VOL. 47. AMEJtiOAJN : V OLUi\TLililt. PUBLISHED EVERY TItUHSDAY MORNING BT ioON B. BRATTON. TE.RMS. Subsciption.— One Dollar and Fifty tidnts; paid in advance;,TWo DMliiVs if paid within the year; jind Two Dollars and Fifty Cents, if not paid within the year. These terms will bo rigidly adhered to in every instance. No subscription discontinued until all arrearages are paid unless at. the option of the Editor. . , by the cash, and hot exceeding one square, will bo inserted three times for One Dollar, and twenty-five cents for each Additional insertion. Those of a greater length in proportion. • , „ f Job-Printing— Such as Hand-bills, Posting-bills, Pamphlets, Blanks, Labels, Ac. Ac., executed With, accuracy and at the shortest notice. 4 LIST FIRE WELL. BY LILLIE ni^WOOD. then art going! thou art going ! I shall never 800 tUco iftoro; For my storra-tosaodbark is drifting Swiftly to the other shoro. ».■ ■ For the last tinto Inril gazing On those features loved so wollj dugulsh of this parting, Words of mine are vain to tell! Once again thy radiant glances For a nidhiont on mo’rest Once again my trembling lingers in thy tender clasp ufo prost. Oh ! those deaf, familiar accents,, Sweetest music to mine car, Ithrillmg through’my heart so wildly, Ke'or again oh earth I’ll hear. Faro thco wclM when, thou has left mo Earth is hut a desert dear! And.my spirit all untrammelled, Hath no. tie to. hind, it hero.. Soon its flight it wingoth upward, , Freed then from its ’prisoning olayy -Fondly it will hover o’ef thee,- Wheroso’or thy footsteps stray. Often in the silent midnight,- , ‘ ‘ When thou (Icem’st thyself alone. Stealing noiselessly upon thoo Will.my mystic presence come. Nc’or a single word I’ll utter* • .Biit.my breath upon thy check, 'And a rusLling*of. my. white robes . To thy listening heart will speak. When thou sittesfc sad and lonely, Bowed beneath a weight of grief* Then’will haste my loving spirit*'. Bringing to thy soul relief. I will press my .shadowy ■ On thy'.hot and throbbing brow; And thou'lt feel my spirit.kisses .Bulling softly as the snow. Thonthou’lt.know that X ani near thoo>. And a aweot and holy calm Will oomo o’er thee, .while I whisper - To thh spirit words of balm. Faro thoo well! wo’ll iii Uaayob, jrbatsoj’er ou eartU botiilo; though m life our fato bo rivon, , Doath will bring theo-to my side, TO-DAY ASD TD-.TOIIOIV. A rosebud blbs-omo I in my bower, A bird sang in my garden; ~ The rosebud was its fairest, flower. The bird its gentlest warden. And a child beside the linden treo Sang t( Think no more of sorrow; But lot us smile and sing to-day, For wo must weep to morrow.” I aflkod tho bird, M Oh didst thou hear The song that she would sing thee? And can itbo that thou shouidst fear, • irhat tho host morn would bring thoo ?” Ho answered with triumphant strain,. "-•Ahyirig, “I know uot.sorrow; But I must sing my best to-day, For I may die to-morrow!” I asko 1 the rose, " Oh, toll mo sweet. In thy first beauty's dawning, Thou oanst not four,-from this retreat, Tho coining of tho morning?” £ho flung hor fragrant loaves apart. The lovelier for her sorrow, tfaying. "yet I must bloom to-day, For I nuy* droop.to-morrow.” I said, u Tho bloom irpnn my ebook la fleeting as tho roses ; My voice no more shall sing or spools, ivnon dust in dust reposes : And from those soulloness monitors • One lesson I may borrow - That wo should.smilo and sing to-day • Fop wo may weep to-morrow.” • / Munllmmm. lome of the Institutions of a Printing Office. The “Devil” is an institution by and of himself. Ho inks the typo, or turns tho Crank “or lays on tho sheets.” (Other people some times do the latter.) If it wore not for him the paper would not “ come out.” Heswoops Out the office—ho builds the fire—an appro priate work for a fiend—and swears because some one has “ hooked the kindlings.” Ho does tho “ chores at the house." Ho “ nuieta £kee aby '”* , Yot h “ important duty to keep watch on the street corner so as to mform the ed.tor when the sheriff is afta- With all this, the..;* Devil!' shoulders all tho bad or smutty jokes of the editor. When the mighty man of the pen is ashamed of an ex pTossion, and still desires to utter it, he save "our Devil says thus and so " and the devil lias to stand it I Nevertheless, the “ Devil” is an important personage in society. Ho attends lectures.— tie frequents concerts, shows, and the opera; tut—X say it more in sorrow than in anger— ne seldom attends church ! He presents hfm- V* a ?. t *' e ‘mket office 'of the “show,”’ with , “ * ,nen ” reversed by way of change, Cfbr ne seldom possesses more than asingleshirt > a? a “member of the Press,” and so presses h a danns that he is admitted without the ac customed quarter. But our young, friend is that* °?r “ H ° 18 ta » ™ u ? h of a Salient for his »w? 18 r man 18 with hitn, and he and w °?. a “ P a3B m and enjoy tho ontert ■ la ment, which, whatever it mav bo, is taken down in doses alternated with peanuts and to bacco. For the. “Devil” chews as well ns smokes and spits profusely upon carpets when be gets within reach of them. 1 novel- heard’ of a Printer’s Devil who had tosav but I ‘bo class th?£S HavoMW "Y knowledge, none of thorn Sr'm/ v vor -V°J r - of these ” Dev- Some to be mayors of cities.— mto Onniri m have T n let ‘bomsolves down B ,V c - , But 1 novar knew one to 4 KXWtataf t 0 beo ° m ° a PreBi iinal 0 “l’ve f b r the “ Devil -" I know the “ nh bimP-rinS. “ ySelf - “ Bull y for [From the New York Tribune .-] | Bold Attempt at. Bonk Robbery in New York. ~. A bold and daring attempt to rob the Now Ifork Exchange Bank came to light yesterday morning. The bank was about to be opened for the usual business of the day, when the cashier tried to enter the apartment at - the rent of the cotinting-room! where the tail It and safe iirb located. His 1 efforts to do so, however; proved unavailing, and a blacksmith was sent for, who, after removing a portion of the atoqe-work around the lock, succeeded iri opening the door. A curious sight at once met the eyes of the spectators.' A large hole yawned in the middle of the floor, and a mass of dirt was piled around.- It was evident that burglars had entered the, most, valuable local ity of the whole building. Beneath the feet of tho cashier, and the astonished clerks who crowded around him, was the aperture, which apparently led to some unknown subterranean region. , The hank hooks, which had. always occupied a position on the top of tho safe, had mysteriously disappeared, while the safe itself exhibited marks of violent usage at the hands of burglars. It Was now twelve o’clock, and three hours had been spent in opening-the door. A messenger was iminediately sent to give notice to the police of the attempted rob bery, and the valiant blacksmith at once threw himself into tho hole for the purpose of mak ing explorations. lie stumbled almost irnmel - lately upon the hank books, which the bur glars had thrown therefor the purpose of ex pediting . their operations with the safe.— Without stopping, to remove them, however, ho crawled'along the passage, hardly two feet in. height, the bottom of which was floored with, rag carpet,.and at length, after crawling nearly seventy feet, he emerged in a dark basement, piled up in all directions with rolls Of rag carpet. Here his view was greeted with a largo, and-select assortment of burglar’s tools, and every requisite .material far- excava tion. Ho groped around for a 'moment, and at last came in contact with the door, which ho found unfastened. Opening it, and ascending several steps, ho emerged into (ho- street, in timetp meet Capt. Jamison, of the Third ward, with a squad, of his men. Ho at once related hjs discoveries to that officer,-and, accompa nied by him' returned to the hank vault of the underground passage., Tho bank hooks wore now removed from the tunnel, and found to he complete. The onlything missing, so far as discovered, is a tin box, the property of Mr. A. ,L. Peek, a broker doing business on the corner of Broadway and Maiden lane, tho con tents of which were S2OO in gold and §BOO in uncurrent bank notes. Mr. Peck has been accustomed to send this box,, with various , sums of money therein, to the bank, for safe •keeping, for onward of twelve years past.— Owing to ifeiy size, it lias never been placed in the safe, but simply laid in thevault. .. . -Inquiries by the police developed the fact, that the robbers had been engaged for nearly six weeks in their underground labors. It .•appears that about six. weeks ago a man, giv ing, his namo. as Thomas Burke,-purchased, the brisemeut occupied ns a carpet store from its former proprietor, John Alcock, paying the latter the-sum. of §l,lOO. for stock and good will. , Every effort was made by the police to find Alcock, but so far tlieir endeavors have prov ed Harmony Roberts, keeper of a porter-house over the carpet basement, and who' rented the latter to Burke, was arrested on suspicion. His case will bo examined to day. The parties supposed to. be implicated in the robbery are Daniel Bartlett and Joseph Myers, two well-known English burglars; who were arrested about three months ago in this immediate vicinity, but subsequently discharg ed on, a habeas corpus. Alan the Life Boat. “ Man the life-boat! Man the life-boat!” was pealed through the hall of one of our most fashionable sea-shore hotels, sending a thrill of terror to the bosom of every one. A small sail boat had been upset, and its occupants were plunged into the dark sea. Instantly the galleries and grounds of the hotel were covered with tjjie gay and thought less, stricken dumb with the appalling thought that death was so near them. ' ■ ' How- eagerly did they Watch the life-boat as it ploughed the rough billows to where they Could see a man struggling in the water, fea ring he might sink never to rise, before the boat could reach him. But as the boat' neared the man, his clear voice was hoard above the deep waters. “ Stop not for me, but save my child, ray poor child I’’ And on they rowed with almost lightning speed, until they came to the boat, the bottom t of which wrts just even with the waves, and upon which the child, apparently dead; Was still clinging. But bn taking him off, they could seethe flame of life was still flickering r-dhere w&t yet hope. " After returning and taking in the father, they came on shore. And ns the poor child was borne almost lifeless to the hotel, and all were told that ho still lived, and hat none were lost, what tears of gratitude filled every eye. • Do wo sufficiently realize that we are at all times surrounded with immortal beings whoso souls are plunged into the deep waters of sin, and that perhaps if wo do not speak to them, their souls will bo eternally lost 1 What are we doing for the immortal souls that surround us? Are wo doing anything? Look at the past week ; how many have we pointed to the Savior ? AVhat have we done for the children that God has given us, or for the persons in our employ? Let us go to the closet. Let ns pray much and earnestly. Let us pray, believing; for those to whom we may bo intending to speak, and then go forth with the' dews of divine grace on our brow; with our hearts overflow 's with love for immortal souls. God's bles sing will follow our labors. Shall we not “ man the life-boat/' and ploughing the rough waves of sin, gather in those who are about to sink never to rise?— Delay may prove death to some immortal soul —a soul that perhaps wo might have saved from eternal death. KT'Wo wore walking homo last night about the witching hours, when we saw an individual in a brown study, and a coat of the same color standing’opposite the door of our domicile. Satisfaction was in bis eye, and a small cane in his hand. As weapproaehod him ho stuttered :- w "®. r . —can you toll mo where J-o-o tin to lives? “IV hat a question I” said wo, peering into h.s face; “why. Jo, my old’ folliw, you are fcho mnn yourself.'* J ho -°“ Im7r yoa ' \ B i“«“latc'd lives.” 1 1 Wan *° kn ° W wll -"’ 1 ‘oro he tr " a Is jom house—this one'right under your nose.” “fa 111 ' if 118I 18 « - 0h then. I’ll 1)9 kicked if somefchmg heat t changed th.o.door, for it wbn t fife mji kcT-liolo anyhow.** J Earnnm Sold. A piiblic joke Ut P. T. Barnum’a expense is not an every-day luxury, P. T. B. for many years having'bad the laugh on the other side. But at length the prince of showmen has been shown a trick that he did not know before, and the hero of the occasion has been, ns is Very Usual on such occasions, a son Of the Emerald Isle; It seems that Barrium, a'fow days ago, was in a groat hurry to be shaved, iind entered his Usual place of tonsorial re- Sdrt, under the Park Hotel, in New York; but all the operatives were engaged, and one other 'customer—a great brawny Irishman, just landed, and with a beard and head re (piiring very extensive attention—stood be tween the exhibitor of the “ Wliat-ia-it;” and his turn as “ next.” “I am in a hurry, my good man,” said Phinefts T., addressing Pat, “ and if yoxi will give mo your turn I will pay. for what you want done here.” . “Airright,” replied the delighted Irish man, and the showman' was soon shaved, and on his way to keep his engagement—merely saying, as he left the door; to the proprietor of the saloon, “Ho what this man wants,”, pointing to the exile of Erin, “ and I will set tle it with you.” . . No sooner was he gone than Pat took off his trusty, and a thick cotton neck-tid, at the same time asking the barber, “ now tell mo what you do.” “ Why,, sir,” responded the tonsorial oper ative, “we shave, cut and curl hair, shnixi poon and bathe.” , ■ • ■ : “All right, then,” said Pat, “do all them things to me. Sorra one of mu knows what they mane, but as ho said he’d pay for.thim, just do thim all, an’ God bless you.” The barber saw the joke, and did ns re quested, putting the big Irishman through all the processes, and bringing! him out so pleasantly altered that Pat scarcely know himself. We leave ohr renders toimagino Barnum’s face the next morning, when the proprietor of the saloon handed Him a bill— For bathing Irishman, 25 cents ; shaving. 10 cents; cutting hair, 25' cents; curling hair, 25 cents; Shnmpooning, 25. cents. To tal for Irishman, SI,IO. Barrtum at once acknowledged the corn— gave a receipt for the “maizebut he is nf tex- tho Irishman, and. swears if lie catches him, that ho will place him cheek by jowl between the ".What is it?!’ and the Aztec children. How am Old Sailor Talked to a Ciiild. —Wo clip the following from Mrs.'Stowe's Story, now being published in the Now York 'lndependent. It is an old sailor talking to his grand-daughter i . “Father,” said Sally, “how many, things there must bo at the bottom of the .sea—so many ships aro'sunk with all their line things on board? Why don’t people, contrive some way to go down and got thorn? ' • ".They do,' ehild;" saia"t!aptain Ititfridgo , “ they have diving bells, and men go down in : ’em with caps over their faces/and long tubes to get-air through, and they walk about on the bottom of the ocean.” “ Did you ever go down in one, father ?” “ Why yes, child, to be sure ; and,strange enough it was, to bo sure. There you could see great big sea critters, with ever, so many eyes and long arms, swimming right up to catch you ; and all you could do would be to muddy the water on the bottom, so they could not see you." , “ I never heard of that, Capt. Kittridge,” said his wife, drawing herself lip with a re proving coolness. . “ WaT Miss Kittridge, you han’t heard of every thing that ever happened, though you dp know a sight.” “And how does the bottom of the ocean look, father 1" said Sally. “ Daws, child 1 why trees.and bushes grow there jist as they grow on land; and great plants—blue, and purple, and green, and yel low, and pearls. I’ve seen them as big as chippin’ birds’ eggs." “ Cap’n. Kittridge !”• said his wife. “I have—and big as.robins’ eggs, too ; but them was off that coast of Ceylon and Mala bar, and way round under, the Equator,” said the Captain, prudently resolved to throw his romance to a sufficient distance, ‘• It’s.a pity you did’nt got a few of them jicarls,” said his wife with an indignant ap pearance of scorn. “ I did get lots on ’em and traded ’em off to the Nabobs in the interior for Cashmere shawls and India silks and sich,” said the Captain composedly, “and brought ’em home and sold ’em for a good figure; too.” "Oh, father 1" said Sally,, earnestly, “I wish you had saved just one or two for us.” “Law's, child, I wish now I had,” said the Captain, good-naturedly. ' “ Why, when I was in India, 1 went up to Ldoknow, and Benares, and saw all the Nabobs and Big-guns—why’, they don’t make no more yf gold and silver and precious stones than we’ do of the shells we find on the beech. Why, I’ve soon oho of them fellers with a diamond in his turban ns big as my fist.” “ Cap’n. Kittridge, what are you tolling said his wife once more. “ Fact—as big ns my fist,” said the Captain, obduratelyand all the clothes heworowas jist a stiff crust of pearls and .precious stones. I tell-you ho looked like something in the Kd valations—-a real Now Jerusalem look he had." . “I call that nr talk wicked, Cap’n. Kit tridge, usin’ Scriptur, tl/it nr way,” said his Wife'. “ Why, don’t it toll about all sorts of gold and.precious stones in the Revelation?” said the' Captain : “ that’s all I meant! Thom nr countries off Asia ain’t like our’n—stands to reason they shouldn’t bo them’s Scripture countries, and every thing is different there.” “Fathordid you ever get any of thososplen did things ?” said Sally. I “Laws, yes, child. Why, I had a groat green ring, an emerald, that one of the prin ces giv’ rao, and ever so many pearls and dia monds. 1 used to go with ’em rattlin’ loose in my vest pocket. I was young and, gay in them days, and thought of hringin’ of ’em home for tho gals, bnt somehow I always got opportunities for swappin’ of ’em off for goods and sieli.. That ar shawl your mother keeps in her canfiro chist was what I got for one on ’em.” “ Well, well,” said lira. Kittridge,■“ there’s never any catohin’ you, cause you’ve been where wo haven’t.’.’ (C 7" f A family knitting machine lias recent ly been invented. It is not larger than a sew ing machine, not liable to get out' of order, can bo operated by a child, will knit home spun yarn, and weaves a’ handsome stocking, Its ordinary movement is at tho speed of five thousand stitches in a minute. CZ?” “Jenny,” said a Scotch minister stoop ing from the pulpit, ‘have ye got a preen ?’ ‘Yes, minister.’ ‘Then stick it into that sleep ing brute by your side.’ “OUR COUNTRY—MAT XT ALWAYS BE RIGHT—BUT, RIGHT OR WRONG, OUR COUNTRY.” CARLISLE, PA, THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1861. in Heaven,’ &c. Having acted as clerk, re peating after Peter, the ferryman cried: “ Now let mo go.” . ' “ Not yet,”, said Peter,’you must make three promises; First,/that; you will.repeat that prayer morning and evening ns long as you live; secondly, that you will hear every-’ pioneer preacher that comes within five miles of this fon-y ; and thirdly, l that, you will put every Methodist pi-oaehor over free of ex pense. Ho yon promise and vow?” “ I px-oiriisc,” said the ferryman. And.-strarige- to say, that man afterwards' booanxo n shining liglxt. , What a Yolcano Can' Do.—Cotopaxi, in 1738 throw its, fiery rockets 3,000 foot above its crater, while in 1744,1 the-blazing mass, struggling for, an outlet, rCared.eh that its aw ful voice was hoard at a distance of more'than GOO miles. ' In 1707 the crater of Tnnguara gua, one of the groat peaks-of the Andes, flung out torrents of mud,, which dammed up the rivers, opened now lakes,A j ncl in valleys of a thousand feet wide nmde'flcposits of six bull di-ed fcel deupV : -'The sVi-dlitil-'-vrom -‘Vesuvius, which in ill 37 passed through Torre del Gre ,oo, contained 30‘,G00,000- cubic feet of solid matter; and in 1794, when Torre- del (Greco was destroyed a second time, the mass of,lava amounted to 45,000,000 cubic feet. In 1070, Etna poured forth a flood which covered "eigh ty-four square miles of surface, aud measured nearly 100,000,000 cubic feet. On this occa sion the sand and scorhe formed the Monte Rossi, near Wicolosi, a cone, two miles in oir | cumference, and 4,000 foot high. The stream thrown out by Etna in 1810 .was in motion, at the rate of a yard per day; for nine months af-. ter the eruption ; and it is on record that the lava of the same mountain, after a terrible eruption, was not thoroughly cooled arid con solidated ten years after the event. In the eruption of .Vesuvius, A. tt, 1770, the scoriae and ashes vomited forth far exceeded the en- tire bulk of the mountain; while,in 1CG0; Et na disgorged more than twenty times its own mass. "Vesuvius has thrown its ashes as far as Constantinople, Syria, and Egypt; it hurled stones eight pounds in weight to Pompeii, a distance of sis, miles, while similar masses were tossed up 2000 feet above its summit.— Cotopaxi has. projected a block of 100" cubic yards, in volume; a distance of nine miles, and Sumdawa, in 1815, during the most terrible" eruption on record, sent its ashes as far ns Java, a distance,.of 800 miles bf su-rface, and .out of a population of 12,000 souls, only 20 es caped.—Eecrcative Science. ’ A Virginian Beaten nr ms own Si.a ve.— The Petersburg Express of the 19th gives the following particulars of a', savage, assault mailo upon Mr; F. Mallory Sutherland, of Mulberry Inn, Dinwiddle county, Va., on Friday last, l>y one of his owii servants! “ Mr- Sutherland was out on his plantation superintending the clearing of patch of now ground, arid directed Ned, a robust fellow, to lift a legato a pileof burning brush. 'The ne gro'replied that he would not doit, which Mr. Sutherland interpreted to moan that the negro did not feel able to lift the log, and stooped to do so himself. While stooping,’ Nod seized a big stick, and striking his mai ler a powerful blow over the back, felled him to the earth. He then repeated his blows until the strik was broken in many pieces, and Mr. Sutherland lay apparently lifeless. Thinking he had accomplished his purpose, he started off, and had proceeded about fifty yards when he sawhismasterattomptto rise. Seizing another stick, he returned, and strik ing Mr. Sutherland another severe blow across the face mashed his nose flat to the face, and then,continued to beat him across the amis, breast and legs, until the flesh waspummoled to the consistency of jolly. Some small ne groes were present when the heating com menced, hut they were mere children, and dreaded the ferocity of Ned as though ho had been a tiger, and were therefore prevented from offering assistance. As soon as they couli get to the house, the intelligence was communicated to some of the neighbors, and all turned but en masse to hunt up the fiend, some throe or four going to the assistance Mr. Sutherland, and convoying him to his rosi donop._ Upon reaching the house, ho mani fested indications of returning consciousness, and at last accounts, Sunday, was alive, though in a very precarious condition. Tim search of the neighbors for Ned proved unavailing, hut the account of the outrage reached this city, and on Sunday night Mr. George Alsop, who know the scoundrel, suc ceeded in arresting him at the depot of the South-Side .Railroad in this city, and lodged hint in .tail. Ho will be transferred to the] county of Dinwiddle .for trial Patriotic Tears. —At Willard's, in Wash ington, the othor evening, a Indy was seated at the piano,'singing, Gon. Wool, wearing his button, asked her to sing tho Star Spangled Banner. She did it with admirable effect. The General stood beside her with tho tears running down his cheeks, and as he turned to dash them from eyes that never quailed be fore his country's foes on the field of battle, thp parlor'rang with, the applause the song and the scene so well merited.' Peter Cnrlffflgla. A remarkable character was Peter Cart wright. One day, bn .nt|proaahing a ferry across the river Illinois, he heard the ferry-’, nian swearing terribly.fttthe sermons of Peter Cartwright, and threatening that if over ho had to ferry the preaohor’ncross, and he knew him, he would drown him in the river. Petex-, unrecognized, said to the ferryman: “ Stranger, I want you’to put me across.” “ Wait till I am ready,” said the ferryman, and pursued his conversation, and strictures upon Peter Cartwright. Having finished, he tiii-ned to Peter and said: “ Now, I’ll put you across.” On reaching the midst of the stream, Peter threw his horse’s bridle over a stake in the’ boat, and told the ferryman to lot golxispolo. b What for ?” asked the ferryman., “ Well, you’ve just been using my name improper like ;'and said if ever I came this way you would-drown.' me. Now, you’ve got n chance.” > ■ “ Is your name Peter Cartwright?” asked' the ferryman. , V My miine is" Peter CaH'wright.” Instantly'the fei'ryman, seized the .preach-' er; hut he, did riot know Petex-|a strength; for Peter instantly seized, the ferryman, one hand on the nape of his. trowsors, and plung ed him into the water allying— “ I baptize-thee in the .name of the devil, whoso child thou art t” .. Then lifting him up. added ; “Did you ever pray?” ■ “No.” : “ Then it is time you did.” “ Nor never will,” answered the ferryman. Splash 1 splash I' and', the- ferryinan is in. ho depths again. ; “Will you pray now?’ r risked Petex-. The gasping victim shouted: “I will do anything you hid me.” “.Then follow mo:— 1 Oor Father whicli art forcicntiiiient of a Murdereh A man named M’Huglx was hariged a fexv days ago in Cincinnati, for the murder of bis wife, and the day before his execution lie, told Mr. Shockley, an officer of the prison, that ho had a presentiment of the murder and his own death on the gallows for thirty years. His remarkable hallucination is related as follows: One day ho was ascending a dark stairway to his room. Ho was sober and in.good hedltht Suddenly it seemed to him as if his right ami had been infused with Samsonian strength. Just then he reached the door, and he was tempted to test his newly acquired strength upon it. He gave whnt he supposed Was a slight tap, for lie scarcely felt the blow upon, the- knuckles. The door, however, quivered under its force, and parts of plastering on the wall-fell doxvn. He looked to his arm tp. see if it had been increased in size. Just then his head become transfixed; and he could move it neither one way nor the other. While he was in that position,, a strange voice spoke terrible words to him. When the voice diotl away his head became movea ble. He looked up and around, but no one was near. him. Again he glanced at his arm, again his head became transfixed, and again wore-the-terrible- words spoken: As soon as bp regained power to ’move,., be fled to bis room, and tried xxx vain to fox-get wlmt bad passed, but tlxp voice continued- to ririg ixi bis 'ears. Oftexx in after years, be beard it. .“■l’ll not tell, you-what the xvords were,”' said he to Sir. Shockley; “for they go with mo to nxy grave. You know what I have done, and what is iny fate. Put the two together, and you can- conjecture the- nature of the-words;.” . Such was the vision that haunted this un fortunate man, through his whole manhood. Ixnpressed with the idea that fate had decreed that he-must kill his wife, and die for. the crime,'he perpetrated the atrocioxxs deed, and willingly .surrendered himself to the- gal lows. - He should have been secured-carefully in an Insane Iletx-eat. ... ■ ; Our iltlncliinent lo Life, The young man, till thirty, never feels practically that he is mortal. • lie knows it, indeed, and, if-need were, ho could preach a homily on the fragility of life ; lint he brings it not home to himself any more than in a hot Juno we can appropriate to our imagination the freezing days of December, lint'now— shall I confess the truth ? I feel these audits but tod powerfully.. I begin to count the probabilities of my duration, and to grudge at the expenditures of moments and shortest ! periods,like-misers’ farthings. In proportion, as the years both lessen and shorten, I set more counts, upon their periods, and would fain lay my ineffectual finger upon, the-spoke of the great wheel. lam hot content to pass away like a weaver’s shuttle.” ’Those meta phors Solace me not, nor sweeten the unpal atable draught of mortality. I care- not to bo carried with the tide that ’smoothly hears hu man life to eternity, and reluct at the inevi table-coarse of destiny; I am in love with this green earth—the face of town and couii- iry—the unspeakable rural solitude—an I swoot security of streets. I would set up piv tabernacle hero. I apt content to stand still at the age at ■which I.ain arrived—to bo no . younger, ho richer, no, handsomer. Ido not want to_ be weaned by.age, or drop, like mel low fruit, as they say, into-the gravel; Any alteration on this earth of mine, in diet or lodging, puzzles and decomposes mo. My household gods plant a terribly fixed foot, and are not rooted up without blood. They dii not willingly seek Levinian shores. A new state of being staggers' me. Sun and sky, and breeze and .solitary walks, and summer holidays, and the greenness.of .fields, and the juices of meats and fishes, and society, and the cheerful glass, and candle-light and fire side-, conversations, and jests, and irony—do not these things go out with life? Can a ghost laugh, of shako his gaunt sides, when you are pleasant with him ?—Life and Jie mdins of Charles Lamh. Stranger Yog Kin Kum In.—A worthy friend from the farming districts, who occa sionally drops ,in upon us to got the latest nows,'narrates, the following; “A traveler passing through his neighborhood on horse- stopped at a modest cottage on the roadside, and asked for shelter, as it was quite dark and raining. The ’head of the fami ly I 'came to the door and accosted the traveler with— ‘What dojou want?’ 'I want to stay till night,’ was the reply. ‘AYhat are yer ?’. . . This interrogatory was not fully understood by the traveler, and ho asked ah explanation. T mean what’s yor politics ?. rejoined the former.. ‘Air yer fur this Union, or again This was a poser, ns the traveler was not' certain whether the man of the house was a Union man ora secessionist, and he was anx ious to put up for the night—so he made up his mind and said : ‘My friend, I am for the Union and Const! ’ ‘Stranger, y-e-o-u kin kum in !’ , It is needless to remark that the traveler dismounted, and both man and beast'were hospitably take care of for the night.—JVasJt villc Banner. First American Poetrv. —There arc few girls or boys in this country who have not heard the nu'seyy ryhme sung by their moth ers while rocking the'cradle: "Ijid-a by baby upon the tree top; IFhon the wind blows the cradlo will rook ; mien tho bou-li breaks the or,idle will full, And down will eomo cradle, baby and all." Blit how many of you know tho origin of the simple lines f Wo have the following ac count from the records of the Boston Histo rical Society: Shortly after our forefathers landed at Plymouth, Mass., h party were out in the , fields where the Indian women were picking strawberries. Several of those wo men, or squaws, as they are called, had pa pooses, tha; is babies, and having no cradle?, they had them tied up in Indian fashion, and hung from tho limbs of the surrounding trees. Sure enough, “ when tho wind blow, those cradles would rock.” A young mail of tho party observing this, pooled over a piece of bark, and wrote the above linos, whiciuworc, it is believed, the first poetry written in Amor-J ioa. —America Affi'iciiftiirisi, married woman disappeared from Kulburtvillo, Oneida count 3% K. Y.. almost n [year ago, and was supposed to have been inurdered, until a few days since, sho was I found iii a hut in a lonely wood, by some men who were hunting. She had lived a hermit, ' save when visited by a paramour, who has a wife livingin Romo; and sho is almost in sane from loneliness and melancholy. {£?■ In all matters of the first thoughts are the beat: in matters of prudence The Coolest Thing on Bccorii, As General Scott’s army was marching tri umphantly into the city of Mexico, a proces sion of monks emerged from the gate of ft con vent situated on the eminence at the right, and advanced with slow and measured tread until they mot the army at right angles;— The guide or_ lender of the proccssidn was a Venerable priest, whoso hair was -whitened with the frosts of many winters. He held in both hands a-contribution box, upon which there was n lighted candle, and when within I ft few feet df the army; the procession halted. As the army proceeded, many n true believer in St. Patrick dropped some small coin or oth er into the old priest’s box. And, when it was observed that a soldier wa? searching in his pockets for something to bestow,, the old priest would step forward iind hold his bos to receive the donation; Ultimately there came along a tall, guant, liriiber-sided, gander-look ing Yankee, who, on seeing the poof rSriestj thrust his hands into the very depth of Ilia breeches pockets, as if in search for a dime, or something of the kind- The priest, Obser ving this movement, advanced, as Usual; while Jonathan, holding firth a grcasy-looUing foil of paper, commenced very deliberately unfol ding it. The old priest anticipated a liberal donation, and put on an air of the most exqui- I'site.satisfaction. Jonathan continued to Un roll piece after piece of dirty pHp'er, until at length he found a piece of tri : twisted smoking tobacco. He next thrust his hands into an other pocket, and drew forth a clay pipe, which, with the utmost deliberation, he pro ceeded to till by pinching off small particles of the tobacco. When this wriSdorie, having re placed his tobacco in his breeches-pocket, ho stooped forward and lighted' his pipe by the I old priest's-candle* and.making an awkward inclination of the head, (intended, perhaps; for a how,) he said, “Much obleeged to ye, ’Squire,” and proceeded on Indignation. in Kansas. .An indignant protest against the outragebns misrepresentations of Army, and Bunffiroy is swelling in loud and fierce murmurs from every quarter of Kansas. The people are just beginning to discover the extent to which their condition has been belied, niid to realize' the injury which the infamous. proceedings will certainly bring About. The effect (if the late sensation despatches has been to create' the general impression in the East, that, not only are,a majority qf our inhabitants on the verge of starvation,, but also that Kitnsas is a desert of perpetual drouth, and subject to're peated famines similar to that.of lust season. Several leading journals have advanced this idea, and it is feared the effect will be far more disastrous than-the drouth itself. In telligent persons from the East say that Kan sas will.be retarded, at least five years by the false,reports which have been spread ovefthe ’country concerning her distressed condition and indifferent resources. Her people have now discovered the cheat practised in their name, and , hold Pomeroy and Army respon sible: i S;> general has become the imp'rodaion that ■ this “ relief' business is a gigantic .scheme to : feather the nests of those engaged in it, that popular sentiment will drive the coining State Legislature to appoint a .Committee to investigate, the'-whole subject. The thino will certainly be. done, nod the Committee will not only have power to send for persons J and papers, but also the time to make a oom- I pjoto ventilation. They can hardly report during this session, and may possibly bo em powered to hold over until the next, or to make their report to the Governor, . _ Pomeroy still refuses to give any exhibit of f his financial operations, though pressed on all sides by friends and foes —Kansas paper. 1 “God Save the Ki.vo."— The following ex tract is from a work by Charles Heade, enti tled “The Eighth Commandment:” Henry Oharoy was a man of gonious. He wrote for the theatre with immediate and las ting success. Next he handled satire;,and Pope took his verses for Swift's, and Swift for Pope’s. Lastly; he-settled down to lyrical art; with rare combination of two rare talents he Invented immortal melodies,'and the im mortal words to them., lie wrote the words and melody of the National Anthem ; for this last he deserved a pension and a niche in ■Westminster Abbey. . In a loose age, he wrote chastely. lie nev er failed tohittho public. He was of his ago, yet immortal. But there was no, copy-ri°dit in songs. , ° Mark the consequences of that gap in the law. While the theatre arid the streets rung with his lines and his tunes, while fiddlers fiddled'him and were paid, nnd the songsters sang him and were richly paid, the gonious that set all those, empty music pipes a flow ing, and a million.ears listened with rapture, was fleeced to the bone. All reaped the corn except the sower. For why? The sower was an author, an inventor! And so in the moist of success that enriched others aml.left him bare, in tlie midst of the poor, unselfish soul’s attempt to found a charity for distress ed performers, nature suddenly broke down under the double agony of a" heart'full of wrongs and an empty‘belly, and the man hanged himself. They found him cold, with skin on his bones, and a half-penny in his pocket! Think of this, when you next hoar “ God save tbp Queen.” Egg Omlet.— Frisk until light, the whites and yolks of twelve eggs, separately, stir wo 1 together with a tablespoonful of cold water, season with pepper and salt. Have ! about an .ounce of butter boiling hot in a fry ing pan, pour in the mixture, shaking the pan as it browns, to prevent it sticking; and I turn up the edges all round with a broad-1 bladod knife, and continue to mil over until I the whole Is brown. Lift on to a meat (fish with an eggslice, without breaking, and serve j, hot for breakfast. 1 Anotuei'. —To thoabovo quantity of eggs, add ft handful of fine curl oil parsely, aiid twelve fresh nasturtium flowers, chopped flop. Another.—Frisk the. whites anil yolks of six eggs together until quite light, ami add a tonpiq) full of crushed cracker or. lined bread crumbs; season with popper, salt and nut m og. Opening of the Canals.— The navigation is now open on the Western division of the main line of the Pennsylvania Canal. The water is now being let in on the eastern di vision, and ■ the canal will bo in operation at once, when the whole line of canals alon" the Susquehanna, from Havre do Grace, Md. to' Wilkesbjvrro, Pa., will be open. The repairs on the Juniata canals will pVevelrt their open ing until early in April. , 0“ A Western paper, announcing the death of a gentleman in lowa, says; —“He was a great admirer of Horace GVeoly/ but otherwise a-respectable man.' dbbfis i\\\h (iiik K7* The small pox is raging at West Troy. K7* No less than $1,260,000 are invested in bee culture in Ohio. , (CT" The Louisiana sugar crop for 1860 is valued at about $26,000,000; [E7* The volunteer rifle ootps of England now numbers 140,000 nien; Prentice, defines what nian wants —all he can got. What woman wants—all she can’t get. O' Mrs. Lincoln retains the White House domestics of the late incllmbont for the pres ent.’ , 1 IE? - Hon; Henry Elliot, of Mississippi,Post master General of the Confederate States, is a native of Salem, N. J. l£7*opv. ,Magoffin, of Kentucky,' last week had his arrh broken tit the socket by the up setting of a Stage coach. C 7” A Anri in St. Louis has commenced the manufacture of•• Billiard first over made in the West. JCT'The total expenses of the New York Fire Department foj the past yeiir foot up the handsome slim of $2ol!;d(j0; . 027" Mr. Seward has written i letter to the Southern Commissioners, in which ho propo- , sos a national Convention to. settle oUr diffi culties. ■ O’’ A Genmin chemist asserts thtft helms found out how to manufacture pure silver by ■ artificial means, at a cost of seventy-five cents an ounce. . HIT’ The Government lias received infor mation of a pilot to .revolutionize California and Oregon. Gen. Johnson and other officers are implicated. C 7” We seldom /egret having been too mild, too cautious,’or too humble; but we often repent hiving been tod violent, too pre cipitate, or tod proud.' O'* Mr. Beecher says,“no man- is a per fect man, in Christ Jesus who does not know, under appropriate circumstances, how.to wSrd off and how to give a blow.” Ov The Cleveland I’laindealer thinks I ,it possible that a Whistle may be iriide put of a pig’s tail, but that of-a, debatable question, whether or not a great min cin be made out of Colonel EllswOrthi A Bliss Roblnsip; of Franklin, Wis cousin, whelms been sick for a year, recently threw up five ugly reptiles," looking like huge, overgrown'leeches. She is rapidly recover ing her health. O’. In the town of Concord, Mass.’; .there are annually manufactured Ml, ooo pails, arid 75,000 tubs, worth §94,000; 2;00,0 gross of pencils, worth §4,000; 2,000 packs of go® leaf, worth §14,000 O’ It is reported that in Liverpool, Eng land, a wealthy yoapg lord has been smitten with tho charms of Airiy,'the soprano of Fath er Kemp’s “ Old Folks” troupe, and proposes to-marry her. C 7” A barge is now. loading at the Arsen al dock, West Troy, with ammunition and gun carriages for .Fort Pickens; : Aborittvtd hundred 1 toris of implements will go' down upon her, . d?" There is a strong party in South Caro lina who will oppose the ratification of the Montgomery Constitution; It is more than doubtful whether that instrument will be rio-' eepted by fire seceding Stales; Robertson, Esq., of Kentth* ky, has presented'to Yancey, the terriblefiro eater of the South, a splendid span, of horses. The. team is said to be as handsome a turnout as ever caused to glisten 1 the eyes of a con noisseur.’ ' A gontlcmoiri was cbriggatrilatinjf thd President the other day upon the cheering fact that sp many office-seekers ,woro leaving, “ Oh,' no,” says Mr. Lincoln, “ don’t you know that when the flics commence leaving in the fall the few. remaining ones begin' ttf bite all the worse ?”. A greenhorn standing* by a sewing machine at which a young lady was at work; looking alternately at the machine and its fair operator,' at length gave vent to his ad miration with: .... “By golly, it's purty, especially the part covered with culiker.” dT’ At Ketchen, Saxony, recently, a gen tleman,- engaged in play at (if filro table, died in his sent. His death was not discovered until his money, by being left on the table all the while, had won a heavy suni,' A law, suit-resulted between the bankor and the dead player’s heirs, width was decided in favor of the latter; , d?” A Parliamentary return just issued give,s the number of vessels afloat iu th’q’ British Navy. Of steamships, there are 300 screw and 113 paddle—a total of 505 ; then 57 more are, building or! converting, nnd of effective sailing ships 15G are now making the eriormtms number of,oBff fighting ships alone. mr* A telegraphic dispatch from Newark/, in the New York papers, gives on account of the killing of. a man who stepped in front of an engine upon the’ railroad track. The dis patch winds .hp hy saying of tho deceased that “ ho' had no friends.” What else could a man do but commit suicide who found himself in New Jersey witli no friends? UT7* Minnie was one day talking to her lit tle class in Sunday School, about God’s great love for man. Wishing to impress it oh their minds and to know whether they understood her, she asked :■ “ Now, children, who loves all men?” The question was hardly asked, before a little girl not four, years old, answered quick ly, “ all women I 1 ’ JET”- It is pretty certain that the President will call an extra session of Congress. If bo docs, tho States ot Kentucky, Tennessee, Maryland and North Carolina, will have to call extra sessions .of their Legislatures, in order to have their States reptesohted in the Congress. The Legislatures will chatigA tile terra' of choosing their members from August to May. 0” Susan Donin, the notorious actress, has pot herself into trouble at Detroit. Tho crit ic of oiie of the newspapers did not have at very high appreciation of her capabilities, and wrote as ranch in a notice of her porfor-’. miihces, whereupon the supposed husband'of of tho lady waited upon the critic and pound ed his head with a tumbler, while Susan stood by anxious to lend her aid. Tho lovely pair made tracks for Canada as soon as they had’ thus vindicated their honor. ' NO. 44.