' -r--' " - lvtfjzyj V t . L . . . .f ... '. f ; 'vi il l t r 'Vr' , j: ") -tl3 t tU) - 'frl JHJS BIESSIHG3 OS qOWSKSTT, USE Tffil JSf HEAL, SHCr2 LZ ZZZZZCVTZD AIXHE TJPTO JHE HKJH AND THE LOW, THE RICH AH D THE ?00E. 'Mr:' i IBW SERJIJS. - , -lawwca ; i .EIJNSBURG, 1855. L ' '" HUM II ifil .1. . . ' VOL. 2. NO. 41 1 JTHE DEMOGI'fA'F SENTINEL, is publish ' ed every Wednesday-morning, in Ebensburg, -' Cambria Co., Pa;,1 at $1 60 per annum, IF rain ? advance, if not $i will be.charged. -jDVEUTIE5ENTS will bo conspicuously pr . jl square-3 insejon,., ; ; , ; ' Every subsequeutjnscon . . ; i square a monms, e- ; 'V ;:v 1 '' ?''': 'Z 1 year, , : ' ' 5 -""col'ii' 1 year, " "V1 Baa ne: Cards; -' :. : ; j : v; W-OC-TrelJinoi constitute a square. po '- 2 .00 ' -3(0 AO ' , , ' -' 'I : r' 'br the i?eaiocrat Setttind. ' ' The ! ll9w9g4ines ' were BUggested on 'hearing f the tieath of Margaret Williams, daughter of jthejae Rowland Williams,' deceased, who recent ly died near this place ... t - To the Meinory of oar Departed Maggl. r . . Sad, ad4 are the causes for sighing, ',4 ' t. AnI mournful the message 4 Jiear ; . , v " ; Enveloped in sorrows most trying, ;,. The tidings are borne to my ear. ., ylYhat tidings T For whom am I mourning'? Why thus are my toars freely shed ? , Ah! heard ye not what ? 'twas this morning i tie I learned that our JIaggie was dead. - , Dead ! Yes. Never more shall w see fyer, No more shall w1)caf that weet voice, Which Echoing gladness" find pleasure, " Made all in her -presence rejoice. y . ':T- -ii '-" ' 5'- . t ;.. : ii On, earth tur communion is ended : N more in this wot Id shall we meet f ; .' uij Tho our voices w.ere wont to be blended,' sr-'i Right glad Obc another to greet; ! ?v : 'Tis done, for awhile we are parted, ' " -Awile has she left us betund . . T ;; ; To mourn her thus early departed, : .- K ; -And strive tne same iieawen to naa. ". 't -But why dearest, why. hast thou left ns J ..7 - And whither thus "soon hast thou fled ? .: left you to go to my Jesus : . -' stt .To Heaven my, way havel sped.;-.". ''r;J VSIy body the while will belying, f r, , Knshrouded by coffin and pall, ' ? ' : . J Where coracth no sotnw ncr jjighing, f" ' ' t: Where Peace is thu i portion of sut.. 1 There silently leave .nje to slumber, J - ;r ' " And wlicn tha last trumpet sliali sound, : s" ' 1'H hurst toe tomb's fetters asunder jj 'i ' ' leave my mipriaoniog mound. - - And soaring aloft at his bidding, v : My Judge's right hand will I sk, : M .,',?! j - There but to await th glad tidings, " , "'" i" Come hitlier ye lowly and meek."' Coma hither inlierii the kingdom , Prepared for the host of redeemed, Who rescued from -dun!; by myTiiusom, il r- .By' iue are now kindly esteemed." ; r 'l My body and soul thus united, t ' ''-; ' : ... t'l'il enter that heaven of rest, ". ' . ' ' o for ever and sver iltlighted ' t, V j . I'll j'in in the song of the blessed. . ; , Tliat song whirh shall never be eudjl ' ' ' 5 uX)t praise to Emanuel's name, ' ,! . Who down from his Father jftesceuded, r . . On earth to establish his reiga. ' " n : Then weep not, O ! weep not dear parents, i " Dear sisters who loredrr.e,-lear friends, , ' ' . O! weep not thyigh now I am abcnt, Time but in eternity cuds. - To, me, be assured that cttrnity - - Happy as endless will .prove, ' . . . .' . r : .Then strive ye my friends and my family r ;t To ensure yon a treasure above. - Written to her memory by SS: .A Fbienp.' ';r f : CimiTXJffYER LOST.;- ; ' vi ; .tn-. -..j.-i -.A .. .. - . Why did. you not mate a bow to those -ladies when you passed them? 'said Frank Masters to Joe Burns, his companion. " " t Bow to them,' repeated Joe, ' why should 1 1 ' I don't know who they are; ' v ' - -J .Nor do I, but that does not signify,' re f turned. Frank; j '.they are ladies you may bo , feure, atid we ought to show them respoct.' ' r How do I kutw they are ladies T said Joe; . ladies are not likely to be wakh jhere ; be . aides. I don't think they arc so fine,a5ter all.' v, . .Well, it doa't follow that they ain't ladies, .and real ladies for all . that, magter Joe, re j turned Frank ; I should sooner think that they -are, for, the very reason that, bey are not so very fine ; but I am certain, quite certain that t they are" ladies., ,? , . ' , : - ' What inakea yflu o.tjure V demmded joe." . I should like to know how you can. tell real to. Frank -waa pussied. For an answer. . ' Jt M ,ot always easy. to pqnvey to others - the. im-i 's.re"aAV.Bca our own minds, however cor- ' erectly tey may. be formed, the mental vision ' ln?y., ?Frcctr wnere definitions may ctterly f f3. .-, tr .. ' etr Joei r thonghr qu didn t know muebt about the matter 4'y waY . Yon don't know anythtng about it, r?ecdn.' t ? ' I da know, though, said Frank, warmly , There is something 1 don't Know whi to call it verjfifferentjn the appearance of real ladies,,, and those, wtowish to be thought 1 jEfchlJ'thejr'dd.noC look'fonceited, and' they . don't walk prpudl and when they pass j o'u, it ,; is so because thej are 'eo grand you are afraid vto push near. them, batoiiitthin-tht'fa bo t. Sweet and vet SO- t" 'don't "rnenh friftiisi"fT . y ij L . " don t nvean seyer-TOmethinjf.f&at makes one feel i is.HghJ,' to touch one's hai'to tTaenj ; and - thev dnn1 'ritri' 'Tf they will give you akind'i'and .ord, when the others will fi Jtner.' bow VC kPUe Jo r"' Ibo'a ftWX do.' ' 1 ' - ' " ' Sie.ak to them, saji Frinkj You .will ) dre Bj sd J(je, eak Jpdeed ! Afld do oi ' syppose tha.t yo do Besk to .'ToJjs 6.ure,-I do,' said be; .'only speak ,? nno- speak sypdJj too ? j don-'b believe- it, t what's .mpre, I don't Liev replied ; Joe, " ' and r j - t. e you uare epea& to one. .. jt dare. sid Frank, firmly.; Then en speak to those ladies,' said Joe. y i .'And so 1 will, returned I? rank.; , I am afraid we haye been staying here longer than we ought, and that it must be r late ; and so saying he ran after the ladies, who were thus unconsciously the subject of dispute, and ad vancing a few teps before Joe,: who. had fol lowed him to be' certain of the fact, he Ap proached them and -respectfully touch nig his hatr asked them if they would be bo god as to tell him what o'clock it was. i : !.;:' , Both instantly stopped. . I woud win ly,' said one; in a jjefltle .a,ol cheerful voiced ' iff could l.but (have ieffc my watch at home.' I can faff- ''Jflfp t08" other." It is two o'clock, exaqtfy.", (Frank thanked -her. . But I ihope you are not ,oo late for Bchool said sue.; it is a bad habit to break' 'in jytpQn : your hours for study.' A . r l,, - We were' -not going to - school,'.' returned Frank, "we!bv holiday; M'.again .bowing, he respectfully fell back. The,look he glanced at Joe clearly indicated,' ' i tqld jou so ;, but .before he could' give utterance o the forda, ope of the ladies called to him. ; -.; 2 ; As jou are na,t going to school,' said she,' -yo' will perhaps show the nearest way .to Holmbrner. " ' ' - ' : V- o yojjpean that low Jjjeee of ground at the bottom of "the park.' where the water al ways lies ? inquired Frank; 'Iltnowi exactly where it is, but you nrast not go this way, it Assent was given. - Frank begged- to take the little basket which one of the ladies held in her hand, and reaching the' spot, he like a pivi:eer conducted them through the 'marshy grouo'd 'whioh.it jrojld have been impossible for them to have crossed withojat suqb a guide The worst part, however, waa stHl to be tra versed. ' ! Tlie ladies had hitherto pursued their way wjthhe greatest good humor, laughing frequently "at 'tbe'4geT they - had to encoun ter ; but they were now aland,' ther to, go (forward cr return was" an aVternative , of evils. ' .StilObeir'inerriraeut was not damped,' nor, were 1 Frank's courage and' activity les soned through the encouragement their man ner give him. : ' - -t -. t si ' I did not think it was so bad as this. said he;'but never mind ladies, we' shall; get one then the other, Set your foot here it won't give way -now here, don't be afraid ;' and :at last' He', held out his ! band to the lady nearest him, which was gbidly taken, and de-; siring Joe to do the same to the other," they both reached the-dry ground without ' much further inconvenience. ; ' ' " - . - .t n ; '. You are a very civil, clever jll.Uje boy, sa'vd .he lady whom he had principally gui ded. ':?-Whatis jry;r name f I - k-vi '' ' Frank Masters, ma'ma, replied he. ;i .ly '' k And your companion's,'' my guide V in quired the lady whose name acpeared toi be tmily. - ' 1 - - . ..' ."ri-'t , Joe murmunngly answered-he r. n tl,.w ( Wyr, , Frank paid the first lady, -' I- am very much obliged to you, and I shall still be move so if you assist me to procure what I now see, after all our perils, it i impossible for rue to procure for myself, ? ,Look at that plant ;" -'-'' ' : That pretty one growing out of the water 7 aeked Frank following the directions of her finger. V'Ooff'ftd" can, never get that; and there is another like it,- and another, handso mer still.'- ' - - ' ; ' 'How",. vexations P exclaimed both ladies; how we shall be. laughed at when we, tgjjl the result of our adventure I Jj 'i2s,: ' ' Hut ypu shall have them, said Frank with animation, "and motioning to Joe to doi-the same, he turned his back to. the ladies, took off his shoes, pulled up his trowsers as high as he could, and waded through mud and wa ter to te prije. r:'ndi this, and this,' cried tie ;" would you like fliisMo'ther plants at tracted his notice At. length he returned ladened with his apoils, ? which he gave up with great satisfaction' to' the ladies,! who had stood , by. thewater's edge eagerly directing him, and who "now expressed in hvefy terms their obligation to him, and their pleasure at the addition -they Jiad gained to their botanical treasures. - ;r.l.'l-v-.-.-.-..;-';,.;.v y -'j- .Frajik'was . now as happy as' possible, and even Joe'could but partake f his" grat ification ; but there was a coarseness and a consequent shyness about him that made him much, less prepossessing than" Frank. ." The ladies were conducted by a drier path on their return, though, the guidance and skill of the" boys were 'not more necessary - than accepta ble." Before they had reachad the direct road, however, rncch pf the family history of Frank had been divulged. " rle nad 'five brothers and sisters, all younger than him ; two of them were' very sickly, and his mother worked night asd day V Only, himself went to school and he ,erped his mother in the evening ta teach' the little oner to'read'. ';rIia father was out of employ, in consequence jf the death of a gentlemaa in whose sejriee he had been for some years, and he waa now frying to get the under gardener's placa at the ball f ifxhe jsue ceeded, all would be rightrita moAer said ; they should ; haye good wages and a eottage. d o?yWr advantages - but a great many were afWthe place; and his father was very much afraid he shojil.l I nobodr to ' speak for him. fa. fitA' hA r - m, t . ' . WWW A,UAU was a very ama renueman, or td the Duch ess, wnien wouia &e better MUl, fbr thooh such a great man. he would not refuse her hui" father Uiought, of his getting the station. ' :: Do you- know the Duke when you see him asked one of his attentive auditors . ..; , : . No ma'ma,' replied Jrank. 4 1 never saw him that I know of, nor any one 'else at the hall," for they have not been here for a good while till now.' . V And who teaches you the good . manners lich I must see vou possess 7 demanded "she" which I was pleased with the : way in which '"you i fenlii Frank, she often says disre?pect is notrt sin gle fault, there must he always . something wrong at the root of it au J that'll is a ftoci c ignorance if not. what JiSj'wofae. V. ! . The ladycOTnmeded uni hh'rj jfor follow ing the inBtru'ctions is mother, so strictly. Frank' listened 'with roouni Jitnloy,, "but neither dared reply or'fiak'e jhfs Jeava.'' e was wishing the adies- would' him to go and thusVciieye lh.13'' effijfsar ;rasament, ; when turmng'an angle 6? the road, ' a gentleman came suddenly upon tjheml w " . '.T egari w be uneasy about 'ou' both, said he hasteririg ioem. '; ''"When1 1 heard were vou were crone; and 'without anY'obe with tou, J was coming inw search of yiJij. But wbo bave-we bere r : :The ladies, nowJanghing. related their ad- I vepture, and foe assistance they had received from the" boys, but particularly , from Frank And, now,' paid fthe fadyl TAhoni Frank ever after called Kit lady, ' vcAiv4(ave"an opportu nity of sneaking to the Duke yourself in favor of your father, or if you' prefer it, I will do 'so for you. ' Had all chances of success depen ded upon his son. Masters would certainly have failed, so completely waa the poor boy overcome with surprise and llama. ; The Duchess soiled. ' sr This little boy's father,' said she, addres sing, the gentleman has applied for Tomp kin'a place as nndor . gardener, and 1 ni ust entreat you to bestow it upon ."him. The conduct of children is pretty' sure 'evTdence "of the character of' parents, and I have seen and heard enough of hjs to prepossess mo in their The Duke shook hiSfhead and smileji. You are""ap to be partial, salii hel - What says Lady Emilyr ' That I can noi cossibte interfere' with the jfucneFS wisnes, repiiea sne. must give my votey too, father.', . ! in favor of, our little guide's . 4 Now run away and tell your mother,' said the Duehess, njt ason -s she is aetUedin -her new cottage" fvull "eonie and see her. Frank needed no second bictdipgvbat the mo ment' he was out of sight and hearing, he exclaimedViPidn't I tell you ' Joe they were ladies? what a good thing it was that I did as mother bid me.' Vy Instructor - r-..-i - I .,Fom the Knickerbocker for July. , - Capt. Samuel Brady and Cornplanter. Many of the wild legends of border Btrife and Indian barbarity that have been enacted along the shores' of the Allghen and Ohio, have never been rescued from the dim and fa ding remembrance of past ge. But occa sionally a story of thrilling interest is snatch ed from the lingering reccrds of the red' man. " The story I am about' to" relate, I received from an old Indian pilot of the Allegheny. It " was many'ears fcjjo'whei 'thaV'stera old chief Cornplanter, (whose remains now repose in silence and loneliness on the banks of : that beautioua river he loved so well,) was in bis glory.1 1 Ilia tribe roamed over "the dense and. unbroken forests along Us baksfearless.'ttn molested; and free. ' r ' " , n-J--" His people were hostile to the whites and never lost any opportunity to lie in ambush and seize the lonely voyager as he descended the riyer, and confine'Junl to the stake and tho torture'.'- But the "watc'eful", shrewd an'4' dead ly foe of Cornplanter and tha whole twany race," was the indomitable and fearless Capt. Samuel. Brady. This .veteran -pioneer and Indian : hunter was one' Oftltbse noble speci mens of the hardy foresters who plunged fear lessly into the jn terminable forests that then overspread so large a portionof the we's'tern States. : " s: ' :". i Like Darnel Boon, Lewis. Weizell, Siriion Kenton and others, who made Indian hunting a pastime,, bis. deadly -hate of the Iad'aacnd his burning ;r passion for hunting ' Ehiu' dSw'd, amounted.to-a. monomania.-' This hatred was in consequence of the wrongs they had inflic ted upon bis family his father, Capt. John Brady, and his brother having1 fullu vicjinu to the tomahawk and scalping knife. '. . . - lue scene oi me preseiii ysry uus piace known to boatmen and raftemcn as "Brady's Bend," and where now the. noise and bustle of anew manufacturing town called the "Great Western" resounds along the shores that then echoed only'tb the whoop of the eayase or the panther's scream- ' . ' ' ' ---.. . . . .i ' i -1 It is a pena . in me river oi ,nme mues in longth, and IsKsouietimes called the " Nine mile liend," and is scarcely half a mile across the ne&k..' rHere in this bend,. Cornplanter returned frb'm somo icfessful-inroad upon the whites,- and eeoureil several prisoners, by tying then to as many trees, while hia si?aT thy and hideously painted followers were bus in making preparations foe the faggot and the torture. . . i-- -- '-.: - . .. ;-A - The stale waa erected and the faggots pre pared witli all the cbolne& atfd refinement of Indian' barbarity: ,l It -was a beautiful evening; the sun was just sinking behind the lofty hill upon the opposite shore. Calmness had thrown its oily wand upon the Allegheny's' crystal tido, and it slept . .I'ho.fUll roudd niood, ji'st bursting - through tno flitant :biue, 'ecAX its mellow, beam's nptintheleepin rivdfland and danced upon its placid bosom. The melancholy -note of the whipror-will from' the adjoining' thicket fcU sweedy upon the5 ear.. The victims were; Unbound and led forth to 'the place'pf torture;1 At' tjiis'moment a tIc Vhh up amdng the frownin nicks u. iAnnk) ntrt from the thick t "mlocls that crowned the lull' oppoiitei: htfcid G6m$UbUsi bowed to me when we met ou first, and sur prised, I own,-'si jourmpatmoii's' rjolu'eness. -tr Oh ! mother teaches us to do' thaif, feplied in the Indian tongiie," iiorlning Juin that T'Xe waa an Indin,,w'arnor;'fa! returned from the war ir-jjaui wim agooaiy numoeroi prisoners.. j.e ur.tarea inai v.e ceremonies oi me tor :3 'ot aavage'eJAIcrngg. ' 'To this Cornplan l' consented. '' Tie flames1 "that Lad teefi fLjuuieu were tr.nuguibueu, ana uie prisoners :uu uvuuu iu me trees. la 10 meantime. Bradv. for it was he who tad deceived the wily 'Indian, with a body of taen, moved Silently up the . rlvt Iyer to a place i nown as " Truby's Ripple, and there ford- p 1fX- e yi"r, - v :? r-'i the neck of Ltii'peiid; and moved notatv-ral j down ptth tne "sai'aes. So cautious wa his approach 'that 'the ludians were completely cut off from retreat before they became alarmed. -, ,-( Brady's men hemmed them' in from behind, wHtfe th;e "Iflegbery idllei ih'frtitit.- i;The first, intimation to the savages of his"approih was communicated by a deadly discharge' from his unerring' rifles. The Indians fought with desperation, but were overpowered ; all were killed or taken prisoners save t,he chief Cbrn planter't ho, finding JilmM IjUobe',' plunged into the river, and'ahHrorth'e jother shore. Being a' good' swimmer,' he remained sever al minutes under -water, but as he rose for breath, he was; greeted with p. snowier ''of- bnf leta , In this way, alternately swimming un- der water as long as he could hold his breath, and then rising to the surface, be escaped unhurt,-- and reached the ' other shore in safety, secreted himself behind a large standing roclc The prisoners were" of course eJtonnd, and all joined in the jollification abd"jby at the timely "and unlooked for release.' T The rock that enielOed'Cornjlanter from Brady's bullets was pointed out to me by the old Indian in a recent trip down this river- " It '.known as the Cortplanter's Rock.' The old Indian gave me ifad "story with a sad and dejected, countenance, m broken' lSngH8il:rt,'-, ? 1 ' ' l Alas 1 .what a change 1 - where then the sheeny tide of the beautiouB Alleghepy jjarted only to tee swift-skimming birchen eanoe and echoed to the wild voices that came out of the dense, dotk forest, cow is ' heard the shrill whistle of the' eteam-pipe and tlie rushing of the mighty steamer. Where the tawny sav age then reclined upon the shady banks from his pursuit of the deer,- the panther1 Siil the bear," or rested from the war-jp'atli)'.s jpfo'w the scene of life and activity'.' The tall '"old forest has receded from before the advance of civilization, and given place to farm, "beautiful villas and bustling tqwns. The Indian, too, has passed away : but a few, and they but miserable, decaying relics of what they once were., are now occasionally seen, the descendants of the proud race" thaf once could call these hills,' and groves and rivers all their own. Alas 1 in the language of the poet: . . .. , -. " Chieftains and their tribes have perished, i like thfc( thickets where they grew." ? . '' , Ag RicuxTrKAL DivisiON or thi Patekt Okfice Thb PbesekvatioW or Potatoes. Sji-rJ'. N". jCnlcr, a correspondent of the Patent Office, speaking" of the preservation of potatoes for seed, says the potato, .' when first obtained from its native - mountains, was a small, watery1, a'nd even bitter1 tuber, but by cultivation it has been brought - into so high and refined a state that most of the countries of the" 'civilized globe look at it as one of the most important articles of food. In ndwer to the question by what means has ieen made & piiif f article of food, he sSyiby violating the laws 'of 'Nature"' Every one who has ever noticed the difference between the flavor of a potato in the fall, when first dug, and one iu the spring which has been .fept'in a large dry cellar, has observed" that Ihfe flavor becomes much impaired: much more so than those which arc buried in holes in the earth, where they retail jieariy'all of their fresh ness and vitality. It has also beea observed that farmers vho have small and inconvenient cellars kep their potatoes in better condition than those Ah6; keep them iniarge cool ones. Hence' by stbrine' Item, in the latter, and let- 'ting them wilt before planting ,.icy ( become weakened in their nature, and are TEuoject to degeneracy, and finadly to disease- In order to obtain eood potatoes for seed, make choice of a small spot of arable land on - which water "will not stand an eastern elope and new - . --. . v.-.' i--v '-jt -ir grouna are wie nesi piougneu cany u . mo spring, and furrowed 4 or 5 inches deep, 2J feet apart.. Select middling-sixed potatoes which liave toficlied the ground during the winter previous, but do not cut them. . Drop one every 8 inches along the -furrows, and fc'over them by .filling the furrows with earth. Then cover them with a top-dressing of forest leaves or straw 2 inches deep "As soon, as the tops of the young plants are 2 inches high, pas beXVfcc!hem-WUh a hovel-plough fol low with a hoe, destroying the weeds and levelling the ground ; do not hill. This Is all you have to' do until falL . When the ground begins' to fre'ete; cover with straw, chaff, or fotest leaves, 6 inches deep, to keep them from ; frost. Your potatoes will now have jt'lebanoe to ripc& hd Tedari.fig the winter. In this way, you will nave the great est yield and. best quality. Continue this Course from year to year and the rot will not only disappear, but jour crop wiH 'increase from'5, to 100 per eent." , The third year you 'may lricVease'yur ficfd crop by ploughing in fine manure, . You wiinow have had nature's course, Dos't no tt. -Never make use of aa hon est 'woman's name at any improper time, or in a,vm1tjcd company. " Sfe'rer' make assertions about, her . that fy0u',thipk are untrue, allusions that you,. feel she herself wotild blueh tq hear hen '0u' meet Vith men ho do'ndf scruple to'make'use bffk woman's faame'. in a most reckless manner, shun them.'for thcyarn the very worst members of community, then lost to crerv eenae' of honor, every, feeling of h a- niaaity Shire migji't -be s'asjpndeH un'y t he could jford tXe river 'and join i them,- w ten' they-wohld'c'A)-r rafe the'oceasion with unusual dembns'tra- rFroiH CalJwin'a 'Tartv Leaders." V Jackson and Cay "Pointa cf Eesemblance. ' 'TJtere were fiiany points' of simtlitude be tweefi these illustrious antagOnisfa. As - par ty men they 'seemed to stand in irreconcilable antagonism. They were' so 'in' interest, in position, in feeling. Yet with ajl" this 'oppo sition, there was a sirjkifcg!'cbrresp3ndL'Ece JJetvrteetf-yiem, VototijWlhtii1, .but"in many points of exterior rescmblari'ce. Both were born, or received ''teir earliest tmtfreki3na in Revolutionary times,r or' from .fhe piinciples of the'Revolution. ' ""'' ' Jackson wa'3 the elder. ''Bdt in spirit and ... ....... . spirauon oi viav sawuKeniDtr Boti."were denied the advantages ''of 'fe'da caflo'n'.1 "Both made a new country fhe"$i6acre of their ebr.Iiest'e'ierflohi 'Both were 'caCvds of the Southj'khd bmlgVated "to 'a S6utJLern State, with a po'f ulatic tfiatfef-th estate 'of "their birth. . Both were' depebde'a't' Idie upon their o-jrn exertion, and eaiSljIhiipdh dent of adySntitious'ald. '"Jolh' were'' aftRi tccts of thei own fortunes.' Both chose the profession1 of the law as their first introduction to the public 1 and both,' though in an unequal degree, encountered the same opposition, and met wj$i early success1.' rBoth displayed f6'ii the star t 'the. sanie ' 'caterprising spirit, ? the same obduracy and vehemence of wll, the same almost arrogant defiance of otfpb'sitjd'n, the same tenacity and continuity of ftufp'o'Se, the same moral and personal darirfg-" Jack son introduced himself to the practice by un dertaking the prosecution of suits which others, of arofession not used toquail before danger or shrink TrOm respeUHy $-ere intimated from representing. ; 31ay 'enrolled himself a boy among the competitors of the strongest bar in Kentucky, and issued bis writ against one of the most prominent and powerful .of them , in favor of Ma obscure bar keeper, - at the certain cost of the defendent's deadly resei'byc'nt ; 'and defied that hatred to its'ex jtremcst manifestations. JBqtb etjy .impres sed themselves upon the community "aiOQnd themr,; tfiid'were jdistinguished for the tame personal characteristics. Both rose at once to posts of honor and distinction ; and at eariy'Sgi' eiubllej ''th Ind to the last preserved them, among the, first arid the highest of the republic. -i" -T" ' ' !Bovh : were men of quick perception ; of proaipt action ; of acute penetration ; of busi ness capacity; of merchantile common sense; of quick -and unerring judgment of men j of singular fertility of resources ; of remarkable power to create or avail themselves of circum stances ; of consummate tact and management Both were distinguished for acefald ease of tnanners.for happy and relished address,1 and of influence over the wills and affections of those who came within the circle of their acquintanco and associations. Both were of lithe, sinewy, and slender physical conforma tion ; uniting strength, with activity .aud great powers of endurance with a happy facility of labor. Both were men of the warmest affec tions; of gentlest and'TiiOst conciliating 'man ners in social intercourse when they wished to please; of truth and loyalty and steadfastnees in friendship; bitter and defiant in their, en mities ; of extraordinary directness , ia their, purposes' ; of V pade'Dt-;an,d. indefatigable' tepi per in following ont their ehdsof waiting for their accomplishment.' Neither could brook a rival or opposition ; and each had the impe rial spirit of a conqueror not to be, subdued, and the pride of leadership" which Cftuld hot follow. . They were Americans,' both, intense ly patriotic and national, loving their whole country, its honor, its institutions, its Union, with' a" lo'vh klddled" early and quenched only in death. They both spent much of their long lives, frbin jouth to hoary age, in the public ser vice, malhfainihgH(fthe lhst "with" only tho modifications which age necessl y Brnleufcn mental and physical constitution, the same characteristics for which they, were at. first difetlnj-uiehed. They f Jived olives of storm, excitement' and warfare; eachin point of real authority equally ait the head of his party; io and out of office equally acknowledged lead ers, and they dlca each full of years rnd honors and by the same lingering disease ; professing towards the close of life tho same religion; and leaving country, at the death of each prosperom and peaceful, a saddened sense X)f a' great and common- calamnity. ; -The; Tattter. 1 ' """ j There is no being that moves on the , habi table globe' more degraded and more contempt able than a tattler. Vicious principles, want of honesty, servile meanness, despicable ih sideonsness, form its character '.fif as, Jie wit? In attempting to display it he makes hihiself a foot.'vllus he friends? By. unhesitatingly disclosing (heir eecrts he will make them most bitter enemies By telling all Jicknows, he will soon discover to the world that he knows but little. Does he envy an individual ? .t His tongue, fruitful with falsehood, defames his character'.4 .Hfl'fctttmptS tb'galn TV' by" slan dering others." HrisVtrjpVoach" is feared, his person hated, his wmpady-'Uiisouht, and, his sefTtiments despised as emanating from 'a heart fruitful with guile, teeming with iniquity, loaded with envy, hatred, and revenge. . .; ; . -,.,.. . . . Xsr-Tncs is Lifk. If we die to-day, the sunwill shine as brighUy," and' flo IWrds hmg as sweetly, to morrow. ; Business will not be suspended a moment, and the great mass will not bestow a' thougit'ttpon'ourjaomenta,'-, Is he deadt will be the'BOlemlj'inquiry'jf a few, as they- pass to their work. Dut no one will miss us except our im rued iste tionn'ecttbns, and in a short time 1 t!iy ifll rbrgfet-ns and laugh a8 merrily as when we sat beside them. Thus shall we a!lt now active in lire, .pas away. Otff ohi)drcn crowd close-behind uj, ,and thty willaoon o grue. J.Ia a few years not a living being ca i say, I remember him." We lived' ia 1 another" age, 'and did brains a with 'thne who"liimber in thtomb. T.UU ; Is lifd." 'Ibw jrpidlj it yassejir " geni'os of 'the'Revblatiotij oatiasting the pen oi. or'a'VAl hostilitiVJ,.' waji'eY.a'! tju. in- anu lervia miaa. "Frm th Allny Atlas, July 1.V :: : Jhe United States Bank. yhe Philadelphia 'papers' announce that the Trui-tees of the Bank lof the TJctted' State will make their final dividend on the 20th Tpt September, when the concern w'llj cease in an shape-to exist.- '"ft has takeh "fourteen years to:,wln'd' op the concern ; and' a t!i end the stockholders loie'Vi. kid tle-'oth'fer fcf editors "get litfle': r" ' "" ''' ' t r i ' ' The bank was originally chartered, at a pe riod of great'Enanclal depression a'nd d.istrew; when' the1 failurS of State bank, after tjbe wlr, ha'd'deprived lhe people of a currency, ' 'The constitutional objections to Its Existence were lost eghtf inCae'djs'.r H sccvirts advan terges. The gov'ernme'dt Beame a 'holder of 'the stock to the amo Jtit'-df'oiieiCdh'- of tho cap.itVf afad ;t YecciVfcd' the dv-potifi 'Of the pistbni House and the Land Offic?.' ' ' "When the question of. its re-charter .came up, the' exigencies which "had callwl it into existiucehad'beased, .ndlne"objectrori to it subsisted." 'Tlie did - f)enK)crata;' who never BbUeed;thaifhch fin nsTitnticfe- was embra ced In the objects of the Confederation,' or . was to be endured under. Democratic inter pretation of the CostitutioaT renewed their objections to 'its re-chirter"- fihtir-Jadbanh ib.-r.igh'eiy. flial a'J the 'piiblicTserVic required could ' bo rendered bV" 'an apency. not interfere with' 'or " repnlat the moneta ry of the people. The Bank had assumed XhQ function of a ".regulator" of the 'credira of the country,' and asitomed krt old, a nation-' al jurisdiction Otter Stale.binks,- while its own administration was based On the &ifcde viciouw system which made the local -'bank' bo 'often a, delusion and' a nuisance. ? ; How Iff t1.' fiddle undertook to perpemato his character by the' purchase of presses ad the bnbery of politicians, is well known.' With as mneh folly os wickedness be conten ted that the bank had a right to expend tm money of tho 'institution in a warfare and upon tho government, its.leading stockholder. iT.bejjsniis, the distress committees,1 th' sus pension, the 1-r VCMutienv bloodies as yet, the attempt to control the cotton market, the immense speculations of the bank followed1. The energy 'and wisdom of Jackson aud Van Jcrn wre successful ; and the monster was prostrated'; though ;ip its fall it brought down State credit and cast the deep"" ifahi, not ytft eradicated, upon the American name. b pcrpfetuate its infamy by a new phrase of cor ruption UndVlf the pretence" of improving the eominoD schools and assisting the internal improvements f Pennsylvania,' the eld bank was re-chartered as a'ute institution, npon condition, of immense largesfieu t the . Staxd, and after a well-known expenditure of money among the members of the too Houses. Bat this concern could not corrufct Others" witlifCfi becoming 'corrupt itself ; There is a law list regulates the intercourse of vice, and threat: ens it with dreadful put)iehment,-having their source of mental foulness. : , The old Mother of Abominations was rotln to the bone. Patches and patnt wuld n conceal the internal ravages,' and. after wacf dliag about a few years in bloated" vice, and rolled over and died. '.'-." ' " "'""There ' were ''"Eray youiia: politicians ' tnat haunted the hou aha lived in. ' What are ' they? What did they become? ; . The slcr has a moral in it. which Time i has not failed to engrave deeply -on the histd- ry oi vnei country, wnere pou uoian , uiy gather future instructiou. : It is that accumu lation of wealth, however great, can hold an contest .vritbr a J"reex people; that corruption cannot reach thVniassfes"? and that politicians whodly themselves in a content on the aide of associated Vdalth ' and monopoly, against ideas of populsr libertv, becomes suspected rbytlfe pftoplej'kad fto talents or virtue can outweigh the bdrden or this 8U?picion , ''S3T" Don't Speab:" so Cross !" " Don't sp6ak eo croes; sSilcT onelittle" boy ycBterday in the street to another. " Don't spoakso cross, there's no use in it." -We happened to I be pasng-at ' tfhe tame,- aodheariog the ii- uncuo3, or raider - exnonaxion, tor it - was made in a hortatory manner,' we set the ju- ! venile speaker down ss an eiubrjo philosopher., f In sooth . touching -the pointnnVdlved Xn the boyish difljeulty which made occasion for the remark, he might properly be consiiiered at ina-tarity. -What more could Soloman ; have said on the occasion ? , True, ( he hath put it on record that a! soft an'swerf' turrieto Wify wrath." and this being taken as true, and eerybody knows it to be so it Is evidence in favor of the superiority of the; law 6f kindness over th at of wrath? Ilut?1oT' young etrcet philosopher ' said pretty much the sametbirig substantially, when he said" Don't speak so cross-r-there's no use in it'-1 On the con trary; it invariably does much harm. '"'IVa man angry ? it 'inflames his ire still' more, and confirms ia his enmity him who by jt kind word and a gentle ' and pleasing" ."demeaeer pmighf-bie o verted into, a friend. J"'ft':ilf 'in fact aa addition cf luei fo the' same already kindled. And 'Vht' dd you gilitf-i'by ir? Nothing desirable, certainTy,'!unless discord, strife, contention, hatred nialico, and all un- charitablencss, be desirable The boy rpake the " words of truth and soberness," when he said, ' Don't speak eo cross there's no use ' Sundat in Paris." Horrce Oreely, writing frotu Paris, France, says that on SYxAlay :half the stores are open ; that- men are. cutting stotie nnd dtilug alt manner 6f work as ejo otter days; hat the journals are published, offices open, and business transacted, and that there is mora hilarity, more dancing, more drinfiing. more theatregoii, and more disi sipution than on any one day of the week?.' . I bol l it to be a Cict," said I'sscal,' ."tbitt if H frans knew what they saidjef each other, there wouli not b four f;isdstj the world." . - "; '-. . U- 7 4 ' 4 II