brit Obstrret. 10 11 I FICA I. • 14 11 . Ir.\ A 13 V 13. F. SLOAN ..ulaeribrro, a pool In &droner oft/ toe wot oft. soldrros for s6,oad .1. 1 , 4 ,oart club% nts r fatlt tot oo poy within tlo year, thr ~44, 1 146.111.4 4 and the leribtlll4l3lll4e nut at ~. r 4„ and ten with a proper of ir r r to, t hy. ~1 ADVERTISING : . „,- , ~, ,....n 1 nog nr less stake a equare.ita 1 ~.....k, $ 16 One square 3 mouths $3 00 ~.. • ~ lOU One " 6 " to 09 „ - 126 one " 9 .. 6 75 - , .. .., .. A "..er, changeable at pleasure, $lO, . , ' 1 Mobilo*, $6; 6 months, 118; 9 mouths, • .. fl:. ~ ,r 10 /NUM . ..a-00r year, $6O; 6 mouths, il` , ~ ~,,t.,1 to the Baldness Directory at $3 per . ~,,, .lioeed bar a Card, over six, and nailer tmticea, 10 cents a Has ; bat no „„ be Inserted imam:kg the 'Special NnUers ,nnts and other% requiring frequent ebalkores ~ •,.,nentx will he allowed too squares, paper, h"r the charges will • the tirerliietueole mast be strictly • •.,eI. Ft tiatate basilicas if lhs advertiser. Pliy ,.. 'Os irt nicutents required le advance.— „.r, tieing will be presented half-rearly. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. r d , k ,I.lt IN IN ptlaffiD WlNig AND 1.114C01174 . 1,..'..i4rtu,:• ~f i , ,nch Ilrandles,Alins, lac.. Champaigue .. , ~.,,, Mal, ra, Malaga., Sherry, Port,aott all kind; „ ~.L. Wilk.: aign manufacturer of ~tided Whia , R.. n,.urbon, Moatongalwla,,, Jo , Reed Houft, On ( 141 Itliter.to f oo 'Malt DKALICIOI 13 GROVVRIXB .0141 • tst, No 10 Brown's Block • t) I II I. I . . • HI %VISA, It LA gIC Boor lAArr • ...11 Ith rl.l.6riat rlAt'm Block, ra. 1111 ( . 11.*ON, • , Al LAO, FPI*. Pa.- - tIY it,. l'arl to the Aowrte*u .1 , v I Is« Imiltiorg, e.rcupkg k 11 li• sivrns • he 1...m.1 10 VllO d•file., and r.• '.1.11t atlewl.,l to I tl I,IIIN, it • COL, rl 11+11IANI , I{l/Tl.ll. 1.0. OKS, Rnd Seo.i. Wood atilt • .r ''F", Ar t d I.iW, N I N., Mod, • • tit HANKY hl . l Al.!, ILI 1010.1.1 ‘‘. ‘VtI.IKER. 11T11.,10.K1 ./..0•/1/, , .• rttonto.h to the 'oonting of 1.14 n. , • the 1.411 ‘ett . tto 8 1 tateo ofHt.. I .: Co. , I. I.•r. !or I), 1,11117.111hAr \I AAlllq I 1111. 1 i. Ikr• 1. , 4. E. COLE, t. T k Blair •t , r, 1•10 1,111.01.1•• Ito 1...0er in and A rtincia/ .....b.”DzKle Vintner), rniagon Ir.qttirtt, , s l'itroilar ..t...h NIA% 741.4 rETTI P. ..1T.4.•1., .T I 4 VI nth r. ou IltmAttillt sTI N. '0 i 106,, \lNtrL.• I.", 1., • I 3r• 1 , -. I ,'.,k,0. . • F - RII.•, 1.4.4111, I . lolgual 3 ,' R 11,11. JOU!, IN. I , 1ikTA11.1 1 14..1.1.101 In henry - , t; • Matting., k kt Clothe*, /tr.. 1. I) KT A T f A w _ Office in Central ch,thln s , SUory hn V Y.. %. 4. VI.ttIttITIII. •T ou Btl • trrrt, 1",,0rt fit..., Erie, Py l.titt, Meonarf y S.ftriair,l , CoroPt . of Stat.. Und rwsm4.b..nr. ~.rt41.11..., V II I,ll' o l i'••• 1,.1.74}5. rToKNIST ,011 , C.I'NetILLLI.1101 •T LAW.— i. roonin of RanirtnianiCa Block, i• • I Ifni the Public 'quaff, Fr...Nth'. v tl.I jr ,ittl,•• in Rmen-' B l aaa a a ir of the Park, Erte, l'a. 1.1 h t. 4.1 . Tn¢ PlEACli—Odibe in "Arve , An , : the Public Scour.. Kne 4111.1..11‘ • N !ITT, 11 , - , • I AYU RKTAIL LivalalßLUllll4,l - •1, ‘•..•,‘, .11•' ••••.1•11,,, 1 , :•.s 11 am) 12 I' • . ."11•Ar.,1••••alt.tirt.t•ts Krlo, I I,,,k•TT,' Ist 11NhIrcl sit t:S.:S{IN. • s • rkrors to Bari,' & Artootkrtr I . • 0 4- r 4....rr01n nri.l American Hartle are Mid , Ic, Iron tot No \Htn 1.% TI.P. T k he r," recently 1 attire, and met' the Store N ti Re.-. 3 a nd Brown), Huh! •PO It .3; ('O.. • Kl , IY Gol SIl««r, \. i4ll. I • • ~n tL. prllLi ' • r••r ilalco N.. 9 H.-«A 11..ur IMt ( ROOM A. CO ki 11.1.1[V4 and ManUrl , tUr• ro , 1,1,40 p (or.. 11) 4.4,L4y1ea ) 111%.)1( I , \ AI.Kk I uOns.uvor Pro v bran. iour, FrUltx, WA, (Han*, W.,o , ku, W Ilnr %VA War*, Pr•e ,vr No 4W rtgLVO the Trott ,)flico, En., Pa.. I t IC %TIM( ottier iteitty•p -••••••• Square, forum riv ~x mpur‘i r 4 +enautru. IC k %kit it. ••, • -ALA I:koN•AM.N. a,n•l &J 0.," In uttis, .1, R A. , - I'. I""l /It: %)/N. (11)., %... •n,l r'routrnisirfoo • . • ,r, %rent 6.r.,1•11, Inpr of - . 1.111. •I. 1.1 111 . I"..rk. Krim, IN 101,1%1.1.. M %It`•11.& e••• Nt ••r ..-rrttsito ot•tteatri Katt , ~e ` n..i lers• • • , • • urns implo.montfit. KAtirou rte. 1`... tr. M:. 1111111DK*, MLR PRE.II M•RRR. .nil lrrnt • iliarblI111•11. Pa•tolllo Ore'r • 1..}. It% Wetit isarl., nr,l'... rir,tatch• ERZ= oitt:P. 11. 11 T 1.1311. 1TT , 04•, , ) AT I Alf, Girlird, CountY. 11..1 ..1 GI,. tf• [ldeal to. •la !.r.•-•• m/7 ,. ), MIN • CW IVAWI V .warn•■ nr THP PRACI, Olnef in R.atty's Amy, ap••t►lt., Vrtr. Pt i%11:1111S1 et 6 11111,VAl i t 14.n1.n. in and V. MeV and 1.1.101kr., lOW .4•Tatll, • • ruit, Fkoti, Aft re, Moffat. }lntroit) \t, t, Iscainvii Itlock, , :tat. ottrret KT4.. !'s A V v C.UI.IIVT I 4111,4 W. it Tt Whnif.otalf and Retail .11 IL 114.1 X 4 , f M%nee, Phasing Room. Releitiot 141, 11 4 Pitting ha.", Nr, 4K. t Yne, Pa 4 , x. 4 in snok4boo• fttWhol•- • lo 11114 i ItY6tl 1, .1 Si 0 1.1, I aarr•-11'• 111.0'k .t•tp rinnot, ,•1«, , )11•1) ., S 1.41 N. k• Lru Tr krut h W 601ew561.• an.l Rotsil in ti .41 •04 rn l'o mi.. or oupeei. , Ousht T. the • ...I 1 * .f now In owe. Shop on Twelfth street .e Po.woh, hi.. Ps. r t• l oedort for earl, tor water for family, rants n '10... • (or male ,heap. =ME I ) 11. 0. 1.. ELLIOTT. ftwonfr-n, Dx.yrinT 11...111ng in orinth Park Row, •,.. ok not of Erie Rank bailitanics. IMMIIE=I MORI: ft .1. NORTON• 1, 7 Foltwa)tnixti Lad Cootuo.coa Moral/int, , A., 9oelt, Ere, dealer in Coal, Salt, Ftsh, Flour and !!ZI 4 1 ('‘ItTER IKKLIAIC:4I4. -71 w(nutost.st sand /Wail sinalnra in Groenrinsa. I s.synin.na. ^hip handler), Wood an , l Hlllow +am ke-. . stet. Erin. Popo. I: ' , WI K K P 41 14)11. ai A. Gaipyroul, J.. 1.1 .r, and Vt.lall 0,• r• of Vorrago Dry • :• t'arr. , tinKA, Clotho, kt. Nu 1:1, "tats stroet, Fifth, grip. Ps. W 11.1.1 A 1.1101INTO?d, esTics Or ?BR ne1141 , . ".• Rotas sal blarteseerg. Limaim, kr., arellirstrly LBd ....11.1'y drawn, Office on Yri.neh, otreet, oT.T. jihs 8. Orueney Store grim, PL. - . 1. P. DOWN' NILS. • A TITOCCIT AT LAW AXD JrpTicit OF VIII • 111 practice in the .1, real Courts of frit. Cocenty, • prompt and faith/tit attention to all totaionne en ' art to his handa rather as an Attorney or Kaleistrate. ?" (Mica. to P.mpare Block, oftener of -tats and Plitt, ij W. Dot tt1,.4.45, ATTOILMIF A T LAW.--Mber moored to neat of State Strret, on the noethaide of the Park, Ern. Pa. I ,l+:\ ANIk BLiNb. and. „ Hum,l„. to a hi. attentar, a t a roluatavl a to the treatzseat a • ..( t h.. t • • iLnd Ka, 19, Ikh4 1r TI ORTIMIR Pll LA,' —4 .frr,, ,Ter toorphy.. Tfn , I.tweon Ilrovrn••• liotirl and Rood Rosso Erie, Pt 8 I'OTT Alt RANKIN. 1., LAIC. In al. It.otia of Coal, Salt, Vitiator, VI • -11. kr l'uhlir Krie, I. bl B. F. SLOAN, EDITOR & PROPRIETOR VOLUME 30. 11. ZALDWIN. 41. (Macanese Is cliffy ßalboa.) Warn san MOW No. 6 Rood House, Kris Pt. Denier in hit* O D' AV 11. lobs% by. Bub. 0L...: Campbells, Burnie; 1 1 1.14, Duteeu rn , ia,lte.. . 22. C. SJICLDIRN, JWnoiseautema Retell denier in a ll time ncl Nab ish, Gomm and Ammiaan flarderann Anvils, vice*ings. Iron, s, Steel, kn. &Adle sad Trimm 11114ilifle Belting sad Pi r, nking Trench i Ca =cupposits tln Rend Home, Las. Ps. J. C. BURGESS &, CO., GROCERIES, FLOUR PORK, &a, AT WHOLESALE. No. 10, Brown's Block, State Street. Erie, Oot. 8, LOW 18 H 1 - 14 I I ,) TECDITSM; FRONTING THE PUBLIC SQ AR E. ERIE, PA. P. ELLIOTT, Proprietor. T HIS LARGE AND ELEGANT ilia F.), Asa been thoroughly repaired and refurnisl, and in now open for the reception of guests ag6,Bourd by Iht Day, Tro.A or Month rr err .oooble term's, the Promrtor pira'grog !lot! no effort shall be trontsno to pre enbrr xattifortkm. in , "*Prirate Parties" Dinner Parties, or )hangers of Public. Balls will find the accommodations Cl this 'Wu.. superior to any other in the city and the cloirzes a. ri A tunable. larGorol Stabling attached when /mitt" from the ennntry will always Ind attentive hottlers to takr rhorer of their teams. May 6, Iks9.tflti PIANO FORT E MELODEON MANUFACTORY SAVE TWENTY PER CENT WILLIAM WILLING ErEtX3EI. ,941 OFTEII T ill.: experient•e of twenty th,• idea that I scold make PIANOS AND MELODEONS In kris cheaper than I can buy them eloooh.ort, bormow rent i• cheaper, lumbisr i• cheaper, coal ut chesty, iron the Name, imiumvl me to 01111p1111 . and complete, et prmeurml workmen, rho rorrird on • Piano Itsuedirtory tliotki• *vivre for ere ream, and Who ..Id Me their entire idea Ileordaary to Make Allen Irmti and / ale now prepared to furnf.h my noMerioOn rriemtp Pianos and Melodeons superior Too. and finish, .nd .111 VI7.I9.—IFILVE.ALN'T wrIZEMIIhEr For any leogth of time, to give COMPLETE SATISFACTION. -My reputation aa a Musician and business msu v. u' be lost tt these instrusneuts should nut prove ao.! I mature the public that nothing is spared to belay wb .t the deeirod remit, viz : Freddy.lns a Ilse and muladantial Hand, wish b will give gem, railstactida, and stay is mud IMBe than any Mae I knew of. TERMS VERY EASY PRICES VERY KEASuINAISLE ! U PATRONIZE 1, Your Own Citizens at Home ! ORDERS of WHOLESALE or RETAIL P:rortltr4:l promptly and fairly E r Produce, order' on Stoma, old Instrumento', Lum ber, and any Oiling elm I can mil strain or use lo si bus them, will be taken in exeliange for rhino rime., 111.1 e, de4 , 110, Dulcimer' and any thing else I hare to glt) store PIANO 4 TO LET! TUNING DONE WELL! NEW MUSIC EVERY 11 EEN N( EItUTTHEBEST ARTICLES (IN MA \ ty THE GENUINE UNltivA LEI) Chickering & Bon's Piano Fortes, Rne you ever heard of • Plus/ 4. t me know where it b and I will oActing* It Wm MII.I I\4 T 1 t - . 1) ITO ItS.—You ull rememlwr offer Mr Horner Watere of New York, toea :r wivert.laing la your paper. The underlogned y. S)1 hitt. better, If ,ou VIII favor hint with a r 01, end v famish you with any Piano eon , ordor ..r drytt.r. hi , me your order W‘l 811.1 Erie, J Pl. 11/4,9 A d da i t For Chicago And Intermediate Porte ! ONE I)F THE PEI PLE' LINE tIF Propeller. will leave tkt Port for tome. Intermediate Venison WiCoNSPIDIY and retTl IC DA y with week, wind and weather n r For freight or paliougre apply to t; 1, tt4iftT4o., Jt.n. 4, 1a59 tf Pubile MEMO MIIII.JI.JINZ:Ei.:4 - _ itt Rs. 41 . la Is ha rett•rned York, Ind 4 Dow weiribg her stork of 'll ILLI YE R Y MID FANCY GOODS ' Consisting of Satin and 'Straw Bonnot.. l N Dead Dremee, Cala, Flower; Ribbon., *orbs, v.h.ot Ribbon*, Collar.. [ACM ke.. Ar A 1.., ( t•' Roof Pairts,Moidery, Zephyr Roods., Egiiltitie Tsai _...1 material. for Enibmidery, Lam toile, oi rior quality, kc., kr., all of wbirh II ill be ...It ar •• ran be bought elsewhere. MILLINERS supplied With all emelt of it. I' lib. , - Wholeeale, Erie, Oct. 1, 101.9.-17. BURNING FLUID—As I.v Prof. Greenough, that will sal erplodr, for .ale by the only authorised agent in Erie Aug 2(1,110 , 9 CARTER .. URI) ALWAYS READY. Colts and other manufseture of Pistols, for tem low, at A C,cTINI., March 14. Paragon Reilitio ; . wile) WANTS A SAFE. The noltterlher has mw. Dirge iitee HERRING'S SAFE, which be will ditpute of (glean for Cash or approved paper. 1W 1,, SCOTT kris, April 9,11139.--44.tf. MANY PERSONS SI I FFEIt interi , vlv with !Nu ILALCIIA, PA is in the Face, Tan . . and Jaw Arne, that might be (*limed ',linnet immiateis by tb.spolleotioo of the Ettreet of Simart Weed It both more plotaant and tab than any of the Pain Kill, and Rot-Drop' la not. Just try it CARTER k Aug 20. 1 111 " _ ASTETT ER'S BITTERS forle by ;hr Agenta, Aug, 10. CARTE JP Hllft INDIGO, First quality, wholes3lo and:rt• tail. at the new Drug Store of Aug. 4Q 1860. CARTER & BRO. = Id I 1..., SHOE BUSINESS AN D FACTOR! ES eat be carried on peons* at liamosonton. S &titer tisitotmt of Lianunooton Lands. 6106. 1:1ILDER8 HARDWARE, A Nil sad complete smsortmeat of Band.rs ;lard. wara, for velfr very km b 7 orrt2ll-21. J. C BILDEN. S ADDLE & CARRIAGE TRIMMING`. A fall asseetebeat al Saddlery and , Caviare Trim allibp, for isle very low by 21. C. SF:WEN. and JOIN TO 11..5. CARPENTER'S and 301 N TO. tb• largest EA cheapest stick In the Cite, at Erie. (let. 29, 1814.-21 J. C. sti.nEx•rz. SAu i A(}E (ITTTERS, eleavient, Mini i Knives, Butcher Knives, at the star, at 0d.29-21 J. C. SEi.ra:x SHOVELS, and Tongs Stands, Mower Stands. for gala by 21 .1. C. SH.LDV.% TABLE ( 4 1 1 i'LERY, Poekk Knives 0 an atyloa and qualitles, at low peon., by Oct W 69-21 J. C. SELDF.N. TIIit:ITHY SEED! T1)1(1111'1' SEED!! iso BOSNIA& MOO Now Clean Ilabothy Sant, jut re indvad. and for wale ebesp by Erin. Oct 15 , 156! . BECKMAN KENDE) k en FARME RS WIVSS, who do their own Dyeing, no obtain MADDER and tNDiGD. and all other Dye Raft 004 my beef material and of the. Inv - sot price, at the Diu Stoner 19. CARTER DRO. MINERAL WATER, from St. Catha- , riots, Canada, at foraro Dry, Store ar Are. Seillicop CARTIER A BRO. - - , - SDEAN, UNGF.S, CANE SEAT and i /lalr Seat Maim Makenany Tablet and Stands, Spring i Beds, Toodbor Bodo and Mattrames, at New Tart pricer, far Cub, fast mot from East, for sale oa eamtjtirsion. to t the Agemt. norb O. W. ELLSET, Eris COAL OIL of a auperior quality can ht. bad of CARTER A BRO. No! li, U 59 - rz. , THE EIiTE OBSERVER. BY BUYING op PSNN•.E3.. cari I=l - _s:_; - z - 1 :_-_- loftiest. Song of the Equinoctial Storm at wit B. SIFILS i come, I come with a crushing blast, Wheat the summer's beat is o'er; And when the old winter's reign is putt I rush to the Northern shore' human band can stay toy tread, Nor check my *taking rod , For hke the air tny powers spread, And both aro horn of Ciuti ! I seize the waves the 'nighty sea, And I lash thentnadly on; I scornthe streng h or the giant tree— brentli iti life is gone' The ,t at el) -hip -hen's pride and boast' With crew, . 1 , rtuuneh and brave. Lila•, t rent er in tly path is turned =.2=l The gat heringellunds are iny armed throng, knit I !wooer them dark and dread' on.on they rush with a waning song. At the ruin around them' spread; And at wy will their veil* are rent— Their watery are thundered Ind tin. liver. and n,rrentr of earth are sent To ruin. u.. ritviA, to drown' 1"111 %colt f run toy Idioti.' rotilid— pov.er 1m telt nu more: On.le in my unknown hnuntm bound 'Till half a rear he e'er. For a bile tey rengt hl4 It giant a strength And :Treads a destrUctire pall; et like trail man. I must yield at length T. , the Will 111 the 1..9n or .ALL.' Choice teiteraturt. LOVING AND PATIENT, t)11 t titlittil a tl.t .t tender mother, a trite 1111.1, 11), 111.. id' •mr ehy,arted 1414ter ivas if ~ l he had trial, pain, 4.vitli,triog-- Ihe ~,1 111111, . 11 lot of :411 there VraUs tblh hll ri nee lielN% yeti our sister and !litany ittint-- /Wl' trials, pains and sufferings. she nai alaat brin g and rattient." And tilt the , . words the minister e10 , e4 the ulogy. Iltr t,,/•e was earnest, and there %%a, a I,,‘‘ trt•tw,r of feeling in his tones.-- Ile hail kii,n‘ it this faithful wife, this true trk nit %tell, and thc•relnre he had uttered plaees„as he stcxxl, un the grave art/ end which gath ered the Vi "Let ow and pattleiyi." stud one to an other. as they walked slimly amid the Bois. tornb..toni-s. on their way out the cement' y. - Yes, she was all that—lett 444 i I, trig. lew sit patient:' ••.\n,l ii i •N‘ anti , lll,Ol t• need of patience, - wn . of home mar t I think she was one. The 1111: for love in return, and if it re, e•, rs not OW' lutist to nourish it., life I , t111 . 1C.4 lit lilt - A.-41n% It , IrrKilks, .11.1 our preeions friond." Y on think nal , url• "fit •' Mr. ( . :tr.mt wet% not •t 11 tars irtri •.•w•• t ••ii treat itli the brutality (.1 :Lit Ij/11.'1311i but, tor all that. h, tiu• guilty ill' 1,a% mg (I:mint-1144, t or her !Wd ith..mtgenial nuuittuze." r •A w,i) ~1 -Leaking the truth." ni ti 11.1. “N i It I Elt• pr.,l, ; I LI% %vitt% 11,1 he NN..111,1 ~.:thuli~Ni tn;ui. she •A• 111.41 li.i Ile.ll iN 111,1! .ilOl lilltit•Ut It \\ .a:1 I igl,l 131 N% , •14. • r. I think, %%.i. in :u1 Pit/1 It 1- Ili , 1% .111 , 1 iii• t 11,•) ,1 iota 11..111 ',0w1.: aro' i•ato tit ' Cite herya‘etl i holm. with Imp, he\ 1i.t.1 11 , 11 , 11 upon ht. ear. with it new noo.tilln2 .c1p111..1 to ht. wile, and gave to ht. ,ertitio new perception as to her laithhil wile. a tender r a true friend " Their were the twrit.t. ;unit the:cl, were fi.otl 111 g .1.111 nt 111, rat, Ilona -inguittrly ele t.tir,l hail I , cycl one, all at tine.-. Mr. Carsou'h ~t lit- %% il.•. cli:irm•ter .4.'041 out 1.101 11 N% 11.-1111 , till --4 •11.• hoot trail. ing." Alapt ! an,l till., %V /1.4 true 1-o to I..•t''iiNid liuo..tn.l in a wa% nt•%- •4 31.).1.4.41:4t4.41 k lionn• Sir. &IA 111- Alootel htur. lioN% 414.soLife I, !I. What a pio--tin• the r.• v‘a,, upon his 4,4 itching %4,441 illill4. 1.444 rn2 steel inatieHt. - Th, brief •ien tent4.. Lome' :In inir oh/tit:ay ropetion rn ins mina. It. kept mg II mor ainti over. u 4 4411 memory lleizan to draw pictures of the pod, Let o- tr:so.ter olie of those pic ttiro. to the OW !fere it in. Mr. I'ar g.otod upon it' until It gave him the lioart :tette. They ha•l I.et. It married over a year, a le rt :Mt-. t'.o- , •n. tt let hail Ito( .I•en her tuotht•r (tut tug that perit4, u.keii to "go home. - a tiu-tanee ttl . .(Irtte two hundred nnh•v, and niali.e a short viva. Since her marriage nh.• had not visited the dear old place, though the heart kept going hack t.ll !Ore . .' 1 1 i11 .11 . )1. :o • nut): all the while. • .10 ..`e h.. n (11.1( is pog.-ible," an swered her busband. coldly, and in evi dent .urpri,-e at the request. "You can't go alone. and fur cue to leans my business 1-• mit of the , l ue,tion." Tear.: came instantly to the ,oft brown of the young wile. •'5 have not seen my mother since came from home." twow it, down through years, canto to Mr. Carson the voice Otitis wife, as it trembled on'this sentence. Not a single shade of it-•tender sadness WAS gone. And now it MI upon sensitive ears that searched into meanings. But when living lipmattered title words so faithfully kept by memory, the,, awakened no feeling of sympathy in heart. -Came front hotne ."-- Ile then said to himself, angrily: "Isn't this tier home'" ••Write to your mother. and ask her to come and make us a visit," replied Mr. 4%n:on. ; "Mother has a large family and many youla not get away for; so long a jourauy . . -Awl ,al have cares, and a honle where your pre.enee is needed," said her Ma le ry. baud. Then he- added. "No, n' , Ma. I can't see that it is possible now. "I can go alone." Tears had n gath ering in Niiite of her efforts to reprissi them, and now a few drops fell slowly pver her cheek'. '•Don't think of that for a moment. I am particularly opposed to ladies . traveling alone. I don't think it at all 8/1(8. and then the 1)/0.y is young. It would be cer tain to take void, and might contract a fa tal Italy i- nearly three months ol(1—" nn u , .• nreuing the matter." taxi,' ERIE, PA, SATURDAY MORNMG, NOVEMBER 19, 1858. Mr. Carson, with oonsideishie impatience of manner. "You can't sty Vary, and you might as well give it up at once." Memory had kept with daguerreotype fidelity the erpression of his wife's face, when he Elun# back upon her this unfeel ing interdiction, and now it was before him in all its rebuking sadrkess. "Loving and patient." This wet the commentary. No angry, impatient, or re bellious word escaped her lips, nor did a frown disfigure her brow. But she seemed to shrink before him, as if a strong hand had borne down hard upon her. Two months from that time news came of the mother's sudden Mmes. I must go home now," die said. "It is impossible for me to accompany you—wait for a few days. Your mother will be well again." -I can go alone, Thomas," urged Mrs. Carson. .1 "1 will not consent to that, Mary," was positively objected. Next week, if your mother should continue to grow worse, I will go with you." "Oh, Thomas! If I should never see her again !" "You indulge a needless alarm," said the husband c o ldly. "This sickness is but temporary, and will pass away." The pleader was silenced, but the pale, sad face gave signs of intense suffering.— A whole week pasties! without another w o rd. Then came a letter from her father in these words: "Your mother is dying Come! Oh, come quickly ! We have been looking for you es cry hour during the last four days. Don't delay a moment after receiving this, if you would see your mother alive." There was no objection to urge now.— hut when Mrs. Carson re-crossed the threshold over which she had gone forth a bride, it was to fall, with a deep wail of anguish. insensibly across the bed where lay the cold form of her almost idolized mother. latek to whom she had so panted te tty, through more than a year of patient waiting. There ,vas a strange expression in the face el Mrs. t'arsen for months afterwards. Its meaning her husband did not it, , ek to penetrate. Inde e d, pereeptitin with him had no plummet line that could reach tar enoueli down to fathom her consciousness. Months piessed before any warmth came back to her cheeks, or any light to her dreamy eyes. Vet no murmur of reproach escaped her lips. She was loving, dutiful, and patient. But she never spoke to Mr. oarson of her mother. Once or twice he referred to the dear departed one, but she did not seem to hear his remark ; and he, from a vague suspicion of the truth, held hack from repealing the reference. With what painful distinctness was this whole scene restored, as Mr. Carson sat grieving over his great loss, in the desolate home front which the light of a loving face had departed forever. Ob, what would he have given for the power to change that one cruel set I Away from the rebuking record, written in his book of life, in char acters never to be erased, hut it was only to gaze upon another almost as selfish to behold as this faded memory restored oth er scenes in which he was the mean, pain ful, opposer. and she the loving, patient, long suffering wife. It bad been all ex action on his part, and gentle compliance on hers, even through ripluctance or pain. lie had been a selfish tyrant ; she a yield ing, dutiful subject, though often burdened beyond nature's power Of endurance. Ifow little had he taken. her needs of mind or laely into co the years of their un n u g lft i tir "L fflifi scarce thought of her as a being with ne cessities like his oa n ; but rather as one green to le- the servant of his wants and pleasures It mattered little how she thought, telt, or desired. If her action served him. that reached the compass of ‘• Loving and patient " What a new to .4 1 )11, bum re. with a whip of .lin/z -ing. .eorptet., was the tostintouy of the preacher p...nung every tnoinent. Yea,she luui been 1.J% 111 V :111 , 1 141(10III ami , l cruel wroilp BIM negiecti, That -lipped the foun dation of her life. Loring and patient, th“tigh daily Lent lower an.t lower IW tteath weight of her unebeerol dutte.. And the , e tic.• that came Lack upon the bereaved husband, as he sat, with his itiotherle;,; e•hddr•en. in the home now malls de•sedttte There hail been an angel in his house for t ears ; but in his blind eu•ltishne•ss he had not recognized her presence, even though hor hand crowned his days with comfort, and made his pillow soft for loin night And worse than this for lot e•, t•oldne-• , For gentle wory-14, unkindly spee•Ch. Not It gleam of con , olat inn found its way into this night ril sorrow and self-rebuke. (fur dead return not. As we have been to them will be our memories of them— blessed, or accusing memories, according to our deed.:. Ihu 11;11 . KNON as William H. SewArd, the Senator from New YOrk, fully InlOrme(' of Brown's contemplated attack upon Harper' , Ferry ? Read what the .I v ornd ,f Can merce says on this subject : -This is precisely Mr. Serrard's postion .11.../..1.(n0tc of BrOtrn'S plane. He dare not d e ny, .I%er his own name. that he knew of them. Forbes, when he said that he -went fully into the matter" with Seward, meant to he understood that he told him of the plans of Brown for an attack upon Harper's Ferry. lle del teU Jun. ,!! thos e plans: and Seward replied that "in his position he ought not to have Leen told." These are ael.s ,e- b,••14 Mr. &Ward Will Yu./ deny, and which must render his conduct odious in the sight of honorable, men. What dui Seward do to prevent the con sumation of the hase plot? What steps did he take to stop it? Suppose we adopt the charitable concluison of the Times, that he "warded it off for nearly two y e ars does that help the matter r In our estimation it only makes it worse. During this long period he has been dal lying with,prospectire crime, and hobnob ing with prospective criminals, when a word fitly .pokenwould have sent them cringing into obscArtty. If Mr. Sieward's friends want more light this subject ; if they want a clearer state ment than Col. Fofbes has furnished, in his published letters, let them call on that gentleman for all the facts. Forbes is no myth, but real flesh and blood ; and they can leant from him quite as much as they will care to know. And among other things they run /warn from his own lips, as we hat.< dont , the fact which we stated, viz: that he did tell Seward fully about Brown's proposisition to make an attack upon Harpers Ferry." ser Mi:.s Coan, a school teacher in Troy, has been arrested for beating a little son of Gen. Ilagadorn, editor of The Bud get, in a cruel and unjustifiable manner.— School teachers are getting into trouble all over the country by undueseverity to their pupils. This is good. Men and women when they become teachers should s pot forget their humanity. A man. named Starling, was exe cuted at Kingston, Lenoir County. N. C., on Friday last. HA was a firm believer in witchcraft, and killed an old lady vrltona he supposed had the power to conjure his wife and child to death, and while in a sta of intoxication committed the deed wad-. an erroneous notion of self-defense. =SE IE2 "PALL GENTLY ON HIS BARU GRAM" Fall gently so her early pore Oh snow of the winter night Lies softly o'er the form we laid 8o sadly away from idea. Beat gently as best the human heart That now la cold and still ; Oh cow her kindly, as covered she All human error and ill ! Let the early sun o'er her swelling mound Triokie down your sakes In tears, As pure sad oousuun as those we shed Fot the lowed of our bygone years ; Exhale above her, oh winter snow. By mortal foot untroJ, As her own bright spirit Hosted up To the sunlight unite of (rod The Great Bantam a Bad Job. —......_ (CerroToi oettehee of the Bolton Poet.) LONDON, Oct, 21, 1859. The Great) Eastern is flummoxed! The leading jou6al records its trial trip as "only a partial success." We all know what that means. She rolls like a porpoise, or a log canoe, the decks leak, the iron plates don't fit, the decorations crumble and disappear, and—the worst remains be hind—she tom only go a little more then half the speed that was expected of her The very best that can be got out of her under the moat favorable circumstances of wind, water and coal, is 13 miles an hour. So say some knowing engineers who were on board and who wished and hoped the moat favorable result. There is no dis guising it. The great hull is worth all it would bring for old iron. Every man who knew anything knew that she would not go to America within two months of the explosion. After hemming and hawing, and humbugging the public for weeks, the directors come out to-day and adjourned its departure sine tlie—vihich means it is a sign she'll die before she ever makes a sue eessful commercial voyage. All the dear creatur . elsin Yankeedc)ole dom who wanted to have a quadril:e or waltz, and to show off their pretty anc— beg pardon, their• graceful motions on her broad deck, will havp to wait -till Spring. The Directors will soon be in the market calling for more money ; as I hear that 440,000 i.i , '2(N,000) will be wanted to com plete the repairs, and finish the vi•.~eJ.— The fact is, the engines have not power enough to go more than ten or ,eleven knotp an hour. So here it is after all ; the Persia, the Adriatic, the Vanderbilt, and I know not how many more crack ships. will outrun her in a fair race! I predicted this some months ago in your columns. It is a lame and impotent conclusion, but it can't be helped. The ship, us a grand •show," I a just as great a sight, and in course of time I hope all curiosity-loving Yankees wit* five hundred miles of the seashore will ,pave an opportunity to see her marvelous} proportions. Now corn( up a new chapter in the ea drama. 0, t o poor shareholders! The stock is graddally going down. and down, down it. will g to the crack of doom. For •lancy," the /shares of the "Great Ship Company" ll sail about in the market like kites and crows on the elms of Mel rose Abbey. The bears are already awful good natured, while the bulls have had nearly all their horns knocked off. Per haps Mr. Lever now will renew his offer, made about a year ago, of .£•20,000 for her for a coal hulk for bib Galway steamers,— poor shareliol'aeoPit freklV at all. In shipbuilding. as in everything else, success accompanies gradual progress instead of great flights. - A CHILD WITH Twa RE aDs—.S.eeeseu/ Amputation of One. —A eorresloondent of the North Andover Cite.) Advocate say,. On the ISth - of &ptembor lam : a Old,' war 4 horn in the town of Palmyra. haring two headA. The names of the parents Are John and liar) Ward. The first, a natur al head, seetned a. nearly perteet 40 , dl3l Of all infant u,ttally 1.4--the MIL ,an un natural Ileaml, isas connected a to, h of about the length :111.1 111.' hack ur poaterior part ot fir-t one. a little above the point where the head and neck natural') .oin. tiotil heads were ot about the mute .12e, anal hiring iippo,te ways. flair gre,v perfe. fly n.ttur.il .‘n both .calls, but the second head a,t entirely wanting in features—there Wen• a few &mall irregulartties where the lave tures should have been, appearing a- , it nature hail attempted to form ti ature4. but without suereas, ‘,l 11pe child seemed good, and it grew wet) until the 19th of the pre,ont month, (I,. ti a, er , : when the unnatural head %V.Lg . ta lly amptitated at the neck by 1r..1. M tn ,on, of Pittsfield : a da 1 ,.1 . 4 11.11 f•brAcwl the skull to he ionapo-wil bone and carttlege aloo, what should hat, kern bone to the neck, proved to be cart.dego. Th e l i c.ed e u ntA t n e d a ‘ll.o%taLlc , atttlo , t perfectly resembling brain, but of I,s, lan sity. It hits now been some five days - the operation, and the child is fAst recover ing. Siar A singular case has eoine to light in Cincinnati. Some three yews ago a young girl attached to one of the theater: in that city "loved not wisely. but too well a little respom.tbdity was the r esult The child was confided to the care of an old negro woman. and the mother disap peared. leaving the charge with the color ed nurse. and has not since been heard of. A few days ago the old negresm paid a visit to her son in Marysville and was there ar rested on suspicion of being a fugitive slave. She had the child with her, and notwith standing its perfect Caucasian features. complexion and formation it was retained on the ground that it belonged to some woman owing servitude, according to the laws of the State. The woman succeeded in proving her freedom, but was obliged to leave the child in the hands of parties in Marysville. Measures have been taken in Cincinnati to have the child returned to its foster mother, and inquries will be made to ascertain who the parent of the little one is and where she is. The story is a very romantic case. pr A young seamstress named Mar garet Dickson, died in Cincinnati last week from the prick of a needle. While at work she accidentally punctured the pal of her left hand with the needle, and - though she experienced acute pain, :he thought nothing of it at the time She continued to work for a few days, • t the wound baffled surgical skill, an he poor girl died in the greatest agony sir The miners at Pike' eak are suf fering terribly from the : ,ects of poison ous whisky. A fearful .. lady has made its appearance in M. • ntain City, which has carried off as •.y a s fourteen miners a week. It was a .posed to be the moun tain fever, but ' _ was finally traced and proved to theproduct of strychnine . wy. leir I. the Massachusetts Senate an amend -• •nt to the Attachment law has been • opted, exempeng the library of a deb •r, to the value of $3OO, from attach rn t. The present amount is $5O. i For the first time in the history of the State. both branches of the Mary land Legislature are Democratic. $1,50 PER ANNUM IN ADVANCE f olitiaiL Judge Inaok's answer to Sena tor Douglas. From the Constitution As briefly as possible, eschewing all mat ters personal or quasi personal, and with out introduction or preface, 1 shall notice the only points in Mr. Douglas' last paxn phlet that are worthy of attention. Be denies that his views on "Sovereign ty in the Territories," as expressed in Har per's Magazine, are inconsistent with those of the Supreme Court in the Dred Scott case. I aver, on the contrary, that he could not have made such a denial if he had not totally misunderstood either his own opin ions or those of the court ; for they are in direct conflict with one another. A plain issue of fact is thus made up between us, and it is triable by the record. Let us look at it. The court, after demonstrating in the clearest manner that. the Federal Govern .meat had no authority or jurisdiction to abolish slavery in a Territory, proceeded to say what Mr. Douglas himself has quoted on page 530 of the magazine : "And if Congress ittte/j cannot do this—if it is beyond the powers conferred on the Fed eral Government—it will be admitted we presume. that et could not alit/ion:ea Tel-no/l a ti.ocervient to exercise them. It could confer nopower on any local government established by its authority to violate the provisions of the Constitution." This is in substance the very identical proposition which Ur. Douglas, on page ten. pronounces to be "as plausible as it is ,fallacioe..." He adds, that "the reverse of it is true as a general rd::" and then supports his assertion by another assertion the most singular that ever was placed on record by any man having the slightest pretensions to a knowledge of our government ; name ly. that Congfeas could confer upon a Terri tory such powers. "and ONLY such as Oni yr,s, cao,a.l exercise under the Constitution!" There is the record ; and I am perfectly sure that no tolerably sensibly man in this nation, except Mr. Douglas, will doubt for a -moment that it places him and the Court in an attitude of perfect antagonism. But then he says he defend the Court I s in more than- one hundred spe cs . It can stqircely be necessary to say, t t arguments on a question of law are valued according to their aright, and not according to their 70,mber. The count of Mr. Douglas' speech es on the Illinois slump was, no doubt, faithfully kept ; hut, when he claims cred it for their orthodoxy, he must show some thing more than scores on a tally paper. Ile might as well come, with his Harper article in one hand and a two foot rule in the other, ready to demonstrate his con currence with the Court by showing that it contains two thousand eight hundred and eighty-square inches of surface. With out reference to the superficial measure of one or the carefully enuntertued repetitions of the other, we may safely presume that the quatity,of his spoken arguments was not better than that of his written essay ; and in this letter Mr. Douglas not only opposed the Court, but, what is much worse, be charges it with holding his opinions. This is a deep and serious injury ; for, how would the Judges of that great tribunal be able to look their country in the face, if they had ever said, that a power over pri vate property, forbidden to the Federal Government, might be delegated by Con gress to a Territorial Legislature l' The whole dispute (as far as it is a doc -4........ ...............1 iyikt this Democratic parrllei l ici ukAYikit and these two propositions : 1. The ! owner of a slave may remove with him, as with oth er property, into a territory without forfeit ing his title. 2. The government of a Territory has and can have no power to deprive the inhabitants; of their private property, whether iii slaves or anything tA^4. Th.. -axiom/di, principle of public 1.1 w. - that a mail. going from one country into another. retituis in the latter (If th,:re no oontlicting Inw ; all the rights Of property whieh he had in: the former, 1•• .so univemilly acknowledged, that nobody think- worth while to pro\ e it. At all uuu t. to all countries. Ulla I nil perr.on taken nod :0 upon a. la,..tulate. eermttil, had not, until very lAtely. the re noit 4`.-1 •ITlCiott, Inat .iny man this of 'hula would doubt .t All tilt' In tel 1.1001 evil the' States, and with h, r eicr i euuntrie , ..leloo lion it \Valium ;t, tl.. tr.,veler 11111- , . 1 to hi.' trunk when , ‘,•r the border of IlVen :MAW nn.l oh. n a fo re i g n e r l an d, at a he two. i,r iohbed of his ptll'M.• bit the first lo.tler that meet hint On the tt hart 11111•ort.d ion and exportation would et' h.o. and the of th e w hole wont , (dent ome to a :l ea d pour , .. it .1 nom not prute hi" right to per...lial pro'. ty in one ,outitr) . ht -how lig 660 1., NI 3 , OP' legal owner of it in :moth t flout whence lie brought it.-- This priii.A.le is to the oommeretal ttorld what the Ito of ),:r.i‘itati“it is to the mate rial imic.•ise • it earinot t a ; aboh,lie4.l with out loirllwz the %\ hole into ruin. Mr 1)“1 1 . 2 1,i : .1 not Admit this **axia rnatic prin, n o r doe. he I he "r i te. ll'IN•lat (foul atoltlt. it. Bla he lizin,utilly clear anti explicit in tit.a "It ha., noapplwittiou to, and doe, not includo, -.Livery. - I that he tni-taken :lave., b. , reec _ keep them if he changes his residence to Western Europe or to the American States. So it undoubtedly is with slavery: no man in his senses ever contended, that a Vir ginian, going to live in Pennsylvania, could take his slaves with him, and keep them there, in spite of the Pennsylvania law.— But if he goes to Kentucky, wherelhe law is not opposed to slavery, it is equally clear, that he retains all the dominion over them, which he had before his remnyal. The right of property, no matter where it ac crued, continues to be sacred and inviola ble until it comes in collision with a law which divests it. In a Federal Territory there can be no such collision with the right of a slaveholder, because there is no conflicting law there on that subject. All authority, as well as all reason and common sense. is in favor of this doctrine. it-was the rerypoint of the Dred Scott ease.— Dred was the slave of Dr. Emerson, in Mis souri, and was taken by his master to a Federal Territory, where -there was -no va lid law which either expressly authorized or expressly interdicted the holding of slaves. Thu Court held that Dred Scott's status in Missouri was not changed, nor the right of his master divested, by his re moval to ths Territory. The principle was al.t•lci .1 t ,, the GM of a slave just as it would be'appled to am other propo y. It is half - a score of time by the Judges, that there can be no distinction between the slave and other property. The other authorities to the same point are eon elusive and overwhelming. Any person who desires to see all the learning of the subject may consult "GM osiSzreery," where it is arranged in an order so lucid, and dis cussed with so much ability, that nothing further need be desired: There is one other authority directly to the point which I cite. not only for its own intrinsic value, but because it will probab ly be esteemed very highly by Kr.pg. las himself. It is an extract from asp e ech of his own delivered in the Senate on the 23c1 of February_ last. The legal equality of slave property and other property was then asserted by him in the following fash ion : NUMBER 24 "Slaves, according to that decision, [the Dred Scott deoision,) being property, siand on an equalftg with all other property.— There is just as much obligation on the part. of the Territorial ,Legislature to protect skateed as every other species of prop e rty, as there is to protect Aorta, cattle, . se goods, liquor, &c. If they have a right to rim mate as to the one, they have as to the other, and whether they - have got the pow er of discrimination or not, is for the Court to decide, k any one disputes it. * * If there is no power of discrimination on other property, there is none as to slaves. If there is a power of discrimination as to the other property—and I think there is--then it applies to slave property. In other words, slaveerty. property ie s, on an equal footing with all other pro - In the face of all this, in the teeth of his mown words so recently uttered, in defi ance of the Supreme Court and all judicial authority, Mr. Douglas now declares that the "axiomatic principle of public law," which enables a man to remove his proper ty from place to place, wherever the local law does not forbid its coming, is not ap plicable to slaves. To sustain himself 111 making this distinction he produces two short passages, both of which have been picked out of one paragraph in Story's "Conflict of Laws." These passages (will the reader believe it ?) nacre)) , show that a slave becomes free taken to a country where slavery is not tolerated by law! Judge Story cites cases decided -in England, France, Scotland, and MiussaChusetts, to prove that the laws of those countries, being opposed to slavery, will dissolve the relation of mas ter and slave when brought in contact with it. I say, that slaves may be taken to Kansasor Kentucky without being eman cipated : Mr. Douglas, With great gravity and complacency, answers me, that I am wrong. because slavery is not tolerated in England 01 Miireachusetss l No instance of a no', s ey,,itu r so glaring. and so palpable has ever before fallen under my notice. Mr. Douglas forbears to burden his pages with "the long list of authorities" which he -nys are cited by Judge Story. It is a curiou, fact that not a single one of those authorities touches the question in contro versy between us. They all, without ex ception, refer to cases in which there was a direct conflict between the law of the country where the slave came from, and the law of the country to which he was taken. No one of the writers referred to has outraged common sense by saying or hinting, that slaves are made free by mere removal without any such conflict of law. The quotation from the opinion of the Su preme Court in Prigg vs Pen/my/wine, is made with the same rashness and with no nearer approach to the point. The public will doubtless be somewhat surprised by Mr. Douglas' loupe mode of dealing with books. I have no right to suppose that he intended to insult the in telligence of his readers, or to impose upon their ignorance by making a parade of learning and research, which he did not possess. But how shall we account for quotations like those? I am obliged to leave the riddle unread. 11. Assuming that slaves taken from a slaveholding State into a Territory continue to be slaves, can the rights of their owners fi.afterwards divested by an act of the Ter if -c the Territories are sovereign States'; not, not. On this question Mr. Douglas has placed himself in a most peculiar po sition. Heretofore he has alternately af firmed and denied the sovereignty of the Territories, In his last pamphlet he seems to think the middle way safest : he admits that they are not sovereign, but asserts that they have "tie allnbula of sovernynty." The, is not all ingenious. It must be apparent to the dullest understanding that a gov ernment, which has the attributes of sov ereignty, is sovereign. Sovereignty is the supreme authority of an independent state. No government is sovereign which may he controlled by a superior government. As applutd to po litical structures, supremacy and sovereign ty tire convertible terms. 'to prove this will not fader to "the printer of inlitiral science :'• it is found in all the Aerii /sok , Every half-grown boy in the country who leas given the usual amount of study to the English tongue or aho has neen.sionallv looked into a dictionary, knows that the sovereignts of a governtnent consists in its uncontrollable right to exercise the high est pow,•r Ittit r. Ik-eights tries to cloth, he ferritorfe., with the -attributes a sov ereignty," not ft proving the suprt•inacy of their jun-41 , 69n in any matter or thing what...ever. fait inerel by showing that they ni•, ,itni ',Arne of them have Is-en, nuthoriz , d within certain limits. to exercise the tight of C1A111,71, d. , mni hr. lay ; old coll e er tar, s for territorial purposes. to deprive a'citizen of ifs, liberrii, or prrprrr i as punis went for eruno, and to corporan .t All this is true enough. but it doe, by no means follow that the pro v isio . al government of a Territory is, there for . a sovereign in any sense of the word. city council may legislate. hut the city s still subordinate to the State Which gave it political being. The right of eminent domain iedelegated every day to private corporations, but no Turnpike Company pretends to be a sovereign State. The 'courts in many placed have authority to create corporations, the sheriff of a enmi ty has power to imprison or hang male factors, and the supervisors of a township can levy taxes ; but I think no judge, sheriff, or supervisors has ever claimed the purple or diadem on any such ground.— Governments always act by their agents. but the agent, whether it be an individual officer or a political corporation, likes city or Territory, is not in any case sovereign, -supreme, and uncontrollable. Thus the arguments of Mr. Douglas, which he elab orates through page after page with wear isome pains, are but touched with the finger of investigation, and they disappear forever. - "The mirth bath bubbles, as the water baa, Ma %Wei" ot theta." Mr. Douglas, the Senator, the statesman, tote struggling candidate for the Presiden ts!, should not have borrowed from the lawyearlings and small wits of the Abolition party, the stale, often repeated, and worn out assertion, that emigrants cannot have a right to the property they take with them, because it will introduce, in the Ter ritory or State where they settle, all the conflicting laws of the different States from whence they came. Nothing coulikbe less worthy of his high place in the councils of the nation. He ought to know that goods of various kinds are going continually into each State from all other States in the Union. without producing any such effects. He does know that nearly all the personal property within the limits of a new Terri tory has come therefrom abroad under the protection of the axiomatic principle which he thinks proper to sneer at ; and he nev er heard that any difficulty or confusion was produced by it. I never said, than an emigrant-to a Terri tory had a right to his property without a remedy ; but I admit that be must look for his remedy to the law of-his new domicil. It is true that he takes his life, his limbs, his reputation, and his property, and with&