VOL. 12. - - PRINTED AND PUB : • BY.BEN3A.MIN . • ' 1117.11331 CL . Two DoLLkei4 per annum, pa ble semi-annual in advance. It not paid within e year,ll2 50 will be charged Advertisements not exceeding t elve lines will be :: harged $1 for three insertions—a d5O centsfor one insertion. Larger ones in proper inn. All advertisements will be ins rted until ordere' out: unless the time for whi th the are to be continue is specified . and will be charged a ordingly. 1 Yearly acvertisers will be cha rge d $l2 per annuli': including subscriptionto the paper with the privilege of keeping one advertisement not exceeding 2 squares titan ling during the year, and the insertion ofa small. er one in each ntrio r. for three successive times. All letters addressed to the ethic r moat he post paid, - otherwise no attention will be paid to them. AU notice. for meetings, &eland ' other notices which hive heretoPire been inserted gratis. will he chimed .15 ennts etch. except Marriages and Deaths ?'EEROPEAN INTEL IGENCE MrJ O'Connell has addressed a letter to the "People of Ireland." The Ittlignage is ,bold in - the extreme, so much so that +e question wheth• ' er it will not do more injuryl than good. The ints of his address are thud described in its opening • Derrynane Abbey, 17th Sept., 1838. Ileratitary bondsmen, know y o u not, Who would be free, themselics must strike the blow 7 Fellow Countrymen—The j time for action is come—the:period of acquiesettnce is past.• There are. indeed, none to Nuccour a , or to secureour rights. Perhaps there neve were. But at all events the time is come whpri we must either bow in base subirlision to qrar.ge domination, or rouse 'ourselves into salutttry exertion. Agi tation fa our sole meant of truccess—peaceable, legal, emmtitattoual agitatio% The points to which our chimand for-legislative relief should for the preset be confined, are these— F:rat—An equal reform oft our municipal cor yoratiqns with that existing in England. SecOnd—An equal extension of the parliament ary franchise with that existing in England. Third —An equal degree lof religious liberty with that existing in Englland—so that the I rish nation it large shall nollonger be compelled to support the church of a sluall minority of the Irish people. Fourth—A due and adequate proportion for Ireland of the reyresentatiori in the united par. liament. After discussing the pro' with the English radicals, place their cause in the h ministers, the policy of hot he proet.e. dir to give hie own in, two distinct parts. First part—The organize 1 sufficiently nntnerous to spe al/ Ireland. Secondly—The practice, Which such sentiments shah acted open as to ensure sue The organization shout brace every body desirous Ireland." • He than proposes that 1..14 in every town, city and coM to ministers, and says that, chieved, it is only by then and wisest of his t requessts shall be public—no secret Model of the Battle of Waterloo.—Lieutenant Siburn, the assistant 'MiMiry Secretary of Ire bind, has arrived in Lon n, with his already celebrated model of the battle of Waterloo, which he is now occupied in fixin i t up in the great room of th e Egyptian Hall. 1 a few days hence, when this arrangement shill have been coMplet ed, the public will bmgratired with a view of this T' extraordintry works he model has been many years in preparation, The survey of the ground has been made under the! direction of Govern rnent, every kind of authintic information has been collected—the !tumbler and position of the troops have been correctly obtained—and the whole field has been modelled in the most inas terly and correct mermen. The combatants on either side are shown, not by mere lines denoting troop, but by seperate po l gores, exhibitrng the troops it. their various trona, and actions, and clad in their different cosiume. Th. model rep resents, the Field of Wirt rloo end thmsurround• Wirt ing country, extending out two miles and a quarter in either directi n. it is reduced to a surface of about four nu n red and twenty square feet, and contains upward* of 190,000 figures. As a topographical niodel, it has the highent pre tensions, and is by far the most beautiful we have ever seen. It is constructed upon a scale of tone feet to the mile. Eve!:y. house, every tree, and even the slightest undulaltions of the ground, to gether with the very crops then covering its fur tace, have been attended \irt ; but the arrangement of the troops is truly wonderful.— • Lord Far nhasts.—W ill deep regret we an , nonce the decease, on .lhe 20th inst. in the 71st year of his ege, of the Right Hon. John Barry Maxwell, Lord Farnham, one of tks Representa. Live Peers of Ireland, anCol. of the Cavan Mah tia. His Lordship is an ceeded in his estate and title by his brother. th Rev. Henry Maxwell, Rector of Templemich el, county of Longford, E and father of Henry Ma well, P' q. M. P. for the i county .ot. Cavan. g Inn Ships.—Scarcelyj has the wonder created in the worta, by the ippearance of the Great .Western and the British Queen, begun to sub. Bias, when we are calledlopan to admire, the rap id strides' of enterprise. 3 hy the notice -of an iron steam ship, the first of p line of steamers to ply between England an Calcutta, to be called the "Queen of the East," of 2,618 tons and 600-horse power. This .magnificent •vessel is designed by Mr. W. D. Holmes. cog neer-to the Bengal Steam Committee, for a communication between Eng land and India, Switzerland.—The e#pnlsion of Louis Bona. belt parte from Switzerland, is the v he r i e f topic ti m of d. , um muse in the Paris 4ournals. He had not at o , in common,— - Jof the latest date quitted Switze7lanit, in consequence it Is alleged, of the different. Powbrs having refu ,,will' to grant him paasports. The latest Paris dates, however, say thisdifficulty had been pled.re moved, mean-time, lar bodies' of French troops, bad approached 'the S i n frontier and the coos. islander-in chief, 'Gen. liz, had issued • prod.- tit!" to his army, -from the language of which it might be supposed, tha the campaign was, imme diately about }o he a We think otwith standing there is littl doubt no • serious conse quence will amnia. I . -- ._° , 3az *lNEittsi*-30v*2fAxi, . . . . . .... . . • ; . 1 I WILL TEACH rola TOPIZRZ. TIM BOWILA OT TAR BIRTH 41.0 BRING OUT 1101 THZ CAVYRILB OF THE motriFFAFNF, mu.* WHICH WILLGIFBOTIIVITITHTO OGIt HAND! JINDBUBJZCT ALL NATORR TO 001 oat AND TL*AJDtk•—Dl•Jollfllofl 1 _ . . . . , . SHED. NN A.pi. Spain, stil state. Mrs. Fry.-l-This much celebrated !Bay h 0 be,eton Scot_lliad for Abe lest cour,Or five weykS, engaged in visiting the prisons of the principal tuwns in itie)colmtry, lied in endeavouring to eit tabliati ladies' visiting commliteee-for reforming the state oftie Orisons, and improving the mor als and habi of the prisoner& • More Ships.—Two iron steamers, destin ed to play rki -the River Nile, Fgypt, are at present building by Scott and Sinclair, eligineeia, Greenock. The models of thAie steamers are bf the most approved descnptions.—Glesgow Chrop icle. Steam Pakkets.—The London Globe states th!st the Brush government has decided on establish ing a line of steam packets beiWeen England ail(' S. and thin the cohtract will be thrown ',peg for public competitidn. Twenty-embt Jewish converts have been in a few yee4rs past baptised at Liverpool, whale also there ti a regular Hebrew service with th e Hebrew Liturgy of the church of England. , Great Western Railwas,—Thq receipts on the 'line from tile London terminus : to Maidenhehd (only abouti26 miles) have in the 88 days, frlin June to thejend of August, amounted to neatly E 21,000. Coal.—Ai Coal Company has been established at York, It* capital of which is fixed at .£lo,ood, to be raised by 5000 shares of.Ci3 each. Des-pack—The Vivid steamiihip, under the command o f Captain Agars*, arrived in Hull on Friday inclining at 25 minutea past 6 o'clodk, having:maile the voyage front•Londun in the apace of 24 hours. - Durham; County Coal Company.—The fourth helf-yearly• general meeting of the shareholdOra • in this company was held in Darlington, on the 28th Allff.; when a satisfactory *port was /dad, and a dividend at the rate of 10 per cent per In num was declared. leaving a surplus of undivilled pram' amtitinting to £3064 13c. 7d. The thahks of the medting were unaiitmously presented, to the directdrs for this gratifying result of their la. bouts. • Extense Lost—The damage done at he preolises 4f Messrs. Macictosh end Co., in Man chester, by the late fire, will not v excced £I:II,IiLM, of which £5.000, covered by insurance. N. P.TALLN ADGE. Filet and alone made, and throwed himself in to the imminent, deadly brew* N. P. 4101. madge made the srst assault On that formidable, despotic, daring, sacviligions band, in the Sedate How-e. We were dvesent. We remember ,his deadly peleitess, his choked utterance, hisiim movably i fixed determined countenance ;We remembef the audahla but birthed remark; of Calhoun, when 411 eyes were fixed in silent doubt. '4l. is the pent up struggling fire ofiVe au*ius," paid /se, "it will burst upon us presently.' —We remember the bold,. defying astonishrlient of the glint 'Benton, and the quailing, cringing, shrinking of the. `meaner beasts," when it,,did burst. Andlong shall we remember the torfrent of patriotic eloquence; poured otd• when the 'op• pressed titterance found vent.-:—We remember at the close, the whispering's of the little groups of the banded despots. "What do you think of it." "We hare lost Tall inadge."—"O no, Mr. (Wan Buren will bring him back."—"But did you not mark the dead fixedness of his eye on our great champiob during his whole speech 7 Did yon not mark determined war in that eye? OZ Mr. Van Buten and Mr. Wright will put him straight again. ' From. that day to this, the patriot spiral: has never faltered. In the Senate, and in the closet, in mottoit or quiescent, the fixed, determined i our. pose of his mind has never for p moment faltered. —"T will save my country. I will save tha re . Or I will perish. And most religiBusly has he kept hie word.—Nrw lork Times. .riety of a junction nd of continuing to nds of the.. present which he disputes; plan 'which consists on of an assoetation k the sentiutints o arrangements by be so expressed and be such as to em . obtain "Justice in Precursor Societies ty; present petitions if success can be ac• • means. The best ie that all meetings itrsciations Magnetic Telegraph.—The following is 'Xi ex. tract of a letter from a gentleman in Patis to H. L. Plsworth, Esq., of the patent office,t,pub. Imbed in the National Intellfgencer. Ametican genius, our readers will see with pride, and pleasure, is again presenting itself to the sciiintit m men 'of Europe in a way Which commands at tention :and elicits praise : PARIS. Sept. 12, 1838. I urn sure you Will be glad to learn that ottr A• inerican friend, Professor Morse, of the;New York City University, is producing a veractreat sensation 'tinting the learned men of this king dom, Ily his Magnetic Telegraph. He alilonit ted. it, to the examination of the Acadernv of Sciences of the Royal Institute of France at, sitting' on Monday last. Its novelty, tutkuty, simplicity. and power, were highly commeinded. M. Arago, the learned and eminent principal in the iastronontical observatory i 4.f the F . :tench Ea-merriment. has manifested a,very lively giatifi cation'in regard to it. He addressed the abade. my ih regard lu ciur countryman's inventiars. in terms +most creditable to Mr. Morse. It itt on dertooild- that a report of the exhibition Will be submitted by M. Aragn in the forthcontinglimin• her of tthe published proceedings of the institute. Other projects 'or the establishment of a!mag netic (elegraph have been broached laere,iespe many from Professor Stemhill. of MuMch. ; It is said, however, to be very manifest that oui Yan kee P;rottssor is ahead of them all; in at the essential requisites of such an inventioo, and that lie is in the way to bear off_ the palm, In simplicity of design, cheapness of'constritction, and efficiency, Prof. Morse's Telegraph };tran scend all yet made known. . . o:rotinuee in the seine distracted Tbb following beautiful extract is taken!' from i.Wil 'n Conworth," in the last number ill the :- Knickerbocker Magazine :- 1 zi or e land of Wit.an Penal is the only soil t 3 not nerchased ty the blood of the native*. A feeling of peace came over me as I thought of this, and called to mind the scene where he is repreitentee as treating with the Indians, the de- sign is magnificent. il ”Iliow firm most have been the principles of that Man! What a religion that must tre,*hich fortifies a man to go without armor or shield into the Midst of a savage tribei, relying upon Ole -ef. fickcy of his purity-of purpose:, and the dignity of his .aliments to protect flim :. How mijch is i such t on3ism beyond the daring of the werrior ! The time is motel, the othnz is pnysical coinage. Is there in all history a chiracter that apciach. es neerer the character of Christ than his 1; His weopqns are meekness and love—be wenCabout doing good—he endured adversity with pieience, and would have suffered mertyrdorn for hi faith. His Principles of peatee,,erei getting to be 00 Prie wide? of the whole civilized world- Thulimuch he eras in advance of the age. As I t04,,.r.h the soil of PYNN, I determined to seek out a blame in some community of Friends." • -j: AND POTTSVILLE GENERAL ADVERTISER POTTSVILLE, PA. SATURDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 24. 1838. AGRICIJLTURE. FOR THE FARMER. As peach trees greatly exhaust the soil. it is probably the cause, in some measure of the fail. ore of crops. Cultivators would do well occasion ally, to S•emove the exhausted soil from . around the roots of the ,trees,loupplyiag its place with good earth. Coal dust from the blacksmiths torgo, and maid ashes, are a valuable omulsher of the peach tree. It is also said they are an antidote against worms which preys upon the peach at the surface of the soll, : and causes such a la- nentaide destruction of tSein Thepeach, also, at proper times, needs more pruning than any other tree, to keep it in luxuri ant growth. It has been ted, as the result of an incident tal experimencthat squash sown in the fall will survive the frosts of svinier and spring, and wil mature m earlier than ■nv which can be sown in the spring. It is worth a more satisfac tory experiment. The earliest Ballads, we know are grown in this way.. , Young trees should not be planted where the decaying old roots are, as they are the receptacle of nurnei nue worms, which seek their food in the roots of the young trees, and open the sap vessel, so that the 'sap instead of nourishing the tree, flows, to waste in the earth; and .causes the loss of the tree Deep digging is essential to the growth of young trees, in order that the rain water may ter under the roots, which otherwise would be rotted by stagnant water remaining around them. From the Farmers' Cabinet. . FOOD FOR PLANTS. Vegetable mould or earth when brought into Late Of solution furnishes food for plants, and enters into their composition and structure; *Ma rurntsti food for other plants and rinimala, and hecome animalized by the process of digestion ; consequently animals are manufactured out of vegetables by a process of which we are ignorant; and when animals die and are decomposed by the agency of heat, moisture 'and air, they are redo ced again to the elements which conititute the food of plants, and so proceed,on the same round again of producing a new generation of plants and inimals; and this rotary system has been in operation from the creation of the world to the present time, and so will continue until time is no more; the quantity of matter always remain ing the same, though its forms and combinations are constantly undergoing a change. From the Farmers' Cabinet.: LIME YOUR ORCHARDS. The effect of lime on orchards an 4 on grounds in which fruit trees are planted, is stated to be very - beneficial ; it improves their health and promotes their growth, and it ia,said to improve the quality of the fruit. The food orpasture of the tvees is Increased in quantity, and improved in quality by the application, end it is doubtless an important agent in destroying the pubs and Wornlt which are so destructive to fruit trees by the wounds which they inflict, as well on ,the tender fibres of th'e roots, as on the branchesind trunk. - The good effects of lime on apple and peach trees is preeeptible in a short time, and it be• lieved equal benefit will be derived from its ap. plicatiun, by all other kinds of fruit trees. ' Let us try it without delay. fot it is universally known that good fruit is never produced by an unhealthy tree. From the Farmers' Cabinet EXPERIMENT TO RAISE LAMBS TWICE A YEAR - PROM - rut sAms swig Having heard that the pure bred Dorcetshiie ewes wonld infallibly bring lambs twice in the same year, I purchased, for the purpose of ma king the experiment, seven ewes on the 2d De. cemlier, 1825. They were all in lamb, and by the 28th of that _month had yeaned nine lambs The first of the ewes lambed the second time on the 2d day of July, 1826, the remaining six by the 26th of that month ; they brought seven lambs. By the 14th of March, 1826, five of these ewes had lambed- 'the third time, the remaining two on the 29th day of April, and produced, at the third lam ping twelv, healthy lambs. Thus these seven ewes, in 17 months from the time of their purchase, brought and 28 lambs, which were all reared in health. and were sold, the first lambs for a guinea and a half each, and the third were sold with the ewes as couples. Besides the 28 lambs, I had a fleece of wool from each of the ewes at midsummer. NATIONAL L SILK GROWER'S CONVEN. 'PION. To the (fiends of the Salk Cullum-1i having been determined at a meeting of the, friends of the cause, held at Philadelphia on the 25th ultimo, in which the states of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware i'vere represented, that it was im. portant for the furtherance of the intereata of tha Silk Culture, that a National Convention be held at the city of Baltimore, on the second Tuesday, the Ilth day of December nest; it is therefore respectfully suggested that the. Silk growers, and those trtendly to the introduction of this brunch of industry into stir country, take prompt meas • urea to appoint delegates to represent the several sections of oar Union in said convention. The approaching meeting of Congress will afford the ditiiens of distant stales an opportunity of being represented to that body theirby representatives in Congress, and it is therefore subniitted to the consideration of those filet-Ay to the cause in those states, to avail themselea• of the opportuni ty which will be - thets afforded of being so repre merited... • The spirit which now animates the American people, in favor of this enterprise, seems peculiuly to call for a measure of this kind, IN it is obvious that a body of practical men, coming together om the remote parts of our country, will be able by their united counsels to lay before our country men a vast body of important facts and Images. Mons, and thou enable them to proceed onward in their holy work with intelligence and zeal. Aa the time allowed for the meeting of -this CAmver.tion is short, it is earnestly requested of the friends of the measure, to go to work imme. iliately and make appointments of delegates, and it is of great moment that every section of the country should be fully represented. PUNISHMENT OF INFANTS. We have tieatises on the rights of man, of women and on almost every .right which attach es to the several social relations ; yet we have Seen nothing on the rights of infanat,• a class more needing and more di:Serving protect,ion than Soy other. The power held over them to SO oft. en and so onfeelirgly abused, that W 4 give from a foreign Journal, the following instance of its criminal exercise,in hope that it may operate u a caution and defer the infliction of punishment which may, by the most distaot possibility, in volve consequences that no regrets cab repair, not atonement expiate. - "The Conycnt de St. Clair, at bombes hmeaui has lately been the theatre of • catastrophe which has plunged a htgly respectable, family into the deepest grief by the . loss of a beloved child, and created a deep Sympathy among the inhabitants of that part of the country—as much, indeed, from the melancholy nature of the cir cumlitance itself as, from the unexampled man ner in which it took place. Monsieur and Mad ame B— bad placed this'll' only child, 11 beauti ful girl of ten years of age, ib the abate men tioned convent, conducted by Urauline onus, du I ring itereral years,' and enjoying a high repute lion as an establishment for iqunule eduriaton. "The unfortunate child, Lputse B—. it ap• pears. had incurreo the punishment of the cachoi, or prison—the usual Diode tir correcii:in stippled in French schoo;‘, and wive in consequence shut up in the place used for that purpose. It was observed that the moment the door was, closed upon the child her screams were heightened to-a •reinarksble.degree, but no particular importance was attached to the circumstaoce, and she wig left in the cachot, situated at the•hottom of the garden, and at such a distance front the house that her cries were mendable to the initiates. About an hour after the child had been shut up, a violent knocking was heard at the outer gate of the convent, which beifig opened, a labouring man who happened to be conducting a cart a long the road, Which passes near the preuintes, presented himself, and to mauthorativekune de mended .whom they were murdering in the con vent T . adding that he had' distinctly heard the sighs and groans of a dying person proceeding from the-premises at the bosom of the garden and insisted on knowing the cause. The nuns uninednitely explained to the man the fact of the child's imprisunment and asisured him that his imagination had attached more importance to the matter then was • necessary. The man • net •erthelesu insisted upon seeing the child, and the none were ultimately compelled by his positive and determined air to accede to his request, and they had_no sooner arrived at the spot where the child was confined than the convulsive sobs and faint sighs which struck their ears excited rip: prehension. of her safety. The door was immediately opened, when a specimen of indescribable horror presented itself The unhappy child was lying on the ; ground in -it state of the most agonising convulsions, and a cat employed in tearing away the flesh from her neck and face. Every effort was bad recourse to in order to save the life of the child, but such was the nature of the wounds inflicted on the neck and face of the unhappy sufferer; that she expired three days alter the even:, in a state o! the most horitti delirium. , It is supposed that the cat, which happened to be shut Up with the child, becone in the first instance frightened by ta screams, and subsequently infuriated. THE YOUTHFUL BRIDE Observe that slow solemn tread, when the young bride takes her wedded one by the arm, and with doWn cast eyes and a heavy heart turns her face from .sweei home" and all its associa tions; which have for years been growing ace brightening entwining a° closely wound the pur est and tenderest Mellor of the heart. How re luctant that step as she moves towards the car riage ; how eloquent those tears whichensh un bidden from the fountainl She has just bid ached to home! She him giv en the parting hand—the parting vies! With deep and struggling eiriot'on she has pronounced the farewell and oh, how fond and yet mourn-. ful a spell the' word breathes; and perhaps 'tis the last farewell to father, mother, brother, ■od sister- Childhood ,and youth, the sweet morning of e, with its ••charms of eartieat birds, and ear. heat associations, have now passed. ' Now coin= menees a raw a momentous period of existence. Of this . she is aware. She reads in living char acters—uncertarnty, assuming that where all were happiness—where home, sweet home, was m all unto her. But these ties, these associations, these enjoyments, she hes yielded one by ore, and now she has broken them all 'maunder. She has turned her face from:them all, and witness how she clingato the arm of him tor whom all these joys have been exchanged. See how she moves on,the world is before her, and a history to be written wbcne pages are to be filled up with life's loifeliest peneilings, or per haps, with incidents ot affecting intetest ; of start hog, fearful recutd ! Who can throw aside the veil of •three score years and ten" for 'her, and record the happy and sunbright incidents that shall arise in succession, to make joyous and full the Op of life ; that shall throw around these em bellishments of the mind and the heart that whicn Browns the doniestic circle with 'beauty and love liners; that which sty.etenssocial intercourse, and softens, improves, and elevates the condition of society T Or who with a firm and: unwavering band, can register the hoArs and days of affie tionatelind silent weepipg--V midnight watch ing! who can pen the blighted hypes—the in stances of unrequited love—the blackness and sorrow of the mind, when neglected and forgot ten, am it were by him, who was dearer to her than life—when all around was drear and desolate, when the garnered stores are wasted, and the fl.cheriag blaze of the hearth wanes and goes out! and leaves her in solitude, in silence,: and in tears. But her affections wane not, 'loather not, and die not. The brilliant skies nay shed down all her glad dening beauties! unlace array herself in gay flowers ; and friends, kind friends may greet with laughing countenances and kind hearts; but it avails naught. , One kind look—one soft and affectionate accent, the unequivocal' evidence of remaining love—one •smile like that which wooed and Ron that heart, would enkindle brighter, and deeper, and lovelier,emotions at its fountain. than earth with all its splendor, beauty and gay associations. Ok, young man ever he to thy young bride that which thou seemest now to be ; disappoint her not. What has she not given-up for thee What sweet ties that bound heart to heart and hand to hand. and life to lifey his she not broken •off for thee? Prove thy self wiwthy ot all she has sacri ficed. Let it ever be her pleasure, as now, to cling with confiding joy and love to.thiarm. Let at he her stay, her support,. and it 4411 be well re. paid. Her's it an enduring, an Undying love ! , Prosperity will strengthen it--idversity will brighten and.lntrigorate it, and giver it additional lustre and loveliness,: Should the band ofdisease fall .upon thee, glen Wilt thou behold woman's devotion, for thou wilt. never witness her spirit wee faint and drooping at thy couch! Whets thy own are failing sbe will clang to thee like a sweet wine, and difrusip around the pillow sweet influences and attractiOns that touch the master. springs and nobler passions of thy,nature—that shall give new impulse to life ! Her kind voice will be like Mollie to the-falling heart—like oil to thy wounds. 'Yes she will raise thee, restore thee, and make happy, if any thing less than an -sel's arrii:ein do it! _ Froth the New York Mirror. A NIGHT WITH I'HE FIENDS. BY 'THEW:JOBE 8. FAY.-Founded "on fact. I would have.given worlds to recall the action.—l bad nu excuse. It was a deed done with my eyes open. The beggar who steals to save his wife and children from starving, has the symiiuthy of the, judge who condemns him—and the homi• cide, whose crime is committed in a gust of passion, may find consolation in tepen lance- arid in the conciousnees of the utfir• mity of human nature. Men sin from ig norance; from temptation; from want o experienc. I hsd perpetiatod this deliber atily, with my eyes open to the copse. quences. I knew the were of .What was dutng.-I'kere was no adequate temp tation fur it. 1 could only expluin it on the grounds Of innate depravity. • 1, who profOssed a acorn of wrung—who was ac eustomed to self-examination and sell-dia cipline— who knew what guilt was—Who felt, while 1 did it, that I was laying' up a store of repentance—l had yielded, and I regarded myself with contempt and It or- Nothing could be more pleasing than the scene in which this incident took place-. It was at a ball, amid moisic, dancing and pretty women. , Ail the elements of hap piness seemed to lie around- Was I hap py 1 No.• Remorse filled my bosom. I felt that I had recorded in the book of fate a deed not to be erased —from which was to spring shame and suffering. the ghost of "buried Denmark" ....",onfined to lest in fires, Till the foul crimes done in my days of nature Are burnt and purged away."' Night game. Night ! At this mysteri ous period, the guilty have a foretaste of their punishment. In summer I should havelone out and walked till morning.-L- Bdt it wits 'a cheerless November night, I went to. bed. In a little while a sort of oblivion descended upon me, faintly light ed with images of the gay scene where I had spent the evening, and where I had unfortunately laid this sin uoon my soul. My imagination retained a dim sense of music and dancing, and careless voices, and flashing light, till their repeated and repeated \ impressions pained me; and over the whole mysteriously and darkly, like a cloud, or an impending danger, lay the definite conviction and shame of that act —a sane of remorse, appreheosion, guilt and and folly, from which I strove to recoil and hide myself in sleep or even death.— And in those vague movements, weltering bee ween the real and the unreal, grotesque beings, whose shapes were drawn in light upon the black air, darted around, acid made faces at me, and held a sort of devil ish revel over my torments, as I lay pow , erless on my back. Such visitations might come to a dead man in his coffin. And a power seemed whispering—" This is to commit a sin." "1 did not think Of it." And for a moment, this seemed a triumph to me, and I shouted the fact sturdily in the faces of the finds, and I called the good angels to help me, a poor, misused mortal, set upon in this fashion by a par cel of infernal devils. But a voice, after a pause, answered as if with a silent smile —You know what you did—you gratified your wish—you agreed to pay the price— you scorned consequences—you have no excuse—you are bought and sold—you are ours !" And I answered—"lt is true !" and strove to hide myself. I would have crawled into my cave ; and all the while the d.incing went on, and the music play ' ed one continual tune—and gay crowds moving and bowing around, and beautiful female faces, with radiant smiles and care less words, came and went in throngs and mastics, with a floating change and a mock ing contrast. Then 1 ' fell abruptly off a precipice—started and awoke. . I groaned aloud. The chamber was lighted by the faint beams of a night lamp, casting grotetique and giant shadows upon the wait and ceiling. There wad sow thing unearthly about them. 1 had not thought that chairs and tables—those homely and familiar objects--could look strange and impressive. There was a bar lying hung black across the - room— = a mas sive semi-circle, broken by an angle of the comic, appeared like, a segmint of Saturn's belt—and a rugged profile, that frowned like tbe spectre of some giant, held forth a threatening arm and:impressed me with a solemn sense of the monstrous and pre. ternatuml. And soon; amid these huge shadow's and that deathly silence, broken only by a sound from some warping panel, or, per haps, , a wall settling more firmly on its foundation, secret tokens-of time * .Unheard r by di" sleepi millions around,) the fatal act which had arited my past availing', aPPeaTed bef ore e. like ,a ghost with a haunted power.. All the darkest aspects of life presented themselves, as' turned on my patois end strove to sleep.. -All that .1 had ever done wrong_or unkind, or doubt. . ful, sat around my bed lilts c company. devils, each event converted into'* fient,' and at the head of this agreetipe twice f 111 deed of yesteiday, amocking, beartle*dtt , mon, and - then came the dancing and the old tune %a m. • . . At lehgth the awful ordeal Walkiratied by agleam of comfort. Something Which resolved itself at last into a soothing . and most gentle spirit, seemed tmisieal in, a& observed among. Om set , of chattering devils, and whispered in my eat: Patience, mortal, and receive thisbour as a lesion. You shall not sink beneath your burden, Ent must hear it a little t longt er. When the cock crows your periecti- tors will dispense. 'Take care you do nbt put yourself in their power again— Tlie earth i 4 inhabited by two .races—nian,3ia . traveller on hie way to -, heaven, but so t beset by the other race, the devil!. Theis is but one method of escaping thesp'gentla. men, who .10w crowd your chamber 'lia: hilariously. It is by following the wa t is of right and wisdom.. They have eom - ' ratively,a'o power over the Charmed podia, but it is the condition of your existence, - that when you err, you are exposed to their mischievous malice. Weed,. each error creates its own tormenter. 'Ea h man, according to his deeds, is boner d with a retinue of these disagreeable co . 1 1 panions, who acquire more power the m re They za'm They retire from around pu &ring the day, to watch the effect of now temptations, as an angler keeps hillniplf concealed to catch the fish; even, wlipa hooked, gives him -the line in order; to • plunge the barb yet di eper into hiwitictern. In crowds, in moments of passisia, snd times of pleasure, they leave their pike apparently free ; but in solitude, illative, and during the night, they assume.their • dominion; and wo to him who beceiett entirely their slave. .As for you,yuu 11100 . committed an action for which you must bear the penalty. - Yield with patietsce and be wiser to-morrow."' ' I- 1 felt like The lace of my instructress was nearer Wine as she spoke, she kissed t = my fere lead. Then came the dancing aiitil the thne, and the crowds and the demons, end and in the pressure I was nearly auffoct4ed. Struggling, attempting in -vain to call:0114 I was at the point of dissolution, wheni in frightful convulsions, I once more awdkee At that instant the cock in the neighbor ing barnyard gave a sudden, loud, andtre ultant crow, and I distinctly heard he slapping of the fellow's wings. It Was followed by the cheerful cry of a, milkniane A faint silvery light fell upon tke%lved ihrotegh the openings in the shutters nd • curtains. The night lamp burned to lo v er and more dim. Saturn's belt was SCII ce ly visible opposite the pitcher-handl . ? ..--• The huge bar had lost its 'sharp outli ne. but retained enough to identify it .vrtth.the poker, and the frowning giant had dimly ed into theoutline of an old robe de apes. ber, carelessly flung over the back of e chair. Blessed human Shapes all, lifter the unearthly images - of night. I- turned over with a sen se of safety, of beink a niong- my fellow creatures, and on 1 the earth again, of having expiated my crime, and of having now life before me, tot try.. anew the path of virtue and Wisdom, and so-I fell into a quiet sleep. . " But •what was the crime'!" deld m ed . my wife when I had read her this e y.. " The reader will know it," said I. t• Not at all!" said she. "I assureiyoti." I have not the slightest idea -of it." . i , " Let them guess then !" said I. "They will think you have been ob bing the mail," said she, "or committing murder. What is it you have dead to bring on yourself such terrible torreedts?" "I drank three cups-of street,' tita I" said I, with a blush. "And it serves you perfectly 4 said my wife with a look of indignant 'Juvenile *or 1 ..7 . For long Winter Evening*/ EVENING'S at Home, or the Juvenile nap et. opened by Mrs. Barbauld and: Dr. Ikea' with 100 plates, I vol., price $l. The Good Aunt, by Marit Edgworth, 31 cents. Peter Parley's Picture Book for Obi Mill, price 371 cents. . .The Youth's Book of Seasons, OtNititrelhant. liarly developed, price 75 cents. • Peter Parley's Present •to all his fr ends. with 220 cute, price 37e cents. Youth's Own Book, or charaeler essen success in Life, b y Isaac TaYlor, price 371' entit. Diversions of ' nollyeot. be the illthlthetis Mode of Thinking, price 50 cents.: , •1. Sunday School Teacher, price 31 cents. The Class Book of Nature. contpriaing Let sons of the Universe, the three Kingdonisl2*. tore, and the Structure of the fininantody, Il lustrated with numerous cull, price 16111.100* Not. l0 "51. Coal Land for; Sale. t r _ • 'NUM su b scriber of f ersaufol.ollll44:g - 11 L• ofeoal Land, situate on the Broad, go Islip, • in Schuylkill county, 416 acres . Move or 1 The Mammolbe Juggler and Tine Hoot 14 - iiiels, have been proved on tide, traet. — There lA, 'alio several other celebrated veins on the seme,'Aurelio well timbered. The termelteminie4o9 and p tlv) title . indisputable. Fur thrthisfParticulairs ent quiriaoT 141RPREP: Pennsylvania Ball,. Pottsville, • 0et.20, 1838. CI 1 • 1 II II Ell NO. 1.- g t D..