The Susquehanna register. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1854, November 14, 1850, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    . 3..
.
3 . ,
• • .
3 '
T I
• 1 : '
. ......
• . - ' ---.' - ' '.
. 3 - 1 ' ''- . . 1
•-•
'''
'- - --::• 2 - . 17 1 ':
''' 'll" '3 , ...,./1i? , : 43 3'.3•' ' 1
' ~3 , • ' 3. ' • •- - '.•3. . q 11 "-,/ , -• • ; -.: „
r.
..-- 1 --, :;:i• ' '4' y
' • ' .--:
sLi
- - - . ' ' - 1 *
n •,' _.'' 7 3 . ;: " . •. * 3, 7 3 -4 ;
~ ... .
; ...).: .
• . , ..,::,_ :_....: .•._.•_.r.,.:;,.,, ,;,...,,: „.,;,....,, „..• ~,........,,i,_.,„..,..... _ ~4
'
„ , ~ .. - ; ..,,.-1,, T., - • - ••,l , .ic:,e3=v,t'. -
.... .• • . : .. :, ' cs- - .... 1.3 i:.: :-.., - L
,-,,, --;:•• ~., , , f .• J
~, ,,,f -, ,, , . .,...4,/, 4 •,1,;. -.. _
,
- -- - - :-.! 1:: n• .
, ~ , -,.,; -•-: •-,... '-.:. i - FAT* :4! 1 - 1 .
i
• -, •:' -0 -,, •1: - I. :-,,,, ,
*R ,,
, . .
....., .4' " ' ....-' • . . I
. ,
• I ;
r 1 s "Tat WILL OF TEE PEOPLE IS Trrr IN— .—
:
VOLUME XXV.
rfrOn her. way from Boston Ito Fl '
Jenay Lind stopped over nightat riclgen T an.,
where Idritaitaim resides; and the Yardee
of the Bridgeport Standard thus facctiouslyicliren
, •
icles the importlult event.
i Arrival of Benny.
• -
well, we seen her 1 Yes, we did! '
It was nine "o'clock at night; •
Not a cloud the azure hid— • I
And the moon was shining bright
When we saw.her the immortal
Jenny Lind,
From a common rail car poftal,
_ As Pat would say—" Descind n
We saw her rather dimly,
For the shadows fell down grimly i •
From the care and things around.
And herbonnetand her veil
Were an eye.proof coat of mail , • I ! •
t
While the smoke from out the titi/-
'Mad locomotive " •
'Did in the atm6sphere abound. ' 1
We did not see a lettere .1
of:the esusenchantingereatnre4. --
Nor catch a single emile frote,her !iris; !•
Nordid we.meet a glance
From these. eyes that so entrance ;
Bat that hat, and jell, and all,
And-her comfortable seam!,
'That in graceful folds did fall,
O'er her 'bust, and waist, and hips
Them we saw
With pleasant awe
And we felt the mighty truth deep impte4ed.., l
That beneath that veil and shawl, t!
And gown, and.pet----that is, all
The clothes her form that dressed ,
The glorious creature was,'
No mistake about it, pn!
An'd we trembled in our hoots— I !.!
Like a man does when he shoots
For the first time in his life, a deer or a mnose.
A fever'n ager shako
With tendency to make
Your body pimpled e'erlike a goose. ,
Twas more titan wecould oar, I f
Se we leaned against a car,
While a singing, in ear ears,
Like the-unisie of the spheres,
A gentle s stealin' thin' us,
. Said ir.elodinusly to as, I It
She is tkiir
•
• Jenny's they- I ! • i ;
But echo did not answer, (not as we knowlo4):
And we heard her honey tones ! !
Go thrilling through our bones; I
Ana doubtless we shall feel them a week
Yea, that sweet, soul pr.lbing. voice, •
I whose power we all
That could te:ieh a new song to a.hird,
We have heard!
at's truel we heard it say—
In our memory will stay
-3n silvery sounds we heard her
- .ldo.si delicately murder
The Entzli.. , h of the Kin;. •
Youit Lar tea., je "
sing,
(The engine of the train had just begun to shri ed 4)
When from the coach she paid,
As she forward bent her head :
4 . KO on., (ricer, queek ko on, vied: !"
'Twas too much for us to - bear,
'We shuddered, gasped - for air,
FcH, arid tainted, then 4utd there
I
McDonough,„ the Miser Millionare.
k fortm - acquain:ance . of Jain :NLEti.-.Uougli, the
millionars who died lately in New Orleans, furnish
-e= the Newark Advertiser with the fulloWiniretiii
niscence ot bun . 1 - ' • $
H•• retsde.d, for rr.anv - years of the latter part ;471 f
his life, in Algiers, a vibage on the oppdsite side ;of
the Mississippi to New Orleans. where lie ciiltia
lei and traintained the strictest habits of industry
and economy. Hiscustc.m was to visit the city
daily, mutt° avcid the expense of the 'ferry, boht,
the usual - mode ef CM seiwg, he kept a .lall skiff:in
which he made his liou.e. servants row,, Lint over.
The foundation of his fortune was laid bj- theqrmiss
fer of Louisiana to the United States, wren d large
tract where Nett Orleans is now locatqd wits ac
quired by him, , The rise in value of th woUldlef
i•self, have constituted at this day a lame fOrtutie.
The income ofhis possession he studiously, and wiTh
t •
much good judgment, invested in improved, prdp
erty in the city, and so Particular was ilia in the
collection of his rents, that he madb out with the
most perfect exactness, himself, every bill; and tho'
he had a collector employed, he would neveristiffer
him to append his name to a receipt He was mitt?
er known to lutve a friend call upon him except em
business, which he would compel him to deSpa(ch
with all convenient speed, lest his time should 'lie
occupied with something which would:not risults}n
his petmiary„advalitiqe. I : 3
The old gentleman whom be employed to Soiled
briserailirtc, woe • uot cven allowed to hale his
brother call on him, lest as McDonoll alleged it
would cost him an extra meat, His a paret when
in the.elty, was always neat amiclean, but bbre the
unmistakeable evidence of bring very ancient. l 'Ho
patticular, was be to save his clothes from the itsnal
wear, iltat:he y has been known frequctOly Ito'
take acids linerialibErtiturn from the city, rind
replace it with that which was of less value r The
umbrella which-he invariably carried with hies was
said to have been found by him daring hister+icee in
General Jac.kson'a. campaignagainst the J-ndwin
tribes. Whim he put on anew coat, it wasdotieicd
and matte, the subject of familiar
_conversation
among busmeis men throughout the ; eltY, tislki 'Mtt•
ter of aktoaUtiletit. 1
,{
kfe . * years ago, a nephew visited him,•aini was
tol_Che'needitot repealhis visit, as it Wks - Jeitpcp
apse', and he subsequently died in the CharitiHnst,•
t i
pi* lis,,tinCle .contributing nothing tow 'rdstbrafu
nevil4gxpenses.. " On accasion r he up '. tbilie
legislative' for the passage of an &co:pp° E rtilio•k i k r ,:.
selret.KU,l749 iii.g.9w-n AP4ute - .11,,,,w lehlteliii
teiided-to save tee usual lee lif "two and I4lf - Pei
cent, to the Probate Cotire li-answer tos peti
tion, tha,hcialataro replied, that if he Would make
a u v i t4 1, 4 4, f44 , 4 ;44 they would itet, ftverat:
hly epTa•iiiii patitir4 l 4 3 . j , , f
41 " 14,*449:014libenuing„.. 'his ilitvpS; iimi
RD erroneous impqrswipti 4 - 114‘'prik•alikolui in reli
tioa tavtdtl}iiVbertilllr.. PIIWAISPIII one, WC Wt. gape
opened •.: • Mg with Ilirl;:wirrtrfkl#' o l )6 tt•Ww ,
0 9 )
PgIVISIt -..„, 11ikta4 414 4.1.1,, Ogg, tVgl .44 ) °F,
money received IV, . Q pie isle slave
cme C e
had p • him HIV,
WWI 41i:44A
m , Aritli4,fitii efailiderattkfit eidrtt,_ *: be
gavel ' liiit'freeikinilimidtld' littl-triotti6St'-,
Sliftlfti,i# l olicteWle, -30 FW4 13 ''''''' ; ' 1 - t ' l ''"''l - 1
:,, , , ......t,i , :.„ ,ua - ;•.. ._ . 11,.. L a . ,.:1:1 1 t.e's .., p, if,',1,:.-1
Wfbe4• 1 iw •
tt*kr.1194#44,t`P5.2
caa Wo jya ikistik.ig st, thousand rayiii: nere
<nit 914111atest eases r,. E ekT, ;.
I.llease.takeskslto(tiiii -AV : I" 1 -
a
i v iktiAuseeAt4 l lolMitti-rraiii oklitr ,oliog--
"AfAtiwiry944.llNoldre 66( ' T ,,kerfit
nuldukko4,4pdrektre.dopt ?
, , ,
• - •
r- • -
r I ••• • "TThi WILL OF THE PEOPLE IS THE LEO lin ATE SOURCE, AND THE HAPPINESS OP. THE • PEOPLE THE TRUE, END OF GOVE.IiNIMT."
-2-17 -
Advtitture in a Mill.
, • .
- A get‘tleraart of New York formerly of this sec
tion, related the followinglineident, wllle we were
enjoying the luxury of a cool sea breeze on a hot
summer's night. The subject of conversation was,
the narrow escapes from death that are -often ex
perienced by mankind in the ups and downs of
life.
When my father, said he, emigrated to Jefferson
county in the days of its first settlement he located
with his family in one of the southern towns, A
mong other improvements on his premises, there
had.beetferecteil one of the fi re t essentials to a
new settlement—a saw mill. It was one of those
old-fashioned concerns common in those days, rigged
withAbe.huge undershot water wheel, long heavy
pitman, and cumbrous saw frame. Those unwieki
ly wheels are now quite;.forgotten in-the improve
ments that hare been made in these agents, but r
shall never target the end attached to my father's
mill.
I was engaged iu getting out limber, when au • the mere decimation thal his mistress is hiswife:—
accident happened to the water works, and I went The declaration makes him ammuthe for her debts,
alone the next day to repair the damage. Care- and very properly—for if there is to check • upon
it
I
lessly khealing upon one of the floating boards of the principles of a man, there shot Id be cheek
the wheel,; -'without observing the position of the upon his pocket; lint the falsehood of the man
crank, I' proceeded to survey - the derangement.— Awl() not lead to the eatablishrnett of a doctrine
While thint occupied, I did not observe the slight which makes no distinetien between a married wo
motion tabards a revolution which had commeu- man andlra prostitute. A man maydeclare, that he
ced• by thd wheel, caused by my weight, and my has committed murder; but the la v requires the
attention *as first calledto the nature of the fact proof that the murder has been con itted, and that
by a slow iheavy pressure above my knee. At a the self-accuser is the murderer. Ithe law is char.
glance I-cOmprehended the peril tart I was in, and itable even to the faults and falseheods= of the critn
made an dffort to van icate myself, but it was too inal. There are certain ceremoniesl and certificates
late; I was fast wedged between the floats of she which the law requires to legalize marriage. and
wheel aturthe sill of the flame. Without which no declaration of Marrie_ge should
With ciinsidieable alatru I now ebserved that the be deemed binding. 1
crank of the wheel was turned up and that my -In a I,e‘rty of young, persons of [good character,
weight hail slightly moved it from the perpendicm whore a:, rung man and woman halve stood up arid
bar. A inl - rments reflection increased my alarm, a:, I declared themselves man and wife in a sham mar
! fully cumprelieeded that the heavy pitman, rind riage, and for amusement only, it has been held
the saw flame above that, were pressing, with their that such as declaration i , as legal Marriage, Even
combined !weight upon the crank. 1 this deci , ion is wrong. for in every art there must
To complete the horror of my situation I percei- . 1 . be a Motive and an intention to ea:limit the act
red that the crank was inov'mg aknust impereept- I Marriage is an important hnk. which binds a COM
tbiy : and, I knew that without instant relief 1 I munitY toe-ether. It involves the italppiness of fam
shoulil inevitably be crushed to death between The ' dies alai the clisp&it on of propert . and cannot be
wheel and l the fiume.! ,I. gazed around and ealleal • loosely defined. A wall :. on re:di:less and tni•-•
loudly for help; but lnoj human being was near ; guided; may he ensnared by a delignin "woman
and no answer wa.t
,given to my cries. My into a declarotlon of .her helm , his Ivife. to far as
eyes fell again upon ilieTcrank, it was still sooting I any injury is done tq the rights oil others by this
and drawing toe into tat awful death. I now declaration, he onght- in surlier, but is like avowal
looked around for some bject to interpose between , ;is urn declaration, of marriage. .k l aiti, it is a well
it
the wheel anti the ilumefend saw an axe that I had !settled principle that to a certain •scent the law
I brought with me lying alone end of the wheel; bat, (wilt protect the just claims of a er ditor, but that
the. er that was lit up atithin me. by the sight of I PEW also requires that a ereditor,to acertain extent
.l
thi. ject was dispelledlin a moment, 'on finding l i Isbell protect himself.
, m ,.1
' I I '
- th th my utmost ex'ertions I could not reach its •;" If a mini declares that he ()writ; a house in a
In my desperivon I.thettaried to wrench something, I treet, and by a number specified, ii, order to esta b
froth the wheel but evert thing refitted ray utmost 1 ish a credit, it is a falae pretence !if he does not
strength.. My last hopelwas that somebody might I . bwn said house ; yet the owner ofnods sought to
p ass u p on the read wide)) ran along the opposite be purchased-on credit should :Ise rtain that fact
e ti.
hank of tire stream; this hope died within me when himself before he parts with his golds, itheeniuch as
I reflected! how Seldom it was thUt-travelers came it was infurnuition for his own proteition, and within
that way.! his reach. .11 a storekeeper tru-t 4 woman on the
....
The crank had now' ached an inclination of declaration that she is A', wife; A ote
bo rlit ti, be corn
about thirty degrees; as I knew that its timtion pelted to the debt, because it ik . tile penalty of
i
we'ild soon become-fearfar r
lv aeclderate I. My limbs a falsehood ; but to a certain extent :main the
had graduilly hentimbedl as the circulation of the i storekeeper shou!d if possible, 11.4.0, rtain It hat fact
hlried beatarne interrupted, and in a Sort-of listless , Iriaiself-- for if the storekeeper knew thaf she wa
s
zeo2airllai,LLra . ,ek upon tthe wheel andethen in not A's wife. he nn=-ht net to reecie4r the dela film,
yea for help. Whale thui fliT. - Tiii:r sii pli - eaCtig, trtm..-Irrturst 0t5, , ,,,,0-ls,-.....- 7 „,..- .--...
and nalf cantplaining. my thaiagh:s turn 4 with a : el man keeping a mtstress drain: 7 3 ' l;r to — he has
sort of impions,alacrit v. - from the Alm; h'y
1
to a i wife i . He would be answerable fit- the debt but
noise upon the bridge that crossed the stream below 1 how could Ile be amenable for bigamy 1 We have
the mill, and I faitiv scrtnimed with delight as' .1- ' long been of the opinion that.a new niamage act is
reenerlzea the sound to he that of a horse's tread. ' necesaary--derialing 'v.-hat eenstitutrs a regal mar
after riage, and providing penalties aga4st false declara-
After cressing the brilgat the horse commenced a
slow trait, and II knew tliere matt he „a rider upon ! tiens of marriage, mil ether iniperMut and heees
him. although the bushel on the roadside prevented sir}'detinttions—to have ft proateta!‘ e operation.
me- from seeing him. Nlelien the sounds came op- s " While on this subject we will I notice a police
posits: the mill. I halloCred, as I suppose d, loud,. case of bigamy. in which a leavish 1 Rabbi has di
.
enocgla to be heard fort 4 times the dis ta nce to the vereel a num and inArried kin tin another woman,
road; but owing to exhaustion my voice could not ' and then clivoree , i the parties mall afterward , re
have reached for the liaise did not amp. S'ili the mar; ied them. and g a third time divhrced the man
sounds moved on. and al I - felt back in 'utter des- and remarrild het ito a third woman. The Mesa
pair upon the wheel, it seemed to rue that tire le trse is law of divorce i- loose enough, :ml does not be
aid its rider in that st4ady tramp, tramp, tramp; 1
.1 long - to the times; but in thraease he learned Rate
were.barharou-ly treading upon my heart. . I hi anl all the parties should be given to understand
This disappointment wits so great - that, for it; ! that they insist study the laws of ti eaenuntry where
while. I settled into a 1 artial,neconsciousness. A ' they hare clio.sen to live and see thiat they arc prop
squeak of the pitman do the crank. however. re- erly sr.-tinned. not violated. The general looseness
Called me a g ain to the horrors of my situation.— : I of our law; on marriage probably itelueeil tip.. par!
My limbs had been gradually drawn down so that • ties to believe that the 'Mosaic marriage laws were
the wheel would soon commence crushing my bo- I better than none."
dy ; the crank would in a minute or two attain a I L -
horizontal position, after Which the wheel would
revolve with fearful radtlity, and I was utterly
without h:h
hope. Then m eart went up to heaven
li
in. an egnea-f, heartfelt prayer, anal I reproached
myself for the selfish tminner in which I had look
edi up to OM Great Thrire but a inement before.--
The seenes of my past fe flitted palpably before
int vision, and with thlep humiliation I besought
ft; iVeness -for the errorof my ways. This com
et nion gradually reconciled me to 4 fate; and.
!
tf irk ul ni se rn;:tioernits.' it w ef.reeenlhei:erru. thaptteldwbasy
le
Th linLuo de pa lig in h ,
13 Ong in a delicious atinosphere up to the realms .
o bliss.
a sound of something rider me, and gradually open
ing my eyes I discover4l the figure of a man stand-;
iag en , the beamiby the] flume. He seemed to me
an angel from Heaven. f Again iespired with hope.
I -uttered a faint cry .. ifof joy. The Man turned
relpiad, and sale:saw' Me, in an instant he bounded
to' the crank- and endeavored to raise it with his
shoulder, but coup not, He then: seized a plank,
and placing it under the crank, secured it froth mo
ving any farther,i3own.r - Then I heard him adjust -.
itat a lever; and in a short time the inexpressible
felicity of feeling myself gradually tl,3vated from
my terrible situation, by the slow turning back of
the. wheel, which eaus4l late to faint entirety away.
W4en Lagii.in opened my .eyes, I was lying up
on tbb . grass, and my I, preserver, by chafing • my
Mitts ' bad partially restored sensibility to my half
dead body. With both hands I feebly grasped One
of his, tint; endeavoring] to speak; and the pleasant'
but.'attOaus snaile t thati.lit up his countenance, told
that he appreciated my ackaowledgementsefgrat
itude. „,, .. , - I . ~ , . •
-
My deliverer •hap . perted to be a man with whom
I was altil acquafaterl,, and he was also the Mart
that.passed the mill when I was in my perikinaSit
nation. Ile heard,.a frdnt noise as he rode'hy, but,
being engaged in thonght was not attracted by it.
Yllfile going tilia hill,Shortly • afterward, the train.
olhii retlebtiaus sla bi:oken and then it necurred to
Inzraliat Osiikty the noise might have been a' cry.'
of diStress.' .To be !perfectly sure, he turned. his:
,horse and.eatue baeltarand thus 1, _was Eitosi provi= .
Identially atesewd.— Watertown. Journal..
.btimiNG trp.—The °id proverb thal " roans atrue
word is spoken in jest:Pi:vas forcibly illustrated
few Sland!iytt since. ••• A Frei! Chokes )nihisfey, : in
CifiligOVOttp Oueas the aiOrninelessoS the - 4th
aaegian•bf th6l9thPsibrii and'mb Ile the tongrega
3inktmerthiokiiig,4iint,thirportion, in. „their „Bibles,
the,Baet., 00001 FseizInfr'4.4 0 f
piatih*iiitill4nb 4634 fk iy:ribilialogT
is nose it
the efiiiff=-be then - bftn - the 'Weak: "Ift soul
ttiiiiewtiabnAbi'dust! Thi - tiitii 'that: ran rtindd
file /Amick sod the = conicision :of -the priest;
sbowedtbeebeth :the conneties sad be:JelAt. the
pificb," • . •
IVIONTROE, PENN'4.., TIII T TISDAY; - NOyEMBER 14, 1850..'
• The Law of Marri ge.- - -
[Major Noah has al - ays so' ne ew and sensible
ideas upon all subjects of general terest, and we
copy his opinion as valsable on th ' subject'uf the
Law of Marriage.] I
, 1 1
In a recent case tried at brookl n for the recnv
cry of a debt, it was decided by udge Rockwell
that a man living with a woman, nd calling her
his wile, and informing othersthat
( lie was his wife,
make her so to all legal intents rut . purposes, and
becomes answerable for her debts., He further tie
'bided that a person so circuinstaUccld cannot marry
while the woman is living whom hp declared was
his 'wife, without incurring the riski of a charge of
bigamy. While we concur in the pinion that the
i
man is answerable foi i ,the debts a woman who
he declares is his wife, and ought of right to 'be
compelled to pay them, we cauno reeeguize the
further decision, that he commits t e crime cif big
amy if he marries another during her lifetime--
The latv of marriage requires salting more than
thr
Trifliv Mist4e.
1 , Some Weeks ago, we had -occasion to journey a
short distance in New Hampshire !by stage, after
leaving the railroad terminus. - It chanced that one
Bill a well known wa and punster of
that region, was one of the "outsiders' on the way
up.
Bill is not a bad man. by any Manner of means.
l'imt it is also well know thitt he w 01" partake," or
"indulge. "at times, and ecpecially whert!be is tray
-1 'cling. On this occasion, he enjoyed the coin panion-
I ship of a mysterious blackbottle,t!o which he turn
,ed his countenance so frequkttly, route, that he
r even acknowledged himself finak, a " leetle or,r
! the' bay l" (the nigh horse by the:hye, was a bay
one, and Bill sat on the left side of the broil . ).
We were proceeding quietly ahlng, listening to
iokes and drolleries; when, 4n, a .sudden, tha t
-
coach came in contact with a hu g e stone in the run!.
Bill lost his equilibrium, and tumbled heels over
head across the dasher striking heavily upon the
sod.
Bill arose to his feet, dug, the gravel front his
nostrils and ears,*tuul commeneed . berating the dri-
VC: for his Garele.:sneF , s in itpsetting the coach, and
thus endangerine. the lives of the passengers.
" WWII thunder yer doW(" said Bill. " You
mis'able saw—"ic—sawney, a knock—lc-.—ockin
p eo ple' s bra i ns, °tint this way "
The driver informed him that, the stage bad not
been overturned at all ; and the passengers assured
Bill that John was right. , •
. Our good natured friend approached the vehicle
again, and remounted slowly to- his former seat,
outside.
ups( t, says"
. " Not at -all," rtTlieittlie . dril,-er.
khow'd that," said Bill, '; I
wouldn't ha' go' njj/ "
AVSTIIIAN PLUCX—RErENGLIG Efhllteu.--neo
the intelligence reached
,Vieuna that Gen. H a yjau
had received die compliment of a sound thrashing
froth . Barclay, Perk'''s A: Co.'s draymen, an 4111131n
an officer, awfully , arrayed; bv battery, - be
sierd the portraitof 4atueen Victoria, which. was
hanged up in a cdfe, and most gallantly deinoli.shed
the unresisting effigy of a gentle lady.
How entirely . worthy of tc'ddeiler of Efaynau.
The courageous flunkeYl . . The account -says that
the fellow-oth'oers of the brave soldier rattled their
swords sad cried brava.. Brave. Austrians.! -
some of the Austrian papers threaten to retail•
ate'CodEngliikvisitorti the treatment experienced
byllityrian'intotidon. The Allgememe 2,eitung,
tho.leadinr jourrial:Of GernianY, •
; 4 A:tenet the Eaglitli'afrald of:being Iterved in
the same way , 4)38-Fotglisk who every year spoil
egr:bieutifulliindecepee by the tghlity,e(theli
pears= and refilierneoof therithannerti 1'
Reminiscence of falton's first Voyage.
Some twenty years since, I formed a traveling
acquaintauce,' upon a steamboat on the Hudson
river, with a gentleman, who, on that occasion,
related to me some incidents of the first voyage of
Fulton to Albany, in his steambat the Clermont,
which I have never met with elsewhere. The gen
tlentau's name I have lost, but I urged him, at/the
time, to publish what he related t, which, however,
so far as I knew, he has never done.
I chanced, stud my narrator, to be at. Albany on
business, when Fulton arnved there hi his unheard
of craft, which every body felt so ranch interest itt
seeing. Being ready to leave and hearing that thia
craft was to retnrn to New York, I repaired on
board, and enquired for jllr. Fulton. I was - referred
to the cabin, and I there found a plain gentleman:
)y man, wholly alone and engaged in writingi,
"Mr. Fulton, I presume." •
" Yes, sir:' . .
" Do you return to New York with this boat I"
" We.shall try to get back, sir."
" Can I have a passage down I"
" You can Lake your chance with us, sir."
I inquired the amount to be paid, and after a mo
ments In4.itation, a sum.l think six dollars was nn•
Med. The amount in coin I laid- in his open hand,
and with an eye fixed upon it. he remained so long
motionless that I supposed- there might be a mi -
count, and said to him, "Ia that right, sir 1" ThiS
roused hint as front a kind of revery, and as. he
looked up at me-, the big tear was brimming in his
eves, and his voice faltered as he said.- Excuse me
but mereory'sVas false as I contemplated
the first pecuniary reword I have ever received fOr
my exertions in adapting steam to navigation. I
would gladly commemorate the occasion over a bot
tle of wine with you, but really lam too poor eyrie,
for that. just now ; I trust we may meet again when!
this will not he
;Some four years after this : when, the Clermont
had - heel.: •g,rcatly imprbved. and tr,-o new boats
made, ranking Mon's tle,•t three boats' regularly
plying between :iew York and Albany, I took pa,§-
s.rtt in one of these for the latter city.
The cabin in that day, was below; and as I. walk
ed its length t aid fro, I saw I was closely obser-
vel by one I f.upriosed a strand-er. Soon, however
I recalled the featrae. of Mr. Fulton, but witimht
disclosing this I continued my walk and waited the
rti.4.ult. At length in passing his seat our eyes met,
when he sprang to his feet, and eagerly seizing my
'hand exclaimed. I knew it mu-t he you, for your
features have-never e,eapPd me; arid although '1
inn still far fr.•ni rich, yet I venture that bottle
now.- It was ordered and during its discussion I.lr.
F. ran rapidly but-vividly' over his experience of
the world's co!iness. and sneers, and of the bopds;
fear 4, di , appointment; and difficulties that were
scattered through his whole career of discovery, up
to the very point of his final crowning triumph, at
which he so fully felt he had at last arrived. Aral
in reviewing all these -•aid he, I have again and
again recalled the occasion and the incident ofonr
first interview at Affinity; and never have done
so with eat its renewing in ray mind the vivid emo
tion
it originally caused. That seemed and st
doe; seem to me, the turning ptint in my destiny
—the dividing line; betweenjight and darkness, in
my career ut.on earth, for it was the first =tail
rec‘erniticat io navigation—a (limn so recent
as to be -till Iveoll,ctegsbrmany—and such Fn).-
ton there related them were the early appreciatiouts I
by the world, of a di , coy c ery which has invaded all
water.. causing a revolution in navigation which hits
almost literally- brought the very ends of the earth .
in contact.—/Valo Commercial.
A floor - JOKE.—The following joke is too good
for us to take the responsibility of it, particularly
as we were sworn never to mention it, but editors'
oaths, lovers' prihinises, and pastry cooks' pie crust,
are about of a muchness ; so- here goes : Young
mammas , are proverbially fond of displaying the
precious intellects of their "buds of beauty."' ; A
triend of ours, dropping in at the dinner hour of 5 a
youthful pair, not two hundred miles from the city,
was treated to a gratuitous entertainment on the
score of maternal solicitude by the charming IMs
tess. " You've - not seen our shake hands
with the gentleman." Of course Willie obeyed di
rections. and of course our friend as in duty bound,
was filled with admiration from the crown of his
head to the sole of his:feet. "Ile's so polite too,"
urged the mother; "says yes sir, and no ma'am,
and - can use his knife and fork like - a gentleman.'
" Now, Willie." said she, placing:him at the table,
the better to give a practical proof of her assertion;
"now, Willie, what will you havel" Our friend
was all cars for the reply, and prepared to go into .
immediate ecstasies, but no reply came.
"Will you have sonic beans 1"
"No-ol " roared out the precious.
" that the way to speak to your math
? No—what "
" Nu beans !" - shouted the little Curiosity, fling
ing the plate at his mother's held, and upsetting
the soup tureen into our friend's lap. ' 4 ‘ Deliverme
from smart children hereafter,"exclaimed.our friend
as he related to us the mishap, -at the same time
threatening toitull our very inoffensive nose if We
should ever make a capital of it. We did not rel
ish the threat, though we did the story, and' so told
it, in consequence of which, we beg to assure bar
readers, that from this time henceforth, we etansider
our Dose pulled in several places. •
A ROYAL D'hoy.—Freckrick, /King of Prnsija,
was so wmarkably fond of children that he suffer
ed his grand-childr'en to cuter his apartment at nny
time they thought proper One day, as he was
writing injut closet, one of thee young pririces
was playinz at shuttlecock near him. The shuttle
cock happening to fall• on the table at which !the
king sat, he threw it at the young prince, and con
tinued to write.
The shuttlecock happening to fall &second time,
the king again threw it back, looking sternly ae:the
child, who promised that_ no occident of the kind
should happen in future: The sliuttlecock, hoWev
er, fell a third time, and even upon the paper on
which the king was writing. Frederick thee took
up the plaything, and put it into his pocket. • The
little prince humbly asked pardon, and begged the
king to 'return the shuttlecock.
The king refused. . The prince redoubled big! en
treaties, but no attention was paid to them. The
young prince, at length tired of begging, advanced
boldly towards the king put his lands on his sides,
and said in a threatening tone— , .` •
" Will your majesty give me My sliettleencli ?
Say yes or deniand - an answer !
The king immediately , burst-into a 4 of laught
er, and taking. the shuttlecock from his pocket, re-!
inrned it. to the prince saying—i- •
.
"Iron are a breve .bov—you will never JO gr.
Silesia to be taken froth you,"
A negro was broight up befOro the Idayni. of
Philadelphia far stealing :chickens.. The theft Nviui
conclusively proved. - _" Well, Toby," slid his pion
or, ",whiit havc you got to,say-fskaroticsalfr
"Niffin,"but die, Boss :1 . was as crazy as 61-
bug when I - stole dat Pullet,c6s I initiklaibStble
de big rooster Wiequeber date it. .DatSlioarAlre
sively dat i was laboeit* under delielirintu treilett
dos,"
• -. • Don't Fret.
Hasa neig hbor injured yo ti I •
Don't fret-L
You will come off the best ; •
qe's the most to answer for,
Zgever mind it, let it -rest, • •
Don't fret.
gas a-horrid lie been. told
Don't fret; •
it will run itself to death,
, If you let it quite alone,
It will die for want of breath;
Don't fret -•
Are yOu r r enemies at.work P •
Don't fret,
They cant injure you a whit;
If they Sod you heed them not, .'
They will soon be glad to quit;
pat fret.
Is adversity your let
Don't fret.
Fortune's u - heel keeps turning- rood,
Every spoke will reach the top,
Which, like you is going down ; r.
Don't fret • -.
,- • i
Interesting Reminiscence.
The Albany Evening Journal of Sa'AtlrdaYi-hbis
the following interesting reminiscence: . i• ,
Twenty-five years ago this 'day, the Erie Canal
Was Imnounced as navigable from Lake Elie to' he
Hudson River. Qn the 26th of October, 1§26,
eight years and four months from the time the
work commenced. the Erie Canal was completed,
and on that day the Seneca Chief," with Ve Witt
Clinton, then _Governor of this State, Lieutentud
Governor Tallmadge, and various Comtnittee 'an
board, left Buffalo for the Hudson River. Along
the entire line of the Canal, within hearing distince
of each other, heavy artillery were placed, andithe
sternly , of the "Seneca Chief" from Buffalo Was
carried to the City - ot New York as fast as sonrid
could travel, and by the same means it was Ist
nounced in 'Buffalo that this great event was k i ti t trn
in New York. This was before the present ode
of communicating information hi - telegraph had been
made known; but the plan was so well execUted
that in one hour and thirty minutes from the fi'ing
of the first gun at ButEtlo, the echo was heard in
New York and returned to Buffalo. It was a :dily
of great rejoicing throughout the State; Audltike
arrival . of the" Cider; at the various places...a pig
the line was signalized . with great pomp and splen
dor. Every city and Village had prepared its kis
tivaL and throughout the whole line, from the lake
to the Ocean, it was a voyage of triumph. Ontbe
second of November the " Seneca Chief' reatthed
this city, eight days from Buffalo. and on the' fahrth
she 'arrived in the City of New Ydrk. 'll t lienithe
fleet which was composed of the "Seneca Chief'
and several steam and other craft front. Albany,
New York and other places on the riser, aeached
Sandy Hook, Governor be Witt Clinton prdeeeoed
to perforin the ceremony of 'commingling the iwit
ters. of tile Lake with the Ocean, by .pouritig a ;'4,g;
Erie, intendedto . ndied e and d commemorate ti? naNiaa t ieeommunicitonwhiehhasbienieizl.
plished between our Mediterranean Seas and the
Atlan tac Ocean in'about eight years ; and to th' ex
tent of more than four hundred and twenty ve
miles, by the wisdom, public spirit and one „, Ot
ro l ,,
the people of the State of New York ; and may the
God of the heavens and the earth smile niosit. PM- .
the pit
i ouslYon'
thiswork, the att b d ure re sti nde ra r
m at
.p I ;bserVientio
best
of
NLVD WOODS DO NOT COST MCCEL-nlgy . 12 • ver
blister the tongue or lips. And we have n- ver
heard of any mental trouble arising front this nuar
tet. 1
, . I
Though they do not cost much, yet they aceorn
.plidi much. . - •I 4 '
They help one's good nature and good Will. 'An
gry words are fuel to the flame of wrath, and Make
it blaze more freely.
Kind words make other people good naturell.;
- Cold words freeze people, and hot worth scorch
theirs, and bitter words 'make them bitter,and wrath
ful words make them.wrathful.
There is such a rush of kinds words in our days
thatit seems desirable to give kind words'aeharfee
among them. There are vain words, and idle words,
and hasty words, and spiteful words. AndriTv
words, and profane words, and boistermis * rtl9,
and wallike words, .
iii
Kind-words produce their own imago els: I ' eris
souls, and a beautiful image it is—they : snoth the
comfort4f the beJer. They shame him out Ibis
sour, mortise, unkind feelings. We have noti ;- let
begun to use kind words in such abundance asithey.
ought to be used. ' '
Taus 8t0r...-A Quebec correspondent t 4, the
Boston_Ranger, tell 4 the follotiirigstory of a "Yan
kee, who bad been'" all around "at that place l'•:' ,. - '
The Yankee aHroached a group of English Igen
Itlemen in. front of the Hotel, and flourishing al red
bandana, observed.-- , i
~;.
1
" Wall, I've been all around, and I've con tided
We don't Want ye." ',.
An Englishman addres4l him • With—"Wli i do
you Phink of tlitcOitadel 1" . ~' ~; ~'
"Oh, Scott wotild'nt make. anything of t king,'
that ; head land fifteen miles down the. rival end
starve them out." 1 J,
"But it is stocked with three years', prwrist , itits;'-
'
replied the other. - 1 1 r . ,
, . .
- Well, he'd stay five, then." i
Go it, Anglo-Safon, thought tire. ~.,.. ..: .;
' ... :
— 77 -4, ---
.-, . ,
Mrs' Iltawr,--The tittle I have fieob or the ' Orld
and known of the)iiitory of mankind, teache - Mit
to look upon the errors-of others in: sorrow, MA litH
anger. When I take,the history sf one poor heart 1
that has sinned and suffered, and represent o t t l3 4?'
self the 'strngeles 'aiiti temptations -it has - siied
through; the brief pulsations of joy; the feverish '
n
inquietude othope and fear, the pressure of lint,
thedesertion of friends, the acorn of theworl that.,
haellttlecharity, the desolatten_of the satire 'er.,
tuarY; and threatnitig - voices Within, health ; '..
,n,
happiness gone; I. 3 Would falai leave the:erringiOnr,
-of my fellow mark'. withi.Hicia 'Ana. whiatiiiisindlit
'came. ..- - , ",,,f2:j...::-..
• 7'4- ,•"" ‘ .7
How is tyro anDatrztrdniriabman *bol - waa
-very near aigh.tefl,..about fig ht a i dnel:itsliated
tbat he" alniuld,stinid"!4x pike" , niaier
on i g t than =the otheedid lb 'him ; Woe'
thejtaine, time I -*This beats , -Sheeic
Oan'a telling a fat man Whe ; was going #Bl.4 t ***,
:thin one:that the.tatters slim td4r.tt, WOE' ito-:
Chitted other's portlypetieti;aila it the :biir;
let hit him citik lino it 0 - 10,1 r
-•- • •
~, •
Atiktoiner)36m in LoujavinePlle4 Ir ie l
appeared in the - character of census` 140.
lug schedule with - him and caused mai an q;6•o9Sint,
by - his questions asito the• age; wealth, teoi , ot PU
the pretty ladiesi...
_
. ' ------,,,,
„,. I % l ':' - blillit - 4 7 0 - ''''''' =
.---.' m.. ~...... ....:.,
...., -•-• ....
‘ ' tow way tilk r htlyikal:' ,. 'l` - ' l= ' :-- ' .-- '
A Seot"h'in'orwhohid liemtiosialifbliiihiga ` Y sword as tofight , severa duetiJ.with *tier' Rea; e infe- -
ess,,but Who on.ieconnt of Ein;exhiniket:thietneviiii p
i
• quarreling, when a little intozn,ted,and.fakNe i
boasted couruge, was deserted end
v .deepieo,by Ni„s 1.
brdther Aeon, cime - oue.eveift info it Targeenizi-
pany. There happened to be !present erilidniiiiii ":•
officer of the saine regiment, whichl*Walarbioriatii.
ti one d at Montreal-. This. XAP4FIr i n 1
;other things the tame nt i t Te l a iii , ,, ,zood i t i okiill
wirich he hill the Mitrfortudefo be ijoinirliitV, - That ` A
was bem us o you was a ralicillieektitiktinin*A•
served - the Major.; Xou , stre• idanedlanirsyailhe fr
ii
Yankee., The ceinpmy Jitared:l , The, Beetehasas, 1 1
looked down upon - him with its 'int& coal ;hiniriAllie : p
Goliath slid upon Day id, and iermedi'iztely alma, AA
you a man to meet me f' ,
i r es - rapliedthei j ilinlos4i
any time and where yon plasii - oury vrit • h thifirik• :.
i ll
vino, that. We Meet within* recoil*
~IY''. !
~1110111. •-, :
to-morroty nioniiii?„ at Eive'o'clo4iitt-i7—,,,, Ajtelq• ' ,
The company present endeavored' to _ffiei elki ir
Yankee, telling him the - Major - hail ever :a pant o" 1;
wbere he bad none, and he had better co ' isip-' .1
matters ere he would haveesueertotePent him& ',
nese, but be sti ll persisted- Thelnext - i n*, ,li
Yankee repaired to the lace ,b - th i . if
appointed hour, ginned with ii, latenniskiwebrirt: ,f 4
ly r,iter the • Major made his aplieitairiiej*lth , hlii il;
brace of pistols and sword. .
ced, far, the Yankee in an Before:lo , lde wive* ii
auptere(tony, bid him Ito* il l
or he Nyould blow hissiarains out. , The Majoritinah !.• ft
with amazement a r t 'this - inexpeeled 'et ritageiri;'
luctantly obeyed but e.rpostniatea withitinrAthi- - ft
injustice ofencli ungentlemanlike proeeedingev the. lii
i t
Yankee, was implacable, and det rminedicrliublish /
him fur his past conduct, and th abusehe iiiiuseg- -ip
had received. Lay down your, iibraisnaiiiiteli. ILI
says he. (still presenting his nittdref,) - iad- to 'the
„ri
right about face march .l , •4 - -•
_- . 1 -- .;,tilzf.r..r• ili
The poor major was again under,the neelefOtt o f 11
obeying, and, u s ttering IL volley titairieeitanist 14 ,
star. prsivety submitted., Thirratiketaken*let‘ ,11f i
'ly took possession of his arinT., ?Tie - bit* ?tirreewl, Ni.
ardly,,ithirs - to disarm me of all idefencie„aitiiktiee . -$
majt.r. No, replied his Allow. )itombietakkAdea :i ,
honorably with von; theie, take - hay: Brunkii I)
I Ns
(thr win; it towards him.) and`cleferiayoutlifte. A
He, site incensed, seized the weapon with!afindit.
tura f exultation and . precipitate . vengeance, - and. 14
- zt•
rush ng forward, denianded,his . OMB, or lle would him to —. i
p
Blow away; and - '-•;1 . ... i, elijil -
the ankee. Provoked at such'nntrarillelea Inno4
lenc . in, a fit of phrenzy he drew iheArhmwl—;.
But, alas, the musket had not been charged! , Th.
glory of our Lira„,oadocia was scr• rallied;and:his a,,ti•
feelings so mortally woundeaby'his indignity„ thee ti-,.
he sold his' commission and left the Oahe: 1:-
, ex.
7.ii.
4.
Kindness.
Tbii word teldom begine an article in
per. but "crueltyror " 9c'e often - tint*. -
It is a pleasure 'to record an *a ' tritidtleia;"- 6 ,„
painful that we have not frequent- opl!ditunitiet—=' , „
Yet such an act made our heart giad,lllred':itwitli..2
anew love for bur 'Lind:only a, (K., oe..i
,A Fchool-girl, about ten y?ariof 00E1; .
with a stuallt .; • .
F eu
Under the shade of ,a tree. Just theliti, lymitt
_,, 1 •.„
observed the. group :' His eirelltkiti-isiii "7" - Utf:,7. - , l '
ly, attracted by the child, stillskipperted' Vie iiirkiV,
or her Mend. 0 :.-.... :7[..C--..._ ~,.::, ~:,-
I" What's the matter, inY litileltt lasi '-' he befit , ' f'...
matter,,
in It hind, soft tone. ' 1
~ ' . „ •
.•
" She's sick , sir 'replied the girl, ' t ''' '' , :i.
k' And are you taking her homer '':',
) "I'm trying. sir.". ~, . . - .- . ... 1 - ~ .- r ' ll
;"How far off does she Bye I" - l ~.,.;:. - .-io,
" Down by the - Long Bridge:, , r .
.."'... ", •. ..: ' I
"A mile'or morel and - you ivittdd;Oriy, iiii 141,.'
i ie
through the hot sun In° shade on tlifi)..ikleitheirAl
" I must try, sir," answered . Pelioolvl.-,, :1 Li
"No, you must not," said th 'lcingen_tin1 1
.it A
I
Would kill both of you." I • -
_, -,,...,- O V. '
A carriage passed at this i n rent - A'irorditbAi,i
a waving arm caused it to draW up to the Pe,s_llo - ' l, .
sent. All the party entered- 4, - . and all ri4ht user-4
ry. except the molt one, but .eett, idle: loektt4 4... t.
with a faint smile, fix/ogler largei,:tender eyins'ess
the face' of the stranger. - - Tlitchiveth*tlieeeif le;
et - meted fully as to hiadestiiiit 'oiChattlilettliill=4;!
tee . , and now drcnre away; : . -7. :::.i-zt,'..:::'",`-,..-_,:ir
. Poor little girl t" said the Outlet*, kt.fdtst4-4,1-1
self. in a lowypice. ' '' - - - 0 • 4 4)
-... 1 ,
-" GOOd-by, sir 1" gild r"
tone..
T The acitenm 'of a sheep's Itar", iiiio
things in nature that I know.of: , ku eve Irdl , -4dial
tinguisti her own lamb's bleat ainotx 'it - thiitiet,o4l:
all braying at the same time :' Betd.iitt,' - ' l lbii'diatil
guishrnent of voiceis perfectly ; miptilatibitWilley
the ewe and lamb, who, atuid the,ththkethir-imirikl
run to meet one another.
_Theriltre few • , tlunim
that hav(i'evefgrniaedine chore than aii Weisha*
ing, and then the spOrt non:hank( thi'irlinlirdat:4.,,
We put-the linekintti-e.=tol4 set out altAir 'l=4l
to -tile bill, and. then
,setitut- the - insaizda - Ai**
1
they are shorn% Thtl,m oment thatii - li , ‘.l
,mlltw .
its dam's voice it tuihes fipiii tW*li .. , ,li..e.',
her; but instead or - finding; .tita . iongh; Web: .
r
comfortable mamma whiebritlehlnfillisuiaek . .
hours ago, it - 4 31 P - ... eithetVoiritiiiiioil: .
deg( ruble ' - Ikirlinelsatootit,
44 - 0 - pedlea - 4. - . - 1
uttering a '
fifostrtun i . ,„- - -i..
airests its • tieeriind=iettitna-.
&wildly ft ilffilibefOra the" '
._..
titruetit is TifeEt#o4&lolthegeA
A Deiti
tiles ilttee;
Many tiep
records,, ea
- In-this cat
ed,.;o his crii
exemption
Ccinstaution
,tifiett fOr Almitinillititii*
a.r'‘'.-44;hainiP ki*e4- twolkt.
alocofiico, 14.1&41: - .: . ., --,, - - :; , ,:::'-',--:-
Pimtneet; LAlriv4fhit iwirs
wept isioiid:-`r
,sonablis-prodanationlindd lio 411
itk2o 3 4beirWorlth4- Puillitk , Mi
repudiate the bondli - ortbe;lTrai
*Rind reptidiiti , isomribt
Losistate
took mo Mtfiritt* - 1
"ii/in;,W L Y 3I Y it/ 1 11.7 ; 1 ;0e
faith to tiioet tbeppOpyi,r.fulAr.
with be •
.
. . .
A little g io' v , -
lieri . littik;ampiii
': - . - sl.ki:liiiiri**:
siidil*": ":, -::", '::-
rog Nbitita.
ie;Prll
it x*,lllk.
• -4414144-
• -
=VM
cliildre6
ii i.'44,
1,
4j os oat
tr; is
-101,2