OLI , 4L v 29 N MBER 32. frl -` 11 ro ft, ci i s .• ‘••-;--- -- '-- ---. -.-- -- 7 -------- 7 - I . 1 . Lines on Revisiting:the_ Conntrz . ' • 1 , - 4 I I stand upon my native bills again, . • 1 '.. 13mad, round, and green, that. in th E unirne' Withgarniture of Wavifig grass and gain,. Orchards, with beechen forests, basicitig lie, • While deep the s unless glens are scooped hetlvecti, Vatere brawl o'er shallow beds the strums u 1 i,j„... .P .. A ii sp i n g . voice and glancing eyes a ro 1- • .And ever restless feet omik a r o ",,,,i n i g - , coin froni, G l i t hers the blooir 0 . ~.. iiie s . s ,,quelianna, a llttleibe4ow hem.- Ti, f.rst extract is. rom the North Brapah Devatrat, • Wished at Tunkhannock, in- which it i ,lappetirs.is 1 jotial, and the other purports to be etv York r-. re pandence of the.Dentaeratie • Or, of Wilk I,Nte. , These staunch Deinocmticsb ts; being p - ;jibed in a District re resented in ir,!; : ibt, have not the fear or the Free Sailers lief the b' in'es,' and . consequently do not hft i ate to sPeitk . 1 \ our l witit perfect freedOm, on th great questions'of l'.;.e•.ilay. : - ... Th'e:- expositions of p,-4its are rich,: but somehou, seem I* .. t, • ealculal fr A Sonthern meridian ! Read and se . . _ r.i.T " There is one word of warning which we w li. - • t o give hi time-'•--a warning Which wehumb.ly su it will be well, for the Democratic partt-of this•C, niertwealth to heed and ponder. No mean need s Ilis eves' to tire faCt that the greats game playing politie , • to-play, as it has been played 4r the lastt, ant i tvehrs,- is the determination'oa thd , part ofilii, elitsetts to obtain the domination tundl i control pf LS 0r , .. Many ar4 the dodges and mauy the ciente tl - vii'..., - which she unscrnpulously combines in this. , tt li ! ,. , :ti‘sitist humal freedom ;". for we +ll the, pee le, ;1::;!, r - e l it'll 'diem to ponder tile. truth' well, - , :that he :te;..:;d;,;;ei,' of 31aSsitchnsetts in this I.7pion is the, iad . ~f31 ) ,., , ;11,, , ,1iberty! Iry all the gamblin i •j , hells -- W h ia10:t..,t19, woritl.'. which offend the e r lve of God .nd ,hifoirS :.,,n.l brutify his image 'in the shape of nian, 'the'stormv passions-;Mil vices which filll the hutilan lits . oin are e:nlide . e . d; . worked, and plii.i . ednpon as he satto ;4(l:lents of ruin; mid tlnifart, the example d is le, son i=-in no respect lost orthro Yu away, in the ...Ti',:li , t:lke whielrshe is playing *for , -bi- Massa hu ,,e' i ES. i!romptell ,l.iy 'that stateless - cu idity which ex-. eite, her to day, she was the ' nurring motile of t he -lave t: rode in this Union ; and when in the. on -1 , v , l , l ion of l I SZ! , it was proposed to put an mute fate ~ 40 . r, t o that traffic, :she had influet ce „and wer 'pf,l - e..;;;fl fo extend; its duration for tenty years. lt ita., - 11;Ilss;;c;imsettS that, did this, and eforence toiler ti i 0 ,1'4.1 wnllinterests invested inAhisr trade. To.- ty , ; Ac is champion of abolition, and therti- is ..f, .hope or form in which she caii excite prejudic or ho,tility t' , ;:tint4 the very institution uhich she nu etl into bring, and throngh which she w rich, that he ; - doe 4 noi tutploy.,. There ,is no agent tite, rile for er rise; there is'nO falsehood which she does not ut r; E there is n 0 deeeption.too low which she does . not p i ' c rice ro'ini:l4;a4l and bewilder mankind trim this •sub jii,et. .11"1„;11 i t tason she haS nothing to do, for reason 4rt-t.-1- ;1j ii; ed - hi en or States...." The p issions and ere-. .11.:Iity . of . maul:hid aredier dependene. Iler proxim it..y to l'i...!;v York has already,enabl d 'her to accom pli_ it hzr. design'upon that Corn niintirealth.. New York I: as _ bccone a mere - colony of l'ilaiifacliiiSetts ; and n o inarkedly is this trtie, - that Lord Jlhn Russell ( ougr:teh,ted Lord Clarendon in . the'Etiglisli Paiiia , iii,•ol upon '. the consolidation of tie• Laws of Itlas.-a -.thlit:lt:z ~title -1 1(:.*' York." •New York is abolition teed,. and froth her ....the • Democras. haiei no' longer • i ny . • . athing to hope. _The great battl •fieldds:new our Owii.be!oved cornmOnwealth: 'As I nges Pennsylva ... aia rein:tins true to liers'elf, to heron interests and • tO ti:,' Den.orimiie party, our backs e free from the ; i • • siourge of Yankee domination. Mu 1 . if ' she yields-1 ~ - if it sisal be =aid iif her in the Er.gl Parliament as! , . 1.1 • : ii111:Ft1:11,111S1011 . gly deClared of New lork.that she lead • beer,the it me -ei colony of ,3taAsachusetts, the last bar- 1.. ner In ;11 c deFigns'of. that Commitwealth will have - t . . • - • ii , .!enre , ..im'ed. ',' Pennsylvania will be ilttniiered and - .tarv ., t-.l . that cite Yankee may 'feed' sumptuously. ey... . l ery d.ty;', dyed children be raised in igno cep 41mi the rizoi . (d the Yankee may :whetted - eeni ~i , , for'tik•ir , ~prot e ct ed tarmits:' • , ' :•. • , - • •., ..-: - t I .: il 1.11-it wili dii for the -Yankees.. jeornment is ( uitc quer.3,;(4.1-. . . . . . . • t 'l' . - • .: 'stiko.7 for rite Demoeratic letter writer, wliczNput 'Al: of Greeley, and views-generalli, are not exactly i 4 accordalitc • Wi tit the letter of our Democratic Judge, • -Uelf. David Wilmot, which We . published last week, / • tflon4l , they mby be calculated to snit-the taste of the -; • T - Fmnocracy of Luzerne : •' -1 .-/ • • it . • 1 • ar * I- Nzir.To Aug. 6,185 i. ' .Yr. - lENti ItArrEart:—Traitor Gait:LET, of the N. 1 - 41.Trilytirti . who was a little;:- while al.. o • disdaining • -il ;ally action, and loudly adyobaing airiiio ii of all par ;, ties op . the Icebraska and Fugitit 6 gluye Ades ion, I - '. b)u;cl : nut - .. resist the'opportunity r. aq,rded by the rey --• li - • Vr.l ' affair ; to let the eat out of the bag, and • ow iiat after all this• new- platform ffir ',the friends of frptlor.i' (!) w = as only a weak inyeution of the i enemy te. make mpitai for the 'Whig party arid_for tie tri . il . hum , . rue fii . c . will show his brus if ion watch him 'closely. ; ileware of the geese when ! thelox of the ......' F r ,f '.... elves about --- 1 . , n nua , .preaelies about frpeciom. ,All Ids 'proclivities ' tend' t!tr:iri despotism-the tismthe despotism 'of .11 contempt il,le oligareby..'of which he hopes tic, be To sac 'rifire.intliyidual mid State freedom • to aiihypocritical Vitiat. of gamhling politicians—the ' same set who hare ~ always +wen traitors to the y eount.7 and taken Sides. • ;I. • - , • cub Erlo2,lld against the - United sttes;--iti the policy . , rthe Whigs; and to 'all this the .tend, wader *aby pretence they : can: get up, -Maine Lae!, Abolition, l'or - ~ r ay thing else; *with any quantity - 1 ;f Afant astd,sancli- a !HI pretensions. The burning oft prrti l town hasset - . l'nem cat afreSit, and the .141Athe isjumped from he Ore.trided 'Anti-Nebraska platfo to join the - ery,and I • is show that!he *as as holies - d insincere' in the e• - • 1 :opusal of ulping parties as he- as iti his Free Soil ' ?ano ,, tiyring . .l When lie 4'ound that he Icould notmake • iaphal out of that Van Buren tu4eMent, he turned • l!n i ' l l an d ,hoyie t l hishrush. lie has done the .same rtiiiititis ioceasion. Any waY that these broken. „down; I , •clui - 41.1SiS Cala injure - the gettratic party, is • •.. I 1 - . ' • . , . !retm): - ..eti - t,i with any amount of Vxis fraud, cant and it 1. co :curious sense ef duty.' 1 .. ~ " -, .. ° ll . It I: , tee , : , scary to keep a brighttloOk out for . i.liese llt ioterl,e , ', ,, rs and beware of joining with them its ,i• - , - :1 - 111 'S of their t•icitemes. • They have as many ii.,.:48 6 a il li tat; and are 'always ready to start any hobby - frpon . • w'seh titc.y . ean ride into power ; 1 and - of late years; (i they hat•• • built great hopes upon the bgitation of the S • , te eslat . e••• li - • . . • 1 'I , . •I . An exeelitlnt thing has . happen ell. here in relation to tiat;, 51aine LaW and tenapenna !iniquity. There is li a hianeli of I there high handed ansi . called. `the • Carson tongue agains't the - poOr, l lwhose; puipose it is 1' to enforce ;tlie Puritan ' SabH.iathi'arid present poor 1 , peradro. filni i i buying any giner i es ; , n .g i oos of soda, • ; or 4 cig.ir pr., Sunday, whilo the . incibers of the holy 11 alliance ttreirunning art andall - i aiay - g unday to prae - o ~ • , I! Sabbath by trii ,. i. ".olsopiesa . nd•ity• o'r;'sica. k-cepiiig their,. . il bylio.ming -their fellow we n , an d watchin g , .1l ;; - to see if sor , ne poor riidow sells a k iallow candl6,. o rl: l l l ! glass, of root beer toyer - poor neighbor who, not be,l 1 . ing paid coll. till late fiaturday night,) . could not pur -1 . thase anything till the: next-trto iingj i , . I - One of this gang of exeanabie undrel l ir lisp. Ltex 11, Gits.ELEY, ,is j /iio is' nUt t ' y e lr in e, in his' . illimirici .t• pa _ k . ..i:, , er b a etaiiSe - jury, will not bring in a man 1, ity of il l - ' s `: , /)* " .11F . li`lntir lit the Ninth War 4, for the gratification ,fl - 3 :'.!r: . . -,. •)i . 1 , 7 1 .0 ...j11‘19116.F.S- a.,,..1.4iat.t....,Et ' ' - TKO L 1 on of IliCTI! rivnt posi . which occasioned the famous I.fitiSoffri.Com: p mise. Mr. Clay iwas ever akrOalied by ordk ry, por rthy • „ - men w country wise, now the clevs gir; one of the Itomisk them, as well,as ter of their own iunittaymen of At trance of this in( ject which-has al consideration. ! solciice, at least 'descendants of tions persecutioi synonymons,and abhdrrence toward the Ito;rnan priesthoodis an undy ing elentent4 It is not nix intenticin tO;review the wary Jesuitism oithis production, bat as the letter was Written the our learning,' with your/I:hid p.srttlission.l Will ask ;the Attention 9f your t*.itera'to a fen- important items contained therein. • • • Theyriter, referring to what he calls Oin -4 pre l j udi-- ces against the Catholics, (and this; by the by, should 1 he (lefined.irejtidice against the Roman priests instead of Catbolies, &distinction' which the hierarchy labor M. disguiiie,),f!aysf, that ' enlightened' Catholiefi look upon. a lie at a mortal sin,''and 'that nothing is forbidden and ptuiished more than deception.' Nos:, what are we to lululcrstandhy-this assertion if - not,; that the in- fluenceof the Roman church tb suppr e s s Mortal sins is entirely . inadequate , ; .or thatt-there are Out few en lightened , Ctitholics - irr',our land: And ye this epistle_ propoLcs, to disabuse us of our prejudices::, i, . • I• : - The Writer s.lys, that 1 the-simple right to believe : and m - cr,slirp as one sees fit,: cannot be destroyed by litiaa - power,' yet notwithstanding, this right Itinually being w=ithheld in the States of the li - ` - ef which the . Pope is political head. And he •i :r.finyS, ',that man has no moral right to worship •vise than as-God,has appointed,' and to this as- c -1 he adds ' `thatt the church of lleme is the /" I . of.the living God, whose executiv: is Vie Pope 1 1 IT it'''. Cxpounder.':. if thitbe true , Olien it legiti ly - forrotrs thatwhal am - lan - is t'o belicVe and Avor lis 4o . be dew - mined bythe - Pope, either in . his k'al or spiritual capacitV. This - teisnmption of sertiol i chum, r ho i I Irt.tel -hip, po.liii powi:l- over liberty oreonscience, is ill meal alas in the nineteenth - ont eiu N' — ' by ay. l . I'M , ine; ''' • • , ' . Th s Catholic professor woultilain hate us believe 'tbit. bele, sincere in asking our interference, lest ' he mayre deprived of those rights to - sy delt be feels hints if entitled,' and yet The gloss instil s)ie scruple not t heap upon us, belie him sueli.oredit. II dc fenl3c4:l2, of the persecution of the Midis' :r the e.o& TOse i nY, .b; says that '.he,' .(the Duke,) ' of only . thin Is' Protestantism to be the underminer of author ity,b it also he knows that it is the darimdtion of.thoSe , l i souls: who embrace 'it,' and .. iti the infinitude of his own I,understarAng he asserts, that not only ' the Oratid.Dtaki, Li- well as every scholar kdoivs' that the English tin: station of the, Bible `.contains over sixteen hundred errors;' iii all' which he not only taunts these Popish' vier, of the Duke as coneltisivel, hut unblush- I ingh bran,ls the whole scholarship of Protestantism • with falsehood, although according to hi's, own state ,; he -writes' is one trembling lest he may be de riof those right§ to which he feeliibimself enti nid of which he well knoWs the *pie. of most Italic countries to be despoiled. .. . • • 1 miga '1 to toleration he saya,, 'if the Catbolimi thelpo -er, I think that . We would have rio Se- Aga bill, I, no slaver+ t no rum, no rotten literature, -, . . no- 'corrupt , Foundation, to socialism, ho woman's righ t ism.'- 'These thonghts . of the worthy professor ben ain tire , real sum: and Substance of. his ideas of y libe . Surely, under 'the ruleof a Rouynpries t-11 priest hood, there would be.no necessity 'to legislate on ne • ',slavery; as all would be alike subjects of a despot !enslaving' both mind turd .body. • But We mac well' inqnire whether,: under Catholicl dominatien, 'there ' 'ls-mild be no rump For answer, took at‘drunken Ro- .mkt! Ireland! - Would there be o rotterm in liter ' ?attire..? 'took- at the •licentioui press or Roman France' • • Would there ,be no • socialism? ,-,Look , a .. ripions:Mciman Germanyfor evidence! W,;.• : - 1 - ere be no corrupt speculation!.' , , —;.. 7; . .es of Ito- t . . man feireit! , . '• - 0 --- ii - ; - z; -- " - oti our Country and eating' ; out our 1 ,- ulistance !'- Would / . there be no Kaman's -' righ ;.,•, ? Probably not The women of .Ataerica : . might:eventually be degraded to‘the estate of beasts : oiburde.n; or made the, sport of a debauched clergy as. inßOman Europe! And now. I ask you, whether, the progress of liberty, teMperance, literature arid , rim Sin the United States would be likely to gain impetus l under Romip fwd . ? _ . •. - _ ' ; • --: - • •'' . ' ` - lios - our literary inslitutions' compare In excellence . AV it the ,'seventeen J'amit seminarists in our Union'l referred to with such assurance'of superiority by our;! .1 • - professor, I ant unable - to speak understandingly, hay-1, lug but little information about them ; hut; if : the eri- , deires of superiority are to • be found in influences tip-r, on Men,- then Harvard, Yale and • Union, have no eqUals in this country; for learning, integrity; patriet-iI . ism and piety, thebar, cabinet and pulpit of the '1 7 .• &Sties are • unsurpassed; and - the positions 'ore mostlY . filled from the scholaregraduating from' e _American' , • - C01k..1, 7 . oes ••• ' i ' • , '' ... .. ,-• • 1 ', •• - The 'associating in the same category by our pro-E, : ' lessor; of li'artin LOther and Mr. Orr, alias Angel Ga-'. kid, reminds me of • ,a_ like coupling of the President. of the United States and Arnold, the troitor, by an it-;'' inerant - Catholic lecturer who visited our:city , - abrint. , : Awe yeari since. i Both are alike worthy that 'univer •• sal !contempt Americans are wont to,trestow on' such characters:: - I - . -. . t • .:,' .0n this occasioni, hOwever, llcarmoi but refer to the, 'ceaseless prieStly reyilings of the Memory of that man'. Who, alone of all bis race; attained tin iSolatiom in hu4' man great i nem.' • Charlemagne had a Military equal in; . Napoleon and 'Newton ‘rifid for philosophic fame hi. La Place, but Martin Luther the ukimaium of priestly malevolence ; rose superior to all earthly competition when, friendles,_ penniless and alorie---Stiunling in, the procuce of asscnribleil, nation's 'at the Ilia of irornis; he tin* leritiesslY challenged' the .Ge-rinita Eiriperor, .M.the:lsinguage Of sCripture, ' If I have spoken evil, • , ~ bear witnesiragaiOt me.' ' '., In conclusion, Permit me to add; that unwittingly: orii pi.4esser has PlaCedbefmthis readers the eauseti of an ,crisential different* existing bet Ween t Protestant. citizens-`and Romen.riebjecti. -He says 'the protost! ! . ant's higher lawlS the Bible, expounded by-his indi vidual reasoning t and our higher lair is. the Bible,ex!' potnde4 by the church of the living God, whose ei . ectitivoaPe Pope.' In --these par:Wells .lie the ele • merits Of liberty and despothirt-of biro= greatneiit and huinan ittrbectity—=of self-dependerice and•self clistrus I: t. - :.- '`• • • . , - -..: -..- -. i: ,- • ' rucril Pil 1 , 1 , led lath M, an, through, the -exercise of that " - pinver of vidna/ r4zirnaing, .Conferred upon hits for high and noble puposes, becoines individtudized, isolatedfroin his fellow rnan-an individtud creation Sf the AhnightY, almost, God-like in bis Attributes, marking out in 'wonderful measure his ownhkgb destiny when net grading hisNnobler powers in obedience to named infallibility, but of his coin inherent will, - acquiring for 'himself, liberty on earth, azid,felicity k , in 'eternity, as connruAncled in Holy by work i hig rt, the august presence othis Maker, hie olvii salvation whim feu and trebling.' PtkiCAL. . . . . .N ' . . . . • ' , ..-r„, . 1 _ •' ....,, "THE WILL OF r' `. .~i t Hinted to A .l culis.s.l:, or ESTBAT.I - o enclosure of thii subscriber on or th of August a yid two . Fenn old s desired to prove Property pay char sway. - EZRI RICE. ug. 15tli 1854 . • Ile A* on of Suique .• lamina Co.; .- - - Ito the Militia ti o f the Conti:l3on ilinsylvania, I hinehy z!ye notiO, (hat rithis county wijl finale their returns qitia men to', me, ,f which I•will re ,i. of'33. ,•. , z. ' 'Rhat•the several afi sesser s within this 11 's , 2a 1 111,1ftt the time when they tual'ie their re . - &lin icent militia Men ,io the etionty com 4 ,as r hiaired by: tho sixth section of the, / 1 n eh till, hi a . supplemeny ,shali at the '4'37 Ire Tal l i eh% er to the Roper hritt'Aisine. I 8„„i ! delmquents, l one - . .. ._.,..... i Junel,i n e ac h .41 4,,,.....‘ as bulk when t , ,'i•r. :, shitsl . i- • - 4 k . rereivot'A inhabittmts,and at 23, t ;,.` r..,Vited. The authorities were•cons: )36,.. ~,_ • g tic ere . nOf a new onti to cosk not less th $56,000. Tits after the Maine Law had been in o nitiOn a few I onths only, Ikea: tit apartments w etnpty - there; and the °stab ishfnent as it now s i , will be sof& nt, under ti viggrous enforcement • the Maine Lair,tintil the city sbitll contain 100,000 habitants. f ' ' . 1 An anecdo t e or tyro ilinstrites: the rie.tualreffect the law upon the grog shops anll upon intempemn Within katt Months after the enactment of the hi , Portland gentleman introduced' 10 the Idayor,a bre , . et of his, wh I lhad arrived:in the city the . evening 1 fore. Ile ha f come to attend alaw suit, and had, ken with Iliad a witness who Uhts a very intemper than. Ile fe i rd the witness wouldbecome intoxi -1. ! , . . 4( -11ce' P, ' l ol' 0 le !gnu... ibis, There I was a' man . living hi our imme' i neighborhood ; who wasi well known aii a very in Aerate man. iWe inquired one tar of an acquaint. ' Who knewhim, what had; become of him, as he I , - pot been seel for somei weeks.: ' , ~T hegentltimait latigited when the inquitT Wasp 'llid said that- ThoMPsrin had been boasting that ' Could alwaysiget liquer!epoughland if bis grog slil he stopped, it would be pretty dry times in Tortli lie guessed.'l But aboUt - it fortnight before, Tho 1 shit 1 - i son was in his shop, .us, ce bleached out Other people if. and he Said: "4h, Thompson, w the matter, tat you bare changed .cotirdenan l .*ery much ri ' Oh,' said he,` find it such a dal bother to gell it, I'll give 'it up., And he was ab 111 : i I ; - , formed. ' I , • - ~i 0,,1y two •i - c.... , 1:.; ago, hi onn, • our principal st We were ::topped b v a man • Nth t e in ive knew pert ]j i well as it skillftil mechanic-, who had been very 4ent _ perate. Ile; Cowmen ced itnmediately ' Speaking, f hiS ....,,ttairs . :Md of),lis ImidnesS.'. We l asked where h div , ed. ' Step bi,re,''said liti,'' and 11l show you.' , Moving o a rod or twi,lte 14pinted'outa nice -' . 1 . house With en lilindand,with pride' in his 1 ,0 he added, ' i's mine, mid an Paid fur., and two 1 1 . 1 lots also . by he side . of it; an dm d the old war I - • three hundrild dollars in !cash; 'in the-house besh 1 '; • I ! ; • • • • • i all My earnings ; Tbreele.ars Ago, I Aaiun ta cc '1 .the and here his emotions poked him so tli . 1 rir,l4 ntit fit , :h the sentence. JHe had been A I 'Ole dranka , .squantleiing all his earnings I, Allops 4 the, who turned his . 'circurnstancei I , ,pro6nkhle tic unt ; I .but, now h was a respeetabl Land a good *tizen. 'l.- ' I. t l i • ~ At, the ti eof the , enactment of theSaine La 4tumber of en grog slinps in Portland wasestil 'to be from O ( to 404;;n0w, i t . ..e.re iri not one.. , I N ris not ho or place in'the eitY where a respc ittranger ea go and call for aiglass of liquor, a I • - ",it.• The keepers of the secret rum shops hive} ; well known customers,'and no stranger is roil „except lund r the patronag.e.!Of .an 'haUltte. I shops Coritatit but small:nitwit:ides of liquor, ai fitted tip w ( "4-11 an apparatusi which;, on toucl spring Will smash the 'tittle's containing that 1 they may not lie seized , iy.tl4 police. i . i • . . . . t ~ troduced into titi! city .are dis ,, r• u i • • - ell iri .boxes or ildur bm-rels and i ' i . • - ' all quantitieF; teat they may e..... pollee. lint a iliort time ago, wee walking itt the Ftreet ,be iito had a floor Laird on :a handide • !k himAvlte.tt he tiirtted and seein•! i Och r and II - ed, , leaving the sled i iairriination; the ,iio, Ifieehi found - th 1 a ten gallon lieg tSt liquor,and card! 1.: Lb-piers ' being inelca r4rati‘ 4 l d3 ; -' Motive -th lice ollieenz • Irishman oti ert exclai» red, load,• On to contain .tO thei l lock' up. • . Formerl liquors were brOtight to this - vessel. lea and-sold. at auction. ;There wet dealers here who told iminense quantieg, at wl ~..and in addition, there . welt ;seven distiljeries night and . ;lay every 6 1 . y. inthe year. );ow, no distillery in the State ; liquors sold at ceptreily, and with; great eaution, tope are well known; yet it nrboldlY said 'that r :tiers are sold and drank in i'prtland now, tha former period.' - ,• • ..We i have formerly seen itflour sitY,. long r: hogsheads of liquori sold at iiublic auction ; is large T i .pac,:s on our AvliarVeo covered With pi 'barrels - of i - 44ay-loads innume liquor pastling, through our streets , ; but now age. Of a 14trrel of kiln for Mechanical pr.rpot is a rare sight, and will alwas attractobservo excite, remark. The quantity_ ohiquors sold - land now, is immeasurably lesS than it was la enactment of the Maine - 14. . we,:s. wish to add. a felr words on the theyaine Law upon the business interests of t and, o fari as it shall be adopted by other Sta those ofthe.nation. It wasli-stimated that, th of Maine spent at 1 . Qa5 . 12,00,060 annually f drinks,involving a losi4 directly and , indireetly ed time, Misdireeted iitdustiiv; and in other; least ?;000,000 more-making an annual 'ls State of 4,000,060. The tor ugh executie Maitie•taW, and the- 4nnihilati Mof the liquf wouldittunediately result iii Elie saving of this sum., Being no longer:squture ered upon t 1( of intoxication, it woUld:be ; directed into I chanut?ls of trait and Would be:expended raiment, slii,lter, iweeasmies. rind otilife, so tlwy . houlif, be iieeded; an( since' would be ruble.) 'to the annunl acct ''' wealth of the State ; trade and manufiktu be stimulate(' to an ext6nt of which we can - r Very inad&quate conception while pov,erty ism tuni crime would 'be 11,11904 unknown The lattice result woo 4 follOw to,the trade, e and nitundsetunts of the nation'from the sal of the liquor trafticin all, Our borders. T cost to the nation in ` f ` cash, !of the liquor tr not be less than $1 . 66,4i0rmi00, Involving au al loss, directly and IntlireCtly,-0f5,1,50,000 1 —making in all, a vast.4gregate.of $3041 which is a dead loss to the '?mtion, - no value' it-hater,er beting . deriietl from it. If the 44 'should be suppressel, 166411:at RIM be employed In promoting the comfOrt of u tl and In augmentingthO wealth, power, and t of the nation, Instead of "Caving no other poverty, pauperism, 'Aega4atiott and crime Merchant's Magazine.. 7 Eir Only one,--fitaith giller—of the basks delegates in Oo*greiis from this Sta nominated for iro:•eltetion, ;and it took to ao that. 'We pr4eythat he sW find I , der to be, 4locted thitti 4tuitutted.—/dti Mmiferi'l. IlliamitialedigistOryof Akin tAm • 1c• ' • ! :I icp , ,' I . - . 1 " NOw is the tithe teit anbscribo.for the above •, . t ' • . being a complete hi tort' of North Az erioa fi 1 • i , i earliest _discovaries, :i,down; to the present, ti '.I i . ,complete history of the United Stateifrotn 't , - t , 'Settlement, including all- the !ram, the. In • t French, Reioletionaiy, ma Mexican tira • i to the present, iTniiiiy. and Russian . vvgo•o . I . vise history of i the FreSidential attthw , i fGeerge Washington, (loin' to - re - • ____ • 1 - i , (Joni Fiosr.L.l. D, -, ' :-"-- ',- '. I, 'i ' - This wOrk w i lt be lover 700 pag es Wei= +7 , • I"..„,rit ITAPFINESS OF TI TE ".PEOPLE TilE TRUE END OF GOVERNMENT." 'executed bi'th • ,:' E ., tifollv color" , 1 • i • ( ~ h.' * wt?tLu.its ales rya Bkeiliesl. • . ; aohe.,Lltchiteld R . Opahlican. •--: : 1 • G iSRAEI4I3IIff Ai. Nothing eohneetiA with ;the General As sembly 0f,1844 has [ given - greater Pleasure than the 4pprbpri4iop of $3,,00p . for the erec tion of a thonlimerit -to,connbeniorate ;thser- Vice of Putnam.; :The spedch of John' Cot ton Smith, in,;faior of the . , resOlution,r is one o the most bimutifull tributes that taw -ever been paid to.the Memory of that great man and is worthy a atisefendatitof -the 1 t Gov ernor under the•Cluirter. It carries .3 back a, -:, to the I loriOns fOretitne' of th 4 e*Re üblic.' ,1 It ispleaSantl sotnetime, to !Vary ihe dull : routine flegislatiOn by the iintroducti l O . n of . a subject Itat.. ; sitmrSaboVe the party stires and petty interests :of the prtent, and carries us back to t.lie. 4role,age:oftle,Republiel. There is no State iii;the, Union, arid I knoii not any in the .WorldPJ tayit the AM - Criam Gi bOn; in speaking of Ci".Oniireeticut, ' iWwlibse hi tory, if (;) I. were a- eftiii,n;;l timid find - niore f which to be proudMul ; ilesS that I could; wish Ito blot.' It is a tnatter of eAingratulation :' that .her an- , nals area soon be given to the world, written by one pf her most talented sons, whi - ise soul is full of her f,glOrious.fQrvt4nei . ; and who has devote 4 year' - of toil to this' labour X love.' ‘,..Nfost trim, itfis, that emr since God ti St plan.; !led the three r.Vinei in the wilderness, n every :combat for either 'liberty or honor, 11 r sacred standar In*. tsved in triumph;in" front of (.. .'the battle, or ( beett drenched With the blood ,I of the brave :'i t , Fror thesstruaing o,..the Vt‘, quod fot to the:eft tufe of ~feiiCe, n) desper ate foe has:lived; that ever stayed for the en " Giol -'-' - le - i'll); pies had 11, che litil tly ition tell tild , orn .f of I f 11(1 !isle nde lie buld 4111Parit . . In i April; 1775, before the .revolution could i.ei generally regardcitl mi - an ascertain ed tlict,la iinnlier of - patriotic citizens of Con- II Iwokilt a .sembled at Ilarttiird;perceiving the - Mime ise ad4ntitage,th.'st would accrue to the cause - fliberty from the capture and pos- Session lot the northern. fortresses. that com manded I he, 'Cluunplaiii+Tleonderocra and Crown 11) int--4cterniined . to seize them .by a surprist of thei British garriStais.. The dar ing enti l a. rise 'was committed Sttli • War ner and Ethan : Allen, bOth natives r of the county Of I.4tchfield. It was, Conthietedmith characteristic i energy and/ detiyinivation.; and the I)idd Undertaking.ivas.nfost "eminent ly] slime- lid., More thanA we' hundred can non were captured ; the same that werel af terwards raoed: across the monntains to Boston,' road Lora -II:owe frcim the city,tuid thunder' against fho 14;464,1 Mies during 1 ;,the whol course of the !wa. Connecticu t alone pro cc:tea and execitted:this I most-im portant MoVeinent; and lair treasury footed p ! I .the bills; In ',the meanwhile, the • rst blood was shed at44eiington, and itS.- re rt stirred. Up her already ;.excited people as with the shock of au; earthquake.i---lutna left - his plough in the! farrow ; the troops.. 'cistern Connecti tit poured after their gallant hero. The batt e of Bunker Hill soon foll Owed; and. opened t. te:seven years drama witb a blaze 'of glory ' . .,1N1:0 achievement; of ancient or modern . tsiry rivals in interest or results this memorable, conflict. A few hundred provin cial farmere In the ordinary :Costume of their calling, iithOnt cannon or baloney, occupied- I . a small rOtatwork, ()reefed by the - unremit ted toil t,the previous night. On the left- of the br q - stwork, and mi. thii 'open ground .stretehin beyond its point tO the waterside,'; are pla d'the! men - of ' ;Connect' cut, under Clark of Lebanon, Chester Of Wetilersflekt, Colt of New London, and Knowlton of Ash 'ford. The, eagle.eye.and,lion heart of. Put,: natri is bUSy watching and superintending the! whole.. On ; came tfie floyer ; of..the English army, to the attricko - nOvlng slowly andstead4 ily, in all the Kamp and pride of war, cheered by thchinists of:martial Muiiie, aria :the rol-.' ling thuipkr ot the cannon. All is quiet and still in t ie!raiilis .of freedonf . , .s little phalanx;, • save 'the chirinir voice of i Putnam l - ringing in their ear-:-:- 4 .I)on't fire Until yon . see the 4 . ,aced here f l able c 1 get few ;.they them, d iti barrel it off ' tunny olerale, 1 inning here 15 all, ex tn.= who ore liq at ant' ye heell eS and ruble (If es only, ;ion and in Port- their eyes.' ''., I - . . • i I oMent:more andrith.., foe lad . alinost. ' thetn They -thOug.fit 1 crush ill 4: 1 ithout a blow—J.:Ns:heti - at once they 1 , 3 • Y 4 sheet ottire, aid fal before Od a death-, as the •-leti.iis.o the. forest Ife.4 1 - .)y, the' storin-blasts of autumn! Ilind a third attack ar attempted . sit Me results, when . a - lit lure of loriF. ;_it dace-s the: patriots reluctantly .-.1 ,e„, .. ,heir retreat is prott cted by the leiitObiee on the left, with sinewy - L*bbed muskets, and the courage daimtless chieftain : coves the 'reti. i ln I like the se.On fold lof M- 1:- • •'1 11 shield.• • ~ •whites (i! • A. in reaelied rebels. arc 'net telopost .itre. swtt A tecon with ,he to retir Connect' arms of their : int colic MEI !tact of e State, 111X)II I e people r strong of wag- 'aye of at qs to the its of the /or traffic, OEM I - 1 ' • . ,' , ! ~ 1 1 , ' • If .. [ - . `There"stritiUld Putnam findf...tan all the;, plains, Callz , the ried'haAt, the tardy reat;sustains ; 1 iind. 'nail it . , the. whir.zingdeaihs ttat till the air, ' ! NVa"-e,o;:t , It Ilifisword and dafea the folliming war.' "rhi :: iglitsprkalJle contlie4 settled, a proii ously Litl i aibtfnitlitu.!:stion,lwbetherrthe eolouistB would collie ;to an oper4 pitchedbattle nigh. the kink; and.;stanid their ground.! "A\rhEiii Washin ;ton 'aiked our hero, after the fight; ' could ,theY, 'stand tire l' tuna the ans'wer was gi l ven be;re.Six)nded, 'The eausel is sate.'.: "1 ' V:efur an assembly )iktf thisi, of .the d seetidants of that noble generation,, it is .sty Ikriluous!ta enter into r detailed story of the life and eiploita of thati eltival e eharbpiOti ' who afed,to lead where any ared to fUl low,', ''''ery, child in _the lStat ..hay . felt its little li Ct! throb with eseitenie tt as he read the tal . sif i his.irietoriotti,i encout ter with the, wild b acts Of the forest. I llis. seven • years l a sehri in the old Freneh war, i full L of deeds . : Of dari ig 'valor and romantic nteiest, and during tho,Whole revolUtiOnary struggle the darkes WO Was illun . tined b the light;of his her ii!,.exatuple. 1 '.. ie • .4d . ' ' 'No t it kent.of • . ulptur , . marble or MEI= EMI for food, eanifort.i the bal. ululating C 4 would have but pauper ong us. ommerce rtpreaslon Q annual additipn• OPO more 11=21 lereturn or traffic d Rt once e peoPle, resources u than fruhei ionPnaLl; ,t 4 45 wauite is netwu, to I'll 4 is imniorfAl ; . and 40r,:l the eternal freshness c t , ' no epitaph - tolree trd 4 nis•grave4 it wig). ins ss%l ;broken „arniour of 1 • 4 , 4 , 9 1 eudw'i fiune. er witl He ue for he hacker hole It e- has-been tivo trial! ;pen bar, rice Free AUGUST 24, ,•• • - feeS., We erw , t' the monumental - 'to . shoes to the ,world, that we are not iingrate 'ol to the memory of thetero patriot,, , who do fiindo,d the State with his valor, and covered it Witti his glory., At the:grave of Putnam, a,' citizen of Connecticut may well feel this sell-, timent, that a Roman might hafve uttered "at the teeth!? ofSeipio: bene fecisti, Sucundisahna est recor-. • • . ‘lhaie no fear of the failure of thi.s resulu tlon in this house. • The unanimous ay, that shall'' greet its, passage, will be like the shout . Of the hero'on the heights of Bunker ; its response will, come back not only from the brave men .and fair'Wonien' who -,.pow tOadi,the . timelionored,Soil of he State, !but the united , voiee.s . of the great and good; 'who have it eft, this beautiful dwellinir-place for the tippet temple; will, from the spirit-land, re (Urn tipori us ono Solertiu ehoriis— frnfoi:i the broad banner! .its stars keenest lustre , Shottld blaze o'er the place of the patriot's rest ; Unfurl; the brOad banner! Amid the bright cluster; Conticctimit's star shines as bright as the best, • fFpremi the fair pile! let Connect: cut -rear it ! TM! proudly she weeps as she• race's his name . - -And the rock from her mountain forer;er shall Lear it, • . • • The sythbol, the. record,,the sh ne of hislamer - GETTING FITS IN A =TIMM STORE. - Lewistown' Ifalls, Maine, is ; a , place; it is! You Can't etiaetly find it on the map, fist it's been located :and incorporated since Mail- . 411's. latest, but its.there--a. !manufacturing city :i.s large as life, with bankS, barber ilops,. news Papers and all the usual fixtures and ap purtehanceS of a locomotive, going ahead, YanleFe settlement. ' ; -7, J-14t about the newest •thing in the' new. 4ity; is a new, cheap, clothing store, that ' ri2 up' or L, railed clown' lately, on the JOnalPs' gourd or Aladins palace prindiple, and Well by tle same inYsteriousdispensation; became tndowed- with . Ithc' cutest' Yankee salesman hat the Dirig State ever :turned '. out.— ',Pother day, an up river voun: , 'an, wild is about to leave father and mother and cleave into Nancy i i y Ann, .came dOwn! to - get his sutit, and Was of .coli..::e ` jest naterallly baonnd,' to find his way into the new, erothing store. Not thatShe' sauntered in'N . Vith the e easy swag-. ger cif 'the town bred searcher after cheap . ;clothng, for the .vernal tint was -tolei.a:l. 7 !fresh; on him yet; and he stopped to give a Imodfstsflp at; the door. - He had effected= 'entrance at the gristi mill :India the J9ltinql 1 1 :ofbea,,where he had been. doing -business in the same unobtrusive manner, and the boys ;all agreed, that ,Mr. Nehemiah Newbegin was NO ' the Gullev,' and was paying his virgin !vr . ti to i . ` Pekin! . i• • , , N'hCiniali was i let in ` imegitly,' :and he. '.arias .le ' , 4litet.l . 't1 -WI the cordial reCeption he il-iet. ;with. '-- . - , • The,prol actors were ready to ` forward his - !snit';iatlono, •' he ‘• saw tit,' or they' would ; ` take nicAures and ‘ furni!sh hihi to order.'- , Nehemiah drew a handbill from the top of his' hat; and spread ,on: his knee fiti east , I reference. It *as he. led in the fat Gothic, ‘ w i c. ' • - , : lNTpt vLOTIIINt AT COST.' •'. i 4 • and set forth! that in „eon: uctice• of the, nuldneSs of We . season, over ive *thousand, dollars' worth. of_ ready-made cl hing Was to be dosed n and sold at an, - . 1 - ...I . Esl . onmot , S SACRIFICE n' • - : A list of Prices followed,- and Nehem'ah, ramiing his stinnpy finger down -the column,,,, lit 4it h emphasis on a particular item. - ` SaY !—v'y got cnny of these blew .cotes left,lat five &Afars 'nd live 'n 'al 'nd six dol , Lars;—Rot enny on !eni left?' ' ' I. • "Sunth, are,there any of those cheap coats left?' inquiredlthe a'perlite' Nark of his part ner.r We . old the last this morning did -we notr 1 . Smith urn e .tood the cheap clothing busi nesS and ans v red promptly, ' All gone, sir.' `OeSt ;sit' . petted,' murmured the disap poilltetlcan ' te, ‘ danuition p eize't all 1 .• - I told dad the !ii all be gone!' 1 iWe hay a very superior tinkle for. ten dollari,'— , 1 • •'Steacely, an4llfired p s'[We can • q-e-sl b strut Off—fa `YOU'd ft `Pun lin thoe :dewra dollars ;- sol habit. ione 1 lACkily t: all' was advi hentiali Was 'to the instin a dicker. Dew y thiiig 3' • 'Take w Projeue • dejv it, de•U . Well tx: to sell 3' Oh, uhr thing, fron ktilaw ; got yeeol ter. G-9-0-11 g(t seine i sot e) got Some ;. b bOt yeou it here; dar tlje inipequi: 'fijrth- to •‘'i butter. .• :10n the speedily, c to be. put sign of a material- NoYv t Coat, will ireck • 1 . :rtai l *ant a co' plates,' *indow,. erockery , eStiOti of Yes, odd thi Naha s coat auti Odious glories o± t• • - , . rpctuata his tinia an p4l - its 'imeraid. gallant akts iced lipon. %.--utaitrrs ..... . .. .. 71- ~ ..,.. .. .: . t . .. ... , ~; . . .... . . , „.: . .. ... . . . . . . . ... ... .. . . . . • . • .. . ~.i -...:• ' ..i.,..-.. . .. ,_ . .... ... .. . ~ 1854. Iz . uire, stately !—ten dollars is ice for a tote l'• . 1 . , 4 ;* ... make you one to order."i) .. it I want it now—want .it right t is, Squire; must hei,.... "un.' . : , 1 these cheap at ten dollars.'. • w 'l7out it ! say; v'ye got any of de doeskin trowse.s lett, at tow d' them all tow, 'spett, paint ye ? 7 them. left 'llouther ' hey ye ?' . m - - te. was a few ft I,' and -.Nchend -ed to secure a pair at once: Ne- I open for a trade, but acting . up , •0 of the Newbegins; it Must be su ever telt' projeitee fur your do- garden sass and •• .4-eou leasionally we do,' what have yeu i I o l st, anythin'; - a leetlh of every- narrow-fat peas down to , rye s me new cider, some_ high ,-top t some ‘4)t . the all killinlest dried u ever set eyes on ; 'speet neow sonic of that dried punkhir • I* * . t . t: for 'id l e met .114,9 . 1 a in b , the (TR, [ Nuited if he had any gobnut-. ! naOw Squire, I expect I've tlie nicest and yallerest yeou oii ' gOt some out here :mow ; Ia shooger . bOx, eout in dad's t it doi,Yu for R . .urnel Waldron bey it; I'll tiring it right -strat cf -I doan't!' And with. all •ity of youth, Nehemiah shot *aggin,' - and brought - in the ngth of the butter, ti dicker was acted, by which Nehemiah was nunediate and absolute josses vest - and .pantaloonsl of good fit. ' • Marl 4 whit kifid of a have.' ill hey a bloji( -'uti• Squire.' 1 1114kind- 7 --a• dress coat V • - Sqiiire, • certainly,. jest •What . I w dress • I.y; just look at those g to the-faiihion plates. in the see what style you tansy.' yeour. plates, -don't want any cf, Nance hits got the en wareyou, ever sot eyes on !' !, just step this way • then can aecommodate you. • : speedily , seleeted a; niee, blue. of green, hint he was luOre fus. choir pants,. these crowning new-suit; He seemed .to in- duke a; . weakneSS for long 'pantaloons, and complained thit'. his last -.pair. shad` troubled; him. exceedingly;:' or,, as ho, expressed blamedly,' by hitching up Over • his: boots,[ and wrinkling. , about_ the knees. delved away unpettiously amid stack: of . two of three hundred"pairs,'nnd finally: his eyes rested upcn , a. pair of leligtby ;ones, real, blazers, and Witikt wide yellow stripes running. each way.. Neraia.h. soaked them out in a: twinkling, - lie liked them—:they Were long and yellow—they were 'just the thing, and: he proceeded at once to try them:en.The new - clothing Stare had a nook . :curtained off .f,r, 'this purpose, ap d Nehemiah-was Speedily, .closeted :therein. Thyants had straps, and the straps -were ; . button Now, Nehemiah, had Seen straps before; but the.art of maifagin them 'was a mystery, and-like Sir. Patrick's Dilem ma,' (wired a mighty dale. of nice. cowilderat„iott: Un .deliberation; he; - decided thin must KO firt he accordingly -,drew on hid Blutchers, ~mounted a chair, elevated' the: - pants a proper angle, endeavored- to t eO:;.X tic legs into them. lie had .a time of it:. Ills boots' were none of the imaJles.p,.an4 . , the pants were 00110 of the widest;, the chair . too, was. riekety, and bothered him, but, bi;tid= ing hiS - energies to the task, be, succeeded -in inducting one ; leg Into the •‘Pesky.thinp.'- 1 .• lie was straddled like the dolossus . of Rhode...4 . and juSt-hi the .act, of raislug -the other foot; .. when Whispering and giggling, fin - his imme:. diate vicinity 'made him alive to the.appal 7 hug tot that nothing but n, thin curtain of chintz separated him from twenty. or thirty. -of thei,prottiest and wickedest girls that were ever . caged in one shopt Nehemiah was- a' bashfUl youth; and' - would haye .fnade a. 0b., : cumbendibus of a mile, any day; rather than' meet those girls,. even . had he been in full dress; as it Was, his mouth was, ajar at the bare pagsibility of making his appear:ince among them: in his present diSabille. Whit if there was a hole in the curtain ! what if- it should fall l It wouldn't bear thinking Of, and plunging his foot into the YaSant. h. , g, with a sort of frantic looseness behrOught . on 'the very 'citstrofilic he was so anxious to aYoid. The chair collapsed with a Sudden ‘- scrouchj :pitching Nehemiah head ove heels throng ! , the curtain, and he-made his grand entrt co Cann/1116 (lit: AL:h. hlsA5 Ali, Lidues on au aPlis a me a fetteied rhinoceros. •: • • . - 1 . • Perhaps Collier . himself m i verexhibited more 'striking scene of tablcanx Vivantes than was now displayed: Nehemiah-was a mod. 7 el,' every. inch of him, and though .not ,exact- • ly revelving on a pedegal," - he Was' going through that Movement quite as effectual on • his back, kicking,. s splurging„ in Short perseni-, fy i ng in thirty seconds all the attitudes ever chisseleil !' As for the gals,..they screamed of euurse, jumped, upon ,chairs and the ent tinglmard,,,threw their hands over ees, peeped through their fingers ; screamed" again, and declared they . should - die, they kne*` they. should. Oh Lord blubbered the , distressed young sun,.l" dOn't holler gals &aft ! I didn't go few, I swan -tew . man I didn't ; it's all owl& tcw these cussed trowsers; ever,y mite on't; ask yer boss, hell tell ye hew lyres:, Oh I Lordy, wont nobody kiver me up with old • clothes, or turn the wood box over, me? - .oh; Mises in the bull-rushes! what'll Naney•sayl ne.managed to raise himself on' hi's feet, and I made a . .bOld 'splurge towards doer,, but his "'entangling alliances" trippedhini . Up., main; and he '-fell kerslap 7- upon . 'the het , . oose of the .pressman ! This Ar4s the . k . dest'hit of all. 1! The.goose was *ted:,ex . ~ pre, ly for thick cloth seams; and.the wait sizzle in the seat of the neW pants Was of flicting the wearer.: • Nehemiah riz up in . an instant,, rid seizing the, source of all his troubles by c slack; he tore himself free froM all sa,ve the straps and :some . pantalet *like fragments that hung . about 'his' ankles, as - hit dashed through, the door of the emporium. at a two-forty pace., Nehemiah: Seemed. I,td! yearn With the peet, , for a lodge. in some - vast - wilderness,' and betrayed a settled" lir:. pose to , ' flee from the laisy . haunts of men for the laSt seen of him he was capering thel raflroadefitting like a seared rabbit-- the rays Of the 'declining sun 'flickering . ..end thuicing upon a broad eXpeuse ,of shirttail, that .fluttered gaily in the breeze, as he head ed for the nearest woods. Yankee - Blade. The Self-Sacrificing Father.. -. • We heard a'good one, few days Since,' of a 'Mayor orone of the neighboring cities, who seemed yery anxious to. prepare his and felloW citizens to. meet the . anticipated dreadful ravages of cholera. lie .would al lOW uo food to be eaten by his family, but plain salted nicatOisli, bread, &e.:; and when ever any. Of them wished for something a lit tle extra3hey had to shy over to ah obliging neighbor's Where they never failed or getting a fine sikk.;-of excellent pie, cake, Or pudding.- --PreviOns to this,. however, they could bOast of theSe delicacies at home. The Mayor, it was nOticed by his worthrbetterhalt; did not havela very good appetite .witeneyer - he •cante to his' meals, (for the good reason prob.; ably, that are many good eating saloons in the plat! eil and she thought that a good rhu barb would' do no. harm, but, rather. give her husband a relish for his dinner. She ac- cordingii; placed one at his side, when he . sat down to7his . . noon-day meal. e'en& pat sed over the br.ow -- of the head of the . fluidly. !‘ "Wife? said he, `'how often mitst T . , - speak oftheseithiugsl , It scents. as- if you were de, termined tO l give us the 'cholera, despite of all my• preCautions. Please take. away this 'de eciitable :green apt, - r - ' - [The ineek datne silently removed, the .of: fendingidolicacy to the kitchen • followe‘'• by. the greedy eyes of half a dozen :disappointed youngsters.. • The father soon gcit through his dinner and pasSed out ; -leaving the others to. finish their meal of plain bread and ' butter old - codfish. The son, hOWever, "not. haying the felir of the tither before: his -eyes, end Withal Sighing for the 'lash:pots:of Egypt,' as. soon as -he . - thought his lather. well! gene out of sigl slily crept into ,the kitcheni to get, a slice ot the coveted pie. But: When. he ;.got there the table was,..bari, the ihubarb'Pie was gonel-, l 7 Thinking, perhaps,' that . Bridget had -thrown it in the swill barrel; lie went,to.: the doOr of,the woodshed, whetilol .whata sight nrescuted-itsell to the li4 Handet could otr.li4e been Mare' surprised than was our 'hero at' the appeartineeinf the - veritable •May or, seated upon tt sokbuek;; with the dd youre4 rhubarbpie ; (detestable, stiff) ; in his hand l Hetwas sacrificing hlinselt, to save his fiuhity, eating the pie; ,chOleitt- andall. is -•• ti Thci son sot a good share_ of - the prize; by • givin4 al3rotnise pet totell ; .andthe old i tnan slid for his office, ~11. e ,has not hc.enlie*.rd-to say anything igainst ‘gree,n WITOLE.._NtMI3ER, - .:153 - • spnirtimasm NAR: Eztraorditiary Afa4ine y a Spirit Bak per.—The_ rtvelationd ref spiritualls% -have . - hitherto beenof an- a:Musing chamter ; but • from o statenlkent which appears in the New Era—the ott.an• of .the rappers-4i would seem as if' the followers ef,this new'iito are - pushing theizi angelic; tit 'orie.s to t,hol Wildest . verge of blasphemy and obSeetiity. In a late number •of the organ; ive favvired ;With a long edite; i l article : bout whsii‘•lis Called the '-Electri Motor: 'or Neti Saviour.' -The Era speaki•of deep .satisfadion - that the world is,i•by-andl7,to be:blessed beyond - • Conception - II this physical - Ore ugh whose instrnmeatality a permanent material: - . basis shall be laid for true spiritual salVatiert; ( The new S#vione is a machine , which has ; been constructed at LynniMass.., by the spir- • itualists, which they claim to..be semi-me -I..chaniad not semi-human. It has, been „ de minated New Motiic Power,' and ' (52,000 toedustruct it., The New Era remarks .` that the ElOtric Motor is ahexsct:eorre pondence ofithe human body, at least so 'figr ineo/untiry motion is timeerned.. It was- _ conStructts.l,,under Spirit directiini t ' and chief..., ly at the liev. Ilfr. Spear's expense.: This' • done, the i next thing to; put Mem* whicir brings us. to the most extriordina-: ry part oflthe business. Ilow life waaim-:. parted to the machine by a we -- will not 'disgust our raders by detailing If. anything more is needed of the last ems-_ - nation of cruzyism, it is' found in he assertioir that themaehine began to have life or piOsa tion, which 'ne.reased under-a process precise.; _ ly analagouli to that of nursing I • Angel* in telligences have of course attended her, to ex-. plain these Mysteries. Spear and fellow fools do not pretend to understand what the ultimate dekrns of the intelligences are. • . To the climax of absurdity, we have the following statement I - ' • In the lqw Era 'of July . sth, We find a vis- . ion had by !J. Wolcott, which developes what• is expected! to be aceomplished`by this •ma.• chine. If Appeared to grow, in size' and . threw off from itself small niachine.s afterits o)7, patkrn,' aial those in turn thiew-Off a ultitudr.i f other little ones.' Thewhe fur,' ' - ler says . . Nest there .appeared a ni!yrement Wirong: the rnaent4s, and the largermies,Whiefter.e now fully . developed , - moved - , a7way..iflor the plain . into the distance.;.. In their path. .stood a great number 'of . churehesi of every size and ;„ variety, :Irdin the.:diminutiie Methodiat chap-, el up •to • the stately Gothie. Minster and: Pan l's :enthedral. But. the 'maehines,4id not turn Oat of their course at all, running ick vet. and through .- those, temples, completely demolishing them.la heaps Of wortblesa - rub-.. bish.--Wa.thingto4 - Star. . „ . BEAUTIFUL INCIDENT. ..- The difliSwallow is not,we believe, a, riAt. ~ ~ ajar suminer sojourner in these parts. , Mils. , -._ l visits 'are belieVed to.be only oemsional-4evr 1 and far betiveen. At any rate, we arc infortn- ed that he ( tnis no regular haunts. - The farm.; . that he gla dens this year, mayot•be cheer ed by his presence for many co ing .seasons. We lave I'D. interesting anecd , t o to - tell of these interesting birds. .` I', ~,‘ , . - It was rehited to us, if not by an: eyewit-- ncts, by one who received 'it, tiom .an mt. dinibted soiree,' ' These birds, es do nearly all the birds of this latitud e s ,:: take their de parture" hetie with the summer,for warmer. ski - es. Several years since, ,a arge nnber- .. of them had their nests upon a barn in'. the, -. smith part of Deerfield. . . • • At-theulnial periodd - their northern homes • were abandbned, and the tribe took its flight for the tropics After a tune a Solitary irtdi- vidual Was Seen lingering 'furlong the fersaken . habitations.) Various conjectures were start ed to account for its tarrying: : It might be . that he had! not, strength enough for: so dist. • .- ant an expedition; or he might have accident ally been leftbebind in the - general migra tion, and feared, to encounter the perils of the . journey aloine." -‘The autumn passed away, and still that -solitary stranger .remained, bra- ying!the, Trcists and the pelting storms of win, , ter. Spring cameimd yet he was there. - An.' occtirrencer singUlar, and contrary to the - habits of th migrating tribes, caused his mo- ' tions to be t watched with more attention. At length 'another head was obseired, protruded. from one of tlfe nests, '.wtieli s seerned• to' be the abode , of the . bird; which had been regard ed with so 'much interest I - On examining the nest the mystery w,as beautifully Solved.r-- Another swiillow was found detained a prisoner. 1 , • ' . • ''— ~ -One of its legs had bethme entangled by It''..‘, thread of h6rs, e hair, whiCh htid beea-uSed in., the lining 6f the nest, and held lit there a alp- \ tire. Net it. was not deserted by its faithful 'I mate.; Through all the long and dreary wiiu ter, this patient, self-devoting love. supplied her 'wants. ' Ile saw without regret, bur•for his hapless' , consort, the cleepeding gloom. of the thdini year; he felt . without feeling,' but fbr her o . the advancing rigor:of winter;: and if he, at times, remembered The sunny_ skies of the South, and thejlasnre the tribe were there enjoying, it . ay only.t6 sigh that she could ? not partake of, them: By.night, and by day, in sunshine- pal in cloud;ln.- the , calm and in the tempest, he was :with her ministering to !ieiNtants, - .and - cheering ,the hours,other hopeless captivity by'his caress- : es. and untiring devotion: ., . Now:do you stip. pose that the vitt** is capable of such hero- ~1 le: constanp)- and. generous_ self-sacrifica 'I Or did you over , hear_ anything like thisauthen icated of ithe fearleSsjrnlture 7 . - [ ACORN COFFEE. • . -- : , ,1 , There is in Berlin, Prussi, ti, largo eetab. lishment for the-manufacture of - coffee. from, acorns and chicory, the tirticle being made separately from each.. The chicory. is,tnixed with,an equal-weight of turnips to render it' sweeter. 1 The acorn:coffee, ' , which- is made trom roasted and ground acorns, is sold in large rquintittek and frquently 'with rather a medielnh than an . economint view; as it' ii thought to have a wholesome• effect upon. the blood, particularly of 'veroftdOuri person!. ' Acorn coffee is; however, made and:used iti many pails of Germany for the sole purpos . .... of adultering gennine coffee, a nd has been inci ported into the United' Statei , for same use, so 'that, no doubt, many_ Ream: who would shrink from kowingly drinking acorn-_ cotfee hay° actuallT'rdrunk ittar o t , ' anoth er nae.. ,1_ • \ • , "'l' ( i • If it bn medicinal in. its' nature, aaisltiai . the -use Ought to be encouraged...; And at any rate, if it is healthy in its nature 4 and can by nutde ve Cheaply from the superabundance acorn, bt.otir forests, it, seem? tp„T*Tx* :ultra I 4fewler,eertaie 'eireTastaileeslts l "sabstitut iy ?for coffee,the price of which *Cmi tt" ' theregy e:much' redneed. ' • . !.• . 1 .. "'' ' '1 ' :: . ''' ' ' . ..:i • ',:, -1 " t - •