.• isagsP.miteittreVa l art bif.)..citibrboßE propiletor. titoolethe Iblleetit a' yet* I • ' ' ' -• :,.•: •••- •-.• . , . INN uopy ONE if EAIL IN ADVANOE; IX F.t oyr woo yvITHIN,TIWPIMQIiTtI. , 1, 9 b oor PAID ,WITHIN mONTII9, '1 ta t, soTPVIININE,6[9NTIIB, 115 le NOT PAID WITHIN TWELVE MONTHS, • 000 :Theabovoteim;atenillbile! as theta tr-e itottattg paper la the state. and will be exaote4. . 0 discloatiatiancis will bs allowed until ail arseartiset har pald. ... • • ' 'lslllTit' Afiti LIAUILITY OF POSTMASTERS .. ii' . ' • . ... . 0 m eets teetettea to notify the publisher. es directed law. of the fact the% papers is rs not lilted bY those to whom 1 are' &anted, ate thernteirte held responsible fot, tho • °bat Of tbe subscription moistly., , Personelittlisst papers riddreued to thvrnutvell. Or to othert. come subtoriben, and atonable tor the price of subterlp. n. OUTPatter to now carried by 'mall thin:Mahout the (Meet ) , • of charge. , e Frbm ilorrinburg Union. Census of PenoSylvanla. . following • Is the census table furn• by the superintendent to the Sucre , • • ..ry of the Commonwealth : lefulsus OrncE, Was'n., Jan. 30, 1852. .SIR:—I have tho honor to transmit, in ursuance of a resolution of the Senate of 'entisylvania, requesting the same,' a tab lar statement of the population of the 'ate of Pennsylvania, by cit d wards. As the returns from all the state's are not rinpletely made, (a portion of those from alifornia not having been received,) the 4oretary of the Interior is unable to aka . the apportionment according to the 3tof 23d May 1850. No contingency an, occur, however, which will affect the crtainty of the State of Pennsylvania be qg 'entitled to 25 members in the 23d ;ongress, being a gain of ono member pier the present number by which she is represented in the 31st Congress. 1 , I have the honor to be sir, very respect bully, your obedient servant, JOS. G. C. KENNEDY. Sup't gf.Cemsus. .W .HuonEs, Sec'y. of Commonwealth, . . Population of the State of Pennsylvania. Adams county, : 25,981 !Allegheny city, : : 21,262 :lAllegheny county, : : 70,427 138,290 l'ittsburgh city : : 46 • 601 Armstrong county, • • • • 29,560 tl3eaver county, 20,689 Ocdford county, 23,052 I3erks county, . . . . . . 77,129 il3lair county, 21,777 i3radford, 42,831 Bucks, : : : s : : :. : 56,091 putler, s 30,346 !Cambria, : : : : . • . . 17,773 Carbon, 15,686 . centre, "" 23,355 Chester, 66,439 Clarion,• • ' 23,565 Clearfield, l2,sB6 Clinton, • * . . 11,207 poiumbia, : : : : •: : : : 17,710 pra w ford, 37,84.9 t umherland, : . • . . . 34,327 iaauphin, ••• . . . 35,754 elaware, :. : :. * : : : : 24,679 k, :: :::: : : : 3,531 ric, : : : : : : : : : 38,7.42 yette, . • . .• . '• . . 39,112 ranklin, : : 2. ----- 36,904 Fulton, . • • • . . . . 7,567 rocne, : : : :, : : : : 22,136 pntingdon, . 24,786 dianb, • ---- • • 5.7,170 effelSoll, . . 13,518 iirdata,. • • . . . . . 13,029 ancaster city, : : 12,369 t 98 ' 944 One.aster'county, : 86,575 ~ kmrence, 21,079 _ lebation, 26,071 ielligli; . • • • . . . . 32,479 inzerne, •. 56,072 iycoming, ..... . . . 26,257 tercel . , : : :. •' • : : : 33,172 fifilin, 14,980 bums, 8,291 ontgemery, 58,291 ontour, 13,239 'Kean, • . • • • 5,254 Uthampton, 40,235 23,272 Irthumberland, . 01 ' • ' '• • • •20 088 .rry, • •• • • • • • : .'lad'a city proper, 121,376 t 408,762 Is il'a co, inclu'g city, 287,386 ike, 5,881 otter. • • • • . . . . 6,048 huylkill, ' . • • . .. . : 60,713 .merset, ' • • • . . . . 24,416 I:lily:kn. : :. 5,694 . usquehanno, • ' • • • • 29,688 'op, : :- : : :, : : : . : 23,987 I Won; . . • 26,083 dimgo, • ''''' : : 18,310 arren, : : : : : : : 13,071 'l,ashington, ; : : ; : : : 44,039 'ayne,• . • . . 21,890 . nettnoreland, : : 3. 51,726 yoming, : .•.• • -• 10,655 ork, : : : . ..... 57,450 i.Sirromsn Fun FAnnics.. 4 ---It is ascer ' ined that furs may be woven into the fin textiles for apparel, and in styles the st.pleasing and lasting. Specimens of la new Material are, or Wore recently,on hibition in. this city, and we are assured tit no experiment over attempted, has • attended with surer evidences of sue a. .; The Material has a richtlossy ap. " • Mime; and ,to the touch is. softer than •lvet. Its duribility has been tested; and zliqaPnessr,no garment could be more I ptablo tO all'claE;ses. Qualities may "varied, ttiO body of the cloth, nefo be adapted eitherio the spring, fall '`'severe winter meatha. We have net opined this fabric ; but assurance 10e; that it eq9als otir represiinta COu tionp, think are styled y Y.r. IROINEtt: IN: GEOUGIA.---Thero is 'a tl drought in Liberty comat,y farmers: -have, much 'difficulty in, pre. ing e ,iriVerfor their catde, _PATO bad al • rolitqe out;in the woods and !Igoe mirt h . ! G. ; ', Tvyo uegroa „were eurrounded the &maraud finally bUrned to death. =NM I t 7 :r . ' , .!• , ..f1rr r.I . F .-, .,i .. ,7 '"-,; 7 0 1, '• ' Y+? "." •s• ..1.11 nit 1.:,•:;) "P'1!; • ' •;•*'° . <, V • • ‘" • • . • ,! ' l O 1 11 • • , . I • ' „ •'•.,••• •t SI L • -• •", • ; '‘, ' •••' • ••• • • ' • • .•. • I, • 1 • • 1, .„ • : . .; • •'• ; ' D‘ • '• 1..11.- • ••• tr • a, tVoigiCid ^ • . AEE Lit `PA PER: l LITE RATURE, . AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, AND FOREIGN AND DOMETICINTELLIGENCE. , • •Ammoni ' l . nnn Volfime 3, II Et EN'C ORRIE,. Leaves frOm the Note-Book of a Curate. , ~ Having devoted myself to the service of Him who said unto the demoniac and the leper, "Be whole," I go forth, daily, tread ing humbly in the pathway of. my Wrap pointed mission, through the dreary re gions, the close and crowded streets, that exist like a plague ground in the very heart of the wealthy town of L—. They have an atmosphere of their own, these dilapidated courts, those noisome alleys, those dark nooks where the tene ments are green with damp, where ; breath grows faint, and the head throt with an oppressive pain; and „yot,„arold the horrors o f such abodes, hundreds of our fellow creatures act the sad tragedy of life, and the gay crowd beyond sweep onward, without a thought of those who perish daily for want of the bread of eter nal life. Oh I cast it upon those darken ed waters, and it shall be found again af ter many days. There we see human nature in all its unveiled and degraded nakednesi—the vile passions, the brutal [ coarseness, the corroding malice, the un disguised licentiousness. Oh, ye who look on and abhor, who pass like the Phar- I isce, and condemn the wretch by the way ' side, pause, and look within : education, circumstances have refined and elevated your thoughts and actions ; but blessed arc [ those who shall never know by fearful ex- I perience how want and degradation can *tint the finest sympathies, and change, nay, 'brutalize the moral being. How. have 1 shuddered to hear the fear ful mirth with whose wild laughter blas phemy and obsenity were mingled—that mockery Of my sacred profession, which I knew too well lurked under the over strained assumption of reverence for my words, ' when I was permitted to utter them,. and the shout of 'derision that fol lowed too often my departing steps, know ing that ono day those immortal souls must render up their account ; and hum bly have I prayed that my unwearied zeal might yet be permitted to scatter forth the - good seed which the cares and anxieties should not choke, nor the stony soil re fuse! Passing one day through one of those dilapidated streets, to which the doors, half torn from their hinges, and the bro ken windows, admitting the raw, cold, gusty winds, give so comfortless an as pect, I turned at a sudden angle into a district which I had never visited. Thro' the low arch of a half-ruined bridge, a turbid stream rolled rapidly on, augment ed by the late rains. A strange looking ookin building, partly formed of wood, black and-decaying with ago and damp, leaned heavily over' the passing waters ; it was composed of many stories, which were approached by a wooden stair and stied like galley without, and evidently occu pied by many families. The lamenting wail of neglected children and the din of contention were heard within. Hesitating on the threshold, I leaned over the bridge, and perceived an extensive area beneath the ancient tenement ; many low brewed doors, over whose broken steps the water washed and rippled, became distinguisha ble. As I gazed, one of them suddenly opened, and a pale haggard woman ap peared, shading a flickering light in her hand. I descended the few slippery wood en steps leading to the strange abodeond approachad her. As I advanced, she ap peared to recognize me. , "Come in sir," she said . hurriedly; "there is one within will be' glail to see you ;" and ; turning, she led me through a winding passage into a dreary room,whose blackened floor of stone bore strong evi dence that the flood chafed and darkened beneath it. In an old arm-chair beside the rusty and almost fireless grate, sat, or rather lay, a pale and fragile creature,a-wreck ofblight ed loveliness. " Helen,".'said the woman, placing the light on a rough table near her, "1106 is the minister come [to see you." Tho person she addressed attempted to rise, but the effort was too great, and she 'sank back, as if exhausted by it. A blush mantled over her cheek, and gave to her large dark eyes a faint and finding lustre. She had [been beautiful, very beautiful, fiery beautiful ; but the: delicate features were sharpened and attenuated, the , ex-* quistte'symthetry of her form worn by want and: illness , to a mere outline of its former gracefulTroportions ; - yet;eVen a mid the squalid wretchedness that sur rounded her, ark air of bygone . stquiriority gave El:nameless interest to herappearance, arid I approached her with 'a ' respectibl. sympathy that,seemed strange to'my very self. • - . • ' '• '' ''. • After a few 'explanatory sentences re specting my visit; to which she [asiented by,a humble yet silent movement of aqui escence,.l commenced , [reading the eiiineht praydremliiehithe occasion ,called for:— As I proceededpthe faint chorus 'of adrink ing song came upon my ears from some fat xedess'of, this mysterious ibode ;'doors ,were suddenly opened-and ClO'spd with 'a vault-itko echo, and:d[boarse- voice calla [art the, woman who, had,ttainitted)me ; She Started: audgehly from. her: knees,.and;Wlth the paleness of .I 'ecotintonandel 2,311,786 ' - "i! :1; 4 c: U(l%,vvr.qic-: '7:' Clearfiel4; Pa., Feb e 7, 118,52. lett. the .room. . After a moment's; hesita ting pause, the invalid spoke in a voice whose lOW flineklike tones stole upon the heart . like aerial music. " I thank - yeti " she said, "for this kind visit, those soothing prayers. - .Oh, hoW I often in my wanderings havo I longed to listen to such --- Tords l . Cast out, like an Indian' pariahf,' from the 'Palo' of human fellowship, I 'had almost forgotten how to pray ; 'but Odim) shed :the healing balm of - religion once more upon my sear ed and bliglited:heart,and I can 'weep glad tears of penitence, and dare to - .hope . for pardon." - „ After this burst of excitement,shegrew 'Mere Caln; - atiff&freEitivbriatiokassume d a devotional yet placid tenor, until she drew from her bosoin a small packet, and gave it to me with a trembling hand. - Read it, sir," she said ;. - "ifis . the sad history of a life of serrow. Have pity as you trace the record of human frailly, and remember that you - are the servant of the Merciful." She paused, and her cheek grew paler, as if her car caught an unwelcome but well known sound. A quick step was sow heard in the passage, and a man entered,' bearing a-light ; he stood a moment on the threshold, as if surprised, and then hastily approached us. 1 A model of man ly beauty, his haughty , features bore the prevailing characteristifthe gipsy blood —the rich olive check, t le lustrous eyes, the long silky raven hair, the, light and flexible form, the step light and graceful', us the leopard's ; yet were-all these per fections marred by an air of reckless li centiousness. His attire, which strangely mingled the rich and gaudy with the torn and faded, added to the rutllentsai.of his appearances ; and as he cast a stern look on the pale girl, who shrank beneath his eye, I i'ead at once the mournful secret of her despair. With rough words he bade me begone, and, as the beseeching 'eye of his victim glanced meaning towards the door, I departed, with a silent prayer in my heart for the betrayer and the erring. A cold drizzling rain was falling with out, and I walked hastily homeward, mu sing on the strangescene in which I had so lately" mingled. Seated' in my little study, I drew my table near the fire, ar ranged my reading lamp, and commenced the perusal of the manuscript confided to my charge. It was written in a delicate Italian hand upon uncouth and various scraps of paper,and appeared to have been transcribed with little attempt at arrange ment, at long intervalsl. but my curiosity added to the links of the leading events, and I gradually entered with deeper inter est into the mournful history. " How happy was my childhood !" it began. "I can scarcely remember a grief! through all that sunny lapse of years. I dwelt in a beautiful abode, uniting the ve- 1 rendes and vine-covered porticoes of south ern climes with the substantial -in door comforts of English luxury. The country around was romantic, and I grew up in its sylvan solitudes almost as wild and happy as the birds and fawns that were my companions. " I was motherless. My father, on her death, had retired from public life, and devoted himself to her child. Idolized by him, my wildest wishes were unrestrain ed ; the common forms oflinowledge were eagerly accepted by me, for I had an in tuitive talent of - acquiring anything which contributed to ray pleasure ; and I early diseOvered that,- without learning to read and write; the gilded books, and enamled 'desks in my father's library would remain to be only as so many splendid baubles ; but a regular education, a re ligious and intellectual - course of study, I never pursued. I read as 1 lilied,o4 when I liked. 1 was delicate in appeal: ante, and my father feared to control my I spirits, or to rob me of a moment's happi- I ncss. Fatal affection ! How did I repay I such misjudging love i • 1 " Time .flowed brightly, on, and I had ; already seen sixteen summers, when the little cloud appeared in the sky that so fearfully .darkened my future destiny.— In one'of our charitable visits to the neigh boridg cottages, We fanned art acquaint ance with a gentleman Wile had become .an inhabitant Of our village; a fall from his horse placed him under the Care; of our' worthy doctor; and he had hired a a small room attached to Ashtree farm, until he recovered from the lingering. :effect; of his - aobiclent. t Handsome, grace ful- - andhisintiatingin his Uddress, he cap. l tivated my ardent imeginittiOn 'ilt'orice.-=-' Unaccustomed , te the;world, - Peoked Upon; him -as the'very qnould . OfTorm ; 1 ' a new andThlissfal :enchantrizent seemed . to Per.; ; vade my i . .being • in his presence, and ray I girlish fancy dignified the: detusiciri , . with the.narne - of loVe I : My , father.‘ wee :le. lighted With. ilie. • society;" ;he possessed'. an 1 inexhaustible fund'ofaneedotesand Strange ;adventures, wasart eXcelletit inusieian,and !had the agreeable :!'act of accommodating himself to. the Mood of the inonArnt' . •-- tie. waS:a nonstant. visitor; and ttt .length • be. , came almost domesticated,in our . house-, hold; Known to. us liy the t' tlArne' of tior iio;happoke of himself nil the 'son Of tt- no :ble houSti; , w,ho, to iindul4b itlhietid 'tent; perament, and a ronwitid: ,, pitibidii T o for pl! . !() •-• J rural scenery, had come . forth on a soli tary. pilgrimage, and cast aside for a While what ho called the iron fetters r)f .exclu sive society. HoW sweet were ourmoon i light ramblings through the d ep 'forest glens ; how fondly we linge 4, by the . Fairies' Well in the green h low of the weeds, watching the:single star that,glis tenecl. in its •pellticid waters l . And, oh, What passionate eloquence, What romantic adoration, was poured forth upon :my willing ear, and thrilled my susceptible heart!.i: ~ "'Before my friiher's eyes he • appeared gracefully courteous to me; but nee a word of•glatrAbetrayed the passion which in our secret interviews worshipped me as an idol, and enthralled my senses with the ardency of its homage. This, he told me, Was necessary for my' haPpinesd, as my father might separate u 8 if he suspected that another shared the heart hitherto his own. This was my first deception. Fa tal transgression ! I had departed from the path of truth, and my guardian angel grew pale in the presence of the tempter. Winter began to darken the valley's; our fireside was enlivened by the presence of our accomplished guest. On the eve of my natal day, he spoke of the birthday fetes he had witnessed during his Conti nental and Oriental rambles, compliment ed my father ,on the antique beauty and massy richness of the gold and silver plate which, rarely used, decorated the side board in honor of the occasion ; and, ad miring the pearls adorning my hair and bosom, spoke so learnedly on the subject of jewels, that my father brought forth from his Indian cabinet my mother's bri dal jewels, diamonds, and emeralds of ex. quisite lustre and beauty. I had never before seen those treasures, and our guest joined in the raptures (Amy admiration. "'They will adorn my, daughter,' said my father, with a sigh. as he closed the casket, and retired to place it in its safe receptacle. "'Yes, my Helen,' said my lover, , ,they shall glitter on that fair brow in a proder scene, when thy beauty shall gladden the eyes of England's nobles, and create envy in her fairest daughters. . •" I listened ' , with a smile, and, on my father's return, passed another evening of; happiness—my last ! 1 We retired early, and oh, how bright were the dreams that floated around my pillow, how sweetthe sleep that stole upon me as I painted the, future—an clysium of love and splendor I was awakened by . a wild cry that rung with agonizing, hor ror through the midnight stillness :..n. 'was the voice of my father. I sprang hastily from my couch, ti.rew on a wrapper, seiz ed the night lamp, and hurried to his chamber. Ruffians opposed my entrance ; the Indian 'cabinet lay shattered on the floor, and I beheld my father struggling in the grasp of a man who had grasped bid throat to choke the startling cry, With maniac force I reached the couch, and, seizing the murderous hand, called aloud for help. The robber started with a wild execration, the mask fell from his face, and I beheld the features of Gilbert Cor- =IS Mil= lEEE a When I recovered "eonciousness, I found that I had suffered a long illness—a brain fever, caused; the strange nurse said, by soino sudden shock. Alas, how dread ful had been that fatal cause ! Sometimes 1 think my head has never been cool since ; a dull throb of agony presses yet upon my brow; sometimes it passes away;, my spirits mount lightly, and I can laugh,but it was a hollow sound'—olt,how unlike the sweet laughter of bygone days 1 We were in, London. My apartments .were sumptuous: all that wealth could supply was mine ; but what a wretch was I amid that scene of ,splendor ! The de stroyer was now the arbiter of my dcsti ny. ' I knew his' wealth arose from his nefarious actions et the gaming table. I know my father was dead ;' the severe in juries he had received on that fatal night, and the mysterious disappearunce of his daughter; had laid him in his grave. Gil bert Corrie was virtually his murderer, yet still I loved him I A passion partaking of delirium bound me to his destiny. I shrank not from the caress of -the felon gamester .. 4 , —the 'plague stain of 'sin . was upon me--- ; the burning plow-shares of .the worlds scorn lay .i my, path, and how wqs the guilty one t dare .the fearful ordeal?— For fallen gown there is no . 'return ; no 'penitence Can restore oher'sullied bright ness ; theancrel-plumes olpurity are scat- • terddin tho, ° dtist,•and'never ,can the lost ,pne . regaipAlta,gden p( her ineocence.— The ,World, may, .pity, Inay,.itardon,.but never: more r'epeet r And, ph, how dread-. fftlltO mingle , with't lie'ptlre;'anif Teel flit; ' mark OlCain tipoti your. broid ...'.' i' 'j ' . , i4A , chringe carne suddenly • upon : Gil , bort. ~:There, ma's no lorigee . .t lib. lavish expendityrp,, the careless profusion,; his looks and tone. were , altered., :A haffaard eigireSsion sat upon his • an sprne eat-, iires, - ,an'cl . thd '' wiirds" of' - endeitirnent ''no longei 'flowed-Lila fieni lips; aquielffootifep. • beneath the wladew inade.him Ste rt,etrange lop!ting roen ,(i.sited,b i ra,,bi . s.absenees Imre tongl4. garments` C*inged ;, rte', deft v l tiEil'itbcitit 6 be ' I ified *riohi inyieizi il position. • .r:i.ll ori:11ro•Iti ;,rn:! ".One, night ho entered hastily, snatch ed me from, the luxurious fauteuil on 'which I rested, and led me, Without 'answering my' questions, to a 'hackney coach. We were Speedily hurled: away, and I never agairilbeheld that home of. splendor: By by paths.we entered: a :close and murky street, the Coach was discharged, I was' hurried over. a dark miry road, and, pas, sing through a court:yard, the gate . of which closed behind us, was lead without ceremony into a ...wretched apartment, thronged with.fiercc, naelk,seat . ed round a table well supplied with wines and ardent spirits. . Our 066.4136e_ was hailed' with sheets. ' GPhert was called by the name of 'noble captain' to the head of the table, and I :wag suffered disregarded to weep alone. I seated myself at, length by the blazing fire, and then first new the real horrors'of my destiny, • ' " From their discourse' I gathered that , Gilbert had committed extensive forger.y ies,.and. had that 'night escaped the pur suit of justice. Bumpers of congratulation were drunk, plans of robberies were dis cussed, and the gipsey captain chosen as the leader of the,most daring exploits con templated. " Since that night how fearful have been my vicissitudes ! Sometimes, asthe splen didly dressed mistress of private gambling rooms, I haVe received the selected dupes in a luxurious boudoir, decoying the vic tims, by fascinating smiles., into the snare laid for them by Gilbert and his associ ates. Sometimes, encamping with the wild gipsy tribe in some hidden dell or woodland haunt, where their varied spoils were in safe keeping. Anon, the painted :and tinseled queen of an itinerant show, when Gilbert enacted the mounwba,nlc, and by the brilliance of his fascinating elo quence, drew into his treasury the hard earned savings of the rustic gazers. "To all those degradations have I sub mitted, and now, oh, now, more than ev er, has the iron entered into my soul ! He has ceased* to love rne. I have been an encumbrance ; my beauty has Faded from exposure and neglect. I have. sunk be neath his blows, have writhed beneath the bitterness of his sarcasm, his brutal jest, his scornful mockery of mv penitence ] and tears. I have endured the av,any of hunger while he rioted with his compan ions in profligate luxury ; and yet, if the old smile lights up his countenance, the old look shines forth from his lustrouseyes, he is again to me the lover of my youth, and the past is a hideous dream. 01), wo man's heart, how unfathomable is thy mystery I" 'the manuscript here ended abruptly.- 1 How sad a moral might be drawn from the history of this unfortunate ! What rare gills of mind and beauty had the want of 'religion marred and blighted ! Had I the Sun ofßighteousness shone upon that ardent heart, its aspirations had been glo ' rious,its course "Upward ! upward.! Through the doubt and the diNtany Upward ! to the perfect day !" What mournful are ever a round us, flowing onward with the perpot ual under -current of human life, each hour laden with its mystery and sorrow, sweep ing like dim phantoms:through the arch of time, and burying the fearful` records in the oblivion of the abyss beyond ! How few of the floating wrecks are snatched &Om the darkening tide ! I returned the next day to the dwelling of Helen, but it was shut up, and in the day times appeared as if long deserted.— To all inquiries, the neighbors answered reluctantly that it had been long uninhab ited, and that its last occupants had been tt gins; of coiners, who were now suffering the penalty of iratisportution. I °lieu vis ited the same district, but all my after search was in vain, and the fate of Helen Corrie still remains an undiscovered mys tery. ' • • '1(1 ii.tir• 111 AT women were "born to love," is as certain as that General Jackson wns "born to die." '1 heir very dialect shows the strength of this proeliVity. They use the word to indicate any sort of affection, passion, penchant, appetite,,or "fancy."— They lave their lovers and their husbands, fine dresses and fine dinners, sweetmeats and sweet ribbons, with' apparently 'the same sort and.tho same measure of eflbc tion. To liko.is too tame' an expres.sion for a lady's choice. She loves eve,rythinf , (that she dosn't happen to hate) and .finds no word.in the dictionary that is equal to her . need. ' That this everlasting and in discriminate use of the highest and holi est word in the languagois improper there can, be ,no ground,. for debate. "Oh, I , dearly, /ova turnips!" excraimeda lady, the `Other; day the table—a' lady WhO mere ly meant trisay thot 'she liked 'the Vegeta: ble in .qudstiOn.." "The d------1 . you do I" said.an ascetic Old bachelcir of. heracquain 7 .ettee, .01e:.;sat, opposite.. .1. 1 ,,1 hat , !nom 'could., yoy say of your, ,hushatid; or that Beautiful 'Chili) of . .yours neeil.en of. your Redneinei;lquilnna'' inec 'Tiiiiiliis . 7 'hope 'you may yft II ti'd''.etitnet hi rig more I worthyief your tilreetions P? , . 1 : .; : ~. , '! Wimyvas,tho.most ,ttpr?ttttaslo sp i ce, tbrr . Jonah', fer he was suc I solidie/ Bastirtioir.• $0 60 3 toasts; lritriathoi' Ido 13 441 1008 . do °months. . 7 oat Each 'cheeriness do, r 28 do 12 myths. •i 0 Oe II squares tritonthe,‘ •.2 OR I'. Milt intarandi month. rim do months; 4 000 • months. 011 s do 113 monitivi 7Or do l (. dot lid . , do. .19 07 Bdo Months. 4CO I column 3 months. 8 pt. An d months, 560 1 ,do,• 11 • do 33:inonths, 8001 do ' OP •A, Itherahreduction will ht . " mean Mitchantr and others , who all vortlin Ly the yenr. , . Palm citoniates in estry • nelchbarhoad. and Is mart W neatly ovary intnily in the county—and therelore affords as couvardent and cheep ratans for tho buitnEssonen, ,41111 r county--the metonrzt. trochanra ,nr.d ' all o' hers—to eriistsitt the knr,wlcden of their I.' ration and La .inets We ihouldt. hke Insert "It Card'" ler army Mechanic, Merchant, om an& Pcori arm in ~t he Cndlyf Wo toms, Olenti withont enGrotrch.ne open our studies column'. nod rearm le a Initininte,hatintsi will tote nfrolvettoins rrxtecsivan—• f.r. Rea aoaeraliule, the mores) teams Ay a mart advashioa.. the orsaltir La hit pp:Attar ' • , ! Books; Jobs and Blankfr, • . . . OL' EV ETIV DESCRIPTION. PRINTF Ti siotnirear l E V/15.•••• RY,DEST•FTYI., •AND 4*l TDB ()THAI. AT 'ID OFFICE OF•THE • • • "CIAIARIII ELI) F.t.PL/111.11CtiNt" •' ' . •.• Somebody in Hie Cask. . • 'Mite an exciting scene; sage cr'vccetist. number 'ofthe'Cleveland Horald, occurred) at one of our wharves•yesterday.' •• ' . The hands on one Of Our' steamers wet engaged , in rolling off. a cask, when to the Consternation and surpris6 of the pitranaty engaged in performing 'this . operattOn, a. Voice was heard' within the Cask. , ' ,‘‘Roil It these darned nails hurt I'd rather pay my passage than stand trail this." I-lolding.up their hands, their visatass ekpanded to the size .of twit •saumts„thee two laborers'exeltrinied — ' - "Thatlichts,all 1" .•" ,• ' • 'rho mite coming up)at this m941E34 . 1 1 0 unaware of the ca - Use of the delay, manced cursing them on their dilatoriness, when from' within the voice again cam, forth— • • "You're nehOd y ; let me'out of this castc." "What's that 1" said the mate.', , "Why, it's me s 'idthe the veinal! "I want to get out--•-1 won't stand this any' onger • . "Up end that cask," said the mate. • "Oh, don't--you'll kill me said they voice. "These darned nails prick look out ! don't" again said the casked-up in dividual, as the inen were turning it over. "Cooper ; said the mate,' unhead this cask and take out that man." • As the adze sundered the hoops, and the , head was coming 'out, the voice again broke forth— "Be easy, now! is the're any one about? I dont want to be caught 1" Quite a crowd had now gatheredatound the seen° of action, when to the. utter as tonishment of the bystanders, a loud gut tural laygli broke forth, which made our hair str(nd on end, and the cask was filled with ba&m. "What does it mean'!" says ono: h ."It really beats my time," said the mate. We enjoyed the joke too weh to , "blow ' ~ as we walked off arm-in arm Witlithe'Ta 'kir of SWa," the vantrilognigt tind -magi cian. • • . .A BI rren TIME COMING.-A good deacon, at n conference meeting in: the town of D—, about ,thirty ,miles north of Boston, addressed hi 4 auditors, one sabb:ith evening, as follows : My friends, there is a new doctrine going about now-a-days. Weirtro• told that all mankind .are going, to w heaven:— But, my brethren and sisters, e hope for better things," AN OLD WOMAN, was praising in en thusiastic terms, the sermon of a Scotch minister who had acquired a great name for depth and sublimity. The suspicions of her auditor were a little aroused; and he ventured to propose a question to her. " Well, Jenny, do you understand him'!" "Understand him?" ejaculated Jenny, holding, up her hand in astonishment at the question —"Me understand him I wad 1 hao the presumption l" • n"--A. buck, while being measured for a pair of bats. observed: 'Make thorn cover the calf. 'Heavens I exclaimed the astoundedsnob surveying his custemeilfrom head to foot, "I have not leather enough." A SMART W ()MAN.—There is a . ma Cri ed woman, not a thousand miles fromßos. ton, who during a late year earned enough to repair the entire inside of the bona() thkt she and her husband occupied. the following year she earned enough with her own hands to furnish the house with new and costly furniture. The next year she was enabled to buy herself a gold watch and chain. The following year she phr. chased her husband a bran new suit of clothes. Last year she became a medium for the "spiritual rappings," and we have not learned how much slit earned by . the operation. If this is a specimen of "we. man's rights," we know of' many band who will go for the doctrine decided ly AN EDITOR in Vermont, having , re ceived two gold dollars in advance, in pay for hiS,paper, says he allows :his t Oil. dron to play with other children as us7l4. TUB TAxits arc, indeed heavy—,-;.said Dr. Franklin on one occasion7reo.,if those layed on by the government rvlTe the only ones we had td.pay, we might, more easily discharge them; bat: we halve 'many others, and much more,grievotai"to some 'of 06. We are' taxed t wtce tui•Muoli for our IdlenesS4 three: timed tu;rinuckhy our Pricle. and tpur_tipip . s.asmtic ll Folly and from these he co mmissioners cannot ease or deliver us by abatement. ' • • •I• ~ '''!i KossuT tt's E Lou,u Erre Loyul •va pc r thus spealo ;ol'the greo.t Hungarian "Ile has stamped' himselE, as fat'tho, greatest oMfor of,the day. To, practicfo, fa r-sighto Pco,olq adorned Cubtlen, the accomplished ern. ley, ihe cunning Tiders;'thd pante 'Web. 'stir, the poetic Vietoi the States. Mitalike mady qualities which Missuth as an °faint cam. bines,"