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And barefoot follow'd o'er the ice, the god-like chief who led, Is menaced by the serpent forms of bigotry and hate, Who coil their folds around to crush. Rise, ere it is too late! Up! if you value liberty, your native land and home— With indignation hurling back the insolence of Rome. Speak as your patriot sires spoke, when Britons on this shore, Forgot the ties of brotherhood, and stained our soil with gore: Speak with your sabres buckled on—the rifle in your hand; Or standing at the cannon's mouth, speak for your native land; Ay I let them plainly understand, no Pope shall interfere, With freedom drove from other climes, and find refuge here. 'Tis yoqr bequest; oh, guard it then with vigi lance and care. And keep your sleepless eyes upon the tiger in his lair, When landed from the 'May Flow'rs' deck, the staunch old Pilgrim stock, Found that for which they left their homes, on Plymouth's sacred rock ; What reck'd they for the driving snow, and Winter's chilling blast, Or for the blinding hail and sleet, that fiercely whistled past? They stood unshackled on the ground, where white man ne'r had trod, No prelate there, denying them the right to worship God Here in their thankfulness of heart, they breath ed the fervent prayer, And hymns arose where savage yells were wont to fill the air. Alone, these iron men endured, but for spin ion's take, 'The red man's tomahawk and brand, the scalp. • ing knife and stake ; The acorn planted there, has grown unto a goodly tree, And spread its sheltering branches o'er the birth-place of the free. Shall Loyola's demons to its roots the fatal axe apply, While we who claim it as our own, with folded arms stand by ? Look back upon the dreary past where Rome has held the rein, Upon the poor benighted lands of Italy and Spain. See in the future, thongi and chains, racks, dungeons—everywhere, Whilst your posterity with shrieks and curses rend the air. Remember St. Bartholomew, whence flowed the crimsoned flood;, And gray-haired men, and fair young maids, lay weltering in blood, Behold the mocking, taunting priest, devoid of truth and shame, Exulting laugh at every groan arising from the flame! Gaze on the quivering, shrinking flesh, whore heated pincers tear, And see the torured victim writhe in anguish and despair. These are the blessings in reserve for those who will not bend Their reason to the mandate which an imbecile Ohl if thec tet erre . nt of our sires is coursing thro' your veins, Tarn on the jailors of the mind and rend their loathsome chains; Encourage not the papist crew, in word, is -deed, iu thought, Bat keep inviolate the boon for which our fathers fought. In vain they bared their dauntless breasts—in vain they bled and died, If that fair gift for which they strove, to us is now denied; The right to speak, to think, to act, the right to worship God As conscience dictates, where they sleep in peace beneath the sod: This sacred privilege secured, by them trans mitted down Unto their sons; and shall they stoop when ty rants choose to frown? Shall laws enacted by the soltie, give way to Popish rules? Or shall they excommunicate the "Bible" from our Schools? Shall lust and superstition reign throughout our favored land— The sacred volume hid or burnt when foreign priests command? Must we be governed by the Pope, his minions, knaves and fools ? Shall they who know not liberty, direct our public schools? The pure and sparkling fountain, where the ire Ant mind can drink 'the waters of intelligence, that fort up to the brink. Itu 11411tii gb/ion OVtrilia • " I SEE NO STAR ABOVE THE lIOIUZON, PROMISING LIGHT TO GUIDE US, BUT THE INTELLIGENT, PATRIOTIC, UNITED WHIG PARTY OP THE UNITED STATES."--.[WEDSTER, Turn from the serpent's glittering eye, that dazzles hut to lure • Its unsuspecting victim to sting that has no cure. When beads and paler noslers are forced upon the youth, And holy coals and winking daubs drivo out tho word . of truth— When sticks and stones, and locks of hair, are looked upon with nwe, And subjects of a foreign prince direct and force the law— Then will our great Republic fall, or linger but in name, And we who eon avert the blow, damned to eternal fame. Lulled into false security, we're closed our eves too long, And 'find the faction we despised grown inso• . lent and strong. Shall such things be? A million hearts of brave men answer—no I Arouse, then, 'ere it is too lute, and give them blow for blow; If there is no alternative, let force with force be met, Unsheath the sword, and crimson dye the gleaming bayonet. Rather than yield our birth-right up, the land shall stream with gore, And Muskets flash, as - flashed the ones our darling fathers bore; The only Spot where freedom holds a resting place on earth, Will find its sole protection from her citizens by birth. Pure as the virgin gold shall be that freedom from alloy- - - No alien hand dare tamper with the blessings We 17la e c e e n d jo tIo : Bible in our schools, to point the young on high, And cheer them in their pilgrimage—well keep it there or die. OUR UNION. The blood that flowed at Lexington, and crim soned bright Champlain, Streams still along the Southern Gulf, and by the Lakes of Maine ; It flows in veins that swell above Pacific's golded sand, AC throbs in hearts that love and grieve by dark Atlantic's strand. It binds in one vast brotherhood the trapper of the West, With men whose cities glass themselves in Erie's classic breast; And those to whom September brings the fire side's social hours, With those who see December's brow enwreath ed with gorgeous flowers. From where Columbia laughs to greet the smiling Western wave. To where Potomac sighs beside the patriot he• ro's grave : And from the streaming everglades to Huron's lordly flood, The glory of the nations past thrills through a kindred blood! Wherever Arnold's tale is told it dyes in cheek with shame, And glows with pride o'er Bunker Hill or Moultrie's wilder fame ; And wheresoever above the fray the stars of empire gleam Upon the deck or o'er the dust it pours a com mon stream. It is a sacred legacy ye never can divide, Nor take from village urchin, nor the son of ei• ty pride ; Nor the hunter's white hair'd children who find a fruitful home Where nameless lakes are sparkling, and where lonely rivers roam I Green drew his sword at Eutaw; and bleeding Southern feet Trod the march across the Delaware amid the snow and sleet And lo! upon the parchment, where the natal record chines, The burning page of Jefferson bears Frank lin's calmer lines. Could ye divide that record bright, and tear the names apart, That first were written boldly there with plight. ed band and heart? Could ye erase a Hancock's name e'en with a sabre's edge, Or wash out with fraternal blood a Carroll's double pledge ? Say, can the South sell out her share iu Bunk• er's hoary height? Or can the North give up her boast in York• town's closing fight S Can ye divide with equal hands a hermitage of graves, Or rend in twain the starry nag that o'er them proudly waves? Can ye cast lots for Vernon's soil, or chaffer mid tho gloom, That hangs its solemn folds about your com• mon Father's tomb ? Or could ye meet around his grave as fratrici• dal foes. And wreak your burning curses o'er his pure and calm repose ? Ye dare not ! is the Alleghenian thunder-to. ned decree, 'Tie echoed where Nevada guards the blue and tranquil sea, Where tropic waves delighted clasp our flowery Southern shore, And where through frowning mountain-gates Nebraska waters roar. THE SPIRIT OF PROGRESS. The gloomy night is breaking, E'en now the sunbeams rest, With faint, yet cheering radiance, On the hill-tops of the West. The mists are slowly rising From the valley and the plain, And the spirit is awakening, That shall never sleep again. And ye may hear, that listen, The spirit's stirring song, The surges like the ocean, With its solemn bass alone— Ho I can ye stay the rivers, Or bind the wings of light, Or bring back to the morning The old departed night? Nor shall ye check my impulse, Nor stay it for an hour, Until earth's groaning millions Have felt the healing power The spirit is Progression, In the vigor of its youth; The foeman of Oppression, And its armor is the TRUTH. Old Error with its legions Must fall beneath its wrath; Mor blood nor tears nor anguish, Will mark its brilliant path. But onward, upward, heavenward, The spirit still will soar, I ill PF.ACE and Love shall triumph, F.II.9TMOOD Trig. on MOT, HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1854. gnaw of Nistog. The Circassian's Daughter. Some years ago a gentleman arrived one morning at the door of the British consul-gen. cral at Bucharest, dressed in the wild, travel stained garb of a Transylvania shepherd. His beard was untrimmed, his sandals covered with soil, while a settled melancholy pervaded his features. The consul-general invited him to his house, and made him his guest. He was an Englishman of large fortune. A wound in the affections had driven him from home, and he wandered on as far as the Carpathian Moun tains, where for sometime he led the rude life of the hunter—hoping that in change of scene and excitement of the chase he might . find a cure. He was disappointed, however, for there was not sufficient danger in bear and wolf-hun. ting to give it the excitement he required, and ho left the Carpathian forests, and wandered alone in the desolate steppes of Wallachia, slt. ring the food of the stray herdsmen he happen. ed to meet and sleeping wherever he was over taken by the night. Each day that he remain ed at Bucharest he grew more and more 'tulip. py, till one morning the consul.general happen. ed to receive a letter from Constantinople, giv ing the details of a victory which the Circas. skins had gained over the Russians. The let ter was written by an enthusiast in the cause of Circassian independence. The description of the fight was animated, and the letter con. clued with a glowing panegyric upon the bra very of the Circassian warriors, and prediction of the noble cause in which they were engaged. The moment this letter was shown by the con sul-general to his guest—whom .I shall call Manly—the latter determined at once to start for Cireassia, and volunteer into the ranks of mountaineers. That very night Manly started for Guirgevo, where he crossed the Danube to Rutschuk, and there engaged horses and a guide, and proceeded on to Constantinople. In that city Manly found another Englishman ready to join in his expedition, and instantly freighting a Turkish vessel with salt, some am munition and arms he sailed for the coast of Cireassia. This was about the time the Vixen was captured by a Russian man-of-war, and her crew imprisoned. The coast of Cireassia was more strictly blockaded than ever, and it was only after the most hair breadth escapes that Manly and his freind succeeded in landing. They were well received by the Circassian chiefs, to whom they brought letters of intro duction; but what was more highly prized than the letters was the salt, the ammunition, and the arms, which were quickly landed, The ves sel in which they came then sailed on her way back to Constantinople, but, a short distance from the Circassian coast, was captured by a Russian cruiser, was brought into the Turkish port of Trebizond, and was there burned by the Russians, notwithstanding the objections of the Governor. The two Englishmen proceed. ed into the mountains with the Circassians, to where the fighting was going on, and they were soon busily engaged in skirmishing and am. buscading, and at times in hand to hand en counters with the Muscovites. Manly, mount. ed on a fiery Tartar horse, clad in chain armor, and with a long lance in his hand, was in the thick of every danger. lie courted death: but for a long time passed unscathed front lance or bullet. At length, in a sharp encounter wills a party of Russians, he was struck by a chance shot, and, though not seriously wounded, he was forced to submit to be carried to the house of one of the chiefs, where he was recommend ed to remain till his wound should be healed. The wife and daughter of the chief in whose house he was quartered, tended him with care and skill, and he was soon able to move about, but was still too weak to return to the camp. The chief's daughter was about fifteen years old : she was called in the country "The Rose," on account of her beauty. She was gentle and intelligent, and Manly passed many of the hours of his convalescence in giving her instruction in some of those simple accomplishments which form the first rudiments of an education in Eu rope. There is something ineffably winning in the manners of the Mahominedun women of the east. They possess a timid gentleness rind a native grave which are commonly feminine. They are taught to believe themselves as far in ferior to men—as creatures of clay that have no existence beyond this world—and their manner therefore, to our rougher sex, is one that woos protection. It is this feeling of in feriority which gives to the face of the oriental girl, when in repitse, that expression of dreamy sadness, and that inward look to her lustrous eye—for if she is not beloved, the end and ob ject of her life is not fulfilled. Rose made rap. id progress under Manly: and when, after some months, the camp was broken up on approach of winter, and when her father returned home, she quite astonished the poor chief with her Frankish learning. The winter passed rapidly by. The snow and the ice disappeared—the stream was again babbling merrily before the door of the Circas sian keep—the forest trees were coming into leaf—and the wild flowers and aromatic plants which covered the hills filled the air with per fume. The mountaineers began their prepa rations for war; but Manly had found a pallia tive for the sorrows of his brain, and determi ned to return to England; but he would not part from "The Rose." He knew the fate for which the poor child was destined, and, there fore, bad no hesitation in proposing to the old chief to take her with him to Frankistan, and to adopt her as his daughter; for, he said ho had grown to love her as his child. The chief said that his daughter was beautiful, and that, thanks to Manly, she had learned certain ac complishments which increased her value.— She would, therefore, he said, fetch a eery high price at Constantinople, arid that it was his in tention at once to take her to the slave tparket in that city, where she was sure to be bought ' by one of the great paehaa, or perhaps by the pedischa Manly offered to give any sum the chief named—but it was useless. The old man said he would never permit his child to live among Giaours—for she would be much happier and bettor as an odalisk at - Stamboul, where she would ride in a gilded araba, wear a jewelled fez ; and have armed kislers to do her bidding. Manly still persisted in his offers; and the chief at length said he would give him a final answer on the following day. At a short distance from the house manly found Rose, seated on the ground, weeping. It was a place at which they had often sat together, talking of the strange country from which the Englishmen came. Poor Rose had overheard Danly's proposal and her father's refusal. She was no longer a child; she had passed rapidly into budding womanhood. If Manly loved her ns a daughter, her feelings for him had grown into a timid and passionate love. Manly said that her father would be sure to consent, and that they would both be happy together in Frankistan. So poor Rose was comforted.— She dried her tears, and returned to the house confident and cheerful. The sun had risen for a time when Manly awoke next morning. He was astonished to hear none of the usual sounds about the house. There was something ominious in the silence. He dressed hastily, hurried into the principal apartment, and found it empty. With a beat ing heart, he called Rose; but there was no an swer. He went out, and met an armed Circas sian coming from the stables where his horse was kept. This man told him that the chief and all his family had left for. Batoun in the middle of the night, where they were to embark for Constantinople. He was left behind, he said, to wait on the Monsafeer, and to be his guide wherever he wished to go. Some months afterwards, Manly arrived at Constantinople. He made every inquiry among the Circassians at Tophana, to try to discover some clue to the old chief and his daughter; but all in vain. One day he was coming down the Bosphorus in a calque he was passing close along the Asiatic shore, and had reached the village of Kandejee, when an old woman who was standing on the marble steps which led into the piney, or summer residence stone of the great pacha's, called to him to stop.— ' She asked him if he was a doctor. He answer ed that ho knew something of medicine; so she made him a sign to follow her into the house. She led him along silently into one of the small rooms of the harem. The apartment was dim ly lighted, for the silken draperies of the lattice were closely drawn. On the divan lay the form of a young girl. Her hands were pressed upon her bosom, and she was moaning feebly. At the noise which Manly made in approach. ing she raised her eyes, .8,, suddenly starting sip, she put back the long, dark hair, which fell loose upon her shoulders, and, after staring wildly at him for a few minutes, she fell back upon the divan, apparently lifeless. It was poor Rose who lay before him. Under his care her senses returned; but instantly saw to his unutterable grief, that She was dying. Immo. diately on her arrival at Stamboul, she told him, she was bought for a large! suns by the pacha in whose house she then lay. The 'm elte made her Isis favorite, and the other oda. lisks grew jealous. Finding they could not succeed in alienating the pacha's love from Rose, they determined to poison her; and that very morning she had swallowed the fatal drug in her coffee. She said she did not regret to die; for her life had been one of constant suffer ing since her separation from Manly. She could never love but him, and she would take her love with her to the other world he spoke of, and there await his coming. And she talk ed of her native mountains, and of the happy hours they had passed there together; and speaking in this way, she laid her head upon his shoulder, and drawing a long sigh, she died. She is buried among the cypress trees, upon a height above the pacha's yallay. It was on a summer's evening, years ago, when seated be side Rose's grave, that I heard her story. Manly went home and entered Parliament; and he is at present a worthy member of the House of Commons. He is still unmarried, and, I believe, means to die a bachelor. ( iogral)l2 . y. John Jacob Astor, Vincent Nolte, a Frenchman, has written a book of his experiences in America. He was acquainted with John Jacob Astor, the richest man in the United State?, who died several years since, leaving a property which at this time is worth between twenty and thirty mill ions of dollars. Seven millions of this he will ed to his nieces and grandchildren, and there. sidue to his SOO ; Wm. B. Astor, who bidsfair to be a much richer man than his father, and per haps is so at this moment. M. Nolte gives the following sketch of Astor's eady life John Jacob Astor had distinguished himself front the mass of German emigrants by his im portant successes, his speculative spirit, and his great wealth, and had won a certain celeb rity. He was the founder of thi Amercan col ony of Astoria, on the northermonst of the Pa cific Ocean, which ho has hoer so graphically and picturesquely described the pen of Washington Irving. Astor was born at Heid elberg, where the original name of his family is said to have been Asebtor. and bad come to N. York as a furrier's apprentice. His first sac. ings,that is to eay,the wages he got in the peltry warehouse for beating out andrprepariug bear, doe and other skins, he invested in the purchase of all kinds of peltry, hear, mink, mid rabbit skins, which he got from the Indians, who, at that time, wandered about the streets of New York; and so soon as he had collected acertain quantity, he sent them to Europe, particularly to the Leipsic fair. There he traded them . uff for Nuremberg wares, cheap knives, glass bends and other articles adapted to trade with the In dians on the Canadian frontiers,and took them himself to the latter points, where be again ex changed them for furs of various kind, Ache has often told me with his own lips, he carried on this traffic untiringly for twelve long years; going, in person, alternately, to the Canadian frontiers, and then to the Leipsie fair, and liv ed all the while as be had ever been accustom ed to do, humbly and sparingly. At length he had managed to bring together a considerable capital, and gradually became a freighter of ships, and fitted out expeditions to the North west Coast, to trade with the Indians of Nootka Sound for furs. Another circumstance contri buted to the increase of his means. At the peace concluded in 1783,between England a her revolted provinces—the thirteen United States —many acres of land in the State of N. York, sense even in the neighborhood of N. York ci ty, were voted by Congress to the German sol• diers who had fought in the American army.— The latter were chiefly Hessians and Darm stadters. Most of them died in the course of the year, without having converted this proper. ty into money; but the relatives and heirs they left behind them in Germany did not forget these little inheritances. Upon the one occa sion of a visit made by Astor to Heidelberg, in later years, most of the parties last refferred to, as inheriting the allotments of the deceased German soldiers, and residing in Heidelberg, united and made our friend their legally auth orized attorney in order to realize something, if possible, from their hitherto useless acres.— But the hoped for increase of the value of this property was on the whole rather slow in com ing, and the heirs wanted money, money, quick and ready money. Astor having been applied to on this score, said that in order to get ready money they must reckon up the real presentval• ue of the cash itself, and not any imagined val ue of the land, and that only through pretty con siderable sacrifice could they get cash for the sin% Thereupon the parties advised with each 'Ala ) and finally Astor received peremptory orderli to sell without further delay. Unknown speculators were found ; the proceeds were srnall, but the heirs got what they wanted— money. At the present day, many of these pie ces of ground are among the most valueable and important in the city, and have gradually passed through Astor into other hands; the un known speculatorrs, however, hare faded from the memory of everybody. Astor, at the time of Jefferson's embargo, was a rich man, and a successful merchant,— The permission (procured by Parish) to send out ships in ballast to bring home silver, had given Astor the idea that the same privilege might be extended to vessels dispatched for the purpose of bringing home the amount of detbs due abroad in gOods; with this view, he went to Washington, and there, under the pretence that he had an important depot of teas at Canton, obtained permission to send a vesssel thither in ballast. This step, however, was only the fore runner of another one. Astor, in reality own ed no depot, and hence he brought teas and sold them in America at vast profits. To effect this he hunted up, among the Chinese sailors, or bascars, on the ships lately arrived from China, a fellow suited to his purpose, dressed him as a Mandarin, and took him with him to Washington, where he had to play the part of Chinese creditor, under the name of Hong Qua, or Kina Hole. No ono dreamed of suspecting the Mandarin's identity, and Astor, pushed his scheme safely through. He sem etly sent $2OO, 000 to Canton, and the returns realized half a millions dollars profit. Thus a stroke of skill had been achieved whose morality no one in the United States doubted for a moment. Astor left a fortune of about $24,000,000, chiefly to his only son. His mind was inces santly busied with the increase of his resourc es, and had no other direction. He was com pelled by physical infirmity to repair to Paris, where he could avail himself of the skillful as sistance of Baron Dupuytren. The latterthor oughty restored hint, and advised him to ride out every day. He frequently tools occasion to accompany his patient on these rides. One day—and this anecdote I have from the Baron's own mouth—when riding, he appeared by no means disposed to converse; not a word could be got out of him; at length Dupuytren declar ed that ho must be suffering from some secret pain or trouble when he would not speak. He pressed him, and worried hint, until Astor loos ed his tongue—" Look ye I Baron I" be said, 'how frightful this is I I have here in the hands of my banker, at Paris, 2,000,000 francs, and cannot manage without great effort, to get more than 21 per• cent. per annum on it. Now this very day I have received a letter from my son in New York informing me that there the best acceptances are at from 1 to 11 per cent. per month. Is it not enough to enrage a man?" Rules for Life• The following rules for the business of life, were lately written by a father on the blank leaf of his son's bible, and contains much in little:— Choose the path of virtue, and imitate a high pattern. Do all the good in thy power, and let every action ho useful. Cultivate thy mind carefully—it will be a atom of reflection. Bo diligent in thy business, and strictly up- right in all thy dealings. Investigate affairs closely, and engage in them cautiously. Lay thy plans with prudence, and be prelim. red for emergencies. In difficulties be patient, and overcome them by perseverance. Do that first, always, which needs doing most. Have a place for everything, and everything in its place. In all things ho economical without mean• nets, and combine utility with elegance' Ifel.lt often happens that they aro the best people whose characters have been most injur ed by slander—as we often find it to bo the sweetest fruit which the birds have been pick• ing at. S' The weather continn , pl •a arc pisallantous. Wearing Apparel at tliiT l Nime of the American Revolution. In those days men wore wigs, surmounted by three-cornered or cocked hats, no higher than the crown of the head. Their coats had standing collars, large wide stiffs, mud volumi nous skirts, lined and stuffed with buckram.— That of a beau had three or four large plaits in his skirts, with an immense quantity of wad diug to keep them smooth; cuffs extended to the elbows, open below, inclined down, with lead therein; and a cape worn low, so as readi ly to expose the closely-plaited neck-stock of fine linen cambric, and the large silver stock buckle at the back of the neck. Their shirts had frills, hand ruffles, and finely-plaited sleeves, but no collars. Gold and silver sleeve-buttons, set with stone or paste of various colors and kinds, adorned the wrists of all. Their breech es fitted closely, with silver, stone, and paste buckles at the knee. Suspenders were un known; and it was considered the test, as well as the pride, of a well-formed man, when he could keep his breeches above his hips and in his stockings above his calves, without belt or garter. They wore shoes or pumps, with sil ver buckles of various sizes and patterns.— When riding, hunting, Le., they wore long hoots, or leather leggins, The boys were dres sed like the men, even to the shaved head and powdered wigs. The ladies all wore caps, stiff stays, hoops extending from six inches to two feet on each side (causing a full dressed lady to enter a door sideways like a crab), and high heeled shoes of black stuff, with white silk or thread stockings. In the miry time of Winter they wore clogs or pattens. Their hair was most elaborately arranged, being powdered, po matumed, and drawn over a pad frequently three or four inches high. As soon as wigs were abandoned by the men, the natural hair was particularly cherished, and it became cus tomary to plait it, or wear it in a black sills bag or sack, adorned with a large black rose. In time, "Brutus beads"—which consisted in discarding powder, perfume, frizzle, sacks, cues, &c.—came in vogue. Those who first braved public opinion, by adopting this fashion, were considered very courageous; and the old men were particularly obstinate in their opposition to it. Death, however, constantly lessened their number, and the mode gradually became pop ular. A Home Item. We adopt the following hints which we find in an exchange, as a "home item," and we wish that all our readers may treasure them up in their hearts and suffer them to be ever presen t in their memory. We have probably all of us met with instances in which n word heedlessly spoken against the reputation of a female hits been magnified by malicious minds until the cloud has become dark enough to overshadow her whole existence. To those who are accus tomed—not necessarily from bad motives but from thoughtlessness—to speak lightly of fe males we recommend the "hints" as worthy of consideration: "Never use a lady's name in an improper place, at an improper time or in a mixed company! Never make assertions about her that you think aro untrue, or allusions that you feel she herself would blush to hear. When you meet with men who do not scruple to make use of a woman's name in a reckless and un• principled manner, shun them, for they are the very worst members of the community, men lost to every sense of honor—every feeling of ' humanity. Many a good and worthy woman's character has been forever ruined, and her heart broken by a lie, manufactured by some villain, and repeated where it should not have been, and in the presence of those whose little judgment could not deter them from circulating the foul mid bragging report. A slander is soon propagated, and the smallest thing derog atory to a woman's character will fly on the wings of the wind, and magnify as it circulutes until its monstrous weight crushes the poor un conscious victim. Respect the name of wo man. for your mother, your sister, are women, and as you would have their fair name untarn. ished, and their lives unembittered by the slim. tierces biting tongue, heed the ill that your own words may bring upon the mother, the sis ter or the wife of some fellow creature." A Singular Animal. Among the lower animals tenacity of life is the most remarkable iu the polypi : they may he pounded in a mortar, split up, turned inside out like a glove, and divided into parts without injury to it. Fire alone is fatal to them. Ii is now about a hundred years since Trembly made us acquainted with these animals, and first din. covered their indestructibility. It has subse quently been taken up by other natural histori ans, who have followed these experiments, and have followed these experiments, and have gone even so far as to produce monsters by grafting. If they he turned inside out, theyat. attempt:to replace themselves, uusuccessfully, the outer surface assumes the properties and power of the inner, and the reverse. If the ef fort be partially successful only, the parts turn ed back dissappeared in twenty-four hours, and that part of the body embraces it in such a manner that the arms which project behind are now fixed in the centre of the body; tho origin al opening disappears, and in the room of feel ers a new mouth is formed, to which new feel ers attach themselves and this new mouthfeeds immediately. The healed extremity elongates itself into a tail, of which the animal has two. If two polypi be passed into one another like tubes, and pierced through with a bristle, the inner one works its way through the other and comes forth again in a few days ; in some in stances, however, they grew together and then a double row of feelers surround the mouth. If they be mutilated the divided parts grow to gether again, and even pieces of two separate individuals will unite into one. tor"ltteognitio - nw.v the tt-rm for "drunk... VOL. 19. NO. 34. Roadside Confab. "And eo, Bquire, you don't take your county paper ?" "No, Major. I get the city papers on much better terms; and no I take a couple of them." "But, Squire, these county papers prove great convenience to us. The morelife en courage them the better their editors can make them.;" "Why I don't know any convenience they are to me." "The farm you sold lest fall was advertised in one of them, andy i p thapby obtained a customer. Did you nor" "Very true, Major, but I paid three dolls& for it." • "And made much more than three dollars by it. Now, if your neighbors had not main tained that press and kept it ready for your use, you would hare been without the nteans of advertising your farm. I saw a notice of your daughter's marriage in one of those pa• pers; did that cost anything "No, but.—" - "And your brother's death sass published with a long obituary notice." "Yes, but—" "And the destructicor of your neighbor Brigg's house by fire. You knew these things were exaggerated till the authentieeecounts of our newspaper set them right." "Oh, true, but-- "And when your Cousin Splash was out for the Legislature on appeared much gratified at Ins newspaper defence, which cost him noth• "Yes, yes, but these are news for the read ers. They cause people to take papers." "No, no, 'Squire Grudge, not if all are like you. Now, I tell you, the day will come when sumo one will write a very long eulogy on your life and chef:icier, and the printer will put it in type, with a heavy black line over it and with all your riches this will be done for you us the grave is given to a pauper. Your wealth, liberality and such things will be spoken of, but the printer's boy as he arranges the types to these sayings will remark of you: "Poor, mean devil, he is even sponging an obituary Good morning, Squire." Look at the Bright Side. What is the use of looking as if you had season ticket for a funeral? Can't you find any better name for this world than "a ville of tears," and "a scene of tribulation?" If you can't, it will do no good to read a letter which a friend has just furnished us. It is from a wife, in Mass., to her husband, in California. She al. ways looks at the bright side. ,She doesn't in• tend going through the world as if "Muffled drums were beating Funeral marches to the grave." Here is her letter: MY DEAR HESDAMI: As it is some time since you left us for California, I suppose you would be glad to hear how we are getting along in your absence. lam happy to say that we are enjoying very good health on the whole.— Just at present two of the boys have got the small pox Amanda Jane has got the measles, Samuel got hooked by a cow the other day, and little Meter has chopped off three of his fingers with the hatchet. Its a mercy that ho didn't chop them alt Itr. With these trifling ex. ceptions, we are all well and are getting along nicely. You needn't be at all anxious about us. I almost forgot to nay that Sarah Matilda e loped, last week, with a tin pedlar. Poor girl! she's been waiting for the last ten years for a chance, and I'm glad she's got married at last. She needn't have taken the trouble to elope, though, for I'm sure I was glad enough to hare her go. She was a great cater. and I find the baked beans don't go off near as fast as they did. The way that girl would dip into pork and bear.s, was a caution to the rest of the family. The cow took it into her head yesterday to run away, which was very fortunate, I'm sure, for the barn caught fire last night and was con sumed. I was in hopes the house would go, for it's very inconvenient; but the wind was the wrong way, so it didn't receive much injury. Some boys broke into the orchard the other day and stripped all the trees. lam very glad of it. If they hadn't, I presume the children would have made themselves sick by eating too much fruit. Hoping that you enjoy yourself in California as well as we do at home, I remain your affec- tionate wife. A Husband or a Hundred Dollars. A few days ago a buxom Irish woman, fat and forty, arrived in Springfield, Mass., by one of the Boston trains, in hot pursuit of a truant. lover. Having ascertained his whereabouts, a warrant is procured fur his arrest for breach of marriage promise, alleging damages in the sum of $lOO. Duly armed with this missive, officer Walker made Isis acquaintance, giving him a choice of alternative, marriage or damage. The former was assented to, and under pretence of arranging his toilet for the nuptial ceremony, he was permitted to retire to his room, but was followed almost immediately by the officer, who was just in time to see the promised bride groom, thro' an open window, spanning an op posite field at 2.40 gait. Quietly taking pos sion of the fugitive's forgotten wardrobe, which was found to contain nearly $l5O in cash, more than enough to satisfy the warrant and heal the brokenhearted, the knight of the "star" was content to wait issue. Twenty-four bourn bret back the unwilling bridegroom, who, unable to recover his money without giving himself in ex change, finally yielded obedience to his fate. The marriage was soon perfected, and the groom, apparently resigned and contented, left in the next train for Boston, accompanied by his bride, whose extravagant grins betokened an overjoyed heart at her successful pursuit of & husband under difficulties.—.sprinftfitid Rep. sir An author unknown achieves the fol lowing remark. The entrance of a single wo man of talent into a family, io suffieient to keep it clear of fools for several generations.