Indiana American, Volume 20, Number 44, Brookville, Franklin County, 22 October 1852 — Page 1

If 1

BV C. F: CLARKSOX.

MlSCKLLANEOr

BROOKYILLE, FRANKLIN COUNTY, INDIANA, FRIDAY. OCT. 21.

1S-52.

YOL. XX. NO. 41.

Fr-m the National Era. RE 711 SIT ESC r. EY ALICE CAREY.

ur or live roars airo. there came "... . .. ; -l,:..i. i

in UK iiviu'vi !..,'.. nt , im ii i

'".j S family consisting of three IiTi o'J lacy, a young man. and j'o; some ftv.irteen years. The tlvv took was divided by a little .V weeds from my own lmme; and -.-T.er.iber how rejoiced I was on

hi? smoKe curling up irom

; disturbed, the daughter readily acquiesced. Every thing about the place indicated people accustomed to refined and elegant habits, but whence they came, now long they proposed to remain, and what relation the young man sustained to the other members of the family I confess I would gladly have known.

:het

Seeing a flute on the table, I spoke of music, lor I conceived it to belong to the absent gentleman. I received no enlightenment, however; and as the twilight was already falling deeply, I felt obliged to take leave, without obtaining plm n

rod chimneys, for the house had glimpse of the person whom I had nic.

"vtftime vacant, and the pros- . tured in imagination as youno- and fair, hivinir n.M-neighbors gave me and of course agreeable lV:hi?- too. I was not the . The sun had been set some time, but ,,-,! that they were new neigh- the moon had risen full and bright, so "ft are likely to under estimate , that Tfelt no fear even in passing the s.i thin-s we have continually grave-yard, but walked more shuvlv but let separation come, and than I had done before, till, reachin-r the -i';nt they were to ns. A pro- gate, I paused to think of the awful ;;l t ie little grove I have mystery of life and death and immortal;.

ty. This is not a very desolate spot after ; all, thought I. as leaning over the gate, ; something of the quiet of the place inI fused itself into mv spirits. Here. I felt.

-i -h i the axe were laid at its . the wicked cease from troubling, and the A: last, one day I heard the ring- j weary are at rest. Here the long train of that fatal instrument, and, of evils that attach themselves To the V.-Y. wa told that the woodman ' best phases of humanity fade to the si- . v.-sv.sl order no longer to spare j lent dust. Here the thorn-crown of pain Eurly I listened at first is loosened from the brow of sorrow by rsrok'was like the song of victory: the white hand of peace, and the hearts j? -.iness subsided, and I began j that were all their lifetime bowed under yi hex the woods would look with the shadow of a great and haply un pitied -rnirch fallen: then I thought, the j atiliction never ache any more. And -t:!! have departed, and begin to ; here, ob, best of all, the frail ties of the i; oa myself as having sealed its unresisting tempted are folded away beimnt. so that whe:i the crash j neath the shroud from the humiliating .-that the mighty was fallen .woke j glances of pity from the cold eyes tf

1 remember there waj an oak o: hr a great deal than its foli ; thousand times I have felf as , mates must be oppressed with

ot degrcdation, and

;:t sons

In vain I argued, that a ghost would have From the Temperance Chart, no need to unlatch the gate. She positively ! Letter from A. L. Itobinson. refused to go farther, and with a ceurage not i Tne following letter from Hon. A. L. very habitual to me, 1 confess, I walked on i Robinson, the Free Soil candidate for Gov-

alone

"Do you think I don't know that sound?" she called after me. "I would know if I had forgotten everything else. Oh, stop till I tell you! The night Mary Wildermings died," I heard hersayjbutl knew the sound of the

ernor, will answer the inquires which have been addressed to ua in reference to his position on the temperance question. We invite the attention of all temperance men to it: Evansvillk, IxD.,June 23, '52. Gextlemkn: Your favor of the 21st inst.,

, oviivuiui' ii v v imu'h unnn ina i .- n .... :

gate as well as she, and would not wait even for ( and the policy of adopting the Maine Liquor a ghost story. I have since wished I had.for I 1 ,Law by .ur own State Legislature, has just

coulp never afterwards persuade her to reveal

it. Gaining the summit of the hill, I perceived, a little way before me a dark figure, re

ceding slowly, but so intent was

superhuman that I paid little

the human: though afterwards,

the circumstance, the indiv kdual previously ! .wilhout tl,e leaSt correspoding beuefit. This i ... 1 ' IfcMruaire. Rlrnnirthnnnh It : r..n I

seen while I sat on the bridge became In some tified by facts wTthout V-mLr ?.k

. . , - . . , AI J VI

been received, and 1 hasten a hrief rK.

The traffic in ardent spirits, including its use as a beverage, is one of the greatest curses ever inflicted upon our race. No words can truly depict and enumerate the woes and

wretchedness which they produce: the at-

I thank you then, heartily, my countrymen of all parlies, for this welcome. I make no distinction, and I trust none is made by any one on this occasion, between Whigs and Democrats. I have made, and I make no allusion to party topics; I say to all my countrymen, whether of this or that party whether born upon the soil or adopted by their own voluntary acts I thnnk you for this greeting, and am proud to call you all my countrymen. Yes, and I am proud, too, to claim your great Slate of Xew York as my home for thirty odd years. I am happy "to belong to the great and glorious Union, of which this is the Empire Mate. I am proud and happy to owe allegiance to that Union to owe devotion to the Constitution, and to all the compromises of

4

The September Gale. BT O. W. HOLMEi. I'm not a chicken; I have seen Full many a chill September; And though I was a youngstr then, That day I well remember; I saw the storm coiled up in clouds It slumbered like a viper; But when the lightnings woke it up, My eyes! it was a wiper, It came as quarrels someties do ; When married folksget clashing; There was a heavy sigh or twe,

Before the fire was flashing-

AGRICULTURAL.

ceptiou of. You would hardly consent t live in liis ptice, if yon were compelled to eat at bis table. The very bread that wl served at the tables of the most noble, you

would not offer to a bejrgar. The mill where

tllA I .(IllLlillltinn T .. .1.: I , .

....... imu. 1 II ii. I ,1 V fw .-...- ........ .. i . ,. .

and snnshine, there is little merit in hX , i I T'e 8l,r atnong the .

T " nicy pruuuee: iiie ai- i . i . i-na-tuui' was 1 on the tempt has frequently been made by writers & i '0U 1 ave been ready "tail times, 9 attention to .speakers, aud as often signally failed. It is i .y dow? I,,e m llle suiport of that in recalling ev.u nd only evil, and that continually, i hon,?, , Co"st'l.ution- But may I not

way associated with this. How hushed and solemn the graveyard seemed! I was half afraid, as I looked in

quite startled, in fact, when latching and un

uiv-urrenL-e, attested oy every one, whose eyes and ears are open to see and hear the every day affairs or human life. The friends of the liquor cause have been hitherto

, unable to name onn sinola normanoxt l...i;.

latching the gate, to determine whether the : securing either to the individual or to society

sound I heard were that or

roused from its light sleep, under the fallen grass, sped fleetly across the still mounds to

the safer shelter of the woods. I saw noth

ing else, save that the grass was

!;.. . ., ... . J

not. a rabbit. , KST" J me use ot alcohol as a

i r ii iucv"rage. ii is true.

we do sometimes hear

..upc inn my past me, in darker hour has proved my scmcerty, and is sufficient to'suarantee that I partake of your devotion to the best interests of our common country. My friends, being debarred from all party topics being resolved notiu any instance to

uu,: . upon sucn suects-1 have little more And all above was in a howl, tO add. FXCent mv lo:irt,r .(.... 1- . .1 . .! I

of an old ,iiiV rjf" :. ? e lliaiR8 And .u beiow

i j , . ' vou nave tins day done him. 1 he occurrences of this day will he .iMJ in t.i nti . . . J

..... '"j iteasing recoilec

Before they rent aesunder A little rocking of the trees, And then came ou the thunder.

Lord! how the ponds and rivers boiled; Theysemed like bursting craters; And oaks lay scatted on the ground.

As if they were potatoes:

ihoes from the hills, I can- t pride. We have need to be thankful that

e';l V-v i an echoe it waked also i when mart brought upon his primal nav'tie?.::. If I could s?e it standing j ture the niih'.ew of sin. (rod did not cast

i;en rf.:.:v t count n.it.tui tnis uay i jus utterly trom him. but m the unsearch-

of diseases cured, and of lives saved by its ! Vn8,r "ourcily d cherished the remainuse, but in every such case it was used as a , niy I,fe 11 liftf already extended to the medicine, and not as a bevem. Tli r,n.u ; U!!ual sImn' a,ul which caniiut last more Hihh

I tr-,n,l' 1 f mperance do not propose to banish it en- ,n. """Iweniy ye.rs longer. Accept, then, s trampled . tireiv .rrim ,hl. ,.i . . .. . my fuends, mv heartv tlmk. r.,r ... u

to a narrow path leading towards Mary's j it properly belongs, in the drue store, with I f !'d si""rit' 6f J or'w.lcome, and may God

grave. . oilier poisons, to be used by the physicians as I u"""tl prosper you all.

Liurmg uie summer, 1 sometimes saw the j '"vul'"e curing diseases; lor Uu and lor young girl in the woos, and I noticed that L'Hrh.f S.Th",11 7 "M' 'V nitl,r ..n..ra i 11 . , i use as drink, either habitual or occasiona , s .e neither gathered flowers nor sang with j is a manifest perversion of the blessings and the birds; but would sit for hours iu some ; j,ts of an all-wise Creator. So we occa-de-p shadow, without moving her position i 8 iona,lv ,lear of diseases cured, and of lives in the Wast, nor even push away the light Zlle'.h T ot,lmm. and f' but . r mo "fe"1 isheuid we therefore take adose of eilher.every curls which the wind blew over her cheeks I mornintr u li- o- r; ,,. ....

when I think of tli-3 til!

5;t fa H'T neiir'ibors. Some curi- !

ieJwith my pleasure, I con-

Ki ?o. a? soon as l taousnt thev

--: s-ttled. and feeling at home, I made ! -,tt with unusual care for the first iottag-? .vas somewhat back from n.: road, and access to it was had ri-ro'.v grass grown lane, bordered :r;:de by a green belt of medow szlonthe other by the grove, slo-;:-xarJ and backward to a clayey ii-:?! with children and children's .;n about them. " ' -i.. torefathers of the h.tm'et slpt." :j: t'art'.ier on, but in full view of its -fi cypress :s and white hea-lsfnes, ;i? c-i't-ige. Of burial g-.v.ml I have no dread, but trom this ::': a- I was acoustnm i. ven ucVld. to turn away w.;h soin -5-" i;porstitious h'--rrr. I ecu'"?thow Laura Hasting s.tw ::

tsr.-nj there all on-1 winter nijii.

'J'uoath of John Hine, a wild, row, who never did any real harm t.) any o;io but himself, hasten'"'n de:it!"hy foolish excesses. " i-.-lois, his ghost hatl been seen "in once, sitting on th- coll clav ::-i?neath which the soul exprest fading and crumbling into dust U least, said some of the oldest t pious inhabitants of our vilTiiere. too.JIarv.WiidermiriT's.wiio

are smnea against than sinnsn-'

and forehead, as Ihey would. She teemed l fr'e"dsasatokenof friendship and hospitality, m i., .. i. i . . whenever we meet them, at home or nhrnmi?

able riclies of his mercy struck open the refuge of the grave. If there were no fountain where our sins of scarlet might be washed as white as wool if the black night of death were not bordered by the golden shadows of the morning of immortality if deep in the darkness were not s'inke:i the foundations of the white bastions of peace it were yet an inestimable privilege to lay aside the burden of life, for life becomes sooner or latter, a burden, an echo among ruins. In the corner of the burial ground, where the trees are thickest, a little apart from the rest, was the grave of Mary Yil denning, and year alter year the blue thistLs bloomed and faded in its sunken sol. The train of mv retW'.ioiis naturallv

suirg-stcd her, and, turning mv eves in I

t:i ;!.r -etion ol her resting P nee, l saw. uen- -sue seems tn leel in

-r th r.'.ht I saw, the outline of a human . nor fear of death nor doe

m ii;n.r l.,v- i : ... wenever we meet lliem, at home or abroaii?

.1,:. A i . .- , ,. i And et the argument for the one is as valid hip. Once only 1 noticed, and it was the j as for the other. They are all poisons; their last time she ever walked in the wouiis. thitt ! eonstaut use will desi

- ' . ' - "-"6 "-"

he whom I supposed to be her brother was , sre.edy than the other, but all finally fatal

will, her. She did not sit in the shade, as ' f w'S n N?y,.tM ''e oe and ,, . ,. , , ... ... i wretchedness caused by the use of alcobo c usual, but walked languidly, and leaning j drinks, the friends of reform propose two heavily on the arm of her atttendaut, who modes of operation, both tending to the same st-veral times swept oft" the curls from resu'1 '"oral sualion for the drunkard, and v.... r....i i ...i i j . '''S3' suasion for the drunkard maker. Per-

... ueu uown.as u wng euasiot B l0 reagon Bnd to humanity, ! 'In. room to overflowing her. lull i.... i. .. j leaves town, we .

clatter;

The earth was like a frying-pan, Or sum such hissing matter.

There were loud nH PnlhllPl'lrCA

when the General bad finished this happy address, and the efTect of his quiet, but earnest manner of delivery was great upon the assemblage. Everyman .. r,l jLhk...

with the old warrior, and they who had been 1 1 Baw tnem st"dling through the air, apniictmitA.l I 1 . . . . I . .

It chanced to be our washing day, And all our-things were drying; The storm came roaring through the lines, And set them all a flying; I saw the shirts and petticoats Go riding off like witches I lost ah! bitterly I wept I lost my sunday breeches'.

accustomed to believe that he was an awk-

wnru anu mingling orator, stared at each lr hnr ,asto,nisl''neut. The s? cott glee club tr UufTalo, then advanced to the front of the balcony, while the General stood back, and sang two of their songs in a style difficult to equal and impossible to excel. The General Wra.eVo.el!tlj' drliehted at the beautiful song of the Club, and when they had concluded, he shook all the members by the hand, assuring them that during bis lifetime, he had never heard the songs they had favored him

wiui, executed in betterstvle. The General

Alas to late to win them;

I saw them chase the clouds as if The devil had been in them; They were my darlings and my pride, My boyhood's only riches; "Farewell, fat ewell!" 1 faintly cried, "My breeches! O, my breeches."

Kcv. T. M. EUdy.

Rev. T. M. Eddy, late stationed at

JllHrZ t0rlu.e dawie rooms, aim re- j Madison, an able and eloquent minister

the sclou, "r rZ. r. f the ?ospel:was about to leave for Cal-

. -- ..V, lit ., . , ,

Ur. S. S. Harding's AlircK. The Franklin County Agricultural So

ciety was particularly happy in obtaining ! you Eend vonr wheat t0 ma(3e inlo fl0ur.

b. fs. Harding, Jbsq. to deliver the An- j is a triumph of art, vastly superior to the nual Address at the late Fair at Laurel. 1 Theban Collosi; and the rough artisan who We have heard old men of experience ! perhaps is to-day engaged in cutting mill say that it was thebest address thev ever I stones from the cranium s of Osri and Osy-

heard. The best of it, however, is for- 1 and''. " 'he banks of the N ile, is conferever lost to the world; for feclin" inspir- ri"z mnch n,ore lastinS Eood 10 h'a c cd by the occasion and circumstances, j lhau 1,18 score8 of artisau8' euga6 for .t c . u lr i r .i l, '1 shariine these demi-cods from the unhewn the first half hour of the address was en- . 1.. . . , , ! granite. The Quern of the ancients, was to tireiv extemporascous. Ana that parti-; .u .- r.i . r c-. ' i.iui j un. wom;in the realization of th e stone of Sisycularly was applicable, eloquent and ap- j p!llIS his uncasing toil. The allusion priate. He alluded beautifully to the u holy writ, of "two women grinding inn peace and quiet about the Fair Grounds, 1 mil I," is a picture of domestic life, that reowing, as he supposed, to the step we ' mained for thousands and thousands of years, had taken in advance of other county j d u through all the heroic ages. Woman, Fairs, in excluding intoxicating liquors j ia her "nceasipg labor at the quern, ground from the enclosure. He alluded to the llw corn tl,at l,rMded the arn,ies of c,"nb"- ,., , . 'srs, Cyrus and Alexander. The purple of rapid increase in wealth and refinement i . , ' , , , , , 1 ' , . ... ,, . , ,. , . bolomou, and the hue linen that founded the m this valley to the ladies the van- , . ' . commerce of Tyre and Sidou, nere the preous fine specimens of mechanical and dortious of the Roc and d.,taff. in the haud.vegetable productions that were then I 0f woman. Not in alt the history of the anon exhibition, &c. jcieut world, did it ever fall to the lot of morMr Harding is an eloquent and grace- ital, whether priest, king or conqueror, to fill ful speaker, full of life and action with ! royal mouth with such bread as has been a fine, strong voice, and graceful action. jehibited here; and such as may be found t After dwelling upon various appropri- : lrul) iu lbe Poorest homes r lniate subjects, Mr. Hakdisg proceeded to I ," a" lhlU C0",ribute8 10 lhe real happines. ga I of our race, our civilization i as superior to that of the proudest days of Medo Persia, ai It was an ide.i full of poetic beauty and j theirs was superior to that of the the wanderdeep religions sentiment, that canoed the i ing and barbarous Sythiaus, whose athletic Hindoo husbandman t lay at the feet of bis ' daughters arrayed their persons in the skins of Idol a nortion of bis harvest. I-t no one J newly slain auiuiaU, aud adinir ed themselves smile at his honest credulity, or scon" at his j in lhe glassy brook, or polished stone, wilh simple devotion. On the contrary, the most ! quite as many airs as our modern beauties

euligliteueil christian may paus in his medi- pnt on, iu arranging a cashmere, before

tations, and reccgtiixe, at least with approbation, a duty that is Incumbent on every human being, the adoration of a greatful heart to the Father of Lift, and the author of "eve-

cashmere,

mirror supported by reclining Psyches. Thearth is not only the common mother of us all, from whose bosom we draw the elements of hf., but she is the great regenera-

rv good and eve ry perfect gift" and though tor or the race of man. She sends him forth we may deplore the ignorance and snpersti- upon the world robust and vigorous, to con-

tion of our benighted brother, yet we are tend with its enervating conventionalisms,'

A few days afterwards, being slightly indis- , "e"fe T ''.T":

it it i i i uiuiinaiu,iiui uiry

pvweu, . ia neu in ine village doctor. UUr coil- , .,on Hip hartl ..it.. ti.. I

' " , itvfiiri. . ur iiiaii ;

versatiou, naturally enough, was of who was , who, tor gam, will deliberately pourout upon

all have done much toenliehten and to in- ! le'ea. l?w.. we believe, on to-worrovr i Hernia belore C onference. Garber of . coustraine.1 to re,rt hi. rU ,h. j, I ,!. n.- -vt M r ..:-.

flue.ice the public mind, and even to reform roorn,n traln for East-Buffalo Com. 1 the Madison Courier then snokn nf ,,;, I from th r ' ...... ..r. , ..r.L...,.L..., ;...., 71'

. . . : . . . v . ,.ui . . ...... , ,nl wmiri?c w. .. tv.o ui .lie a.a. ur p Vl.uiug

as toiiows:

r:.-e. I re 1 T--.t fbe' i::l.-.:t oi sir -It' lln.s al

nbere 1 th ? s'orr of h

and at first litti

it, nn.l Kit, I own, a 10

1 leenng o l un.iiii j mv- ; so n- ar a 1,11 -stlouab)." j

-.1, 1

01c auiiusi W'llt'llj iUM 1 Vrtf

- ... v.WV4 v, ill uu wil JUUI I UI. V HO 4 ur . - -

uul 11 iiii . .n . n .1 m crnp nf f 1 1

sick and who was dead. community where he dwells, a stream of " as . Un'KT KtV1U SCU S COm- ' cerity his cloauent nnth 1 1 ? r7? 7 ,,,,,,- , .. tr-j i ""-it Lrr ss.on ,hin ,,r i 7 mtes ttu none that interests me so deeply as a little ! sl.oulu be t.e. teJ as itl.er crindnnls are i Scott to make a brief, terse" and ' ' uk,:,r0,11 h,m l? the brotherhood. As girl at the cott.igc indeed, I have scircely ' treate l.i.nd punished in proport outo the mag ; eloquent address to his men on the bat- ' Clt.,?cn1". Is without enemies, and meets thought of anything else, since 1 knew that' ,,it"'ie '''. oih-nce ; tie Held. On such occasions he is ex il lrl(:'IU !n one whom he encounshe must die. A strange child," he contin-I 1!1t,;"t. rT PP""-'' the tre.nely happy, and the earnest feel- 1 1;" '!? !m "'' rp.ra,nbuIiltio1 about the

ued- "she seems t, feel n.-iLh.r nf l;r ' , " . " w,".cn ,e8" ''e ' "iff with which he sneaks. sl,nu-a th:,t : ,U."'""S "'Pastoral lunctions

his whole heart is in what he sav Ma-' ! 7 , Pt:oP,c1,', hls chnrpe. As a

ny ot these addresses m irhf b. rir.,,1 .?" "-" aim esteemed as

s!w either weou 1 ev ils, are utterly inefficient and foolish. The

oi Iier I or sim.'e; an I thotur 1 I have been l,-, 0,ll remeoy winch can be effectual, is a law

M- much ef Me, I have never seen her slee,,.- ! AVLllV?1"? f?.and

. ' 1 "io v.uuuirv. J00 isn t he nres-

sutlers no ntm her fan -Mr ilia eiit license trslmn ... 1 . . 1 !.., ir..: n

. 1 i'u---uiiic i.iw wnicn 1 uii mt- -ui-Aiuaiis uuer inev were same calm expression, but ,'to' I w ill accomplish this desirable result. W bellier , keu prisoners or had surrpndorpd

melancholy eyes are Wiae oi.Vu a.f W' " . 3 ""ut ior mat jrpe closed a feeling addrcs

1 tniirj nnu r i ur rit iit!P ran nintio duiurm tn.

rh :i.I said, this is s un ? delusion ofi1""'- far it has worked well. It i. nnM:ku il..

the senses: and I passed my hau l over my I The second evening after this, though not ( some featun s of that law may be too striueves, for an uncertain rlimmer had fol- quite recove red mvsi lf, I called at the cot- ?0", a"11 O,,,ors again too lax for the condilowed my intensity of' "gaze. I looked tar. in the bone "of h-in .,1 llou Vf ll.l!"K8 '." ,l,is ?ta,e l,t that measure

I'lII'll . 1 . " " "

After the lull of Chapultepec he rode up ! " T WL- ?ay ncvor a'm Iopk i, i.:n ...1 .. " .1 unon. Asa socinl i.u. ,,... i. :.

around him. Man is not a creature endowed j ical power of the ancestor, in a degenerate and with perceptive facu ltiea alone; but he is in ', dwarfed posterity, earth, like a true mother the most exalted sense a religious being; aud ! as she is, receives to her bosom the poor wanfaith is as necessary to the full development j dering outcast, her recuperative embrace reof his moral nature as food is necessary to bis I stores I. is long lost and abused faculties, aud physical existence. be receives again at her hands a regeneration" Man has ever "looked up through Nature ' ami a new baptism, to Nature's God," and in becoming a tiller of Thus it ever has been, anJ thus it ever will" the ground be has always improved bis moral , be. throughout all the generations of men. and physical condition. No matter how ! 1 he proudest dynasties in the history of the fierce and barbarous the tribe or clan from ' world, may be traced back through all their

i towards the cottage to reassure myself ! by the light of a human habitation, but all there was dark a cloud passed over I the 1:10011. and, without venturing to look

I

wonts: 'Jeeiis like yours

in history. Be humane nnd generous, 111V bovs. Vol! are victoi-imis I u lll

f j run .. .? il1A ... nrl.... ..1. 1 nilr hnrilr iilim.1.1 ... ...... I t -. 1 - - . ... .... t-

, . ...o iuuu w ui un , i.omur. --- - - ""uru oy our uu ii on my neiiueu knees to tioil for

...1 I ...... 1 .... I .....1.1 ....... ... I U. ... .1 r

thehill where our sodiers were shootinr.'1'',- i1 80Clnl companion, he is ; w,r "c e" n"lwr "ow l" P.u o. r- . 1 01 n-MJ 11,1 Ii ! V-1 n I - U. flin.lr innra m,,lit 1 I. . . Ml lilt. OT fit IhO Unrba inn nf lit a arCm

'l 'may lond. As a m nn, a brothrr. he j ou! the living miracle ihat U vrer before j Tlie fiat of Go(I t,mt went forth agninst lh'

in which hi , r ? "u m,?- "fnce the I " the oevelopmeul of each blade of J eiiure race 01 11m. ,"-n the sweat of thv face

dissuaded them in the moment of tri- ' , .". , 80rrow we experience on 1 grass, and each expanding flower, imbues hk : s,ml1 ""u eat bread, till thou return uuto the' umph from doing an act that had the ap- : "l -' - lI,T-yture from this city, I mind with one great central idea, th-t strue- gr"u"d: for out ol it wast thou taken; dust

pearnnce of inhumanity, with these ; u.,. L" . I1. nlf Vr" a"'1 JIas,er to 1 gles in his heart for a comsnondinp faith. i'u art, and unto dust shall thou return."

tvl.Inl. ,.,:ll ;.. .!..!., . ...

lomeMt-k girl. Uie snowy curtain was lirely drive Hie tn.iVic au.i liruuke nness from

inhumanity, with the ; I .' " , , V0r" aV Mas,er to &

are reccrded ,i:,., r .'...!.., ' .. . " 1 l!" and finally convinces bis rpH,,.. nr il.n vi- 1 was not a curse, buta dispensation of mern .

mkii-.ii. iv n il r 1 s in h ,,,,) ll ; - ' .

...1.. . .. . . . .

the sash partly raised, and nil within still i Ll'SI-"iire. It is pussihle for the best of

vou

towards the haunted grave. I withdrew

trom the gate, very lijjhtlv; nevertheles

very still. The door vves a little open, ai:

pulsing, I beard from within a low, stifled for a time iniure 111.

men, 111 their anxiety to reform the evils in

society, to go loo far and loo fist, and thus

cause thev desire to

to-liijrht.

Some of his answers to the Mexic

v oiiiinaiiuer-in-L,iiiei were oriel and to

III : n. .....

people. H e shall miss him in the mnr- a ai:tJ 01 '"s n '"""''rt 'bty. 1 miosopiiy ana reiijr:on go nana 111 hand, in

limg; we shall miss him at evening yc i ''lan ws placed upon the earth surrounded j Ue vindication of that wisdom, whose beginshall miss him on the s.irro.l K-.T.I.o. 1:. 1 with forces, the maimitu dn tif which lm ranl.1 1 't: "d emiiiiff, whose lenpth. and breadth.'

itco l.;n. :.. i. . 1 . ' i ... . .. . . ... 1 t 1. . .

1 we shall miss him in the

.. riinii iiiis nun in

courage: and when I walked a litt way. I turned sn-I looked again, but the dense 11 .11 .

snail. iw Touiit nave nrevente.i mv

' . nerance cause i-i 1 1 . i:. r. 1...1 i.b.

1 fc' j s oiold,"lhey say and do not." ' III the white sheet, drawn straii-ht nr..r Uut whatever measures may be found nee

I lirnr.l tn siri(Tsn,l ln!l .,? i it creaked as 1 did so. An sound save .' which I coul.l not misun.lvrsiii.l. n.! serve. e have oilen heard

" ' ....... .- .. ' nil.,...!!,,. ,! c I r , .

-,n- moon sometimes, anil at 1 the oe.Uinj ol mv own heart rave me nusluns onen thedoor. I entered with.mt . " ") i"".e.i men, is 01 tne tern

. .. . . .....I ,T,lll-..t

r.r.ies ha.l been seen sitting by her : grave, and braidiog roses, as for

!. in her hair. True. I never saw

f tlicse wonderlul things: but a

ire likely to be haunted by the :Z spirits of t' bad could nit yK' imijined. The woo is. thi; k of birds, along the r u.lside. -in'Vi.v t-w:ird t!i- desolat ridge. 5':ors srew ever the 2r;ive-nit;nds. ' :t and through the !.i!len ;i.i!ine;s. T wonM, with here and there a lit-'-"-nj among we"! and thistles and

n... mm. . ... ., ... n i-i. a. 1 iiiiss nun ni inn 1 1 r . .

this caiuinn ' ",L I u'"t- e iiigui ueiore Hie battle ill n 1 ,. . "..vn... .iiriii. ; r now 11 01 uuexpioreu science,

oi 1 napuitepec, anta Anna sent word ri." 1' , "i 1 i ,l 1 ann llle 1 img"e, even at this day.

riiari- , locwtt, that unless he surrendered in 1 lli." . wie onhbath These force.. fr mn-. ..,n..,t,.

1 lour hot.rs he would show him no m,ar- ; .u Fcnoiar!l' a"" will be missed from ! ,,, .r ' . , t..rU. 1 :MaMi T'a,r , the prayer meeting We .;-. I mo,or were T'sib,e- al,d mvisd-le

.0. u.uii.i umu m-ih uarB lnn nc j ; " ,,- . -

':."; .;.: ,:..',ak:V ,:.VV.V... the bead and the feet. I ree,,.iJM i ?rfy to ?'-''PI end sought for by , f0,,d his ( Santa A a- n 7 ,-" nendly face as it was wont to show it-

''- ''".-. ' ;4 ' ' 1 me true menu's of the temneri.c rrnr.., : ,v . , """ l" " ' sr II 11 ..nr C!.,.r 1 . ocUl 11., i..

!,... ,. ti...r.. 1 . : -t ; r ,- ,,...1, ineieariut truth -the ti e r r w.- .).! .i.uii ...11.: : '.- .. . V very jrood, una lie should take n.i.. ,.i-,e a sincere wel- '

" Bv the head oftheh... i...,! ........ Z I I ' sionolthercstofthem without 'AT" ! r0,.C waited . For he is The tree of know

n.......:,.t.,. r. 1... 1.1., 1..,.,... ! into stone, sat the ivrs.,,....- I ... r.- :.k. : BW 1 o far as I possess influence, small !"" to show them to hi.n. Again, when . ?'"?n.W,": '.P.trh.aI,s' m'vt'r to return. . the tree of life

.... ,i,u. .v.u.,,. ..,,, ,. Tl.-,r,. i 1 aml humble though it be, it shall be cheer- tlu; troops were about enterino- the Cam- " " ; "PS Pn t,,c rrairio fruits.he would have ke."ier. :i o-arru ous nerson nsnnl v. if she . ei1 to see. Ill" riwm was sluJowvun.l l.ii r..n .. . . .? ' v.icc. . ."r, mi vu n .u ,,,,

1 . -.r ...... - : 1, , 7 J ' j iumj yiei.uu to us support. toi, oanta Anna sent to Scott for i,: 111 ,,n ,le la m essness, or roamed re;iiemb--re.l Marv ildermin.'-s.anil if she . lacebuned 111 his hands nrrih..lu u. . r..n . , . .. . . '-'"i t 111s !-.,:. 1.1 , 1 ru

7 ,, ... r"'".' i "uij, jour irien.i, .terms. 1 lie latter s rep y was "I have b nu uinugn we are and untamed savaire u :.t bu led ;:i .'1 rrravevard across the ; him it was he u- u .., 1 .... 1... i a 1 Donivcnv . 1 ' 1 n.tvi SOrrow to nrt w th i,;m . 1 . uu umameu saiage

- r.-. ...o uu me ; ... u. ..uiiii.iu.i. iiu answer ro !? ve aiii tin nupetinn ... . ' um. n c uu mast con- i..

,-. i . u. uiin- iui action nnu not

..I ,

Tass

or t.ie making ot a

ahii'.l siunmer

"s-; twi'iht of a b.

;Iwa'k- l down the grassy lane r'th lonesosn?' grave-var l t

:ivs-e i--,1! .1 ih. c.,tTr

WOOl

"Ves, I rem Miiber her, n:i 1 she is burie.l in the corn, r of the -round on the rreSt'""y the housekeeper, or one that I hill. Th y com - t t;iv house. I know, ! ,ook 10 be she, entered, and whispering to to C't a cu;. or something of the sort him, he arose and left the room, so that I but

with which to u;;i the water from her imperfectly saw him

ones

a time for action and

crave, tor it rain.i terribly ail the tiny ol her funeral. Hut." she added, "what d

I- i vrn iv.-ii.t to 1 1 1 oft h. 1 o :i r I nTiil oroii. for

l vwely knew why, strangely j when there are livingfolks enough to talk ":a old broken bridre inthe 'about!"

cottage and the j Truth is. she wante 1 me to sav son-.e-.. ..I . . .. ...

r t.iat. 1 sat down. tlun-T ot our new ni-io-hbors. an.l was

1 V-tween th

"i-il rem-:nh

, ;!v r ' time listened to the trick- ' vexed thnt I did not, though I probably bTe close her eyes her mother, they say, died I Tl ; e '-sater over the pebbles, and ; should liae done so had thev not been in watching for one who never came, and I M -gi.lden patches of sunlight . driven from my thoughts by' the more the baby was watchful aud sleepless from the ! hP? , . taded out as '-came still absorbing event of the evening: so. as flrst i ger 1 - - '..En I txviliibt "-rav.that in her lnoch nn 1 .lw:.,,n.,itt.i.l -ii l.ri.li" I m. . 1 -.t

Urn. s oot at Itiiffulo. Gen. Scott reached Buffalo on Tuesday moruing. A large number of persons collec-

When be was gone, the ,e i to wt-lcome him, and he was escorted to

voman folded the covering away from the hls llottl i' a grand civic aud military prof.ice. and to mv horror I i tht th cession. Ile was received by the Mavnr in

ere Hill unclosed. Seeing my surprise, she a br if spt-eel., in which he alluded to the j lhe N.lion ll r,ll;"C ia Me ico.wra

said, as she folded a uai.kiu. an.l .,innd ii nous atfurs on the frontier in the neish- i "ns 01 nw oratory ana elo

close over the shut lids 1 borhood, and which Geu. Scott had dislin-

It is strange, but the child would never in Euihea himself and won an undying name.

To which Gen. Scott leplied:

ask." It was

for parley

Cen. Scott was educated to the bar, and on ordinary occasion, (off the field) he speaks rather slowly, aud with great deliberation, as well as with great eloquence. His different speeches before the Court of Iu-

quence. Indeed, there was something akin to moral sublimity in that scene the great Captain of the age and conqueror of Mexico, a prisoner as it were, in the Capitol of the country he had conquered, aud on the very theulre of his brilliant victories which hives-

' ' and all things clad.

v 1 it tint the mole, begin--,;V""k st nset. loosened 'and Fr.m beneath my feet, and - l.i'.ek- ingeJ moth, coming -C"i:h the dus'kv weeds' fluttered and lighted i'n my lap. and the -'- ly beating of the" bit came al- . ' rny fare. " compliant 0f thc owl seun 1- . th hollow and died over the -.-warning me to proceed, when V; 'twere the echo of my own -";r,'?''Sted in alow. mebinrboK-

My Fellow-Citizens of BufTalo: I am

;y to lie able to feel that I am not a ?tran-

per anion? vou. It is now 411 years nnH una

1 . . - . . ' ...1 1.:. i.r .1.... 1 ...

Ti... , . : ween since 1 nrst visited this nlace since I ' lr" m'F"""" uciuib iiiui iriuuuai wuu

retired. Tne nisrht was haunted with . . .u hrsl caui-ht a view of the miwhty inland ocean

. . . , and rainv evet......... ....I . . ' i i. .- . j l r . . . .

some trouli esome dreams but a day " ",,u premaiure expo- , "icii now ties spreaa oeu.re me. it 1.1 upwards ,1Mcp,l n.. nrd;.irv n.c,..M..u"

of sunshine succeeded, and mv thoughts s"reld induced a return of my first indispo- f t"rty years since 1 was called upon to form a ! ' . i i. .l- ... .. , .0. 1 . u..., siiion. so thnt I n. .1... c ..1 - camii ol instruction in this neighborhood; and I

' v"" 1 r pine, the army first organized here and pre110 ; , t . 8aw, however, from my window, preparations pared for those great battles which our counDays and we ks went by, and we nei- for the burial to my surprise, in the j trymeu do not now cheose should be forgolther saw nor heard anything of our neigh- lonesome little rravev.d Kv il. , io ten. f Applause 1

Iu the course of a fortuight, I prepared for

busy week. '' nave uo ratinual conception and of which j whose height and depth, is beyond our finale

Lodge room i 'he most daring adventurer iu "the dim un- 1 comprehension. As true it is that families

can scarcely i a"" kindred rise iu the earth, reach their cul-

; minating point, and fheii in obedience tj a' Fpeaking j ': ef our being, as fixed as the law of grav:orgauic j talion, descend again; as it is that the oak

; and inorganic, ponderable and imponderable ' spring from its germ, and striking its roots

great storehouse of nature. 1 int the soil, raises alofl its glorious sheen cT

ledge was indeed, to man strength and beauty, higher aud higher, age

; aud had he not partaken of its , afu"r and century after century, till at last

perished in his-utter help- it feels that decay is in ell its membsrs.for the

upon the earth a naked 'i,f!t time puis on its kingly robes, and piece-'

There was before him nwu by piecemeal, mingles with earth, in obe-

ever restless ocean, lhe snl..mn mnup nf dience to that same eternal law. 'Fnr.ln.f'

Master's itS eterna' M)'nln: tha chaiiil;ssriver,the rush- i thou art, and unto dust shaltthou return," j Ing torrent, lhe desolating tornado, and the 1 '3 the law of all living matter. t fearful crash of the descending thunderbolt i The science of agriculture and the arts of

; but be looked upon each with admiration or Peace are al a times, and have been in all 1 fear, ns an element in which was csncealed ' "ge8 of 11,8 'orlt objects of the deepest In-

; some being mightier than himself, and he teresl wlUl a" civ,llitea nations. Go back as IT During a trial for highway robery, at sought to propitiate Iks displeasure by gifts ; far as lraliliou thrown the light of her the ork Assizes, a curious piece of infer- and oblations to the unseen Ue.tv. Mal, g1'"lerillg lanlI'. "" we find that every nation Tiie' pLsrcXr'dVcXTidmsef t loked abrad UP0n ,he earlh au1 Mi t,ie mAUiM v"rion" the imPor1st, singing at Free-and-Easys, at the rate hi"8 BUl1 tl,e valleys. tenanted w.th animals of agriculture. The religion of ancient of a penny per print on all the ale that was ' much larger aud stronger than himself E I'1' tile worship of Osris aud Isis, the Didrunk by the customers. j T, Lowerer. for many aes it is believed 0Dia t,f Greeks t:,e Saturnalia and Ro-

ITTbe entire amount of the receipts of thei were only used, (if us-d at ain for bis food hgalia of the Romans, were only so man?

Iidently trust him in his

and in his devotion to the I cause.

OUR CHIP BASKET.

Duke of Wellington, for his

nearly three million, ofnound. Z i " ' I 7 ms"' 1 "e W""D2 ' U,e "'

emolumenu of the Duhe' nne .i,... 1 Pr"n,t,V9 J of our roce, formed an epoch

the 'om, r niai.ife-tirg the teep interest of the

nation, in all questions connected with Cieir

uuai uu nl , . . ' " '""W8 1 . i,;.,.,. r .1 11..J creatuess and honor. Ard hra lt ....

1 ... ... . . .... , a. hi vmrr reiniives. Iroin h ' ,c 1 li,c wiii,iim iii.ueprui.rrss " - - degree of thrilling interest never before wit- army, the church. hmH it,. -M.i- ! I i.' ....... ... .... .... ouire in what Hoe. r,,tin..Bl mnj -.'.

i- 1 ' 1'w.uiiiioioic ru- : tt wv ui in j ui uriuz ir it uraieu Willi ----- . . UuU on ord.uary occasions ; oru.ous. diT. ry coM Not sure, . , ,.ne of

O" Real difficulties are the best cure of j tioti; aud the motor thus furnished, was the ball'e ships; not in her frowning fortifications

bors. lor my call was not returned, nor d; 1 1 make any further overtures towards

an acquaintance.

O.ion, as I s.;t undc

the door, of twilight

mellow music of the llut

1 thnt :it t b r ott n iro 1 vniil f hotico ' hnriul (Trtmlll..oa h.- ik. ...... r w

c-.nib,s;., -c .!... i. .:.-.:i ' , . " . r :.. " 6 1,larJ

. .,, ,m 1:1,11 ii;:.ivit.iuii Keener to me. one r.i-ni "ii sonniis in me

1 well recollect the scenes which wro en-

Mr. F. HolbrkTHilished far- the other " M a'ha"'ed f "g point of man, in the pathway to his batteries ; not in her m.rshallen

r ot lirattleborough, t., has publish- O If I were a rock in Massachusetts I 1 6 'J"": "' ca' - , " a long coinniunication on the subject would try toedge mysolf to some rlifT ,t ' Jectt0 f880" superior to instinct; 01,8 0n uo- uo1"' llltse vr 811 eIse t"t

rln,li:in corn, in which wo tumble into the ana. f..r . .nnn I j. and tho In nnint nf 1 ,1, ..... beloues to the aits of war. But iu her neace-

mer

ed

nf niltivatin ti

- nit mm in it i iiuiirtHinrnniui nr i u i nm..,., .. . . - . . . . ... .. Mnn.im.j i ... u r . ...... ...

a visit of condolence to the cottage, but on i The, are brought bark forcibly to my mind i J1"1 7 'oUS'in? d lC(X h"n hoi.sinr 2 h J,0" , fi ? nc" boriS ,nfer:r 10 any of the clas f lar8 !"". "un,,e8- n" l"min t.".n,,hg

rone-the ".is morning when I behold some of my fel- 1 r u- t ' powder .-Rev. Mr. Filler KB-j lowerln n-eed, yet hi. reason iriuinpLea "e,,, ner couuness scnoo, nouses, ner nnr-

low actors hi those sceues; lor although sol . " "i'"" 1"viiil buujcvi, i , i over them all, and the huire elepliaut was 'ersai euucaiMn, ner unoought prew, her t j ... i , ... . ! 1 1 e,f n wnril n limit eii'luir c.n.t coi-m Lj A lint irnn Kalrl ...U. ...J .l. 1 .. i-.i

D , ..,.,, i .... ,. . . i "lauv nave passeu away, i mans noa mai a i " "'j " .v"u..u,..,s Bl,u - ...... . ..r ..pouea parts : cha ned in his rtreuvt.i the minel ti. lm u ucorrupteu pu ipn, ner pure ciiristianily, aud Uumy return, I stopped at the haunted ; few 8l,n nflnv old COmnaniiisof 1810. ; All experienced farmers are aware that the letters damaged by salt waters, n.auv . . Hreu8l". "' l t 10W. . . ... . ....'. .

. . " . . .ill uh...n ...I. 1. I. HIin I IA llllia U-ura nuil,1.1 n l. i tl , l . I a VII HIWlllUU. HHl IIKlIlliai 119 III I C IdLD UI III I

as intervened ' the productiveness and early ripening of X., "ave lately arrived from ; " ' "6"' " '"K". " .. .. ' . .L . ....

wituv t uU irthc appUMroo by rac,li,,K il fouUtl the inhabiuuu gone.1 h ired the swoct lttCe 8tlU aud enHy

Ilk iflA Ctrf. nf tiiim UrKi.-l tnam

inrd iiin n,,rrjrt ho. f-rt. i,,L i i i- i i . i California, will ass is b vrv m.i.1. . i..: ! have ever si nc. rrn.,iH hki-.. aristocrat ic tendencies, the true diirnity of

1 ebvrv in rfr.w .. i- :.V .- r ... . . ' 6- ..... . Bua..Ker ciiiiii. , r.r.TTT ll". , "J ..mwi win, urliu9 jr uuvu.back th(, ,..(,. - s . . .. r. l.l... I .... ...J .U.

-Vrd I i: ,' s l"u"-," ,n,ml"U1'' cnnllrm The briars aud thistles had been carefully cut "'&"' "'J r. i nanss to me enterprise upon the manner of selecting the seed. b ; vanis oi man, anu have been his compn.ions w B upon - 1 du-tmctiy caught the graveynrd ' away, U,e-was no slab nnd do nami1. ! F,C' .''''"V' 'T'" 1 have a long-cared vaiictv, which I have ! (ttThe widow of King Loui9 Phillip-', io the civilization of the o.ld. Yet bow which we live-labor, that makes the deso- . . K ?,n:1M1 aS T tUrne,d h,,,ruhoa:, ? lMo either but the blue and white violets were ' "tlon ButT.lo wa. burned 'in The wi-tef been r,antin and "Pr"vinS for some ! pe is residing pern.enantly near the Lake incredably .low has bee., the .dv.ncem e.u of ,a,e l'bcM of l,,e rtl gld-and not that ia----waa.ier.ng eu her sacred bower, to one sele, and. encircl,nr the r.ffht ear , ,sfcl..lw.. "u t, L ,c. HVZ ! ten or twelve years; and although during ' ot Como, where she has purchase a cha- 1 man in the useful arts. Though each draft .,f that reaps down our harvests with thrf

"afrrt- ... ... : Wlthhnr ham llt.Ti,l 4.v comn .mnutnc UUlll. I Ufll VllfV PlPni i . r : ..i . " i " . " ..... . -

u. .uary re.gn." ! m , V , , ! wll, u ill I knnr place at the time ot the burning, aud the i "me, 1 nave trieu, i presume, a uoz- water that slaked his thirst, and each brculh ,n,.r,n ,- , , igerU, and then proceeded to fX-;TOI'gM'"' whole frontier was iu a state of despondency cu other sorts, I give the lint-named ! rr A teacher i. .;,, ci . . Lr.i, ,. , i n , 1 1 i , i ts iii approaching slowly, ' press her conviction that the music was : . w, L . of despair. sort the rreference Whatever may be teacher iu a Sub -Jay School was lec of air that uillaleJ his lungs, contained an iuioi i.i and pv.-.s nnon the 1 ,...,i. : i ; l ne itavanna news ls.that in con- ' . t .L ..cj.uu mi. turine a class of Iiiti

--5Voun.T,n,! -.- , ' i- i - ' " ii.i.nun... agi u- Ke of the fremnmt Pillih.,ctw. 1 mat penou i was seiu uere oy me gov- , 5aui 1U ilvor 0f a c ,ange ot seed , 88 re- I r . . , -. ."uueuto , - 6 tj 6 . u.i' anil sfeinin-Tlv ovcoedino-' ;st-iiutiue oi me irenuent r iiuousters ' .i . r.,.,n . ..i i..,. . . , of uious instrnci :., .i.. r ,. .... h. ..i...i .... . r ...i

n V.. . '. berp in t ho llnito.l Ktotcc in,iroirm,..iJ. V . cards other crops, there is no ncca ,ol . " ormauon oi o8c, aUU .gD

i' l.assv.l W IlilUllL UU- I " lot mil .v..r hfnrn s rik.ict w....v. ....... ...v. ...imiui. , nj mMRa i(t,i .munsi in. auemv. niie llle . . . ... - . Vnttlhfill i.i.r-i...

r - . . . " fc "-- i"".' '" I.:,! llnrln n,,r Pnmmnn , .... : ciiaiiffiup-sced com. provuteit proper care 1

.-''e man.

said I.

basse.l witbnnt 110-

. an,II.l,;nl. ...:.i.... . ' , .7 . "..

, . kimin iuiuui scv- . tne uuie;

-.S IIP ,.1.1 Ti.a. 1. . ' . . ... , .... .

bpn "" uum-iic mi, ii "a mite: sue answered indignantly,

5,,, . , ir- uu.-iiiuig 1 -n s a mue, jum as iiiucii a.

. 1 rtOUiillaill have forerrone

'Ah, Miss Caroline," after age, without knowing how to make the

as voura 'flute-1 courf;e t,uT wiU P5ve mble to us, and

n,l for tho s .ko of onli.rhlnm.r . VOlllHU TCf Ol COU ZSC SUIierS.

t-i.'e.? . t0 ,iave von oae S!al,ce- blind understanding, I '11 go to the grave- ! '

shoil i 81 ' humiliated yard, night as it is, if you will go with "Lov one another, pray oft together and see

.v ....v. i. ,.it. u.iiiiiinvi; iiu v-uua. ; arm v lemaiueti, aim i am prnua to say mey :. , , . 1 , ' V . :i u. , .. , ., , . . ' , . . , ,. ....... . i.i. -: . . . .. ..... .-. : . ; is nsoil lor tho vonrlv- sploition of that i sal" ne to one ot the class. "it .n vnu : rnnnin? brook contribute to hn. rmi. nf life.

.-is i- gn e iruuvie io uiiut nations, ,ot i renueren goon service, tne lunaoiianis iook " ---- ...... j .

. s,one. His face xvas paie c7 Sad. ana !,;, i .l5j.i

i., lureiieau siiaueu

.-sot

So, under the

i .n . , v. u . , nail , 1J Ll MIC VI 'IJUl 011P tOTY.1. J r.n-

overt, ..t. ' -"""s s- j Gradually

ou never both together anprv he:

o v . "Come on." ! If one speak fire, t'other wilh water come;

faint light of the ere- ; Is one provoked, be t'other soft or dumb."

a. .1 I

cenx moon, we iuok our way togemer. ; rrrlla.i3no. fva . ,

j nie. I "Very well," I said

f black, heavy hair, pushed' .

.t. i... "noi tne best sermon which

sa. der. and quiet died awav. 1 1 " . " go away taking to one

tne i . urged mv trembling campanion to walk ' s oui wmcn k I'Ul ODeOSlte hill Kl. mir rnrr - . - . .. , " . ... ... milcc lli.m . ,. i , .

.. l . , ' ,s,.,J taster, lest the gnost stiouui vanish too, uiougutiui, aud sehe had w.mtnnW- cli.rht. . . . P. . . ...... ...1 ....... ... . . ..

iclain t l . , - "T."- zm she acceded to mv wish wttn sweni ..aj..r..uiK io uo aione up liurn"t po ad"i'0U Ij1'1 fhI'alacritv, that convinced me at once et. m. LT '., - Ilave :'L sllS'lUvt; of the" sincerity of her expressed be-' f-7-For the benefit of that n,n.n r

"i-uuuiored v awav, 1 , lf 1 v , , .-i-"" ick sten toward 'he" cot- ' Ur r,a,!ers who ull,5or thl-- rule of F i Just as we beran ta ascend the hill, she : fashion have been obliged to pass food to

lAn-hairod ,, :.i l-e stopped suddenly .sayins, ,llcir ."outh with am Ivor fork in the right

f'-aumsr. and ,.. ,nn,n.li "There ! c.id you hear that 1"

. ., . 1 . . - 1 1

..s. r Kul,ol.n.. th.lr imk. 1 . ' . rr.1. i-.i- mhu. i meat in iu aru auu sciences we conteiuprogress, ol beholding their houses tcr tts to productiveness. The difference , . m i . , . om the foundation to the crowning roof. jn produci between careful selection in 1 It Is TtmtT-Tha Springfield Repub-' PIale w'th u'"nl tl.ose m.gl.ty rel.es of r rte,tli1rr?,,iir"L0,k ll ! nW.nJ taking seed atranJom from ! tl it i. . story current in bygone ages, U.e glories of which seem to StLmhS few "ears' be t''y.t a gentleman, not unknown jp have belonged to the god, and not to men

thon

t'ii:

-X

Mill

hand and a crut of bread in the left, we will state that the English nobility have

iei fMi.1,1 ... .. -.i. r . ...r..r.,.l .!,.. T 1 .1 : !.....!....

, ,5d vell-brn.i . 'i . i l.i . .. . . , . r , lately decided that knives may be used ;stSr u'- brcd courtesy, but du- ,t was no unusual thing to hear sounds of the , f nr ;r ,i, i.:..art c;lr

v)B n'aalUv ""si . DOt nC? " j EOrt in an inhbi,ed TO,8hWhood "l 80 X" this is a very important item, espel WaS-Y : 1 lllY tin T ! RU hour- ciall-v l, ,he ho are not so greedy as !. Tle mother I did not ee She ' Itwaslhe ,alching of the gave al the to be afraid of cutting their mouths if they c be 1S sl';htly indisposed ' graveyard- She answered solemnly. j use knives instead of forks. '?!nS that she might not be! "As you value jonr immortal seul, go 110, J (fcj"CocK.NEY EnT.vrn ox A Cook. ; u rther." I Peace to his Hashes:" Punch.

courage ihey returned to lhe smouldering fr planting, lly proper attention to ( think you would have been without your other than by capturing its finny inhabitants ruins where once bad stood their dwellings, this matter, a variety may be perfectly j good father anil pious mother?" "I suppose, ! with his rude net. We have read of the civand commenced rebuilding. Whilst I re-1 adapted in its habits to a given climate ir, answered Miss Caroline, "I should have i ilixation of India and Egypt, or their advaucemaiueu 1 ha.l the measure or seeing their .ml

IW. ('i.u,ii ih.i. hn..u. 1 . . . mL . J:.r. oceu u orpnan. meat in tlw arts aud sciences we conteiu-

, ' 1 ..-.-...e ...w.. r , ter us to preuuctivencss. j. iiu uuiita-iiic

I had al u 11 leers

Riiinnir'

the ranks of the ui my and brave, noble ol-! much in favor of the lormcr mode the businesss circles, is living on a cracker a day

aiers they were. I hey aided the Inhabitants 1 sou ana cultivation Deing in uutn cas.s by the directions of spirits and tint he ia so

........ wora, .u raumuiitii " "r i anise. I reeblo as to be hardly able to walk. power to their rehf. These are the recol- "As SOon as t.he earliest ears are ' lections which make this spot most interest- j thoroughly o-Hzed I go over the field To drive a cut nail into seasoned oak

inn mill -... ilr thn ncia...! iiii.tnvnl n.iA r r . - . ... .

the proudest 111 mv lite.

There are other associations, too.more

nnal. with which these scenes are connec

I do not forget that it was in this neighbor- 1 ure taken immediately home.braided, and i , . .,,.,. . . , ,. nrsl toot prints of civilization marke.J the site

hood, lorty years and four days ago on this , hung up in a dry, airy place. hen I ! " " , 3 ,, " of the "Ltemal Lily, these iniyhty nionuvery day, that I beard the report of the first j commenced with mv favorite variety, it "A,i,,lsou '"'"ore, . attached, went from , nieutg cf the iluVe r(.maiUt,dt aud tUe cannon and musket that 1 ever heard fired wa8 ditticult to rind twill ears; but now Worcester to Boston (41 miles) in fifty miu- wanjl.rillg Wiuiaelile pitched bis Uut in the neverhiUetm'Tieiet-The IZllt tUe ar My crops aUo ripen ules including all stop,. , shllJow of lUo Mcllluooiuint aa . reslwi hia sistan'ce which the brave and patriotic citi- tea Ja's c.arl.icr lltt hT" 'lln IT The "gift of the gab," to use a vulgar spear agaiusl tho crumbling Monolith. , xensol this vicinity gave to the army of their mention the length ol ears that might bnl net inexpressive phrase, is no criterion Yet who will contend for a moment, that . ceuntry in securini' the victories which 1 be lound in my nelds, out will say to 0f a man s abilities or qualifications as an ex- - .. c . ., ' .. ... mil1 fiivili'iuliAii 1M vmt au si Ur ... fA K t '

followed. I remeniher the assistance, indwil. 1 vou. Jlr. t.ditor. come anil see lor vour- ; ecutiva othcer, even in a civil capacity. 1 -j "...u. .u.u.i

......I i C . I. . ... . .... .. . I 1 .- ,, I .f Ik. .InWll.ull llUVa K..1 1.

nun. me iiinnoiiauiH uu uie eunre sell. 1 '" . s'.w. c.vv........ .

We stand amid the ruins of Thebes, Mem phis, and Falmyra, and count the years by thousands, siuce the sileuce of the grave rested npou the ashes of their desolation. We think of Greece and Rome, aud our reason staggers

Greene

I mvsell select ng Irom those stalks that 1 timber, and not have it break or bend, dip the . ' , f - . . , J . ,i, : . . ., under the mighty thought, that before G , ( are 'stocky' and vigorous, and that pro-! end in oil. , , " ' . ,cli duce two good ears. The selected ears G SrrsD The w Railroad ! nan'8 'U y W ' ' Zt. i ure taken immediately home,braided, and i ,JF "J J.ll V!T .. !u ! first foot J,ri"U o" -"

frontier, who came to the aid efthe regular! , . i such mere stammerers in their speech, that troops and helped not a little in achieving ' 1,008 lt not ofleu ""Ppe" that the beau I ny glib peltifoeger could appear to more ndthe victories wWch thenceforth crowned ourjin,""e t00"18 drawn ""to knoll Ctr- j vantage, and pass for lhe belter nun amoug arms. tainly it docs. the uiirellectuig.

..... ..... 1.. ...... ..J 4k. .!..

S..,..,rt nT Ihrt irr..!. ..si .tiitt..M ll Iihvm 1... it I nl r.irTrit nr lllillM. ol iKene. Vrsiri nf r.ri..wa 1 s '

or Rome? Yon, ladies aud gentlemen, have

facilities for the enjoy meiit of life, that the .

nail cbxl band of war.

"Aud ploughs our fields, With gory fallows of the canon' wheels." The true condition of man is labor; honest' l ilor in the countless walks of human life. it is im etd a law tf Lis life, upou which depends Ins moral aud physical well being. A' law as rid as when God said to our first parent"., "'Iu th sweat of thy face bhalt thou' eat bread." So true is th is that a violation of it carries with tho certain eT dence in a degeneracy of mind and body , stamping with divine disaprohatiou, our whole physical and psychological be nr. (fence the re. nark ef a great phi oa pher, "That if you will deter mine the number of generations, thai have pasted away iu idleness, unconnected with agricultural or mechanical pursuits, or the pursuits of commerce or other nseiul artsy c. l!iDr..k, l.,rr.;l...l ..m1, . ..K.l:

or the ,.,., , 6

scale; iy whicn you may determine the mental and bodily qtitililits of their offspring, witlf a? much certainty as jou can weigh lhe atf-niospb-re wilh a Iwroiuctrr, or ineasure i hrat with a ihermoineler." The morality and Christianity cfa people, go ever hand iu hand with the literature that prevails. It U prenosterocs to suppose that

As'

; soon miglit you expect that virtu can lie

prouJtfct mouurch of autiijuity had no cou-

down on the cauch of vice, and arise uucootumiualed, or that a bitter fountain can pro-

! dnue sweet waters 1 ?ee next page..

r i

t. i. f !