Newspaper Page Text
VOL. L
ALBANY; BAKER COUNTY, GEORGIA, JANUARY 14,1846.
THE ALBANY PATRIOT,
f-UUSHED EVERY WEDRESDAY KORKUTO, BY
NELSON TIFT & SETH N. B0U6HT0N,
Editors and Proprietor!.
TERMS.
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AhettiremenU not exceeding twelve linen, will
at One Dollar for the first insertion, and
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* laving the nnmber of insertions specified, will
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ihpJlV oimlc.
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litr manner forty days. -
Krtiv t» Debtors and Creditors of an et
estate must
upddiahed forty days.
\dtirf that application will be made to the Court
JOtliiarv for leave to sell 1 .and and Negroes, must
iit-d weekly for four months.
auMuiwu weekly tor tour months.
H.'utlilv Advertisements, One Dollar per square
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j til U-tters on business must be port paid.
MISCELLANY.
depends tbe career of human liberty. Little dkl the
miserable pedant and bigot win then ruled the scep
tre of Great Britain imagine that from this feeble
settlement of persecuted and despised Puritans, in a
century and a half, would arise a nation capable of
coping with his own migbty nation in arts and arms.
In founding their colony they sought neither wealth
nor conquest, but only peace and freedom. Tfcey
asked but for a region where they could make their
own laws, and worship God according to the dictates
of their own own consciences. From the moment
they touched the shore, they labored, with orderly,
systematic and persevering industry. They culti
vated, without a murmur, a poor and ungrateful soil,
which even now yields but a stubborn obedience to
the dominion of the plough. Thoy made no search
for gold, nor tortured the miserable savages to wring
from them tbe discovery oi imaginary mines. Tho’
landed by a treacherous pilot upon a baren and in
hospitable coast, they sought neither richer fields
nor a more genial climate. They found liberty, and
for tho rest it mattered little. For more tlian eleven
years they had meditated upon their enterprise, and
it was no small matter could turn them from its com-
As I said before, I shall not accompany them in
their adventurous voyage. On the 83d day of De
cember, 1630, according to our present computation,
their footsteps presed the famous rock which bns
ever since remained sacred to their venerated mem
ory. Poets, painters and orators have tasked their
powers to do jastice to this great scene. Indeed it is
full of moral grandeur; nothing can be more beau
tiful, mote pathetic or more sublime. Behold the
Pilgrims, as they stood on that cold December day—
stern men gentle women, and feeble children—all
uniting in singing a hymn of cheerful thanksgiving
to the Good God, who had conducted them safely
across tbe mighty deep, and permitted them to land
upon that sterile shore. * * * *
How simple, yet liow instructive, are tbe annals
of this little settlement. In the cabin of the May
flower they settled a general form of government,
upon tbe principles of a pore democracy. In 1636
they pablished a declaration ef rights, and estab
lished a body of laws. The first fundamental ar
ticle was in these words:—“That no act, imposi
tion, law or ordinance be made or imposed upon us,
at present or to come, but such as has been or shall
be enacted by tbe consent of the body of freemen or
plction. On the spot where first they rested from j associates, or their representatives legally assem-
NEW ENGLAND FESTIVAL.
Tire following extracts are taken from an elo-
lS «it address, delivered by Hon. S. S. Prertiss,
tforc tue New England Society of New Orleans,
niV 2*1 of December, the annual festival of the
lauding of the Pilgrims.
This is a day dear to the sons of New England,
lad ever livid by tbein in sacred remembrance. On
,i,y_ froui every quarter of tho globe, they gath-
, r iu spirit around the Rock of Plymouth, and hang
.von lire urns of their Pilgrim Fathers the garlands
l,iial gratitude and affection. We have ossom-
:;oi for the purpose of participating in thi* honora-
"e duty; of performing this pious pilgrimage. To
hear will visit that memorable spot We will
pie upon the place where a feeble bond of pcrsecu-
id exiles founded u mighty nation, and our hearts
till exult with proud gratification as wo remember
tat on that baren shore our ancestors planted not
silv Empire lut Freedom. Wo will meditate upon
arirtoils, their sufferings and their virtues, and to-
• arrow return to our daily avocations, with minds
' fn shed and improved by the contemplation of their
idyll principles and noble purposes.
The Imman mind cannot bo contented with the
jTCscnt. It is ever journeying through the trodden
ikii
;ions of the past, or making adventurous excur
sions into the mysterious realms of the future. He
who lives only in the present, is but a brute and has
not attuned the human dignity. Of tho future but
little is known; clouds and darkness rest upon it;
we yearn to becomo acquainted with its hidden se
crets ; we stretch out our arms towards its shadowy
inhabitants; we invoke our posterity, hut they an
us not. We wnndcr in its dim precincts till
in becomes confused, and at last starts back in
like mariners who have entered an unknown
a, of whoso winds, tides, currents and quick
sands they arc wholly ignorant Then it is we turn
for relief to the past, that mighty resorvoir of men
and things. There xvc have something tangible to
which onr sympathies can attach; upon which we
■■an lean for support; from whence we can gather
knowledge and leajrn wisdom. There we are intro
duced into Nature’s vast laboratory and witness her
elemental labors. Wo mark with interest the chan
ces ia continents and oceans by which she has notch
ed the ccnutries. But our attention is still more
eeply aroused by the great moral events, which
have controlled tlie fortunes of those who have pre
ceded ns, and still iufluenco onr own. With curi-
■ -i wonder wo gaze down tho long aisles of the
’M, upon the generations that are gone. We be
held, as in a magic glass, men in form and feature
hie ourselves, actuated by tho name motives, urged
w the same passions, busily engaged in shaping out
huh their own destinies and ours. We approach
them and they refuse not our invocation. We hold
loavcrsc with tho wise philosophers, tho sago lcgis-
hlors and tho divine poets. We enter the tent of
'he general and partake of his most secret counsels.
We go forth with him to the battle-field, and behold
him place his glittering squadrons, then wo lis
ten with a pleasing fear to tho trumpet and the drum,
or the still more terrible music of the booming can
non and the clashing of arms. But most of all, a-
mong the innumerable multitudes who people the
I'M, we seek our own ancestors, drawn towards
them by an irresistible sympathy. Indeed they were
coir oilier selves. With reverent solicitude we ex
amine into their character and actions, and as we
find them worthy or unworthy, our hearts swellwith
pride, or onr cheeks glow with shame. Wo search
with avidity for the most trivial circumstances m
their history, and eagerly treasure np every memen
to of their fortunes. The instincts of our nature bind
us indissolubly to them and link our fetes with theirs.
Men cannot live without a past; it is as essent-fo
to them as a future. Into its vast confines we will
journey today and convene with oar Pilgrim Fa-
tbeir wanderings, with stem and high resolve, they
built their little city and founded their young repub
lic. There honesty, industry, knowledge aud piety
grew up together in happy union. There, in patri
archal simplicity and republican equality, the pil
grim fathers and mothers passed their honorable days,
leaving to their |xKterity the invaluable legacy of
their principles and example.
How proudly can we compare their conduct with
that of the adventurers of oilier nations who prece
ded them. How did tbe Spaniard colonize ? Let
Mexico, Peru and Hispaniola answer. He followed
iu the train of the great Discoverer like a devouring
pestilence, llie cry -»«rrnlil! cold ! ! gold !! !—
Never in tho history of the world had the “sacra
fames anri” exhibited itself with such fearftil inten
sity. His imagination maddened with visions of
sudden and boundless wealth, clad in mail, he leaped
npon the New World a,n armed robber. In greedy
haste he grasped the sparkling sand, then cast it
down with curses, when ho found the glittlering
grains were not of gold.
Pittiless as the blood-hound by his side, he plun
ged into the primeval forest, crossed rivers, lakes
and mountains, and penetrated to the very heart of
the continent. No region, however rich in soil,
delicious in climate or luxuriant in production could
tempt his stay. In vain tho soft breeze of tho trop
ics, laden with aromatic fragrance, wooed him to
rest; in vain the smiling valleys, covered with spon
taneous fruits and flowers, invited him to peaceful
quiet His search was still for gold: the accursed
hunger conld not bo appeased. The simple natives
on infernal one—terrible, cruel and remorseless.—
With bloody hand he tore the ornaments from their
persous and the shrines from their altars: ho tor
tured them to discover hidden treasures, and slew
them that ho might search, even in their wretched
throats, for concealed gold. Well might the miser
able Indians imagine that a race of evil deities had
come among them more bloody and relentless than
those who presided over their own sanguinary rights.
Now let us turn to the Pilgrims. Thoy, too, were
tempted: and had they yielded to tho temptation,
how diftrent zdghl have' been the destinies of thia
contitcnt—how different must have been onr °wn!
Previous to their undertaking, the Old World Was
filled with strange and wonderful accounts of tbe
New. The unbounded wealth drawn by the Span
iards from Mexico aod South America, seemed to
afford rational snpport for the wildest assertions.—
Esch succeeding mdventnrer, returning from his
voyage, added to tlie Arabian tales a still more ex
travagant story. At length Sir Walter Raleigh,
tho most accomplished and distinguished Ot all those
bold voyagenrs, announced to the world «•**£
bled,’’ See.
Here we find advanced the whole principle of the
Revolution—the whole doctrine of onr republican
institutions. Our fathers, a hundred years before
the Revolution, tested successfully, as far as they
were concerned, the principle of self-government,
and sojved the problem, whether law and order can
coexist with liberty. But let us not forget that
they were wise and good men who made the noble
experiment, aud that it may yet fail in our bands,
unless we imitate their patriotism and virtues.
Well may we be proud of our native laud, and
turn with fond aflection to its rocky shores. Tlie
spini or uk> i>;i L ,ri— out, i— :. .„a its
fortunes. Behold the thousand temples of tlie Most
High tint nestle in its happy valleys and crown its
swelling hills. See how their glittering spires
pierce the blue sky, and seem like so many celestial
conductors, ready to avert the lightning of an an
gry Heaven. Tbe piety of the Pilgrim Patriarclis
is not yet extinct, nor have tbe sons forgotten the
God of their fathers.
Behold yonder simple building near tlie crossing
of the village roads! It is small and of rude con
struction, hut stands iu a pleasant and a quiet spot.
A magnificent old elm spreads its broad arms above
and seems to lean towards it, as a strong man bends
to shelter and protect a child. A brook runs thro’
the meadow near, and hard by there is on orchard
but the trees have suffered much and bear no fruit,
except upon the most remote and iucessiblo bran
ches. From within its walls comes a busy hum,
such as you may hear in»diovir , “’dbee hive. Now
hundred children, with rosy cheeks, lmscl'i’i’cvious
eyes and demure laces, all engaged, or pretending
to be so, in their little lessons. It is the public
school—provided by law: open to all: claimed from
tho community as a right, not accepted as a bounty.
Hero the children of rich and poor, high and low,
meet upon perfect equality, and commence under
tlie same auspices the race of life. Here tlie sus
tenance of the mind is served up to all aliko, as the
Spartans served their food upon the public table.
Here youug ambition climbs Iris little ladder; and
boyish Genius plumes his half-fledged wing. From
among those laughing children will go forth tbe
men who are to control the destinies of their age
and country; the statesman whose wisdom is to
guide tlie Senate—the poet who will take captive
the hearts of tho people and J|iud them together with
immortal song—the philosopher who, boldly seizing
upon the elements themselves will compel them to
his wishes, and, through new combinations of their
primal laws, by some great discovery revolutionize
both art and science.
sweet dews of morning the gentle recollections of
our early life; arouod thy hills and mountains cling
like gathering mists the mighty memories of the
Revolution; and fire away in the horizon of thy peat
gleam, like thy own bright Northern Lights, the
awfol virtues of our Pilgrim (ires! Bat while we
devote this day to the remembrance of our native
land, we forget not that in which oar happy lot is
cast. We exult in the reflection that though we
count by thousands the miles which separate us
from our birth-place, still our country is tho same.
We are no exilea meeting upon the banks of a for
eign river, |o swell its waters with onr home-sick
tears. Here floats tbe same banner which rustled
above our boyish beads, except that its mighty folds
are wider and its glittering stars increased in num
ber.
The Mas of New England are found in every
State of the broad Republic. In tbe K»«r, the
Sooth, and the enbooadad West, their blood min
gles freely with every kindred carrcnt. We I rave
but changed our chamber in the paternal mansion;
in all iu rooms we are at home, and all who inhabit
it are our brothers. To us tlie Union has but one
domestic hearth; its household gods are all the
same. Upon ns then peculiarly devolves the doty
of feediog the fires upon that kindly hearth; of
guarding with pious care those sacred household
gods.
We cannot do with less than the whole Union;
to us it admiu of no division. In thn veins of our
children flows northern and southern blood; hmv
shall it be separated; who shall put asunder the
best affections of the heart, the noblest instincts of
our nature ? Wo love tho land of our adoption, so
do we that of our birth. Let us ever be true to
both; and always exert ourselves in maintaining
the unity of our country, the integrity of the Re
public.
Accursed, then, be the hand put forth to loosen
•lu. cmlricn cord of Uuian: thrice accursed tlie trai
torous lips, whether of northern fanatic or southern
demagogue, which shall propose its severance.
But no! the Union cannot be dissolved; its for
tunes arc too brilliant to be marred; its destinies
too powerful to be resisted. Here will be their
greatest triumph, their most mighty development
And when, a century lieucc, this Crescent City
shall have filled her golden horns; when within her
broad-armed port shall be gathered tlie products of
the industry of a hundred millions of freemen; when
galleries of art and halls of learning shall have
made classic this mart of trade; then may tlie sons
of the Pilgrims, still wandering from the bleak hills
of tho North, stand upon tlie bonks of the Great
River aud exclaim, with mingled pride aud wonder,
Lo 1 this is our country: when did tlie world ever
witness so rich and magnificent a city—so great
and glorious a Republic!
cry of the province of Galana and its magnificent
From tka Farmers Library.
ANIMAL AN D MENTAL FORCE. *
Difference between them—Strength of mtk of
different Nations compared.
In every industrial occupation there ore
actually involved two totally distinct officer,
which are paid for in very different degrees.
paid for in very different degrees!
These arc tlie animal force, and tlie men
tal exertion which directs it. The ques
tion of relative cheapness or dearness of
labor altogether depends on the relative
proportions we want of those, and the pro
portions in whicti they are possessed by tho
man we hire. Now, owing to the general
absence of industrial activity in this coun
try, the mental power is not at ail so uni
versal ns in Britain. It is hence dearer in
Ireland, whilst animal force, destitute of
industrial skill, being less abundant in Great
Hritain, is dearer there than it is with us.
A bricklayer in London gets 22s; per week
and ins lali ‘ '
>orer 14s.; a bricklayer in Dub
lin gets 25s. per week, and his laborer but
9s. These proportions arc often said lo bo
caused by combination and threats against
employers. It is not so; the fact Being
that men who know bow to set bricks nro
proportionally more abundant in London,
ana men who do not knowhow to <16 .jb-
ure man; ubuudant with us. This diversity
produces both the power of combining, ana
the diffetenen of wages.
Considering man merely ns a source cf
animal power, it is gmlifling to have jt
proved, that when at all welt fed, there is
■ . ... 1 / v.vliisn in Slip?
no race more perfectly developed, os to
physical conformation, than the inhabitants
of ibis island. Professor Forbes instituted
an extensive scries of observations oft ho
size ami strength of the students attending
tho Uni-craiiy of Edinburg, who may bn
considered ns fairly representing the mid
dle classes of their respective countries;
and I have subjoined the similar results of
Professor Quetelcl regarding tlie students
of tlie Univeisiiy of Pruxelics. Tho
strength indicated is tltnt shown by pulling
out tlie stem of n spring dynamometer.
Ar. Ifrght
in inch s.
Aa iceipkt in
pounds.
Ar. x/re*x*4
inpanmU.
Englisb,
(SI
151
403
Scotch,
(.9
162}
423 .
iriph.
70
155
433
Belgians,
68
150
339
The Irish are thus the tallest, strongest;
and heaviest of I lie four races.
Mr. Field, the eminent mechanical en
gineer of London, hnd occasion to examine
die relative powers of British and Irish
the Instit ute of Civil Engineers in London.
nuGfluci urcuared for his return to Suez, it 1 lie Institute 01 t/ivil l^ngtncrr- in la mu •
unsadiV^msht wbenl ereachedthe coast. I!e found that the utmost effort of a man
Thc llow if the tide had begun, and it lifting at the rate of one fcot per tn.nula
was proposed lo encamp, an5 spend the
night on the shore, but tionaparlc refused;
lie called the guide, and commanded hint
to lead the way. The guide, confounded
by an order from a person whom the Arabs
regarded as n prophet, mistook the lord,
and the passage was lengthened by about
a quarter of an hour. They were scarcely
halfway, when tlie waves 'of the flowing
tide began to rise round tlie legs of tbe
f Englishmen, from 11,5^5 lbs. to 24,235
Irishmen, « 17,325 “ 27,562
Tbe utmost effort ofaW clslnnnn was 1 o,I I-
horses—the rapidity of the swell was
great—the darkness hindered them from
seeing the distance they had yet to go.
General Caffnrclli, whose wooden leg pre
vented him front holding firm to Ins saddle,
cried out for assistance. This wus deemed
UTILITY OF GEESE TO FARMERS.
It lias been remarked that calllo of nil
kind's are never unhealthy where geese oro
kept iu any quantity ; and tho reason ns
signed is simply this, that geese consume
■ . I 1.4_ (•t.rlllSn linXlAllS
with complete impunity,- certain noxious
weeds and |
a signal of distress; the little caravan was
instantly thrown in disorder, everybody lied
capital, tlie fer-femed city of El Daredo. We smile
at his account of tho “ great and golden city.
and “ the mighty rich and beautiful empire,
can hardly im^ue ^t^o« could tavebelfered
Tint common village school U New England’s j his own way. Bonaparte nlonc co " l . l ” , '® < *
fairest boast—the brightest jewel that adorns her tranquilly to follow bis gttufe. St til l Ire
uirest uoaso- wale ' r r( £ e> his horse became frightened
brow. The principle that society is bound to pro
le for its members education as well as protection,
that none need be ignorant except from choice, is
vide for iu members education as well as protection, alM j refused to advance—the position was
vide tor iu me . , he i casl delay was death. One
for a moment, in their existence. At that day, How
ever, the whole matter waa received with tbe most
Implicit faith. Sir Walter professed to have explo-
redthe country, and thus glowingly describes it
from his own observation:— .
“ I never saw a more beautiful country, nor more
lively prospects; hill, so raised here and thereover
the valleys—the river winding into divers “re"®"®*
—the plains adjoining, without bush or stubble—Hi
fair green grass—tlie deer crossing in every path—
the birds, towards the evening, singing on every
tree with a thousand several tunes—the airfresh
with a gentle easterly wind: and every stone that we
stopped to take np promised cither gold or silver by
iucomplexioo. For health, good air, pleasure and
riches, I am resolved it cannot be equaled by any
region either in the East PC .vest.**
Tha Pi!- rims were urged, in leaving IIo«and,'to
seek this charming country and plant
smoog iu Arcadian bowers. WcU might thepoor
wanderers cast a longing glance toward* lt ^ h *yW r
valleys, which aeemed to invite to
the^mostTmportant that belongs to modern philoso- 0 f t | lc guides, remarkable for his great height
phy. It is essential to a republican government. an( j Herculean strength, , leaped ^tnlojjie
Univeraai education is not only the best and surest, 8Ca> l00 k the General on his shoulders, anil,
but tho only sure foundation for free institutions, holding fast by horse’s tail, carried Lonn-
True liberty- is the child of knowledge; she pines 'f ke a child. Inn few n.mutcs the
away and dies in the arms of ignorance. water rose to his arm-pits, and he wptn
y . * * lose his fooling; the sea rose with frightful
Thev have wrestled with nature till they have rap iditv; five minutes more, and the dcstl-
nrevailed against her, and compelled her relucUntly „j£ a Q f (| ie world would have been changed
to reverse her own tews. Tlie sterile soil has be- by |hc death of a single man. Suddenly
come productive under their-agacions culture, and , ho £ rab shouted, he felt he touched the
the barren rock, astonished, finds itself covered with shorc; lbe guide, quite exhausted, fell up-
luxuriant and unaccustomed verdure. on his kneej—tlie General was saved al
Upon the bankt of every river Cay build temples t |,e moment bis strength was gone,
to industry and stop the squanderings of tho spend
thrift waters. They bind the naiads of the brawb
!n" rtrcanTand* compel them, like the nd daugh- 0 f every one alone, and attend to your^own
tera of Dankos, to pour unceasingly from their gift- Don’t bi
thers. WewiU.p-k.to and they Ml -
t
of tbe wild Atlanticjonded 'upoothe bleakest | the J^^reS SreLtri
a hundred a^ Rod one care worn exiles. To the
wra^SlM^T^tbk had "reeo'ved'to vindi-1 ^‘’^wkd'kkleSt'the of New England live
ed a hundred a>* And oris -re #ntn exUei. Tothe w' temp^x^ ^ JS&fomanfrheir pnn- the unsrarae ^ Their advontur-
? , “ l observer no event could seem more to add dominion to their native land, and to |«c ^ ^ waters of every sea. Bold and
Tbccra.tempt^e^of^wo^ro^ly Northern they go forth
. . After full discuss** and am- rc*uo-- . , ^ m irrhtv deen. The
dtlrned to noli— it Yet the famous verael that
bore Cesar and bit fortun- carried but an ignobte
* l J as the c
the rocky shore swim forth the- ocean birds—horn
how they spread .
hrcexe an d wing their flight to every quarter of tho out
globc-Uhe center pigeons of the world! Itisonon
boreQnsaraod biafortun--rri-om«^ drtennlned tbrt their'pasture,and over it. wkte prairies he despised
to seek their fortun- in the mighty deep- The
freight compared with that oftho M*yflo • objects could be best accomplished bya settlement
little band of pilgrims broagbt with them, neither obpcu* ^ Northern Continent, winch
wealth nor power, bat tha P riac ‘P 1 f*° f 5‘ v . holdout no temptations to enpid'ty—no m-
ligioaifreedom. Tbq,
tinm in theWert—U Continent
they follow the monstrous h»ds that fowl upon
Glorious New England! thou art still true to
fame and worthy of any wesfrsl boo-
hy children, have assembled in this fer-
^ifrwoble^rpoM.
historian, “Trusting to God and them—Ires, thc y („ irit 0 f the boar. On thy pleasant Tallies rest like
- - - nwiloni illtoPTlW*
cultivated and developed them to a fall andhuuriairt ^h ^solution tothe accomplish- j -a.
■rturity; and then famished then to thefrp—te<^ noble purpose. lath# hug—goofthe
grasses, which taint more or
less, according lo their abundance, the fin
est paddocks pastured by horses, bullocks
and sheep. Most formers ,«ue aware ot
this, and in many places where tlie beeves
appear sicklv, geese are lut into tbe pas
tures, amt the soil where they tread con
verted for the lime being into n sort of in
firmary—JVcir Farmer's Journal.
Last IVords.—Commodore Elliot, when
apparently unconscious, culled n fnend to
him nnd arid “I nm about to be launched
into Eternity.—Stand by mo nnd keep my
Un‘
head to the Union.’
Moice to Young Men.—Let the business
r one alone, and attend to your own
uv what you don’t want,—use eve-
J . . • Avon If
“Hallo ! my dear,” exclaimed a newly
married man to his wife ‘what arc you
fumbling about your inouilt there fori
‘Just Inking out my teeth, love.- i
‘The deuce ! well you can l talk, w hat s
the matter now 1*
me iiinuci * , , %
‘Oh, that’s only my palate dropped ou-,
* ^‘Thunder 'and blazes I Why—why
•WaStfSq a**’! “wl*
ry hour lo advantage, and study, eye" 10
i • i, n .. ra .t—fiil tlnnk twice be-
temed'haunts, and force them to desert each favorite fore you spend a shilling, remember
torn— naunts, ana .— w jlj l, aV c another to make for it ; find rcc-
it ilie other day of a hair dresser.
The man tpok to his heels, nnd has not.
been heard of since,-though a nian resem
bling him was seen not long afterwards in
quiring the way to Texas.
f or UDO n river, creek and bay they are busy w , u , luyc ttiiwuivs aw - : *
giiiTC, ■_ • smats d,nnrii and ml- realion in looking after your business, and
transforming the erode forest into staunch and gal- rC auuu iu *<~*“**& /j"'
tent veJte From every inlet or indenture dong so your business w_. II |«J»»£(dc£eok
after recreation; buv 1?W, selll fair ami
in the wild wood, fledged npon the wave. Behold i a £ c ca f C of the profits ; to
thev .oread their white pinions to tho Wing
u. ,, -, Jook over your books
gularly,and ityou find an error trace it
outshould a stroke of misfortune cotnc
It is upon acro s3 you in trade, retrench—work hard
er, and never fly tlus track ; confront diffi
culty with unflinching perseverance, they
wi/disappenr at last; tUghyousU.dd
fall; m the struggle, you will be hon-
even mu, iu mic j a ..a
ored; but shrink from the task and you will
A Use Breast Pii^-Bama.n, «
in the'movement. I'•* s« u ' V
the sizeof ia man’s list,X'rvM fo“ali5bI?Mr C.
in his bosom, nnd its head selves for a | w iFojfcfiigttm
Report of anew Rerolntion in.Mexico.—A
private letter was received lo day front
Havana, of the 9ib insl.. fr £"
r to the Sunday Atlas, ’hqt
ter,* the lion tamer, has^a little dog. ateut
half the sizeof a man’s fist,
ries in his'
breast-pin,
IreenreceivedatVem Cruz, an hour or two
no opposition to him in the city. The
grounds of his pronanciamento arc, t he tn-
nexation of Texas. It
a foreign nation was