SUNBUKY AMERICAN. AND SIIAMOKIN JOURNAL. rmccs or m i:in isixe; I square 1 insertion, fo .'.0 I do 3 do . .07 1 do 3 do 1 11.. Every subsequent insorlirw, . . .0 'Jf Yearly Advertisement, (with the privilege nl alteration) one column ?25; half column, fIR, three squares, f 12 j two squares, 9 ; one square, f.". Without the privilege of alteration a lilicr.M discount will be made. Adveitiseme.its lolt without directions as to the length of time thef are to he published, will be continued until ordered out, and charged accord, ingly. C"j"Sixteen linf s make a qnarr. orriCt 15 X1RKKT iTIIf.KT, PEAR BEKR. THE" AMERICAN" is published every Satur day at TWO DOLLARS per annum lo be jiaid half yearly in advance. Mo paper discontin ued till all arrearages are paid. No subscriptions received for a losa period than ix MOitTiia. All communications or Idler on tmsiness relating to tlie office, to insure attention, must be POST PAID. Absolute acquiescence in the derisions of the mnjnri'y, the vita! principle of Republics, from which tlvtre i no appral hut to force, the vital prim-ipln and inimedia'e parent ul ilispilimii. Jtrrraso'. Ily Masscr & i:irly. MiiiUmy, IVotiliumbcrluiitl to. la. Sudmluy, March 5, Vol. II o. XXIII. ti:iois or Tin: " amizuicax." HE.NKV B. MASSER,? Piblishkrs asd JOSEPH EISELY. SrRoranTona. II. It, .TI.lSSKIt, lUMort friiji Tint united states gazette, Human live are liver coursr. Running ta one common sea. Varying in their size and sources, Landscape and rapidity. t?ome boil up on eratrcy mmm'sins, And co madly down thoir sjjle ; Olheis fed by mmmr-r f ainlains. Mirror meadows in their tide. Here a silver hronk winds errant Through the flower and'fragiarit grass ; There a slow and i-limy current Threads the frowning wilderness. Human griefs are shadows, gliding Where the deepest waters gleam ; When the Autumn cloud is riding Hindi above the Millen streun. Human joys are sunny billows, fcfpnrtmg by a garden side, Whcie no yews or weeping willows Ruslla o'er the smiling tide. Onward, s'ernly onward fleeting ; Onward lo that shoreless sea. Rivei, brook and torrent meeting In one calm eternity. Philadelphia, Fcliruaiy ISth, 1512. E. S. M. SPKECII OP AltKKOlOtliDDIIlXKAUl). The following address was delivered in Fa- noun Hall, jjoston, ty 3Jr. Jiawkins, one ol the i then drank nothing for a while ; but it was so opened sober and shut sober ; and when 1 rnter Reformed Drunkards from Ikiltiinore, who are hard to do without, that at lengli I took a glass t.,, my wife was standing in the middle of the now travelling as agenUs for the I emporaiice j Society. j Mr.iiankin.'. Aldr. j W hen I compare the past with the present ; my days of intemperance with my present j peace and sobriety my past degradation with my present position in this Hall the Cradle of Liberty, I am overwhelmed. It seems to me holy ground. I never expected to 6ee this Hall. I had heard of it in boyhood. 'Twas here that Otis and the elder Adams urged the prin- j ciples of independence, and we now meet here to declare ourselves independent; to make the ": second JJeclaration not quite so lengthy as the Oid one, but promises ol lite, liberty, and the pur- suit of happiness. Our Forefathers pledged j l. l : - ..ii-. i -ii their lives, and fortunes, and sacred honors; we, too, will pledge our honor, our life, but our for tunes have gone fbr Rum ! Poor though we drunkards are, and miserable, even in the gut ter, we will pledge our lives to maintain sobri ety. The cause of Temperance ! what is it, but the cause oflunnanity ! I have suffered from every description of drunkenness; and borne the heat anil burthen of the day in ks. m mi 1.1.9, (grog shops) and know all about it and I re joice to say, in this Cradle of Liberty, that whereas I was once a. drunkard I am now a so ber man, and always mean to be. 1 represent 2tKK) reformed drunkards saved in one year, now connected with the Washing ton temperance society of Baltimore, and its auxiliaries. Our society originated in a irroff. shop, where twenty of us, all drunkards, resor- ! ted. Our pledge was there drawn up, and first signed by six persons, who now stand firm in the cause. The President Mr. Mitchell, is a host in himself. Our meetings are held eve ry night in the week, and we find it as pleasant and good a way to spend our time as it ever was at a tavern; nay, more pleasant, and in better company than in those little hells upon ' earth. At our meetings we don't look at each other, and say nothing. No! you can't keep us from talking. One said, "I feel better, though I am growing smaller, and ksnk pale; my ideas arc clearer; 1 eat better, and feel happy." Another; "my wife is so happy, and every thing goes so nice at liome ; the children are so rejoiced." And mive went over the ground, telling our experiences, and we have none too much time I assure you. We found enough to tell about ourselves, our homes and our old grog-shops, to make a long evening Khort. We would have no sectarianism, no politics or arguments, Whoever ventured up on, cither was mule to take kis seat; he must te!l his on experience, and not another's. "Tell us how olten you have been drunk, and what rum has done to you and your family; nnd how you now feel, and uhut cold water is now doing lor you." Total abM.inertce is the fasis no proscrip tton of men, ONLV THE LKU'OR. Men who sell Hum may tako cilr pledge and join its; and we would like well to have tho man who sells 20 hogsheads a week come and at tend our meetings, and if we did not give him enough 1 am mistaken. lie knows when the mechanic earns f 12 a week arid spend half of it at his tavern bar, that he has taken his mo- fjey and given no equivalent ; that it is wrong to vend an article that will wild millions to a drunkard's grave. We cover all under kvm and Ri'M-Mii.i.R. You may talk of your gin and wine it is no matter what you ra!) it wc know there is no dillliciicc ; you may as well drink one as the other. Thirty years ago, wo drank everywhere, on all occasions, and the question we asked was, "does ho keep a good bottle V and when we could not get a good one, poor one would da I was born of respectable parents, and was educated by a minister, and then bound out to tiic hading busincs, in as perfect a grog-shop as ever existed. Ma few days before I left Baltimore, I found the old books of my master; there was the names of sixty men upon it, and we did not recollect but one that did not go to a drunkard's grave. Another hatter says it was just so on his books. Atone time there were twelve of us as apprentices eight of the twelve have died drunkards; one is now in the alms bouse in Cincinnati, one in the alms house in Jlaltinioro, and here am I. For a while I was prosperous, notwithstand ing 1 drank on; I did not expect the appetite to conquer me. Well, when 2'J years old, in I went to the West. As soon as away from parental care, gave way, all went by the hoard, my suffering commenced. Forfl months I had no shoes, and only ene shirt and two pair I of pantaloons; and then I was a vagabond in- j deed. But I returned, ragged and bloated to j my mother's homo. When I got to the edge I of the town, I was ashamed even to walk on j the ground of my nativity. In the dusk of the I evening 1 crept along to my mother s, and was soon dressed up decently. Mv mother onlv said, "John, I am afraid you are bloated." I ol ale, and all was over with me again my appetite rushed on like a flood and carried all before it. And for fifteen years, time alter tune, I rose and fell; wa.s upaud down, would quit all, and then take a little glass. I would earn floa week, bo happy and well, and with money in hand start for home, and in some nn- accountable way, imperceptibly and irresistably, fall into a tavern, and think one glass only would do me good. But I found a single glass of ale would conquer all my resolutions. I ap peal to all my fellow drunkards if it is not ex actly so it" the one class ol intoxicating drink dOPg m,t annihilate, by revival of the appetite, ,,n resolutions to resist drinkinff on. I am Bat- inod this appetite is rooted in me, and I never ... I expect to get nu ol it. it is like mercury in the themometor keep heat away from it and it will not rise, but apply the heat of your finger and it will rise at once. June Kith, last, 1 drank and suffered awfully. I can't tell you how much I Buffered in mind 111 body every thing, but in mind more. 1 drank dreadfully the two first weeks of June- bought by the gallon, and was about taking my life drunk all the time. On the 11th I was a wonder to myself astonished that I had any mind letl ; and yet it seemed in the goodness of God uncommonly clear. I laid in bed Ion" alter my wife and daughter were up, and my conscience drove me to madness. 1 hated the darkness of the night, and when light came I hated the light. I hated my life, my existence, I asked myself; "Can I refrain.' is it possible !" Xol a being to take me by my hand, and lead or help tne along and say "vol' i an. ' I was friendless; without help or light; an outcast, My wife came up stairs, and knew I was suf- fering, and asked me to go down to breakfast. I had a pint of w hiskey and thought I would drink ; and yet I knew it was life or death with me as I decided. Moderate drinkers beware ! Take care you don't get into this awful condi- j ' ell, I told my wife I would come J down presently. Then my daughter came up 1 ad asked me down. I alwayu loved her : because she was the drunkard's friend ; my on- i 'y friend. And then she said, "Father, doti't ; send nie after whiskey to-day." I was tormen- I lpd before, but this was an unexpected torture. j Hold her to leave the chau!cr, and she went ' down crying, and said to her mother, father is i unory with me. My wife came up again, and asked me to take some coffee; I told her I did not want unv thiiiL' of her. f soon heard some oue enter the room, and I peeped out and saw it was my daughter. I then thought of my past life; rny degrada tion; misery of my friends; and felt bad enough. So I called her and said. "Hannah. I am not angry with you, and I shall not drink - any more. Klie cried and so did I. I went nn and looked to the cunboard and looked st .. ... ..... ...wi, i....u ,i i . IIIU l in III, mjr mo. j uvi.i , niiii lllWII!llf "is it possible I can be restored," and then I turned tny back upon it. Several times while dressin". I looked at the bottle but thought I should be lost ifl yielded. IW Drunkard! 'n,, ; bm for vnn ! Von cannot bo worse off than I was; not more degraded, or more a slave to appetite. You can reform if you will. Try it try it. I felt bJdly I ten you. There are some here who know how I felt. 1 know yon feel bad enough. I have talked with some of you. Some say we leelinn. Some My we f el rkitfh, and some say we feel l-'IKST RATI'.. Well, Momliy night I went lo the bucu; I v of drunkards-, and there 1 found all my old bottle companions. I did not tell a ny body I was going, not even my wife. I bad got out of difficulty, but did not know how long I would keep out. The six pounders of the so ciety were there. We had fished together, and got drunk together. Yon could not break us up when drunk. We stuck like brothers, and so we do now we arc sober. One said here is Hawkins, the "rcculatof," the old anvisim; ami they clapped and laughed as you do now. Hut there was no clap or laugh in me. I was too sober and solemn for that. The pledge was read for my accommodation. They all looked over my shoulder to see me write my name. I never had such feelings before. It was a great battle. T once fought the battle at North Point, and helped to run away too, but now there is no running away. I found the Society had a large pitcher of water drank toasts and told experiences. There laid my plan; I did not intend to be a drone. Alcohol promised every thing, but I found him a great deceiver, and now I mean to do him all the harm 1 can. At 11 o'clock I went home, because, when I went home late, 1 always went home drunk, Wife had given me up, and thought I would come home drunk again, and she began to think about breaking up and going home to mother's. My yard is covered with brick, and as 1 went over the brick, will listened as she told mo. to determine whether the rote opened drunk or sober, for she could tell, and it room to see me as I came in. She was as- toni. - hed, but 1 smiled and she smiled, as I caught her black eye. I told her quick; I could not keep it back, 'I have put my nair to the temperance pledge, never to drink as long as I live.' It was a happy time. 1 cried and she cried ; we could not hush it ; and our crying waked up our daughter, and she cried too. 1 tell you this, thi'tyou may know how happy this reformation of a drunkard makes his family. I slept none that night, my thoughts were better than sleep. Next morning I went to see mother, old as 1 was. I must go to sec her and tell her of our joy. She had been pray ing 'JO years for her drunken son. Now she .it"ia Pnouh, 1 am ready to die.' It made J my connexions all happy. The next thing was to determine what was to be done, aiy mind was blunted haracter gone; was bloated and I was get ting old ; but men who had slighted me came to my help ajain and took me by the hand, held me up, encouraged and comtorieii me. 1 11 never slight a drunkard as Ions as I live; he needs sympathy and is worthy of it, poor and miserable as he is ; he did not design to be come a drunkard ; and people have too long told him he cannot reform; it s no use; he must die a drunkard. But we now assure him he can reform, and need not live or dio so, and we show ourselves, 12001) in one year, as evi deuce of the fact. The poor wretch here is crammed into the poor house or prison, and when he conies out, he meets temptation at every step he begs you to succor him; but ,e is led by appetite and neglect, straight to the grog-shop. Drunkurd ! come up here, you can reform take the pledge in this Cradle of Liberty, and be ever free '. Delay not. I met a gentleman this morning, who reformed four weeks ago, rejoicing in his reformation. II brought a man with him who took the pledge, and this man has already brought two others. This is the way wc do the business up in Bilti I more ; we reformed drunkards are a Commit 1 i:k of Tin: Whole on the State or Tint L' nio.n! are all missionaries don't slight the drunkard, but love him. No! we nurse him as the mother does her infant learning to walk, I tell you, be kind to him and he will never forget you. llo has peculiar feelings when the boys run after him and hoot at him ; take hi.s part and he'll never forget it. lie has better feelings than the moderate drinker; don't lav a stiiinblini; block in his way. One man n.wr, miserable, ureiciieu, raggeu ; a t 1 ueal w iiARf hat ; I suppose you have such here, we had plenty of them in llaltimore, but much lessened now ;) he was a bu&ter ; about a year ago, his clothes not fit tor paper rags, " ,i,,n"y nM now"" 10 Ml' 1,0 ,ue'' nor evt" I.I .1 W-..1I l. I. .1.1 l,,o l.,.tl,.. I,., una nvi- i . . .. . . .i . . , . U,H"18, "c '""" b,r- S lo (lu,t wautea nun to go nis bccuruy for a horse and cart, but he would nut. Our I men went to his brother and he was persHaded He has paid lor his horse and cart, his family an" 'unwell are well clothed, cellar lull oi woou, a ba"el of flour, and he has become a gentle "n and a christian. And all this in one short )'ear' Just let metell you about one of out reform- ed men. We alt changed a grrat, deal in our appearance ; some grew thin ; tome pale ; but a dark complexioned man grew yellow, and the grog-seller, untiring the change in others, and seeing hi old customer not becoming white, uud he did not he!, eve he had rpiit alto gether. The man In aid of it, and prepared himself for an interview ; so happened in his way. These taverns arc apt to complain and say we do them an injury, bpcanse we shared our money for the support of our families. Quite villainous to be sure! And so they charge us with drinking a little ; but I tell you wc keep cIofc wutch of each other; wo are very loving and we take good care to get along side of the mouth, and know pretty well what has been going on there. As I was going to tell you the taverner said to the member, 'it appears to me you don't alter quite o much as horic of the re.it.' 'Ibn't I,' said lie, well, why don't I V 'Why, you don't look pile, voti rrrow vallak.' '1 urow vallnr you think!' 'Yes.' 'Well,' said the man draw in"; out a handful of gold pieces from his pnnta- oons pocket, 'these look yatlartoo, but yon don't get any more of them, they belong here,' returning them to his pocket 'and my wife will liHvelhciu that in the trouble with you. These grog sellers know how to fix the drunk ards they understand their business thev keep a platter of salt fish cheese, herring and crackers to fix the appetite all free don't ask anything of course, for them ; but when they see a man take hold and eat a little, they think they have him, he'll want to wash it lown ; he'll get started and -he'll do well e- nough yet.' Well, the stuff is very apt to stick in the throat, so it was washed down; and the breath must he changed, and a little more fish or cheese is taken, and that must be wash ed out of the throat, and so it goes. But if a man eats and don't drink, lie is pretty sure to be told that that will not do. This drinking has killed more men, women and children, than war pestilence, and all other evils together. You cannot bring upon man so awful a curse as alchohol ; it cannot be done ; no machinery or invention of death can work like it. Is there a nuxleratc drinker who says he can use 'a little,' or 'much,' and quit when he pleases !' I tell you from experience he can't do it. Well lie can if he will, but he won't wax, that is the difficulty and there is the fatal mistake. Does he want to know whether he can ? I ask him to go without his accustomed morning bitters, or his eleven o' clock, to morrow, and he will find how he loves it ! We have come up out of the gutter to j tell him he loves it, and how he can escape. It is the moderate use the lilt'e, the pretty i drink, the genteel and fashionable, that does j the iniHclnel ; the moderate drinker is trauunjr i to take tho place of the drunkard. Go to Baltimore and see now our happy wives and families. Only look at our proces sion on the 25th of April, when we celebrated our aniversary. Six thouwmd men, nearly half of them reformed within a year, followed by 12(100 boys of all ages to give assurance to tho world that the next generation shall all be so ber. Uut where were our wives on that occa sion ! at home, nhutupwith hungry children in rags as a year ago! No, No! but in car riages, riding round the streets to see their husbands. My family were in a hat k and I carried ap ples, &c. to them, and my wifesaid 'how happy all look, why there is all dressed up and only think I saw old in the proces sion as happy and as smart as any of them, and so she went on telling tne who she had seen. And where do you think tho grog seller's wives tvero ! were they out ! Not they ! ! Some of them peeped out from behind the itrt.vins ! We cut down the rum tree that day in Bil tiniore, underground ; not on the top of the ground leaving u t.tump, but under ground roots and all ! ! We have not seen six drunkards staggering in the streets since we have been in Hilton, and we have been all round, even in Ann street. They must hide themselves. If they are put into the bonne of correction, I don't wonder they hide. I said when I talked to thern on the Sabbath, over there, that I wuhed I had a distiller at my right hand, and a rum- seller at my left, & let them answ er the ques- tion, what brought all these here ! And would have hail the answer ki m. This making the drunkard by a thousand temptations and in ducement, and then shutting them .ip in pris on, is a cruel and horrible busi'iess, Vou make the drunkard, and then l't him come into your Ihwso and you turn hi ;.i out ; let him come to the church and you turn him out; friends cast him iiff; dp grog-seller turns him into tho streets when his money is eone, or mid night comes. When ho serves his time out ia prison, ho is turned out with the threat of a flogging if he is ever caught again; and yet you keep open tho place w here he is eulangled and destroyed. Wo are bound to turn the whole tide of public opinion against the traffic. The sellers will pour down your eon's throat a tide of liquor, and you do so to hit son and ho would cut your throat Ask him if he ia wil ling you should make his daughter a drunkard T And v 1 1 v (hculd hr make vour sou our ' SnvtiK Keneonlir. m 'st savage and intvrderuuH combat occur red a fjw d ivs since, near l.evvisburg, Conway county, Arkansas, between Dr. Nimrod Mene fee, and Nelson Philips. Tlu-y met in the woods, (having previously quarrelled.) without any witness except a negro boy wlto happened accidentally to pass and the result is thus sta ted in the Little Rock Gazette : Philips dis charged his pistol first, and missed his antago rii.t. Manefee then fiied and shot Philips through the back. The hitter then drew his knife and attacked M. with it, and at the first thrust, gave him a frightful cut in the abdo men which let out his entrails. Menefee hav ing no weapon except his empty pistol, and be ing inferior in size to Philips, defended him self the best way he could, by warding off the blows of his antagonist, with his pistol. The first knife used by Philips broke off at the han dle, when he drew another, and renewed the combat. In this way they fought for near half an hour, sometimes on their feet and sometimes on the ground un'il both became so completely exhausted by fatigue and loss of blood, that they were compelled to desist for want of strength to continue the contest, On assistance coming up, the parties were found stretched on the ground, weitering in their blood, and both supposed to be mortally wounded. Dr. Mrnefee, we understand, was horribly cut to pieces, having no less than 31 cuts and stabs. He survived only a few days. Mr. Phi'ips received only one serious wound, a pistol shot through the region of the kidneys, and no hopes are entertained of his recovery. Sam fcilck' lJIUurnire Iwtwrni a lienn mid a 'W IfV. Thi must be an everlasting fine country be yond all doubt, for the folks have not hin to do but to ride about and talk politic. In winter, when the ground is covered with snow hat grand times they have a slaying over these here mashes with the gals, or playin ball on the ice, orgoin toquiltin frolics, of nice long winter evenings, and then o drivin homo like mad by moonlight. Nalur meant that season on purpose for courtin. A little tidy scrumtious looking slay, a real clipper of a h rse, a string of bells as long as a stringof inions round his neck, and a sprig on his back, looking for all the world like a hunch of apples at gatherin time, and a bweethrait alongside, all niutHod up but her eyes and lip', the one looking right j swer. Curious to see how lar the ex atyou, ia e'en almost to drivo on ravin, tarin, i perimeiit could be carried, lie went a districted mad with pleasure, aint it ! And j bout for several hours, treated all hi then the dear critters sav the bells make such ...'., . I a u m there s no nearin one sseu speaK ; so iney put their pretty little mugs close up the face, and talk, talk, till one can't help looking at them instead of the horse, and then whnp you go capsized into a snow drift together, skins, cushions, and all. And then to see the little critter bhake lietself when she gets up, like a duck landing from a pond, a chattering away all the time like a canary bird, and you haw-hawing with pleasure, is fun alive, you m;iy depend. In this way blue-nose gets onto offer himself as a lover, before he knows where he is. Rut when he gets married, he recovers his eyesight in little less than half no lime, lie soon finds he's treed ; his flint is fixed then, you may depend. She lams him how vinegar is made; 'Put plenty of sugar into the water aforehand, my dear,' says she, 'if you want it real i-harp.' The larfison the other side of his mouth. If his slay gets upsot it's no longer a funny matter, I tell vou ; he catches it right i , i l . i - - and I. 'It. Her eves don t look up to his n any more, nor her little tongue ring like a hell any longer ; but a great big hood covers her head, and wappiu gn at mull' covers her face, nndsho looks like a bag of old clothes agoing to the brook to be washed. When they get tut, she don't want any more for him to walk lock and lock ith Iter, but they march like a horse and a cow to water, in each gutter. If their aint a transmogrification, it's a pity. The difference between a wile, and a sweetheart is near about as greiit as there is between new a ml hard ci ! d r a man luffr tire.- ol'puttin one to his lips, hut inn1. en lnuy wry faces at t'other. It j maVes ,p so kimh-r w .m.hlecroj t when I think fm ;t, that I'm afeard to ventur on matrimony nt all. I have ween sunn blue-riiej mot prop erly bit, you may depend. The marriage yoke is plaguy apt to pall the neck, as the ashhow docs the ox in riny wevhrr, oo!ps it be most particularly well fitted. You've seen a yoke of cattle that warn't properly mated ; they spend more time in pullin nt;airi each other than in pullin the load. Well, that's apt to be the case w ith them as chooses their wives in laying parties, quilt n frolics, and soon, in stead of tile dairies, looms, and rhoesehouse. OrrmvG a Post riox.---A Connecti cut editor defines his position to be the snme as that of an animal which was carried through the country in a mena gerie. "Ladies and centletnen, this 'ere animal as yon see here, between the linn and the jackass, is amiiici'oi'S. I Ik can't i.i vk in uit: wati r, and he Ml1' L'N Till f Af '" Wonderful Contrast. About 47 years ngo, in 1705, Alle gheny, Washington and Fayette coun ties, were full of distilleries, and nn im mense quantity of whiskey was mode and sold. The United States, in order to raise a revenue, made a law to tax iU The people refused to pay, rebelled and raised an army called the Western Insurrection army, and marched lo Pittsburgh. Gen." Washington sent an army of about 3000 U. S. troops and volunteers to suppress it. They arri ved when the Whiskey armv disband ed. In the year 1815 and 'i3, the U nited States" put on a direct tax, and perhaps then, we hnd 1500 stills in Washington and Allegheny counties. Now there is not perhaps 15 stillhouses in operation in the two counties. A few days ago a gentleman, who was U. S. Deputy Collector in Washington county in 1S1G, informed us that there was then fi7G still-houses taxed, and 70,000 collected of taxes for the Uni ted States; and now, perhaps, there is scarce ten distilleries in that county. Pittsburgh Gazette. CaCTIOX TO THE I.VTEMf f.rate. A man it) his cups entered a house in Pitt street, between Aisquith and (.'anal, on Sunday afternoon, nnd made an attack on three women, who happened to be alone; they retreated into the kitchen and armed themselves with prts, kettle?, broomsticks, &c, nnd then met the in truder and gave him such a boating that he could scarcely take himself from tho battleground. Aslhere wasnooffico at hand, (he women gave the rascal what ho deserved, and when he reco vered lie was perfectly sober, but could not give any account of the bntile, or the cause oi" his numerous wounds. Halt. Sun. A New Yorker visiting Philadelphia during the present excitement, went in to a barber's shop in the morning to get shaved, and offered a one dollar bill for change. The barber shook his head, and told him to pay next time. Ha went into a refectory, and eat a shil- nig s worm, ana recetveu uie same nr.- .i i . i.i . . i mends on the credit ol inc aonar, ana nt niaht cave it to a beggar, telling him that if he made small purchases it would last the longer. Boston Mail. All very probable, except the giving away the note ! That part of the story is rather tough. Westward IIo! A House Travel. We were struck yesterday afternoon with the queer appearance of an emi grant's "outfit," w hich went by our of. lice on its westward way. Upon tho running part of an ordinary wagon, with rather a long reach, w as construe ted a CJibin, well-roofed and clap boarded, with curtained windows while n stovepipe protruding through the roof betokened that appliances and means for warmth and cookery wero not lacking the apparent comfort and snumicss of the whole arrangement 1,..... I r nn n r.roAnl.ln .nntrnttt YV i t thl I , . . ? ' ' r' ,, . " i i ,i hardships usually encountered by Urn 1 . ' . . -i,i venturous pioneer to wesitm wnus. This nondescript dwelling was drawn by three horses, driven very conveni ently from within, and thus sheltered from the inclement elements, the enter prising emigrant, while sitting by his own fire, with all his household goods around him, was pushing onward to the new homo he had chosen, with scarcely a deprivation, while in tran situ, of the comforts of the one he had left behind. Hun". Com. oi Wednes day. Shon, Shon, Tiive on Slton. A serious old Dutchman, in days gon bv, slopped in the vicinity of a boiling spring to rest his team, and bathe his levered brow. Ilavi-ig left his son John at the horsfs' heads, he proceed ed, with his bucket, and began to dip fhe water. At the first dip his pail dropped from his hands, and he return ed to his wagon, on the full run, shout ing "Shon! Shon! trive on Shon ! hH ish not von mile from dish place." Wo consider President Tyler to be pret ty much in the condition of the old Dutchman, he has plunged his hand into a pool of hot water; and, unless h drives on at a faster rate than he has set-mod disposed to of Ute, Re may say, with truth, that he is in the neighbor hood of Belzebub's back kitchen, and that a whole Congress set together, by the ears, is nt such a political milleniutn after all. Index. .