Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1849 : Weekly), 1854-07-19 page 1 |
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(Dljio State JournaL OAILY, TKI-WKKKLY AND WEEKLY BT TUB I) II 1 1) STATb JOURNU COMPANY. Incvipontttd uiuIt the Utneral Law. TERM9, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCD. Puiv-1'ili ,lih .i.l".... " I")''"- M i i 1 ' . Hv the t'JiritT. x r wfik el- Thi W it klv -Z l-'V'"' wivuir ; Clul. uf tin tinlorer 1 TERMS Or APYKItThsINo llV TIIK (HJl'ARE. n:x uw " uwa hake a cam One i On aiu.mtln ; i.iiu " S'lav. 1 JS ,. -l month- HO ; ..im' ' 4-l.iv. 1 - Ih," - 1 ""' " 'A 1 lu one - 1 month 1 W ot... 1 lawrtfcia 5U DUplajfl advertUcniMiU lialf mure llian ttu- nbove "kerlNemetiK Ira led and iilt'ed In tin- column of " ?ppclal Notkes.'' J.,n.i.. (A (irrftmir m. All notices re-pUied in Im pulillshM by law. leiral rat. If ordured on the iiuirio eicltitim-ly aHr the tint wul, 60 r cent, more than the above iIm ; but nil aucli will aiiixitr in tin- 1'ri Wi-ekly without tlmw. iJu-iiii-fH C.ird-. not i-cit'.UH(( flu- llm. r Tear, hi-lilt. ll.'M x-r lino ; outside Nuticci of moiling, cliartubl auci.-lh-a, flr emitpa-ui.-H, 4c, Half jiriw. Advertisement not aecomt.itiir-d with wrtttt-n rtkee-Hunt will be Inscrtod till forbid, and charged atcord- AH tranib'iit ndvi'i-tlsi-uieiits inual Isi iuld fn advance. WltKLV Ollf B(JUL1I0 WHS WL'I'k, 60 wut ; twu wick, 75c ; three weeks, 1 ; one month. 1 "6 ; thn-o mouth, : tlx month. 16 ; onu year, 111). Under tlio rao.iat system, tlio advirtlnur pay an much for tliu he m.-ciiiiea, llie cliaum's being chargeable with Ibu unnpo.it ion only. It U nowgtai-rally adopted. jllisfclloncom Millie, the 111 I lid Child, BY II ART 1HV1MU. Did you ever thauk Ood for your i-yefl.dear children? Those two bright, clear, bappy eyes, that He has given to driuk in tho pleasant Huniihiuo, the beauty of tho flowers, tho glmy uf llio rniubow, mid thu swcctnesn uf our dear inollier'H smile t Li k leu, now, to tlio utory of a child to whom lie never gave eyes to look upon anyofthesu beautiful things. It was on ftHunsliiny morning iniHowhcrc in the middle of tho Atlantic ocean that a gentleman, whom sickness, had irnjirinoiieil in hi utate room bine the firbl roll uflho uliio, look courage, from a ctip of coffeo and tho calmness of the tea, to crawl upon deck. Ah ho stood at the head of tho narrow stairway, clutching a ropo to Hiinport hU tottering nlopn, hu heard a glad child a laugh. Looking up, he Kftw a littln girl, about fire years ohl, quite at her cane, on Uie turning ami rolling floor, trying to "jural) rope" with n knotted end of hhip rigging, which had been given her by nn old nailor. 1 he brisk breeso had brightened her cheeka, and curled her flowing hair in no very orderly innnner. Mr. L. thought of liia own littlu daughter over tho ocean, ar.d biscyett filled. "Come to me, my dear!" ho kindly called, reaching litBhand towards tho child. Sho atoiH-d her play, looked up, m though half iriidilened, half atonihhed ; and then lm-can carefully to creep toward tho outstretched hand. He lifted her to hiu lap, and kisaed her coral lipa. " Whuite little girl are ynn V ho imiuired. ' I'm nobo-'y'B little cirl'uhe replied, ins touching tono. " Only (iod taknx care of run and nmnelimeB Captain I ." " How, where ia your mamma?" "Mamma ia in llurrnmpooter ; I'm not her little girl any more" hero a lear Tolled down her cheek. "I'm going to New York," ahe said, " to bo uncln'a little fjirl. But New York ia a great way otr, isn't it, air ?" "Not a very long way, my child you will noon see your uncle." " 1 ran't trr, nir," alio Haid, aoftly. Mr. L. atarlled. and looked down into llioso bright, dark, intt-lligent eyea. Ala ! it was too true! they were darkened windows, through which thu foul could never l'Hk ! "Mittio! hey Mittie !" called A Muff voice, ax the caitlain'M ramisln d hat appeared from behind tlio marri- " Kh, birdie, what now neat have you found i "With a Mart and a hound, Millie jumped into hia rough arma, und laid her cheek upon lliefchnuliler ot liia mnugy co.u Kienvo. "So-ho, shipmate," continued tho Captain, addroat-ing Mr. L., " you are aloft at laat. Nothing liko a etirTnor'weitter for Inking tho tarcli out of your liimlsfiplk." And hu laughed. "But Una litde girl, Captain I , bow happens hho tolw alone on tin) wido world uf waleraV" "Can't aay," returned tho rnptain, with a duhioua thake of hia ahimiing hat. She' a tray waif that I picked upon the Liverpool docks. Don't know her belonging ; hIiu was labelled for New York, it acema. Her name what'a tho balance of it, aea bird V" ho atdn d. " Mittie Wythe Hamilton," lipped the child, who hud already found her way liack to Im r bit ol rope, and Mat agninnt the ship's railing, loa-(.ing up bands at every new diuli of ipray. " 1 was named for Uncle Wythe, and he tola mam-tnatoaend me." H'r face clouded for an in-ilant, and then lirigbteued again in tho ami-ahiiie." Tour blind pet! M) far an I can maku out her story from one thing and another, tdio ia the child of imahioLiancK in India. I'oor creature, they could not bring her over themselves, and I dure aay she was getting noi;ood in thitt heath-cuuh land ; fioitan nis they put her in charge uf an Knglihh lady, name I've forgotten, who set out to join her niibband eoiuewhere in Canada. But hbe aickened and died before the barque Sally reached Kuglaml, and tho poor thing was h it friendtens and lo lplc.a. W hat the niDlain ami mate of the Sally were thinking of. I don't know : but ther nut tho child on drv I land, with the balance of the naseugera, and net sad without so much aa looking up a ctvw York packet. Alone in Liverpool and il'a no place for a blind child, sir, to say nothing of one that's got eye I found her, smoking In mlf pretty much a you sen her now, with bits of chips, at the corner of n chip yard ! How tho creature bad lived, 1 can'l say. I'll bcliuve after this, hbipmate, there's Hod in the aky, who, aa alio says, keeps watch over children ; if He don't over us grown-up ttiuncra I It acema she had never wanted for a berth nor i hihi, 'I want to iro to New York,' sho would ssy to evervatranirer who spuko to nr. I couldn't Imvo left the little thing but I don't know I where I'm tukinir her. if 1 ran't anchor h safely, I'll keep iu-r for first mate of Ihe Down , j hey, sva bird 1 " " What could vou d with her in that terrible . storm off Cape Clear ? I shudder In recollect lhat night!" I " Will, air, while you were lying flnt on your hack, aud Ihe real of us were hurrying, hauling and pulling hither and thither, working tor dear life against the winds and waves, the pretty creature was rolling about the cabin floor, clapping her hands as though she were in an apple tree swing, and found il capita) fun ! When I tumbled down to my l.-cker for five minutea' rest, 1 found her on her knees, in her little night rapper, saying, 'Our Father,' and 1 felt sure no atorm would sink the ship with her on it I " I'oor mother of Mittie t how her heart was wrung at sending her Mind, trusting child from tier arms I But her brother in America had written, telling her that he would provido for Mitlio, poor sightless Millie, who could learn litllu in lhat uncivilized land. So, with many tears and prayers, that missionary mother had packed her' Millie's small trunk, and fdared her in Ihe care of a friend thu Kuglish ndy before mentioned to ! transported lo our country. nai nui a mouiir a prayer guard ed tho lu lpless darling in I i ii er in icly wander- On arriving at New York, Captain I And Mr. made inquiry evurywherB for Mr. Wvlbrt. Directories were searched, streets ransacked, ami questions repeated hundreds of liuica, to no purpose, no relative oi the poor Mind Millie could bo found. " Lmvo her with ino. captain," aaid Mr. ... " I am soon to return to Loudon, but hrforn sailing, I will place her in an asylum for the blind, and see that sho ia comfortably cared for." Instead, however, of placing Millie in I he Slate Asylum of New York, her friend look her lo a skiulhern ciiy, wncre no nni nmiueas coti-neclions. and left her in ono of thosu U-autiful ret teats, which nature and art have combined to nihrn for thoto wlnsu ryes tell not night from day. nor beauty from delormity. Kind voices welcomed the little alranger, but they were voices sho had never heard nor Imped to hear, h' or thu first time since sho lobbed food-by on her mother 'a lap, her hope and faith Altered. Sho Mt that she was alone in thu world, and alio sought out a cornsr to cry. Had lh anportnteiident particularly interested himself in too child, bo would have found out her history, and probably have sought some rnmiiiunication with her parents. But selling down her name As a charily scholar, ho forgot that alio waa nut an orphan. And Mr. L T Ilia sympathies had been strongly enlisted, nnd ho really intended In find out the mystery. But he was a man of the world, and immersed in it-t busy cares. Having placed a sum of money for her use in tho hands of the director, with permission to apply to him in any emergency, ho returned to hia Kurdish homo and only remembered tho blind child of tho voyge At momenta w hen his own laughing Carrie climbed into liia tap, ne among a hundred cmrirrn, Mitite was, well educated in all that the blind can learn. j She waa taught how to read the Bible, from which hr mother had rend to her, by passing her small tingera over Ihe curiously -raised lot- tin. She learned to sew, lo braid , and to write strange thoughts that young head Used to frame, for that unsteady hand to pit dow n in its crooked wanderings over the paper, Sho learn cd losing awevt hrmns of her school mates, and to touch for herself the keys of the piano, w hose melodies had almost made her fancy herself in heaven, only thai sho had been tohl lhat in heaven she should see like oilier children! Koinelimea, in her dreams, she would find hvr-fll on a soft couch, with strange perfumes and sounds about her, and would fael warm Irara dropping, one by one, on hrr forehead, while a dear arm pressed her rlosi ly. " Mother ! dear mot her t " Mittie would cry, aud wake 4 find no mother. Years had paaaed when again a ship was nearing the forests of maats in New York harbor. On the deck aat a pale lady, in drep mourning, with traces of leara upon tier cheeks livr children clung about her, with wonder in their faces. " Oh, beautiful America ! Ihe America you hive so often told ua aboul," cried a aweet-voieed girl of twelve. ' Mamma, doea it look M it did when you went Away I " " Mamma, did you live in any of those great " Ma, ma 1 plenty f 'tftfWtts here 1 " chimed in Uiyoungat boy, whose eye hail taken in Ihe numerous church apirea. All spoke at onet. but tha mother answered neither, Her taart VOLUME XLIV. was too full. Sho had gone from that ahore a happy bride, and hopeful ; she was returning, a widow, broken in health and spirits, to place ! her children with her relatives, and then, as bhe believed, to lay her bones iu the tomb of her kindred. Que hope only made her heart bound, and her pale cheek grew paltr, as she looked on that bhoro of her nativity, for tho first time in twenty years. " Oh, Ood I could I aee all my children be fore I diet" ahe faltered. I pass over the scene of her landing, aud welcome to tho houso'of her brother. I will not stop to tell you how many wonders the Indian-born children found in American city customs and sights ; for I must hasten to tho end of my tory. I " It ia impossible, sister," said her brother to the palu lady, ono morning, in answer to some expression, "The chila could never have, reached this country. Wo never, as you know, have traced her farther than England, aid if sho bad been brought hero, sho could not have faib'd to 6ud me, or I her." Thu widow sighed. " Ood's will be doiio I" she murmured. " But it ia hard to feel that my little helpless innocent my eldest born waa sent from rnu to perish alone. Often I feel as if it could not be as if she was yet alive and I should rind her at some day." Providentially, aa it proved, the mother was led to search the catalogues of various iustitu-tiotis for the blind, long in vain. AtleDglh.sho obainrd a circular from a distant city, and glanced over it indifferently, so often had she been disappointed. Her heart sprung to her lips aa she suw tho name" Mela W. Hamilton."" Brother 1" she gasped, extending the paper , to him. He looked, and shook his head. " I'm afraid i you are expecting loo much, my poor sister. I Matilda wan your dur ling's name; and then, I how should sho stray to that corner of tlio United States V But the mother's hope waa stronger than ' her fears. Sho scarcely ato or slept, weak though she was, until she reached the Southern city whose namo tho catalogue had borne. "Hamilton? Yen, wo have ft pupil by that, namo," replied tho bland superintendent, in an- i awer to her first question of trembling eagerness." But sho is an orphan, mad am." " Aro you sure, sir ? Oh, I must ace her at oncol" Sho followed him to the door of a large room, 1 where tifly girls sat busied with their books and needlework. The buzs of conversation died, as they heard tho sound of strange footsteps, and a hundred sightlvaa eyes were turned toward the door. Near a table, on which lay a bunch of delicate straw filaments, sat Mittie Hamilton. She hud been braiding a bonnet, but her fingers had ceased their work, and, buried in a sort of reverie, aha was the only one who did not notice the entrance of u atrangor. "Was there any distinguishing feature, by which you Would recognise your daughter, my dear madam V" asked tlio gentleman. Thu mother's eye wandered over the group, as though she dreuded thu confirmation of her fears to lose her lost hope. " Show mo thu child of whom you spoke," hhe faltered. " Meta Hamilton" but ho atopped, for, at the lady's first word, Mittie hud sprung from her position, and throwing back the curls from her lace, turned wildly from side to aide. " What is that?" he cried with outstretched anna. " That Twice apeak again ! " " Mittio, my ehikl!" cried Mrs. Hamilton, apriugiug to her side, aud sinking, overpowered, upon her knees. " Mother, oh mother I" aud Mittie fell into tho arms that had cradled her in infancy. 7'Ai( iri a mnmrni ntrtr toht forgotten! Uncle Wythe Harris (for (he mistake which had clouded ao many years of the lifetime of mother and child was that of Mittio in substitutingchild that ahe was tho first namu of her uncle for the hist,) found a pleasant cottage on the banks of tho Hndoii for his sister aud her now happy family. What aloviiigwi-tcoinc the dear girls and boys, whom Heaven had blessed with tho power of seeing their nMcr, gave to tho wanderer, Mittie ! How she comforted her mother's heart, tusking her forget her great bereavament iiiakiiig her ovcu forget to sorrow that shit had a blindchild, in her joy at leeling mat sue lial anoilier living darling ! Tlio sunshine of Mittie'a girldhoodcaioe back to her spirit. Thu dear blind girt was the joy of thohoiio. How could anybody cherish a feeling of discontent or peevishness, whn that glad voice waa pouring out ila songs of thankfulness from moruiug unlit night I Oh, dear blind Mittie, iiv-r more happy spirit that she was mourned lhat (Iod hud not given her eyes to see. " He has given me back my mother," alio once said, " and these precious brothers and aiatera, and M will let mo $re Hu m all in m-av wn VtMtte '(., 1 0. l ife en Ihe M leaM f Urka. iv aw in. rirrrm:. The Itev. M. Bmham.arrieniberof tl I - don We-levan Mission." recently n-tnrmd tn , Ml lo Atrka. and in Hie roorw ul n Aeli li I of the inor.tl aud wn t.il condition of tin Kr' inli.ibtiitiir the Cold CoaM and its viciuttv. he furni-hes a Iruly aw till picture. Thus ; ' Scarcely has onu of their barbarous and bloiMly customs Uen abandoned, from thut-ar-Ibvt periisl of which anything U known o them. They si ill p.ive (heir court yards, palaces, and even the si reels or market places o tin Ir villages or towns, with Hie skulls of Hiom buti hered in wars, at feast-, luueruk or a sacritit es to llossum.' Still their wives nnd slaves are buried alive with the deceased huslwnd or hli-pt. Wheu Adihaii.eu died. lu liiindied and eighty ol hia wives were butchered lielore the itn mil ot eor. which ptil a stop lo it only lo in- creaehe How ot IiIoihI and the mimlsTol death in other ways. 'I he remaining living wives were buried alive! arimUt dancing, ."inking, and bewailing, the noise ol horns, drum.-, muskets, veils, gtoatis. And m -rceching!. ; the women marching by beadles trunks, bedmiU'd Hicm-elve witn earth and tiiood. I heir victim were inarched almig with large knives pnH'l tlmi" (heir cheeks, 'I he rvccutioiiers struggle 'ir Ihe bloody ofllee. while the victim- look on and di lute with apalhv. I hey were too lumllinr with ihe horrid saciitli c to show terrm lhat all wamioI a-it should Itr. ere lirst cti"ptfd off, and I hen their head I of, to prolmig Hie amusement. Even mine ho iiNd'ted to (ill the iirave were Im-th-d in alive, in order to add lo the sjsirl or folemniiy nl I lie -cene. I pon tlie death ot A king hrolticr, four thousand victims were thus sacrificed.-TheJ rercinoniea re ullen rejn-aled, and hun-ilredsslniighlered al every nhearAl. I'inui ihe death of a king ot Ashaulee, r general innvai rc lakes place, in wnicti I Here can ts' no eomputa-lioii ol Hie victims. " At their 'Yam f ii'loins,' Mr. Howdlleh, witnessed spectacles of I he most appalling kind.-Every calsiceer, or noble, Mieriiicml a slave as hu etitcrcil at the uate. Heads and skulls lorm- i tlio ornaments of their Ihish'snoiik Hun dreds were slain; and Ihe streaming and sic Ing IiIiknI of thu victims was iningh-d in a vast brass iian, with various vrgelables and animal mailer. Iresh as well aa putrid, to conqniec a powenui rein ne, ai mere cusioiua, inu saimc scenes ol butchery and slaughter occur. The Kiiig'n emutlotiers travrrw the cily, killing all th'y meet. Thu next day deflation n-ins over the land. The King during the Moody saturnalia In. .kd on eagerly, and danced in' his chair with delight 1 ' The hing of Dahomey paves the approaches lo bin residence, and nniameiit.-i the Uitllcinents of his pnlner with the skulls of his victims; and Hie glial Fetiche Tree Al lladagry. has its w idespread liin'M biden with liumaii carcasCH and linilis. There the want ot chastity it no disgrace, and thu priests an1 employed as pimH. Murder, adultery, and thievery,' says firman, ' uit here no sins.' ' How to spoil at Nplrtlcd Wife. "What do you apeak in that way lo your wife for, young man t" asked old uncle lUgcr of hia nephew. " ilerauso it's fun to aee her spark up," ru- Idied tho hopeful Benedict; "I liko lu make ler eyes ahinu, and her round cheeks grow red aa any damask rose. And il'a quite tragic the way sho puis her little foot down and say s H i r ! By the Muinsl if you'd stayed long enough, uncle, I'd have show n yon a loeen. You've no idea how grandly she toasea back her fierce little head or with what a Dido liko air ahe wrings tboso delicate bunds of hers. Il quite breaks tho monotony of life to get up such a tenipi'il and blue sky ; and so, as I know she owns Una spunky (miner. I hist lourli it nn with the spur matrimonial, and let it gallop till "I've as good a mind to root out lhat sapling, IU), and usit overyour shoulders, n I had this morning to est my brcakhtst before vou spoiled my appetite. Yon are taking the anreat way (o ruin a merry-strung omaiiiiatioii. Saving your presence, I dispise tho man w ho thus tampers with a passionate but loving spirit, Louis at your wife how delicate her beauty! Look at your household the very temple of taste and ncalneia. Tho little fixings on the mantel, the fringing and tassel ing here aud there give it a tourh beyond tho common to your humble furniture. That lounge, thai lends so grand an air t" your parlor, 1 had ael down for no leas thau a lilly wheu lo I it (urns out that five dollara and a Woman's ingenuity deceived an old experienced npholater like myself. Then look at tho vines sho has trained, thn flowers ahe has plantrd, that lean towards her when alio approaches them aa if alio waa their guardi-aa angel I V hy, Hnl, is it poaiible ihe wma-aionofsurh a thing as this lempla you lo an absurdity that will surely end in the destruction of your domestic happiness T" " You are mighty serious about this little thing, uncle T" "Serious I Unfortunately I am something more a victim to my own ladulgence in a simp lar infatuation. You have heard "here uncle Kugera gave a great sigh' that 1 am not happy At home T My own fault I Every bit of ill" and the old man gave Mother Earth a savage blow with hia cane. " If a man marries an an gel, and torment her into a fiend, who's lo blame but himself T My wife ia very hand some, anil, aa you aay, spunky. I hero never need lo have been a warm word between ua, but I liked lose her angry. I liked to aee the delicate nostrils expand tha large bright eye scintillate sparks of Art but 1 rfid it just one too often. I know tho very time that anger raised the final barrier of opposition, and that nice aeuao of right beeamo an exacting and im- Scrious tormeulor. And now your uncle is riven from the homo of his nephew, where he hoped for peace, aud tortured with tho fresh opening of old wounds, I tell you, Hat, you will spoil your wife, you will ruin her ; it's not manly its a burning shame" and the old man's thin lips quivered with excitement. Hal said nothing then, but when hu returned he ground his pride between his teeth and begged his wife's pardon. "I'll never taunt you for fun again Carry," he said in a low tone. And she replied, as she hid her tearful face iu hia bosom " I am so quick, so passionate but indeed I never begun it; and you hnvo beeu so nuble that I will try and conquer this hasty temper. But Hal, sho added, roughly, shaking her curia iu his face, "what will you do for your queen V wnai win oecome oi umo, irauegy, c, en i Her husband blushed, (1 contend that a man looks handsome when he blushes,) and a kiss sealed the reconciliation. To dav. after fortv years of wedded life, Hal boasts that ho remembers but once makiug up after a storm and that was away back in luo honeymoon, hver since he haB had still waters and a steady voy ago; aud Rogers, Mho died years ago peace be to hia ashes used to call Hul'ti home a num. diso on earth. From the SaUm Wttkly Dt mot rut, "Out of JhII. " A boy, fourteen years of ai-o, who ban been confined for sometimo in jail, was yesterday discharged."now my heart leaped aa i read the above par-auraph, from a daily paper. A bmt confined in Die county jail at such an age, 1 involuntarily cast a irlanco at his previous, history and the1 cause of his degradation became manifest. Born of dissolute and intemperate parents, he waa early schooled in lessons of crime and debauchery, With no education save what he received from an intercourse with his degraded associates, it would indeed have been n miracle had lie escaped tho dungeon's gloomy cell. What knows ho of great and eternal Principles of ri'i f Nothing. lUssotit ia unfed with tho bread of life, and (Iod is known only to bo mocked. Thu precepts of Christianity ore to him unknown, and tho word of Clod as revealed to man ia to him a sealed book. I'oor bov ! I exclaimed : what a life of wretch- cdneaa ia before you, unless providentially you be snatched from your downward course. Al ready witliiu tho walla oi that dreary dungeon, tho linger of scorn will be pointed at you by tho rich, tho poor, the miuhty, the creat of earth. tho rkri$tntn aud thu infuttl. All aeek to drive you from the society of the virtuous, I lie educated and the good. All join in wanting their children lo shun you as they would the poison ous aimer. I'oor boy! Y'oit are enst out uopn ahiitrtlim world, poor. degraded, friendless, without mon ey, starein'i, and to your entreaties for mercy, the multitude turn a deaf ear, and when vou ank them for bread they coldly repulse you from their doors. Can we wonder if you plunge still deeper iu crime and infamy V But see that aed man, with whitu cravat and golden spectacles, approaches you. Hiu hand is extended towards you, and a friendly smile is printed upon his visage. Surely hu is n friend, come to lelievo you form your diotrcss, l-'rotn bis side pocket hu takes a package, and from it hu selects " a tract .'"which he hands to you, carefully replaces tho packagn in his huge pocket, and with an admonition to read it aud practice its precepts, hu passes on in his journey lo administer tpiritual food to other AUiKry victims, I will not picture thu Workings of that boy's mind as tho muttered cume eseajHs bis lijn. fir ivim iiunu uiiirmiiy pratiltr us ieucinnjs ! What knows ho of the science of letters V Alas, 'lis food of a different kind which he desires fieid that will keep body aud soul together. You may preach llio most aublimu and soul-slirring truths of the christian religion to a starving man, but ho heeds it not. How can he, while the cravings of his appetite for food lo support luseailhly existence is unendurable V What fully then, to attempt a reformation f llio child until hu in removed from his evil associates and placed under the guardianship of (ho benevolent and eood, who will supply ail his wants. The mut of tho evil must Im reached and deatroyed, before tho evil is removed, and this can only bo doiioby furnishing employment j to tlio idle, by taking tho dissolute, friendlt's and suffering boy into your family, and treat- j inn him as a human beni. Depend upon it,! that junt ao long as you treat Imu a vagabond . and ouica-.t, iiial ltig will he continue to tie onu, nine nun irom piur noyrs ami ireai mm : I know that some coot icutiuus hemes may : , i',i ,.hi." v.. have no claim upon huu or his services. What claim can adebauched and drunken father have lo the services or education of his child None , ti ,,...;-. r ., f I..,, .i ,i I y , .-hnievrr S o-tv I. .-. .-lainM , n evervmei... whatever. Society has claims upon every nieni l)t.r (f tllt. human family, so u,, a, ih in ! l t.. 1 purpose. Ills lactiltles were given Mm lo im prove his race uulll happiness should be a su promo ruier oi maiiKimi, uniting ino wnoie World into onu va-d brotherhood of perfect be-I ings. j I'o do this, he must hu educated, not in scenes of drTinkeiuieas, crime and debauchery, hut iu all that renders man noble and pure bu i fore (tod. A drunhn parent cannot thu ethtrate Aia rhwt. I he claims of society aro therefore predominant, and it should wrest tho boy from his pai cut and "train him up in tho way he should go." I'oor boy 1 The world will not sec, with an eye of truth, your condition. A fnlsn theology hasplnced Vou in the hands of merciless beings, ami the wh'ulu force of our social system ia united in keeping youtheie. You are ones more at liberty to Ilea ) the sod and travel where Tou will. But w hither will you go? And erho'an-swers, where? 1'isir, poor boy! JoVArilA. Halem, Juno 13. l.rl RrTtrto el I be 1 hurts tie x I en. " splendid dav ! We'll have unite a turn mil. r iu ini.i;ine i mere s nointng hki sintsunie io uraw an auui-Their haiiiM ence. ll'.Ws'tler lhati all the popular preachers lhat were over Isiru. "It ! there a my memorandum lik ; Id like lo hnvo forgot I en It, and If Ihetn directions hadn't Is-en tetidei) to, most like I should have lost in place. Lei's mm1 Takes out a memorandum and reads; " By onb rs ol Judge It., the woman who squint and ealicramlanian seeds is not lo lpm in the seat in front of him. ' By order of Squire II., the young man who ogles his daughter and wests plaid pant. Is tn is' pui somewhere on the oihrr side oi tiiethun ti. By order of the wealthy Miss Prudence Trim. Ihe young mnu whose clothes smell of cigars and brand v, shall lie set behind her. "The request of A., a met liatile, lhat itran- gurs lie tiol idmwn into ltiew -to Is; attrnded II colivellleiil, "(Julie a rhapler ttuvhow. But iieonle are iN'ciiminir (o streak In. IVrc's two oiinu wo- I men wailing, Common sort of folk' guess, gentility don lcoimMiiile;,iertrlva-tlHs. 'Iluvc 1,1 nuaney i-ina-K even lorinuoui nnil epe-a seal, marm. Sim with a how.'- II vou idea-e. . rieinrd; Hie child Erne-line was obliged to eon- sir No matter, Mi tenet Is acleaii artitlu, il ilon'l rosl nothing. So here goes the two wo- men Into one oflheb-irk wall (tews. Mere's two more birds ol Ihe some feather; woolen iliawlv slraw Isiuneta and rollon gloves; wall w. second from tho ibsir ; gs eimugh in all science. "Ah! there's a bride. Satin velvet, and whit" kids: Hue broadcloth and white vc-l. .'-lull I have the pleasure of showing yourself and lmlv some seals : i tiey must nave seats, for I hey are evidently se adifb renre there is In olk ? Thry must have somu lirsl rate " Now there's a dressmaker and a n hisd mistress, nolHslles. Hack seats gout) enough. Two young law vein-NimelMslies ; I must lind a seil in the middle able. A broken dow n mini-ler, coat rather i eedv, rraval rallier coat e imhodv side ailu. Sit la liionable boarding ft h"ol eirls soine1lie - middle nble. Il i.oil.le Koilgid cheeks, but a splendid i ilk cloak, some-1 Isslv -middle able. An apprentice l'V, decent bsiklnff. hul a uolsslv side uble. ' Hllo H fy I BUI t II plde ol liullHII lllllltie r Don't I know who a man is Ihe minute I see him. Now there's one of tmr sredy ce.ilid old ft I-loir -eomliig. Don't I n i him down a-11 md "sly. and won't he lie glnd tn get any kind o a seat I'll ihovv folks that I under!-la ml my btisine-v. Have a seal, sir ? "Coiiloiindmv III link. Just as I wio. putting him Into line of Ihe poorrsl seal in the hoi.-e. uloitg comes Judge i who ipving him. come" up ami stvs ho, Alt. bow dy e do. Governor I H,' Take'a ual with me. tir ; my wire will re-: Juice lo meet vou." Shaking h.iii'l- wild Ihe sredy coat he looked dagger al niu, and I'll kl a tourpenre I've Wt mv place. Who'd have , IhoiiBlillhitt Hie old fellow uu an cvGovct no r. I lint thai toiiu-s of looking as meek as a ichool' maelrr, aud dressed like a wimttawvcr! Why tb-ii'l bdks, as ought lo. hold up I heir In ad-and Ite ta'tltelsslv."- feie 7lr Hue. - nui-fions. vveie oll ne, t fiuhleiily turned away M. Delande, id Paris, lias presented 11 11 invi 11-. u eoiicul a tmile. lion, whith coiisisls iu certain pim-asm lor pro- Mary was In r uncle's favorite, Ernestine was ducing a new metallic alloy, similar (o sliver tn j his iid'niii.iiiii. Ib could no. however, have apHarnnee.nnd intended lii supercede It in vail-, buiml a nearer wav (o the un.elllsh heart ol IW-ous application-. Tin lono the ! ol Ihe 1 tie- line Grav. Hiaii in his kindness to Mary. impo-iiioii, ami io pirpair 11. me mvcnior 1 ,11 cini'slt two or lliree lint" Willi fsllis'lie, und ie- ditces llm calcined pari lo ponder, which Is melted down In a viticible. W hen In a fluid slate il 1 Is put tiled by being litWed Willi charcoal powder. ' the clear part Is'ing drawn oil Into .inotle r crucible, ready for ue. The Mircal way In till a private upaitintiit, whether in a printing oftho, a cotton factory or sausage-aliop, with vi-llnrs. is to place over Ihe door a placard, bearing the Inscription, -No ,d-miltancne." No person ever read lhat piohiM- lionovrran entrance, without king liutanlly aitaes.ni ny nit migoTcrnai'lc U right in. ire to ru-li A Fmt roa iiik Kmiw N.hiiimw.- The N. Y. Daily Minor rays the late census show a that llio inirnkr ol Irbhmen in Ihe t ailed Slates it U rn (han one Million; and our Fedora), Stale, and Municipal ' Blue Books,' we kdlere, will show that a majority of the public orllcers and places In the I' nlted Slates are tilled by Irishmen. II strange that AmerkaaUiu is waking up T luo COLUMBUS, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 185L r'rotn FvtiTHjn'n Malta tine for July - truest in Gray. IIY KKV. H, HAST1XIJ.H WKI.P. I do iH-lieve," paid a gentleman to bis wife. lhat if a perfect human character evcrexWed. 1 u ia H...I .1 ,,.. ..i,.i,i- .....i M.,., f,,i vot d.i , it is that of your placid' and cheerful, yet sad- so practical and Jul ttbwwli m full of common j bcnse, usefulness and companion, and yet self above all common desires and disappoint ments." ' Hers is a history. Shall 1 relate it ?" " l'ray do so. 1 only wonder thai you have nut given me the narrative before.'" Men are always disposed to difparage maiden ladies; and I never felt like expo.-iug Ernestine Gray's touching character to even thu shadow of a smile. It is one of my sueml tlieiiies: lit only I fur a guest hour like this, when the sluidow uf her ulmoit saintly presence his di-poncd Hie mind . to coiilemplulo the higher beau lies of the Christian character ; the Truth and Love which iu their purity makes us realize the heavenly influence of Christian life." Thu character which you so mueh admired, and so justly, lu one lhat ba been perfected through sutler i UK- What 1 urn about U tell you in nut her confession, formally made to iuc in uu hour of conlldeiiiu ; for Krncetiuu (iruy is not of tho e wlio are addicted to obtruding their private grief upon their Iriends, and challenging admiration of their martyidoiu. Nor does she regaid herself as at all notable or remarkable. In her quiet humility, she would In- very much surprised that I can llnd patience lo recount, ur that you cuti bo interested in heuring thu uvenls of her life. In lb'1 course of her pilgrimage we may see only suffering; but iu each event hhe discern the gomlne.-s ol (iod in permitting b"l' to Is,' useful to her kind, and schooling her by IliejiieipUiii! uf sorrow, lo calmness of spirit and strength of religions ehnnuier.- What I know ol her I have learned ehielly of others; mid her accidental tilUtsions lo lierell have, only enabled mo lo correct and connect the nuiTiitive. 1 llrsl met with her a few years since, during the tup valence of a dis-cue among children, which was so severe as almost In take the character of nn epidemic. Tin' wealthy could remove their children from the Iullueiice of llio infection, or disarm disease of a portion of its terrors by the provision of remedies and I he comforts of attendance and suitable nourishment mid palliatives. But the poor deprived ot all luxuries, und in many eases of ab-olulenec-es.-aries, shut up in close courts and lanes, and debarred that fust rcquMlw to heat III, wholesome air. perished in great nuinljer-'. The ladies. In organized societies, or as the represent alivei; of ehuri-he-i. aud also iu their oivn continual capacity of (In1 rcpiefeiiUliu's of humanity, made great efforts to i-tay the malady and relieve the, di-lre.id. foremost among Ihein Mas tustine (Iruy-foremost but unobtrusive. Many women hud the safety of their own children to consult, and could not compromise it by actual contact uith lln; disea;-Mj, Many others, generous, but laint-lieai'Ud, were ready lo give without stint, but feared tn place themselves wlUiin the run h ol' the dreaded miasma, or were posllhely Interdicted by friends from so doing. Almoners to distribute aid were more needed than uluiR-givern to i'ui iiirh 11. Eiiienliiie had none of tliuseelogs upon her lieiievolence which 1 have spoken oi ; and she had im fears. Wherever Hie cry of distress appealed t" tier, flic answered It with calm and unconscious courage am) self-denial never with th reckless liinalicbm ol mere iiiipul Shu guarded her own lile. and husbanded her own ttretiglh, and sin; won hi not Ir-mpt Troti-deneo by heedless aud imuccrf-ary epo-uri or anrnlgo her own useiuliitM ny the pro-iratmn ot her rnergies, I had never heard uf her before. I let' name is never prominent. She docs not a- nurni'dirodioii, but silently co-operates in whatever good, reipiiriiig nid, is undertaken by any one else ; and alwayMliligi'tiHy pursue.' her own coiir.-e in lite retired paths oi mercy, where one ueulle woman can put a uioumidm Ml- to llle,hl. i hie day I met I'rne.-tiiie in the sired, and--our ways hiy logelher. we bu-ily compared notes of what wo had seen, and who needed usMilatice, This was tsd'ore I leauie a ndli-h wife, and while I yet had npportuiiily to gite lo th1 poor the eai eaud love whii h one's lioiisehohl comes in lime to iuniiopoli.e. We went Mopped by a child who begged itli hoiie-t, ualuial lears, '' ( ill, gooil ladies, iti' come for falher isdj ing !" Following lln- lillle mes-i-imer up a curi. we were u-lieit d into a M-eiie. Die memory ol which will iiewr leave me. I mi a tuiseitilile du -lv 1 d lay a man in his la-1 throes, his hea v bienlhiim com ii biii) his whole Iruinc. Tlird.iuipMil death were on his litow. Several w.iiinii. his poor n'-ihlini j, wire gathered round, looking with Ironiiied e in n --it v at (in "la -I sceno ol nil i. . (1- , . ... , . , i . i-l-itk. and he Link on his inlloiv In rhe no more. line tool pressed up lo Hie Uibide, and I stood just )-lore me, IIm iII v looking at Iheib ad. even took one cnid ii.itid iu hers, and as .-lie ,lHl 1 h'r """ 'Hi puwerlul n '" "n;t. pH'-sed down lilseyeini-. and misled Hermit ! a titomenl iu composing his mailed hair. When -lie tinned I aw in tier leutures the traces ol a feaifol shuggle but though her eyes swum in teai:-. not ii ny, nol wind escaped her lips. ,-he r.ii-id the ehihl, who had thrown herxlf weeping upon tin- foot of Ihe bed. am! said, "Was HiU youi lalh- r :'' The child replied throwing In im II upon Ihe lilelesa body ; and it required no link- oM'i lioti of strength to disengage her Inun that leiutnl c mm ace. " totuu with me, ' said Kruesliiie to Hu little forsaken one ; but Hie only reply was to rush back lo Hie ItciHdo nnd cling willi frantic energy to tho cold form of him who bud Ih'cii her last, and only friend. "lio willi the lady," said one ol the women, wiping the child's eyes with her apron, and ad justing us well us she could her wreck of a Ism- net ; " go with the lutlv. and when all is ready for the burying yrut biiall come Imck again.1' The little one looked up, as it hcarce understanding what was said, but su Hered heixdl to be peicunded. When we reached the street Ernes tine beckoned to a cab, and not wil ling (o in trude myset upon her purposes, whatever they might U I pursued my way home alone, heart weary al Hie wou In thu world, of which I had just seen mis new instance Ernestine never recalled Ihe events of that day again lo me though we met often during thai sad summer, and have since kept up a con. slant intercourse. But she had acquired such a st ran ue interest hi my eves, that the curiosity with which I traced her history inn-d be pai don-able. 1 learmil that at an en My ago she lost her falher, nnd un Krnesliuefell Hie double charge ofa helpless mother and an infant sister. It was Hot that (loverly conielled Hus hilioi'; but there are attentions which weaiui canuoi piirctiase, and requirements ami allentiima which affection only ran supply, Friieslinu was remarkably caiuiblo of fnlhlling their demands-a very Utile woman, wise Is'vmol her years: but Ibu burthen caused a premature development ol her charac ter, mid iiupiiuiid upon her youthful face the stamp oi caie ami soiieinnie. vt mil might have '"-en budding Uauly under hapiiier aii-pic as t liangeil lo a look ol unlcly which Is simke poneisoveniL-neo. 10 (jouie uie waywaiuness D'd h'l' tisler si jear.i voungrr. And she was required moreover to rule with such discretion thai Hu cunning pel evrrunee of III tie Mary would iud d-leal In r bv apH-als toancrvelem mflercr for whom the phv stcian unjoined nqiose 'I hus. early did (.riiotiiie (ray learn felf tucri he-. Her iii"lhcr' ib -nth came upon her as a great and oppre . iv e ultlii lion ; lull she learned alter w.ud (o d el lhat il was a deliverance and a ' mercy bt Ihe "iilti icr. and a relief lu her chil- iIiicImsIy. hall"l,u. ineeiiriy varsoi r.riiesiiun coimi imi : long have cudmcd ihe double task; mid mind, or luslv, or hnih, must have sunk ls?ncnth it. In such a tc In "d was- she i ally trained to endure the dials of lile; nnd lo b id thai "no one livcth lo liilll-ell Fioiii oiKhtei'it year" ol age, when alio wept er her mother': giave, lo lour or live und i twenty, were the Miuny days ol Ernestine dray. She ls-c nine, idler the ih alll o her parents. Ihu . H'l ol lh hoipehold of her mother's abler; tll'd at nnro perlected her own education, and o.inam ii y KrrcoiinniB mm nei mm' I, i ,u in ir is pie.i inu wueii nn moor lor tho. e we love ; und In coiislniil (KViipalion Is Ihe Relet of enjoyment as well as of usefulness. To all thu house Truc-lim' was dear, and hv all Moved: hut thelovewbiilioxhled between her and li'T charge wa pa ing beautiful. Thu geu-tlusvvav o Ha- ehb r rehr-nol ims'rioua from Hie love oI-mwit. bui turn iu Ihoib-pth of atlec- ""U. and the con eiott nes of well-earned right, "ever failed lo roniud Mary, wayward aa she 'I hu very contra I in their characters made their siMnlv union more iblighHul. Mary was hcedl- ss. happy, impul ive -and her merry laugh and Hiuiiy lace aiminl uu at a glance, and ,M"""I " allerwaid. oti could not but love "' lioli. otne. minimi heart, which opcucd to von as il sorrow had never entered luto the wmld. nnd deceit nnd evil were uol known In It. Frequently Mary (it ay came under grave ro- plind ; but the IV lips wllbll cllltl her trans- . vt lieu, llien lore. 31,11 y wu, 1 iio.liu 10 uccompnny In r coiisin ami their lalln r on a long summer lour. iMpcdine muled a pleiin l ui'tpm neneo In his letnaik. thai he would " leave the iwo old nunes at Home. ,111s. warner nan poiunu iy tbcliued to nceoinp.tnv Ihe party ; and as il was neces. ary lliitt tome one ihould remain at home with her, Hie choice of ioiir-e tell upon thupen-lie-he ail ul girl wlm appeared to have no higher pleasure In lile llian consulting tho widnsol her frietid.i. It waa a dull house during tho many weeks that (he family wrro Absent. Ernestine began wanowietigo weariness almost ior me nrat application, but (ho want of employment. Chance threw in her way a mw friend; or rather tho politeness of one who had long ken an occasional visiter at Ihe house, Accrued to her tho more grntuful lliat, when so little seemed to attract him, his visits ice mitt (o increase rather than diminish in numtter. Old ladiea aro ku la j eyed, and Mrs. Warner tooked on and smiled at ciiuusuuvaiuuocuniacii'Ufcepuuu, mere was no need of frowns certainly, for tho frequent guest was in every way worthy of Ernestine's uuVctiou, if he could succeed in winning it. Herbert gaiued her confidence, and tho ovi a"co T" w." wiaeu uureserveuiy BUt warmly to him, not of herself, but of those . sho dearly loved. Her kind aunt aud uncle, orB ,,,,' wlm:h Bh ',,,,,,,.,. , j,., ' and it was from all this that he learned to di vine how deep a well of affection her outward calmness concealed. Ernestine Becnied then, as she now does, passionless and almost cold. It was only her intimates, bur own family circle who kuuw what waalth of love was hid iu her placid breast. Aud Herbert first found favor in her eyes that ha listened with such pleased attention lo the praises of her sister. She tho't it was interest in tho absent which lighted up his face as she talked to him. She did not suspect that all other human beings were absent Irouj his thought oa well as sight, while he listened to her. Old ladies, we have said, aro keeu-siiibted. Mrs. Warner furcot thu loneliness of the bouse. iu her amusement at the little drama which was acting under her eys. She could have told Ernestine more thau she knew or suspected of tho becrets of her own kejrt ; but she was discreet and silent, and divtited herself with the thought how much all would be amaxed when they returned, to find thut even Ernestine was noi iu- sensil'lc and that she also, the, Helf-Hacnheuig, had discovered that another might live for litr, and be beloved for it. Ernestine did not yet know her own heart. It was still lobe revealed to her. Herbert wL ao far from cxactinir auv thing, that he did not even commit himself They were a Couple uf vc y blind lovers. In duo lime the family returned ; not a day too soon, Mrs. Warner declared, "for nobody could tell what would have happened in their longer absence." Ernestine blushed as the old lady went on to dilate upon tho frequency of Herbert's visits. Sho had never felt her face crimson before, nt any such allusion. PerhapB sho began to suspect tho true state of tho caso. I'uuctual as night-fall, Herbert was at the house. Heturned travelers monopolise, conversation. It is their right. And Mary Gray was voluble in her description of what ahe had Been, and animated iu her account of what she had enjoyed. Ernestine, more than shared her pleasure. Was not Mary her own creature, ao far as one human being can mould another 1 How their hearts knit, as hand in hand they knelt at their bedside that night to thank the Good Being who had once more restored them to each oth er ! Herbert's benevolent attachment to tho de serted house did not cease, when it became once more inhabited. If possible, his assidu ous aucmioii wun increased. Aunt Warner, who saw a clear case befuro tho return to her family, saw less clearly now. And Ernestine V could that pang have been jealousy jealousy of her own sister ? Tho anxious look camo in a heavier cloud upon her brow again ; but she wrestled with her foldings and was si ill. What she had uot suspected, till too late, in herself. sue rend plainly in mo transparent nosoni ot her sister. An lit Warner waa Bitting nlono iu thu twi light. She hoard a light foot-step and called, " Ernestine !" Tho ueico camo nnd sat down bv her sido. " I have a surprise fur vou. Her bcrt has obtained the permission of your sister lormally to atk our consent to his marntigu with her." Thn matron felt the hand of Ernestine grow cold in hers and then a glow of heat came to ino very nnger cniis, tier neico sniu, in a calm voice, " flo is worthy of her." " Are you a perfect stoic V asked her aunt after a pause. "How can you conceal your own thoiiLdits and disappointments V "I hope, my dear aunt, (hat I hide nothing it wouio ncuciiioiiicrs to disclose. " Ernestine, you aro more than human" " Less, oh, much less n wenk silly child !" Ernestine bowed her bend upon Mrs. Warner's ......if n...l i... n.,..i r..ti ii.,. t;..ni.i; r..n ing into her bosom. The happy voices of Ma- j ry and her cousins, and llio deep, manly tone! it ller her l were heard as they approached. i Two fignrrs glided out of the room as they en tered. Lights wero brought, uud thu happy laugh resounded where a moment beforu tho heart which would not break silently struggled, and yielded to I he requirements of a high sense of duty. The victory over self was perfect in Ernes tine. Her ligbl -hearted sinter did not dream, while kind advicu aud direction and assist ance were continually given, at how great a price to nuolher she hud acquired her dreams of joy. Ernestine, as was lux wont, was thu il " all tho preparations, hvtii ileiburt. who had at Inst somu twinges of conscience, when im huw tho unconstrained and uncomplaining miiuntr in which the elder sister ful- till- d wlmt cho doomed her mission, waa put completely at wise. Only Mrs. Warner knew (ho struggles of thut tried heart, and loved her neice more than ever. Herbert felt almost angry at her insensibility, rejoiced in his ownes- cajH-, and was almost ready lo reproach Er nestine with having kindled in him an affection she did not reciprocate. What an artful casuist is an incoustnnt heart! Herbert aud Mary were married. The sister showed no more emotion than was natural less outwardly than her aunt. Only farco writers make marriages, sceuesof unmixed happiness, as if all our lifctiescould bo disturbed, and we unmoved. To be sure, the future ii full of hope but brief was the dream of happiness for Mary. A short year scarcely passed before the bride was consigned to the tomb ; but Ernestine Dray, as sho wept over tho dead, had still a consolation which no one know, save herself. Mary died, as sho hud lived, her dear sister. Not a suspicion of the secrkt clouded her brief day, or dimmed llio hour iu which sno surrenueicd to hur Uod t tie you tli fill spirit which a sister's care had train eel to meet that lure event tho end of all the living. And now, you arc ready to say, Ernestine's cup was full her desolate existence could know no further sorrow. She saw her aunt, a second mother, laid in the grave but sho waa gathered into thu earner as a shock full rine. Death brings not an abiding grief to those who sorrow 1101 wuiioui nope. 11 is a transient separation not an everlasting farewell. Calmly Ernestine mao above these sorrows. 8)10 bowed to the blast, ami when it waa over- pist, rose again, gentle ami pliant, hut having within herself ihu elements of strength for her truth was in une whose arm is mighty, and whose mercy sure. Thomcinory of the departed waa sacred to her, and sho could heartily give thanks for those departed this life in the true faith and fear. On Herbert stricken and almost inconsolable in hia despair, she could look with the teiidercst pily. Ho was dear to her, as ono w hose life had been united to her sister. tor. Tho unhappy past had faded from her nights in tho sacrcdiioss of the mora rotont tllOUl n miction, in which, with him'she had a common lot. Hhu softened his grief with gentle words ol holy consolation. And again Herbert discern ed in her heart its wealth of pure affection. Again ho found lhat, she was not cold and insensible. Tho living Mary had once taught him una; iiui memory 01 uie dt-nd caused llio lesson to bo repeated. Herbert could not understand llio noble na ture of Ernestine. His love for her gentle spirit to which her brilliant lister had done unconscious and innocent wrong, returned with new strength. It seemed to him that he had loved them both as one; that Mary had Wen dear to him for the snko of Ernestine; and that Sorrow fur the dead now made the living sister more dear. He would sit fur hours, recalling the very word and gesture and thought of thodcparted : Ernestine gavu w ay with tho aw eet sadness of affection tohuch communion with him. Herbert waste her a dear brother, and the love wilh which sho regarded him waa pure and holv as the relutie.ii in which ho seemed to stand to her tho living representative of the sainted ueati. For many months this innocent drtnm ln.ind But Ernestine had learned to distrust tier own heart. Ami what waa sadder lar for the grieved spun mourns to timi itn hopes disan pointed sho was forced to distrust Herbert. bhoaawbtwhat they were lending : and lo dis cern Iter duty was to resolve to do it. Ernestine calmly pointed out to him (ho danger in which iney an ssi. Herbert said, " You liavo saved mo thu awk wardne of an explanation. Why should you describe that aa dancer a result to 1m rYr. 1 and dreaded which to me seems our only hope of happiness, our plain course of duty if duty consist in preserving uur peace and useful- Ernestine lixed upon him a gaao of crioved astonishment. Then all tho woman in her came to her aid: her bruised spirit rebelled ae-ainst its oppressor. Herlserl needed no interpreter of tbe glance from that sternly beautiful face ; ami w hen he tlared to looked up, alio was gone from him, ami forever, " Well, upon my word," said tho gentleman, looking at his watch, as his wife's voice censed, "You havo mado 1110 forget my club. You should bo a Sultan's bride, for nothing iu tho Thousand and OneNiuhts is half so interesting. Pray, where di.l you learn to improvise, littlu one, and why have yon concealed your accomplishment ao long V " No raillery, sir, or you will break your faith." " I am dumb. But the girl lhat cornea hero with Miss Gray, (a she her Bister' child i" " No, she is Herbert's, tho daughter of another Wife, for Marv died clnldleaa. Nhu ia tha orl'M 1,1 whom I law Ernestine Gray lead from , o ' miner ofatn ue JNtM'bo London 7Voifi having made Mmo dirulniuioa advrrM- In Ihe wbhes of Hie government, the editor thus defends hiniM II : iTIiu aeipiiMtioit of Informaiion is iml only our piitilego, hut our duty, and nol only our duty but uur avowed and recognised imdi'I-Hoii, To accuse a newspaper ol procuring Intelligence, U I ke itiviidiiff . llL.I..,r,..n ..1 .ml. liin.i li lt We should, of course, la? culpaple, if no employ-cd the resouiees al our command in corrupting lltlcllly or conquering uprightness. If we pub- li-li nny inlelbgciice which, in Ihe opinion ol ihe I country, had ktlrr have fa-en nipprecd, we do so ul the risk of our reputation. If, at a con- - tmicturo like tho present, wo should make any disclosures detrimental lo tho piddle safety, wc uouiu oo more mrecny aiueuuuiv tju"n;ti, nit OIji.ii State Imirnal. COLUMBUS: WEDNESDAY. JULY W, 1854. Stale Fair at Krwark. TheK Is every assurance giveu from our couo- ty boards that (ho annual State Fair at Newark will uot be surpassed, if equalled, so far at least as our agricultural interests arc concerned, by any previous exhibition. The new importations of thorough-bred cattle froii England and lrc- lund, by the Clark and inyette county associa tions, will alone constitute a marked feature. The great breeders from Kentucky, New York, and New England will bo there with Ihe best Ihey can turn out. Judges can then decide which are the banner States and Kingdoms In tho cattle line a much better mark of true progt ess than Ihu allied fleets and armies of Europe. Wu have examined with great pleasure a large lithographic view of thu Fair U rounds, made under the pergonal inspection of G. Sprngue, Etq., the corresponding secretary of the Slate Board, who has devoted his time to the further- unco of the object of tho society with a zeal and discretion worthy of all praise. The sketch is beautifully execub-d. the minutest figures liclng w ell draw n and the coup d'atl very line. The old Indian fort w ill lie a great curiosity lo lliosc who have never examined these mysterious relics of the olden lime. Little did its builders dream of fliicli a display within Its broad area, as will be seen from the Iffth to the 22nd of September next. (Jcu. Qullnnn This distinguished lilibuster Is undoubtedly thu leader of the contemplated movements agaiiiHt Cuba. The grand jury of the U. S. Court at New Orleans, knowing that a hostile demonstration was threatened, and that the proper discharge of their duty made It necessary for them lo inquire Into It, directed that uen. Quitman In brought before them. The scene waa n peculiar one ami Is thus sketched by an eye w itness : The -lUtfirt t hnniicl to lh( Ore-ril a pnnli-'l uliir. whn-h pui m-rlfl tn contain a rrrsirt or n nif rt Ihk tiM at soiu" iiNfinin.l i.ii-r, ri-liitive to the Ul.iml ef m l ft rert.im ln'iui'iit vj.frrlirn li'lii-i'il on that h l.y rriljln nlii:kl'ptifi1 (-ntlnncn. Thn IhdpmI '11 v li.H" ti 1 1 Mm i ih -mm lit : nfl.T nlii. li l,i- u i. a-k'-l ifliikin'w ntn Hiln,il.iit ael tnrctinc, or nnv olli et ini etoiK wliirlic.nti iii'Uti-'l an sifO'liliiinrpnl' t()ilf ,'i ,i ii-iuiiiiii.iiJiv i Mi i.i, iit ngnui-i itie utMiia m luna. Tl" M'l'l Il" ti. ii. i,iU l ire 1 Ihe Einii l jmy riiM.in Hull, no f-ll',ws ; " ' lirnll' im-ii t liuvf n'-kiK-vrlnleMf nn v act rfrrf'"rh r of ih'Th.ii ,u lpr n-n-iri-l t. or nnv other eotilctniU tlmi a rf lohittoniuv inovenn'iit in the ihnl of Cuba, in whkh I ii.o,c not n-irtlriitr't to in utpuI nn extfnt n- iinj olhrr i-iT-oii, 1 hnic ilmip nolhlnjt, lumcvcr, whi.-li in iny JinlciiHiit, eillicr tint.!, ur (tislionornl-ti-. Hy eon-i -Iciiti. U rliMr on tlxnn i.int hit. Mlttr the Ititr r iirMalimn th;it lnui- rercnllv Isrn ylvcn t'i ihe law. 1 submit it In "tir eni of lioiiiir tusth-e ami iroprl"ty, tf 1 1 .in in- i-.n i n-1 ii, .in ni-r 101 ipiraiionH loiaiingtn mnvcniriits or piirinni-. ' 1 r'Thiinlyiiot.'idiMrkf-il wvfrilof the luror. It l-yi.iir I'lc.iMif then, rfi-nlh rni-n. I will relit.-.' Mid the C.cnctnl. Inu rati ri.' s.ii'l the fnninin. as if tin rrji ot ti...irt Willi the liciicrjl ; nnd thcri upun llio gillunt If any doubt has heretofore liecn felt nliout Hie e.vistenco of a deep laid and general plan of operations against the authorities of Cuba, the remarks of (Jen. Quitman will put it to rest. This scheme does exist, and he is at ila bead Tho government ia iicrfeclly cognizant of tho fact. Wo ihall now fee what steps are taken to prc erve Uie national faith. Stati: Ht -k. The Statnmm assures us lhat " 'ytll, l,nw' Commissioners " will never shrink Irom any inquiry into their conduct. Who raid they would? We arc referred to tho Architect for Information as tn the progress of Ihe work und Ihu character of thu contractors. As lo the work, we can see how thai progresses for ourselves, especially the mof; nnd vve have no question ulsotit the charavttr of the contractors, nor do wo wish to raise any. Wh.it the public feci more curiosity about (him the character of Ihe contractors la Ihe price paid for Ihe work un der the contract for tiling. Tbe Cummttrioners of cource" will never shrink fnm any inquiry Into (heir conduct," ls?caus.e the Siuttmnn says ao. Butslill I be contract for tiling was let prlvalely without any public advertisement for bids, ami lo this day Hie public know nothing of .... ..... . .,.. plastering, it is rumored, is to be let in the snme way. Would it not be quile as well fur tbe Stale, aud for the Commissioners too, if Iheru was a mie more puoucuy given to nieir pwcwtiing: State ILh sc. Wehad not time yrt.tml.iv to refer tn tho last annual report ot tho rilalu Hon so Commiaaiuaers, to which tho Stattunan called our attention ou Tuesday morning, ami in which it wild all our Inquiries as to when the State House would bo done when occupied how much It would cost when (he roof would lie put on, 1c., wero " satisfactorily answered.'' o have turned to (ho report, and find therein tho following statement, which wo extract fur the benefit or (he anxious public. Tin- Commissioners say: In June last proposals weie received for the Iron work for the reception of the root of Ihe New Stale House. The contract was awarded to Aru bos & Lenox, of this city, Ihey k ing the lowest bidder. In July last, the Commissioner enteral into a contract with said firm for Hi- Iron Ira me-work of the roof, lor (ho sum of thirty-seven Hiotii-nntl eight hundred and thirty-seven dollars(;ii.. e:t7 (Hi), payable from lime io lime, us the woik progressed. The framing ol the south w ing was to have Is-en completed by the tii( of Octokr ; the north wing, by the 1st of Noveiak r, aud the center mnuiing, ny mo 1st ot January. 1 iwing to tint d 1 111c ul ty In procuring portions ol ibu iron, the contractors were unable to comply wilh their contract. The Commissioners are wili.-died. how ever, that duo diligence was used by iuc cm-tractors lo procure ihu necessAi j Iron: lint, owing 10 urn iow singo 01 water, in the into river, anil llio impossibility of tlio large rollinc-mills. to procure coal, retarded tho progress of ihe work. " Tho contractors have, However. Ihe greater part of the iron work In its proper place, and will have (ho balanca in readiness during the present winter, for the reception of the copper rooi, eariy in tne spring." " An early completion of the ,-'tatc House Is an object of so much importance to people, lhat the Board desire to Impress upon Ihe legislature (bo imporlauco of (ho subjtcl. The great expense Incurred, Ihe inconvenience to u hich the Legislature, and other oMicers of Ihe Slate, arc Kiibjeclcd, aa well as Ihe inwcuiily of the archives of (ho Stale, render it exceedingly desira-blo that the principal portion id the 'building should be ready for use prior to Ihe next ineet- o ft uvBiswiure. no hail somo faint recolleclion of these pm sages when wo put our queries ; uud now, on looking at them more particularly, wc repeat the question, when trill the root k on ? Early spring has passed, hut the roof is not on, nor Is tho Iron work even in place for the reception ot tho copper. But thn contract for tiling hn hern letat what prices Is not known lo Ihe public; and (he plastering in to he Id vhen ? and w ill the public ever know to whom and at what prices? The Slate of California luw not ken very (ordinate in its llnaiiclal AgcnR The interest duo on its bonds In llio city of Now York, on the llist of January last was not paid, ami thu house 01 iniucan, r-neimnn u, 01 itial city, nobly aleppetl forwanl and advanced aktut IHI.IHH) in behall ol the stale. The agenk lo whom the business had ken Intrusted were the tit m of Palmrr.Cook A IX They had Hie Hinds or the State within their control, having ken nude the depositors by Mr. MeMeans, the Treasurer of Slate. Alter having paid the Interenl, and thus preserved the credit of Ihu Statu.lt wan expected of course Hint they would be reimbursed us n-igi as the fact kcame known by Ihu Slate antlnul-llci". But this has mil ken . lone. After three nionlln delay, Palmer, Cook ft. Co. have paid a portion of (he (titl.OOO to (be New Yoik home, but several thousands yet remain unpaid. 'I hu California pajHTs contain Ihe correspondence of Duncan, Sherman A Co. with Ihe Coverimr mid Treasurer, and 11 pi aces the liolilen Slate hi no very fuvoraldo light In Ihe lltiancial eiieles. It la a mailer of doubt whether any moneyed man will again slep forward to protect Ibu credit of (he Slate and save its pa tec from prolesl. "Tnr. EriKrw oi'Tiik ApxiiM.nuTios i. Nkw IUui-shirb.'' The Vanrmd Ihfiottir, Hie organ of th Burko faction of the Democratic party, says : Never have we hoard of micIi direct ami open inkrlereiice on Ihe part of the national government, nor such gross and palpable corruption, as mis oeen mannrstcd in tilth city alltcu the emit- meiiceinent of Hie present session of the I I Inline gia- And what a slulo ol ihlnss is here hihlted The President and Cabinet al Wash ington mt only attempting lo dictate o the people or lhiaSla(e whom they shall elcel n Senators to represent them in Congress, but it sends on lis agents tn In line nee Ihe result, and eairy oul ila k bests, charged, It is believed, with llio melius or corrupting (he tnemkrs of the Legislature. (Jovcrtinieiit itrhYer from other Slates have been upon the ground, and hired agents, a sort ot Hwlsa cors are here, lo hrow-beat.eoax, ami buy support for (ho Cabinet Dominoes." A ThrUUng and fleet In & InrWenl. Professor Forlstt, now counseled with Colum bia College, N. York, as professor of languages and literature, was one of the leaders in the unsuccessful revolt of tho Italian Slates in who. with Silvio Pklucu aud some thirty others, was sentenced to iir.prisoniuent lu Spiells'i g, by the Austrian government, lor terms varying from ten to twenty years has lately furnished for publication Iu tho N. Y. Tinut, at the instance of a friend, some of the nioet striking incidents of his captivity and Imprisonment. Tbe Professor suffered in pilson fourteen years, having been sentenced to twenty. Hu was re leased iu on Ihe dcalb of tho Emperor Joseph, After his release, while waiting the preparation ofa government ship to convey him ai.d tho remnant of his associates to America, the following incident occurred : must relate oue little anecdote. Wo were ouo evening sitting before the hotel of the vil lage, called Humana, when there urhved two elegant traveling carriages, with a great suite of servants. From one of the carriages alighted a man of severe aspect, and a beautiful aud graceful woman, with two lovely liltle boys. The luifilainl woj CuutiPellor of State to tin; King of Prutsia ; and the lady was n I'olauder. The gentleman went up slabs to look at the apartment, while the lady remained at the door ol tho Inn with her children. i?ho perceived that wu wero strangers, and the people who always gathered with curiosity about us, made herawHie (hat there was something extraordi nary in our presence there. She -kud in ft whisper of the hotel keener 'who we. were, und learned tbe deliny lhat awaited us. In the meanwhile we entered a room on the ground lloor of tho Inn, in order lo take a glass of w ine. and eat siomo fruit, us we usually did. i-omi after Ihe lady entered with her children, precc- ileu hy the landlord, wiio said that the lady rsk- cd pcrmiwioii to speak to iih. Wu rose in assent, with tho courtesy due to Her sex, her rank, and our education. The landlord retired. The lady wished to siieak, but only stammered out a few confused words, and then burst Into tears. .She turned to her litllo iMiys and said : " Kneel, my darlings, to these brave Italian patriots; (h'-y arc illustrious victims in the great cause of Lib- irty ; and you. gentlemen, slie said, turning to ia, " bless my sous ; your blessing shall Ire fruit ful to them of falutary effects ; It will make (hem love their country, and dio for It If need he. I uin a 1'olander. My country is oppressed like yours. 1 have two brothers, compromised in the last Insurrection In Cracovin. May (iod preserve them!'' And, weeping bitterly, she hastily withdrew from Hie room, as if fearing lo he Men by her husband. We remained silent. deeply struck and allech'd by so dramatic a scene, winch li would im uiiiicull in dcscrine in adequate terms. Angelic creature! May the blessings which wo Itcslowod, indeed give to them and her country llioso blessed benefits which wc sou glil for ourselves and our own Italy!" " What Hvk VP IMiK'f" Very f- w msmbfr of t on-((rf.i( on their M'lnrn, will liki- to li'-ar that unealiotiTo-lmu.-1i"t Troin any mil ir'..f ron.tllnent. Vrry T'-w t tb'-ni ran. if thuy Its v any sen-ibihly of ihani" 1- fl, an-iwrr II wit limit bhulicii nnd ni"rtili utln. t'oiiRreis Imp kkiwii Into (lie i(,c.sf nfn of the country. A nation miol ! firi Unit t-sn live nnd fl-uoMi, u hilo ie h fnlliivi, mUeljii-l i met rnMill'- as li.irr di.tiu Kui-hcd It nrtinn uf l ile venrs, -mi-l it ulo tlio main or n.itiimal l"girUm. IVitijent cxblil". Iluiironilic fn, emit, (lick and Itiiiiiting r'iutl'" thi-d.oly ilniii(; of u goodly purllnn. rflriOilHK tti.isc nli-i liiiuht 1"' ttsctul in the work tha I is nHid, and H'l"ninn 1 he whole public mind lu such an i-ilent Nfiiit the v-M' that mn Uie wfnet msn ire lj(iiiinii(; to think it ihnul I lie B bo I iihed Col. i'117. There Is a grcal deal of truth In Ihe above. But we hardly expected to find such language In a paper lhat upholds tho greatest " mischief and rascality" or tho whole, to wit, the repeal -f 1 c.,r..,,i.uh.,.. fat. 1, the primary cause of the gre.il neglect of bui- Hess that distinguishes the present Congrcsj. There issome talk of reminding Ihe reolu - lion for adjournment on th 4lh of August, for tho pui pose of despatching some of the busine under which the tables of kdh llour-es groan. Wo trust in mercy lids may not be attempted ; the people have had enough ot the present Congress. A list of Ihe unfinished business has b"cn compiled for the New York Hi raid, ami occupies over four columns of that paper, but little of which beyond the appropriation bills will k-acted on. Out of two hundi'i'il and Ihirty-lhree members of which the House ol Keprcsentatl nosed, our himdnd mid jiftii-niiir bcloiii: lo , different factions of the so called " Henna ratio ' imrtv" -oir humhtd and I of wh. j without oueslioti. stand recorded on (he repeal 0 me .Missouri ".omprotm-e as wioiigmg 10 the Slave Democracy. TheadtolnklrullunhBluiind ino diffleullv In rarrvini u meamres ihnmuh Congress, aud no pretence can lie set up lhat it h yn restrained In its entire by the mitmri- ly. I'pon thu udinitiistiatioii. therefoiv, upon I a-yd Ik- cmiulry li.i- -cm-K I. It ik-pr-s-llii' Slave Democracy, nitisl rest Ihu odium of! sure which k'.irs -.i In-.tv ilv on the citv . The Hie prewnl condition of Ihiitgs. The Itiver and ' birim-r.-. an- olitainini; go, price- for whatever Hiirltor bill, the Homestead bill, the modillca-1 !"U11 U! H'1' "'"l J1'1' T' A l,'tnM vr" , ., . . , a, - ... , I Ihii l K'hkI. Piol'-tlilv 110 foi ite r mips cer Honof Ihe Tariff, and all other great Interests tVX(.,.t.,i.-d (b'.-e n-tv on Hie gn-ni'l while Ihu nave been snamelttliy sacritieeu lo slavery itgi- latloli and the plunder ol the treasury lo (ill Ihu pockets of needy adventuiers. An eight mouths session was never before so wickedly wasted. . Ji:tKKIi.tN Cocntv, The Whigs of Jelfi r-oii have just held their coiiuly couvenlloii. The following ticket has ken put hi nomination; Piohalc jHigi Dr. John Cook. t'hrti of the Court Jame" E. Marsh. Auditor J Aiues Lowe. (V rum 11.1 iantr John Di-hiirT. Injirmanf 'inrior Alex. J Bejlty. Stionn resolutions n-niust Ihe reisal of the Missouri 1 'tiitibromi.e woreiinaniuioiidvaihinli d. The ftillowing will show Ihr spirit in which thry are prepared to act ; inter- lies, (dh -llclieviug Ibis question, In It id, rxiciil and iin)Mirlancc, paramount others, we Inviiu a union ot all lionet men. and i their eo-opertithui in reHitig the encntaclunents and extension of slavery thai blight upon Ihe prosperity, ami incubus on the energies of pen- iie cnnimiiy leimenug 10 me menus 01 in c. dom everywhere our cotitldeneu In return for ineirs: 10 uiase eueciivu uiineii action 111 im premises. .0-The Teacher's SlaleConvetition al iiatiiM-villc adopted the following resolutions: iVenfrcir That In ths o)ilnion of the mi-ntiT f thn I. foi Ution. llrawini ilioiibl rouititulc a btani h id v-lut-a tion in tho 1 nninu n si li.h ol oiiui hVWiy. Tbsl Ihe Kmcnlive ci iiinilllee t- InitmclH fillip Ui trpul s di-lmitr il.i d'" e.tiiti,tiiinni ui N, let th nu-i'li -. Of tin- AxorMtlotl h'tiUtrtt, That Mid H'omntltte if to ll action ai lln-) may ili-ciu iti,p t di-tt-rmininjr th jo rti-4lUii r ol i,ii taMi.hne-Tilot iel Normal si hl. j.V (jf, liut Mirb a sr-.t-in -l i' aa r-uilrniiiUled In llie ,ill intn-l s-itlinnie-l In lute HI (mid V-r pie i n vcr ef th- Stall v Hm J. II S nit, ilurinH lit "inter. Is in nui i j Iiik hlf, and Kiiold fohliitint- mm b tn Ihe Ihr re- uric and inrre,M of ihirrilih in hublt d''iu .Im I 1 ""'il ol A Visitation. The death of lie.iil W. Watson, In Milford towndtip. nlsml nine miles from i Mt. Vernon, Knox county, of cholera, has ken ' mentioned. It seems that his mother was next ; attacked, and died ; ami Hieu followed, In quick ' succession, Ida brother William, and a sister Two or three others of the family were attacked, but hopes wero entertained hy last accounts of their recovery. Thu ncighkrs all fled and left Ihu family alone in llieir heavy troubles. Nobody could be found to asr-ist lu Hie interment of Retiu kyond the niemkra ol Ihu household. Asotiikii liioT. Our Irish Catholic friend seem determined In run (heir heads against a alone wall A .li.i,,,!,, u,rt,..l .... ih.- nih at Lawrence. M.o-.. klwceii the Americans am) .. .. Ihe Irish. I'btols ami ullur weapons were used. It la reported that the Calholic Church was de- slroycd. The Irish raised thu American (lag will, across over it. The Americans ae,M it and lore II down, a uunikr of ptrninH were in jured. No low of tile. r D. C. Bloomer. E-q., Ihe hiiskind ol the Mrs. Bloomer, has retired from hk nst as editor I of tho Mt. Vernon "Western Home Visitor," where he h.u Is-en doing scrvlco for aUnit a year pal. Hi- wile, who his lieen asAveiatetl Willi him In Ihe editorial department, wo prc atime. remains, n- lh. ro is no notice to Ihe con 'rrtrJr' . . 'o. A new adininUtialion organ Is about lo iu, ...i,.i,ii i..i I., rhi.-n.... It k to lN ctlled t'slalili-hed in Chicago. FoKog .iniiihii, and will play jtisl Ihe tori of tunes lhat are sent (o II liotn Washington. Of cmilM! it. will defend Ihe Nebraska outrage. Thu '.hhhmM Ih Ihe hading man 111 Hie new Unit. Mr. Et.l.KT. the engiuecr of the Wheeling bridge, announced on the ;u in.-!., thai il the work was not arresleil by legal proceedings. Hit1 hrtdgu would be again open mi gencmi Iravci and tliu transit ol llie cmtuilMBlcs.uaiis ttiiiiiu two weeks from that date. It ia our hope that the wmk of nquir may not k Interriiplisl. T1, ..,ll. v.,r ll. I...1....1 lh.,l'.nPA1 , , , ' . ritual, we-l oi lAinoriugiMrii in on .aii.Msy last And biuti-d the (lack lo Ihe depth ot leu feel for considerable di-taure. It will slop travel caul of (hat point lor some days. i-Q. Tbe N. Y. Tribune, giving an account of the animals butchered In New York for the 2d quarter of IWI. soya: Nine tenths of the swine and large numbers of sheep come from ( "bio, It will ho noticed thai Ohio cattle average almost 1000 per week. NUM1EI 41). Hard 1p. There U inm-h plain sober truUi and loud lor reflection iu (he following article whii-li we clip from (he New York Tnbunr. As a nation it is evident to all we have ken living too "a-l. We come luck to the line path, or stiller Hie coustqiieriee.-i. ' here i. im law ol nature more llxeil aud .-tublniru than H1.1l retribution is sure to follow in thu wake of eliavayuiiee. Bead, ponder, und act, kdoie it if loo late. Yes. it is the snb'-r. prosaic, literal linth, that we an? nearly allnl us hard up. vto either owe money, ami don t know where to get it. or ure subject to calls" for installments on unpaid Railroad or oilier s-uh-criplioiis, or uie doing a heavy taMiiUM w lm h requires large distmise. iiieiits weekly or monthly and brings iti ho cor responding returns. .Many of us ure shinning Horn day to day, ami Hint tin- worn grow harder and hauler, though we live in com hint linik, with Micawhcr. llml - soiuellitiig will turn up." Meuutime piopertv. uukas it e.iu Is- eaten or drank imiiiedi.iti lv. is vn vli.tid lu turn into ca-h, while borrowing is well mh unposililc. The Banks tiiinit abate the income. There are doubtle--; some among them Unit aro loo timid, while oHe i- me extended more widely than liny fle-uhl lie ; but, l.il.en us u limly they have done and are doing altout as well as they could 01 can. 'I'hi-.v havt- not. but tin1 great mas.s o llieir cii-t"tii"ls have eaten und dtatik and worn too many co-ily luxuries, and built loo' many grand hoii.-cs. Money in very hard lo get. simply Ik-cup e as a cuouiiinil v we haveprom-i.-ed lo iay fur more of it than wu have ur can readily procure. The rare vviru'-iweliavedrank. the eo.-tly silks we have worn, the guns and jewels vve have bought, the iron we. have laid down or used up for some year.1 pa d nearly all imported and much of il bought on credit now rise up iu judgment against us. Wu are like the Iu4 youth grown older, und nitl'ciing from gout, dyspepsia uud other maladies which result Irom hard living, who grumbles that bo should In- alllicted nti since he has abandoned his evil habits, when In: had never a twinge while he was ab-'orbud iti'llient. But the avenging bolt falls when it w ill, and doubtless al the very k'sl lime. No palliative, no nostrum, will relieve iih. We cun only recover bv di-sisl ing Irom the w rong and returning to the right. Vte must live lu our old houses or build more frugally limn of late, buy fewer and cheap"!' new dre-ses, drink more pure water and les .; eo.-tly liquors, commence no more railroads reiving on future sitb-criptioiis of stock or sales i, Imnds In eke oul the cost of (heir construction iu sln-rt. we intisl lake in sail generally. We uiu-l ln out fevvir si reel and clear up more farms; sow more acres in grain und edible rootj. while vve r p-'inl fewer llioii-aiul.' 011 stage danc'iand race hor.-i s; undergo fewer ten dollar hall- uud live dollar dinners, ami not lie ashamed lo lie K'eti wheeling a barrow or car rying a package. The change w ill Is- trying for many, especially for when und daughters reared in indolent luxury, whom the bankrupley and consequent Meant or night ot liu-itamls ami lath ers will leave suddenly destitute; yet, tince wo were all intended to do somelhing'for a living, and not to live uselessly on the labor ol others, it win he oust 111 the loiii; run even lor them. Many a noble character has Is-en developed by adversity which would have remained unmatur ed and unsuspected hail Uu- pussewnirs lieen dan dled throii'di life hi llie lain if nro-pei Itv: and the wMow who In poverty ami nh-eurily trains her orphans lo live 1 ol indu-lty, Irugallty and useimness. is pun ning a nooier arm holier career Hum il leading litem giddily through the mazes of FaMiioti amid the snares of Wealth aud Pleasure. We shall pa through Ihe existing pressure, nnd be the better lor it in the end. Many of us will lie weaned by it ft tun City w ays for ever, ami drawn away into uie itroad. green Country 1 ,re a man may sit down to his dinner without ! '" I'1 10 '"V""' "'' ,,1C iriWflS j to-morrow or" It- Is rui I. From lh- purgatory of shinning and th nighlmaro of bankruptcy. ; F' ssttr will libcrale many of m for ever. ! ""'r Jiiy ia.i. in.vy atumiing exiiensive fer to Illinois cut tidd- and Mimic milk and who will live lo k Ih.inklul for the change. TIih sit km-ss is not milo d-alh bill unto life ;" aud If our people ever l arned any-thing frt'in disH-ier or were weum il from folly by mi 11c ring, ii would Is- an excellent thing for us. Yet, al Ihis very hour, when il Is morjlly impo.-Fil-le lhat vve :1m mi Ii I pay for the Imports already coii.--iimd. then1 are many more coming in than wu ought lo buy, and iio immediate ! prospect ot a lading oil. Kither tbe importers or ino buyers mu t ioe money oy irn tn hope il may not Is- th" hitler. If vve could oulv reduce our 1 11 rt - di-enli-dlv kdow 0111 W- ' rts. to as b pay oil' one-piai tend our Foieigu D' bt W itllill Ihe year, we lipoid Is' a Christmas, and medtl le.ume Ihe cm Iniclioiiof our sii-is-iidcd Railroads: Iml tin- pn-M-itt leit- r " .dnev is fowanl a n d-ieti-m o ,e Taritr and a !ruiieeipii-tit intluv of more Fon-ign I .ikies. .rl I ' pe'-pk bov 110 mole llian Hn-y uiu really aMo ''',v ."" ' "l,a "lt''11. ,MV'' 1,11 ,H'!n i . ,. ' . . , . ' """ pi-jee of itm l farm prisnt .tc- vrn gotxl. Tlfv will k lower b'loie lMemki, Iml l.iktr will abo Is- Ii.u.t: s.. u'll-.-ls and ihe knn-er wlm t- mil of it.-lil can Inty a. much of whal-eter he want with hi .; enp a he ever could. --And si, hum a- Hn e.u lh iehh ntnto.l.uitlv ami Hie lti.i'l'ily of our eotliitl yim-n me lieillier all. ml nor a haiilrd to lill it, He- r poll uf pres. sine and p.ini' - will il iuo-1 liii'-td - only a the vague, r.mt.i: lie it coll etion of a dt'ciiii. To Tin; I'lofi.coriiiiio - Al tlieh-t m-. dim of the lietier.tl m'lv an act wa- pa- si np-suntiitg lh- iind'T-i-Mied ( 'oiunii- iotter- to erect 1 a luoiiutiieul to Hi.' ite ne-ry liMienl .-'moil lltoii. and d"llitrs . 'n '" -'IT'T' laiing I thai iiitiih i Al a bit" uietiiii"id the Cotiii ioiicrs. held Ion the i!l-t .lull", io-l till, at le iletoul.iine. in 1 l.ogatl counl v. il w.i.- ih h nnitit d lo erect Ihu Hitiiuplateil noTiooi. ill nl lhat place, near whit h the remain? ol ( ell h- ill-'tl How rejuiH pJiit'cn car-ii hit. lili J m, h,.re. tor ihe la.-t he re.-itletl, j The Comini sinner k ini: ol ihe opinion lhat . a nicmnrui woriliy ol llie lun v irUies and einl j neui pul.iii of Ib'ii. Iv iitou cannot eveculetl for 11 le-v. -utn llian t-u tliousuiul do- 1ms. have ie-i)ivis lo solicit suh-r nptmiis irotu tin- K-ople of the Slate, lo aid in erecting itn monutneiii, itniiiid 111 amoiiiit lo one dollar liotn eaeli Mib ciilier. We llien lore call upon our l' How -fit iy.cn- l 1 mitt to aid 11 - in comtiu iiioi tiling Hie memory of ne man 10 vv mwtr couraoe ami iiu iiimie tin-peo- pie uf the est, am) of Ohio In pitiicular, are 111 a great ib giee iiub bled lor Ihe k-aulilul ounlry winch liny now occupy and enjoy. Let 11-. bv a nioiiuiiM nl woilby of lk most : di.-lingui hi-d nl Ihe uc.icni 1 toneei-, woo I Mutiny id tho pn cut n- ialioii iti Ohio. Iran- 1 111 it to our de Cendant. Ihe rcodlei lioti of hi 1 hemic ih cdj and exhibit tie in to fttturi' ages a: Hie llieuie ol prai-e, and nnslcl d ituititlioit. W. A. Anvus. Joiix A.Coitwtv, Bvn vi.i. II m;i;: os, Axiiiom I'v.svn, K. II. Cm , MM M. CiKMOlAMiOK '. III. i.i.khixtvixi:. dime. InM, The l.alrrt ftr The London Standai d of the evening of June in, thus sums up ihe latest intelligence it had received : "The day has U-vn lev rich in inblligence respecting ibu progn-sw nf the war llian any lor Foiue m.iM.ii-. hi inc., . ...it nil- itoiiuccmetit timi rashiewnch has received orders lo proceed from Jiwsey to Odessa, nil Ihe conimuuiciitioitslrom lite Coiitiueul ate but tepc-lilions of fuels prev lonsly announced. Paskie- witch's inMon ( 1 lessa. a soon a his wound- allacK iilHtii ihe 1 11 men. i.ei us add. nun 1 in i !"- !' ,' 'r "',")' s 'ni . , inu pass 01 inu intriei, were ltiucii more mtious , m ivH-rTu"!. Tk litw-ia a lost ;t..Hm . I1U. ,im, j ,jr w,oe torcu. and I heir com- i nuinicalions with Georgia were 'etleetnally nil off. Sliamvl is now ;ntd to Is- in a enintition lo T V,' W . , .' lflTa. !'"' . '! nis oH-niiions oiny in niiemiance tqion uie sioiv mnvi'int'iilof an equal aiiiotiut of I'orer under Hie command of Ottoman general-." PLANS OF TUP A LI.I Ex ti..,i..,r v.. ;ii ..ni.r ib,- liinol,i, Prim ipalilitM to commence- ho tiliiie Immutli- airly against Bula iu the eveui ( the retn-al i vaciuile. or to serve as a soil ol me.li.ilor k-1 ( hvecn her und llie nllnv in ihu eveiil (not con. i - idct'd impiob.ihb-) ol aepndv evacuation, it - M'" vermin Unit il will ho ll.e signal for j lh. ulll,.fl nt niioj lit ,'iil..r mi I In. ill in nl !, lit. I paign which it is kli"ved ha.- ken already i adopled. Ihu Augio irencii imcc win. 11 up lH'iU'- h 'tvu (he itglil bank u Ihe I'anutK' i' and lirccl lln-m-cUcs lowaids the Crimea, wlure it is ihotiglit a ct'itibitii'd attack will U uiadi' by sen mid laud, in conjiinclion vviili ihe CiicisiiuiH. 11111111-11 siege preparations are gim; on, ami guns ol great mwer have already been w ill to Ihe Itlack Sea. ami lln I mops in 't'utkex are lie-qnenlly i-x. ii in d in Ihe rni'mi king and landing. Wo ni.iv cvpecl. thereloic, tuhe.tr Is lore nnir of serious iqn-r.iHoux in the Him k Sea, I Const vmixoi'i.k.Juiiu l.i.. 'Ihe Duke of Cun-1 bridge, with Ihe ttr.-l divi-ion of i.uon men. h it xy " ( r hh;iiii ine 1..111 in i. i,otn -.'- 'f - -m... m. ...m. night. l ater fresa Haxana. 1 1 I'"'1 Cm id i;-rox. J' uly It. - Tho sl'-am-bip lsal mine last niht, sh. I. II Ila arrived al tiuaranliue m , mTnUil ,t ,),, III, uud hey Net on the evening ot Hie same day. I Ml' MoniCa--lie, sho pastel two From h tri galea nml mte French steamer, bound lor New York. Adinhal Diiquc-ne wa- hiiiriett wilh grout pomp. The Spanish slcamer Bonne de Begin arrived at Havana on the Mil. with 'J IS soldiers. Cup!. J. M. Sauroth. Culled Stale Engineer, who had t n charge thu const rue lion of Fort Taylor, died at Key We-I. on llie 'IM. of yellow fever. Between the 2d of June am) (he hlti of July, seven ikatlisfrom yclbm fever bait ewet red at Key West. Jta of toi Brutal Attempt to Mi rdeb at Cadiz. Thomas Coleman, who married a wife some two or three months ago, much younger than himself, attempted to kill her on last Saturday morning. His wife was engaged in putting on her slocking preparatory to going to church, when Coleman struck and knocked her down with a largo iro poker, and when down cut her throat with a ra zorthen cut his own. A neighbor happening lo call In, made Ihe discovery, and gave tha alarm. Mrs, Coleman's life was despaired of at lirst. but she gives indications now of recover ing. Coleman did not dip' very deep Into hia own neck. Whcntheneighlsirsenteredthehouae he was eyeing his wife aud leaning with his head s tho ft.mlor l.tlin Ihe liVftri (Irinnn till mIimb ' Coleman had been formerly au exemplary cit 7 zen. Is supposed lo have been insane caused by ' inordinate lore of money and meanness, and ' fears of coming to want. His wife has caused him to make au outlay of fifteen dollars during 1 tbe Iwo mouths they had been married, and act- f ing upon the Principle that it was better to be l out ot the world than out of money, he attempt- f- ed to send his young wife to eternity and follow I himself but from recent experience, we think he's come to tho conclusion that 'Jordan Is a hard road to travel. StuA. Herald. The friends of Gov. Corwln in southern Ohio have In contemplation the erection of his statue iu bronze to be placed in some appropriate position in one of the cities in the Miami valley. A statue of tho kiud contemplated, say eight feet high, on a noble pedestal, with panels represen-m ting striking events in his career, win cost about lilleeii thousand dollars. Jones, tho sculptor, who has made, a bust of Gov. Corwin in marble, will undertake to produce a model for tho proposed statue. He Is an enthusiastic admirer of thu matchless Western orator, and will give to the task that study which only a genuine "labor of love can extort from geulus-'' Mr. Ames, the great bronze caster at Cbicojiee, Mass., has fm-nishcKl a rough estimate of the cost of costing, chasing, Ac, aud is capable of doing tho work in a style worthy lo porctuaie to coming times, the form and features of our favorite. A fund necessary to defray the expenses of tbe work will Is raised by ad -script ion, and tbe probability il inai 1 lie city communing tne. largest amount will he allowed to nx the sue lor toe statue. Anoi.tTioN McKTixfi im MABSAcm'strra. A gathering of five or six hundred abolitioniala look place in Framiugham, yesterday. Speeches were made by Messrs. Garrison, Phillips, and others. Mr. Garrison concluded his speech by burning 11 copy of the constitution 'of tho UniLrl Htatcs ; also copies of tho fugitive slave law, the decision of Judge Loriug, and Judge Cur tis s charge to the tinted estates grand jury 'J lie act was followed by applause and cries of shame, itr. I hen Mr. Garrison U a fool Ian man, waning so much paper that he might have made profitable use of. The operation must have been supremely ridiculous as performed by Garrison. We could imagine Wendell Phillips doing such-a thing with wtmc melodramatic effect, tragio dignity and vehement romance ; and ho would probably have " brought down tho bouse," bat to see the cool, demure, prim little Garrison attempting such heroics must have been peculiarly uinttsittg. V. V. Cm..'ldc. II Is said thai Mr. 1 this of Ohio, that puiely " Democratic" rue in lair ofCoiigrcsa who gocsfor raising the postage on poor men's letters while maintaining the franking privilege for tobacco-chewing julip-sw igging Members of Congress, has a sou who was recently appointed to office in pari consideration of his papa's vote for tfa- Tie orai Ka mil, aim trial nis son laoors under tbe name of Murqui de La Fayette Olds. It seems that the father Is so profoundly ignorant a man that he supposed he was giving his offspring the proper mime of tho good La Fayette, when he was only giving him the gallant Frenchman's title as a nobleman just as if, wishing to name Ihe boy afler the Father of his Country, he had called bim General Washington Olds Instead of O'forge tVathington 0d$. Itis notsurpris-ing perhaps, that such an Ignoramus should wish to lay an additional tax on Ike circulation of In telligence among the people, but wodon'thelievo his constituents will like him nny the better for it. j . i wune. ItoMISII CoVII'I.HIKYM Ol' AVKRICAN ClTlSA The Boston Pilot, one of the mos( favored and popular 01 mo roe s organs in tbe united Slates, gives utterance in (he following very emphatio strain to the opinion it and its muster entertains for American citizens : ' Wc every tiny read of a congregation of the American Order assembling for Ibo purpose, of iiieulting female and even committing outrages iqtoii mem. 1 uis is a prooi 01 tne braggadocio bravery of Americans; Ihey have no raautfmfl no honor uu love for fair nlav: it Is of no ubh rea-ontng with them; Iherc are but two courses bit, Itio most plausible of which is, and we believe that it k the determination of many of our Irish bre t hern, lo knock them ton, or otherwise chiHiso them corporeally, for should our Irishmen npieal to law for a redress, the odds are against him, for religious prejudices run so high in Court, lhat with a Protestant Judge ami a Pro tenant Jury, lite poor oppressed Irishman Htm he deprived ol all just means of redrei Tne Lvtk Nathaviei. Hknuv A paragraph lull of hi u riders relative lo ibu death and circumstances of tho late Nathaniel Henry, of Floyd, which has ken going the round of tho newspapers, found its way into Ihe Virginian of yesterday. Since H appearance, wo hue Imi --- .n. i.-Monuig iioiv 01 correction ny a memiter 01 mo lamily : Ikk Sirs: On taking up your paper thfa iiioiiiiiik, in-.- ujiuv ui 1 dincK ncnrycaugni m eye, and after ruatling itio article so headeif ur lirst impuiv was lo sei.e my pen lo correct tl error as to the "de-litution and death" of h youngest son. I iml gentleman is now living Htllueucp at l.etl I tall, Ihe seat of his father. N ttiani'd Henry, one ol the older sons, died man years since, lie was a man of superior min and of a noble and generorts uitposition. Ib was a poor man. hul was uol without friends. I feel called upon to correct this impression, that reproach may not rest upon the names of his brothers and sisters, most of w hom. If not all, are wealthy. l.tnchhurg t'iiginian. Tin: Aituv or nit: Rkvoi.itiov. Tho whole enrolled Continental army of the Itevolution was ;il,!),",!l. of which ti7.!iu7 were from Massa-chnselts, or more than Ii per cent, ul the army, wink fiery Slate nnnth of Pennsylvania nrovl- dt it hut .".!'. iJX or H.4 1 1 less than MasachuselmrH alone. The New England States equipped and inain- lauuii iif,.t.o. or awtve on if or tne whole rcvo-lutiotinry army. In Ihu years 1777, 177H. 17H1, and Hu- quota or Massachusetts and Vir ginia were alike iu battalions and men ; yet Mas-sachu cits raised Ti.M in (hose year, while Virginia, though hound to enlist (he snme nutn iwr. g,n itaiintgioii nui i.i.iu.r, or :i.airi leas n than M -issae h 11 etts, a difference which would g make a respectable army. PoviKRor Sii.t MiM i Af-n in:.- The Pomeroy T humph contains an article on (he salt manufacture in thai pi sen and vicinity, lt places the manufacture al buhds a iky, to wit ; Pomeroy rn I M oinpany, "mi bushels ; 11: ,' Hidcg Company, Ami; Coalport dm ; an, WeTvimiifiA kibiaPK) or alsuil miimiih) kishcls a year. lAta j value, allowing 2d cents a kishel at the yard, ia 1 tl.'ii.iHH) a year ; llie business isyel in its tufan- J , ey ol that place. Two new soft furnaces now is-tng mini, one at Loaiport, Ino other al I West Colnmbia. The salt vialer la obtained by Istring lo the diqith of 7m or 1,(100 feM. ami is 1 brought lo the sip lace through copMr pites, Ity means 01 pumps woiktii ny u am except ! the Pomeroy well where the water rises to t j surface spontaneously. Domdhtii' Bi.tss is N.w ExoLxn. The N, Hamp-hire superhtr court, nl Its laic term Kl t.oiieord. neani arguments in en; itv-tlm: voice anils. Tbirlv-tliree of the studies wi re granieu, seven neuiesi, ana tbe declHon I lorlv three n-servtit. lire sins-nor 00111 ' riage relation Is concerned. J CvTiioi.uy ap Coviuox Snioow. The Ctev? , nn(i ,Pftl,,r aV t,a ,hP Calhollc editor ot th' ; niicugo Tablet, iu a lecture delivehtl at Jollet llhode l.'land.al its hist term, bad seventy I simiUr ruses k-fore It, of which forty-two re I eeived jiidgment uf divorce, four were denied, F three settlett, ami Ik remainder continued foi7 considerAlioii. New EuglAiid is fast oatu(t B"l title to Ihe name of the land of steady habit.! at least m far as the permanency ol the mar-A 111 , expri's-d Ihe following opinion of Commn4 fjctllHllB The common schools of America are founds. Hons of prostitution and erime.andall tuaum J Indecencies and immoralities Are practised in till , I nrsl Jtl years of my life in Ihera." 1 Know it 10 ih so. necause 1 was eilucAled IB Aeeonlinir lo ihe t'nited Slates TrraaiiretJ ' .,,',,, , ; "., " rr " , . "; v. . : . . . , . J . , i "'M-' iirwT Almonto n-ectved a check Ior '.,HH'Wi, on rridny.aa ihe nrat Instalment " Wexicn nn aeconut ol Ihu n-eenl tirsly with I ; " '"; ; ! has an n'mrh exlr liiuiliT.iB hkul. ' f 1 t A Know NoTitivn. I say. Bill. I AesVir?V' Nolldn. 'Where:'' "liy, on the Museuiirl ' hut did he look like? " Why, h-j i oa. -Huotii. io. i an i worn nasi ne on . " t litmus. mm i oe a inoi let me how too ' found nut thai he was a Know Nothing? - " Why, ho said so.'1 " Did you ask bim lo tell you.' "No. but I aoked him whether kwotildn t give me a sixpence ami lie.jnl No, nothing, " Dkvih auomi mt: llouti .--A Chicago pap" nvs mat aisnii j.'.t nogs, is'ing nan oi a oi o t ill head, tll'Hl from excessive font on l day last, while ou the Ens-Urn branch of ll I Inois Central Bailroad, ttelween Pern an iluntlion. Tbev were fstitk- inuiaportiHi Vermillion counlv to NewYurk. and kins ly stowed In the cars were Miflk alttt from heal. The train went on tn Dunkirk from Junction, the dead ami live hogs ttivaeparale Tho LonlsvHIo Cornier says that onu of t lurors in tho ixam irtai has been etrtx tiuii rr the chuirh to which he klonaed in Edski town, tor having sworn lhat In- had formed opinion in lhat case, when tlrt called us tur i wlidoll was pro vest thai ho had rviM-alnlly i vut An opinion. Uthor Mirtenue was ebeite.1 wllil,n WU H, iit aTafiaTuTr- ltvi:xi.-At anclMinn for Jimlhe of lh Peace, held in Kavemia, Portage citimly. Obit la Salunlay, whore the Nebraaka nitration wJ - 1 m,l,'f tirrrt P"-illie ksaue, Uie Anll-NeA ina-KA raniiniaiu was eiecicii ny a maiorily el one ntimirtti niki piny our. i uis ia ino mor nolewirlhy. from (he fael lhat tbe old line Dm ocrals have carried Ravenna by strong niaje ties for years, oven when VYIiiga and Fmsoil uniletl an a itial them. The farm oflieneral Cass, which, thirty yeai ago, was In Ihe suburbs id tbe link vHUuo " Delroll, la now In tho very beait of (hat TerH and pnwpi'roiia oily. By rulalnlug poanwsiy of the land which originally ciarl kit a few h f dri'd dollars, ho now flndshlmaelf worth at Ihreo millions Irom lhat operation alooe. T -' -v -v a
Object Description
Title | Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1849 : Weekly), 1854-07-19 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1854-07-19 |
Searchable Date | 1854-07-19 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn85025898 |
Reel Number | 00000000024 |
Description
Title | Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1849 : Weekly), 1854-07-19 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1854-07-19 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3642.76KB |
Full Text | (Dljio State JournaL OAILY, TKI-WKKKLY AND WEEKLY BT TUB I) II 1 1) STATb JOURNU COMPANY. Incvipontttd uiuIt the Utneral Law. TERM9, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCD. Puiv-1'ili ,lih .i.l".... " I")''"- M i i 1 ' . Hv the t'JiritT. x r wfik el- Thi W it klv -Z l-'V'"' wivuir ; Clul. uf tin tinlorer 1 TERMS Or APYKItThsINo llV TIIK (HJl'ARE. n:x uw " uwa hake a cam One i On aiu.mtln ; i.iiu " S'lav. 1 JS ,. -l month- HO ; ..im' ' 4-l.iv. 1 - Ih," - 1 ""' " 'A 1 lu one - 1 month 1 W ot... 1 lawrtfcia 5U DUplajfl advertUcniMiU lialf mure llian ttu- nbove "kerlNemetiK Ira led and iilt'ed In tin- column of " ?ppclal Notkes.'' J.,n.i.. (A (irrftmir m. All notices re-pUied in Im pulillshM by law. leiral rat. If ordured on the iiuirio eicltitim-ly aHr the tint wul, 60 r cent, more than the above iIm ; but nil aucli will aiiixitr in tin- 1'ri Wi-ekly without tlmw. iJu-iiii-fH C.ird-. not i-cit'.UH(( flu- llm. r Tear, hi-lilt. ll.'M x-r lino ; outside Nuticci of moiling, cliartubl auci.-lh-a, flr emitpa-ui.-H, 4c, Half jiriw. Advertisement not aecomt.itiir-d with wrtttt-n rtkee-Hunt will be Inscrtod till forbid, and charged atcord- AH tranib'iit ndvi'i-tlsi-uieiits inual Isi iuld fn advance. WltKLV Ollf B(JUL1I0 WHS WL'I'k, 60 wut ; twu wick, 75c ; three weeks, 1 ; one month. 1 "6 ; thn-o mouth, : tlx month. 16 ; onu year, 111). Under tlio rao.iat system, tlio advirtlnur pay an much for tliu he m.-ciiiiea, llie cliaum's being chargeable with Ibu unnpo.it ion only. It U nowgtai-rally adopted. jllisfclloncom Millie, the 111 I lid Child, BY II ART 1HV1MU. Did you ever thauk Ood for your i-yefl.dear children? Those two bright, clear, bappy eyes, that He has given to driuk in tho pleasant Huniihiuo, the beauty of tho flowers, tho glmy uf llio rniubow, mid thu swcctnesn uf our dear inollier'H smile t Li k leu, now, to tlio utory of a child to whom lie never gave eyes to look upon anyofthesu beautiful things. It was on ftHunsliiny morning iniHowhcrc in the middle of tho Atlantic ocean that a gentleman, whom sickness, had irnjirinoiieil in hi utate room bine the firbl roll uflho uliio, look courage, from a ctip of coffeo and tho calmness of the tea, to crawl upon deck. Ah ho stood at the head of tho narrow stairway, clutching a ropo to Hiinport hU tottering nlopn, hu heard a glad child a laugh. Looking up, he Kftw a littln girl, about fire years ohl, quite at her cane, on Uie turning ami rolling floor, trying to "jural) rope" with n knotted end of hhip rigging, which had been given her by nn old nailor. 1 he brisk breeso had brightened her cheeka, and curled her flowing hair in no very orderly innnner. Mr. L. thought of liia own littlu daughter over tho ocean, ar.d biscyett filled. "Come to me, my dear!" ho kindly called, reaching litBhand towards tho child. Sho atoiH-d her play, looked up, m though half iriidilened, half atonihhed ; and then lm-can carefully to creep toward tho outstretched hand. He lifted her to hiu lap, and kisaed her coral lipa. " Whuite little girl are ynn V ho imiuired. ' I'm nobo-'y'B little cirl'uhe replied, ins touching tono. " Only (iod taknx care of run and nmnelimeB Captain I ." " How, where ia your mamma?" "Mamma ia in llurrnmpooter ; I'm not her little girl any more" hero a lear Tolled down her cheek. "I'm going to New York," ahe said, " to bo uncln'a little fjirl. But New York ia a great way otr, isn't it, air ?" "Not a very long way, my child you will noon see your uncle." " 1 ran't trr, nir," alio Haid, aoftly. Mr. L. atarlled. and looked down into llioso bright, dark, intt-lligent eyea. Ala ! it was too true! they were darkened windows, through which thu foul could never l'Hk ! "Mittio! hey Mittie !" called A Muff voice, ax the caitlain'M ramisln d hat appeared from behind tlio marri- " Kh, birdie, what now neat have you found i "With a Mart and a hound, Millie jumped into hia rough arma, und laid her cheek upon lliefchnuliler ot liia mnugy co.u Kienvo. "So-ho, shipmate," continued tho Captain, addroat-ing Mr. L., " you are aloft at laat. Nothing liko a etirTnor'weitter for Inking tho tarcli out of your liimlsfiplk." And hu laughed. "But Una litde girl, Captain I , bow happens hho tolw alone on tin) wido world uf waleraV" "Can't aay," returned tho rnptain, with a duhioua thake of hia ahimiing hat. She' a tray waif that I picked upon the Liverpool docks. Don't know her belonging ; hIiu was labelled for New York, it acema. Her name what'a tho balance of it, aea bird V" ho atdn d. " Mittie Wythe Hamilton," lipped the child, who hud already found her way liack to Im r bit ol rope, and Mat agninnt the ship's railing, loa-(.ing up bands at every new diuli of ipray. " 1 was named for Uncle Wythe, and he tola mam-tnatoaend me." H'r face clouded for an in-ilant, and then lirigbteued again in tho ami-ahiiie." Tour blind pet! M) far an I can maku out her story from one thing and another, tdio ia the child of imahioLiancK in India. I'oor creature, they could not bring her over themselves, and I dure aay she was getting noi;ood in thitt heath-cuuh land ; fioitan nis they put her in charge uf an Knglihh lady, name I've forgotten, who set out to join her niibband eoiuewhere in Canada. But hbe aickened and died before the barque Sally reached Kuglaml, and tho poor thing was h it friendtens and lo lplc.a. W hat the niDlain ami mate of the Sally were thinking of. I don't know : but ther nut tho child on drv I land, with the balance of the naseugera, and net sad without so much aa looking up a ctvw York packet. Alone in Liverpool and il'a no place for a blind child, sir, to say nothing of one that's got eye I found her, smoking In mlf pretty much a you sen her now, with bits of chips, at the corner of n chip yard ! How tho creature bad lived, 1 can'l say. I'll bcliuve after this, hbipmate, there's Hod in the aky, who, aa alio says, keeps watch over children ; if He don't over us grown-up ttiuncra I It acema she had never wanted for a berth nor i hihi, 'I want to iro to New York,' sho would ssy to evervatranirer who spuko to nr. I couldn't Imvo left the little thing but I don't know I where I'm tukinir her. if 1 ran't anchor h safely, I'll keep iu-r for first mate of Ihe Down , j hey, sva bird 1 " " What could vou d with her in that terrible . storm off Cape Clear ? I shudder In recollect lhat night!" I " Will, air, while you were lying flnt on your hack, aud Ihe real of us were hurrying, hauling and pulling hither and thither, working tor dear life against the winds and waves, the pretty creature was rolling about the cabin floor, clapping her hands as though she were in an apple tree swing, and found il capita) fun ! When I tumbled down to my l.-cker for five minutea' rest, 1 found her on her knees, in her little night rapper, saying, 'Our Father,' and 1 felt sure no atorm would sink the ship with her on it I " I'oor mother of Mittie t how her heart was wrung at sending her Mind, trusting child from tier arms I But her brother in America had written, telling her that he would provido for Mitlio, poor sightless Millie, who could learn litllu in lhat uncivilized land. So, with many tears and prayers, that missionary mother had packed her' Millie's small trunk, and fdared her in Ihe care of a friend thu Kuglish ndy before mentioned to ! transported lo our country. nai nui a mouiir a prayer guard ed tho lu lpless darling in I i ii er in icly wander- On arriving at New York, Captain I And Mr. made inquiry evurywherB for Mr. Wvlbrt. Directories were searched, streets ransacked, ami questions repeated hundreds of liuica, to no purpose, no relative oi the poor Mind Millie could bo found. " Lmvo her with ino. captain," aaid Mr. ... " I am soon to return to Loudon, but hrforn sailing, I will place her in an asylum for the blind, and see that sho ia comfortably cared for." Instead, however, of placing Millie in I he Slate Asylum of New York, her friend look her lo a skiulhern ciiy, wncre no nni nmiueas coti-neclions. and left her in ono of thosu U-autiful ret teats, which nature and art have combined to nihrn for thoto wlnsu ryes tell not night from day. nor beauty from delormity. Kind voices welcomed the little alranger, but they were voices sho had never heard nor Imped to hear, h' or thu first time since sho lobbed food-by on her mother 'a lap, her hope and faith Altered. Sho Mt that she was alone in thu world, and alio sought out a cornsr to cry. Had lh anportnteiident particularly interested himself in too child, bo would have found out her history, and probably have sought some rnmiiiunication with her parents. But selling down her name As a charily scholar, ho forgot that alio waa nut an orphan. And Mr. L T Ilia sympathies had been strongly enlisted, nnd ho really intended In find out the mystery. But he was a man of the world, and immersed in it-t busy cares. Having placed a sum of money for her use in tho hands of the director, with permission to apply to him in any emergency, ho returned to hia Kurdish homo and only remembered tho blind child of tho voyge At momenta w hen his own laughing Carrie climbed into liia tap, ne among a hundred cmrirrn, Mitite was, well educated in all that the blind can learn. j She waa taught how to read the Bible, from which hr mother had rend to her, by passing her small tingera over Ihe curiously -raised lot- tin. She learned to sew, lo braid , and to write strange thoughts that young head Used to frame, for that unsteady hand to pit dow n in its crooked wanderings over the paper, Sho learn cd losing awevt hrmns of her school mates, and to touch for herself the keys of the piano, w hose melodies had almost made her fancy herself in heaven, only thai sho had been tohl lhat in heaven she should see like oilier children! Koinelimea, in her dreams, she would find hvr-fll on a soft couch, with strange perfumes and sounds about her, and would fael warm Irara dropping, one by one, on hrr forehead, while a dear arm pressed her rlosi ly. " Mother ! dear mot her t " Mittie would cry, aud wake 4 find no mother. Years had paaaed when again a ship was nearing the forests of maats in New York harbor. On the deck aat a pale lady, in drep mourning, with traces of leara upon tier cheeks livr children clung about her, with wonder in their faces. " Oh, beautiful America ! Ihe America you hive so often told ua aboul," cried a aweet-voieed girl of twelve. ' Mamma, doea it look M it did when you went Away I " " Mamma, did you live in any of those great " Ma, ma 1 plenty f 'tftfWtts here 1 " chimed in Uiyoungat boy, whose eye hail taken in Ihe numerous church apirea. All spoke at onet. but tha mother answered neither, Her taart VOLUME XLIV. was too full. Sho had gone from that ahore a happy bride, and hopeful ; she was returning, a widow, broken in health and spirits, to place ! her children with her relatives, and then, as bhe believed, to lay her bones iu the tomb of her kindred. Que hope only made her heart bound, and her pale cheek grew paltr, as she looked on that bhoro of her nativity, for tho first time in twenty years. " Oh, Ood I could I aee all my children be fore I diet" ahe faltered. I pass over the scene of her landing, aud welcome to tho houso'of her brother. I will not stop to tell you how many wonders the Indian-born children found in American city customs and sights ; for I must hasten to tho end of my tory. I " It ia impossible, sister," said her brother to the palu lady, ono morning, in answer to some expression, "The chila could never have, reached this country. Wo never, as you know, have traced her farther than England, aid if sho bad been brought hero, sho could not have faib'd to 6ud me, or I her." Thu widow sighed. " Ood's will be doiio I" she murmured. " But it ia hard to feel that my little helpless innocent my eldest born waa sent from rnu to perish alone. Often I feel as if it could not be as if she was yet alive and I should rind her at some day." Providentially, aa it proved, the mother was led to search the catalogues of various iustitu-tiotis for the blind, long in vain. AtleDglh.sho obainrd a circular from a distant city, and glanced over it indifferently, so often had she been disappointed. Her heart sprung to her lips aa she suw tho name" Mela W. Hamilton."" Brother 1" she gasped, extending the paper , to him. He looked, and shook his head. " I'm afraid i you are expecting loo much, my poor sister. I Matilda wan your dur ling's name; and then, I how should sho stray to that corner of tlio United States V But the mother's hope waa stronger than ' her fears. Sho scarcely ato or slept, weak though she was, until she reached the Southern city whose namo tho catalogue had borne. "Hamilton? Yen, wo have ft pupil by that, namo," replied tho bland superintendent, in an- i awer to her first question of trembling eagerness." But sho is an orphan, mad am." " Aro you sure, sir ? Oh, I must ace her at oncol" Sho followed him to the door of a large room, 1 where tifly girls sat busied with their books and needlework. The buzs of conversation died, as they heard tho sound of strange footsteps, and a hundred sightlvaa eyes were turned toward the door. Near a table, on which lay a bunch of delicate straw filaments, sat Mittie Hamilton. She hud been braiding a bonnet, but her fingers had ceased their work, and, buried in a sort of reverie, aha was the only one who did not notice the entrance of u atrangor. "Was there any distinguishing feature, by which you Would recognise your daughter, my dear madam V" asked tlio gentleman. Thu mother's eye wandered over the group, as though she dreuded thu confirmation of her fears to lose her lost hope. " Show mo thu child of whom you spoke," hhe faltered. " Meta Hamilton" but ho atopped, for, at the lady's first word, Mittie hud sprung from her position, and throwing back the curls from her lace, turned wildly from side to aide. " What is that?" he cried with outstretched anna. " That Twice apeak again ! " " Mittio, my ehikl!" cried Mrs. Hamilton, apriugiug to her side, aud sinking, overpowered, upon her knees. " Mother, oh mother I" aud Mittie fell into tho arms that had cradled her in infancy. 7'Ai( iri a mnmrni ntrtr toht forgotten! Uncle Wythe Harris (for (he mistake which had clouded ao many years of the lifetime of mother and child was that of Mittio in substitutingchild that ahe was tho first namu of her uncle for the hist,) found a pleasant cottage on the banks of tho Hndoii for his sister aud her now happy family. What aloviiigwi-tcoinc the dear girls and boys, whom Heaven had blessed with tho power of seeing their nMcr, gave to tho wanderer, Mittie ! How she comforted her mother's heart, tusking her forget her great bereavament iiiakiiig her ovcu forget to sorrow that shit had a blindchild, in her joy at leeling mat sue lial anoilier living darling ! Tlio sunshine of Mittie'a girldhoodcaioe back to her spirit. Thu dear blind girt was the joy of thohoiio. How could anybody cherish a feeling of discontent or peevishness, whn that glad voice waa pouring out ila songs of thankfulness from moruiug unlit night I Oh, dear blind Mittie, iiv-r more happy spirit that she was mourned lhat (Iod hud not given her eyes to see. " He has given me back my mother," alio once said, " and these precious brothers and aiatera, and M will let mo $re Hu m all in m-av wn VtMtte '(., 1 0. l ife en Ihe M leaM f Urka. iv aw in. rirrrm:. The Itev. M. Bmham.arrieniberof tl I - don We-levan Mission." recently n-tnrmd tn , Ml lo Atrka. and in Hie roorw ul n Aeli li I of the inor.tl aud wn t.il condition of tin Kr' inli.ibtiitiir the Cold CoaM and its viciuttv. he furni-hes a Iruly aw till picture. Thus ; ' Scarcely has onu of their barbarous and bloiMly customs Uen abandoned, from thut-ar-Ibvt periisl of which anything U known o them. They si ill p.ive (heir court yards, palaces, and even the si reels or market places o tin Ir villages or towns, with Hie skulls of Hiom buti hered in wars, at feast-, luueruk or a sacritit es to llossum.' Still their wives nnd slaves are buried alive with the deceased huslwnd or hli-pt. Wheu Adihaii.eu died. lu liiindied and eighty ol hia wives were butchered lielore the itn mil ot eor. which ptil a stop lo it only lo in- creaehe How ot IiIoihI and the mimlsTol death in other ways. 'I he remaining living wives were buried alive! arimUt dancing, ."inking, and bewailing, the noise ol horns, drum.-, muskets, veils, gtoatis. And m -rceching!. ; the women marching by beadles trunks, bedmiU'd Hicm-elve witn earth and tiiood. I heir victim were inarched almig with large knives pnH'l tlmi" (heir cheeks, 'I he rvccutioiiers struggle 'ir Ihe bloody ofllee. while the victim- look on and di lute with apalhv. I hey were too lumllinr with ihe horrid saciitli c to show terrm lhat all wamioI a-it should Itr. ere lirst cti"ptfd off, and I hen their head I of, to prolmig Hie amusement. Even mine ho iiNd'ted to (ill the iirave were Im-th-d in alive, in order to add lo the sjsirl or folemniiy nl I lie -cene. I pon tlie death ot A king hrolticr, four thousand victims were thus sacrificed.-TheJ rercinoniea re ullen rejn-aled, and hun-ilredsslniighlered al every nhearAl. I'inui ihe death of a king ot Ashaulee, r general innvai rc lakes place, in wnicti I Here can ts' no eomputa-lioii ol Hie victims. " At their 'Yam f ii'loins,' Mr. Howdlleh, witnessed spectacles of I he most appalling kind.-Every calsiceer, or noble, Mieriiicml a slave as hu etitcrcil at the uate. Heads and skulls lorm- i tlio ornaments of their Ihish'snoiik Hun dreds were slain; and Ihe streaming and sic Ing IiIiknI of thu victims was iningh-d in a vast brass iian, with various vrgelables and animal mailer. Iresh as well aa putrid, to conqniec a powenui rein ne, ai mere cusioiua, inu saimc scenes ol butchery and slaughter occur. The Kiiig'n emutlotiers travrrw the cily, killing all th'y meet. Thu next day deflation n-ins over the land. The King during the Moody saturnalia In. .kd on eagerly, and danced in' his chair with delight 1 ' The hing of Dahomey paves the approaches lo bin residence, and nniameiit.-i the Uitllcinents of his pnlner with the skulls of his victims; and Hie glial Fetiche Tree Al lladagry. has its w idespread liin'M biden with liumaii carcasCH and linilis. There the want ot chastity it no disgrace, and thu priests an1 employed as pimH. Murder, adultery, and thievery,' says firman, ' uit here no sins.' ' How to spoil at Nplrtlcd Wife. "What do you apeak in that way lo your wife for, young man t" asked old uncle lUgcr of hia nephew. " ilerauso it's fun to aee her spark up," ru- Idied tho hopeful Benedict; "I liko lu make ler eyes ahinu, and her round cheeks grow red aa any damask rose. And il'a quite tragic the way sho puis her little foot down and say s H i r ! By the Muinsl if you'd stayed long enough, uncle, I'd have show n yon a loeen. You've no idea how grandly she toasea back her fierce little head or with what a Dido liko air ahe wrings tboso delicate bunds of hers. Il quite breaks tho monotony of life to get up such a tenipi'il and blue sky ; and so, as I know she owns Una spunky (miner. I hist lourli it nn with the spur matrimonial, and let it gallop till "I've as good a mind to root out lhat sapling, IU), and usit overyour shoulders, n I had this morning to est my brcakhtst before vou spoiled my appetite. Yon are taking the anreat way (o ruin a merry-strung omaiiiiatioii. Saving your presence, I dispise tho man w ho thus tampers with a passionate but loving spirit, Louis at your wife how delicate her beauty! Look at your household the very temple of taste and ncalneia. Tho little fixings on the mantel, the fringing and tassel ing here aud there give it a tourh beyond tho common to your humble furniture. That lounge, thai lends so grand an air t" your parlor, 1 had ael down for no leas thau a lilly wheu lo I it (urns out that five dollara and a Woman's ingenuity deceived an old experienced npholater like myself. Then look at tho vines sho has trained, thn flowers ahe has plantrd, that lean towards her when alio approaches them aa if alio waa their guardi-aa angel I V hy, Hnl, is it poaiible ihe wma-aionofsurh a thing as this lempla you lo an absurdity that will surely end in the destruction of your domestic happiness T" " You are mighty serious about this little thing, uncle T" "Serious I Unfortunately I am something more a victim to my own ladulgence in a simp lar infatuation. You have heard "here uncle Kugera gave a great sigh' that 1 am not happy At home T My own fault I Every bit of ill" and the old man gave Mother Earth a savage blow with hia cane. " If a man marries an an gel, and torment her into a fiend, who's lo blame but himself T My wife ia very hand some, anil, aa you aay, spunky. I hero never need lo have been a warm word between ua, but I liked lose her angry. I liked to aee the delicate nostrils expand tha large bright eye scintillate sparks of Art but 1 rfid it just one too often. I know tho very time that anger raised the final barrier of opposition, and that nice aeuao of right beeamo an exacting and im- Scrious tormeulor. And now your uncle is riven from the homo of his nephew, where he hoped for peace, aud tortured with tho fresh opening of old wounds, I tell you, Hat, you will spoil your wife, you will ruin her ; it's not manly its a burning shame" and the old man's thin lips quivered with excitement. Hal said nothing then, but when hu returned he ground his pride between his teeth and begged his wife's pardon. "I'll never taunt you for fun again Carry," he said in a low tone. And she replied, as she hid her tearful face iu hia bosom " I am so quick, so passionate but indeed I never begun it; and you hnvo beeu so nuble that I will try and conquer this hasty temper. But Hal, sho added, roughly, shaking her curia iu his face, "what will you do for your queen V wnai win oecome oi umo, irauegy, c, en i Her husband blushed, (1 contend that a man looks handsome when he blushes,) and a kiss sealed the reconciliation. To dav. after fortv years of wedded life, Hal boasts that ho remembers but once makiug up after a storm and that was away back in luo honeymoon, hver since he haB had still waters and a steady voy ago; aud Rogers, Mho died years ago peace be to hia ashes used to call Hul'ti home a num. diso on earth. From the SaUm Wttkly Dt mot rut, "Out of JhII. " A boy, fourteen years of ai-o, who ban been confined for sometimo in jail, was yesterday discharged."now my heart leaped aa i read the above par-auraph, from a daily paper. A bmt confined in Die county jail at such an age, 1 involuntarily cast a irlanco at his previous, history and the1 cause of his degradation became manifest. Born of dissolute and intemperate parents, he waa early schooled in lessons of crime and debauchery, With no education save what he received from an intercourse with his degraded associates, it would indeed have been n miracle had lie escaped tho dungeon's gloomy cell. What knows ho of great and eternal Principles of ri'i f Nothing. lUssotit ia unfed with tho bread of life, and (Iod is known only to bo mocked. Thu precepts of Christianity ore to him unknown, and tho word of Clod as revealed to man ia to him a sealed book. I'oor bov ! I exclaimed : what a life of wretch- cdneaa ia before you, unless providentially you be snatched from your downward course. Al ready witliiu tho walla oi that dreary dungeon, tho linger of scorn will be pointed at you by tho rich, tho poor, the miuhty, the creat of earth. tho rkri$tntn aud thu infuttl. All aeek to drive you from the society of the virtuous, I lie educated and the good. All join in wanting their children lo shun you as they would the poison ous aimer. I'oor boy! Y'oit are enst out uopn ahiitrtlim world, poor. degraded, friendless, without mon ey, starein'i, and to your entreaties for mercy, the multitude turn a deaf ear, and when vou ank them for bread they coldly repulse you from their doors. Can we wonder if you plunge still deeper iu crime and infamy V But see that aed man, with whitu cravat and golden spectacles, approaches you. Hiu hand is extended towards you, and a friendly smile is printed upon his visage. Surely hu is n friend, come to lelievo you form your diotrcss, l-'rotn bis side pocket hu takes a package, and from it hu selects " a tract .'"which he hands to you, carefully replaces tho packagn in his huge pocket, and with an admonition to read it aud practice its precepts, hu passes on in his journey lo administer tpiritual food to other AUiKry victims, I will not picture thu Workings of that boy's mind as tho muttered cume eseajHs bis lijn. fir ivim iiunu uiiirmiiy pratiltr us ieucinnjs ! What knows ho of the science of letters V Alas, 'lis food of a different kind which he desires fieid that will keep body aud soul together. You may preach llio most aublimu and soul-slirring truths of the christian religion to a starving man, but ho heeds it not. How can he, while the cravings of his appetite for food lo support luseailhly existence is unendurable V What fully then, to attempt a reformation f llio child until hu in removed from his evil associates and placed under the guardianship of (ho benevolent and eood, who will supply ail his wants. The mut of tho evil must Im reached and deatroyed, before tho evil is removed, and this can only bo doiioby furnishing employment j to tlio idle, by taking tho dissolute, friendlt's and suffering boy into your family, and treat- j inn him as a human beni. Depend upon it,! that junt ao long as you treat Imu a vagabond . and ouica-.t, iiial ltig will he continue to tie onu, nine nun irom piur noyrs ami ireai mm : I know that some coot icutiuus hemes may : , i',i ,.hi." v.. have no claim upon huu or his services. What claim can adebauched and drunken father have lo the services or education of his child None , ti ,,...;-. r ., f I..,, .i ,i I y , .-hnievrr S o-tv I. .-. .-lainM , n evervmei... whatever. Society has claims upon every nieni l)t.r (f tllt. human family, so u,, a, ih in ! l t.. 1 purpose. Ills lactiltles were given Mm lo im prove his race uulll happiness should be a su promo ruier oi maiiKimi, uniting ino wnoie World into onu va-d brotherhood of perfect be-I ings. j I'o do this, he must hu educated, not in scenes of drTinkeiuieas, crime and debauchery, hut iu all that renders man noble and pure bu i fore (tod. A drunhn parent cannot thu ethtrate Aia rhwt. I he claims of society aro therefore predominant, and it should wrest tho boy from his pai cut and "train him up in tho way he should go." I'oor boy 1 The world will not sec, with an eye of truth, your condition. A fnlsn theology hasplnced Vou in the hands of merciless beings, ami the wh'ulu force of our social system ia united in keeping youtheie. You are ones more at liberty to Ilea ) the sod and travel where Tou will. But w hither will you go? And erho'an-swers, where? 1'isir, poor boy! JoVArilA. Halem, Juno 13. l.rl RrTtrto el I be 1 hurts tie x I en. " splendid dav ! We'll have unite a turn mil. r iu ini.i;ine i mere s nointng hki sintsunie io uraw an auui-Their haiiiM ence. ll'.Ws'tler lhati all the popular preachers lhat were over Isiru. "It ! there a my memorandum lik ; Id like lo hnvo forgot I en It, and If Ihetn directions hadn't Is-en tetidei) to, most like I should have lost in place. Lei's mm1 Takes out a memorandum and reads; " By onb rs ol Judge It., the woman who squint and ealicramlanian seeds is not lo lpm in the seat in front of him. ' By order of Squire II., the young man who ogles his daughter and wests plaid pant. Is tn is' pui somewhere on the oihrr side oi tiiethun ti. By order of the wealthy Miss Prudence Trim. Ihe young mnu whose clothes smell of cigars and brand v, shall lie set behind her. "The request of A., a met liatile, lhat itran- gurs lie tiol idmwn into ltiew -to Is; attrnded II colivellleiil, "(Julie a rhapler ttuvhow. But iieonle are iN'ciiminir (o streak In. IVrc's two oiinu wo- I men wailing, Common sort of folk' guess, gentility don lcoimMiiile;,iertrlva-tlHs. 'Iluvc 1,1 nuaney i-ina-K even lorinuoui nnil epe-a seal, marm. Sim with a how.'- II vou idea-e. . rieinrd; Hie child Erne-line was obliged to eon- sir No matter, Mi tenet Is acleaii artitlu, il ilon'l rosl nothing. So here goes the two wo- men Into one oflheb-irk wall (tews. Mere's two more birds ol Ihe some feather; woolen iliawlv slraw Isiuneta and rollon gloves; wall w. second from tho ibsir ; gs eimugh in all science. "Ah! there's a bride. Satin velvet, and whit" kids: Hue broadcloth and white vc-l. .'-lull I have the pleasure of showing yourself and lmlv some seals : i tiey must nave seats, for I hey are evidently se adifb renre there is In olk ? Thry must have somu lirsl rate " Now there's a dressmaker and a n hisd mistress, nolHslles. Hack seats gout) enough. Two young law vein-NimelMslies ; I must lind a seil in the middle able. A broken dow n mini-ler, coat rather i eedv, rraval rallier coat e imhodv side ailu. Sit la liionable boarding ft h"ol eirls soine1lie - middle nble. Il i.oil.le Koilgid cheeks, but a splendid i ilk cloak, some-1 Isslv -middle able. An apprentice l'V, decent bsiklnff. hul a uolsslv side uble. ' Hllo H fy I BUI t II plde ol liullHII lllllltie r Don't I know who a man is Ihe minute I see him. Now there's one of tmr sredy ce.ilid old ft I-loir -eomliig. Don't I n i him down a-11 md "sly. and won't he lie glnd tn get any kind o a seat I'll ihovv folks that I under!-la ml my btisine-v. Have a seal, sir ? "Coiiloiindmv III link. Just as I wio. putting him Into line of Ihe poorrsl seal in the hoi.-e. uloitg comes Judge i who ipving him. come" up ami stvs ho, Alt. bow dy e do. Governor I H,' Take'a ual with me. tir ; my wire will re-: Juice lo meet vou." Shaking h.iii'l- wild Ihe sredy coat he looked dagger al niu, and I'll kl a tourpenre I've Wt mv place. Who'd have , IhoiiBlillhitt Hie old fellow uu an cvGovct no r. I lint thai toiiu-s of looking as meek as a ichool' maelrr, aud dressed like a wimttawvcr! Why tb-ii'l bdks, as ought lo. hold up I heir In ad-and Ite ta'tltelsslv."- feie 7lr Hue. - nui-fions. vveie oll ne, t fiuhleiily turned away M. Delande, id Paris, lias presented 11 11 invi 11-. u eoiicul a tmile. lion, whith coiisisls iu certain pim-asm lor pro- Mary was In r uncle's favorite, Ernestine was ducing a new metallic alloy, similar (o sliver tn j his iid'niii.iiiii. Ib could no. however, have apHarnnee.nnd intended lii supercede It in vail-, buiml a nearer wav (o the un.elllsh heart ol IW-ous application-. Tin lono the ! ol Ihe 1 tie- line Grav. Hiaii in his kindness to Mary. impo-iiioii, ami io pirpair 11. me mvcnior 1 ,11 cini'slt two or lliree lint" Willi fsllis'lie, und ie- ditces llm calcined pari lo ponder, which Is melted down In a viticible. W hen In a fluid slate il 1 Is put tiled by being litWed Willi charcoal powder. ' the clear part Is'ing drawn oil Into .inotle r crucible, ready for ue. The Mircal way In till a private upaitintiit, whether in a printing oftho, a cotton factory or sausage-aliop, with vi-llnrs. is to place over Ihe door a placard, bearing the Inscription, -No ,d-miltancne." No person ever read lhat piohiM- lionovrran entrance, without king liutanlly aitaes.ni ny nit migoTcrnai'lc U right in. ire to ru-li A Fmt roa iiik Kmiw N.hiiimw.- The N. Y. Daily Minor rays the late census show a that llio inirnkr ol Irbhmen in Ihe t ailed Slates it U rn (han one Million; and our Fedora), Stale, and Municipal ' Blue Books,' we kdlere, will show that a majority of the public orllcers and places In the I' nlted Slates are tilled by Irishmen. II strange that AmerkaaUiu is waking up T luo COLUMBUS, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 185L r'rotn FvtiTHjn'n Malta tine for July - truest in Gray. IIY KKV. H, HAST1XIJ.H WKI.P. I do iH-lieve," paid a gentleman to bis wife. lhat if a perfect human character evcrexWed. 1 u ia H...I .1 ,,.. ..i,.i,i- .....i M.,., f,,i vot d.i , it is that of your placid' and cheerful, yet sad- so practical and Jul ttbwwli m full of common j bcnse, usefulness and companion, and yet self above all common desires and disappoint ments." ' Hers is a history. Shall 1 relate it ?" " l'ray do so. 1 only wonder thai you have nut given me the narrative before.'" Men are always disposed to difparage maiden ladies; and I never felt like expo.-iug Ernestine Gray's touching character to even thu shadow of a smile. It is one of my sueml tlieiiies: lit only I fur a guest hour like this, when the sluidow uf her ulmoit saintly presence his di-poncd Hie mind . to coiilemplulo the higher beau lies of the Christian character ; the Truth and Love which iu their purity makes us realize the heavenly influence of Christian life." Thu character which you so mueh admired, and so justly, lu one lhat ba been perfected through sutler i UK- What 1 urn about U tell you in nut her confession, formally made to iuc in uu hour of conlldeiiiu ; for Krncetiuu (iruy is not of tho e wlio are addicted to obtruding their private grief upon their Iriends, and challenging admiration of their martyidoiu. Nor does she regaid herself as at all notable or remarkable. In her quiet humility, she would In- very much surprised that I can llnd patience lo recount, ur that you cuti bo interested in heuring thu uvenls of her life. In lb'1 course of her pilgrimage we may see only suffering; but iu each event hhe discern the gomlne.-s ol (iod in permitting b"l' to Is,' useful to her kind, and schooling her by IliejiieipUiii! uf sorrow, lo calmness of spirit and strength of religions ehnnuier.- What I know ol her I have learned ehielly of others; mid her accidental tilUtsions lo lierell have, only enabled mo lo correct and connect the nuiTiitive. 1 llrsl met with her a few years since, during the tup valence of a dis-cue among children, which was so severe as almost In take the character of nn epidemic. Tin' wealthy could remove their children from the Iullueiice of llio infection, or disarm disease of a portion of its terrors by the provision of remedies and I he comforts of attendance and suitable nourishment mid palliatives. But the poor deprived ot all luxuries, und in many eases of ab-olulenec-es.-aries, shut up in close courts and lanes, and debarred that fust rcquMlw to heat III, wholesome air. perished in great nuinljer-'. The ladies. In organized societies, or as the represent alivei; of ehuri-he-i. aud also iu their oivn continual capacity of (In1 rcpiefeiiUliu's of humanity, made great efforts to i-tay the malady and relieve the, di-lre.id. foremost among Ihein Mas tustine (Iruy-foremost but unobtrusive. Many women hud the safety of their own children to consult, and could not compromise it by actual contact uith lln; disea;-Mj, Many others, generous, but laint-lieai'Ud, were ready lo give without stint, but feared tn place themselves wlUiin the run h ol' the dreaded miasma, or were posllhely Interdicted by friends from so doing. Almoners to distribute aid were more needed than uluiR-givern to i'ui iiirh 11. Eiiienliiie had none of tliuseelogs upon her lieiievolence which 1 have spoken oi ; and she had im fears. Wherever Hie cry of distress appealed t" tier, flic answered It with calm and unconscious courage am) self-denial never with th reckless liinalicbm ol mere iiiipul Shu guarded her own lile. and husbanded her own ttretiglh, and sin; won hi not Ir-mpt Troti-deneo by heedless aud imuccrf-ary epo-uri or anrnlgo her own useiuliitM ny the pro-iratmn ot her rnergies, I had never heard uf her before. I let' name is never prominent. She docs not a- nurni'dirodioii, but silently co-operates in whatever good, reipiiriiig nid, is undertaken by any one else ; and alwayMliligi'tiHy pursue.' her own coiir.-e in lite retired paths oi mercy, where one ueulle woman can put a uioumidm Ml- to llle,hl. i hie day I met I'rne.-tiiie in the sired, and--our ways hiy logelher. we bu-ily compared notes of what wo had seen, and who needed usMilatice, This was tsd'ore I leauie a ndli-h wife, and while I yet had npportuiiily to gite lo th1 poor the eai eaud love whii h one's lioiisehohl comes in lime to iuniiopoli.e. We went Mopped by a child who begged itli hoiie-t, ualuial lears, '' ( ill, gooil ladies, iti' come for falher isdj ing !" Following lln- lillle mes-i-imer up a curi. we were u-lieit d into a M-eiie. Die memory ol which will iiewr leave me. I mi a tuiseitilile du -lv 1 d lay a man in his la-1 throes, his hea v bienlhiim com ii biii) his whole Iruinc. Tlird.iuipMil death were on his litow. Several w.iiinii. his poor n'-ihlini j, wire gathered round, looking with Ironiiied e in n --it v at (in "la -I sceno ol nil i. . (1- , . ... , . , i . i-l-itk. and he Link on his inlloiv In rhe no more. line tool pressed up lo Hie Uibide, and I stood just )-lore me, IIm iII v looking at Iheib ad. even took one cnid ii.itid iu hers, and as .-lie ,lHl 1 h'r """ 'Hi puwerlul n '" "n;t. pH'-sed down lilseyeini-. and misled Hermit ! a titomenl iu composing his mailed hair. When -lie tinned I aw in tier leutures the traces ol a feaifol shuggle but though her eyes swum in teai:-. not ii ny, nol wind escaped her lips. ,-he r.ii-id the ehihl, who had thrown herxlf weeping upon tin- foot of Ihe bed. am! said, "Was HiU youi lalh- r :'' The child replied throwing In im II upon Ihe lilelesa body ; and it required no link- oM'i lioti of strength to disengage her Inun that leiutnl c mm ace. " totuu with me, ' said Kruesliiie to Hu little forsaken one ; but Hie only reply was to rush back lo Hie ItciHdo nnd cling willi frantic energy to tho cold form of him who bud Ih'cii her last, and only friend. "lio willi the lady," said one ol the women, wiping the child's eyes with her apron, and ad justing us well us she could her wreck of a Ism- net ; " go with the lutlv. and when all is ready for the burying yrut biiall come Imck again.1' The little one looked up, as it hcarce understanding what was said, but su Hered heixdl to be peicunded. When we reached the street Ernes tine beckoned to a cab, and not wil ling (o in trude myset upon her purposes, whatever they might U I pursued my way home alone, heart weary al Hie wou In thu world, of which I had just seen mis new instance Ernestine never recalled Ihe events of that day again lo me though we met often during thai sad summer, and have since kept up a con. slant intercourse. But she had acquired such a st ran ue interest hi my eves, that the curiosity with which I traced her history inn-d be pai don-able. 1 learmil that at an en My ago she lost her falher, nnd un Krnesliuefell Hie double charge ofa helpless mother and an infant sister. It was Hot that (loverly conielled Hus hilioi'; but there are attentions which weaiui canuoi piirctiase, and requirements ami allentiima which affection only ran supply, Friieslinu was remarkably caiuiblo of fnlhlling their demands-a very Utile woman, wise Is'vmol her years: but Ibu burthen caused a premature development ol her charac ter, mid iiupiiuiid upon her youthful face the stamp oi caie ami soiieinnie. vt mil might have '"-en budding Uauly under hapiiier aii-pic as t liangeil lo a look ol unlcly which Is simke poneisoveniL-neo. 10 (jouie uie waywaiuness D'd h'l' tisler si jear.i voungrr. And she was required moreover to rule with such discretion thai Hu cunning pel evrrunee of III tie Mary would iud d-leal In r bv apH-als toancrvelem mflercr for whom the phv stcian unjoined nqiose 'I hus. early did (.riiotiiie (ray learn felf tucri he-. Her iii"lhcr' ib -nth came upon her as a great and oppre . iv e ultlii lion ; lull she learned alter w.ud (o d el lhat il was a deliverance and a ' mercy bt Ihe "iilti icr. and a relief lu her chil- iIiicImsIy. hall"l,u. ineeiiriy varsoi r.riiesiiun coimi imi : long have cudmcd ihe double task; mid mind, or luslv, or hnih, must have sunk ls?ncnth it. In such a tc In "d was- she i ally trained to endure the dials of lile; nnd lo b id thai "no one livcth lo liilll-ell Fioiii oiKhtei'it year" ol age, when alio wept er her mother': giave, lo lour or live und i twenty, were the Miuny days ol Ernestine dray. She ls-c nine, idler the ih alll o her parents. Ihu . H'l ol lh hoipehold of her mother's abler; tll'd at nnro perlected her own education, and o.inam ii y KrrcoiinniB mm nei mm' I, i ,u in ir is pie.i inu wueii nn moor lor tho. e we love ; und In coiislniil (KViipalion Is Ihe Relet of enjoyment as well as of usefulness. To all thu house Truc-lim' was dear, and hv all Moved: hut thelovewbiilioxhled between her and li'T charge wa pa ing beautiful. Thu geu-tlusvvav o Ha- ehb r rehr-nol ims'rioua from Hie love oI-mwit. bui turn iu Ihoib-pth of atlec- ""U. and the con eiott nes of well-earned right, "ever failed lo roniud Mary, wayward aa she 'I hu very contra I in their characters made their siMnlv union more iblighHul. Mary was hcedl- ss. happy, impul ive -and her merry laugh and Hiuiiy lace aiminl uu at a glance, and ,M"""I " allerwaid. oti could not but love "' lioli. otne. minimi heart, which opcucd to von as il sorrow had never entered luto the wmld. nnd deceit nnd evil were uol known In It. Frequently Mary (it ay came under grave ro- plind ; but the IV lips wllbll cllltl her trans- . vt lieu, llien lore. 31,11 y wu, 1 iio.liu 10 uccompnny In r coiisin ami their lalln r on a long summer lour. iMpcdine muled a pleiin l ui'tpm neneo In his letnaik. thai he would " leave the iwo old nunes at Home. ,111s. warner nan poiunu iy tbcliued to nceoinp.tnv Ihe party ; and as il was neces. ary lliitt tome one ihould remain at home with her, Hie choice of ioiir-e tell upon thupen-lie-he ail ul girl wlm appeared to have no higher pleasure In lile llian consulting tho widnsol her frietid.i. It waa a dull house during tho many weeks that (he family wrro Absent. Ernestine began wanowietigo weariness almost ior me nrat application, but (ho want of employment. Chance threw in her way a mw friend; or rather tho politeness of one who had long ken an occasional visiter at Ihe house, Accrued to her tho more grntuful lliat, when so little seemed to attract him, his visits ice mitt (o increase rather than diminish in numtter. Old ladiea aro ku la j eyed, and Mrs. Warner tooked on and smiled at ciiuusuuvaiuuocuniacii'Ufcepuuu, mere was no need of frowns certainly, for tho frequent guest was in every way worthy of Ernestine's uuVctiou, if he could succeed in winning it. Herbert gaiued her confidence, and tho ovi a"co T" w." wiaeu uureserveuiy BUt warmly to him, not of herself, but of those . sho dearly loved. Her kind aunt aud uncle, orB ,,,,' wlm:h Bh ',,,,,,,.,. , j,., ' and it was from all this that he learned to di vine how deep a well of affection her outward calmness concealed. Ernestine Becnied then, as she now does, passionless and almost cold. It was only her intimates, bur own family circle who kuuw what waalth of love was hid iu her placid breast. Aud Herbert first found favor in her eyes that ha listened with such pleased attention lo the praises of her sister. She tho't it was interest in tho absent which lighted up his face as she talked to him. She did not suspect that all other human beings were absent Irouj his thought oa well as sight, while he listened to her. Old ladies, we have said, aro keeu-siiibted. Mrs. Warner furcot thu loneliness of the bouse. iu her amusement at the little drama which was acting under her eys. She could have told Ernestine more thau she knew or suspected of tho becrets of her own kejrt ; but she was discreet and silent, and divtited herself with the thought how much all would be amaxed when they returned, to find thut even Ernestine was noi iu- sensil'lc and that she also, the, Helf-Hacnheuig, had discovered that another might live for litr, and be beloved for it. Ernestine did not yet know her own heart. It was still lobe revealed to her. Herbert wL ao far from cxactinir auv thing, that he did not even commit himself They were a Couple uf vc y blind lovers. In duo lime the family returned ; not a day too soon, Mrs. Warner declared, "for nobody could tell what would have happened in their longer absence." Ernestine blushed as the old lady went on to dilate upon tho frequency of Herbert's visits. Sho had never felt her face crimson before, nt any such allusion. PerhapB sho began to suspect tho true state of tho caso. I'uuctual as night-fall, Herbert was at the house. Heturned travelers monopolise, conversation. It is their right. And Mary Gray was voluble in her description of what ahe had Been, and animated iu her account of what she had enjoyed. Ernestine, more than shared her pleasure. Was not Mary her own creature, ao far as one human being can mould another 1 How their hearts knit, as hand in hand they knelt at their bedside that night to thank the Good Being who had once more restored them to each oth er ! Herbert's benevolent attachment to tho de serted house did not cease, when it became once more inhabited. If possible, his assidu ous aucmioii wun increased. Aunt Warner, who saw a clear case befuro tho return to her family, saw less clearly now. And Ernestine V could that pang have been jealousy jealousy of her own sister ? Tho anxious look camo in a heavier cloud upon her brow again ; but she wrestled with her foldings and was si ill. What she had uot suspected, till too late, in herself. sue rend plainly in mo transparent nosoni ot her sister. An lit Warner waa Bitting nlono iu thu twi light. She hoard a light foot-step and called, " Ernestine !" Tho ueico camo nnd sat down bv her sido. " I have a surprise fur vou. Her bcrt has obtained the permission of your sister lormally to atk our consent to his marntigu with her." Thn matron felt the hand of Ernestine grow cold in hers and then a glow of heat came to ino very nnger cniis, tier neico sniu, in a calm voice, " flo is worthy of her." " Are you a perfect stoic V asked her aunt after a pause. "How can you conceal your own thoiiLdits and disappointments V "I hope, my dear aunt, (hat I hide nothing it wouio ncuciiioiiicrs to disclose. " Ernestine, you aro more than human" " Less, oh, much less n wenk silly child !" Ernestine bowed her bend upon Mrs. Warner's ......if n...l i... n.,..i r..ti ii.,. t;..ni.i; r..n ing into her bosom. The happy voices of Ma- j ry and her cousins, and llio deep, manly tone! it ller her l were heard as they approached. i Two fignrrs glided out of the room as they en tered. Lights wero brought, uud thu happy laugh resounded where a moment beforu tho heart which would not break silently struggled, and yielded to I he requirements of a high sense of duty. The victory over self was perfect in Ernes tine. Her ligbl -hearted sinter did not dream, while kind advicu aud direction and assist ance were continually given, at how great a price to nuolher she hud acquired her dreams of joy. Ernestine, as was lux wont, was thu il " all tho preparations, hvtii ileiburt. who had at Inst somu twinges of conscience, when im huw tho unconstrained and uncomplaining miiuntr in which the elder sister ful- till- d wlmt cho doomed her mission, waa put completely at wise. Only Mrs. Warner knew (ho struggles of thut tried heart, and loved her neice more than ever. Herbert felt almost angry at her insensibility, rejoiced in his ownes- cajH-, and was almost ready lo reproach Er nestine with having kindled in him an affection she did not reciprocate. What an artful casuist is an incoustnnt heart! Herbert aud Mary were married. The sister showed no more emotion than was natural less outwardly than her aunt. Only farco writers make marriages, sceuesof unmixed happiness, as if all our lifctiescould bo disturbed, and we unmoved. To be sure, the future ii full of hope but brief was the dream of happiness for Mary. A short year scarcely passed before the bride was consigned to the tomb ; but Ernestine Dray, as sho wept over tho dead, had still a consolation which no one know, save herself. Mary died, as sho hud lived, her dear sister. Not a suspicion of the secrkt clouded her brief day, or dimmed llio hour iu which sno surrenueicd to hur Uod t tie you tli fill spirit which a sister's care had train eel to meet that lure event tho end of all the living. And now, you arc ready to say, Ernestine's cup was full her desolate existence could know no further sorrow. She saw her aunt, a second mother, laid in the grave but sho waa gathered into thu earner as a shock full rine. Death brings not an abiding grief to those who sorrow 1101 wuiioui nope. 11 is a transient separation not an everlasting farewell. Calmly Ernestine mao above these sorrows. 8)10 bowed to the blast, ami when it waa over- pist, rose again, gentle ami pliant, hut having within herself ihu elements of strength for her truth was in une whose arm is mighty, and whose mercy sure. Thomcinory of the departed waa sacred to her, and sho could heartily give thanks for those departed this life in the true faith and fear. On Herbert stricken and almost inconsolable in hia despair, she could look with the teiidercst pily. Ho was dear to her, as ono w hose life had been united to her sister. tor. Tho unhappy past had faded from her nights in tho sacrcdiioss of the mora rotont tllOUl n miction, in which, with him'she had a common lot. Hhu softened his grief with gentle words ol holy consolation. And again Herbert discern ed in her heart its wealth of pure affection. Again ho found lhat, she was not cold and insensible. Tho living Mary had once taught him una; iiui memory 01 uie dt-nd caused llio lesson to bo repeated. Herbert could not understand llio noble na ture of Ernestine. His love for her gentle spirit to which her brilliant lister had done unconscious and innocent wrong, returned with new strength. It seemed to him that he had loved them both as one; that Mary had Wen dear to him for the snko of Ernestine; and that Sorrow fur the dead now made the living sister more dear. He would sit fur hours, recalling the very word and gesture and thought of thodcparted : Ernestine gavu w ay with tho aw eet sadness of affection tohuch communion with him. Herbert waste her a dear brother, and the love wilh which sho regarded him waa pure and holv as the relutie.ii in which ho seemed to stand to her tho living representative of the sainted ueati. For many months this innocent drtnm ln.ind But Ernestine had learned to distrust tier own heart. Ami what waa sadder lar for the grieved spun mourns to timi itn hopes disan pointed sho was forced to distrust Herbert. bhoaawbtwhat they were lending : and lo dis cern Iter duty was to resolve to do it. Ernestine calmly pointed out to him (ho danger in which iney an ssi. Herbert said, " You liavo saved mo thu awk wardne of an explanation. Why should you describe that aa dancer a result to 1m rYr. 1 and dreaded which to me seems our only hope of happiness, our plain course of duty if duty consist in preserving uur peace and useful- Ernestine lixed upon him a gaao of crioved astonishment. Then all tho woman in her came to her aid: her bruised spirit rebelled ae-ainst its oppressor. Herlserl needed no interpreter of tbe glance from that sternly beautiful face ; ami w hen he tlared to looked up, alio was gone from him, ami forever, " Well, upon my word," said tho gentleman, looking at his watch, as his wife's voice censed, "You havo mado 1110 forget my club. You should bo a Sultan's bride, for nothing iu tho Thousand and OneNiuhts is half so interesting. Pray, where di.l you learn to improvise, littlu one, and why have yon concealed your accomplishment ao long V " No raillery, sir, or you will break your faith." " I am dumb. But the girl lhat cornea hero with Miss Gray, (a she her Bister' child i" " No, she is Herbert's, tho daughter of another Wife, for Marv died clnldleaa. Nhu ia tha orl'M 1,1 whom I law Ernestine Gray lead from , o ' miner ofatn ue JNtM'bo London 7Voifi having made Mmo dirulniuioa advrrM- In Ihe wbhes of Hie government, the editor thus defends hiniM II : iTIiu aeipiiMtioit of Informaiion is iml only our piitilego, hut our duty, and nol only our duty but uur avowed and recognised imdi'I-Hoii, To accuse a newspaper ol procuring Intelligence, U I ke itiviidiiff . llL.I..,r,..n ..1 .ml. liin.i li lt We should, of course, la? culpaple, if no employ-cd the resouiees al our command in corrupting lltlcllly or conquering uprightness. If we pub- li-li nny inlelbgciice which, in Ihe opinion ol ihe I country, had ktlrr have fa-en nipprecd, we do so ul the risk of our reputation. If, at a con- - tmicturo like tho present, wo should make any disclosures detrimental lo tho piddle safety, wc uouiu oo more mrecny aiueuuuiv tju"n;ti, nit OIji.ii State Imirnal. COLUMBUS: WEDNESDAY. JULY W, 1854. Stale Fair at Krwark. TheK Is every assurance giveu from our couo- ty boards that (ho annual State Fair at Newark will uot be surpassed, if equalled, so far at least as our agricultural interests arc concerned, by any previous exhibition. The new importations of thorough-bred cattle froii England and lrc- lund, by the Clark and inyette county associa tions, will alone constitute a marked feature. The great breeders from Kentucky, New York, and New England will bo there with Ihe best Ihey can turn out. Judges can then decide which are the banner States and Kingdoms In tho cattle line a much better mark of true progt ess than Ihu allied fleets and armies of Europe. Wu have examined with great pleasure a large lithographic view of thu Fair U rounds, made under the pergonal inspection of G. Sprngue, Etq., the corresponding secretary of the Slate Board, who has devoted his time to the further- unco of the object of tho society with a zeal and discretion worthy of all praise. The sketch is beautifully execub-d. the minutest figures liclng w ell draw n and the coup d'atl very line. The old Indian fort w ill lie a great curiosity lo lliosc who have never examined these mysterious relics of the olden lime. Little did its builders dream of fliicli a display within Its broad area, as will be seen from the Iffth to the 22nd of September next. (Jcu. Qullnnn This distinguished lilibuster Is undoubtedly thu leader of the contemplated movements agaiiiHt Cuba. The grand jury of the U. S. Court at New Orleans, knowing that a hostile demonstration was threatened, and that the proper discharge of their duty made It necessary for them lo inquire Into It, directed that uen. Quitman In brought before them. The scene waa n peculiar one ami Is thus sketched by an eye w itness : The -lUtfirt t hnniicl to lh( Ore-ril a pnnli-'l uliir. whn-h pui m-rlfl tn contain a rrrsirt or n nif rt Ihk tiM at soiu" iiNfinin.l i.ii-r, ri-liitive to the Ul.iml ef m l ft rert.im ln'iui'iit vj.frrlirn li'lii-i'il on that h l.y rriljln nlii:kl'ptifi1 (-ntlnncn. Thn IhdpmI '11 v li.H" ti 1 1 Mm i ih -mm lit : nfl.T nlii. li l,i- u i. a-k'-l ifliikin'w ntn Hiln,il.iit ael tnrctinc, or nnv olli et ini etoiK wliirlic.nti iii'Uti-'l an sifO'liliiinrpnl' t()ilf ,'i ,i ii-iuiiiiii.iiJiv i Mi i.i, iit ngnui-i itie utMiia m luna. Tl" M'l'l Il" ti. ii. i,iU l ire 1 Ihe Einii l jmy riiM.in Hull, no f-ll',ws ; " ' lirnll' im-ii t liuvf n'-kiK-vrlnleMf nn v act rfrrf'"rh r of ih'Th.ii ,u lpr n-n-iri-l t. or nnv other eotilctniU tlmi a rf lohittoniuv inovenn'iit in the ihnl of Cuba, in whkh I ii.o,c not n-irtlriitr't to in utpuI nn extfnt n- iinj olhrr i-iT-oii, 1 hnic ilmip nolhlnjt, lumcvcr, whi.-li in iny JinlciiHiit, eillicr tint.!, ur (tislionornl-ti-. Hy eon-i -Iciiti. U rliMr on tlxnn i.int hit. Mlttr the Ititr r iirMalimn th;it lnui- rercnllv Isrn ylvcn t'i ihe law. 1 submit it In "tir eni of lioiiiir tusth-e ami iroprl"ty, tf 1 1 .in in- i-.n i n-1 ii, .in ni-r 101 ipiraiionH loiaiingtn mnvcniriits or piirinni-. ' 1 r'Thiinlyiiot.'idiMrkf-il wvfrilof the luror. It l-yi.iir I'lc.iMif then, rfi-nlh rni-n. I will relit.-.' Mid the C.cnctnl. Inu rati ri.' s.ii'l the fnninin. as if tin rrji ot ti...irt Willi the liciicrjl ; nnd thcri upun llio gillunt If any doubt has heretofore liecn felt nliout Hie e.vistenco of a deep laid and general plan of operations against the authorities of Cuba, the remarks of (Jen. Quitman will put it to rest. This scheme does exist, and he is at ila bead Tho government ia iicrfeclly cognizant of tho fact. Wo ihall now fee what steps are taken to prc erve Uie national faith. Stati: Ht -k. The Statnmm assures us lhat " 'ytll, l,nw' Commissioners " will never shrink Irom any inquiry into their conduct. Who raid they would? We arc referred to tho Architect for Information as tn the progress of Ihe work und Ihu character of thu contractors. As lo the work, we can see how thai progresses for ourselves, especially the mof; nnd vve have no question ulsotit the charavttr of the contractors, nor do wo wish to raise any. Wh.it the public feci more curiosity about (him the character of Ihe contractors la Ihe price paid for Ihe work un der the contract for tiling. Tbe Cummttrioners of cource" will never shrink fnm any inquiry Into (heir conduct," ls?caus.e the Siuttmnn says ao. Butslill I be contract for tiling was let prlvalely without any public advertisement for bids, ami lo this day Hie public know nothing of .... ..... . .,.. plastering, it is rumored, is to be let in the snme way. Would it not be quile as well fur tbe Stale, aud for the Commissioners too, if Iheru was a mie more puoucuy given to nieir pwcwtiing: State ILh sc. Wehad not time yrt.tml.iv to refer tn tho last annual report ot tho rilalu Hon so Commiaaiuaers, to which tho Stattunan called our attention ou Tuesday morning, ami in which it wild all our Inquiries as to when the State House would bo done when occupied how much It would cost when (he roof would lie put on, 1c., wero " satisfactorily answered.'' o have turned to (ho report, and find therein tho following statement, which wo extract fur the benefit or (he anxious public. Tin- Commissioners say: In June last proposals weie received for the Iron work for the reception of the root of Ihe New Stale House. The contract was awarded to Aru bos & Lenox, of this city, Ihey k ing the lowest bidder. In July last, the Commissioner enteral into a contract with said firm for Hi- Iron Ira me-work of the roof, lor (ho sum of thirty-seven Hiotii-nntl eight hundred and thirty-seven dollars(;ii.. e:t7 (Hi), payable from lime io lime, us the woik progressed. The framing ol the south w ing was to have Is-en completed by the tii( of Octokr ; the north wing, by the 1st of Noveiak r, aud the center mnuiing, ny mo 1st ot January. 1 iwing to tint d 1 111c ul ty In procuring portions ol ibu iron, the contractors were unable to comply wilh their contract. The Commissioners are wili.-died. how ever, that duo diligence was used by iuc cm-tractors lo procure ihu necessAi j Iron: lint, owing 10 urn iow singo 01 water, in the into river, anil llio impossibility of tlio large rollinc-mills. to procure coal, retarded tho progress of ihe work. " Tho contractors have, However. Ihe greater part of the iron work In its proper place, and will have (ho balanca in readiness during the present winter, for the reception of the copper rooi, eariy in tne spring." " An early completion of the ,-'tatc House Is an object of so much importance to people, lhat the Board desire to Impress upon Ihe legislature (bo imporlauco of (ho subjtcl. The great expense Incurred, Ihe inconvenience to u hich the Legislature, and other oMicers of Ihe Slate, arc Kiibjeclcd, aa well as Ihe inwcuiily of the archives of (ho Stale, render it exceedingly desira-blo that the principal portion id the 'building should be ready for use prior to Ihe next ineet- o ft uvBiswiure. no hail somo faint recolleclion of these pm sages when wo put our queries ; uud now, on looking at them more particularly, wc repeat the question, when trill the root k on ? Early spring has passed, hut the roof is not on, nor Is tho Iron work even in place for the reception ot tho copper. But thn contract for tiling hn hern letat what prices Is not known lo Ihe public; and (he plastering in to he Id vhen ? and w ill the public ever know to whom and at what prices? The Slate of California luw not ken very (ordinate in its llnaiiclal AgcnR The interest duo on its bonds In llio city of Now York, on the llist of January last was not paid, ami thu house 01 iniucan, r-neimnn u, 01 itial city, nobly aleppetl forwanl and advanced aktut IHI.IHH) in behall ol the stale. The agenk lo whom the business had ken Intrusted were the tit m of Palmrr.Cook A IX They had Hie Hinds or the State within their control, having ken nude the depositors by Mr. MeMeans, the Treasurer of Slate. Alter having paid the Interenl, and thus preserved the credit of Ihu Statu.lt wan expected of course Hint they would be reimbursed us n-igi as the fact kcame known by Ihu Slate antlnul-llci". But this has mil ken . lone. After three nionlln delay, Palmer, Cook ft. Co. have paid a portion of (he (titl.OOO to (be New Yoik home, but several thousands yet remain unpaid. 'I hu California pajHTs contain Ihe correspondence of Duncan, Sherman A Co. with Ihe Coverimr mid Treasurer, and 11 pi aces the liolilen Slate hi no very fuvoraldo light In Ihe lltiancial eiieles. It la a mailer of doubt whether any moneyed man will again slep forward to protect Ibu credit of (he Slate and save its pa tec from prolesl. "Tnr. EriKrw oi'Tiik ApxiiM.nuTios i. Nkw IUui-shirb.'' The Vanrmd Ihfiottir, Hie organ of th Burko faction of the Democratic party, says : Never have we hoard of micIi direct ami open inkrlereiice on Ihe part of the national government, nor such gross and palpable corruption, as mis oeen mannrstcd in tilth city alltcu the emit- meiiceinent of Hie present session of the I I Inline gia- And what a slulo ol ihlnss is here hihlted The President and Cabinet al Wash ington mt only attempting lo dictate o the people or lhiaSla(e whom they shall elcel n Senators to represent them in Congress, but it sends on lis agents tn In line nee Ihe result, and eairy oul ila k bests, charged, It is believed, with llio melius or corrupting (he tnemkrs of the Legislature. (Jovcrtinieiit itrhYer from other Slates have been upon the ground, and hired agents, a sort ot Hwlsa cors are here, lo hrow-beat.eoax, ami buy support for (ho Cabinet Dominoes." A ThrUUng and fleet In & InrWenl. Professor Forlstt, now counseled with Colum bia College, N. York, as professor of languages and literature, was one of the leaders in the unsuccessful revolt of tho Italian Slates in who. with Silvio Pklucu aud some thirty others, was sentenced to iir.prisoniuent lu Spiells'i g, by the Austrian government, lor terms varying from ten to twenty years has lately furnished for publication Iu tho N. Y. Tinut, at the instance of a friend, some of the nioet striking incidents of his captivity and Imprisonment. Tbe Professor suffered in pilson fourteen years, having been sentenced to twenty. Hu was re leased iu on Ihe dcalb of tho Emperor Joseph, After his release, while waiting the preparation ofa government ship to convey him ai.d tho remnant of his associates to America, the following incident occurred : must relate oue little anecdote. Wo were ouo evening sitting before the hotel of the vil lage, called Humana, when there urhved two elegant traveling carriages, with a great suite of servants. From one of the carriages alighted a man of severe aspect, and a beautiful aud graceful woman, with two lovely liltle boys. The luifilainl woj CuutiPellor of State to tin; King of Prutsia ; and the lady was n I'olauder. The gentleman went up slabs to look at the apartment, while the lady remained at the door ol tho Inn with her children. i?ho perceived that wu wero strangers, and the people who always gathered with curiosity about us, made herawHie (hat there was something extraordi nary in our presence there. She -kud in ft whisper of the hotel keener 'who we. were, und learned tbe deliny lhat awaited us. In the meanwhile we entered a room on the ground lloor of tho Inn, in order lo take a glass of w ine. and eat siomo fruit, us we usually did. i-omi after Ihe lady entered with her children, precc- ileu hy the landlord, wiio said that the lady rsk- cd pcrmiwioii to speak to iih. Wu rose in assent, with tho courtesy due to Her sex, her rank, and our education. The landlord retired. The lady wished to siieak, but only stammered out a few confused words, and then burst Into tears. .She turned to her litllo iMiys and said : " Kneel, my darlings, to these brave Italian patriots; (h'-y arc illustrious victims in the great cause of Lib- irty ; and you. gentlemen, slie said, turning to ia, " bless my sous ; your blessing shall Ire fruit ful to them of falutary effects ; It will make (hem love their country, and dio for It If need he. I uin a 1'olander. My country is oppressed like yours. 1 have two brothers, compromised in the last Insurrection In Cracovin. May (iod preserve them!'' And, weeping bitterly, she hastily withdrew from Hie room, as if fearing lo he Men by her husband. We remained silent. deeply struck and allech'd by so dramatic a scene, winch li would im uiiiicull in dcscrine in adequate terms. Angelic creature! May the blessings which wo Itcslowod, indeed give to them and her country llioso blessed benefits which wc sou glil for ourselves and our own Italy!" " What Hvk VP IMiK'f" Very f- w msmbfr of t on-((rf.i( on their M'lnrn, will liki- to li'-ar that unealiotiTo-lmu.-1i"t Troin any mil ir'..f ron.tllnent. Vrry T'-w t tb'-ni ran. if thuy Its v any sen-ibihly of ihani" 1- fl, an-iwrr II wit limit bhulicii nnd ni"rtili utln. t'oiiRreis Imp kkiwii Into (lie i(,c.sf nfn of the country. A nation miol ! firi Unit t-sn live nnd fl-uoMi, u hilo ie h fnlliivi, mUeljii-l i met rnMill'- as li.irr di.tiu Kui-hcd It nrtinn uf l ile venrs, -mi-l it ulo tlio main or n.itiimal l"girUm. IVitijent cxblil". Iluiironilic fn, emit, (lick and Itiiiiiting r'iutl'" thi-d.oly ilniii(; of u goodly purllnn. rflriOilHK tti.isc nli-i liiiuht 1"' ttsctul in the work tha I is nHid, and H'l"ninn 1 he whole public mind lu such an i-ilent Nfiiit the v-M' that mn Uie wfnet msn ire lj(iiiinii(; to think it ihnul I lie B bo I iihed Col. i'117. There Is a grcal deal of truth In Ihe above. But we hardly expected to find such language In a paper lhat upholds tho greatest " mischief and rascality" or tho whole, to wit, the repeal -f 1 c.,r..,,i.uh.,.. fat. 1, the primary cause of the gre.il neglect of bui- Hess that distinguishes the present Congrcsj. There issome talk of reminding Ihe reolu - lion for adjournment on th 4lh of August, for tho pui pose of despatching some of the busine under which the tables of kdh llour-es groan. Wo trust in mercy lids may not be attempted ; the people have had enough ot the present Congress. A list of Ihe unfinished business has b"cn compiled for the New York Hi raid, ami occupies over four columns of that paper, but little of which beyond the appropriation bills will k-acted on. Out of two hundi'i'il and Ihirty-lhree members of which the House ol Keprcsentatl nosed, our himdnd mid jiftii-niiir bcloiii: lo , different factions of the so called " Henna ratio ' imrtv" -oir humhtd and I of wh. j without oueslioti. stand recorded on (he repeal 0 me .Missouri ".omprotm-e as wioiigmg 10 the Slave Democracy. TheadtolnklrullunhBluiind ino diffleullv In rarrvini u meamres ihnmuh Congress, aud no pretence can lie set up lhat it h yn restrained In its entire by the mitmri- ly. I'pon thu udinitiistiatioii. therefoiv, upon I a-yd Ik- cmiulry li.i- -cm-K I. It ik-pr-s-llii' Slave Democracy, nitisl rest Ihu odium of! sure which k'.irs -.i In-.tv ilv on the citv . The Hie prewnl condition of Ihiitgs. The Itiver and ' birim-r.-. an- olitainini; go, price- for whatever Hiirltor bill, the Homestead bill, the modillca-1 !"U11 U! H'1' "'"l J1'1' T' A l,'tnM vr" , ., . . , a, - ... , I Ihii l K'hkI. Piol'-tlilv 110 foi ite r mips cer Honof Ihe Tariff, and all other great Interests tVX(.,.t.,i.-d (b'.-e n-tv on Hie gn-ni'l while Ihu nave been snamelttliy sacritieeu lo slavery itgi- latloli and the plunder ol the treasury lo (ill Ihu pockets of needy adventuiers. An eight mouths session was never before so wickedly wasted. . Ji:tKKIi.tN Cocntv, The Whigs of Jelfi r-oii have just held their coiiuly couvenlloii. The following ticket has ken put hi nomination; Piohalc jHigi Dr. John Cook. t'hrti of the Court Jame" E. Marsh. Auditor J Aiues Lowe. (V rum 11.1 iantr John Di-hiirT. Injirmanf 'inrior Alex. J Bejlty. Stionn resolutions n-niust Ihe reisal of the Missouri 1 'tiitibromi.e woreiinaniuioiidvaihinli d. The ftillowing will show Ihr spirit in which thry are prepared to act ; inter- lies, (dh -llclieviug Ibis question, In It id, rxiciil and iin)Mirlancc, paramount others, we Inviiu a union ot all lionet men. and i their eo-opertithui in reHitig the encntaclunents and extension of slavery thai blight upon Ihe prosperity, ami incubus on the energies of pen- iie cnnimiiy leimenug 10 me menus 01 in c. dom everywhere our cotitldeneu In return for ineirs: 10 uiase eueciivu uiineii action 111 im premises. .0-The Teacher's SlaleConvetition al iiatiiM-villc adopted the following resolutions: iVenfrcir That In ths o)ilnion of the mi-ntiT f thn I. foi Ution. llrawini ilioiibl rouititulc a btani h id v-lut-a tion in tho 1 nninu n si li.h ol oiiui hVWiy. Tbsl Ihe Kmcnlive ci iiinilllee t- InitmclH fillip Ui trpul s di-lmitr il.i d'" e.tiiti,tiiinni ui N, let th nu-i'li -. Of tin- AxorMtlotl h'tiUtrtt, That Mid H'omntltte if to ll action ai lln-) may ili-ciu iti,p t di-tt-rmininjr th jo rti-4lUii r ol i,ii taMi.hne-Tilot iel Normal si hl. j.V (jf, liut Mirb a sr-.t-in -l i' aa r-uilrniiiUled In llie ,ill intn-l s-itlinnie-l In lute HI (mid V-r pie i n vcr ef th- Stall v Hm J. II S nit, ilurinH lit "inter. Is in nui i j Iiik hlf, and Kiiold fohliitint- mm b tn Ihe Ihr re- uric and inrre,M of ihirrilih in hublt d''iu .Im I 1 ""'il ol A Visitation. The death of lie.iil W. Watson, In Milford towndtip. nlsml nine miles from i Mt. Vernon, Knox county, of cholera, has ken ' mentioned. It seems that his mother was next ; attacked, and died ; ami Hieu followed, In quick ' succession, Ida brother William, and a sister Two or three others of the family were attacked, but hopes wero entertained hy last accounts of their recovery. Thu ncighkrs all fled and left Ihu family alone in llieir heavy troubles. Nobody could be found to asr-ist lu Hie interment of Retiu kyond the niemkra ol Ihu household. Asotiikii liioT. Our Irish Catholic friend seem determined In run (heir heads against a alone wall A .li.i,,,!,, u,rt,..l .... ih.- nih at Lawrence. M.o-.. klwceii the Americans am) .. .. Ihe Irish. I'btols ami ullur weapons were used. It la reported that the Calholic Church was de- slroycd. The Irish raised thu American (lag will, across over it. The Americans ae,M it and lore II down, a uunikr of ptrninH were in jured. No low of tile. r D. C. Bloomer. E-q., Ihe hiiskind ol the Mrs. Bloomer, has retired from hk nst as editor I of tho Mt. Vernon "Western Home Visitor," where he h.u Is-en doing scrvlco for aUnit a year pal. Hi- wile, who his lieen asAveiatetl Willi him In Ihe editorial department, wo prc atime. remains, n- lh. ro is no notice to Ihe con 'rrtrJr' . . 'o. A new adininUtialion organ Is about lo iu, ...i,.i,ii i..i I., rhi.-n.... It k to lN ctlled t'slalili-hed in Chicago. FoKog .iniiihii, and will play jtisl Ihe tori of tunes lhat are sent (o II liotn Washington. Of cmilM! it. will defend Ihe Nebraska outrage. Thu '.hhhmM Ih Ihe hading man 111 Hie new Unit. Mr. Et.l.KT. the engiuecr of the Wheeling bridge, announced on the ;u in.-!., thai il the work was not arresleil by legal proceedings. Hit1 hrtdgu would be again open mi gencmi Iravci and tliu transit ol llie cmtuilMBlcs.uaiis ttiiiiiu two weeks from that date. It ia our hope that the wmk of nquir may not k Interriiplisl. T1, ..,ll. v.,r ll. I...1....1 lh.,l'.nPA1 , , , ' . ritual, we-l oi lAinoriugiMrii in on .aii.Msy last And biuti-d the (lack lo Ihe depth ot leu feel for considerable di-taure. It will slop travel caul of (hat point lor some days. i-Q. Tbe N. Y. Tribune, giving an account of the animals butchered In New York for the 2d quarter of IWI. soya: Nine tenths of the swine and large numbers of sheep come from ( "bio, It will ho noticed thai Ohio cattle average almost 1000 per week. NUM1EI 41). Hard 1p. There U inm-h plain sober truUi and loud lor reflection iu (he following article whii-li we clip from (he New York Tnbunr. As a nation it is evident to all we have ken living too "a-l. We come luck to the line path, or stiller Hie coustqiieriee.-i. ' here i. im law ol nature more llxeil aud .-tublniru than H1.1l retribution is sure to follow in thu wake of eliavayuiiee. Bead, ponder, und act, kdoie it if loo late. Yes. it is the snb'-r. prosaic, literal linth, that we an? nearly allnl us hard up. vto either owe money, ami don t know where to get it. or ure subject to calls" for installments on unpaid Railroad or oilier s-uh-criplioiis, or uie doing a heavy taMiiUM w lm h requires large distmise. iiieiits weekly or monthly and brings iti ho cor responding returns. .Many of us ure shinning Horn day to day, ami Hint tin- worn grow harder and hauler, though we live in com hint linik, with Micawhcr. llml - soiuellitiig will turn up." Meuutime piopertv. uukas it e.iu Is- eaten or drank imiiiedi.iti lv. is vn vli.tid lu turn into ca-h, while borrowing is well mh unposililc. The Banks tiiinit abate the income. There are doubtle--; some among them Unit aro loo timid, while oHe i- me extended more widely than liny fle-uhl lie ; but, l.il.en us u limly they have done and are doing altout as well as they could 01 can. 'I'hi-.v havt- not. but tin1 great mas.s o llieir cii-t"tii"ls have eaten und dtatik and worn too many co-ily luxuries, and built loo' many grand hoii.-cs. Money in very hard lo get. simply Ik-cup e as a cuouiiinil v we haveprom-i.-ed lo iay fur more of it than wu have ur can readily procure. The rare vviru'-iweliavedrank. the eo.-tly silks we have worn, the guns and jewels vve have bought, the iron we. have laid down or used up for some year.1 pa d nearly all imported and much of il bought on credit now rise up iu judgment against us. Wu are like the Iu4 youth grown older, und nitl'ciing from gout, dyspepsia uud other maladies which result Irom hard living, who grumbles that bo should In- alllicted nti since he has abandoned his evil habits, when In: had never a twinge while he was ab-'orbud iti'llient. But the avenging bolt falls when it w ill, and doubtless al the very k'sl lime. No palliative, no nostrum, will relieve iih. We cun only recover bv di-sisl ing Irom the w rong and returning to the right. Vte must live lu our old houses or build more frugally limn of late, buy fewer and cheap"!' new dre-ses, drink more pure water and les .; eo.-tly liquors, commence no more railroads reiving on future sitb-criptioiis of stock or sales i, Imnds In eke oul the cost of (heir construction iu sln-rt. we intisl lake in sail generally. We uiu-l ln out fevvir si reel and clear up more farms; sow more acres in grain und edible rootj. while vve r p-'inl fewer llioii-aiul.' 011 stage danc'iand race hor.-i s; undergo fewer ten dollar hall- uud live dollar dinners, ami not lie ashamed lo lie K'eti wheeling a barrow or car rying a package. The change w ill Is- trying for many, especially for when und daughters reared in indolent luxury, whom the bankrupley and consequent Meant or night ot liu-itamls ami lath ers will leave suddenly destitute; yet, tince wo were all intended to do somelhing'for a living, and not to live uselessly on the labor ol others, it win he oust 111 the loiii; run even lor them. Many a noble character has Is-en developed by adversity which would have remained unmatur ed and unsuspected hail Uu- pussewnirs lieen dan dled throii'di life hi llie lain if nro-pei Itv: and the wMow who In poverty ami nh-eurily trains her orphans lo live 1 ol indu-lty, Irugallty and useimness. is pun ning a nooier arm holier career Hum il leading litem giddily through the mazes of FaMiioti amid the snares of Wealth aud Pleasure. We shall pa through Ihe existing pressure, nnd be the better lor it in the end. Many of us will lie weaned by it ft tun City w ays for ever, ami drawn away into uie itroad. green Country 1 ,re a man may sit down to his dinner without ! '" I'1 10 '"V""' "'' ,,1C iriWflS j to-morrow or" It- Is rui I. From lh- purgatory of shinning and th nighlmaro of bankruptcy. ; F' ssttr will libcrale many of m for ever. ! ""'r Jiiy ia.i. in.vy atumiing exiiensive fer to Illinois cut tidd- and Mimic milk and who will live lo k Ih.inklul for the change. TIih sit km-ss is not milo d-alh bill unto life ;" aud If our people ever l arned any-thing frt'in disH-ier or were weum il from folly by mi 11c ring, ii would Is- an excellent thing for us. Yet, al Ihis very hour, when il Is morjlly impo.-Fil-le lhat vve :1m mi Ii I pay for the Imports already coii.--iimd. then1 are many more coming in than wu ought lo buy, and iio immediate ! prospect ot a lading oil. Kither tbe importers or ino buyers mu t ioe money oy irn tn hope il may not Is- th" hitler. If vve could oulv reduce our 1 11 rt - di-enli-dlv kdow 0111 W- ' rts. to as b pay oil' one-piai tend our Foieigu D' bt W itllill Ihe year, we lipoid Is' a Christmas, and medtl le.ume Ihe cm Iniclioiiof our sii-is-iidcd Railroads: Iml tin- pn-M-itt leit- r " .dnev is fowanl a n d-ieti-m o ,e Taritr and a !ruiieeipii-tit intluv of more Fon-ign I .ikies. .rl I ' pe'-pk bov 110 mole llian Hn-y uiu really aMo ''',v ."" ' "l,a "lt''11. ,MV'' 1,11 ,H'!n i . ,. ' . . , . ' """ pi-jee of itm l farm prisnt .tc- vrn gotxl. Tlfv will k lower b'loie lMemki, Iml l.iktr will abo Is- Ii.u.t: s.. u'll-.-ls and ihe knn-er wlm t- mil of it.-lil can Inty a. much of whal-eter he want with hi .; enp a he ever could. --And si, hum a- Hn e.u lh iehh ntnto.l.uitlv ami Hie lti.i'l'ily of our eotliitl yim-n me lieillier all. ml nor a haiilrd to lill it, He- r poll uf pres. sine and p.ini' - will il iuo-1 liii'-td - only a the vague, r.mt.i: lie it coll etion of a dt'ciiii. To Tin; I'lofi.coriiiiio - Al tlieh-t m-. dim of the lietier.tl m'lv an act wa- pa- si np-suntiitg lh- iind'T-i-Mied ( 'oiunii- iotter- to erect 1 a luoiiutiieul to Hi.' ite ne-ry liMienl .-'moil lltoii. and d"llitrs . 'n '" -'IT'T' laiing I thai iiitiih i Al a bit" uietiiii"id the Cotiii ioiicrs. held Ion the i!l-t .lull", io-l till, at le iletoul.iine. in 1 l.ogatl counl v. il w.i.- ih h nnitit d lo erect Ihu Hitiiuplateil noTiooi. ill nl lhat place, near whit h the remain? ol ( ell h- ill-'tl How rejuiH pJiit'cn car-ii hit. lili J m, h,.re. tor ihe la.-t he re.-itletl, j The Comini sinner k ini: ol ihe opinion lhat . a nicmnrui woriliy ol llie lun v irUies and einl j neui pul.iii of Ib'ii. Iv iitou cannot eveculetl for 11 le-v. -utn llian t-u tliousuiul do- 1ms. have ie-i)ivis lo solicit suh-r nptmiis irotu tin- K-ople of the Slate, lo aid in erecting itn monutneiii, itniiiid 111 amoiiiit lo one dollar liotn eaeli Mib ciilier. We llien lore call upon our l' How -fit iy.cn- l 1 mitt to aid 11 - in comtiu iiioi tiling Hie memory of ne man 10 vv mwtr couraoe ami iiu iiimie tin-peo- pie uf the est, am) of Ohio In pitiicular, are 111 a great ib giee iiub bled lor Ihe k-aulilul ounlry winch liny now occupy and enjoy. Let 11-. bv a nioiiuiiM nl woilby of lk most : di.-lingui hi-d nl Ihe uc.icni 1 toneei-, woo I Mutiny id tho pn cut n- ialioii iti Ohio. Iran- 1 111 it to our de Cendant. Ihe rcodlei lioti of hi 1 hemic ih cdj and exhibit tie in to fttturi' ages a: Hie llieuie ol prai-e, and nnslcl d ituititlioit. W. A. Anvus. Joiix A.Coitwtv, Bvn vi.i. II m;i;: os, Axiiiom I'v.svn, K. II. Cm , MM M. CiKMOlAMiOK '. III. i.i.khixtvixi:. dime. InM, The l.alrrt ftr The London Standai d of the evening of June in, thus sums up ihe latest intelligence it had received : "The day has U-vn lev rich in inblligence respecting ibu progn-sw nf the war llian any lor Foiue m.iM.ii-. hi inc., . ...it nil- itoiiuccmetit timi rashiewnch has received orders lo proceed from Jiwsey to Odessa, nil Ihe conimuuiciitioitslrom lite Coiitiueul ate but tepc-lilions of fuels prev lonsly announced. Paskie- witch's inMon ( 1 lessa. a soon a his wound- allacK iilHtii ihe 1 11 men. i.ei us add. nun 1 in i !"- !' ,' 'r "',")' s 'ni . , inu pass 01 inu intriei, were ltiucii more mtious , m ivH-rTu"!. Tk litw-ia a lost ;t..Hm . I1U. ,im, j ,jr w,oe torcu. and I heir com- i nuinicalions with Georgia were 'etleetnally nil off. Sliamvl is now ;ntd to Is- in a enintition lo T V,' W . , .' lflTa. !'"' . '! nis oH-niiions oiny in niiemiance tqion uie sioiv mnvi'int'iilof an equal aiiiotiut of I'orer under Hie command of Ottoman general-." PLANS OF TUP A LI.I Ex ti..,i..,r v.. ;ii ..ni.r ib,- liinol,i, Prim ipalilitM to commence- ho tiliiie Immutli- airly against Bula iu the eveui ( the retn-al i vaciuile. or to serve as a soil ol me.li.ilor k-1 ( hvecn her und llie nllnv in ihu eveiil (not con. i - idct'd impiob.ihb-) ol aepndv evacuation, it - M'" vermin Unit il will ho ll.e signal for j lh. ulll,.fl nt niioj lit ,'iil..r mi I In. ill in nl !, lit. I paign which it is kli"ved ha.- ken already i adopled. Ihu Augio irencii imcc win. 11 up lH'iU'- h 'tvu (he itglil bank u Ihe I'anutK' i' and lirccl lln-m-cUcs lowaids the Crimea, wlure it is ihotiglit a ct'itibitii'd attack will U uiadi' by sen mid laud, in conjiinclion vviili ihe CiicisiiuiH. 11111111-11 siege preparations are gim; on, ami guns ol great mwer have already been w ill to Ihe Itlack Sea. ami lln I mops in 't'utkex are lie-qnenlly i-x. ii in d in Ihe rni'mi king and landing. Wo ni.iv cvpecl. thereloic, tuhe.tr Is lore nnir of serious iqn-r.iHoux in the Him k Sea, I Const vmixoi'i.k.Juiiu l.i.. 'Ihe Duke of Cun-1 bridge, with Ihe ttr.-l divi-ion of i.uon men. h it xy " ( r hh;iiii ine 1..111 in i. i,otn -.'- 'f - -m... m. ...m. night. l ater fresa Haxana. 1 1 I'"'1 Cm id i;-rox. J' uly It. - Tho sl'-am-bip lsal mine last niht, sh. I. II Ila arrived al tiuaranliue m , mTnUil ,t ,),, III, uud hey Net on the evening ot Hie same day. I Ml' MoniCa--lie, sho pastel two From h tri galea nml mte French steamer, bound lor New York. Adinhal Diiquc-ne wa- hiiiriett wilh grout pomp. The Spanish slcamer Bonne de Begin arrived at Havana on the Mil. with 'J IS soldiers. Cup!. J. M. Sauroth. Culled Stale Engineer, who had t n charge thu const rue lion of Fort Taylor, died at Key We-I. on llie 'IM. of yellow fever. Between the 2d of June am) (he hlti of July, seven ikatlisfrom yclbm fever bait ewet red at Key West. Jta of toi Brutal Attempt to Mi rdeb at Cadiz. Thomas Coleman, who married a wife some two or three months ago, much younger than himself, attempted to kill her on last Saturday morning. His wife was engaged in putting on her slocking preparatory to going to church, when Coleman struck and knocked her down with a largo iro poker, and when down cut her throat with a ra zorthen cut his own. A neighbor happening lo call In, made Ihe discovery, and gave tha alarm. Mrs, Coleman's life was despaired of at lirst. but she gives indications now of recover ing. Coleman did not dip' very deep Into hia own neck. Whcntheneighlsirsenteredthehouae he was eyeing his wife aud leaning with his head s tho ft.mlor l.tlin Ihe liVftri (Irinnn till mIimb ' Coleman had been formerly au exemplary cit 7 zen. Is supposed lo have been insane caused by ' inordinate lore of money and meanness, and ' fears of coming to want. His wife has caused him to make au outlay of fifteen dollars during 1 tbe Iwo mouths they had been married, and act- f ing upon the Principle that it was better to be l out ot the world than out of money, he attempt- f- ed to send his young wife to eternity and follow I himself but from recent experience, we think he's come to tho conclusion that 'Jordan Is a hard road to travel. StuA. Herald. The friends of Gov. Corwln in southern Ohio have In contemplation the erection of his statue iu bronze to be placed in some appropriate position in one of the cities in the Miami valley. A statue of tho kiud contemplated, say eight feet high, on a noble pedestal, with panels represen-m ting striking events in his career, win cost about lilleeii thousand dollars. Jones, tho sculptor, who has made, a bust of Gov. Corwin in marble, will undertake to produce a model for tho proposed statue. He Is an enthusiastic admirer of thu matchless Western orator, and will give to the task that study which only a genuine "labor of love can extort from geulus-'' Mr. Ames, the great bronze caster at Cbicojiee, Mass., has fm-nishcKl a rough estimate of the cost of costing, chasing, Ac, aud is capable of doing tho work in a style worthy lo porctuaie to coming times, the form and features of our favorite. A fund necessary to defray the expenses of tbe work will Is raised by ad -script ion, and tbe probability il inai 1 lie city communing tne. largest amount will he allowed to nx the sue lor toe statue. Anoi.tTioN McKTixfi im MABSAcm'strra. A gathering of five or six hundred abolitioniala look place in Framiugham, yesterday. Speeches were made by Messrs. Garrison, Phillips, and others. Mr. Garrison concluded his speech by burning 11 copy of the constitution 'of tho UniLrl Htatcs ; also copies of tho fugitive slave law, the decision of Judge Loriug, and Judge Cur tis s charge to the tinted estates grand jury 'J lie act was followed by applause and cries of shame, itr. I hen Mr. Garrison U a fool Ian man, waning so much paper that he might have made profitable use of. The operation must have been supremely ridiculous as performed by Garrison. We could imagine Wendell Phillips doing such-a thing with wtmc melodramatic effect, tragio dignity and vehement romance ; and ho would probably have " brought down tho bouse," bat to see the cool, demure, prim little Garrison attempting such heroics must have been peculiarly uinttsittg. V. V. Cm..'ldc. II Is said thai Mr. 1 this of Ohio, that puiely " Democratic" rue in lair ofCoiigrcsa who gocsfor raising the postage on poor men's letters while maintaining the franking privilege for tobacco-chewing julip-sw igging Members of Congress, has a sou who was recently appointed to office in pari consideration of his papa's vote for tfa- Tie orai Ka mil, aim trial nis son laoors under tbe name of Murqui de La Fayette Olds. It seems that the father Is so profoundly ignorant a man that he supposed he was giving his offspring the proper mime of tho good La Fayette, when he was only giving him the gallant Frenchman's title as a nobleman just as if, wishing to name Ihe boy afler the Father of his Country, he had called bim General Washington Olds Instead of O'forge tVathington 0d$. Itis notsurpris-ing perhaps, that such an Ignoramus should wish to lay an additional tax on Ike circulation of In telligence among the people, but wodon'thelievo his constituents will like him nny the better for it. j . i wune. ItoMISII CoVII'I.HIKYM Ol' AVKRICAN ClTlSA The Boston Pilot, one of the mos( favored and popular 01 mo roe s organs in tbe united Slates, gives utterance in (he following very emphatio strain to the opinion it and its muster entertains for American citizens : ' Wc every tiny read of a congregation of the American Order assembling for Ibo purpose, of iiieulting female and even committing outrages iqtoii mem. 1 uis is a prooi 01 tne braggadocio bravery of Americans; Ihey have no raautfmfl no honor uu love for fair nlav: it Is of no ubh rea-ontng with them; Iherc are but two courses bit, Itio most plausible of which is, and we believe that it k the determination of many of our Irish bre t hern, lo knock them ton, or otherwise chiHiso them corporeally, for should our Irishmen npieal to law for a redress, the odds are against him, for religious prejudices run so high in Court, lhat with a Protestant Judge ami a Pro tenant Jury, lite poor oppressed Irishman Htm he deprived ol all just means of redrei Tne Lvtk Nathaviei. Hknuv A paragraph lull of hi u riders relative lo ibu death and circumstances of tho late Nathaniel Henry, of Floyd, which has ken going the round of tho newspapers, found its way into Ihe Virginian of yesterday. Since H appearance, wo hue Imi --- .n. i.-Monuig iioiv 01 correction ny a memiter 01 mo lamily : Ikk Sirs: On taking up your paper thfa iiioiiiiiik, in-.- ujiuv ui 1 dincK ncnrycaugni m eye, and after ruatling itio article so headeif ur lirst impuiv was lo sei.e my pen lo correct tl error as to the "de-litution and death" of h youngest son. I iml gentleman is now living Htllueucp at l.etl I tall, Ihe seat of his father. N ttiani'd Henry, one ol the older sons, died man years since, lie was a man of superior min and of a noble and generorts uitposition. Ib was a poor man. hul was uol without friends. I feel called upon to correct this impression, that reproach may not rest upon the names of his brothers and sisters, most of w hom. If not all, are wealthy. l.tnchhurg t'iiginian. Tin: Aituv or nit: Rkvoi.itiov. Tho whole enrolled Continental army of the Itevolution was ;il,!),",!l. of which ti7.!iu7 were from Massa-chnselts, or more than Ii per cent, ul the army, wink fiery Slate nnnth of Pennsylvania nrovl- dt it hut .".!'. iJX or H.4 1 1 less than MasachuselmrH alone. The New England States equipped and inain- lauuii iif,.t.o. or awtve on if or tne whole rcvo-lutiotinry army. In Ihu years 1777, 177H. 17H1, and Hu- quota or Massachusetts and Vir ginia were alike iu battalions and men ; yet Mas-sachu cits raised Ti.M in (hose year, while Virginia, though hound to enlist (he snme nutn iwr. g,n itaiintgioii nui i.i.iu.r, or :i.airi leas n than M -issae h 11 etts, a difference which would g make a respectable army. PoviKRor Sii.t MiM i Af-n in:.- The Pomeroy T humph contains an article on (he salt manufacture in thai pi sen and vicinity, lt places the manufacture al buhds a iky, to wit ; Pomeroy rn I M oinpany, "mi bushels ; 11: ,' Hidcg Company, Ami; Coalport dm ; an, WeTvimiifiA kibiaPK) or alsuil miimiih) kishcls a year. lAta j value, allowing 2d cents a kishel at the yard, ia 1 tl.'ii.iHH) a year ; llie business isyel in its tufan- J , ey ol that place. Two new soft furnaces now is-tng mini, one at Loaiport, Ino other al I West Colnmbia. The salt vialer la obtained by Istring lo the diqith of 7m or 1,(100 feM. ami is 1 brought lo the sip lace through copMr pites, Ity means 01 pumps woiktii ny u am except ! the Pomeroy well where the water rises to t j surface spontaneously. Domdhtii' Bi.tss is N.w ExoLxn. The N, Hamp-hire superhtr court, nl Its laic term Kl t.oiieord. neani arguments in en; itv-tlm: voice anils. Tbirlv-tliree of the studies wi re granieu, seven neuiesi, ana tbe declHon I lorlv three n-servtit. lire sins-nor 00111 ' riage relation Is concerned. J CvTiioi.uy ap Coviuox Snioow. The Ctev? , nn(i ,Pftl,,r aV t,a ,hP Calhollc editor ot th' ; niicugo Tablet, iu a lecture delivehtl at Jollet llhode l.'land.al its hist term, bad seventy I simiUr ruses k-fore It, of which forty-two re I eeived jiidgment uf divorce, four were denied, F three settlett, ami Ik remainder continued foi7 considerAlioii. New EuglAiid is fast oatu(t B"l title to Ihe name of the land of steady habit.! at least m far as the permanency ol the mar-A 111 , expri's-d Ihe following opinion of Commn4 fjctllHllB The common schools of America are founds. Hons of prostitution and erime.andall tuaum J Indecencies and immoralities Are practised in till , I nrsl Jtl years of my life in Ihera." 1 Know it 10 ih so. necause 1 was eilucAled IB Aeeonlinir lo ihe t'nited Slates TrraaiiretJ ' .,,',,, , ; "., " rr " , . "; v. . : . . . , . J . , i "'M-' iirwT Almonto n-ectved a check Ior '.,HH'Wi, on rridny.aa ihe nrat Instalment " Wexicn nn aeconut ol Ihu n-eenl tirsly with I ; " '"; ; ! has an n'mrh exlr liiuiliT.iB hkul. ' f 1 t A Know NoTitivn. I say. Bill. I AesVir?V' Nolldn. 'Where:'' "liy, on the Museuiirl ' hut did he look like? " Why, h-j i oa. -Huotii. io. i an i worn nasi ne on . " t litmus. mm i oe a inoi let me how too ' found nut thai he was a Know Nothing? - " Why, ho said so.'1 " Did you ask bim lo tell you.' "No. but I aoked him whether kwotildn t give me a sixpence ami lie.jnl No, nothing, " Dkvih auomi mt: llouti .--A Chicago pap" nvs mat aisnii j.'.t nogs, is'ing nan oi a oi o t ill head, tll'Hl from excessive font on l day last, while ou the Ens-Urn branch of ll I Inois Central Bailroad, ttelween Pern an iluntlion. Tbev were fstitk- inuiaportiHi Vermillion counlv to NewYurk. and kins ly stowed In the cars were Miflk alttt from heal. The train went on tn Dunkirk from Junction, the dead ami live hogs ttivaeparale Tho LonlsvHIo Cornier says that onu of t lurors in tho ixam irtai has been etrtx tiuii rr the chuirh to which he klonaed in Edski town, tor having sworn lhat In- had formed opinion in lhat case, when tlrt called us tur i wlidoll was pro vest thai ho had rviM-alnlly i vut An opinion. Uthor Mirtenue was ebeite.1 wllil,n WU H, iit aTafiaTuTr- ltvi:xi.-At anclMinn for Jimlhe of lh Peace, held in Kavemia, Portage citimly. Obit la Salunlay, whore the Nebraaka nitration wJ - 1 m,l,'f tirrrt P"-illie ksaue, Uie Anll-NeA ina-KA raniiniaiu was eiecicii ny a maiorily el one ntimirtti niki piny our. i uis ia ino mor nolewirlhy. from (he fael lhat tbe old line Dm ocrals have carried Ravenna by strong niaje ties for years, oven when VYIiiga and Fmsoil uniletl an a itial them. The farm oflieneral Cass, which, thirty yeai ago, was In Ihe suburbs id tbe link vHUuo " Delroll, la now In tho very beait of (hat TerH and pnwpi'roiia oily. By rulalnlug poanwsiy of the land which originally ciarl kit a few h f dri'd dollars, ho now flndshlmaelf worth at Ihreo millions Irom lhat operation alooe. T -' -v -v a |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn85025898 |
Reel Number | 00000000024 |
File Name | 0836 |