From the United States Gazette. The Presbyterian Case. A gentleman of the bar, in whose pro. dence we have great confidence, has, ai our request, supplied us with a notice 01 the case which closed yesterday. It will b-. 1 seen that the verdict of the jury is for the Relators, or New School. the Coun sel for the Respondents, (or Old School) moved fora new trial. IN THE SUPIIENIE COITRT. Befire Hon. Mallon C. Rogers, and a Sprcial Jury. Commoawealth—At the suggestion of James Tod, John R. NefT, F. A, Ray bold, George W. McClelland, Wm. Darling and - Thomas Fleming. Ashbel Green, Thomas Bradford, Sol- onion Allen, Cornelius C. Cuyler and Hallam Latta, not summoned. Information in the nature of quo war- Tonto, and ordered by the Supreme Court to a Jury to try questions of fact to in form the conscience of the Court. The proceeding of this interesting cause is founded upon the statutary power given to the Supreme Court, declaratory of the common law, by act of Assembly of Pennsylvania passed 14th of June, 1836, entitled "an act relating to writs of quo warranto and mandamus." That 4 u i provides that the writ of quo warrants may issue in a designated description of cases, among which is the present, viz: "In case any question shall arise concer ning the exercise of any office in any corporation created by authority or law," &c., and "in case any association or num ber of persons shall exercise any of the franchises or privileges of a corporation within the respective county without law ful authority." On the 29th of May, 1838, on relation of the complainants, it was suggested to the Supreme Court, that the defendants were since the 24th May, 1838, exerci sing and did stil exercise the franchises and privileges of corporators without law ful authority, viz: the franchises and pri vileges of trustees of a certain corpora tion called and known by the name of "Trustees •f the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Churzlt in the United States of America;" that on said 24th of May, 1838, the relators were duly elected Trustees of the said corporation agreea bly to the provisions of the act of Assem bly of 28th March, 1799, incorporating said body; but notwithstanding said elec tion the defendants still usurped said of. fice, and praying for process of iaw, &c. On the 31st July, 1838, the defendants put in seperate answers: that of Ashbel Green asserted that he was one of the original Trustees and had ever since acted as such; and denying the election of the Relators, and claiming that his right as Trustee had never been vacated, deter mined or abridged; and that of Thomas Bradford, alleging that on the 27th May,' 1822, he was duly elected by the General' Assembly a Trustee, and had ever since acted as such; also denying the election of the relators and asserting his present right. On the 10th Oct. 1838, the relator re plied to the plea of Ashbel Green, that true it was he was originally a trustee of the General Assembly, but that by the act of incorporation, the corporate Body had power to change one third of the whole body of 18 trustees, as often as they should hold their sessions, and that, in exercise of such authority, said body did on the 17th May, 1838, at an Assembly held in this city, duly elect James Tod in place cf the said Ashbel Green, and the said James Tod accepted said office, and therby the sail General Assembly avowed disfranchised and discharged the said Ashbel Green, &c., and thus replied to the plea of Thomas Brad ford, in like forte alleging that George W. McClelland was duly elected in his place, 4-c. In like form, the relator asserted that Thomas Fleming was elected in lieu of Cornelius C. Cuyler, and William Darling in lieu of Solomon Allen. William Latta was not summoned, and his right, opposed to that' of F. A. Raybold, is only incidentally in, question. In the pleadings the several' parties appealed to the country, viz. a jury trial, and the issue of fact became ripe far a trial on the 7th Nov. 1638. Accordingly, a jury was empannelled on the second Monday of March, 1839, and charged to enquire of the matters of fact contested in the pleadings. 'Flee re lators were represented on the trial by Josiah Randall, fr. M. Meredith and George fl ood, Esqrs—the defendants by F. W. Hubbell, J. H. Ingersoll, John Ser geant and W. C. Preston, Esqrs. The facts of the cause covered much' ground, and were extracted from the course and proceedings or the General Assembly during a long pet iml veays; but the most striking, interesting and no por`ant points of consideration were the Excision of May, 1837, and the Secession of May, 1838. It seems that the organization of the Presbyterian Church, as to Government, is this:—First, Ike session, composed of pastor and elders who enjoy a life tenure; next, in rank, the presbytery, consisting of all the pastors and one elder from each session, wit , in a particular district; next, still higher, the Synod, composed of a number of Presbyteries, not less than three, within a prescribed district, in while. as in the Presbytery, all the Pas tors and one elder from each session hold seats; and last, the highest tribunal, is the General Assembly, composed of pas tors, and delegated elders from all the Pesbyteiieo In 1303 the presbyteries of Oneida, Al bany and Columbia, N. Y. composed the Synod of Albany. In 1812, this Synod l having increased in numbers, was divided into tiro Synods, called All;any and Ge neva. In 1821 the Sy nod of Geneva was parted, and its presbyteries of Niagara, Genesee, Rochester and Ontar;o were for-1 mod into the Synod of Genesee. In 18 25 the Synod of Pittsburg was divided, ,and its Ohio presbyteries of Grand river, DAUGHTERS MURDERED BY PIRATES. Portage and Huron was constituted the A foreign journal received by the re• Synod of the Western Reserve. In cent arrival at New York, under date of 1829 the Albany synod again yielded to a Athens, January 7, furnishes the details of division, and its Western presbyteries of Ogdensburgh, Waterloo, Oswego, Oneida, one of the most revolting instances of pi rac and murder, to be met with in the and Otsego, became the Synod of Utica. e Y ei of crime. The four important Synods so much in! calnd It is stated that on the 10 o er November f question, thus created, were the synods of the W last, the Turkish schooner, Cherkaj 1 and Utica. Western Reserve, Geneva, Genesee I &her/ (The Prophet's Mantle) anchored The Presbyterian Church, as in almost in the Bay of Patras, the crew consisting ' Captain Said, a, and nine others. all other religious communities, encoun- 'the vessel r e d, car besides eight passim tered internal disputes on doctrine, awl 'gm, a German antiquary, M. Ilundscl,',it i M r. and Mrs. Davidson, of Car ;;in;, with ranged themselves into parties, called the three daughters ; and two young New and Old School; this has been until t h e i r recently a division of opinion, not feeling, Turks, Abdalla and Hussien, twin sons and kindly conduct ed on both sidee. The General Assembly .: at va'.'ous times,' of the Aga of Kara. The cargo consisted had a majority for ‘!l,ner party. From 'of Cashmere shawls, Oriental trinkets, 1831 to 1R:35 inclusive, the Old Sehoull 'Circassian embroidary, and other vales prevailed. In 1836 the New School was ble articles. On the evening of the 12th the crew and passengers returned on in the majority. In 1837, the Old School board, and on the 13th, at dawn, the vessel party had a scperiority of numbers, and was to sail. The Petrasfisherman per in the session of the (general Assembly ' ceived be tho schooners lights that she of that year, a resolution called the Ex, was sailing.:though they did not hear the cinding measure, was passed. This vote, customary signal-gun fire. cut off from the Church, the four Fynods ' ' Some hours after, when the sun was of above the Western Reserve, Geneva, Gene see and Utica. These Synods contain the horizon, a few fishermen, spreading their nets on the shore, descri -599 churches, and not quite so many pas- bed a man struggling amidst the waves. tors; their representatives were of the Two of them rowed to his assistance, and New School party. The ground of this arrived in time to save him. Ile was a excision, was connected with the opinions 'youth dressed in Turkish costume. his or faith of those Synods, and the question condition was horrible. ' he was fainting of unconstitutionality of the Plan of ,and the blood was gushing from a large Union of 1801, between the General As- 'recent wound in his head. He was con sembly and the Church of Connecticut. lveyed speechless to a calms, where every In May, 1838, the annual session of attention was paid him. The fishermen the General Assembly commenced, and !conjecturing that other persons might as might be expected, the process of exci- have been wrecked, proceeded with their sion, caused great difficulties. Delegates boats in various directions. They shortly from the excinded Synods, presented espied the carcass of a vessel, which seas , their credentials to the usual officers, the soon thrown on the: coast. It was the clerks, who declined to enrol their names. Cherkaj Scherf. The scene she present- The Moderator of the past sessioh, Dr. ed was horrible: on the deck, which seas 1 Elltolt, took his seat in the Assemble, streaming with blood, lay the attrociously held in the Seventh Presbyterian Churcli, mangled corpse of the captain and eleven 1 according to the usual form. De. Patton, other persons. of N. Y. offered resolutions; the Modera- Below in one of the cabins, were exten- , tor made the same decision as , to his ap. ded the lifeless bodies of Mrs Davidson peal. Dr. Elliott, after the report of the and her three daughters; the state of the clerks, enquired if any delegates were corpses revealed that the most infamous ' present, whose names had been omitted, violence had proceeded their dreadful I Dr. Mason of N. Y. then presented the wounds. The ships masts and oars had commissions from the excinded districts, been demolished with axes and her whole and was declared by the chair to be out cargo plundered. The oceurance was , of order. He appealed, and that was also forthwith reported to the Governor of declared irregular. The Rev. Mr. Glen. Patras, and the poor youth saved by the eland, of Michigan, then moved that Dr. fishermen seas carried to the hospital.— Bemun, of N. Y. be appointed Moderator Every attempt at discovering the perpe pro tem. and put the question to the As- trators of this attrocious carnage was at , sembly. The ayes were general; there first fruitless.' All that seas ascertained ' being but few negatives; but whether the was, that on the evening before the schoon- ' voting were universal, seas disputed. At er was to have sailed, a brig, which ap- ' this time great confusion occurred—much Feared to be from the Island - of Samos, 1 noise—and the evidence was contradicto- had beat about the bay of Patras. Two , ry upon the opportunity and the generali- days after the dead bodies of two mole ' ty of voting, and the conduct of the re- of the crew seers found on the shore.— ' spective parties. The Moderator thus At length the young Abdallah whom the chosen, Dr. Beman, proceeded to organ_ fishermen had saved recovered enough to I I ize in the usual manner, and the body of declare the follawing: The schooner had New School delegates, including the ex. scarcely left the Bay of Patras—the sea I I ciaded portions, adjourned to the First was calm, the passengers and part of the I Presbyterian Church; and among other crew had retired to the cabins—when a business, elected the six gentlemen named fearful tumult was suddenly heard. as Relators, to the office of Trustees. Fifteen ruffians, avined with daggers I 'The renainin body also organized and and yataghans, had boarded the vessel, I transacted business. and, before any resistance could be at- It is not our purpose to offer opinions, or adopt the evidence on either side, but merely to furnish an intelligible view of the points in controversy, and the history of the events which have evolved them. The charge of the Judge ruled the law in favor of the Relators in emphatic lan guage. lie held the excinding resolution to be unconstitutional and void, and on the question of organization he charged the Jury that if the delegates were pre. vented from hearing the question, or vo ting, by the clamors, art or measures of the new school party, or the audience, then the Dr. Benson Assembly was irreg ularly formed, and the relators must fail in this issue; but if they believed that the confusion was the act of the defendants, or those who supported the Dr. Elliott house, then they could take no advantage of their own wiong act, and the verdict must be for the plaintiffs. The Jury retired for a few minutes and returned to the Court a verdict of guilty against the defendants. The discussion to the Jury was ably conducted by Messrs. Illeredeth and Wood for the plaintiffs, and by 1%4 essrs. Ingersoll and Preston for fhe defendants. The leading counsel for the Relators, Josiah Randall, Esq. was their original counsel and Lwjafadviser during 1837 - , and yielded the promith:Pt position in the argument to which h e was ei ;!itled, in order to open the cause of the plinOffsto the Jury; it is spoken of as a masterly effort. The evidence of the defendants wag fully opened by F. W. Hubbell, Esq. The consequences of the judgment up on this verdict will be according to the eleventh section of the act of 1836—"1f any person, &c. be found or adjudged guilty of usurping or intruding into, or unlawfully holding or exercising the of. fice, franchise, privilege or power men tioned in such writ, the Court shall give judgement that such defendant be ousted and altogether excluded from such office, (franfranchise, privilege or power, and that chise, Commonwealth, or party suing such writ, as the case may be, recover coats from the Defendant." Iris understood that the law laid down by Judge Rogers will be considered by the Court in Bank, on motion for a new trial. A SHOCKING TRAGEDY AN AMERICAN ➢POTHER AND HER THREE tempted, massacred or threw overboard every soul on deck. Abilallah had seen the death of his brother, and he was making himself a desperate defence, when the cut of a yataglian cast him into the sea. He added, that on the day he arrived in Pat-, ras he had been with his brother and the., captain into a coffee house, and that he thought he had seen there two meen whom he had seen again on the awful night of Nov. 11?.. The youth further stated that the captain had long talked before the two men of the richness of his cargo, and that, next day, on the owner of the coffee house being asked who those two stran gers were, he replied that they were old soldiers of Hydra, living quietly at their, homes. The coffee house keeper was, then questioned. At first he denied all,l but subsequently avowed that the two men had conversed with Abdallah and the captain, adding that he knew nothing of what they might have done. Notwithstanding this declaration he was imprisoned, when his wife, alarmed ,the circumstance whirls her husbands concealment might entail, disclosed the Tacta that the two suspicious individuals were Geo. Diomado and Alexander Glou kos, two of the most formidable pirates of Samos, and that their strong-hold was near the Cavern of Philoctetes. The woH man protested that her husband was guilt 'less, and that his only relation with them', were there of a friendship formed while serving together in the GI eek insuurec.l then. Upon these circumstances being, communicated to the Governor of Samos,' he hastened with 300 infantry and 69 horse to the Cavern of Philoctetes, which he caused to be surrounded. He in person with 50 picked men, entered the den, Scarcely had he entered the dark vaults, when he had to sustain a discharge of mus ketry. After a sanguinary struggle which obscurity rendered still more horri ble, the fire of the pirate band was silenc ed. Fifteen of them had been slain. one only captured, and the remainder had escaped by an aperture which the govern or not having detected it; had not been watched or guarded. Young Abdallah, on being confronted with the prisoner, identified him as one of the two men he had net at Patras. After much hesita tion, the coffee house keeper avowed that the villian was no other than Gloukos. the lieutenant of the brig commanded by Geo., Diomadi. Levu AND DEATH.—Farilue, in Swe den, a few years since, witnessed an in . cident which partakes of the romantic. I In spelling a communication between two r mines, the body of a young minor was found in a state of complete perservation, being impregnated with the vitriolic wat- , er of the mine; when exposed to the open air it became stiff. The features were not recognised by any person but tradi tion had preserved the recollection of the accident by w i nich he hail been buried in the bow;.is of the earth more than half a c^-iitUry ago. —All further inquiry was dropped, , lien sullenly, a decrepid old woman, leaning on her crutches, advan ced and descovered that the body was that of a young man to whom she had been engaged by a promise of marriage fifty years before. She threw herself on the body of her former lover, and bedewed it with many tears, fainting with joy to have again beheld the object of her affection before she descended to the tomb. The contrast between these parties—one of them buried during 50 years, yet preser— ving all the features of youth; the other bending beneath the load of years, and living, if she could be said to live, during an equal space of time, above ground— may be conceived, but cannot be descri bed. IMPORTANT INTELLIGENCE.--By the Dromo, Capt. How, arrived yesterday from Havana, we have received a file of the Diario de la Hahana to the 18th inst. From the paper of that date, we translate the following important news : "By letters from Vera Cruze of the 10th March, we learn that a treaty has been concluded between Don Edward De Gor ostenza and General Victoria on the part of Mexico, and Admiral Baudin on the part of France, the British Minister, Mr. Packingham acting a mediator, of the fol lowing tenor. Ist. There shall be an armistice of fif- 1 teen days. 2nd. y The Mexicans shall pay 8600,- 1 000 in periods of 2,4, and 6 months. 3d. Indemnification for the expenses of the war, and to the expelled French men shall be finally settled by a nation in friendship with the two contracting par ties.] 4th. The Castle of S. J. Ulloa shall be delivered up to the Mexicans as soon as it shall be known that the treaty has been ratified by Congress. The same letters say that there was no doubt the treaty would be immediately ra tified. M. Gorostezo had set off for the city of Mexico to remove any difficulties that might present themselves. In the meantime the discharge of all vessels of all classes and nations was allowed. Ve ra Cruz will again receive within her walls the persons who have emigrated, and the' 11th will oven to the merchants their for mer places a of business." The above intelligence is confirmed by Capt How, who states that the British I rigate Medea, Commodore Douglass, and British sloop of s war Race Horse, arrived at Havana from Vera Cruz wit's letters to the above effect, and would proceed ins mediately to England.—N, Y. Courier. MELANCHOLY SUICIDE. A tragic event occurred yestesday mor ning, [says the Pennsylvania Inquirer of April 1 ] about 8 o'clock, on Noble street wharf. A middle aged man named Mr. 'l'. J. Pascotare, walked to a part of the wharf near the water's edge, and taking a raior from his pocket, cut his throat in so dreadful a manner, that he nearly severed his head from his body. He expired al most immediately. Several persons hastened from the fatal spot to James Gregory, Esq Coroner, who promptly con %cued a jury; and from the evidence de posed before them, it appeared that Mr. Pascotare was about 52 years of age, had formerly been in good circumstances, but of late had suffered much from the diffi culty he experienced in obtaining a live lihood. Two letters were found upon him one directed to Mr. Clemens, and the oth. er to Mr. Shaffer, in both of which he sta ted, that when those gentlemen had read them, the writer ,would have quitted the world. They were written in in a friend ly spirit, and contained one or two little requests and directions which he hoped would be attended to; and the writer as signed as a reason for the rash act he was about to commit, that from poverty, v ant of etnpliument LPN he was weary of life. We have been informed that he once kept an hotel at Cincinnati. The jury, after a brief consideration of the cif:- cumstances, returned a verdit of "Died by Voluntary Suicide." MnIiDERER ARRESTED.—.-We are glad to learn that Kobler the man who is sus pected of having murdered a Jew pedlar in Lancaster, Pa. a few weeks since, was yesterday arrested in this city, by Edward C Taylor, one of the city police officers, and Banff Smith, at a German tavern in Market street, Fell's Point. He was ac companied by his servant, who calls him self William, and who was also arrested. uuderstandthat a passport in the name of the pedlar, had been seen in his posses. slon, previous to his last.—lialt, Chron. J\ X 4 al,", s . 4 0(tmilet - i- a w.:,,, , 1v.k,w ,, , , --,......,4,,,„,„.,,tt0 THE JOURN AL. 'One country, one constitution, one destiny Huntingdon, April 10, 1830 Democratic antimasonic CANDIDATES. FOR PRESIDENT, GEN.WM. H. HARRISON FOR VICE PRESIDENT DANIEL WEBSTER. FLAG OF THE PEOPLE: Kr A single term for the Presideney, and the office administered for the whole PEO PLE. and not for a PARTY. a-y- A sound, uniform and convenient Na-' tional CURRENCY, adapted to the wants of the whole COUNTRY, instead of the SHIN PLASTERS brought about by our present RULERS. jr7ECONOMY, RETRENCHMENT, and RE FORM in the administration of public affairs, 02° Tired of Experiments and Experi menters, Republican gratitude will reward unobstrusive merit, by elevating the sub— altern of WASHINGTON and the dosciple of JEFFERSON, and thus resuming the safe and beaten track of onr Fathers,—L. Gazette. Democratic State Convention. The friends of lIARRISON and WEB STER in the several counties of Pennsyl vania, are requested to appoint delegates equal in number to their members in the State Senate and House of Representa-, tives, to meet at the Court House in liar risburg, at 12 o'clock, M. on WEDNESDAY, 22d of May, 1859. For the purpose of nominating a ticket Electors, to be voted for by the people of Pensvlvama,:at the Presidential Election in 1840, and pledged, if elected, to sup-1 port the candidates for President and Vice President of the United States set tled by the Democratic Anti-Masonic National Convention, which was held in Philadelphia in November, 1833. Thomas 11. Burrowes, Thomas Elder, Theo. Fenn, Amos Ellmaker, Francis James, If m, R. Irwin, 'Gilliam Ayres, Harmar Denny, Samuel H. Fisher, "Gilliam Smith, Ner Middleswarth, Milian McClure, George Mowry. Levi Merkel, Maxwell Kinkead. State Committee. Harrisburg, March 2, 1839. Our Town. Ah! favored, happy, distinguished town this Huntingdon. At this present mo ment, we have a Governor! a real live governor! What do you think of that, little towns, a live Governor, just think of it. "Vat a werry hextraordinary ewent," as the loafer said when he found a fip. Who would believe it? How strange! yet not less strange than true. Reader, let us introduce yotr to him. Do you sec that man standing like Tom Benton's ball, solitary and alone , his hands most gracefully laid across his hips, under his coat tail; a little inclination in his figure, his eyes bent on the ground, and his brows brooding over them, as if to keep out the gaze of a plebian world, or of hon_ est men. That's him, a real live Gover nor. But watch bun a moment, see how noislessly he glides into yon little crowd of men. Hear him "how de do"—"how are you"—"How do you do," how friend ly. They were disappointed, he must keep them friends still. But here comes one ,he is rejoiced to see— he is a whip per-in. "flow have you been," why did not you come to Harrisburg; we wanted such men as you," and he takes him by the arm and walks away to one side, to tickle the fancy of the pour dupe with a notion, that he ie a special adviser. The native sucks it all; and the Governor tell s him Ile never could get along in his town ship without him, and what he wants done next time. He is, a favored man, he talks to a live Governor all alone; he is satisfi ed; it is the summit of his glory, and he turns away, and says "he is the same old two-and-six-pence" and is more his dupe and slave than before. While his Excel lency, bows a smiling adieu to him, an , l a pleasant welcome to some other, & to both he says inwardly, what uncle 'foby said to the fly; "go poor tt—l." Such are the daily scene in our town, is it not a favored one? "Anti-masonic Vigilance again." It is really laughable, to see the holy zeal of some one of the whiters in the Stan dard, in trying to show how wickedly negligent the Anti-masonic Sheriff had been, in net having a reward of perhaps hundreds put on the re-capturing of young Taylor• At first he fumes, and works like a barrel of beer,because our Anti-ma sonic Sheriff is the tenant of an old jail that would hardly hold sheep unless watched, and because a cunning knave has been cunning enough to leave the old walls for more extensive quarters; and a gain h 5 cracks his whip because the sher iff did• not advertise him sooner than fifteen days. We almost think, that the article was dictated by a spirit of remorse at having lost an Attorney's fee for pros ecuting the pox. devil. (The first article was from Huntingdon) but, be that as it may , we perfectly agree with the writer, that villians have escaped punishment in this county, but not exposure. If they have escaped justice, contempt, scorn and disgrace, have overtaken them; and even justice, if it is slow, we trust it is sure; and the "iron reign" of Anti-masonry, may tell in letters of flame, that in old Huntingdon, though the cell of the felon cannot claim its fugitive, still "WE KNOW HIM." The Mails, What in creation has got wrong with Amos' mail bags? IVe have often felt dis posed to join with the general out-cry a gainst the irr egularity of the mails, hut, long since, we have seen the fully of com plaint. But, in order tha t our readers may know, that when the pape r is not re ceived, that it is not always our fault. On one day last week, we received a letter post marked at Mill creeek, 6 mike below this town, which had been seven days on time rout. This kind of expedi tion is only equalled, by that of the man who "ran 14 miles in 15 days, and never looked behind him." We may as well laugh as cry,at the negligence of these Sub Treasurr —all we regtet, is, that they cannot send their letters as rapidly as they can run themselves; although, it is not res corded, whether the worthy whose speed is recorded above was a Sub or not. On Thursday, of last week, we received the U. S. Gazette of March 23d, which had been ten days on its passage; and, what makes It much more vexatious', was, . . that it contained an advertisement for us to . publish, which we were unable to pub. lish as directed, and consequentl7,materi al injury was done, not only to us, but to those interested in the publication of the advertisement. The unfortunate rascal who dares to stop the mail carrier, has to 'answer for his crime in the prison cell, if detected. Yet these Sub Treasurers of Arpos', can stop its contents , just as often and just as long as he pleases, with im ipunity. Su we go: and we must bear it patiently. - - - WO3IANI. ".What is man's love? His vows are broke E'en while the parting kiss is warm; But woman's love all change Nv 1 1 work And like the ivy round the oak, Cling closest in the storm." Who is there that has not marked and admired the firm and devoted affection of woman? Who that has felt and known the fond and endearing attention of a sister, or has enjoyed the ardent 4 . sclftor getting fondness of a mother? Who that has wen or lived in the eternal sunshine of a wife's love, will not join wills us in the sentiments of the poet. If there be aught in this world of toil and care, that was created solely to cull the thorns from the rugged pathway of life, and to strew flowers in their stead, and to render more bouyant the spirits of man—that being i 5 woman. From his cradle to his grave, the little of joy and happiness man can know, or earth can give, seem to be all concentrated in one feeling—alrection for her so justly called, "heaven's last, best gift." We have seen and felt the endearing attachment and holy sympathy of a sister!' We have seen them liye through all the storms which too frequently rend assun der the ties of kindred, yet never did that lovo change its purpose. Immutable as the laws of nature and ceasless as the march of time is her affection. Basking in wealth and luxury, or shivering amid poverty and rags, still the balm of kin dred love she pours upon the wounded spirit of a brother—Bough the world mocks at his degradation. The wife! Let those that have bowed a t that exalted shrine of female prfection— a loving wife, pour forth in the loudest strain of melody and praise, the ardour of her love, the firmner.s of her attachment,
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