Erie weekly observer. (Erie [Pa.]) 1853-1859, May 12, 1855, Image 1

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    DU RLIN & SLOAN, PUBLISHERS.
VOLUME 25,
BUSINESS DIRECTORY.
ROGEILS, KENNEDY & KEYNoLDs.
riuteespore to C.d.ell & Bennett,)
%
Not.o♦tia D Rai*, it Dna Lail in Hardware. Crockery. altar,-
• are a rodigaddlery. Me II and Id. Emp. re Mork, corn. of F int
and Alai , street", Erie. Pa
100111.11,
_
DR. .1. L STEWART,
Iv I'lo.o P111 , 1 ,- I*, •ICa 1 , 11.6..0% 'Mee. Ptewar & sqn
a.r• Lnrug nnore. corner of Kim.. and Perenth streets Res
.)eree e. estvetsle +trees. one door oar( of Anatafrai street
W. B RI:81010RK,
With Oharehi il. Wa'kis, Johnson.
Puirraita and Jobbers of Fore,an and tronnrshe Dry Goods
.rw LSI k 13J Broadway New lurk
WODung Cbarrnitt
Rufus M Jut loon
H H. LIAVEH.S'rICK,
logic MILL. herOT, Wh,rlesale and Retail dealer
around reed. and all oi llr,r , I fl. east tide thr
Yir,ite Square. Bee:* ri Block, Elie, 44
S A C T - ERRE"I"I & CU,
n, Ti,, Copper and eineer.frou 'Ware, tWhole
.1 c and Retail, Corner of Freliell and Yiitti-m reel, Jplrosite
runners' Hotel, Erie Pa Per) article rn the above litre
1,14/I}. Ull aana iu,dritiVr web •11 e as.urlmenl of
r-orrem and l'uoking ate A'l kindr ut Ruontig and
rinreuted w ith nrarness and dispatch, un rfliolUtlibit
CLEF ENS S; CAUGIAY,
~,i•• I k iirkr..r.. and I)raler• ro I/01110 , 11e And 1111p011.4
CIO Meant, l'u , atreu, I. Nit, Pleb. NI. et.
A k erlit. fur Niudraul Buffalo A le Nu, 7 klunn.ii Mout, eau.
1,0",
NEILEIt & \CAR - HEN,
,•.a. and Dr ‘4 0 ,11 d.ar Bang \ u, lOC, Icon Uloc k
111.1 , on dli trip rr ncipal I h t 14;ftle.
IL , I . ' 4. , 31.1 , 1, .111.1 irmited Rank Noir,
d and •• 1 1 I.rr !.,tigtli and I Inkrre. paid vu TIME
od. I. Mond t&/ to d:af4l,,,e, Land IVa Itant a bt , Ughl.
Rod located Lin the mkot rra,•nat,,e trro,
A. A. 1'1(.116
c sor the Peace, ()thee remote,' to N
Dour, Skit otter'. E.rw. Pa
E CHAPIN
a , . BK uf the Violth and Gatti's, rriolenct un Stich .t.
door to John P Vtuceut. Music arranged (or
ti-art. or Cotillion Bands.
W li. SIIEIiIAN.
1) r' ERRE ' 4 krt .
,t Sow, belWrfatl Or , .Wn'. Flute! and the Reed liollor r
Ka. turn award, rt bun for the teat the
'lO
L. W OLDS
/4' & Retail ILA 4111/1.1 , 1i4/erm r all,l rustera
..wer,..t coal Mr, pr.( now in use
1 , 1 a'./ 1 e l'Pr} BlurlL, in rear Ul 1.144. r Fari..arre, -(ale
• q.t.! f lir(a
k, 4 ,1 (JI lily r/Olbre• fur ( . 01.10/ 4 . 1.11$ MAW( 101 1.1 1 / 1
, Ir a 11141 luernan,Cßl wade to order
L. FOX,
1 ,, ffit...0.4 Prefitlthr,g f A dwr,
le f r.lO
E)lEttl,
Ur rot, It .* d.. r wra of Anirra . llll
kat, Pi
TOOl),
With Oarlath Terry. & Dew.
Litt. and A . NakVOIP Jabber. rT t.riv!" h. German and Ike
/lama/arr. Gana, PialOla. ati IS4 Market
Jan and :bah,
lit IiTON & II ERR( iS,
• .1114.1111. T.. J N &E. o .
e.• •-•,* l Reis .1 14.4 rt• lb 10111%, %If. y
1% t..DV! %WC Ifirmthe. P. rtutorn. b. or burp.
S Jir.4l
DR. L
NI 1/.111,111 —()Eficr ..w.ldwel.ing nn r... 111 Furlßow
. 6,111, w ur auted
UR 131{1)WNi:LL,
, • nOUlli •I It Lel .11..
• •IV 1. ,1ch xtreet., Ent., ri
kilitt.o.llPC I •! • 4 A MiLLAk
E f l AIiELL,
ART at, ROOlll vi er 1., flint. . 4 ,011111 side of
ound, FL Is Pa.
lesisiten in Ow nest style of the a,,. and warranted tort
T. I). EI)WAII1S,
Imy • 411.1 • • , *CILIA'S XI law W woi‘ ph P.ofelitlarll
104.• and eyllerttoftm will rpre•tse yrernp ntu,130,,
D. D. WALKI.:I-1 k CO,
gAdID.IIO. produe• Ir..f t inomrr+ion 1N.., hams fourth Warr.
wept of the Punic Bridge, rife. Pa
--Lirsirrs in Coal, Nast. I'l -wr. o, F,-h. I.one
. tar Stone, Iron. Pll,l, ,101l*. I 4.lgitg. arw i th
f• t r a for stooping cutter 111.11 13
.1,4}11 . 1., I Ult.,
s,,rwrs. , yr by 5ta. , r....0f
• Y. WALKER, I u..•01x..
_
. .
CA KS( )N Li ItIA 11 ,
••., • 111. COL fk•St UAL .1 1.•1 0 4, ,it 1'14 . 1.'110( . Oiouita
01 tixr Vat". tne, t'.
VINCENT, 11011;01)4 CO,
rt '"lo‘.. ~r, r Ili 114. k1a . {1.0. , ,
4 .r• r r i'a
iiOM )f
L. k FIRM v.' I. 1.1.0111
•IL in 411 X Po, V. nicto... Jew, re I , IIJA/t
illortsl, 1..41Per 1,11111•4 tll,
Qtrapi,r. tu.. '• 1310
11 .I.IRECK I
%Dar Wrol •pl.• of I r
J 13 GI 'NN !SON
o n Rook., Station , . r$ big p orlo, I 1.4,“0 r
Muttc. r
• the. Reed 41.)%r P.
li()()TII & STEll'.ll{l',
N•
Intl Retail Fltt,‘ 4 0.1 I,nple
,tier,. loeuherii lI.P 1:e%4111 , ..i-.. a nd Rr..wb a rlutri
LIDDELL, KEPLER (1)
,„ I ,„„ Penn. IR, la. vaul,
• 111.1 % of 114.1 , 11tIler‘ .1111.1
STERRETT & IiIA I',
••. jqh(orli , ah i Flrla .1 Pt llrk I. •••
1'r”.1•icc,r..0.•44, .1 i.) ihlllie.l6l l 11/11, , 181.1.4 , 1
Sh is, a• r. Fit/ ,rt. \a,'
:•414.0 At , At( , -,,,, ul•
• .r •••..
WM S. 1..0 F
'Ol ••al I , IR al Imo'
E•ol Ow 41,,
S.‘SFint I ) l(
'A•11.41,11. Nutt—, •Ir I • ~e 1k
t skit o ,
.ill I.
• I. afire Nts 51. kr,/ r.. —.4 re ,
T pS ST I *.l ItT.
• • l••r I iri , kli OW' OW/
wJ ‘fl,llll.l'llll 111,1
I:1 Fl S IIEE1)
~,t,..•ef 111,1 Ali, 1, , at, 1.11 1,...ihr1• nu.. 1111
II?. nter. horn
.110 \\
....• ).4 ,, F1 14..41i , 'it'll, 14 • • lo AA, I.r ,tent
i.,...*.tre 114. :11 ~k• Ll.' I 1011.
k•• 1 / 4 e I 'lO,, ..t• 1, lullr •1001 , iH•W*
• klUlei, f.r,e i'n
CI Et )11GE 1 . 1
• •• Law. i.trard. Irirl V,,„,j
511PW 4 4 4 111..) Mitt, , 41.1
el( )SIAli K ELL( )(IG,
• tilt,l 4 tga 3.11.4 I Ulflll.ll.lVll Mert ~11 the pub!, wog.
- • ' , Alt .ttrel ( . 4.1.1. Salt. r ,„ r
Vif pale
(' IKTEEt J ISi:A )I'l i
ant Rrta.l Illrawr. 41 ,
It, ones, Ay . , \in Ml, kerti :4r. h.r ha
JA)I ES 1,1"111:„
111 ere h T,iiitgi on Ihr 7' , ,?. if Pgw,rr, a fr.
-.raw ore., Lrin
.11 )iiN S‘V EN EV,
Pratte, ',fir.. ru Uo r• • 011 1,,(.1,er I) tO.
=ME
JOHN 11F.11z:\ A i • 4)
• •,••• M
akgrtil kit • 01ttv $l.
E .1 Nit )1:1 (6
. 4 4.1 r'omrnr..,or 1,,,
"“ n r ori. Ana. ruin. 1 bur and Pla .ter.
J (' )IAItSII.VI.I.,
—tfi.e Up .141 , 1 , 111 1 .Islol.lfly Hail
h PrgolltOniLitt) • o office. brie
TililiALS, I L .VES S: CC,
(.runner, I rockery, Irlnkr.lwarr .
I. brown • Nev. flute/. f.r.e. Fa
SIMITLI JACKSON 1 SON
thy lkrod•. Gruerrtr,,, Hardwire. CLuertis Warr
al la, te . tit tyu eh, taw.
TkiORNTuN,
Nor#alr rvas.xo.
,
1,011.1. 11 1 rt*airs. Lea•co, to , •r.u
-aa•drawl-I I.llice in IVrorttr. Mock. l ie
1%.
DOUGLASS,
- .othrt Kam; in Vl'llbate Rau k. w n iu
TANNER S NIAGILL,
~opor. Slid! And o.lPwri Iron W A re
'" turrUi kV WI ISM it CUa Cie Iran,.
r
• A NA Nil'
B WItI( A '111'
f OOO- t0,r...f0 , 11,,,0t0r00 nio . PO'd 4 1tv•r Com .or to'
W arra nu andr rlll f) , nit.. of I ' , epos! I Al.o.
Yld
• 11. ;of of, ilfo4l Clllem oft the oilod part-
.11 tMtee. W iaimi Rivet twist r
Pubt, tkri,*,e
•1'4.11r r P
IV KP,li A TILa Eft,
liyienalt Ultallef• ihrwrrt dr-f rlpUun of
• • Aar. • •,• Kort, rap l':ay and haP l tna 4 111/I,e WO.
and Thud .trvirts on the! ra
u.a.
M A. GAI.I3RAII'H,
.mot al i.ab TAN., Oppuritethe new Court
CHA - PIN
awn r Derma-4 Ar• in Own ,bt •'tan 'Wren,
corner trf dilate etreet +lad the ?nand uluallr, Up
Ni-ces rannoanitte. &ad nu work war
ranted
•Aerum Yudi Bame.L maul, at 3 ceisia et yik rd. just
"1 11 UNA St, 111-411 kat IXi a cu.
ERIE WEEKLY:HOBSERVER,
Mg roll against roll, sod oftentimes drowning the
noise of their spinning-wheels with their laugh
ter. Flaxen-haired and dewy-eyed, pale of cheek
and with a sweet patient expression coming out
now and then despite the mirth which for the
present has possession of her countenance, is Bet
ty She is slight, rewindiug you of a wild flow
er that has grown up somewhere in the shade;
the sister, Polly, is stouter, with darker eyes and
maban w danthair
hair; a cheek fresh as a rose just
bursting or
with
bloom,and a step that is stronger
and prouder than Betty's. They are in gay mood
just uuw, and though they have done more than
their tasks, they spin on, for 'tis easy work to
e r ne when the heart ie light. The swallows are
se used to thew that they fly close over their
lieady'
rafters, th ad the d
they
y u go inun u d v o es tr io,sk ofth o e u ir ie n tryi
t 4
down on inst
the
thew from their high dusty beams, as though
they were friends. It is near night, and the bell
it, the distant meadow tells the spinners it is
time to bring home the cows, for that is a part
e e up, the
i w r li h e u e n ls ci z tfo tb r y t , n a e n s d n w n i i t s h lo c w otta no g w e
„f ihe evening task; so the last skeins are reel
u„t- lit the
, bo th n i;
take their way up the lane together
( )eon Polly looks bark at the mill, mischievous
ly as it semis, and talking the while of some one
w he is there, while Betty keeps softly along the
pat h of white clovers, pulling the ripe metes that
hang over the fence, and thinking apparently
wore than she speaks.
lie is coming, he is corning!” exclaims POI-
I); 10, rue walk on the otherside of you-1 would
not 'tried in your way fur the world."
°O Polly, just as if I cared whether Richard
saw me or net," replied B e tty
"Just as if you didn't care; now, Betty tell
me true all about it."
"All about what?" asked the girl, innocently;
-there is mailing to tell about
that is the way when there is nothing
hi tell. Well, never mind; when I have a lover,
I wont tell a word he says to tne—see if I d 3."
At this punt of the conversation the girls were
overtaken by the peseen mentioned as Richard,
and who, we may as well explain, was a young
fernier named Richard Armstrong, who lived
with and suppedrted father and mother, half a
dozen tutus away, and who is just now returning
twine with three nice bags tilled with dour and
meal Ile is sitting in the front of a snug cart,
and drising a -creme -mart beret, and altogether
hits a well-to do and thrifty aspect
1' .sly lingers behind and gives him a lively
tier good-natured salutation, setting why he did
n e t nonai n to e a t supper with them—and she
tepee lie will come to the heuse often, as she
and her -ester are always happy to sec him; and
a- -lie talks she tos, plea and nestles lute his
earl, raising herself un tip-tee the while to 41'e
how much flour there is, and what the probabil
iota of the young man's coming to the milhagain,
sighing, •• Ah we: the prospect looks dismal
en..ugh, " awl laughing while she sighed. Rich
ard laughed too as be talked with her, saying it
, was a misfortune that he had brought so much
The June roses hung bright over the ;',w fent', wheat—that another time he would only bring
that rah along elth..r side of the n irrow th.. quantity—ale! that he wae mire be would
leading front the main road down the e'er up- he' gilt./ of any excuse that brought him to the
oar which stood the house of &suite Merriferd, heights etieed of the beautiful Polly; but when
sue of the oldest and must considerable meant the he spoke to Betty it was in a lower and deeper
thrifty ueighleirliood in which he lived Bright tette; and though he said not it made him hare
sh
hung the rose- along the lane 1. lieu, the middle t ie t o see 1.--
e., w il es 1
/0'
une ina.ie thew blush t 11•e si ball" kite inn it del; and as for Betty, her
tee sin hero ovugus wt-re .troup a Mils.,.. and her tretnlrhug vow,. betrayed the
little with the growth of :Tel , siieweig ere Ili, it] tii it was w her heart, thew were the
erini-nun'r ru-set tin uses gr.. —, ask,t, and how came nu tbe bar
strawberries show along the grils,.in t Ito wow - - Ili hard pretuise well; but uth
ere stepped new and ttit n to lift up the ein hri- ye) -11 i• w end sal i ste• if he weuld eetue again
,re iit thee. r if ese r At the ewl of the lane the
the r went if 1111:1 , I t), i'; ) it, I‘lllliii it, are direction and the girls
set, sanding the air that h `11). r 1 -taut 111 anotio r, leo his tioiughts stayed with one of
pastures, and vete-lee . woes dee., t -t, die, tl elm, 3 , t may be sure
lay e.ititeudly r tip •, 0 it-, a- they hoard the "bar ," falling,
out tee flie ear of t h e foresee Cain pi• 'urn .1 'VI r heats homeward, and ,ne by ene
rust! , et ereen eern All t', • Lir?h -et tin d wls diesel the road end turned their
renewed in the bre:tee-4 n-, and -r, p- into the lane; benind the rest name the
t h e 0,,.•. of Iti.• will in ill , Ie ,I)m i h ie d. ne e, of all, !sweetly wearing
house, and the Lion et* the hi 'wit .w le ' i h ••W ho all that list . ' said Betty, pent
tlyine nod; it, tee air. awl the —we! • • f the ho l ee les int a v' ungl genileman 'who, in a tine
- 3 , -pe e ling is he t i e .1 • ',tit et et g, ,ci is , fl'.l.llrg tiw flock its be leisurely
general ,•heerfuluess ?tt thonstuittess rward, mere intent, it appeared, on the
Q.liet and still stood she h“lne-tease see the % ern e stareen that, the course his horse was take
-taxi—its block thick up it,. ins Net a jet fr''m her aceustotned path turn
erieteru hill—the see issis .hpleue into its stout . sit the' ali...e hell had givetk warning of her
charm• ys, exe"pt the . t,c fr el/ V.i , ” 11 the smoke appre e la, for -toe was unused to interruptions,
eatne putbeg b are and fast, :tie c,id was black and had probably o.•yur sec') so fine an slut
with m e—, 41,1 d the race s, uo tit , t fashien page as that inimediatchs fronting her Suildi n
of Ion,: ago, leer , ulet k, t tit ii, t:ii! -"sit uly shoe Levered her head, and with a quick thrust
!spout:, that led the rain-aster re tee gnat plank of her caused the horse to rear and fall
et-tern, wound such vines ;Is bad beet. traueplano heel:tient en carnage and driver.
ed fr to tho Un i t[ of the tieurieLl more • mercy, tnerey! what shall we do?" cried
in the etmehlue. A g .'id sulatential lieu-e. built Bet), helmet, her eyes in her apron, and weeping
tit he wit legs, was that of Alerroord, hay in fear and fright, but Polly rushed forward at
,„ 4 e „,‘„,„„ ,„ w , r,. hung ....eue „lice to aeeertsiu the extent of the injury and
et the nicest toots et* husbandry, awe where, just pretfer her Set rice
new, the boughs of the re.1w....1 made blinds for The young stranger proved not to be hurt
t he w ir e lesses, and softened a tre the light that riot-ly, and was in a moment on his feet, seem
wanted inte the wain resins, , AttlCh were furnish- in.z!y mere a n noyed by the alarm be had given
,d, as the render tiny supp,e.e. with a simpiscity women than for the accident to him
:eel ce -itch UOVV-.1 d.l) i -rarely to be tw o Toe earnaee was quite crushed to pirSurli,
suet Vi.t were there seine eieurreto deep arid so ruu. hse a- tee make the Immediateproseention
sett feittier led?, hi. ng reuuti with curtains of of the j , urney an impossibility There was no
plc linens -erne cusheitied chair- of an ancient i tavern within half a dozen mike, and feeling reel
fa-hiere an el e gant brass click, some pictures ponsib;i . for t to• eemluct of the cow, and directed
wr , ught to worstk , and elm pets of common, he kindliness of heart, tile hospitalities of their
but -.weedy hieomnig fiewers father's house were at once proffered by the young
Who made the pictures, and who keeps the woman and accepted with a grateful politeness
flowers so bright, we look abut the house in vain , on the part of the stranger
to learn The meows are empty of human inter- I Not to linger—lie proved to be a man of for
est, a eat dozes in a streak of sunshine on the ture of the name of Fairfield, who, aside from
floor, loeltiug up proudly as theugh the sole sen- his rent,- of travel, had accidentally strayed into
twee and bs no means to be caught asleep We the neighborhood of the Merrifords The esquel
bear a round as of footsteps hard by; the house• may easily be guessed The young man found
wife is busy plying her evening care, quietly, many objects of interest to detain him; and
and iu if work were her best rest Slit' is drees- when at last he took his departure, Polly was his
ed neatly and simply in gannente of her own TifOralbcil wife
feeh'emiug; her cheek has hat its blushing lung What seeming accidents determine the cous
ago, but tier Bette keep all the kindliness and in- s e, of our lives! but what appears broken and
telltgeuee, awl her hands retain all their cuuuiug contused, is, we know, oneness and order.
Good Mrs Mernford has never bothered her
brain as to what will suit her style, or what the PART SECOND
new fashion will be She feels deeply that the The fall was come—the more beautiful of the
fie-Mien of thi:, world passe' away, and that a sea..n. ~ f the par; in the woods the nun' were
geed life makes the face pretty, and mu she works dropping with every wind; the time of the her
on cheenully and piously; and her excelleut hue- ri , - and the roses , was past, the time of the birds
baud truly says that age adds to her beauty. and , was past; only one was seen sew and then twit
that her heart shines wore and more in h. r face• terine on the leafless but sunward branch of some
A little way down the elope stan,hs tee old- tr,e, the orchard ground was bright with apples,
fashioned mill i and the two stout hero e, hue and the sleek cattle went up and down the inea
black and the other white, are treading there all dew- where the harvest had been Some yellow
the day, and sometimes fariuto the night flow leases clung yet to the rose-vines along the lane,
all the neighborhood round for miles cone !Ile and the blackberry bushes stood thorny and bare,
farmers to Squire Merritord's mill. bringing their inking: as though their roots were dry as well as
gnats of wheat and corn, Bud ht iping to chap' their hranehes; the clover buds were all gout',
the affairs of the nation in tie it little dispute sail the gees was brown and thin along the lane;
nous with one another while they wait ter the the sun was plug dewn and seemed burning the
horses to tread out the flour or the meal Itp weeds lute tire Le he went. The homestead of
posite the mill standa the barn, temple, aul tee- the Merribirds looks lonelier than when we saw
taming more of the modern improvement. than • it ht-t—the currant-bushes and the Ullman' leaf
the house can boast of; the new bay is elready less about the yard; the vines that run up to the
in the mow, and the sweet smell of it is in the , cases hese hat foliage and flower-; wtudows and
air; thrifty hens have weaned their young broods deer- are closed, and the very smoke from the
and are sleeking up for a second eeam,u, in the cloud). y dritts away in a blow and Melancholy
privacy of out-of-the-way nooks, or walklng let- • faehinn. They are sitting by a wood fire, the old
leveler to the sunshine, not to elicit the attention people talking et the time long gone—the time
of the group of idlers about the yard of course; when they were young and lovers; it seems only
their seeming indifference presupposes maiden yeeterday. and yet it is thirty yearsago--thir
meditation, tapcy free. i ty pare :once the orchard was planted, and the
The great doors of the barn are open wide;— logs hewn for the huuse where they ale sitting
the floor is awept clean, and Betty and folly ' Diibrr a very little while it seems; not long enough
Mernford are there spinning together Knots , for their hairs to have grown gray as they have,
of spun yarn hang from the low beams, and the and for the little children that were so soon play
reel is wound round with a wide belt of the wool tug at their knees, to have become men and wo
threads, and bunches of soft beautiful rolls hang I men. They cannot tell hot it is, and when and
under the spindles that are growing plump very t bow the years weal away: they do not feel that
feet el the two girls run book and &nerd, pie°. 1 they ham come far or are tired, nor soli they see
I=
Tho stirring old Nem, says the Ilow4
has the r i u g of tbo true metal, and le M applicable now as
when it was written—foe We plitlurophy is sound, and,
therefore. univereal
lioLeton
W it R u•lutar
._l___llrtl
tin..
-ton/.% n
1111=1
0.1 0.,. Flow
MIZEI
151:Ern=113
elect Vortg.
A POEN
Who shall judge a man from wanneno
Who ,hall know hint hr hu (irret,
Paupers may be fit fur princes,
Princes fit ha' outta-thlng h•s•
Crumpled shirt and dirty pi.iikrt.
May be , lotbe the vltirn rr
Of thr deepest thoughts Mt.& It rime."
Seim rash, ..tuaht I, a. , mare
There rrr rpringa cryotnl nectar
El'er welting out ut YtuDe,
There eV. purple budr and !olden
Hidden, crushed and every , wn
th.d. who counts be oeulm, not dree.,o4
Lin er and pr , ...pere, 3 , u awl me,
h, t elurr tk r ure the toe , ,•,t
But as pehblus In the era.
Mn,r uprakerd 4bove hie trll~ w.
Often f“rgete hiP fettwor, thet.
:Idasteni—ruler.--))r1, n.awrnh. r
That your ulasneat hind+ aro wan'
Men by lsbnr, wan
Men by thought and moo '0) fame
Clattntng equal righta t...un•hlne
lu a coan'i enot,,lng name.
There are bum etntor..idereti •••• t ,an•
There are little weed-clad oils,
There are feeble 111 , , h-b gh Aapi,og,
There are cedar" on the fink:
Ls 111, Who cuunta a,PI
Loves xnd pr , opers you nr,.l
F•r t. Eiuu xll %Atli
p, vp tbv I
T Tug bawls a:,,ne are Laude
Of a niktp , ti. ITPINJ Sn I Lila
T,11e,1 11\1.111et• 5F pnrlbit , t,...l.
Fe 1 itivi fat:enel m lh,
111 tti , rwrnt t h.rt 114 a
LIN 4tnly re;,'
%% Writ. the pu. , r lOW/ • ..utrni , ...l Ireteh,th
etirt!3 'II up Jt•
Truth and are ctern ti
H ern with lorelibees and I:ght:
ryt wrong" hall n•t er
AVtille there to a 'lllOl . l (1
.1. b .•
t..
`ink..,pprttiPin• with n•
fl O ' , jib,' •
iloitf
Fpau the Natiormi
C HANGES A ;;TURY.
BY A L ICE cARE)
81 50 A YEAS, Ili` ADVANCE.
ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 12,1855,
any place where they till be willing to stop as
they look forward; life *ems just beginning, and
yet they mis t have cone aloud way on its jour.
uey they know, else hot came the orchard trees
grown even past their rime, and how came the
thick moss on the roofor th e d eep lines in their
foreheads, or the .ocka 'hove them so faded and
thin. We are growinpld, they are compelled
to :admit at last, and unit be content to see our
children really to take fir places when our work
shall be (tine.
s . iberly and
And while they sit Owe talking
yet happily of days tbsdkre gone, and the bless
ings t h at are a b o ut to 9, the two girls, Polly
and Betty, take their w , along the lane for the
last time—out
isughiniand Jesting as before.
but wit h wrote , about eali other, and mostly tti
silence. No more will ley spin together when
the summer comes roust; and the sheets and
coverlida that were wows and bleached so gaily,
have been parceled sepistely and soberly now;
the guessing and the diming are done, and each
looks calmly on the ft*re spread clear before
her—each is oonteutedand more than content
ed, and yet the assuriice each gives to each of
happiness is choked wh tears. Already the
spiders are at work in he idle wh ee l s , and new
itifluences are at work i their hearts that will di
vide them more than to distance, that is to be
shortly between them. They do not think it
possible, as they bring )me the cows together,
saying, "We never shaido so any more.' •
Betty hides her lam liter hands, as they pause
on t h e mea d ow ' s edge, site one by one the cows
pass them going home; it you sight hear Pol
ly's crying half across ti held; she half wishes
the sunset would stay stile just as it is, and
that the long looked-fore-nrurrow could be kept i
back: nothing, she feelsust then, can compen•
sate her for separation fin her good sweet sis•
ter; but she will never It her less—no, never
Their homes will not be , ry far apart, and once
every three mouths, and lit seems a great while
, w , th e y wlli visit each her; and every week
they will writ,• rod say usch other every thing
they have thought and don often they will meet
at the homestead, and a tkisand promises they ,
wa k e , an d a thousand as , Nuftices of this and of
that, as with the tears runig down their ices
t h ey tollow !pane the cows rough the deepen- '
ing shadow+. They do notuderstand how it is
that they have so often wadi together and had
nothing to say—there is snitch tip say now,
and yet from that very cuu•they talk little '
Not many dreams came Ithe ptltows .1 the
sisters that night; the worm would give a new
mate to each, and bow coulthey dream: The
full moon looked in at the iudows; the wind
its lullaby in vain; many ati they would c om e
home and sleep in the old einber just as they
did then, they said; but for) that they could
not sleep, and the midnight is came and went
and the wind sung its quietil 1, t inn again and
again, but the tumult of the art would not he
still, and the gray morning lie up from the
east; but there Wlit , no need it.goiden tiug,
to touch their eyelids It is -, they said, and
kneeling at the bedside, they seed together
And when night fell, the ther's kiss had
been on their cheeks and the tier's Land had
been laid on their heads in tking; they had
sobbed their farewells to eackher, and a tong
( . I . i ! .. i tmee of miles, and the hit:L i ..f new Q':
Not far from the old II .nme, Bel sat to the
hoalely huu« of bcr tittAntivi, whi,ked pr, ud
and liupr, in hi. flier u w suit 4.1 It %pun, a.
heutd her call the old folk. whom the ....c
-her father and mother, and saw th,ley smiled
and looked plea:.i.,l with the )ounite he had
brought howe The) were .11 a'eelle, and
could u,d work an) more, and p.p. it waa
lor the love which the young win igought
them, than for the bundle of wiliteerletri unel
*heel.", and the line tow-hag lull eight silver
doliars, that they %kr. pleased &smiled as
they 1/e.lde her in the corner
"it is a poor home," says Rich "and you
will mi-s much that you have Isti-ed to, I
hill airaoi; I am to blame, perliapud yet I
could not help loving you; and l‘g, I could
not help wishing you to be my 1 and now
that you are so, dear ll , tty, you d be spared
every thing that my nal and my t ran spare
you " And in these words and lie kiss that
gol'r, with them, the wife would Infound corn
pensafaiii for all the trial and al.e suffering
that awaited her, couid they harem tort , etl3.
The old people talk apart of a m-ont for the
house—new plastering fr. the gar, of another
window that must he made; tor thw they grow
blind the light is too lithe for tt; of a mom
that must be bought, and ;hen of sp that must
be had, so that there may be smiting to spin
and weave; awl then the birm to b e rio t tor,
and if a few acres of woodland wended if would
be well; and in short, there is tend of the
things they plan to he dote with e little hag
of money Betty has brought, andth the more
than she and Ittehard shall earnfor what are
youth and strength for but .o be int in work:'
—there is no holiday in then plat all. Rich
ard hopes that Betty does tat beat] this, but
she does; and though she puhi an a b out h er ,
sod lays his cheek close agaist Ulu* to drown
their selfish calculation, shtheaall the same, i
and the stilled sob that shaks hobosow is not
more tor the tender light of tr in g o od mo
ther's eyes, than because othelaarp glances
that measure her ability to nik d to spin
The tallow candle burns aitadown, and the
old people find their way to k thethekeriug
wick, having told the young , lkalt.y must be
up early in the morning sod oea life in ear
nest; and Richard breathes talagain,
lie asks Betty why she is 'dent, and she
answers it is because she is sappy; but she
feels that for the first time in ltte ,he is con
cealing the truth from him, ant the first time
in their tutereourse he finds it•e,ssary to dm
„,,„„ble, an d makes pictures in future, bright
as only fancy can wake.
The brown mare shall be la sod he will
spare corn enougli to buy her ',ldl e , a n d he
asks her whether its custilon sly blue or re•d,
and assures her,h h
t_umg_ she sleety, that the
bridle-bit and the stirrup shall liver, and that So:tit - Lae Aren't:sr —A correspondent of
he will order them made the lune he goes the Cleveland flew 41, writing from Addison,
to town, and that she herself it go with him Steuben county, on the '2li t, gives an account of
in the little car t, an d buy a sihwn as fine a, a singu ar accident which occured to the train on
the nch Mr. Fairfield bought sister Polly the N I. i 1... hlrie Railroad on that morning A 4
that day. She shall have a nebr eau too , in the train was approaching Addison, when uppo
which to keep the pretty litieui has brought site t„e mountain gorge made by Goodhue: Creek,
from home; and one drawer 1441 keep lock- a mass of water, one fourth of a mile in width
eel away from him, and in that S ia n keep t h 2 I -and seven l'est high, .i.nstantly breaking away,
purse that was her father's marrloft, an d a dd ! rushed down with the velocity of fifty miles per
to it from time to time all the p e y s h e can ! boor, and striking th c front of the train, demol
save from the management of I d atr y. B ut ' shed the engine and baggage car,. and nearly
Betty puts the purse in his hail u d sty , s h e eapsized the entire I ,rain
will have uu luck and key to div4 eut; an d all The engineer an , I fireman saved their lives by
s h e h as , an d h erse lf tun , are b l o ts , she only' jumping, barely es caping being drowned. The
wishes she had brought more, lattuat she her- , passengers receive d a few bruises. The fog was
self were better and worthier °th ew F ,„ iti „, so dense as to pre vent the engineer from seeing
--he dues not say worthier of l A n d so ti t s the coming of th Or flood of waters, and bad the
fire ourna down, and the rain (4 against t h e train been its lc' igth farther ahead, it and its
window; a little of it drives tbr4a p ane t h a t , freight of hums arty would have been swept away
is broken, but Richard places if between Iby the flood
her and that, and she dues not f and as het The volume of water was the contents of nitre
soothes and caresses her, she to li s t en to large mill you Is, which in bursting their bounds
the wind as it blows rougher a ngh e r ; s he I carried away 7 title mills, five houses and sundry
forgets the thick warm wall of se wed—l trees and roc' es. Unhappily a mother and her
for even Polly—and but f troubling ' child were d' :fiwned, and the dead body of the
shadoiffrom the future would . ' infant was t then friss the water by the passen-
Poor Betty, enjoy all you rink in all getli
loves 's whisper, full uit is; le faith rout ; VA. To - n ---
bens uke ens lay perpetually—Hit them
itself deeper if possible in the
mud pus .on the her A with a big club. Other modes have
rite of ,he heart, fist which you in part at pee n raw amended, bat this is the only one we
/sass sold rosy the loos that and true I has. few a d asststal.
--and will need to grasp and to treasure all the
bright moments Heaven shall give, and they will
not be enough to cast even a little light from
shadow to shadow along the way that is before
you
' And thus with the rain against the windows,
i and the wind in the leafless trees, the clouds
at,ove, and the winter coaling on, we leave them,
and for a moment turn to a brighter scene
Polly has no time to weep—no time to listen
to the winds; but their noise is so broken by the
high wallS of the houses of the city that it would
have lost all its old melancholy sound if she heard
.it ; she is so bewildered by the lights about her
that ber thoughts reach not to the lost light of
home; so many gay voices speak to her, and so
sweet and so often falls one whisper on her ear,
that she forgots the broken farewell of the gentle
'Betty; or if sometimes she thinks of her, it is to
Pay, "She has an she loves, even all I, and she
must be happy as I; she is not fretting about me,
I am sure—how were that possible!" So are we
prone to measure the feelings of others against
our own,
It was a higher and a wider roof than the one
Polly had lett that was over her now, and with
in her memory so many lights had not been con
sumed in her father's house as were burning
about her now—the very draperies at the win
dows were worth more money than the broad
meadow where the cows fed at home Bridal
presents were shining all about her, and as far as
she could see the future gave excellent promises.
And the old people had set the house in order
after the wedding, and had prayed far blessings
on their children till their supplication had been
answbred in peace to themselves, and were calm
asleep. The will was still, the cows lay togeth
er in the meadow, and in the spinning -wheels
the spiders stopped the making of their silken
tneslics fur a while; but with the morning sonic
changes would come, and others and still oth.?rs
with the weeks and the years, for change is the
order of being, and one generation passeth away
And another cometh
Children are born, and old men and old wo
men die and are heard of no more; youths and
maidens love to weep, and young men and young
women marry and are given in marriage; house
hedils are firmed tutu perfect circles, and broken
and narrowed together, and broken again, till
only ue or two are left to wander apart and grow
weary, ;searching for that which iu this world t.
never found—pei feet rest; and then cometh the
coil, 11.1.1 the old house is repaired, or a new one
made, and another fitfully begins, and work and
hope for a time go ou .t.s though the sower were
4 11r , i:, thl• reaper. and the planter ol the tree hail
promise ~ 1 the slia , h,w, And i,c) in is beginning
awl ending. cu hug and beginning always
rt. BC AK‘ r Nr,Ca,:
A IlomAN, REAL LIFE —.4 wedding
took plae.2 iu kris.-1, England, a few weeks
und , r somewhat rotnautie c rvuulsranees,
realizing the old adage tlnAt "truib is strange;
stranger than fiction It appears that a sister
o f 3lrs N , resides at Montpelier, some two
or throe years sine.', married a merchant, and
einierated to California soon afterwards, with a
view of bettering their fortunes, taking with her
the likeness, of an unmarried spo.or
tit :heir house in C tliforDia, and attraeteil the at
tention of a rich resid-nt of that ,li.trlet, who
happened to pay a visit it the h .use lie was
enr.ip , ured wttlte imag.• of the fair uuku Kn, and
exclaim , .1, "By Jove, I'll marry that girl if she
is to he found in the world. ' He was told wilt re
-lie res.d , , L and he posted to hi r a mne eneb,d
iu, a present of forty thousand pounds sterling,
and a few days since a knock was In and at the
door, and on the young lady going to open it, a
g,ooddooking, bronze-featured gentleman rushed
into die house and gave her a chaste salute. ex
claiming, "that he had come from the odor end
of the world to find her;" at the same time
out the likeness which first led him to s, ek
his attraction Of course they were married, and
are t.. , long and die happy, - as usual
/I lOW STATUE!. ARE MADE.—Dick Tinto the
Kerenee correspondent of the New York Times,
wiites that the inducements tor Atuerican sculp
tors to rctuain in Italy, Powers, Hart, Crawford.
and others, are that they have cunstautly on band
more orders dna,' they can execute, and employ
numerous workmen at cheap wages. We quote.
These vrorlenieu, who actuilly perform the
wbol•- nine tenths of the villzwlinig, cutting
in marble what their employer sets belGre them
in plaster, receive lealiau wages—a small daily
pitt..aa•e. if taken to New York they would at
ouee triple and quadruple their Ita.itau earnings,
and would probably set up for themselves as
carvers, in a small way, or as d. coraters and or-
Etalt/cut/Ts in churches and public buildings.
The chisel is no !eager the tool of the master
a. ulphir—his instrument is an •std lot of a stick,
with which he scoops away at. the figure in clay,
or "at the mud," as be will tell ) ou himself.
When finished, as nearly as such a mater:al can
be, a mould is taken, and from that. mould a cast
in plaster If necessary, this cast is stall Rattier
finished and sand papered, and it is thee handed
over to the cutter, whose duty it is to make an
I
exactJ>~ simile in marble
"1 he sculptor proper may never touch this mar
ble, and when he is told it is done, he is ready
bi deliver it to its owner The workmen in Mr.
Pow(.li . studia have executed not far from 44)
Prusperines from the one Plaster originally com
posed by the master, and the Greek slave has in
the same way, been produced three or four times.
The hest bust maker in Italy never touches the
! marble. lie may suggest or order hair strokes
bore and there, but he does not handle the scra
per himself. In all this the workmen, though
be may execute unassist4 Ally the Statue, the head,
or the group, is nu more the author of his work
than is the clerk who c , ipies the Prime Minister's
rough draft or tip , caiiigraphist who engrosses
a set 4 1t teSOlutaoUS Yoll can see bow impossi
' ble it would be fur sculptors, occup)iug and re
quirtug in this way the work o' many men, to
transport their studies to ..Vmeriea
NIGHT
Now the hungry loin roan,
And the wolf bellow!' the moon,
Whilst the heavy plowman snores,
With the weary task fore-dune
Now the wasted breads du glow,
Whilst the screech vwl, screecomg load
Puts the wretch that Les in woe,
In rem•mbranoe f a shroud.
Now it as the time of 0 Igbt,
That the graves all gaping wide,
Every one lour forth his sprite,
In the church-way paths to glide
And we f►irtertbat do run.
13y the triple Heart'', team,
From the presence of the sue,
Following darkness like a dream.
Now a frolic nut a moose
Shall disturb this hallow'd hawse
I am seat, with broom, before,
To sweep the dust behind the door.
Judge Douglas and his Slaves.
Ertrart from nix spe,, h in reply to Senator
. . •
Witle, of Ohio.
Mr. President; The Senatior from Ohio [Mr.
Wade] has invaded the circle of my private rela•
tions in search of materials fir the impeachment
of my official action lie has alluded to certain
southern interests which he insinuates that 1
possess, and remarked, that where the treasure
is, there the heart is also So long as the state
meat, that I was one of the largest 41avebolden.
in America was confined to the abolition news
papers and stump orators, I treated it with silent
contempt 1 would gladly du so on this occasi
were It net for the fact that the reference is made
in my presence by a senator from the purpose of
imputing to rue a mercenary motive for my offi
vial conduct
Under these circumstances, silence on my part
in regard to the fact, might be construed into a
confession of guilt in reference to the impeach
ment of motive I therefore say to the senator,
that his insinuation is false and he kn o ws it to
be false, if he has ever searched the records or
has any reliable information upon the subject I
mu not the owner of a slave, and never have
been, nor have I ever receded, and appropriated
to my own u.e, one &liar earned by slave labor_
It is true that I once had tendered to me, under
circumstances graiefte to my feeling*, a planta
tion with a large number of slaves upon it, which
I declined to accept, not because I had any
sympathy wito abolitionists or the abolition
movement; bufor the rea-in that. being a n
them man by birth, by education and residence,
and intending always to remain such; it was im
possible fur me to know, understand and provide
fo r the want., c imforts and happiness of those
people I refused to accop , tI in because I was
unwilling to assume respotisibilates which 1 was
incapable of fultifltog
This fact is referred to in the will of my fa
ther in law, as a reason of leaving the plantation
and slaves to his only daughter l who became the
mother of my infant children.) as her separate
and exclusive estate, with the request that if she
departed his life without surviving children, the
leave
„
clum leave survivaig children, the slaves should
decend to them. under the belief, expressed in
the will, that the) would be happier and better
off with the descendauts of the f aint ly wit h whom
they had beeu born and raised, than in a distant
land where they might Mid ne friend to care for
them. This beet statement, relating to pi ivate
and domestic affairs, which ought to be permit
ted to remain private and sacred.; has been ex
torted and wrung from toe with extreme reluc
tance, even in vindication of the purity of any
motives in the pet-leen:Leer of a high public
trust.
As the truth •ompelled me to uogative the in
sinuation so offensively allay by thecenutor from
Ohio, tioci forbid that I should be understood by
any one as being willing to east from me any
respimaibility that now does or err has attached
t any member of my family S long as life
shall last—and I shall cherish with religious
veueratien the motnory and virtues of the sainted
mother of my children—so long as my heart shall
be tilloa with parental selicitude for the happ,-
DeSis of those motherless infants. I imp: re my
e nemo wh so ruthlessly naval, the most:e
sanctuary, to do to tb , t aver t believe that I
have tio wish, no aspiratin, ro be considered
purer or better than she who was, or they who
are slaveholticrs Sir, whenever toy
ants shat; refuse to aveopt a like alW.Unt 'lf this
rpevir- ot property tend. red to thou' under sitnt
itar and shall p , rf orm a domestic
trust with floal ndelity and disinterestedness, it
will be time enough for them to impute mere,
nary motives to me in the performance of my of
ficial duties
Dp:eavEay 4 1 1: A NEw PEriiihE —A c u m, ear who would not be covetous, and with r es .
t :A c ta of the
_A., ayune states that son, if health c oil Ibe purchased with gold:—
during the late trip of the U. S. .10.,p of war De N‘ ho not A
.cubit , us, if it were at the command of
.e
cater through the Strait:, of Dr. Hain-
p wer or re.t .1 by honor ' But, alas! a white
bridge and another o ibeer obtained leave of ab
staff will wit help g , uty feet to walk better than
sence for a few iti) during a calm, and were land- a eiitntu in cane, nor a blue ribicm bind up a
ed at Terre del Fuego Thty then ascended a wound so well as A WI , t T,he glitter of gold, or
o
mountain of 3,5141 feet, when they came upon a of diamond. wili but hurt sore eyes instead of
plain of surpassing rehness au! b, auty; fertile curing them: aiid an aching head will b e no
more eased by wearing a crown than a nominal
fields, the greatest variety of Trait trees in full
bearing, and signs of cultivation sad refinement nightcap -
Their appearance wont,.
hed the inhabitants, who,
however, did not treat them unfriendly The
men all range from six to six and three quarters
feet iu height, well proportioned, very athletic,
and straight as an arrow Tti, women were a•
mong the most perfect m o dels of beauty ever form
ed, averaging five feet high, very plump, with
small feet and hands, and with a jot black eye
The writeradds
Their teachers of religion speak the Latin lan
guage, and have tradttia ns frN , tu .ueees.,ve prlests
through half a hundred eenturi,. Thoy tell us
that this island was once attaeleql t.. the mai n
land, that about 1900 years ago, by their rse-rds,
their eountr) by a violent earthquake,
which oceasioneo the rent now known as the
Straits of Mage,,an; that on the yip of the moun
tain h Itfut. it, head to the .un, whose ba.e
rested where the waters now flow, 1,1...1 their
great temple—which, according t.. their d, ~•ript
ion, as compared to the one now existing we ,aw •
innAt have been 17,200 feet square. and ,wer
feet high, built of the purest pantile mar
bk.
The officers remained two wet ks with these
trange people, and ()Waived from th, to aspec!,
men of painting on pot-eel:kit, over three thousand
years old. Tlw men, wou cm and children num
ber about 3.000, and when the children multiply
too fast, they are sacrificed by the priests. They
live in huts or cottages, eae..1 . 1 one ty himself,
avoiding company and discus: roe, employing all
their time in contemplation and their religious
duties.
ADVANTAGES OF PAYING Et IR A NEWSPAPER
IN ADVANCE.-A Boston papo)• says one of the
facts put in ervidenee at the trial in the Supreme
Court, to sustain the will of the late Wm. Russel,
was, that only; a few days before he made the
will, be called at the office of the Dentosrot and
paid for the papers year in advance, thereby MT
g fifty cents. The fact was dwelt upon at
length by Counsel, sad oommenttd upoa by the
judge in his charge, as one of great importance
Toe verdict of the jury 'would seam to sustain
the proposition, that a man who has mind enough
to pay for the newspaper iaadvaatop, is competent
I ta sehe a mill.
The German Journal of San Francisco has isho
ly given a number of interesting uttelosibmsaiot•
iug reminisoences of travels in Chihwahia and
Sonora, by Julius Froebel, lisq. W e g eeme lm s
the following:
The Apaches make frequent inroads iota the
southern portions of Sonora sad Chihuahua, al.
though they reside farther north. In the Later
Starr they frcluendy meet their hereditary foes,
the Comanches; and the Maximum have insaard
to profit from this hostility, by aiding ass Webs
against the other The history of them ladisa
wars is full of romantic episodes, which would
furnish the richest material for the pen °fa=
Some years ago the Government of Chih
firmed as offensive asullefensiveallianosuithties
I a
Conianchei of the Holman de ifapinsi, for the -
pose of carrying on war against the A
These Comanches had at that time an o aquae
as their chief, and she was named by the Mitzscama,
Geueial of all the Comanches. Her eldest sea,
BO() el tee, (Under the Sun,) was an intellicon
man, far bc)oud his tribe. He held his lima*
given to the Mexicans to fight the, Apsobes, as
sacred. With a few companions, be once hap- -
petted to come, about daylight, upon a clamp of
Apaches, and refusing to beat a retreat, he washad
in and committed dreadful havoc among the ear-
prised warriors; but at last he and his comrades
were overpowered and slain.
: 4 AAAAA L•RIL
There are so many Meivican captives sarong
both tribes, that every thing of this kind is soon
kouwn among the population of Chihuahua, who;
on the other hand, have so much Indian bloodies
their veins that they take pride in the bold deeds
of the Indians
Though the Apaches forbid their squaws to
have any conneeuou with white men, they piece
a high value on white women, whom they eon.
cider as the mist precious booty to be obtained
by their murderous inroads upon Mexican soil.
The treatment o f th e f e mal e cap t i ves is ver y dd.
ferent in different cases. State of the chiefs
treat their wires tow paratively well. The Apachee
are ninth kinder to their captive women than the
_t,loaliinelit.s; and ezemples are not wanting where
)lezicau women hate refused to go back to their
relatives Some ) ears ago au Apache, who had
lived with a priest in Salvia, made himself fain.
,pus as a chiet. Ile h.sJ stolen a Mexican girl
from the house where he formerly lived, and she
wan much att,iched to Mtn lie used his lilt.
learning to great advantage by waylaying couriers
fri to the min, and diseo%ering from the letters
when convoys of silver were to be sent or. He
was at last killed while attacking a large troop
of lklesicau soldiers His Mexican wife was in
his company and was recognized by the Mexican
troops, who called out to her,that she had noth•
tog t o tear from them She refused their me_rop
an g, with h er arrow , shot down several sol4eis.
before %be was slain Ott my last journey over
the continent, I met a prominent man in the M.••
*tail Valley, who told me that his niece was a
captive among the cooper-mine Apaches, and she
did not wish to return to her former home. He
had met her with the tripe at the American fort
of Sauta Barbara, and the duel sa2A-
Fill fie Ai Vita C Itt'ste'apa, pero indiata,
~,G,"—(sod yet .ehe is a Curiatian, but =
tied, apaehig.•d Ca/ Chromide.
Tut SCREW OF TIIP. MAINE LAW.—The
l ate I,,• gis l,,tur e of Maine added some amend
ment, t th :r already stringent liquor law,
winch It.a:e nothing t be desired by the most
ultra advocate of the law:
If an express:natl. rartman, porter, or any
other carbon, shall carry a bottle, or cask, or
fiemvhn .‘f wine or other liquors, to i gentle
man s re-idenee, he is subject to a fine of twenty
dollars and en-ts for the first offence For tre
s econd offence, a fine and costs of thirty days
impribou mon tis the penalty. If any man tarries
in hie own bagga,,, , , , or about his person a flask
or any other ve--, outanatie, liquor of any sort,
to be use 4 by him. Cue party doing so is made
liable to a tint that) , duilars and thirty day,
Wit-Th.o &to of Saturday says:—
llecd• r. f Kati.am, hag, arrived in this
city "11 w:cy vl.it h i .; f ami ly it Easton,
PI , hie laa r, -td. lie will return with
them in shout two month to the theatre of his
public rluiie4 —The executive head of affairs of
the territory, in - the mean time, is Mr. Woodson,
the , t'icretary t ;ov Rei.d4lbcfore dew
ture, p.tued a proclamation f - Or an election to be
bell on the 2.2. d of May, to fill vacancies that ae,-
eur in •ux. or eight tit.triet., lie a k o imed his
proclamation to I is" v4.u 44 the I,eguilature on the
tint Monday in July next.
"Sir'. you shall `far from me," said a fallow
with a thundering voice and a chimney bask
fr , iwn, to in elitor who had publishePiomething
he construed t hard upon his party: "you
shall hear from tn...." and he shook his I nge?
2 11 tic tI y . "That's right, dew," and JOOll
- tn , i 1 I UP.: politely; “write occasionally, sod
let ku.,w how you're getting along."
YLVAGYMAN catechising the youth of
hi. Church, put the question from the eateebla
to a glri
What is your consolation in life end
death "
Th,• pp. 4. / girl smiled and did not answer. The
priest insisted
then," said she; "binee Imust tell, it is
the )oung printer on—street "
MR -do you-keep-anything-good to t-adt-e--
her,:f
"Yes, we have excellent cold water—the beet
thing iu the work!
I know it, - was the reply, “there is no
one thiu2 that'.4 done o much f)1. osivigation
th a t Awl ev , o a.; a beverage, it ' s
capital mix
ed with a lade brandy.
k* A eorrespoadent of the Buffalo &ph c
statos that, /t. , 4 au etutgrant train was posing
slowly over the Susp , u-ion Bridge, the otherday
a German woman gave birth to a pair of
,twins.
One of them was named Suspension Bridge mid
toe other Niagara Fails.
IS. A breach of promise ewe waA
re
OMI7
tr i e d at Lyons, W3yne county, New York. The
plaintiff tea.. Nancy Servoss, And the dein
tient Kelly. A verdict was gives by the
jury in favor of the lady fur
PRIZE. CONCNDRVM.—In Huston, ,the other
clay, there was a prize mum:lrma conientioc
One supposed to be from one of the fair stg ins
as lollows: Why is the hand of the rather et Shia
con cadre° like a bell? Aos.--0001111111 if
los Sali tin Is!
B. F. SLOA.N, EDITOI.
NUMBER 52.
The . Apaehee:and Conanehee.
ROI
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