{ title: 'The Elmira gazette. (Elmira, Tioga County, N.Y.) 1828-185?, June 02, 1853, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030949/1853-06-02/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030949/1853-06-02/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030949/1853-06-02/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030949/1853-06-02/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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\Cf 104. estrus € + 2. Bid (\teng Wm...- . i B w Q’lf' ms$ of Iquted fo 44 W 6A“? gig} $ Y > 400m ey iy = a> wun A s a a E20 3 : . . \bro. w. mason, komo . Frorx the Minnesstian. ._ The Lane fin. * {ddrme on the Minsota river, during the lending . e 2 oon + ,_ 3» yhowifira purerwoon ._ ._ «Nof a word he spake or gesture made - share, and sell the hotre «_ *\ do he gased on “mmrx , shell have only a small :< . patha'thded hie nemuncrom ble PMM ) | to coteinence the battle abr m * fin“! Warrier\ Mkm M Mci.nt ta W & fit“ “d b,‘ cho fre ef the Brave\ in hiseyes - ' nfamily. «Weal hopeto do tig nd hitpalseless lips are frmly compeonted ; ure Fet mo kindred or friend is nigh. ~| be % Closely and Zracefolly his blanket he drew, * * Wa hy thought of the white akill, fflwmfl mattered caak t 2 t m exe ' ‘r hilftare tnt ; 'With a strong and:powkeful will. - would aid instead of bam In the scene that way passing around: \ Fop the strong defence of the white. man's walls Were to rest bn his hanting ground. A The spot where his \teepee\ had 'The stream where he paddled his light sance. - . Wher be roameil in his native wood ! The remuant were doomed, and brief was the hour Badly, O, sadly his spirit warstivred, { For life was bersft of its charm ; «Henely, more closely his blanket he drew, < Fer his ”fly heaving breast. \ er. His eagle eye bad divined the scone- 1 q+ Aud westward he courses his silent way | Till in the dim distance he's lost. . i ly he # i -- ‘ 0 n the old In the outskirts of a smalltown in Devon- J £1.33, zhsngnnio 330,12: ml? xii: 3:11.41 - shire there stands, to this day a small farm- | wil) take a little moro ground near it, and house, ofpicturesqire though ruined sspeCt. | begin farming on & larger scalo. 1 shall Is 'had onge, béen far mare extensive, but it® puy , ; and catt, and employ & couple 8 f lnbo thear 1 and Ali ed no gradually parted with aorgs, nnd allowed 3m (1005: 1:01:23 \ m * g” aced ao 6 a 4 \Alice who-not Alio#\ Hawthorn !\ said; in the course of twenty years to ruin, uhtil Edward ?\ 00> I 4 \Yes; what objection haye you to her'! two bed-¥ooms. Mare addicted to tporfin; ”he; Madramhfilnxggxythougfi re» | and betting om horse-racee, tha® to rssidu- spect for his elder brother still was “Maggi in the tone of hi¥ voice. - * ' \None to her. But her father, you know was a respectable tradesman, who, ruined | drink, took refuge iff\ beer-rhop, | . 3 owner, a énjalele and upenergetio man, had this principal portion of his dwelling to go there remained habitable a kitchen and ous attention to his interests, Edward Sar- . , gent hadibecome a distressmed farmer, not from bad harvests or misfortune, but from thoughtlossniess or love of pleasure. It was + if vain that his wife strove to supply his presence. She had n young family to at- * W410; anffiis‘iam gand. unubnnfinflm' ther was a townsman's child, whom he had married for her beauty and personal good qualities, but who though an excellent wife and better mother, was not the woman top replace the absent agriculturaliat. - She had as I have said, a family, two boys and'so ~* * $3 §ou s ~- i z A £ P would .g¥ren- Halib- Eff: hisfimpflsjw noy t This r more wise fitheT The country'@ too \thickly peopled\ but to this Alfred\ I pot neigtihors close\ upon Ava.,f When I come hore fust, there WP er within fifty miles. SoI'm of There's plenty o'room sand to- whign witt lA lice. ne d to amigrate, wi insuperable objection And.sister, therefore, put Ini amide, and began nrrangin iplate, | Thayrhad saved a foy exiraine economy and next day EAward ged \Ris money to be sold out, f «session of sven} hundred ows “fifth! fowls, wi +5 15.2.5\ clothes “film“. w Pag p ta m, b * Charnin wis “muswfifijfi‘wmfi ry Rest.1 and no more. - The momunt: we part: 1 take each our-own | oft Besides ita great hanting ont in Thiiw °C b 'gins. - Aud then thero'd wite, and \Yop wighed sho hit ‘ and. soon 1,031; . pe Vlgi ' ill?\ ow.. If we were I rs, or shopmen, . aphi® uld then say, marry. We Bate a cap- £0, b Ate - : ip dat etatton wives | f ¢ us But wa . For he knew there was mo good teken tobim ___ | uno sanéee above this, should before We take agitl from her home, have snothsr hometo give her. 3 f J have madémp my mind. He saw where bis brave Nahum , _ Wfhutshe is a country better, sdited to skill : artisans, laborers, who fnd ready ef ployment with man of capital. In Amert Nérer again to his vision might deere ' we find a fiew country, where 'we can have T2311“ sky so bright trad so flit} ' land for little or nothing, where the {if} i¢t-earth smilein so euch besuty and Fée! ; wigens every day, where professions find Samtggsmeno the calm air. .' meWoutlots every hour, and where a man Pale faces coming, so- potent in skill, * may venturseren without money, but where 'His own race was dwindling away ; ' with our resources. we should.in the west- ° ern settlements be rich, - 1 finvo long reflec- Ee could oer these hanting grounds stray - >| yig oo opis, and [ had hoped that you would | mean to go over? settle ein twomaonths, the dak high withidg to- reserva and if ever I comes to a#ik you must 4 give mo another fiva hundred - fs ma third he? nt two handred by, and' spent the | What say you friend !\ 2}: » d odd mtibney- in nocessaries. : what gould not be done without. England 1 love, {. Ox, Sundiy, Mrs. Enderby and game} aud found a hearty wel §3 q a middle sized, § { @ountry girl, beaming with health -Feady for the rough contest abe whanbout to f enter om Emily was slight ond mithom«leli~ cute, but still with a good cons! rather serious in char pleat méasure because of her ch§gnge of ex- istence. | Haviag WBen brought lap ofjakary; the falling to a position which | he sticks that on his dodr'and eJopes , Tty Heeded hor earning hor living, cogld not but #248, gone Ta Toras.\. Thank pd Job} fq in, Aud iake obout His wormen as well, ba felt Hy the most philosophical, gud Emi. | Posts ain't in debt, but he's too confine4 iB} ga. reich necessaries from the town. As ly hadino pretensions to he iu philosopher. tthese diggans.\ * > Bhe wes grave, too, at the thouglit f ing wit} Edwang, whose manly, ; tan hour's inspectioq in the wiflw’ for daogh- | mo ag well as it did this ovrenidg\. | like it, so I aball pack up. snd. ; Texas tu morrow. ri out; wanted to find a{ strangor who would by and Job Potts Js \G TT =_ | Inoghing, ' e : hecompany me. Hut stofeally there like a statue he stood, } inyself on some moderately peopled locality, ' Still betraying no grief or alarm. | a farm, and practise as an archi- ; | teot and surveyor. - I calculate at the and | More firmly his lips wore compreated, | of two years, I should be sufficiently settled Aud stronger he folded 'his brawny «ras ' to send for or fetch my wife and hor moth- Naw what say you, Al rageous, ; Ho found oms haondred sores, of whico five sand upright character {will won| hog heart < were ander cultivatton - The < house was completely. | But he spoko 80 chebring)y and ! substantinl, the farm-yord well suxpiied. ed their l the river handy to go down to the neigh- now lifo in such glowing colors, fetailked of | boring villag@®, or oven to New. New Ot two years as nothing, ho lmigdufiyn plaos'al- . leans if necessary, aitd Job Potts was sbont | to atart on that stupendous journe in a akiF. In fact, it was quite clear thk$ the enterprising Amprican sold his property for one fiith of its real value, but then he w? une of those reokless spirits that osn $ave? goon flown; Edward and Sophia jrgro ready , fix; in u‘no plats: and £3 15m to get rid of his fl, property, at however groat & tosk, was de- lignutal His utle deeds were gvod. the, tranuter was effectedpebnd that came night*or © the. 1192)qu {j home - They bad with them an Inistggao, 14/2 his wife, and twoo ohildran, emigrants of the | 4® poorest class, whom the goang inan engage ed for three yents to work\on thé farm and Sophia hopafully of the future, he dese \That will 1,\ exclaimed Sophis, hearti- CL for their journey, and se dent idlhis faith as to success could ¢ésist bis eloquence, and they spent a really Happy day Time passed rapidly tha two | SIX months' ago, I would gladly have , ~- THE BETHERSJ | | said the same,\ replied Alfred, with a sigh conld not restrain. \E cannot leave i AN ENGLISH TALE. England now. My plan», too, are all mado. They took A gan, some ches books, instruments, and drawin plain good clothes as possible, they gould afford, Feat, a dozen shirts, made by Mfa | Enderby .and her dsughter, who lind n mis and) drawilig both to make hla prosont 3G her fturo hasband On tle wedding . ' rd.and Sophia worse; spoken of odgly, beemise of their plain wp lodked handsomemin theiv plain: clusively to his new * o mag, house, enlarged tho fidldg on happy corn fAdide, mgadows, api\ phot\ pe of the works, and thas a your siged rapidly. o whom tima sufficed to prove to Kdwurd that ha' Alico - need have no doubt sBout th6\ fafure; W6. 0 the Jastarthen after writing\to Sirs \Badin ahd Batt yory igno~. \ ily to come «as nu 00h as thoy could, he ad- ded to his res surces by hiring :a boy; and of ‘Eng then procured momo sheep. Rpring the efented a memberof the loon} logisisture twelvo nontbs nearly a dozen hbuses arose In fact, fortane had favored him as perhaps in tho immediate neighborhuod, and the\ sho fivors few, though all raay,\ with his couniry Lecame peopled with that won- qualities attains port of such anccess. He drous repidry which is the great character- bad fire cbilden, Sophia four Sho wnw very ° happy Both were happy . ps much : Hinga, than of thoae prokbn (Dut they tried to, spend dsyjan@ gare up formal possesdio harnow-married coup rdwfree) wad, as is ofton the cng wauy of knowlodgo being pr chief ground work of vanity Afid thai an” departed thislbjother and . tearful, but full « gourkgie } Their fatarn home Wiscopsit-a state of grent py climate. god g§xe whent other places.are completely up. Such a connexion can scarcely do us eredit;4 * Edward,\ exclaimed the other passion» ately, you are unjust. Hawtkorn has his faults, but Alico is an angel, apd no power girl, whom she brought up as wel} as she could. They had not much otit-door educa- | , sion, because. st the very time 'when they should have gone to school, the income of the farmer decreased in consequence of heavy tosses, nnd then came death and took the head of the house. , Mra., Surgent found herself, at thirty-ser- , cen, witha house, a few thirty pounds a year, derived from money in the funds of her own, and with these limiteJ resources she determined to do battle for her little ones, and to raise them to as high & moral elévation as possible. The Clergy- many of the parish, fortunately, was s sim- 'ple, good man, who willingly aided her. and when Edward was twenty-one, Alfrod nine- teen, and Sophia seventeen, they had made much progress. Edward was lesrning the ingss of an architect, Alfred attended to : the farm, and Sophia to the details of the ~household. Their characters were very diferent. Edward was very | thoughtful, looked before him always, and : scarcely ev- er acted From sudden impulse. Alfred, on 'the other hand, was more lively, very s thoughtless, and possessed by an ardent desire toraise from his obscure and hum- * ble position, but without ever beginning .. anything whigh might lead in? bis success. Sophin was a good little housekeeper, aided her mother in-doors, worked at her needle ' and made the house light snd merry with - her sweat voice and gentle smile. At tliis epoch in their life their mother died, and Edward found himwelf at twenty- . cne at the- head- - The: on earth can induce me to give her up. \ I have neither the desire nor the power | to prevent your marrying this girl,\ replied Raward, gently; \but listen to me, She may prove an excellent and good wife, if you will it. Should you. be determined to pursue the path ofpatient induatry, heve-&¢ elsewhere, she would profit by your eiam- pio. But why not come with ma,! You are both very young and milrely can wait two years. - if she loves you, you hor waiting your with and proud to accompany you to a homa, where, competence, even wealth if you will, may the oemiginut »tan réquire secret fegling for the oxtreino Quypngéfied‘im Americs, with passion for huntingito which when not fen way had carried| Edward in stion. They smiled (rdm. Plymonth , and thence by thel lakes to the state of Wiscomaivi, without lodging an hour Arrived in the piomised Iand, Fl@i.Sophit at'a hotgi of modest ap- paarkna (raga price, and hiring a Tho Jan ing hig objedt, had directed h the banks of the Wisconsin were s6vorik \desitrahle Incatiogs first chop. lord, learn- \\She would be matried to young\? exolaimed Alfred. ~ Then she does not rem served Edward. = Yep, she does. Bat'then two of | absdnee would give my , rival opp'bqtnhitiea | which he would not miss. He was simost | engaged to her, when I stepped in and won her affeetions, And you, are you ' certain that your young lady will wait for you two.! r; wed tha land wBd found E-@N#BIbwooded fertile (a Hd;wftfi hore and thord n log-houss, &#arm, nod in on Hy love ‘xbuJ’ ob- | g tots,\ that is, Jocations on the; “ $1194.11;me near t =P oke of his my ink \Yes !\ cried Edward, warmly;\\'you know Mrs. Endarby, the widowed sister of my | employer. ly is her daughter Idégk b We lave\ been almost engaged::pige year, and lastnight I was finally :agespted. She will reside with ber mother until Fend - for them, living on small pittance and upon their joint labors. Thcugh brought up to better things, they employ s certain num- ber of hoursa day in yarious pmfitnblefi Mrs. Enderby is clover at I Therd was cvidant- ' second year proposéd for Sop {ugh nido ofa was try gfifi‘m‘fiqng,\ one an , :33th'ungwitb.flunvou 'an ffolosed «pace, devoted to tlib purpns« of with n boat Abbut thred Aggies oF If brn, and other vagetpblgn, ftiration and. thp ~&hol> the appearance of being the pid@ - doctor, who was a _> young people deeply grieved Tor the Inss of their pare: }, and for more than six- go other topic of conversation ils heard In the house-all. however, otherwise contin- : ning as usual, Edward going regularly to : his office, Alfred attending to the fates, snd Sophia silently and sadly performing the domestic duties of the interior. Generally . of an evening they assembled together, and \ sfient the hours in reading, talking snd sewing, according totheir several tastes; & but toward the end of that time, Edward would often go out of, «n evening, and soon ~ aftor would Alfred. Fm former always re- sister, but Alfred wpuld often stay nutil nesrly midnight.'\}For some time this change is their mofle of life excited no re- mark, but one morning, at breakfast, Ed- ward addressed his \brother :- + My dear Al,\ 'said be gently, \how comes it we never see you of an evening ; now:? - You never come hort until we are: - fast asleap.\ # o Alfred blushed to the oges, and tried to © suswer carelosely. ' \Why the fact is,\ he replied, really glad to bring sbout an explanation, \I am think- \Ug ins 0! fitting mini-Gd.\ | ** Married '* repeated Sophis, in unfeign . 48 astouishment. ~ \Not to-morrow, nor next day, but soon. 2 when I get my taro hundred peands,\ gaid | tea thatthe family might. wiske x quaintance. ' 'Edward segretiod he had notpean seore: fl}? might at ah. Alfred, with some hesitation. . \Well my dear Alfred.\ continued Ed- ward, \I am glad you héwo made this eon: | er; fSdensé to me, for I myself had in .yiew * Edward ¥ado upto fie 40 to takp a lesson, if possiffle, frope The barking of a huge dog @ out a tall Amerieqn, whose dreq at ondo the indefeff ' \Well stranger,\ said he, voice mwhigh thpugh.rou die, and Emily gives easy lessons on the pi- . a9o to young girls. Sometimes sha teaches mergehbildren to read, to write, to use their needles, and thus they live cotafortably - When T am seady, they will both come and join we, and Emily's four hundred pounds will be added to the sommon stores.\ \Oh how happy we shall be!\ oried So- his gladly; if Alfred would only come | with us, it would be delightful.\ \I shall stick to old Englsnd. make my fortune here too.\ éxofaimed Alfred, somewhat sullenly, turned aboug half page nine, to sup with his | \and we shall see who will do best in the ! p,; dhiman,\ teplich] Edoakq politely \Jn mearch of a locat{on,. Having as woll, as Edward, even unde L.haco ven. tbo disadvantage whicha& poor \I gum an Engli ridderp further then I expected,, tared: to usk your hospitality. 'f | Upporch from thy, | tithtdbaove tbe horse in where thea'll find-coffutalks a erable few beans, ant tring ' anchor lnsido. . Joh Patty 1s g fort the inner man, af.. do. aldering-ha'nwafting:'y |- Edward followed thik directions, and #oon I steaming, mass.of posa and:cofse, whigh was Jorrney.. For ate and drank in {low brought ont «ome M red Edward a pipe, wh F bave my plans e frignd the stable - d a consid- of his maney 3114,th “flair, If | to an | productive ja com. , Ptothot » Isttera.and sighed usche reReoted\ \Coumust do as you will We should haye done better united, but I seek not to foree you. Whenever you nre ready, the two husidred pounds ure at your command, and this house, as Sophis, companiss ime.\ ~ \Thank you, Edward. * Though too seri- ous and sgarched by half, you are & kind brothdr.* Let usbe the same friends as be- ug, con- , rave git!” ac» And Alfred hursied away, Edward, re- maingd with hig. sister to digouse: | fall length his plans of emi , , \Married Edward, himself color- z ing once made of his sister a Momma?” fc \ lng violently. .. . | Jact of conter.\ young man found ample subject of conygr- sation relntire to Emily, and is was resed that abo should over go the farms with ber mgther, to \dfiiner an Tob Rotta is your . mail Ayors: but ® q ap, as a'll pet Yow n tim\ \dig- | Gon obi * aint fut the Mexicans, yot, but he to (or- So M#rosanofer. Givo me Ave bundredi{igomfort snd anrigyance at home in visits to ; dollsrs for the house; iuJProvmenm catile, fther father's beer- «Bop. fowls, ganoffiiifii, tarmitute, and aH the traps, my gan not being counted, asd tg, fnorrow welll go.to Bureptrille at 'Lthe location. If ik anawors its wuth five thou- iH \That | nccept with ql my heart, if half,\ a? ip # \That affair is softled themxkflggfinm P id «start, for'?\ I ve found ong, \What does that mean MEdeF: \ Why, when a man can't pay\ his debts, » Noxt day Edward wont over the- ground. | Ca - *C. i in thei ne er and {1&th pt. z ns I £ istic of America It was soon found that more than a hundred families were copgre- gated within a distance of ton miles, taking Edward's houso as the centro. A rmesting was noccordingly hold, and it was after fom» discussion determined that a chiirch, chap- ol, and sehool-room sfoold be- built shout balf a mile trom Edward's residence, he be- ~ing the person charged with th6 manage- ' ment of the affair, tho drawings which or. ) Eve children, two baving died Tmo months afterEdward seqoived this' profession. | Tho yourg man was quiteeta.' letter ho was by Alfred's side. Vorg little ted, and set to work with enthublsam: 'Af., Was ssid, -tbotlh werb too much moved,- ter n month's stady and Inbor he had com- | but a wick later they wero all on <~board a packet, sailing for New York. .The husband was better. tha wife, decently clad, well fed. 1, was surrounded by fine children, to namented bis houeo haring betrsyed hiv plated his plans, his datics demngdingununh of his time and they waze submitted . to ® cominittec. Unanimously .they were ap- 'hopotu proved. and Mr. Sargont-weas elected archi. hosq cheékn healthy hues were returning tect and saryeyor far tho-~district of White, Ibe gee voyage did thei all good. > Edward (ounty _ From tliis honr his prosparity:wss didnotbing by heives. He put his brother . - onsured. .He found soon enough employ- &n a handsome Bouse. gave him n hundred | ment out of doors, to need Furfixeraaxistméei acres, tools, stquk. everything he, required * ' on hisfurm, he bad rich settler? houses to! Deep gratitude &gbim whoihsd shown such . orect ground to spuryoy, and soon rumor} earnest fratetoml affection, and unto! Frovi out a town, ome of.the . dence. worked upon ‘Mfredfitb’pomr and | bo \first inhabitants of which wes to be- a | force Ho set to work iluogt gterply, as did | his wages, 'of less if possible, until he buys ! young doctor, who towsrds the end of the ; bis wife - Still they are glad at.heart, and his, aud w!“ thank God every Aay that such a brother . necepted with tho hearty consent of hoy| wasfound to snatch thom from the las ; brother It was ngreed that the mix—Hugo atage of misory. Alfred bida fair to rival \ should take place the #arfo day Fo thi‘f'plf Edward nud Emily In the mganifms. the fatty pretty walt off phad a bouso built at and Inid ont in tempting lots for all who chose to settle in Grahamatille. | inl, | ef » be sbould not bara England as- gompared with n now. fertile. ri8; ing untaxed Innd ' At the end of the year;, Ms be found himealfe-fathur, the_greater part Ho rand with arcret euty his bow ho had hopelesely thrown 'away the obmnco of wich vapid ancéess '&s' be' clearly. eaw would be his ) His, capisal was met-fwd he had a wifeand.child. -A. akea Jflflbfi to Aworic® was, therefore, now im- 4 P01“! Bs. t the worst park of his posifich was the state of his: home.' A\ pbited “Em; {used'ift Hier Tuther@ house 6o.do nothing, to |. 'be waited bh all da'y, to dress smartly me of the pagan. a qnueraloys, ill tem woman, domplatning of having adything th 'In: groisblng Gocknse Alfred\ dipepted, her ppio dros Tike gfl‘rfimysfinflifiéfiifi do whard Sophia had always done, attend=to - the} # | meals, while. ho war oat of floors: with big - much that |- with hiy broth- 'of taty! [Imbgrérs. _ tKee \did it, for. she. had. po,on thas dhoice-aho knew be conld aot. afford other popes . and:{ arwise--bat «mever.; without - fanuit finding ..: | |:Bas is was # racktroese whoo 'sho had b bi was talk of 'his mias |= | Ahoy < wormed - a ~* } € A # vol oe} it {Con «o_ 20 (ate @ W'd‘fl 142.95 asa 119 < soft .. #1) a he stco bor Tar. «., sd fe. a siad mews C ' - d Goon [0 ; n 4 !s . culo e rod n fog® + l nud aed absbettamsehe had, dittle of. - Inni-thiw addition to the | ery foud, real: figdgbi‘mr 'only disaatie- MNecausg of the additional ,, Peas .augry. at her- #! ”fists; 'hes' hoorly declaration\ A a ' noter seaon him and so 'Iron seenes f dis- Appa o epee ione nme nene ann neo - TERMS $200 A YBAR ; $1,50 IN ADVANCE-YOL xXXvi--No. aoe \ Laws-otafew York---By Authority.. © {Every Law, unless a different time - i . hall commence and - ahd dress in fp caliea.‘ all ibefiam natural life, ratherthan live by. sufferance, and be in daily danger of starvation, or be compelled to work how and wllen’mmébody‘ pléased, whether we liked itor not ~Make s of the unrighteous mammon\<--savo your money, and thereby | your independence. mestic Opera. ainmezq‘gnent of the Sontag! sigstic friend of ours and ' his wife have become so dstried awsy that thing in the world for them to restrain their disposition to sing eve -thing-the mare so, beonuse they are bo pusic. The other morning, | while orflering his dioper, the butcher, a sedate man-was surprised to hear Igar i frienp shout ont with most emphatic enon | sembed therein s Since the p oporas, an ent hout the State, on and not befo after the day of its Gri® 6 Scoretary of State¥ 7, part 1, Revised Stammtes 1 in Md fljfofifll as cert} rery law go published in the State be read in éviden papt ihailk-be contained, in all courts of } Tan din all procesdi body or board, in which it a sary to refer thereto, until tree mont! elogo of the session in which it beceme gal-t 11 Revised & it is the hagd unto yourselves_fr » proficients in is after the =_ 8, title 7, chap. 8. lg ws of 1845, chap. . Cuarrten 174 AN ACT in elation to layin - roads, and diego A eqple of the Ne \ 2d in Senate and 422352535 do enact § 1. An application for a shall be made in «waiting, width and location,\ courses as and the namea of the owners and joceapaunts .of the land 'through which the /r. d to be laid out. 2. The commissioner or com idm such application shell shall thereupon appoint as early A-| the convenience of the will allow, when at his office, a jury will be ° ose of determining upon e necessity of said road, and to assess the famages by reason of , the bpeninig thereof. . $ 3. Such commissipner or commsstongrs all thereupon deliver to the applicant r py of such application, to which shall be dded a notice of the timé and | place ted for the selection of, such | eil to the owners and The Little child': Fauny Fern, $ the Baston Olive Branch, | thus solilpquises for the juvenile ;-Wish 1 mu would pleasetkeep me warm.\; My little bare legs are very cold with the face ruffics; they are not half as nice as Wish I had ~ .Atthq second year Alfred sold his horse . d his L is. rent. Up to this tine transfer had written to dward..but Emily and . departing for Americas at this' 'hd gert to pay : Dota, , . The butcher winked at his partner, apd ippriod, they took ouege‘lm 'Tetter whey; answered, wilh an nir of composure. | \A ! 4 . 3, { asd q gm’him for gears. Elm? shillin', sin:\ but it was evident.our friend 5b ana Mra. Ender y wore met at Quebec } was down in the day-book of his estimation as a lunatiq, | Making his pyrelases; and | bad a long c he met with his ngigh- | and arms ; | of my eyes, or have the | @ress would stay up, on my shoulig‘ers, and that it was not too nice for nie tol . the ficorto pay ninepins. Wish my: mi mms would go to walk with me sometimési Wish she would let mpil my cheek to here If I. would not tumble | (33 curis or her collar. Wish she would not K ise me something 'very nice, and then Wish she would answe questions, and nut alwayssay, 'don't b Freddy.) Wish when we go out in the , she would; make me wear my &1 léeast I should 'tan my hands.' Wish aha3 w F not tell me that all the pretty flowers will *peison me,' wish | cofid tumble on th ahd go into the barn and see how D Wish I was one 031m tle friskey pigs. - Wish 1 could make nad cous ! black Jim's woolen stockings. x I 'had a little pair of warm rubbers; wish 4 sleeved apron, for my bare neck wish { might push my earls ont m cut of : Wish:my | POS® Edward rechiv ee Edward whom they found much chang- i qb, ~ in look, but theeame fmhesrt hddier, had rpugher hands, and was more [fnly-looking than when bo left. but it was sant to s80 an that healtby face the afrank,.honest smile, which Emily so ell remembered. He burried them an.} ve them any | real un- | gum.)> There they \ cart, : Passing into a | going out of the door, | bor Jones - Extending his hands frantically \A1 friend Jones, and'is it ygu ! flow do ypu do, Jones, how do you do I Long vim! singe we've met together , lightful weather !\\ Sones was astonished as wall he might he. bakery to procure some bread t, he sang ina very plaintive 1 x' arties {interested raver and never lected for the pu 'they came to pund st an inu a handsome covered Fhatween a var «anda carriage. which ho! for breakfas z just purchased with a ntr - wir of ”fiofises 10 make his professonal vis ' stead of Betty . all about it. nounced as havr I 'Hakerp' bakers ' bless your souls! l.ct us bare a dozen rolls \rolls\ put so tenderly that the bakey's wife burst into tears. -The | try n down by the baker's wife, and finding His voice again, be sang with * groat feeling +-- _ , sy ane, with Angers taper, A « 1 10 the bread up in a ' in Aterica, but rick in | which she did'fnndpbe willwhama hurnming and beating time on the paper parcels he held in his aims., His wife met him at the door,ginging, her bands. The fit was on ommenced singing- arest Charles, wha p's all as black» ink ! proked, that I can ery -* | and rolled the word 5 f {. g4. The applicant, on re ving such eqpy . and notice, shall on the same next day thereafter, can to he served upon the perso; dressed, by delivering to each of them who reside in the same town a ihereof : or in case of his absence.. F! same at his dwelling house, and {upon such : as rgside elsewhere, by dep ; post-dffice a copy to them respectively at t dence, and paying the po : in case of infant owners, by like services i} upon their paromik or guardian, |/ 4 time and place ob Ci of the servici#fof-such noticcee, such commis- '} sioners, or in & town where there are more : than one, either of them, shall present a list g names of eighteen peredng, residents of the szid town, and rors in courts of reco: of kin to such. applicant, owner|and occu- them, and not interested in I & ants of such Hist any num ey drove along, thk new wrrivals were fe- . with the picturesque and fertile gonntry they M through -bat more sur- gisea awaited then P A Happy -dinger was that, ‘fiithfldh as us Jpyous smiles asd rolls were mlfie F such! copy apd abundant in ' eat his supper. by lgaving the py intercuarse When ; was orem noarly night. Emily ald go out to see \her future domaine, to [be initinted into the secrets of the farm- gard, whexq‘ fowls, ducks und poultry of all ; Kinds revelled in obundancs. ~bhe admired evemthe pigs, kept at a dis- inge from the boule, aod the beautiful ositing in the thereof to each| addresged- heir plates of reai- tage thereon, . or what makes mamma-look so smiling a Emma's children (who come here infix 's carriage) and so very cross ati at R © poor little cousif%i#? whose mother ~ o | hard and cries so much. Wish, I knew what makes the clou up in the aky, and where the stars gofifi #1 day time. Wish [ could goover on th hill, where the brigh't sun is going dovwp,' just touch it with my finger. Wish {keep thinking of things that purl : when nobody will stop to tell me the . for anything. If 1 ask Betty, she says,?ido% ; be a fool, Master Freddy,\ | 1 wonder if Betty knows thi : berself ' 1 wonder why my , love hgr own 'little boy ? | whi | Pam grown a map, if I shall -have to l gle r - nice all the time, 'and be so tired .of ber, sud she t do you think ! ; uy dear. it's all in your eye' ortune comes, why bear it, 1, your ldving gpouse will share is \ ome, pow, lot us sit at table, t that wo sro able, Lot the coffee go io grass, We wiil bave some tes, my lass\ \drove of sheep just centering its suw with plessurs, too, & neat wator excursions, fishing and wild-fowl d felt that upder sach circum- , she ast Bdhfippy with such that; pd as Edward waa sure to prove, And he did so. Fo record svents during ' Wite~- At the end of to- act as ju- ‘ P ti , £ng \A pant, or gither of & 6. The owners and _ occup lands mayiitrike off from sich ber ef names not exeseding six ; the, appli- '! cant may in like mannegigtrike off six names or less, and the persons Arhose| names are off, or if: more tha qn:the lisf, then the (six persons whoso.mames stands first upbn shall be the jury for the purpose nfgresaid, 3 7. The commissioner shall then appoint i} some convenient time avid place for the jury to meet, and hesworn in the: at??? f £3 «9+ & : ten years would bo useless i that time. at thirty-three years of age, he Edward devoted himmelf for some timQ®X~ * wae the richest proprietor in the» neighbor- propefty, improved tha “mod; qwned, twanty houses in the new nélds/Inid ont PM?” $Ronrishing town, had bought over a thou- 7 | sguod acres of land. milf on the river. B»% \ whene fie ground All iim owp carn, and mast xf thiut of his neighbors , four by the thousand 'bgrreli+to England, | Chi BSC Firoorrespondefit in fn : a * ~ d§A Th Livttzpool, 'and drew \heoyy ' & lish bapkaerm At this tine he was t, \Ob thy Charles, you happy make me.\ \If I dba't, the deuce may take me ' Hear thy word that now I utter, stroug, and&-#p's the butter~- Trust ind it will ne'or bo weary- Pass iheltonst and ebeere, my doury.\ .net stricken imam m fool ! He now exported | '*Notw|gond bye, dearest treasure.\ premises, and -> them accordifily.' | .~ ~ ade Inst mention- ed, all the persons named as suth jiry shall meet, they shall bo aworn wellland truly to {1 determine as to the necessity of said road. and to assess the damages by opening thereof ; 'if one or mor {| parsons shell not appear, the. If | shail summon of the bystam | so miany free from all legal obj ake the number six, who {I he author $#. -c we vo ues **Caol the steak just to your plots-11,9, at it's nol overdone, Me at bomo by one.\ . 4a The following account of a remg piece of mechanism, istaken from a manuscript, called ©\ The History of Jerd) It purports to be a description Throne of King Solomon, and if the How this will ead it is hard to foresee, but | aro correctly given it undoubtedly su \Friends of the family\ shake their heads, ' any specimen of mechanism produ j and point to their forcheads significantly, 48 © moAern times, notwithstanding the wondes. much,@s#. to say there's maomething wrong i about our young friend's phrenclegy.- Bos- I ISSHELM, inher Sunday Viz- the following suggestions to Laboring men as to the ways and means of - commanding a fair reward for their labor. It is not truth, hut very true as tar as 48 gobk, worthy of at- 1} | shall be sworn as aforesaid. . ¢ 9; Such -commissionsr sha ised to swear the fury, and administer any oath necessary to ca 10. The jury sbs after heart and such \witnesses since, shall progeed tdfw make ap their verdidg, and if \they shall de-, f termine that the proposed: they shall assess the dam ' | or persons through whose to pass, and deliver their ve to the copmissivniées } 11, If the nec has been occasioned by tho [aiteration or blic highway running elonging to the same Buf to tetuim \It was in the year 1850 that they heard of Alfred | le they wrote .o s3d and fearful leiter | He had sold the {Tarm-bouso from sheer necessity | loag all his \farnitaro by a'geizure for reat. and,\ at the ~ death cf old Hawthorne, bad taken his beer- abop, where he now was ill, nimost dying. in the last stage of misery. with a wife emi this at into effect view the premises,; the @#'feg £1911; of the As they may - liberate and , fal inventions which have taken pléce fm every branch of science : \Thesides of it were of pure gold,' {of emerslds and\ rubiés, intermixed 'with { pearls, each of which was as big asfahn trich egg. 'The throne had seven s f auch side were delineated orcha; trees, the branches of which were cfa of precious stones, representing / and unripe : on the tops of the be sean figares of beautiful plum#; particalarly the peaddok, the kurgess. All the birds were tifelally so as occagiong thousand melodious motes, # of mortals never heard. On}: l delineated vine Hranches, | grapes. oomgosegi of variou | stones, fashioned in auch & present the different colors of purp' green and red, so as to render the”? pear- ance of real fruit. Onhb! s f each side, of the throne, j terrible aspect, gs large Vl'f‘fa, and 'I’exm.turjI : thi tey MfisJ Sw 8 is necessary, sto the person - the same is essity of such, private Foad discontinuance of a through the lands person or persons, thr rivate road is pro jury shall take into 'ol the road so discontinued, an resulting to such persén or pe on of such discontinuance, an the same from the damages atsessed for the and laying out of such private road. 12} The commi@sioner # | such wirdict, the application {mentioned in irat of this act, - same to the town same, and the\@omp ers shall lsy dut and make a/ road, as described in the pet{ \W é hava long known an unfailing re ordinary opprassions of ital (We have a prescription which, if well} shaken and [regularly taken, would oure the rikes, as they now occur,; do . Itis, \In time of pesce, ng b. aches of \fF our laboring men, before making war . would only build anto them- | selyes fortifi¢ations and Iny in stores, they | , could stand hiny length nf siege The way | do this is for every man to live- on half; nll annex to a d hand the commission» dofd of said on of the ap. fof un acro of ground, fences it,, it a house large and close enough to pHelter Himself and femily from & ; This is bi@&-fort Then let| him tae allithe timo'fe now spends in tay- erns and othbr lounging places, to lsy in stores of amunitivn and provisions, in the knowlsdgd, gleaned from pers, and grape-¥ines, trees, cabbages growing th his enolo; P** lants every foot of it with some, ht to the eye sud good for food, 1 employer gan starve hir into bg. submission. It is extrava- providence, and nothing else, which-keeps the laboring clases in the pow- «riof Capital, 'We know very fow capital- gve nof become so, through a self- rasgerence- which poor men | of aast gold; Ble throne was such, th placed his foot 'on the first! 'Step, spread forth thei ‘wiug'safi' noise in the air. 'On his step the two erpan his reachingthe third meinbly of defsons and fit rated tho praises of the f§ity. . se any armidemmi shal proyent f the proceedings required by this act .Gone on the day assigned, the procged. cine other day, uurned to s; all pupficlyanbounce #. U bis elder brother in enérgy, and ong day in prosporfty, But he n his fortynse ta his children, and to show them point whera=:the bow onsstepitothe right or lefr one wing 'town was to bo, the land- being Bis own, . ov one fals@sfart, may fof eni a man's fa- Tor all who! tire fate. Without Edwg 35mm prob» havo died jo a wor woold baresucoseded in life ander, | with hi charatrei* Hd I siflt beJieuss in tpp'wiaflém -of youthful mar riages, but aver adpises his children to be sure of what theyare about apd abt to mar 19 Withodt a home and & sur® living | But Protidencs i¥ good, and the prige of the ok White caunty, Wise Two Brorsgrt' -- wo. idi C Shafi a in 6 me * rexg The lag English Co; Tomitydes is an sdrerfisemcnt -in the ~Joutnal, of thé following tist.of 'by Chavlon «nd ang. 11. - bean get to mutio by Step lustrated by supdry artists 's Sopge-**Sleep “Ezifi “153g— X3 dln | Partfag Words neax, mis .. tell you nothing.\ .., the Wife and sell the er omits to narrate such adjourmment. | _ § 14. The dame shall ibe paid the rosd is Is: ' the paa# whose bene & before ' Sal C he omnfamrm. Bptirég » own cerafly C hn ivate road was ocd or discontinuancb damages sh Abs assessore «sianed by the - of a pib‘lie g paid by ssid potatoes and sure If hep thing ploasa no tyrannis any degradi arrived at the fourtli heard addressing him in i} ner: 'Son of David, b#\; Blessings the Almighty. Ife The same was rege ing the fifth step. >On hG , |. 'f abiy ndd, While Edward was thos rapidly advan pownear Clog tuwardam bright and happy® fatdrs, bi roughs | ovents wont on in The old country. A} proclaimed ' had faken possession. of the farm-h j * | hired additional land, bought a horse \a p a tone \of clrt, and employed two Itborors. fis Fof@rhamon. | forts wore at firat praixemorthy , in the. {ex- ; rtreme, and there was no. reason 'lnduatry and pationce highway, sue.\ town, and refuna.\ * Cy Ta- part ew, QD | made thereing or T 3 y|'road, or in a | guy eiraptastancen other way, shalt 1:® abandon. lic, and is no 1 public road, the commissioners r1oner of highwa clerk's office oft ing signed by t 9 it s shall file in ¢ riptionin writ» them or him, of £119. xoad as' the. same sha thereupon be: . \ Whenever a public mi g the divisig dr. morg persons.. re, and the. tion, and ogased not until selfin the foyal sdut, wh and other anithals, by i charged a shower of fames on j Kurgees descended and! - crown upon bhi was a cglnmn' Jf burnished Zeid of which was a golden dove; whisk: . hin! beak a.yoljmn bonnd in book were writteg:-tho Psaims o \ the dove having présented the ' hao! king, he read aloud a portion of i children of Iscael.. It is further that on the appr¢ach of wicked #i; 'the throne, the'lions were wont to & roaring, aud 40 Insk their the birds began to brist1 Teathers and the assembly also and genii to utter horrid.czies, -so [fear of tham falsehood; but contsased thei was the fhrope: of Solomon, the . scorn to use ~ \We'knort men who, on wager of « coms rer|-séldom more than 75 cents a. day -linve lived comfortably sand accumu:| lated property, while thousadds earning m, live \froin band-to mouth,\ if a week ont of employ. \ini fon is, »that the majority of ~ | thesdfrould {not be one bit batter of if they ot teh dollars a dey-thit, in fact, they pre likely to prosper on fifty people win. need contribn- win BSudss 1; mon inborer the lands of two xpon one side of Jn both sides of maid paint-aka dorfimproved, the ngbocwm 10, . farm. 104 orac~ | #4\ a N Len Glover,.und il 2 ”dinfiifiem; # ipying. the - lands s ;- for building - f maintain. by be 'ngeer; -- i: my 'Chud,\ had matitai 'Fions,to sustai riabg'a Lagent ~- Habghd.\ .., .., Moxgeby. Toly1: 00. Dust-Tgrea yoad, which said - dam and égrm; + ra pend all thay gat, be that little prmuch; con- ’¥°Fbu' mm sedueritly, | 3 ,, | to read mor t' > Alio. sey ready the Fourth Thoussad th Poiks,\\ srith the Portraii, PBamagost C w~a \Tully's Trus Tepry Quuror matter if she wond To @éb}\ br not, young' .. | and very PMyologs-Alice was,. at the. and , he must - learn to: . hie income, be that little or niuch . ¥Eog he Hak #x00 . ~4m - wis , 00 Tm 4 ablin, paper contains. tje 1; rattisensiqrt : ,so 0 . $0 f fl Veg/i RP . aap. bo eg ' ~*~ walk for. a hog.\ * ' do Taleo his bbage, and Maps\ change sion he basa mind to; but prefers induigeénioe to t yt to be a slave, if ¥p of life will only t Ley‘ A mush h} pf he cab af a small family, +f drubi flut