KY" BENJ. F'. SLOA'S t 01,01 E 29, i lIE Eli IE OBSERVER. • pr HI I% MEI) EVERT' 84 TURDAIF r s. t F. 41.0.0., Editor and Proprietor .T -T, , 1PP 1, -111: THIS Pt)NT h.lls 1, .0 .1 , auc., ..r grttbre 3 mouth's, $l/ •4' • . In• 1 r etlt:ttt in I , lli, •tti.tn the ',oar. the paps/ will sw: Ur s, a.ut.t bll etth • proper officer tor out- 1 - 1. ea te av car ..A.crsrertisisiim.o. f.. !.• ou part.; 1, IllaA IMPF w. w. 3w. 1 6 wk. I 1 y lie= 1 7 , .3 4 00 00f 10 00 I=l dOO 9tou 19 , 19 00 W 7 ft (X) 10 , 17 mi ' I'. 4 A . l 4A 00 '2O 1.10 00 40 JO I 7coo I . 3 :n. 1 , ..: ‘ ll n . l t r u t' n to d. r a right! suum_ o r / ,, .•nto but u.: advvrttals- N 1..1 , r..• than one MEIN •0111111 g firyu..ut cl.au t r«a In thistr puper, and ,e.rtl, for $l5 • orrtiata 14,1 t.. to proportion, and the • 1, , 1,111111 r. 'Orr, •IP nt traorleut satretrriarOtranta reolOtreri tI• I. Ivi trlr tarlitttrtlairtSrr ul be pr«oenteil tutlf• • X. lu pl rCr 0 1 aoi hr M.O. on 0.1 elDept I..e•tlairtitanra, e, on paid ID ItlrranCta • .I..trrrt.vor•, ..I,, , D , lnothg their n , trortimenients • in:ml.l• , n r • •!,e runt-a,•t, to. charile.l at full rates • '.l go 111 . 1 .0 0.0 , 1 e oth • • their ,ogitatoste =MIMI USINESS DIRECTORY. k JOttUAN. ' •%• a'ro Eke , In raner and Stapia L.:ands, •ta, :Loa, &I 0 I 121143•113 a liluck, grit, S. 4. 21.4 V ENI.OII T. L.* In Central Block, over `...aberror & • , Llitrln. c. "Z SULte , t rest 11 A. 1. GALBRAITH. r- •f• atroet, Dead. ,rp..trer toe T. ". SINCLAJR., .tr , %u. - artk It g gam, , of Stitt* and 7th St's, . Muth , t rroptirro., kittrttittg 1 111.1.1:11 a IIE Ul, O.L -b". Pmdia s &,, l'ark • • %% -fight o'x Exchange OffiNte,Erie, 111 LA4 I to corner -ner ' , tate `!reef ar , t the Public Ill{ It. 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Al/TEIC r.• ••• in Cr,., Ship Si- s %re YSr , :•tatt. `strut, Eno, MEI h't It F. y e t 1( e • t 161,44, In every dait• r• nue Dry ..•••••tr., I..rireltnga, utl • v-411.1 h Lrt.s. P. .„ r mo LATIUM: mTllttli, Nt.nutiettir, to drat quality R,a,dy ‘r. n h Vic (fro. o 7 , Bmwn•• %% 11.1.1 VII TILIOILN TON, • . rAzrormviit 11,sdr and M o rt g ..• . 1111.1 r r, to 1.1 .!1 . 4.1.11:1 1410! ui • I rr• 111., 4 trrrott, Grr,cory .71tore F.n.ti Pa. .1. 1114111? NJ N4ll. 1 • J or TI }.0 , . VI 13 prxtice lD a nod foi• prompt •11 , 1 Elatbrul •hti% 6w04., •ittier as an At li F• r niplrt Bluek • oornar of L • t.•..• ‘v B. ut Ktimtium. JoAuturon, y ('‘.. ' J •s vt .1/10. Dorneotl.- !Iry G,o.is. Nos. .. 31 ' , lr. tr., \.. 1 - ..rk, M jI.11:1A., LIS • aaIArIIZXD, • • 4,, A Artli A RA Cllllllll3 =I J. tt . 1111( (:I,A•ata. • t,. r rw wrAt Stale ns 'l.O I .rk, o.r (lark & Metcalf' Ea- =CI 11.1.P.N A. CRAIG. r- Moot corner of l'Abawlk •-o• !1,. I L.' u. , iun.ro, E rip T. It. 111.% KIP:, •,. Fcrt.:l IThrit.tign and hbordl, Slits, Lazes, V. ne , ). i a,aa ,, u • fronting the Peat, • -ill:1r a u two t. /Irdetl/. !MEI VEIIRGE fl TLEU. ,• Fr.t. County., Pa lbllectsona sad • 01, atL•11.1,.. prOlrlpto4.lll.nd duspatekt JIM N. A% LE,OI. L,/ 7 . 11, VILA, V. fl b 111 klwatt naildsrg. up-stun, Eri,r, JOIIN IIEtRN at IV.. • • ' 4 . • I , aaoa Merchants, dealen In Coal, Flour, seer.' s darly 'tee of t'; per Lake Steamers, Sabha I- (iIIEY S CLARK. a • pi - aka and 14a..r0 , in Pritneatie and Imported Wiz*. Stt l iar*, Tota,r., Frlitt, nab. Oil, uni Aril" t• , ,ft% A k •k. State 0 17, 1. 4 . grlti J ()SIN M.. 1.1 1.1k10.r u ki ad. of Fancy, . nb: ..tuine N. 4 Hey .11 1 1 E% t. 111 It.IIA LI.. r. Tamm►u' !tali bizildtng, 4. • •• P• 4. K. ( HI HI HILL. ,! , it, Kortalt 1 VC ,in do , I. r.: rt, -t .1. Rlllll 111; e • 1% ft 11(4411. at Se 10 I=ll OLD. S 1.014 An •••• • .L. t. In Wall and Cl*. •• " t 1.•• p.. •nd trot bnt. In P. GM +a + hra ID.EI\TTISTI:t - '2" . OIL O. L. ELLIOTT, lo r.rk Rnw, fird July 10, 11114 /o. •••• f Bank. k 11 4 ,1.: J 1111h:Clif • ,n ie. • • •Ittp,, ttantaa and %gibed • . B,eket and ta•h•. I t 3004. t A tu , ..,:sr. B state .1r vt Mir Y. 24 ',1.A•1) .P/1. rk4, AO , : .11161 , 11 in West India f•owdor, J• t Fur., Tobs.. - e. , . Clgsrs. Fish. oil. tn, tea, No. tt " , ••1.0 Lne, Ps EII'IIENLAUR Jr., - t. T. 1 , 10, ..f 11.. , t• and She..., am: Wholnmal• and ite...3 airs 0.1 Ilrld..ek : 4 01. Leather, French and Asti •+1 110-r “., I !nine, Bindings, Hips owl spltla,Thread .• I.a.ttur, G.Hoona, Ribuhk, Haruains, • '••••••, k*, Pno. Nana, iv Kerr Block, Mato lanwt.). QC.., • • • ••• •,•• " t - teasekagisia, Boilori,lllll Goortnig,Agrical 1, • •••••• Cora.ice,fitio, Po. fr44l4 — ift —• ULP r , R1,11, Luaa , and Agent for W horicr k W bore •e% k ref Mar b.. • Fonimil °Tiff A 44, in Jewelry Stnra,Went l'a rig F inr`tilthleig done ta, ardor _ Cifr.• X. , C , C/ilailEl. • 747- lA a'F. ; a stafedid &...rttneot of rich Oilt Chi. ..r•• • Motto t 0i..0d MaUd..lll, Muds. Candlesticks, and or .41,10 t, %.1 I f 1 A.NI) ORYJNENT.II. ARTICLES, 1,., Hoiidsrn Kletant Cake Beate* Tier&lpts, `‘ ,, o , Spat/AI, Ladles, Napkin Rings, (beantlhal rieG JrtrelE7, Watchea, and Fancy Gtooda.- .r le, lA, • . DLaities at ma Morena reNag pima at ea 3.411 - - f• vc• • t• Are' . 6 7 t Obottiler. tot Ortt r tv,,. ! I'2 00 ' 15 00 25 00 11 ZIEI:3 r - firm or merrehrinl X I. Low, r: 7. ►atia7, OIIR COTTAGE IT LOUISA BAT= FLASDINIII ---4..-- Lonely looks oar little noting*, When slam winter bolds bor reign+ All alone, a4owa the meadow, Skirted coved by hill and plain. Earn tall try* bard by, to la►tlaaa, Nor i obrub Ito rortharo near; And the croon-sward on *mirth's bosons, Now a *snowy mantis boars. Not ► eooreter from the green-bough Warble* forth it► direr strain, Nor& bird, BIM She 'moo bird, Tape at lieu's window pane 'lever, now, the loot of cattier Grose before the *pea door, Wslttag for sweet Ann, the walk maid '74.11 !kw day's • Wilt 11011.111100 o'er Vac comes no. the cheerful &nom, From his labor in the deld, While earth drop. her sheantrig mantle, •nd night-sheds their eceptre amid thooilt all orttbout ~MS ohoorlaoa, la oar cot ►right love-beam shuts, And orlthjiratodal hearts sod happy, gocti 'cattalo of Ohm dicioc AAA. La by glo•tat hearth atoll., We partake oar 511001 cheer, Vaaght, to US, MOMS half Co plasaaaa Aa this loreely dwelliag berg HER FIRST APPEARANCE. From Household Words === The Iluthams were left orphans—the brother at twon'y two, the sister at twenty-one years of age—but their desolation wu by no means ex creme; it was tempered to them, as the Rev Applepy Swats observed, by a oonsiderable sum of money in the Three per Cents. Besides, the girl found in Cecil Hothatn at once a parent an a brother ; more devoted to her happiness than! a lover ; for his devotion exceeded that of a woo.: ing time • it lasted for life Evt n if one had not been related to her, it would have been quite possible ta have become exceedingly fond of Nina Hotham; as Mr Swete, the curate of Brendan, where she lived, proved Sw e t t . w as not a strong minded young person, but be was very honest and well•tneaning, and the living would be his own as soon RA the ilea rector [who was eighty-two] should be rentoted howl what was denominated, more technically thau literally, his present sphere of usefulness The old gentleman had indeed been put in at seventy-four by Mr Swete's father, the patron, j as a warmingtpan for his son, and be bad already taken five years longer to keep the place warm than was expected of him Still, it was plain that he oould not persist in such annoying eon. duet much longer, and Mr Applepy Swete'4 ex pectations were—sinoe the living was a g eki one —proportionably excellent Nina liked him well enough . , though not passionately, and her brother Cecil, seeing that, was, in consequence, his warm friend and supporter ; for, if her vpin ion of the young divine had been unfavorable, be would have been his determined and une Eui promising foe It is probable that Nina [she was fair, tall, and blue-eyed, with a carriage like that of r princess, and a will of her own to watch] would have be ootne Mrs Swete, and lived and died the wife of a country rector, had It not been for a circuit stance no leas trifling than that of an acting ohs rade. It was winter, and at the hall where the old squire, who was king at Breutfell, lived, a large party had assembled, among' . whoto were the Hot hams. Private theatricals were a novelty in that part of the country, and such acting even as the gueats attempted, which partook more of the nature of tableaux vivaots than anything eke, aroused 'cameose enthusiasm in the locality, atol attracted more spectators than the double draw • jug voondeould easily hold Nina Buthauri, mag nificently attired, and imitating the sili-nee weil as the attitude of some sublime statue,tuade a pr.found impression AccustOmeti from her youth to a country l,te, and knowing nothing of the world in these vi lames of the unreal, m.sealled of the iniaginatiou; the poor becau.ie tutoxi cated with this partial and unreasoning applause In it, her fancy caught the herald notes of a burst of triumphant acclaim, which was to sweep per baps, one day, through the length and br .adth of England ; of Europe; of the world. The; call ing of the actress, she had often thought, was a something little less than divine, and now she had the exquisite pleasure of persuading herself, and of being persuaded, that that high privilege was her own by natural right. Vain, indulged, and accustomed to no other influence than that of her own impulses, this young gentlewoman, brought up in affluence, and imbued with the usual social prejudices, nevertheless found her. self stage-struck. The Revere9d Applepy Swete had not baile , l very eagerly *IT - appearance of his intended as Rowena, the Sazon Prinoeu, in a charade ; but when he discovered that, in consequence of the success of that Mystery, it had been determined that the last scene of the play of Othello was to be represented, the part of Deedemona by Miss Nina Hotham, the young curate looked cilinust as black as the Moor himself " I do trust Nina," he urged, wtth suppressed feeltug, "that you will think again of this " I mean to do so," replied the girl, who was annoyed that the only:eyes which had not beam' ed admiration, the only hands which 'had no spoken approval, on the evening of her reoent triumph, were those of Mr. Applepy Swetc, "the part requires considerable thought, sir " " Nina," be said earnestly, "do not answer me thus. You and I, as I hope and trust with my 'neart, are, at no very distant period, to be one, as man and wife Our interests, our gym pathies, our actions, are to be similar and.united If I suffered you to take this highly imprudent and unbecoming step LI cannot apply a term less strong to your acting In such a scene with such a man as Colonel Chowler] without reproof, you alight, in after life, reasonably reproaoh me for an unwonted harshness ; since, as your husband, I should not surely—" "Silence, sir," interrupted the embryo traget dienne, imperiously, "you are going too fast 1 thank you for the warning you have given me of what I am to expect as your wife. You have not a good temper. 'This bloody passion`—that's what I have to say to the Cllonel—'shakos your very frame, These are portents, Have mercy upon me Kill me to morrow, let me live to day.' Moat reverend signor, you are very ter rible!" " If you do act that scene," cried the curate solemnly, and certainly in a rage, "you and I, Miss Hotham, never speak cf love again " That five minutes of irritating conversation probably altered the whole tenor of a couple of human lives_ The lady persevered in ber deter. mioation to play Deademona, and the young clergyman, upon his part, kept his word. If the charade was a Success, the play was a tremendous Hit indeed The gallant colonel handled the sofa cushion as if he hod all his life done nothing else but smother people•witti that implement ; and, as for Desdemona, she, accord. log to universal testimony, wu well nigh fault. less : her skin looked:whiter than snow, and smoother than the monumental alabaster; bet tones, exempt upon one occasion when sites got the tassel of the sushi= into her mouth, were Desdemona's own. _When she desired to be eimuswaided to her kind lord, and died, for- SWIM kb! it AWAY, IP.lth its ' a % famient" P=MM EINEM upon her closing lips, there was not one dry eye in the double drawing-room. This second triumph put an end to what few prudent reflections yet remained to Nina' with regard to her becoming 60 actress. lier admiring brother protested, from the bottom of his heart, 'that - she'was the most perfect Desdemona that ever played, and that she would make her ()Anne in a fortnight, if she were only to go upon the sge. ' ta "l am glad to bear you say so much, my dear est Cecil," was the girl's delighted answer. "I feel the power within me. It has been slumber ing long indeed ; but now is all the stronger for its resit. I have made up my ,mind, dear brother to become so actress—to immortalise myself— aye," she added, in her deepest tones; but not until after* little pause, "and you also, dear Ce oil," Cecil liothatu shuddered. Re had the most untsouncleill fsith ►u his sister's powers; but all his instincts rallied round his preconceived °pia_ ions of the stage, ►n arms against this scheme.— Ile knew his s►eter well enoix i gh to feel that it was something more than su ;lea of the moment engendered by excitement and suooess; and he knew himself too well n tt to doubt his own abil ity to portals& her t aIASItIOII the resolve Remember, Nina, whom you shipwreck by tht, course," he urged; "poor Swats now dreams that vott are hts—" ' 6 Not now," she cried, "we are not to speak of love again. lie has told me that I shall not aot on thu /gage SHALL not! lam glad to think I have escaped the man. Bat he shall hear of me, as all the world shall bear; and you, my Co. oil, brother—now that all familiar faces will be set against me—you alone,, I look to now for help." They two bad Litany more‘convertations of this nature. There was endless talk. and oceans of advice, and almost universal moms pouted upon them from all sides, as well. But the end was, that Nina had her way. 1, Their comfortable Brent fell home was let; rod since it was of course absolutely necessary that a tragic star of such a magnitude should make its first appearance in the metropolitanfirmament, the frothams removed to London. Nina went through a course of training in eloi cutinu and deportment, with a patience hardly to have been expecied of her ; and, to six months' time, WILY pronounced by her theatrical Coach [a gentleman at the very top of his profession] as perfect as art could make her—which indeed was true. While she continued to occupy herself in the study of yellow. characters—each of whioh, how ever, was the most ambitious in ILA particular pi‘ce —Cecil set every wheel Within his reach in W o ion, to provide her a suitable engagement.— With miney and friends in plesty, her position was of course a far mere favorable one than that of many a more gifted debutante. Still she did not find the thing she sought. More than one manager of this and that great house had later, views with the young lady at her private resit (knee without the expected offer of the position of first tragedienne being made. They saw her, and were charmed. Her free, her figure, her carriage, her action even, delighted them; but the words themselves were often wanting, and the aenvi of them it bad been out of the power of the theatrical Coach [who, perbepaitid not know it to convey Nina grew sad and heart sick at the lack of generous enthusiasm in these personages; whom she had pictured to herself all eager to secure her for their own. Cecil was indignant beyond nvasure at their ignorance and want of taste. The., pars ins who have the leading thea tres,'' said he, kissing away her tears, "are given up to pArti,ular style.; to mechanical and stereo. typed etis,leter-; to women mere like Isy figured than .err , .0. They know absolutely nothing •,f getliu... They do not understand the language ,f N i.v n wh , n they hoar it apokon by one ho noG 4. yourself It is the people only who hay.r the pow..r to put you upon your rightful then. V.,u 'hall appear at some minor house under an assumed name; and afterwards, when y , ur .tiecess is proclaimed by the public voice, these mistrwittful men will be ready enough to open their doors to my own Nina," Aei , irdingly, it was not long before a leaser monarch of the stage paid a business visit to the disengaged young lady; approved her speeish* well as her action, her delineation of passion y ind her majestic meth td of crossing the room. Fi nally, in offering her the leading part at his the. acre during, the ensuing month, he promised to rpapect the secret of her name until an enthusis satin public world would be denied the revelation not longer '' And now that you have mnde your business interments with. my future proprietor," said Nina, with laughing eyes iind radient (mutate niwee, Ili her brother returned from an interview with their visitor, "do pray, dear brother, tell me how much I may be worth pot. week?" " Well, love," replied Cecil, with hesitation, l'oon,idcring that you are entirely unknown and quite inexperienced ; that you have not the great theatrical lineage which some possess, to give an interest to your debut; that (I am only quoting the manager's words you know) you hate no de• cidedly original readings of any well known—" " I worth nothing?" interrupted the girl, passionately. "What does ill this tend to? Was the man lying to my face ten minutes ago? ' No, Nina, no," stammered her brother; "bat the offer seemed so small, so insignificant, that I scarcely liked to come to it Fifteen pounds a week It would be positively distressing, were it not is) ridiculous; but the Siddonses, O'Neil's, and Nina Ilothams must begin, you see, upon a trifle." She tossed her head and pouted a little at this inteliigence ; but presently left the room to put. sup h. r studies, in her natural high spirits. Cecil stood looking at the door through which she had d..p.Atted, with loving but melancholy eyes He had schooled the manager in the part he bad to piny with Nina before be saw her, and his sub. sequent business arrangements 3 with that gentle• man had been different indeed from that which he had'represented them, I think I was right," he mused; "1 trust, I was right. To have told her the miserable truth —that I have had to pay fifteen'ponuda a week for the privilege of her being permitted to act— would have gone well nigh to kill her After next month, too, all these things will be thanged. Such beauty, such grace, such genius, eannot re. mem long unappreciated by any who have eyes and ears. ' 4t the little tninspontine theatre the effect of this! pecuniary dramatic arrangement was tre mendous. The first tragic lady,Who bad to become the Isecond tragic lady at once, enacted a little extiosporaneous tragedy upon her own account by going into hysterics. The second and third tragio tidies were each proportionally indignant at being unceremoniously thrust down a peg a piece in the dramatic scale. The sentiments of the whole corps of female artists can be only par. alleled by those of the military, when the high est step is not allowed, for some unexplained teas son, to go in the regiment. The male actors pro tested in soothing tones that they would wore to sot with the interloper, or, if they were obliged to do so, that they would set exeeedinFly ill. Accordingly—for to this universal jesloney of his sister's position, poor Oehil always ascribed the catastrophe—wben the naineleae tragedienne made Her rust afkat the tine theatre, no failure ever been so c omplete, t on is Wier lids a the Masa. Thine was raft ERIE, SATURDAY MO' ! 43, FEBRUARY 19,1859. general applause when she - her first majes tiompearaam ; bat, from • moment when she to speak, until she dosed her eyes in mini liNin death, the Noes had it. i The second night was uolpo. completely %Wm. tunate as the first ; only beaten there were not so many people in the hottest° express disappro bation. Oa the third night the disposed first tragic lady of the theatre roamed her sway. It would be painful to nitrate, in detail, how, at this and that inferior thostre, Nina Hotham attempted again and again*, assert her fancied h i preiemiaeoee, and always ' vain ; how bun • dreds of pounds were open n the wetly wbim of hers although her brot never had the heart to tell her the truth, and Is* be himself never bait. his loving faith is her; but believed that the world would welcome hat one day, yet. Pee rush and fretful at the aligh)set erne, as ebe bad ever been, she now began to under this great reverse. Her vanity, so Whom being crushed by these repeated disappololfsents, grew ranker and wilder than ever ; et:talking out, its too lux mint tendrils on all aides, end finding nothing to support theta, anytrlaere4-' It really seemed as if the glare of the footilighis and the breath of popular applause were as light and air to her, an d that, both being denied heroshe must perish Cecil Hothant, tnowinp wii much better than she did, in what light esti ion her talents had been held, was yet so bli with admiration for her as to determine to his all in one more grand attempt to smt her a pablie hearing. One of the two great Loudon t t iatres being &dyer, , deed to he.let, for a certain %goo, this good young man--sensible enough in ordinary circumstances therein his sister was not concerned, but Omit m r lie fitted for the part of m r of such an' es. teblishment as the Vicar of akefield—resolved to undertake the managem tof it. Matters were the more difficult and ciafavoruble for him, insomuch as all things were inside subservi.ut to the interests of Nina. Timmer; who chanced just then to be not fixed, wale excluded from his company, lest they should di his sister's bright ness ; but the minor oonstel dons exacted from him the pay of their snperi They were not going to do second business (Opw indignantly poor Nina echoed that word!) to atperson without an established name, unless chapters well compen sated for that humiliation. f ie In spite of the two them l agents in this employment, or, perhaps, of them, the young manager paid dou the usual head money for every recruit in is enormous corps dramatique. , . Flowerer, the plan of the nampaigu was in the end arranged, and the objeon of all his prepara tions at last placed in a Asition to wear the crown of triumph she had iiii long desired. Nina liotham's name in le gars of all the oolors in the rainbow, and biggeOthan the poor girl herself, wearied the metr " tan eye whereso ever it fell. The newspa proclaimed to the whole oountry , including t little world round Brendan, how the ambiti ~ ebutante had oho. il k sen one of the first eh rs in the range of i Britise drama in which to e her appearance 1 upon the first stage in gem , on that day fort • i night. Nina Hothans had acted no less a part 4 for herself than that of L k t Macbeth. i 1 The hour to whioh brot d mister had look ed forward with a seoretsus nee that was al. • most agony, at length erne The vestheatre wai "densely crotiaft.l from 11 tierritus' g. Put ling had done its work. Vague rumors almost of failure at other places, and tinder a feigned name, had got about, and excited curiosity to the , utmost A greater number of her private fnends, too. were there ; besides at lesit five hundred , hands, which, if they did not applaud, ought to • be ashamed of themselves, sines they had been admitted by orders, and upon that very oondi. lion. In the third tier, far back in the darkness of s private box, sat the Reverend Applepy Swarm, ' now rector or Broaden; who, for all his hasty words and rigid resolves, had an int.irest in the fate of theXproine of the night only second to, that felt t# one another. The ocean of murmur. , ous talk/in that vast ooncourse ebbed and flowed about him, bringing her beloved name upon its almost every wan. He bad behaved violently toter, he now thought, and too rigidly. Per Maps her haughty spirit had been even driven in to its present oouree by its harsh words. He it was, not she, who was to blame. He bad need to offer her reparation as well as forgiveness. All sounds suddenly died away as the curtain rose upon the new heath scenery that had been painted, regardless of expense, for the present occasion. The witches prophesied:; the Thanes did everything that was expected of them ; but Mr. Swet• had neither eyes nor ears for them. A room within biacbeth's castle at Laverne.. A pause, wherein you might have heard a pia 4drop, and then a roar of applause which shook the house. Nina llotham was in the centre of the stage, magnificent, majestic; the object upon which the eyes of thousands were concentrated. The letter from Macbeth was in her haw!, from which she ought to have already spoken the first sentence. Another roar of applause. still Nina spoke not one single syllable, nor was she fated to speak : her faculties were numbered ; her tongue powerless; her limbs immovable. She was paralysed by stage fright. Applause, min gled with disapprobation, sueeeeded: then dtaap peobatton only. Finally, the curtain desoended upon the voiceless lady Macbeth in a perfect storm of hisses. Even Coot! Hothaux knew that Nina's ehanoe as a favorite of the public was now gone for ever. The final opportunity, thui lost—had oost—with the previous expenses upon her amount—nearly all their fortune. Neverthelitia, not a word of sorrow, and far lawn( reproaolodid he ever utter After paying ever farthing that they owed, he left his ezpensive residence, and removed with her to a suburban lodging; their Brentfell house having been sold. A room was appropriated in their humble home fur the vast assemblage of theatrical properties which now seemed to form hor sole comfort. It was her melancholy delight to catalogue these relies of what she we woht to consider her palmy time ; to array herself in the most gorgeous mimic vestments; to represent to her own setifitotion still the characters which she was never destined to perform before others. The llothems courted obscurity ; and, like all who have got through their property, and lived only for themselves or for each other, they easily obtained it. Only one visitor was ever seen to enter their door. The Reverend Applepy Swete came to place his heart at the disposal of Nina, in spite of all that had come and gone. She re. oeived him very kindly, and indeed with a great. er appearance of election than she had at any• time exhibited towards him; but it was only to dismiss him for ever. Anxiety, disappointment, and, more than all, disgrace, had undermined the poor girl's constitution to an extent that no phy skies could remedy. She had only a few months in which to live,--and she hew it. She told him this, with an earnestness against which he did not dare to hope. She found it much harder to persuade her brother—always anxious to believe pleasant things about her—that her ease was indeed so bad; but, at last, even he was brought to believe it. "If I had years and years to live, dear Cecil," eried ebe, one day when she bad grown very week sad ill, "they would be all too abort to prove how grateful my heart feels to you: it has been a selish, foolish, blinded heart, all along, I fear." alba, imair he widspred, family. 61baire u .v_sr! ~~ done nothing which my judgment has not ap• proved. To me you are as great as you are dear. We have done with ail that - now, but only yes , terdny, when you spoke those noble words as a queen should speak them, and looked every inch a queen, and felt—" bush, dear brother," she murmured, "uo more of this I will sot no part with my own Cecil again. You have been deceived, and I have deceived myself We two have both been wrong; you through love, and I through shame. ful vanity. I am no actress, and no geniar; have no wisdom, power, nor truth.. lam a poor, weak, sinful girl, who has ra;oe'd the kindest brother the world ever saw " Yet, when Nina died, her brother missed not only Nina, but 'being of infinite radiance, knowl edge, skill. He never lost his faith in her, dead or alive. And, when he died himself—which was not long afterwards—the effects belonging to him, which were found most religiously pre— served, tied np and sealed, were certain mons. wows bozos tilled with theatrical gewgaws. NY DAUGHTER Mu Is oar 111ly sad oar rose. Our darling little bliseli-ered girl. tier nat•broln Fair fells round her lam In many • bright and litany earl ♦nd malt bar baby lasigiter nap. It is as 'rhea • robin stop U., uoilee are has the /ight:ltaett, So ..ery pore and glad It la, rye seen the brow of pilaw:dread, la sekswer to her sweat earths. 0.1 teens are like early obeyers Which Lett stteehlee as the flowers ilk ms ; how dreary were our house, U ought should still Those dancing foot ♦ud If she DOT*, goon should mum, Her luring Later, 'top to weft Ood ' permit It not to be for ohs is Ilte Itself to Inn I'm watching re co twor as oho sloops A holy cam is all Ilroand. tier breathing is SO Ilan sod lu• 1 saws* can estsb tier gentle With .Wave we my spirit bows I "hare an .regal to th• hog.. ' POLITINE3S PAYS `.Seems to me you treat that ragged httle brat with more politeneas than I should," said a rough looking mau to a young .hop keeper, who had just done up three cents' worth of sugar very neatly, in a brown paper, and tied it carefully. The boy in question cad presented a marked physiognomy From under his rimless hat pro jawed a wide, full brow, deep sparkling eyes, and features full of energy and resolution !its face and hands were scrupulou.ty clean, but hi, cl o th es were poor and patched, though not as the man had insinuat,d, rugged, Ills mother was a woman possessing mush force of character—a hard work log wom a n who bad been reared iu apparently better circumstances than those that to* sari rounded her, ter she was the wife of a drunkard The grocer was busy, and he evidently had put heard what %ca.+ .6.1141, the nutgll men remarked again, "I say Wytnau, you are a queer one." 'How queer, (}roes'" asked the grucer,t brow iug a ~coop of tea into the scales "Why you treat.all the beggars about h.re with u much ounilltternTlon wheu they come with their pennies, as if they bought by the whule sale. "And why shUuldn't said t h e gruorr, look' tug up with his honest eyerrynde open and clear "0, I dou't know; it's queer, that's all, you re the only titan that d >es it, I reckon, in these parts." "Well, I'll tell you," said Wysi.to delideri tely unwinding the spool of cord and twisting the string about a package in his hand: "the feet is, if I wasn't naturally tender towards the children, I should treat them as I do from me• fives of policy You see, I'm but a young wan, and those "brats," as you call them, are grow lug up fast. Many of them, of little worth as they seem now, will becsime men of character, and men of business Now I want to retaiu their custom," he said laughingly; "their pen rtes in the course of a few years, will turn into pounds; their three cents' worth of t.ugar will change into orders by the barrel I shall have many a good customer among the "brats;" be, sides, I have always found that politeness pays well" "Something in that," ejsettl Aced the cioarse man, chrutitiog his lt.totia tot. hie pockets, "something in that; but l u.'ver I eked at it in that light before." "The boy who bought th -ug,r," continued the grocer, "is one ut u orditi.try - tuli], if lam not mistaken If his Lather w.as dead, I'd take him with me low the stole and tuAlte a man pf him—though I rekol, ore w:L, I ll•tter for him than I e 1 1 0 t tr• 4 clog grok.er smilingly handed a cents' worth of pins to a lit tle timid °hilt', whose lop eurl just real h.si to the counter Time verified the predietiou of Wyman, the grocer. There waeu't a shop to the place where so much small change was spent as in his; for the children loved to go where they *era n.it afraid of rough aotions or rule speeches. They felt themselves safe while milting their little purchases; they saw that their rights were re spected; and it is well known that on such tri fling sales muoh profit accrues in tie aggregate Time passed, and Wyman the grocer, Was the mo-t popular man in town Hts pLasant face at forty years was greeted everywhere. Yeulig men and maidens always patralizoi Wyman.— It was strange to see the transtirms'i in that took place so gradually; the little dirty faced juvou_ iles shot up into awkward youths learning trade•, and then grew to be respectable husintss m n. Wyman enlirged his shop, and built him a stitch did house, "all the fruits of the ehtldreu's pen nies," he often said laughingly Yes, with him, it paid to be polite; it always pays. it pays the merchant as well as the mech awe, the lawyer as well as the physiman. lir bane manners have been the means of.uasking many a fortune,' whit• the cross grained, have wondered why they didn't get along- The rough ness that speaks its mind at all times and in places, boasting itself that it is only honest, blunt and straight forward, is a habit that dern• oralizes.ks well as insults. Ask any man you chance to see, if he remembers those who treated him with urbanity when he was a obild, and he will recall his name with a throb of pleasure,'" Perhaps, too, he will couple some other names with the epithet of "old mewl!" and "I never liked that man—l wouldn't have dealings with him." It paid the grader to be _polite. The ragged boy, the drunkard's son, became a great a well as rich man. Re established his sad mother in a handsome - residence of her own, and sent in unlimited orders to the grocer. It was his in. hence that gave Wyman several posts of honor in his native city—for the town became a thriv ing city, aid when silver hairs hung on the shoulders of the old man, and the young con gressman's name rang far and wide, spoken by admiring tongues, praised by men of wisdom and sterling worth, it was no idle boast for him to say, wish a smile of triumph, "I told you so!" Politenese pays. Econoictam..—A man who shows fourteen dollars' worth of totem% a year, and atop his ue►spaper; beams hi is poor with the blew* of the Mee ii the mow 1 Osee tt via u ted Wtth the mee maw shed; Bat the row led with remegar Wag ese 1 Weans's/off tie% la the Jolly dyed Jam, ♦nd vs danced 'down tie peke la the hitt I - Now If incoarts Arab And es: hinsin at, dark And dank .e huddle o'er the embers Mire arahilet We pluck from remenisoeuces about town, the following little episode in human life which needs no embellishment from our pen to find its way to every heart. We suppress names, but give the hosts as they mime to us, from a soured, which we did not question. Some years since a young German of laicism ting persons.' appearance, intellectual sad res• pectable, but front the rather humble walks of life, married a °harming little actress, which the St Luis Theater goers have often encored Por 00030 time they lived on happily—he indus trious, she unrepining for the exciting life she had hitherto led, till a little girl, their only child, was five years old. About this time the husband was led off into the most 'wicked and ceaseless dissipation by the malicious efforts of a rejeoted suitor of Mdlle. Actress, till from 0023, perative independence they were reduced to the lowest depths of poverty. At this crisis the de graded husband, no doubt at the suggestion of his tempter, declared his intention of placing the chill upon the stage, a step to which the wife, actress though she tied been, had snob an invini Bible repugnance , that she declared she had rath• er he would slay the phild outright. Persistence on his part wrung reproaches from her, and re erimination, till what bad been a happy home became the scene of fieroe contest and bitter. roes, in the midst of weieh the husband daily forced the little one from her unhappy mother, to receive lessons is dancing, and at length au flounced that he had made an engagement for her to appear on the following evening; at the same time producing the gauzy tinselled attire, which he 2ad purchased for her "debut." The outraged mother glared tigerlike upon the gay trappings, suggestive to her only of re• moist). noes which were evidently too sad to be recalled without into. ' and had not her husband restrained tier, would have rent-them in a thou ,and pieces. The little girl siding entirely with her mother, declared she would never put them on, and clung sobbing to her dress. The follow tog day the bills announcing her appearance were playearded all over the city, and when the father, doggedly resolute, entered at four o'clock to take her to rebeersal, excitement, with a nat orally delicate frame, had so enfeebled her that she was unable to rise from her °ouch. This wretch, however, was not so to be deterred from his purpose, and dragging her forth, he himself robed her in the tinselled dress, sod throwing s oloak around her, lifted her in his arms prepara tory to conveying her to the theatre, which he did, despite the mother's tears and entreaties.— Before another hour had passed, he stole back a "guilty, cowering thing, to ley in /ear erase a little form bruised sod blesaing—flowers upon its brow, and blood upon its garments. Too much under the influence of stimulus to direct his steps aright, he had been nearly run over, and the child was dying there before her now sobered pa. rent. She died, and in that moment the wife cursed the husband, and bade the departing spir. it of the little one witness the curse, and thus, .ilirsys thus, to haunt him. N )11 comes the story: The child was buried, and the wretched mother left the more wretched husband to bide his curse, and departed, no one knew whither.- It wu generally supposed that she bad thrown herself into the river. .He re• mairied in his wretched cellar hovel, striving to drown care in drink, literally soaked; but never so under its influence but that the most profound horror dwelt in his eyes, which had a look as though he saw sights that other men wet not of. His hair grew perfectly white and his form bow. ed with premature age, while a °mutant shiver crept to and fro over his deerepid form. He mumbled strangelyz—dropped now and then a word, whose ghastly import struck a chill of fear to many a heart;. and there were some who pre tended to have heard sounds from the miller that caused their blood to curdle. Finally, the poor wretch became ton weak to leave his miserable pallet, and half from pity, more out of curiosity, the oeighbors succeeded in wstehing with him. .Vo oue ever, by any means, could be induced to repeat the vigils, each of which seemed more ter rible; but as yet only vague hints and surmises were abroad. One was frightened by the man's groans, starts and looks, another fancied be heard stealthy steps approaching, and still an. uther saw a shadow oast across the door sill, and all fled precipitately without seeing the right, which all c9nourred was nightly to be seen by brave enough eyes • p )11 the fourth night of the German's ills the police having become aware of the es• citeineut prevailing, were hovering round, silent n.l wstchful..The man was dying, sod besought to rot,ou. tones that a clergyman might attend him A reverend of this city, no lees 'Watered ht• scholastic attainments than beloved for his deep toned piety and silent ebarities, obeyed the sunnaons; at the maws earnest entreaties, retu4ining through the last moments that might be vouchsafed to him, whom his superstitious friends would haveleft to die. .\. midnight approached, the sick man grew more nervous and wild, casting fearful looks about him, and clutching his companion's arm with shuddering terror. The good minister re' tt.iurod and toothedhim, praying and reading aloud pasiages of Scripture, till the wand of light steps on the stairs sent a nervous thrill all over him; but he read on, affecting not to hear, though his patient became frenzied at the first noise Suddenly a loud shriek forced him to look up, and what a sight presented itself ! With in three feet of him, stood a form whose biasing eyes gleamed from darkly sunken sockets, whose 'unkempt" `docks streamed in tangled dampness over its attenuated proportions, whose bony arms extended the mangled bleeding form of a little child. The German, roused to preternatural saera by the agony of the sight, crawled from his pal• let to the furtherast corner of the room, seeming sa if he would shrink into the wall, sad crying, "Leave me, Marie, for God'i saltl, leave me to die in peaee. The curse has worked. Your curse is killing me. Go, go 1" sad be' fairly bowled with impotent agony. The figure advanced a step; but the minister was a man of nerve, Placing a fins bead upon her shoulder, he - gently forced the manias, for such she was, into a seat. The " which had represented her dead And from her nerveless grasp, as the husband s o pped her love kill stiffly ovq—dead—his eyes glaring with horror, aid with a wild shriek she slipped frm her mat, uoconscious. She lingered along a few days, but never spoke. • For safflokot reasons the matter WAS Mahood up at the tiros, and it is may by the kindness of the isler mss in isestios, that Isms me allowed to pnblia6 lbw lute alias pawl 1 . . - IMEIM WINTIS PlIONIP• 31 IL I. weotaaux. —..— It 411 • winter Wight Awl t►O stISI sulk km wild % lll:a.aui isq.) Irma di* Bt. Leal. Times. ~...a-~. ..~w., ~.. TERMS: $1 60 IN ADVANCE WORDS 1101 SUMO. 11111011M11 V. NOSISIL Pow t►ea erelt--tre part torevert aG ntfiltese aim la rata Pate amen that in man arm, War is metes earth iota. Other Wee will nod above tam, Other hearts will seek thy dais% Bat as other e'er trill love this With the constancy of ann. Tat farowell—wy pie forever ' All regrets are nen Is rata t Fatenastees than ere mat seer, Weer to meet os earth mats. Yam thee vsll Lao thoolordow os ti. dial I.4apoto *in ow post*, Was i 1.16 lue se aerator trial. Death no pang to .goal Qat. an the world la now before th... ivory ellot• to roam at 'nu, Bat wttata the food that bon thoo, Om toad Wart will lora thee still Yet ilmongaii—es part forma . ' all nitrate are now to rain' Into domes that w• moot oo.er, Seer to Dint oo earth again Pan the well' THE HIDDEN HAND. BY V ALVA II K. X tiOUTHWORTH, Arrsoa or 'rat Bator or kr iriSt..l3," "nu MUST= "MI, OUAPTBR I —Tux SocrcriurAL Lsir. • • • whew is that knocking HOW let with ma wheneru sound appals ass • • • • I hear • knn4g la the south entry Mara t mons kikeeking SILAS/um/AL Hardiest, gall to a large old family mimeos, )silt ai dark. red sandstone, in oo• of the loneliest and wildest of the mountain regions of Virginia. The estate Is serritooded un three sides by a magi of steep, gray rooks. spiked with elstapt of dart eeeepe en e, sad sailed, from tta horseshoe form, the Deva's Hoof Oa the fourth side of the ground graduidly deseends In broken roots sod barren roll to the edge of the wild moan• tale stream knows as the lush's H.un. Whin 'corms end flooue ,ee-• h.gh, the loud roaring of the wind through toe ei'd mountain g .rgee, and ti:o ter , rifle ragtag of coe torrent oi,er tc. r”eity c .orec. gore to Hits savage loco Hy it. ,metiea nAtnee of Deeii's Hoof, Devil's }Las and Hurricane ba,l. Major Ira Yr arle,d, 1130 1..n.1s priprietur of Ilse Mall; wita a veteran d st wrist be supposed to be 111-regattsid eereces, bad reared from public Jae to. spend the ironing of hLi e.gerJus age ou lets patrimonial, estate. gore be lived w leo ust.o. +rah his old testuonedi housekeeper, Mrs. Cuudicoeot, and b,s old totally 'errant, and his favorite dogs nod buries Here Me to t e D ipire wore aittally 'pest so the ?as's, iu wbY.n be excelled, end his afternoons and eviatogs were Jcoupi,l :0 , aril dotly'•lad Rippers among his ehueea a iu ?ant uus o ( toe ooaie,lgt tLe bottle. In pens Major War6sll ' , Si tai aid strongly IS‘s It, reatindiag one of foam oii.t iron ,imbed Doug as of ..tie den :has. feature. Worn isrgo *rid ttsrs4, cis comities. ion dark red, as [hot nano,, brol.s•tl nv 1 u g expo:Pura •ad flaalmd with strong drius H d r-s ,ors grsy !yell Wits snrmeanl•d by thick. bras) , Li•co Grows, that woes is/Mord tam a frown, roatin , toil one of • thunder e• , ..+4. as 1.00 climbing orbs beneath theca did of 11,, tit tng Hls Mardi. harsh face was surrounded by a th.Ck gtiterth •,f if , tit-gnliy bur and board that met beneath his en in Hi• weal bab it was a bison oloth coat, ono:ilk', mart, back leather breeobm, long, black yarn stockings, fastened at the knees, and maraca° slippers with silver buttons Io eharessfar Major Wart Scud was are labs, domlolloriar &a d ,t o i d et,.....masaly loved and feared by to faotAtal o'd family 11107.41/ At home ed and dreaded by Ins neighbors and asquaioutuees abroad, •bo p.rtly from his eharamer, hind upon ►tm Lb. appr.priata **lambi of OLD 8171111104111 L Thor. was. however, other ground of dultke beside that of his arrogant mind. riolieot temper sod domineering habits. Old flarriosise was moi to be on oid bisowelor, yet rumor Whispered that there was in 1 , 01•• obs-are pan of the world„ bidden away from human algal, a dautud vita and shad. poor, forlora sod broken hearted. It was far time wtilaparut that Om slam brother of Ira Wartlsid bad mysteriously disappeared, ani not without some oupteloa of foul piny cia Oa part of 'ho ooly portoo In the world who had „a among inform in hie •'taking off." Horror* thou Skaggs might be, it wu known fors cattalo', that Old Barribsa• had an ooly sister. widowod, melt end Poor, who with) her NCI drugged on a wretched ht. of 111-reigai„ mod toil, Mine pnvation and painful in/11101*y, in a distant 'My, unaided, unsought and uncarod for by ha: oriel brotbst. It was tho night of the last day of • Ootobor, 1845. The evening had °load in very dart and gloomy. About dash dos wind faros* In the northwest, driving op mass*° of lead en hood tionds, and in • few minutes dr. ground was nor_ 'red deep with snow, aud the air wan Ailed with driving slosh As tbia was AU Hallow Eve, the dreadful inclemency of the weather did not prevent the hogroes of Hurricane Hall hens availing themselves of their eapricious old matter's paresiesdea, sad going off to • body to • banjo breakdown be d I n a m ewe quartos of their next neighbor. Upon this evening, then, there was left at Harrleans Hall only Heim Warield. Yrs. Condiment, his little old housekeeper, and Wool, his body ',cram. Marl), In the evening tho old hall was shut op *lately, to keep oat as ow* aa possible the sterna that roared tbro' the teetotal° absents and oannosadod the walla of lb. bones as It determined to tom* an ratrao‘se. Ai loon as Om bad loon that all was oafs, Mrs.Coadinovnt Went to bed sad went to sleep. tt was *bow( ten o'clock, that night that bld Hurricane, well wrapped up In his quilted aaanel dressing gown, sat to his well padded easy chair before a warm and bright Ira taking his oomfurt in his own most comfortable bed. TOMS. Thin was the hoer of the cosiest enjoyment to the seltindnigent old Sybarite, who dearly loved tits own ease. Very comfortable was Old Hurricane; and as he teeem,l Ile feet and sipped hie punch, while his bleak serves, Wool, applied got morales pas to his oozy oonoh, he fairly bussed himself for eajoyment, and deolarid that nothing seder heaven would or could tempt him to leave that room and Um louse and go into that storm on that night: Jan as be had 00111111 to this ompbatoe detersoinattoa be was startled by a valeta nosing of the door boll. Urderibg Wool to see what wu the matter. he hastily arrayed him self In Ifs steeping Itabilieseets and jumped tot., bed, det upraised lot to be intruded upon, or to be mined out of Ids nom oa any amount whatever. At this moments Wool reaprueareJ. "Shea th• door, yoe ►dlato' D ►oo ,ciond to stand dm» botdiaig it op." on m• CI a ea!?' ~,, L, r eted the old eao Wool hastily closed the etteudtpg p .ad horded 10 his leadaes side. w WMI. Mr. who was It rung the be.] ? ' "aer, lb* Reverend , Mr. Per, n U eas4 bow be 1011111 t see yourser, per.o..a ;y a one “fjott ma, you villain i Dub:Cc you te.i him that mitred r . 0 1.41, Maros, I tail him hoar jr.,a ware rasa to bedfa4i asioirp toOrlia 11.12 h 'Dr se., and be Jared ma to WS, aid watt* you up, sod say but. it w,ro a master o' life sad death !” Life sod death 1 W bst hare I to do wit') HU bad WOO% owl If tb• parsao is• be will hav• o souk* op bore sad see tae "Mae I fetsh bun reverenee u, air ?"' lo t op and g•. InMJ t so* Wapitis*. ba--•Yat tit• door, rut rase* or 1.',1 t r 11 , Like ►0.., at your wooden bead '" Wool obeyed with a.acra , y and to swap? tp e tbrestabog After an &aromas of a ft.w miou:81 be was beard ro.urn, lag, attending ova, the f rt ~ a mber. Aw.i the nest C01:100 h.. entered, I.:o‘<•r .g in the Roy. Dr. 00tial• win. the parish nit, i ;of f B-in'etioni. St. Marfa. "Mow do yogi do? II .w . 4 • yO4 1.1 Glad to Geo y 4 a. ow I glad to lee you th•.uir, "hi getto rrer!vo Ton in ben! Tut is, I caught a cold a it LI dote movers change of we Oh. Of, and took a warm a.gUS and went to knort to Mall It 4J! You'll saran me ! Wool. draw that easy obair op to ety bedside for worthy Mr G.,orlw in. and bring him a shwa of ware norm It will do hta g after his cold ride.* t h an k y ou . ht,j, r W, , t1..”1! I will tale* the seat, bat set the lierui, if 3,..0 pleare, to eight." "Not the Degas ' Oa, coat. now, you ma joking Wly„ It will Imp you from catching cold, sad be a most eons foetal, might-asp, dioposiog you to sleep sod 111/11.4 fiJtew baby I Of coarse you spend the sight with as r «t 'beak you, au' must take the Foal* again Is bus 4/ .tastes." **Take thy road agate to-eight! Wby, 111M1 /UV.I kb stinight, and the boos driving like all Lapland.' "Sir, I am sorry to rehire year proffered tt=titg leave year coomfortable roof t,„ tits t, t , "g .fl • tam pm with mid the pastor gravely. *lake *1 with you No, no, my geed dr Z 101. (bat is too good • Jokei—ha! ba I" • 'Sir, I fear you will !Lod it a very lake, one! Teit /errant told yea that my errand was we of Womb Or' ri.vr " YS.. wometblog like life and death—." "Vaisetly--down in tb. cabin, Roar dm Plls* Ud e awe lean old ream dying--." olliers, I hum It 1 yes old worse dyisig. Bat. a: Wbat ow I do r HBasaaity, sk would pro 'Mat, ay doer sir, bow ployalataa to prolooribo---, "SUM for past a ybyaloiat "SW as I a priest to boor ' "Her eettessies Oat Wu well. aid I'm not s law 4 "Ns, air; lost you are rides► does St Ida Prase far Alio& Key ink irksll et **At UV tin, au*, IP (144 • owe *no lo w,. old in Maio bola VD" WA 6110.111/2 , 5 - NUMBER 37$ SM. ITO.. 111 C. 111