By D. A. dr. C. H. BUEHLER. VOLIMiEt XXII.I Th 4 St 4 aullderc lllf lON* a. ivittrrtiti Thereity le ruddy in the But, . • The earth 'moray. below, And, 'Poland in lb* ri:rpr-tnist Qur, bnre, . whitstlinhers do*. Fp y—lirit the sounds of measured stroke And grating idle begin ; 114 Wed./tie' to the gnarled oak, The rootlet us the pin i• Haiti -4iiari the bellows, Melt on biset# The sooty serithy Andire•sparks rising far and rut Ansfading with the star,. AU 40Yifbe ;lathe amith shall hand, Repae',that flashing forge; All diy Ilia heavy hand ' Thigneming anvil scourge. Gem itp!Ose ho l—The panting team For us is toling near: roittithe rafts:nen down the stream Their Wand burps steer. Rings trot fn. maths 8:a-man's stroke In forests old and still— For ua the nenutrpoirclad oak Fano:braking down his hill. Up I—up l—in nobler toil than our Noun:Dams* bear a part; We make of Nature's giant power Thi slaves or human Art. Lay tib to rib anil beam' to been, And drive the Mandela free: Nor Whir. joint nor yawning seams Mail tern pt des marching see ! Where's:, the keel of our good ship The i♦eils tough field shell plow— Where'er her tossing seas shall drip With•alt spray raoght below— Thatehip must heed her master's beck, Nerbek obey ' And MIIIIMOII tread her reeling deck, As tithe) , trod the land. Hec oikett ribs the vularoheak Of Northern ice cony peel— The sianken rock and enral peek May grata 'lona her keel : And knon.aii well the painted shell Weems to wind and wave, Mug Sor t, citadel, t, the sailor'. Orsank, the sailors's grave Ho!—strike away the bare and blocks, Andhet the good ship thee! Why - lingers on thews dusty rocks The young . bride of the sea Look !--how she moves adorer' the grooves In giacelfol beauty now ! • Hew lowly on the breast she loves Sinks down her virgin prow ! 'God 'bless her, whereso'er the breeze Her snowy wing shell fen, Aside the Neon Hebrides Or sultry Hindostan!-- Where'er, in mart or on the mein, With peaceful dag unfurled, She itiWto wind the silken chain Of Commerce round the work!! Speed on the ship —but let her bear ; No macho' odiae of sin, No groaning cargo ordespair Her roomy hold within. No Lothian drag for Avalon lands, Nor poison draught for nuts, disc Mimeo nuissettailitte hands. , And Natunes sun asid ihowers. /Be here the Prairie's golden 'grain, The Desert's golden send, * The clustered fruits °tenon) , Spain. The epic. morning -lend ! nrir path -Ivey on the open main May_blesidngs toilorefree. . And Sad death welcome bock amain Mee white soils from the sea I A WORD TO YOUNG MEN Of the three =odes of using tobacco, nakoking is that which seems to hare insinu- VetiitecTf nioiitettensi rely among the youth oft toantinnity. Tobacco employed in this way, being drawn in with the vital treath ) tonveys Its poisonous influences into every part of the lungs. There the nov ions bid is entangled ia tho minute spon- a airocils l and has time to exert its per- nicious inibtence on the blood--not in viv ifying, but in vitiating it. 'The blood im bibes the simulant narcotic principle and circulates it through the whole system.— It produces, in consequence, a febrile action in those of delicate habits. Where there is any tendency to pbthisio and the tuber cular deposit in the lungs, debility of those organs, consequent on the use of tobacco in this way, must, favor the deposit of tu- berouloas usttor, and ; thus sow the seeds tif oeuswurption. This practise impairs the Waters! taste sad relish foe food, lesseus the end waikene the powers of the OHM* , DIN!AICIAL PAPEE.MAKtNO.—Few .iett Ikitve hoe, more insprotal than this, tita3 will aAnowiedge who have road a dacription of the old mode, and compar ed the present to it, The Louisville Courier of *AM .040 relatea a remarkable instance nfdiapatch : "{At half past five o'clock last voraning,ult Gam gothe paper on which this indinNes calthmt ofthe Courier is printed royr~io's paper-mill. ;"5., Ti. AtialFera 1 0 0 A co!rfert.la 000 thf Vele me named, and at fifteen.minutes be t'brel ei itt etlookithe paper was delivered b. if'r r ~ifi u Maly fbr the press This is oortandi in teatime Of roMmkable expo viiitows =RE iziP.Thettie now at the ,Bereatt of Itt- Itkii;4 l4 ;'fgrVtathAlgiont ietpricatark. 41p „ *WAN 411 th0.42•141:*4. • 4Cii?:4 l 4te of •Ifoar ettutatolleA3E.parehatent,elesoly.peekj At 4 . 3 1, init +ablest on, which ara 17 77 00; . S 40biht aheirutoti i potlormi.of 1 , hp..k.00.0.!40 1 1. lip the tribe from time itooteteeelal. How ore, t , , 100.1 1 .1 0 0' . f2latroot,' MArks.—A ~gpsn,si t Astiesi, 4lltid.Y not Over twenty-five. ;lora ort k iigivarins the editor, of the Stir *all* of blinded. mateslave commit -411 tetttlete,,'4llre i btoVl3 died violent deaths, ppe hei );eter sent to the penitentiary for 1440tIter attrroFly escaped go irig Ale sow voiago , tor alike e lf e e e e. ,, •Qt twenty you's of °go tae Fill reigns ; iK • sit ;, at forty tbo judicoont. Tll6 Arttlie Expedttlels. Dr. Kane, who wtts attached to the A merioanExploring Expedition, is deliver ing a course of lectures on. this interesting subject 'at the Smithsonian Institute in Washington. We find in the National InteArmor a brief report of the first two lectures, from which we extract the fol lowing : "The topic is full ot interest. For the first time we were made aware of the geo graphical importance of the Arctio ocean i ---Nn ocean who pea exceeds four and a half millio ns square miles, and whose tributs;iiii drains larger country than the Indus, the Ganges, the Mississippi, and the Oronoco combined. In discussing the much vexed question of the cui bone of these Arctic Expeditions, Dr. Kane, after citing in detail their vtduable contributions to general science, observed that the cod fishery of Newfoundland grew out of the voyage of Sir llumplircy Gilbert ; the northwest passage of Davis opened the whaleflshery of %Vest Greenland ; and Fro bisher pioneered Hudson to that great bay, which now margins the most lucrative fur company of the age, "Sir John Franklin was last seen in lief fin's Bay, in July, 1845, moored to an ice burg and avvaitingsno_p_cning to the West. By a strange coincidence, the American Expedition was imprisoned for two succes-, sive seasons at the same spot. The next traces of his onward progress,. were the sad memorials of his first winter encampment, at the mouth of Wellington Channel, a large inlet opening towards the north ; and here Dr. Kane, after describing the scene, whiCh he was among the first to visit, expre: ref his conviction that' the missing vessel had proceeded in the early summer of 1846, up this inlet to the unknown regions of the north. Thiti seems to us extremely probe , ble. The American expedition, in fact drifted helplessly in this very direction.— They attained a latitude (75° 26' north) never before attained on this meridian by keel of Christian ship, and there saw the Ark water sky that indicated the Polyna of open sea, advocated by Lieut. Maury.-- It was this painful and helpless drift to the North that urged upon Dr. Kane and his , comrades the conviction of Franklin hav ing preceded them upon this very .1.'" , 14211. ,"Franklik was ordered by the British Admiralty to proceed through Lancaster I Sound for some three hundred and fifty l miles, ton Cape called Walker, thence ho! was to steer to the Southward and West-1 ward L towardsßehring:a strai&a. Failing to accomplish this, he was ordered to attempt a passage to the North by Wellington Chan nol. Dr. Kano, by a series of practical arguments, which seem to us almost con clusive, shows that this was the passage which ho adopted, and we see, although a I few of the English officers differ with him in opinion, that the Ascent yuhlications of the British Press fully sustain alio view.— The position of Sir John Franklin's first winter-quarters, at the very mouth of this 'channel, is conclusive as to the fact of that judicious commander having contemplated ita future navigation. It was the shams tire enjoined by his "orders," and the lee tuterdetailed many facts to short that it was a favorite alternative. Dr. Kane, in inves tigating the natural laws which regulate the ice -drift, showed that the eastern sides of this channel are earlier and more fre quently open than the western ; and the peculiar position of Sir John Franklin en abled him to see and takeadVantage of the very first of these early openings. "Add to this the singular and perplex ing fact, that Franklin loft no written re cord of his intentions, and it really seems as if the ice bad suddetilropened to the North, and that Sir John, with his daring and energetic promptitude, had pushed iu• to thi's, without delaying to give to the world behind him a notice of his course.— Certain it is that the deserted encampment bears marks of haaty departure, forcing us to the conclusion that Sir John Franklin has six'years' age.reached the region north of this iee-bound inlet, and has since been unable to return. • "Can he have survived 1, This question was then taken up by Dr. Kanein a manner that , surprised us. Vite'ivere unprepared 'for litO fooOrleo which. that region ly pommel' foe Ole support of bu en life. Nar-whale, white whales, and seal--the If4tor AO, es#Ome, ibundance—,crowd the :waters of Welibigtoumluutnel indeed, it Vrairdiseribed as region utenising-witli rtnitttaltiji:" The nilgritionis'of the eidJ , er duo*: the brent good 4r and, t 6. bird about the .wise of our i teal--,-irere also., ilutely wonderful.. The , fatty envelope of &Vie marine animals, kunite,as blubber; inpplies and teat,' their Warm and well saapted for 0 104 11 4 ttioli o es4 wholesome and anti-morbutio food ; w hile . the 'snow-hut, or,igloe of 'the Nsquimani, 'fOrOiahca a dry and comfort;ablo housing 1 In a word, Dr. Kano announced that, after s careful comparison of all the natural ro- sources of this region; he was convinced that food, fuel and elothing,—the th great contributory!' tp human eXibtellee— were here in superabundant plenty. answer to the supposition of the en tire destruction of the Yowls sad caws of 'GETTYSBURG, PA. FRIO Sir. John Franklin, shirrree or at tacks of the foe br kane said that wind . • storms were, rare, and that the was destruction of both vosseets hard to realize ; but even supposing that the ice should have crushed them, that same Ice would Boren, in either ease, ns Means of escape, Itt 1882, more than one thousand whalers were cut out, shelterless, upon the ice in Baffin's Bay. Yet only seven per. ished. "The interesting question of an open sea arttund the pole was then taken up...A. After siting the theoretical' argunients in favor of such a body of water, which we cannot here review, Dr. Kane mentioned that the American expedition, under Lieut.' -De Haven, had actually seen from their most nothorn point, that most unmistake. able sign, the dark cloud known as the -water sky;" and Capt. Penny, an energetic whaler, for whose views Dr. Kano seemed to have a great respect, confirmed this "sky" by sighting the water itself. "Such an open sea has been vaguely call. ed a Polyinya, or poliniya-...a term in the Russian, which implies an open space. Dr. Kane cannot think that, in a literal sense, such a sea oxiets in regions where the mean 'temperature is so far below the Ivint of congclation. lie fully advocated, homev er, the existence of a comparatively iceless sea, in which the drift never agglutinates, It is iu this region,,not far to the north and west of the point which the American Expedition reached, that he supposes Sir John Franklin and his companions to be immured ; surrounded by seal, and the re• sources before described, but unable to leave their lino tit% grenixdand_crosa. the) ' Sahara," which intervenes between them and the world from which they are shut out," TRANSPIANTING Or FRUIT Land to be set with fruit-trees should be be-plowed in the fall or very early in the spring; it should be plowed very deep-or subsoiled. When the ground is quite ready, get your - trees, and set them the same day, if you can ; never buy trees that have been dug over winter, and ,"laid by the heel ;" nor plant so late in the season, as when the leaves have started ; trees of this kind may live, but you lose the growth 1 " r 4 1/0 right kind of 'Management, balisplantin-g -will hardly put them back at all. Vie have often planted trees which grew four feet the first year. Holes should be dug of sufficient width and depth to extend .the roots to their original capacity. - When the trees are placed in the holes, spread out the lower roots and cover them with fine earth, as also all the rest in like man ner; get the roots into the earth so that they will stand interspersed, in regular sys tem, with the soil as the roots of a growing tree always do. The practice of thrusting the roots of a tree all in a heap, then piling on hard earth, manure, ko., and stamping it down hard, is sometimes successful, but no scientific cultivator would recommend it. After trees are set, the ground should be stirred around them while the heat of the season lasts, as often as once in two or three weeks ; and if great drought should prevail, they should be occasionally water ed ; this should be done by making holes with a stick among the roots, and then pour on a pail of water. A SMART DOO. —There is enough of the dog mixed up in the following story, told by a Nasliva paper to entitle it to the name of a "dog story." A man down East had been exceedingly . annoyed by wolves, which destroyed his sheep. in the eourso of 'lime, a dog fancier offered to sell him a dog. A very noble dog he was too. The catalogue of his merits was a very long omo-7-there was not a dog virtue in the whole catalogue for which he was not dis tinguished.--but if there was any one thing in which he peculiarly excelled, it Was 'his prowess as a wolf hunter. This with ' touch ing our friend on the right spot. The her gain Was 'closed ) and ho only waited an op portunity to test his nierita. • At length Oere came a light snow, just the kind, of ono* for wolf Inniting,..and he took his•dog and gun, and sallied out. Lie soon crossed the, tack. of a iminint. The dog to.* the scent and bounded °Olin Our.. sui t. On followed Otir' friend, up, 1 . 04 , iind Own " throug h bush, and =hriii," 'for two mortal: hours, whqt he same across a Yankee. of the live species, ehoppingwood,' and the • folio:04 iii4ittsiett4 Withigue i*C4F 04, 3 you.seea dog. nd awaiting& here ?" • “Welli I reoken I did!' ' "How' lode ago p , guess *hea r t a half . an l!Our;"' il!"4: 1 0 1 /1 6 ~ just about ;tip and teek—.but the dog had the advantage, for he RR a leak'ahead." ' OZ:r Nicholas longworth, of Cincinnati, is the heaviest taxpayer in Ohio; his bill for the past .year for both city and county, is nearly 817,000-12,000 of which is on city property. sg,..The number of copies of übwspapers priuted iu tbo. United Btates is one year, is 4422,600,900 1 So gals 40 Gov ointment oensua. nnitaziEse ND lEEE." - EVENING, JANUARY. 1 . 85 , 5► ' • POWSRIP ti I.ItONLNG; . At 8 -Young/me slakaing society some where down in •,, ..)jbe question for discuesionkiwis. the greatest evil, a scoldittg • ' ',..lenuoky chimney." After the appointed tants had cousin ! ded .the debetes.. , , •• , arose and begged the privelege dT a remark on that occasion: 'Penni obeing granted, he delivered hitaself • , =this way : "Mr. President, live been' t. mad a listening to the debate of 3 -ore youngsters.— They don't know. ~%.'ng about the sub ject. What do the ow about the evils of a scolding wife f "sit till they have had one for twenty. • ~.and been ham mered and ja d slamined all the while, and wait till I, ..y've been - scolded because the bale . • because the fire the ovon wan too would'ut burn, hot, because the eo kicked over the milk, because it rained, the sun shined, because the hens dint lay, because the hotter would'ut oo , i►oeauno the old eat had kittens, becan ; come toe soon for dinner, because th ore ono minute to late, because-they , because they tore their trowsers, been • they invited a neigh- bor woman to call • in, because they got sick or because the did anything else,.no matter whether the -.uld or not, Wore they talk about the vilsof a scolding wife? Why Mr. Presiden I'd rather hear the clatter othannners stones, twenty tie pans, and nine kettl 'than the din, din, of the tongue of asco ng wife. Yessir ree, I would ; to my m d r Mr. President, a smoky chimney is more to he compared to a molding wife, a dark night." ' TAU. GIIABB.- Buckeye atul a lionsier got into a discussio, upon the superiority of the soil; kc.,.of that respective homes. "We usually,"'saiikthe Buckeye, "have an immense yield of Otis in etir I have known the gries to grow as high as a horse's knee inOnellitigle n'ight." ... - "Pohl" says tliel&sler, have known of a horse beipg turned into pasture over night, and could not je seen at all in the mornsag. POPULARITY is 41111, PIIANTOIL--001. , Crockett said , "Popularity ;la like soap ; it hardly stiffens 'befogs, it goes to lye and, Isrrye4 4 11 4R1-4/1., there is anything of uncertain duration, liable to be swept froldexistenee by a breath of wind, it is popularity. It is here to-day and gouu to-morrow : leaving little else be- I hind, than chafed and goaded spirits, bitter 'lle's:- aril -itura r ,: - PiiiitiLii4.lls a phantom "He who dares to injure,. woman." (raid 1C.114. soth in his spree!' to the ladies at Tripisr despised in the gait like a d u g." OcT'Aye, and in the West, too—espe daily in the Mist. .In the 22,000,000 of the United States population there are more persons who habitually read and write than can be found in 150,000,000 in Europe in oqo Um, marked off in any shape you please. trY"Onions were originally found in E gypt and so highly were they esteemed in ancient times, that the chosen people of Clod, whim on their. way to the promised land, murtrired'at God's providence, and sighed for the Leeks and Onions of Egypt. 11:7''An Irishman said if a few goose berries gave so fine a flavor to an apple-pie, that ~ i t would Lt a daitra of an apple-pie Which was madeof goose-berries intir'ely." Ser"Fair Play between Nations" 'is the doctrine of Koasuth--mlntervention to ao cure Non-intervention." Or• The following definition 'ache words Cabal and Whig way !lotto uninteresting to our readers us an item of history The word Cabal originated in the reign of Charles IL of England, from the initial letters of his minister' namen--.Clif ord, Ashley, Buckingham, Arlington and Lauderdale. The word Whig. was given , to the liberal party in England by the my- . ells% in Cromwell's day; from the initial letters of their' motto, oWe Hope In 43tut." Who would .unt be a Whig I mi.lt is said that the Alabanni Legisla ture, at this session, intends to present a system of 'genital oodimon dohooLeduca- Oae«.-A la "Bentley's Miscellany" furnishe's' the followitigirly effort tosdalit rite mourn fill ditty of "Jack and GBP ttr the olsssie torn °tithe mitidi , of the piOsent.dny 1. • ') enie : Aro asariat,equam. monieln St ProlaKur, fteot.riAritoo.o. ' The rernarklhat ' , thereto more pismire in giving •Ihan receiving:l ,is i suppopeil to apply chiolly to mulleins", kick", ad vice. An•editor out West• has harried a girl netned.Chureh. He says be has egjoyed more happiness since he joined the Church than ever he did in his life before. A skeptical young man one day conver sing with the celebrated Dr. Parr, said lie would believe nothing vit hi;li he could not understand. “Then, young !thin, your creed will be the shortest :of All man I know," replied the.Doetor. • . . Tut Connmil ixt CALlgonatt4.-n-Iltopete C. Ratably, Esq., frowerly otifork, bat now.a resident of Oaliforgds, in,alegter to the editor of the York Republican, ;Teak ing of a professional gieit to tlio town of Jackson, of Calaveras eounty,esys: liTwo courts war in sessittn. the Coun ty and the District Coatis, ' My owe was in the County Court, before Judge Smith, said was dieposed.of al, I believe,,the very table on.whigh Conyers' the-county clerk, died, , who wee shot by :this ,saitte Judge Smith, a few Weeks ago, perhaps very ce. eusably too. The catmint apposed: to me, Gen. Anderson, a fine looking old 1 gentleman, was armed , with alloy Howie knife, that hung like a broad sword Ity side, and I was perhaps the only deertned man in that body. The Judge had his Colt revolvers buckled on—the spectators. had theirs—the grand.jury, dt.c.inieWits - I" said, the sheriff" and his assistants theirs, In fact, Colt's revolvers' and raw brandy are a pan of every day's dress, the County Court was held in the elerk's'offi• ce. as the District Court occupied the Court house ! The latter was built of posts set' in the ground—no windows—the collar beams a Few inches higher than my heed, one and of the, hopee entirely open , anti no floor, but the earth (which was tramp led into a deep dust) eteept four or fire boards for the Judge to sit one The build , ing was about sh leationg and about 11 wide. Yet in this simple building the most'perfect order xiigionL _Everything transpired with dignity, and the kiwi looked, as touch, if not more m a jestic than in brick and mortar with granite pillars in front." ellitErßruu WINTER.—Let me Sir word in fatiOr ni those vicisitudes of our climate which are too often mado:the.littb ject. exclusive repining. ,If they annoy us occasionsly by changes from hot to cola, from wet to dry, they give i tis_one or the climate. • it the -- Wrorld: They give its the brilliantsunshine`of the eouth.ol Europe, with the fresh verdure of the north. They float our summer skies w 1111'6110de' f gritteutfv . II& kir flee., cy hiteneis,•end send - Amen - coal' allow era to retread' the panting •eartit:and keep it groom,' Our seasons are all .pootittolt the phenotneea of our heavens are,full 4)1 . 146. limity and beauty. > .. • IVinher with As his none of its prover bial gloom. It may have its howling winds, and chilling froate,"aittl whirling anew storms; but'it has' its long litterrals cY cloudletts sunshine, when" the anew clad earth givetredoubled brightness to the day; when at uight t ,the stars bestu est lustre. or' the moon 'deeds the whole landscape with ber most:limpid tadianCe; anG men ltileitlopfi'litirtbicAtaihar wkholi bursting' SU once Mtn' test atof blositimi re dundant with vegetation, and vociferous with , and theeptenthire of our snip , mer—ite morning vole ottinttenees ntad eve- ning glory—its airy palaces of suit gilt deeds, piled up in the deep .sztire sky ; tirepeiii Orli - 14165t tropical grandeur, when the forked lightning , and the bellowing thunder volly trona the bat. Clements of heaven and shake' the sultry atmosphere—and the sublime istelancholly of our autumn, Magni &eta in its decay, withering down the pump and •pritle of woodland country, yet reflecting back from from its yellow forests the golden serenity of the sky. Sorely we may say that in our climate mite heavens declare the glory •of (Clod and the firmament showeth forth his handiwork ; day unto 'day uttereth speech, and night unto night showeth knowledge."—W, Irving. • a little nigger in to SATZ !—Save 1----Whero is the man who cannot save and , improve ? 1)y curbing the appetite and restraining the meion, by observing prudence apd maintaining regularity, he mity save his health,'hus. band his otrength, and thus preserve the spring*, as constant fountains or nnergy and happiness, to sustain and cherish ,him under'every labor and every hardship:— He may save's lbrturie by industryVtind de nying himself needless indulgent**, • and find A pure enjoyment in deVuting it to 'lib ble uses. One of the hoOrseachtlay milt ed on trifles or indolence, saved Stet deify devoted to itnptimerrient,' is 4 eitongh to make an ignorant man wise in ten years— to provide the' luxury 'of intelligences.° a mind torpid frOm lack of • thriughtto brighten faculties perishing with rue V. —, to make life a • fruitful field;tind death a harvest of glorioni deed*. - - SOCIAL homwevitsier6 , -We 'Mould make it a principle to extend the hand of fellow ship to Pveg man who discharged faith fully life do end ml inlainstgdod order ; who manifesto deep interest in the.swel fare of general society, where deperunent is upright and whose , mind is intelligent, without stopping to ascertain, whether he swings a hammer or drairie the thread.-- - There is nothing artdititant from 'tree nobility as, the reluctant ; • , the• backward SYMPIith,Y. forced smile, the checked, COP. reflation, the licaltatlng : compliance, the well-Off are too apt to inanifest to those a lithe down, with whoui;l6 comparison of intellect atol'Printliplre of 'virtue, they fre quently oink .into itOsfcr. • } ;.. " MIA ' Or ' F LAvEII few days 'ago, twent•one slaves belonging to thq estate of Ma. PENDt.KTON, COOffilit ilig *lord and 'young men, women end chit. debt-end not regarded as above ordinary, • wftre,iteld at Lynchburg. Va., at the aver agepriee n(058. One negro man, with out a trade','Cold for 01028 ; a woman with a'eltild ten' months old, sold for 6950; and a girt aged eleven years, for 0000. On the 'public roads of Virginia, slave men are hiring at.from 0120 to 6150 per year. EXPERIMENTAL TODDV.--..You've had Ave gin toddies already this morning," said a barkeeper, the other day, to one of his hardest customers, who had called yet fur a sixth. "Have I I" inquired the chap. "Yea, you jinn have. Don't you glink another will gut you drunk 1" "Well I don't kno4--inake - tue one'aotl we'll see.. Inc always but to be peritueots." , • O'CONNIZeS TACT" iv .CROSEHEXAMIN 'imo.—He was once examining a wit Hess, 'whose inebriety, at the time to which the 'evidence referred, it wasessential to prove. He quickly discovered the min's charac . ter. He *as a fellow.wlto may be describ ed "half foolish with roguery. "Nell, Darby, you told the truth to this gentleman I" "Yes, your honor, Counsellor O'Con nell." "How do you know my name!" 'AAA 4 sore every one knows our path• viol." .Well, your're a fl ood humored, honest fellow I now tell me, Darby, did you take a' drop of anything that day 1" Why, your honor; I took my share of a pint of spirits." . share of it ; now by virtue of your oath, was not your shine of it--all pewter?" ..Why, then--dear knows, that's true for You. Sir 1" The court was convulsed at both question sod answer. It soon. step by step, came out that the man was drunk, and was not, therefore, a competent witness. Thus (V- C/Mired ion his case for his. client. There it another instance of Iris ready tact and infin ite resources In the &kora of his client. 'ln a trial at Cork, for a mur der, the principal witness ewore strong a gainst., the prisoner, whose name was James. '4* • Virtue df ?Our oath. are you sure that this is-the lumina i s ! — 4 - Arde7 l "Did you examine it Carefully before You swore in. your information that it was thet pOsoner's "I dill. ° ..Now; let the'see." said Otoonell, as he lobkl,upi the hat, and Won to eremitic it nitrefully, in the inside: Be then spelled aloud the name of James; slowly. : thus : J-aqn-e-s. ..Now do you mean to sap those !Rairi graul aLit.wheuundit ?" “I do. ' 6 Attil iliis is the same het ?" is."t , - "Now, ray lard." said O'Connell, hold inwup itte,hat. to °the bench, “there is sn eq• tlt this ,casa., there is uo flame whatev. er inseriliod in the hat." The result was initant'acquital. ,"I Tuiag t usect. soms DK Brl IclHn. . In the'fieW etittitois of .I'he Laird of fan gsin'," IS au anecdote illustrative of love at first.sight; A Servant girl of no strong in tellects,who lived, with a lady in the neigh borhood of Pais;sly, one thsystirprised her mistress by giving up her place. The la dy ingitired' the Millie," awl ',Mind it was that fertile source of dissenaion between Mistretta asti , insid servant—. 4 lad. ""And I. ' " inuttired the mistress. - "LAI he's niculltdi. a lad tint!, sits' Ili. the fdrettint Me." "And tvliets dues he-interid that you and he aliould he .mar tied “I dittos -ken." . Are you sure that he ilttends,m marry you -at allr "I daur say he does, mem." "Have you had midi of-each ; Other's company ?". “Not "When - did you leit - converse with him 't*' "Deed' we hue nse conversed ave yet." "Titen,how should you suppose - 11 0's going to, Marry you?" "Ou," re. plied the Amide girl, ..he'sbeets laug look. iii'lictue,nnd I think het loon be sp'esk• in." PRIVILEDPIW MKNOIIIIII.-4 torrelpon , dent of the New York "Independent." writing from iVashington, tells the follow ing good ohe of a 'minister ' wart was not acqiu4nted with the rides of the capital : "A gentleman on a .yjelt 4 hore. and anx intia to lieterf debates, ripened, very coolly, Ontiol theAloore of the Senate. and was about to.pass,ln. when the doorkeeper ,asked, Aro, yint,s priviledged member? What do you mean ity.such a man ? asked the stranger. The reply Wig, a Govern or, err ei•nitionber of oi:ingress. or a for eign minister. , The stranger said, I am a ministers,, From what .court or country. if you please ?Asked Om Very gravely pointing op.) , Frpm the court of Heaven. Td this ourdoorkeeper wag. gishly l'emarked, This government at pres ent, holds ho intercourse with that foraign pleat* I". . 'Coxtest.--6 , lmnitilettl," said 'a shrewd fellow as be Seated ',himself' in the bar room, and bore the silent gaze of the stir- Amoding Stivocitot.in the, bar; "do you 4 0 9 w 91,1 1 9 y lsettly.,9mt hes lust a hand some 'ivory handle lack-knife, with four blades—Wo large'ones and tWo small ones, pitieb'orailver on one aide and brusilat..stitt,eitda,l" . "No," replied the voteram./80190,. whose. proboeis resem ble!! n ripe etrawberry, tipped with a pear ly drop of dew-- "why, have you found onel7' said the wag, 4.l)in I thought if I would find one, I might know whotteit was." • Pern'lNG MROIME.7-411Urt! ie a knit. hn intehicelii operation in Philadelphia ''which.' knits three hundred and eighty stitches at each turn of a small crank. which crank may be easily turned by hand from one hundred to one hundred and fif ty revolutions per minute, making from foxy to sixty thousand stitches per minute, ofSi the rate of three millions per hour. . , • A DiscovEßy.--A friend says his Irish nerse.girl has discovereda truly Hibentian plan for regulating the temperature of a room by the thermometrr. She was told to keep the instrument in the nursery at a certain point, but on TtieFday morning her mistress found the room very cold and the girl sitting by the stove holding the thermometer close to the lire, because, as she said. "Ute little spalpeen had run clean down mast, and she was warinin' it up, and sure she'd got it most up again."— Meanwhile, though the mercury was get ting warm the room wasn't. Nutmegs aro grown to some extent in California. ' A person being asked what was ment by the realities oC hie, answeretl—ltesl motet , real mousy, awl a real, good din* ner.". , . When eery see , takesteererof cue ie , 'Utiums of TWO DOI LAIOiI PLR' 'ANNUS, iNUMBER 45. Vtto Moose, Veto of the "Obstroctlots IMLIP On lituratlay Gov. Jon:4B7oN sent into the Senate of Pennsylvania Ilia objection, to the passage of the bill of last sesaioa, for granting the use of ourjalle to the safe keeping of Fugitive Mattes, It is as tot- lows s To the Senate of Penneylatmiit;-- Satssions :—An act entitled "An Act to repeal the Sixth Section of an act, enti• tied an act to prevent kidnapping and pre. serve the public peace. prohibit the exer• ciao of certain powers heretofore exercised by Judges, Justicees of the Peace s and Jail• ors of this Commonwealth and to repeal , certain Slave Laws," has been held un• der adt•isement since the adjournment of the last Legislature. In obedience to the provisions of the Constitution. I retorn this bill to the Senate, where it originated, without my approval, and with my reasons for withholding it. To those reasons, founded on the clearest sense of duty and of official responsibility, I invite your candid. attention. They are now fur the first time given, because now, for the first time since the passage of this act, has an opportunity offered to confer with those to whom my reasons may be important, and with whom they inay be operative. The section proposed to be re pealed is in these words, "It shall not be lawful to use any jail or prison of this Cons. moowealth for the detention of any per. son claimed as a fugitive front servitude or I labor, except in cases where jurisdiction may lawfully be taken by any judge un der the provisions of this act ; and any' jailor or keeper of any prison, or other person who shall offend against the pro visions of this section, shall, 0111 convic tion thereof, pay a fine of five hundred dok tars I one-half thereof for the use of this Commonwealth and do: other half to the person who prosecutes ; and shall moro. over, thenceforth, he removed hum office, and be incapable of holiiing such office of jailor or keeper of a prison at any lime during his natural life," It is a panel a law passed in the year 1847, under the Exeou. live Administration of my predecessor, and by votes'unanimous, or nearly so, of both branches of the legislature. The bill un der consideration is . confined to the repeal or the section prohibiting the use of our prisons as places of detention for fugitives front labor. It the legislation proposed authorizes the use of the prisons, it is in repugnance to the Constitution of the U nited States as expounded by the Supreme Court. By a decision made in deroga tion of the local statutes of Pennsylvania, the Supreme Court of the United States, held in Si) mail!, words that all State legis ktstion on the subjeut of the reclamati on of gi tires from labor, whether to obstruct, to aid il, hinder or promote it, is absolutely and entirely prohibited. The legislation of Congress supersedes all State legislation on the subject, and by necessary implica tion prohibits it, The State cannot enact auxiliary pro visione on the subject. This is the very language. 11 therefore an act of assembly were passed, authorizing the several Coun. ty Commissioners to erect safe houses of detention for persons claimed as fugitives from labor, under such regulations as the Legislature or its agents might prescribe, for the reception or safe keeping of the in mates, such a law would be unconstitu tional, and consequently void, and any single discontented citizen of a county might have it so declared. lam unable to see any dilfetence in this respect between the special construction of such places of detention regulated and controlled by State authority and State agents, and the per mission to use those already erected and regulated by general laws. It is the State law interfering in the question of the al hedged fugitive and his claimant, and such laws the Supreme Court or the United States have pronounced unconstitutional. It is not the legislaiimi &Pennsylvania that has closed i our jails against the reception of such fugitives, but a formal decision of the Supreme Court, declaring our former Statute on this subject unconstitutional : a decision which, until reversed, is binding on every department of this government. Nor were the certain consequences of this doctrine, thus solemnly adjudicated, unfirrseen. The present Chief Justice of the United States, an eminentjurist, and a citizen of the State of Maryland, in dis senting from the opinion of the court, ex pressed' his belief that these very eflecte would he produced, and foretold the time, When State agency heing repudiated, and State prisons closed by this very decision, Nile territory of the neighboring States would become open path ways for fugitives from labor." These are his words, and they conclusively show in what light he understood the judgement thus pronounced. I am aware it has been alletlged that the point herein mentioned as decided did not arise in the case. It is answered, that the Judges of the Court, iu their several de cisions, declared otherwise. The Chief Justice, who was present and took part in the hearing, and whose dis senting opinion furnishes his views of what was decided, says : "ant as 1 under stand the opinion of the Court, it goes fur ther, and derides that the power to provide a remedy fur this right is exclusively ves ted in Congress, and that all laws urn the subject by a State, since the adoption of the Constitution, are null and void." Justice Wayne Lays, "In that opinion it is Jet-hied :8. That the legislation by Congress upon the provision, as the au promo law of the land, excludes all Suite legislation upon the same subjeet ; and that no State can pass any law or vegeta tion, or interpose such as may have /wen law or regulation when the Constitution of the U.luttes was ratified, to super•adtl, control. qualify, or impede a remedy NW led by Congress for the delivery of lugitivo slaves." He adds, alter a /earned argument sustaining this view,'"l consider the point I have been maintaining Wiere importer's say nth& in the opinion of the quart •; "eliegiug, as ionfir manolk, late ‘l7O 'poiit decided, dust Osity- t :ltilas of the ogle Judies ccutptonec th t Voitft, .(11.40.014141•!