsl the woods the wit , de of that long, warm. liveable .1 atm holiday, weaving garments and listening to the concert of birds in that dark, mislcto. vt readied oaken forest. There was one in years arty• that prayed—" Lord keep my memory green," and the clinging tendrils of our hearts gnever baek yearningly to this prayer. Bet-green and fresh us the poet's prayer, had the heart of Ben Bolt been kept—from his early boyhood to the hour lie sat by his old friend, and listened to the song of by gone days. Not 'through a glass, darkly,' did he review those scenes of the pipit, but it was the going back of the boy heart to other hearts of ehildhoood. There was the Hula old red school house, with its dusty windows and desk that bail been nicked many a time trying pen knives ; its tall stern-looking teacher, whose heavy voice caused the young ones to tremble; its rows of boys and girls with their heads bent attentively downward to their books and slates; The wild winter wind sang and whistled without, and though some few childish hearts tried to dial words for its mournful notel4, they were young mid happy to know that it car ried desolution and heart-ache in its wail ; yet did they learn it in after days. Then there came a few light, round snow balls, so tiny that it must have been the sport of the storm sprites in the eldrich !ovals,--eliiinging by and by to feathery flakes, that danced about over so gaily,— ,Ilovr the children's eyes grew bright as they looked at one another, and thought of the merry ride ,doWythe hill, and the suow lialling'fbat *mild make the" playground l'lnWagoin I Tito ,last lessons were said,: books 'and :slates put aside, and, iu this Idaeo of the %donee, reign4trgay, glad / Voices. Kate ashley shook husk her jetty 1 ,ringlets, and laughed through her spark ling eye's, as she gave Jitinie.blarvin that bit of curl lie had tensed her for so long, I immitott,,,lkels,l44,the,prettlest sled in the whole school. 414. a bit cif engitette Was I that sante &Out tottipink Kate ; and . AterciWm that : Sppyia Dale, lookaig as de -mum ikkoklaAte,n .*P 31 0. 1 4 from a of new milk, and I,sut.,.playfnl, as, :kitten, too, ifftWiihO, inifoito of her quiet looks.; .and 'tins stktsly; Eliiialkitllll-Qatiem , Boas they called,, hot, I question if England's' quote 114 4- h444.191 ;' !#0'0)' 0a, 1 . 1 ' from thUna.wbet,Wlloi,P4o4..urkialt'fo Ivied& :Ao.take thew Wale, All ea MayisasiVeit &HOC". 'lrery • beautiful and ' r xh g , w ith her wineomeychildiali 1.0444Wa‘a,f114'09141i! 'She )04144,01404°" 141- most fancy her a litho maw olulkorerect - fedirbalstuv .•-• ~•. ' . . ~ . ~., .. %iffy' 0 '!st. 4flaiin - 1 1 1 4 departo4 , zi0d440:410 044,1i0htfiV9 lfAlls, .. ipot , sie 4ircoWim4soit wPA,, Air*, "ug - til • a rich boyish .toicatwatitrtied ' hp.,. , 11y :004111 , 10144110.40 01 1W ,114,4 A 1 NC ,,40 ' 4* r 4 • , , i 4 '.. 6 tr "No, I goes noti Bdd, alto replied, in r , haisignikbarsopm• , , . , - • i . igivoltawooos. io too deep for you to 14' 10 1 4... i ...i i . I. guess I will carry you home." .-171:10`94-* , henay to be carried so '' i rtiLlott'ihilatighed low And sweetly. ?lOWWTI-49-You're just like thistle. w•tutonvor aN anow-flake, Ally; I could carry il .., F. 69 England and back again, without -1 alantliatignitl," and he tossed the As - rl , it hie arms. '. J ii ,‘ ..k,ltp, let, we go; the boys will laugh st you Btu," and ,alle Btruggila• •• id , oVirlist , de Learn ? they may -laugh at t'llett Holt as numb-tut they like," mind 4he )wave boy drew himself up proudly s and pall~:? '':u uhe.0..,..441s (rota 1 .: i '. lIIIMMI forehead . ; 'abut I did net mean to frightoi' ,eles, and long ridenesdged laehee, Rime you, M i ne, he con'finnel, As he saw hew' ding the pale cheek. Ile carried in his bei. the Maori it:ambled. „ ' solo keurl like the 600ot:titling tto softy' , So she put on her bonnet anal cloak, and liy her temple, Mid Wills a talisman, keep- Ben took her in his arms 11-4 if She had,ing him from the enehantinent of other been a bird, while, the little tiny thing eyes,, I nestled down on his shoulder, as he went When the eorvjesig,were closed, Bon was L stumbling threugh the show, saying K ay. thronged about by old fami fi nt faeott=e-they" ,laude pleasant things, that the shy little ' hail so much s to say, so matey tbinir to girl laugh ; and when at length, he opened, speak,of, so much joy to expr , B4 tit but re er mother's cottage door, he stood her oti turn, that , it well nigh &moldered him.— 1 ttm floor, saying—o There i Mrs, May, I It was very pleaeaut, to be ed warmly well I Baugh t Alice home, lest she should , get cotned by old friend:4, delightful to chat of buried in , the snow bunk.; she's such,. a' by-genes ; and !twee indeed tiailiblith or 1 weeny little thing;" and before Mrs. 'Joy to,Ben Bolt. May could thank him, he was out of ' Sweet .Alige I Ah, liewheig and weary sight. the time hail been to her. :sometimes her , What a brave, glorious snow -storm, it heert died within her . as oho thrilled of the was though I The boys built a great snow broad ocean ; but. when slip Molted so shy house, dipping the chunks of snow in the ly at Bon that morn, and saw hoW hami water to harden thorn, so ;they might last sonic he hail grown, a heart sickle:stream° I longer; and they relied large snow balls over her, au d. the sunishine fell dimly ou i for, a pyramid, till it wee larger than the the,grass at her feet. She know- she had school house, They worked bravely, hut hidden away in , the depths of er pure the brightest face and pleasantest velum a- heart, a wild, unearthly love, aud She strove monis them was'llou Bolt's. Such rides as to put it from her, for would he think of! they had down the hill! and though the i her now? So it was no wonder shestiould' larger boys and girls said Alice May , was slip_ her tender hand in her mother's and I too little and etiwarilly to join thew, be- steal quietly from thii joyous throng. cause she felt fearful sometimes, yet Ben It was Sabbath eve—oneot those balmy Bolt had her in his arms ' mei away they moonlight evenings of the young Mumtuer. went, as merrily as any of„the rest. Mrs. May liallgoue to see a sick neighbor, But the tVinter began to wane, andnow and, Alice sat by tlto window w ith th e lii ( 1 and then a soft, mild day would come ble open, and her Bleeder white lingers that lessened the pyramid and snow ',musepointer] to the words, falling so musically materially. "Such ti pity," they sail, I i front her lips— and wished Winter would last always ; I"Axel there shell be no night there.; anti but there Was one little wrstelike they need no ;candle, neither light of thi voice that prayed for violets aud , blue suit ; for the Lord God giveth them light, birds. and they shall reign ha. ever and ever." The pyntinid wadded down, the Anew , She looked tremblingly upward in the house grew thinner, a n d she boys jested a t 'moonlight, for close beside her knelt the 1 it' being en the decline, till 1 - )M1 dey it disap s l manly form of !len Bolt. There aces told peared—faded awns like no many of their i a we sweet story of love aud hope, not the Less childish Impes. ~.„ st for being the language of every Int -1 The glad :.'piing came with its larks and 1 man heart, Boil the tiny hands of Alice daises, and one delightful day the children 1 Wesc folded i n his, as she said very low went aM a lug- Kate Ashley was queue, and sweetly—self I live, lieu, when five and n bril liant queen she was too ; heti years more. Louie passed, tied you return a I lieu Bolt gathered white violets, nailbraid- second time— ed them in the soft curls of Alice, and told She did not finish it—it was never fin her she was sweeter, dearer thau a thouseed jelled. May Queens like Kate. Child as,elte was, So they plighted their troth, that holy his s to lid, mode the sunshine brieliter, and 1 Sithbath evening nod the buoyant heart lent enchantment to the atmospriere of her, of Ben, in its gushing sunniness, pictured 1 ellen:muss radiant hopes foi the future. lie was Then thelongJunedayseame r encircling young said full of vitality—every pulse . the green earth with a eoronal of roses, I of his heart was beating gluilly, and the and making it redolent with perfume; and coining live years were inure precious to iii a warm noontide boor the children him than the ;met. strolled to the foot of the hill, mid "If we both live, Ben, God will have us clustered weedier, told over their childish in his holy keel'iug," Site said ill answer hopes of th future. Seine were lured ito leis parting ii eels ; but 714 he pressed I by ambition; s ome dream, d of I ( tdet 1 her ( .ni alsikely to his besting heart, beret country repose ; some of gay city life ,; I Plied— but there was no whose e ye ki te lled "trod will Lo merciful to us who love so tunl thee Rushed with en ii ii Waspi, es h s , &est., ,Slice, dari n g." 1 spoke of the sparkling blue Iv:tient, zitet "tto ~, 1 , .,, :,, 4.1.4 1-...,.,, 0, , ,L... 0 , 1 , the brav e - did not always answer the prayer falling lands-. I from the Itiledjsl lips. Sweet Mice ! A ' B deem the future site looked trembliugly Ben Bolt was going to sea, Captain , Shirley, a generous, eltole-souled being as I and as she saw the fragile form anti slur- ever trod the (leek, was to take him wieder I mash face, with white lilies braided in the his protcetiou for the next five years.— I soft brown hair, her eyes grew dim with There were exelantatilnit of surprise and I tears, for she knew not If it was it bridal sorrow from the children ; old haunts were I or a burial, for close beside the altar was us visited and revisited; they sat down iu the grave- ' aid. the shade of the sycamore, and listened to They were not wanting who wondered I the musical murmur of the brook, and the at lien BoWeetioice, and thought, it strange dreamy hunt of "Appleton'a mill ;" ex . that ho should take Alice May in prefer ence to the fairest, and wealthiest. Some changtel keepsakes, and promised always 1 there were who held their beads l o ftily to remember the merry eaten-hearted i boy, whose home would be the wild blue I when they passed her, but her heart wee ocean. ! away on the blue waters and she heeded it Alice May seldom joined thorn. She I nut was so delicate and timid, and the thought I low she watched the days in their pee of Ben's departure filled her eyes with sing. She noted how the Sumner waned tears, so she would steal away alone, fear- —how the fields of waving green grow Mg the ridicule of her hardier compan- golden in the eunlight—she heard the glad ions. voice of the reapers; auil when the leaves lint ono night Bon came to Mr. May's / were falling, the merry ehildrou went nut cottage, to bid theta "good-by." Al es , gathering in the woods • then the nobilues stood by thin window watching the stars , sttow felt, and on the fiilleside as in the , woudering whit made them so dim—never olden days, until the genial spring tide m thinking of ihe tears that dimmed her eyes, welted it away, and the violets and hare as Ben told over his hopes so„joyfully. bells dotted the fields—so passed a year. She could not part with hint there, so she I She was growing fairer and mom bean walked through the little door-sard, and tiful—too brilliant for anything earthly. A, s t ee d b es id e t h e v a c , l oo ki ng lik e u Once she knelt at the altar iii the little , gol.ieu-crowned angel in the yellow moon- church and listened to the words uuitiug light; and then he told her over again h e w her with the Saviour's redeemed on e arls, large she would be on his return, that lie but it was un outward feral, for her limns would not dare to call her his little Alice had been lung in the keeping of angels.--s then ; as he tookeit back , lingeriegly; s h e Again she w•stetted the waning of the sum laid a soft brown earl in , his band, saying new days, and when the soft winds swept —el' h a ve kept it for you this jeng s leng over the Avery rye fields, she thought time, Ben ; ever since the day you breught of the ocean afar, with its broad waves.— ute home through the seow—do you re. MI through the winter days elm grew member i More spiritual in her heady, anti the sit.n no did remember, and with ono p utt i e d_ der white hands were often folded on her ate burst of grief, ho premed the little gird breast as slip prayed fur those who wuehd 1 to h h is bosom, mid the breve-hearted bey soon he left desolate ; fur I'll° knew she sobbed the farewell ho could find uo words was dyiiig. , for. It did not startle her ; shelled felt long But five yeare are not always , a life. ago, that this fair green earth would. 11041 1 tints,, True, it was such to the,tioiet, her pulselem heart, ere it, lied, hilt the thoughtful clluirlie : Allen, whitsil largo dark OlOhitOT of Oriltuod, Pio was sweet atel eyes had stolen brilliancy from his.,book ; beautiful, yet in her idulesiness, deatk' haul "t 1 tlO:latighli t g 1 11. 110 Utl Areheir—hotti ao aff,O I O,YI Nava her 0' 1 '9 4 • 4* °T Ill'oile left were laid to sloop ; in tie, tild,chu,reile4 in lenclinest,, .t was only 4 v . er, little where, the pighSsMulsikone tut* grime. way testbesleod °trad e Pod , feet lied Others weni. ..out to,seek , a furtuners,ehe never ger; woary,; yet "she, Itltogeil to lipty world, and some ,pAr i tse NlA t turp look once iotwo upon the ll4wers, and have roPl.fiu 4 FoutPu l i ly t;tietfown,tiy eel Ittn.. theta tortdded is hpr hair; 'll4 so she iii?: siiql,but Alice UV, soul* 04 keitild. SeMl„tltt ' i le• IT* 9 4 " Sil r Og * O- Ikur k ° I,Xitt idio was taller, evil her .alight , form OR 11 4i - ttiPc., -IX Qrq + gra°ooll' 444PP°44,,hutihRO*Sis ss,C4 l ,e „MPTAttg,.*hen ~Silowte'olll m odi lie smog . arm ed looking thrizaigh her gees step gstheriog *lt Oka naty'Ortains'bf +Riad watphed there an o p, Ott i mf fr.kbe the pigii h ond tho ,a . lartgrov ttlp,Ato Akita at , home nowt to, : m ist: lifw . , ! mi n porky ultirnsfilf 0 0 Atitt o atrarkthq " u r n ' ; Bowlog-,..7tieir chief support '„but o.q was hula 0f,..P0449, 1014 14, kidii yattni the same shy,sweei , Alioe ,t4at lie u _33, 1 k wore opeuiod to the fair, die& girl. ' ' Tliso% heel mirtiCid through the snow. , izetuidoilon hoOips a prayer, auil . l3fessihs , Pug o°4 had onto, bill*. 1 -1 0 W stnuige for lieu Bolt , unit, her mother , o &ivi'n& mil' that five years • sheet . ' *emend BO welt- aneir to the fitir, (load face ; ,and they hiaiti lysand stranger still that this large hard. ml Spring flowers in her waSS brown some sailor, whose voice was so full and hair. ~ rich; should bo Ben Bolt. Kate Ashley The church ha chimed, ,softly to tit(' wag -not thinking of the sweet Sabbath few years earth had claimed the staiottste relit, as the•ehime of the church bell float:- srsul of Alice May, as tinny twooght die cal threngh the village; there Pito stood tiollio in the little old chore t. How beau before she inh•ror, :unitising her shinites . tilal she looked in her IN,hito; burial robe ; curls, and faqtening her dainty , bo nne t,: toe fair and sweet for death ; too holy, had with its white iibleine and drooping M ee I there not lieel4 a resurrection beyond.— bells, thinking if she could net florins's. M ost beside her stood the friends ef her Ben with her sparkling siyee--it' wroilti lei girlhood, wising ou thet yinieg t e ,,, 08 If delightful to have his whole attention . ths- I they Woula Ft4l her back to file, „end its ring his stay. Ism wit have. So they laid sweet, A liell to Ile thought she did be* very heautiti, I sleep ,in the obi ebitroli-yard, uni i l those as be sat, beforo service, looking on the-' mho had looltea 90 , 1 1 3% 1 4 11 in teok tO . t.hoir olden fakes—.-but there was a, hater• one sorrowiug.,ikeihrth 411 blbent (audit il of life than hers he fancied, us he wow the motet early dead. . . i ' '.li t ie n it y, with her half dosed There was agony too deep for utte'rlhee. p,` • G &TT 13 B4i , Bilfg , P , A,, HILDA Y 4 ,V4ENING, , CT4:111E11 - 21.1853: ,,. -I. , - • unkitLESS AND.FEEB." •. r ' • When , lho ciitrong,•'llerainbitearted man, *bone.guidic3g;,atar bad bean the /ova of filet ! sweetprl, e_emp hi p (trot the oot tago home dirsolatii ! ;tin let, iihrOng be 'neath ii'graY stone in thrithttreh-yard. '" Dot hod' and tittie , ' Ahereiful, and as' . years pissed away,thi - !to 'think: of her accincrlanded , in , e in fruitage of the Edca 7 lajed.„ , ?this wait the crinct ettag of; as . 1116 y 'Kit in 'light; years afterward{ farectbat ' had !glutei their early pathway •,,,,. 'hearts, childhood had Only they tWo were h the tremulous cocatil depths; others iu thi beneath the waving ! there were who - sic; ! greewold uhurehyardi fairest. atul:the has • Alt, he (sera tat ver !, ! ' lie baillcaurd from: elate mother, icto , 'slir her !darling,- bow pal ' hail .grown;' how.elte. way in . her saint hire' messages that a fond, could dictate.. Down ' than any ether earthly ;bent ; cherished titer Liedli. Many a time re sweet Alice risen bd . ( the beauty of that to so dimly, and he km,' call life had merged it I should meet low ugait Years afterward; tl sleep by the sure 'of • , • CL Parents enunot be ing society for their men cannot Lo ton ch ates, The adage In whielt ,Fays, "A ,tuan putty he keeps,' T. Iy it ie of infinite it fuie.4hed with compit emus Ituarta anti huu Sriy thb Hall; in his "WClrik by ,Ilarper &lirctlters "Society, is thelt we of souls ; and virt.i necessarily i Neu it some thing nitich is eithm nistei atlubri... on's.. The 'society is persons is enjoyed boodud,thei i, while vice carries a sting in tel !Ate society , of the company you Ice both the indica tion of your cbarattei the Thrmer of it. in company, when il '5 Of the mind are, opened, there req ire`guard than usual, because thelp assive. Eith er vicious company , you or it will not ; if it does you, the end of going f ill be tlef salt nodetv I you wiTr . NI you, I'M- rrto-w -tatos of Conseicnce'wear off, end that name' at which imp Is bow and devils tremble, vou will herr condemned end abased.— The ltible will 'supply materials for mi me fling jets end impi ms buffoonery ; the consevenee of this will be a priteticat deviation from virtue •, the principles will become sapped; atvil the fonees of consci ence brolcbit down ; and when denanehery has t orittptetttheelltirecter, a total inver sion will takeplaceT they will glory in their shame." . , , The IFlritt Voire for Liberty. A inah cam% mein the (lime of the iIdUR9 of Delegates of Virginia. He turns au eye ol fire around liitu—lie tremble with some 'nighty emotion. That emotion, reader, •wilf4 trio breath of Liberty. The grandeur of the svelte eflllllot be e yainied in one glance. Ile stood timid a ghee and prodentleidv of men, roneciouriii deed of the wrangle of their country, but relying 'upon modest addressee. They lied ever let their imagination* ramble in to' visione of upright end chainlees inde pendence. k *anemia things frirtiatle the idea: Their habit*: or thought and action, their pitiable weaklier* as te country, their diagust for War On account of want awl plaints ting centliets, all tended to dispose them to freedom. They Were, halides, le gislating beneath the jealoui eye of ro) al deputies, ,who would not fail to call.;Na t son by its right name. , The) , eat, es, it were, under the glinitnerings'ot diadem: Who would dare, it so inelitied,-'to stalk forth from theii , 4l/idrt and throw down the gauntlet to the mightiest empire of tito world-41m, prinei ples,as oltl is,,tite great globe itself, interwoven with every page of history; sancifoned 'by Senerutile u. sages, and as, prowl and a wful,tut time luta wens? ,W ho would, dare to leap the tools- : , grown and' froWitiiig tairiparts 41 moiler.' chy arid pluck likiiid-rest lfag? Who would tooth out- frOrit!ibit eecurity, of -aiibe miaiion,'ent4tietneuti-like, gtoop the, by timmkn't.. 4 vf*ti tholaTaPdt,A time . tnetitof time-rrlnit Owl had„ reared, Up One to‘6ll it: 'Thit Henry.' ' • ••• • opened his lip.. Idis hearkilig- With; slll*-04ietP.V. 1 4 1 'w4lii.P040 1 g!L I for a moment with a doubt—but no longer. The electric appeal ptkoi:fortbcderting lialhintl4erqrAtifl?tlrOMCP.;e,4f l luP "K nyerwiedroing, tnalle , ty, Until until -the last wOrthi, ugly° M 'biker{il,ft the lent AWE - of.sthq ettoslly, bthtiud }IN form of (tegiimo 101 0 hthirt He Ott `AtOr4,l4,rell!iipl.mtkk, .l l ia lieioviutiori Was sAbot. ' P. T. Barnum hes, r prtented $2OO to the tentilicettie`e'relitlen er'a 'ittnnittninnt Yd KJ►ud ivereofr, Abe; noble .'Norimelan youtb,.wlacupretetred tleollt-Aut4o stint, • A little boraboin' ten yeirs , oPage!esitl to hie playmate, 4 4 John, was lbet k : 9t4 !rte. ther I saw et,your house l" "Yes, replied the builathees other Aire wait my.owu "'outlier, auil the, one bufcito' her wan my mother too, but eke died helots: I. was berth A Pit EN() stEt‘u.N.—Jleittuttester V ir• ginian states that durintlt&rain on WWI: riesitay evening' ita4o-is 'number efAittle abatis, niortsltrittic free'. hall sat itjalor antl ut ce,,111! iu . tlwtplace awl yhitAiii..y, 11 1 1 1 ,4 Elll were ftelcuil ufk butuu Ate eta ,Jtci; ',.. ! - N r, . 7 - 1 , PT' • 'Kate' - Illaisitlert 3 Kiargeoftwaalow .- ,•,-, , ~,,... '; , [Frqs,tie; Re Atom Oh v e Bra nc h, , 6 0h; there eveethousands !" said the lit- .. , i 1r...!f0 P,ff 92' 11 1 laa'!a !le Favor._ , tie Mni. Howley to hit dretamelieei *ha "' Itillle,rierreeat !mingling by the bed- Iran measuring silk by the yard; •uthiep flildtpfloa skit Mother. ' There was no sands V.' bread in tini'elose't. and Mr' the whole tiny , Just then she caught a sly,gonersicrom he het tint ' timed food. , Yet he oat hoot her linshatid, as he hit:Aced over 'his lot0i!ir;, ming to keep up his 'spirits. Still at times Wm knew it was in 'rebtite'frillt er , lesee,,l he thought of ,his loneliness and hunger, gerations, solthe ~ ettitl. , leughltlif 1.1, aided i anti` lie NAM' icarcely'keep the tears from help it, Willisn4.l44 w a s 10,44,;, so just: „t lerewArr he knew, othing would be let me talk,as I ~pleatre :, I dote& hinller:{,, t> grateful to his poor invalid mother as a ,You . ' , sweet orange, and yet he had not a Wiiiiiii tlnfittei'llittl i ftliver beetiViliait "Pendt - fiC Igo world - .. • ' ed with thitt itecutimitiof hie peen,. bride; The litdit, *oat itiv was, pinging was his The habit ..of es r ation he l* kee 'Wirt. (PWiltirigif tht composed with . air and enthellisbutett.t,, an • that, to ,unorrupulaus, "voids r.fel the Child was s genius. and falsehood., Ever tones " their wedding day a ferveht 'ircilsilaPper It the shrine of mu he had (rein° cheek this protienilty: ain• But elint'lAte 'found, like many 'soother 1". .As the tears nron!il mll down his cheek, lord of ; emotion, the% .- • , t , :, and'iile'vtiteV. w o uld' filter at his sad, sad ,thottglitti , ltellid h o t thin to; let his moth ' &When women *meta, 't, , ••. ' . And there's the tad ~,, er arte c latthesillyi,vising, , hurried to the , " . wwdow enttslotre watched ..a man putting Nov* was the young :sal. , ItandsnoM'4, l , 4 a t b ill, with, yello* letters, ennoun- Kent, tIOLiktY - more ;Soluble of in,„be,iief t eirig 4 talll i atlani M - ttien * favorite can 0061s than 10,411 x, ~rhe magic Pr , nne I, lesflefi *litivid sitietiott night at the tem coloni, and rich silks, , and the Witinieg l e . ' .. . smiill talk 'orate littleltreas Mititei, Who' ' , f ob. irg, cmi ld, N o go , ” thpnght little Was it droll genius in her say; hadeetther . • Pierre-rand th a n .pausing a moment, he 'tongue. out hinenli and s , ah° inthOdeil , clopped hii'hanillt 'his,evia lighted with her besetting habit with a, perffel i nlifil•'• unwrihtiot 'ilie==inii Minning to the tittle don. „ stand, he smoothed down his yellow rude, ..... , hie friend I •Suntrnet. \lkea of the id faded in, 1k the glad, together, the slept in' io thajungle shade, and ;AFC Some illy in the ig these the flea that. of tlintili.sv lecp beside icily Alice. cutely a. ; leering 0 ; heart, ouly , heart. deeper bad be leiu and groeu niritforui of qua, iu all ho aw .but An thing we Atality,.: he it ' 'Cite untley s were to • have a 'titan' party lathe evening, and Mr. 111..detterittin.J' ed to try , ed experiment.rwhieh he , to contemplation. So wimp the,ledittehed aesembled, and the gentlemen were ,faat dropping in,, With' the rest Came'. }Whitey, looking euite'fltished end 'nets "Why.are you so late, Din :Eluntby;4" asked his wile. , "jlly dear, ot had been to make my last" Will anti,testament, I couldn't have come any Sooner,'" said 'earnestly: been working-like a tlray'h orse ; .thousands ot clerks • to -oversaw ; twenty. thoustanti cart loads to ship (4; millions of accounts, to "tiend to beside" it's been .liouef`'l to six nvensall • ' • ' ' By this time every' eye. was tipitri.lilm. l astonishment and mirth predominant, but our young ,huithatul took ,coolly, wiped, his heated brow gild Ititiked,aa uneoucerrie etlind iiitieeent as' irholarliaid nothing to attract attehtidii ; but' his . Wifeterosy cheeks greworwier. • • •'. "What do.you Mink pf new lynotr asked a gemlernim, as the C4llvereation named pit literature. , t'' • eililaithed 'Hartley; telling his eyes; tint! earlll,4 a half fortive glance at his wife. "It sets Me imperfect rapture". —I used ) on ambrosia-4., drink, necter.—. I meld tine the sittlior,,,l should certainly take my heart in my hind and give it to' A smile went round the assembly. new house," liq, added. ItilluwT,lll adyantage. "Happy Allen—what ti,ortu athinanft. balms air', 'Mottling - over ii salt month loaded-with ;Mitten 11l a. house—two etitriesthigh, and 'painted , yellow—glorious trees. mit Jewett withip.A loot of the ground-- 7 splimeid. garden with. one rose bush and awilderness of . , . weed—charming ' view-flits fin every vide—delightful' pond—peeping.heremmi • there under the think green scuMand duck, weed. ? -Ishould think ,Allen would, be happy—well. I can't think of anything ; less than a kink." By (hie time the company wereliretty , well iriitiated.into.littntley's "tenet. The ladies laughed faintly, for they were every one of them guilty,in s greater or less de gree of by perhole—ait perhipsyou may be, reader': • They rallied, however. moil jeshal with their tormentor; bat he. enstaintsil ' part admirably' throughout thestviiming,e.. Every sang ; that was swig bid ,fair set him ie rapture', If lie told the truth, he was . Intending to die twenty tini4—.4rattiported (nit' tif hitriiierfirith joy 'Airiest tdieh; nevi er was he as delighted in ail; hisliteeer tvrY' five raioutesiind by the way he, risked his thousands; one would have ' thought him cashier of ' th e batik' . of Everything was sublime Or horrible ; every womint;heautiful se auangel, or. hotrotly is hidg, lease. In vain the, pretty wife ; endeavored by. all the masonic signs or.wedlock to - step tier bookend, ;tea ell* 'could eeiteely keep lier 'equanimity till the last pectins, gobs; then site burst into a, passion:of team, and "would not be condoned." , "Come, Katy. tell me how it all lo o ked' andeountled," said, he, litilltelenting that he Intl vexed, her an • . "Yealittow 'yoti looked, ri diculotts," She, ahsWered through nobs, "Yon 'knew' that yoir Mortified me-half to death. mothee•TThh4l4steer• - ltetlint 1 ,19, 13 ,4 1 ,4:4 , have dared to treat me se, ,! hold up my head I'w - society again. 1 thatiglittithtittlerreitHyjdie,,; • • „ K 013, 40 hoobilui;. spairing'itt - the'faiture oflthritiorts; "heivr tifi'Yotritriagine - you I ‘ , itasnitlett . yesterday when Yeti declared' Your- -teas tirekert when you tripped Over a tottelv=k*whell Yrofr'tleetoeimaker yonrEdress you `raid' 'it Nrilts ei ton large ;were' not these esprellitloni ai-ridiouloue ' as Milne 3" ' 1 ' '• ' ' • moment, -01 don't see eel ein help it yetalkedsm ever since I was born." '; • '" I theta :einy need of'resit extra's. gllttee KittY'l dessert-let:lour, good sense anttatet;" ; ' '' ' ''• Lnnt." , answered Kattientity-ticuptimt.a very little, ;*.but .e.angt help it ; ((very hotly talks ito,," Not every body, Kate. Come, what . trhe}l-T gat-you. if :yeti will only. break Yourself of thie,otilottf. heti; S XII buy you , a beautiful little pony d', . Uhdcligltiful exclaiinetrkalY ; "I'll (1'111111;06hr, in thi! world fir Stith yea, l'll stop it if I twel° cui'my tongue , oat !" ...oh, Katy, Katy." cried. her, huaband, "you are iticurrigiltie." , lint - Katy, did try, and May • you, d ear succeed as well itti Bratieh: , • • • • ion Bolt to (el . in select= t, end youtig their asslet ()thing by l age to by the cern men 'especial that they be onsseesieggoe , \-iAttotan sot tithed Itabett 'ly publiahed "WIWI(' pm net , 'have „titisionfl to t,F niy . aim V' *eked a gentleman. Mr. t'uttan answered, hir'zi +dal ,natk&ta mute is opus andlikintlirom a little box some old stein 'ed one eager ;leper ut the- Molitor wft9 alept i ond ran speedily from the !Muse. "Whit did , von say wee waiting for me $4,--Te-o-te-bur servant. "I am. .alrootly, , nearly worn, out ,by com pony" "It le Only a very 'pretty little boy with yellow corio,:(rhe pays if ho•catt only see you. he. ii.attra -yqu not be sorry. and he won't keep, you a moment." g.t) well. let hini'conte," said the hese kiftil singer with a smite, "I never refuge Little Pierre crus e loosender h i e his liked') little roll of paper. %With it nianliiiinet' toweled foro child, he valked otreien ep'io Madam M.—. .and .boyairig, said—tl. came to see you 'beelines my mother in very rick, and we are too peer to get loml mid medicine. I thought that perhaps if nor, would only ruing onY little tiring tiothe of your grand "'beetle. may ,holouno, ritthljoher would buy it for a 104 sem, and so I could get food mid Medicine for ml; mother." Womari'vete from her seat very'talVanit_stately the' was; she took the little rettfrom his hand, and' lightly bummed the ' • '•Did toe compose (t? she nsked.; "yeti, a chifit r" 'Ana' ihe tiefils WenderTul lit tle geolun't "tlireintif von like m to ovie to rfir p;nwert r' she fished, ante' tare* . me "' 1 1 ) 1-1 : (t) hoi : p i) ; -. 711 711 ;; i 4- 74 1 1 ut r es ciiiitan'etehvb Mather. .4 will send 11011te person to take care of your mother for the evening, and, here ,is a crown with whirl, to get fond and medicine. Here is aloomm of my tickets —Rutter/ to , eight ; thatiatill admityou to a nect near mf.P. %eel littl4,o4 lol eft Year ,mother ; lies a treAsu re in, yen.., A !Moil. btside:hinoll with, jay, ''Pierre Ugh hot some orMigee.tinll ninny 'I little Itutu)ry bootelis;ondeiatiltitl' dam' home to - the poor invalid, telling her, not ; without team, of his great good fortune. Neverint hit' We *ad 'Pierre ~been in such agreed plette, The tourer, clashing Intl rolling, the myriad lights, the heauty, 'the daahing of diamone.s and reading of silks.` bewildered hie eybeland brain. At loot ',hi inthie;—and the 'child sat with glances riveted upon her glorious feet -- Could he helloes that the greed lady, all blazing with jewels, and whom every body seemed to ivoriliip, would 'rettlit sing his little aril.' Hisiathletii he firaitell-04he band; the!whole hand: emelt up a little plaistiveteltediely:t he knew it, • anti clap ped, tlis hsp4i, for jay : And oil t how she acne it lc was an /Mille, so weirdo!, ito pool-tinftduinig—ininy a litighi eye dimmed with Woe, 'and naught eintlil be heard hot the 'hatching .. words of that litue song--"ob I , so touching , !' Pierceweiked home es , if he were mow ing 081 air. 'What cared 'he tor money, noir t 'Phi greitest' pritnatlonne in all Eli rope had rung hie tittle soot, and.. thud sande Itad'erept at , hie , grief. . ' The ; next dey he was frightened at a visit from Modem M----. She laid , her hanky,' hie yellow nude, and turning to the lick , woman, said,, ..your , little bov. inedaine,, has brought you a fortune. I wiitiffbred this morning by , the Wit pub ließi in f;entilott, three' tinetlred pounds for die 'hide' Anne ; anti after he Iran re. MOM a certain 8111011Fli for the wile. lit ' ile eierre. here, is to 'hare the profits.— Madam', thank God tinit your son lies a gift from hekven." The hohle-hearted singer and rthe poor women wept toge th er. As to Pleire, dl wept mindful of him who watches over 1 I hu l at i e m tr i ed ;tlt i tand.. bed .1 ;i 1 i t ( T e d , and i t e u it e knel t reti down a sil y *.n p l yet eloquent prayer, asking titePs bless. ing on the kind lady who had deigned to , notice their affliction. 1 And the memory of that prayer made the singer more tender-hearted ; and she 1 who was the idol of . .Fliglanil'a nobility, like the world's great :nattier, went about !doing good. And in her early happy 1 0 dim. 1111 Whet' the grave damp* gathered over her brow,:and her eyed grew di, he WhO alOtid by her bed. his bright fare clothed in the tnotirtiiog of sighs and tears, and smoothed her' pillow, and lightened 1 her Ipst moment by hia undying affselion, was the little Pierre of former days—tittw I rich, eettouiplieheth•and the moat talented l• ento-peer of the day. All honor tot:the great _hearts who from , their high stations send down bounty to ihe widow,kJ th I 4 '' 111 Ipli 1 er e 4 I II • . , . PRESENT To , UNITPp STAitti —.14 is mated that die Rupee e( Siraiebts recen4 paid a vi u , to the V. 8. I rigate eisaiberlsnA, Hi Niei, Pete. - ed she •Saw', eihit 'utile vibe egti aid* to distribetel,ooo titres rustooi , dao I Crew. • TWO DOLLARS. PRE 'NUMBER 30. EXPANDING llnf CH1GR1E.....1 4 110 &is*. Tic American sari, that Ihoue in essyr circumstances, or those who wale ms. dentary employment within doom. use their lungs hut little, breathe but hider sir in the chest, and thus, independently positions, contract a wretchedly small chest, and lay the foundation for this loss of health and beauty. All this can be ob. viewl by a little attention to the manner of breathing. Recollect the lunge see like a bladder in their structure, and can, stretch open to double their size with per feet safety, giving a noble cheat and per feet immunity from consumption. The agent, and only agent required. is the common air we breathe, supposing. however, that no obstacle exists, enteral:, to the chest, such as twining it about wit stays, or having the shoulders upon On rising from the bed in the inotith‘r place yourself in an erect posture: with your head thrown back and your about. dere entirely off from the chest, then Ins hale ell the air that ran begot in ; then hold your breath aud throw your arms off behind —hold your breath as long as possible.— Report% these long breathe as many as yon please. Done in a cold room is much better, because the air is much den ger. and will act much more powerfully in expanding the chest. Exercising OM chest in this manner, it will become Sex ible and expansible, and will enlarge the capacity and size of the lunge. Making the bed Of It. The editor of the Clinton Courant has been on to New York and purchased poetry pen that won't write "anything . else' The following is the first rettnit, of Byline?* attempting to write a prose item with..that pen A Yankee, out walking, in Virginia, it Wheeling, while to himself a talkinVer. perienced a feeling—strange, painful, lad ; alarinhe from hie caption) his kneels. enf he suddenly 'discovered, be was covered • o'er with bees I They reined on his stye. lids, and perched upon his nose; they • eblonized his peaked face, and swanned upon his clothes. They explorett hie swelling nostrils, dived deep into hissers ;• ' they trawled up his , ttrousers," and filled his eyes with tears ! Did he yell lint a hyena I Did he holler like a loon ? Was he swirl, and did he "cut an' run P'' or 441 the critter—swoon? Ne'er a tin's 1' lie wasn't scan a mite; he neserswnins —nor hollers ; but ,he hived 'ern in 'a - " mille: tight land sold 'an for ago blot lots ! niLICACV Or THE Ert.—A, distinguish ed german physician wse called to itaf . s gentleman who had alWaysenjoyederOd• kilt sight until tt was lost in 6, moment !rhojtatient had been at a party of Matilda; him, and covering both eyes with his bands. wished him to guess who it wee. The former, without speaking a word, en deavored to escape from the pressure, and when the eye-lids were opened he wait entirely bereft of sight. Although theta was not the (seat appearance of injury the sufferer ternains hopelessly blind. Feet OV A SUBMARINE TELEGRAPH.... .The.king of Holland lately delivered his , usual speech to the States General, ens. eluding by 25 minutes past one &cleat. P. IC It was immediately' translated, transmitted by telegraph to London, and composed and published by three e'tilatue the same •fternoon. The line tremens nearly one hundred miles on the bed of the German ocean. The speech euetain• tnl 1,750 words. A resident of a western town tioisphiiio• ing that he could not sleep one night. avow mod up the cause :—"A wailing hahe of seventy days—dog howling under the win. dow— T eat fight in the alley—a colored serenUtle at the shanty over the wey-4 tooth ache, and a pig trying the Wok door." "Tun 8111COR or BOLOCIIIA."—thia eel• ebrated beinbardinunt has just been plow rially caricatured by a French piper. It 'consists Ws brindle dog tugging in over grown sausage. Nut a bad put in, that. UserULNIRSH.—The first premium on woolen yarnii, at the Plymouth County (Mass.) Agricultural Fair on Thursdays was awarded Miss Betsy Holmes, of MMfrhlield, a lady ninety-five years of Judge Washburn anti Judge Bishop. the whig and democratic candidates for Governor of Massachusetts, were class mates in college.' Some start in life without any, leading object, in view ; some%Mt a Jow and Dome with a high dhe ; and just in proportion to the elevation at Which they alai, will, be their general eueeess. TonAmo:—One hundred and forty mil= Zion dollars wool' of tobacco. MiB mien. mud by (treat Britain Wet year—kitio‘git money to keep 'n million of boys at a good school The Governor of 'Fermis, in balky. haw mg said that when there was on ttiOnt flour the people might eat straw , the 'pew pie threw him oto of a window jut Muffed him with. straw till he died • , . _ . A colt:red man who inutertook to gal . 's living from the land' which 113ertiUSseittr t gives away in northern NeW yod.. the'huniblebeeir had to go tibia' a der knees to get aide clover.' The Nutmeg 'Tree, grows en the 'oath side of the Consumers river, in Odiftewhif and bears fruit 'superior, it is' esidi . ktoilat which grows on the Spit* Islands. Turkey hai two hundred rwt► ` 1111161' •. . , The deß►oiena7 of A/4w is Nom wi, , , roma% 10 aorly. Noslatak,h,,:ori,p , ,, crop. . ~ YY. ,„.,,,.... / .„.„ ~,„.„,,,,,,..e . ..... ~ ~„ el . • - 4-t ,t.,i,* ,-,,.,.,'i ZOE =WM
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