RATES OF ADVERTISING fear lines or less constitute MY 2 • spare. Ten linen or m ore than fonri contintne a SqIISTO. , . asitS4_,olleda ......... 450.25 Ono eq., one day...---- $0 .60 oneweek.—...., 1.00 , " . one week. --.. 1.21 .. one month-- 2.00 "ct one month... COO ~ three months. -2.00 . a threemontin.: IS.SO. :, i.:months— . 4.00 a six months..... : 1i.C.00 ~ ono yni7......... . 5. 00 s c 0 neyear.......-49.00 /Er Business inserted in the LOOS'. ISOLIFICIFitir. Wore forrisge a kaths Fin . contra cznamen for eack insertion. 2 1 0 mennuntearat enters enTeStiOnnisbrnieteur seersiteL arrbe offered. - gr The n winsunberefineertionenstytt .110 designat e d = the ttettiAaP . Er Ner.rogeg Ind Deithil_! wi4: 1 1 6 Ingekttea 0 14 4. w i e ei ,„, m o a t 2.o..ertiwne4o. .:. .. ; „.. . , . ~ • - . _ . • . ... . . i3O - 0.10•1 'At..*i*t;i.*4 rmOOL BOOKS.—Sehool Direetortr l aw, Pareida, ffehols;r4 Mot otheil, In want ea pod Beam, 3011091 Bildigonfl, &Ott will Ail * 091UP/ite vuertmexe at Z. M,POLLOOM & SOlspll ROWE STORH, go ut Spare, Harrisburg, conaprising in part the fallow . BElL—MeGutrey% Parker's, Cobb's, Angell's sf SLUNG BOOM-411tdittifer0, Ckibb's, Webster s, refes,lficr LISH ly'N. Cknehrra. .... , • - lING GRANlUSS.ThellionV,Smith's, Wood kd a f es, identeith,s^thars,Hart's, Wells!. .. AgTOBLVA.-•-haw's, Davenport's, froenr, Wu , 2 9 0, Willanl'Olooddeh's, Pinnool,e, Ooldsmith's and ASITIEBEInirIf.r-GroenleoPs, Stoddard's, ihnerson'h tike , e,Boool; 00111mn's, Smith and Duke% Dwiles. • ALUBMlAS.:•4ireezdtars, Davie's, _ Daym, Aists, . Orr. ' OTIONAMPIL—WaIkeeo Scheel, - Cobbs* • Weep ife rOostvir's Comprehensive, Wercesim 3 s Primiwy, Web; der'l PrimOrY, Wabstet's High lichtxpl, Webetel a a Quarto, NA- . ' AL THILOSOPHISS,...Cmisitockto pierker,„ swift's. The above with *great varietrof niers can al ay time be found at inviter& ' AlsO, s coisip etetiscw.b. loot o utfit hol Stiktionery, enibradug fn the wlt le a com plete ot for satieol purpoies. Anfbook notiri the Mors. Pr ocured it one Ws notioe. 11:7 CowArY Itetchwggi Million at wholeesle rates. Au Loing.-..Tobn Bier and Son's Alumnae for sale ad I. H. POLLOCK & SOWS BOOK ATORl,llaribibrag. ET' Wholesale and Retail. __, "',l'• JUST RECEIVED LEI SCHEFFER'S' BOOKSTORE, 4DAMAN2•I3LE .S_LaTES 0! VARIOUS SIZES AND PRIORS, Which, for bemity sad iLlo, cannot be eziellegh nietUaSER T PLLCZ, scHsrPs'itis Booxsro.n.g, NO; 3.8 MARMAT STREET _ . N E 'B - 0 - 0 Si'. zus T 0 E I ir 2 D it SEAL AND SAY by the inither of 4, Wide, Wide Worla,n t , Dollars onalllants,” tfalt- • • t "HISTORY 01 AIDTHODIBM, " by A.Stevens,LL.D. For sale at - • 110112122113' BO O SSTO22;. , ap9 - No. 18 Marko at. S T E - D . • 3 • A LARGE AND : SPLENDID At3SONIIIENT OP AzOlaartitmENntr , • WINDOW 0111CTAINS, .PAPBB,BLINDS, Of Tatiana Designs and Colors, for . 8 cents, TISSUE' PAPER AND CUT PLY PAPER., At [my24l SOHEIFFEEN BOOKSTORE. WALL PAPER 1 WALL PAPER 11 /tart received. our Opting Stock of WALL MAUR. BOADERI3, FIRM SCRRISSI &c., &C. DU the 'areal and bestwelected assortment intha city, ranging In price from six ( 8) dentuup to onordollat and a quarter ($ L25.) As we pure - Mao very. low for cash, we are prepared to nil at ialow rateailf not lower, than can be had else- . wham If purchaser! will call and examine, we feel andident that we can pleasthorn e reapact - tu Vida sad quality. B. POLLOCK & BON, spa Below donee?, Howie, Market Square. • - EETTEit, CAP; NOTE PAPERS, JJ 14;ns t ihaaaras vinionai/E4r 4 UPONI ftessatuglraz, vt natant %natty, at low- priagaoltreat-fraai Awns_ factories, at mat3o EICHSPIEWS CHEAP )I(o3lFlMuna LAW BOOKS 1 LAW 'BOOKS. pineral assortmaht of LAW VMS, all the' nits Reports and Standardßlementary Works, with many . of the oid English Befoits, scarce sad rare, together w ith a large Assortment of. second-hand law Booksoitmiry lOW- prices, iss Ow one prico Bpskstore . • , . • A; M. POLLOCK 41t, 4W,, • myB . Maxicet Stowe. ggifislonsg: ' . intOCCMMOUt3. OF. N lar.aotops APPROPRIATE. TO THE SEASON! SILK" LINEN PAPER FANS! PANS!! FENS!!! ANOTHER AND aprninza Lot , OP SPLICED FISHING - it-op sr Trout Flies, eat and Mali Snoods, Grass Linea, Silk and Hair Plaited Lines, and a general assortment of 'FISHING 11AOHLE11- 44111 SAT vienri.or WALK.FIT - G DANE S 1 Which we will sell as cheap as the cheeped! Silver Head Loaded Sword Hickory Panay Cans. Otuea . Osseo ! Odneis I Canes KELLER,I3.Dittfq AND• FANOY STORM, No- el *ABUT intazze,.. South Ride, one . dOor•east of Fourth street je9: B. J. WORKER 'IN TIN, slow. IRON, AND METALLIC ROOF/NO, Second arid, below Cheetnae, • HARRISBURG, PA. Is *spared to fill orders for any article in his branch of bums and if isot...en tniO4 t be win' make to order on short Douce. • . - . METALLIC: ROOFING, or TID or ctstrainised iron; oonstantty. on mid. • • • n• Able. Tin Ind pheet-Inlisicrbreitiponting,:ke.' • . lie /toper; ?y strict attention , to the wants df hieonsip sancta retard. niskniosiie a gentrotirshare ef plata rap Misery Proms strictly MAIM. B. J. HARRIS, 311 11 7.- 11 71 se*ta Street; below °bedsit. F'" ll" MACKNEBriI (Nos. 2 3 2 and 3.) SALMON (very 'superior, lam, Mow and very line.), ) 041 RT 42 , (" Ira iar g e ' COD F.lBll. SMOKED =mama, (exlmi, Dishy . MOTOR MEIIBP4. in s • IND4MCITIOVIES, Of the then we have Mackerel is h alf , _ quarter and eighth Ws. Heiring in whole sad half bbls. The entire lot new—mat:cm 110 M Mt 711111214118, and will sell them at the lowest . market rates. eeple - - W.M. HOCK, .Ta., & CO.- CHAMPA4NE WINESI WO DE MONTEBELLO, REIDBLECK & 00z esszTas nribsnox. GIES= lo P O -1 ANOROILLERY mousalui, SPARKLING MUSCATEL, • MUNK & 00. 1 8, TERZBNAY, _ _ CABINET. In Mors and Damao by JOHN H. EMU% . 78 Wicket atreet, 020 MOWRY WOOD ! !-A SUPERIOR LOT _U just yeeelyed i sad for polo In quantities to snit w ailer; by a mans X. W/LIELEIL Also, OAR AND PINE constantly on hFod at the leweetepricee. . putair , BIBLES , from to l % x..tr..tintiliiiil66ll6l7 bounds winten on gond limier,. .4, 4 * if y i wßmEnim at • n,ywirllVEl Cheap Cootefve..: CitIMBVIRWES SPLENDID LOT - .11U4 octlo 'OR a superior and ~9heap TABLE of SALAD niaLLKIVB DElle . HE Fruit tiro,viefiV Eandbpok—by Tweattua—wadou4 utitretsil Embal - , 110811 0 11/101 BOkstore- . SPERM CA.NDLESak; lar g e ,smy . ~.., just received by sepia WM. poor.. & co?.. V ELLEF S DRUG STORE is the place to Mad the test atiertment of Porte Nounaleit. 1D CONSlntitht 111911 MIA GALL TOM Team WINTER BOWL " • , Ur Orders loft at my house, in Wind street, near lriftk; or at Brubaker's, North street; J. L. Spool's, Market Sinus; •Wm. Bostick's, corner of Second and Booth streets, exelJelin Lingle's, Second sad Mulberry atieets, will receive prompt alto/ALM. jylB4loni F 1 8 11 1 1 1 DOCE. - 72., & CO. 4 ,.. it k. . . . • . • N., --- - ' -----,-'' i ' 1 11. '''-' -•-..- . . :: • , ._ . • . . • . • ,-- . - • . ! • :r! • •+ , . i:,. - . . .. ,--Tl , - - !-- , -,_-__z.:--.. , , _iiro: . . -_-• ,:--;......_,,,,, • . • • . , . . •. i . . . . . ~ 1 1 •-' i'. -. rt o ... .] , • ~ tl . n.e._ n , ~.11. •:, ~, :,.. •! ~.:• !...__l,. _,. • ). _• P . . . !if . . . . • . ... . . . „ . . . , . . . . .. . ' . ' ' - . . , • , . ' . . ....... . . .. • . ... • . . • .., --' 'll IT ..t.... VOL..3.'' toed. mO T 4 - E ptr t 5 L I c • JOHN TILL'S C o A $0175r8 SECOND ON'ENDT, .13ELOW !PRATT'S 11.0e1.:1 . 1410 EIL L, Where he has Constantly on hand - , LYIENNS vAFLDT BROKEN, Rao, OTOVII AND NUT COAL. - • ALso,' WLLIMSBARRE STRAILBOAT, BROKEN, STOTIO AND NUT COAL, ALL OF THE BEST QUALITY. It will be delivered to bonsumerd dein, and MI weight warreaited C. Q A ..L •C , A. , • - ONLY YARD IN TOTN` THAT Dtr,zrzfits COAL 'BY TEIIO • P A TENT WEIGH GARTI3I w• /SI • • for every bandy to get In tildr sniplY of - Coal fir thir winter—ireightid tlioitt glom by tberriginit Ip;begi ..• . • Carts. The accuracy of thole Cary so one clisyuces,:tue4 they never get out of order, u is frequently . 4Le CM, of the Platform . Scales beoldiul,;the :ennsumer has the witial!aurt et probing the Tweight of, Inn 90afit bit I haVia large Imlay , of Qoal on bond , CP7BIN : S nS of • S. 31,00'SOrmisirAgii • iix*iiAl4.4i • 40 " WUJOISBAILRW : : . r go; I ; BITUMINOUS BROATi TOP ' • An Opal itest - gisity and delivered fief froM all impMitiee, it the - bidet! rates, by the ixitA os car load, single, half or third of Cons, and by the bushel. • JAMBS M. munumi. ' Harrisburg, September Sit. 1880.—sep28 T 0 W NI PA TENT WXL H CARTS For the convenience MY numerous up town . custom. ors, I have established, in connection with my old yard, *Branch Onal Yard opposite North street, in a line - with the Pennsylvania canal r havingthe office formerly Isom. pied by Mr . R. Barris, where consumers of Coal in that vicinity and VerbeketoWn'tan .receive their Coal by the • • P ATE NT- W RIO El CARY WITHOUT EXTRA 'CHARGE FOR HAULING, And in any quantity they may desire, as low as can be purchased anywhere. FIVE TM OMANI) TONS. COAL 6N HAND,. Of LYKENS VALLEY and WIUCEPARRE, all sizes. Er- Willing to maintain fair .pticiS, but unwilling to be undersold bi• any pattses. Mr AM Coal forked up and delivered clean and free from all impurities, and: the hest article mined. ,e.r...-s-.-e.oinr‘sracorthet•Fard - wiii be piomptlylilled, • nd all Coal delivered by the Patent Weigh Casts. Coal; sold. by Boat, Car load, single, half or ;third of tons, and by the bushel. • • " • .7..kilES 'H. WHEELER. , Harrisburg, October 13, 1860.---octls LYIKENS VALLEY NUT COAL=- or Sale AT TWO DOLLARS PAR TON. 11Zr Ali Coal dolivereel by PATENT W61104.11= . • • . . . lAMBS M. WILEELNR. 1 1 1:r :Ooaldeliverea. limaboth yards. Matted. , 1int11113074D 9 ,g, • HELMBOLD'S .HELMBOLD'S HELMBOLD'S HELMBOLD'S HELMBOLD'S HELMBOLD'S' HELMBOLD'S HELMBOLD'S HELMBOLD'S lIELMBOLEPs '.HELMBOLD'S HELMBOLD'S • • HELMBOLD'S • .Extriet Bache, Extract Raclin; , Extract Bruhn, Extract Extract Bnchn i Extesot Emilie; - Extract Buda', Retract baidoe, • . Extract .Bocine, ,:Extract ; Backlit, Extract 'Baohti, Extract Bitishie, Extract Bailin.' Extract Dunn - , FOR SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS. FOR SECRET AND DELItAIT DISORDERS, ED R SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS. FOR SECRET AND DELICATII'DISORDERS. FOR SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS. FOR SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS, FOR-SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDER'S. A Poinitive'vuld Specific Remedy. A Pesitiie and Specific Remedy. A Positive and Specific ReModr A Positive and Elpedifi6 Momedy. ' A PeilitiTti foC4 Specific - Remedy, A Positive and Specific :Remedy. A Positive.and Specific Remedy. FOR DISEASES OF TEE' BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY, BLADDER, QR4VEL, KIDNEYS,, DROPSY ' BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY BLADDER; GRAVEL; KIDNEYS, DROPSY , , BLADDER, GRAVEL, • KIDNEYS , .. DROPSY,. BLADDER, .GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY' BLADDER, GRAVEL, SIDNEY; DROPSY, °EGAN'S. WEAKNESS, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, ORGANIC -WEAKNESS, ORGAN'S :WEAKNESS; ORGANICEAKNESS, • ' • MUNI° WEAKNESS, Am' nit Diseases of SAS.isal Organs, And all Diseases of Sexual Orgaxs, . 'And all Diseases of Sexual °tease, • Aid :ail 'Diseases of Sexual Organs, And ail Diseases of Sexual Organs, aind all Diseases of AMMO FRO Sezot le a Organs, Excesses, Exposures; end impradenoles in Life. Waimea, Expunires, sad ImprudeneleS in Life.. .Itreemes, Exposures, and Imprudeneles in Life. liroataled,Expouree, 'end Impadaneles hi' Life. . Bacatetses, Exposures, ane , Imimidanecies in Life. Excesses, Exposures, and Impradenoieof in: Life. Prom whatever cause originating; end whether eaiatiaCia MAIM ,OR MALE: " ' • Pileaska - ; taheinO more Tills I' TlioY ao 9 1 ,91 1 ror (complaints ineident'te the dim. • . Januar - BMW ? • Rithict !Whit lea ,liftlioine which . 11 per fectly pleasant 121 its • • , TAsTR AND ODOR, lint immediate in its =ties, githig Health end Vier to the Tram, Venni' CO - the PAM "Cheek, au restoring the patient to spirted Meteor' • ANA.PTIRITY 'ilehebOblve' Zetraiit Bache. in lingered swotting to Rharmeey 'Chili**, am ii preaeribed 'and need by JTORMUST SMINIINT PHYSICIANS. Detexne,longer., Prenre the remedy epee. Pries gl-per nettle; or efelor'illi6: - ' li.pot,lo# tlouth Tenth etFeet, Phihnlelphis. i • BSWASS OF lficIWQ11101i1) Dial= T topelin Off . their oin or ether articles of 10;13$17 oereputstion atteintedy '" ' ' • BIELMBOLDII jiI.TRAOT Man, .The• Aniginal end only ftennine. We emirs to ran on " • Arsatr Or 6 'Mt ARTICLE I molests worthleei —is mold at nenehlese rate" and oom mionions, conneinentlY Ming a much better profit. WS MINT COMPETITION I _ _ _ Ask OF . • Etuipi,omo RSTRLOT BMW. Tithe Ito eike#. BoIitbiZORNWYWIN,. Druggiot, comer of Market and Becon4 streets Harriebnrg. ADD pRi7OGISS EVERYWHERE. nol4 'WOW: EXTOACTS! E.TT.RAOTS! WOODEWORTH BTINNZIOB SUPERIOR FLAVORING EXTRACTS OF BITTER ALMOND. • NNOTANINE PINE APPLE sTaAw.bzusv, ROSA, LEMON Am) VANILLA, Int recelyed and ter rile br ie22 win. DOOR. 75., & CO. HARRISBURG PA., TUESDAY . , FEBRUARY 12; 186 : 1. V d fZDL 41 TUESDAY PiIORNUM. F•B: is6l. PERSONAL HISTORY OF LORD BACON A E :London reviewer justly remarks that "the most characteristic tendency of literary and. historical investigation at the present day hi to throw doubts ,upon opinions of time honored currency, and, to show that the traditional :ter-. :dint upon some of the famous ,personages and remarkable events of the poet is essentially erreneous.and in support. of. this assertion he alludes ' to 'Grote's "new and iteprovell views of Clean and the 8,00114,7 Carlyle's and "1114-. cauley's laudations of Cromwell, aid Fronde!tt' defence. of Henry There cannot be a more harmless, even if it be a mistaken ten dency: It is eomforting to think of the art*, • men of the earth—of the grand names a, his, . tory, of literature or of art, as free.from ,the lower vices and frailties , of ordinary minds. With, the exception of thous. whose, 0 4 1 7 * claiM to the. memory, or posterity has, been. their crime, the Waves of time =gradually washout . the darker shades in their characters. 14hake,_ spears Was mortal and , possessed a• Mortal's, faults, but who can venture ta :dieser* thein now ; .? It would be , like trying, to look with naked eye at the noon-day sun to see- its dark, spots... Milton committed errors, bit:how fel' can tell what they were ? FutprityWill . ProbaL bly do the' Same good service for the great men of modern times ,B,yron's heartleseness 'and littleness, lcapoleanfo petty raeannesees Hultir bui4Vo. ullgrfiltcfa. b ;Didier tore, mfil4. birforiot44, and 9 1 K *cli'gree4Sels rat941 1 1 ,, ,i .l' • • 1, 0T4 , Bacon 's, reputat io n th'lMgh tar nished, has' at last, found an earnest and indus trious defender. , The illustrious: . philosopher , hair been long accused of ingratitUder and , treachery toward the Earl of Essei, his friend' and benefactor, and- Macaulayenceopting the , received- tradition reviiid:ed. With: .his peculiar trenchant! vigor,. and Campbell a *plume to uphol d , the same aeutone.• 'Against both of thee* : writers, , _tied against OW, 'received judgment of th e reading w orld,lSr. W. Hepworth Dixon - arrays Irimecifiand'eendi ' t o the public hie- defence. of liord ; Bacon l in these "Personal, Mettioirsi", dug out . of , unpub.. belied manuscripts, and certainly eVincing.the untiring, industry, of the writerv, Mr. DitiOn, too,, has a style peculiar to halite no means original. It itia sort, o_ i f raise imi tation of , Buskin and ,Caliyit:, Aire following extracts , t . giging the: beet idea, of Dixon's style, while, however we abstain from selecting those few which contain inelSgarteiee . of thought and expression unworthy eo,expe; 'juiced a writer. , • ,` JOHN TILL “Sweet to the eye and to the heart is the face of Francis Bacon as a child. Born among the courtly, glories of York Aimee, nursed on the , green slopes and in the leafy woods of Gorham: burg; now playing with the daisies and' for-. get-me-Hots, now with the mace and nab One day culling posieewith the gardener or coursing, after the pigeons, (which he liked, particularly, in a pie,) the next day paying hie pretty- woe compliments to the Queen ; he grows up into his teens; a grave, yet sunny boy ; on this side of his mind in love with nature, on-that side in love with art. Every tale told of this plaything of the court wins on the inagination ' whether he hunts the echo in St. James Park, or eyes the juggler and detects his trick, or lisps wise saws to the Queen and becomes her young Lord Keeper of ten. Frail in health, as the sons of old men Mostly are,•his r lather's gout and stone, of which he will feet the twinge and fire to his dying day, only chain him to his garden or his desk. When thirteen yeare of age he goes to read booka under Whitgift, at Cambridge; when sixteen, to read men under . Paulett in France. If he is young, he is still more sage. A. native grace of soul keeps off from him the rust of his' cloister no lass than the stain of the world.. As Cambridge fails to du hint. into Broughton, Paris and Poicters fail to melt him into Mont joy. The perils 'eacapes are. grave; the' three years spent under Whitgift's hard, cold eye being no less full of intellectual snares than are the three years . spent in. •the voluptuous court of Henri Trois among:the dames and courtiers of France; ofi moral snares.. In the nol7 train of Sir Atnias Faulett he.rides at - seventeen with: that throng of nobles who attend the. Kin g. and Queen-Mother down to Blois, to:Tours; to Poiotiers ; mixes with the fair Women on whose bright eyes the Queen. relies for her success, even more than on. Cher • regiments • and fleets ; glides in and through the hostile camps, ob serves, the Catholic and Huguenot intrigues, and sees the great men of either court make love and war. But Lady Paulett, kind to him as a' mother, watches over his steps with care and 145.0-0, kindness he remembers and repays to the good lady and to her kin in later years. For him the d'Angelles sang their songs, the Tosseuses twine their curls in vain." "No one lapse is known to have blurred the beauty of his youth. No rush of mad young blood over drives him into brawls. •To men of less temper and generosity than his own—to Devereaux:and Montjoy, to Peroy, and 'fere, to . Sackville and Bruce—he leaves the glory of Calais sands and.Marylebone Park.. If he be Weak on the score of dress and pomp ; if he dote Him yeung girl on flowers, on scents, on gay eolora,on,the trappings of shores, the ins and outs of' garden, the furniture of. a. room; he. neither drinks nor gamos,, nor runs-wild and looie in love. Armed, with the most : winning, ways, the most glean Bp,at court, he hurts no. ,husbaad'a. P 0099; Ato , dr.sgo no womaa'ausme into thejnire. 110 seeks•nO tietorice iike those of Esse; ; he z hurneno:shame like Raleigh into the ,Oheek of. one,he joved. No Lady,• Rich, as in Sydney's immortal line, had cause ' • *ors° Mush alien he is,al.7 When the passions fan out moat men, poetry flowers out in him. .Old whmi aohild, he seems to grow younger se he. grows ;in :years.' Yet with all .his wisdom he is: not too wise to he A. dreainor Osamu; for .while. busy with 'his boas, in Parie ,he gives ear, to a ghostly intima tion of his : father's: death. . All hie _pores lie •open to extinud i A mur& ~liirds and flowers delight hit sySi, pulse lisats quick at the sight. of a fine f horee,,.s ship in full Alan, a soft sweep ,of..eouptry;' everything iholy, innocent and gay nots,on kis Spirits,like wino on a strong. mates blood s Joyoull, hopeful, swift. to do PIA, Slew to Quit*. evil, he knees on. everyone. who meets. him sewing of friendliness, of pease• and power. The serenity ,of his spirit keeps; his intellect , bright, Ids affections warm ; and just as he had left, the halls of Trinity with his mind nnwarped; so . her now, when duty calls troln France, quits the galleries of the Louvre and St. 'Cloud with his morals pure." gliow he &piastre in outward grace and as pect Among theae courtly , apd marshal con tempararies, the miniature by Hilyard helps us to conceive. Slight in build, rosy and round in flesh, tight in a sumptuons suit ; head well-Aet, met and framed in a thick sterOlted fence of frill; a bloom ; or, study and of travel on the f&t, girlish face, which. looks far younger than his years ;• the hat and• feather tossed aide from the broad white brow,,wror whidt BACON'S BOT4OOD. BACON'S ;YOUTH. „?.ERSONAL ,APPEARANCP ,OF BAO,01.! crisps and curls a mane of dark; soft hair; an English nose, firm, open, straight ; mouth delicate and small-'—a lady's or a jester's mouth thousand pranks and humors, quibbles, whims and laughters lurktng in its twinkling, tremidous•liies ; such is Erandit Bacon at the age of twenty-fours . ' , ,BAOON IN LOTH. "More than a year ago, in writing to his . eouein.Cecil, Bacon mentioned his hiving found si handsonie maiden to his mind. She loved him and he loved her. But her mother, a wid ow and again a wife, having made two good matches for herself. has set' her heart on ma-• king great alliances for her girls.: • In.part to please her, still. more:to ,glorify his bride, Ba con waits and toils that he may lay at her feet a settled fortune and a' more splendid name.' Thelamily into which—when he can steal an hour from the courts of law and , the pursuits of science—he goes a courting, and in which he is'new v an accepted lover, consists of four girls, %heir pretty mother and a bold, handsome, heady stepfather of fifty-six a group of per sons notable from their private stories, and of romantic interest from their loves and feuds with the philosopher,' and from the part they must beveled in shaping his views a the feli cities and- .of :domestic life..: The four young girls are the-I:orphan:daughters of Benedict Barnham, ;unbent of Cheapside and alderman 'of his ward ; - an honest fellow, who gave his'wife a good lift in the w : Orld, and left his Children •to take theirehatioes • of 'rising arilolig men who, with :all: their sins, are never blind to the merits of: women blessed With youthOovelineas and wealth. Alice: is the first fail ,in love; .but the three. hoydens -who now romp around her, and . perhaps.get many a hug "and kiss from her' famous` lover, :au_ soon be in their turniffolloweiller their ' bl ight' eyes and brighter gold. Elizabeth' will marry Mar . trin-Touchet, earl ofoCastlehe.ven, that misera ble , valtalx who,: whewhis first young wife, the hoyden of to-day, is-in her grave, wilt expiate "On the Week the fettles& crime .ever charged •agaiast tin English peer: The two - little things new playing it' Aliee'S knee will 'become in due time `LadysConitable• and Lady' Soames." • - 4avores wain:and. ' ' “The•aay fe named the lath or May. By help of Sir Dudley Carleton we may look upon the : pleasan4 scene, upou• the .pretty bride, the jewel- knight, the romping girls and the merry company, as through , a. ; glass. Feathers and lace light up the"rooms' 'm the Strand. 'Cecil - has been warmly' engaged tb' come - over from Salisbury House.:: Three °Chia gentlemen; Sir Walter Cope, Sir; aptist Hicks and . Sir Hugh Beeeion, hard drinkers and men about town strut over in his stead, flaunting in their sword; And plumee yet' the prodigal bridegroom, in hid tastes as in his genius, clad in a suit of Geneeset Vel v et;-Purple from cap to shoe, outbrarea them. all. The bride, too; is richly dight ; her whole; dowry seeming to be piled upon her in cloth of silver and ornaments of gold. The wedding rite is performed at St- Maulebone 01401, tire Miles from the Strand, among the lanes and suburbs winding towards the foot of Hampstead Hill. Who that is blessed with any share of sympathy or poetry cannot see how that glad and shining party ride to the rural church on that sunny 10th of May? how Ote girls will laugh and Sir John wllljoke ' as they wind through lanes now white with the thorn and the blootn of pears; how the brides maids scatter rosemary and the groomsmen struggle for the kiss. Who cannot •imagine that dinner in the Strand, though the , tiny hUnchback Earl of Salisbury has not come over to Sir John's lodging to taste the cheer or kiss the bride? We knew that the wit is good, for Bacon is there ; we may trust Sir John for the quality of his wine." LADY ANN.'S Abvioz 'TO HZR SON. "Like the ways of all deep dreamers, his habits are odd, and vex Lady Ann's affectionate and methodical heart. The boy sits up late of nights, drinks his ale-posset to make him sleep, starts out of bed 'ere it is light, or may be, as the whimsy takes him, lolls and dreams till noon, musing, says the good . lady with loving pity, on—she-knows not what!. Her Own found of duty lies in saying her morning and evening prayers, in hearing nine or ten sermons in the week, in caring for her kitchen and hen roost., in physicking herself, her maids and her tenants, in making, the rascals who would cheat her pay their rent, and in loving and counselling her two carolosi boys. Dear, admirable soul I- How human and how humorous, toe, the ;picture of .this good mother,, warm in • her affections, sbolding for us our broadt owed awful Vern lam , 56 'Grace and healt h. J.Jaitt; your increase in amending lam glad. God- continue it every way. When you cease of your prescribed diet, you had need, I think, to be very wary both of your sudden change of quantity and of season of your feeding, specially suppers late or full; . procure rest in convenient time, it helpeth mita to digestion. I verily think your broth er's weak stomach to digest bath been much caused and confirmed by untimely going to bed and then musing, I know not what, when he should sleep, :and then, in consequence, by late rising and long lying in bed, whereby his men are made slothful and• himself continually sickly. But my sons haste not to hearken to their mother's goed,eounsel in time to prevent. The Lord, our , heavenly Father heal and bless you both, as His sons inehrist Jesus.' , " THE. MOTHER AND SISTIGNS OF EIDDLIC. "As LetticeKmollys,, as Countess of Essex, as Countess of 'L:eiceiter, as wife of Sir Chris topher Blount, this mother of the Earl has been a barb in Elizaheth's Bide' for thirty years.— Married as a girl to anoble husband, she gave his honor to a eednocr; and there is reason to fear she gave her consent to, the . taking of his life. While Deveregx,,,lived she deceived the Queen by a seandalovs amour, and. after his death by a clandestine marriage with the Earl Of - Limiter. While Dudley 'lived she wallowed in lieetttimia love with Christopher 13/ount,,his . .groom: of the, horse.. When her Second. husband- expired, in agonies at Corn bury,,neta gallop from the ,place • in which Amy Robsart died, she again mortified the ,Clueen by a -seerat 'union with her seduCer, Blount.' " Her children riot in the same vices. Dim himself, with his, ing of favorites,. is not more prodigateihan lt*sigteir Lady Rich. In early . youth Penelope RiCh WEB the mistress of SY4- 'Ley, 'whose stolen love for her pictured in his most voluptuous verse. Sydney is' Astro? phel, Penelope, Stella. Since Sydnef: await she , has lived in shamileSo alluitery with Lord Moutio.Y, ihouil , her husband, Lord Rich, is poll eilive. Her sister Dorothy, after wedding one .husband, secretly and against the canon, Las now. ,married perey, the wizard Earl of N dog r . thumberland, whom she leads the life of 6 Save in the Suffolk branch of the Rewards, it would not be easy to find out of Italian story a group ictf women so detestable as the mother and sisters of the Earl." A MIT AT LORD CAMPBELL. "Of all the sins against Francis Bacon, that of Lord 'Campbell is the last and worstal wish to speak with respect of so bold and great a man,as our present Lord Chancellor. He is one who has swept up the slope of fame by. native power of heart and. brain; in the proud course of his life, from the Temple to the peer age, from the reporters' gallery to-the woolsack, I admire the track of a man of genius—brave, circumspect, tenacious, strong ; one not to be put down, not to be set aside ; an example to men of letters and men of law. But the more highly f rank Lord CamPbell's genius, the more I feel drawn - to regret his haste. In such a case as the trial of Bacon's, fame be was bound to .take pains ;to sift , every lie to its root;-to stay his condemning pen till he had Satisfied his mind that in passing sentence of infamy he was- right, beyond the risk 'of appeal. A states man • and law-reformer himself, he ought to have felt more sympathy for the just fame of a statesman and law-reformer than he has shown. Not that Lord Campbell finds fault with Bacon where he speakeby his own lights. Indeed, there he is just. . He haeno words too warm for Bacon's reforms as al lawyer, for his plans as a minister, for his rules as e chanceller.-- When Lord ampbell knows his subject at first hand, his praise of his hero rings out cloak and loud. But there is much in the life of Bacon which he does not know. He has not given rhimt3elttiate teen and winnow. Like an easy magistrate on the bench, he has taken the pleas for facts; That is his fault, and in such a man it is-every grave fault." THE'BIG TREE.Y - 0;F CALIFORNIA. We find in a late nuber of the. Boston Tran script the mest . graphic account yet written of the grove of mighty trees at Mariposa, Califor nia- ,We quote the moat striking passages: The flowers are plenteous along all the stead ily rising trail. Here and there we must pause before" one of the seductive'sugar pines, which 'looks' Bolan of melody tfiat ' it seems as if the first breeze that brushes it would make it break forth into a .Mozartish song. * * What if we should meet a grizzly ,on a flowery bank. under one of the graceful sugar pines ? While we . were discussing this' Possibility, we cattle uponfresh -traces of n very large one. I was ; eager to get a glimpse of him,.but the 'inajority, of the company, preyed that they Might not see one of the shaggy:monsters, and their pra,yer was aneivered. • Thereare two large groves of the mammoth • trees in California.. ' The one which is usually vi sited is in Calaveras county. n contains hardly a third as many trees as the Mariposa Cluster which - we were in' search of in this letter; but it is much more easy of access. It covers' about as, much space as the Common, and-a : good carriage road leads to the heart of it. At the portal of the , grove stand a pair of sentinels, twenty-five" feet' apart, which are sixty feet in circumference and three hundred feet high.! They are well 'named the "Two . Guardsmen." • Whata pity, for Dumas' sake, that there is not one more? Pasting these warders, you drive up to a hotel, and find the grounds trimmed up'and the trees named • and labelled for guests. Some of the labels are of gilt, letters on marble, we are told, and 'are tastefully inlaid in the bark from six to twen ty feet above the ground. The "Hercules" in this group is ninety-three feet in circumfer ence. The "California," seventy-thiee feet in circuit, shoot's up straight is an arrow three hukdred and ten feet. "Uncle Tom's Cabin," is a tree which has been burnt out ; it is eigh ty-three feet in circumference,: and will lodge twenty persons. The "Mother of the Forest" is three hundted and twenty-seven feet high, and nearly eighty feet in girth. * * * One , of these Calaveras reee, three hundred feethigh, was cut down a few years ago, eight feet from the graund. Part of the trunk is used as a bowling alley, and the stump, twenty-five feet in diameter, covered with a canopy of green boughs, is now' a dancing.saloen. To cut it down, pump au gurs were . used from either side, until the tree was complelely severed from the base. Only by driving in large wedged with immense bat• teringrains, could its equilibrium be disturbed sufficiently to make it top-heavy. Five men were at.work twenty-five days in this wretch ed drudgery of destruction. The Mariposa grove stands as the Creator has fashioned it, unprofaned except by fire, which-long before the advent of Saxon white men, had charred the bum of the larger por tion of the stalwart trees. We rode on for an hour, climbing all the time, till we reached a forte, planted five thousand feet above the sea. This, in New England, is the height of Mt. Madison, where not a shrub can grow. Riding on a few rods, through ordinary ever greens with dark stems, we at last catch a : glimpse of a strange color in,the forest. It is a tree in the distance, of a light cinnamon hue. We ride nearer and nearer, seeing others of the same 'complexion starting out in the most im pressive contrast with the sombre columns of the wilderness. We are now in the grove of ' the . Titans. The bark has a right leonine ef fect on the eye. We single out one of them for a first acquaintance, and soon dismount at its root. I must confess that my own feelings, as I first scanned it, and let the eye roam up its tawny pillar, was of intense disappointment. But then I said to myself this is one of the striplings of the Anak brood—only a small af fair of some forty feet in girth. I took out the measuring line,.fasteued it to the trunk with a knife, and walked around, unwinding it as I went. The line. was seventy-five. feet long. I came to the end of the line before completing the circuit. Nine feet more were needed_ I bad dismounted before a structure eighty-four feet in circumference and nearly three hundred feet high, : and I should not hare , guessed that it mould measure more than fifteen feet through, It did not look to me twice as large as the Big Elm on the Common, although that is only eigh teen feet in circumference, and this was twen ty-eight in diameter. During the day I bad seen a dozen: sugar pines which appeared to be, far more lofty. The next tone we measured was 89 feet and 2 inches in girth ; the third was 90 feet. There are ''nearly three 'times as many of the giant species in the grove as in the Calaveras clus ter. Divided into two groups, there are 650 of them within a spate of a mile and three; quarters. Colonel, Warren, the faithful and self,sacrifithng friend of agricultural interests in this State, proprietor and editor of the Cal ifornia F armer , measured the principal trees of one group on this ridge, some three years ago, and found one of 102 feet, two of 100 feet, one bf 97, one of 92, one of 82, one of 80, two of 77, three of 76, aryl gradually diminish btu - more than a hundred trees were on his list that measured ,fifty feet and upwards in circumference. Tikie crowd of majestic forms explains the disappointment in first entering the grate.' The general scale is too immense. Half a dozen of the largest trees spaced half a milea part, and preperly set off by trees of six and eight feet in girth, would shake the most vol. atile mind with awe. We ought to see the "Fountain Tree" of the Mariposa grove, a. hundred and two feet in circuit, rising near the Bunker Hill Monument, and bearing up a crown eighty feet above it, to feel the marvel of its bulk and vitality. Think of that monument as a living structure. Conceive it as having grown trona a granite seed, whose outpouring life absorbed from the, earth, and.attracted from the winds fine grau.- its dust, to be slowly compacted, by internal and unerring' masonry, into solid squares, of its strength and its tapering symmetry. work far more marvellous than this, has been PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING, lIIINDAYO RICIIIIIIIII4 , BY O. BARRETT & CO Tim DAILY PATRIOT Alp trNIOX will be ',erred to It lieribellrillfillinglifthlei Borough for wixeigWve PIIIIIIIIIEX payable to the•Qarrier. DQail robecribera,poos DOI. LARK NCR itortrit. • Vas Witintr will be pnbliihed as heretofore, lend• weekly during the session of the Legislature, Ma 0110. a Week the remainder ofihe Teat, for two doiktra in it. Vance, or throe detiarvat the expirationof the year. Conneeteil with this&fabliau:Rent is an entenlitin JOE OFFIOB, containing a variety of plain and fintibi type, nnegnallsdoby anyestablislunent intim interteret the State, for which the.patsoasp Of ,the public is NO. 138. wrought by each fragment' of it cone that toot . root five thousand feet on a ridge of the 'Sier ras, centuries ago, and - now is represented by an organism of thirty feet 'diameter. Indeed, it is quite probable that there have been a feir trees in both the Mariposa and Calaverna, groves, which have built their sublime .col umns out of the air, through the energy a single seed, in whose trunk Bunker Hill mon ument could have been inserted and : hidden,' while the stem would still spring: more than two hundred feet above its apex. Melte, • -rot' • the ruins of one now lie in the Mariposa - grove,_ which was forty feet in diameter, and must have towered more than four hundred feet high. FAITH AND FIDELITY.—A short time ago dog, well known to the railway officials, from his fr j equent traveling with his master, presen ted himself at one of the stations on the Fleet wood, Preston, and Longridge line. After looking round for some length of time amongst the passengers and in the carriages, just as the train was about to start be leaped into one of the compartments of a carriage, and laid him self down under the seat. Arriving at Long;• ridge, he Made another survey of the paseen: gers, and after waiting until the station had been cleared, he went into the Italitiay Station Hotel, searched all the places on the ground= door, then went and made& tour of inspeation over the adjoining grounds ; but, being &pint rently unsuccessful, trotted back Co the train - and took his old position just as it morel On reaching the station from which he had first started, he again looked round as before, and took his departure. It seemed that he now proceeded to the General Railway Station at Preston, and after repeating the looking-around performance, placed himself under one of the seats in a train whit* be had singled out - of the many that are constantly popping in and ; Out, and in due time arrived in .Liverpool. Re now visited a few plucks . where> he had been before with his master, of whom, as it after- : ward's appeared he was in search. Of his ad,' ventures in Liverpool little is known; but he remained all night, and visited. Preaton again early the next morning. Still not Sliding hie missing master, he for the fourth time "took the traie—thie time, however, to .Lancaste; . and Carlisle, at which latter place the sagacit y and faithfulness of the animal, as weft as the perseverence and tact he displayed lir prose; outing his search, were re warded : Wing his master. Their joy at meeting was mutual. —English paper." FROST Mune .--I was once belated in Caned* on a fine winter day,. and was riding -over the hard snow on the-margin of a wide lake, when the most faint and mournful wail, that Gould break a solemn silence seemed to •pass through me like a dream. I stopped my horse and lie tened. For some time 'I could not satisfy my self whether the music was in the air or in my own brain. I thought of the pine forest which was not far off, but the tone was not harp-like, and there was not a breath of wind, Then it swelled and approached ; and then it seemed to be miles away in a moment; and again it moaned —as if under my very feet. It was, in fact, al most under my feet. It. was the voice of the winds imprisoned under the pall of ice suddenly cast over them by the peremptory power of the frost. Nobody there had made- air -holes, for the place was a wilderness; and there was no escape for the winds, which must moan on till the spring warmth should release them. They were fastened down in silence, but they would come out with an explosian when, in same still night, after a warm spring day, the ice would MOW up and make a crash gfift a mallet' from shore to shore. So I was told at my- host's that evening, where I arrived with something of -the sensation of a haunted man. It had been some time before the true idea struckme, and meanwhile the rising and failing moan made my very heart thrill again.—Onee a Week. A TERRIBLE SIIICIDE.—The most intense excitement was created among the citizens in the vicinity of No. 82 Pleasant street, yeeter-. day morning, by the frantic cries 9f a woman whose husband had committed suicide, during a brief absence on her part, and while holding their child in his arms. The particulars of this heartrending affair, as gathered by our reporter during the examination before thi Coroner, are as follows: Thomas Neander, the suicide, was a mechanic, of exemplary habits, with the exception that occasionally he would indulge in the use of liquors, and during . that period was unfitted for.business. A few days ago he left his employment and spent the time. in drink. On Wednesday he got the impres sion that some one had been guilty of stealing and that he was falsely accused. This infatn , abort took possession of his mind, and haunted him during his hours of waking and sleeping, until yesterday about 7 o'clock, he became so uncontrollable that his wife stepped out of the room to get some neighbor to stay with her.— She was absent not over fire minutes, and when she returned her husband was lying on the floor with a child in his arms, mad. his throat severed from ear to ear. As she approached him he moved hie hand and instantly mired, so thoroughly .had the work been done. A razor was lying on the floor by his side. Neander. was about forty years of age, in moderate circumstances, and lesiva a Wife and two children. —Cincinnati Gazelle, Feb, 9. A STOWE IN A. MENAGERIE.—On. Wednesday afternoon; the mammoth elephant Hannibal, now exhibiting in Van Amburgh'n menagerie in Philadelphia, suddenly lost his 'temper, and indulged in some Herculean antics, Which for a While diffused leirornmong the spectators. Hannibal, who had been lieenrely *harked by three legs and a tusk, lifted his,enormousirtfak and snapped• into ',teees an iron column.that sustained the roof. 'One Of lie Mow§ ar pioaching at the time, the •infuriate.d beast seized a east iron frame, used to' nupport a canopy, S and hurled it across the apartment as if it had„ been a hall. * Not content With this display of strength; the beast. dashed down a Wooden partition with ablow, and made Titania efforts to. release himself. His fastenings ran, dered such efforts abortive, and he was obliged to satisfy his rage' by rolling his enertnouS el ea and gnashing : his teeth. No keeper dare ap• preach him. MS , tawny skin and huge sinews were contorted during _the 'whole evening, and. th e strange noises that 'emanatedfrom, 'ld, trunk caused a curious crowd• to collect in front of the ixtenagerie. Added to , this, tho as - if in sympathy, proceeded to roar in tendert, and speedily the entire arena was the PM. 94" general affright and confusion. Tho - Olsphant weighs 12,000. pounds. His escape from his fastenings would have been a. disastrous event to surrounding parties. . • Cap Bms.—Notwithstanding the extraordi nary coldness of 'the season, and the presence of a coating of ice nearly a foot thick, some half dozen 'member - 0 of the London Bathing Club perform their ablutions every morning in the Serpentine. These heroin bathers • borrow 4 hatehet from the nearest, station of the Hu, mane Society, and cut away the itte . until they purpose, have a bath large enough for their and take a single dive, seal-like, beneath the freezing water, emerg ing therefrom with icicle, laden beards, and protesting, of muse that, "delightful," the plunge was