Br HENRY J.* STATILE. W u YEAR. TERNS OP "THE COMPILER. gar Me - Repti &lime Compiler is published every Monday morning, by HENRY J. STAHL% at $ L 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 all arrearages are paid. ADVERTISEMENTS inserted at the usual rates. Jon Winth - , done, neatly, cheaply, and with - dispatch. gat-Office on South Baltithore street, direct ly opposite Wampler's Tinning Establishment, one and a half spiares froni the Court House. Poetrn. From Chambers' Ediuburgit Journal THE DEAD CZAR, Lay him - beneath his snows, The great Norge-giant, who, in these, lest days Troubled the nations. Gather decently Ilia emperor's robes around him. nfis but a man— Thus demi-god. Or ( rather it was a man. It is---a little dust; that will corrupt As fast 'as any nameless dust that lies 'Heath Alina's grass or lialaklava's vines. No vineyard grave for him! No quiet bones By river margin laid. where o'er far seas Do children's prayers and womett's memories come,' Like angels, and sit by the sepulchre. Flaying: the;e were men who knew the count, Pront-faced. the coat of Honor, nor did shrink Bruin its - full payment; knowing how to die, They died—as men." • But this tan ?—Ah! for him Pale solemn state. church thanthrgs. funerals grand, The stony , womb sarcophagus, and thou Oblivion. • No—oblivion wore renown To , that fierce howl which rolls from land to land •Art thou fallen, •Lucifer, Bon of the Morning?" Or condemning: "'nue Perish the wicked." Or blaspheming : "Here Lies our Belshazzar, our Seimacherib, Our Pharaoh—he whose heart God hardened, Bo thit he would not let the .people go." Self-glorifying sinners: Why, this min Was but as other men ; you, Levite Who shut yolguspainted ears and prate of hell, When, outsidWureli-doors, congregations poor Praise heaven,-in their own way; you. Autocrat Of all the hamlet. who add lield to Odd, And house to hiMse. whose slavish children cower Before , your tyrant footstep.; or you, fierce Fanatic,and ambitious egotist. Who ank God stoops from his great universe,- To lay his tinker on your puny head. And crown it. that you henceforth loud parade Your maggotship through all' the wondering world : "I am - Um Lord's anointed:" Pooh; and blind ! This Cznr—this Emperor—this dethroned corpse, Lying so straightly in an icy calm, ,• Grander than ..tii - ereigiity, was but as ye; No better, and no worse—Heaven Mend wi all ! Carry him:filial and bury him—Death's pewee Be on his memory! Merry by him bier sits silent; or says only in meek words : '•Let him -who is without sin 'mongst you all, Cast the arst stone." Select itlisceltann. Deaths by Scalding and Burning. We still see reported, almost daily, an ap palling number of deaths by burns and scalds, not one of Which we take it upon ourselves to say nerd prove fatal, or would do so, if a few pounds of wheat flour could be promptly ap plied to the wounds made by fire, and repeated till the inflammatory stage had passed. ,We have never known a fatal case of scalding or burning, in which this practice has bten pur sued, during more than 30 years' experience. and having treated hundreds in both public and private practice. We have known the most extensive burns, by falling into caul drons of boiling oil, and even molten copper, and yet the patients were rescued by this sim ple and cheap'reinetly-, which from its infalli ble.success should supplant all the fashionable nostrums, whether oil, cotton. lead-water, ice, turpentine or pain extractors, every one of which ha 's been tried a thousand times with a fatal result, and the victims have died in ex criltiating agony, when a few handsfull of flour would have calmed them to sleep, and rescued them from pain and death., Humani ty should prompt the profession to publish and re-publish the facts on this subject, which are established ,by the authority of standard medical works on both sides of the Atlantic. Flour is the remedy, and the only one, in se vere cases of scalding and burning. casualties which else so often destroy life. Let us keep it before the people, while the explosion of steam boilers and burning fluid lamps are so rife all over the country.—pmerican Medical Gazette. VALCATILE RECIPE FOR experienced whitewasher sends us the follow ing recipe 'for making a brilliant and durable wash, which he has tested hymany years' use. and assures us is never-failing. It is worth a year's subscription to any of our readers, but , we give it to theni for nothing : This article, as ordinarily made, rubs off the walls after it becomes dry, soiling clothes and everything coming in contact with it. This may be obviated by slackening the lime in cold water, stirring it meanwhile, and then applying—after dissolving in water—White Vitriol (Sulphate of Zinc) in the proportion of 4 pounds to a bushel of good lime, making it the consistency of rich milk. The Sulphate of Zinc will cause - the wash to harden and to prevent the lime from ruhhing off. B. 11. B. DON'T STAND STII.L.-If you do you will be run over. Motion —a et ion —progress--these are Words which now fill the-vaults of heaven with their stirring-demands, - and make human ity's heart pulsate with a stronger bound. Advance. or stand aside do not block up the w ay,and hinder the career of others. There is something for all to do : the world is becom ing mute and move known, wider in magni tude, closer in interest, more loving and more eventful than of old. Not in deeds of daring -not in the ensanguined field : not in chains and terrors ; not in blood and tears, and gloom : but in the leaping, vivifying, exhileratiug im pulses of a better birth of the soul. . SITERIORITY 01' AMHACAN 1110N--ITI a lec ture recently- read-befut e _ the_Londou_Societv ofArts, by Prof. NVilson, on the Iron Industry or t h e u n it e d stares. he awarded the prize for superiority in quality to the American over English irOn. fur mill °ads. —English iron rails, it was stated, were used because they were so cheap:" On all the curves, and places re quiring the best iron. American iron was pre ferred, and the mamifacturer found a ready market for all he could make at his own fur nace. FADING Fon WANT OF FLATTEILT.—Lady Blessingtnn once wrote : I fed that [am growing old.-for--want-of_wmebody_to_telL nie that lam looking as young as ever'. Charm ing falsehood.! ThOe is a vasi, &al of vital air in Living w0i11..3." 3 famill 311 1 11,15ppr----Enotrit to liofitirs,, 3grialturry litmtort, arts .Wait ;kiting, tOt Ajorkrts, rnrral romutit out /snip 3tlttlligtutt, luttstuttut, Fishes and their Migrations. 3 , From an interesting article iii — the April number -of Putrinni's Menak4.entitled "Was tine in Motion," we clip the following4ara , graphs : - For known and for unknown purposes, in the tiny monntain brooks and in the wide ocean, f s'les are seen in unceasing nation, darting in all directions, traveling now single and now in shoals: Their regular journeys are mostly undertaken for the purpose of spawn ing ; the delicate mackerel movet southward when its' time comes, and the beautiful sardine of the Mediterranean goes in - spring westward, and returns in autumn'to the east. • The stur geon of: northern 'Europa is seen singly to ascend the - great rivers of the continent, and the ornal or Migratory salmon of the polar seas travels, we know not how, through river and lake, up into -Baikal; and there swims, in whimsical alternations, but always in immense crowds, first on the southern and then on. the northern bank. The travels of the Salmon are. probably best known; because the fish was a favorite already in the days of Pliny. and 'Yet, strange enough, is found in every sea in the Arctic, near the equator, and off New Holland, only not in the Mediterranean. They press iii large, triangular masses up all the great northern rivers of Europe. Asia, and America. They enter Bohemia with Shakespeare by, sea, sailing up , the river Elbe ; s they approach Switzerland in the green waters of- the Rhine, a,pd even the foot of the Cordilleras by a sjour= ney of 3,000 miles up the .Amazon ! Their crowds are not unfrequently so-dense that they actually stem for awhile the current Of mighty rivers ; still these bands are formed -with, great regularity. The strongest and largest females lea, followed by others of the same sex, traveling two and two at regular intervals ; after them come the males in like order. W its a noise like the distant roaring of a storm, they rush up the stream, now sporting in easy, graceful motion, and now darting ahead _with lightning speed that the eye can not follow. Do they come to some rock or wall that im pedes their way, they leap with incredible force, and repeat the effort until. they have, overcome the difficulty ; it is even said that, at the foot of the cateracts, they will-take their tail in their mouth, and then suddenly letting it go, like-an elastic spring, rise twelve or fif teen fee tin -the air.- And thus they travel on, undismayed and unfired, until tjiey have found a suitable place for depositing their eggs, and with the same marvelous inAinet- return, year after year.- to the distant ocean. * *. * ' • The herring is a small. insignificant fish, yet it gives food to millions", and employment to not less than 3.000 decked vessels, not to speak of all the open boats employed-in the same fishery. Where their home is,, man does not know ; it is only certain. that they are not met with beyond a-certain degree of northern lati tude, and that the genuine herring never en-' ters the Mediterranean, and hence remained un known to the ancients. In April and June, all of a sudden, innumerable masses wear in. the northern seas, forming vast banks, often thirty miles, long and ten miles wide. Their depth has never'been satisfactorily ascertained', and their denseness may be judged by the fact, that lances and harpoons thrust in between them sink not and move pot. remain standing upright ! Divided into bands, herrings also move in - a certain order. Long before their arrival, already their coming is noticed by the flocks of sea-birds that watch them - from on high, while sharks are seen to sport around them, and a thick oily or slimy substance is spread over their columns, coloring the sea in daytime, and shining with a mild, mysterious light in a dark, still night. The sea•ape, the "monstrous chimera" of the learned, prvcedes them, and is hence by fishermen palled the king of - the herrings. Then there are first seen single males, often three or four days in. ad vance of the great army ; next follow the strongest and largest, and after them enormous shoals, countless like the sand on the sea-shore and the 'stars in heaVen. They seek places that abound in stones and marine plants, where to spawn, and like other animals they frequent the localities to which they have be come accustomed, at a regular time, so that they may be expected as surely' as the sun rises did sets. Other fishes have strange peculiarities con nected with their travels.. Thus, we are told that the mackerel spend their winter in. what would appear to others, a most uncomfortable position. In the Arctic as well as in the Medi terranean, as soon as winter,comes. they de liberately plunge their head and the anterior part of o their body into deep mud, keeping their tails erected, standing straight up. The posi tion they do not change until spring, when they emerge, in incredible numbers, from their hiding-places and go southward' for the pur pose of depositing their eggs in more genial waters. Still they are so firmly wedded to this element that they die the instant they are taken out of the water, and then shine with phosphorescent light. The eel is , the strangest of traveling fishes he even performs journeys on land. In hot, dry summers, when ponds and pools are ex hausted, he boldly leaves his home. and wind ing through thick grass. makes his Way by night to the nearest water. Ile is a great gourmand. moreover, and loves young tender peas so dearly that he will leave the river it self and climb up : steep banks to satisfy his de sire, and, alas !o fail into snares of wicked men. Other fish tiiirsel in large crowds all night long, and a perch in Tranque bar not only creeps on shore, but actually climbs up tall fan-palms, in :pursuit of certain shell-fish, - which form its favorite food. Covered with viscid slime, he glides smoothly over the rough bark '; spines, which he may sheath and unfold at will, serve him like hands to hang by, and with the aid of side fins and a power ful tail he pushes himself upward, thus com pleting the strange picture of fish and shell fish dwelling high on lofty trees. _i=he.art .of_Counterfeiting Bank Notes has reached such n. state of perfection by mean 4 of the photographic process, as to put banking institutions to their mettle in devising plans to defeat their efforts. Thi, seems to be attained 4,3- printing the note partly in .red ink ; such for instance as the nanre-of the hank or the denomination of the bill, inasmuch as by the photographic prooeNs, thus far,_ duplicates of one color, only. can be copied. It is a curious fact that, during the pe riod of One hundred and thirty-eight years. the first born of the Austrian hoube has always been a girl' y 7 Prodlgal. arc Nirn of Lulocrb, ao butter /hub are tot)1 u of gr u Uzi. GETTYSBURG, PA. : MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1855. Niagara Falls—Doestteke on a Bender Dear Editor—l have been to Niagara. you know --Niagara Falla—big rocks. water, foam . , 'fable Rock , Indian curiosities, squaws, mocca sins, stuffed, snakes, - rapids, wolves, Clifton House, suspension bridge, place where the wa ter runs swift, the ladies faint, scree - fa - and - get the paint washed off their faces ; where- the ar ristocratic Indian ladies sit on the dirt and make little bags; where all the inhabitants swindle strangers ; where the cars go on in a hurry. the waiters are impudent and all the small boys swear. When I came in sight of the suspension' bridge,.l was vividly impressed .with the idea that it was softie bridge, in fact, a considerable 'curiosity, - and - a Considerable bridge,—took glass of beer and walked up to the Falls— another glass of beer and walked under the Falls ; wanted another glass of beer, but couldn't get it ; walked away from the wet through, mad ; triumphant, victorious, humbug—humbug ! sir, all .humbug ! except the dabbliness of everything, which is a most certainty, and the cupidity of every body, which is a diabolical fact, and the Indians and Diggers every where, which is a Satanic truth. Another glass - of beer—'twas forthcoming immediately—also another. -all of which I drank. I then proceeded to drink a glass of beer, went over to the States, whereli procured a glass of beer—went up stairs, for • which' I paid a sixpence, over to Goat Island, for Which I disbursed twenty-five cents—hired a guide._ to whom I paid half a dollar—sneezed four times, at nine cents a sneeze—went up on the tower for a quarter of a dollar, and looked at the Falls- 7 ,didn't feel sublime any. tried to, but couldn't—took Some beer and tried again. but failed—drank a glass of beer and begin to feel better—thought the waters were sent for and were on a journey to the ; _thought the place below was'one sea of beer—was go ing to jump down and get Some, vide held me—sent him over to the hotel io get a glass of beer, while I tried to write some poetry ; result as follows : Oh thou (spray in one eye) awful. (Shull lobster in right shoe) sublime (both feet wet) mister piece of (jimmeny, what a lie,) the Al mighty. Terrible and majestic art thou in thy tremendous might --aw rut (orini) to behold. (cramp in my right shoulder) gigantic, huge and nice ! Oh thou that ttunblest down and risest up again in misty Majesty to Heaven-- then ,glorions parent of a thousand rainbows— what a huge. grand. awful, terrible, tremen dous, infinite old swindling humbug you are"; what are yon doing there, you rapids you—you know you've tumbled over the rocks and can't get up again to save your puny. existence ; you make a great fuss, don't vou ? ' Man came back with the beer, drank it to the laNt drop, and wished there had been a gallon more—walked out on a rock to the edge of the fall, woman on shore very much fright ened—l told her not. to get excited if I fell over, as I would step right up again—it would not be much of a fall any how—got a glass of beer of a man, another of a woman. and anoth er of two small boys with a pail—fifteen min utes elapsed, when I purchased some more of an Indian woman and imbibed it through a straw : it, wasn't good—had to get a „lass of beer to take the taste out of my mouth : legs began to tangle up, effect of the spray in my eyes, got hungry and wanted somet * hing to eat—went into an eating house, called ter a plate of beans, when the plate brought the waiter in his hand I took it, hung up my beef and beans on a nail. eat my hat, paid dollar to a nigger, and sided out on the step walk, bought a boy a glass of dog with a small beer and a neck on his tail, with a collar with a spot on the end—felt funny, sick—got - some soda-water in'a tin cup, drank the cup and placed the soda on the counter, and paid for the money lull of pocket—very bad head ache: rubbed it against the lamp post, and then stumped along ; station house came along and said if I didn't no straight he'd take me to the watchman—tried b to oblige the station house— very civil - station house, very—met a baby with an Irish woman and a wheelbarrow in it, couldn't get out of the way, she wouldn't walk on the sidewalk, but, insisted on going on both sides of the street at once ; tried to walk be tween her ; consequence collision, awful, knocked out the wheelbarrow's nose, broke the Irish woman all to pieces, baby loose, court house bandy, took me to the constable, jury sat on me, and the jail said the mag istrate must take me to the constable ; object ed ; the dungeon put roe into the darkest constable in the city ; got out, and here I am, prepared to stick to my original opinion—Niagara unus humbug: nun excelsus, nun indignus admital eoni. Yours unquestionably, Q. R. PHYLANDER I) , OESTICKS, P. B. Serving in the Penitentiary by Deputy. We have once or twice (says the Endianapo• lis Journal) alluded to the case of Muir, the rich rascal of Ripley county, who was lately sentenced to the penitentiary for forgery. We find the following anecdote of him in the Law renceburgh Press: Old Mr. Muir, who was sentenced to the penitentiary from Jennings county lately, is a pretty hard case. Ile has long went nnwhipt of justice. We believe the Ripley folks had about given up trying to convict the old man. Since his conviction, a good one is told on the old man, exhibiting his dogged stubborn. ness. It runs thus: A friend of Muir, after his conviction, asked him now it happened, as he had certainly extricated himself from several harder cases than this one. "Oh," said the old man, "my witnesses thought they could extort ten dollars a piece for swearing me out of the scrape. when I never, in all my life, paid over five dollars. and have frequently only paid 50 for the best kind of swear ing. Five dollars is all it is worth. It is a liberal price. I told them I would see them in Tophet before I would pay over five. lam determined to let such villains know that they cannot practice their vile extortions upon old Muir. "Why don't von think a fellow asked me P. 320 per month to serve my time out in the penitentiary. I told him I would give him r.s..E. ) .—and not one cent more, for it is all it is worth. The labor would not be as hard as I making staves or girdling pear trees. My I property came too hard - to be paid oat at such rates :" To critz -FELoNs."--Send them to the State Pri , on. There have been other cures recom mended. but this is the only one w•e consider ethctual. siy•A 1)own Easter guys that modesty is a quality that highly adorns a vraman, but tulip a Luau. A painfully correct conclusion. "TRUTH IS NIGHTY, AND WILL PREVAIL." "If you will promise me to let me - have all the wood f want, more or less," says I, "even if it is ever so !ittle, or a s much . as thirty cdrels, at ten dollars a cord, real rock maple, and yel low birch,-then I will take all your mackerel at three dollars and-a half, money down." "Say four." said he. "No," said I, "you say you can't get but thige and a half at Halifax, and I won't beat you down, or advance one cent myself. But mind, if I oblige yoii by buying all your mack erel. you must oblige me' by letting me belie all the wood I want." "Done," said , he : so we warped into the wharf, took the fish on board, and I paid him the money, and cleared fifteen pounds by the operation. "Now;" says T. "where is the wood ?" "Ail this is mine," said ho, pointing to a pile, containingnbout fifty cords. •Can I have it all," said T, "if I want it ?" He took off his cap and scratched his head— scratching helps a wan to think amazingly. He thought he had bettor ask a little uutee than ten dollars, as I appeared ready to buy at any price. S, he said. “Yes, you may have it all at ten and a half dollats." 'it thought yOu said I might hav what I wanted at ten." "And so have I," sayS I. "I won't trade with a man that acts that way," and I went on board, and the men cast off, and hegan to warp the'vessel again up to her anchor. , Lewis took off his cap and begun scratching his head_ again ; he had over-reached himsel f. Expecting an immense profit on his wood, be had sold his fish very low : he saw I. was in earnest, and jumped on hoard. "Captain, you may have it at ten, so much, as you want of it." "Well, measure me off hnlf ti` cord." - "Didn't you say you wanted twenty or thir• ty cords 1" • "No," says T, "you said - that T might have that much if T wanted it, lilt I don't want it ; it is only worth three dollars, and you have the modesty to ask ten, then ten and a half, hut I wilt take half 'a cord to please you, so inensuse it off." He Stormed, and raved, and swore, and threw his cap down on the deck and jumped on it, and stretched out his arm as if he was going to fight, and stretched out his wizzened face, as if to make holloaing easier, and foamed at the mouth like a boss that eat lobelia in his hay. IL / Y .- When Dr. -Rush was a young man, he vrap invited to dine in company with Robert Morris. a man celebrated fur the part he took in the AMerienn Revolution. It so happened that the company had waited some time for Mr. Morris, who, on his appearance, apologized far detaining them, by saying he had been en gaged in reading a sermon of a clergyman who had just gone to England to receive orders. "Well, Mr. Morris," said the Doctor, "how did you like the sermon ? I have heard it highly extolled." "Why, Doctor," said he, "I did not like it at all., It's too smooth and tame for me." "Mr. Morris," replied the Doctor, •what sort of a sermon do you like ?" "I like, sir," replied Mr. Morris, "that kind of preaching which drives a man into the cor• ner of his pew, and makes him think the devil's after him." IMPORTANT TO SPORTSMFIN.—Not long since a youthful friend of ours accidentally swallow ed a lead bullet ; his friends were very natural ly much alarmed ; and his father, that no means might be spared to save his boy's life, sent post haste to a surgeon of skill, directing the messenger to tell him the circumstances. and urge his coming without delay. The Doctor was found—heard the dismal tale, and with as much unconcern as he would manifest in a case of common headache, sat down and wrote the fo;lowing laconic note : Sia: —Don't alarm yourself. If after three weeks the bullet is not removed, give the boy a charge of powder. Yours, &c. P S.—Don't aim the tryst anybody. Our friend Ferguson, having so much confi dence in the skill and expenence of the Doc tor, obeys directions.—Ucre/und Herald. A POINTED ItmstAcm.---Farher, I hate that Mr. Smith," said a beauty, the other day, to her honored parent. "Why so, my daughter ?" "Because he always tales at me so, when he meets me in the street." Samivc beyare of the vimmins as reads no noospapet. Your father married a woman what read 'none, an' you're the sad konsequins. You're as hignorantras an orse." r - r - Men's happiness springs mainly from moderate troubles, - which afford the mind a healthful stimulus, and are followed by a re acuun which produces a cheerful flow of spin to. Sam Slick's Bargain. “You wilt find." said the "Doctor, "the men (I except the other sex always) are as mints as you are at a bargain. • You are more likely to be•bitten than to bite, if you try that game with them." ‘ , Bet you a dollar," said I, "T sell you that old coon as easy as a "clock. What, a Chesen. cooker a match for a Yankee ! Come, I :ike that, that is good. Here goes for a trial at any rate." "Yes," said he. - 4. What's the price," said T, "cash dow'non the nail 1" I knew the critter would see "the point" of coming down with the blunt. •It's ten dollars and a half." said he, cord at Halifax, snd it don't cost mc nothing to carry it thbre for I have my own shallop—bait I will sell it for ten dollars to oblige you." That was just seven dollars more than it was worth. "Well," says I, "that's not high, only cash is scarce. If you will take mackerel in pay, at six dollars a barrel (which was two dollars more than its value) perhaps we might trade. Could you sell me twenty cords •1" "Yes, may be twenty-five." “And the mackerel," said ..oh," said he, "mackerel is worth only three dollars and a half at Halifax. I can't sell mine even at that.* I have sixty barrels. num ber one, for sale." •Well; I have changed-my mind," said he, 'it is too tow." "But, my child, how do you know that Mr. Smith stares at you ?" "Why, father, because I have repeatedly seen him do it." "Well, Sarah, don't you look at the impu dent man again when you meet him, and then he may stare his eyes out without annoying you in the least.. Remember that it always takes two pairs of eyes to make a stare." A Marshal of the United Stem. Among the Americans who attended the late ball given qt the Hotel de Ville, - Paris. was Jack Spicer. of Kentucky. Jnck rushed the dress somewhat strong, and sported epaulettes on his shoulders large enough to start four ma jor generals in business. Jack was.the obsery ed of all observers, and got mixed up with a arty 'that his ;friends could not account for. erever the Marshals of France went, there went Jack 'and when the marshals sat down Jack did the same,-always_taking_ the past of honor. The day' after the ball Jack called on his old acquaintance, lir. Mason, our minister to France. who started up a little conversation in the following manner : • "I hear, Jack, you were at the ball last night I" "1 was, sir, and had a high old time." " "For which you were indebted, suppose, to the high old company you got mixed up with ? By the Way, ..low came you associated with the 'marshals ?" "How ? by virtue of my office i they were marshals of Franco, whila, I am nothing Ilse than marshal of the Republic; 1 showed my commission, and took post - accordingly." "By what right of - officti 1 what do you mean ?" - • !fere 'Sack presented Mr. , . Mason . with n whitey-brown paper; with a seal big enough for a four pound weight. - V - "What in the name of Maven is this I" "31v commisEion of *Marshal e - I received it in 1850. when I assisted; in tiling the census in Frankfort." “You don't mean to say that you travel on this ?” don't mean anything else. j'hat makes mo a •tuarsbnl' of the Republic, ati I intend to haie the office duly'honored." • Mr. "Mason allowed that Jack was *ita large business on a very small capital. "-"We should not wonder If the reader thinks , the same. A - Census maribirof Frankfort mixing in with the marshals of France is certainly rushing matters in a manner that requires AS much brass as epaulettes. Jack. we are hap , py to say, is equal to both the requirements.- 0:7-"Speaking of snuff." said Mrs. Parting ton, smiling. "such as this can never be dila tory to health. • The flavor is beautiful es the balm of a thousand flowers. Talk of the inju rious tenderness of FOUL indeed !, I say it has the effect to extenuate life, for there was old Mrs. Aims. who took snuff all: her life, liv,ed till she was nearly a centuries', stud then. at ninety-seven had her days shOrtened leaving off, taking it. I don't think there no anything harmonious in it, and many , a poor creator with:a guitar in his hea4, - *as- been cured by it." , „. A fellow at a race course was Stagger ing about the track, with more liquor than he could carry. _. , Hallo ! what's the -,tnatter now ?" said a chap whom the inebriate indi, vidual had just tun : against. why," said the fellow, so. drunk hq.m.ns.,fiatu": ly able to articulate; aithe fact. is, a lot ,of my friends have been betting liquor on titO• race to day, and they've got me to hold the stakes [j 0m of . the dead 'certain cbutcb asked a bishop if he usually kisioed the bride at weddings. • , Always," was, the reply. "A id how do you manage when the bappy :pair are negroes ?" was the deacon's nett qpisthii,.. , ••Eit all such cases:" replied the, 'biShop, i‘the duty of kissing is appointed to the reasons." (17(30.Moribaldi. who diStimruished him self at the- siege-of ROtne:thiringthe revolution which was put down by the French, is said now to be the leader' of thj3l'exicon revolutionists. Santa Anna, at last adeounts, hid ' gone In pursuit. and accounts of a battle were °speak& Ir7Hon. A: H. , Stephens ,and - Senator Toombs: of Georgia, addressed a large meeting at Augusta, on Monday night, in , opposition to the Know .Nothings. -Mr. Stephens announced himself an independent candidate for Congress. fri'lle Canadian Government.' at {he ea`rn•. est solicitation of the township and' lower coun ty members, has appropriated the sum of•X5.- 000 for the purchase of seed wheat to distribute among destitute settlements. [Li — The little State of Delaware, in imitation of its large sisters of the Union, has passed a prohibitory liquor law. After this, we pre sume, the Brandywine will no longer be al lowed to flow through that State ! TeoNoun —lt is no small commendation to manage a little well. He is a good wagoner that can turn in little room.' I will study' more how to give a, good account of my little than how to make it more.—Bishop Hall.:': QUANTITY OF Luta. IN BURNT Sum.t.s.---One hundred and eight bushels of oyster shells will make seventy bushels of quick lime, which will slake' lb one hundred and twenty five bushels. 7Father Su eeter, of Boston, during his ministerial service of 28 years' duration, has married 3,673 couples. Surely the old gentle man has much to answer for. Cr7*The two General Assemblies of the Pres byterian Church—both Old,,and New School bodies—have resolved to meet in the city of New York in May next. 7llte city of Cleveland has s- law that every owner of a dog shall pay a tart on mate canines $5, on females $lO. QUA young than named Dent has been mulcted In 15 2 .000 for seducing the daughter of Thomas Grider, at Farmington, 310. The New Orleans Picayune says the summer tide of travel is already setting strong ly northward. Ilow ignoble most men's lives would ap pear to themselves if described 'as the lives of others! 137 Expoience is a pocket compass, that a fool never thinks of consulting until he has lost his way. a rr — j -- The Juryman who 'stood out" got wet. It had commenced raining about that time. Li -Every woman is iu the wrong until she cries—and then she is in the right, instantly. .&1 SHARP Tne.A.—Sooner than tnarry a wo man of fifty, I'd take two at five-and-twenty. (yWhy are green peas like Sebastopol ? Bey :Luse they rau.lt be &belled before taketi. TWO DOLLARS A-YEAR. Base ,Itorgary Ittpised. The Cincinnati builm'Enqmirer of October Ist, 1854, contained an article stating that the words "if ever the liberty ta' the United States. is destroyed it will be by Romish piiests," had been "dug out" of a letter written by Lafayette to a gentleman in NO. Tork.sh,OrtlY after the last visit of the marquis this court. try. in the year 1829, and that the - rxi: s *ere ' quoted by Lafayette from the letter to the New Yorker onlY to -be refuted.' 'Alortg4xtract from the alleged-letter of, Lafayette *argil/en 'in the Enquirer, ft - a tot - - W us to quote the following:— Prom Lalqotter Alleged•tfttsi. " _ 4, 1 cannot but Wmire your noble senhmenta • of devotien and 'to your country and its institirtions. Ilut'ftriust bepepritiMd, - to erasure you that the' fears which, in your patriotic seal, you seem to entertain plat t>F• ZVKX TUX LIBRRIT ,Tfill 'UNITED .&TAI= is DKSTROTXD rr WILL XX BY 1101.1180 PRIIISTM Sri - certainly • without any , shadow "of foundation whatever. An intimate acquaintance of more then half a century with - the prominent and influential priests and Intel/tempi that antra, - both in Europeand America, warrants Mein assuring you that you need entertain no appro." hension of danger to' your - republican Luton- Lions from that quarter." ..z The words in brackets are, taken from the context and attributed to Lafayette who quoted them only to refute them I ; Vier-Louise:Me Know Nothings, aided by the telegraph, ere . : trying to make it appeir. that Professor Morse "proves" that' Lafayette used the n010;81°11 above. So be did, and said lesiden thskt the fears implied' in the expression wenes‘WlTlt.. OUT ANY SIIADOW FOLTZ - DATION WHATEVER." • - -•- horn the Otermesternk, Sorra ' Itin. Alas :—The preients olthis weed;— grass we hesitate to call it--in an iithmof - an acid noilef-one on which , allntlesPent ma* mires, such as liiiSe, *she% etc:, tire calculatid to produce their best eiTeetts. amid never, , be permitted to grovr when it ean avoided.: but when it does; take. root. it it the part of 'good economy to mane the molt Of cut kieen—.before the Seeds tnivilwanne indu rated. and 'cared figniss nock,?' it makes ei hay which' sheep - are very fond ofi and on , which they will, wintei Mmes. aria, partake °tit; and have bee'n lititntri to do , Well when fed on it with very nide, ether 'hod.. The seed of sorref,,ground fed - : to - swine, rill cause theta*: to. *hie *int even •thitett,„ It verj.tintrirfons, - and whet fed - censtantlY, appears ti ta*e sttlittill , erect upon the general system. and ti - ba penumthie of the general Sot•after distOein' be said wits behalf,: !Way Canada thistlii; tR moot t undevirsidetinatit. Owing to the extryinely'ndollited , os l oo of the.periesip or Intolcure in which 'the genii encloired, it musses the ,powersof reiniihneg in the soil for years uninpred;=When turned down with ndeep farrow; it 404 not,' t , bgetekte; but awaits the next inversien which will bring it nearer thenurkce, and in 'ti,'eshidition to put' ' forth its long , detniant, energies, and win' a '- march, upon the regular' 'Crop. Lime' `th i s best, remedy : it' sweetens, te soil. - and, rota the ' - beneficia l acid into s ply tory , num, ' - ' AN Plarlixxivrons Near Petersburg; Va. ' , ' BEEP' AT , Oka Yiian 11r. Crowell • has been verOitteeeserui in refiring ns to fit , thetn - tot-the butcher hi• one year old:' When a kw . days old he ComthenCed feeding them on sour , milk: keeping tbeition the same • kind of food during the soonneri taking good care to feed' them uniformly,' but 'not-'eary abundantly: 'so as to keep them growing• thrif tily-irithont forcing them too rapidly:- , 3n the fall theywere Rat hi 'the etablecAtatiled 'ott hay, and a little meal, inereasinglhel quantity of the latter gradually, with • I alie*'of fitting them for sibeetunin the opting* obi year or- a little ender. • These' calves- at' eleven - months old; looklike yew% oxen, and ire es timated to weigh about,GOO pOt' ettch afire. A eon espondent - et 'Clizettotrie writea ' us that ho has tried the same 'plan witlfolutd sum*, —Wool GroWer. " • • Htviriff Bses.--A chap in I.ouisiana recent ly. took a , notion for a bath , in an inviting stream. which . flowed ihrottgh a field lie was engaged ittplowing, and divesting 'himself of his clothes ;for that purpose, hung his Unmen tionables upon the limb oft) locust near by. He had luxuriated for some half hour, and swain back to his- starting point, when he perceived a bevy of young damsels approaching with their Sower baskets: • He- scampered up the bank and into his breeches, but alas . unhappy man ! not soon enough. They, were occupied. A small colony of bees were in possession. He reports that be got home; but bow, he knows not. "Think he ran ." knows be bolloed. and - is — th - e — girls 2 laughed, - ; His - friends— found in his pantaloons a number Offload bees, some angry ones, and the biggest half of a very sore youth. AN ANOMALY IN TRADE.—One of the most curious features of business in San Francisco is the outward movement of flour, rain, etc. It is thought an export of .50,000 bids. flour or its equivalent in wheat may take place, and still leave sufficient to supply the consumption up to harvest, which promises to be very large. The clipper ship Charmer had nearly completed loading wheat and flour for New York. The Telegraph had also been laid on for the same port. and had about half her cargo engaged. She would probably take a full freight of flour and grain. At the same time a movement was making to ship ta Aus tralia, and the Boston Light wouhrfrobably take 550 bbls. of flour alone. A DISCOVEHY.—It is said that qpeif tbe m - ci (1 en tal results of the Japan expeaitiBn is the discovery that the Zodiacal light is a belt ex tending entirely around the earth, after the manner of Saturn's ring. The matter has ex cited a good deal of interest the astrom' omers, and Professor Pierce, of Cambridge, considers the fact established by the observa tions taken. IT7'Tvre Wild Geese were shot in Upper Tulpehoccon township. Berks county. Qe the 7tlriilt:;ll — Afr. — George - Degler. The ddler - says "it is supposed they were sent out by the Know-Nothings of Virginia to drum up-re cruits from the North : bnt having had the misfortune to fall into the hands of good Dem ocrats, they were captured as easily as Mose who sent them were, by the Democracy of -- Virginia." NO. 37.