The New York Herald Newspaper, May 6, 1858, Page 2

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NEW YORK ‘HERALD, THURSDAY MAY 6, 1857.-QUADRUPLE SHEET. x a ADVERTISEMENTS SEMENTS. ADVERTISEMENTS. ADVERTISEMENTS. ADVERTISEMENTS. i sehe } of 4 PAPAL SDLP AAAS nner WME DYING GIRL TO HER MINSTREL | Portemouth folks, and we have made the fo sowing a HOME FOR ALL, ph ad poor, 8 peiereh cont, Eageive.” RALPH, THE BRICK-MAKER'S BOY. THE DIAMOND BREASTPIN. whic! work toa \—we are cio , hal hink — ecg to takethe Winthrop, and when the other crew is BY MRS. L. B. SIGOURNEY. Pag ia ais ‘was not your + oe BY 7. 8. ARTHUR, BY @RORGE D. PRENTICE o bre Fergie be oar bs x — boree that aid thin ” [From the New York Ledger.) “It will cost two hundred dollars, Anna!” [Prom the New York Ledger.] “Ti tell "you? retuned Paulin, ‘I've kept this ists “yp mapcani “ That's just the p'int I wanted to 'xpiain ‘Bquire,” Fass . | George Blakely to his 4 oer nil Sone matter to myself, because T didn't want it to leaks “and every mam wert unio his own hoxse,” sarwored Uncle ee gy eet, 4 ands it = De ene decom fare a yea ae bare; i The tone iy mich ne ald ts showed th i fi 4 jORN vr, 62a. + J 5 Bad ara Py ho SE are tne midnight rain, a at Poe eet Winthrop will ieyto of ‘The king unto his palace proud ode I vome up here, I should a ‘told ’em all abaout | But Ralph, when he a white — to wear, “T know it will. But what are two hun all Palle op yo -and love's dear years again the extreme northern point of Salisbury beach. She Returneth from the tlirone,— it, The fact is, ‘Bquire—'[For the rest of this amuse | Plays in the mortar, and shapes it to pots, lars for @ diamond pin?” Mrs. Blakely’s voice | Qn memory throng. will ron ont from th abont ton, 00 as to be The noble to his castle hoar, ” ing wtory cee the New York ietee for May 15, | ‘That is his mother's house over the hill balf contemptuous. “Mary Edgar's diamonds sure and hand by midnight. We will al The peasant to his doce which is now out and for sale by all newsdealers.) Wit ° Patch, (tke window, t; | over'a thousand dollars.” ce The music of the past mann careadiome atte Snir tne (thee teas The monk to cloister fone.” ~ | antpame pitgher ov decte at his wil” | . “Just one thousand dollars more than her husbai over a with our mo ¢ jone. is her , and sets at Somes Aosting round me~ aus) young fancy Yring® | on onr shoulders, and be reaidy to board her as F000 Wenelitinbaetah ia A Needed Lesson. ; ia the soft bricks, the prints of his bare little feet. | could afford to pay for them,” said Mr. Blakely, h Crean Eee gen Cry om ber witgp as she comes.” The tastor Lo his camp, Once in & few months the city is booked into | poo sou) ane j ‘ Aiea ana ald, ‘He’s the best Judge of that, I presume,” retorts bright to last. “ find all the arms smd ammunition The AeA on Sno 30 Fe es night transient excitement by the perpetration Same bere ae ‘ na bowels ma areata be a yy male + ignify. You'can affor ” Y tote ene ne Dow that d the years aboard Of her,” suggested Gardiner. That flecks the forest green with white, tarethie gpd, pireadots age Sere ste cot | For herself, since no neighbor has need to be told FYeannot, Anna?” Bo hife’s young m gi with blessed ray, Everything,” said the captain. “ All we want ‘And neath ita she! ner’s investigal public mind is kept in a st What ber dertine han bane? mn haste ! a . e Bot s00n, too soon, ite beauty melts away to take with us is our clothing. We shall take her jer sleeps. of feverish excitement; but this eoon passes samy, r 7 aunty enough, spare! ‘What do you do with your money, pray?” in clouds and tears. just as she stands, and in a couple of weeks her ‘The Greenland bunter scoops a cel and the murder is only remembered by the Low down on the limbs of the prickly sweet-brier Right Bs fe Seraed Sharnhy, upon ber huswan! 1 may not hear that tone crew will take our vessel, So, ye see, we'll not only Beneath incumbent snows, ef the victim. No lesson seems to be taught by the Are handfals of roses, bat still he will push one ne Yay Bue thie pnt pe 5 into a rath ©f mournful mastrelsy ‘Tis well! this Englishman, but we'll help our friends ‘The son of Afric to his kraai, horrid event, though, if she-saamg mee aad women His cheek through the thorns for the one red as fire i ay a tr mae Set, a ‘Alea! that eaxthl agin well! ortsmouth at the same time.” The Indian to his wigwam frail of the city would ponder upon facts elicited, That grows out of reach, at the top ef the bush. 0 A aid be eran é vA tones ever swell ked Weeks. With cane like roof tree goes. would find in them leséous of commanding im- "i ), very well,” said her too yiel busband, | So wild and Jone. beon board. We shall - Nearly every victim of murder becomes | Sometimes the old britkmrker, sunburnt and bent, last, ‘‘ go to Camfield’s to-morrow an: gt the pi Minstrel, I love thee now and leave there about half The eagle knows his eyried cliff, @ victim through indiscretion, or the gratification of | _ Will tug him about on his shoulders awhile, Tell im to send in his account on the first of Jan As firet I Joved thee. In this raven hair we'll go.up the river to old Kent's, ‘The lion loves his Jair, depraved tastes, This wag not the case with the | Whereat growing restless instead of content, | ary; and it will be paid. 1 twine, aa thea, thy favorite do iooatne in his gondola, and from |. The beaver builds his lodge of rest, r victims referred to in tt’s new story in| He scarcely repays the good man with a smile. rs. Blakely was in earnest. There was not o7 f u dade wers—| » ” Foxes have holes, and birds their nest, . The victims of Indian avarice of her fashionable acquamtances but bad a diamor an hour and a half. e Ledger. ey were 0 He makes of a stray piece of shel Ob! where art thou? the men, Adam Weeks ‘Where dwell the houseless ?— Where ? n yeree, le makes of @ stray piece of cedar a shelf, ring or breastpin, and until she was the owner: ‘The solitary star Tel an bag particularly delighted There is a mansion free to all, aig dinde anata, 0 Sp reo id be eb bean one or both, she could no longer hold up her bead | ‘That rose £0 ratty o'er yon monntain’s brow ‘goon as the meeting was over Ste- Whence none are turn’d away; Forgiveness, Hie Leeate then and tramplee down every one. | *ciety., Her husband was receivin r in a ban} © that biest eve of love—'tis rising now— P Burgess harried off to his sister's honse and Even those who ne’er had home before, The brave only know how to forgive; it is the : at a salary of fifteen hundred dollars per annur Bot thon art far. engaged her to watch the spy, after which he and Are_welcome iva unlock’d door most refined ‘08 of virtue human | From the time when the locust puts on the .ghite | when he married, which was about a year befor 1 dear Burgess went over to Plumb and saw.an old To enter in, and stay. nature can arrive ai have done good and masa : ‘ and he still occupied the same post, and at the sani anes Gh ones oe fisherman who lived there, and who was a Patriot of No fee of gold the lodgers pay. xind actions—cowards have even fought, nay,eome- | Of his odorous fumes, till in summer's decay, income. For a young mun in his position, he ha Secret we gazed ere love's young dreams were | the most palpable order. With bim they made In that sepulchral bower ; times conquered; but a coward never forgave: it is | His bright yellow jacket he throws on the grass not married wisely. The handsome face at And weep that dreams eo passing hpantifal such arrangements as they cht » and But ‘dust to dust,” on forehead white not in his nature; the power of foing it flows only | And braves the bleak wind—he is busyeach day. _ manner or @ dasni pelle nf ‘werP fabould fade 0 soon. Se erie 00> ae ene ee Dee Doth give each applicant the right from a strength and greatness of soni, conscious Of 1 4 know it ie all in his own willful way, gr ag ore ae ge eat . night when they reached the brig, but the old gan- Of mastership and power. its own force and security, and above ail the little | “ Yoy"sigh, aw I see him a working #0 hard was promptly accepted, an to the ma 1 wander on the spot ner kept on up to his sister's, whom he fi up, N this inidiates temptations of resenting every fruitiess attempt to | y;, ral ph ‘A hia apron ao heavy. with clay riage altar, not a true woman, to be transforme Where firet we met. The notes of early birds and who informed him thst Adam Weeks was at is hters robes a interrupt ite happiness. It ig well known, too, that | “fy (Anan ADO oe PS we oat ie dhe yard) into a true wife, but a weak, capricious, vain cre Bri) float upon the air, bat thy sweet words— that very moment with the Tory Belkaap, having noerenas ars . mt 5 the Indians never forgive; and, dear reader, although y yeu ture, incapable of genuine love, and too selfieh ar Thear them not. i ae about an hour before. eth he ain me rae eae? a light, re may fo ive oa, meh ve Foeay ld ae we vi My heart vel ey iy beth rac oitiral ay er ee to feel the influence of honorab following morning Harvey Lang, the © : ae fort fact, read Emerson Bennett's ‘our thoughts in a n 80 D, “ My hfe is ee ee eth thie breath Plumb Island Saherman, came Over and visited. the Bi ge binge sel panmaneicne brig, ain story of Indian fe in the Ledger. Reflecting, I'see in the brickmaker's boy” An extravagant love of drese and ornament ch Bias ing now, and the low wind of death brig. He told the captain that he had kep? a care- ed * - ee A type of the work and the wisdom of men. rece, her from the beginning, and she wou wen : fal watch through the night, and that at about two SR ff Sin Rta ‘The Ledger on the Sabbath Qnestion, hearken to none of her hnsband’s gently offered r URE PA o'clock three men had gone off to the sloop-of-war, UNCLE JOB IN COURF. Under this caption the New York Evangelist ‘A Gift-Enterprme Victim. monstrances. Nearly half of his income she epet ‘Tie well, and I have come one of whom he was sure was old Belknap. Whea =e says:— ° SaREMsBUNG, Apri a, 1858, | AUTing the first year of their marriage, in dress ar To bear in silence. I can camly see he had made this report he started for the ‘sland BY COLONBL WALTER B. DUNLAP. ‘ course of Sp oechiar jowrtals op she Gabhetequase ‘Mx. Ronrnt BOWER :— ’ ’ Jevay: nce aa’ (aes re | blossom wi 7 again, he had nore duty to perform. ae tion, now so prominently delore the rublic, mue: be re- ho F. Todd & Co., of 202 Broome etreet, deman undged dollar breast! eee Then seek Cerone ‘copa AB soon as the shades of nigat had Pathered over | Joe Bassett was @ queer genins—“Uncle garded wih Syoly amerse: oy every feed. of oo, 2 mn0- Now York, $b cr one of their gold pencils avd gts, end | coming upon young Blakely, as it did, a a tn bye “ the town the men began to gather on board the brig, | everybody called him—and, though possessing ale. Vth few exceptions, their tone 's ail that could ©® | reseived » pencil worth $1 60, and a chain worth no wnen be just made the unpleasant discovery Minetrel, this mournful token and by hal-past eight the crew were all present. | very few of the goods of this world, yet he was one | i¢#ired. * * * The undinching advooncy of right prin- | being only a bronze thing. pencil was represented | a deficit in his income, when compared with his e° Of dove is thine—it is my heart's farewel!! + | Stephen Bureess was then sent on shore, and the | of the most usefal men in the town. If any ore | ©Pl¢s es to the Sabba:b, dy the New York Ledger, wi to de worth $6, and the chan worth $b; and seing it | penses, of reveral hundred dollars, sadly dishea | ¥ brave thee soon—oh! keep it asa spell captain and the old gunner took their sta‘iona near | wanted an odd job done, he was the man to do it. | fifedlasion ter outnamoere shat of —— ——. uy | nee stated inthe Ledger tkat the concern was broken | ened him. iiut he was not brave enough co me: Of Jove unbroken. feck gangway, to ether no one left the vessel. | In short, he was a sort of universal “Man Friday,” 4 —, dane 00 th we gol Teach | OP, Want to know if I can get my mine, = % partof it | the exigency, and, therefore, weakly yielded to poe NE ala Haif-past nine came, and Adam Weeks wished to | and for a consideration he would perform any work | ass divine and biersed ‘netitnt'on. ¢ pare RR lng Lh ve Tama young mas rivag | demand that should have been met by untlinch'r inset Haale wr met rae sate Moturned Cope, Pealin. “Tha ay rai bide SE ne ete Sard morale ob the grod.iateance of tach views, ciared | Swene-two, years of foe fon eerie, oa le mori, Be Janvary found Blakely short of fun “x ite yet,” ed Capt. Paulin. “ ve | low; as of f i. 4 enc sews, © and ba but wi for, judging fant vue YANK SxIPPER soe Deere gemteome nme | ce mee rae ce toad as | eeaeaaee | Se ere ieee amt | teen arkansas is 2 an; . He i 7 | the 5 iodd’s i. nus BY EYLVANUS COBB, JR. art we migbt be getting oar bags up,” suggested to —_ a cmaehed afew acres of got Pi, a Saimnes at Myst ot ete in the co- soyshin for poy ee “ ee ed lt m4 benseen i would not do te him to hold back | Week land; and le this &@ cow, and some 0 ns of & and influential religious paper 5 SPB: aunty, e matter of ment, for the jeweller was an a 3t wae in the early part of November, 1775, that |“ Walt till the mate comes. There will be time | items of stock. He lived quite comfortably, and the | like the Evangelist, because it shows that wherever | [4 Yours reepectfully, ADAM GOSSER. "| quaintance of ete than one of the directors of th the Yankee brig, Lee,” lay at one of the | 0ugh.” And witb this the captain turned and | impression had gone abroad that he had managed to | the Eyre er fe mnderstandingly mas it bd be ap- ree aie anal ¥ \ Tene and oe Eats Desa, and inference wharves harbor r si oke to hii '. lay up some money. reciated. Many peop! people, too— fe can do nothing for 5 _ Your money | drawn prejui to his s . o#an evil hou stout Nat per ea bad eg a pt aang eg “Ten o'clod came, and Adam Weeks began to ‘Captain Daniel Lober, who had recently settled vo have not Been in the habit of reading the | is gone, pastrecovery. Had you paid attention to | under tn ss of mind and strong temptation, tt net, just pacsed by the Continental Congress, for the | SbOw figns of uneasiness. At half-past ten Stephen | in tue town, owned a fine piece of land adjoining | Ledger, have su) d that it was a mere ‘ ye what we have repeatedly said in the Ledger, daring | young man made a false entry, which enabled hir ecmimissioning tamed vessels, Her guns andam- | B! came. Uncle Joe’s lot, and he was not long in making him- | paper,” and that in all ite articles it was light and | the past six or eight months, concerning “ gift en- | to abstract two hundred dollars trom the funds ¢ ‘munition were all on board, and a full crew shi 5 bs it’s the news?” asked Paulin, as bis mate | self very Siesgreedie 3 et yt wd Friday. ee ar hke other pay ee it in out bey er money pres ae ee bos ip | the bank. page , 2 : i i ame over the sii ‘was @ proud, sel person, and little mean withal. | w. be cairped w reesion is passing | foolishly wn away. now, m, let ns as t was only the beginning of a series of defa Ny. ey Rel Md ag The poate has hoisted his light,” answered | Uncle Toe had some geese and they ranupon Lober’s | away; the high mora! tone of the’ Ledger, the exalt- | you how any reasonable man could expect C. E. | cations which ran through many years before th ‘ance off the harbor, and lay-to there ag ahe = a land; upon which the indignant captain threatened | ed reputation of its well known contributors, the | Todd & Co., or anybody else, to give him a gold pen- | exposure came which always follows such a cour ‘would like to have some be come out and see her. “Then the coast t clear.” to shoot them if he caught them there again. practical and unmistakeably pure and healthy cha- | cil worth $5 and 5 yok chain worth $15 for asingle | of crime. |i was easier now to supply the extrav: J was a bitter pill for the Yankee crew. They had “ Of course.” «Ef ye'd make yer fence tighter my geese would- | racter of al) ite articles, and the care which is taken | “V?” Will any o Fed Greeneburg neighbors gant demands of his wife, whose annual wardrot received intelligence of the approach of Sele ” The boatewain was ordered to call a]! hand aft, | n't it through,” ms suggested poor Joe. that not even one offensive word shall appear in ite hae $20 for $57 Will you give anybody $20 for $5? | and bills for , for which she had that passiq Tia #tore ships, and had made up their minds aan and the captain addremed them as follow+:—jFor the i fence is as it a8 the law requires,” an- | columns, are gaining for it a position that no litera- it ae for anybody anywhere to give $20 | which Is teristic of weak minds, a!mos Sams aoe at ee pt rel iP iP remainder of this thrilling story see the New York the doughty captain; and with this he walked Hy paper bee ime Delors eons ied. We hae for $5? rig nf gp See Pengo reeioed Soe Tal eemnuae tf lore i a Capt. ‘Paulin paced for May 1 away. wa: we fel ce er attaines - | any kind ive a customer wor four times at end came at . One morning, sev = ane the dao the Sip uae Fea tea 5 eae penis” "7g geht } So Uncle Joe had to go at work and tighten the pa eaag circulation, that a tremendous res} mnsibility ! as much a6 cash he pays them, or, in fact, worth | years from the day of their marriage, Mr. and Mr) any more atall? A man who sells dry goods, jewel- Biskely were about leaving for the opera when the A books, gold pens, or any thing else, does so for | bell was rung violently. Mr. Blakely started an| the purpose of making money. To the first outlay | turned pale, with a ended presentiment of evil. | for his stock be must add a libeval pee centageto Ns is the matter?” asked cover rent, insurance, interest, clerk , Wear and | the sin; hos ye in his countenance, } tear, and general expenses, and must therefore sel] Mr. ely did not answer, but stood listenin’ his goods at an advance on their cost, in order to | towards the door. Men's voices were now bear¢ eave himeelf from actual loss. This being the | and the tread of heavy feet along the passage case, whenever agin advertise to give a custom. | There was a start and a hurried movemec: b er articles worth more than his money, it is evi- | Blakely; then he stood stili, as if riveted to the spo with nervous, wrathful strides. He saw himself eur- | by al news 4 younded by stout “ Deantifa reposed fence, and put larger upon his . rested on us, and have endeavored to discharge that aa aeeiapen mi for peng wt ie Lober’e pol move was aginet Joe's hens. He ibility conscientiously, feeling contident that seenimseded thteeti--cak sot thanenild catinnes Fashion. swore that he would aboot them if they were not | nltimately we should receive the thanks of thousands “Burgess,” said the cap’ stopping and addreas- Fashion is s strange master—a whimsical tyrant. | kept out of his lot. Joe built a henbouse, and placed j and tens of thousands of families. ing his mate, “what d’ye s pose sent that sloop-o-war | !* Prefers rarer te comfort, and novelty to conve- his feathered bipeds therein; but it was a sore trial here?” nience. It willhave any sort of change in prefer- | to him, and people sympathized with him, though ‘The Poor Indian, «Why—news must have been sent up to Boston that | 2¢¢, to & monotony of taste. It scorns pri- | they conld not help bim. i Lo! the poor Indian, whose antatored mind we pins in’ 0 sail,” returned the mate. dential philosophy and laughs at e2onomical hints. Ges season Ce . Lober ploughed ap his land— | Sees “od in clouds, or hears him in the wind; “Ang 1 8% she could lay to in the offin’a | J* canmot be said that it has nothing towear. It is | some ten acres of it—ana sowed it with wheat. The | His soul proud science never taught to stray wonth, if she felt so disposed,” added Paulin. inexorable to its idolators, and exacts to the last | grain came on finely, and the owner used totake | Far as the solar walk or Milky way; u } Ofc said "The British have got | {rill and flounce. Why ie it’ Is it because the | men out there to them his field. It wasac- | Yet simple nature to his hope has dent that there is cheating somewhere. An honest Who are they? What isthe meaning cf this# hath nakte ony dt B to watch | ™ase who wear and worship are blind of better | knowledged to be the best, piece of wheat in town. | Bebind he clond topt bill an humbler heaven; man can’t do such @ thing, nor will he try to do it. | asked Mrs. Blakely m alarm. At the same momer aD the —— ‘crafts we can raise.” — judi it, or incontinent of real taste? Do the , But the captain wasdestined to a piece of ill iortaae | Some safer world in depth of woods embracec, He might as well try to lift himself over afence by | two men entered the room. his wife, who say : A . a public, of man or womankind, demand a continual , which he bad not thought of. This land was at some | Some happier island in the wat'ry waste, ‘ the of his boots. Remember this fundamental “You are arrested,” said one of them, ‘on acharg have oneal ¢ yedlnceate: ots tone horis? Nay! Among the many there is | distance {rom his dwelling, and when busy | Where serppane mace tei coi Aa NN bebold, truth, Adam, and never again bite at such bait. | of defalcation.” parsed the ca aby wihastamp of the foot. “By | Much eober sense—they would prefer more thana | at other points a week or two might pass with- | No friends torment, no Christians thirst for gold You can’t even give the most cautious nibble at it Mrs. Blakely shrelked, bat her husband steed sti the pine 0 on neg Hol bad! We can’t ren oa harlequinade in costame and manners, to read Emey- | out hia visiting it. One afternoon he came to see | To be, contents his natural desire, without being hooked. And New York is full of | and statne like, his face of an ashen hue. } nike Bhat sloop ‘stbere,” son Bennett's new story. | bis wheat, and when he reached the oage of | He asks no angel's wing, no seraph’s fire; tricky anglers, who stretch their lines and display | “George ! George! This is false!” exelaimed Mr) “Not ie cecus fool the enemy in some way,” Prpteenepnecpamnliitesinmchitiniontl | the field he stood aghast at the sight which met | But thinks. admitted to that equal sky, their gilded bait trom ene end of the Union to the | Blakely, recovering herself. “You could not soo, i d the mate. “That chai - mA Yeave the of- 4 | his gaze. The tall, stout ra was trodden and | His faithful dog aball bear him company. other. Beware of them. Give them a wide berth,no | to crime! | Saf whie he thinks we've at idea of leavin’ this sre hastever before beenateh a seacriicing? | #8mPled down over half of the lot, presenting a oe , ,,, | matter how plausible their advertmements, or how | “It is true,” he answered, in a low, sad, despai hee.” 7 ” There bas never before been such a “sacrificing” | seene cf hayoe and destruction traly horrible to #o- Read Emerson Bennett's great (indian sale in | strongly they are recommended by circulars or edi- | ing voice. Then laying one of his Singers cn t ral hebae tees Gas good men just doin’ of inet beaees and matched teams ye tend ted ol | faa ‘And the astounded owner was at no loes to ac- | the New York Ledger. | torial notices. We have done our duty in warni diamond pin that glittered on her bosom, he adi ‘ y — Yoceat ecuaeanacs bebe: count for the desolation, for near the centre of the ——_._—__—__—- our readers against them, and have th speaking to her ear aloneo— ‘At thie, point the old gunner, whose name ean | © wh ig hae checked art y ih pe i gerd | Jot he saw a horse. It wae a jaunt, heavily built ani- Hours with these we Love. hundreds and thousands ‘rom losingth “You gained that at the price of your hnenand Bagh. meofpmalfprn dl wore 5 ee = ~ ments’ yrs cobavend aad vel UP mal, of a dingy white color; and though ouealy Sweet are the hours spent with those we love— | you did, while to otbers the warnin a dishonor! You demanded it, 1 remonstrated, an’ ‘Cardi = SPs ing gaze rously - ea prety as sor Be ah re yy bean well stricken , yet hn aiapeens they are the drops which fall into the cup ef | came too late. Your only ns in inflexit! said I could not afford 40 costly an ornament. Yo abou pops 1 rayther think I can find ye the }ecued e gi poe to markets with ¢ nee about with marvell irit--now cropping a few | our lives li from Heaven. From ehildbood | refusing to send money to anybody who attempts to | repeated your demand, arfd I, weak fool that I w: ae Pe coos: — yw age er ah a eo Sam) bak chee | of the well filled wheat Peds, and anon trampling | 10 ryt 1 of us have those golden hours, | seduce customers int patronizing him by offerin ermitted the contraction of s debt that could on!) meds SG fun, wn « mate wa | MEaaptn hace ase cig | patentee fase oe | tase eon rigger | aap geet ere | Esme, etme eg a 8 Wi : 5 supply | tread wine vat. ° t y surround us in our | mat ‘or. Yoo might as wel! trost atreache- | I married you, that I had obtaiued a wite wi i Are you sure © borse’s manger with oate, or his daughter's pe< dog I should dare to tell all the oaths which Capt. | remotest after time, evea in the day wheneaccumu: | rous cata. By the way, Adam, if you want to | tues night hep me upward onthe way to heave * Pooty eure 01 And ! goess he’s shipped | with eweetmeate. People who have heretofore | . d i tw th | i ‘ sruelties”” r ae daa Lober then and there poured forth; but they were | ated years and experience bow uv vo the earth | learn something about the “ horrid cruétties’ but you have proved only a tempting fiend, draggin, bx) this Se et hale ential Gorin neglected the, useful lesson, will now, if ever, learn terrible ones, and the white foam stood u Lie lipe | rem whence we sprang.. There are moments in all | trated b indiane, on mingt read Beanett's new A me dai bearer and neater the beink of destroeto ae ~- J pe ponte nn a y anf patty bn | fon pe That is the aa he raved. A® Comp ge som —, oar ce ~~ ve egg all of mare ly in the Ledger. ‘e say Bennett's vew sere over which I now tall to hopeless ruin. I hav! w'vd £08 8 . jemcn get . tional prespe- he started for Uncle Joe's. He knew that Joe mast | and how ently does this occur dering the | mean Emerson Bennett, not James Gordon Bennett. bbed the bank, but it was for you?” j do pretend t that very thing, capt’. | rity, and the man who learns it not tat well | have seen the horse in there—for the animal coald | hours we have ‘with thoee we loved io our pring i ~ vain fie The aid, in @ cay operative and visivle for many months to come. “Why | haint got no hows as is capable of doin’ so ' large And, on the whole, we think it has dene, ie » | much mischier.” Senate on the last day of the session. The enlarge: cleowhere, i now ready and for cate ni all the | vented to hide thought, instead of ax; it, To ment of the Henarp this morvingt, in connection | news offices. this purpose the “ifs” and “ands,” the “ 7 “Well, my mea | and bb h- eoge ghd he my ony) It hae bronght en leave that for others to decide,” said the with the sanogncement of Emerson Bennett's now 7 . os Y ~ Ave aad ae i bn = mean bh tout of many people, of both sexes, who had become 1, wit cant uod of c f u » fi it ent a be misunde: hay cugied ei wean fr 4 me . H tally | he on the eabject of pe . par | connee!, with a very significant uod of the head story in the Ledger, in as great an event in the his Morres ve Swinate io oo | the Hmmat.n thia ng to hay Sanat “You own a bore” tory of newspapers as is the enlargement of the Frie A man named Johnson, of Did ye ever take particular notice of that Adam | herd with the wild Indians of the forest, w! man- | 24’ Neon then threeer four dapa mt the | time! A word, a look, at one, @ thougdt gar Shania tbddaananaas ‘Then tarning to the office wee ‘ids debbebd, cetiannd fom ners and customs he can get @ good idea of oy read- | Pade perbape the dopredator might belong to nished with the flowers of poesy, or gt oy Loavanwonte Cry, Ap. 18, 1858. bar on at your servicg,” r { ye mean that sab-iced, cock-eyed man, aog Emerson Bennett's uew jndian story in the | Joo Just aa the captain reached the road,he met | bright asa ray of sunshine from the eastern aky,| It was bat necessary to use the Werd “celebra- For the remainder of this heartrending story se) Saleh Yer Ledger, which i out this morning. Those In- Gam Warner. Sam was nota temperance man, nor brake throagh the tangled web of our ideas, and ip | tion’ in connection with the intended tura ou: of | the New York rol May 15, which # vow fo tt aad nas ae »» | Gians, a way, have queer notions about babies, | oid he nelong to the charch, bat he was a particular | bobbies a clear spring, which, forming for ite#if 4 | the free soil men to procure a fall of rain. Every | sale at all news offices. { By sue big book, Som, 1 have noticed him,” | gbom tbey believe to be sent here for the parpove fiend to Uncle Joe, and didn't think much of Daniel | channel, carries ue alozg with it, andgives motive | day when such word hae been used in tue publis _ ——_—_— mn the capiain, tboughtfully. “Tve toa; bt he of—but we will not anticipate. Read Bennett's | 1 ober, “! to ‘one of our futare ‘actions. The im- prints of thie place, the rain fell in torrents. until The eaabi “ 5 of the IE a“ wae 8 coward, or @ scamp of some sort; bat did'nt | ‘tery, “ Blanche Bertrand. or the Perils of the Bor- “Mz. Warner,” cried the captain, trembling al) | lortality wi us themabakes its plumes, and, like | yesierday night, when the politicians, fearing, per- M So wae fond of havi amend _ maigtios, that be wae & Lory Spr. you can bet your | &?” sDd leasn all abont the Indians. over with rage, “does Joe Basset own a horse?” an eagle, soars into the empyrean 3f wich st ball | hape, thet unless something wae doue ‘to keep ‘alive but ced ar abies knew boa a Tada tals cont Nm th my ay yt a= —__——__-— | “Yeas. B'l eve he does, ‘Squire,’ returned Sam. | be the fature lord. The transition from the boy to | the eacitement of the people, it wae determined, » Aad Wedaaciees a heme, A arech deal is ont pe Dy Bagel at 4? es Son ben, te thet 33 | Kindness. “Is it a white one?” the man, after this glow and enthusiasm, rapidly | rain or no rain, to have therr glorification, The word eke on tt ‘sd entane Jory Lelkuar's two cr theve tapes. The very night |. How much misery may be abated, bow much exf | “Kind o’ whitian.” foes on, and ere the mantle of youth has been cast | was given, and of couree the rain fell. ‘The affair, | frequently made to prove one’s fichnese ia this eat aed i. 4}. poet, ry | te may be rei a, the simple topeand ex-| ‘How cld aside, new wants and wishes create new friends and | however, proceeded to the excessive joy, no doubt, ae But, as a bs thing, tae more e: Ta ere be cid ¢ i coc an weld n of the human volte! Upon the heart that | “Wal—tain't very ol} nor very young, Bot it's | pew ties, aud ere long,a pilgrim is found at the | of thore who look for offices atthe handa of a peapte | Saree hye you make, expecially. the mo Ei Gay ics wailing,” ne "MBE S# Rochas we'd'sek | Fone and desolate, that feels iteelf ay it. were, shat | kind o” shaky raound the knees.” fhrine of human blits—love. The reign of court: | grateful that their rich Iands have been allowed to | form and. geetility you get up for che Oxcagion, tb) et why it yon tlw of this before, at” | ov ft won: wrapped in loomy aging, | Copan Zt pera of Unc Joe ort and | sin gmmencey nd the coming ma ease ia ears ear, =Y® UD CF | moe laws and tanaar! tn aaer you ree * Becans? I didn't know of it #1) today. Ye know | how sweetly fall the voice of #ypipathy and consola. | foun old fellow at work al e premises. ay usted on T patience wearled. one . Ye pot 6, tster that Sioee fake cppenie old Bel. | tion! Why iit then, since eve proves, and | “Mr. Basset,” he said, with awful meaning, “do Dd eet My de oe f one sare cute are not neve-—aterybody knows | ne hospitality, we opine, consiste in the warm kcaps bbe saw him go in there, and she told me none are ignorant of the fact—that al! must lie down JO ga eepther calkiste a0 heow't I Gew, Hope, fed by fond desire, enthrals his senses, and si "4 =, ar trees thats heenes ¢ 1? 1g — and hearty welcome of one’s friends, far more thar bay Hee in mother earth together, stheo all ore travellers in | U7 0 ataeed the ola fellow | the sweetest hours of his varied life are spent in che | Sc dram people from their homes *“ollow in their | in all the fuss and show which is made for their en eee ee ae —- penne that which cove bias Mtlert bat which | *Sisd did you know that your horse had destroyed pcre dog nee gal wanes pm Pane ake tollection ‘of people aesembled pon, this ‘oooeaien. in. SAynean saees. po wy talk 10 theta 3 a reecad up. 1 £ e ) ~ # “3 embrace, to he gives the kiss which makes an’ i Hold on,” seid the captain. He started across | might raise¢he drooping spirite of his neighbor.and | more than halt of my wheat’’ : the blood bubble to the temples fi i Shere will not probably be enother demonstration fee! interested in their welfare; and top the deck, and wnen be came beck he edded— | heer him on his journey—a copy of the New York | | “Jerewealem’ Yeou doan say +0, quire,” ex- | Sriery or the bea. fae dine lore bone ot erertty | antl Beanett's new story epgeere in the New Yark Zalling their attention t0 the great advertised fe = at yo ag po fe Checks | ory. "7 . 76 j : “lt ty tir; and now you may sete it, or | @Joyoun ones; for if there is one pleasure in this | 10 be termed wal top The beck slows bo baa pon sont he pm tad Tell your friends es ® Jock’ hd lor to-night, and of course Adama | tuffer the consequences.” ice i wide world ey than another, it is that of bav- offices, #0 great is the desire here to get bold of Ben- poten ee A, end they will be sare to circ ihwstes ‘The Binck Prince. | 5 Bu ‘Baquire rally I can't belie Wy bow ics ween pry EE npietseeniod nett's narrative of Frontier Life. More hereafter. | the rumor, that Mr, Bonne? haahad to pay large “Youd be sure te nee him wherever we've got | At the battle of Poictiers, fought in the year 1356, _ nome pe ae settle 12°" cried the captain, | *mile as only fond lovers can. In such moments a Ax ExJoun Parsrem | to advertise this story, and that the author expend ay Luasinees to do,” responded the gene. it | —— seg Tames ayes A imigdl e | | ment » bodes eae Sp a Hoan feels himnenif te he superior to his ordinary. ever _ nk Seein Sta ed a great deal of labor and time in writing it. | “Then just keep . leave matter wi! amount bousand 3 | mes r . day tone of life,and unreservealy commits bi if ae Enema me, reeemed Pauiin, “Tl have something stodied | of the French under King John, exceeded sixty | | “But ‘Sauire-railiy—t conldn't pay ye noth'n— bos Ng tae | geseroun epee is Peltiahnese be- | _, Te undersigned conumittes on + the Benton Mon. dike Meanie of up tefore the time of meet Ané mind yoo—don't | perry jotwithetanding so great @ disproportion se 'll pay romebody else. You know that comes active for good, the poetery of his nature | 7) Oy nn = “a7 _ itize ne of he The United States and Pngland have inte: take range of ath j Dat act jam an in point of numbers, the courage of the English, and your horse nas been in my aciay” githdrewing im from bie eenmaa! tendencio TY a of haltga Bn dg yg oven telegraphing. The conception und the cou you } good conde Prince, gained > tn y 2 o ” susceptible to fines: and lofties 1 ay th x, to attem| ts realization are lasting credit mari "Have yon pot an idee!” aaked .carnentiy. | The French forces were completely defeated; «3 | tect enough,’ “Abd with this the captain went, | Ramen emotions, and with his manly avowal o* pre. | Hetunda, to, take measures, for the carrying out af | of the two nations, But the example, #0 noble { ° . * It ing hopes, . ns are imitative, as well a etiver ‘bat all this must be kept perfectly mam. | admirable heroism of Edward; but even his courage | eee ek ctamaean aot Cy oe Bod keep them nnstained anti the Detaa) beer noocy | zene of B, Louis the cuaima of {ie deceased rates | Songnesuaiese. Wet Gand dc Beare “deed Ben sig Meth sve Noho es SS Sac gd Ret esa ode lat cate | ar iin nay ia har ear gat, ag be | Sn ferme” gral the Yak ser eurpect him.’ - z (* £77088 106 Ube bole ied, pire eemnayyems soon be on our track, or on tracks great and glorionr dito b oret , Bennett's new of Indian life, che Bertrand. at one hundred dollars. The lawyer Ane "7 committee feel no fear that a generous public will rae Te eae Te esas ee Matter, | Tyabe way, It will be coen by reference to aaa. | OUat era eter, but che od fellow refused to take | An bouse ane saters-Svereco se ates fail to testify thelr appreciation of his services to | Sf ourn. Russia fecle the inspiration of example the aneapected obstacle which bed vertixement ip — column that the Nee Yerk ooeet i Poem dg g ng court, fing, oa ee a wahons in egli Missouri and to the U: waste te ya A ao et | of overwiring eo and an ‘oceans, that po ne hn Soe harbes, the _ ee | Unele Joo to the last extrenntt \ ‘ Deadliag hs preesareo ead uh ares Wax ~ nia bl aes Rpwaap wus, she may, via Siberia and our remotest west, i the pat iat brig bed heen notified to meet at a = | “Sie suas ean tn seesten, ont the day for the trial Wisaing him beck when mlagiteg -o ths tr sc, - Jonx O'Fat1on,. | have @ lightning talk with the New World, i Sh be the oem, chve ep vont cok rove, | Fanny Fern on Lady Doctors, | arrived. The roum was crowded, for » whisper had Trom a vain wor'd we .ove, ala! 109 stg, Toux How, | pendent and on her own hook, Bravo, Rassia! Se Se thst hon be dake’Atot or hoar af |, tune Maem alled so ah account by afrend whom | fon aread tat ire Jor woud mee tr oft: | ane pone ean ae itany of ar deceased mater are sot on | $2, wih your wire se’ more tb better and the even oeati } both Jove and respect, for an article in “Fresh ¢ - so pees ament “ r ’ certainly i | , more we way, \b ~— a inte Weake —t~ ma the Leaves on “Land Doctors.” My friend charges me satel intone of tea ensce'e hao} Fes “Twas the dashing of tach and weet santici Sonne Maitnfally in ibe counolla rT. 0 Rieiah ale lees we bandy words < oe and seek to cut and A =" pan owen FB, ; | in thie article 4 want of sympathy for this class, | gait, enlarging upon the damage which had been esey as these which so filled with agony the | the most interesting rections of our coantry. No | 0D¢ her's th nike miserable In: : ree 6 ee, eae Soe oe ul fener, | and with throwing obstacles in the way of theit | gone to his client's property. aud explaining bow Ste bero of Emorsen Bannatt’s greek Indian Biate 12, the Union, perhaps, suffered mare from pe ed anh gl ey sory he pad been able to overcome all the prejudices | Puoctt on oy Poe that a Qa little the tranegremor had seemed to care for it. en aveuthens yay as b - Indian depradations x Keaoaris 6 and hence the Sock sy Ao now being publiehed ew we fol wottanr ne uae in an easy otfband man. | ieapprebension, 1 will tale thie occasion to repent, | Nobody seemed to Know. Ledger, and is one of ibe moet thrilling tales ever | Yopristor of he, Ledges, pot ein tho rican lemmas aang nll er, “have ye thought of any way yet to get eroand | What! there raid, ‘that I do Tajoice for various | “In the defendant in court’ a = i ee ‘The has been leon activity in the book market thie BL es es pyens | ried me amen tor kel ARTES |g 7 Net ae wo Ue Jo, awe te | as Rare ge an” er ee a eas toot eet | Ingomete wi the viagh expresso of my in| °"Are you Ube Geendant in thie caer” anhed che | Thien ¥y no mean an Segantor vez pr-pleuons | gigton, decided in favor of riking oat hs oras, | Decome exceedingly sy of fmalng pew works, ne We shoud be shut up in here now. By thander, I'm | (vitae! Pewee. cling “ng 4 Polar" searaed See, witha ea more conteraptible than ever in our estimation since on ibe te foore of Pariiey 7 d- | nation in the book trade is found in the smile of Par- gaxiow to be fou! of some 0’ them avoreships, | *y' to certain] po A tas my censor could be “Ye 7 d sate cotiand a lady friend, yesterday, sent us three specimens of —— +A. rans in fa — re wae® | ton's “Life of Aaron Barr,” which tas hed a brilliant We mast get cot some way, if it conte blood.” oe neal Comantal comertiy Seosmmen come | “Beil tase hanes,” wot ayer what’ her nine pound hens had bea’ producing. | Rt 'tty Of two te one in favor of this mensure, Ite | crecess and i atill eelling largely. ‘This is not to be ‘This wae ol yey Well is te bs it was slight | cedical ladies have iely received ‘at the hands of oe aap setiade at etek resumed. They have laid—not set—egg sacoples yuich, a feted by tee Misuse ef fotae The | el Aa ~ -} wondered at ny Si it ie remembered that “ werdone. The real wae rather forced. and the | ‘ i. be ae, © j J present form v ‘ame tian scald st lk "his Smamander in ibe eye when | Ye aborigines of & PBiadelphia bowpsal who are | | Mate] Knows on,” rei Joe, with w ball fool | Whee bam yard community sagt to omnes, Ong | the oath o cous exciaden, na wad intended Uo ox. | HOR, Is pombe he St bor ewoaty a concers | as foo ther get ont without losing any of onr | Geseribed ip Emerson Bennett's new of “You are robably aware of the reason why you | each of the other twe the same within arade, if rality of the Lords in refasing this concession bid ed. He haw been so constantly written about, oe e any of ont | cBanche Bertrand, or the Perila of the Border,” | have been here,” 9 ¢o | these are eggs, others are mere exceptions. Se wo jly voted by the C “editable to | 80 Yariously and mercilessly “cnt up,” that every, oe Osrtaaly,.” & died Weeks “Bat still, 1d shea | eet isewed in that incomparable pate paper, the pity the man'* wae grb °° | may say Ve new story ia the New York | Be eek sores, vor worth y of a0 culignteusd body feels a desire pn Bente oe) od 4 “Certainly,” add . ill. ; 2 te | pity ; EA 4 OF Wor ia equa rire to ““Gayeain sulin nad read bie man pretty thoronghty, | Pct chy in aa criginal, but even an abort nas aa.” ld Lebar's conaual. uur bares | Slight, captivate, QA end! glean everybody conatrvcton can male it anything ine “a jen han Spenk Ont, j fe ine ay bs rh ny fA the astare of tie client.” EicitS 7 Erie Canai Bai _—— York Led, or, We ejotoe to wate, Nvasne dies ity”? Don’t, practice prevarication or clreumlocation § thie Was al . | 2m ec chal ony a oxe conldn't do no sich 4) ” enlargemen ', waa before the Gentil at liberty to bi d 1 Bennett’ a i my ut on ae @ Mask pled, and | #04 long comtinned that ita effects will probably be | "What do you mean by tha:t” Legislature of New York, waa finally defentad in the | Dew sary, wbich an iatcncted trauvatsertiomeny | a fasnowe satarkal writer, that it was wemtngly iv | ] i ashen hold expenditures, once more to their senses, Ithaa |“ Why-—- canal in the progress and developement of States. | and good ad: seen, loafing about this city | fact that Emerson Bennett's new story is commenced oe temas | checked the extravaman’ and demoralizing ontlay of We want none of your why’e! You own @ | Just think of it for a moment looks aaa occupying | for A Gus, alice suey can vere pretences | act a York Zadger. You can't surely metake 4 way he little expecta You may ave | ther people's cash for high li ing, useless finery, | horse 7” | eight pages of aleading daily paper like the Hanarn | apon shih to obtain money, which pretences proved fae! f you, that oar friends in Poriemouth | #94 costly jewelry, and set, them all reading Emer. ‘But I wavt to xplain. Capt'n Lober, he come | to announce a new story! “Is Bonner mad?” will ) t be fallacious. Among other representations, he | sup @ brig. son Bennett's new story, which is now ready in the | to me, a bilin’ over with wrath, and axed me did! | doubtless be the gonera’ inquiry thia moraing. | passed himself off to one of our first merchants as “One Thing at « Time.” | sur poe ‘who hed hea dnothing of | New Vadger. own & how, and I told him yes.’ Then he biled over | Perhaps he is; but if he is, he thinks there is some | connected with the linen house of William Braylier if there is one fact in the arrangements ot active kaew it some time ago; and shee « | more—made lots o' theeats” and went off inabeap | method in his madness, and prides himeclf on tho ' & Co., New York, on which consideation $20 were | life, now-a-days, more noteeable than another, it is 9 | Tat Ridden o paseion, atore T covid ‘xpiain.” extraordinary and unparalleled circulation of hia { lent him. Me haa just left the cit; leo a email the tendency towards ¢ifision of Inbor, which so. e mned the captain. | Ore of two things ie certain—either our city is the “ But do you deny that your horse was in my | Ledger. belanee on the booke of the Missouri Hotel iis is y revaila, Articles which once were made how fortune has favored most expensive in the world to govern, or it isthe | client's field ” | — the same scoundrel that fiquted a aumber of years single artizan, now furnish werk for a score; b brig-—they call her the ‘Winthrop’ worst governed. Lew than eight years ago it cost | “It couldu't a’ been thar unless somebody put ® | Caritar.—Some one asks why the peopla of | 9go out West aa a decoy for the Indians in their | and newspapers which were once printed by one for see, bat she an t have acrew ander three weeas. tnt three millions @ year; now, the tax levy ix over | thar. | land, in the tite of Citarlee 1. were like David Crock. | efforte to entrap aud glunder [ite Rallies, le jereeymaa printer aad his “devil,” now employ One of ber owners was down to eee me twodaysago, eight millions. This is nearly the cost of our F ral “That not the thing. Do yoo deny that your | et? Because they first made «i they were right, | shown up in vivid colors in Bennett's new story of | hundreds of hands. Indeed, so great is the roeh for ould take her and go government under the first administrations, and far | hore and then went ahead! [f you will read Bennett's | Frontier Life in the Jed Phage demi Toady and | Emerson Bennett's new story in the New York er the matter with my more than the cost of Emerson Bennett's new etory. | new story in the Ledger ‘you will Gnd that the | for aale at all the news officer, Take our advice and | Ledger, that bundreds of hands aro employed in | Dow retype New York Leeger. Your ie white bores | ' Ind'ope are just like them. grt it thie morning before yop Griwk your pote, —* the preps goorm alone of the Ledger and he was anxious that w a thin damage OE i, aT One

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