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4~ &.N I- r WE na~'-- -Gorlhoriin4 isDelars for 3 Nosthsd 10,t t the DissoDmWation of erahfrnto.Srg (ies$00 VOUEI.- EWER, .C,TtTESDAY MAY 2, 165 .N~E ~ -NWBRRt3 THETRFWEEKY HERALM 1EWBERBEY .. HW . .ter y Thusdaq and Saturday Mot three;ionths,ja dGaeie. d thtliementsiaserted at the fate of $ for frst fertion of selve lines or.less,. and $4 for sub aeqnent in A~tiof. - When I Saw Sweet eWllIe Rome. In the sk th-e bright stars glittered, OnIWgrass the moduligbt fell, shed th. e'aond f&dylight'sbustle, 0i, ed the "pin-eved .ipernell," i a m ha nossoiwm wi,od pith Were catile ove t ro~am I'*ae a etiequit p, e ittyingets.softly fhitter -Yer a brow as white as snow And her ehvek ;-the cringon sanset Scarey id a warmner glow Mid hr parted lips' vermillion, White teetb fLshed.like ocean foam --11 Ijparked, with pulses throbbing Wtile I saw sweet *Nellie hie When the, autumn tinged the greenwod Turning all itsle;ives to-gold, lu the lawn by alder?s shade F iy lo'e to' Nellie told; .As e stoqdy together gz On the ta'bespangled dome 7w Inblest 7the Augvst evening h iai s'aw sweet Neieome 4bi' lair tvnugles with heetresseu T4o" $w, POV But a love-sm ehms andbIeoes Litfe' declining m stepts 49W Itatea, in ty noity Uerhirc Go%er to iny-bosm co;,e 'ell i4e, dost thou stIlf reine Tien I ae W qWet *el ie? T mc Hol * )nehre. The EmpresS of the Freneh?hast ut ised circular tOrtheqeen so -gns of: surope .respectintgt gondition decay and .ilapi datiQn in.',rjtdh the doie fthe Qhuh.VofO the SFy.Sepulchre bak beenfalling for'najy years past inftfi"otgreg docum,nt tho inpresi1mAke ar* eastand foi-cibleppeal to ter istee gstenite and epair the-hly:phe asking how it is that the Cbris tiaPowers bab' it nariened to 'put an end to& a state of things-amfficting .to t h faithful of all ommunzitie& ? - .~ *.~ .Theprp ition is not merefy to epair td decaying done, but,t rebui ldthe ehrch on ._.- etirely. new princJple.,o-#s fo affordi n iht c9nveniene to the pigriths"f every con ndity of hriRb ahs from every cine freely to4isit and wegship ere ecircular says t would badvisabl,after baving obtained ~ consent of theSubhieorte,go entir y V -* rebeild-tie Church'of4thefoly,Sepulchre on * Y. a.new pla,ad on&aeger scale, so thatif *might afordco~mmodation for al! oor.ou,n sus. :Thus, for exataiple,'tbere gould'hbe on one side.a chapel, ahd even a-wave, coniseerited to the use ofthbe'Latins, and on thle other -.a -nave and a'chapel ieserved 'for the use of the Greeks. The pgrncipal nave abould be~ open to all, and the arces of the faithfd t' Holy Sepulchre, at p)resent so difficult, giving * rise to frequent disturbances,.woild.be freed fronm-all hindrances. Theimwojesty of the new sanctuary-shoold as miuch as possible equal* that of the sacred associations which: are re -catled by ti$ese sacred.places. 'Por these'rea sons a competition might be opened in~ which the irchitectts and1 artistsof all countries.sheid be invited toiake part, and an international 'ury might select front among the designs .sent by themn thaL which, in a purely artistic point of view, migh!t i>e deemed-the triost wor.thy 6N so great *an idea. As toi the furnds nea%ssar~y for comacing and. completing without delay - - ~ the .ee Chorch- of th~e Hloly Sepulchre; they c ould be furnished by a uiversal subscription, at the head of which all. the Christian" Prin cesse:<would no d'opht vie with each other in iscribing their names. Goon TE iR BRINGsEAr.--I have Sten' many ia.excellent. matron,'whio cutld never, * in her best days have been handsomne, and yet she h:d a lacket of yellow love letters in a private draiwer, and sweet children showered kisses on,bersallow cheeks. Yes! thank God, *human feeling islike the almiighty rivers that bless the earth; it does not wait for beauty. -it flows with resiitless force, and brings - bsantv wft it * Bamsn EXPERIME.-"Mny;years since an enterprising Englishman--Dr. Turabull-be coming impressed with the -valueg,and pro ductiveness of the swamp lands of Florida, purclhased a large body, and brought out, from the Mediterranean, a -colony of about seven hundred Greeks, and Minoteans, ap 1borers, with the view tothe making -f sugar, and other products. Those people were engaged upon a principle sinilar to that which the British are now-employing the coolies in Ja maica-the apprentice system. They ere stil6d "red motioners,' because of their being bZund seven-years to- redeem, by their Ijbor the expense of.the voyage, and the cost provisions, &c., necessary to the support of themg,and their families. At the end bf the seven years, they were to receive stipulated wages. Things went on prosperously, foi' short time; buildings wre erected, extensive canals, and ditches wr dug, and the lands .were gradually being brought under !eutivT tion. But at length the energies of the abo ers began to,flag; their empfoyer became im -patient; their task-masters became morel ur gent ; blows and stripes were resorted to, witg a view of inducing them to tsore active. work; till,. at length, the Minorcans t.ookto running away. Three of these fugitives-arrived af St. Augustine, where thei'r tale bf,suffering, - and wrong.excited the sympathy of the spaniafds, ;who, pursuing their old game tqwards.theEn glsh, urgedthe:u to return, *Trd Paiseageng eral josurrection. This advice they followed7 and,iRa* sbot tite, there was a corplete .emeut. T"e whole body of laborers dropped their toi, refused to worl-, and marched off, in a body towards St. Augustine. Thusiended Dr. Turnbull's scheme for tis wog sugar with free bhelabo6r.4anotherprfI 4 theBritish, by Mne of their, owncouptry iaei,that for the tropical products of gricul ture, od anythiig like an extensive sale"no j.her tbah negrObe-labor can, with certain tbe depended upon. Dr. Turhbulldisplayed Amuch judgement m.the pelection of his- linds, being those in the vicinity of-New Snyrn6 WI is statedto be a fact well known, that on the ntation ofMr. Dummitt, near that 1place, :4nd of the description abonimentiond has rodunid for hogsheads of sugar per acre-' th6 greatest gield of sugar ever produced in Tidorida. ________ now Woa i.C '.esED.-There are o e bnnd"ed sepeittely organized Gov ernmn7t i&i the world at the present time. Nearlj one-half are mpnarchies in Europe; -and of these&a large proportion, are pettv Pincipalities and Dukedoris, containing abdt sixmillions of in hitants... Of the GoveirmentsoEurope, Great -i tain.-is fiiited mo134rchf; France isnominally cons itutional- b.t iii .eaity an Absolute monarchy; tussitand Austraare abaitet russia, Spain and Sardini areI'igiited, with the Chaibers of Deptitiet' iere are only 4four Republics fit Europe-Switzeclain4 San 'Mar-no, Montenigo. and Ancoua. The tbree latter cntWi an aggregate Population o Mef - over 120,000 people. Switzerlaud, secure,in her monhtain fastnesses , is now by -omnIon topsent, left ubwoleste& - The Governmerits f Asia are--all absolute despotisms. Thibet has mbie of being a hierarchy,-but differs iT1 no t~fical sense from'adespotismi. In! AfrHea, the Barbary States, and all the variousj negro tribes, of ,whatever name, are ruled d.espotically, except Liberia, which is republi can, and may beth:e opening wedge.of civili zittion on tbat con tirnent. a The great islands in-ihe Southern and Pacific Oceans are mosty independent and despotic, such is Japan, -with a population of twenty millions, and Madagascar, -con taining about five millions. The Sandwich and Snciety Islands are limited. monarchies, ant the other islands in the Southern and Pacific Oc'eans.belong mostly to t4he differ'ent European,.Powers, and ;are ruled .according to their respective forms of governmeni. On-} tbe American -continent, .there- are two Mbonarchical Government;. -that of .Brazil, hich g3, .however, libeialye constitutional, ~ -andithat of Mexic~o. In tbe three geographical divisions of:America; there ai-e ne,w eighteen seperate Republics. The Britisit Possessions in, No:th. Auterica exceed thie United States in territorial extent, and they enjoy 'a large amount of political freedom.. WHY WiP~Ar.We db not pray to in form God of our wants, but- to express our! sense-of the wants- which He already knows.J As He has not so much madelHis proimnises t our necessities as to our-requests, it is reason able that our retiests should be miade beforef we can hope that our necessities will be re-) lieved.- God does not prongse to those who want that they shall have, biut to those who ask ; or to those who need "that they shall find, but to those who seek.-Hannak lore. A quicksilver mine has been discovered in' the streets of Valparaiso. In the debates on the Oregon bill, in 1848, Daniel Webster saia: "I understand that one half the people who settled,in Illinois are people, or descendants of people,, who came from the South en States. And T suppose that on-third of the people of Ohio are those, or descendants of those, who emigrated from the South." We dare say that a large proportion of the. people of other North western States. are, in like mannor, South ern citidens, or men of Southetn descent. "The 'most formidable armies we have -eneoun tered in this ivar are made up of "North western men and Kentackians and Tennesseeans. It is fhe ~i0s of her own children .that bave given the more trouble than all the Puritan,' Eu ropeatnd African troops combined. D ubtless, this is 'true. It is an. ill 'bird that fouL its own nest, saith the proverb. ' But what :nust b6 the terrible ignorance of a people -which thus'prompts them not-only'to bind theingelves as the tools of tyranny and usurpatioa, but which prompts them to lift parricidal,hands against their ancestry. 'Nay, which makes therb lift weapons ownsagainsta people actua!ly fighting their battle!4 for the South really is waging a war for the free dom of-igr cultui-e-." The West is almost whollj agricultural and it is fighting ushow to 'Uphold and extend the usurpation of the, ianufacturing ;nd trading population of New,-Engand, enb sylvania and,-New York. This ignoan;e- of the people is 'the terrible curse of.very' country, the real source of all its mischiefs, and must be essentially the curse of all .deaocraciesp.,placing them at the mercy of the cunnipg. demagogue. who soothes them with a lie, while -he saps the vital fluid from their -system-the vampire~ vtho fans them to sleep, while he sucks the blood fro: the very fountains of the heart. CrIous ig mAx' Foon.-Mankind .40' been wonderfully ingenious since its 'jnfacy in the concoction of edible varieties." Apaii from bked htiinan1highs in'Feje and bo.Jle fingers in Sumafti, there are sundry e6iary fashions still extarqt.which must be marvel lously unintelligible to, a 'conventionalized ap petite. Not .that .it appears strapge te-eat duck's tongues in China, -kangaroos,in Aut; tralia, or the loose 'covering of the great elk' nose-in Nev-Brunswick ; nor "even Ihlt it is startIing to see"an Esquimauxeating hisdaily rations, twen.ty pounds.in weight,of fleshand oil, or a Yacut competifig in voracity witha bia constrictor; but who would relish a se. of red ariti in .Bururah, a'half4hatched egg' ir China.inonkey etlets and parrot pies at -Ri Janeiro, and bats in falabat, or polecats ani praii-e wolyes in North America ?'etither can be little doubt that:these are atwarjanta ble prejudices. p'Irr'Shar enj9yed lion' Mr Darwin had apissibnfor,'auma ;Dr. oob makes affidait thi elted..b,ear'Sgrease -i a mdst refreshi fig potion. - Andbhw. can W disbelieve, afteir the testimony oHipoerates as.to the favor of boied dog If squirrel are edible iA the East, and nts in the Wesl Indies-.if a sldth be good oh the Aniazonand elephanh'iVpaws-in South'Afrita, why should we compassionate such races as Jrave link beetor mttoi, foi-'w i iay'e dite'iretbat As On"te weusffirnis tere-a,e v,1id reason for not eating perIher aresasons qmnteas gntp eb afr ating girafeg,alpaeha, mer maid's tailshus trd peenda. AOc jnquired o ai Fayette to,learn~ ore"ossted batIes ' of the AmiseicangRevolution, the 'eply 'mgs "Sire, it wa.s:the grandest oteciss. woinb the skitmishers:of sentinels ;nd 'outposts." It is said of G4enLee in the battles of Chick abominf', he ro.de to the side of Gen:, Jackson in anxious mnood(gastening to the terrific fir< directed against his colgmn, "Do you.' thi1i they willistand that General?" he almose ;uu consciously inquired. ."I think they will,' said"Jackson. From that day Gen. .Lee and his' men have continued' to eclipse the higbesl annals ofmartial life. Txcztox SEEF'.--Kill the" tcks on" th( sheep, and there wilLnot be any on thAelimbw This may be done by' feeding 'to the, shedp salphdr mixed with salt, in the 'ionth' o March, two or three tim4ei he quanfity should be about three pounds to one bndrid sheep. I presume that aidy other'time, in tbi season will answer.equally as well, al'thoogl I have never. tried it .except in March, while the sheep:'were about the barn.--New PEn fan2d Fzrme - - Two birds within one nes$ Two hearts within one'breast, Two souls within one fair Firm league of love and'prayer, Together bound for aye,.together blet. An 'ear that waits 'to catch A hand upon the latch ; A step that hastens Its'sweet rsto o in .A world of cae without, A world of strife shut out, mA rkd of lkve shnt in. From the Curo,ialL Generals Grant and Sherman are said A hlave gone to Washington 'to confer with ,the ral.' authorities on the subject ofa doeniteseulerezra of terms of peace.. There appears to be no dodbt that these officers in their consultation with G 'Johnston made p'opositions, which were dme "worthy of acceptaibe by 'our authorities, bu, when. brought before the Yankee. Presi<ent for IRati,ication, were ejected onAhe grolAothat he would mot treat witi-rebels is6 arms. If this condition of 4firs. really exists, au the above'premiserbe correct, '*e argue f6o1 - them that neither of the federal com6mand.r will be satisfied' with the summary disposition that has been mode of the question. -They and their airmies alon'e ofinduced to the result. Shei ma~n s amestern ian, commanding Weste" troops, fought-suiply. fd a restoratioa of the Union. If he captured negroes, it was no to emancipate but to..employ them. As-an aboli ionist'we'are not aware that he has any re9rd, unless it be one of opposition -to the sentinent.. Grant, as an individual occupies the sam cate gory. We have it personally. from the lips 6f his own brother-in-law, who was for a tifne Pllti al.prisonei in Clumbia, that no man, ould bl rmore opposed it'he doctrine of emanepatiow. except as a wir meifre, than the Federai chiet With pribeipqts,htheefore, thus'firmlj &0 and their objeciie 0foint attained ; withimins armies at their back which embody'andrepresent the -entire power of the North-, with their hoor plighted as officers, who assumed the -responl bility of speaking for-the conxersative:portidt o tir North; and' with a natuia pride sA mn, tW see the teris. upon whih 't&y had' ageied, ratified by their .own government,V., can easily lend cedence to the statement Grant and Sherman have both"gone to Wi 3 to in -person to plead for the adoption othi fA L measures. We .can golenatep beyoad, an*, aicpate--that.in-i the. evt. ofkdhe' rejectivon ther propo!itions hese'&. leaders 'will refuse leid theiiarnies'orthekrIndAnc t6, any ft thercoercio -of the- S'6dth. Tbe statesman. who supposes th s pIbis"p4* can' be held il subjection bilitsiry raIet W with ha1f*-milion of bavfets" toba thea will exaotlhr'or penaity d. onf' iMa, 4 Scontolevetnns' libery to think nd' acf.y lmere paper pasi, is sordly mistaken, e r I be either conciliated. or destroyei. The e jP~pIetthNorknovi:oirrtemper- " - ,u pto the North- no ir %ena pagine that there can be a mi tween th e*xtremes. T&he pop stions L and Shermau Attest the belete tey *es ain, and probablywithi thirt sthe'press, pi pits, andorums of theiodt .wiRl anite inura ation of pace upon the basksoa to* bcceptel'y ~ esi4e& '4 Samsarg IgComIL- handsoule yopng Wd7wipatied .a physician to relieve of three distressing complainta, with ybiesh wasafflicted. ' "In the digt p1ade,'' said she, "flave'Jit or no appetite. What shall - take for 'thiitD' - - "For that, usiadam, you shoultd~take air and exercise r Anedoctor, I atn quite 'fidgety'at night, . nd afi-aid to lie alone. What shall I take for :-or thatmadm I can .only recommend 'that'you take-a 'husbend." "~Fie !,doctor. 'ut I have the blues ter, ilbly. 'Wimt shall I take for that ?" "F9r that, miadam. you have, besides tk 1ng air, exercise- and a husband, to takeMho Sensible doctort,a reA rzsau Duhm.-Rolcroft. the well~ 11owh dramatist .weoneeyen at Qpie's. IAfter .be'elethd be'removed, numerous 6tonies ide told~ amobg which was ens of a gentlemean,.hoAhaving put ont his candlI on iEgoing to 6Vid, i-ead'a phosphorescent charac :ters on trg wal $"Oonfelss thy sins." The ~entienan fRon his knees, and 'isexpe-:ted' Ibegdito con.Tbis sinsaloud,. not from .tenror, howeverAfor, aware it was a trick ,tb terrif' himj dens~ed bya-certain waggish young Jady in the house,undi hearing a little bustle on the Istairhead, he guessed rightly tht she and her comrades were there toenjov his discomufiture. He confesed,' as 'the last and greatest of biR sins, that "he had,kissed .Mis.--frequently in the dark,'oad ro turned the taibles~ on his jtor'metor with a ngence, a lessoti sbaaste1 A raonantic yqunng min says thast a woman's beart is!ikes the m.-n'n-it ebanges' con.tiniua 'lv.bhnr aiway he a mmv in1 it.