The Susquehanna register. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1854, August 22, 1850, Image 1

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VOLUME XXV.
TICE REGISTER.
PUI3LISIIED EVERY THURSDAY BY .
• James W. Chaßmaii.
•
Advance payment in Cash per year .4.1 60
If p4id within the rear, .; 2 00
ri,)t, at, the end of tile year, P. 50
For the Susipehainia Register
The - Night Burial
BY . sues. S. L M. FAsi,FirE
softly fell - the lengthuing shadows,
Over, hill and tree and plain l ;
And no sound save the law murmur'
Of the waters godly came.
•itid the starry host above us
4Yer our pathway gently shed
Light to guide us with our loved one
Ta her last cold narrow bed:
Dreamed we not when morning o'er us
Shed its bright and gladscime - ra:y,
That 17:scene so sad and feallul4
Thus fur us would close the day—
Dreamed we not that he woo bore her
Frum her home a happy bride,.
Homeward then her form was bearing,
Cola and by his side.
Yet around ber grave we gatheraa
Mid the deep still hush of night—
Pitting time . to hide our treasures
Ever from oor eatehly sigitt •
There we laid her, by her loved one,
- Where she wished that she might relit ;
Though :Tar hearts wore stricied4eeply,
Yet we. know that she was bleit.
Then we heard the low dull rattli4g
Of the damp and heavy earth, .
A n.l we saw them phwc.nbo`•e her,
(me by one the fresh green turf—
Then we felt that we should listen
For that mite we loyed, in vain
-1 hat we ne'eishorild took upon het
In her r,:latkornariess ngnin
'Mid the deepning gloom around 4 11 .4
Left we our loved one to'ileep---
;-leep, which knows no bitter waking,
Blissful, long. and strangely cieep-. 7
l'iwre we left her 'mid the shadows
'Neath the gentle star-light sky,
"Arhile unseen, unheard by ntortais,
Angel watchers hovered nigh.
Cu.. by one the lights are Attiing
From our pattiway'and our hearth ;
One by ova the links are lo.;iug
That hart bound us down ty, earth.
One by one the loved are gatiiering : ',
tne Ltesr-vti sprit.land—
There we hope at last to meet Cheat—
One unbroken hour,ah_old_ band. ' ,
Ye-, dear Jane, while hearts are weeping
t)'er that narrow Name of thine, -
1.%,,Nv we. thr.: ;•ptrit."., roaming
In a bri„ . 4l.oer. better clime.
Ar.d. n i ft,Pl that thou art rotmil us,
un-eau by mortal eye.
softest whi=ffs
r flowing tears be dry.
• • •.r flowers in beauty linger
. thy culd and lifeless clay,
P .",pirit roams nt 'plea ore
the tiphis of endless .
epr, are dimming
T 14.1,11 we of illy happy home,
Where no blighting charge can erer
Itound air Tiri=_ dwelling come-.
Aug.
Wrong riot the laboringloor. -
el rur...slzer. ELLTOT, OF s;11:111F.ID, ESA:L.4NO.
l':' ::,‘ not the laboring; poor . by whent,Le live! ,
`A nog not your Munblefellow-worms,ye,ptond,
,: i ~,d will not the poor man's wrongs forgive,
:iu hoar his plea,and have his plea elli . ),We r d...
obe not like the vapors, splendorrolrd i 1 ;
That sprung from earth's green breait Mint the
sky, ie
, , -- , ..• k.,-- -...- ,, ,ti. - ..1 ,- ?..“:,-,
Thor.Thor.Tread around eohtogion black Orli* d,
Till all Who mourn the dead inep4i!ii ' l
l
' . , . ~,,ill t.i.;i .
). ' imitate the bount& cl
tus orids.ha.rie.l
re:ghted witl., bliss, front liver, vale and lain,
L thankful clouds, dial heantifY.;*.fkieii ' — ir
Then fill the, lap of !i:rth %rah. Un44.1314 all,.
e, . emulate the Tresuntaih sad the flood;-'1 -- :''
Tiaa trade in blessingswith the mighty 4eep,l'.'-; •
. : .. , .3ti.._.d to peace and satisfied with good; 1 '-
1 eeian t , eeart be happy as a thitd s asl p. ,
1°
The Maidens SolllilOy:".:° - : i
filluden alone Milton in :kiez hand, Sbe
pens at die pa,,age," Hail, wedded level nkyste—
e..)l2a law," ete. She soliloquizes:]
• r i. 41 he eu' Milton thou reasoinek'sieeil =
whence Ahis plew•ing hope, this final 431 re,
ius longing after tristritniwy 1 ' 1•3 f. 7. A
rhence this t.ecret. dreg. a this insrarti bon*
lying =espoused i Why shnaks the heart.
on itself, and startles at celibacy. ,'1
reason, faithful reason, that stirs within .10 ;
natures self that points out an alliance,
.. , I.mtimates a husband to the sex.
LI.-nage ! thou pleating, and yet anxious thought!
two* ulna new, rariouschauges must we pass;
marriage state in prospect lies before me i ,
ut t•hadows, clouds, cod darkness, rest uporkit,
• ere will I bold. If nature proMpts_ 4110 wish • -1 ,
•tid that she does is plain from allber:wer6i
ur duty, interest, pleasure bids indulge it, I',
or the great end of natures law is bliss.
.;
: , at yet--in wedlock—the tromluir•;Mist obey
weary of these doubts ;tke priest r1&1J end lenr ;
...or rashly do I venture loss andigstint. '- • '-•
lose re and bandag% meet my thoughts at ic4 •
wed, my liberty is gone lorerei; • '
happiness itself Irem this secured t - r'
vs first shall iieeeiriliense my losl4. -!
' wiletrztY chameAtall have faded.
• eyesgroti"dirti,4ind.stature bend iriitt, pork
, *tun, yrieudimpolhall inneeed ie,
Pleased rl/ worn infsmity.44.4eath,. •
wed suceessively*Anotheifene& LI it its •
••I,'
Allr. Ban lately. snarri44,loC4ss-,GoLe, We
'obi if the LegislatureNW li'ut'4Own
__t an, or prevent it from issuing SMALL BLIALI.
"lieti.4ll.l, OF :TAB 1 1 ) . E0Y'LE, IS 3 1 11 F,, I.,EGErTE SOURCE, D TEE ii_APPINES:S OF THE .PEOPLE THE TRITE ENO OF _OOi'EROENT:'
=MIMMI
z..:1 .7"' .7.
r..• •- ~•,
'Seth Wilt6i Elk County Witness.
, • „In the.spring of 1846, after the, close of a
4611 tiresome session of tike ' Pennsylvania
legiSlature, the *writer Was'itriitect by 'Colonel
the clerk of the Iroise of Repro
ilentatives;io aecompany hiurtohia home in
the backwoods of new •county that I
had been, partitioned off frourjefferson, Clear
field, and M'lcean, at the sesSion. The object
of this visit was two _fia ; ,first„ to enjoy the
- 4n,e, trout .fishing of: that prolific region, (I
have taken ' here three hundred : that would
-Tiveray,e relibt inClies, in sib inputs, with a
worm.) and secondly, to_aisisf•the- Colonel in
getting the Sent of Stitice' where fib wanted
'The thing war so well worked that I
!Mist telf it before' coming to thetrWsnit story.
- The Colonel owned 'a Mill .and.store-atCal
! edonia, on one edge iof . the eounty,land a I
very fine mill at Riclgeway,the principal . town ,
:in the county. He wanted the.courthouse
at. Ridgeway, but was *tot inclined to pay
anything 'for it, as Mr. John Ridgeway, a
millionare of Philadelphia ; . owned nearly all 1
the land-abont it„-autithe•county seat would ,
greatly increaseits,value. plan
wa.i to pat in.strong,4for .Caledonia,' and he
did. lle offered to build the courthouse and•
jail, and givo .boncls thereof if Caledonia
sltonld be chosen. Ridgkay becit t
mt. ri 6s i
•,• •• -
ened;,and offered sintifiit - preposition, fur lit
own town, which was, of course accepted by
the commissioners, who were all perional
i friends of the Colonel.
One day the Colonel and myself went over
te,Coledonia, to see how things flourished
i-e:r there, and eat some of Aunt Sally War
eer:A_ pumpkin pies and venisonsteaks; _and
uu arriving at the door, found. a justice's court
iu (ull blast. The suit grew out of s, lumber
speculation, but as near us I could tell by the
' teStimony of the witnesses generally, the
stood about six for one and baif-a do
zeillfor the other. One of the parties Was a
malt of* Con4iilerable,'re - ady cash, While the
ir,erth ..noutinemat,dime..
[Lulls, the, man of Me.-Ms, bud no& l'eeu tong
in those parts, and little was ItWown of him
exci.pt- what had droked from Seth Willet,
One night at. Warner'a „store. Ile ,wasin: for
it at, thc-tanc, but ettongh was understood to
ii K alic the settlers of Elk - form a.bad opinion
of . .14arris.
As the time of trial drew nigh,-some who
were in the store whim Seth was "'blowing "
about Harris, began to try xi) recollect ‘viiat
11,! safl, .ap (1 the other party in the case was
it/foaled that' he had a first-rate Wit'nes4 (51.
Ireo, ,
. Seth was forthwith waited upon and
_purged - by a young man named Winslow,
who acted as attorney for the prosecutor.—
All the information he possessed of Harris
-was freely' and unswipeeting,ly given, and
WiasloN noted iti down at correctly as he
The day previous to the trial, the proNecu
tor and Itarris met at the store.
" Well, you're going on with the law-suit,
I s'pose r asked 11...trns.
'f u' be bare I am, and Pll make you smelt
cotton., to."
Bahl" said Harris, "you can't touch bot
tom.",
Tech bottom .Ca-an't hey I -Just Tau
wait till I git Seth Willits on the-stand, an'
swore en the bible, tut . see if I-ea-will Per
haps L hain't becr'd nothin' about sheep over
to Tioga county. and robbin' of ',lent:init.::
store down to Fainted Post, heyi"
What the devil are you talking about ?"
asked Barris, apparently perfectly in a fog at
) the purport of the language he bad beard.
" I Liow o cue that.'.s 'mai," said the plain :
i tiff';_ " but.let's..liqupr r ,any how."
lost•It0, LiMA:
Ilid you ..4yerlivo in- .Tioga county,
•
" Arlthing..about aheep- 7 -3," ,
Painted Nor, 0 7 -1 14,ena. P ost.
",
- r• 40th.Jenititises'` store," said Seth , with
nt
1 grA*4)7,,
!ISO: 1W rca wouldn't be 0 bad. pile,
.
! . ‘,Not4'l t, Itwinildn' that's fact... Got
Bart, amount to lend on a stow note I"
WO); I iriight ieiape it tip'—'-leould• give
• :11'011k,4ndred down, , and the rest after:the
court's 'adjourned." .
' Harris counted out the hundred and rolled
it up, and heldlt terifrtingly in his hand.
Seth's eyes • pealedr..iiiiiirrs; mid
' .*)u - th fairly _dr:lnked t9ngnO Ovii:4l: at thy
• display. ; It was more money than he ever
had owned in his life:4-
laltive von ev=er heard that - 1 st4le sheep
*IVO P • •
i“..Yoere sure li4ttiudilon'll• have , to swear,
ih d'cittrt * ' ";
..,`;'8 , 641'1#4 , 400* '*isl :Ciftd . Auli thebi is
4Su.' re .- T ,-par4ntly.,surZ t : • •.,-,
Itoranythlditratiout-myibeing implicated
in . Ibe . robtketir orikeitititeS . tord" still lie! ding
giefigt,Wiiilr itituilletti . .er
the ends, ande.iliThitingth l en "and 17s..snOit
ttuitalicingly.
" N l p . ;111 sweirlfrfeteeLtrard nobody tiny
3 .0 n !i'=f."
gtYiiir are an bece's
hunfirl4 4 lk 4494at , ,, 11 . 142 • °filer hundred
yiakeheil CcnirtY Tr:
.;;Tbe court had been: 4idmion 'some time
when ihts 4 Marlai'Wulintigelf arrived. \-Seth
itaialiOr,bo:ol4tdriv - ; 'Aie was to destroy
the dibMoe ortraras s ' by testiftin'rrin
`orgordSte Sat sip taralliA;bery at
l'iritftek rod.t-tik. Wittoktiv-rocoaded. to
.
rail4PAilbc4qaPYtlting ati pat: the arly
lAtory of Mr. iratris
MONTROSE": PENNIA:, THURSDAY, AUGUST-22, 1850.
'. I re - a4ti about the itijins a!tetnpt
ing to burn . . John Harris itt H4trrisburgh, in
the year seVeacettilmadred anU—"
"Stop, stop Yost, misapprehend me.
Have you.anything agaiitst the prisoner at
the bar ?"
" %Fall, I guess I ha-fat. I had, I'd
take it away, instanter."
" Do you,.ot- do you not knox* that he was
charged with sheep- Ftealing in -coun
ty ?"
" Ca-saersay't I. du."
" Do you, or. do you not know'. that he, wn
implicsated in tho‘robbery of Mr. Jenkin's
store, at Painted Post ?"
" llan`rno knowledv. on the pint."
"Iltive.:you never 14:std. while li~in at
Painted Post; that lie was suspected of being
engaged in the robbery .1"
4 1 do-no. I never take no notice abeout
what people say' susTiceously about their
neighbors." •.
"Really; you are a very singular witness.
Let me jo? Your memory a little.
remember having said anything about I:fai
risi- connection with the Tioga. sheep st,'alinv.
and. the Jenkins' 'Aare rubbery, while you
were at Gillis' store one night litst, At'ril
"As fer's my recollection serves. I ha-ant."
"•. \Vera you qt Gillis' store on the night
!of thii• 17th of Aprill" .
".‘ I do-no for sartin."
" Were youitiliidgeway at all on the I 7th
of April i" . .
1 - e-eas, I was."
I .
flow do you fix the time ? Proceed and
tell the Justice. (We ; shall get the truth of
this story..yet—aside to the plaintiff) Come
sir, proceed."
i • , 4 W a ll on th e ir,,,rnin' of the 17th. Dick
son ses he twine, ses he, Seth gu down to Mr.
Dill's and ~ait the nails clinched in the brown
mare's off hind foot. Su I Ynqt . put a Laer
au' cantered down -to Ridge Way, an' stopped
to-Gilliso store an' 'bort dome thread'an;
l
needleslor 'AMA 1'04 , 11.5'1i; an' GilliSes ''Clark
ost.pe ef..i ‘Ncild'nt like to, taste Awn new
i rum he hail hist got from Bellefonte,' an' I
rstud yes,''and - he• poured 'out. p.hebut hiAlf a
table spotinfnl an' I driukt it right: deoun.
" Well sir, goon.' • `
- " Wall, then I led the brown mare orcr to
Dili's.ild ast Miss Dill—"
"'ton mean Mrs. Dill, his wife."
"Yeas—Mrs. Dill. - 1 tst Miss Dill of Mr.
Dill was to hum, an' :the Saki 110 ; 11V'3 deoun
to the lick b'low AndreAN.sesnw,Nta
-•—
bans clenched to the mares off hind slim, ses
I. Wal, ses slle, can't you du it youkself
Wal, says I, I guess I can. So she she wed
me whey the horse nails was, an' give tie
banner, an' I put en Dill's hither apron, an'
at it I went. I got in three nails, fig?l!t snug,
-and clenched 'eui i‘ns driiin' dexAta the
•rhird -when the mare shied at suthen anal
sli-v.cd a oin:si.le, au' the hy-rner cum deoun
caslap I - right on this there thuail, nail.- lou
see (holding it up) its u)tgroWed eo . ut yet.
1, " - lint what has that to do with the talk at
store
Int guilt' on to WI you. Lord!-.how I
did yell I You'a a thort thar was fifty pain
ters abeout. Nl!ss Dill she coin a runnin'
eout ast what Wai the matter Look
here, ses „iv thumb, which was,
hl,t , tlin' like Jr:hu. , \V hat shall I do, ses I.
teit yyu what, ses-Miss ; and she run
an' gr;t a leaf of flve-for, ever, ses she, peel
off this skin att' pnt,tiiipoth dn. Pell it off
yourself. ses 1, a ervin' with the exhuhnant
pain. Sy she peeled it off an' tied it on, an'
in tWO klays tharwant a bit of soreness in it,
but the nail cunt off.
" But t..) come :u Gillis' sore. What did
.you about Harris that eight ?"
Wal, all I recollect is that Thompson an'
la of fellers was thar, Thouipsoa a u - I
not at a marli fur wlusict'v, an' Thompson
he win; au' W - e dint ,it my expen,e.
" Then Bill Gagager and Dm, they shot,
an' Dill beat Bill, and we dranlit, at, his es
pen se, au' thou Charley Gillis lie shot ag , n
,liank outher, an' we drinkt at. U'narley's ex
pease : an" th;:is Bank lie , sung s a song, and
then, Thompson he sung a song, and the next
recollect was—"
"," NVe4 sir, was what • .
Why, I waked up the aext.morniu' under
Gillis counter, the, sickest critter you ever
seed. I didiet get over spree for two
that,
,
"'sir, What else, ?"
V
"That - all' T recollect 'at present. Ef I
think,of, any, tuoTe,. yir come in an' teHle."
",•Voit. may gp..sir."' •
..-,fttavrikwou
When boos firet came in fashion, a pair was pre
egnted to a. worthy Mayor jn wine partof ,Eugland.
He es:mined them attentively, and concluded they
were a -netvzkind of , ba4kets:: Ace`ording,l7; when
he . went tticlittielitiast. tiaday,be'sittng one round
ltl!,,r:teck. and put,. hi.s . ,prayer bools. into it. 4is
-wife used-the other.to bring bonieberinarketing
A bIFF/CUirielr 50t.ven . . 7 .1 merchant, eiriniining
allgshead harti,werp, l op comparing it with the
iirv0N.e.,,61y32t1•141 right_tateept one hammer. "Oh,
tloolle.troubled,iny honer,"'Eahl the Irish poker,
0-Ore" , ,,thi;Nnitfr tookit out to open the hogshead
p w ,fiAlOw‘pg !Iniqur ,to'a4t 44.-;11:A atqt .4th
of July celebnitimriu Suut4 Carqina t b
'" Peaciaig, putt':
6 4
igsp ,xnpneY 01, th e poeko .
4, '
juAlur.lcraflic, tiod..p.O.V . wit"4: to to&
Coffee' o the Closet' aria sugar id MI6 bariel,
silenca*und the fireside,fulks that flavor rioari.d.
An Army of Monkies.
A NOVEL M-IDGE.
In Capt. Adienture in South Nlexi
co, We find the following curious account of
the way monlcies cross streams of water too
wide for them to jump over. It is exceed
ingly curious, att.doubtless true :
" They are corning, and will most likely
cross by the rocks yonder," observed Raoul.
"how—swim it r I asked. ,It is a tor
re:nt there."
."011,no," ansivered the Frenchman, `mon
kills would rather go into the tire than' water.
I: they cannot leap the stream, they will
bridge it.'
liridze il, ! and how 1'
Strip a moment, Captain, and yon shall
The bite' humantiow AAounded Dear
er and near e r, ;Lod ‘ve.could pereieve that. the
aitnala were approaehin . g the spot where we
lay. Presently they appeared upon the op
posite bank, headed by ran old grey thhiftaiti,
and offiePred like so tnany soldiers. They
w; , Te, as Kaoui stated, of tht.s comarirrja, or
r - ,n_r-tailed tribe.
aid-.4e-camp, or chief pidneer,
'erhaps—ran out upon a projecting :rock,
a'td after looking across the strcani. cal
culating the clistaiice, scampered back and.
aPpeared to communicate with the leader.
This produced a movement in the troop.
Commands were issued, and fatigue parties
were detailed, and marched to The front.
iNleanwhiie, several of the cmsradrejas—en,'
neem, no doubt—ran along the bank, exai -
Ming the trees on both side of the arroyo.
At length they all collected around a tali
cotton-rrocrci, that grra over the narrowest
part of the stream, and twenty or thirty of
them scampered up its trunk. On reaching
a high point, the furemoit, x strong fellow,
l an out Upon a limb, and taking several turns
of his tail around it, slipped down and hung
headdownWardv Thoif64 °tithe limb, also
a stout oue,etimed down the body of the first,
and whipping his tail around the neck and
fore arin, of the igt,,er, dropped olio 14sturn,
and the fourth upon the third, aiiirso on„un
til the but one upon the faring rested his fore
paws upon the ground:
The living chain now commenced s'iving
ing, backward and foreword, like the peadu - -
ui a clock. The Motion was slight at
tirst, but graduadliy increased, the lowermost
;monkey Striking; his bads violently on the
4 04.11 . „
atl{l(4 ea t 4 l 6 ti, ent of the
aided the muvetnent.
.This continued until the monkey at the end
of the chain w thrown among the brunches
of a tree on the opposite bank. Ref% after
tivo or three vibrations, lie clutched a limb,
and held fast. This 11:1<yelnent wa.s executed
adroitly, just at the culinsnating- joint of the
in order Co save the intermediate
liuks (ruin the violence Of too sudden a jerk.
The chain was now fast on both-ends,
forming a complete su.•;pension bridge, over
which the C: hole troop, to the number of font
or lire hundred, 'passed with the rapidity of
t.%
.
It was one of the most comical sights I
(-veto beheld, to witness the quizzical express-
ion of countenanes 4 101,g - that hying chain ! •
Tile troop "as now on the other side, but
.liow were the animals forming tire bridge to
get theinst ices co er f 1.1t3 was the qugstion
that suggested itself: Maplestly,"by number;
one letting go his tai4 4301 the....n.the'`P#(.,
d'uppu; on the other' : side was lniteli:Tp*i.",.
down, and numberVifi'ivilli haltii:i.tati r tf.4,
Lis neighbors, would b . tiisAtil, kftiti)34 . 1, 4 *., , -
opposite bank, or soused into the 50....*-''l4k
111. re, then. was 4 . prObl 0; atut#tiAte,it,
with some curiosity iurfitS 'OliittS,ll"ig . **
coon solved. The . trio.kdkirrtsAititiijiteiiirCipt::
Ladling his tail to tile lowest . t n . th:110,d,‘,.:
another girdled:MO ill a si Jilar . rrialti#l . :i . Atli'd .
, •1
another, and so on, iiptii idtizentn9M7,i,i.,tk
added to the 'string:lT tese,"le.it,.:44`3,All'.
) powerful fellows;.."Ppd4ti,, Jiiki - 4p,l44.lkikli',
4;,
barb, they lifted : - .4,:rii; : bki e 4)0 i i . k . r . .:tpiftt , '
a linost.horizuntal."' - ' 1 t ; ;;' ;'. r ;);;- 11j ; ; . ;
I 'then a ser, am front tlie 4.s .04:41 0 4 :4 1 4..4.i: 13- ‘:
i l,
•
; new formation warned.itli,'Ufif/W,,,..:1i*, i. ..041J;;
was re ady ; and the 'nekt iiiiiiii*liiiittaio
I was swung over, andlanded-Siifelgtifilh.e l o
~..: - i
I i.‘osite b4nk.Th` The lowermost lilikS - : !#:*ilo -!-;
pod off like a melting oandlb, while *l4ll - 1g
~. y:
1 er ones- leaped to ''the brunches,,ana'clitO.', ,
i down by the trunk. ' The *hole- troop thqi
scampered. oil' into the'ehappayel and - disap 7
i petired! ,
111:2111111
•
"So here lam hetwecn; twb ors," cried
beau at a public table where a - couple of -younk
tailors were seated, who had ' begun bnuinesii
for themselves.
"True," will the reply, ",we arc beginners, and
can only afford to heap one sooie betwecii us."
I==l
As Gen. Scott was assisthig, raise the tiag_to
the utast' heatl, at fi'e*borgh, n the 4th Jaii,;l
bystander said: " General, l yo?i Fu - 0 In9t utapfl• to
raising flags." "lie ) " said lie !old I, ..et.gnuli * qniS
these Lands hase. hauled some
A .preachariu the far We :ove.outfoC his teckti
•certaitreluiptlr and verse of -Plow. :A. ileatlou
arose and turd hint was Tiatotliy. `• Ohs yam,"
replied the divine, " It is Timothy.; I laiewit was
ruiuC kUul of grass!" .
el riegro - women was . rehiting her'ertierieneerio
gving congtegatiodnf hefownetor',^a(nting nth.)
thinis she Sid she'llad been to heaven: Oue of
the brethren ail:ea liCr,'"sistfir,ion see pack
in heafeni" fihe repliaci," Oh oitt=s9eigo
in de kitchen when I was dar,"
...,.. ? , ... ,. ;_.- 1 4:T3:11'....A1: 4 1 1 .61-.•-:44
-0
NUMBERv..34; ''ql
..
-Disastrous Termination . of Polattil„l. lily 'Agit Would ~do - efeditliiii*iiiir s il
It is daily made More' apparent thai - 1 4 0- t' ixsN ' .. ' A:fran ' a ' ''' .drkilaviveket "C iii. "- 4 11
land is hastening. to its eternal sleep - With ki- - •I rd , info g rmd " . " ith ' ..the f ' titis _ii_.. 9l4la4 : 4 , l * he}4 ll
- pieies oe:' , inusic can IktrrfOrmed , •s:' ,, 4, - ;. filet,
gaittic steps. The aristocrat r- of thekint..
•has- tmggested ;that tiv‘OzO'rlitien , ,ixtrOcOtil
dual, who, in spite' of all • ten n pora'ry SYMpa
thies with the people, are still an iiiisteeracv, t (Jeri provided bk . . tit Vestrpwatilit giitooilio
have hroken with the denideracy. and Vis,ility I , ety to the music, and.gratify,:rheyondi;trtitatfit
become friendly to the Government.' 'The 1 me,,our music-loving =4lr,iiitincM
y
feel. that therean not satisly the demands :Of has given evidence of mucktplentimtliket&R,
theAeniocrae-v without beggarinp,qhernselves 1 structiou of this clock; and also in othit . pieegi
mid -clearly •
perceive that all -national efforts ! ' .es. of inethariisnt.' When tfiki'Vzii4i7: ‘ l,oen-44
tirely'eampletedtlurdialswitUbeilitim
must now be fruitless, tee:tuse every' ;Condi
at night, - and till ,
. whote t-iivill - WotrOlieiel l'i
tion of success is wanting.' Attlie - sitnie thug,
Ciiiiiiinent,' but •inhly:ttsefiikigoiloo4 : 4-p
in Order to save appearances, itis-reperted
that the Czar is about to make eencetsions-to t ilel's generily. - 1 - •' - '' ^4 •' '-',- •"'''': Vs' - ',.- - t'C'''-''-;.'- '4
1 the Kingdom,
.and must be met half .wayi-al- ' . . i : I s.. -. .. :,,i, . 7 ':,... ; ,...1„,... , ; , .., -_ Iti:
though.these 'ery parties are conviiiez.d that . • ' Timporance Aneef1ntt , .. ,,,,,, ....q 1
I the Poles .as - a nation have no .concession's - A small temperance sciciety had :661 . 160 - .IA-)- - .
1 whatever --to expect from tint. In a-word, ed hi a'conininuitY very 'rinielf fiticteethefiiil4T_
i the Sristocracy of the kingdom believe that Vol of a rich distiller 'corriinblitY'Wliii4Of f
they , must choose between -their own- e'Xtinc- Myers." This matt hod sekeraFioni - AllAitit -,-
bon-mid a, close union with Russia, and, they i become drinikarks% du Afiel'ireilitiWaroptt I.
~,,, ,.,,„_;, (,-.
. have adopted the latter. ....ThiS - ,greatilieta, by theiredneation.at-houteallte*nolieum4 ,
morphosis explains. the numeituns aets.ofgrace , ily Was- arrayedi• - k„oitiiiSt fliOantfeirAfoisi, , ;
already granted, and perhaps the ..univeyal. ythreattmed to break urOlidsmiietiiiecitledio' ).
i
anmesty to be 11 .. estA)Nvt-t1 in
..Decemher,ufthis I promote the,object. Learningilikbfi,-flitik ~
.year, The. r i Ruan policy has taken them* , I went to a neighboring'distrierfotteMperaneut :
row out of the l'olish nubility, who- can as I volunteers-for tharfiiiitielifie - 4*.lsiop-., - 1:1•1 it•
easily resign- their existence as ti,.;eir levelz.? I - then-gave but word for albeetirig;ittid'ailloi P ,
,how, s o th a t. they ar e ready:to yield to the time 'found his; friends . , find ' ,- erieri — tiftAi"tilicitit ly i
' unalterable and postpone that uational.regett- , . tequal , iir number. , ) ThirS'fat.i' , Pie4etitedraiiy 5 . 7 '
!cration, about which tlicre has 'been so much -outbreaki , but could not pievent - uoiSii..x -' - fr- 7 . `'!
der amation, to the day of doom. ,T.e this' : ' Itr; Hunt Mounted Ili -, qlatfOtittiAlictbritii 1
i eision, the example of Callidagives •t.d;,11,-, !fciv s p ar anecdotes and irktr)' gliYinelliiets 1 : : 6 . 1
tional weight, there, as they . see, the' most; ; !silenecd , all noise:A - IceptZthejaiirarßillW- 11
bhundle.- - ;:s eonfusibn Brea ails, and th e:Polish: 4 ets , the iald - Duichinantryingivat,-.4lilat* ''i •
1 noble. hourly t rem Lies in 'fear of 'the reei'-!k . - - e,' '46n t, i money makes tthe : ular'is-• gu"' 16 , 4*, ,I,
! of his former subjects; who' have taken' Ks- L ;ery shot whith..teeined:ready44sl4eliixilish 1 ,, ,i ;
session of his prouerty. They see, to6;that'l him, the\ild fellow, presented ithelodu,sidetik si . "-',
i' 'e.
if they only 4D over .to the government, thy' - mare -mariikei
. .4,
can treat' tin d Jeers and the common - pee;ble. !!• At last Mr.ll.uut stoppe di Mitiadditessest i e. '.
;in the' saine arbitrary Way 'as before slii the .:the imperturbahleGerinati.dlook bere,lkil [,, •
1 Grand Duch of Posen; f lie's lit is it cit '66* . i'-so you say. that mone e y analts_the:mire 01' .
' I .-idea, but even thire 'the'eability'areiloie 44 . 0 , !- , ,1 .---• ,•- • :- :•-';.: : •: •: : . ; .,!. ;;c . 1._ , :. ,- t
and rnOfe'drdwitig An.k, • from llie - r'eale's , 0 '. Yes, dat ish What,l saiddishter.ilnittZi; t:-1
, party and the ' elites. Duriiig the'St.laiiils '4... ' Well; iiill Myers, you- 0wn . ,,, slid ,ii
feStival of this year, the. nebleS haiiit Ceti . ; distillery,,,doat you l' inquircd,plir.Amik., ,•-•
I everywhere publicly blamed 'for' liVing . Again .-,_.„. ' Dat ish noire of your. i .husinesa k , .
....A t , ... ,
Ifishi .'
. 4
, in. the old hututy, and - leaving' their tirrfortn- ppat-,. 814, den, I ish,'not, Ashamed 0tip...7. .ii.'
1 nate comitrymen in exile to The of hinger. ish got` a still„and,w,ork 4,, t00,, 4 ,,. ~„
~,,,. ~..i, ,, ,
I Thus Koschisk - o'e " I Polerimi" seems to ~- !A 11 ( 1 You gay JalilneY
.makes the Piare-,K4 i; i
be approaching its last siticie. " -. T Do you mean by that , ,thafl.4 . Ve i co'ttleh . , bee , , 4 ,- -
0
I ----= - -4.- --- .
_--- . i to. get the inoney 'of these peope:?' . - -- ': •I 4 '
1 . An Affecting Rene. - ' 1; ,
~ i
.. 1 e.-,, ?, isliter, llnpt, dat 1111w4t,,i,,mean. '„,
i in - in r
.. ,
cif, . ' ~, ' , ~.. ~ . cveiy. well ;1 - 9u w o rk a:dialAery,i4l44lo , .4.;
, . a % :per:, , i..e, in a reino t ,... part, Mi ;, , • .••- ,' - , .r.. ,,,, k- .'.7' , '! - - , 1. 0 ..*. A -
oney, and I lecture on temperanet to maze 1-,
Cb ti nectiCut, laid a mortgage for 41,100 a —
r • . onev, , and as you say money makesJho . f . '
. which was Within a.. few days of being,due. - - - • '_
117 ... ncfn7i,,, , -+1......14.5.a.:.0.1341 se , slam,'
s the mar.e, g?, ggA,F.n.g ant49 l 4;lnctrg
. _ mil will brineon 'mine rind' Well Ai . *
payment could be put off for a 5 . p .. , , ,, . ...
Ile was a man somewhat advanced, ka.life,,
and very intemperate Time lawye'r, In
it
' 'to his ingniries ' silid that the mail that held. .
'l, • •
1 the mCir .- tg:itge wanted his, money 7 --that, - he
was s4rry, hut; t - could not be extended.
The tths 'Caine Ate the old man's eyes, and
after standim - ra few Mc Molt's, a perfer-timage
of desPnir, he''tiirnediancl left the office. 'HO
returned home, believing ins few i A:44 'his
:wed and infix e Wife, and invalid dau,ghter,r
0
would have to•quit the roof'wbieh had' slieF
tered them, and seek a bottle he ktiew - noti
where.
lle could say nothinF_t to them shout it!
would cause them so much grief. inort-il
gage I:pelene due, and in the mornin(r . euity.il
the-farmer again repaired to the ilawylk3 off- 1
iee • ' lit .- pleadt4ifot tiinot but' td no ouipOso.i
thenld- mail sunk
jatii?thair . ; honrg;ap
-04113,141g, that was,
=Ana ,hilii, , iihinfeStirita4 rove
artito , thO doof,•-ind i =ldily oep **fib
i,jlo 'entered &lie ntfice4 , I,A,4ers `din etv'
JitiOnents; , iiyeini teroit
eznotidtwahcil aixaat *the - ca l ! :40.0*si
• iltr• ' 1 ; t' 3 ''3 o !':••:_:;ko: ,„ : 4 4 : : ,;4 ;ki -2 ..
itge.4./4•404;
i t tliajavaligr,ooo7i - I,:e4nAlikto l4l 4:lo:44o* , `:
4YkEitill.ba-ta1i1i,014114.4-44401631i*V
i4144isltalliko.t wi,11)01m0.,099c
'4 4 4-1 1 .141:::1001a4 4 .itg 41.44A 1 / 44 . 3gYtri?' 4 10 1 0
tti . ",l4 s :4 l :kgk r 4R* *
;-::Yiy - pely;o* - YOi)::b!it4t-eaOilao • :,'," lo r4X's:4a l
11 6thiaikr#44:3 1 4 j OitgidW I N;...
;- - At.z0i4,4010.014444P*5.. - . '
44t -
tha
home thallgy 'heart:
The daughter had stixed $1,200 - woil
• •
ing'in a factory.
- '.Musical , Church . Clock. '
' The• Charjeitdn 'Ciiiirier . gives ' the tolloir
ing accoiMfera envious piece of meehanisui
in St. Fbilip'a•ClintCh in that tity - :•
From the`tasteful iteeple - of tits beautiful
edifice, We noxf, fit; intefi-als; have tones.of
sweet innsic,•emanating front machinery at-
tacked to the olbeii4nanufactured by
Stine of our city. The clock 'w.as ,
to thu,cOngregationpflhis church
Canip4,`Esq., of ')3baufori,'S.M;
mater-deco' of hit; lire* cieilital?l
niechamcalifigennity' of flifr, - Stind:'
thirty Bohr tinie pi•ded . Chinitri t lit
lions' with - feint lidinine.rs' (rin!
o ,
belid, and strike's the hout 'on. 01'0110
cvser'nf •bells,'eleven :in nunnber;Atti
of Which is 'near SOO& Nunits.4,.. _
Incas of the machinery' plays-,,
music. ,atthree ,different interr Ailli;11 tif•
oa d i
inenty4piiiiietitiAi: '''',',.-: - ''''''W ' -
df Reit," 'l3lideliland'i l Teri'', '; 1 . 7 ' ' ~'_.
"Tf tint?, f;* dt ti if di IMP ' , -tr ' ', : . ..:',- - 4 . ,:. -'
played-wittf ftsweetm*9 of to kill :firir
'-•'''",-;',-•;•:;;1`7::.3,g,...'11--.-f,7'...
=1:11
MEE
thter of delight, an..l even t ~ .
'COuld not repress theirthe i ev- E.
idet:t embarrassment of their oracle, 44,tlie
'meantime, we"must prerniie . ihat'Mr:WM:4
4ew - a lily& number df' the 4,ifiiiilM:cfsjiirei
'opt; anti among them the sons httn
gar.
.11vels, - wlio is that
br i ) that tree?' inquired Mr. pinnt
hi.4-tO 'a, young man so drunk that he botild
'niot stand Alone.
the old min started; as if stun 'by an
der, but was obliged to -rbriry,-'`Ditt
son.; but what of dat; litti.Ofer finittt: '
Goc d deal of that; Bill.M3to;ibi eiess
Intit 'soil has beeit'riditv yoit it xre and*
' con, too!'
1' Mere there was a t erfett -tiproite troio
-pafta of -the assembly, and . as soots as ot
'as , restored, sAir. 'Haut - proceedokis--
pohrted to ;another son -.-- • • -4 - K
Jtyers-ntho is•that Atintreritor about
his. legs re-.;a3 mrealout potaaeviuts
4 4to r rfrd s t,r -7,- • • K.444;:r;t,q ,, "-
4 f:31 :ell,
isliiipi*,olo4oloo 4 6l l
rWdithe,old-InuyUtii iilili*
AE : hi i nsemb vinsAZU*4l4
acv _Thai yotlilg P*A1f4F4 1 95(14.
popt`rroipeut of the Vnac44..N4,,i
nest
ionngi4ie4
glYe o :44.Prr.
rauct'‘of sPi
meal,,. and.
ing their
, p . resento
by ! Per
an
'd -is
wi z
r r ~......,
~: 114; -V 4 . , v-
~2 .:
443,4 i - , `, N,,t
,! . 4, 7. ~k,,,YM7.e. 4:7:
, 14 . AMPO''
.....,.:.„,.....,....„
r
it*-
i,...ti,.4,,,,,,,,
"00.,,nr,..44,,...,_,.„
.-- --4163:-.444.4...
oii.tloarea,tailtwo.o4o)
~...„,...,,.....„,
'
.54 4
401
REES!
Vi.4",v; I , v
pilita74lo