6 ) tit &o h gAni. PEri.SyLVANTI 2cIIBPE:iIIENT JOURNAL. COLUMBIA. P.:"..„ SATURDAY. JANUARY 16, ISSS. sa.-64er ,P Ilobbips will preach iu the Presbyterian Church to-morrow (Sabbath) laoraiug. Servii,• - :. to cotr.LIICUL.2 at ,10/. 4. , ,I ~.1 NEW A L, - Litr:-Elics:rs.-11enry IVisler, ..lWk; Smith c BruLer, Diw,/u;i:xtof i'art- WWI or llocr..—On Monday nett the trains or the Penn'a Itailroad will run by a new schedule. The may change affecting the passenger traius at this paint is in the rime of starting the Altoona Way Train, • Nvldc.h now :eaves at 2.45 P. M.; it will, on Clunk:es MAmiztsr..—Graham for Feb- LA after that date, lease at 12.33 iraary is received; a capital number. Gra ham grows in grace, and let us hope in Cit.- ruy TICIiET., Olt PAY Er.TRA FARE circulation, for the magazine improves with IN rut CAR,..--Jlleh is die warning punted each issue. It is a favorite with the public, upmr the ticket office of the yenu'a Railroad and Mr. Leland, the editor, by his pleasant Company, and we V 700,1 ca i attention to gosip gains for it 1;0.,ts of friends. to the regulation, us it may save) trouble, and ten centz, to s,-.nia of our readere. 1 5 01.1 M III: w".--CUI1:11“11.1t WaS made be.: been received from the publisher, T. S. .Ar- i Pure Justice Welsh, on Saturday last, hs thur, Philadelphia. It ii a monthly that is 1 NV illi a m Hunter, e:slore.l, Tow Hill, clam ging ! calmdated to win favor in the home circle, Ili:, step ~ ,,ns, Charley V illimns and Joeand to be welcomed on its periodical visits. l F , , ilds, with N lu'ent assault and btittery, i , The present number is fined withthe usual C per ,,,,. at List variety, the patterns of ladies work being a I: ::amitted on the :derma 11 0 r. e:Lr 1.:4 3 C ,r:e; of. Elbow Lane and a Imotnineut feature. tc,els-h sticet. A , aarrai.t r, the arre:d. GODFX volt I'Enex.strr.-41Jdev, the ladies ... , e the ;,n,-,:tai Al youths %las placed in the favoeite, has reached us, with its "sweet" Lands ..1 C.,ust.C.le . 11,11.has.v...rth, and on patterns, "heavenly" fashions, "loses of ..sf,mlaly ilicy were i y hlin ca• ture? and Lonna-," and thousand and one entrancing ..r.we.ht into the 3lagisterialpresence, ae- um oilies, c: akulated to make wives wishful .•, mpan',l hy a cloud .-f finilald WitneS,C , . and husband, shake in their shoes. The l'ia, esi hia , , , w.ts \N.:lA.2ring an 1 compli- HU tither is an attractive one, and will be ' '''' I" twat "f the e/m P lainunt being parties sought after from its many beauties. 1.11,,ir1y onscure, he lab wins at the time under outra ? ,o I stop Imre:I:al feelings and Et.tcrioN ur Orricr.ns.--The first annual 4.lmcc coot whisky. ki the crowd, however, meeting of the "Agricultural, Historical linKitaus and valuable testMs any on almost and Mechanics' Institute" was held on the any subject of general interest was to be 4th inst., at Sprecher's Hotel, East King had for the swearing. Front the mass of- j street. There was a large attendance from fered, the Justice, by careful sifting, sue- the city and county, and all present mani zeoded in extracting the small portion that felted a deep interest iu the objects of the bore directly on the case before him, and meeting. ,illl.l wont to prove Williams a boarder at On motion of Edw. C. Darlington, Esq., the Tow ,Hill establishment, instead of hus- John Wise, Esq. was elected temporary band and father, as he claimed to be; that , Chairman. he staid out "late o' night," coming home i The charter was read and accepted, and towards morning uproarious, to the great the meeting proceeded under the same to scandal of ths moral and decorous neighbor- the election of permanent officers fur the en hood. With a di.crimination (generally i cuingyear, which resulted as follows: palled for in Tow Hill mt-es) that de-m.l.es , Peevident—llan. Thaddeus Stevens. 11 praise, the Justice discharged the de- 1 Nee Presidents—llon. Ferree Brillion, A. fen/ants and seat the plaintiff down fur L. Henderson, Esq., John Landis, Esq., lion. thirty days at hard labor. We regret the The. 11. Burrowes. fate of the defendants. i Corre,:pondiny Secretary—E. C. Darling- On Monday last, a young. woman residing ton , nn Chestnut Hill, near the borough, was ar- Recordiv Secretary—B. F. Baer. rested by deputy Patton, and brought before Librarian—Gcurge Brenemau. Esquire Welsh, on a charge of obtaining h oar d (/' iflumgcrs—John W. Jackson, goods under false pretenses. It was alleged City; 11. m. John Strohm, Providence; Hon. that she bad defrauded the proprietor of a A. E. Roberts, City; Cul. Samuel Shoch, Co shoe store, in Front street, of three pairs of lumbia; Maris Hoopes, Conestoga; Simon small shoes, by representing herself as in Stevens, Cit.); Christian B. Herr, Manor; the ,employ of one of our citizens, by whom, Peter MeCunomy, City; 11. B. Swags, City; as the stated, she had been sent for the John B Warfel, Paradise; Chas. M. Howell, shoes fur the purpose of trying them on a City; John N. ;Russell, Drumore; J. 11. Her child, dht pairs not fitting to be returned. shcy, West Hemptield; Jonathan Dorwart, 'fiat sloes no: acing forthcoming •within City; Emanuel F. Gast, City; Dr. Henry E. reasonable time le,l to in q uiry wLieh re- Muhlenberg, City; Jacob Bailsman, East vealed the imposition. Suspi c ion attached Ilempfield;James Black, City; Henry Carter, to the prisoner, and she 11a, arrested, but Fulton; Jacob Grid], City; E. C. Darlington, not being positively identified by the City; Dr. S. lieneagy, Strasburg; Dr. P. S. tih', was discharged. fact of the defend- Klinger, Conestoga.--Lancaster Express. hat•in; a tick child at hum• wat. a btrong 1 , 1.4.1 with tho ter,d , 2l. 1,...1rtel 'Squire, and wo imagine that lie W.l'4 nut rurry to tern er Wise, of Virginia, has sent a jite.tiee with merry, in Ct long letter to a Democratic meeting in New The fJur Gerurau•o, mentioned last week York, in which lie opposes the Lecdmpl OD ai hat im 4 `,een arrested and bound ()ter fur eoustitution, thinks it ought to have been further hearing ;al a •Large ‘.f frightening submitted in full to a popular vote in Kau thy ehildrm of Mr. Breneman. appeared on sa , , but rather falurs a policy like that of Saturday la •q. before Jm4tiee Welsh, and Mr. Pugh's bill. were Irmurably di-charged, no facts of et it A long series of resolutions has been in intentions hating been established. troduced into the Kentu:ky Legislature, of -.au assault and battery, occurring cm the which the following is one: Ott; clr., c-ncaped our notice at the time, Resolved further, That it it the opinion of but as the ease will come up before the Jan. this General Assembly that no eonstitution s nary term of C.‘ert, are give the particulars. ' a'lilted fl 7 convention in Kan as to The cmnplainants, George Schneider and t i n , a k c e ,u i n t :`rate u t n h t e i r l e ; :; t d g i h n t e t o v e b e sanctioned te mrad Shroyer, charged that Jelin Lear, in stidauitt m ed to . the decisim; of the r.Y m p a3o r rity n e uf ' the erepl , y of Ju+epli Mack, ut his Brewery, the qualified voters of the territory. irner of and Union streets, had as- The Louisville Democrat, the leading ad-1 eoulted him with clubs, fists, 4.e. (.t exam ministration organ in Kentucky, having, ination of n itness it appeared that Schneider from the first, opposed the Lecompton usur and Shreyer, \sill some friends, had in-' pat i ne , saes: ;liege,: in lager at Mack's, which developed "We hale reason to know, from evidence itself music4.lly. Mr. Mack, with an eye to quite satisfactory to us, that the mass efj party in this Stare are with us, and orThr in his esta'olshment has probib- the that the rest will he, we have not the slight ;zed singing, and it was pnditely intimated t doubt," the vocalists that they Joust either "dry ; e 1.," o r le e ve. N o t g i eez b re d to soft per-Letters received at St. Louis from Fort • .asi.oi, Lear was invoked, aad " mode Kearney, says that Col. Cook and his corn 'nand were all safe, but the grass had been sz•iie to time rescue," hustling the sweet burnt by the Mormons, and the animals ringers into the street avith little ceremony. were dying at the rate of a 100 a day.— I.leerning then-ascii cs hardly treated, they The Mormons were fortifying all the pusses. the law of him.,' before Justice Welsh, file reported massacre is untrue. f.-etn the evidence, judged that urine- ; eess.ary violence had been ueed in serving j Governor 11alker, the filibuster chief, t he ejeu:nent, and held the defendant to publishes a letter addressed to President iktlii•XPr the charge of assault and battery, at , Buchanan. It is elaborate complaint against Commodore Paulding, and an assertion of the rightfulness of his own cause. In one sa,nrwei Ethiopic, oper- passage he says:— r tie, semi-barbaric, banjoic , Mr. President, in the name of the offi immense favorite canto upon its 011 Thurs- vial oath which you Intro taken in the pros day eveniug. and brought down the town. mice Almighty God, I call upon you to runish the eiTer ice it not t ride i r end right the wrom,•.— Friduy ev.cnirg he "sbowed" again—on • both occasions to goad bonzes. llisindivid- i ° , u ` t . s u Li .e e c : t3. ` butcourse it shall in wisdom tl iTf perfermance would grilvitudse the mutains, the men whose rights your officers have in n( the Pilgrim fathers, if in "the presence," fringed, and whose honor has been most send iis.company is fill Ch a one as he always ' harshly and hecdlecsly trampled in the dust, travels with; lay has the "Lig pig," the "lit ' cr i i , llijur iv tl%ejuetice it is your high prerogative Tie pig," and counts himself the "whole hog to 'We have further intelligence of the dee m. none." To-night liehis last perform- lion K,ansas under the Levompton Con s' en„ "With P -7C vegrannue." - - - -- stitution for State officers. The notorious A Tra.nD.,exr. (70:T.- -W e were !down en l Oxford precinct, Johnson county, where the 'Thursday, at the shop efCeehran & Worrell, great fraud was perpetrated last October, 1J? January tern] al coat manufactured by them, which deserves I has repented it in a subdued form, giving notice. It being a g.irment intended fur a 1 ,7:1s ru-slavery maj , .rity, while Shawnee etareutan, and one which any gentleman precinct gives 82.1. Very little voting took da mighi appear in, its me,rits of course lie in place at Lawrence or Topt t. Fort Scott the neatness of workmanship. not in the gave 300 pro•slavery majority. plowing-as of cut or material. The stitching By the arrival nt NeW` Orleans of the ~r tiro lining in mechanically perfect, and Steamship Empire City, we have later news slim workman, Mr. T. Worrell, may safely from Nicaragua and California. Colonel .ohisllenge any cog:petition. The coat is' Frank Andereon, with his command of the iwurthy a careful examination.. j remnant of the fillibusters, some fifty men, TUE CoNTESTCD DO:Z=o:s7 CASE.—The con tested election case, between Messrs. Carpen. ter and Martin, was decided on Tuesday last, by the Court, in „favor of Mr. Carpenter, he being elected by a majority of 13 votes. The length of the decision prevents our giving it in full, which we regret, ns it bears evidence of being the resti•lt of a patient and impartial esamination of the testimony, and must con vince even The political opponents of the succrssful party of the justice of the award. MEDWO-CtiIItURGICAL REVIEW.—We hays received from J. B. Lippincott & Co., Phil adelphia, the January number of their Ikfed ical Quarterly, the North American Medico- Chirurgical Review. This number com mences a second volume. and - its contents are able and valuable papers from eminent medical writers and practitioners. The subscription price is five dollars per annum. Anruer:s MAGAnNE.--The Febru- ary number of this pleasant magazine has Items of News who had been left in possession of Fort Cas tillo, bed surrendered to the officers of the U. S. steam frigate Sutiquebauna, ar,,d the river steamers taken by him frog the Costa Ricans, were also captured by the Susquehanna. Anderson and his men will be brought borne. TROII lIARTLISIWRO. Tr' casn_tv, JAN. 7th.—The Senate re ceived a message from the Governor, an nouncing his signature of the following hills since the adjournment of the last legislature: Supplement to the charter of the Delaware River Railroad Company; Supplement to the acts consolidating the wards of Pittsburg for educational purposes; to change the name of the Bank of New Castle, and to incorporate the - Bank of Fayette County.— Also, that the following bills had become laws without his signature: To charter the Monongahela and 3lcKean County Banks, the Bank of Plicenixville and Milton Savings Bank, and a supplement to the charter of the Easton Bank. In the House, Mr. Dohnert offered a reso lution calling upon the State Treasurer to report where the money of the Com monwealth is deposited, which was debated: the House refusing to suspend the rules for its adoption. The death of J. B. Backhouse, member of the House from Allegheny county, was announced in bath houses. Both branches adjourned to Monday. Mosotr,..l.ts;. I Wt.—The Speaker of the Senate announced the appointment of Stand ing Comniittces. A settlement of the ac counts of the Girard Trust was presented. Also, the returns of the last State election for Governor, and on the amendment to the constitution. Bills were read to repeal the I supplement to the act relative to the estab tabhshment of two district attorneys in Philadelphia; to establish a general bank ing law; to confirm the charter of the Me tropolitan Saving Fund and Loan Associa tion; to remove the disabilities of witnesses, on account of religious belief. The bill to extend the operation of the stay law wa4 I taken up, debated, and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. Itesolutions were adopted to meet in the Hall of Repro sentative on Tuesday, to hear read the re ' turns of the State election. The following arc the Standing Commit tee , : announced bs the Speaker of the Senate: Committee on Finance--Messrs. Buckm low, Coffee, Wright, Souther and Fetter. Committee on the Judiciary.--Messrs. Wilkins, Finney, Bell, Cresswell, Schofield. Commitee on Banks—Messrs. Cresswcll, Finney, Bell, Coffey, Marselis. Committee on Corporations—Messrs. Wright, Souther, Steel, Schell, Shaeffer. Committee on Railroads—Messm Ingrain, Gazzatn, Cresswell, Turner, Ruliterford. Committee on Eduratinn—Meq.n. Brew er, Harris, Wilkins; Gregg and Miller. Chairman on Committee on Accounts—Mr. Evans, . " On E-tates and Escheats—Mr. Bell. " On Pensions—Mr. Gregg. " On Library—Mr. Randall. On Canals, &c.—Mr. " On Election Districts—Mr. Scho field. " On Retrenchment and Reform— Mr. Steele. " On Agriculture, &c.—Mr. Knox. " On Roads, ,f:c.—Mr. Laubach " On Vice and Immorality--Mr. Miller. " On Claims, &e.—Mr. Schell. " On Printing—Mr. Gazzamn, " On Buildings—Mr. Mareelis. On New Cuunties—Mr. Craig In the house a committee of thirteen was ordered to be appointed to divide the city of Philadelphia into election districts. Tes:sn.tr, JAN. 1.2.—A contract with J. llaldeman, fur the publication of the Daily Legislative Record, was reported and adopt ed. A report was made adverse to the Gov ernor's recommendation of the erection of an Exe,!utire Mansion, accompanied with a bill appropriating l 1,010 for the purchase of a house and lot on Front street, Gtr the iovernor's residence. m hick was passed without opposition. A bill was road ena bling the Bank of Pennsylvania to make an assignment, and transfer its charter to new parties. A special committee of tin ce: con sisting of Messrs. Brewer, Gregg and Craig, was appointed to escort the Got cram- elect to the capitol, on Tuesday nett. In the House the Speaker announced the following Standing Committees. Ways and Means—Messrs. Calhoun, -Jackman, Struthers, Smith, of Cambria: Crawford, Turner, Rhodes and Imbrie. Judiciary—Messrs. Ouepp, Sill, Chase, Jenkins, Smith, of 13erk , : Lovrence, Owen, Calhoun and McClure. Corporations—Messrs. Yearsley, Hamil, Ent and McDonald. Railroads—MeAsrs. Westbrook, Jackman, Lawrence, Lauman, Wilcox, Williams, Shaw, Mellor, Smith, of Wyoming; Donno ran, l'ownall, Askins and Benson. A bill was read to repeal the act consoli dating the Lebanon Valley and Reading Railroad Companies. A number of other bills of no general interest wore read. A joint convention of the two Houses met to count the votes cast on the proposed amend ments to the Constitution. WEDNESDAY JAN. 13th.—In the Senate, the Speaker presented the annual reports of the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund and Auditor General. In the House the report of the State Treasurer, showing where the money of the Commonwealth is deposited, was presented and read. It shows that of the balance in hand, $709,141, the amount of $487,093, is deposited in banks, and 8165,031 is cash in the trea9urc. Fao3l iresaus:cro); MONDAY', 11th.—In the Senate a re port was received from the War Department, of the surveys of the rivers and harbors on the lakes in the State of New York. Mr. Brown, of Mississippi, who was entitled to the floor on the Kansas question, declined speaking at present, on account of the un settled position of affairs. Mr. Hale, of New Hampshire obtained the floor, and will speak on Moaday next. A joint resolution was passed giving the President power to nominate for restoration to their former po sitions on the navy list any of the dropped, retired, or furloughed officers. The Presi dent's special niessag2 on the capture of Walker, was referred to tlAe. Committee on Foreign Relations. - In the House, a resolution to print 5000 extra copies of the Coast Survey Report was rejected. Leave was refused for the intro duction of, a bill providing for the increase of the army by establishing four additional regiments. The House went into Commit tee on the President's message, and Mr. G rosbeck, of Ohio, defended the views of the President relative to Walker and Nicaragua. Tresrp.tr, JAN. 12th.—In the Senate, Mr. Douglass, of Illinois, presented a petition from Henry O'Reilly, in favor of establish ing a line of telegraph front the eastern borders of Missouri to Fort Laramie and the South Pass of the Rocky Mountains. Re ferred to the Military Committee. Mr. Wilson, of Massachusetts, introduced a explanatory of the act granting bounty lands to officers and soldiers, passed March, 1855. In the house, the President's special mes sage on the arrest of Walker, was received, and the portion referrin,•, to Commodore Paulding, was referred to the Committee on Naval affairs. The remainder of the mes sage was referred to the Committee on For eign Affairs. A message was received from the President stating the reception of a copy of the Constitution of Minnesota, with ab stract of the vote. Also, a message in reply to a a resolution of inquiry, stating that no complaint had been made by the Govern ment of Nicaragua, on account of the arrest of Walker by Cum. Paulding. The House then went into committee on the President's Annual Message. WEDNI,SDAY JAN. 13t13.—The Senate pas sed a joint resolution to extend the time for the restoration of naval officers, dropped, retired etc., by the Naval Reform Board.— A bill was passed to repeal the act of March, 1816, authorising, the Secretary of the Tteasury to change the names of vessels in certain eases. The House went into Committee of the whole, and the President's Annual Message was discussed. IZZENIZI By the arrival at New York, yesterday, of ateamship Africa from Liverpool, we have advices to the 26th, three days later. The Bank of England had reduced its rate of di , count from 10 to S per cent. The Bank of Berlin had also reduced its rate to The Indian mail, with dates from Bom bay to the 9th of December, had arrived at Suez, and would be due in London about the :29th of December. Lucknow had been relieved. Sir Colin Campbell joined the force in Ilumbagh, on the 11th of Novem ber, and on the 19th, after a series of severe struzgles with the enemy, the garrison of Lucknow was relieved. On the following day the sick and wounded, and the women and children were sent under escort to Cawnpore. One authority says that the re lief of Lucknow was achieved with only a loss of four officers killed and forty wounded. The government despatch says that the army under the commander-in•chiefamount ed to about 22,000 men, "amply sufficient to reduce Oude to entire subjection, a task which will occupy them for some months to come." Another despatch places Sir Culin Campbell's force at 12,000 men. The Malwa field force, under Brigadier Stuart, had relieved Musserabad, dispersed the 7Mehadpore rebels, and was clearing Malwa of insurgents. The flying columns, under Brigadier Showers and Colonels Cot ton and Tidderal, were scouring Rohilcund —complete success attending their opera tions everywhere. Reinforcements were pouring into India, and all alarm for the garrh,ons and outposts had ceased. The East India Company's dispatch states that Sir Colin Campbell was slightly wounded, but nut sufficiently so to interfere with the performance of his duty. The Gwalior rebels had advanced to with in fifteen miles of Cawnpore, but had again retired to Calpee. (;cn. Windham is stated to have marched to attack them. Twenty four inferior members of the royal family, and an influential rebel chief, had been exe cuted at Delhi. The Johdpore legion had been defeated with great slaughter, and the los, of all their guns, by Col. Gerard's force. Cl.o G. wad, however, killed. All was quiet in the Panjaub. The fort and town of Sangor remained untouched, bu: large parties of rebels were in the sur roundin4 district. The Bheel disturbances in Kanderisch continued, and a rising of same Beruds, near Moodhole, is reported. Exchange at Bombay was 2s. f2id. for credits. Freights had declined. Business was quiet, and money extremely high. Tars or Tilt PASSIONS. (By our Mute Misvynist.)--To find out whom a child lo‘ es, make it a present, and notice to whom it is most eager to show that present, exult ingly. To find out whom a woman hates-- do exactly the same things. R.svnov REFLECTIONS.—Your cabman is the must aspiring of mortals. Whatever rank he may he on, he is always looking for a hire. Hope cannot satisfy, it merely appetises. The man who "lives in hope," is generally hungry. Happy the man who can meet his tailor wihout flinching, and can even be "at home" when the tax-collector visits him. Bashfulness is merely a matter of position. Ladies who object to be kissed under the mistletoe show no such reluctanceto be kissed under the rose. TUE SWEET USES OF PROSPERITY.—Man when prosperous, is kept regularly acquaint ed with all the pressing wants of his friends. He is reminded or every little favor and obligation that has ever been conferred upon him during his life-time, even including his school-days. lie is beset by mothers with marriageable daughters. Ile becomes the target of all begging let- ter writers He is expected, every now and then, to take a chair at a public dinner. He yokes himself to a magnificent car riage with the most beautiful horses, and becomes terribly alarmed at the smallest ac cident occurring to them. Ile is doomed to hear nothing but flattery, and should the truth by any accident be told him, it sounds so harshly in his ears that he is almost inclined to resent it as an insult He has fulsome dedications, and is obliged to buy innumerable copies of stupid books, as he knows well enough that the dedication is written for no other object. He has his town house and his country house, his carriage horses and his riding horses, besides hunting horses for his friends and his grooms, and favorite dogs, every one of which is a source of endless anxiety to him. With his possessions increase his ME2 He has relations without end constantly springing up, and they clamor at his gates, and demand relief as boldly as paupers knocking at an union work house. He must not question a tradesman's ac count, but submit gracefully to every im position, inasmuch ns he has plenty of money, and can well afford to pay fur it. He is expected, from his exalted position, to set an example to others; so woe to him if he is not regular in his attendance at church, and still greater woe to him if he should happen during au asphyxiating ser mon, to fall asleep; woe to him if be at tempts to sneak off a jury, or tries to get himself excused from attending at an in quest; woe to bins if he refuses to serve - as church warden; woe to him if he is diffident about examining charity children, or deli cate about the distribution of tracts or soup tickets; and everlasting woe to him, if he fail in running about with all the benevolent old women of the neighborbut,..l in catechis ing, relieving, and visiting thc, queerest people in the queerest places. --Believe sue, that of all the sweet uses of prosperity, the sweetest is in knowing how to use it!—The Hermit of the Hoy market. LEAVES FROM A CHRISTMAS TREE, OR THOVIHITS TIIAT HANG oN PLAYTHINGS.— Pleasure is but a ball that a child runs after so long as it keeps rolling, but which he kicks away from him the moment it stops. The character that has holes pierced in it isn't worth a pin, and you can say the same of a child's drum. The child takes pleasure in blowing its trumpet. What is music to itself is discord to others; and yet it will persevere for hours. The man becomes often as great a nuisrncc when he allows his vanity to be incessantly pushing blue before others to blow his own trumpet. We generally make the most of any little danger. We shrink one moment and laugh at our fears the neat, like young ladies pull ing bonbon crackers. Most apprehensions have a ridiculous or a pleusantiermination. The end is generally a motto or a sweetmeat. A good hook is like traveling. The mem ory Is sure to make some agreeable passage. The doll that speaks frequently ends badly. The possesion of its gift is the cause of its destruction. To find out the secret of its inspiration it is picked to pieces. It is the fate of genius all over. Scandal flies much like a kite, according the length of the tale it has to carry. The full mind, like a money bag that is full, makes no noise; but the empty mind, like a money bag with only two or three coins in it, keeps up such an incessant rat tle that its emptiness soon betrays itself to all. A wooden sword has this advantage—that it doesn't wear out the scabbard. The same can be said of a body with a wooden soul in It is pleasant to see a green old age, like a christmas tree, comfortably boxed in at home. It is pleasant to see its trunk, bent beneath the weight of riches, surrounded by a host of happy children. It is pleasant to see it stretching out its hospitable arms to all, as though it were anxious to embrace the entire party. It is pleasant to see it blossoming with generous things, and shed ding It cheerful light on the gay circle it delights in drawing around it. And it is pleasant to see it distributing with a lavish hand the treasures it has accumulated on all branches, and to notice its head rising higher every time it parts with a fresh gift: THE Suers or SHANGII.II.—Some of the best shops of Shanghai city open upon the tea-gardens; some resound with the buzz of of imprisiened insects and the song of caged birds, there are "curio" shofs, where are to be seen antiquities of dynasties long ante rior to the Christian era, carefully wrought by living hands; there are caricatures of the English barbarians, one of which I cannot refrain from buying; there are carvings in bamboo, very inferior to Canton; there are shops for fans, and embroideries and silks, decidedly inferior to Ningpo. There is also the studio of a portrait painter, not probably a dangerous rival of Lamqua, of Macao. ' There is loud talking in that studio. A Yankee Captain is inspecting a portrait of himself, which has been painted at a con tract price of some $2O. The Yankee is a man about forty, with streaks of gray in his bushy hair and beard, with a -light defect in one eye, a large nose, and a pock marked face. Yet, withal, thanks to his affluence of hair and an expression of jaunty determin ation and devil-may-care go-aheadness, he is a manly looking fellow. He is looking ruefully, however, at this counterfeit pre sentment of himself which is to go on to the girl of his heart at New York. It is a most laugter moving caricature of all the salient points of his physiognomy. The Yankee swears that it is no more like him than ' hickory nuts are like thunder. The artist has produced a small looking glass, which he places beside the portrait, and pointing to the gray hair and squinting eye and the pockmark of the portrait, and then to the pre-ent originals from which they were con ed, says triumphantly at each verification, "Ilab got? flab got? Hab got? How can make handsome man s'pose no got hand -1 sonie face?' Let us leave these parties, for I there seems likelihood of a hot dispute, and, arming ourselves with another cheroot as a defense against had smells, retrace our steps through the city, and out at the east gate. From Punch "IN PEACE: PREPAItI FOIL WAR. - -In the dayst of Our 3 oath, tt behooves us to make seine preparation for the approach of one. flow ninny persons hate be come prettotturely bald by tieeteettart to apply sPPro priair 0111141108 to prevent the hair from fallow out.— The use of Prof. NVo.ni's celebrated ellair Restorative" will prevent the hunt front ftiflute off, impart to it a healthy trout:. mid even restore the hate of the bald 't'housands have testified to its efLicacy. To be had of L% - itAi.ste everyna.ertt. [Jan. V, 1-,t59 Good Things from "Old Knick The "Editor's Table" of the Knicker bocker, seems to hare a first claim on all the good things said and written, for in that re- ceptacle of fun a large proportion of the hearty laughs of the country originate.— We . copy from the January number the fol lowing. In the county of Pickaway, during the last term of "the Court," a suit was being tried on a contract for the purchase and de livery of hogs. One of the most able attor neys inquired of the witness on the stand: "How many hogs had you ready for delivery at the time agreed upon?" The witness replied, in a slow voice: "I should think about seven hundred and fifty: but I can't tell to a hog (please understand that the witness was addressing the "learn ed counsel") the exact number." As a pendant to the "thrilling extracts," from a rather popular New York cotempo rary, given on our fourth page, we offer the annexed from the pages of "Old Knick:" "Night dawned upon the turbid stream of the pellucid Clam, whose swiftly flowing waters slept placidly beneath the pale and brilliant light of the cloud-hidden moon.— By its barren marge, where grew luxuriantly the tall and waving grass peculiar to that region—a grass of the bluest crimson—stood pensively in a sitting attitude, a maiden fair and beautiful as ever poet dreamed or blind man saw. Leaning against the gigan tic trunk of a stately mullet:, and at the same time, gazing fixedly downward at the waving foliage, which drooped motionless from over-head, she exclaimed in a tone of voice so low as to be plainly inaudible: "Why is it, 0, unpitying Fate! that while I am standing here, I am not somewhere else? Why is it that while lam living, I am not dead? Fortune, unpropitious For tune, smile upon me with thy sad counte nance, and bedew me with the crocodil ean tears that emanate from thy laughing eye , ,! But, no, 'tis useless! The hour is come that I am momentarily expecting; therefore, ye swiftly-flowing waters of the Clam receive me in the motionless depths of thy shallow stream." "With a frantic laugh, lound as that of a disappointed ja-hinney when he sees, invisi ble in the dim distance, the feathery flowers of the nutritious thistle, she sprang far out into the waters of the Clam, and sank down, down, farther and farther, until the water reached the tops of her stockings! "Oh! must she perish? is there no hand to save? Ah! what is that wide]) comes bound ing over the hill with snail-like speed? On, on, it comes faster and faster. It reaches the brink and plunges fearlessly into the stream. It is the gigantic poodle of the no ble Count Alfonso, who follows close behind. Ile seizes—the dog, not the Count—in his teeth, the dress of the dripping maiden, and supports her above the raging waves, until his master arrives and draws them both to the shore. An! then the scene that fllow ed. The painter's pen, or the poet's brush I needs must have to faithfully portray it.— After about seventeen minutes of speech less silence, the Count exclaimed: '0 my my dearest Pollyseraphina! it is thee! 0. ►leavens! I thank thee. And thou, my no ble dog, shalt have a golden collar, plated with brass and set with Jersey pearls, to commemorate the service thou host this day rendered Inc. I swear it by the stars' calm light.' "Then spoke the maiden with choked ut terance, as if she had swallowed a pear too large for her beautiful throat: 'Alfonso! 0, Alfonso! why didst thou save me from a watery grave? Know that life has become hateful to me, and, were I dead, I scacely think I would ask for life.' "'Why speakest thou thus, my dearest Pollyseraphina? Am I, thy own Alfonso, not by thy side? In the language of Smith, the immortal bard: "Come, twine thy heart around me. Like a bran-stalk round a pole:" Let us fly. Dost see that house on yonder hill? let us thither. 'Tis but a short dis tance, not more than three-score leagues.— I Within it dwells that patriot, Jones, the Al derman of the "Sanguinary Fiftieth," who for us the Hymeneal knot. Within my purse I have two of thtt-e fragmentary parts of a dollar called "dimes," the income of which. when properly invested, will be amply sufficient fir our future support.' •Would, my deare , t Alfonso, that I could consent to wed with thee. Dust thou not know that I have sworn a solemn oath to my guardian, Hugo de Clam, upon an alma nac's dread leaves, that I will never wed thee while he lives?' •• •While ho lives? Hal ha! then « • ere he dead, as—as—as a "rabbit," wouldst than marry me?' "'Ay, ay, ray own Alfonso!' said the maiden. " 'Come to my arms, then, Pollyseraphina —thou art mine! Know then that the cra ven form:of Hugo de Clam lies weltering in the brandy and water which flowed from him, when 1, in self-defence, ran this my trusty weapon through his body,' and from beneath his doublet he drew a sangni nary tooth-pick of the best Damascus quill. "The two lovers Columbia Post Office MAILS Through Mail for the East—S A. M. and 6.40 P. M. Way " •` " SA. M. Through and Way Mall fur the li'asl-6.25 P. M. " " " " South-11.30 INM Mail leaves for Mountrille on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday—closes at 6.40 P. M. hail leaves f? Manor, Highritle ant/ Sale Ifarlor, Tuesday. Thursday, and Saturday —closes at 2 P. M. Nail for Siker Spring, on Wednesday and Saturday. MAILS ARRIVE. Eaßtern-2.40 A. M. and 12.05 P. M Western-7.40 A. M. Snuthern-12.05 P. M. Columbia Post Office, Jan. 2, 1839. lOhn DOLLARS TIEWARD will be paid for no) Nleutiettie that will uyll PRATT A. BUTCHER'S NIM:le OD. for the following di.ea.es:—Rheunla• item. Neuralgia. Spinal Alicritonv.Contraried Choltc Pain., Paine in the Side or Rae k. Headache, Toothache, Spraiae.Sore Throat, Cut•. ltrui-es. floras, and all Diseuees of the Shin., Muscles tied tl.e Glnnd• Nolte eeruttte without! the signtature of tiTT & 111 - TfIIER attaelied to each label Principal Office, Wuehinadon street. Grool.lyn. N. V. The great number of persons that have been :mime• dintely relieved in all the erne , and town. where ti ha. been used, as well ne :hie city, so-tarn them is •acing. in all candor, that it Is the greatest cure in the world (or pain. ever sold. Dr. IL li. HERR, Sole Whole•ole Agent fir Colum bia Sold by all respectable Druggist,. I h!otighollt he United .'tires and Caanda. tact. r, 1857-ly FROM C. C. TROWBRIDGE, ESQ., PRESI DENT MICHIGAN STATE BANK. itP I ItOIT. A tigU , 30. IPSO. Dn. GPO B GREEN.—Dear Sm.—Having been a great sufierer from 1,17-pepgra. and baying been Cured believe by your Oxygenated linters, I 1130.4 cheerfully utte-t their :ffieney. bl) cane wa4 a bird cue. lir the .purr of Cour months I 10.. a my strength. and forty-.evert gonad of he'd], we, compelled to 1lb:1,111011 remained an invalid for lateen '/•ravelnug, Ifolll other duly, hod door -unwilling cur are. lent there .reined little prOtoll -10111y ot a cure, until I begun to take the Bitter.. In one arch I war,e greatly relieved, and in three week. I woo perferrly well, lord have mime regained tin r.y poundr , of fle-h. Van are at liberty to u•c tint if it will tit all further your laudabl.. purpose of dilfusrlig thin, mtluirtile remedy. Respectfully C C TROWBRIDGE' SUell Cerlifiewei 11Q tie above. art: not 10 be ob. tamed in favor of a medicine destitute of merit, but are 0111 y given upon the most satisfactory proofs or their efficacy and success. Sicrn W Eowt.x.sc Co , 13'; WVa•hington street, Bos ton, Proprietors. Sold by their ageins everywhere. 117,1-9:QVALITI co ALL!-I.7lllrOrMlly of Prices! A New Tenure in Business! Every one. Ili , own sales invn.-Jone, & Cn , of the Crescent One Price Cloth ing Store," No. 200 Market street, shove Sixth, Phil adelphia. in addition to having the largest, most va- ried and f.h.bionable stock of clothing 111 Philadelphia, mode expressly for retail sales. have constituted' every nine Ili• own snle;maii, by having marked bin figures, on each article, the very lowest price it curt he sold for, so they cannot possibly vary—all must huv alike. . . •The good., are all well vonced and prepared and great pains taken the making, ...I) that all can hay with the lull tot-orance of getting a good article at the very lowe-t lietnernbet the Cre,ectit,in Market. "hove Sixth No. 200 JONES & =1 ANGELS' VISITS—GONV TO PROLONG THENT. The joys seln eh Qoonent ink , their flight, Are the mo-t exqui.ite and eirolig; Like angels' visits short and bright, o. too weak to bear them long." Unit... the k clad in garment. from the Brow. Stone Clothing Null of Roe & Wileon t Non 6113 and GUS Che.nut street, nhove Sixilt, Januury IC, 165-tin. LADIES AND (:ENTLEIIKN:—NVe would cal/ your nitennou to thenulsernoernent of Prof. U.J. R'ood's !lair Iteonorotive, the columns of our present number. From our long acquaintance with the proprietor. and with n u merous nulls thrills Mho hove used In, prepora non with perfect oneceNs for the loot two )ears. we feel no hesitation inn recommending the article as superior to ninny of the preparations non• in use for the b • purpose, for reNtormg gray hate to its origioul color. a sure mud perieet rare for Mildness, and an never fulling pre veitinve for the falling of the hair. It is devotedly the best and most popular in u•e for beautifying. preserving*, restornig and strengthening the hair. relieving diseases of the •kin, and removing scarf, dandrutt, 81111 all eruptions and feverish heat from the scalp. We speak iii relation to the shove (rein what WC 6110,T. having I/1,11 pere011:111Y 110101:11111 , (1 WWI uwner ou. persons who have used the restorative for the above purpose...oh the most gratifying recoil+. It is nut rotten see runner r 1 patent medicine. Indeed, we Mink we !rave never polled one before; but Proles \‘'imil's Hour Ile•tortinve in something so superior lu must of the preparations of the day, that we cannot forbear asking the alt.llloll of our readers to it.—Catho lie Vlnghrator. [Jan. if, GREAT IMPROVEMENT IN MEDICAL PREPARATIONS. No medicine of tlois or any age has loot with ouch us rivalictl +twee- , in overcoming disease, sis - thoelo's AITICOIIIIII COllll/0011d." Tile roqutry hat should render this Compound co 111,111 ennuis %Olen all others have failed. It is because tine veg.nible matter %%loch composes n 1 1" rendered into n 11111101 state by it 11.1 remarliable nhrpn ruins. li ens end loy, and kIIOIVII 01111, 10 111 r proprietor of this remedy. Vitiated humors of the blued. Bronchitis. Ulceration 01 the Throat, Stontnelo or Bowels, IA cplipsni. or Chronic India 11111 l a non of 11111 011 . 1111,010, ut the stern. enalrely th.sappear !winner a timely use of this medicine.. 11.teln's Aim, lean Compound owe. it ',lroner to the intrinsic CllOllO, properties or this vll which emtipi,, it. It contain. a •• roinpound Fluid ExtrartrVhcnch Drop 01 Cane, Runt. — 0010 flirt given to the Yu LGq hut long 1.10, 1 1110 the 110'11111. /1... 11 never rune for Scrofula-. Coll.tilliptloll. 'WHIMS Of the Mood, nod chrome tin ...nicer in any pelt of the system. This Metill . llll, he hail of all rein:t ide dealer-, no the Cooled Mules and Canada. See advertisement in :mother column. December 12. 1.-57-i!on MILK! MILK!! DILLK!!! r IIE subscriber will be prepared on MON -1 DAV. I"th I NST ,!0 •iippi, the citizen.. of Co. onhia %soh intik lII> wagon wnh on and alter that daa•. Wall 111111•1 cu,.lomrr.. at Moir nod lank will lie forni-lied at market pi ice>. The will he carefiilly attended to. and none, but the nrnele eupplied. A pilflloll ut tile 1,111,11 e 1 . 11.1011 a. 14.oheited. HENRY l%'l:4l,Kft. Columbla .I:stturtry Dissolution of Partnership. 1 11 17 ; e j u ' ;‘, ‘, l l , 4 ; ilN ,g l: u n t.:l 4ll ‘ l . l .. l, :e i r ' ' ' ll r 'l i f?: : ::rt;ril'er'i l iTi g & t. 37l7; tiny di-eoh•ed by 11111111.0 VINCENT DANIEL I. tut ws:Ert. Di,. lb 3,1 II 1111=1 FOR RENT, (AN REASONABLE TERMS, the fine Mt, STONE HOONI A NI) .1.AVI:1-1.1NG occupied by Jou Fetutrtch & Co, oil From street, t.W. door (ruin 1.0..11,t , treet _Appl) to Col , .11,11 M. D. WII,SON. Dissolution of Partnership. T 111 : p . orlocr.lop heretofore exi , toig under the firm of 11. P. Apr°ld .k Co., w the Flll l , 1:111111.; illlll COlll - 1111, day. JANUARY .5, .olved by 111111U:1i Coll , elll. Ihn otii-tanditigueeomith vk itl be collected Ly Ii F.-11)110W, ,1,0 wll seille all the in of the firm. It I' A PPOI.D, Jam 1:75,--.3t II E APPOLD. rrlll 7 , business of the firm will be eontin. ued In tip.; undercap)...l. at the old place. mho could rekpectfully solicit a etrlittl.lll, of public patron -13. F. 1'1'0U). .1 :lunar) 9. 1-57-lit Opera or Sleighing Hoods. \TT 1: hate Just rreercrd :m addwnllal supply of tlta Y shove ;;Dods, w Ire, at fa.. than )nnmJnr turer'y prirts. ALSO. a full litre of ladle,. 1111(/ gentle rnetr's /Col. Beaver HMI Cloth fauae. /1111/ CllllllllO5 / AT P11.1C12... The be,t a,ortineot in Col ulahiu, at 11. C. FOND1:11S511T11, Carl, More. =1 Gent's Mufflers or Cravats. N so,. full tir‘ortiticiit Joel received. in 11. C. FONDERSNIIT/I'S People , 4 Cush Store. Columbia. EMUS Just Received, mu:sn Citron, I.ClllOllq. 11:“..in.. of nll Linde, FtF~, Prinn....l)4l,..Cranberrn, Oranges. Currant., Gum- Drops, et :N. , &e. nt (X)Nt.T. lIETNER'S New Confectionery. Front .trot. =MEI COURT pROCL, i3l ATION. C lse lion IIEN nil' G, 1.(1V(;, Preai' A. I. e , ud g , Court of COI2IIOOII Plea., to unit for the counts or Loneo-I,r. nod A•-ktittit Ju.tice.rif the COMA Of I ty I•r II Oil Terminer and Gen eral Jail Delivery and QuaiterSes-iom, of tine and for the county of La Ilra-ler, have i—oed their Precept to Inc directed. rt'lliOrlllg roe, among other Ming . , to ribOi, puhlne PrOCLIM.IIOII thromtlanit toy that ri Court of Dyer and Trimmer and r.enera I Jatl Delivery, AI-o, a Court of General Quarter Se....ion- of the P. nee and Jail Delivery. will eolllwilVe at the Court Doll, in the City of lamella te, in the C ttttt moan enith of I ' enn-t iVallla. on the 3.1 lilt'. DA4IV JA NI • A UV. incr of nhieli precept. PUBLIC NO PIM: IS lintERY r:IVEN, In the Mat or and Aldermen of the city ty Lanca•ter, to amd county. 'Pill till the JILP , Per. of tor Pence, the Coroner. and Coo•irible. of the , auf eilie and ['own} of La neater, that they be then ut.d there in their on. proper per-tni., with their roll., record.; and earainnannis., and niqui-nionc, and their other remenitiranee . , to do those thiuga whirh to their of fie., appertain, m their beleilf to lie 11011 e; Mid also all din.e who wi I! pro -crate against the 0n..., whn are, or then shall be. nit the Jail of the said county or Lancaster, ore to lie then and there to prosecute them a--ball lie jii.t Dated at Luncn•ter. the :;!111, .lov of Noveml.er.l,s7_ lIENJ A MIN P. 110V11.1 Sheriff. N. — Punctual a de11a...X., of Juror- arid Witioesoie4 till hereafter lie expected and required on the lir-t day of the SCS•loin. Alder:nen nail Ju . ticeri of the Peiree are required by no order of Court, dated Nov. 21, to return their r eeoenitniire. to Samuel Evan., Clerk of Qulrter Seit-ion., within one week from the day of final introit JO each ca.,, rind in de fault thereof. the rtliegi.tralcs' cost, will not be allowed Jo uua cv 2. ILL 11. P. APPOLD, W M GENERAL FORWARDING AND COMMIS SION MERCHANT, :i ga ir RECEIVER OP C OA LAND PRODUC E, And Deliverers on any point one., Columbia and Philadaphia Railroad. to York and Raltzmore and to Pittsburg; riEALER IN COAL. FLOUR D GRAIN, I/ IV lIISIRV AND BACON, lino, jo4t received a large lot of Monongahela Rectified IVhi.key, from 10 n.hurg, of . whiclithe) willkerpn -apply eroctiontly on hand. to lock prICCK. No. I, 2 and G Canal Lawn. Coluustia, Januar) 2;.151. NEW OYSTER SALOON. THE subscriber lifts opened in the basement of the AMERICAN 1101 1;, saloon for the •:11.• ni OYSTERS and OTHER REFRESHMENTS, %here he Prepared to supply V“.101111.T1t WWI the hem nruele. in in. line 1b.., can lie. brought io the innelret. Ii- lin.o long experience in the and believes that he call .erve up o).ter. ul ever, inainier,a sad in n .10e that cannot he surpipi‘etl. lie will give the h11.111C.• otrict attennoti,sind will funnels none but. Oy-ter4. Cr) tier', cuiipned to tam he. in large or entail quart either cooked or row. opened or to the elicit. A thine of public patronage to relippetrully ranched. ELIJAH 110 WE. Colombia. October 21, 1927-3 m