Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, February 02, 1859, Image 1

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WILLIAM M.IPOITAPEp;, Editor.) }
11l R., 001 f r -ER, Proprietor. .
0
TERMS OF PUBLICATION.
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' The CARLISLE lIERILD Is. published weekly nun large al I
, A• AV NOTICE:—TIIOB.. M. 13IDDL I.:
sheet containing twenty eight col tin ea. n furnsh.' • •
J continues the practice of the law, in the office -
to soleteribers at $1.50 'I : paid strictly In advance ;
5 innerly occupied by.his father, Wm., 51. Biddle, Hsti ~
$1 75 if paid within the year; or $ . 2 in all 1.1181,S when
/111 d niore recently, by the law first of Penrose klliddle,
payment Is delayed' until :titer the expinitio 1 of the
. te , olved• . a
year. No subscriptions received for a fess period than npw di .. _ • .
' • •
six months, and 110110 diseontiotted malt all arrearages .1) ". '''i• 70 ,1 ~
... . . ..
are Paid. - unless at the option of the publistin.r. Papers ,
sent to subscribers living out of Cumberland comity( - 1
P.. ri UAI 111011, Atlornay at Law.
must be paid fir In entrance or the payment assumed
. k . )
.—ollice on North llanover street, tn. few doors
by soma responsible person IlVing iu Cumb0r1,,,0.,4,1111- south of last' lintel. All business entrusted to hint^
•ty. 'Chose terms will be rigidly adhered to in all will be promptly attended to. . (Aprllls. • '
.
WON.
jr. AW NOTICE. - REN . Lmsi,.,., %,) I „,_
rriliKitoBE h;nro 4 =il7l. oh:in T4l. ,-;'
' e'''
the Court Muse. where he will promptly attend to all.
11EIRIlleSS,Mitrusted ib'him. ..
August 19, 1857:'
.-44Y, 1 4/W--`I4 3 SAWAXA.
• Mire:ll.lll°las will Ito charged $l.llO per square of
twelve linos for liniertions, and . 25 ernts for moll
• subsequen t inserflon. Oil advortlsenients of less thin
Pottgideren
Adeertlsonnthils Inserted afire Mafriages ant deaths
8 emits per line fir first insertion. and 4 rotas per line
far o,nbsrvjnont insortbmp.. Communientlons on 'sub
jects of ILuIWd or Individual Interest will lie charged
6
coats porline. Tile Proprietor will not WI responsi•
bd., In daina•tes for errors in adrertls,•mnnts, Obituary .
•
waives nr Morrla..;es not exeileding (Ivo lines, will ha
Inserted without eliarge •
=1
The Carlisle Herald JOB PRINTING OFFICE is 11le
largest and Innst i:oinplete establishment In t1101 . 1111nty•
Then ..401111 VIVS:if,:l111111 gl111(11711 1,11 . 11.ty Of material
snail for plahrand Palley work •of every kind. enaldrs
us to do Jolt PO sting at the shortest notice and no the
angst reasonable terwn.. Ptll,ollB In want of Rills.
plonks or anything in tint Jobbing ling, will find it to
helr iotertmt to give us a rail, Every variety of lll:inks
on•aantl 011 11:111,I.
aLJaial_toceLLltfoliiintiott.
'U. S. GOVERNMENT
• •
Presiilent —.I WES 116 , 1,14 N N. • •
Vice l'resi.lent—ioll,( C. iiRECKESHITIO
•
Secretary ni SCULL.—lion., Lewis
Secretary of Interior-3 ienit
Secretley of • .
Secretary or ‘Vni.—.lllnN
Secretary of sniT k all .
P.O. :Vaster emend—A. V. ilinnex: ' •
Attorney lierterai-Jeitioli•Cii N. ill keit.
eiliel.lustice nt din (hilted iitateg—ll, It. TOMY
STATE - GIWERNMENT.
•
- <.firirtornnr—NVlT.i.t?.:ot• • FS-1'4110:11. - • -
61.1,...t;try Slum 0 M. Ilvtsrtut.
Survrytor Booloorool—.lllßN
A wilt or 11/oter:ll—.l%oor Frr.'.lß.
Treasurer—ll LN II I' B. II cißuow.-
ohooNer of tht. Saltow '7oourt —E. Lrwri. .1. 'l' ATOM
BrrtoN,o, IV. B. hownir B. sl, IVionioutto..lolKM. BorAD
COUNTY 'OFFICERS
Preside° t Judge—llon. James 11. Graham.
Ass-elate Judgesllon. Corklln, Samuel
Nomllrarn. • '
District Attorney—Wm. J. Shearer.
Prothonotary—Philip Quigley.
lit... Ardor 4 - C.—Daniel S. Croft.. •
llegistecS. N. Frauninger.-
High Sheriff—U.lFt. 311.0wthey; Deputy, S.
County Treagure,—Nhles Bricker.
Coroner—Antehell ArC i,!iai.
•, County Commissioners—An Irew lferr, Samuel Me•
yaw. Nathaniel 11. F-kels.. Clerk to Commh.sioners,
Janice Armstrong.
Directors of thi s , Poor—George jlrindle, 'John C.
Brown, Satuuel Supertothmhrat of- Poor Nous
--Joseph Lobach.
- BOROUOU OFFICERS
Chief Burgess—Willbon Curt.
Assistant Burgess-4 , 111.1s Kekels.
Town Connell—J. 11. Parkin' (President) Jelin fiat
shall, Robert Moore, Jaines . 3l. All.. William Cameron,
John B. tiorpis, Michael .lluWomb, Miebael 311.1e11,
Peter Monyer.
- Clerk to Council.—Thos. , ll. Matron.
Constables—Jacob'Brets.,' High Constable; Andrew
Martin; Ward Constable.
Justieg3 of Abe Peare—A, L. Spoorler, David Smith,
I . lolcodlb, Stephen Keepers.
CHURCHES
=
tro Square. nor. Conway P. Wing Pastor.—Servieca
every Sunday Morning at 11 o'clock, A. M., and 7 Welc*
Second Presbyterian Church, corner of South 1 snorer
and Poutlret sti cuts. 11ev. 31r Eons, Pastor. Services
comineneo at 1.1 o'clock', A. 31e turd 7 it'Vloelt P. 31.
St, John's 11i amt.( Prot. Episcopal) tool beast angle of
Centro Sluvre. Re v.Jacolt It. Alorss. Rector. Sery Ices
at 11 o'clock A. 31., and 3 o'clock, P. 31.
English Lutheran Church, iledlhrd between 3ialn
nod Lout her streets. Rev. Jim thyry, Pastor. Services
t 11 o'clock a. 31., and 1i!.4 o'elock P. 31.
Gorman Itiiforined(Miura). between Han
over and Pitt streets. Row. A. 11. Kromer,
Service. :it I 0 . !:, o'clock A. M. nod t.% ti cloak P. 31.
3letloslist Olurc (first charge) corner of Alain :Ind
Pitt Streets. Rev. It. 0. eloinibers, Pastor. Cervices at
11 ti clock A. A. iii.d o'clock I'. 11.
l'lnvell(sccond charge.) Rev. A. A.
Itet , l'astor. Services lu College Chanel. lit 11.
o'clock:loc se, k
A. 31, and 4 o'clock, P .31
ilorinin Catholic Church, Pomfret' near East street.
Bee. - Linden. Pastor: Services on the 2nd Sun
day or each month. '
lierantio Church corn, of Pornfral and
Itedford streets. Hey. C. FIIITI:E. Pastor. Services at
IL o'clock. A. P. 31,
if IVltcu I . ll:plgeS 111 thy altos.. are nrcesaary the
proper Feral.. are I....inertial to truly u,
•
DICKINSON COLLEOL''
Roy. Charles Collins, D. D., President and Professor of
Moral Science.
111. V. 1:311111111 31, Johnson, I). I), ProfesNor of Philoso
phy and I:oldish Literature.
James W Marshall, A. M., I'rofehsiir of Andvnt lath,
gvage,
Ile, Wm. 1.. 81/SWI44A. Prdfr,sor of Ma thentat 111,
William C. WllFon, A. M., ProlVl,Blll. of :in Lin al &loom
and Curator of tho Museum.
Alomnider School, A. M.; Professor of Hebrew and
Modern Lang mows.
tmontol 1) Ilillman, A. 31., Prmelpal of Ilio Grammar
School.
Dotill John, A. 11., Assist:tut In the ttratuntar School
BOARD OF SCHOOL DIRECTORS
Andrew Blair. Prieddent. 11. Saxton, I'. Quigley, E.
Common. C. P. Ilumerich,J. Hamilton. ticeretary..lanon
W. Eby, Trennm•ee, John aplwi. 31c8heliger. .31ect uu
the lot Monday of each :%lontli al 8 o'clock A. M: at Ed.
°cation Ilull.
CORPORATIONS
CUILIHLE DEPOiIT II 1N K 11.31. llotiolertoir,
I.3lsltier. W. 311. Ileotetn; Asti!. Casliltgr. J. I'. Hasler:
Triter, Jas. Floury,: Dlroirtors, Itlullard Parker. Thom is
Paxton, Moses tricker, AlnliLaln Hurler .11114.1.
. It. P. Woodwarkl, Wlll. 11. SAIL Uei IVllorry unit
. .. ,
CIMIIiEIIIAND VALLEY HAIL ROAD C01 1 11'.4.:` ,. 1t. , -- PrOliidUllt,
Vro , lel'irk %Vattf.t: Secretary ;Ind Trenttoror, Edward 31.
- Biddle;' Superintendent, O. N. Lull. Pateonger tralnt,
twice a da,y. Un.tward leaving Carlisle at 10.39 o'elcel:
A 31: and COO d'clnek P. 31. Two trains every day
-Weßtward,leaving Carilido at - 0.51.1 n'elprk A,.31., mitt
2.50 P. 31.
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kso....lVArialComuAxr.Pree.tdont, Fred
orkk %Vials; B,a:rotary, Lemuel Todd ; Treasurer,
M. Beetoni: Directors, F. Watte, Diehard Parker, Lemu
el Todd, Win. M. hokum. floury Saxton, .1. W. Eby,
* John D. ilorg., IL C. Woodward, and C. M, Diddle
UtIMIIattANID VALLEY BANK.—PrAlont, John S. Stet ,
rent ; Cashier, 11. A. Sturgeon; Toiler, Joe. C. Hoffer.—
Directors. John S. Sterrett, Wun. Kor, Melehok Drone
luau, 'Richard Woods, John 0. Dunlap, !told. C. Sterrett,
U. A. Sturgeon, and Captain John Dunlap.
SOCIETIEB
•
Star Lodge N 6. 107, A. Y. M. merits at
Marion on the tind and 4th Tuesdays of every
Month.
St. Johns Wu No 2110 A. Y. M. Meets 31• Thurs
day or each tonal', at Marian
Carlisle Lodge No 91 1. 0.,01 0. F. Meets Monday
evening, at Trouts buildlug..
FIRE COMPANIES
'it. Union Fire Company yes organised In 1180.
Presine„st. Conneaut Vico President. William M.
Porter; Secretary, Theo. Cornman; Treasurer,' P.,Mon
yer. Company meets the first Saturday in March, June,
September, and limeMber.
The Cumberland Fire Company was instituted Febra•
ary 18,1809. President, Robert McCortney; Secretary,
Philip Quigley; Treasurer; U. S. :hitter.. 'the company
meets on the third Satoday of January, April, July,
and October.
• • . • . , ,
The tiond WM hose Company was inatltuted In March;
1865.-1/rualdont, 11. A. SI urgconlVlco President, James
B. 51cCart.Tion1.1.9pint.nry0axnuel Trsaaurer,.
Jnneph D. halbert. The second
Saturdalktf January, Aprll, July, and October. '
RATES OP POSTAGE.
Ito:stage on all lett (woof onethalf ounce weight or un
der, 3 cents wee paid, except to California or Oregon,
which In 10 cen,s prepaid.
Postagn on the herald the County, nee;
Within the State 13 rents per Tear. • Teeny part ,t4tho
lthitierditiluedrthents ' PeStage on'albtranellint earth
under 3 ounces In weight, 1 cent pro-paid or two COMB
unpaid. Advertised letters, to be, hnrgod with tin , rent
of stivertisimr. .. .
. .
11E8 i,D .10fi a 1;001i.
• PINIING OF
'S. •E. Coi. - of the:Square; -irtaitt..A
ausuie,ss Earos.
r\ r OFFIC DEL TODD
j has respnal tin; pral•the of the Law. Oflice.lo;
Centre Square, west n, near the First Presbyterian
Churrh.. "
April 8, 1857.
ty .W
lt. S. B. KIEFFEOflice in North.
Ilanovor ',trek two doors froni Arnold I: don's
si w.- (Miro hours. morejtsrtlvularly from 7 Co 9 o'cloelt '
A., .1.. owl rrom 5 to 7 o'clock. P.. 31.
D'
CTOR A 11:118PRONG has rein ov -
L ( .4 ) 1 1:1,4 orne,!*t., Centre Siluare west of the Court
!loose: where 110 non lie consulted at July hour'of the
(lay or ItiLOtt. • Dr. A. line NO thinly years experit ore
In the protesslon. the lest ten of whtaqa hnye ),,,aa ;1,0-
Led tan tha• study nod plo tion or lionam.patinte moll.
One. Ally 20, 'hi Gm.
E SEA US, M. .1)., will .
_j_o_spouClike 7 ,llllBl',_tlitd- Till 11
month in Carlkla..fortlie bej•fit, Ladit.s.. n Ito
may Ie Ni to eonnult 10r, pronssinally. 091eu at
A lighin ha corner of Hanoi' et. and I,..ither sirents.
•
Ort. fl, 181iS •
( - 1 Et). • W . .. N Dr(III, I). D. S. -L
- )Ir Late Demoost rater of I) per: IleeListr.;,' to the
itnl ti more Collet:a
^ Detail F‘lrgerV.
an" V
at his relthlevtee.
opposite Marion 1141,-
%Vest. Muhl strret, CarllBli,
Nos. 11.
-, V.l•Kvirc,= ; — _ - „,,T,:
..out;, Ilailotoo - .otroot; "•-; Cit.-1(7,A,-.
'Moo. . .-
•
It he ill's...ill from. Carlisle the laxt too d,lys
41'301 month. Aug. I, 'lot,
it . ..GfE 0 It 4:E. Z. Bit i.l z
•
retnrnell 'to t'arlisle. offers his professional
sereiees W the citiztuis generally. . -
!inky ill North Pitt street, nearly opposite his=(n•mer
reAtlence
[Carlisle, March it. 7.8.
.C.Z- Will he libsent until the Ist of Aprii next.
D .R._ GEORGE S. SEA--
• - HIGH'
I', inMuT, Brn o flu, Mil.
timore College of Dental Surgery.
Blri_Ofliee at the residenee of his mother, Eak Louthet
P Erect. three doors below Bedford.
Mach Ifl, Itibß—tf.
twcr . ..,... Mt. J. C. N6FI.? respect,
fully Interns the Indies And W . llllOlllOll
•• • W. ° of earthly- Anil vicinity- the! helms re
snumd the traction of Dentistry. prepared to pre.
form all operations on the teeth And gums, belonging
to his profession. lin will insert full Fels of tenth on
gold or silVer. oil gum teeth. nr Mortis. as they
may prefer. Torahs intoderato. to shit the limes
Mire -High street,- direttly oppaidle the Cumber
land Valley Bank.
ga-Dr. S. will ho in Nowvillo flu; lost ton dais of
very nu m th.
21, 1555.-Ip*
Docrron, AuclusTus- It. EGBERT,-
Toritlern Ills Professional Sot,lees to the citizens of
Mount Holly St o iuzs. (formerly l'apertown),
and its vidoliy.
ITil- Ills (nee will Int I;mnd at his residence, Moore's
Hotel. [Aug, 25,
s, W. TJAVERSTTOK; Drug.gist,
North IlanovertSt4.et,
Pliyg o's prescriptio n s ea, eful le Colllllollllded
• A
full supply of fresh drug.; and chemicals.
B 1.1? N It, Dealer• in UI•u:i:;,
I'nrfuuu•ry, Faney Arlivlrv. Conte,
11/mover Str....t, larllsle,
B E E 1) & JIENDEN 11 'A
_
BANKERS,
- 21 - oi b ru I a,u!rrrut'Co/feetur,J elgrirls
1 . :Irtir111111,Ittellt1011 11;11111M MO 11111,111 t, or n0m.r,..).
den Is, 5n..11 as Int, ing; and q,lllllg Heal Estato.lonniter
ninney nu 1.../11 mottle noeurities. l'aying. Taxes and
looking niter the general intin . 4.24 of non-residents. '
'lleterences 01,41 if required.
AddreNs, 3IENI)ENIIALI
31hAmwo1ls, Ilinnesnta.
July 21,1554-1 y
E PUI3LIC.—The undersign
.ea being will ii as 11 'writer. would oiler Ills
servlves lo all tequlrloi: literary MIL Ile will 1 . ...L.1i
l'll , llllllllloll 5p1 1 1 1 1 . 111 1 5111111
replies, Lines fer .10 . ohlles-111 . 1.11111.11 11111111 1 1 .
11,r 1110 PreSS - 01 1 1111111 1 11 1 11, 31111 write Poetay upon any
subjeet Address (plait paid)
FINLEY JOIINSON,
Felt. 17, 10:15,
pE Al, , 6 ,14.1 STATE. "1. GE N C .
ANDREW 0. ROE. N. JEIT 1110111,ONE
•bIOE k TII 0 M S 0 N
!lave opened an Alm at St.doseph. Mo.. Gar the per
elms° and sale el Real Estate. buying and selling Land
.Wei rude. entering Land on 'iliac, Surveying anti Map.
ping Towns. Location of Warratitt., and making Invest.
Intuits ha` newresidents. paying of '!'axes. and all bunt
nest pertaining ton (loners. Land Agency in Missouri •
KIMEND. Nebraska, and lowa. •
....prt.,0111., on Soeon..l Street, Nortl of A. T. Beattie'
Itanking !louse. . [July CO, 1850.
DEAL ES 'l' AT E AG Es.e.y, RE-
F", VOCAL.—A. 1, spoNsi,En, REAL ESTATE
Ali Erf, CON VEVA NCEit ANO SCRI i'EN ER, has re.
'unveil to h is New Offieb 011 Main street: one door wind
of the Cumberland Volley Hail Head Depot.
He Is lino'parmailentis . 10eated. awl hat, un hand Ind
for sale a very lar , re our unit of Real Estate. eotn.holug
of Farms, of all MIMS, improved and 'unimproved. )1111Hroperl lea Town VI epvety or every deaerlptlon,
log Lots, also, Western Lands anti Town Lute. Ile will
give his atteni Inn, is heretofore to the Negotiating of
Loans. Writing of Deeds. Mortgages, Wills, Conti:tett+,
•
and Serivening • ,
Oct. '
Mr. C. •
ATTORNEY AT LAW AND GENERAL AGENT
Minn&Told
Y nut io , ;re a Lll a n l t c tet I,n a ti3tgtt ott, l ., a ~I.ytute
Iteal Eatato and sodurltlea. Negotiate llma, pay taxe-,
locate land warrant's, &e., ke. Hofer to the members of
tbu ClllllllOl . ll/1111 County . liar, and to all prominent On
colic of Carllale, Pa. • [IA uA.PISS-Iy.
FRANKLIN HOUSE
South Hanover Street, adJoluitiit the Court (louse,
Carlisle, lu. - JOHN ❑ANSON.
Proprietor.
.0 - - Mail Ceara !saves daily for l'apertimm, l'uters
burg, York Jpritograng !blamer from this !louse.
VRNIT[.►N BLIND 3IANUFACTURER
Mechanicsburg, Pa.
4ir All kyles hid patterns of thuds made to order,
and Old 1111104 repaired in n neat and subatantlal man.
net, and on reasonable terms
•-
•
lirdors from Cliirllslo and other phints abroad ro•
'sportfully solicited, nod promptly /Mended to.
Shop directly oppoillto the.. Union ilotol,' West Muhl
St, cot. -o [July 14, f,
&nos P. SNYDER, 0140.
of W. K. MeFAnGtmG , reptinylvnoln. .
G. f; Coax, . Rhodo leOlini.l.
Q N YD Wit, r M'FARLAND, AND
vj
_ COOK, : _ . .
BoakkorCand Dealers 'in Real Estate,
, • .311NNKAPOL1S,_.
~
: `„)., ' rillommotel Terri! ory.
r ,
FOR SALE OR •
b, The largo ontablltlitnent. known - nn
tlytp*- JUNCTION DIST/LblillY," nit
tinted on the Yellow ilreochun' Crock,
- 't J, lieltshnover'n Mill, in offered for
wile or relit: Tilo buildings andminehluery aro all new,
having only buon In unit übnitt one year, and In capable
of in:Hating iL to KU buchele n day. Tun" location for
bunliiens In equal to any ht the i'mtwity, nod tin, 'can ve
tilencenAir_Work.nre.ulitiorpawa t a c
pviol at 'qui' Nme. Fuc tartan or other infortant
ply ott 1110 prianicon to
.0. w..1,F.1 Melt,
Allen Cuml),
I=
movoi;µ' ut
tiit• rein i•t' •
-'• • .
WOM `inDS% niaMEIT
POETICAL -
COLLEGE .REMINISCENCES.
=
l'ln'hilting in my room, tar Al.,
' ' And Minh] lig of llie rays
• Of were'‘vont to gild
Our bytrono l'ollege dayB. '
Familiar arils an - tlio •
And idess the Prato' that pia , t(i trio in
'TIM class of '5B. •
You'll not forgot the times
.weves!en,
notnfier ::2,
When Johan 411111 W°llt the t:Ounds
trout hpin-11 , so biltheand true;
Now oft the Dr's. iN 1 . 21f:117111W11 rap'
NVopid (welt agilator,
" Wll.t. gelitl, men. it nuvum to mo
You need it modern for !•'
13elbr.;ine rke the 4111 sky forms
Uf .11'isie mutt S%3IELL IV.trrs,
Of Umst.e Ipta. hod SILINOIIII BELL.
ill spare.
I hear lii clanging 11)orniing 1,;11,
The t•huilliag up the stAtrs,
The cluttered huoroeiti•ms which
Ai,eathst m iLll the pray ere.
YOU mind ills night when 3lonsi and .lonif
Stnle e•dtly in our 1 , 0011,
I ipprd /111 , 11111160 NS to prep iro •
--
A motto i t his d,•nau ;
The efilgy tots hung. dO3l .
Full histy feet hi
The fellows nil iheslarisl •tirs4 sport
• Tzi see It diniglin4 there.
Ono d irk initinizlit, 'twits rattling land.
.
eri , ry desk RIO drawer
For impel's to cou.4 - iime.
alin:t.llteye , ivNit:ltljimt
tlu purp,:so to
The s'i,tui_eol it+of udxi ug oxy.•
Ilydriogi•il with Orr.
IVllat wort: we had that tilAtt,'
• , TO roa,tlr)se calves to go)
thi. 14.1 . t lire 111;011.
TOVOgla qt. :mil grow:
'Arad whet it)atigh t , enjoyed,
%%lice 'Wilson, Inat
Exclaimed Chia We igillitoti vnx .
The elites was large eitough.
1 often lo.t. Ike lb:A
A-running In ray ntldd '• •
•(Our pannion for-tlie Aid terse,
'liOne. been divined.).
_
I hill zit, dear A . l.t. in illy sleeve,
At how ire uned talk •
Soft twosome, to our lovize.;.;uteti,
Id ninny A.2noonlight walk:.
ekso). Al.. lout Lhnr yoiiknoW
Tho ~,, 111116i1:,
STI!I.I.iT 1 . 41111iq A girl,
That she ,otist -
Oh 110: 111.11.. AL, the Am..,
Ix th. far to Larry,
• '
For all thin, 5,1:1,1 . .4 disappear --:----
1511 . eit Inn ortyiela kgld marr.k.
,
own that same forget i he ride,
madot he girls I.ellevo
That students o ere responsible,
Whene'er ihey would deceive.
Thero's•ANnv, IKE, FLI:TCII, BILL nod JACK,'
80 - tom-their svifrniatral;—
That
To make the parts a whole.
Methinks f sve the pi tty lv l
ElrtittllS :41.11:111d !MIMI,
Thn tl , t.ry 10 olit , h t 1,.0 lug -
A ‘• a fits outside the Hll?'
The ninuntrain% then are I°ol,llllls nmr t
The threats aeon not but clngor,
And friend,ldp has usurped the hearts
lir those dbapproal bl auger.
There . ) , Dot and Ntat and •• 11,11 . p 1
01 . Ln.thers true nn steel- 1
I'd rather have their friendship, .dt.,
Thin halt whittit at ttt reveal.
)lay he.n ea grant theta lev y ; to live,
And it hen grim death drawn nigh,
may they havivatt heritage
•
{Pith angell inn the ithy.
Thu '• Lobby." AL. rulmt oft. reeall
The memory of him,
Who fell a victim to,t hat, seettrgo—
ciiiiiitimption. fierce awl Jr, lin.
Poor Jon' ha wandered home to rile,
Just, In hours:
ealiiily liar AL,
Amidst his southern lino eon.
Awl since tie left. Jr OwnN fell
'3IIII fitratigert all alone;
still his .pirlt hinged Its Hight
Up to thi, tireat 11'bite l'hrone."
Illu an:ull)• ll.rm Is laid heneatl/
Far
lIIIW the "101111. star'' ap:tvls•
"lis guarded hy leis tied.
WO O 0 01111 n yo-otr toootelher. At.,
Anil (oft I blues tho
I'rm•ldnnro, so kind to mu,
'!hits throw you
For nought loot poiltNi wool halotoiti, sit
Jid tyarli(our iol..Cy t• goo( her,
And alit a (thigh, flurry
Uld cloud our. lohoilsoloot tvo.iithoT.
But College days are over,,At,
We're on that beaten traek
Of musty Blackstone, Kent and Co.
IVe never ;011 torn haeli.
And when our pilgrimage. dear At,
Is finished Lei e below,
LeCa meet In that ;jean! home'
To talk of long ago.
V41.111E: or•A BELLE is Seuutn.-- ,, Around
her snowy..:brow were set' t et) thousand dol
lars;
such would have been the answer of any
jeweler to the question, "What are those dia-
TIMIS?" With the gentle undulation of beT
bosom there tmse and la exactly one hundred
and filly dollars. The sum bore the guise of
a broach of gold and enamel. Her fairY, form
was invested in ten half eagles, represented
by a slip of lilac satin, and this was overlaid
by three hundred dollars learn in two skirts
of white lace. Tastefully down each side of
the latter were live dollars, which so many
bows of purple ribbon had comb to. ~Thelowo
r margin of the three hundred " dollar skirts
were edged with eleven additional half eagles
—the value of some eight yardsof silver fringe
a quarter of II yard in depth Her toper
waist, taking zone and clasp together, is cal- -
colored to be confined by at leaSt one hundred
and fifty dollars, Jler„delicutely_moulded
arms, the gloves of spotless kid being added
to, the gold bracelet! which encircle! 'the little
wrist, may be said to have•heen,adorned with
Will 1fi11t!A.1tn,(4911..11011itt73,14 tieyenty : llyo,
cents', and putting - the silk and satin at the
loweit figures,. I should. say she wore 'three
dollars'and fifty cows on her feet. Thos, al
together, was Chili thing of light, thts oroaturO
ot',lortiliness, arrayed from top to toe, exclu
sive of little' sundries, in two thousand eiglt
hundred nud twenty five. dollars nod t:wenty.
Iva cents."
reedy chap perpetrated
,the follow:
lug daring 6110 Of the 'late '.cold mornings
- Mu .Somerset, ahr . duit't you get mar-,
tied?'
~•
"Because I am tea Inc telt to ask any Young
lady-tu turn a ,S'eate.r,at.• _
I t , t-13-R-tf-
Of all the burial pieces. in • the
,world, the
'OOOllll is the hugest, and many thousand; lie
•deep, deep down beneath the surfheeof its wa-:
tors. There, no eye can 1001 upon the grave
or the deported; no sculptured one,. nor Mar
ble tahlet..rehearoe his virtues; nor does the
rout of man e'er profane Ihe saerod spot with
'its impress. The flower wools not there, to
he4ms.-Itweet , -Iter.funue,o!er.A.h‘soshe.44-41ua
dead; neither lloes the friendly willow spread
its weeping branches aronturlo:„Ward- off ap
proaching evil ;.. nor,.genthiyhilontela.warble
her, nocturnal eulogiunts anthills houghs. -
No sighink friend can weave the garland of
affection tit entwine nround fie mound which
conlainst he object so dear, for the dark bosom
of .old ocean quite conceals yfrom view, and
.
the rude sea 'weed iloite cue adorn if. There
the monster of the deep watches. while the
wild it-birti ;nouns a hoarse diige. and foam
crested . ._lillows-chi nt. a inCornful requiem in.
limo». or the slemberer. And. thc.ve are the
0/di/honors for the oceanleiried for the proud
waves dery the cl ill of man Co ereet endearing
.
The heavy freighted vessels, specimeits.of
1111111 ' 011 . 11io godn , , tinily .pleuglr he majes
tic seas, and nelde rivers. !mane regard I COO or
the titer, that beneath the trackless waters, 're-.
A vast eembiery thev great deep!—,
and one too , itt which tie di•crimiuutiuns are
Blade, fm• the rich and the poor, the ignorant.
and thole:ailed, widely separated as they only
have _been in life, rest on the same level, in
the same watery abyss. Ity. various chnnees
they Have keen brought. Ily;ellier from 114er .]
enr-elimeoqt7n. call the numbers ever be est
01: II 141 II lIIP . SeIt shall be comminded to
to give tip ita dead.
I l'hore upon the ocean's' twil sleeps the la
' I.tticitt6ll' 111111 dOVIIi(!il . I ' I/01611:11i: idill ' ll , j,4 ,4i j.
- . Ilifililtre - allikilll 0 Vit. WITIPP -- iiriglTH7Ert - tT - 61 . 111 -
rimed with the 117.:. , truCthin -of the ill. I . .titsi
l'imsident. - Fri — the tottiliiiinftl . ,, - ticim - V - 1)' - 't lit. - jitr.'
%Alta regions. no 10111,1 Sit. Juan Franklin tuts
long since - I'olmila final vc , tiog placet and the
gallant flertolon slumbers lientmth the \rav e s
Or_the blue Atlantic; while thousands beside.
compose •the vast. family of the . ocean buried.
Some by accident, and others whim-being of
the nuniher ... that g.i lloWit to tam in ships,
rh:lt 11119111SjIll , L; jll great 1Y1i.11 . ,+, " have 1 . ,1 lien
VIIIIOIIS 10 Ill'aill. 11 1 / 1 1 lIIIVV been consi;Attml to
tho'holuttltess limits or a 'watery Comb. 'There
they wilt rest in, - quiet repose until iho•l3Mit
2ingel ' s trump shoal I -call I hem iroin their ilrear
abodes to meet the nations of earth at the tri..
Immo or file last day. Till then lei them
skip - nudist Imbed: \V would not Itrertict heir '
peaertnl slumber, but we envy:nitt their.ocea 11 j
4epithiltre, for, though the burial gr o und s and
cemeteries on 'Mtn', are places calculated to'
excilit ftwlitigL.tleepest_interest_andi hough,
the grave itself holt subject of pleasant thought.'
and eon he contionplated.wit limit - I( shulliliit-.
vet what •iiiind 'ClIn thil4C 0 , 1; the roaring sea'
..-
witlitutt exclatoriig:
~ it, bury 7111. ?Mt is the fiver, deep hen!"
True. it !potters little wherellie.hdy lies'. of. 1
ter. the spirit Inistled„ tot thy're reintiins but ;
the empty casket, yeftre —all 'olive' a natural
; desire to be buried tinning our kindred.
though 1. would not that a talVet be erecied to ;
wy memory ,when I ant gone, ror that friends
'weepon'er thy grave, yet 1 w(Tint sleep - Scht , ;e':
the 'minstrelsy of the wind nti;;;•lit .ing end_'
less requiem: the bloom of wild flowei:s yield •
perennial sweetness, and the music of nature
unceasingly roll.
From I lit,Fruldrly Di , patal
A. RE AI A 111( A BLE 1)11,1: AAI •
Ilroart, are lutt
llego it t.r Iloliti.l4 I.IIC vain l'tnt.tsy
So with Shakspeare but what nine hold
good in some ease, .lure 11111 hold good in all
11:141'8 ill IIIWWI:41, there wiliilid,be . general rules
without exceptions, awl that is held by • logl
. *shuts le lie morally inipo ,, ible. kith Ile
&resin is a , 11 . 01011, 1111 , 1 I lient is an end :
lull not SO With VVl.l.ylllllly Tllol'l' lure 8,11110
men in this world %dm eitll , lkll`l . .ll.lo
piil . l:lllCP Io flip 11 . 1SPIOSti robrro . " o droom
which flit+ unbidden . through the brain ; and
I believe. as It general thine. it is conceded
that the leamle portion or a ll
abiding faith in dreams. wheilier they he of
good or evil import. 11Ity this should be - SO.
0111 hill lirepllll4l to s.iy, 'null leave
tiou to those deeper i'ersed.in bunion nature
Otani ant. for a solution ;41aft Ldo :my th a t
the most intelligent lady that I ever was 11C•
nu:tinted with. was It titan believer in the fore
shadowing-of dreams..
lint to my story of a remarkable dream ;
and it' there be truth ia the tale or the dream
er—nal there is no reason to doubt hi, word
thien indeed, it tv,ta n I.l3.llllrkaille dream.
Some years ago, in a little city °film West
tir e d Ri c hard Miller, an
sober shoemaker. Ile had emigrated Ilion
Philadelphia a few years previous to the 01)l,11 -
lug of my story, .wit hiS wile and child, iiud
by economy and the closet attention to
mess, he managed to lay 'up six hundred dol
lars.• 'Phis sum he would have undeuhfially
so increased as to plaim himself and family
beyond the reach of wool in very fifiv years.,
hail it not born for dim insidious monster,
consumption. The fell destroyer came In hind
I as is a=unl in such cases, in a bad cold,_ll 11 11
trOl. 11 long time he flattered himself info the
belief that it was only.A bad cold; bat like a
skilful :lappet and miner, it soon undermined
ids constirliTioui-1 Mid lilt nbn.began - to hove
some faint glimmering of
There was no use staying any Linger in the
he sold out hi, stock and fixtures and;
returned to Philadelphia. where he took ‘tip •
his permanent abode. Ifavingtieconie entire.
ly tai weak to work', he spent. his days in that 1.
inactive, but petulant slate so coMmon to con
sumptives
. One day he look it into his. head to Ansult
tin emitient pity...lei:in-zone of the Professors ,
,
of medico college- ivt order to ascertain his
true condition. Ile called ;alum hint and stn
tell his case, and underwent the customary
exaniimitior."Th.
"Young man," said the Professor, "your.
lungs aretailly affected, and I ant only deal
ing frankly .with you when I say that., in my
opinion, you are Tithing for this world!"
Miller's heart sank within hint as he heard
his doom. lie had the Most implieit confidence
in the professor; and as bethought of his wife
and child' he felt very much as if. for the fu-.
tare the world would be a blank to hint
t‘ Did scu over drink whirikey?" inquired
he Dootoic, as he paced the room '
"Never; except upon one, or .perhaps two
liemisions,"Maid Miller.
You eon keep yourself alive .two years—
probably three—by the moderate use of Whin
key. It is a dangerous prescription.' but in
•
giving it to you thavo, reason to•believa . that
you:will not, let it, obtain Gutmantery over you
Get the best• Whiskey you can buy, and drink
&Pint of it ti day."
the merest
shadow of relief,, went to •a liquor. store and
Parttime& a - demijohn of Bourbon whjSkeY,tind
commenced to take doses -of It at intervals
throughout the day.
A year rolled away, And Miller -was much
improved. Ills cough was caSiqr; runt the
atimulue appeared tq impart 'a Itind . of grafi ,
cinl rent h - to - his - I- - imgret - to - say
his•appetite, whiehitevet• before Craved - ale°
ludic drinks, had assumed an aboortnal' con
dltion, to appease .wlitelt,lt new reqttirtl 'not.
less than a quart per 'dkem. IfeAqt h s ;
vas 'nut titling. much' toivarils'rtar•ilite!
niaroh. dorm to ihe Urare tiro lis•rvS dh
sea ..of alcoholic stimulus..:invested- the .past.
MIMS
For tho Iferahl
TEIE -OCEAN-10.111MILV.
=2
present and future with a feeling_of oblivious.
• - floss that was qitite a raid to Ins niefancholy
braidings over his misery when' he was peep
erly himself, • •..
• When in this state. Jtill r loved solitude,and
lie frequently walked as far away from home,
as his strength. would permit bin-generally.
inthe,MAgliborlihod of the brieltya rds in the
southwestern part of Ifto city.g
One day, having extended his walk beyond,
his usual limits, and icing overtaken by a
thunder storm, when lie reached the_brick
yards, lie took shelter under the silo of ono
trYrlitmt -itlitesimtoptantity--
of whitikey doting the day, he Pill asleep upon
the Wheelbarrow on which he
,was resting. •
while - lhe storm - lets still raging; nor did lie •
awake until the Alawn of next day, a Mild,
beautiful. Morning; Ai. first. he was ;
lint he soon recalled to his recollection the
storm and the brick-yard, and feeling soine-
what drowsy lie compost:a himself no: another
- nap. 'TI. is 'uncertain how long lie slept-
pi.tibably not;over halt' an lunir -but tirint ,
I that thou he hail a remarkable 'vision. ire..
dreamed mot the- principles-of a machine for -
the mantitictore of _brick-a machine that.
Iwould iii a greatmicasure supercede all - hand
labor. Evei.y, - Wlicel. cog, and casting passed
I through his brain, and in his dream lie even
Si. W the machine in practical operation. When
lie awoke it was quite light, and lie hastened
' toward his home • Ills 'ltalia was ,entirely ta- •
lien up with the machine, his ;dream having
•-evidentlymnole-nnimirressimmittonZhim-osdit—
delude as any idrn re l y . e „ hee i ve a h t. hi s most •
wakeful hours. , Long before he reached his
home. he resolved to carry. mut the spirit of
his dream, -5 ft er
sary preparations 10 work out a model. - The
obstacles that interrMseil' were legion, but he
L oyereatim them all Tools that he could not
borrow Inc bought, and it was now that he,
went to work most patiently and perseveringly
paying very little attention tothe whiskey, as
I hi , in wail appeared - 10 I.l9wrapped
..._ jo'
Feet .
— lTi7 l- WiTe77l . olll file VerY - Inlginnint -1115—''
Hoall4lll Ilia IllS . lllllll waq giving way
poor, ial iirit, enhancing. W 01111111,111 1 ,-
ritgi'lllir - 1-10ok Or money ropidly?Thotreasing, -
' took in sewing,,, While - he'saweif. planed and
chiseled tit his model., 'll - it grin Morotte. and
-seldom spoke, Sometime. , he would gaze
stracteilly upon the model fora longlinte,tind
! then as if re assured, be would en to. work
I again wit Irrenewed -- energy; 'and so lie eon
tinned for many long and 'weary weeks, until
1 the model was finally completed, blot xtood,,
before him perfect in till its parts, - .ks he
Lworkett-a-t-i-t-in the Presence of his wife, ii
gleam ol, , sat !scma •at. upon his countenance
and he smiled. It was the first smile that_liad
Mont - Med his counteminim since be had 'mint
nt work oollio model. • 11,e carried it off to a,
litlisiltAlitechattie, who engaged In make n line
duplicate- for' t went y. dollars ; - and when lie
•
had-Mashed Ins Jo the wife titLe
that i'iniount from I lair slender store more it
sorrow . than in angee;lim•she knew the uttei'.
protesting. •
Itiehard \lilliranne for tlpt
stilted is fricini in - tile matter; and , 11 - 41 . friend -
1,,t - Ving had some experiettee in . pi iiiuriug .
patents. gave liiimtlie - benetit at' Ins knowledge.„ . •
To procure the puma ,watild.cosi thirty dol
lars more. 'this alarinea Nlitrer-; but -the
patent must be haul, imir , that . amount went.
Lrdue time'letters patent S.i.rived. =and he: had •
flie - rough model - and the document-nothing
"in . ttre..! Out nC tifeti, it 'ei - o . ohl be next to int
possili,le to realize : anything T - No, he must
have-n madam. capable of working. Ile felt
satisfied that not hin p liort of a matillineWaida
enable him to dispose right. Bit how
to - geta machine- built-wok a- question- which •-•
puzzled him sadly. N a one impableol making
a perfect machine wool I undertake thebott fin•
less th,fit one hundred dollars. Alas', lie had
tio longer that SLIM Or 111011ey ' ill his house.
mill er iris otioosi bordering it lleSpale, when
one Of the mechanics to whom lie had spoken
called upon him to makF a minl. minute ex-
Hifi - to: oh m or the model: tit, was eminently a .
practical nian, and he made most tloirough
i•xaniiiiat ion, at tho end of whirl' he deelared
111. Ilk tires VOliViCtiall Was that the Oleellille
wad e great invention. _At alt events he would
Lc willing to bitihl one ou ❑ comin r .ehey. If
doled 10_3yOr1i, , , he would charge Nothing; .
but it' it anstv'cred tfie r espeetation or the .in-
Vettliir, then Ile W olll 4ellaegallWolllllllieed
burs for machine and risk.. This was virtually
taking an interest in the sucer,s or the wren-
I ion, and Richard him. The inert
clianie Was plaliliprout ellorgelle, 1111t1:11116111 .' g
Ill,:re'11010,foree lu Wiirk. lew days turned
over to it complete machine
(Its next holiness way 10 give' the ihaehine
a tri ii, Ile Went over to Camden, Where Ile
11.1 in the business, mut
prevaile,Luiem hie, to let the trial take pla c e
at his yard. next (lay at 11 o'clock. Ile pro
,tir,ctor hail very little faith in the machine,
hot as Ile had a large lot of brick for sale, he ,
was willing to submit to iihnost anything to
attract attention to his yard. To this end lie
slyly inserted an advertiseinent 'fit several of
the daily popery of Philadelphia, announcing
th e t r ial of a wonderful patent brick 11leellille,
earning the inane 'and place T-which, of course,
lie thought would only be another addition to
the long catalogue at' failures in that lino of in-
Yentions.
NeNt day Miller partook of on early, break-
Toot, and then posessed hintself of the last dol
lar in the•house to pity currdut expenses. Ile
bade his wife be of good cheer —that he thought
he should return before night with not less
than five hundred dolhu•s' The poor_ woman
thought it more likely that* he would return
dejectM, broken-hearted :and ready to die;
but she said nothing.
Froth his house he went direct tO -the ma
eliine shop, and had his invention taken to the
forty-boat. and it safely landed. put up, ready
to operate at the appointed, hour —lle knew
nothipgoh the advertisement in the 'papers,
and wits the'raOreii little surprised to tee up
wards of a hundred per:Mils congregated in
the yard. Ile did not like it... - for in case of
failure the mortification would only be the
greater ; but he consoled hiniself with the be
lief that in case of 'success competition might
spriteg up and enable him lb realize one thou
sand-dollars for his right, instead of five hun
dred dollars, at which moderate 'figure ho .
held it.
The clay having been elevated, the horse
was started and the machine- moved. „It seas
a moment. of intense anxiety to every one, and
painfully so to Richard M filer Eureka!—lt
woo a triumph! .Metild after mould of beau
tit'ul brick were carried front it, until in an in
credibly short space of time, a thousand were
tiniVhed and dryittg in the yard 1
There stood Richard Miller, gazing upon his
invention It was the full realization of his
dream, In its minutest part iewhirc.--It was the
happiest moment in his life. lie was just on
the point of otreking the right of making and
vending'the machine in 'the gnited States to
the lifghest bidder, when an_ohl Yankee tap
ped him on- the shoulder.
"Young man,'.' said h 0,," that's n very good
;Machine of.yours, hut. I- see. whore a very ha
portavit improvement can be made, Under
-such.ciretunstenees-Lwill-givo you-fifty--thou
'sand dollars for your- right, title and interest
'in it 1" =.• ,
Miller grasped one 4 the lovers of his ma
chine to kite? from falling. No! it couldnot
he ; the whole thing mist boa continuation of
the brick „yard dream. •
time such tibi you say ?" asked Miller; in
llottht ,
111 01, 19 1 1 4 d 7." . taqd 1110 man,levidently
'reedy to increase the amount if Miller detualati
e(l It „
' lake' it;" rasped the inventei,' who
Milt cool:1 not believe tho . evidenco of his sem %
Thca.cutue with me,":,„ „ ..„
A few moments ;gore and' they Were on their
- Way to Philadelphia; and, In crossing - the rii7
er, Richard Miller paid . the, last six-pcney he
had hi the world for ferringc.—Once Urrived
in the city, they went directly to the fillice.of
a lawyer, where the necessary papers- intik nig
a fidl assignment were drawn up, • Miller all
the while doubting the possibility of the'inad
;acing anything- like the amount of money he
offered;' but lie still resolved in his wind that
he was safe if he got but a single thousand in
cash, and dhe balance in
,worthless pronii , sary
notes: At length the assignment was finished
f.toulftii . gue-4-4t.ndate-nnuk,lnpaed,Mliller a el eel:,
payalflo at one of the principal hanks...l7M)
.entire , anionnt, on thoOntek of which lhe
tui:ney certified to Miller' being the owner of
the check." • -
The liatenlee Ivas still incredulous:.
satisfied that. if-the Cheek was worthless..it
would he evidence of fraud, and the sale not
the papers wore-exchanged, and he left.
the °nice. Ile hastened to the hank and pre•
seated his check to,*the
. paying:teller. • That
gentleman serulinized it a moment, and !Ilea
asked -him how-he would have-it'?-
• '
- Richad Millet• w•as again tonplu4seti.--.lli
stood •kika a
. oatue, gazing upon ihe.teller tin,
til Iheitaeslion was repeated. •
" tttul silv . er!" said Richard.
"Chilli rind silver ?":fetitf the teller' in-sur
price—" hare you it dray ?"
• " Ileg your pardon." said " Let nue
have it hag of :t Ihuusund (1011,,,s in gold mid
:41.01,011111-411-e-.1111111-11136-
A hag with .tliat, amount in mixed coin way
soon placed before - him:Alit& foitylnine pack
ages' of one thousand dollars each were lnid
t he 'votinter:, -- Nii . ller had - by- tiiis time in
n'titerisitre regained' his self pos , h , sino. awl ;
alter stuffing the notes into hiv pocket. - he
shouldered his bag of coin, and left the hank.
Is gr.rogg a< he stny ottiggithis he hailed it
and rode Ell within IN'O 4111111 re, or hi:, home.
When lig,•reittglied the latter; he -sigi,elf,ggregl In
hettent h hi. Land. reel walking glirertly to. the
6 , 1, fie mi . ,' iel the , lngg or gingering eigin.un :
'rm-it-tgr the - --inthigtertni-gr.g.4legn-gn-lthq.-AvifiLi...
111 lilt was I,
Ala. NV , 1101' 11:011111,111101111 15'11011 Ile 1 10,11 Y
-101 1 1 , 14 1, 1/[ , .[lociketsletekttgeerieinictnefile-,
enn't•tilie,l hiee4el eel il in liad Lliuuuut!' t he'lll.4 - 1
intek:e4.! Itlloll 1110 11.01,-Wllllll 1111 p; 1 1 \'l.l way 10
1111.141. 1, 11,10,1 010[1110,1 ex.travng.tet
•-• 111. - ! ha! ha: - lie laughed
‘• my-dream is nut! The ni whine
Fiky thol:and ! lia.! liii 1:1
Then euatchinglilp his child, lie 'con_thine.l,
li:icing the room
My boy —you are no beggar: I•'ifwy (boil
s:ma ha:.ha "
lu this way he raved. st:injp
,e,l. Large health upon
his b r ow, his live looked I.:i gg : k mi. :opt like:ye
had the wild glare of a 111811i:10.-,111. Valli ilk
Will` tried:to giant Ilia agitation; he raved un
til he ruptured it liloo,l-veset: IL: sat 'down
in his eillllr with his 111 . 111 S, the
blow' fro/it Lis uuse 111111 month. Ile
grew back to iinhilg`e, inattot her hys
terical .it wins checked
ling noise, :itel the iii:xt instant 'Richard Mil-.
ler wa4 a corpse!, Ilk spirit li passed
away, in the latignagepf Longfellow:—
LIU 3 glorious roll'ci drums,
Is I lie triumph pr.:, dre:kin
. The reader will note that we have used lie
lithium pH : reitl:nalinni. The tlyieliine,
voul. under the 1131111 e of he .purelia.air. made
Lim an inilelietnlea fortune awl is mill in use;
.hit. tittierd., better adapted to the ago in which
we live.' have nearly eroiviltne' it out of the
market.
;rabics' flepartincut:
_ ,
THE BRIDE OP BALDOOti
The story of the bride of 11.1bloint let been
rebite.l with all the grace of fiction in Ibe
“liritle of Imninternpor," by Sir.ll'alter t..;(! , ,tc
and - it has been set to exipti,iite !Tilsit, by Don
izetti, urthe pointlar opera of "Lucia ili Lam
mermoor," bat the story in its - octopi] eirmon
stances, is pectiliaCly interesting and deeply.
impressive.
She was the Honorable Janet Dalrymple,
- .Wighthrnfthelirst Lord Stair; so di s t
its a lawyer and the part he luck in dhe
polities of the day While still in girlish Years
the younglady contracted aliasdonate Which-
moot to Lord Itutlwrfortl, Earl of . Teviot. Thy
yontig noblematt returnOl this affection, and
i the pair plighted their troth in the usual mau
-1 tier, by parting, a coin between ibent. and im
-1 preeating dismal evils upon whoever should
withdraw from or violets,. the compact. Btu
! this alliftnee did not I•mit the vim+ or the pa
t tents—vOlether from deficient fortune in the
young lord, or from contrarian. , polities, ILA
-11(.1 appear They ftvored a 11,,W suitor, who
appared in 'the person of David Dunbar,
younger, of 811110011 in Wigtownslthe.
Ito learning that Denied' wa+ advancingin
his suit ; Lord Rutherford wrote to his mist iero
to remind her of her engagement, but receiv
ed an ansWer no her mother to the effect
that she was nom • nsible of the error she had
committol in enteell •into an engagement un ; _,
sanctioned by the heat and authority% and this
engagement it was not her intention to fulfil.
The lover refused to take an'aiWWkwhich did
not come directly from his mistress, and in
slated on an interview. ft t o ok owe ; but in
the pre.Selll'lC of the mother, a women whom
public report represented as master of her
husband end whole family, and indebtol for
this influence to witchernft, though for no
oilier reason that can 'bo &scented beyond
her uncommon talents and force of chnsacter.
limey be-readily be supposed-that even the,
resourees . of love would be or but poor avail
against the skill and resolutfon of stodiit -per
son When. Rutherford wits introduced, he
found her ready to meet his „arguments with
what was an unanswerable defence, a text bf
Scripture, (Numbers xxx, 2,3, 4,5,), Clearly
absolving woman ?rein a hood entered into in
her youth. if her father_ disallowed the fulfil
meat of it., and - proinising . that in such ease
"the Lord shall forgive her." The poet• girl
herself sat mute and, overwhelmed, while the
lover vainly pleaded against the application
of this text; and the SCCIIO ended with her
sunrender . of her portion of the broken coin,
and his dying distracted front her house, after
telling her she would be a world's wonder for
what she het done, and was yet to do.
The union with young Balloon went on,but
entirely under the management of her mother
for it is inconceivable that the young man •
could hive pressed his suit if he had known
the extent to which the bride was under con
straint. The wedding was celebrated as tons
customary in . those days, in the presence of
the relatives of_both parties, and with great
festivity,. but the bride remained like one lost
inn revery, and who only moves and acts
mechanically. ..A younger brother lived,long
enough to state to a lady who ccnmutiimtt ed
it to Sir Waller Scott, that he had • the duty
of carrying her Mt horseback behind him to
church, dud he remembered't hot the hand with,
which she clasped • his waist was "cold and
damp as marble." Full of his now dress, and
the part he atited.in'the procesdnil, the cir
cumstance, which ho leng•afterwards mom
-bored- witlt-hitter-ttorrow and - coot punotion;
mado no impression on him at the time, „ '
In tht~ evening the'nerely Wedded party Fe
tired to their &amber, while the merry-making
still proceeded in the hall. The roan had
boon looked: and the key taken possession of
by the bridegroom, to prevent, any of the uti
seemlY frolics which, it would seem, were
sometimes played Mt on suoh occasions. Ittn
suddenly there was hoard to, proceed from Ilia
hridal chamber aloud nod piercing cry, fol
lowed by dismal groans. •Onita being opened
the alarmed- company found the bridegrooM
weltering 'in, his, blood , on .the threshold, and,
Thu !ride .00wering nemmor 'a
the clam.
uey,..with nuooveriug but bar,. shaft, tud that
MI
S'lsl 50 per annum in advance.'
- t S 2 00 Knot paid 'ln:advance:
dahbled'in gore. She told. them
„to take
. " . lwitily bridegroom."' It was evident
that she 4trits iusline—anda he general belief was
that '.lit! frantically st•ibbed her husband. From
that moment she made no other rational cola
iounicatien, hat pitiCanway 'and died in.less
than three weeks. Young Rahloon recovered,
enter- into' explanations re
garding the tragic occurrence . Perhaps it is
'ibis mystery alone .whielt has given rise to
'belief of the 1111111' descendants of Lord Stair;
that the wound-trim not 'inflicted by their un-,
happy , relative. hat by Lord Rutherford, who,
tlt ov v, see ret
iii•Mitill:liiffl7,4ape7iraitemltr t fs. by a. win-
This notion seems to ng contrarTto ail,'
probability,. not merely because
,theChneep..,
lion of siielt iuh act was far 100 grosivfor a
man of'rank even itnliat day, but because,
100 l it been acted tooth, something must have
come ofit,..cither.iu the way of privatetige
or of procee tire bidbruit eriminsl . leourt..The
idea was prevalent at ilte time,. but it may be
classed. we think, with another recorded by
the ereshileas law..tdat the poor bride was ta
ken from him and karle,l through ,the house
by Bphit.,e.
David ,Dunbar is described in an elegy by
Mr. Andrew Simpson ns a most respectable
tumidly LV`lltiellian, an agricultural improver,
anti rut (of studitt; habits. Ile died by a fall
from nurse, while riding between Leith faid
Edinburg, in '11;84 and was interred in Holy
rTul eimpol, • Andrew Lord Rutherford is
Htufetl-itrtiurrein
1685,
ourt • wLfts
From an article in the last Hrper, under
the'above t en d, we make the Ibllowing extract. -
'Hie wife's. sensitive organization is much
enhancellby the nature of American society- F. 2
whiell has so little doliiestie stability..and as
com.tantly titve - rs changes of fortune an of lo
cality. Wa.
e
re, tn . a people, in a-continitotts
revolution, 'tind- in My or Country, the man
'W - 1111
fathers is thermos exception. This mutabili 7
.r . 1 1 .01111 1 ,11: who tie naturally adhesive and .
consorrift ire, and take neatly and. deep root in.
the soil where they art; first planted. The
orile , il or the lirsf-yeitrs or married life, which.
is.bren t ; cougenial natures, lint without se-
vern trials before Twit 11/11111 . eS ill'smne respects ,
different Ikre assimilnled , i 4 -1111 the severer
when ;Wended With the freiptent•change.s and
startling incongruities of thr social position;
and the American girl Who has been the pet-..--
id .tather's inay;. s wit hoot falling in
it?....linkind hands, have. many %misgiving and
a Sinking of heart when she finds herself in to -
new and a strange home, - with a husband tired -
by'liiisiness, cares that never intruded upon
rho'olll hours ofdioneyell courtship, tindftllloll;..
neighbors'.wlio are strangers to the monism
it/115.'11:1d 11011!1113 Lai the associations; and re
finements of her youth: Let her be ofnverage..
good fortune, she must find society in many
respects i s unsatisfactory andaggravating,and
she is tempted , by the universal emulation tit
measure her condition by what She desires.
not Ity.;vlCat she possesses, and unless she . has
beltq_gable than the ruling fashion, she
led to roust ter competemie a dbmppointnitiitf — T.
in view or the noire brilliant prizes that Move
fallen intii dace dashing tieigilbors 111111ds. --
' l . l/e habit or invidious comparison is the
fatal harm ticAnlcrimtt families; and when the
wife's envyings happen to cross the husband's
ambition, anti her ....social vanity refining to
enter into his lousiness sehemings, claims for
ostental MI the time :intl. substance he needs
' s tn cope with some rival's grasping competi
fion,,woe-etonn-to the hottsohold, and thegood -------
angel veil, his face . and is ready to depart ;
but let the wire, who should know him best,
keep the boarenly guest. and if lonely self.
111 , 10111 . 111 V, or devout sacrifice be too great an
effort, let her bringsocial fellowship to her aid
an d comfort herself and her husband by such
society as blesses ainhedifii,s the home. The•
wife who will use the goOd privileges of any
;n" Oily, and encourage the presence
off Cowls, whom, though few, she most respects • •
will find herself strengthened, and a
few inmates of t rue quality ivill cheer and help.
111. r far more then the whole train! of frivolous
fashionists, who care for he'r the less after till
her a . ttention to them, and not seldom make
510;01 her-best eadeavors to entertain theta
in style. Let the wife know that every associ
ate whom she'anol her husband both like and
respect is a tower or strength and n treasure
of eetnifort to the..family. and it few sensible,
well principled, good hearted: . independent
men and , women may be a match tot all the
foolery of the 101{11, and create all atinospheru '
in which every ' , Must aggiii
i s ab -and right pur,
pose thrives...nappy is the wife whose best
fiiend.s are also her IntshantTs and who is.
nearer hint and his worthiest purposes by their
cempatdom-hip. 111 fares the wife who takes
the Miter course, and surrounded by frivolous , .
triflers who despise till serious thought or tail,
tempts her husband to like folly iu the oPpo
cite extreme; by (mining home to chat for
ever with the drudges of the nuorketlinice, .
not to carouse with the revelers of the club
and gambling house;
WHAT ARE LOOKING FOIL ? man was s
angry with his wife, either because she talkbd
Ito, much, or for some reason or other, and .
resolved not to !speak to her for a long, long ~.
time. Ile kept his resolution for a few days
very strictly. One evening he is lying in bed
and Wishes to sleep. he draws . his eight-cap
eder his ears, tad his wife may say what she -
will. lie-litems. nothing of it. The wife then
takes a candle. and carries it to ever! nook
and corner of the room, -- she - removes stoOlsi --
chairs, and tables, and,Jooks carefull,y•behind
them. ,Thelttistilibil sits up in bed, and gazes
inquiringly at her movements ; he thinks that
the din must -have an end at last ; but he is
mistaken—his Wife- keeps on looking 'and_
searching._
.The husband loses patience and
cries, . “What'are you looking for 7 1 - 11 For
your tongue." he answers ; and how that I
have lbund it, -tell me wlny yint are angry."
Hero upon they beeitiT t o good friends again.
„
floors, Pst.sn' HALO, WOO AM) MAT
RIMON v. —.lO act wok introduced into the En
glish Parliament in 1770, "that all women, of
whatever ago, maidens or widows, that shall,
from and after such act, imposenupon'tral be
tray into matrimony, any of her majesty's
natio subjects, by the scents, paints, cosmetic
washes, teeth, false hair, Spanish
wool, iron - Stays hoops, high-heeled shoeS,
holsipred hips, shall incur the penaly of-the -
law new in force against 'witchcraft and like
misdetu*anors, anti . that the marriage, upon
_conviction, :than stand null and void,"..
A 'GEM P11031..AN Ora) Boox.-11 has been
eloquently and truly said, that if Christianity
Were compelled to lien front the inansions of
the.,peat, the tteadomies,of philosophers, the
-hall of lesislatots, or the tyrongsof 1)114 men
we should flrol her last retreat with WOMAII at
the fireside. fler last...audience' would be the
children gathering around the knees of a moth
last'siteelf.lo-t lie - Prayer
silence from her lips, and heard, porhapp,only
at'the t irowti of Clod. - '
4 6 4:Aittas BeatNime,--:Three 'Young 'men
'named Ice were married to three young byline
in Anderson, 111., n tow days ulnae, Iciolem. -
will be 'npt to gIiAtML ere long'nbout their ta
blew,
seoreoy.' Ims helm well .termed the soul 'of
ell greet' deoigno ; perhope more has been
etKoolc , lb,Y ouneonling our own imentiOnti, than
li3., , ditetiverinF them (+fair enemy. nagreot
men euoeeed-m'botb. •- • - •
El
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