SLOAN MOORE, PUBLISHERS. Vt)141111114: 26. THE ERIE OBSERVER. /A PURL/SHIT Ei ERY 5471;k1)4 111" i+l.o►\ AND U. n. 31001111 t, F•vICE, CoRS ER O} STATE AND eIIFTII Arc B. K. SLOAN, 6 d ,I t s r cr. ?saws Ifpaid to adiauce, or w Attie 3 month, 11 AO; it sea paid as stare= sill ho charged 0 0 any ateeertrar t♦Wn( to pay willtur the rmu, the payer will M diebeetbeteee and the asataut wt with a proper calker for col loallies MUM 01 ADVI.itriSING or- Sisteen lbws or lava make • Kwa. Ai awe !Igoe", owe 11 , •••k, $ Ow 'guars i umoutlia $1 00 iJoe " two " 1 00 tM - 6 " 6 00 liwa" Uwe* " ,1 YS our " " 675 One square ► year, changeable ►t pheaunr. ik, sqpuare►—J mouths, $6: 6 swaths. $8; V ntooth; $ll IP; 1 ear, $l4 !r"' iir" , a Cards loasehrd t tho Business Unix-tot" at $3 pee annum sir linas allowed fora Card, user six, and under eight, $3 40,64 1 and Editorial notice; 10 mots a line. iteltgious P.Wk, rho Company and other notices, half tie above rata* Marribants and orieenTrminirtn i i frequent Mumma in their advartismenta will be alisi.ed t. u vinare* paper, 111134 card, fur SU, Per maditional spiv" the Mawr+ lie in pruportkin, and the estmetilemmita mast be strictly confined to the Irititildstre 1,041200 . or the advertiser. Payment fur transient advertisements TVqII4T4.I advenee. Sue for yearly ad. 'tuning vrill be prevented ball ..vely A miknetios GAO per cent. rill be vomit 00 all except tem scary ertiamussite. .hen paid is advance. BUSINESS DIRECTORY t NC Eli lIELBERT, WIT!" liormsa, 1m,R01.l k Co., Great Penniti !culla Herd quar• toy thr 1.n7 Goods, 6.r. 1:13 blarketcltreet, rialadelptila MR:KEA Dl* , MOT! a. Bittlf LiA 5.e. 161 Maselnt Law, Clinger of Freud etrert, rbreer York. Dieticians of Triple Keened Caraphetie, du at 16 pr. et Alcohol rod E Kum. Also, blanalscturer• aml Dealer* le the full., tog articles of the beet quality, and offered at the lowest market priers. &truing Fluid, riptrit• Turpeutane, Tar, Pitch, !loft and Rant Tutpouttue, linght t aenoth, Loal frr, rod Niit eltores, of every desertptiars. Thus. Byrn, budill&w. 3u.30 JIVIXT, Jr GALBiLi I T & D.% VENPORT, ATTOILIIiTII rT I.••, 0111 c• near!, opposite the new Court He..., Erie, Pa. Ws. A GA1.104111 3.1 A. DAVIL4rOIIT BEEBE d DICK' "stION, klartau entered taw Co-partnership, would reopectfully offer then prat...tonal senl•Ps to the eltiaecni or En, and e‘ehoty . • p•- .tai attentiou • 11l be gi, ea top obot&trlCS A Bemis Ml'*dG butane In Geocerits, Provlsons, Produce, Pork, Fish, Salt, Grain. Flour, }Yalta, Nutt! ,Glasa, Brootov. Pails, Wooden, Willow and Stone Won., tc. Terms lasts. Prlces low Nn 4 Wnght's Block, State Street, 4 does above the Poet 0111ce, Lrie, Pa. .1.3 LYTLE & RIUMILKORE, VAAN/ORABLJ Weimer? T•ILOR•, on the f'ubtte Square, • kno &oil west of Btate street, Krie 33 TANNER & KERN, • DRAJ.KJA In Stores, Tim, Copper, Brun and Snort Iron Ware Bute sttret, two Amon north of C. B. Wneht Extbantr. I .thor, kne, Fn. ••• J i. TA WWX7L JOSEPH MERE, I. Mel ITIOLUN State street, between Stu enth and Eighth etreets, Eris, / . a. liawLetu+r■ to order, and also keep' constantly for rig Sams, Superior Seing Malmoea wade upou a new and ea atheist principk, Sea torus Matrasaes, Hair liatrames with and without spring*, ie. Prices iery moderate 33 BARTON HOUSS, C 3kCasoa, Proprietor. Mater Street, Meadville. PellosYlva ' ale- Principal !Mart Mee 33 14 1- 11;1.1A51 - TRORNTEVoil, it. arms or 111 PL CL Deed., Agreement , ,, Rmade sad Mortim er, laaaes seeurstply and es drawn OMcr to rtglit's Block, Slate street, Eno, Pa THOM 41.4 HOORN E tD, Neuss PriLic, will stet attend to Drafting DleeNix, Mortgages, Kends arol ether tostruments ttr.ntiur .itlifx in 4 .4.1 e-t Coun cil Hones, Wright's Block , earner of Fifth and State st f.f.t. KMPIRE eiTORIKS. l'soarsu. t liitbroOtb, Jobbers. and abetsll !balers to etert dew crtptiota of Forego snd lbaeoestac Drs Lorpetaor n i, Ud Cliotbo, AM No. LI Slate street, corner .•t Ltfth, Ent., Pe. ILILIMY SU- 33 "•1 A I.:ammo., PITAILE - dL PAY NE, ►utwa2DtiO ♦tt. COIIIMISSiuII Mr.I4.:IIIANTS, Dealer,. in Coal, Fab, Salt, Flow, Water Lime mid Plaater Public Dock, east of "tate street, Ens, ?. Usu Vi STALL tit ILlitK Z WRTILALIV, Sumo; Art) Eirul•kGx Elsoktga, Enc. Intcro•t allured ou U deposits. These and Slight lirafte, Checks and un• current manly sod Land Warrants bought and sold Cul!tritons leads on all the ptinetpal eittei In th•ltcrl . z.tat. • stoner re , ratted to Europe on our ore responsibility P4I,KENNEDY rt itE 0 L , Sacceemore u Canee4 died &mew WiIitISSALS sgr Srtsit. Dealers to Hardwaro, Crot Itcr, Glossa, end Saddlery, Not. ti krol 12 k-morru Mock. corner of Filth •104 aisle rlgorls, Erie, Ps. 33 L Baena; J. Caxstor , J W fisrgoLos IldL. J. L. !MEN lILT, PIACTISIWO PIITIIICIAM ♦aD SiciwitO% °glee steoart k suieltor's Drug Storm, isomer of State and Seventh streets ttelooeout, Seventy street, one door east of Swarms street W. s. RII4III3IOIItIC, Rita Cbsraltall, Fr aikkr, 4 Jadasea, I.IIPOILTUM• and Jobbers of Foreirn and Pot:m..olr Dr , \ ,.. 151 sad 163 Browny Nov York Wikuoal L Hams I. Jostasol HI. B. lIAVICUSTICK. Karma YELL Door, Wholesale and Retail dealer n F our, Grassad hod, and all kinds of Gram, &Ade, .4 of Um Publie SIM" Besba's Black, Eris 33 MAGILLat Co., Darriara, continue their Ater Besty's Block, Dearth stile of the Public ` 4 .laart, are prerpared to a" a• 'l""eireet"itb other aoirqualU'ratrcr"kreal"Mealume: 111MVIEL 14TElitlit. Brr a: (0., HaaresCITUMI of Tin. Copper, and Sheet Imo Ware, wholesale sad retail, earner of French and Fifth street, opposite the Far mers' Hotel, Erie, Pa retry arttele in the shove hoe &leafs ea band; together with an P[lol=l9* assortment of Stoves, and Cooking Vaentlis, aseo All kinds alit:Klink and Spouting Clow-m -ind with neatness and ‘laspateti ea reasosabk. terms 33 - - - CAI:GHEY, irsolaaau Gsocsas, and De sr In Domestic an Imported Wulf* and_Liquom, also Sesnr, Tobacco, Fraft, 1•oth, I Ili, and Arn Is fur Bo to Buffalo Ale Su 7 Bonnet! Block, State Street Lew, Pa. JOILI Wu M. ,;.i-0/1/1 WILLIAM C. WAILMIiN. /24311111 and fisiders in li:change, No 1 American litoek Collec tions Diadem" all the ?dad* title* of the L tilted States and Caoadaa, and proceeds prompt') remito-d Baal Notes, Gold and Silver boodbtand sold Interest psof on time deposits. Yo r) matted to Earope, Land Warrants bonen. sold and located ea the aft meliesabus term. A. Jrnicv or rum Pears, iYabP rroto..Kl to So I kluehe.' Illock rood floor, Slate ?Wart, Krae, Pa. .S., ( Srosstror to Without /4 Am.. LIMA 1111U.A..7 Anna!, Publte Square, between the Heed House and Wows 's Hotel Yk - tursd takes to the beet otete of the art atki oarrastod sot to lade 33 W. OLD, dr. CO. IlLsrrnervanxe and Wholesale and Retakl &Zen, Vi .0 and tars Pumps of superior quoliti, the chrap«.l and t... 1141.11 112 use %bop w t welt% street near ?vomit, Lne, rir Aquesiset for currying mratar for fund., farm rircbaniesl purpose+ Int stleebisp. 33 (Sureermr to Breton i f Herren,' WIMUUDIIIII sod Retail Pesters to -Drugs. Mrdteinee, hoots, obis Winsion Gla.ti D's ,tuffs, Brushes, Perfumer,, hbor Soaps and Dentists k boding; No !lased House, hrir, Ps Sf IX WAIALER IL Pinworm/Liam, Prntuat, and Comansboon Mercissots fourth Witnr- Wass west of the Put.hr Itrtdie, k-nr, Ps Alse dealers to 1...1, kink., Plaster, Staten, ktsh, Lame oral Lune rWa. , iron, \ Stress, Ca4Ull4l, Cc, orison...sled nbettitbrs Abr 14/ippon either b. Stersnbosts, Proprlirm Aeker.to or tn Railroad. D. It WALKER I..lktpoist. ThO3IIb I. %I rer (La. if . let fru w G Loma a ra .) Ot A lma in Clod; Watehrs,timiral strusionts, Gla.sea, 14.1111) and }an.t•114,04., h 01.1.1•11 sod retail 3.; Ltuabr.LL, &EPLEY, Yurrracitix aofln.o i •tice, Katluy ateauu Roden, Viola. I 0...0r5, Vu, Proof shatter; and all ki tai• of Machinery and au, mut- Mirk tc.. done to azdrr. :2 M. CHAPIN, Reasserr Ussrier—tilect io the Amenehri corset a Note street and the Yul,t.e Watt. ep 81141k eerie. Prows reecoosolt, Wei all pure warranted taTEMBETT & Gll.lll, leroermua Jobbers sod lieuecl ()mien ut Wet awl Dry t:roceraca, Provence& Produce, Yonne and 41, .m...11c reit! t, tt li low and Storm Sera Flour. bust, Now+ Yflrrtier. "Lot, Sef,tr i sot, Le reach •teeet, owe. le the Herd kioner, I.ne, WILLIAM S. LANE, Arfol.lllNT AAP Cur.•&/-I,,JE •/ L•• O• vr is. ..1100 . , t , . re St lioarthrallt cursor of Übe Public . ...qua» rs R. SANDFORD ('0. 4 III6•LIVILIS IV lin/I to, Silver, Hank !Coto., rertileatPo might anchinner on the print-Iml ritto4 Namtany.i• for MI.. i Are N.. Ra..l Hour,Nuan T. HK/MOl4. STUART tk ■uMra Pirroww,..--4 MSc*, 1 tftb otn • f.. .I.A.r. I sat .4 . Vrlnach. P•udenca, •tn. t. ..f t 6, apolllmaar, Hall Kt it n UREA), Ira a y L la L'o~W6, Berman as.l Am4ricam Harthran and I lAtiery AAP. Midis. Awn* tray Irma and Stalk, .b trio H. JAIRECKI, 'Nam froenroov, west lode of Stat.. etre. 1. Erk., ro J. B. lit NNIP.ON. Lia..A.ia la Books, Slatauwer., Monthly Ilairtunrs, t twap I'u Llt.a Ilois.Ment lIYk, Ninripapon. truld Prns, 11,1 rutirn, 4.e I'tnt 4s *rot o the sucrril at. &*TEW tUT, Mutatussa4 Situ! Dr*ler. 1., t An, W.U.lmPer. the &..f Hour and Dm* utmt(aic H. etvLE:st, • trot's, .4? 1-•., twarl, M.rw, Cout.t). vtbs, niteml.4lt • •Ms prueiptimi• am] di•p•L 4 13 JOSS tU KELLOOtZ t i taw tAlt4ll. bed Comnumatiiii pa the Public State attt.tt twyl, ti•itit. Nett, watt Whit. Fmk,. hired, I'ARTFIK 1 BIMTHEM. twi.lla•Le Lu , l timtall Dealers In Draw, Lilo "WOK , Nn • JOAN AWFLENY; JISTw:a or ?is hues., MS,: in tho m.,l‘ JOlia• Gunalooms. ho • 111..e1, Js JOH : 4 1 HEIR N IL. CO., rulfu•auf•u au4 CummainaLm nnur, hilt, n 4 meet for • dad, ha* of l'pp.r fit he Duck, vie,i's 32 WIL 0. L. EL as si smuri fta y urr latm awl 11. viill3l 1.4 06.1401 G ee •• Nit Krie. • mr.rn.m..d se J. W. DOCGLAM, Anemia/ft IT L..,-011a• with &Alum& Gnuat, Eaq., hut IL. kotmea W 116r,d Howe and %owes Hotel, Ed*, Pa ERIE WEEKLY' - a sp y JP Dicaixibuy. THE TWO COLLEGE FRIENDS. EZIMEII2I Winnington's visits to the manor grew more constant as the day of his departure drew near. Early in the morning he passed through the rd. lags, and entered the dilapidated house and only issued from it again, accompanied by Ellen. to pursue their botanical pursuits upon the hills.— Had he ever told her of any other pursuit in which he was engaged r Had be gone in a for mal manner, as recommended in the True Lover's Guide, to the father, and demanded his permis si.in to pay his addresses to his daughter? Had he displayed to that careful gentleman the state of his affairs, and agreed on the sum to be set tled during the marriage upon Ellen as pin money, and as jointure in case of his death . No, he had never mentioned the state of his heart to Ellen, or of his affairs to Mr Warleigh. He Lad spoken, to be sure, a good deal about the future; his plans when he had taken his degrees; the very street he should live in when he enter ed into practice, and.somehow all the,... projects reference to some one else- Ile never seem ed to limit the view to himself; but in all his counaellings about the years to come, he was like the editor of a newspaper. or the writer of a pon derous history, and used the dignified "we "-- We shall have such a pretty little drawing-room, with a great many roves on the paper, a splendid mirror over the mantle•piece, and a piano, such a piano: against the wall Who was includiii in ale We? :kW that was a secret between him and Ellen: and I am not going to play the spy, and then let all the world know what I have di covered It seemed as if the father was inelud, .1 toil; fur there was a charming little risitu laid aside for a third individual, with a nice low fen der and a nice pipe laid all nady for him after dinner, and ti-rue delicious tobacco procured from a patient of Winnington, a distinguished mer chant in the Turkey trade, and kept in a beau tiful bag of blue silk, which Ellen had sewed up with her own hands, with gold ta%sels, astoni s h. ing to behold "And we must have a spare bed-room," be said; " it needn't be very large fur my sister she's not very tall yet, and a little crib would do." Jo. I; ?AIX\ ti.sivrov W•Lcun W B N.rinnimes "Bat Duleibel will grow," raid Ellen; "she's now seven, and by the time she requires tho room, she will be—who can tell how old she will b. then, Winnington ?" I can She will be ten at most " " I think," said Mr. Warleigh, "you had bet ter bring her here: we can get -Lie Walters to patch up another room; and, with a prop or two under the floor, even the ball-room might be Kite to occupy " 0' no, father• the floor is entirely fallen in; and, besides, the ceiling is just coming down " "And London is each a noble field for exer tion," ' said Winnington; "and if i have a cline' ) I will so work and toil, and write and make my self known, thit I shall be disappointed if I am not a baronet in ten years---Sir Winnington Bart " "A very modern title," said Mr Warlcigb, ‘• which I hope no one I care for will ever con descend to accept. My ancestors had been knights of Combe-Warleigh for six hundred years before Itaroneteies were heard of ; besides, as those pinchbeck baronies are only given to millionaires, whore are you to get a fortune sufficient to sup port the dignity ?" A sudden flush came to Winnington's face --- " I could like to owe everything to you, sir ; and, perhaps—perhaps, there will be enough for any rank the king can give " "It strikes mc," said Mr Warleigh, with a laugh, " you are a great deal more hopeful even than I was at your time of life Ah! I remem ber what daydreams we had, Ellen's mother and I—how we expected to restore the old name, and build up the old house—" " I'll do both, sir !" cried Winniogton, stand ing up "I feel sure there is a way of doings.; I have thought much over this (e,La week pest, and before I go I'll prove to you—" " Whs.! Has a ghost come from the grate to point out some hidden treasurer' Winniogton was still atanding'up in the ex citement of the new idea which fined his heart. He was just going to reply, whin a sudden crash alarmed them Ellen sereamed, and fled to Win. uington for safety. The sound shook the whole house. At first they thought some of the outer wall bad tumbled down A cloud of (lust so o n tilled the room, and nearly blinded them. "It is the ball-room ceiling," said Mr War leigh, as if,strirk with, the omen n The house to ruined beybull repair, and sometime or other will bury us all in its fall Young man, I advise you to get out of its way; for it will crush what ever stands near it " The interruption gave Winnington time to think, and he resolved not to make Mr Warleigh the Confidant of his hopes That night he took hiti r leave It was the last night of his naidenee in the rectory, but he was to return nest short vacation. The parting was long, and it was late when be got home Arthur was busy writing He bad given up his . geology for the last week, atttd seldilni wired nut of the 11011...; he looked up SS Winnington came iu, but said nothing in welcome. " I'm glad to tin , l yr.o up," mai.l ‘Vinnioirton, fqr I want to talk to you, Arthur, awl (like your advice, if you are not busy " *lett p&p. A SICK KAI'S DB' BY soarer It. ILLID Mothought that it a awined wood, riuntatrid es a boat of hewers; Soothed by a StreasitoTs outdating hood, that gargled through the wiuspvting bowers had dreams did vial ow—eo height, ha Ei,dom only solid beget thew, They heogght woe such Intense delight I sorer, sever tan target than It waned that thou wore promat thorn Thies eyes with living lustre Wanting: The star of morning dock'd thy hair, and all around lta radiance streemlac, Iceperted to thy 1/p—thl dunk— no !Highbrow of immortal glory , ,). we can weer ouch visions seek, But in some old romantie story • And sear *bee hung s lyre of goid, Beneath h how of &bedewing noes Hosea-like thaw that love unfold, When from We tolls the God reposes, When thy angers touched the strings, They y ielded ambers rich had swelling As when-sane spirit sweetly sings It 4 evening, from her neerles dwelling Yet changeful was that Music's strain, It told of Hope, aad Youth, and (Ladner, of Pleasure's Wrath, of True Love s rheas tad then of blighted Joy. and Swine.* nuit an answering Voice there maw, From a bright cloud that them deeteade.L And while it eptik•—• quivertag dame We. with the fleecy whitener blended - I may not ball the words so kind, By that same plarthre stoke then spokes icor the dark atiht-storm's rudest wind Came o'er say dram, sad It was broke.. But lady, tranquil be thy hours, and smooth the path of the before thew For sorely, from celestial bowers. Saute happy spirit watches o'er thee' o.7linict P/111111 Dockrae Hassel.id PO or its CHAPTER 111 Arthur laid aside the pen, and covered the sheet he was writing with blotting paper "About Ellen, I suppose?" he said; " love in a cottage, and no money to pay the butcher.-- Go no!" " It's about Ellen," said Wianington; " it is about love—a cottage also, probably—but not about poverty, but wealth, rank, magnificence!" " Ha! let us hear Yon speak with sense at las.—you'll give up this penniless fancy—you'll hate her in a mouth when you find yourself tied to penury and obscurity." " But I shan't be tied to penury and obscuri ty; I tell you she is the greatest heiress in Eng land, and it is I who will put her in possession of her wealth. It is this right hand which will lift up the vail that keeps her treasnrescoocealed! It is I who will bang pearls about the neck that would buy a kingdom, end plant the diamonds of:lndia emong her hair—and all from her own 11 is impossible to describe the effect of this speech upon the listener. He sat upright upon his chair; his lips partly open, his face as pale as ashes, and his eye fixed on the enthusiastic boy "And you yuu, dear Arthur, you shall help me in this—for your German residence gave you a knowledge of the appotrance of a mineral bed, you have studied the subject here for I have watched your experiments I know this estate is filled with ore; but how to work it, Arthur— bow to begin—how to smelt—to clear—to east'. these are the things you must help me in; Ellen will be grateful and so shall I." " Shall you? Yon be grateful for what?" " For your aid in bringing into practical effect the discovery I have made of the vast mineral resources with which all Combe-Warleigh is fill ed You'll help us, Arthur—for Lucy 's sake for my sake, fur all our sakes: won't you?" How have you made this discovery?" said Arthur in a calm voioe. " Do you remember the night you burned the broum•plant? I thought nothing of it at the time, but in the morning when I came down the old woman was clearing out the grate I stopt her, and grubbed about among the amber, and see what I found! a piece of solid metal, perfect ly fr,e from earth! See, here it is! How lucky I was to make the discovery! It will make Mr. Warleigh richer than if his lands were filled with gold." The faee of Arthur grew almost black. " I was of age," he said, "four days ago, and made an offer to Mr Warleigh's agent for the manorial rights and heath lands of his estate— which he is b quid to accept, ter I give the sum they ask " "Arthur!" exclaimed Wilmington starting up; "have you the heart to ruin the right own t rs of the soil? By this time they have ..“id it; they am deep in debt.- " Ent that .hall not' No; this very moment I will go back b. the manor and tell Mr War leigh whit I know; lie will not fulfil the bargain made by his attorney." "OW no, you won't," said Arthur, knitting his brows; I have toiled and struggled fir many years for thi4, an d you think I will now submit to beggary and disgrace, to see the wealth I hive w rk d for, formed into shape, called out of nothing into glittering existence, heaped upon another, and that ether a dotard whose fathers for a thousand years have been treading no countless riches, and never Leard the sound—the sound that reached my ear- the moment I trod oo the the soil it ' , hall not he " Winitingt, II I , e , ked n t thy will r „ ni l of' Ulriti 11 11/11111r into hi s mind of the. 4tate i.f A rthur . pi brain lie tried t. hitt] " Hut pi•rhaps, aftvr all," he said, " we may be ir..ti, Mi+taken It is very likely the friendliest, thing I e 'u!.l .1 . bin 1. you from buying these unprofitable :lens., If your expectations are klie.m..l, you will ts• utterly ruined, and what will ), , n ••A 111 (*.in always die," replied Arthur, sit ting down; "Ind better than live in poverty " "And Luei,,*!—" For ev.r Lucy! I fell you, Winnington, th‘t when you look at me you grow so like her, th a t I almost hate the girl to if the blow you strike me ju=t now, were struck by her " " 1 strike no blow I merely say that Lucy would give you the same advice Ido She would not wish you to grow rich by the concealment of a treasure, and the impoverishment of the right. fu l owners "The rightful owner is the tian to whom the truaqure belongs," said Arthur, not bursting forth into a fresh explosion, as Winnington ex pected the moment his speech was uttered.— "And if the bargain is concluded, the lands are " Not all:'" N. I leave them the rich fields, the pas ture ground in the valley, the farm upon the slope lam modest, and content myself with the mteless waste; the dreary moor, the desert bill It is, in fact, making Mr. Warleigh a free gift of fifteen hundred pounds, and with that he ran give daughter a portion, and rebuild his old ruin, with a wing in it for his son-in-law; and the remaining five hundred of my stately fortune (that a retches should be found so low as to exit on two thousand pounds!) will erect a cru‘hing mill, and dig to the first lode. Then —then," be continued as the picture rose to his imagination, " the land will grow alive with la bor There will be a town where the present hamlet shivers in solitude upon the wild. There will be music of a thousand wheels, all disengag ing millions from the earth. There will be a mansion ouch as kings might live in, and l— and I—" "And Luc)?" again interposed Winnington "Ay! and Lucy—when 1 have raised the an nual income to ten thousand pounds-1 could not occupy the house with less." Winnington looked upon his friend with pity. lie sat down and was silent for some time There was no use iu continuing the conversation. You seem to forget," be said at last, "that I gn to-morrow to Oxford." " Sn soon?" slid Arthur, with a scrutinising look. " You didn't intend to go till Saturday ' " I shall have a few days longer with my fam ily I want to see Dulcibel, who is home from aehool; and besides," he said with some embar rassment, " I don't find our residence here so pleasant as it used to be. There was a time," he said after a pause, " when it would have bro ken my heart to leave you; but you—" There we a tremble in his voice,, and he ',top ped. "And why?" said Arthur " Whelk fault is it that there is a changer' "Ah! mine, I dare say I don't blame any one," replied Winnington, checked in the flow of feeling by the coldness of Arthur's voice '- You will haye your letter for Lucy ready I shall start before you are up; so you had better let me have it to.night." "There plenty of time I don't go to bed till late. I will walk ten or twelve miles with you on your way to the post. waggon The er• ercise will do me good." " I start very early; for the wagon leaves fur Exeter at ten in . he morning. I - have sent (in my trunk by the .lmernaker'i art I have tak en leave ef—of people who have been kind to me, and shall walk merrily across the moor It is only fifteen miles " " I shall see you as flr a% the Hawaleigl Brook," said Arthur, " that is, if you dotet ob $1 50 A' YEAR, IN ADVANCE. ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 5,1856, feet to the company of a friend. And why should we quarrel?" Winaington took the offered band. "I lr i pew your heart could not be really changed," be said, "as you tried to make it appear. You , are ill, Arthur, your brain is too much excited. I will not let you get up so early, or take to such exer ciao. It will put you in a fever. Let me feel your pulse, and you can owe me my• first fee." The pulse was galloping; the cheek sltersate tely flushed and paled. "This is beyond my present skill," said W,in nington, shaking his bead . " You must apply to the nearest doctor for advice." " You are very kind, my dear Winuingten, as you always are; but I don't think medicine will be of much avail " " But you will see the doctor ?" '• Whatever you like," replied Arthur, now quite submissive to his friend's directions " And you will write to Lucy, quietly, sober ly. She'll be alarmed if you give way to your dreams of wealth," Raid Wilmington " And Alladin's Palace and the salary ?" re plied Arthur, with a smile. "Well I will be as subdued as I eau, ana the note shall be ready for you in time." He took the pen as be spoke and commenced a letter Wilmington looked at him, but-more iu sorrow than in anger There W 1.9 something ;n the pertinacious offer of Arthur to accompany him which displeased him "He watches me," he said; " as if afraid of my whispering a word of what I know to the Warlcighs. I shall reach London in time, and carry a specimen of the ore with me " The dock struck one. " Yon don't seem very quick in writing, Arthur. Perhaps you will leave the letter on the t a ble l am going to bed " " Nu--just live minutes—and tell her, Win hingtou, tell her that I am unchanged ; that riches, rank, position—nothing will alter my af fection—" And that you will come to see her soon ''• Yes , when I have been to London " Winningtt , n started "And wbco do ) ou go there '•' In two days I will come to Warwickshir e on my return—perbapA before you bare gone back to Ozt)rtl." ! that will put all right ! That will b.- a reuewal f the I I time " Here . : the letter, put it carefully away I have told her lam unchanged You mot tell her so too ‘Vinnington sho,k hip head. but said nothing They joined hands " And now," aid Winnington, "farewell I didn't think our parting would be like thi. But remember. if we ,houlil never meet again, that I new r Chang. d ; no, not for a moment in my af fection to you "Why shouldn't we meet again' Do you think me so very ill'" inquired Arthur I don't know There are th , tights that come upon we don't know why. I twa',n't of your health 1 was thinking But there are nitiny utteiptteled eliati.tes it; life Farewell V , at shan't get up in the morning." They parted for the night Adthur, instead of going to bed, lookittl cut urn ni..or .1 wild and &solute s. ent It was, which seemed to have some attr tction to hint, for which it was difficult to aoc-unt. IVhen he had sat an hour— porhaps two hours, for he took no note ttftinte-- in perfect stillness, observing the mans, which threw a •Irtirtgv light up , u the Lath, he thought he 11, aril a er‘ al, mg oil the rick, ty "61 stairs, as of •-me eu , -lipping o tip tot d all Ile'st, al up It It , - w , 1141.1w, vk ht.lt riilw of th• top tti o soo n porch Stealthily looking run I, •t u mf ar 4..1....rvatin0, he saw II WWI with .11:. rn held is foie him t merge from :11. hon. , an I walk rapidly sway. Ile turned et t with 111, I. ft th t r his shoulder ht carried a pickaxe and a spade They shone fit fully in the light lie passed down the deelivi ty toward' , the waterfall, and then disappeared Next moruatg, at -It o'clock, the tad woman, on coining to her ditty work, found the door on the I.itelt Oti the tattle site saw a note, and took It up -fair , :4h , knocked nt Arthur's door Cons iu,' ‘. Is that you Wioninba tOn ? I shall got up in a moment " Su zur, the young gentleman be gone, and I thought :to- here letter alight he of come• quence." Arthur t thuletter , and, by thy• grey light of dawn, read a. follows: " I am going t.) leave. you, d.ar Arthur, and feel that I did not part from you so kindly as I wished Ido not like to show my feeling, for 1 in fact I have so little,command of them, that I am a:ways afraid you will despise me for my weakness I will give your messages and your letter to Lucy. I will tell her you are coming soon Even now the dawn is not far off, and I a m going before the hour I told you ; for I will not allow you in your present state of health, to accompany me to Hawsleigh It is to London I am going. 1) ! pardon me for going. I think it my duty to go You will think so too, when you reflect It they are surprised at my absen• ce (for I may be detained,) explain to them where lam gone I should have told you this last night, but did not dare Dear Arthur, think kindly of me I always think affection ately of you W. H." He should have signed the name in full," said Arthur, and laid the letter under his pillow. "To London—to the attorney—with specimens of the ore. I shall get in town before him in spite of his early rising." There was a smile upon his face, and he got up in a hurry l 4 lie can't have been long gone," be aa to the old women ; " for the ins be wrote wit as not dry." " I thought I saw him as I came," she replied " a long way across the heath.; but pqaps it was a bush, or maybe a vow I don't know, but it was very like him. - After breakfast be hurried to the village. The drunken shoemaker was earning a farther title to that designation, and was speechless in bed, with a bandage over his head, which some one had broken the night before. The motley Winnington had paid him for carting his lug gage was answerable for his helpless condition. There was no other horse or vehicle in the place. So, moody and diseAntended, Arthur returned, put a shirt in eatifi . pooket of his coat, and pro- ceeded on foot to Hawsleigh. He arrived there at one o'eloek The post wagon had started at ten. The shoemaker had carefully instructed the driver to convoy Winnington's luggage to Exeter, and as he only jogged on at the rate of four miles an hour, and loitered besides on the Way, he was not to wait for his passenger, who would probably walk on a few miles, an d take his seat when be was tired. There way no eenvevaner in Ilawsleigh rapid e nough to .n•trcakr a vehicle which travelled even at so slow a pare as fonr miles an hoar with the advanta. 4 .• thr..fs tart ; and onesi in the .•••a••h at :here wat , no possibility of c..utending with such rapidity of locomotion. 16 would take him to Iptelnn in little more than five day.. Arthur, h.•wever, di•eovered that ts carrier'• cart start.•.l at three o'eloek 1.. r the village of ()Afield, tw, lee miles onw a rd on th e H irt " road He Wh* in *melt a elate of ereitemeat and antti••t) to get on, that rent in one place was and though he knew that he was not a yard advanced in reality by availiaghimself of this chance; us after all he would have to Walt somewhere or other for the soza norms's poll waVn, he paid a small fee for the =ier of a few articles he hastily bought and tied up in a bundle, and set off with the carrier. Re seemed to be relieved more and moss as its kit nearer to' the object of his jowls". With • knitted brow and press lips he sat is the chummy cart or walk ed alongside. The driver, after some attempts at conversation, gave him up to his own refec tion'. " A prowl fellow as ever I ors," he nattered, " and looks like a lord. Well, he shouldn't travel by a cart if he did't speak to art's com pare. The cart's company increased as they got on. Women with poultry baskets returning from the neighboring hamlets and farms ; stagy friends of the proprietor of the vehicle who where on their way to Oaltfield ; and at last little village child ren, who bad come out to meet the cart, and were already kghtiag as to who should have the privilege of riding the old hose to the water whets he was taken oat of the shaft.; it was a caveltade of tea or a dowse pouffe when the spire of the church came into view. Arthur still walked beside them, but took no part in the conversation There seemed something anus al going on in the main street as they drew near. There was a crowd of anxious-faced peasantry opposite the door of the Woodman's Arms ; they were talking in whispers and espeeting some one's arrival. " Have b oa seen him sousing, Luke Waters ?" said two or three at a time to the carrier. " Ne--who, then ?" " The crowner ; be hs' been wit for a hour and more." a What'll happened then 1 Woa, horse !" " Summit bad. He's there !" said a man, pointing to the upper window of the Inn, and turning paler than before ; " he was fond in Parson's meadow—dead--with such a slash !" The man touched his throat, and was glut- Arthur began to listen. " Who is it? does any one know the corpse ?" " Nos ; he were a stranger, stript naked all to the drawers—and murdered; but here is the °miner. He'll explain it all." The coroner came, a man of business mind, who seemed no more impressed with the solem nity of the scene than a butcher in a shop sur rounded by dead sheep. A jury IMILISUIDIIIOIIOd, and proceeded up stairs. A few of the bystaad era were admitted Among others Arthur. He was dreadfully calm ; evidently by an effort which concealed his agitation. " I never looked on death," be said, " and this first experience is very terrible " The inquest went 00. Arthur, though is the room, kept his eyes perfectly closed ; but thro' shut lids he conjured up to himself the ghastly ..ight, the stark body, the gaping wound. He thought of hurrying down stairs without waiting the result, but there was a fascination in the 4e, ne that detained him. " The corpse was found in this state," said the eoroner ; " it needs no proof more than the wounds upon it to show that it was by violence thr man (lied Rut by whose bandit it is bar*. We to say ( 1 4ti no one identify the body ?" There was a Ling pause. Each of the speeds, tars looked on the piteous spectacle, but would give no answer to the question. At last Arthur, by an immense exertion of self command, open. ed his eyes and fixed themon the body. He= gored and uessirfeli. His sheik beam. lv pale His eyeballs were fixed " I—l know him !" he (-tied and kick beside his bed " I pared from him last night; be was to oome by thr wagon to ilawsleigh on his way to Exeter, hut left word that be was going to walk on be lon• He we. my brother—my friend " " And his name!" said the ooroner. " This iz very satisfset4wy." Arthur looked upon the mid brow of the mur dered man, and said, with a sob of despair-- Winnington Harvey " The coroner took the deposition, went thro' the legal forma, and gave the proper verdict— " Murdered ; but by some person or pervious un known " It was a lawless time, and deeds of violence were very frequent. SOON years after the per petrators of the deed were detected in mama other crime, and confessed their crime. They bad rob. bed and murdered the tanoffendiog traveller, and were scared away by the appromh 'of the post wagon from Hawsleigh. Arthur caused a mall headstone to be raised over his friends grave, with the inscription of hie name and fate. Cal lous as be somesimes appeared, be mold not per sonally convey the sad news to Winnington's re lations, but forwarded to them the full eertificate of the sad ocearrenee. It is needless to tell what tears were shed by the unhappy mother and sis ter, or how often their faney travelled to the small monument and fresh turf gre •in the church yard of Oaltfield CTIAPITIt tV When thirty years had elap, great changes bad taken place in Combe-Warle sed igh. It was tio longer a desolate village, straggling in the midst of an interminable heath, but a populous town— busy, dirty, and rich. There were many thou sands of workmen engaged in mining and smelt log. Furnaces were bluing night and day, and there were two or three churches and a town hall. The neighborhood had grown populous as well as the town ; and a person standing on the tower of Bir Arthur Ilayning's etude, near the Warleigh waterfall, could see, at great distances, over the level expanse, the jutting, of columns of smoke from many tall cbimnies which be bad erected on other parts of his estate. He had stewards and overseers, an army of veers and wrgoners, and regiments of clerks, aid at in the great house • and from his richly furnished li brary com manded, ruled, and organised aIL Little was known of his early life, for the growth of a town where a man lives is like the lapse of years in other places. New people come, old in habitants die out, or are lost in the crowd ' • and very recent stems take the enlarged and "aw ed outline of remote traditions. The data of Sir Arthur's settlement at Warleigh was as mom. fain to most of the inhabitants as that of the siege of Troy. It was only reported that at use period infinitely distant, he had bought the es-_ tate, had lived the life of a miser--saving, work ing, heaping up, buying where land was to be had ; digging down tato the soil,-always by some incoseeiveable faculty hitting upon the richest lodes, till be was the owner of uicaloulable ex tents of country and sole proprietor of the town and mills of Combs-Warleigh. No one knew if he had ever been married or not. When fat the population began to assemble, they saw noth ing of him but in the strict execution of their respective duties,• be finding capital and employ ment, and they otiediiinee and industry. No so eial intercourse existed between him and any of his nelohbors : and yet fabulous things were re ported of the magoilleenee of his rooms, the quantity of his plate, the number of his domes tic servant's. His patriotism bad bees so great tilat be bad subscribed an immense sum to the Loyalty Loan, and was rewarded by the friend ship of the Slag, and the title that adorned Ile name. And when fifteen more years of this so elc,iou and greadear—this aectunulation of wealth and preservation of dignity—had aeons teemed the public car to the sound of the million. sire's surname, it was thought a natural result of three surpassing nitwits dist be should be el*. waled to the peerage. He wu now Lord War- Leigh, of Combe-Warleigh, and had a coat of arms on the panels of his carriage, which it was supposed hie ancestor's had woes na their shields at the Wale of Hastings. ABreen of fifty thous and a year ma tame up to the Norman conquest. 2e2ii their fathers were hedgers and ditchers, air grandfathers inhabitants of the poor bonito, it is always consolatory to their pride to reflect that the family was as ,old as ever; that extravagance, politics, tyranny had reduccii it to that low condition ; sad that, it was left for them to restore the ancient name to its former glory and to re-knit in the reign of G-orge or William the line that was ruthlessly broken on Bosworth field. Lord Warleigh it was stated in one of the invaluable records of hereditary descent, &for which subscriptions were respectfully foliated by that distinguished editor, Slaver Lick, Esq ) was linisaly descended from one of the peerages which became extinct in the nnhappy•wars of Stephen and Matilda. It is a remarkable fact, that in a previous edition, when he was only a barseet, with a reputed income of fifteen or twenty thousand pounds, the genealogy had stook at James the First. But whether his an eestry was so distinguished or not, the fact of his immense wealth and influence was undoubted He had for some years the personal superinten• donee of his works. Instead of extracting dull ore from the earth, be had rent up dull maulers to the House of Commons, got dull magistrates put upon the bench, and exercised as flinch SOT 'reign sway and masterdom over all the district, as if he had been elected dictator with unlimited power. But there is always—a compensation in human affairs; and the rualevrktieo natural to all people of proper spirit lying in the shade of , so preponderating a magnate, was considerably gratified by what was whispered of the deeprest condition of his lordship's spirits. Even the clergyman's wife—who was a perfect model of that exemplary character—looked mysteriously, and said that his lordship never smiled—that a housemaid who bad at one time been engaged in the rectory, had told her extraordinary things about his lordship's habits; about talks she had heard—the housemaid—late at night, in his lordship's library when she—the heueemaid— was mortally certain there could be no person in the room but his lordship's self ; how _she—the housemaid—bad been told- by Thomas the foot man, that his lordship, when dining quite alone, frequently spoke as if to some person sitting be side him; when he—Thomas—had sworn to her _th e housemaid—that there War, An person what ever at table with his lordship, no, not the cat; and then she--the clergyman's wife—added, as her ,own knowledge, that at church hi* lordship never listened to the sermon ; but after appar ently thinking deeply of other thing, hill him self frour her , observation, and pretended to fall asleep. How sorry she was to say this, she needn't remark, for if there was a thing she hat ed it was tittle-tattle, and she never suffered a servant to bring her any of the rumors of the place • it was so unladylike ; and his 1-rdship had b een such an excellent friend to the church —for he had made an exchange for the wretched old glebe aid given a-very nice farm for it in the vale of Hawsleigli, and had built a new par. sonage house where the old manor house stood, sod was always most liberal in his donations to all the charities; but it was odd, wasn't it? that he never saw any cempsny---and who could be be speaking to in the library, or at dinner ? Dr Droves can't make it out: he was never asked asked to the castle m his life ; and he tells me be has read of people, for the sake of getting rich, selling their souls to I Isn't is dread ful to think of • His lordship is very rich, to be sun* but as to selling his soul to —! 0: it's a horrible supposition, and I wond-•r Dr Prowes can utter so terrible a thought But Dr Dr ewes bad no great opportunity of continuing his awful iunoudoci, for h. , was short ly appointed to another hying , 1 L.,rd War leigh's in the northern pert of the county, and was requested to appoint a curate to Wsrleigh in the prime of life, who would be attentive and useful to the sick and pip , r To hear, wai to obey—and the head of hie college in Oxford, recommended a young man in whom he had the greatest confidence; and l'ilr Henry fienford soon made his appearance and occupied the par eoasge house. He was still under thirty }ears of age, with the finest and moat iieii , :ately cut features consistent with a style of masculine beauty which was very striking it . was one of the men—delicate and refined .1. expression, with clear , light complexion .5.r.,1 beautiful soft ere--of whom; people say it is a pity he is not a girl. And this feminine laud in !uok was ac compsnied in Mr. Henry Benford by a certain effeinina, 'of mind Modest ;is he was, and what t world calls shy, for he would blush ,in being pie oted to a stranger, and scarcely ven tured to speak in miscelaneous company ; but perfectly conscious in what he minsidered the d is.. charge of a duty ; active and energetic in his parish, and with a sweetness of disposition which nothing could overthrow. He had a wife and two children at this time, and a pleasant sight it, was amid the begrimmed and hardened featirci of the population of Cambia Warleigh to see the fresh (awe and clear complexions of the new comers CONCLVDID NEXT WEEK MANNA SI/GAIL—The following interesting letter was handed over to the Cammig.inner Patents, y Dr. Bernhisel. Tt from Mr. Aa ron Daniels,i who resides in Provo city, Utah Territory, and is dated August 11, 1• 4 :15 We copy as fellows. " itecording to agreement I send you a small cake of sugar made from the syrup or honey found on the cottonwood trees, and as you re quested, will give you a few particulars concern. mg the manner in which I discovered it As I paned along to and from my cornfield, (which m situated about one mile from town) I discov ered a white substance on the cottonwood trees, which, apes examination, I found to be a sweet snlistases, somewhat resembling the honey dew in the States, but in far greater abundance, and rlaessieg other properties; some of the cakes g at thick as a knife blae or window glass. I though t a from the quantity .there was on the trees, t t sugar might be made cf it, and signi fied the same to a number of my neighbors, who all ridiculed the idea; so I thought I would try and see what I could do with it. I took home two bushels, and washed the twigs, and then strained Ind boiled down the water, whieh made a pound and a quarter of sugar. Since that time most of the town have been at work. Some fam ilies have made as high as one hundred pounds o f sugar. It makes excellent molasses, and as good vinegar as I ever saw. I averaged about eighty pounds per day, with two three gallon Weiss." • Although the quantity of sugar made from this syrup is small, yet we are assured that it is still very profitable, from the fact that Einar in that region of country is forty cents per pound - 1 AN AWILWARD SCRAP —A luau is Pitts burgh accidently spilled some oil oo s boodle (4 bank note,. 'Po remove the oil he Tabbed the notes with a solution of potash, which had the sleet of miaowing the siguaturcs of the officers of the banks. Frightened at the probable lam of the money, he filled np the notes again, 'writing therein the names which be bsd so incautiously removed Upon presenting the notot at the bank, the wri tiag vas detected and the man was arrested Vortuostely thy him, however, several gentlemen were cognisant of the facts and he was released— the batiks redeembig the notes. CCM 11=:ZEI B. F. SLOAN, EDITOR. Stating at' Bea. Tli. MILT 11 ti ye erg% smelt W. Nye. dt Nettarlid fOrdt wh' , swa% p.4.k, , .l un at tan u - , Ie eurvivar of a boat ...a.l tel./ lift tlo ,ship Rat ledge, in a -unliiti, 4 e from *Melon ,with an iceberg, It thnlilug n.. There were five Li 3 0 ,14 attached to t h e s ki m which I think would sot l it ave tarried 14 board. As it was, some tliknty-five or were left to go down with the wreck, of whint all but the mate and carpenter were passel= • The heat that I was in was the last to • off. h mai the intention of the mate and Car penters to have joined us, but they wont to sound the pumps, awl while so doing, ottr boat broke adrift. Indeed, had I lain alone side a few minutes longer, we should bare bees swamp ad W e s oon lost sight of the ship, and found our selves—thirteen in n utu ber upon the wide ocean with but about a gallon of water - and six or eight pounds of bread The par ty the beet consisted of the boatswain. a Seetch sailor, lye men, four women, and a little girl, passemputa, and myself. One of the women was the mate's wife The weather was intensely cold; the boat shipped a great deal of water. and from the effects of both the sufferings that we were to enemata/ were not long delayed. The two other sailors, Atkinson', and myself were warmly clothed; Lut the passengers, with the exception of one Is were net That lady was wrapped up in tw blanktts W had a compels in the boat, but Mrs Atkinsou in jumping in, broke it. It would have been of little use, the boat was so unsteady We inside no effort to reach any par ticular point—our only hope being that we should be seen and picked up by same passiug vessel.— Mrs Atkinson tolk charge of the bread Nod water, and would fitve but little out. Bhe and the boatswain drank most of tho water. Bath were sown erhgusteil and then the bitter cold begau to tell u u- It is my opinion that if we had been well suplied with food and water, most of 1213 POUII have withstood 41110 cold. Os the third dy iu the boat, a male passenger died. lie was very thinly dressed--a light coat being hi. only one lie was followed next day by. a woman. whose husband survived her but a day er two We this day Naw . a brig running free, with a light wind Our hearts were chewed with prospect of speedy relief. -- We raised on au oar, and pulled for her with all our strength.. We gained on her for some time, and I had be gun to picture to mye if the hearty welcome that would be extended to the shipwrecked by her cap- tain and crew But a breeze mon sprung up and our hopes were crushed. She gradually left us. I thought we were near enough to be seen from her deck, but no notice waLtan of us.— Notwithstanding this great disappointment, I en deavored to keep up my spirits. --- On the fifth day, all those in the boat with me began to drink sea water. I warned them against it, but they persisted. I got very little of the water taken from the ship, but I drank no sea water When my mouth became very parched and dry I rinsed it out with sea water, but swal lowed none. Some snow fell one day 'which .1 found a great relief. After the others began to drink the sea water they died in quick su&xtesi3n. On the 7th day the last one died, and left , me the only living being in the boat. The dead who first sucoombed were throVitt overboard; boat the fear last owe b o w l ed my little Kornai Bias steassik. and for more than two days I was forced to at with their distorted bldie 4 before and with but little hope that a better fate would" be sine.— The last who died was a passenger—an English lady, of slight form—the mether of a littl4 girl Her daughter precede,' her a few hours. I can not remember the order in which the others died. The boatswain, the night before his death, be came delirious and furious lie - assaulted-Mrs. Atkinson, hit her .everely on the arm, and - scratched her Ile threw the bucket overboard, and attempted to throw the oars overboard also He assaulted me with the canteen, and struck me a blow nu the face, the marks of which !still bear lie died about noon, some hours before which he became and stupid. Nearly all the others became delirious. Mrs. Atkinson called in the most agonizing tones for water— stretching out her hand, to receive it. They all dice' like the boatswain, and in many instances / the first notice I bail that another victim bad fallen, was by his pitchioe ever when the beat lurshed heavily When all my con3pantin- were dead, I ized an oar upright, with a white woolen shirt and a red silk handkerchief wiring from the top, as a signal This was the fir-t permanent signal that had teen ereeted My feet and legs had become very badly frozen, and I we- hardly able to move. 1 l a y to the h ow tit the boat. It would ship a sea occasionally, and I would rouse myself and bail it out I vr,,uld then lie down again. On the'2Bth of February, when I had been nine days in she boat, I saw a ship hearing down towards in I was now eoatident that I would be rescu ed I was directly in her path As 'he neared me she hove to, and sent a boa t to my relief.— Myself and the hat which ha d-tborne me volong in mid es , an, were hoisted en hoard The bodies were consigned to the deep. T found the abip to be thelll , 2rrnani.k, ;'.apt Weed, from lime for New York A SINGULAR kgE —Tn the fat of TRSB, a young man about 212 years of ace, named Grady, was sentenced to hard labor in the Conneeticut State Prison for the ertmc of stealing. The term of his imprisonment expired last fall, but hikbeg ged the privilege of remaining till spring. The Warden kindly permitted him to 'tay, and found enough for him to do to pay his way. On Mon day, the severity of winter being over, and the spring work about to commence, it was *greed that he should leave the prison and take,eare of himself, and he was furnished with $3. He came to the city but the world seemed dab to him ; he felt that he was au outcast, pad shrank from intercourse with men. In the ageing he returned to the prison, and begged that be sought be kept there during the remainder of his days ! The Warden has taken the matter in hand, sad is attempting to find 'a sintable Owe for , where be can earn an honest Nving.—/loefferd Time*. HOW TO START MxLoss.—A eolTesPoodest of the (!ountry Gesstiesniin glees the idiom:lag plan for starting melons: 4 "My plan for obtaini or ng early pts ia, to construct a rude bas] ut wicker-wor lank of willow or other twigs, something like a bird's nest, with ou t th e in s ide filling up. Make a hotels the soil of the hoc. bed of sufficient size to daft the basket, W up, plant lnd cover the seede r r a k e an d sw ieth the srerfitee. When the weather is warps enough, and, sufficiently settled to "drat 0 /outside planting, I make my ttilla,andlift tk e little baskets containing the plants, and *irefully remove them to their piad w where the quickly strike through the open net work of the 'basket into mother earth, and soon repay al) trouble for giving them 'a start in the world.' " • CREOsoTE FOR WARTS.—Dr. Rainey of St. Th omas ' Ilcopita!, LAndon, has written an arti cle to the Lane t, dessitiag the ethos tut ereo 'tote applied to warta. Be applied it &mkt to at obstinate warty avereseace on the flage;, then covered it over with a piccu of e‘tiCkil% klastae.. This course be pursued every three daysibe two weeks, when the wart was found . to hate Idisap peered leaeingithe part beasith it quitelhealthy. This is eeetalaty a remedy which estaissieasily applied by amy pessou. . .1 ii , : idb •6ff0143 NUMBER 47. T :.irr::.J.T 10111