I A V' CAR tV L II. B. MASSER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. ' OFFICE, MARKET STREET, OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. SI- JFamU ilctosprrpcv Dcbotcti to JjoHtfcs, aucrnturc, lornlfti, jfovcfflit nnii Domestic Hclus, defence antt the arts, asrfculturc, .ftlnrltets, amusements, fcc. NEW SERIES VOL. J, NO. 19. SUM1UIIY, NOUTIIUMISKKLAM) COUNTY. PA., EATIKDAY, AUtiUST 3, 1831. OT.l) SKIIIKS VOL. II, NO. 45. 1 Tirmrnrni n niBii-m-rrminTnii 11 iwiiumttt in -mi i m itwrnrni hum m hum iimiiii i iiiwir TERMS OF THE AMERICAN. TUB AMKHTCAN in pulilisliwl every S:imnl:iy nt TWO DCM.I.AIC piT niiiiiiiii Ki lie puiil Imlf yearly in 4t'l !tiice. No paper tliscniiUiiucil until all nrreurunua ure . ii I. '. eomirtiiiiiralions or li'tlcm ml litiwiitrs rr-liilmg to I'm .lfice, tu imure utti'iitioa, must tie POST 1'AIU. TO CI.LIJ:?. Three coniea to one tulilirss, So 00 Seven li Do IIMNI Kiitei.ii 11" l)n iiiHHi Five dollars in mlvniiee will jmy for three year's aub cription Ui the American. 'One Soiniie nf 10 lines. 3 times, IKvery subsequent inftcrliim, One Sqnnre, a inunllia, Six months, One year, lluaineaa Cnnla of Five lines, per nniinm, lereliunti unit others,, uilvcrtisimr by the yenr, with the privih'fre of inserting different mlvettisenients weekly. W Larger Ailverliaemenla, ua per Agreement. Sinn 8.5 3IHI 4 .it) (lull 31KI 1000 S. B. IASSE?, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BUNDUHY, PA. Business attended to in the Counties of Nor thumberland, Union, Lycoming ami Columbia, liefer tot P. & A. Unvoildt, I.uwrr & 13 a mm. Somen ec Snnilarnss, Reynolds, McKarlmul & Co., ISpcring, (iood & Co., y r hit ml. NEW STORE AT HOLLOWING RUN. At the Cross Roads, near J. I). Courads, Loircr Anausln. J. 15. KAl I'KUAX RESPECTFULLY informs his friend anil the public generally, that be has just receiv ed and opened a new stocjj ol" goods, which be now offers lor sab- on the most reasonable terms. His stock consists in part nt' MOM AS '.'inlht, Oissimercs, Snltuielts, Meriiios, &'c. "Mer ueir of nil kinds Muslins, Calicoes, Ciiiidiitins. Checks, &c. Al.st): .',1 assortment of Hardware nf all kinds, most poiu-r l'v in use. Al.st): (.poetries of till Kinds. .! Siipiir, Coffee. Ti-ii, Moltifscs, Spiriitt, iVc. ALSO: Qnccnsware and Croikery ware, u '.'ill! assoittnenl. Ui Silk Hats, Cbiii Hats, and Straw Hats. ALSO : An assortment of Liquors, viz: BllAMIY. Wini:, Wiiiskkv, &e. liesides a variety of oilier articles, most gener ally used and in want by farmers and other per sons, all of which be will sell lo purchasers at a saving often per cenl. by calling on him. All kinds of produce taken in exchange for goods at the highest market price. Hollowing Kun, April '(i, 1S31. tf. SPRINGAEDSTJHMEir CLOTHING. EYKUYBODY slioiild embrace this opportu nitv to l-ny ( ' I .OTill.N (! for Men, Youth and liovs, at such prices as have never vet hecu known 'in this Cite, at GF.ObMJK C'ULI.N'S CLOTHING HsTAlll.lsll.M KNT, t-oiilh-lhtst Comer of .Market and Second Streets. Philadel phia, embracing a choice of the best, most desira- I ble, and fashionable. DRE33 AND FROCK COATS, Habit (.'loth do., Linen Drilling do., Tweeds, &(.'., &e., togellier with a grent variety of Eoys' Clothing', Consisting of Sack Coats, Polka Jae..ls, Mou kev Jackets, Vests and Konnd Jackets made of Tweed, Linen Drilling, Cloth, Alpacca, Kersa mier, Doeskin, &e., eVe, Particular care has been taken to procure the new styles for Men and liovs' Summer fonts, Pantaloons. Vests, eve., to which he would invite special attention. Furnishing Goods, Consisting of Shirts. Slocks, Handkerchiefs, cVe.; nil of which are offered at the luwr.st Vusihlr tush l'ri-cts, nod as cheap as any other Clothing btorc ill the Union. Parents who desire liovs' Clotiiimi arc ear nestly invited to examine the Stock. Country Storekeepers can be accommodated at very low rates. (iEOUCE CULIN. S. E. Comer of Second c MarUt Sis 1'hila. April l'J, lfi3i. tf. Teas ! Cheaper than Ever! ! ! 100 Half Chests Ruse Flavor Black Tea, 15 " " Olono; " 15 " " Nine; Yon?; " FiHESE Teas are better tor the price than were ever ollered before in Philadelphia, es pecially the liosc Flavor, which is of the very best quality and finest flavor, and families that Want a Half Chest or less hy sending soon will net a first rate artrcle at a very low price. They will be well packed up and sent to Depot or ears ireo of charge. DAVID PEAsE, Tea Dealer and (irocer, S. V. Cor. Cth & Arch Sts. Philadelphia. May 10, 1851. 3mo. NATIONAL HOTEL, SHAMOKIN, Northumberland County, Pa. THE subserilier respectfully informs his f iends and the public generally, that be has open ed a new Hotel in the town of Sbainokin, Nor thumberland county, on the corner of Sliamokiu and Commerce streets, nearly opposite to the House he formerly kept. He is well prepared to accommodate bis guests, and is also provided with good stabling. He trusts his experience, and strict attention to business, will induce per fcous visiting the coal region to continue the lib end nulronage he has heretofore received. 1 WILLIAM WEAVEK. Sbainokin, April VJ, IH.t tf. JAM ES J 1 M A( i K E Fi CAS removed from his old Stuud, No. 11S fifi Vine street, to A'o. 52 Dillwyn St., (bct'n CaYhill Sf Il'itow.) where he has constantly on hand, BROWN STOUT, PORTER, Ale mul Cider, FOR HOME CONSUMPTION Oft SHUTING. M. B. Coloring. Bottling, Wire and Bottles, Vinegar, Ac. r or sale ua ahove. Philadelphia, April 18, 1X51. ly. Lycoming Mutual Insurance Company rv It. I. B. MASHER is the local agent for the XJ above Insurance Company, in .Northuiulier land county, and is at all times ready to direct Insurances against fire on real or personal pro perty, or renewing; policies lor the same. Kunhury, April !it, IS31. tf. ""llUSTICES' FEE BILLS. For sale by J 11. B. MASSEU wunbury. ApI 28 SELECT POETRY. Tho Bachelor'3 Lament. They loll mo to hasten, and marry But ah ! 'tis Ihi' cost that 1 fear ; Anil piuili'iioo still warns me to tarry, Kru seeking uiiiusfint'iil so dour. Oh ; there' rapture untneasitrpil in wooing;, Ami sweet the eoiifiHiiiin when won: But the house-keeping horrors, pursuing, Are suro lo make sentiment run. Tints I mined t:o!her tiiaht, as fair Chloe Swam round in u; dance by my side: I must furnish that wardmlie so sliuwy, If rashly I make her my biide. Thai slim, fairy foob and ils fellow, That tread tin light meiisme so nay, Must with saliu be shod, and prunella, And husband the piper must pay. At a "liuioe of that anele so slender My heart the dear bargain would close; When my head bids me, ere I surrender, Kemember the price of the hoso. That hand so desired beyond measure, The suitor, that venture to hold, Can only secure siudi a treasure By hooping the linyers with gold. These eyes, though their vi.-ion surpasses The eagle's that pierce, the light, Must be uiihd with opera glasses, Howe'er they enibanass the sight. Though made up of roses thy face is, Such roses bloom not in the sun ; t We must veil them in thu best of point laces, Or freckles will soon overrun. Sweetest mouth that e'er smiled upon mor ul, Hides organs of hunger within ; An. I dainties must pass the ted portal, Or soon cherry lips will grow thin. Ah ! that cliaims so desired by a lover Have duties so costly assigned That the peails, which thy smiles now un cover, The choice of the rnaiket must grind ! Thy form richest fabrics must cumber Will) many a garment of show ; And Willi doubtless ol olhers a number That bachelors never may know. ' Thy brow, the fair temple w here towers llii'li honor in marble enshrined, Must be thatched with sliaw, leathers, and (lowers, To keep out the sun and the wind. Thy care must be constantly petting With rarest cosmetics thy lace Thv nose, be indulged in eoijuelling Willi 'kerchiefs bewildered with lace. Those tresses, ensnaring allures us, With lillets of gol.l must we bind; Thy ears must be fed with btavuras, And hung with the jewels of hid. Strange ! that man should embellish a ci eat u re Ahendy inure fail than the morn ; That the being most gifted by Nature Is the one we most love to udoiu. Why was Eden so pleasant to Adam So rid of connubial ills ? Because his ingenuous madam Ne'er bored him with milliners' bills. No bonnets had she for her tresses No silks did her person enroll : So cheap were her costliest drrsses, For a fig one hud purchased the whole. Ah ! that was llie season to marry, Kie fashion made women her thrall, ller trumpery garments to carry Yes ! clothes are the curse of the fall. -I Select (talc. OLD MAIDS. OR, A MIVI'Aki: A1MIIT 31 Alt It I V(. I.' BY" 51US. K. II. HAM.. Wiirc.v I was a little girl, I was a fat, merry, "i'y iinmplin:, as linppy as the j day was Ion.;. Kveiy body pim-hed my j red cheeks, and I waddhd about w ith my doll in my plump arms, finding- fun in eve ry tliiiijr, and fully believing; that my lull was as sensible as myself; anil perhaps she wa?, almost. Hut, though I had a natural antipathy to a spell'mrr-book, and no fond ness for spending; a long summer's after noon in poking a needle in an out of a bit of calico, though I coi sicleied patchwork all foolishness, and guests as utter superflui ties, though I was called a simpleton for asking my mother why she cut cloth up and then sewed it together again, still. 1 was fond of picking up ideas alter my own fashion. When the wise people around me supposed I was thinking of nolhing but my play, my two little cars were open to everv worn spoken in my hearing. And many was the word impressed on my me- moiy winch the speaker lorgot next mo ment. The talk aruiinJ me was my real education, as it is of all children, send them to what school you may. U lien 1 was ten years old, I had one sister aged, fifteen, ami another seventeen ; and, as usual with gt of that age, they had a set ol cronies, some very like and some quite unlike them in character. One afternoon, as 1 was tending my doll Ophe lia, who was sick in bed, 1 heard a brisk discussion among these girls, which, I may almost say, decided my fate lor life. The first words that caught my attention came from an animated, romantic o-irl of sixteen; scolding because the heroine of a novel she had just read was left unmarried at the end of the story. What surprise was expressed at this catastrophe! what indignation! One of my sisters did not Reem to sym pathise with this burst of disapprobation, and then came the pithy question, "What! would you be willing to die an old maid 1" Mary said very quietly, "Yes ;" and sister Ellen added, "So would I !" Then such looks of amazement and in credulity. "You can't mean what you say," cried one. "II I did not know you too well to think you a hypocrite, " said another. "Why, it was meant that all women should be married !" exclaimed a third, "Then why are they not all mar ried ?" asked Alary, with her usual simpli city. Eager and hot grew the controversy, and I lost not a word, while Ophelia lay flat on lu r hack, her still kid arms sticking out, and her croup quite forgotten. Then first did I take notice of that terrible com bination of monosyllables, "Old Maid." In how many different tones of contempt, dread, and deprecation, did I hear it utter ed by those juvenile voices! What anec dotes came forth about cross old maid?, and fidget ty old maids, and ugly, and dressy, and learned, and pious, and flirting, mid mischief-making, old maids. Never did a bevy of regular filly-year-old spinsters ut ter so much scandal in one afternoon as was poured forth by these blooming young creatures. Two or three friends of my mother whom I had always cherished in my innocent affections, because they talk ed so pleasantly and were so kind to me, now appeared like new personages. "Miss Z. was so ugly, she never could have had an offer :" "Miss Y. dressed so shabby, and wore green spectacles, to look litera ry." And "Miss X. was for ever talking about Sunday-school and society meetings," and so on. You may be sure that the next time these ladies came to our house, I scanned very closely the face of Miss Y., a face that I had always loved before; but now I saw that it was exceedingly plain. I looked hard at Miss Y.'s drab-colored bonnet and shawl, perceived that they were old fash ioned and ordinary, and that her green spectacles looked pedantic. Then Miss Y., beside whom I had always squeezed in upon the sola, encouraged by her kindly smile and delighted with her conservation how uninteresting she had become ! They were all tUl vvi'nh .' It must be observed that my sisters right good, sensible, domestic girls thev were bad no part in this bewilderment of my young ideas. They were in the min ority, so I took it for granted thev were in the wrong. )3esides, what children are ever as much influenced by what is utter ed in the familiar voices of.their own fami ly, as by words of comparative strangers? Take care of what you say at a friend's house, with the young folks catching up every random sentiment you drop. Many a judicious mother's morning exortalion has been blown to the moon by some light re mark from a dinner guest, who did net, af ter all, mean to give his real opinion, or whose opinion was not worth having. And now, I assure you my education went on rapidly. It is perfectly marvel ous, in how many ways, and by what dif ferent sorts of people, a young girl is taught that it is a terrible thing to be an old maid. Eools never show their folly more than in their hackneyed jests upon this topic ; but what shall we say of the wise folks w ho sin almost as often in the same way ! What shall we say of the refinement of him who is gentlemanly in thought and expression on all subjects but this .' of the humanity and chivalry of him who assails the de fenceless? of the justice of him who tax es a class with the laulls of individuals, and wounds with that meanest of weapons, a sneer? or of the t'ln istianity of him who indirectly censures and ridicules one of the arrangements of Providence ! 1 learned my lesson thoroughly, for it came to me in some shape every week. 1 read it in every novel and newspaper, and heard it from every lip. The wry men who spoke truth and sense on the subject, sometimes neutralised it by an idle jest in some moment of levity, and the jest drove out the truth from my young heart. At eighteen, I lived only for the ignoble pur pose 1 cannot bear to say of getting married : but what could have been the ruling wish of one who had been taught by society to dread celibacy worse than death? 1 dare say I betrayed it in the ball-room, in the street, everywhere. 1 dare say 1 was duly laughed at. At last, quaking on the verge of six and twenty, 1 had an oiler; a most absurd one. 1 was si years older than my lover, had ten limes as much sense probably ex cept on one point. I knew that as he was "rather wild," as the gentle phrase goes in short, I neither loved nor respected him; but I was willing to marry him, because then I would be Mrs. Somebody, and should lwl be an old maid. My parents said "No," positively. Of course 1 thought tbein unreasonable and j cruel, and made myself very miserable. Still it was something to have had "an of fer" of any kind, and my lips were not hermetically sealed. 1 had several confi dantes, who took care that all my acquain tances should know the comfortable fact that I had refus. d Mr. S. I went on with increasing uneasiness a few years longer, not seeking how to be useful, or trying to find out for what good purpose I was made. Neither was I look ing for a companion who could sympathise with my better aspirations and elevate my whole character, for I had no right view's of marriage. I was simply gazing about in anxious suspense upon every unmarried man of my acquaintance, for one who would lift me out of that dismal Valley of Humiliation into which I felt myself de scending. Had I met Apollyoti himself there with thu question on his lips, I be lieve I should have said "Yes." At thirty-six I wore more pink ribands than ever, was seen everywhere that a re spectable woman could go, wondered why girls went into company so young, found I was growing sharp-faced, and sharp-spoken, and was becoming old maidish in the worst sense of the word, because 1 was an old maid against my will. I forgot that voluntary celibacy never affects the tem per. My sisters, be it remembered, were old er than 1. They, too, were single. But they had lived more domestic lives than 1, had read fewer works of fiction, had been cultivating their own natures, and seeking to make everybody around them happy. And everybody reverenced them, and lov ed to look upon their open, pleasant coun tenances I mean everybody worth pleas ing and they Were very happy. At last our good parents died, and left each of us a little independence. Within a year 1 was married. I was married for my money. That was ten years ago, and they have been ten years of purgatory. I have had had luck as a wife, for my husband and I have scarcely one taste in common, lie wishes lo live in the coun try, which I hate. I like the thermome ter at ?.") (leg., which he hates. lie likes to have the children brought up at home instead of scNoul, which I hate. 1 like music, and want to go to concerts, which ho bales. There is but one thing which we both like, and that is what we cannot both have, though we are always trying for it the last word. I have had bad luck as a mother, for two such huge, selfish, passionate, unmanage able boys never tormented a feeble woman since boys began. 1 wish I bad called them both Cain. At this moment they have just quarrelled over their marbles. Mortimer has torn off Orville's collar, and Orville has applied his coltlike heel to Mortimer's ribs ; while the baby, Zenohia, in my lap, who never sleeps more than half an hour at a time, and cries all the time she is awake, has been roused by their din to scream in chorus. I have had bad luck as a housekeeper, for I never kept even a chambermaid more than three weeks. And as lo conks, I look back bewildered on the long phantasmago ria of faces flitting stormily through my kitchen, as a mariner remembers a rapid succession of thiindergusts and hurricanes in the ('ulf of Mexico. My new chamber maid bounced out of the room yesterday, flirting her duster, and muttering, "Real old maid, after all !" just because I showed her a table on which I could write "slut," with my linger, in the dust. I never see my plump, happy sisters, and then glance in the mirror at my own cadaverous, long, doleful i.-age, without wishing myself an old maid. 1 do it every day of my life. Yet half of my sex marry as I did ; not for love, but for fear! for fear of dying old maids. They have their reward. And they whose idle tongues create this mischievous fear, and thus make so much domestic mis ery, have their responsibility. DFATtl IN r.VIUS OF It O VAT. 1) AVCIITMl of nit; mix. 1 1. it i i:. The Princes Aline d'F.idir. a royal daugh ter of the- Mogul life, expired in Paris on Wednesday week, at the advanced age of SO. Iioin in Delhi, in the Imperial Palace, her childhood was siii reiinded with nil the splen dor of Eastern sovereignty. Being one day at play upon a terrace of the palace garden, which nvei bung the liver, she slipped from the embankment, and fell in. Carried by the swiftness of the tide soon beyond leach, she was mourned by her family as lust. She was, however, picked up by lishermeii, w ho at sight of her rich attire, nint llie jewels with which she was adorned immediately sei zed her as their prize and bore l er oil' to Chaiidernngor, where she was given into the bands of the French to be held as hostage to secnie tho neutrality of her relatives in ihe war then going on between tho French and F.nglish. Meaewhile, tin- recall of the Cap. tain liotichaud do Lafonlaine, to u hum she h.i been conli.led, caused her to bo brought to France, where every honor was paid lo her, and eveiy eaie taken of her education. She was taken to coint, an became an espe cial lavoiite 01 ..Marie A uloiuetle, muter whose auspices she was placed in the Con- j vent of Mount Calvaiv, and where she was baptised, the whole couU, with the kii:g and queen, assisting, in state, at thu ceremony. During the 1'ioign of Terror, she was im prisoned for daring to belong to an aristo cratic race, and condemned to be guillotined, having bad her hair already cut for the pur pose, when the overthrow of Robespieire restored her lo life and liberty once more. The Eiupiefs Josephine took especial de light in her society, and Napoleon would of ten pla fully declare his inlentiju of pro ceeding through Egypt lo the eoinie.esi of India, for the express purpose of placing- her on the throne of her uucestots. On the res. toralion of the Bourbon, when intercourse was re-established with the East, a p"iiiion was presented lo Louis N.YIII., fur iri'iuquiry into the existence of her family. The result of this inquiry w-as 'lie arrival in Paris nf the Sheik Ooulum-Mouhi Oud Din. sent by Fei iaz Alii Khad, wilh express commis sion to claim her at ihe hands of tho French king, and bring her back with royal honor to Delhi. But hero arose mi unexpected dilliculty. The religion tho piolessed, and in which she had been brought up, pieclu.b d all Idea of her ever being udinitled back a a member of her family. In vain was eve ry promise, every inducement held out ; nay, every threat resorted to, in order to oh tain even a resemblance of change. Her high soul rejected with scorn tho most allur ing temptations and she prefuned to live in the poverty and obscurity lo which both England and Franco with the basest mean ness und injustice, had condemned her, la ther limn swerve from the Chrislain failh. Tho East India Company, whose spoil her rich heritage has become, has slithered her to die without one single manifestation of in terest. -Mus. Elkvi:n chuich edifices elected in Cincinnati A IILMI WO OUT A-l-'SIIINU. One of the little restaurants of Asniercs, so frequented when in good order during the summer months, was, on one of the last Sundays of May, tlu theatre of a scene w'hic.h seems copied almost from one of the Parisian vaudevilles. Asniercs is a small village on the Seine, some ten or twelve miles from Paris, on the road to St. Ger main, and is celebrated fur its fetes and merry gatherings. It may here be stated that Orleans is in fin opposite direction from Paris. Hut to the story : M. D , a retired merchant, lately married to a young, amiable, rich, and beautiful lady,slill found himself not com pletely happy ; so true it is that perfect happiness is not found in this world. M. j) , under his calm and contented inein, conceived a passion, of which wo man was not the object, but which was not on that account less honorable a passion for fishing ! He concealed it, because his wife hav ing a horror of it, had expressed it to him before her marriage, to which naturally M. ) , in his quality of suitor had an swered, protesting his abhoience for such exercise, if it is abowable lo call fishing by that name. AI. J) bad relied too much on his s'rength for extinguishing his aquatic pas sion in that more ardent one which led to marriage he resisted a long time the al lurements of Ihe tackle which chanced lo meet his eye. Finally, he one day hap pened to mpet one of hi.; old friends with whom he had often gone, furnished with pole and line, to Asniercs. This friend so vividly awakened his re collection, so victoriously overcame his scruples, that the following was arranged : M. D was lo pretend he had to go on business to Orleans, anil instead, merely go to his friend's house, from whence they would depart, fully armed and equipped as of old, for Asniercs. That evening M. D was to sleep at his friend's house, ami returning Monday morning, as though he absolutely had come from Orleans. So said so done and our two friends sat themselves down on Sunday last on the banks ol the island, nearest the bridge of Asniercs, holding majestically their lines in the water, w hen all of a sudden, M. D , casting a glance on the opposite batik, uttered an exclamation, and his line lell from his hands. He saw his wife on the arm of a gentleman, promenading. His friend biting his lips, leigned not to recognize Madame I) , but the hus band had no doubt of it, and the passion for fishing, which an inslant ago had been up permost, now changed immediately into ! one for his wife. To his friend's great displeasure, bo j went lo seek a boat to cross the Seine. When they touched the shore, Madame D ! and the gentlemen who accompanied j her, entered the little restaurant ol which we made mention, and had ordered rcfrosh mens, in a little room fronting on the wa ter. M. D made a sign, and in a state of agitation which those experienced even in a love of fishing can appreciate, pre sented himself, suddenly followed by his j friend, in the room in question. He com menced by exclaiming loudly and no one knows what leni'th he would have pro ceeded if a word from his wife had not pa cified him. "My dear husband, let me introduce my brother, who arrived yesterday from Eng land, and whom you have not met. And now will you be kind enough to inform me when Asniercs changed its name to Orleans?" One may imagine Mr. D s confu sion, inasmuch as the scene had drawn a number of witnesses. I!ut after the first minute, lie toou me ining piear-amiy, reia- ns, .iliiiougli lie lnul a most singular and un tod every thing himself, confessed his fault, j accountable mode of expiessing himself. timling himsell veiy happv since lus wile had not, like him, been out a fishing. a r nx'ri coritT st i;m:. In the trial of Day, at Washington, for the murder nf liis wife, in detailing the particu lars of her daughter's death, the mother said : 'Before I could get down to the outer door he had run her into the house, r.ud had shut h"r once. My little daughter run to me ami said, 'Mother, John has shot Kate.' I said, -Oh, no, my (Jod, I hope he has not shot my poor child !' In an instant, and before 1 could reach her, I heard the pistol go oil again. I humd my daughter lying at the door ; she looked me in the face and said, 'Mother, John has given tno my last blow.' 1 looked her in llie face and said, Daughter, I think he has, from your appear ance.' 1 raised her up against my breast ; she assisted herself lo raise her head to my breast. A couple of gentlemen and JIis. Lamb came in, and we four took her into a back room and laid her on llie sola. (Throughout the whole of the testimony of Mis. F., relating to ihe act of killing, and ihe acclamations of her dying daughter, the prisoner was all'eeted deeply, was in tears, anil tiung ins head below Ilia railing ol the box My daughter appeared to bo sensible but sai l no more till the doctor came ; he cauii) in fuur or five minutes ; Dr. Butt was the one. Dr. Butt told her to lie on Ihe side she was bhot in ; her reply was, in a faint voice, 'I cannot lie on it.' She died in half un hour utter. 1 went into the room before she died, and asked her if she fell any belter j the looked up at me as if she wanted to kiss me ; I kissed her, and she said, 'No, no, I'll soon be gone.' M V. was so deeply moved by the reoitul of por tions of her evidence, at to be frequently obliged, to pause for inmates ; at such times she would exclaim, 'Fxcute me, gentlemen, my l;eii ia broken ; my poor, poor daugh ter, when I think cf yet (, tun not my self.'" S.c.1 CACTIIlNd Rl'LI.KTS IS THE MOUTH. There is a man now living in East Dix field, Oxford county, Me., who actually caught in his mouth a ball discharged from a musket. Ila was nt thu battle of Bridge water, in the war of 1812, and while biting oir tho end of a cartridge, for tho purpose of loading his enn, was slruck by a ball, which entered the left side of hi face, knocked out eight of his teeth, cut off the cud of his tongue, niul passed into his throat. He rai sed it, went to tho hospital, staid out the re mainder of tho enlistment, and returned home with the bullet in his pocket. Ex clam gv paper. We can relate an incident even more .stranger than this. At the seige of Monte rey, in 1SI0, and while General Worth's troops were advancing lo storm a smii! fort known as I.a Soidada, a man named Waters, an excellent soldier belonging to Cant. Ben MeCnlloch's Hangers, caught a large grape shot directly in his mouth. It was fully the size of a hen's egg, rough, uneven in shape, and in ils course completely carried out the four upper front teeih of the ranger and part of the jaw, cut off the four lower teeth as with a chissel, split his tongue in twain, car ried away his palate, went through tu the back of his head, and striking n tendon glanced down and lodged under the skin on the shoulder blade, where it was extracted by a surgeon and safely placed in ihe pock et of Waters for futuie reference. No man thought the wounded ranger would live ho could swallow neither food nor water Wo saw him two nights after wards, in a room in the Bishop's Palace which had been converted into a hospital) sitting bolt upright among the wounded and the dyinr, for the nature of his terrible hurt was such that he could not lie down without suffocating. 1 1 is face was swollen lo more than twice its ordinary seize, he was speechless of course, his wants were only made known by means of a piece of broken slate and pencil, and he was slowly applying a wet sponge to his mouth, endeavoring lo extract moisture which might quench the fever and intolerable thirst under which he was suffering. Ey his side lay young Thomas, of Maryland, a member of the same company, who was mortally wounded the morning aft?.-, and who was now dy ing. W.nmded men, struck that afternoon, in Worth's advance upon the Grand Tlaza. were constantly being brought in, the surge ons were amputating and diessiug tho hurls of the crippled soldiers by a pale and sickly candle lig'.it. and the groans of those in grcvinus pain added new horror to a scene which was at best frightful. Wo recollect peifectly well a poor fellow, struck in both legs by a grape shot while advancing up one of the streets. He was begging luslilv, after one of his limbs had been amputated, that the other might bo spared him on w hich to h.ibbhi through the world. Poor Thomas, as gallant a spirit as ever lived, finally breathed his last ; we brought Waters u fresh cup of water with which to moisten his wound, and then left the rocm to catch an hum's sleep ; but the recollections of that tenible night will not soon be effaced from our memory. The above incidents occurred on the night of the "Id and morning of tho 21 h Septem ber, tSlt. During the rai'y part of ihe month of February following, while passing into the old St. Chailes in this city, wo were accosted with a sliaugo voice by a fine look ing man, who seemed extremely glad to see VVl, ri.I.;,.l.u,d ,,u t,v il3 MIU we. had been familiar with, but thu lower features of Ihe face, although in no way disfigured, for the life of us we could not make out. 'Why, don't yon know me !" in a mum bling half indistinct and foiced manner said the man, still shaking our baud vigorously ; I'm Waters." And Walejs it was, in reality, looking as well and as healthy as ever, and without tho least outward figu that ho had ever caught a grape shot in his mnuth. A luxu riant growth of moustachios completely cov ered his upper lip, and concealed any sear the iron missile might have made ; an im pel ial on his under lip hid any appearance of a wound at that point ; and with the ex ception of his speech there was nothing lo chow that he had ever icueived the slightest injury about the face. His tongue, which was teriibly shattered, was still partially benumbed, rendering articulation both diffi cult and liiesomo ; but he assured us ho was every day gaining more and more the use of it, and in his own words he was soon to be "just as good as new." It is needless to say that we were truly re joiced to see him to meet one we had never expected to encounter again in such excellent plight. Any one who could have seen him sitting in that apartment of the Bishop' Palace, his face swollen, and with a gravity of countenance which would have been ludicrous even to the causing of laugh, ter had it not be'jii for his own precarious situation and the heart lending soenos around, would have been tquaily aa much astonished nnd rejoiced m wo were, on again so unexpectedly beholding; him. .V. O. Picflifwnc. Nafoi.kon's Opinion or tub I'kkss. "A journalist," suid the fieat Napoleon, :is a grumblar, a ocnsuier, u giver ol advice, a re cent sovereigns, a lolur of itglioni. Four hostile newspapers are more to be fey red l!un a bundled, thousand bayonets " TRENCHER MEN. Awriler in the Boston Post, tell the fol lowing stories of great feeders: "Somo twenty years since, the wdow F. kept a tavern at Qnamphegan, she was n stout, fat woman, nnd equal to the task of landlord nnd lmullndy. One morning, a. lumber dealer from Lebanon, called at this tavern for a etip of tea. Ho sat down nt the table, spread with nil the 'ffxins' for a sub stancial breakfast, but look nothing except his tea. On being asked what was lo pay, Ihn parsimonious man of lumber was amazed at the price two shillings. '1 took but one enp of tea nothing else,' exclaimed he. 'It's the same, sir,' returned the widow, 'eat and drink much or little as you please.' 'All tho same, eh 1' replied the tea custo mer, as he drew forth his leathern purse nnd paid tho two shillings ; 'we'll try that ero game, I reckons' The lumberman then went to ono of his teamsters, well known as the greatest eater in the whole country round about, and asked him if he thought ho could eat a good breakfast, could he get it gratuitously. 'Try me,' returned the tren cher man, eagerly, smacking his lips, and striking his lank stomach at the idea. "The lumberman then led the way to tho tavern, nnd told thu man of appetite to fol low and do his best, lie did hi best his very mightiest ! Falstafi", Dickeu's Fat Boy, mid six aldermen together, could not have made such havoc in llie widow's lar der. Dish after dish was brought on nnd clear ed in a twinkling, till not a morsel more of food could be scraped up in the whole dom icil ; anil when tho gourmand was told by the astonished widow that there was noth ing more for him, except he ate her, he seemed to scan tho lusty landlady, as if ho was calculating ihe best maimer to serve her up ; but her unwieldly siZu brought him to the conclusion that she was too much for even himself. Finally he agreed lo leave llie house if she would refund the money paid ; so he could finish his breakfast else where. There is another of these immense feeders that 1 wot of, who resides in a village near our city. This mar. actually eat two quails of baked beans, with a good pound of poik ba ked therein, beside? any quantity of bread, for his Snudny breakfast. It did not inter fere in the least with his luncheon, dinner or supper, ho did ample justice to all thesO meals besides. This man has been known to eat a huge heaping milk pan full of dough nuts at one lunch ! 'I wish exclaim ed this man ol" tall feeding one day to a grocer, as be was buying a drum of tigs fof his wife ; 'I w ish they would put this fruit in bigger drums ; one of these 'ere littlo things wouldn't give inn a taste ; I'd like a yase ilrnin lull ot 'em : 1 his marvellous eator got sick once by eating a half bushel of pears somewhat decayed, or as he after wauls expressed it, "a ire tie to ripe by a dained sight !; I chanced to meet him a week after this event, and remarked to him that he did not look so well as usual. 'Ah 1' replied this extraordinary consumer of food with a doleful look, 'I've had to diet somo lately, and you know I aie'ut nothing with out my vittcls !' ' uitAAntF.it in niivMi:. 1. Three little words you often seu Are Articles i, mi, and the. 2. A Noun's the name of any thinpr, As school, or gui ded, hoop or swing. 3. Adjectives tell the kind of noun: As great, it;o((, pretty, white or brown. 4. Instead of Nouns the Pronouns stand Hi r head, his lace, your urm, my hand. 5. Veibs tell of something being done J o iKiif, tcWiY, cuioif, stiig, jump, or run, (!. How things are done the Adverbs tell; As slowly, qiiicLlij, til, or well. 1. Conjunctions join the words together; As, men nnd women, wind or weather. 8. The Proposition stands before A Nuuu ; as in or through a door. 9. The Interjection shows surprise; As, vlt ! how pretty; alt! how wise. The w hole are called Nine Parts of Speech, Which Beading, Wriiing, Speaking, teach. A Sack Br.T. Several gentlemen were riding in the cars on one of iho Boston Kail roads a few days ago, when ihe conversation turned to the next Presidential election, and thu prospect of Webster, Fillmore, Scott, Cass, and others were discussed at large. Aflei some lime, a suleinu individual w ho had lioleiiL' d in silence, addressed the patty thus : M) friends, you are all of you wrong. . Beforo the i lection of 1S52 ihe woild will have come to an end, unit Jesus Christ will be Picsideut of llie United Slates. Up slatted an enthusiastic gentleman from the Granite State, who stutteiingly said lu the Millerite, ' S-ir I'll b-b bet you ten d-d-d-dollars New Hampshiie w-w-w-won't g-go for him. A roar of laughter greeted the exit of the Seooud Advent man, as he removed himself to another car Courier. 'Comk here my lilll" man," said a gentle, man to a younglor four yearn of age, while sitting in a parlor where a large company were" assembled. "Do you know who urn V Ves sir, I Ihiuk I do." "Who am I the i let rue hear." "You are the man what kissed sister Jano last night ill the parlor " Jane fainted.,