wr' - Jlfcfc** fe?? ?S?g Ay RIM fATBSM,
DpP|p 4e Plymouth, Mat*. 1630. *
^ *>?5fhy children'? prayers, O Father, hear,
> y i *' . And stretch thy saving mra;
V ..- Our little baik in safety fleer,
"And calm the raging storm."
'Twaslhos the Pilgrim Fulheya sung,?
Their Ood's protection claimed;
A. l??.i *i?? *?? :? ------- ?
... >.?. HIV UUIDllli|r ll'UI|ICBI IVIIg
v And keen the lightning darned.
\\ hilst nil wm fierce contention mund,
And Hope no longer beamed;
in Faith their consolation fyund,
An through the mist it gleamed.
Leke Love that in the darkest h'?ur
Glows more intensely bright;?
^lYhflut woe and peril round us lower,
-fa;,/l g|,e |3 Jier |lo\y light.
longer now the tempest blows,
Nor lightning o'er them blaze;?
N?.? U..J iU.
*'?" ?"?' "? ' nuviujiiiis
And joyous songs ol praise.
And why forsake fair Alb'on's shore,
And seek a distant strand.
The forest wilds to wander o'er
Far from their native land.
And was it Peru's dazzling fame
That lured them from their home,
Or for Ambition's empty name
Do'they tlio billows roam?
Her gold nor fame will be their meed,
A holier boon they win,?
Unshackled with their God to plead
And shun the death of sin. C.
^
HE I1AS NO WIFE.
He has no wife?he's quite alone,
Unsought, unhappy and unknown ;
His days pass by, no pleasure give,
lie breathes, methinks, but docs not live.
lie has no wife?he does not know,
TliP inva frnm 1?"
I "J - """ " vnuvu IHC Htm u?w j
Hiit absence there i3 uonc to inourn,
No eye looks bright at his return.
He has no wife -his joys are few*,
Though he is rich and healthy too;
How selfish he who will not share "
II is wealth with woman chaste and fairHe
has no wife?no prattler's smile,
Or lisping tongue his bonis beguile ;
His heart no kind attach i nil knows,
Regardless both of friends and toes.
A . I
? Mjf has no wife?and is it inert
That man should live to drink and eat!
For this did the Almighty hand
Form man, the Rr of the land ?
He has no be it so?
|I] is j} wys arqjnumoered here below ;
He soon i^st go whence none return,
And thenWliis dog and cat will inourn.
Jiiji'cSlaiici.yi.
0 Fro 7^ the Xao York ?rr;?|j|^^Hr
T.IU PKINTLK.
There he -Manils at his case ; his eyes
are fixe I on his copy while his fingers,
o iient 10 his will, c diet the letters lYotn
th ir various boxe*-, and place them to-1
geliii r so aa to I'.M.ni w rds, sent -nces,
complete articles of Ii.-ws, politics, nr>
1; . rature. The inusiriun a? the piano can 1
Ir;rdl\ compete Willi the printer in tin*',
rapidity, and precision oi his digital motion.
Like the p.nuisi who plays with his
music book and instrument before him, the
printer sees uu.l comprehends at a gleoce'
i'.se ever varying resol's his lingers imist|
produce, ami docs not hesitate a moment
to perform the necessary action with tip*
rapidity of lightning. Like notes' lroini
th\.- instrument; every letter, every pause, j
every slop, is called forth in its proper]
place, till complete ensemble is formed,
which the memory can treasure nn ?. ?!'
* - "I'l ??.? .
which the mind can conceive ami digest.',
Bui lo?w di lie rent arc the Jimil effects pro-i
iluccd in these two instances! The inn-!
eiciah creates, a series of melodious ami ^
liartnouinus sounds, which please the ear'
lor a moment ami die away; the feelings
gay or sad, disponding or enthusiastic,I
mil I or violent, are excited at the moment,i
bul the charm soon cease--, and nought huti
iite i.'-collection of past pleasures or pain;
rem mi upon the mind. Hut the printer's
labor tears t-verlasiing fruit; he spreads
befof- .. -nkmd toe arcana of knowledge,
and \v ivs .wilt thfs.iges in the laboratory |
01 reason; he sends messengers to every I
one of the hum a i tamily; lie invokes all]
men to bcholc i.?e beauties of trutlt, and j
seeus to mane toe mass of mankind own-,
ctoiu ol lii.'.se imimitab.e ifg!;ts with j
w icii man is invented at birth by nature j
and hy nature's CJ ul. The prtnter has
been, sniee the lifeenth century, the faith-!
ful ami most active auxiliary of learning.
Th.-t day the printer struck oil- a rough'
Llucii of typos?from that day wo ma)
date tl?c universal spread of knowledge,
und the gradual dhdYanchiscmcnt of mankind
from the bonds of ignorance, superstition
and oppression, l-'ruai t!?at day has
ma.) gradually advanced to the general
eiipyr.iuut of free, enlightened, and rep
ulioau institutions; from that day royally
un ' its concomitants began to decay,
and la?r libet ly to grow in their place.
J migi.I continue to show* in detail, the
Co. cetiie.-.s ol (ho general outline I have
diuWi) ; bat die immense benefits which
t c art of printing* < onf.rryd upon man*"*
kind, have bte!? (lc?ciibed l?y abler and
more c?o?jucmi pens Let n>c
pres. nt a sing n livpoioesii^: sop^ae that
Uic ?ieai ptuVccUvenets, and teucWr of all
%
*
ml.
1 oris ami sciences?suppose that the art of
printing had never bceW/diicovercd, at
what a stage of progress would we now
find natural philosophy, astronomy, mechanics,
navigation, and many arts which
conduce so effectually to the comfort and
preservation of mankind? Where won Id
jmw ||p these liberties we hold so dear ?
4pt in the womb of futurity. The discoveries
of a Newton would have been the!
treasure of an exclusive few. Wall and
Fulton would,:perhaps, never have learned;
the llrst principles of mechanics; and
Franklin might never have read a book,
nor published n single principle tending to
the indtepc'ndcuee of his country.
The ancients of Greece and Rome, ccr
laimy number some great aip4 wise men ;
but, beyond the circle in which these learned
men moved, how few received a glimpse
of science, how few ever learned to read ;
and how difficult it was to obtain instruction
books. Now, through the agency
of printing, our tntans of acquiring knowledge
arc unlimited, and its dissemination is
universal. The consequence is, that a
gteater number labor to unravel and make
useful the secrets of nature and the progress
of mankind towards perfection is u
thousand limes more rapid. . |
The printer, us an individual, comes directly
under the constant influences pf the I
instructive and liberal art he professes.
Tiie printer, reads more varied and gener-j
a I information, than the theologian, lawyer,
or avowed philosopher. It is the printer'si
trade totreud constantly, day ul'ter day,
during his whole life; he earns his daiiy j
bread b) reading?ay, and reading sloiv'y
and carefully, for he must follow and put
thu works we read into type letter by letter;
he must dwell awhile upon every sentence. I
Does the merchant know the prices of cotton
and other goods in distant countries?[
the intelligence is perused by a printer he-1
fore a merchrnt touches it. Does thei
politician discuss the affairs of nations?lo*
owes his knowledge to the printer who is
always ahead of him in points of iufhrmat:
" i\ it
nun. mjiics me pnysictan stithy tIk* work j
of somo profound E*culupitis?lot him
look at the title page, and no will see thatl
he owes the work to a printer, who has |
read it over and over to see that not ui
letter*!* wanted, not a comma out of place.]
The same may be said of the lawyer, the"
minister, and the scientific mechanic.
The printer stands at the door of all their
learning, and holds the keys which open ii.
The printer is a great traveller. There
are few printers in the United States who
have not visited every Stale in the Union.
They are sure of finding a printing office
in every village, and consequently do not
| hcsiiate to travel wherever their fancy
may lead them, sure of finding in their
brother typographers, friends ready tq -ossist
them, give them work, or obtain a
situation for them. The printers arc v'qn-j
seqiicnllv thoroughly acquainted with their
country, ni general and in detail; .tone
can know better or speak of it more cor-j
recti)*. {Sometimes ho crosses the Allan-!
tic; and, while he prints geographies and
books of travels, ho takes occasion to view .
with his own eyes every part of the old
and new world.
T^^iujptcr is always a good gramarian
arftf^^M#uer:tly happens tlia^ men whose :
p^^^^^pus are esteemed by the public, [
the printer, that they are not
down asses. Often, very often,
dujFs it happen thai manuscript is put into;
sne hands of the t) pe-settcr full of gross'
/ : aiuma lical err >rs, sentences devoid of j'
-.ensc, ami u iitinut a single point or capit :!
letter. W h"ti this lias passed limineli his <
hands, toe errors arc c irrerted. the f>11 ;i<*- i
Illation and capitals arc all set in their pro- <
per places. 'The c nc? hod author finds ii
himself all at once a grotninatiju' and h?g-'<
ical writer, and hasks in the sun ?>f popularity,\\
Inch he owes t" some tinohtriisive son
?f (lUttembiirg. He takes care not to give
credit to the proper person ; hut on the
contrary, should ?-o no of his blunders re- <
main uncorrected, lie is sure to lay thoni al!
to the charge of the "ignorant printer;** i
such is the false and unjust phrase ignorant i
writers frequently use. i
No trade, class or profession, except! i
those of law and physic, has furnished ah
greater proportion of learned and distin-li
guished person's than ihe printer's Cralt.ji
From the day of Franklin to the present
tunc, our legislative hulls, our places o| j<
honor, have; been ornamented by talented ji
and eloquent printers. J he bar is often
indeblctl to the printing olliee for some of ,
its ablest members; in this cby we have
living and prominent examples of the
fact.
The printers, wherever lin y can hnite a
sufficient force, generally farm themselves
into a society for tin? mutual protection,
and for the purpose of assisting each other
hi c.i^es of need. These societies lix tin
rates of wages, the hours of w >rk, and
provide, for the sick and unfortunate.?
1 They oind themselves hv the strict! st and
most honorable rules to preserve the dig**!
nity of their art, and to defend each other
against the injustice of grasping employ*
cis. If a printer should dishonor his trade
or work under wages, he is itnmediali lv
stigmatised and disowned. It is very rare
that a printer ran be induced to dishonor
the pledges be has given to his fed lowworkmen.
n<i ....
I i hp primer is essentially a democrat?
j'hat is to say, opposed to the aristocracy
of riches, and though so fur above the ge?
I lurulity of artizans i>i knowh d?e and lulcm,
yet lie is proud of being railed a mechanic,
and ho frequently boasts that his
subsistence is earned by the sterol of his
brow. Yes, yc proud nabobs, who loll in
your carriages, and who would disdain to
touch the hard, hand of a mechanic, learn
that there are mechanics who are by far
your superiors in every things which ele-l
vales mankind above the bruto. 1 Know I
of many graduates of college who might j
be mude to blush for their ignorance by
the mechanic they despise, lint the boast'
of these proud aristocrats must gradually
lull beneath the power of (he press; and]
it is probale that, when the laboring classes
of Europe and America will claim their
true rank in society, and will call for the
enjoyment of more equal rights, their
spokesman will be a printer.
Love?By i?. L. Btt/tecr,?~llnw bright
and beautiful is love in its hour of purity
and innocence?how niisteriously docs it
elhercalizc every feeling, and concentrate
ettery wild and bewildering impuls j of
the lieart. Love, holy and misterious
Invn : ? I. - 1 ? : ' "*
I iw.??u is uir |>urin!iu wpriug Ol llie??
| the dream of the heart?the impassioned
poetry of nature?its son?j is heard in tiie
rude and unvisitcd solitude of the far
forest, and the thronged haunts of busy
life?it embellishes with its flames the unj
pretending cot of tin: peasant and the
gorgeous palace of the mornarch?flashes
, its holy gleam of light upon the measured
' track of the lonely wanderer?hovers
about the imperiled bark of the storm
beuieu mariner?enfeebles the darkly 1
[ bending tving of the muttering tempest,
and imparts a Motional splendor to the
beacon that burns "on the far distant
shore."
Love! is the m\?lic and unseen 'spell
that harmonizes e.nJ "soothes unhidden," i
! the wild and rugged tendencies of human
| nature?that lingers about the sanctity of
the domestic hearth ? the worshipped dei-!
ty of t:?e penetralia, and unites in firmer
union the aH'c ti'ms of s -cinl and religious
society, gathers verdant freshness around
the guarded cradle of helpless infancy,
and stea!s in m >n!iglu darkness upon the
VielditlL' heart of 'lemiiiirinir mr??if l>?oti.
es into reposing calmness the chuffed unci ,
bruised and unresist in if spirt of sorrow,
and hears it from the existing ami anticipate^
evils of lite, to its own !>rijrlit and
sheltering power of repose?transforms
into a generous nsvuiion the exacting dosires
of vulgar interest and sordid avn^rice.
and melts into a tearful compassion
the ice of inscn-dhihty.
' The image of which holy and undecayino
love has once p??itrailured on the
deep shrine of the heart, w ill not vanish
like lineaments which childhood's lingers
in idle iriotnents may have traced upon
the sand?that image will remain there
unbroken and t'tiniatked?it will burn on
iiiidcfaced in its lustre, amid the quick
rush of the win !s a ni the warring of the
tempest cluud?and when the wavering
' star of our late seems declining," the
bowed and bewildering spirit, like the
trembling dove ef the pttiriarrii, w;i! meet }
its home and its refuge in that hallowed)
fane whe e love presides as high priestess {
of it** suncttt.ttrj- unit confreretes to on-J
bending truth tire offered vow s of her votaries.
. ^
^ Corrcspo)ulincv oj thr CharteS&^Zouritr.
War nn?tim, A|>r,\Cth Idd7.
M:\ Rcuh?n M. Whitney applied ye.-torday
to our Court, preparatory to his taking i
the benefit of the insolvent art, and filed I
in the Clerk's officii lie usual sell dole of
debts and assets. The day of hearing is
fixed for F.:<'a\, the 13ih iust. I have not
heard whether there is any intention to
oppose him, or whether any one is able to
file any o!h gallons for tit it purpose.
The notice of this act, e lii>-It will he found
in the papers of this morning, has filled
every one with astonishment, as it was
ijeneriilly believed thai he was in the re- i
eipt of a sul try from the Deposit! Hanks
far beyond w h .t In re (i.n ? d for It s annual 11
axpenditiire. It is iv l above eight or ten j
weeks situi t'at In- : v? a most splendid'
party, declaring that i? -hould eclipse itit) |'
arty given in Washington during the j
same winter. Natural and artificial flow-:
r rs were strewed in p? dttsion about the
tipper table; the lights utic daz/ding,
itnd lite music was surpassing. The cost |
ni that supper was said, at the tin *. to he J
:i hove I (MM) dob.us. \ it m - i< .rlwi<liil? K?.
returns the whole value of his .troperly, j i
itonsisting of carriage, horses, plate ami i
furniture, as only 30u0 dollars. So that
the supper cost hint about one-'hird of i
w Ital he was worth in property. l)is sehe*
[lulc of his debts is very terrilie. Tonne (
creditor. (II. dates & Co., of Canada) hp (
o.ves ahove 8 11,000; and to a linn in 1*lii 1 ndclpltia,
(Wiggins 6c Co.)&8oO(K); and
to the rest ol his creditors, his schedule
allows him to he indebted to the amount
or nearly 800.1KH). This is an alarming!
debtor and creditor account for one who is
supposed to have been basking for some)
years in the sunshine of Executive patron*
ago, and to have enjoyed unusual money
facilities in consequence of the position he ;
has occupied in reference to the Opposite
Hauls. It is hard to account for the utter
destitution of means which this schedule
prescjiis. and. us it natural consequence,
ittr ( ittititi'o .1* .*?% I 4 ^ 1.1? 1171.?*
I J in II.B.III IU tlJ I'. YT IIIInef
will he circulated.
Military fl >ooings in England.?
\V#? have sfiiiicwhcrc read that a private
soldier in a regiment of militia once recovered
heavy damages against his oflicers
because one or inore lashes had been inflicud
upon hini than had been awarded by
the brutal sentence of a brutal court martial.
That sentence, if wo remember
right, was a thousand lashes?i. e. nine
thousand strip&s; or, reckoning that each
of the nine ?ii's or thongs of the instruments
of torture contains three knots, and
that the executioners were then, and are
now taught, on scientific principles, to
make every thong tell?the infernal sentence
would literally mean twcniy-scvcn
' . ..
thousand wounds. The victim in the caae' i
referred to, received this horrid punishment
at three instalments?that is to say,
when the flesh was so dreudfully torn thai,
the presiding surgeon declared his life in
danger front the loss of blood, or from the
exhaustion of unbearable anguish, the
mangled wretch was unbound from the
' triangular rack, and conveyed to the Itos-.
pital. whence, when his wounds WereT-h'eal-.
cd, he was brought 4>ut to have them torn
I open again by the-knotted cords, and this
' liemllike process*repeated till the number1
of lashes first awarded, by the niiscfeants'
in epuuletts had been iirflioted/urJopjiifttvThousands
of miserable ^vrefcrnes*in the;
"good old tunes" underwent this infernal
process ; and i?jn the case referred to?of
which we have but-un indistinct recollect,
tion?a soldier did recover heavy damage^
wcfcan but applnud the decision of the ju-|
ry. In our opinion, utter ruin ought to;
overwhelm any beasts in human shape cal ,
ling themselves men?not to say officers
and gentlemen?who would consign a man
to such inexpressibly altrocious punishment.
Of late years some amelioration
has been made to the extent to which the,
aristocratic amateurs of whipcord can in-|
dulge their unnatural penchant for tearing
the'living flesh from men's backs. W??
man can be mangled twice on the same
sentence ; but if the surgeon decides that,
human nature can bear no more, cre the '
number of lashes awarded ugainst the victim
have been administered, the victim is,
pardoned the remainder. C.'otirls martial, 1
too, are restricted in their sentences to i200,
or 300 lashes, although oflieers ma y% an-11
age to torture a man to death wi ih UK>
lashes, the general effect must be advanta-'
gcotis to the cuuse of humanity.?London i
Drtpatck.
Paris, and her Itesident-Forf.igners.?A
writer in a late number of li e j
London Metropolitan avers that the pre- (
vailing spirit of the Parisians, prpsent,
is economy; and that the pomp, splendor,
I uxor) and ostentation of the capital are '
exhibited almost exclusively by foreigners,
such as "American pursur Col. Thorn* '
,\nd the Spanish stock-broker \uuudo,^h^J
lite Delmares, Hopes, Tntiakins, Derii-^*
t|ofls, Rothschilds, and NVelleses." And <
t^ial the gaieties of Paris, are Mlhe I
lyiIIinnt banquets*of the Thorns, the <
jrplendid concerts of the Ferrarap, and <
The wiltv coti ries of Lady Keith." The
autocrats of tin* Parisian society; he at- .
firms are the foreigners who ruin it with
a sceptre of gold; and truly* if his descriptions
are correct, not the sceptre only is
of g? Id, hut the v( ry box in which it is 1
put away when not i 1 use. The inajjni- 1
Jicent hotel (not house of aceoiomodaiion
for travellers, according to the use of the '
word with us, hut private residence) of *
Huron Rothschild, is called Solomon's
Temple, in reference la its gorgeousncss; <
and it is declared ^ ho covered with gold t
b-ef, fronr the basement to the. attic story. <
The gilding of each door cost a hundred 1
guineas, and of every arm-chair fifty?- <
^ nd tl|e vei v hem th-rugs of ti e Yankee n
&/;rgrtyV grutiihowmc, as Col Thorn is ir- \
revi re entitled, are sa'd t<? be decora-1r
ted with (ring's of gold bullion. ?
? j
Panther Sii???? iino.? 1 he St. Luav- I
renc.e lb publie oi has an interesting account
of a conical between a mill by the
name of llaiues, of the town ol En wards, ^
in that county, and a large panther, in
which the former was victorious, after cxhibifing
^ degree of hardihood and persevereiK.t,
which fully entitles his adventine
to a place along side of the well-known
wolf a flair of General Putnam. The oto- 1
ry of Mr. llaincs is, ihat on llie lSih ultimo.
while travelling through the woods,
on the Haven tiact, in the town of Pilcaiu, I
he came across the recent track of a pan- t
tlicr; he immediately returned homo <'/?? -
* - t *y* c
his dogs and rille, and started in pursuit. 1
After following the animal in a zig-zag direction
nearly six miles, he came a
ledge, into a iissnre of tvbich the panther
had entered. Adding a second ball to his
rifle, he commenced an examination of the 1
i avrrn.and readily discovered the animal's 1
position, hv his shining eyes, which ser- |
ved as a mark, at which he took aim and s
fired.
*' At lIte place where the panther enter- i
rd, tlx ascent was nearly equal to that of i
ihe ioof of a house, for twelve or fourteen
feet, then extending downward under the j
floor of the entrance, nearly to the place
where I sto?><'?at which place there was '
another opening, hut covered with snow (
two or three feet dc? p. I reloaded my
rifle, and in the meantime, 'he dog and the j (
panther, apparently in 'close communion,*
had descended to the lowest aperture.
Judging from the shrieks of the-j
dog, that the contest was an unequal one,
I threw aside my rifle, dug away the snow,
and immediately pulled him out. The
panther then ascended to the top of the
lower cavern After making the aperture
sufficiently large, I crawled in six or seven
feel, taking my dog and rifle with me,
when, upon looking up, at the distance of
seven or eight feet, I beheld the same
glassy eyes, darling their fierce lustre up
on me. mKc me boy in quest of the!
bird's nest, with mueli ado,' I succeeded
in bringing my rifle to bear upon bis head ;
* lei sliver, sent my dog foi ward and immediately
backed out, re-loaded my ritle,
and prepurcd for another onset, should occasion
demand. Tl(tis I repealed three
times in succession, ench time sending
my dog forward as a feeler. The fourth
time 1 sent in my dog ; they soon come
down to the mouth of the cavern, the dog
hacking out, the panther having him by
the nose, and his claws grappled into his
shoulders, the dog of course having the
t - "i
under jaig of tlTe panther in his mouth';
the objecl/of the dog being evidently to
get out of the cavern, bringing the panthei
with him.- As soon as the panther's head
came in tight, 1 fired a ball ifito his fore*
head ; and here terminated*my sport.
Upon examining the head of the pan*
ther. 1 found that every ball {six iu num*
ber) had taken effect. One eye destroy- f
ed, the roots of his tongue cut off lee'h
knocked out. &c.. all of which could not
have been effected by theater show .Notwithstanding-all
"this* he fought like a ti- ;
ger, illustrartrfgf' Hie truth of the axion>9. r
tlfat * jhe ruling passion of life is. strong ' M
even in death!' 1 have dressed the skin^' 6*/
and handsomely stuffed it; so that any ont
can see it, by calling at my residence ii
Edwards. Length, ten feet." J
fragments of ARABIC PrETRY. ah
Arabian having brought a blush to a maiden'9
check.by the earnestness of-his gaze, auufto
her. My look? have planted roses in ygur
cheek*; why forbid inu to gather them T s
The lajv permits bun who sows 10 reap the
harvest."
Timc.?Thp stream of .time rolls rnptoly
away into the ocean of eternity, sweeping orf
in its impetuous course all hu-i.an ihinga
Deputy, fashion, genius, accoin; ltshmeuti
wealth, will be no more, licligion alone ii
destined to survive tho ruin. Vain, then>
very vain, all sublunary pleasures, all.earthly
advantages. " There.is Lut me thing necessary."
*
Fishing for Compliments.?'W? II Dinab,'sjaid
a would-be belle, to a black girl,
Khoy say beauty &o<?n fades, hut do you seo
any of my bloouj fading ??now tell rue plainly,
without any xfeinpliir.ents' 'Oh no, *
missa ; but den tne kinder link' ' I hio'*
what, Dinah; you're bashful?' '< h no, mo ^
no hushfuf; but den inc kinder links as how
missa don't retain her colouy quite so well ua
colored lady.' ? r ^
Pandora's Box.?A father was telling his ' ?
ion. lint ihpn sovpii I'unr^i.f ?*? il... i..l.i- ..?* >
. f ...... j viiij vi uu; i'luk' ui
Pandora'* Box. lie said thai ail the evil* \
which afflicted mankind was shul up in that
box, which the curitvitv of Pandora ten.pied
her to open, when 'hey all flow out and spread
aver the earth ''"J hat cannot bo.' said the
1 d, "since curiosity tempted Pander.' to
apen the box, which being one of ;h 'greatest
evils of itself, could not have been in it1.''
. .
Unclaimed Baggage.?A bill is nnvj
before the New-York Legislature, to dispose *
?f the unclaimed baggage, left at the oifft
rent steamboat and stage offices throughout
[he StaW. >ouie i.tmdreds of trunks remans
iiuclauned iti tho cuy of Ntvv-Vork, and i:?
Utica and Ijuftfiln^cre arc whole loitsst r? d
a ith thcm.Avhich have been coliefc-.ing these ,
ifiecn years.
Mncouuagino.?Peter Streborn, ol Un'on **{
otinty, Pa is tho lather ol nine hib ren, *
lirec of whom are sons, u'.?out six
?ld, horn at one birth. \ oiil is befote ihu <V-legislature,
appropriating $300 lor his ben;lit,
on the ground that "such instances of
ttivancing thu interests of the ("o.r.tno.tvcallh,
hv increasing its population, art*
ere." We believe there is a statute of fbo
state of Tennessee, allowing a handsome
lows to s?u.h I e< efnetors as .v.r
ms proved himself to be.?Ilrgister.
A Signer Gavuldi, who has been anuiinig
the audience at the Manchester theatre
>y sliootii g art a | pie fioui his son's head, .
>r hand, with a lifle, missed the apple ami
itruck the boy's hand, on one of his night's
xhibition. The boy had the fortiiudc not j
o c.ry out, so that the audience kuoc.v^^^
lotldng of the matter until alter he
.ak'cn.&way.
An impertinent petil-maitrc told a country
gentleman in a coffee house it ft>e west
?nd ol the town, that lie lookcH like a
>roont. " I am one," replied he, "and am
cady to rub down an ess.
Specific foh Blindness.?A quack doo?
or in the neighborhood of York who
ldvertisfs a universal specific for the ill.-, of
nunkind. adds, that he atti n. ?? to
, w ?V ?
ligations bv letter. %4,but it i> necessary-t'.jyt
rcrsnns afflicted' with the loss ol* sight
diould see the doctor."
( Logkaphy or the Heart.?A woman's v
So! is but a crooked path unto a wo* . :l
mail's Yes!
Rare honesty.?A London p.ipcrirti?
ales ol' a drivi r in that city, in
:oach some ladie? accidentally left ?10,Oi(T
worth of jewellery, when going to a bell.,
that the driver, as soon as lie discovered
the accident, immediately proceeded to
the ball room and restored the lost property,
much to the gratification of the fair
owners, who gave him fifty pounds for his.
honesty. Wc related, not long sihcc, a
similur case in this city. An honest driver
found a package of $30,000 in his
coach, and.on returning it to the owner*,
he was presented with a new coach and it
pair of horses?lie being merely employed
as a driveraf the coach in which the
money was left.*?N. Y. hjinrr.su.
- /
A person can sit or lie, as well as eat
and dri \ to excess. So the truth is, that
there is a.i-jiitemperance of inaction as ?
well as of repletion : and of the two, an
active life is, if possible, the moot dm.gvr.
003. ' i
A Windfall.?A police constable iri
London, narr.ed John Barnes, has hud
10,000/. bequnthed to him by his uncle,
who died lately in Calcutta.
A Prf.vkntive.?The business of lock
making has been discontinued among the
prisoners at JSing Sing, as it enabled them J
when liberated, to be successful at picking
locks. . * -J
1