t n. W MOORE, ) . ; 4 4 1 )EI C TMLL , "45 " Prlit" ilplivenew te , pautAila, ".. " 41, wcekly P4cr, will be published tti th • idlleming•low ..! 11311Ctir ii . 'VVEAWIN ADVAATCK $1 00 ~ :117iE.A.11.13N 3: 'MONTHS 1 25 ~,f YIKAIt..IN ' 6 DO , 150 , 8 1)0 1 15 ' Y It'Ll'S.D. 1N 12 • DO 00 Kr No paper' will be sent to those who pay int advance after the eapiration a/• the time paidjbr., letters . on 'business cminectecl ' , Wilt the ofice,:to receive. atiektidn, Must be Pcist - Paid. I.J: • ••: . • icap s" g a go I Fla y. Daltors of the NSW* Rugby's Husband. • ' Among tha .celebrated characters who ladfor some years bestowed their pa ron lige,. semi-annually, during court-week, , uPot“he Union. Hotel, of Tallnpoosn, was 'Captain Simon Suggs,whose deeds of val or and of strategy are not unknoWn to the public. • The . Captain had "put up" there :time and again=—had puffed the "Unicti" ,both"before;tho face and behind the ~ of its owner, until it seemed a miniature 'P . f,'the microcosm that bears the name of 'Mtor—rnid, 'in short,' was so ' cretierallY useful, accommodating,' and polis, that nothing short of long-continued and -nft-re peated failures to settle his ,liills, could,have induced mine' host to consider Suggs, in any oiler light than as the best frit - na the "Union" or, any other house ever had.— Bid alas! Captain Suggs had,frem one oc casion, to nraither, upon excuses the most plausible, andlvith .protestations of regret the. most profound, invariably left the lilt larder and warm beds of the "Union" wi:h ont leaving behind the sli,, , litet pecuniary remuneration. For a long time 'the pa tient inn-keeper bore the imposi ion wi.h i patience that indicated some hope of even turd payment ; But year in.and year out, and the money did not come. Mrs. Den nis, the landlady, at It ngth spoke out to her husband, and argued the necessity of d a tziVerit-keeper's collecting his dues, if ho Was disposed, to 'do justice to himself and I ' family. , . , • "Suggs is a nice,man in his talk," she said; "nobody can fault him, as far as that's' concerned . ; bUt smooth talk never paid for tour and bacon ;" and so she recommend ed to her leaner hall that the "next time" summary measures should be adopted to .• secure the amount in which the Captain was indebted to the "Union Hotel." ' -- The , next session of the circuit court, . - , aller,:tbia prudent .conclusion had bt•en arrived. tit---the circuit court, ssiih all its ' 4qrac!ions.olcriminal trials, poker playing laWyerS',.political caucuses and possible monkey . Shows..--fhtind Capt. Suggs snug ' • LY.housed at -the "Union." Time passed on.swillly for a week. The Judge was a hearty,liquor-14ing fellow, and lent the `, etiptain ten 'drillers "on sight." The We ' tumpleti : - and Mont g omery ' layers - bled freely. In short, every thing went brave „ ly on for the Captain, until a man with small pp% pits.tind a faro hex came alma. 1 .'. The Captain. yielded to the temptation! yielded :1,1,•1;lf ( a Presentinic.mt on his mind that: -he should' be'"sluiri.” The "tiger" 'lovas, triumphant, and' Captain Suggs was, ; logloxithouta dollar I . k ...* if to giv,e intensity to his distress, on 1 0/V2:Morning tiller his losses at the faro litink.; the frieddly•clerlt of the court hinted '; teißuggS that The grand jury had found an indiaitment againstiiim torgaming. Hero was,a diletriod. Not only out of funds, but obligpl to.decamp belbre, the. adjourn •' Mein. 0're,660. !-- 1 -6bi ,, ed to lose all oppor tunity of rAemitigliis "fallen fortunes," by further-plucking the green horns in at. • " tendance. r .4 It was in no pleasant humor, therefore, IA that ,Captain Suvg the next. morning un- O. nounced • his MiSIQC:IIIICS to, the wor,hy - f k o.4t..ar .flia ,"Unien," end his amiable wife. ' :f . •"< You' see, cousin Betsy"-L--Suggs aI .;T ways•cdusi2ted any lady • whom he wished to cozen.r-”you see,. cousin Betsy, the fuel is,yrrt downdust now,,in the way of mo ney, and you and Dennis needn't be a fraid I'll run away and•never come back .. / .......i..”.,1 ..,, .! ', - ,• . . ~' . , . "'Tain't Viet/Wt.:afraid of," said Mrs. Dennis.:. - ' - • .t . "What theril".asked;angAs• "Of .yon'e . Co'bain' back, Cann' 'us out o' : .fiduse atidnltorne,' and 2iizier yiyin!•nOtlz.: . iii:.v.! -, i ti. . 1 '•••• • • , ' , • ."'Well,ll.said the. Captain,, slightly con-, fused, at the,. lady's directness ; "well, see in' that's the way the mule kicks, as ,I was 1 sayin', I proposed to "Dennis here, Milting 1 as, him and you distru - sts an old Union frikoitl thal 4 s' .stuak by 'your ItOuS like a tick, even:.Wheir the red4rinuthed mall:: . Ors tworb 'you , was feedin' us i slap: tails: ''; on bull beef anti' blue collordo-1: . 14Yi 41! 0 long as that's the case, . I propose to give you a mortgage:en the:south hal fof 21,13, ' 29. It's the best ,Italf section in the coun- I trY, an 4,,, it's worth fatly' limes tile aritSinit . 11 •nr i 1 • ~• !, ~ ', or Vizir' bi . - • • , ~/1 ~ .. "You ain't got:no:right:l'lo that land-4 ' I iiial,ilinow it- 7 J,-or , you. wouldn't want,' to, mortgage it for a tavern . hill," shouteq.mpl, ' Dennis ;\'"and I 'tell:yen' that your horse old Bat don't ge out Of our 'stable till 'the' rnaney, 7 s tr.:id—mind, 'l - say ntweey—into •iii,l) - 4ilind ,•''' and 'here' iliegood lady tinted kilt and' called 'Bob; tale stable 'bby, 1.6 bring! ~, the.Atdble-key. - :. ; i ~ f ~:! 1., ,• . ..1 :1' , .'1 Ttie!PCIPIAP , Yaa. claW79,Kille,dl,, ;4„ripl peered very evident that ItpcoUlcl.,Ot get &-. away Iliwt day, and ho arranged'With'thiel F' clerk 901, to issue 4 ciiPias.until the,,next titiliteon. 'l - tai , ;ing'd.one his,'".`h i e east a•, . ' to ''hilleir'Soirie'sYity l tiridi3iiig'tlie• wind I b'utit&liite s ,tworeagainsti him p and at etc , ( 41 , , . vedefoloptirthatlnightp.,llB.W.ent; to -boy{ 5P a; 44 4 ) 1 ;50AP1 that thlep . ,phts of. whiskey: 18 ,e.'e'ill:o3,,, ii,ti,led . tetl i t,sst r nate: .:, 'll heat et - tvAi• - aft,ei n It& ''Cuptaiii inidi .. • , , . ... '• gbl. betaottti Ilia lahaitE4 aiid lifter eVeifont ei/ktillelatt le ,',l3e,daeurd3icatusiotie ivalk' ' ' iagolvotaadilyr /Alt gtilloßfOY , P stuirse , r , ~, :- An =lama bi;c9g told that it was soma . . -,. . , _, . e• ' 1 I- ;--- el ,^ 0 ". • . .. 1 r 1' ' It,' ', `' r ' • • , J ....,.. ....... ' r. t . "' , ',...'T rL ."''' ' '.. ' l r.. ' • 1 ••- rarrl Ilticoc -:•.i ni .-i• , s ....----- : ... r, , r " 0 . ~. ~ . .T 1 't CM ~ I i , •'N .".." --- -=••• ' ' ''' s ' . ' )i J i 't ' ' 1 .'*•* '' ~, 1, r . , •..Ifir It a I , '(`. -"-•'-•-- - - igg;:. 1 I.= - -- 4 `.- _, -,.7. :r_ ~ -•— le , ' 1% - _ =_ 4 • ; 't - '':,-TL:7I•.,Fi ; r ..,.-T ,-- -=. . , .• • - . y= . -,- , - lt, e „,- ___,. . . . ,'. • - 1 , -.7 .- . , Q, V - 7, r-F 1• f ...* `V 'l.'. 4 if 4 . .1.1 . t .t.. ~. p..... „s., .. ,ilc.,. . .._ 0 it. 'fiti ki.. 0 T),,_- 4 , 1 , ,,,,,t‘ 4,. ~,,, ~/7 ~,,,... ; -, ..1 .; ..) T.., -",..: .'-' (T. t,, v ‘,!.4' ••••,f , . rat ia - ic ,I ) „ 1 i t . I , q $. ~.., V ''' 't '''' '''' l '.i 4 ., - :1 - cf:74tig:.:. q . , 1, !. y , .5.4 . . I. ,ii• ..„ . ...ri - ~,r,- . . ---_____----- ••'; :5...• A . • -... .! 4/.. A 'WEEKLY PAPER: DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, AND FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. Vo.ailllC LI. fellow drunk; and this was confirmed by Pullum turned white and stammered out a heavy fall, which the unfortunate tea "seven or eight cents." as soon as, leaving the railing, ho attempt- • " Whi( h will you tell your wire yOu sold ed :o travel sues ptyli!nts. yours-hrr's-air 1" 1 1 . "Oh, good Lord I" groaned the fidlen John P. turned blue in the face. man, "a ho'd a-thought i: !, Mc, John P. "\Vhat do you know about my wEe?" Puller - li, drunk and tal.in' down! I never he asked. 1 was so before. The world s a-turnin' "Never mind about that-was you in 0 , v:64 -and-over ! Oh, Lord! Charley the habit of gettin' drunk before you left I S!one g et me into it I What it ill Sally say Tallnt county, George l" el she hears it-oh„ Lord I" 6 , 1 never lived in Talbot ; I was born ' "That ihar lettere" s..iil the Copt: in to nal raised in Ilarrki,'' said Pullent with hints, "is the victim of Niel I wonder sung thing like tritarph. lel Ire 's got oty nil ney 1" and the Captain "Close to the tine, though," re:pined! 1 centmui d his solticquy inaudibly. Suggs, confidently, relying on the li.ce ! I 'Poor Mr. Pulltim,,Vier limb tumbling that ;here was a large liiinity of Pullums I about, and sundry re*ti ins oi his fall, at in Talbot ; "most of your connexiens live • length contriv«l to get in:o bid, in a room in Talbot." ',,adjv ining that oectip:ed, by . the Cupt a .n, "Well, what of all that 1" asked Pullum, end oily separated from ,it by a thin par- ail' itortfie ace ; "what is it to you, • titien. 'i he , i.-lev Mpg effeJts of his debauch wha r I come J rom, or whar my connexions increased,, a n d the tdread:ul nausea was lived I' ' likely to eaute him to make both a "clean "Never m!nd-I'll show"you-no mu • breast and a clean stoma( h. that married Billy Stearns' daughter eon "I'm Very'-'4:-!very-ch, Lund !--drunk I carry on the way Lou'vc been (bin', with- Oh Mc, is this 'John P. Pullum tha4-good out my interanan' for the intrust of the heavens I. I'll front-inarricd Sally Rugby I tinnily !" ' -oh, oh I" 1 Sieges said this with en earnestness, n Here the poor fellow got out of bed, and, s'erntiess that ce mpletely vanquished l'ul poking his head through a vaci•nt square lurn. Ile ta millet:sly asked, in the window sash, began his ( jaculaikus , "How did you know that I -marrie d of supper and of prief. ! Steal n's daughter?" • "Ah I I'm so weak I-wouldn't have' "That's a tact most any body could a Sally-ow-ow h- wha-oh, Lord Ito hear known tint was intimate with tce family of i: f o r a hundred dollars. She •said- , in 'old times. You'd better ask me how 1 it's comin' agin- ay h-ogli-a hu-o-e- knowed that you tide ? t our wile's cotton to gracious Lord, how sick !---she said a hen ! Wetumple!,,--solaii-got on a spree-alter she agreed fbr me to sell the cotton, I'd be ~ Sally gave you a caution, too-and then certain-oh, Lord, I believe I'll die !" . I come by here-got on untidier spree.- The inebriate fell back on his bed, al- , What do you reckon itally will say to you most fainting, and Captain Suggs thought' when you git home?" he'd try an.experimant. • - "She'ivon't know it," replied Pullum, "You're a liar ! you didn't marry wid,thv i "unless some body tells tier.' Rugby-you're some (1 , ---d thief tryid - to!! "Sonic body will t,:ll her." said Suggs; pass off for sot - within' I", 1"/'-ia going home with you as soon as "Who am I then, ic,,l• ain't John P. Pul- 1 you've had breakfast: My poor Sally him that married the ividoW, Sally Rugby, Rugby shall not be trampled on in this Tom Rugby's widow, olifßill Steam 's on- way. lye only got to borrow fifty dollars ly daup,luer 1 Oh, lord! if it ain't, me who ! from some of the boys to make.out a coo ls it? Where's Charley Stone-can't lie pie of thousand I need to make the last pay- tell if it's John P. Path a n?" ment on my land. Sago over and eat your "No, it ain't you, you (yin' swindler- , breaktast'quiek." you ain!t. got a dollar in the world-and 1 "For God's sake, sir, don't tell Sally a• / never married no rich widow,". said Suggs, hoot it ; vou don't know how unreasonable still disguising his voice. she is!" "J did-I'll he d-d of I didn't-I know Pullum was the incarnation of misery. it now-Sally Rugby with the red head- "lire devil I don't ! She bit this piece' all the boys said I married her for her mu- l out of my lace l"-here Suggs pointed to ney, but it's a---oh lord, I'm sick again- a scar on his cheek-"when I had her on augh!" i l my lap, a little girl only five years old.- Mr.Pullum continued his maudlin talk, • She was always game." hall asko , p, half awake, lit sonic time ; 1 lithium grew more nervous at this ref- and all the while Captain Suggs was busy erenee to his wife's mettle. • analysing the mattenejecturing his pre- I "My dear sir, I don't even know your cisc eircumsumees-his comity relations name—" -the probable state of his purse, and the "Suggs, sir, Captain Simon Suggs.', like. "Well, my dear Captain, of you'll fist I ! "it's a plain case," he mused, "that this let Me off this time, I'll lend' you the fifty feller married a red-headed widow fur her 11 ll dollars." y•-(- mono-no man ever manied sick for any 1 " You'-Al/el-me- the -fifty-dot- ; • thing else. It's plain agin, she's got the: Tars ! Who asked you for your money prtoperty settled upon her, or fi xed sonic' or rather Sally's money 1"; : , way, For he talked about her "agr6ein'" for ; "I only draught'," replied the humble', him to, self the cotton. I'll bet that he's husband of Sally, "that it might be mine- the new feller that's dropped in down till r con ii eedation. I meant no herrn ; I know' by Tullassee, that Charley Stone used to Stilly wouldn't mind my • lending it to iiii kuuw., And .('ll but that he's been down ' old) riend of the family." to Wetumpka to sell the , cotton --got on ;r "Well," said Suggs, and here he mus- ! bust Char-and now on another hare. Fle's l ed, shutting his eyes, biting his lips, and afraid of hiS wile, too; least ways his voiee' talking very slowly, "el I knowed you'd i trembled like it, when he called her red-' d o better." headed..: Pulluorl Pultuin 1 'Pull-um !--I "I'll swear I will," said Pulliam. I Here, Suggs studied--" What's sure(&!.! "No swearin', sir!" roared Suggs, with Talbot cOu l uty name-I'll venter on it, aRt ' a dreadful frown ; "no swearin' in y , • • i m• pre how.'' 1 settee I" Having i'otached a conclusion, the Cap., "No, sir, I won't anyinore." I tarn turned over in bat and composed him- I "Er," continued the Captain, "I knotted self to sleep., • , . . I you would do better-go right home---(tho At nine o'clock the. next morning the Captain didn't wish 'Pullum to stay where bar-room of the Union contained onlyl)en. hi. stock of information might be inereas nis and our friend, the Captain.' Breakfast ed)-"and treat Sally like a wile all the watt over, and most oldie temporary wee. rest of' your days, I 'nigh!, may be, borrow pants , of••the tavern , Were on the pubtH, the tiny, (seein' it's Sally's any way,) and square. Captain Suggs was washing Mr. let you on this time." Pulliimi who had not yet come down to "lif yea will, Captain Suggs, I'll never' breakfast:,, forget yeti-All think of you all the days , 'Atiength tin' uneertainitep was heard °tiny ti.e."' on - the Stairivay, tend n young man, whose "I ginnally make my mark, so that I'm face showed Indisputable evidence of a fro- hard to forget," sail the Captain, /rut/Ol lie on the previous night, descended.- ly. "Well, turn me over a ditty for a coo- His eyes were bloodshot, and his expres- pie of In Alik, and go home." sion was a mingled one of shame and fear. Mr. Pullum hatakd the money to Suggs, Captain' Suggs lwallted%up•to )1:m as he who st emedto receive it reluctantly. He eats:re:4 . llle bar-room,, gazed at his tire twisted the bill in his fingers, and remark- , earnestly, and slowly placing his hate( on ed : his'" h ulde r . as clowly and a , ih a stern • "I reckon I'd better not take this mon, exprelsien, sate-e; ! ,1 . ey-you won't go home, uud do us. ou • • • ”iY-1:1.1(IS-7n•AP'F-r-kl-,-P01.qc.1,!:'1.4 said. . . I,llu:twit I,l,,",a,ai.lithp moungman. "Yes, I will," said Vellum : "yonder's ,; . 4, :-: t!, . , . „ . . 0 0... „ , "L'orni thkst way • ilain " s ai d Suo-a5 my liaise at the door—l ' ll start this min. ,! palling,los,;viziirp out,. into the .street, and ute. •i.•i 4 - ; ••i cepiain :apd, Putelir ti rep rnea te 011 Pzinxat,birn:Witliu The, the,loOlt, of tt stern ' tart ntreenonate:pnrent.. Turtripg to Oen ! . tuyprn, a hero 9ic l at te r swallowed hiso th cof'- njp es ,they d went. orn,.,he L said:,, 14a..te a fpe j artrl paid ! leis bill. , , ~, . . cu of entree rea d y ,for.,tills,yO,upg, ipol il, ks. 9n , yPqpg INirl, , .i? 1 0 1111 le. d:his horse, l 4 ftpq • n minotep,,and4is !terse by the tiMe Suggs, tOOhinraffeeneyr,elyby th(tltand, - , 4 oe a.' " 4 home '• -nee ' lwrs'dPuP:drictiOtig,l4, . -.,•,,, ~ , J :• 7 :' I `' I i,"1 " : ' CL ' • i he , -, •', s p, ~i m y : Mr; Pul,kum lyphed..copfognded7.bat said' !bye to cotisin bully, heti kiss ,in lo t' tn.;, 1;1 it - - ,. , .,1 , 0.nihe tint( the, Capra in walkert rq 'Laid dd I'kt:ter, iehti !for the ! futur' ; P t • ia ..... - ... ... ~•. .;.l . ‘.f ' ' • •1 , L.: • '.. ri !,. eivpr, t,o,a. vanant, blacksrnithailop,aerpss tlif. ap ; if yon, , havc, aily, children, .leh 4,, brtng, il'e ! wit) of l iir the Loa -. :Good street,, AY,b9FP.1,4,Y1c0041,P9,fr-r.r°r9!°l)7! PP , 1 !11 , )/ I Pi . .7 ,1, , I: ;, )i.: , 7 !!1! IL , 'n..! , r, ssgrY l ati° l) . i!; ._.ii . tio: I . '-,' , • ,i! ~ a y e i'.. J:: .! f! , • ! •• . •' '. ,1 ..- , ' "Ylat•t're. ' f l ;ean 'Wet M . ky last,'' remark- Captain S u ggs now paid /475 bill, and' had ed Suggs, with severity and as if his words trbalaoCe on hand,: HeAnarne„ta t e,y , 7 faitlirkil , tgiii . " 1111(11.,* thus a's CIAIVA.i'it 114 1 9... a't-e. • e! it ~I ,t. 1 F9L 112 ! !iis -!: ••• •i, •• , i ~ i ••••• : oil.;: . " . • 114 if. Emir' Felicti • ,-Oniltee . , lifith,! he meiy0 : 11(09,N,v,.P, 1 :4;.,, I.„ ~,, ,_;,, ~i i,,_,, vi _ i . ~, -, ~ 4.otrQr.t tqI4PIIP4 old,?,: '. ~ in. , o , fi(.• 1 f,!: l' i ,"•EY.. l o ; f /a Y a ii.gL ) ;;PK i t g jit , f fit:9lf99P 4 4 i , .::, . i. .. 1.. _ , ~ t _. , , , "What's. cot,tb,FrwOnr aslted tltacifttr, tar'. ;; .,4; pE , . I . 0," ~.,,,pq,d,..nt.tpdeLsinin , .tain,'with an elmost impercepnb)e wink. 3 . • . -•• ....NG. • •••••••••••••. - ..0,14, , i , •Oig •,•• .••• • tri • ••/'' • •,...,114•r-••. Clearfield, Pa. 111 November 16, 549. yens feedin' Elishy ; now, its clear to my eyes. Trust in , Providence—That's the lick! Here was lin the wilderness, sore ly oppressed, and tnility nigh desrmir.— Pullum come to me, like a 'raven,' in my diAress.--and a jet/ one, at-tlrit ! as I've oilers Ilcnegty and Providence ill never fail to fi.tch a man Out ! Jist give me thrt for a band, and I'll 'stand' akin all creation !"-6 real West. litsult of Cle Unitttl ;Ihtts rxrlaing (..11011 Iu ILR liivirJur;:tzn, End 11. t ;(0. The Centrihntions to . knc,wledge ed throughtt he instrum( v of United States navel forces ere 1416 , ;trifle( ieted and warmly tick nowledg«l by the sc4ras ' of Europe. A writer in the last number I oldie North British review expresses the ! opinicn that Lieut. Lynch deserves, rind the hope that he will obtain, the gold med al of the British Reyal Ceograillical duty, for his discoveries in the Holy Loud, white conducting the expedi:ion de spateh- , ed to Palestine in the Supply. The slime; writer elm ractelfze , ( the enterprite as, praiseworthy and liberal, in every vny most creditable to the United States gov, ernine nt, r rid emit acting advantageously , well the "unutterable enc.:unless" ()Hite British government in similar ma Hers.— This seems a harsh stigma en his own country from a writer apparently not giv en [(reprobation, but candid and sensible; especially when we hear in mind the sac rifice of and property hereto'Ore incur red, and witness the undiminished energy and persevering toil still exhibited in at. tempts to discover a northern passage to the Indies. Nor, in thisconnexion, should we overlook the coast surveys, prosecuted I undrr the direction of the British admiral ty along every shore, whose results accu rately end minutely presented on well en graved charts, accessible to navigators of every country, indicate to the mariner the peril to be shunned and the refuge to be sought, and develop information which multiplies wealth, and diminishes the haz ard attendant on.its pursuit. That portion of Lieut. Lynch's explora tion which is of chief value .& importance, relates to the river Jordan, between the lake of Tiberias and the Dead Sea. Only one European,l4,eYer performed the pas sage down the EiVcir from sea to sea be fore it was explored by the American, end he, Lieut. Molyneux, of the British ship Spartan, like our own lamented Dale, on happily fell a victim to the climate, and died before he had an opportunity of,im parting to the public the fruits of his ob servations. The foresight evinced by Lieutenant Lynch in the equipment of his expedition, was signally vindicated by the perfect adaptation of his boats to the navi gation of the Jordan. These, two in num ber, had been constructed at home, one of copper and the other of galvanized iron.— They were built in sections, so as to be taken to rieces if necessary lint transporta tion over, land. Willi the view, however, of transporting them entire, if practicable, b ou t carriag es w( provided wi.lr, as was supposed, t he requisite htuness for b rses. lu oilier respects the expedition w :es a d i ni. trebly arranged. 1:s solely and success were assured by every pro\ isicn that tin intelligent and p radent circumspection and preseictiee could sug g est. The crewcon sisted of ten picked nun, "'young mus t cular native; born A tneriLtans,'' pl , dged to total abstinence from intoxicalieg liquors. To their s.,ber habitsl Lie comileaider as cribes the hardihood which sustained th( in under "severe privations and great exp.,- sure." The second in command was Lieut. Dale, truly 'a skilltid drauvlosini.n,' as his urep of the river Jordan and w the Le id Sea, end his valious sketches rind drawings of the naval scenes and 01 jeers viewed in those comparatively unknown rcgiuns prove. • As an exploier, he pot - sessed other eminent qualiticie Las, hav ing acqt.ired extensive expern ace while serving with Cept. .W likes in the Antarc ti,t expedition, and being a scientific and practical engineer, in which capacity he was attached to the coast survey, and al . - term , rds act( d ju Elea lea. , liit pre mature death, at if.: ag - e 01 35, was greatly deplo red,, not only bemuse Lis :contributions to the triton tinder consideration plight have secured a mOre satis:hetory of the, result 4 of the expediti in, but by the na vy oh' which, he was. the ornament and pride, to whose officers he was : especiatly endeared by his admirable social qualities and necomplishmials, and. wric,rally by the Boon! ry whichhasticed sortices. Midshipman was,als'o uttaelwil to the cxpedi,ion; and Mr. F. Lynch, a, son the commander, to, whom was assigned the herbarium.:, $o that 'at. it ,embarka tion, the party consisted of 14 persons.— Btit it was subsequently , increased to 17, UrALdiol Piicd 4as 'u '`'loltiraccr at Colistdntinepl&,,and r. n el:ion at 116ir / tit ? . whe re also The con 'pander c;nplc : y 7 ed'am interpreter Mu '.4'#Uny,l i ti, native r tteequipliOted, whose wasiibr:er,to tit 104' 1 304. N VoitidBh.: j Thi ejcpe tt s lon dlseruharlt4 ip • 'thc l 'ay Carmel, th, iT9' '•'l;J* . : 11 ti .rnp the o,afget to. elvii.slog,' . 4o`l:l4. . ntinfe n trucks, tiol7r 3i :d N'uinber 21. end laden with the stores and luggage.— The harness proved too' large for the small Syrian hones; but to obviate this diffieul ty would have bet n a work of superero. often ; for the animals, not having been trained to the eperatien of pulling, abso lutely reftisc dto draw. In this dilemma the commander, fertile in .expedients, re solved on trying en mils. The experiment M.CCe( ded, to the amazement of the Arabs, aho had never before seen the camel tip. plied to any other use than that of cnrry ing burdens ( n his back. Three camels were found to be capable of drawing each truck with perfect ease. Of further prep-. ~, aration, there only remained to make pro- "The Fanny Mason in the metinwiele vision against hostile attacks from roving swayed, frOm side, to side of the mad'iOr•• pa r ies of Arabs ; and this was effected byrent like a. 'frightened bird, straining the I a judicious enlargement of force, in the line whidi held her. Vl'alchinge thei*- additien of a Bedouin sheik named Akil,! merit When her hews were in the right ili ai h ten a ell-urmed followers. The in-1 rcction, I gave lie signal to lei go the dui ace of L her if Hazza, of Mecca,, an A- - rope. There 'Was . a rush—a pltingetin rob nobleman, much venerated by Ins race, l upward leap, arid the rook was eleared— "the thirty-third-lineal descendant of the' the pool passed! ; and half full of water, prof bet," would also, it was thought, avail with breathless velocity - , we were swept to their security. He was accordingly ii:- safely down the rapids. Such :creaming duced to join the party. Thus reinforced, and shouting! The Arabs seemed •to ex ile. expedition cambered thirty•one; and alt more than ourselves. It was in seem a hen arranged in order of march,. the ing only. They were glad—we were boats decorated a ith flags, end drawn by grateful. Two ofthe Arabs lest their hold, camels, the Arabs in their • Dense gut b, • and Wore carried fur Mow us, but were heating long tufted spears, and superbly resisted - with a slight injury to one ofthem." l mounted, our own gallant tars sustaining; The sernory along the river is so variti , well their somewhat unnatural transform- ble as scarcely to admit of a general des. ation into a miniature squadron of cavtdry, eription, end we have no space to extract , it was not inaptly likened by its proud corn-those passages which are requisite to a sat ; wander to a triumphal procession. i isfiletory illustration of it. Except when They left the coast on the 4th of April, disturbed by rapids, the waters of the Jor traversed the desert in safety, and succee- den are clear and transparent. AtAsoints ded in launching their boats in the sea of its banks arc clothed With'Yegetlithisti,'With ' Gaiilec—the first vessel, of any size, and here and there patches of cultivation..,-- indeed the only vessels, with the excel). Sometimes they present plains of dreary tion of a solitary little boat %%Inch cone waste, broken into ridges resembling mender Lynch purchased for thirty dol- I waves, the mountains of calcareous lime lars to assist in carrying their baggage, stone rising tip in the distance like islands that had disturbed the waters since the from the sea. `..:Oceasionally a thicket of time of Josephus and the Romans. • On lolly cane, and tangled masses .of shrubs the 10th of April the party embarked, and , and creeping plants, gave the appearance pushed off from the shelving beach for the' pt . a jungle," Once they saw the-track of outlet of the river Jordan. Here commen- l a leopard, abu had quenched his thirst, in ced the observations and discoveries ; which , the stream. Once they startled a wild abundantly crowned the labors of the ex- boar from his lair. The thickets were vo• plorers. cal with the songs of birds. The corn- The investigations of science claimed mender dwails with delight on the bean. to have established the fact of a difference i ties of " the sacred river!" " Its brinks of 984 feet between the levels of the lake I fringed with perpetual verdure; winding of Tiberias and the Dead Sea. Our learn- lin a thousand graceful mazes; the path. ed countrymen, Dr. Robinson, doubted way cheered with songsof birds, and its !the accuracy of this estimate, because the !own clear voice of gushing minstrelsy; its l two lakes being only 60 geographical course a bright line in this cheerless Waste'," miles, the average full of the river would And again': • be 10i feet per mile. "But the Jordan, l "For hourS in their swift dekent the so fur us known, has neither cataracts nor ' boats floated down in silence—the•Sileriee rapids, and its flow, though swift, is sileut. of the wilderness. Here and there were Yet, of' the 984 feet of its decent in 00 ge- spots of solemn beauty. The numereits ()graphical miles, there is room for three birds sang with a music strange and man e:tweets, each equal in descent to Nkigu- ilold; the willow lir:niches were spread ra, and there a ould still be left to the riv- upon the stream like tresses, and creeping cr an average lull equal to the swiftest por.- ' mosses and clambering weeds, with a mull . tion of the Rhine, including the cataract thud() of white and silvery little flowers, of Schaffhausen." The Prussian geogra- looking out front among therri; and ' the Flier, t•ad Ritter, affirmed a like doubt,—'-- cliff swallow wheeled over the falls,-or But the observations of the expedition es- went at histown will, darting through the ' tablished the accuracy of the scientic de- arched vistas, shadow ed and stayed by (ludittn, and removed entirely the basis t! e meeting foliage on the banks; and`ti w lea supported the skilfully constructed hove all, yet attuned to all, was the mu fabric of dissent. By the tortuous course sic of the•river gushing with a sound like of the Jordan, the distance * between the that of shawms end cymbals." setts was loand to be at least 200 miles;; The great achievement of the expedi. and in its course there are many rapids, tion is the thorough survey and ample sane presenting obstructions to navigation description of the river Jordan. 'I he that reiibt weft shake the purpose of the sketch map of its course from the lake of boldest ad% enterer. Of this latter, 27 ' Tiberias to the Dead Sea is a master-piece 11 , A-(• encountered, and those of minor im- of minute delineation; awl- although wo , I,ortance were N cry numerous. ane 01 may regret in behalf of lierature IMU-Sel the most formidable of these obstachlond . 'once that the.same hand. which guided the the method of o%erconling it, are graphi- , pencil was not. spared to wield the pen, it r I ally described in the lollowing extract is but fair to preaounee the narrative ern front the commander's narrative: 1 inently interesting, and in a • high degree "At I 0.15, a. in., cast offend shot down creditable to the industry and ability of the the first rnl.id, mid sfopped to examine; writer: All that relates to the river and more closely a d( sperate looking cascade !adjacent country, except in the immediate of elev.( n feet. In the middle of the chit n• I vicinity of thenkra seas, is an addition to net was a shoo! et an angle of about sixty %%Ali the stock of human knowledge, as values des grew, i a bold, bluff, threatening I ble and unportantias it is interesting and l'oe. c .k.at its foot, exactly in the passage. it I novel; and v lowed , as the result of the en, would, therefore, be necessary to turn al- terprise, it merits the conneendatione-s"ji , ' most ut 4 -dm rp angle in descending, to a- 1 ?cis cornatopus." . . '.. ',. void being dashed in pieces. This rock! A week was spent upon the riser., and was on-the outer edge of the whirlpool, its banks. The navigation" of theiDad which u caldren of foam swept round and Sea,- or, as it is classically termedafrom round in cir i sfing eddieS. Yet below wen i the bitumen It producer, the lake; tif As, two fierce raj iris , each about one hundred phaltites, was attended with lesa•difficuLty, • and fitly yards in length, with the points i and its r.estilttiure Of less importanee:insa, ' of black rocks peering ° above the white and : seientifkiToint ofview,, mailing. as they, do & ; agi ated sur.ece. Below' them, again,: rather to : confirm or disprove. the staid within a mile, were two other rat ids—long meats ofsprovioua yeyagerS,, than to de., er, but more shelving and less difficult! Ivelop; facts before MilinOWn. 'They, will "Forfar - lately a large bush was growing, operate,. however, in some degree, to. Atitie. upon the lest bank, about five feet up where' fy the curiosity of the Christiansworld, the ru s h of the water treat ahoVe had for- I which, ever anxious to penetrate the,inka ined a ; kind' of . proinditory s By swim- tory that veils the sea of Sodom - , .wasstim, ming across some distance up. the stre4rn, Waled to eager expectation by, the, pOin. one or the . Inca had carrio,.eveohe i:nd , ise of an exploration to bo.prdsecute4 t ut. Of a rope, and made irfilst around • t4C der auspices •that seemed so favorable to , rents of the bush. - The great doubt Naas itatsucazssis !.; I : s f .: -.. :: - , j Whether ' the hold' f the:,recits vy,Old he , Twenty-two Opy i o; were employed in.put siifficient to withstand the Eltialn, 1441116 . e kingihe circuit o', lira lake and 'crossings ii . as- no alteinative, 11 1 r(orcli4:rt i o‘toyilt 'feqtalte to. loirii-iille It 4; depth. Wing' . the tnen,l,emploed i sibMe Of the ,4184 t ' . i,l'. lthis i uetiod vii minute ObservatiOn‘ydre 4 i ! l ionsas Arnh a llli ,the cO4 iii", Swirfilty - ' ! the Iced() hied relpi.cting r ,all tliq, ,to-041- 1 44c Am 6de Of the ' boats, and 'Onde them it ; pba:i. , VI - Ale - anti, , Thu exf,et topegrao F i r''Ai * io'dicat of, di.i4er. - Sending` men, shamesWik, 40 :4i;zer).aliatd'at4, ,i c I tho. o •rok4' and tracking :the Ftinnyigaoonl'ted: It k forty rniles . long, iyiifi. ~ : ::Z I - il ati4ltin i6 : . '0611 - 10r:tie#ss,' : l 'iiiid":0,iiih:- "4" brOttiLfir ' ruinlolo;':' V . tipekipi ifie'st o iicle, of the - "itipp,l6t 'lfei drOp 'ende ts'err the Vible:,' '6ityji`th(i'• es (. se s ess i .......: ss .i .T , v e x ii ik 1., ~ n. [6401:r40,, r . ;46 qittpAie, whey',, sllp 5 1 .9 1 K1. Virg! }he pt!re ,(„ h atm r 140' ititiibled'' OW ',bite in ;; th,o'.'fteree stunk 4 - 90,4010,4ing . , i w - iltAp4iii dibiOlvdtiiiiineeurA i ne.: '.'"lt *as rGOil; fietliiis'Viite . , '-'l pgicEs,OF 1 nut:re, (f,15 Ilnestores . s. I insertion. 410 I do do do • 5 ea': TO() ' !. Each subsequent inicrtion;' t 014.5 I do 3 months ; 1 do 6 months .4 Q 0 ° I do )2 month; • • ":" ) • 1 7 00 2 do I'. Months 2 do 6 month • , 2do 12 months ,„ „ • - . 11 1 . 0 0.,._ 3 do 3 months `—"- a do 6 months, , • . r at.; 0110 3do 12 months „ : - -14 DO ' 5 do cr half a columa. 6 hithath'A "; 11 16) 5 do or half eritainn' 1 Vini)htffi".: 20110 10 do or one column. 6 Months r, 10 do . or one column, 12 inanthit , 20,Q0 =I Book Jobs and Of,every description, przeted an very,,tel ftyl. and on the rhoyest notice, a' the COTa.Y. DOf LA El ,Offtee. a moment of . iiiten.4_,‘ anxiety...t . ors' had now 6lainberedmono" . the i *,bank and stood tit intervals belOw,, ready to OS. slid us ir thrown from the boat and 'sicept towards the m. One mann - with the in the boat stood by the line; a number of..4fats were upon the rocks end in the rooming water, gesticulating wildly, their ShOO'ts minri b linq With the roaring of theilbisto- gas rapids, and their dusky foirnS — cOn• trusting strangely with the elliqwes§iiig flood, and five on each side in the }tiii,er were clinging to the Wet, tetOy to guide her clear of the threatening rock rposgi. ble OE