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to -A - - - -k-ll, BDiA neie - eti kand a6 thyt rtis Ume as slgl ,t n~tion tibmardI e 'or n Id ,~ nued,- avnd J Sio sar-u for ing lag 'h ch~~wyai-dohl Advertise ~~~~~~~"i bo~agd;h ae an ;leg1 b t6' he 's - -fiCpne, ndhie 4'outy, rasiedth bU t 4r,pace o i etionenterprien agedi.n a-n ogthe intrior fl on ret N cib'n aiv pAdvertise, -4E P W aFinde Wiisabunte soa ~~asnifiatend waulected to ria bidien'thre is - tdinnt'prsecuriedohim a".. Ind t interir ofti coun. W,. h~b ic dt ib e tice -of law. hrseiPrance wete re. u Engl'andfter a timehe remn in" st bratie prootiac, to 10 % -.c re' Prosperi)ty:,ar iended.-iim, ,and fib M ie a cndidate, 'nd ias elected h11enhsr inment, thlera -hs ; A01'.4-~j to him Latij~~~eeon, and* Influence.. 'fr f the PCarliament hre g t be written byTr" a It 3 h ight'1d'1 also of the T e~the insubstan , 6*i4itW46uio~livie, and was alone in "Iiiis name in the pa. So t Canadian Pt ~~it ~' m as-hers, he miht b of'the: ~ urther. statbd, ta t"f :0 dd~al proper. aig m toet p)xpenses and :pake pery;Mr. K., sup. hoax made no answer, Sottntlo it.. Two or three he u'eceifod another pIm ornp urging ins is isit to her, and ht tog4 gtd Eannd 'Jilt ruth tere waI in it. He i fbdfot hiscrrepondent as she UR 6EfShoe-Was livin at ndieilinhe doiihiry, and in n 'She wadelhited with af',~ .ndr spad'no? pais ko bait himn. fter spend. oe"" hirepared to return 1adygl&amyc'd all bis ex 'didhhm many. -present. phe renewed to him j to to him all'her. proper. 6~dAto himnthe incideint which 9t re nddnce. She informed wai the het roth - 11'ma ,of'the nam0 of Paul a -.-tl I* w~i ai an officer intie Britihi efaenIn bnttle, lie ~1~itl~ n tion of' -thieir. nuptials, &du ninc~iied unmarried and Jsnory. 17:at seeing hist gtp.name of' her lov , 'sheo was struck with ~t 1~u~aro nieirid, and <thought (E "hoW her dove 1f~u~i4of' lierbietrothed, thiih ~~iIety :'pon him wvho e~y~ hamn' to ho the reptesenta ~ ~jtI~' ;e li. her and returned :o - I lia~ 'year afterwards ~oirtel~jtnce of her death, and ~b~h~~l~hewas made sole, heir. to e u immedistely for gj~~dj nIinhis srival every aJdorhiin His oldimndvas I~nae 'at onaewinto a large feinine. Hie is new ~ 'jthe enjyment of his large and [,l'ue st Mtontreal, arnd perhaps a I n~w' urtnty thas been, a member of q eid~ rliament.. k~ht~ s atje s keh of the historvy of' y, andi there are daubtless heregions of' fiction, uind a the imagination,' do rro nteadventure. Vermont Phzent ~ A~VOE30 YOUNG WO ~ 6~i~in riches, but pre-. ~ilbtpvr~ emergency In* life. agj not to be dependent rs itagipake your bread~sweep q~r ad darn gyour own stockings. V W~l$6ido hot esteem too lightly ffmen- who sustain r ged.t parnns by. th li ypu pie.for * ~ yo~~4 pppy those Ia,zy,. ~yv~ everlift a~n t t~ tosenke mg gg ggge g tfia asensmaaumoremrqwamweno ar, 9 m~ii tist. 1 i k hn fi hi i jt ad-.ke pltnms vdes;4eui~e fly atselttri be-isett-_ a fi ap'piaranicefth e iot Ih'..,fbolsh conni e iisn h your iboughts.---SatQ le' . WELSIISYINGS. Tlii~e things that can never become rasty, the money ofhe .Iondvolenhtthessons of the blthrl Mi a'woma in'stn alley thirst . eiopdr 'et Wi Watetntai p-lease all in overythmgj that Is:5lone. Three th'tngslthat arc as good. the' 1iest ---.byirbe i ir famine, wet): water i t'hitst, and a 'gay 'east in cO$d. 'Three filingin asi thi bentr...diiy wa erto ettinguish th fiwf, ai ugly wife to a blind. man, ind &'woode sWord to a comard.. Three warnings from th~e greec r.-tha: klowebt.*h't I wast thtor seest *hat 1 dtW~ .romer~xdr 'what tholi aft to be, Three things of short : ontinnance-i -a l qd's o-e, a clip fire, and a brookL' (food. Three thins that ought neyer to he from home-the-eat, the chimnIey, and the housewe. The essentials to a f'fte stoffy-;eller-a good memory, a hold face, at fools foinn andlerice.-Three t69ugs ~ent in,'tfit peadoet-tfie gs rl6o an angel, ie walk of agthief, and the vioice of the devil Three thing it Is un wise to boast of the avor ofale, the beauty of thy wife, a'n'd'the.contents of thy purse. Thremrniseries ofa m'an house -a smoky chimney, a dripping.rolaW d a scolding stIfe6 THE DEAD4 How little do we think of4 the dear' Theicr bon' lie entombed in all offowns, villages and neighborhoods. . The lands they cultivated, the house they buit, the works of their ands- are always before our eyes. 'We travel the same road, walk the same path, siW at 'he saife i e. sidle,sleep in 'the samerooms, ridisli the same carriage, and dine at the some table, yet seldom remember that those that once occupied these places are gone, alas, for ever! Strangc that tie living bould no snto forget the dead, when the storld is so full of hernernhtosof their lives. Strange that the fleeting cares of lire shoui so soon rush in and fill tho breast to the exclusion or those so near. To-day mantand9 and vepc over the grave o f some departed friend. To-morrow ha passes that grave W~ith dold hldifferenc.e To-da his hiearj was Wrung aith all the bitter of anguish for the loyf one he so much lovedl; te morro themage of that friend is efced from his wvhol heart and almost emirciv forgotten. What commentary upon sucl men!-..Neal's Saturday Gazeule. 'RETENDED BIINEVOLENCE. Some men it is dic tn to(ee through Thiey pi'ctendedh to advocate. benevolent projects, wvhen self only is at the bottom. We have Ihecard men talk eloquently of purchasing land and privileges for .the benefit of their native places, when in fach wost of the money expended would come into their own pocket We hiave knowr mn advocate laying ouit public squa res and walks near their own dwellings, whfie. if the truth were known, It Was not the ptzr. lie goodrhoy cared a fig fo'r, but their own conv~enee. They were fearful that house weld be erected that mighi cut offtheir fine prospect and injure thor prenises. Such preanded betetainne as that we speak of, is rife at the present day. Man a man would pass himself ofth as quite c hilanthrplst,es hen'self only is at the ottom of very thing he does. Portland Buglletin. LOVE SOMETHING. .That man alone Is happy who ha something to love, truly and sincerely. l1 he ha. no wife nor children, like Cowpor, fie may be attached toadumb catore a bird or a dog. James Montgomery, the poet, has lived for years, with no otheir comvpainien than a est. Our attachments are sti'ong-nnd we are so constructed that our affections are drawn out upon something. A favorite tree or flower-. oredevotion to some particiular service may yield us exquisite pleasure. Few men who have some object to,love, turn out t be depraved and wvretofred4 They who hava nothing to love are onen outcasts fromsociety, and die mlserable at last, Part. Bulletin. WoMAN./-EyeO hath~ not seetear heard, nor hath it entered-into~ tho mindof man tooconceiveoofapy .thing more beautiful edeip n.woman. In thist1fairest, .t petr rk of' our Alnsighty lod, gentte allthaki .imost! pleiksing toe the s~nos~a4~ither repose .rnhn'a foddest d~er6hops a efori. Ioarpoe fr~Iegetpis owp k" eaa sbfore he died, to sit th reupob; andid kept his ord. -He;siv iin dndustrei, man-honest, repeiablennd kinuhtr. ted He it edin aolhisjefa a doumidate an rpe op rld ~e.iie idid cumulate it, and:uptigli 1iiefiare ter kept pace with the increase of i.4 pro perty, and he lIved to sif, a agiqtrate ot the very bench thahto had sawwre d planed" GOOD NATUt&I Nothing is tore valuable, that ise easily uirdhesed; than-good natre'. A man -i.i a.. pliasant disposition fiAds friends overy, whore, and makes 7tiid!d whe r- opt. of a contrary na'tare oe o69yoales. Cood natotrefreate iithi siv 7z of Providence.- Like the pure sanshfin. it gladdens, enlivens, cheers Iitfhkttrdstof hate, revenge, sorrow 'nd despair, hw gIdri"s itili efiects. Yoit can see is operations on every coqlnteh ance-hear it on every voide, and fel I: in every sense. It is good nature that ele vates, purifies and exalts; but the roverse that dide's, debases, and ~destroys Whowill not strie to possess this gloridu trait of charactet. fff' TEA TAX I- AM1!RICA-THE PALACE AT KEW. About eighty years- ago, -there lited,'ii England a mai whose name was Ge6 Guelph, better known in histoiy a: George the' Thirde king of Great Britain. He wal -' toldfible kind of 'man in point of-abilities-" not,-In fact, a bad meaning- person. He would have made a better farmer, grocer, or tra'desman, than king. But he was born 'in the bdivine right o kings." He was a decennt of William the concier of Engl ni illidme Dukeo a tanner' daughter in Normandy, who .sut. rendered her charms to the favors of Will. ham's father outside the bans of the church William the First was a brave In crossed the chanidel with'. his retain6 on the field of Hastings dMeated the'siip killed Iharold, theit king, and took '1edd6i sion of England. There is a little town caled Kew, in 'ur rey, England, and George the Third aftei he had been but a few years. on. the- ' throne bethought he would-like to biild'a pSlac'it this town of Kew. Parliament had beer liberal to him in salary, and could hardly ash an additional appropriation for the purpose o building a palace. He suggeqted the 'thing to his prime min'ister, who told him the mat. ter might be done by a stamp-tax,-and a dut laid on tea of two-penco per pound in hi colonies of America. These duties the toadl tlio't would more than be enough to build hundred palaces. The king reconinevide the matter to Parliament, and Parliamen passed a law to that effect. The colonies re'used to be thus taxed, unless they wer allowed to send members to the body tha paswad the law, for the purpose of defending themselves. Revolution followed-seven years of bloody war was the consequence; but the colonieg came out free. In their offorts they wer< aided by France. This war cost the English government some one hundred and fifty mil. lion pounds sterling, or six hundred millions of do lars-a pretty good price for the palace of George the Third at Kew. When the Frencitofllkers returned to-theih native land, they began to feel d love of repub licanism 'themselves, and they planted the seed in their native land. A fewv year after a revolution broke out in France. Thhy al took part in it; but through the wildness o the people, the republic wvhich they had form. ed ended in the military-yet as far as vie. tories went, glorious-despotism of Nap. loon. To drive him from te throne finallj cost FEngland aboust six hundred millior pounds sterling, This was payix~g rathei 'dear for the palace at Kew.. Within a few brief' weeks, a monarch o *one of the most powerful nations of Europe has been driven from his throne like a vaga, bond. h alf the world is in agitation, and re. publics are the general cry of the people. B ut for the palace at Hawy', our o*n' couintra might at this day have been part of tihe Brit. ish Empire, France a monarchy still, anm England out of debt, comparatively speak ing. Kings as the clown says are "gettitig to be low company." H~alleck wrote trulj and prophetically some years ago: "TIhe monarch fears a printer's frown -A brickbat's range; Give me in preference to a crown Five shillings in change." TO NEWSPAPERS READERS. Stop, consider, reflect ui pn what yot are doing! A re you a sitbscriber, a bor rower, or a grabber? Is the paper you hold in your hand yours, or is it the prop. erty of some person less able than you are to subscribe for it? If you are a borrow or, or have stepped into some store o~ house for the express purpose. of reading it, let us entreat you to rid yourself of the heinous sin, and subseribe for it at once Now is the time; don't delay, buit comc along at once.- Nantu.'ket Mirror.. '"Please to give me a light?" siild'a lit. t1e urchin ithz a long nine in hihand, tc a six Coot dandy, whor was ptulhlli atithe end of a regalia cigar, as he was walking tho public street. i What" said the dandy, "a shavor like you smoke?" "tea1" replied the -hoy, <*overy Gen. The~sii lip'xquialte di iei disai like' a'hot tob to a :n"' I~iI 7a0 And Wt T angdf101 Andbnet the8 harace'k Wie r tb N 'a o in i Anid tak le t61 IiWh't Whe Boung dc~eun 4 - -ba~ a no "Y eWn a in AlfWlTI l v Uwd dSis foruw fl N t Tll It Ieep wae onde wsdl osMs, en7 I aason s Aud-ineft th fdl"u e -saene d' ~ "i And din'myoe ke dr tIs reoms A'ddkulokeof dedco a -re ede asI popyt y.lthkll DTat44e orning e ti ftah n Vc ot for doilt hiue e lie.s wa, ndaky wo'e re or liarob-fo m~ie Dil'l dfi *lob I- rnu rfe Ig WU E RONG PA Ud k.fotin D . 'Aiid oi~u4 I s eiepv I I De threms, ohnow "'61 th""iy~wl cc ee o e haedor pokiig~ theiinnsat raranej W iall ~ m vis I anuneio gOund met, pon Ifi atrev,- than muppeor oas t follo fa t liti seem nl Andtlemet in Indiar, whoe had arviscen.t tAd alicheiofficldgoty afro theng Da, ashe ats, ee to d-,4coa o0 dimotanc hiel dM i t ll trages 1o oftestteo scunywt t6fsa se t af uf a poosr#ou-a anre Eik e'ts [Fro wthe Yane]B - ' tadeo. d WAKING UPoTHEt WRONGb h PA$. AHSENGER.-" hh gh'ay S,6' a Dt YAW~I The vi~ut Pe ome po have F r pokin eoir oin saakpterand into the iffirvof otbor'si' fieifsler eq de more apedair average, than Dtchnie to a t a COu"ng eacts would seemingly illustratF The in shriff analml gth . imall settlement in Indiann,,who had arisen to that tall niche In offiia dignity -from 'the mro ke. N-ofm poitegng knowing: the law, and feeling his oats, determined to do his duty up to the handle; under theoe circumstances he lt uponeall-trang.resors orthe taesof his couity with the o tset' of apourd W.v ft*qvo: tA*; e ih oions, sh~i 'en podci o~, ofNWand got 'p~n the orsaid uth herisWhat ad ask t' kheri as pticulsr andemotic us ononakeruntd Squire, bi oktd y~ei, boa d Anrall~ soe a pedas gen-'o'eninar. Dstelckin makthe oaclda eold tdo* o' youn bardn' such a crla -lm Frth aeo 'Thkey i Nice mlg d'ese oldci sore e itchet a ak walon, con-a. tis upy Bhra~ut htsoledainffith -ottls the-waoit gd o .toniosed his pntg to front o 'elm' si. 'Weil poI gne, Issfu eou'wo and des~tty ~t be ac e;ldlat. ot 'Whforasti pou ot hnmselany ting,' a tid thet say,4e heafari#I1e-A , a'Gess onc ho fe nto.a ie rt a r Julyr ad ysoamIk 't homi1 soeh ra' l ebe~rg and xerm tops aarticfthemsees yo n Sqire,-Fbd loifyr etd Adhr' Whlnla d as' n backn raeisetr e'alw 6a b -~ 6. z Z T ~* 01 11 A Z, nc tt e -f eM a 3 Pho_ tb~ a n iv 19ng 1_4 100 'ab esht~~ dr'soW. 'was as VI, whoMhas 6~ZV li 4vlIt o 31rl .op ait parents, .yer 1 bribg eWt inteiligencd'andfii'1 es tk jov~iaiad curteous; hehhs vI~db or a part of EuroN. ai cinations ef Loo royae haridE B Rome A -_ he .A d ta oen t wwith wa He99 mis diamenr a al iduoi the~oe~h '411 a pep 4 nt oi. NerIt,Y ains we~pi Are it an,, ' of fergn aef nda tho ho was rhii hed' e fetr aart of dtb.JI Un [ith 0loiW N- anV - n r x, he?| eW Whre Iiahdppi the sltesten'jutj day 6'vntit9 a6a the.~: i' S6i r * t.I.V HuA Mac.