The people's advocate. (Montrose, Pa.) 1846-1848, November 12, 1846, Image 1

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    ght: P`o;iles .:kbuo-tate.7
runtasuarolisruar THURSDAY NORNING,
DPW• BOYD.
(Office on'thr west elide of theTublie Avennel
hha• , ••
tERIVIS.—ObiE DOLLAR a year in tabfaxe.
One Dollar Iriffy •Denti if not issicl within th
mouths, and if Riilayed until? after the ezpiHtitm' of
t ho year two dolrs. will be exacted, , •
DigeontinuanCtllit.Opiintial with the
los arreara,geslaile paid. e
Letters to. the ?Publishers on business skitittbst,ofi.
flee mast be pastipithi to insure attention:'' ",„: •
p Oitrlj.
_ -
Intkication of Dcatit:'
C ome t i, th e grave's . quiet slumber, ~.
i';:isionate heart; °.:'.' • =• .
At the dAad sonnd of thy deeming,' :- " '
1, ;}y Bost thou atattl _ ...
Oft di t i s 6hon sorrin.and languish, •
Wilding to go;
' I
w rar ily ' I.teping—lamenting--
lietivy with woe; •
Now is they time of calling,
Wht. dust thou shrink f •
Why dost i thou turn with such loathing
Firmn the grave's brink 1 i
I `?.; • i
Soft is theidepth of its shadow,"
Slq thou and mark;
Peaceful tile bed now preparing
lit he chill dark !
Here the sild sea of life's tunittlt 0
0 (leliseth to roar; .
hero the tent fever of love •
V4eth no more ;
Here, shall' nolsound of reproaches,
Ltitierly said, ,
,
Filling 0,6 heart with hot aching, •
trtiuble the dead! '' .
I lore ace }to partings—no leaving
I:Tit& clearly joined;
here is, 14 sobbing and moaning
Paine on the wind;
Here sbati no hopes, fondly cherished.
Crinnble . away :
Calin in ki,.5 u hito shroud, and painless,
Li4s the still clay.
Th oug h a the schemes if. was planning
trnitthe high earth
-
Wteckod,tere the hour of fulfilment,
Da , iu their birth!
Come ! Wish what thought dost thonlingeri
Ha* than not tried -
All the world's promising pleasures
Which Both abide
Which of them blest thy attainment ? .
Wader on Sand !
Wild fldwirs, whose stalks haCe belt broken
Ill* child's hand !
Which efjbem failed thee not always
Wen most desired ;
Mockin; Keith unsought fruition,
linien the heart tired
Ilath notribe friend of %hi bosom
lirflkcii his trust 1 4 ,
Were nqthe loved of thy kindred
I..altd in the dust
Lid not ttly foes and oppressors , •
Rine and grow proud ? •
While {ha-heads sank of thy kind ones,
/Itimbled and bowed
Why wionldst thou mournfully linger •
ItCNI bad world
Bark, 4ch the storm blast bath beaten,
Get tun- sail furled(
Come tliou shalt know the deep quiet
YO41 -fled far in vain,
When 11+ wert maddened' with striving,
lqary- of
Come !I thou shalt meet all thy dear ones,
fat long ago, •
In the .$4 dayi s when their dying
Witung thee with wo !
Eartit4fdi thy burial, torn one—
' ()pens her breast;
DeeplyUttty bed bath been hollowed,
Oipie to thy rest!
4Ui9cctlainn.
From the Saturday Courier,
The Te4tation ortrashingtoti.
A Tradiiln of tke Wissahikiht off
Rt GEORGE LiPPARD
e
There are days in winter when the air
is soft abd liOliny as the early days of slim
mer, when, A fact, that glad maiden May,
t•ceinsto blot her warm breath in-the grim
face of Febtpkty, until tlie rough old warrior
laughs hgain.%
.
It was on . ii,day like this that the morn
ing sunshine streaming over .A' high rock
that frowns.there, far aboVe the Wissahi
k on. i -
A high rook attainableonly by,
~along,
winding path fenced in by the winks of
giant pines 301ose boughs, in- - the days in
winter, form )1 canopy overhead..
This rock is covered by a carpet. of ever
green moss
And near, t ` is nook—this chamber. itt,the.
forest, for it Vtas nothing less—sate, an, old
man, seperatO from it by the trunks ufilie
large pines, 'hose boughs concealed his
form.
That old rAan had come here- alone,.to
think over hie two sons, now freezing tit
Valley' Forg4—for, though the father was a
Tory, yet bisr:children were Continentals.—
He was a wet-meaning than, but some half
crazy ideas 4out the Divine Right of the
British Pope, George the third, to rule this
Continent, ail murder and burn as hepleas
ed—hirked it his brain , and kept him ihack
fro m the =nip of Washington.
And in„,thiv bright triornuig in FebrUary,
he had come iere, alone, to think lice •Aost
ter over. tt
And whit , . jie was 'pondering ill's Matter
over, whethe4GeUrge the Pope or aeorge`
the Rebel wrili in the right—he heard. , the
tramp of a war steed not far off,andlooking
between theunk,s of the pines be saw
luau, of noblil presence, dismount froin his
grey horie„ land then advance. into the - quiet
nooks of the 6w-carpeted 'rocks, encircled
by giant pint I -1 • .!3,
!tad now avingithe aged Tory; to look
Upon this fain for 'himself, let us loolti on
lain, with ouriown eyes.
As he toruks through those thick toughy,'
you behold riiinan, more than di: feat ,high,;.
with his kin dy for rmselopedin a 4ml:se
grey orer i eoup, chapesiu •on his fore d pi
and heneStliik. skirts of that , grey.: coati
you may see Ake military .bome.and the mid
of a scabbard •
And 0104 this man of Wiley presence:
who comes hire alone, topece.dlittotuseov.
cred roat, ith drooped heist- 40d folded
arm el.l
:r} '~ ~.
44~
$
A ."
Ar .?.
T 1 1 : ,. ,
11)1J1r)r. ,f T, . 4 1,,i
-" -. l ') Jr...). -,#
tome, my frilled' ti ? "itod`look upoittittt
let i. e show yeti-not this figure oftniit and'
,fra t_ wc o;,which soma. historians hayg_call
ed Vssntortio+ltuf WrisiiihgtOn, the' 1 iv
rin gi throbking & fifsbpnl bloo&Washingtofi !
Yes, WAsiTmatwritem A N. -
, took ileillitii, iiihe paces that . mosi.
kred'rolek t ' thatitte !mini that inns.
culkr cheatheav •uader, the folded arms. ,
~ he is.thin :g of Valley Forge 1. Of
I n
the l ' oody . footprints in the anow,, of those
th ' hidious fires` that '
sit down In'. the'
hut , of Valleyge together--DiSease, and
r /h .
S ation, anakedness. I.
'bolo .as th4se , dark hidious .; thoughts
cro, )1 on links*, he fulls on his kneels, ,he
prays the G)A oflleaven to take Inslife, as
an`' raring for - the' * freedom of his native
ry
•
Jan f f, '
, 'AM as thatyeestardes the still woods,-
tht4 grey. coat f is open, and discloses , the
p 4 a
blue and gold uniform, the epaulette and the
ss4rol hilt. i'' . ,
Then the aghny of that man, praying
thein the. eller woods , praying for his
cot n
I T
tiy, now bleeding in her chains, speaks
out, in the flashing of the eye, in the beaded
i saint, inippinglfrom the brow!
lAli, kings of the world, planning an) coolly
your 'inthemes of murder, come here, and
1 100k -at George Washington, as he offers his
' lif, a sacrifice for l his country !
h, George pf England, British Pope,
an good-natutd Idiot, that your are, now
co nting in yopr royal halls, how many
tire men it will take to murder a few thou
sa" d peaceful farmers, and make a nation
dri k your tea; come here to this rock of the
Wasahikon, and see, King and Pope as
vdir are, Geor6 Washington in council with
his God ! !
,11.. y friendi, I, can ,never think of that man
in the wilds ofiWissallikon—praying there,
akin?, ; prayin for his country, with the deep
agOni in ;without
altio.thinking f that dark flight in Gethse . ..
/
mane, when the blood-drops started from
the brow of Jelus, the Blessed Redeemer,
as Lite plead (4 the salvation of the world !
,Now look ! I As Washington kneels there,
oni thatimoss-covered rock, from those green
benghs steps girth another form—tall as his
'onin—clad in k coarse grey coat, with boots
and scabbard . seen below its skirts, with the
chapeau on hi; brow.
That stranger emerges from the, boughs
—stands there unperceived, gaznig in si
ler ce on the kneeling warrior.
'moment imses !
ook ! Washington has risen to his feet
--he cons ont4the stranger.
Plow, a that stranger, with a slight bow,
ii i
uricovers is fOrehead, tell me, did you ever
sec a stro ger,
,tranger resemblance between
twb men thanibetween these two, who now
confront each other in silence, under the
shade of thoseldark pines 1
?
• The same height, breadth of chest, sinewy
Blabs, aay, almost' the 'same fuces r —save
thin: the face 4f the stranger, sharper in out.
lirie, lacks that 'calm conelonsness of a great
sop!, which ittamps the countenance of Wash
it on. .1
i t resemhlance is most strange—their
ninsclar fortn4 are, clad iii the same blue
coats—theii cbstumes.are alike, but hold—
The strangar throws open his overcoat—
y44t behold the hangman's dress, that Brit
iSli uniform, Aashing_ with gold and stars !
Washington tfartil back, and lays his hand,
on! his sword.;
Lind as these two men, so strangely 'alike;
swot there bpi' accident, under that cati4py
ofnoughs, one wandering from Valley Forge,
onn from Philadelphia—let me tell you; at
orkte that theistranger is no other thanthe
Mittel' Butcher of the Idiot king, Sir Wil-
Haim Howe. I.
IMM
es, there }bey meet, the one the imjier
so , : tion of Fieedma—the other the "tinsel
, lacqtry of a Tyrant's will !
t i ef l u w t i i ll in t ta n
ntot..!hcii conversation : it is
or 'a monient the British ' General !Mod
s 11-bound l:Yefore thoman whom he cross
e the ocean
who
entrap, and bring home;
th Rebel, who had , lifted his hand against
th Right Deyine of the British Pope !: To '
f
th t Britist General there. :was something
awful about tie soldier who could talk with
hi God as Washington had talked a mo
i
sit nt ago. ;
4 . '1 cannot Se mistaken," at last said 'Sir
cit• 'am Ho* e • "I behold.before me the
iftain' of the itehel army, Muter .Wish-:
i n 'I" , ' '.;
. . t ahingt i ti coolly bowed-his head.!
Then is a happy hour! FOr iwe
together can kri "
ye peace and freedom to this
itnOPY" land !r .
i lolkt this wiird Washington *treed with
sOtPrise , --,adyanced a step—and the ,ex
claimed—.l '
~-
,And irh i sir, are you that thus i boldly
promisespeafe.and freedom to my country?"
.1" The , commander of his: Majesty's for-
Cep ,in AmeriOor! said Hciwe,,:adraneing a- i
ll o ttite*444 , bidden rock towards : Wash- ,
i ns... f,Alad oh,,sir,.lerme tell you-that I
01,i/Im, to ter, has lewd ofyour . vit.,'
titis,,which,tilotw-dignifies the revolt . • with ,
' . name of pr, and it-is loyou he's looker
f;
. .,,,the„term ation ;oft thii moit: , disastrous
st-r l, -,, :.. , , . 1
he Washington; pulse n whose p had newer
q ickened bifore all the panoply of British
l ?e
e, felt-liis heart &olefin his . ' boefitii; 'as
t 'great hoion was before-his eyes,l peace'
ftieeikeit 4 to his tottivelindt. ' i
~
t - "Nitc,'" - eoctinued Howe; ,idianding,, an-,
6rliteN a4 nsykinglikikii 'to . y,O - ' 6i' thi . '
1
'niinati4te this unnatural - it-eV' 'tit , re::
stet i
heti' on* •' - croshtioV—let 'thii ia,:filiiii*
art.' ill 'by, rut. rlittliteime and
sir; . • hOM the . gratitude iiriiirig
As IWO . ' 'e; lie Viec'd -in ihti handieof
t ' idokt f in —thiiiiive.-t.iirewilii;rieida
' the . " fJelll..of Ettgland;iiigtitidWith
* . lniti'm l 4fKiPtGe°tge• .--"
''' -"
'',",
Nimihingufm took the parchlient, j ‘penea
-seed it...his &Cicala p otr j itniu a nuig.
A ir: . ' kir" 'ibid . ' imieluiten t nia•dVii-
G t 4)Fire.itteithigtbin" PG - mil'ut . ePalhiii :‘
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OM
tirtrON- DuRE' or Moutifrr T gariowt, our ' oreli
dddnid'aeretrntVwEiOy of AstmacA 1,
was a boint fora the. Virginia plant=
4. 4 4te're wawa title and :a power for the.,
young-man, who was lone 'day struggling
failiirlife Staid floating ice, on the
For aiimmenr the race of. Washilltott
stati; buried in. that parChment, , and then,.m
a low deep voice, he spoke—
" I ha4e been thinking, said he, "of the
ten ithousand brave' !pen who have been
massacred in this quarrel. I have been
thinking of the dead at Bunker Hill--Lex
ington—Quebec—Trenton—yes, the dead
of Saratoga—Brandyivine—Germantown;"
nAnd. the King,"- (continued Washtone •
with aloolc and. tone tint would have, cut in ,
two heart of marble, would hate me bar=
ter the bones of the dead for a ribbons and a.
title I".
'And then, while Howe shrank, cowering
back, that Virginia Planter, Washington,
crushed that parchment into the sod, with-the
heel of his warrior boot—yes trampled that
title; that royal name, into one mass of rags
anti dust. '
" r r That is my-answer to your king!"
And then he stood, with scorn on his brow
and:in his eye, his outstretched arm point
in„ an that minion of King George.
Wasn'st that a pictire for the pencil of an
angel? wid now thtit British . General, re
covering from the first surprise, grew red as
his, 4 'uniform with rage:
'$ Your head ! he 'gasped, clinching his
hand, " your head will yet redden the trai
tor's block !”
Then Washington's hand sought his
sward, then his fierce!' spirit awoke within
hint, it was his first impulse to strike that
braggart quivering in to the dust.
But in a moment he grew calm.
!" Tburi is a. good and great King," he
said, with his usual stern tone. "Vt fiigst
he is-determined to sweep a whole continent
with but five thousand men, but he soon
finds that his five-thOusand must swell to
twenty-five thousandfrnen, before he can ev
er begin his work of inursler. Then he sac
rifices his own subjeets by thousands—and
butchers peaceful fariners by tens 'of thou
sands—and yet his March of victory is not
even begun. - Then,:if he conquer the city
capital of the continent, victory is sure !
Behold ! the city w his grasp, yet still the
Mists of freedom defy him even from the
huts of Valley Forge!
" And now, as a last resource, your king
comes to the man whose head yesterday
was sought, with a ',high reward, to grace
the gates of Londonhe offers that rebel a
dukedom, a vice-regal sceptre ! And yet
that rebel tramples the - Dukedom into the
duit, that rebel crushes into atoms the name
of l uch a king."
never spanietskulked from the kick
of his master as that General Howe cringed
away from the presence of Washington—
m4unted his horse, has gone ! •
Dne word with regard to the aged tory,
who had beheld this scene from yonder
buihes, with alternate wonder, admiration,
and fear.
Fhat tory went home—" I have seen
George Washington Tat prayer," said be..to
his wife : "the man who can.tratople upon
tlui name of the king as he did, pray to God
as :he prayed, that Man cannot be rebel or a
bait man. To-morrbw I will. join my sons
at fya/ley Forge."
From She New York Obserret.
WISCONSIN PRAIRIE'S ; WESTERN PROGRESS.
WIC6NSIN s Sept. 5, 1846.
In 1836, when th territory of Wisconsin
was formed from the domain of Michigan,
this place was fixedi upon as the seat of gov
ernment, literally bdyond the bounds of civ
iliation some seventy miles, in a course al
most due West from Milwaukie. At that
time there was a single log cabin here, and
the, entire population living within - the terri
torial limits sotnethitigover 11,000. In 1840
it ;mounted to 31,000. The State census
of last June exhibits an increase to inure
than 150,000,, to which, it is thought by
competent judges, twenty thousand have
since been added! 7.
As rapid as has keen the increase of pop
ulation in many of the Western &mei and
Territories, that of this greatly transcends
them all. Indeed one can scarcely believe
it possible that theri has not been an over
estimate ; and there would be ample loam
fol doubt, were not the facts confirmed by
the best and strongest evidence. Men are
literally coming hete by droves, to upturn
the rich, mellow soil of the whole prairies,
aid dot them over with shanties and cabins.
The prestut population of this city, for it
hab been incorporated during the present
yew, is between 790 and SOO. For beauty
ofisituation it is mr!ely surpassed. holies in
a talky, betwixt typo lakes, one three and a
half, and the other! six miles in length, the
waters of which are remarkably clear and
pare. There are several other lakes in the
vicinity, and the view, from the dome - of the
neat andeommodious State House, of these
add the surrounding country, Made up of
oak groves, and rolling, prairies, and :undu
lating btils, ib Of the most pieturelque de
'To one in pursuit' of a spot where
hi may sit in quiet to Watch for the - laggt,
foptstips of returnihg health, I'knovt of few
lotelier or better tlian this,
One who crosses the Southern botderii 'of
Illinois without bating seen'the ticrrtheriver
-central portion ofithe State, and knowing"
n4thing of lowa aniiWisconsin.footti persob
ohtiervation,, will- incline to. the opinion
thlst.the praises . which setae, have lavished
upon .66 beauty and &stalky of dhe., West,
1 1 4velad no formation is truth:-. In
itoPm.Viegt he. Pipets fittlehelte,thaa-Thalf
___.
beuotoestibl level prairies:, Our as,
lili,turnit his face' northward the scometegins.
toi4linire* altd *el band of variety** tonal('
her checkered map. The vastness .of ::the.
pinkie is relieved- by gentle undulatiops;
tkleara:idsiaoi legit of densityis seem'
twinyite , pleemiat:=sari
041iiiiiiseecintolguaiiitlisi adjoining tatTitelli
h# finds still more of variety and bonny,
which iberease•upon -him mud! he titkei up
the stinglihat others hare sung, and 'if he
beilikemyself, strives to deepen the 'strain.
Certainly the loveliest news which I have
had of fti Prairie Land,"' have been in Wii
consitut lit was but yesterday that,jecnning
across.finm Mineral a thriving placia
Some fifty mile, trim here, where considers
ble miningis 'earvia, on--we struck into-a
prairie, the sight of•which should. be' enough
to thrill i stoic. Just asfier al the eye could_
reach in ione direction it 'presented anal
in ost •e milieu tniccesskiii of gentle swells, cov
ered with a luxuriant growth of grass add
flowers, With many ‘ ti variation ofSunlight
and sha4e, iind . a Clear outline 'appearing tee
lie dhectly along the iky. Looks
,g to the
leil,'M the distance Of it few miles, he dark
greett - toitii'af a stretch of trees we tole
seen, whl e 'directly ahead, its . * y sues-;
mit hun ground with the haze Of tokm, -rimiti;/ .
like ag . nt in• the wildemess, one of the '
Blue inonnds. • There was no overwhelni
ing subliinity or grandeur in the - seene. I l t
wanted ruggedness—more of conlipicucius
ness in eXpreision, to give it this.et there
was a vastness Of beauty, a delimit of 'con
tour and, filling up, combined 'with a single,
bold an di Massive stroke, to make a picture
capable Of inspiring and,sustainingla feeling
of calm intensity such as one dims trot Often
experienee even on the prairie.
I do not know that any thing hke a fair
and full Attempt has yetbeen, made to gath
er,and classify the flowers which bloom on
the prairies. It would be a difficult and al
most endless task ; for while there are a feiv
varieties which are met every where, scarce-.
ly a day , passes in which the tm eler does
not meet others which are" rich an strange." '
From the spring until late in the autumn
4'
there is a monthly succession, End those
who have not seen them have but little idea
of the peculiar beauty of many of them, and
the profOseness of all, They are generally
small; the largest nave seen is the dwarf
sun-flower, -about the size of the common
June rose. In the " slues"—if I were to
call them sloughs few here would itnditrstand
me—tbe most delicate kinds are usually
found. In the vicinity of these one 'pan pick
twenty dr thirty different flowers in an hour.
If it had not become such an old story, I
should be tempted to say something abont
the present prospective greatness of the west
to speaklof its capacious adaptedbess•to the
wants of man, and the controlliah , political
influence it must eventually exert, trot only
upon the institutions of our own' land, but
more or less upon those of the world. Bin
this subject, in this aspect; at least grown
stale, if not threadbare.
GREAT QIIRIOSITISS.
To the Iditor1 ditor of the Journal of Commerce:
Feeling an interest in the National Muse
um, whOse formation you have announced,
I beg leave to offer the followingcuriosities
for the acceptance of the managers:
The toil of an Irish Bull.
Some sand from time's hout-glass.
A torn Tuffie from Love's last shift.
The Ilion, from'the plane of the ecliptic.
A quandary, with a man in it.
Pan of the patch with which O'Connel's
rent wat;', mended. •
Half a dozen feathers from a: gin-cock
ail. I
A fishing-rod and two walking-sticks
made of Hurricane.
A kndek-down argument, and the impres
sion it made.
The World in miniature; very old copy,
aded.
A pound of butter from the cream of a
joke, and a cheese from the milk of human
kindness.
The march of mind arranged for a ful
orchestra, with a trumpet obligato, by Fame
• Some bristles from the last brush with
the Mexicans, and a little of 'Ampudia's
dander On them.
A fluke from the anchor of Hope.
Whiskers and noses; from a Masked ba
tem •
The shadn'w of the meat the dog saw in
the water.
A paik of sculls from a White-Hall boat,
and a table showing the phrenological derel
opemente.
A bottle of the smoke that t Mr. Polk's
message* ended in.
SoMe ten-penny nails, made of a fragment
of the Irkm Duke.
A finger-post, from the road to ruin.
Music of the spheres, original score.
The cap of a climax.
Musk4t and powder-horn of a shooting
star. I
The fiiith that Henry the VIII, defended,
rather the worse for the scuffle.
A boot from the last or the , Mohegnns,
one of th spurs of the Rocky Mountains on
the heel.l
The pparl that Cleopatra drank; and the
two diamonds that cut one another.
A silk ttassel from the staff of life.
The afternoon of the Dey of Algiers.
Some Fif the eels. that are used to .being
skinned., ,
A pair s . of pointers, from the Great Bear,;
well trailed.
hinge from the gates ordeath, audliomp
of the snuff that the child wasn't quite up-to.
I hold these things subjcit to your order,
and should Y find any thing farther woitt9r
of, a plaCe on the shelves of the Museum,
shall inf4rn you.
_
• A Gir,Kr Cousyray.—This country' has a
frontier 'thin l C*0"! !WC ,
have a' line of sea 'omit of` neaily :MOO,
a lake Cdait of 1200 `mikes,' Ode of our
era is' tw,lice the 'BiCO3, length of the Dan
ube, the largest 'rider in turope,' The Ohio:
river is 600 miles longer than the Rhine,
and Alliiison hal a navigation 120 , ,mitcp
lonpF, than thri Thames. • Tho sing l 4*
sfl r iiritio l u a third Large thin Englandk
contains 5420 . ,060. - acrep,, more-, gum
Scotland frff9,4,iiineP) 944 i! Artherf 'h a *
from Loudon to i;onstantinoplei IKK.WW
might go; on and 61i columns, enumeratip i g
distinces Avers, - and 6io
with cal lwwwthi estimaies • 6f100 , 4:
and population. • ' ')
. . ~
•-I kir t,,J •
... ~, , 1. 1 I i-, , ,, - •
t'
'' ri'f,' 11 ".- '''il . "i '3 1 4 :
ii 1 r i = •• -
•':" I :' • "I i': li Ltrt; ' i.•:?.. '.-
''.• '' 1' • , I.
•
I
1., .•- 1' , ~, •
.1 l' '".. ! ' ''...'_i s t - ' . :1 •- ..! e.....',1"1 -' ..
" .:.... I.
• . . . n i . -
___ . l,
„, 'I, ~ , „ , _ -.- , - . • '
1 44
-A `‘g - ikeltrdittitlt --*iiititi.l/ ‘.. 7
, - 11 • , ••,:4,i7r = t••• :,-1 :: • , •-, i 1 -
T •
xyzarcitar. .!
, ; ~ • .•.74.„;; ; _ t -7-- : , , •.; :. ~ r: ., it ;
Our fn'endlaails; Of 60 4 1411 in ',kw ,.
;.,
has just:libout thenicest-arrengemiti inttlii
shape ofi!tr- bath -that an op-Triverm it can;
desire ; Ihnt still* haster, - ;after all;' 4 ' "411 e:
"latest tOutib'f initia wayofliii cock -'-* ad:
1 .1
that * filltin
ed'otd - recelitl*at the St() aides!!
Hotel, New OrleilOnj- ' 'Wevidled iittOlit;sa ant
old. de,ipinintanee 'Wholhad :inortrst ' li••Vo
her ginilo their! follinieiabli Inci.
itist. 7
thing fleshy; In •• ecilitik eicept it , Fel -,
stafildiagnitted a tha";fautiromaa oflleent
fordr in tbeMerryliVistes. - . , -We werephOwn
into a bathing rdonk s iend - there wiiAiver
ed-that *patent l• new plan of " letting onm
and I dletetllg off•t l the -water had beer4lintd.
duceitL• ;I*satil a 'shinihrbrassplarf, , irith
threa Pollshed handles, ' having ;ti` . " ' tik"
turiii , slidelegantlylettered beneath?" 114".
lia
" adld;l'"Waste:";- . . - .t' : , . • 1 't-- ,:-
' "YOrl You understand the cocks? ,t said
Mrs.! Coinfed. l‘ - ' ii ' ''
"Oh, :iertainly,"; , said we—for the credit
of SkLiihis andlU Italian Baths?' - *inlet
mistketie Of the Mysteries shut herself' out;
we wenti i, to work - very con fi dently 'pt the
handle,' heard -a desperate prgling u thro'
polished grating in the bottom of th4ub--
prepared', ourselies leisurely for the Ilizury,
and ; blifwe haie'another -story to telabout
the artattOr, and, i -as that lother is the rather
richer ofthe two, we shall only say;thet,be-
tween the " hot" and " cold," we nevet were
so docked id otir' life. After a• desperate
struggle,! we managed to get a bath On the
"improid planj" without exposing' hur ig
norance;:',we left the place, and were iiter at
the torner by a ; rough -but estimabletfriend
from Noilitern Illinois ; one who hal ; made
a fcirttuie amling the - " diggins? and
one ivrhci - can afford to take a " sOurge"
every naw and then in the south ;l so he
terms his occasional visits to therlarger
cities, f, . . 11.
"'You haint been taken' a bath, her ye? "
said 'ie.': t! ;
":ob,r,yes ;" Was the reply. •• I, •
";In them are confounded , brass handled
conearnal" ' ' .
1•• we i '
" Yes" said- " a great improvrnent ;
''
obvtatesithe inconvenience of the noilie, and
dash of the old plan.".l;
t':
We hive that this public -confessipn, may,
prove gitne atonement; but we certainly did
talk to qur more ingenuous friend tnblush
ingly. l-le roared out laughing, Rad gave
us his Mtn experience of the matteri ~
"131d1 5 Mrs. Comfed Was there," Odd he,
" asked rue if I knew the cocks, and I told
her l yes„an course; . cause I'd bathed ;a,
,few
1 repkoti, • though not with them kin:', o' : fix
ins ; I tikes and turns 'em all, and ti ,re was
all kind of sputter below, but whef ready
there wasan't a mite of water in the blasted
thiqg ! 11 g It just naerally run out as fast asit
run , in,l, and then I know'd what waste
meant. i. Well, 1 just fusses with it iirst . up,
and then downond then one side and !ben
l'other, :fill I allowed" I'd shut the, lilarned
, thiciff a up,causejthe tub began to fill 4 Well,
j it,kept bit!, a f ricifillin', tai I rect;one • ci it
was alxint ftill,nnd then in I went,. he leg,
bat ! ; holy Egypt I.out again,' nein, bOwlingl
The cussed, eternal cold one hadn't 14.4edt
I s'pose; and I clouldn't a .come odt ~tvuss
from a !'seven filler eplosion ! old. ,700,
weight inocked at the door; " PerhipS yees
k
dont understand, the cocks," say;she.—
" Coek ihunder !" •I sung out ; but I didn't
wanrher in, to laugh at-me, and 141-wasn't ,
exactly fit to be seen by a lady, Ober, if
she wak fat, so A said it was nothin' and tried
hard to get, the hang of rite, cocaarniti haa.
dies. But by this time the, tub was
full, and bilin at tliat, and I kept turinte and,
waggia!,; till I rather guess I must hdye start
ed the cold one , without stopping ; the, hot
one, and as it was brimmin' full hefore,, it
none narrilly run over, and prehatis there
wasn't the darndest rise all over thar,icarpet,
in about two minutes, that you everdid Tee !
The cuieed cocks wouldn't stop ; d une on
'em, as a hoppin ' about in the wilier,- and
had j to 'sing out for old fatty, any how. I'd
rather gin a farm, by thunder,. buj- out I
!Alit, add half opened the door, 'fora recol 7
lected My costegme t . Back went old' fatty
aptinst!tite centre table andboake aittitcher,
and I flapped op, to achair and in m$ pdnts,
and then I broke for one of the apposite
badtintroonis, and locked myself ;pi,. and
told the, old women I'd gin her teat dollars
if she Would swab up, and heed rite; my
shirt, and say nothin' about it ! i I dour
know Whether she has or not, but I I aline* st
died a gait', spite of my scalded leg, when
eci Ititink - ofil I" i'
"I • fell you ; what, ',' added our f i.sucker,,
friepd, ,1 1 dont mind yonr_having a; laugh.;
Writ* AM go to publishin' , this in ihe, ,Ite-,
veille, li'll shoot you by gosh !" 1 4j , •,,; ..,
' We peg,to aseare, our, readers that ,we
consider, ourselv,es, shot.— , --•&, ! Lintis. Re
el/id. 1 ,
blortorio Lowx.—lt is well, said that .noth
ing !psi:. TIT ; drop ,of water thaiLls-aPlit,
the , fragment ofpoper,that.it,burnt, he plant-
that, rope pathe mundounVall thatiPeri*ea
amt tergotten,equally *mks., thcii, mow,
phere o find all ig there preserved4,lonathenee
daily nOrnetl l far use rr -,2lfcCulloeig
I -
ollowing claims paternity 'o the:- Nil,
Y. .43ri, :i.;
Contjedrunie.+Why is a pig. on a: like
• -411; r•'l.
ENE
=IR
..:ut.fii' ~,., i-, -, :t, , „ . -
i=lM=
- *C. , I, ..:f ."."!} • "I
N
)1 1 .1.1,
geiyo4fallind•
I::.yourqhorvito.
:krouttrOneto
to
'frio - t , lbw long
_.....L.4 3 ';:t.i,:i7iii.
(40wiiyikviii
6itisilipiiiii4
ngiii eg i
ohigtitietim ,
%
t
.om . t&' ' " - o l ve
in g t . ,, , lf i-
- . i-, i --,..74%.„,,,.
till
i
_
ME
r
SIM
I~
MEI
;22
,
1 Pitoiitit T r ini.; ton 3 e
• 4 eittßi..orthieitontt
titai::forhis(purPooe
d‘r,:titat ~“ the4ap: i
1 tfiluillitT l ALit j 8 ev
, 'al -, .4flierver,th4t;th:
' hty,mPaap7,.hi i t ~,..
C . lttflea,iaatiftini-vfi,..
... • 'itte4.44:oll -. getded.
e 1....
.......4!rytet, .w ,
1. , .iii 4 neapn( atop 4, ...
•lakilibileitopht - Wo
:601; peiloil:af ;I •,..
i lvinti the Ja iliot AU
I I , - Nil Ille Ileileo4 l o
`ireeticitu Certain, it
_ , x pk i, . or i
.011?-etas a
. , ti
icli - ,irbießittareth`
lor three,.:Rties,„as
1 4' 64.wheit:ie....»A.
e4eir*tainattin
d .at aaceixt led,
k .. ..i.
Mid, elefigtetti in, ,
dryiOgl. , ,luic if it-:i
• der. cover;. the :100
er:•:•.,lVoial. , Jetig,tt:
11 , uelloettet when , e.
I. ,d. itn' ntedi •ly ho
i v •- I', 43,9.1',-, .
•
or the
osigp
showa
mope
Paine .•
am. 3
°thee
!est'W,
citcula
Ratio
.cate,th:
being then require
ie crops, it mei. be
t. mrbeneverthere is
America* 4gricultv
rirtoliousfEw—Pai t' applied to 4 ttio-•
irof buildings late in the' Outdid - 1i cir
will endure'twice a liingytirs L ivWn
tn
earl"; in ininer ' r Jitt , :iventheii' ,
fanner case it dries cotV itid bec6ingtr '.-
i
t ea glazed ' surface; ot easily affet4::' l
rwardli by weather, rifle beating's'
.' But in voile hot ather; the oilzlff ; 1 ,
nt 'sodjui into the w tint once,i its ill-
tonge; leavin,,o 'the - ea& nearly ifry
tdj , to erunible off.' Cultivator. '',
a pphe4
In the
hard
ed af
storms
the p I
to a
and re
~,
one of ,
strt nu
tion;
len 6
he wa
old ,w
Jon be
was i
nevEanscm—The-C
j
harcOuntrymen wll
I. us aims to acquir9
who • Oiseoaraged b
gave
. up, his ,books,l
returningtottounue
. man rubbippt crow
ng,asked ilie reason
want ot, need;
rnb.ilown the eras/
enough... The patie
:.provoketij him to i
rs,succeede# in obtaii
t three in Ithe empil
could
!: a "MODE l oi;'llnii:',
1 1 :thei trotatoes Clean
tinethe elani D
.
ing Water 1 ,) - addirig a
remain unol:suffiete
• asily thint throng,
enid in w ich they'
i i
i ;
ash' in Cod' water.
Ntatoeh reniain two
;Id- water ; 'put the ,
t4id partially' min,
't until -neUrly'dry.
I theinion tie table'i
I NO .1 I,oosei r —Some
gentlenteniin) a negi
in Mr.' D.l and he
for. his friends, ! . of
freeli. Mr& D.' a .
ing-someWhatdispl
lengtii D. lig
He Was, 'however,
mself as he felr.a.li
firtitat samexine
milk twill destroy-di ,
• ped into iheiroom ,
Iwife tliare4irair
I- •: 1:..i
three
ed upi
:re is. s3Me- On-the'.
extunitied, , but - co
F
gto the d r, he . ,
art, 0 M ry, didn'
'Me milk - ere V'
es, there is some o
-i - a Second unsuc
crainlto the mined,
aiy, limy
; dear, , ii , .
or is it ju, tn lying Is
II
WBS
Aft l
went
thing
' `A"iiii IliOnea
• ponipittanCe of t :
,bcing a iillain for:;
.nr ne!gh iiir liei i
yon wi innoce
irottih th track of
i:,
'en ta..ret
sink
'
rici'sr• they sink frOi
on are tb , pi a'l
'ill find. C ernar '- :
have tae
• .ve . iyr'mli
eV%ilts," whit
foit*t
nk4own gusei,-.11
' I
I ', TA
, ;;t: , Wrec k of 1 lid, f' ,4 :‘ , ` ' 1' 1 5 ,1 i
Le Fe,lifi : pmething El, e .t ia;,t4e. wt :
:4 4 ,.
Ae ollliractrt if t h e Pr'A't_lntbit:l4otfrg
• aivl to him,..hose. an l i. assO,R,
areitirPf Ent,e l ll ol .Y..-, ._TllPArfifftz
humanPatiKeis"?'Pltegi r .i44torstAka t ,}
0, dir t y. toiOd , WA'
theaa:Oto,ifor,4l,AF 49r 0 14Tii0- 1 0.ilititll!Pt4 .
.4. kdies.liot , VPPY' P r ' i 4:Ikel; 7 PPC4f9l l , 4,
hod all the gte tit } at i t lygiii v i;
t.. % liP g r efjPg 4 l, - I NI.; winck{ cltur ~
1 ',t...:i s t."Aeut- Tor -f'D YIS E ClIF. , 41 11 1 1 7;.•1:
Pe t i9r, f Tliintivii ilk - iogarAoo-4Pal,
i • nti a ssensitiveness nuffertag l anpk,
: peateil w wads can dull; a harrOwthg,
,
in thou thou itisitit: Irmilittf i t,4ttepast,
.."i1 1 ' . 4 etiltilillo iii: l .Ot.rParet
1
! C*ritti',. le' sari» ',Vlatooioflio*ller
410bfi t iieliitigli '!3 • Vfi l stigt)ft, ‘ l 4 l
, palifit'Otihe 'to 'ii . it t s#iiiiAtiT 3 4 l l, 4
, 'astaeWelte'-'-'or .‘alionlia t tritevatton
• agh*alohei.burtitaieertrameheitruk
like iitalseitiof , die seettaii'leth4lo*.
- ', , ,0t 111,tbei diginfielthadilrb
it OA, _whether. v
...4 10,01 9 1 , 1 0 i ts art il
. , ouritailhe''firei. whiok-',Ditilliftill
eitietlll*llfe,iniii it illsOkaattlfon4.4a.
tagaibuatatutha i la-11'4aq l ith cr i m i l l ik
haebaiaeil'ettgle;l '. rav is saitelrfilam
ins; but-the AU 'thotilifilwakeko
‘l,T.:llPtfirlhallti g iiiiiitiern . lhalaii :
T io
\ Li :,-,.) t n= ti—Vt . • 4 ei 1.. c; t all .0 -Flit 4v.if.,.
rest .
like
71; 1 '4 6
..... J•
etch "biequene
4)
-4tri;eileg6-, of iil.l
El
Iffri farf
CIOR7t. tatilika
t .
:3, 13 0 4 0y
':. -fit
l~l~!j
I!MK:TO! NEY',lsi
' itY,thillkiiiit
;but-the
_ L Yrrak i ni , l•l'
• in thekk - mvuh” r•••
~ . .4410 ilte-tho,th
-_ • :sifnelPt-Ant..q
:iree-14 siti ...wlty
i ewoidNkfh4ft
iduritgAl%, ; l 4
, -entirsli. _. HO
4 .
: e
k r-111
SeeOl _ rim ,, .-
• Pr.00.546:v>
1 maturity '0 041,iil
erux the ta!", 41'
.•minium tgl./.4",
ificthet:*,,#ll4.
i be/Neat With u 3
r ited , ieduili444ll
1 : gnat .as, ,tlittf.,,
i. odpr •preeiselill
grit;.igi felte4 ,. 7,
Irawriltyint, tba-J.:
I e; vomit 4 0 f* ,
il•intended„wivd
i iticp4l.4e4l.'
! , for fuel; ligliT
i t aO above glai,-
•i Bed, butA uthik,
otn, the lab9r._eF r ,
. for theharvest-Ir,
. ore econentietikv
moo. leisure4-7,-tt
!kinetse Yil, u,s; 41
I , hnd bennipah)ng,„
, literiry informa-
. in dilli ,dis e pt i 27,
4 ' '. 7
labor,,4e saw ng,"„
ar, iall ,'tsy i.t9. 1 10 f , fi .
she, rpplinil Anti:
nd Abougin, ..alle,_ •
ar , till 44ei,gott ito,
ce/I . o f It 4 ligfd.; ,
PFither. •;itte9 l l4, • ;
jog, the.. rikof,,qc,,
e-77 -31 e4Ars4;: ,-, ,
rb Porsiiitket-14 .- -
rithoidtbiezikiiit'
p Vieth ititta 'sner'•
liftle'aelt,i Oael';i
Itijr'o4lo4 it - T(o: g\
'them. - Mir olr''
Intim' been "bioile&„"'
n- its stead:' ' Let;'
cninutelf;'Poiiii:off e
over a - sli i ivi'-fire;"
red, and' let thettt!''
Then' Oeel, :air'
an' open "disk' ic"
.....- .• , i - ~,, -)
me since twotost
boring tostaocall,
prepared an Egg
hich-they drank
ery amiable-lidY
": • • . , retired: I '!l7's
ed his friends to
nwilling to , g'eptii
e 'unskody; iiig-, ,
• d said, "to drink'
effeetsofipiritsl!
opit,;•andihniiiiresEP
ny- milk.littmtibit
itii . .q.li
ble:? , ishcoiepliii44.l
i l d :find - ncitielltre“"
r , „ ~....„(11. 1 i; y :
I you sa la y thew
', 1 ;:-
the table .'• -; .v. 4 p
1 essfal. sentehtins4;
or„ , aml,salk i , ]••lt.
hat-milk in' sop')
, Sel r , 1- ...- .(9
Life. t.
verit)r
Whit •
it i siiiidiel'ti4ll62
ee. took
'the ialks maii4
tieeti the'Ciitiffe J ':
, eat 01 :7 :
I eiinte not in kel
IMM
II
Ell
11
=I