tTh tt ink tkt MmWwn AMER SUN H. 15. MASSER, EDITOlt AND PROPRIETOR OFFICE, MARKET STREET, OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. SI jFamfln ilttospnptr-DrtotrU to VolWts, aftrraturr, iWornlfty, jrorrton m& Borarsuc iictos, Stfcittr an the arts, acrfculturr, JHiuUcts, amusements, fvt. NEW SERIES VOL. 3. NO. 4i. SUXnUltY, NOIlTlIUMIHiULANl) COUNTY. PA.. SA'JTKDAY, JANUARY 23. 18.11. (11.1) SERIES VOL. I, ISO. TERMS OP TCIE AMEItlCAtV THE AMKRICAN i nhli"h-it .very Siitiiritny nt TWO DOIXAHS per nmiuin In lir piihl hull' yearly in nilvmice, No naner ilitonlhmeil until AM. air.-rng nre pnid All communieiiliiin. or letter on I""1"; T to th Alee, to iiiuraltiiii"n, must lie I'tJM 1AIU. TO CM'BS. TKret copict tn one wMrem, J''' Fivo iMIart in a'tvnnce will pny fur three year's tubtctip lion to the American. On Souaie iif in linen. 3 timet, t) 00 Ererv SMlincunenl tiisrrili'lt, cnt Square, '6 months, Six mnntlis, e)s. year, Juainera Cants of Five tinea, per nnnnin, M.rrhant. ami nihera. iiilvcrtisiiw l.y llie yaar, with the privilege "1 inaertingilir ailveO iHemenl 8 weekly. 3WI 4'0 0(111 aim 10 80 jy I.nrget Atlvurtineiiicni, in per ngrermen'. H. 3. 1A33EP, ATTORN K Y . A T LAW, SUNBUHV, PA. Business attended Join the Counties of Nor ,timbrland, Union, Lycoming nnd Columbia. Krlrr lol P. A A. UotnuiiT, T LnwKft & UAHnns, Knmuun & Xsoiiobam, yi'hitpil. Rktwolii. Mcr aki.anm & Co. Sfxhiko, 'toon & Co., J THE VERY EAT EST AURIVAE NEW GOODS, AT THE STORE OF XHA T. CLE1CE1TT, WHO Inkes thin method of inforniinif hi friends mill customers, Ilint lie lias just re ceived and opened a splendid nssortmciit of N E V V, OOl) S. which he oilers to tlie public ul the lowest prices. Hi stork consists of every variety and quality, tieeessnrv for the farmer, mechanic, and laborer, ai well as tli professional man, viz : nil kinds of M ens' A p u r i I . WUCII AS CI.OTII. rASSIMKIIl'.S, 8ATT1NETT8' vi;riNiiS. ic ALSO : a lari assortment of Calicoes, Monsseline l)e. Raines. Alpaccas, Merinos, Shairls. llaiulkerthiij's, (Hovis. own;. Checks, Cambrics, (Ging hams, o'c. Also a Urtre assortment of Jiaoh ami Shoes, litis and Cup, iuin over Shoes, Also ax Assoutmcnt of REAOY MADE CLOTH INT.. A j?nfial assort tiu'iit of (irocerii's, Sugar, Coill'i', Tea. Clicfsc, Mo liisscs, Spices. An assortment of Harihvare, Sails. Stctl old Iron- Liquors, Such as Jimnilij, din, Rmn, Whhkey, fee. C?" Proline of nil kiwis will ! taken in ex change, and the highest m nket price paid for the Mine. Suiiburv, Nov. 30, 1 SSO- -lv. GEEAT AEEIVAL or NEW GOODS! Mavkct Street, Simlury, Pa., rOHN V. VKIL!N(i ic peel I'u lly informs lno friends anil ci.l .m'.its tinit he lias just re ceived a Inie and handsoiiie assortment ol Drv C.oixis. CoiiKirilini! of 'Iot!. Cn.inirres, Sattinelts, Do Luines, Caiieoes, Kuucy anil St;i.U ( I. hh'.-;. ALSO: GROCERTKS of every drsrriplion, Dltl l.S AM) Ml.llll'iNI'.s dTTEESSVARE AND HAEDWABE. Vit, Salt, Plarter iiml h general assortment of till tnili nooi'.s as will suit all classes ; the Fur iner, Moi haiiic, l.ulnnvr a.id (iendeineii of all jirofessiimii. T In L a cl i e "M find a priat variety of all mcli article at Ihey will need for Ihe present Krasnn. jC (.'ouiilrv prmliiee of all kinds taken In ex thanne ot the hiirhi st market price. bnnbury, Nov. !l. lS.'il). KOrS KE7 GOODS Ai the rVi-w More of JOHN lilJYKItS&COoi Market Street, Sunbury. Wild hail just iCceivcd and opened a large as sortment of new mid fasliimialile Riioils, of every variety, suitable for thft fall and winU'r sea Ion, for all persons ; and to which lie calls the at tention of friends und customers. 11 iK steels con iiita in part of uitv c.ooirs. SUCH AS Cloth, Cassimeret, Satttnctts, Merino', J)e Laincs, Calicoct, Sluiwls, Hand kerchiefs, ami all kinds of wear iiig apparel. ALSO: Hardware, iueenware, Groceries, Fish, Salt and Plaster; An4 all article that may be w anted by the com munity. The Lndies Will find, by eallinir at his store, thnt he has not teen unmindful of their wants, and respectfully invites them to examine his selection. Cy Country produce cf all kinds taken in ex change for goods at the highest market price. Sunbury, Nov. 8, 1S51). ly. NEW STAGE LINE FROM POTTSVILLE TO SHAMOKfN. A new line of stages is' now running daily be tween the above places. A comfortable two horse stage will leave Mt. Cariucl for Khamokin, imme diately arter the arrival of the Portsville stage at (hat place, anil will return the next day from fibamokin, So as to meet the Pottaville stago on As return to Potuvillc. From Shamokin to Trevorton there will be established a DAILY LINE hyiiert spring to a to connect with tins line at rJhaiuokin In the mean time private conveyances will be in readiness at eliamokm on the arrival of fasten fen. CONRAD KER6HNER. Shaniokin. Dec. 14, 1850. tf. INK. Boureau's celebrated ink, and also Con great uik fur tale, wholesale and retail by ' H. 1).-MASSES. December 29, 1850, SELECT POETRY. A riMll'KIM ME. At fi-slal board in Vnnkoo land, We Imil thn Pumpkin Pi-, Where plenty crowns the frnonl hand. Anil Freedom's tnrelipj (ly. Delicious treat with lirown burnt face, New England's dish of yore, Willi thankful hearts no'stiiitcd praco We sing its tnerils o'er. Old Scotia's son, far famed in ?ong, For dnrintj lea! mid deed, May sin:; of nut'i's, loud and long, And on its inei its Iced. And England's" Ii.,ril brave Sa.xon Chief. A noble piper Id, May chant in strains of Jimmied Kerf, lis swelling measures bold ! 8t. Patrick's merry rovinjr child, A anest in every laud ! If "Praters'' yield, then Pat is wild, Willi open heart and hand ! And Chowhrcd France, with Ragout rare, And Simps nf every name, Leads oil' in Fashion's circlo fair Polite, yet lickle game. The Dutchman, with no fear nf gout, In quietude nnd ease ! Give bim his Pipe mid dish of Krout, His Ihtttermill; and Cheese ! Let Russians dine on Mutton Hams 'Mid cold eternal snows ! And Finland's bonis survive on Clams. When mad the Hallic lluws ! Let India father Fruit and Spice, And sparing feed on meat 'Tis best her sons should live on rice, 'Mid plai'iies and ilealh and heat, So may old China feed on Duus, And dine on reptile rare Still feed her Kins on seasoned Fros, We crave no kingly fare. Hut here beneath bright Freedom's sky, A land that valor won, We'll sing our famous Pumpkin Pie- From morn to senilis sun ! With bannock, pastry, pork, and greens, On Week days let us dine On Sundays, bless the Pot o' Rcans, Nutritious rich and fine ! t;v r I THE LATE WAR IN HUNGARY. The baroness Von Beck, by birth nn Hungarian, saw her husband fall when cheering on his men to defend a barricade during the October revolution in Vienna. Broken-hearted and desperate, she deter mined thencelorth to devote herself to the rood ot her country ; and, on the invitation of some members of the Austrian Diet, un dertook to carry a message to Kossuth and the Hungarian army. She persisted, in spite of extraordinary difficulties and dan- gers. She was stopped at the frontiers by j the army ol H iiiiiisehgratz, and turned back three or four times. At lat she man aged to give the enemy the slip in the guise of a fisherman, and arrived safely at I'res burg, where she declared fur message to Csanyi. Hereupon (ioorgey, who was pre sent at time, requested Inr to undertake a mission to the north of Hungary, to ascer tain the strength ol Simoiiii h's army. In two days her preparations wi re made, and she was a?ain on the road. But we will give In r own .story, as rela ted in the narrative ol her personal adven tures, by Bentley, Loudon ; On the loth ol November I received my charge, namely, to obtain accurate intelli gence concerning the strength and position of Simonich's troops. I immediately took the railway to Tyrnan, and travelled thence by post-carriage through Nadasli and Se nitz to my own estate. My people were in the greatest terror and anxiety, expect ing momentarily a visit from Simonich's soldiers. Their fears, however, proved happily unfounded. 1 remained here until the 21st, and, having received and returned the visits of my neighbors, took my depart ure for Neutra, where I fell in with the first divUion of Simonich's corps, and an uncouth mob of peasants under thp com mand ot Pastor Durban-, a fanatical Sclavisli priest. The division was on its march to Senitz, and was about two thousand strong. Having ascertained, bv calculating the quantity of provisions they consumed, that the whole force of Smionich amounted to about iiK thousand men, and having made accurate observations on their position. I returned to my residence, where I made such arrangements of my most necessary allairs as a haity visit would permit, and set out once more fr Presburg, to give an account of my mission. At Senitz, which lay in the route, I found the head-quarters of a Hungarian division, commanded bv Colonel Ordody, to whom, as it imported nun especially, on account of r.i. prox imity to the enemy, I communicated all the information I had obtained, and authen ticated it by my papers. I then started by pust-carriage for Presburg, and waited upon Corgey at once with a full report of my mission. He thanked me for the services I had rendered to the cause of Hungary, and handed me a letter which had come by express from Kossuth. He 'also entrusted me with a despatch for the Lmbassy at Vienna. Baron Motoschitzky requested me, at the same time, to bear a letter from him . to Prince Windischgralz, containing the intelligence that his newly purchased estate at Leska had been reduced to ashes by the Hungarian bombardment. I was glad of this last commission, as a letter to the field-marshal would be a sufficient pass port for inn through any part of the Aus trian encampment. And should I be for tunate enough to receive an answer from Windischgratz, it would protect me from all interruption on my return. The same evening all the preparations for my journey back to Vienna were fin ished. I had now entrusted to me a letter from Kossuth to the Embassy, a letter from Baron Motoschitzy to Prince Wind ischgratz, and many private letters from the officer to persons iu Vienna. My military friends advised me to conceal the letters in mv haversack. This did not op - j pear to me good counsel ; for I knew that, should 1 he stopped by the Croats, they would ransack and turn inside out every thing likely to contain food ; my letters would thus be discovered, and myself in cvitably put to death. I had determined to make the journey in a peasant's cart, ns it would expose me to fewer inquiries and stoppages than a vehicle of more imposing appearance. 1 caused one of the planks ol the cart to be hollowed out at the end, without breaking the surface of the side, nnd placed nil mv letters in the space thus r,- i ti,.. .."ii. . ii ..ntn.i j i 'I 1 1 1' i . I nr jiltiuiv w tis men I i!iiiiii, and the joining at the end rubbed over with clay. 1 now felt perfectly certain that they could not be discovered by even the prying Croats. On the evening of December the .r)th, I left Presburg, nnd soon reached Wolfsthal, where Jellachich's corps was posted. As usual, I was seized at the outposts, and sub jected to a rigid examination. In anticipa tion of such an event, I had provided my sWfw'ith papers) from a well-known fruit warehouse at Presburg, and represented myself as an arrent of that house going to Vienna, 'to collect in some debts. In spite of nil my precautions, however, I was pla ced under military surveillance as far as Sominering. I was stopped and examined six-and-twenty times, but in all cases my papers proved a sufficient passport. At length, early on the (ill), the cupolas and lowers of the once jay, hut now humbled and mourning, city of Kaisers appeared in view. I entered Vienna. It appeared to my imagination invested with a sombre nnd tragic hue, and the ruins which marked the fierceness of the recent struggle against ty ranny seemed fraught with solemn admoni tion to all despotic rulers. The figure of my slaughtered hesbund came before my mind ; but the thronging memories which accompanied it I cannot, even did I desire to, depict. It was now exactly a month since 1 had left the city, but the exciting events which I had passed through made it appear a much longer period. I repaired to the Hotel of the Embassy, where I was received with the greatest attention, and an immediate answer promised to Kos suth's! despatch. From thence I proceeded to Schouiiiun, with the letter to Prince Windischgratz; but was informed that lie was gone to Jellachich to the Imperial Court at Olniutz, and would not return till the next day. His nephew, Count Wind ishgratz, whom I saw soon alter with Count Tbun and Prince Lichtenstein, confirmed this information. 1 returned, therefore, to Vienna, and occupied myself in delivering the various letters with which I was char ged. In the evening I received the promi sed answers of the Ambassador to KossiillTs letter. On the next day I again visited S'clion brun, and was admitted to an interview with Windischgratz and Jellachich the two pillars of the House of Hapsbnrg. They received me with distinguished court esy. LVuld they have divined the thoughts that filled my heart, how difleretit would have been my reception ! 1 handed my letter to Windischgratz; he read it, and seemed struck with terror at its contents. I conless it was not without a secret feel ing of satisfaction I saw this man taste some of tlie bitterness of that misery into which, with a remorseless hand, he had plunged myriads ol his own, and of my countrymen. He went into his cabinet to write an an swer to Motoschitzy, and Jellachich re mained standing in the presence of his deadly enemy. 1 now looked, for the first time, upon the calumniator of Hunga rian honor the plunderer and destroyer of Vienna. I could scarcely refrain from giv ing utterance to the feelings of disgust and scorn that swelled within me; but I could serve my country more effectually and was silent. He questioned me as to the num ber and condition of the Hungarian troops. I represented them as double their actual force. Cpon which he said, with apparent carelessness, that those divisions which I had not seen were probably still stronger. His drift was evidently to draw from me some information respecting the position of the various corps, but I defeated it by taking refuge in the general ignorance of mv sex upon such matters. Windisch gratz now returned with his written an swer to Motoschitzy. He thanked ine again for the trouble I had taken on his account, and, what pleased me much more, he directed Count Thun to make out an or der, giving me liberty to pass, wherever I chose, unmolested by the Austrian troops, to which he appended his own signature. I took my leave ; my object was accom plished, and the two great generals the conquerors ol Prague and Vienna were outwitted by a woman. In such dangerous expeditions as these in fact as a spy when death would have instantly followed on detection,' did this enthusiastic and brave woman pass the en tire time, with scarcely a few weeks' rest, from November, 1S4S, to (he end of IS 49. So extraordinary an iustance of passionate devotion to a cause, and of perfect indiffer ence to danger when a service could be rendered, we scarcely recollect to have heard or read of. Certainly it has never been surpassed. During this anxious and busy period the Baroness Von Beck passed repeatedly through the very midst of the Austrian and Russian armies. Some half dozen times she penetrated into Vienna itself. She was present at two great battles, those of Moor and Branitzscka. She took part in the sur render at Villages, and the evacuation of Comorn. At one time we find her stirring up the Poles to insurrection at Lemburg and Cracow; at another, she is intriguing with Germans at Dresden and Cseks in Prague. She was now feasting the con querors of Buda, or dancing with the he roes of Kapolua; and now dressing the I wounds of the patriots, or superintending I the hospitals and prisons. At one moment she draws out plans of Campaigns for Gor- gey, and gives counsel on slate alhnrs to Kossuth; at another she is steaming down thp Danube, listening to the silly boastings of Welden, or engaged in pleasant conver sation with Paskievich himnelf. Her masterpiece, however, was her visit to Haynnti. in the derperate hope of sa ving the life of a friend, this intrepid wo man actually bearded the tiger in his own den ; and thnt, foo, nt the very time when he was revelling in the blood of his victims, Had she been discovered, she would not have had twenty-four hou s to live ; yet sue actually placed herself of her own ac cord in the power of the hangman, and es caped unsuspected. Cf all the multitude tn the NeugoSaude, die only one (o whom I could bring any comfort was Danielis. I lis affairs were in a fair way of arrangement, but his personal danger was still great. He begged me. to see lfaynnu, and to prevail upon him, if possible, nt least, to hear Danielis :n his own defence. 1 he prisoners knew of the death of Balhyanyi, but as yet the fatal tidings from Arad had not reached them, and every one made it a duty to conceal these atrocities from them. I left this lilac e of mourning, and retired to my hotel. 1 had pledged myself to see Hayiinn on Danielis' behalf, and my pro mise must now be fulfilled. I went to 1 1 ay nau's residence, and, after wpiting a long time, was introduced to his presence. He received me politely, and I lelt encouraged. I told him that I had come on behalf of Colonel Danielis, and mentioned that he was the father of a helpless fimily; that he had not fought against Austria, and dwelt particularly on his having saved the roval estates from destruction, of which, I said, I could bring him satisfactory evi dence. Haynau said that the chief baililf ol the crown property had been already with him, and had repiesented the services of the prisoner upon that occasion in a very favorable light; -that this ail'orded sufficient ground for his pardon, bufslill he could not be liberated until it came to bis turn to be examined. This was very satisfactory. I felt emboldened to present a petition which Kossuth's mother had intrusted to me, praying that his children might be placed with herself, lie took the paper and read it, and his natural character re turned ; he was Haynau once inure ; a dark frown, like a thunder cloud, gathered upon his brow. "What !" said lie, in a voice hoarse with passion, "what! tin you want the children to receive the same revolution ary training as their father? The women of Hungary have the devil in their hearts, and are guilty of infinite mischief. No, 1 teJI you ; the girl shall be placed in a con vent, and the hoys brought up in ienna, under serveillance. (Jo; that is the will ol his Majesty." He a.sked me how I had become acquainted with Kossuth and his mother; I told him what I thought pro per, and he left me with a volley of filthy abuse agpiiifit the illustrious exile and bis family. These were bad tidings to bring to the aged mother. 1 tried to comfort her as well I could, and alter this visited her much more frequently than I did before. ni T( II BlvAt'TlllS. The late llev. Henry Column, w ho was as irreat nil admirer of female beauty ns he was of huiie pumpkins nnd cahbares, in his "Eu ropean Life and Manners," yives tlm follow ing luscious account of the Dutch womcm which tbo Chevalier (who has travelled ex tensively in Holland) says does no more than exact justice to their transparent beauty : ' think so mo of them the fairest hand somest creatures I ever looked upon, and made of the. finest unmixed porcelain clay. llefoie 1 left England I thought the English women the lineM I had ever seen I now consider tiiein as belonging to the colored races. Tho Dutch women much exceed llieni. Take the fairest iodo that was ever plucked, with the glittering dewdrops hang ing among its petals take tin' fairest peach that ever bung upon tho tree, with its charm, jug blending lints of red mid white am! they aio eclipsed by the tianspaieucy nnd beauty of complexion of the fairest of the Dutch women, ns I saw them at Jlioeck and Saaiilam. If llieir minds are as fair, and their manners us winning, ;'s their faces, then 1 can easily understand the history of Adam's full. It was imHissible, poor fellow that he should resist. A'.iriuiige. I'OW 111 Hl:l ALl.Vf. Applied by the finger to the part alTected, very seldom fails to cure iiillamatioii of the throat in a few days. The efficacy of this remedy, says tho author, M. Velpeau, is as marvellous ns it is rapid. Employed is the first, second, third or fourth day. while there is yet no abscess in the tonsils, it tirrests all symptons as it were by enchantment ; the fever abiites, the swelling diminishes, appe tite returns, and (he convalescence, is quickly decided and completed. Ify showing that this remedy is as powerful in simple inflam. matioii ns imllanimation of the tonsils, M. Velpeau hopes that the practitioners will no longer hesitate to maks proof of its ctlicacy, and rescue thereby hundreds of human beings from the grave. Gam bum; in Washington city is very lu crative. One firm of faro dealers was able to buy a property which sold ut $48,000, out of the prolits realized during the last session of Congress. A dead whale, measuiing seventy feet in length, was found on Barnstable Beach, on Friday lust, supposed to have been driver! thbro by one Of tho luto stoiriis.' REAL LIFE. The Despair of a Disappointed Love A Sad Scene in a Telegraph OflicJ. The Cleveland Plaindealer furnishes the following iiceoiint of a pitiable ceno which occurred a few days ago in the telegiapn oitico ol that city : A case of melancholy interest, to one of tho parties nt least, occutred here the other day which wo will relate for tho public good A young lady arrived here from tho Stalo of New York, on her way into the Southern part nf tho State, whither she was going to con snmale a marriage contract entered into some ten years since. Her intended was a young man w ho had been born nnd raised near her father's residence, but w ho in all things did not suit the old folks, nnd consequently they opposed tho match. The result was, t young man left tho country, but has kept lip a most intimate coriespondence with tho lady ever since until last summer, he wrote 'o her that as she could not bo married nt home she had better meet him nt , this stale, in the month nf August and be mariifd. To this she consented, but it was inconvenient for her to leavo home at tiny time, nnd she did not arrive on her mission of lovo until a few days since. She stopped nt one of our best hotels, pre paratory to her voyage South. She appeared cheerful, was exceedingly welldressed, sport ed a gold watch nnd other paniphernalia pe culiar to the 'geniilitv.' Previous to depart ure, she stepped into the Telegraph Office to inform her lover, w ho wits an operator him self stationed iu a southern Office on the same lino that sho had got so lar on her joyous way and would like to hear from him at this point. After her despatch was sent and waiting a reply, ene of the operators who was very well acquainted with her intended, re marked that the young gentlemen to w hom she had sent her message, had fallen into a 'streak of good luck.' The lady wns ob served to startle considerably, and asked what he meant by a streak of luck.' He told her the young man wns married. She fell back iu her chair, and fainted, almost instantly. The operators and clerks were much frightened, but mnunsed to bring her to by the use of water. She could not be lieve tho report, and requested them to telo- xraph again and ascertain tho truth. Tho operator stepped to his key, called the office of tho young man but found him not in. A eloik iu tho office, however, answered the message saying Mr. was actually mar ried on the 17th of October, and was then keeping house.' When this was read to tho weeping lady she instantly swooned away nn, nnd for a limo -eemed lifeless. She was resuscitated and taken to her hotel in a moft frantic condition, where fur days the remained entirely insane. 'I li. criel' I'eyi'tiil all oilier priefa. when Tate First leavr tlie iuiif; hmrl desi'late In 1 lie will'- wnrlij, villtlt Unit only tie. I'nr winch it wislnnl to live or lYiired to die.' Kind care nnd time, that curer of most heart's diseases, have now nearly restored her. She exhibits letters showing with what fidelity sho had trusted in the one now false to her; that during the ten years of their en gagement she had refused several olfers ; had furnished her betrothed money, her parents being rich and he poor, bad endured the con tumely of her friends at home opposed to the match ; and all for his sake. She is now iu our city, among strangers, alone as it were, in the world, having clandestinely left her father's roof to meet her lover, and now de serted by him; her constitution shattered and broken. Earth seldom produces iu hu man form so miserable an object. No won dei she went mad : Iter wreu-hnl brain pnve wny, Ami she Uvumc u wrn-k ul nnnlniii drivf n, . Without one j.'liinpiii'1'f en"n or of lienvcii." She is now belter, but the picture of deso lation. Young men can here see the daugcr of trilling w ith such infectious, yea, the dark sin of creating hopes or raising expectations in a hca it too true and confiding to survive such disappointment. Coincidence ok Invention. A letter wri ter in Washington states "that veiy fre quently patents are granted to different per sons for the same invention, the parties hav. iug had their minds led into the same train of though', from the existance of the same difficulties. Thus some lime ago, a patent was granted for a certain churn but before this could havo been known far beyond the walls of tho Patent office, two other inventions, each from diffident parts of the country, laid claim to the identical improvement. An in terference was accordingly declared, and no sooner had the decision been made in favot of tho patentee, than three other inventors were found pressing their claims to the sunie inven tion, il presented nil unprecedented case iu the history of the Patent OtRce, of seven per sons, each' a bona fSe inventor all' claiming thesatns thing, and about the same time, and all from dillereut portions of the country." Makuiaoe in Hiuii Like in Europe. It is affirmed that negotiations for a marriage between llie Emperor of Austria and the Princess Sidonia, el Saxony, havo been brought to a conclusion, and that the mar lingo will be celebrated next May, with great splendor. The Princess in only IT", and very beautiful. Her father, the Prince John brother of the reigning king, is, owing to the latter having nO offspring next heir 10 the throne. As the Princess is' a Catholic, the alliance will give great satisfaction to the Pope, while it must, on the other hand, be disagreeable to Prussia, from the additional' weight likely to be derived' by Austria and Germany. IIOW TO TOAST WELL. In toasting bread, we wish to pet out tho wnii-r il.i.t r,.n,..!i,a nuil which makes tho bread cold, waxy, nnd heavy of digestion Perhaps we shall be lest understood if wo first explain what makes bnd toast of a piece of bread, or rather no toast nt nil, but merely a pieco of brend with two burned sulfates', more wet nnd waxy in the heart than even and which not n particle of butter will enter, and if put by for nnd hour or two and nllow. ed to cool, will get ns tough as posrfble. If the slice of bread is brought into closo con. tact with a strong fire, tho surface becomes covered with, or rather converted into char coal, before the heat produces any rffiect on the interior of the slice. This being done, the other side is turned, and has i!s surfaco converted into charcoal in the same manner. The consequence of this will be, that not a panicle of butter will niter such a piece of toast, but only remain upon the surface, and if vexed with additional the, (urns to a ran cid oil of the most unwholesome description. Charcoal, as every one knows, is a very bad Conductor of heat, ns such is used between the cyleuders and casings of steam engines it is of no consequence whether the said charcoal be formed of wood, of flour, or any other substance, for its qualities arc in every case tho Fame. Now, when the surface of the slice of bread an; overeharied in this manner, there is an end to all toasting, ns no heat can be communicated to the interior,' and not one drop can be evaporated or drawn awav. In t.na state the slice ot bread tiiiiv be wholly burned to charcoal: but until it i"1 altogether so burned, t ho tinburned part will become more wet and unwholesome. Hence. if you would have a slice of bread so toasted as to bt; pleasetit to the palate, and whole some und oasily dige:ted, never let one par ticle of the ftn face be chaned. Chesiiut brown is even fur too deep for a good toast ; and the color of a fox is rather too deep. The nearer It can be kept ton straw color, the moie delicious to the taste, and I'm more wholesome it will be. The method of ob taining this is very obvious. It consists in keeping tho bread at the proper distance from the fire, ami exposing it to a proper heat for a duo length of time ; or it may bo done, placed on edge the same way as dry toast is brought tolable. in a rack, in an iron or brick oven of a proper heat. For those w ho 'make the tons!," i specially il" a largo quantity Oo required; it is generally a tedious process, and for this rea:on it is commonly hurried. Cut 'f the loasting fork was discarded, ami its place supplied by a small apparatus mado of wire, long enough to hold three or four pieces at a time, and so contrived as to slide in cl out to any requited distance fiom the lire, the j bread may be placed in it, and the process of toasting carried on, while the seivant was at liberty to do her other work, Ol eoui.se the "Toast Holder'' would require to be made differently to suit panicular shaped giale3 and fire places. If not cut too thin, if placed at the proper distance from the lire, and continued long enough, care being taken that not a single black, or even dark brown spot, makes ii ap pearance on the surface, and slfee of bread may be toasted thiough and through ; mid it is this operation which makes properly toast ed bread so much mere wholesome than bread which is not toasted, and slid moie preferable to bread buiiiedou thetuilace and sodden iu the interior. !y this means the whole of the water may be drawn out of it, and it may be changed from dough, w hich has alwayj a tendency to undeigo the ace tous fermentation in ihe stomach, to the pure farina of w heat, w hich is iu itself one of tho most wholesome species of tood we have, not only for the strong and healthy, but more particularly eo for tho ilelitated nnd disease' As it is turned to pine latina, ihe tough and gluey nature is gone, every part can be pen etrated, all parts nie equally warm, and no part is so warm ns to turn the butter into oil, w hich, even iu the case of tho best butter, is invariably turning a wholesome substance in to an injurious substance. There is another circumstance regarding llie biitteiing of a rightly toasted blicu. The dough, bciug a compound of w'aler, repels llie fuller, which is nil oil ; tint t!u dried farina allows the but ter to penetrate tho whole slice equally through.' There is mere advantage in t! is than some may suppose. I'mltei iu maeses (whatever may be ils quality) is too heavy for the stomach : though butler divided with sufficient minuteness, and not sulleied to pass into an oil, makes a most valuable addition to many kinds of lood. . The pioperly toasted bread absorbs tho butter, but does not con vert it 10 oil, and both butter and lariua are iu u state of very minute division, and one serving to expose tho other to ihe lieo action of gush ie fluid iu the stomach ; and that this fluid shall be tiblo to penetrate tho whole mass of the food, and act upon it in small portions, is the grand secret of lieullhlul di gestion ; so that when a slice of toast is right, ly prepared, there is, perhaps not a lighter article in tho whole vocabulary of cookery. Unfcnneiiled brown bread, treated' in this way, forms un excellent substitute lor biscuits and is iu some respects superior, as il may be eaten with impunity by thoso pciaous with whom biscuits may disagree. Tub Rev- Mfi WhiiefielJ was once accu sed, by one of his hearers, of wandering in his discourse ; to which he replied: "If you will ramble like a lust sheep, I must tamblo after you." In Omka a man condemned to death rimy procuie a substitute, which can easily be dene for money. IXTI Itl.STIMI KA( TS.-l ltlMlXi. Common, or letter press printing, such ns ho iks, newspaper, kc, is carried on by a large number of tools or types, every ono of which cost money, labor and ingenuity to fil for use There nre about two or three men in he United States w ho can make tho matrino in which types are oust, so peculiar, complcta proportioned, uniform and exact, must tlm work bo done ; the letters nre made princi pally of Ii ad, mixed w ith other metals, in or: der to baiden it sufficiently w hen cool. For every sized and differently shaped type, new matrices have to bo made, and each with lln; same exactness, or Ihe font is defective. In Koman each loiter must bo made three times large nnd small capitals lowercase, points, figures and other indis pensable characters. To give some idea of the number of characters and letters w hich go to form a font of types, we will state that there are two cares, as the printers call them the lower case containing nil tho common or small letters, w ith the figures and points or punctuation, double liters, spaces nnd quad rants ; this case has 5-1 boxes, and every ono is occupied. The upper case containing tho lare and small capitals, and numerous marks and characters which are in common Use, has 93 boxes. Thus it seems the typo founder, iu order to supply n common font of Poman letters, has to have constructed 150 matrices and tho Italics are not included hero' which will make over 100 more just to manufacture loiter, &c, of si,:o nnd corres ponding faces. line then, there must be about Sol) characters, nnd some of them a good many limes o.er. to print a newsrainer To give the uninitiated the number and mo. portion of type' used it may answer just to state that we use, say for a common avetago font. a 8.500 : b I. GOO ; c. S000 ,1 j.nno : o 12,000; f 2.000; g 1.G00; h 0,000; i 8.000 ) j -100; k S00 ; p 2,000; m .1.000; n sjooo ; 0 8,000 ; p J.(K)i) ; 5-)0 ; r s.ooo ; s 8,000 ; t 0.000 ; 4,000 ; v 1.000 : w D00 ; x 500 ,' V 2.000 ; z 200. .Nothing is here said of points, figures, dou ble letter, and otiier characters, which would swell 1U ;.;, amazingly. And till this makes ono item in a common newspaper office Nor is nnythiug raid of llie numerous pic tures, floweis, ornamental shades, condensed, extended, lc, types used in i .'j and news paper printing, all of which is necessary to make ihe stock of an oniinary newspaper establishment. Tlie lypcs cost fiom 30 cents to S3 a pound. A common newspaper offieo ought to bo supplied with fiom 1000 to 1500 lbs; of type. These with some 200 woith ol" wood work, f 2?0 for a hand press, a good many dollars fur bra.-.s rules, and still moro foi iron mate rials, ink, Jcc, will make a very large ab straction from 51.000. The usual width of newspaper column's is about 17 m's wide. And an em is Ihe thickness of a line. Tin: following is an epitaph w ritten by a schoolmaster in an inland town in Connecti cut, on the death of a favoiitu child, which tell into Ihe water ol a saw mill dam and was drowned : JlM lie! v :i l".l Mil it:illl . ("iuiil wns ili-nvv'ni! Slam !!:i k :itiT li-le hrait Tin- I'luM win. Ki!t slim ilrail. ri.i iil:!i!t iMinr-d.iwn Hutu tlie wjtci Ml I' rlnM-i; what was Ihe innMiT 'J'il'-V 1111:1 lhtir W(1VMS V-'.t J ! 1 . 1 LT'lOtiOll i'. -r I In ti .'ii a i"tt! . .iilr v:.s ilriwin-.l. lNin:it oe Kisstxi; a Woman auainst her Will. A curious trial was recently held at Middlesex Session England. Thomas Saver land, the prosecutor, elated that he was iu thu lap-iooni where the defendant, Carolino Newton, and lur sisler, who had come from l'iimiugham, were present. Tho latter jok ingly obseivcd that foil J bad promised her sweetheart that no man should kiss her w hile absent It bciirr holiday lime, Saverland couriered this a challenge, and caught hold 01 her and kissed Tier. Thu young woman took it as a joke, but her sister, the defendant said she wculd like as little of that kind of fun as he ph ased, Severland told her if sho was" angry he would kiss her a!o ; he then tried to do it, and they fell to the ground. On rising, ihe woman struck him; be again tried to kiss her, and in the scniile sho bit oil his nose, which she spit out of her month The action was biought to recover damages for the loss of llie nose. The defendant said he had no business to kiss her ; if she wan. ted kissing, she had a husband to kiss her, a better lookjng man than ever tho prosecutor w as. The jury, without he.-ilation, acquitted her ; and the chairman said, "that if any man attempted to kiss a woman against her w ill, she had a Knurr bite off his uusi if she hail a Jane i) Jur s o doing .' Dipn't Like tiik Jit..--A wealthy, popu-' lar und gay young gentleman once boasted' that ho could walk home with any one of the members of a certain division of llie Daugh ters of Tern pen; nee, from church : accord-" ingly he, alter services were tivei the i:: xl Sabbath, pruced up to a fair durmel, and with a pi lite bow tendered his arm. Tha young lady, as by instinct, drew back as from a serpent and exclaimed .' "No sir .' I'll m rcr put arm through another jug handle as long as I live !" Formcblv, it was a maxim, that a young woman rhould never be married till she had' spin herself u full set of linen. Hence, all unmarried women have been culled spinsters:' an appellation they still retain in certain deeds' and law pioccedius; ihoLh many uiu uut' entitled to il. V