MEI _, „5, If_ 1) la :)3f.t 11(3 ji3 113 3:3 • 3 •3311 i: . 10 J;11;, ~ ~. but. ,•u:!., ‘1 ^ u•:xi:frYw! I r7,h.. WEAkiltY. 1 . WAILAOII.: 41-.11;1 •,:r.ro( , • • . , TEM 0'6'160 OP TVINV:t!' , ' A wlOat!iiv)it xiteihitt Whoa hey the chntinid atthi;: • I I An angoluillpped out front herjuefiorthronoi 2 kud wandiwing down totlio, world alone, , • , She watched the children of mon In the taco For Nab ion tuella:no; for paWor and ' . . Sho arm how tho tutelar could hoard up his gold And tom his own Islndrod to dlo In tho cold; Shit saw how ihealrolar.bont o'er his books, Tilt tho Beal of death's angol was aeon In hh looks; Rho saw how a warder, In hope of renown,: i• d'hallß•o of Aloe people H i ke donee mooroddow . 4'. • ' She saw bold the.truildeu by Bullishness cursed, Though by flatterers blesssd, by her victims NV WI cursed ; . . 01w. and_pew,_ And the . falseness of those whOl bad sworn to he trio, In tho Alpo on the Fen, to tho hownon land, Tint tooth of tho tempter woo over it hood. In the Wake of tho chain we're lifWe plume me told, Both the good'and-tho true, with the beep and the hold; And tho shadows of stn like a firmament hung- O'er theerutohee.otago,,and the tirpprof the young, And the nark, of the rorrowloF Mowed like a wave O'er ahrlnes that wore broken, that love could not Bat a sorrow far deeper, morn fearful than all, The angel laid 'viewed, though hovel or hall Had yot to,bo soon, whore tlp llctitusilf rum In the Rollos of grief and tokrow wero dumb., Not long did sho wait, ore'illo trail of rho car , Wino BOOR ill Ito march orn t r faith ,luvo and holm And never come tide, thatin ebb and flow, Covered over such love, or revealed such Woe, 0, children °talon'," sold 'the aniol to ma, The sorrow (4-sorrows-MIR sorrow must be I llilotal all tho morrows that mleoecato Make, Beyond all the lives that nothltlott can take. The greatest la thl;, whore Ai hope In bereft, Aral the c Ulna of kionipeinneo Only 18 left, 0, maul rondo Immortal for lose or for gain, Why taboo i WM Why, i.hy tpuc OM Illat vino' , tbrclt'ohtorn, lont•soldorn deportil, Why roll down the Andow to fold you•ln wrath, (unload of Ilia monaldne to brlghlou your path." . A MARRIED CUSS. Young non, if over Inclined you be To outer the pert of morn nmxy, Be wary how you goti3iough it! I(1 tali a toy wife not to trot and to film, She only ,1 You're ee•eue•; you're You're uc-out-, yoe'reuecuntomed to It I No niotter`how tidy she oily° luny have If madame' thliks slovellneem le no min— And Oenly of, women an vleie It— Thu more you complain and kick up a moan, Thu wane die will to, till you're rosily ac cue , You're cc cue-, you'so accustomed to It I r any, young man, take warning In Mao I l.•✓dc well to the lotion containod In my thyme,, Or twenty to ono you will rut• it! If one., no autoult, nlwaya ho thun; gotting a wife, pray don't get ac-cm,, -tit •t oc-ells., get neenitozned to It ! THE STAR-SPANGLED BANNERI . The dObiniad just closed - upon his re tiring figure, and I haste to gather into a sheaf the stalkS of ripened grain ho has scattorpd around me during the past hour. Au American gentleman of tin blemished reputation and strict integrity is au honored guest atany fireside ; but when to these noble graces is added the . digufty of eighty . yeare varied experi ences, and n memory as clear and sharp - as the blue-black :eyes which :sparkle under his gray, shaggy brown, ho is a gem of a visitor, acrare as valuable. Such mine. And hiS the mirage of the desert, which reflects from the beautifully tinted sky back .again ,to one's eye the pomp, ctreunil stance, audbost of the caravan gono be yond the horizon-of vision—brought up .almost into, active life some of the scenes .and incidents of near a century ago, ithrough the clear lens of his unclouded recollections. It scorns a long time since Charles Carroll, of Carbilon, died ; and still longer since, with one bold stroke of his pen, he affixed his signature and. the name of his estate to that great doc ument which, had England conquered, would have been the recorded evidence of his treason, and the caps() of the loss of millions. " Vet I know. him well," said.w visit or, Mr. Hendon, In my native town of Frederick, Maryland, many times, when I was a boy, I have seen him—an old man, with hair white as the 'silver knob of his cane, wallchig slowly. We boys would stop aside when ho ap proached us, with the deference due a king. Ho was a little man, his figure bent, his, frame slight andmhscular, aTid hismaniier the gentlest and most court eous—well, ,child, there are no such gen tlemen as When I was a boy." And the old man's gaze seemed introverted as, with the end of his cane, lie traced cabs, :natio figures upon the carpet, to the -meaning of Which his memory alone had _Alio key. , . " Does that .time scorn very far on; I ventured, by way of bringing his thoughta baCk. "No ; it 'scarcely seems longer than last Christmas since a parcel.of us bays were. 'playing before Modtard's tavern; when „we saw a procession coming up town. B=6 mon were on horseback, and their knoegmekles shone like glass ; 'others, in #eirtrgst now leather breeches• and blob L eop.ts, .marched behind ; the drum and fife, were playing; And every-, body looked excited but old Medtord, ,who stood on the door-sill, smoking' his pipepand looking monstrous conteMPtu , . , olyhtit's: owning, Mr. bledtard ?" we' askod. • • . , — "Only a green.mou, adwn tho Lao: caster Road.' . • Away wo went, , like'a pack-of hounds In that direction, to meet a coach drawn by four black horses, -with liveried foot men hanging to 'the tassels. behind, and surrounded by a" largo troop .of mili tary as an escort. the coach ,sat President John Adams—a portly gentle dressed in pearl-colored broadcloth and largo powdered wig,: who; Witlrhis Suit' was traveling. -from Philadelphia to Washington; on , ..tbet!occadon of the :re :Mel-val-of-the 'goat of • government from Philadelphia to that place.' We followed :the' proCessloti •dntil ' the Piesidout :Olikhied at Mrs. Rimball'd taVern‘-the :Sign' of thd Golden Fleece—!whore LOoneral'HenrY Leo received ':! "And, why was' Mr, MOdtard so In-i 4lfformit, th'e'aPproadli 'of 'big Polltids hindan. 'ilittaro . noVei:. ',John 'Adonis *Op Violist, and imorlAddtarda'Repithlioari,' 'hielinittilo 'differs:Mao thdrti'dtijht.: Yes, that happened "Saventi'Ydar4 l 4i , this Very montb; - :but ,it ' don't scorn • - leuger than the 'of My ''" Yet "Skin hr s'o lived i tof ;see. -"grant '-e4angek." " dektriie, I but :hotlimibh „rAnality. Polka walked and suffered' and ' died, for ldeOS:ilinoPri4inC as iidokrl•As gki c ipu),(l niter uo‘oproo or or, to ion ' „ , Thorcrio no bdri`coth'ilio oitii 'I. ~. . . x • - , . , ' - ,•• : • ••• • •---'"--.------ -,.i . "--• :. t ----. .. 4- ...• • - 7,- ' _. . .. • ~ , k , - •;'••.10 , •i, ,, t1 . .;,i,iit.;, ,,- *••: . 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IAVII•kit F171:11 , Ill , iti . .ill 111 1 ' 11i11. , 1 : 1.1.' * 1 f ).. ' i .1 ' " 4 ' . ' ' ' ' `` ‘i ^ l '' ''' '' . ME yl 1.1 e 41 1 .1. ~!•',.1 I Aft, 10 ' 1:ilft%i e.1,f1•10111(t . !oil 111111111iiiIIMMil tO• I nd you know. 1 eag,erlY.asked r lred teiknoW.PAM4hill.k. , •Of ' a raad•:poot, , ,whe :dared:, aPprePrlato, subh an:old-fashioned"quototree• "Know him 1, Why ho lived but a fqw. doors above my father's, house.:. :There wore:onco two ,brothors, John Ross : and Philip J3arton,Key, Philip was an Wiper hillfd,British army during the iievolu tionary war, while 'John 'was in : that of tho United States. John lived , on Pipe's Creek, near Taneytown,,Frederick ecaltik ty, Maryland, whore Fi'ancio and his sis ter Anna, John's, only children, more _born,_ , There _ was _an_ exiled_Sootchman, Bruce—said to ,have, : tieS, heir .to the throne, of Scotland 2 --41io had Built a mill on Pipe's Creek, and there, in the : company of - this noble old aristocrat, Frank spent-his very early boyhood. The brothers, Philip and : John, were largo, manly-looking] fellows,• but Frank' and Anna-were-ofmtich-smaller_mouldl Anna"Koy Was a beautiful little girl, Witlpthe cheerfulest facoand most Pleas, :aut;4mile I over saw. When theYmoved 'into town; near my father's, Frank was half grown,' and ready to enter as.a law student with Roger B. Taney i then at the head of the Frederick bar. Roger was a tall, gaunt follOw, as 'lean, they_ used to say, as a Potomac herring; and as shrewd as the shrewdest. Ho mar ried.bright little Anna. It was like r the union of a hawk with the sky-lark ; she lived to be the wife of a Chief Justice of the United - States, and' I never heard that either repented of their Marriage: AITT - rfauu,r was-a-stridt-Cotholic,Land- Frank an :Episcopalean, not considered ,very zealous and sharp in his profession, and much, given to dreaming. Ho went to Virginia, and brought home a wife ' much larger and taller, than himself, went to housekeeping on Market Street, 1 , and had a couple of little children when I left home in 1609, to seek .my fOrtune in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. . = "Then you little thought you had . been daili Seeing the man whose in= spiring - song would become the national anthem of . America I " I asked. "No more than Abraham was aware that be was entertaining angels. Yet the war cloud, through which tho light of his genius was to burst upon us, was oven then gathering. You have read about the. embargo which was doclM'ed -in 1800, when England, jealous of - the naval power of the States,. fired into. the:United States ship CheseaNake, and :behaved otherwise so rudely, we were compelled to close our ports againsther vessels and imports. Those wore_ the days"—and here the old gentleman in voluntarily drew up his bowed form— "when even the proudest city belles were wooed and won in homespun rather than be dependent omforeign finery. I have danced with many an elegant wo man in lirey-woolgey and tow frock those times, and well remember that Governor Simon Snyder, at hiSlnaugura tion in 1809, wore a suit of broadcloth, manufactured in a loom in the borough of Lancaster. Patriotism was strong when It could conquer even Woman's vanity." . •- I forget the malicious twinkle of his -oyes at that last "hit" out of litMlf . st reverence to our grandmothers, who in spired it. " Well," ho .continued, "England kept growing more insulting,. the - whole Country Ntas clamorous to 'punish her; Ana war was declared on the eighteenth of Jul,, 1812. I had gono.down in the stage to Baltimore, to buy souse typo metal for-my father, who was en astro-. nomical- instrument maker, and wit flossed ono of those outbrealcS Of popular feeling, growing out of the Atate of the times, which gave that patriotic' lint im pulsive city the temporary title 'Of Mob' TMvn.' "A newspaper. called the Federal Rc publican, which had been published in Georgetown by a party of rebels to the administration, was removed to Balti more, where its issues contained violent' articles in opposition to the war, the government, and loyalAcitizens of Balti more. The people determined, they would npt stand it. So they ,hurriedly got up a procession, in which they wore joined by a number of sailors 'from off the Bay, who, drawing after them a lingo cable, encircled the printing office,. ,and pulled it down. The rebel :party pro cured new material, and,romoving into a largo brick building, defied the mob,• and continued their publication. Antici pating another attack, they wrpte Roger B. Taney, at Fredmicktownwlio belonged to their party—to come down to their assistance, bringing with him' lathing hatchets, pitchforks, and any other implements of warfare heCotild Ob• , • tain. Roger, was a spimr' citizen, {vho' thoUght disoretien•was the better part of valor, =Maid at home. The Balti more:mil renewed thdir attack upon - the fnini which' any ()Qin= ,Wei•e' fired on , and killed'. Governor Winder 'then ordered the milikary to rout the rno . they did; 'and the sheriff' entering the 'house, •the offenders snr rendered to him, and wore put in thojail for.their protection.—All seemed quiet , until'e following" night, 'when the populace re-assembled, broke into' the jail, killed it General Lingan, in the door way, and cruelly • beat and wounded many 'others. They then' threatened the post Office,' in' which several of •the •ob noXiotisph•Pera were said 'to bp depoSsited, but :the. civil and mllitary'autherities again 'interforini, they wore''ilnaU 41.110U0(1: 1 "Villifi 'ou See history-so producosiMos ,• • • • • " You have heard" of Admiral Cook- Cionamandoil'tho Jiritish 'fleet ?, The titrodfotis'iicouridrol Paiht 'the hal'seral)lO - Okinrtikl' acid ho'lnitot lii his `true 'depredations" aloiig the EaaterU. Shofe 65 the 'tollewod tlaYriacicing of '*fiehlugton; , the,lonttle , Nerth Poini l and the attimapt of tlib onOnly' 'take thO t .eftY'Of liyi"vAittii., 'tlie 'Mkt Mihod to 651: by Laid. oh"knOW• r ell'iiiietit'thO'biiinfairclinOA' of • `lb39ry;:lB4A)tOthlfoi thirteenth', :jay'. • i' have gone over it' , dgnin,' faho3Viiiiii itiedis ot i tidries,'Urid Frank Key, patriotic as ho, was to hid! boait''s core, could riot help Just'. iq llll lF . 4 , 711 ff , VFfr2 I I9F,P /1..t . 1 with:ll7mi anchored 'fijoiii;frort : ) Cohi# Wateh and ho.know i thp dp,rigpi they forOboibid. 'Tip:64db ' 'Ctianichadiuk ikcif tliAt'midnighbilglit, while tlaiiskt. At p ItIV the , tibry. coursos :of .tho 1; - ,:ei '041,11 ;.11•1,11•17il 1,.,:•..11; , ,etp: ,211 141 ',MI, 14 bra:6LN kid,ycin think 11.10 "fie spy,, :44ttiii strirgglelaeased upext the, amain ; morningatand ha looked tl,troiNli fljni.: twilight forAho.flag:ol.: Ills eMmtry,,his beart siek-with fear,and doubt,..eopid the, grand outburst .l;rf ,that first verse ?',.And.then, as through.' the mists of the deep' the banner loomed.siinily in the Morning zun's first rays, and he, ex claimed; •,, tho otittoponglott, boon:eft, oh, long trtny it s ..Suave, thtt hind of the free itnetbo home of the hnitv . l” '• • ' - it was prayeiand praise all in ono o'aud there_luisi.ttevoiLbeetr .anything_ like_ Lit , _ oindo. ' Hendon' stopped to wine his sweat ing face. with hit red! !bandana handker 'Chief, and take-a fowrapid stridesncross the,. had :forgotten his cane. and the weight , bis 4i . ghty.years in this reminiscence of his strong' young man .hdod ;_and if. Admiral Cookbuin had_that. moment stood before birn,:in the -and-blood insolence of his real solf 7: - I would have boon the chronicler of his " 'Whore F0r0,'3 , 94 cluring4l that ei eitement, Sir ?" I asked, to waken him out afhis reyario. , . . • . !! Chafing like a caged tiger because was not in it. The first day of August, that samovar, I, with a hundred, and, thirteen others, volmiteer militia, were, the first to leave Harrisburg . , Pennsyl vania, -.in ,dofense, of Baltimore. Our rendezvous was York,. Pennsylvania, : Where we expected to meet General Wat 400,_of_Lancaster, commander of our division." "flow were You uniformed, Sir .7" `!ln blue cloth coats turned up With red, bluh pants, white vests slides . with cloth gaiters Over them, far hats;, and high leather stocks with the Drifted States coat of anus stamped,nson ,thein t I engraved the impression for those . stocks intype metal for our company, anda proud, day's work it was. Every man found his own uniform; and .of the many thousand Pennsylvanians I have seen march from Camp Curtin ,within these last ten years, none felt bolder to prOtect our, country thim we, When wo reached York, where General Watson was to meet us witlknow Harper's Ferry muskets and tents, he was not on htpd, so we were quartered at first in the aunt_ house. Dearing onr eamp equipage was at the Carlisle Barracks, -a squad of us got wagons, went after it, and brought it to the York jail, whence each man -drew his musket, cross-belt, and Car tridge box. We were on day there several weeks before the division of five thousand men was organized. We grew dreadfully impatient. Telegrams were not dreamed of those days, and daily newspapers were almost as scare() as roses in winter. Ono morning home of our guard went out to gather wood, and hearing 'a dull, rumbling noise, they laid their ears to the ground and listened, The sound of cannon was distinctly beard,..and they hurried t.) camp with the news. Soon wagons outwardly filled witi. , hay, but containing the specie from the banks in Baltimore, -.came imfor. protection, folldwed by every' kind of vehicle, packed with flying Baltimorean's: Then, in tremendous haste, we were Mod into rankg and marched to• the seat of war, three days after the battle had been fought. gene r al Armstrong had an Irish brotherzifi-law, ICennedy; - Who -was ap pointed colonel of • our regiment. He knew as much about military tactics as a boar does of mathematics. An old-, fashioned country school - master, with. scarcely' an idea above the common spal ling bOok otthat period, and vain and tyVaimical irepronortion as ho was' igno rant, lie was - illy fitted' to cohtiol as spirited and independent it set of -Tenn syleania Dutchmen as ever trod Amer-- 'can soil. He rode amhnmenso fat black :horse, with a hack nearly as broad as an elophant's ; and the only change he had made for, the occasion from his, usual 'citizen's dress was a cockade standc in his hat, and a short sword huckled . around his thick walst.—. "The captain of our company, Mr Walker, who was every inch a man, and who, by reason-of his superiority, should have been Our colonel, needed to exoreiso all his influence with the ,regiment to preserve any kind of discipline. It was a long' three days' march to Baltimore. We were fourteen. thousand strong, and. eager to, moot. and punish our :British. inliadera ; but a micaession 'of ' heavy thunder...storing. and the fatigue of long marches through the mud almost exliatistcd ns.• PuSli along, men i yo'ro walkin' dreadful slew,' was the-colonel's C.comearid,•issued every fifteen minutes. The_,second'day come of the men . fainted frnm,tho ; heat and, fatigue. 'Nearing a pump along, the road-side, 'we halted' to; driuk,:hat the colonel angrily urged its fOrward.. An orchard. near bY hanging full of harvest apples, tempted some of the thirstier ones, whci . broke ianks rushed or the fruit., This excited the' colonel greatly. Riding up to* the rails' and,hrandishing his sword, he shonted, , .blackguards ! would ye bo' , aftlier laving the -ranks - for, the paltry sum of :an apple?', "This expression of his indignation . grow into a by.-Word; 'thanliS powois of mimicry'of by.-word, , of oirr''coin parry, Charloa. and Ferdinand Driraiig., They, with their ,fathrn-s, war's . stMiling play-actor,s ,i kustivos of LahmMihr, think), wh' , wicetrtliniizinter engage ments in•citi tlientree weallovor, entertain ns.in town auck country„ with theiri :varied: . .,accempliskruenta, !rhe biothere•ftveno anal goulal, Ur tive fepoWn,, and, mirthful, so, full 1 of rollieklng they; kept, ue.,alive, soul j and body,. by compelling .us, te i laugh. nlkekwo reached an old.encempment riper Ilalt{ more,, ,on, the Yorkllead, just alono l andc 'what, , 41141 r/ ae. ,I,lpwarßs the. citizens camp , to. ,rpo? ! hays op, which. vivo ~ liog4Na,cl,„so(,l A q. coffee,- MOO 4olipiops,, :f,canne,yer i ferget that ,coiNco„poi.'liew waeAtln.,blano of .o,F.Citilipoi?.i.•ftt,i••o; and ndwa cane that the 4y.fty,b, ~Tyr,o h overing abont,'"and, 'tiro must .go to •Elkridge's • Landing. to .• oppose •,tlipm. As we marched, through, the streets ley .wprq, prm - ,lo,,with xyompa, weeping, andi 7.111 , ,1 1 0YST •All 99/V° 1)401C,i,44,i,ii ,Butawo u]_;,for, 'the ,xpry,,,noit day, drawn PM9, l l l. :Pit . ?, . Pr, ; hio4 hoP3€!;.99YOYO , :vvo;4l*.f.r4 ll !. ,the oFfhpl i for, our hpippdia,to,,FpptrApi gig Pith Pfi4y3.49 l lio4 o lF,N, r ,mmgrE* l l. from the fleet, still„lilngAlt . , 0.••••• ( .1.. a \O. ~•./ , , '14i • H., , i . 1 - :{..• 1 i;. ..,p ; ; ; . ; ; ; :i“ 46 ' .;; 0 .; - • fl, ' • ' j ,Q.LA.l3fj_j . , , S ,. ,'LF,, ' ''P t J,LL E .,I O.: ; _Ii -13 !:111111J• c : • . • i J. , . it -41,1 , ,,11: lair t*, • IY9I . °Y ° V9PT. ;,fPN 1 9.91 0, )V.K9P119 , 1X, ,44v,ipgAtiNcl Pn vis !fi l ?!- t 1144 !'#! 3 ,-.IPAKISAT '11 ) 1::1 ) °, i Ng, 9,ualcorp h Arho would uothor„aol‘ i give us food, to eat, nor straw to lloupou, we wore Con - welled to do without either,, or.buy . ,for, ourselves from the ouly , ,one littlo grocery du) place. ~Tho occasion of our return "was also that of the colonel's first compliment to us. ' Boys,' ho.saia, ,prandOhlug his little sword, yo belia,yedlllio,tNeranll! ;`,` Wo:got, back qult,evening, and en d , camped upon Pq97s Hill, liptr, a rope T ., wlierothree months we reMained,, daily waiting for agronomy -that -Foyer Then, for the, : llystsinco : leaVing wo took breathing-time, .looked, about for amusement. .„ ",` Have you beard ' krancia , Key's, poem?' said one Of our Mesa; coming in , -ono oyening, as we ley„seattered over the green hill near the captaintimarqUelN It Wan ,a , rude copY, and'. written ina scrawl, which Horace Greeley might have, mistaken for Lieown. Ile read# aloud; once, twi co,. three times, , until ,thq Antire. division scorned electrified by, its pathetic,. 'eloquence. An iaaasizd4 Tfrociridrinig ! : 'Huntingup,a volume of :old'iliitetriusiei j which was in sorn - ebedes-,Ltent, lie im patiently whiSifed snatcheS'ef itinS . 'afedr' tune„ just p they eaugilehiS qUieic eye., One, ,called„A.nacieen , in .floavign', (I liiye played It:Often, fgt. it' was in my .htiok that he found,it),' struck fancy and riveted his :attention. _lieti) after 'Mite fell frem his puckered lips 'With a leap silent; ho ezclaiinedy - .IMA - rye lialt - P and to the words, thette rang ea for 'the; first: time 'tho Song of the 'Star Spangled' Banner.' How the Men - shouted and fer i . noVer•was there a wedding .Of .peetry to' music Made under such Inspiring influences Getting' a brief 'furlough, the brothers' sang it on the stage of' Holiday,' Street Theatre 'scon' after.' It was caught up in the camps,' and sang around our isivotiao fires, and whistled in the' streets', end, When Peace was 'ileclal•del,'and''We; scattered to our homes, carried to tlieusitialS of 'firesides as the most lireciong relic'Of the 'war of 180," Ferdinand Dinang died-iI do not know'' where—and Prank Key's bones lie in the' ceritetery at Freclericktown ; but I .guemi that song will live as long as there is an American boy to Sing it." " Was that the only incident of the campaign, Mi. Hendon?" He was get ting restless as a child, and I only the more eager for his stories of old times. . "Very little beside. Our prinCipal, liarciShip was a Want of goial bread. That furnished us waS so old and sour it contained worms an inch long.' Our rations.of beef and rum Vero abundant. Of ruin there 4.6 enough served:daily for us to, swim if wo had wanted. General 'Watson was appealed to ; but there wits,lind management somewhere, and things greiv no better. 'All rum and no bread' became' the 'sullen motto of the entire cainp. The Maryland en campment,,_ a Mile from ours, :held . a mock court-martial, and made-of theirs 'a: bonfire. I remember one day 'that General Watsou t .. , -with his negro servant riding behind him; was about entering the. city. The' guard, instead of presenting arms, saluted him with. All rum and no bread P - At him,' Pomp P shouted tho indignant Minion The guard fled; the, .nogro. pursuing in vain i and it was said lie never stopped running until ho reached his hdnio in Burks County." MEM! U.APTAIN LIATOOLN. On"getting up to tho.plain, Our loft .and front, I found that ,Gen. Taylor had not yet arrived; while all was anxiety at the sight of the immense masses of Mexican infantry, their bright arms glittering in the early morning sun • that were scan approiching under, the 'fire of thoir. heavy guns from tho ridge just across the narrow valley. .I turned, ito bur 'rear to seek the ;AMY and nTht , my, i v frieuct Capt.. Lincolb,_. W"rB adjutant Iteneral, on a. gallop to • the front. My. greeting-of "BuenaVieth.!" with the right arm pointing to the rear was re sponded to with his right arm fdlwarili and "Buena. Vista-l',' which was pro, balily the last exclamation of his life, except his closing chcor. • As I passed onward, I first met. Colo nel Belknap, moving quietly ..along un. dor a perfect" hail pf•inuaketry t and next found Qoneral,Taylor, and. his 'staff, as they cani t e.upou the plain .from Saltillo, where the' anxiety of the general -had carried h lea . tlrtring the_ . night to, asSYro, himself again. of the proper dispoaition• of the. troops, these, • We had scarcely moved a hundred , yards upon •the plain, -when Captain nVagg , rode up , With ,tlio ~exelensation, " General they are too strong fur thefare, sib to my two !". Upon this, Generat•TaylormUthorized...khn.tO..Willt 7 . draw to asafer place., ~,40 he : turned . to, join his h ) ittory he HOW:, MO, . Dud, , grasp ing vary hand, cried out, " I give you joy. 'shed a tear fer you, just now. , I thought I.,sawyyqn dead," , I' followed him, and saw.at tito : rogl of, 'the horses of one of his ,piec'es all...that was -left - a-the gallantaMicoln, so. rcectitly, in full and joyous .My Arst, impulse, WOO to save his'sw,ord,•as of, priceless, valuo to •those who loved' him, and, I carried it with his pistol tothoileldhospital under the edge of the plain,,for, safety. .Upon returning some short time after, .and. finding his body, stilt loft %Opp:, it fell, I ' had that tilqp -taion tAto field. TIo 'had, pressed,forward as,l..passed him, to the front of,l3issel'sregintent, then form-, ing to anpport n;seepiouet,,arpillery 1.1 ,- dor Tlitittirts, attcl to input „OM' ,chal*, - '4f the, advancing qlotnum, Rkiilig t4ng , tit:dal : out Ito turned back to their loft 0441 yortt• to .glicor diem on with ,tliq lifprds,:‘',Lomo pp, ,nty hrayn, lihnoun , ans, aMlSave, this hattery; ".; the , ,sterm of ,mtwlt , c4ry tliat dr r;lim4,,dewn upon 11,10"9r }waist; 9 ( '‘ ,I;il9ik ,of, hie , head, p *'4:l l:9 p i un g ferward t ,,. Ile i 7lli ?'I I E.IO Ffig ii;toup,w ff p passed him inte,the,alm)ty pi, his, order iy j'an4 IM:wn laN:yaion tiro ground.,,.,w4theuca,,groan,dr i . after g t oyoj to Lis 4 it „ Jr; sen't,: s long, letter ttoTy' (17 U '11643 - ..ti:Plitch• Poll. gn neat eon pf, et,jip :4l 9`:ifiito iitikfi,ttOr!o indoitg eel on lief rolls A0.t4, 9 .0 1 , 4 „ ; „.1.; ,. ..1 n a 11;1,,A. ;S UNA/0J 4, ,„ , §,.lllollinO;kier drid',Ao 11,;idff,'•` ,, '.; `;T , • it Iphib tho ointad,tioveitif, ; J... airitshinn houtttihg !the 1h ) t.11175 .1. '4l.bat the yolloV been , • 1 . , And ounallino . oVai the inttyllllle " And over itio'hlinpiltig ♦• •,. • And I. Wished' that the nfiti idd Ithe'Snininor day abint ' dnitlnet f.keYar:ii ' .• . Woe olkad Own by ' 'rho-prom! high way',Yartinting, tll9:gulet of ti;itt.)9loly,at , t , plein94 hotter t roy nurloyo:niniiiag t , t . iihy; , „1; down through, th'e. elover; ,t '' 11ut wo,thougirt. It the iitveoto,a64uninifir 'thy' '• 'Thot t erg t tin) enn ?holm • ttlu heard tho birdo In . the .woying grett;" .t they, twittered to each'•r: :A br l ut Li ! , pp t iti k ui4, 4 llrtd lint/ thp COO of each ginjll.,l4,nielhor., An islo' W. 1414, A'Fi ey'Alliiitlqii , dguimil6r . d.y tho claret' bfeaniet4e`thor, , .. : :That nt.lort the :world ,wAieltup - orp!it Ann^. :" 1,4!), • I eitianot toll. what'is.lcigto • wv..walkAltwte-aesp_ln_t4o:or ;--: • lint I know that tho robins tout -illy sang ataign'6.l3r.. "' ' --- -Anit'dOWn In to liaatiKtlYea , Mciiblrtt Rugg - • A song that woo gjaatiol', mire-for,' t;. And its ocbp joined .11(9t b,nintt, , And rondo tbo day . ccimplotor. , _ when 3PO amnia up,tßovneallorja . thi-, Our hearts song over and over; "0 went, glad (By Gr blossournad 1441, ' • ' And for 4 5 -efy Myth§ young And, yutCl knout pot thd wordsinlio flails, 1./ if ••, „ • Or.olothoraho apako at all ;, r But of all sweet dais,AbatSaillrael; tl_ny - I eau o Vas tlid'Best 6r ad.' ' ' =L__ MARY •MOORE. "' ''. '.' ''' Adl'my gib I had known Mari:llo6m ; . i ~.! all iny lifof . l. find her: loved. lito niatc'sradcl' first cO'n;ins. of hby, i'i4il`trocic - . sank icici`rciOVO' shoes, rocking cradle', a, gunny haired, ,blnoi3Ydfial , l3 , t ' , iliot, rjOitO a year old. boy Wall ,mysele llarry Church that - - Later, still, I see myself ,at tale old schobl-hou62, Arawing: my, little ... o4Se, up to the door that ' fide home. Many, a beating.haye,J,galped on such an occasion for other:bOys ho sides me Idced . berondt - sho ? 1., fear, was something . 9f a, flirt, even . 41 , her' yip- . fdre. How elegantly she Omne tripping down the steps when I callekher name ; how swectly, hor bliie,eyeslongcdAmci how gaily, rang „oat her nmrry laugh, No one but Mary could over ; 'nips.. her heart so soon to,Nher j followed that laugh 'my, days of pyphild-, hood till I gro'e au ,awkWard, blushing youth ; Lfollowed it-through ,the heated noon, of manhood; . aud .now,w . hen.,the frosts of age are • silvering my,hair, many children climb upon my knee, and call me " father,".l find that memories of youth tre strong,, and that, even in gray hairs, • I am following, the music still. . • • When I was.fifteen, the 144 groat sor-, row of my life came upon my:licart.,' was sent to school, and was. obligod to part with Mary.. We were not.",to see each otherfor three long years.. This, to me, was liko a sentenre of death, for.. Mary was like life ,I3ut hearts aro tough, things after all. I left collcgo in all the , flash 'Of my nineteenth yehr. I was no longer a:Wk wai'd or embarrassed.: I hadgrown info a tall, slender stripling, with a 'verY good opinion of Mykeit t 'hli in general and particular.' : If 1 thought of Mary Moors it was to imagi4o lawrcould dazzle mid bewilder her Wail my good. looks and wonderful' monthl attainments, and never thinking . ShOnight dazzle Arid be wilder Me .411 more. I.wae a 6.xilib, I k'ncriv,. but 'as youth; and good' looks havo hod; I trust that I'inay'bobilliecl when' I'say that: Self . COnecit liA`krofti4 also. dit advantageons propoSat'wds' made meat that Ode,' and accepting it; I . gai:s . ' up all idea' of 4 profession, and prepared to , 'go to India.: In' shy hurried visit home of two 434, 'I saw' nothhig of Mary Moore. She had gonis 'to h' lioard ing salient at Sonietlistance, and'Was not expected home uistil the 'folloviing - MiiT. I uttered a' sigh to 'the tnensory, , ,Of, little bine eyed play-mate, and *then called Myself man'! again. % lii a year, I'' thought siS the Velsiele Whirled aWay from doer—in a Year; or three years at the very most•Ll' will return, - and if 'Mary is as pretty as used' to , be,cwhir then, perhaps, I:may :trry,ber. • '• • • And' thus •I , Settled the future of a young lady whoin'' I had net% seen for four . years. , I never thought•of •the pos sibility : ';rafbidng., dreamed that 'shci'tvotilil not coralesbotitl to•accepE my Qiit!r." • ' • ' But now I know that hail .I%tai'y.mot motnee she would hive :despised mo. Perhaps in the scouted and alleCted stn. dantr:slio might , have found plenty of sport; but as for loving me, I shoul&, have found myself mostalcom India was my, salvation, ,not merely because of my succoss,". but 'because' my' laborious. in dustry had counteracted tho evil iu my nature, and had, made me a bettor man. When at the end, of • three years, I pre pared to 'return, I said nothing of, r reformation of miselkivhich I -knew taken.place.!.,They-loved • me" as I. was, murmured to myself, and, they shah / filar -out. for-"themselves whether I am hotter worth loving than formerly. - .1 picked up many a token from that; land of .romance, and gold for Life friends I hoped 'to mid ! The. gift, for, Mary. Moore I selected with a.boating:heart;, it was a: ring of rough, virgin gold, with my name' and her's engraved„ jut:11(10 that was all, and yet the sight of the lit tle Joy,' strangely thrilled lb!) .as I bal-. anced it upmi;the tip of my linger, i. • -- ;`,7 , Ti.t."Yie :eye'sdr - Others, it was but small, circtot sug'ge'sting thoughts . perhaps, by its elegance or the foOvhito, haticriliA Was' to Wear 'IC But not, to me-4OWniilich. was onebedi hid; the4ei'doligh,tx: were hid= tkOnWithin that'ring of geld.' • " bthrtded" add sun-briiiried,' kheeled' tit' 'tlie'"door father'S hOdse7 Thellghts:in the 'oedirdiliation'ltrid'.ebeek ful Ifitiffi&i.,"shbwed !that. 'doMPatii Viiserehlod'iliere'' Ilioiechllitt•Sis tol.l6lo'woUld Might' greet When no:Strike dyo'iyas thirdbaliloOkinif ori. 1 "Y. ''• !Milmortid la' to' Oho lik6' Wig lUtrit IlikillioniicY'frOint' Elio t iliciirlOi;!.cuid 1 stiNsr, the half suppresso,d, 146 itot-i Matgretd: l : t e'" 3 f".% f . ''',l "'" t,l3l'.''"''k z "'''' ~, imitate a monien , • e. IA xna ;nib mysclf.knowniter asking •for uny.of,, the. tairtily.. , :And. ,while ..I stood,•silent; a: lliqaiir,r,o' , apparition grow up, before mo ; I'4pn - I behind , the servent,• peered .out a gehlen head,. a•tiny,,delioato ftirm.and a 'sweet , childish , fabeovitheadna , eyes, so, like to•those of ono who haibbrightened: ley, boyhood;that started me wi 7 th a-sud, i t den feeling•of pain. ' •,•.El .. . What,-is your' . me, soy. rprotty,". I; aslied,..While the W adoring ia'rvant held the door.' .; ~ .: •:,• '• • iit !•. ' • ~ f Mary Moore." . ' t:; • , :i.' ' .001 old 'mull Can• this.-he so? At. heart, It i airs, as young , : as ever., And ,Mary, bright., hair, • :parted: smoothly: froin a brow ~that has ,ft slight .ffirrovOlpon it is , still ithe Mary of other dayi. • To me. she ban inevergyew .old•or. obangi3d. , Tho heart. ;that' held. tier. fn, infat l6 Y ' 1 ; 14 Aeltore& her , in-the , flush MC beauty of , woril Sanho od,c: ean ...never :cdstaier out till life shall, pease to: waiTut. Not loVe . still lives abovoili,:s:: ••: heart sank down lilce , lead, Here!! o •.1 ' Agd Avbat,blse,Vt• I ask,dil quickly '',..Bltoi lifted ;ulr !her .hande to ; shade .hor had E.oondthat .fury , Attitude it atiothor; Alf - my , • lioyllocid, rant; *Many thbo—;-and an eatorodo in .a .swedt, voicol'l. . ..,,,• Mary Moore; Cheeter,Vvi lisped ithe oliild. , - . ; • ; . wfii - an.ond - 15 all the bililitllreams and 'hopes of My yonth Mid manhood:. Frank , Chester, my hoyiSh•iiiml,. whifr had iofteu ttiod in,rvain .to;ifsu'rP-my.placo beside ilia girl, hadifirfeepedodriteand had cvon her; tqair; . 004:01.:: :31 . 14 was the 14Pnca9?,:Pli!; blocii land lid hag .my. fate, :10 my bands 4, `l6ariedi the; , door,lWhile imyllthSrt is/cint"eik'frVdeblbed • dtliP'i,g l / 2 1QMP,4 lihi prettyJlips as, if. ;about . to er,y,, •while the perPlexediservihtatoniedlotho.par-' for and . dalled - Yrii lviis'tliat conducted hnsel.f,so train Ply' -Plicard-a-slight-stop r ianchp . leasantyoicei; 4; l• ; • ; :i;i: ". I , looked :rup• - ,Therfr'Rtflo(l.4llPl:Qttl,, ' swdet. fuce'd , maiden oftWeritk, hot much liban i de'd frOM t!librdearlittlei'dite't I'ebed so well. loo'litid at Pier k:4.P and then — stilling - ttarterrmest of my Beatty !by:4 mighty effort ~L.opened, MY along and 1 '" .„, T . ,l4l'el.,"( ' i,,k'n't7y ..j ou„,l . ii] . .,\V Ol' ° . . 1 4;1 1 : 1 7., 1 .. 01 )?.MYr14 9' 01Y, ,11 .4 7 YA '' 4i9 ' ancl•threwherself,upon my ;breast, . a'nd I,6iit tip It horliert ;Would brehk..i ; "'I could "1" drew 'intoithe parlor, a 44 stead her before them all, • • , tur r .. vi4vo 'rcisly and a , ' cry joy, , and th'en itiy. itllor etiil'vi'ckt,.4F.pra'ng' 'toward me, and?welcorpeiibM,t, )ionic with, hbartfolt, tears: :f Oh r atrange and pass7t big sweet'is•siacli , ti gtdetVitg t01t1145 worn traveller..— And -as .T...heariiy' old mother to my.heart f and gasped my, father's baud; Liu,io Clung beside itia„l., felt that all, was not yet lost ;.• and. although-another had 'secured lite's most choicest,bf . epiptt, many ,toy remained for rue in' the sariatuary „ There were four other Inmates of the room, on.,my sudden on-. trance.,, Ono., was, theAlheeyed, whom,,l„had already seen,. and. who now stood,hcside, Frank: . Cl)9sltor, - ,olpigipg to hit 4a 11 4?, ',Near ~tech. LiFzio 3loore, .Alary'is eldest sister, ,and in a,Clistetcor r. net.to whiehebr had lut rriedly retrciated. when rny, name. was spoken, stood ,n and slender,. fignre, half hidden ,1.4,41M' , heavy, window eurtahis that fell ;to the door. *!- When the 1 . 44 rapturous greeting was dyer, 4izF:ie led,me forward with a timid &ape,. and, Frank o . )l9ter grasped Welcome • hoine,,my.boy he said,. with the loud, cheerful tones remem bored so well., " Toµ have cchanged , that I never would hayo known .upon t but no matter .11) . 04 that, .yoer hpart,is . in th right place,,:kknew,'. ." Hoy can you say be, changed ?",. said, my mother, gently,,, ' sure , ho looks older‘andgrner, and i more'like . a man than when ho, , away ;; but , his oyes and, smile ,are.the same over. It is a,heavy,heart which obaugelliirm He, is my boy,still.' ' " Aye,,mother,7 I, answered, sadly, "I am,your boy • s' , Heaven help me ! .At that moment I felt like 4 rt boy, and it.would have lthetil 'blessed srelief:to , have wept upou,lwr bosom as I ,Iladlone in niy.. infancy, But I kept, down the beating,..of 'my heart, and the tremor of my lip, and 'answered quietly, as J. looked,into full handsolue.face, ~ • • " You hare changed, too,!Praulc, but. think for tho,bottol:..".. " Oh,: yod , -thank you, for • thO ifiont,' 7, lle finsiyered with a hearty laugh: '"My wife 'tells handacitner overt' ; I !12. • r. llin wife I .Coald-I hear that name, and. lieoprellent atiih... . r ,, , '" havti' ?"' ha adiled;liftihrg `the jail& in arniA, in the World. 'l)on't?Ohliiink.ilheldelcn' intich like her mother lined' to?" :' " Very in nob'," 'I 'fOtered, , • "Hallo I." CrIM n!suAlf:' 114071qis01 "OA have forgotten , to, introduce. you . 1 4 , P1Y ,wife ;,lbelievo you iand ,, she used , to, be playmates hi 'Yoni . As . tinger' dhys-L'yes; • IfarrY, " me. Qu tylO hapk " for tlie ealcq of ttmez,. and because you were not at the wedding, I will give you , leaVe• to ki tie butpiind, old feilow, you are ,nov,orjo'i;oper4 tp9'c2o- . molly. „Comm, here ,ehe ;, „for:clue, Want to lieu . how .1 , 13 u mill manage those ferociousst,c l u ct of ! the f „, nuelied Lizzie n langliing,ryml ing,:tcyvarsiti,,rnoirr. A..gleara.of land hope .lilmoiit".tdO'' dazzling to bear diffne •-• " over nio, anal I,Fs Cf 0 0;0 , , 1 9 11 g 1t , 1 ": - Not I%trY, I' niust hay° libtiqed iny decrot ttk °!';Y..,1 61 _ 4 / V 4 / 1 1 " ,!; / .. 1 P::401 ' ':PY i t " 0 tl i l Rps t .A 1 ? 00 1 1 01 4: R 9. Obtuse s .wos•ilthiei time silent. t. k lase d: tlid fair " of tbo' , younewifO; land #l!t Pf:tlli /IV, • • Mauro haiai , In . a etikarl lifiito d. Welcome to giva She turned, and laid , herhaudinonine, and! Shid ~, I r , ,r tly ,„, (4,l,Araglad toile° xou.liere, Bireple, wakds,•,and !•yet ~h ow,.blessed ,they made me. , :01. would patios° yielded her tbattnaoinent. for 'air:emperor's crown. • For there was the batilv,,llome AVR9P.44 1 , 1 fli r t r 4l ( ? , l)!qrPo,!i l P.,:s s lP) l ,Rvie°l .Mary, ,, MoOre.l rfEho eyed ,I;had..,dretqued,l of..dv: E tual inthts„,were , :fallizig! beneath! bn 4 doe ! !therm, besitiOlfsne.li li,AQYcil.;hnew.r;tll , ;il , vilA 'o,Pq Irr,pl • Meaning °flak:A miss .until thalpoment,. ; „4. 3flr r ny \ learii ; hair° passdd sincor, that kapily.igl46,:and.theihaii that was Alpir. , and i g lossy,is frist ,, turningi gray...! (I am ,novi grown tole an ; :old-.man, and can look back to.a La ppy;land dhope a well spent, ii.nd'tyet, 'sweet as it has le9n; Would'not..tecall, a single : day,' fog ,thb , love . that Mad() my manhood? ki ,brightehines also upon may. white Lairs. , it&pus uIioATE: ' l l'l - tuins l Cl.,p,itto , a,ad i Chief:JitStice,Shaw t ' of ' lgassaelluslitt,s. • fft,e,y..';', wordy. :? 0, r014.1.._. (1 :10, freoly„vtp . po94l)yhotl.Aides , ..._ lidato was: .Rpee, , arAtling: a,eansfs before .tbd 1 ;Hest men r elleF elovnt , hti . to •tho •Bolidir ) ..toie,xprpsilAiB; F ( 1v°F9 1 .99 ,f9S, ,00needgd.. ability of, qudge,dla!d, in ..ieldiNTftiakadyerse - dseision - : 9i9PO'lP.Kl 3 (° u ,i r everinue . R .. ,tnu,same, .feellege .ittt 711P'.4911.6f.'0)°!ii.45 'his i 4 0.!:,„ ?P9)Yi I fool tat •ou aregrt . ,.._!.at j r :It is said that Choate, had, aTM=6nd' lapgtfage,.arkd his gain teemed with' a.. wealth • of ; ,dietion iii tyUly 4.}4'4ge, that' there 'was il l fresh edition i?le ..taonary, eontaißieg i q i pew ;word; •eielainfed, "For ; heay,on's,salce (10 , t let dhoq.,to gott it! Cbeate, ap iawettant, msa'ult , and ,hattory, ease 14;14 . 0r4;:l •on and . lnidgekid S'ofOr' 'itout ,art hour that,.dicic s'alt! iwatqF . , IT, and hauled . lq„the,Wind ,hring,,tho ,isciei4eston i iawy,er nrtd4 , his 'hattPriPS;:., .1 I ~•.•.u` . ' '',1616 1' 6./6.. • • . . . "' At; t'°.li9gLlllllAg,,Ql hid tcat'cnpuy l 11? icicAn,icl, t,11,4pt1.0 "(lark as lieypr! , !rised ; "i'Vas thery, a, oigop tlst . • ' " X9f3,1 sir." , .„ . ~ S "Apr yos,;A , " )- r et; , q. Dsq. 5r014,590 • •• • '2..v . ,9t. 9 . ! nifQ•"; ;, •.. ~ • . ": - Al l erii,„.l,,,ow • (10, y9,lt know there wa "T;13.9 NaUtical Almanac'Haid so and I'll .boliovo that sooner than any.lawycr in the world." ~ 1 " What waei . the principat luminary that night, sir ?" •' •• ' "' • . • "Ilinnaelo' Tamp aboard thb Chtd- OEM . "ills ! you aro Wrotvii4 -sharp, 'Mr Bgrtlin," '•' ' • - - ":What in blaza4baie you been grind ing tbrglour'foi- 7 tOirMke me 'dull?" !`Be civil, And ma what Wall& - and' lonittide iou'brOSSCll tho cqu4toi 'in?" ' ' ; - • sir, I anycleAt sire you to answer ' ' "I"Alittn't:" • ' • • ' 'yoitroftis'e; do you?" " - "Yesi dan't" .."Ifirloed l - •Yoti are' the chief mate of 'a•'clippel phip, are ,answer SO a q4e'stion." •' • • •'"" :":Yes,''tis the' siniiihit'quilstion I ei , or' hart •11'sked 'me.. Why'l thought'overy fool' of n'hiwyer knew that there 'Molt no 3atitude la the equator." ' ' "i .• Tula nhotelloored Rufus. 'EDITINO 'A PAPElL—Editing .71 paper' is very pleasant:.busindssa. • • •.: • If it contains too winch politidal mat. , tor, pecqdd won't rend. it: • : If it' contains doo' little? , they won't If thelypeAtho:darge,:it.donit cantain .ennugh,reading matter. ,• ' • Irthe typo Is small, they can't real It. ,If we publish.tologrriph reports,• folks say they aro nothing but lies. If wo omit them, they say wo have no• enterprise, or suppress.thent for poiitial effect. , ,• • • • If, wq 'publish original niattor i •,tiloy lama ua forncit giving soloctiooii. . I, '!, • If , wo puhliHh • kileotroiiß; areAnry for not'.•writind+ more, theth hallo Iliad in Homo other` llf kvo 04 . 0'4 man a conifffiriimitary iin, tied,. Nye itrei connrod •' ir iwo'clp•not,' , lol , Laridn nay wet am-'a trat, hag: • .• A 1 if Wo.flikert an hrtible.'wliioli'pleases' Oio , littl Eli 'become jealous: • ,JO,; WV' attend' church I they" say it'' is holy foi'effeeti If We ilb not, they denonitho ha do oitfotand'dbmioratoly wicktdl' '''"' ' • If 'WO ?cumin our offieb and . itttond to r Our 11uniness; 'folks say We , are too' i)roud i If we gh, thOrnay 'wo:novoixatond to • our busincgs. If wo doli't• phy 'all our hill's prOiaptly, hey' Ay' We iirii aot • tObo taint:AM.' . ' I'lf••Wo par prom i)tly,' they . S'air WO 'stolo IforlibnOi , -Lospooially those' who 'o wo us, bit ccrtp:iiiiy they judo that if a ?da: 'OrItT of otir partitia'dia• as they do, we [cannot iikilo mach motley:: I . Y''' ...'' SrinagAnakfadu a luonorous, sPoooklMtlio Ciormatitown epilog° °ow - meneemont,, sabt:,, "I:was pleased, atthenring ,tIM - ',valOistory, delivered, by. pbcpti.'„ I,was. in St. !Louis about thg,tilup ho was , born,. a nd, hie father ,bo-, ing,a,vgry tleac friond.pf mine r , and, the yptwg ismall, aid ; mon k that he was,noP OlLliested" . !}ise long, , l got:14,01;x to him That was sonic ; years book ;I won't toll -the. girls how 4 1 . 1 . 1 ..PYri0P 1 01 old' 4.9,9800 , M1rP. ;do ..not supposi the young, man, Tonimpbort,' E. but those whet j , Orq there at the Vale meeUCin 'ear ihat raid hot rp• .1 .assume much respons oility. As it 'is 'I am delighted to mid hins grown irp wolf i iiiitllitizei ;nx Ale 'bath' of p i s if 9twi • Arr Indiana man•4obkliit:idatiumitio , ',marking:. that, die lindt4in.,fiilgagoniont (19ppsal,. :at.lnurl44plnck. .totivielocorpLwLiu timpatipOt atoniaolt ~ .pUmp),lmaneeditily) oiigaiiiAMent •latleon. r 40d Ivl t... l'-LTILM'IROAIN,.• • • By doltN-th-wrivrTlElt• .1:,. . N'IY . Wolith oelelilior over tliO sny • Areeeforilitirft lo' alln of §prfug, - Pushed troal liar earn the lacks of gray, Ael'll,,lehml.to L.nr tlo rm.an 1144.. ,livelgrallthion, playing at nntrliloo Iltoppod, ,Autt cruel, ii opott; no buyo, will ho, Tonged tv,olonpnt tlin 111 rd, who hopped bongf. tobonglz in tho apple tier. tlo . gtmolo;Othim; " hnv. yon not heat'd Ny poor, to‘il'hoi I of the fiery And lioNi , ; drop by Arop,-thhi morel , 61 bhd • Cnrrloti th. m;iter that tioom.het, It? ceertfew Ili his little bill, tote It fell en the soul of sin. % t'41.12,111,0 tho,uterk on lots rod brood still Cf fires tbut.scerch nsb,l droim it in. My.p9or llffn 7 rlll.loyu! ni:PI . Wevtlyr1 . 011l11110. tip lilllll, VCry 1.1141 i f 9 I.ll6llNert'irontr Lord Y. Ir' " rsaltl to'thei ...Slogybikd or God, In my Itenrt nil well! finch good Allouglit-,14 . 11 ; 41t0p +.yltcrowlt o cool 'qui Iw 4 e . eij q!c flies of boll Prtyere.llove,.llkeritlyd,rpi. .„Toireto ;pity rtye Footle': dew, deitr to the heart of our Lord, ill,' 101 ' , Who soffCr Ilke'llhn,'l:n the goOd they do!" - ; IJ , ; • ' • —A fia kitic;.,llouthls4 • • 4.O7aUFTURP A VA up ! The basest fraud of p. 04.01 is agriculture, Tito' .deadlies,t la(da that ever ; tray is agriculture. ~I. speak with feel ng on Ibis subject, for I've been glittered . and beguiled, Mud dazzled and destroyed by this , same arch deceiver. „ ghe.haa_made mc.;:ghousancl-proluisib 'and .broken, dvery ono of them : She has promised me early, and the rain ,has drowned them ; late .potatoes; and the drought has withered them. has promised; me summer tamashes, and the worrusimve eaten , them ; winter squashes, and the •bugs have devoured them, Sho ; promiseiVellorries, and tho curculio. has strung thew, and contain !lying things, incornoly to the, eye• and Atnsayory,to tho tahto,, She has promioed.strawberrica, and tip young chickens have enveloped, them, and the eyes cannot see them. Sl r ie has promised tomatoes, and the old hens have ehcompiissed . them, and tho hand cannot-reach thorn. I aie+betcire daWn to set out sweet .potatoes ; the agile . seized , 1110 ; I had thirty chills and three: pecks of potatoes. ItOiled in the lientofthe day to cultivate cabbages; I raised. twenty:two blisters. but nothing more. I labored with the latest twilight to hoe my melons. I lost the melons, but found the rheumatism. NO wonder_ killed his brother. 110 was7l tiller -.of the - ground. The woilde - iii that he didn't . 1011 his father, and thee weep because ho • hadn't a grandfather to kill. No doubt his Early Rose potatoes, for which ho paid Adam seven dollars - a bariel; 'had been cut down by hags, frorp..:the head waters of the Euphrates. Ills 'Pennsylvania wheat had been 'Winter killed; and wasn't worth cutting: , gig , Norway oats had gone to straW, and Weald not yield five pecks Per acre, and his black. Spanish water melons had . been,stelen by, boys, who had Milled tip the vines, brOlcen down his Patent fende; and "written scurrilous 'doggerel all 'oiler his hack gate. No WOnclet , hotelt,niacl when ho saw Able ,whistlifig• :along.. with his- fine French ,merinoes, worth eight dollars a head and wool:going up every day. No won der he-wanted to kill some, body, and t ßought he'd practice on. Abel. And Noall's.gettinF drunk was not-as all , surprising. Ho "had .thrown away ,Magnificent opportunities.. lie 'might have had;rt monopoly of any profession or business. !Had ho studied medicine there 'would not have been another doctor within a thousand miles to call him.'" Quack," and every family would bought a bottle of "Noah's Coin pOund . Extract 'of GOpher Wood and ,41.nti Deluge Syrup." •As a politician, he might have •carried his own ward solid, and controlled two thirds :of the delegates -in •every convention. As a lawyer, howl:mid halo been retained in every case. tried at the Ararat Quarter Session, or the old Ark High Court of •Admi laity. lint Ito throw away all these advantages and took to , agriculture. For a long time the krotal was so wet he could . raise nothing but sweet flag and bull-riishes, and these at last Tt °mine a drudge in the market. 'What wonder that at VIA he did got lialf a pock of grapes that mere not stung, to death by Janhet's).honey lees, lie should have made iyillo . 9.dd deownedhls Morrows in A The feet is agrictilture would demtwa lizo n adiut. •I , was almost 'apt • when I went I'm a demon 'Ma., I'in; at war 'itforything. I fight Myself mit,Of bijd 'at, four 'o'clock; when all my betternattirb tiro' to lie still 'till 4410.4 Myself into the gait:101110 worklihe'a4rute, when,reason and in stinct tell mo to 'stay in the houSe and enjoy Myself like, a man. 'I fight the pigs,' the chickenS, the Moles, the birds, the hogs, the • worms—o Ver y -thing in which IS the breMli of life. I tight the ddtikti, the 'burdocks,' the councils, the thistles, the •rapes, the weeds, the roots !•-•'the whole vegetable lciugdom.• I fight the heat, the front, the rain, the short, T light do 'universe, and got whipped in oVory 'lMttle. I have no mono sidmirationtn'VmSfo' on the father of George Washington for forgiving the destruction of his cherry tree. A cherry tree-is only a cumuli() nnrsotsy, and the grandflither of-his country know it. I have half,a,doien cherry trees, and the day my.,yeung , George Washington: is six years,old•l'll give him a hatchet and, toll himto2down with 'every ,eherry tree on the place.--,,Qineimlti Times, 131=11 'Tiin editor of an'easterit paper having rheeived' a 'bankiloto . detector, returns thilnks, , 'Afid"rfithieatik ask for^ some bank notes upon which to test . its tic curacy. • • - , App,apsp ,fgr iflrs,?" cwirpcl ,8i! .914:, i t . l .•/590. olliFkrAFO, ,•T,A) O , '!` ( 1 9Y • g9,t;. P I :OI4Y:Pg ADA Is ttv,, yl wing • •: il=l=E • l airmi. I iyAn, opstst,ifi!nood k oxolqinioO t • !INWARD ,lE,; • , I:inieva, k : catiso, of ;011 Aonviiiosgii,4libnikbytitanderropisiiiod ; for.nlio is tlio mine evil lidr7 EMI . . 1 ME MEI . r7dN t n noT. P pnlu witfi thetnAy7:l;. ~.,:..~ 14,coNce,—The 1:ollOviing, !monies were inyont9d by Mister Ignoins, and I am in no iny • rilsixnsiblo fOr sentiment or diction : - It is to be feared that to most Men the sky is but a concave mirror, shoWing nothing behind, and in looking, into which Alley see only'thoir own s distorted images, like the reflection of a face in Is spoon.. 'knee it needs not surprisS that they are .not very devout worshippers ; it is - great . 'wonder that they do not openly, scoff. uponciviliza- - tionliaNteen more exhaustively treated thim studied. Otherwise, we sholphl know how it is that some countries that have so much elirnate have no civilizes tion. -Who so shall insist upon holding your attention while ho expounds to you things that yob have always thriven without .li7.nowing,—resenibles—onovho— should go about with a hammer, eracking nuts Upon other people's heads and eating the kernels himself. - • There are but two kinds of temporary insanity, and each one has but.a symptom. - The one was"discovered by a coroner, the other by a lawyer. The ono induces yen' to kill yourself when you 'are unwell of life ; the other persuades you to kill somebody also whonyoui aro fatigued . Of seeing him about. IT itwere as call.y to iMvent n crediblo falsehood as it is to believe one, wo should have little else in print. Thainechanical. construction Of a falsehood is is matter of. the gravest import ; a lie which is sober imaritathe-is-nniimmally-scoutedrmay-be "done up like new" in.'s pungent epigram, and will be as universally 'credited. There is Moro false morality:,in prov erbs and aphorisms, thsin there is poison iu painted candy. A .Lad marriage is ,like an electric machine; it makes you dance, but you" can't let A strong mind is more easily impressed than a wcal6 ono ; You shall not as readily convirico a fool that your are a philosopher, as a philosopher that yon ae a fool.—Overland Monthly. - • — NNEWSPAPER POINTS.—The following appears in the Chicago Republican, and we - give it' as a part of the gossip of the day, taking occasion to remark, however, that the valuation placed on some of the papers is either too high, or that placed on the World, which is the second Jest newspaper property in New York, is.too low:'. Tho Now York Herald is valued at $5,000,000,.and is owned by Commodoro JaMes Gorden I;ennett, jr., having been presented to him by his father. • The Evening Postivas valued by ,roth, J. 'Cisco and two other' referees, some months since, at '51,250,000. Tho Now 'York Times was valued at' $1,500,000 ;. $1,000,000 has been43llbred for it and refused. — The Now York' World is valued at $1,200,000. More capital was-sunk to make it than any other newspaper ever started in this or any other country. The Tribune is valued, at $2,000,000, and could not be purchased for that amount. The Evening Mail is valued at $150,- 000. Cyrus W. Field datelY purchased 'one-third intbiest in it for 50,000. The - Evening Telegram is valued at $200,000, and is not for sale. ' -The Now York Sun is valued at $1,500,000, and pays seven per cent on a larger amount. The Commercial Adrertise'i• is valued at $550,000, but it Would take a large• - sum to purchase it. Tho.,Tournal of Commerce is valued at $5OO, 000. The daily and weekly New are valued at $BOO,OOO. The daily circulation of the News and Sun approximate closer than any other two daily newspapers in the city. The New York Star, Mr. Joseph How ard's paper, is valued at $500,000, but is not for sale. AN ITEM FON. EVERY MAN To READ.--• We have of us, probably, mot with instances in which a word heedlessly spoken against the reputation of a woo- an, has been magnified by malicious minds until the cloud has been dark enough to overshadow her "whole exist ence. To those who aro accpstorned— not necessarily from bad motives, bat from mere thoughtlessness—to speak lightly of ladies, we commend thieve "hints" as worthy of 'your considera tion : Never use a lady's name in an .im proper time, or in mixed company.' Never make assertions aboht her gait you think untrue, or allusions that you feel she herself would blush to hear. When you meet with men who do not scruple to make use of a woman's name in a reckless ,and unprincipled manner, shim theM, for they are the worst mein bers of the community—men lost to every feeling of humanity. Many a good and worthy woman's character has been forever ruined, and her heart broken by a lio Manufactured_ by some villain, and repeated whore it should not have been, and in the presence of those whose little judgment could not deter ,thein from circulating the foul and bragging report. A slander is soon. propagated, 'and the_ smallest, thing derogatory . of a, woman's 'character will Ily on the wings of -the vied, and magnify as it circulates until its monstrous weight crushes the pier unconscious victim. Respect the name of a woman, for your mother and sisters are women, and ns you winild have thou' fair names unernhitterod by the 'slanderer's bitter tongue, heed the ill that your own word's may bring upon the mother, sister, or wife of yourfellOW creature. Is a letter to the proprietor of a monthly magazine,lloracetheeley says :. I was formerly called Grahamito," that is, I rarely ate moat. And it is still my conviction that moat 'should he eaten very sparingly. I eat, however, like other folks, not having timo to make myself disagreoablo to eVorybody by in sisting on special food wherever I go, .since I travel much and eat in many places.in tho course of a year. I ceased "' to drink distilled liquors January first' 1824; when I Was not thirteen years old. -I occasionally drank boor four or 'live yeais aftor,.whon rabandoned that also. I cannot' romomber thatever More' than tasted wino.' I stopped drinking • coffee about 1834„because it Made my hand tremble. I am' opposed to norm. I did not drink tea for A quarter of a eentury, onding , In 1864'. when I had , brain rover and was vary ill. My doctor .krodsted that I should drink either claret (*.tea, and,tehosothe tea, which I have gauorally used; elute ? though not, firmly, i hfyfavoritoexerciseis ing/ '\ Up trees in riforost with. ut into; . -ontting ont_underinush, . etc. wish I . ; could take more of, it, 'hut my- farm is distant and My ,family scattored. sornotirags 41.46[1. weights at the licking cure. I havo ;only, lifted 261 Roundir shim I. becalm) sixty yonrs,old, Fobrunrithirtl last. •: 0 TIM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers