D:IV; HEMPHILL MOORE,; Editori4 Proihrs JL 5 InlittelsovErsant Enenzatti A Weekly Paper, will be published , at th. following law Rates: ~,. 111VEARAIN ADVANCE §lOO 11YEAR IN - 3111110NTHS 1 25, 4 YEAR IWO ' • ' DO .' , . 150 f .,..1 YEALL IN.9', - .DO ! . 175 I 'TEAR IN 'l2 00 200 frr No paper. will he sent to those who pay in advance ofterthe expiration of the time paid for. r. .44g letters on business , connected ycithtliC ojice, to receive attention, must Lc postpaid: . • Mary Brand's Rescue; . Or, a Love of fifteen years rewarded. A TAB OF TnE FAR WEST. AthMidthe Iklormons wherOthey emi grated tram Nauvoo, was an old man, rt- Ined:Branil, 'from Shelby. county, State of Tennessee, with a family of. a daughter end two sons, the latter with their wives arid Children. Brand was a wiry old fel loif; nearly seventy years of age, but still itrong, rind, wielded axe orrifie better than many a young manl If, truth be told, he Was riOt a Very, red hot Mormon, and had -joined them as much for the sake of, corn pany to . California, whither he had long re solved 'to emigrate, as for any implicit credence in the faith. His sons were strap ping fellows, of the sterling stuff that the Western pioneers were made of; his daughter Maiy, a fine woman of thirty, for whose . state of single blessedneSs there tpust doubtless have been sufficient reason ; for she was not only - remarkably hand- some, but was well known in Shelby to be the best tempered and most industrious young woman in those diggings. She was known to have received several advanta geous offers, all of which she had refused ; and report said that it was from having been.disappointed in very early life in an ajairc du caw, at an ago when such wounds sometimes strike strong and deep, leaVing a scar difficult to heal. Neither his, daughter,nor any of his family, had been converted to the Mormon doctrine, but had' :ever kept themselves aloof, and refused to join or associate with them ; and, for this reason, the family had been very unpopular with the Mormon families on the Arkansas ;band hence, probably, one great reason . \Ay they now started on their journey. One fine sunny evening in April of 18 . 47, when the cotton woods on the banks of the Arkansas began to put forth their buds, and robins and blue-birds—harbingers of "Spring—Were hopping, with gaudy plum age through the thickets, three white tilted Conestoga wagons emerged from the tim bered bottom of the river, and rumbled slowly over the prairie, in the direction of the Platte's waters. Each wagon was drawn by eight oxen, and contained a por tion of the farming implements and house hold utensil's of the Brand family. The teams were driven by the young boys, the man followed 'in the rear with shouldered rifles—eld Brand himself mounted .on an 'lndian horse, leading the advance. The women were safely housed under the shel ter of the wagon tilts, and out of the first mild face of Mary Brand smiled•adieu to 'many of her old companions, who had ac • companied them thus far, and now wished them God-speed on their long journey.' The women were sadly. down-hearted, as well they might he, with the dreary prospect before them ; and poor Mary, when'sho saw the Mormon encampment shutout from her sight by the rolling bluffs, and nothing before her but the bleak, bar-1 ren prairie, could not divest herself of the idea that she had looked for thelast time' on civilized fellow-creatures, and fairly : lairstinto tears. They had for a guide a Canadian voya geur, who had been in the service of the Indian. traders, and knew the route well, and had agreed to pilot them to Fort Lan- , caster on north fork of the Platte.— ' Their course led • for about thirty miles up the Boiling Spring river, whence they pur-' sued a north-easterly course -to, the divid inc, ridge which *separates the watersnfthe Pratte and Arkansas. Their progress was slow, for the ground was saturated with wet, and exe,eedingly heavy for the cattle; and they scarcely advanced more than ten miles a day. 'At the camp fire at night, Antonio, the Canadian guide, amused them with talcs of the wild life and perilous adventures of the kunters and trappers 'who make the -menntains their' home; often. extorting a scream' trom the women-by, the description of some Beene of Indian fight and slaught ,er, Or: beguiling them-of a commisserating tear by tiro narrative of tho sufferings and ,prisationw endured by those hardy hunters " i in!their arduous lives, . :Mary..listerted with the greater interest, sincei!sho remembered that such was the life that , liad.been led by' one' very.dear to one, long' Supposed to be dead, of whom she had -never' but once, since hie departure, nearly - fifteen years before, heard a Syllable., Her imagination pictu red as, the bravest and mostdaring of these adVentiirous hunters, and conjured •np ,his, figure, charging through, the_ midst ofWhecputg ; sairage,s,' or stretched ,on the ground perishing fom wounds, or cold, or .; Amang'.the. characters: !who figured in Antanie's stories,, a- hunter named -La Bank:Was "made conspicuous, for deeds ,of hard . itiessind daring. The - first : , mention orthe name caused, the ; bleed :‘to rush to Mitry'S,faCe 7, not that she, for ,a moment imagined that . was . her La sopte, fo r she knew the:name was . a common one ;abut spoetated.with feelings which she ,had ne , er get the better of, it recalled Et sad, epoeit her former!life, to whieh .. she ceuld, not .k back withoiit mingled pain and plea 're. • . :. .. . ' . . ' ''' . ' ' •. • ...•'''' - - - -- -1 -'''... , , • ' • . • . '•, • . , • . • , .1 spare of 15,1inecoi kis Ada , 1 insertion, SO \ 9 ''''• i •... i •' , , . —.! , , ~;•. • , , '' ' ' ':.. . ,I r ` . . I .i / .. ::-.-- 1 , e:7 . . • '- - ' -t ' '• , 1 •. .- + ' ' ' ,- ,Each subuguent in/trite/A '.. . , e ....'' `• - ' • / - i 1: , •; i ;-;- . 1-•'- - ..... ''•' ' ' - , .:: : i.;•:;• '' • ' . .. ••-',, ' . - • ... .., ..) ' : - •Ido . : 3;elenflts: • , 1 do -- a monal ~ . .. ~ - . ~ .. • , ~. , , :: , ~ '' ' i . 4 ifof ,-.... . ..• ~ ~. I • ; , ~.; r , ... ....-,.,... _ -... :. -,..1 ',..- ~' 1 . d a , 12 'o.i o ,ighl ' -,--;,".. . 1•... '.' . , _ .:I . ' - - - . 1 ,.-,-,- - 1 - .7_.--_ - ---- i • . , . ; 2do • 3 months, •,..•• ' . , t , 1 , •,:,..1. • •''' i,. , , , . I '2.do • 6 months, , - . , ..• - , 3 .. . . . . • 1 '' ' ' .• '' '. .' ' ... . \ ,-.•ik,:,,*.i,?8;(--iii-;---).• .. 2 do' 13 months ' ' ... . . ~ A ,ty,.11 t.t , • - =.--. , 1 - 3 do ' 3 4nonthi . . ..... .., , . . , s , _ , , . . • , , ; ". Vis- i'l "'"..,.....-141., - ....=i,.. - . - - - ~ .3do • - 6 months . .. . , ~ 1 • 3do' 12 ilinntha ' ' ' • ''' -12 60 . . • 5 do. .. or haft a column, 6 months l- -2 00' ..,. \ ~, - - -W WI ) - - • • sdo or hatf acolitmn; 12 mantis s -2A .00 -` , ( , ~ , , , ~ . - ~• •.. , , , 10 do . or one cotumn, 6 months 20 , 00 - - ' 90 00 N. A WEEKLY PAPER: DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, AND FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. Volume I. Once only, and about two, years after his 'departure, had She aver received tidings of her former lover. A mountaineer had returned from the 'for west' to -settle in his native State, and had found his way to the neighborhood ,of old 'Brand's farm,. Meet ing him by acccident, Mary, hearing him speak of the mountain hunters, had ed tremblingly after La Bonte. Her infor mant knew hum well—had trapped in com pany with him—and hod heard at the tra ding fort, whence he had taken his depar ture for the settlements, that La Bente had been killed on.the XelloW Stone by Black feet; which report was confirmed by some Indians of that nation. This was all she had ever learned of the lover of her youth. As the wagons of the lone caravan. r6ll on toward the Platte, wo must ask the rea der to accompany us to a camp in the wil derness, where La Bonte, Killbuck, and a stranger, were sitting before a fire ;—Kill buch loquitur: "The doirth' of them Mermen fools can't bo beat by Spaniards,•strangers. Their mummums and thummums you speak of won't shine whar Injuns are about; nor pint out a trail, whar nothin' crossed but rattle snakes since fust it snowed on old Pike's Peak. If they pack along them profits, as you tell of, who can Ariake it rain humpribs and marrow guts when the crowd gets out of the Buffalo range, they are some now, that's a fact. But this child won't believe it. I'd laugh to get a sight on these darned Mormonites, I would.— They'te no account, I guess; and it's the meanest kind of action to haul their wo men critters and their young 'uns to seek a starving country as the Californys." "They are not all Mormons in the crowd," said the strange hunter; "and there's one family among them with some smartish boys and girls, I tell you. Their name's Brand." La Bente looked up from the lock of his rifle, which he was cleaning—but either didn't hear, or hearing, didn't heed, for he continued his work. _ "And they are going to part company," continued the stranger, "and put out alone for Platte and South Pass." "They'll loose their hair, I'm thinking,' said Killbuck, "if the Rapahos arc ou thar." • "I hope not," continued tho other, "for there's a girl among them worth more than that." "Poor Beaver !" said La Bonte, looking Up from his work. "I'd hate to see any white gal in the hands of Injuns; and o Rapahos Worse, than all. Where does she come. from .stranger?" "Down below St. Louis, from Tennes see, I've heard them say." • "Tennessee," cried La Bonte--"hurrah for the old State ! What's her name, strap—" • At this moment Killbuck's old mule pricked hj cars and snuffed the air, which action catching La Bonte's eye, he arose abruptly, without waiting a reply to his question, and exclaimed, • "The old mule smells Injuns or I'm a Spaniard:" • • - The hunter did the mule justice, and she well maintained her reputation as the best "guard" in.the mountains, for in two min utes •an Indian stalked into the camp, dres ed in a cloth capote, and in odds and ends of civilized attire: "Rapaho," cried Killbuck, as soon as he saw hips; and the Indian catching the word, struck his hand upon his breast, and exclaimed in broken Spanish and English "Si, si, me Arapaho, white man amigo. Come to camp—cat heap carne—me ami go white man. Come from Pueblo—hunt cibola—me gun breafi—no puedo matur nada ; mucha hambra. (very hungry) heap eat." Kil!buck offered his pipe to the Indian, and spoke to him in his own language, which both he' and La Bente well under stobd. They learned that he was married lo a Mexican' woman and lived with seine hunters at the Pueblo fork on the Arkitn- . sad. He volunteered the information that a .war, party of his people were' out on the Platte trail to intercept the Indian traders on their return from the North Fork ; and as some Mormons . had just started With three 'wagons in that direction, he said his pople Would make a' raise. Being muy amigo himself to the wbites, : he cautioned his pregent companions from crossing to the divide, as the braves, he said, were big and nothing in shape ofa white skin would live before therri. ' • The • Indian was prOvAled poWder,. of which he `stood 'in need ; and ;lam' gorging as much meat as his capa cious stomach 'would hold, he 101 the camp and started into the mountain. ..1 , • The"next' day our hunters started on their journey down the 'river, travelling leisurely;and stopping wherever good grass presented itself. One Morning. they sud- denly struck a wheel traps, Which loft the. creek banks and pursued a pAuiso at right Angles to.it, in the direetion of the Kil(buck pronounced it but *a few hotiie old; and- that of three wagons, draiiti by oxen, - ; , , "Wagh I" he eXclaiined, "if them poor devils of Mennonites ain't going head first =I I= Clearlield, Pai l August 211-1549. into the Rapaho trap: They'll be ''gone: beaNier.' afore- rong. "Ay," said the strange 'hunter, "these are the wagons belonhing to old Brand, and ho has started alone-tor Laramie. I hope nothing will happen to them." ' "Brand I" mutteted La Bonte, "I know ed that name . mighty well once, years agorae ; and should hate .the worst kind that.rnisChief 'should : , happen to any one who bore . it. This trail's as fresh as paint; and it goes against me to let these simple critters help the Rapahos to their own hair. This child feels like helping 'cm out of the scrape. :What do you say, old hes'!" "I think with you; boy," answered Kill buck, "and go in tor following this wagon trail, and telling the poor critters that thar's danger ahead of 'cm. What's your talk, stranger 1" "I go with you," shortly answered the latter; and both ollowed quickly after La Bontc:, who was already trotting smartly on the trail. • Meanwhile the three wagons, containing the household goods of the Brand family, rumbled slowly over - the rolling prairie, and toward the upland ridge of the "di vide," which, studded with dwarf pine and cedar thicket, rose, gradually before them. They travelled with considerable caution, for already the quick eye of Antoine had discovered recent Indian signs upon the trail, and with mountain quickness, had at once made it out to be that of a war party ; for there were no horses with them, and, after one or two of the moccasin tracks; the mark of a rope which trailed upon; the ground, was sufficient to show him that • the Indians were provided with the usual lasso of skin, with which to se cure the horses stolen in the expedition.— The men of the party were consequently all mounted and thoroughly armed, the wagons moved in , line abreast, and a sharp look out was kept on all sides.. The women and children were all consigned to the interor of the wagons; and the latter had also guns in readiness, to take their part in the defence, if an attack was made. However, they had seen no Indians, and no fresh sign for two days after they left the Boiling Spring River, and they began to think they were well out of their neigh borhood. One evening they camped on a creek called Black Horse, and, as usu al, had corralled thewagons, and forted as well as circumstances would permit, when three or four Indians suddenly appeared on a bluff at a little. distance, and making sig nals of Peaceable intentions, approttehed the camp.. Most of the men were absent ' at the time, attending to the cattle, or col lecting fuel, : and only old Brand and one of his young grandchildren, about fourteen years old, remained in camp. The Indi ans were hospitably received, and regaled with a 'smoke, after which they began to evince their curiosity by examining every article about, and_ signifying their wishes . that it should be given to them. , The other whites presently coming into camp; the Indians 'sat quietly down bythe fire, and when the supper was ready, join ed in the repast, after which they gathered their buffalo robes about them, and quiet ly withdrew. Meanwhile Antoine, know ing the treacherous character of the sava ges, advised that the greatest precaution should he taken to •SeCure the stock; and before, dartt`, therefore, all the..mulea and horses were hobbled and secured within the corral, the, oxen being allowed to feed at liberty—for tip Indians scarcely care to trouble ,themselves with such cattle. A guard was also set around the camp, and relieved every two hours; the fire was ex tinguished, lest the savages should aim, by its light, at any of the party, and all slept with rifles ready at, their sides, . Howev er, the, night passed quietly, and nothing disturbed the tranquility of the' camp.— The prairie wolves loped hungrily around; and their mournful cry was borne upon the wind as they chased deer and antelope in the neighbcain.,,i , plain; but not a sign of lurking•lndiant Mre seen or heard. • In the( morning, shortly after . sunrise, they were in the act of yoking the oxen to the wagons, and driving in the looseani male which ,had been turned out to feed at day break, when soMe,lndians again ap. peared upon the bluff, and, descending it, confidently approached the . camp. An toine strongly advised their not • being 'al lowed to enter; but Brand, ignorant °fin-, dian treachery, replied that,. so long as they came as friends, they could - not he 'deemed enemies, and allowed no obstruc tion-to be offered to , their .approach, At was now observed that theywere 411 palm ed,armed with bows and .arrows, and vested;oftheir buffalo robes, appearing na ked to the, breech-clout, their legs onlybe ing . protected by dtter4kin leggings,-reach ing. to ,the of the thigh. : Six or' seven first,arrived, and ; others lowed r drOppitig inione after the ether, any 1 til a score er.more .were,,COO ted round the i wtigopl,•, Their, demeanor, .. at i first friendly; soon ,changed ; as their numbers increasedrand.they now became tirgent in their .demands Tor-o\oer and,lead, and bullying in th,eir,miinnm,',-:A ebiefliccos,, ted,Brand, ..threugh MtO,ino, ed , him : ‘,144 unless • the , demands ?qf his braves were acceded to, he could not be responsible for the consequences t that they THE were on the 4 wtir trail,' and their OyeEiWere, red with blood, so they could not distin: oxish between white and Yuta scalps; and the party, with all their women and wag ons, were in the. power of the Indian `braves,' and therefore the white chief's best plan was to make. the best .terms he could; that all they required was that they should give up.their guns and ammunition "on the prairie," and all their mules and horses L--retaining the 'Medicine' buflhloes, (the oxen,) to draw their wagons. By this time the oxen were yoked, and the teamsters whip in hand, only waited the word to start. Old Brand foamed while the Indian stated his demands, but hearing him to the• end, exchlimed—" Darn the red devil I I wouldn't give him a grain of pow der to save my life. But out boys land turning to his horse, which stood ready saddled, was about to mount, when the In dians sprang at once upon the wagons, & commenced their attack, yelling like fiends. One jumped upon old Brand, pulled him back;as ho was rising in his stirrup, and drew his bow upon him at the same mo ment. In an instant the old backwoods- Man pulled a pistol from his belt, and put ting the muzzle to the Indian's heart, shot him dead. Another Indian, drawing his war club, laid the old man at his feet ; while some dragged the women from the wagons, and others rushed upon the men, who made brave fight in their defence.— Mary, when she saw her father struck to the ground, sprang.with a shrill cry to his assistance; for at that moment a savage, frightful as red paint could make him, was standing over his prostrate body, brandish ing a glittering knife in the air, prepara tory to thrusting it into the old man's breast. For the rest, all was confusion : in vain the small party of whites struggled against overpowering numbers. 'Their ri fles cracked but once, and they were quick ly disarmed; while the shrieks of women and children, and the hiud yells of Indi ans, added to the scenes of horror and con fusion. As Mary flew to her.fathers side, an Indian threw his lasso at her, the noose falling over her shoulders, and jerking it tight, he uttered a delighted yell as the poor girl was thrown back violently to the ground. As she fell, another deliberately shot an arrow at her body, while the one •who bad thrown the lasso, rushed forward, his scalp knife flashing in his hand, to seize the bpody trophy of his savage deed. !The girl rose to her knees, and looked wildly toward the spot where her father lay bathed in blood; but the Indian pulled the rope violently, dragged her some yards upon the ground, and then rushed with ti yell of vengeance upon his victim. Lie !paused, however, as at that moment a fierce shout sounded at his Very ear.; and !looking up, he saw La Bente galloping down the bluff; the long hair and the frin ges of his hunting shirt and leggings fly ing in the wind, his right arm supporting his trusty rifle, . while close behind him came Killbuck and the stranger. Dash ing with loud hurrahs to the seene:of ac tion, La Bente, as ho charged down the bluff, caught sight of the girl struggling in the hands of the ferocious Indian. Loud was the war shout of the mountaineer, as he struck his heavy spurs to the rowels in his horse's side, and bound like lightning to the rescue. In a single stride he was upon the Indian, and thrusting the muz zle of his rifle into his breast, he pulled the trigger, driving the savage backward by the blow itself; at the same moment that the bullet passed through his heart, and tumbled over stone dead. Throwing down his rifle, La Bonte wheeled his obedient horse, and drawing a pistol from hiS7belt, again charged the enemy, among. whom Killbuck and the stranger were dealing death-giving blows. Yellint .for victory, the mountaineers rushed at the Indians; and they, panic-struck .at the sudden at tack, and - thinking that this was but the advanced guard of a large band, fairly turned and fled, leaving five of their num ber dead upon the field. Mary, shutting her eyes in the expected death stroke, heard the loud shout Bente gave in charging down the bluff, & again looking. up saw the wild looking mountaineer rush to, the rescue, and save her from the savage by his timely ,blgw. Her arms were' still pinned by the lasso, which prevented . from,. rising to her feet ; and La Bente was the first to, run to her aid, as soon as the fight was fairly,o; yer. He . jumped from his horse, out the skin. rope which bound her,, raised her froni the ground, and,. upint her turning up.bo face So thank ,bim, beheld his nev, er-to-be-forgotten Mary Brand; while she, hardly believinff b her senses, reeogniied in her. deliverer her .former loyer, and still well beloved La Bente, . . . . . f "What a Mary I can it be your lie ask ed, looking intently upon the trembling woman. "La Sonte,• you ,don't forget mar she 'answered, .and, throw herself sobbing into the army: of dip sturdy:mountaineer.. 1 , ,There womill leave her, for the present, and help' Killbuck and his, companions to, examine. the , and wounded;, Of the former, Aye ,Incliatui . and ; .tip whites lay dead, grandchildren gifola J3rnnd, OnviJads of.PuTtqclL,Or OftqPi Who NO fcmght with 'the greates bra Very, and lay pierced with lance wounds, Old Brand had received a ME 'Sore buffet, but.a hatful of cold water from the creek sprinkled over his face soon re stored. him. His sons had not escaped scot free, and Antoine was shot through the neck, and falling, had actually' been half scalped by an Indian, whom the time ly arrival of La Bonte had caused to leave his work unfinished. Silently, and with sad hearts, the survi vors of the family saw the bodies of the two boys buried on the river bank, and the spot marked with a pile of loose stones, procured from the rocky bed of the creek. The carcases of the treacherous Indians were tell to be devoured by thegolves, & their bones to bleach in the sun andwind —a warning to the tribe, that . such foul treachery as they had nieditated•had met with a merited retribution.. The next day the party continued their 'Course to the Platte. Antoine and the stranger returned to the Arkansas, start ing in the night to avoid the Indians; but Killbuck and La Bonte lent the aid of their ' rifles to the solitary caravan, and under their experienced .guide, no more Indian perils were encountered. Mary no long er sat perched Up in her father's Conesto ga,but rode a quiet mustang by La Bonte's side; and no doubt they found a theme with which to while away the monotonous journey .over the dreary plains. South Fork was passed and Laramie was reach ed. . The Sweet Water Mountains, which hang over the 'pass'. to California, were long since in sight; but when the waters of the north Fork of the Platte lay before their horses' feet, and the broad trail was pointed out, which led to the great valley of Columbia and their promised land, the heads of the oxen were turned down stream where the shallow waters flow on to join the great Missouri—and not up toward the mountains where they leave their spring heads, from which springs flow several waters—some coursing their way ;to the eastward,: fertilizing in their route to the Atlantic the lands of civilized man; others West Ward, forcing a passage through rock y canons, and flowing through a barren wilderness, inhabited by fierce and barba rous tribes. . These were the routes to choose from; and whatever was the cause, the oxen turned their yoked heads away from the rugged mountains;- the teamsters joyfully cracked their ponderous whips, as the wag. ons rolled lightly down the Platte; & men, women and children waved their hats and bonnets in the air, and cried out lustily, " Hurrah for home!" Four months from the day when La Bente so opportunely appeared to rescue Brand's family from the Indians on Black Horse Creek, that worthy, and faithful Ma 'ry was duly and- lawfully united in the township church of Bmndville, Shelby county, State of Tennessee. We cannot say, in the words of nine hundred and ninety-nine thousand novels, "numerous pledges of mutual love surrounded and cheered them in their declining years," &c., &.; because it was only on the 24th of July, in the year of our Lord 1847, that La Bonte and Mary Brand were finally Made one, after fifteen long years of sep amtion.—Rurton's Life in the Far West. Woman .under Paganism, ! In many pagan countries the birth of a daughter is regarded as a calamity, and an occasian of sorrow. In some tribes fe male infants arc immediately exposed to certain death, that their parents May not have the trouble of bringing them- up.— When the daughter is allowed to live, She is regarded as an inferior being; is frown ' ed upon by her parents and other relations; sold to the highest bidder in marriage; and then becomei the slave of lief hus band. As respects matrimony she can rarely be said to have a choice; she is given or sad • to those who are willing to take her. Such is the disgrace of celibacy in Hindostan, that many women have been known to marry decripcd and dying old men just before they drown themsel ves in the Ganges. Many woman arc buried alive with their deceased husbands, or consumed on their funeral piles. In China, women, have . been seen yoked with an ox or an ass; while 'the husband held the plow, and sowed .the seed.. In Hindostan it is said until recently, not ono female in twenty millions was acquain ted with th 3 commonist rudiments of Hin 7 doe' learning.' The American missiona ries affierri that in the • Island of Ceylon, When:they first visited it, not a single wo man in a population of two hundred thousand could read and that it was con sidered pernicious, if not :absolutely possible to educate a • female; and. heavy calamities, were expected to befall the woman.that dared to aspire to !le.:distinc tion of being able to. read and, write Meng the aboriginal ,tribes country, the women do the drudgery; and the men spend their time' in arid idleness., In i'eany pagan, countries, the lif4 , of the wernawis . at,tlte..mercy of the husband, nrid if,sho -offenOtint,'" . may. her,with perfect , impunity, _or at . .rnost, at the expease,of a .small.Ane:, As might 440 bene,,xpe_eled p r sp4i degrading 9Por.eooP.ElP4.l...Mmagilth99lY9.4 419 1 1. P1 1 014WR1P4 1 1 , ‘. , q91ic9% . are generally lowisensual, vicious and'uri worthy of confidence. Numbcr. 9. .Pnidg''Oto.Al)MtirisiNo . : 10 do or ono column', 12 months -Books,' - hbs and blitiflia' . .; Of cvcr:y description, printed sn cry liset'etsfle, fling on the shortest notice; at ihc . counritY‘..:ool.i. LAU Oita. „ . A TALE ABOUT A 11EAD.: . . Jake, a little buck 'negro who belonged to Dr. Talater°, Was - said to have iii bib little frame a heart as big, as 'General Jad.'. son's. He didn't fear. dvijn Our 'resiictel.b:C ble• fellow citizen, Old , EtOfor coolness, ho was as cciol as the .tin nip' of the N. Pole. ' . • : • . , One day, Dr. Talafero, upon•the occa sion of the comnieneement ofn Medical College, of which he held the chair of An. atomy, gave a dinner. Among 'his guests was a well known ventriloquist, •Late in the evening after the bottle had 'done its work, the conversation turned upon real courage, and the Doctor boasted coliiidei ably of his favorite man Jake. He orered to bet that nothing could Scare him ; - rind his bet the ventriloquist took up, naming at the same time the test 'he wanted im posed. Jake was sent for, 'end he came. "Jake," said the doctor, "I have bet a large filial of money on- your head, arid you must win it. Do - you think you can?" "Berry well, massa," replied Jake, "jiist tell dis niggar what he's to do, and he de it shurc". "I want you to go to the disseeling room. You will find two dead bodies there. Cut off the head of one with large knife which you' will find there, and bring it to us. You must not take - a light, however and don't g . et frightened." • - • "Dat's all, is it?" inquired Jake. "Citi,! .c berry well, I'll do • dat for shtire sartiti and for being frightened, de debil aint going to frighten me." Jake accordingly set ofF, reached • the dissecting room, and groped about until he found theknife :and-the- bodies. He - had just applied the fonner - to' the.nec . k of the latter, when from the . body he was bout to decapitate, a hollow And sepulchral voice exclaimed— " Let my head alone!" "Yes salt," replied Jake, "I shit parties War; and tudder head 'll:do jes as well:" He accordingly put the knife to ihd neck of the other corps, whtenother voice,equelly Unearthly in its tone" hricked out— “Lef 641 d al it my - alone l" Jake was puzzled at first, but answered; presently— " Look a hen ! Master, Tolivcr says I must bring one ob, de. n heads, and Yon isn't pylon to fool me . o how!" . and -Jake. hacked away until he seperated the head from the body. Thereupon half a dozen voices screamed out; "Bring it back! bring it back !". - Jake had reached the door, buton hear ing this turned round and "Now—now, see yah: •Jes. you keep quiet you fool, and don't wake'-up -the *a man folks. Master's only gwien to lailt at the bumps." • - 'Bring back my head at once,'- cried the voice. - • - - • "Tend you right away, sail," replied Jake es he marched off with the head,-and , the next minute deposited it before the Doctor "So you've got it I see," said hie mass 7• EMI "Yes salt," replied the unmoved Sake, "but be done lookin at him socsh kaso -de geminan told me to fotch him back right [tarty.", • • • ' Nource of Electricity. The, earth is the great reservoir tricity, from which the atmosphere and clouds receive their portion . of this Auid.-- It is during the process of 'evapomtion'that it is principally exeitcd, and silently con veyed to the regions above; and: alSci 'du; ring the condensation of this name. VapOr the grand and 'terrific phenomena Of tlitin 7 der and lightning are made manifest to oui sen&es. In order to form a:correct estirnate - V - : - / the immense power 'of this agent - in the production of electricity, we must bring to our view the. quantity of water, evaporated from the surface of the earth, and also the electricity' that may he developedfrom a single grain of liquid., - Aecording, to ihe calculations of Cavallo; abohi • live thou.: sand two hundred and eight:ninilliona tone' of water are probably• , evaporatod from the Mediterranean Sea, in a Single:. Orrin - ees day. - To obtain some idea. oldie Vast vet: untiof water thus -.daily taken hp bY'the . thirsty lie,avans, let its comliaro something more apparent: than this rnvisi.; ble proceSs. President Dwight and Pro: i lessor Darby, have both catiniated :the quantity : of water precipitat4,over — ,thii Palls of Niagara at, more,thari eleven mil- . lions tons per flour. Yet all . the Water, passing over, the cataract in tweritY;daYS would only amount to thut ascending from, the Mediterranean , iii one clay... More cent estimate makes the, mean evaporation' from the whole'eartlfaS etpial to acolumn. Of thirty-five:incite - 8 from every inch of its, surface ilia year, Which gives' ninety-fotir. thousand.; four bundied. 'and fifty cub}e: nines, p.kl the 'quati9 cOntintrallY reultr7, - tirig through, thc*:titnrospliere.--.ollifipf,. r„:Coining ich., ti rniu, respeh.tivelyAhwhn l ,tlieirinsignia mitt dilutes. The - iiicces hro 6ifier. over weight, E