I,,, 'D..A. , ASUICHIIiIk , BDnea AND PROPRIETOR. AFFECTION'S PRAYER. ' ' aY F.. et. 111111 TE. Lae me be beloveds I sek'ao higher boon. .;01,I,o w i esi Both, front all thretore at awaits; Tt o , ;n o wild qtey be, slay ehus, two soca ' The mitilterAwer* Into , their beteg 41.0, ' . ' , Aild.they Ile oraelted thd *ail. Whim I Eke them have 01•4 Like them the mantle of manlike weer, 'Lit *hi be pawed, That on my grave theta fell the sleet wee— l d tl, That I was loved iI Awdriv4hop will liana my fete.— . ffrealraoe m thattde'er my tembeteme erre, Os t e and to the etrua relaw eniTette vs hissed& the quiet grave ; We , Tattle*, oh Earth, *lsm e ~ . Thy pumice and thy tem, As ow by me each am et thins departs* . .. ~.,1 t , Let this be proved, /lot thou but *Moist grief of human Imre,— Thet I was loW. ! Will there Alet gym; to , weep that peeve hod Po to sorrow that I een,qo mere-- thi'lone hearth no longer hears my tread, that nry dim Ando* &tine not the door, And it the kmal **or, evening's quiet hour, No Iticit of Mine sounds out Its ,welcome note : WW this bq proved Thse in loins ear those i tones will ever Boat— That C was loved I Ls me *loved : Fame, thy fleeting breath Might tome and limas be might suit thy mind • could forego thy fading mown, thy wreath, Aud in soma heart r sum, sweet :vibe: find; There in its deepest cell, I could contented dwell, Nor amigo. nor time, disturbing my repose And this be proved That aro no rester gift on man bottoms, Than to be beloved Let me be loved ; I ereie no monument, Ambition, front thy hand to guard toy dust— No bluing iscrelfwith wordy prairie besprent, Nti sculptured niche wherein to place my bust Het I would fain receive (What thou attest ever give) A livhig sluine whereon to carve no , name ; And this be proved That . i• the lapse of years I still could claim Vint I was loved ! Let me beloved : I &ea could teasel the earth, Corslid bid 'dusk Lite, a long, a last farewells Cosaltell thee, pastkr,,aad chronicle _thy Worth • Asti to the yartraieg grave thy virtues tell Then could my geed soar, On edam, untried before, Mitred* latiodieldepsaa,dad-rereetihalelight;- Se tau irem peva, Whet Li my *eked took its beirreitirard eight, wall wart loved! 'ffna CLostma Ysaa.—The year is fast drawing to a close—a mere breath of eter nity—abut in that breath, how many chang es hese been wrought! Spring, with all its buewatil hopes, has passed sway; and summer too, with all its green fieWs, and sunny :skies, and balmy winds. and gor geous landscapes, and soft, tender, dewy nvets, - has pissed away; and adtomn, with its cluaging hues, and falling leaves, is fast deparaimg, and soon we are to encounter rude winter, with all its icy terrors. In the domestic circle, or in the springs of ear affections. or in the deep wells of feel ing, have there been no changes in this brief respiration of Old Father Time ? Have we eonimitsedio the sanctuary of the dead a father's or a mother's remains, or stood by the grave of a sister or brother, wkile,tears of unavailing regret bedewed the fresh earth! Or, have we parted from some dear relative—some cherished com panion—who hes left the homestead to buffet with a cold and selfish world, from the promptine of ambition, or from the no mtssitiesefpuichinghitingsvanit have been no changes by death, or separa tion—vacant seats at the family board, and the absence of the kind look and friendly greeting of some loved one' s you approach the family hearth—what changes have been wrought by the capricious nod of fickle fu ture? • Are we not wiser, sadder, for the •experience the closing year has brought .Have we not discovered that most of our }pursuits are vain, and ourpleasures transi tory and illusive ? And. finally, have we sot found that we place too high an esti mate upoo,life, and upon those who figure In its busy . scenes! ' Rim TOIIO6 HOME HAPPY—Nature is wow industrious in adorning herdomains *Sid ;titan. to whom this bounty is addres sed. should obey the lesson. Let him, tou.:be imbastrious in adorning his domain hie nuking his home, the dwelling of his, wife awl etuldree, not only convenient sod atisfeirtable. but plemait. Let him, es far as ciostuustasees will permit. be in /tourism is minmundtrqg it with pleasant etejsese-wia deserts* it, within and with out. with things thatesike it agreeable and Miteetive. Let iodising make home the Aside ;brassiness/lad order—s *lee which brier .fiatisfsetion•to every Mame, and widths is absenee, thaws back the heart iby the fond. isssociationa eomkat and °wow& Lit this be done. and this sawed apse will Liman more sandy the seem of • ieurfelnese eid•peace. .IYe pireouNwho weld have your lehildrim hippy, be in duitsiom bring them twin Ike midst of apleasant, a cheerful, a n happy home. Waste not your,. time in accumulating j walth`Airiheni ; "but pleat in their. minds and iopu;li the way'pioPosed, the sited, 61'01%4'11W prosperity.' " 1 -Tmciiimurtsurd tiriuturost ow mitt ,antass..v4 neit r elan, freelpaired, sweet. - chant:Li well•arranged, And Well , iituated lionise, eateries a mural se well u s physi • eal imiluenek Omits inmates, and makes dm members of a fatally peseettbte and 41ousideratit.' of dm &defts and happiness • aitesehather ; the confection is obvious be - itterisa thesusie of mind thus produced and bablasof Unpaid fo r others and ro ithore high -er duller and obligations which no law. can , teaftMeir. : Oa the contrary, a filthy, squalid, ;Await* dwelling, rendered still more caresebed by its Noisome site, and in which vadivirof the decencies of life can be °beer -wed. tontributcs to make its unfortunate in illtabibints selfish, sensual and regardless of *bid ' , doling* of each other ; the constant liedUtagenee_of Such passions renders them t:trisklesa and brutal, and the transition is `inittikal to propensities and habits incom- . ritilik• with a respect for the property of atheniOr for the laws, Ir" tale verrold copy of a work, now ex neeromanoy, ie the following :04 1 0 ristifte:,--Queetion : How to raise a dove c 1 Answer : Contradict your *Vire, e.; . ;0/ ' 0 THE HOLY LAND. ' g II +WWI& *Men SSA 17. I t ommi=OW. • t It was on OUndsh W Muck NI got we were to enter the Holy Land, .1 had** too much engrossed by the *Ores winch, interested us at every step ia ADP' led, Arabia to think much of , this, beforehand ; but when I came forth from our teat in the dawn of this morning, 'there was, enough of novelty in die Boone orouod . ,mo to narks. tae [eel Oat 'We nere,abeet . I p,Atter upo n a new country, and anew set or uneramal and - I beouno eager to know at what hear we vete to-pom-therlimmsdavy-whioh sep. arsted the Newt from the Holy . Land- 7 the home of the old Faith from that of the new. We had followed.the track of Mo. sea from the spot where his mother placed the bulrush cradle to that on which he died ; for• to the East we should this morning see the mountains overhanging the Dead Sea ; and among them the sum mit of Nebo, whence he looked abroad o ver the Land of Promise; and now we were to enter upon the country of Jesus— certain to walk in His very footsteps, and see what He saw—perhaps this very day. I never remember feeling such an interest in every wild flower, in the outlines of all the hills, and the track of all the water courses. We had left the stony desert behind us, and were encamped in a nook of the hills, where the ground was green. and weeds grew thick. There wan grass under my bed in the tent: and when I came out this morning, the dew was heavy on the daises and butter-cups and flouring mallows which grew abundantly on the turf. Af ter breakfast, while the camels were load ing, I walked in the early sunshine on a strip of sand overlooking the valley, im pressing on my memory every feature of the landscape, and impatient of the rising ground to the north, which prevented my seeing which way we were going. . It was about ten o'clock when wtpassed the boun dary. It was impossible to tell the exact moment; but in a mile or two we felt that we were, indeed, - in - the native - lead of Christ, and probably on His very track. lie might have been here. His relations lived at Hebron; and duringthe first thir ty years of His life, lie had probably ted them, after meeting them at the feasts of Jakusallrm. He might have walked over the hills' which swelled higher and higher as we advanced. and rested beside some of the wells which yawned beside our track. At any rate, the trees and flow ers which we saw must have been familiar to His eyes ; the thorny acacia which be gan here to rise and spread from the stunt ed shrub of the desert to the dimensions of a tree ; the scarlet anemone—with us a precious garden flower—which here strew. ed the ground for acres around the cycla men, which pushed forth Its tufts of white and lilac blossoms from under many a stone and hush ; and the poppy, mallow, hem lock and wild hedge : I did not know be fore that these weed's 'Were as common here with us; and never before did the sight of them give me so much pleasure. It would have been pleasant any where to meet these familiar weeds, so far from home ; but the delight to-day was to think that He and His disciples wereas much accustom ed to them as ourselvea, and , that , a walk in the early spring was. in the pure coun. try, much the same thing to them as tons. But we soon came upon traces which showed that the expanse of pure country was small in those days, compared with what it is now. The towns must have been more thickly set here than in any other country I ever was in, Patches and masses of ruin showed themselves on ev ery hand, so near each other as to indicate that the land must have been people to a degree nowhere known. The first plow ing we had seen for many weeks, was a striking sight to us, a mere scratching of the soil at the foot of the hills ,but close by lay a heap of building stones, the remains of a town or village. Presently we saw a ' rude plow, with a single camel at work; and at hand was a long foundation wall, ' laid in a far distant century. On a height farther on were the remains of a large an cient building, with two broken pillars standing, marking the eight of the Amer of Scripture. Then, though there were wa ter-courses about every hill, wells began to abound ;r substantial. deep wells, built with trim with holes in it, toreettivethe covering stone; such wells as tell of a settlement beside them. We stopped early this day —partly because it was Sunday, and part ly because•our Arab guards who know nettling of our Sunday, found *convenient pike Mutat the -hills ionverrhat sheltered from the cold wihd ; and here, a very Air Mild from the boundary, the gentlemen of tht party discovered that wohad midtown in the midst of what was. onewi lame tow n, 'though ;the place appeared* , Mete mow tittet, like many that we hittpaesed. In the morning early 1.-went Out-to see for myself, sod-was astorihthed at the extent of the ruins which I •should not have ob- Served - while hittirelr riding by. .1r• Gould trees the lines offinindation walla fcir half a mile; and building steneei over4rOWn with grass, burin Weeks for a considers ble dittanoe round: The away avant' in the. limestonwrooksorew used tur beds for the goats, wereAbUndte be the valdttref large buildings. now gontr4o ruinin In at few minutes we trseed.thrse temples, or other truch:bnildingsibyrtheir overthrown pillars. Oar eyes being now Opened, we 1 this day sew more and more remains, till we we convinced that all she why from the' boundary to "Hebron, the land was thick est with towns, andawarming with inhab itants in the days of its glory—the day's when the Teacher went up and down in it, meditating the changes which must make it what 1 have seen it now. Its hills and streams; its skies and flowers, are to day What they were before his eyes; but where He saw towns on every height, and villa ges in every itook; there is now hardly left one stone upon another. A group of black Bedouin tents on the hill side, a camel or two brousing here, and a flock of goats there, are all that relieve the utter solitude where them was then an innumerable throng of men. , GETTYBBIIIIt, PA. -10111)14Y .EVENING; 0 . . ' As wa advanced, on the Monflay,:tits soil became richer, and field was joined to lieid, so that we began to look for the.lend distils, which • are here used. instead '.Of finites, to bound "field property. We en tered upon thickets and shrubberiee, where white roses, the cylclamen, co'nvolvulus. and fragrant herbs abounded. Soott,after noon, a new scene opened upon us. On our left hand lot a wide, daep basin among thehills. full of vineyards and olive grounds, where the stones from the soil wen! Wilt I up into fences, and in almost every plot rose a garden house. This was a suns sign that we were neara town ; and as we rounded the lOU on our right, we came tn . sight of the two eminences on which He broils Witt: s 'There stood The toviiNiWe John the Baptist was born, and here were the scenes which he must many a. time have talked of with hts cousin, in their boy ish meetings at Jerusalem for the feuds. Hebron, too, is only twenty miles from Bethlehem ; only twenty-eta from brass. tem, and in those days, when .a large a. mount of yearly travelling was a tsooleemn religious duty incumbent upon every ram: ily, it is scarcely possible butthatreladvsc must has often visited each other, and that Jesus and his parents must have come to Hebron. The cave of Machpelah is there; and the burial place of Abraham and his family was a sacred locality, and an object of pil grimage to Jews of all ages. As we in quired for it, mid walked round the inclo sure, which du!' Mohammedans now per. mit no Christian to enter, I could not but think who might have been before us in the same quest. [ro ■c CONTIXUE.D.I THE HABITS AND MANNERSIOF THE MEXICANS. "J. E. 1)." the well-known Monterey correspondent of the N. 0. Picayune, thus writes about the habits and manners of the people of the "magnanimous nation :" The Mexican is never without his blan ket, clinging to it with a singular and admi rable tenacity of purpose ; they are insep amble Vat iglA and day; . througllstmahine_ and storm, heat anir cultf;tiClings to 'his blanket as his main-stay through . life. If friends desert him, if his mistress prove false, if the world frowns and looks coition him, he can turn to his blanket and forget all beside in the warming embrace of his beat friend. "Charity covereth a multi tude of sins"--so does a Mexican blanket, fambien; it is a cover for , poverty and I I and - a - cloak for rascality. When the Mexican, exercising his national propensity for appropriating to himself other people's goods,"bags" anything,ltilaithful blanket hides it when he pp forth on some mut.- derouit errand with his deadly weapons in his girdle, his blanket conceals the keen, glittering steel ; it is his cloak by , day and bed by night. A pair of leather breeches, coarse cotton drawers and shirt, atilt leath er sandals and a sombrero, completis,s the Mexican. peasant's dress on ordinary cocoa sions ; his hair is generally somewhat long ' iu front, tangled and shaggy, and rarely ever any beard or whiskers are seen upon his face. The country is infected with vermin—the men are Silva with the most repulsive kind, while the heads of the stra. ineh suffer some, their kindness and assi duity to each other notwithstanding.— There is not a day in the-ealender that the females do not hunt each other's heads, and this is not confined to the lower class es by any means. I have seen monkeys in a menagerie perform the same opera tion, but really the Mexican • women • stp pear to derive quite as much satisfaction from the operation as the monkeys. lam not much addicted to alenderiurpeople and this is no slander. It is the misfortune of the country and the people that such a course is necessary. ' • In their'manner of living, as well as ev ery thing else, the Mexicans are far behind the age. Their &Wettings are all rude and and uncomfortable, from the cane jacale on the banks o' the Rio Grande to the rude, rough house of adobea in the cities. In the poorer houses you see generally one comfortable bed, k pile of skins, a few sad; dies and bridles, a couple of benches, sev eral cushions of the same material as their blanket., a crock with water, a meagre dis play of leather breeches, and i beggarly ac count of other wearing ap parel ; on' the walls a few rough daubs ef !gale and rude ornaments ; upon the gieuddfleiir It num ber of naked children, or sometimes partly clothed, and any quantity of rubbish.- You very rarely see a Mexican, either man or woman, sitting upon aehair or beach, even when they hate'Ahem, a sort of natural propensity inducing ; them se mast, if maybe alkwred the use of tbe word. They squat to eat,, to work, at .grinding core, washing,,cookleg, and almost _ every; thing else. A Mexican ranchero?* wife has but little rest, for they grind stfl the corn for the family consumption, ' They 4160 no French cook-b00k.,. and; live tery abnply, their principal articles of fdod being beans, corn, tortillas; boiled beef or goat, -soda• sort; of oils podridir of vegetables, every econpeuml abounding, With• grease; metres land tea, they rarely get, but use chocolate , instead. They eat but little' ie the morning or It noon...the lower. chides .I: meast-4heir -principal natal , being at night. In the mid -dle ofithe day, after. the 'midday' meal, ee -1 ery body take* -a siesta. In „a„,large town ,you may gothiough theatre-els from 12 o' i d elect till-Cia-tbe aftentoon and,fipd her* a door °pease& see scarcely a 'solitary period in the streets.. At the expira tion of that time -they grt to vespers. or say their prayers in their own domicile, and are on hand, no good or evil for the rest of the day. , A VETERAN ' S REP LT.---All officer ofits tinction and tried valor refused to accept, a challenge sent by a young officer, but re turned the following characteristic answer: "I fear not your sword; but the sword of my God's anger. I dare venture my life in a good cause, but cannot hazard my soul itt a bad one. I will charge up to the can non's mouth for the good of my country, but I want courage to storm hell." FORMATION of character depends on cir culuatanoes apparently .the man trivial. 'IMM4.PI,4 ND FREE'" WCOWIELL. , areluvir 1110111 . X. 0111411TIOX, ' The independeadenes dila Irish nation. , although fitture,is not distant. rig• eonspeassed lis.nomesity hive been dem. opstrated. The spirit of the people 46. They Cannot relapse.,_ 4_ 106; with si Reformed Par li ament ask* fairing aristroeracy, is no longer the E nt i tle d of the twelfth, the eliteenth, and oftile eighieentlibeateries. Political econ okay will milt& with Withal philosophy in enabling Ireland to retrievelter proaperl ty, end that can bb effected oaly,brallow inglier a distinct Legislators. We -may .not. doubt.lhat-the appalling distress of the. Irish_people bowed down the isiliarviiie unbending:of O'Con nell: Sorrow for , affliction* %hat be had, hoped in vain to avert, and that he could not alleviate or sooth,, brought on quick coming because long-procrastinated age.— O'Connell dies like Anchises, in a foreign land, winning'the favor of men and propi tiating Heaven-with prayers and sacrifices for the restoration of his people. What shall be liberauk among the bene factors of Mankind I We pease not a mo ment'to disperse the °alginates that follow ed him to the grave. They were but trib ute* to his greatness, yielded by ungener ous minds; for it is thus that Providence compels the unjust to honor virtue.. O'Connell left his mighty enterprise un finished I Su did the founder of the He brew State ; so did Cato ; tio did Hamp den ; so did Emmett and Fitzgerald. Will 'their epitaphs be less sublime by reason of of the long delay which intervene before they can be written ! The heroic man conceives great enterprises,' and labors to complete them. . - "Success he hopes, and' Fate he cannot fear." It is God who sets the limits to human life and the , bounds to human achievement. But has not O'Connell done more than enough (Or fame I On the lofty brow of Monticello, under a green old oak, is a block of granite, and underneath are the msbe t of Jefferson. Read the epitaph—it is the Sage's claim to Immortality : •'Author of the Declaration• of lndepen _deum.and_of the Statute for Religious Lib `erty.'r . - Stop now, and write an- epitaph for Daniel O'Connell: - "Re gave Liberty of Conscience to Eu rope, and renewed the Revolution, of the Kingdoms toward Universal Freedoni, which had begun in America, and had been arrested by the anarohy in France." Let the Statesmen of the age read that epitaph and he humble. lot the King s . and aristocracies of the earth read- it, and tremble. Who has ever accomplished so much for human freedom, with means so feebler Who bat he has ever given liberty to a people, by the mere utterance of his voice, without an army, navy, or revenues—with- out sword, spear, or even a shield? Who bat he ever subverted tyranny, sa ved the lives of the oppressed, and yet spared the oppressor? Who but he ever detached front a vener ble constitution a column of aristocracy, dashed it to the earth, and yet left the an. cient fabric stronger and more beautiful than before ? Who but he has ever lifted up seven millions of people from the debasement of ages to the dignity of freedom, without ex acting an ounce of gold or wasting the blood of one human heart • Whose voice yet lingers like O'Con nell's in the ear of tyrants, making them sink with fear of change, and in the ear of the most degraded slaves on earth, awaken ing hopes of freedom t Who before him has brought the schis matics of two countries together, concilia ting them at the alter of Universal Liber ty t Who but he ever brought Papal Ronie and ProtestaintAiberltit to turn in cense together? It• was O'Connell's mission to teach mankind that liberty was not estranged from Christianity, as was proclaimed by Revolutionary France—that she was not divorced from law and public order—that she was not a demon, like Moloch, requir ing to be propitiated by the blood of human eacrifiee—that Democracy is the daughter of Peace, and like true Religion worketh by Love.' I see in Catholic emancipation, and in the repeal of the act of Union between Great Britain and Ireland, only jecideuts of an all-pervading phenomenon—a pho. nomenon of mighty interest. but not por. tentons of evil. It is the univenol• disso lution of monarchical and aristo cratic al Governments, and the establishment of pure democracies in their place. I know this change must come, for even the menaced Governments feel and confess it. -I Itudei thatit win be resisted, for h Is got in. the nature of power to relax. It is a fearful inquiry, How shall that Change be passed? Shall there never be an end to devastation and cativo t • Is every atop of human progress in the futon"; as in. the past, to be marked by blood &fest the nationi of the earth, after groaning for. ?mot under vigiour institutions, establOhed whigitit their consegt, wade through seas to teach that condition of more perfect lib erty to which }hey are so rapidly so irre aistably impelled? Or shall they'be able, not ithstacidinginvoluntary lgtiorsOee and meat contracted wittypt their Auk d notwithstanding the bliati resistance of despotism, to change their [orals of Gov men% by slow and measured degrees, with out entirely or all at once snbverting them, Ind from time to lime to repair their ,an cient constitutions so as to adapt them peacefully to the progress of the age, the diffOision of knowledge, the cultivation of virtue, and the promotion of happinese ? • That which we call Death. is but Life n other fords of sanctity and power. The dead are like the went by day, Removed limn mortal cye: Yet not extinct—they hold their way In glory through the sky. The world is populous with gond and useful men, though their forms are in the keeping of the grave.—Rev. f4in.„Bsanu. t is said that the potato is a native of Peru and Chili, where it exists as a dead ly poison, with a small bitter root. It was not known to Europe until 1588. CTOBER it 1847. , THE .DSATD•SSD The fidloetiPS , Foloo, by Thqmoo Ho°4, is Pr°ll" ably- WWI* toenail ti our Ander, ; hot tine po ottto OM 1101414% fielielriff kagliatjlt ivaloggpc !Pio Whys anethemsipoduThe Death. Red" Iva now been expeuted: "ike tretebedlierbreaildnig through the night; Her,breatbing soft and low, Al ie her breast the tram Kept herring to and leo. Bp aceiiied to speak so *ploy . tinned itelit, As we And Mat *Er Italf our peers' 11 , tin kr , liviing Our vary hopes belied am leers, Our ham our *pi" 01 . 4 . $ 1 , V4 thought hiw ill , y when she slept, For when the mom tame dim and mid, And chill with early showers ' Her quiet ',elide cioppd-41te had. attemiter mem thia Gum" . _ - 3Ertit Liku AND 11EfiliERIEW:- In the Manchester Courier we hnd the following singular statement, which we give without note or comment : • "On the 3d instant, Muffle. Jenny Lind. accompanied by Mr. and Mrs &bathe, and a few of 'their friends, attended. a' se. once at Mr. Braid's for the purpose of witnessing some 'of the extraordinary phe nomena of hypnotism. There were two girle who were in a warehouse, and who had just come in their working attire.— Having thrown them into ,the sleep Mr. Braid. sat &mit , to .the piano, and the moment he began playing, both aornriam bullets approached and joined him a sing ing trio. Having awakened one of' the girls. Mr. Braid made ft most startling an nouncement regarding the one who was still in sleep. He said, although ignorant of the grammar of her own language when a wake, when in the sleep she could :mom , party any one in the room in singing songs in _tiny. language,'Ovint both - notes and words. correctly—a feat which she was quite incompetent to perform in.the teak. lug condition. . Me. 8. . requested any one in the,room to put her to, the teat. when Mr. Schwabe played and sang a German . - equirria - - 4 . l initabolmnolaPanied ha wt . ' reedy, giving' both notes and words simul taneously with Mr. Schwabe. Another gentleman then tried her with one in Swe dish, in which she also succeeded. Next Jenny Lind played and sang a slow air, with Swedish words, in which the.som nambulist accompanied her in the most perfect manner , both, as regarded words and music. . Jenny now seemed resolved to test the pewee; of the somnambulist'to the utmost by a continued strain 'ol l the most difficrift roulades - and - cadenza/1 n,etti. ding some of her extraordinary so:le/trite nowt', with 'all their inflections from pion. iseligeltricirte'erestetailo andagain &We lshed totl*ftd.like pianissimo, but in ell these fantastic trieks and displays of geni us by the Swedish nightingale, even to the shake, she was so closely and accurately tracked by. the somnambulist that several in the room occasionally could not have, told, merelv by hearing, that there were two individualssinging—so instantaneous ly did she catch the notes and imperfectly did 1 their voices blend and accord. Next, lee ny having been told by Mr. Braid that she might be tested by some other language. cemmenced 'Costa Diva,' in Which the fi delity of the somnambulist'e performance, both in words and music, fully justified all Mr.. Braid had alleged regarding her pow. era. The gid'has.naturally a gootivoice. and has had a musical.instruction in some of the 'Music for the Million'_elastsee,;leri is quite incompetent of *dug any such feat in the waking conditition either as re. gares singing the notes or speaking the words with the accuracy she did when in the .somnambulist state. • She wee also tested by Madlle. Lind in merely imitating language, when she gave, most exact imita tions ; and Mr. Schwabe also tried her by. most difficult contiiinatioos of sound, which he said lie knew no one was capable of imitating correctly at once, and that wheth er spoken, slowly or quickly. When the girl was aroused she had no recollection of anything which had been done by her, or that she had afforded shah a high gratifies.. , Lion to all present. he said she merely felt somewhat out of breath as if she had been running. Mr. Braid .ettributee all this merely to .the extraordinary exaltation of the sense pf bearing, and a muscular sense at a certain stage of the sleep. togeth er with the abstracted state of the, mind, which enables the 'patients to concentrate their - undivideclatteetirintri the in hand, together with entire confidence io their own powers. ity, *hie means, he says, ibeYcan-appreciate aloe shades of difference i n mound. which would wholly, escape .their observation in die erdinatz condition, and'the vocal organs are corms- , pondingly more under control, °Wing to the exalted state of the:' muscular sense, and the concentrated attention end confi dence in their own powers with which he endeavors to insplre them enables.them to torn these exalted seniesto the best Wyatt *age:- It is nolift of inteitioni as they de not understand the Meaning of the words they utter t. butit is a wonderful example of the extraordinary, powers, of imitating sounds at a certain stage of somnambtd. ism. And wonderful enough it most as- , snredly het •f . ,'% , f ''-,'''.., ~ .••• ‘7 Cnaliee "L l ois A nn ii. C. R.—At the Phi Rein Kappa dinner.* Richmond re lated the following 3, given to him in Italy by his ?fiend, one, 'of the parti. Henry Crabbe Robinson,fri well-know nevolent 'English 'barrister. W en , ea id 5111 44 Mr. Robinson, I told Charles Lamb the history of my first brief, he said, stammer ing until he came to the qnotation from Pope, which he pronounced in a clear full voice:. "Wh-en- you g-o-t your fir-tir-ka br-br.brief, didi-did-n't you e-a-y, 'hou pest fret cause, least underanod !' " peat fret I /loaton Post An interesting discovery was made last month at Tunis. .110 clearing away a mound in the inner part of Carthage, to ex tract some stone for the repair of the quays at Coleus, the workmen found a colossal marble bust, which is supposed to rope sent Juno, in as perfect state of preserva titni as if it had just been sculptured. MOW AN EDITOR WAH MADE It has been before remarked,several times, . we suspect, that it is strange to observe by what slight and trifling causes the current of human life is changed in this queer world of ours—albeit. the best world we ever saw—and how oddly some men are moved from the plough to Blackstone, or fmm the anvil to the quill. One of the most singular illustrations of this remark may be toned in the case of our old friend, A,lick Bullitt, well known in this region, now one of the editors of the Ncw Orleans l'i *layette. We may ab well say, en paeeant, that while the legs of Aliek carry about a body, the size of which has entitled him to all, privileges of an alderman of the good City of Orleans, he has a heart at the same liar that is quite as large as his corporation, Ind a head stored with as good mental food as the physical delica cies that adorn his stomach. • 'What: on earth' ever made you. an edi tor," said we to Alick, one day. , , "You were oducateal , ibri lawyer, ?" , "Yee.". , 44Were admittedm the bars", , f. , ~ "And ownutenetxl;praufclui 4 i ~ .'l' . 1 "0, yes." ' , ~,.,' --' ll', `'' ' '••• , 1 had a gods hcsinetw r . „,,. ~, ~ , .., . , 1 f•Nell, I can't exactly Jolty that,'' rite i Ninded Alick, "I stuck out nt+'slitng"la'h Louisville, and fnithAtilp followed MY - 1) 1 M" replan for thaw ,yeanrrtlarissdhat,tiose: t had precisely grin case,','; Q' ' ' ,r r 1 " O ld 'Y "M a l" .. i . , 1 1, • C 't / , , ' ', ! "Ottly one—and that divulged toe, tv 411 the profession, and "ItztlariodAOsthili4 had) most distinctly mistaken tnyeocetiou." , ' "How watt shut ri ~ ,!.„ ~ "I'll you all shoat it., You zeinember the time Lovett—the man ,whette skull is new preserved as ; precious relic by,Ju4 oh!. licotaa-naolhfrseastrAciett ,for ,mur. der, and convieted ,- Wellf -- E - was junior counsel in the mute, and madam/ maiden speech before the itirji. .There is no doubt that the mon was as accomplished villain, and that be had been guilty, in his time, of many eterdiugenornotiesiand that he rich ryiliiiiiikeillhfOkiffif Atipt;of the crime with which 1 1041000..etlioled upon this oe- 1 caidout I feel raltdrod, he was, perfectly iti i Wen?. :r.ho evidence spine; Min scarce- IY daerVed.lbe,osme of eircutastanaial ev idenoe—jt 4 was vague, unsubstantial, in com plete,iauLtrifling to the last degree.— To make my story short,•l lei& myself out, made a speech in favor of the poor devil of about ilitur' hobrilri length, and sat down tinder the impression that I had done the Matinees peony eftintballye That jury gave' a • veettiet` of ovum without leaving their seats, ant !kilos was• hung accordingly." ?All caused I.97Youir eetwoh.".l ,' , ?, • "/1 wasn't soy thing alittramt eonelu ding that 1-could *ever makiksbsight and shining light as Qouttindlos.,,audl,4.norney , at Law, I forthwith tarneCEditsr," ' / ~ And a capital Editor Ives r he. M eaetAeo.° —Cincinnati New 5.,., ,; , ~S• &,, ~ ~ --..-r- ---- -, -- 1.---.---, -•-•-: , . , Fe MACg Aunt/ IN 111Vtriztliallb.L n We have' Mentioned in it s jiratilc;ON nilitiber , the' two regiments of wiiinim Of 'till. 'CaniOn of Uri, but' we , find iii ii-Erjeitli,Piiiitti'it' nti".. tice' of them, vi r nyck ve i6o*lii - 14,0611 , :, --"The two bittalibits, • Minii rirtgioar t • I_.l : •,-,-. ~ (1, .i• teen hundirt`lemaliiiittittilL,„. rdt pri.sent en lusitect'at 04'400 :timelormi. dable and captivating."' In their Red discipline they .ars e drilled:*l perfec tion. Curiously enough. superioriq of form sod beatify hie; bask very much the reason or difrereode of grade; the hand. sornestare of the tulvommgaard; ,and ibis post of distinction andAionger AteeMil tingly conceded them,byttitair compahions why are Jess favored 'by nature. Some claesification has been guided by tempera motit.thati ,•!The more viyid and flighty hive Inieu enrolled as woltiguers, or hglit. horse—the more phlegmatic as greoadiers. Those who , have figures of more embon paint ,are in the,. central body, those of slighter forms are stationed, at -the wings. , The coarse and rude , ire enrolled as. dre goons. and ccutlimers« Xhe, Areatiou tbia corps, (which , with its discipliee and' enthusiasm. Pemba likely, actlie rust throe, of the coming pOlitical , movement .of Eu rope, to take possession cif the Relestion soil.) is an esereiseef the powethtl genius ottiolis Segalo, wbo hair reesirxed ;1471011).1 self the general contiboad.-41ente Aar- Atom= 4 1.. GitorleoV,,of B Weiti/O4 ePOeIPPe4.,a 4 0dierf Iroqi the of execution. The feller when he 'heerd 004 watt in. hopiiii of a. pardon, but 141 g ;owed that,hemas mistaken.re ,plied with aloud voice, i-My tongue is still freep '444 I will use it at my pleasure." Ile ,did:ao,and ,ficenfiously charged the '444, ;with much inoolence, and.as loud as he could speak, with injustice and harbar ttyr appealed to God for reveoge.- 7 The not hearing him distinctly, in quired what the soldier had hem) saying. A. general officer, unwilling to sharpen resentment against the poor man, told his Majesty he had only repeated with greet earnestness, "That God loves the moreifid, and teaches the mighty to mod 'Crate their anger." The king W 39 touch od by these words and :sent his pardon to the criminal. A courtier, however, in an opposite interest, availed himself of this occasion, and repeated to the King exact ly the licentious expressions which the fel low uttered, adding gravely that "men of quality ought never to misrepresent facts to their sovereign." The King for some moments stood pausing, and then turned to the courtier,' saying, with reproving looks, "This is the first limo I have been betrayed to my addantage ; hut the lie: of your enemy gave me more pleasure than your truth has done." The amount in the SatiMgs Bank at Worcester, Massachusetts, is about one millions of dollars ! made up princfpally of deposits from people at work in the fac tories along the line of the new rail-road. I 1 ebnsciencii does not point the finger at you, you nifty laugh at the opinions, with rcgard to you, which others entertaidi TWO pOLLARfi PEIV4tI9MnM6".,, INEW SERIES---NO. MEXICAN MOONLIGINT.—.Meet .me by moonlight alone" can be practienlised ifs Mexico with beautiful effect, we should think, judging from the following letter which was published not long since .in a Southern paper: "Perhaps you will not believe me when I tell you that I am writing this by MOOD* shine—yes, the beautiful moonlight of Mexico. Heaven help those in the United States who think they know what moos light is! They know nothing about Moonlight in Mexico is moonlight—pure, beautiful, beyond description. It is the ts• sence of noonday rarified. Every object stands out in bold relief, and so clear and pure is the atmosphere that the stars and unclouded sky seem within reach. I have enjoyed this enchanting moonlight a hun dred times while sitting with my mess in front of our tent, or sometimes we take n pronienade around the camp as far Is the guard will perMit us; and at other time. pass out and wander through the beautiful streets of the city and listen to the chatter of a thousand Mexican tongues, jabbering ,to one another across the streets. It is at such times that we inhale the'sweet odor .of the''now ripening fruits that grow so plentifully in this city—such as oranges" , Llentlihs, limes, figs, date's, and almonds; and then that best of all fruit, the juicy peitch, , grows here to its greatest perfect :Mid. All these things combined will ever Soldier some happy hours." LAVOIIING IN tin PULPIT.--4381d U-- a Presbyterian minister of some F notoriety. I never laughed in the pulpit on ly on, ono occasion, and that came .near procuring my dismissal from the ministry. About one of the first discourses I was call ed to deliver, subsequent to my ordination. after reading my text and opening my sub ject, my attention was directed to a young man with a very foppish dress, and i l bead of exceeding, red hair. In a seat immedi ately behind this young gentleman eat an urchin who must have been urged on in his deviltry by the evil one himself, for I do not conceive how the youngster thought of the jest he was playing off on the spree.. ed dandy in front of him. The boy held his forefinger in the red hair of the young man, about as long as a blaeloimith would a nail rod to heat, and then on his knee carninenued pounding his linger in imita tion of a smith in making a nail. The whole thing was so ludicrous thall laugh ed, the only time that I ct-br disgraced the . pulpit with any thing like mirth.- ' MARTIN LUTHER A l'oer.--The great Reformer knew how to appreciate ALL God's gifts, the means of pleasure as well - as the faculties for self-diseipline. In a conversation Ivith a very ripe scholar, at f• ' iepsie Luther became the Subject of • • - conversation, N connection with the mo dem reformer Rouge, and the gentleinan *icier to, quoted these lines of Luther. : O'er nicht field win, well; uml gearing, Der bleibt cut parr Ban lebelang. Wlto loves not woman, wino and wing, That man'. a fool his whole lifelong. SINOITLAR DEATH OF A SWALLOW.WO ' milk°. impaled on a lightning rod, on a neighbor's 'house," a swallow, with ant. stretched wings. As the rod Dins up a bove the chimney. it in moat probable that the bird was dropping down into its place ofabodeorith the swiftness that is common to the species, and missing its aim, struck the point of the rod directly into its body. and thus caine to its death. It remains there yet, a warning to its fellows, "tp be sure they are right before going alleadt— 'Springfield Republican. AN hum complaint:N.l%—A lovely girl was bending her head over a rose-tree which a lady was purchasing from an rish basket-woman in 'Convent garden market, when the woman, looking kindly at the young beauty, said, "1 axes yer pardon, young lady, hot if it's plaising to ye, I'd thank ye to keep yer cheek away - froin that ruse: ye'll put the lady nut of consait with the color of her flowers." A DVERTISINO GMAMANV.--A merean tile house in Berlin has proposed to all the; railway companies of Germany to supply all their carriages with silk blinds formatt ing. They simply propose to reserve to themselves the right of changing the blinds as often as they may please; and they re quire the companies to engage themselves not to accept, during fifty years, neither for money or gatnitonsly, any blinds but theirti. Their object is to cover the blinds with advertisements.— Gulignunrak Alga, A LITTLE: boy of the commune or ileyy sur-Alhy. in the canton of Geneva, was lately seized by an eagle at the momebt at which lie had taken some eaglets from a nest. The bird carried him to a height of upwards of GOD metres, to the inimMit Or rock ; luckily 'some shepherds saw what was passing, and rushed to the reseue.— The poor boy escaped with a fright, and the deep impressions of the eagles claws in his flesh. "My brethren," said Swill, in a sermon, "there are three sorts of pride—of birth, of riches, and of talents. 18111111 not now speak of the latter, none of you being liable to that abominable vice." The razor strop man, holding for* apt the Agricultural State Fair war than ed., dressed by a young man. who *ugh" hitnt4cli remarkably smart : , --"Yierti a .”One more left of the same !tort," said the razor strop man, poiiitiog at get prestimptious individual. I\pAmous AFFAIR.--ily 8 letter Mita Ten s as Parish, dated on the IMI instant, (says the Concordia Intelligeneer,) learn that a duel was fought iit'iboin I mile above St. Joseph, on the gth,betweitts a man named Shelling'', and one 'setstail Bowman.' They fought with bowie kis. —SheHinge was killed, and Bowls** in. badly wounded. The parties wear Ails A /Roblin paper says, that u,s4lOOllW l ter in Ohio subrunises the{ be will imp*" Sunday 84:hind swing s wrivitr-4110‘,114 , ,, and Saturdays.