.. ... _ -, , • / - I • ' ' . . , . . /-,.,, • • . ~ . 1 ,1> - 1 .1 -. 1(• ,_ ~ . . . I, 11) , I I - , - , I: 0 I - ' ---•- /.'"N; ''/•-• ' . , 1 I * 1 ' IN' r"----,/ ' . I 11:1 '.lt - , . , . , . i 1 , .. 1 CO' "_____ ~/____-. / , . By HENRY J. STAIILE 37 1 " YEAR. TERNS OF THE COMPILER rtr. Republica:: Comp,' kr is published every Monday morning, by LlEria.y*J. S TAHLE , per annum if paid aftvatice---2,00 per alitimi!if not pail in advance. - No sub scription discontinued, unless at the option of th e publisher. until all arrearages are paid. ADv EnTtsEmENTs inserted at the usual rates. Jon %Vont:. done, neatly, cheaply, and with dispatch. 41prir - 011ifT on South tnltiniore street. direct ly opposite Wampler's Tinning Establishment, o n e and la. half siluares from the court house. Cpire portrn. ONE BY ONE! ENE Om; by one tha sitil, ,ire ;towing, Uric OtW . the MO 111111 , SUnte at e cmalltpz, mime are goillZ Do not, psta t: to gr5,L) tLcw all. 01WUV one thy duties %%Ail, ltu•e; Let thy hide atr a Ih g., too *melt Letup tutaro dreams chile thee; Le.titt thriu hrrt what llie-e into' tio,tch One by one (bri , irbt zift feom iti•Aseu) J(IV :WIRE then . bery beim% TAP Owe; re.enly vibe! , 141% eu— lie,vl), too, to let tbr;irt go. One by One 141.11 l meet thee, !fr. leo 1,•.0 „ in I I oil. a, niter, via•o•t thta, tlie Do not, look :It !HIV ; tit , Irpm +1)1,11 God aril lu II tlo".• kr lu lalunioo • l'Avvy 1 Lty 1,1•.2,11/ ag.tift. ery hour tit tt fleet, t-,o Moe ly hi-k to dom heir ; Luoooote. the crown.hnly, thnt/ etch gew %fall CAre Do not I Inge' nab regrettirn:. Ur tor how. ile,pini; Nee, •tally toil foreot,n.f, Look too eagerly beyond. Ilour o ozololen links thool'i. to ok RI. :honor 110.4.1 ell j but oonn by tutu Tatou thew. le-a tit,. eh lin 00.. brol s oli _Liu the polgoion.ye bu LITTLE THING'S, ECIO not LL , . !.1i: . ;111t•t l'l•.rtt tiettl, Im4frelll it Void •,1 p. ,- Apr ; fruit, iri oad Aaltol lb aitiug , it. uatal but.er. A nhi, pei. d word may:l4;ll.th the heart, And e4ll it ha , k to lir, A 14 , 1 depart, And -till unholy :trite No :wt. Eat; frititle ; notio cm; tull Llutc ; 41,1, tt, - p•tucr WAY ttr • Not ;11.1i utittildwl dwell IVllllto it ntiotitly W , ,rk ,k,lLtir not, Give thy mite, Nor eArt. I it CIA Li 11, Oh ;AIL t the right, Thu holy, true, awl free. THE JUST MAN. They are nOt t llu dot no wronl% PO. uc Nlin 1,111 not VI.11;,; uh. II he may-- e lust 1 not thew 1% Iv , in tio'#r" petty bit ttt• %% coo -..•aetn:,. ,puenz, Nveret fraud, 11 tr.it t 111111 , ie I dud 41(.1,1 -,nt so; Ills. Lc ilia I.l.it•t! 1%110, loaak .1.%% n t%tlh .COra (in j(1.1 , 111C1/1, Of the 1.41 ttallo•ol, COIII4III, 41, nttu ••).• 11 in..trL, an , i WWI y ;I,tre not to lie Ta..ut.urp au hi ale,t, 111.111. s"cl'ect The Wife's Influence. A WOntall, itt Ilially instances, has her hus band's fortune in her vowel. because she may or she may not conform to his circumstances. This is het first ditty, awl - it ought to be her prid e . N o pas l , )o n cm- y 01 . diSpl:ly ought to tempt her for a . tucanent to deviate in the least degree from this line of conduct. She will find her respe - ctability in it. Any other course is wretchedness itself, and inevitably leads to ruin. Nothing can be more misera ble than the struggle to keep up appearances. It tt could succeed, it, would co s t more than it worth ; as it never can, its failure involves the deepest toOrtilicauon. Some of the sub / I Mcst, C \hi ij titms Of human virtue have been plade by women, who have beers precipitated soddenly from wealth and splendor to abbe)- lute Want. a man's fbrtunes arc in a manner in the hands of his wile, inasmuch as his own rower of exertion depends wt her. moral stmngth is ineonceivably increased by her tlittpathy, Inrr colowil, her oto,l. She can aid holm immensely by rehet mg him of every calc tt hich she capahle of taking upon her,elf.-- His own emplut tl.k His arc usually such as to rcquire ht, whole time and his wloile A good w tic w ill never slat r het husband's attention to be distracted Icy details to which her own time awl talents ale adequate. II she be piumpted Icy true ttil•ction and good sense, she will perceive when his spirits are btu nu down and overwhelmed ; she, all hu man beings, eau best itnnister to its needs.— For the sick soul her nursing is quite as sove reign a - s it is for corporeal ilk. if it be weary. in her 'assiduity it finds repose and cell esh- Diem. If it he harrasstal and worn to a mor bid irritability, tier gentle tones steal over it tits a soothing mute potent than the most exyuisiie music. If every enterprise he dead. her patience and fialitutly have the power to rekindle them in the heart, and he again g , ,es 1.0 IVIICW the OICOUIaCt with the toils and tioubles of Romrixq. -Never punish a girl for Lwin - g tomv, but thank heaven who has given her health to lir 4.11 e. li t better thon a Msfin Led :lane et It( eaie Little ought to he weal NADI'S IKAler than !raying 4loctor's hulk for them. Where is the gymnasium which be attached to eves v That's cutumg,. like other Improvetuenti. ri!":: 'An Imliau haying given a trader some annoyance. was told that in cam: he was stt again with a honk it would be taken from t uns anti thrott u into tilt ii!e. feu- tla3-. alit,, 1111: hilliall itrive:rrd with his pmt flask ru hr.. blanket, its usual, but the tratkr wits a, good as his wail]. and din,amied the Wale, - s vhich the Indian glive up ,dt,l .•taitti for the elu u r. The wailer threw the llaok into the stovt., at u l out cam e the witubity,, the hailer following close behind. The next time that man lnnus a Whiskey bottle he ki ill CN3ttlitic 1l to set; that It is lioL of • • Wpollt ' s " make. ICI,I sip`tr:v-17-4-ncit a J:lfil Buff to Jonathan, •-1:, one on %% Inch tht Sun neetr , ets." ".1101 l(pilt , l J l 4 l ttion the 1..0 rk.r :it to ht.i 111 t, I 4 a., utl , A,111; 1:11 , 1L plt Litt)" ,1,411L1/,: tl..t LU put, jll. Almilli _;lintilipaptr----Prutitih to I‘alitiro, ~,:tiriolturr,itrraturr, ( .3rto niih , k tlr Onirrot Foutrait forrigli 3ntaligrutt, Murrillha, Rmtormtut, tt. on which A. Thrilling Sketch One of toy father's brothers, residing . in Bos ton at the time when the yell-Ay fever prevailed to such a frightful extent, "became a victim to the pestilence. When the tirst symptomB ap peai•ed. his wife sent the ,-hilifr u n into th e country. and herself remained to attend upon him. tier friends -arned her a7ainst such rashness. They old he would he death to 31114 no be efit to, him : •he coon wonhl hi too ill to know :Mein 1 upon hint. These arguments - made no impression on her affectionate heart. She telt that a long life of satisfaction to her to -attended hint, if he did not. She stayed and watched with mireinitting; eau.. This, however, (lid nut avail to save hint. Ile grew Worse iind worse, and finally died.-- Those who went round with the death carts Itad visited-the chamber, and seen that the end was near. They now came to takezthelidy. His wife refused to let it go. She told toe shce never knew how , to acconr.t for it, hut though he was perfectly cold and rigid. and to every appearance quite dead. there was a powerful impression on her mind that life was not ex tinct. The Melt were overboi ne by the strength of her conviction, though their own reason was opposed to it. The half hour amain came round. and again were heard the soCenin words, "bi iug (rayon! dead." The wife again ri-sisied their iniverr= tunnies ; rut tus tune tre men were more resolute. 'They said the duty assigned to them ; was a painful one, but the health of the town required punctual obedience - to the coders they received if_tiley ever expected7tire pi.; - stilence to abate, it !ink be ht- a prompt retnoval of the dead, and immediate fumigation of the in fected apartment. She pleaded and pleaded, and even knelt down . to them in agony of tears, continually saying, -"I am sure he is not dead." The men represented the utter absurdity of such an idea ; but, finally overeMne by her tears, again departed. With,tretubling haste site renewed her efforts to restore him. She raied his head, rolled his limbs in hot - flannel, and placed hot brick to his feet. The dreailed hour came tonna., nail found him as cold and rigid as ever. She renewed her entrearies so ilesperately., that the messengers, IkTgan to think a little gentle-ioree would he necessary. They accordingly attempted to remove the body .against her will, but she threw herself upon it. and clung to it with such frantic stiength, that they could not easily loosen tier grasp. Impress by the remarkable energy of her Will, the retaxed their clh,rts. To all their remonstrance:4l she answered, "if you bury him, you shall bury me with hint." At last, by dint of reasoning on the necessity of the case, they obtained from her a, promise that. if he showed no signs of rife before they againcatne round. she would make no further opposition to the removal. flaying gained this . respite, site hung. the watch upon the bed , post, and rerewkil her ef forts with redoubled zeal. She kept kegs of hot %%ater about hint, !Owed hot brandy be tween his teeth; and breathed in his nostrils. and held hartshorn to his nos,y: but still the body lay motionless and cold. She looked anxiously at the watch, and in five minutes the promised half hour would expire, and those dreadful yokes Would be heard passing, through the streets. I lopilessiress came over her—she *hopped the head .she had been sustaining— her hand trembled violently - and the ham Ls. horn she had been holding Was spilled on the pallid fare. Accidentally the position of the head hail become shiftily titiped backward, and the powerful liquid flowed into his nos trils, instantly there Was a short. quiet: gasp —a struggle -- his eyes opened ! and ‘t ben the death tacit came again. they found lino sitting up in bed ! lie is.st.ill alive, and lots enjoyed unusually good health.—. Mrs. L. 111. I had. Death Caused by a Corpse. A sad accident happened some time ago in a tarts house near liberty, in Mi:, , ociii.—The mistress of the huiise beanie ill one having. ari.lordiog to symptoms, received an attack of eholeia. 11cr husband had left the. house - at daybreak, and her only daughter, tt ho wits then with hei, sent fhr at physician. After a few bouts the littler arrived, but was already at the door received by the sobbing girl with the cry- -Nie is dead!" Ile was conducted into the route) while the rorphe evnnincd it, and direcied die -danglitor nut to alll4 the nitcrincin unlit '2l how:- ha.l clnipscd. Ile had scarcely done when the COIN. 1* nodded sig,niticaritly. The I hilighter saw the nil/till/I, ;And Was NO 1106'0 . 1(11 I 11;1 t She fell doWn dead on the spot. It:is a wi.ll known fact that per sons vi ho die of cholera retain the ‘vat min of blond for it long tine, and fic,l n cn.ly almin by:4:111(1ms by Contraction of the muscles- When the poor farmer returned ni the evening lie found nothing but corpses. The doctor. howcycl, had to huller most ; he bad to leave tile State. A Dog Story. A friend ip Scottsburgh, ‘who signs himself hie who nails and pays for the llerald," per:,on, are alwa‘.entitlyl Ili 3 110'3111g in (114';. , C(111111111', rrntl, n, till filllo%Vilig 3C- Gollllt. of a 11l L to It, ma,ter Mr. 0. 1I llophins. late (if Nrott;l , tirg - l), tvlio died 01 Jatiinny last. 'mil a small and sprightly 'Perrier, naonal ••Nig.' of which was very food. 0h...11211.h of !us ilop , tyr Nig grew intlancholy. Nothing the funily eoul t l. Iry :4,aanell 111 1111111'.1: 111111. lIC 4:1/11141 11 11 t I/4.7 Cial l.l 'll 114111/ t h e 4.11 his 111111141'‘ . .• 1110 . Weidil I . OIIOW 11(..1 . 11.111111 t. 1 !i• 4 : l• V‘‘ l lt.rni‘ e 3111 1 sedate, a, L 11011,411 :AAwally Minkil, 'of hi, tkail IllaNrer. 11111. day a 1113 S• ri(11.11111:: li. lii Nig 4t , oover the : , :irno•ot- than Ail fri,ked al•oitt, a,hno,t fiantle ,•\ apim \\ It flit lrrnr ani mal. di , cirtectt.,l Lt, t.) ,he .it , • apfi4inutielit. by pitumv., awl n10(11'11(1! liv‘vl - In :11,re 1.1.-t, poc.t NI • gi cw mole tlitlaitcho ly than t•VIT. .111 1‘) tut :11in Li, IC:IVC hone acre 111,01 out day his tinstre,s kvent t vi-At the arc of her hus band. '111(11 lit -followed and on atttrtllg at the timund eotiinienct"l testifying hi , grid in the niost et/non , : and alit:cling manner. Flom that tittle he not he ciitk:kd to leave the grave, lott -Lay( d day ait,l till• 711 .1:11%%: , 1 11, I. te;tin , l th( it . , 1 011 till t... 11 ih. 4:.. ) :11 tvid -ig Nk• r?f :I; 110), lt+ri • 1, ij .1;- I t.tc! LL .t...t. 111 .... .I.i. L . : ' tLL t t GETTYSBURG, PA._: MONDAY., JULY 23,1855. Man's Heart and Its Machinery. 11Iatt has two hearts, and each of these is double -; so that he may be said to have four hearts. Two of these are •for bright. red blood. and - two for purple or dark blood. It is usual iu biolis to call red blood arterial. nml -the purple blood venous. But each of thez-e two double hearts has its own set of arteries and veins. and the arteries of the one.ate al ways filled with red, and the arteries-of the oth...r with !Purple blood. The veins. in lilse manner. of each are in ii.verse order—the veins of the red heart being purple, and the veins of e purple bring red ; for if the blood gOeq oil red it CotT.,ti back purple, awl if-it goes out p rple it comes back red. It always goes out .d from the heart on the left side. and comes i ► purple to the heart on the right tool it al way2-govs out purple from the heart on the right side. and conies in red to the heart on the left side. And thus it makes its everlast ing - round, tieing converted from purple to ied by passing i hrongh the !flogs. It is a wonder- MI piece of inecliammn a steam engine is a clumsy affair compared to it. Each heart has its ,oing and returning series of vessels, infi nitely numerous and mmilied ; and the blood is forced through them in such a way that• it. must go.forward, and cannot return, except by piing roimid the circle ; for these 'Mini Is are all supplied With valveB that opli wily one Wa • Anti shut the tailor: and t4terri'iTiv, were the blood to make an ellor•t to rl itii rl, the valves would Close immediately, and stop The elastic nature 4'4 the blood 'vessels. also, is such that th e y •Ineeze the blood in undulations or linbiati4ins along: closing upon it, and then opening to let more forwind : and-all this they do sp un ►taneously and regularly, tlie will ()I man having nothing to do with it and no pow er• over the u►ovement. ' Fine Fclluirs.--Tho man who advertiqes iu our paper : the man who never refused to lend you money, and the fellow who is courting your sister„ Ortitrel Piople.—Tho young. lady who lets her inother do the -itothig. for fear of sitreitti ing her bands ; the Miss - who wears thin shoes oil a rainy Alay, andlhe young gentleman who is ashamed to be seen walking with itiN father. /iu/us6i , /us PropitA,The young lady who rends romance: , : the friend who i. al- Wails engved when you Call. amt tho cories pondmit who cannot find time to.nnswer your letters. rpqnpular Persimages.—A fat man ID All omibus, a tan man in a crowd, and a :shut t mall on parade. Timid Pruple.—A lover about— to _pop the question ; a man. who - hoes not like to bt: shot at, and a steamboat company with a cholera ease (nl board. Diotifird 31 en.—A cit in a country town. a midshipman on quarter Aleck, and a school (Amnon (cc on examination Slay. Petw•citteil mut n. 1)y that tvrrinf. man boys, by their parents :mil tetichers, and all poor people by hocieiy at large. Unhappy I'Lople.— All old bachelors and old dud/Nines (hops.—The writer who pays thy magazines for inserting his etninnunivations the politician vi hn (puts his party byeatiw he vannot ; the boy who exln to be President. //nialite Tersam.—Tho husband who dues his w He's churning : the wife who Hail., Li r 1111Shanini boots, and the man Who thinks you do hint so much honor. i'ev/c.—The elan %Om kicks folks %Own they ate down, and the bulrecriber whn pay PiiliTs l'euple. an] I. Smile philanthropic individual l i n , : oatt;:ht an mica ()NAT in Iwhation, atnl lar h.ts voilii dentiallf . informed the didr,rfisrr, what he nt• tun,ls to do—when ht gets the funds. here is iliy vomisitittiealion : :11u. Eurrou Send tile - three dol lars. (A, t o what I want a it a wt nal in your ears privately.) I intend to lay- down in every street and alley., 111 miles of IRO III:till, 4 feet iii thametet , with 12, inch service 11111C - Ii t•Ill ju ! , cath 11,,w.a 2 -.so tar_ tic) ,(10d. Then I ...ball commence at the top of the ntountains to lay pipe ten feet in diameter into the ground six• yards deep, front the said mountains to the main, which will have been already rott-truet-. ed as belOre remarked 1 1 11`; 110111 -: I "kill hull , ' a steam engine seven hundred and 4.9;')11.4 . 1i thousand horse power, and th - an OVt'l IA ay, if you please, I ' m aft airi sonwhody might hear . ' on.) itrta - Me freezing j r•st , l lb; inmrol,rin inter cnrry !nose! 'net C . :: no mistake about tins - -it ' s bound to go : and when it ' s finished I. mean to buy me a pair of hoots and in t-toon - el for a hut - of pipes to the tropics, t amp hot air into the house tit winter. These tle jots completed, and' we will have onr cool weather in July, am! Jan uary shall he warn, and comfortable, as It al ways ought to have been. 1 'guess Naltire ' :, jig is about up, ain ' t it < A li.sua RINKLE. The pain of a bee-sting may be at once rP• h e y. tl;:tnit the siib,eipient prev , ilted Ly ix( tting the pari ti - ;ith-spirits of is ;I,V;lter 01' 1111111101113.) The Sting" 1:..1 1 - 101111W. ' .111:1 1.111:1C i, a little drop of pokon at its row (Int t throni . .4h it by the pres,iire of iii,l ° .rttoti, and depo,ited in the \vomit!. poison is said to be of an acid Tutuila., and to hi. I le,11()),(d by thi:, volatile alkali. p.iiit of tooth aclic, a1..0. 1-; / c hi vi d hy a few droir, of hartshorn on a bit of Intt iii,ertrd into toe cavity of the tooth, than -1/V any tqln:r application. K..t.p a Vl:ti cif it. v'(l :mil tl you art: lot- Utualr elluit;:11 tit fleet: it for Itothlll4 1 14. IL Lit It::)11);i:-Liii: cult)t di:"1,1•) . 1•1 by ho l t ,„1,110,. '.lll 01 , 1 la , ly ito , Nrs-seil of it floe torton e att.l ootc , l for hct pkitithatn. for Lite 1/:,( of 11 - .11- 1:011, c \ pre‘4• (Mc lay a.-,t,rotipit.ii hut 1.1111(11(qt, wbeu Llit; lulltActtig etptivelas twit to.){.. plal Mr clollitci," said the ohl lady, -I aw the root all.l you Are OK: hrant7he.." ••‘1 ha t, ttly child ••1 tl7 .111,111 g; lOt% much I , 4‘tter th )ratidie , Would if the rut undcr giutiiitt NT,..rtt i Tht., - . tt .11, 1,3,1. ( r tt `kii•ill . 4.01.1“11, Vl.ll' • ••I • •: k••• 11 .1 kb* i , I. t V• 11•0• 1, I ir itt, • I , t ton! 3 Id ‘, at To A , LA/L t%lca tiAt. 1.41+.11.1.1t.1 111 Ell . . t. • ' Definitions of Character. A Public Benefactor. Bee-sting and Tooth-ache. TAUTII IS MIGIITV, AND WILL rim , : AIL." 11 - 7 %Vilat a n n the I‘lassa• htisetts seoatm vi n 8 iii, 111 the Wit( pi)..itions me repot test thus !- 111'. :- . .quilittm)-. I (limy powur on the part of coogruss to abohsli sla very the district of Columbia. Mr. Wilson—have no donbt of the power cmcler the cm Istittitton. (Rea& the usual articles nuclei- which hi authority is elation].) Coitgress has power to abolish slavery there. or to regulate it iii-whatsocorer way it may please. Mr. like to know, if I'ongi hati Ott' pc)Wi•l' ILA) 31/011:iii SIAVVI y in the di-tiitt of t 'oloinhia, if It alou has not the pow ei equhli.,/, it ? IV ikon —1 ! bum ! ! hem I! I I—loam ! -1 didn't say that. • " hi,,, no ;filch ~niir'r: A FAMILY MEE'liNtl.—The ailhiteit or Noah eavellitort, eight fit number, an met off the :.!stti tilt., at William Davenport's housi in Slnnccr•tntvn, Col tiffthia comity, N. Y., ,attic 11(itvw wlu•tc they mete. all horn, alter a parati9ti or fivt.r fifty _years. Their avera: : „ , e Ica, nlXty. The hoe. e they nict in ii the thu rather fif took 14 a home uf 71 f year, 11. 8 0. It has lkieff 114:x1111ft:4 by ihe lan/11v ever ,filee. awl probably will tie held by the full; th genet:W.)li. TIP) :%1 %N Y. -Itiv pcoric, cued lit very !0,;.:11 (pia flt? It I. :+3l4i, 11.1.1 V obiveLion to tllntru•tl at. iltotod. Dt. la . r to IK ont.. of 3 vomp.illy rrl th.lt imifila,r ILL 1)1% in' it-, fn nth rcilidlivtd and pry tiotiiivcd al)ldehy, he sat,' ••11 , 14ffit thAt tt uttlu;lty lit uue , •11 hat. that ?” `•Wiit ti there_ is on:y dinner enuugli fur T in . ; Vii, %I d ; s .11.1.w.--"Speaking of the vo acity ul :Naitl the Major, "wh4 n :he , I ,• aoi er I;.iltnnole was lying II LI- Vtitdri3. ,curt, the :AL‘viti.l lu I, MR.! 100.11 - 4 - 1 .1 1.11111. .)11.01 . 1(1 ,11111 It.lr)V " /1.11 %%.1, ,11p111i 111 11,:1 tIl 1110 j . oll , l:ti.i. ..11 f.. 111.: 1 V...41V1 1%1v.1 ,r 1 ,, / 1 011.11. %% .11 #llll l l l ll r l 111111 hc: un in I‘, Scenes Within Sevastopol. . The Augtrian ?tlilitary Zriturp , contains tin interesting letter from Sevastopol, under date of May 13. The following is a Summary : “In spite Of all the efforts which the enemy have made,- our bulwarks stow' as fast as e'. err Long before the bombardment began the join.• mils of the West informed us that our walls and forts were speedily to he put to ,rt n e w proof. This made us redouble our preenution:;, and we bore more firmly the truly murderous fire which threatened all with destruction. Nex crawl ("5.5--tltousand-s-were devoted to-death, and it made one shudder to see the El horns (the_steatuboat;: pass every two hours during thi. - lannbardment finui the south to the north with so m a ny wounded that shecould seated)! carry them. - While standing in Bastion No —the bastion which suffered most•of forgot the danger to which I was exposed in admiration of the cool and stoical co nduct of our sailors. They fell and expired without a cry, though racked with Abe most leatltil ago. rtes. ..The son them side of our town has suffered most -severely and is hitidly to be reco7nized. Five hundred houses have been totally de stroyed, and grass is growing on their ruins. The beautiful theatf( no longer eNistk. Though the tipper districts or the town ate not go touch damaged. yet there is not u single house to he seen which does not hear manifest traces of o , goo nut mem. • to streets are everywhere pl o wed np by shot, anti the pavements arc to tally destroyed. while at every corner stand Yehole pyramids of the enemy's otitttn . balls and exploded shells. Which %%ere dailY collect ed before the opening of the tire: In Iffiltly ;;Irents live or six such pyramids ore to tic seen. each of them from eight feet to ten feet high. Nevertheless, business iti continued, anti booths are opened for the sale of goods. Prices, however, are enormon: ly raised, and sto 4 or costs 'one silver titbit+ (es.) per porptd. The supply of Meat is more than abundant, hot tncad i, c‘ceedingly scarce. The streets are tilled with people, anti crowds of children VIM to and fro, asserting at the eonittuction of bar emits and peltinn each other with halls of dai-. "Oirr life in , Sevalifolud -14 nt. , , , reeable to us. for use is a second nature. The greatest ac tivity prevails in the harbor of Ekaterin, where caution halls, powder. 14seineS, sacks, and pro vi•ions are Willed in w:loondillig, quantities as they are forwarded from the northern forts. In a word. neither the thunder of the enenly'i vainion nor the siege of, Sevastopol is suffered to disturb its ally longer : we mourn o ve r o u r adversaries, who ate shedding their blood with out result, beffire our brazen walls. -- 'We read malty absurd !4 rat i . Aue ut. : .; ationt the condition the besieged ; but the abstadest of all is, undoullually, the news that we suffer from want of supplies, rind that hundreds and bun dled.: of us are daily cut off by death—of all Which no trace is to be seen." DMSTRIITI(iN OF 1,11 7 g BY A VAN- Nos BAI.t..—A letter from the Crimea relates the 111 f : In the sit ad: upon the quarries,. Russian rine pits AIM itynolies, on the night, of the 7th and niorning of the Bth June, by n detatibilieut from the British army. the 62.1 Regiment form ed part of the reserve. and during the ilight• Lan 0111 i trcn 01' I Ilr« s casualties amour, th e Men. ly after da yl it ht , Major Dixon was .;hot through the head,..,aud in a short time several of the rues wvie killed and ‘vottudvd• Alter occupying the winks. group of toilieurs will men tverc sitting, ha:ether talking, under Od I ( 4 1' of the uniiialosino,t, when a, cannon entire in. ,junipell ov er one Of Abe officers (Capt. Datilienny) struck ('alit. Ingail on the left thi , gh. without hreakito , the bone; then mortally wounded Lieut. Ca Shemin:in, kill col Captain Forster on the Via, xud also kill ed two Color Seigenias and hum privates, oundit a rg aim:. other privates. two of them Nlajor Ihel“on's and Captain setvanh,. Thus one strut killtd two officers and six men, and wounded one officer and three men. The Adjutant, who was present. as well as Cap tain Danitenny, miraculously escaped. • 1)0.) I linderqatul the 1313,:sarthu ,4Av4 m•tut to! , tl.en. to s-ay Cotigress has absolute legislative power anti a ot..lo.lity over the ills triet 01-Columbia, in all ulatteis pertaluing •la‘ f•ry 31r. Nvilson --That is my pop,ition. The interpellation to lc.l in a ke . neral laugh til Lout ,i.::, ~,~ It.j)lit.i./ l l UI ilk Mercury ExtractCd from 'the System by Electricity It appears that in Paris tt discovery has been toady, h', which any metallic poison, such tiS lead. mercury or arsenic bray be extracted flout the system, by the potent agency of electricity. —The /media opriwidi is as follows: -A metallic bath is insidated on glass legs and partially tilled whlt acidulated water, to convey more readily the electrical currents. The patient lies . iipon a seat in the tub insula-, led entirely from the bath. When gold, sil ver or mercury is in the system, nitre of by drocholorie seitls are employed. When lead is suspected the acid used is sulphuric. This done the neritive'pole of the battery is put in connection W the bath,- w bile the positire polo is in the bands ol - the patient.' Now the work of purification .commences.' The elec tricity piecipiuttiS itself, hunts. digs, searches and discovers every particle of metallic, sub stance concealed iu the moSt profound LiStillM bones. nerveand joints of the patient, resolves them into their pritilitilit .10111tA, • and extract ing thelli om their buman orgattimii. deposits them upon the side of the bath, where they can be sveti with the naked eye." - 4 111A611.11Y n UItVENCASTI.N, IND.—Au affray took place in the streets of lit eenrahtle a %leek or two since, between Dr. Stockton and a man by the name of Svciest ; it► which Dr. S. wai killtd—Neetest using a bowie linty, and the Dr ; a ram. The idlair grew: out of a ltivicrl eiretnumance—tend a quarrel of.worda in which the lie passed freely—ending in a tragedy which bilogs grief and 414:parable hiss to many. I:oth parties are L•add to he past the •Ineridunt of lite. Mitt of very respectable characters. Necrest wits nt one time I clergy man.—Lo Porte Timm FAMINK IN MADAWASKA, Min:K.—A letter from the - Itev. M. It. hap, ft howe missionary in Madawaska, writes to the Portland Mirror. under date of June 24., that the people in that portion of Maine,are and have been for some - months in a state of starvation. lie states that probe lily 500 families, with an avvrage, of eight Ordure-it each, have gone w ‘ ithout bread . from one to eight weeks at a date 0114 Spring. They keep alive now On greens, a few fish and frogs, and it, is said they have eau's sitako ! i. ( /ne or two cases of starvation are said to . have occurred beliwe the Spring opened. - Fish and game of all kinds are scarce around the older settlements, and many of the nun arc too much famished and_ disheartened to take to the woods and lakes. The greatest relief leaked fur was the raspberry harvest, and .about the First of July raspberries and blackberries were inexhaustible. ItEPAYtNO nrt 01.0 M.:RT.—III A. D. 1670, after King Philip's war, 1)i. Increase Mather, of Boston- Moss., "did by hi _fetters - proctire a whole shipload of provisions from the charity of his friends in Dublin, Ireland." So that when- Boston .sent. by R. B. Forti n o, Dal:, a ship load of provisions to Deland, a few years ago. it was Pitt the payment, without interest, of a debt .coittt :Acted a century and three quar ter:4 before. DISCOUit 'WING CONDITION 01 0 +Pr from Cola gives 6 d eplorable account of Morniondom, There is said to be not only discontent and di , sension amongst the Saints, lint the whole Territory threatened by famine. In the Southern settlements the win& of the wheat crop, which had looked so In oinking, has been devoured by grasshop pers.: and towards the North, the, same , result is :Imo ehunded. These inseet ft %Vete gushing out or the unit hi by Atonls, and it reilllill6l only a little s weather toliatiten their growth, and to * R eiile the entire destruction Of the et op. A %Vivi.: AS. NV .% 3 A WIPE.---The' New York p os t Aso y of It merchant in that city %vim, when first married, his wife that for ever .411 V prodneed h e w o uld pl ac e a t h e r .z.:',000. Atter a lapse of years he end upon informing his wife of his cm. barrassinetlis, She quieLly placed in his !muds honds to the amount of as the pro ducts of her industry, remarking at the same time, "Yon see. that I have not been ialle ; and if you had been half as industrious as your brother over the way, I. should uuw have c. 60.000." SEA:44 )ti,i II INT. - exOlutige !tip, fruit and vep,etables are the natural food 'Or snowier. nut) the cheapest also. Hat., there fire, none fruit and I(4...As:tables, aiLl ics6 mut aid you iA ill MIL only ctmuih~ttc, to your ,hvall1), but you wlll give the tio t loest , at tn;ltB of in inn.: necessity, a )lit; tinder the lath rib, winch they richly det,erve. Tom.vro. -T. JOLimon liandolpb, in a(lte,:, la:lure the Agrirtißural Society of Albemarle comity, Va.. lately deli vered,stated that 111 r. JelbrAoli could . recollect when th e towato was cultivated as an ornament to the flower gailleiss, callr.rl loire apple, and d eeme d poi , ouous. I t ww, eaten by but one individual. ‘e hose peculiar constitution, or the f orma tion of %t lakNe moniach, was supposed to le:Ast its deleterious vitt•ta. A Pout% if WAYM AN. -ACCOUIIti frOM Mexico state that the diligence between Toluca and Morelia had been stopped by robbers and the—passettgers plumtereil of about 52,000. The ullair was done in the ntost genteel man ner. A lady passenger had a ring of great aloe on her linger, which one of the robbers .;trove in vain to get off. Finding he could not ,ucceed he begged the lady to keep her bauble in remembrance of him. PATKNT 4 1)ICKFYS."- - - A Ulan in New York haN invented, patented, and introduced a paper -dickey." which he sells at three cent-, and warrant , : to stand with the mercury at 96 de• m the shade ! 1k makes the article by rit.teltmety at the rate of a thousand per hour, stitches anti them until -they-are-as brilliant as it made of linen ! Tithr.,3 ON TM; WA:m[s RAILL.o.m. —ThC 1,111ca40 Dettioeratic PtVzsS says that Ur. of that Lily, has wade a Contract With the Eli 'lA.; Central Itallroad to plant three r o w s of locust trees on each :3 if c of Ike road. for the di,tince of 1:20 miles south of Chicago. The row, alc to he set five feet apart, and the trees nolt.ilo_LA_Let fioni cavil o Zr that the r( nowneil marrying (..i.i1,11 Jim, lit. hlettia Ihli, at (ircinal,iicol, 1..0 ;and. It t , ) 4.. lcmuli.awl. I ht. Yoti. (I'..L) Rt. pul , lll—tis 6.1v: - . the %%1, it 4 i I that COUII 1•3 wort than au ay- LI .1,(.. ,11., .LT WO- DOLLARS A-Y . EAR Front the Baltimore 800 intiinittO itPneflts of Droughts, and the /dude* in which they Act to Improve Land. LABORATORY OF STATE ettillitST• No. 29 Exchange. Building It may bo a consolation to those who have felt the influence of the late long anti protracted dry weather to know that droughts are one of the natural- causes to restore the constituents of crops and renovate Cultivated_soila. The diminution of the mineral matter of cultivated soils takes place from two causes Ist. The quantity of mineral Matter carried off in crops and not returned to the soil in ma mire. 2d. The mineral matter carried ofr by rain rater to the sea by MUM of fresh Avater streams. These two causes, always in operation..and eounterneted by nothing, would in time render the earth a barren wasto in which.llo verdure would quicken and no solitary plantltake - root. A rational system of agriculture Would obviate The first cense of sterility, by tilvvity% restoring to the soil an equivalent' for that which is taken elf by the crops': tint its,,thiti is not done Wall - eases. Proiidence fies provided a way of its own to counteract the , thriftlessness of man, by instituting droughts at, proper periods to bring up from the deep parts of t 147.. etkil h loud 1w ; I . again The. manner in which: droughts exercise their beiiefuiial influence-istisfollowb.. ituring dry weather a continual 'evaporation of water takes place fixity - The, surface of the earth. which is not eeptAiedlay-Way - - frOur - the clouds. The evaporation from the surface cre ates vacuum. (so - far as water is concerned) which is at once filled by the *stirrising' isp from the subsoilof the land; the rater - from the subsoil is replaced - front the next ,strata_ below, and in this manner the circulitkin of yea tet'in' the earth is the reverse to'that which. takes place in wet weather. _ .Thialtregresa - to - the surface of the- wait+ in the aid* toanifesta itself strikingly in the nV*f.'sprine4, and of rivers and, streams - which are teppt +rut d by springs. - -It is nut, however, only- the wao. , ter which is hmsglit to surface of the earth, hut. also that 'which the water, holdsin Solution. ThestosubStances are silts of limit, and mag nesia; of potash and soda, and indeed whatever the subsoil or deep strata, of. fiseesith Allay contain."' The water on reaching theinifiee t lie, soil is evaporated and Actives behind - the mineral sell% which I will UM :enttnierate, viz :.Mime, as air-slaked lime magnesia, as air-slaked magnetite ; pbosplutio-of tense,' or bone earth ;:sulphate of lime,.eirplaSter tarisl carbonate of -potash andsodii,•with.stlieste of potash anti soda, and also chloride 'Of stadium or common salt. All, indispensable to the -growth and prodtiCtion 'or plants . ' te hich are used for food.` - Water' 'as'it ° falls would dissolve but * eery' entail . Preto:olkm of softie of theSe subtitances, but when.ft beciones soaked into the, earth it there beettmes stirottg 7 ly imbued with ettrbenielicial frein tite -- tlecom. position of vegetable matter- in the 'Soil. and thus acquires the property of, rtagiir'4fissot trig- joinerals on Which before it timid have very little influence. • - - - tyres tiro led to the cousiderstion or the Above subjects by 'finding'. on the re ! eanutina; Lion of u soil which t -ttnalykrl 'three or four yearn ago, a larger quantity of at particular mineral substance than I at. firstleunt.l, its none had Leen applied itt the meantime: ' ' The thing was tliffieult oltsplanation Moil membered the late longand protracted drought.. I then also remenibered that in Zacatecas and several • other proVinces in Sotith Aime d .A. soda was , obtained front thebottoni-mf ponds. which were dried 'in the dry, and agattvtilhal up iii the rainy season. As theattovesaffitint-' tied depended on the prinitiplew, of natural iolilosoptiy, I. at once instituted se veral went:; to prove its truth. Into a glass - cylinder MRS placed - at' small, quantity c.if chloride of -barintit,4n' solution': this tvas then hilts! with a dry 44,-, and for a long time exposed to the' direct rays'eftheAun on the stirlaqe.• The soil on the tin face of the cylinder was now matted withiulpburic,meid. and gave a copions precipitate of sulphate of !Arleta, I l he experiment 'was envied by:substituting chloride of lime,, sulphate of soda i and 'carbon - ate of potash, for the chloride of barinni, and on the owner re-agents 'beim! applicd.frievery instance, tlfe presence of thic:e substances was defected in large quantities 9 0 the surfa ce o f the soil in the cylinder. " here then was proof positive and direct. by plain experiments in chemistry and natural philosophy, of the agen cy, the ultimate, beilefleial agency. ord. - oughts. We s ee, thereinte,' in this; that even those things' which we look upon as evils, by Provi dence arc blessings in disguise, and that we should not murmur even when dry seasons af flict us, fur they too are for our good. The ea+ ly and the later rain may - produce at once abundant crops, but dry weather is. also a beneficial dispensation of Providence in bring ing to the surface food for future crops, which otherwise would be forever usele&s. mon stile weather is good fir the present. 'hut droughts renew the storehouses of plants, in the soil, and furnish an abundant supply of nutriweut for future crops. - thilas State Agricultural Chemist. jIA Navin %VonEri.--'llie New York ('nurier condemn.; the 4f:sire - to save Mrs. Robin:4on. th e c li enleress, flow the gallows, because :the ••Itmly." -For the same reason. it. is ar gtt,-,i. 0,0111(1 we spare a ( 1 / 7 CCS. "Imagine." o liter, "a tigress' fangs yet stained with.the bloo.l of her victims, filially brought to hay and abooat to fall before the cage! rifles of her purmien.. when some friend of felinity ruhltes forward --.6eritletnen. stop. fikr heav i•o'A sake ! Ilow can you! . Coloider the gender of this beautiful creature! it is nint,.' " '"-_)- 'Bill - Larkins. who is what may I* de twiiiinated a sporting character, once Amok 11.111.1:; with Gm. Jaels.son. ..Aud." says Bill. • hint a piece of advice at the time. S:i •1. now General. we've elected yon. and. I. hoot , you'll take edit: of the Constitutlon." tia ) ; lie, ..111 try, and I hope you'll take care ut yours." IVestcro editor thu!.; delivers himself ‘V 00 4.:..y 0 le 11 , 11,1 t uii W it) 50 C Our .1111 t utr the 1/01C, while we wcie lying in I,ed %%ailing ft), it to dry, that,-we sincerely hope the collar vii .v c , lt his throat. :ACMg" a 4...A.:Ul f ding wife who }i. on at; olive tux, excl-timcd • Oh tliAt Ail iite..3 tvuultl Lotar NO 33.