Erie weekly observer. (Erie [Pa.]) 1853-1859, November 27, 1858, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    , N \I TORE, PUBLISHERS.
1.. 29.
FLUE OBSERVER.
r firr:l l i VCR," SATURDAY ltr
O%N AND I. 101. MOON ,
r. i 1.0 4 ..4 dilel
• s "race, or 1. , 1111,” 2 "o_oh.,
„ • WtSi tor cLarpo.
• t• issy 1 4* 1 4 1.: w l.l
v..i %Ds isccovat :./ft ~ith a props :Akar ros ro,
r.. 11 1- .O.Y. ERTr`,l`,....,
.V . " .. 1 , 1 .• • .••. make % Nur"; 43
„ - •l.a. $ Var .yu.J. 1 /Amara.. tr 4
6 JO
i Oc• r - 6•6
•e.. 2.A:..ipea.L4r p.allactat,
a clantht, Sa SO 211,6'
UZEJ
; , yua.-•.--oc. I'4 A
. L :. the Haulm* Directory et he pot at 61C3
I.ol' a card, 0 , 117 111.1...124 1,111404 1
Let.66e, /0 cents a lino th , wlntrtise
.esortekieseocig the HpeetaeSetiees for lea, than cos
?morn! rLI.I4VI .L failtf
-11 •tC Oa two squats, payer, tot auC,lot 811.
.61.401011, tae Chin ll • prop, rtton, LA; thil
r..t. MOO W rtr.ettr N nfi n.dto tbf legittnitte bostettil
rayntwat for irk:4llW wdieruswasitta
!fir year:7 adsertlaUrg .r!): for pretsebtk Litlf
fO4IIOIOII Of IV per *rut erta W to.de oa a:, esapt
a.trortileagenta, when pal:. In ihelvar.o4.
a 8 SZTEBB DLRECTORY_
Fi..t. D t ENT() RT.
. r Las —Ogles Is Central Block. over d
!Slug to re t. ctn. IS 0/J Z-1:-trt
wit. A • lAA I. lIIKA(Tii•
L.. —o2lc. n (Stu •Imt,
. /it* to
T. !I. 4 /ACLAIK,
3w...wore to honors 4 si"aarr.
_ . DM 44.47, t_ ortkor of nut. .4.
• , • att.numg
. A ItOOTII, LACS T •
bells: is Fancy and Ztap.e .'-v.;.
•:•* "up.. t• br.+a'• Votc
1111.1.1itit & 1.1.1iN IL ,
1-
K.
.N3.I.LAAa L.. —Loto, As reu. • .r: ui u ,
• r•
►i KJ ti UNA 16:. TI-1 - 11: 4 04JN
LArr
• •at,, • ,n ~ ..i•.
f
%Jr . K. 11-\l•lLl.,
+T.-7, u it .• • h •. lr
L. 1 , 1 rt F 11., Ya
tp. ; - •
C. H. A: il„
• t:lh U.% •1.1 Uva.,r• .0 A . .• • . .
Lau W ‘1. • • 11..1 t • ..! A dk.
. .12 :be pr, ettio • t • loc., 164,1 1,1 pial.
.t .• • a
J 1.
!.• Ita I tier:Win W.,:
•.. .1.13•1:•. In o, .
flat,*
!..• :I
tiVI: .S LTT,
R.T lt. r••• a t, (.laanokary
••••r, •• • t t. r rap
11 t- 1 NW ,
/BCC( PS,: er .4 L.... Albs.
J t Ht. , L. 1 11.4 b.
.•
-• r. • U. t.. t 14..4
IrIMEIBI
*l. "111-o.lili A. *U.,
=I
)1 KUllh A. L. 0..
•
=II
T. lILIZICON Ur!
'
„ ,
Lt 11104 AUU.
t , ort•t t.. • • F • 1,. .11,
• I \ u.; .•
- • . k . 4 At,o* 4“ •• • • \ 4
r•••-• • lot et,••-a 1 • •• •• tt.• ..It
LI ( b %Tit Itt
-• • b
4144
All
r• • • ' '
•
t:6011(:6 J. ti01::111 , 4
• , N u •c.. 1 ller.A. Lu u.
ru/h, ►L I Y.►fl< r
U. K. t
1., it
J.\1116 It. VIC I.NII
•!_ t :A
-4 -luu lc Fr.. , . 141.1.4
L..111'1 if k:
n a . •.• rt
11,110 A: MOM.: t 1
• 111, catike'ly., 1,1
strew . , . t tr“.. En.. I'.
k YALU 1..1.0Tfi1M..
mnl Mactalartorwr .11 cirst
Geot,e4s34ll . lllfilrlatlitli.4 .1 .1 8 r... 1/ •
• • et:, Erie, l'a
kVIL 1..1A T 1 TItO1t:%11§ 1 t,
• •4. Ow S. Agroccirwr.. M. 1 1 / 4 1
• . •r. ‘11•.4 (qt . ,t,
,4t Jam • +l, r•-t', re Erse, I •
J. F. DOWNIAti.
• L.. • , ro irattex or ettz yr It 10
of Exit( u2tt., • e I: Qapt aril
•-, twoluviitntrustoe. I.c ha -a:. :IN etcher 114 1.0 V.
4apstrat• • yr ()tr., dr 6.1 1 bl 4a, wry+r of
*% •
% lIUS/1 3 1(111.E,
Ortat Clnerchrlt, Jortasans. i r w ,
•- k G rego
. Si Y• ..rrera t'tr•••••, York.
& , IlleitC2l: Caat•.1.6.3 A ailk
• • •••*sON, • •JICTX) . 34rN•DZICS
TILIH ALP HAI k"... 1 (0.
. •t FtttuL Pi.Lript., to F•nr, arid Ytapla Dry 1,4,041
• • , t•tt.ugs, ldl llutbeL No l kr , ,rn •
• fIiIi.OHGE H. rTLIEIt.
. r Law , thrird, Ella 4 J —4111.1. 4 . 44 1K 4 C1.1 , 4.../
1‘4 44 11 4 104( UP 44/44 prolc,;,:uess :ispatch
JOHN SW EIK!..V.
t ral. PAACZ, nib, in B-att...1) , t11. , mr, •utir., Fr,
JOHN HEARN S t 0..
....La NW wad Mer42tut•, •teal.,. IL. • vILA,
tn 1 eirut deals . line 011 i.r,er st...sur.. Public
k Erie, hi
CAL:OIIE V ti CL % KA.
• vox'ams, and .;1 .naratlcan..l Import...! W,o'
oarpt, clan loran. 1 - ntrem..., F 4,44 et.a. Oh awl Arent,
t.t, actffiao \.. 7 1:1.4.011...1 kilori, Stat. otrert bon,
JOHN W. A MKS.
holesale •nd Itrtnll I aenler a n'l k,r10..4 Flkl3,
-•a•in, "tracking, othem and Dinlng tanalra., No 4
a 1.41 e,
J
-- , iftico a1...L.1 , - in Tuoniani 1411
' Pa
R. ell t 11.C11111i 1..
auct D.-aier at, Itectua.-•. asa
avoact.
r. 11.;, BA it it
• n h. ~ ‘134 Shn4. at Wa.....aale aa•t Itetall, at Zs.. 1.)
•It t ntat• &treat, Erie. P►,
PAKK U%11.1..
• tuw Hate 14. r routes, f e.. - tukkt, tbd
g " . ,• • tct 4.. f kw hat Enquiry kt tt4 Btu kir
N.. .4, Rope.. Env,
OLI)$ & I.OW.
'LA+ • Inuieno. , ILI,' Retail In Welland c.-
•11114,10 f tb• cilear.•C SO, yo'.
n 74.!fth uoar Pa.
r her carr)to,.: r Inr 11.'11++. farm nr modu
ft, .okl. -twat.
Cr A .
• 7 ,
~
Jt1r.6.1•11 IC. FE 1L61.1.0!..,
1. •NI• •y, .• s.v.a.ar nft., be I . + ll,
• k•. b, 1t th , treet. F.nr, i a All I un.lewan la
rromptl) awd fatthful.)
W•• !•6411
,- ;j4 DENTISTRY_
DR. 0. 1.. hiILIJOTT,
T 11 , 7 •te an 4 Dwit to nui Roe. 1)110
L rAL.,t • f Eno t J.,1% IU. 1655.
CKI BROTnEic - . • -
.1410 E S
•,• ksl, 1.11. e,, Hrlttannba •Od 1'10.41
' • Yowl*/ &IA table CciUr rr label Goo&
r,ean qtate xtrort Krt. fti 24
GUA I J !MAR
'• TR... &Del ti•TIL 40 W.-4 lads. Got.,:. Pro. 4.,
.awt, Ftr , , lobac•nof:Iyull, ,
4• 0... tt , ,w-a, Stat. •Ise..t. Eri., P.
HENLAUB Jr
• 1 -an, • i H.Notw and gq...4, end W bolevai.- Poeta,:
• , •• 'Ol at. le LesttwT, f rr.cl, •I 3 d ttpettral,
Bin'apr% giro iLud
Cons, L.-. to, Loptings, itibsixlig. Hammers,
Mawr.Salta, L., NV Stab.
' • wt.
I 11:1)B1 ittiff4lllkl. Cu., -
k• Aix* el N 1.4,41 !tetras', boilers
M. I..es, • uga. viesi
• , • , 171.40• • lo•• ewe I %MR i's
3111 4 44 W. E. ULIODE",
t llr tett NA rx .0 I irrpt 4•1••• L Rtorus
Mttri It • Ftrot•ego A. 111 • Jir• Os) : ., t•r•,ldk in
Erse t.. -t,„h.,„ AIM.
• irdrr
rtos Yr4•4.1.-L M. ru,.4 szol •1; wool &Pan
I
dh.
i:41.41/Ar• st much kw/ than main Prim. voglimmi
Ass' tk• soy 1,1.-27 BIZ muvr. t
iIIIE WEEKLY ,OBSERVEIi,-
CO-I.li. 4111. 011
=I
I=llll
i • to :t,.
MEI
. Kr'. ,
MEM
a ~ tt 0
a t, t
CEMETI
)It re J
therPt, 11/1.
TEO
=ITEMS
lIIIMMEIII
I=ll
MU
Jie ‘sb
1. t rirliCl4
OMR
IiZEMI3
EIMECII
=I
From Quißatlual .V 1 ) rovi er
THE OLD TIIREPLEY
boas oo wort of the eltakto4 L , 04,
And Q. Amp coital r►ttltti, by ,
roptlTO stria kw; rules the trove! .us wu , ki
♦nd the OW Otis lon to di*
ftq g;oso crepe uer the ISlnty kat.,
14.311".• Itoettly Cal sloe stool
it* stop horse, day, 11,
.1:4,111* trot hoe)
. i. 00 wear, eargr
comunii morn
1:0 ,4 0 11.4 basting Isrlord run,
At tn• woad of tlte oebotag born
rot thn Jost lies att.: upon %Ito roa4,
Ant tbaUrigbt .rod silAlaren
4 - UM Qa4 tba 6attatin hoot tad wt...
Itattlisd "law 1.-4 we'
awe .1, .41 'am: tit erica. zr .I',
Or toe Stv.c wZios. a rzz....
Alai he • 4..• era
Ard 'ar :'7L L yr.* t,
PLo anicit atiaraa=g ta tt.e
&ad tio Was, tai suagilt. tlao
We :two spaar...l tLit
tbe 'Mesa 1,22 i :v.'s. va cc ••
3.6 cAlttribptipi la a plk-?
Wide -pry • .r. 4, sosus••,
Iry tot." , twat% •31, a mod for ncr :torero to strt.
Aod r. it al3 tag rate,
cc.. 1.....y:1e1 the the :e.. -1 •
And t.,anr'ea t:_e
r0c.2.2 tzt. er,gie, -•
`..s.tioss".) now we r.de
with a Lii-iLt3
pllir,jl - thtirli wa, .la.f
111111 Lh. 111444 echo.a wales •••.
hatiohlii hawk the wound,
mail the tail pit. road Ls left wwh..
A 0.1 the starer" vnit ti.• pl.
4 • hare elrctrrl th. %cold 41Ih ti,
•od :Ur •Ifikm lling mi.. Lys m.•
BEAU TIFt I, I►ECOY I'ACLA
A THRILLING STORY
)rtir. 1.4 , 1i111g firbt•ca.,l
- - the. t•al•uttl r,f 1 .1t. , s 3v , 1 , ill net. ttl
..tier of the erluntry rn the n.•rtlotitrii, I
n.,r u 'h -t.r\ nil thrilling advonturt., whleh I
ho, • ,••trd, .1 It r '•• to fir IKL
ttdo• 411 itit• 1, r, nin•lor ,T,f ) ti
1,•11••• - -- "tit , tot , t ,
tu-t •
TEe firt.! t ! I h • I : r, utr , ,l
bet ilevn Vvre ( t ruz sari Ito• ell) f t ,
thN t. iodbi .1,-110 t itt, rutitiing tniwttu
c.- I I,a I Izarn t1f.t.11.,1
. tt r itgt. U. Jai Tu. bud
eu to. g.•• 71) t. Ito of i'erott , ul,l/ u , u
it , cv.ti to, Y, u 141( c,
MEI
lig r k, • t, tit% K um,: n i zatu• , b•
(1• 1 , •I
I. r,•rt,l A , I', , Nitt It NY tla I . •
cd t,,, u I. r,frt.sbru,nis, 4 i ni ) I,
use.' , I , vcry
-urit,p u., I if iadr nt. nr
her.. • , 4,u,d be tuu,b t , , , itt 1-r tu,. 1,, tak,
tuattt, , and .uff,r ut3selt t,. 1,0 blew: •
pliant/ • , 1 , 0 tl run tt,t. tti tog%iag iu
te cu , I r I bad s, 10.1
rrc.-161111,1 w•- wy intetwou f I
, cLi to fc , r ihrtr ',time, arid r.E In.l Tlikt
I v ud thk, moot. r
Al rt•r. le. I it IA al, it" 104 L. Lull t. , vell all I
t gi • tr, tin V(ra Crux k ut.• of nit
• I g c,d of ti ir j ) kit (6.t t Ilt„
4 11.-ri• 114 V. I .--. r •
w ‘r•l, aL 111, I 131,!„ h e t,. l, t!, i-und
a I-Ito ,•11,. •vt,r.lN )4:‘i•
st
LI I ‘.l
- I% tl•• /11`11
i,. 1 , Nts !I. ~ i.
I M!!!
. 11, Ili.. `A
%.“1 , J :! O IU . Ir I
.kk
I.' ii, II I 0: 'lO -
pt.l e -
011.1 e it,
lill
• •I• • •1•• • ". I
I ,I.i ,ik e.
I=11!
itt ,"•,,
t ! \
T I ‘
114 i t . .
Jul VI I , A %.!
lIM
11.tt, . I G ti It
wt t't tlll, . 111..1 LLt • U , , It ,
lit in ILe 111 -•t,t.... I. 1 I t) teld,
lillll tiLN k I • L.. It e 1 lustl
It ott IruLiz• .•m I I.) .1. ' i.t.t
yl3 ti,d 'Alb el., I ti •Eig. ar y wo.
ter (A Gnrfe, btAl Gr.m t.c.•.at . N. n.
wk) Ilr IN' I t 10 , 41. :t r . ed to
4.4 ) b • . ) 1.12 41* ,
g ti.. t . • I , • : et For
1:1C—r1 .• D IN.trltil),
14 , • e& for ) t,
Tu 91:00 N 11..• t tLj .1 •I. 'ztdrorae•,
sr.d 131 . • t. U. ,/./ jum de
rt t• "
• la 3, ett 1 , 1,11(.0, putting the ii 1 SpOLS t*
I, f dl. r. "), u Will It• 100 hasty ! Let them
111., I. , Fill r, -%, y ielu —let thtur (pen the door '
l . ti i.„ f ' v.... ' Or • Lt.. tt a u/i tht Li I* ILO tale -
) 1 t i..• ) I, rt t tut .S• I -;. ne it.e 0011 was suddenly aims", e pert,
I , . .-I drone., ;'tell tbs., i , r I'. ur aseariLy, Ltavity• hearth d men
.t. 4._ { ifrtr , 4 Ltd it( turt Arb it , my vitit
'Quit k, Sc Lo mil, ter the lose ot (lot' " I
t t •'r cited. rasping it her arm
l ' ) "H('ld ' ' she (IC4:flit& I übtaull) pret•volitig
r. c. 1., tLe cf ni) t yen revolvers to my bead. -Reels.
b' Le ' fete° IP. 13?4.:1(-..--)C15. are our prisoner "
fit), tat .134, d God ''' t xclaimed 1, perfectly &stoup
r instant il,d , -out pri•oncr, did you ay ? It is not
..1 14 re I. ,>il. 't that tto to lair sod lovely as yourself is
..d -o tee iu any manner cenueettti with these banditti l''
Lt ciii, t "It i 4 even FO, atnor," sbe replied with one
so pints; • l Li r rr,"st bewitching ollu., still keeping one
,tin, 10t11. , ( toy ten leuptuts tuned against myself, and
le it I.Leti 1 :ii.u.tieently yointing the other to the door.—
. Tou wiil t ttige at by stepping forth and gist
ii 1,1; el, -a it g 3 t urst If into the tare of those good gentle,
it t 1 dt .og re( u, who will Ht. ttat you ate treated as 'brave
tu,..} le etLet ii man theu:d he, but who still trouble you, mean
-I,the, ler soy little charge or valuables you might
p Obe,. replie , have to spire
tietusitns t 1 There seemed to be no help for it—the bean
will St Lima Paula Valtrde was a spy and as
tlon i,u I of millet of the lidroure She had entered the
j . ! and I as( yt ott.getic,a at Perute fur no other purpose than
)t niipeitr to ascertain the tract cenditien of things inside,
.Dt 1% abet run bud be able to tiguaitse her Kw matte Dui she pass.
ti oil I , Ii e't t) I Id bit a l t, CV that they might knew exactly in'
Di If <pt, ti It. t what manner to conduct themselves and make
re P err •I t l it etr at A sure oithcut risk By a single. strut
Cr, ttd 3. o t, eta ag. m the had obtained my arms just at tile point
lielaitci to 1 1-0.1 where she knew the attack would be made, and
a i:1 111 I et ty 1 L I.t r discharge of the pistol, as if by accident, was
LI, I 111%t Lt‘.r ere sign to ibew them that all was secure.
, at d II li one I tt "1 ucknowledge myself conquered by being
Li 11111 tlf f I, asp i ui a mid," esid 1, bowing to la Senorita.
hot ytu Ituily 1 The u turning to the re Lhers, who bad DOW COI.
hat k and it r I !tell in a holy in front of the door of the dili
.t.l. 1 Lett i 10 try : gene a, I continued :
II bt,tll ft,Pt 1 1 1 tI t Ire '' tutlemen, will you permit me to alight and
make yen some valuable presents? In tbe tan-
Andguaye of your country, all I have is your. "
yen taint I .to et DIIDUe it reyettlit u of
the rime lot the its; t 1 your MO" The leader of the party bowed politely in re
• Wto iLitWer elle trilled "At leant I hope I turn, and said, with a grim smile:
it , he always pit sated '• "Si, Senor, we obeli be most happy to receive
Atd your It I.t W IttLtlClr.
-aid I. rhare j shy - thing which so distinguished shoveler may
you Litt I ttyla 11113 dltr(ttd to ruler tittle tin have to bestow"
__
taw ful sets?''
El, r) 'r ‘t •ee •1 e• et! t, "eL•
1 . L' 1 b ALI .1 COUISP 'At 11/
tql 1 .• 1 . - 1 u r. %. U. to. .LP 114.1)15,
to wt.. La Ll..i :1 tt' Lr `Lt U 1:3) 4 . i. Ittelb t•uru
frr it ,t,\( ruftt), tbiht IL bl; 111 1 LIP br, .0
je q ..id ) Fir ILr aLlt, if Le first rt 1.1 h
tLet r. tLu,L rtqu.rtd ftr rolClllllltillt
o ILt way, at.d -o iLukh 1, r thr tititiukst(y
)(U -i , tait f. ft 8111 ILtu lAN( tie tzaci r , rtt
Letat , Li :Lt. 1% ,, Foistr; and if Le will takt thr
'tau:, a. 11. t rum, tota. of lair jorrn. y, L. xttJ
uut bet tu 1.. le it 1-f,Lti Ly SO) 111 part) anti
tLut ahotLir
I zi —May lx, I he iit sr ir,
Dlt Ilchb istt Ut t I dl .I>g hat dct,
tui.y with tiLtu,./Itetc.....tivtd f u, (onittn•
— Hut eter) °be,' replitd tise fair lad}, •rhi. u,(l
coitelt.tni t tie (t utoly ti.st 1.44
..ALtl )1...0 IL. L ttp.itd ht. tbir high
1,33 Il i I I) atdlot( )tu Lo liar IL 1 Lu- y
yuig )uutpcier
- "AN. It, r: Lit t. %bat ere 1 du: 1 hal: 1 . 1
Irrl‘t, eb Uti Ile . tu ird); ta Lt.., ttt rt.ttunt
Trutt , T. tiLi to pule tltt urt.ty it
re P Irt' • t lblottr, 1.4 DJI r
1 r.e , ts 3. ur, ttd ti rtittol3 CI tt:d Ltt t :pet
pf Nit Ci to It-tit DO rimed 140 d• AM
. t , fttr, I XI I Lt 1 c it) 1 Lel(' my rlbll t I
101, ILI, I 111%i Ltltt ale! Rub ato riuttb
It ulto IP rtd t 1 ti 01rt I tlUrt Lb.?
11) RI Lt.( Rttl tit I I t tt• pi I.I?Ur
Al( lblt )(U Lttn Idtkd ui
jt Ul L‘ rLd it 1 1 Ir I utkrd
"1, t 1 .L 1 1 Lit(lra' tr 4..11 14 tLP ihuo te r
Ut) , t , 141.4:1 .1, int. ut.ll), • ' laugh
td
01 4 ( 4 , 14 Ibt I, at, Aarl,uu &Ltl bib Eoglleb
Hi; L, R I S. t* n IL. pure( dil4t Lt;l anb tut,
filed 1 11 , 411. Fuci vit ut,cirtz
tvou."
"Aid (.1d Ibt• rt 11,4 ti. fit, tetit?“
''Ytp, tut Bed ILO ((haft Il rid It flit! iffi)
a oil ff V.llO. t 1 t Uf patty " .
-A., I ti.tuitl bkve %spaded," retursed
1 7, u "rite but rt:bted on that occasioo, I sup,
tx)l.,?"
.IV'. was not, senor; but the ti foreigners , up and down the road, where it wound between
subeegoeutly paid dourly for their resistatior, for 1 dark, overshadowisg trees, bet dine veered ma-
CCM
Eta
v. 1h • 1 1.
in
t u. I !• . -
=I
=I
J
%:1 11.1.11 g,tUt% .Ut
;.1.11 . t I '•t-U1 1. I
ME
AT
in journeying back and forth, tooth were killed,
separately and at different times, uear the same
sivot You see those crosses by the aide of the
road, senor.'"
"1 have observed them frequently, but here
they sem to be much more numerous," I re•
looking forth from the vehicle
"Each stands ou the spot where some one tae
met u viotent death," she rejoined, "and a, we
go tiong I witi call your attention to thoee which
mark the plaees where the two foreigners met
th .ire "
"D, kuuw," said I, "that I am recutved
to tutulate their example, !et the eonsequeneet
be what thel, mat"
.
"Holy saints defend us:" she enflamed; "you
are not in earnest, senor?"
"Serioueiy so, T assure you "
•You w , uld oal bring oertain death upon us
both."
"Say, rather, I should llghteu thee:proses of
the j •urney—for your knights of the road under;
.ttattd retreat s well as advance--and you )our.
I se f have acknowledged that firm resistance pot
then! to eight for once "
6•But there, wt-re numbers opposed to them,
moor, auctyrtu are ovly *Ate "
"But It.rtunotely I
have a couple ul revolver*,
which a, k w guud Lauds amount to ”0410 tell or
dttreu *hots, ALA lily friends have repeatedly
told usekl au; not a bad marksinan.•'
'MI' smut ,Nlarit . you will think Letter of
ht•. "LI 1 . , Ole very hiss of resistance, terrifies
Ua
But o tLe ith of robbery
lit•oau,k. I havt• oevrr met with volonee
IVe continued to cones rse in a sausilar strain
time It.nger, my fair companion gradually
thanging the butject, aud seetniug much inter
eptetl in myself. I kilned that her family name
Valertie, that she was unmarried, that her
whet. mud r were uffisers in the army, and
5 , , f.rth 50(1 NJ OU; aud in return I gate her my
owu Utt CLIC. Ntatt d something ofmy history, hum.
n, -a and prospects, and altogeLher became mart
o.•tumunicatke than I would acivile any friend to
1 with uny , 'ranger of either ,ex in a strange
couutry
A., we colltlGlnd our. journey, the conversation
gradually changing from one thing to another,
S, n(,rrra j'all,lll bilddt nly brought it back to the
r, it firat (petied
—We are corning opt a dangerous part of the
r she said., "are you still resolved to def.ud
),.urself if aseliderir
•,‘ ith your p, ratisaloo, Senorita
cl,4,'t think tt a4virahle," the raid,
it -Liqt, your Mit tillOU, I think it 130 more
u give at, a chance to
I.k, a I,,ri in my defence, stage my milt of dap.
gt r a.. al grunt at. )1 urr!"
"Awl Lava you realty the nerve, after all, to
d, t, ud ), urrelf?" I inquired
"If 1 Lad the mianr, tenor."
I tt.,t e two piatolr,"- Paid I; "if ycu will ac,
Li, I,t One I lilt CU, it 18 at your service
'You are it 13 kind, 14 , 401—but can I fire it?"
—With czat , tent lite," 214 producing cue of
11,3 rtit.:%tr:, 1 t apia.ut d to her the manner In
IA LILL, it woe to be u;ed
.•Autl hi. n say will shoot some half a dvs
..1 think tt (tare to calculate that 6•r ehtirgeti
ut ittli apludo, 14. nurita "
A tity Intdatble wtapt.u, matt u," atm re.
tl, .ut.L I eati a:m(44 fancy we are
u t.O. 'T the, )(Ai ay like thi ,9 "
,
=
Wb.,t u be: , 11111u: ib%, pilot) " • bk übptrv.d,
urbnq: • at t oud cuku g it (ruin ruy baud
It cLd.Y K bat t atm-, revolvf ya
h, • 1t t. Lud "ATM d I%kr tl,c ..gte
1,6 1 i/Ut 1..U.1 t ' ot s
.• Ai I! t. •w tl , l •11.! pr,-
Ito Nt t • n- 4 -111 •I kt ,
. )II •lax 11 1 .111115t.1. tt.l root)
lila. r U 11111' liatig
.1 I .• • VI. ~.t"')• un r d wL.O
.g jo r, drid ot I i. 1.1 Lairds
"44 , 1 wni, u ri poll A oltuute
f 111.41 Willie I wiLz. grntly cbt,liug b. r , lAt•
b. rid ti.r. tap i 1 bi
rat laman. tt• Tbr next natitstrot
~urr•d'•y. , urt b! SriTp. .uddi fly, oval wr
Hi V. II I • ...ill I l•Utida 11 I.) rowrctgbtur ten
uuti Tl, tt• wham, in a loud voter, t
In Ili li
COE
• y ) , i). r— r-, r "
• Qu .1,-Sor‘ t.hitl 1, t llteroliug trry Lurid;
• Lit k k 1.1 h%. n , oarue give the oLe of
!Loaf; Dui" (fur Wile for deeituve
act i,)rr
With this I guiety ett Aped fetal the iehiele,
•
asect i one quick, starchiug glance put me in pos.
r eg k i• o f the a hole b tau of affairs. The (bli
p hem bad bets ateppetl in • wild, gloomy place,
sod the timer Rah pitting careleasly on hid bqi,
taking everything as a matter of mum. Ile
might a'so bean acei•utpl.ce of the robber;., or be
might Lot. but in either clay there WIN little
hope - of rettatecce from him ; for any attempt
of !Le kivd would oertaiciy bring Upon Wm a
metre puniellutot, sooner or later. I glanced
el 50 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE.
'ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING, NOIEMBER 27,1858.
ing to give ine any hope. The rubbers, wine
eight or tee in number, and ail well armed, were
collected aronad me, part of them mounted, and
the others standing on their feet, holding their
mustangs by the bridle. Looking at my asap sr
a desperate one, so far so Wag plundered is eon•
corned, I still retained my preseaoe of mind, and
did not wholly despair. True, I bad 'loon outs
witted sad disarmed, and now stood singly be•
tween numbers ; bat the idea of yielding tamely
to this °Waage was nipagnant to my eery nature,
and I resolved to put the least favorable *Kw:-
trinity for defense and retaliation to lb. eiruelieel
"Will you swept this parse r prods.
°ins ors that held several °eine of gold, sod
handing it to the chief of the ladrones.
"Thank you, mar; you ant very kind :" be
said, es he took it in hit band, with a polite bow,
asd.ohinked the matey
"This diamond pia'ntay prove aoceputitie to
u, friend 17! I added, Li I quietly mooted it
from the bosom or my shirt, and handed it to
the ozwriantau an his left, who reechoed it in
the same polite remsser
"Thin diiiimead ring I trust you will retain as
• keepealta!"' I sestientei, Airs,* the Jaw , '
from my linger, and presenting is to a third
"I bug your pardon, snores," I pursued,
glancing at the Senorita Paula, who with my
pistils still in her possession, was quietly stand
ing within the diligent**, regarding the whole
proceedings with one of her sweetest smile. "I
must not forget this beautiful lady!" I went on,
at the same time producing the article, "a very
beautiful gold snuff boz,—set, as you perorivs,
with diamonds—will your ladyship honor me by
accepting this as a slight token of my regard for
the pleasure allorded me by your employ and
coeversatioor
"You are a very gallant gentleman, senor!"
she laughed, taking the two revolvers in use (air
hand, end presenting the other
I reached the box toward her, but my baud
trembled elude, and jest as the present was
about to touch her fingers, it slipped and fell be•
tween us.
"A thousand pardons, Senoras, fur my awk
wardness!" I said, as I stooped down to pick it
up
Noe was the all important moment—the mo
ment of life and death! All were in • measure
off their guard, and one quiek furtive &snot
showed me that the glil asPi held my weapons
carelessly in one band, with 'ht. other remaining
mended_ for the piss; but as I raised myself, I
gave a wild, startling yell, and u the Senorita
started back, I, witb the quickness of lightning,
seized both weapons and wrenched them from
her
EMI
To wheel and eommenee king upon the part)
was only the work of a moment The ire shot,
fortunately, laid out the chief; the seeoud took
effect upon the one neatest to him; and by the
time the third had been seat on his mission,
there arose one simultaseous yell of dismay, and
the astonished robbers began to seguer in every
direction. I had no disposition to follow them,
however; another minute they might rally and
turn upon me; and springing forward I grasped
the reins of a freed musSaos, aid vaulted into
11 .addle. Owe .wooeso Eteuse around glowed
me the Senorita Paula upon the body of the
chief, bey laughter changed to grief, and some
of the scattered cowards bringing thror pieces to
Lear upon us
Senorita, and Senores!" said I hitter•
The next moment .tra ore tug away linen
tLr r, ad, the half-rallied ri.blx , rs pouring after
me a roller), Lut ti,rtuorately nit touchiag their
'oath They doubtltas would have followed me
iti''lost pursuit, bur for the wholesome dread they
Lad wy .tall undischarged weapon As it
w.r- (soaped, and entered the town of l'uctila
where, it is almost lit tairlw to add,
a t Ultifli r t my exploit made me a hero and a
It vi I.i Ib. tne. Ilene I soli.' my captured
musritig Ind trappings for enough to tied moldy
we t, rVI It: 1 bid dlapnt ‘,l lb ,L, VI.) of
pit •. 111i4, and the next day raw me au 'nettle pe
rt u F . r of the same diligeticia, re 'owe for Mud.
whit , 1 arrived in safety, without any furtb,
er event worthy of bole
What tumor of the robber' and their beauti
ful accomplice I never learned; but the leseoo
tetught me ea that Jimmy I have buyer forgot ,
tett, and duriug the rensaiotlet of to) otey to that
conntrY, no pretty smut ever bad the honor of
being my business confidante, or of getting pus
er.sion of inlety and unfailing revolve/a
A Sin ovule CASON ty New hi woo —The
nor pa sent out frail Fort Defiance to punish a
band of hostile Indiana in the neighborboodOluc
eetded in capturing five thousand head of sheep
and six Indians Six Indians were killed and
two soldiers were also killed during the fight
The troops entered a remarkable gorge, or canon,
climbing down the mountain side at almost its
renter, through a narrow passage, where a tingle
horn man only rould pats, and at the risk of
being precipitattd by a false step down a chasm
of fire hundred feet Tbe walls of the canon are
in some places over five hundred feet high. Ars
rows shot from Ate top at the troops below lot
their direction by the resistance of the air, and
came down horisoctally Stones thrown down
were broken before they retehed the bottom from
the tame cause. It is about forty or fifty miles
through it. Peaches and corn were found in it
in great quantities Tbe pedalo are said by the
officers to be trey fine. Several prisoners were
taken in the canon. Had the tribe in any num
ber atoud fight here they could bare annoyed the
troops much without a doubt. It was a hazard%
Cue march : and the succor, is a matter of wonder
as well as et congratulation. The opinion is ex
pressed by POW of the officers that ten deter.
mined men, well armed, could have misted the
entrance et the troops into the canon.
HABITS or BPII4IIB —The following curious
fact it given on the authority of Mr. Spencer :
"Having placed a large full grown spider ou •
cane planted upright in the midst of wow, he
saw it descend the ease several times, and re
rot nut when it had arrived at the anthem of the
water Soddenly be altogether lose sight of it,
but a few mom eots afterward to his great sa-
t oniabroent, perceived it quietly pursuing its way
on the other side of the stream. The spider
baring spun two threads afoot the ease, had
cut one of them, which carried by the wind, bad
become attached to some object oaths bath, and
so served the spider as a bridge across the water.
It is supposed dist spiders, when adult, always
use similar seams to eras; water."
TIMIUVIC Exmostoit —The boiler of a steam
taw mill st Industrious, Miss., exploded on the
8d instant, with trementkas faros. The mill
was Wien to fragments, and although seventeen
men were employed in ir, 'wasp to say, no one
was killed Several had limbo broken and were
otherwise eeriest/1y *tared. Oast of she boilers,
80 feet long, weighing 8500 pounds, was blown
over a quarter of a mile through the air, passing
over two dwelling homes is its light. Mother
boiler of the same lesgt► we. driven half us
length into an adjacent bask. ;
mr We ones heard of a leataekisa, wimps
atteogth orso attended pith fatal wow
queooto. He was cattias • alien of brad and
batter, when the knife ftoellsad esi bialsalt
ia brit, sad two tan babilW him
The illassetesiu and British in :span
The treaty negotiated' by the Untied t.Atc/6
with the Japanese Government has not been
empty of results. Duriog the residence at &m
-ods of the American Consul General, Mr liar
vie, opportunity has been offered that functionary
'to beeetne acquainted with the country and tin
rulers, and to establish relations of amity be.
tween the two caucuses, whiob have borne fruit
in the shape of a new and liberal Treaty, which
provides that the Christian religion ehalt be tel.
*rued in Japan—the — trampling upon- the Crises
is no longer enjoined; Chrtsuan churches nifty
be built at the ports open to foreigners, and the
Apogee are to have religious freedom; the tart
of six per atilt, :an the purchase of Japanese
goods is reunited; Sitootia is tv be closed, and
the more important ports of Kaosgavra and Beg*
are to be opened; Japanese, coin may be• espor
tad, and • Minister is to be sent to the Untied
Suites Mr. Harris has been permitted t-, cult
Jeddo, and bits bad several interviews with the
temporal Emperor and frequent intercourse with
the nobility A letter from-an American naval
Amer at Shan ghai gives the following .tat meta
of what Mr. Harris has said:
Be said thu it was a very tnisuiken idea shit
the people of Japan wore in favor of rotereoursa
with foreigners, while the nubility cud Emperor
were oppeed to it; it was j ust the contrary --
Upon one oocasion, wbeti the Princ. Lad lac,
cited a certain liberal foreign roller nwaqure,
oards bad been posted threatening tile delta, ut
the racists who should bring it about lo Cant,
he said, wore it new for this opposttiou k, fl ti l e
part of the peoplu, the imernment would at onc e
throw Japan open to thu world; ea it wee, hue.
ever, thoy were obtiged to prooned with extreme
caution
I have already mentioned that Mr. Herne has
been to Jeddo twice, and that he had seer, the
Emperor in hie palace We were speaking of
this fact on on occasion, when some tine askpd
him what the Emperor looked like, and if he
lived in grand style?
In reply, he said as it wan the fashiou in Jtl°
pan to ask how old he was,_and how many chit •
dren he bad, be had easily satisfied himself upon
these and similar points The Emperor was
thirty•six years old,, had oue legal wife, sod as
many seeondary ules as he desired As fur his
palace and style liviug, the former was very
large and comfortable, but ettremely plain,
while the latter could not certainly cost him
over Ave hundred dollars a year, his clothing in.
eluded It was a great mistake which early
writers bad made when speaking, of the logged'.
ceuce of the court of Jeddo—if soy existed, lie.
Mr II , bad never sett, anything of it.
The spirituel Emperor of Japan resides to atm t
retirement at,Aliseo, and to him the Ernp , ..rer
at Jeddu is otitis , d to pay submission; but has
latterly evaded .to. act of kneeling every seven
years before this Sou of Heaven, by sending a
high ufficer to pi rform the genufiexiou. If the
United States will send out a steamer for the
purpose., the Prince of lligo will visit the United
States next year
The British Ambassador to Chum, after the
accomplishment of his mission at Tree to, made
a voyage to aapas, and, disregarding the testi'''.
five Japeacee awe, steamed up to the p,tt of
Jeddo, and lauding his retinue, prove - L-(1, ,1 I La,
the Imperial City, to t, tetuple pruvidtd for hint
The I ffect of this tworotuent war not immediately
unfavorable The correspondent of the Tunes
gives the following &coolant of that occurred
•
- r Ono A mr.suAatiOr and bta
GUltk :
The hated struck up "God Save the Qiet 13,"
as Lord Elgin ascended the steps of the, -fficial
lauding place, near the centre of :he city, and i
was rtoeived and put into his alma by sundry
two &worded personages, the teat I lb, uheeioe•,
together with come officers of -rile squadron,
lowing on horseback The crowd which for ur•
wards of a mile lined the 'diet-hi leading to the
building fixed on as the reenlence o f the Ere h ats . ,
sy, was dense in the a:tie:oat, the iltoecabieat
was preceded by policemen in btalecium c o,teitne,
jingling huge iron zeds of office, hung with heavy
clanging rings, to warn the crowd away Ropes
%ere Illreibbed the eroesatrests, down which
masses of people rushed, &mech. d by the evict
sight; while every few hundred yards were gaits
partitioutogeff tbe different steads, which were
severstly closed inimeetiately ou tin paring of
the procession, thus hopeleasi) barring the further
progress of the old crowd, who ,rrsita t tl %Du, us .
ly through the I•ers end e ivied the perio us coin
Ecsiog the rapidly reaming nucleus Durieg Lord
Elgin's stay of right day/ on shire, a ll a l ,. t ie,
eves of the alutidron had an opportunity of pay
lug Lim a bible Hie- it side no. was-a portion of
a temple situated upau/be oti' -LI Is of wha; was
known as the Prince's Quartet, in. other words,
it was the Kuightsbridge Jeihet In front of it
was a street which continued for Len mob re as
closely packed with houses sou as derise,y crowd
ed with piepla es it is frusta Ibde Park t,.rtter
to Mile end. At the Lack of it .tretched a wide
and somewhat dreary aritteetaiic qnarter, con•
taining the residencies of 860 hereditary Niece.,
each a petty govereign of his own right, many
of them with half a dozen town house a, and acme
of them able to accomodate in these same man
aioos 10,000 retaiuers Passing through the
t_ipaerieue and silent (ereept where a party of
English were traversing them) streets, we ar
rive at the outer moat of the castle; crossing it,
we are still in the Pripee's Quarter, but we are
astonished as we reach its further limit, at the
seen. which now bursts upon us—a magnificent •
moat 70 or SO yards bead, faced with a smooth
green escarpment as many feet in height, above
which rune a massive wall, composed - of atones
Cyclopean in their diemensioos. This is crown
ed, in its turn, by a lofty palisade Towering
above all, the spreading arms of giant cedars
proudly display theuiselveie, and - drools' that
within the Imperial precincts the picturesque
is not forgotten From the hicheet point of the
fortifications in rear of the castle, a panoramic
view ie obtained of the vast city, which its two
million and a bait ; inhabitants, and an arcs equal
to, if not greater than, +hat of London. The
castle alone is computed to be capable of contain
ing 40,000 souls
But the party on shore did not confine itself
to exploring the oily alone , exouraions of 10
miles into the Country were made in two differ
ent directions, and but one opinion prevailed With
respect to the extraordinary evidencee of civilise
%lot which met the eye in every direetion. Every
cottage, temple and tea-house was surrounded by
gardens laid out with exquisite taste, and the
most elabora.e neatnese was eitillfully blended
with grandeur f design. The natural features
of the (*natty w. re admirably taken advantage
of, sod a long ride was certain to be rewarded
by a romantic scene, where a tea-bones was pie
=nely parched over a waterfall, or a temple
its caned gable amid grovesof ancient
cedars. The tea house is a natural .cbaracterie
tie of Japan. The traveler, wearied with the
noonday beat, need never be at loos to find rest
and refreshment; stretched upon the softest and
tdessest of matting, imbibing the most delicate
lg.:Lured tea, inhaling through 'short pipe the
t tobacco of Japan, be resigns himself to
the ministration of fair damsels, who glide rap
idly and toiselesely about, do most sallow+ sod
skillful of mundane..
The simplicity of the people is extreme.—
Males sod females bathe prosuscously, sad rush
oat is their bale exesiitios to look at the straps.
as pions by.
The people inhabiting Ibis Raab* Whisk hem
jam been opted to the vow of lb* dalitigelkod
Western world, seem to Kist in a state of prints
hive innootiam It may well' hi doubted windier
the comsat of Europeans sod A.mieriooas will lot
ensure the introduotion of the lasorios sad vioso
of civilisation The Loudon Tuna, otossmants
'.upon the reports from Jeddo ant -in a vein of
half 'Rosati° levity :
Had we thirty years to prepare for angelic vis
itors we should never got Lemke mo ready as
Jeddo appears to hero been without soy wallow
at all Every street, every body &Win ; washing.
aud buthtog as regular institutions as meat sad
drink , no beggars, no cripples, no squalor, no
poverty, no drunkenness, no fighting, no bad
amells—in fact, nothing to remind the Englisht
men of their own beloved city. Tot it wmildits
difficult to find a closer parallel in natural elr.
cumatainces than that between the Japanese - and
the( British group of islands; thiamine area, tree
population, same climate, mine insular posidos
between a great continues and a gram oosoo; and
a maratime metropolis with the mime population.
How it these , strailimarbarian manage those
things better than we do? When we are taunt,
01 with the thrift and industry of the Chios*, it
is a cqutfort to think that, after all, they wrongly,
disgusting brutes, with but-the drags of a whit.
lons and the bare threads of as oid civilisation
What earl we throw into the souls against Ja
pan ' They shame us at every point. Not a
word about opium They were all seen
drinkilig tea in pleasant tea houses, to bs found
wherever a spot of natural besuty ettrsNe the
es es and gives an opportunity of laadseapopr
duaing on a reasonable genie. Oraoeful sad out
handed hauris wait on the turcil traveler But,
unless our journalists are very blind, or very sly,
even here Japan shames us. In the utter Mamas
of prudery is the best pr of their innossme4.—
The most unaciorn-d beauty disturbs not the well
regal 3 Led J.pan, miu i Our poor eountrymen
Were carnet thr .ugh sconce that. !tit! Wiliam poet
might have tlelight..l tv have imagined, but en
Englishman loudly ventured to describe hall
these ti,.ve.tt,.s is the newest and the stran•
est
If, itvlce<l. it Ie• the Paradise piettued by our
correlorid , n , , we incur a serious responsibility
and some very unpleasant comparisons by leap
ing over itm or.uie awl planting ourselves in the
midst of it If ever British civilisation was fair
ly tented, it Is in such a virgin ajil sod excellent
mai..rial as Japan Unfortunately, them has
never yet been au exoeption to the law by wilt&
the superior eiviliaation corrupts sod destroys the
lower But surely something may be done to
mitigate, it nut wholly arrest this process
Europe has twiny things to answer for; it no
su-ocr found a new world than it spoiled and . tie
otrulol it. May that crime not be repeated in
Japan
MARRIAGE
Nature never din betray the soul that, loved
tier, and nature tells men and women to marry
Just as the young man is entering upon life—
jnat,as he coulee to independence and man's as. I
tato—just the oriels of his being when it is to be
heen whether he decides with the good, and the
great, and the true, or whether he sink and be
1... r forever—matrimony gives him ballast and
the 'grit itupul..e War with nature and she
takes a sure revenge Tell a young as not to
have an attachment that is virtuous, and he will
have one that is vicious. Virtnoos love, the
honesty of man for the woman be is about, to
thing pure an DesurtruaLar
And am woman ,
. what spurs light is shed upon
L, r path; it makes life for bet DO day dream, no
tJle 1,,,ui, no painful shadow, no passing show,
Lot .temething real, earnest, worthy of her beret
and baud But most folks are oowarda and dare
not think so; we leek grace; and we are of little
faith; oar inward eye is dim and dark.
The modern young lady must marry in style
lbe Upd,ru yOung rodent,' marries a for ,
tune Bat in the meanwhile the young girl
grow. au old maid, and the youth takes ahem'
hers—ogles at the nursery amide, and bohemia a
Mtn at, , ut town—a man whom it Is dangerous
to ask into your house, for his businate is int
trigue The world might have bad a happy
nple; instead, it gets a fretful woman, a plague
to all around her. He becomes a aseptic io all
virtu , ; a corruptor of the youth o f both se xe s; a
curse in whatever rircle be may enter. Even
wtrtse may result She may be deceived and die
of a broken heart He may rua.h from one folly
to another, associate only with the deprimed,
brute disgrace whit -arrow upon himself and all
at,uud. him, sod -ink into au early grave
Our great vitt. s show what becomes of men
and women who hot marry Worldly &than
and mothers advise not to marry rill they eau
tapir, rt a wife, and the boys wickedly expend
doable the irritant in bad company. Hew* it
all wise men—like Frooklin—advocate early
marriages; and that all our great men, with few
exceptions, *ere meta who married young
Wordsworth had only one hundred pooh& a
year when be first married. Lord Eldon was so
pear that ho had to go to Clare market, Loudon,
to huy .plats fur supper. Coleridge and South*
ey had no inehme when they married. We
question, st any time, whether Locker bad more
iban fifty pounds a year We blast huma ni ty
in its very dawn Fathets, you say you te a ch
your •eous prudence—you do nothiog of all kind
—Sour worldly-wise and clever son is already,
ruined for life You will find him at the faro.
tablet. and freeslove • taus Your wretched
worldly wisdom taught him to avoid the snare of
marrying young; and soon, if be is not involved
in embarrassment that will last him for life, be
is a blase fellow—heartless, false, without a sin
gle generous sentiment or manly aim—he hail
"no God, no Heaven, in the wide world "
WUAT DEFEATED TUB DIMOCILATID PAILTY
—The Pritssykaniatt has an artiole showing
conclusively that the hsrd times were the mato
cause of the defeat of the Democracy io this
State. [fere are, the facts in figures that prove it.:
"Take f .r ev Hence, the vote iu the counties of
Allegheny, Baatrer, Bradford, Butler s Brie, Elk,
Indiana, Jefferson, Lawrence , McKe an, Mercer,
Potter, Suaqaehanna, Tioga, Vunane, Warm,
Washington, Wyoming and Wayne, in all twin.
ty, being those in which the question of slavery
has uniformly wielded the greatest influence, and
it appears thnt the majority against Mr Frost,
the Deemer:fie nominee for Canal Commissioner,
and an open and avowed Lecompton man, was
but 18,818 rotes, whilst the same counties, in
1856, oast a majority of 29,478 against Mr. Bu
obanan for President, being a Democratic gait
in the Free Soa counties of the State, since 1856,
of 10,660.
, "Then turn to the manufacturing and mining
districts, composed of the counties of Carbon,
Centre, Chester, Clarion, Huntingdon, Blair, Le
high, Schuylkill, Lucerne, Montgomery, Phila.
delphia, Monroe, Berke, Dauphin and Armstrong,
fifteen in all, and it is seen that in these Mr.
Frost was beaten by 6500 votes, whilst in the
same counties in 1866, Mr. Baobsnast - ited 211,-
061 majority, beings change 29,818 votes! By
deducting-from this aigregate the total majority
against Mr. Frost is ibis &au, 26,284, it will
appear that the satire ebony aim* 1858 wr,
produced is times fifties counties."
-. Moolog to pay yaw 'primer's ball, aird
robbing hes-roost us 1w Isms ibiss is Dstielk
°sly s diEwsady aspierei.
B. F. SLOAN, EDITOR.
♦ Bets Trials.
The tiptingfielti Republican has a oaOtal arts.
de (fa this subject Rens are Aoki. @drama
MU IaOHILATIO7(S WITH TIM "OLD lII4X "
We suppose that the arm revere trial; boyPias
to touters° it to submit his will to the,old Mill,
whom ha is taught to consider be Whet To be
reuriaiseil io dour at night, •o he' fortiddelt to
go is wwisamiag five time, • day, or to b q bind lin d
from pinching the rest of the coildrea at for
fun, is so interference with samara i
rights, every tray lojurirtm to the (realism Aid
the*, when upon some overwheisuitag ottoptatiwo,
- the boy asserts his iadeprudeece of pareotelcoo•
trot., mid receiver a "tanning" mat s switch
beta a guises bu.b, either two! his beak or -hie
bate feet, It become!, really a very owirewthiag.
We sever could see that the smart of se open•
kiwi like this rru at all assuaged by the alsoties
ate assurance that it wit bestowed oitt'ef pose
love
siTTIJNO WITR ?RR OTILS
The oust great via: of that boy is to be
obliged by a cruel govt., to !it with the girls ea
school This usnally comes before the develop
meat of tboseundeuisble aislitias which, is after
woald tea to reek; the puOisalleillt Man
endurable. 'l'. , 1 ,..,0teJ out Si a "gal boy,"
Li be smiled at grituk by Ili,: Maxtor, who is so
tar dwiteitw,i with ht.' ~ wu ineffable pleases
as to give the hit.. .vs 'wense to laugh
and to be FO.. .1 by the sob- of a girl who Lad
no baniikerctoef, and u,, knowledge of the we of
that article, is, we submit, a flint of so assn
magnitude Yet we irive been there, and hare
been obliged to "sit up close" with big Itaoltel,
laughing and blushing till we (Jame to - hane ber
same W e wonder where the overgrown" frowsy
creature is now, and what the condition of bow
head le ?
TII E 111/.4a LAJNU TAILED COAT.
We do not believe teat any boy ever put on
lus long taiod c.)at , vitticut a sense of sham.
lie lust ;wow+ his h4ek half off booking at it in
the glass, 120,1 tbeu *ben be steps out of dopes it
seems to blot as it all creation war in n braid
grin. The sun laughs iu the sky; the mete turn
to look at him , tu. re are irons at every window;
his shadow him When be walks by the
cottage wh're ..I•ine lives, be dame not look up
for his life Tue vcry boards creak with con
sciousness the •treuge spectacle, and the cdri
pair of pautscoons that ,top a light in the genet
window, nod with tierisoo It ho is obliged to
pane a group of aka awl boys, the trial assumes
its.inoat terrific stage ilia; legs get all mixed uJ
with embarrastnent, and the flap of the dung
ling appendage is felt upon them, moved by tit•
wind of his own agitation ; be <weld not fee
worse were it a dishcloth, worn as a badge c•
diliface It is a happy time for him when b
gets to the church and sits down with his ea
tail under him ; but he is still apprehensive wit
thinking of the Sunday school, and wonders it
any of the children will ask him to "swing bi- ,
long tail blue "
GOING HOME, WITH TILI Olaii
The alumna) into society may be mid to tal...
place after boyhood har passed away, = i nn
cited* take the .1014u:tire before their sr.
presentable. It
. is a great trial either to* tend
or a tough age For an overgrown boy to 110
a door, knowing , that there are a dome girls lot
vide, and to kiosk or ring with absolute eeriein
that in two minutes all their eyes *ill be upon
him, is a seven test of courage. To sia bare
these girls and make a satisfactory tour al the
room wttbont stepping ea their toes, and awn to
stag seeas--.4 eitt. heads without Int ,
wbtch few boys eon boaet. If a boy ens get
far as to measure off ten yards of ewe vidi of e
of these girls, and ton it short at leek 11114 1 e
may stand a °Liana to pass a platelet eves*
but let bite not tatter himself that an the trio -
of the evenieg are over. There aeon et Let
hreakieg up The dear girls doe their hood .
so d put on their shawls, sad look as me, ae•i
toisehievous, and unimpressible, all if they di , t
sot wish say one to go home with thew The;
ways the piece, and the boy who het the was
push wakes up to the prettiest girl, his heart b.
his threat, sad his worn cliegisi to thereof GI
bit mouth, and erooking his •eibeir, etaaaer,
out the worths, "Shall 1 see jolt hosts?" Sht
touches her fingers to hie arrn,and theyaelk Mee
about a foot apart, feeling as awkward, as a eat•
file of yang goslings. As soon aa ohs is asfay
inside her own doors he struts hane r .sed Wake
be ban really been s od goes andidese It. Bleep
seam to him at last, with dreams of etiaailie
sad calico, and he attaltee to the noes* and
ends the doors of life open to him--yd the pip
squealing for breakfast.
CONCLUDING RIFIXOTIONS
We bete passed over churning and lowning
the catechise, because we are lawful of Reeking
this article too long, although we might have
talked of butter thwt would net be peeweaded to
some, and perplexities of a literary turn of mind
and a head that measured seven and a quarter
when asked what the chief end of Me MU.—
Boyhood is a green passage in man's ezioerienee
in more senses tbau one. his a pleasant thing
to think over and laugh about now, though it
was sesame enough then. Many of OUP MOMS
trials are as ridiculous w those wbior, now taellb
the rieibles in the recollection, and when we pa
to the other world and look upon this, sad e*
the infancy of the soul through 'blob we passed
here, we have no doubt that we shall grim over
the trials which we experienced when we loot
our fortunes, when oar mills were sweptaway or
burned, sod when we didn't get elected to the
Legislature Men are bat boys of larger growth.
Ose Hudxed Tears Ago.
One hundred years ago there was not a sines
white wan in Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, and Ti.
Hauls Territories Then, what is now the most
flourishing ports of Anatole*, was as little knows
as the country around the mountains of the moon.
It was not until 1769, that. the "Hunter of
Kentuek," the gallant and adven t turona Boone,
left his bomo in North Carolina, to become the
first settler in Ken Welty. The first pioneer of
Ohio did not settle until twenty years after this
time. A hundred years ago, Canada b e l onge d
to Frauoc, and the whole population of the iTni.
tad Stater did not exceed a nubbins and a half of
people. A hundred years ago, the great Freder
ick of Prussia, was performing those exploits
which have made him immortal in military ant
nal*, and with his little monarchy was sustain
lag a single. handed contest with Bawl*, Ana.
trig awl Franoo—the three great powers of lim
rope sombined. A hundred years ago ) Napoleon
was not born, and Washington was a Jowl and
modest Virginia Colonel, and the greet mute
I
in the history of two worlds , in tx these
great but dissimilar men took leading parts, wews
then semely foreshadowed. A lutadred yearns
ago, the United &ate' were the moat loyal part
of the British Empire, and on the political Mei
son no speck indicated the Wiggle which whim
in a some of years thereafter, astahlisbsd the
greatest republic of the world. A hoadred years
sgo„. there were hat four morsyspas in Amities
--steam iloii had net beak limegiced, and
railroad' and adestapho had 101111111111110 into the
reototest massptioas at am Whoa we ousts
to look bask sii 4 through tha dila of history,
us Asd,iitst to the oostory shish Joe posed kw
boss aimed more impotent , rem is Wilt
bearing apes dm lailisom of the IMO aim ilk
slims say atket sihisii has eloped ow taw era
, stimea-fila Asst. .
NUMBER 29.