LEWIS H. C. HICKQg, Editor, an. WORDEW, Printer. LEWISDUBO CHRONICLE 4 iwnsrwni!rr ' orit, luucd on Wednesday morning at Lemisburg, Union county, Pennsylcanic. TF.R VS. M per Tr, for cash actually in ndTanee; 1 li if paid witliin tliree unntus: 2,Ou if paid within a Tear I IM if not paid lirc the year exeires ; cent for ingle Mnbm. Subscriptions for fix month, or lew. to nepaid in adtanee. Discontinuances optional with the PublUher, except when the year Is paid up. AsvEaTl.msvra hmdwoiely inserted at SO cents per inara,one week, fl jonr wet'aa. j -i-iitV.i. - w,,J,. t; tor a eear. Mercantile adeerUse. a W n. exceeding one fourth of a column, $10 a, year. JOB WORK and casual edeertuemenU to to paid for 0.xo:S;.ll bjeel. f ee-eral into rest not within th. raor of part, or sectarian contest All letter ut oome p-iet-paid. accompanied by the real addrNS of the writer, to receive attention. -Tnoe le'etinc exelonirelv to tlie. Editorial IV-partment. to be di ncted to llnir llmxoi. Ki- Atf-tor-and those on Office on Market street, be-t w-it -rr..l xi J Tlltrrt. over the Fo4mce. O. -V ORUKN, Proprietor. " Tell Her to meet He there. T MISS K. . lirCBJLRB. Tell hr. oh. tell her bow l.ifc-s sands ebb fa-t away, T'dl her that on my brow ' Is the ml of .ore decay. Tell her tbeearth look, bright. And it scenes are pa-sin.! fir : There V a purer one of light Tell her to meet me there. Tell her w oft hare gaud Upou yon i tarry aky, In Lore'' fin, early days, Ne'er thinking one would die. Tell her our b art were twined Into a wreath sefair. Cf it. bliunt we ni rer dreamed - Tell her to meet mo there." Tell her. oh. tell her to". There pressing at my heart A weiirtit I new knew Till from loreJ one n led to part. Tell h. r tliat wlien she hear I "ve left tbia world of rare. To abed no wto wine tear. . -IeU her to meat me there." Tell her my Sartor's lore My dvine. pulses thrill Bet all other thine above, I lore, I lore ber still. Tell her the breath ot fame la a bubble ou the air To a bese'inii .erred name - Tell ber to meet me there. "Tell her the falline li arcs Arflniinwiiufrnc Silt .r lliem who e'er crieres, Sprieff aid re-role the troc Tell her BIT purlin foul Bnars ou the :nnof prayer, Nnt di-tant far the. pal - Tell ber r meet me llm Costly Furnishing. Many lovk up capital which would save . . - ..., V. !n r-vrlriivarrant ...cm two r. j luiiium. J . l TIVTTr I'XIHMirc 111 ll"H." , .. " . . t hovc the 1 while one isn j j furnishing, meed of "business facilities," causes embar rassments which arc very unjustly charged upon the timet. -Gold ad silver in table services, ceases to bo wsefeiL They arc not . ..... i 1 : ml.rll t e.Tttf.n- current, out a iauuaij , times costing in interest lost, -chat should j art Tor tnc -u TZ Z ,be enough to pay the rent of the bouse. nature. And were it not for these path-MaLmetasLcwdimPostoT,laidmanyUays-K re .ocessary te render the jMahomcas - , hm acccssiblc, it would require no great rr" sEes rsi. - . . - mv agan cc. . . .;w 1 to fiuicr himself in the primitive forest, of 'Jartarius 10 wnocr WpM;'i..j,uLu.K.j Oricntials use wooden and other cheap ves-! sels. Some, however, base discovered a wn a 3 letter n m-atifv their vanity, and still in a tw1 .1. . .. .e-t ,och e 1 JJX. The 1 basins, &C-, w.iy tj g' j oir( of the spoon r tcr.tbo Wtewtrj " . a a. V.A IHAAfl ai nPW. inlaid with pr - 1 ,! the Indian hunter bounding from their pressed not down nor rustled beneath his they should be prospered in all their un Wl is sometimes made of agate, amber, " i:j:! 1 ... j. j :...:.: .1.. i: e it some sucu w t 1.e ame.4.;..1 Thus Mus-i ,.lnn. manage to follow the tetter, tut follow ..r,v tlm .Jrit. inst as our ownlwg" j " , winl when inclKied to extravagance, people, w uen MR. t Tan hold themselves beliiud evasions and TMies. No man,1iowcver,Chri?tian, Mobomedan , or Pagan, can safely lock up in unconvcr- j tible investments what he necos in nis business. No matter what expensive nobby we ride, it is a dangerous one, if we forget poor Richard's caution, - Ere fanej yon toneoit, consult your pnrat." Jaded and anxious faces are reflected from too many splendid mirrors, and pride and luxury mar the comfort of many a house hold, which by prudence might be chcerfuL Arthur's llov.e Gai'tle. Value given Cotton by Transformation. The enormous value given w comm ita various transformations, is shown in the j an tide nf lace, of which there is at the London Exhibition, doubtless, a richer dis- nlav than the world ever saw together be t in.i;9 Prance. Belgium. England are vieing for supremacy in this manufac- placed bis ponderous bow into the hands j : tare. A manufacturer furnished samples 0f m infant boy, and taught him" to speed of one pound of cotton spun into 900 hiinks, j the feathered arrow, and wield the toma of 840 yards each, making a distance in j hawk 1 Where is the young bravo who in all of 430 miles, should the single thread ; tjCSe wjld retreats so often told his tale of be extended to its utmost Another firm i i0VCj poured into the car of the Indian exhibited 4200 hanks, of the same number , g-iri fa uniin passioned vows? Where are of yards each, froRi a single pound of j they who made these hills and mountains . 1 'I - I .,.. ,1 la 1 AIL n o are k 11 A 4tTl eVUAfl lore. c ' cotton. The first then cxBiwieu oue jwuiiu f witinn CTran into a thread 2000 miles long, which shows the perfection to which cotton machinery has arrived. Brussels lace, all made from cotton, worth 200 sterling ($1000) per yard. A large shawl made in France for the Duchess of Suth .eiland, is exhibited, the cost of which is 1000 sterling. ; A bridal dress is shown for which the owner wants 5000. The girl who wrought at it the first three years beeame blind from the heavy task it put upon her eyes. Just think of simple han diwork enhancing the value of a shilling's worth of cotton to 125,000! A pint of water, converted into steam, From Me R&lford Inquirer. LEGEND OF THE SPRING. BY DR. CHARLES X. HICKOK. Be then a apirlt of health or goblin damned. Brim; with tiiee airs from heaven or blaau from hell, It thy intrnts wicked or eharitahle, Thon eomVt in fneb a questionable shape That I will speak to thee ! main. It was on the afternoon of one of those excessively hot days for which the last year will long be remembered, that I had occasion to pay a visit to the celebrated mineral spring in the vicinity of BedforJ. All nature wore the appearance of languor. The leaves of the green corn, instead of raising their long spear points to arustling brcczo, hung motionless, like withered moss from their bending stalks, the her bage appeared burnt and parched as if by fire, the herJs sought the shade, or, pant ing, betook themselves to the cool brook side ; not a zephyr's breath moved the forest boughs, nor hummed its accustomed chant amid the pine tops ; not a ripple dis turbed the surface of the little artificial lake where the enchanted waters of the health-giving spring pour their tribute; the speckled trout lay reposing under his mossy awing, and even the goddess of the fountain appeared to have yielded to the general infection, for the jet over which she presides played languidly through the air, and fell sprayless and less noisily than is its wont into its pebbly bed. The long eolonade of the Springs Hotel was deserted, i The busy crowd that thronged it in the! sight by the intervening hill, here flowing morning, were dispersed to their couches, gluggishly by the cultivated fields, there to enjoy their siesta, and find repose for ;?rUshing and foaming o'er its rocky bed in the dissipations and fatigue of the drawing-' the wild forest, and anon receding entirely rooms in the evening. Finding no com-; from the sight, it passes from the valley pany, nor anything else to engross my at- tention, I treated myself to the luxury ot i a bath and then attempted the Herculean! ict nf nilirrimam to the Summer House I on the summit of Constitution IlilL - ft -c i With the exception of the artificial I , .1 1 Ml 1 1 .....aAOT.A.l in DStUWayS, miS mil BUS ut:ca iura.s.vis .u - N has (. - been displaced, as is too often the case on .... . r i :.- account of its want of regularity, not dead lo has been touched; the underbrush grows in all its wild and tangled luxuri ance, enabling the visitor, by the transition of a few steps, to change tie taroencss of . . myself: union" 111 e Iiu-uuia u ." " 7 on sacred ground, whore yet A. V S va. uvw " I CJ - dwell the ; Tir'1 ,10st3 of the lpPartcd nations, who, Wp lived, and acted, ana aica ; who - w - 1 As I turned at the numerous bending, of: iv;n,i1:an rau.scwavs. and cast my lhcW dccp pepee views, 1 1 :mog t cspected to see the gaunt form of i tuicsvct iwiuuib, v o o. . 1 . . . 1. n . run rnv 1 nineii eiiuiuu i to heaT reverberating fa ...... nf f, " ; warrior But nau"H.jT)eared to disturo warrior. iui iaucukfj jn, , startled my bcanng ; all was silent as the grave ; not a cricket s a... ' W chirp broke in upon the stillness ; even the sound of my own footsteps was un heeded I deeply pondered on the chang es which the last century had wrought in the scene; and I tried in fancy to recall the picture in all its wild magnificence, ere rt had dared to deform its beauty by her sacrilegious touch. Where (I asked my thoughts,) are the wiffwam homes that studded yon bright green, where now the uncouth castles of the white man rear their proua ironis : Where is the cheerful song of the Indian mother who there tilled her field of tender : corn and watched with joyful eyes the gambols of her little ones, or went out to 1 mee,t her warrior lord ana welcome uib rctnrn from the hunt or conquest ? Where ;s t is the noble chieftain who, with the hasc, !Vnfc in his wiirwam door at sunset and I a ... , eiofjncni, ana gave mese in;j with their shouts of triumph and victory ? As nam the reeks and trees, The tout respensiTe spoke, now lewd and King, Knw sealing from this etas; ; now there again, KroWronder glad. ; now clear and full, now wit, Aad softer stilt until whisper eoases To tell, how like this Serlu. echo, an The things of time. Alas! they are all gone, the wigwams are in ashes ; that mother and her little brood have lone been dwellers in the spirit land, and where they played, the child of the pale face holds his sports. 1 he re treat of the lovers is now thronged by sickly sensualists, the maiden's charms have fled, the warrior's arm is in the dust, his bow string is dissevered, and his toma hawk corroded by the rust of years; and where he Mi ba-gtoj BWe; BURG LEWISBURG, UNION COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1851. manly pride, the effeminate city exquisite struts in all his borrowed plumes, as if in contemptible contrast of the past and pres ent years the red man and the pale race. Occupied by such thoughts as these, I found myself, almost before I was aware of it, at the Summer House, and, weary and warm, I threw myself on one of the rustic benehes,and pursued my solitary thoughts undisturbed. The view from the Summer ITousc is magnificent in the extreme. The edifice stands on the brow of the hill, on the ex treme poiut of its summit, where it ex- tends like a promontory into the surround' ing valley. A few ot the largest trees have been removed from the slope of the hill in the direction facing the vale, for the purpose of renderingthe view less obstruc ted; ou all other sides, naught is seen but the wild beauty of the dense forest From the open space, the distant mountains are seen on the north, east, and west, rising in bold, rugged majesty, crag on crag, tier on tier, like a vast ampithcatre formed for the assembly of a universe, until the top most wall, the tall, hoar summit of tho giant Alleghany, crowning the mighty pile, in the dim distance, kisses the clouds, and like the scarce perceptible blending of two almost equal shades, joins earth with hea ven. In the nearer landscape, the roman- tic Juniata winds, now like a thread of gjlver through the valley, now hidden from through a gorge in the mountains, on its Way to the mighty ocean. JNearer, at tnc distance of a mile, St. Thomas Church w;li its tall sDire and cross, strikes the vision, embedded in a cluster ot trees, tuo - , , rest of the village being hid by the neigh boring hills;) and still nearer, just at the , base of the hill, lies the little lake with its ! tiny isle of Emerald Green, and the music j tribes came and departed since their time, . ; e . r,m.iisiti1iia.r 01 -.,.., .r y,a nf its nutlet, as it forms a foamy cascade I , i i:l. 1.a over tho tocks, reacnes tue cur uw mo distant lulling murmurs of a gentle breeze. A rustic mill, and a lofty and ponderous ledge of rocks beyond, and the brook and arbored road winding through the vale be low, complete the enchanting prospect As I lay musing, a misty indistinctness gathered over the scene ; strange, shape less forms hovered around me, none of which I was able clearly to define While I was endeavoring to account for what I Raw.mv attention was arrested by the ap- .f - - ncarance of a tall, shadowy hgure that emerged from tho thicket near by, and ap- .... . preached me. it was mai an oiu watt. . . a aa . a . 1.1 1 1 ty crcct form. His long, straight hair -M white as snow, but his step was light , elastic, and as he drew nearer with a 1 tread, I noticed that the leaves vntirnr Over his shoulders was wrapped tvi.. blanket, made from the inner 7 i:n, .ml f,t were - , - clothed in leggins made of the untanned skin of the wild cat and moccasins of the same material, ornamented with tufts of stained horse hair. Encircling his head, neck, and wrists, were chains formed with the tusks of the wolf, connected with huge links of shining gold; a single plume from the eagle's wing drooped over his brow ; in one hand he carried a bow of large di mensions, in the other an arrow. A pon dcrous stone tomahawk was strung in his belt, and over his shoulders, suspended by the skin of an enormous rattlesnake, was a-quiver of panther skin filled with feath ered arrows. I was startled, and about to raise myself, but as the apparition drew nearer, I saw that I had nothing more to fear ; his sad, benevolent countenance indicated no harm, and had it been otherwise, his bow string was broken, and the shaft of his arrow bent and wonn eaten. When he came op posite me, he paused and eyed me for some moments in silence with a mournful ex pression, a deep drawn sigh heaved his breast, be shook his head and passing on soon vanished from my sight. Ere I had recovered from the reverie into which my surprise had thrown me, I sawhim coming j back ; he paused again where I lay, and regarded me with the same sad, melan choly look, sighed heavily and passed on as before ; nor was my astonishment di minished, when I saw him approach the third time, and fix upon me his mournful gaze, more sad and grief-like than before; deeper sighs struggled for utterance, and down each furrowed cheek trickled a scalding tear; wondering and afraid, I de termined to accost him, but my stiffened tongue needed not to make the exertion to break its bondage, for the figure raised its hand as if to enjoin silence, and with im pressive solemnity thus addressed me "Son of the pale lace, thon see'st the red man weep ; 'tis not his nature, but the heart of the red man is full of sorrow. i "Son of the pale face, the red man reads thy heart, and it is friendly to his race. There is kindness for him in thy breast. Thou hast had thy bosom filled with indignation at the recital of his wrongs. Thou hast shed the tear of sym pathy for his grievances. His sad and hopeless condition has made thy cheek blush for those of thy nation by whose wrong he has been degraded. His injuries have caused thy young blood to boil, and thine eye to flash with anger. The red man knows this, and he is grateful. He would recompense thee and show thee how to avoid much sorrow. Then listen, son of the pale face, and let the red man's voice teach thee wisdom; let the experi ence of the past warn thee of the future. Man comes and goes ; has birth, and dies; has joy, and ruin and sorrow often follow in the track of pleasure ; but learn thou, that in his ojvn evil nature are the elements of his ruin contained, and in his fall his own bad passions arc often the workers of his destruction. Tho Great Spirit has said it, and it shall be so. ''Son of the white man, cherish not anger, hatred, nor revenge ; for, like the hot blasts of wind in the dog days, shall they draw up thy young blood if they be harbored in thy breast. These passions entered the heart of the young chief of a mighty nation, whose hunting grounds lay among these hills and mountains, many, many moons ago, or never would the pale face have trodden here, and the sickly vic tim of vice have tainted this pure air with his fetid breath. Here yet would the child of the red men have sported. Here yet would the wild chase have been kept Up and the dance of triumph acd victory perpetuated Son of tho pale face, listen. "Manv hundred moons ago, a powerful nation dwelt here. The Ka-ma-was were a inightv tribe. There names been forgotten, and their deeds passed from the memory of man. Many before the Shawnees were masters of his soil the Shawnee has disappeared, and the white man holds his sway, but none were like the Ka-ma-was, successful in battle. The power of their foes was ex erted for naught, for the Great Spirit was their friend. The arrows of their enemies were poisoned in vain, for the antidote was here. "Thou hast drank of the spring where the sickly pale face resorts for health. That spring has lost much of its power; the enchantment of its waters has departed; health is still in its tide, but the strength of its glory is fled. That spring was the Ka-ma-was' safe-guard, for him it was cre ated. "Listen, pale face. "Wa-kon-Tun-kah, the Good Spirit, re vealed himself to a wise prophet of the Kama-was, and with him made a covenant that they should be his favorite tribe; that dertakings, victorious in the repulsion of their enemies, successful in the bunt, wise in council, and fleet in the chase. The poisoned arrows of their foes should not harm them, for a draught from the spring should render the poison inert. It should banish disease in their borders,-give strength to the warrior's arm, and courage to his heart; swiftness to the young braves, and beauty to their daughters, lor their na tion alone was the blessing given, but with it a command, upon the obedience of which hung the continuance of the Great Spirit s favor; that condition was peace. While they were permitted to repel the encroach ments of their enemies from their borders, they were forbidden to make war. They were required to treat their prisoners with mercy and kindness. They were comman ded to banish from their breasts a spirit of revenge against an enemy, much less nirainst those of their own nation. Mur der, that child of anger, hatred, and re venge, was prohibited on pain of the na tion's ruin and the Great Spirit's anger." " Long, the tribe of the Ka-ma-was pros pered ; their chase was always successful, their battles ended in victory ; their squaws were fairer, their young warriors more no ble in their strength, more expert in the juse of the bow and tomahawk, than were any of the surrounding tribes. Moons came and vanished, the sun took his course across the topmost heaven, and made his way along the South horison, then tracked arain the senith, in his unvarying round. Seasons came and faded, and still the Kama-was were happy. As each succeeding corn-dance came around, their trust in Wa- kon-Tun-kah was stronger, their council fires burned brighter, for the Great Spirit that blessed them. They loved the Great Spirit, for his word tailed not They knew not sickness, for the water from the en chanted spring, which they carried in vi als of the alder wood, was a charm to ward off the ill-will of Wa-kon-Schee-chah, the bad spirit. The wounds of their enemies harmed them not, for the water staunched the flowing blood and brought life back " ft O I Their chiefs and people liyedj .gain. CH BON strong and happy, until a good old age, and then glided peacefully into the grave, and sank to rest as sinks tho summer's sun beneath the western sky." "But the Ka ma-was are gone, they are not here." "Son of the paleface, listen I The spirit of revenge came, and the Ka-ma-was fell. The good old chief Wal-lal-lah had departed to tho spirit's bright hunting ground, where the chase wearies not,"ad the golden arrow never misses its aim, leaving two children, the young chief Mow-een, and his sister, the beauteous Wi-no-na. Mow-een was but a boy in years, but in stature and bravery he was a man. With the cunning of the red fox, he had the strength and daring of the wild catamount His yonng and tender hand had taken trophies from the enemy, and proud were the Ka-ma-was to to hail him chief. Kind was his nature, but his pas sions were like the quick, hot flames of the pine-wood fire. Wi-no-na was beautiful as the rose tint that stains the the sky be fore the rising sun ; her eye was gentle as the soft gaze of the turtle, her step light as the fleet fawn. She was the delight of the Ka-ma-was, they all loved her, for she was worthy to be loved. "Sixteen summers had spread their flowers for her boundins feet, when Mow- and his warriors returned from a fight een with a distant tribe, who had encroached on their hunting grounds, bringing spoils and prisoners. Among the prisoners was the son of the chief of the Wah-pe-lons, the mortal enemies of the Ka-ina-was. When Mow-een fonnd his foe in his power, his heart whisnerered for revenge, but the fear of the great Spirit's curse stayed his hand from violence, yet his heart was bit ter within his bosom. The prisoner, We- hc-mee, or the Eagle-Gazer, waa a vonn? j o een saw it, and his heart exulted, for he longed to humble the proud son of his father's deadly foe. But when the gentle Wi-no-na stole a visit to the young prison er, to carry to him the dainties which her 1 carry to uuu tut. iuiumw w !.. . 1 i 1- . t: own hand had prepareu, ana ue ca admiring gaze upon her, his proud nature .: w i.to r,r,A ntrir have long brave of noble stature and nobler heart x -snai - have ' Stately, proud and haughty in the presence rvf --v i J,t . . .: mA Af TTaheitnii a uriM be ended. 1 - e i i. v:Ayi in 9wiia niAV. 1 uliiii iuv - . wa, ataav 1 C I yielded, and he ceased to think himself a jtne nignt, ana j captive. At the dawn and sunset she bowlings of the storm. Hah pon has spo sought him, but Mow-een knew it not, and ken, and now will she follow 1 no na to soon she heard We-hc-mee'a talc of love, and her heart responded to its call ; they met in the wild retreats of the forest, for We he-mee roamed free. The red man will not break his trust; We-hc-mec was, a prisoner, but his own honor kept him so. "Fierce was the anger of .Mow-een when he learned that We-he-meo had dared to love Wi-no-na, but his passion amounted to phrensy when he knew that his love was returned. Wis enemy was wnrthv hia sister's love, but Moween's vengeance reasoned not j The old braves t.A v.: : nj wiih bis moth-1 euuvaicu aim i " i er clung around him; he dashed away their detaining hands, and seizing his bow and quiver, rushed into the forest We-hc-mec and Wi-no-na were seated side by side on a rock near where the great lime stone spring, gushes from the hill; her head rested on his. "'Beauteous Winona,' said tho lover, 'fly with me to my own tribe; there shall our lives be like the days of a never ending summer, our joys shall know no end, Wi-no-na shall be queen, and my nation shall delight' " But the sentence was unfinished ; an arrow from an unseen hand pierced his heart, and bounding into the air he fell a corpse at the maiden's feet 1 With a wild cry she sprang up, but it was only to fall upon her lover's body, tor Irom tne gasn of another arrow from her brother's bow, welled the warm tide and mingled with her lover's blood, "With his deed of revenge, tho angry spirit of Mow-een fled, and with agony he saw his crime in its hideous light, and frantic with grief and horror as he had been before with passion, he rushad for ward and fell on his knees at his sister's side, and raised her dying head. Wi-no-na,' he shrieked, 'oh, my sis ter, my beautiful, my only one, do not die. Ohl Great Spirit! listen to Moween's prayer, forgive his crime, and let Wi-no-na live.' " With joy he thought of the enchanted spring, and with the speed of the wind, he brought some of its water and held it to his sister's lips. But the covenant was broken, and the spring had lost its power. With her dying eyes turned tenderly on her brother, Wi-no-na softly whispered, 'Mow-een is forgiven,' and her gentle spirit joined her lover's in the hunting grounds of Paradise. "The old braves found Mow-een kneel ing by his sister's side, his head buried be tween his knees. Deep groans of anguish rent his breast They tried to raise and comfort him, but he heeded them not. 'Wi-no-na is dead he said, 'and so let Mow-een d "And he raised his hand to plunge his scalping knife into his bosom, but ere it fell the weapon waa wrested from his grasp. " When nah-pon, the mother of Mow een, saw what was done, she shrieked not, nor wept, but a tremor shook her frame, and her eyes gleamed from their pale sock ets with the lustre of madness as in a hoarse unearthly whisper she addressed her son, 'Son of Wa-lal-lah, rise.' " Her command was obeyed. "'Son of Wal-lal-lah,listen to thy moth er's voice, for thy vengeful spirit has de stroyed her peace. The light of her eyes is gone, wrenched from her by thy mur derous hand. The Great Spirit is angry with thy people; thy wicked passions has displeased him. Thou hast broken the covenant which thy fathers kept, and hast brought ruin on thy cation. Thou should'st have been thy nation's preserver, but thou art her destroyer. Then listen, son of Wal-lal-lah, to nah-pon's curse, for the lan of Uuli-poH. shall be upon thee. Thou hast murdered thy whole nation. They all shall die, and their hunting grounds be desolate. They shall go to the hunting ground where their fathers are; other tribes shall own their wigwams, but they shall not behold it Thou, only thou, shall live to see the ruin which thou hast wrought " 'Full sixty time six score moons shall wax and wane, and thou shalt be a wan derer on the Ka-ma-was' soil, once thine own, but thine no longer. Thon shalt seek rest, but sleep shall fly from thee. Thy bow shall not speed thy arrow to the mark, and thou shalt hunger because thy quiver shall fail thee. Famine shall fol- ! low thee, and thirst shall be thy compan- ion. Oh ! thou shalt long to die, but the Spirit shall not hear thy prayer. vircaii n l Once each moon as thi full orb ascends the meridian, shalt thou hear soft strains of sweet music wafted from the balmy shores of the spirit land, where thy people dwell, and its sounds shall fill the with 1' . . ... ,. . e 'rnmnrM for thv enme. and thy shriek or - - , - . 'anguish shall oe neara ou uc the spirit land, " Son of the pale face, see'st thou that high ledge of rocks on yonder steep, above the mill where the white man grinds his corn ? Thither the mother of Mow-een fled, and with a wild shriek, sprang high in the air and fell bleeding and lifeless on the sharp crag below. - "The cur? of Hah.pon was fulfilled; the Kama-was dwindled away and died. Their enemies were successful against them, and tho young braves fell in battle; consumption fixed itself upon the aged - , . . . and the young, and the enchanted water saved them not, bat hurried them to the grave. "And Mow-ccn stood, alone, the last of his race. " He laid his mother's body in the bu rial ground of his tribe, far up, on the high summit of the Cin-tagah or Gray Mane, by the latter tribes and the pale face known as the Allegheny. "And since that day, the curse of Hah pon has been working well. "Mow-ccn has seen his hunting ground in the hands of his enemies. He has been a stranger in bis own land. Desolate and lone, in summer's beat and winter's cold has he wandered, invisible, yet always feeling, over the homes of his fathers. Famishing with hunger, and faint, has he sped his arrow at the passing deer, or the fleet pheasant, but his bow string always snapped, and his arrow failed its aim. Sick, and ready to fall with weakness, his pride has given way, and he has asked in piteous accents for food at the Indian's wigwam or the white man's door, but they saw him not, and his tremulous voice was taken for the mournful moanings of the wind. Parched with burning thirst, he has sought to sip the limped water, but it fled from his approach. Weary and rest less has he lain down in the cool shade, but the murdered Wi-no-na was before him, and he saw the mangled corpse of Hah-von, and he could not sleep, lhe white man hears at the full moon, on the Bald Summit of the Allegheny.shneks on the stillness of the summer's eve, or borne along upon the wintry blast 'Tis the cry of Mow-een.f Oh I great was Mow-cen's crime, but sadly has he suffered. He has lonired to be at rest, but he could not die. Often has he turned his wistful eye, and reached out his impatient hands, to the bright star where Wi-no-na s spirit dwells, but t'was vain, for the ban was not yet ended." . ... " But the moons haTe passed, and it is ended now. ' Son of the pale face, shun anger, ote, wenge. 'Tis Mow-een speaks. His time " a i . .... it. - r .I.- CLE o. Volnmt Till, Pamper 30. Whole number 394. is come, Wi-no-na is avenged, and Mow ' , een shall be at rest. To-night, when th full moon walks the central sky, his spirit shall fade from earth and fly to meet hie. ; long lost tribe in the hunting ground of the spirit land. And see ! even now ha she reached her summit. Hark ! I hear a voice. 'Ti Wi-no-na speaks she softly calls. Mow-een! Mow-een V she beck me to come I go Son of the pale S e.'t strains of music struck upon my ear as the shadowy form grew fainter, and faded on my sight I was awake t'waa a dream the sun was set, and the pale queen of night was reigning in her full . 7 mm V 1 . harvest glory m the xcnitn; 1 naa step, xor hours; I still heard soft, distant music, and it was some moments before I could realize that I was reclining in the summer ' house, and that the sounds I heard wen from the orchestra, in the ball-room below. I hastened down the hill, and soon was mil gl ng in the busy mazes of the dance, but amid the gaiety of the scene I waa unable to divest myself of the impression which my strange dream had made upon me, or to forget the admouition of my mysterious visitor, " Son of the pale face, harbor not angr.r, hatred, nor revenge." It is a eoted fact with regard to the water of the Brl- fhrii Spnuga. UiaUtalUionah l.iihl.T beaettrbl in all etlkr dfot-aeee.) when awed by penema ulferuag fro" pntaawwre aiferUons it n only aliraate the disiass. eat MantuaM pruriuees difaftrous reruita. fMany ot the settler of the Allegheny in the eiaisuty of Bald Hill, tell of shrieks that are heard oa dear wisaty nithts from the vicinity of an ancient radian burial .'nana These stranfe soands no doubt produced by the aethja of tne element are attributed to snpu natural waste. Fashionable Dancing. Time was when the danc was decent, if it was worldly and foolish. That time has passed away. The modern, imported dances, such as the "Polka," "Redowa," "Schottish," and "German cotillion," aiw redolent with the lasciviousnesa of Paris and Vienna. And the drawing-rooms of Saratoga, Newport, and Cape May, furnish exhibitions too shamefully Jndelicate Cor description. Perhaps a counterpart may be found in the splendid parlors of Fifth Avenue or Chestnut street Fashion has placed its imprimatur on this outrage ; and what has native modesty or purity, or the decalogue itself, to do with the diver sions of the families of millionaires? The gloomiest aspect of fashionable society is furnished in this readiness to sacrifice the properties and even decencies of life to the Moloch of the day. Bitter rcpentings are at hand. Pareulal indul gence and ambition thus directed can not but result in disgrace and ruin. That beloved daughter, whirling in the arnw of that bewhiskered villain, is on the brink of perdition. O, save her before virtue shrieks over the shrine she Las left, and you curse the hour when yon destroyed a ' soul to win a smile. Redeem Time for Reading. Perhaps you thiuk this impossible ; but the busiest life has some pauses. When I see the large amount of time spent by some over the lowest sort of newspapers, am convinced that the most industrious young men might obtain a few minutes a day for study : and it is astonishing how much can be learned in a few minutes day. What can not be done to-day, may be accomplished to morrow. It is as true of time as of money " Take care of the pence, and the pounds will take care of themselves." Or as Young now more po etically expresses it "Sands make the mountain, moments make the year. Do a little every day. Constant drop- it a . 1 ping wears away the rocx. nen Apei- 1, the famous Oreck painter, was asked how he had been able to accomplish so much for art, he replied : " By the obser vance of one rule No day without aline." The following table shows the number of persons in the different Institutions from January 1st to June 30th, 1851, in clusive ; also the number of foreigners in each department : Whole No. in State Prison, 474 Foreigners, 14V " County Jail, 2lUt Fnreiirnera. 222t County Jail, Foreigners, House of Correction, 977 636 Boston Lunatic Asvlum,224 i-urciguci?, " Foreigners, 14S " Deer island, 823 " " House of Iiidus.&Refor.,6& " " Foreigners, 554 Making a total of 0005 persons in the six Institutions, of which four thousand four hundred and fifty-seven, or very near ly three-fourths, are foreigners. It is related that Galileo, who invented the telescope with which he observed the satellites of Jupiter, invited a man who was opposed to him to look through it, that he might observe Jupiter's moons. The man positively refused, saying, If I should see them how could I maintain my opinions, which I have advanced agaiiut your philosophy ?" This is the case with many. They will not hear it for fear that the arguments which they have framed will be destroyed, and they may be obliged to give up their vicious mdalgcnccs. - ti - -: - I : 1 t 1 1 J. J 1 3v " s I J IK v -1) K