Bz rEEN J. STATILE, 37Ti l YEAR. TERMS OF THE COMPILER. 053'The Ilepublic f,,,nipiler is published every, Monday morning, by HENRY J. SrAttLE, a t 51,75 per annum if paid in ,advance—s2.oo - per annum if not paid in advance. No sub scription discontinued, unless at the option of the publisher, until alt arrearages arc paid. ADVEUTISEMENTS inserted at the usual rates. ,Joa WORK. done, neatly, cheaply, and with dispatch. sat-Office on South Baltimore street, direct ly opposite Wampler's Tinning Establishment, one and a half squares from the Court House. cell dicePoctro. Prom the Philadelphia Merchant NY WORSHIP. • BY ALICE CABBY I hare no seasons and no times To think of heaven—sometimes at night go up on a stair of rhymes And find the journey very bright: And for some accidental good • Wrought by me i saints have near me stood I do nut think my heart is hard Beyond the common heart of men, And vet sometimes the best award Smites on it like a stone; and then A sunbeam that may careless stray In at my window, makes me pray The flower I've chanced on in some,nook, • Giving its wild heart to, the — bee, Has taught me meekness like a 'book Of written preaching; and to see - . A cornfield ripe, an orchard . red, - Has made me bow in shame, my head. • Of stated rite and formula, •A formal use the meaning wears; . When mostly in Clod's works I see And feel his 'love, I make my prayers,—, And by the peace that comes, I know My worship is accepted so. Select HERE SHE GOES, THERE SHE GOES. The folloWing amusing and well told story was published in one' of the city, papers of Gotham,nbout a dozen years ago. It occasion ed at the time a good deal of merriment : Not long since, two stylish-looking persons put up for the night in the upper part of the city. On the morrow, after ordering their bill, they sent for the landlord, who was not long in waiting,on his aristocratic guests. "I wish tp pprc.l2,;_kse that old clock up stairs ; will you sell it - ?" asked the elder, while the younger lit - cigar, and cast his eyes over the columns of a newspaper which lay upon -the table. The landlord, who had set no great value upon the clock, except •as an - heir-loom, began to suspect that it might possess the-vir tues of Martin Ileywood's chair,. and be Milled with coin ; and almost involuntarily, the three ascended to the room which contained it. "The fact is," said the elder, "I once won twenty pounds with a clock like that. "Twenty rionnds !" ejaculated. the landlord. "Yes ! you see there was one like it in a room down in Essex, and a fellow bet me he could keep his fore-finger swinging with the pendu lum for an hour only saying, 'Here she goes, there she goes.' . He couldn't do it. I Walked the money out of him in no time." "You did"! You couldn't walk it out of me. I'll bet you ten - pounds I can do it on the spot!" "Done !" cried the knowing one The clock struck eight, and with his back to the table and the door, the landlord poped into a chair— "Here she go* there she -goes !" and his finger waved in eikrve, his eyes fully fixed on the pendulum. The fellows behind interrupt ed, ••%Vheie's the Money ? Plank the money !" The landlord was not to lose in that way. His fore-finger slowly and surely went with the pendulum, and his left hand disengaged his purse, from his pocket, which he threw behind hiw'on the table. All wassilent ; the dapper man at length exclaimed— •• Shall I deposit the, money in the hands of the waiter ?" "Here she goes. there she goes !' was the only answer. One of the wags left the room. The landlord beard him go down stairs ; but lie was not to be disturbed by that trick. Presently the waiter entered, and touching Tupon the shoulder. asked, "Mr. B—, are you crazy ? What are you, doing ?" "Here she goes - , there she goes 1" he respond ed, his hand waving the fore-finger as_ before. The waiter rushiA down stairs : he called one of the neighbors and asked him to go up. They ascended, and the neighbor: seizing hini gently by the collar in an imploring voice said : "Mr. B—, do not sit here: Come, - come down stairs ; what can possess you to sit here?" "Here she goes, there she goes," was the sole reply, and The solemn face and theeslc - Wly moving finger settled the matter. He was mad !- "He is mad," whispered the in a low voice; "we must go for a doctor." The landlord was not to be duped, he wa not to be deceived. although the whole town came to interrupt hiM. "You had better call up his added the friend "Here she goes, there she goes !" repeated the landlord and his hand still moved on. • In a minute his wife entered full of agony of soul. "My dear,''-' she kindly said, "hook on' me. his your wife who sneaks'." 3rittspaprr-----Vtuntiii -to 380 Agritnittar,- "Here she goes, there she goes !" and his. hand continued ; to go, but his wife wouldn't go ; she would stay, and he thought:She was determined to conspire . against him and niake him lose the wager. She wept, and she con tinued-- - -What' cause Jhave yOu for this ? Why do you do so ? Has your Villfe-," "'Here 'she goes; there she -goes !" and his finger seemed to be tracing her airy progress. for anything she could ascertain to the con trary. • “illy dear,” she still continued, thinking that the thought of his child whom he fondly loved, would teneto restore him, "shall I call up your daughter ?" "Ilere she goes, there she goes !" the land lord again seperted, his eyes becoming more and more fixed and glazed, from the steadiness of the gaze. A slightstnile, which had•a great effect upon the minds of those present, played upon his face, as he thought upon the many unsuccessful resorts to win him from - his pur pose and of his success in baffling them. The physician entered. - lie stood by the side of the-busy-man. lie looked at him in silence, shook his head, and to the anxious inquiry of the wife, answered— • n►adam ! The reWer,persons here the betteT.:Tife tnaid — lfid:better stay away ;- do not Itotthe maid—" . "Here she goes, there she goes yet again, in harmony with the waving finger, issued from the lips attic landlord. • "A consultation, I think, will be necessary," said' the physician. "Will you run for Dr. A-- ?" The kind neighbor buttoned up his-coat and hurried from the room. - In a few--minutes Dr. A—, with another medical gentleman, entered. ~ "This is . a sorry- sight," said he to the doc tor' with him. "Indeed it is, sir," was the reply. "It is a sudden attack, one of the—" "Here she goes, there she goes !" was the sole reply. The physicians stepped into a corner and consulted together. "Will you be good .enough to run fora bar ber ? We must have his head shaved and blistered," said Dr. A—. "Ah, poor dear husband," said .tlfe lady• "I fear he will never know his miserable VW I " "Here she goes, there she goei ?" said the landlord, with a little -more emphasis, and a, moire nervous, yet sdettituined . waving of the finger in concert with the pendulum : for the minute hand was near the twelve—that point which was to put ten pounds into his pocket. if the hand arrived at it without suffering hini self to be interrupted. The wife, in a low, bewailing tone,,contin uid her utterances— "NO ! never ; nor his daughter." "Here she goes, .1.1 - rere_she goes !" -almost shouted the landlord, as the minute hand ar rived at the desired point. The barber arrived ; he was naturally a talkative man, and when the doctor made`some casual remark,-reflecting upon the qTfirlity of the instrument he was about to use ; lie replied : "Ah, ha! Monsieur, you say yer ver bad to razor—tes beautiful—eh ?—look—very fine, isn't he ?" "Here she goes, there she goes !" screamed the landlord. his hand waving on—on, his face gathering a smile, and his whole frame in readiness to be• convulsed with joy. The barber was amazed. "here she goes, there she goes," he responded, in the best English he could use. "Vare ? vare shall I begin ? Vat his dat he say ?" "Shave his head at once !" interrupted the doctor, while 'the lady sank into a chair. "Here she.goes, there she goes ?" for the last time, cried the landlord, as the clock. struck the hour if :nine, as he sprang from his seat in an ecstacy of delight, screaming at the top of his voice, as be skipped about the rooin— "I've won it won it!" "What'?" said the wailer. "What ?"said the doctors. "What ?" re-echoed the wife. , 'Why, the wager—ten poUnds." But cast ing his eyes around the room, and missing the young men who induced him to watch the clock, he asked— ( 4 "Where are those young men who supped here last night ? eh ? quick-.where are they ?" •'They went away in their phteton nearly an hour ago, sir ?" was the reply of the waiter. The truth flashed like a thunderbolt through his mind. They had taken his pocket-book with twenty-one pounds therein, and decamped —a couple of swindling sharpers, with wit, to back them. SEVEN MILES IN FIVE MrsTits.—Mr. God ard, an dEronaut, ascended from New - York, on irra- balloon, and wa - s - ca - rri - ed - bra violent gale Seven nines in five minutes. when be thought it time to descend. x _ • . DIFFERENCE BEN ETWE "..No , W "Tuffsr.' —A woman said in the police court the other day that, before ma'rriage, her husband pre tended to much struck with her, but now e-Wa4..every day struck by him. D'lskender Bey, a colonel in the Turkish cavalry;of whom frequent mention is made in the present war, is described as eighty-three years of age, of medium size but: powerful frame. ' - - ittritturr, .3rts anW lriturrs, , ct4r 311Arkrtg r _Orntral Ihnuatirfurtign 51burtiBing, Rinumitrut, kr. GETTYSBURG. MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1854. Extraordinary Case. The Paris correspimdent of the Columbus Journal translates the following extraordinary and incredible story from late German paperS.; A very rich old lady; the Countess de K—, had by her first marriage,' two twins sons, Whom she loved fondly. After having trent : bled a long while for their existence, she de cided to quit - Germany. her native 'country; where she possessed, independent of a vast and magnificent chateati. an immense proper ty under rent. She traveled, consulted the most eminent phycians, and finally fixed her residence in Italy. There, under the influence of a beautiful sky, the two boys grew up, but they preserved the excessive nervous impressi bility which had, since their infancy, put their lives in peril. ,The two boys had between them a retnarkable resemblance ; they both engaged in the culture,of arts, but especially to ainting.' At sixteen years of age, they were already cited as masters ; but at this epoch a new crisis appeared : the same syrop toms;llre-sanie pains ; the physicians decided that to prevent the return of these nervous crisises, the young men should be separated. They obstinately refused at first, but vanquish; ed by the supplications of their - distracted mother, they consented to the painful scpera -tion.--It w-as-left- to-chance-which-one-should leave the maternal roof, and it fell on Alfred. , Alfred K. started on the tour of Greece and Egypt : the journey was to continue a year. I *Allred wrote - r•egular•ly every day to his.mother and brother ; he sent them his drawings and his pictures. But what was remarkable, the young man who remained in Italy lived so per fectly the life of his brother, that he deSigned and painted exactly and simultaneously what his brother designed . and painted after nature. Each time that a package arrived from Athens or Alexandria, the Paintings, the moat ellsthat they contained had already their duplicates in the studio of the brother—duplicates so faith ful that the artists •themseltes could find no difference. One day, returning froin a journey in Upper Egypt, Alfred K. died and the physicians sent to the family a detailed account of all the cir cumstances which attended the_deatb_of.the young man. The same day, at the same hour, and under circumstances, and with sympteins precisely identical, - the brother who remained in Italy died, pronouncing the same words as his' brother had pronounced. The desolate mother, who was yet young, being but sixteen years older than her—sons, rem' trod to Germany, v. here her husband oc enpieda high position un ler government. Two years after her return, site gave birth a second time to two twin - boyg, who resembled, trait lilts trait, tne "twin sons whom she had so un fortunately lost. 'hey received at their bap tism the names of their deceased brothers. All the circumstances which had presided at the delOpement of the first children, were rel 4 produced precisely with the second ; the same nervous paroxyistns ; the same mysterious sympathies. Again the mother was advised to travel. This time she went into Spain ; the boys exhibited the same taste for the arts, par ticularlyfor painting. , At the age of sixteen, and day for day with the' first brothers they fell sick. Then separation was ordered, but this time the mother resisted energetically ; she was vanquished, however, by the persistence of their malady and the continued perstfasion of the physicians, who declared that they would die if they remained together. on ac count of their extraordinary resembl ance, of I regeir 'nervous organization, which' absOrhed mutually the principles of their existence. The mother consented that one of them shoilld make a voyage into the south of Spain. Chance again desi ,, nated the one who bore 1!) the name of Allied. The same phenomenon of intuition was reproduced. The one design ed at ,Madrid or Barcelona -what the other painted at Cadiz, and with the same wonderful resemblance of- toueh. Tile day thatelfred was ready to start home to re:min his mother and brother, he fell sick and died at the same hour that his brother died at Cadiz in the arms . of his mother, and hoth pronounced at the same time the words, which their de ceased brothers pronounced eighteen years ago. WITTY LANTMCOP Y. —An Irishman on trial pleaded not guilty, and the prosecuting attorney proceeded to call Mr. Furkisson as, a witness. With the utmost innocence, Patrick turned his face to the Court and said, "Do I understand your honor that Furkisson is to be a witness forenist me again ?" The judge said it seemed so. "Well, thin, yer honor, I p!ade guilty, not bceanse I am guilty, for I am as innocent as your honor's suckling-babe at the breast, but just on account of saving Mister Furgisson's sowl." said a lady to her hus band "that I am a g-oi - b l g to have a still neck." • 'Not at- all improbable. my dear,' replied her r,pow,e, —I have. :,een sr.roug L ,D.u.- - Moin of it. ever ai nee we were married." . r,,.,••1 go through my work,'' as the needle said to the idle- buy. ''But not till you're hard pushed," -- as - the idle boy raid to the needle. • a": - /"The man behind the age was overthrown , by the advancing civilization of the rising gen era.tion. Bostma Post.- - No, he wasn't. He bought two bottles of •letchup" anl i k;ot &heal. —Lnuiaville Dens. "TRUTH IS MIGHTY, AND WILL - PREVAIL." ATftro OF Curtrors ()CF.:RMS.—What is th depth of the deepest anxiety? When a man looks well can he see any better? What is the dktfinee of an object when it, is the farthest from our amnia A YOUNG GIANT. —A young farmer of Little ton, Mas..achusetts, who visits Boston very of ten to sell produce, has attracted great notice in that city by his giant size. He weighs 2il) pounds, is sit feet eleven inches Wet, is only 21 years old, and is growing yet. (JAn Irishman complained of his physi cian, that he stuffed him so with drugs, that he was sick after he got well. The Elephant Show in Paris. A ,Paris correspondent of the Boston Post, gives the ,following account of the really extra . ordinary performance otelephant.s in that city : **Sine I saw an elephant stand on his bead at the- circus in Paris, I have not been more amused than I was an evening or two-situ, _. • the Cique de rlmperatrice, at an animated lad der-. The elephabts were evidently young and docile creatures; and appeared - in the immense• area of sawdust and tan to be somewhat small er than usual. They were handled by a mus cular fellow, who had more control over them than any mahout I ever saw in India. They waltzed, danced, promenaded and walked on the& head. I never laughed more in my life than at this singular performance. To see the trunks and tusks plaoe themselves firmly on a small raised platform in the ring, and' then to hold the huge slouching legs and diminutive tail gradually elevated, the act disclosing a vast expanse of dirty, tawny-looking belly, was infi nitely ludicrous. The elephants seemed to en joy the attitude, too, very much, and disclosed no modesty whatever' in revealing 'the .whole beauty of their construction to an intelligent public. A reward of acracker or an apple inva riably elicited a repetition. and once,ain the ar dor of success. one aspiring animal tumbled fbr warilTon to his back"! His fall shook the house, and for a tnoment br two decomposed him; but he quickly recovered himself, and soon calla''. ted his companion, wha, in his_natural attitude had been a quiet but, observi IT spectator oldie effects of a tho lofty thraying of the hind legs 'towards the ceiling. They subsequently inter laced their trunks, and to . a diseriminating strain from the orchestra, performed a series of evolutions which, if therwere not characterized by an extraordinary rapidity were at least dis tinguishable for the dignity attending their ac complishment. Feats with their trunks they exhibited in profusion ; but the ground and lof ty tumbling and the waltzing Were things, to we as supremely ridiculous as they were' otr • derfully . industrious. They :circulated their keeper, at his command, in every direction, sa luted the audience, etribraced• each other and gracefully retired from-the aka; bearing be tween them the biped whose 'nature, in etnnpar ison, appeared so contemptible; and overwhelm ed with npplanses and laudation from the de lighted spectators. All Paris flocked to see them during the engagement, and the owner, I suppose, reaped a handsome Ihrtune. The a -mated ladder is also an extraordinary perform ance. Nerve, skill and composure distinimish the individual• who innnoralized himself night ly for five franks a sight. Ho mounts a narrow ladder some ten feet high said from the topmost round really appears to (imbue it with human intelligence and animation. It strvts, trots, gallops. beats a measure. or is stationary under his influence.. As a finale, he, holds it and himself in equillibrium and fiddles the carnival of Pagnnini in a very Creditable inanner:x.• The ladder does not move a hair's breadth; it scents to be driven in the ground and the man tied to 'it, utterly motionless do both remain (with the eXception of the motion necessary to the violin playing) until he has concluded—then both walk away as steadily as possible. Ravers ladder,feat is decidedly inferior to it, though at Howard Athenzeitm I remember to have seen him exploit very Sublimely: The leg develop ment necessary to their performanee, we can both believe, must be enormous. The fellow, however is like almost all , the French circus performers—short, square, and very quick and graceful in his movements. There are many other entertainments incident to the' Empres's eirc t , which ar e equally striking and interest . ing, hitt I will not exhaust your patience in de tailing them. TnisK. 7 Thought engenders thought. Place one idea on paper, another will follow it, and still another, until you have written a page. yo u ca n no t fath o m your mind. There is a well of thought there which has no bottom. 'The more you draw from it, the more clear ttiul fruitful it will be. if you neglect to think your self, and use other people's thoughts, giving them utterance only, you will never know what you are capable of. At first your ideas may come out lumps, homely and shapeless, Ina time and perseverance will arrange and polish them. Learn to think, and the better will you express your ideas. A DarnTrri. COMPLIMENT. =--A - compliment is recorded as having been paid by a rustic, who had never before tasted ice cream, to a lady who at an evening party had helped him to a plate of -succesATul frigid milk," under its usual simple designation of "cream." '•Your cream is very sweet," said he, "but aint it a 'cede lecher.' with frost." UNINTERRUPTED FIGfITINO ,IN TUE CRIMEA SEBASTOPOL FORMALLY INVESTED. The foreign paper's from Liverpool to the 6th inst., brought by the Africa at New York, have come to hand, and Clearlysturarthat—the-fall -ot e astopo is utter y a se, long+ a to _latest date thegillies were investing it. The next steamer from England will bo the. Washington, sailing titmice on the .11th. Tile WAR---THE CRIMEA. Various fragments of intelligence has arrived at London on the Gth, preceded kir, a dispatch front Viscount Stratford de Ratcliffe, the Eng lish Ambassador at Constantinople, which, while showing_ Sebastopol Was. not taken to the 28th Septeinber, also show that the allies in the Crimea had made a movement upon Rataklays, which is some ten miles south of Sebastopol, while Alma and the other points at which.they had previously met the Russians, were considerably north . of that fortress. The. indications, therefore, are that the movement. to Balaklays was part of a general arrange ment of.the allied forces, consequent upon the total rout of the Russians at Alma and Belhek, and the retreat of Prince Menchikoll into' the interior. The allieS thus appear to_possess the entire country at mind Sebastopol, from Bclhek to4lltklays; (a distance of 1;3 or ‘ l4 with Sebastopol fronting to sea. between them,) and the place is, therefOre, completely nvest ed. Prince nehi koff's escape :to Sei las topid , with half his army, is owing to the-allies being at present totally without cavalry: The na ture of their flight after the battle - of Alma is demonstrated by their having been obliged to leave their wounded on the field, 300 of whom have -already arrived at Odessa, whither they were sent by the allies under a flag of truce, One story circulated is, that fourteen Russian vessels ,of war made a vaiii attempt to escape front Sebastopol. The details of the battle of ; Alina show the severity of the combat.. The steamer Nile. which left Constantinople on the 25th, arrived at - -Marseilles with despatches for the .French government, relative to this sanguinary affair, and we.learn from a telegraphic message that the English loss i killed and wounded, instead of being 1,400, as at first stated, was over 2.000, while that of the French wits but 1,460. but Gen.' Bonet was killed. "The - Russians numbered 40,000 teen and 100 cannon,- find their loss in killed and wounded is variously estimated at 6,000 Lo 10.000, the former being probably 'the more correct. The Fury was on the way to England witli the despatches to that government. Letters from Nriena, October 2d, state that the reserves of the Wiles were not brought into to action. The English, the Turks - and the French, in different positions, did their work so well that the Russians never had a chance. After their defeat on the Alma, the Russians regained_their fintitications without making a halt. The Zouaves, Tirailleurs, and Scotch Fusilliers distinguished thetusel ves. The Poor Boy's College. "The printing office," says the New York Globe,. "has indeed proVed a better College to many a pour boy, l►a; graduated .more useful and conspicuous n►eml)e►s of society, has brought more intellect, and turned into practi cal, useful channels. awakened more mind, gen erated inure active ai►d elo;ated thoughts, than wavy of the literary Colleges of the 'country. How many a dunce has pa stied through these Colleges with no tangable proof of fitness other than his inanimate piece of parchu►Cnt 4 himself if possible inure inanimate than his leathern dipinu►a! -There is something in the very at mosphere of a printing office calculated to awa ken the n and inspire a thirst for knowledge. A bey who cuu►n►ences in such a school, will have his tolents and ideas brought out ; if lie has no mind to be drab, n out, the' boy himself will be driven out." SELF CiovintsmENT OF CIIILDRE N.—.d Modern writer says:--"I know nothing moile touching than the efforts of sellgovernment of which4li t tie children are capable, when the best parts of their nature are growing vigorously under the warmth and light of parental love. How bea wild is the self-cotitrol of title little creature who stifles his sobs of pain bec . anse his mother's pitying eye is upon his in tender sorrow ! or that'ofthe babe who abstains from play and sits quietly on the floor,. because somebody is' ill! I have known a very young child slip over to the cold side of the bed on a winter's night, Ihati'a grown sister might find a warm one. I have known a little girl submit spontaneously to hours of irksome restraint and disagreeable employment s merely because it was right. Such wills as these, so strong and yet so hum- - ble, so patient_and sollignifiedoyere never im painf,d by fear,_bot flourished thus under the in fluence of love, with its sweet excitements and. holy supports." [r - j - - -A child was stung in the eye•lid by a asp - , -- trea - r - Wheeliiig,, Va., a feiv.--=days-sine• and inflamation of the brain and death ensued within thirty hours. tySugar is the substance most universally diffused through all the natural products. Let married people take a hint from this provision of nature. (T, Dr. Franklin, in speaking of education, says:—‘•lf a man empties his purse into his hp*, no — elle - can take it from him." TWO DOLLARS ,A-YEAR,._ ff===IMMISM New Grip and Salutation of the • Know Nothings. The new grip and salutation adopted by our Know Nothing friends is as follows : The challenging 'Party lays his right hand upon his left breast, with all the i i_ • c `tented exce i t the little fin _er. tihich. is inward toward the,palm of the hand. The answer is by holding up the right-hand with the first and middle tinger'extended up ward and the third and little finger bent to wards the palm, the thumb being placed over them, • . The grip is then exelianged, consisting of an ordinary shake of the band: with the exception of a doubling - inward of the little fingers. the little finger of ono 'party crossing the ,little finger of the other. The party challenged asks, "Where did you get that ?"_ To which the ansiver is, "I knoir.". Then the former asks, "What • is'the word r' The answer is, "I will divide it with. you." "Washing.," says the one .party. "Ton," says the. other.. The meaning- of this -being ASnINGTON ; no party repeating the first two syllables of hiS name and the other the latter. --Pennsylvanian. -tr7ll ever there was a time when it Imes* thepetnoeratic party to stand by its Ptinel ple-s, andshow. no iffthiliCenee to trait - ors, that time is now. They have conspired Against its doctrines, and have adopted a platfortn 'Pre pared for tlietn by the Whigs ;. they have' de. feated an honest and pure man, who was mit candidate for Governor; and they haVe. dons their best•to deprive the State of the services of one of the noblest judicial minds that . have ever done honor to her jurisprudence, in order to elevate-in his place Thomas H. - Baird. a man whose total unfitness for the position ren dered - his nomination an absurdity. Pittsburg • NEW COUNTERFEITS..—The following new counterfeits. have recently been put in circula. tiun : Farmer's Bank, • Lansingburg, N. Y...-1018 altered from 1 Vignette, train of care. White Plains Bank, White Plains. N. Y.-- s'a and 10's, altered from 2's. Vignette, female and sheaves of grain. - _ Shoe and Leather Dealer's Bank, ,Boston, Mass.-50's and 100's altered from'l's. Vig; , nette, warehouse, &c. ShoemakerS and curri, era on ends. Gracer's and Producer's Bank, Providence; R. 1.-s's altered from l's. Vignette, twq females. Bank-nf-Bainbridge,--Tenn 10's letter A, dated June 1, 1850., Engraving very coarse—has the appearance of a-weod cut. Island City Rank, Now York.-10's 'altered from l's: Vignette, 'ship building, &c." . • rfintROICS THN: concluding , an article upon this subject, the N. Y. *rive says :--To the lost, the, livelong hours pieced., ing the final engulphing of the ship -were a thousand times More terrible than the pangs of parting life. flow ninny thoughts' , of the' loved ones at honie, yvhose faces they 'should see no more ; how many fond remembrances. how many earnest prayers, how many forgiv ing of injuries and hopes of being forgivettwere crowded into the last mortal moments preced ing eternity ! The mere drowning is nothing, ---a gasp for breath—a suffusion of the brain —a serene insensibility—and that which was known on earth as a human souttningles a drop in the - ocean of the Infinite." 81:13STITUTE FOIL COAL.—Now that coal is worth considerable, if not more, a cheap sub stitute is desirable, which the Washington, Star says may be prepared as .follows : 04 third clay, one-third chopped siraW,,one-tliii coal-dust, mixed together „ tdc a ~prup'g .co' sistency, made into 4oclis.sithilar to,bri+6, when dried in the st .: o' r b o t ther I?eat, it wi ' be come hard and suable - folgurning h oveg; ovens, &c. — GREAT - - YIELD 077A - PPLNS:=I.IIe, 1111.8 — be011 - gathered from a singles.apple tree, upon the , farm of Mr. Nehemiah Perkins,ln Topstield. thz extraordinary quantity of one hundred busliets (forty barrels) of apples. The tree has always been a great bearer, freqUently producing from fifty _to sixty bushels. The ,tree is about fifty years old. =Salem Observer. , FINE CATTLE.-AL thelVythe county (Va.) Agricultural Show last week, Mr. Stephen McGavock exliisited five three year old cattle which weig td respectively 1850.18 , 174.1900, 1920, and 2i:05, averaging 1902 pounds. Mr. James T. Crockett exhibited a yearling steer that weighed 1225 pOunds. A LOGE 1106.—The Madison (Ind.) Banner says : "Martin Roberts. who resides on the ri_ver,_six_rniles_below_Madison—in Kentucky,_ informs us that he has a hog that /weighs up wards of NINETEEN DUNDRED POUNDS, which he has sold for two hundred dollars." Cuai Port RINGIIONE.-44jInVe noticed in the WiEfriffl of a ringbone in a colt, and answer : Take high wines of cider or brandy, add saltpetre as much as will dissolve, and wash the ringbone two or three times a day. One ()tiny neighbours cured one of three or four years' standing, by the ap• plication a few times.—Boston Cultivator. (1:7In Allegheny county, two Whigs, one Democrat, and two Native Amerie.ans. bate been etected to the State Legislature. . NO. 5. urned =I , an inquiry