" 'X. , iit . ii .r.' .-'-.i-; Ml ) (tO ; i:'irvi Vi.J 1' , I 11 rT'. i,"is (,' ; 11,; ft: ,i : OFFiCll, JiAhkET STR:iCT, OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. n "r. .( j J ?.i ( ' SI jramCls etopapfrDcbotca'to i3ofmt iForcrfln ani Domcstfc acj.' Stftitce aU th 2itts, glQrtcuiture, ittarftcts, amusrmentj, :c ew dEitiRs VoL. 3, No. aa. OLD SERIES VOL. 1I NO' 0 - ' - v H i..v,U,i,,,:, . M 1 1 J II a 1. M U ' : " m sr .vAT f inri , , fa'e ui - - ,. u.,-. .... . ... .. '. '. . .; T 1 ; iv 11 1 k , - t r- :., ...l 1 ' . 1 . 1 MI''Jr, 1.V.,jT. 'V ' . ' : I s , ;5rs:y TERMS OF THE AMERICAN. TrtE AMERICAN ii pnbliihed t7 ftatnntay t TWO i!aKS per .......m to b. Mf jr-rly ... .dvwc, All Snmn.MO.t . letter, on Ih.. rek .ting to t hr opit to on. ' -it " ' ' M JJ g; uS' ' ' - ' MOO i""' .. i nav fur Ihra ve.i'l (ubicrlp m PW ; r. : l. .. . ... a mrtrleall. : t ' n 9iu.i of 10 H.i tiraia, , , , : ' ' 'S3 ' Odd . sod :1. 9 A 1 mmitliB. ' &r,..rM. 3 moiitht i'JncCnii of Five per .nnm .rrhann nu omer., nuvti ..-... ... ... ier, with the privilege of iiirling. li r.rS.r-.7i.or HMtink dif- ferent dvertlMinei wec. . f . . l.iurii.rnieiiU. a. ner ureemeiil. 10 on Uf 1" ' , -: A T,T O U N E )C . A T( LAW, ; ii-.- UWBtJ,RT PA ; i .;! Bu.ine .IWitdea o W,.tlc Countic. of Nor lumberUnd, Union, Lycoming and Columbia. !! ,'.f: P, & A. B.T.iOiiT, ,,,,,, , , , Low-mi it. U"MOI, , I, , Son . & iIkoi.o.am, KlIHOLD, McKaBI.-"'" " ' ' Spbi8, Onnti A, Co., VI ROCXEFEllfelH ; 1 :' ' Attorney at Law. : Mlnem. Ille. sclinylklll Co., Pa. fJtiSrXCoS will be prompllv attended lo in the countie of Schuylkill, Northumberland, Jnion, Columbia and Montour- VJ --. Refer to: ' A. Jordan, H- Bella, cV H- B- Mcr, Esqrfc, tunbury Wm- Dc Haven, Edward Hfi(?hc, Solomon 8hindcl, Minctiville C. M- Hall, M. Mortimer, PortsVilte ' fact. 5, I8ft0- lv- 1 ' ' eiUtlLfiS W. IlEGtNS, LTTOP.1TET .T L.V, ' iotlnvlll, P.! .- !;': VViii prottVV attfemHo rrtlhrttin onj ill' burf- r r tip enlrusttd to hi cirrv 'Juillt it?, 1849,-' ' ! . I H. ZIMMEEMAN, , " il'STICE OV THE PEACE; . . Sonbury,' Pa. , 3ftlo In Dwf Btreeti immediately opposite the Public JSchool House. rr Mortirs e iileeted .hJ .il Birtincrt pminiitly n0 care fully attended to. !nn:H i April SO, 1850. , . . , JIKW YORK' & PHILADELPHIA '' x,i ' JOUEUEYMEN 111 . '' " lIIalleri AMttoclatlon,' ' Cr. oftlh and Chtstuxd Srlcti ' Philadelphia. ("""ONTIN't'E to make arid cll a finer and more durable Hat for the money Uian any other tabli.hment in the Coiled Stales aiaudard price of Hat $3 00. Gent and Boy's Clotli aiid Glazed Caps. Uinhrnllan, Carpet Bags, Calaly Panama and Straw Hut at. equally low price. ' May S5, 1850 ly ' ' ' ' ' jo5.' r. fa its: & Co. IMPORTERS OF "WsLtcles, Jewelry, Plated Ware, ; , AXD FA SCI ..OUUS, lit ChttntU St btluettn Sd If ilk Streets. PHIX.ADEI HIA. ALWWfl kep o b.ru an encellent aort Bitot of th titov truck, which iliey will tl n term' W M uy in tile cMy. iun 15,l8SCLJ3ia "VM. rCARTY -,' ;,"i'r 'iBUHBUEY, PA. .' HAS teoentJy reeivd, .nxng other articte, a great variety of New, Cheap and Enloruiu tnfr puMii-atimi auch a : . 1 Cosper. uonls. eomplete r cewra ' "' ' Herbart. D. ! ' ' Kodwrll, ii:,il)ui-,i!::,,.;l - V Hue ,'t i .i ! - , . , i lieyadeh , . do t . . , , .'j Cocktoa, : ; . Jo ., Maiwelt do , ,,, .. , ,'.., Jbrrold . ! .. io , i , t0 'J'rollopc, , ( .,. II Jlibuitou, ; ... Jlirtyutt, ,v u; '''., y,r I T,3rsU,'., i.iiatmrih, At the low pcira of from H to SO cU per vuluiue. . 8uiibury, bepL 8S, 1850. tC JACOB REED'S CI.OTIH.U ROOMS. SoMtkiecft Corner ef Fifth tnd, Market Streets, . i PM".APeHiVj(;' u , f . always kpa on hand a large atock of V V '. evefy variety k clothing made up of'good . material, and in tl latet and beat style. He would alio inform the public, that lie pays coni . derahle attention in getting up Military Clotlunj, in ftood atyte and on reasonable barm. . June 15, 1850-.. ly ... , , . . , CHAS. DUMrrllG, No. 207 CAeinut S'reef, front Arcade, .h 'in'l ,11,; '.J PtiuiiiHU' i'.f .'i' .'.. ', IMPORTER and Manufacturer of alt kinds of M aocal nitrumenu, Fancy A rticle and Toys. I Jli pricca are lower tlian those of any other store tin Pbiiadeloaia. All kinds ol Musical Inetru- ments4epaiiat to the best workmanship, and also takea in trade. , , , PhUadelphia, May SS, 1850. ty. . :;Ti" T. edwin ii ll7 7 ' (LaTt or rai Fian or Watkihsos & Hall,) ,- n, , Yb. 21 South Second Street, ' ' ' Philadelphia, , . P ESPECTFL'LLY inform hi old friends and -- ettstoknera, as well as tlie public generally, ,. that ha has opened an entire new stock of elegant c:trlaavof u i '''-';: .. i Springr & Summer Drew Good.-, -'Hi. assortment consists of the latest and most deal- table styles of English, German, French ck'Ame- u: n4- ' .-u iii; 'in r. ni. - uvwa. m ui it mm irwmiimsm , . mimi ,w ges,B.i-i, Lawns, M uslini, Sliawls, Hi&fti, Olovei. J.mwA yaw M;tar f Vnnmr tlsmA ! Pbilai March 1, 1850.i-ly t ' " . n .ii.. I 11 1- .... - .,. .! ' l 0T.t.'MTH.- - t--4 .ij THOS. . . iETH , . - gE'TJI & "pR OTHER,." ' " , " WHOLESALE. GROCERS ' 1lJ Sill n s ,1 ....-- AND ml I 1. 1 !.i : , MO. 8 PHATT DTMlurP, ;.Oi (Na BowLi't WHAtr,) ',' WJfl Bay particul A attention to the sale of G jilN sua lliwuw inui4Uis oi m Hum, . Balamore, January SB, 16S0-ly SELECT POETRY. "" Frari the toinrille Jtmrnal. n TWO YEARS OLD. un Bf t. i PERCtVAL. 1 I lj- 'I. "tl ' 1'layinsr on Ihe carpet near mrj u! ., Isa lilllu cherub girl ( ,. , j ..... i ... .And in her presence, nmch Ifear me, Sets' my senses in a whirl;' '"' 'For book is open lying ' . ! ' Full of jjmva philosophy ins, ,., ,AnJ I own X;ni vainly trying . ni.,Tliera my .lliougliis lo hoM. But, in spite of my 'essaying, ' They will evermore-be slravitts 1 '' Tu Hint cherub near ma playiuy1, '. J. , ; ..Only two years 9,IJ,,;,:,j ,,' . 1 With her haif so lonj? k'ntl'iTatte'it;- ' ) Ami ht'f sunny ejvs of Wue, ; ... Antl.hec vbeeks so plump ar,d,.ivaxei), , She is I'liiirming to iho view. . ' Then lier. Voice to all' who hear It ' "" " Breathes a sweet entrnncirlg spirit ; : ' a.'O! to be forever near it' :,; :,..! i i. Is a joy unlold . - ..... i ,. . For 'lis ever sweelly lellinp:, . To my heart with rupture swelling, Of affection inly dweilins ",; Only two yeais old. -'.v , Wilh a new delighl t:m hearing ' All her sweet attempts at wordc, "' ' In l heir melody ernleurintr . Sweeter fat lliun any bird's; And Ihe nmsical niistakiii', . , Which fter baby lips are making, From my heart a charm is Waking Firmer in its hold, Than thd rhaim so rich and 'glowing, . From the Uumau's lip o'erllouing ; , Then she gives u look so knowing, , Only two years old. ' " " ' ' : N'otv her ripe and honied kisses , ..... (tlonied, lipe for me alone.) , . Thrill my soul with various blisses,' Venus never yet'has k'ndwii. ' ' ' '' ';When her twiuiur; arms are rourid md All domestic joy hath crownnd ine,, , . And a fervent epell hull) buuiid mo , . Never to jj;iow col.l'J' '' O ! there's not, this side or AMertrr, . i Aught wilh loveliness so lailuu As my little cherub maiden, ;, , Qistovifal. ' (.:. STELLA AIID. VANESSA,' .'J ' During Swift's visit to London in 1710,' he had reujularly transmitted to Stellif, by which flarne Esther Johnson is made known to posterity, an account of his daily doings with the new. Government. - The journal exhibits the view of the of the writer that his conduct invariably presents. It is full of tenderness and cun(idence and not with out coarseness that startles and shocks. It contains a detailed and minute account, not only of all that passed between Swift aA the Government J but of his changeful feel ings as they arose from day to day; and of his physical infirmities, that are commonly whispered into the ear of the physician. Ii Swift loved Stella in the ordinary accep tation of the terms, he took small pains in ! his diary to elevate the sentiments witlr which she regarded her hero. The jour nal is not in harmony throughout. To wards the close it lacks the tenderness and warmth, the minuteness and confidential utterance, that are so visible at the begin ning. We are enabled to account tor the difference. Swift had enlarged the circle of his female acquaintance whilst fighting ! tor mi menus in London, jib nau Decotne i a constant visitor, especially, at the house of Mrs. Vanhomrigh, who had two daugh ters, the eldest of whom was about 20 years ol age, and had the same Christian name r upon her like a tiger. The trembling as Stella. Esther Vanhomrigh had great creature asked her visitor to sit down. He taste fat reading, and Swift,, who seems to ' answered the invitation by flinging q pack have iligbted in such opcupation, conde- j et ori the table, and riding instantly away. (xencWd,, for the second time in his life, to ; The packet was opened ; it contained coth- become a young lady's instructor. Celore Miss.' Vanhomrigh had ihadt-much progress j in her studies, she was over head and ears j in love, 'and, to the astonishment of her ; master, she One dar declared the passionate i and undying character of her. attachment, Swift met the confession with a weapon lar more potent wnen opnoserj to a politi cal foe than when directed against the weak heart of a doting woman. He had recourse to raillery, but, findttiz his banter of no avail, endeavored to appease the tin- nappy gin ny "an oiler ol devoted and ev erlasting friendship, founded on the basis of virtuous esteem." He might with equal success have attempted to put out a contla gration with a bucket of cold water. There was no help for the miserable man. He returned to bis deanery at the death of Queen Anne with two love affairs upon nil hands, but with the stern resolution of encouraging neither, and overcoming both. Before quitting England, he wrote to Esther Vanhomrigh, or Vanessa, as he styles ner in nis correspondence, intimating his intention to forget everything in England. and to write to her as seldom as possible. So far the claims of Vanessa were disposed of. As toon as he reached his deanery he secured lodgings for Stella and her compan- ion, im reiterated nis determination to pursue his intercourse with the young lady upon the prudent tefms originally establish ed, So far his mind was set at rest in re spect of StellaV But Swift had scarcely time to congratulate himself upon his plans before Vanessa1 presented herself In Du blin, and riiadfJIcnown to the Dean her reso lution to tulltip tier abode nennaneirtlv in Ireland (Her, another was dead, so were.. L . t it . . . . ner two oruuieni n and her water were alone m the world,, Mod they had a small property near Dublin, to which it suited them to retire. i.Swift, alarmed hr the pro ceeding, rfm9nstrated, tbrentened, denoun ced -all, in vaiii., .Vanessa 'met bis re-, proachei with complaints of cruelty and neglect, and warned him of the consequen ces of leaving her without the solace of his friendship "and ' presence. ' Perpleaed ulid distressed, the Dean bad no other 'resource than to leave events to their own develop. ment. " He trusted thai lime Would mitigate and show th hopelessness of Vanessa's pas sion, and (n the meanwhile he sought, by occasional communication with hpr, to pre vent any catastrophe that might result from actual despair.,,, tfut, his thoughts for .Va nessa's safetv were inimical to Stella's re pose. She pined and gradually sank under the alteration that had taken place in Swift's deportment towards ner smcif hisctoaint ancp with Vanessa. Swift,' realty: anxious for the safety ot his wardy Fedie"! a friend to ascertain the causetoi her1 malady. . it was not difficult to ascertain , it. His indif ference and public scandal, which spoke freely ,pt their unaccountable, connexion, were alone to blame for her sufferings, j! was enough for Swift.' lie had passed the age at which he had resolved to marry, niil lie Was ready lo Wed Stella provided tlie marrlase" were kept a secret and she-' was contetiF to ' live apart. Poor Stella'wns more than content,' but she over-estimated her strehgth. The marriage' took place, and immediately afterwards' the husband withdrew himselt in a fit of madness, which threw him into gloom and. misery tor days. What the motives may have been for the inexplicable stipulations of this wayward man ,it is impossible to ascertain. That they were the motives of a diseased, a ndT at times utterly irresponsible, judgment, we think cannot be questioned'. Of love, as a tender passion, Swift had no conception. His writings prove it.: j he coarseness that pervades his compositions has nothing in common with susceptibility that shrinks from disgusting and loathsome images in which Swift revelled. In all his prose and poetical nddresses to his mistresses there is not one expression to prove the weakness of his heart. Hi writes as a guardian---!) writes as a friend lie writes as a father, but not a syllable escapes' him that can be attributed to the pangs and de lights of the lover. - : 7 , Married to Stella, Swift prpved himself more eager than ever to give , to his inter course with Vanessa the character of mere friendship. He went so far as to endeavor to engage her -aliectton for -. another man, fcut his attempts were rejected with indig nation and scorn. .In the, August of the year 1717 Vanessa retired from Dublin to her house and property near'Cel.lbridge. Swift exhorted her to leave Ireland alto gether1, but she was not to be persuaded. In-1720 it would appear that tho Dean fre quently visited the recluse in .her, retire ment, and upon such occasions Vanessa would plant a laurel or two in honor of her guest, who passed his time with the lady reading and writing verses in a rural bow er built in it sequestered part of her garden. Some ol the verses composed by Vanessa have been preserved-. They breathe the fond ardor of the suffering maid) and testify to the impertuiable coldness of the man. Of tlw innocence of their intercourse there cannot be a doubt. In 1720 Vanessa lost her last remaining relative her sister died in her arms. Thrown back upon her self by this bereavement, the intensity of her love for the Dean became insupporta ble. Jealous and suspicious and eager to put an end to a terror that possessed her, she resolved to address heiself to Stella, and to ascertain from her own lips the ex act nature of her relations with her so-called guardian. The moment",::: question was asked in a letter, to which Stella calmly replied by informing her interrogator that s)e was the Dean's wife. Vanessa's letter was forwarded by Stella to Swift himself, and it roused him to fury, lie rode off at once to Cellbridge, entered the apartment in which Vanessa was seated, and glared ing. ,ut VanessaV letter to Stella, .. Her doom was pronounced. The fond heart snapped. In a few weeks the hopeless, desolate Vanessa was in her grave, Swift, as-onized. rushed from the' world. f For two iiionths subsequently to the death !Vf Vanessa his nlace of abode was unknown. ijui ui lur riiu u. iiiut j'ci ivu 11c iriuiiim to Dublin calmer for the conflict he had undergone. He devoted himself industii ously again ta affairs of State. His pen had now a nobler office than to sustain un worthy men . in unmerited power. We can but indicate the course of his labors. Ireland, the country not ot his love, but of his'birth and adoption, treated as a conquer ed province, owed her rescue from absolute thraldom to Swift's great and unconquera ble exertions on her behalf. He resisted the English Government with his single hand, and overcame them in the fight. His popularity in Ireland was unparalleled even in that excited and generous-hearted land. ' Rewards were offered to betray him, but a million lives would have been sacrifi ced in his place, before one Would have profited by the patriot's downfall. He was worshipped, and every bair of his bead was precious and , (acred to the people who adored him. , In 172G Swift revisited England, for the first time, sinew the death of Queen Anne, and published, anonymously as usual, the famous satire of Gulliver' Travel. Its im mediate success heralded the universal fame that masterly and singular work; has,.ince achieved. Swift mingled once more with his literary (fionds, and livt-d almost entirely Lwilh Pope.., Yet courted .on all sidesj he was doomed scam to bitter sorrow . XSewi L reached Aim that sieiia.wis iu. , Aiarmea I .' . . .. , CI. I -'. .'I - 1 apej,, iqlj of self-reproaches, be hastened home'to be received by the peopie'of jre land to triumph, and to meet and he was erau-ful for the ieht -tbt- improved; and welotuning looks of the woman. forwhoie4 dissoluiion be had j been nPrrpared,-i.)p 4 eoveredy the Deao-iveotprdirinKa .Pioe tp England, but toon' Id hoi r-urampned,,tp ihe hapless couch cf his eahuusted and mott miserable wife. Afflicted in body and sou), Swift suddenly ..quitted Pope,, with whom he was residing at Twickenham, and reach ing his home was doomed to find" his Stella , npou the Verge of the grave. Till thf last moment he couttnued at her bedside, wi inch ing the tenderest t consideration, and per forming what consolatory tasks he. might in the sick Chamber. Shortly before ,her death, part of a conversation between the melancholy pair was overheard. ,, "Well, my dear," said the Dean,' "if you wish it, it shall be owned," i Stella's reply-was given in fewer words - "It s too lue." On the 23th January,' writes f tje, of the biographers of Swift,' "'Mrs. Johnson closed het Wedr pilgrimage',' and pasie'd d that land where they neither marry Vt are given in marriage," the second victim of one and the1 siriie hopelesi 'and consum ing passion. ,' t. i '. .ni.-.;'i Swift stood alone in the' worlds and for his punishment, was doomed to endure th ; crushing solitude for the space of seventeen yeais. The interval was gloomy indeed.; From his youth the Dean had befh Subject to painful fits of giddiness and deafness. From 1736 these fits became more frequent and severe. ' In 174-0 he went raving mad, and frenzy ceased only to leave him a more pitiable idiot. ; Dunns; the space of three years, the poor creature was unconscious of oil that passed around him, and spoke hut twice. On the 19th .of October, 1745, God mercifully removed the terrible spec tacle from the sigjit of man, and released the sufferer from his misery, degradation and shame. ... ., j : i-.i " THE GREAT TELEGRAPH CASE. ; The case of F. O. J. Smith and others,' re. piesenling Morse'- patent, praying an injunc tion against cprtain infringements of House's invention, Intel tried in the U.;8'. ; Circuit Court, lit Boston, has been decided rnjainst the plaiilifl's. We make the following extract from the opinion of Jndiju Woodbury in the case, explanatory ol the principal points of difference between the two inventions! Now has thirt patent been violated by the defendants 1 The' defendants .. insist they have used nothing which was not open and public be for the date of Morse's invention. Whilst shielding the public in this right)' we muHt not allow any ono to use l.ho inventions of Morsa without his anient, llou-se,' ma chine appears unlike Morse's and.ii i work differs iij using. two now powers. .Whilst Marsu's is simple, lliat of llonse. is so compli cated as to require days of attention by me chanics to understand. . Whilst . Morse's is speedy, House gives lightning to Human let term; his speed of . breaking, and closing is much greater than Morso's and- without this greater epued bo oould not. accomplish hid ob. ject. This is not the same system as Morse's and is more like lliat of Alexander. , Morse's machine traces the signs intended: the type or the lever at one end do;s so, end the pen ot the other ulso. House's machine ddes not do this. It acts at both ends by sig nals, and traces nothing. This new power of axial magnetism, the invention of which is claimed by Mr. House, aids ni transferring this so hs Id have it printed, and the U mag net of Mot-se would be utterly efficient for l his purpose. House's is A signal and print ing telegraph, and Morse's is a writing tele graph. The electro magnetism between, the two points has been Used long before Morse) and therefore no infringement 'of his inven tion. House produces in his machine new results, and cannot be considered us an equiv1 alent for Morse's, as he nses neither the pen', the lever, nor the stenographic alphabet to translate' the signs, as appears from the testi mony ot Piof. Henrv,' Dr. Jackson, Piof. Hare Burdelii, Hibbard,' Chnhnln'g, ect." His hondr then commented or! the originality and nov elty in House's machine' of uxiul magnetism and the use of the ft if tubes and condensers, and expressed himself astoifhded) in e.vamin. iug this case, to find that so much which he had supposed to have been nVar an original iu telegraphing; was not of late origiq or'drived from Mr. Morse us electro magnemmj wire ec, t'Ul that the iiiveiiliuns of Morse j lay in a different plaoo fioia what be had formerly supposed ' i'O'M f ' ,' ; Morse's leading1 novelties, his honor thought were 1st' the local circuits; 2d, writing at a distance by electro magnetism, 4th, the stenographic alphabet! Neither the electro magnetism, or Ihe Roman letters, or 'the printing apparatus were Invented by Morse, The local circuits,' and the stenographio al phabet were not used by House or Ite w rit, iug, &o. . ,.! ., tAHEWE.il . . j Nay shrink from the word "farewell," ' As if 'twere Friendship's final knell : Such fears m a j' prove but vain : 1 ' So changeful is life's Heeling duy, ; , .... . Whene'er we never, Hope may aayj , , vy pari, to meet aain. . - Even the last parlinir etirlH may knowj ' ' Brines not unutterable we . i ! i . To soul that heavenward soar .;. , . For humble ailh, with steadfast eye t Points lo a briyhler world on high,' ' ' '. Where hearts, that here at parting sigh May meet, ,lo part ijo more, ' A wdMiW in Greene' count yj 'lndiannj a tew days ago, undertook to extort eonfea idn of theft from a tittle pirl, and lied her round tho neck fast to a tree. ' A shoft time after the child was found dead.' ' ! a it 1 r : -u i' r .'mi. ' Whew Pf., Johnson, courted Mrs, Porte wUorq he afterwards , ruatfieX B1 ,t0U her (bat tie was of mean extraction had no mon- eyi,,and .that.'Ji''Jihd'! at, u.n.cle hanged." an equality with the doclorrepliedthal she' had no more money thau himself;' and 'thai,.! though slie MdW aroUtive hanged, ehe bad,! fifty rb9 dweirfd Ringing. i . - ' THE RISK OF SENATliR rUsk! The. gentleman whose rise td pubtio fiivor form's theiheme of the following article Is so tnViversallyartd favorably khtiw'n by ttir fellow ciliens for his perSdiiaf qualities of liberality, beneVolenc' and patriotism," that wo leel as ured it wi be read with pleasure by all) ami by none with more than that Of bis politi cal adversaries :H a-jifngfon Republic. . From the Fot'd du Lne (VVi ) Journal. . . .Tb.a.lragedy'at Nacogdoches, and. the ro mantic incidents which led td; the Texan war of independance, find their parallel only in the Homan.liirsiory of Lpcretia and the el tler Bttttus.1 ' Juah Costa' was V ' person of great influence and bravery-in (lie wild forest-' bur fell utidef the displeaaurcof Santk Anna J and his rdiiiion Pedras, the commandant of Nacogdoches, was sent lo. arrest him-. t He arrested the father at , the. supper-table,, at tended by his only daughter a voung girj of snpprising beauty and intelligence. He loaded him wilh chains' and cast him inlo prison, notwithstanding her tears and Intrea. ties.'1 Finally,' hi proposed to free the father if'lhe daughter would sacrifice honor-"ind in nocence. She rejected the infamous propo. sitioti with a blow in the farie ; when the armed uilfiah swore a horrible' oath td exe cute his will on them both, and then , With dark eyes, fearless, glassy, and fixed as those of the corse, yet flashing a double portion of luminous fire, she mounted a horse, and hurried away wildly around the country She hailed at eveiy. house, no matter wheber, Mexican or American,and rehearsed, in tones of Jhrillipg horror, lier falherjs wrongs and her Own. 'All timid 'modesty,'1 all 'weakness hdd vanished' !"rom her fonghe, ' U(terllyl con sumed in Ihe scorching thirst for vengene. Shd painted in passion's fiery language, laud wilh awful minuteness, the'fucts of the dam ning .deed, she bared her virgin bosom ahd showed the livid marks of, the ravisher's fin gers among I tie mazes ot tho&u azure veins along the surface o! thai expanse of snow, now so polluted and soiled, but before pure as Ihe gleam of angel's wings.' , ' And still,, wherever the beautiful maid wandered a 'deafenihg yell ' of wrath and vengence rose up against the tytittits.X The people of both races,! arid UlPclasses HeAv to arms, apppoiuted ri. trenerul ' rendezvous for the 25ih of June at the residence of (.the ab sent and now imiiisoneil Juan Costa. . -, It was then debated by the people as to the mode of attack, and who should be the lea der; lint nothing being agreed on, the whole assemblage bid fair to bieak' up in conTusioni when a tall and powerfully 'built stranger who' had just entered Texas from the States, came forward and addressed the multitude as follows : ,:l am a stranger, but I am also a mart, and I owe my life, body, soul, happiness all, all to a Womati my mother ! And if 1 turn a deaf ear to the prayers of an innocent woman asking aid against a villian, may both my mother and my God curse me ! I go for one, and should you all slay behind alone lo fight Col. Pedras uiid his armed ruvishers of your wives and daughters!'' The speech was received with three tre mendous cheers, and ihen a general shout) that seemed to shake he solid earth, uttered th.-first peal of . revolution. ,'-We will go. Death to die tyrants! .. Freedom for Texas, and Ihe "giant shall be our leader." And then, for the first time, was heard in the land of the wild oak a imme destined to become an echo td the pulsations of ull hearts the name, Thomas J.' Kusk. '' ' ' 1 'The next day'Ve led his raw troops to the attack, bf Nacogdoches, ' and .'stormed every position against Immense odds,1 alter an assault of four hours, the carnage being dreadful on both sides,. Among the .lain vas the dead body of the atrocious Ferdinand Pedras. ,, Such was the debut of Husk in Texas, and from, that day his popularity has gone on steadily increasing,' without even a 'traiisftdry e'clifWiir'so much as 'l 'i-foud; to dim Its splendor. In vain for years General Costa fderiiumted his arrest? Mexico had not enough to take him, hnd in 18J3-8 he assisted to chase the last of these out of i the .country. ' After wards be amassed a fortuueat the Texas bar( aud was chosen one of the first Senators from the new State annexed a place which he may hold for life if he wills it. . . Hunk is ihe ou'.y public ptnn in Texas who I has never engaged iu a duel. . - - TREATMENT OC kCARLET FfeVER. An eminent physician of Washiuton City Harvy Llndsly, bas recommended the follow ing treatment for scailel fever, practised by Dr.. Sehneemniij Physicluu to the King of Hanover) as. contained in a recent number of the London Lancet.. , Treatment of Srorcf' Fl-fr by inuttetion. From the fiist day of the illness', and soon as we are certain of Its nature, the patient nuis1 be rubbed morning and evening over the whole body with a piece df bacon',' in such a manner lhM wilh Ihe exception of ihe head, a cofering of fal is every where applied. In pnbtr to make (his rubbing In somewhat easi er, I) is best tu take a pjeeo of bacou. the size of the hand,, choosing a pijft still armed with ih'a'rind, lhat we niay have a firin grasp. On the soft side of ibis' piece sills are to' be made, lrt order td allow the oozing out of' ihe fat. The rubbing must be thoroughly' performed, and pot loo quickly, in order tnat the skin mi j'te' regularly saturated With' tho fat -Tho beneficial results of tbiot application are soort 'oWiouSj-wltra rapallty bordering on rnAlo, alt,Vren iho nrwA painful syropiori of bo disease) arilUjred ftuf sleep, good fcuueor, "ppet'.o rotyruk.ai .ihera1. remain1. only the impatience to quit the eick-room. " PiNT:iis,t LiueAois.-FJvery profession baelle technical ' terms,'.' and .'of course the printers have a "smart smutleriiig,;,1 which is intelligible tmly mine craft r The following (says the Delaware Iteptlblicun) is a speci men ; it don't mean, however, es much as it would seem to the uninitiated : ( "Tom, put General Washington on the gal ley, and then finish the murder of that young girl you cpmmencod yesterday. Set up tho ruina.of Herculajneum ; distribute' the small pox, , and you. needu't. finish that rutmwny match ; haVe the ,high water in the, paper this week. Let the pi alone till after dinner put the barbecue to press, and then 0 to the devil, and ho will tell you about, the work for the morning." ,, , . m , , The London Daily News fears that the re cent triumphs of the American steamers are tlie hand writing on tho wall for English ocean-supremacy. rot a uonut ol it. in two years,' I can dee a difTetence in the respect paid 'to Americans abroad. They have only to keep still and Ihe world wll revolve around them. The ' recent provincial displays in America are hardly in keeping with the force of the American maelstron which is now drawing Europe to it. There are numbers of Americans now in Paris. While Europeans go to America trj make money Americans generally come here to spend it. Mr. Hives has returned to Paris, likewise his family. During the revolution of 1848, American di plomacy here played quite a pait. The poli ticians were eager to have uulheutiu details of the workings of onr system, and wont to head-quartf 4 to get them -.: A Singular Attachment. Romeos thoro have been in plenty, who harbored a ro mantic attachment to a lady's glove, and a lively desire also for the possession of the delicate hand beneath it. But there is a young gentleman mentioned in a distant pa per who must have been driven to extremi ties ; for, he on the contrary, has a passion for ladies' soles, and commences his onset on their understandings.. lie is reported to be the son of a clergyman, arid to have demonstrated his peculiar temperament first in Brooklyn, New York, wheie he was arrested for steal" iug a lady's shoe, aud discharged .upon his fathers testimony that the act was the result of a monomania,, wiih which be had been alllicted. from his childhood. Tho same per son, it'would appear by a Detroit paper, re cently attacked a well dressed lady in lhat city, ' threw her down and took off her left shoe. ' Afterwards for some unknown reason. he changed his mind, took possession of Iho right one, and made ofi, without offering any further injury. Xeicarl; Daily Advertiser. New Species of Indian Cokn. The 6'ti's- det teit, Berks County, informs us that, lust spring, the Rev. Daniel Kohler obtained from Ihe Patent Office at Washington, with other sdeds, 81 grains of a new species of Indian Corn, which is native to Oregon, With these he planted 33 square yards of ordinary land, upon his farm iu Maxatawny township, and the yield was one bushel and three pecks of ears. In this proportion, an acre of ground would have yielded 223 bushels of ears. The stalks below the ears grew'higher than the common Indian Corn, and bore each from two to three ears. The graius are it beauti ful while, and produce excellent meal ; for which reason there is no doubt .hat this com world .readily bring 12 J cculs per bushel more than Ihrj ordinary com. Hl'NGARIANS OX liOABD THE FlMCATE CON STITUTION- TIlO following in an extract of u letter from a gentleman on board the U. S. frigate Constitution, now in the Mediterra nean : "' tlSpc.:iey Ocf. 1 md. Wo have just re ceived on board the Flag Ship a party of Hun garians who" reeenlly arrived here. They were offioeisjn tho. Hungarian war of liberty and were forcibly reduced by Ihe Aiistriaus to the ranks. They recently nrrived in Tus cany ; in Ihe ranks of a lar '8 Austrian rein forcement, (20,000) and took Ihe fut oppor tunity of escaping here, where ihey arrived after great hardships; and as they could not get out of the country in any other way, this government would have been obliged to give them up tu the Auslriniis. . They appealed lo the Commodore, and are now safe under the stars and stripes." BbscatiI an Indian palm a girl ., Of ol her blood reposes; Her cheek is clear and pale as pearl Amid that wild of roses. Besides a northern pine a boy Is leaning fancy bound, ; Nor listens whoie Willi noisy joy j A wails the impatient hound. Cool urows ihe sick and feverish cniiti 1 Itelaxed tha frosiy I wine . The pine treu d' camel h of tho palm, The palm tree of Ihe pine. ' As won shall fixture interlace " , ; i' . Tirse dimly visiooed bough, , , ; A those young lovers face to face. ( ! Reno their early vows. ''"''' F.very Sunday now, in Paris affords the et. hibition of three preitjl young woman, who, dressed allegorical fashion, with wing hitch ed on their fair shoulder are being suspen ded beneath the car of a, tinge balloon, , fear lessly ascend to the upper regions. . ,Wh, af ter this, shall speak of the native timidity ol thoeext " ' .' ' '. v " It a aid that the widow of ihe late Prof. Webster, and her daughtera'riave 4 sailed for Fayal, In the barque lon.'!,v'i " "-"' ! f"i ' ' ' '' 1 .J. J..jh ,rMh.- I , JcrricasoN Davs wu grily, cheered at Vcksborg, Mi., on anpennciag that bo was not a di.unionisti . .' . Ludicrous. A young itinetant preacher, in tho conslant habit of declaiming a great deal about the Creator, and especially about the first getting up of man, whenever he wish ed to display his native eloquence to a good advantage, was one day holding forth lo a mixed congregalion in a country school-housO. Becoming warm and enthusiastic as he pro' coeded, it was not long before he reached his favorite theme, and started oil in something like the following style : "And when the world was created, and the beasts of the field, aud fun is of the air were pronounced very good, God said : Let us make man." And he formed man after his owm likeness, and declared him tho no. blest of a'l tho works of his hands. And ho made woman also, and fashioned her in tli'j exact image of man, wilh a little variation , . "Tlumk the Lord fot the variation !" shout ed nu old sinner, who sat over iu the a men comer of tho room, ut this interesting juno lure of tho discourse. The eli'cct was puifeetly ludicrous and Ir resistible. Tho preacher dropped the sub ject where he was interrupted, und was nev er heard lo nlluda to it during a subsequent ministry of forty years. bilE.VDl lL TO TllINK Of. Tlie Columbus (Ga.) Sentinel regales itself with '.he follow' nig pleasant language : . , . "We frankly tell vim that so fur as we am concerned, we despise the Union and halo the North as we do hell lire." . Should'ut be SUDDrised if that chnn ia rln.. tilled to despiso each of the three pluces1 still more heartily, lrom aclual experience, by being forcibly kept iu all of ilium. JJai( more supper. . , A Black Rsu Gray Suuirrel May be seen on our counter, a squirrel, shot a few days since in Middle River Neck, near Carroll's Island, Baltimore county, lhat is worth the study of naturalists. It is of a large size, par taking of Ihe nnture &; color of the grey, black and fox squirrel, hftvliiu a black head and grey legs, back, and red tuil. Hull. Sun. Vr.ua la Ciiaisu. This beautiful city of sepulchres the Parisian Cemelry contains only about one hundred acres. It was com menced in lSO-t, and now has a population equal to half lhat of Paris. Its streets are regularly paved and lined with monumental habitations. Twenty millions of dollars have been expended in monuments; and the gates and streets of this city of the dead are daily thronged with companies of men and woman bearing wreaths and garlands for the decora' lion of the tombs cf their deceased kindred. 'Father," said a little boy, "I think you ate unwise." "Why, my son 1" "Because you brought that baby here when mother was sick, and now you have to get another Wo man to take care of it." A gentleman, whose character for veracity is established, declares that his wife returned form a shopping excursion the other day, wilh three cents in her purse. .There must bd a mistake somewhere. '' 'Do you drink hale iu America 1" asked a cockney. Hail ! no, we drink thunder and lightning,'" said the Yankee. Mister, will you just lend pa your paper f lie only wants to send it to his uncle in the country." 'O, certainly ; and ask your father if he'll just loud mo the roof of his house ; I only want the shingles to make the tea-kettle boil." Milton, wo believe, in his Paradise, beautifully expresses our ideas iu the follow ing: 'Him w it pri. wk iwi't lii.'n tVeu tie's cili'Ii'd alua go Ui prian." , A bell' weighing a tnrt, is shortly to bo placed in the steeple of the German Reform ed Church, in Easton. lie that plants trues, loves others besides himself. Wm. T. M u.1.3, of llighistown, Mercer Co. j N. J., has just relumed fiom California wilh 5.80,000. . ... The instrument that bares a Square hola has arrived and no mistake ; it was invented in Texas ! Tun Washington National Monument is now over seventy six feel high, and attracts the notice of travelers several miles on Ihe Potomac. "Jim, I hear you are on a cruise after Dick to horsewhip him." "Yes, I am bound on a whaling expedition." ' The iron mines in Duchess and Columbia counties, New York, produce annually 20, 000 tons of ore j Esex county, 1500 tons j Clinton, 3000 ; Fj-anklin, 500 ; SU Law rence, '2000 ; amounting, in all, to more than 500,000. , . Tub Paris Academy hat determined that gelatine, as an article of food, has nd nutri tive properties. Tim Average Stature of Englishmen is five teet s-vea and a half inches; ' Cashmere Shawls take a long time to make.1 'A shawl is often iu the frame more than a year.; '' -; Paris is now, probably, the cleanest city ,n Europe. it.t i O.v (hi Continent some gentleman retain tlie old fashion of wearing ear-ring. ' Jv.cHtNo;,4the present Emperor of Chios,, it 19 yea: 'of age. '