11 el)i 2thocidt. I'U A Sup ED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING, BY ‘, • g 'DON & BOYD. (Offic4olS the west side of the Public Aventos.) TER.llO3.ib--ONE DOLLAR a yeas in advance. OneL'Oa. r . Fifty Ceuta not paid with* three months, #4l if delayed until after the expiration of the 'year Iwio dollars will be exacted. Disemiii winces optional with the Publiahera, =- less a are paid. Letteni t. the Publishers-en basineap with the of flee nius.Ab postpaid to insure attention. Portrii. - 1! IE FLOWER SEED n die. ,Thall he, line again ?"—Job 10 WM • .„ "Char , dear, iu the early spring made my garden bed, Von 14g ed at my doing so strange a thing --)ts itniting the seeds that were dead. "Awl ion . wete sure. I never should . see The4edves come bursting out For 0,40 u, thought, how strange it would be If sittliose seeds should sprout!' '•I wily )11 w wait till the gentle dew; The4l: :nul the shower, Had sltwu us all that they could do To dhti.v from the seed the flower. "And Von 't you remember, aftcre I whihol von to come and see qty gaiticn bed, you asked with a smile, NY ll o"er all those seeds could be? "1 tohtyrt then that evry seed ined a living power, Wlti4fnitm the dry envelope freed, WoOdl soon produce a !lux% er. Audpftn since, you'N e watched my flowers, Wh.ge grow ing.7, on knew not how: But disiden stram: , r than those bright bowers Invdesl your attention now." And th,e tnothor led her thoughtless son To cponue burial ground : And tsert•, a, they thoughtfully wandered on A Ili‘Vis• Made trrave they found. Flow#, , ivere growing ani' und the tomb, Thos4--i , and the fweutthl briar; :,, And ticj.) - ..:eented to say by theirbright rich bloom, Thaka rootber's lore was there. "o.p rive is a beautiful place, 'Smithy flowers are all in bloom And Alen he raced his innocent fime, It hid lost its; gatheretl gloom. "Bat e fairest flower, my Charley dear, Thai plant has ever given. Will siring from the seed now buried here, AnOhlom in the bowers of heaven.. • Thelar'vest day will surely appcnr, - Whin the seed will hung the sod, And figrt- from all IL:a could mar it byre Shi . ti,rlll by tilt• throne of Gold. " ' oth,ior,.s of 2\-gt-,urc GULF WEED MMIMMEC! _ •tVaNtry Recd, tasi.ed to and fro, I keur;i , dr-mheil in the ocean brine, hiri, and sinking . lolimt along Witkortl. j. 411 the spoom of the surging sea, Otilg7 the foam afar and linear; :gap . my manifold mystery— Growth and grace in their place appear. I lniarromal, berriei s gray and red, lctailless and rover though I he; My prangled leaves, whet, nicely spread, P#boresce us a trunkless tree ; Cu ti dslcurions mat Inc o'er, *bite and hard in apt array; Jib the wild wave,' rude uproar, (fratiefully grow I, night and day, 11 eirts they; are on the som.a . ling sham leis tbing whispers soft: to me. Re#leis and roaming fur evermore, Bike this weary weed of the sea: Beiir they yet on each heating hreasti eternal Tylie of the wondrous GrOwth unfolding amid unrest, (3raec informing, with silent soul. liliscellann. -1 NIAGARA FALLS We We eitract from the " Democratic Re view,/ ftir January, the following) interest ing fict t relating - to this great Cataract, which were contain Melted by 114 Hall, in his r4cetont report of the Ge4ogic4l.Survey . z of .Ntttv York : 1 ' In . Prder to obtain a correct understanding of test merits of this subject and itshearings, let uistrite clZ,arly what the present condi tion of is magnificeut cataract it: - Lake Erie is s tttated 331 feet abuve Lake Onta rio.tween them runs, in a 4directiou main. , omit, an immense river, which with in th chstanee of little more than one mile, falls irough the greater part of thikdeep de seen Through this river runs every Mix' l ute Mitts of water, probably not varying mug from 20,000,000 cubic feet, or every five 01, dl one half days a cubic mile, or every yeaysixty-six cubic miles ! not far•from the . one tree-hundredth part of all the fresh wa ter 4 the globe ! From Luke Erie to Lake Ont. - o the whole channel of the river is Ivor through the rock, forming every where a de i t , perpendicular chasm. But it iste - lowie falls that the deepest portion of this Borg eXists. From the falls to Lewistown / is setptitniles, and for this whole distuneo the' bottom of the, river is at the botio of an e c 'iltion from three to fi re hundyfedfeek il deep a d from'twelve hundred to twoithous and:i e. For the first two miles' after leav;) g Lake Erie, the course of the river. is quit jr pid ; it then becomes slOwet,' tepar atin4i two branches at Grand, island; and fart t own expanding into, a troad lake like ith et of water, filled with little islands. At the oot of this the stream begins to pre senttl.l ifferent aspect. It suddenly con traeigs i width . , and plunges with inCotreeive labl,e ocity doWn the rapids. 'llithertothe ilesept from Like Erie has been bUt fifteen feet ithin'aboul a mile it now falls 'fifty= two ee down the rapids, and theti plunges will te rific randeur over a fall 0163 feet.* 1 It ..' n descends 0.111104 feet before, leoaCh .„,kr lake telow. I is will known to have lowg b een !the 7 CFoche , Sill the I#. , au g b ably, tha pisieritrui c i! n w full . il4. ndlr 167.7e5t . ‘ fet ; lr krona Lake Eiie, D freplfattly raise lu s ftto " m n . 164. higher. .. ti[ , • E .i, , , VOL. 1. belief of those who have paid much attentidn to the subject, and we believe it is a current opinion in the neighborhood of the falls, that the cataract was! once at the point where the Niagara rivet empties into Lake Onta rio, or at Lewistown, seven miles below its present place. It is believed by the adeb: cafes of sticha theory, dint the cataract has retrograded through these seven miles by its own action upon] the rocks wich 'give it ex istence, and that:in retrograding it has dug. out the ittlmense gorge already• described, which forlias the !river's bed below the fitllS. An oppite opinion has also prevailed, and heretOfore extensively ; for to the minds of some there hall appeared one element in such a calculation wanitng. That element ayes time.' Until recently a school of phi losophers has taught, that the; ' utmost: limits that could'be placed to the age of the falls was some six thOusand years ;,'and that pe riod, long as it appears without the troub le of calculation far short of that required to dig this vast ravine, in comparison with the greatness of which the miglitieSt of man's works sink into insignificance.' But we take a different view of the subject: • 'Ye say, that ifthe cataract can,be proved to recede at all, even though an inch an age, then, if ages enough be found, the cataract must have reached its present position hr recession. And ,we say farther, that if the cataract can be shown to recede ,now, ; it must have been 'receding ever since it com menced to flow. But if it has been receding• it must have worn a portion, at least, of the ravine. If, then, the cataract has worn its way back a:portion of the seven miles, th.• presumption is, that it has worn its wa r y back for all the sieven miles, and time enough must be allowed: for the work to be accom plished. If sin thousand years are not enough—then, if necessary, sixty thousand must be granted', and the onus probandi lies with the opponents of our argument, in showing that for some satisfactory rea so much time cannot be allowed. It I;ti s with them, too, to explain away the alisur dity.of believing; that while half a mile of the ravine, or mire or less, must be charg,ea to the action of the cataract itself, the other six and a Ma miles of the same ravine, per fectly agreeing With it in character, must be attributed to other agencies. We have amag,nificent a priori argument thundering in our ease the conviction, that at some far distant age, the water of Niaga ra 'poured theniSelves into Ontario over a precipice seven miles below its present posi tion. No sane : man can escape it. lie might=as well visit the studio of an artist, and: after watching him carve out the fia gerof an almost:finished Venus, sagely mid with candor that with regard to eto 6. ri swot ~.• • and that it was even ntitlAY Ptt'slialV that - 10 the game source might be attributed the hand, and perhaps the ann ; but as for the head and:form, and divine proportions winch the marble presented, no reasoning should ever convince him, that so weak an instrument as a man and aChiselhadever accomplished so much. With respect; to the rate of the present re cession of Niagara, unfortunately neither history nor observation can reveal much. :It has scarcely been known. to civilized. man more than fifty years. Many of the resi dents lorits vicinity, who have known it for aboutjthis period, say that within fifty years the fall has receded fifty yards; but this seems to Mr. Hall an over-estimate. But still, the frequent 'Undermining and away of the cliffs which form the cataract show conclusively, that whether slow or oth wise, there is yet a very sensible recession. ,yvellzknown fact, which goes to ; af fitm the same opinion, that the American fall is constantly growing more and more cerved in its outlines. In 167, Father Henepin visited Niagara, and made a draw ing of it, which Mr. Hall has kindly furnish ed us with in his report. It is, to be sure, something of the rudest, but it yet serves to show that a manifest and important change has taken place in the whole appearance and contour of the falls. 'How great this change kes.been it is impos t sibleto - estintate. It is sufficie4i - for the argument to know ! that any change has occurred. To put j th'e truth of the Matter to test, Mr. Hall, ; by Governor Seward's direction, caused a trig ' onometrical ..survey to be made of the pi, I and the moan' talents of the survey to be prop erly secured pn both sides of the river. A. few years will be sufficient to throw some 'true light dpOn this subject. One question, which has been freqetitly mooted respecting Niagara, has been happi ly set at rest 'by the -ruvestigations 01 Mr. Leyell : Why, if the present be of the river was worn by the river itself, did it take its present course in preference to any oth er ? The answer is, that the stream :runs along the bottom of an ancient valley, formed doubtless like many other similar valleys by the agency of water, long before the conti- I neat had so far-risen from its native bed as to have given birth to the thousand water courses, and the great lakes among them. which intersect its surface. Thelpriiof of this lies not altogether in the topographical surface of the country, but in the fact,' that in the earthy portions of the banks of the ra vine, at the bottom of which is the river's ';beds and Upon Goat bland, and upon the platform on .either aide, there exists, at heights above the water, diminishing as you go towards Lake Erie, fresh water shells of modem genera, indeed resemblin g those -now found in Sims lakes aboveand hlow.— The evideu9i .18 complete that ere Niagara 'ives, a fresh water sea existed in the ;basic -.Which now forms its bed. , The rivet' , occue Ivied it because if afforded it a proper cline - lie, but the valley existed before the I nver.. Slade that distant period, a river has graded for itself a path through solid stone,; from, tilvelve to twenty handed feet %Vide, and from three:to five htitidred deep. -But now the sublime inquiry presehts it 'self: t How has been this , periPtl ? 't-How-lorto . since Niagara commenced : Idesing at* long,lthe time it has con sumed in Moving backwards from Lake On- "EVERY DIFFERENbE 0 tario to its prekient po in vain for ani answe chronometer, )ut its i actersdefying'ptire tl to decypher. i It mi;, easy enough, Iknowit ; given - time, td. comp' recede seven 'miles; rdispels the illtision. aract has diudnished tnenced ; for eon side and topograiMical el. tans, that when it could not have beep height ; it halgraduz I St:ata which, when its base, ha% e disappe those rocks (Ater whi stream itself May liar In some parts lof its c ly formed -a mirrowe forms ; in others, a of its course, he cha which its force has b ualiy changedb It a feet of very thick bed Niagara grouo,) whit_ of the Ihll, and of al; shale, which forms it supporting tie lin) *rates by the action tog out, sufices the lit and 11111 down; into such data as these, u calculation, it ,its only eoinpute the 4g«)lN is a fact, that A% Ain a!readv the el of the werld has sear,. animals ha% e iwopled w:!ic:; pruccdth! out n i.arc A v. all Ilia! du: of le: a!:1:44-.; !eliutig . et R hen loekediat, 111 eternity of tittle w hick the Potsdam l4itid,t4l4 ila, the t!rstiktoiwn ;dim e Lt.,: less er forCifer,4n4 locks, have been torined granite iierc ikon; ,1 0 of age—whoht. ..as ‘i stone, a1.,1 ceeding-stratili.i teem of annual 4iad ewetai inal and vegetable lire it, eliarieters; I)ri turies of centuries co to produce vege ell:inked by alliundre constitutes the audit: tl as' vast owll fields, r..;,lyd.=tlr. liappeas ae•ailt : the whole strata are- fur again the' coit!tinent a ptcrodaetyli—t-rriou at winked reptill:s start vallies at-c formed, f. - ont ut,linowit regio, tiacnt ; ha.-inis of firs appeal!. Yes: agaraconinicnces. hears it. It t)erfurm. signed it, ballot one Mastodon alai 1.. tigt it. l..ist of all at It, anti Avo l r fur ancient a ltib aneegt tv - ctilit th Lfc-jIL-ratiun Wt; niunt Urea s c is, the emi,eipirtice ul (h( p ia.rara. Mr. Hall has show has continually that it inut.t contioni of this is the southi the strata,over n loci estimates, that a receded two :lilies, at a point Where tot ready been Said, far in heiiiht, the bottoi nvcr which is the fa appeared beneath II cession 1111.1:0. he Uhl tion of the water wi upon the thick bed now lint worn away underlying shale, tected froth the age on it. Four or iii tion will bring the ter ; and then, if th ded limestone—all above the falls,, c ,present codition, tl have ceased to ex I being all that is le Some persons I this has occurred, t of these rapids nth deluge those portio ada bordering Lak ions are chimurica were to be poured tario, it would on] fifty feet above its surely. But, for age, even If it ever gradual. ,But hef inttevenc.-I The G lag up of the lures regions whence tl must diminish in and unlo4,ed-fur alter the Whole fay BRQOSs!CORN. id deteriution of ti ()flute a subject plaint. This is d quences insepera, ner in which it near Indian corn and in a short ti istic fvattires and To prevent this' be selected from have been grown etieS.--Maine p) L • A I V . . , ; 7 . • „ • • OPINION IS NOT A DIFFERENCE ' OF PRINCFPLE. -_T FFEBSON.j " TROSE, PA. JAN, 27, 1847. AlO ;Mon ? Alas, we look Niagara may be a ial is engraved in char an a Com polhon's skill lit, at first sight, seem ig the recession for any Lie the time required to but farther reflection We know that the cat in height since it coin •a!ion sof a geological aracter render it cer- as at Lewistown it ess titan 350 feet in Ily diminished till now. t commenced, formed trod or dipped beneath it now pours. The I. been altered in size. tanuel it has nianifest i'cataract than it now rider. In every part new of the rock upon :en spent, has contin w consists of about• 63 ed limestone, (of the forms the upper part it the same amount of base, underlying and :stone. This disiate f the spray, and wear , iestone to break au aft, abyss below. With nat which to found a mdio•ss to attempt to agara Falls. But it period, as We have I ar,xter of the fauim ely clmnged ; the same :• th" fr, di water tta, as now people its lei . tilt , c c,.ury i!ic Jobe ita 1! I!Jvi 111,1 a sped. ..citriparisou has , ;titer:enc.,' ...in—/ C, %%Atli iti little h:tn :firer ol'ot h ich its r.j;,-al.” .1 ::!I.l.ffinuis 11 !II d,•• is uIL d up ‘v:111 ts;i4 - 11 ,qIC 11111E\(lllll tae refflitiai leale and their :ou r 111 . fillt lltly C 17311211 1,, :did vas formed ; ecn lid only :tare suffieed able rzion:th which, 1 circums.adues, now Hite, and the coal of of the event of which v land disappears, ned ab we the coal : spear., sa,ariam, formod of life, and into h. Inv, hills and houldeN are washed s over the whole con. t oat r,v,ith louder' l•rday, as it were, Ni. t thunders, but no ea' I the functions tiod as !etc. it. J o!.1. How ilu aion trcidilled us thi•t has hc:flia 1:1101;1 loath, it it can be a !irs of the hundred an, traminz, from which the true dignity and lie mon(' point, and tht permanent happiness of life atone can conic, f the entire reres,io !Lover teaching them habits (if self-sacrifice s2pectne conchtion i atal ;Ind control, rather by example ite:tructing them in evil speaking, n, that thus far the fie in tita_iltaritaideness, iti.envy} rand in false uished in. height, ad ! hood, I think, with a sigh, of the patch on to do so. The eau- ! both Nees and gloves nil. -aid or upward dip ;.! When I t;r•e a family in a dold and selfish the river runs. M !solitude, not habitually warniing their lions ion the fall shall hat 'es With the glow of happy fates, but lavish will then have arrive • ing that which should furnish thehospitali shale; whtch, as has t i ty of a whole year, upon the !profusion or a for about sixty fo !single night, I think of the patch on both • kw cs and 4rlf,res on. of the encamploy I, will have entirely di ! When 1 see a !Kluge profusely famished e water. Here the t ! with sinnptuous furniture, ricti Curtains, and oat stopped, for the luxurious carpets, but with no books, or then b e w h o ll y spa none but a few tawdry annuals, I am re ed limestone, which minded of the patch on bath knees and gloves but undermined by t inch will then be ni idles which nuw act e ►wiles of retro,;,rraii tnestone below the rock—a very tl►in in eh now forms the iapi minucs to maintain , cataract of Niagara NI st —a precipitous rai of it. aye fearer], that tilt sudden tic caring tc.i It. drain Lake Eric, II is of New York and C 4 • Ontario. But such . Even if all Lake E 1 constantly into Lake raise it one hundred 4. irt scut Icy (.1. Limo; bviuus reason, this dra l occur, must be slow 4 , 1 ire it countless ages ttli cat Lakes, from the els"; and the civilization ofl Ley derive their wat • ize, and ;1 thousand ri geological changes c of the continent. lln ninny sections the; ' 1 Lliis production has heti. f almost universal c übtless one of the cu le from the careless , s cultivated. If• pia it willinevitably "ti e assume the chart qualities of the form -teriatiou ' 'the seed sh ell dOveloped plants emote from all other nner. • • ' :t l I ATCH ON BOTH KNEES CO GLOVES ON. I The following, from the BOston Courier, is one of the cleverest essays; we htive met with for many a day. Similar in kyle, it is not inferior in point to Franklin's best : " When T was a boy, it was iny.fortnne, for a lung time, to breathe what Aome =writers term . ‘• the bracing. air of ilulVerty.i'' My mother—light lie the turf upon the form which once enclosed her strdug and gentle spirit—was what is cotntnonlx calledlan am bitions woman ; fur that quality, whiCh over turns thrones and supplants dynastids, finds a legitimate sphere in the hUmblesi abode that the shinlow of poverty Over da'rkened. The struggle between the wish to keep up appearances and the' pinchin' gripO of no ce.,sity, produced endless shits and Contriv ances, at which, we are told som6 would sntile, and seine, to whom they would teach their' own experience, would high. But let me not disturb that veil of oblivion: which shrouds from profane eyes the hallowed mysteries of poverty. . On one occasion, it was necessary to send me on an errand to a' neighloir in better cir cumstances than ourselves, and therefore it was necessary that I should lie presented in the hest possible aspect. Grdat pains were accordingly taken to give a Smixrt appear ance to my patched 'and dilapidated ward robe, and to conceal the rent and chasms which the envious tooth of tine had made in them ; and by way of throwing over my equipment a certain sr. , or and sprinkling of go:nil:iv, my red and toil-htirdened hands -were enclosed in the unfamilikir casing of a pair of gloves, which had belonged to my . :anther in days when her yerirs were fewer and her hear; lighter. I 'allied firth on my errand, and on my wity encountered a :tack older and bigger bee, a he evideuilv belonged to a family who had al! our own dragginir povierty, and none of our uprising wealth of spirit. His rags Xtirly fluttered in the brek-re i his hat was i •iii,ti-net•id en the most approved principle olventilatiou, and his slows, from their yen . rable antiquity, might have iwen deemed a pair of t;issil , hoes—tlic very 'ones on whirl. Shen) shoaled into the ark. Vie was an im pudent varlet, with it'd:we-41MA swagger in his _air, and a " Pin as !food its YGO" leer in his e , e—the tern whelp to throw a stone at a n ell-dr , ssod horseman, beeatniw he was n ell-dressed ; in u-ar a boy's rut' les because he aas clean. As soon as he I.aw me, his eye detected the practical inc onsistencies ' that eharaeterized my c‘isatime, and taking ',MC la the shoulders, tut-Magna.. round with ino gentle laud, and surveyilq; me. from • head to fttot, exelanned, with a seernfal iategli of der,sion, "a patch, on both bites •:_ , ll 1,.:,-. , ..1"' .• hich !Amt through me at [Moto words. To parody a celebrated hoc of 11 - ,.‘e immortal T Li 4 ." 'filar day I won) my o:we , no nufre But the lesson thus ruddy Criforced, sunk deep into my heart ; -and, in after-life, 1 have had frequent occasion to make a prae.- i tical applicamm of the words; of my raged when 1 'have observed the practical • inconsistencies which so often mark the con duct Of Mankind. When, for instance, I see' parents care ; . ;idly providing l .r the ornanional education of their children, furuisLing them with teach ers in music, (lancing and drawing, and grv rui• no thouirlit to that inoralj and religious When I see the public men cultivating exclusively those qualities which win a way to office, and neglecting those which qualify them M fill honorably the posts to which they 'aspire, I recall the patch on both knees 4rtores on. When I see men sacrificing. health of body mid peace of mind to the insane pur suit of wealth, living in ignoiance of •the character of the' children who are growing up around them, cutting themselves of rona die highest and purest pleasures of their natures, and so pnrverting their humauity, that diat which was sought as a means, in sensibly COltlt'd to he followed as, an end, I say to myself, a patch on both knees put glares on. When I see thousands sqaundered for sel fishaess and ostentation, wit.' nothing he stowed for charity—when I gee line Indies be-satiaed and be-jewelled, dheapeniug the toils-of dress-makers, and with harsh words embittering the hitter bread of dependence; when I ree the poorturned away from proud houses nhe re the erumbsof the tables would aft;ird theta a-feast, I think, of the patch yn bath knees and gloves on. - 'HINTS ADMIT Foob.—Roust meet con tains nearly double the nourishment or bpil ed, but boiled meat is hotel adapted to weak digestion. Frying is one of the very best methods of dressing - food, as broiling is one of the best. Baked meat has a strong fla vor, is deprived of some of its nutritious qualities, and is difficult of digestion. Spices, sanees;tand melted butter, -should never be used by an invalid. , . 11 47 an liVayander, a discharged sergeant of the T. S. , artillery, and who lost a leg at Pah? 21.1t0, was robbed of all his CM on lending !,it New Orleans, lIY C IIAIILRS LAS JI Cast of the lllin : f i _ 1 _ IS4irved,.B.ock is the unpOic name of , atiligular spot on the 1114104 r ver; about I ei lit miles south of Ottawa: lit is a rocky Ihlfiff rising from the margin ofih stream•to I tlt height'of more, than ti - hundre feet, and isiseparated'from the inaiti laftd . by 'a . par raw chasm: chasm; Its length' mialitt probably I - asure two hundred and ftyl feet. Its si es are perpendicular, and tlt.re is but one pint where - it can be ascenditd, and that is i l by a narrow! stair-like path. It rs covered with many . a cone-like eve ' tn, and in summer, roe by luxuriant. and ivy e. Ivi , and clusters of richly c orled flowers. . il q ItliS ondoubitedly the most cod picuous and I biautiful r pietorial feature of' he sluggish I and lonely Blitioisond associ t ed with the r filial extinction of the Indians. • The legend, I w)lich I listened to from the li s of a.vener i , able trader, is as follors:- - , I I i Many years ago the 'whol4 region' lying 1 biftween Lake Michigan and [rtelVlEississip- I pi, was the home and dominion of the Illi , nUis Indians. For them alon did the Buf-' fop and antelope range over t e broad !val... I .. ries ; for them, did the finest f Irivers roll 1 their waters into the lap of Me ico, and bear I ) their birdhen canoe, as tl,eylsought to, , capture-the wild . water fowl ;genii far them ; atone did the dense forests, ctilV c , din upon in these strens, shelter their un n , itibert7d den ikns • I , • 4 .; •, . l. In every direction might be stea the smoke t , (4 Indian wir4ams curling uptvards to min .l 4 with thelsunset clouds, widelil told them ! tales'of the spirit land. Years palsed on, and thes ecintinued to hi at else inltheir possessions. B u the the white inan from the fareast, with thi Miseriesthat hive ever accompanied him On !his march o usurpation, began to wander into the wil-. cltrnessand trouble to the ikor red man tits the inevitable consequenc4. The bane . fill " tire-water," which was fife gift of civil *non, created dissensions arnotig the say aie tribes, until in process of time, and on account of purely imaginary villi, the Pot trfwattarnies from Michigan etermined to make war upon the Indians o llinois. For nine, or rather destiny, smile tt upon the op pessors and the identical ro4 in question iWes the spot that witnessed th# extinction of alt aboriginal race.. , i It was the close of a longeige of cruel ;Airfare,r and the afternoon of a iday in the gdtliglntul Indian summer. *he sunshine rew a mellow haze upon th 4 prairies, and Awed the multitudinous flotfers with the diepest. gold;; while in the diadows of the Ilrest islands, the doe and heAfawn reposed iis perfect quietness, lulled in+ a,temporary -4.. 1...",-.1- - *;,.,„,, .........,r..t,..-, rlrt 4.!•...,., cw.l3 - C{A (.f a perfect Sabbath._ But no to the twink ldig, of an eye, the delightful solitude was bfoken by the shrill whoop and dreadful strugg..le of bloody conflict apt the prairies mild in the..woods. All ov the country were seen the dead bodies , o the ill-fated Illinois, when it was ordered itv Providence that the conidudinfr skirmish- between the. bstile parties shou ld r ' take pl.4ce in the .vi cinity of Starved Rock. -?; 4 .• The Pottawattainies ntirribtied near three . hundred warriors, while . the Illinois tribe was reduced to about - one hundO, , who were mostly aced Chiefs and youtlit4l heroes--the npire desperdte fighters havini already per ited, and the women and cipdren of the, tube having : already been ntssacred and clnsumed in - J- their wigivam, The battle I tats most desperate betweeni the unequal piirtie:. - c. 4 . I i The Illinois were about to give up all for lit, NI hen in their frenzy, the g:lve a defy , . it shout and retreated to tit , reeky bltk horn this iti was an: easy n . ttdr !to keep Mick their enemies, but alas! om that tn-o -f nnt ioent they', were to 'endure . un bought of sOferitig, to the delight of r baffled, yet victorious, cderaies. - i r -ind now to describe in weds that followed land was prololed dks, were utterly impossible.Tl NI hisarted Indians, in whom ana 'mil , become extinct, chose to ie 1 strange fortress by starved° - at ther than Surrender . them elvi. sga I ping k nifil of their . exterinkbet° liith a few e*eptions, this wlis th iti which - theyrdid perish. sowl indeed, a desperate man wottl.d li: s 1 lf, hoping thereby to escape' utl hwk would cleave his brain b fort . e the ground, or the waters I Day followed day, and thesfi bei I ties sat in silence, and gaze in upon their broad beautiful ` lane Idtnghanger er was gnawing into thir Mght followed night, and the lot the silent stars and beyond di the Great Spirit, but they m inti i t Ids decree. Atid-if they slept,.thi tliey once more played with t eirl t 1 diem, or held Converse with titir } : Named the w l pods and praises I ft edom. 'When -morning thivvr4 i tl e harbinger iof another' day Of a' vt ten the ev ning cattle, a O f sinictitnes bri hten up a lin gal nhnce—for th pubr, unhapp sot ter eye of au obscure faith ; • lad I g 'llipse of tie spirit land., Da day and the last lingering Ito v gmed. Then: destiny was s ale tinge for good could possi y fdr the human blood-hounds 4 th their prey, were utterly widut I.9le.feeble, w6ite haired eine cre thicket and there breathed l s - f recently 'strong-bodied wart r, ptcted but teeble yell °rev, tat As maliewkjupod some. fie . then yielded _ himself up to t o p ;e6ndition. Tice blithe form th tithe parted] with its - streitgth :• mpelled to inner and . :fall knot rigid die. Teti weaq,;veardal I I 4, and. the strongest num ; t e ' 4aeo, was numbered awing , ,inglorious ban T rat, was iirese ti g)e and raven/ FE Advertisements , conspicuously insetted4t. the 04 al rates of. Irrry CENTS . IX 7 go re. f or E rg! " ai d TwEsri=hvx fads sBlbseorent Yearly Adyerisements, With the .priiilegio of teration, not to exceed • ' • Quarteri Column, with the paper, pet-e ar, •$3 00 Cdlumn • do B, 09 One Column, do do' 13 00 Btadneis Cards, do . 3.00 All other advertisements inserted a 4 remigiablip rates: - x ~~ El Advertisements 'should be marked with the ism- . ber of inseribes required. 7 . • • • `The poor have no• business with Buell feelings--they should be crushed ;' , exclaftnz ed the wealthy Colonel. H. to, a young girt whose lean. stern sorrow had well nigh bra ken. 'Crushed, Uncle, crushed !' replied she; her voice choking. - Were they not given. us-by God 1 -And is he not a Father ttithe poor as well as the. rich'!" Hush, hush, " girl !' answered the Ool: warmly. 'You are looking too high ; grasp; i inn• at something which you can never reach; and I tell you 'tis your place tolie humble r Yes, I know it is,' replied she; 'but- not in the sense in which you would Wish: Be cause I am pqM you would have me crush all the better feelings of my naturebanei my' purest .and holiest hopes foi a few Olt. Illl,Cltll/1 :IL a dui , lhas _ rkr war. chain'ine.' She paused, fearful of having givennt"- fence, and her Uncle left the room withhigay step. The sorrowing girl leaned her facelfn her hard and gave full vent to her feelings. Ah ! well might she weep—well might she sorrow; for he to whom she had early-given her young heart's • affections then'lived but in heaVen. She -was aldne' He Who hod loved her with a whole heart's devotion, who would have shielded her )from the world'ir cold selfishness, was not there to sooth and. comfort. Alas hers *nB=a• bitter trial, and it well nigh 'drove the blood fiber her yeins. Alaa! how many there are like Colonel IL; hOw many who would sell even their very sOuli for filthy lucre.' But islith• hearts can know little of true happinesk ('Selfiall ness and 'a greedi love of gain' must have reigned like a :tyilint in their bosoms, de throning all else. Such persons deeetre our,p4y rather than censure.' Besides; thty may libt .have - always Veen add it bitiy be that even now these "fits of selfishridat are but momentary, and pass away like' the fleecy :cloud before the noonday's Let us bmiare then, how we• conderait,-renietii bcring that 'he that is without - tin - thodld cast the first stone.' - • the scene or several /OSe stout- 'was about brion their thirst, s to the But' while we would most willingly ex tend to them the hand of tharity, 'we can but see the utter fallacy of their reasoning. The poor no business with feelings, in-' deed'!' Then why were they given? Surely, God bestoweth nothing in vain. Let them be cherished, then. Let the coldness' Rid selfishness of the world have no poWeitta: pollute them ; but lerthtse high and 'noble aspirations be litpt pure end holy, even as tit*. they comit, Then, indeed, 'they will be a blessed do preferable to thti world's whole wealth. . I And, le manner ;1 and di it borer hi - . I the to a he tou 1 dpless c p daplorin4ly ids ; whsle Jery vitals. oked upon 1e home ; of Bred not at And rather than let povei4y prove alitt tier to the mind of feelings, let it - nightly., urge then] onward. Ay, and how frequent ly it does! Go ask the , annals of the titi#, and What tell they? Is it not thattminy, very many of our greatest minds have'been nursed in the-cradle of comparative *lntl True therlind the geins of a striantiiiill within thentt- but the' indulgencep 'wealth might; haieJenermted. As it wan;"-111# Went bravely on, have risen UpleVniiirtheitt. blessed, so let it lever be. ; Let`Tinverybe - ttir y stay: ; Indeed it; Cannot be whern'thereii l a strontmind ad determined finiiiase: - 'Si il 1 . know nophithrsjAave those -Which cast aiide till this.' mortal 'put nu inumi,•itali ty, and death he swtillo*ed up in victory.'"; eir-drcams (little chit- Wives, and in perfect 0 it was 'cony ; but le would ;d counte 1, through caught a followed as -aban- i; and no pike - place, watched j INerouvr AT Sstaitt.o.--When • Wiest. Wortb's command' was approaching :Salta lo, and Were about, three miles distent'lroes the, city, fuur young women Whited Inuall. merican dress were sect, standing ~ by, road ,side.. COriesity ran high to . know who they were, and they received matipis oialate as the troops passed, therriz, , At last tin officer rock) up to see, who.they were. ,Theyi; Informed him ihtit they4erelnms New lersey, and engaged ialuperintendirig ili e ,t e i no le operatives of ti .cottoe : mud, !we& . ritotery hard. by, andi.expressO v in: the coarse of tbeir, ,cnnversatioti", a desire a) bear againAlg Old National Air. Ysiokir De* mercy. t into the .ast. The uttered a ion, hurled ©low, and tins of his soft=eqed and we's the earth Vs passed st of his end ; - and to.the Tomis of Adirerta4;ll. f: _ UE tiILGIUM'S 80C,14. BY Mn.'. A. 0. WELD," When first the lonely ➢lay Flower flex: ; Her canvauss to the breeze, . To bear afar her pilgrim crew, - . Beyoud the dark blue seas, • Proud freedom to our land had flown, And chose it for the brave; • Then formed the nation's comer **mut. I. And set it by the wave, •,. • That when the pilgritheanchored thenir •.! Their Stepping-stone might he; That consecrated rock of prayer, • The bulwark of „tbe -fire. And there they stood-4eacb brow ' Was wan with grief and air; And bent each manly form: but oh,: Another sight was there— Fond woman, with her sweet sad Face, All trembling, pale and chili .; And oh, there was in that lonely Owl - A sight\more Muciting still -15 The cheek of childhood pale with fear; And hn.thed it 3 voice of glee. And they are gone, but we are here; A bulwark for the free. • . . . .., . . Our pilgrini sires are gone, yet still A nation in its pride . . . . • .. }lath poured o'er every vale and hill, , In a bright unbroken tide; f . And still their sons shall flood the IMad..; While I that old rock appears. ' Like a pilgrim's spirit, torn to stand -' The mighty- wreck of.years; And oh ! while float the' ind and wave; That billowed reek shall be -. • The tbreshild of the good and brave, The bulwark of-the free! . . iroygny Cainuit Chaiii: MEM! B BIM