NBURY 1 N 0 H. B. M ASSER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OFFICE, MARKET STREET, OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. a jFamfly iietospapcr-Dctootca to Vomers, aitrrature, iorala, jfortfun ana Domcsttc ilcius, Scffitcc mm the arts, Slurfculturc, iWnrncts, amusements, fcc NKW SEItlKS VOL. 5, NO. ft I. SUNUUI1Y, NORTIIU.M11ERLAM) COUNTY, PA., SATURDAY, MARCH 13. IS.IS. OLD SttRlISS VOL. I S, NO. 2 AMER n a w TERMS OF TIIE AMERICAN. T11K AMK.HICAN" ia publiih.il every Suturdny tit TWO UOI.I.AKS p.r Diiiimn to he )mid hnlf yearly in advance. No paper uisut-inlimied umil all urreunig.s are (aid. All cnmmmiicnttnn. or letters on business relntlng to Hit office, to iuiur ttention, must bo I'UST TAIL). TO CLUBS. Three copies to one address, 8.500 Kcven 1) fo IUUU Fifteen D Do auno Five dollars in advance will pay for Ultra year's sub scription to the American. On Sauaie of 16 lines, 3 times, Kverv subsequent insertion, One Sitmre, 3 inn.ilhs, Su months, One year, tlusiuess Cards of Five lines, per flnmtm, ft no 301) 6il Ml) 3JO m srriiams auu niners. nuverusiiiB; ny tne y.nr, with the privilege of inverting different udvertiscmenls weekly. 10 00 IV Larger Advertisements, as per agreement. S. B. JtASSE?T7 A T T O 11 N E Y AT I. A W , BUIIBURV, TA. B usiness attended to in the Counties of Nor thumberland, Union, Lycoming and Culimihiii. Merer toi P. & A. Rnvoudt, "I Lower &. l'niroii, .Sinners & fSnodgrass, l'ntarl. Reynolds, Mcl'arlaiul &: Co., 1 Spcring, Good A; Co., J H. J. W0LVERT0N, OFFICE in Market street, Sunbttry, ailjoinini the U Dire of the "American" and opposite the Port Office. Business prnmptly attended to in Northunibcr land and the adjoining Counties. Kkfeu to: Hon. C. V. Hegins ami H. Bnn tian, Potlsville; Hon. A. Jordan und II 15. Mas acr, Sunburv. April 10, 1852 ly. HENRY D0NNEL, ATTORNEY AT LAW. OJJice opposite the Court House, S anbury, Northumberland County, Pa. Prompt at.UMjtiun lo business in adjoining Counties, WEL L ROCKEFELLER, ATTORNEY AT IiAV .M;.Elt!iV, PA. Tier.. 13. ISM tf. M. L SHINDEL, -TTOPklTSY AT LAV, SU.NBURY, PA. Pecemher 'sf'jf- HARRISBTJRG STEAM WOOD Tl'SXINO AM) SCROLL SAWING SHOP. Wood Turning in oil its branches, in city style and at city prices. Every variety of tVoinet and Carpenter work either on hand or turned to order. Bed Posts, Balusters, Kosclts, hlnl anil iiar- ter Mouldings, Table Lens, Newell Posts. 1'at- terns Awiiinu Posts, Waiion Hubs, Columns, I Round or Oct a iron Chisel Handles, iVc. 1-fT This shop is in STRAWBERRY AL LEY, near Third Street, anil as we intend to lease all our customers who want irond work done, it is hoped that all the trade wit' give us a call. f-jjr Ten-Pins and Ten-Pin Halls made lo or der or returned. Th attention of Cabinet Makers and Carpeti tera is enlled to our new style of TWIST MOULDINGS. Printer's Rislelsot $1 per 100 ft. W. O. HICKOK. February 7, 152. ly. AVM. M'CAltTY, 13 O () K S K LLKB, Market Street, EUNBURY, PA. Tl'ST received and for sale, a fresh supply of r.v axgemcail nirsiu or SineiiiL' Schools. He is also opening at tlita time, a large assortment of Books, in every trauch of Literature, consisting of Poetry, History, Novels, Romances, Scientific Works, Law, Medicine, School and Children's Books, Uibles-, School, Pocket ond Family, both with and without Engravings, and every of vari ety of Uinding. Prayer Rooks, of all kinds. Also just received'and for sale, Purdons Di gest of the laws of Pennsylvania, edition of 1851, price only SB.00. Judge' Reads edition of Blackstones Commen taries, in 3 vols. 8 vo. formerly sold at 510,00, and now offered 0" frcs" binding) at the low price ofSC.dO. A Treatise on the laws of Pennsylvania- re. apecting the estates of Jjccedcnts, by Thomaa F. Gordon, price only 31,00. Travels, Voyages ond Adventures, all ol which will be sulJ low, either for cash, or coun try produce. February, II, 1SS-2. tt. Dilwortli, Branson t$ Co. Importers of Si Dh.Atr.ns in Foreign and Doiuchtic HARDWARE, CUTLERY, &C. jSTo. 59 Market St., door below 2d S(, PHILADELPHIA. Wher they always cen on hand a large stoci of every variety of Hardware, Cutlery, &c TVm. Dilwortli, Samuel Uranscn, October 10, 1852. ly Henry 1). I.axdis, anc. V" AIT TED. w ANTED. Pennsvlvonia lands from 100 to 20,000 acres tor cash or trade in ex aUance for City property. Apply to h J. A. BL RDWICK, Kal Estate Broker, 107 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, January 1,1853. 2in. ft CUIINEIJI'B. ! F. UAKKR. W. C. BAKKR Cornelius, IJafccr Co., MAN L'FATl'R i:i(8 OF lamps, Chandeliera, Gas Fixtures,. &c, STORE NO. 170 CHtiSTN L l bl.. Jauucory No. 181 Cherry St., PHILADELPHIA. AprU' Wk L85S. tt -- - - ' " Lyrjoming Mutual Insurance Company. DR. X. 1. MA8SER ia the local gen (of the above Insurance Company, in Northumber land county, and ia at all times ready to elfect Inauranrea against fire on real or personal pro perty, or renewing policies for the same. Sunburv, April 26, 1851. if. rHAL PUMPS A small number of these excellent pumps have been received and are altered for sale by H. B. MASKER. unhurt, .Nov. , 1862. ) 0 C t V V) . KEATS DYING POEM Tho following lines were wrillt'n by John Keats tm his ilealU bed, tin I are ihelast vet sescviT peiineil by Ilia! gifieil yonna poet. It will be ri'ine.nbered I tin I he ilieil lluouyh in tense grief, on account of (ho too severe nml unjust 'criticisms of GifTonl, Ihe Enrrlish Ju venal. Tlio youthful poet was removed to Italy, wlirn he expired ; and Iho last sad words he w hispered were, "I dieof a broken heart." He was uuried in Ihe protectant btirying-ploeo nl Ihe base of the pyramid of Caitis Cesiius, near Rome. Many pieces have appeared purporting to bo his last pro duction, but these now transcribed are Ihe last that ever emanated from his pen. JIv spirit's lamp is faint and weak, My feeble senses bow ; Death's finger pales my fading cheek. His seal is on my brow. My heart is as n withered leaf, Each fibre dead nnd sear ; And near tne sits the spectre giicf. To drain each burning tear. The earth is briylil with buds and bees, The air wish purplo beams The winds ate swimming with the trees, Or sporting on Ihe streams. But nol fur mo llie blossom's brealh; Nor winds nor sunny skies I languish in ihe arms of death, And feed my soul with sighs. 1 s!l'1i lo hope ' Come back ngain, My lu-ail is weak for thee !" But woe is me ! my sighs are vain She Hies from misery. It i not thai I fear to die. Thai burns my withered breast But ihns In waste with agony, And sigh in vain lot rest. To count ihe minutes one by one, And loiia for coming light, inl ere the liniicring day is done, To languish lor thu night. To feci the sinking of the mind, Thai nolhinuiiess of soul, Yheie all is dead, and duik, and blind, As drops of Lethe's bowl ! And yet, O sunny Italy ! 'Twere sweet lo find a lomb, Where wild (lowers ever strew n to thee, Above my couch shall bloom. Farewell, my harp! I kiss thy strings, (in hanii Ihee in tho bower., Where oft thy dreamy w hisperings, Have charmed Ihu btitied hours. And if some finger fain would wake Thinp nnremembered lay, And bid thy sleeping silence break, Then, haply, will ihou say: 'Oh! stranger' seatlered roses, And slips of cypiess burn A broken heart repo.-s Within this silent urn." Worn Dodge's Literary Museum. MY GRANDMOTHER'S GHOST. by riitnxrLY. "I rol married when I was t went v," said Bill Gull, one day. ,;I got married to j Pliebe ClialU, and all tnese young uuiis that you see running round here came from my lump of Chalk by Gull !" Bill Gull always swore by Gull. It was his only oath. She was a lump of chalk as large one way as the other. Bill Gull was always a bashful, backward youth and some surprise was expressed that he ever got married at all. i.Mo Cull"' c.iid li 'mv crrandinother's ghost did the job." ' "J . - "v o- - I "Ghost job how's thai ?" ; "I'll tell you all about it. You see, I was about as green as a spring gosling, and ; I thought Phebe was too. By gull ! she I wasn't though but she knew I was. Well, j we had a sneaking notion of each other tor ; . . . . .. ii , , about two years, but it never would have j , come to anything it it had'nl been lor tne ghost. 1 was too bashful, in the way ol making love, Could'nt say as much as boo! too a "oose. And I'hebe was utst as uasii- (ul that is I thought so but she wasn't , geize it. Ba nol deceived bv nppnnratices ; though not by a long chalk. One night, j te not misled by the cowar.Uy sophistries of about hall" an hour alter L had gone to bed, 1 lukewarm men. Tho enlire suilaee of Eu as I lay thinking of Phebe for 1 had been ropp r,om Spain lo our own land, from .. .:.!. i .:il .I.-- - l-i., 1. I ' 1 sitting tip wmi uer mi i-ui.r. .me- ..uu., as usual without bringing anything ;tc ' -the door of my room opened slowly and t.. J ! i 1 1 . . . The monn was shinin" III into IT) V Win- dows, and I could not be mistaken. It was .n : ...t,:u T o ;., mi. h.d urhU " -1 t 1 1 tl vt tlltVi . Wi-t, V I ' St s ....... my teeth chattered, and the perspiration run off me in streams. It came almost to my bed-side, and pointed a long, bony fin- per at me. that uvn thrniif 1 me like a not iron. I tried to sneak, but it 'twas no go. At last a husky voice said 'tsill Uull, you must marry Phebe ChalK right away. You have fooled away your time long enough. Pop the question belore to-morrow night, or I shall appear to you .111. uo it, i3i ii uuii : Then the old Udv disappeared an ruiirk that 1 couldnt tell where she went to, 1 aian't sleep a wink that night. The sensa tions that kept crawling over me were aw- iui. r thought 1 telt my hair turning gray my teeth sailing outmy legs dropping off-tuid all kinds of queer reelings. Ii wa tne longest nisrht ever T r,r',ur,. ,1 Morning came at last. I met Plwh in ik dining room, while she was prenarimr for breakfast.. She had been our housekeeper I avi.1 tin it A A!pnnl,nlL . I I . Mother died the vea, before y Bill, what'i the matter with you?' said Phebe. 'I feel pale,' said I. You look pale, said she.. 'Such t night,' said I. What was the matter, Bill?' My grandmother's ghost.' You don't say !' Yes, and ihe said thai' 'What, Bill?' That I must marry you.' What else, Bill V That I must pop the ques'ion to-day, or she would come again to-night.' Bill, take my advice pop the question, and let the old lady rest in peace.' I do,' said I. Well, Bill, I'll have yon just to keep the old lady quiet, provided, Bill, that you won't ask me to lo to sleep with you, Bill.' 'I promised (or my grandmother's sake. Afler breakfast, I'hebe spoke to the old gen tleman about it. lie said it was all right, go ahead. We went ahead. At least I'hebe did. In three weeks Phebe Chalk became Mrs. Gull.' She pulled you completely. Yes, I found that out, and I'll tell you how. On the night of our marriage she went off to her room, and I went lo mine. It was according to agreement, but some how or other I couldn't help thinking' it wasn't just right, and the more I thought ol it the more it seemed not just the chalk. I reflected upon it for hours, and indeed more than once I provoked my grandmoth er's ghost in hopes that she would appear to Phebc and soften her heart toward me. Finally as the old lady's ghoit seemed to take no further interest in our affairs, I con cluded to be ghost myself. I crawled out of bed, and enveloped myself from head to loot in a sheet. NIot without great trepi dation, however. I have often wondered at my temerity, for there was a total lack ol courage. I walked into rhebe'n room and stood by her bed-side. Good Lord ! said she. Phebe Chalk!' said T. 'I ain't Phebe Chalk' said she 'I am married, find my name is Phebe Gull. Who are you V 'I am the ghost of your grandmother-in-law, and I have come to tell you that it ain't good (or man to be alone especially if he has got a wife.' Well, grandmother, that is what I have been thinking about ever since I came to bed. It is very cold, too won't you get into bed and warm yotirsell ?' By Gull ! I had "a great mind lo but I was afraid.' No,' said I, 'I must go back to lb? grave yard. Remember that Bill, your husband, is shivering with cold, all alone by himself.' Well, grandmother, had't you better go and keep Bill warm." No, do it yourself, or I shall appear to you ajain remember !' I growled out the remember ! with a fear ful cmpha'i.-;, but do) you think she was (tightened ? Not a hit of it. She burst out laughing with all her might, and kept it up, too, ever so long, while 1 stood there shiv ering and shaking with cold, like a pauper in an ague-fit. 'Now, Pill,' said she, as soon as she stop ped laughing, Bill, don't you think I know you V 'How do you know me?' said I. Well enough besides, there ain't no such things as ghosts.' 'O yes there is, though. Did'nt my grandmother's ghost tell me to marry you ?' Bill, that was me!' You ! by gull !' Ye, ,ll it was me, Bill!' 'Well, Phebe?' 'How sMipid you are, to stand there sha king, half Irozen.' Well, Bill, sro on with the story.' By Gull ! I have nothing more to say.' MA.7.IM S l'UOl LAMATION. The following proclamation was posted all over Milan, and has been spread in other Parls uf llallJ- Italian inatiosi. committee. Italians ! Brothers '.The mission of ihe National Italian Committee ia ended ; your misfiolls begins. To-day,' ihe last words vvllich brolhets, utter to you, is ...., -1 surreci on, iu iihmiuw. iiii.iiim mu 1 h i, ,b. ,.f ihu niinn . via a i n.il' mil to , "-- - , j : maintain ir. I R.surreclion I Hie moment malnreu, pan- j tea lor three long years nas arnveu. i-e. u. Grcece , ,,,,1 , puiallj) j4 a volcanic ciust, ) beneath which sleep, a lava which will , 0 nnhe.vin of It-ilf Four vears ago Ihe insurrection ol :llJ1)' rollr )cu, ' r..ll I I... j 1. iti-r.nnii lovn. aiouy was r .. - lotions : twenlv European revolutions will . I i follow yours all bound by one compact, all sworn to one fraternal aim. Vfe have friends even in the ranks of ar- mies who rule us ; there are enlire peoples u'lmtA alarm crv will answer lo yours. The national democracies of Europe form one or ganized camp. Vangaardof Ihe great nrmy nf ihu neon'e. fear no isolation. The iuilia- - . i ' live of Italy i lh initiative- of Europe. Insurrection ! Sacred the thought of country that cor.secrales it ; strong in will and in concentrated energy as ita aim which is justice, amelioration, and" free In ternal life for all J let it rise and conv martyrdom into viclory. The thousands of victims who have lallen wnn me sacreu name of Ttaly on their lips, deserve this at our hands. Be it Iremendous a the temp est on our seas. Be it obstinate, immovable as the Alps which surround you. Between the Alps and the extreme Sicilian tea are 25,000,000- of us, a:id a 100,000 foreigners. It ia ihe atruggle of a moment if you do but will. Insurrection I Let the grand' woid leap from cily lo city, from town to town, from village lo village, like tho eleoliie current. Arouse, arise, awake to Ihe crusade fever, all ye who have Italian hearts '.Italian arms ! Remind the people of their unjust suffer ing', their ligh's tlenied them, their ancient power, and Ihe great future of liberty, pros perity, education, and equality ihey may conquer at a bound. Remind your women of the mothers, the sisters, Ihe Irientls, who have peiished in unconsoled weeping for their loved ones, imprisoned, exiled, butchered, because they had not, but desired a country. Remind your young minds of thought out raged and restrained, of the great tradition ary past of Italy, which Ihey can continue only by action, of the absolute nothingness of the stale Ihey ore now in they Ihe de scendants of the men who have twice giv en civilization to Europe. Remind the soldiers ol Italy of the dis honor of a servile uniform which the foieign ers deride, of the bones of thoir fathers left on ihe bottle fields of Europe for the honor of Italy, of tho true glory which crowns the wariior for rij-lit, for justice, for nation ality. Soldier", women, youths, people ! Let us have fur the moment but ono heart, one thought, one desire, one cry in souls, ore cry on our lips : "We will have a country ; we will have an Italy ; and an Italy shall be." Attack, break at every point the long and weak line of Ihe enemy. Prevent Ihem from concentrating thrmsclvee by killing or dispersing their soldiers, destroying roads and bridges. Disorganize Ihem by striking at their officers. Ceaselessly pursue fugi tives ; be at war with Ihe kite. Make arms of t lie liles of your houses, of the stones of the streets, of Ihe tools of your trades, of tho iion of your crosses. Spreail ihe alarm by watch fires kindled on every height. From one end of paly to ihe other let the alarm bell of the people loll the death of ihe enemy. Wherever you are victorious, move for ward at once lo the aid of those nearest you. Let the insurrection grow like an avalanche wherever the chance goes against you ; run to the gorges, Ihe mountains, Ihe fortresses given you by nature. Everywhere ihe bar tie will have broken out, everywheio you will find brolheis, and, strengthened by Ihe victories gained elsewhere, yon will de scend into the field again ihe day ufler. One only be our flag the flag of Ihe nation. In pledge of our fraternal unity, wrile on it Ihe words God and the People ; they alone are powetful lo conquer, Ihey alone do nol betray. It is th ) Republican flag which, in M8 and '49, saved ihe honor of Italy ; it is ihe flag of ancient Venice ; it is ihe fi.ig of Rome eternal Rome, the sacred metropolis, the temple of Italy nnd of the world ! Purify yourselves, fighting beneath thai flag. Lei Ihe Italian people arise, worthy of lha God who gnidxs ihem Let women be fa ciei! ; let age and childhood be sacred ; let property be sacred. Punish the thief as an enemy. L so lur insurrection the arms, pow der and uniforms taken fiom ihe foreign sol diers. To arms, to arirn ! Our last word is Ihe battle cry. Let the men yon have chosen to lead you send forth to Europe, on ihe monow, tho cry of victory. How to Pacvrnt Wet Fiet.--T1io Me hanies' Magazine ays: "I have had ihtee pair of boots fur the ast six years, (no shoes,) and I think I shall not require any more for Ihe next six yeais lo come. The resun is that I Ireat ihem in the following manner : I rut a pound of tal low and a half a pound of rosin in a pot on Ihe fire: when melted nnd mixed, I warm the bonis and apply Ihe hot stuff with a painter' brush until neither l lie sole nor Ihe upper leather will suck in any more. If it is desired that the boots should immediately take a polish, dissolve an ounce of wax in a leasponnfnl of lamp black. A day afler the boots have been treated wilh the tallow and rosin, rub over Ihem this wax in terpentine, but riot before the fire. Thus the exterior will have a coat of wax alone, and shines like a mirror. Tallow or any other grease becomes rancid, nml rols Ihe stitching as well as the leather ; but ihe rosin gives it an antiseptic quality which preserves liie whole. Boots and koe ahould be so large as to ad mit of wearing cork soles. Cork is so bad a conductor of heat that wilh it in the boots the feel ate always warm on the coldest stone floor. THE AXGE. err CRFEFi BY WH1TTIEU. Wilh silence only as iheir benediction, God's angels come. Where, in the shadow of a great affliction. The soul sit dumb. Yet would we ay, what every heart appro vein, Our Father's will, Culling to him the dear ones whom he luveth, 1 ineicy win. Not upon us or ours ihe solemn angel Halh evil wrought The funeral aiilhem is a glad evangel-; Tim good die nul ! God calls our loved' onesj but we lose not wholly Whnt he has "iven : They live on earth-in thought and deed, at truiy As in Hi Heaven. Tribute to Mb. Fillmorb Ai boat of President Fillmore, by Dr. Horatio Stone, the eminent sculptor of New York, of pure Italian marblo, is now in the rot-jnda of Ihe capital; previous to ils being deposited in ihe presi deuiinl mansion. Il is a tribute of lepect by gentlemen of boib parties to tb lata es timable Chief Magistrate,. DA MIL WEBSTER. ar Theodore farkcr. MR. WEBSTER'S ORATORY. His style was simple, the business style of a strong man. Now and then It swelled in to beauty. He always addressed the understanding, not the reason Calhoun did that the more, not the imagination in his speech there was litl'e wit, little beauty, little poetry. He laid siege to Ihe under standing. Here lay bis slrenglh he could make a statement belter than any man in America ; he had immense power of argu ment, making a causeway from tho will lo Iho hearer's mind. He gathered a great mass of material, bound it together, swung it about his head, fixed his eye on the maik I fieri let the ruin fly. If you want a woid suddenly shot from Dover to Calais, yon send it by lightning ; if a ball of a ton weight, you get a steam cannon lo pilch il across. Webster was the steam gun of elo quence. He hit Ihe matk less by gunnery than s!r?ngih. His shut seemed big as his target. The orator biings down his quarry wilh a single subiile shot, of sixty to Ihe pound He carries death without weight in his gum as sure as fate. Here is another, the lin pcdlar of American speech. He is a snake in the grass, slippery, shining, with a bale ful crest on his head, cunning in his crazy eye, and the poison of the old serpent in his heart, and on his slim) jaw, and about the fang at ihe bottom of his smooth, and fork ed, und nimble tongue. He conquers by bewitching ; he fascinates his game to death. Commonly, Webster was honest in his oratory ; open, English, and not Yankee. He had no masked batteries, no Quaker guns. Ho wheeled his forces into line, col umn afler column with the quickness of Hannibal, and the masterly management of Cicsar, and like Napoleon, broke the centre of his opponent's line by the superior weight of bis own column, and the sudden heaviness of his fire. Thus he laid siege to Ihe understanding, and carried it by dint of cannonade. This was his strategy, in the court house, in the Senate, and the public hall. A PRICMDCIMT 1XCORMTO. A Washington letter, w hich appears in the South Side, Virginia, Democrat, Ihus de scribes iho manner in which Gen. Pierce dodged the politicians and office seekeis w hen he arrived in Washington city : "I understand thai Gen. Pierce run a very leep set saw on ihe oiTice seekers last night when arriving at the Washington depot. The committee, some of whom had got themselves appointed to receive him wilh '!o grande flourishe,' were arranged about the inner door of the car house, written speech and hats in hands The instant the trs stopped, a seedy looking individual jumped from the baggage car. He was ha biled in a rusty overcoat and shocking bad hat, and his jaws were tied up iu a haud- rchief. With hands iu his pockets, he elbowed his way through the eager ciowd of committee mer.j who were ttiaiuing their eyes lo discern the persons of Ihe President elect and those known lo be in attendance upon him, among those dismounting from the paasenger cars. While so engaged, a patriot, deeply inleresled in the division nl ihe spoils, hearing the steam w histle, had rushed fiom Ihe avenue lo the station, and eaping into ihe door, ran bull against ihe seedy looking stranger, ho was just then striding out of il. The latter gave bis as sailant a look from head to fool, saying, "Is it absolute necessary to run a man chuck lown ?" passed on, taking the first buck at hand, and driving to Wiilard's. A ihe backman was closing the coach door on his 'fare,' the committee learned that iheir prey had escaped ihem. On arriving at Willard's, Gen. Pierce managed to reach his tooms wilhout ils being known by ano ther soat- that he was in Ihe house. His piivate secietaiy, w ho had selected his suite of rooms some lime before, had so de.se ii bed lo him their locality, as to enable him lo reach them without even acquainting the person in ihe office of his presence." Another Webster and Parkman Tracedv. A letter in lha Lynchburg (Va.) Express. from Ihe Kanawha Salines, stale lhat a man named Stnghun went to the house of a neigh- bor to pay him seveial hundred dollars he owed hinv. As he was not seen afterwards, his friends instituted inquiries for him, and finally searched the house where lie bad gone, wilhout success, until' one of Ihem commen ced scraping Ihe ashes of a laige fire place, and, to his surprise, found several human teeih and the cheek-bone ; also pari of lha flesh, supposed to be that of the missing man, which had run into a crevice in ihe fire place, partly roasted. The occupant of the house was immediately arrested'. Sr-ANimi Nobility.-According lo the Span ish law, daughters inherit lilies of nubility, and pieserve them nol only while ihey re- lain their family name, but transmit tnein, in marrvinir. to their husbands. Thus Napo leon 3d will receive the title of nobility from the head of Mile. Montijo'a family.. If he accepis it, it will become his duly, in terms of ihe law, to mak a deolaraiion of his ao eentanco lothe chief of Ihe Spanish nobility, who is now the Duke ofMonipenaier, son of I nuia Thillinne. who attained lhat distinction bv Tiitue of his marriage with the sisier of Ojieou Isabella Boston ,mtiicr. AARON BIRR. To the Editor of the Evening Mirror. In your paper of yesterday is an article from the "Savannah Couu'er," headed Aaron Burr, which, afler going into a detail of fic ticious circumstances, winds up with stating lhat 'aficr wandering on the face of iho earth, shunned anil despised by all afler lo sing his fortune, his daughter and his grand children, he sunk not but walked erect at R0, among those who despised him that he was Lear facing ihe storm." There is no character connected with the early hisloiy of our country so little under stood and so cruelly misiepresented as the subject of this article. The wiiler was inti mate with him, both personally and piofes sionally, during the lust fifteen years of his life, and knows almost every circumstance contained in Ibis article to be found in er ror. For instance, he was not disowned bv his relatives ; on the contrary, an eminent judicial character, who represented Ihe senior branch of Ihe "Edwards" family in this Stale, as well as several others of Ihe name and blood in this cily, were wilh him al and before his death, and intended his remains lo his grave in Princeton, wilh ten or twelve of the most respectable) and iulluetitial old citizens of New York, who ranked among his friends, and acled as pall bearers. A funeral sermon was pronounced over his remains by tho President of Piince- ton College, in ihe Chapel of that institution and probably few distinguished men receiv ed as much attention, and drew forth more sympathy than was apparent at the funeral of Aaron Burr. Again, il is mi it! his daughter was baibar- onsly murdered when on her voyage lo visit and console her father. Thai this is an error 1 had from his own lips ; for, once mention ing to him the story, that il was asserted by some that she had been captured by the Al gerii.es on her voyage from Charleston lo New York, and that she was probably yet alive, he replied, wilh great feeling : ' No, no, she is indeed dead ; rho perished ia the miserable little pilol-boat in which she left Charleston ; were she alive, all the prisons in the world would not keep her from her father." "Willi her, loo, (said h-) were lost all my valuable papers ; a loss to me and to the history of the country, which can never be supplied. When I realized the trulh of her death, the world beenrno a blank to me, and life had then lust all its value." As lo his circumstance?, ihey were cve rylhiug but these of beggary ; cn Ihe con trary, he was always in comfortable circum stances, living like a gentleman, nnd enter taining his friends ; nnd even occasionally when success in tome great cause (in many of which he wns engaged up lo his death) put him iu possession of considerable sums of money, he was lavish, piofuse, and gen erous lo a fault. He never begged, and never needed or received ehaiity; had it been so, he would have felled lo tho earth Ihu band which extended il ; for hi pride and self esteem were indomitable. Nor was he "hunted from lown lo lown, and from city lo city, fleeing in disguise fiom tho face of war ;" on Ihu con'.rary, up to a peiiod very shortly before his death, he went into Court lo superintend the liial of his important cases ; and I well temember loo, the one Iried at Tioy, N. Y., and Ihe other involving ihe title of the Union Raca Course, on Long Island, Iried al Jamaica, where ho was present, and an object of tho greatest interest, so much to. lhat ihe schools were discharged to allow the pupils to see him, and spectators camu many miles to look upon Aaron Burr. Il is true, however, thai a certain reserve and gloom hung over hinv; it proceded parity from his natural disposition, which was taciturn, d'iatant asid diguilied. He was doubtless so when a young man, and when in the heighlh of his prosperity ; bul his feeling and his looks w ere not those of being rebuked by the world, bul the oppo site of rebuking. No man was found bold enough lo meet the piercing gae of his keen blaek eye wilh anything bul courtesy. He discovered a few years before his death what he called "Ihe wrong which was done him by public opinion ;." and in quired of me ils cause insisting on its In justice. I told him that in my judgment he bad throughout commitle.r a fatal mistake, in allowing the thousand newspaper para graphs published lo his degradation In pass uncontradicted ; lhat I Ihotight he owed il to himself, to bis fiictidv, and bis history, to set his- personal contradiction iu opposition to this romancing at his expense. Ha said, "The federalists did this, and they would never forgive him ; that he had acted on the principle lhat his character was strong enough lo bear such petty as aul:a without a contradiction ; and lhat he had supposed be was safe in treating ihem with contempt ami silence. Bui," .aid be, "T fear I have uointnit'sd n great error ; the men wbo knew iheir falsity are mostly dead, and ihe geneiation who now read them may take thein for tiulhs,. being un contradicted. I- adinil I have committed a capital error, bul it is lo lata to repair il." The recollection of this conversation (which I noted duvrn at the time) is the cause of this reply to Ihe article from the "Savannah Courier. " Poor Burr ; he was a man of sorrow and of many giiefs, but he was a child of genius a brave, intellectual, brilliant man and had within himself ma ny of the noblest qualities which distinguish his species. But he had his weakness an ! hi petty vices in addition. Who has rot ? Ho was Ihe victim of n combination of cii cumstaiices, railu r lhau of his own f.i'l -The hale of ihe Fedetal parly, and i! jealousy of Jefferson and his party, do-: political grave of Burr. His history l. yet written perhaps the lime 1 .is ',..-.. come lo write; hut, whenever ii -i . ; fairly presented, it will be prove,! !.. " a patriot, a slatesman, a lawyer, and n t:; far oulreaching lha thousand who have n. ployed themselves for neaily half a ceutui,. in traducing him. CATO. New York, Feb. 19, 1853. "Truth is confirmed liy investiration ami fl ' fnlselmod a-jni! Itself of twite and aueeiluiiity." " t:n-s. The Marietta and Cincinnati Railroad Company, which Ins added to its stocks S750. 000, subscribed by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, has now, it is said, ample meal -for completing Iho road lo Wheeling, loucl. ingal Farkersburg Messrs. Wiusluw, La: i. : S: Co. have contracted with iho company t deliver 2,500 tons compound rails, of V:i.v luw,s pattern, 5lbs. to I he yard, to be ma nufactured at Hanging P-Jck,on ihe Ohio Ri ver, to be delivered next mouth. Found at Last Curt for Corns. Rub Ihem every morning before breakfast, (ex. cepl cloudy weather,) wilh a solulion of tar and spirits turpentine, for nineteen mornings in succession, pare ihen closely with a Ihree- bladcd buck-horn handled jack knife, nnd wipe ofl the blood wilh a napkin. Then soak every nightrlor llree weeks, in a mix lure of salt water, nitric acid, rectified w his key, eau d' Cologne and glue, (equal parts.) and cut them off close to the ancle. A writer in tho National Intelligencer com plains of the names given to new cities, towns, kc, in this country, and says that he himself is a citizen of Dresden, close by Vi enna, on Ihe road to Naples, between Ant werp and Cornith, in Indiana. Acii.mer Jayer Pa.-iia, who recently died at Alexandria, assured an English traveler that in one season he had lost thirty of his children by infantile complaints. This ca lamity reduced tho number uf his offspring to one hundred aud thirty ! The Longest Stiiau;ht Line in ti:s Would Tho Illinois Central Railroad ia TOO miles in length, and has G2G miles in a straight line, which prepares Ihe road for a speed which no ether road in Iho United States is capable cf. The Power of ICi.sdness The power of kindness is great. Men whom no bli-.-s could move, no punishment quail, have before a k i nil word, mild toned, and gi;. . manner. A blow hurts Ihe exterior, merely enrages !ho more. But nbov'r times is it pleasantest lo heat kind v . w h?n a person is sick and suffering, or when bowed down wilh care; When almost in de spair, then A li'.lle vc.-.t in kindness spoken, A moti'ni nr a tf.ir, riu'.li or.cii hcaletl tlie lic.rt that's broken, A:nl ruuie u friend sincere." Whilst, if jou experience bad treatment, it sinks deep into the hear', and time i'.s- . ' scarcely can elfucc it from your mind. "A vnl a look lias crashed' to enrth Full iimuya bu-JuiiiK flower, tY)iH')i. had u situ'.e ktit owned its tiirll;, Would bless tile's darkest hour." Then be careful how yon speal:. fi You may feel angry and provo'.is.!, strain your wrath, for futnio dcvol. may showjou il was unjust. Eecar.Mul. !r , easier to lose a friend than to ma-e one -Treat others kindly sp--ak kindly. ''Tlien deem il iut an idle tliii A p!erm-ut wold to speak ! Tlie fu-eyou wsiir, t!ie tbunptits you Lrii ;, Ti.e heart may heul or break." One of our exchanges snys that hall n, v ni.-.g is a positive luxury to the ladies, ami that many of ihem would like to keepa flock of cousins shut up like chickens in a coop, t . wring Iho neck of ono whenever Ihey wens lired of gay colors, and- wanled a change . . half mourning. Wisco.N.'iN, wilh a spans and c-:' i population, has a school and univesiiy fir. I of 5850,000, and an annual outlay for ihn i:-. slruotion of her cl.ildien, of $120,000; 80.0CC of her l-:0,000 children have atlended schoi ; luring the year. ,:Bob, where is the Slate of Matrimony?''' "It is one of the United Stales. It is boun ded by hugging and kissing on one sido, and cradles and babies on Ihe oilier. Its chief -iroducts aio popuiiiliun,. IrcoinaUcks, and i. .i : i. slaying out late o uigms. u a uutu.ticu by Adam and Eve, while Irymg to nml a. norihwest passoge out of Paradise. The cli mate is sultry till yon pass tha tropics of houskeeping, w hen squally weather common ly sets in,-wilh sufficient power to keep al? hands as cool as cucumbers. Fur the princi pal roads leading to Ihis interesting Stale,, oonsiili the first pair of blue eyes you tta against." S.mitiiers, on going home the other night, was tun against by a three story brick house which was chasing a lamp post up Ihe struct. On coming to, he thus reasoned with himself: Is that mud, (hiccup) nr is it brains 1 (hiccup. ) If it's mud I'm mortally 'loxicated. If ils brains I'm slightly dead, (hiccup) that's all.' When we left he was trying to persuade .i freestone step that il was unconstitutional U hsve swning posts out ef door aftei nighlU.