Q7The following beautiful lines from the Christian Observer, were handed to us by a mother, bereaved of an ()NIA CHILD, and will no doubt touch a responsive chord in many a heart, wounded by the hand of Death, and sorrowing for those whom God has perhaps in mercy taken from the conflicts of life. HOURS OF A BEREAVED MOTHER. BY MRS. R. M. DODGE And lam left! There is a stange delight In counting o'er one's bitterness, to cull A flower of comfort from it. I am left To hear the gathering storms of life, my child, Still tempest-tort upon its dangerous seas, While thou art safely moored. Thy little barque Is anchored in the haven where the winds Of sorrow never blow. Thy star has risen In climes of peace and love to set no more For ever and for ever. All thy life Was like a rose-bud—like the gentle breath Of purest fragrance, wafted on the wing Of early zephyr—like the opening ray Of morning's softest blush. Thy litte heat/ Had never tasted wo. Thy infant breast Was heaven's own dwelling place—it never knew The touch of aught save innocence and love. • • • • Blessed child! Thy lot on earth was bright, and now thou art With holy angels. I will cease to mourn! Oh! had I loved thee less, my foolish heart Had sighed to keep thee in this changing world— Had fastened thee to life, 'till thou hadst drained Its very dregs of wo! Never! 0, never Could I have knelt and kissed the chast'ning rod With such unfeigned submission. Never! never Could I have looked so calmly on the smile Thy parting spirit left, had my fond soul Less doatingly hung o'er thee in thy life— Less proudly treasured up thy darling uame In the deep recess of my heart. But now Our very lives were one. There could not be A deeper, purer tenderness, than heaved This trembling breast for thee. How could I then Ask aught for thee but happiness? In life, When thou wart closely folded in these arms, And I did feel thy warm breath on my cheek, Thy smiling eyes fixed tenderly on mine, My prayers were full of pleadings, agonies Almost of earnestness, that heaven would bless The opening day with joy and every good That might be deemed most proper, Oh, are not These prayers most fully answered? Could my soul, In all its deepest gush of tenderness, Have asked a holier boon—a blessedness More durable, more infinite and pure, More like the nature of a God to gyve, Than heaven's own self, with all its blessed ones, Its high society, its holy love, I Its rapturous songs of gratitude and praise, Its pure celestial streams, and fruits, and flowers, And glorious light reflected from the face Of God's eternal son? Could I have claimed A HIGHER boon, my precious bah. for ch.c And then, again, to be exempt from wo And human suffering, for ever free 1 From all the toils, and pains, and nameless cares That gather with our years---and oh! per- chance, At last a hopeless death: Ohl I could weep With very GRATITUDE that 111. art SAVED—. Thy soul FOR EVER saved. What though my heart Should bleed at every pore---still THOU art BLESSED. There is an hour, my precious innocent, When we shall meet AGAIN! Oh! may we meet To separate No MORE, Yes! I can smile, And sing with GRATITUDE, and weep with JOT, Even while my heart is BREAKING! From the Indiana Journal. dlmerican Industry. PROTECTION is the word! From the shores of Maine to the exuberant soil of the South, protection of American in dustry is the instinct of the times America is now consummating the FI NAL act Of INDEPENDENCE. True tt 18 that the venal leaders of a party cry halt! to the army of the people in their onward march to this great result; the Farmers, the Blacksmiths, the Shoe-makers, the whole mechanic interest; the laborers of the land, pass on, full of high resolve, re , garding the treason that would bid them pause, with the contempt due to treachery. It is a great work and it must be accom plished. it is not in American blood that it should be otherwise. It is a revolution, the beginning of which, though but yes terday a speck in the horizen is thicken ing, and widening and deepening over the land, carrying not the destructive, but the purifying elements of the storm-cloud in its progress. " Never," said the eloquent MARSHALL, , t will America be truly independent so long as our own labor and our own indus try is left unprotected—never so long as it is the darling object of our own govern ment to dash down the enterprize it should protect and foster!" And a nobler truth was never uttered. In our midst we behold the matchless ) ,nterprize of our free people, fretting for a sphere in which to conquer, and over looking our vest empire, exhaustless in every resource which the energies of that enterprize demand. We behold thousands of honest Median-, ictesger for the bread of honest industry; impatient for that independence due to their worth of character, their families, and an honorable old age. We behold the rich harvest of the far mer bursting teem the earth in luxurious superabundance. We witness countless laborers, whose' spotless hearts, health and strong arm are their only legacies, panting for the reward of their toil, and looking forward as that reward, to a homestead in a republican soil, asking for work for their hands.— The widow, with her orphans, and the maiden pining for honest employment throng the avenues of our cities and vil lages. Yet this enterprize droops; this vast empire almost in vain unfolds its resour ces; those mechanics yield to despondency to pressure of the times—the rich produc tions of the farmer moulder in his barn or bring pitiful returns in glutted markets— those laborers ask in vain for more than' the scanty food of the day, and female virtue too often yields to female want,— The Sheriff walks abroad in the execution of the final process of the law over the land, and all is gloom. This is uo hyper bole. 4 , To this distress there is a ready solu tions, Mal government has brought us to the door of ruin--but just at its threshhold we have awakened to the evil and its remedy. American enterprize, American produc tions, American sail, American mechanics and American labor are bound in the chains of European vassalage ! Ten thousand productions of the indus try of our mechanics, are brought in coin. petition with those of Europe. Those of Europe flood our shores at prices below the rates at which freemen can live. They are purchased, and their proceeds fill for. eign treasuries, and fatten a foreign people, while our own are left to languish. American labor is made to compete with the starved allowance of pauperism. And as the mechanic and laboring inter ests suffer, the farmer droops and suffers. And while this havoc is going on among us, our people are sued and sacrificed for money slue beyond the ocean—for the de mands of foreign mercenary . creditors! Does any man ask u how is this?" The answer is at hand—so plain that he who runs may read. The goods of foreign lands flood our nation free of duty. In other words, they are sold here, at nearly the rate at which they are made there. There laborers are slaves. They are hired for pennies. They are half starved. 'They are fed like dogs on bones and pluck. Where labor can be had thus low, the thousand departments of mechanism are readily set at work. The results of this labor COMO koro. nor thus procure labor. Therefore foreign wares are cheaper, and foreign wares are bought. And the laborer and mechanic, whose blood is our blood, pay the penalty and the traffic. Do we ask Great Britain to take our products in return for hers? SHE SCOFFS AT THE EXCHANGE. We have a fat soil. Our farmers have s F...r?.* produce wire ii.......2?.ti.ain needs, but ...6. .. iii not eve it. The products of uur soil are taxed by , her government, at such rates of duty as deny them admission there. And so we are in debt for her products, while she refuses ours—and while her' pauper labor is crushing the energies of our noble people, she is demanding, in the midst of our distress, the gold and silver / the pound of flesh--tor the amount of money which we owe her! Are we prepared for this 1 NO! We say to the American Government—Shame on the policy that thus invite to ruin I Shame on the slavish surrender of the bone and muscle of the land, to the coffers of Great Britain! We call for protection I and we mean by that, that our laws shall be so framed that the manufactured and other foreign articles which come to our shores, shall be taxed in the way of duty, a sufficient sum to prevent their competition with American Industry. The Almighty never designed us for a race of slaves. There is nothing in her whole domain for which we should even bend the head to Britain, much less consent to receive her goods free, while she refuses ours. We say PROTECTION! and the Peo ple trumpet tongued, are demanding it. We say, a place on our own soil, for our own enterprize, our own labor, our own manufactures and our own agriculturalists! They pay the taxes, and when need re quires it, they shed their blood for this Union; and this government, for the pal try consideration of dollars and cents, must not barter their sweat for the trum pery of Europe. PROTECTION FOR DOMESTIC INDUSTRY! are the words. One may almost read the sentence in the Heavens. It is a word that has aroused the lion of Democracy--ThE WORKING CLASS. They are coming from their workshops, their places of labor, and their farms, and who shall resist them? The conquering host whose energies are aroused in behalf of American interests will never pause, until the object which has aroused them shall be accomplished. Lancaster County Banks. RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS.- We are gratified on being able to state, that the Banks of this county, consisting of the Lancaster Bank, the Farmers' Bank, the County Bank, and the Columbia Bank and Bridge Company, the representatives of which, in Convention met at Lancaster, on Wednesday last, June Ist, Resolved unanimously to resume specie payments on alt their liabilities on the lst of Bcptember next.—Columbia Spy. The Wire Sugpension Bridge. This elegant structure is thrown across the Schuylkill, on the site once occupied' by an airy and graceful wooden erection, fur years the pride of our tits, and cele lbrated as being the longest briilgoof a sin gle arch in the known world. The bold 'less of the architect in thus spanning a river three hundred and fifty feet wide, was the theme of universal admiration. Few will forget Funny Kemble's poetic compa rison, when she said the bridg looked like a white scarf flung across the water.-- The destruction of this favorite fabric, by fire, in the fall of 1838, was regarded as an irreparable loss. The conflag ration presented a grand picture. The flames were first seen to wards the western entrance of , ithe bridge, and in a few minutes the whole fabric was a mass of fire. The wind was down the stream, and catching the flames as they broke the flooring of the bridge, it, swept them far under, until a fiery cat aract, reaching train shore to shore, see- lorem. med pouring horizontally down the river.) On all articles of silk, according to theh By this time spectators began to throng character, thirty or thirty-five per cent. around, and before the bridge !fell, thou- On unmanufactured hemp, forty dollars sands lined the adjacent shcres and coy- per ton. ered the side of the overhanging bill, 100- On iron, in bars or bolts, not manufact king down on the scene below, as from the ured by rolling, eighteen dollars per ton ; seats in an amphitheatre. on the same article, made in whole or in This splendid sight continued for some part by rolling, thirty dollars per ton. time, the gazers looking on in a rapt si- On lead, in pigs, bars or sheets, three lence, until suddenly a low murmur, 101. cents per pound. lowed by an involuntary shiver, ran On cur glass, from twenty-five to forty through the crowd, as the bridge, with a five cents per pound ; on plain, moulded, graceful curtesy, descended a few feet, and pressed glass, from ten to sixteen hesitated, and then, with a gentle, swan- cents per pound. like motion,sank, likeadream,down on the, On all articles of china or any other waters. But the moment the fabric touch- earthen ware, thirty per centum ad valo ed the wave, a simmering, hissing sound rein. was heard, when ten thousand sparkles On tanned sole or bend leather, six shot up in the air and sailed away to lee- 'cents per pound; on calfskins tanned and ward. The fire still, however, burned dressed, three dollars and fifty cents per fiercely in the upper works, which had dozen, &c. not reached the water; while volumes of, On all bound books in the English lan smoke rolled down the river, blending 'guage, twenty cents per pound, 4-c. the earth, the wave, and the skydligg one ! On raw sugar, two and a half cents per dark, indistinct mass, so that thalatrfning 'pound. timbers, occasionally detached from theOn teas, according to their quality, bridge, and borne along by the current, !twenty cents,. fifteen cents, ten cents, seemed, almost without the aid of fancy, down to Bohea, on iVhich a duty of three to be lurid stars floating through the firs cents only is proposed. mament. The moon, which was just ris- On salt, ten cents per bushel. ing, and which occasionally burst through After going through a long enumeration the dense veil of smoke, appeared almost' of specific duties, a duty of twenty per side by side with these wild meteors, and centum ad valorem upon all remaining an added to the illusion. The effect was tides. picturesque; at times even sublime. An additional duty of ten per centum' More than two years elapsed before on all articles imported in foreign vessels the bridge was replaced by the present in cases where a specific discrimination is elegant structure, whose airiness and not made in the bill. grace more than reconcile us to the loss of All duties hereafter to be paid in cash. its predecessor. The bill also proposes to repeal the pro- This new fabric is, we believe, the fi- yiso of the Land Distribution Act, which nest, if not the only, specimen of its kind suspends the operation of that act in the in ft... United States. The plan- I rani sim- event of any duty being laid by Congress ple. Two square towers of solid gte, of a higher rate than twenty per i..eutum thirty-two feet in heightare built on either ad valorem. abutment. Over each of these ...tors, un iron rollers, pass five wire cables, each cable being composed of two hundred and sixty strands, each strand being an eighth of an ipeii thick. The length of „. e j, —.ate is six hundred and fifty feet.— nese cables are secured, on each shore, in pits, distant from the towers one hun dred feet, and continuing under ground fifty feet further, to a point where they are securely fastened at the depth of thir• ty feet. These pits are built over so as to exclude the rain, but nut the air ; and the cables, being painted, are thus pre serveding the o r o w n e t s tower pointwer t o o t. w t o h w i c e l l; , is f a o t r i t n i e a c c e u n r t v r e 4 ' iron rus t . The cables, in stretch stliTahlelecrauleil'‘e. and th h e abn i g i s tl , g b e y . aycaisbloefs w f o r o o d m , these larger ones. The width of the bridge is twenty-seven feet, and its length,' from abutment to abutment, three hun dred and forty three feet. The strength of the bridge has been tested by a weight of seventy tons. The structure is painted white throughout, and has alregy won the name of the most graceful bridge in the country. DECISION Is BANKRUPTCY. --Some time in March last, Henry Breneman, mer chant in Columbia, made an assignment of all his effects under the Insolvent Laws of this State, prefering certain of his credi tors. A petition was afterwards presented to the District Court, Judge Randall, by two of his Philadelphia creditors, praying to have the said Breneman declared al Bankrupt under the law of Congress.— The case was under examination in Phila delphia for several days, when Judge Randall delivered his opinion, deciding that the petition of said creditors ought to be granted, and accordingly declared Breneman a bankrupt. This decision, of course, takes his property out of the hands of his assignees and divides it equally among all his creditors, and decides also that the Insolvent Laws of this State are superceded by the general Bankrupt Law, in cases where a man's debts exceed 82000, the only case in which he can be declared a Bankrupt against his will. THE ILL•FATED STEAMER PRESIDENT. The Boston papers contain a letter from Havanna, giving a conversation of its writer with Capt. Roldos of the Span ish polacca Rondo, who stated that he fell in with a wreck on the 30th July 1841, while on the passage from Havanna to Corunaa. It was the wreck of a large I vessel burnt to the water's edge, which the Captain thinks was that of the steam-' ship President, and that she was destroyed by fire. The head and stern were none, at the least extreme parts of them, and hel could not tell how long site originally was, but lie paced the remaining part, by step-' ping from one timber to souther, and to the best of-his recollectios it was about 120 feet long. The Tariff Rat Reported. The Committee of Ways and Means reported, on the 3rd, a Tariff Bill to the House of Representatives, of which the National Intelligencer gives the subjoined lextract: It proposes to lay duties on goods im ported from abroad, on the chief articles thereof, as follows : On unmanufactured wool exceeding 8 cents per pound in value, thirty per cent. ad valorem. On the same article of the value of eiht cents or under per pound, a duty of hve per centum ad valorem. Qn all manufactures of wool, forty p centum ad valorem, except carpeting, blankets, and some other articles, on which special ad valorem duties are proposed. On cotton unmanufactured, three cents per pound. 1 On all manufactures of cotton not oth, 'erw•ise specified, thirty per centutn ad va, Criticism. A correspondent of the New York Commercial Advertiser, in criticising the ?ictures in an exhibition, lauds several, and then adds: lit"2s. Portrait of a Lady--R. A. Paul ding--Good background." Alas! how many both of ladies and gen tlemen are there, whose only title to notice is their background! Nothing in them• selves ; nothing in mind or body to war iant the confidence in which they stand before the world, taking their place among the respectable and excellent society; no thing in their plans or achievements to warrant any assumption of position—all de p endent upon some background of acci. d ntal or inherited wealth, or the favor of wealthy friend, or the influence of iggidental profession. It ifthe palace against which he leans; it is the robe that gathers in majestic folds at laik back ; it is the pledged hostility to othiTff, of those that support Dina; it is the racoity of poljaGat change, or the accom modation of 1911 ideal creed ; it is the art which preserves the exercise of flashy tal ents for popular exhibition, but never dis. plays in private; the cant of popular doc trine, orthe forward championship of well received opinions. All these, and a thou sand other means, are contrived to give good background to men of little personal weight, and to insure to them a position almost enviable with those who do not pause, or have not the power, to see that the goodness of the background makes the prominent figure only the more ridiculous. And the very commendations built on such "grounds" are, in reality, tl. , keenest censure with minds capable of apprsr,i at i ng the force of strictures, and able to di s , criminate between direct deserved prai,m, and the qualified commendation that looks to some extraneous reflective object.--U. , S. Gazette. Judge Morrison. A paragraph recently travelled the rounds in the papers, charging Judge Mor rison, ot Bedford county, with forgery.— The Bedford Inquirer ot Thursday last, announces the return of the Judge to his place of residence, and says: As soon as the Judge realied home, an individual, who was indebted to him some V7OO, preferred a charge of forgery against him, and insisted upon prosecuting if he did not give him a release of the whole debt. This was promptly refused, and upon a hearing before Judge Mason, the charge was dismissed as entirely with out foundation by the clearest proof, and to the entire conviction of the Judge's in nocence in the minds of friends and foes. We would request that those Editors who have noticed the absence of Judge Morri son, would do him the justice to say that he is here. prepared to show his inno. cence." What shall be done? Home truths are spoken by the Bucks County Intelligencer, in reference to the state of our commonwealth and the ruinous effects of locofuco ascendancy. " In August next, the interest on our immense public debt falls due, and the State cre ditors will be looking for payment. When we reflect that the present Administra tion has devised no plan to meet the re sponsibility, and that the Banks, the Governor's resort in trouble, can afford no adequate relief, having been already squerezed dry or nearly so, by those who di g nothing to do with Banks, unless to money; when we 1 efleci on these c g s, and' add the reflection that there is no money in the Treasury, the prospect be fore us is gloomy. The people are hots ding meetings in all parts of the State, expressing their unwillingness to be fur ther taxed, unless something is done to prevent the public works from being, as they have been, the sink into which pub lic money goes to the benefit of office holders only. Our public works (as they are managed) are eating out the substance of the State, yet the Administration holds on to them for the sake of office holding friends. The Legislature will meet in June, but what can we expect from such a body of legislators, as one session has proved them to be? Never was our State in a more wretched condition than now, and never was locofocoism so completely master of its fate. The loco foco party prospers, but the people suffer." GREAT SACRIFICE OF PERSONAL PROP* ERTY.-At a late Sheriff' 's sale, in Mus kingum county, Ohio, at which specie was demanded, a lour horse wagon sold for $5 50; ten hogs for 62i cents; two mares and a colt $3 each; another colt and two horses at $2 each ; six cows for $8 50 cts. A small store, costing several hundred dollars, was sold at the same time foql twenty dollars! and a barrel of Orleans! sugar at one dollar and fifty cents ! There are two specie paying banks in Musking um county, and if such great sacrifices take place in their immediate vicinity, how must it be in neighborhoods where specie is not so easy of access ? The above is a true bill, and may be taken as a fair sample of prices under the specie standard," which the Locofoco hard mu ney faction" in Ohio are labor ing to estab lish under the disguise of Bank Reform! We don't know what others may think about it, but we believe the present bank, ing system, with all its defects, would be' inhnitely better for the people, than the wretched state of affairs that have been brought upon us, by vain attempts to re- I form it! 'rho people would not lose half as much, if a Bank were to burst over them every month !—llrbana Citizen. A friend has called on us to state a most distressing circumstance in the fam ily of Mr. John Dixon. Mr.D. is residing at present near the Robin Hood Tavern, on the Ridge Road. One day last week, a little son of his, about ten or eleven years of age, was walking towards home, when a small dog, a cur, sprang out upon him and bit his arm. The lad shook the dog off, and the animal flew up and bit the child's' cheek. By this time, some of the neigh bors come to the boy's rescue, and led him home to his parents. Mr. Dixon thought the dog ought to be killed, and on going in search of it, he ascertained that the work had already been done. A few days aftewards the child, while out with a gentleman in a boat, complain-I ed that he was sick, He was taken home ! to his mother, and some medicine was ad- 1 1 ministered, declined taking water, l and subsequ had a spasm. Aphysi cian was cal n, who heard the circum stances of the boy's injury stated, and noticed his condition, and then remarked that though he lied alipasquaintance with the symptoms oPlPßs , drophobia, yet he feared that the child was laboring under that disorder. Spasm followed spasm, each either more severe or less resisted than the other. Between them, the child was sensible, not only of his disease, but of the rapid approach of death ; and after suffering from Saturday noon in almost unheard of agony, lie was, on Sunday morning, released by death.—U. S. Gaz. Charily at How. There passed our office yesterday about fifteen persons, five adults and the others children. They were Irish emigrants, apparently two families. They seemed to have on their backs and in their hands 'he whole of their worldly effects, consis tints of tattered garments and two or three small articles of furniture. We regard these poor people with commiseration.— Oppressed, beyond the hope of nmeliora , wig th.ir condition at home, they are glad to leave that home friendless and penniless for another, where more gen erous institutions and freer scope for ex ertion may afford them"' the means earning, and the privilege of eatiox th daily bread. Accounts from di parts of Ireland, render it probable tha about one hundred thousand emigrants will come or be sent to the United States in the course of this season. Of this large number many may have a little money, furniture, or the tools of their trades.-- But many also, possibly the greater por tion, will be in the condition of the families which we noticed yesterday,—several children too young to serve themselves, and the parents destitute of every thing but the will to work. Largely as these people may draw upon our sympathies, cheerfully as we would welcome them to oar shores, while they have any prospect or self support, we can. not but condemn the system as cruel to them and iniquitous towards this country, which forces upon it a class of population who, during at least one generation, may be a burden to its benevolence. We mean the system adopted by the commis. sioners or overseers of the poor in Ireland, who ship them for the sake of getting rid of them regardless of their subsequent fate. To these pauper masters are we in debted for this increasing encumbrance.—. the emigrants themselves are in many instances but the creatures of necessity, who merit compassion and care wherever they may be found. Their situation, which is involuntary, appeals to the hu mane for relief. And are there no means of relief! We can offer at least one sug gestion on this head, which is our main purpose in introducing the subject into our columns. The Associations which have been for med in the United States for the purpose Of aiding Mr. O'Connell's Repeal Agita tion, have sent to Ireland large stuns of money. The donors, whose motives are undoubtedly allied to a sense of duty, might upon a little reflection find a pare ' mount object for their generosity, in the class of their emigrating countrymen, whom they may see daily in the streets without the means of subsistence. The money which is remitted to promote Agi tation,—we have no faith whatever, in its promoting the actual Repeal,—would sup ply these needy strangers with the means of finding their way into the interior, where their honest labor on the soil would be sure of rendering them a livelihood. We will not discuss the question of the right or the propriety of the interference on the part of American citizens in the relations of foreign states, or their domestic affairs. To our apprehension such interference is njustifiable. Other men may • erently But to those who not . . "Fink but act, who not only approve ing a tax in the United States for t e purpose of altering the plan of the British Government, but who also help to pay the tax, to them we would propose the question, whether their charity had not better begin at home,—if indeed they consider the spot home, where they now live and have sworn allegiance. Can they not here, among their unfortunate a co g u u n i t d r .e y , m ,, e ,i n t , h o w u ho tafi pursend t em o s r e l e v m e s pi A o ‘ y • m th e o l u a t in a strange land, bestow the sympathy which would encourage, the advice which would direct, and the money which would aid them in their desires and efforts to procure a living by their labor? These iare beyondob ject objects question, ti benevolence whose n w e h e o d s e is desert con stant and crying. Without the help which might thus be afforded them, their fate is often_ worse here than if they had remained on their native ground. Let our poor houses and jails tell the story of many of them,— Friendless and in utter want, they rely ei ther upon the systematic alms of the pub lic, or resort to dissipation to drown their sorrows, or become adepts in the various modes of pillage which necessity may suggest or bad example may incul cate. We believe that from these ex tremes the great mass might readily be saved. Few of them are viciously dis posed ; few would lead a life of idleness; and if taken by the hand as soon as they enter our cities, before they become fami liar with their vices, and directed to parts of the country where the virgin earth will' sustain them, they would become worthy members of society, happy themselves and useful to the community at large. The Repeal funds whiC l frare sent abroad, and which there is reason to suppose are ap propriated in very questionable modes, would now go far towards aiding the pro gress of destitute emigrants from the seaboard to the interior. There could be no mistake about the correct, legal and useful application of the money. It would be returned to the country tenfold in the increased production Ta filch the receivers would yield. But now it goes, we know not to whom, we doubt for what,—but it Mgoes forever. It is earned and collected ere, it is dissipated abroad. No one witnesses any good effects. A few may hope for them at some distant day._ None can promise them to any living be ing. But we propose substantive good from the application of this money,—a good immediate and manifest, which will reflect upon the donor, while it is enjoyed by the recipient.—Norlh American. 1 ROYAL VISITER EXPECTED.— Extract , from a letter of an officer to his brother in Cleveland, dated on board U. S. Ship Vincennes, of the U. S. Exploring Expe dition : " We have on board, Vindoba, the King of the Fejee Islands, a prisoner, who killethend ate eleven of the crew of a Sa- He is a fine looking tem vessel, in lags. I suppose he will be, shown about like 11%.-k Hawk, antlirVend, sent home. If... a )Vawvnien we reach and Wiahva CO live "li,,,VV would you like , wears his hair half a ellow, v !;,ytPli" a "" k- ' lia-xopo IQ . j rd 1,112. li e would be wo , , show about the country." m e U ro n r i a te m d e S s t s e in te s l y .71 !. BarrEn THAN Nose.—A poor married woman was telling a staid lady, somewhat on the wrong side of fifty, of some domes. tic troubles, which she, in a great degree l attributed to the irregularities of her hus band. " Well," said the old maid, " you have brought these troubles on yourself; told you not to marry him. 1 was sure never would make you a good husband." " He is not a,good one to be sure, madam," replied the woman, "but he is a power better than none !"--Nut. Intel.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers