1)111 , VOLUME 24. BUSINESS DIRECTORY IRA S. GRAVIIS —.VnittifsetAry of tho earner of • Ir P n. Thv hichoot IST;PP icitt her paid S C. BROWNEL. - 1 „,,,.„ sak.te of the Plildlr :iquaro.p. Pei:ti Street., Eris, Ps. I= LIKE.VESSES POJ°' 1 • —N E 11 ABELL. \,.,,,r . P 0 ,0111.4 over the. Eris &bait, giattli rrir. Pa. ~,„ Oit gtyle of the art. and wairan- T I) EfowTtßpg.. ~,LL,,te•st Law. Warren - Pa. !Ohl N.ll.!lioaa wtlt reCe ir.. 13114bPt ti tk WALKER L CO., du. and CuinimiaAion • Iletrbitut.. fourth t ef the Public Bridge, Rrie;Pa. ,„ t,nl . sett, Plaster, Ekuseeo; Ash. Liar Stores. Cretingli t te., with 11J , A.:. chipping Wilier by Annunbnoui. 4.r ottsfr.... L. 110111aX.1. - - Ell (IRAN M, . Ca N91.1:1 CR AT , LAW, O. 0111 Erlich ~.quer of the Park.':.Erie. T. -11(711-40111E, ~,•ne.. Prot asinns,:lWines Liquors, Candies. • a line d,,,,r below Benth k litawatt's State-at. _ . 1 INCEST,- 111 0 - ITICo., „ : REF . of Stuee T IB - ~, Ho G Ware, Rragiaea. Ma. -.1'.... .road Cori, etc., - se SL, E r i o P a. TrIO3IAS M. AUSTIN, :km , : TIIL FIRX 01 4 11. LOOMIS * CO.) , ,„ u•.;}.., Watches, Jewelry, Siker Spoont,Mnal . - -..:,•,:/t-, Looking Masses, Lampe and Fahey „ ... ' , ale and retail. • • II JARECECI. a- .t fide of State Street, Erie, Ps 1. N. TIBB.A.LS & CO. 1.11111. or IgrALliar a naiad-44 and Shipping Merchants, and deal , Ihur, Frih, Salt. Water Line, Plaster, de., Erie, Pa. Packager intended for ear tiro uvvriool. J. B. GI'N.. ISON, stationary, Monthly Magi - \ d4k! t. , Cheap • ~:•. , lieet Newspapers, Geld Pe A. Pock , .11 Fatt Jour wen &the Deed ilow.e. Erie. lit )(all Ttivitet, izet.ti beaten. in ,Faery and elsple , Dry N1.11.m.13, No. IL Poor:Pboi.lON R0w...m.41e II -- - - 1.11 1 14 KL 1,1„ PLif.it & Co. • • 7: • Ir••u Fence, Railing, Steam lloilert, Proof:Stadler,. and all kinds of dour to order. 'l, \lt & METCALF, r , t .i 1 tenter.; in Dry carpe ts. 3114 I Hoed ' li, COOK. ' _ • a Parley Dry tioods, and the Greaten ca, store in the city, Chenit side. Erie. P. STEBRETT & OKAY, ',hers and retail Dealers in wet and dry Oro :,ton., Produce, Foreign and Doniestic'Entit, tt •11, - ttr and Stone Ware, Flour, Fish, Salt. Obi", jor, hot. Carts, Safety Fuse, Le., hr., French thr It era Rouse. Erie, Pi. 5,1 Canal Bost., Vioeela. Hotels, and Psi - , applied with any of .tbo *hors articles •-Find very cheap. • W:sl. S. LANE, %;,A.N.ELLon at Lt.tr.—Odra over Jaek , •en't Lest cortter of the Public Sward.. tft6l'i'hjj & 1 - TRPLY - .IR, - nrorerieß,lliirdwzre,Uro.•kery, 40. ,tnte ..treetfr.iie, Pa. 1)1{ l' BRANDE I S, 'Mee at his residence on Eighth Fernit and llnliand, Ed o , Pa. :-.1N14)11D - ,1 CO., rirt•Lei, t_ ertreirmir , F.tchange oh ttiv p. 41.a.1 •ig ie. lA, ilLb B 0111) Rh.•k. i'lll}.li.i. lif..l:oN STUART, 1.0 -:Residenee 611 F..erri h -i rr.•r. 't Apothecary HilL _ _ _ - Lr•FUS -BEER, E... 5, I,vnasn and Annediesn Hardware and A', , .Natk, Anvils, Vises, Iron and eztorl 5... :t Ene, , 'ADWELL - it BENNETT, - nna Retail Dealers in Dry Goat, Gra aF e • t :. Hardware. Iron, • . -1.1ke., Le. Em Storer Flew. !.;tre..t. • • .1 , ..n- Brown', Rote Erie, Ps. - . L g.” ,, , Bellow,. Axle Arms, Sprinitc a nn.l ", ' - ru.ueut of Sroldlo end Carriage Tritroninf.... s, MERVIN SMITH, , and jr3 ‘t ICA ~ f the ham and Ag, at ,„. Mutual Life Lowrance t;oinpau, , 1 Wright' , dare, Erie. PS. I. i tcc Li c;uutity, Pi. . ciut promtn.i. an.l KELLOGG,' • ' • : Mor , hant, 14, OW Palate 111 , •irrel. t' tt ititi White ..00l.tandy aele. - - .1 1 . , larueerse., Wine., -A zr,,, Fink. Nutx, and •••r . Pr..serves, and lierinetricully de.etiption Monty ou hand. No. • oppogitollrown% N,w N..‘i York. W. I. MILL*. Beira!". ~u;r iu thew .esson. Oysters in shell, indu J. Dry street.. New York, whirl' will 1.• r w price.. A. C. JAincsorr, AO, • 1: Ala ER - - ,iBROTHER, • ani Retail dealers in Nur, Medicine. Paint., • ,t_ Ola.Rs, lc., No. 6, Reed House. Rrie. JAMES on•imnt Tailor. on the putdie equate. • few .rate .cruet, Erie. JOHN a BURTON & „,, R TAIL dealers in Drugs, Medicine, Dye a,.., X". 5, Reed Bosse, Erie. lir MAN -&-T3LITANT- MI w1..1 and Miseellasetteo nooks, ..- and Printer' Card.. No. P. N. k:rie Pa. --- • I • 4I4 "foRS BEEBE ' de STEWART, _ •aian• and burgeon& °See end • ' Streets. r war S. A.M:I to 2, and 6sor, P. 31. •ThilN HEARN IC co., -•:.] r -nitai,.ion 3feretuude..deaktr in in Coal, agent for a daily lino of Upper Lake • Pnbits• Duck Erie, Pa. EXPRESS comPANY, 1, hi .{ N.R. ;1 Reed %Sleek, Plate giroet. Ili n'eloek, A. M. 34 b'elark, P. M. I; E )117ZRJ. — iftliftT 4 C - • • Mtrreleter, Pettik 110,40: Fnr. • ~„ Flour and Iftatr. itQZENSWEIG & Cr,. ' ' •'s i• P.t , 411. Dr Aimee in Foreign Atoll Dnerrr- I isixdoiletbing, 0040 mitt Jo % • • Itl.iel, State ,tract, Erie. ItSitALC & 'figetkr: • ‘t 'Ayr-016e* up Wars a Tammany 11,11 the Prrithottotary's CRICAY . IV - TIALLONT .1 ‘s,, co..StL4OIII AT LAW—Wife user Wll - entrance etre door soot of Rua. ewer, 1 , 'mum!, Erie. 111111 .1145, EIA ES, • .•,. iirs liuwir , Dry Ureerrios, , \ 1. 14.weem .New IleteL _ . JACKSON, tilverries. hardware, *now Wore. 1 ' 41e., 121. Choniod4o, Mo. Po. • - _ kWRIGHT, • - 1 ) Rad Dealer, la thaid awl Sils.r Land Warrant" and cortillei.leo of De. `d..• ogou Drafts on Ow principal eitk+ of the .o l all part, oldie (114 Country for sak. t1. 4 4„.., n1 .. r of stio-st. amot PiOilie etiA Itz.mogirr Desisorr--0444. in 0, , Entore Btork. evirwar of 2.74,5u1ai54 Fifth •lalrp. Peas row* avid OEM - - Utt 0.. L. ELLIOTT, Itr.t.lcnt D;otlift: 01ee sae ditolliar uft thr South ship of the Public Botasee,l doer F.att the Erie Bank Bedidists. Teeth t*. -,o q,.1 Instr. frvitt ono to NI out** sot. Ohrioul Lie i 'rah pats 4144, ia4 n o toswil hshAlhilit solo. .4. Teeth cleaned with lamentation' Deeelliee so t vre then of polksei deleenteee. AS wait weeetetheiL , . ~ • .. - . ,• . ----- :`,:- ~,.. • Ct.-- .. .' ":.; '-• -," - . ,1 1 7: - .1":•,:t - -: -1. "ri --- .W.Pg' . ....41 - 1.1.3 , VZ - ;.!7.1 - 3' r.,..'''.:. - a... 04, - .: - . `-r.10 . 4. - .VV" , ... " •- ' ' '.l" ""..%Z.n.....t'-;-"Y.111/0,4V,•t". -. • ; ....,..; . . ... ~ . . .. . . , .., .. . , I . 4. ' =1 , 4 . . . . L •''' . 14 ' '. : . - . .. .. -, . •. - ... . y.,..... _.,- - , . , I .. . . , . . . . - . . .. , . . , , . ...... ___ Stitrt Vottn). TEE POOR VOTER Olf ELECTION DAY 1 ' The itteutiort now L het ra poen The highest not mere high: tf.-,ley. Olen the weary. r. A king of men ant 1. Tortiny, silks are great and ttut.‘ll. Tbe ratnielexa sod the -known; kly poises ie the people's hall, The ballot ben ni) throne' • Who eeinna to-41/ty upon the list Beside Me served Alike the bums as wrinkled The glared aml dainty- hand! The rich 6 Wept with tholum.r. Tbe weak la Arun to-4y; And aleskaa hremieloth counts nn wore Tlma homespun &orb 4.f gray. To-day lei pomp and rasa precinct. My towboat* eigßt abide; I set a slab mash ammo* some Agolael thrsollsora setae. To-day shall sittpla neabood try The steagth of gold sal land; rhombi* wield has notirteahli to bre The poem of my 0141 hand. - inks. there's a grief to rook redress, Or behoves to adjust. • While weigbe our living nosab.xxl That/ Masuou's vilest dusk -While timpree i right to need at onto; A wrong to sweep away,:—: rp! clouted knee and ragged etas! A stn's a man to-,hay. * gtoict isaliaiiv IBIS - SHOOTING IN LOUISIANA. A TIIBILLING SIZTCH. THULE are few sorts of pine 1 have not fol lowed with horse, , hound, or gun; and, among other sports I have gone ibis shooting; it 1134 not as much lb/ the sport, however, a, that I wished to obtain some specimens for nussurting. An adventure liefel me in one of these excursions• that stay - interest the Trader. The southern Part of the State of Louisiana is one vast labyrinth of, swamps, bayous and lagoons. These bayous are streanta that glide sleepily aloug; sometimes run ning one way and sometime...the very opposite.- according to the season. Many of them are out lets of the great Mississippi, which begins to shed off its, waters more than three hundred miles frdm its mouth. These bayous are , , ometimes wide, with islets in their midst. ey and their contiguous swamps are the great ha hatless of the alligator and the frel water ',lsar —the gar. -- Nnmerous. speeimeo of witer.swil ding_fowl ayl over them. and plunge through thr r dark tide. w l i Here you may see the red Ilamin , . the; egret. the - trnsapter swan, the blue he - of, the wild goose, the e_puie_ the 'ice. , ....1::...-- --4. the This 1, ow may le ewls'. see t , osprey. anu the white - headed 'eagle robbing hit of his prey. These lot-tins-and swamps produ aimndantly Gds. reptiles, and insect , . and :ire rinsctinently, the favorite resort of dtrindreds o birds , which prey upon these creature:. In some places - the. bayous form a complete net-work over the eopn try, which.you may traverse with a stntill boat in.abnest any Itireotion; indeed, tlii, is the means by which lawny settlements .cominittsieat.• with . • each other. As you approach —srliward to the Gulf, yon get clear of tbe timltr. and within so me Ilitv ntiqjr'ef the sea there 4- not a t 0.. ., to 1.,". - 9 ,./asn ~ - ;It Was lti•at the edge thi, ekaltitr3, 1 it..ist ibis shooting. I. set out lot s stnlll Premli I..irtale settlement, with no other c o m i, A ni o n than my gun—even •without sang, :1 , toy favor ito spaniel hal 'been bitten by an Alligator whit,• scritum;ng across the hayoni. I went. of in a boat, a light skiff, such as is C . ointil,aly • by the inhabitants of the ci*. try; Occasionally using the raddles, l allowed my self-to float some four or five miles down the main Iniyou ; but as the birds I was in searidi of did not appear, 1. struck into a " brrnch" and sculled my self up stream. This carried me through. soli tary region, with marshes stretching as far as the eye can see, covered with tall reeds. There was no habitation, nor aught that betokened the pres ence of. It was just possible that I was the first human beireg who had ever foOnd a motive for propelling a boat through the . dark waters of this solitary stream. As I advanced, I fell in 'with my game, and I succeeded in bagging several, both of the gnat wood ibis and the white ripe cies. I also shot's Ape white-headed eagle: which came soaring over my boat, unconscious of dan ger. But the bird which I most wanted seemed that which maid not be obtained. I wanted the . - scarlet ibis. think I had rowed some three miles up stream and was about to take in my oars and leave my boat to goat back again, when I perceived that a little father up the bayou widened. Curiosity prompted me iota:satin= ; and pulling a few bun died teat further, I found myself at the end of an oblong lake, • toile or so in length. It was deep, dark, marshy ground around the shores,. and full of alligatois. I saw their ugly forms and long serrated hacks, as they floated about in' all parts of it, hungrily hunting for ash n.e il ind eating u another ; but all this was nothing new, for I had witnessed similar scenes .dnring the whole of my excursion. What drew my attention most was a small Wet weer the middle Id' the lake, upon one end 4 Thiel' stood a row f?t• upright forms of a scarlet 4`411. These red Creatures were the very objects I seas in search a: They might be flamingoes; Timid not tall at that distanee. :le much the better, if I conid only succeed in get ting a shot settees; but then; creatnrci are even more wary de la the ibis ; aed as the islet was ' low, and altogether without eover, it. was not likely they walla allow me Mimi* within range; nevertheless T was determined to make the at, tempt. I rowed up the lakei, otvasionally turn ing my head to see if the game had taken the alarm. The ma was hot and dazzling, and as the bright scarlet was magnified by refraction, T fancied for a long time they were flamingoes. This fancy was dissipated as I drew near.— The outlines of the bill, like the blade eta sabre, eseviestd ins they were the Ibis; besides now I we that they were only abets three flintier height, SY JOSS O. lfeirrirn -••-- stapri\ while the flamingoes . . - There. were a . dozen offlerMt in all. They we balancing them selves, at it their usual habit, on one leg. appar ently asleep. or buried in deep thought. They were on the npper extremity of the islet, while I was approaching it from below It was not rarer sixty yards across, and I could only reach the point nearest me. t knew my gun would throw shot: to kill at 'that. distance. I feared the stroke • of the 1111116 would start them, and pulled slowly, and 9ntiously. Perhaps the great heat—for it was as hot a day as I can remember—had ren- - dered them tnepid - : or lazy. Whether or not, they stood until the cut water of my skiff touclud ' the hank of the islet. I drew my Inn np cau tionary, took aim, and tired both barrels almost simultaneously. - When the smoke cleared out of mioyes, I saw that all the birds had flew off except one, that lay stretched out by the edge of the water. Gun in band, I leaped oat of The beat, and ran across the islet to bag my pine. This . occupied but a row minutes, mil' was turning to go book to the skiff, whei,•-te•itei eoinaernation, ' I saw it out upon the lake, and rapidly floating downward! In my haste I had left it unfasten ed, and the bayou had carried it off. It was still but a hundred yards off, but it might as well have been a hundred miles, for at that ;time I could not swim a stroke. • My first impulse was to rush down the lake, and after the boat. This impulse was checked on arriving at the water's edge, which I saw at , a glance was fathoms in depth. Quick reflection told me that the boat • was gone--irreenverably I gone! . I . did not at first comprehend the full peril of my situation; nor will you. I was on an islet, in a lake, only half a mile from its shores—alone ; it is true, and without a boat; hut what of that? 1 Many a man has been so before, With not an idea 1 of danger. These were my first thoughts, natiir- : al enough; but they rapidly gave place to. otit ers of fardifferent character. When I gazed af- 1 1 ter m,;‘ boat, now beyond reeovery—whei I look- ed around. and Naw that the lake lay in the mid dle of an interminable swamp, the shores of which, even could I have reached them, did not seem to promise me footing-.4hew I reflected that, -be ing unable to swim I could not reach them— that upon the. islet there was neither tree, nor log, nor stick—not-a.stick out of which I could make a raft—=f say, when [ reflected upon all -these things, there arose in my mind a feeling of well defined and absolute horror: It was true as only in a lake, a mile or so in width; but so ras the peril and helplessness of my situation w concerned, I might as well have been upona me in the middle of the Aden- tie. I knew that the 4 W 39 no ..ettlement• with. . in Julie& - ;:tniir3.._. 4.ls 4 ilitet. twamm._...l....kzicac t that . Is. t, o' ..Auld either hear or % We Me 111 - 1 ono was at 311 likely to eotite near the lake; in deed I felt . 'sitistiell that my faithless boat was , ors i iamen4 — . ;T hi bards Wheßing arAlintriki) 11 , '1 1 1 I% .; -,. , %;;It'llet• id . this: . I 1.1.11111 nt•rt't ,ge "at hike: I ' X, - th let, 4r.rd . must die nu that isl !nom sit attetepting to !este it.. swept uty gun around, and cliassal them hack to 1 -4.- --- 441 with the small-pov In I. oeginning .. 'Mese reflections rolled rapidly over my qtar• • 'the water. intl. whieh diet betook themselvea 1 . le Dirdanelles. i . reign, hi ,, feature , did not pre , ent a sery marked I fled snul. The facts were clear, the hypothesis 1 with a sullen plunge. but with little aemblanee 1 The old gates of donna were opened when 'Rome expreasion, as if no strong Pr.sion had yet agi definite, theconsqmence certain; there was no and- of fear. .I.t each fresh demonstratien Oil Inv 1 was at war ; -and their modem pmtot , the ' fated the young brenat. But his eyes. large and biguity, no superetitiona hing upon which I could , Part they..dused less edam*, until I cool,' Ito dun- 1 Dardanelles straits, are open only when a state of very beautiful, sometimes became animated with hang a hope; no, n o t o n e. L eon id no t even „, ger drive t h em , e ith er With shouts or threatening ~ war makes treaty stipulations Void, and the Porte a rnmt livel,' oNPreolort• and glistened with the tire of intellige a rot t h a t I ..h,, si ld b e mi sse d an d soug ht ter; gesture.. They only retreated a few feet, fora*. i deems it to be necessary to admit bin -allies nce. - ~ -: a sr W er e aa s ni t one to search for me. The simple ' ing an irregular cirele around me Thus hem- ; throws theta to protect his capital. The. se. '-The first time the young Sultan (seventeen years habitants of tb.. tillage I has) left knew no. not sled in. I became frightened in turn 1 loaded i eannts we have are, that they are now open for of age) presented hint in the lf to the eyes of his 'sub -I Iva , a stranger among them; they only knew ! toy gull and fired -•I killed none The) are im-. , the passage of the Rritish r i nd French fleets. ! jects,' he' waa dressed F.nropean trouser ' me as a stranger, and fisneied Me I/ Strange indi ; pervious to a bullet; except ►in the eye or limier : The Danlanelles,froutwilich the.strait. or Hel- ' and c"at• over which was thrown the imperia victual--one who made lonely excursions, :11141 the forearm It was tOOl dark to aim at th e .... ' l e ,p on t, d er i ve -1 i tsuaute ,", are f our strongcastles 1 , cloak- fastened by a diamond airrette- On hi la. - ay:l,ld home Imnches of weeds, with•bird3, in tart. 3: by shoo glanced hermiessly from the pv- ; built opposite to cash other on the European ands, breast he wore the decoration of the Nielean-Ifli seet,.., and reptile.s, which they had never seen be- 1 rataidal•seales t of their Wis.,' The loud report, 1 Asiatic. coasts ; and arc the khys of Conatantifio- ' char; his head wascovered with the tel surmount fore, although gathered at their own doors. My however, and the blaze frightened them, and they I pie. - Two of th '. . - castles, the ,old castles, ~,r e eh by a tiiatuond;nierette The new king. whit .., absence. heaides, would be nothing tow to them, ! fled, to return again after it long interval. I was raised by - Nlah and II aeon after the coisiquest thus continuing the costatne of his father, ne -1 earn though it lasted for days. Thad often bees aslcepi'when they returned. T had gone to sleep !of Constants le, n 1-1:13 ;-tit h e other two, the new erthelma presentaal only a pale reatanblanee t ab.zeilt before a nook at a time. There Ua.-4 no in spite of my gflirts - tai keep_ awake I was c:isiles, were 1. It in the middle of the seven-, him. Simple without affectation, he cast arettili i - hope of toy being utiased. • startled by the touch of stoncthiag 4.0141, and half teenth tsentuty o protect the Turks against the 1 hint glances full 1 . 11 .ateneSS and )kgy,V(7lel)l.j.,‘T I have said . that these reflections came and i stifled by a strong musky; odor that plied the air. trenetians. Thi. latter command the enttsnee to 1 Everything aueounee.l in him the at/Lim:are passed quickly. Jn less than a minute, my a t- i I threw out my,artns--4 tha,gera rested uponan the Hellespont, and the distance from each is successor of an leflexible ruler; nothing hitherto frighted soul was in full possession of 'thew, and ' object slipery and clammy — it was one of these I,.almitt two, miles and a quarter, in *four 1, 0 „,,; 1 , hal indicated what great and precious qualities almort yielded itself to despair. I shouted, h ...ut• rnonstem—one of gigantic size. He had crawl- tail u r the strait are the old castles, whit are I were conceikai beneath the modest and. tranquii , rather • involuntary than with any hope .1 should led close along side of me, and was preparing to about three-quart:se; °rip mile spark These are I "'twit's.' He: was received favorably by his peo.. , be heard. [ shouted loudly and fiercely; my an. i make his attaelq as I t.,lr he was bent in , the well mounted with formidable batteries. All ' ple, but without any demonstration of enthnsi suer—the echoes of my own voice, the shriek oft form of a bow, and I new that these ere:it:tree along the Eitropeansshore to the Manuora•the i "IL' It was feared . that this delicate Yrint the osprey, and the maniac laugh of the White- Immune that position when they are about to aspect of nature in its ritggedness.s eorrespondit-, could searcely.he equal to th e i m portance o f ' headed eagle. an , strike their victim. I W a s just in time to avoid with the frown of the ;tn.; ban the scenery on I thitine• People Pitied hits , ''el, at the eaM I ceased to shout, threw down myJent4o the I the ;stroke of his poweiftd tail, tat the neat; coo- the Asiatic shore is beautiful. The. region I time , tre ttb l ed-fnr- t he futur e' le rns l' e ' t° of th •earittoind tottered down beside it. I have been 1 meat swept the ground !here Iliad lain. - Again abounds, too,; in plates• famous in classic story. , country. The women alone, touched by hi' in a gloomy prison, in thehands of a vengefulgu. l I fired , -and he, with the! rest onee more retreated Here it was that Leander paid his nightly visit ' 1 y ou ! th and hisi appearance of kindness+. manifest idlers banditti, with carbines cocked to blow out to the Lae. • to Hero; here the' ill-fated hosts of Xerxes cross- I their itynqatlty for him openly. When helm! my brains. No one will call that a pliaiant sit- I All thoughts of going to sleep Were ai an end. al on a bridge of boats; h ere Solomon crossed on 1 through Cosetantinople to the Masque of Baie - nation—nor-was it so to me. I have been lost-1 Not that I felt wskefal, on the contrary, wearied a bate raft; and in modern Shoes; here B I id, they ran towards him from all parts:. 'ls refit_ 1 i our son handsomer they cried, adopting him with , upon the wide prairie - the land seta—without with my day's exertion, for ,I had a long - pull swam from Sesta; to Ahydos. • bush, break, or star to guide me--'-thatwas worse. under a hot tropical PM, I could have laid down ; These famous straits have been more thin once : ( affection: A contrast this to the bloody cora -1 j mencement of the a s sist of the Imperial drill-se -- There you look around you; you see atiothing;::- ion the earth', in the mud anywhere, -and slept in 1 pasted, In 17;6 the7llussiaa squadron, under you b ear no thi ng; yo u are a l one w ith G o d, an d an instant: Nothing bitt the dread certaiuty of Elphiatone, appeared. before the tower castles; ! geont of -Russia. ~.. You tremble in his presence; your senses SWIM; MY Peril ItePt me awake. - Once again - before and that admiral actually went by without dim- The Czar has !remained .a drill-aergeant• ---; your brain reela . you are afraid of yourself; you ' morning I was compelled to battle with the, hid- age. -But the other ships did not folkrwehisp, i Hardy, laborious,: indefatigable, simple in his . are afraid of your own mind. Deserted by every.' eons reptiles, and chafe: them away with . a 'shot and he returned, with drums and trumpets sound- I *sates, the faithful 'husband of one Wife, " be h ( thing else-'yea *tread least it, too, may forsake 1 from my gun. ing. A British fleet under Admiral Duckworth, i at,tiven to introduce Circler and honesty' hat° II yen. There is a horror in this—it is very born- ' Morning came at length, but with it no change lin bis dispatch to his government, giving an ac- ' 1 branches of the public service. Arrogant, e ble—it, is hard to bear, but I have borne it all, lin my perilous position: The light only showed 1 count of this fact, ac h kes d e d ge i that h e ran ~ !may be, conceited, tyrannical, but not efferni , i not weak. Let us quote a few more ante and would bear it again twenty timesover, rather Imy island prison, but revealed no way of escape I narrow chance. He set 'sail on the morning of than endure once more the first hoar I spent on from it. Indeed the sites (amid not be called the 19th of February. At a quarter before nice that lonely islet in that lonely lake. Your pri- fur the better, for the ' mid rays of an almost, the whole squadroa, under a tremendous fire, had ' mild hnuniendge :— , if j front M. Bouvet, w)t,o seems 'to write from per son may be dark and silent, but you feel that you .vertied situ b urne d un me u ntil my skin blis- J passed the outer castles, at hat-past nine the I "Already forty-filequartovolumes of the Sr_ , ar t y not utterly Ainneeing9 like yourself are ! tered . I was already kled by the bites of a leading shim the Canoptue.eatered the 'narrow or Russian Digest, have been published, and reg. : near, though they may be your jailers- Lost on I thousand s wamp Mi t* a nd mos quit oe s, that all I pa s sage of &suss • and Abydes, under a heavy ulate the decisitmanf the Russian tribunals. time prairie, you are alone—but you are free. In, night had preyed upon mc. Where was not a ! cannonade front both Pestles, me( ming stone shot ! During a long period, Nicholas passed all his ni the islet, I. felt that I was alone; that I was not cloud in the heavens to shade me; amt the sun- l o f 800 pounds weight. Each ship, as it passed, I Eta and:days in superintending these arduous free e,n the islet, I experienced the feelings of beams emote the surface of the dead bayou with I had to endure this eannowuke The admiral re- 1 labors, and, in bringing them to a satisfactory re 'The prairie and the prison combined. .a double Uneasily. Towards evening I began to ; mined before !Constantinople until the 3d of i suit, in . spite of the dumb 'resistance of the int l. lay in a state of.stuPor -- almostuneoniseen' ts; huager.' No vendee of that; I had not eaten l March, when his equadvan of ten ships returned. j. reauents. It oftened happened that the Otte since *Tin g the village settlement. To 'lmage ;In this interval the Turks had been so busy that I.Empress, :Seeing her husband with red and 'AM. how loag I know not, but sassy hours I am eer- min. I knew chi:thy the nun—it witegoing down thirst I drank the water of the lake, turbid and ' the mak% werO made "doubly formidable." The I ken eyes, went to hint in the midst of his intlale i when I awoke, if ‘ I may so term the recovery of slinky as it was, I drank in large quantities, for , a d m iral weighed anchor in the morning of this I orateurs, and said to them: ' Now; gentlemen, j my kricken senses. I was aroused by a strange it was hot, and o nly moistened my palate without d a y, an d "every s hip was i n safety outride the I let my husband enjoy a little repose; cone nod 1 , 1 ette m u ta n c ei I waa surolutdad by dark objets ; quenching the erasing elf my appetite. Of water passage about noon." The admiral in his die- take a cup of tea with na"e * * The &I lof hideous shape and hoe---reptile th e y wee p.— i ~TMe was enough. I had more to fear Pie the 1 p a t c h expressed his "most lively sew" -of his iperor has directed legislation to the question of . . 1 They had been before my eyes for 'name time, want of food., ' good fortune, and ;Amin that had Turkebeen ! serfdom :he has not dared to deal with the great 11 . . 1 but I had not-seen them. I had only a sort et . What meld I *air the ibie? Bet how to cook allowed a week longer, "it would have been a very peeblem of general emancipation, which has Noy dreamy eonseimumees of theirpesettre; hut I it? There wa s nothing wherewith to mike a ! doubtful point whether a return would lay open more than ever become a necessity, bathe has heard them at length, my ear wale in better tune, fire, no t a stick. N o m atter f o r that, crooking is . tohimatall." He hiet-I2killed and 235 Wounded. prepared the way for ,it. He has endeavored bi and the strange noises they uttered reached my a s snoslern inventien, a luxury for pampered pal- The - Turks were so iedignant at, the emote. of degrees, to make peasants conceive the hope of intellect, it tonceled, like the blowing of a great atti, 1 divested the ibis of its brilliant plumage, I the British fleet they believed that the Governor becoming free. *,r * - belkurs i with now and then a note harsher and said ate it raw. 1 spoiled my "Penmen, bat at I ;if the Dardanelles; was bribed by DueltVerth, "The Emperor Nicholas leads a life of d the moot louder, like the roaring of a bull. This started ti l e time th em was little Anemia of that; there , mod beheaded him. falai:Mk activity. He rides, walks, a re - me, and I looked nP and bent my eyes upon the was not much of the naturalist left in - rue. 1. in. ; _ The Dardanelles are said to be in snob a for- T i es' , superintends a f ig ht, goes on t h e we . to i ton 41 4 011 4 1 / 0 7 wen the form el the CaOCIODMI r adtmaised the hone I arm inhaled such a' tame; • addable rendition mkt°. be iarragarbis.---Bos. t ar , gives a f e e, emer ekee th e Dav y, and a ll i n "rolls giant *heeds—they wow anigalpaca. i i - ..;' t I wished _baba, Dnlionowid emir, s• 'bat. i , ~ - • - t- -• thammierlei. He travels inesminttp; - peineni fr. at I ILA I ERIE, SATURDAY. DECEIVIBE4 I R 3, 1853, . lieg e ones th e y w4e, ' f , and ins- i their welt% inla twang/. The Ms did nntweigit ny were they in number at least. were I above three pounds, hones anti all. It served It crawling see r the islet. hc * biatl,and en all me for :t second meal, a hreekfast; hat at this m sid es around me . Their ,lang gaunt jaws and ilejitorrionsAnoviim I picked the hones. eimanek,a scouts projected forward as•almost to t What 'lett? starve? NO—not yet. in the tonelt my bode ; and their eyes. 'Neatly leaden, I battle I leaf with the elltgatorethwing the second seemed now to glare. - . • ,' night, one pf - therwreeeived a shot that proved Impelled by this new da rer, I ,rung to my mortal.., The hideout etarearat of the reptile lay feet, wilco, recognizing thelpright ljerm ofa man, I dead wpm the heaeh. , Ineed not starve, I could the reptiles scatted off, stad pluntleg hurriedly I at that. Snell were My reflections. I mast into the lake,. hid their hiders totes under the' hunger, tliongh befor e I eould bring myttelf to water. ' . • 1 1 touch the musky-morsel. This snore slays fast- The incident in eau, 2411' 461.4 in,.. I ins conquered my squenutiehne;te. I drew out ,1,, saw that 1 wa s n o t alome, 4 ritere J was eompany i my knife and out a steak from the elligtstnee even in the crocodiles. 1 gamin* betintio more I tall, ttutl ate it--not the one I had first Itillekl,.: myself, and began to reflect. with toms degree ef brit a second, the other was weir ptitrid, rapidly' cooln ess o n the elreutustasees that surrenntlett 1 deeoinpesing molar du: hot aria; its ordnr Snail me. My eyes wandered over Itte isiek—ert•ry 1 the islet. in c h of it c ame smiler slanee---every object 1 The stench had grown intolerable. There satel upon it was ,wentinined--thertfonli e d feathere of'' not a breath of air stirring, otherwise f mis;fitll the wild fowl, the pieces of mud, the fresh water' have shunned it-by keeping to windward, . Thei,. anus-des (unions) etre'the beach—all t whole atmeephere of- the islet; as well as were' etaniaied. ^ littiVr f i d l . ' ' Aiiiiii4re-41 . n , litigi eliclii 'avOuttlf it, *as impregmeted4rith•flid means . of escape. ';" i fearful effluvium. I could hear it - no longer. 7— ' Tho islet was but the beial of a sand bar form-' With the aid of my 4114 I pushed the half 'de. I ed by the eddy—perhaps gathered together with. composed carcass inhi the lake; perhaps the cur. in the year. It was bare of herikae , e, with the . rent might carry itway. It did. I had the exception of a few tufts of grass. There was gratitleation to see it oat off. The circumstance neither tree or bush upon it not —not a stick. A raft, led Me into a train o reflections. Why did the at indeed! There wan wood enough to make a body of the alligator oat? It was swollen—in. raft, that would have floated a frog. The idea of • fluted with gasses. Ilh.! argil wasbut briefly entertained—such a thought An idea shot suddrly through my mind, one had certainly crossed say Mind,. but ,a single! of those brilliant ideals -- children of necessity.— glance round the islet dispelled it before it 'had-, I thought of the floatipgalligator, of its intestines taken shape. I —what if I inflated hem! . Yes, yes: buoys and I paced my prison from end to end—from side I bladders, float es and ife preserves: that was the to side I walked it over. I tried the water's I thought. I would n the alligators, make a depth. on all sides I sounded it, wading reckless- I buoy of their intesti es, and that would bear me ly in--evkwywhere it deepened rapidly as I ad- I away from the islet: vaned. Three lengths of myself from the islet's 1 I did not loose a meet's time—l was full edge, and I was up to the *el.. The huge rep- lof energy; hope had tgiven tae a new life. My tiles swain around, snorting and blowing, they gun was loaded, a It ge crocodile that came near Were boldei in this eltuutut. I could trot have the shore . received tle shot in his eye. I drat . ' waded safely ashore. even had the water been ' getl him Feu the beach; With my knife I laid open ; shallow. To swim it—no--even thoulth I swam : his entrails.' Few grey were, but enough fur my like a duek, they would hive closed upon and . purpose. .‘ plume ' quill from the wing of the quartered me before I - eouhl have made a &ken ' ibis, served me for a blow pipe. I saw the Had strokes. Horrified by their demonstration s , I . der-like skin expitndi until I was surrounded with hurried back upon dry ground, and FINNd the is- 1 objets like great satuages. These were tied to let with dripping garments. . . gether, and fastened to my holy, and then, with I continued walking until night, which gath, ' a plunge, I entert4 the waters of the lake, and ered around me dark and dismal. With night I noted downwa rd. i had tied on my life preser came new voices—the hideous voice., of the .uoe. vers in such a way that I sat in the water in an turnal swamp; the quae - pial of the night heron, I upright pcksitiou, Itolliug my gnu. in both hands. - the screech of the swamp owl, the cry of the bit-' T-his I intended to OSO as it elekie case I should tern, the el-I•uk of the great water toad, the tink- : be attacked by the. ligators; Kett I- had chosen ling of the. bell frog, and the chirp of the Saran. the hot hour of at ti. mien ;the, , s:reatort, lie na cricket—all fell upon my ear. Sounds still its a half torpid ste t ‘, awl to tia jest I was -- not (, harsher and more hideous were he trti artitintl use, lestea. Ilalf,ats Ihours drifting With Ilk eur 7 _tih.,..1.1 1:41tiat,, ,, ,,r_ th, a11i.e„„,.. 1 1 .;.g.... r of, 4 ren u arr ,,o ~. I , ii. , 1 „ ....t.ii.ii...a....L......'....tt-iietim+ fa,: ride, - tlie,e rpitiltilleit toe that I inttA istd - itiv , elf at the di liPti here of the iii)ost !fere, _go ao ,leei. Co ,leep! 1 .lair•t 0.4 14.1%.4. di r pt ! 1 1) 14 1 . 11 1. ; . 1 7:i at ilt ti li it: : I ...Au. lily 1., it in the ~t 4' :10111, , , Hera 'tingle in s tant. Kve IL when 1 Lai 14 a few Lit •••: • . • s ,i r t i t - '-..-, - n . ....,_ i r rn. ,,r, 1, „ nur . , 1.7071 -4.141 11,4 i ::1 11 1, 7 11:477 :1 14 1 7 113 7 : 7 14" ; ill.,llY:T,s; ::: 4 : : k .'," . I: IgWriri7:;:! '311:11. 1: in: :::"I' g.4.71:...ik:111111:1t1ipi1-onfrrile:;:thlh:•nr°ilntiienl::::(l"lllii.oii:. 171'44..1:tn17tLr-i-- ;.: - .11 intervals I spraeg to ley !eel; ,bout, .1. , bayou. „ . .. r i n . 1 , • '-e of his. $1 50 Al YEAR, IN ADVANCE. I . Tax CZAR AND THE SUOMI, • The Ciar comes within all I net, or two of equallin g in 'statnre his royal „brother, the King of thy Canibal Island., who stood six feet 'Aix, in hiknme easins. lli.L figure is of iletettleatt di men.ions tui symmetry. ' , The exp* of his countenance," says one of his adm it tib ia-ids, the Prince Kolofski, quo. a-certain sever ity whh-li is far from putting the behold er at his ease. Ifis smile is a smiliv`of complaisance • and not the moth of gayety or o . There is something approaehing Pot prodigious in this ,prinee's manner of existimee. He speaks with vitacity, with simplieity, , and the most perfect propriety; all In' .411. i. full of point and mean. idle pleasant ry--not a word out of its place. There is nothing in the tnne of his voice or the arrangement of his plirazes that indicates ltangittiness nr disstirnplatiosa r anal yet yOn feel that Ttis heart is closed." "The Ffin . fiotv another writer, not his sobjeet and not his:admi rer, "is of areat: height. :mil is very proud of „s . it —OA prints, perhaps, as lie tuti: — acquired the habit of certain which often give him a strong resemblance to a peacock when about to spread his tail. It is a fact well known in l'etersbnrgh, that every well-grown Mall newly recruited for the . gtiardis called into the Emper or's presence,' who.measnnt heights with hint. Ifis,air is serious,._his glance wild—even a little savage; his entire physiognomy has something hard and stern in it: his gestures arc abrupt;and he cuts his words in pronouncing them. The Emperor never shows himself but in the milita ry costume, the stiffness of Which is in perfect keeping with.his .tastes, and which wakes his great height stiAlluore (-auspicious. Meanwhile. there lea want - of.ease in his mocements; sineen faltfrom his horse, he drags. one leg afterhint in a disagreeahlpinelegant manner." • The Ozer has lived fifty-seven years—reigned twenty-eight. His name is Nicholas Paulvoitch: he is the fifteenth sovereign of his dynasty, and the eighth of his littuily. tic is More a t;erunin than a Russian; but, as the Geralams are to the 1 Russians an mho srare. he ig•nore. his Ginn:tan Wood, awl so do h.• eourt historians. Nicholas was not the heir 44 the • thriinc; but his lAiber Constantine refused to reign. and, site?"' inter regnum of three weeks, Nicholas was proclaimed emperor. Nicholas, previous to his acoession to' the throne. had displayed the talents Of a drill sergeant. lle was on inflexible and punctilious disciplinarian, an4l nu- unpopular nun withlarmy and people. Bnt an ir 7 nrreetion liqtrely#lll 9 /Ph4. ed, :and the ingorgent , elementy treated, his an-, thority was establiAted The Sultan, AlAll Metijill, the thiry-tirst 4 tivylatell of hi dyanNty and twerity-fint child father. i , n...w in tho hirt v-tirc , t sear of his age.:ut•t thy• I;.,trternth of hi-:;t•ign "81einler \\. .< : _ '' B. F: - SLOAN, EDII'OIL NUMBER 29. nier at least fifteen hundred WON every spa son ; and all those who are attached to bia pews hare to share his fatigue. The Empress, who will follow him every: arltre, loses her health, by doing so, and it is mid that the young Grand4luke Constantine will 60 victim to the mode of traveling adopted by his her. Nicholas is in d ilte habit of traveling not than seven leagnes an hour in an open min. ONI The Sultan, meanwhile, him been cultivating reach literature, impacting schools, and caret. g his fair, fat and thirty ChoWeians. Here is _ pleture of a Turkish echool emwitualeu-4he 'Arnimr being no lei s . a pers4 this themai le Selma himself : • . " in a vast hall, decorated wittrusilitary tro phies, and provided with seienti&rhostrumepis of every -kind, a hundred young men, of from Moen I _years of age, modestly await the Bel- tau, hem Mertens as much as they revere. illo r ,, . ' takes place among thee 1- 7 -eo consomatiett laughter; alt eyes ate taped otarinoilet throne, which stands in the middle of the roosi, sod which is as yet empty. " At length Abdul Medjid appears and sits down—near him the sheiks, the nieniabs, the Ministers, and thtlptincipal pachas. Etch pupil venom in turn towards the theme, and replies I the questions which are pat to him by Oa of he t rofessors, one of the ministers, or by the n himself. The questions refer to teethe ties, literature and art. : When Abdul litedjid utsa question; he does so with the greatest kind . • ss; If the pupil replies correctly, a soft smile , "gide up the Sultan's face 3 if he makes a wig -. the Sultan corrects him with indulgence d without making him the least. rePretch.— ' 1141 the examination is finished, the rewards • giveu to those pupib who have chiefly dis inguishod themselves." • It is plain enough' that the kindly, delicate; ter:try Sultan is no match for the tremendous' gat. " Pale, melancholy arid earwirern, the ti ultan is the living symbol of deeNte. His die inguished countenance bears the sad jsupreni of rate formerly glorious, but which is bqinning to Oisappeai . The Czar,_ on the. eoutiiry, with Herculean form, his vulgar demeanor, and this implacable character, is the true chief of a barbarous natlow....W nation restrained only by a false civilization, and wig but fora signal to be transformed into a &roe:10s beast, ready to 411 upon and devour all Europe." 1* Such is the substance of M. Bowtri."!:a inanaat iug bit incomplete little book on the "12' 4 n' and he Sultan."- We make room for one passa;,7 —a passage significant,pieturesque arullero :— " In 1850," says M. Bouvet,'" I Adt at Con, stantinople 'the new palace of the Rompista em bas _ _ at • . I ..ang on the i nuitertal image of tike ainiliFlG power which the Czar has acquired in Turkey.— _ It. is in this palace that Menschikoff was installed, iiiis surrounded -by a regal pomp. It was there he received deputations from a great pa of the Sultan's subjects. It wits from thence imbed his audacious commissions of inquiry • /various points of the Turkish empire. kineffy, it was from thence that he emerged to attend the audi ence at the Pachalik—with insolent messagn-:- and dressed in the disrespectful paletot of which so . much has been said. .. "On the tlfoth of January, 1668-=nearly two hundred years ago=-under the reign of the Sul tan ._ Mahmoud IV., an embossador of the Cur Alezi4i Mikhailovitch was conducted te`•the ser ilin, to he received by the Sultan. . The Res •si trot 166.5 worsno more ,disposed to inuasisityt t uhe of 13153. The introditeing fenetiontries f . that he did not W*'down loci Weigh be- ' their:master. Faithful to a harl4mo and ding costom,,they applied their bands to e back of his-head to force him to bead it as - nch as possible. The Schivonian couragataady cod upright, but the chamberlains, instead :.4 I ing their hold, only pressed the hare*, to . s ch 'a degree that the' visit.* fen to the geetui is dragoman, seeing this, lost all !elf-poeseas4 u, , and was not in a state to offer a single ward,— Tho 'Sultan, out of patience, ordered his karat nen to relieve him of the infoilt f trs presence. The minister obeyed, and drove out with a cudgel, • which he applied with his own hand, the,enthes sador, the secretary and the dragoman.". .f &Inman W u Has.—We are reminded of sa anecdote of a elemtnan, who ate. a bit of a humorist. He once took tea_ with s lady of 'his parish, who .prided herself much apes her nice bread, and was also adapted to the' common trick of deprecistiug her viands to het 'inesta. As she passed the nice warm bLoolit to the effeeelei gentleman, she said, "They were not: 171. JP*" "she was almost ashamed to offer them," ke.— The minister took ins, looked atrit ratker!dubi4 ously, and replied, "They are not so midi* they might bet" The plate was instantly Wit/alums, and with heightened color, the lady ezelahmed, " They are good esossilit for you."' Nothing far , ther was said shoat the biacuit.—Portiand Tr. WAILES Toumr.--Sato Jolter lived up in Or ford county. Now, Sam was`tit onetime' eater, and it happened that he was one day boding a load otushoolur to the nearest village, wiles his team stuck in a seed hill. Well, did Sam fret and scold his oxen, ar unload his teams , Not, Ho very coolly to ok: down his dinner from the load, sat down and ate it, when his emn started off with the remainder of the load without fur ther trouble. • Tam LAST Inirmortou.—We we it Moiled a the Cruseinnati dim that two young sea elf *at city hod ionatroMad a boiler and stems 1101014 on the same peineicle 41 the Ste") mime, which they wheel shout from one pert of die city to another, and when they get a job to saw wood, ea rah* steam in shout ten minetes, ad just their elevate oisr in the meantime, and is half an lour est s cord of wood in two or three pieces as may be desired. The whole meshise ry does not weigh over ire hundred pow*, sad may be regarded as a nest improTtem, sad a saving of mach *wool labor. , 11121 R>= Immo