iirOt 'Voyles 'At/Limits) , svinivi Tito ":-. - ; JOS. 'BO (06ce,8n the wait side offs-Publit Ale#maci; 1003.—ONE 151)LLAR - Ctisti One 'Dollar Fifty •Cents ,if slot . pad witt#l,thei mrths, and if delayed until r the isporetiosnif the year two dollars trill bee tided. Discontinnences optimal:ld the PatailliWiripla• leisurrearuges are paid. Letters to the Pablisheriek business wilt 4he o fiebilust be post-paid 'to inmxt attention:.; t „ Pottrp. THE FADED HEATHER., --rr• [lt is recorded of the Highland einignuats to Cana they. wept because e headier would not grow on their n ewly-adop son.] Theis may bo some too ye to wee? co* po v erty, or care, of wrong ; Within whose manly bosoms sleep EMotions gehtle, warts{ and strong; Which wait the wakening of a tone - . Unmarked, unthought of by the crowd, Ami seeming, unto them lone, .A.iwice both eloquent ind loud; Ana then the feelings, hid for years, Bust forth at length in burning tear*. He wept, that hardy mo4itaineer, 'When faded thus his lord heath flower ; Yet: mid theills of life, n tear Had wet his cheek until' hear. You might have deemed the mountain tire Had sooner shrunk ami the blast, Or that his native rock shOuld be Rent by the winds whih . hurried put,' itather than he a tear shodld shed, Because a wild flower drcioped its bead. • It would not grow—the lie' ether flower= Far from its native lal . exiled, Though tireezwi from the oreit bower . Greeted the lonely mountain child: It better lov'd the black high wind Which blew upon the ighland bill. And for the rocky heathl pined, Though tended both care and skill-1 An exile on a stranger strimd, It languished for its native laud. . Oh, if the heather had bui. grown ,vici bloomed upon- a fokeign scene, Its owner had not felt anme, I Though a sad exile he had been ! But, when be marked itslearly dead, Ile thought that, like Ifs mountain flower,,, Wither'd beneath a foreign breath, lie soon'might meeting! final hour, Aii4 die, a stranger and alone, Un!ept, unpitied, and, u,'known! 111,0cellOn. GENERAL MON BT J. T. 111403L1T One summer evening, i when a primeval `forest covered almost thq entire surface '-,or this now glorious Union, young British of in rich uniform, stored on the shore'elf Lake Champlain, and )looked off on that beautiful sheet of water. He was wily twentyktwo yeaof, a'e, and butifor-his manly, / almost perfect form, he would have seemed els-a _yoonger. His skin was tali, and his anntetiance beautiful as a Grecian _ warrior's. As he stood land - gazed on the forest-kirdled lake, studd i Cd with island', his dark eve kindled with the poetry of the scene,. and he little thoaght of the destiny before. him. In - the full strength and pride of ripened manhood, be twos yet to lead crier those Very waters a bath) of freemen agaibit the country under whole banners he nbw fought and 6,11 foremost in freedom's:battle. That handsome young officer was Richard' .Montgomery, a lientenairt io the British ar - my. 4 nntive of Ireland, he was born; in 1736,:0n his father's 'tate in the town of "Raphoe. Educated as me the son ol' a .gentleman, he, at the rly age of eighteen, Lreeeived a commission n the English &nay. 1 1 it is a matter of mere ojecture what 6501- Or induced him to sell is commissibn in the Akogfiih army and emigrate to this country.le arrived in 1772, an purchased i'fitrm '.rear New York. Soo after, he; married Mile eldest daughter oft • belt R. Livingston, "then , ; lone of the kid_ s of the Superior 4 0-ourl of the Provinc•. In 1775, be was l eilveted member of the first provincial Con •ore:nticin of New York, . am Dutehesi coun try. Ile, took no very , five part in the eon vet mion, still his viiws ere so well ,kunwn Eras peeling the controv countries, that, ai the ma noier-in-chief of th Anti! the creation 'of off!, was : made one of the ightbrigadier-gener aim, and wa!-subseque . tly promoted to,„ the eaal tot. major-general. In the latter part of the summer of 1775, a the heed of a small arm Y,, he invaded C: / ada, and-soon 'sue -ceed 'id in capturing z John's; Montreal, -and some other places of less iinpottionte.-- , His 'nem step was to .rm a junction with Ann .ild.,. who having c , . the• =trodden wild ; . s of Maine, was n w with his maall,half , , elath ed, and-badly !stt. plied armYkplo l i 4 4) , him ;dog Quebec . , ontgomery hearing ot his ..iirrival, 'and - of .e destitution 'tir his weer: si, put 'himself-at he head' of only about three . hundred men; d began his mat& It vs is the latter, part; .f November, endw* ter, i! u that high latitu , e, had already set kn; yet ti trough the drivin . snow, antrovei - the froze aground he led his litdesband, keep. ing ii live their Wm _ - by , cheering , 'girds. and.f. sxeiting them f 0 . .by his. noble ecs wept e. Demanding ~, 1 0 1 0 wYpik l o,o ll - not li insself stibmit t . . , iittieg* no anger! whey e he was not =Of first to%iioThi, kept his * idisciplitied'Alit!stiffering - troopsidgut bile i with- a fuitaisalkiiir: kitscliei iboth- our ealeil_ ' , ration . amt. mteeiebtrieut. , He 'lslet haviec ~ kaoim it .1,1;10. weal, Piet a ; , nigh . tale( On which lie 'slid entered, andit hie coma timidity; , z form - 'rlO44S, on his column thros lb the — tfildrliCftiiiig snow,, gterti Wiwi; 4 7 -irbatid bittilt-pri4Atataltiloret hill 4001. If,; Thorpaartherdayiihd le.iiiinlM 'W I O' ilaw *d lalw. ..,,.. tidial.k'!ae # i 4 l oetnikw- '4,iij id .. Aran ;Aiies _0 brie Dketn, . , g laiit-eineiy,:iiiiiiiiimiribiiiifiriiiiiiiiiis4' - 4404 eadifiadiog belbadmliffam*aeoatb , ,aa: *..ake - ,swayivappraschlai4apwasasi, Alin?' *O4-. 6 1t 4 :0 1 04,QW., hill*. iiiot a,O ll ,p9 1 ,.0 oPPOr t aPi t g li t!- " 1 ); , , ,,, fi n c 4 Ifedooa "Mike 4, - poster — maw - . c Vii s'iutailited?ifith , Ilitiiiiiiitivi - dth‘llH- , blimai - isionollit - fiilif ameba etual, he plaited a battellOialeari . 4 houttcr- MEM AT' .Dt'l- • --..- 1f ; - ,i Vo .- t i ; -s. ' ,••)--., r-e - • f li - 1 - la 4 h 'tzei . iilin' i fa' 1 non an a on . u rty rods (rain the walls, and ' sedine fire., . E T Winter bad : wfisiffyxnrs•SrPon.theifi÷ the ground wa coveted with snow, and 'Montgomery was. compelled to place his guns on tilocluribf:icei „Nrs .., being heap enough tolinake Impression on solid waibi their fire was orlittle consequence. In !the meantime, the *opal suffered leeriy (coin the frost and exposure .. The heav es were ,constantly darkened - with snow; which piled' up around tbedAmerican Camp in huie drifts. ,Thrtinglf these the, 'Miserably clad ;troops would floOnder, and , with benumbed limbs and stiffened fingers, place themselves in order.of,bittki. ~. TM:diminished columns were mere Mach. specks amid the smooth, - white caul thq covered the earth. It was impossible' ti; Keep any troops long in the open field, e*poited to such 'biting cold, laid MontgninerY beOin to look anxiously about him for,soine way to escape from the perils that every 'raiment thickened around his lit- , de army. To dd to the horrors of his po sition, sition, tbe schall4iox broke out in the camp; and consternatiOn filled the hearts of the soldiers, when they saw their companions struck down i nyithis plague, which had he come the terrorOf the army. Those attack ed with the,s'symiptoms - were ordered to wear a s tipriglof hdinlock- in their heti. Th4se sprigs increnited so fast that despair beg nn to seize the troops, and it was evident that even the power' of Montgothery • could not steep them together much longer. On his first arrival et uebec he had quelled a dna gerous , mutiny, only by the greatest effOrt, and should another, in the present despond ing state of the men, break out, the army must inevitably disband. In this position of affairs he saw clearly that he must carry the city by asiiiul4 or abandon the design of taking'it altogether. Accordingly a council of war , was called, and the assault proposed. Both men and officers were in . favor ofl it, desperate as the alternative seemed, and it was resolved to divide , the army into 4,, columns, acid make an attack on the cityi at four different points. : • i '`. s Two attalckst led by Majors Livingston and Browa, against the upper town, wire to be only feints to attract the; attention! of the garrison, while Arnold and, Montgomery should' conduct' the two real ones againstibe lower town. It was on the last day of De cember,, before daylight, that this .galltuit band put itself in bank array. - The wititry, morotrig was dark and gloomy. and a, iltiv ing snow-storm filled the nir, weavingbe l* forehand a winding-sheet for the noble el m mander'and'his brave followers 'The II and graceful formof Montgomery was sien gliding through. the gloom, pres ed cleniely nfterfiy,his yesolutti column, and at Tehgth approached :Cain Diamond, Where he came npon the ,first barrier defended by cannon. The enemy, seized with a sudden politic, turned and fled. Could the Aniericrns have immediately pushed forward , the &s -ilo sault would doubtless have been . soccer ul. But large banks of snow filled up the p th ; and as, they rounded the promontory of the Cape, they, stumbled upon huge muse of ice thrown up by the river, which so ob structed their progress that the British I dlers had time ,to recover their surprise, nd rally,again behind the barrier. Moot m ery,.with his own hands, lifted at the bl cks *of ice,,aild dng away the snow, cheerio on his 'men as they one by one broke thro gh, until at last they cleared themselves, an ap proached the battery, over which the gun ners stood with lighted matches. The jneu seemed a moment to hesitate, when .gomei7 shoutedforth, I.‘ Men of New-1 ye:civil' not fear,, follow wkire your cral Acids—forward!" . With his s tl i ti waving 9‘ his head, he rushed forwai to the mo siof the connon, followed a shoat hy, hit i devoted soldiers. The L _ charged with grape-shot, opened in thei ry faces; Sand when the smoke lifted, there lay the lifeless form of Montgomery, almost under the wheels of the artillery. GORIEST. , • rsy between tbeatwo ppnintment of, Cora- American armies, by Ctingresa, he ~ T% .r i ~, ,), i l 1Y t iti 9? , 3n si' I. - )10;r).4, ...‘ I 1 7t.tlg 1; maw ; • - " Pet/ID the 011 a Pod 'ride ONIITS'OF LIDIES SEWING BOCIBTY II T THINILL. , ;••----r ,Presiderit.- 7 Ladies ! ,I believe we are all flisemblpd, what, shall be,the .subject of dis cussion this evening! amiss L—Oh, you thelect onelltlithith G. I you are,always so full of thubjectlui. • Mrs. ii,.—Are short dresses and low necks ii becoming for , young ladies in their tee s 1 • 41rus,, et.-*-Stuffl - " Are brutes an old bachelors endowed with ieason ?" Ide . G. Mrs. A.—WhysQ„., you are always harp• ing on Ile old_ haehelors--why they wont trouhle yOu my dear. No, let'slhave "should wwesp4ssessanequ amountof tote kenee theii busbandsr ~ ' ' k very gbod' subject ; I what 'do' owsity, ladiesl , , give P.- 77 "Sta!e, fiat aod uoprofi ble." riga,— i t give yoy one. '" Is woman fillip her prOpifr Sphere di the . tuter 'of lk nation l" .. ' Illiroyiwieei- 41 Capital!"—" first rite Pel . lees:ltaie it '. . t., ,-- ' 4 - oa then Mace you seem resaleate—,G, , t° lioiillogi — ded• , ,/rilOl-X",..,y0u wilt Open the olibi.:. itifillsittered i aib I 'am with the theleeiion i 1 hiveeerylitde' to • thal wtt the thubjeet.,,,ilire have a thouthand instaathiths on nword•wbere,women bath been., ed from her, dmacithic •duiith (who _ mj , 'thithoithlrtolgr eitioas thitioWths lot je w iiiili and boMWcami 'hivelaitatiebbi . sa lted' dietaieleeibi withihe l . kreiteth Mat. Gips taii - yout. couowit*NipWr- 164.Q:seen ba c mbet • . ICatbarite• 00144, , mirsezet fof PimrsiNviliigitinopiThF 04inailoir jetlif ir0d0,4044 - 14, cinlOgetk, Atilie„,pr tegicaUstkeinaiii*eith.lo - thei `-tir instautb4 of what eiriiiiinfitly . isiijablir '. wissnodrosastaithstiii•calt 4§04 , dill OCPW' ****b0rp041...:014011_ ,, 400'1,1111, 1 , aity.,tkpe,,POtim itzoi, __, ..) .I .,___ , ATY 1 / 4 fops autspopiromufir* : i , A9r. , iir- Thoth.* i brava to l day es 11416400. Ar ra ieu*velk4inikitioodditee • • Mini 4 . 1• • • 1. , ' 'DIFFEREN =I i on the subject, la dies.Prerider- itdO with (FiteiN Sise'D., , geite fla i triedly, Who' whiipers to the' ladies as, she passes' them.) Mrs. A.H gaged to Whom, my dear I /Piss b.— rank Forrester ! her parents ate much . -- op led; to it. ! , Miss` P.— . 441 - iren they may be.' No i One knows b a parent the responsibility Of consigning tk: happiness 'of a child to the keeping of a '' thir.. Miss 0.-- 'cies he drink; M 6. P. T Mrs. P.-- eis not , a Sonny at any rite; they do say plays cards. ~ Miss Q.— hen they are well matched, for Kiss • Merpdeth belongs to the Ladies' Free and ' sy Club. But - I'm glad they are to be mar ied, for his sake ; 'I do hate to see an old ba belor. Mrs. A. (In a whisper aside,) Sour ln grapes. President. the discussio • Miss L.— G.l The m the clock thri fortune ! Mil D.—, batel what i President.' er sphere, as Miss Q. words to say them quick! thread my n I must differ man's only t wire or moth exercising a society with amiable qua with the. frui intellect. S sphere of ' and expansi cushion, if y ton he is ca [Clock st President he door. [Enter se Mr. E. Hope you'v. the exercise President low me to n otherwise, a provement • Mr. H. muses? Miss 0. curious you you give to Mr. H. Mrs.• P. Miss 0. ger's points Hiss L. late you ; y going to be Mr. K.-- I presume. Mrs. Miss Mere.] Mr. Y. ing. Preside , dies you h Miss L. Miss Q lend me a cold. [Great - &e., flying (Curt ,•ont lork, ta • ord p I vi u th !lam, PANTHE Newton, J " Mr. - amuel Hudson went into to woods abo .t three miles from his house, C companied by his son, ten or twelve le,:ts old, ta l ent .. bee -tree, and as he expectefto find ' lots' of honey, he did not takeCis shooting i on with him, believing thaihe could not .arry it and the honey too. Ilien he got to t e tree, he commenced choping, his son at.. eighty or a hundred stepstona him, with . butcher-knife in his hand. He had cut bit a few moments when he Bard a - noise j st above him in a hollow He looked' up and saw a huge panther wfking leisurely, . nying no attention to him, De termined .of to let him - pass thus, Odsoit il l took up a stone or twa,and threw at The panther • .pped, looked up, saw demi, t3 :.e and made at bun, without asking hil if he was read .. Hudson • turned to ink e axe out of the tree to,fight him 'with ; 6 rote be could :et it and turn round, the tithr was on hi.. and he was compellett drop cs, the axe a d take it' fist and scull.' • Its first efforts were ,to take hi y the ro throat, bu thwing his bead it c a t him by the t. -lead and bit him se, . He l u kisonked, t off two or : three _ tim and it would ri , and; rear again p get by the throat; . the prevented it. frotn ins' so, cae, by stOki At, A.underlianded ~a , !Ting his arm i its - He id c" - _ht it so that be; cool 41 nod ter: hi i d' el hira, nd,he.. pa. *ter, by, , IdOng -11 8 -then m ade reached.- itbaut .. lowt:ork ..: He but his ounds .1 sosan: tAktemtk Is it,nny. wondat __ whip a. anther l i iii - .# Winn iii AT - _lliiiiiiiiiig number . Le _MI ti.. *hr ir simatgas yalalioh,„ IN jiptismia4 lamitl* .. Waif • '—l . i..,4 a Viee for I. tidy. s:: , ...1 MEM MEM Al pIiFEREN ) l• - .6:XtR081; 'PA., AUG. . ..I.Q Ladies, will you go on with dent it moth too late Mithith a, will be here prethithely ath .es nine!—what a thad mith- h no ! do go on with the de the question ? " Is woman filling her prop a ruler of a nation 1" Iri. President,l have a few on this question, and will say as our time is short. (D., edle for me.) lam sorry that from Miss L„ but I think wo ue sphere, whether as maid, r, is Fier domestic circle. In .arent's tender duties, adorning er goodness of heart and many 'ties, or in beuefitting others of a well stored and talented ch in my opinion is the true man. Alan's more vigorous e genius fits him for (my pin u please) fits him for the sta led upon to fill. kes nine.] Nine o'clock ladies ! unlock eral gentlemen.] I Your most obedient, ladies ! 11. i spent a delightful evening in .f your charitable avocatio ttk. Rather pleasant, sir, and al .ure you it could not well be we always combine mentallim ; ith charitable usefulness. Vliat.! making flounces for the you naughty man ! How gentlemen are. What would ow r 'My heart and hand are al That I can give thee." A. 'lnch's-I:Wen, I aussinmc. Of war, then, for I am at tin ' ith Mither K., I musth congratu ur friend Frank Furether ith arried. nviable fellow ! to his old flame, The monster ! what old flame 1 th is scarcely fifteen. Mysteries of Udolpho ! charm- .—Bless me, it's raining ! La . better all go home tit once. My new thilk dreth ! My new chip bonnet ! who'll air of gums 1 I'm so subject to, nfusion ; bonnets, shawls, shoes n ail directions.] in falls oil a picture.) FIGUT.—From 'a letter clatd ;per county, Arkansas, July i EIMPI Correspondence of •TILE RUSSIAN • • a view takes place at paratory to, the de their summer guar hours,l had.a good sight,, and my you as adequate d • - 1 'splendor. When I the troepe , ,hed alre The balconies and twildings.and elegai i rounding the field, -and gentlemen, -and - self covered with a men and children. , gorgeous tent was p form, for the Empr: esty and Emperor t review ! The pano field, you can read ful. But to the re body of 60,000 troo pose thegarcle Impt holes, and who are my in Russia, whic one million, rank• a The foot soldie first passed in revi ; of companies cow. dyed and' fifty meu der. As the sever: site the Emperor, rah went up;the wh., king the welkin ri all picked men, tal of them with a Ite'l They moved with and whether on a seemed like pieces muskets not vary either in the height Of all the marehin have seen the A and Prusian soldie pare with the Rus infantry was blue militia uniform in I; was about •tw ry. bad passed in r: etivalry, advancing tonna of sixty ho a sight that beg , . when I recall it, see ion. First came Princes, mounted steeds, with long sweeping the gr , l were dressed in a ly to the skin, and steel chine armor fell from the head shoulders; apron of sandal,and upo similar .to those of 1 c robs, their beckst filled quivers ; in t is tbir girdles the - They are a fierce, though handsome set or fellows. Next Carrie . the Tartars, upon tieir wild fleet little horses ;,, all of theni l car lying their - necks forward and their heads ligh up iu the air,', as if snuffing the breeze, rr so uniform was the- line of heads, As if ley were, drawn i.tp by pulleys. The cos tume of the. Tartar soldier is a blue frock, trimmed with silver, and a kind of skullcap, bound With fur; in his hand he carries a spear, the end of which lie rests upon the head, between the earn, of his horse. Then came the Chevalier ancers„ spleuded men, ' dressed in white cassiwere, with heavy 'and high polished brass drest plates, and ' Brass helmets, surmounted : hy the Imperial eagles, all =punted upon mostelegant horses. Reg iment after regiment passed; by, each i•egi teen% with different colored, horses, and the -horses in each regiment so ivell matched in size, form,. color, and indeed in every;res pect, that to distinguiSh then, each . had bra ded in . his mane his number,,upon'a small plate. The lancers are all! picked men and s are the flower of the Raritan _army, the &teem being of noble birtb,i and were it nut for the different colored pennants they carry Upon their lances and the color of their horses,Ao One regiment could be distingUished from another, so nearly !alike are they. •- Af ter the lancers _came the Imperial-hussars, in their costume of red, with high fur caps, and mounted 'evert tole,, upon white steeds. This regiment, it is sitid,is the favorite regi ment of the Empress. Then - came tbeilm perial carbineersi m nted .on. black horses, and dressed-like the l ancers except that their helmets and , breast-plates, were of steel, highly-polished. ,Fol owing these came the Cossacks,—their black steeds carryingtheir bbnds high in the - air. The dress of Abe Cossacks, s similar tn that. of the Tartan, which I have above described-except in their caps, which are higb i rd of fur ,oheir w,eap en is. asteelosharp• p nted lance. i . The rear,ofthis *Owasso body, otPaYO l 7 , amounting, to over.300)00, tires brought up .byteginsents=orniottatied;artiflery, six b 9,11013, - thrteabreasi,toeach.gun t and of sappere and Minierittane diet:Lennie the •_ baggage.. Wag gons,. antl the ponieri. 4ain. : But *- eit- sight, was ..the marnhintof the. bo . seatip incited , to tha;differeatlegitaeatectbey seem, ed. like , Machines: l ' ; You 1 think it . 1 atrapge,' no doubt ; , ind yet' itio.no loss 4 strange than ' lue,'thnt every:borne in marching kept per lA* cttime.mith thetztusic. ,1 never I tier, spl- Acre milaatdoit batter,--iiiilaaii riot so well, Airwbea's gaick-lively, tune was play, h a r p. !theAnusitioeverrinoilek„commenced. . trot andiceptsep the moo- utiiforaiity,ot , .as bilibite, libeteme-4 walk, .And thew , 4 0, -Pue kitowbOrmi ;Nwliee4y,"• ) eatepeniel‘, AO in I,ifoubkoo4erotomiistiround ritioeßmig , 1 i4o dilitcompma ileieribhapa eir.elehilit,ap ittaihmilitaydttegaeNekiekegii4 l 4: -.' -1' .' . 1 1 0 Aikarithe sidkobvatiwyaor .bit.otiail.iio aiadiiii;orOgiod Ili on-Alitirt idiot , (* two . IlOW•kbatloneetligi:iiiitvaso o 4o l-4 4Eglig , osiit, tbeinfikaterkit. thei00 11 010 ,1 10”/ , "kV thono l4l ll* fiatigoNllMO: o (4iiillad aireatinisoWsoliemwlo6o l, - , ir . : ~t he GisaissorAiiiwto.o 7 .00 1 40 F.. MO , sEumiiiaiiimpill s odmiclatilaMatilkt i + ... . .. ~ . . he Iwo lys, ,as l!il To loir4 old Jed, peek no with Eressiog ow. 1. : I fi c T .1 PRINCIPLE I . .ipirrxx,soN. 1847. k I e New Haveallegiiterl• MPE;brt GUMS. yrcrassßace, Jutte, 184/ " Every year tliis re l. e Imperial city, I ;art . tar e of the trocps for above four i lew of die „magn ficent, ; d pen will fail . to give ription of #s exceeding raved Upon the glound, yr begun 0 march.— • indows of the public t private residences tour •• ere filled, with ladies the sides of the. field it ease mass of men, wo- On one side of the field a /teheti upon a raised plat :sB, and before her maj he troops Were to pass in awic view of the whole y, imagine, was be:sad - - law itself, of this grieat .s, who in part only corn .' eof the Emperor Nib , istinetfrom the main*- , I believe numbers near d file. infantry principally, ' w ,tnarchiug by platoons niug, perhaps, one him each, and in double or platoons arrived oPpo- e peculiar Russian burl. i le,length of the line, ma g. '`he of soldiers were athletic, and every i one i vy black meustaelie . .— mathematical :precision, slow or quick march, of mechanism, and their •ng, it seemed, an inch or inclination givan them. that I have seen, and I erican, French, Dutch , none will at all Com ian. The uniform of the I nd red, not unlike our onnectictit. hours before the infant ' view, and then came the in double order, by plat Is abreast ; and here was, • description, and wltichl, s like u uagnificen't vis . company of Caucasian len black, coal-black fiery manes and tails, Oiliest u 4. 1 The Caucasians ed garment, fitting close over this a finely wrought •i overtng the entire body, tDosely over the neck and cis , fcct they ware a :4.lind i their legs !ether letins, •ur Indian warrior e 'a,; a ey carried a bow with well eir hands a carbine, and liavege yaghtigghn.L' r , „.. ..„„ ..,, ~,. ..,„ ~7,,,, ....,..,, : 1 ~,, r,,,,.., 1•, • ' ! i ••• _,L!,A,..-, L, ,' (et I( -; . E: GM Aftert Is,th e• itotteif 1 - them selves some distaoce opposite the Empenir,' close - ottler; . tanct at d - givettlignat halrof this body, -over . 15,000 horsemen ; started . On' a,,lrun and sugd enlyi halted - tr few feet iti wince of the Emp*ori•• preserving a* they halted, the same compactness and the smile - , perfect front wihichlthey - had before starting,) A few mote' vihieliVhave not time to wiiteltboutl now,l finished thsi refit v of the 'day—a day ,iihich done , istocii to; irnpresson Met the intirk of Napoli:K*4 , MA! with an armrof Russian soldiers he vrobld' conquer the worid.l • ' Ire spoke of the 'soldiers, net of the Of& chrs; of whom beli;ad- not a high opinion: The Russian' soldieris a me ke machiene, and has not a. thotight beyond his Chuich ,and the Emperor4ano for lyhe, believes it his duty to - live had die. "Mast orthe-ar , .. my is composed or serfs anti slaves; and the pay of the' soldier is about three dollars lAer annum. He is fed upon coarse bread emi ts kind of soup, an -upon sotnefeledayte is given meat as a 'luxury. , *he pay of the: .nsian officers is also very sinall. A lieu tenant gets but-500 rubles pertain um, which ip it little more thiin $ 100 ; tt. captain 700 rabies, and n colonel only 2000 rubles— too ask how theyffive 1 The officers gen e',rally have a competency beyond their pay : tiome few there are who have not and their Condition is worse than .the soldier's, for the. latter is prvided with a uniform, and is fed at the expense of tbe Emperor. • I finish this letter by daylight, and yet it is after' 10 o'cloek,',P. H. The sun does •set here, at present, untill 9i P. From Ch4mbers'E4itrgh Jrntrwil White and Brol6nllllressd." 1 Several years ago, we torch- out the sm.- . I mise that the se paration of the white from the parts of wheaCgrain waiibaneful to the health. We pro6eeded upbn theoretical grounds, believing that Providence must have Contemplated our ?sing the entire grain, and not a portion only, selected by means pf a nicely arranged machiliery.; It struck us forcibly, that to go for alnn e ,o course of years, thus using allind of fond different from what nature designed, could ! )lotfail to be at tended with bad;consequences. We have since learned our views havef, , some recogniz ed support in science. Tha following par agraph from a recent pairipbet will at: once serve to keep the subject alife in the minds of our readers, and explain actual groonds pn which the septiration of the flour is deter mine]. !: - " The general 1 belief," 4tys the writer, r‘ is, that bread made with the finest floor is the best, and that whiteness ii thelproof Of ha equality; but both,. these opinions are Ovu lar errors. The whiteness m ay, be, and gen - . c rally is corn m u niimted by alnin ',to the injury a the consumer ;' and it is known by men of science that the bread of nurefined flour will sustain life, While that ,made with the refined will ;not.: Keep a , an on biowti bread and water, and he wil live and ehjoy good health :', give him white bread and' wa ter only, andi he rill sicken and die. The meal of which die first is mtlcle, contains ill the ingredients . necessary to he composition of nourishment to the va ous structures t composing our bodies. Sp eof the ingre xi dients are removed by the iiiii Md, in his ef forts to please the public ; ad that fine flour instead of being better thati meal, has the least nourishment; and to ',make the case worse, is also, the most diffic ult of digestion. The, loss is, thet'efore, in ''all. respects, a waste, and it seems .desirable that the ad mirers of white bread, but, especially the poor, should - be acquainted with these truths, ;and brought. to enquire whOher , they do not purchase at too dear a pite L ilie privilege of ! indulging in'the .use of-it-', - " The unwise preference Oven so univer i.sally to white bread, leads to the pernicious : practice of mixing alum wil the flour, nhd this again to all tlorts of a 1 elterations and impositions ; for it enables bakers,. wh o ! are so disposed, by adding nixie and more al um, to make the flout- of an, inferior grain, ,look like, the hest and - most costly, and to dispose of it accordingly—at once defraud ing the purchaser, and, tampering with his health. Among the mattera i iremoved by the ! millers are ~the large l saline substances ; which are,indispensable to the growth of the bones and teeth, and are required, althOugh . in a- less degreei for dailyirepair. Brown ibread should, therefore, be given to nurses, 'and to the youngtind . growing, and should ,be preferreabTall, of whatever age, whosv ,bones show a tendency to bend, or who have weak teeth. It is belitived that biown :bread willgenerally,be (gun the.beet far all 1 persons baying Sluggish b owels and stom /ache, equal to the digesti.n of the hran., But with some it I ,will,disagree, ft. it is top ! exciting , for irritable . bow an it is d id solved with d ifficulty in Nome stomachs. ,When this happens, the !Fa , should ha le moved, either whollY , 'or 1 iart ; - unit 'by such means the bread may ; e adopted ,with the greatest eattl_to i all' habits and to all 'constitutions.' I - 1, ,1; ; ' Mr. Spiith i ia h i s ; ateatemarkahlo wor k , on fruit and fan !mein a the, • ftiod of man, res al some illustration's o ft 144/intl. ".Bulk," he says ,." is meat: ~. necetisar y . to the lull ,cle of diet as the „ . 9,tdencSinniple.' They . ;should beAo Oulu ged that °int, should he is proportion ;to tho her. Tik f .,, hie; nuirit Ara is. prObilli fataGo ,tile pro I,Ig40°11" I ;of life and haaltli; l ;,aa r thM*kickii•itallus" l ineufficieqt, ni4t4.7 , 4 1 10 106 .40f? • ,I :Pr il i 'a matter 4 mOn.remarkt amongffigo:olll l im ::wheleuter4 , : et :,ioileei:'o l *- 1 )1 1 lik* ',better th eir. ~ . • ;:." X hiftrel,4 ifj.* 4 b 2 , 48 ~..... for th . ... ii. 4 , Yors: 7 iWiii r, o r , .a...k.a,„,. it... . t . :•.: ;aat%aardaigk l t,4 „., -ms..Torzrento.:, •r•I.. (,1,, , T 'beekioll . Ir l t4i .7, ROI' -::#07,___...,1 Any, ,Bruf silai 'gm Lft444llci 'Tiro I ibrio.is . . t krt stitocf "if. "! * Rt l 0 4 ' • i!LI um wn , - . , 4.PY,,.. o lrs , s,____ ,says..o. a , - "AlfiP, IPMR ir front die V ~. wfrAlloi At. , di to b. wholosonw , o.lmr* 001*4,-ilaT 7 .4. 0 5 1 pullogikni , 4 0stukcA' mato! IV , ~f . f . produce co etiPetifie s . , :i.44 , -m,r, -zi , '`l ''• 1 I L IP_ 4 '!Of4 ,i• i -` ; ,:• tif ( t Mieflliaßlims irnsEne7..l nue* .... al m ai o r 1.• pft eviTs .... . nue ini the _ mser ertit. Tiri*o,lyii Oise . . ....-!. for ,ine,ihputuutinntr I WI 4 4 4 t • . n4 Cl l4 bAle.lt4fol,44* aeration, nit.bi Qiiisientroluttit,withthellipirrger yea, Huai Ooltuoli •'-',: . -I', do 1 ! . 1441.--, s I ,', .4 1 1. 0 ° Opeqiiiqinn, k 4 ., ~,... do 1 ~ , , do t .., , .15 00 lkiinieu 0 - td , ' ' do 1 ''' - 414 --' '3 - 00 'Alt 'oettiradeeittialMllll illted st'ierlseame rases: :: 'IC - 4 • ..1„ ..1-.A. , ' .. 1 s , lc- ‘-‘ t,. , Advertitemutts ebould b •.. va,irippid vrith' got gm • - (4 1 1 i 9 e. 1 :ti?° )1 rTi'ltrea• : I ' f :11 ,* 7 .; ME • I ME ME ti - Tlk,'Difi , 1114Ief of the .. i•• , ~,,---- , ;,,.. r. • „ :•- 4 0 4 .1 1 .„,,,,, 1 ,„„, ast.eyemeg, arded meetp4 u ot lee, 'membite of tbei.7 wisli issoCiation for„the i removeftif Civil /andßeligiou,s Dioeb:Olia, ametriged.pt the Fisimoigerat,Artes,„ t4t. Jades' Place', Aldpit 1 1 , , ,_, / ti:, - ,ThiliAmocis t iion bu s alteady„„helOsto preliminary meetings, ilnd,,th' ,ojeaSaf . OZ ' l l l PFeceknti‘Melv •, ta, ,, e,* * ', l4liliuhli.•; Ike preeeschog ,oei,to hear , 2 anAddtess, dedicated to th elect sof i eity,of lorite ? , dour,. aid F.ari e tTd b ,Dr. aPhael, Of; the Birmington.. ,J . ~ ish . Ougre anon; .ati,di„,M. discomAbo-r,eacllatiPP oeAail dbeltivi,, ~ T befebik# 'ae t'll'.n by - Ai. Mitehelo. Whoollit, : a ,f,etv re,ma i tits, q . led on the.§ec-, t i l retary R io read' the mi • tes o the last meet; lug. These halling,..he n reit and confirmed, Mr,,Sentuel . 6kthismi ! .0 , eede s d, to 'reed. the. ad re vs alind tit whir. Was receved 'with much tiptilause, nd,iit commentitigou I t it,lie stated •th t he as li ivy to.say, that the li4rel : pa y, nay many. conservettiesr, would *etc for th e rei evil . ; f civil and to• ligioos i disabiliiies. l i p tot a present!time,. he-regretted toi say th t poll "cal action. hid : been wanting among he 3 . .8. But..thoOs .were times thilt woalf call nergies hithisetti dormantioto notion, find, be relied much i , the present i polation of affair to, induee Meet; Ito support th4 ,. ../ewisli Ms ciation , in, their efforts:: , If they 'did pot so port the Aaron; t Ide Rothschild i and tl'e nth_ . _liberak r :candin", dates, they mast for any ears submit to. the diiabilitie tuf sey rely flt by tbent,•• It was moved by this g rah= n, and. . second;, ed by. Mr. Pb 'ip Boren the, ' that addrem : be adopted,,piinted, and& culated amongst, the electois °flute 'city of endrot.'. 4 _Car ried utinnimonsly. 1 ; f The third, rtsolutio , tht tion pledges, it self n to, dil andyeligious.lisabili e s, slit wasizioved by, Par r Imaq . ,l by Mt, H. .Limarus and !nation, The -fourth, resel ion the. Rev. T. IV. Mar s, r reference to the , opiiiion tained of the ,feelioi of pect, to the, Christian - )-el; nothing. to prevent la 1 Piirliiimeot•voting in ft and endowment of b and without fferin connection b tween he would say that 1 inimiesd to th m dial •id 'x t r- . . and state might reaniin nn . tectfor centu e r He felt rouglreasuie in - roposieg.th !cep. oltithin . : pram ted iciihiiii,. ..z .. :.,“, That AN, association h . . rehy ,Wei t • , eir,. gratefu.ac 7 .,;„. t i knowiedgente.te to the. etropolitan_l44 provincial pr 9 for, the •perons supwer; ~ they hare riff rii1.4 . ,, the J wish•pandifiateis ;for the holior of - Pa ligrpf.": •,-,,i,„... The. resol O•I en as en usiestiallir;rei= •• . .' - v .... , ... ceived: ; ..• • ,;,. • • II --„, .. Mr. : Cary : alp° Ao he nexijesolu 7 .. Lion,•ancl,said Ott 4 dr ht the Jews hid i fairlOrichrre cee t e or, heir :winit, i nf•'en, ery inn* A hating' cuig forthe: - Omit, yel : of their, p' • . tit , ,abilities ; yet it might ' be- 4,041 that they . aci, a hied, their An?e, 4 , and he chnsi.ersd n, , Alen f i , so , 91m9Fzu9R as i the.pisen , the . (ire so as public.opiii ilm IF-a- how ti.Vcorab a to. eir c• 1 0 1 *., and there was. no iolerithiarty: e . eling,iihreedtp, prevent ; their heingidiyu sad with pelt* calmness., . e, calle -on . t ern,ope k. andi ail,- ,- I . , . .'k.'r' a . , ,ulto to support tne pain de Rothscnnailana place, him ! at the liend of, the poll. [Loud, -• r cheers.] . ;., ~ •. . if 1 . &twit. ,Carpent r (in oduced by ,the chairman as ii-Clri . ian) most cordially proved• of the presen ,associntion, and ita Y. o a t ' :feet% and *quid rei i,:ele i telsee Boron Roths child at the head,of, bc,poll. Yet ,a ,Weili nod crafty enemy., °Old tiaturally,.havi,rt.' source to, the, tria4i ' , of - divOre and ,govern, and he,truste .that, cy -Would not. 44,,,t. the parclontib e•vanit of Wishing to see, the sil till Baron de : IC hschil atilt head a the poll interferowi', the other -li nil, cinidiileces IS }e whose namek appelired in . the resolution, and whichhi now +ould tread.l9 ? 0 !r ii "That :this associlition, I consid ring„ the claims of the liber4l candidates-l-Lord 1 .11.. i t Russel, . 1 7.-..rattison, - sq., Si r. G..44,i,rp t e and ;Baton . de Ro 'schild-- T are, . , eon f,: with i dul l great tau s of sciv,il, And, ,religioltOr , liberty, .;pledges - . 11 to fi ord - hese,feur candidates its bes ts pport." ' - , Carried gent. ; 444.- r -Loadon Paper. i 1 , - , .... ..., _,.,..,- Tut STUbY OF IlliteUiTUßE • -+cait um . • ,assert that aiknowl . ie et inilita 7ti tied, orlaii; is inonialiste t frith!' agrietiltures'oo / 1 the Contrary, a cops ch eat' knowledgialif ei , there and particular of the latter, confers a value' on - the cha der or I country gen. del:dad Veisitet *rith I airietiltutif; bin whet, I dolisssert Dion stiungly it ' , theta* .ti it inchoate tic.gpairitane Avgh,,elther:prill t ee , ver ! a l i t ; us ,a substitut e for.,,ignoranee:of egyi. r Ctiltdre in a cantor getideman. ' Odik evil arising trent studyi those excitink'pref,. sione before viiiicu ire ii, thit, .however shori the Arne ;spen't vai,'.le q Uiritit tetii-,4t is i l itittelentlY kink. biefeate i dislike' terkiern itiOtriitiltitrerlirti ' cally1; for, stieh'i r tisk can only * he nedert en, lifter the lii* , id. '!ife,,,,iy,,fitithiiiiiiiiitia- 441.1 . Butit farming ii,iitieesiiiiiliehe ps4ifessfoit' it'ithevitouswy, liiitleirditi4ge 1111"*Yetak'fikiii.14 sion‘d . bibia t ireit itieiwetiepirridOttetiiiatyi , bip Taiiihtigisueition . a uktiblecl6o4l in fogid: If fie ' iii . , hii , Ca4 itftati4Tas lip $ ant' ' 1 " 1" ' ;''''—' ' '"Aiirest - iii . . I dietle :grot diseettlie ill? *pared. - 11- , -1.,--Al •.1 , 491 t, jI tikei it^ FE t " tbis,asserja - :olve, !intik 64 IL be raw i YoP4 , -•. 1 , 0 ;094. arried-byacctup •- = .:_,=-.,:=/_= 4s.' ProPTR 4I 4) . observed, rue e.nerally .euter n Jews witiA, rep ,, that Literally*" igh member.ef of the eupport. s and °ballads; .jnion as to tbe ie .aud ; state l but, y no class, ore the Jews, ch rch I_‘ .m 4,11 l i f erm i w pit , op 'IP,- i f ir VOA , 40rif. Mg