{ title: 'St. Lawrence Republican. (Ogdensburgh, N.Y.) 1833-1858, August 25, 1857, 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/sn83031401/1857-08-25/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031401/1857-08-25/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031401/1857-08-25/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031401/1857-08-25/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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• Slt^m-r •*«•»—, i £&£&$,££&& ilADE be wsttf& t£re#W<trw<i and c wQtSj wtuoh t | (jiaimed to of April, %S56, treated by qfjttfe town jf Lawrence, WjAjptate of New of the sdfcte ,pUtee, and she Clerk of as., E«wrence in B*>ofc,icEmbq^ £2 0 f on the T^f^*j otJuly, . . which said Mortgage baa, m, neen duly^sftfgned to. the -L suitor proceed3n$ &H»v or to recover ih)B. amount so w, therefore,\nfotfce is here- - oi d. pow«r J( sait»contaaned in sut h aaae msde and in and CQVered by said factor parce. of iaiid situate jtj o>f St. Lawiien^, and the _ known and djgtiagttfebed as [v >sjon of said tc^pn* of &°jp*& Wit. Beginning at a w«4^ .e intersection of ihe Ox Bo* tie > iHage of wsn^jrville, run- to* ol Ute saiti Qx Bow road, four oha>aa (b a stast? u-ii % half degrttes^west three ks t» a stake iri tfie fTronnd l degrees, east three chains ana ler *>l the GouVetneax road , • said road, horth Sfty-two four chains and s^venty-nme s •.-- i.t**u*ng one aor*: a«d 1 vf :ati... *a ->urv<;jea b? Lev, rwtU'be su..l At st'-paotic suction, : u of ttaaaie, anti • ' anty of S*t tfaj of Sepit-idWr next, at 1 :-d t the 3t>ih dai w f JuLe, W T *S fur Asaujntae, , N Y^ - ; .. -.s tarn sum of money, secured to executed fry UORACfc, oi Btockbotmi County .-f M. New Yorfe, and &iAj£X£U u, hi« WEBSTER, of the same r >iaeie, > ana rceurdjed fx theCvutiiy Cuuuty, aforesaid, \n the a t 3$&*oM «fc p. m», to &»«& on ipages 1M, Ac-, whicii sail ErfcnsferT^J »nd DlKEjOi tile Town, C amy, assignment, dkte(fOcu»t*t ^«i, th« iaj6utgr.jgj«[fc» a Oflwc »: >te- or October, ISJSLin ikx.* N .'\ V ^3 lSJ^ .to. pap- pr-n,.*ea :i are describ ^ thereto, aa V > foUowing panjels of laud, > -.< t„wn o* ?toi-ki\oh4, being i. »< 4 N. , ^.uuUed as fodowa « t r ejist MovKT'Otm Meeung flou>f. IN East i ( cbains 1$ ^linka i , W. 7i imfci to a pos* . thence, >. JV .ijiiti u. a p«>st thence , Sotatii «t ^tb'-oce. N U , Kast -^S Unfcs rtn IN , VF. 5 crtain^ to th e middl e «s, N . I- , £^ aiyQgt : •- middl e >f » t>6 links , thenit^S. . ^ , taat \*\ ^ beginning , containin g 6 %•- , . 1 \ less. Also, afi. t_>iat othe r piecr, . b<iitcr.> cuxae r of a tot ol l3uu ..tiouf, ^- l-* t j^31 y chain s liom . w a y lea.J.cg Westerl y from Eaat an d rannir<r. thence , Nort h a puat , ihe&£e, y^rtb 1? , Wes t UT, ii'uL.' '- & W eat it>*j ItUkj t \ ' i t \\ -s: _ -hA^ns to th e place ' '. do-ift * tn«asandtJ.i ) of an acxr jiuit ur .cs»<b ^ wh^ch mor%ag v lu e At t: e unjjpat ^i e Sxst puhlje sun. »f Qvi- -hundre d an d fifty -three ctjn^a; an d ther e Is t o be - lt tgag e ;wu^»undre u an d fifty dol - k,t. N-r, ' -.\ T. w u» interes t from :.e fuxti.er giiii of-two hundred L^ th e first cf ^ of October , 1 *£»., *oh«r 1st, IN^amounting i n th e ii-;tfresL, L« ^i^ujy 33 , no w r e ierure<J ^-v sa> i mortgage , an d D » me.ioit y &avbi£rb*en tafeen t o r e -y par t u.creo* . - -Now, tbereiore , ., t;.a t p-.s-tti. ; !o \J^e power f i roojrtgas^ a.E.J \»f th e statnt e -n •ronded . »atd mortgage d premise s . be s< >u ax public auction , to th e . II _-r i '. s-a*d ^rcui^e a ua th e \*t, a t ' f'-Kfrt it'e afternoon ^f •t^ensbar^rt , May'Jtitn , 1\*6*. WAMJ^ Lil hJi., Assignee . Attorney 3 2t/-'idw _ tlXG BE£K MADE IN THE : c«rta.n ' rao^E^aae execute d by . , a.r.d fc..-jat«?ti U , his wUe, ot n tf Car, mn , St . Lawrenc e County , Si. MAWJSb, SrKFHlS N V £ H. hatTTLfi, of th e caty °1 vi.n pr-'TTi.seS ,n th e count y of St. tared October 25tb , 1N^4, t o jecar e thoaaaft'd J-otfars o n o r before th e ri, a^ J :<«.- rfl- u »4 to e office of th e 'Awr-o> e &n;y aforesaid^ a n th e • ISM. i: - .X. M jn Boo t of Mort - 66i , ;•:*, V^ an d W4 , Said t^rJa st td,'ajrai^ncd, and tran^ t :.e i a 1 pteres t -a an d to sai d p.-M^nmrnt tbtfbfoT m w iting, da'ed p-iorded in the* Cooifty Oleik'a office ^,-ty Aloieaadd, u ^ th e M h daj of , „ ' a li *Gk No 24, B. of Mortgages , •*fem'se* mclodr d i n said mortgag e , :vw% tit w ; A;: that certain lot, upd siliiJiic, ij.ng and being in the I-J- paifs, town if Oantun, coonty of ••^tate of New York, known and des- • •lud qpp*>sate the gtwt mill and be- , *He Bvnueu aad Uajid Ameay the said •jvoae fttnidreQlha ^r eight-tenths of Lsr exect<^d toere<m.3 one and a~haif L <S ifuosp, and a am til barn,-and being M'Z&beth L» :&mU,«n her own r,ght, g^free from allihefrs and tncumbrancea 3btch mortgage there is claimed to, .f th e tiroi pdbUcatio n of this notice , sand 'n f i andre d forty-seve n dollar-* ^d n o pn-»ceet^ngs biasing bee n taien .y for ihg_j»trpos e o f .obtaining th e ' • mortgag e ,u an y ^art^ereof: Jiow , v ereb y g.vrji u.* t por^tiant t o th e ; r. <a.B n-.ertgage,\ an d of th e mad e an d ptromdf U, said mortgage d >ta a t pa n ici auction , t o th e highes t - of Juuso n & Pt-wen, In th e Tuiage • tte count y of tft. Lawrence , an d on ta e twenty - aidth day of Angnst , ^i ti.c '.uren<j«n ^* that day.—Dated THA2^M. STAPLES, (. Mnrtffawt « St. latent* Sl^ton 13 PSIOTilD AND PUI&ISHED KV^Y TOSSDAT »T OODlHSBroOH, ST. tAWBETOT °°™\^ i '' T, » .-•> BY HITCHCOCK, TttVLOTSfflS & HaLWEEE. Eaitors and Proprietors. OHlce in New Stone BaUdaw^Isabella street, one door from ford. ». B. arroaoocs...... w.rttunsoa--.1 o.smwrnj.. TERMS OP THE REPUBLICAN : To Mailand Offlce Snbsoribera—OneDollarperannum, To M f' ,a ° a \^ T o village Subscribers, who are :'.SSl \y ^.TSrrti-On. dollar and Twent,-n« 0ents - TBKM8?0a ADVERWS1NG : 0a« sqoare.one weet,*0 So ^ ooramn twomontha,*600 Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Da. * \ One do. do. do. do. do. •Jo. do. lumn , i: ft m % \% !•--¥:• It: ,«(> do. 0 75 ; Do. do, three do. 7 50 tnreedo. 100 Do. do. »li do. 15 00 on^month,l 25 Do. . do. one year, 80 00 two do. ITS a ootmnn,onemonth,5 00 three do. 2 25 Do. do. two do. 9 00 six do. 4 00 Do. do. three do. |§|kP one year, 9 00 Do. do. six do. ^^S* , one month, 2 50 Do. do. oneyear, 5000 column, for three months, or longer, at the rate per year of $10000. BnsinessOardt, of 3 lines orless, inserted underap- propriate head, with privilege of oh&nge, at9* per year. Advertising nnder contracts, as above, confined to the Advertiser's otrn business. Legal advertisements in- j erted at the rates established by law. ;.jgp- \U Communications must be post-paid toinaurs attention. ,-iT. LAWRENCE RKPOBUCAN illl\riM.-KOVSl! AI.TIAXAC, For 1857. S a s 5 a s ~ S 2 S S s A < » ! E * !• s » KKB, 4 5 6 1112 u> 14l6 1ol, l<)19io31 Mi*** 05 9S.27l-*9S\Sl 2 s JCLT 9 1,V I i 8 4 5 6 T 9 l,i 11 12 IS 14 •Mfi 17 l 1 * 19 21121 22 2S 24 25 26 27 2S [ \• 2~s 4 5 6 7 SEPT •- 9 lilU 12U.U IMSIT I? 19 20 21 223S--24 25 26 27 2S 2980«1 » _ 1 o s 4 OCT.. H'l ^ 9J0 11 12H14151STC IS 19 2„ 21 22 iSai^ 2« 27 2S 29 SO.. 1 o \ S 4 5 6 f S 9 SOT.. 10U 12 1814,1518 1 '7 1^19 20 21,32 28. 24 25-26\2T'3S 29 SO ' 1 2 8. 4. 5 6,iDEO.. T - 9 10 111213* 1415 1617 1« 19 2ft il 22 2S 24.25.26^27 2<29 8,' • < > > .j >. a •< , •< si a H s f> a> »o _ . . 12 8 4 5 8 T' S 911011 13 18114,151611118 19 20 2122 28 2425 26 2T2S-2980S1 . ' 1 8 3 * ft.6 7 2 •9 1*11 12.1814 15 16'17 1519 20 2122 28 24'25.'26-2r2S 29 SO 81 1 3 S 4 6 6 7 2, 9 10 11 12 18 H151ltIl''H 20 2122 28 2425,28 81 33 2980 . . .12 8 4 5 6 7 ^ 9 10 11 13.1814 151617 1* 19-2021 22 28T24 25 2S27 28 29 30181 1 2 8 4 5 6 T 8 9'lftll 181844 151617 1819 20121 22 28\ 34 25 2« 27 25 29 80' . . ..' 1 3 8. 4 5 6 7 8 9 10.11 12 IS U'1516'17 1119 20 212228 24(2526 27 2S29 80>81 . It i not ; n a s] VOLUME 27. BUSINESS CARDS. ] _THELGKJEAt WEST^ Dealer i\ LINES OF TRAVEL. I'MAKLiiS tS~ SEVERAL r.i.^eX0£R AGSXT, Fir all Points East and West. Throujjlx Tickets can b e Procured over tin- following Roads: SRAVD TRfNK RULWAY, of Canada, GREAT WESTERN RAILWAY, of Canada, MICHIGAN\ CENTRAL RULROAD, NEW YORK CKSTRA1. &A1LBOAD, LAKftsJBORE RAILROAD, VIICWSK.N snrrmcRS RAII.R,IAD, PJTSHM A WATERTOWN R^ILR.IAD, BALDWIN-S LINE OF STAGES, And all Railrovl, W.-*t of Ohicaffo—at the lowest rates -f far* ^tat^ * rt\.t the old Drover's Bank, rtuaj'y, l*r,7 GEORGE WrrHERHEAD, Groceries ajtd Provisional —ALSO,— Ptonr,Oorn,Meal, Pork, Fish, Fruit, Wooden-Ware, Ao. OeD£NSBBCReB. Water-8t^ opposite A, OHAHSY A Oo'a Hardware Store, BTCashpatu (or Country Produce. All Goods de- livered in the Village free oi charge. (8-tf] A. B. JKWIK, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in al kinds of Wines, Gin, Brandy, Monongaheia Whiskey,95 percent Alcohol, Old Ohio High Wines and Whiskey, Old Tom Gin, Oherry Brandy,Porter, Ac. 3 Doors below J. ft. OS-TOCII'W store-, ISABELLA ST., OGDENSBL'BUU, N. V. _ 9ENTAL UPERATiqNS. _ BI.ODUETT <V I.l:t.«i«, DEST1STS, OperatlngRooms,in EagleBlooli,over Se^ly A Freeman's Storey FO&D-ST., OGDENSBrROH, S T. CAUD. Having associated Dr.Leggo with me m basiness,the '\ l - ..-tioon^n. Thankful for the iplendid goverameat \supported if PwmW -monopoUes jwdarirtocrafio eMyOmm thatjhe people wfll find QQilBN&BURGrH* N. Ys, iNKVltv dc UU.HEAi< DKAUKRS t a REAL ESTATE, Aim «SfTioral Laud ARetitK, OMAHA CITY, NEBRASKA TERRITORY. PAVTD A. KSVTH. ' OKriAOl 3. QtLDS&r. WillColleot Debts; Invest and Loan Money, Buy «t d Sell Real Estate, Pay Taxes, \E&amtoe Titles, Loo&te Land Warrants for Non-Residents, and attend to all business entrusted to their care with promptness and Sdelily, REFERENCES: ' Hon. Jtohn. Wilsnn • Chicago, Illinois. Messrs. Cornell. Jameson A Baas. . *' u C. N. Holden, Esq. ...\ \ B. S.8hepard, Esq \' \ Messrs. Wm. Warner 4 Go Detroit, Michigan. Hon. J. C. Hopkins Madison, Wisconsin. Rev. 0. B. Smith . Iowa Olty, Iowa. C.Wilcox ' Minneapolis, Mitmesota Territory O. A.Burnham,Esq \ ' \•—\• \ \ G.N.Seymour, Esq Hon. Preston King Prof. Calvin Pease .... G. T. Boardman Uon.B.P.Agan A. Watrons [IS-ly]. ,...Ogdensbnrgh, N. ¥. it »» . Boriintton, Vermont. .Middiebury, \ Granville.S.Y. Balston Spa, \ Thankful ,nld most respect- office here will be constantly open liberal patronage I have received. I v fully solicit itsoontinnance for the ftrm [25-tf] S. S. BL0DGETT. SHAV!?i« ASD HAIR-DlllES>J.\<;. HENRY WATKINS, Sliav-jns and Hair-5Jrfasinf saloon, itreet. Basement of Royal Vilas' Building, Pord 0GDEN8BITRGH, MEW-YORK. S37~ A variety of the best Newspapermre alwayaon his table. ' r86-tf] OLDS' Dagnerrian and vmbrotype SO. i EAGLE KLOCK, ( the Mammoth Eagie, Ford street OODESSBVRoB, S Y , l.allerr? H.. T. I.VOIN , COMMISSION MERCHANT AND FORWARDER, No. 50 irlertvln-strooi, and Cuyuhogu Uivcr, CLEVJILAND, OHia Solicits consignments, from the country of all kinds of Produce, Merchandise, Ac. Will attend to the porchase of Goods for COUNTRY MERCHANTS, And give them the earliest information of the state of Foreign and Domestic Markets. t, Strict attention given to the puronase and sale of Produce and Merchandise, for the Northern, Eastern, Western and Southern Trade. Bnttor , Egg*. Always on hand, Flour, Pork, Lard, Cheese, Grain. Hops, Groceries, Salts, Water Lime,White Ll'me, Plaster, Fish, Ac. PRODUCE ABD JBERCHANIMSE Purchased at a small commission, on orders for shipment to all portions of this and other ' '\ ~ POETRY CONSERVATI^IUS. In the aold tiraee they thonght the moon Just like a sark, or pair o* ahoon. Wore by degrees, till her last roon Gaed past their viewing, AD' shortly after ahe was done. They gat a new one. this passed for certain, undisputed : It ne'er cam, i' their heads to doubt it, Till chiela gat up an' wad confute it, An* ca'd It wrang; An* mnckle din there was about It, fialth load an 4 tang. It was deny'd, it was afnrm'd , The herds ana hissels where alaxtu'ij ; And rev', end grey-beardsrav'd and storm'd That beardless laddies Should thtnk they better were infonn'd Than their auld daddies 1 ROBKBT Boass. DKAOBEHTELS. MISCELLANEOUS. Go Back, Rose—TTouIre toolLlttle to . Oome, . BY EIXHI-OCSIA CBAXDUai The cattle crag of Drachenfels FfoWns o'er the wide and winding Rhine Whose breast of waters broadly swells Between the banks which bear the vine ; And hills all rich ^vith blossomed trees, And fields which promiso corn and wine, And scattered oities crowning these— Whose far white walls along them shine— Have strewed a scene which I should see With double joy wert thou with me. And peasant girli with deep blue eyes, And^ hands whicn offer early dowers. Walk smiling o'er this paradise. Above, the frequent feudal towers Through green leaves lift (heir walls of grey, And many a rock which steeply- lours. And noble arch in proud decay. Look o'or this vale of vintage bowers. There were three of us—Kate, uiyBeif, and we were going into the5 hunt strawberries. Oh! it) was sucm .a delicious day ia Jane. The birds sung rill the air was fair- ly vocal with their melody, and all trie green treeS nodded their heads in approbation. \\ brook seemed to have caught the ge;heral tion, and danced along through the! if keeping time to, a quiekstpp of the] [Annette and old wood to The very inspirn- meadowg as fairies. VARIETY. The Geysers of Iceland. H ATS, I V1\% A > 1> w. BENEDICT, n «>. Ladies'and rilAStiE OF TIME. ?DAY, J1\LY E. •AHUrAOTOEJifi kSB DKALKB 19 Kattt. Caps, fr ur» and Bobe§. d Qentlemen'a Pur Gloves, Collars, Vic tonnes Children'sYancy Caps, Ac., aompriainga general assortment of hb «wn and city ^^^ manufacture. $9^ Oashpaid for all kinds of Furs, Wooiand Sheep Pelts,at the old stand, No. 15 Mechanic's Row, Ford-st., 0gdensbxirgh,N.Y. 4o-tf H)«WAUUKRS AM> HIPOBTKHS. aoBKRT W. BUSU, QSXKBiL AUESTAKU Coniiuisciion ^le r e hunt, Plqar, Wheat, Corn, Pork, Pish, ^'ater and daud Ortnd- •'«nM ,6c.. fiSMyl stones, 4c, OGDENSBrRGH, SEW YORK \ \ ~ - l^densbnr^h.N iN\ AND AFTER THTRP Trams will run daily, ^Sundays 3'», 1 i V/ Passenpe r UOlNCi EAST. ^ FIRST TRAI N —leaves Ogdensbnrg h a t 11 2o , A. M . (din e a t Brush' s Mais) arrivin g a t Boose' s Poin t at 4 45 P. M, cynnectin g wtt h Vurmon t Centra l Through Twin, arrivin g a t Bosto n eari y nex t morn - .^g, als-' wih Lak'* Champlai n steamers , for Saratoga , Tmy, Alban y an d Se w T\rt an d with Chatnplau i d.ud Si. Lawrenc e R, B~, ftfr Montrr-al an d tjnebe c SECOND TRAIN—leaves Opdensburirh a t fi.06 p. M., arrivin g a t Roase'9 Poin t a t 11, P M., 1 to lodge,) an d proreed.nsj n-^ t tonrnTig b y Vermon t Centra l R. R- and l>ake Champta m Steamer s for th e Eas t an d South . (.OIX. WENT. FIRST TRAIN—Leave s Rnnse' s Poin t a t 6 A. M., con - nectm ^ a t Ogdeusbum h a t U, A. M., with Grand Trun k Railway Expres s Trai n an d America n Expres s Steamer s for Kingston , Toronto , Bellvdie., Cobarg , Hamilton , Niagar a ?a.U , B^3ulo, Dt«tr » t, Cy..cago, an d al l point s West . SECOND TRAI N —Leave * Roose*a Poin t a t 1 P . M ^ arrivin g a t Ogdensburg h a t T.Su, P . M.., connectin g with ti T, R. R., an d America n lai e of steamer s for th e South and West, ,i*\i*ept on Satnrd.ay'HO when it will leare Rouse's Pt>tnt at T 45, P M , nn arrWal of last trains and steamers Kl\ tra.na e-^nnect at Potsdam with the Potsdam and Watertown Rail Road for Watertuwn, Rome, Ac., also at Mooer* Jum turn w.th Plattslmrgh Jt Montreal R, R,, for Montreal and ^'attshargh GEORGE V. HOYXE, Superintendent. Office Supt. S. RR. Co., I XLU-OHK, July 25, 1S57. 1 REFERENCES- D. C. JCBSOU, ^pTdensmir^n n Y , R. Gii3SRT,PTest- Drovers Bank, JAMR* AVRRKLI-, Prest Og' denabarghBann.JoHM D. JCDSON, Presl-Judoon Bank. [43-tfl FINERONN . _ Countries. Chnrgea moderate. ^f? - Refer to Baamess Men and Bankers generaUy TO MANTJ?ACTURERS AND DEALERS is PINE AN1> SPRI CE LrMBTIIl. W E WILL PURCHASE SEVERAL mil- lions of feet of Pine and Spruce Lumber, to be delivered at this place, br along the Line of the North- ern Rait Road, during the present Winter, or in the months of May, June or July, next, in quantities of One Hundred Thousand Feet, and upwards, Aa we are pur- chasing for Western Markets, manufacturers will nnd it decidedly for their interest to ascertain in due season what is most desirable, and to conform strictly to styles of Lumber best adapted to^ur trade, ad the targe ma- jority of lumber manufactured for Eastern Markets, is quite unsaleable in Western. ToD&rties disposed, to forward for Sale, on their own account, we wonid say,.that we have ample facilities for the transportation of ahy desired quantities. 13^* N. B.—Any enquiries by letter, addressed to us here, will receive prompt attention. ^ I. L. LYON A CO. Ogdensbargh December 19, 1SS6. t*-tf] l«57. 1857. KAKVI.AA, IIA I.I, A: CO., (L. T. HAKCLj.. '»- J- n\LS 4 WU. T. MATHKR.) CoiumiHslon UIMX. SAI.OO> ! Jwo doors from the St. Lawrence A'.j/n'.'. t\ ISABELLA STRKET, OGDKNSBt'Rl.H, N. ' Keeps constantly on hand a rhnuv a.4sortmf>>i quors, iniiudiug that rare iuvenu>'iiau.i tn'»*t delicinus beverac^, 'jgglf) I.nffer ltit-r ! \m ROCHESTER AND ONONDAGA ALR 1 «\ NTKK Served up in the best Style. Warm and Cold Meals at all honra^fle extends a cordial inaitatiun to ais friends on boihwdrs Lawrence river to givr him a cad. Oguenaburg-h, November 31, IV'6 BALDWIN MOlSK, CORNER OP CATHARINE & DIVISION-STREETS •--.t.„^i«„ OGDENSBCRUH, N. Y, [From the Philadelphia Ledger.] A paper was lately read before the British As- sociatftm on the present condition of the Gejsers of Iceland. The Geysers on the Southwest por- tion of Iceland are those best known, and they BUU exhibit great strength. These came into ex- istence in the fifteenth centory, viz : in 1446, and it is thought that their action then must have been much more powerful than it now is. The principal springs now are the Geyser, the Stoker, uud the Little Stoker. Near them *re some tre- mendous caverns, pouring over boiling water with greaC rapidity. This boiling water is blue and clear as crystal down to the bottom. Some others I throw up boiling mud. The Geyser w the only I spring ot the three which has formed a mound 1 around it. When the Geyser is quiescent, the Cup and pipe are tilled with hot water, which boils 1 over the centre. The King of Oude. 1 [Prom the Friend of India, Juiie IS ] I From an early date, the popular instinct con- | Dected the defosed King o! Oude with the revolt. ( Annette Summers uud I bad befen invited to spend the half holiday with oar Bchftolm^te Kate Harrington. Beacon Harrington's {old-fashioned brown house fronted toward the Scaitb, Behind it stretched a broad green meadow,!]and still fur- ther back was a densely wooded acclivity, famous for flowers and berries in the geography of evei*^ child in Ryefield. I used to love td took at Dea- con Harriugtou'&old brown housejeven in those early days when I bad not a single well-defined notion of artistic taste in my curly head. 1 know it combined to aa eminent degree tae elements of the picturesque. The low roof whicp sloped back- ward nearly to the ground was g$ey with moss. Ivy crept about che windows, and <j|ver the rustic porch had twined climbing roses, along with heavy clusters of trumpet creepers. \ There was a rude seat at the doorway, made of the litlie boughiT of the white bt|ch twisted, to- gether in t fantastio fashion, and here grandmother Harrington was woot to sit, with hjbr grey woolen knitting work. Oh 1 what a tre#t we used to think it to spend a half holiday *ith Kate Har- rington. • ! ** I wish I were you, Kate,\ exclaimed Annette, after we had tfpeht half the long puminer after- ' noou chasing butterflies, and arranging a veget- able baby house, with holly hocks Bbr our ladies' parasols, and teapots manufactured out of veri- table poppy pods. u I wish I were! you, and then I could be happy all day loug v|ith nothing to trouble me.\ jj , \ You could, could yon ? \ ana Kate's cheeks flushed as she put away from tfjem her heavy bands of black hair, \ you think sjp, and that's all you know about it. I have a thousand things to vex me. There's Rose, for instate. F Mother ex- bcatiou of pects me to be constantly taking tare of her, and breath. a place, 'where I am fed and clothed, and'' have twenty franct a mouth. I have also found a good woman, who, br these twenty francs, will take care of Lucilii 1, and teach her needle-work. I \ claim my sister rt \ My boy^' mid, the judge, \ your conduct is very honorable However, your sister cannot be set at liberty ti 1 to-morrow.\ \ Never mu d, LucilHe,\ said the boy, ** I will come .und fctcfe yon early to-morrow.\ Then turn- ing to the mag strate, he said, \ I may kis& her, may I not, sir •\ He then thrt w himself into the arms of his sis- ter, and both \ ept warm tears of affection. Courting In Ohurch. An eccentrif rector remarked a gentleman at church who wt» not a parishioner, bqt who Sun- day after Sunt tty, placed himself in a pew adjoin- ing that of a y >ung widow. On the first occasion^ he detected him sidy drawing the young lady's glove off the i»ew where she was accustomed to place it. (Her band and arm were delicately fair.) By and by, tht lady's prayer book fell—of course accidentally— rom the edge of the pew into the gentleman's. He picked it up, found a leaf turn- ed down, and scanned a passage which evidently caused a smile of complacency. Our minister saw all their rrove nents, and continued to watch tbem with a scrutin zing eye, for two successive Sun- days, On th( third, as &oon as the collecU were read, and whl e yet the clerk obsequiously- waited to attend him to the chancel, our eccentric pastor in a strong at d distinct voice, said : u I publish the bans of marriage, M —and H , (de Uberately pronouncing the names of the saTd* parties.) If any one of you know any just cause,\ I c The eyes a [\the whole congregation were turn- ed on the wi< ow and the gay Lothario; the lady suffused with blushes, and the geutlemau crim- soned with ai ger ; she t ami tug herself with vehe- mence, aud je opening and shutting the pew door with ra^e and violence. The minister mean- while, proceeied through his accustomed duties with the sani ; decorum and ease, as if perfectly innocent of t ie, agitation he had excited. The sermon preached and the service ended, away to the vestry rushed the parties at the heels of thu pastor, \Who autliurizeil you, t»ir, to make such a pub- patia '! \ demanded they both 111 a Morast-, D-alers i she'd the greatest little torment y^u ever saw. By the way let's start after those strawberries in the wood, now she's out of sight lor aj minute, so she won't tease to go with us.\ J We were just half way across the meadow, when we heard a sweet voice crying, \ Please, sister Kate, Rose wains to go too.'* I turued round, 1 remember, and thought how beautiful was the little creature (coming towards us. »8he was very unlike her sisjter Kate. Kate was a brunette, but the little wHSte-robed figure tripping acrws the meadow had |t pale, spiritual face, and long curls of golden ha|r falling to her tiny waist. There was a tlush ot^ her cheek, and The bulk of the SepoytT in the Bengal array are , a luok of eager beseeching interest iu hwr large recruited from tdi dominions, where they enjoyed , biu w eves i *\ d she stretched her dimpled arms with a stare that M uT tb e St . FINFR0NC * [fia-ift re-m ™™^ A \r«^s KKTOW * , Atu..rn«j8- 3 3*urgh , New T» 1 F±>'\ HULLA>p A.SD flDKIJA monsaged m OaiS M. PISK, AUUl»t ' .and^ j.lual^ .o life tovu at Dekalb, j.- nailed ' n a ^rtAtn map of said town, - \• aad &iLuj &j«;£K-»*r, by the anmj>ers i^jbert-d frnr taodrcti anti ftity-dgiit. . *nd ftitj-nini: ^aai map va3 made in u is nou JQ tU« ia Lbt: chancy Clerk's i*y rtf s t Lawrence said lota contain ^ and atxty tscrea -f Land, birt there is *.-pted out of ine same aboat tTreiuy- ^ sonth side thereof which was eoirvey- t hundred and thirty-Qvt) acrea ; and •±£t the said Or.n M. ?tsK duly assigned >n, since deceased, who at his death thereof, and'said David Crichton, by e»tament dnjy executed and attested, l^r^lgned and otners, t/.e tixecntrtx creol, BU-.& said wail and testament oofore the Sorrogate of &u Lawrence aader tbe szme^uuly grant- undersigned. The* mortgage is dated and was recorded, with the power of u.»ined anu lQ.e assignment thereof, in [e County Clerks oiBce, »n the 7th day t 4 u ciocit p, m., in ^oos: 21, B. of i .«T, At T3ie amount now due there- Jreil and tnixwen doilara and sirty cents, leeome due two thousand two hundred and aunoal ^nterd^t on that sum. De- nxade m payment, tne aatd preznisea public auction at th e o®ce of J . n. ugdensbarff|i, on the 49sh.- day or Oc- fcued ingnat i,.18B7. JASIfr CR1CHX0S, CHASLBS D. OEICHTON. DA\!1B J . OBICHTOM, and DClfCAS TTBNER, Byecntrut aAd Executors, 4c Attorney. * Pfr-lSw] COURT.—(JOLNTY OS ST.LAW- Ektward iMng, Charles £mer& Alex- LLiiacj Pope, j r , John T. K. Hayward, r, jr . Ealph f omeroy, Bloondjeld yaher, Beryamra Cushrag, Bdwwrd Cooper, «n, teter F^ Beffiagei, Aoatin WiUia, WUltato Hgby , Wqiiam Dewna, Lyon, Ira aMrdncb , Ithamar Sweet, \\ira#H. freck^ Nonnar* Saclcrider, Troy, Bfln£ oi Ualone, fieorge r. Near th e Steamboat landing.. JsaxMtAB B^U>WLS, 1 roprietor. Oarriajreswfll be in readiness at the Rail Road Depot, andSteataboatLandln-g, to convey Passengeraand Bag- gage to aad from the iiouse, Free oi Oharge. The beat of 8tabling and the largest amount of Stable-room of any Hotel! n Ogdensbnrgh. 41 tf \V.\MII.\«. 10-. HO 11.1., KKPT BY J. W. CARRIER, Washington-Street, Ogdensburgh, N Y. This honse has been thoroughly renovated and re- paired, and is now open for the reception of traveler* and guests. The house is large and commodious, and is pleasantly situated near the business portion of the Vij. lage of Ogdensburgh. (25-tf.] IUBOUABE, Ac. Forwarding A- .llcrcltstntH, Warehouse, below Walker*s Point Bridge, MILWAUKEE, W1S00NS1N. ' all kinds of Western Produce, on Commission. A'gents for \Sortltrru 1>»ii«portati<m < oiupuuy's 14 PTR5T CLAS? PKOVELLBIlS, Connecting at Ogdensburgh with Railroad for BOSTON, and the ugdenabarEh Railroad to Rouse's Point, thence by firatolasa Oanal boats, via Lake Champlain A White- hall Oanal for NEW VORK. AGENTS. OTTS IC.idaAtl.- 10S State Ptreet,Bosion, Masa. J XMSS P. Onuacs Rouse's Point, N. Y. OiuwKOuB * Cp OgdenBhurgh, N. T. OHAMBEftLTs, C&AWttmn k Co Cleveland, 6hlo. A. G>inian . . . Toledo,Ohio. J. Mruits 1&7 Broadway, New Vorlt. J-L. WiRirea No. 8 OoentU Slip, New Fork. RICBABU Carina Whitehall, N.Y . K. R. MATHBWS Detroit. Michigan. MATRBH A Co Ghicago, lllinola. ^f~ Property forwarded with dispatch to and from Njew York and Boston,and to all pointa in Mew England, v(a Ogdensburgh. [23-M ] BXCHANUE AKD \mUGRATIOU AQEXCY OF HKNBV OHAPIIAN A CO.. MONTREAL AKt) QUEBEC. privileges of great value, which have been swept I awa) since the country was unDexed. Ttieir , status ari soldiers in the service of the paramount poaer, gave Uiem importance, which was made j the most of when they had a lawsuit on hand, or | chose to press claims on the notice o( the local i authorities. Their relatives wffre spread over the I cuuntry in the ranks of the King's army, or in , civil employment, and thus almost every Btahnun , sepoy had a direct interest in the maintenance oi ! the ancient order ol things. But the authorities steadily set their faces against the theory that the banished monaich or hi* courtiers had auything to do with the mutineers, or their plans, and allow- ed him with his thousand armed retainers to live unmolested at Garden Reach, until Monday morn- ing last, wfien his Majesty, with his late Piime Minister Nawab Alee Nuckee Khan, and others ol his courtiers, was arrested and brought into Fort William. Hoxo- to Celebrate th e Completion of the Atlantic Ocean Telegraph. Watertown Junction Watertown Sanford's Corners Evan's Mills Philadelphia Antwerp. ^ Keene'a. .. . (jouveroeur Ricbville . Hennon Canton Potsdam Potsdam Junction GOiN'O SOCTU. LEAVE Potsdam Junction Potsdam Canton - Hermon Richvflle Gouvernenr. Keene*8 Antwerp.'. Philadelphia. gs^a*» Mills •ganford's Comers.... Watertown Watertown Junction 6 15 a 41 7 115 T 25 T 50 •< 25 s 44 9 18 ..9 45 111 20 10 5 5 11 85 ..13 0U Mail. .5 45 6 05 . 6 35 >S 57 7 2 5 ..7 5n .3 08 9 25 9 08 .. 9 80 .9 45 10 05 ' .10 15 12 45 1 00 1 17 1 8 0 1 50 3 10 2 24 2 4 3 8 10 8 85 3 55 4 25 6 00 Acc'm. P. M. 1 00 1 25 2 05 2 85 8 10 8 40 4 10 485 4 5s 6 25 5 45 6 05 6 15 CHANKT & CO., WATEuVSTREET, OGDENSBTJRQH, N. T.: ' Dealers In Iron, Steel, Nails, Gla«», Staelt and Hearr Hard-Ware, Wood and Willow Ware, and Maxuxfactnrersof Copper Brass, Sheet Iron, and Tin Ware. Agencyfor the sale of India Robber Belting, Hose aad Packing ; Duryee, Forsyth A Co's Scales and Safes, Ohilson's Furnaces, Metropolitan Cooking Ran- \ ges, Ac, Ac. 41-tf - ATTOKSET8 A1VD COrSSEI.OBS, E. & N. 0RARY, Attorneys and Counselors. MADRID AND WEST FOTKDA11. Wm promptly attend to all Legal business entrusted to them. ' H4TOAJI CRABT. F.nirland, fror sale Sight Drafts on Ireland and Scotland, AND PA88A.QE CERTIFICATES By Steamers add Balling vessels to and from Liverpool via Portland and Quebec. STARK A CO., Agents, [ l4-6ml Rail Road Wharf, Ogdensburgh. OF OLD BLACK. STAR LINE r !>'• EDWAttD CRAB?, Madrid. St. Law. County, N.Y. W. Potadam. _2§FSA1LINGFR0M \• Liverpool to New York, ~—— ' lat, 6th, 11th, 10th, 21st, and 2Cth of I each month._jg9 The subscriber is prepared to sell PASS AGE TICKETS in this Line. Also, Drafts on ENGLAND, IOELAN D and SCOTLAND. LAND WARRANTS bought at New York Prioea. GEO. N. BOTMOrra. April 2T, 1857. las-tn CEO. B. PHELPS, Supt. EXPRESS A. La Slot,! jx~ «o .\». ^.*tiior M. Hudson, Joseph W. W.SouldiugfHenry L. Know lea, Charles \ [His Hough, Btoomfield ^jt Kronuer oaiut, t Cyrus Pierson* !Eroy *rButier,jr^B. Richmond KeeUtrHichard w 8. Johnaon! Chafes H. Dudley, Alfred atchie Bank, JProntier Bank, Commercial oall, Patrick Hand, George Hand, Henry ykiswortb, JosepfcH. Sanford, and Jerome nfa. You are^erehy' arrmnBinea to An- oint of AmasatS. Fo#ter,Jojeph W. foaujr, ajc, Edwani Qornins, Jasper B. Corning, . KUtoedged3lsdntuTB ( w htch was flt f^1gr* the lerk of St- La|i»ren»e Comity, on UreSTtb S55, and to serve a copy of yunr manor pera at Potadam, 3t, Lawrence Cqunty.H. days aftfer ti * service of this aapi- the day of ser^tee; or tne piltrntfffB ..„ _ourt for the relief demandaTi&f file atert Jons SI.1S6T. . _«.«^ X SAftT t TAEPA5I, .' Att'ys fdrlEIaiatutr, Potsdam. N. S. st FPLLBTT, <o«(:*ais t H tiKEAX NORTHERN RAIL ROAD LINE To all Points West, AND ALL PARTS OP CANADA. L EAVES BOSTOS, LOWELL DEPOT, AT 1H A M. and 13 «. The 7)4 train goes through to Montreal and Ogdensburgh same day, connecting a t Ogdensburgh with the American Line Steamers on Lake Ontario and Qrand Trunk Railway for Niagara Falls, Toronto, Chicago and the West, and all Intermediate points. Tne 12 train. M. arrives at Montreal the follow. .ng morning at 9)£ A M., and at Ogdensburgh at 11 A tt., connecting aa above. Through tickets, and all In- formation mayLbe obtained at\the offlce in Soollay's Budding, No. 50^Court-Btreet, Boston, i J . W. RICHARDSON, [26-4m] Agent for the Line. May 26,1S5X^ CHAS. J. KING, (Formerly Df the Firm of Myers A King,) Attorney & Counsellor, OFFICE IN AVBRELL'S NEW BUILDING, FORD ST. Per\professional buainess entruated to Dim will be promptly attended to. K. H. NICEERS0N, ~ Attorney and Counsellor, Waddington, St. Lawrence County, N. Y. [21-tf.] W. A. C. BRIGHAM & CO., General Commission Mercbanu, Pealert in Butter,<3heeae, Porlcand all kinds of country Produce. Consignments respectfully solicited, and cash advances made when desired. NO. S RUSSIA WHARF, BOSTON. W. A. 0. BalGBAlt, 137-tfl '.8AM0BL roPB. \ DENNIS T>~. SIOTT, Attorne y an* Counselor al Law, I ASSES A VTLLASE, ST. LAWREN0B COONTY, VILLAGE PROPERTY FO B SALE. m TffE. WELL-KNOWN PROPERTY of the into James EL Consall, situated a t Oak Point, St. tawrenco pounty, ia now offered for kale at a good bargain. Convenient ,atore, nearly new, 80 by 48 feet, well fin- ished; three Store |fouses>. Carriage House, and Stables, Wharf, and a good Stone Ashery, an u Blackamitha' Shop, with Tools really for use. Alio, two Dwelling Houses.wlth goad Gardens and ffmtflreea i together with a Saw Mill about a quarter of a mile distant, r suth 75 aor£a of Land and one Dwelling House. The above ^property is situated on th e banks of the beautiful River St. Lawrence, 18 miles above egdens- hutgh,in-fl, healthy and flourishing section of country, convenient fcr Canada trade, and has proved the best location for a country store in trie County. rJF\ Time given on good security. For further in- formation Inquire of, or addrssa , SARAH Xi. Q0N8ALL, ' Or E: H. LEONARD. • Oak Point, St. Lawrence Oounty, N, Y. May 18th,\l35t. .j, „ tSO-8m] Professor Mahan, of West Point, the gentleman whose bull vest created such a sensation at the Court of St. James, writes : \After the line ia completely secured, let a mo meat of time be agreed upon by the committee' in which, from the American terminus, as a cen\ tral point, the command, Shout by a mighty voice, shall be sent through Great Britain and her de- i-udencies and the United States, wherever col- lecting lines may lead to. At this moment let all men who may be congregated for any purpose, as merchants on change operatives, schools, etc., .send up three simultaneous cheers. Let the two kindred nations, thns wonderfully linked together at the same moment Interchange grand national salutes (rom their eheif naval and commercial harbors. Let bands of mrialc and organs, ou the side ol England, play \ Hail Columbia \ (Sid the \President's March ; \ whilst, on our snie, \ God Save the Queen,\ uud any other national English airs, are simultaneously played. To these national manifestations of joy at the inauguration of so eventful an epoch, let anything else be added that good taste may sanction.\ Valuable Discovery i n th e Iron Trade. [From the Liverpool Courier, August 6.] Mr. John Harding, the managing partner in toward us, and kept crytug iu hefr earnestness \ I'leose giris, wait lor Rose.\! 1 A look ol vexation crossed Kale's face, and she called\ out in a tone of extreme irritability ; \ Go back, Rose, you're too Ijttle to come. Go back I go back! \ \ | | v Kate always had a way of behig minded, and die little one put her fingers to per eyes, and si- lently turned toward the house, ji We hurried on in Hie direction of the wood, without giving a single glance backward. 1 think (Kate'sconscience reproached her for selfishnessi and I know my Own pleasure was spoiled for tb? afternoon. We found plenty ol strawberries, red and ripe, among their beds of leaves. There we|e litlie blue-eyed blossoms, too, that kept reminding me ot-'Rose, and I was not sorry when the| sunset shadows lengthened, and we turned to d|o home. We had gone down the hill jout of the wood, and crossed several rods of the rAeadow land when ! Kate said in a hoarse whisper, I* see there, girls, what is that white thing by the brook. Do you I see it v \ ' I We saw it and hurried towarp It. It was Rose. At first we thonght she was dead. Scarcely seem- ed the faintest breath to steal from her parted lips, aud the pulsations of her lljeart were so weak you could scarcely feel them, phe was in a kind of trance-like sleep. It was some time before we speceeeded in waking her, and then her limbs seemed chilled and stifiened by the subtle damp- ness of the meadow land atmosphere. She could not stand. How many limes jthat afternoon the little darling had begged us 'f to make a chair \ fqr her with our hands, and wa answered that we could not stop. We made one now. She twined her dimpled arms about our hecks, and held on very tight; but she didn't spe&k except ouee and then she only said, \ ain't I iriost big enough, sis- ter Kate • \ _ : Mrs. Harrington mot us at |he door with a wild look of alarm. ' \Good heavens, Kate 1\ sh<J exclaimed, \what's the matter with Rose ? Audftaking her from our arms she discovered that herfclothes were almost saturated with moisture. \ Ekte, child why don't you speak 1 Has Rose been in the water ? \ \ No, ma'mo, but ehe went into the meadow and got to sleep, and we found her there sleep- Authorizfed me ? '' ,said li heightened their confusion. \ Yes, sir,jwho authorized you ? \ \ Oh,\ said tiie minister, with a sly glance al- ternately at ijuch, \ if you don't approve of it, I'll lot bid the baiis next Sunday.\ \ Sir,\ sanjl the lady, \you have been too offi- cious already!, nobody requested }Ou to do any such tiling, j Vuu had better mind )our own busi- ness.\ \ WM, ink' pretty deal,\ said he, patting her on the cheeia, \what I h<t\e dune is all in the way ol Lunuieas, and il you do not n ish lo wait ior tluee public .ittuu>, 1 mt\l*o Juil, su , ^turning to tlie genLkmipil to piocurc the license, the ling and Lite fee, sand then the whole may be sealed as soon as to-uiorrow.\ \Well rjeplied the gentleman, addiess'iif; the need expensive aqneduobl to furnisli it with water- J purposes, apd iron niav to some exjtent. ^pjanbajt It will be a long time before level Savannah wfll! tuted for wood\ in the coMtruotion.~of ships .ajd find i t necessary to copy ifhe water-works of Boa-1 nbuggj. But 'on tins' we cannot bnildT any cafcn- tony—that town of tpcV;(riple hills. W ^ have! latibny i^he&rer.aJSdtaoTe^a(36ba1'e0u4s6'is Hi more faith in the sanativii effects of Nature v s de- cootiori? beneatb trie surl|iee, tban in'those heat- ing beverages whiob renqerthe-name of \ tea\ so indefinitive. Good water, into which the virtue oi plants, hath passed, is a more sovereign remedy for an inward bruise than any weak dilution ofleaves and pbwders. • •* | We pasB abruptly from this engaging topic to say a few words abput birds, in connection with trees. Where the forests are, there will the birds be found, certainly in tr]|s land. Insects' every- where abound, and no deplerHs so waste and sandy, that it does not generate,, and nourish insect life. But birds congregate wjier^ they fjnd shelter, food, and an appropriate home: When \ the fig- tree potteth forth her green figs, and the vine8 with the tender grape give a good smell,\ then \ the time of the singing? of birds is come.\ We need not iusist upoji th^ essential service whi*h small birds render-in destroying insects, and so in saving vegetation or opfjft their agency in directly enriching the soil. All the harm that tbey may do in depredatious uponjtfruit is more than balan- ced by their music and'by the animation which they impart to scenery. Jj He is a public benefect- tor who con entice birda$o the habitations of nfan, and it is good taste, if not good economy, that will plant lruit trees fot this purpose. Let the cherries go, if we can have the songs, and be rid of bugs into the bargain. The actual damage which insects do to our orchards and grain-fields, even where birds are incessantly devouring t^em, is ver^ considerable, as every farmer and eveS-y gardener knows to his sorrow. What it would be without this mitigation no reckoning can tell. IAS the shoal which comes back where a single herriug has spawned, so is the devouring host of worms which a single wing- ed moth will leave as its progeny. The birds which devour the worms are by no means so use- ful, as Dr. Piper shows, as those which devour in- sects on the wing. And it is therefore no objec- tion to swallows that they daintily prefer butter- flies to caterpillars, and are more given to the noble chase ol a flying rjrey fhan to the wearisome delving of slow clodhoppers. o. We do not urge the practical consideration of easy and handy shooting, which led once a lazy sporting friend of ours to choose the neighborhood ol a wood for his Summer residence, so that he mi^tit, like a Pacha o( the Lebanon, fire from bis chamber window without removing his pipe or doffing his slippers,—since we hold this whole passion for small bird shooting in utter abomina- tiou, as the basest lorui which sport can take. Hut lor any passiou tc which birds must minister, it is ueedlul to provide for them shelter and a home,.—a place to hide and a place to build. Farmers and lovers alike must have their forest aviary, to exterminate borers onto indite sonnets of harmonious nurubeis, to rid Lire air ul its plague of flie- or to pen the sweet invocation— .byus, H^iosiarell''' ^STM-^onBy'a^tfldtocfiatflft-Jtreet; SWr=5fORK-J15ibtme Buffling; PHILADELEHBiHSr. W. cor.. Tu&fand Sbflbrft-StB. gggyffife^i: p cAf. ggrffiajtfl|!ayet^-g»eet8) ? 1^\ meeUnej4an.g er by tn&*4irece means of feest planting. If h^ the money, that is usually iw.aste^ in foolish speculations, or loss_in the fluctuations of commerce,-were turned 0 to 'fiis wort of renewr ingour forestSj aUthelosa'^Oflld be mefby aa equal gain. Xhe.^leajouigs Of alarmists may seem extravagant, but in tjie. end, we are confident, it will be proved that tnej were not too earnest or too early. * '\'*' Death of, a Mighty ^patter. The Pittsburgh DUpatch df July lath, thus an- nounces the death of Samuel Askeyq— SomuelAskejr, a \ mjgbtv Njmrod,\ ^pd ie . |a t the Brighton.meeting,,{or-which Lecompteand terlcan Horses in England. ^.'H'St'SPS^iiSilelphiailieager.]. .\ I ^R^WerkffebprseSTt^Qugh ?arj badly beaten hfthe 6k)odw«mrace, are not out of the field; in fact, they seem to be |ust entering it, for we se§ that they lave ono'less than \ten Engagements singly or together running up (r> October the 26th. The first ia the Champagne stakes, one mile beat. cently in Snowshoe township^ Gentre counfy, RPrioress ( are eriterejirj with twen^ other horses, Pennsylvania. The Belfefohfe X>emo«o/*saj(| , he lithe-flower 6f the 5 English turf. This race was run born in Franklin, NortfcerrS Carland coSntj^ Ron the 6th irfetarit, add we shall hear in a few days — \ \'-'\ ~~- how Lecompte behaved. On the 10th instant served under Gen. Harrison, anti when the wata were ended, returned to his native place^and sub- sequently Irjfcated in the wilds of Snowshoe county. He was one of the first Settlers that foUowedin the trail of the- Indians, -they having left but-a short time previous, leaving their hunting grounds to be occupied by white men. .-Thelife of Mr. .iskey as a pioneer and hunter, would compare with that of Daniel Boone or Colonel Crockett. Many of the most thrilling adventures with hair-breadth escapes from the wild denizens of the forest, have been heard from the lips of the deceased by the writer. He carried with him to the grave scars, the result of wounds received in several contacts with panthers, ia which his life depended on his presence of mind and the faithfulness of his dog. Much of his time was spent in hunting, whieb proved to be the most lucrative business in which he could engage in his new botoe. He killed, dur- ing the time be lived in Snowshoe, sixty panthers, muety-eight wolves, I,to this the records ofCeutre county will bear testimony,) about five hundred deer, and a large number of bears, the precise number could not be obtained, but in a statement given by himself to the writer, he Bold in'one sea- son two thousand seven hundred weight of bear's meat. -«. .— The Great Pa r Vest . ladv, \ with ;\oui pi-rim- siulf, 1 »ill f-'el them, and may be biarrled in a day in two.\ \ lib, yuu* Ilia \ both du us Juu please,\ yet notbjng loili, rVplu-d the wido». It was a i|ay ur tn u altt t that tin- lieen-. • was procured. Th e parson received his lee, the bride- groom his jbiide, th e widow ior th e Un.t tim e threw ber giow-flover the pew , a d iL was alter- .rds i-aiJ, kill pajUes Were saln-tied. [Pioni the North American Review) There ar • several reasons why forests affect fa- vorably the health of a locality or neighborhood. Two of thise we have already mentioned, that they check the formation of poisonous miasma, i ^..«—. --- — . r —a J^J s0 common to find the orchards belted with rows ot P* lt!»lt- Trees and their Uses. \ Come, all ye feathery people of mid air, Beneath the chamber where my lady lies, Aod, in your several musics, whisper love !\ A (Hiestioti of much iutelest, which we tiust Dr. Piper will treat tully in some of his futuie u'lmbers, is of the fitness of ruingliig fruit ami forest trees. There are horticulturists who hold that the close-corn in union doctrine is the only one to be applied to orclrards ; that elms must be kent separate from plums as niuch as sinners irom saints, and that an oak among apple trees is as much an intruder as the serpent in Paradise. We are inclined to a different view, believing that the shade winch laige forest tiees give to an oi- chard and the moisture which they retain are very important to the healthy growth of the lruit bear- ing kinds. Some of the finest peach trees we have ever known were nurtured beneath the shadow of a tall sicamori ; and iu walking aloug the edge ol woods, we have often stopped to mlmire the sturdy limbs and luscious crop of Some ancient apple tree. Giapes rrpen readily in the thick shade. On the continent of Europe it is u.uite log r\ _ Oh, there were anxious heWts ia Deacon Har- rington's old brown house thlt night. Very ten- derly was the suffering little Rose cradled on her mother's breast, but not one! did she speak c_o- the Beeston Manor Iron Works, Leeds, has tafeen i h( j rcnt , Her cheek* burnedjhnd bcr eyes . out a patent for m improved method ot treeing f ber dimp tJ d arma wer e tossed ajjove her head, and every Jittle while, between MASSES A VTLLASE, SEW-YORS. [29-tf] ttTTAWA AND PRESCOTT Railway. STRAW VAKTETf; GOODS. IN QtTALlTT AHP E«-«^aSiKtfS5* poaitJM, Co LBWIS B. AMES; .i v u»f» ffeiMfaDtsr Yoa ar-> hereW •^MES, led to plaln- ... _ i Clerk ._ a copy oJ on,St. Lawrtnce \\• ^^^Irn5»t» \wet* refl\*^ - d JOfal. ill^^ #«Mama : Yon orrmoned '^fflS'S^, of whfch win be ^ E J-^^tfttlcounty o, St-Uw- *\* ° iS^^jrir answer on «w«*- ?' rv e t£?$tl&*£-° f\OTty B»e» Vork.- ^^^J^rtWiServ -e of totjsfujnmona, ':f^|J^lirvlc* and if you fail to an- f««Sfcl)l!M*y paired, Oie.plair. .A m« ^gS«^«»r obe tmndri^idoilars^th !»*-.. \V.r » rjnonRILH. Summer Arrangement. OOMSJESOISS ON MONDAY, MAY 1STH, 1857. 1I.1IL TRAIN, L EAVES OTTAWA AT 7 : 45 A. ti., ar riving in Prescott at 10: 15, A. M., ootmeeting at Junction with Trains going East and West, and at Prescott with the Northern Rail Road Trains for New York and Bostonr-alao with the Lake Steamers going West. Leaves Prescott At 12 30, P. Mu, on the arrival of the Grand % Trunk Trains from East and West, and the Northern Rail Road rr&majrom New Yoxk ami Boston—also the Lake andJliver .Sleamoiafrmn the Su* and Wen, ar- riving In Ottawa CRy at 8: 00 P. iV -=~ ACC03HW(»1»ATTO!« TRAIN, Leaves Eresco.tt at G:'3» .A. at., on arrival of the Srand Trunk trains from the West, arriving to Otta- wa Gity at 10: 10 A. St. Leaves Ottawa, it 11 15 A. M-, arrivihg in Prescott at ?: 43 A.JL, connecting' with the &rand Trtmk Trains froto- the East and West—also with the Lake Steamera going West. B. FSEHCM, Jr., (3-tf) Sapertntenaent Prescott, May 15, 1*». I8ST. niVHtUAM 18&7. SOUTHERN RAIL BOAD LWIE. WM. B. BOC!DaH.H, .: P'aic '..r- Attonssy, Castim; it; y> »i niBos*. -'. : \ ; ' ; r-\v* \1 RT.i-0A>fKIifS:,e0TSK^: IVQQV& Eiecoior xf tt^W^fif :'•«' & •'**&g£.£8%-& * ^,-,'j iB^nk. J«l 5 la*-\fy»*^*Zl-:to. Bank,\ i r ( ?Pl-\2''....;.^.-*he.Pre3! Botlalft- Is Cblcaeo, TOLEDO, MH.WAtJ3BE8; RAfSKB, KBNOSHA, WAtT- KKSAN, (JALESA, ROCE. ISLAND, BaRUnTG- TON, DCBCQOB, MADISON, IOWA CITf, ST. LOCIS, ST. PADt, AND ALL PLACES IN THE WEST AND SOOTB-WEST. \ \\. ' Thefonowlng New Low Pressure Steamers \orm the Line from -.^ Buffalo to Toledo, . CannfttSting with the lill'HIiilv SOCTHERN & NORTH* 1BV INDIANA BAIL KOAII, ONLY 2G MttErTTO CHICAGO. BROWN & SPENCEE, attorneys, Counselor*, &ei, OGDENSBCBGH^ N. Y. (9~ Office lately occupied by James * Brown. w. o. saovra J. o, mpracaal I April 13, 1684. 81-tfj' I. G. STILWELL, Attorney and Counselor at Law, Justice or ttoe Peace & Town Clerk, OGDENSBURGH, NBW-YOKK. pB- Office, in ST. LAWnzscs BXVCBUCAII Building, Isabella street. [4S-M l MOBSIS & VARY, • Attorneys and Counselors at Law,: OGDENSBURGH, NEW-YORK. Office—Marble Row, Corner of Ford and Water-Streets. ,««AH profeuional business entrusted to them will receiveprompt attention. . ' r^-ADDHIONALBODHTY LAND obtainedundet thelate Act of Congress, pasaed March 8rd, 185o. OJtosQS M0KR1S [16-tf] BBBSBTT O. VAST. Attornex-, Countie]or> Ac, eiveahU,»to«ti^tJen,i<».t*!! ptBCijceof biaprofeo •Ion, »na sollclti patronage. ygr Offlce—Corner of Ford inai9aberla-8treeta,0g'- densbnrgb. New-York. -«--r -- -»~ — 148-tfl JUDSpN & POWELL. attorneys and Connsptors at i.atv, OGDENBBCBOH.ST. LAWRENCE CO , •) Y. OSlce, No. 8 Eagle Blocife, Ford.street, op atatrt. aoaorcs w jo-Dsna [if-tf] ... .jowsrnwixL,;*. C. W. BALDWIN, AttOrnoy at Latv, OQBKNflBDRGB, ST. LAWRENCE OO..N. Y. OMcelnCnstom-lIouseBnililihg. OGDENSBURGH ' I HAVE OSrVHAKD vand Tor eale; .the most I ? oompletc lot Qt BUGGIES 1 — »nd OARRUGES ever offered'intTilaplacelconinrialng-. 18 OPEN, SDGtifES,' \ fl SIDE BPBrNG-BB6BT£S, 10 TOP 6DBGIES, At prices defying all competition. WorlD.wiU b«void. — *- - written stipulation tbatife. shall be atrong and iron and other metalic ores from the rock and shale in which they are generally imbedded. As thpse who are familiar with the iron trade are SWure, it is. necessary to remove this extraneous rubbish before the ore is sent to the blast furnace, and hitherto the mode of accomplishing this has been by exposure to the air, by which the rock and shale was loosened, after which it was chip- ped or \ napped \ off by manual labor. This was a work of time, and involved considerable cost, and the object of Mr.. Harding's patent is to di- mihish both the one »nd the other. Instead oi exposing the stone to che air, it is enclosed in a structure for the purpose, -and subjected to the acyiqu of steam, which effects in a few hours that which, often, under the ordinary method, takes months or years tb accomplish, the shale and rock lulling off of themselves, and-rendering almost un- necessary manual labor for \ napping.\ The in- vention has been seen by some ot tbe leading men connected with the iron trade in tbe district, who are satisfied with its value und efficiency. her moans, she would stretcfi out her hands to- ward some Imaginary object, and say, \ Please sister Kate, isn't Rose most big enough r Three days passed—days of incessant watch- ing and weariness, and towolds evening tbe ttflli Rose opened her blue eyes ifter a reMpss slum- r ber. Sbe seemed much better, and we mother glanced hopefully up to the|kind physician bend- ing over ber. 1 »'I cannot say she's better; madam, God knows I wish I could ; but Rose jnust die before mid- night I \ and the tears stood in glittering drops on the good man's cheek. J The mother's great grief was not noisy, he/d, - ] • ' ' quietly lifted She with a i The Copper Mines. The Ontonagon Miner of August 1 st says : \The largeS6cMpye&eotirOm the Minnesota mass, was taken,off »few dayasince. U»»f>a»™o rOALLAGHAN. durable. Termsl&jeraL, . .-..-. jtaBT\ Rvery description of work made w order. , A. OALLAGl RgFKttENCR — G. N. Sxruotm, C. G-. MTISS,'A; Wit-stuns, E*<W. .- ' • • f.a.um*l> -{ POBtfWAHlrKBSjJ •thirty-one inches in length. . I t was fairly taken 'from a regular cut in the great- ma|3,' Ji is the largest yet made in thjs district, and, so juw as we kuow in any' other, The copper beaia.np about oue-tlnrd ot its length in cutting—that is, the pluCe from which the chip fe taken is^bout half as large again as Che chip; so that Ihe copper in T O iuLjaRCMAJlTS, FORI • w AM ) «>TI1EMS. TOST rilBaTED\AM> FOE R ft pntcAari fllSri htmW- *orwarderil,*na*tti«r»i • w ,J|o^T i 00^!lBJ»IgOK*B'm.1irRI,L. 'piuur trtamass must have, occupied a jength'of 47J 'inches. There are numerous cutain,the ma»s.of 'mhch ' greater f length than this. The largest which we ha v e, seen is sevcii feet three iuohes. V?hefl it la c^nsujlered'tibat these,, cuts, always re- ^miiffirt'Wrwiiw'midwui, \bfsita magnitude may be imagined. tharts. .JiLj.i'\^'^™ .. ' \ 'Utth^BranMin-KiB^EectionSsH-oathe^ew. ' r arji6 yejnKJbey+reiiaking out same specimens Of \Barrel copper #»rj .rich sJBittpxatunVftojigbt.their op«atioTis:coa}rnenced-but & few. weeks since.' At tfioEetfablo they have every, insurance ••-\* ,h ' yield for (he current year, wrll not fail _« lT_ darling lUm the bed, aud sal (irtwn with her in her arms, | Kate stood by, sob- bing, as if already the brit|doi Caiu were upon herbrow. , \ Please, mamma,\ saidiie little one at (eugtb, •'ami big enough (o go to peaven ?\. \ Yes, darling,\ was £rfe tearful answer. \Jesus loves little ehlldren,\ , | \And mamma, da you fpose he'll forgive me for sitting down in *he niejdow to watch Katie, wbettyoa,tol4nip 1 thusn'KDever stay there? '•Yes my pet, tho good. £ S.yiour «ill forgive you .for everything, if you are pply sorry! but Kosie } doesn't want to go to hea\en and leave mother, doesehoi\ \ I heard somebody say^l must go when 1 was aslfeep,\mother i aibeaoilfiilady, with, oh I such,] Khite shining wings, and ibhe stretched out her armsTo take me, but I didi't go. I wake up just tokisa you and sister onka more. .Please kias rnetKatie. 'I«!eposewctft never beauoigbty. any more uoUj heaven, a!|dXU grow big betore you come, Katie, so { rkn play with ffou upjl '{bejel* .. • ii : <.'. there we.re.feahtSg.hi „afuneral «nd.-sjtfle cofljo, The rosefod bBiuted its. petws or* .toe j bosK^Jfesos,. ^{mlittle ejah flawerwaa\tag l ehbngh,itw^e*veijr' » ..-..• A. Iu PBO0TOR &) CO., Wbotcsalcand Retail Dealers Infiro- cerles, 8a|H Wa*or JLtiaea «o™»-* Co*t& dPorfe, *c, &c. ^\tBBlIS CASH. Cash paid for Butter, Cheese, ^ork Be*n«.Pe»»,and atlklndsof OountrjProduoe. \ - NEW BB30K BLOOR, WAIBB-STBEET 'v.i ' H . 0. u Bow*OD. NO, 1 . u PEOOTOtt. ijrtfed^ Sejiirlure, and; clomuj of Mails. ' [-AH.S GOING 13AST, vTA.MALOJJE AND \ \alnttlease ev« \ * :j4\o*dtaick *. n 4outh,Tia MO! Jau0i,m He^Uori.'-ReMiejaer *»U|»i I Hails ^U>fei?.0aut9n i le!r'| e^very dajat «i»«mj.J • Canada fflall cttses %t <S% ». ttC'artives'atSp.'ia; pBl'GS AJ»p WEOICIWES. ii-«: ; l^Jftr *^%*% ?r^^j. IS iUwW> at Ma MuW»T0y/1wrfd''. aa »»*\M» £3Xmi »» »n p»»wn» »**- . • II IT \ JjjErmKmr. •'»'* o' \^ ** v a '. • ^^ d»»Mr»»i*: m TIC miSTBBS. iltTDOPOUS, I- f- PanATT, ConrV; Leaves Baaalo Mondays and Thursdays., - •',•'• CITT Off BBFPit^h. r»:i»B4siss.Com', Leases BcuTaloTo£3dayi.aiid '.fldajs. '--/,•'«.- SO CTHBtiff mCOlSA ir, t, B: SouxESrra, Oom'r, Leaves Bnffiaid Wednesdajsana ftaturdays. , -: \ - . Leaving Michigan ! 8oafharn fiafl Roia Doci.fisht of , Bjato-StreotvBiuaioievery evening,<.auaday«eicepted),-, ae il o'cloc*.or immediately after the arrrral of : -C:o EX-. press Train from Bcstoa, Albnoy and Se* YoTtjtarOBXh ! toToledo witisnat laadin^,where pasieJsjojs tafcj tha. Lathtniig Express Train fcr Ohteago.arrtv^ti^ ^ iTXo-ueit etenins afteroepareare from EKSslSi caj.., fSSv^lcdreteaKCT. m.lsJtoMgU«ux - Paisengiravby daliv«lnj'taal«€l^ito»be-AK%Br . uotorafSba.q t6=ir^S^?,<^vey^« fc 9 &„ '^trti^ri^ter Eias* r traiSfidthi^ ^^^ € ^$£t°l&W. tow**'** 01 \« Toledo-, thlrltos <rf.?Bamer3x;OTM6t4 Wg -the TOLEDO, WABAaa ASO WESTE3S ^ft,^^-,^ P^Saefl«r»-»a-rd«in>.f.! pi »ltil>»-waK ^S^V^Th - ^iS« tAKfi.BH0RS.'R a n,'ROAD, as Baffal»i.r?r ??„£• or &B&V WISTEas ?!«L«Av',»$.Sa 3 pe^»f ^^^\naiana. «aii u«adr - H. 8. HtriiTHBEY,.,.,. Wholesale & Htotkil = Dealer I n OrriR* :,,. - \* . and Medicines,. ; Patnti.OUa,bye-Staffs, Window Bliss,Oaguerreotype : 8toe»J>en^t'8aid-6arElcilIn3tram9at3(,W.Uie» t „,: ; - and Cigars, No.' a 8aav» Bidax, yoab-SranT. OapyxsanaoB;»«-V ,-...\: ~ ,SA'iJt»«2L:-C. 'C HAVKY,' .''.' gailes^r to Jho tato-ftrat <rf fassa*s< Ciustt, ii C6. • >' Hermon Village,, N. V.s, \' TttArrCFACTTjirtES .&, ' SctScja^onstaDtlyhaBaxd 0AUaiAfiE3 & SLEIGHS, 1 \^atf ^*\\ .. both tibcj.'ind'plain..-Be. «, rnctaWi t*w«s v doaa '* 0 ^ CT .'.^LS5S?^?*fe vS : , Albapy, TOstrlStithYij FosV Offlce, Albany DlatrlbaOnfe,Po»>Offlees.*..i - ... • . »• ... \ All mails close oji Sandaj at 1 o/clock, prectselyj , _, , . , T.BACON,Postmaster,'. J,Ogdensnur%h,1Gt> Jnty,:tSliT. ',\- . .',;.'•'..\ .\'. \ ! ;--| ^;>;.NA^lOKAli.\^0^C&-/p ^'; V J. crlftiinals la in luitwelflb.jear, ami Uj widely circa, 14&4 t|ijy3s1i6at.tfe6 coShtry*. lt,eofltaIiiS ; alr.Qiagrc»t;: trial?, crun&al cases and apprdpriate. c63tort314 on tie' caste, (ogethcr with dnfortaatirajortMlntfiiril taatters, apVtope fctradln any .other oewispaper.- . . ; J^^nhsoriEt!olir^.|^tieTia^uwrW»Or<»lxlndiuha, to ba reriltted.by saescnber?,-(who~thonld'. 'writotheir -c>^o:cid'th'^t-p.rfn 1 C5raferAieuts.-to*e. : t-^ ErJtfeT«na : ' Prenrtetot tt tUs Rational •Voltes' GiKitff, t'3-ttl-'\ '•* \ •<<•• •'•' ','••-''• .SitTYCri: City.: the'Pewablo they have every, assurance that the yield for the current year, will not fall short of two-hundred tons. At the Quincy, on the Pewa- We vein, a party of men have taken a contract to %Wp the vein from.No.-2- . to-No. 3 abaft, • dig- rUnce of 800 feet on to^utfitcev tb qne hundred and tweDty doilara per ton—*0 per cent, copper. They took out ten ttns--m»eTe»:weeh£'.Thel3lo Royal are averaging from, twenty-five to twenty- eight t0iSr-t)& mpritn. , , ^r^peftdiftre nec^ST; aary to- effect an e hs'f>vcU safe\ ingress 'and egres 4 ': to and .from Ppri^ge ljake, i3.nl ! that is now need\ «ed torend6T 1 this\pB'e' o^.\tte jJoriul6'iis''liJrid 'productive^asf KIs noW the'bidst p!ctuHsque^- poplon Of thg mtoeraf ^aibge!\ '' * r - * -\••\;,--•' •;?-.'• v.; ;*>i.t\&* -, .','- -u ,-.-.-..-,«i; v : ..i ,--r} J .- : -Ai.^ghfeWo« t ft / I^w^S,*^v''': ..- , ;t*rbnitho'8pringBe_i4fflllno|jj-4parrial,August l%-]», ..', It wpulflda'iany d^njairi^oj 'the -oitj good to ; taite aJaunt out .beyond fiuffalo Heart 6rove,;j 'faikmt louiteen miles-northeaat of town, -.{fc^d: butbefOTq ^ico be. woifl^ iec^frtjni, the emuiebce on Which ho stood, corctkld after cornfield for rottci in evisjy; direetioiti : SM ^elt^t^ciuatiori tBAW «W.bei 't^keu.iir^iOj.e .viewat\ that pbint;l ':o^i»u^-or'^rty-'^<^i]r3;4^i(rf' , Cora L Four \--i i„-i „< nohmtftt orairio. Then.A HI ^ \jtoucWlBfr Inotd8rit|jof Praternai ! lirbye.' Vfo hayo never read aLoretdnohlng and beau-: tiiblinoid8pfe.tbanfjie t folfwtng, whichi oeenr red* \short time since iri one of ihajfjeneli Oourtft lb e n»tarat*^UMy. of the br4h« v aod;the,affectionat* and that tb jy absorb it when it is formed, prevent its pernicious influence. But their effect upon chma e is even more noticeable and unques- tionable. They equalise the heat of the atmos- phere, and so prevent those extremes which have come in these latter years to be the bane of New England. [There can be little doubt that the cut- ting away pt such large tracts of forests in Cana- da and Maine haB had a great share in causing the intense coin ol our recent Winters, if nut in in- creasing tlie number of burning days in the Sum- mer, and that tbe rapid changes which transpose, at the caprice of the winds, the place of the mouths anti seasons, are due largely to this cause. In a warm day, certainly, one leeln the heat more iu the woods than on the open prairie, whe' e the wind is blowing. But a thermometer will give a lower temperature iu the former than in the latter position. A fair way to test the difference is to sit for a whUe in a boat upon a pond surrounded by woods and then go into the woods. The, sensa- tion will nstantly be one of refreshing coolness. Iu Wkiti r, on the contrary, the thermometer .shows a t luch higher temperature iu the woods than in t ie open field, with a. wider variation in proportio i as the external cold is greater. Team-' stgers knoff this, and even ou a still day in January feel a reli if from the cold, the moment they reach tbe protecting woods. We arfe not able to give tbe results of any large observation of the comparative temperature in wooded tnd in open countries. Unfortunately, the fores «rs omit to provide themselves with the means o; measuring heat, and are content with the sens ition of comfort aud the satisfaction of profit. Experiments enough have been made on a Bmall e cole to prove that, if the mean tempera- ture is a >out the same in cleared land as in lorest, the extr jmes in the latter are much less severe and tbe rariationa much less rapid. That tbe wood of living trees gives off heat directly in Winter there ca i be no doubt, aud there can be as little doubt t lat the atmospheric heat iu Summer is taken up by branches and foliage. Ol course the inlli ence of trees in deflecting and softening the ray i of the sun has much to do with .this , equalizi ig process; and the first reason which a child w< uldgive why tbe woods should be more com- fortable thau the open field, is one which needs not to t e weakened by any refinements of science. Shade i i a hygienic agent not less genuine than light; i nd Nature approves that song of the com- forts of tbe behemoth, \ chief of the ways of God, who lie .h under the shady trees, in the covert of the ree 1,\ as heartily as she sympathizes with the despen te prayer of Ajox. Tbe effect of forests in establishing an electrical equilib ium, aud in conducting the electric fluid-! or fore i, has also a bearing upon their sanitary I value. Many persons object to the neighborhood of a gi ove, for feat! of tbe lightning, and tall trees, when I. chargedrcloud envelops them in its black- ness, a re terrible to those who else would love them. Yet we maintain that there is mora real iSecurit y in a house provided with a surrounding of the ie natural conductors, than in the best fib- ting o any patent metallic points. A grove of trees.i oes on a grand scale what Orcutt's rods do ou a i ery small scale. However ibis may be, the electro conditibn of the atmosphere is more healtl y, where there are these efficient means of adjust ng it; there iaa freer play of the lungs, an easlei npfeement in, the limbs, and the air is leas oppressive on a sultry day. ihise general views, however, will not apply to aBkiids and varietierbf trees'. $here are special inflhehces which modify the general verdict of \\'\- ' s *~» tindsof trels ar^oer^Snl^ sahib faith'pi#6jBis*ertfW0 « lowed by. |he: unfojtanat —B,oweirer JarJi, Jfe it •ftrm reswve will ovewoi „ A- French paper sa; Pffltte girl with, WW forest trees, set there to break the force of the winds. And it may be safely predicted, that he who has an orchard protected-by this mean will gather a third more lruit thau he who leaves the slender trees exposed. At present, in mostof our orchards, tbe crop consists very largely of wind- falls, which become food for swine, but not Ior men. It may answer for one who can afford it to use his peaches for the creation of pork, but that luxurious diet will prove in the end, we think, rather expensive. Connected\with this is another question, as to the advantage pf niingliug varieties of trees in forest planting. That picturesque effect is gained by this method there can be no doubt, aa any one may see on the grounds of Mr. Tudor at Nahont. The more shades aud shapes and contrasts it shows, the greater- L the charm oi a park, as well as of a garden. The inferior species of tree are dignified when set in the society of mouarebs of the grove, and draw honor from their privilege. The larch and the birch command more deference as courtiers of the majestic pine, Chan in any equal democracy ol their own kind, however pop- ulous. The mpst ungainly trunk will have beau- ty in the forest, and he who will renew credit to those stunted cedars, which recall only by utter contrast the precious growth of ancient Lebanon, has. but to plant them under tbe broad-leaved syc- amore, Or by tbe side of the symmetrical chest- nut. Whether economy is well served by this mingling of many varieties, we. are not so ready to say. Nature, indeed, mingles trees in the forests. Yet moat forests'have some prevailing species, which gives them their character. Oaks among tbe Jews, and a silver-leaved aspen, slender and tremulous, among the lithe and sinewy ash trees, reminds us of a pale missionary preacning with fear and trembling to a tribe of dusky Indians. The prevalent idea of planters is, we imagine, that the most profitable forest) atefiomogeneous; that the growth la more rapid, and the influence upon the soil more wholesome. TheFrench gov- ernment whicn has done more than any other in the culture df forests, rather favors this theory, and encourage the separation of kinds, where large returns are expected. In the Department of Londes it has chiefly replanted pines; on the slopes of the, Pjreuees the box is the favorite va- riety ; while in Brittany and Normandy the linden We have recently noticed hi our columns the \ arrival of the steamer at St. Louis, which had come down the Missouri for 2,500 miles, having started at a point where there was barely water enough to allow her to turn. Got Galphin,'\\a passenger in this steamer, has communicated to the St. Louis Democrat a graphic account of the country traversed by the great river and its branches, from which account, as condensed, we take tbe lollowing:' ' \ The plaint, occupy a longitudinal parlalelo- grani of neatly a thousand miles iu width, and ex- tending froru the Texas to the Arctic coast pre- sent an area equal to the twenty-four States east of the Mississippi. They have a slight slope from the weal Co tbe east, and abound in rivers and streams, which serve, like the Nile, to irrigate, rather than drain the neigliboring surface, having few affluents, and running from west to east, in Shallow, broad beds, through long, flat, narrow basins. They are destitute ol timber, even single trees being scare*-, though tluckly clad with nu- Ditiou8 grasses and swarming with animal lite. Their sod id chiefly a flue, calcareous mould, ad- mirably adapted lur pasturage, and good arable, farming land is found aloog the banks of the riv- ers. \ Colonel Walp.'iin descr tbes the climate to be in many respects lik e Egypt, rainless, lavorabie to longevity, intellectual and physical developments, and stimulative of a high social civilizatiou. Storms are rare, except during the melting of snow upon the crest ol tbe Rocky Mountains. These plains, commonly rega.-ded as deseris irreclaimable, heJ declares swar m with animal life ; aud he estimates the buffalo which find their living upou them at twenty millions, all of which subsist mainly upon the gramma or buffalo grass, which the dry at- mosphere crisps into a highly nutritious hay. \A million of Iridiaus have until lately subsist- ed altogether upon the garnc whichthey furnish- ed, and they are capable of sustaimng^tr=sast pas- toral population. Six-tenths ol the food ot the human family, the Colonel thinks, is or ought to be \animal the result of pastoral agriculture: and as tbe Northwest is now the granary of the world, so, he maintains, will the- Far West furnish its supplies of annual lood, consisting of meat, milk, butter, cheese, tioulti-y,egga, wool and honey. \ These plai-js, without a single abrupt moun- tain, timbered space, desert or lake, ruuuing smoothly out <M the navigable Missouri, Missis- sippi and St. I .awrence, aud to the Texas coast, not a portion ol whose whole sweep of surface is more thau a t housatid miles from the best navi- gation, must become the pastoral garden of the world. \ They are everywhere adapted to sustain a great pastoral population. Adobe bricks ior dwell- ings, impervi.otis to heat or cold, can be made anywhere ; planter, lime, clay and sand exist be- neath nearly ev ery acre ; bituminous coal is abun- dant, buflalo dung is scattered everywhere, and wood fuel is found plentifully by digging, for the trees are stunte d by the dry atmosphere, while the roots spread out in all directions. \ Mr. Galphiin does not claim for these vast plains tbe cardinal basis of the future empire of commerce and it idustry ; but maintains, from their ample dimensions and positions, their climate, abundance of fuel, building material and animal life, tnat they are not only adapted to be the home of millions ot happy freemen, but that tliey will be \ the pasture-field of the world.\ , | lljeconlpf&a>d.? r 9' res s\aftin- at lewes, two mUe |raea-, on the 19th Prioress runs alone at York, a ! 8 i 1 B B 1 S,,dash of one mile; again the latter at Here- ford, 'aS ft e gTth, two .miles and a half. Both Prior anosIScioregg arB entered at the same time and place for the Eoyal plate, terms, conditions, weights and distance the same exactly as for the Goodwood cup.''teie n ^ xt engagement is for Trioressfjft the LeXfi%gton stakes, September 2d, two mUeSi for which th a best horses in England jare entered. The following day the three Amer- ican horses run for the'Warwick cilp, distance [three miles. At the Doncaster meeting, Septem- ber 15th, Mr. Ten Broeck has enjered his three jyear old colt Babylon, At the Houghton meeting, October 26th, .Prior and\ «-Iiecomte enter for sweepstakes of $100 each, half forfeit, with $500 Sadded, for a race over a track four, miles, one fur- Jong aad' one hundred and sdven^fftlu* 66 yards. This last, shows tbe speed and endurance of the horses, and is considered the best for the Ameri- ban racers, which have been trained to run greater distances than the English horses usually run. The failure at the Goodwood race is attributed to the bad management of the trainer, who brought them in too high flesh to the post. It is generally believed\ that they will vindicate themselves yet When they run into good condition. Mr. Ten Broeck seems determined to.test the merits of the different systems ol breedm^and trainings and in &ddrtion to the above-mentioned horses; he has taken to England the colt Woodburn aad hily Bonita, both of which are entered for the great Epsom race in 1869. , How an ^Anaconda was Captured. [Prom the Philadelphia Bulletin.] . A few. day&sinee Gaptam Wilson arrived-in port with three anacondas, which he had conveyed to his house in Front street, above South. One of tbe animals, a \ beautiful\ fellow, fiifleeu fleet long, and .stout in proportion, became among the missing on Tuesday last, and it \was thought he bad been stolen ; but yesterday afternoon tbe fact leaked out that his snakeship had merely journey- ed off ou an exploring expedition, or perhaps he fancied himself in his native land and went in ' search ol the ele*phant; at all e-vents, yesterday atternooi±,offieer 61 of tbe Second Division was in Swamson street, near South, when a Hibernian came to him in breathless haste aud staled that a \ whapping big bull dog was in the cellar.\ No. 61 lmuiediately desceuded to the cellar in search 01 tlie big dog, but was somewhat astonished at ^putting\lout upon something bhrny. No. 61 next beard-a tremendous hissing, and concluded it was atjout time to leave, but in attempting w beat a retreat he found he'lad eaught a tartar, for the snake woubd himself around one leg and the body of tbe officer, and commenced to crush him up in accordance with the regularly established practice ol anacondas. Tbrtunately for the police establish- ment of the Second- District, No. 61 is a very powerful man, and as spuuky as he is athleuc. He seized the snake by the back ot the neck with a tremendous grip, and held him very uncomfort- able and much astonished until Captain Wilson was sent lor. The Captain relieved No. 61 in the custody ol the snake's nape, and while he held on the othcer uu wound-himself. Benedict Arnold's Silver Watcih. Benedict Arnold's name will go down to pos- terity coupled with, curses- but for all that, be was as brave a soldier as ever \wore a sword. He had as much jniliipfy genius as any officer in our -revolution. Re led the 2d company of Governor's Foot Guards to B anker Hill; he Ipd the expedi- tion up the Kennebec, through the'trackless wildV erness, co-operating with Montgomery in his at- tack on Quebec ? he fougtrflike a,madinan,-<but an inspired madman, tru b. method in his madness, at the battle' of Saratoga. He was the' idol of the j army, till be fell, like Lucifer, tUe son of the Rum among the Indians. [Prom the St. Paul Times.] ' We do not claim any original discovery when we assert that alcohol is the stimulating and direct cause of lour-nfihs of our troubles with the In- dians, as it is of four-filths ot the crimes among white men. If the government would inflict a heavy penalty on any one who sells the fire-water to the red men, and then deputize a vigilant force to carry that law into execution and enforce that penalty, there might be a hope of something like perpetual peace. Indians may smoke tberr kinni- kinik in a calumet, but a drink of whiskey is an emblem of contention and crazy wrangling. There is lour times the need to day for the government to station troops aloug the frontiers to prevent a set ol vagabonds from pursuing this everywhere nefarious traffic, and putting 10 the red lips of the poor Indiail the cup that shall make him mad, thau for the suppression of actual hostilities. This is the key to ail our frontier difficulties. We sell to tbe wild and benighted savage something that makes him drunk, then we send government troops to bayonet him, because he dont't keep sober. - The Chippewas have been furnished with liquor on tbe Upper Mississippi, and have consequently become unmanageable and warlike. They have threatened the white settlers, and have driven the Rev. Mr. Breck from hi | mission at Leech Lake. This ini&mdus trafljenot only sets tribes against each other and lights feudal, spacksof discord into a blaze, but it puts in jeopardy the lives of our settlers and oqr sealer's wj.ves and children, and margins our tei-ritory with blood. abounds. In Scotland the larch bos been most m0 i-ning, with something of the ruined archangel extensively cultivated, and more than ten thou- sand acres with more than fourteen million of trees were planted in leas than a eentaTy by the single family of Athol. This example has been copied in ether parts of Europe, and one js often surprised to find in secluded places, like the region of the Tegernsee in Southern Bavaria, beautiful artificial forests of larches. In Greece, the pre- possession seems to have been for plane trees, and on' the hills of Laconia a recent traveller, M. About, has-remarked °tfoe- wanton dpd wasteful destruction'of these noble monuments of the Tur-> kiskdominiim)' \ • '- * > •> The best method of planting, transplanting, I pruning, thinning and \felling trees^ is a subject ij'wbjoh warns us back by i'ts-eltsnt, and by the confusion of'opinions which surrounds its-disdus- sion. 'Weseenoofieasion to-ehahge-the opinion expressed twenty five years •ago irr 1 this Keview, .that in moBt, if not in all casesJ'itsiS'better to-raise- trees from;the'eeed;-i-felni treeS'and-ash frees n*»'f less than ofifirand hickory. \We-renew the^rspSt T tooi af^nsrthe'ProcrhsteSb'truHeatiDii <or sapling^ which, to wake the%bot<of rMSovalalir'\ *\\*''» ton's Satan still to be trtfeed'in biatWffeer. li e fate of Arnold has been brought to mind by a silver watch, a regular Old-fashioned \bulls eye, which now lies upon our table, and »*><\\> fi OQ £ papidn* of Arnold in his military career. It », came into- the ac-' statement. He I'X: iheftf perniiibuSlri their e*h«il$ibhs as Others\*)} subst toce and'oualitiea. One may be poisoned by OdoVi assurerfas b* tpBchi and taste, jfiyeS'i'h.e' most f \delicious • pjarjui byjthe Rev. L. Smith Hobart*of Hudson, i«n, and. from the manner •> Wbich it can fin, Hobart's hands, we have no doubt of t curacy of the accompanying ^•This wafcrfthVproperty ot Benedict Ar- noM ltw^reaented..hyhJmto^eremtabiA|5 water, who, \ the Revolutionary JrW^^Jx' Banbury! ftMMeUMt, *&£&&$£ earned property of his wife ^% d %^BTl fSawiedi John Go^Hu^^*Have^im4 jZffi* • mother.o^AsdreW.*«•*•*«??*'ST t'mahy years was, a, !r«^^«eJSP9ajBffirW^W< *New York feity. Tjffl wStfh ^W *? M: 'Session of A. T. awtfiB® from^rpareny, did o-line ,*'Ahl my good sir, er;»ny friends;;! my-At j 1 have ohly, mjf ,;brol. youujj as 1 am. i.Qb, ipt?»jrorthy tojM fain youth: a t every countryi ,i ty^»n, boriest-heart Mid -.thegvettestiObstaclefl-:. that Lucillie Rome, A p-jnd-MrhiitY&iait? lut n^adjTolad, was bkraght before, th«;SiMb Oohit : ofiCorrection! a|de* .tteichlrge, of t** V Does f^f, qm-ftovstysm* \ «a|ed the- mains- iterte.' ,/ ; Vvii Up,T»H.*M?'\*«*?-T v ,-.--,*-,- ., -. ygaiajagolt wa>^afi ohbrDkeft prairip, . Then.it 1?Q3, worth tela doilara per acrcti- ho» it could not I-Such'is-'tt-'aSjaplb - . - r - j- T -o.. UUno|3 i3 making :1a -tVeilth \aild-tf ; frj^atteal re. d she;\ thwe-no lOflgf' i«!Mdfflotliec«rftdeade^ -r James •,; but be is.' as cLwbavcari; hep do for' \Who are you r •«-•\; r—• '~-v --• ,ii^„-', 1 „ii-« I \ jatacs, Borne, the of the jrosress *hicb Central \^Y6^ ag<# , v '';, '•Tbiriecn. n '{'•' •'•Anil.-wlSat dp you. -rho-f''.: •-. .'r'-'.'-if . -, . --• . , . - .*? The, crjust. njnit stnd you.to the flouse ol Cdrjcorton.? • ^•••U-'-'K^iV' -'\•''\'• '•*-••': : \ * Btero.lft#,visW 1 ^sperelam, 1'.'donot-teari ;- cried ^childish vdi|eo : lcom.ihe.i)ther..endiof tha' -conrji. ; iSaSA? ft 10 sjmkinsjtaijtj&iitttobbjwitb- \aUyelycpuntenancp etlrledfoith^ro i^dsttbo '\(^^oidit^^ 0 jy : ,, ^S^e , Sl'-'\• • >?* \ % - irotheS>tif^'t&S- poor little ,>^eiilte'W(t«n ftey .overload We air, and r the «mm»tiiStff tho shambles.Is more 8pIershl r 'olte'n than (the aroma, of an orange-grove. After riding' \for ah hour through tho gaw3ens of Pamascus, ana breathing that hyper-intoxieating cbmpound of all | that) lis delicious in the scent of leaf aud blossom, it is Jan unspeakable relief to snuff in the baraara Qt, tie city the fragrance of new morocc^ steam- iflg I'-BibahS,\^ Pei^afiitimbacBi South,Ame- rii&i fravelleW tell of trees wUdse D'reath'u-pon /the hir is deadly after nightfall, and a notioh of thisjsort has banished from some, of our city streets,! •fa; tree whieb a few years ago was a favorite. P*' faiujao superstition; of a tree possessed •80^* deyjl has U» •jlUiStration in the antipath?.** '•»\. it ever^c^rflmunity to-some noxionji^' 11 ^ ? r Th»e»|«»^ons of trees aro,l l o«»«! r »rV* of^heriaUitery than hoxious. ,'fsm, '\* **** ** hment in the scent of the p1nr?,} tt \<? h re fm- oiia flavor ctves to the rahgB;**^*! 08 ¥ WW Drj Buhte?s medicated vajbrtf What there^n f decorates for a lastrtifn oar dboi>ya^d8j# n ' <wl,IB ot tufted poles; 1Sr\e woBld repeal, HiR wtrftf diUbs ^atbbacultutai^nm^^v'\™ 5 ? e* joins an annual use '<irtlie bAft6»». \ fiflc ?,*?? a tf/ he esscieaed eveW ! yeari«i«wy* g61i •WWUM* to be- gained; and i'thai\\ '-=-•-•••' the Rev. L. SmiShSobaEt, of Michigan, by whflnr ted to the Comjeptijiut ^Bistoricali^ojj i(,was ores ciMy:\ 8 \• ,;^ B fiBrttydO'we object B»i •«i7-» ««• iO^^d ^ i^^-destroyB the'vig?* ui»i '\law of aefeeuouv, 1%~Z~ Tt )» i~ u^a fiSis Bnt the vaoi Pbr - fi¥ec atfec Willi SS&Whtisb the great btW- KSeVtBS dttly-neeeiSltylSjBJBti»tey ve ^•woi^h'dSrfrnifctreeh onthevery «WE,JrS„i«*»i....ij->..'a > «tsu »Woo»ii«,-iif I Kindnes tProm the Country Gentlemsa] • -ilrulymBrcytl'twtee fe^e^!#?^£ •hTnTtmtt gives and «»r^Wr«a**^ W Ti «*\•- & ..»..._ .^f^AlMn'iv,r.Ar,.nf<mnria^ sif may be sa which consistsi M - makes' the animal more aFthe Dronertv of the owner more Sw o^ merey*Sr*COTomtoad«awagei of m*-. m vi II lit %U ; if rU- &_ The CHiluese Sugar- Gahe. S^feoi the earliest notaies of. the Chinese Su- gar^Sui^ire given in the Columbia (South Caro- Uua^fes . The editor says he«aw a half gallon of superior quality-molasses, which bad been ex- tracted by^O.'W.Bay, a planter on thpFork, from taventy'sSiIkB ofxhe cane. Br. Bay planted four acres, and is satisfied that he will getsfifteen, 'hundred gallons of sycup. Richard H. Smith, Esq., of Scotland Neck, Sooth earolina, writes to the Kaleigh Register that,tfrom three ftnrtpe joints of the caneaboutaone grit of juice wasimperfeetly eitractdd,-«na after iavinE been boiled for half an hoaivp tahle^ppnfnl df very good,molasses ijvas obtained—superior to the common grade of molasses. ^^^i-^i^^^^^J^^ js£ What,tbe fjontb-Owea tl>e North. . .,.- fSrara a Speech ofOTendeHPhBlipsCJ' «• iTliSara ah'anecdote \the 'other day-; let me close w-Yth-ftJ to<shoW you how pVofqmid is her sense ofdependenOe. oh th'e -aSftattu^mdiJStry of theS»rffi fdr &e i, v8ry^dmfbrt8-'oT'life. That mQsd'elSqtteM^f aJI'Bodt'hernerlr a^Ithinfcj.'Mr. Prentiss-of\MSsfssfpp''P -was- a^aressmg -ij-fefowd some 4,000 people, defending the tariff; and in the courM'bf44^M%»Beriodt which rose grad- y\ '. !»••' »t . M# ^ •i'i f • tbe tions, nW'iSougte'Of asmhcB asft ought fo t>e. :&m itot'^biyreasb-if*i%«'#*'© 8eB%'pi%s|abP'j , i gpp^c^t.ttimHiecfeln.^hiSiaBtieotirii \\ ' ~ * icatea vapor^e •• ^n„*a£lt thdauhfjower to p B 'rfcf %m m ^^W^f BW» of the ••i ll *^ms**&»*^3 Science nas' not yet expl not to'he.treated*J««~ ?l Sf*' '' - - thf slaves :«*MgJ,£'{Salwr* '>*»£**£ irieritof .fhealth. i SkMastlwmore im|.0rtanti of the.cpns^era.,: L-'SOi^skriBiVr*''-'\* '\\ \'*'\- ' .' i man, eTOry>«^wn|od matt^rtundp?. likewise mjrcifaBoJiem. Abusive jf horses, *ia*£ffiel ttanafeementand <e 4i »^a^essrni!ti 'am tmspom^jm.™-• X^'J^^Kfi^onjeffn®us^^ mjuiagementoJ,.a>^3,P|gfwegtoir. *Sea that it wdl form a prommejaW*L u T > rr-. J\. S\^LSiEanif arrdSlvefcanawSspreseer:? •* M the topica*hicJ^hWe <««« fi*S<S&S^| SS\S£*irf©Bi?.i*3a iiwb iliSliaffiJm t ''\ I, .'•l»&ljr .\ ' ually to some ^^^..^ _^, _ 'thrift, the energyr^^c|iWbr^ the Vealth, the Hivjlization of the •W&flS-m'gloyfmg colors, when the vision yS. the assembly in the lOrferag; Hon ei- . _ _^_ _ _„ „_. ,- fI -&sh was „ JSmsmsik #M|a|JSa3bfSfcl^B%: of a rlffiiiisstppP'miafeS^ f$k l^^Bh^llr, en- thusiasm, and nothing.but respect fbi|th9,.Bp\eaker kep;ti^^o^^o'iW%jp^&g'tu| hlraeniafi. Prentiss 1 tor&d KaLjaffig^WargnM w$. SaJd,' \ !^ &38rireryTwIira sit?\ He assenW 2 SaW t te,' , ^ajor, the lie on which you'.sit come from the Upper ssonj?^fe%tadJ}e, that .surmounts Km, came - i, -t ™«I<-J.» it —-' m Trenton/New Jersev; the hat on jour head L i ,«KI« TO* iWasLmade in l&nbm% Wnectikfe; -t ^ %6ots valuable, to* l^^ feW;^^ % JmehofMBrslurtialrishiand Boston made it %p '{. y^brMd%to#cbat.f% t&rmmtriHui- thM and was cot.in.$% T*r*t ^d, to-flay, if ^WBuraender jiBQ&«> &•**>* •«—^Unwh •• l-l-.-B-l ' y*oa*rji»e;tlia '*d—v-dUorth,\ ehed in ^I'tSeiB'value, , , arPc|e|i|d>^^f^«^g : -SaS&W^Pp 1 -^ V-^'l Onegrelt factIs 'pateW^^r5to.irVt^ ! |W6a^'M^'^9W»^ k W> 8 \^^ e nou^h^o'«»us*to*^2^ atfjBia. 'of kfay.-fliia??^ te%Mm ffiiMWUSL*, <wu,h^ai'earJ>*P^S™..« n huard 1 „r J»ai s '&medbv-ffid«der; or.It One _ ature wholdoea not own fit^f stares :r^and Tjie (am- atitufion also provides;tiat:-nov amendment shall be njade to that inBtruo»wt'*i»s» *»ill for that Js»urrifiB9 shall iaive passed «i » general sssemMj Iby a; tte«e4BSs #«oi\«H tomBttttwrtlitsJ®© &Tb8*Sroato^ss tspptovsa.i *~~ \ f the \ - '-- \> •—.\ \— .; ... , ... .. fV-Pr^iica Att&ui 'eftff\ tho l^trirjl-iybjffir.: tia'eni -)t»\ •Cniui'SOTlrJb;Csir*-£e.T- B 8- . . «i--B.-E.^ ' • . WtG llAKER,,, • ; \ vWjtit jtiasifi,, ogriffwsrMii - - -. i ; ersonrfs iosJs' put?-'- •\'- ' '~-\\< an-#»,'Pt!>.iH'T65i«,Co,t<iB-JBriil-'. tstii.'pn e»--l'\r OW,ile.-W 644**, ar* l^mgitji»-6oii3hl-'-r'it4tM-m >^i&. *h»n)f>; • . .• '..'Pfiv-! -. - <5dkbSGu a <d3,'/ba3 a* e^o •ttoojaslnt; antr\'\'. *- •'•: ;,. •', \.. . i Lucaije,\*.' .\. '',.,. hicaiia 'pf presiding, fox 'vj-,(jaia6;:to-cliiiin. 1 .\Buthavp^ou.thi ticrS\^ \' '• '••--• ' j - *• '• ' \iftaJe.rd^tluiJ 'W>?c, bntrn«rfTJb*,vjp. Pprft t',bcwui\. 't.V, ' -£-• '••>*' ' .* > -'•' ' •5 Ob, how eijod jtoil ore, James 1 - . ,-•. • \'^rfcll let toset-,nly boy,\ eald the magistrate , ,„. - •--„-«-» CASSOX VtruwtM* , . • ligaiaVd PowderOs,,\/or aWeoy i \ Cen«r>l SapeHfiteniebt. i??».l>Owiitt,Tr»v.A S !!at. Uarca3S,-l«5t. \ f nrietWU. AH dUffaej et theT«rtti, .- J VK*. trfateit in thismo»v ,*»M««W niMMr. ^ tftm Office,»b4vi»t«** •i.iw*''li'fc«' oW «*? ,l . a * tMl * *• -~»j In tte-B*..l#wsir»e» E; Office, 4CDSOK BU3Clt v *0'a.t>-ST : '; , ' (QverTHOnrwa's Bouriet Koorai-L pt.'filSWwllt r* 1 \ Potadam »> the. H<n% ^t^^-'yAS^zOe^A^i^J^^^S^ «'T4.;. C ^iidi.»posldto-ttoari they lean tor , nwruauweield watbM,-graved with-1 ........ -,»„.., » . v .~. cr - -«, T , -_ ,. - r IS^'iaUw a portrait of,his young p uf!, who- !* I *t> w pMV mother died of » bad o»a« tt < fo I i«Mer'^««ppjf «* *1.«A'l\»\<» t»*rt.ln5J*foi>_ * ^ ve l£ co] i J b ?me ^ W» twtaj^ \ inliitarjf oipvement, \ ... .... . — .,.»...«i^^m . A Oe»v*»t w Win**** !^«^^S^1§S ^i?^^S^^H^1^«. v^i m . *.- **cw4 variety:'\ ----- ... , v , .. . h Ontns,. Month, and •-•\\ •• AbseTf<-<t:- », ri e?shtorfiWiu* -aitiokceFty • ^fi.-^puon wnng ^ m-it) CHAiM.»s asiiLKT. Of TH-*ral SAIESMAS *»'«»' fc.CVl»- Sl-HVBIflStt. I THE SUBSCRIBF.R il A VTNfJ HAD «o5id«r»ble *n>-Hence in 9n,8T.fyin^ land in the South (*\\' M. Lawrence»anty\ T HVTED -—AS IcXFEBIEHCED U I, T J 3S»Tl, «*»*»» » l* *%$*%''* vt %m ot, «\*« T AMMi . AS K.vrw\* _ _, ^ ^ r to- ,, alh4 | M ciwftot«h»<}<>unj]r. ttutti|B ^^^^ t,*»r0»,io8f, r.aa-s-1 YV OOdlll SaKanan, who ea» f>v» r^,** «re»ce«. -&~ Address \Box Uo, <**«*»'«*• AFtU 14, 1351. L«-tt] l x - -TW£ PK*t3l?, At; . ' A lie* .Wlip'j-- ^t*? In tk 'iSir& of th*art,a.ti*o'^l i *P«r aa*hl»Wy .ofWWientedVcSr «*!• •» »»'««<• ° r . HITCHCOCK, TILL0W0* A »m.W«ll» Nana IT, 1SB, f*oobte. .ThenI^^MwfflW*\ 1 artisan, and when I kfww • good tra* } *^T W«- »«*: Inrormed Upon good authority that •Uinfirrp Junckcr.has dosed an arrangement by I the order of Pweunt? Vtm pott my »i»ter. I \<*» »n apprentit- •*- , ^*o f maker. Ever* *jt«*«» ^ryhw *£ suy dinner, and at niAt.l took h*g«** 7 \™ t t room, »\d»h« slept'*» my l^**T J ' I „'l!?Lv e Z floor. *»tiUp^«lS**** «$&• pirirheiit \w\ \»n ., --.-... .. . t Ae BBnfioWexbtt3»n especial vrrtttfe PeruapS any . othej-plant- of as rapid growth tajd a vogctalion ['-ai luiunant #0ul_d-Jiivd dohothe sawe good work \a devourtag thomalarloiis poisons given forth by. tie drying of thesoU. ; Set we rhay bo eiire,wh«n Se .experiment is- known, tltat tho sunfif;»ter will bi testoredtti favor.atiil through iaprop&ylaetre wrtpes perhaps .regain its fame aa tie queto of Twij have not space to discuss the »g«ncy of ikes in sweetehing and purifying tbe spring* of water which run where their root* penetrate. The miracte of Moses at the bitter fountain ot Marah ii typical of tha course which wfll restore, not tjierely the How to wells which have become dry, fut the sweetness to wells which have become \rard and Brack**. A city mppued with trees ,nd parka, howsvor flat and low lt» nite, will not . • fci^- -r ^-S&nrttent'annual demand ? e ^J^^!llAloh«irthe«ntt6a States «! togd^wa«cega»J &fe amongmtay ^tas. ^?TSm%mixta i#fe»-«H *» M ^3it^f *wfa remaining.',If fto. : raw 'of ^^Ll^eKoTbnSmeae«thafcetitoy^ Sfte soa pi ' Atdci,and itsioble trlw»sirOB«g t Smer/Uke^cheloa s iand .iCephtaaS* to ^.SbMokT ItisiashonabB tomW, W tM%TSSwi of this kind as toM*. «« . Katahdin or th«^ eM L Wl ^^SSl conviction that there is «W «n0u£ teft .*} *^ North«n«#oni to supply the ^\*.*™ toaAoussndjeaW. *• ™£SlZX2S** f^andflpm^^^^taXrSSo fwndmhewrsa ^ lw ^^° lng p tl c e of pf.speediagatlnedhy:lhdT|tl&~o> Mv&^r.t«e\| 'siu^oYlnBteBaehtall^bftJie %a^iSTO,'k«6ljr,r ;<to Mvaiti%e for/tliktime b$m^«nd 'toltfteJiiture prophesy amooth things. .— _- - ^r-_,«•„, Fuelis.premoniUon which ^g^f^SLS heed, TbeprobabUityofanyt»ip<>rt«n* <J '?^^ If the coei tooom^ve. *<mj^^S& Dodoobt 'spe'e| beyond ~~ . ,.,^.. y .» . _ T .^ _, motlpn. To; compel I^im tpdmwmore; thanhe, *ari ^a>By dr^w r injures his vaiue.alsa, It is, ecpn- omyiarid wisdonijas weB^s humanity and wewrp, tocitoylfehiloaisrortho r teaai. .. .-\ ' * \tf a person wishes to travel mthe me oi tea miles an hour, ho should have anj animal that can transport him «i«^ at that ratej-and not keep » horse that cwnot easily go more th»n eight apt* an hour, and force him to ten mites an hoar, '<** a whip. The continual snapping of the w>^» M ' cites and worries * horse. Some peraotw!•*** so nowise and inhuman,—have so littla A>o»ledge of economy, tnd are so ignorant of ifcek own In- terests, as to think it moreprofltaW**' *i*x»7 and cheaply provide for the hot***** <•>*• .«*• to work or speed with the whip. »«n to spare the whip and increase the feed^ ,»- w**k made a valuable TohWMe to the Mfek peip1%'1alu1ieiaerd''-ati J S 1ojt-^, i; ,. . . \ *h<)W flualifioatiott tor -a.'wiWr- m the Senate, ''wa4iSdt>fth»*« ! ^fi f «*T otei D * S5 *> ^tlie^tS&rai i«» ! te^6,-wft«flj«tih> .iHfteleQfJpn,* S'IO.TAA \I - : -- • uouuuttfiWiBgS feaSKMStt anrrnqsea % },»««-. ill to'=ti*el>'««e»'' « MB n«)*%ngfes», tWs, Weare gl«d to fatiw is.* aisJSke, Ife was trdl ^noMfcfoxnike* Jelling spsecli at the recent doabtless, ba- t t his post, la. Washington : ia Oe, eemnezi* lodge \vv*. Z. asart has retried his seat on the Supreme Bench of Indito*. Hon. Stephen A. Do*!**, of nimois, voted U Mi^iSflii, Wiecoopia, «> the llth inrtaot, en route for St. Paul fer Bon. Caleb Cuahi. [donation of some ft a J^^?w«h. rz****, [»***, ****** Daniel Hece decKoes te i» ft Judge of tbe Oswnt Court oili JiWS In one ,nW?* *«: °*+*** forin«oe»\.*l(ei *•* OgUll^psa^v* — -T~ • ^ «««*ftai