-
,«... ’,;· ..:...· -1.—·::·-:« « -.— « :- «,:..«-.,....,.. JHIL III-:J'., ««·« —’«« « 7——TTZ«,·· ·,—.««« «—’—«Æ «·'"«:7«": M -·«'·«
sehend to Palme-. queitu and sonst-m New-, jmrsmry Amen-m stritt-nur« comärtlat kaum-euch su» sec.
MTL —?«’««I-. 71
j Yoh. IX.
LITTLE ROCK, TUESDAY MORNING,
SEPTEMBER 30, 1851.
No. .4
T HE a iC K v NHAS B A N N ftN
|| PlttLIIIIBD IITBtt* TlMDAT.
,iA)|B8 ( f i. .Will «!.**. Hubli.hrr.
TEH MS :
p ir one ropy, one year,..* ^ ^
F.k liver < y«.4, one year. to ona • 1
For Jiec c iples, one yc«, to °«« «"Wrc**' * * “ J*
p,* teu cop .-s olio year, t . one addrea* . . 30 (W
jj-Tbe ntin • of no p*r*>u will be entered up.r
our b K»kit u nlow payunwi' he made m «.*«nee, ol
warned by some reapon obi*por»oo in tins city.
J7-Distant subscribers tony forward ns money by
l. tter, at our etpeiwe. and nt our risk, provuteri
the postmaster'* receipt be taken and preserver!
for our protection.
1 yNo deviation from the above terms.
INDUCEMENTS FOK CLUBS.
The auccesa that bar attended our recent cir.irta
,„J the ini-real taken in the BaI»»iw by many .1
„ |>iirum, l..v- induced ’>* »<•'[ f»r {*«
(,„,!• Oi effecting tlic rormatiOB of clubs, the follow
i iii> tint of _
«s3^*» mJjmmmm*
Any i,-ranii forwarding to n. to dollar, in cnrreu
luiola for Fair anbacrlbera, wilt receive .
mav »f»ur psp-f for oar 1**r. gmlu.
To any one forwarding twenty dotl.r. i«. e.rren
f.lu,N we wilt aeud f-a copies of ihe B»*«W fo
asm tn v >i''W sahserihers. and one copy of t«OD*v i
Lov a Hooa orUtAHAtTa fer oue year
r« «oy one forwardiug thirty dollera In eurfcm
fun it. we will a*n,l if’" ■» enpiee of Ibe HAUirtl
Cor as many n-w aubacrib-ra.nud aa-copy of Hu
(rnit,> ! States vf ijresine ami l>-mocratic Kevie,
far oue year. ,
1-0 anv one s«»dtng >•* ‘he largest number (ove
tifi-Vu> of O'* aubacribera, accompanied will
the’mtvnice payment, nt the Inst menllone. rntea
e-e Will as ltd ou- copv of ibe Spirit of the I iinoa
ilir-e steel engravings, nnd one copy o
HI, h wood's \lag nine for one yeir.
{ T Keinittnncea may b> made »l o«r risk, and re
rei'nta will te- promptly returned. In makingsucl
remittances. the Pm! Marterr receipt shoulu be ob
tniued for our protection. ^
r«>r Yearly Advrrlinin*
For 1 (Mines, or leas,) en.-li additional )
:l months,\ square, * *
Ill
,. |-2 “ IS '* “ J
Ail .tun li"it advertisement* will be charged at tb
ir.at mentioned rates, unless » contract be mad
w‘i ‘.I left for iuaerliou; and must be paid for in ad
' ’\\. person will be announced for any office,eitlie
city, .-state, or county, without the advance pay
men! of five dollars. ...
Political circulars will be charged as udvertiw
m-nt- and payment required m advance.
M„ Will hereafter he delivered to any perso
» .C, a hum we have no regular dealings, until pal
for.
iwrkff.l with till* tilim
tur of insertions desired, otherwise they wilt li
continued unlit forbid. »nd chirked accordingly
Yearly, half-yearly an.! quarterly advertiser
Wi'| confined to’ thoir Jeyifimafe business A
1 Irertisements of a difierent kind, or for oilier pel
„ous Will be charged for «i til- usuul rates.
\il .-tiers muslbe /lost-sunf. or they willuol re
Cr'tiV** any
I f I' jililv-ly im variation will be made from th
jbilve regal iliou •
JOB I’HINTING.
l i,. ;.r.. i t-i.»r of III- Arkansas Banner, re
. .. (in y informs III- public, lhatiie is prepared t
-,.i'iii . -very leserlption of Jos Woh, with neat
ti-sv md dispatch, and al as low rofeo as any ofBc
in the. State -such a*
It inks, I*.im ihlets, llitml Hill's StenmboH
Hills, Putters Bill* of Lading, Bill
llends. Horse Hills, Labels
raids, K.pcei|»t«, 4r.
tlso constantly on hand. Blank >’otcs
t li rk’s, Hheritf’s, Jnatiee** mid l oust able'
lllanks of every kind. Blank Deeds of con
I -ranee, tkc. whirk will be sold cheap lo
rush or city aecepianc-, and will be sen
In mail to any part of the stnto,JI required
Agency for the Akrnnsas Banner.
•f- Mr Wn. E. Beavms is authorised to act a
ijj—nt (»r the tfann-r, at l.ostCre-k. Saline county
j- Mr ticotnt Bogus is authorized to acta
nl fur the Bonnrr. at Pine Bluff, Ark
f- K IV Otaa, (Jeueral Agent, Evans’ Build
4-, N >rth-wast corner Third aud Walnut street*
' -j-ljihia, is authorixed to act as Agent for ‘tti
huinuo Ha liner "
J i. Smirikv, Esq., No. 2d Camp Street. Net
i. .in, is our exclusive \g»ot to proenre and col
l iia.n-i, for advertising, &.C , in that city.
Donation Lands.
Fur saie at this olfi-e. List* of the felted land
i . set to douatiou tiy the stale, to actual settler
»t T j cents per copy, or #t> per dozen. Postage t
auyparl of the country, TJ cents.
To subscribers.
We h-oe that urher ver any irregularity may t
'■■•otto: in the receipt of the Bonner, our sut
ui>n w ill do us the favor lo give information •
l i- net. i.i or.lnr th it the cause may bo aacirlaiuo
an.I remorod.
Important
\lrl' *'*uld
tf . ill \\.r
<« UM to the
Uii e ;»| Oku
th-Mu-viven
lb**
***«»! nrtiei* of tho
ELKf'TRUWL •
FEBRIFUGE,
'iN.r.D’s ffvkhtonh
u l»i a any w ith
‘“‘t }miii< uUr k**m\
I- Ur Of
to Planters,
I WO lO TWRm IIOIRM.
1 ■ ■ ■* * i**-ut in the .Materia Medtca.und one whk*
! 1 * r «•»: ?»trui'in) w uh (lie law* of hie; producing a.
• . ! . i hi» hi ’!**■ mitiiI itioa of the wiidc -ystetn, actta
tlifoctiy up m me n-rve*. ui** great
MUN*Pttl\U OK Lll%
' i,! ! •’ ! ; r ;uU?ju" and I.rm;m4 that Uunrni
•> h**uiiii whenever there i
.irj ••I*'**' . 4. cither iiM'al or generaj. It
^KlrilKK VO MlTM \OR l*r Ml EN,
■* y 1 ), in .v.r. . the mint (Mirate «ium*eh. IV* can giv<
j‘. * f •» 1 • u» • •! u man that d^4«riM bv II F. Fly
1 '■* 1 I " ■ 4aU ilauiUa, I .a., Oct. 17, UCO,iAWluc]
. * V ,r * htw heca im.mI with wonderful niece**
' * *? *' '• flv'1 hnriJr J imum uiitliiatim, (Ouachita,) it iia<
u<i * *"'1 “• *‘v.?ry raiij 0 fea* act'd like a chanu, at
i •l»'r’/ I*1*1*11' 10 J' -v.'* *'t health hi from TIV*.
r i i HOI KS A* iat :u aiv knowledge gw*, tiler*
! norh.ug t » c.m»;nrc w ,tij ji. It a< i* on tile MiriUOtt, opem
! •»' ’l'* ■■ '<tn. * q 1 iii«* s Hit! circulation of the k*<x*1
• it piticui !i •, <l »u n ainl g > •** 1,1 sleep, ho waken*, aim
j * r *<•<**» S whmt cur. d him a »s emphutical
HKVfi:?#V FOU KKVKUS.M
In wttiiAM# ♦.! iu r» uiokahh- curative power#, we will aj.l
rt, *r,Ui** !•** NoMo, n( ('aidWail juhvi, uiHicf date ul
'* *i- d th» K1 'C*i: \il Febrifuge i t a j*r.' vw minr and
; (.« 01 , ,vi oi lc»«*r -always* routorinr. U10 pau«*oi tu
tu frum tv*>, h* four hour*! j, Uterdort d«i
• m primotmcitif it out .rf’ f »
(aft*titewK llhcovcrifi of the* AKf ’1
" ' : 1,1 V'' fttou^h of twit te iimo iy to fili
• • * - a a . t, , u a** drat utiutin ttttr Jotnh—from pi «tu«^.
■' • '* ; *:,d ‘>ti» r*i hut a trial o?' the much it-Wi »> u»
• ... :;s 1 all la* Ulli41irny I*'P dcwirc.
* ,! '• • . ,:i aUN9N$ mi l «h *ulj it fyil ^a«m
ti.rtii in rhrocskuta, t?ie ruoii-’y ii'iil b« rt
'■ -i oa<u .W <*enL* per half ounce; ri*
•' I ' C *:•<* \ t ■ u .
, /*' ’’* ' U r * “I *| J *r *hv «vk*A,f».*>4 »*l* d:* Ulfe lit til*
. ' f " •’ ■r*v- ‘l “ **»» to tn> foe itorfffotrt
i i *,r f’ VS uw gitcit M.iHf of lout
} 1 ' ant wdl t*-? made it* dealers, nad i*nl:r.- faur
. un >. .■u iihoal «ur /«; iMh »ij >?urs, With lit
J ‘t‘* a«J sMgu iturc of Jutu-» vd *m the «ti
*'hit jiAaic ‘‘Witivn** in the vial.
N
,.r auy tlUHv pUiporims Iw be Ktrcuicaf Frhrt
' . - Uic . •*. • iuarit* «»f firumm .. . yV<
M 1. in • m • qu m • • r..„ .
^ ! N,, ,1 |HCt,ii.W f *,
• 1 m>. ir «Msm, «*,!•«», !)•
Uim|U«.i aal UNlM|(MiMI]rikN»^wttllk
PH,. Jft. CO"Sol* Pr->(Mu*u,,
1 MtX,<JAN MU4TAV0 UMlMKfT, U .»-•>, <,u.u
■•i ,!"‘T 'l, l)l|,IN**; ^w»>» 1M1 likud, nriiol
"**•*.« 71 Haiuw! \rm n
l»* r4iV *• *<"•***. in Liltlf Roc It, at me
TM )S. BCTrEaWMRTII, A*e«t
Jill 1 IHJ, Rm U, • stole of Atkansa*.
THE BANNER.
TUESDAY MORNING. 8EPT. 80.
To Lawful-—We copy Ine following ailver- I
moment from the St. Paul's i.Mmenia) Pioneer, |
; of a late date: "One hundred able bodied law- 1
: yer* are wanted in Minnesota, to break prairie
| land, split rails and cord wood- Eastern and'
Southern papers please ropy.”
A NrwBtatb.— The pcopleof North Michigan,
(the mineral region on Lake Boperiof) are moving
1 to have a separate government, or in other words
to divide themselves from Michigan, and become
' one of the sovereign States.
MawsrsrER Sr ATiariea.—There are ten new spa
, pers in Austria, fourteen in Africa, twenty-four in
■ xpain, twenty in Portugal, thirty in Asia, sixty -
five in Belgium, eighty-five in In nmtrk, ninety in
Russia and Poland, three hundred in Prussia, three
1 hundred and twenty in other Qerinanic States, five
' 1 hundred in Great Britain and Ireland, and one
Ihousand eight hundred in the United States.
Bivoohkk Anoi.ino.Msn.—Three hundred ladies
I ; in the Bloomer dress were among the three thou
• sand abolitionists in convention in Stark county,
Ohio, lately.
Ciiinksk is Lo.vuov—Among the foreign visitors
to the Great Exhibition is a whole Chiuese family
i of rank. It consistsof a Chinese gentleman of the j
name of Chungaltai, and his w ife Ahap, accom
panied by her two sisters, andallended by a fem.de
doineatic. The three ladies possess the small feet
which are the peculiar characteristic of the higher
1 class females in the Ceh stial Empire. Thdv had
hoped to teach England in time to be presold at
. the opening of the Great Exhibition, but their
arrival was felatded by contrary winds.
I Catholicism in lutLtNu.—The new Catholic
association of Ireland, is defying the Government
and Uw in the most open manner. The Catholic
press is filled with defiances and declarations that
they have set at naught the new anti papal bill,
ami openly br ken the law. A new and compre
hensive field for agitation is now opened, and the
controversy is proceeding in a manner which the
I government cannot overlook. It is now believed
' that Ireland is on the brink of an important and
startling crisis. The Government it is reported
l has positively resolved upon prosecuting the Irish
bishops for assuming the titles of their respective
sees.
Biutish Armament.—There arc now in England,
or on the voyage homeward, fqrty regiments; in
India twenty-four; in other Eastern possessions
fourteen, and- two reserve battalions; in the Medi
terranean, twelve; iu the West Indies and Bermu
da, sit; and in Lrilish North America seven, and
two reserved battalions. The total strength of the
llrdish infantry regiments abroad is 60,332 odicers
and men.
The Hope of Spain.—In a recent debate in the j
' Spanish Cortes, on a call for information “ con
cerning tne antecedents of the last expedition of
r pirates, comma 1 Jed by Don Narciso Lopez, against j
■ the Island of Cuba,” the Marquis of Miraflores, one
of the ministers, in answer to an enquiry proposed
| by Senor Baditi, one of the deputies, observed that
„ all he could say that time w as that “ the naval
• force of England ami France, an I the state of our
' relations with those countries, offer us the certain
means of preserving the integrity of out valuable i
island.”
A Ntw !i«ka.—A despatch from Washington
f ’ dated the 8th ilist, says:
' ' “It is alleged that Lope*, was decoyed to Ba
hia Honda by a stratagem of Gen. Condra; and
that facts are connected with it, involving great
national questions. There w. s a meeting of the
Cabinet on Saturday night, said to tie connected
with the matter.
1J' Two young men at New York were trying
. the strength of their arms by clasping the right!
hand of each and resting the > lbow on the coun
ter, and then endeavoring each to force the hand
of the other down. In the struggle tin ar.n of one
j was broken short off above the elbow, causing a
report loud enough to be heard from oue extreme
of the saloon to the other.
Pant* Rmnw.— A paper unit in Georgia men
, gaged in manufacturing an article of paper, for
> roofing, which is believed to be better and cheaper
[ for that purpose than almost anything e;se. This
paper is made out of the same materials as corn
, non wrapping paper, and is a quarter of au inch
; thick. It is securely nailed to a well seasoned
covering of boards, and then thoroughly tarred,
1 and, while the la, is green, a good coat.ng of sand
silled upon it. The roof then becomes hard as
stone, entirely impervious to water, quite as proof
against tire as uny roetalic roof, and said to be
more durable than any otter in use.
—,r T — ~ m i
CtiiiJUUM Kina was MatajUK*.—The C'.rittom
Jin-:,it raysthatin Chili then- us a domestic Court
termed ' a tribunal of fathers to decide in the case
of minors complaining of the refusal of parents to
permit their outr age. Unless the defendant can
show satisfactorily cause for refusal, the court de
crees the marriage to take p’arc.’ The effect of
: this arrangement, i: is stated, i* to cause runaway
matches to be eoinparltively scarce in Chili.
Basks in vuk t'srrto Stai*».- The Boston
Banker ,’ .Maganme gives a tabb showing the nmn
!*• r, capital, and condition of the Banks in all thei
States ol the Union. Total number of banks, tkiif;
eironlation 9130 5*>S,400} ypeeie, 931,446,000) |
capital, 92ii0,8ei,100. New York leads alt other
States, having ID) banks, with a circulation of
SlS.nOO.OOO, while New York city hs.i 2a batiks, [
and 06,400,000 circulation.
IT Courting is ar, institution of fl utes and moon
•ght—2 pen id that brings discretion to a full *tnp,
and marks with a star the morning of o.ir hopes.
Courting converts women into angels, mouths into
honey combs—the lleqrl become* a great hive of
sweets—while kisses are the lose, that keep up
the supply.
.Maa. Pastinctok on Klandck.—"If there is
. any body under thccamster of heaven that I have
in uttot excrescence,'' says the amiable Mrs. Par
tington, it is a slanderer, going about like a. vile
Viv constructor, circulating hw calomel about bon
' est folks.”
-
fr>no tf« t.mii.WI!** Jirtnia'. f
Tt Hr gihtorf ••/ tAr l#ui*riUr .f>M~n*l;
PanviorveK, R. I., An?. 29.
I>k*»Sh»: Yon will p'ra ■ inform me who wrote
the poem entitled “ The Lovera’ Last Mating ?"
I saw it in III'* Providence Journal—it was taken
from your paper. People this way are in rap! ures,
and deem it the sweei*;t poem out. Please give
me his name and oblige e iMOat ardent lottt of the
beautiful.
This is from a lady of Providence, Rhode bland.
We fully concur m all thnl afce and other people
of the east say or can say of the exceeding beauty
of “Tbo laivcra’ I.asl Meeting,” but she is mis
taken in supposing that it was written by a gen
tleman. It is the production of one of bar own
•ex, a young girl of our city, Miss Mattie Or.rfitli.
wbo could, in one week, write a wliole volume of
such poetry if she would devote her lime to it.
The general impression has been, that, in these
days, when ao much j«*:try of sup< nor excellence
is written, no pad, however br limit, < an establish
a high reputation except by the labor of years.
Our young correspondent lias shown, that, by the.
powp-r of genius, such a reputation can be esftb
lished in a few months and even in a few weeks.
A few days ago, Mr. liar rick addressed, through
our COlums, ail exceedingly Are piece of poetry to
our correspondeni4.’ Mattie,” aud here- he has his
reward. Tins is out of ihe sweetest, loveliest,
aud most beautiful of the productions that even
the genius of its accomplished authoress has given
to the public:
tor. a. ba union.
Oh port. to my h*nr%nud iwpllins heart
c<*nll> conn*# lit** rtM'H'.vjr* vent by lbc*»;
It to uit* <tf bit I know Uk*u art,
For thy hi$h ton! « in «*»«•!» hunting lim*.
I neVr h.»% met Okm* hr tin* oarth, but thou
Jls-t vrjJt n t! vijti• .«- that will long r -main,
Sh' <ltin.fi tin« *mi> 'brightm'M* on my brow
Ami haunting wi|b tiwir glory heart umi brain.
Vw, to i»v »oui, a* to thim- own,
*1 in world w bright* ami if dark cru*f awhile
t.buiUs the high vision* i»l hiy spirit lone,
1 hud no fittom in nature's hlemed MiiUc?.
The flower* still bloom :u* in my eluldbvod** J ear.*,
Tin- KiiiiMft hang- a.* lovely ou tin* iky,
And the dear m«H*n wake* #tiH the hippy tears
Her pule Isn't* wakened in the y or* gone t*y.
And earth i- hrifilter .-uil that souls like thine
Are sent !»y heaven beneath the skies to give
To cold realities a tinge divine
And make it a sweet luxury to live. ,
.Such spirit* lend a dc.-p k!»*;U glow
To wave, to wild wood, rainbow, star and flower,
Dunning from human life the shade* of woe
By the Wrong spell of their inyWeriou* power.
And thou lust vtolen even Amu tiu* dull
Cold heart of mine one ha Weight of pain,
And made eilWenee almost tH-autlful
By the strange niagie of thy heavenly strain.
Lured by thy tone*, my weeping spirit turn*
From all earth’* can**, it* bitterness and strife,
And, leaning on thy noble spirit, learns
To taste llie glorious extant * of life.
< >h eartii to thee must be a Paradise,
Where bird* are Milling everoVr thy head,
Where silver fountain- picture goldmi skies
And loveliest flowers spring up heueath thy tread.
And there blest spirits beautiful am! bright,
High angel natures, love v\ ith tliee to roam
At mom, at eve, and in tin* silent night,
And talk with liter of thy immortal home.
MATTIE.
Condo »id It -tory of steam.
About '2. 0 year) H. C., Hero, of Alexsudria,
formidably which exhibited some of the (lowers
of steam, a ml was mav c4 by its power.
A. n. 510, Anthemius an arobeitect. arranged
several caldrons of water, each covered with the
wide bottom of a leathern tube, which rose to a
narrow top with pipes extended to the rafters of
the adjoining building. A tire was kindled be
neath the caldrons, and the house was shaken bv
the efforts of tin steam ascending the tubes.—
This is the first notice of the power of steam re
corded.
In 1543, June 17, Blasco De Garoy tried a steam
boat of 2ii‘J tons with tolerable success at Barce
lona, Spain. It consisted of a caldron of boiling
water arid a moveable wheel On each side ol the
ship. It was laid aside as m.practicable. A pres
sent, however, was made to Garoy.
Iri 1750 the first railroad was constructed at
Newcastle on Tyne.
The first idea ol a steam • iigme in England w as
in the Mat'juts ol Wotcesler’s “ History of Inven
tions,” A. 1). IW53.
In 1710 Newcomer made the first steam engine
In iils patents were granted to Savary for the
hut application ol t ho steam yngioe.
In 11 14 Jamcs Watt mailt tin; lirst perfect attain
engine in England*
In 17.18 Jonathan Hulls first set forth the idea
of steam navigation.
In l#7* Tlioujas Fame fust prop sell tins appli
cation in America.
In 1731 Marquis Jonffriy constructed one on
the .saonc.
In 17Hi two A1 wriduS published a work on it.
In t7sy William Tvramgton made a voyage in
one on the Forth aiitl Clyde canal.
In 1802 this experiment was repeated.
In ns2 Ramsey propelled a boat by steam at
Mew York
In 1787 Jolm Fitch, of Philadelphia, navigated
a boat by a steam engine in the Delaware.
In 1792 Hubert Fulton first began to apply his
attention to steam.
In 179J Oliver Evans, a native of Philadelphia,
corisiructd a loc omotive steam engine to travel on
a turnpike road.
The itwt steam vessel that ever crossed the At
lantic . was tiic Savannah, in the month i f June,
18.'9, lYom Charlcston to Liverpool.— Hunt't W»
c4i.it*’ M gaz ne
Aso vhks Fiujsi'tt> s Rxckimwom.—-The follow
ing n> from the last number of the St. Loan He
p ubit i" an:
We understand from a soutcc which h ads ns to
give it in,pin it credence that for some 1 m> past a
number of Americans have been com enlraiina up
on the KioCiande, near Fort Brown, to intis’ in *u
attempt t" %volutk>uiie the mate of Tamauiipas,
Mexico. Ai the last account, they n(mitered some
SiWnwn. ready forth** expedition, and were waiting
me signal from Carraiajuil, a noted freebooter in
that Stale fur years past, and well remembered for
his depredationa upcu small parties <>f American
troops mthat part of Me ico, during the last war.
lie was to have lakeu the lead in a prouum-m
memo and the revolution of Tama ultras, ami the
FiHibulteros troni Texas were to invade the Terri
tory and to aid in the establishment of the new
gov et n men L The prosper:! of a ret otution in Cuba,
unditr the flag of Lopes, diverted the attention of
cr--n Tataanlipa* patriots, and we recollect that one
of the accounts for the New Orleans papers slated
that about three hundred men had coax-regaled
about Mustang Island waiting the a trivialof a ves
iset to take them to Cuba. They del uot go, how
ever, and now the old expedition will be, no doupt.
revived. One would think that the very name of
the freebooter who ia to take the Mwd tn Urn Tara
auiipas expedition would b* suflicieatly tepulme
to deter any Ametutau from engaging in xach an
enterprise, "but it is quite ceriai.t it is not. We
hope that the government, already probably adv ised
of tars foray, will lake the moat decided measures
to disperse those engared in it.
J-L --U_-LJ----wo—-—!-1
Fro n Uw Dutitln Hitmr. f
I re land--History of Ten Year*.
1941—1*6:1 There ten short year* hav* pro-j
ductd more grievous and ovetwbeluimiig eliaolef
in Ireland ihari ferfal! other countries in the course
of centuries, Down those long foes of figures on
the Of nan* til-le is indexed one of tb«Pmost rnooYn
fill natnnal histories that the eye offJod has ever
rested upon. Within ten years the world h« ad- 1
vunted greatly toward# ua goal—noble thoughts j
and actions keying slit Harmony with the iti.isle ‘
of her spin res Arridrc* has doubled her power,
and earned her banners to the golden water* of
the l1acilio; France has become a republic. Fug i
land has freed her trade, and increased in popuia- ;
tkm and prosperity; nil F.nrupe has been ill arms i
for liberu, and democracy coped with despotism
not in vain. Fo-m the Vistula to the Mersey, man
h is grow n stronger, lyui freer, and litter (or lice
dom; and lands hav? Lnrcm lilted to abundance,
and the people have inch ased and multiplied. !
Hu! Ireland has struggled asd starved for ten years.
A worse desoiaiioi than w»f las acatleied or ala.n
our people And. of all the wide world, ours is
the only country that we know of Hi sc, during
this decade, has retrograded in the b< ate of na
tional strength, happiness, and liberty.
We are fewer now than we were thirty years
ago. We have h sT. within a fetv years, not alone ,
the actual increase of population during the last
.thirty Vi ara—not alone the probable increase ot
the last ten. if the circumstances of the country
had favored ah increase—lint the prosper live in
crease for many years to come, by the exile of the
very generation who were heirs ot the country,
and destined to perpetuate its people. As many
of our race have tied away, carrying their energy,
strength, courage nj.id faith to the great republic ol
the west, as would suffice to found a new nation
anywhere on the earth, and muTf than live within
the bouitdaiies bf prosperous and indepeiidonl Eu
ropean firatep, Far more have died by star, i1 um
and government than fell undt r ro|»e and >>v>rd in
the bloodiest struggle of our forefathers m apist
England. There are as many paujicrs m Irish
workhouses to day as there were people in all Ire
land at the* beginning of the. last century. The
landlords have levelled '-*80,000 honst-s. and driven
forth as many famitiea—only loO.ouo less hearths
left desolate than there were in all ltelund a cen
tury ago. Connaught has lost ‘.'8 6-10 per cent,
of its iiniiiiltlidn- Munster 0it fi.tfl: I tster. 10:
Leinster, 15 5 10; Ireland, on an average, VU per
cent., or one-tilth of its whole population. Of
the other fifths, one at least is a pauper; one may
he aide to live by profession, property or industry: I
and the others struggle hard between the extremes
of our social state. Such is the summing up of
the case f Ireland to-day. it is very easy to or
dt r the demcirnals and parallel the statistics. But
w hat human tongue may tell al! the woe and evil,
all the causes and consequences which these few
figures cipher, and preach the duty that lies upon
us all before (toil aud man thereby.
Ten years ago the w orld had great hopes of Ire
land. More men and women of the Irish race i
stood together upon Irish soil than ever before
since the abounding days of Calial Mor. A strange
moral revolution, to winch there are but few par- j
allels'in the lustory of mankind, had suddenly been
wrought in the habits of a whole people—young
and old crowding in myriads round a simple friar,
at of yore, when the hermit called Europe to save
the sepulchre of our Lord. The people were re
deemed in a summer from the follies and vices of
their slavery: temperance bands on the roads*
temperance reading-rooms in the villages; tempe
rance and its virtues in al1 the acts and words ol
the people. It seemed as though one act of Volt
turn should lift them to the full stature of fri tdom.
True, there was gnat distress m many parts of the
country, as there had Ircen, indeed, fi,r years even
of the most prosperous times; but it was borne
with pride and patieuce, aud no one looked to the
workhouses, which were first beginning,to open,
as the reihedy or receptacle for it. \V ho should
dream that those beggar barracks should be crowd
ed with the proud, hopeful, temperate Irish peas
antry' The national schools hail fcett fairly es
tablished, find buzzed by the leg!: roads w ith their
quarter of a million of noble young children, j
whom one Imped yet to see the free un i happy ci
tizen- of independent Ireland—tl it quarter of a
million rctruned by its little p.attling hundred
thousand a year. It is only an old man's dn am,
perhaps, Ilia' ten >. are ago 'he sun beamed bru'l t
er. and the streams ran with a more silvery clear- j
ness, am! a deeper verdure was on the fields, and
the happy smne of (iod shone more often m the
air over Ireland.
And then the next year, when the great national
agitation begun, bow the people aroused toO’Con
licit .s call, as clansmen w h n the fiery cross is on
the hills! How alt burope gazed toward: tins
great movement, with t‘s proud, impetuous Ian I
guage—with its meetings of millions—with its
enormous treasury—w ith its great aggregate force, :
able u> overwhelm all the opposition of ling and!
And." a soul came into Inland.” That" (let) na
tional spirit, silent since the graves of the I n ted
Irishmen had closed r sgcakiiit only in rare aud
indistinct mutter mgs. echoed like thunder through
the island again. And then followed Tara, Mat
low, Mull agio nast, Cioutarf; and England and
Ireland were now surely free. And I’e-el recug
nifitd the Irish clilliciUly.
The Siale !r:ats began in the Queen's Bench, j
and ended at the Cnancellor's Woolsack. And I
the-day passed in which the enthusiasm of the j
monster meetings coulil realize iis true purpose.
The angel of opportunity vants bed. A dreary agi
tation of '‘charitable bequests-' and “ infidel col- j
I t peal e'er be got,/ Ami then tunic the wines,
Dnngarvun. the “eleven ineusurea,” the seces
sion, the famine. On a single night the find of
the whole nation was blighted. Since then we
have lived am nig chaos and death, uutil nmv vve
see hundred* killed every week in the workhouse,
and thousands flying panic stricken across the)
seas, and the census returns leave us some three
millions of people less than we should he.
The hand of God has lam heavy upon Ireland.
For our own sins and shortcomings it is that Ire
land is lifeless and desolate to day. aud that the
llowir of our population have tied to distant
lands. Contemplating that terrible state, the head
reels as over a precipice. Hut when we are dead
and gone, history shall paint our times iu their
tr e and eternal lineaments, aud irat e the cause
and effect that we are blind to see. God defend,
the right in that judgment! Whoso renders •• /, a
Ihi Jinn’' 1840-’4<t truly will l aid u lesson the
nations of the i ai.it may listen to with fear aud
trembling; for never was a people of articulation,
speaking wen ruined aud overwhelmed in ■ short
a space.
How is it that even yet we so little realise to.
o irsclve* the sacred, solemn responsibility of po
lilical action! it r* vain now to say that had lie
laud fought for her freedom in ISIS inne ns of
lives would have been saved to the country Hat
it is true. It tv in vain to say That a nation never
took up arm* on more so; mu justification than
Ireland m 1*40. That, too, is true and past.—
0 iun.il i,s in durance at Fort Arthur, and un». of
his hand chopping wood in f)cnmrni‘* chain can:. '
flat in the faiee of a perishing people and of a per-!
seemed church, when we see Irish constituencies,
•.rider the direct .natigaUon of catholic clergymen,
yead the basest wings to parliament—to the par.
liamcnt that is ev cry day giving increased facilities
for starving the people, and layiu* the bishops at
the mercy of any jemmy 0*ttrieii or ijltphenaon
Lkibhyn—uow can we believe that conacencc is
concerned—that rdigirn or the la.- of Got! i. re
girded in »uc!) uamscfrms'' And this in the year,
of mir Lord, tf'fll.
Tha year of our Loid' In history we cannot
read of suy nation of men in so vrietchod a stale'
as the Irish people at this moment. Alt around us
is whirling towards one maelstrom of destruction'
—the landlord at the office ,n Henrietta street, the
tenan’ at the door of the auxiliary wothbouaua, or
on the flag* of E.!cp quay. The people utc Btiii
being slaughtered in the south and well. VH
lagr* an* sficnt and gras* grown—tbo towns mart, f
with baie shelve* and dull countries
trav.rsc me counties through, and hardly w a
human fare to the mile. In the more ptoaiHTow*!
disttMs murder* arc beginning—the first dread
•ymptgOR of sweeping evlermiP.»Uo*j. Population
liu so halted that, even in the counties compara
tively wealthy, marriage is the eery rarest fere
feony a f lenoman is i ailed upon to perfotnj, amt
the deaths greatly oninumlcr the births Exter
mmatHM contmvi-s its havoc far and wide Last
week the prolesurit U»h.<p of Icraerick emptied a
village of tenant* who were not a day in mrrtat. .
Where or how, in t(.e name of Ood, is this to
atop1
We are beginning a new decade, and. weak as
Ireland is, *l,e contain* a greater population slit; j
than she held when Roger O’Mrwirc linked the
I’aJe and the Clans together, or when 0rattan pro
claimed her freedom in I he frtSBt of the volunteers.
Ten years hence, ami w hat shall men say of our
acts, if. with the horrible picture before our eyes,
we dl} not change its terrible condition, and bring
health and lope and a soul into Ireland once
inure’ Shall they say in future that, standing on
tho bank of the tlovne in le-M, we swore union
and action for the sake jf our tountjj, and ihni
from that meui irabte day the fortunes of Ireland
were retrieved t
There is one in a far distant island, under the
dazxiing Antarctic stars, rriwac elowtuz genius
forecast the solemn spectacles of next Monday.
••Swear it." sgld Tartans Meagher in Belfast,
"that you shall have another anniversary to cele
brate—that hereafter your ehildten, descending to ;
that river may say, ‘ That is to the memory of our
fatle rs, they were proud of the victory which i
their grandftres won upon these banks, but they
anibitiotn-d to achieve a victory of their own; their
grand.si res fought and conquered for a king—they
fur a nation. lie tbttr memories pious, glorious,
immortal !’ ” Would to God that he were here to
day to speak to the heart of Ireland the grand ,
Significance of this event!
The question is now before us-—.Shall the people i
of Ireland perish on their own soil or nut; An
other ten years like the last, mid not a man, wo
man, (ft child, would I*? left in Ireland at the pres
eni progressive decrease. Not one, save those
whom the English goviruiueut maintains. This
must end. or we.
The Country ruined «r«iii—T >c Steam \ j
Knsine outdone.
It appeantby the western papers that a Mr. Solo
mon, a rriissnin emigrant at Cin< mnati, has dis
covered a motive power that throws steam entirety
in the shade. His power is the expansion ol car
bonic acid ess. made from common whiting, sul
phuric acid and w ater, and at eighty degree s above
boiling point his gas gives a pressure ol 4.380 tbs.
to the square inch; white- to producetbe same pres
s ire from steanvrdemirtnhr if-heat of about 4»iii de
grees. When this presure is on we would rather
be- a miie <iis!ant.___^„
Mr. Solomon says that his gas can be generated
hi a small apace not much larger than a good
bombshell, and that whilst it costa in fuel one
thousand dollars to run a first class engine from
Cincinnati to New Orleans, Ins gas will produce
the same result (or five dollars.
Here then it will be seen that by the discovery
of an emi -ratit irntrim an, without Iho assistance
of the tariff, every man owning atcarn engines will
be ruined; us they will certainly sell for nothing
but old iron.
Seriously, however, xve doubt whether this new
power can be made available for common pnrp-ises,
as it must be difficult of management, .and very
explosive, It may l»e that the careful chemist can
control it m bis experiments in the labarai -ry,
but we candidly think the ordinary engineers w ill
not lie able to manage it on an extensive scale.
OeexN Straw .Vt vs .at ion.—A London letter of
the Mb instant, in the New York Commercial Ad
vertiser, suvs
“ The activity of steam enterprise is still observ
able, and among the p >inta to be noticed in regard
to it, >s the growing tendency of i he use of the sort *
propeller. A strong opinion in its favor wasrei- ntiy
arrived at bv a parliamentary committee, and in a
work just published, some important details have
been furnished t> slow the unprovetnent, winch
max be neide in i.s npp n ation. A v-m-s of tables ts
giv* It, illustrative of ttusefeis vessels in the British
naxv. Kr- m these it app- ars .ha' by nhari>ciiiiig the
stern in the case e.t on xis.-e-i called the Teaxer.
and making a few otherstight adjustments, she was
propelled faster with forty horse j>ower than sin had
previously t.-e u by lik) horse jewer; whiie iri dbe
case of a similar alteration in another ve- , ! called
the Kideman, it was f > ind that a greater spin
obtained with 100 horse power, thou previously
w i... 8<SI. The KtlleUiail IS 4 SO ton;, a id, tin. Tea
r. -r 89b, and the Tcaaci's original engines, when
tran-f.rred to the !! -firman, drove .hat vessel near
ly two knots an hour faster than they hud driven
the sunnier vessel. Those eoiiteiuplaling the con
struction of s'-rew x. ssels would do Weil toinq ore
into tlii v, facts tooblairi the maximum of effiei-.-nc’y
with the nil tutu urn of exp -nsc."
I nos Ho:e-s it c r.—We hi „r that dufihg the ap
pro.it lung j. rt o' l Air in this coy, there is to he a
Inal of spud between such locomotives max
choose to compete; the race course to be a section
of the y uaton and I.owell Ran road, and entries o!
Uin-bine-a to be made by any p -tsotiof the'.-date or
beyond. A ran- belwecii iron herecs, xvi h “the
sit am up,” would certainly la- a n- vrl and atlrac
tive speetable. Such ••-•mpetition might be made
with entire safety, over a count- or track within
certatu limits, and as the builders or owners ol
loeoin itives take as much pride in showing off the
good points of their machine*, ns any amateur in
horse flesh ever did those of tes nag, bets would
lie apt to run high on the occasion.— L uc II Cuur
small My stem**.
la It"* boon* lirtle nnthiug cbii bt m >re praJuc
live of inis' hkf than '•mall mysteries, the conceal
went of little* thing*. ami the furtive accomplish
meut of what luiytit bettor be dene openly. Dr.
Johnson in Ins forcible language onto said, ••Noth
ing ends more family than Mysteriousneta in trifles;
indeed it commonly ends in emit, for those who
begin by concealment of innocent things, »ill * u'n
have something to bine wiiiuh they dure not briny
to light.”
The faculty of concealment—or as the phienolo
y sts terra it, ••sectetiveness,” « a dangerous gift
Oj*:nfu**s and candor an delightful in a household;
giving all Ihe u.euib. - .1 n'.easant parlii *pnu*,u m
each oth -r's happier***. When wedis vy-r Ilia! a
friend has deceived »*r only half trust! I us we r
yard him ewr after with suspicion, and it requires
a long time foi him to recover the ground he ha*
los' in our con6den* * and esteem. lispe* tally i*
this true in the fana.ly; for vrh* n w« perceive that
thos* ubfood know in re ol’tl *• motive*of a rriem
ter of the sain** hoi t than wt <Jo g ,, em.v as $(
* tong were d ne, whi .. ran no! l« ! argot ten.
H st in Isnn.l v. i* i'i" r* w iMs>ic t.ifvjiidorr
by baring out tic r i ■ii*i*ia»*s *r.d
even separation hai r had their rite in *••«•» ui
fltn? matter of tl.ii sort, when the parties might,
by a h-4*« r i- hue r .muird a(f«* tinn ite and
mat-parable. Child re u u no prefer o'ticr friends
our their patents arc alu.«€t sure to be kd mfoer
ror and unbaptaness. While under the home
roof, the heart should be kept there; the preiiun
n awes to a future home eauMOy the outy excep
tion. And even m such a case, he nr sue isutau
aily beat married, whose parents trere catiiea: «p
prised, of the cugagemeitt.
33*Tf i* C early proven '.tat yujag Whitlock. o(
Albany. New York, who was found banging ami
dead in bis own room at liuuw a abort tune ago,
came to that terrible end by fodishly trying to
frighten one of the girls He intended Ur make her
believe he had hong himself, but fhe frail chair
on which he s'orl broke, and instead of a farce
the areno *nlf*,l m a tragi fv.
WAlarm H»»ar*> In Ai«bnm«.
**"*• Tuoniy ami an tawntfi h»\r la'ely lyen
traversing the Mate of Al»!»n«. rnwaNtgaitac its
yolugieal character. Tix-tt tiJHUM haa txwu I
attracted li> tfc many naiur.il wonders in line]
wwirtninnwo region*. the most ron.^srvio jy among '
winch is the Natural Bridge, which thev deernbo
os rivaling the celebrated one in Virginia.
U is situated m Waller county, about a roi.e
frrm the road, and on the proper;* of a man bv the
imuw of West, b’rt vet would nrefi repay a trnrein
by the beauty of the aernery. fur denana* a Irttte
froai Ms lwruiar route, it orcuw in thatgeologirai
(iopaati termed the radiate,n* grit, the lowest m.e in
coal measure*. the only tork which in Alabama
csliitnl* th« truly wild and romantic grandeur of
nature. Before rcm-Mm* itnur ndaginations had
been considerably elevated by the description given
by our guide, but notwithstanding, when iherealry
broke upon os in i’s full raakmftcenr-e, we found
that our espertauonstctl verV far abort of the truth.
Thw era mi strnt-iurc- of the (feat Architect spans
about one hundred and twenty feet, white ita height
is about atrenty. A smaller budge connects it
with the Muff beyond
The symmetry (if the main arch will make »t ai
moal indestructible, though of < ourse us regularity
has only been produced by the undermining and
breaking down of the rock, which, at aomd bygone
time esisted be tow it. The clear age mark" of the
massive aand sionc of which it is formed. epuses tt
even m the mare minute construction to rasouilda
an artificial bridge, as thesis lines make it *p
pear as if built with tvgularly worked Mocks.—
Beneath it are many pieces of broken nd partially
water-worn stock; uni eriaia as it were, left by the
buihters; and these, together with the mighty es
carpments r ,und about, ivuhfifipart a mat gland
aspect, even if that were not produced by the bridge
itself. A little spring Irekiing from between these
broken masses wake u a fr i^nent resort oft bo deer
which abound in that part of the country, and
whoso numerous Pool pr.nts on the *ofi sAit. indi
cate a faviirite litsh. Lofty hemlocks and berrh
trees growing on the bridge and near by. shade it
fruit) tire rags of tire aun.
I uniiing Hite list; Inn.
Wt> present the follow!tie simple process far pre
paring buckskins, as a useful nrcompunympitt to
the foregoing rmerestiug letter.:
\ ‘•During the war of 1836-7, in Florida, the of
fleers and soldier* while encamped on the Withla
coochce river, were frequently not in the best of
circumstances respecting good coverings for Utw
understandings. The Indians had king been dis
tingnism ! for making an exceedingly good ami
durable buckskin, and it so happened that i num
her of them, With their squaws, were kept kind of
prisoners at the camp of out aruiy. One day a
triend of ours in the aruiy . ,one of the best practical
tanners and leather dressers in the t'nited States,
watched w it h great earnestness, the mode by which
the squaws dressed their deer skins. He observed
that they used the brains of the deer mixed along
with lye made of wood ashes, forming a kind of
soap T eolation was rubbed on the skins,
allowing thorn to dry at each operation—two or
three times, until the skins were completely satu
rated with ti e solution. Alter tbia, the skins were
■tanked, thi same a« bams, in a pit dug in the
ground. After the l mb ads had left the camp, the
officers could not even get moccasins.
The idea suggested itself to our friend, that there
was no use o' wanting shoes when there were
plenty of deer killed; but from a distance in the
woods they could not, and w ere not accustomed to
bring the brains of the annual; but a remedy was
at bund; he knew Ui.it snap was the same eoiopj
sitioii, as that used by the Indian in tanning, and
he had plenty of that. The blacksmith made him
an old shaving knife, ami he got Ins post between
two trees, while he kept an antiouseye to the skins
soaking in toe river, for the alligators were not
very respectful of the right of property. After the
■kin? were properly prepared, a strong solution of
warm yellow soap was mad» up, in winch they
were handled until cold; they were then dried end
went Uirough Uiv M*iD« moceAM until t• nrn< tical
tradesman saw that they were made into leather;
» hen they v. • re afterwards suiiked tu the manner
of the 1 ndtaiis. From these op«ra;ions an excellent
bur hskin av.l made, which through the drenching
#t ramsand ttm ireijftent imrocrsiomr I* the»wsnips
and everglades, retained it* pristine sultucsi a id
qualities. *1 bus, ill the wild*of Florida, a seteq
11tic tradesman applied Ink knowledge and art, in
a manner lei which many a gallant soldier had r a
MM IQ I e thankfu.. In am b ibtntkMM the me
et me rents lar at: the polios pie r. ’
To r* -isvt Dams tbimh<nr S'»v»«—Make a
ihimkcr ■ f <f .ininr-n cotton bag* a little larger (ban
your bium ; alter the leun- are well siauked. place
them in the bag*; then get the very best sweet
made hay. cm it with n < utting box or knife, with
your hands press it well afound'the hams in the
bags, tie your bags wi n gaudstring*, puirtnacmrd
ol the year to show their age, ami hang tin m up
Hi your gamt, or soutt dry pin e; and my vvoid f ,r
it, if y oi let them liuig hi ■ years, they will b,:
belter than on the dav you put tlieril up. I have
a* p in sexeti fears. This inethod coata but
iiioc. as the bag will last t-n years. The truly loss
is the l.av, and that the <attic will eat, ,f given to
them in the winter. The sweating or the hams
will be taken up by the hav. and it wii! also impwri
a very fine liavor to the meat.—(Jtntfct Firmer.
llxvrwoMs Mrs, Ba axee!—The Georgetown
enrr- pn (ideal of the Baltimore Sun, in a recent
letter says:
(In*, remarkable thine which fiirilre-a »
thU place ;» the prnl.ki'jast number >f Inn beauti
ful, f.it ! . hie--, sprinkled along tbe shady pave
merits. (iue would «»(.[> me they grr-w rm the
Heft, and could he shaken-front tbe bonghsat auy
time they were wanted, ft is also remarked that
tire la-la •« have outnumbered the gentlemen by st
least fifty per rent; *-> that a very handsome mao
at absolutely eompetlcd to carry a Hub to keep the
sweet crcatur- s -u a proper distance.
NaTtoeat. Cosuvnos.—The Committee ap
ptrittd by th It, i-i Hra’i- National Nominating
Convent i n which assembled at (fall mote tn is*t.
it is understood have agreed to propose the satis
place tor the <i< ,1 Convention, but have I,.4 y, \
fist'd upon the tnu> Matty democrat* are ready
to say, the ear,ter the better; art-i »k impatient foT
the inspiring .•'••■nm on to victory—‘‘I'p guar>l*
and 4t them *" N tt a fi. ar of tbosrt who ate moat
earnest for anothergeneral engagement, are am-vg
the over round,ng d- mx-rau, who wily fw onee,
aoi to reward a meritorious m titan ursii, —;t.i he
rat tit i u. ire a democi* than a whig if elected,;
cast their vote against their party, ». rifir* its
pni) and c.: -db!«e*. an l throw the country
into anesnbrac.- >i whighery, which ha* ca ts.igei
ed the itwti- at.. u« ot the coutiUy, and brought h
to ihc bor.f r, of da, union. These tmrn cutimt
ft*. 1 that they are f irgiven, or forgive th- mselves,
until they have given otw true re teeming vote.
!'■ • taws • K. t U mid.
Ntw M om a? LoiowoTiov.—The New York
Tribune of the Hit, i.e* : he to. lowing paragraph,
. Thu Tribune always has ttw earneat tabling *d
u. ,v •' b i-Idas.",
“ Wi have h. ltd of a new style of carriage U
tw toted n comm n road* ao-l in the streets or the
city, to be propelled by fht weight of a single
The structure is firm. with drivmg w bents turn
feet two un til i iii diameter, with an elegant
wire frame weak body. with arals for two periom
over ike front which ate four wot m maroviyr. A
•peed equal to fif'ceu tail** per hour, caa be east
ly attained, attic,ugh it is designed U> run but
about ten mile# per hour. Thin new carriage ti
; tbe invention of a welt known city mec haste, *Jm
propose* to make a public eibtlMUuo in the aipek
sometime duris- nest week, when tbe Utility a
■ this novel mode of cicuiBotwu will be fully tested.*
of ON.«k«M»
I*. •»
mi«ki far
faW*n« WMl
w*rr*d and tr«B*rmttt'd to or far |
vertiseinrnt*. ' > s,
■ -, '
JOS WOi
nr *11 kfafa. Wh u
!?o«, Pw*ten, HendWH; Sheri**,,
(VrattWaa* Banka. Funeral sad CM
c^t*. B,wk*n^P*B»p},SetPhoMli $
n»-*tiwf*» and dispatch, «t Moderate |
!(Wj3 -™_ -.—.,
FWe relates • •■Mffuiar a*v«_
nceunwd «t Pisa, when- a youngi
»er» and maaofal SfesjgM«mt o#
bia sin*. Scajwgreee M 1m «u ha i
rxinaoUtn'o* »f ratiem* in hi* laet «b
fWd H eanfaw or fapent.' g*» troth
I* tiMM n«'<w sod faawfr
7 — ■■ ^papnpnvpiBV
of tw» tnuamui soul, an* Up perNfaifa MMgfat
in kMAthof ■metal t. S-h--. J_._. _ _ .Via 7_
m another wnsM far these afaW tMrVtTttw
•so fad thrfmta 4*1*3
in fin*! impenitence—in rain i
!•< umo< iMifi-. mn. I1« ih »*.««!« ISf I
(h*: »ha darit would him «Htn «wa the
m M*nt hi* fast ugh «N* drawn—*n4 Id vain did
o>* Of »h« reveres* yeatiamrr Mmewnt bowlr a
TMMn he saw bm internal mifar*? mMhUM
rind muter on a stn.iar oceeaw*. The yfaith
«lird game, as the greatest crunmaU often M; bat
befnt. be gave up the *h«rt. be msd* one of bia
friends, a Oscssesr. reatdant at INna, pr imn that
b« n-jutd watch .mar the bad* fa, Mm Ottaftalle
.Murtuaxe, and never leave n unui it wa* con
sisoed to its last home, The Correian koai hia
word: amt atone, In the dead of fhe ntdftrplh Pet
hv the nde of fas departed friend in Ufa son vent
ofcajwl. where corpses ate caponed twvntyfour
hour* before bunni, cither in onscc rated or un
routerrated ground.
But just as the dock atTuck twelve, a <faep«faen,
accompanied by thh rattlitsg of ehaiaa w*a heard,
and the watcher to hw hornr saw a fisore enttr,
Atr^tni according to the most tp,waved receipt far
fiom* spa devil, with U.inon.h ut horns, a Win*
tad, a ohmii am round his body, dtaped m red and
h'sck, as ffi* Sals mo Majesty should ha. The
Corsican hi>d a bold heart, and he whed-Ufa Devil
what be wanted. The Davit replied by an awful
ft-an, too rattling of chains, and the eeispentd
m*r of his flaw* to sewo his prey. The Coweta.
■#rn _♦ i 1 ^ * ,iT % _V. ... 73 ^ w
still undaunted, d^elarcd Ihst lie would Hoiatlow
the hodv to V touched, and h« warred'«Mf-Devil
that if f-a Utd not leave th« place he wonlft'acMi
him ba- h to h v infernal regions fssier than he
esssc fom them To this 4»r-ech the Ucvii re
pil.il by a srornfui Ism-h.' *xu I, n Zmhiel m per
/V*.»riuti us.il, and with a ndi her rati leaf the
chains, advanced to the coffin side, or which the
faithful friend pr-wfuecd AUosded pfcsol, and fak
ing a sure aim. vhofthe Jforit throngh the heart,
dropped him at hw f.-et, dead, aa they My ur Am
sterdam, as a herring, of a BinmiighaBh aaa door
nail. The report of the pistol alarmed the police,
and a n ii in her of thoae ynardtans of the ai*hL h*S
ime arm* .ire•«! ihi»v ttta in it*. .» —-«■ -*
corpse lying in U* proper place, iht t’ocwiaa ml
, tnijr tranquilly t>y its aid,, an>,{ a bleeding maea,
Mivcfed with red urn! Mark, with a tovttnttosB
pair of horns, and the well known tail. An n
planation was nrxm given, and when the Devil
was stripped of his linery, he turned ont to be the
U-ll-tusn of the- convent, employed by the Inara
whose religious seMtteeN* was rrtuned, fof the
purpose of giving a striking proof of the danger of
dying without the connotations of the Church, and
of the fate to which aft impenitent sinner* are «.
j poa.nl. The Contran was trail au-l acquitted,an
he showed that in the Tuscan code ttm>rp wu ik>
penalty attarh.nl to shooting the Devil, and aa be
' persisted in saying that when he fired, he helmed
he had to deal with ilia Satanic Majesty.
Be* Hardin's WMh.
Romance is sometimes embodied la a that an
inches long. Old Ben Hardin, of Kentucky, gat a
wife by a rich and funny stratagem.
In the days of hi* young manhood, he was a
work hand on the farm of a wealthy landholder in
that Mute, and Uteri- sprung up between the yeung
laborer and thirVul nun s daughter what is oAeu
called a secret attachment. By the by attach
ments are generally secret. Ben and bia dulcina
made up matters in proper time, without the
knowledge or consent < f hit intended father in
law. Indeed, the old man had never sospicioned
that the aspirattoM of the yonth warn tending
towards an ail<aac« wdh lua family—and if it had
ever occurred to hint he would have spurned the
tho ight. Ben was a wore ofhia ariatucratic notions,
and of the existence of almost insurmnuntaLle oh •
jc<-i.ions to the match. Ho one day consulting the
ingenuity of ht» nature, he devised way* and means
to btiog it about.
Lo.::g 10 the old iu in, he (old him that ttpfor
luualely lie had conceited a liking fur the daugh
ter of a wealthy faimer m the neighborhood-—that
IT war implies Me to ?»<n tfm lauiii ut of tfig girl'*
fatlu-r—*hal be i.rved her and she loved turn -end
ask- d » mu course he would advise Iniu to imarne.
“ Won't »he run away with you P* (aid the old
man
“ She '{Tight,” answered Bee, “ if i could make
the arran,' in. utn. Lhj yon think it would be
hen. .cable f w tne to take ad vantage in that wayt"
Oeftuml) ” replied the originator or the plan.
"There would be nothing wrung.**
Ben kept at him, and ao enlisted the old gentle
m.in lb at he made Sum a lender of his I,, rse and
buggy. amt a few d-mes, to carry out the elope
mem. The place of nweiiug was arranged, and—
reader, you know west follow,d. Ben run off
with the old malt * dsugb'er, a (set wi teb the old
Icilow miuH. J in the nest m-.ruiug a hteose, and
-■ which -hagamd i.ibi not a little. Wording
up as novels dig—Ben and hut wife were forgiven.
Poavaarr or •* Uacut San.”—A writer is the
Southern Literary Gaaette gives the following
graphic pt-n-i nrt ink slwtcli of out reapeetnd ancle:
" in personal appearand*. L ucie Sam is a tali,
bony, he-1 thy looking man, apnareuy of fw<(.yg««i
for, though born ta I »Td, ht bears bia age welt,
and wobi to lie getting younger every day. He
j loves tit brag of bis establishment, and puts ham
| sell on aucii an equality with the pt pie, that a
j t.'nri of haiqptte-oe are a|w*y* at h«i elbow There
arc always at his table a number of gray headed
old fellows, w ho were his cuuipgntoH* in yonth,
and oi wheat- services he cuaitnuaiiy speaks. He
lores to boa*I how Tutu Suc h a um wived Ina Ufa
at B mkei litll, and bow Du k Somebody whterted
i reilow that a**aotU*l h tn at &at«w. He oflea,
too, wipe* Urn rjw when be took* at tbe picture
o! > tall (literal, banging up ta hi* parlor, who,
b« aaya. whipped a failuw itatued Pafceninia. who
uBce tried to lake away one of h<$ g,;u and a cot
ton bale. Oh llit-ae oceaaiOM, 1'rifle Sam will
ix-fojte greatly edited, and. tattingof bit »a«lwd
knl-yvbtcta; twaaya, wa* the gift of hi* old friend
Umf?,- WW. **«.»—well jgageM u baa tbr beat
)*itvl tilt tlie tuftj, null tail wit ittar iMt'juiuu,
and whip any teaa ™ «he bill lo praiatniTftL
f”< ltd* aw' bu> plautatKvn. l ade Km ufteutaake*
tiMMeti t.d^vtoo ji. bat. in truth, time aw ban
oeceofrtmca at a ebaracu t wi.icu & m mugf wp
**' bfeaefoM *int»e* ar U» teevsuubk. Tfrttyifr
inclined to p*?*ce, he can stmetimes play Use brag
t,art, and i» one of Ibnh. »k», while h« twtt g»*e
hat life in tb ; way of fneaebnip, ia tba natter of
batgaiwi »;« aitcai* on the n<nth port of a ban
At any aittaifi upon ana of- life enamel**. ha
wtilahuaidu hi* caucaod actual aa many awaoitt
vret aa a half pay ticaueaiBt t>f Infantry. On fbo
whole beta one of tbaaa wbo will cadge!
fimd ia a eaaaa ta wbteb be ia engaged. ead em
brace but bttw tuat esc toy, ta * huae contact watt
wtt ih'.e the tmaiiowl ormoiuie at ttiairnaniante ,<ui