bors era nod their netUs when a chaise drawn by six white horses drove t» the dour, run! tin* little? princess w ith her flit her rind mother. started on theirJourney 10 ihr Wlilt#* Sulphur Springs.MIm ''nil l.r-v% \v:i:i u yming woniniiv lili a strong | MOi la I i i v. utal an Iron will that dominated all who came within hor ken,Ni UiTlI 15UN SYM I*AT1! 115 R.Sh*‘ received hor educatImi at Phila-il*iI 11ia, and vvilli i! iml ih- d much nf tin* nentihv nt that Catmcd her to euatJa r sympathies with tin* North.The mansion, at \yhldh before the w-'u won- •ntertnltied many n«d»*d nun and women, among whom were Frederlkn Iheinor, the distinguished Swedish authoress. became during those dreadful years tlmt followed the Mecca forNV»rthern saddlers.The late John Minor Polls, Franklin Ftoainsnnd ex-Renutnr John F. 1-cwls w ere among her most esteemed fii* ml.r She was a great admirer nC Wendell Phillips and Il'irat e Otcolry, and. like them, an earnest b» llever In nntPslav-cry doctrine* of the petlml. wlih h sentiment was so strong—so mu* h a part ef hf r nnture -that all pi In* I pics, all feeling of loyally to the city in whit h slu-was horn and rnlae^l was entirely lost sight of. She wiih honestly opposed i«* slavery; slio del in red the institution wrong, ami, like Messrs. llotis and Sterns, her friends, was violently opposed to the war.