Star and banner. (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1847-1864, November 10, 1854, Image 1

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it!•.' , ,lin r, l)4. A. 41.! a.. . • • - • • ,
.•
VOLUME xxv.l
,
Thelgreat High Rtos11•: ,;a
a* , tnncsys , nAsits
l'bere's s path stretched out before Ult
'Shill we UMW ebtkinefoa way
the mists - that o'strt'bovie'' " "
d dfdl int:tiro(' melt away 11 '
:Why Mend ,doubting or inquiring I ,
Lot CI farpird in.our tgigh,.
And ascend the path of buy -
Mount .
ithe mat high.road of Right.'
pont* may emir at ,our endeavor, .
And took down with apornlui face,
A. With every nerve in inkfoti
We press past them in th'd tics. '
!Shall their puny !efforts shake is, .• • , '
, When , as moment but in sight,
And grin they're left behind us
,Inthe great high-road of Right 1
What-though ate. and conflict? welt us,
Won at every step wa tato t
If the right path we are taking,
Let's endure them for it, sake.
There relitaini this coriiolition.
Stronger thin' the world's despite, ,
Tbettbe sky! will end day brighten
If we keep, the path of Right.
•W0K1M...-Perhaps a more lust beau
tiful compliment was never paid to women
thin the following by Judge Story :
To the honor, to the eternal honor of the
_aex, heit.sahl, that in the path of duty oo
uacrince with them too dear, high or
low.
Nothing with them is impossible,
bpi to shriuk,from what loye.• honor, inn!).
,co,Oco.and rang* require.. „The, voice , of
,plessurtror of, power , poly pass .by unhqeded
-hut the ,voioe of affection never. the
.chumber, of the.sick, the pillow of the dy.
..tag, the vigileuf,the And, the altar of Kell
-40.09, Jlewer.ntisied the ,presence or the
iyippathirts .of ,Womeu ,1 Timid though
, she be,,and sp ,delicate that the wind of
..he,av,ep nay not too ; lightly visit her, on
such occasions she evinces ,a courage, which
~knows • not.and fear, pot consequences.--
Thep she displays that undaunted spirit
which ueither courts difficulties nor evades
them; and thatpitience in suffering w,hich
seems poor*, even .over.deoth itself.
MOTHIML AND DAIMILTERS.r-lit is a
nmet •painful spectacle in - families where
the mother is the drudge c to, see,thellaugh
tem elegantly ,dressed reclinini at their
'teeth-with their music. their fancy Work;
and their reading— beguiling themselve - to
the lapse (dhows, days, and weeks, and
never dreaming of their responsibilities ;
but, as a necessary consequence of a neg.
'acted duty, growing weary of their useless
lives, laying hold of every newly invented
stimulant to rouse their drooping energies,
and blaming their fate when they dare not
blame their God for having placed them
where they are. These individuals wil
often tell you, with an air of affronted corn
passion, that "poor mamma is working her
self to death ;' yet no outliner do you pro
pose that they should assist her, than they
declare she is quite in 'her eletnemt—•in
short, that she would never :be. happy if
site bad only half as much to do.
INTERESTING EXPERIMENT.—TWO bun.
dred pounds of earth were , dried in an oven,
and aluirwands put into a large earthen
, vessel; the vessel was then moistened
with soft water, and a willow tree, weigh
ing five pounds, was , placed therein. Dur
ing the space of five years, the earth was
. carefully watered with rain-water or pure
water. The willow grew and tourished ;
and, to prevent.the earth being mixed with
freely earthoar dust blown into it by winds,
it` was covered with a metal plate, perfora
ted with a great number. of holes, suitable
fur free adtnission of pure air only. After
growing ',la the earth for five years, the
!Mow tree was removed, and found to
weigh one hundred and sixty•nine pounds
suit about three ounces: The leaves which
ifelltroti the tree every autumn Were not
included in' this weight. The earth was
-then removed from the vessel, again tided
in , the _oven; aed afterwards weighed'; it
'was , discovered to have lost only *bon' vivo .
'twitter of its original weight. Thus' ohs
hundred and sixty four pounds of lignin,
.ar.oinedy, fibre, birk, etc.; were certainly,
produced from -the air.
,:Am old:farmer who .feared neither Ood
gorimeth,had hired a ,diirout negro ; and , to
get sotoe.Sliodel, Work out oi he•would
,:otWitYPRIMI lone of "necessity" on satur•
day,and, 4 4 1 ' 611 ( 4 U would put that point to
theAtarlOrielittnce. One morningnldgim
bo proved 're/musky:" us : would `
work no
intire On 'Sundays." The mister - then
hued yiittititai that It tiras ' , cilia of nennse.
Il#,"" that the'sciipttiree allowed a man to
get Ont lir &pit; oire - Sitbhath 'a beast
"Mir hid fallen' in: '""Yes, insiniti:"'reji)le ed.
the blatli, obst.not it herpend•Saturdsic in
'digging Me pillor the teryperposer
An old gedtlaatinfroto Prural. die.
,trivia:' _haVitpg bar! invited, !alit Sunday;
by one of our,citigenti. to titteni‘ divine ear.'
vice, withlinn, at a faabi , oritible church the
4aitio raibire.itte., dr which 'igreeibly id'
modern'icitotn, are left eipiNied;tvits Ask
ed, •
Well, Mr. how do yen like the
looks of our new Wirth •• •
t.Well,ttirait the reply; aerie,. ye git
lathed and, plastered, ii won't be every int .
nightly lookip' Cootaro."--Beitow
Inn; • . ,
~ 11fatriatony, does agree very well with
ionant,peciple. Thorlow Weed, the editor
of the . ,4liNkny ...Evening '.lotovinl, in the
,sujitsiof all the dirty turmoil of polities,
„liatifound leisure to enter largely into the
,gubjvaition al babies. He is now the lath.
thildren—hia valuable helpmate
:hrtipg. presented him 'with one ever e
lexe.p,,monthe since their manage. We
.14. 1 RuiciApy;t 1 pit Weed was rather a luzuri-
Milikind of striation anyhow.
le g ` gilt that feels not its own shame
48 ,:ailtidlxi9curable. It Was the redeem
illt,PrPFtiel!, in the fau!t or Adam, that,
,the ~commission of hie crime,
me the eenee : of hii Pahidnees•—W. C.
!#.fii* • 4.49P."410ther, tbui book tells
1 14,0 U , M! MU q`ettYcle of the eeele.'!---
; r
.1 1 .I!§itiPt'lfle Ole Mini, get !Mg r, I
z, gq`ultl,4 baa 4 0 4 • ereisfd le, often,
. . ,
i, )iit.i
•
'OPet ts tit G ' F RIDAY ITEN G ()VENTRE 10, '1 . 8..04.
•,
ri
• • ,77.:94ve
I t r
_l l. l to 0
/Wm Itactl4r— "acetic
• ifi re
• , . :.;
,11)r) P9filf, , i
Mei SolomenWinthropY was~a + plain old
farmer-44n. anitiliei precise man, who did
every thing by'Jestablished 'to* ant,who
enw no reason why people. should , grustrat
thine beyondi what had Seen recaudly
their great grandfathers. Life had ;brae
children, two , .boys gala girl, There will
Jeremiah, seventeen years old, Samuel, 'fif
teen; and Fanny, thirtein. '.•
It was it cold, winter's .day. ;Samuel
was in'the kitchen reading a book, and 'leo
interested was he that he did not notibe
the entrance of his father, Jeremiah'was
engaged in cyphering out a sum which he
had found in his arithmetic.
"Sam," said the farmer to his youngest
boy, "have you Worked out that suneyet'l"
"No, sir, returned the boy in a betita
ting monad.. '
"Didn't I tell Yon to stick your arith
metich till you had done it,?" muttered Mr.
Winthrop to a severe tone.'
Samuel hung down his head, and loOked
troubled.
"Why havn't you done it?" continued
the'father.
"I can't do it,,sir,"treiriblingly return
ed the boy. _ _
"Can't do it? And why not Y Look
at Jerry there, with his.shite,and arithMe
-09.,, ~had cyph'eredr.fucther than you
have, long before Ire was,al,old as.ygo are:"
"Jerry ,wille,alWaya And of uottliem,ati.
cal problems, but fasten my mind
on them. They have, 00,,interest for me."'
.elhat's because ,you don't try to: feel
any interest in your stodies.. What book
is that you are reading ?"
it • is a. work -OnYhihniQPltY,
"A work ,ow Fiddlestipke,l Elq,put ,it
away this,instant, and , get your, slato,, and
,don't let me.see you sway from your,arith•
,inetin again until you eau work out these
recta. Do you umierstaod, me F"
,
,Samuel umPle answer, but. silently he
Put away hitt phtlosophy, acid then - got his
Plate, and sat down again „in .11a.ohigkapy
corner. His nether hp, ttetublod, itud his
ayes. orePoistened, for , ho was unl,uppy.
aialather bad ; been „harsh tolyards,hm,
and he felt that it ,was .without ju t s,
cause.
,4 13am,v said Jerry, a as , the old
man had gone, NI will do that sum for
you."
"No, Jerry," returned 'the younger bro
ther, but yet with a grateful look ;'that
would be deceiving father. I will try 'to
do the sum, though I fear I shall not suc
ceed."
"Samuel worked very hard. though all
to no purpose. Ells ,Mind Wilt 4 not on the
subjtot before him. The roots and squares,
the ba'ses, hy pothenuses and perpendloula
though ebnipikkativelYsiMpl6ipltiOo**
were to him a 'tiaidilled'm'asti'ofiiiebmiie
thitl i gs; an d' - the theoWl hi' tried
the more did he . beeMn . g . perplexed and bbih
ered. The truth was hie fatheedid not
s
undertand'hicit:
• I , I ' 1
• Samuel wae,a !Fight bob , and Auqom.
cnral,y,,intelligent, for auepf.hi!t,4ge. Itlr.
Wintbropwws,a thorough rnath,enutzician—
he never yet r4et.e.; across A Problete•he
eonld,not solve; and
. be desired that ,his .
boys should , he, like him, for he Om: mired
that the acmuof,educational,iserfectipp.lay
in the power of, conquerinpuolitl,,aud,he
had often eaprepped his *pump, that, were
Euclid living_ then, he, could "Aire the old
mathematician a hard tussle) . lle, seem
,ed, to fort* that different, mg* were, made
of different, capacities, ,and„thatwhat one
mind grasps , with ease, lltioAer .o,f, equal
power would fail to comprehend. " Hope,
because Jeremiah .progressed rapidly; ie hie
•mathemetiertistudtches, and could, already
Attu:spy. a piece of of ,many angles,,,he
imagined that becapie„Spuel made i nt)
progress at all,,in the same branch, he ras
idle and careleoB, and he :. treated him , go—
cordictgly. ,He ,never, e . undifily'sertversed
i with.huryonnger,eont
.li,Vhe Ties' to iiiiogr
tain'the true bent of hie ,odoci l but be,had
his 0841 3 etendOril ef Pe •li9eg -9A .4l llPliOcier
MA he Petieeetooeli(l44l4l4 to it• ,___ •
Therewas another,tapg thati o x , Win-.
throp ,aeuld • .1 11 4,,fee, aoSii.tkat ,was that
Samuel watt cohtanually ; ,pecnterAng ~npen
such PFofitetae.•oeltere JO lo.ti,ree44 Moe:
and that huwas scarce ly evertdcP; 140{%lilin,
his father see either; that 0 he crer,tv;sh
ed bblibPYA4,4 koooole a e i t ethelOaff)PPrf he
was pursuing the very' course toiprueent 1
such a _result.: Instead of endeavoring tol
make the study interesting toslitt.qhittl, hel
was making it ohnoiioui.
• The dinner,hduri oamep,ssoliElamtull had'
noble" workird•one the;'soma t His father
wal , angeygatid oblige:l the boy top with-•
'out bit ditinag at the saute timuteliing him
that'll' was an islleplasy child. , • :
• Poor Slmuel left the , kitchen, and went
up •t&hiechaatber; and there; he sat , and'i
cried.• . At length hirt• Aniad seemed• to paw;
frotwthe wrong he had : glittered, from, the .1
hand of his parent and took• another,lurn, 1
and, the grief marks :left his 'face. , There
was a•large Bruin the room below hie chop. ,
her, so that be was not very cold ; and•get•
ting up, he:went to a small closet, and from
beneath 11 101 Or 011 clothes, ••he , -dragged
forth some long pieeosof doodand commove;
- ed•whitling. It was not trout mere pastime
that he whittled, for he••wea faahioning
some curious affairs, from:those pieees, of
wood. He had bits of wire, little scraps of
tin plate, pieces of twine, and some dozen
small wheels that he made himeelf,•and he
seemed to bo working'to got them together
after some peculiar fashion of his,own.. •
Half the afternoon had thus passed a
way, when his sister entered his chamber.
She had her apron gathered up in her hand,
and after closing the door softly behind i
her, 'she approached the spot where her ,
brother sat.
"Here, Sammy—see I have b'rought
you up something to eat: 1 know you"
must, be hungry.' ' ' ''''
As She spoke, site opened her apron and
took out four. cakes, And a piece pf pie and
cheese. 'The •boy was hungry, and/litt•hes
itated not, to avail himself of his sieterlA kind
1,
°for. •He hietted•her aalbeteek, the, pake,
and thanked her. ' , • • ' • :, .
~ • flO. :what ,'I PRetti• thing 11k5t.4,4145Qu
we Atic401 1 ,1140;41444435 Pa& mood
iMRIMEtI6I
r i —tr 13 , r. , 77, 1' 1 rv... , • ~,' -
1.
hi' fiiirbbtothertg. '11604.=
l l rro ir e 4l e_yett gliS ° e; It tri into afteitit's•donia"
~' ;""Nt►t'"thie inferiiiterr Vettitned , tbi boy,
with'wemilti o , "lttis'as Sett as r get time I.
•ivill , undri . one ektiallY se ptertY".l ; ' -',
( 1 -Faitly.thattited her brOther, anti shortly
;afterwards deft thii boil; and-the boy re- 1
stimetflic woik.'''! '4 . :-,a,. ' • ', '. ' —t i i
;" • Arthe end of the work the !various mi.
toriale that had been aubjeetedf ,li,Elatn
nertjaek-knife and pincira 'laid conllned ,
form awl comelioesaitil they were, joined
and, grooved together in;.curious ,00mbina
tion. ',The embryo' 'pliilosopber feel the
machine- - for it latticed ,MUOY MN ~,msc
hine—on thtifloor, pzi,thoweto4o end
gazed Azpon, it. • His ,eyesgleetnP4 , lritb. ll
peculiar'glow of s atisfaction , e eodlle Icioked
proud . and happy, While yet he 'pa r otid
gazed et the child. of hth labor , hi'lloer,.
of lie c hamber oPeird t 'and tilts fa ther On-,'
''' 4 1iliat--are you tiot study lug ?" ' ' ix
claiMed Mr.' Winthrop as he noticed , the
boy sta ndin g idle in the 'Middle of the
floor. is ~-.: •.. ' i
Bamtiel trembled wbel he heard' his
father'il voice, and turn , e 4 ilpidu fivith
fear. •
"Ha, what is this ?" said , Mr.Arintbrop.
Aube caught sight of the construction on
the floor. . "This, thee is , , the secret , 'of_
your idleneas, Now I see: how' it iallhat
you cannot. muter) your studios: , Ton
spend. yoni,time in making play honsetand:
fly.pens. , I'll wee _Whether you'll,leam to
attend to your lessOncor not:" :There I" -
• Aa the fiither , uttered ;that simple inter
jection, ho placed his foot upon the object
o f tlis displerpre, Theaboy , mittwodeqpiek
cry, and sprang forward 'hut 'be, !Witer,4oo
, late. The ourtouscooktruction.waeozillitl
ed to :litetut—ltbe :laborx 0f ,, . 1 014- , Yegks
wore ,uttgly,gone 1,,' The dad gaged for a
moment upon thewthaeof. ruintyand ) then
coyering,his fee° withAittitendtt, he, i buni
into tears. . _
"Ain't you ashamed ?" said Mr.. Iviii
tx,)P., " a greft boy Ikkef9,t;°•,Bl)°9o,,t;lf,°
ousuch clap.trapa, and Reit cry "Opt it
,toleaciho I chowle thlit' you chill, a t tend, to
'Your studies ? Noi,g , out to the batn and
help Jerry shall . , rk. .
ttii, bay's'. Cola!! of "Wei' 'Co' Make
o \g
any eiplana *. n,' and 'withotit ' Weird left
1
hie sham ..i; bak - yor 164 - di!" ifteineeids
.)
ho was ~ d end down.beatte ,
' 41 : hel," said M. Winthrop one day
a,ftei: the spring had opened, I have ''.an
Mr. Young, and he-is willing to bike' you
as an apprentice. Jerry •and I can get a
long on the farm, and I think the bust
thing you can do is to learn the black.
smith trade.- I have , given up all hopes of
ever making a surveyor of you, and if you
had a farm you would not know how to
measure it and luy it out, Jerry stow will
soon be able to take my.place as surveyor,
and I have already made arrangements for
having him.Zin
'tririell j . andobtaining bine
'mlestom`,•Bet'yttar-''zradeila,alee‘olll4
'howaverpaad t•have.no;donlit you' , wil-ibe
able, to, make a iiring,et it."- , .., 1:„ -
Mr. Yonos, was eThlzokfwit,ina 1 .0,0'
boring town, and he carrie d - on 'citlite en
extensive butinesi; and itiarenifee fel' 'hid
the reputation iof being a ffniemitni ;•Sam.
mei was delighted.Witl his fatber's-,propo•
sal', and-when be, 'canted !" . 114,,i'Vr. Young
also carried on quite 'a largo machine shop
he with in ecataCies: Hie traiili'vis' pack.
'ed—ti` good supply of cluthes'd hewing been
provided; and lifter littaing his, mother
.and sister, and , shaking hoods mitlkiiis
Settler and brother ?. be i lium:it : o i tlho a go
',t
and set o ff for his n ew destinat i on. ,
He found Mr. Young all thit''lle' edttld
viaticand - hi went into•thu biiiiiiimewith
ac,assiduity :diet eurpritesi, hie: moster:-!---
One J o ven ink 4ftox . ; Sz,tso up) I. )tiutbr,ep, hod
been with his masters new, IX months, the
Iditeiceine' fnto 't tte shop obit" 'it ig,lo, after
'tdrthijoniikeyttieti hid quit - worktind gene
home, and found thuyouth busilreugaged
filieg,a , piece of. IWO. ; I s'Alif reiVOre3 quite, a
number,of pieces laying cm 'OO i beech ,by
his aide; some of Which were Curitiuslirtv
i6d togetker'ind"hed 'With leriligs' and
.ilides,. while iithersthyPeariti net get ria
ely,for.theirdestiliodkuie: , me.:Yclunikas- •
,0040 , 1 1 4,0kat. SWlY o .ll ll ,B•VP*Mtq,:vpia up ,
to, "Rd
,119 not o nly mmouraged hitn . in his 1
Midettilint l ii, but he"StoCa lin : half ad lieur
isndiwas o kin? POO PrOctl Aho +next
Samuel Winthro p rimioye'd 'from
the 'Slaekimittekti4E6' the iiutettitM sh 4.
Stitaiel 0;6 •iiettittllbis:paretibiadmi;at
the t and , oftwo , eastil hii (athelk.ifaii , aold a ,
MRAT*OO, B 4O4F; YolaVoictfortaad
h!l4hti 'q
La B9'n" • '
by fiat.
tPtine4tiralajah had daamffree 4.0'0 yearao
awl ha , Waa , aga of ille ,, mitat aaaticate• and
trast - NPrill kVleSsllk the lazkyy4
:"with"Wii)
Mrthropl,ook upen e
often{ eaireciild a *Oh
chit theetheisowetiuld.ihalve Wen likahlin,
&urinal, h afill odium han etoviehlth paretite,
,41r.,Yfttkatibi411,94 1 *,Witill uh! ;
9fr li r TiRS) blit e 4•4•;A r ilthf9P,lPNir
the leahinge ha ncteire iway, 'that.
is a fine factor y they hive' 601,8111'yoar,
fOwA ,`; f.;Lk or. VII •
les," reiiirnea Ai. Young,,
three of them and' tilky'ite• jeliavyr
b lis i t ".l? .1 Pr • ,••
.t 4 I understand they ,have .sneettentive
machine shop eqnneeted pittEthereetorioB
Now if my, I?py Sad ie,pe
,gaPd a w?Fk
just! as you say he; is, palliate he might
get a first-rate eititatioli - ttiefe.' '
Mr. Young looked around at Sanfuel
and smiled. • • - • .
• "By t(le,wiky," corqinued theßldcarmer,
"what is all,,tbis noise I bear, and, see in
tim riewpapers, libont those Patent, NVin
thiop Looms. They 'tell me they "go a
head of anythieg that wais'ever'got tip be
fore." • ' ,• - . • ,
,‘.You must ask, your eon abort that,,"
rPtUrF4P4 *rl Y(1 1 0. ,` funoe pf
your son's b usiness '
"Eh? My eon? " Some of
Sat&+ " The old than stopped short did
:gated at' hie aon.i: He Was bewildered.: It
could not be that.hia.,so-ktie..idle.son-r
-was the inventor of the great power loom
that blia.lakOn the Mangracitgrank by
q9rprise. • ,
• "What do you Meat' 1" he at
i a k e d •
lilt tf. ainiarthiegsfathery that this' heal
; . : 1 ‘ , PEATiIifiS AND' FREE."
=ME
„r 4
lis mine," returned Samuel with a look of
.conecious ,p ride.. "Liovented ii, and have
taltenit patent right; and I have already
been offeredten" thousand dollar's for tho
right of patent in tire adjoining States...—
Don't you remember. ,that elap•trap that
you crushed . with- 'guy foot six
„years
ago'fil‘ i. ,•-• (1 , l ",9 . ~ . , 1 :
. ITO ' ''. ,ruiewered the. old man, 'whoa°
flYaalwßvo legt,t.9lol4 oo r, and over ribose
mind a new - 'ligh method to , be break.
Jog.
, - *Well," centiniied Samuel, Hut was 'al
most a paterb ti the very loom I have • set
t;up in the ;foto - 1i oki•thougb. of course, •I
. haveAn
.adP Inuoil.,Optiot; xnd„iwprove
,Trate,r4r there ppm); for improvement
yet.' ' •
' '"And' that' wasiirhat you were' studying
when yon , need to , od , and. sei lita
1100 me weave,
and when y0u ; . .. :-,to
fumble shoot , an
loom aomuo ( 1),! . 414,wi 0 thr0,..,
"Yonare ight tit Other. Even' then 'I
had tioboetved th 'lshii.' I' barf elude eiar..
t i e d oci evi r. ~ ,4 4 , ; - r ~,, ~ .., , :l , ' to-„.,',
stand my motheo
ed Mr. Whitldol
"Somneli my son
IR•ed
been blinq, t SRO I!
reindera coal
tow ivereldlo *n'
ing a philosophic
could have , temp
Somaal,-.Lnetat,
ed intlgment one
Of course, the
been .fotgiven fo
ntinkwos open
nature , . Is , mat
.Diffareat,min
ties , and no min
itut,t, far which
. ,
imp* to oncierst
yid dispositions
yaw: monogamy
afterlife, gayer
.George Qualms;
phar of his day,
simple odAitioo
matacian could'
NOVA
Softly Even•
Wl' If
Elope her
And elotik
. her an Mare is,given—
Trutaine ho a there:
Heavenly , ' F heVfar above me,
Though I , not see; I;love thee
~ For thy, idly cage ;
Tell me if r tithe, mother,
And my tlevribling lao ther,
• In thy pr.. Neeire
Foramp. e whenym dreaming, •
()Moe three I . a: happy beaming
(Hein'
Wh ,
• I T I A 11 0: "WO. 1 al "i n gingi
Al:1M 1-4 r
=‘, o2 fi.'Po7oleltvlse.
A biayiuirtrej front a heada c he, the le
male' ihjetua etilledin;'eitepretir ; riWe
new betifieti 0 Anothe r female docUir
finds her,parepi flying, ge. ,to dip, set
tide." Thlrliiibehd'utilitlit ail 'well write
and take instantly'; the doe-
Aar stirtito,Ortlerlst.: , Prescriptions
will be .made to of new dresses. botinets
boke; at die o)er , braugharne,, a party
.
now and theO, ncreased, tillnWaime r fur
, holteekttepinglY . tr the
thituland aid' brie ; ihert Wfilch
ladies ure sonata IY . ' 4, tlyiiig'"td be 'in.
-du tged t'•The' odtorif Will declere'lafe
Rout inf-thlf`ttid. tide' iiiriet'didgeli
outc;' order es they prize
hellth,tto lebre'sti theirriblubb:;
tell them that let. keys are 'undermining
thole Canaille den ; that cold mutton' once
it weelt , ibri/Wash g days is highly 'bene
ficial to the'utyste. ' for
thtrodrsering. ;Ma; 'Or .. bringift' Then
home.aneepeeud to dinner— they would
net drib-war forth it lives a single day'titi
lees tbrygise'up. uctr,nnwholettomfrprie
ilei -Wilitosn'h re gitt'slrestfy'qiiite fat
•fielent meahirnt mitering
hive doctorcieco l / 4 1 ir .toWn' aez AO allele&
ohm's, and MO band'ireistr williiiidtsed
be a hard one. , rhaps, after all,' Viers
efistr, ty, totheAcitioppf
inale'ldfyetcfatit.' 'pbysiciatie; egeop
Ihtiselwflo i preiti • , gratuitfiaidy, may' be
‘tlssigretotl by he ord female spelt with'
0 11 09; i s, , e., 4 4 . 4 aot.;a few, ,of
at can be, !laid/ Abe
wOutin not cilculated Tor the
di besiii;'ithe 'San at least
IshaltutA)inf ktiliffi di case; asjelfeettialty
Alkkontert , oun r 'having A.litofter , and
,more,rousimil ~ To then, the noteculine,
she l ls better emit ed than most, men,are
'for r patt medical practice *bleb
ionitieteld! whit • big Comfort to inralide.
.14—Eftincbt . •
i'nkvittlinett , hib
lately necessary
jilepand•beattity .
'th'?briiillialitiet •
iiiharinsc , llF';isvati
Rd pallet:a:taw
lasting epithet
appears either
oritdr ,. •' ,
,
i
iliCremarked, tt
Aesoication, atLi
he believed thee!'
to be eeivii4 bit
recent obeervgio
made'svith Uri '1
his belief in ,tha
At Naples, ii : small and filthy street
called :Vino del 3 Sepolreo, one hundred
and forty-three all of one hundred, and
,fortyll,sinhabtfos have been earried of,
one after spotter by cholera. The au.'
thoritieil eausei Ile three survirdis to be
removed,' and la el sentinels' at the en
,trance of-the *4: to present persons
from :Visiting. , This plebe has , ben
eineeappropri nlydeeignated,this Toccata
it
del Ben Sapid '
Innnonso dap, _ Ass :been anted in
4'!!!..!ill•lV.2.4agtiinlindikunns. the
pTovince of ti tin 21911 1 i! 6.iti!itl;ted:at
Ortwenti4even million
+,•111P •.•1 It ,4,1011 , 1,
, t-1)-
riyou iconida' 4 6 *der..
ii lo 4 l PFPNermy,'„uAtei.
as he started row 'lds
• Yohiri 4 .# '314i 1 iiiina.—..
frriltre •ale huhe harsh
ping4.B. nu,l...ic hi o.
1, an, and iPir Bee )iow
you. *While t" Cheilkiit
ifirkeits: • YOuCodie , sold
4 problem 4110 , 1 nevi*.
rebeltded. , Torglen •mo.
: , moll enough but I look.
diaccintibaticc;', „ ,
Ad-tnan had long before
sli B Imbues/. •end , his
r. a ofliclessoii•in human
simply, this,;;; ,
a havn,tlifforent. aqui•
nazi be, driven; to, lore
, l'intai no taste. , , First,
d ~ she' %aguish , abilities
nhildren,. fr and own, in
rof. their, education for
„yourself accordingly.,.,—
Juoigreat 'Mond pbiloso.
could hardly reckon in
ili, Ccolburu the =oho.
1 0 write out a common.
lle.Devolllon..
1
shades are ateaiing;
1141x3 1 .b fl"eli9o
tt I prilyer ;
agoattif heaven
lel the mind hi so *boo
influence. the t svhcile
ery
.particular action;
repel' all the gilded
, pride; and • ielf-intlir
eservedly produres the
good tor. bad, as: he
yed by, or . regardless
• moon, Profeesor Phil.
meeting of the British
'I "At onetime,
e
I one,
e was no trace of water
confined' that moil.
'particularly those
,sae's telescope, shook
inion." •
i a (
f ' :
......
a l i ge 4
r
ant
1 :,t), • -
.:* ~~.
'Ati lassay On Flower..
KT"(be.
They are of all &intim and shapes.:They
are of all kinds of !perfumes, disavreeable i
or delicious 1• they are of all kinds of
toughness--delicate, so that they die of
a stroke of the sun, or so strong that the
hottrr. the fun the
,brighter they are.---;
catiCollive in a hot climate, others
Cannot live in a Cold.; some cannot bear a
;wet soil , others cannot bear a dry—all
,ow,irig to their different conatilutions.—
Some ,are, tall ; . ,others are short ; some
have big heads; 'others little. The heads
Of "some erelong ; of others, almost per
fectly round. Ls to color, the rainbow I
is not .a circumstance to them ; the num-
bey of their colors ,js ports of
grades., •They are•not near se accommo
dating as people. The man from Africa
Will Hie and die man
Halifax *ill:do:well in the West Indies ,
but, bet aloe will not flourish at the North: 1
/Ind ,tho rottemill,not get jalong In South
AMII9I,
ee 71'41 ( THE111 orpsaa.
Thqy have , thecommon names they, are
ktiotin by, nod 'thicoriamon
tijiified they are tihriStened with by the
'botanists I bet the familiskr names are much
,ibe7rnoakfrigniftosni, being generally con
egf?Ptilttyjtb,llT,
,prtgellar, character of the
flo!ei—thg.uorning:glory. because k has
. tvay''fir turning towards die
sitth-'. The retelling glory is called, by the
scientific r gentlemen, Ate convolvulus,
is,certainly notosts agreeable a. title
the other. , • •'
CAPACITY . .
iextraorditiery whet, it chair . eISP
produoid by a mixture entl,cinontaiicin
with ot~ier`flouibri, ifici r by 'at
thelttod - of "the ticeord•
. .
g as, the earth:la r ich or poor.'elayevi or
.8 1 :1 1 ,!IIIY , win AEl,P4ill .01 1 4 11 114. Of 0 9 1 94
its size and perfume. , The hydringei
clUttiiiiitio . .eitlor is it tihidgesi its sail;
tine by , mixture with other' dahlias; by
, skillful grafting's:the dahlia becomes larger
anti MOre 4erable. . ,
• : MO OR. DOINIZYTIO.
e'rhe.wild ,run, wild—nobody take' any
,csre,.of them ; the nultiviiied,sre watched,
'rained, and guirlied. I said nobody tidies
care iifthe wihl t ihia'ie'wroni. The '441t1
are' taken care of; the kind Being who re
always looking alter the poor, the destitute,
and pie unprntemeil, takes mire of them..
The (loth is,. he takes cure of both; withr
out , him they could come to nothing. ceith•
er diem , But the miltivited fare lttler';
they Inn only hive the protection of Provi;
.dence,but.of the bargain.
„,, wno.utre •',
The, young: girl . is attracted by bounty.
.4 1 )0A.A 1 / o PlOkfolifs 3t l- eolotr Oa shows
them sinning hqr
,inva is natgrninidrLl
upon any knowipilke'Orvirtne in the plant
ityeitiontifivmenttem -- .leMnettmee
the , it mort 4 tatiibl, 'iletel rid laid int ftirs
from ,had -:aesoriatiens4shis is poisoned
she learns a ledson,cather. too
.1;1W, ,The
old florist, takes delight in a flower, He
laiii'dapnaliad the small
,iieetf,'; he ,
has
3 wildhtid its arid appearance i' n the world
—its first leaves losso perhaps, ,beetral-
Inost , killedi by the , haat At; tpq.laoltl.; hut
by fff?P4.F9aRN
rn
I ° Pell!..l l ° tIT Pr e 'e r Ye'l*
li(e. It a ninnuentia exertions •
lie`heimncer:ti strititeer , , end thenl
troisseur, inid. likba'te lee every new' vs.;! .
riety. , • ,
' *tiivits• knidst
• P rherarlit generallY';'retigh-looking
fellowei perfectly unsnited-to the heautilui
9llifTl„ttn , src with.. „But
these , objects thrive in their green-houses ;
they 'sewn aiiridereta'nifitiffin ;
they, knoworben ,they, require malting,
'lntl they 'knoer when they 'fieve'enough.
Evert plant looks as Wit was thriving and
getting on.. Thera are none of•the miser
,±ol4l, sicklAhltlf•dead. things, you find in
univsm foliectinne . of.,those who do not
derstood their mvingenient. The for.
isui etifiliteresied. There are others who
'who keelp , thern, not fur money, but for
be,windows right up against the
0' 0 94 the glass beautifully clear ; doctors
keeps them, and keep them beautifully. I
cannot say so much' for them, when left to
the griarlianship of the young and beautiful
belle ;. site is' apl to be a cruel guardian—
otte, half ,generally, die in the winter
through neglect, frozen to death ; or roast
'ed in summer by the exposure to the sun.
Now and then y ou
,may find a judicious
lady, but to take the sex in general, they
&robed nianagera.i There are good, how
ever•;,,a•gotta, housekeeper is often , a good
flower-keeper ; one who can make a pud
ding'ean nfien make a soil. To make a
l'puddititith'e' deposits a certain quantity
of dna, a cenain quantity of sugar, and
judietouelPeprioklea.her spices ; to make
the soil, she mixes clay, and gravel, and
11140re:end aprinklei carefully 'with char.
'coal. In this way a lady sometimes sue
ceetle beautifully ; whatever she touches
ii sure .to 4.0 :' aucceas le sure to fol
low.' 'lgacCeee le apt to be called luck. It
ie•no such thing; it comes from peculiar
skill in a:proper formation of the earth ;
grid, moreover, in not exposing at wrong
times to too much sun, and by risking an
exposure at a proper time—withdrawing
from the rain at the right moment, and
coming into it when,good will follow., All
this requires good judgment, which some
ladies have.'
WfiBRS TIMIt'ARE FOUND
' I should like you to tell me where!they
are not. Go where you please in the
country, and you find them-•-in the low
grounds and, in the , high. In ,the low
grounds; where,the soil is,richest, you will
find them the most 'robuet. In the high
groginds they are apt to be smaller, and
not so deep in their color. You will often.
find the same flower in the high . siinatione
and the low ; unnsualiy' the high have
their peeuliarsit,snd the low theirs..:The
gild sittm will E. 104 QPlY.rettive to'grom on
high ground', but it _will not graw.on low,
unties itii,peouliarlY,sitAted right on the
water; it canna: live awe r from the 'wet;
or. There are some plants that will live
anywhere, if t h ey ice Fo.ll Bll lllllLyatoredij
the • itylfringea s for .There, Ir 4
stet elri Width' iittilii'litlleortitei.if itiy;
they ere dry 119wers ; each are many (Atha
cactus tribe.
Some go to the moat delightful resting
; places—the valleys of the blessed—dhe
' bosom of the beautiful maiden. Others
Ign,into the interior of her body, arranging
difficulties there, bringing reli of to its dia
-1 tresses, the ,poppies are among these.--
Thelast go'when they are withered am!
dried ; the first; which the youthful beauty
takes for her bouquet, have all the brillian
cy and complexion of life, and tht shape
of life also. They are received so soon
after - death they do not appear dead ; de
composition and decay have not begun ;
tete moment they do begin, before they
become offensive. they are judicinualy a
liandoned. Often they go to the dissect
ors. 'Phey are taken for the promoiion
of science; they are carefully anatomized—
that different members examined by the
skillful botanist ; he gives you their anal
omY. Sometimes they go ;into deposi
tories ; they are Skillfully dried, preserv
ing mach of their form and color, all the
moisture being taken from their eye- I
tams by lying between two sheets of:
blotting paper. •
He dreamt that he was at the house ` of
a friend when be was taken datigertmebt
ill. By degrees be seemed to himself tb
grow worse, and at lot to es fie Iq an
instant, he *was sensible tha t'be 'bid 'l,,t.
changed the prison house and .'sliffetib
of mortality for a . state of liberty - and ha '
ii .
pitiess. ll'inbodiell in A slonilei 'te r ri
form, he tieerned'te float in a region of Pn
light. Beneath hint ley 'the earth'; ' 4,_
not a glitterilig city or village, the , forest
•or sea, was inutile. There was Dinh* tit
be seen below, save the inelaneheitypt i c
of his friends, weeping round '
a his 'Wel
reinahnt. ' Himself thrilled with *light ?
he Was' a urritiied at their tears, AO itifit•ept i ,
ed' to infOrtn• them of his happy tihaUo r
but by some 'amain-Jowl ito - nri bt le r 4ftqf
wadi denied. and as be anxionety, lea ned
Over 'the mourning circle, 'glAing Nitily
upon them, arid itidggling to Rio* kip
I rose 'silently upon' C air, their fertintlT
CAM's 'mere and more indistinct, and "e}
ally' molted, from' his eight: lisp.
sing upon golden clouds; he found 'VA.
self swi ft ly mounting the s kies,' with
ti , .7sr
enable figure it'hia, side, guiding his
„iii,ys.
Gerbils muvemonts , and in Whose 'lcounta•
i 'nentie, he ' remarked lineaments of youth
.
and age were blended together, w ith*? Iti,-
*halite harmony, and majeity, aid iweet
,nese. ~They travelled , together through a
vas .region , of empty ',peep, until o,leoinit
the tattlemente 'of a glorious edifice'slioAt
in the distance; and as its form limit!' twit
tuna and distinet•among the fat , :off shad.
, ows that flitted athwart their path,' the
Anteoce of common things. guide informed him that the palace he bil.
„. . .
HOSET Dinv.—noney dew is a . .sweet I held for the present was to be hitCiWitil.
liquid depesi ted in autumn upon the un- non of rest. 'Gazing upon its splenderf,
der'surfaces of leaves by a very small in. be replied, that while ou earth be bad of
soot called the aphis. It is very injurious ten heard that it could not enter 'Lite the
to the leave :,- as. it fi
ills the pores in them heart of man to conceive the things which,
II with a think clammy liquid, no account °f God had prepared for those who ,love him;
which die leives cannot perform their no- but, notwithstanding, the building to which
oc;assty functions, and in a short time they 'they 1
tiii•n' to` it dingyyellow. Silts 'are very
superior to anything which he had actual•
fond of the.boney dew, and will crawl up, iy, before beheld, yet its grandeur had 114
the loftieet trees to obtain it. - I exceeded• the conceptions which he bad
, y.Melmitio OF A FIEgE OF SUGAR.—If, formed 4 : . Thu guide made no•reply—they
ou hold a' piece of sugar in a spoon at the' werdarready at.thcr•dodr, and tiotefed:.;•-
; top of your tea, it will melt quicker than if Th e gu id e introduced him into a spacious
i , 'dropped to the bottom. Th e reason j A , as! apartment, at the extremity of ivhich stood
the tea becomes sweetened it falls to the i., ‘ table, covered with a ifit,* white cloth, A
botrour'ny its. own • gamine- gravity, and ', golden cup, and a cluster of 'grapes, and
and fresh portions of ensweetened tea are then said that lie must now leave him, 'bat
brought constantly in contact with , the: that he must remain, for he would receive
lump of augur till all is dis•tolved.
1
in a short time a visit from the lord of die
THE °AUBE OF COO RENTS OF AIR FRO3I mansion, and that during the interval be•
i. THE•EQuaratt TO TIIE POLLS.—The 'air' a- tare hiq- arrival, the apartment would'' fut.
rotted the equator constantly ascends, in nish•him with sufficient eutertaiiiment and
consequence of being rarilied by
, the heat' instruction. The guide vanished and hi
itif thcroun ; its the hot equ , ttorial air Os-1 wan j e f t , a l one . ‘ ' '
wends, eold , nir from the north and south lle now began to, examine the decors
flows, towards tile equator to „restore the , tions of the room, a - nd observed that the
equiiibrium, thus
,causing , currents of , ,
. •
walls' Were adorned ivith a niiintter of, pie
. ..- . • . ...., ••
, . .
Some will last a year, and are e.alled an
nuals' ; others last lotiger. Small iiteel.
men. sof vegetation.: Ito weiet, liavit'ittit the
length of life of large trees; they reaemble
hirda—tho wren will riot live as long as
the eagle.
thousand yeti" ego, • '
On rushy an, upturned brow. •
TN' moon phone brighlas now;
' 'Add deny a heart like mine' '
• - Bow 'd t.iw , et beauty's sbrine i •. ' •
Bleesing the Lord for light
, On good %lit .
A thous And years from now
Where will 'my'Splut bet ' • - '
In vast Eternity • "
-• Will I he lost in night.
Or bathed in Girsi's pure light }
Thought's wings grow tremulous and.weiek with
fears .
While hovering est that gulf—thst kuil of van.;
LOOKING AT. THE bIUN..If a person
looks at the sup, for a frew monten,,S , all
other things' are dark. because the pupil of
the Ayo Apov tue4 50.C913 t ted .thnt it is!too
EIDAY to collect a suflicieut number of rays,
of light, so as to enable it to distinguish I
colors. Btit:after a few ininutes it dilatesi
again, and 80 accustoms itselfto the light.
WHO WATER BO[ s OFF FRON THE!
LEAVES OF THE CABBAGE AND POPPY.—
The reason is. because the leaves are cov
ered with a very fine waxen powder, over
which the drops roll without wettiug the
surface, as they would aver duet.'
8 pLDiEns.--Onp peculiarity
of the Turkish soldiery is, that they will
smoke. It is a very cOmmnti thing to Poe
a sentinel with a cigar in his month; and it
is not unusual. in passing a corps de garde,
to be respectfully asked, "Have you any
tobacco, air ?" Nothing is commoner
when one happens to be such - king, thin to
be checked by the military, iii a voice be
tween entreaty and cucnmand, "Wait, air !,
A light sir, if you please 1"
INTERESTING CORKESPONDENCE.—"Dear
air, I am sorry that I cannot accept your
kind offer, as am already engaged; hut
I am sure my sister Ann would jump at
it. Your obliged Eliza 1.."
""Dear Miss Eliza - L.; I beg your pardon;
I wrote your name in mistake, it was Miss
Ann.l meant to ask—have written to her
per bearer. Hoping euon tuba your a(fec•
donate brother, J. H." The doctor and
Miss Ann were Married:
Reports of the vintage are still very a.
larming. There ,will not, probably, be
one-fourth of the average quantity of Wine.
In many countries, there is not 'so much
as a single pipe of wine. • Enormous prices
are given for the new wines.. Twenty
four woidores have been paid; fur a bar
rel of wine, which 'formerly cost five or
viz.'
There are one hundred And twenty-one
Geiman newspapers putiiished
,in. the
United &mei, of whirl'. twenty-seven are
}.latlies Only' fourteen of me WWI& fitim
ber are of whig
In the early period of New York his•
tory, innkeepers were tined:if, an Indian
Was peen leaving their house drunk ; and
the whole street'wue,.fined,it the right
house could not be aseert4ined: "'
ONE or TUB Ostst.l—The'lroledii Repub
bilcan says that p 137`rtemn sTontan
into Scott's hartlivsie few' inorningi
since, bought- cookiiig siove, and plaeing:
it on 'her head, delibetittely , Mari:held
Pith it.:. :.if Oleo.. ain married: thitie•
V!94 ll trl YRs l l, l l , oyl4 -
Why is a tidy. walking in front Of
lautat *maw
ate in *".
‘f; 'ffffff o^ • e j.ll v s Lf
lIMEMSM
PM/0M 'THEY oe/ Al/TlOl 0011101
THEIR /1011 R.
•A Thousand
BY. L.P. BUCHANAN. i
TWO POLLAik Tilt -ANNUM:
;NUMBER 35
1 Dr. Doitridipre
Dr..Dodridge was OR terra ofvery in.;
timate friendship with Dr. Samuel emits,
and in religious conversation they spews
very amity happy hours together. , Amont
other matters, a very favorite tape wit
the intermediate state either soot, hied
probability that, it the instant of (limit&
tionr, it was not introduced into the' pits
once 'of all the heavenly hogs; "end !the
splendors around the throne - of , God. -4 4
Ono evening, after a onverbaticas of t ibia
nature, Dr. Thdridge retired to rest, With
his mind full of the subject diem:Weed, aid
in the "visions of the night," bit{ hied
were shaped into the following 'besintifat
form : •
tures. ' Upon nearer inapactionhit
to his astonishment, ihitt. -they 'ftirreed le
compleo biography of his .iwn Hera
he saw uppo , the canvas .that ,engels,
thbugh unseen, had ever been his familiir
attendants; and that, sent by "God,' they
had sometimes' saved hi' from imminent
peril. Ile beheld himself first represented
as an infant just"expiring,, when bits lite
was prolonged by an'angel gettily breath.
ing into his nostrili.' Most of the 'ro ni.
reuoes here delineated Were Perfectly
iar to his recollection, and unfolded' ittipj
things which be bad never before`
stood; and which had perpleied Lir With
many doubts and much 'uncivilness:"
mong others, he was particularly; Street
with a picture in which be was repr esent'
as fulling from his 'horse.' wheri - detith
would have been inevitable, had not an wits
gel received him in Lie arms, sod .!)mken
the force of his descent. These merciful
interpositions of pod filled him with jour
and gratitude; and his heart oyerliewed
with love, as be surveyed in, them ill en
exhibition of goodness and mercy,far ',be
yond all that he had. imagined. - • !
Suddenly his attention was arrested by
a rap at the door. The lord of the man
sion had wired ; the door opened audios
entered. So powerful and so. overwhelm
iug, and withal of such singular beauty wee
his appearance, that be sank down. at his
feet, completely overcome by his: majestic
preseue". His lord gently raised him
the ground, and taking his hand.' led liar
forward to the table. He pressed with
his fingers the juice of the grapes into ast
golden cup, and after having drank him•
self, presented it to him, saying; "This is
the newwine in my fathr's kingdetii/ 'n.
No stioner had he partaken, than ill units
sy sensations vanished, perfect lovis'itrir
mitotic fear, and he conversed with hie
Saviour as an intimate friend. Like ' - the
silver rippling of the summer stia, he heard
falling front his lips the grateful
tioa, "Thy labors are . over. tby, weak' fs
approved, rich and glorious is tbeiwwititt."
Thrilled with an . unspeakable blisis,'` gist
glided over his spirit, and slid tutu th val.*
depths of his soul, he suddenly siwglariss
upon glories bursting upon his iierw..
The doctor awoke. Tears of rapttfre frees .
his joyful interview were rolling dojta hill
cheeks. Long did the , lirely itaPressiotti
of this charming dreani remain 5 ape, i bie
Mind; and never contd. he speak ,plitrth•
out imotions'of joy ind'tisbdernapa.
.•• . • .
Limes: Foy.—qtklyitft yriv,
go:mo,lo6p x.e
hi ,tei bred $n Aktirmibli
lor the'eltie)ten, tiegeeteelly,i4thine
font; kis ti,nr tit l 44o l / 1 0.
the' POW 4 .ChnjiltdCp,Fiter.W4t. .: 1 1
stivit,oftelh as chil d 's We $1114414 VA,i
i4apirik. **Olt
o t c.th.b f iert _
pito from 1144; Oork4 4 44!rik , = "
"I"Ph