PITTSBURGH --GAZM'E . . „. .nrvinFrireipica.. 11l R : .mirxrrr. . , Oh, don't - io in to-eight, John Now.hustir4 don't go in To iriend our only shilling, John, There's not sloof.st home, Jahn; . There's not will you know; ' Though:with hunger Ism feint, John, ' And mild conies down the sum Thew don't go in to-night. 1 Alt, John, you must remember, • And, Jain, I caret forget /When never foot . or your,: John, }Vas Ili alehowa set, • Ab, these were lutpliy . times, John: • bittictarrele them we knew, ; And COD* were hisppier in our lane Than.l, dear John, and you: Then dons go in tonight! . , Son will not go ! John, John, I mind, When we were courting' few Had arm no strong, or etep as firm, Or cheek'no red u you: But drink has stolen your /truth, John, And paled your cheek to white, Has tottering made your once firm tread, And bowed your mealy height, You'll not go in tonight ! . You'll not go in? .think on the day That made me,John, your wife; What pleasant tak, that day we had Of all our future life ! Of how year steady earnings, John. No wia!ing ebtitild consime, • Bat weekly Wonie new comfort being Todeek our happy room; Then don't go in tonight! To sir. is, John, as then we dressed, ' So tidy, clean, and neat, Brought all eyes to follow us. - As we went down the street. Ab, little. thought our neighbors then, 5 , And we as little thought, That tmteJobo. tongs like these By dzlnk we, ebould be brought ! . You won't go in to-night ! AM' will you go!' If not forme, Yet for your baby stay; • You know, John, not a mate of food line passed my lips today; And tell your butter, little one, 'TM Mille your lifelmngs -You will not spend that shilling, John! You'll girls It him ? " - Come, John, '-'-;Come home with us to-night ! POIMEIN rrize In one of his brilliant Exhibition Letters, Jules Janie says . : "The Americans have sent, among other productions, (I don't speak of raw produc tions for certain reasons) a great number of wigs end beaver hats.- Along other hats, were Siloam those of the famous latter, Henn, celebrated throughout the universe for having purchaied at thehighest possible price, the first ticket for the first concert of. Jenny Lind, - Such is glory —the greatness , of w name. To purchase a great. name for 1,200 francs. Such is happi ness. • • • . Sir James . Emerson Tknuant has formally re signed the Governorship of St. Helena, in order to col:deW6 . e representation of Belfast The sittings of the Great Pence Congress will commence to London, on July 22, and continue • for several days. • Mtuogo Park's brother died last week in Scot land, at au advanced age. _ The Royal Mail Steam Packet Company have offend a free conveyance of 20 tuns of rice and biscuit in their ship—the Tay—to the eufferen from famine, at San Nicholas, one of the Cape de 'Verde , The are now 12,000 Swiss in the Neapolitan army, being an increase of 8,000 since 1848. Canto. in Piedmont, was on the 21. - tb nit., vis ited by a cloud of butterdies of various /ohms. They settled in myriads on walls, trees, &c.— They are supposed to have been gathered together by whirlwinds in Africa, and to have been driven over to Europe by the.same agency. . The amount of railway calls payable in the Month of illay is £262,498, against .£1,083,899 for the corresponding period of last year; .El.- 071;088 in the same month of 1849; £3,246,848 is 1848 ; . 'arid t3;440,675 in 1847. At this time, two of the best newspapers in the Lritish West indies--Morning Journal in Jamaica, and the West India in Barbadoes—are owned and edited by gentlemen of color. A lianxtema,,yho has been on a visit to some friends; st.Liverpocd, has astounded the towns men by his high dimensions. Arthur Caley is a farmer, 23 years of age, 7 feet 0 inches high, and weighs 21 stones. • ' • The census recently taken in France, shows a total population of 35,500,000. The number of foreigners domiciled, of all nations, exceeds 1,000,000; of these upwards of 76,000 are Eng- Nib, in- various parts of the country, which is considerably less than previous to the revolution, when it exceeded 160,000. - . . reruns who seek to make light of holy things sometimes meet their match in the fricada of much things: An English Major, an tmbellever, once forgave a soldier some offence, at the in stance i?r the regimental chaplain, but on condi tion that - thi chaplain should in rettut grant him the first favor he asked; and this favor was to perform the ceremony of baptism to a young puppy:,. A member of gentle Men were invited to be presetaai the christening, and the chaplain requested the Major to hold the animal up. .As lam taministm of the Scotch Kirk,' said the :cbsplain, lIIUSt act accordingly.' i oak no mare,' said the. Major. `Well, then, Major,' resumed the paean, with a most equiplary grave face, • I shall begin with the usual question: do you acknowledge 'puma!' the father bf this puppy r ."The offlcer bad the good sense to take the cutting rebuke thus administered in good part, and to throw the.puppy aside. . IDA* m no DC—WORTH EZADING. I saw a laborer westy.from hia work. I saw him stoopand. take a stone, that lay in the path way of paten; wheels, and mat it oat of the road. • This eight did . me good. This atone might bestrack by a passing wheel to the dis comfort perhaps ,of the traveller, - and ,possibly the injuriot the vehiele. was kind in'the man - - . What a trine for a newspaper paragraph!" says a Captious one: Not so; my friend. The act wan email, but the motive noble—that null act the principle on which itis based, is ofon . veltattle value to the human raze. I lova to trace things, especially such things, to their fountaini _That man had emotion in his. 'soul when he stooped to pick up that stone. He felt right. It was kind in him. I have a sight to think that act was bat one of the links of a chain —and never Iris a chain made of better material —locator the welfare of other. Such &chain is all gold/. The man had just done Such things . before, - I could not doubt - lie would do such things avast. It - cost him something to do this for there ins pelting storm of sleet, and he car , rialan umbrella, andle most pause in his rapid . Takao, it , Well diim, my humble friend, if every other would stop and pick out of the path of his fellow traveller through life the things that vex and annoy them, how many sunny faces there would be In place of scowling ones! Drops make a shower; give enough of them. Such acts as this man's—give us enough of them--- , . said how great a shower of blessings —How much misery would be prevented, ' I shall not stop here. The man that will do snob things, will, do greater things. That will show what the fountain is. lie has a kind heart - He will remove Jarger atones than that from the Path of human life. Give me that man for my adversity. He who has honored the email draft will honor the greater. His good will not all be ,exhitusted by that effect It was trifle, wan it , Please then think, my friend, it, can be but a trifle for you to do such a thing. , Do every such sort of thing .anything ~that will remove obstructions out of the path of human happiness .Give your neighbor a jog to do so too. Perhaps he will pass the jog along, and we shall joggle some of the selfishness out of the human heart—N. - Y Evangelist. Baokerre Doo.—The following curious instance in related by the Edinburg Weekly Reg ister-. , 'The animal belonged toll celebrated chemist, who tried upon it the effect of n certain poison, and open the' next day admirdsiered a counter poison which lutd the effect of preserving the cresture'slife. The next day another dose.was offered him but he would not touch it Different sorts of poisonous drugs were presented to blur; but he resohdely refused all. Bread was offer id, but he would not touch it; meat, bat he turn ed from. it, water but he would - not drink. To reassure him, his master offered him bread and meat of which he himself ate lathe dog's pres ence; and that tile - sagacious animal hesitated not to partake.' o was taken to a fountain, but he= would. drink nowhein but from the spat where the water gushed free and fresh.— This continued for several days, until the master, tottr.hed by the extraordinary intelligence of the poor erasure, resolved to make nothore attempts upon lira with :his poisons. The dog is now ve ry and eerY- happy, but will eat nothing that he does not,East yee his master touch; nor will drink:except from the purest spot of the • „. • • •• • 410 i. 40/I•TAIIT.-At an orening patty roolatli it , i 111,3 proposed to dispose_ of. the belle of the reweetpt a lottery. ,Tereaertioketa were hairiediately. sold at wised Flee. The joke ended not ham. - The fartasate 'achenta. Ter low Oast married the ladprillairleas Her. ~~: `. . BY zee PIUMCDKIIT OF PEE MYl=l) fITAYEL IN pursuance of la*, T;lliixesnFlLLsose, erweirat of tiro United States of America, do hereby me =lntake known thatimblie dm will he held at the andsmientlam4 Unkea lo the Maloof Arkanam. at these-Mob hefirLoalLer designatr, to it: At the Lend Mee st BAISSVILLE, ediainialtalWa.ait Mooday the dmtday or September mad, tor the dlapom4 of the public laule eltustsl wi th in the andermentbmed to,ifflehlyw and freetlosel towoehlblb,rji: -Noriliqr the boar Snored OM br:Me.ArMAMISpoI Township two, of mom three. TOwnehlp two, of to lbw. Viattialtal tow ostdp limeteen, north of White rim, of Srlas bits finernai muds/ Me MA priotriPollwrM 6 . *- Township Maim of mas• two. fractional worship Melon and twelve, a rands - ^ At the Land Since at CILAMSMINOLE. oontomorioal Slanday, the liftreatti day of riaidatatit: twat, the die piesl of the nubile Land, within the urateriaanticasid Writ- Alp; to wit: &ward the basalt. awl yarn Township. eleven ant liaarttwit, oftaint ...saki"... Township eleven. of mope eighteen At Mi La. Meth UALANA. ecatimenci. nn nth - Jay, the eighteenth day of AngllA Ise.. for the disPieni m public Wade within the ibllowing towed puts of tolerable/A Mai eth taw f jtith wNw See e .thire x n. m; n a pthme. mod(Amend twehntyu gee east of the It ortthele l Bawer ' In towthtdp threw, of rsng. bar, Township eliae, of Mi.. ethwm Muth Vt. to.,.....stordwAftkprowintedeteredion. Townthdp four that part of .1M le :Mons thirty two and thety-threv. in Mereith. it of rem one. At tbe Land Otte at LITTLt HOCK.. emnwoolog on I blanday.• the an do of fO.OO 1000 fOr the ' of the public kande in the batmen ossied tracts on end am Cypress U. VII: • 1 North qfthe 6melise wet west oaf the AR/ Tbe moth half of redden eight. the mom half a( tem Cractionsl sections burn. and Mem the north half of the east .helf of twenty-mu, twentpUre , the north es truml southwest muster ofe, twenty-three, the northwt demur of twenty-Oz. and the west half of tbe oortheot mita of twentpoerene to three, of Mt.! • Lsodi, ra p by law for the• ass of achthis, mili tary and other penmen. together with "Mee th eme and owertlowed laeds mod.- thin - thereby for cultivation." if any. which shall be Memel by the State authorities be.. Pro the d:poointed forAba tositmencemetat of the gob a, gm. rely; =Awe the set entitled 'Ay, let to llt.the of Arkansas .d other litotes to ItCllll3l t. 'Ey/amp lends' within their lietlet." Septem ber YtthklBso. will be thorned fee. tea Ath no In. Uwe Mr howl Minim Metedote greeted by .y.law of Genres. for milt.. eraviees rendered to the .United bode. sea bs (wmatend an .0 of the clue •thdieusel hoote r as provided by the act entitled 'An Act main appropri tions flu the dwil and elpMelthottreiroment." en. meowed Mt Meth /t. The Miming of lb. therm Mentioned lamb Will be mu; uthemd 9.? nthe .5r401.1. azd voe.a stu or.' wier in wroth they are Merthed. with en ownvenient Pete , . until the whole shall bare been tottered and the odes thus elmit'bot 110 oak stall be kept open looser then two weeks. and no Mirthh ete t Faily of t he lands 0110 be atholtted until Mr the th of the two weeks. Cilwen under my band at =ref i Wathboten. thin Meth day of May. Anon Donated mu therwenet e hun dred and elorolol. Vto o.oxo fiIAhIURT... • By the Pueldenit Combslsidorm of the Omani Land Ofilee. ..VO TOTE TO PRIOSM.P27O.II' aALVAN= ofEtbeTanTs7witreittin too o.blpo ewes enumerated. is required to ertabi. the sill to the eatisfathkok of the Itogi,der aid Keeeleer of the' proper Lead Ofelea, and mat Foxe:Not therefor= loon 121,11211., bie oft. - seeing this other, and babe., the day amthted for the cesameneament of the imbile eale of the Weds =ben. aing the tract chimed, otherwise each claim be forfeit ed. J. BUTTERFLF.LD, Cortholathmer of 11101.12 ml Lead Office. =yr:Loran BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE VETTED STATES. kPN liurounace of law, I, Blor..Liao regident of the United States of Anted. do ter. y re and Mato known. that public Wee min be held at the andermentioued Lend Offices la the State of Iva., at paripls berettuerdedgulaA, to wit: At the Land Oellta Cl lOWA CITY, commenting on Mon• day, the fast daypt September nett, far the dirs.:deaf the' public Lands situated In the fallasing named torathiya,' gYarth qf the ban hat, and wed of ff.qAfth pal arri Toarnlitlic sena:trill., of 'nage twenly.ning. Tondhips nrystatranse and eaghty, of range thhTf. Townships moment/dd. end eighty, of range thirty..., Torn... seventy-nine, eighty and eighty..., clang. Townthip eighty one, Of tangy thltty.tbree. At the Lang OMee PAIICVIELD, commencing on Mow dor Mt , fifteenth dog of Behtembet twfil.,. for the &go.' tite,go bile la, within the ungermen totaled townehltA, to wit., cif Me hire bee and wed of Me Mk principai an, Towedldn seventy, of rang, thirty. Township seventy, of range thirtytwo. Township seventy, of range thirty-ihnoi At the Lana Otlke at DUBUQUE, on Monday. the eirk teenth Pry of Aumistnegt, Car the dkposal or the Ellen log tracts, to wit: A small biked in sections