AMER UNBURY 110 g ' OFFICE, MARKET STREET, OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. H. B. MASSER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. "gl".iramntf "uttospaprr-Dctfoirt to Jjolftfcs, artrrnturr, ilTomlfty, jFortfflit anH Domestic ilctos, Scfcnce ana the Slvts, gtarfculturr, illitrttrts, amusements, tct SfilUM UL. O, AO. IS. SUMJUHV, NOItTIIlLMIlHRLAMJ COUNTY. PA., E AT U 11 DAY, JULY 2:?. i S.".8 OT.t) RKIMKS VOL. 1 , NO. 41, IT jTi A mi , TERMS OF THE AMERICAN. AMERICAN I. publisher! every Saturday el VU LXJl.l.AKS) per milium to be paid half yearly in dvance. No paper discontinued until all arrearage! are aM. All communications or letters on bnalnewretatinf to le office, to iniure attention, mini be POST PAID. ' TO CLUBS, "are. ooelee to one addrees, 6 P even ' I). "Do ifteeo Da Po (K) Pin dollars In advance will pay tax three year'i sub fiptiua) to the American. tie Sminie of 10 Unci, 3 times, etrr eutieequent inaertiun, u Square, 3 mouths, n mimtha, ne year, uaineea Cards of Five lines, per annum, arduous and others, atlvertisiiif by the yenr, with the privilege of inserting different advertisement weekly. tf larger Advertisements, n per agreement. tl no Si 3011 6(HJ Sot) 300 io un H.-S. 10.SSE?, ATTORNEY AT LAW, JUKBUHV, PAr Business attended to in the Counties of Nor tumbeilaud, Union, Lycoming and Columbia, liefer toi P. & A. Rovoudt, Lower & Barron, (Somcrs & Snodgrass, Reynolds, Mcl arland &. Co., Spcring, Good & Co., S rhilad. HENRY D0NNEL, iTTORNE'Xr AT LAW. at': 0ice opposite the Court House, Bunbury, Northumberland County, Pa. Prompt intention to business in adjoining utilities. a Skctcl). WM. M. ROCKEFELLER, ITTORNEIT AT LAW Si Mil El Y, FA. Dee. 13, 1851. tf. It L. SHINDEL, at repairs? AT LAV 5 SUNBURY, PA. December 4, 1S52. tf. CLINTON WELCH, ITTORNEV AT LAW, . LEVTlSut'RG, TENJii. llrILl. practice in tho several Courts of Union and Northumberland counties. Kifi.r to Hon. James Burnside, ' James T. Hale, E.C. Humes & Co., Hon. A. S. Wilson, " A. Jordan, " Sand. Calvin, Lewisbnrg, pril 30, 1853, Bellcfonte. do. do. Lcvvistown. SunUury. Hollidavahiirg tf. From the S nithera Literary Mesienger MY DEBUT AT THE BAR. aiMeaee.eai My client was a respectable butcher j his opponant a well-t,-do larmer. On getting to the court-house, I found the court in session. The clerk was just reading the minutes. My cam I can well speak it) the lingular was the first set on the dock et for that morning. I looked around and saw old Kasm, who somehow had found out that I was in the case, with his green hag and half a library of old books on the bar before him. The old fellow gave me look ol malicious pleasure like that of a hungry tiger from his lair, cast upon an unsuspecting calf browsing near him. I had tried to put on a bold face. I felt that it would be very unprofessional to let on to my client that I was at all scared, though mv heart was running down like a jack screw under a heavy wagon. My con scienceI had not practised it away then was not quite easy. I couldn't help feeling that it was hardly honest to be trading my client, like Fallslaff his men, where he was sure to be peppered, lint then it was my only chance; my bread de pended upon it ; and I reflected that the same thing is to happen in every lawyer's practice. I tried to arrange my ideas in form and excogitate a speech ; they flitted through my brain in odds and ends. I could neither think nor quit thinking. I would lose myself in the first twenty words of the opening sentence, and stop at a par ticle ; the trial run clear out. I would start it again with no better luck ; then I thought a moment ol the disgrace of a dead break-down; and then I would commence again with, "Gentlemen of the Jury," etc., and go on as belorf. At length the judge signed the minutes and took 'jp the docket : "Special case Iligginbolham vs. Swink ; slander. Mr. Ulendvs for plantifT, Mr. Kasm for defen dant. Is Mr. G. in court ? Call him sheriff." The sheriff called three times. He might as well have called the dead. No answer of course, came. Mr. Kasm arose and told the court that he was sorry his brother was a good deal of the excitement had worn off. The tremor left, only gave tne that sort ol feeling which is rather favorable than oth- , eiwise to a public speaker. I might have made a pretty pood out of it, if I haj thrown myself upon the merits of my case, acknowledged my own inexpe rience, plainly stated the evidence and the Irw, and let the case go reserving my sell in the conclusion for asplurge, if I chose to make one. Hut the evil genius thai presides over the first bantlings of all law yerings, would have it otherwise. The citizens of the town and those of the country then in the village had gathred in great numbers into the court-house to hear the speeches; audi could not nhs such an opportunity for display. Looking over the jury, I found them a plain matter of fact looking set ol fellows; but I did not note or probably know a (act or two about them which I found out af terward. I started as I thought in pretty good style. As I went on, however, my fancy began to get the better of my judgment. Arguments and common sense grew tame. Poetry ami declamation, and, ot last, pathos and fiery invective, took their place. I grew as quotations as Richard Swiveller. Shakspeare suffered. I quoted among oth er things of less value and aptness, "He who steals try purse steals trash," etc 1 spoke of the woftil sufferings of my poor client, almost heart-broken beneath the weight of the terrible persecution of his enemy ; and growing bolder, I turned on old Kasm, ami congratulated the jury that log my e'f .ere by words, or chevdicr?, il H ' turned himelf into tt fuhhII cascade, need be, by blows, and that this youth1; making a a,ieat deal of noise In make a greai gentleman ahull right well know before I J .H 0f fio:h; tnnililinjr, mating, foaming Ihe have dune with mm. You wnl hrar in mind, gentlemen, that what I say is in sell-defence lliat I did not begin this quarrel that it was forced on me : and that t am bound by no restraints of courtesy ; or of respect, or of kindness. L't him charge to the account of his own rashness and rudeness whau-vi-r he riceives in re turn therefor. shallower il tuti, all the noisier it seemed. Ho ficitef and knitted hi brows; lis beat the air ami he vociferated, always emph.isi in tho meaningless word mimt InuilU ; he pufleil, (.welled out, and blnweit off, until be renail like new bellow , all brass and wind. How he mouthed il as!hoe villain ous stnae-pliiverK, tattling out fustian in a "Let me retort on this youth that he is a bam theatre mitnicitig 'Who sti nN un worthy advocate of his butcher client. He purse steals trash.' (I don't deny it ) "Tib fights w ththe dirty weapons of his barhar- something" (query?) 'i.oihimj' (exactly ) ous trade, and brings into his speech the reeking odor of his client's slaughter-house. "Perhaps something of this congeniality commended him to the notice of his wor thy client, and to this, his first retainer ; and no woiuh r, for when we heard his ve hement roaring, we might have supposed that his client had brought his most unruly bull calf into court to defend him, had not the matter of loaring soon convinced its the 'Tis mine; 'iwas hi., and has been slave to ! thousand but he who filches from me my eood name, lobs me of that vrliieh not en- tiuheth him' (not in tho leas!),'b'Jt makes j me pour indeed' (justed, hut whether any poorer I bun before he patleJ w ith the en. I ciitnbianrej is another mallei). ' But llio young penllemaii refers to his vonlli. He uuuli nil to reproach us of ma- animal was more remarkable for the length lurcr age in that indirect w ay ; no one w ould ol his ears, than even the power ol his have suspected it of him, or him of it, if he lungs. Perhaps the young gentleman has had not told i! : indeed, from hearinu him pes.k. we were prepared to t:ive him credit taken Ins retainer, and contracted for butchering my client on the same terms as his client, contracts in his line that is on the shares. But I think, gentlemen, he will find the contract a more dirty than profitable job. Or, perhaps, it might not he uncharitable to suggest that his client, also seems to be pretty well up to the busi ness ot saving other people'1 i bricon, may have desired, as far as possible, to save his the genius ol slander had found an appro- ow n ; and, therefore, turning from the priate defender in the genius of chicane members ol the bar who would have char and malignity I complimented the jury ge, for their services according to their on their patience, on their estimate of the value, took this occasion of getting off some value of character; -poke of the public of his stale wares ; for, has not Shakspeare expectations, of that feeling outside of the 'said ('he gentleman will allow me to box which would welcome with thundering j quote Shakspeare, too, while yet his repu plaudits the ngnieous verdict the jury would render; and wound up by declaring that I had never known a case of sla.ider so aggravated in the course ol my practice at the bar; and felicitated myself that its grossness and barbarity, justified my client in relying upon even the youth and mcx tation survives nts barbarous mouthing o! the poi t's words) he knew ati attorney 'who would delend a cause for a starved fur almost any length of rars. But doe not the youth remembei that Gititiu was only seventeen when he was in full practice, and that he was attorney-r!tieral al Iwenly-lwo: and what is Giotiu lo this (.neater lihl? Not the burning of my smoke-house to the :ouflagriition of Aloseuw ! 'And yet, young Grotius tells ns in the next breath, that be never knew S'ich a slan der in the course of his practice Wotider- Inl, indeed ! seeing thai his practice has all teen done wiihin the lasl six hours. Why to hear him talk, you would suppose thai he was tin old Continental lawyer, grown pray in the service. Il-i-s n-r-a-c-t-i-c-e ! Why, he is just in his legal "wadding clothes! His practice ! ! But I don'l wonder he can't hen, or a leg of mutton fly blown.' I !"'8 'be absurdity of such talk. How long trust, however, whatever was the rontrac', does it lake one of the canine tribe, after the gentleman will make his equally wor- birili, lo open hisejes? thy client stand up to it ; for I should like nerirnce of an unpracticed advocate, whose that on one occasion it might be said th poverty of resources was unpaid by oppor- j excellent butcher was midetopnij for his stcne. "I find it difficult, gentlemen, to r too much 'stroking his chin and looking I tunities of previous preparation. Much down and pausing) indi.spr.ted, or otherwise more I said that happily has now escaped encased, to attend the case, but he must ; m plv to any part ol this young man's effort, ex- 'He talked, too, of outside influence; of the public expectations, arid all that sort of deiuauuuim. I observed no evidence of any popular demons'ratious in bis favor, un less it be a tailor I saw stamping bis feet: but whether that was because he had set ioctoii i. av. jiu;iiks, )FFK'E on Broadway, near the Ei'iwoi.al Church, Sunhury. tSunbtiry, April 11, 1S53, tf. IvSvilENCE HOUSE, SUNBURY, PA. rllE subscriber rcpertfnlly informs his friends, and the piihlic generally, that he h is opened "Lawrence lIoue aim win uo nis ucai m- THOMI'SOX. avors to ulease the public. SAMUEL Sunbury Feb. 26, 1853. if. ' SLAYMAKER & HASLETT. t o I tt m D in ?L o M 0 c Chestnut Street hclow Tth, PHILADELPHIA. Board St.50 per day. Phila., May 28. 1853. insist on its being di.poed, etc., the court When I concluded, Sam Hicks and one ! crpt his argument, which is the smallest said it should be. I then spoke up (though i or two other friends gave a faint sign of i part in compass, and next to his pathos, the cro.s-lej'.'ed so long he wanted exercise, or my voice seemed to me very low down, applause, but not enough io make any im- most amusing. His figures of speech are was rejoicing because he had gal orders for and very hard to g.-t up,) that 1 had just pression. some ot them quite good, and have been so been spoken to in the cause. 1 believed I observed that old Kasm held his head ; considered by the be;-! ludges for the last we were ready, if the cause must then be ! down when 1 was speaking; I entertained ihousau.l years. I. must confess, th.-.t as to tried; but I should much prefer it to be . the hope that I had cowed him! His usual these 1 find no other fault than that '.liev laid over, if the court would consent, until i fort w as that of cynical composure, or bold j were badly applied, and ridiculously pro the next day, or even that evening. Kasm and brazen defiance. It wasa special kind- i nour.ced ' ami this further laul!, that they protested vehemently against this, reminded ' lies if he only smiled in covert scorn ; that , have become so common-place by cotis'ant the court ot its peremptory order ; reierrerj ; waslus most annauie expression in a inat. use, mat unless some new vamping or lei to the lormer proceeilings, and was going Rut when he raised up his head I saw city ol application be given Ibem, they on to discuss the whole merits of the case, when he was interrupted by the judge, who, turning himself to me, remarked that he should be happy to oblige me, but that he was precluded by what had happened; he hoped, however, that the counsel on the other side would extend the desired indub gence; to which Kasm immediately rejoin' the very devil was to pay. His face was of a burning red. He seemed almost to choke with his rage. His eyes were blood shot, and flamed out fire and fury. His queue stuck out behind, and shook itself slilily, like a buffalo bull's tail when he is ! about making a fatal plunge. I had struck between wind and water. 1 here was an Dilwortli, Branson Co. I.MPntlTBRs OF Si DEa!.F.RS IN Foretell aml IVoiiirittic ARDWARE, CUTLERY, &C Ao. 59 Market St.. 1 door below 2d St, PHILADELPHIA. rhcr they always ee- on hand a lr(te stocZ o every variety of Hardware, Cutlery, &c. 'm. Dilwrorth. Henry P. I.andis, imuel Branscn. James M. ance. October 10, 18.V2. ly. vmTm'cauty, BOOKSELLER, Mtrket Street, SUNBURY, PA. rffcT received and for sale, a fresh supply of 1 F.V.iKGCLlC.ll. 9ITMC' 8inging Schools. He is alo opening at i,time, a large assortment of Books, m every inch of Literature, consisting of Poetry. History. Novel, Romances, Scientinc orks Lw, Medicine. School and Children ks 'Bibles ; School. Pocket and Family, both th and wilbout Engravings,-anl every of van , of Binding. Prayer Books, of all kinds. Also just received and for .ale, ? union I) -,t of tile laws of Pennsylvania, edition of 18jI, ice only 56,00. JudgeTve.de edition of Blackstones Commen iea. in 8 vols. 8 vo. formerly sold at J 10,00, dow olTcred 0" " binJin6) 8t tl,e low ire of $ 0,00. K Treatise on the law. of Pennsv v.n.a re- ecting the estates oi ueceuvii, . irdon, price only $4,00. Travels Voyage, and Adventure., all ot uUh will to .old low, either for cash, or coun- produce. . February, St, IS52.-U. t d that this was a case in which he neither , audacity in a stripling like me bearding asked lavors nor meant to give them. So. ,im which infuriated him. He meant to the rase had to go on. j massacre me, and wan ted to be along time Several members of the bar had their j j0inj it. Jt was a regular auto de fe. I hats in their hands, ready to leave the j lvas t0 he the representative of the young room, when the case was caller! up ; but seeing that I was in it alone, sufTered their curiosity b get the better of their engage ments, and staid to &ee it out a circum approaches nearest to it not only in the humor, hut in the veracious characters of the inridetitsftntn which the humor comes. Such lace sn w irbegone, so whimpering. bar, and to expiate his malice against all. The court adjourned for dinner. It met again alter an hours' recess. Bv this time pulic interest, and especial- stance which did not diminish my tiepida- : y nat 0f the bar, grew very great. There tion in the least. was a rush to the privileged seats, and the I had my witnesses called up, posted my ; si,Hrifl had to command order, the shuffling as if Ihe short period since he was flog r-d client behind tne in the bar, and put the 0 (et a(l( the pressure of the crowd for- at si hool (probably in reference to those case to tne-jury. l lie aeieiinatii nao pieau : war() was si great. justification, and not guilty. I got along j j toob. mv g,..,t within the bar, looked pretty weli, I thought, on the proofs. The arond with an affectation of indifference, cross-examination of old Kasm didn t seem j so belaying the perturbation within that to me lo hurt anything; though he quib- the same power ol acting on the stage bled, misconstrued, and bullied mightily j would have made my fortune on that Un objected to all my questions as leading, and Blr,. all the witnesses' answers as irrelevant ; j jasm rose took a glass ol water ; his but the judge, who was a very clever sort , hand trembled a little I could see that ; ot a man, and who didn't like Kasm much, too, a p;ncn of snuff, and led off in a voice helped me along and over the bad places, j sow am measured, but slightly very slight occasionally taking the examination him- V( tremulous. By a strong effort' he had sell, when old Kasm had got the statements r"ecovpred his composure. The bar was of the witness in a fog. surprised at his calmness. They all knew I had a strong case ; the plaintiff showed j it was affected, but they all wondered that a good character that the lodge of Masons j he could affect it. Nobody was deceived ha"d refused to admit him lo fellowship un- i by it. We felt assured "it was the tor til he had cleared up those charges; that ! rent's smoothness ere it dash below." I tire nearly as much as Ins original mailer videlicet, that matter which being more ridiculous than we ever heard before, car ried internal evidence of its being his own. Indeed it was never hard to tell when thi gentleman recurred to his own ideas. Hi is like a cat-bird the only intolerable dis cord she makes being her own note, though she gets on well enough as long as sh copies and cobbles the songs ol other w'ar- blt-rs. "mil, genliemcn, it tins voting orators argument w as amusing, what shall 1 say of d keep the ciowd from you, gentlemen, if his pathos? What larce ever equalled the you should pive us n verdict ! fun ol it ? The play of 'The Liar' probably I '-But, gentlemen, 1 am tired of winnow ing t (h never had more than a thiiribhful ot brains in her dull baby head), and was -o tickled with them, thai she got her bmthe' Bill, about fourteen, to copy them off, as w ell as he could, and lake Ihem lo iho priming office. Bill ihtevv them under the door ; Ihe pi inter, as big a fool as either, tint only pub lished ihem, but, in his infernal kindness, pulled Ihem in some critical commendations of his own referring lo the "gifted author" as "one of the most promising of tho younger membeis of our bar." The luti, by this time, grew fast and fuii ous. The country oeonle. who hnvo nhont n much sympathy for a young town lawyer badirered by an older one, as for a young cub beset by cuts, and who have as much idea or respect for poetry as for witchcraft, joined in ihe tnirlh with glee. They ciovvded aronnd old Kasm, and stamped and roared as at a circus. The Judge and sheriff in vain tried to keep order. Indeed his h r smiled out loud once or twice ; and, to cover his retreat pretended to cough,' and lined the sheriff five lollais fur not keeping silence in court. Even the old clerk, w hose imtr.emoi ial pen behind his I it hi ear bail w orn the hair fiom that xide of his head, and who ha J not smiled ir court for twenty years, and boasted that Patrick Henry couldn't distuib him in making up judgement entry, actually turned his chair from ihe desk and put down his pen ; af'er warJs he put his hand to his head three times in search of it ; forgetting, in his attention to old Kasm, w hat ho had done with it. Old Kasm went on reading and comment ing by turns; I forgot what ihe ineffable trash was. I wouldn't recollect if I could My equanimity will only stand a phrase or two lhat still lincers in my memory, fixed there by olj Kasm'. ridicule. I bad said snmelhing nboul nry bosom's anutiish" about the passion that was consuming me and, loillustralo it, or to make the line jingle, put in so.n"thing about "Egypt's Queen taking Ihe ap lo her bosom'' w hich, for the sake of rhyme or metre, I called the venomous worm how Ihe confounded thing was brought in I neiiher know- nor want lo know. When old Kasm came to lhat, he said be ful ly apprecialed what Ihe young bard said he believed it. He spoke of venomous worms Now, if he Kasm might presume logive ihe young gentleman advice, he would recom mend Swain's patent vermifuge, fie had no doubt that it would effectually cure him of his malady, his love, and last, but not least, of his rhymes which would be the happiest ps'sase in his eventful his'.niy I couldn't stand il any longer; I had borne it to the last point of human endurance. When il came only to ski.ini; g I was there tint when he showeie I down a-)iiifo !is en the raw, and then see'iie.l disp-i-'d to rub i; in, I fled ; "Abii, euiii, evasi." Tho last thing I heard was old Ivas n calling me back, amidst the shouts of the an liance but no more. The next information received of Ihe case, was a leiter that came lo me al Natchez, my new re.-ideuce, from Hicks, about a month THE MR IV VOKK CRYSTAL PALACE. f The New York Crystal Pataee appears to be filling up rapidly i h contribiilions.- (ioods are comirisr in in great abundance, keeping several persons ConArsji.tlyvrVrctipie.f in rcjiisieriuji them and making otit (Re mv cessaiy papers. Lnfrland,. France, Germany and Prussia, are largely represented, and Ihe main lloor or the Crysul Palacusia at present principally filled with goods from those countries, still imdisplayed, and remaining in llieir original packages. No less than l.00 foreign package, are already registered exclusive of many others jet in the custom House, some of which are of large bulk. Theie lias been great delay in forwarding American goods, and the collection will bar quite incomplete at the opening on the 14th lust., unless more promptness is observed. The Journal of Commerce says: In a few day, many goods will be prepaf ed for exhibition, and Ihe Palace present a, greatly improved nppea:ence ; but it seem, hardly possible for any considerable propor lion lo be in readiness by the 14:h instant. Enough will be ready, however, lo render the exhibition attractive in a high degree, and subseqneiil lo that date, it will improve rapidly. The presence of the President and a large portion of his Cabinet, will add greatly lo Ihe interest of the inaugural cere monies on the 1-lih. a new suit or a prospect of paijincnl Jor an old one, the Leiitierruiil can possibly tell bet icr than I can. Here Hick left. 1 However, i! tins "ase j's to be decided by ihe populace heie, the cenlletnau will allow me ihe bene fit of a wiilcf error to Ihe regimental muster It be held next Fii lay at Reiuh.ii ts dia.il- ry. "lir.t I suppose ne meant to lutihten yon into a verdict by inlimatu g that the mob. frenzied by his eloquence, w ould tear you to ieces if you cave a verdict for defendant like the equally eloquent barrister oul Vesti who concluding a case, said, '-Gentlemen; my client is as innocent of stealing that cot ting as the sun at monoday, and if you give it ncain him his brother Sain Retchins. next muster, will maul every mother's son of nflerwards, telling me that the jury (., which you," I hope the sheriff will see lo his duly, TEfiltlBLE STORM. Destruction of a Pvildins containing Fifty PersonsSeven Bodies Dug Out. New York, July 10 A most violent hiri- cane occurred in this vicinity last rvi mi ;. aecompat.ied by teriifie penis of thunder ve vivid lightning. A building at Ta:i)': r:( occupied by several families, ntJ to contain about fifty ppisrn . r; the storm, was b'own i!owr, at.d purson are known lo have , ;, bodies were lakea out In! eve .i.. many more ,e a c:..y six '.i Svvea h atnf il J bi'iieuih was feared the ruins A litig" brick s'orc and dwclKng in pro grese t the eo-rer of I";.-ks and Mor:tenj;ui3 Streets, R ouk!t:, '". as o:i: ;re!y tr.3". h'jd by the etorm. Tvu p-'f icrs-by wcie buried u the mine. Dri AWARE. I. ACKAV. ANN. AJ.I) '.Vr.?i in ! Railroad. The contracts for constructing of the entire Southern Division of this road, were made during the past week. Tim Soulhren Division extends from Seranton f the Delaware liver, at the point of bridt'ir.g.' about five miles below Ihe Delaware Ws'er Gap, and a distance of fifty six mi'e. The contractor are required to cflrr.p!e!e their contracts ready for the superslrnctor, at different dates, fiom 1st July to 15th of Au gust, 1S5J, wi:i one exception the contract ot II S. Weli S; Co ; being very heavy, and embracing a tunnel, it will end on tho 1st October, 1S51 The work will commence on tle wh ile line in the month of July, and it is confidently anticipated lhat by this road, authiacite coal will teach the city of New Yoik in the vear 1SGJ. rooming Mutual Insurance Company. R J U MASSER i. the local agent for the ) abo've Insurance Company, in North , urn her ,d county, and i. at all time, ready to ellect lurameigainst fir. on real o, personal pro .ty. or renewine policies for the .ame. hunburv. April 80. 1851. tf. "dentistrv. I.- i Flint a yir. ucnusi, wuuiu Mr. Catharine Uoulton, where be wi I be hap "".tend to all lto in the line of hi. profe ' operetio... or Mechanical work war. .1 i answer all th. useful and ornamental uaaaUtSal IT i. oH 1H5.3 untwry, iun . S Vanilla Bean of a .upior quality "fET- H7B. MA88ER. me 4. toJ" of the art. lune rU KITING H.L1D i and self JLp Env. r ' . - . r. i. mnA Fincv Fan.. rTMBBEi.1--. the Methodist Church, of which he was a class-leader, had required of him to have these charges judicially settled; that he had offered to satisfy the defendant that they were false, and proposed to refer it to disinterested men, and to be satisfied, if they decided for him, to receiv.e a written retraction, in winch the defendant should only declare he was mistaken ; that the defendant refused this proffer and reiterated these charges with increased bitterness and aggravated insult; that the plaintiff had suffered in reputa'ion and credit ; that the defendant had declared he meant to run him off and buy his land at hi-Jdefenrtant's) own price; ana tnai oeienoani was net and often repeated his slanders at public meetings, and once at the church door, and finally, now justified. The defendant's testimony was weak ; it did not controvert the proof as to the speak ing of the words or the matters ol aggrava tion. Many witnesses were examtneo as to the character of the plaintiff; but those against us only referred to what they had heard since the slanders, except one, who was unfriendly. Some witnesses spoke of butchering hogs at night and hearing them squeal at a late hour at the plaintiff's slaughter-house, and of the dead hogs they had seen with various marks, and some thing of hogs having been stolen in the neighborhood. This was about all the proof. The plaintiff laid hi damages at $10,000. I rose to address the Jury. By Ihn time chaff; I have not bail the rewaid paid by Griiliauo for silling his discourse; the two grains of wheal lo the bushel. It is all fiolh all wind all bubble." Kam left me heie for a lime and turned eggs falsely charged to the hound puppy.) "P"n '"' t''"'"t ' dor H'-'l-'iubolham caught bad either obliterated the remembrance ol " ami Heavy, ne wooieii nun, men his juvenile affliction, or the looks he bore skinned him, and then look to skinning off when he endured it. the cr.der cuticle. Ilig never skinned a beef "Theie was something exquisite in this sn thuioughly. He pul together nil ihe fads picture of the woes, the wastin g grief of his disconsolate client, the butcher ol Higginbo- than), mourning as Rachael mourned fur her children for his character, because it was not. Gentlemen, look at him ! Why, he weigns twelve stone noie. lie has three in ches of fat on his ribs this minute! He would make as many links of sausage as any I .L. I . . ... - uog inai ever squeuteii al niklniglil III Ins Biauglitei iug pen, anil has laid enough in bun sous lo crush his client. lo cook it all. Look at his face! Why. his out. as not hearing on ;h thought he would come down on me in a tempest, and flattered myself it would soon be over. But malice is cunning. He had no idea of letting me off so easily. He commenced by saying that he had been some years in the practice. He would not say he was an old man; that would be in bad taste, "perhaps. The young gentle man who has just closed his remarkable speech, harangue, poetic effusion, or rig marole, or whatever it might be called, il, indeed, any name could be safely given to his motly mixture ot incongruous slang the young gentleman evidently did not think he was an old man, for he could hardly have been guilty of such rank inde cency as to have treated age with such dis respect he would not say with such in sufferable impertinence ; and yet "I am," he continued "of age enough to recollect, if I had charged my memory with to in considerable an event, the day of his birth, and then I was in full practice in the court house. I confess thoughgentlemen, I am old enough to remember the period when a youth's first appearance at the bar was not signalized by impertinence toward rut seniors; and when public opinion did not think flatulant bombast and florid trash. picked oul of fifth-rate romances and nam- by-namhy rhymes, repeated by the upstart saucinessol a raw popin ay toward tne ex perieuced members of the profession he disgraced. And to some extent, this rani inz youth may be right. I am not old in that sense which disables me fro no defend- chops remind a hungiy man of jowls and greens. If ibis is a shadow, in the name of prnpnety, whydidn l be show himself, when il fi 'sh, at tho last fair, be.ide the Kentucky ox; dial were a tnore honest way ot making u living Ihau stealing hoe, liul Ilig is lin ing in giiel! I ronder the poetic youth, his learned counsel, did not quote Shakspeare iiin. He never told hit woe but 'let con cealment liii tne worm in I tie rud prey upon hi. damask cheek.' He looked like patience on a monument cmiling at grief or beef, I should laiher say. But, geuile- men, probably I am wioug; it may be that this tender hearted, aensitive butcher was lean before, and like Falstaff, Ihiows the b'arT.e of his fat on sorrow a:id si'hioc which "has puffed him up like a bladder." (Here Iligginbolham left in digni.) 'there, gentlemen, ho goes, 'larding Ihe lean earlh as he walk, aleti".'1 Well baa Dr. Johnson said, 'Who kills fat nxen, should himself be fat.' Poor Hig ! stuffed like one of hi own blood puddings, iih a dropsical grief which nothing horl of ten thousand dollars, of Swink's money can cure. Well, a. grief puff, him up, 1 dont wonder that nothing but depleting another man can cure him. "And now, gentlemen, I eome lo the blood and thunder part of Ihi. young gentleman's harangue, empty end vapid, word and noth ing else. If any part of his rigmarole was windier than any nthr par', this was it. about the witness' hesrii " the hogs equeal ing nt nig hi ; the different rnaiks of the hugs ; ihe lussts in the neighboi hood ; peivertet the testimony and supplied onii.-sion. until you would s :p; ose i'u bearn g him that it had been hilly pioveti that pout llig had t.;ti!cu all the meal ho ever sold in the market. lie Ufseveraled that his suit was a malicious conspiracy between the Methodists ami M.t- Cut all thi 1 leave i main Hubject in y - lUin. A writer in a late number of the London Quarterly Review furnishes the fol lowing inhumation on this subject : "London imports about five tons of human hair an nitally. Black hair comes mainly from Brittany ami the south of France, where it i. collected principally by one hair merchant, who travels from lair lo fair, and buys tip, and shears the i mps of the neighborhood d.im5e!s. A liavt-llcr in Brittany describe the peasant giils as attending at the fairs with their beautiful trcsse, perfectly willing to sell out. He saw several girls sheared, one alter another, !is;e sheep, and as many moie standing ready for the shears with their caps in their hands, and their long hair combed out and hinging to their waists. writes, in reply lo a boyi-h epistle f.oni hi, ' "e ne ut'",,!r w" Placeu 'r son at boarding-school, 'io his mater. to send : et, '",u wh,Ll' "ccsmvsj crops of him home for reason, which ho thus cha.at- 'e lu,ow" "L'".UP W1!P c' . leiisiicallv explains : 'lf- Fu' a hei111 uf ,la,r about ,wen,y " "S.r-Mv sou's of ltilh iut. camo duly to in money is given, or a jjauuy uanuaercniei. J ham., ami eon! rt note.!. Sony lo ii';ir lif s been Ftu.i'i! I.aliti, Vh:ii' I never .tn.li.ul ',.- cn.. It iliii.nr rnVtiimv Itlll WYh- sters Sp g Book and Daboll's A.ith'k, and P'r '. " U.rm"rS' n"R "CM 1 . Richard's Alm'k ; yel gm along well encgh ! fr oidi once a year. And who know. I- nmnev i. m ttai.k Diieet'r. Mrll.h. 1 "u;" " 1 " " 1 " Chanib. Com , kc, fce , fce.,. Latin ! -better ' look into MTullock- some isr in that j Learn nil about Dr. and Cr , cl , per cl , if "i .. r . .1 . I cur cy. cxcti., li.inK tacii , m.i ., ft:e, in n s ; ihe commodity of true know ledge the 1 o-t j I should have staled old Kasm had got two infidels and four anti masons) had given a verdict for defendant, that before the court adjourned, Kiank Gleinly had got sober and moved for a new Irial. on the ground thai the verdict was against the evidence, and that the plaintiff had not had justice by reason of i the incompetency of his counsjl. and the I auaiiii'iumeiu 01 n;s cause; ami 111,11 ne go' a new Ilia!, as Hell he ehould have done. A Sharp Rcsines Lf-tteh. A contempo-1 rary publishes ihe follow iug specimen letter from one of a class w ho th'nk there is noth ing valuable bul trade in the win Id. Il pur ports lo come from a "cute" merchant; who lie came back to me wi'h renewed appe tite. He said he would conclude by pay in; his vuledictoiy respeel lo his juvenile diend, as this wa.lhe lust time he expected to have the picasuiu uf meeting him. 'The poetie young gentleman had said, ind'e for counting-room always in detu'd - lhat. by your verdict agaiind his clienl, yon always available in maiket. when y'r Latin This hair is Ihe lii.cst and most silken that can be produced. l.igUi hair comes from Gei many, when! it is collected by a conipa- ses gleaming i'i the gas-linht, w ith which our bluoiTiing Eves, aptly entangling their own. tempts our eligible Adams. and y r Greek would I lelclt a toonmrkie, as my captain says. "Hut to point. My son i now 14 yr's old would blight forever his reputation and lhat of his family thai you would bend down the spiiit of his manly son, and dim the ra diance of his bloomirg dauhtei's beauty. Very pretty, upon my won!! Itut, ecnlle men, not so fine, poetical by half, as a pre cinus morceau of poetry w hich adonis the column, of the villaceiiewamner. bearimz .u.. -r 1 r i .. .1.:. .. 1 l.l.. I Si .ficn rm ii b in voice Hlld bi 1 1 of lad g, of inn 1111 na . ui j . w j. n 1 ui. a1 no 11 a lic i , - 1 1 1 . . ..t Um.t. t r. ..inned in Merx and Co , X rirouuciioil lia exeneil a iin-rfl iirui in n e--- nl.iu e in the nurseries and brardin2-i hoots. Y'k I must ber- lo read il. not for tho nstruclion "P. S. Send Lin, ami win renin v .r...,,, of ih rx.iiilf.nian he has already seen il . moil. Slocks rather heavy. Sfli'd be glad In bul for Ihe entertainment of the jury. Il is sell you a lot of damaged Jtva al 7 cia p1' addressed lo R !, a young lady of A Citv with Twelve Thousand I.nhahi tams Destkoveu. Iii ihe foreign news by the A'laiilio last we, k, it is slated that on the 11 of May tha City of Shirax in Persia was destroyed wilh twelve thousand of it inhabitants, by the shock of an eaithquak ' ! This is the second city in Persiu, and III fur U II III nuni wi 111111,11' . .....in , . r . . . . n m ....o.u 1,.1 u nfriil;ltimi nl ill flofl n.. , a. . n I I.;- I,.- th ,. v m, , 1 J " I I '"1 have lei l.im stand another half year though, but for ihe Latin, arid high rats ol lui'ion at , bo.iid'g-sch'1. Please tdiip him on board hi idace. Here it goes." Judge my horror when, 0,1 looking op, I saw him take an old newspaper from his pocket and, pulling dow n his spectacle., be gan lo read, in stage.artor style, some ere I had written for Rose Bell's album. Rose had been worrying me some lime lo write hr eomething. To gl rid of her fmporiunltiea, lhad seribbled off a few lines and copied ihem in the precious volume. Hose, the lit. lb. -very cheap, arid good enough lui ouaril g scb'll. Plea) ml viae." Wash 1NQ Clothes av Si ti.vi. All the washing of Ihe St. Nicholas lintel, New Yoik. is done by steam, without rubbing the linen lo rags, or wearing out the hands of tba wasUeuuomen. In less than thirty min utes the clothes are washed and dried ready for ihe wearer. One man and three omen do all the washing of this hotel, amouuting lilt foot, took item for lomethinf very cl?- 1 Um J to 5000 pieces a dsy. j bill an eailhquuke in 1824 nearly deet-oyed it. Il was tormerly a place of gm.i: t .ii',el ' and i celebrated by the P. r-la-i r"ei H.if ?,: who Wasa naiive of Stiiinz, fir i . bi.nitv and ferliliiy. Since ihe ea-thqnake of jwsi it has greatly il.clined in both, iro-l ef it public alriiciuies liaviig I ten r.nned by that calamity. . .. e..i A conespoiidcnl of th Memphis Appeal wriles that the poet Alexander ? nith, whose productions have recently made s :en a sen--saiion in ihe literary ciu-! cf Scotland, an are so favorably notioed m tria Flagiish He- view., waa, in Ulti, ".eed)!' atij neg'eot ed individual ii Wist-onsic she butt for ridicule of all the literary peopie cf that IU and lhat after seeki .g i:, vain 'hrouch all our principal eastern ciliea, lor a just arrre ciaiion of the merits of taluma of m poema, then recently publuaeit-he w l in: Eurtf., here he bl become fsrtous.