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\ ms, imam payable quarterly by | .' _- f, _; L. \ a fo eus ' 11-1? H af‘\ arh oot or ApvEREIsIEG ° -> ; with Pabers® 0 . $20 P ayafile gfilfiflfilfly) . o- “flail“ _n P my ®! Top. j | - THE-SUMMER SEORM. § ‘Wfimé‘exééufié’é’inmfi‘gshgfl notice: | < conopnmmemizai. * Lat asjow.cates as car be diam-mfi‘my and | \Tjs coming fast, 'tis coming fast, ; £3153“ “$55,375? not inferior.. | - The ecogling summer storm ! The big black clouds fly feeting past, And 'the afr is murk and warm. All still ! all still! yet see afar How the pine-tops bend and wave, And the winds that storm their emerald bar, In the dim distance rave. Creepingy creeping, through the wood, . O'er the green and unshorn grass, With rusfling sound and voice subdued, ' Sprites of the tempest pass. ° L500 oto m'i Sg me 7. ‘ r 000 MB.\ a - g 20. & - sCOME AND TAKE (mM-wnee \ tue 2 Ad $ ; ao m on i cARL as et § V (g en £ OIL . 1C\ XUESDAY, JUNE 22, 18947., r?- «F‘ 2- 2”... ‘fiA 45 ~- . . * g\ v + gaff-55711 anhafigigpt Tove for his country ; but his patriogiém: shouldn't fuduce-tim 'to eat of it with his porridge and pota- tock; ‘fiéithérfiiij’p‘ld, he have such an gt- tachiment to \the soil of 'his birth as to 2 * a G COHOES, ALBANY COUNTY, N.\ * A FEARFEL HISTORY ,- .: The following is fhe histoty of eight | 'Fantities inong fown, the heals of which used ~~ |_ =- (| Tho first had *a deughter -|: take \pride in carrying a cart-load of it : A. grcit.squm. was expended- on her edy- |. into his neighbor's domicil. : Clganliness; 'is ag necessary to the health of the body | eatiqn. She died front th : effects of strong | ¢ 'as pare virtue is 40 thio. welfare of theldrials\ 2000 f C Co T THO T) je nC % mind-or soul; if you choose to call'it-| \The second 'had anonly son. He wasi while the little plant that grows unbeed- | and he that neglects it commits 'a heinous | educated with great care 'and at a great'; ed at Gur feet, is just as, wonderful as | crime, inasmuck: as he is a self- murderer | expence, but. wis Iifled. by wine. - Asif cither-and a terrapin thore so. © | -| by omigsion-a defacer, ayo, demolisher| _ The'ghird had. four sons,, and one{og ~My friends-you needn't go to sea to of the beautifil temple built for him by daughter. | The dangliter is a drunkard, [ see wonders; but stay at home, look a- | Omnipotencé, which it were the worst | and one son has gohe to the bout you, and you will see enough to sur- | kind of sacrilege for him. to ~You l grave.\ = ~~ > «oad fp s myn prise you, if you but go to the expense | are surrounded Gy friends,. with conveni-] \ 'The fourth of a few thoughts. The links in the] ences for performing daily ablutions ; and | ine .matter-he can't make fire, (although he, imagines he ean,) .and neither-can -he. make water. - The fact is, we have been so daily accustomed to the wonders of Nature from our childhood upwards, that \ we look upon them with a cold .and care- less eye. Some of the less common of these command more attention. ° We' be- hold a rainbow or 'the gurora-borealis, and we exclaim, That is wonderful! - $c.8 foco . IK TANCY.AND STAPLE \ G49 9005. __ -COa.Remsen street, 24 \door below Oneida -street Kespy'Sobstantly ow hand 'for sale a geheral-as- | sxtinent! f to -which 'the. attention of V ~~. $pfiJe' 16;fo gsilyéry veil ._ >. . |: __ down to earth from Heaven s, I With horky edge dnd tasiles pale, 'By lightnmge wildly rivers. The big bright rain comes pattering now \Fo the earth through swaying leaves, Emy dil mies ogly ond leiter.:\\ ** 6 had three song; One died of intemperance, ond was killed in a du- , No-zéither can you, you fool\ & . - r}? woes, SAaseh onlt maf dos a pe ~ LLCITOR IN] CHANCERY, -Now I reckon L-can you fool.\ # L0 | _ . CouppS Niv ._ @Oregr J,. Store, corner of Mohawk i* ~* . and Oncida streets. , noon 5 t s MILLER & VANSANTVOORD, e nggm CsinicEnyy eqfHors, N. v. > J. VansaxTvoorp. + .C, F.GOSS, - Iffive on Remsen street,: next door to Hol- ister. & Co's Store, Cohoes. :~i ~' .J. D. LEOUFFMAN, \ AND DEALER IN zou ¥ Er err.\ » wn. as Pollen, mo R a H. W. SHIFFER, crsson to Joun G. Yak Scnoonpoven iggist.-# Apothecary, 3 \REnglislk Drugs and Chem- Handkerchief Ex- foaps andCosmetics, = ALBANY. aos and Family Recipesaccurate» * & RoBEins, Emil and English Cloths and Cassimeres KEEP ON HAND ., Se a a £0. - . which they will make to order at short notice 'Of Remsen street, 3d.door above Oneida street, Cohoes: . H.R. HAWKINS: . DRUGGIST & APOTHECARY. Deatér in Paints, Perfumery, Brushes, Fan-. - Acticles, &¢.,.corner Mohawk andOneida © streets, Coahaes. ~. A. L. PHELPS, _- Barber & Hair Dresser, Shop in the basement of the Cohoes Hotel. + Ce irina i rme fdlh . H. A. & G. R. BENTON.: UGTION & VAxIGTY s¥ORE, ? «No. 3189, & 291‘JRivrér street. Troy. _ HURD & KENDRICK, 4 : ~~ Realers in Fancy and Staple Dry Goods, store on Mohawk sireet, opposite T. Ken- , & Son's. f =-- &. G. LAWTON & CO,, - PDeaters in Teas, Molasses, Sugar, Coffee, a Spiges, Pork,. Lard, Hams, Butter, Fish, Sait, P 37‘ny Beans, Nuts, Fruit and 'all kinds Bird - Heed. No. T4 1-2 Congress street TROY. JONES & SOUTHWORTH, ._ Dealers in Fancy and Staple Dry Goods, Gro- deries, Crockery, Glass ware, Boots and Shoes, Remsen'st.. Ist door below Oneida-st. .. H. HOLLISTER & CO., te\ in Groceries,. Provizions, Wooden ain, &e. corner of Remsen and Onei- Al - Cohoes. | gag; aifle'? bf Mohawk and gactory sts. > _c BY R. <> metal- dad-ng efforts: will be: omitred to make Iris . Entablishment an ~a the © Above Oneida street. ** AW & QUACEENBUSH . Dealers in Dry Goods, Family Groceries Baits. Shoes, Rubbers, Caps, Yankee Notions Kr.. Remsen street, 24 deor above Oneida st Coloes - __ . _ __'_ d. 6. BURNAP, Dealer in Fancy and Staple Dry Goods, Gro- egries, commer of Mohawk 'and 'Oneida. st C2 CT,. KENDRICK & SON, lers - in . all kinds Groceries, Provisions Pealer in Pry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, €atlery, Glass Ware, Mohawk street, 2d door €QHOES HOTEL, K>J WELLIAM®. _| . This Hotel has recently «been 'éplarged 'and foprictor is prepar :d to accommodate Par- F Pleqsure.and the Traveling Public in ge- ment an agregable and Dl¢3§a§P home to ; OLMSTED & CO., s ods,\ Grocéertes, HartWare, €, &o., Mohawk street, Ist t Mill, Colioes., TL & w. B. FRASER, ecs ang. Blank Book Manufacturers, --* BiG ___ -__- ik '.. ta win TROY- «Music and Periodicals bound in every variety Bioding. __ . A; SNYDER, | _. ndi-nt Goal.\ Also- Rig: Iron, gand Sand, Aggofiffiflf and Western Plaster, | OF a Front; below\ Troy aem urethane . 262 thet Cetera diana ered a 1 And over wood and drippi‘nihi“, ed, > 1 And through the lids of the snowy cloud, . The sunbeams slant in silver bars, | their investigation, they went directly to {Alps, the Andes, the Appenines, - the | Rocky and the Himmelah mountaims, are like rams.\ mystery. | There was no rain before the philosopker, and now they are so far 'tamed as to run upon errands, even for 'A the humblest serf of the soil. Never- : mystery now, as ib was in the beginning. are we led to wonder at the astonishing works of Omnipotence. 'Why, the proud | but \foolish atheist, who asserts that a Rower makes itself, can't even begin to And leaf or flower, with upraised brow, God's benisen receives. 'There are tiny circles in the brook, - And its wavelets dance and flash, ; As the boughs, that on. its bosom look, ~ A mimic shower dash. There's music where the rain-drops fall, _ Qn the wet roof pattering thick ; On the hollow tree, with its mo=sy pall, 'Fhey are beating loud and quick. . But see, there gleams a yellow light -* Faint on Lb? shrouded west, ' And the rato falls soft, as it grows more bright, And the-rack to the east is pressed, On the low brook's sandy Aslant on the waves of the gentile rill, . A mellow tint is shed, Like the glance of an angel's eye, It breaketh.out from its airy shroud The blue and lovely sky. Down through the fying wreath, And bright as the blaze of a million stars The rain-drops flash beneath. 'Tis gone, 'tis gone, 'tis past and gone, The gentle summer rain, And bright and warm on his western throne The san smiles down again, Froot the N. Y. Sunday Mercury, PATENT SERMONS. BY DOW, JR. My text is taken from Psalm evii;: 23- Who go to sea in ships, and in Great waters trading be, Within the deep these men God's And his great wonders.see. ° My hearers-those who go to sea in ships, or out of a ship as Jonah did, have a chance to witness some very wonderful wonders. They may there see water spouts, infinitely larger than those attach- ed to the eaves of- our houses ; and spout- ing whales, far more monstrous, in ap- pearance, than those \whales for spout- ing\ that live upon the land-and sharks too, equally as voracious as any in Wall or State streets. The three wise men of Gotham, who went to sea in a bowl, had as good a chanee to examine the wonders of the deep as those who put out in ships; for, not content with merely skimming the surface of the object of the bottom, and saw what none of us havo seen, nor ever care to see, but what we all must, sooner or later, see -Death. My hearers-the wondrous. works of God, and the evidences of his almighty ower, are manifested everywhere-upon the land as well as upon the ocean. The proféy extensive works in their way: a- | bout as tall specimens of terrestrial ar- chitecture as you generally see. . We-read that, in olden times, \mountains skipped This is wonderful indeed ? Why. such huge monsters should have | been allowed to perform hop-waltzes and come their antics in the destruction of human life and the demolition of mole- hills, is past my understanding. But many of them, as we plainly see, have been made. to smoke for it, and they keep comparatively quiet and sober: notwith- standing every now and then one of these big b'hoys breaks out in a new spot, and appears still determined on being \bound to blaze.\ Water, too, is a great won- der. By what process it could ever have been manufactured is an unfathomable fall of our first parents; noy until sin and iniquity had filled the land. Then Heay- en wept for the wickedngss of man, and drowned the world with a flood of tears ; and the Angel-of Pity hax continued to cry ever since for the viegs, follies, and errors of us all. Lightnings were first behold, with wonderment, to play about the awful summit of Sinai-after which they were sported with by an American theless, brethren, lightring is as much a The more we experiment with it, the more make the simplest of flowers. He can't works . stilt: great chain of Nature are curious gud interesting to observe-from a toadstgol up to the tall cedars of Lebanon-from a worm up to a woman-from a moth up to a man. No two of uis are formed alike, either physically, mentally or morally- our thoughts aré different, and our habits are different; but our propensities are all the same: every one enjoys such car- nal pleasures as eating, drinking, and kissing -the latter being a kind of des- serg, not- essentially négessary, nor neces-. sarily unessential; but if is good, any- how. So, nations differ in complexion, traits of character, habits and pursnits; and, as for bringing all mankind together into a bond of unity, as some of oir mo- dern reformers are trying to do, you might as soon think of forming an association among the hawks, doves, crows, and rob- ins-causing them all to build nests alike and none'to. take advantage of another in obtaining a subsistance; | Such is the incomprehensible wisdom .of Profidence -wonderful, indeed, when we come to why and wherefore about it. Nations, societies, and circles will differ, as well as individuals ; yet it is all for the best, as: the old woman said when she saw a bull- fight. oo My hearers-it is eurions and mafia\; little astonishing to yiew the vast ma- chinery of the universe. The wheels of nature continue to roll with the same ve-: locity as thousands of years ago,; and, want of greasing-the pendulum of fime regularity-the planets, W r lites,; never grow weary in waltzing round their suns-and not a spot or blemish can be found to mar the apparently. new- ly-painted and varnished structure of creation. The.carth is as fresh and youth- fal as when she was first pregnant with Adam-the eye of old Solis as bright and piercing as ever-and the bald-head- ed Moon gets on very well without a wig. In short, my friends, there are mysteries and wonders, whichever way you may look-whether into the sea, upon earth, 'or to the heavens above. - Everything is a mystery, from a catérpillar to a king; from a king to the King of kings. But the time will soon come, brethren, when all these will cease to be mysteries to you. -when your grubs will sleep in a ctysa- lis state, till you come forth upon butter- fly wings, to flit among 'the never-fading flowers of immortality, So mote it be. . ls a . on CLEANLINESS. Tr:xt-You love your country mother earth ; Of this I cannot doust' you-- The soil is rich ; but, from your birth, Why carry it about you ? My Hearers-inwardly and outwardly you are more or less filthy. The scarf upon - your hearts is tantamount to that upon your heads and other portions of. your skin. Some of you appear to be as clean as a dog-licked platter upon the outside, while within you are as foul as an old musket. You, once a week at least, seem to take a great deal of pains to rid: yourselves of, exterior dirt, but care not a straw for the moral mange that infects the interior of the soul's ha- bitaties. ' But, my hearers, I regret to say that not a few of you are as careless of 'the spiritual portion. In fact, I have knowl- edge of two or three members of my church whose persons are so located with sOIL that I wonder weeds don't grow in the place of whiskers, and hop-vines flourish in lieu of hair. Such men can never enjoy anything more than a coun- terfeit happiness in this world ; for it is impossible to be happy without first feel- ing comfortable-and how, I ask, can a man feel comfortable with dirt enough about him to attract and support toads, bugs, muck-worms, and ground- mice? No, these folks must feel as un- easy all through life as I would feel in a bed suspected of fleas and flavored of chintzes. If they die in their filth, they will be filthy forever; but, instead of their being allowed to bedaub the costly furniture within the walls of salvation from the ramparts to march downward to the tune of \Go to the devil and shake yourself.\ e make carth--he can't make vegetable toy Meera ce I“; mus My friends--I like to see a man en- they never squeak upon theivaxis for the,| and fro with its wonted | with their slime, they will receive orders ; yet. rather than spend a shilling or take go about wafigy, sickly and drooping; relying in vaiy:upon pills and the wrong: sort of piety, when nothing under the. canopy of heaven is wanted but soap, cold water and a clean shirt, to make you feel as though 'you' belonged here. My friendse-nof a little of our boast- emigration ; wh of it is car- ried, to foreign shores by those who are too dirty and thzy to obtain a decent and permanent livelihood anywhere. © Oh } that a mighty Ganges rolled from pole to , pole, anér.;that§5ggl,_vyeré possessed of. just | enough rusty religion, 'combined with suf- ficient \superstition ' to compel them to bathe daily in its waters, for the purtfi- eation 'of both.body and soul! The bap- tismal fount was ordamed for a. quality | of purpose,; 1:1qu would recommend cer- tain of my cofigregition to turn Baptists and suffer the wholesome horrors of im- their.lives. - Sgour up your morals-ap- souls- find Cleanse yourselves thoroughly | from theoutward skin to the of tha heart. You must begin now; for hen Death galls po time to wgh your feet, cut your tog nails, and pufon a'cleam grub of holiness. He will tike ¥ou as he finds you, though you. were ngger so filthy. Take eare tbat you be mot found , more fit for the celler kitther, righteous arinthe flowers of endless joy and love. So mote it bef < 2.00 . j . «HINTS QN MATRIMONY. No woman will be likély to dispute with us when we-assert that marriage is | her destiny. A man may possibly fill up some sort of an existence without loving ; but a woman with:-nothing to love, chér- ish or care for, and aninister to, is an an- omaly 'in the universe, an existence with- out an object. It is as natural for a wo- man to have some one to look to for ad- vice and -agsistance as to-breathée. With- out-it no woman was ar ever can be hap- py. . It is the want of her nature, and nothing can satisfy her heart with such a void unfilled. : we Now, with the exeeption of some occa- { sional irregularities in the relative pro- portions of the sexes, produced by cir- cumstances, Such as the settlements of new countries, there is no reason why ev- ery man should not have a wife and eve- ry woman a husband; and, this would easily be brought about by. the exercise of more common sense and less ambition. bove its own sphere, - first. When he looks for a wile, the neat, industrious daughter of a mechanic like his father, is not good enough for him; he must take love to some fine lady who is one age in advance, that is, her grand- father was a mechanic instead of her fath- er, a very aristocratic distinction. - for her living, fool. Now this is all wrong-deplorably, Girls should know that men, superior to themselves in edu- cation and position, do not always asso- ciate with them for good. Men should know that by marrying girls educated in habits of life above their fortunes, they are not likely to have good wives. A lit- tle sound sense will enable any man to see that is better to have a wife grateful for more than she expected than rumb- It is delightful going up the hill of fortune; but horrible and ag- wretchedly wrong. ling at less. gravating work to come down. advantage of a Tew leigure moments, you ed soil is borpe higher upon the back of mersion, for thk sake of having said that. they have beef: washed, at least once in ply soap and your 'seurf- covered Bs for you, you -will have |P below 'than- for the grand andfesooned with thépam; |d Each sex is looking up for something a- The son of an industrious and success- ful mechanic, must be a profesSional man or a merchant, instead of following in his father's footsteps, and. this is folly the On the other hand, the girl who works | earning it by her honest labors, would not deign to encourage the addresses of a laboring man; she would set a cap for a gentleman, forsooth. The mechanic's daughter, educated on her father's earnings, ta be a fine lady, en- courages the attentions of a set of fops and danglers, who drive honest men away from her in disgust, and she becomes the victim of some sorry sharper or shallow el and the other is a drunkard. |__ ~ ''The fifth H4d one who killed himself by drinking, and two step-sons are drun- kards and on wing. | | ~ c; . 00.0 The sixth had five sons,. Two are dead through.infempérance, and another | is & drunkard. °\ ~\ e seventh had five sons. Four are; drunkards, aud orie through the influence: of liquors is an idjot.. . | tou lts . The eighth had five sons and thre: nephews. Four®of tlie sofs have been: killied'by alcohol the fifth \is a.drunkard and the three nephews are in. tho drun- kard's grave. | ° © < Thus the sin of # 6 drinking and its pun- sweeping many very many to a prema tare grave, and rendering many more & torment to suryvivorg. | > ~ ' wegen s -- Tas Youre xarroonixa!l -The Monthly Rose tells the following. very: good story of a young whaler in xantuck- | et. - No wonder the hardy seamen of that island ean handle, a harpoon. with such singular dexterity, when they begin so early in'life:- . ,C . e \\Passing : through Nantucket, last roached the half- opens? 83005, we beheld the following scene, which éxcited> our extent . - An urchin, some siz years old, h | . Loro Fave it \ -* ishment, go from parents to children |, visibility, at the time, to a considerabl withgreat severity nes near Fort Winnebsgos. .; i Wif'é‘b‘fefe ~ 'Well, we will put one 0 -guk bio --put three o's- pat: three 6'8 o's- put six o's-put sgveil , 0 (=s lo *a & al mol Laziness grows on in cobwebs -and ends in ston 6 more -pasiness a man hafifii’em able to «c. ie ~ A we' knows political 5694: \We py best, first those who. destr -genarales~-second~those-who che | - politicians «aid who , The; world is -| back to every man; onn faee. - Frown, look sourty'at you, # and it Js p. J€ so let all youn t summer,. we stopped at an.out-of- the; way | house for a glass of water. As we a -| Me: sickness prevails, and the .email p« th; reat severity among th TBE wi fastened a fork to the end of a ball % V QU ip a rue agit - er felt thesharp prick of, the fork, than darted off in a jiffy, while the, experimen- terr sung\ out-in high glte, 'Pay: out, mother, pay out: there she goes, throtgh the window \ \ Tus War.-The Richmond Republi- ean gives a sorry picture of the war with Mexico, thus: _ f Moes .~ \The halls of the Montezumas are now in full view, but neither Mexico nor our own goverument anticipotes that the na- tion will fall with the capital. Santa Anna is raising new levies, and the Mexicans evincing increased obstinacy. +: We are groping in thedark to find the vital part of Mexico. Where is it? No one pre- tends to know: All the while, she loses nothing by our empty possession of har cities. She can afford it well. War cannor. Time is everything with us -it is treasnre-it is life. - With every day we are losing men, losing money, and gaining what? - Nothing. - No ijndem- nity even. No more military reputation. All the flowers of glory: that grew in in 'the luxuriant garden of- Mexico Se » but .the thorns. And while we injure the enemy, we are inflicting a greater injury on ourselves: The giant has planted his foot upon the serpent's head, but the snake is biting his heel; and its deadly venom bids fair to diffuse itself through every vein and artery of his systen.\ Roxvanoss. -It is probable that, ot all the causes which have injured the health of women, the principal have been the prodigious multiplication of roman- ces during the last ' contury - From the cradle to the most advanced age they read them with an eagerness which keeps them almost 'without motion 'and-with- out sleep. - A young girl, instead of run- ning about and playing-reads, perpet- ually reads, and at twenty becomes full of vapors, instead of being qualified for the duties of a good wife or nurse.- These causes, which influence the physi- cal equality influence. the moral man. I have known persons of both sexes, whose constitution would have been robust, we weakened gradually by the too strong impressions of impassionate writings. - The most tender romances hinder mar- riages, instead of promoting them. Wo- man, while her heartis warmed by the languor of love, does not seek a husband; a hero must lay his laurels at her feet. The fire of love does not warm her heart, it only inflames her imagination. - Tissof. Nathan Dauchy, Esq., was on Tues- day elected President, and H. N. Lock- wood, Esq., Vice President of the Bank yarn which his mother was holding, whidhallief® | ho very dexterously aimed at an:old caff 40 Ber out TREES-A invite the birds to its -brangh 'have been culled, and nothing remains lieved, bas not been murdered .~ single treo \in front of yonr house megflfefflfififl Aols lowing benefits. - It» will Ancregsetlis value of your estate; it will affor for the children to play: it-it ‘ grateful to the passing stranger £ ' I So # repay you in rich gushes. of. taste, liberality and public. you not, then, do the simple deed secures these groat 'henefits ? : Now: season to \prepare for your trees and select , your, posthfon® Steroe places the planting of thotres amongst thefour cardinal yistugs..~ | a7F Ty - ((3°An immense Felescope fir the National Observatory . has, arrived from Bremen;and. is fo be put up Ammediately at Washingfion. - We may , expect 0 fixfller interesting agfrononiical fromghat quarter, as soon. as | tf . instrument gas, m oper ati $ ane \ Lieut. George H. Derby, attdélicd to Gen. Scott's divisioh of the army Mox ico, -and wounded in one of the &¢tom there, arrived in Boston, still suffériag under the effect of his wound. ~~. ..' a\ Inprana anp -Effortanre now being made, and which, we'heliers, will be attended with entire-sne * the clearing of the credit of the&i tes, from the disgraceful which it was plunged by Loco extravagince, speculation and misrule, and ultimatély for the payment of their debts. - Father Rey, it is now cdhfidegflj be- by the x 20% Mexicans as reported. O'CoxxngLt ter from one-of Mr. O'Connell's attend- aunts, dated near Rome, to the papers in Ireland, speaks with hope of his réturn- ing health. .ll. \ 5-3» The politest man in the world is the eaitor of the N. O. Jefféer§6nian. Accused of kissing an old maid, hide» clared upon his honor that he never saw one. tou. The Machinists of Boston are taking measures to induce their employers. to adopt the ten hour system of work. . Thirty-niné yeéi‘s agmgfi’iy one house, and that a log one, occupted -the present site 'of the city of Rochester,the pres- ent population of which is about twenty seven thousand . > J Tom Thm‘£‘1§9j§fit of the Philadelphians in 22 days, by dh 6x. - ‘4 of Troy. hibHfica:of his groat lttieness. Noe 3