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( I . . . -rx.,,,..,fbeS;r..d,ser.ce-tu. nOYEY & SMITH'S CASU jp " 1 Joctical Selections. ittisccllcmcous riulcs. How Does the Water come down at Lodore ? BT ROBERT SOITHET. How does the water Come down at Lodore ? My little boy asked me Thus, once on a time, And, moreover, he tasted me To tell him in rhyme. Anon, at the word, Then came first one daughter And then came another, To second and third The request of their brother ; And to hear how the water Comes down at Lodore, With its rush and its roar, As many a time They had seen it before, So I told them in rhyme. For of rhymes I had store, And 'twas my vocation For their recreation That so I should sing ; Because I was Laureate To them and the King. From its sources which well From the Tarn on the Fell, From its fountains In the mountains, Its rills and its gills, Through moss and thro' brake, It runs and it creeps For awhile till it sleeps In its own little Lake. And thence, at departing, Awakening and starting, It runs through the reeds, And away it proceed, Through, meadow and glade, In sun and in shade, And through the wood shelter, And crags in its flurry, Helter-skelter, Hurry -skurry ; Here it conies sparkling, And there it lies darkling, Xow smoking and frothing Irs tumult and wrath in, Till in the swift race On which it is bent, It reaches the place Of its steep descent. The Cataract strong Then plunges along, Striking and raging, As if a war waging Its caverns and rocks among ; Rising and leaping, Sinking and creeping, Swelling and sweeping, Showering and springing, Flying and flinging, Writhing and ringing, Eddying and whisking, Spouting and frisking, Turning and twisting, Around and around With endless rebound ; Smiting and fighting, A sight to delight in, Confounding, astounding, Dizzying and deafening the ear with its sound. Collecting, projecting, Receding and speeding, And shocking and rocking, And darting and parting, And threading and spreading, And whizzing and hissing, And dripping and skipping And hitting and spitting, And shining and twining, And rattling and battling, And shaking and quaking, And pouring and roaring, And waving and raving, And tossing and crossing, And (lowing and going, And running and stunning, And foaming and roaming, And dinning and spinning, And dropping and hopping, And working and jerking, And guggling and struggling, And heaving and cleaving, And moaning and groaning, And glittering and frittering, And gathering and feathering, And whitening and brightening, And quivering and shivering, And hurrying and skurrying, And thundering and flounderins. Dividing and gliding and sliding, And falling and sprawling and brawlin" And driving and riving and striving, And sprinkling and bounding and round ing. And bubbling and troubling'and doubling And grumbling and rumbling and tum bling, And clattering and battering and shattering. Retreating and beating and meeting and sheeting, Delaying and staying and playing and spraying, Advancing and prancing and glancing and dancing. Recoiling, turmoiling and toiling and boil ing. And gleaming and streaming and steam ing and beaming, And rushing and flushing and blushing and gushing, And curling and purling and whirling and twirling, And thumping and plumping and bump ing and jumping, And dashing and flashing and splashin" and clashing, And so never ending, but always descend- Sounds and motions for ever and ever are blending, All at once and all o'er with a mighty up roar, And this the way the water comes down at Lodore! CROMWELL. The following is from a review of Carlyle's Cromwell, and Guizot's Eng lish Republic and CromwelL From the London Time'. Few, even of Cromwell's personal en emies, would have denied that he was the first of English soldiers, and the first of English statesmen.' JNo one couiu doubt, that by his arms, his policy, and his ardent patriotism, England has been raised to the summit of glory and great ness. Yet he wa3 scarcely laid in his tomb, when his people suffered the dregs of humanity to profane his ashes ; and for almost two centuries it has suffered the dregs of literature to defile his name. By the hearth, and in the prison of the Furitan, reverence was still paid to his memory, beneath the protection of whose mighty arm, the poor and humble had worshipped God in peace. Milton s son net still spoke in strange and scandolous accents of " Our chief of men, who through a cloud Sot of war only, but detractions rnde, Guided bv faith and matchless fortitude. To peace and truth thy glorious way has plowed, And on the neck of crowned fortune proud Hast reared God's trophies and his work pur sued." But generally hatred, slander? and igno rance, worked their will with Cromwell's fame. To the mass of his countrymen, the worst act in his splended life was his history, as the coarsest feature in his he roic countenance, was his portraite. So far have abhorence of fanaticism, hatred of mititary sway, and the memory of one dark deed, together with the merited ab horence of Tory, and the cowardly phil osophy of Whig writers, availed to make the English nation unjust to the memory of the greatest man. The fate of the Protector's reputation, seemed sealed by the judgment of Hume, and afterwards of Mr. Haliam. Hume was, above all things, a gentleman an atheist ; and Cromwell, in his day, was the enemy of both. As a historian he was averse to the trouble of reference, and by no means averse to telling false hoods, provided they were told in the grand style. It may be safely said that in the firsttwo pages of his chapter on Crom well every sentence contains an untruth. This he did with easy good nature, re posing on his sofa, and without the slight est shock to that moral philosophy, which was an elegant handmaid to the pleas ures of a gentleman. Mr. Hallam's cen sure is comparably more grave. But Mr. Haliam adores the letter of the Con stitution, and, he has no sympathy for religious enthusiasm, or irregular great ness. He hates Luther as well as Crom welL He is even disposed to be com paratively kind to Napoleon, because Napoleon was always talking of his star, while Cromwell was always talking of his God. Mr. Carlyle first effectually stemmed the tide of nonsense and injustice : and England owes him gratitude for so doing, though he has not failed to give us some splended injustice of his own. He writes history, as everybodoy knows, on the theory that great men are divinities, and that to worship them is the one hope of salvation for mankind. If a character in history is very strong and very success ful, he is perfect in wisdom and in good ness ; and whoever doubts either, is to be bludgeoned with hard names. The laws of morality were not made for heroes, nor the laws of candor and justice, for their biographers. This theory is simply false. Great men of all kinds, from the auther of Hamlet to the victor of Dunbar, are, indeed, one of the highest gifts of Heaven ; they ought to be judged by the spirit rather than by the letter of the law, ana to over-pnze them, is a generous er ror. But they are all of them palpably men men with only one gift, and always v. un many weaknesses and limited vision Mr. Carlyle, who, as a hero worshipper, treats his heroes as incarnations of eter nal truth, is obliged as a skeptic to treat them all successfully, as the trainsent emanations of their time. After the hero worship of Mr. Carlyle comes the history of M. Guizot, who reaps the fruit of Mr. Carlyle's noble la bor, and enjoyes the light of his cenius without special hallucinations, M. Guizot has given us an admirable narrative, far more candid than from an English pen moral judgment is rather Machia yellian. He tolks of the designs of Prov luuugu ne was as intimate with its councils, as with those of Louis Phil inne: but ha cnmntim n . . . , uuM ot numan motives as though he had never known an honest man. He sees cajolery, where a common mina sees nothing but good sense, uromweU desires that the pffi of his army may be put on the Dunbar medal, instead of his own : Whereupon we nrp fnlil rfiaf r,r- - . uu cal man ever ear ned so far the hypocrisy of modesty, or so easily sacriiiced Lis vanity to his am bition. That Cromwell had any vanity sacrmce mat he was not actuated by by real magnanimity and a real desire to do justice to his soldiers, M. Guizot does not attempt to show. Does the French- otatesman think J.; :,.. " - VI bllll so great an object that noting but hope of a kr-e bit can induce a great man to -forego ltr How many effigie9 of himself did Crom well cause to be made when he was Pro tector, and might safely have as much tinsel as he pleased ? The man who can read Cromwell's personal history and private letters who can mark his conduct in the day of peril and the hour of death and still believe him to Lave been nothing but an ambi tious hypocrite, must have lost all faith in human nature. Cromwell lett a nap- dv home at the age of 43, unconscious of any powers in himself but those of a -rood farmer, to fight for liberty ana gos pel faith he, and his boy Oliver, whose loss " went to his heart like a dagger," and whose memory fired his charge, and saddened his victory at Marston-Moor. His life was exposed, not only in every battle, but in every skirmish, for what he believed to be the cause of God ; and his religion was the great source of his adamantine courage and his unwearying decision. The hope which it kindled, shone in him " like a pillar of fire," when hope was extinct in all other men. It raised his heroism, sometimes, to Hebrew grandeur. What is the sun of Austerlitz. to the morning of Dunbar ? How could a hypocrite have formed the Iron sides ? It was said of those men, they feared God, and that they feared nothing besides ; and the first part of the saving was as true as the last. They were not mere ranters and psalm singers. They showed their practical religion by religiously abstaining from all military license, even in conquered cities. When they were disbanded, from the best of soldiers, they became again the best of citizens, and peacefully did their duty to God and their State; while Jesuits, and strumpets, and infidel persecutors, trampled on the Protector's ashes, and dishonared the protector's throne. For the general cause of Protestant ism he did more than any other man ex cept Luther not by publishing propa gandist manifestoes, or threatening to subvert foreign Governments, or holding out promises of universial brotherhood, to be followed by universal perfidy and pillage ; but by a course of policy at once energetic and discreet, which made all the world feel that the protection of pro testantism was the first object of the greatest of nations. He had succeeded in founding a dynasty to carry out his traditions, the Edict of Nante3 never could have been revoked, the hopes of freedom in Italy never could have been stifled, and Europe might have been Protestant at this hour. What has damned Cromwell's memory is, not that he betrayed his cause, but that he served his cause to well. Perhaps, if he had crushed the liberty for which his soldiers died, had married a Spanish Princess, and restored the Anglican heirarchy, as a tool of his political domination, Church men and Tories would not have been found censorious or unkind. In war Cromwell was the most merci ful of soldiers ; for in his campaigns he always sought decisive battles, and his battles were always soon ended by a de cisive charge. When he commanded. the carnage was small, the results im mense, and few brave men died by mis ery, pestilence or famine. His five great and decisive victories of Marston, Nase- by, Preston, Dunbar, and Worcester, did not together cost near so many lives as the hideous and fruitless butchery of borodino. He treated war, not as a sci ence in which he was to show his skill, but as an appeal to human fortitude, which, for the sake of humanity, was to be tried without delay. War, under him, was far less savage than under other cammanders of that time. His men al ways spared the country, and almost al ways gave quarter, even to those who gave no quarter to them. The storm of Dredagh was the single noted exception to his and their humanity. "That bitterness" he justified on the ground that it had sav ed, as undoubtedly it did save, much ef fusion of blood in what would otherwise have been a long and desolating war. We must remember, too, that frightful atrocities had recently been committed by Roman Catholics upon Protestants, both in Ireland and elsewhere." The blood of Dredagh was a drop in the ocean of O'Xeile's massacre or the sack of Madeburg. That any of the peaceful inhabitants of Drogheda were put to the sword is a confuted calumny, which M. Guizot cught not to have repeated. Cromwell's political genius is a hack neyed theme of literary praise, to which M. Guizot adds the attestation of a states man. His reign is indeed the marvel of history. In every department, from our Navy and our commerce down to our poor Postal communications, we still feel his benificent energy, and pay homage to his glorious shade. It was not his fault that much was left to be done by me parnmentary Keformers of the pres ent day. He established our diplomacy on me sounaest basis ; his own bearin A i toioreign nations has been aped, but scarcely equalled. He dealt with the most difficult characters, from Mazarin to the Anabaptists, with equal and almost in variable success. And we must say, in epite of prejudice, that his administra tion was as upright a it wa able. He . . , .t nnahtica- sreaiesi joy. . " - , Wi ,, i. i. :, , r r ' ests. He fixed a us" v , ' w Wshand : but only that T0U and all ouier inumu u.j piace in OaLTV :iIZ:i permitted. Accord- Goods can be bought at a lair value. tion for the suffrage, though his own pop ularity was chiefly among the ower sbe may marry DIlY GOODS, ders. HeputdownLveUe mo 10 Linen . mfUThStuoUn -ceL the marriage bond as pletely . ' IflV - a moments hesitation, uo fe .f faer Am. & chn , risk to his own person government pays her expenses and she gjPlS 1 Sflk, 87 1-2 to 1,20 Gents Kid Glove,, I thereby , P-baP-d o assumes the wM dress, though not Mprouniins bages, 15 Ladies French Kid, irom a reign ui - , . , , the fetters ' Lyonese (Jlotns, uv u ""w nose, perils and anxieties with which he was exam;nat;on past, the exiles are Poplin, Paris Beragea, Alpaccas, Dress Trimming,, Ther, !,. H nower of concentration and The ex animation p , fccLafllow. . Cashmere &Summer S4 . , r led to a tmra courr, wueic . v- ThU Covers. l&U Onawls, nnvFY : ... .x. w;- r. that, ot Deins logeiuei m b t - steadily promoted men u i ig LaIIcd with the .We have :ust receiveed from Boston the W.. ' vice, without regard to his persona , peti. offerC(1 in tW Mark u w g- you & a , A V self command must have ueeu , Th;s ;8 a We must " JEmbossea iaoie , haveseldombeengivenman. L, t mot cruel and brutal affair. The fetters Ready MdO OlOtHlng, Hatatfc.; -n,- 4t,i,;e nnblc life began at most cruciauu iuwix . , . . 7 no Ttiir xru it-. -vh iiuu luimsjiuw-r- . . pmwkt of a eout)le of heavy iron rings, ijooa m. r iw .. , t.:w mniiiRis vonnor. wuolD " . . . t...: rv A 00 in fi.Ort an age wnen nuu. o o-- - - for each nnIted by a chain not f " o'ftn Tnn r T "TT I- , and that he reigned ior nvc ju - , - summer voau,, - n-, mutinous army and a Ihous peop e, x rani,, nstantiy seeKing uis iuc, - .,. -tun ' ' " - . " . . .ailing for terror in to T"" ZT " A beaUfu Citi TE A NEW 2,25 to 4,25 Summer Hats, 1,25 to 4,U0 Uoyg Caps, m:T, instantly seeKinir ins me, i - . i - mm moaojiuo v j . i .1. ,., ,nf 'I'hia w mnneci- . - ... . . -t n n t -r -,i i ,1 , w,;iinc for terror in his enSui, an. A beautiful vanety 01 new isonneus, r rencn juace, ana b raw (W with his mother wailing ftr tem - means rf (Qm four tQ fiye rf Ffench and American Flowm raw. bouse, with armaments and enem es at j mother chain fastened ' - , t-,.,, around the waist The hoops on the an- 2 J5 tQ 3 00 Ladieg GaUerSj cna5p kle are not fastened by a padlock, so as Meng p, Calf, 3,00 to 3.62 " Walking Shoes, : ut smoki to be removed at night, but are riveted Calf & Enameled Congress, 2,00 to 1,25 Misses Gaiters and Fancy eoraplacei by the executioner, who drives an iron Kip and Goat Brogans, 1,37 to 1,50 Shoes, Children and Infants Qrot e, e , , , t. t ,(m,j Our Stock of Boots and Shoe3 is very large and of the best qmlb . bolt through the rings, and by strong and 0.'7l, J ''J. t manner, i . ii- ik . can t be beat. , , careless hammering, (for often misses the GrOOOrieS, Oils CiXXCl. Idln-u All was mark and strikes the flesh,) flattens the - from a Bbl. of Sugar to a Tallow Candle, Good fresh V ir bolt at both ends in such a way that re- Box Raising 14 cts. Linseed Oil, Jappan, White Lead, F.YJ ;m,Lskd 1 moval is impossible except by means of Red, Chrome Yellow, and Green. interrupt the file ; and with these chains, the poor HARDWARE, GLASS AMD CROCKERY AVARE, eOITe'il, weary, foot sore wretches are to walk ev- variety of all kinds. Best White and Colored Tea Sets, " c" ery step of a journey which takes them and everything to match equally low. Glass, Nails, Salt, Fish and YVm ' w07 7 only a few days short of six months. Tools of all kinds. the" mart Meanwhile a sergeant stands by them, We have given you above the prices of only a few of our Goodslaughter who must answer for their security with his own life, as he takes charge of them his. Council Board. Such well might De the greatest man that the English race could produce in its most heroic, though its saddest hour. Cromwell's grandest visions, says M. Guizot, were bounded by his practical good sense. No higher praise can be wiven a statesman. But his visions were limited also by his patriotism. He was not the man to undertake chimerical schemes of aggrandizement, and to squan der oceans of blood and treasure, to grat ify his own selfish and miserable pride. Through his ambition no English citizen put on mourning. After Worcester he was expected to put himself at the head of some great military enterprise, by a duri their p;grimage)and he seegtliem nation which expected Armageddon and sppnrp, , f . , to(rpher:n t""f . o room prevents any more. Please give us an early caiL Albany, April 1st, loo b. P. S. Be sure and bring a purse full of Money. H0VEYi?tt7OU ocr. had not forgotten Cressy. But after Worcester he sheathed his sword forever; he sought the empire of England on the sea, and gave the command an the glory into other and unfriendly hands. First since the great Edward he saw that our strength must rest, not on conquest abroad, but on the consolidation and un ion of the three kingdoms. We have ratified his West Indian expedition by retaining what he acquired, and even the footing on the Continent which he sought at Dunkirk we may be almost said to have kept a Gibralter. His quiet do mestic court, and his solemn but modest state, were the true image of that pol icy of good sense, superior to vanity, which has been the mark of all our great est statesmen, and most of all of him. And therefore he died triumphant. His people were subdued under him. His design for restoring the constitutional monarchy was still advancing against GREAT CURE FOR DYSPEPSIA! DR. J. S. HOUGHTON'S PEPSIN ! ! fours by the wrists. This ceremony over, the gates are thrown open and -the world ceases to ex ist for them. It is surprising to witness the calm bearing, the sad but resigned npHE TRUE DIGESTIVE FLUID, OR, GAS- 11- e u i 1. 1 X TR1C JUICE, prepared from RENNET, or looks of that melancholy assemblage. the fourth STOsi ach OF THE OX, after direc- Hope is now dead ; and in its place a dim, W8?? LA?,Ift,ti?eS W?11 1 ' . . Chemist, by J. S. HOUGH ION, M. D., Philadel- vague glimmering appears in the distance phia, Pa. p vi- f 1 i 11- t -.1 This is Nature's own Remedy for an unhealthy Ot life, to Which they look, perhaps With stomach. No art of man can equal its curative a more dreamy curiosity than 7ftUMS?o active feeling of terror and despair. the taste, and may be taken by the most feeble , , , , ., i patients who cannot eat a water cracker without goira luiunu tAuta aic acute distress. Beware 01 ukuijolu uin a- handed over to a strong guard, employed "C Pepsin is NOT A DRUG. exclusively on this duty, and each soldier gratis, giving a large amount of SCIENTIFIC , . I EVIDENCE, from Liebig's Animal Chemistry; luuus ins gun 111 meir presence ; mere is Dr. Uombe's rnysiology ot Digestion; Dr. rere--1 ..j . ..t - I ira on Food and "Diet; Dr. John W. Draper, oi aiao u iiioumeu ebcon mui spears, me New York University; Prof. Dunglison's Phvsi commander of which carries a long whip oIgy; prf- Silliman of Yale College; Dr. Car- ?i- i -i fr" ; " -4- f.-: - - .f- 10 lasn me cavaicaue into oraer ; ana 1 or uiuts trom an parts ot tne unitea states. !,.,, ih ih mQlocfif . OS?" Sold by all Druggists and Dealers in Med '"uo ""J io., ,cmes, fnce, u-Mi uullak per bottle. the carts, lastly the females. Persons of rank are not treated otherwise than the lowest serf, noblemen being compelled to I Sold by Chas. C. Keli.am, Irasburgh. 1 . Ci. CUTLER, DerOV 1.1UB. J. S. Weeks. Danville. 24-Jy Later from Europe! inarv lMinnnv n m -1 , j 1 I luaiiU tug uivai j juui 1 wt anu ao ou.iac.eb wiiicn lie never unucrratcu auu - AH. LEIGHTON, Tin nd Copper Smith, before which he never succumbed. Eu- J v"",v-" wou1(1 respectfully inform the inhabitants - 1 M nose destined tor tne mines are shntmif! 01 uraitsDury ana vicinity, uiat ne nas taKen tne and Teneriffe were in his ears, and the eTen fr0m the llght of heaven 5 the not he wiU keep "tofly on band an assortment of otampea ana iiouow ware, ment of cruelty, are deprived even of Parlor, Box and Cooking Stoves, arid all kinds of , . . , . , i un, vujipcr, urass, miu euecfc iruu wurv un nana, iucu iicuucb, iuiu a uuuiucr given mem I or man ulact urea to order instead, by which the driver of each band From the Tery Best Materials, calls wnen he has need to address them. laurels of Worcester were untarnished upon his brows. He went down, as Sir. Carlyle says, like a summer sun, as glo riously and as calmly. The one cloud that hung over his Eetting was that of HprpnvpmPTlf Tint, nf failnT-n ni rF ftiof I . n , , ' KNOWLEDGE Royalist and Prelatist assassins that no or lJle liillllOIl I 1 assassin pvpr nnnrnanTiP Tto . ' I ouoscnoer naving once more returned assassin ever approached his person; X from the City Market?, and having purchased it is not true that the tear ot assassination I VERY EXTENSIVELY Clliercu 1UIO UlS SOUl. UUI anOtner " daff- U now T,.rrpfl tn tnmi.l, hi. 1,1 nn.rnm.n ger"iound its way. In the stormiest menus, ana tne Pudiio generally, wita and most perilous moments of his life he . Books .of e7ei7 Description, and at lower rates than can be bought at anv otner snop in isortnern v ermonr. Call and see. Orders from abroad promptly attended to. All kinds ofBABTEB taken in exchange tor UUOUM, Craftsbury, June to 24tf FRENCH & ROBINSON TAIN'XEUS AND CURRIERS, Glover, Vt. T7 OULD say to their friends and patftms, that TCnt thn nf an imm.Ml notnu X n . mM. I w W thpv an) nnv YW0narf.il (norn.ta.tl Anw had watched over the welfare and pro- I reduction of prices. I for Tanning in a manner unsurpassed by anv firm wo w wuuucuv UUI mill U1I ClUcncEUX I uugiftliu. UIDCU uiuca TvmiMSU 1U in the business, and a close application to the exchange fot Cash. Kemeinber that we pay i unceasinf care. He declared that nnth. 1 same- ana an intimate acquaintance with many I little more ior uiues ana sums tnan onj bodt ? iiuiu- 0f the leading publishine and wholsale houses in else. ing but the comfort which he found in I the United States, and buying directly of the Sole and Upper Leather, and Calf Skins, of a trip "Rihlp hail sa vp1 Tiia 1A T, i Publishers, and always acting upon the principle superior quality always on hand, and for sale at " "cu ue lusi, i oi tne nimoie sixpence, ne is prepared to furnish we lowest mantel price. Zo ly his eldest son. And his end was thp P001" f every variety. t from ten to twenty- -i . I mo cveu uiuy percent less man can Del - i irt i -,TT TT crown, and, in some sort, the reward of bought of any other man in the United States. SAnll KIj W N 1 1,1 TOT .S Mostof the S1.25 Booka t. 1 nn mrf mn XJt X 1 Jl LJJKJ nis anection : atter so mnn fn-. k,.n.... - - .... j ...j. . . wirf I iui a initio. Premium Paced Blank Book Manufacturer. Among his assortment may be foundmostof the uui ueiuer in w.tp. a Dcaooi Classical ana miscellaneous Uooiss, anu. xucuo, Stationery and ArtisU- Mati-ril side. THE EXILES OF SIBERIA. The laws of the Russian Empire re quire that all those condemned, in what ever part of the country they may have received sentence, should pass through Moscow on their way to Siberia: the traveler who may have chanced to be there during the weekly gathering, will have little difficulty in recognizing facts in the following account : A generally that I have removed my Store and Bindery to No. 146 Church Street, nearly opposite A. C. Spear's Drng Store, where I shall be found uiLcr una ume. BLANK BOOKS. The attention of buyers is invited to my assort ment of Paged Blank Books. A large assortment alwflvft nn hand mnH hv a-vnA-r;AnnA 1 WAn. 1W1UCU WUI IkUlCU. and warranted equal to any City work. Partic ular attention paid to making Blank Books for Banks, Insurance Offices, Manufacturing Corapa- """j vuiuvmuuuit) xU A complete assortment of Writing and Wrap ping rapers always kept on hand, consisting of ""i"1 "uym, imperial, uemy ana lat uaps ol all qualities. Cap, Letter, Bath Host, Billet and Note I aper Hardware, Manilla, Bag, Straw and other W rapping Papers. This stock I buy directly from ior vasa ana can ana will set on the same terms as New York and Boston Job- STATIONERY & ARTISTS' MATFPTAT c A large variety of ;this class of goods which He has also a ter.re sunnier RiKi.. -..v. u. "' ."T wua 5 thh mar is seliing at hi. usual etremelVTow ori' fVm 32i? tZZF SZ r ' i j wuuii. vaaBicni bjiii ni hcai io Special arrangemen' with the work. Partic- fields, and amid so many perils, he died of grief at Lady Claypole's death, and of illness brought on bvwatchino-hvripr !?iost ofthe new PQDl'cations of the day, No. 146 Church Street, nearly opposite A. C. - Spear's Drug Store. Burlington. Vt. I nr WW. nr v? vvvvmr wr . m-c mo f wni"I r inrnm, n r: i j t. i l'ha I A . rn rr i - w -uawcw j.i w , j. c j curs umong the Mail Bags ; A Tour among the Planters; iVtne Tears among the Convicts ; The Jllirror ofthe World; The History of the Great West; The Confessions of an Attorney. Also Dick's Works, and a fresh supply of Haywards Gazetteer, Mrs. Stowe's Works, toaether with a. On reaching that city they are allowed 36 ?f Religious, Historical, Bio- daily journey being so calculated that laneous Works, the separate bands all arrive there from nn,nerou t mention, at prices that cannot divers directions each Saturday night . He has also a large supply After resting throughout the ensuing VtWST JT & sS uunng wmcn term they are re- THE COTTAGE BIBLE, 'ing publishers render my Ktm. . for lur! nevea oi their chains, they are despatch- "liV8 ,orm,e Prlce 54'75- a i s. "5 BloCK e1nm w nnnse in the U j : . . F He would call particulor attention tn hi. ted.s.t!,?. ra luone common hand on the second mt of StaUonery which is now complete embra- W FEATURE. Owing to the largely in Mondav afi. tVa.V V1 Ti ?IDg plalI "d Fancy Note and Letter PHnr fm creasing demand for is divM .-.v. "LP? SS75?? raOGEESSIVE&SPIEITUAL BOOKS. ...w .nw mice tuurts, eacn !. j Li.l i c. i "uu ici iiuiuB connec- i .. , stricUy guarded by sentinels, I the ftffiJfcl? first of these both sexes are to be seen ScKtM. 5 I?!?..10 TT mingling indiscriminately, and are dress- !?u P" thatwill posititeh 4afy M comneii- f"3: A.H Pactions of the American Uni- A i:i- -11 Uon ! i?rlan Association and Partridge & Brittan th ea alike in long loose great coats, made He.u also prepared to furnish materials tar ? wks of Channing, Theodore Parker. Sweder.! of a kind of gray cloth, the only di.tJn. 5?!. k,in I?ing Z iwl&S" guishing mark is, that the men have l.olf and u articles required for OUIkltin.t Spiritualist, Tiffany's Monthly! &c? Thankful fm-fnrm. t. v. . Medicines and Stnno'. v V f . ."'"H rt.fi0Ur9l0f ealln?' ni "elu sion of all works of a doubtful tendency, to mer it and receive a good share of public patronage. uvauj ouaicu wunsi me women retain their long hair a privilege also granted to the men as regards their beards ; which decoration is the pride and delight both of the merchant class and the peasantry. They are led thence to a second court, where their names nirriif r. O . Crafubnry, Vt, May 27.16.-. ivcai j&siaie ior sale. .T!viZ THE sulcrih "T7 ' . T ,M 'at mr price wiil are re. X im T. j . 7 "J. 01 ? " neP the Cl.eant. nrf gi-tered, as also their crime, ,nJ " yr. tb f" ""SSf Jft auZ2 l to tk and pr(c. TT. .1 . . . " has a good horn and a."a 7" !f.'u ' " AeentforMrs. MetW. o.!h..i'T:V! 1 Bm. Medicines and Stone's Smlffi A supply always on hand. "inmeni. BOOK BINDING. I continue to Rind xr.i. tj..i rCeVt f BiDdin 00 -c. at aea. Here t!.i ,t. i.- iusukc lueir peuiions; some SOliCltm!? If-av. tl U 1. . " nuaer a go 1 ,1, r e oi a uculars enquire on the premises. inv.., tiow-eiue,a poor couiolation, buddug., and running water to Lo!lib2 livery. Prmpt ttn- rros. c. on V. For par, No-146 aurch 8;,,' C!oyer, Sept 8, 1855-38 vt"'vUJ.l l. i U AAA GoodS-ruc. Shingle forw,ebr PShoMof.n -jvuv " Al.WUKm 4c WtST. 1 ourBui ' -ldo It ism "And BACH'S American CompoDg?" THE subscribers would restss "One attention of the People of Vfn-, . claims of iii fnen BACH'S AMERICAS C0:,T;r ' " Oh 1 As one of the best preparations Mv.tr..., V. for the relief and cure ofthe fo!Iow;i Bronchitis, Ministers' Sort IJs,c.n owiet, Attrsmg and Ukiroa Mouths,SoreATipples,3IerKr,wife." Fever Sores, Scrofula, Ut "Jen! the Lungs and Stomach,iiiye j Complaints, Female Wedm, regularities, Fluor Mm,! Coughs arising from a dc Throat, Piles, Weak fehould 1 fact, in anv case of when v WEAKNESS, INFLAMMATION- . 1SLUUU, USK THIS EEC """' J In the city of Auburn, whmtti. lir nrpnnrp.d. ftnil thp PrnnrtptA.. . r i , .j'..v.viain.Ki . of the most reliable and respects pn Ami efficacy have been furnisjied ititoi-Kl.rtm voluntary promptings ef thoMwhok ueveaana cured ol long rtandiaf m n advn aggravated affections ofthe aicn from a grateful desire to pread itif81" and promote the good of others wio v uarly afflicted. . Its lnlluence has been n-nlmr!ri-irui. cases of Bronchinl and Throat of. slight to Chronic Inflammations and t.3ut raJ'! aiso in some verymariedcasesofferi , ness and Irregulnrifiej, scd numy r c""1 plaints enumeratas&oi& ref e nave also scraiesteoiii cscso Mu ter in our own State, i iWn it h It " A with wonderful success, Tthere tot jean - many other remedies hive failed to ro,e. flnid extract of "BEECH DKOPS." OK "CASCainemDe and composition are such as to renter , ly safe and harmless, reqmrin the fK, u l0J special care in regard to the W.a he tw viuuai, oeyona mai orumari!; ucctssr t rom a personal knowleace ol taenr oi not hesitate to say to all who an is r-. it. flicted with Bodily Weaknesi, Ws& c ' 1 mation, Impure or SInegifh B!ood.-b: lation BACH'S AMERICAS COXKC . is recommended in the stronjes isn nl Kehefand Cure. nnn 1 KtU. E. 5MITH.li Wholesale Agent for the Stt('!jandso To whom all orders should be i -eputat TO DRUGGISTS AND OTHEBj, a'ji A CARD. . ' For the conyenience of Dre-risSi! nu 11 uals now using this Medicine in therrife o mont, a constant supply will be kpr''.-., . of our State Agent, FRED. E. SK " hat applications or orders will be prrmfme (0 the same terms as vhen tvlhrmiito . . . P. V. B. COVENTRY & CO, Pan Lis 82 Genesee St.Acte., CEKTIFICATE5. in m Important from Dr. E V-tetl.,;, Kochester.S.I. P , Decenie-be oi This may certify that I have iraiwaJ "Bach's American Compomd" i severe Bronchial Affectum, and realty irritation ofthe mucus coat of On , By tne use ot two bottles ol tieinw it is thought a permanent cure w .be ile have seen its wonderful effee i ia i of Scrofula Consumption, where tlx WOT pi thought to bebegondcrt-Herii ; , ties of the American Cumi"!' bi out of danger, and nearly ml '"apartn have seen of the erTect ofthe Coop certainly recommend its' use ia s-ered. above named. E. ff-Sff ;t ( e Aubum, N.TJwnot T We, the undersigned, hare iee' la for preparing"BACH's AHCil,ej. and as far a we have tested it, ? , its general use as a tonic andain' ,no4 " tO REMOVK VITIATED HCMOEI Lo Lfl and peculiarly adapted to Fenai" Leucorrhcpa, (Whites,) and to S fror stitutions are enfeebled from t'rwiJi JOSEPH M.J t ,,Pec' LANSINGH BB1 t A.C.TABEB, ' fnena Hon. D- L DODGE, of Anb fci, w late member of our State Up - ' the most accomplished Phnicjuslmve) of our country, after giin?tt,l,r1i'w w sonal observation, says: "A . Z., sede all liquid preparations "r' "I xai-u b r auiii r " of all Agents-you will the" Tv.v . ses recorded and you are lor.W JJY cat with any whose certiDC " ' ;j,e j, order to prove them gennins. CAUTION Jty All thtrnuine medicine iefen. P. V. B. COVEKTRY CO, wrapper. , isp Principal Office and Depti FRED. E. SMITH, General if" j or Vermont , .u,jr. . For sale by B. W. KYEf I missii.ei:a 71 TILLISER AXD f E eomr, ill procured th liZli 1 selection of UlLLlSLRt OUU. Urta ladies of Barton I-Ild"!,fl,ert', orders entnwwd to her wiii M WHt and SA llSf A CTQ& r b"- r att ess. Barton Landing, May W. 1 N. J S-V art i nAGGETT will 1 6kini,nd Hairr ' I, it udebvE. t.AMY,lica& Btrk -art e made one In the County..