U VOLUME XXXIII-NO 39. Pin r r gd ' A's° rtP!. l 'sa" 3 7 ' 1 INATIONAL 81A8CIPdTI01P - CON" • 011iiITAINTII 8 BIG TEEN . O. . • _ TERMS--Olfg DOLLAR and PUTT CE*Ts,p(leil • . , I . •• 1- 1 ' •" i 1 The sun in the visit - makes shadows lon', munnin, IN. ADVAiC6; otherwise TwO• Doet.mie< l This body called' toget Or by Elihu . B ar = gor, an il hence the rriso l 0, we suppose, why , wiil-be eliarked• .. .. 59 PMier discontinued, until ritt, 'and other lead6g mu ipationista,bel the W stern papere give us quite the most i rarp:trages are settled , ascent at. the option . 1 1 i ' i the (prove • , ', • ' its first session at Cleveland last• week.— :tensi l e picturing. (four rational elm. i .. A lverree-menta inserted at the rate of 60 etc .. The isceesdepe tool 1 Wide lapge,,and Wes ans. We copy from one of them the fiil-1 7 , : r s•inare, 'at tirteon Ha t e cot:One insertion-- 1 • -... .. ..-ach sobsetinent insertion 25 cent. ;A; liberal , p an ic r•• ...."-' in by tratyiof !h. leading an- wingsthadowiegs-forth: .1 . ... . uni•le . to yearly advertisers. .I , • ti-slartery men of this wintry, *Mon; them HTh4 l . greatest eatsraetin the; • world- is Itf . r . 3 Ind icolloala . aleat . "1";• 1 ;•T Intia , , •Crerriit Smith; of New , York . 'The veto - the :falls efightgara,.W'herel . the waters; I*- -e Prolotcatltentioit. ' --,.`i., . . . cuMulated, troni the great tipper lakes,.form , ...., . ' ludo a adoptettiottleate. fairly lad I • ' ~-. ,- • ; pretty Convention, - and ing &river three gmlet" of aniile in width;', Por tbe Helier Ar go,. ' , ehara tor and object the i 7- , . .are iniddetily contracted and plinged - Mr LLN E S • - 4 , . .. • • • , . - , of int reat and food' for subsequent retie.- one htu}dted and suit feet. 't : • . , PI: Vildl. 11. kt 43.. ' . i l . :!' The greatest cave .to the world is the • .-------- z- . ' ifon. They I ,ato ai Rowe: : ..\' \ . .nr.•;,i,, , briiii.i.:lrea ,, ,,k... .. L . ~ I '7. • .-,, viw i r.exA . ii, in coo ideistion of those m ei.. .I,llmanith Cave in Kentucky, where one , - 1i th, cold tatty stones; 0. 5E.... '— - .. .. .. .. A' i tuptiiai r a lectishito can make a voyager the waves of a a z ul, . - Aft ;ft ...c l od th at my tongue roult,i 'utter, • , al, polltzeal bod cot .. . . , teranean river, and cafonlish !withouleyel.:. qbp th..,ugLtsithat arise tame " ...- ~ by which the Free stee,,have. directly o r . ~,, t . tea • :1 . I . la. „. th The eta firer i this world is e T".kir' . .V. ; indirectly eontribUte to the sanction - and . 3iiwiss f ... 1 which . , f , p r , fa, our t h ousan d One 11. Vt.r.rt d.f:r fiiew .i, , nano -over4pyriilg, ' o s t eriance o t slave ~ OLGi of the waged! , . . t , _., - : . . 2 , hundred:mites in It Its name it de -,-,:ir..-ii-E.3- t• - 1.1.-ril `A And!)".# t+ night, . rude or tlimenittes tulrolven in its eating- , rived fro ! lc sc 1 Indio word y = ins the Fa , S-- tU 1..111 , ‘ i ;14 f n.: t?..6,mi 1 u..r me tl....ronin F tion, and also!of the kaanfeasurable atleants... therof Waters r - - 1 --; - - ~ : 1 - beir I.lllr.4ttii Itibt. - ' ic.f.l- ic'hi4 veldt! accrue to' l every section nfj • i.•,, , - • TOargest vall4 in the world is the e, !,;,... , <.'t teel;ngs t o my spiral trw g i n g, . - the country from its, .:r . emovals - - There for!, i 1 4 valley; in the Miiiiiiatiiiiii.. -It - Inontaios five 7 bur; -y Pticentil !hist, ti . ihcu my o F bi,--uu, ‘r, 1" ~, 1. Resalved, ; That in the opinion of 1 this , hundred thouaind - squi t ro miles, and it one y desirable , -liivlll my 407.11 . 115 Ci. sordid tho spiti Hanging . •, Convention, tt, Pi h l gh! that the ihf-the,most prolific regions of the - glebe. i e-.. it. o.< , dust. ' •. ,p eo p le of the I 'North • tumid eo.operate, -...; i . - Tbelsigest laktein the world is Lake "Su iris 1 - , .1, . a-teneroos and bro&erly ap, with th i l 1 petr id r - erhteb is four hundred' ,': and thirty, ~ d. . <,, , e,e- It, LIP . s s , W 1, • 4, ± . 1''Y E;r-t't "'""'" , people of the Sou th , a dshareliberally wit An it a 1 0 " . , ~. : 1' - ' • 1 J ., irl , ... . , i , , , ~ ' them iu the eXpetoe potting air end to s ,1 The gran test natural bridge is the ' world. ' • - -a, i Si I: • :14 , /l/ ir MMIIIIF . , '.. tl/ II iII I I S I. • d‘ ."!'• ''' ' .. . • i : great a moral tnd 3 r l . i , ica l . an ev il as Amer tis that drer , Cedar creek, in ! Virginia.— :.--- , -.4-. - - 1 . . 1 ,,,... . i ~,e 1 .1,,tf.. wi,ty aril di%idea - , ..-"t-' ''-, llt extends across a chasm eighty feet in , IV t. 9 1 . -." 4°4 ' 4 'l: - .., ' 2 - .. Resolved, That - lie Airieriein people i width aqd two hiindreelknd fifty feet' deep, , . .... , at the bottom of which a creek 'rims. • 1 i • - 1 It - i tar ,sr u:ob ~ t al long should make itheir-cmmt:ttytevetnTenti•,, ~....• ‘.tik...04.).•`., ... , , , I , o their agent in this Matter , and shOulciinallL . The I reatest 'soltd Mass of iron — in the 1.- 41 on Congress to pay to,bank,State thatalill wor ldl a . th e h en nleuntein Of miseeuri._ ,'., ii,<, ast., ~...:...,,...1 s:,ti, mg.', .., ~., .t• , , Stayer a suntinot -exceeding ~ itt• . ,t , ‘,../r ilmilit.g pre.,, Huger •' abolish 7 y, ~, . 1 - • t wo ) rt is three hundred:.a . di fiftyfoot 11 h. and I -'''' 'th" . ....-:- .• , . `hundred and fifty:dollars for each and every tw o miles in circuit. - 9 ' . ..' • i•,..i, <-1,,, i , 5... vet. . ..,,,,„_ ~ ...,. 7 - ...liive.rmineipafid, eit'ett State providing for . The longest railroad' i the World is the ~... , „.•,... • 1 - .. ri. . . t - • the ics;•' , l a . to‘ing _.:yt..-y st.- •;11 Uruttm. mt-tattu,.t Central railroad 'of Illinnie, which is seven I ... ' 1nx,,L.....-i,t awl the .If-if,f are throng ng deem pr ops a, -.' ' 0 '' - - ' . i , , _... . - huudred and thirty cue-long, and cost fif- ' I i ,.1.1,ait, 7 of gm _ tr;!fro-.11 thy Mae eyezl i r ul vm_c..--,-,, O.„ Resolvcca., That the Ant.t'lol) people, 1 teen .millions of dollar,. :art Ir're . :- :' .. i . !' i.•, - .;,..i ~le.s-7 . ,u ',-,m;wt i t t IL,t.still; assn ., ... this ... . ould 01 ettOpL 2 . o.xceeci our Wishes. :ii t h e • ld .• • - •l i in ire,, . • o wor ~ ts • in _,lgassachusetti, wine , %Lilt. ,t,,,,gt, g,'er a;l : r,ts . l feni . I Nevertheless, the stnall ,sum :of twenty-five .s; • till A;da.i t., •.:I -. '"• - c"'''''',., ".. -' p .-' r i . 4: labor wou ld b ring Orem ,a State, would bp i The'greatest 'graikpq i in the world it; .. , es , t , -.atteayeate--..-.rt-.0 turn on the .v ,jec . . . , more .4 . , ( f,./ , ~ than, compensate .in the - enhanced I ahi cago; 1 .•. , -;rt.a.i•;:' u.- 11)114... ..thf I . f f I fir ( 1 If . I bad her story 4 • :7 • , , • :I 1 t ,value ' of her soil x and i n ,"numerous ' , DM- i The,larigest aqueduct the. world is the 4 a , :ltr.r trial :mil bereavement to Ire a e, , , ler great advantagei that ! would , itisne.-- ; Croton eqaelnet in,NeirYork It is for . on- kid looking irotnan,l whose , t Were V irginia to emane,pate her tilves the 1 t e r and Ulna miles long, and coat twelve ...1;4:1-,-h-S, - 1 . , :Jul th-jf•tted air showed that , . • . Tear, •her, wealth to ten-yearii wealdl atel-a holf.millious of dol arc." ! - :.. -,r,s,a pray vi the deepe.st - illoaii-eholy. ;present oat .what l is col b.i far more than d •bl ' Inow. _.....- . 1 , ~ , • , zzall.-1.1 3 .a..ll, : ing 11P1SCII, site I lam in a - i Let j ,, er ems.tr:.„_,_ here sues _ this-year, and ' '...v v i - .:, . r unt oti•:_of ynu know what Inn- i.. ''' . 'WI" ue ! - her worn-out land could lie soh' he - pest . , . , ~... - l ,e - Kllnsa.s correspondent of the Chad°. . I ' , f....r severe: damsel] much as it can pow. - ea • 1 aitti Gotaitte, thus desert one of the ino 11ill‘yee idea se Ir's Orly,' said the ' ' ' ' ih •5. Resolved, That in proposing' e pay- d e i D etn + t i n Judge, woo are authorised I.:A true of R. I . l';* who well knew her? 41, 'tell illt hultes Asst you ealll.troulster. anent of such ttst sulef money to , the by Presidint Buclaanar_ t sit in judgement • I It all if you lh , sire It,' she repliedif,v . riauthrela L . tatas,...e are actuate . d by - the o the lives and liberties lif the Free State I (Lire .seen it ?dy parents posse , s g - -g r ;earnest de ire Itch we feel tu common tali millions of our coOntrymen, that all !people of anew -apeteitee, 141 stow girlhood wa. smlroniill-.3v ,•i hf , a ll th e l e A4 - 0 ,,t. ; -Quit., I s o , d o „, tlic slivcs in this lands all be lifted from, i "Judge Cato, is a man i of dissipated bib- hy 4 m . i.unr , t: A d wiA --- a, v ir w -;,„ O n . ay „, t elcgraflatiou of their chat lehood ' and bon- I its, notorious as a drunkarfl even here where • I li , flithe.irted I married at gy . ,_,lr . n i na.. „..:,,dage at the earnest posse le daY that it coo i ~.4,„ke ni ,e i „,, is so common. . essit one 1 wooed' irii) than allthe world 1,6-..-:•I'e effected I '3' P amble eans, ias the first ' ' 'At adrinking party he was called upon `}taus qi i i kaet, in that full, re licss a their ;wrongs that , i 1 ~. OUT W29 retired, but the ' and ii.a le t epee - eh- r ick reseonse to• the fol ' ' the n• fon nu es' them '''. i .. 1. li , :lo-nyver ff.ll (In a lovelifT ono or a hap- i• I ;I , , lowtog tear "The I.lnio' -must and shall • t Ds:oh-s k i What in n akin this offer of T .i, r 6,11,141 lefts rolled on , peacefuli • -. t- , g be dt.solv , peaceably, if Iwe ean- - -forcibly, is-.. 1:Ive +i1.1:...n sat primed our board, .1 co-operatton, on !.ne'part o l the Federal Gov- I , if we rnust" in which he took the most til met alt el 1:fell-till I.lf stied in my crimient, Congress would obt, in the alight. 1 i era grounds against the hinger continuance f-e-.1 , :- 4 -7. the: ei itit, et,uut , iittelowUrono o f (-slob gree, infriiage upon he Sovereignty of of the Ifni n - of these Stn es. He was de the-e li t tli 1 LI./ k s•r,fi. .tino on, which r any„,State, as it las rega fled iii the South, cidedly in aver of a Swat ern confederacy, 4-f• .f - re.nottion to our southern climate.-- As the acceptance ca tbMos er, the appcii•tian• and the ge ivalde South to remain iudepend I , r.ne •/‘ 11.11111 I 11 , rain 1 „,„,,,1 ,-dons, in .„merit of the money, and 11 the legislative mit of th'e ortb,. &e. ° s• - f•fritlt• 31frning down (1 hut still the; acts necessary to the extitietiree c; alarm, 1 jlrbile t e examitiatiem of witnesses is 1, incnt, ragea. The whOle :Avail:fah Seem. withinits borders, would be , left to the going on; e Judge will take his bat and I htloat. rht iitth. stream near om dwel- , Stilte it '-cif I ' leave the room to visit some of the numer if f! ',Name a ragiu' torrent. 13,tore . we " Re6 ol se f That tit is 01 ienton , w oull 1 1 A OM 92 002s / in town, for a drink. I The pro re str'are of it, our house a a suriotinded invite all t! , friends al e° peusateal Email- ' eeedings ar topped, and after waiting a tale ttatet; I tnanafred O•Ith my babe to 1 cipation to into rat the pu , lie intuit, i i -n t - '' i wliile fort e retur the Court, and that HII , a -little eft 1 ate:l .pet, or whieh l a few favor through their ken ' netr'-.1 33 P°r 5 Dy'; dignitary, n t ceming bete - , --- --tlie_Attorney ad e .preadin el I ree . s were standing, 4-h ose , public meetingc,atl by etitions to 09n- ' General th i n, in imitation of the rt e , . il ,, I, 1 1 ,, n , ,, on r d,s i i .c 1,1,1 protection, ,',.hil e gress, earnestly endeavozirig to' gain the ad- igors out pl to drink. • he jury seeing hu-hand aud stn; -:tigve to save 'what be - ion acrd active co-operatiou of persons "of Lthd Judge, nit Attorney % out to liquor, '..,y t calla el our pre-pert -. At I.it alfear- all ptrties'and professions North and South,l . eerier:lde at4ong themselAe to follow suit, .1, surge swept. away my hu,hand, L an d h e 90 that olio movement ma not assume an -1 1 apparent emnection with , a, y particular par- .i n land soon thii U. S. Marshall is left alone ever ro-e. ae- • L I' - .. ca m ~.., to_ no one era to - td a liesbatid more, but i that was not trou- 1 .1- ' • ' I flosses., If be Judge gets oo drunk to re ?, , , _ , B. Resolved, That' not. rhstatiding the ' fiNe *d • ' turn, t e ourt is a prune until the next Presently My sees saw their danger land press of 4Soutl condegialf ,as ' unauthort- I morning . Tompte, in 8 ice of his stus , 1 r , and . Jo Atruale for ltf - • bf.c.aine lb,: Only eon- . 7 " , u 341 -r 1 e i n ` i ''. t' to - r etk• ' th• ' t l ing is subjec I pidity and piedjuilice, has sme decency in t,, tat i oa. Th ey ~,a as ;,,,, 1 .,. , l ov i ng . in and, we eve.theless yustify ourselves : 43l, 4 r„pect Ivrbile`C.:o - bas none whatever. 1 • I oys as ever 1 , I.•-s , - , I a mothets 'heart an d on t e gro ud, ltt, that what vitally eon- i .:_ 4 .-- ' • wa '0 their tile/is-to escape, airth shell cern, ev y other part of tlie human broth-+ i Beautiful Pails e. geny - -, a':, et. 'leas calf feer— Ti ,,, were erhso ,and 2d, that the .Nerth has as much 1 '.. , ~ , „ . . „,-.?.- -____ far-off I I rdd not .peak to them, but I '-rig, , •tes-save creep, as the' South has to I In a disco, rat. dotaveredBlBpurgeon, on I mild seen them t osing nearer and neaier 11 rrY to, destruction the ,gbip of State, I 3foties' prayer to see God's glory, we find ' i' 4 ol other li ' littleinland ,89 seir grew 1 7‘hieb carries boat; the Nori and the South, . , the followings eloquent pillage,: aall-5 snit .maller. N • ,L 7 the dearest interests of the one as well as 1 gq. w i ll a ll ' o t o i 'b e en aka,T r a my ,g ness pass - 1 bctsiiiien rip i• roomed around the liii,,,, the dearest interests of the they.-' ; . cy e i 1 1 c `f I b ''' • liii i 1 j ore t ee. say again wt a panorama! r ue lie!ae hranches,upturtiediannks, , reeks '„ , 9. Resolved, T . hat 7 the coloration that Whitt a 'oriel: - of dissolving Melting What houtesidropning cattle, masses o rub- our undertakinglinvolves t I d recoguitinn i nflaight 7 hpotilsight. each one Melting into the lA, ~II "Cueflosting past us. My boys/ the right of property in mao, is as groyanti-Lober I Coil(' I stand bet this morning, area their hancls to me, then polo d up-1 less as it is'astounding ; s o th a t lolls nu- rand ' borrow Pie eloquence f an angel; i 1. , 1 3 r -11 1 alts it W;18 aft - llsignal,%--1 i dertak ' e far from binding thus- Is 1 • - -his, Acme( signal, inL n ann6r;a-rs,•an imagine my anguish.-- !an tLiat rill perish, and yet—that, was l 'hu2gi•dtov l),114 close to toy heir?, and ro‘e to, my feet, 1 climbed ' lt ' A" I) t'll , l . 3nel:tea of the t ree, and so v ritiaelwfore it, - till an All-pOwerful ,41 YP , 1 the waves, that ibey should sLi}furthrr.- I wa.4. otaxotti: All my ylclessiuris were swept away-'; all tny Lopes Llisted- 7 ---yet that - vas tint - • Nile, • 1 )r L . L1. , ! was all 1 had left on° c • rth- -- „ lalyrt.d night acd day to support I 'l'4 l ',ln" and s . upitt - Ao train hitn in tie right 4a: but 'mut as be - j ,- , -;e w older, evil companiow's ay:Troia me. lleceaseri to care his rnot!ter;-s counsels; he would sneer her entreaties' and agonizing .rpraya's hft lonni,le roof that he alight be . '`"tralara in thep ?'" ursuit of evil, and- at "2:when hy wine one : night, hit life of a fellow being,''and ended a the scaffold. My heavenly %,o1 fillet.' my cup of sorrow before; - C 1, 41 over That was trouble'. ladies, mair r hppe hi n s mercy will. ever spare i e ' tr) dry. ‘•)••1 among the listen . - .! nuttnest WaS • fir the bereaved Ituother: Whose sad I t.0!•_:,., th.tn'ali-Pl,ll At,. , .ins, so fir , winding those that embark in it, froM inculcatie t lg, as all should. id°, the pnconditional duty of the slavehol ;der to set the slave immediately free, does but impart to them a special ,fitneas for inculcation and 'a special power to make it _effectual.'n, - I 10. Resolved, et through petitions to Congress and perional communications with members, the propissitions ot ) Conipensated Emancipation be4brought before both Hons • es, and discussed' the following session: and tbist all other proper and pidicious means be taker. to press the subject upon the at tention of tho GOvernment land i people of this eountrY. 11. Resolved, That in order ta prosecute with vigor and without susPension of effort the movement inaugurated by this Convec tion, a society _be now formed to ;be called the "National CompebsatiOnliEmincipation Society." ; --------..""----- F ed I N I 1 _ALVABLE wri i tovEmtN . gentle. ,Man in Michigan has inven an attach ment to reaping machines, for the purpose of grinding the grain u it is eat. • The ma chine is calculated to weave the band from the butt straw of the --buodle leaving tie beads of the strew, which compose the band at the head of the linndle, with the rest of the wheat: it is expected to save the I. I lge,r ‘.l . ,ioht ~,u 1 -' ' ' ERi PA., WEDNESIMY: SEPT RENEBE 16, 1857. - BE g - . i 4.' 4Demo El iit .... could I "ea to you as I might wish—but alai! -I cannot_break these bonds that bold My stainmeri g telgru . „.3—cauld llama these lips and speali ry_ii iegels speak— then could I tell you - sarnething. but nol much of the goodness of. God ; for it :isl 'past finding out.'l I s Sirice - I cannot nt:ar it myself, I would invoke all creation to ha vocal in his prabio. Ye hills, lift up your Nolen", let the shaggy-woods upon your Summits wave withi,adoration. 'Ye vall tys, fill the air with the bleating of your sheep and the' lowing, of yOur cattle. - Ye that . hive life if ye have; voices to e his praise; and if ye walk in silence lot your joyful motions showithe thanks ye canna speek. Oh, ye trees of the field clap your hands, ' ye winds in sol- 1 cmn harmony chaunt to his glory. Thou ocean, with t 3, myriad Waves, in all I thy. solemn pomp, by motion to and fro, forget not him who Us a thousand, fleets sweep by over thee in, vain, and writes no furrow on i thy ever youthful brow, And you, Iye stomp, ' howl out his greatness, let your thunders roll le drums in the march of tha God of iuies ; let lasi lightnings write - his natr. in fire upon tlme midnight illiz darkness; let ibe"ilimitable void'. of space become' one m uth for sotto 1 and let the unnavigated I ether, throughits shade's depths, depths, bear through the infinite remote, the name , if Isini who is ever lood and .do. eat g ev.i.' 1 1 1 -, 1 ' • covommie Colonel ittICCO# . I•IO added much in bis recent volumes * O@r knoiledge of the vicelike' ernes 44 1 0gigren,l_. °°ll interest; the Hon. 6.lltai I* Ornishingthe Indianapbtia (To ith..rem sketches which are very, inktOs:Oing,j,! give one witch will be .ulsw„ Scena - bOwe6 : .The House T .• bean n Vision but a fe attei: , the appoint. meat of the- Standitst .03thnsittees, when Mr.- 1 4 I'Duffte; Chaffin ' 1 01; Ways and Means; made,Fibikreipartj filly Sustaining, thelree trade doctrinesof the Beath, and udisting piotentuntin tails ph 'rep • 2 .-1111103, Tbe report was read, Ind , M(o;llltwgeSs arose ..earcestisalty remarked: SI am gla d die chairmen has taken hie net Irate ' Hoe. ton free trade report," and jai dein. Mr. M'Dulhe sprang to Melba— 'l'll the ge* tiara* charm os with tabs my report frso the Bost o n free trade report, I pro nounce it false,!- and otl.upen the gentle. min to take back what:lolAL" , The sir eitement in the House was intense, when Mr. Burgess 'Wai,set•t• risingi on the oppq r (rite side of the , ball, his bald • ~ head bigb 'forehead, and 'lO4 booked .nose, eying prominence to his appearance-1 TO House 'was silent as midistglab, and •al eyes were turned upon the old 'MD..eawyet . see him and hear his voice. - Hei . bligle in the most subdued Manner, In a low voice : • 1 1 "Mr. Speaker, I rise to take , back every word I have Said , about the•-is Port of the Committee of iiWays ;and Means. The chairman says it is false that he tookbisl report from the Boston free trade report --I He says he id tle•author, ind he is an hon orable wan. • Sq much for the gentleman. ) A word as to myself. I beg' ,leer° to as sore the House that I was inthred to make the statements by facto before my eyes that, I tkougbt at they time warranted the charge; but /the gentlenian says it falalse, and he , is an '.honorable man. The Bogon free trade report *as publiShed and sent to the mem bers of Congrese weeks before the session. I readTage aftei page of thereport of the Coin:Otte° and ,find it word for word - with the Boston report. I send to tke Clerk these reports 'and ask =him to read from die Marked pages."! The „oleik Sead' aloud from t wo, alike in word and leiter. As be read the head of M'Duffie 'rank :to, ,bis breast! The Cl.rk ceased. Mi.f Burgess raised! his voice to its high est "I take it all back,' Mr. Speake r he phair..! man says it _is sl t filse, and lm honer 'and he took la.' plans, from the :galleries,- .tiart in- ibe House. 511D1 ndge: t, is. le uu'l §peeher pi to the o w e . , f`; t ' of t Mine. The Source ryc - 1 , - ...., • • - . '1 . 14 source whence . this deadly , piano— which , has gained a world wide. celebrity. recently from its effusion in the,fiqnors of the day-is thus noticed inliousettold Words: lu Ceylon, and, several districts of India grows,a moderiteSized tree, Ili* thick, sbi- 1 ning l'eaves, andlia short crooked stem In I the fruit season i , is readily rpeogrthiled by its rich orange colored berrie., abeut as large. 'as golden pippins .: The'rind is bard and sonnoth, and ;covers Si white soft , pulp, the rivorite fruit of many kinds of birds, 'within which are tho flat round seeds, not an inch in diameter, mob-grey in! color, and covered with very silky -hairs. ! The Ger-1 ,man's fancy they can discover a tescruhlance , iu"theiro fo grey eyes, and call them' cow's eyes, b ut the likeness is Purely imaginary. Tbol, tree is rthe i strychoitte mix voinica, and the seed is the deadly poison nut.,.: The latter is ul as early, used as a ediei ne 'hy , the ~ [Undoes, and its nature and properties un -dewocal by. the 9ricutil doctors 'long be fore it Was known to foreign! nations:',`Dog killer' and 'fish scale' are two of its. Arabia names.{ It is stated. thaVat 'present the na- fives ,1 Hindoostan - ','"Oftett take it for,! monthoo continuou 1y, , 1n much the'same manner, as opium :stets eat opinin. They commencewith to ing the eigth • f a nut a day, and gradual y increase ti • lir allow-1 anoe to an entire , nut, which would be 1 about troanty grain . If they eat directly 1 before ! dr after fo no unpleasant effect! 1, but ' theyneglectlo'' are prouneed;' tf cation" , spasms resU l ll. ' - ! , I . * ' I reply, and' the buffineos an hie . - . A GErizttou.s SIIph)ORIP7O:I.—A West- . ern correspondent of Zion's Herald, in de scribing the stingyr;habite of tho people of his ilk,wben called updn.to assist in be nevolint winks, relates the following emu riertory 1 One,. of our friends, a generona North Carolinian was called,. upon byf a railroad agent, who was soli:citing . stoMc dong . the linA He bad a floe farm and plenty of ,1 metkrey, and listened,rith an intimated coun tenoned to the glowtog - dotails of blessings likely to be realizetifrum the propose'd rail road: The agent Made an elegant palaver, and thought ho haewon our friend and hitt money, when he suddenly gol his efe.teetb cut in ,thia wise:— If I "MY . , yea," the good old farmer; "I know it is wonderfol; itmust ben pow.! erful thing, them air raiircads--they run like Jelin., I Surely 1h 'go in for it. I sulil scribe Something oilers to such thirty." "How much stock will you take,' sirlr said the elated solictor. «Wh ' yon May i put me,down at fifty cents," was the magnifccut reply. I , isa...lew Yorkers iff , tre,egotistioati kna no mistake. The Times isa an article which it says “the ocitomerce of New York is rapidly becoming the commerce' of the, world." , . The issue otithe London Times each mor ning makes a pile of fifty feet in height.— Every four. days it would make a column , as high ash the London iAocument. The en tire force employed i 4 the printing depaxt,- meat, is three hundi , inoludiot reporters and proof rns4Prs.. I . . • UNINISCE3SBB. THE szunrcz or AN ARcatc azovr. The Following eloquent description of the eihnice of an Arctic night mews in Dr.' 'Ray's lecture on the Arctic re gions. ' l We r have at least upon one occasion, sap the iNetional intellisteruer, when eight or nine miles nutter ground in the Mammoth eive, Liesteini . 4) fea_thc t . duirseigi lette beYer %Imagined that - other furtive attribute of - nature, allow, ` could be Ist - h th imeelai to .be beard. Yet the DoetoesdesetiPtion makes this stetter parody is reality; He says: , The moonlights of this period (winter), rare the most grand sod ispressoe of any-1 thing ',have ever Witnessed. The dear sewed the, sir, the ,white surfaCe of thel anent and the lee give an effect rnOcotonons and cheerless but truly grand. 'But there lie :new dement which makes, this mid- shin moonlight seem almost terrible in its hiapessaivenese—it [have often, to ware' the,trying mo notony of ship-loom:I life, gou ',off six or eight miles into the interior in ',search of! novelty, and in order that I Might be !alone. ' There, seated upon a rock or snowi bank, I look, around tneand and.see a knit uneven! country, rocky hills and glaciere'covered with snow, myriads otorystal gems spark ling in the light of the polo moon, whieib shoots its rays down through the 'crisp air, making it almost es light as day I look seaward, and see a long plain of Ice, melt ing into the horizon, dotted all Over with huge towering ticrgr—notbiug mow All.nature is in the repose of death. I am too far from there to bear the scrunch ing of the tableau they ripe and fall lazily with the tide, or the roar like distant thus der as some huge era. opens into the heavy Etna - . Shiro is no nimal to erode sty path, no l tree among Whose stiff hrancles the wino can sigh and tuoan. l There is, no song of birds to enliven !ba l een°, no wild beasts to howl. I stand there alone, the only zepresentative of. God's - living l i world, the only being that has life or can move-- 1 Every antra that I hear, every motion that' I see, is made by myself. I hear (nothing ' ,but the pulsations •of my own Ire.art, my own footisteps, or now and then,Foossibly, the distance, the deep rtunbling of a fallingsnow-bank. The sensation of utter loneliness and ieelation creeps over-meMy heart I beats as • it rushes thp blood through the aeusitive organisation of, tbeiari am oppressed as with discordant latitude. Silence hoe ceased to be negative, it has be iternly Ito um 1— erti:,in-itAitritraf stiow to drown its - - back to the yessel glad even to find refuge in its 'dull life of Eorrid'inriedSity - - - - ' • , , • I. A Goon JOKE.—WiPiora Wells'l3l' romu l 11A the colored orator, who 'in not so black a i so m e White men, told a vary good story at 'the Abington celehratton on Saturday.- 1 Oa a steamboat on Cayuga Lake, the other day, he went to the breakfast table with the other passengers. Just' as ho took his I seat, a dark colored *bite man called a l Waiter and asked -if colored - persotier wrro!i admitted to the table with white folkii_ The' Waiter did not know_ valid t . o ly what _ say, I in he called the Captain, who, on catering the cabin inquired wlto hid called for him. 4 k, sir, ' 'said , lqr. Bro wn pointiagl to-the dark stranger; ' 4 l desire to know if it is Ynur chateau to, allot , cidored pesde at the fregular table ?, The (nptain replied, that rio objectioc hit ,, d ever been made before, and seeing the dark whin) man etudintly I . annoyed te,spirst, appealed: to the geoerosi.. ti at the'colored orator,! taallow lain to re-., main. Mr, Brown finall coeieented, and: at Shia turn of affairs the 'white malo who wasiso - black as to be passed for a negro, left the table in utter diNguAt and unable to speak his thoughts.=-BostOrt 7'ravdtl 4.. A rootain lilaw.—A Tennes4ee : flanter lately visited, New Orleans, i and stop led at the Bt. Ch:tries Hotel, and In the cou rse of, a week created a prodigious, sensatio. lie wase stout, plain looking old fellow, andrea the trip doWn from Memphis contrivhd to get very drunk, so that from the tibiae he landed in the !city until he ;left be 2.irried' on like a crazy man, paying fifty or , a hun dred times the value of,ever_vthing he pur chased. He gave a barber $2O for shaping hiM, and refused to take any; ,change; paid half a dollr for a glass of liquor, declined gl a Abe chalk and gave the - bar-keeper 820 additiona(aS a free gift. Ou the latter being rejected, the toter crumpled tip . the I bill, threw it beta' the counter, andimint off in a rage. lie had, al: his pockets otuff-1 edivith bank notes of the denominations. of hundreds, fifties, and twenties, which he threw away recklessly If he ran atinst a person be dashed a handful ,af bills i hie face. Not satiefieff with this he afterwards paraded about with a linen bag so fell of silver that it bent him down to carry it. -Wherever he:bad a chance.he paid for the drinki, &c., with a handfull of belt dollars. After a three. day's toiii - cif - tbis description ,be packed uiand travelled baek to Tennes- Ire where he belonged._ He is said to ba i quite wealthy. , The suckers about town are believed to have reaped !a grand harvest out of the` poor inebriate's f9lly. ' 1 ....p. , --- , ~, Gov. SZWARD'S CRUIBII. G ov. S ewa rd took an excellent way to spend some of the ipr hot days. The party left, , Quebec onitbe fiat; of August in a , vessel chartered by, Gov. Seward for the trip, They Were on w board twenty-nine days: The" roel u 35 tuns biirdeo,atul possessed' all the Con veniences for each an excursion. The par ty went as far as the Megan Islands on the coast of Labrador, and tbe.lsland of Anti costi, regions, lying some 400 miles beyond the herders. of civilisation, i The exourslon, we are happy to learn, was a Most agreea ble one. The party returned in excellent bealtb.—Rock. .Dent. , . '. segL,ln Cork, a short time ago, the crier of the Court endeavored to disperse the erowd by ezebtimiug, 411 ye bla4guaids that is'ut lasvvre, 'quit the coact;'`' • 1 ISTERESTIONI WEDDING AMY. % ~ ,In the thy of Lexiegtonian tile even-1 re log of August 6, a W . — as witnessed such a wed- I ding party and such a 16aniAgi cetomboy as perhaps never vectored le ilia Uniteti States, certainly, not in the State of Ken- • NAP Mr- &SIM BLoutti., iit aile - d mute, who was brought _up in .Alalui linl Iv eeisid hit education at thei,lCent ityliisti ir ~t.,n foi the Deaf ind:Domh a Danville, where { he is at pretent an accent and highly esteemed instructor. Ile li - if:tali_ and fine looking specimen of a men, and is a gentleman in every sense ef2lie • word. DiEss • LUCHLTIA ANN HOAb ND, the i bride; is also a deaf mute. She ,Wai-eduCe led/ in the institution at Danville and would pasi fOr , a beautiful • antl acasobipiishei lady in, any: eirclemf society. Mr. ,and Mrs. Wm. **gland, the, parents' of t e bride,,, at, whose house the marriage took lace, are also-bah of them deaf mutes. . bey re- 1 eeiiedi their education .some twen y five or, thirty t years 'since at the sane in titiition.l 1 They i have three other -ehilciteti, two of:} : jr j and • their . ' • whom ihear talk, .. young st,,.a lit .l tle boy 'of. nine years old, s, like the bride, i a mute, and expects before Icing Ito go to] the Same inetitution, to Obtain;that inesti- I mable ' , blessiog—a good education-. which , 1 his father, mothei, and sister have reeeivod before him. • - , -1 • There was also present, as incited guests, seine twelve or dfteen educated onites all of them, 'present or former piipi) of tile ; above named institutia.a. .Th 4 attendant of the, bride,- Mies Mary Daydir,oin Ifairison county, was a modest, beauti ul, and elegantlY dressed a lady ite ,acorns any dmwiug-riaoin: She, w form- • i s eily a class mato of the bride. '. Other Other joutigwere ladies who mutes were iaresent, l . wbo attracteA marked , attention by their personal charms as we 11.83 by theirlsuperi or ititolligencel Young gentlemen alto were not wanting, of fine appearunce,;'edlioation, and manners' to lend interest ,to the Does- lion, in addition to the mutes, 'w ho. were present, from interamirse Witb7the fainily . of the bride or in some other wayau_ be- come familiar With the sign I - saga:4e,, so that th'e conversation , of the evening was held chiefly in the beautiful pantonlime of the deaf and dumb.) ", l e ' But that" which porbaps gave th e Most_ pe%uliar interest to the occasion• w as the fact that the martiagd ceremony was cele brated in the sigVlanguage of the, deaf and dumb.' The officiating olergruan Was the Roy. S. B..eittait, Yiee-prinnifial 'of our thevernaeular - of tho deaf ata. a ik was; taken . altrzether, emphatic tlty ' mute festival,ln which all present were'd lig . ht ed - , and which furnished a mos l t st ' i tng exemplification of what has been do p and what can be dime for the unfortnatiteinute. —Lou. 'Journal. , 1 1 ' I Pnmosorny or COURTING.—TheI i few' operations which one has to pe in life, that require more delicate wai meat, more truly scientific ekill, than of 'courting. One of the most perplik problems aboutthe business, is, liowllong should one"iflabota in thiS line be ii,totraoth od ? The4.-i t itoOie datingorersi , whO o wry. the heart 'The" wish to captur , at, once by: stbrrn; while others beseiga i the flin ailed la ffes Cons of their, mia treisea . !for a.poriod greater than the Orecelts requireck \ 1 , to beseige and sackftlinm. . The best*e POTATO ROT IN fi.aistiCnusErrs.--We probably, is' o be neither too enwardlyor re _ re ' 1 , g to notice the continued, prevalence of iiton 'bold in your ,courtship. The Benspat. i i - the potato malady. lho Worcester !Spy' lean aystem is the .best for some persons to ' v-- - t adopt. Concentrote alp fOrCes of yovr sAY 3— chaims,on emp»y's tve(ikest 1) 1 01)16,, 1,16 d I <