i A ,1.; 2 --; . -V? Srootci to politico, Citcmturc, Agriculture, Science, iHoraiitnauii eiierdl 3teeiigcna; 'A VOL. 13. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. MAY 19, 18M. NO. 30. .Published by Theodore Scliocln terms-two dollars per annnum i a ad vance-Tuo not discover the causd of a man's sickness, dollars and a quarter, half yearly -and if not paid be-, v. .uu..v. lore the end of the year, Two dollars and a half. Those We'll try this, and We'll try that.' We'll employed by the proprietor, will be charged 37 1-2 cents, per year, extra. No papers ditconimucd until all arrearagesarc paid, CXKdVehrS one square (six - SitS me unarge lorone ana uiree insertions the une. A iiuiai uwwuiu uiauv iu j vaii uuiui llcUldt IO All letters addressed to the Editor must be post paid. JOB PR IN TING. Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and ornamental Type, we are prepared to execute every description of JFAESTflBS? 5Pj&5C7OT1Rrek Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes. Blank Kcceipts -Justices, Legal and other Blanks. Pamphlets. &e. printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable lerms, AT THE OFFICE OF THE JEFFERSOrriTAiSf. The BSearl's IL:tmesit. BY MRS. A. Ii. ItVTER DITOCR. I know thou wilt forget me, For that proud soul of thine Turns coldly from the passionate And ardent love of mine. It may be that thou deemestit A light and simple thing To strike with bold and nervous arm The heart's lone, mystic siring. Thou wilt not deign to hear the strain . Thy own dear hand hath woke, It matters not, if ne'er to thee Its trembling echoes broke. I know, ay well, thou wilt forget I ever dreamed of thee, Thou lovest not, thou carestnot My fettered soul to free. The gay and gifted crowd thee round, The beautiful are thine, Then how canst thou, oh lofty one, Kneel at a lowly shrine! I ask it not; oh never more My soul's cry shalt thou hear My heart shall learn in betterness To hide its love so dear. (rThe melody " Old Folks at Home, 14 V. V.AMAmA r, i-.r-tr l . . K ...-..-fit- HUD UCLU11IC CI UUIIUIdli UUt IMC HUlUOl ... m. , . are not eo meritorious, me last number or j Zion's Herald contains the following new j .; ontJtid The Blest Ones at Home Away on the banks of life's bright river, Far, far away There will my heart be turning even There's where the blest ones stay; All through this vale of sin and sorrow Sadly I roam, Still longing for the dawn of the morrow And for the blest ones at home. All without is dark and dreary, Every where I roam, O, brothers, how the heart grows weary, Sirhin:r for the blest ones at home. Through all earth's sunny scenes I wandered In youth's gay morn; How man)T precious hours I've squandered, How many mercies scorned, When seeking sin's delusive pleasures, Wretched was I, But now my heart has found a treasure There with the blest ones on high. All without is dark, &c. One hour there is forever bringing Memories of love; JTwaa when my sighs we're changed to singing Of the blest home above; When shall I see my Saviour reigning On his white throne! When will be hushed my heart's complaining, There with the blest ones at home! All till then is dark and dreary Every where I roam, j 0, brothers, how the heart grows weary Lomrinfr for the blest ones at home. A yegrd's Prayer. An old negro, return ing one night from a dancing frolic, when crossing the river, lost both oars, and came , handed round, the lady, who was presiding near being swamped. Determined to do over the tea equipage, 'hoped the tea was what he had never done before, he dropped good.' 'Very good, indeed madam,' was the :bn his knees and exclaimed, "Oh Massa, Lord , general reply, till it came to the turn of one if eber gwine to help old Ira, now is de time, of the Cantabs to speak, who between truth and politenessj shrewdly observed 'That the The Advantages of being Vain. :tca ls excellent, but the uatcr is smoky: A vain fool is the happiest animal thatj A native ofnibernia relll- tQ his frjend lives. His weakness, as the world calls t, A , . f , , . -i r c a -j the dangers and difficulties he had undergone it, is to him as mail of proofs Amid a , , , , . , &, . . r r - n i i both by sea and and, speaks thus to hmi storm of sarcasm or of insult, he stands i . , v not only unappallcd but unmoved. Were Wlth &reat seriousness:-! believe in my soul the hisses of a universe directed at him, Jonn that 1 llave Euffered every thing that he would merely pity the -want of dis- ma" fears but death; andlexpectj if I shall cernmcnt which f endered him a mark for live, to suffer that also. scorn. Oh! if there is a man who enjoys an elysium on earth, it is the anointed of Saldus,- a very eminent lawyer of the 14th npneeit. Tain of his mind, his person, ( century and Menochius, who wrote on legal s acquirements regarding them with , presumption in the lGth century, both lay it 2uetes of immeasurable magnifying down as clear law, that .ir it be proved that posrer, and looking at all the world be- a certain man's head has been cut ofFj a vio eide through tin inverted telescope, his ex- lent presumption will follow from thence, jswJBce is a uream ui gwiv,uww fiUDiime uftconsciousness oi luiyviiwuuu excludes even the semblance of a cloud.- Bely upon it the nearest approach to an ' gelic bliss permitted to mortals, is enjoyed by him whose capacity for self-admira-iNew tion and modicum ot Drains stand m tne,saw tjje stor House, the Metronolitan, relation of infinity to nothing. There- j rt.rt A rt f ti tt fVio n nain Trmr OT Mu L , MLtA nss. -R.fltW finvvtknowwhere the money camefrom to build jijm.-r-Sunday Times. j A mountain of marble hae been, discovered 5in the great Salt Lake Valley, of almost eve ry color, containing slabs of every size. Old Dr. Hunter usdd to sdy, when life could shoot into the tree, and if any tlnn tails, , , T T well and good." " Aye replied a ,vag, "1 fear is too commonly the case, and in mT shtinginto the tree, the first thing , tnat generally lailS; IS the patient, f An avaricious person, who kepta very scanty table, dining one Saturday pith his son at an ordinary in Cambridge, Wjnspered in his ear," Tom, you must eat for toWay and I to-morrow," O yes," retorted we nair ' starved lad, "But I ha'ht eaten for yesterday , ... ,r ni i ailu uie uaJ uuiuit- yh lamci. A Clergyman who is in the habit ofpreach ing in different parts of the country, was not long since at an inn, where he observed a horse Jockey trying to take in a sirnple gen tleman, by imposing upon him a broken winded The Parson knew the bad character of the Jockey, and taking the I ffentleman aside told him to be cautious of j the person he was dealing with. The gen- , tleman finally declined the purchase, and the I Jockey, quite nettled, observed 'Parson, I j had much rather hear you preach, than see j fVientl, to take the new coat. Upon put j you privately interfere in bargains between ; tjQg Jfc ifc lacked aboufc & foQfc of cQm man and man, in this way,' 'Well, (replied j . t fcher , The tailor was tuunder the Parson) if vou had been where you ought . J - . , , struck. I here was the measurment I have been, last Sundav, you might have heard I , , .... ,0 ,iin. :nm,;rP,i ,u the figures his own. How could he have me preach. 'Where was that, inquired the , o 1 i T Jockey. 'In the State Prison, returned the , clergyman. j A Scotchman in New-Hampshire being sick, tvas called upon by cj clergyman, who conversed with him upon his religious con- j cerns. Said the minister, po you repent of j all your sins.7 Do you repent of Adam-s first sin!' 'AdomV AdomV saids the sick scotch- j man, 'I never knew the mohl' Two men, in dispute, rejected upon each other's veracity. One of tiiem replied, that he was never whipt but orice by his father, and that was for telling the truth. I believe then (retorted the other)1 "the truth was ! I'll -.-,T wnipt our. oi vou, ior vou never nave sponen , . . i 11 s,nce' i u..:-i 1 A vnnnrr rlprnrvmnn hnvmrrtllP miStortlinR i to bury five wives, being in company with a about to dash out of the shop, ivhen Nich number of ladies, was severely rallied by them' ols saidj coolly, " Here, let me try on the upon the circumstance. At last one of them first coat you made for me." rather impertinently put the question to him, j The tailor, amazed, handed it to him. ' How he managed to have such good luck;' ; It buttoned exactly over a genteel waist. Why, Madam,' says the other, I knew And now, suppose I try on the large they could not live without contradiction, coa again." therefore I let them go their own way.' He did . and ifc WM non(J toQ krge fcQ The Duke of Orleans! when Regent of ( button over his body, which swelled up France, was solicited by severel noblemen to like an alderman's. pardon a man who had Ibeen convicted of j "I think," said Nichols, "HI take both murder, and who had been pardoned for com- of these coats," and he handed some bank mittinir two other offences, replied, " I will : notes to the bewildered tailor; who after pardon him, at your request, but take notice, ; and keep this in your memory, that I will ! certainly pardon the man, whoever he may , ,,:., ' I be, that hills either ofyon. At the siege of Yorktown.tu'o blacks were , , , . placed as sentinels together. When the re- lief came, the corporal found both in the same position he left them: on demanding of the one Eittingwhy he did not rise, he answered, "I believe Massa, I'se wounded, and I guess CuUee dead; hant poke dis good while." On examination Cuffee was realy deadj and Sam bo had the bones of his aria and leg so badly fractured as to render amputation absolutely necessary. When the poor fellow was in- formed of it, he replied, "Well Massa, take um off.' After the operation ivas performed the surgeons began to condolewith him upon his misfortune, when he exejumed, "iNebcr mind, Massa, tank God, I go! noder leg and noder arm for um yet. At a tea-party, where omeCantabs hap- pened to be present, after the dish had been ,tjiat tjiat man s dead:' A rural visitor, describing the many strange and wonderful things he saw in York, winds up by saying: " We and other hotels, and ere troubled to know where the money came from to build them; we paid our bills, and felt relieved on that point." The area drained by the Mississippi River, is about 1,226,000 miles.' The Ventriloquist's Coats. Some years ago there was a )Toung man living in Savannah, by the name of Nich ols. He was a clerk in a large store. It happened that a travelling ventriloquist visited Savanah, and so interested Nich ols, thathe engaged withhim to go around the country together. In the course of time the young man eclipsed his master. He displayed most astonishing powers, and caused great ex citement wherever he appeared. It was after he became famous and wealthy, that he visited a tailor's shop in Savannah, to order a new coat. The knight of thd shears was happy to receive the order from so distinguished a custom er, and assured the ventriloquist that the garment should be an exact Ct. Now Nichols had a remarkable chest. He could inflate his lungs as to increase the circumference ot his body eleven inch- es. A week passed, and the humorist wait ed upon the tailor, in company with a "" " u6ia,Ciui uiunuci ; mcu numberless apologies, he begged to be al- J lowed to measure again, and make a sec ! ond coat. ! 1 XT 11 ne" IC as uone JMcnois came m with his friend again, to see how it would fit. The tailor handed the garment to him remarking that there was no mistake this time he would find it a complete fit. Would he ? He put it on, and lapped it around him like a blanket ! It was as much too large as the first was too small. He tossed it off. The tailor struck his nana unon nis neaa. ana cneu. "iara 0Ut of my senses !" He tbrew his book and his shears across the room, and was ' bis singular customer had departed, final- j concluded thathe must have measured j A , e P ' , . , ,, utmost, tor the second coat, and for the hh confcracted ? smalles capacity. The tailor, at the last accounts, was telling the story to , ' J AN ORIENTAL PARADISE; A Persian heaven is easy made, 'Tis but black eyes and Lemonade. Host o)i Transcript. A CELESTIAL PARADISE. A Chinese heaven, of course, would be A heap of fut and a cup of tea. Lynn News. AN ENRLISU PARADISE. An Englishman's heaven would he, in chicfj A rosy cheek and a piece of beef. Vox Populii a Yankee's paradise. A Yankee heaven is a different life, A soft pine board and a sharp jack-knife; Sunday Morning News. AN AMERICAN 1'AIIADISK, The Yankee's place of heaven and rest, ls found a li tile further West. London Times: A Dutchman's paradise. The heaven of bans, without a doubt, yath walls and floors of sour-krouL AN IRISHMAN'S PARADISE. Where's heaven for Pat but in the tater In Biddy, piggy and the cratur! Schenectady Reflector, A PRINTER PARADISE. The Printer's heaven is a very queer place, No hell no pi fat matter, 2 em brace. Louisville Democrat t AN EDITOR H PARADISE. A home that's void of every evil, With regular mails and a smiling d- -1 jKs? A husband and wife, traveling through the woods in haste,- met with a melancholy accident which is recorded in the following felicitous strain ; And while retreating through the woods, And through the tangled fern, He tore his must-n't-mention-'ems, And had to put on hern! 0-Cato Smith, aged 75 years, the weal thiest colored man in Chester county, Pa., committed suicide a" few days agoj 1,000 were foude in his pocket.' The Force of Fear. At the close of the winter of 1625-26, about dusk in the afternoon, just as the wealthy dealers in the Balais-Koyal at Paris were about lighting their lamps j and putting up their shutters, (the prac tice of the major part ot them at night fall, a well known money changer sat be hind his counter alone, surrounded by massive heaps of silver and gold, the glit tering and sterling currency of all the the kingdoms of Europe. Jle' had well nigh closed his operations for the day, and was enjoying in anticipation the prospects of a good dinner. 13etween the easy-chair upon which he reclined in perfect satis faction, and the door which opened into the north side of the immense quadran gle of which the splendid edifice above mentioned is composed, arose a stout wire partition, reaching nearly to the ceiling, and resting upon the counter, which trav ersed the whole length of the room. Thus he was cjfectually cut off from all possi- I bility of unfriendly contact from any of j his occassional visitors ; while a small sli- ding-board that ran in and out under the wire partition served as the medium of his peculiar commerce. Upon this he re- I ceived every coin, note or draft presented j for change, and having first carefully examined it, returned its value, by the same conveyance, in tne coin or 1 ranee, or, indeed, of any other country requred. Behind him was a door communicating with his domestic chambers, and in the middle of the counter was another, the upper part of which formed a portion of the wire partition above described. The denizen of this little chamber had already closed his outer shutters, and was just on the point of looking up his doors and retiring to his repast, when two young men entered. They were evidently Ital ians, from their costume and peculiar di alect. Had it been earlier in the day when there would have been sufficient light to have discerned their features and expres sion, it is probable that our merchant would have defeated their plans, for he was well skilled in detecting the tokens of fraud or design in the human countenance. But they had chosen their time too appropri ately. One of them, advancing towards the counter, demanded chance in French coin for an English sovereign, which he laid upon the sliding board, and passed through the wire partition. The money changer rose immediately, and having as certained that the coin was genuine, re turned its proper equivalent by the cus tomary mode of transfer.- The Italians turned as if to leave the apartmentj when he who had received the money suddenly dropped the silver as though accidental ly upon the floor. As it was now nearly dark, it was scarcely to be expected that they could find the whole of the pieces without the assistance of a light. This the unconscious merchant has tened to supply; and unlocking, with out suspicion, the door of the partition between them, stooped with a candle 0 ver the floor in search of the lost coin. In this position the unfortunate man was immediately assailed with repeated stabs from a poniard, and he at length fell, af ter a few feeble and ineffectual struggles, senseless and apparently lifeless, at the feet of his assassins. A considerable time elapsed ere, by the fortuitous entrance of a stranger, he was discovered in this dreadful situation; when it was found that the assassins,hav ing first helped themselves to an almost incredible amount of money, had fled, without anything being left by which a clue might have been obtained to their retreat. The unfortunate victvm of their raprt city and cruelty was however, not dead. Strange Us it may appear, although he had received upwards of twenty wounds, several of which plainly showed that the dagger had been driven to the very hilt, he survived; and in a few mdnths after the event, was again to be seen in his long-accustomed place at the changer's board. In vain had the most diligent search been made by the military police of Paris for the perpetrators of this de testable deed. The villi ans had eluded all inquiry and investigation, and would in all probability have escaped undiscov ered with their booty but for a mutually cherished distrust of each other. Upon the first and complete success of their plan, the question arosti how to dispose of their enormous plunder, amounting to more than a hundred thousand pounds. Fearful of the researches of the police, ' they dared not retain it at their lodgings. ! To trust a third party with their secret ' was not to be thought of. At length, af ter long and anxious deliberation, they agreed to conceal the money outside the , barriers of Paris until they should, have i concocted some safe plan for transporting ' it to their own country, This they ac- ; cordiugly did, burying the treasure tin der a tree about a mile from the Barriere d'Enfer. But they were still as far as ever from a mutual understanding, ' When they separated,. on any pretence, j each returned to the spot which contained j the stolen treasure, where, of course, he was sure, to find tho other. Suspicion . thus formed and fled soon grew into dis- j like and hatred, until, at length, each j loathing the sight of the other, they a-1 greed to divide tho booty, and then etem- 1 ally to separate, each to the pursuit of , his own gratification. It then became necessary to carry the whole of the mo ney home to their lodgings in Paris, in order that it might, according to their no tions, be exuitably divided.' The reader must here bb reminded that there exists in Paris a law rlative I to wines and spirituous liquors which al- of sight-seeing English workmen, to the ! lows them to re-tailed at a much lower Place de Greves to witness the execution ! price without the barriers than that at of the two assitsshls of the money-chan-which they are sold within the walls of ger. Under the rays of all almost msup the city; This law has given rise, among portable sun, ah immense crdwd had con tho lower orders of people, to frequent congregated arditfad the guillotine j and it j attempts at smuggling liquors in bladders' was not without c'Ohsitlef able exertion and j concealed aboutCthe?r persons, often in a bribe of some small amount, that stan their hats. The penalty for the offence ding-places were at length obtained with i was so hiah, that it was very rarely en- in a few paces of the deathful instrument; forced, and practically it was very sel- upon the flat tdj of the Idw wiill which di dom, indeed, that the actual loss incur- vides the ampta area of the Plate de red by the offending party was anything Grcve from the river Seine, j more than the paltry venture; which ho Precisely at four d'c'lbck the sombre i was generally licrmitted to abandon, cavalcade apprddched. Seated upon a making the best use of his hotels to es-, bench in along cart, betweefitwd priests; cape any further punishment. The gens- sat the wretched victiin's of retributive darmes planted at the different barriers 'justice. The crucifix wis incessantly ex generally made a prey of the portables hibited td their view, and presented td which they captured, and were constant- their lips to be kissed, by ghostly atten ly interested in keeping a good look-out dants. After a few minutes of silent and for offenders. It was this vigilance that i horrible preparation, the elder advanced led to the discovery of the robbers; for, upon the platform of the guilldtine. With not being able to devise any bitter plan livid aspect and quivering Hps, he gazed for the removal of the money than that1 around in unutenlble dgbny upon the sea of secreting'it about their per?ons, they of human faces ; then lifting his haggard attempted thus to carry out their object. ! e'cs to heaven, he demanded pardon of But as one of them, heavily encumbered , God and the people for the vidlation of with the golden spoils, was passing thrd' .the great prerogative of the former, and the Barriere d'Entcr, one of the soldier- the social rights of the latter; and besought police who was on duty as sentinel, sus- mdst earnestly the mercy df the Judge, pecting, from his appearance and hesitat- intd whose presence he was about to en ing gait, thathe earring smuggled liquors ter. In le"ss than two niiriutes both he in his hat, suddenly stepped behind him; and his companion were headless corpses, and struck it from his head with his hal-jand in a quarter of an hdur no vestige herd. What was his astonishment to be- j savd a few remains df saw-dust, was left of hold, instead, of the expected bladder df the terrible drama that had been enacted, wine or spirits, several small bags of gold Soon; however, a cdufuse murmur per.va arid rolls of English bank-notes! The ded the crowd a report that the victim confusion and prevarication of the wretch, of cruelty and avarice had realised the who made vain and frantic attempts to dread presentment of his dwn mind, and recover the property, betrayed his guilt justified the prediction contained in .the and he was immediately taken into cus- j anonymdus letter he had received. Ori tody, together with his companion who, 1 inquiry this was found td be true. As following at a very short distance, was the signal rang out for execution, the un unhesitatingly pointed out by his coward-j happy man, whom twenty twd stabs of ly and bewildered confederate as the the dagger had failed to kill, expired in owner of the money. Xo time was lost 'a paroxysm of terror adding dne more in conveying intelligence of their capture, td many examples already on record of to their unfortunate victim, who immed-jthe fatal force of fear upon &h excited lately identified the notes as his own property, and at the first view of the as sassins swore distinctly to the persons of both to the elder, as having repeatedly stabbed him ; and to the younger, as his companion and coadjutor. The criminals were in due course of time bried, fully convicted, and as was to be expected, sentenced to death by the guillotine ; but. owing to some technical informality in the proceedings, the doom of the law could not be carried into exe- cution until the sentence of the court had ; been confirmed upon appeal. This de-' lay afforded time and opportunity for some meddling or interested individual either moved by the desire of making a cruel experiment, or else by the hope of obtaining a reversalof the capital sentence feelings of the unfortunate money-changer o i A few days after the sentence of death had been pronounced, the unfortunate victim received a letter fom an unknown hand, mysteriously worded, and setting forth, in expressions that seemed to him fearfully prophetic, that the thread of his own des tiny was indissolubly united with that of his condemned assassins. It was evident ly out of their power to take away his life ; and it was equally out of his power to survive them, die by the sentence of the law, or how or when they might ; it became clear, so argued this intermed dler that the same moment which saw the termination of their lives, would in evitably be the last of his own. To for tify his arguments, the letter-writer refer red to certain mystic symbols in the hea vens. Now, though the poor man could understand nothing of the trumpery dia grams which were set forth as illustrating the truth of the fatal warning thus con veyed to him, though his friends univer sally laughed at the trick as a barefaced attempt of some anonymous impostor to' rob justice of her due, it nevertheless made a deep impression upon his nTind. Ignroaut of everything but what he rela ted immediately to his own money-getting profession, ho had a blind and unde fined awe of what he termed the supernat ural sciences, and he inwardly thanked the kind monitor who had given him at least a chance of redeeming his days. He immediately set about making ap- plication to the judges, in order to get'lieved td be indispensable between com- tne decree 01 (icatn cnaugca into v. scn- ! tence to the galleys for life. He was e- qually surprised and distressed to find j that they treated his petition with con tempt, and ridiculed his fears. So far from granting his request, after repeated solicitations, they commanded him in a pre-omptory manner to appear no more before them. Driven almost to despair. he resolved upon petititioning the kiugt.may be for my real good.' , t. and after much expense and toil, he at m ; length succeeded in obtaining an audience I A sentimental chap' iri Hhode Island' of Charles X. All was in vani. A crime 1 intends to petition Corigress, at' its 1 f&xt? so enormous, committed with such cool ! session; for an appropriation to imfrove deliberation, left no opening for the plea! tno channels of-affection; so that tfencc df mercy; every effort he made only sorv-j frth the f course of true love :nayvr,uri od to strengthen the resolution of tho au-; smooth.' thoritics to execute judgment. Finding; ; .-r all his efforts in vaiu, hcappeared to re-! It js Sftid that if you. gently tickle' ii resign himself despairingly to his fate. bull frog 6n tlfe back of the hertd' with a Deprived all relish even for gam, he took feather, he will ih and cry like d child, to his bed, and languished in hopeless! misery, and as the time for the execution ! It ;g a(aed bat Uof G ree. Qf M of the criminals approached, lapsed more New York Tribune, has recently paicle and more into terror and dismay, tween $700 amj sSOO'.pri.n'fiip'al and com- Tt jf r a sultry afternoon in the be- pound interest' of a tfeht of i'ess than SI 00 gir.flXf 1f36? that tho writer of IL ' Jtavucu a uuv luu , - - 't. t. . . Un-r. , thouglittui iau, in searcu 01 uuiu.., m Pans nurnedj togetner iuiu u pity t imagination. A New wrinkle. An ddd genius-ascribed the very cold weather we had win ter before last to the fact that Sir John Franklin went through the Northwest Passage and fdrgdt td shut the ddor af ter him. Here is a demonstraiidn df the go-a-head-ativeness df tills age : Married In Canton, Maine Februa ry 20, by E. G. Harlow, Esq., after a courtship ot eighteen minutes, Calvin Sim mons, Esq., to Miss Cynthia G. West all of Canton. "PatcIi upon Patch." :We find the j following Complicated piece df patchwdrb in Tim Incr rmmhor eir I fib frmrtf rlif Chien Courier "Married. At Patch Grove; dn the 24th ult., by Daniel Andrews, Esq.. Mr: Recd Patch to -Bliss Harriet Al. Patch, all of Patch Grove." It is said that rdw eggs and milk are a sure remedy for poisdri of any kind taked into the stomach. This is information that mav do a deal of gddd if remembered: and cannot possibly be productive of any harm. Paste it intd your scrap book. Tricks of Duelists. At a recent grand demonstration of the Friends df Peace i at Manchester,- Eugland, John Bright: 31. Jr., made the following disclosures: He said, "I was not very long ago in the shop of a gunsmith in London, and heard there what I had not the least reason to' doubt; that it is the commonest thing in the world now, if there is to be 5 duel; that sonic friend of the parties procures pistols and takes very good care to be supplied with ball from the same place, which are made of a material which Sig nor Blitz, I believe, has occdsionly used, in his exibitions. They are something like balls in appearance, but when they are put in the pistol, and the ramrod goes I down, they all go to dust. Xdw, this is what duelling has come to; but it is oulv a few years since duelling was believed to be as indispensable for the settlement? of private quarrels,- as wars are now bo- inunities and nations.-" An old paper has ths, " A vc'rv devdut fellow, not being able to1 please his. nice piety in his prayers,- used only to repeat the alphabet, and then add, Oh-BIrd God put these letters into words and these words into sentences; thatj.thev' which hwrgSoir father owedTwh.ei he did - i. , L x . f iik uiucrai' Hfi,iY jLAirs ago. i J3k r I