A ;i in7 "WE GO WHE2E DEMOCEATIC PMNCIPLES POINT THE "WAY ; WHEX THEY CEASE TO LEAD, "WE CEASE TO TOLLOVT." VOLUME IX. NUMBER 14. ) Hi- hi 1 ' ..'; : T Ell HIS. tot."XOUXTAiy SEXTIXEL" is publish ed everv Thursday morning, at One Dollar and Frffi Cents per annum, if paid in advance or vi'thin three months ; after three months Two Dollars -will be charged. No subscription will be taken for a shorter period than six months ; and no paper will be discontinued until all arrearages are paid. A failure to notify a discont'muanc at the expira tion of the term subscribed for, will be consid tr'ed as a new engagement. ADVERTISEMENTS will be inserted at the following rates: 50 cents per square for the first insertion; 75 cents for two insertions; d for three insertions ; and 25 cents per square lor every subsequent insertion. A liberal reduc tion made to those who advertise by the year. U advertisements handed in must have the broper number of insertions marked thereon, or thev will be published until forbidden, and charged in accordance with the above terms. -tjjAll letters and communications to insure tttention must be post paid. A. J. RUEY From the Louisville Times ( TO COl'SIN M ILL. EV J5i:S. A. 1.. ECTER PUFOLK. Oh ! I could love thee as the flowers The crystal midnight dew ; My soul could fold its wings in trust, Thy kindred soul to woo. Eut human sympathy and love, No more can c"er be mine ; No more the withered flower may bloom, Beneath the darkened shrine, Vet I may love thee for thy soul My trembling one has met; And'by thy strong ethereal love, Ilas'softened its regret : IUs breathed in accents soft and low, True sympathy's pweet words, "Which ever more will gently thrill, My spirit's mystic chords. Oh ! rarely do congenial souls Their sister-souls here find ; And oh! how very few does Love Forever truly bind. Cold looks and colder tones are all In Life's drear paths we meet: The throng tread scornfully the heart Of Love, beneath their feet. From maze to maze it wonders on, Through labyrinths deep and dark; No gentle spirit's soothing smiles" Beam o'er love's lonely barque: But if perchance some kindly word, Is softly, sweetly spoken, A chord within the lone heart thrills, That never can be broken. Then will Hove the Cousin dear, Will claim thee near or far; To soar 'mid realms of thought and love, By blossom, sun, or star. And in the hush of eve's soft hour. Full oft thy soul will meet : And with thy lofty spirit hold Affections converse sweet. THE HIXTER'S REVEXCE. A WESTE3N LEGEND. BT MABK riXDEIX. CHAPTER I. A few years since, while wandering in some of. our Kentucky counties which border upon the Ohio river, chance eaused mo to pass the night in the house of one of the oldest surving pioneers of "the dark and bloody ground." The sight of ruch men relics of a departed age, and mem irals of that state of infancy from which our countty has grown iuto its now glorious man hood always possesses for me the highest in terest. I listen to their words with reference and delight. L.never tire of their simple loqua cy, for I feel that it is from their stores of tra ditionary learning, than from the dull pages of historic lore, that we can become fully aware of the peculiar and. distinguishing , features of the spirit stirring times . in which they bore a part. . ' lie, to whom I have alluded, was a fine speci men of his class. Though his once stalwart form was somewhat bent, and his white locks' hung thin upon his broad temples, yet his body and mind .were still active and vigorous. Ilis cheerful laugh',' the Tuddy glow; upon his cheek, and the quiet gleaming of his clear, blue eye," that told the good effects of an early life of tem perance,' and active manly toil. In the oppo site chimney corner- sat the grey haired matron whose love had cheered him through the toils of youth and manhood; and who now shared the ' peace and contentment of his age. ' ' ' 'I soon, fonnd, to my pleasure, that the old man both remembered .well and loved to speak of the scenes of 'his early" days" j and never had -story teller oMTbf youiig,&'niore pleased . and atten tive listener.- It was .a cold, stormy, blustering, winter night. ' Th winds howled around the old farm house and drifted the snow wreathes against the window - panes with a fury that made the greatfir&of logs, that was throwing its cheerful, flickering blazer pver the room, doubly welcome. As the night 'grew colder, we drew our chairs closer around the . hospitable hearth, and while " the young folks-were -enjoying the winter store o$ apples andjriuts, and the old ladj quietly knitting and the.' h.ouW dog slumbering1 on the floor.-my. venerabieXack woodsman detailed ma ny a thrilling anecdVte of the daring of the hun tV and the vengeance, of the red man. .. ' At Jength, 'at "the earnest request of the young folks, told us a story which I will endeavor to repeat accurately, though, without hoping to convey the charm imparted to it by the simple ordi and manners of thenarator. ; Without further preface than a preliminary punch at the great backlog, which sent a cloud of sparks up the huge chimney, yawning like the mouth of a cavern, and roaring as if in de fiance of the storm without, the old man pro ceeded somewhat as follows : ' "For several years after the interior of the state had began to settle up, and was becoming quiet, this part of the country remained contin ually liable to incursions by the wild, roving tribes of Ohio. Companies of Indians, some times consisting of thirty or forty, sometimes of only three or four, were constantly crossing over in canoes at night, setting fire to bnjns and fields of grain, stealing horses, and some times carrying off women nnd children. True, there was one jDetty 'station' not far from where we now are, but the scant, though valiant garri son could do little for the defence of the fron tier, beyond protecting the families immediately within or aiound the walls, and by chasing re treating parties of the enemy to the river. It was about the year 17 , that the Indians, ta king advantage of this defenceless state of the border, increased their depredations to an alarm ing extent. And it was in the spring of that year that there appeared at the station I have mentioned, a man, whose character and actions seemed for a while to infuse new spirits into the desponding frontier men. ' Who ' he was, or whence he came, no one knew, though his singular habits and appear, j ance called forth many inquiries. Tall, sinewy, j and raw boned, with sunbunrt countenance, seamed across the forehead with a deep scar, i deep sunken-eyes, which in moments of excite- j mcnt g'camed with a strange, lurid fire, and dressed in the wild, half Indian costume of the times, he presented a rather remarkable figure. In spite, however, of his looks, his -dress and his accoutrements, there was somethuing in his conversation j.nd manners, which showed that ; he possessed an intelligence and a breeding J above the rude, unlettered men among whom j he moved. j The most prominent feature of his character, ; the one thought of his Soul, seemed to be dead ly, uncompromising hostility to the whole Indi an race. In his ordinary intercourse with men he was shy, taciturn and retiring. Eut in mo ments of the chased and the conflicts, he seem ed changed, transformed, and filled with a mys terious fire, which rendered him an object of wonder even to the bravest of the old hunters who locked upen his reckless daring. Thus uniting to supt rior intelligence, uudaunt. ed cuurnge and lirce energy of purpose, he ac quired at ence, and without appearing to seek it, that ascendency over the minds of the sim ple backwoodsmen, which such qualities must ever gaiu in any community. Yet he seemed, as much as possible, to avoid mingling with his fellows. He refused to live in a stockade fort, but built himself a little hut upon the summit of a hill about three miles distant, where he passed most of his time with no society save that of his dog. j But whenever the alarm was given that the , foo had crossed the river, he was seen at the station, eommardirg, organizing, and planning; a self appointed dictator, to whom all yielded implicit obclienc?. In the pursuit and the con. flict he was ever foremost. He sought to make no prisoners ; death to the enemy was his watch word and his only object. When the fight was I over, he was heard claiming no booty, disputing with no man about his share in the conflict ; but j silently and unnoticed he stole back to his mount ; ain but to resume his solitary life. Thus the woodsmen came to regard Mai with awe and al most with superstitious reverence, and the in quiries concerning his past life, checked by his stern and austere manner, gradually died t away. .. . . There .was but one living being, besides his dog, for whom he seemed to entertain any feel ing of interest or affection." This was a young hunter living at the station, and who had once in an Indian battle, saved the old man's life at the risk of his own. This boy he sometimes suffered to join in hi3 hunting expeditions, and to share his frugal meals. But even to him he never spoke of his past history, and the boy was to discreet to allude to it. . " CHAPTER II. . Months had passed' since the stranger made his first appearance at the fort. Spring and summer had come and gone, and autumn had thrown his rich mantle of bright and mellow' hues over the landscape, when one evening, a few hours ere set of sun, the hunter and his yonng companion might have been seen ascend ing and descending the long, green hills which skirt fhe chores of the Ohio, on their return from one of their long and lonely wanderings among the recesses of the mountains. Descend ing the slope of a thickly wooded hill, they came to the bank of the river, where a .sudden, bend in the stream formed ai little cove; known as the horseshoe. As they were about to cross the lit tle pebbly beach in order to reach the hill which rose in front of them, the hunter's attention was attracted by the unusual and uneasy motions of the dog, running higher and thither, rsnuf5ng the air, and. pushing through the bushes ; which skirted the bank, with a sharp, quick bark,; ,'Ua ! old Snarl ha3 snuffed something in the wind. That dog's never wrong, Ilcre,. Snarl, down, .down, old fellow, before the red skins hear you !' The dog came back and crouched at his mas ter's feet, while he stepped cautiously forward,, looking carefully about for 'tracks,' and peeping anxiously into every thicket. . 'There it is, at last,' said he, suddenly, point ing to the ground and turning a significant look towards his companion. Sure enough, there were too footprints in the sand. They were half ef faced, but the keen eye cf the hunter could de tect at once that they were quite recent, and had been made by a moccasin. After a few mo ment's scarcbithey found, snugly hidden beneath the thick undergrowth that skirted the immedi ate bank of the river, an Indian canoe, contain ing a bag of parched corn, a little venison and some powder. 'Well,' said the old hunter, after a few mo ments' reflection, 'I'll trap the red scoundrels this time.' 'How is that ?' asked his young friend. Why, you see the canoe is so small that not more than two or three can be in the party. They must intend to return BtJon, or they would have brought more provisions and hidden them in a better place. Sol judge they intend to commit their- deviltry to night, and be off be fore day. Therefore, I'll just come down as soon a3 the moon rises, lay in wait until they get here, and then I think that Black Ee:s and myself will answer for two or three scalps to hang up in the cabin. In the meantime, I want you to go to the fort and put the boys on their guard, or some of them may be picked off be fore they know what hurts, 'em.' Well,' said the youth, 'I'm willing to go to the fort and warn them, but you must let me return and stand guard with you here. TI ere may bo more Indians than you expect, and two liUts are better than one anyhow.' 'No, no, boy ; do just as I tell you. There's no chance whatever of there being any more of 3m ; and if there was, why, my old scalp is is worth notingr-at any rate ; but you know it won't do for you to get hurt just about this time.' The old man chuckled, and the young one blushed in spite of his sunburt cheek. He was to be married, in a few days, to a young girl at the station. His friend, however, paid no attention to his blushes, but carefully replacing the canoe, and erasing their own foot priuts, he led the way up a rugged path which lay before them. This path wound along the si la cf a narrow gorge, shut out from the river by cliffs, and rendered gloom y by their eternal shadows. After a tedious walk of half an hour, the rocky path brought them to the summit of the hill on which the hunter' hvt was built. CHAPTER HI. The hut wa? rf the rudest and simplest con struction, and almost hidden by the thick growth of young trees, wild vines and bushes which the hunter had left undisturbed. In front of it stretched tho green sward for a few yards, and then the hill went abruptly down, forming an almost perpendicular precipice, at the foot of which it sloped off again to the river's bank, which was thus a considerable distance from the hut. As the two hunters gazed around from this lofty eminence, the scene spread but below nd around them was one of almost J indiscribablo beauty. Far as the eye could reach, stretched a sea of hills, more or loss abrupt, and covered from bnsc to summit with a mantle of foliage rich with all the varied hues of autumn. West ward lay a level expanse of forest, over whose tops arose the curling smoke of the distant sta tion, the only visible sign of human existence. At their very fact, apparently, flowed the broad Ohio, rolling on in sluggish mnjesty, undistur bed, as yet. by the keel of the steamboat or the snort and whistle of the engine. And now, the setting sun, in his dying glories, poured a rich flood of light over the whole scene, making the ripples of La Belle Riviere'-' seem a flood of molten gold. " - - ; i .The prospect was Indeed gloriou?, but the yOung1 hunter in vain endeavored upon that evening to make his friend participate in his feelings of delight and admiration. J During the whole day he had seemed unusually gloomy and taciturn, and as evening advanced, a deeper me lancholy settled upon his brow. Now he sat upon the green grass, with face buried in his hands, and returning brief, often incoherent an swers, to the Trords of his companion. At length, as if endeavoring to Telieve himself from his own meditations, he raised his head and said,' with an evident effort to be cheerful : - - 'And so, my boy, you are going to get mar ried soon, they tell me ? Well,'well, you needn't blush so Molly's a good girl, and wilU make a hunter like you a first rate wife. Uut these are trouble some' times to be 'marrying and gir- en in marriage.' Ah! I remember '"' "He paused, and his.'mihd seemed absorbed in painful xecollection. . , , i ': What is' it that depresses ,yon .?': said ,'the youth, coming nearer,' and laying his-hand gent ly upon the old man's shoulder.' ' ' ' .'(' :!." . 'Eoy,' he answered, at length, this is the fifth anniversary of ay sorrow; that which made me the outcast, wandering hunter you sec me now. Never Uefore have I sought for human sympathy-. But I love you a3 a son, and some thing seeris forcing me to speak. Five sum mers agoJtMs very hour, that same sun looked down upon a happy home in West Virginia. It was an humble log house, it is true, situated in a lonely spot, amid hills and woods, but it was full of comfort and happiness. That ! home was mine.' For years, all went well with me. My crops, my cattle were unsurpassed. ' But above fcll, I had a wife who was an angle upon earth, and two babies, a boy and a girl, who would have made a desert happy with their sweet laughter and their childish sports. . 'Though remote from any human habitation, and though the Indians were occasionally seen and heard of in tho neighborhood of my dwel ling I yet felt no fear. I had never, wronged them, but on tho contrary, had often fed and clothed half starved straggles from the tribe, who would wander to my door, and blindly I trusted to their magnanimity for the safety of all I held dear. Well, a little later in the day than this, just five years ago, I was seated by my hearth with my children on my knee, while my wife was bu sied in the preparation of our evening meal. The sun went down, and darkness came on, but the air was so pleasant that I left the door open to enjoy the fresh breeze that seemed making music among the branches of the great caks be fore the doer. I had lent my dogs to a neigh bor fur a hunt, and there was nothlug to give warning of danger save the melancholy hooting of an owl in the neighboring forest. More than once my wile spoke of the dismal effects that sound had upon her feelings, but I laughed nt her fears. & nddenly as she was crossing the room, I hctrd her utter a scream of terror, I turned, and beheld a dozen dusky forms crowd ing into the doorway. Even now I can see their white teelh chining as the fire light flashed up on them. Springing from my seat, I was snatch ing dowu ltty-Vinft which always hung-over the fire place, when I received a blow from a toma hawk, which made that scar upon my forehead. A thousand Iigh(s gleamed in my eyes, and hor rid sounds echoed in my ears as I fell insensi ble. Severe as was the blow, I soon returned to consciousness, owing, no doubt, to the exces sive flow of blood. How awful the sight which I beheld ! My wife standing bound in one cor ner of the room, the little children sobbing and clinging to her knees as if for protection, while the fiends were heaping all my little furniture into the centre of the room, evidently with the intention of firing the house. Making a des perate effort to rise, I gained my feet, and stag gered forward a step or two, when the blood gushed over my eyes, and I fell helpless and blinded upoii the floor. The shrieking and sob. bing of my wife and children at this pitablc sight, were mingled with a laugh of derision from the savages, who supposed that I was dead at last. At this moment one of their seutinels rushed in, exclaiming in their own language, Fly ! fly ! the whites are coming.' 'I heard a few words of consultation. Then command was given in tones I shall never for. get. Then came blows and shrieks. They were murdering my children ! Oh, God ! how I writhed and struggled, in vain, to rise ! In a moment their infant cries 'were stilled in death. Then came a crashin blow, a fall, a groan, and all was over! They had murdered my wife ! Yes, they were all gone 1 all all! not one left !" The big tear-drops fell like rain through the old man's clasped hands, and his strong frame shook with agony. The young man said noth ing, but wept. At length the hunter calmed himself, and proceeded : . "I became again insensible. A party of hun ters who happened to be in the neighborhood came in time to snatch my body from the burn ing dwelling, but not soon enough to take ven geance on the murderers. No, thank God, that task was left for me ! "I was taken to a station. I was nursed and tended mct kindly, but for weeks I lingered upon the brink'of the ' grave. ' I wished to die, I was delirious not only with pain and fever, but with grief and 'rage. . But, at length, good treatment and my own iron constitution proved victorious. I recovered my health and strength of body, but there was a fever at my heart wlich no time, no medicine could cure. I came forth twenty years older in feelings and appearance My hair was grey and my face wrinkled, as you seem them now. But my change in body was nothing to my change in soul. I, who before was too kind hearted to have harmed a worm, wa3 now a ti ger, thirsting for human blood. I thought of nothing, prayed for 'nothing, but revenge ! I sold my land, ' and swore never to rest until the last of that band had fallen beneath my hand. I have nearly , fulfilled my vow. Though I saw thein butmce'f' each "of their features was burn ed into my brainarid I could not mistake them. Day and night,' Eummer and winter, alone - and with bands of men, over' rivers and mountains, .through forests and morasses, in all shapes and in all disguises, I have1 tracked and followed them. They made me a demon, and the demon has turned against and rent them. In their tents at midnight with their wives around them, in the battle-field, and alone ia the dark forest, I have met and slain them! One after another they have fallen, and still one remains the most subtle and ferocious of them all; and I have followed lam here. He leads a band upon the Ohio side, and I have watched and sought for him day and night. They call him the Black Wolf of the Prairie. You have heard of him be fore; but when w e meet you will not hear of him again!" The hunter clenched Lis rifie fiercely, and was silent. His companion sat mute and motionless. CHAPTER IV. Tho boy had not sat thus many minutes, how ever, listening to the low hard breathing of his excited friend, when his attention was attracted by the sight of a familiar object floating upon the river. It was the large boat belonging to the station, and rowed by an old faithful negro. The fluttering of a female dress in the etern of the boat, revealed the presence of his sister and his betrothed. They had come oiil to meet hiin on his return from the chase. Jumping from tho grass to hail them, his step was arres ted by an occurrence which struck him at once with terror and amazement. The river bank, far below him, was lined with a thicket of young trees, matted together by a luxuiient growth of vines and creepers of every description. From the thicket he beheld a thin curl of smoke arise, followed by the report of a rifie and a single wTar-whoop. Before he could move or speak, the old negro had fallen heavily from his seat into the water, and two' savages were seen to spring into the river, and with their rifles held above their heads, gain the boat, now drifting with the current. With a cry of horror the young man grasped his rifle, and rushing forward, would have plunged over the precipice, had not the strong hand of the hunter, laid upon his shoulder, ar rested his steps. "Stop, rash boy, or you will ruin every thing!" "Hands off, old man, I say! My sister and Mary ! I must save them !" "You must, and you shall. Follow me at once ! If the Indians sec you, they will push across the river, aud they will be lost forever." By this time the Indians had placed them selves in the bow and stern cf the boat, and were sculling her along, keeping her in the cur rent. The boat was large nnd heavy, and their progress was not rapid. But the young man saw at a glance that his companion was right ; and, accustomed to yield implicit obedience to his dictates, he turned reluctantly and followed him down the same narrow pass which had bro't them to the hut. "Back, Snarl! stay here, sirrah!'' said the hunter to the dog, who would have followed them. "And now, my boy, look to your tools, we have work ahead !" Away, like bloodhounds on the trail, they started down the rocky path. The sun had set, and the twilight glimmer which was left served only to throw strange, dark shadows over their ; rugged pathway; but with the firm, unerring ! tread of the hunters "in a mountain land," they dashed forward at full speed. The contrast be tween the two was great. The one, furious and j half demented at the idea that those he loved best on earth were in the hands of the brutal savages, grasped his rifle with a very death-grip, and with clenched teeth, sprang and bounded like a wild deer startled from his covert. The oth er, older and more accustomed to restraining outward signs of emotion, went as swiftly, but with the long, measured tread of a pursuing panther, taking care, as he went, to look to the priming of his rifle, and to loosen his long hunt ing knife in his scabbard. Few were the min utes (though they seemed like hours to the youth) ere they emerged upon the smooth level bjach of the cove. It was, as we have said before, a little, pebbly place, a few yards square, with hills coming gently dawn to it upon three sides. On that side furthest, but only a few yards dis tant from the shore, lay a giant oak, which had been uprooted in some ong prvious storm, and which now reclined, like a fallen monarch, in stern and silent majesty, with its giant arms still lifted up towards heaven. Behind this nat ural rampart the two hunters placed themselves, with the long barrels of their rifles supported by its trunk, t : .. '.,., . The harvest moon had 'now risen in, all its splendor, shedding a glorious flood of light over tho scene. The river seemed ono bed of liquid silver. The fog was rising, and the distant hills stealing out through their hazy azure mantle, seemed like ghostly sentinels or mountains in dream-land. The nearer forests, as they seem ed to clamber up the steep hill-sides, .were hero tipped with silver, here wrapped in impenetra ble gloom; A little ridge which ran out into the river from one end of the cove, giving it its peculiar shape, was crowned by a bristling ar ray of yoang forest trees that stood out with strange distinctness against the clear ble sky. ' "Be still, boy P eaid-the old man, in a whis per, as' the youth moved uneasily in his posHk-n: "They will be here soon." All was still, indeed. The river did make a low, rippling, splashing noise among the bushes that hung down into its waves, and an owl in a neighboring tree sent forth his long and melancholly hooting, but all else was calm and noiseless. "Curso that owl !" muttered the old man, for getting his own inductions ; "it was just that way he hooted this night five years ago. Tho young man shuddered as the tale of hor ror ho had listened to was thus brought to hia mind, and made him reflect how soon th same fate might fail upoa hi3 sister and his Vride. A moment more and the low splash of oarg ! heard ; another and the boat swept rapidly around the projecting point which formed tha upper end of the cove. In the bright moonlight every figure was plainly discernable. In the stern sat a small Indian, steering, and occasion ally speaking to the two girls ia the middle of the boat, who, with terrified countenances, lay clasped in each other's hands, as if for protec tion. In front stood a tall and magnificent lock ing fellow, in all the war-fincry of an Indian chief, with scalp-lock, feathers, paint, and silver bracelets. He, too, handled an oar, while his rifle lay at his feet. As the boat came near enough for them to dis tinguish the features of those on board, the old man started as if an adder had stung him. "By heavens! 'tis the Black Wolf! Thank God, the hour is come ! Don't move," he whis pered between his clenched teeth, "until I say the word; then fire at the smaller Indian." The youth feit excited, also, but by a stron" effort, quelling their emotions, the two lay mo tionless as statues, while the polisLed tubes of their rifles gleamed like fire in the moonlight. The boat strikes the shore. The chief steps out, and order the girls to rise and follow him ; but, insensible with grief and fear, they neither hear nor heed his command. The smaller Indi an, enraged at their obslinac, rises with an cath, and stepping forward, clutches Mary by the arm, as if to pull her from her seat. Tho young man can contain himself no longer. A quick, clear report rings out upon the air, and the smaller Indian, with a single cry, leaps up and falls dead in tho boat. The old hunter, ta ken by surprise, fires hurridly, and a half-smothered groan from the chief, as he springs back into the boat, tells that he is wounded, but not mortally, lie seizes an oar and pushes the boat from the land. Quick as thought, with a bound like that of a tigress robbed of her young, and a terrible shout of vengeance tho hunter has sprung into the boat, and grappled with hia last and most deadly enemy! But th warrior though wounded, is not con quered. The long, keen blade of an Indian scalping knife gleams an instant in the moon light the next, it finds a sheath in the hunter's breast. But there is no time for a naennA Mm the hands of the Avenger are at the chief tain's throat. The cry of "Blood for blood," rings in his ears ! The boat rocks with the ter rible struggle. They totter, they fall with a heavy splash, and go down in the terrible em brace of death. A sullen wave, a few bubble and the dark waters of the Ohio roll over tho hunter and his Indian foe. Such was the JIun tor's llevenjc ! "And were their bodies never found ?" I in quired, when the old man had finished his story. "Yes; long year3 afterward, when the wa ters were unusually low, in a bed of driftwood which must have lain upon the bottom for half a century, two skeleton forms were found by a startled fisherman, still locked in a last embrace. They have been buiied upon the summit of the hill, where once stood the huuter's hut, and there they repose side by side." "And the young hunter what of him?" "I am he, and there is his young bride,'' and he pointed with a smile to the grey-haired matron, in the opposite chimney corner. I looked up, and saw the eyes of the old cou ple filled with tears. Columbian and Great West. . " A writer in the Wilmigton Herald, says the following rule Jiavc been aoopted bv hiiddla aged married gentlemen, when they assume thr, privilege f kissing their young and pretty c.r,a sins. They certainly seem to have formed a ve ry accurate conception of the proper manner in which this innocent luxary shoul d ie en joyed: ' ..." Of course you must be taller rhaa la(y you intend to kiss ; take her right haud in yours, and draw her tightly to you, pass your left arm over her right shoulder, diagonly down across her back, under her left arm, 'press her to your bosom, at the same time she will throw her head back and y 0u have nothing to do bu lean a little forward and press your lips to hers' and the thing is done; don't make a noise over it, as if you were firiog off percussion caps, or trying tho water cocks of a steam engine.., nor pounce down upon it like a hungry hawk upon an innocent dove, but gently fold the damsel ia your arms without deranging the economy of her tippet or rude, and, by a sweet. presr when r;er mouth revel in the blissfulncos of vnr situation, without sraackinc vour llrs on it a -yu trould over a roast duck ' " ' ; f t . 1 ' i f i v ? 5 f f , , i' u i ' ' h ; ?! i t t 1 X