4._ _..„;:' , '!I • . ''', „ir t. • - , • • • _ ; „ • I / '• • • " ' • "- *---• • • • • WM • " _ - • .. , . • • • • 14 1 ' • ' . • ;t, " •- . • - • •• • 7 •'• :- . 1 4 ., ."-- ' ; • • ••<l4;_,-2/41/4itati F, ;_;11, , ' - • • ~„ • • • -1,W7 ••••,..A• • - 1 • • ••'-7• • • " ' • . - - . _ ~ • • . 1 - , . • , _ P. ECC.EA.TTy; Proprietor. dm:ol3. 'Die.. C. S. 241.211 7 .11. • his proreFsiontil s e.. 4 to the enizoutt u r Uorltele and sur• ruo.oling eountry• r t ,01,:n.0 in South annoyer Street, dire .ity op i loolte to Ow Volunteer Office." trth.te, tpl 20, 1853 1:111.131',Z, W ILL perform nl qc7.t. operations upon the Owl may be re re faired for their preserv.,ticii. Artificial teeth trotn a single tooth to a:tenure set, 01 the to ;et scientific principles. Dise,llFea of tin in into in I irrc%ularities carefully treated. 0. the residence of his hi other, on North PiWStroot. Carlisle GE.43.11GE JUS LICE OF' THE PEACE. OF eis re3idence, cornet of Mein strew ant till Public. Si \Etre, opposite Burltholder't. Hotel. lil itddttion to the duties of Justi. eOl the Ponce, will attend to all duds of writing, su tit 111 deelr3,l»ed3, indentures, articles of agreement, notes, &c. Carlisle, no 8'49. DR. I. C. LOONS'S., I LL perform all exirA operations upon the ',reoth that are requi red for their preservation, suelvis s eu hp g ,Filing, Plugging, S.r.,e, or-will restore the foss of them by inserting A.rtilicial Teeth, front u eingle loot It ton fall sett. 1 . 1.:r1)llice on Pitt street', a low d)ors south of the Railroad ITetel. lir. 1.. is ub cat iron Carlisle the last tot days of eve] month: 23R. S. B. IKIEVEE.B., OFFICE in North Hanoverstreet adjoining q r . wolps morn. t /trine hours, mote par— ticularly from 7to 9 o'clock, A. Dl r. a nd from 5 to 7 o'clock. P. M. nutlet/3'51 "Dr.:T3ITLW S. SPICIGGS, OPFER, his professional services to the people of Dickinson township, and vicinity,— Residence—on the Walnut Bowan Road, one stile cast olCcnir,•villc. lidAlypd a. 33. COL 13, Tl' 0 N Y . ATLi A %V, will attend 'lA_prnininly to 11H business entrusted to hint. °Elide in the room iiirrnaily occottit.d by NVil litrolt•vtoo Islorth Ilattover St , April .20, HENRY J. WOLF, •177"T0 R.,0*101. Et, professional business sit-icily :mended b). Uerinaa language spoken as ead .tho English.. [SPI, 1553 I=l .702-1111 W. BELL di', CO., A NP GENERAL CONIMISSION OER . CLIANTS 110 WARD ST it EET, Upposite Ceio re, Iv BALTIMfIRE Carlisle Female Seminary.__, PA/NO will commence the .L M. sit' al of %hair tioniinary ou 1.11,1 At. 1,11111.1 Nloriday in April, 111 a new and conintod,ollti 131:111J01 room, next door to Mr. Leonard's, Ninth llllluver street. !Liar:lotion la the hut ,Itagesl.llll N rawing, no extra charge. 1 , 4 it by an experienced teacher.ni an extra charge. (eept3tl) Plaiatieid tilassical Academy .Year Carlisle, Pa. rrITIE 15th Sl:ssien (live months( will corn .'nonce Nov. 'l'he ouildings are new and extensiv e pine erected last i all). The situation is all that tin be, ties,r.eil for health fulness and tn.,ral purity Removed Irons the eicitements nil Town or Village th • Student may here prepare for College, Mercantile pur• suits, SL., All the branches are taught which go to torn' a liberal t ducat on. A consetcn tious discharge of duty has secured, under Providence. tile. Pre flounelling condition ol the Institution. Its future prosperity shall be maint•uned by the :VllllO Terms—Board and Tuinim (per , , fatinn for Catalogues with full information address R. IC. 13111 C Nti, Princi pa t SqProprictor. Plainfield, Cumin, Co.,Pa. waxTri UALL CAXI.EIV/Ir. Three miles West of HarrisiZg, Pa. rip HE SIXTH SESSION will etunmence on JL Monday, the seventh of November next. • Parents ana Guardians and others interested ars requested to inquire into the merits of this Institution. l'he ,mtttion is retired. pleasant, healthful and conVentent 01 neees4; the course of instruction is emulsive and thorough, and the accommodations are entitle. Illinstetteturs. PAD. Denlinger, Principakiand teacher of Lan. genes and Alathentatics. —l)r. -A.-Dinsmore, A. M., teacher of Ancient Lativiztges-and Natural Science. E• G. Dare, toucher of Mathematics and Nature! Seienc-s. Mali Coyle, 'reacher of '6ltiste. — 'l'; Kirk — Mtn e, - teacher of - Plain and Omit , mental Penmanship. Terms. IFtar ling, Washing, and Tuition in Kutr,li.tli per session (5 months), Instruction in Ancient or Modern Languages. each, 5 00 Instrumental Muhic, 10 00 For Circulnrs and othar information laddress D. DE;NdaN tfnrrinbofft , . Pn.. MEI 'Fresh Drugs, Iffedieines &c, &e. have just received from PhiWel. kithin and NeW York very eitensiyc additions to my former stock, embra• 0111,1 clog nearly every article of Mediciut now in tire, togthaer with Teints, Oils, Varnishes, Turpcntine,'Perfumery, Soaps. Stationery, Fine Cutlery, Fishing Te'ditle,- 13rulies of almost overy.-description;'!with ondelss variety of other articlep, which .I em dt.- termined to sell at the'veav Lowcr; prices. All Physicians, Country Merchiotts,' Pedlar: and others, aro respectfully:rerjueSted not Wpm* . the OLD STAND, es they may rest asiutred that every article will be sold of a good quality, and IVOR' reasonable terms. . • S. ELLIOTT, winjrl,o2: .: Main street. ,arlisle. STBA.W lArximmEr•-- The'snheeriher will psy CFA' for Sq'n ASV of miv kind delivered nt Middlesex. 'Farmers Atli And it to theirinterest to soil their straw and purelase other manures. E. SHRYOCk., • ' Agent noN•3otf) • IVIERIBTOICS, CASHTII.iiES. • . usT. REor,r7p.t) nt tho NOw and Clomp TIE Store of IVoi , c St[Rionnboll a Jurgt.lotlof nE,NCIT - . '• ' • tupvs LAENE, •-r„ now on Imnd frenh frpm Plllnd.•lphin, nod soI- Linglowut , INVIvIaG -CA MPB ELL'S."' ;.,1140:Ininaprs = l . l •Plia. tfl-4 . ‘ • Boy your UAL of T'o N'L . V . 1. 1 . , 1ni;42'411.1,117.D- , . . A . 11",P01,',i7,`",, lNT. , : i ii i irsi,',.l,74lo . erh°,; ' utw e, awl .Ipr ealeAly„ i , • 10 AV :IIITTNI:11, , Sarnilll to riftrafttrt, Ehltrafign,litir ~ I,lritnlittrt, an it TRRRE' AIE TWO THINGS, SAITII LORD BACON,- wnicri MARE A NATION GREAT AND PitospEROUS—A FERTILE iIML . AND q3 .I Oi)PORRSIIOP '' p ' ,- . TO VOIOR. M AID iCNOWLEDGN: AND • FREEDOSI.-Bish o p , Behold that fair young mother ! see how soft Anu pencefully„she smiles, as though her heart, Reposing in tlio fulness of its love, Found perfect rest. Upon her snowy breast A smiling infant sleeps, her first-ti en kw; Ifer virgin love's fit'Sl dear embodiment. . Her husband sits beside, half bending, half Supported by her chair, o'er which his arm Is thrown protectingly; with the proud joy POSSCI3SiOII g ves, he feels they are all his own, And with fund admiration looks on both. But now a deeper glance—a warmer love From his soul rushes to his speaking eyes, Which rest with rapture on her lovely form: When ,with must womanly and blameless art • She takes her infant's hand caressingly . And spreads its dimpled beauty on her cheek, Which now with deepest 1 - 41.101 PS is BildtlSed. But that sweet art to hide Its burning glow Is powerless, and then she quickly stoops To press his placid forehead with her lips; But all in vain, for now.her trembling limbs The soft confusion of her heart betrays, Till overpower'd by love, she's driven to hide Her glowing face upon her husband's breast, And on her ready lips she now receives The burning pressure of•44.fervent kiss, Forgetting all, but the absorbing love, iVith which she'd trused her young lovo to hint .• I have never told you my secret, my deer nieces. However, this Christmas, which may be the last to an old woman, I will give the whole story; for though it is a strlnge story, and a end one, it is true; and what sin there won' in it I Cruet I may have expiated by my tears and my repentance. Perhaps the last expiation of all this painful Nipfession. We were very young at the time, Lucy and 1, and the nmghnors wild we were pretty. Bo we were, I believe, thonght calico ly different; for Lucy was gniet„nuil Mir, and I was full of life and spirits; wild teyond any power of control, and recklesti',. Fwasihe cider by two yenrs ; but more lit to be in ISIItl!ng strings myself than to guile or govern my sister.• But oho was so good, so quiet, and so wise, that she needed no one's guidance ; for if advice was to ho given, it.was eke who gave it, not and I never knew her judgment or perception to fail. Fha was the darling of the house. Aly mother had died soon after Lucy was born.— A picture in the dining-roorri - of her, in spite of nil the difference of dress, }ens exactly like Lucy ; end, as Lucy was now seventeen nod my mother hod been only eighteen when it was taken, there was no discrepancy of years. I=l One I 11hallow's eve a party of us—all young girls, not one of us twenty years of ego—were trying our fortunes round the drawing-room lire; throWing nuts into the bright blaze, to hear if mythic lie's" loved any of us, and in whet proportion; or pouring hot load into water, to hod cradles and rings, or purses and coffins ; or breaking the whites of eggs into tumblers half full of water,:and Own druivii , ig up the white into pictures of the future—the prettiest experiment of 01.- 1 remember Lucy could only make a' recum bent figure of her's, like a marble monument in miniature; itnil I; a maze of on inks -nod sculls and things that looked like ancing apes or imps, and vapory lines that did not require much imagination. to fashion into ghosts or spirits; for they were r otearly human in the outline, but thin and vapory. And we all laughed is great deal, end tensed one ens 'thee, and were es full of fun end mischief and innocence and thoughtlessness, as a nest of young birds, There was a certain room' at the other end of our rambling, old manor house, which wee said to be litiunteJ, and which my father led therefore discontinued as a dwelling room, so that we children might not be frightened by foolish servants; end Ito bad : made it into a lumber place, a kind of ground -floor granary —where no one had any business. Well, it was proposed thatnue of us should go -- into this room alone, lock the door, stand before a gloss, pare and eat an apple very deliberately, looking fixedly in the glass_all and then, if the mlnd never once the future.husband will be clearly shown in the glass. As I was always, the foolhardy girl of every party, and was, moreover, very desirous of seeing that . apocryphal intlrvidual, my fu ture husband, (whose non-appearince I used to wonder et and - bewail in secret,) I was glad enough to make the trial, notwithstanding the entreaties of some of the more timid. Lucy, tibove all, clung to one, and besought me ear nestly not to go—at last, almost with tears:— But my pride of courage, 4nd my curiosity, and it certain nameless feeling of attraction, were too strong for Me. I laughed Lucy and her abettors into silence; uttered hoe a.dozen bravadoes; and hiking urqibeil4oom candle, passed through.- the long, silent possages, to the cold, dark, deserted room—my heart beiit ing with. excitement, 'my foolish -head dizzy with hope and faith. The church (dock chimed a quarter pest twelve.as I opened the door. 'ltr,wne annwfal night. 'The windows shook, 'elf every instant they would burst in -With Aim strong man's hand on the bars, and his $5O 00 shoulder spinet , the freines;qend the trees howled and eilirisked, as if each branch= were ee9tient end in Tlin. The ivy bent . against the tvindow,'sontellineS with fury, and sortie- times with the lettvcs slowly scMaping' against the glass,' and 'drawing out long shrilleounds, like spirits crylrg to each other. In the room itself itlves worse. - "nets hod made it their refuge for many.yeers, and r they rushed be . hind the wainscot end down inside • the :walls, bringing. with. them 'alum era of limo. ehtt dust, which' rattled like chalet), mr , .sounded,.llke . .;rneu's „feet hurrYing to end frmt 'add: every now and..then a cry broke. through the. room, one bould.unt. tell fromierhenearer .fromfutlitit buys cry; (Hattect and hutmin ;.'binvy;-blows seemed to tie struck on tiro floor, which crack ' , eddike . parting Ice henenth tay..feet,.andiond krookitige shoolc,:tbe walla. Tbtin this tumult • 4 1 / 4 4aa'not afraid:. 'l.' reasoned-6'n each vew " sound very culmly—and' said, Untie 'are puctr,ti. THE YOUNG IHOTHICR gdfsrt Tuft. TIIE SISTERS ; OR, THE 01,13 LADY'S STORY EC= eats," or "those iwe leaves," and birds in the chimney," or owls in the ivy," as each new howl or Fcream struck my one. And I woe not in the least frightened or disturbed ;it all seemed natural and familiar, I placed the candle on the table in the midst of the room, where nn old broken mirror stood ; and, look ing steadily into the glass (having first wired oft the dust) I began to eat Eve's forbidden fruit, wishing intently, ns I had been hidden, for tho npparation of toy future husband. In about ten minutes I heard a dull, vague,- unenrthly snout 1 j felt, not heard. It was as if countless wings rushed by, and small, low voices whispering too ; as if a crowd, a multi tude of life was - about me as if shadowy fa ces crushed up against me, and eyes mid hands, and sneering lips, nil mocked me. I woe suffocated. The air wns so heavy, on with life, that I could not breathe. I was pressed on from all sides, and could not turn nor move without parting thickening vnpnrs. I heard my own name, I can swear to that to day! I heard it repented through the room; and then bursts of Intighter followed, and the . wings rustled and fluttered, and the whisper• ing voices mocked end chattered, and the heavy nit., so titled-with lit r Omeg heavier cud thicker, and the Things premed up to me clo ser, and checked theiwenth on my lips with the r Innimy breath from theirs. I wns not alarmed. I was not excited; hut I wns fitscinnted not spell-bound; yet, with every sense seeming , to possess ten times its natural power. I still went on looking in the glass, still earnestly desiring an apparition, when suddenly I saw a man's face peering over my shonitler in the glass- Girls, I could draw that face to this hour! The low fore head, with the short, curling black as jet, growing down in a sharp point the dark eyes, hens nth thick eye brows,,burning with a peculiar light; the nose and the dilating nos trims; the thin lips, curling into a smile, I see them all plainly before me now. And—O, the smile that it was!—the mockery and sneer, the derision, the sarcasm, the contempt, and victory that were in it! even then it struck into me a arose of submission. The eyes looked full into mine ; those eyes and mine fastened on each other; nod, as G ended my task, the church clock chin od the half-hour; and suddenly released, pis if from n spel , , I turned lound, expecting to seo n iron standing beside Inc. But I met only the chill nir coining in from the loose window, an d the 501 i t nde of the dark night. The Life had gone; the nings had visited away; tho voices lied died not, find I was alone with the rats be hind the iv:lime:et, the civic hooting in the ivy, and the iv threugll the trees. Convinced that either onion trick had been prayed on me, or that some one wine concealed in the mem, I searched every corner of it; I lifted lids of hones filled with, the dust of ages , ; and with rotting paper lying like blench ing skin. I took down the chimney-board, and snot and ashes flew up in clouds. I open ed dim old closets, where all manner of rout insects had made their homes, and where day light had not entered for generations ;.-but , found-nothing. Satisfied that. nothing human was in the room, and that no one could have been there to-night, nor for many months, if not years, and still nerved to a state of deeps- raw courage, I went hack to the drawing room, But, ns I left that room I felt than something flowed out with ma; nod, all through the long passag'es, I retained the sen sation that this something was behind me.-- steps were heavy, the consciousness of pursuit having parelyzed not quickened me; for I knew that when I left that haunted room I had not left it alone. As I opened the drawing-room door, the blazing fire nod the strong lamp-light bursting out upon me with a peculiar expression of cheerfulness end wel come, I heard n laugh close nt my elbow, end felt a hot blast across my nook. I started hack, hut the laugh died away, and all I sass Were two points of light, fiery and flaming, that .ornehaw fashioned themselves into eyes beneath their heavy brows, and looked at me tnenningly through the darkness. • . They , all wanted to know what I had teen, but I refused to say n word; not liking . to tell faltiollood then, and not liking to expose my self to ridicule. For I felt that what I had seen was true, and that no sophistry and no argument, no reason and no ridicule, could shako my belief-init. .Afy nWeet, Lucy oame up to. me, Hoeing me look to pale and wild, threw her arms round my neck, and termed forward to kiss me. AN sho bent her bend, I felt the tame worm blast ru , h over my lips, and my sister cried, " Why, Lizzie, your lirs burn like fire I" - 'And so they did, and for long after. The 'Presence was with mo still, never leaving mo day or night; by my 'pillow, its whispering, voice often waking me from wild dreams ; by my — sidc in the broad sunlight ; 'by -my side in the still moonlight; never absent:—.busy -at my brain, busy at my heart—a form ever banded to me. It flitted like a cold cloud between' my sweet sitter's eyes and mine, and dinikned 'therso that. I puuld scarcely see their bealqy. It droWiied — my father's voice and his words fell confused and indistinct. „ Not long after, a stranger- some into Qui: neighhorhond. Ho,heught.Qyeen Itewo, ado • sertUd old pioperty by the river side, where no one had lived for many 'years; not since the young bride; Nye. Brsitliw'aiie . , hgri been found in the. river ono rnornind,entnngled.nmong the bank weeds end dripping elders, strangled and *owned, and — her , husband dead—iolin know bowlying by_the • °lmpel' door. The place End had a bad name ever t;inee,, and no one Would live 'there. Ifoweier, it was paid r thiit a stronger, who had been long in the East n bought it, And that ho was coming to ysni , ithere. Anti, ,truoonotigli,.. one day, the whole orour little town of Thorn- hill,lint4 o..i;:eitinnent;' 'fir a trnrel- kling oarringa na , lfonr,:follon!o4 by another :;fati.of toiviinhi- , llinti o oo,or-Lnscers,..or.No I ipoct+i .dnr!Caolaroil, strangq lOphing lie o~ile- ;passed thOugh, topiepbadetfaio4' 10f Teen, 11610( .; plyfat tiOk . ,anllo a ll )4 wt ARO. : ',115 lbs thr, ha,ase; went pirlf-hiar.“; 'Green Iloivo bad bOe'ri clitiaged, nn if by; ;nal. isra.bc',ll ;a4J9kitepill !tho .iron.'proa that .lati , up tlioibrocal irlho ruhiral 'iardlon, was one niaaa 'of t CARLISLE, PA., NVEDNESDAY 9 , FlgpgrAny . 8, - fresh and green, many of them quite nevi! to 1110 ; and the shrubbery, Whlch hid been a wit dernesS, wits restored to 'order. The IMuse looked larger than before, ti , ;`vir that it was so beautifully decorated, and the brohen trellis work, which used to hang ditagling among the ivy, Was tnaGed with creeping roses, andjas- Minc, which left on me the impression of bay; ing been in flower, which was itripopsible It was a fairy palace ; and we could scarcely lie. Hove that this woo the de?erted, ill-omened Green Howe. ° The foreign . servants, too, in Eastern dresses, covered witlyrings,:and neck laces, and oar-rings, the foreign smells of ann. dal wood, and camphor, tnitlmuek ; the cur tains that hung everywhere in place of dobrs, acme of velvet, some of cloth of gold; the'air . of luxury, such as I, a simple 'country girl, ~10A. n ever seenbefore, madq, such in powerful_ impression on me, that I felt us if carried a way to some unknown region. As we entered, Mr. Felix came to meet its, rind drawing aside I a heavy curtain that seemed all of gold and fire—for the flame colhred flowers danced and quivered on the gold—he led. us into an inner room; where the darkened-tight, the atmos phere heavy with perfumes, the statues, the birds like living jewels, the magnificence of stuffs, and the luxuriousness of arrangement overpowered me. I felt as if I had sunk into a lethargy, in which I herd only the rich voice, and 1311 W only the feria of our stranger ghost. lie was.certalnly vary handimme; tall, dark, yet pole as marble ; his very lips - were pale; with eyes that were extremely :bright, but which. had an expression Deltind them that tbdued me. Ills manners whre graceful. lie was very cordial to tle; and made us stay long time, taking us through his grounds to see his improvements, and pointing out hero and there farther alterations to he made, all with !Molt n disregard for local dillioultes, and for cost, that, Inid he been one of the princes of the genii ho could not have talked more roynlly. Ile was more than merely attentive to me r speaking to me often and in a lower voice, bending down ncnr to mo, and looking at me with eyes that thrilled through every nerve and fibre; I saw that my father was uneasy 5 and when wo left, I asked him hlw he liked our now neig,hlawsPllO said, "not much. Lizzie," with a grave and almost displeased look, as if he bad probed the weakness I was scarcely conscious of myself. I thought at the time that he was harsh. Howel'er, as there was nothing positively to object to in Mr. Felix, My father's impulse of distrust could net well 'ho'indulged without rudeness; and my dear fatl:: was too thorough n gentleman ever to he rude even to his enemy. We therefore saw a great deal of the stranger, Who established himself in our house on the meat familial! footing, f',r... , 12.0.fte..1 on my f , ther ' and Lucy an intimacy they both disliked, but Mudd not avoid. - Tor it was forced with !Melt consummate skill and tact, that there was no thing which the most - rigid could object to. I gradually became an altered being under his influence. In ono thing only 'a happier— in the loss of the Voice and the Form which ad haunted me. Since I bad kuuwn Felix this terror had gone. The reality liad,nlisorb• ed the slidow. But in nothing else Woe this strange moo's influence over me beneficial. I remember that I usedlo hate myself for my eXCOFSIVO irritability of temper when I was Away from him Everything at home (Ls leased met' Everything seemed so small and mean, and old and par, after the lordly glory of that house ; and the very caresses of my family and olden school-day friends were irk come and, hateful to me. All except my Lucy lost its charm; and to her I was, as faithful as ever; to her I never changed. But her influ ence seemed to war with his wonderfully. When with him I fell borne away in atarrt, His words fell upon me mysterious and thrill ing, and ho gave use fleeting glimpses into worlds which had never opened themselves to me before; glimpses seen and gone like the Arabiari garden. lVhon I came back to my sweet sister, her pure eyes and the holy light that lay in them, her gentle voice - speaking of the sacred thinga of heaven and the earnest things of life, seemed to me like a former existence; a state I had lived in yee'Ve ago. But this divided influence nearly killed me;, it seemed to, part iny i very 'Vont and wrench my being intepit; nnl this •noro than all the rest, made me end beyond In) thing' people believed possible iu one so hay and reckleie ns I . had been. .Tly father's dislike to Felix increased daily, iind Lucy, who had never been known to use a harsh word in her life, from the first refused to believes thought of gond in kiln, or to allow him one single claim to praise: She used to cling to mo in'nwild, beseeching way,- andon treat me with payers, such 046 , mothP might have poured out before an erring child, to stop in time, and. return to thoso -- wito loved me, "For your soul is lost from among tas, Pzzle," she used' to say, " and nothitig but a framo,renniins of the full life of love you once gave I" But ono Word; one look, from Felix was enough to Make mo forget every tear end prayer of her who, until now, had been my idol and my low. At last my doer father commanded me not to see Felix again. I felt as if I shduld have diet In vain I wept and -prayed. '• In vain .r cave full license 'to mylintitgbte,•.ond' iilr fpredwords•topoitr from:My lips Which ought neverste have crept into my heart. In thin. my father tuns inexokble. • ..; ,wee In tho drawing room. noiselessly, Felix woo beside : am fib had not -rifered,by-, the door which wee -direotly , in "rent 'or Inc, the winder wee closed.: I emmt: conk! , uiniereiend this. endtlen :once ; for am ~ocrtain thet.,lto had not beeln cooecalorj 4 , Your' Lttitwi boe . spoken • of root ,I.ttzio:?" Itf; 'lola oath a' tangiaar opiate,: :,f , was oitota si it:Art(lllas [orbit:Won-you to 800 •ma again:l' he continued; ', ' ' ,Yes,7 'I firis , w,erdci, • lmp6lled' spOttk-by ,801110:bing stronger ihtta '.4! And you intend to obey Mini"; . eAttngnin, 10•.thr de if linid • 110 pulled nom. Who IT ho so hike when ho emilod? : I. could not remotobor, and Yet j Ittioirtth i nt hn" was like Oonio7ito" thititi "seen —a foe° that beiinnOd out side toy memory, on the horizon, and never Iloated 'near enough to be distinctly realized. " You are right, Lizzie," he then 'said ; there are ties which arcstronger than a father's commands; ties which' no map has,the right, and no man has the power ,to break, hlcet me to-morrow at noon in the LOw Lane; we will speak further." Ile did not say this in any supplicating, nor in any loving manner: it was simply n com mand, unaccompanied by ono tender word or look. He tieverAaid he loved me—never ; ,, it seemed.to bo' too well understood between as to neo4 aosuranco "I answered "yes," burying my , face in my bands, in sham; at this my fi ist Oct of die obedience to . my father; rind, when I raised my head, he was gone. Gone as he lied 'en tered, without a footfall sounding ever 50 lightly. I met him the next day, and it wee not the only time that I did so. Day nfter day I stole at his command from the house, to walk with him in- the Low Lane—the lane which the country people said was htlnted, end which was Corpjoglielltly always deserted And there we used:to walker sit under the, blighted elm tree for hours, lie talking, but I not under_ standing all he said; for there was a torte of grandeur and of mystery in hie words that overpowered without enlightening me, and that loft my spirit dazzled rather than con vinced. I had to give reasons at home for my long absences, and lie bade me say, that I bad been with ord Dame Todd, the blind widow of Thornhill Rise, and that I had been reading the Bible to her. And I obeyed, although, while I said it, I felt Lucy's eyes fixed plain tively on mine, and beard her murmur a prayer thet , l might be forgiven. Lucy grew ill As the flowers and the sum mer sun came on, her spirit faded more rap idly away. I 1111V0 known 8/1100, that it was grief more than malady which was killing her. The look of nalnelm. , s suffering which used to ha iu her face, has, haunted use through life with undying sorrow. It was suffering that I, who ought to have rather died for her, hod paused. But not even her illness stayed me. In the intervals, :I nursed her tonddlly and lovingly as before, brat for hours and hours 1 left-her—all through the long days of summer —to walk iu the Low Lane, and to sit in my world of poetry nod fire. When I canto book my sister was often weeping, and I knew that it was fur me—l, who once would have given my life to save her from ono hour of sorrow. Then I would fling myself on my knees beside her, in an agony of shame and repentance, and . promise better things of the morrow, and vow strong efforts against the power and the spell . Milt was on rne. But the morrow subjected me to tho same unhallowed fascination, the same faithlessness. At last Felix told me that 1 must COMo with him ; that I must leave ,my home, and take part M his life ;.that I belonged to him and to him only, and that I could 'not break the tab let of a fate ordained; that I was his destiny, aid he. mine, and that I must fulfil the law which the stars had written in the sky. I fought against this, I spoke of my father's anger and of my sisters illness. I prayed to• him for pity, not to force this on mo, and knelt in the shadows of the autumn sunset to ask froth him forbearance. I did not yield this dny, nor the nest, nor for many days. At last he conquered. When I said " yes," lie kissed the scarf I wore round my neck Until then he had never,touched even my band , with his lips. I consented - tic leave my sister, who I well knew was dying; I consented to leave my father, whose whole life bad been ono act of love and care for his children; end to bring a stain on our name until then unstained. I consented to leave.all those who loved me, all I loved, for a stranger. prepared ; the hurrying chiuds, lead colored, end the howling wind, the fit compa nions in nature with the evil and despair of my soul. Lucy was worse to -day, but though I felt going to my death, in leaving her, I ,could not resist. Had his voice called use to the scaffold, I must have gone. It was the last day of October, and at midnight, 'when I Was to leave the house. I hail kissed my sleeping sister, who was dreaminglit her sleep, and- , cried;-and grasped My hand, coiled aloud, " Lizzie, Lizzie, Como hock!" But the spell was on me, and I left her ; and still her dream ing voice Called nut, choking with sobs, "Nut. therelnot there Lizzie ! Come back tooito I" wos to leave the i1011:0 by, the large, old, haunted room that I have. spoken of. before ; Felix waiting for me outside. And a little after twelve o'clock, I opened the door. to pass through. This time the_ chill and the damp unnerved me: The broken mirror was in the the room, ns before, and in passing it, I meohnitically raised my eyes. Then I remembered that it was Allhallows -eve, the anniversary of the apparition of last year. • As I looked, the room which hail been so deadly still; became filled with the sound I had heard before. The rushing of large wings, - tifitlfithe crowd of whispering vciees flowed liken river round me; and again, staring into ;MY: eyes, was the 'mune face in•the glass - that I had seen before—the encoring smile, even more trititu pliant, the; blighting stare of the fiery: eyeri; the low brow and coal blank hair, end the look uf.:lxMokery.' - • All. wero':there; and: all l• had seen before and since ; .for; it was.Feldi who woe gazing e s t • me 'lions - the -, glass • When I turned tolsmink.to him, the room was empty, Nods, living. creature wen' therm; only, a lots laugh, and the for.olf voices whispering, and the wings. And : thcri s a bond yvin497, 410 the .vpiUe of F,eliO,cried from.out siiie, ',Conte, Llizial,cenao !",,,: , s I staggered, rapier than.yrolked, 1p We win : dow; and as diraß olonetodf- 7 my Ikundralsnd to open it—there stood bctivothi, nie aud it a pale figure cl.dhed in white , liar face, mote pole time tedineu round , di,cr.h r oir bring deu,ii,eit s : lter . hre r ast,,end her blue eyes 3 15,qiied enrmißtly,tintl,nmeilifully into !Mee., S 4 lte,rns 5i1ent,;0;4,3,4.4 seeped es if 'a yobiroo.of toio and of introntj tionled from her' lips' as it d !twirl' "words of l Aentilleis •*ntrietimi." It was Lucy; :standing Altera siu td,tio , dlittcy .m i dnight • LO'Olo 4ikfti," tilOfi'gpre turned, and b'eokotilitlle4 s ue; then slowly .faded away. The the ' hilt hour sounded; and, 1 fled front the rote te.my sister.- I found her lying-.dead kt the floor; her hair flanging over her breas 1 and one hand stretched out as if in Supplicati ti, The next'day Felix disappeared ; lie ail his -whole retinue; and Green Howe fell into ruins "again. No' one knew where . ho wept, as no one'hnew from whence be came. And to this day I sometimes doubt whether or not he wee a clever adventurer, who had heard of my father's wealth ; aed who seeing my weak and imaginative character, bad noted on it for hie own,purposee. All that Ido knew is that my sister's spiritsaved nee from'ruin; and thlat she died to have me. She bad seen and known all, and gave herself for my salvation down to the last add supreme effort she made to rescue me. She lel at that,honr of half past twelve ; and at half past twelve, as I live before you all she appeared to me and needled me. . And this is the reason why I never married, and why I pass Allhallow's eve in prayer by my sister's grave. I have told you to-night this story .of mine, because I feel that I shall not Bpi over another last night of October, but before the next white Chrisrnas roses come out like winteeetars on the earth, I 'Shall be at peace in the grave. Not in the grave; let me rather hope with my hlossed sister in Heaven I . . 31liatilantoug DOMESTICS „ - From the earliest ages down to the present day, Alter() have been different classes in soci ety. This necessarily arises from the very or der of society. The well established, and very proper right of inheritance, and, the ability which some members of society have to acquire and which others have not, the difference of - education, and other obvious causes nescesarily produce these distinctions. Who among the various classes, is the most contented and hap py, is quite another matter.. There must be some to serve, end some to be served. They are mutally dependent. We refer at present to domestics by which we mean those who con stitute a part of a family fur wages, or other wise. We hear great complaints, sometimes, of these persons, and sometimes great coin plaints froinithem. This connexion is regar ded as one of the miseries of life. It is not necessarily so, and is, usually, the fault of those who command, rather than of those who ll= Servants:masters, and mj.pErossda, have. the .atne sort of bones, musbles,Ve'atla, find hearts; the same self love, rand the : tiaMe rational and well instructed persons con sider tlint servants ore entitleil l b-be esteemed and respected according to their merits. That they hay.% no well as every shove th em has, a to be happy. The y sire Mai tied to be. spored when sick; advised and relieved .whoa in trouble; tobo made as comfortable no the circumstances of the 'parties permit. If they aro persons of religious impressions, their so comodation is to be consulted. They are to be, counselled as to saving the fruits of their la bors. The comands given to them should bo plain, clear, uniform, and not contradictory and capricious. They are not to be comancled wills virulence ant reproach, but gently and rather by request. Children who are porinitod to bo insolent.to the dependent ore permited to do unchristian and highly reprehensible nets: Servants, in common with all who ,wear the lit . mitti form, are entitled to civility. We know nut, in this changing world, whose turn it may, in a very few generations, if not the passing one, to be masters or servants. To fret awl be ill-tem pered about one's servants, ill - becomes the dignity of any one. If they turd troublesome, unworthy, or ungrateful; the rbmedy is to dis miss them, and find others. It may be assumed that all persons who are served, may be well served if they ohoooe to be so; when they aro not, it is their own fault. If there were no just cause against masters and mistresses, there would, be much less against servants.— all persons- understood and . practiced on tees° truths, the good qualities of servants would be more Common, and thus, ono more oau of human Misery would be diminished.— Suliivan's Moral Class Book. TIZE NIOWSPAPICR How lonesome the fireside where there is no newspaper! Ask' the an who has a family paper to rend; with the - latest news, good stories, the useful lessoris, and the witty soy ings of the newspaper—ask him its value. Let him be deprived-of' it tarp few weeks, end then asked to put an estirnati& upon it. Will he any that two or three dollarearetoo . Tuch No, no.; he will esteem it one of his gr'eatesk treaaures, nod value it neeordinlly,• , We were led to these .reileotione the ether day, by an industrious, worthy man, who call" oil dt our Mike to subscribe for a pper. Said he, "I wits taring it, but times wore so hard, paid up and- quit; and 1 cannot got along 'without it..c 1114VO not- the motiey,to- pay now, and 1 have called to see if V could get it on 'credit till fall ; for I must have it'on some terms—l wbblil not be without it -fur ten dol lars." Of course we placed his nano on our list with great cheerfulness. . Such men are by bent eubsoribeed in the world,, (except hose:Who 'pny down.) They will ,alwayaptie tho time It fidle due . .. . , . . Evpry family ought to have a paper; it ie.a duty .they owe to their chiidren, if . nething else. Who wish , their children to the in , perfect ignorance, in order save the price of, a newripaper 2: , . .. . . ,: . -, ,; 19F,1„: 11 1ifilliOns money for an inch' 'of itime e " cried Elizabeo; - thegifted;' but nnibi. CitiOe t r(Of ta'ibludoipon her tied. 0111.441 ' ' Open' n i‘oio t robe= ii' kingdoni'on u'hiClNha ;Nib 'Wei:6. 60'0; at her feet—all ore now volueleem:''ai-,(1 'she obrioks hair Vraa r n .yi liwOosOorO,tudd..teb derat'eir ! l e (6, irtdo - '6 4t ttit h' or'tdhol e preparation fo'i'oierniiy was !crOkillea cake hho' bad wailed more (1 n hpiirlaeatury • :' 'would 'liarter bililiotid tor on I= :e.i.StiT.ot, ~ '. 4 .z,l-s)i.itai'itii7iii7i.. UORILIQLTu INDIAN CRUELTIES Wo have already-announced, the eeeape and return of Mrc . Jano Wilson, ofTexas, to Banta, Fe, who had been taken .captive by the Com anche Indians, and subjected 'to the moot ex traordinary cruelties. Tho aflair has very justly excited the greatest indignation in New Nlexico against the Indians. - From Mrs, Wilson's narrative, it appears that Bho is but i 7 years of ago. About a year ago she was married to a young farmer in Texas, and in April tboy.joined a party cf 11l ty-two emigre nte,hound for, California. They were attacked , by Indians, and the party, wad compelled to return to Texas; but Mr. And Mrs. Wilson remained at El Paso, where their horses being stolen, they were compelled aka to give up the plan of going to California, mxtl set out on_their. return to Texasln July. In August, Mr. Wilson and his father fell Into , he hands of Indians and were murdered. Mrs. poli g lass returned to El Paso, and again :lit September she started for Texas, with three brothers-in-law and a small party. When within three days' journey of Phantom on American militar3 post, they were attnekcd by Comanches, while some of their men were off in pursuit of some of their horses that 1,0 been stolen. A Mexican who was with MI% Wilson, was brutally murdered and scalped before her eyes, and, she and her two broth ors-in-lace, lads of 10 and' 12 years, were seized, bound, and carried off, with the entire property of the party, • t Tho Indians, with their captives, preceded iu a Northwest direction, each being appropri ated as the property of one or other of.the chiefs, They wore etript of nearly allthier a!othing, end Otherwi,e brutally treated, Mrs. Wilson, although expecting soon to become a mother was oubjectcd_to every conceivable cru elty and indignity; beaten and hrused; expned to fat , gues of all kinds; her flesh lacerated by lariats and whips, or by the loads of wood the was obliged to carry on her hare back; coley - pelted to do the work-of men, or punished faF inability by by being'stoned, knocked' (lown and trampled on; almost entirely deprived food—and all this lasted for twenty-five days , . At this time she was , ient in advance in the mot.- ning as usual, when she determind to Attempt an escape, which she succeeded in nom; tith ing by secreting herself in some busheetill the Indians passed. For twelve dais she wandered through this Indian country, subsisting upondterries, when the fertunately4ell'in with some Now Mt xic, traders who Kirnished her with some nirat' i s clothing nod a blanket. In consequenceof their meeting with '11"-Careanclie, theylroil to leave her behind, and she uturowly esca,peda . second capture. But, by the subsequtt;t of one of the traders, a Pueblo Indian, site was enabled, after hiding herself for eight days to CFellpe. At the expiration of this time she wits roscuedby the traders, fare<io i'l with a horse, and brought to the !min of Pt cos, New Mexico, where .Major Carlton and others of the army, took care of and enabled her to proceed to Santa Fe. This is but an outline of a tcrriblt story, the counterpart of Ivitich, in all' excipt the escape, are said to be frequent. ° A letter front Santa Fe says that the white coptivell among the Camanches areas namerous its the Indians themselves. The same letter men tions the escape of a young Mexicali women who retains, after a year's terrible on ptivity, expecting to become the mother of at, , mfant whose father is a wild Indian. The Coman ches practice cruelty in its utmost refittenriit towards their captives. Children are 'ruin ed to be' More savage titan they are themselves, and women are subjected to outrages tea horri ble to be mentioned. The Santa Fe Gazette says : "The trio broe.ere of Mrs. Wilson are yet in captivity, and unless soon reclaimed will imbibe rt taste for the wild life of the Indian, and be forever lost. There are many hundreds, and or venture to Say, thousands of captite" : among the Indians of NeW Mexico, prinelpii:',;r . '”' men and children ; the former are fMced,tti become elavee of the men, and the latter ate trained for worriers." When Gov. ideredivether came out, he, vilt . fortunate enough to rescue trio Mexicap.ghela, from the Camanches--one It; and the x •her.A_ years of ago. They had.heen captured from near Chilthaltua, one'three years and tile_otliNs, tee; months before., They—were_seut Governor of that State,, who aoknewledgell the conduct of the ()weenier of New Meijoe), in very handsome torlyte. They eel) they", were ,a large number of Mexican captivity, and they saw one Atnerhym ivoman i with a small child ; that--an Indian one 4et,v 4 , .when they-were traveling,on horse-heel:, OA the child from 14 mother, throw : it . pp ,ipto the air, and as -it eateradown caught it on Kit spear, and that others irode.up at full anrpi9 stole it on their Upper°, and t r ib_passedit aroma among the party Surely our Government wilyot. , rertnif such outrages to go unpnniWied, even if it be necessary to exterminate the whole tribe of these bruit& savngee. • DISPARITY OP , AGES 'AR= DIAIIR I ASIEtt We clip Out following.interriting piLrograj.ll, about the uge, of pope of, the.wigeti ; op . dmin i. ;guished personeges fontati*nglfsk„popeyi 7 l- 1.. , , i‘fahomet's tiret,:wife,. Eudy4b, viol itt ie#4 2 forty,when be, nt the ego of twenty frie.iwomet riled her . : Stin'h:reprare'e Ann;ilittiuttrfty . Wrii 'ren Years; his: - Fietifoi,'ls',r;' pditierani 'Wit !Mee.- literally. ohneet .11huido,his. age._ ,WhEt wife of Lord Tietbert of Cberbury; six or accent yhn:reLditier'illen her hueband.. lifewhiiliittill nbillintiO()Pfiii, ni it o'ag6 iie iWenty..iivr,'riiiO rio4, a ,fi rpt wire,' who,,iren Alton A f,ty-tro : .dk,iit; 4* Rowe, the nutherese:4nW , !fifteert'iyenreitiddit:s4 the'il liltr. ItOtH,.'Reilel;iiie' Ge"ttnith Do 0011 , 0 3 IvPrt !I P,. 1 4: , ! 0 ,1. 1111 Y ,, 4-A S.,F. ° -,,. ''P gPte l 2i . .IY,Olsoli (Mirs-Fullor,d,mue• wdtrly tet i .ye l e4 her -Iturband'it "Atithi or; ' , Jenny , Lind,: lan, rat : , flidli) iii}i , igliit''QP` ii 4 kinii',oldVit thail . lii3.l l l 4l) q0(1.4 Ip,itc,l,e, o , . ~. . . _ . • • veti•%. A miserly old fellow opmewhereslowyps Eget Luis hit upon n,n • esn'edinot•Aci Bllve.atat Mos: _lle uses .• other.dnyo.n4iLict ' .t. aireer, il`re ofe . vi4;v4ll94'iliO''l34ny* s caLi'Clgo off' WitLutit theM:' 'oe j i~ ij~~~ NO 20 ~s t e EMM =I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers