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. BUSINESS CARDS. hANI) i '::W & ((CO., JOHN W., Commission A R1'fi,';i w II. W., Commissioo, Provision IENSOeN, J., oIhose, Sign and Ornamental C.ADP,;. ., IRepairer of all kinds of Furniture, CONVERSE & CO., Grocers and Dealers in Weern Prod-c, 7 Tchoupitoula. M,,r, .ornldr L . antte C 1ARRELL, EDWARD J., Attorney at Law, Cun lmmi.iosr lur Trnnes, ., N.3iOr, -rt.m Nsei o ne., ( 'tRRX, J. W. & J. A., Brick Loyesc and -I Iuilrlrre, Nn. 769 Un..... ,trF. . N0,.Oh . we tit' 1 rw~lin with tha .hoer hne Illlle· s*1 Imlilln aR1C G'IS7'I;ItY.Y rend 4 tarsnly tlllm. Canlmilrcatnlinm thron~i the Pe~t Bmr" 0· lO ,,' t 0, , i,.p.- h ,,. H ,,lt--luil H t W. lfill, D. F. Durthe, Lynl h Dande~r,., ]. A. . Itrnl & k Mný, .liwln ph F Bnlnm, el t 1 MIBOLL, W.M. O., Carpenter and Builder, 1)N BXO &q of CO.ritn , on Ii~ ur.u, l rawnn ooooo ns+ Boot~ fIated u, L 1 ante.oerly" of Kentuckyl:u o u, I Irr~ri bw ll, D,,nrn and l!1u:;I; : l.: rrlrl n""rr.0 . L0,,,,, , "r4 :wrl Pr.;Lii ¢ .n hand. ýr j rnl y W UNBAR & CO., A. F. Co cmmission Boot ndi~ SLOT \PllO-.,oa .. -1 .6~ : Cnm ll;nu etncrt, Yew stir urn [DbANIEL nlAYEkS, formnerly of Kentlucky, jý r Into of Jnslc~n. 111*·.,,l~ r~1 ldIOil -fyn ·L l1 .III GII l `hn~ nrn t,, Y""w·I r· 1·ri" .i llll" , l n (lr ill i i l90 G REENWOOD & CO., MOSES, Commission and F,-Ydingl Yr:unla fa GrM-,r s A.v li G IIEFIF & CO., A. D., Wholesale Grocers land Commi.uln :r;hlm.h ;ln e lr lnl w ten Butter a33 Clre,. nad Ag,.lt. r.t T F.url.l . drl, Al, Portr ,and N~rh ider, NI.. 38, 4I taod 41 1d Lst,,, ad No. IU FrontL weu N+w ARALSON, F. N., Notary Publio and At H tonley at I"'. U. S. Cltlthliaionerr fu r plt plljllnll an Ark-.w N'..~ I' E ehanr. I']m u:,,, lllu te tIhe PY )+*LA:lre· . fr'B tf AIIT & CO., C . J~ 79 Tehopitoula. street, H IAMILTON WILLIAM, Collector, (at Mr. : J h , W I, '+,l ll.,·I ,) K o, 2. CNW p , 1t"l..t. JONES, SAMUEL, JI., (late TALBOT, JONES $- r. , il!,!t" ,,r rocur tal n- Feornw':-1.g l :.JerI ult, H45 P, :,rn3 KLENNETT & CO., FERDINANDJ No. D3 It 1I; +L 4'A I). ', . ," 5.. 1,,".. i. Fi ""t I'o~vvr. i 11 ii I ONI, JOHNUoSON, Aluctirnfero it'l Gene rai SI,1 ,~I:I' II T lIi 5Loyal street, colrnr of 10l '10.,1" ,L,, r,~: l· 1II·I1·.I· jli A- 1.. I nl·/ Ilri nl i) ' XI I & R LI'OTS, Attorneys at Law, 27 A' H. MId LI No. 100 Camp street, SI N, No. lFL £ ICE 0y910)L, 1;~:,k 1'i ; ýiP. '.i!GI.ES and W"ATCHliE. AilJ xlelr fir..., rxy~r^As) n,ý'rnl+1"r~rý. RI NICHOLS, B. F., Architect, Office 27 Camp o,,d..i,. ", irln.l, r :.%s :fn*·? -, ven ,re ti 91/ 1.0o mny fa'or SI'. r ab , OL)TT & RIITII, Attorrcys it Law No. t.U It CO., Colmnission hirchauts, I ;c I , 1EDWARD II.,Cormmisionu andFor 1 tiO1ND, W. C., Family Grocer, 71 C mp , AiE'' EILt, ttarnee and eCounlelors c T. r D - Tq - f T. H I Ta Ti.O. " rh,.. tH ,wIrle.r .. I :a ly 1:·. · -. '·r · ul l""i " S1TAi1 & CRIIISTY,; Office No. 10 Beaks IjJOLE, ,JOHIN, Comminsion Merchant, Emi 1' I 'E &[11 CO., J., Imporpers o nd . i'.ll;EXTEEIH h en asInttr , IrL.''. .AUI:uL, lnurter o,"JO I' At ny and C Wiun: P II Ia J l 1 11 iip srod Can 1o 1",,; . . I. t. "n TrAiE undersignIi conunsn to mCike liberal p lu 5' I i ii . Ir~~~l filiv Vi:n` h (: A. C ::\I., nis : A IJDICAL CAIRDS. OCT., S \A C. & . L IILNSLL, 4b Cnni -Ir.·-l. ,,,l Ie J)it J. '. SI'G N of fce ait Thos. Itoankin's .l 1^• a . ulI ;*t IIJSi :.:,, i , dle r.:n, I r,;,L- "u.l, ltr l 2,, k'; .I-i .12, 7...,, ,, I: > ' III:" lliF M'. rl'rtl I EDICAL NI)ICE-DRI I)(ttCtVKOOD, who 1 h- " , ,, 4 r,. <, 4,I , .l.'..,;S I. i1,, '..: F., T t . l1~ rill, ~ l..·l *~ l:· ~I.. t'.1; - 7 ! I:. .7·11·11 V- ei 11 .1( 111 L '$ FIN 'ER S. q a: lu'll <1 - l ( t 1, 1 , -1" . 1: ý . ,,'; ,,1' '.,,,lý h'r ." Q I.''i .ll . L l ,@ j .,, .[ I i ilt l : I i ,=, l. Iy...t i~s· lll. 1 it ub lcrrltd io ,, I r-lll . nL lr, , G , i. r k ý, a ". ' L .nhI"t a U :,· , l ( ·4 lyl. x i . , :,< i, 4 " , .1> m,"ý;.: F;~l .. n tT~ l , " ,i. r. ,'o retlm ( ,rn dl-I' , nlnre xnl l~r r , . ,, ..r.)' s , ;':,' . : t`: ,:,,ia,,',.~t, tre e ý,r;,re p.: . ,, U~:7ý "tni:;, ',Iar, rýtI;:r, i~,I ~eenlt7n a't Ht C Li rs.f -1 ;Xv~s e ~rwilb ~~n ualrrý A UIC A L UtJRE OF CORNSB, without Clttitl tll" I nl, 0 Wntr In l' n1·.11111. ul rt 1-II.I In:. lint helli llli L k lilýx .tn·:ill n i ý ;wr "ýn~ 1'·· . · , i\lLIUI `CTTI 'Tl L~ by mýol:ýn n u VI.IXIR 1 iLe vi.ý·'.. ·'.h r ,. yrl:. n:l.l in 1!·c lulrr PI 1:nl·.n In lit~a, r.-r'l otlt the Iý"n" I·1:, n 1 :'. I. ;r..," n.c r...:,r. 1.: dr .x nn n.:ulal u a h th vntlr. nr. L.l:m 1 . I n .n t .,n :' Inr .r Irlrll t In hi, hood. lf lll~ 11I· Irr. t. I.. !,: ýý.: ..:n:. , :" I r of lntl rin v: In n1inl prn. "ýI i n· lri·I . rIJ :.t l.: r .. ý non I-nr ;ý nn11 6)' I. 1-11 i I ll :!.. i'hl in x","Iý,IrI'ý^'la, a l.1 L'.rlaý In 1rn lr.1 r~iw:")r , nIrn ',sn~tn the rnlrý ,.,..,.,, ~r ,,a Irr; lr II.I.1 iii I ·· alllllna* ,II ,;li li· bl i I a·l I ,·9ir !.I·i. l.:lll\Ii r.l! l).I i Illl l., Illtr! t 1lr. Ill l llli· t,, l· 111 11 I \. F I l11I ; ·1 Id'fUOF'S Z' 1s 1I ilii·-FG I·. ! I1I1 'i II t'I' AS F, :!.\ 1,151}I P:C I:II:=1nl" I r :rltI hnn; ,.. ,,I I- . , ,,,; rr;~;n; o I .. V Bi e . -g nin,. Poll. t |'of L.% 1,ri h. io ) R MEiDClNlEu, :l'E pen' Blnxry, p reenlvin,'. m v ari}W trlv I ba-r. s; ara I';; .*,, ol., nts. THOd. RAPIKIN, r,,ý,,, n. ao:,t.,.a nrth r~ra" rror P~mr "n t".,.".,,,t. 0 SPTIAN E II1E BALSAMI.-D. CO ,.,..,.. iaLlf ~"l me l./ for ull "lahelte lrrttllln l to tir'/ R7"E. f f" O , f "e lire ý " t nlln urinu; l lrr! la rn rrreki ; the T, r I the r ..... ý t ," :: . x,9 ur.1 r11n t n w..... I; nn l L i/ it , llr ll llr ll*,* llll wt I. 1, ( 1I-. \ i,, il l) l rlt, .!,!,x (:nl, ,I it.. dr'l. I .:l.. irc !Its A L Pl(JLoUII I ~I, O, DEN-~lP~~ . 1~ ,',,± r. -r ,d,: :t,e r,', ~th, tl,,LA. . ]. ll ,irý 1t: n ý.ý.ýý;, ý . . ...· ill +ll()l i atn:+ri . i , {l nl,:l,· ' rr ,..-i . t,ý i 1 : .. , 1·- 1 1 ·· 1 1,, A , I · Pln l t rhe . l a ,rl;: · i, ·II tl· ,I l,ýr"- I .I: r 'Il t r I· !~ n I l[,r. ' L ' "- Lr ,,.::nt nr . t ! r . I ni, . ru,, : 7 cn . .. . .. , r.s l'.. "' ., .y ,, In" : r r , d nlv, r . i...l.. , ',li t lrr , ·n ,;? II It . . r·.E- . l rll ' "Lor P i, II N , SiON, D , .tIl,,. . .? ln l . ,,. !., Jn [a i l :, E.I. , Ibt rv ~lll, .,t; r. L Mr 'I'[a,, tllt{ "~t r 1 ~ 1 , a .L k. )r .:,l hr:fl. A, 7C, l 'uý"ATr, h:I. , ] rtiaL n; . _'" . o . . . -ir l I , N w l u 1 (r r r ~u u I : r , , . : r TVaR ANFOUX, 3J P2AIuTICAL DENTIST, ho. F Roso .e trot, near CanalL·Uetikearlrsnl. ul·L ly 3m'' ti er otramef ,t ' dý p ,,thttIt t.'nl tEf I " ie Ape ou {9 I I C, <'h~. r~, Cý" r .l~bne ,:il uherd4-- so thn Unite anS 1-1., E. D. REACH, S.I. Proprirror, ApYtharvy rand DrIIKK~vt .nn131vd Vtt ,.ath wnrr roamr n! rh nrlr oe ind ,{ar,' ll·,lu. rl., ?RUG(GISTS' GLASS WARE--A larde vari t" ,,. Il.. h,. F... t..AT A CO., .e Tr,_,.,,+ ,, crr,:t. UIOISPHATE OF AMMONIA-10 lbs., for pI 0. I Aell MA . L. MASE-Y. T INSEED OIL--20 bbls., for sale by SNSEED OIL-40 barrels Linseed Oil, boiled • sno- rsrkfror nn,", tM.v ,,,,. + ... A. rnt.ArRA* A .. Ct Mae rl,,,..l rrt. 'ASTOR OIL-100 barrels Adams', in store j d for Wile by t NEW ORLEANS DAILY CRESCENT. PUBLISIIED EVERIY DAY, SUNDAY EXCEPTED, AT NO. M3 ST. CHARLES STREET, .Y IIJ . .ADDOX. VOLU.E V SiTUTI RDAY IOIORNING, JUNE 26, 1852. NUi.JBER 99. IMPORTANT TO PROPERTY OWNERS 1 Bridge water Paint, FOR WOOD, BRCK AND IOTlER BUILDINGS, TEAMBIOATS SIIEPS, RAILROAD CARS, DEPOTS AND ALL OUT DOOR WORK, AISO FOR ALL KINDS OF IRON WORK, ABOVE AND UNDER WATER. rTh· attention of the pA he i, r,:.peetfully cdl d to the follw;ny tesetmoninl inIfavor ot h eb,,lrted BbRIDGEWATER I'AINST. It I unn `Dosry for tl / lhoA wto moe t thou dl, t ant after EIG IT 1IONTI fS un, in th+. South, thile ch.rater of the oInlt.i. firmly -slnbh.lhlr: r Ji it ie now , flr,.d to fIllIIIPIM . , bItil lb., Ill AN0D AATIIE ti PiOtl. TECTFOIR $ER DISCOVERED. CEIRTIFICAT] OF kIo. F. MILLER, OF ATTIAI'APA i Jy ,eaI w,. imps "n to app l]y the Pnr: J ,"watr 11.o .ain Ybt to :,hl tJe r,.+resl,+, tn pu nudr by ,,"n+Age t+, a,+,. G. U. Ill)(ii:lt r A o. o. 1 r ,+rl ! y : i. my rn:ll ,th1n. j ll ,r rrnt t++or. ,n,-.nembr,,, 1 i,. wl ,it. l .; her 1n ltr btj t.[ lr,ý kn I u l n fnel lld m.ai ll' SIl;,he1 h JOIIN F. .ILLER. Newt hrtn, AttahkapoSl~la t 1, 1 1),L. CERTIFICATE OF CAPTAIN ST. CLAIIR TIIOMASSON; OF STEAMER MAGNOLIA. HnAinE vxintp ltdhe hurrIlme dIa IAAI ,':t n AIsteamer mAN NOLIA ArImy Icommand, wiih tEi IaI ,HAAIAk: PAINT, cllrr:;.llr . r. re sod it for ft. INIPE&K liOUB yunlltl, And Ilnry hcritntiol, in pr ,,t ue·LIU ,t SUPERIOR, m my Ilnd.-Itt to env ninr AI IM- -iE' it t h ae kaUI i'dUTEG 'I-IN AGAINST TIHE EFFECTS OF SPARNS AND LINDERS. II 1I-ha proved ENTIRELY WATERPROOP on my dcIk., after thraw tlix1~ use. (Srenxll) ST, C. THOuIASSON. marwllinnny Decembelr 2, :851, CERTIFICATE OP CAPTAIN WILLIAM BROWN, OF TOWBOAT PORPOISE. 1 hnve need thea BRIDGEWATER PAINT, fm wrhich Meeen. O. C. BOGERAT h CO. e , P,", on Ihe huII ;ruli d.ck of IIhe TowboLa IOIEPIIISR. TI ,daAAAi l Ien on nA ,ouIA ' An.hi, aAI SPARKS OPl CINiARS CONSTANTLY A tg AeAA A A.. Lat NO EPPICT IIOLCINAAAI ,ATE V II AlSAILE IIICIS In nl~uut four wteka it tWiome PE!RFECT SL.ATE, and I am mu.-· Fed of it. ruu~rinE~tl:L. u ql..iilil srrlarnrC to inelrr it r, CERKTAINR PROTECT JUN sil~lln. the etleca of SI`:{ICE nn' CI N-DERS. I non A.I.,,IlyA rAA.iA.nl thae BRIDGiEWATAAI PAINT AorthIIAul fa i t. fvrtL in 'hi. AnllnI0 Clitnlulr (S 'Cno O W lf. 1AIiWN, CpIiA of T-AontSA pATnies. CERTIFICATI OF TIlE MANAOG.RS AND AGENTS EOF LOUISIANA DRYS DOCES CO. Alnr it 1 ..d 0.. ULICIS1NAN DRY lIIMAIA 1.*AIISIIA BIIP.DGE SA-IIFlA PAINT, aAdA,Aa LAAI'.AA.ýl It-lAd, A-A Ib.l. , Eror iA I IIirUiA. AIAI I'AINTAA LSU iELAIIIA ARTI Li. (Eign.:d) HUGHESL, YA:.IF.T t THOMAS, I..u.ýnnstllocrl Yard. I. I. IHiIlPrNEY IA CII A1A rL.b iAA- Lu y OW ck Co Ni ,I-ses FAbruSy 4, 1I57. CEPTIFICATE OP JOSENAl IIENSON. PAINTER. I h .n -4i01 BRIIIDACWATIO PAINT, Ar the.t fieS. AIAAlin, ,-I and pluVAd IAiig.AA, an d AAiAhingle and AAArwAAA a 1 in .rerv mn-+m t )w !lE glcr thes h.llelt eatie~Ioo. ýFrnm 4ei -d rernrl to made under my 'nt diau d:rectinn, trao FYI - l A) InYin A PROOF AGAAIlST THE EAAIAAAA OF SPARSA I r to AA, AAIiA ri I AAIAN rtT OLABF d i. loLa. f1SO ll".t ,ioor plil. we-p, lnenn.. (u·htlsl thlll osrunlrly mind rlll t for ..ES-Nntnr rAIAA. JOSE) IINNSOON, P-ia, NASAA UAAA., FIbruAAAA, l654. IIICIAmp. ASIS. UNDERWRITERLS' CERTIFICATE. T). ::r I xrelcnrd, Cndrrw nt·ra, inrbll annfidir · t th BRIDGE SA1'F.Ii I1AIý'L', for the orrrrll of sL:,ir -. - ud ``n rr hoLunnill (:tt, :,"J) I. MA T)'1:LWS A<" ! S., ý" \ tl-nllnnunnnr, (tmp'?p "!'I'. A.I CI l CII r I. I I II. n, Cl ll l t Y. *i. W. (1;bL i, iI. S. r .CCl·I ,L ACC FiA )I'L F. ASIS hi , A:C. Ill AC' Cee CC.,nt I In l~ll.: un:n " 1: " .A.... '-t ."t ti,.til rprns , ..t ror.-rao S4 Are"-nn1 ; R. AS. it"Nh NEW nnnt en. iIe", lut Sullcr~ru.!uo t (ro: Sr,, 4wLlyr c it t Lidnun River Rwalroad a. . C. I"C, CT, C O.C A C -A. 'rte, t, S RA;-AC. NT IN NEW\ ORLEANS.S 1I, SLAW S . "Ir~ DAY, S'I`AAFFER Q CO. CC.nJ iTCA'C i 1.IC CE' U ,,L AiCAKSAC, N^. CE Camp .C.aEt. AT '11CC F 350CS G. WIIITAEXE. \"ICKCIif IC 'CCIYKi .ACI CCCCERM (i:ALVL:ST( N--J-III F:C S CFVEI:D.) l1Aro/ Kl!:.F. -. .vi k I'1.Lf;11. nt - EIc AID VERTITtiMENTa--Let every body No. 1. R. 11. ,. A.FD FFY A il.iIJiY RELIEF IS I'F I'. T '11 1m EVE:. RI' ECOR2 ED IN TIlE \ ;\.' : N.UI:L.I.,,,,.,.ý iL.,,·:1.ý~ L/\l !.hlAlb S1: A .t\.' TO TIIE SICK AN') PAIN-'.:FFEIRTIN OF NEW IL LI, ,I. IN J IF A tILT,1'. LIALILt'f!ISSIL'OEFT L F ",L,, m L.koLe Lr Ln.L , I: hA 1.iLY'R h IL.EAL% i::F I is '' xI , ,,.A',I ' r: ,tat IT' WL ILL F'RELAAX . IF 1'AI 1 , 0 I , .01 lOICA, FIA E h N UTES. IT HAS CUA IIID, I: :IAETY CASA RIT OL' A AHU.X!i 3 RIFEL,,TI"FR FM IN F'ALLR illfUES. NEI'URALGIA I 1:` \, OUR. CR(O1L P I1' TEN" !NL:1TE.I I tR!( IFTEON IN L.AES, ('iA LLLA' F INI LIOE SINCL. 51 A1('l lll:A)'t: I. FIIT.": I INUT ESR . FIAI.I T SL L FL INI.' '.F NI"FL; T IES. A" , I FILL "SL.LEA OIR t'F IS. II"LAN ICl: FHEAD'AIIE. I(AD w AY 1t A YR.3fl :F Y .I.):: v))t ..~L~ PRVENTIO)N the i r plo: tlr· l'rn=,:,t ",,..I nr, · .LI 7,rlty me or R. R. R., it willi ,.I,. I ·al "ýull" ..!r sen. s- rullite Lnu cl.li -d rrlr y icrliuge of IN 1ATIIINA. ..... .i env . wln, l;.lFo r:l L··lp t e k",, p .·n.,* F~ t nud I-Itltlyg pr,""Lllur rotAuu r xndei~ ors. hniulnrllr nnli biihucrlm se. ALL Il)W~i) COMIPLAINTS. [JALAII)ADY)SENTERY, H1. ·IIII$ F LUX, CHAlOLERLMO0R1IUS, I'iAI hl.. DI SC CARGI.SI; t rulilhb 11:e nuo-t s rrrr p t sll lii N ,al~ill kx the rnnm that-c g irtnarugdi*nnr ee, arx u-ii Iprrrduy. NEURALGIA. PAI.N STOPPA'' IrSTA NTL. RADW"AY'S REAlY RELIEF ...crs ,. " . ^ msl . irnru!nne in rr for ':r+I, d.+rtnK pun n nv ' Ir rr )tp aiut Iv! 2.·u l'rlr., .. Irru nunn np t the h L rr.bruh nlmn:.t to ,Itnll:'e I11.·yý,lo Ilr n~lle ue tllr urli·.,* vrl.·ll. I..l ralp!"! the Ilr ýva r lth +.,rs u i býte h loan 1 ul iirll ,a Lii* rauiur f irl; nrljrOU 5155 SMIII \ TS!M. rec"? rsrInlll~r ~I·· 1·1.ra·11. I I r ·I 1 o ism:.~i. ':~lr rl·, UIA Mll P.Y: · Ill- D} R !:' . i',etr I."a,.. r" ;,1rInr.u, Cll SA~ILS DEI.') ", El 2;:I .S!T~:I`- t'II· l:.IE~ t.llS~ 55 15' rl~ ý !,n,.arl ,,,. ,,, i;. ."ur, xs,,:,.:t irnt~ntlý. I':r.. , :.. I,~~~. u". ;n\\~nY ' ..1. ,, SiLI,,,ll lb. ,,,, D.. " poll a.: ,,, t rr : i t_ .! ,.lN I ' ; t w r VLI.ýic~ u~hnCI o ut lb,: 1), 1.!, Ill :11'. ,..(11 "ý}'\7SOF AL Ii IN DS.lil. rrt .I1 1 SAI)DLELRY, IJKR.TN ti E,,S IC' I)IIILADEL'lilA SAD- c lIMrE ANIIT1P.U~K\I'l(-~~~ir TI~Lt; InADOS~ICI.RY, SADIILIIRY I INADnWARE, HAR N ESS. DM0~11. NA IISSE~lIINA. ANID lAUBIiINTIAJNEfS, ILEOI IIIJSISrR ! I)LELe dSIIHSIINESSD TRUNK NlAKERS' l; ){'lE Nn.r nl. .IVV;ýr S. I~n ll n d91 q` R EAIU(1, N.J., SADDLERV WVare- - v REE.ANR.-h(REW A. BELL ~ C.. No. II J~l ;nK Ne nu~xrdxliu: l, ir -d fn ( urm nl'..ill.tecaios rr n~mrllu * t~n, NK~,,,Aetur .nA lHmpErErA oSADELEETL RAndE)hLEWARB rlE'xrEi lasly SE bn nd nI I gat e,1 a lE r ;NNE ulEE1 S";oAIr. ýT,,,,A,. WhH., SAIrtiE, IAn ,.l A t R!Al. L S. I tA U ,I AD.kli .A, s L ' R SP A N.TH R ES HA R PB ,k 1 UEE y HE . Et. CANAL STREET. ECTI, _ 11. LACEY & CO., 81 St. Charles street, WHICANCII OF LACE}'(EY PHILLIPS'S CEL1EBRTATD .lAR ti SS UACFPLORT. lildcDLE. Isa uoinUN &le Hmdr sj '1- I, II AAIANFA, ýAUI.ES AND TRUNiS r ýl ril RA KLPAIRIN STRIATLY A'TreNUFUDT. G:l'legAl P UMPS and 1A12IINO APPARATUS, a .-lOIN.1 1cCAILTY, PLU.MIBBER, No. 184 CAMP P'I'REE T, Te Or -nnr hne just rrrltv.l n nw .,dl Inrge iw ,orl,,,nl [frrnt okek-, vn la 6iel; Foreeand Li/ blinl -rll User I'unsE, eta. etc.; CookL K6ngne; Bathinlg T'ubo and Shwer H lay3ing and repairing Load Pipe.; Sheet Lad work of every dei 8 h u'ob a t work promptlyput upandrap ired. AllOrde REGULAR PACKf'S. LIOR MOBILE.-Daily U.S8. Mail p 1 L` i~ina. -Bammcr ArronRlmrllt--Thr Ar m rylen lld lowlnr...are P ket tleamI(. rl.Olll/A n.i[ · I:it,ý·r on, m.eu~r, and I OBEBO/Y. It" A. 11<ila, RIrtrr, ( vn nnI.l e yrecely for tho lake tr·(*, with ·Ierior s-r· 1 r o'o M of th. ewve atunmv will Icnye the Ponkhnrtnin ]Illat·Ind DAILY orsrirl nt the m.LI er tha 12 o'rlork etop·.?opi:"R dnlly II Any 9t. Lonie Pnee ('hrietilln. Iltd P~nrrauoeln: n d Moll nK, wa l;l .top nt Puc·* ý +il n, Plrrs Clri.(inn -I l iar' St. r ,:ki d, wl Pa Pu nr and nnlmlilli with I~rlr* hnp , e nuylhl t~ Vi nwn by tl~, 11 n'r.·I +k. rn ltlll· bol n~ll ot clop to tlk· nwny fr.,y t LV P Fr+; t t',r Ifuy $t. Irmo and111 Puce Clllj~tinll o I/hl to1 Ir nnnt :'nr th~· rlre of the AR-, lt nt 2o c .ial l " e nrl e're·: l o', lu k n. r. i."1 H. ? F Oh BILOXI, B.15' 'flI'. LOUIS, ~n~3 r'. :.I ." r("'.II ( I.l~llill( i I.\-'li. 1 'rir ·1·*Atiiw~i fin , l. fý r I r:rl rlr I.ýI. , ;!\~. C'1· 11 X -, m .. "lll ii : I.. arr. , Vo.6 ''Inck,:,re~n, .11!:..,an ·r Ya l l..a: · : w ri·c~u\IuE.~ ·3:li\ .l................t rr ý ·l l* 'l- 1 T, I1.:TI. "RIDY ANTSUNDA I,, :LI. y tY TIC,. }~y 4.:,.r u,,,; ~,II Ivl~v \!nr.I:ee. ~n;,,:l.A.·Da v,.ý ýnln h:( ylo e,;n llly nt a W, ]-,,k. e Fur !,igl. t o pe,,.l; I apply on LDla.l, or to R. UP.UDES, A:" n+~ la Rnrk Plnre. FOR THE WATERING PLACES. F . I, IOXIAISII'I' I 1I TYYAIS lAlll rlA AND BAY ST. LOU ID.-DF el.-rnt -:l i Sil = pallio gcM "[ lrn r J' sxv d.l1 I t:'+, _ 1111 ' C!;ark, -III F uve TI;:DI) Y,:,n lo rxl-i I·.w. FRVUIDAY, t '' . *FRIDAY. YI,AA, AI.Ill . U 1 !WI:F.E frAY, n[ . TIlIi i·. II [ý Fnr rurftrrr sxr f'¢ II IIII N LI Cif l: ti.. I n II SrAS B 11.1 AlAN 11%ý .1.,w r oil..d NI y A iIl,', III'IFI ,, I Ir tr (III COV INGTON, JIAD1UI.ION ýF: \5'L A · ': S7F1`1:'. 'l +.ýr,, e al .. I.!-:iY'i. , V4.\Yr1:L:A yýI:;1 F. \hIiT)\*i.If: Yi()V Ir,15 .......... .:r a. rir· .\lýIr{5'. nt ..............: .. r Tl.'f ýIr.15 .............. .. .. it' ":'S ).\5'... a...... .....ii . "URSTIAY.......::::: a " i I~li l ri.,. I ............. r'nIDA V .............. rrlnlr)AY. s1rrn-oaY. ......... .1 .. .. .ýA1 c1,D............. h...t r Ir. r to k"ýe I' I 1nxr r ri ý r III.'.1lr n I n~iil IMf - A Ilrt-r B 'I'll n A i (nliA! Illr II ° 'S, A2 f R V ICKSBURO, MI hLLIK6Rh'St IK\)II r, l- , Rr1114Y A ND \ AT.CI .%--t. r ln 1H~i I I.ýD'.Y ] .-L. " g Pn kr: Ir.:,m."r l. S. w'1'.1 t: 1-1 : ... ," "\ II Iýýn ý E\ýgrc 1' 1t1[:I:ýDý] ýt ix i-n .I. `I i o ni; U. OR BELIZE--On datu:"dy, ` ii) N CL: 1., t.,pi. ;..1 iI ·tlll .L(CI·T ·Li i Ult D G.LIZE', SW ;rll\\-t'r '.\T PAS t~ :L·1·-- ·· nil~i ) / - r r~ii· I :: .,I (I .: ' 547 ('RDA 1'ý\I. rlt\Iý', ". Fir lre ,-..i. , ., ,nl,}ýI.ý u,,:l. ,..,, .n I . 1 .. ' .. . a r -tr c , r ~ r . "' ' s .t . .' i v K Is · h C , . I I . v ... . . , , t .···, · l :am· L'EE hYlin Irm rl.::rtýýn. (i ]^. Hnv,. ýwl, mii ti, 11.4:O U (:IVtI:1) ,6E inc~ ~ a. '; c w- ,. 1.-rn,. t:.,i :rp·! CI!:T0:IIC:S-- ]5'cekli y 1'ii kct for RidI'r nF x E nl.,"rI". 41 !4C:, ti n. E l, nr.lrr" il I.ývv., u oaenrf "F. I, 1' .ruc r ý1'J nt :rl ~l: r u , . ý "t ý c"t :21ýr .4 :ýI. IL " , c F ElOOTELSh AND B LOA wIL {ý. Sý 1\1' (IrB lPi 1LOOS.- iii s C xtn " . i I; S-0.0~ uh OT t Lt the .v;ib "iki ý. ý~)Il1 ýT l.i'.ýI. iif~ q, ti Y 1ýY "r :l:~. ý ý`.I:r".i IT,, wVTS' ' .++u coencr Jx ;. ulu.l.".i " - '~ .aL (`ýk" I I., L I11 iIOF~l lwqq.I.e rti".i~M.--ý ;! .t I lv. +,FIV15 `0\I\IIERChL HOTEL 6 u~tod a the V rot···· f...01, Id Im~ LFl"EI: STREEIE.-- 71,·? Vro i~lu ni:u~n~reellnal, l 1 Lt l:o he 6rnte and d"r~~i; rli ;! II! u ý t cl IN·Ir Ir \T Yarr! Iigulrr; ; WTE8T~I:F VERANDAh comecr Julia~Q ý, ..al n .lir .: ::Ar. r:. ra ~u:, ," Yrt : .. n it r. 1ý:<: . ra<: I11 tCIIEL(I:a IIS'HAL, lilo*,i, \li s.-- :fi l.,.., "r ui...,;. c ,,,,,,r )l:, tT. A jýj::: ?. III; rll II. L· i .:lo ine 11A ll ; .ýý"ýIl!. lo~ I· wit:, t '.'i. Iý. ,t ..r ... ·· ······'" II and 4,'F k": l' aý e.t ` .... .... ... ... ..4. : LADON SPIUNGS will be open ler tlhem :ni'"'"'.: ha, r 1.. r:; Houle +IllliTII ; I/lr jlll.l \\·llltrr. anA VII t, ro I+;,L,,:.+ý;:"ý bý L+" ,; rnillll·Oar n lllllJ· LL,· Llh.l, l ltjlill..a . li?·.ýix 1.;1 : 1 · !. ý. r il to iII clilri L· rIPIII· n ta ll + ! .cr n lý'1" r .r Lltr}c:ý' 9L"L . u Ii "ai n sub IADISONtILLtE Tg.' tOTEL.-h st b-i ILD '.r!1 ý ý+ . .11 i1,.r. a , :Lr I:ý1r11: ,l./· r ldl .d +1· . ea i.jie ,r~ltiDI II rJLL, 1)001) m l(JLOL I lolern, FolL1 oir Sldn r In 1..d . lo I nt tilt .0 r til t" l(i nil \ lrll·. Il·· if;l i -111 Lc 11:lr· ·1 · I11)111 to11 illn,rf:; . n!:+. l ilu1lo of } 11.r 1a nI·. o-11 1,.1 .lu ll l n 11 l`.0l . ............................ . ooJIt tSOt 't O i t \i;;;· I...1 I;, llllli nli nl rll I u L br I. b.11in R l~x .Illr lliý: · PIN rt I.1nlrr - 4 1:.111 !,110\1. 14e liar av ui Ir x+.1q;- 1 v:! " 0,r I+- ·· llu i [.:,lam ll~ ' ý.ýJ n r l:Jr. 11/ + tltu : thkl, : I r.'I"fnt io Iltteoitit, Ate loe it : n :r .In .ý i r;ý, a :NlAGNULIA HOUSE, Biloxi, Miss. xnA Imtrnn, nItb" nb r euelll t1:nS t'n.u llotr Ir :np:ll.l ,r ,. o wllii~P~rlll ep ýu t:,r nrel'tain of r.nitronr ibis rione :P n.Ot nl n,+rpl t:.,"l .,at m is 11I rlý.; :.l Y r x li ,.., tn Oe~t ionr ton U boi.-I o the r n nwtlli '1 iLI! If A I. ItOO\ r::rl .iin~r1snn,.inp cn" iln rn..t iý. 6 :ýs., n 7 i nll\'. ' vvl irl~ya tla, ,lll llý ý.lett In iarr iu dmerL 1".. l;t ,a d-I !l "of Is,. u. I?,1,;11 Ls i;,, j~· nni:. ; lil;r IMO.r IyLOX I I[OUSt,Bn.(L:1,ix 31i y.a'-T pub-, .l, .g il,<" nril..r l L, ý u~ u, tnlý,,,,«ý l w I li A, l ,i L . wslls ~ Vhs . l.. xi \II\, ,V, onlllr v liret utny ordnnr. At n.', to lhn huul , rllil il L G rii!; BAR vlilln.l tII.I..1Ill 1:0 til '1,1"_\ PIi wlr Ahl·l:)'s aIIu1 17 A'1'Lii n l- h.1 U Tea TABLE wi II 'll always ha xnp },:i«,1 x nl, ll tlýý d: iar"a "f0' L'I iEEN OAKS m O-1, L,1 lo. T ,1lhsu.1s L I .1.51.. L, nl55l 55l'fll l 515r Al' l lsý,s .., no l 511 7'rec5, ud'"riu tIt. e eye a lion pro 1e t l ,i. x. ll n " 15 O LS "5 5., .he:, a sa xn . 5y n IS , a I. n a. ua5hi niri xa~,n011 iX r~~:. s to rn,~nuite:,,,l ýtilidrIn rený,,taaý n~r her nn,!x,: xo to::a nxt, a, aII ~ý ý.le LI .1.1" Iso..r T AR I I, Ir Irr 101n.L l t de n V,.I A III, ,Indnrti AA wil IIA h ntxrI nI1t' lru L REEN OAFIS HOTL, 4lo5i, Mis. Crn.55~l111511i5 .sLC II I11515 s~~LI··.ps ls;sI I s'sIIfii~!tI1·.( rll, ,I.tI,,s.,teand.I. 511511 11,nn5rrr1lll'5n555l5 °O~itcA' sl`';.Ed I a ne dxt nlu 0n hn ýEIh nra et (i:'o'm w Iluo e fyS.. sI11ss.os. «i.," Ixt ~fd.v,.r c .r a " rn-rt.u, nnr , i·a.,rx r nnl t11 . 5 . rruhuli~¢aeunrn. ý" Un"4tWIw \\"us.1, 111theI~ _______il ~n nt rýrmn M ASONIC WORKS.-r1rsons M'1L1SUNiC OOKS OR 1)1 LOIAS mdl b sn t hN W )ORLEANS STAT1ONELS OTO. (t. ll STEEL'WS.) N . 6u Cwap mrt, wham t oq eau tied = y uort "Ut pI ure *ilnalo for the fr~t. m)7PO t. MILLINEPhY AND FANCY. TR EDUCTION of PRICES.9-rW. Clark, ramnr nr Mydrn and Cnron f"1ý"t etr."u. ",i,:v· o Iý"nui nwl fn . laro hlr ·frrk, om:rs qq ' e n nlla t rlrr t IfO.`: \4.7'S LACEIANrTILLAS, It0 a11ONS FBFLOWER C!)\tlll P:Itt'[;3tIERY . ,rol n· n ga·nl +".rrll -t 410 1 .I A XI 111h H I \'I:V9. It r:·ry ndnllr l yrirr.. 1.:1 If Spring MIllinery. RS. BRYAN, 106 Canal street, hna 1ý ,1'^t '."r. ý+d hrgg 1 f".1 iionll.: n~r.,rments~ 1Il0 1141, 0 UF. BONN. S AND 'i'iE-F.' FI.ATO N rA'0L)0,lS.:OUSK V, l nnao l· yl, .r 1y10le. .olado,.ý briru.S~ein l p"^fl nteteIfin'.CTlK::S54S mnlln in the lir:rll f yll and on the mn~e mnlfr;.lr [cone. - -- ýýt C. Yale, Jr., e Ceo., MA STA AZIMN STREET, K9' IWl-n!rl.i. Dr±Ilm in Tmyprtrn LA A CAA A, STA I I Al.F S, bAASYDhIfARAAmfl ?IrlLT.: ~F:AY;Y D(.E? 9 nMDS9 .1fT.1: TAfF C C .i.Ap 5.-A.' ý:Itt.'AI:ýS, gf):l1TS, ii c etc. A In,,, and ^ :ripl W raven truer t r.' "MY thane i^ ther lin; t of the of the wnýýeerl~ttrnd ··:irrrilr. C. Y~ILF., n., h CO., 97 SL ss treet, .19 153p G-umC il~n n4 jai ·n~l Unparallelcd Bargtaik18, UY ACCOUNT OF F EMOVAL. L37~' P."noorndrei," o! ýLU.IillnR CHEATP AND) FASIIIONABLE CLOTHING, .M d", .,11 "l t. reR cn tti:: . it Merer rl~r th", 'ill mld faul rr\..rr Ifr~t r~i READ)Y Y.\AD f:( )T r of ALP COATS, FINE FRILLING FlbNISFLTII C OOi N ONS SliIOlt?5,,I., redu""d !.nceý. (lire hum ora!. fi. Ii.Alli[; T.O ERTilor n·r f ~ 164 Comnp ntree[, opl+,ud she Flo..au: Hollre· FURNITURE, ETC. JTOHIN 13 B R&EN has removed his %;Ir1hIlit`1`, Il f. ST. ·I(?V 7 ., ýtl: !j I 3i*·U:* 1. .. ·rtr.lll, rrnun;,n:iý.e I :1.+ pn~r rngr he !:,w iretfa i'TILL TIHE- COMlE !-A ncw trrival of Res +-- rl·rla I*tct Plrt lWl SPRSl'li MA*Tilt::-.SF , , rhl-h *re ,!. ý· i..; rte.. .-: *.':·o r !·:; I w ,ri~? ·::rt 7L._, mp.my "ýT:ýe ý". Fr..Lmt- li JL::tr"cr. (l lh. C he n rt t r en le diuriv e'.1 F'urn:cre Saar nln:m,1r,; S", rll··ri··, sn e'., u:.; ýloerlrom Po~rl nr·(':,. pý..:!r xrL -cyrrtfý,:y rril.·rrad w cri llPrd exa t,:il ~ ,t~. ý Y.1'' It. Erower $ Co. IIOUSE FULNISIIING STORIE, CAMP STREET, SILVER, I'LATED nd BRITANNIA WARE; IRON, I; .and WOODEN WARE KNIVES ANJ FORKS, JAIRON:ERY, LAMP, tN ýK I.'::. S:OVFS, eta, e:4ly 73 AV Camp Street. `a 13 rfr M IILLER. HARnRIS k WALDO, C-pcil ln~lrr ., N-Orlr m, 1 STI:ItY ANDu h~ CABINET k CIRNISHING GOIJI,'S, PAINTS, On h.., .1 . l·l a InL n sur01lv,:11 n! Gilt Llld lrnnril Lnn:p ant Gi-i 1,Innewnre Pln~v n:,d 1` , nll Flr,,r liel::ýll; ":npl, · tins, `i..rni nvd Su~r tyI1udIIe9: S- Tm. Wha:e, 1-4r·, I~L,na, ' J Ner....ý ..,Al Ch. nllicld Uiir; Spelntj· ' r rlnc Al-"n ""1, 'i"ur~p..t:,ýP Pxtr:a of every d+ Piv.Ilve. Yel;.r'iný, Fcn lpl F mt~. nrfl ll+ :ý. cdtthl T,-k- end B7 d L ;r; Corn 7nss, le, ,."u. n: ~o, Ptc" u and Cocuvona ,&..a n1-y. f or .11 Ce . By tha'nnr r. ..~~~........................... en -t. lp rpEtton, by LEI h- S p l! nl·.. · ···: ·· ..................lon Fk'orn lore yiin: ll)- ... . ..............··. · reo-···· p il gxlpr lcLvo mvl 1)-IN Dobyn9 U Ilarringlatn's DAGUERREOTYPE AND STOCK DEPOT, \o. CAMP STREET. This ecll-known .tr:ll:chm nmn h-mg h"a····i thorn-;hly rcpnired, ~c. cg-d tc "I'.p'-"-'4.ci"' ptn. r cri'" Ir.ci' t~a lon ,c .tar'hic 1 S. IS -t rl,urn;n·rJ tiiilL O t with r, eo(,:,te APPARAhTUS al Ulr low hriu. e 'n,' r, ~= u lrr nnr rxlrr , r, i -',", dC. ['',Uks ("('1'.TmVýTt , l' t , A c r.cis i " u s Ilasil. I:li mr nine", c.I..n~l n ^r t N' 106 ImiRLOTYFPF 11 6O\LS, No 30 Phcil'pici' fd ' ,(.1 1a". acid (CD'iaqnt, c j)n 3n .FL t ., e 4 Cocci ciciuci ctcicI c ic, " iA , ,, ,,; ,'' "< 'ci ci ' (cii,,, 'cii)' c i,,:, I ciii "i ,,ci<c'. ci~ cici ," A ·.?c·icc'''''i` Lou·~ criciltc'cc .i·· tr y. · I i· h V i. dll n.L n yer.? u,. Llr .·;.? e n · nv In r ·! o nn19 'I'hKF. tFA[ "t;nFETII. PtlT" boibuiun:s~n~t, Crockerey, Chilrlte aria Glassware.. rI R. EELL L Cv., 84 Common ctreet, I:;.,i + d; hlr o I ·cd allr to "r ,,rir 111 nnI ,n ,r c%.,: iiic'. cnricc n r1.":;".., nnncn, uiý"tr Ir -410 %R MEXICAr~ N ANuD PLANTATIONT TO c/ Accu-',,,'-"'ccc c hai: id and ci ci' ` ,,1,, ri,,ci','c, ici"'ilI, a 17,' A\ \t` \, FLc ctll cc' A~ f, F.I. (K . *r·l 401~r. - 4 Lai, e.i5:lt , .u~urtd lorthe %" COflc c',cicicic 1: i Tc:.miicicic is S"('cL IV'O RL'. 1: 1 Lun d ptir-ý A1~i~ -Iin ilis +. ua ; 1" . ,xnhlil 1 ,''!'r' - ýýIte:,ýr" Irtl( IL nl r n i t .rrn · ri e - until: u Clilll -ln -5a cici P,,,., c1,t'~c S'ci'r C'i - nicc ui t l rul l :t'(ci( cc S . lu lilitl r, i;rm , ^, lv l...................·...4~ , . 7';o'lock. ............................ re ........1- .dl.' re ;Ka 1: Utr,.ncntt.t......·l":l " ' ,: AI't. r ~:ih the care h~ill luci;,· r,?cii "nil pr cly 811"r u ninsto· ""1 8 'lr v : aIan l r.a, e t ,,o. A d `3y 5}§ ln " r ". ra~ Irom 1.:,lnren e. far Nirtn-:!~riot N ght l nrs fr Piirll s, yn:,s, Jlirstlngs. etr., sap. I P I'll Y'ill r14111rd· lllh 11 lT lE WEST' PASCAGOULIA IIII1 SCIHOOL, V: .SITN l' ,A. IN, I', " n l~n Illlni 1r1, ni: , I,', . 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W I.SO .. .q ilIA.IPAGN ES50 baskets quarts and pints, I ;A PAP'ERt--;0 bundles, Bodies and 1..._ ~,L; a. _ R: ILKENN 9T:' T& CO.93.1Inc els. tr C HIIOT AND BAlR LEAD--A full assortment S Eubll.l .. ..ETT {*,F..ml maminee.* tt T.'lTAR CANDI ES-5;00 boxes best Cincinnati J.ldt Al D. RIFFP 00.C ISad 40 Old L4.1e. DAILY CRESCENT OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF TIIE CONSOLIDATED CITY OF NEW ORLEANS. THE MERCHANIIT'S DAUGHTER AND THE JUDGE. It was the land of poetry and song-the land peopled with the memories of the mighty past ehe land over which the shadows of a long re nown rested more glowingly than a present glory. It was beautiful Italy; the air like a sweet odlor, was to the senses what sft thioughts are to the mind, or tender feelings to the heart, breathing serenity and peace. That sweet air swept balmly over the worn brow of an invalid, giving to the p1lid hue of his countenance the tirst taint dawn of returning health. The eye of the invalid was fixed on the dark characters of a book in cumbrous binding and massive clasps. which would now be considered an invaluable black-letter ; and so absorbed was he in its perusal, that he heard not the ap proaching steps of visitors, until the sound of their greetings roused him from his meditations "The saints have you in their keeping !" said his elder vistor, a man whose brow bore traces of age, though time had dealt leniently with him. "The dear Madonna bless you !" ejaculated his other visitor, a young girl, with the large flashing eye, the pure oval face, and the classic contour of Italy. The invalid bowed his head to each of ther. salutations. " And now," said the merchant, for such was the elder visitor, " that your wounds are heal ing, and your strength returning, may we not inquire of your kin and country ?" A slight flush passed over thepale face of the sick man ; lie was silent for a moment, as if com muning with himself, and then replied : " I am of li:nland, a soldier, albeit, of the lowe.t rank." Sif England!" hastily responded the mer chant. " Of England! of heretic England!" lie crossed himself devoutly, and started back as if afraid of contamination. "I may not deity my home and country," re plied the sldier mildly, but with determnination. " But I shall incur the church's censure ubr harboring thee!" exclaimed the merchant; " thou knowest not what pains and penalties may be mine for doing thee this service!" " Then let me fbrth" replied the soldier; " you have been to me the good Samaritan, and I would not requite you evil: let me go on my way, and may the blessing of Ieaven be upon you in the hour of your own need." " Nay, nay. 1 said not so. Thou hast not yet strength for the travel: and, besides, England was once the brightest jewel in our holy father'> crown, anl site might reconcile herself again: but 1 fear me shie will niot, for your master Henry, is a violent, hot-bloodetld man, and he hath torn away the kingdom froma npostolis care. Know you not that your land is under interdict. and that I, as a true son of the holt mother church, ought not now to be changino words with thee ? " " Even so," replied the soldier; " Iat th're are many that think the king's grace hardly dealt by." " The shepherd knoweth lest Ihow to keep his fold," replied the merchant hastily; " but you are the king's soldier: you take Iis pay and eat his bread, and doubtless ought to holpe the best for him, and so do I. I would that he might repent and humble himself, and then our holy liother wonul again receive him into the fold ; but now I bethink me, thou wert reading; what were thy studies ?' The brow of the soldier clouded; he hesitated a moment ; but then gathering up his resolu tion. replied, " In the din of the battle this book was my breastplate, in the hour of sick ness cly best tnlom,' and he laid the open vol umle before the tt:rrcthant. "tloly saint !" exclaimed the merchant, crossincg himeclf and drawing back, as he be ,hlittLia oaluuan.iichidtis Ithnrl.haadnloeot aginst the laymen " Thiou, then. art among the heretis -who bring td,,,n a ,:urse upon thy land! Nay. thy sojourn here may bring down maledictions utpon me and mineit-upon my house autl htome ! 3utthou shalt go ftrth ! I will not harbor thee I I will deliver thea over to the church, that she may chasten thee! Away fromt him, tmy child! away from him! " The soldier sat sad and solitary, watching the dying light of the sun as he passed majestically on to shine in other lands. One ray rested on the thoughtful brow of the lonely nman as Ihe sat bracing up his courage to meet the perilous fu ture. As he thus mused a soft voice broke upon his reverie. " You are thinking of your own far off home," said the Italian girl. " How I wish that all I love had but one home; it is a grief to have so many hones!" " There is such a home," replied the soldier. Alh !" replied Emilia, " but they say that heretics colle not there! Promise ime that you will not he a heretic any loniger." The soldier smiled, and sighed. " You guess why I ant here to-night," resumed the Italian girl. " I know it by that smile and sigh. You think that I am comlne to tell you to seek your own lan d d home, and therefore you smile, andl you just breathe one little sigh be cause yogu leave tiis )bright sun-and me." " Am 1 then to leave you, perhaps to be de livered over to the power of your implacable church " Emilia crossed herself; "No, no--go o tyour own land and be happy. Iere is money; my father could not deny me when I biegged it freom him twith kisses and tears. Go and be happy, end forget us." " Never!" exclaimed the soldier earnestly "never! And you, my kind and gentle nurse, my gvtd angel--you wiho have brought hope to my pillow, and begniled the sad hours of sick ness in it fbreign land-words are but poor things to thank thee with !" ' 1 shall see you no more!" said the young Italian, " antd wlhat shall make toe happy when you are gone ? \Who will tell me t:iles of flood and field I have been linppy while you were here, and yet vw met very sadly. M.y heart stood still when I first saw you covered with bloodl, on Youre way back to Milan, after the battle. tYou ha d crept under i hedge, as we thought, to die. But I took courage to lty my shnno upon your heart, nned it still beat; so we lbroulght you hiome; and never ihas it orning 1pas.ed but 1 have gathered the sweetest tifower to freshen Vour nillow; anld while you were in sensible in thlat.terrible fever, I used to steel into your chamber anl kneel at your betl-fbot, and plray for the Madonna's cnre. And when you revioved, you smiled at my flower, and wheno you hlad voice to speak, you thanked me." Emilin's voice woas lost in sobs; and what wonder if one fromn man's sterner nature ruin gled with them ? The morrow came. The Italian girl gatheredl a last ifower, and gave it in tearful silence to the soolier, lie kissed the fragrant gift, and then, with a momentary boldness, the fair hand that gave it, andl departed. The young girl watched his footsteps till they were lost to sighlt, listetned to them till they were lost to sound, and then abandoned herself' to weeping. " Thou art sad. dear daughter," said a vene rable father to his child, as they traversed that once countrilied expanse through the city of London to Westminster-" thoo art sad, dealr daugh ter." " Nay, my father," replied the maiden, " 1 would not be so ; but it is hard always to wear a cheerful countenance when 'l The heart is sad, thou wouldst say-" " Nay, 1 meant it not." " I have scarcely seen thee smile since we en tered this England-- may not say this heretic England." " Ilush! dear father, hush ! the winds may whisper it; see you not that we are surrounded by a multitude ?" ' They are runn:ring madly to some revelry." ' Let us leave their path, then," said the girl: " it suits not our fallen fortune, or our dishonorable faith, to seem to mingle in this stream of fltly. Doubtless the king hath some new paRgeatry.'" S\ell, ant if it be so," replied the fatheor, " haply the gewgaw and the show might bring back the truant staile to thy lip, and the lost lustre to thine eye. Thou art too young to be Sthuos moodily sad. See how anxious, how eager, how happy seem this tmultitude ! not one care. worn brow ! thou mayst catch tlheir cheerfiu. Sness. We will go with the stream." The girl offered no further resistance. The3 were strangers in tf. i..d, poor, almost penni less. They had come frtm c thir own country to reclaim a debt which one o4 ths. ,ebles of the court had incurred in more prope'osai.day! when the merchant was rich in silver anm gold.; and mercandise. The vast throng poured on, swelling until it became a mighty tide; the bells pealed out, the cannon bellowed, human voices augmented the din. The Thames was lined on either bank, ev ery building on its margin crowded, and its sur face peopled. Every sort of aquatic vessels cov eroy its bosom, so that the flowing river seemed rather some broad road teeming with life. Gal ley after galley, glittering with the gold and purple, came on laden with the wealth, and the pride, and the beauty of the land, and present ly the acclamation of a thousand voicesrent the skies. "The king! the king! long live the king ! " He came--Henry the Eighth came, in all that regal dignity, and georgeous splendor in which he so touch delighted. And then began the pageant, erontrived to throw odium on Rome, and to degrade the pre tensions of the Pope. Two galleys, one bearing the arms of England, the other marked by the papal insignia, advanced towards each other, and the fictitious contest commenced. Borne on by the crowd, our merchant and his daughter had been forced into a conspicuous sit nation. The peculiar dress, the braided hair, the beauty and foreign aspect of the girl had marked her out to the rude gallantry of the crowd ; so that, to a limited sphere, the father and daughter were themselves objects of inter est and curiosity. The two vemmieined.te.latUs femimie contest ws begun. Of course, the English cejr trt umphed over the papal. Up to this point, the merchant bore his pangs in silence: bunt when the Englislh galley had assumed the victory, then came the trial of patience. Eltigies of the cardinals were hrlcad into the stream amidst the shouts and derisions of the mob. At each plunge, -roan" issued from his tortured breast. It wrs in vain that Emilia clung to his arm and ismplored him, by every fear, to restrain himselt: His religious zeal overcome his pru dence ; anl when, at ls't, thie figure of the Pope, dressesd in his pontificial robes, was hurled into the tide, the loud exclamation of agony and hor ror burst from his lips. " Oh mon-trous impie ty of an accursed and sacrilegious king !" sound ed loudly above the din of the mob. It was enough; the unhappy merchant was immediately consigned over to the seoular arm. Oh! sad were those prison hours! the girl told her beads-the father prayed to all the .aints-and then came the vain consolations by which one endeavored to cheat the other. They thought of their own sunny land, its balmy air. November came with all its gloom-the month that should have been the grave of the year, coming as it does with shroud and cere-cloth, foggy, dark and dreary; the father's brow numbered more wrinkles, the once black hair was more nearly bleached, the features more attenuated. And the daughter-ah ! youth is the trans parent lamp of hope-but in her the light was dim. In fear and trembling the unhappy foreign ers waited the day of doom. The merchant's offence was one likely to meet with mercy. IIenry was jealous of his title of head of the church. He hlad drawn up a code of articles of belief, which his subjects were desired to sub scribe to, and he hadl instituted a court,of which he had made Lord Cromwell Vicar-General, for the express trial of those orthodoxy in the kina's creed which was called in question. Neither could the unhappy merchant hope to find tt,'or with the judge, for it was known that Cromwell was strongly attached to the growing reformation: and from thle acts of severity with which lie had lately visited some of the adher ents of the Romilsh creed, in his new character of Vicar-tieneral, it was scarcely probable that he would show mercy to one attached, by lineage and love, to Papal Rome. Strangers as they werc, poor, unknowing and unknown, what had they nao to fear, and what-Trn -left .b for bhoe ? The morniln of the trial coame. The fogs of that liosmal ntnth spread like a dark veil over Sour earth. There was no beatuty in the land rscape, no light in the heavens. and no hope in Sthe heart. The judges took their places: a crowd of wretched delinquents came to receive their dout. We suppose it to be a refinement of mo dern days, that men are not punished for their y crimes, but only to deter others from comnmitting them. This court of Henry's seemed to think .itlherwise; there was the array of iumsan pas sions in the judges as well as in the judged. On I the one hand, recreant fear abjured his creed: on another, heroism braved all contingencies, courting the pile and the stake, with even pas I sionate desire: and the pile and the stake were to given with stern and unrelenting cruelty. At length there stood at the bar an aged man r. n1 a youthful ,irl; the long white hair of the t one fell loosely oiver the shoulders, and left un 'a shaded a face wrinkled as much by care as by age; the dark locks of the other were braided over a countenance clouded by sorrow and wet wl with tears. The mockery of trial went on. It was easy to prove what even the criminal (did not attempt to gainsay. The aged merchant avowed his fideli ty to the Pope as a true soe of the church--de ilietl the supremacy of Henry over any part of tile fist, and thus sealed his own doom. There was an awful stillness throuoih the court -stillness, the precursor of doom-broken only by the sobs of tie weeping girl, as she cling to her father's arm. Ilowbeit, the expected sen tence was interrupted; there came a sudden rush -fresh attendants thronged the court. IRoom ftr Lord Cromwell! Room for Lord Cromwell !" and tile Vicar-(leneral camie in his pomp and state, with all the insigniag of office, to assume Iis pre-eminence at tiat tribunal. Notes of the proceedings werelaid befreo Lord Cromwell. lie was tol of the intenled sentence, and he made a gesture tf approbation. A gleam of holpe hadl dawned upon the mind of the Italian girl, as Lord Cromwell entered. She watched his coun tenance while he readt; it was stern, indicative of calm determsination: but there were lines in it that spoke more of mistaken dluty than innate cruelty. Yet, when the vicar-general gave his tiken of assent, the steel entorel Emlitissa soul, and a sob. the veriest nocent ef despair, ranc thrus.h tlhat court. and where it met the human heart, pierced thsrough all the cruelty andi op pression that armled it, and struck upon the nat ural feelings that divided men trom monsters. The sound struck upon Lord Cromwell's ear ; his eye sought the place whence it prcetdeed; it recsted on Emilia and her thter. .A strange emotion passed over the face of the stern judge -a perfect stillness ft.llowed. Lord Cromwell broke the silence. HIe glanced over the notes that had been handed to him, speaking apparently to hismself--" From Italy, a merchant-'Milan-ruined by the wars--ay ithose Milan wars were owing to Cilement's ambi tion, and Charles' knavery-the loss of sulstance --to England to reclaim an old indebtment." L1 ord Cromwelils eye rested once more upon the 1 merchant and his daughter. " Ye are of Italy --friom Milan ; is that your birthplace ? " "We are Tuseaus," replied the merchant, "of Lucca ; and oil ! noble Lord, and if there it mercy in this land, show it now to this unhappy Sirl." merlcy t n unl b anus, 0ucW IL uu0 L0 0u00 u00I0000'O0 girl." ' To both, or to neither !" exclaimed the girl, " we will live or die together." The Viear-Oieneral made answer to neither. li1 rose abruptly; tat a sign from him, the pro per officer declared the court adjourned-the suoffrers were carried back to their cells ; some went whither they would-others, whither they wouuld not; but all dispersed. A faint and solitary light glanced from a chink of the prison walls-it came from the narrow cell of tlo Itaolianu merchant and his daughter. The girl slept-ay, slept. Sleep does not al ways leave the wretched, to light on lids unsul lied with a tear. Reader, hast thou known in tense misery, and canst thou not remember how thou hast felt and wept, and agonized, until the very excitement of thy misery wore out the body's power of endurance, and sleep, like a torpor, a stupor, a t lethargy, bound thee in its chains? Into such a sleep had Emilia fallen: she was lying on the prison floor, her face pale as if ready for the grave, the large tears yet restine on her cheeks, and over her sat the mer chant leaning, asking himself whether, treasure that shle was, and had ever been to him, he could wish that sleep to be the sleep of death. The clanking of a key caught the merchant's ear; a gentle step entered their prison. The father's first thought was for his child. He made a motien to ejoin .sleue ; It was okeyi; his visitor advasnded with a rejlt tread t e merchant looked upon him witth'ader. hýas ly-no-and yet, could it betht his jug Lord Cromwell, the Viesr-Ceneral5-stoodh him? and stood, not with threat fnbis eye, not with denunciations on lhiilS.L-ht tank his stand on the other side of poor E t, gazing on her. with an eye in whibch tenderm and oompass.on were coaspieUomto. Anetment bound up the facultiep of. the merchant. *e seemed to himself as ene that dreamat. .l. "' Awake, ogente girl, awake," .ahI Loru Cromwell, ae e stoced over milia. "Let me hear thy voice aite more as it-sounded in mise ear in other days." Jcan te ac ents fell too light to break the spell of hat heavy el.doliera.d the merheat, wilo5s fears, leelisgs and cosifssiiw fowsd a perfect !saae, stooping over his ehlls' awoke her I t tie cOf .," EilI, · I iai! awake, and behofb~er e!" "Nay, nay, not the roghly," said Ler Cromwell, but the sound sd already recalled Emilia to a sense of wrete C ae. she half raised herself from her recum h 'bi rs ibo" a kneeling one, shadowing her das ielswith her hand, her streaming hair fslull wi· r d disorder over her shoulders, and thus restingt the feet of her judge. " Look on me, Emilia . said Lord Crrmlt"ele. And encouraged by thegentle accents, she raiseu her tear-swollen eyes to his face. As she did so, the Vipar-General lifted from his brow .is plumed cap, and revealed the perfect outline O· his features. And Emili. gazed. sa if spehl bound, until gradually shade of doot, of won der, of recognition, came tring1 eg 'over her countenance, and finally, in a voice ofpteron ate amazement, she exelaimed : "Iti the sme!ne i It is our sick soldier guest!" " Even so," seid Lord Cromwell; "even so, my dear and gentle nurse. He who was then the poor dependant on your bounty, raesing from your charity his daily breadu as . a , bhath this day presided over the lass ues ltusnd death, as your judge; hut fear not Em.lin; the sight of thee, gentle girl, someslike the memory of youth and kindly thoughts aeroas the sterner mood thathath lately d gkened ever me They .whose voice may influence the destiny of a i nation, gradually lose the memory of gentler thoughts. It my be Providence bath sent thee Sto melt me back again into a softer nature. t Many a heart shall be gladdened, that blt for Smy sight of thee, had been sad unto death. 'I hethirk me, gentle girl of flowers, laden with a dew and rich in fragrance, which thoudidst lay Supon my pillow, while this head throbbed fwith agony of pain upon it, fondly thinking that their sweetness would be a balm; and .hoou :o wert used to steal into my chamber andlisten to tales of this,.the land of home!" Thou arthere; and how bast thou bees welcomed ? to prison, I- and well nigh to death. But the poor soldier hath is home; come thou and thy father and os share it." 1. An honr-who dare prophesy its events; At rl the beginning of th't hour, the merchant and o [ his daughter had been the sorrowful inmates of y a prison; at its close they were the treasured y guests of a palace. Congressional We AwHl.eem. June I8M 182m 1us.-Prayer baving bfeeniaid by the Bev. Dr. But ler. and thr journals bern read. Mr. Stuart. o Itiehigan. moved that the Heae take np tihe bodvi one the Speaker'e table. for, the otorpere a pa3eioe two or three territorial bite, to ebleb there could ee ae objeotitar. Tbiebobing objected to. M~r. Stanton. of Tennessee, moved that when the Hord adjoaurn.itadjourntsotomeeetono M dad y ex tand oellee havingber ee ppoittetd, the motione wa0 qgred tc -eal iY; : nays. 19. Something f r Every nody. A Vienna journal announces that Fanny Easer has jous married at Hlambrg a Dr. Hahn. Gen. Jose Conchahas arrived at Madrid. He tas been visited by all the men of rank in that city. Why is our Banker's account like "linked sweetnes :' Because it's long drawn ot." Meanness of birth is no obstacle to true merit, in which alone .aolld glory and real nobiity consist. Thirty pounds sterling were recently paid in t"ngIand tor a sheep, drotined to be eent to Australia. To improve a man is to liberalize and enlarge him in thought. feeling and puopose. Horace Walpole says : "In my youth I th'oght of writing a satire on mankind. but in my age I hiuk I should write an apology for them." The proprietors of the St. Louis and Keoknk Parcket Line have ctprseed their determination to re. r ev.- t bhos from all their bosts about the Sret o.tame. \o.ie men are instructed by reason; men of let- undlrrstaling by experience; the mot ignonrat by neoaesity : and brutes by nature. Zealous men are ever displaying to you the str ogib of their liief. bwhile judicious men are showing you the grounds of it. A gentleman in NewYork State has acted upon tbr odd fancy of being married in ansOdd Fellows' lodge. dreessd in the regalia of the order. A few days ago a little girl, aged only seven years, wa soec r.mking a cigar in the prineiJal street of Cincinnati. A fishing party recently captured three harkse off Caotle Pinckney. Charlecton, one of which measured nine feet sioxioches in length. A young naval officer, when asked what pe riod hit hit tot battle was most appalling, replted. "The ftw ht:shed moments whetn they sprikled the decks with oaud. to drink the hunman blood as yet unshed.?' I should not think the man sound at heart aeain,t whom the world hoe not sothing to say; for sumo one always speaks ill against a goad patriot. a loer of freedom aed an honorable man. A foreign correspondent says, pithlily, "To dtserito the cities of Itay in sbort phrases. I would say tiht Vcjice is a spot to dream in. Rome to study in, Naples to visit. and Florence to live in.' A new journal, with peculiar recommenda tios,, i abohut to be established in Circleville, Ohio. The editor in his prospectusay: ' Ourteermsa.etwo dollarsu a year. Gentlemen who pay in advaneowill receive a Sfirest rate obituary notice in case of death." We are happy to announce that we have dis coaered the derivation of "a horn.' as applied to "some thing to drink." Itisfromthe Latin.whiech ignifes that (un.als yor are used to it.) if Syou take a het, it is pretty apt to nro u A philosopher was once questioned how he could prove the existect of God . "Why." answered hes, • by opeinlg my eyes--tod is seen every where-in the rowth of ithe grase, and ill the movement of the starse, in ite wasrbling of the aInrk.and in the thuntdrsof heaven." lHon. Pierre Soult, the distinguished Senator reom Inouiian. is to deliver a Fourth of July oration In PlladelphLi, i eoimplipnee with the requnest of a clergy .sn of that cly. The proceeds are to be applied to a charitable institution. If Virginia is the mother of Presidents, New Rtamps°ir is the mother of Presidential oandidates. No less than five of the proniuent candidatesr for that office are nat0s55 of NewntIampnhire-C55.o. Webster, Dickinson, IFierce and Douglas. Piron, the Firench author, was quesutioned by Stnueghty polle mgisteute concuerng his profession. "" 1u am,, poet.Flr.- il.1iro' . - Oh. a poet," said the t.,agitratc ; "I a'sh a brother who is a poet." " Then Sarc. even, "" said Piron. ' for I have a brother who is a Since the opening of the Hudson River Rail r::oad. to millions of palsengers have been conveyed in he cars. and but on, person hne list his life-who was imsrtpicrly on the plttform, and .cning beyond the ear, hlr. icrr ing :t draw-bridgee. tA relilds we always wish to travel on. A Patent Steam Ice Cream Company hao lottIv been organized. A it is averred that the vapor of bi.ilig wat-er will be entirely superseded by, Erricon's now calorie engine, we may expecrt to hear before long of " patent inotait icee cream,.' which will probably psrvv a vsery palatable pauladox. A goodt story is related of .x-Governor Briggs, of ui..lthusetot. that many ynears ago, when eapostula ;o; with a yung man about drinking. and urging hint S:.., nln the piractice. the young man agreed to leave :I e if .hs oeeeruor sosld leave off wearing a shirt collar. Thle later ngrc.d to tihe,novel requioition, andin eon trmuity to theh bergain. has never worn a collar sinace. Onle of those devotees to mammon oncereceived a nIs;sn from an lhumble follower. who did not seem to pay im toIL, psecseor of the purser. suflticenr homege. and ,.id': '-Do you know. str. that l.m worth a hundred th,,unond pon "d VT." Y "lld tle irritated. butnot broktu-spiritd r espondeut. 1 i 1 : and h know that .s a:',,,, o sks rt',." There is no need of stealing umbrellais-they an be got without--in the tfllowing way : Take your ,tand in a doorlwy on a rainy morning. When you see a rn comlin .be yt with a nice Wilk article, step up audany to h m.. "c. I beg your pardltn. you have my umbrella.'" I nime' cse out of ten he wll ionstantly surrender it. liow does h, kunow tha it twa nut you he itole it fme. It may be n faneifinl notion, but I hink the ltinary alutaotiocns oi a people indicat4g'lit i- melatpi tl ir phuiiuopiy ut" living. The Fren e getelng is ,iii--°" IHr do, you carry yourself !"'ae. query sUggestitv ut' gotm ; that of the ItallanQ-" leow do you Fetand " --which breathes of an exCstehneo in the intediate--so all'lctcristint of the Soult] while our favorite phrase is -"ltow do yot get dlang t"-at once celling up an x tual aond distant gnal--snccess. A Philadelpbit merchant sent a cargo of neood to Coustantinople After the esernego Far the ,id .I and boxes n'tdly landed. hi inquired where they e du:d be .torid. "Leve them here, it won't rain to. ight,." was the reply. "Buti I dare not lecave them thus ixpcecd ; some of the goode may he stolen," nid the sperriuroe. The aNtomltan mercehant hburst into itugh no he replied. "Don't he altemed, there t not a Christian wi'h fif tyn miis of here ! " There is abont to be commenced in the neigh i lrhood ol'Direh:.u. rru-^nl ai, npeanion bridge over to, tintulan. whirh will be unquelutionnbly the lirgest that lhas ver e been coemnructed in lurnepe This bridge. cver whieh will pans the rilwhiy of ti.t Sute. wilt be 31'0o to, Sin lengthIb. y 03 in breadth. and nl beenpptetet by sit dilare. at a distance of vu ltiot apat, fhin of LteCh w he xced in the bed of Ibhe rivr. The eonatruettrn a1l Of this eorlninl bridge will not 7.7 .li,t. aentdbe w to bo nelxeut a on th. to bnan w ill h6eIat i 11,404' 'it all 1th000,00tf.