A irtrtr T T BY JOHN G GIVEN. ITittrrj itigr for i?oiicv BY 21113. H. F. AXES. "Hang it all. Frank, how dull you are ! I asked you to accompany me to day, in hopes that you would help me to drive off a legion of blue devils that have been pur suing me like my shadow for a week or more, but instead of doing so, your rever ential step and wo begone image would give a fellow the horror9 with Mirth standing at his elbow. Come, man, what has gone wrong with you ?" "Nothing, I assure you; I was never in better spirits. Perhaps I was yielding somewhat to the dreamy influence that this soft South wind produces, as it steals so lazily over the prairie grass and sweet ly scented flowers; but let me repeat your question, 'what has gone wrong with you ?' " "Oh, everything! I get no business, and I am too proud to go back to my father, with the tale of my defeat, as he assured me I should one day do. 'The West is no place for lawyers yet,' he one day said to me, and I now believe him; for I have been here a year now, and have not made enough to cover my ex penses; but I am determined to make a raise in some manner, and the only visible one that offers is by marrying." "Oh, ihat will be no hard matter for you," replied his companion, in a slightly perceptible sarcastic tone; "Uncle Jasper will of course receive with joy a profes sional man like yourself into his family." "Uncle Jasper! uncle dev 1 I should make a great spec, Frank, marrying Lou isa Fosworth for money, truly. Why, what has that old curmudgeon, her father, got but a few sections of wild land ? and those he will keep as long as he lives, and he will live long enough to preach my funeral sermon, I will warrant you, if you care for a lease of his life. Marry Louisa Fosworth for riches ! ha ! ha ! ha ! a good joke, upon my soul. But what led you to fancy such a thing, Frank ?" "The very obvious reason that you have paid more attention to her than any other young lady in our village since you came among us." "That may all be, and yet I have not paid her much either; but really I never thought of her as a wife; though, to tell the truth, I think her one of the most am iable, intelligent, nay beautiful girls that I ever met, and had she the wealth of an other in your village, a few hours at most would find me at her feet, humbly suing for her hand and that other is Sarah Munson." "Allow me to congratulate you on your hopes, but unless i am mistaken, there will be a breach of promise case before you get through with jt. for a more com plete coquette I verily, believe there does not exist." "Very likely, but the sex are all more or lees given to it, and five thousand dol lars m her own right is something of an excuse for a Western belle to play the coquette; such a needy scamp as I am ought not to complain of it, at any rate, and I will not; so good bye to sweet Louisa Fosworth, and 'love in a cottage.' Heigho ! I wish that I could afford to marry her; she will make some fellow a charming little wife,' as the ladies say; don't you think so, Frank ?" His listener replied affirmatively, and in a livelier tone than he had before used in speaking to his companion, and which he managed to keep up without any apparent exertion throughout the day a day of fowling on oue of the beautiful prairies in one of our Western States. Nor was it any wonder, for to Frank Willard Louisa Fosworth had been as the pole star to the sea worn mariner guiding him on through poverty and sickness, and the many other heart storms which mark the life of a western emigrant. Failing in business in one of the eastern cities, he had removed with his mother to one of the Western States, and, perhaps unadvisedly, tried his hand at farming, ilis means en abled him to purchase an eight acre lot, and upon this he commenced operations; bin he progressed but slowly, for the very good reason that he had attempted a kind of business of which he knew nothing. His cattle were lost by straying away from him on the broad prairies in sum mer, and his grain was, injured by being improperly kepi in winter, and had it not been for the advice of his mother, an en ergetic and persevering woman, he would have abandoned his farm, returned to the -city, and applied for the place of clerk in some of the mercantile houses; but she persuaded him to persevere, and the next year everything prospered with him. But alas ! ' when winter came, the Angel of Dearth was hovering over his dwelling, nd as the spring flowers sprang from the gladsome earth, they shrank away from 'he newly godded grave of his beloved "WE OO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE VAYJ mother. It was a heavy blow to the iso lated young man, and he grieved as an only and affectionate son could grieve, over the loss of a mother. Mrs. "Willard had made many friends, but no warmer ones than the family of Mr. Fosworth, the minister of the little village near which they resided, and whose family consisted of a wife and her young boy, and Louisa, a daughter by a former wife. No pains had been spared by any of the family to the invalid, but in no one was the disinterestedness of friendship more apparent than in the gentle and hith erto shrinking Louisa, then scarce sixteen years of age. If watchers failed, it mat tered not if her last night had been spent by the sick couch, she would again take her sleepless stations, and this, too, at an age when nature calls so loudly for her accustomed rest. If Frank Willard had before admired the graceful vivacity of the beautiful girl, was it any wonder that that admiration should have ripened into a warm passion, as he thus suddenly dis covered the priceless wealth of her loving heart ? And yet there was something so pure and childlike in her entire character, that, fondly as he loved her, he felt that it would be a seeming sacrilege to breathe in her ears the words of passion, until more mature age should call forth the glowing emotions of her woman's heart. A year passed away, and he was grati fied by receiving a letter from ail old classmate, containing the intelligence of a proposed visit, and if he liked the location, of establishing himself in the practice of the law in his immediate vicinitv. It was a pleasing prospect for Frank, for Turner Williams had been the favorite friend of his boyhood, and a boon companiou in his latter years. That he had some defects of character he was well aware, but who has not? and he looked forward with joyous anticipation to his arrival. He came at the specified time, was pleased with everything he saw, and the citizens were soon enlightened as to his intentions by a showy sign, with the words, "Tur ner Williams, Attorney and Counsellor at Law," gilded upon it. "From an Eastern city, and college educated," was an im mediate passport into the best society the little village afforded, and he soon found himself a favored guest in every family where he chose to visit. Frank Willard observed with pleasure the success of his frfend in gaining the seeming good will of the people among whom he intended to re?ide, uniilhe came into the family of Mr. Foswoith, or "Un cle Jasper," as he was usually designated among his friends; but here even friend ship faltered, as he saw the warm welcome of the parents, and with a lover's jealous eye watched the flirting blushes of the now more than ever beautiful daughter. "It is my destiny," he muttered one evening, after he had returned to his boarding house from a visit with Williams at the parsonage, "and has ever been thus; the cup of happiness will be held out to me, and as I reach forth my hand to grasp it, it will be suddenly dashed aside ! Fool that I was, to suppose love like mine could be requited. ' And must I look calmly on, and see her given to another, anil that other one whom I myself introduced to her!" These and similar thoughts were constantly in truding themselv.es upon the mind of Frank, up to the time of the conversation which commences my story, and in which he discovered the heartlessness of his "world-warped" friend. A short time only was allowed to elapse, ere he visited the home of Louisa as in ; former days, and an early period was chosen to declare to its object the passion he had so secretly cherished, and with a strangely throbbing heart he listened for an answer. It came, and the reader need only know that it was favorable, and that the ingenious and blushing girl acknowl edged that she had shed many bitter tears over his recent seeming coldness. The consent of the father was not withheld, "but," he added, "do you, who know my meagre resources, expect to take my daughter portionless V . "As far as mere wealth is concerned, yes; but instead of regarding it as a misfor tune, I look upon it in this case as a bles sing." "How so!" asked the other with sur prise. "Do you wish to be understood that Louisa would be less acceptable to you with a certain portion of this wolrd's goods?" Perhaps not, under certain circumstan ces, but but " "Well, but what?" "I fear I do wrong in repeating it, but if Louisa Fosworth had possessed wealth equal to her virtues, and beauty, I should have found a powerful rival in one whom I have long found it vain t o. contend a gainst, at least where elegance alone is concerned." "Indeed! Ah, you need not speak the name, circumstances lead me to cues? it. EBENSBURG, THURSDAY, And so the young lawyer would have sought ray treasure, had he known its nominal value," he continued, but rather as if speaking to himself than to the young man at his side; and then tuiningto Frank and taking his hand, he said in a trem bling voice: "I yield her to 'ou, Frank Willard, as I would the dearest thing I possess on earth. She resembles her sainted mother, but oh, for your sake and mine, make her. cot an .idol, as I. did that mother, lest like her she be suatched away 10 show us the sin of idolatry." "Thank you, thank you," he replied, returning the pressure of the hand that held his own, and then departed leaving the kind old man to his solitude, for he well knew that he would be alone. And who that mourns the loved and lost does not feel that such periods exert a soft eniug influence upon the affections As imagination brings u p the seeming forms of the loved ones, now hidden forever from our sight, the heart clings more closely to our living loves, and we cherish them with tenfold care, less the hand of the spoiler be laid oa them, and our pathway be en tirely desolate. A few days passed, and wedding invita tions were issued, not from our humble friends, but the reputed heiress, Miss Munson. It was a splendid affair for the little Western village, although but few guests were invited and those only such as the bride deemed the first in the place." A few days after the wedding, as Frank ( was walking the street, he chanced, upon turning a corner, to come unexpectedly on his friend, who upon seeing him ex claimed: "And so my sly fox, you are the one that is to carr3 off the dove from the par sou's dove cot, are you? Well, I hope it will turn out a better match than mine; if not, you will hang yourself, I am sure, in less than a week from vour wedding day." "I apprehend no dissatisfaction on my part, at least." No, nor did I, but you arc not marry ing an heiress. But hear, step into my office, and I will show you how rascally I have been treated. You thought my wife hold six thousand dollars in her own right did you?" "Idid." "Weil 6ir, she has just one hundred and fifty, and no more." "What!" One hrndred and fifty dollars was the portion of the 4rich heiress'. 1 seems that when the father died, he left six thousand dollars, and a widow and eijrht children to share it. The widow's third was con sumed before her death, and Sarah had used three hundred and fifty of her five hundred since she came of age, and left me to fall into the trap which had been set to catch a rich husband. And when I re proached her with the deception, she de nied having used any, saying that neither she nor her aunt with whom she resided, had ever stated that she had such property if rumor had given it to her she was not to blame, and that if I married her for her money it served me right. And now Frank, you sec what a predicament I am in; instead of having but myself to support by my precious profession I have got an extravagant wife in the bargain. What would you do if you were in my place?" "What would I do? Why go to work like a man, and if your profession will not support you, buy or rent some land and turn farmer; a farm is safe capital, at least 1 have found it so, and then you will have plenty of time to attend to all the suits you may have. "That is easier said than done; had I such a wife as Louisa Fosworth would make I might think of it, but I might as well think of- teaching a peacock to knit stockings as my lady wife, with her lofty notions, the duties of a iarmer's wife provided farming was a kind of business I understood myself." Much more of the same kind of argu ment was used on both sides, and they parted with the expressed determination of Williams to try his luck in California, if Dame Fortuue did not bestir herself in his favor before long. A few days after, Mr. Fosworth, at the close of Divine service, announced the fact that a marriage ceremony would bp per formed at his house on the following Wed nesday, and cordially invited all of his congregation to be present." "My house was donated by your kindness," he said, "and a seemly welcome should breathe to all who deign to visit it." And they came if not all, enough, so that every room was crowded. It is a very common thing to cultivate the locust on our large prairies, for their use as well as beauty, and a beautiful grove of them flourished on a spot of ground a few rods from the house, and here, benalh the pure sky, in the shade of the sheltering trees, the solemn vows were spoken,' and the gentle Loui5a returned to her father's house WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD. WE CEASE TO NOVEMBER 7, 1850. a wife. The plain butbountiful farepass ed freely among the guests; if the still haughty Mrs. Williams did draw herself up, as some plainly dressed Iarmer's wife or daughter brushed past her rustling silk, no one heeded it, unless to smile at her folly; for it was now generally known that the flimsy title of heiress, which, had so long supported her arrogance, was but a borrowed -garment, and she now stood forth simply as 4Mrs. Williams, the feeless lawyer's wife.' It was a happy day for all, or nearly all, and a strange rumor that began to float among the guests, and in which the words 4ten thousand dollars' were distinctly heard, added not a little to the interest of the occasion; and finally, before they dispersed, nearly every one was made acquainted with the following facts: Mr. Fosworth's first wife was the'daugh tcrof a merchant in the city of New York who died previous to his daaghtei's mar riage to the young Divine, leaving his property to his son and daughter, his only children. After the death of Mrs. Fos worth, this brother was killed by being thrown from his horse, and as he was un married and there was no will, the prop erty descended, of course, to the child of his departed sister. As this occurred after Mr. Fosworth's removal to the West, he determined to keep it secret from all, even his unassuming child, lest upon her it would exert a hurtful tendency, and he well knew that it would be a temptation to some needy fortune hunter, and thus prove a curse instead "of a blessing; but it was now ready for her with its accumulated interest. . It is needless to repeat the anathemas that Turner Williams bestowedupon him self, Frank Willard, Parson Fosworth, and the world in general, when he became assured of the fact, for with as large a share of self-esteem as usually belongs to one of his stamp, he firmly believed that he had but to have asked to have obtained the hand of his (to use his own terms) milk and water friend." But he foamed and fretted in vain. There was no help for it, and as soon as he could scrape money enough together, he left his unlove able wife, and if alive, must now be in California, as it is several months since he started- Frank Willard and his amiable wife arc in the possession of that calm content that well balanced minds ever enjoy, while the "ministers familv continues the even tenor of its way, the kind old man hardly feeling, so close in their companionship, that his choice plant blooms on aaother's hearth. Tf.irlr Ye TirUI It is high time that some body told you a little plain truth. l ou have been watched for a long time a certain class of you and it is plain enough you are laying plans to cheat somebody. You intend to sell chad" for wheat; and there is danger that some of the foolish gudgeons" will be sadly taken in. It may not be your fault that you belong to the "one idea party" that the single idea in getting a husband is the only one which engrosses much of your time or attention. But it is your fault that you pursue this in the wrong direction. Your venerable mother, of Eden memory, was called a help" for man, and you are looking for a man to help you; to help you to live in the half idle, half silly way which you have commenced. Men who are worth having, want women for wives. A bundle of gewgaws bound with a string of flats and quavers sprinkled with cologne, and set in a carmine saucpr this is no help for a man who expects to raise a family of boys and girls on veritable bread and meat. The piano and the lace frame are well enough in their places; and so are ribands and frills and tinsels but you can't make a dinner of the former nor a bed blanket of the latter. And awful as the idea may seem to you, both dinner and bed blanket are necessary to domestic enjoyment. Life has its realities as well as its fancies but you make it all a matter of decoration remembering the-tassels and curtains, forgetting the bedstead. Suppose a young man of good sense and of course of good prospects to be looking for a wife, what chance have you to be chosen. You may cap him or trap him to catch him, but how much belter ? better to make it an object to catch you! Render your selves worth catching and you will need no shrewd mothers or manajrin'r brothers to help yon to find a market. One of our exchanges makes mention of a 'Jenny Lind Tea Kettle which being filled with water and placed on the fire commences to sing in a few minutes. Water is very nourishing. All you have to do is to put it in a pot over the fire, drop in a beef bone, rice, a few potatoes, and a little salt. Among hungry people, this i called the water cure. KOltOW.' A VERITABLE DRAMA. We chanced while at Constantinople, to be well acquainted with the lady whose career has terminated in the tragedy des cribed below. The incidents are copied in the Courier des Elats Unis of this city, from the Semaphore, a journal of Mar seilles, which usually gives the news of the Orient on its first arrival at that port. The event, that paper states, had made a powerful sensation at Constantinople. Home Journal. 2 (translation.) A young Greek, girl of extraordinary beauty, was married, some years since, to an English physician, Dr. Millingen, who had taken up his residence in the capital of the East. After the birth of several children, the husband having discovered an intimacy between his wife and Fethi Pacha, the nephew of the sult3n, procured a divorce. Soon after the divorced beauty made a conquest of Mehemet- Pacha, pacha of Belgrade, who married her on condition of her embracing the Mahome dan religion. Although vsry much in love, Mehemet did not seem, after a while, to be com pletely happy. One day, at last, he re pioached his wife that she had borne him no child. Discovering thus the cause tf his sadness, she determined to retain her empire over him by a cfeeeption. A few weeks after, she preteiided to a prospect of maternity, and, in process of lime, pre sented him with a noble boy bought or stolen for her by a faithful slave who was devoted to her interests. The village which was the birth-place, gave splended fetes in honor of the event, the child was named Belgrade-Bey, and the delighted pasha had not the slightest doubt that the infant was his own. Soon after this, Mehemet was recalled from his government of a province, and sent to London (where he now is) as the Turkish ambassador to that court. But, before his departure, he expressed the wish to have another son, a brother to the beloved and beautiful Prince Belgrade, and his wife declared significantly, at parting, that there was little doubt but his wish would be gratified. Leaving her to fulfil her time at Constantinople, the en voy took his leave, and the child was duly born, the news sent to England, and the name given to the second prince was Usnud-Bey. A few days after his birth, Usnud-Bey fell dangerously ill, and, by order of the physician, he was sent with his nurse to Pera, a rural village on the Bosphorus where foreigners reside, and where the air is healthier than in the city. The infant soon returned in perfect health, in charge of the same faithful nurse who had alone assisted at the two births; but there was one person ia the household who refused to recognize the healthy child as the same one that was sent away. This was an old eunuch, who had brought r;p the pasha from boyhood, and who was the confiden tial master of his dependants. In the presence of the other servants, he said to his mistress: "Madam, if that is Uunud Bey, he has miraculously changed while breathing the air of the infidels at Pera !" The mother said not a word, but, giving the eunuch a look of fierce hatred, she seized her child and left the apartment. But suspicion had taken possession of the mind of the old slave, who had dis covered the history of his mistress and w as well aware of the illegitimacy of Belgrade-Bey. The excessive affection of of Mehemet for that child had long pre vented him, hitherto, from disclosing the secret. This apparent repetition of the deceit, however, made him resolve to clear his breast. He betook himself to Pera, collected with care and segacity, circum stance after circumstance, and established indisputable evidence that the veritable Usnud-Bey died of his disorder, and that another child, bought of poor parents, was substituted in his place. Returning to his mistress; he took the changeling in his arms and boldly addressed her: "Madam, send back this child, I beg of you, to Mossud, the fisherman ! 1 know all !" The pretended mother, at this, became lividly pale, and left him with the single exclamation, "It is well!" Just before the hour of mid-day prayer, the mistress enquired for the 'eunuch. ! As steward ef the household and his master's favorite, be had sumptuous apart ments cf his'own, and a bath to himself. She was answered that he was, that mo ment, in the bath. Her resolution was at once taken. The old roan was attended by two servants while performing his daily ablutions,'and these she found in th anti-room and ordered imnprioiislv awav. - - - t i She was alone with him. "You wished j to know everything?" sheabrutly said. I "Yes, and I know everythig' he replied. "To whom have you spoken of it?" "To no one j'et but I shall write to rny mas ter!" "For how rhuch will you keep the secret?" "I vifl not keep i: I will writ VOL. 7. NO. 5. immediately!" "Here, then, u a seator your letter!" And, with these words, she threw a cord suddenly around the teck of the old man, as he lay in his bath, and sprang back to strangle him. Weak and terrified, he could offer but feeble resist ance, and soon lost consciousness. One of the dismissed slaves had sterhhiiy re turned, and found her struggling at the cord, and exclaiming with the rage cf fury: "You would know all! know more, then!-Write now, to yur. master! write now. old fcoV At these vociferations and the chokings of the victim, the slave fled, spreading the alarm with cries of terror. Some cf the servants rushed into the streets with the dreadful news, and others hurried to the bath-room, where the old eunuch, dragged from his bath, had fsile n sense less on the marble floor. Deliberately unloosing the cord, the inii-tress calmly and silently walked through the terrified crowd, and gained her own apartments. The eunuch had been a kind old maa to the other servants, and their distress a! the frightful scene before them was un bounded. Every possible effort was mado to restore him, but in vain. He rallied for a few moments, summoned strength enough to reveal the circumstances given above, and died with the words cs his lips. All the vast city of Constantinople wa aroused with electric rap'dity by the news. Crowds rushed to tbe pl.rce, and, spite of the high renk cf the guilty wo man, the cadi ordered her to prison. A courier was despatched to London with, the intelligence, and she will remain imprisoned, and tbe affair uninvestigated farther, till his return. The criminal, to all questions addressed to her, p tc u d i y asserts her right to the life cf a eiave, and makes no other attempt ai palliation. Semaphore de Marseilles. The Festive Slate Excilaect In B:it)3 The Times gives a graphic accDunt of the turbulent proceeding in Boslcn in ref erence to the prosecution cf the cwr.ca of the slave Crafts, for kidnapping: The bail required of the prisoners wai $10,000 each, which was promptly fur nished by Patrick Riley and Hamilton Willis, Esqurs. The crowd were evidently waning for the egress the parties, who, it was by some expected, would be mobbed on com ing cut- Indeed, if we are to judge from certain expressions made by both whits and blacks, they were resolved that tbe Southerners should not leavs the plcccj quietly A barrel of tar and seme fev feathers were even spoken of. In fact, there seemed sojrjt? h't'e ground fcr apprehensio:, -tbet some hot-headed fana tics might cause our rity to b d scraced by a riot. In a shrrt tin? a splei.did car riage with a spnn of "whites ' diova ia front cf the door, and Mr. Hughes, assis ted by the Deputy-Sheriff, with much, difficulty got through the crowd at lha door into his carriage, CTit not without losing his hat and getting somewhat hustled about. The crowd now formed a pretty sohd body around the carriage, climbing tfpoa it, canting it from side to side, tearing open the doors fast as they were shut by drivers, and it seemed as if they wen; determined that it should rot go away, but to drug out the Southrner. But the driver jumped upon the box, seized the reins, raised his whip toils extreme height brought it down with a right smart w'.aclc and away went the vehicle with both, door3 dandling open, and the Southerner silting with anair of collectedness within. Some cf the mob had a smart grip on tha spokes and feiloes of the wheels to keep them from revolving, but it was no jro. some two or three of the individuals giv ing ludicrous feats of "ground and loftv tumbling." The team took its course up Court street, at good speed, a lare por tion of the crowd foil wing after, h ung and vociferating threats. Those who remained behind now put themselves on the qui vive fcr the second gentleman, Mr. Knight, but he e!u-?ed the obsevation of most of'.hem by issuing from the side passage on Ccuit street, stepped into a cab, calmly took hi seat, and got away without much trouble pro bably from the fact that the more riotous portion of the mob were eff on the ether scent. The two Southerners left word behind that they should te on the Ctwircn at 9 o'clock this afternoon, where any of the citizens of Boston who might desire to see tfcem, could then hare, that privi!. ege. 7ime is Money. So says aa cid adage In that case, if the clerk cf the weather has anything to do with it we would most respectfully suggest that he gives us a little Jess change. Wild pjrrn5 are abundant at St. Louis,