.t.,e .11,;!.,..'.[1tti1t.4b0n aksitia WILLIAM BREWSTER, 1. SAM. G. WHITTAKER, FDITORS. (stlect 'cj.)octri). WHAT MAX BE OURS. TA L 2011]:;111 ilaCiNKaJo • Thou that dust pine indeed, o,l% . ealth more precious thFan rich gemsor gold DV KISS I.HUISA H. SHERIDAN. ~earti how to seek it ere the heart grows cold; • And tako Cor thy creed ; Among the primitive inhabitants of the Not who lore OA, b u t WIIOIII we love are oars. remote parts of Poland the great point of So Ault thou know thy vet nedreani'dofpowers. I emulation with the yonng melt is to be the Pt, thine no dooloing inhal ; best marksman of the dittrict ; for other Moro than thy eager hands eau grasp, More than thy - outstretched arms eau clasp, feats of skill or activity in their simple Thou !teeth:id, and shalt find. lives, there is but little struggle for pre.ein `llly treasure shall be countless and unknown ; For, all it lovt, the heart deih make its own. inence ; bneto attain dexterity with their Thor shalt break off Ow chains i guns, a vast deal of time, temper and pow-. That bind thee to the present : for tlio' Time, i dttr is annually wasted in every significant I.rawcoti as and his elder-born, uproars, hamlet. Most nations who possess this Like a huge bulwark, days, mouths midyears, The bond of brotherhood remains ; characteristic are impatient of restraint, but And o'er that towerin g watt, "", we wilt, can low in the scale of civilization and sci . Thus, more than those who share [climb. With thee the gentle air. Shall yield to the strong magic of the spell That lies in love, mid in IN heart shall dwell. And distance shall not limit thy deep love, If from the human flowers that flourish there Some wanderer chance, like Xmas gentle dove, To thee u token of licit bloom to bear, F,tr-ofr their 'maw may I,e, Beneath glory of au eastern slay, Or elate bright hales amid blue mum, lie And thou may :ir ,~~i t•il thi Own). li li and seuk r. l'ornon aVt.,,. • anV • itancits. teacupful of flour, three iTiola,,es, one of cream, one of butter, wieitiblespoonfitl of ginger, and of :Arai.. Hoax=.--Itemove the nihto I horn, and bind the stump With V well tarred and pitched ; any fabric Ii Llo to hind with, if the wounded part hir,t well cut ered with warm pitch. TO CURE --'l'ulco two ounces of lemon juice, half a drachm of powdered Ifilax, and a drue Im: if :agar. Alix:toge. (rep; mien' awn, - tinr.d it e her for reiv dnys in n glass bottle ; then rub it on the fare and hands occasionally. Balm!) L'o•r PIE —From this time forth like to have a good tunny pot pies. .A pio, two inches deep, needs only an up. per and under crust, filled with tipples; a deeper pan needs a middle crust ; sprin kle a little allspice and nutmeg, with was to otmu,gh to cook it; let it bake an hour or till tile apples are done, and eat with sweetened milk. Dried apples make e• • .•oily as good a pie, by first stewing HOW TO Day PUMPKINS AND 3111 V, TIIE PIE.— Perhaps some don't know the best way to dry pumpkins. It is this : —Cut them up and stew them until they are soft and dry ; pound and stait' through a col . ender : then grease pie pans. rind spread it on n quarter of en inch think, dry it ; and rod it up, and put it away in a tight . box, or bag, from itvects. Each one of ifbeso rolls will nmke a pie. It is very V esy now to make a pie. PUt it in sweet milk and let it sank fur about two hours; it,tt in en egg, a table spoonful of sugar, I'd a ten spoonful of ginger, and one of lspice; and if you are lovers of pump• iii pie, us we are, you will pronounce it te1 1.........”.• 'Amer FISH LIVINU IN A WELL Twarg ' O,- live YEARS.—M e. F. Hoyt, a corres• pcuirt of the Country Gentletnan writigs I•u,:i .South. East, New York, .November L • }A li, says : : 'Can any ono tell how long a trout fi sh . - I live ? Twenty.fivo years ago the iiitst summer I came on the furiu where I n'w am. Almost the first work that I d after getting in my spring crops, Wan t drain a bog swarnp, the outlet of which I• s into the Croton river. I had an old S tchman to do the ditching. One day I ti ito 'sir up a trout fish about the size I ,ig ii pari' s little finger, in his whiskey jug .. , 111 1 / 4 '. by we used a little, on the farm T et a . . 0.. I put it in the well near the house .ore c 4 o r flora now, grown ton goudly size table ~. 0 . d 4 . sot a foot long and large in proper '• • ~, It has beets fed but very little; once is ' !e some one throws in a grasshop• per r cricket, to see hint catch it. The ivei is thirty feet deep, and water hard, and ettles down nearly to the bottom, and the again rises to near the top. lle has been taken out a few times to , clean the well, but not fur the last live years. Fri day last, I got a grasshopper, the last one I expect loses this fall, and gave it to him. The water is now twenty-five feet deep, but It hardly touched the surface before he had it. If any one has a fish older than sniat‘i, I would like to know ii " 1 aic. Soon after the commencement of winter, it is customary in the provincial towns of Poland to hold an assemblage of those youths from the surrounding districts who have been noted for their skill in the sins!. ler communities, to make trial together in difficult innr . k shooting—for which prizes are distributed by the fur-clad 'miles "of the authorities," One of these annual meetings, souse years since, was attended by Ermann Sa tin i, a youth of about twenty, the only son of an extensive land proprietor, aid who was admitted, by even his nearest ri vals, tube the best shot in his native vil lage. The winter had set ,in early, with unu sual severity ; and Ermann, who had sev eral leagues to travel in his sledge, sur rounded himself with various defences of fur, which he more than shared with a large rough hound at Isis feet—an animal of such uncouth form that none but a lo ver's eye could have traced attraction therein, or have seen the necessity of guar d derby a sable pelisse. But Ermann was . a lover: the sagacious attached Slanth was a luve.gift from Minna Zabiuski, the coquettish love of Ermann ; and thus there i s no more to be slid respecting deviations from plain “comtnon sense." On arriving at the town, he proceeded to the square where tlw a....01.11311”.te was generally. held ; and here he found every thing in animated confusion. It liad just been proclaimed that, instead of the usual mark shooting, there was to be a wolf hunt in .a forest at some distance; the early se verity of the winter had forced the wolves to approach the town, and they had con,' !nutted great devastation on the surrounding farms, escaping ere morning to the forest; the prizes, therefore, would he awarded to those most skillful in destroying the depredator.. • I This exchange from mechanical to ani• mated sport excited the spirits of the young men, wlio sot forth in a gallant baud ; and they did not return from their fatiguing chase, until the red glow of sunset lighted up the savage trophies of their success, which they bore in triumph to the square, where the prizes were to be awarded. This had been no ordinary day for the young Ermann ; during the morning he had conversed some time with Minna, and she had made ono of her capricious decis ions us to visiting his mother's house for a week, dependant on,Erinann bearing away the third prize. The prospect of success was nut very flattering, as he had to con tend against so many more practical men than himself. But almost every one has, at some time in his life, a brief inspiration through powerful feelings, which makes men "surpass themselves," and to which they afterwards look back with calm won der at the sudden power they momentarily commanded. Ermann felt that the time of his marriage would be decided if the co qucttish Minna were once under his moth er's Tool: and, with this inspiration, he did wonder in the field and forest. Heed less of danger, %, and the rough dog were ever pressing lemma ; and, after each volley fired at the retresiing pack of the wolves, Ernialin's gun was loaded again with magic promptitude, and. °se of the savages generally brought down. When the band returned to the s rob, ve , and the trophies were examined, Erinann'e: Success exceeded Minna's stipulations, for the second prize was his reward ; and ho drove away in his sledge amidst the cheers cordial and prolonged of his companions. The evening was gray and chill ; Er mann, now that the excitement was over. felt the consequence of his over-exertion ; the poor dog had not escaped unharmed from the throes of the wolves, and be' lay stiff and weary at his master's feet ; even the gaily-caprisoned horse showed indica tions of fatigue from the additional distance he had been driven to the forest ; so the trio pursued their way very differently front the spirit of the morning. About two leagues from town, Ermann heard the merry tinkling of sledge bells - _ ~-~- " . 141 ERTY AND UNION, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INBEI RADIX. " HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2,18 L; coming after him in the so , forest symptoms of distress. Minna, who did road which led towards his , ; the not comprehend Ermann's strange pro now arrival draw up beside 1,1,„ nd he ceeding, after vainly remonstrating was greeted by th e gay voice of Sainislaus with him, had placed her hands on the Zabinski, the brother of Minna. reins, when the wolves, having reached Ermann ! stop Mal runaway the brow of the hill, caught sight of the steed of yours ; though potr tired wretch, objects which they hod tracked, at their if you stop him, perhaps, he willoever be discordant howl soon enlightened the hap. able to move again ; what astupid looking less girl as to the cause of her lover's trio—man, horse and dog ! Had yeti good haste. sport t' The famishing animals, scared from !?manna held up his prize, "airin g why their late haunts redoubled their ardor of Stan shuts had not attended the hu nt pursuit on seeir, the sledge: their gal 'O', ! the old cause—a woman; those , loping feet resounded on the hard road, women make me a slave, a victim !' "w ith. ed the handsbute Pole. it closer and closer. .Ermatin jets flight "—ere's my greet was no longer security :he seized the rt aunt, Froshkin, now asleep beside me, anti \ tie which had done such good service in she's also deaf as these pine trees, she i h should despatch one savage, the others , the morning, with the faint hope that, if wanted . to see the assembly, and the shout ing, and afterwards to visit her old friend, ttlikt forego the pursuit in order to nrey your mother; and she has detained me, on has.-.. The rifle proved to be unloaded, l ! driving her, all day." aid then the dreadful re collection flashed q have beard my mothe r speak of her, on "mina that he had exhausted the very and I shall be delighted to have her socie- last chary of his ammunition in the day's ty," returned the lover, speaking of the ' sport. old lady, but thinking of the grandniece, One of the ves had now reached the who was doubtless to follow under her cha- carriage, which he l'wsed, and evidently meant to spring on the Ito,. This would expose the travelers to instate death; and the frantic Ennann, seeing snottier mon ster gaining the side where Minna sat, seized, as his asty toe num.. , hound, aim him forth to encoutti., the terrible foes, of be must become the wtectm. The sagacious horse, now tremblingly aware of the dangers which beset him, j strained his panting frame for a fresh ef fort, without guidance from his master, who remained powerless, as though over whelmed by this his own deed, in sacral , cing the attached companion who had so' often defended him. Minna was also mo tionless, through fear and horror. Maddened by the sight, the youth spran g at its throat with so fierce a grasp that it was forced to relinquish its hold on I Minna. The eve balls rolled with green light ; the hot lreath came with difficulty over the protruding tongue; and Ertnann had almost convered the brute which ha preened twabarg4l,, j,„„j, but he had tw o other foes, who sprang on him, and with a deadly seizure pulled him from the vehicle., Minna saw no more. 1 ss/ r • The servants belonging to Ermann's fa- , ther were surprised by the sound of sledge bells at night in the court before the house for 'their youpg master had expressed an intention of remaining in the tot;n until the morning. They went forth cheerful ly to welcome the unexpected arrival, and ; there beheld a wretched exhausted horse, fallen in the harness of an apparently empty sledge. On moving the sable pet. isse in the letter, they discovered the mo tionless form of Minna Zabinski. During the day she recovered from the heavy swoon, but all remembrance was gone; nor was it until night came, and the cold beams of moonlight brought back the late scene of horror which she witnessed by its beams, that the agonizing recollections returned 111 fearful clearness ; and ere the morninithe had expired. pers . l!!agd, el'heri your 'delight' shall begin from this moment,' said the gay Stanislaus `you shall drive her the rest of the leagues to your house, for I I romised to be home. to night, and even now it is rather late to be ttut alone, though I hope your siwting has icared the wolves back to thei , suin mer abodes.' So saying, he jumped from the ledge. before Ermann could plead for his tired horse, and, rousing the slumbering old la dy with a shout which would have waken ed the Seven Sleepers, he lifted her shape less, fur wrapped form into Ennann's sledge ; then, bounding into' his own, he drove off at full speed, making the woods echo with his merry song../ Errnann, in spite of lib fatigue, felt true love's prejudice in fivor of any one connected with the belovo i d object ; there fore he sedulously endeavored to accom modate his companion ;Aul his courteous actions and remarks were unnoticed by the Inc:turn lady,„. who did ro4 even answer the caresses o(the poor Sleuth, al though he seemed to forget his fatigues in welcoming her. The weary sportsinan soon relinquished the ungracious tusk, and became absorbed in a love reverie, from which he was only • roused by the branch of a tree having fal len so low across the narrow road that he could not drive under it without danger. In hastily removing It the fur hood of his ! companion was caught by a bough, thrown I back, and thus displayed the youthful coin ! plexion and glossy hair of Aliana Zabin. ski. ‘Ahvays plotting against me, Minna r said the delighted youth ; why might I not have known who was my my companion. .So you should, had you only gained the third prize, as I desired you,' replied she, laughing ; itint you were too vain for yoursuperior success for me to give you farther grounds for vanity. But see, Er mann, we have reached the foot of the hill h'lp me from the sledge, and we will walk up, in order to relieve the poor tired horse; and Slanth, dear Slanth, too, shall stretch his limbs beside the mistress who lie had discernment enou , 111 to know was not her grandaunt. The youthful I, ded the 'ang ace ful o' ',4 n fight them have be a wh• • existen threw heir well snow, I s they atilt league • form. Ermana oiled Minna (rot I; ig 'Tare hen I missed sera arm in arm, descen ilty slowly, but uninind il time, which seemed to !I but a moment, and yet e. The cold moonlight defined shadows on the entered the sledge, with of their journey to per assidiously envel he piercing air on the I to proceed homeward, Flantli from his customa. sledge. flo turned lagging favorite, and tat bristling hair and ich indicated too surely energy, glaring down Y had just ascended. rtnxiuusly followed the their late path, distinct letr moonlight, he saw I quickly tracking the ry putdion in sharpy to call percesed him, gleaming eyes, % the apripch of the dal steep tl Thu y, ul lov : 1 i and, in 1Y three's, 3volv( fresh oltstern, Entakin felt thi 1 besid3 ini, he r agaiot uch tear was n fight alit of re distance I ex t,usted condii grd'ifnint. II lv . 01 the bicitel 'ith the precious charge risk an encounter is sole change thought lw the sloddsi is nigh when lu.k the village, an tis of the horse, his t ?ever, he stooped eagor Sleuth, lashed the horse 'di and soon seemed to utinOst spt ice all par us they co great rapidi d ; again tl limed to descend the bill F; but, on reaching level , panting horse showed *c( pct jii'ccllan. THE Y, LOVERS' SOLILOQUY. .AA thin And. I stnsa Sadj f.al a hatchet I've grown, oor as Job's turkey, by golly ! ice a scarecrow, erotic— Wm of Love's melancholy ! on confoundedly blue, 118 it turned into thistle, . 'heart has turned out untrue, socked me as slick as a whistle. rslively and keen as a rat, Playful as any young kitten, got the sharp claws of a cat, Las showed 'em to me thro' the mitts k village girls she is the belle,— plump as a putridge she graws,— 1 ?.. for two cherries would sell,— r cloaks pre as red as a rose. Like tee. bran 1 Ile , ' II 4ure i In bowl, wit II • 1 : hais—i leo ktl her l: ding Alas r tuy lo H heaniil ," ill tee it ha A d poor as I stern ike a: A. , rictiun of f new dollars her oyes,— neater than wax ; Venus she vies,— is finer than flax I after day, wedding to follow ; thrown away— a pumpkin, was hollow Got I'vo grown, ab's turkel, by golly ! Ve'a er° Zo ' ll:Zo ' ly l Voting Difficulties. A corresponds furnishes to tht foil ing emfnuiii he ectieo t hould like to or 'tgitriotit fell to ite the..td w fo .he fact tbkhe in the norh-w, of the Knickerbocker • of that journal the Th of the purity of in the State of Ohio. ) grasped the hand who was so anxious if it were not bnoked out. Lion of tho State )hio, in ih mr"?' • I w . 1P is a township, the citizens of ,t ch are .1 principally German, and mtwith., tnding their , sweet accent,' they are all .)emo , crabs of the regular , unterrifit , tripe.— I I From the time of the erection ton coon ty fifty.two, there had never been a Whig vote cast in the township spoken bf, al. ; though there were over six hundred vo ters ; but at the fall election of that year, ' upon counting the ballots, it appeared that '1 there was °nen big dmongst them. There I was the proof, a regular straightont Whig ticket, and they dare not pass it by. This causbrlgreat commotion; their escutcheon ! ” , as dimmed ; there was a Whig- amongst them ; Mar rte. re,nst be wiped out, and with their courage (Damn s "nurse) up to fever heat in the shade, they went work slyly to find the man who had do ; red to vote the kVig Dicket ;' but their la ' hors were unsuccessful. In the mean time another year rolled round, and the good 'beeples' were again assembled at the election precinct. It had not been fagot ten however, that at the last election some one had voted the Pig Dickel ; and it was now the subject of open remark ' and w Nader. •While they were having an out-door 1 discussion of the subject. ger. Starrett, a tam immigrant from the eastern shore of Maryland came along, na-AlsLanded the ,UUtiC Ul MO cuu......._ - . , ..Yell, ve vas a yonder wit voted do Vig dicket at the last election said an old Dutchman. to hopeless bondage. Nor does the anal°. stilly, do smiles akinrine, make the heart glad. Frail is the flower eat is her gy cease here. ryhr's hobbies fai!ed to power to cheer the lunch the the secure him the honors he fondly hoped sad. The smiles of boa to attain by his treachery to his party and • i ty, should beam on the It c ful s l i t c l i t: ..I tell you it was though,' said Sam , I the distressed ; nor all their briLlitnees b: poured on the lightness ofteterfly flat, country. And we greatly mistake if Pierce does not also soon find lihnst.lf in retire pulling out a Whig ticket, 'and may I be 1 ment, where Its may funs opinions free lore's sparkling Priest and hollow breast.. chewed up if I slat a going to do it again. ' 'l'he voice ' of sweetness is inesck's . t an, I am going to vote that (holding out the . completeness, when words of kindness, ticket ) and vote it open too. I'll let you ' know that I'm an independent Jlm,rica,r 'by beauty spoken breathe hope to the sight- Mr. Tyler, but to matte some cotronon•s is, not o daguerreotype Citizen, and I'll vote • just as I please, and • • • following' . I' ' i ; mg, peace to the dying, and faith to the on the sentiments ut.eret a tse you can't help it, by Jemima r hearts by misfortune broken. Not • hallsf ,ner 0 1 t 7 n. occasleU 'shove refers-I to. 'So in he went to l d dposit this ballot.— of '., " ' ' o f . 1 ; II There. sat the three o Dutch judge. a , splendor , does her voice sound sweet .1i the courso .,,,4 -....re,s at tho election 'calm as a summer morning t and i n ' t . o i r ' e "‘ rno - e - li " c th - a - n Ittin;n r .7.- tireirelt..."' . ; . 'I" r". • " .."--s--"'""---"" "--.A".5 "i ;is , ,al i'll• p taical in:anut:ons, eonstitutions und true to his word, Sam handed over hie' Charity ,Faith a I m. Love .—how sweet it law, ,aid, 4, 1: is no visit., what our pees ticket, open. One of the old judges took sounds to the ' heaven above—C • I• . ii...ftiTl,• rain v;.•.,,, may b e, or what prejudice muy it; and scanning it a few seconds, handed F AITH and Levi,' . take possession ()lour minds and hearts, if, it back toward the independent voter, and ! said : Advice to Coquettes. 1_ as ~Iwrican citizens, we find ourselves "Yaw, dat ish a Vig clicket.' ' Young ladies, beware how you coquette con,trained by a law, higher or more im " Well,put it in the box,' said Sam. or you may repent it to the last day of perative titan the civil law, we thus deny ' , Vat you say f' said the old Dutchman, your life. Though a gay young girl may the obligations which the constitution lei his eyes big with surprise; put him in de be fond of society and attention, fond dad- poses and can have no just claim to the box I' miration, and desirous of being the cyno- protection and blessings which it confers." "Yes•sir-ee, put it in the box ! I ant go- sure of all eyes, let her not coquette. Let i Now if that "higher law" to which he in' to vote it f her not trifle with hearts as she did witli : refers is the same that was uttered from "Oh ! no ! nix goof, dat ish Vig dicket, her dolls in her infancy, lest site inflict zni- the Arabian mount, the rocks whereof for said the old Dutchman, shaking his head. eery and wretchedness on herself as well over thirty•three countries bear testimony "Well, I reckon I know it's a Whig a s on her victims. Man despises a co- to the dread majesty whence it derived Its ; ' ticket,' said Sam, ' and I vvant you to put queue, and it is the only inherent vanity ce.ptions to this reasoning. ve have just ground to take ex itauthority, ; in the box, darnation quick, too. of a man which promotes their success as ' "No, no! dat ish not goot ; dat ish a his own opinion of himself leads him to ' And as well front the language employ- Vig dicket : we not take em any more, suppose that he must be the favored one. ; ed, as from late proceedings of the govern said the old jndge turning to receive a A coquette is feared, dreaded and despised meta, we feel justifiable in the conclusion 'goat dickets' from some of his German by all sensible persons both of the other that it is the moral law to which he ox friends. sex and her own. Her tritunphs are ever coos. It was not enough for hiss to break 'Sam went out and cursed till all was brief, and when she falls and looses her down all harriers to the spread of slavery, blue—said he had come thar to vote, and power she is not pitied but despised. She , but he must promulgate such doctrines as he'd be flambergasted if he want pin' to falls— ; let lout) a set of Missouri ruffians with all vote in spite of all the Dutch in the town- "17nwept t unhonored and unsung." 1 the weapons of mobocracy. to control the ship. So, alter cooling of a little, he a- Her latter days are days of vinegar— I elections it Kansas ; and when he finds gain went in and :endured his ticket very her disposition, her temper, her whole na- Governor Reeder unwilling to approve a neatly rolled up. The old judge took it lure grows acidulated, and she becomes ; mock Legislature, he removes hint to make again, and notwithstanding Sam's demur- soured with the world, an animated vine- room for an instrument better adapted to. ring unrolled it and looked it over ; then gar cruet, delighting only in spiteful elan- his vile purposes. It was not enough for der and malice, her only bonne &ruche the . him to flatter the friends of slavery in the turning to Sum in a manner and tone not to be misunderstood, said : stews of a vim. con. case, a diverce.a bro. South, but one of his own minions boldly "1 tells you dal ish a Fig (ticket ; dot ken love match, saran unhappy marriage, attempts to curry it through Pennsylvania; ish nix goat ;and dui we not take ern arty Gentlemen ' shim a coquette if you would and because a free-born, honorable citizen be happy ! of the State tells the captives that in Penn more ." .Sam again retired, cursing all Demo- sylvania they are free, a legal truth no. The Dead Child. • crate generally , and the Dutch particular- where denied, another of his pets issues a Few things appear so beautiful as a vie habeas and assigning them the hottest cornershabeas corpus, and that writ, one of the no. ry young child in its shroud. The little blest effitets of Magna Chaste, by which of the brimstone region; and was going insacent face looks t o tublim tly simple met en to curse every body that didn't curse every free man has a right to a hearing, confiding amongst the old terrors of death is so perverted, as to be made the insult them he was interrupted by an old Dutch- Critneless andlittle • fearless, that mortal man in the crowd, with : meat by which Passmore Williamson, for has passed alone under the shndow, and "Sam Starrett I tells you vat it is, if you ' speaking n benevolent word, in truth, is in. explored the mystery of dissolution. There will vote der Dimergrat dicket, and leef carcerated in a gloomy prison, and denied is deatl in •• subl' Ipurest . no hat ; its imest and image; his right to the benefit of that law, which der county, we gifs you so much monish ed no hypocrisy, no care forh . • t-- 1 was intended to remit the darkest recesses as Bakes you vere you cum'd vrorn.' morrow ever darkened that little face • 'Sam stretched his head, studied awhile and remove the bars and bolts of our death has come lov'noly upon it there .' and then said that as he had corn thar to nothing cruel or harsh i in its victory. Tile!' prisons. vote, and want goin' away without votin ', .-- indeed-%. ' Again, whilst this anti-higher law Prea• yearnings of love cannot be staled ; . , . he guessed he'd do it. mont is enjoying the plandite end flattery for the prattle and sntile, all the little world 'Again Sam made his appearance beforeof Southern friends, mode such by servile thoughts that were so delightful, are of ' the judges, and tendered his vote. The gone forever. Awe, too means, a mob is legislating for Kansas and in same old judge took it. and looking it over its presence, for Awe, the ' will overcast us lonely voyager passing laws too bloods. for the ninth cep quietly quietly turned to Sam and said: for the child ' has gone, simple and trusting tu ' ry• laws which would hare disgraced “Yew dint ish Boot; dm ish a Dimes.resenee into the of the all wise Father, P I the dark ages of the weed; laws which grad; dicket r and dropped it into the box. and of, such, tried powerfully to prevent the industrious we know, is the kingdom of I It is only further necessary to say that Heaven, and pence loving membt'rs of our communi • Sam went back to the eastern shore at ' ty from taking possession of that fair part the expellee of the township; and that, atContentment. ,of oar inheritance. At all this his Facets ; that election, and ever since that German ! Contentment is better than a rich legacy ' lency complacently smiles and. Vales township has been 0. K. -- All that is necessary to se- I that "higher li ' - influtenets 'That is whnt I call preservints the • qt was me,' Sam said, 'and it was'nt no body else !' dinks not,' said the Dutchman, and the balance shook their heads incredulous ly. The Old Maxim. Just as the twig is bent the tree's inchn• ed remarks the "English Reader." 'Prue. But no skill in bending or straightening I.:, can convert a twig of heinlock into a sprout PRESIDENT PIERCE AND THE of apple, nor reduce an oak sapling to the "HIGHER LAW." rank of poplar, nor convert ivy into grape- AlEssas. EDITORS somewhere read vine. Good culture can make the young an account of a political meeting, held lost cabbage to grow into a large and compact summer at the White F.'ulphur Springs, head, bin it is a cabbage still. But cul- Va., at winch Pratt/din Pierce and Ea:- ture can prevent the perfect developement President 'Puler figured conspicaously. of a rose • but if it lives 'at all, it lives a is natural that these two dignitarie s lose. Breed is the great thing, and next shauld meat to sympathil, with each oth- It breed comes growth. The teacher is cr, for, if history can be credited, they on y the gardener to immortal plants; it certainly agree in many points of charac is lis to keep down the wtieds that would ter. Tyler was elected by the Whigs of , draw away nourishment from their roots, ter the death of Harrison, pledged hienself -to supply the nourishment suited to the' now to administer the governtnent on nature of tech to defend all from the ver- Whig principles, and then turned round min that mono, prey upon them. a n d served, most fawningly, the enemies But, after all, the -hid ditty of child. of those pt4nciples ! Pi rec is a northern hood is to grow. Natu,.. will do al-man and professed Protestant, and it was most all that is required, if Nature to I‘l-• reasonable to expect that the North would lowed to do It. At the present day, it is receive justics at his But heinha only poor children, for whom no one cares, led the Southern breath, 'gsnufied the bloo that have a chalice to health developcment dy breeze," and sold himself to Bishop others are blighted by over-culture. 'Phe Hug!. Laid 11113 slave-holders. Tyttr gardener is always fumbling at their roots an - nutted 011 the annexation, hobby, declar with his hard, thick lingers. Oh ! let the ed Texas taust he secured or slavery would poor children alone once more! And never perish, as our patriotic fathers had wished suppose that a teacher can do what God and predicted. Pierce closed tits ears alone can do—make a man !' against the wailingof bleeding humsni- Both Rhyme and Ron. ty, lout all the influence of his position to T he Seedes l, ,Y lieuisier nuns the tttatuk break dotes the Missouri Centoromise— of 'rt. ~,„„„m i limpti.lo- a in hit i crer to the spread or a great, following delicious . ra P a,r,•*r thus doomed millions of his felliw-b4ings the breath of the lilly, so sweet and so VOL. XXI. NO. 1 QTonmuilotion 10 of ur.l from the t P ,, t m i a JPI ,At .R. ~~ ..1` • vo.t. tip " ik *. ; ..,