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We had 0 001 u Inn Us. th ti . bi ' 1 ' "• , „::11-5- • - *. A ' r '~,t - *„. iiii 41proa . ,I , •'•viim - 4--- . r to.' - . - - 'Pre.' s o ec o n cth it a c: s n o i r i:g ;ti a t n a l i l ie w iti e , re an g: i .n a t l i l y ti vr ii i n t g h s three ehlug up on ' 4 ' . ri4fi advanoo, or if paid4o6on . -, . i on board. „ , .A. , i O -will be elyyged / li ' main kg to the emA ^ -- • • • reatm.--- • , •, a posd re s, • • every description of 1 000IFt. z.T x isr In the neati•ot manner, at the lowest pekes, and with the utmost despatch. ;laving l'. ..r9111111 0 4 a large collection of type, we ate p re pared ,tosoSistx (lo orders of our ft ion& DEIifCLCIZATIC CREED • • - 1. Bruit and exact pun re to all Melt of doilidasysr slats or frerortr.rton, rrippoil.r or polif- jt. ream, cowmen.. and hours! friend pliipirtekald ytallopis j culong/sugallsanora with 7%, right of Slam All Terrtior tem to uslisrimiatry their owe ifoineirie affair," • 4. Freedom anti osntality, the nay:et:awn ty ibi Mie people o nted the rig/it o/ the majority to P1411,441ix tA eh- trill is coottit ut ion ally ',pi 'wed IYo. 5. lirononly in the imbhr expenditures, fittkii a mowed praerootion or restirfinth. ~,A p. 4.-ermioo l oi religion., freedom of the FrEe_s euidAytteial d' lesion of information ' NO.?. ft tetitte to tai teerrt jroiitirol organ -11142. I Mt ea corrupts tens sh Fajita! , et. . .4,sewed preservation of tell. Federal etttiootottd no religious tests for tug re. ' Nie s . . No bigotry. or pride of rarer, or dis tinction, of birth amities; American roil:ens 1, Arenii... iltiniplet cod protection for the rights .11 Die preterrn loa .. n of the nainralizatian tohnisifilhumi Ike tight of off to the pollee domain witot~_ 11 1 . 1_10 2 , ,dgi•tiK of 1...t.1..z.,. ra=NrorpursAns 7V moots r — eitTerliond and goo will 1111 - giVitheie 'lee of ti'r hafterheht of BPLSNPOR oPCRJMI• We find in a New York paper thii follow ketch of the fasonable life of hi Hunt ingdonYbefeire Lis arrest : "tled now 'Huntingdon i s iu th e t oom h s . Aitt trial will make work for this lawyer, and 'tract a good deal of public attention. It 411141 be II nice legal point whether the loilg liniftheito nofes as collateral seeurity is tant amount to utter them. The penalty for each traintli may be seven years in the State Pris on, and if couvieted on all, he would r'equire iffilive as long as old Parr to serve out his U In the mean time he seems to be indifferent to his situation. 1V hen otli • 16011 , Sewer informed him he came to arrest ho cooly walked up to the inentlepti cc, WC up a match, lit the cigar which he had tiO his QM' uth, and walks d out nr th the ent- OCT in apparent unconcern. Ills cell at the Toombh is rwhly carpet, el and furnished iris wife's tit rage drives down daily, and her 'is him with kumptions fare. Ito beside champaigne and his Iles alias, and don't seem to let the depredation of his position weigh down his spirits. As an instant% of his extravagance, teen now, it is 1111d • ths1 alto dining a May or too .go, he Mgt rip t. 5) Thotapsoll's fin- ft nit, and paid an high as firs dollars for five pears. , ••1t will be asked • lint has become of th e prqcceils of these extensive forgeries ? We hairogivensta inkling of the extravagance of this Hum, which mufti ;lenity indicate his . character in that respect, and WO liars no I , doubt that within the last two years he has .! been able to squander all the ninny that lie raieeit by the means we hat e deselibed. Ile owned two houses iu oil{' -sec oi l hired.; costing probably 1 , 25,000. These were fur nished* regardless of expense. In vile of these he resided, with las famil . y ; iu the other riot a block distant, he maintained a ladrof beauty and al. ximplishments in grand style, which lady was no:. his wife, lie 'w as fond of showy equipag is aid tine horses and oatshined all his cconpetitors in that line. “ It was usual to see his lady driving twot ift.haad, and himself driving a similar team, alio by side. lie kept open house f r Ins - Meads, and wi s e them the use of his estab lishment. Ito rarely dined at home, bat normally atsome of this fashionable rustau ring& with some fashionable ladies. At the watering places, his lady outshone all others in the aplendor of her diamonds. Tt is said that on the wiry day of his arrest, she had seat to his office, from Sit stags or Niagara, a boa containing s3o,ooti worth of jewelry. liar brother took it in charge, and the oth ers have not been aple to get at it. We rearelied, the other, day, a communication dale had recently bought, at Tinny & Ce's, • 'piece of Jewelry, price /. I ,81 1, for pressestalion to a lady. Mr. 'Filially, howev er-says that this and other similareinate sosnts are exafgerated. '' With 8114 lavish expenditure an these astaaragant tastes and habits imply, it need stet be wondered what become of thepro- IMO& of the forgeries. Huntingdon, like many other people in New Yolk, nas deter mined to lire like a prince --uo matter who dd have eventually to foot the hill. now when the crash that watt to lie eArokled, has cone, and when lie ran r .4- ' 4 461y look ' - that of a 1911/101, his liners a id• lo cell in such gwitO and 'tits- And e %fallenlp sts heave sound of whoa be lot the re the giddy 'sad to eon • 'esrear - ot his wife ;Ole, will of a non food address have livedil ly became Mild not re- In's - hurry, vistence in itj 'Jinn - emzenc his mother dipped him in the - „- #kor bid' Made him invulnerable, 'w_;;) h 431. by cithiarriTt rhtid hint: "tr -point proved his ru4; , an arrow . , wijiiih R. ' • }leaThus ilia with all men. - 6ilii It ciblc on SimoSte•ittry r rArit, i iv 'Weak:place in every man's EationO halt tdsl,.44seiting loristr.PaPitityfihiltixursi.— ',Ehe ncOoptippro • . ifttAiioll9plVOß )Imit . pails ape tiobtied by the snow hignio. following extract In the iumiedinte ticinity of the spot from which I address you Vcese lines, are the de lapidatesl end antique residences of three distinghished Major Generals of the Ameri iean Revolution. Within a radius of one mile and n half lived, long and iveary years, Chas. Lee, the sinister here of. Monmouth ; Horatio Gates, the loser of the battle , of Camden and thy Bouthery campaign ;” and Adam Stephen the 'early friend of Washing ton., In this little Tillage--on whose golden forests I am gazinit—under the shadows of the great woods here—remote Item camps and the Bashing world, these throe warriors rusted out the remailfdor of their lives in i glorious repose, the lArottia irtmeth eaten soshbarda no more Wife drawn. liers r if I mistake get, taco of them died and hoop; eden theid lingering momorials or them Will crumble and disappear its heir figures are fad* !tom tee general mind. house is a hundred pacts from the little assenddage.orliOntiVit by hid TiVdite,lo4 and is an, oblong building of stone, with Chimneys at each end and midway—low, with a rude porch, depneding, as it were, above the rough door, and with a few out: !lenses. Gates arced sotnewhat fuithi:i from the 'town, in it plain undecorated building ; and Stephen occupied a mansion probably built by the earliest pioneers of the valley, in which everything is small and confined but the fire-place, Hut that is neither stiuM nor eonflneil. It is grand--enormous!— Around it how ninny good companion's Inuit hat r gathered in the olden day, amid what sounds of revelry shook the rafters overhead ! l'ou may L i (ad of. Adain Stephen in sparks' edition of the writingitof 'Washington: and there you will find that 'among the hardy geittlemnen who =wt ond shoulder to shoulder win ilk pun" at" VTheliegler; it hen the IndianB TM aged the vane) a hundred ) cars ago, aas I.lcutenant Stephen. A large landed.. poprictur heicabouts, dunlstivara re,enti d the treva -is of the Indians upon his grounds, stretching towards the foot of the great Noah, Alountain --at least, we know that he, del good service. Ile was [O tero:sr-Lk.. goiew tip ••• 4•411,x 4n -thr trl ottzt • nry struggle: but left the nrmy ntiont the period of the lint tle. of Piiiittetom disgiinted at something or other and to cnnie and lived and Med. Of Onto; end Lee more is known ;' thchto ry Of the nuful quarrel of the latter with Wschington at Monmouth you may read In full in the recently published third - volume of Erving's great work. It inato,hableAhal history will flnidly show that Isie was not impute!' in the vr.rong its the world suppo ses. That he made a blunder en orderW3 his form b retret and that his retreat ve ry nearly ruhiel all the plans of Washington and lost is the battle—this is certain. But it was probably an error of the judgment— not a want of courage. In Lentz's great pie_ terc, he sits on 'Mil horse sullenly before the chief, whose hot anger flames out—all that h • did and said afterwards was sullen too, unfortunately. Iligln words—indignant core respondence : Washington, cold and hauty —Lee raging ; then o t court martial --6111: pension (or a year--and Lee, In utter dis gust, threw up his conaminuelon, and came hither .• to hoe tobacco—that being the bent /school for a lee neral," he said, with a slicer at Washinglen. And here in this poor and obscure dwelling, asl have said, Jested out the sharp spirit of Lee, and fell into dust and oblivion, With a few neighbors, no friends ; surrounded by hounds and horses, and making the chase Ins only occupation, nearly ; thus lived' the generab.oad One day, long aftei'iiiards, says a tradition of the neighborhood, Washington sent his old adversary smote, saying that he would call on n'eertain morning and see him—that 'he hoiwe all Fast . contention and bitterness had been foe gotten---hea as conning to see him as an old comrade in anus—as a friend. On the (lay fixed for the visit', Lee sent awny all his servant i—placed ;upon the locked front door lb paper with "Na most cooked to day," written thereon—and then followed his servants, /caving Washington to knock in vain. Ile never teturned, sod with the passing year the eccentric tioldier grew -more and more morose spd The ground floor of house was divided by chalk lines merely, forming thus four corn- Partmenta. In the first be kept his books, In the second was his bed—his saddles said hUnting gear in the third ; the fourth was used for a kitchen. Ile could thus sit in one spot, hr said with Ms - grim humor; end over look his entire household. Tired of his dogs and Ilia silaut iniaa,thropy at ,last, ho com menced Ilia silent " Queries, Political and Military attack on Washington. But , the world declined listening to hits, and then tired pf tho cynical spirit of Charles Lobe lied to other roalma. dlis last words Were —"Stand liyMe, my,brave greuadiers "f snd ad lie ended his career on earth. ( llomer's word now of the third ray of my triad of warriors. 11oratig Gates genie to the old hens° pioder, after the battle of Caluden-t -it wag the Gates who had taken Burgoyne; and wiles° popularity at one (One orerehe4. owed , Washington's. • ,_., • But now, elite ! how fallen! The' Weigh of en itidisnant yuWlc, opier4on had tsd kiln ; and werstell scared, withered. lie haa.l9at the battle. of CIAO- w forll2—oxenhie head ered a heavy cloud of public execration almost; and Con it is Said, lind prepared its• thunderbolt to strike him. But the bolt never fell. The sad s >ldler's sorrow was - reepected. They left him to die in pence here—enough pun ishment that the magnificent drama of the ReVolutlon was played out, independent of ono who - had ennoted so splendid a part in the earlier abra. "T . 7; p Saii4 46l "" Pateriburg F. Lcelown, —Veft.‘;'r da that paper , nn ,volutionary men ich we make the These - three, old wooden houses- ore tht; visible remains of three rigorous them, tothe musing eye, thespirite of. Gates and Lee, and , Stephen hover nround there still, spekeing in every whisper of the pine trues and the-oaks—those ancient oaks of the noble English looking " chase" which murmur yonder through the window L . --th\ro' whose lengthened' vista appears- the lone snansior Df General Adam Stephen. Here, within gun shot almost of each other, these men of history repose—though not happily, we must•eoneinee—after aIL their itruggies. The current of tha Opebneht,-resianant in old _diva with towage- sheets and dyed with blood, -murmured h by, them, and perhaps spoke to their minds of other &apt—typify ing human things which ever bud and flow obmeiiistibt • • • —an icortvoug • 16113 1514 , 9 46 16 colors - vary with each day. SCIENTIFIC AND MECHANICAL ConPARATtvs: ELASTICITY OF WRODOUT AND User lam—The moan ultimate resistance of wrought iron to a force of compression, as useful in practice, is 12 tonic per square inch, while a crushing weight of cast iron is 49 tons per square inch ; but for a consider able range, under equal weights, the cast iron is twice as elastic, or compresses tit ice as much as the wrought ire,,. A remarks lila illustration of the effect of intense strain on cast iron was witnessed by the author, al the works of Messrs. Easton it Amos. The subject of the expci iment wits a cm.t iron cylinder, 1(111 inches thick, and Ii( inches high; the ext.trtuilthametts bung Id inches. It was requisite, fur in specific purpose, to reduce the intA rind disineter to t inches, and this ins cfleeted by the insertion cf •mallerc,usi iron cyliAlleA4tito the centrelof the large one ; and to insure some initial strain, the large cylinder was expand. '1 by heating it, and the internal cylinder lie nig 111 i W 1 L.O huge...wow thus compressed. The inner cylinder was partly tilled with pen tit.. and a steel piston being fitted to the bore, a ',misfile of 972 tow; nos put on the steel piston. The steel was upset" by the ptcssure,and Om ; internal ammeter of the small cylnukrwa's iimr..tased by full thine-sixteentlutol an inch; that is, the diameter became 3 11-I(itlis or au inch ! A new piston was, accordingly adapted to ' tins the ey tinder continues to be used, and to resist the pres sure; the external layer of. the ifinei cylin der wasthus permanently extended 8 1-501.1 is of its length. In fact, d can only be zir ded as loose packing, giving no additionsl strength to the cylinder. Under these.high pressures, is hell noedinul , nnehanically, cast iron, as weld as other Judah, appears, like liquids, to exert an equal prefottn: in every direction in it bielkits motion is opposed.— Clartili &Lb:milli: and 'Campy Tubular Drudges. • STKREOSCOPIC DISCOVERY.--An interesting fact ham come to •light in respect to liCreo amide pictures. M ldigeol, in making thC stereoscopic portrait--of one Of his frimitle, had the idea of taking the tiro images or proofs one after the other, and making his friend each time look upon a different object. Thus doling the !I; ht sitting he looked at the glass of the canteen obscure, And dui ing the, second to the right of an objerit fixed nearly at an angle of forty-11re degrees. Theis to o images being placed in tile stn r eoseope, let the observer stand opposite window, and, tt ithout ceasing to look at the portrait, turn himself to ‘ the tight or left, he will seethe eyes of the portrait follow tutu as if they wire animated. More than this has ken (Meted. by an adoption of Sir Da vid Browster's natural magic toy, tchose lig : uresodnitun into a circle, are moved quickly reund i 8011124 three or futireif them catch eursys at a' particular angle, at tdincsit the same instant, or rather at imperceptible in tervals, the effect of motion iql given to the limbs of ,the sfereosoopie portrait., Matturacruzwor Wnotint Otors..--it re quires a large capitaJ tb conducithe menu facture of woolen cloth on themost Ipprovcd itrisciplea, to produce flue goods. Fresh !rool stockpot work freely, therefore wealthy manufacturaiii have always a large stock ahead, so that it can attain e proper ago be fora thay-couttuiluce to-wOrkit:- .Age _s few - months, at leant—imparts to it, by soino cause not very well understood, a superior working quality, which givesani advantage to companies who can lay tip a large stook. A great desire to pr o duce cheap goOda with a good surfaco basted woolen manufacturers to use Um touch cotton in their They display much skill, we admit, in cov ering it up with-the wool ; hitt such, .goods after a little wenr4sxsunertnrit - ; AM fade in color, and thodo 'not possess that soft and akreeablolueling . to, the touch, that belongs to goods made entirely of wool. We have atataments hi nortie,4if otir-ditily papers to the tdfitvt that American wool was not sufll• ciontly tine for the manufacture of thti finest kinds of woolen *loth. Thiii is an error. As fine qualities%or wool PO now rebind in AkeT e l» d States' as can he foundanywhcre: We - only , tenth.."Alio.t. there was more of ft. Ancordini to toi c iipatiticeof CAM country . ipc ,sheeplrattiar,' not tithe or wool to Atidetrdiat might be. `•atirrtlice Amoi.kan, Still it came on heavier; and the ice began to drivo mire wildly thartl thou:gilt f' had el'er seen it. had just turned into warm and dry myself during a'momentary lull, and was stretching myselreut: in my bunk, when I heard the sharp twanging snap of a cord. Our six-inch hawserhsidparted,.and we wore swing by the . tn:o . others roaring like a lion to the southward. lialf a minnto mom, and "twang, twang!" came a second report. I ° knew It was the whale bye lly the alit:oloms of the ling.- teti Inch manilla still 'held on. I was hurrying my last sock into its slialskin bo'ot, when McOary craw waddling doWnilie companion ,ladders ; " Captain Kaiih, she won't hold intich;longer ; it's blowing the devil himself, and I ain afraid to surge." • The manilla cable was proving its excel. lance when I reached Ow dock ; and the crew as they gathei ed round me, were loud In its praises. We could hear its deep !Eel can chant, swelling through all the rattle of the gear and tits mopl i of Lo ahro way with the Wetted gun ; and in the smoke that followed their recoil, 'we were dragged out by the 1 . f1 , 1 ice, at its Mere . ) . We Steadied and (lid Node pretty warp ing and got the brig a good Ned in the rush ing (hitt; but it nit Caine to nothing". We then tried to beat back - thrtugh the narrow ice-clogged n Ater-way Out was driving, quarter of a mile wide, bettreen the shore and the pack. It cost us tw•o bourr of hard labor, I thought skillfully !tato% : but tit the end of that time we Wtre at haat four miles off, opposite the great valley in the centre of liedcville Rcarh. Ahead of us, farther to the North, we could see the strait growy . lg still harrower the heavy lee tables grinding up, and clopiging . it between the shore cliffs on one side and the leqFc-on the other. There nas one thing left for tv-4: to keep in mater I,ort the c o mmand of the helm by going freely where we mast other is Is be driveu. We allow cd her to seful under a rutted foretopsail --ill hand, watch ing the enemy, as we closed, in silence. At MeV in the morning Nl (7 were. close upon tin piling 111RS'ICH. drypi)cd our benvie,t anchor. with the desperate hope of winding the I , ri,g ;lit thrre was no with standingthe ice torrent that followed us.- - IS'e hail only turns to fasten a apar as a buoy to the chain, and let her slip. So went our best bower. Don* we went upon t4iv galta,gaiu, hope lessly buirapingAlong a lee of ico seldom leas than thirty feet thick7twie floe, measured by a line as we tried to fasten to it, more than forty. T had seen such ice only once before and never in such rapid !notion. One up turned mass rose above our gunwale, smash ing in our bulwarks, and depositing half a ton of ice in a lump upon our decks. Our staunch little brig bore herself through all this wild adventure :LS if she had a charmed but it nhw ellelll44lllC in sight, ahead.-- Directly in our way, just beyond the Ime of Hue ice, against •which we were alternately sliding and thumping, aas a group of ber gee. We had no power to avoid them ; and the only question was, whether we wcro to bo dashed in pieces against them, or whether they might not offer us sonic providential nook of refuge from the steno. But as we neared them, we perceived that they were at SUMO dibIAIICO front it by au inter val of open water. Our Impel rose as the gale Move us toward this passage, and into it ; and we were ready to exult, when from some unexplained cause, probably an eddy of th wind against the lofty ice-walls, we lost our' headway. Almost at the same moment, we saw that the berges were not at rest—that with a momentum of their own, they were bearing 'down upon the other ice, and that it mig(Lbe mu . date-to-he crushed, between the two. Just then a Lroad sconce-piece or low wit ter washed berg mune driving Irma tie southward. The thought flashed opon mu of one of -our eueopes is Melville Bay, inuLas the wince moved rapidly dole alompidelo, Mc(Jary managed to plant an anchor t ticriti slope, and to hold on to it by a ' It was an anxious moment. Our noble tow horse,- waiter than the pale lasso that seemed to be pursuing haled us bravely on, the spray dashing over his windward flanks, and his forehead plowing up the lea ser ice self In scorn. The barges etieroached upon us as We idVanCed ; our channel nar rowing to a width of perhaps forty feet; we .braced the-yarditUiloVolear_uf ing ice-walls. We passed clear ; but it was a close shave --so close that our pert quarter-boat would have been crushed, if we -had not taken it from the davits—and found ourselves under the lee of a berg irr.a comparatively l open lead. Never did hoUt tried ipen aeknowl re, with inorwriatitmlo, theirLrucreiful delitibrance from a wretched death. The day had alreivirits full shttia of tri shl.flatttOidro-wetilineit to come. flaw tirovoindrom our shelter, nod the aitle soon ceftiod us beyond the end at the land. We were *agslo.in tholco, - sometimes esesping its osset hp warping, soniethoes forced to rel.,' on the stritruith 'end Intexiinetof the kicto onssenr4P, tiolfAtinlfs ' agu.4" (ling thtougis the hell. open drift,— ' One )ib•beinit , witeratogiunt,Soff in thuev i p — 0:41 2 . ;: 4.4 fir'? A little pont of upon water ,reoeived us al last. It was just beyond a lofty cape that rose up lilac, a wall, and under au iceberg that anchinred itself betw4e4 us and the gale.' And here,,close tinder the frowning soot e of (lreenland, ton miles nearer the pole than our bolding ground of theanorning, the men turned in to rest. 'leas afraid to join thom for the ,gale eatwenbroken, arnt- - tho toes kept Pressing heavily upon our "berg,—at ono time an heavily as to sway it Ohl iCs verticle axes to ward the shore, and woke its pinnacle over hang ounveseel. My poor'Tellows had but a precarious sle . ep bcffire our little harbor was broken up. ,They homily reached the deck, when we were driven astern, our rud der stilintered, and the Muth% torn from their boltinge. Now. began the nippinga. The first shock took us on our poit•quarter ; the brig bear ingilly ell, and, after a moment of the old fashioned auspense, rising by jerkit hand somely_ The next was front a vetyranfloc tongued and honeycombed, but floating iu a single table over twetatir • • , • but theishorewatel - fen' of Our iceberg - hap• poled to present an inclined plane, descend ing deep into the water and up this the brig was driven, as if some great sh•am femm e . power Wns forcing her into n thy 1104. Al one time I expected to see her cat t ied bodily tip its facto and tumpled over on its side. But one of there mysterions tele \lone, which I have elsewhere called the pul;e•e of t the ice, low end us quite gradually' down t again ildo the nil and we were fen t Loll. of the line of pi (wow toward the short. !Lee we eureve,led ill currying out a I nip, and making fast. We grounded as the tide fell ; and would have heeled over to sel -1 ward, but for a match M . detached thindice that grounded tilting side of no, and, nl though it stoic our bulwarks as we raid over it, hlim vd us up. I could loudly get to my bunk, ns I went • down into our Intend cabin On the Sunday morning AR( r our hard-w ot kit% vigil of :Id hoer*, Nags of clothing, r.,(4- tenteiylnd4a; rubber blankets, and the hundred Mile per sonal matters whicii every Man tikes to save inn time of (risible, wCrr scattered around in places %%bete the owneis thought they Might have them at, hand. The pemmican had is en on deck, the boats equipped, and every thing of real importance ready for n march many hours before. During the whole of the scenes I have been trying to describe, I could not help being struck by the composed and manly demeanor of my comrades. The turmoil of ice under a heavy sea often conveys pressionof danger when thereality Is absent: but in ttti fearful pnesege, the parting ol; our hawsers, the lose of 'few anchqrs, abruprcruphiug ofonr stovin bulwarknirizitl the actual deposit of me upon our decks, would have tried the nerves of the most ex perieneed icemen. All —efldetra and men— worked alike. t;pon each occasion of collis ion with the lee Which formed air lee-roast, efforts weie made to carry out lines; and some narrow escapes were ineiniee, by the zeal of the parties leading them iutorositions of danger. Mr. Donsall avoided being crush ed by leaping to a floating fragment ; and no less taus four of our men at one time wire carried down by the'dnft, and could only be recovered by a relief party - after the gide had subsided:"---- As our brig, borne on by the ice, com menced her ascent of the berg, the suspense was oppressive. The immense blocks piled against her, range . upon range 'wooing them selves under her keel and throwing her over upon her side, till, urged by the 141/CCeti 41 ye accumulations, she rose slimly and 55 if with convulsive Mines along the slurring wall. 61111 there was no relaution of the impelling force. Shock after shock, jarring her to her very centra she continued to mount steanily on in rrecarious cradle. - But for the groaning of her Timbers and the heavy sough :of the Ilocv . We might hat e heard l pin drop. )11141 then, as hlio settled down into her old Peaition, quietly bd. i , ,te her place among the broken rubbish, there was a deep.breatlnqs. leri ce, as thovgh. all were widting for sow& signal hetire rtr of congratulation and eomnita burst forth.— Al fit trplorallont. SOMNAMBULISM We copy from a Pittsburg exchange, a brief announcerr.ont of a reeent..gme of ow nandfulism near that city. The particulari furnish& vivid picture of the.perils of this singular phenomenon, and the narrow escape Of the, pareilt tanm injuring 1114 0114 Id ith ho others not . to be too hasty. The case, an statpd, ozeurred at Oakland, the private res idence of a gentleman, and the account Stift! '• Hearing footsteps upon the stairs about midnight, and suspecting burglars might be !she'd the premiseu, tlurgendoman rose from bpd and took down a •claublo barreled gun, widtwhich he proceeded to .the_ door opeekitdo,the hall. Iteaohing-the—denri: ite , spplied hls oar to the key lidlO andhc i allt what ho thought a rustliug of gartuentaUpen the stairs.. Hastily drawinips'ehoir to Alto door Ito stepped upon it and indertM his gin through th,c transom. Just thou t the thought rr:giiNl to i3im that it might 1tia . 10 1 4 1 416 41- Ur , "IL? 4 04kAnkl . PICY 10 44 1 YrIril . 141 1 1 € te a, ' 44 ffiditinthrha. .I"Akosincibutteivelo 14Sftd i cage, eireiltristrinces warranted it, he founl — tW dpirtMent entirely yacant, and lighting a him) he then ascended the Albs. Imagine his surprise and terror ott looking out the elistnber w Mtlow to see 'nutting the. branches of a tall tree whielt [pox thieve, his daniliter dressed in her night habiliments, awl seemingly utterly unconscious of liar perilous poaition. Without tattling ri Word or nicking a sound eah Waled to fi rgliten her, he stepped out of the window hi taself, and winding his twin tightly about the waist of the sleeping girl, he with great exerti, n managed to regain the ball hi 4 precious burthen. The surprise of the young lady when she awoke and. wart infottued her perilous adventure can he better imagined than demoribee" PRE.IfiTURN LvDEßmnB.rs ITT iil.:711f11.: RAT TT At the death ?f Philip Detir:dge, nn em inent lawyer of Virrginia, %rho (lied in the city of IVnshingion, while n inernl•ex of con gress, it I% ns WU( d ns fi rensrpn for man- Wiling his body longer than wild, that, on a 'former occasion, he had narrowly escaped I - • • , • . • .p lids reoplritroti'Vezi - seiT, - Pidse uri lOUgei throbbed, Iris linlbe were peifeetly bis face exhibited the slump outline of denth. The family physician and friends, nil, said the exception of lies wife, belies ed him to b dead. Mrs. - V., however, wou l d not nib] -finish hope, rual continued fri apply. froti tins' to time, (levy remedy she could think of to irstoie sitalii.‘ ...and limply sueceLdL, in itilinnustiming a small quantity Of loandy, which immediately restored him to life am the command of his lie !buil many years afterwards, and etas wont to flint • with deep feeling, tbo painful and l i oir i ble sensations he ex per len rid daring the perica hr was supposed to he dead. lie said that though pie f ctly unable ti move his linger, or give the lest sign of hi. hang afire, he could hem cud Has con izeions of all that Wa4 ggior on nioiind him. Ila heard the announet meld that he ass dead, and the lionentritiou ; , of his fondly the eleructions. fur, lum shroud, and all tie usual 'meliorations for pus hprinl._ Jfolund - desperate efforts to show that he was no dead, but in vain ; he could no t 'note Lulus de. PATTI despair, and the premenee r. a fate more opralling (p humanity (lion any other earthly ti rror, could riot arouse tb • dormant body to perform the slightest of it Functions. Ile Lt aril Mrs. poddrolge cal for the brandy, with a delight and rapture o love for her. which the horrors of lib, Rik's tion may easily account for. lie nit that It was caved. Ire lounorenimly (Awl "ilia it was no little as bralltly COIIIIIIIO to restore him to life, as It had produced his living .teach." Mu. Dod•lrolge Was unfoltunately_ addwted to the intemperaiu use of ardent spiritx,lind a lit of intemperance had. no doubt, produced the condition nom whicl4 lie was relieved by the perseverenev niol love of his wife, Is ho administered, at the last moment, the powerful ntimulent hich re: stored' hi mto I ife. Otherwise his free WOhld hum been that of many others, who have here bin el alive. Another instance of pre% ention hum the horrors of premature into nick omurred in this country, and has been related by Mrs. Childs in her letters from Now York. It is an additional proof of thu strong. eohjugal affection, and of the necesally of retaining the ; body where there remains the k ast doubt of the ex timition of life. The uncle Of Mts. Childs was attacked in liot,titn - nOh the pil low fever, and W3S consi , frryd ns drat. Ills affectionate n ife, hots e‘er, did not abandon all hope, but enntinticil n lib him during his contrary lo the tt monsiraticiis of her, friends, and persisted in refusing to allow his body to lie talon front the house for ur let meat. ;The satis Ails. Childs, "that she never kneii'v how to aeeou it for it: but though lie IVII4 litrfee 11 y (add and tight and to every appearance tails denil,...kli . i?re visa a puive.tful impression on berditinil that lite ii 114 not extinct. '• Twit calb , , at hate! of half an hour, had l.peen made nab the death earls, to take awij theilead betties, and the constant cry watt; lits usual on such occasions, 'Bring out your !lead :'- but her earnest, entreaties tuna Mtn lintnced them reluctently to grant to bar another respite of half Mt hour. Wiili trembling haste, she renewed her elforts to restore life. She mined his head, rolled his limbs in hot flantwl, and placed hot 011i0116 ou his, feat. Thu dreaded half hour again cants round, and found. him as cohltind rigid !sever. Again she renewed het entreat ies so desperately that the messengers lic g_anlo think that a little force would bo re quired. They aceurtlingly attempted to re move the body against her will, but she threw herself upon it, and clung to it with such force and . strength, that they could not easily loosen her grasp. At last by dint of reasoning on the necessity of the ease, she I promised that, if he should low no signs t f life before they again come round, she would inaki; pp further opposition to the removal. Having gained ttrecious repite, she hang t 4ho watch upon id bed post, and renew • her Ands with redoilkbled zeal. sho placed kegs of hot Water about hint, and furectl, ..iwandy,betieettn his recut, hreuthed iota his rOgtrils, Ind . held hartaborn to his unite but still tho.tody lay ntotionless and eidd.. , phq 14keikanitioally at, the WateVi "in Bye 11 / 6 Priinuaerl .half hour would ea- Om and ilioidi.vi' lol mitlig, by 1-4.. ' 4,011 40, came irer her ; she dropped 'the A stile had been sutilriiuing ; her lied trembled via-, letdiy, and the luerteliorit 14111, led hose holding wits spißed on the pallid (am-- Accidentally the position of the Lead had beCome slightly inolined backward, and the powerfld liquid flowed into the nostril. In; sternly there was a short quick gasp —a struggle--his eyes opened, and when the death man - came again, they found him sit ting up In ,(.ho bed. 110 is still elite, and has enjoyed unusually grunt health." Many additional cases are recorded of persons apparently dead, who have L'etn 811 fortunate as to-escape the horrors of pre*:, lure intermehEr Among these is the calked the elegant lady Russell remained •Thr the space'of seven days did nights, without:any Signs of life, and her burial was preventint only by the violent grief of Tier husbind.— On the eight day, an tlni perish bells were ri nslog'for churdli. Lady Russell, iludderdy raised her load, and to"tlic amazement and indesciibable joy of Lord Russell, told him to get ready to accompany her to church.-- Her recovery was rapid and complete, and she lived many year 4 afterwards And had several ahiidren, • - •• - licralit gives Abe lullowing-tiatcti *MI 4434-- boy, who recently decoyed one of his corn. 'Anions into the woody, and there 63%iiej ;nor lered him • McCarrie is small of hit age, not haring the ep ivtiranc.• of being over tWelve---11dcl: set, full blue eyes, and a mild And pleasant aspect : in -fee, it but would ha called a pr tty boy. His conduct SitICO he has been eus.odf, u e are informed, lea been in s'imillar Contrast to his appearance:- He de s its the incidents of the murder with the groato t u woncern, we might say with hi lacity—his decoying the little victim ineo . the wood under pretence of having, hid away —his striking him twice on the head with a battle, which was broken by the eon,msaiou then beating him about the head with d Stick, little OM hbltlitig him hands over his Ewe the while, vrhioh' accounts for their b.:- n,7; s Ilblnekened, and evi.ntaslly his thruse ing the ed;e. of the broken bottle, Which ha I formed a spear-Irk, print in breaking, ro wstedly into - his - vietims throat. lle Matti; nth !mull glee' "and aitiz parent hell approval the manner in which he escaped capture and evaded reco4nition on everal or .nsions since the murder. So far ns we have lcnrne I, he ape ire hot only to Ito without the slightest contrition for his offence, but to have no idea of the enormity of the crime he had committed. We had sti;qms 11 he would very pr b.ably Le occa sionally. at least, under the influent!e of so . wrstitious learn, in refer •nc+ Co his slain, Oi l at all events under the dread of punish ment ; I ut it appears that he travelled con sider Ally in the night time without any alarm 3 of, conscience, and lie inquires with, much apparent interest as to what Sort or food and work he will have in the Peniten tiary, where he 'supposes he will he sent. ONt: ov TOM Sr.o.ttl3 --A New 1;ork physi. Ctittr tolls nsthe (Whining mtory:wttieh we feel safe the.l fore aa endorning for a fist: Two or three years ngo, a Bpania d from Citha„ came to this city to he (reacei fir a diseast of the Inns. 110 Caine to l)r. M. described hiti symptoms, and put lama(' in the Din. hands' • " Well," said thy I kwtor, " if [undertake yuur cure I shall be obliged to impose pi. condition --and that is rather a Ilan 'One for you to complywith." What it it I" asked th.f.'iihau. The' you entirely 'I; top au.okufg until I . , give} ou lease to resume." " Never' rather let the thing rill we. What 1 , 1 a , 1111 . 19 there in life if one cannot ainoko "" Tl.e (I.)et.lr nhi a siMler hint (Aland f.lt tome sinpathy. So he said. " Well, perhaps this is beyond your pow. er. hut you Must solemnly promise me to smoke but one sego'. a dny, yr I will not un deetAke your OM. " Cuban promissed ; It wat 'IIIV only tslialloT. Four or fi“, allerwards al • doctor thought be would call upon him s s he poised his house, and thus save him a walk in the office flir that day. llu walked up stars--Lisocked—.. Couw MY' -*behold the Golan with a segar about eighteen in ches long and a Proportionate °dolmens !-- lho confessed that he had that brand made to order for —hut, said he : - Doctbi., T smoko lint one. a day,- asi premi 4e.t." A LIWG Raw/E.—Some:soldiers Ow an - exchange) who were firing a Mink dlllWat-fa target, at Mark bourg, Faxony,at ordr (lowa - or 1,000 paces, hit and morliany Irotirmiled-a-Itiborettra- wtr4t.: -700-rteear6e.. yowl. A filial) Nt as accidentally killed hi ;land with the Euiktd rillo flotn tance of 2,500 yards. Jints llavEs BANK.--This bank, has ific aired a dividend of fiec , per sent, oint its capital stock actor paying alt espartos for its' chador, plates, State lay &c. 4 bceiQes haying a Stirptuts d of about t 4,000. JJ Itindeeso unaorsilend test. Dieffeubsoll, Esq., !us- romigned:tkpguperin% tendency of tho tiotnissen Sobrottletif Crteton comity. ;ercit. A. IS: Iltqwuc,. tit-Leek " 1 „• in him fdaye. `0: , Trip L;mritadirei D•btottraf naive . tJt Pplir Well • ei o 64sf ( lvitiSt: t 4 • - .: 4 ;rs o ok t° 4 1 ,1q 1 . /IL 'A .