I Aiiiniain UiiliinfriT. . '. .- ' . ■.. . - . . "OUR COUNTRY—MAY II ALWAYS BE'BUT, RIGHT OR WRONG,,OUR COUNTRY.” ll|| TOL. 46. ■ V . CARLISLE, PA., iItCBSDAY, lA¥ 10, 1860. ~ ~ : ■. ' TOLUNTEER. PilgtliMMi lo Btm. Tin Ditto OnwilW. (iWiilli BIOM under, «l UMlrnelloii of Pro, I HED EVEIiY THURSDAY MORNING BY fbttH B. BRATTON. • TERMS -, f j^UlJfCirTioy. —Ono Dollar and FiftyCcnts, paid if paid within the year; 7 and Fifty Cents, if riot paid within 1 the yeaK These terras will bo rigidly adhered to in No subscription discontinued until v. nJr.arrbfcrftgcs aro paid unless at the option of the • '•ArirJßßWsKMKNTS—Accompanied by the cash, and not one square, will bo inserted three . tiiricB*foriOrio Dollar, and twonty-fivo cbnta for each Those of a greater length in pspporlipftv • Such, as Iland-bills, Posting-bills, Pi^pW^Wßlauks,.Labels, &c. «tc., executed with at the shortest notice. ■ ...... i ,-M# TITE LONG AGO, ';■• ■ - •- ■ ■ •' A BY B. P. TAYLOR. '' ‘ 1 ' ,^S^.^wonflcrful strcnm is tho rivcr Time,, • , glides through.tho realm of tears, , ..,u ;., ■ faultless rhyrath and a musical rhymoj^ v ;V^^^^K!> r(,a( lor sweep, and a surge sublime ; *i .> ' with the ocean of years.- r 'i ‘ ’ ! are drifting, like flakes.of snow. , summers like buds between, r ’: “ year in the sheaf—so they conic and they V' . ; breast, with its ebb and flow, 1 r\^sSS ! i€ t glides through tho shadow and sheen. ' .•, ■ - • I, ’ magical isle up the river Time,, ■. •, • ,| jl^he^o i tho softest of airs are playing; ' . [. - a clpiulless sky-and a tropical dime, !j Ariawtfong as sweet as a vesper chime, | , Junes with the roses are staying, ’’ of this isle is tho Bong Ago,, , v. Arid We bury our treasures there; » * ; ' Rrc ro "'? °f beauty and bosoms of snow— Thero.'aro heaps of dust, but wo loved them sol . > v'J&.v There arc trinkets, and, tresses of huir. ) . i , are fragments of songs that nobody sings, . '.a' part of an infant’s prayer; t ' ''•?R^^'f ire broken, vows, and pieces of rings, : *;AW.tho garments that «/ic used to wear. v. ■ ’■ ?<■*.:, ■ • ' 1, P'- , £ ‘lbere hrc hands that arc waved when tho fairy shore thp mirage is lifted in air ; • ,■. wo sometimes hear, through tho turbulent roar, t V . wo heard in the days gone before, . lr>-'o^v-Wbcn the wind down tho river is fair. : ' .. . - f , Oh l femembercd for aye b<* tho blessed isle, : -dAUitho day oflife, till night— jl L;’ , Ayhoii the evening conics, with its beautiful smile, ■ All arc closing to slumber awhile, . - 3fiiy>thut u Greenwood" of soul bo in sight. •jWiml AGrtICULTURAL ODE, T ’ r in ages r £ plbw wltlt wreaths was crowned, ’■ Sa g CS the chaplet round ; fatbn-of-spoil - . ■- - - • : to- toil" • ~ T ' '' the world wQS nourished, 1 ; ;\\-/' ood and pillage were tho soil u;,'/ tlieir'laurols flourished; t|-V;■'. . World her fault despairs— r;’; -i, ■ : yj; r VlTho guilt that stains her story, : b-’i/, Vj'j’’nd weeps.her crimes amid the euros formed her earliest glory. ; • . tVi; V.lv ( ri.v'}Tbo throne shall crumble, diadem’shall wane, |.! tribes of earth, shall humble f*{ rMgEho pride of those who reign,. .. t And >far shall day V;'-, pomp away; ” fnmo that heroes chcrlshj * * V. glory lamed in deadly fray ' i^.s’ Shall fade; decay and perish. : . *-‘Honor waits o'er all tho earth, ~>■s} Through endless generations— „ ,\v , Tho art that calls tho harvest forth /And feeds, tho expectant nations. .BY WSf. C. BRYANT. Mmllnmmß, - .. SAVAGE ORATORY. Clnirbornc’s Life of General Satriuol Dale Contains account of Tocuniseh, the oelobratedindian chief, who exerted such re ihnrkttble >ijnfiuonc6 over the Indian tribes. Hia fato was sealed at Tippecanoe. . The fol lowing is . of the war council, .iThb Big Warrior and the leading men were sitting there. The Shawnee chief sounded his war-whoop—a most diabolical yell—and each of. his .'followers responded, Tecumseh then preson ted to the Big warrior a wampum hclt ofifiye ■different colored strands, which thoOrcek chief handed to his warriors, and ■it passed down the line. The Shawnee pipe "~ tL tliprt produced; it was large, long, and ited with shells, beads, and id porcupine quills. It was i fire in the centre, and slowly Big Warrior along the lino, t a word had been uttered; still ns death; oven the winds was only the gentle rustle of ves. At length Tooumsch >\vly and in sonorous tones; impassioned, arid the words ics from his lips. His eyes ipornatufal lustre, and his üblod with emotion; his voice the multitude—now sinking joal whispers, now" rising to hurling out his words like a indorbolts. His countenance . ipeeoh; its prevalent oxpross siofl .was „a, L sneer of hatred and defiance rdorous smile; for, a brief in it of profound sorrow perva le close, a look of ebneentra moh, I suppose, as distin onemy of mankind, idny great orators, but I ne the vocal powers of Teoum iommand of the muscles of been deaf, the play of his id have told mo what ho said, wild, superstitious, untutor issemblage may be conceiv es said, but stern warriors, woods," shook with emotion, imahawks wore brandished ‘ t “.° Bl e Warrior; who, had , . ... ■- wh,tos . jnd remained-fnith fuldurmg the war, was for the moment visi bly affepted, .and more than once I saw his hugo hand clutch, spasmodically, the handle of his. knife. All this was the effect of his delivery; for, though the mother of Tecum seh was a,Greek, and ho was familiar with the language, ho spoke in tlie Northern dialect, opefitiwas afterwards interpreted by the In d>Oif lipguist to the assembly. His speech lias beeto reported, but no one has done or can do. it justice.* I think I can repent the sub stance of he said, and, indeed, his very words. TECUMSEIt’s SPEECH. *''‘rV ' *in defiance of tho white warriors of Qiiio and Kentucky, I have traveled through their settlements, which were once our favorite hunting grounds.- No war-whoop was sound ed, buttheto is:blood on our Knives. The pale-faces felt the blow, bqt knew not whenco it. came. . “Accursed bo the rnco that' has seized on our country and made women of our warriors. Our fathers, from their tombs, reproach us as sieves and cowards. I hear them now in the wailing .winds. . “The Muscogee was oneo a mighty people. The Georgians trembled at your war-whoop, and the maidens of my tribe, on the distant lakes, sung the prowess of your warriors and sighed for their embraces. “Now, your very blood is white; your tom ahawks have no edge; your bows and arrows were buried with your fathers. O, Miiscogees, brethren of iny mother, brush from your. eye-, lids the sleep of slavery; once more strike for vengeance—once more for your country. The spirits of the mighty dead complain. Their tears drop from the weeping skies. Lot the white rnco perish. “They seize your land; they corrupt, your women; they trample on the sacred ashes of your dead 1 “Back, whence they came, upon a trail of blood, they must bo driven! , “Back! back! ay, into the great water whose accursed waves brought them to our shores I “Burn their dwellings 1 Destroy their stock! Slay their wives and children ! The Red man "owns the. country, and' the pale faces must never enjoy it. , “War now I War' forever 1 War upon the living!. War upon the dead I Dig their very corpses from the grave. Our country must give no rest to a white man’s bones. “This is the will of the Great Spirit, reveal ed to my brother, his familiar, the Prophet of the Lakes. He sends me to you. “All the tribes of the North are dancing the war dance. Two mighty warriors across the seas will send us arms. “Tecumseh will soon return to his country. My prophets will tarry with you. They will stand betwooeh you and the bullets of your enemies. When-the white men approach'you the yawning earth shall swallow, them up. Soon shall you see my arm of lire stretched, athwart the sky. I. will stamp my foot at Tippecanoe, and the very earth shall shake.” _ When ho resumed 1 his seat the Northern pipe was again passed round in solemn si enco. The Shnwhese then simultaneously leaped tip with one appalling yell, and danced their tribal war dance, going through the evo lutions of battle, tho scout, the ambush, the final struggle, brandishing their, war-clubs, and screaming in terrible concert an infernal harmony, fit only for . the regions of tho damned. • The Turkish Sultan. Frederick Bremer, in a recent magazine ar ticle, thus describes the Turkish harem: \ tl A little in an in a'dark coat,-a dark-rod cap with a long black tassel bn his head, and a pale, unploasantcountenanco, comes down the steps, with os little dignityas a shopman. , Can that .reaUyboYho-Sultan-? •-Ydsi-it must be-thtfSal tan; because the elderly military personages by his side reply with an expression of deep rev erence to some remarks of the little man, and the stout lady with the children, steps hastily forward into his path, as if she would stop his further advance.He starts, makes a half stop backwards, and- contracts, his eyebrows most threateningly. Yet he listens to what she has ' 1 to.jsay, but listensyvith a gloomy expression, and then easts an inquiring glance on hisbro , ther-iu-law, the High Admiral. ”, He utters a | fowwords of explanation; shrugging his shoul dors, pod then another word or two, which • seems , tp. say, ‘What do I know about your i husband.?’—motions the stout lady out of the way, and walks on to the shore, talking gaily • with.the gentlemen whoattendhinn ifesteps into the caique, from which the canopy has been removed; puts on his gloves, distorts his lace in looking up at. the sun, and so doing ex hibits his. tobacco-stained teeth; while his plain, uninteresting countenance assumes a most disagreeable expression. This, then, is the man who is called ‘God’s Shadow on the Earth,’ and who rules with absolute sway over the dives and happiness of 35,000,000 of hu , uian ibpings.. . X .have seen- many crowned . heads, ibut none who seem so devoid of digni ty, so devoid of anything-as remarkable as this “ Shadow of God on Earth.’’ Noverthe less, the throne must produce an effect either for good or for evil. Travellers who see Ab dul Medjid only at public audiences, usually merely, the lifeless, automatic charac ter of his exterior. I now saw him under oth er circumstances. Ho was lively, and his countenance,, although pale, indicated more youthful strength and health than I had been led to .expect. That is, ; I was told, because within the last few years he has dranksomo thing stronger than champagne, and this has given him strength. Besides, ho was to-day in a good humor. But he generally looks very gloomy. Abdul Medjidhas the Turkish fam ily feature's, the oval countenance, with some what prominent cheek bones, the nose broad at, the nostrils and arched, the dark'brown, well cut, but not largo eyes, and; the finely penciled eyebrows. They struck me as finest when contrasted with their threatening ex pression, and the countenance then appeared more significant. If they could contract with a grave, earnestness, Abdul Medjid would bo a man of high character. Naturally mild of disposition, a good son and brother, unwilling, though a deapot. to sign a death warrant, Ab dul Medjid is not wanting in the softer feel ings. 'That which he wants is real earnest ness and real strength. So, at least, it seems to me. Ho does not throw himself seriously into anything, but lets all go as it may and will. ‘Allah, Kerim T " (C 7” Neither Patrick Henry, nor Henry Clay, nor Daniel! Webster, nor Demosthenes, nor Sheridan, nor, in fact, any. great orator could speak when very young. Webster says of his own boyhood: “There was one thing (at school) I could not do. I,could not make a declamation—l could not sneak before the school. Tho kind and excellent Buckminis tor especially sought to persuade mo to per form tho exorcise of declamation, like other boys, but I could not do it. Many a piece did I commit to memory," and rehearse in,my own room over and over again; but when the day came—when the school collected, when my name was called, and I saw all eyes turn ed upon my seat, I could not raise myself from it. * * . And when tho occasion was over, .I went homo and wept bitter tears of mortification.” Clay makes a similar state ment. 0“ A Quaker, had his broad brimmed hat blown off by the wind, and ho chased it for a long time, with fruitless and very, ridiculous zeul. At last, seeing a rouguish looking, boy lungnmg.at hjs,disaster, ho said to him: Art thee a profnno lad ?" Tho youngster replied that ho did a little in that way. . “ Then," said ho, taking a half dollar from ms pocket, “ thee may damn yonder fleeing tile fifty cents worth.” A recent publication of the ministry pf Al geria and the colonies makes some curious statements relating to the pilgrimages to Mecca during, the present year. The cere monies at Mecca terminated on the 11th, of last month, in the presence of about fifty thou sand pilgrims of whom seventeen thousand eight hundred and fifty had come by sea, and thirty-two thousam}, one hundred and fifty by land. In 1858 there .wore one hundred and fifty thousand pilgrims; in 1857 one hundred and forty thousand; and in 1856 one hundred and twenty thousand.. This great decrease in the number in 1859 is owing, the natives de clare, to .the . events of Djeddah last year, and also to the dread of the cholera, which made extensive ravages in 1858. Ah soon as the pilgrim sets his foot on the sacred soil of Mecca, he must put on two pieces of white cloth, ene tied around the loins, with ends hanging down to the middle of the leg, while the other is thrown over, the shoulders, so as to leave the right arm free!. He must go bare headed, and wear sandals. As long as he wears this garment he is bound to lead a pure and regular life. At Mecca he begins the ceremonies under the direction of a guide. They are ns follows.; _ 1. Visiting the temple and going seven times around the ICaaba, starting frorii the Black Stone, which ho must kiss or touch in completing each circuit. 2. Drinking the water at the well of Zein Zem, at which, says tradition, Hagar and Ish inael quenched their thirst. ,3. Braying at the station of Abraham, ' marked by a stone, on which he is said to have stood when he went to sacrifice his son. 4. Stopping and praying at the place called ■ El Madjen, the spot where Solomon stood to see mortar mixed for building the temple. 5, Running seven times between Mount Safa and Merwa, within the limits of the city, in commemoration of Hagar’s anxious search for water for herself and her son. - 6. Repairing, on the 9th. day of tho month, to Mount ‘ Ararat, about twelve jniles from Mecca, after morning prayer. Mahomedan tradition say that on this hill Adam built 1 a temple, and Mahomet performed his devo tions. _ ,7. On the following day the pilgrims all go in a body to the Valley of Mo'una, and there sacrifice propitiatory victims; ‘they also out their hair-and nails, devoutly burying the portions cut off. After remaining two days at Mouna, they again visit the temple, of Mec ca, and then prepare for their departure. Looking Up. Mr. Astor, it is said, when once fording the Susquehanna on horseback, found himself be coming so dizzy as to be about to lose his seat. Suddenly he received a blow on his chin from a trapper, who was his companion, with tho words, “Look Up.” He did look up, and thereby recovered his balance. It was look ing on the turbulent waters that imperiled his life, tho blow he received and tho looking up, saved it/ ' ■ A parallel anecdote, in reference lo 'a car toon painter at St. Peters, is familiar to many of our readers. He was working, on a tempo rary platform, so constructed as to enable him to touch the lofty dome’with his pencil.. In order to give the last touches to a figure above him, he was gradually backing untS he reach ed the edge ef the platform. In a moment he would have been precepitated on the marble floor that lay at an immense distance beneath. One of his associates saw his peril, and with great presence of mind, threw a brush of paint up against tho almost finished painting. The painter sprang forward to arrest, if he could, the injury. Ho was too late; the pic- ; ture was ruined, but the painter’s life was saved. It is so, often with ourselves, under God’s discipline. A sudden shook comes to our own persons, or death descends on one of oiir friends. At the moment, with our eyes fixed on self, or on some object of earthly idolatry, we may be nigh ruin. , Then God’s providence comes and disfigures the idol, or forcibly withdraws our eyes from tho path in which we were seeking destruction. In earthly re lations we would see in such interpositions the presence not only of a wise but loving friend. Shall we not, when ivo consider the relations of the soul, infer the same thing from God’s chastening providence ? The Old OakeV Bucket.— Tho following reminiscence of Samuel Woodworth possesses sufficient interest, we think, to warrant us in presenting it. to our readers. It is a portion of a private letter recently received from one whose authority in tho matter cannot be ques tioned. In reference to the period of tho pro duction of tho “Old Oaken Bucket,” tho writer says; V “It was written in the Spring or Summer of 1817. The family were living at the time in Duane street. The poet came homo to : dinner one very warm day, having walked from Ilia .office, somewhere near the foot of Wall street. Being much heated with the ex ercise, he poured himself out a glass of water —New York pump water —and drank it at a draught, exclaiming, as he placed the tumbler on the table, ‘That is very refreshing, buthow much more refreshing would it bo to take a good long draught, this warm day, from the old oaken bucket I left hanging in my father’s well, at home!’ Hearing this, the poet’s wife, Who wim always a suggestive body, said, ‘Se lim, way wouldn’t that be a pretty subject for a poem ?’ The poet took the hint, and, under the inspiration of the moment, sat down and poured out'from his very soul those beautiful lines which have immoralized the name of Woodworth;” —Home Journal, Insurue'ction in the Ohio PeniTEKWaiiv, —A desperate conspiracy among the prisoners in the Ohio Penitentiary, to rise en •masse, murder the keepers and so escape, was frus trated on Monday. Information of the plot was given by one of the convicts, and tho ring-; loader, one Blackburn, from Gallia county, being secured, the remainder quietly submit ted., ■ ■ fi£a?°,A robustious countryman, meeting a physician, ran to hide himself behind a wall. Being asked tho cause, ho replied: “It’s so long since I’ve been sick that I am ashamed to look a doctor in the face.” JSSy** A waggish constable in Albany last Wednesday arrested a man under tho statute against carrying deadly weapons; for going into tho police Court room with a bottle of whiskey in his pocket. Cijffv says he’d rather die in a railroad smaSh up than in a steamboat hurst up, for. this roason. If you gits run off and smashed up, dar you is.; but if you gits blowed up oh do boat whnr is you ?” DC7* A lawyer engaged in a case, tormented a witness so much with questions that tho poor follow-cried out for water. “There," said tho Judge, “I thought you’d pump him drv ” Thoro is a drcadfulambition abroad 6 for being “genteel.”' :vWe;keep up, appearances, too often af thß.yxpehse of honesty; and, though wo may notborich, yet wo must seem to bo'so. . Wemuttbo “respectable," though only in the meanest mere vulgar outward show.’ ; Wohovo not the courage to go patiently onwarfcjh :tho condition of life which'it has ploasedGod to call us; but must needs live in soine’fashionable state to which we ridiculously please 'to call ourselves, and all to gratify tho.vanjty of that unsubstantial genteel world of wCT£h wo form a part; There is a constant atruggfeand pressure for front seats in the social amphitheatre; in the midst of which' nil noble; 1 self-denying resolves is trodden down, and many fine natures are in evitably crushed todjjpth. What waste, what misery, what bankruptcy, come from all this ambition to dazzle others with the glare of apparent worldly: success, we need not de scribe. ThetuisohievouS results show them selves in a thousandways—in the rank frauds committcd by meri w&p dare to bo dishonest, but do not.dare to see them poor; and in the desperate' dashes at fortuno. m which the pity is not so.much for those who fgU. as for the hundreds of involved in their ruih.- ' r ' r \. I Mr; Hume hit.the mark wicu.ho', once sta ted in the House of his words were followed 'by laughter—that the tone of living in England is' altogether too high. - Middle classes hfijlooplo are too apt to dive up to their incomes, ; . if not beyond them; affeoting a degree of style which is most un healthy in its effect upon society at large. 'There is an ambition to bring boys up as gen tlemen, or, rather “genteel” men; though the result frequently is; only to make them gents! They acquire a taatd fot dress, style, luxuries, and amusements; which; can never form -any solid foundation for Wanly, or gentlemanly character ; and the result is that wo have a ;vast number of gingerbread young gentry thrown'upon the world. jwh6 remind one of the abandoned hulls sometinios picked .up at sea! with only a monkey bn 1 board. ; " HOLD; OS. , Hold on-to your tongue when you are just ready to swear; lie, or.speak harshly, or use iany improper word., ,i, ' Hold on to your you'are about ready to strike; scratch,.Bteal, or do any im proper act. , : ,t ■ Hold on to your foot when you are on, the point of kicking, running away from study, or, pursuing the patJi of error, shame or crime. Hold on to your'tetnper. when you are an gry, excited, or itnpoacdfhpon, or. others- are angry about you. ■ Hold on to your-hoafjj'whon evil associa- ficek your company, and invite you to join in their games, mirth end revelry. . Hold on to your good iamb at all times, for it is more valuable to youfthah gold,*high pla-, oes or fashionable attiro.li ! Hold on to the will sofve well, ;and do.yop v gQ,Qd,.tbtough^^tormtjUi, , x,;.„ Hold_ on to your vjftuo-iat is above all pried to you in all times and places. \. Hold on to your good character, for if is and over will bo, your best wealth. Distemper in the Horse.—la an eruption foyer peculiar to. the horse, -attacking him chiefly when young, contagious, but probably also producible by other causes. It is char acterised by sore throat and cough ; a thick yellow mucopurulent discharge from the nos trils some difficulty of breathing; and the eruption of a hard inflammatory tumor in the subcutaneous cellular tissue, between the branches ,of the lower jaw, which matures and, in about ton days from the first appear ance of the disease, bursts. This is the.no-' tural form of the , but in some sea sons it assumes various forms. It is nearly, .allied to those contagious eruptive fevers, such as strangles in horses, inurnan in cattle, dis temper in dogs, and scarlatina, in the human subject. Fever, catarrh or sore throat some times precede the formation of the intermax illary tumor, sometimes * tumors come very slowly, or does not suppurate properly, goes hack and .appears in some , other , part of the body, as inside the thigh, under, the shoulder ;blade, or, worse, in. some of , the internal or gans. This, last form may be suspected when the tumor beneath the jaw. do.es not come, pro perly forward, when there is weakness and loss of flesh, with derangement, either of the respiratory or digestive organs. Treatment,—-} The' great -aim. is the healthy idevelopemont of the abscess in-the natural site, between the branches of the Idwer jaw; keep the animal cool, blit not cold; Let un der warmth bo avoided.-' Encourage the ani mal to eat bruised oats,-boiled barley, carrots and green food. Except in mild cases, steam the head and foment. -The abscess may be safely allowed to burst of itself, unless symp toms of suffocation appear; when the thicken ing and knottihess of the skin, the result of a premature opening, is avoided. -Vesicants are only requisite when’the tumor is slow in maturing; and is not Hastened by steaming and hot fomentation. When the animal loses its appetite, its.flesh and its'strength, admin ister a preparation of iron and ginger in warm ale, beer dr gruel.— Weekly Pennsylvanian. A; Dog's Journey. —The following trait'of sagacity in the canine race has.bcon given us from an authentic source: : > , ‘A brother of Mr. Esler, of the Johnson Roof, n short time since'left the District, and oyerland to Adelaide, taking with liima dog belonging ’ to his brother. On arriving there, the dog appeared ill at ease ; he deter mined to see whether ho , would return, and accordingly wrote a letter to his brother, and enclosing it. in a handkerchief, tied it to, the neck of the dog, which then , started. A let ter was then posted to the brother hero, with the somewhat laconic Contents of—‘Dear Bro thor,—Arrived safely. Farther particulars see dog.’ This was, of course, perfectly un intelligiblo to Mr. Esler till, the day after re ceiving the letter per post the four-footed mes senger arrived with his‘‘further particulars’ round his nock. After his lonely journey of COO miloS he did not appear much fatigued, but seoniod overjoyed at regaining his own town again.’ —Bendigo Australia Advertiser. O’ “ Main’t I see you homo from mootin'* Peggy?” “ JNo, you shan’t do no such thing, I am otherwise .engaged,” , , “I swanny, 1 guess you’ve missed it this time, for I’ve my trouser pockets full of gin ger-broad.” “ You may take my arm, Bill, I only said Rrt }> O“Tw6 school girls, residing in Jefferson county, Mo., wore obliged to pass through some burning woods. The clothes of one of them caught fire, and before aid could bo ren dered the little one was burned to death. (£?■ The man who was injured by a burst of applause, is recovering. When Dr, Bodge, an, eclectic physician, was lecturing the .State on the laws of health, and particularly on the evils of tea and coffee, he happened to meet one morning at the break fast table a witty son of Erin,: of tho bettor class. , ■ . . Conversation turned on the doctor’s favorite subject; he addressed our Irish friend as fol lows:' • ‘‘Perhaps you'think I would bo unable to convince you of the deleterious effect of tea and coffee I” “I don’t know,” said Brin, “but I’d like to bo there when you do it I" “Well," saijl the, doctor, “if I convince you that they, are injurious to your health, will you abstain from their use ?” “ Shure and I will, sir.” “How often do you use coffee and tea?” asked the doctor. “ Morning and night, sir.” “ Well,” said the doctor, “do, you ever ex perience a slight dizziness of the brain on go ing to bed?" - ■ ' ' - “I do—indado I do,”replied the noble son of Erin. . “ And a sharps pain through the temples, in and about the ■ eyes in the mornln n- .” “ Troth, I do, sir.” . °' ‘ Well,” said tho doctor, with an air of con fidence and assurance in his manner, “ that is tho tea and coffee.” ' . . “Is it, indeed ? Faith and I always thought it was the whisky I drank.” Tho company roared, with laughter, and the doctor quietly retired. He,was beaten. ■ The Eyes. —An eye can threaten like the loaded gun, or can insult like hissing or kick-. i“g; or in its altered mood, by beams of.kind ness can make the heart dance with joy. The eye obeys exactly the action of the mind. When a thought strikes up, the vision is fixed, and remains looking at a'distance; in enume rating .names of persons or countries, as France, Spain,-Britain, or Germany, the eyes wink at each new name. There is an honesty in the eye 1 which the mouth does not partici pate in. “The artist;” as Michael Angelo' said,'“must haye his measure in his eye. Eyes are bold as lions—bold; running, leap ing. They speak all language; they need no encyclopedia to aid in .the inteipretation of their language; they respect neither rahk nor fortune, - virtue ,nor ; sex,, but they go", through and through you in a moment of time. You can read in the eyes of yoiir companion, while you talk with him, whether your argument hits, though tongue will not confess it. There is a look by whioh a man tells you he is going to say a good thing, and a look which says when he has said.it. Vain and forgotten are all ,the fine offers of hospitality, if there is no holiday in the eye. , How ■. many inclinations arc avowed by the eye, though the lips dissemble I How often does one come from a company in which it ; may easily happen he has said nothing; that no important remark has been addressed to 1 mm, and, ,yet in his sympathy with the com ™ seems hot to have a sense of this fact, for a stream of light has .been,-' flowing 1 him through his eyes. As soon as men are off their centres the eyes show it. • There ape eyes, to be sure, that give no more admis sion into the man than blue berries.. There are liquid and deep wells that a man might tau into; there are asking eyes, and assorting eyes, and prowling eyes, and eyes full of faith! ond-some of good and. some of sinister'omen, the power of eyes to charm down insanity or beasts, is a power behind the eyes, that must be a victory achieved in the will before it can be suggested.to the organ; but the man at pdaee or unity with himself would move through men and nature, commanding all " things by the eye alone. The reason men , don’t obey us is, that they see the mud at the , bottom of our eyes. Whoever looked on the , hero would consent to his will being served • I he would be obeyed,— R.- JK Emerson . ( Interview with a Polar Bear.— lt seems hardly right to call polar hears land animals; they abound here one hundred and ten geogra phical mile's from the nearest land, upon very loose, broken up ice, which is steadily drifting into the Atlantic at the rate of twelve or four teen miles daily. To .remain upon it would be to insure their destruction, were they not nearly amphibious. They hunt by scent, and i are constantly seen running across and against the wind, which prevails from the northward, so that the same instinct, which directs their search for prey, also .serves the important pur pose of guiding them in the direction of land and more solid too. I remarked that the up per part of Bruin’s fore paws are rubbed quite bare. Peterson explains, that to surprise the seal a boar crouches down with his paws doubled underneath, and pushes himself noise lessly forward with his hinder legsuntil with in a few yards, when he springs upomthe un suspecting victim, whether in the water or ’upon the ice. The Greenlanders are fond of bear’s flesh, but never can oat the , heart or liver, and say that these parts cause sickness. No instance is known of Greenland bears at tacking men except when wounded or provo ked; they never disturb the Esquimaux graves, although they seldom fail to rob a cache of seal’s flesh, which is a dimple construction of loose stones above the ground. A native of Uppornavik, one dark winter’s day, was out visiting his seal nets. Ho found a seal en tangled, and whilst kneeling down over it upon the ice to get it clear, ho felt a slap on the back, from his companion, as he supposed; but a second and heavier blow made him look smartly round. Ho was horror-stricken to see a peculiarly grim old bear instead of his com rade 1 Without deigning further notice of the man, bruin tore the seal out of the not, and commenced his supper. Ho was not , inter: rupted; nor did the man wait to see the meal finished.— Copt. McCliniock's voyage in search of Sir John Franklin. H 7" Some years since, a boy in -county Va, named Timborlake, was sent to school gratuitously, by a gentleman of the nemo of Starke. This boy was plowing one day with a one-horse team, and liis horse, being dis posed to turn 1 aside from the true course, ho bawls out to him: “ Why don’t you come hither, I tolls you f” A gentleman happening to bo near, and overhearing the boy’s exclamation, calls to him and says; “ I thought Starke sent you to school toloarn grammar!” “ Humph 1” retorts the boy, “you think that Xam such a fool as to' talk grammar to a ( horse ?” Governor Packer has issued his war rant for the execution of Henry Pritts, con victed of murder in the first degree, in Somer set county. The execution is fixed for Friday, The Coroner of Chicago hold an inquest on Sunday, the Bth inst„ on the body of a boy thirteen years of ago, who had committed su icide by hanging, to relievo himself of the harsh treatment of his father. Carlinvillo, Illinois, April 17.—This city and section of country wore visited Cn yester day evening, about six o'clock, by onb of the most terrific storms that was ever experienced in this country. There seemed to bo two dis‘ tinct currents of air, both of which came in contact when about over this village, creating a most terrific and appalling scene. . A num ber of houses wore blown down, and roofs by the quantity were torn from dwellings, store houses and barns, and carried to an incredible distance. Tho roof of the Protestant Lutheran Church was blown some distance, and- the walls some what injured. A dwelling House in tho West part of town was demolished by a roof from a large store-house, the roof having been carried about fifty yards, striking the top of the dwel ling,, crushing it nearly Jevel with the earth. The family narrowly escaped with their lives —-one child was badly burnt in making its es cape from the building. A roof from a dwel ling was seen flying through the air; afan an gle of two hundred feet, supposed to have been carried about a mile and a half. One large two-story frame house was twisted around, making it almost a total .wreck. Stock was killed in every direction. Con sternation was seated upon every countenance of the inhabitants. Trees, fences, brick chim neys, &c., could have been seen flying in every direction. _ A small child was carried at two different times quite a distance in the air, but was not seriously injured. It was blown from /off.a porch where it was standing. Small out houses went tumbling about as if their weight did not exceed that of a feather. A man by tho name of Love, while plowing,-was instant ly killed by ligtning. We heard of another that was plowing, and had both of his cattle killed, one by lightning, and the other by the falling of a tree—the driver was uninjured, Tom 'Sayers, Tlir Pugilist. Tom Sayers can, physically, be best describe cd, says a London correspondent of ‘f Porter’s ' Spirit,” by the word “sturdy." Ho stands like a rook; walks with his haunches on a firm, easy wing; makes: you fancy that “it’s no use knocking that chap down; he’ll bo up again before I can say ‘Jack Robinson/ and, likp the Titian, twice as strong for having kissed his mother earth." That’s where the, chief point of difference between , the rival champions lies. Sayers’ face, when he is put of condition,, is large, and somewhat inclined to be puffy. His eye is of the ‘pig’ order small, deep-set, and inscrutiable. Jt is most dangerous because you cannot understand the bearings of its expression. It does not inten sify in gaze when ho means' mischief, and so give yon warning of the coming “ auctioneer,” jut is the same—stoical, imperturable—-either when he has just been floored, or the moment before he propels the terrific right hander that ids to grass the. “ candidate" who standsbeforo .him,. . ■ . ■ ®S' lt ' n S T '® Tt !r wasratluccd'lo such, coldiblooded, matter-of-fact science ’os it has been by Tom. From the moment ho enters the ring, he regards his opponent ns a “ sub ject” that it is his duty to dissect. This idea, in the stolid way it is impressed upon his j.mind, never leaves him until ho sees the I sponge thrown up by somebody", whether by his own or the others side it docs not matter, as those who saw his fight with Nat Langham I remember. Such power of self-devotion .to, and conoehtrativo energy upon a given ob ject, renders him tor the time, in-my opinion, invincible. You cannot by severity of punish ment, divert his mind from the ono undivided idea and intent of ultimate victory; and his body is so tough that you cannot wear that out before you have demoralized the loss ma terial part of his organization. To beat him, an antagonist must do one of two things blind him or stun him. Quid Nat” had sci-' once and strength enough to do the former, and came off conqueror. lam told that the Benicia Boy has the roquisite.amount of sledge hammer in his fists, his flexors and extensors to do tho latter. We shall see, : , Tom has been taken off his pins with ”• rib roasters" and “jaw-breakers” before now; yet he always managed to shake himself up. ; m the thirty seconds allowed between rounds, and come up to the scratch at the time-keep er’s call in a rough and ready sort of a way that was not to be trifled with. In his second fight with; Aaron Jones, for instance, some sporting lord .{Drumlanrig, I think,) offered Jones, a pretty round doucuer if ho would get first knock-down in a certain indicated round. Jones, who was as plucky as tho what’s-his name, went in to edrn his money with a will, and regardless of consequences, gave the gen-, tle Tom such a straightonor bn the tide of the neck as not only, “ stretched him prone,” but caused his backers serious doubts as tq wheth er ho would ever get up anymore. But Jem my Massey spoke up sharply to him, gave him an extra squeeze of the sponge, and ho woke up somehow, astonishing everybody round tho ring.by his steady march to the scratch. Old hands exclaimed at the time, “By Jingo, if it wouldn’t take a Ilindian club to knock the senses hout o’ such a cove as that !" Ex. Effect op Blce Window Glass.— lf green leaves are viewed through the ordinary blue . glass used in ornamental windows,- when the sun is shining, all those through which the light is transmitted appear orange red, while those from which it is reflected appear of a grayish tint. On a favorable day, trees so ob served seem covered with brilliant blossoms. Death Penaltv in New York.—A bill has passed both branches of the State Legis lature of Now York essentially modifying the death penalty. Executions hereafter are only to bo for.trcason, arson, and murder in the first degree. In cases of death sentences, tho execution shall hot take place until one year j after sentence shall have been passed, nor un til tho issue of the Governor’s warrant, JBQ?" John ITaylor, for killing William .Graves at Richmond, Va., has boon convicted of involuntary manslaughter, and fined $5OO. Kieled. — A slave, owned by Mrs. Mary Gilliam, of Dinwiddio county, Va., was shot I and killed on Wednesday last, by Dr. Anson, his hirer, whom he was attacking with a club. B®“In exhuming some bodies at a family graveyard, near Crawfordsvillo, S. C., lately, the body of a woman, buried- some twelve or more' years, was found a petrifaction, with each article of dress perfect, A SjnCui.au Death.— Mrs. JanoGamblo, a widow lady, of Eatonton, Ga., under the influ onco of monomania, starved herself to death, oho died on the Bth inet., having lived twenty days without a particle of food. ter - , Beutzo is about to paint the landing of of tho Cathojica in Maryland under Ix)rd Bal timore. 1 BfiT" Tlio Parker Mills, at Wnrolmm, Mass., arc cutting 10,000 kogs of nails per month. party. 3C7” Whatever career you embrace, propose to- yourselves an elevated aim, and put in its service an unalterable constancy. • • DC7" “ How did you like your visit, to your sweetheart?" “Oh, I.didn’t like witji which I was received by her father." O’" Suspicions among thoughts are like hats among birdsi that over fly by twilight. They are defects, not in the heart, but.in the brain.- . ®> B tonclonoyof excessive reading ofteU is not only to indispose us for conversing our selves, but to make the general conversation of others insipid. C 7” Men are: frequently like tea—tho real strength and goodness are not properly drawn out of them till they have been a short time ia hot water. BIT’ Years are the sum of hours. Vain is it at wide intervals to say, “ I’ll save this year,” if at each narrow interval you do not say, “I’ll save this, hour," Let the day have a blessed baptism by giving your first waking thoughts into the bo som of God. The first hour of tho morning is tho rudder of the day. ° BIT’ Don’t despond.. Let not anxiety ’ "have you on the./iip."- Consider your health ns your best frjend, and think as well of it. in spite of its foibles, ns you can. Dp* Men don’t generally like to be hamp ered, but if you are going out to spend a week If 10 had bettor hamper your- . BKeep a scrap book if you like, but don t put into it every thing you can manage to scrape up; that is, don't lot your scrap-book bo.a mere scrap-book. E 7” When men and women get very-old, they are generally, for the -best of reasons, in ao danger of having their misdeeds thrown in their .teeth. , . ' DC7' A single piece of ordnance would have secured to Pompoy the battle of Pharsalia, and a single frigate at Actium would have given Antony the empire of the world. ! y7" It is not proper for a young lady to leave her partner in the ball-room to dance in anothorpart of the house. At least m?t with out acquainting him with her intention. . O” Men with a strong appetite for land I generally. take it by the acre ahd willingly swallow it greedily by the thousand; acres.—. They satisfy their appetite, at last, on sis feet of it. ■ ; . . C - That person who views what ho dis likes with suspicion, or treats what, after all, may only ho zeal for his welfare with anger or at all events with ah ungracious petulance! does not deserve to havo a friend. , ICT* Surely n woman may bo able, or, as a Yankee would say, raising Cain and making one fool like throwing a veil over her and withdrawing her from the public gaze lor her own mother’s sake. w ? r . k for thc attainment of an object. If the object itself is not im portant, the pursuit is. The fox, when caught, is worth nothing—ho is followed for the plea sure of the following. 1 tD“ Do not cat or drink anything that your stomach dislikes, and clean your teeth every day and you will probably soon bo rid of your bad breath. Camphor and chalk make a good powder for cleaning the teeth. i ® u ? °t ?ho duties of friendship is calm ly to advise, instruct, sustain, and console; and when this duty is performed prudently, the object should fool grateful, and bo pro pared, when needful, with a rcciprooatory compliment. (Wb anl C 7" Tho heart is a hoot which wo ought not to tear in bur hurry to get a,\ Its contents.- fc7* Yoif ehpfild deal aid ten derly with a he’art still your bwii,- iy A policy: of itfStirnncb is.bfttpijrenddred void by impolicy,- ■ V C7’ Pickles in glazed pahs,gross' flogs, and delays, are dangerous.- : • - _ O" Physical beauty ip, a, fitting envelope of Intellectual and moral beauty; " ' ’ *■ O’ It is no unoommonihing thathot words produce a coolness. O’Don’t locate yourself on the hook of a wild horse unless'you want to bo dislocated. * [O* A stitch in tho side, takon in time, may save nine spasms. . ■ (O’ Corn and wflicftt, like . very slovenly people, often have smut in their ears. (O’ The first draught serveth for the second for pleasure—the third for, shame' —and the fourth for madnosSi (O’ My books speak to my mind, my friend's to my heart, heaven to my soul, and all the rest to my ears. • CC7“ Never answer a calumniator. If yorf will only give a rattlesnake time enough,’ha will sting himself and die of his own-vdnom. DC7* Man’s riches are to be estimated rather by the, fewness of his wants than the great ness of his possessions. , DCT” A load of epistolary liabilities is tho heaviest baggage that a traveller can bear about with him. . DC7* Idle men are more burdened with their timo than.the most busy are with their busi ness. ■ . . ~ Bl7* Praises are valuable only wheU they come from lips that have tho courage to cops deinn. • : DC7“ There is a kind of. fortune, called 91 luck! so ill, that you hope it will die—but it doesn’t. ■ 1 O” A faithful, genuinß friend, who will neither flatlet nor cajole, is a rarity'in the present day. . , D-T” When a girl, for any reason, advises you to " marry another,” you may as. well go and take her advice. DC/’The misery of idleness is nearly'os ' manifest in high life as in the rags and filth of extreme poverty. jCT" Mon of correct principles are disgusted with flattery, , and denounce the venders of that nauseous article as “ toadies.” 10“ A Massachusetts editor says.that there are one thousand six hundred tin nedlars in that enlightened State. ' -XT' iTh-c-mouicnt anything assumes the .shape .of a duty, spnie persons feel themselves, incapable of discharging it, jCT” Life should be fortified by many friend-, ships; to lovo and to be loved.is the greatest happiness of existence. , i • ' ' M, 48,