1:31 - HENRY J. STAIILE. 38 T " YEAR. TERMS OF THE COMPILER. The Republican Cumpiler is published every Monday mornincr b , by Ilssav J. STAIILE, at $1,75 per annum if paid in advance-2,00 per annum. if not paid in advance. No sub- the publisher. until all arrearages are paid ADVEKTISEMF.NTS inserted at the usual rates. J6 B WattK done, neatly, cheaply, and with dispatch. yoffice on South Baltimore street, direct ly opposite W ampler's Tinning Establishment, one and a half squares from the Court House. From the Warren (N. J.) Journal. Jonathan's Reply, in-Verse, to John Bull's Boasting in the London Times. I wonder, John, if you forget, some eighty years ago, . 'When we were very young, John, your head was white as snow, You didn't count us much. John, and thought to make us run,' but found out your mistake, JOhn, one day at Lexington. And. when we 'asked you in, John, to take a Cup of tea. Made in Boston harbor, John; the tea pot of the free, You didn't like the party, John. it wasn't quite select ; There were some-aborigines you didn't quite expect. You didn't like their manners, John, you couldn't stand their tea, You thought it got into their heads and made them quite'too free. . . - But, you got very tipsy, John, (you drink a little still,) The day you marched across the Neck, and ran down Bunker Hill. You acted just like mad, John, and tumbled o'er and o'er, By yOur stalwart Yankee son, who handled half a score ; far too fat to run, • You havn't got the legs, John, you' had at Bennington.. You had some corns upon your toes, Corn wallis that was one, And at • the fight at YorktOwn, why then you conidn't run, Von tried quite hard, I will admit, and threw away your gun; And gave your sword, fve, John, for shame, to one George Washington. 1 do notthink_you'll e'er forget the time you went to York, And ate so like a beast, John, you raised ,the price of pork, Then we had some to spare, John, our hooks with NH; we bait , d, And hung them out on Jersey shore, and you evacuated. • Another much-loved spot John, such sweet as• sociattons When you were going down to York to see your rich relations, The Dutchmen of the Mohawk, John, anxious to entertain, Put up - some "Gates" that stopped you, John, on Saratogh's plain. That kill you must remember, John, 'Lis high and very, green,— We.meam to have it lithographed, and send it to your queen, I know you love that hill, John, you dream of it o' nights, The name it bore in '7d, w,►s simply Bemis Rights. You old friend, Ethan Allen, John, of Conti nental fame, Who called - you to surrender, in "Great Jeho- van's" name, You recognized the '"Congress" then, authori ty most high, . • The morning he called gn early, John, and took from you Fort I know you'll grieve to hear it, John, and feel quite sore and sad, To learn that Ethan's dead, John, and yet there's many a lad Growing in his hitrhland home, that's fond of guns and noise, And gets up just as eatly, John, those brave Green Mountairt-h-oys.7- Oh no, we never "mention it," we never thought it lucky, The day you chargfd the cotton bags, and got into Kentucky. I thought you knew geography, but misses in their teens Will ell you that Kentucky lay, just then, _ below Orleans. The "beauty" it was there, John, beyond the cotton bays, And did you get the "booty," John ! some how my memory ti:ors; I think you made a "swap," John, I've gOt it in my-head, Instead-of 'Told and silver, you took it in cold lead. The mistress of the ocean, John, she couldn't rti!e the lakes, You had seine 12;anders in your fleet, hut John, you had no "Drakes ;" 'Your choicest spirits too, were there, you took hock and shrrry, But, John,-you couldn't stank our fare—you couldn't take our Perry. We make them all just so, John, on land or on the sear; We took this little continent on purpose to be tree; Our Eaule's free, he loves to . soar, he cannot hear a cage : But, John, he 10,,-Ps to scratch the bars, and make lion the rage. Our glorious stars — are„ sparkling - bright, in creastnir year by year. _ SupporTld by a thousand hearts that never knee• a fear; Our children lisp it in their Prayers, 'Lis carried o'er the sea ; - -- Post hear it, John it thunders there, '•We're children of the free." Free as nor sires of - 741. as bold, and brave and • oil, and k tlic la-n*44e we took train ~u; To keep our flag free ~ n the land,-unsullied on the wave, the la.? hri-rht shali. set on the Ireeaila's 3 fainitti Vrininper----Deuntiit to inlitirs, grirulturr, littruturr, 3rts nn Snirlars, rljr !nrl;rts, 6rnrrat ilamrstir and larriga faintErmrat, kr. 1= ,Getect q`he Beginnings of Character ; OR, STARTING IN LIFO not - ; -• •; ; • . • ; • • • - damage themselves for life. or at least fer many years, by what to them appear as trifling or unimportant errors. They violate the truth, form reckless associations, and neglect positive . engagements. Thus, at the _very beginning, they impair confidence, excite suspicion, and create distrust. Character_ is a jewel of price less value, and yet it is easily impaired or tar nished. The young, generally speaking, do not appreciate its importance, because they lack experience', and know . but little of the w orld_andi ts_ se verity—A v hittatior ex ample, who is in the habit of repeating all sorts of wild and improbable stories, - who boasts, exults, and magnifies, is at first looked upon with surprise and caution by the intelli gent and discerning, and then, detected in some monstrous fabrication, he is distrusted and avoided. Thus. in an effort to appear what he' is not, and to occupy a position to which he is not entitled, he destroys his character, and loses friends who otherwise would prove use fal to hint. The young and indiscreet do not appreciate the realities of life, hut permit fancy and fully to mislead them. They do hot remember that character is to a certain extent, like an, edifice that is : intended not for a day or an hour. but fur years, and hence its foundations should be of the best material. The advanced in life are, perhaps, too severe and too critical. They do not make sufficient allowance for the indis. cretions and the impulses of youth. Hence they are often disposed to consider as vices what are in fact merely foibles—foibles, too, which might readily be modified and amended if not wholly cured. When, however, the habit of exaggeration and falsehood becomes so fixed that it forms a feature of character—when engagements are made, pecuniary or otherwise, without any intention of fulfilling them, the reputation 'soon becomes damaged to so serious established Not a few individuals among the young in dulge in the error, that by extravagance of speech," recklessness of sentiment, and - inso lence of manners, they make themselves im portant, and excite envy and astonishment.— The mistake is a fearful one. The only feelings produced among the sensible and observing, are those of pity and contempt. If, in brief, a statement cannot be relied upon, because of the known habit of the person who makes it, to falsify and exaggerate—thereafter, his career in life and society will . be disreputable and downward, and at the most t apid rate. The beginnings of character cannot be too carefully attended to. Temptations beset the yOung all sides. In the first place, they have to re sist their own evil passions and weaknesses, as well as their inexperience, and in the sec ond, the evil associations with which society abounds, and "the many allurements which pleasure and profligacy hold out. This is es- Fecially ---- the - cahe iu great peril may- be-said to exist within the ages of eighteen and twenty-five. It is at that period that the character and the reputation are more fully developed than at any other. The habits then become fixed—the tone of the mind set tled—the disposition regulated. But if a false step be taken and a false system be adopted. it will be difficult, nay, almost impossible to recover in after life. Only a short dine since, a young man paid a visit to a neighboring city, as• well for relax ation as for pleasure. Before he left the place of his abode, hie standing was every way cred itable. Ile had grown up under the eyes of watchful parents, had received a good educa tion, possessed a fine mind. and was addicted to no vice. It so happened, that on the, way. ed-art-acq.uaintance4v-i-th-a-41--si ang-ro • of the world as he described himself, who in fact, was nothing more than a polished sharper and gambler. The youth was led on from step to step, until all his funds were exhausted, and he was compelled to, write home -to Ins parents, for a sufficient sum to pay his hotel bill and passage back. Meantime lie had been seen in one of the streets of New- York partial ly intoxicated. Fprtunately he was called to a sense of propriety in time, but not before his character had received a shock from the effects of which it took months of good conduct to re cover. Naturally kind of heart and correct of deportment, he intended nothing of the kind ; but was led - on gradually by an evil•asociate. Ilow many-are ruined in AL similar' manner ! How many forget the little proprieties of life, commit sonic excess, and then discover to their mortification and shame, that they have dis graced themselves. The young cannot he too watchful. They cannot guard too vigilantly against bad habits and evil associations.— They cannot be too careful to protect them selves from the vice of falsehood. Character, to many of them, is all they possess ; it is the only inheritance that has been left to diem by their parents. and it should be cherished ac cordingly. No young man, who has a just sense of,his own value, will trifle with. his rep• utation. It should be as precious to him as the breath of his nostrils. But, like the down of the peach, or the fragrance of the rose, when once gone it can never he replaced. Accord ing to the poet, well that ends well,•' but there is seldom a good end that has not .a good beginning.—Pennsylvania Inquircr. Boy Love One of the queerest and funniest things to think of in after life, is boy love. No sooner does a boy acquire a tolerable stature than he begins to imagine himself a man, and to ape mannish ways. He casts side glances at the tall girls he may meet, becomes a regular at tendant at church. or meeting : carries a cane. holds his head erect. and struts a little in hi; walk. Presently, and how very noon. in love : yes.prils is the proper word. because it best indicates his happy, delirious selcabase ment. He lives now in a fairy region. some what collateral to the world. and yet, blended somehow Inextricably with it. Ile perfuines his hair vi ith fragrant oils, scatters essences over his handkerchief, and desperately shaves and annoiws for a Iwarl. He quotes poetry. in ivilich —love" and —dove" add —heart" and —dart" peculiarly predominate: h e pluu es dee ier •ill 4 to dt.;icious fancies "CALL Yorit N F:XT 1 4VITNES.; "—Yesterday , in the court-house, while the thud srk . e en i n an important CaSe WaS being wade by a km n ed barrister, the Judge fill asleep - . -- The bar rister proceeded fur smile time. hut at length sat du wn. re at ii..ct— -the court's asleep."— La w yers. olli_w, an , f ' sp , :etators .at it/ profound silence fir smile time. steing tt,L: court in 1e [0,..e. At len:oh a lawyer, bolder than the rest, ventured to shake the CJ:/It, tt hen. ruo lauhg kw; eyes. his honor cried utttall-4:4/ur tr.(aning the hymn, "lin 4,,r4:Ln's i awakened by ~,,„if fiA t i %-% oh Ji , c ,._, 4 1.:, 0 , .. -tliatus • , /"1, u"r• Pr"P';'''''' "' ('-'"'"' III(' ex.'relsol "Y sill;',""'--! titxt wittit..-:;." Brut, It.,vfir• bLen --- thhrarp , i/ly the laugh that followed, he cur sudden! v brcaks into a r.Carict racfi—of thyrne. : - -/' ,l- jall.: ' banks I s tand.-' . Tfie worthS,man 1 rected this, by sa v ing. "Proceed with vuur ar lie f o _ a up o n th, : 1,01:3 of his beloved : is si-onnY was horritt..-d by hearing the whole schou. in/. gunient."—Cin. Gq.z , fie raised to the seventh heaven if She speaks a - pleasant word :is betrayed into the mo. - -1 ac.- medlateiY strike up. Jardan ain a hard road tonishing ecstasies by a S1111:C ; and is plunged to travel, I bt•iieve ETTILSI3=UTI G I OI\M AY, FAR el 1 - 24718 56 . into the gloomitist regions of misanthropy 'by a frown. Ile believes himself the mast derbted lover in the world. There was never such another. There never will be. Ile is the one great idol ator ! Ile is the very type "of - magnanimity • - I a '( s•s the I grovelinn• ° thought. Poverty, with the adorable treloved,he rapturously apostrophises as the first of all earthly blessings ; and "love in a cottage, with water and a crust," is his beau ideal .paradise of dainty delights. He declares to himself, with the most solemn! emphasis,:that he would go through fire and water ; undertake a pilgrimage to China or kainschatkn ; swim storm-tossed oceans ; scale impassable mountains, and face legions of hay onets, but for one sweet smile from her dear lips. lie Boats upon a tlo\ver she has cast away. lie cherishes her glove—a little worn in the fingers.—next his heart. He sighs like a locomotive letting otlsteam. He scrawls her dear name over quires of foolscap—a, medium for his insanity. He scornfully dep. recales the attention of - other boys of his own age ; -cuts Peter Thibbets dead because he said that the adorable Angelina had carrotty hair ; and passes-Harry Bell contemptuously for dar ing to compare "that gawkey Mary Jane" with his incomparable Angelina. Happy ! happy ! tOolish boy-love ! with its hopes, and its fears ; its sorrows, its jealousies and its delights ; its raptures and its tortures ; its ecstatic fervors and terrible heart burnings ; its solemn ludicrousness and its intensely Mo saic termination. The Lady in Grey Silk. The New York correspondent of the Phila delphia Sunda!) Mercury, in referring to the fact that 'Hon. James Quiggle;- formerly a mem ber of the Pennsylvania Senate from Clinton and Centre eMin ties, had taken up his residence in the "Quaker City," relates the following amusing anecdote : Seine years since, on the road frOm Lancas tei to Philadelphia, on a blazing hot summer day, Judge Jim Pollock, (your recent gover nor,) lion. Jim Quiggle, (then plain Lawyer I uigg • the former well, but not the latter, were alone in the rearmost car of the train. Jim Pollock' was looking.out of the car window, at a place where the train stopped to water, when sud denly he. drew his white handkerchief from his pocket, and began vigorously waving it in the air, at .the same lime bobbing . his head out of the window in - a very vigorous manner. "What are you about, Judge ?" asked Mr. Q., without rising from his seat. "Why. don't you see yonder ? There's a lady waving a white handkerchief, and I'm re turning the salute—some acquaintance I wade formerly, I suppose ?" Judge P. ceased, but in a few moments he ngain looked out and resumed the operation with his cambric. “Who is'she, Judge ?” risked Mr. Q., as he lounged in one corner of the car, with his nether extremities curled up like a gigantic capital Z. ' , Well, the fact is:l don't exactly know chief r• Mlle nc'' • cone near-sighted, a ut earV6-ecogniz - e her, hut she is dressed in grey silk, and stands yonder, under a big maple tree, near my friend John B—'s house." By and by the locomotive gave a snort, and the train began to move. Judge Pollock again flirted his cambric to the lady in a final salute, and this time Jim Quiggle thought he would have a peep at her. So he cl'os , ,cd over to the Judge. and poking out his head, took a view, but didn't see the lady. Nevertheless, the Judge kept. on waving his handkerchief, the perspiration roiling down his face n ith the effort. Where is she ? I don't see anybody." said Mr. Q.. after kcanning the landbcape, with ont observing any female. "There !" was the rather petulant rcrly ; standing under that maple tree, waving a white handkerchief?" There waS a Su ppressed snorting sound, and Jim (niggle rolled nccr On the Sea,t, red it, the face as a boiled lobster, while. your corres: pondent picked him up in a state of virulent pat oxystn of laughter. and hit] him out upon the seat. After sacrificing all the buttons on his vest and tvaist-bands, he explained to the Judge the occasion of the cachinnatory The Judge had been exchanging salutes for' twenty minutes with an iron-grey mare, whose long - white tail, as it flipped away the flees, had been taken by him for a white handkerchief, waved by a lady in a grey silk drc, , s ."I:he Judge didn't. swear. but he changed the subject to sawmills, the only portion of which was in telligible, being the frequent repetition of the word —dam." And Ike, immer s e] in his physiological lesson, read on----" The -heart is of a conical shape, is situated in the thorax'. just within the sternum, a little inclining to the left side." Mrs. Partingion laid down her knitting work, and, looking over the top of her spectacles. said., "Is that so, Isaac'?" Ile assured her that it was : She paused a moment, as a pause will occur in the breath of the winds at times, as if they went into their caves for a stimulant pre paratory to going on a fresh blow. ' lll sure," said she, striking out, "1 don't see anything comical in its sh tpe, and. if it is within the sternum, the store must be true that Paul used to tell about the soldier that the tailor played a prank on." Ike looked up and ceased roiling up the corner of the leaf he was read ing. "He went, to the tailor," continued she, "as he was going to battle, for hint to put a breastplate in his uniform- next his heart, and the tailor, who was a funny than, put it in the hind part of his pantaloons loco down in the back. The man was a coward, and run away, and as he was getting over a wall, a soldwr struck him right on the breastplate with his hayonet, and pushed him over, but didn't hurt him. Ile said when he got up that the tailor k no wpd where his heart was better than Its did. I - always.thonght it was a i.tke t i ll The dame smiled at the rentiniseen - ee, and the Old rignl profile of the corporal on the wall even SLCMCII to borrow a ray of heniguity. an d Ike laughed triAtneudouslv. kickinv the stove door cuipitutielily as an accompainweitt.. rtad ou---.---Bwbni Ns'. Tninl;'er, after lecturilv , . s ragzed Sqn , lav Cia , .3 in a innst "TRUTH IS MIGHTY, AND WILL PREVAIL." Skerrett regretted Cie catastrophe, hat concluded there was no usle for crying ,over spi t milk. lle shook-hands-with llavells a ntl left, saying he WJlild try and Lind •a piece of speed in some other pant of- the city. Havens having (putted SLerrett, took the 445 train for New York, and arrived at Brooklyn a little after 10 o'clock on Monday evening. M'Call promised to send the mare downon Tuesday evening, Ile did not du anything of the kind. In consequence of this, Havens went up again on Wednesday to . see -what it all meant." He found M'Uall at the steamboat landing; - - _ hy didn't you send that mare down last night ?'' "What mare ?" "Why, that grey mare I bought of you on Monday." I "On Monday ?" I.‘ ' . _on Alontlily " "You're mistaken. 1 soIJ put TM mare . on Monday, and for the hest reason in the world, she was dead a week before." "Dead ! What do you mean ?" "1% hat do I -melm--? and have yen forgotten that you broke her leg on the Troy road, and that so badly that we had to blow her ht alas out ?" "You don't mean to swindle me by any such game, do you ?" -Swindle! not a bit of it. You killed the mare, and I ran prove it." -"What by-? ,, ... "Your own neighbor. Skerrett. Brooklyn." "And what does he know about it 1" •'Just what you told Inn, and that 1 , 4, that you killed the mare while trying her speed on the Troy road." havens could hear no more, hut rushed for the Police Office, where he swore out a v arrant ag-aimit Weal! for swindling. It was issued by Justice Parsons. But as "Mac" proved h Skerrett that the complainant wimitted that. he killed the mare on the sth of ike.itier, of CO Li l'Set he could not have porehased her on Monday, the 10th. Vet dol. for the defendant. Mr. Havens left for :New York, on Wednesday night, in the Manhattan. lle was accompa nied by Skerrett. Ou going forward. after tea, he saw a grey mare, that led to the following dialogue : "'VC ho's bob-tailed mare is that, Skerrett ?" "Mine." "Bought her'frow M'Call. She is not ghite as goud-lo9king as the one I wanted, but I think she k full as.speedy." "What did you give ?" "Four hunched dollars." "Say no more —le t's think." Skurrett obeyed orders, and • went in :I nd took .'a little bonialiitig warm." Il.►veus !r,►iil for it. As lie did so, a bystander thought: tie uttered an imprecation about a certain scoundrel in Albany. .Nloitm.,—Never hire a man to tell z lie, un less you wish to get chi:laud An Original Horse Trade. Mr. Samuel Havens resides in Brooklyn, and is a great admirer of horse-flesh. On Monday last he went up the river to Albany for the purpose of buying a mare belonging to his friend M'Call. The grey mare' is a , very fine do a mile in 2.5.5.. with two in a wagon.' Ha vens heard - of her merits last week, and re solved on a purchase. On his arrival at Alba ny he took breakfast at Stanwix Hall—short ly -after which he buttoned up his coat and started to find M'Call. - He met him in Broad way, near the =City Hotel.. With "Mac" ho had the following converslition: "I understand, Mr. that you wish to sell that grey of yours." "rdialjVaritio sell her, but I imagine she is now disposed of." , "Disposed of !—to whom 7" "To your friend Skerrett, of Brooklyn." "What 'did he agree to give you ?" - "Five hundred and thirty d011ar , .." "If you will let rue have her, I will give you five hundred and fifty dollars cash'down." "But I've promised her to Skeireu." 'When ?' "Last week." '•Never mind that. If he should call, say she's dead—that I brae her leg on 'ihe Troy road, in consequence of which we had to blow her brains out." • "Of course, I will. It's n bargain then. Give me the five hundred and fifty, and Ol send the mare down to-morrow night. But hadn't we better crop her inane and bob her tail, so that She:ll . cu cannot sue me fur lying to him ?" "Just as you please—there's your money. Be sure to send her down on Tuesday nightou the Knickerbocker. promised-to do so. Soon after which he folded up his live hundred and fifty and walked around to Captain Knight's for the purpose of.putting the party through. This was 111onclay morning. On 'Monday, afternoon Mr. Sherrill made his appearance in town. lie met M'Call in State stieet. ..IVell,".llac, I've called 'Lc) pay )uu for that . it "What mare ?:? "The grey ►n:►re, the one you wrote to me about last week_." —Haven't you heard about that ?" 4'..lGout what ?" . - "About that grey mare—she Is dead and buried." " Dead —nonsense. You _nre f(mli og me." "Not at all. Ifyon doubt it ask your twigh. bor Havens, who bloke 'her leg on. trio Troy road." •'ls Havens bore ?" "Yes—you willaiind him nt StnnwiN It is not necessary for us to say that Mr. S. went to Sinn wix Hall and saw Havens:neither is it necessary fur us to say that Mr. Havens swore that the grey ware was dead, and that he killed her. Ile could not io whet wise without losing one of the hest bargains he el, er made., =I L is :a 1 . 14 t L LLL inn a , iul tr;ilei Good Seed. Brother Farmers!--The spring is now rap idly advancing, and you 'will soon be again called to the healthful and invigorating labors of the field. Let every one, therefore, with the commencement of his agricultural efforts, and usages of the past. This he cafi do in many ways. We have not yet arrived . at per fection in any of the numerous and interesting departments ,of this great art —.‘the Art . of Arts," as an able author has justly - styled it. But the first and most important thing to 'be attended to, is to provide Goon SEF:n. This is by no means a new idea,,fur we find Columulla —an old Roman author who wrote much and' learnedly on the Art and Science of AgricUlture —enforcing.it with particular earnestness. In one of his worksim says—; • -I have this further direction to give you. that, when the corns are cut down, and brought into the threshing floor, we should even then think of making provision of seed for the future seed time, tbr this is what Celsus says, 'When tb4 corn and crop is but small, we must pick out the,brst eats, and oithem lay up our seed separately by " Virl il, also, touches upon - the same subject. lie says :- - 'vn seen the hirge•it seed's, the , vlew'd with care, Dea'rnecate, unless the induiddieue 11,1)4 Did vearly cull the. 4. %Mania. VMS alt things By fatal doom,grow worm., and by degroM, Decay, forced into tboir'prinievoti state." In consequence of the scarcity or high price of good sett], we sometimes, for the stikozof a slight; saving. feel warranted in sowing poor andimperfectly developed grains ; yet this is always to be avoided when possible. When such a course is adopted. the result of our la bors is never satisfactory.; a spirit of dissatis faction is engendered against farming, anti our ambition weakened and unhinged. The labor of culavating a poor crop is often as great. and sometime:;, indeed, greater. than is required in the case of a good one. Where the soil is thin ly occupied by valuable plant's; the weeds spring up, and finding more nutriment. and a freer range for the roots, luxuriate almost with out restraint. A few dollars expended extra for an extra article of bleed, will rarely be m'ssed 'n t t rse but, never last in the field. It should. I am persuaded, ever be a rule with the farmer to sow and plant Me very best seed he rash obtain, no Matter at what price, where the only alternative is to pay high,, for good aced. or °propagate from had.--A BRISTOL TOWNSHIP PARSilai. [Germantown The Faculties of Animals. Among the" mental problems which ocenpied much of . the attention of Anipere, wits the -vexed of the nature of the faculties of aninsals. Ile originally decided against their capacity to reason, hut he abandoned the opin ion in deference to a single anecdote related by a ft lend on whose accuracy he could 'rely. This gentleman, driven by a stern) into a vil lage puillie house. ordered a fowl to be roasted. Old fashions then prevailed in the South of France, and turnspits were still employed in plate of the modem jock. Neither caresses, threats. nor blows could. truilie the dog net his part. The gentleman interposed. "Poor ,dog, -infl-Qed-P-Lsaid-the-laodiord-Ararply : "he de serves none of your pity, for . the scene takes place every day. Do you know" why this pretty fellow refuses to work the spit ?—it because he has taken it into his head that he and his partner arc to share alike, and it is not hi's turn," Ampere's infamant begged that a servant might lie 'sent to find the other dog, who made nu difficulty in performing the task. De was taken out after a while and his refrac tory partner pit in, who liegan, now his sense ofilistice was satisfied, to work with thorough good will like a squirrel in.a cage. A similar incident was related by M. de Liaiwour to the great Arnauld.._whO„wit h other Port-Royalists, had adopted the theory cartes. that clop; are automatons and machines: - and who, on the strength of tWs conviction l_disseeted_the_pour_critatttres to obser.ve_the circulation of the blood, and denied that they telt. "1 have two dogs."-said the remonstra tor against this cruelty. "who turn the spit on alternate days. One of them bid himself, and his partner. was about to be put in his place. De balked and wagg ed his. tail as sign to the cook to follow him, went to the garret, pulled out the truant and worried him.. Are these your muchi»es?" The great Arnauld. mighty in controversy and redoubtable in logic. must have had a latent consciousness that the turnspit had refuted him.—London Quarterly fr'Fn prevent cows from sucking them• selvts, take a common leather halter and put on the cow 's head as you would on the head of a horse. Attach to the ring under the jaw one en d of a stick, which shall be so long as to reach from the jaw half way between the fore and hind legs, passing between the fore legs, and fastened behind them by means of a girth passing around the body, so that when she turns her head to suck, the lever will pry on her legs so much that she cannot get it tar enough lAA to ream► the teat. I have seen it tried several times, and have never known a failure.—S., in Rural New-Yrker. *A PitoprrAin.i: Cow.—Mr. 11. G. Nlnlin, of Tredyth in township. Chester county, informs u,, says the Village Recard, that he has a cow which he thinks is hard to beat. She has I►ad her third calf, and will not weigh more than 450 pounds. She has been milked for forty weeks, and has averaged nine pounds of butter per week, which makes 360 pounds, besides supplying, the fatally, consisting of live per sons, with cream and The sale of 360' pounds at 30 cents per pound, would amount to ii 108. USEFUL RECEIPT.— WOUnd , i in ea tle are quickly cured by washing several times - a day with a trlixture of the yolk of eggs and spirits of turpertine. Awfal Calamity-30,000 Lives Lost A vegsel has arrived at San Francisco from Japan, bringing intelligence that the City of tie& way destroyed by an earthquake on th e Hilt of Nm.ettiner. One hundred thousand, houses were destroyed, and thirty thousand ii ,e, lost ? Th e earth opened and closed over thousari , ls of buildings, with their inhabitants ! Fi r e bloke out at the saute time in thirty dif ferent ',Arts of the rity. Among the buildings destroyed. xvere 54 temples of wm•ship. Jeddo is the second capital of the country, and resi- demce_ofillie_3lilitaryernor. its popula tion is said to be a million and a hal for persons. This is the greatest earthquake of mode' times. In 1755, the greater part of the city of Li-Jinn. in Portugal. was destoyed. and nearly 7t pur.sons peri.,hed in six mill lalet; TWO DOLLARS A-YEAR. Hon. W. H. Welsh's Remarks IN TIM LATE DEMOCRATIC STATE CONVENTION. Mr. President-1 did not come here for the purpose of =king n speech, but simply to par ticipate in the 'deliberations of the Convention as an humble member. I came here. sir, to gn ie • " • th—th-e—Dtmoc-rwey—or-Reitiii— around our annual council fires—l mite here to perform with them a solemn' lustration-at the pure and limpid - fountain of Democraey-4 ame here to look with them upon our old bat tle flag. so often - Crowned with'the laurel leaves of victory, and pledge with them my constant and unalterable devotion to its bright stars and its red stripes, which have-never yet been given to the breeze, that they-did not blendand mit in harmony and glory with the glorious stripes and stars imprinted on the consecrated ensign of our country. Perhaps, Mr. President - , I have some little right to speak here, when the name of James BucliCnan is mentioned. I-had the honor to be associated with him two years, dniing his mission in London. ' I feel it an honor that any man might he proud of—it is an honor .perhaps, that I May never have a higher one in this country ;. - hut., sir, in /all my" intercourse with him. wherever the place, or e Weyer the occasion, whether•in London. in the Court, or with the people, I can say to this Convention, and can say to the people of -Penn sylvanin, as I hope to have-the pride of doing between this and the next election, that be was in,every inetance. wherever he went, under-all circumstances, thoroughly an American citizen. - (Applause.) I can say this, that the British Court never received a bolder rebuke than when-tunicl their blnzonry trappings,l.heir gewgaws and emblems of -office, James Bu chanan walked proudly erect in the plain dress of on American gentleman. - (Applause.) --- We have met here today fora double put pose—for the put pose of selecting candidates for a State ticket, and also for the purpose of ascertaining the - choice of Pennsylvania for thei next Presidency. and presenting-a Democrat to our party in our sister . States, and asking that we shall no longer be hewers of wood ,and drawers of water, but that the long neglected. claims of Penns y lvania i shall non' lie recognized er-Nittiontl t..onventicar. ----- (Applause;) - - never in my life felt more interest in any - nn. ,proaching Campaign-than the one now opening before us. I believe honestly.-that upon the succese and permanency of the Democracy:of this Unioti depends the permanency of our re publican institutions. The Democratic party has always been the party of 'the country.— . Every cardinal -principle of its faith aims most strikingly at an - enlargement of the- popular rights. • We have-always contended for an en= la of the elective franchise. battled for the destruction of monopoly. ,taught every. where‘that - the people are the safest depositories of politioal power; for-the. reform of abuses; 'taught that the poor man is on the same equal- . ity as the rich man I that, his priceless inheri.. tance of freedom is the same. and that the - hewer of wood - and drawer of water has as tniich,right to be considered in the fashioning of municipal regulations, as these whose good fortunes have placed them beyond the pale of -. labor ; and we have also taught and have - preached the subject with some' pride,. that matters not, where a man first drew the . breath of life. if he has hilfilled all the mma-- tuitional requirements,_ he_ can .ffitike_s_good citizen ; that a man's religion is a matter. be tween himself and his God ; that,in this free -; mid happy country, the -rainbow, and not the • cloud. emblems the cross: and Jew or Gentile. Catholic or Protestant, is not Lobe persecuted on•ftecount - of a faith made dear to him by the memory of his fathers and by the hallowed re collections of the past. . (Applause.) Mr. President-4 have nothirg more to say. . I thank this Convention for the honor done-me in permitting me to address it. I to-day en-, • list in this Democratiderniy. I will-go- forth whenever I am needed in this Commobvvealth, - from the Delaware to the Alleghenies, render-- . r , ny service. that - I ma; be able LO ,secore,7 - , not only the-success of -James Buchanan, but- . the success of the Demeenitic party 'of this • Union ; (applause) and' if we all do our duty,- and go to work manfully, after'the next . Presi-• dentin] election, that Democratic standerd will . he floating gloriously -and . . ttiuttipliat.tly over the millions of freemen-now scattered from the icy waters of Maine to the golden sands of the. -! Sacramento. (Great applause.) fr7General Dearborn, of Tenne;see. in tak ing the chair as President - du Know Nothing Convention, gave utterance to the following in tun►ous sentiment : "Unless we stop• emigration. we can't pre serve the liberty of our country: If coniin ties the time will come when we will have to rise in arms and massacre the foreigners; or make them our slaves, in order to preserve the free institutions of our country. and traususit them unimpaired to our children." A Jolly Trio. About thirty miles above Wilmington, North Carolina, lived three fellows named respective ly Barham, Stone. and Giay, on the banks of the North East River. They came down to Wilmington in a small row boat. and made fast to the wharf. They had a time of it in the city. but for fear they would be dry before getting home, they procured a jug of whiskey. a - id after dark ,of a dark night too, they em bark ed in their boat, expecting to reach Lome in the morning. They rowed away with all the energy that three half tipsy fellows could muster. keeping up their spirits, in the, dark by pouting the spirits down. At break of day they thought they must be near home. anti seeing through the dim grey of the morning a house on the river side, Stone said : Well, Barham, we've got to your place at last." "If this is my house," said Barham. "same body haS been -putting up a lot of out houses since I went away yesterday : but 1 . 11 go ashore and look about and see where we are, if you'll hold 'tier to." Barham disembarks, takes observation, and soon comes sminblit , back, and says: Well, I'll he whipped if we ain't at Wil mington yet; and, what's more, the boat has hitched to the wharf all night !" It was a fact. They had been rowing away for dear life without moving it. r; - ' lt is said that the rment troublesin Ran sas cost the contending parties something like a hundred thousand dollars. "r7-11onest industry hisbroughTilltilia — iito the scaffold," said a wag, as he saw : a carpenter' Upon the Stnillg. sensitzv4 young lady recently billed at a bare idea! NO. 26.