wir . 0 0, s . .. 4IIF- 0 1 (('- nn JAI/4(qt) oft ---....„....... . • :,., -..„-,......- -..-- . BY JAS. CLARK. TO DEATIIe PRO ) THE GERMAN OP GLUCK. Methinks:it were no pain to die, On suct,an eve, when such a sky' O'er canopies the West.. To gaze my fill on yon calm deep, And like an infant fall to sleep On earth, my Mother's breast. There's peace and welcome in yon sea Of endless blue tranquility, The clouds are living things trace theii veins of liquid gold, I see them solemnly tit:fold Their soft and fleecy wings. These be the angels that convey Us weary children Of a day , — Life's tedious nothing o'er— Where neither passions come, nor woes, To vex the genius of repose On Death's majestic shore. No darkness there divides the way With startling dawn and dazzling day; But gloriously serene Are the interminable plains:— One fixed, eternal sunset reigns O'er the wide, silent scene. I cannot doff all human fear : I know the greeting is severe To this poor shell of clay ; et come, 0 Death! thy freezing kiss • mancipates ! thy rest is bliss! I would I were away. Interesting Sketch of Minnesota. H. H. Sibley, delegate from Mineso ta, has furnished, at the request of the Hon. H. S. Foot of the U. S. Senate, the following interesting description of the new Territory in the North West, which is worthy of perusal, as giving a correct and favorable account of its ex tent, capabilities and progress : That port of Minnesota which lies tostof the Mississippi river, constituted a portion of Wisconsin Territory, before the admission into :he Union of the State of that name, with curtailed boundaries. The St. Croix, and a line drawn from the main branch of that stream, to the mouth of the St. Louis river, on Lake Styerior, now divide %I isconsin from Minnesota. On the west of the Missis sippi, the parallel of 43 deg. 30 min., is the line of division between the State of lowa and Minnesota west to thellissou ri, All the country up the latter stream to its junction with the W hitewater, and along that river to the British posses. sions, thence eastwardly following the line of 49 deg. to Its intersection of the extreme north west boundary of isconsin, in Lake superior, appertains to Minnesota Territory. The area em braced within these limits contains be tween 140,000 and 150,000 square miles, equal in extent to New York, Virginia and Pennsylvania combined. This immense region is bountifully and watered by the Mississippi, St. Peters Missouri rivers, and the Red river of the north, and their numerous tributary streams which traverse it in every part. There are also innumerable bodies of fresh water, which abound in fish of va rious kinds—the white fish especially being found in great numbers in the more northern and larger lakes. The general character of Minnesota is that of high, rolling prairie ; but the streams and lakes are bordered with heavy bod ies of timber, which contain every spe cies of wood known along the Missis sippipi below, except heed) and syca- More. At a point about eighty miles above the falls of St. Anthony, west of the Mississippi, commences a large and remarkable forest, which extends to the south, nearly at a right angle across the Minnesota St, Peter's river to the branch es of the Maketo or the Blue Earth riv er. This vast body of Woodland is mere titan one hundred and twenty Miles in length, and from fifteen to for ty in breadth. Many beautiful lakes of limpid water are Inund within its limits, which are the resort of innumerable wild foul—including swan, geese, And ducks. 'the dense thickets along its border af forded places of concealment for the deer, which are killed in great numbers by the Indians. The numerous groves of hard maple afford to the latter, at the proper season, the means of making su gar, while the large cotton woods and butter-nuts are converted into canoes by them for the transportation of them selves and their families along the wat er courses and lakes. At the approach of winter, the bands of Sioux, save those who rely excusively upon the buffalo for subsistence, seek the deepest recesses of the forest, to hunt the bear, the deer, and smaller fur bearing animals, among which may be enumerated, the raccoon, the fisher, and the marten. In this beau• said country are to be found all the re quisites to sustain a dense population.-- 'The soil Is of great fertility and un known depth, covered as it is with the mould of a thousand years. The Indi an is here in his forest home, hitherto secure from the intrusion of the pale fa ces; but the advancing tide of civiliza tion warns him that ere long he must yield up his title to this fair domain, and seek another and a strange dwelling place. It is a melancholy reflection, that the large and v, arlike tribes of Sioux and Chippetvas, who now own full nine tenths of the soil of Minnesota, must soofl be subjected to the operation of the Same causes which have swept their eastern brethren from the earth, unless nn entirely different line of policy is pursued by the government towards them. If they were brought under the influence and restraint of our benign laws, and some hope extended to them, that education and a course of moral training would at some neriod hereafter, entitle them to be placed upon an equal ity, social and political, with the whites, much good would be the result. The soil of Minnesota r 8 admirably adapted to the cultiiation of all the cereal grains, Wheat ; oats, tin'd barley are already raised in considerable quan tities, and corn grown to great perfec tion. kVheat and barley afford a sure crop, even at the British Red river colo ny, which is in latitude 50deg. 1\ but will be the result in the cultiva tion of fruit trees in our territory has ne ver been tested ; but there is no reason to doubt that the experiment will be sucessful, with all those species which are produced in the same parallel V latitude elsewhere. Minnesota is des tined to be a great agricultural region, and her prairies are well calculated for the raising of stock. There is also such an extent of water power throughout i:s broad surface, that no reason can be perceived why manufactures should not flourish also. The reports of those scientific men who have explored the country justify us in the belief!that our territory is rich in copper ores, and more particularly in Galena or lead. Whether coal exists is a problem yet to be solved. If it shall be found in any considerable quantities, the discovery will be of more real advantage to Minnesota than mines of silver or gold. On the upper portions of the Missis sippi and St. Croix valleys lies the great region of pine, which will continue to prove a source of wealth to the Territory and future state for a century to come. The manufacture of pine lumber already occupies a very large part of the industrial labour of the peo ple. The quantity produced during the last year must have exceeded eight millions of feet, although the amount is but conjectural, as I have no reliable data upon which to bases calculation.— Much of this is needed for home con sumption, caused by the rapid increase of population, but the larger portion is ratted to St. Louis, where it meets with a ready sale. This branch of business is in the hands of hardy, enterprising and respectable men, who, enduring evrey species of privation in their wild hoMes are too often fated to encounter heavy losses from the uncontrolable floods which set nt defiance, equally, the strength and skill of man. The climate of 'Minnesota is not sub ject to sudden variations, especially in winter. Although in some years the snow falls to a considerable depth, yet, as a general rule, we have fur less than is the case either in New England or in the northern part of the State of New York. The compa rat ive absence of mois ture in our country is attributable to the fact that no very large bodies of wa ter are to be found, although ; as I have before stated, small lakes abound. Du ring the coldest weather in winter, the air is perfectly still ; consequently, the temperature is much mere tolerable, and even pleasant, than could be supposed by those who reside ia the same latitude on the stormy Athintic coast: 'rile navigation of the Mississippi is not to be relied on, after the first week in November ; and steamboats arrive in the spring about the 10th or 12th of April ; so that the river may be considered as closed about five months in the year.- 1 have known steamers to reach St. Paul us lute as the 18th or 20th of Nov., and to get back safely to Galena, and to re turn by the first of April ; but this is not usually the case. St. Paul is the present capital of the Territory. It is situated on the east bank of the Mississippi, about six miles below Fort Snelling, and eight miles by land from the falls of St. Anthony. It is now a town of twelve or thirteen hundred in habitants, and is rapidly augmenting in population. Stillwater is a thriving vii liege on lake St, Croix ; about eighteen miles from St. Paul by land, and twen ty-five from the Mississippi. It is sec ond only to St. Paul in size, and is in• creasing steadily in wealth and popula tion. There is also quite a village at the falls of St. Anthony-, which is one of the most lovely- spots in the upper coun try, and also at Marine Mills, on the St. Croix river, Sank rapids, on the Missis sippi, seventy-five miles above time falls, and at Mendota, at the mouth of the St. Peter's river. Point Douglass is at the junction between the Mississippi and St. HUNTINGDON, PA., TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1850. Croix rivers. It is a charming place and it is destined to 131 the site of a town or commercial importance. Pembina is the name of a settlement on our side of the line of the British possessions, and contains upwards of a thousand souls, principally persons of mixed Indian and white blood. These people are active and enterprising, hardy and intrepid, excellent horsemen, and well skilled in the use of fire•arms.— They subsist by agriculture and the chase of the buffalo. They desire to be recognised as citizens of :he United States, as do some thousands of their kindred, who now reside at Selkirk's colony in the British territory, but who are anxious to emancipate themselves from the iron rule of the Hudson Bay Company. These people are only await.: lag some action ori (he part of the gov ernment of the United States, to join their brethren at Pembina. They would form an invaluable defence to that expo sed frontier, in case of difficulties here after either with the British government (to which they are much disaffected) or with the Indian tribes. might state in this connexion, that the Indians generally through our Terri tory are kindly disposed towards the whites and anxious to avoid a collision. This is emphatically the case with the Sioux and Chippewas. I would remark, in conclusion, that the people of our Territory are distin guished for intelligence and high toned morality. For the twelve months or more prior to the establishment by Con gress of a government for Minnesota, although, in the anomalous position in which it was left by the admission of Wisconsin into the Union as a State, it was uncertain to what extent if any, the laws could be enforced, not a single crime of any magnitude was committed. The emigration to Minnesota is composed of men who go there with the well-founded assurance, that, in a land where'nature has lavished her choicest gifts--where sickness has no dwelling place—where the dreaded cholera has not claimed a single victim—their toil will , be amply rewarded, while their persons and prop erty are fully protected by the broad shield of law. The sun shines not upon a fairer region, nue more desirable as a home for the mechanic, the farmer, and the laboror, or where their industry will be more surely requitted, than Min nesota Territory. I have thus glanced, in a cursory and imperfect manner, at the state of things in our country. Much more might be written on the subject ; but enough has been stated to enable you to form a gen eral idea of a Territory which is destin ed to be admitted into the Union ns a State in the course of a very few years, and to eclipse some of her proudest sis ters. I am, dear sir, yours, very respectifully, H. H. SIBLEY. The First Marriage, Marriage is of a date prior to sin it self, the only record of a paradise that is left to us—one smile that God let fall on the world's innocence, lingering and playing still upon its sacred visage. The first marriage was celebrated before God himself, who filled, in his own per son, the offices of guest, witness and priest. There stood the two god-like forms of innocence—fresh in the beauty of their unstained nature. The hallowed shades of the garden and the green car peted earth smiled to look upon so di vine a pair. The crystal waters flower) by, pare and transparent its they. The enhlernished flowers breathed incense ott the sacred air answering to their up right love. An artless round of joy from all the vocal natures was the hymn, spontaneons nuptial harmony, such as a world in tune might yield ere discord was invented. • Religion blessed her two childern thus, and led them fort into life to begin her wondrous history. The first religious scene they knew was their own marriage before the Lord God. They learned to love Him as the inter preter and :Neuter of their love to each other; and if they had continued in their uprightness, life would have been a form of wedded worship—a sacred mystery of sp irttual oneness and communication. They did not continue. Curiosity tri umphed over innocence. They tasted sin and knew it in their fall. Man is changed; man's heart and woman's heart are no longer what the first hearts were. Beauty is blemished. Love is debased. Sorrow and tears are in the world's cup. Sin has swept away all paradisean mat ter, and the world is bowed tinder its curse. Still one thing remained as it was. God mercifully spared one token of the innocent world—and that the dearest, to be a symbol forever of the primal love. And that is marriage. This one flower of Paradise is blooming yet in the desert of sin.—Rev. Dr. Bushnell: A Monster Balloon. A discovery, which, if successful, is destined to change the whole social system of the World, is to be tried, in the gardens of the Observatoire, in a few days. M Patin t the aerotat; after a se ries of ruinous experienentS, has suc ceeded in fabricating a balloon, or, rath er, a collection of balloons, calculated to convey through the air as many as three thousand persons at a time. The whole machine is said to be of dimen sions as vast as those of Notre Dame. He has rejected entirely the ancient system by which these machines have hitherto been guided. "The talent and energy of the whole human race tem- . bined have never been able to'create;" says he. "Mankind may compile, may combine, and may apply, but the Al mighty is the sole creator of all things. The first navigator was taught his sci ence by the fishes of the deep; why,then, have we neglected so long the lessons which the birds of the air have convey ed to us, from the beginning of the worldl" Guided by this principle, M. Patin has constructed the machine of his balloon in exact imitation of the ac ting muscles of the wings of birds. If it should succeed, what then becomes of war and conquest—of import duties and export duties—of sanitary cordons, and of prohibitory clauses I—Paris Pa pers. Take the First Step. If you are ever to be anything you must make a beginning; and you must make it yourself. The world is getting too practical to help drones, and push them along, when there is a busy hive of workers who, if anything, live too fast. You must lift up your own feet, and if you have a pair of clogs on which clatter about your heels, they will soon be worn off and left behind on the dusty path-way. Mark out the line which you prefer; let truth be the object glass— honesty the surveying chain—and emi nence the level with which you lay out your field ; and thus prepared, with pru dence on one arm and perseverance on the other, you need fear no obstacle.— Do not be afraid to take the first step.— Boldness will beget assurance, and the first step will bring you so much nearer the second. But if your first step should break down, try again. It will be surer and safer by the trial. Besides, if you never move you will never know your 'own power. A man standing still and declaring his inability to walk, without making the effort, would be a general laughing stock ; and so, morally, is the man, in our opinion, who will not test his own moral and intellectual power, and then gravely assure us that lie has "no genius," or "no talent," or "no ca pacity." A man with seeing eyes keep ing them shut and complaining that he ca.tnot see! The trumpeter of his own imbecility QD In 1790, when the scat of Gov ernment was held in New York, certain discontented and acribilious spirits, who rnagnfied molehills into Mountains, talk ed strongly of dissolving the Union. Gen. WASHINGTON, in a letter to COI. STEWART, of Abington, Virginia, said it was impossible to satisfy such men, for that, being disappointed and chagrined because, on visiting the seat of Govern ment, they thought their merits were undervalued, they sought in a dissolu tion of the Union a cure for wounded vanity. When we see men pricking up their ears at every pretext likely tojiistffy treason to theft cYunfry i and gloatinir o'er tthatcver lids a iendeney to minis ter to a morbid appetite for civil strife and contention, we cannot help think ing that the causes assigned by the immortal WASHINGTON for the discon tents of his day are equally applicable to some of our modern political Luci fers.—Jackson (.41i.)Southron. DOUBLE EAGLE.—This beautifut ne'iJ coinage has been issued front the mint, and far exceeds all the other golden pie , ces in elegance as in Value. The device of the head is from the antique, and is an emblem of Liberty, as required by law: The reverse is designed th' ee'nformity with the act of 178 *bleb decribes the arms of the Unitcci ntates with the scroll containing the motto 'E Minibus Unum,' more extended and ornamented titan usual, and seeming by its form and arrangement to indicate the name of the piece. Mr. Longacre, who designed the die, deserves great credit for its ele gance and neatness.—Daily Sun Somebody has well said, l• The rich depend on the laboring poor for their work ; on the merry poor, for their amusement; on the learned poor for in struction ; and on the pious poor for sanctification. "Were it not for the poor, how mit.erably poor would the rich be ; yet with all their dependence on those who work for, amuse ; and instruct them, they affect an " independence" thut is truly ludicrous. ( -9° VlArita l (7 NAPOLEON-WASHINGTON. BY WILLIAM WARREN Fifty years have not yet passed away, since two' men, the most distinguished of modern times, ceased from among the living. They came forth alike from the midst of a Ilepublic. Each, for a time, held in his hands the desti nies of a nation. Toward each was directed' the admiring gaze of a whole continent. Each held an absolute sway over those by whom his superiority was acknowledged. Never, perhaps, in the history of the human race, has a man risen from comparative obscuri ty, to the loftiest heights of military glory, so rapidly and triumphantly, as Napb'Peoti'. Na ture, in mingling the element of his character, seemed bent on mischief. From his childhood he was distinguished for his firmness, which not unfrequently degenerated into unreasonable obstinacy. In early youth, choosing arms for his profession, and possessed of an ambition which no disappointment could destroy, and which no success could satiate, it needed no Prophetic inspiration to predict his course in after life. His opinions, once formed, however hastily, whether right or wrong, were rarely changed. His plans, which astonish by their apparent rashness, none but Napoleon would have devised—none but Napoleon could have accomplished. He never calculated the chan ces of a failure. Though any of his underta kings required the sacrifice of many thousand lives, yet was his course marked by no hesita tion. At one time we beheld him traversing the streets of Paris, with all the honors of a lei. , umph. At another, he is surrounded by a te bellious mob, whose rage the sword and the bayonet are scarcely able to restrain. To-day, from the ice-crowned summits of the Alps, he falls with the avalanche upon his astonished foes. To-morrow, he seeks in vain for peace at the hands of his conquerors. Now we hear the voice of the populace, as with a wild enthu siasm, they hail him , Emperor of France, and anon, the lonely island of the &eau has become his resting place—the dashing billows as they break mournfully upon the rocky shores of St. Helena, chant his funeral dirge—and the worm of the charnel makes a luscious feast on what was once Nopoleon. How unlike this was the dazzling, but far more glorious carreer of our own revered Washington. Engaging early in the glory of the colonies for independence, he exhibited tal ents, which showed that he was destined not to follow but to lead. Soon is he placed in com mand of the whole American forces, and ever shows, by his wisdom, his prudence, and his firmness, that he is by no means unfitted for his station. The motives which urged him on ward, were pure and honorable. Looking into the recesses of his heart, we find there no traces of an unholy ambition. The God he worship ped was the King of kings—the end he aimed at, the deliverance of his country. Never do we find him within the walls of the capitol, en forcing his authority by violence and arms ; but the breezes of midnight pause and listen, as they sweep by in some lonely solitude, uttering the hoMage cf his soul in prayer, or seeking coun sel of the God of battles. He accomplished his object. The shackles of oppression were bro ken. His country was ftee . . He might have reigned as a monarch; but he preferred the retifenVent of a domestic life to the adoration of a land, he might almost be said to have created." He passed his days in honored repose, and dy ing, shed a deep, yet hallowed gloom all over a whole continent. Napoleon, like motherless Minerva, seemed to spring into existence, clad in complete pano ply. For a time he hurried on, with all the fa ry and desperation of a fiend incarnate, from conquest to conquest. He hangs for a brief pe riod on. the lofty summits of the Alps—stays a moment in his course to apyly the torch to kindling Moscow—and rushes on madly to de feat in the plains of Waterloo. Thus robbed of his imperial power, and deprived of all the in signia of royalty, the feeble glimmering of his faded glory sheds but a twilight radience over the lonely island of Helena. Well may his coun trymen erect over his rescued bones the stately mauseletim, and grave the history of his ;glori ous deeds upon the monumental marble. Per haps such mementoes are needed to call up the recollection of the bloody scenes which ware enacted for the gratification of his mad—his un restrained ambition. For Washington, we ask no such memorials. The toWeting monument, or the time defying Marble, are unnecessary to perpetuate his fame. His name is graven deeply upon the hearts of his countrymen—his virtues are inscribed in living characters on tablets of memory. We are unworthy to speak his praise. Let Hamlet be his eulogist. How infinite in faculties! in form, and moving; how expressive and admira ble ! in action, how like an angel I in appre- hension, how like a god !" Let Marc Antony give his epitaph His lire was gentle, and (lie elements So' mixed in him, that nature might stand up, And say to all the world, •ruts WAS A MAN." Loorc.—A gentlemen asked a country clergy man for the use of his pulpit for a young diSine, a relation of his. I really do not know," said the clergyman, , 4 how to refuse }ou; but if the young man could preach dotter that, we, my congregation will be diesatisfied with me after.. wards and if he should preach worse, I don't think WI fit to preach at at?. VOL, XV, NO. 13, FROM CALIF ORM. SACRAMENTO CITY, iiet, 939, 1899 Dear Relatives :—I am now in the thtiVing city call Sacramento, which nine months agd was not known; you may think it a big yarn, when I tell you that this said city now numbers about nix thousand inhabitants. There are but few houses here, the majority of the inhabitants lives in tents, and canvass houses. There are a gteat many sneering and dying from exposure, as this is the wet season, and I myself have et perieneed three days pretty heavy rain. lam not living in the above named city, but am lo cated in the gold region about forty miles east. I came here a few days ago, for a load of pro- Visions, and wile caught in the rain ; and cense , quently was detained about a Week. l'o , mor• row I shall leave for my home. There are sev en of us living in a good log building; but only three of us work together ; we have not made anything yet. If we have luck in getting this load of provisions up, we will have enough to do us for about five months. Provisions are ve ry high this fall. Flour $2O, per cwt., Pork $25 per cwt, Corn meal about the same in pro poriion, Rice 10 cis. per lb, Apples G.. 5 eta. per lb., Onions $l, per lb., Coffee 124 eta. per lb. Sugar 25 per lb. Good beets 530,00 per pair, (but I bought a pair for $l.O, which was reason. 'able price.) Other things are in about the same proportion. When persons buy their stuff they have to pay 50c. per cwt. for having it carried to the mines; this is California. We bought two mules, one for $B5, and the other for $.lO which carry about one hundred and sev enty pounds each. 1 have a pony of my .own which 1 brought over the plains, bSt I must leave him on the co'romons, fur the wet weather has near about killed him. If you were here to-day you Would think it awful' to see the im mense number of cattle and horses that are lying dead in town. But man and beast fare about alike in this wonderful country, though whets gold can be found in any of the mountains sottlh of this place ; and on some of the northern, and eastern also. You no doubt have heard many exaggerated tales, as well as some true ones about the gold diggings. The stuff is bete ; for I have dug it, and hope to dig more if my health will permit; it is not very good at present. With regard to the manlier in which we heed and travelled while coming here. It wan very rough, (no fruit,) and when we leave our home, which was a large tree, we sometimes would take a mule, and a pair of blankets and a few sea biscuits; when night came we had to hunt a new home coder some old oak, where the ground was smooth, and gram for the mule, for he had to hunt his own living. IThis is Califor nia; and this I have done many a night, and slept as sound as a rock, and expect to do it going home, and probably a nice moist night I may have. This is a !mall sketch of gold liv ing. I will now tell you how we dig it. We in the fitst place get a pick, shovel, iron spoon and a large tin pan; and then we get in some creek, on a bar termed by high water, dig until we fine solid rock, and there we may find it ; but if riot on the rock, no stopping there,. perhaps two or more days work lost, sometimes we find it in little ravines where it is scattered all along. Some men make fortunes, while otl, era make but a living; it is like all gold dig ging, or gold making ; you must have luck, work hard, and then save all you get. I have often seen fifty dollars dug in one day. There was a lump found close by me one dej , that weighed three ounces: I have out now worth nineteen dollars ;' /oh each things and places are scarce. I got through my journey safe and sound, and hope to do well. But if any of my friends have the gold fever give theta a dose of picks and shovels and work it off with tin pans filled with gravel and mixed with a few cents worth of gold dust; and I think it will cure them. I was offered work the other day at my trade (which is Tinning) at tell dollars per day, and board, for the winter, which WWI a very good offer indeed ; but as I had gone to so much expense in getting up stuff, I thought I would wait until Spring and then if mining proved as it had with nie, I would quit it, and work at my trade. I speak of Spring, bet it is all Spring and the proper name would be wet and dry sea son. It is said here that it stops raining in rebruary, and then it is Spring. Snow never falls in the valleys. (the grass is shooting up finely) but it can be seen ell around us on the mountains. I shall write no more at present, but ask you to answer this soon, for I am wiz ions to hear from you. Give my love to all. I still remain your sincere friend. JAMES LOWER, Diamond cut Diamond. The other dayagentleman who had occasion to cross New York in a cab, found, on alighting, that he had no change in his pocket. The only shop at hand was a cigar store in which were some three or four fellows beside the proprietor putting the villainous weed, The gentleman entered, requesting, the cab man to tollow him, and handing a live dollar bill to the Yorker," asked him to change it. The cigar vender handed him a three dollar bill and the rest in silver, out of which the cabman was paid, and went on his way rejoicing. But a moment afterwards, the gentleman looking at the bill, found it to be a very suspi cious looking document, purporting to be a promissory note of the llogtown Lumber and Alining company, or some such ambiguous and apocryphal institution. Finding that he had been shaved, he asked the cigar vender if that was a good bill. " A 'good bill ! yes ! I wish I turd ten thou sand of 'em," was the answer. Bill!" (wink ing to a villainous Whoy) "isn't that 'ere a good bill 1" Good as whent said the bey ; and •' good. good I" was echoed around the shop. Very well," said the gentleman, € 4 I asked for inlormation. You seem to have no doubt of the genuineness of the note, and(ad you were kind enongh to accommodate me, I think the hest thing r can do is to break it at your coun ter. Gentlemen, try another eigat apiece at my expense. The cigar man 'Vas regularly taken in and done for—caught in his own trap. With great reluctance he changed the spurious note, and the operation cost the intended victim but about a As lie was leaving the store, one of the B'hoye touched hit* bn the shoulder. " You're otie Of 'em," said he, " and I'll bet high that you're a Yankee." ain't any thing else," replied the seaste. man, "and while I'm in this 'pal! village, 3 mean to keen my PY*4 nrten