• fr: V fk A F II) tf ••Fiii; l.itf" in the Holy Land. ] Hi :\' ISllAKL On Tie of th«'>-o t;!! aii'l qiiiot ovonin^s. whoti j th? 'Uii l\*'l Jti'f j: "I •- >wn behiii-l flie cifv, we I r'i«> iiTi ihi- v:ii,. \ "f rlu* Ke'lron by the w.'il ot'i a u.'ij.'ti-"iu :i l.nijT oaiit'T towar't lit'th- i(': = i;j >i .-All ilii- wuy ot fti(» to Sd Tit >.t.1 Miriirn’-. w;i> troh, utjiI chainpci the bit with :is iLiu 'h spirit H' winMi w: M"- ’ ImiituO'i A- i-i pr.'ttv well i-e i iiji, Hit 1 tin' rein lay on 111:, Tit ri;, whil‘ 1 ;uv ' 't. S’>iiif\vriat luoii- tii'eii u>U!'. a litf!*.* ill my , atul r.iiiv- with iii\ o’, on tlie grouii'i, rvvvy iuoh oi rt iai'ii wj«« saTictitie i oy footsteps of patri- arctiji «!i-i ap ii» thr .-.ficTed Hgt'S Tilt- viilfy ut J lio^jhapliat l:iy deep iii ^rliuvii. ultliiVi^ri tli i iit THVs of the ba I 'far';' \ left th" i-.iiiii'.i' of Olivet, and tin* iiiliiart*: ‘t Oiurfi gieuJi'vi yet in thi* criui^i»ii liglit )f t*ie west. {'lie toiub-, of tho old Jews wi're .'i!iMi' m the darkiiep-i, :i:id :is we pHs.i -d utrkr tli*.' roelfy ' heiiiht-j if ’lUi it app:.-arei! hefnre u-i a.' i! vst- W'. re ei'iiTUi;, th' vailcy of tb.- shadow >f d‘:it!i 'l iie pathway wiiiiiiii^ uri Ifr the tomb of tlie wit'-- '.if Soloiiioii and theti cros^i.ig an opt n spnoi' eppu«.ite lu the south aiigle of th; triiiple wall, enter'i directly amon^ the graves of the .It'ws, . marke l rjich wi. h a heavy slab l}iiig prostrate oii the tomb, earv>(i iu Hebrew eharaefers with the simple 'torv nf the son of Israel. The .‘•te-p slope of tile I'hitern side >f the \alley i-> filled with tlif^'' graves, where. r>r thousands of years, the eiiil- dreu of l-;r:u‘l vvt re aeeiistomed, aii'l are still ae- cust,ined, to se> k that deep sleep that the weary always lin 1 Miriam w.is a little in advanee, and t!ie eliest-, nut was seiMni' his daitity feet down and lii'rinL' them up ii'‘ it ne. with true Arab feeiings, it - -ipi,->eil the du'f ('f that valley, when ‘•udden.y lie threw his li' ad up iu the a:r and sprang out of the n ad, dliiiii>t into the bed if the Kt-dr.in Mohammed louk* d ' n in surpri.-e, but was tuo cool to foll'iw the viiung In.irse’s exuinfle. A moiuenf hit-r the lause of the fright wa^ mani fest in a f'rm that ro^e siowl_\ from a Jewish timb, iiireetiy hy the r a(i-siiJi\ ai,d wiiii h :i e. 'di r Iicad than Ha>'';;.n’.'. uiight h.ive h'.'en [.a!- dont'd f'-r 'hinkiiiL' a s^'irit H 'tuni, who w;.« el"se liehiii'i. ru-ilu- i f irw .rd and began t"pour:iut Arabie i ur>C' ■ n the sMMiif: «r, wh;. h T .-t j.’ . d as hoon a** I v'"uM g.-t audible Wi'rd into the -toiui. I was p.i 'iiiig , .i jg'.iin ill 'ileiiee. when the .stranger saiik 'iiiideniv d' wn "11 thi‘ grave with a ni'^an that 'een.ied vt rily ;:■> it I't'e liad g 'ne out with nis brea'h I ^pr:l^i: fr.iin my iiorse invoiuntarily 1 had seen t ii'.ugh nf misery and pain i.i the Ki>t :,i make II w. Ill in’s hi art cali'iu.-, !'Ut thu.- u.c S'lnetMrig ihdi serital'; in that f'rm, ai.d tu. uj"au of aiigui.'ii, that imjeii.-d me t!:t> «!'ie, 1 liad nt. v-r bif.re 1 ■. en moved iJut when I -itpi\.:'i-l;eii him. he app-.ired t'l 1 pa t ail 'Vii,!,it. \, aii'.i I beiievfd iiiat ;he >'ul 1k,{ Veruy u-'* ti:- I'l'eii aims ■ f Al'raham, tiio-,e an-.'i wh'Ti iti so many of his wi rld-W"M. ehiMren des.re eanu'Stiy t - tind repose. "Uiiii. Iv-tuni, to the f.'untain of Mary, an J briug wa er " 1 givt t.'.uj uiy leathern p^vket-eup, ;.n l he was g' i.v in ,'in insr-iti', leaving me with the dead Jew, wtiile M,r:am '•at b.'r horse, by this tim.‘ reduced t q iir. and pH'ivUtly waited tht- le^ul- of my ex iminati'.u Alrea'ly ih*- j-hurt twilight wa^ ended, and tlie ‘tars l.'iikeJ j' wn into the valley, but it was il*rk nnd siien\ n -c could I ee a irleaui • f light from ai; !.i tiie tate of Sr. Stephen. Hetuni re turned with the water, and diluting a little brandy, wlr.eh my p‘i(.ket-fla>k always contained. Ipi'ur> d into the m' U’L of the oid man, while Ketuui rubHed his hands and arms vrith the brandy it self, duaining I im in his mind all the while f'f a Jew, th ugh he dared not whisper a curse in my presL” •• At ii iiLr'h returning conseiousne.es w-s evid^•!l^ ;uid he bfgati to ifit-ak. as if to himself, hr' k'-n wiirds, Italian, and in a few m' UU nt- .-at i;i- and .'■■ ki 'i ar. iii.d him * N It dt-ad yet.” sjtid I, as cheerfully a» I e.iui] '{ e ik, aii'l s'ni ing, toi- Ht.- 1 ki-d a' me with his pi rcing evo>, an«i 'poke, in a \oii-e that I shall not nOon f'rg: t, "I 'hall n. vrr die.” 1 can ni»; well e.xprcss the thrill of a.st.)ni>[ino nt With wfiieh I listt^ned to those words. 1>'ubti'-s-; y“U undt T't iiid why All the wild leg. nds of that eiin.'cieiue-'punit.'u, S'lul-cursi-d m:>n, wli-- fro!u the m 'mi!';: ot the oruciti.xion to tiiis day, ha' w.ndtr>d h'lpele.'^. and prayed in vain f.a death and 'ibiivi"ii, ru'-hed acri>s my niemorv He aii'-wirt'd well the description of the ima'd- naiion Ilf that man. He wa? very tall, even statciv in nis torm, and he W(>re the loo.se flowing robes whicii ea>tern old men always wear. His ta'-e Was thii:, his features sharp, but noble, his beard ii.ng .n his breast, and white as snow; his eye flasiiing, but melaucholy, and his foieh- aii high and white, but written all over with the 't- n w s of exi'fence. I lofiked at him as he .‘■poke, and for an in.otant, i»pite 'if reason, thought that I verily behehl that man Till next in.'-tant. 1 .smiled again, at ju\ . wn folly “Ai.d why not?” “liecau'c I have wished it so long and ir has never c me, and 1 de.spair of vest now 1 can die.” “Y u are mii «iM man.” .^ly chililrt'ti ;> children are asleep below this 'pot, and F T’ niaiii.” ‘‘D i you live in Jerusalem?’' ‘‘I live where (iod leads me—sometime.s in .ftTusahm, 'om‘tiriies in Oenuiiny, sometimes in Kus'15 I am !i Jew.” •'Hut lint 111 tiiolc-u t})('i('fnrt-?” ‘‘"^t :!, h'.M.i h ss tiieref.ire. \\ lit re have th( childr* n t .Jai'ith a h^nr', except her*-? ’ .\r;il he pointed sadly to the gr' nnd by the side of flic stntn’' v>n whudi ill* sat, and fixi-d big eager oh] eyes n mint' i*' if he thought I c .uM tellliim >f •r; ith. r r. .'ling place tur the tribes ot the wander- iiikT t ' it and Weary br' ..'t.” I 'kt'd him tiis present intentions. Itappenr- t.d that lie had remained in the valley by tl,e V'l'ivt .1 bi-. l iiiidren until the gate of the city wa- i ;.... 1^, .j,„j i.t ffiurse he was denied entrai--.?. hor ‘.■me utiexplained reason, the iJoMier' of the L'’iard at ili(- j.;,re of St Stefdien i.ad vlosei; it Ml r. Miii-iT, [jjj,] hack ty the spot that «a- deare-.t to him on earth, the only du.'t ,11 all thi' liL.d Hi.rld in whi'di lie elaimed a .'peeiai pr.i,ine.ur'b,p, ;,,.d had laid down there t- pa .' tne I.i^bt U. irr the .ky It .Was not the ii-t nijrht be bad pa,,,.. .1 ,l.o,e. t.y very many. le eould eount them by years, the nigbis be had bail I,., covering trom tlie dew, n . .'belter fVoni Hut the .lew.', ..f Ibi^ ianj l,e loved un.i tU w,:.,!., ..f the biiis around .lerusalem wen’ liKe tb.- wii.iis ,,f i*uradis; to bin,, and be was CMitent to ;.leep there, and onl} longed to -!..er, tbere foit \el ' 1 know not what it was tiiat drew me to that aan so closely l>n,i,Hbly 1 shall never know 1 iicre are secret cords drawing our aff. ctions which We i:i; w I,(,thin;i of, and call never extilain He W.IS too w,-ak to walk, and 1 led my hor.,e up to lietuni b. id him, wbile I belpe.i the old man into L Mjrrup., and i wuk'.d by liid biUe, wLiie Beti ooca.ioua]i;r^ tue i). ,■ aud su .'Urpn'e a' eo ild tie expected from Ar.ib". It th • lid m i'i riding >n t'n - r liistiiii pilurim So wt* walked Dilor'i-ia, Jiiii mi di.smal at thi'' From the Cleveland fferald. AN OLD BOOK AND ITS PRINTERS. On the table before us lies a little square 16mo. bo ik, containing the ancient charter and laws of England The b.x-k was “Imprynted at London in Piule^ Church Varde at the nif^ne of the May- dt.'ii'heed by Thyiua.s Fetyt, MUXLIl. W hen thit littk- bo'tk, now three hundred and fifteen years oid, was printed, the art of printing in Eng land W'^.s only s»;venty-i>ne years old; Cranmer .s l^ible had ju.st bdin translated and offered to be in churches, fastened by (•hains co tlie tomb of Absalom, and the wall of Gethsomane, their children are here—^just here. 1 am alone, ami the gr ivi’ o^ the Virgin Moth» r, and soon ! No human heart beats with kindred bl'tod to shouted our demand for entrance at thd gate of' min«. Wife, children, little ones, all gone, St. Stepto-n \lonoy oi*etis the gate.-; at all hours went out into the world, and wandeie-l nil ov-'r of day or n.irht The sleepy «UHid turne l out at it 1 sought rest everywhere, but my he„rt was the sound of bu •ksheesh, and stare 1. in as much never i*tlm, and I eaine hack to die under to' iiulf awake siiH'iow of llie hill of the temple. B jl I *..in rjot die. h'>rs‘! of the 1 am aim i-t a hundre«i years old, an'l 1 am you up the V'ia >,ee wiiat I am The charit) ,if the monks of the time of the Terra .Santa supports me now [ ■. luietimes eVcniMi.'at.d I pirte.l with my old friend, at the li'fen t.i tiiem when they t .lk of the crucified .son gate oi At : .Iii i', hou -, whence I s. iit • Betuni of Joseph, and I >om-tiine' wi.h I too could be- w^tn tiiiu t I III' r.vii iju iriei'.i, wliicii I ii 11 L'arn- ed Were near the Zion and whitlier 1 de- already spatciicd V>'S with a basket of provisi.ins, and si rice so 1 uig ti.t reach liberal supply of thi; w;ne of Hebron. the old man ended his story. He caught The next nior:.iiig, as we were taking our usual my eye as it swept rapidly back and forth from Wjilk, vvi' iiii't him on the 'anu* spot He rose the bill ot thi"* tcinph: to the hill of thi ascension, j breathing fire and slaughter to uil who disputed :i ue approjcli.'1, aoil e.tpressed bis gratitu le aud he divined my thoughts, but shook his head j yf dr>ctrines; wiiii • ne 'iMU 'st feclini;, but I tnade him sit down sadly, and stooping dowii plucked a fi.iwer, a de licate blue anemone blossom that grew near his feet and han leil it to .Miriam ‘•There is not so much differencH between us after all. \Ve are all alike wanderers and trav- volers; we seek another 'and, and sitting iu this V!tlb-y I sometinies am .able to hear the voice of tin; ir«i as he spoke to Daniel, .raying, ‘(} 1 tiiy way till the end be, for th,»u shalt ground, or p>lace a slab rest atid .■>tand in thy place when the end of thy days cometli ' That flower grew from the dust of one who was beautiful as the morning oy.*r the .Mount of Oliven. Take it with you, dear lady, and when you pray, ask God that be- fort' another spring’s flowers bloom iu the valley anil tell u.- onewhat of his stor\ It was so much ■ t’liii (!'',i'trat:m 'if the life of many of the weary children of Abraham that I can not for- iiear giving a 'ket.'h of it. He .'at on a tomt.i->fone. The reader knows alreaiiy that tbest; tomb-stones are masses of tlie native roik, tu-w 'iiiootii on one side, and laid on the grivi' I'hi' ancient law forbade Jews to erect a tomb above tlu .■'tundini: upright. Ou One of these he .-^at, and Miriam close by him on .m itlu'r, and I 'food in front of iiim, ami watched .--ti'.i'itastly bis tine countenance as he sp.'kt , set up , ^ lit ve that t!ie .Messiah has come, and h.i-* builded I allowed to be read by c rtain classes already the other Jerusalem that our foot-weary j ,jj,j u„i i-puJ aloud for the ins ruction of others. The .Monasteries had been supfiressed. whilst tvl the same tiuie the bloody '-Six Article.-*” had just been issued, the ‘-fires of .Smit.hfield” were buni.ing fiercely; Henrj VIII. had just butchered hia fifth wife, and H law had been proclaimed forbidding the imp'jrtation of books, as there were “books enough in England”—too many probably for the .security of tyrants The volume is neatly and correctly printed in “black-letter,” and ii a quaint looking affair A rude wood cut, reproduced from a book nearly cotetiiporary with the vf)lume before us. A DRINKING SALOON IN NEW ENGLAND From Ilawlhonre’» Blithedule RoTntiuce. The saloon was fitted up with a good deal of taste. There were pictures on the walls, among them an oil painting of a beefsteak, with such an admirable show of juicy tendorness that the beholder sighed to think it merely visionary and incapable of ever b^ing put upon u gridiron. .\nother work of high art was the life-like rep- sentHtion of a noblo nirloin; another, the hind quarters of a deer, retaiuing the hwfs and tauny fur; another, thtj head and shoulders of a salmon; and, still more exquisitely finished, a brace ot canvass-back ducks, in which the raottled feathers were depicted with the accuracy of .* daguerreotyj>e Some very hungry p.»intir, I suppose, had wrought thes'^ subjects of still life, heightening his imagination with his appetite, and earning, it is to be hoped, the privelege of a daily dinner off whichever of his pictorial viands he liked best. Then there was a fine old cho-'>se, in whioh you could almost discern the mites; and some Sardines on a small plate, very richly done; and looking as if iMizy wi»h the oil in which they had been smoth ered .\ll these things were «o perfectly imitated that you seemed to have the genuine article be fore you, and yet, with an indescribable charm, it tortk away ihe grossness from what was • fleshiest and fattest, and thus helped the life of . .. . ... - re ■ *i i man, even in its earthliest relations to appear cxlMbiH tl,e of print,M- cffico m the j ^ ^ ^hcCTful, and time when Harry the Eighth was king. A com- po-^itor -iits at his case. C)pposite stands the proof reader bus}' examining au'l correcting. In substantial There were pictures, t«x), of gallant revellers — those of the old time, Flemish apparently, with Hii^i; ?v -r head, before his flec, but behinil me, tif Ji hoshaphat the old man may be at peace the f.ireground the pre.sstnaii IS inKitig the fotm.s , sleeves-drinklng their w-i,' th-' t.mplt wall that i)iice inclosed the glory of .Solomon, and high t>vcr head a,> well, before me, bu! iiei'ind him, was the hill where our Sa viour wept over the city t>f Pavid, atid where the linst fell f’l ni iiis departing feet when ho ascend ed t i li;> tluMiii l-'it tmblem of his faitli and mine. Ills tv-. s \\ore ti^ the crumbling wall the temple, mine to the blue sky above the (lar- deii and thi' .^Iount. “I lived, when a youn^ man, in Frankfort on the .Nlaiui', in the old Judenstr.tsse, which per- h.ip. \"U li.ive r.een My house w;is thu third on tbe ii^lit you enter the street. Ujiposite ^o !ii' v. t' :he bou.-M' ii. wliicli after.vard tbe m.^th' r ot tiie great b aron - .ivC'i, a hose names are better kii 'WI; aai>i:i_' file nati'Mis of the wttrld. I vt'rily b l: ve, ttiun are names of their glorious atiees- •o:-. the p.i;ri.ir.-hof old t!' ;.- 1 wa born in it I.}, blit I married a young German girl in \ .Miice. and wei t w::h her to Krankl’ort I lalior- cii '.I'lere fir many years as a teacher of music, an art wberi in . iiad much .->kill ■* 11. ubi. s arose, and with our children we eom- >i;e!iced li. i; life wiiich >eeins to be the inberi- 'uoee 111’ our racv Fr in Frankfort t.. Hasii, Ir'IU 15,'il TO Geneva, fr >m G'-U'-vi to .'lilaii, iuor. Mil iu t‘. 1'ioi eiici-aiiii to Home, lusiiiti one, t'\f, e'r !h;ee year.' in each place, anti even loii.;er in ti. '.- va, wiu re we were hajipier than --Uewhere. vse at i.-ngth ' ttle.l. wc lioped for life, in the city : the l*op'* •‘liieie t T tw. ir.y Vvars I lived, simjily, fru gally, aiid pei liap.' with a.'* much of happiness ;i' We can eX[iec\ wl.o ale persccutid and forsaken ot our God But one n.oining, when the i'hris- tiaii' Hum-: eeiebrate i the fea.it of the (Jorpus 1> mini, a' they are wont to cali it. I, in •! fa*al .Nlany times siiic*; then I have seen that old wanilerer in dreams. .Many times I have heard his inelancholy voice, and have wondered whether he i" yet at rest .-In I'n/ortunntf Mittnkf.—On Monday even- f ing last the steamer Coffee, chartered by the .Me chanical Guards, went from Norfolk on a cheap pleasure excursion to Old Point and the ('apes, tickets selliiiir as low as twelve and a half cents for the trip, and, a.s a nece.ssary consequence, there were rowdies on bo-ird As the 'otfee ap- T>roaetied the wharf at old Old Point there was no with a couple of dabbing balls Another is taking a printed piper from the press, this machine beiii;; a rude hind screw c'»ntrivance On a rioi.ihooritu; table li; q lires of printed sheets, and a mighty fl igon of beer f>r tho refreshment of the thir.-^ty typos Til the olden time, and even now in England, every printing house is called a “chapel ” The term originated in the fact of (>axton, the first En wine out of fantastic long-stemraed glasses, quaffing joyously, quaffing forever with inaudible From the PhUade^hpia /iufletir, THE STATE OF THE COUNTRY The Stock Hoard is often looked to as thp indicator of the condition of business in the cour try. W stocks are down niany people think ev * thinf is' going to ruin, and if stocks are i,p regarded as a sign of great prosperity Ineith^ case the inference is a wrong one. ^Jfock^ dr, represent the business of the country, but otilv^ single department, and that not one of the hiift* e«t importance. Indeed so much is de-dlint; in stocks at the present day a matter of mere ulation, oft«n closely resembling gaaiblirj[r, , it cannot give any thing like a proper ide,i of true state of the country’s finances. The oapuu' represented in the daily stock sales ut I'aiUiji,] phia or N’cw York looks very large, but it i- almost entirely fictitious; for, by the systetn .r credits, that prevails, there is sometimes y,.r, little money changing hands when the report ij .sales art* enormous. Stocks, indeed, repres but a small amount of the capital of the peiipij of tbe (Tnited .State.-*, thoueh from rheir b-inc peculiarly sensitive, being k--pt con«itantlv b'-r t." the public, anl employed always a.s aj^-nti fj. great speculations, they are looked to a-> ufF ir iii.j intim itions of tho condition of bu'^inc.si in ;;tutral' There is certain fallacy in all this. T*^.' .rr interest of the United States is agrieultu.f- it the bulk of our capital and labor is uiv-*^’ j The West and South are almost wholly a.'ri'ju,. tural, utid even the Eastern and .'lid lie .State, derive their chief wealth from the products .f tij^ soil It is much safer, then, to look to th 'cij. dition of agriculture and the state of the cr > for inform itioti in regtri to thj con iitioii of ::,o country than to the .stock board With ti - 1 J 1 i_ • I I L. I I 1 J cuuiiti y I uttu lu I im; li lauehtcr ana soui:, while the champagne bubblea i . immortally against thin mustaches, or the pur-! ^ | ^ pn.si.nt im., w( may re*' ',it.,fi . pie title of burguudy ran inexhaustibly down ; ^ ^ V pr0'perou. utii throata ^ •' | never had a better pni.'-.pect Ihe crop, oi Is,,; But in an ob.scure corner of the saloon there ; I'Pown in the I was a little picture, excellently done moreover, of! ^ ')oe we wi i avc eiem_'fi t. j supply ourseives, to hcnd abroad as much as Ku- The Tom smelt his .syncope. Tom’s only comfort lay in the forced reflection , . - . . . - ■ V’ , r j a ragged bloated toper, stretched nut on a bench, I •i‘^r-eive> to ^ena aoroaa as much as U li>h prin.er, havrnj: h„ office in . chapel at.iichca drunkenness. The » • ■- to U cstmini.sier Abbey .\t certain time.s, or at , , ^ ^ n . i u "waiit, and to Uy up a lar^^e store for nei' y-ar to any «hen raat.er, c^neetd ,ith the offiee »a» tno well por'.rajej. Tom smelt ‘emer.enc, a ,-hor; r, “ m di.riHsir,n, the oldest prin'er, rermej tho ^ pmy liquor that bad brought on this syncope. , j J ^ I I 1 II 1 .• f .1 • . lom 8 only comfort lay jn the forced reflection , - i- i i “'"a* theiv ,o make f,i»l the li,,ind s .me of »;>'«ll"j'P™,t. caitiff was but ^Jge far ej.oeeJ.ili! all ealcal .tl„,,s of Ihese roivdios ..rJerel Ihe sentry stali.ned .here '/"P-’ing stone, an i after due diseuss.o,^ ^ O other grain,, ol h.y, of p.tatoes, of fnm., to do SO. to which he paid no attention When , ' ^.*1^*^ ’*1^ *'’ ?' ** 1 tip'r,. i I 'lelitinm tremens, nor so much as a retributive i‘®^“'^ary artiel.s o loiue pro ucti.m. wt the sleainer h:.d ni.ired the wharf suffi -icntly, t'r ugllt before the chapel. In eases where an I awaited on the mo-row shall nave a more abun i.ni supply than was .;r a.. l-o„ fthe hands I,ad tumped ashore and : f;'"'''- He general punishment was By thiUime, it being paat eleven o’clock, ,he i'-'™P 'i" >>« ‘ a "drink all around at the expense of ,,f ,1,^ L„on-ere in pretty eon-= T' "t fr*''''™’ “ otT-nder. .\n anti,|uarian and heraldic wruer, who One of these young La had a , liofary that alway, abound ut this spas m of .1, A.iuris i. d ih,_u. two hundred years • rare faculty In the co.icxtioD of fin cock-tai's. ' '’""P; '•I' .....p I s. .,f „ft ...ees for which a solace or penalty ^ .o behold hi™ .,,h « „.n.hl..r »«'!' “"J f ■'JueMo.i of must tie exacted. ''Oine of the hands had jumpetl as TU ide hi r t’ast these r 'w lies attacked the s‘titry and beat him .nost unmercifully, after which they went up >n tile point and commitfeil i ther o\- ces'Cs The steamer Glen Gove, which bad been charti it. l b\’ the Juniors, also from Norfolk, and having on boir.I an orderly and [ih asaiit company, . in the nieuiftnie ••topped at the wharf, and, as U'Ual, s line of tht- past iiger«; got ashore to remain until her return from the Gapes, knowinj: nothing (»f the fracas which had taken plact’. 'I'hese. af ter enjoyiiig tiiemselves at the liotel, startcil back to be in time for the Glen ('oveon her return to Norfolk; but while some six or seven gentlemen wt're walking along, some conversing, sonie 'Uiok- ing, aud one .'inging snatches of s iiig-. they w re suddenly set upon by an officer and fifteen dra- goon.«i, armed with sabres, who, without a challenge or a command t > -surrender, ctimmenced cutting aud slashing among them. Mr Wynne was severely cut on the head, face, and arms; .'Ir Nothingham received a cut on tho head, aud Dr. Finch nar- It was a spectable to behold him, with a tumbler in each hand, as he tossed the contents from one to the other. Never conveying it away nor spil ling the lea>t drop, he compelled the pretty liquor sO.H It seemed to me, to spjut forth from one glass and dc.-»ceud into the other in a great parabolic y Liiii of which we shall not bi.ave an oversu;ii1y Tj' season of 1S57 is iudeod one of unprec-dei.trj abundance. There will be some that will declare that thij abundance will ciuse low prices, which will be A grt at number of thcbreachf's of goi>i govern- '• ment de»eribei wouM not be und.'rsfoo 1 at the present d ly, as they were purely local an l archaic, but we give as many as w.iuld be applicable to ■ the pre.-sent time Sweariuir in the chapel, (i. e. printing offi.e ) Fighting in the chap-d, abusive ■ drS'ta’.re Xn,d "'Vii? anf of'tr'worlL^n of riquor“7of wMeh''tb;;e Ver";';', ' ^Hlghtcned days The abiii.y to pay off . la,,e toi«M.‘i,'i's‘;:ndi':. LrXt/ Jc 'Hut - .b.‘l^prit::tTuri?„?";:»': c,.,iip,;sitor le, fill his eo.i.p,sing s.iek a.O ano.her Va7X '» take It up. h r three .etter, ani^ re-ached the second stag, of potatory life. The embarrassments that may appear iirve, as well defined and calculable as a planet’s ' farmers than short crops Bu These cocktails and other artificial com- i that_nee.i t.ot be exposed m the- oibit up. der ihe compositor s ca.-se. fttll his ball and another tak.' it up If a pressman leave his blanket-j in the timpan at noon or night. For any workman to mention joining their penny or more apiece it) send for drink To mention rowd. asked mysdf solemnly what all this mean. “1 was un old man Three-score years weigh u'.ore heavily mi me than on others, and my wife, .'liriauj — ” ‘;My i;.im-- i' .’'liriam,” said one of his listen er'. iio-ri i.iptii.g him an inst.nnt “fhe G'.d ot .Vbrabam bless you,” said he tervently, an.l form, atid hi; tiour. Wan ^Tcd into the precinct.' of the great le.uiin^i on a wall in'the^^miT of th./allcmbled ‘Escaped having his head split open. After chapel money till Samrday night, or mil updu unresi'^linjr inon the officer pro- other before atrree^i t*rac. To play quadrat?, ceeded tu aootlier party who were sittii-ir iienr the excite others lO the ch:ipel to pl^y for njoney or wharf, and laid hands' on Mr. D S. Cherry, of stranger to come to a compositor The firm of W I) Kobert.« & Go. Mr Gherry to inquire the news. The judges of these .solaee.s, demanded an explanation, and while doing so a or forfeitures, and other controversies in the chapel, friend of his endeavored to show the officer that ‘‘s members, was by plurality of votes he was mistaken, wheu the latter immediately chapel. The amount of the fines was ordered him also to be taken pri.soner; but before his old eyes s ju^ht her">nghf guard-house an ac.juaint- ^e.'tU'-l to* marvel^ why she bad ^nce ot tbe officer explained to him h;s tbi'take, stanch old soakers, on the other hand—men who, if you put on tap, would have yielded a red alco holic liquor by way of blood—usually confined themselves to plain brandy and water, gin, or Wfst India rum; and oftentimes they prefaced their dram with some medicinal remark as to the wholesomcness and stomachic qualities of that in Home individual instances. There is no better settled axiom in the world than that which dt dares that a season of abundance is a seaman * prosperity Every interest in the country i. benefitted by good crops Manufactures, ooa merce, tnining, and labor of all kind.“^ feel the good effects at once. The low prices of food ar? particular drink Two or three appeared to have * Messing to all engaged in itldustrial pursow bottles of their own behiDd the counter; and. tl>= ati™ulu, given to trade of all kind, b.i .inking one red eye to the barkeeper, he forth- '■* ‘.'I' >">““f“«‘i'-e, and the shipment with pro,|„eed these choice,! ,od peculiar cordials. l»tge,sup lea of brcadsinffs and cotton is „f its.; I. . . J e suflicient to Overbalance the evil caused by snv nia'le thi' tar pilgrimage, as he continued, “and tik' y u toy. ur distant home! Why came you : ■ .iei U' li- ni, niy ehilii':'” 1 ■ vs > rile -.'I- time in i iir wandering-; that |j'-r eyt .' ba.i w.>n her such -i ble-ising from the oi'i and 1. elle ( hice b-fore, in Nubia, an i>Id Won.an, t'l wb ui ‘he ihrew'onie breal anl money 'II tbe boat, bit s---d her with upliftei haiiil.-i. ut.d they Were reloa>eti. 'I'hose who wn' taken to the guard-house were s lun di'Covered to have been iiMUifent of any disturbance and set at liberty, and they returned la^t niglit in the Glen Go\c, exasperated at the conduct of the officer, who liad orders to arrest the parties who created the chapel tiie dihturbance. They hhime him for having violently a.'.'ailed them without having first de- which it was a matter of great interest and favor proportionate to the extent of the offence If the « '^dr acquaintances to obtain a sip of /™i^"7om the low prices deliuqnent would not pay, he was to be taken by . Agreeably to the \ ank«e habit, under whatever ^ “jngt ^bis picture of a1 f.rco and laid oyer the correcting stone, face down- c.rc^stanee,, the deportment of all these go^ ty present and prospective, as indicated bv'tb^ ward, whilst eleven hearty blows with a board feljows, ol£or young, was decorous and thornghly inrere.st, we have pre.sonted t and individual cases of ditficuhy Against this picture of abundance and prosperi- an.J praved that (Jo.J w.nild take her «afely to her ‘'xplanation or callcd upou them to noitier.’ TI hi man looked a moment silently a> would have been the proper course. On Suspeiiximi Brid;/e..—The durability and at iier. and c*.litit.\ied; ‘•.''iniaiii Wa.' a' light and small as you. but her lacti Wa' (iifTen tit .''he had the features of Kai-hi !. I U't d t'i think, and r.ow that I was old, .'lie, a,' Id in ytar-. wa - younger by mneh in .'f'iru, anii --be wm! 1 su'^taiii and eheer nie when 1 wa' tainting ^he walke«l with me that morn ing ill tlie iate spting, and had spoken often on were administered. They grew only the more sober in their have pre.sonted Rules for p.vment of money to the chapel in cups; there wa.s no confused bubble nor boiateroui ra^sufeJtT’^^financid soeSltor - an^*^ eeriain cases^•r. also laid do^wn Evcry'^,ew They aucked in the joyo,.. of the ^3y gone down the counirj work.d in the same oS.-e. he only pays half the 7"'”''* *"'* '0“^ Th'ir eyes fe.'. If a journeyman marries, he pays half a twinkled a little, to be sure, they hem d vigorously nvr hnc l t- ) r crown to thechafiel When hi.-* wife comes to after each glass, and laid » hand upon the pit of ofourLook toJ^'htntHrp!‘i! T '''^n r thechnpeUhep.ys sixpence, and then all the the stomach, as if the pleasant titiiation there men join their twopence apiece to make her drink, was what con.stitut«d the tangible p^ivt of their not indications of "Jhe general wndinoL er. If a journeyman have a enjoyment._ In that spot unquestiontbly, _and ./.u, .rkman must pay half a crown, or be no member decanters, and kept it smouldering in their inmost ' ' ’ If the journeyman had formerly fecp^sses with a bliss known only to the heart and to welcome her. ir a journeyman nave a *u iu«i. n^»ui, uu^ucotiwufcu.j, ...u of thines-for ev«n in the worst davs of the safety of suspension bridges has been questioned son born, he pays a shilling; if a daughter, six- «f^t in the brain, was the acme of the whole affair, monev was not scarce and could be by this paper, and the presumption on our part pence. If a master printer have a son born, he ^*^t the true purpose of their drinking and one qq sood seenrirv t l .t s Gd. An appren- that will induce men to drink or do something j , .l- ^ ? moderate ra t? terestcd in such .structures In all that we have tice, when he is bound, pays half a crown to the equivalent as long as this weary world shall endure been^stockf Sve h^r X^^"*decliDe has been rebuked somewhat severely by those in- pays *2s. Gd ; if a daughter, Is said or permitted to be paid in our columns on chapel, and when he is made fr. e, another half —was the renewed youth and vigor, the bri.sk, i’“‘“ea*l'*estate*'orTn*'*rents ^ no declme this question, we have been prompted simply by crown; and if he continues to work in the same cheerful sense of things present and to come, with prosnerouslv TraX^ of al? kind Ihv .a,v, ,.t .„e l.r,gl„ looks Of ouryounge^ child, L^fnl'iL'r'-^S; “Ir wW^ t^hatr' ^-kt'^d I'n^wtr'sut of\oVaVe'LvX'lpin»s|iri'.s"' ' »tkn""ll“t tbere are principles of philosophy The printers of olden time were .jolly, rollick- ters of an hour can be obt.ined in ,ome of our abundant cropl Ou!y''s.Lk,'afrdeJ,T««I -‘I ^iii.,l f Ti u f 111 invoived in these structures which point to the ing set of fellows, and on Saturday night and baneful to the great sum of man s life, but never-j , , thpao ai.uth. n l \ "'‘i destructibility of suspension bridges with decrees Sunday generally saw them at the accustomed theless with a little spice impropriety to give ' g. , , ^ st)ck.s are mor: " L;:;'."pjriSl:" :ri,t 'h f The, hi, eer.ai„ privileges al.so. for l.. ^ * ->d »avor, we temperance people may ring , :f:rl:trtCrfor“tI:gh ",e““htkTh:f:: viin It k I .1 » I i' 1 • t relict in duty if we failed to raise a warning voice times and places ~ e—u:j3— out onr hells for v'etorv. ! . . . fi It behooved me to be looking around in tbg public ear n’\*'ack r»rtT»/-»¥-k i« .........V T 1 1 . ^ . warning voice times and places when sworda were forbidden to bells for victory! A few days since we were re- be worn, the printer was allowed to carry his his sides for SI tne e. rt-.i,. lw^K» 1 „ t i “ lew aays since we were re- ne worn, tne printer \ hot live Ion,r I tl n I t 1 ^ minded of the danger attending suspension bridges weapon dangling at his a 1 11 II r’n PO“P by looking at the towers of the fallen bridge over - __ n ^ ^ i f .’ the Falls of Montmorenci, in Canada East There Tl.nc the Devil Lo. mere a pageant as I had thought it. x...a thougl ‘Miriam,’ said 1, ‘what think you of this? Can It be that onr Messiah was a Nazarene?’ “My wife’s eye' lo.ike 1 reprovingly at me. I had never -. eii them look thus before; they were :i’w.i_\' beautiful, but now I thought them gloriou.s. ‘‘ ‘And yet old men, and learned, and" valiant soltiier', and g .nd men too, believe it. See them kneel, side by side, with peasant and servants. ’Jhere must be something, of tremendous power, in thi.' thinci that wc despise.’ sf.—The following is too was a structure which had enjoyed public con- good to be lost. We clip it from an exchange fidence until, upon one occssion, a horse and cart, paper, and respectfully call the attention to it of with a man and woman riding, and a boy walking, certain persons who feel disposed to spread in the were crossing it, when, without a rMoment’s newspaper line:— warning, it fell, plunging all upon it into the A young man who ardently de-sired wealth was abyss below, and into an endless eternity. Scarcely visited by his Satanic majesty, who tempted him had the impressions from witnessing that wreck, to promise his soul for eternity, if he could be and considering the fatal con.sequences attending supplied on this earth with all the money he it, passed by, when we read of the wreck t)f the could use. The bargain w’as concluded, tho devil suspension bridge over the Desjardins canal, in was to supply the money, and was at last to.have some parts of the Union railroad-making on credit The Slor^ of the Battle Field.—A soldier was ' been much overdone, yet every montb, bj wounded in one of the battles of the Crimea, and adding to the wealth of the country, adds to tL? was carried out of the field; he felt that his wound • ^iilue of railr^tads and increases their ability t. was mortal—that life was quickly ebbing away— ; P=‘J their indebtedness. Railroads stituula:: and he said to his oomrmdes who were carrying ' agriculture, and agriculture reciprocates by giv:!.; him: j increased traffic to the railroads. Abundant cr ps “Put me down; do not take the trouble to carry therefore, are a positive and immediate ailvantai? me any further; I am dying." | railroad in the country. The sbipmen: They then put him down and returned to the the wheat and corn of 185 to market will field. A few minutes after an officer saw the ^®’’y largely to the railroad receipts—in s'l' man weltering io his blood, and asked him if he probably as much as fifty per cent. Tr? “Hut .Miriam laughed scornfully, and, as the railroad di«V«fpr TI f K t f the late fatal the soul, unle.ss th« young man could spend more Host jiasM'd on, I stood erect, and she beside me T w ? u j .v, ? money than the devil could furnish. Years passed - ' becau.se it lacked the powcrJ_o support it.self under away-tho man married, was extravagant in his and her flashing eyes caught the razc of the ^ ,uo luan marriea, was extravagant in his erowd around. One and another sought to pull it ir-fvp wav anH I'^mg, built palaces, speculated widely—lost and her down Hv. n 1, weak and frightened feU on i V ‘‘''''.fortunately we be leve, when ^ gave away fortunes, and yet his coffers were al- niy knees; but .she .tood firm, and^ id aloud ^t ‘ she would worship none bul .he Lord tr God Ibe conviction that! He tun anl when a liar''fi)oted friar, with a rone cirdle rl^ position upon the durability power and laiue, wiinoui reaucing ms "pile" ot ° ' •n~*' — •'T' | _ mnro K u • ' r thi '.nd a hempin gown, .said, ‘That is our Wd ’ she tl^e li? and strictly in i gold. He became a “fillibuster,” and fitted out open u at tbe Uth of John, and , fn ^isTear 18=.-^ replieii, ‘That! that!’amilaughei^ scornfully again ^ when we admonish the Dublic shins anH nrir.ioo K.,t Kio _ii u:. Dear the end of the chapter vou will find a verse i * year, lao. could do anything for him. “Nothing, thank you.” “Shall I get you a little water?” said the kind- hearted oflicer. “No, thank you; I am dying.” “Is there nothing I can do for you? Shall I write to your friends?” ^ . “I have no friends you can write to. But i P®°P'® awaken to a proper sense of ibinf- there is one thing for which I would be much ! ®tpcks will return to a legitimate value, and » 1 i_ -11 * «** ! will Hp npraiitKof «..c npv^r depression in railroad securities is tho result s. .f j of isolated ca.ses ot reckless alventure in th??' securities. But for these there wouid be, in 't* present prosperous and abundriot season, reason to look for an advance in stocks of all t-' great railroads in the country. In a little wb; after the excitement has entirely died away, tc! 'I be fi-;ar said to b. r, in a .solemn voice, ‘Whom you (lespi-ic, may the iod of Abraham reveal to you.” At that moment there came :icro.'s the grand square, mad with fury tbeguar.lof the pontiff. Hi> flying hoofs da.shed damrer In^falur^wkhout^^reduci'^^^ obliged; in my knapsack you wili find a f^sta-j that the country was uever - „ , c— He became a “fillibuster,” and fitted out will you open it at tbe 14th of John, and ttie line of our duty when we admonish the public ships and armies, but his banker honored all his chapter you will find a verse 01 thvir danger. They will all fall in the process drafts. He went to St. Paul to live and paid t>egins with ‘Peace.’ Will you read it?” of time, so sure as iron will granulate and lose the usual rates of interest for all the’money he • t words, “Peace Its tenacity under the influence of the elements I could borrow, but though the devil made wrv ' ^ “J ^ the hor.se of one of '“"I'"'”- wbe'o'"h’e Tamr'to^par'thrbins,^^thl^ ! giveth.'give I unto you. 'Let not to be, of course we know not, and therein lies the — -n • i ^ _ • I vnur Vmaf-i- ti-rkiiKia^ nAWKai* i«a> a*- It publishes itself too late to avert the throui.rh the ma.ss of living men They pressed r—.a.c u, «vcit lue »..d and .he crLi swayed to a!ld fro, “»"”'l“''iccs of the calan,ity.-fl„j»afo all paid One expedient after another ' failed—the devil counted the time, only two years ' “Thank you, sir, said the dying man; “I have that he must wait for the soul, and mocked the ■ ^ Saviour; God is !spairing man. One more trial ^ ‘“stantly expired. efforts of the despairing man. One more trial was resolved upon—the man started a newspaper!! A Spiritual Appeal.—A colossal sailor full of K. M. MCRCBI80N. a. J Hi)WSU MURCHISO.N IIOWKLL Commission Merchants^ No. 104 WALL STREET, 69-itf .'VI>W I'ORI*' FEl*ER .I.V» .§GIE. i"M 1 b-.irti my wife wail aloud, and the blood A Lire Mai, Sold /or Soap Fat—A Spanish nisluu trom ner bps ill a red torrent, and she fell journal states that a son, whose fatner being in "p -- - to tb. irround, ami the trampling feet of thou- a state of idiotcy was a heavy burthen to him i gr^^led at the bills at the end of the i whiskey, went into a Boston “Bethel,” one dav \Stand,n;/cured by .v;nd. went oyer her gravely proposed to a neigbbcr to sell the old ' . m six months melan- last winter. The day was cold outside, but the jbat wall rings in my ears to-day, as I have man, who was very fat, to be melted down into i l ““J broke, “dead broke,” at the uani It every .lay in all my sad life since. grease! The nei.'hbor having oimsented. a year. So the newspaper went down. . T , J. . - c ri'e neighbor having consented, a bar-i ,i ' ^ , -I. too tell on tbe pavement, and clasped her gain was struck for 800 rials, and the purchaser! bo.lN, 1,1,1 .^ou^rht to shiel. her with my feeble procured a large caldron in which to boil the old j - 7 ~T . 7-~ , .irn:s, hut aia.'! in vain. One moment onlv T man: hut tho .r.. ! i ne old bag which carried the entire mail be- I ,, , »“">nent only I saw man; but the authorities having heard of the ic ni'bit.g crow.ls—I beard then yells of fury— atrocious affair, had the buyer and seller arrested. . thi( w my a>-ins around my wife—I saw the red bioo.l il.iw down her face from a fierce wound in Joke /or a Farmer.—The French excel all na- iple, ami after that I saw nothing, tions in a studied equivoque, but give us a Yankee ur>ncin!»* r^f L i. c aI_ _ • . • » i • , her white V\ b n r became .sensible of this mi.serable ex- fnr the unintentional kind. A Western New .““i J*" '» “ di»tingui-hed ^ , iud and I wished that I too were dead scientific agriculturist, to whom he felt under With my Wife and our first child aMiriam. '• tween Hartford, Middletown, aud New Haven in 1/75, is still preserved in the rooms of the Hi.s- torical Society at Hartford. It is about eight inches wide t'y fourteen long, and will hold two or three quarts. Advantuije o/ Foreijti Travel.—An elderly . . lady who, with her daughter, has but recently was p,is.ses, ,l of, and taking my youna children » j a- i , i un i part of Germany and Italy, hand, J eame to thJ^ laL of tny father" T ^ I “u visited Rome, ’ ' ’ ’ 'isalem. '.anAi ilem Mv ^ • i T I found several pigs of your 8pecie.>-: i and she replied in the negative. “La! iVIa ves ^ren and mv dam/L there was a great many Leasts, and I was astonished J/’ •'*aid the daught. r, “that was th* place ^;en, and my daughter- and ^ at not seeing you there!” 1 where Wo bought the bad stockings!” ^ air in the chapel was hot, and being crammed with poor people, in all stages of dirt, the air was not pleasant. This state of thing.s produced visible effects upon the drunken sailor. He became qualmish, and being jammed up among the crowd and unable to get away, his face was twisted in strange conformations, the sweat poured from his face, and he became very pale. The preacher noted these changes, and attributed them to the sermen, and at once turning to the sailor, ex claimed, “Brother ^Mariner, how shall we help you?” ‘‘Burn a rag," was the sententious reply. The proprietor of a forge, not remarkable for correctness of language, but who, by honest in dustry, had realized a comfortable indi^ptndencA, being called upon at a social m««ting for a tOMt, gave: “Sucoeii to forgery.” HOLLAND BITTERS. Michael Kklit, No. 117 Seventh, near Grant says; ‘‘L.ast July, while ruuningon the river, boat plying between Natchei and New Orle.ans. 1 taken with Fever and 'gue. For eight long suffered with this dreadful disease. The greater F*' of this time I was unable to work, and spent at fifty dollars for different mtdicines, but founi no F^' manent relief. Three weeks ago. one of my insisted upon my trying Bj;rhavk’s H0LL.\M^* ® TKRS, saying that a cure was guitranteed. tilt**-* it for one week, I must state. 1 was a souni la eT een at work now for two weeks, and have no return of the Chills and Fever whatever." I certify that th« above statement is trus- THiM.\9 -AD.^'IS Diaft%:>nd Boitst, Jt E Chuttr't Oothic ' Stpt 3. FAYEa """^RSDAY kvkm KUlTUil.\!i A party of about left ffere to-day, and our State arrived I l>een many here—I i froTD North an.l So ipnee I came. The not bad so many n jetfS. A Saratoga Ysls at nine of the p of August, amountir at same houses to .-a Last evening abou Buren and his .-aon J of Union llall, . tie Hotel,) an.l reiHailie an individual pr. sen ing acqu iintaiie. wi' them. The e.\ Pie-i was very neatly r»ut whiskers perfeetly v as active tii.d form a stead of 7year> of duced wa-> .i -ei li My has cfijoye.l til" i has quietly n tn , has outlive.! t • of party, in the n.' style makes hi- w;r rently in (ju.of ; idle hour. Th rej is well illustratf.l it from the nio't b-i the highest b ii ir-, from high or low, u common ievel ()(■ flatteriiig to tnankit, would hav come ht men at his in'’ U, w nmnieiit to 1 nt'. if ten.lunt i- hi .^.m revereiHo.’’ .''ueb roost alw lys. .\ii counter "t—loss of | and con-^iilerarioii — upon a political car to be one of be m ful of men. .\ii'l appearance. I'hik looking—inileeii I sessing. Perhaps cause I first ^aw I widower of 45 o- 5 moustachc. a ba'd the agreeable tn a fashionable dane"! The s(juall in th terribly serere I but leaves many a and merchants, wi There are curses, ‘ against the N. V done more than a trouble. That pa I any thing, has bee all uioiuye l iiitere gatisfied with the c gone, but i.-' .■^till c “There is but New York,” said| years ago. He objects command I first derives its First ('ause, He the everflowing vales which are last is the creati palaces, often sij pleasures, his pr lias! to his ha{i[ij the great river, din of tho great I am not abtl either—it w u ■! ~but only tl hours more f> gl more of eomf rt| wonder tliat.ain except on ur-;t pleasanter and driv.*n ■ tf tb. foniit .1 tl.e lint the b"at^ are o.| speaking "1 “Faniiy ” ir rality i.f bi .at.-, I find ill r( tl over. The aiJ exceedingly hJ counting la-j law; every 'bijl the i-ouiitry, (• the trout,ie h. | new trouble the future thJ when every rj home or here,] that way n.yl down r • \V. bee-liki- 111 times I ,t| gion Wt re cause of r. ^r^ er.^—-h. e Aue ■ ' thj sll'iW'5 S\ I. .. h I along l>r marble buiU^ globe ga- bl Sewiii^ .'lacj ingen I'-u luJ this oveii.r.gl room, hiii-hj thing as biij on tables ml operating oi