(brie Oboerret. \ i-Li - lic.ki..l()CliNAL i iy B. P. SLOAN. • • 0. If pal.: IA AAA •n.•• . . • • be , t, pa, :b•• teat, tku. • t. • .1 't » art• taut made out to • • II • 111 a fa t ‘ll‘ \ I. - • ,•• mat.. A (A, - 4,4 „, rue «quar.• 13,.•ntb a S,S • 1 ot., • (TA. * (Al 1 t.n.• • 9 • h • , Aar, etatag*Abbe at pleasure, s!tt tn.a4111., SA P mouths, ,••••• 000 TrAf, Vu. n months, • i • ,• ,N l / 1 e011111)11s., tar, at $3 per Is, . ar,t, o'er #li, sad ancirr • • I •,.•., ra , 10 cent. a In.- . but no ,••• ••• Att,•,tte • otlera .Hutt (rA•oleut o'lai112”. „ • . ,11 br al I,or•••1 two agustres„ parer, •• sd,lttiona!ap.see, (Le charges wall 'hi. t'it• Ito.all• must by 'tn.. tin ...1,0.0...•••• th. athertteer )•a) - :..^.1.6.11101211A r••• 111 re.l -a (Wean, It•lng u , l! b.• half-,eatir BUSINESS DIRECTORY 1111 I.lttAl L. tarn) OP TH l'T Q4lln Nrw 1. r 4: ' Plabor I, kt..I..EY, ) Lk ", 1 1, ..t• 41 CAA I a.d. `tate rtrwt.t, Fail I•M.NDiti •SD RICT•IL GROCIAS, •nd 111 , • IN,rk, PiNh, Salt, ...eel, 4{",.0.! boa po'a tin•l 4;11%... It N 'Nnglst a 1=111:11:1111 21 1111 N. hitt P.O. et I - rotors:l IT LIN .• of .1. 1.:.11/1 HAI,MITT, .4I • • t 'a-0 It. - • 1 Jr! eCtrtiftVitr him .•.r. am?, , tt i,IIEV .k I'I.ARK. WiloutALE t.h.otthx. aria I , ,alrei Iri M and Lt.,,,ru, ato•• •••e•garn, •, • •Ild A evnts Mollato Buthnio • s : Cop,u IR! tr%. , P ,, i• " •• • . • • I I.H IT. a I l • LA ha It W )1), . • • •• toot %1 •t • talL -Am.( 3m34 )ft. 0.1..F.1.1.1(0TT, I , KSTIST 414•04,44 DV•dl,,, mmath fart - 1- • 1., 1. B. .r•r n. PL•SK 1:00K M}•,Ct ►a. T , k‘k n S.r,. -I .. , 1..t..'• ru.•rtit En.• I • STORN. , 4 v , •11. e- eTery tit orr.o.ii. or. .1; CI, Th., Re I) %t W I 1. , 0%. 1T pt •NT k l'nr.rsrLiOk • T 1-.. r, Ern.. P• tlir Pu•IL 4t. lt,r Aiorrym • • b'• rt I • %I , lir alwa)% b. found Fa Ins M11e.., +r,,l t ILI', .1/ fr% 1 h , 'our EMS= ,tittll II ( I'TI.EII • T.•101T •T i . u t. 1., • .., 0 . 1. Pr I u•it,., Attertt,-1 w:111 =I .1.:1.1 .•Rt, a. I 0 , 111? - 1.118 , 11 M.re6►r !r►rur ‘- rdr. F'r,r•• 1:11 t 1,1RH11: 4, ILI, 1 k!4•11 if, '. 9 .1,1• 9 . t \ • 9 9 nn4l .1, 1 ••111 1!151=111111:11 I IN I .101[1111. . •• . •,L I'l-41•K. IT, VI., • •..k, • U 4. I ."I ( (1., .t • 1.• k. I 1 . / k •k+ .• 1.41b1, I. AV -N% 1 1 =I Ili. I It t (p _ • sr vi. • • - , ••• MEESE! 1 1 1 1K.4 ( HOOK 11...mr5•-• EMI i illt• 11. %%1110, UM= !!11111=111111 („I, k•rT , J , ‘ll .t I .• 4.ft) • •orn, • • 1.1, :u6. greet of:-Iste .t•eort, on t 5. ourt'i EiA'nl IL et 1 "" " • "" i'•"• ATTOP,FT AT 1 tw, Lora.; ntn n Inolting of • • "••• ' '‘ ••• •• • • tfl4- 't.•• .0 . 1' a:I • , tri,r,• for tht• t• ham. , AELDEN ir •in a londs 1 0 1, ,can are A un,.n, , and amaze. I rmmin,e, t an 1 r, t, .:rent, .at t. the I I% DOWNINII:• %TT"; .•r aT I.• , :. J; •T , .1; i;• Till • r ll,; .r of En.. u . Wall rA.ti; ° .; •1.1.11 •••••• , 17 LIS ha.. 1•, pat ; A.l ILA At . orne. M.;;.; • ra rr ;/. FmNr. rifth 1 1. %. 1 10111f1411,1N. • ••••••+ f•r•-• • ro•lar, l'• !IL, r •• ••••it,n Vuip f.nr, 1 1 / 1 /F.1.1., 41 I t "t.&01 ' .a rt.. :1 0 111,, IRE 1 I. lItI.IIN l'Y 1 Is ti,..esiert to (lurk 6 .I:46lahrt..j H. la : T.ruvrie, N.. 14 ". • N art Burnlnt: Hurd, Brusr.rok, r I. %% • °LW., t 4 • Ilrf xsit k ) • R Retail We', tn.:. 00 , -n Pump. of 411twro, T. Ow -Loy Tue,ttla stroot and btrat uUw Frie, 1.• t - o- A ,a•-du wet.— r. , r '‘nillr, farm or - r “rpoaro for pie rheas. r(s • ,:e.7oZisouy t aatcn~ in Fnet.l., German sin.. {Uteri , an Ilar..ware mind trek. an.l:eteel, No. nee. Hower, Frie. 1 • P(04F01111 4%; ( iv IA LE R , : 4 11% el% Noten, .r•inrroo. , «schnLi,,, pm , natarit73 for arkl.• (4fi c t.N., S g. 14,1 }lour. I,lle ii. v ‘.41 .r V. 1 fig' St a , kAllirm ITII• kurein's J. vt • `I. r., r l'n. If/ Ar•n. to .r,r,irr NI 9C tICTIER hEl.1.0“1:. ' 1014 .i• 11,• . OCt nes, • mionl4, '46ip ehaltell..ry. \Woo , L o 1 A 1„,.. ware • , .treet. M 'IP, l'eliglc ea — lk H A L I. v.ufnett• rer aLJ Whol4 104:1 u,: 4 '111: Itralor • S. r , •••••,. 7.Arrhyr Kolt•tn.r. and I.,ite. No r • r 'h a ra; 1 • ,.. f1t elf l•••:Itli •'• a ' bet.ot ; an 21.--.'S t NI.-- % ...'"'',....„... T R Rl°4'‘ K. l l, T• wrw n n I,4enal. riglarec in nn •I. ;la Gord•. A r'olrual Flown, a .0 kn. ranhion•Par IliNfnery, Paragon 'r I n P. att.titi.n 1 ) A. J. 111'0.11 • , 10,1••Yries. Ision., Pr.- •I.•r Vl.•ur, 't•, "IMO* ir 11 In w and Stone Wage, 4`Cright'a Mock, - •. Ene, I's. IMRE 11 ,, ,(110, PSI tr I=l ISM R OGER* et, It F ETT. N.J. 11 and 1.2 roots, Jeri*, Ps. sly ( N 11.1 $••• $ • 4 . I." F. VW TON 1' ETTt A., • • • • • Ne.:vwe, V F.NPOILT TTOIKSIT T • r Nriab.rrof & hal.or's Clotlar ••!..i • it_ 'lrrt, lITT .0) - ilmar bl 1 l.Yii% trertn, ADAMS 11.013INSON. M D.— (~mr. pAnttat At .1 tzur.-oon, Erie, I'. tirriCt ' • Itemdearo., .)1 t o .l P, A NI 11% to 3, .n 4 n: • l• •i.,• •• •-•,‘ .•, r .tanty,) promptly at b In--37 30 tf `I. It !wicAt..z.x •rkr FIDP .Ip.- - ro, War.•, Looking Glvw, . F'anur F'araQ••n Building. • Park new PPIIIO, at NC I. tiK. In :,teerarg 4 'alga/aro .al.ll a•D RIM •IL DC 011101. Cortirt ..r State and • .• 0, Palutx, Chls,Dyr-Stntle, Glass, Campbasie - Iv tag 1 a 64, linallart. ke. B. F. LOAN, EDITOR & PROPRIETOR VOLUME SO mr X. A. OALBBAITII. LBILIAITII. AMMiln at Lair—oso. pa 6thatnirt, r4.-srly oppoott• tha I"..srt Roam, Dia, Pa. WIV H. MAGILL, . Darns?, 011eo in Room- i of ------ •witir's kloct , ou • • • ' . W A 11. LIAM S • LA UI N ITT L AID COTTIMILLOR AT LAW. - , , tfiev recuored to earner mouse of aceetgavretioe Block, ...rner State Street and the Public Square, Erin, Pe. WM. H. LUCE. ee' Ikarrtirr, Ogler to Beatyy 'lf aaaa• Donk 'tido of Public Square, formerly emu r" • y .gill kCo AU work warranted. WILL/A32 THORNTON, fr Imes of tal Place. Deeds, Agree ment Bonds and Rortcaqva, Leases, to., aeon:ate, and carefully drawn. Office on French, street, over Jac S. •Iterrett, Groom Store Erie, Pe.. TEETH t AirlL LUCE, thankful for the liberal • patronage given kink =bowlegs that having procured the assistant* otG. J. LUCK, he Is prepared to do •II kinds of Dental work promptly and to the latest and most Improved styles, and the atteotton of the path. le again called to the CO.NTINUOIIB GUM WORK. which Le ban been engaged in making for the put year, to the entire satisfaction of bin 1.118.711111, that be le non yr . ..pure...l to put up Teeth on VULCANIZED RUBBER, which has the saws advantages poasessed by the Contin uous Gun Work, 'earthy no warm or spaces for the accu mulation ul food, sod siring to thetas. a perfectly natant' exprraanon and tot clasps profess/At to any btber matArrie-t used. uit tit not Vela/ the Muth. Teeth pot on gold or miser for those who rifler It- Particular attention paid hi Oiling and p sutu ral teeth, and also to the correction of t r =eo.— office to Bratty's moat. Part Ron Erie, Dee 24, 11169-43m29. W11%26 J. C. BURGESS & GROCERIES, FLOUR, PORK, &.0., AT \\-1101,ESALE. 10, Brown's Block, State Strad Erie, Oct 111, 1549 1. and Retail .r.gn and I).•mrstlr lir) M HA)I)EON MANUFACTORY SAVE TWENTY PER CUM BY BUYING ut W IMAM WILLING fiiwil . r _ Olirrl T HE Pxperience of twenty years, and the idea that l eould maks PIANOS AND MELODEONS lu File cheaper than I coo bey theca elsewhere, because rent a cheaper, lumber U cheaper, coal is cheaper, iron the B• 1130, induCed me to employ competent cad complete., expertencri workmen, wbo rwrried on n Plll3O VllllDelleth77 them .«,,«. for n.. sears, and who sold me their , tur ..t.rk noooOsary to mako ouch Instrument. 3.1.1 I •m now pi...pared to fural.ll my numerous fri-nds Pianos and Melodeons t) , aupeour Tune and fiedah, and will 107.A.MICELAS-Nyr rirSZVEIDIL ~r •ny length of thee, 14 gm COMPLETE KATIMIPACTION. My reputatt.n as a Wasictims sad bash:tem man woold iost if these Instruroonts should not prow* good, and I asun ths public that nothing is spared to bring about the rl.rtred result, sts Producing a fine an/ subatandal Mann, wbk will give anal antillnedon, and *nay In ease louver Mao say ?lase 1 kserwr TERMS VERY EASY PRICES VERY REASONABLE MEE r a...n.1) .1, tLiva PATRONIZE e., ME ME Your Own Citizens at Home ! . ()RDER:; at WHOLESALE or RETA IL Executed promptly and fairly. • thl , 111 IMMIO Ir y Produce, orders on Stores, old Isstrnmeats, Lunt to.r, sad any thing elm I mu sell spin or use in my bus iness, will be taken in esshangs for Mao Fortes, llelo deons, Dulcimers and any thing else I have in my store. P 1 %NOS TO LET ! TUNINU DONE WELL NEW' MUSIC EVERY WEEK' NONE BUT THE BEST ARTICLES ON HAND 11.4. gnu e eer board of II poor Chfollowing PAUL, coo lino. lion It Is sod I wIII eseitange It. WU WILLI biti " EDITOR? —You all remember the offer Mr Horace Waters of New York, has made fur advertising In roar papers The undersigned will do a little better, If one will favor him with a esti, and will furnish ynu with any Plano you order nr desire. Give me four ord., WV. WILLEVG trio, Jane 18,1869.-1 1118 GEORGE W. SMITH.) Brewers, Nesters and Hop Dealers. HAVING purchased the entire interest W SMITH, in told and well-known Point Brewery, Pittsburg, We ere new prepared to furnish to the nunisruss elastom ers of the old lirm, with an article of X, XX. Kennett and Bitter Ales, that cannot be excelled by any estahltah meat to this country. For the accommodation of our customers in thts "ec ti°on, leo haws appointed Mears. Coaghor*Clark, Who ts- sale Orocers. of trio, our sole aces ta for this vicinity. (obit' —lO7 FLEXING SW es. COAL OIL 1 GOAL OIL ! ! C:PERU* IN QUALITY AND LOW sr to Pries , ' Fl tYING reeelveo FRESH SUPPLY ants Purest and MTSIONGICAT COAL OIL to be had In the country at reduced priors srs ran now coffer it at. ONE DOLLAR THEGALLON by mingle Gallon and STILL lower when the qwmtlt tak•n a greater. rir Remember the plane la at th qtor t . of F.h 11. CARTER & BROTHER. DE FOREST, ARIEURONO, & CO. DRY GODS MERCHANTS, 80 & 82 Chambers St, N. Y. Nkr()1:1.1) nottfy the Trade that they are opening Weekly, in neer and lotentital pattern& the A. M. 0 32C P. CI- 1 A Nee Prtot, elate') excels every Print In the Country for perfection of execution and design In full Madder Colors. our Prints are cheaper then any in market, and toseUng with extensive sale lar Orders promptly attended to. Ibb4-1 y&S. AIRS. CURTIS has returned from New ju York, sod is Dow receiving her Stook a MILLINERY AND FANCY GOODS Consisting of INbilk, Satin and Straw Bonnets, Head Dreams, Cala, Flowers, Ribbons, euchre, Cherilies Velvet Ribbons, Collar/, 1411 !Ri k k e., is Also, Conwttot Hoop Skirts, Hosiery, Zephyr oeslitalttlegy Yarn sod materials for Embroidery, Lima VeU Kid Gloves, tope .or quality, ae-, ke, ail-of which w 111 le sold as lbw as can be bought elsewhere. rap- WILLINERS supplied with al! goods in their Rae a. 'W Dana e, MRS. Y. CUZtIS. Erie. Oct. 1, 1869.-17. I= BUILDERS HARD WARE A full and complete aroortment of fluitdoro SAM osre, for solo very 10. by 0,02241. J. 13. t r .n 1 Q,ADDLE & CARRIAGE TRIMMINGS 1..3 A full saworimoot of Saddlery sod Contort Trim mnyr•. for mile racy ivy On 21. J. 11. 13111.0 EN. CIAItPESTER'S and JOINER'S TOOLS, :bp lat g .taseami ebnipest dock is the City. et K.r1.., /et. IN, 1649.-21 I C. SILL.DhN's. SAUSAPE 'UTTERS ' Cleavers, Mincing Keivee, Belabor KaiTi4i, at air More et oet.2e-11 J. C. SELDF.X TABLE CUTLERY, Pocket Kniveb all styles and qualities, at low Floss, lry o.Bstok:N. TIMOTHY SEED ! TIMOTHY SEED 1 ! Ms Badman Dia Dim Clout 'Hotly ea 4 Slat Ift ceived, and for ask clasp fine, 05t.160160. =MR IMMO b Co. THE ERIE.• - -i.--- . :- . .\:- OBSERVER, PIANO FORTE t*IMTZT'AL. Frrl.lM. CM THE GENUINE UNRIVALED Chickering & Son's Piano Fortes, C.). !S FLEXING BRO'S., r StreCeSSOßd TO WAM.SIITTA PRINTS! M.ILL.I7M.Ft,"Ir- gottitai. THE RUINED CITY The shadows of ► thousand sprints. Unnumbered sunsets, sternly sleep Above the dust of per behest things That form this city's blasted hap Dull watch the crumbling columns keep Against the fierce, relentless sky, Hours, that on dial ooteth, ere , " Like unremembered phantoms. by . And still thw city of the dead Gives echo to so human Used A curse Is writ on every atoue, The Temple's latest pillar, itsvi Like some white Mammoth's bleaching Woo Its ►ltars know no deities Floe ooltunas of a palace rise, And when the son is red sod low, And glaring in the molten s►t.s, A shadow huge these columns lt.r.ok, That like eneme dark colossal hand In silence creeps across the sand The eenste sluindvrs, cumirous Of councils sage, of subtle schemes. But does no ling-ring tone survive To prove their presence inure than d•esius: No light of revelstious beams ♦round that voiceless Forum no,, Time bears upon his restless streams No reflex of the haughty brow I hat oft baa Gowned a nation's fate liere—where dark repttles cougrugate Where, where, is now the regal rag That clothed the monarch 4 1, you miser, On which the rank weed Baps Its flab Acrose the dusk this - somber hour' Alas' for pomp, alas' for p.wer, When Time unveils their nakedness. And Valour's strength end Re-auyi'slioecr Find naught to echo their distress And flattery—fine dedustre breath Melts In the Iron grasp of Death Day rise* with an angry ranee, ,Aa to blight the stagnant air, And hurls his &wee and fiery lance On that Doomed City's forebend hare The suneet'a wild and wandering hair Streams backward liki a comet a inane, And from thii deep acil rulien glare The ehuddering c ilumns , couch in tato And through the wreck ntarrattitsl years Ilse grim Wens atalka and sneer*. hoict. littraturt. Through the Snow. Mn.s Tubbs—fifty, fat and frosty, drest..te , l in bleek satin and flowery cap—como, from her housekeeping room t where she has been consulting Betty. her cook I into tho study of Itr Tubbs, it. r who. up later than ht- , 4 pouse, breakfasts leisurely, and read. his letters grimly, on tho Snowy Christm o morning He Is by no means a prepos-e , sing-looking gentle man, though tits co tt Llpertirio and hi-, waistcoat large. "I've ordered Betty." •zays MN. Tuu,., sinking into a (-Ilan. ••to make the fellott a small suet-duntiiling-----no plums or cut rants in it. Dr. lubbs and send it in with a rasher of bacon. The fat bacon. Di TULLB . the ham-like lerm I keep for 6, parlor t for if ushers a ill stop during tn.. holidat s where t het ain't wanted they tit-t take the consequences." "of course, my dear,' answered T u hh., pompoualy, and at the same tune winking terribly (for he has a viiional defect v‘ always keeps h;s moving.)' remark is most judiciote , . Indeed, it too truth be spoken. el Pfl thi, prudetirt.il ar rangement will LP unnecessary : for I think of giving Gray notiee a t O n ce , an d rid of him this very morning. a for—this getting-en rapid system of I,„ a , I never do. If u continues, Mrs. Tin.' shall soon cease to he mach r and in -.al— of Gattlien ffow-e, 1 r here's a lett.•r t , .It t the Bailey's tallier. prai-ing 1)14 y,1•1 progreaa ui ,Auhmeto Hui from Wiggett's ttio•;•• -ay that 1.1 .1 - general advanco , , all, here' , 4 a third letter. fr , on the it. Pike, canon of 1)1,14h-burr say that his grand,m, 'pi in t 4 me., is remarkahle 1 ,- Lrterni , ..l n ry dear, that there ate 0, i that they have learn: As mdt. h ir 0.• i; Latin in the halt' a. , a! some s e h,„,i, thy would have done ui three yeas Maid this, my dear: N..w ..t 'nurse bore getting, along m this A. 1 .1 will SOtill leave. Instea I of having dix years out of 'em apiece. te.o will be enoulrit under such a fori l li g pl There were the Fielding:A, too: wily they leave? Why, that they could draw trees well when they should hay.• •till in lines awl wbas. Iye tnld f this, Lille, .lad ,fterl; hut, MILLS Di. Tubbs, with pathetic dignity. • he mind" me no more th in tie... , boy, who 'Old Winker.' lie talks alsiut •rnor honesty' and trash of that sort. instead paying attention to my behest , . Soa. , tins is the case-sand it don't do to let boy education get on like a •team-emits.—i'd dismiss Liam, and—and---t his very morning. True, I must give ~iinte equivAlent. a, our arrangement was a intinth's eon eilii er side, and gratis b. - aril and heleing du ring the winter vacation. But better a 1....1 pound• than that this evil should make further head.- "A pound : \%e .hall save double that in the fellow's board. Why' it wants yet five weeks to the end of the vacation, and this—,ay at ten shillings a week—will he two pouh , l• t,•n tio and dolt at once, 1)r. Tubb.. whil.t 1 drcs. for rhtt relt. Awl Make htk"te ; wr eau then drive 'ii mitt then be bpared the nonsense• of 'go. 4-I,yes ' On my was , up stair., doctor, I sh•tll c•nut termand the suet dumpling.". 'Not without some little hesitation wire his wife4s eye is on him—for his conscience• seared as it is, points how base In, conduct is to one like Robert tray—Dr. Tub!+ draws cairtain sovereigns and shillings from ,k iq private drawer, and goes forth to the sehool-toom, where, by a most econotmeal scrap of fire, sits the gentlemanly usher.— His feet are on the hob. a little ,EschOus in his hand, a short pipe in his mouth t behind him lies the wide, high school-room, beyond that the bare windows and the snowy Yorkshire landscape of wooded }tights and barren moors. "Faugh'. smoke—smelling like tavern: ' are Dr. Tubbs' introductory word• am! then. taking a distant chair, he procee Is to business. It is soon effected—as most base things are—and to his infinite but se cret chagrin ; for he expected demur soil entr,•.dy 11 is usher's manner express, - sense of relief and release. True. wei,• the pompons pedagogue a reader .if hu man Ile iris. he might have detected on , vibration of desolate despair cross the ele.ir bright, ulan.) eye when the first word- of diamisSal came ; but it. is gone like trio flash, awl he sees nothing before him, but this serenity of self-reliant nrmlessl. Hurrying over his gruff adieu, pocketing his receipt, and basely oblivious of all linty's noble efforts to increase his school—which, when he came a year ago, was sinking to the verge of ruin—the pompous and shal low pedagogue makes his exit to go to church—a hollow conventionalist. not a sincere worshipper. Re4olute and brief as piun t z men itto, Gray gathers up bis few bor,ke front off the soh room shelves, hasten:. up stairs, thNks port-o3anteam, and directs it to Mistreat railway station, puts the rest of his things in a knapsack; and then going down; stairs he scatters a few shillings among the servants, visits the old yard-dog ERIE, PA, SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 31, 1860 in his kennel, gives one look around the old play-ground where has so many sad and weary hours, a nd goes his way, him knapsack on his shoulder, a good oaken stick in his hand. There are some worthy souls to peak to in this primitive Yorkshire village--the Parish clerk, the cobbler, the carrier ; then he hurries on ward with a brisk Ate') toward the moors, which lie so high and far away ; they must be crossed to reit, h the railway by which he intended to go. Turning by and hyoutof the more beat en highway, he proceeds down r lane with high . banks and hedge-rows on either side. It lies deep in snow, though traversed by recent is heels, and wind away presently toward woodland and river scenery of ex yucute beaut)—though wreathed in snow and crisped by frost. Here is a cottage, old-fashioned and substantial, an exquisite garden around it, and clothed with a glow ing pyracanthus. The berries are massed in corouals ; the leaves lie around in beds of richest green. But the windows---at least toward the lane—are shattered ; no one seems keeping a CliHstmits within. But as Robert Gray leans upon the pal tug looking toward a little window that now is bowery with scarlet and green—in summer with the myriad witacti trumpets of the yellow jasmine—a man plods by and touches his hat yer a wanting Mr. Watson, sir," ho says, '•you won't find him a‘ home to-day. Him and the raissis he gonp to sec their youngest son. Old Tab the maid's mind ing the li.iuse but she's uplatairs dressing I dussay now " ' • Vett, Mr. \Vatsun d esery el_ a holiday Uone for lone" "No I reckon they'll be home to-mor row. Miss Marrianna, the daughter, ain't She's gone to Master Fielding's, serest+ the moors, to keep holiday »•t' the children. She's a particle: favorite there —a sort cousin to th' So saying, liodge again touches his hat, and proceeds. When the honest fellow is out of sight, Gray opens the gate gently and steals in. Then from the before-mentioned bowery window he cuts a ' , pray of pyracanthus pith his pocket-knife. and coming forth again, hurries away like one guilty of a se rious sin. When he is far out of sight of the cottage, on his path again to the high way:he looks at it long and tenderly, and then opening 1111 knap.qtrk, lays it within. Tins shall go with Into lir and far away ; .t grew about her lsiwery window---s6c wheat he has met once or twig• in country homes—shelwhomn lie ha, spoken to a few Whotn;he has looked:uponand loved Lakea.uin who hay accomplished a mis sion. h o now walks titeaddy onward. re eaiiis the 1 . ), and begins the ascent to the moor----to the lower one.., which lie at the hitse .1 the higher and more remote. Deeper became the Snow, wilder the scene —neither mail nor bird nor beast giving I,fe to the whitened waste. By awl by he comes to a few i-olitary homesteads, and beyond these to A lonely grave-yard, where the dead sleep eternally amid the great hush ot nature lie must pause a moment, here lie. a poor -chool-boy who died ot cold and fever Gray nursed—Gray loved ), !in ; v cannot turn array, perhaps for e% er, wiihout sit) liio tarewell to the insen tient dust As he diverges to the gate of entrance into this Inn hurial-groundAmiddle-aged gentleman comes toward }t to the rear of the small thatched church, and, striving to undo th.• latch, can not; he; fingers may be cold. Ile may have entered the grave yard by some other path. For dAys, pos sibly, there ham been no passer in Be this ,t ma), the gentleman can not make e,.tress, liurr.es forward, and from Lis sale un , 1.. , •' the lan. h. • ['hank says the zentleman, rais his hat. • a court.tsv is alwars plea ant, e%. , 11 .t oiioly Yot I. , !iiro nt , or I thank —,L happy Ci.ri-airris —l% e. ).-A day -- 11 , is 4 lian.l,,ino. thouplitiul wan, ot , Itts he,r kaichetl with nij In. , in .tiner pro•lipt, him word, court, Irk,.. one %%i are inlny with men ant he t' a Yorkshire to tnutacturer—who k IItOVA ' — rnany have in the h0,14..v. of tlie,e :oh, ciact — , g.thering thole 10 11,u round th,ru, mid ruakaig :,teuan their wilhn.; 1V hen the Atrangor is •)ut of sight Gra) 1 , 0 ,, ec , In , ti , i ,•t tvi , m,nr the footsteps in the snow, they lead him to a simple gra% estime it the rear of the church, off which the .now heen recently brushed : on I t is recorded the death of two old persons— wan and a ife—who died some live years before. Their unos were Fielding: their marriage life a lung one, considering the years they lived, ••I thought as much," says Gray to him self, "that gentleman was Mr. Fielding, the rich spinner, and this the grave of his hither and mother. I have hearth that he was as noble a son as he is a noble father ; husband, masterand man. Yes! I thought there VMS a likeness in his face to the boys that came to Tubb's, to be taught drawuag, half a year ago. Ilow often does the pro s tie hide the depths of a poetic nature:— This is his visit to his parents' grave, on the anniversary of the death . and who knows of what worth such visitation and self-communion may be? The virtues of a ) ear may be sown thus in a single hour." Gray passes on to the schoolboy's solita ry grave. No reverent feet have visited it —no reverent feet have scraped off the dazzling snow. The marks where the lit tle redbreasts have hopped acmes it are plainly visible, and yet it is not solitary ; the wind sings a dirge, the snow presses ;lownily, and at night the moonlight sweeps .eer it and silvers it with glory. Under the arch of heaven no single thing but what has some hymn sung to it—some tears wept over it by nature! The poor usher resumes his walk pres ently, tor he has far to go. The cold is be numbing, the snow deeper, yet he preeses on ; and he stops to find a small flask in tLe locket of his outer coat.; from this lie sips a drop of brandy, (it holds but very little,) and then plods on The day begin= to fade—the distance is yet considerable— he grows anxious. At length the moor dips downward into the valley, and beyond this is the higher, bleaker, lonelier moor, across which lies the station lie wishes to reach : through the valley sweeps a vast water-power, and here stand the wondrous mill in which daily work three thousand people. employ ed by John Fielding, the great cotton lord. But the mighty giant of spindle and mule ,!eels to-lay, the fires are low, and labor t cst.s her hands! Some mile from the mill tile mansion of the cotton lord stands em kosomed in woods, and here at the foot of the fell is a cluster of cottages. Descending to one of these he asks a wo man standing at a door the nearest way to the opposite fell. "Why, crow' the beck by the bridge, and take the road before thee. But oh, sir! it's a coming on a wild night for the moors : and now I'm thinking, if you go by Gray atones—Mr. Fielding's park anew there— you'd find it more sheltered like, and a bit nigher still. You can't miss the way if ye keep this side the beck to the mill ; then crois it, and a bit beyond get into the park by a stile ; the path then'll take you by Greystone-pool--a mighty piece of wa ter, all frozen over now—and toward the end leads up the way to the moors. You can't migs it, theught it's coming on u wild night, I fear." Gray hurries on. passer the mill, the mill-hands' liottages—almost ;Al of them tenantless to-day--finds his way to the pool and so to its furtherest side near the moor. As he approaches the road leading there to, he sees a wan dlreMani •s • servant standing on the bank .rs Oiougli attending three or four boys who are skating up and down the pond. They are all of thetn fine, athletic lads, and Gray knoviii them to be his old drawing pupils. the Fieldings.— Though he has no intention 4.11 approach ing them, for they are •katlug some dis tance from where he ti.i- torn off, he can not refrain fikom stns m t s moment to watch them. As he doe- a bell at the hall rings loud and ele..r its echoes are taken up in the "(lie/silt 1110Orn, and re tielio4-41 back again -ilentletnen, esils the ~ervaint, "there ie thu first dinner•t.able vuu had better re turn- They prepare, as it stMll3 to obey, by skating toward the shore ; and Gray turns away, not willing to be recognized and de tain, d. for he feels desolate and low in heart. Fur him nu weleonimg feast is spread, nu ear listens for hint, no eye ex pects hint. Snow before him, snow behind hint—a sail and solemn Christmas day to hint! Yet the snolks of w in te r hid e t h e buds of spring, and out of our sorrow our truest joys are ottenest burn. He has turned 'his lace and his steps away from the per toward the moor, when a crash, followed by awful cries, met his ear. Looking round, hurrying toward the pool, he sees that the cancels youth, in skating toward the shore, grounded dan gerous ice ; it cracked, and he fell through. Ho is now struggling in the water—his head above it, his hands battling with the lee ; while his brothers, hastening to his rescue, seem in peril too. The poor de mented servant—a coward, perhaps, by nature—stands on the shore, wringing his hands and shouting. At a dozen athletic bounds tiray has reached the spot. In another moment he has thrown off his coat, bat and knapsack. "Stephen: Walter: Falkland: - he calls: "don't attempt that ; come to Ilarry's rescue." Even while he speaks he dashes his way across the ice, goes through it— is in the pool , tiot n minute too soon— the lad is spent. and, benumbed with cold, is sinking. "A brave heart. H.irry—a hand there ; there, now my arm's around you—bear up. I'm tiray your ulsl drawing-roaster." fold ing the Cad's head above water, swimming dextrously, battling with the ice, in an anxious moment or two lie has reached the shore. flaying Itet_.4l"4 Bray's warning, the other boys ray...ale, too, and noW crowd round. - Harry to not much the worse," said Gray, kindly..,, the .pent and benuutbed lad leans on Iwo and I.,tins to recover.— "A near chance . l.ot a drop of brandy,. with a tun how, and warm bath, will set hall all right Walter, feel in my coat. Locket, You'll find m) brandy flask; it holds but a drop, it'll do goo(l. - So sa)ing, when the tta-k found. l irav n Li t hos Har ry take what It Indd., and then hurries him utf hmno "But you'll tsune. Gray?" says Stephen, who is the next oldest to Harry, ''papa will never torgive os. if you don't come, after having saved us our dear Harry. Wn al ways liked you. (tray. and were talking of you this very morning. Come on ; dripping like a dog." "Thank you ; 1 want to be at—station by eight o'clock to-mght. and at Leeds to. morrow, so I (vivo dry undergar- merits in my ktiair,atek here, which I can cliangc to that f‘Kliler shed pm - der. Good by, I want to, toss the moor before it too late." -Th e moor (-fray Why, you'll hare a h•tra tieht w!t u the -now. Our slieplle:tl.l report it as vet .feel. But why .ire you u- , 1 for a few Ip+nr-''' have loft I tauzllt too fast for turn : hot if f r wli Lee& by to-morrow may get a ttim)r-hip : for there WILM aim ad vertisement 1, lattng it) one in the limit pa p.m.„s:,..) rum, home. So•pkomm : write to You thence.' Gray does n -i..y for any reply , but eILIII4 hi+ coat and knapsack, hurries to the distant shed lion- ho changes 111 , 1 ..liot4s and ne:th.-r gAr aatews and thou, to gi.t warm. , e "1r out .4 run as stlon al be has dresseci and ..wung his knapsack on.— Up the snowy 1011.1. by the• moorland crag 4, on to the moor wide. wild waste 01 whitene,l Vet some mac through the day marks the road 411tiklOill v tOr it to be easy to find, while light lists and the snow holds off; so lie keeps on at a rye! pace: tor the whole distance now to traverse is hat .iome six miles, and he is not without hope that it will be easily effected. But presently the snow-drifts get deeper, and bailie him more and more at every step. The clouds charged with snow bring day suddenly to a close : and at last it begins to snow heav ily, as though the clouds bad burst. Still he keeps his way, not without hope. But when the road becomes more and more in distmet, when the sti , iw comes down heav ier and heavier still, when the rising wimp whirls it round and. when the cold beanies so intense 104 to benumb linn, even while he is moving and regrets his folly in hav ing slighted the kindly invitation to Mr. Fielding's house. But tray is a proud man: he has hail the birth and education of a gentleman, and he eon not go/awning any where uninvited. like a beggar. At last. hopeless of regaining the track, thoroughly spent, and growing drowsy. he sits down on a eratr the storm whirling around him and :I re , lfle its Mood Then he closes his eyes lied in that dreamy en thanasia which preee.les death by cold.— From this he is .tr. , 4-0.1 by something warm and wet toueinme his !oid—something ly ing heavily on his knee. Reluctantly—J ahnost with difficulty—lie asserts with sufficient will and volition to open his eyes: and then lie shepherd's dog rests its paw , : upon hi- 1.11,:e. .tnd larks bet hands At the isatna in ituticit a loud halloo is hoard. With st ill In, o diffii_ulty than he has o pen e d labs is ‘ es. he makes a faint reply, for he is 1.-ori-i• the rescue is at hand.— It is seareel) tutored before a shepherd casts bark the blinding snow and stands besiil him. - If you ploane, sir, you must come with us. As soon as lie hie ird of the tuatter, Mr Fielding sent me an‘l another oil . with hor , e and Cie (in the moor after you : for no 4 - me. lie knew. could live nut such a night." But Gray eun wily .peak. So the Shep herds assist : now einnin4 up with the lioNe, they place 11. m on it. give him some whisky they h iv, with Chem. and one mountine beleirel. so s- to hold the be numbed gentleman. the other leads the way hack to tiruystorms. But the way is hart to find, the %now so blinds and baffles them, so lies in monstrous drifts, and the cold so benumbing : vet thro' this desolate waste they get at last, and by eight o'clock reach the hall. There, in the wide porch, a whole group of sympathizing friends welcome the-poor gentleman. Ile can not talk much, but he replies to the pressure of their warm and kindly words. "There, take my arm-and lean on me," says the same gentleman for ,whom Gray opened the gate of the little, lonely burial ground this very morn ; "you bave twice served me to-day, once in a manner irre payable :so let me serve in turn." Thus saying, Gray is led up stairs to a chamber, where a warm bath and dry clothes await $1,50 PER ANNUM IN ADVANCE NUMBER 43 him Cherished and refreshed he lea down on a sofa. and has soup and wine and other restoratives These taken he sinks into a sleep. When be awakes it is ten o'clock or more ; yet he finds Mr. Field ing seated beside him. "God ever love and bless you, sir!" he says, taking Gray's hand ; -for you I owe the life of my priceless boy. I can never repay you, for they have told me all—your bravery, your goodness---everything. But you must not leave us. Mr. Gray, for a long time. It wee I who advertised Ir the last Leeds newspaper ; for my boys want a master, and you were the one I thought of and should have but I (lid not know that you were leasing that mean, pompous, shallow hypocrite, Tuble. Make your mind happy, sir ; )ou have a home here ; to-morrow we will talk of money af- Curs. But be sure, even when your office ends, pit] shall find-me a sincere friend -- Now, do you think you are strong enough to come down and see the Christmas-tree. and Sir Roger de Coverley danced? Mrs. Fielding and all my people want to thank you, too." .4 - )h: yes, he is strong enough ; for shall he not see the pretty Sfariatina. the idol of his dreams!" So they go down arm-in-arm togetbr. and Mrs. Fielding and all the guests are earnest and warm in saying grateful and kindly words ; and there is Marianna. little tremulous and timid and still moro so, when Gray gives her oil' the Christtna.s tree a small needle-book, on which is finely wrought--- - Love me. and I'll love Gray sits down beside one of the glowing fires, while they dance Slr Roger le Cover ly. But by-and-by he leave. , the dams and sits down beside him "I was so sorry for you, Mr. bray. ' she says, "think of you on the Weak moor." "Were your that is good news, Marian-' no. Before I ascended the moor I had had a long walk. I had been past a cer•' tam cottage, and cut off a spray of its rud dy pyrecanthus ; it is now up sours in my, wallet. But Ipm going to stay here as tutor. It is a piece of richer fortune than I qiou g ht of, particularly if the little one, whose faee I first saw beside those cottage window-panes, is a glad." She does not answer, but lays her hamd in his, (all the rest of the folk, are mad, dancing Sir Roger.) and looks up with tear dimmed eves in tag., So he came through the snow , fur ti is and this : fie is no longer gltolista but rich ly loved By sorrows we are baptized to holier du tieg and to happier AN AINMITION CLER4.YIII N SELLS fill SLAM , AND LIVES ON THE PROCEEDS.—Rev. Dr. Potts, Pastor of the University Place Presbyterian Church, New York. is one of those divines who utters denunciation= from the pulpit against the institution of Shive ry. lie preached a Thanksgiving sermon last fall in which he presented the wick edness of Slavery. &c. The sermon found its way down south where It seems Dr. Potts formerly resided, and-owned a plan: tatton of 1,201 acres. and fifty- t ix slaves, in Mississippi. The Natchez (Miss.) Courier gives an exposition of the Rev. gentleman's slave property. Upon the avails of which he now lives. It seems he 4..1.1 his sLives and plantation taking a mortgage upon them for security. A law su:t subsequently aroso between the Doctor and other parties to I recover the value of the property with in terest. The reurier gives all the parti,u las from the Court records. and Luncludes .ta 1./i/Jtri: Dr. Potts succeeded iu the Chancery D.strict Court. anil Messrs. I)enni,toun & appealed. The case was then argued and re-argued before the High Court, and decided in April. lm3q. The decision was that Dr. Potts' mortgage on these "chat tels" held priority to that of the Messrs. Dennistoun : and that Dr. Potts' ten per cent interest was not an usurious transac tion, as was alleged, it heing to secure a loan of trioney. The s.ile of :he "chattels" was ordered in Jantisry, 1534, without a word being said about "family separations." and the sale mui accordingly wade. The Rev. Dr. Potts received his princip.il and ten per cent interest, in all at,out which he securely invested in other prop erty, and upon the interest of which he now lives in affluence. to preach before a sympathizing congregation about the late guage of "Southern statute books degrad ing human beings to a level of chattels," and to arouse them to a realization of how shocking a thing it is, and how entirely beyond vindication to speak of chattels at all ; and how inhuman and how much at war with christion rights and duties it is-to expose human beings to the breaking up of domestic bonds and in the be para. Lion of fatiatltes. After this Thanksgiving Phillipic to his ho doubt delightt.d.ituditory in the Fifth avenue. New York. we should hke to have read in his and their hearing the record of his long continued and strenuous endeav or:, ~ucee.sful at la.st, to realize out of such chattels hi+ $15.R9 . 2. and his ten per cent interest for nearly fourteen years. We ha% e wondered somewhat that Dr. Potts er !tidied to our notice of los sermon We gave him ever% opportii ni'v lie! sent hint a marked ropy. We twn now understand the motive of his siletu•e least said, they sooner mended." ti.o I lIIOW I Mn.: 60 cram, onir be kind Thus haxl be: 1.--hut behind tisio.l-I,ye, Dr. Potts fl.e next Thank 4 giving sermon m.Tainst ilitvery had better he preached by .orne one who tw not now en joying the fruits of the axle of tift)-six. "chattels ' and their natural Increa,.t4 A ticoa Purbon who pre-pled over x little flock in one of the back town 4 in the State of w without any exception, the most eccentric divine-we ever knew. Ills eA:centilettles were carried as far in the pulpit OA out of it. An :nstanee we will refute . Among the church members was one who invariably made a practice of leaving ere the parson was two-thirds through the sermon. This was practiced so long that after a while it became a matter of course. and no one, save the divine, seemed to take notice of it. And he at length told broth er P. that such a thing must be needles 4, fait P. said at that hour his family needed his senates a' home, and he must 41, nevertheless. On leaving church he al ways took a round about course, which, by some mysterious means, always brought him in close proximity to the village tav ern, which he would enter, "and thereby hangs a tale." Parson B— —learned from some source that I'.'s object in leaving church was to obtain a "dram." and he determined to stop his leaving and disturbing the congre gation if future, if such a thing was possi ble. The next Sabbath, Brother P. -left his seat at the same time, and started for the door, when Parson B--exclaimed • "Brother P." P., on being. addressed, stopped short, and gazed towards the pulpit. "Brother P. " continued the parson, "there is no ne ed ot youtleaving church at Pe this time, .as I e‘t the tavern this morn ing, I made, arrangements with the land lord to keep your toddy hot until church was out." The surprise and mortifkation of the brother can hardly be imagined. In High Life. (Irma Undi Dotson Tria Puna.) runt delightful locality known as Math am, C., W., the scene f numerous negro disturbs", cos of late, and the object of much unenviable notoriety abroad, has la i n dis tinguished itself in its own paoaliar war. It ,is well known that this place, which u forty miles bons Detroit River, is overrun with negroes to such an extant that they have grown bold with numbers, and as sumed authoritk which nothing but stren uous measures can resist. The surround ing country is virtually under their control, as the township elects:ma prove, and their efforts to obtain possession of the schools a few weeks since, together with the riot ous proceedings which resulted, are -well known. The present occurrence, however, is more peculiar in its nature, and, if a Bible, more aggravating to the whites t any that has yet been brought to light. About two years since, the Exeter Hall Atm:Anion Solaety, a British association, whose principal business is meddling with other people's affairs, and neglecting it own, sent out here from England, amon other missionaries, a young woman named King, whose mistaken philanthropy bad inducted her to devote herself to the thank less tea of improving and reforming our fugitive Africans. She is at this time nine teen or twenty years of age, an intelligent and refined lady, and possessed of an an nuity of several hundred dollars a year. accrimig from her property at home. Her affisetionete interest in the negroes culmi nateda day or two since in her marriage to an old darkey preacher named Pinck ney, near Chatham, an event which took the community by surprise, and excited the most intense disgust and indignation, as -he was very well known and, from her iNiueutlon cud attainments, much respect ed. The motives which led her to disgrace herself in this manner it is useless to spec ulate upon. Experience has determined that white women of all degrees can throw themselves into the disgusting embnes 4 of Any black scamp who invites them, and we are nut sufficiently skilled in the law of analogies to trace the connection by which they are led. The logic must be finely shaded that explains the fact. The couple were married by an Episco pal clergyman. and immediately took pos session of their domicil. The shades of night had hardly closed around them be fore the house was assaulted by a gathering of abf)ut one hundred white citizens. who first smashed the windows, then kicked the door in. and without ceremony pro ceeded in a demonstration on the house which threatened to demolish it oval the heath of tbe bridal pair. No harm wasof t. r.. 1 a.. thorn, but the efforts of the crowd did not leithfi u !mil unmistakeable evidence 01 their disgust had been furnished, when th.• asptring neiao and his super-elegant piece it household furniture were inform . t t:„ t tli.• operation would be repeated ut ten us an expression of sentiment on tlit. p.irt of th.• white citizens was needed. Ile . , as well a- the rest of the negro popu l-tipn,.i.-t.- co% eraived by the popular out u • ',tug. and no resistance was of tea w.is, perhaps, fortunate, as a yerier,il row would have followed any SILICII ntoi•cment. The party wihy took the law into then own hands in thiq case were respectable. and responsible citizens, who were unable to restrain their indignation at such out rages upon decency. There was but one expression of sentiment, and that was that blackatuoor deserved hanging, and that the wealthy, and refined and philanthro pic leiiss King ought to be seat back to the Exeter Hall Abolition Society as a fit sub ject for the exercise of their reformatory twaddle. The universal disgust, excited by the occurrence is undisguised and the female is branded as completely as though the touch of her negro paramour had burnt the mark of Cain on her forehead. Sit.oui...se TIME FOR A MA Rai AGL.—A lov ing coupli in Memphis, Tennessee, were last week married antler the following sing ular circumstances : They were taking a carriage ride in one• of the principal streets in that c,cy, when they chanced to meet a Judge Bill who v. - as riding leisurely along upon a favorite donkey. They at once ac costed him and requested him to unite them in ti: , holy bonds of wedlock. He acceded to the proposition, and without dismounting, performed the ceremony. making the occupants of the vehicle one. and having for witnesses the mule and two or three persons who were passing at the time. "]JOWL RULAS TRL COURT."-A. jury in Texas lately acquitted a man on the charge of horse-stealing. although the crime was clearly proven against him, simply because he stole the horse to elope with his sweet heart, who was present in court during the trial, and waiting to marry him if acquit ted. The jurors had probably all been in love themselvcs, at one period or another of their lives, and there was not perhaps one of them but what would have done the same thing, in their younger days. if they couldn't have got their wives without. 121%.. At the Leeds Chamber of Commerce recently, it was stated by the President that a Frenchman had submitted to him a piece of cloth seventy-two inches in width which he affirmed he could produce at :it per yard. The principle was the adoption of a machine which wrapped a wollen thread around a cotton thread, and this produced a fabric looking like wollen, but which could he produced at the price named The machinery is to be tested. esl)„,. A siti.zulAr lawsuit is going on in London. a gentleman having sued a con fectioner for putting too many portraits of Mr. Spurn upon a supply of bonbons he hail nr.l , .: L-41. The lids were to be orna mented with wirtraite of celebrated living personages. and the confectioner had put five Spurgeon* in each dozen. The plain tiff had no objection to a fair proportion of Spurgeon in his sweetmeats, but he 110 five out ocevery twelve was more Spurgeon than he dr his guests could stand. Itifq. The Boston Bullets has the subjoin %%uich reminds one of the Daniel and blue-cotton umbrella story : ••What's that a pictur on?" said a coun tr2, man, in our hearing the other day, in print store. to the proprietor, who w,,* turning over seine engravings. - That., sir." said the dealer. "Joshua e4 , tpinanding the Aun to stand still." -Du tell Wall, which is Josh, an-1 whicKis his son?" Serccuxs.—The Sew York Tribune ',flys: The Hon. Abraham Lin coln virited the Five Points of Industry on Sunday, where he made a brief and affect ing addres.: to the children. He left Ow, city for ilia Weatern home on Month.) morning." The Tribun, does not say how much Mr. Lixcota charged for his speech —as it w.i.s delivered to children, we sup t rged 11. adted only "half price," say - .l 01). I=o titgii. It is stated that a suite of 'wont) noblemen and distinguished gentlemen will iicconapany the Prince of Wales on In.. visit, to Canada this Spring. It is said fur. then that His Royal Highness the Duke or Cambridge, the Duke of Newcastle, and liejor General Bruce, will be among the notabilities on that occasion. BS. The superintendent of Baptist, col. portage in Virginia has instructed the book agent of the Sunday school and publication board(T. J. Starke, of itiehmond,) to send back all the copies of Sptageon's serznon4 ordered for their eolporteurs and now on hand. "iiir," said a little girl to her mother, do the men want 'to get married as the woman do ?" "Pshaw l what are you talking about?" "Why ma, the woman who come here are always talking about getting married, and the men don't do so."