•*. i> f'tr *ra\un- •l-.'i’ * - W . ■ l‘l J* ."AT 1 ' : 1 -~~ : V V‘ V, ■; ' ;‘.T 'i\ ;:/ . ; , ! T—G * t ■■ j f ' 1 - * ’.•*, /. J /• s" - 1 v■ V' a . ( . . \j t . K A-* 1 :. ;vo jPjSBL Al. -• ■r * .’-v'''- vV.-/-' i. r .i A *■:-'A*. -v -'<■ p-.i ' Z -■> site weal i«l ® oluntciT a'.iim*' ->■’ .»i?U in;, if ft?' ' I',' W-Jf. I‘i3 I.V-.1/ r-.rh'if,-: : . ■ YOL. poetical. A CONSTANT DRIPPING WILL WEAR 1 ' A STONE." ' 11 OF all the proverbs, none better-la known Then a “ constant.dripping'wiil wear a stone;" Wo mark its truth in pcaeo or Inslrife, • In oach ebb or flow of the tide oLlifo, Tlio Fust by Jts tales this lesson bath shown, filial aconstant dripping.wlU wear a : alono," And the Future loo,spile all wp may say, , . Time's constant dripping will soon wear away, Look well at that buy with the laughing eye,' ‘ Hark, hoar how his song on the breeze swoops by; The.future to him sccins open nod fair. A garden offlowers without a care, Of a noble name, and deeds of truth ;' Of ono who in life shall bo all his own, But a " constant 'dripping willwcat a'stono?* Full Boon will (tio cares of (ho cold world come, And sorrows will darken bis onco bright homo, nia-youthful ho|icp, liko llio bubbles that swim, In their graceful pride bn.lhn gcblel’s brim, Will Hide from his heart atone breath of care, Nollcavirig a trace of their short life (hero; And weeping', he’ll Stand in : the world alone, Tboi'tcanstanl dripping'is wearing (ho stone,” Time haa drawn its lines on his open brow, And tho (Ilcisurofi.of enroll are worthier now, He (nrnslo the Past, bul-tho friends of old, Aro mouldering fast in (lid churchyard cold. .There aro qpnelo loyo him ; ; no heart to prove, By its generous deeds, its-wealth of,love j And ho sinks in. (ho.grave unwept, unknown, soi thd “ c'dnptonl Gripping haa worn the slono.” .a^tacttiHitcotts. WATERLOO. This famous balllo field lies about ten miles from Brussels. It was a cloudy gloomy day, that I loft I ho city loviait this spot on which the fate of Furopc was once decided. I stopped a moment to look at tho house where tho ball Ivas held tho night be Toro (ho battle, and from tliO thoughtless gaily of which so many officers were summoned by tho thundering of cannon to the field of battle. Before rcacliingitho Held, wo passed through tho extremely beautiful for* rest of Soighie* composed of tall beeches,' and which Byron,'by political license,has changed into tho for. cal of,Ardennes./Ardennes Is more than 30 miles distant in an opposite dlrcction.bul still it was-mnro classic than Soignics, and so Byron, In describing tho passage of the British array, through it on their way .Id tho battle says;- “And Ardennes waves above them her green Iqavcs, Wet with.naluro’a tear drops, ns they pass— Grieving, if aught inanimate o'rc grieves, Over the unrfiluming bravo—alas! Ere evening to bo trodden like tho grass, Which, now beneath them, but above shall grow In its next.verdure, when this fiery mass Oflivlng valor, rolling on tho foe, And burning with high hope, shall moulder cold and low. 1 ’ At length 'wo came to (he small village of Water lon, «vhd taking a guide wandered over the field.— Not to. weary one with confused details, conceive a largo undulating pUin with two tldgcsTislfig oiil of it, lying opposite to each other, and gently curving -in Iropi the centre. These opposing ridges arc mere elevations of ground, separated by a shallow valley, varying from a quarter to a half a itillo In width.— Standing on ono'ftf those curved ridges, along which the English army was posted in two, lines, the other 1 ndgo or elevation of ground fqccs you, along which French were drawn up. The main rend from Bros, eels to'Genappo, culs dircclly across this valley, and tiirough these ridges, in the centre of (ho field. On the extreme fight is llie chcaulcau.of ilungonmoni, a farm houeo, with an orchard surrounded by a high wall in the shape of This defended Wellington's right. The centre rested its loft on n small house called La Uayo Bainto,while the left wingediended larlhcr on to onoihqr -firm house, called Ter, U llayo, .Thus fortified on bo|h extremi ties, and in.llib centre, the allied forces awaited the approach of the tho opposilo rldgc.,,, Fif ty fuUt lUoUsaodmen were drawn.op for tho slough, let; oo one side, k mile and a. half, in length, while Boqaparl brings to lJiq battle seventy, five, thousand Fsonctunon. Uick of the French lino is a house called La Bello Alliance, near which Bonapait placed his observatory. Tlils was llSo position. of the fi«ld, and such the strength of the mighty armies that stood thirty years ago, on tho tnuintng of the 15th ol June, look ing each,other in the faces. Two uncunqucrcd gen orals wore at their head; and tho fate of Europe the stake before thorn. As 1 stood on the mound.reared over the slain, and Junked over the field along which the grain waved as it waved on UTo day of that fierce battle, a world of conflicting emotions, struggled in my heart. One moment the magnificence and pomp bf this stern array converted it into a field of glory —tfip ncjU.lhc conception of llto feeling that agitated the bosoms of thesp two military loaders, qnd terrible results depending—oil Eurbpo liongtng In a breath, lass suspense ' on tlio battle, imparted to it q moral sublimity utterly overwhelming'; tho next fierce on set, the charging squadron, tho melee of horses and riders ; tho I'ilfing df mangled companions before the destructive fire; the roar of artillery and (hr; blast of the bugle, and braying of trumpets, and rol of drums t siid the tossing of plumes and banners, and wheeling of regiments, and shock of cavalry, changed it into a scene of excitement, and daring, ond horror, that made the blood flow back chill and dark on tho heart. Then came the piles of (lie dead and tho groans of tho wounded, whole ranks of or. phans, and whole vjjlogcs.of mourners, till a half ut tored 'woo to the warnpr,’ was qhoHod by tears pf compassion. , . ‘ l , , _ . . I 4 Thirty years ago Wellington stood whore I stood, and surveyed the field over which tho two' mighty armies were manamvcrlng. At length, at this very hour (eleven o'clock) when I am gazing upon it, the cannonading begins and soon rolls the whole length of tho line. Yonder on the extreme right, Jerome Bonaparte with 12,000 men descends like a moun tain stream on Ihocbeatoau of llougontnont. Column after column, tho dark masses march straight into tho deadly Gre lhal opens In every direction. In perfect order and steady front they press up to the very walla and thrust their bayndts through the door itself. At length (ho house takes fire,sod the shrieks of the wounded who ate burning up, rise a moment over the roar ofslrife, ond (hen naught is hoard but tho confused nolso of battle. Slowly, roluallantlv, those 12,000 surge back from the Wall—l2,ooo did 1 say 7 No, in this rapid half hour 1500 have fallen to rise no more, and there in that orchard of four acres, tho bodlosaro scattered, rather piled,besmear' od with powder and blood. Between me and them fresh columns of Frorich infanlry, headed by u long row of cannon, that belch forth-their fires every few moments,come steadily up (o (ho English squares. Whole ranks of living men fall at every discharge, but those firm squares neither shakp nor foullor.— Tho earth trembles as oannoh answers oanhbn, bury ing tboir loads in solid masses of human flesh, (n the midst of this awful moloo, tho bravo Pioton charges homo on the French, and they roll book like | a wave from the rock—-but a bullet has entered'his; temple,'and'ho satis back and falls at the lioad of his followers. And yonder, to save their flying In faniry, a column of French cavalry thruw themselves [ with .the ocean's mighty swing on Jlio, foe, but those fust squares stand rooted to (ho ground. Slowly and 1 desperately thaf daring column walk,their horses pround and around the squares, dashing at every opening, but In vain. ‘ . , And now from wing (6 w)og U is one wild battle, and 1 soo nothing bat the smoko pf oanngn, tho tos sing of plumes, and tho soaring of tho French eagle over tho charging columns! and I hoar nutyjhl but Iho roll of the dram, (he sound of martial mnsiq, the explosion of artillery and (ho blast of (ho buglo sound* ing (ho 'oh&rgo. Therostands Wellington, weary and'anxious. Wherever 1 a square has‘wavered* ho has thrown himself into it, ctidcring on hla men.— Bui now ho 1 stands, and surveys the field of blood, and sees his posts driven < n > ,hia army exhausted, and exclaims while he whlpcs (lie sweat from his brow. “Would to God’lhal Bluchor or night might come." Tho nobloGordon- stops up to him'bcgglnghlm not tostand ho is exposed to tho shots of tho one. my, and wlillo ho is speaking a bullet pierces his own body and ho fulls. Bonapaktb surveys tho Hold with savage fcrocicily and pours fresh column on tho English infantry. For four long' hours has the battlo raged and the victory wavered. But look ! a'dnrk objectsmergcs from yonder wood,and stretches but into the field. And nnw there are banners, and horsemen, and moving columns. The Prussians arc coming. Bonaparte secs them, and ■ knowing that nothing/ can-'Hiuvo- - --him bnftho’ 'dcslruclTdri' of tlio English lino before they arrive, orders up tho old Imperial Guards, that had been kept aloof from the battlo oil day. Ho addresses thorn in a fow.ficry words telling them that all rested on 'tUcir valor.— They shout ‘the Emperor forever I* till lt\o sound is heard even to tho British lines. Willi llio impetuous Ncy -at the .head, they move in perfect order and beautiful array.down the alopo. The elorm of battle is hushed. No drum, or trumpet or martial strain cheers them pa. . No bugle sounds iho charge. In dead silence, and* with firm and steady steps they Como. The allied forces look with indescribable awe and dread upon Iho approach o( those battalions (bat had never yol been conquer* cd, . But the momentary pause is like the hush of the storm ere it gathers for a fiercer .sweep. The cannon opens ot once, and whole yanksofiho gallant band'falMiho a snow wreath from the mountains, yet (hey falter not—over the mangled forms they pass, and with steady, resistless,,forco, come face to face with their foe. T(io lines, reel, and toller, and sway backward. l The field seems lost—but no, that awful discharge on their bosoms-from (ho rank of men (hat seemed to raise from Iho ground, has turn ed the day*—the invincible guard slop as if stunued by s terrible .blow. A second discharge and they wheel and fly. The whole English lino now advance to (lie assault. Look at that mangled column—how that discharge of artillery has lorn its head and car. ried away half its number. ’Tls over! that magnificent army that formed In such beautiful order in .(ho morning on tho heights, is now rent and Iho fugitives darken iho Hold. ’Tls night—but the Prussians, fresh on tho field, pursue tho flying Iho long night. Oh! out where the thunder of distant cannon comb booming on tho midnight air 1 Death is dragging hie car over (ha multitude, and tho'vcry heavens took aghast at tho merciless slaughter.'*— Ifeadty. Woman's Rights* David Hale, late editor of thp,“ Journal of Com* mcrco,” once wrote a jeu d'esprit on the “ Rights of women/’ in which ho showed that the balance of wrongs wasdeoidedly on (he side of. tho men. “ When the .simple question of superiority is at issue, the men always have to give up. If ladies and gentlemen meet on the side walk, who has to turn out 1 If there are not seals enough for oil the company, who has to stand up I When there is danger to face, who lias to go forward I If there is curiosity to gratify, whogoes'.bohind I If there is 100 much company for the first (able, who eats at the second 1 Who has gfwajrs llio,right.hand, and the most respectable position V’ We could mention a hundred other cases in which, on the simple question of right, everything is yielded to tho women. But (hero arc many cases in which (hocondition of tnon is still worse. For instance if on any public occasion, a pew at charch'*or a seat any where, ho occupied by men ever so respectables or aged, a smirky little beauty trips along and pro sents herself at the top of the .seat, and they must all jump tip and clear out as thongh Ihey had been shoi. Especially ought it to be noticed, that when matrimonial negotiations aro to be. made, (bo whule burden of performing the. delicate, apd often very embarrassing part of,making proposals U thrown upon (he men, while the women no, no, no, ns long as (hoy like, and never say yes, until they have mind to. Noble Sentiment* This is on agreeable world after id). If wo would only bring ourselves to look at* the subjects aropnd us io their truo light, we should sco beauty where wo behold deformity, and listen to harmo ny where wo hoar nothing but discord. To bo suro there is a great deal of vexation and anxiety 19 meet; we cannot sail on a summer cotot forev er, yet, if we preserve a calm oyo and steady hand, wo can so trim our sails and manage our holm, as to avoid (ho quicksands and weather 1110 storms that threaten‘shipwreck. Wo aro members of one great family ; wo nrn (ravelling 1 the same road, and shall arrive at the samo goal. Wo breathe the same air, are subject to the same bounty, and wo shall lie down.upon tho bosom Of our common mother. It is not becoming, then, that brother should halo brother; U is not proper that friend should deceive friend ; it is not rigtn (hot neigh bor should deCoivo neighbor. We pity that muh who can harbor enmity against his follow; ho lo ses half tho enjoyment of life; he embitters his own existence. Let us tear from our eyes the colored medium that invests every object with the green hue of Jealousy and suspicion, and turn a deaf ear to scandal 5 breathe tho spirit of .charily from our hearts; let. the rich guehings of human kindness swell up as o fountain, so that (ho gold en ago will become no' 1 fiction, and Islands of (he blessed bloom In more than Hyperion beauty. (CT Quakerism is favorable to longevity, it acorns* According to lato English census returns,'tho aver age ago attained by merabora of this peaceful sect in (jroat Orilian, la fifty one years, two months and, twenty one days. Half of the population ,of (ho country, as Is seen by (ho samo returns, dio before reaching the ego of twcnly-ono, and the ovorogo du ration of human life the world over, is but thirty-three years; Quakers, therefore, livo a third longer (nan the rest of ua. Tho reasons ore obvious cimufch.— Quakers are temperate and prudent, are seldom in a hurry, and newer in a passion. Quakers in the very midst of tho week’s business, (on .Wednesday moroi ing,) rotlro from the world,and spend an hour or two In silent meditation at (ho mooting bouse. Qua kers aro diligent, they help ono another, and the four of want does not corrode their minds,, The journey of life (0 them is a walk of peaceful meditation. They neither sudor nor enjoy intensely, bdl preserve a composed demeanor always. Is it surprising that their days should bo long in the land ? Spitti.no.— I Tho Now York Mirror Bays tho fol lowing ; Spilling Isa vilo American peculiarity. Wo are a nation of spiltors. If tlio naan in tho moon were lo visit us, ho would think Hist wejhad all boon lasting something vary, oifoneivo, or that wo woro all affected by sorao loalhesomo disease of ihosal ivary glands. On our farryboata ono is sickened by the condition of tho floor. Many monspll about so often,at any rato; if nny 'spcclaloxoiio* . raont or ombarrasemont arlstb, ihoy indroaso tho frequency. Tho spilling along tho strout'is ludi crous and disgusting, what if every third man* was scon occasionally vomiting' at tho curb slono! This would bb but a stop further in tho progress of indecency. ( Woman’s tliaiiT*. —Thoro is lo bo a 1‘ Woman’s Rights Convention’’ in Ohio, tho 86th of this month. Wo** go in" for'woman’s rights. Every woman has alight to a haabahd and a baby. Perdlliontd be tho man who would deny her Ibis inestimable blessing and inalienable privilege I "om IT : M-WAtTS >E BipilT— SOT BIGHT OB' WBO»d, Gift. COOftBT. CARLISLE, PA., THURSDAY,. JUNE $, AMEBICAN STATESMAH’S WIVES. FKUALS iNFUIRNOB AT WASHINGTON. Il is said that- at every European court, the la(J|os are adroit politicians. ■ Washington Is the govern* moot metropolis of our free country, and experience shows that thu rule, truo.in olhor r caflcs, applies with striking truth.in,our own- lam not prepared to pronounce against the. I bolioyo it operates advantageously, and it is quite certain, that no bad results hove yet attended il.' The influence exerted by (ho ladies upon Washington politics is groat of course, end’ many ’ interesting anecdotes, if the subject,wcro'nol nlllto'aacrcd and se'erot, might bo cited in proof of il. A beautiful and intelligent woman discoursing upon public mon and measures* is always euro to havo listeners and' followers ; and il may bo called a pardonable vanity in' ayonng,or oven a-veteran'member, to excel in debate when ho sees the gallery blazing with a conslcllalion of bright eyes. It is lrjio, wo-ihavo no Do Btool and no Roland, but tho-pagos of iporo than one of our daily papers, and tho several departments of tho governments, at test equally tho eloquence and the tfifluonco of the ladies when they choosp to figure in (ho arena of Slate affairs. More than one intelligent and virtuous woman has provided for her husband, and her sons by tho graces of her conversation and her faCinatiorts in the social cirolb. Society hero is an’element of tho first- importance to public men, separated from their own homes, and avorso.to tho dissipations of a gay and crowded capital. Hence it is,‘that tho female character, illustrated by tho intellectual, accomplished,'and experienced woman, accustomed to tho Ways o( fashionable, life in Washington, and preserving Us winning purity in' every vicissitude,exercises on almost resistless sWay, Hence il is that a lady.may wield a most potent In fluence when oven the veteran politician would plead in vain. A lady, who has spent her .lifu in Wash, inglon, could wrilca most attractive.history of irion and of events. Mrs. Madison eiimvcd.hor husband many years, and to, tho lust retained r lho freshness and tho vivacity other mind. In her old ago, il was gratifying to sec how sho was waited upon by high and by low. Successive Presidents, made her a sort of household divinity, and attended upon her. wants. She was one of (ho links that united tho dead past with tho living, present; a sort of contrast between the customs and tho opinions of another ago, snd tho advancing impetuosity of our own. Sho died two or three years ego. Tho widow' of tho polished ond powerful Alexander Hamilton is still alivo. I saw her at tho last President’s loveo, looking remarkably venerable and well—an object of profound and ro~ spcclful interest to all. In tho . crowd of beauty, ambition and youth, by which sho was surrounded, sho seemed to bo, as il were—indeed sho was—the typo of another era living among her own posterity. Her husband, the confidante and companion of Washington, of tho elder .Adams, and of lho groat men who stood on the threshold of (ho nineteenth century, and saw tljaf (Government .launched into being which in flfly yoare'has- become tho political marvel of tho world. Sho knew thesemlghtyinlol* (eels, and doubtless in her own day, bloomed qmong Iho lovelies! of (ho social circle. She has seen them rolirc, one by one, from Iho busy stage of affaire (heir high resolves, their god-liko aspirations, their bright hopes,' their ' fears, their rivalries and (heir enmities,—all quenched in the impenetrable “ gloom of Iho grave." Her own great loss—«tho sad, tho, sudden, iho world regretted death of llib bravo, do. quonLand.learned Hamilton—iho master sorryw ofher career ; and ‘she seems lb have boon spared to experience (he wholesome truth how kccly a great notion cm cherish the memory of its devoted sons. It is no longer a party that reveres the example of Hamilton [ his great abilities have led their impress upon tho nation; and if somo'orhls opinions haVd bccii tested and'discarded, many more have been approved and adopted. Mrs. Hamilton is now ninety five years of ngc. Do you know that Mrs. Henry Clay has never visited Washington ? Her domestic character seems to hove been formed for the quiet shades of Aehland{ and although her woman’s heart beat high when sho saw “yonng Harry with'hisbeavcr on^ f * In tlib midst of tho greatest events that have rbsdq his’ ndme 'im» mortal, yet by lief'tl«rbltfl»idgß ! bf hbmo and fireside, wero*lo bo preferred, ‘Now that ilia.statesman is Wasting away, her presence would alleviate bis suf ferings and prepare him for his final reckoning.— But now she is too old to come. She could not bear the toilsome journey from Lexington, and she r'o. mains, as it were, a watcher for tho fatal new?. A few days ago sho sent him a*boqucl of (lowers; but when they reached herb they wore faded—a mel ancholy evidence that both the giver and the rccciV* cr were fast hastening to that bourne whence no traveller returns. - Tho old man held it to )iis lips fur a few seconds, and said will) inournibl pathos, “ the perfume is almost gone 1" But not sb with his feme. That wilMivo forever green in tho memory of rrtan. Ilia physical frame will decay, but hi* groat history will nover bo forgotten. Of hlin and of hio pluco, In the regard of men, in the dim future,'lt may well bo said: ■•Voti may break, you may ruin llio\n«o Ifyon will, Dut (ho scoht of the roses will (tang round II still." Bdi.i.?roo Concert.— An eastern editor hna hern favored with a grand Frog Concert. Ho transcribes iho recitation as fellows : “ Rung do nong—kung lung; Kao de hung, to koo, , Tltlori, titter! koo, Tiltori, llliorl nong,” PfiH Chorus. Bung dekung—kick a ku! To to vveo noun do koo. ,iSWa Soprdno. Tiddory pode Wo do kbm, Pe de weel, pe do weet J i . Chbruto/JJaaa Voicct. Kung, kung, trata kung, , i Bigggory Jum,do kum de boo, rrce-'lhad Sola. Tr—a—aloweot! Weetcrry deo S The effect was (roly astonishing; the dtara blinked, and the balmy zephyrs stopped to catch tho enchanting melody. Tnncß hundred and. four Tavern* are licensed In Lancaster county, twenty-two in Columbia, ond the others in the several townships and boroughs—num bering from one to seventeen in each. “Strangers and travellers,"in Lancaster county, have np difficul ty in finding asnfficlcncy ofhouscs licensed Tor their accommodslion ( whatever the “entertainment'* may, be. r A Modil VVifb.—There ie a woman in Indiana on tho Wabash river, who toltos it into her head, and sometimes practices, (while her old man has gone to town,) plowing, nursing and fishing, all at once.— She first yokes an ox and her cow to the plow—then puts her twin babies Into the corn basket and sds pends ilon a tree—then lakes the boll offlheoow and attaching it to the ond of her fishing polo, which is .stuck in tho ground at tho .water's edge ; sho then commences her plowing around the field; at every revolution she gives tho curlal cradle a. send, which lasts until she gets round again, at; (ho sterna time keeping her oars open,so that when any rash member of ihofinny’tribo swallows tho hOoknho may hoar ol it, for under her arrangement? tho calamity. is an nouced by tho. ringing of the boll. Our Informant says that sho'is a pattern of tho kind they havo there/ “John, slop your crying," said on enraged Cither to his eon, who hod kept up an Intolerable “ yell” for tho past fivo minutes. ‘.'Slop,' I say, do you hearth again repealed tho fnlhpr after a few minutes, the boy still crying. 11 You'don't .suppose I can clibko tiffin a minute, do you,** chimed Iri tho hopeful ur chin. ' ’ '■ Doctor 80/ks« Tho folly of dabbling in medicine is very pleas* antly hit off In the following liiimorous piece: “ About four years ago I was happily married to a very prudent lody, and being of the same disposltJ ion as myself, we made □/very prudent couple.— ! Somo time after bur nrnrl/go my wife told mo that' doctors bills were very high, and, as wo could not always expect to bofrob'frorn disease, she thought it best to purchase sofiio doctor’s bbbks, ‘and thus,* said-eho with a smily, ‘ wo can steal their trade at once. This 1 agreed to, and made it my particular business to attend dll auctions of books, in order (o buy medical books at tho lowest rale. In fihb/lnj less than 'twelve months I\had bought a couple'of. * Dispensatories,’ 1 Buchan,s Family. Physician,* two or threo treatises on Iho art of preserving health, by different authors; seven treatises on the diseases of children, and 1 divers-others of the greatest nolo.— My wife spent all tho time she could spare from the economy of her household in studying thorn, and ob soon as my store was shut up in the evening, 1 edi fied myself wilh a few receipts from my Dispensa tory. ‘“As soon os spring arrived, my wife informed rao sho found it positively enjoined by some of our writers, that wo must swallow a large dose of cream of tartar and brimstone, to bo taken every evening fortli'roo weeks, in molasses; (his Iho whole family cbftplicd with: I, who being the head of (ho family, to bo first; my wife, my brother Dick, who lives with me, my son and my daughter, my negro boy and Iho servant maid. This cliro wo oil wont through to the entire satisfaction of my wife, who had dhc pleasure to find ho* medicine hod Iho dosit cd qficol. 'j. * 1 Soon otter this (ho contagion of reading medical oooltV spread through all my family, and ecarco a day-' passed but some 'of llienf made uso of some mc'dicino nr other. My poor brother Dick, after lio pormission to road my boohs, had accquircd a dejected countenance, tho cause of which 1 could not conceive. At last ha broke silence ;* Brother,’ said he, (supposing that I had read more-than him* Bclf # )‘fcol my putso;'l think I have too modi blood; had ;I not belief gel bled 7 you.know that If too much blood gels Into the head It produces apoplexy; iho symtoms of its appearance, says Duchan, are, remark able redness in tho face, and you sco that is exactly (ho case with me.* I could not but laugh at him iho was indeed red in’lhe face, bat such redness as in dicalcd (he very offspring of hoalth. Opr maid, from an education at a country school,had learned to road ; she earnestly requested her mistress to lend her a doctor book to read on Sunday afternoon. This reasonable request was granted ; but poor creature ! being not of the fairest complexion in (lie world, sho in a little\vhilo bccamo quite low spirited, and find, ing my wife and mo alone one evening, sho came in and ventured to express herself thus: * La! mistress; I am concerned and afraid I shall got tho yellow jaunders, as I begin to look yellow in the face*.— Decency prevented my smiling for a while,*but when she had loft Iho room 1 could not but enjoy a laugh. My negro boy io, always eating roasted onions rot a cold, but as ho cannot road, ho has luckily escaped every other disorder. Ono night as wo wero about goirtg to bed, my wife desired me In (ho most serious manner lint if sho should over bo taken With a luck, cd jaw lli-lt I'should rub her jaw with mask, as she was convinced from comparing tho arguments of a variety of authors, that (hie was (ho best remedy.— I (old Iter there was no danger of such an event, ns Iliad Dr. Cullen’s word lhal.il seldom allocked fc males't imleed, I t»m-convinced Ural a locJi jawed lady is a rxtra avit in tertis.' “ Hitherto our family medicines wore used with confidence and satisfaction on ail sides, (ill I coneid creel ono day (hat a family Without a doctor, had consumed more medicine in ono year limn my father's family used lo do with the advice of o physician in six years. But one day when my wife told mo she thought it would bo well enough to weigh our food before wo cal u. lest wo should oat 100 much or too Lite, and ilia I Saucuorioua advised it fur good reasons, I got such n disgust to our schema that 1 resolved gradually to abandon It. 1 am now convinced of tile, truth of a saying of a rational medical writer, •onq-.or more things must happen to. every human body— to live temperately, to uso exercise, to take physic, or bo sick.’ And I am pretty certain that ifl and my fimily persevere in the twvr former cours bs ( wo need not bo in danger of tlio two lasi.”-’ • Cinnamon Trees, iThoroaro many Cinnamon Plantations in llio vicinity of Colombo. The cinnamon trees or shrubs aro planted in rows; their height does not at the ul most exceed nine feel; the blossoms aro white and eOnscless. l,rom the fruit, which is smaller than an acotn, oil is obtained; when the fruit is crushed and boiled, iho oil swims at the lop; It Is used Tor lightening, mingled with cocoa-nut oil. The cin namon harvest takes place twice in the year, the first l called the great harvest,, irqm April to ,luly ; the second; the little harvest, from November till January. The bark is pulled off* t iho slender brandies with a knife, and dried lit the sou, by which process it acquires n yellowish or brown color, and about tbo thickness of a Card board.— The fine cinnamon 6il used in medicine is obtained from the cinnamon itself: it is shaken in a vessel of water, in which it is steeped for eight or ten days; the whole is (hen thrown into a still, and distilled otrer.a slow fire; on the surface of the water thus obtained, tbo oil, after a short time, oollccis* and la removed with the greatest care. G«luantrt Down South.—A correspondent of the Now Orleans Picayune, who was on the; steamship Mexico, bound for Corpus Clirimi, clnoniclcs the ful* lowing incident : , Among the pasaongors on board aro a young German and bis sister, who aro on their way to San Antonia to join (heir mother. Tha boauly, modesty and respectable appoaranfcoofthb young girl; who Is about sitloon, attracted (ho attention of aoibo bener olcnl gentlemen) who woro ,Burprlsod to loam that aha was a deck passengers and hqd no berth to sleep in. Her brother was questioned on (he subject, and replied that ho had barely money enough to got to San Antonin, and could not- afford to take o oabin passagoTor Ills sister, A purso was immediately made up to pay for a Xjnb'm, and tbo young girl taken aft to tbo ladies* cabin; but Capl. Pluco, hearing of tlio circumstances, sailor-likc, said she should hnvo a cabin passage free, and gave (d tho young girl tbo money which was made up fur tho pprposo. RAi/.noAU SonscniPTtoNs.— Tho borough council of SunbUry, Pa., has authorized a' subscription' of 895*,• 000, to the Susquehanna railroad, and 825,000 to tho Sunbury ond Eric Railroad—tho latter, provided tho work It commenced at that place within one year.— Tho'subscription to (ho Busquoliartna railroad was entered by tha Chief Burgos*, on tno books of tho company, on Wednesday, last. Dkmociiatio Unit/ —Wo‘cordially ro-ooho tho fob lowing sontimcnls from, the Now York Aattonoi Democrat: i • • • “ There will bo no more quarreling among Demo crats, when our standard bearer |>uv boon named at Baltimore. Nyhan (bo nominations aro made, ail divorfilV'of sdnlimchfnfl to who is “our first choice" w i|| onth 110 will bo llm. nominee of that body, ami nobody olso. 110 will bo more than that r He will be the President of the United Slates for four yean from the fourth of March next. A WottD to Jiova.—Stiok to your trade, boys, pm) learn how to work, if you wish tp bo truly in (lcpuiulcnl., . There is'no mo>o nitiublo, ojghl than n half-learned mechanic Applying for work, :Ho is always at tho foot of tho hill, and labor as ho may, unless ha bccoraco porfocl in hi 9 trails ho Iran never rise. A.Daughter’* Marriage* Tho departure of a eon from beneath Iho paternal roof does hot present any spectacle of dcsolaiifin,-?- Masculine life has, from infancy; an individuality, an independence,.an oxolism, bo to eay, which is csson dally wanting to female existence. When a son abandons his parents, to create for himself a separate interest, Ibis separation causes bat littlo Interruption in their mutual relations. . A man marries, and stilt maintains Ins friendships, his habits and filial aflcc lions. Nothing is changed in hia life { it Is only an additional tie. His- departure is consequently a . more simple' separation; while the; departure of a : young girl,become the wjfo of a fow hours, is a real desertion—a desertion wit h oil its .duties and fool. Ings still fresh abqut'it. In ono .word, tho son is a suppling which has always grown apart from the trunk; while the daughter has, on the contrary, formed art essential part of It, and to detach her from her place Is'lo mutilate, the tree itself. You fiavo surroundodher youth with unspeakable tenderness —tho axhtailUt* (ondarnesa of your paUrntl tnd maternal hearts; and she,in return, has appeared to pour forth upon you both an equally inexhaustible gratitude; you loved hoc beyond all the world, and she seemed to cling to you with a proportionable af fection. Out ono day, one ill-omened day, a man arrives, invited and welcomed by yourselves; and this man of your own choice carries off to his own do mestic oyry y'oUr gentle dove, far from tho soft nest, which your lovo hid made for her, and to which hers had clung. Oa the morrow you look around, you listen, you await, you seek for something which you cannot find. Tho cage Is empty ; tho tuneful linnet Iras Hewn ; silence has succeeded loJls melddious warbtings; it docs not como as it did only on the previous morning, flutter ingils perfumed wings about your pillow,andawaken ing you by its soft caresses. Nothing remains but a soil calm, a painful silence, a painful void. Tho chamber of tho absent darling offers' only that disorder which it is so melancholy for a mother to contemplate; .pot (lie joyous and impatient disorder of occupation, but that of abandonment. Maidenly garments scattered hero and there; girlish fancies no longer prized: chairs heaped with half worn drosses; drawers left partially open end ransacked to their remotest, corners; a bed-in which no ono has slept; a crowd of charming trifles, which tho young girl loved, but which tho young wife despises, and which are littered over tho carpet like tho feathers dropped by the linnet, when tho hawk made tho timid bird its prey* Sadi is tho depressing sight which wrings tears from tho mother's heart. Nor Is this all: from this day she occupies only tho sec ond place in the affections of her departed Idol; and oven that merely until tho ho ppineva of maternity | shall have taught her. whom she weeps to assign to her ono still lower. This man, this stranger, tin. known a fow months, it may bg but a few weeks previously, has assumed s right over Directions which were once almost entirely her own \ d few hours of fleeting, and it may bo of assumed tondcrncesj have, in a great degree, sufficed to efface twenty years of watchfulness*'of- care* and of self obnegation; art! they have not only rent away her right lobe Iho first and best beloved, but they liavo also deprived her of the filial caresses, (ho'gentlo attention, and (he adored presence of tho heart's idol, whom aho baa herself given to him for life. Nothing is left to the mother but the attachment of rcßpccl., Alt the warm emotions aro engrossed by (ho husband, to whom his young bride owes alike obedience and devoted, ness. If aho loves him, she leaves hefr homo without regret, to follow ills fortunes to the end of the wOrjd; if she docs not love him, oho will perform Iho same duly, with resignation. Nature and law dliko Im pose tho obligation on her, and her won heart must decide whether it will constitute her joy or her (rial; but in either case tho result to the mother is tho same. Nor can {hat..mother reproach her for this painful preference, for she has,reared her in tho con. viclion of (ho necessity of marriage; aho lias herself offered to her its example in her own person; Heaven itself has pointed it out as a duly whoso omission is culpable; and, therefore, far from venturing to wish (hat (ho lost one should rcsloro to her all Iho tender ness which time andliabH to with draw from her husband,-tho mother is bound on tho contrary, to pray that they may every diy become dearer to each other, even at tho expense of her own happiness. This is the misfortune of the mother's last blessing. Government of Schools, In our reading Iho past wcok,wo have thought lliis article woith scissoring for our own readers.— Order is tho first thing in every school. "There should bo a ported system of order,* soul fur every student, and every student at his scat, unless absent fropi it by permission. In ordinary cases there should boTio going out allowed during school hoars; there should bo a recess for recreation, nnd ventila tion of rooms, which should occur at least onco In (ho fbrenoon and afternoon of each day. Tho-atccn. depey of (ho teacher .should bo maintained with firmness, yot with kindness ahd respect rather than otherwise; remembering that mind is acted'on by motive,‘matter by-power or force; nrfU as a founda tion will not riso higher than its source, so llig mor als and deportment of the pupils w ill not rise higher than those of tho toucher. Lot llioso who have bden accustomed to severe and arbitrary mooes of correc tion try it and see if it will not produce a bolter effccl. Let (heir condition bo cheerful, throw ofiumoroso* ness and irascibility ; bo familiar, Come down to a level with the humblest of their pupils, and a spirit of ambition and zeal will bo Inspired in the hearts of the youth, and tho cause of education bo advanced." The Miser and ilia Treasure.—A misqr having amassed a largo sum of money, by denying himself the common necessaries of life,'was much ombaras sed where to lodge it in security. After much con sideration, ho fixed upon a pernor in a; retired field, where ha deposited his .treasure, in a holo which he dug for (hat purpose. Tils mind was now for s' oment al ease; but ho had not proceeded many babes bn his way homo, tWion his anxiety returned, ho oould-not.forbear goingwtok to See that every thing woe safe. This ho repeated so often that ho was'Observed by a man who was looking over a hedge in an adjacent meadow. Ho concluded that something extraordinary mast bo tho oocailon of these frequent visits, marked tho spot; and coining in tbo night and discovering tho prize, carried it away. Early Ihonqxl .morning tho miser renewed bis visit, when finding his treasure gone, ho broke out In the most bitter exclamations. A traveller who was passing, moved'by his complaint, inquired the cause. i. ~ “Alas!" replied (ho miser, “ I have sustained a most irreparable loss. 'Boms villlon hss rAbbed me of* sum of money which I buried under this stoned “ Burled," returned, (ho traveller, with a look of surprise; “why did you not keep ll |n your hodsr, that it might bo ready for your daily wa'nts? 1 ’ “ What I" replied tho miser, with an air of sston. ishmcnl and indignation, “do you imagino 1 so little know (ho valuo of money? on tho contrary, 1 had prudently resolved to lay it by ond not louch,a sin. glo shilling of It." "If that was your resolution,* 1 answered the travel ler, “you havo only to pul this stone in plaoo of yopr treasure, and it will answer ail your purposes just os woll!" Kossuth's Fauilv.—A Vienna correspondent of (ho London Times says, in regard to Kossuth's family t~ U having been found impossible to ostablislrn case against Musd»mcs Meer.lonyi and Rnllkay, (hoy havo boon liberated, and aro now residing In (ho Hotel National, in tho Lcopoldulndt. Tho Austrian Gov ernment .ha* tt length omno, to the conclusion (hat nothing is to bo gained by detaining Kossuth's rola tions hero, and accordingly, tha vvhulo family—some seventeen parson*, 1 boliovo—will bo ponnittod to quit lliiq country on (ho Ist of May. feflggT" Miss Sollio Ward, tho oolobialod Ken ucky holla has gone to Europe. “ ShVe all my (fancy paint," &c. AT |2 Off PBU Mllflllv: • 4DQT9# illl a 23« a«. - The fourth of July combs on Sunday.’' Real friends arc ghost* abd what many people talk of bat few Met BIW/' "Ifc Sweden, when a man gets drfl&k'fW ibblWd 1 time, he loses tho right to Tote.' v Jodoe Baldwin, oflho Virginia Court 6f Apoofctb« died at Staunton, on Tuesday of last Week* ... The National Frco 1 Soil Convention Is appointed to bo held at Cleveland, Ohio, on thb‘ fourth, of Au gust. ‘ ’ It is complained ofShakspepro that lib dbncccwt rily murdered Hamlet. Bbt.hb.haa paid for If«VA groat many Hamlets have biurdcrod Shakipcare!"• The Grand Division of the Sons of Temperance the State of Va., decided ogainat ■ tile Maine . ilaw. at ila late session.. . - , . ; ; ,. 4 . A thief broke into a book store al MllWaoklb/tf day or two since, and stole dollars' worth' Of DIOLESI - .... The Whigs of Maryland, in Contention, hays de clared Fillmore to be tboir first choice ftr the rrest* dcncy. A lake, one hundred mites in clrcamfcrcoce/bcrtL (oforo unknown to tho whites, hap besn 'dlscovsrta within 15 miles of St. Anthony. - • Dean Swift.said with much troth :* u ll is QseteM to attempt to reason' a man out df a'tiling ho Was never reasoned into." On tho 22d ihst.,Gov. Doutwolll of* Mdss.,‘si£&dd ic new Liquor Dill, passed' by the Legislature, and will becomes law In alxty days. • . -• r ■ The office hrSborUTlbr Now York city end dottß* ty, is said to yield oh income to Mr. Csrnley, the occupant, of nearly $lOO,OOO per annual/ OiiNinuflsEs aro beginning (o bo-constructCd df itbflf in They aro said to be Ilghlcf,slroOgs' than those of wood. ( An exchange down east, notices the rbtiirb dT m' friend from California "with twinly thousand dollprV worth of experience sod sixty two contain dssb>" Major Richardson, tho author of WacouitA AtUT other literary works of equal merit, died of orVaiptr*. las, last week, at hia residence in tho city ofNtovf York. There Isa negro In jail in Troy, N. Y., likltied Woodin, arrested in Lanslngbargbn Charge of girsorf Imccny, who has two white women after bltaveadb’ claiming to bo hie wife. Women aro like houses, (ho longer tireyreihaia "to let," the more dilapidated, they become. To keep either from going to destruction they ehouldbd darly occupied. A telescope comet was discovered oh (he lb lb tosb «t tho Cambridge Observatory, by G. P. Bond, whlfeh' is (ho eleventh or twelfth first scon by bias' Uefoftf information had reached this country, IVyoa want every body to know whsrtt ydn Ails/ what you aro doing, what you want done,'add < ’21b#.> cheap you aro soiling every thing, frora &' < ddcdto Ip*, an anchor," advertise. i The National Intelligencer announces tHe sp. pointmont of Wm. Hunter, for many years ddhoSCteff, with (ho State Department, as Chief Clerk of tbatj * Department, In place of Wm. S. Derrick, deceased. ■ A writer in tho London Times estimates that ftanf' 182 G to 1650, thcro have settled in tho United States 1,549,351 Irishmen, of whom 250,000 have sines' 1 died, leaving 1,209,351 still olivo. The number set' tied in Canada, is about 150,000. A gentleman popping hi* head (brotigb •* tailor** shop window, exclaimed—‘'What o'clock'if itjijr jour lapboard 7"—upon which ho lifted u/> hi* lap* board and struck him a blow on thb bead, arfawerldf, “it has juat elrucb ooo." • : Mrs. John Quincy Adams waa married in.theyca* 1804, boro tier husband ihtoe sons—George Wash* ; Ington, Juhn and Charles Francis, of whom the bat* tor U (ho solo survivor. George died unmarried, end John loft several children, who reside in the hbtotf of their grandmother. A gentleman of New Jersey soya '(bat on tba first of May 1851,;ho had 10 hens, valued at 9*. and lhal-tho coal of (heir Toed till May Ist 1659'. wan 88.47. They produced eggs a(nounllng to 891.63 V and all of them arc still alivo, so that hla clear' pfpfiV are 813.15 for the year. »■, The N.O. Pichyuno publishes a letter from Il»» vana, winch slates that four respectable cltikenf hate been condemned.by a Military CommlsaloA for hat* tng in their possession a patriot dig# and fourolhcri woro condemned for not attending a ball in htonof of tbo Quean. They woro all sentenced to .5* trans ported to Cuota. According to the Doaton Poal* life amoatof of "material aid" received by Kossuth during hlaTlftl* to Massachusetts, was from 815,000 to $18,000.' 1 A commlUco of llio Virglnnla Legislature lilt' reported against the’ adoption of the Maine Liqfaor Law. y ' ...... CCTNovor laugh at those who do not dreat at Welt as you. They may know a great deal mote limn you do. . . • Tub proprietor of a forgo* not retpsrkabfe for Oar* redness of language, but who, by honeal induralrr* had realized a comfortable independence, bblng call*' od upon at a social meeting for a toast, gatb-*-‘Soc* cos* to forgery.* Mr». Partington toys she did not marry her eeff*' ond husband because she loved the roaleaot, bot jual because ho was tho sieo of her. first protf otor, «gd would come bo good to wear hla ofd ofptfie* noil. , Tho Catholics of Pittsburg are building a Calhf-* drol, to cost 8130,000,with a steeple 339 foet'hlgb. It is to bo 220 by 190 feel in size, and will teal 10,* 500 persona. ~ , A «on of Brin cautions llio public agsloil barber* ipg or trusting his wife Peggy on his aCCoulas he Is not married lo her. ‘ K. S. Dusslc, near Orleans, Orange county, last week mortally wounded his own soo f «' man or 31’ years, who had offended him by groan language. \ ’ 1 ”' 1 • Tii* Nashua, N. 11. Gattitt ipjfy Kate ■V. P?®J#< the gjrl who threw her child out of the winter, has been sentenced to (he Stale Prison fqf life. She plead guilty. Warren Felcli.of Walpole* rs. 11. hat beet} Carried to the Insane Asylum,at DraUlcaboro, raving mad— a victim of llio epiritual rapping*.' , CAt.oMEf. is said to bo an ihfaltiblo tftmedy for lb® blio of a mid dog. Cleanse tho Wounds .*• soon poasiblo with soft water and caslile soap,’then apply a plaster of morcuripl ointment. Tiik Rov. Mr. Gccenf has been senloneed in Phil* odolptiia (031 months imprisonment on Iwp.bi/lscr iudiolment for awlotlling, lie pleaded guilty. , (tjToarson D* RoSdlog, the Whig .candidate al tho lust election for Governor of California'Jurboeri appointed Indian Agent In that State, v e.’l A young man residing near Sobuy)kHkQ*TJH*«s9ft' Ilia fool week with an and bled TtiEitE were 17 deaths from cholera at Now;p£|' loans during tiio week ending tho 15th inst. ' , A* salmon weighing eight pounds was caught So tho ilvor, near Williomppurt, pa. last week. t Tiir Legislature ,of Maryland has pastad'.floillj/ the bill prohibiting tho. circulation of ; foreign, atopu notes in that Stale after the first of October ae*|.. TucCatholio population of the United' Stats# is 1,999,000. , ( tj.i Tn^gc:i-