BY•D. A. & C. H. BUEHLER. VOLUME XXV.} GREAT iTTRACTION! FAH NESTOCK & SONS has just "• received and are now opening one of the largest and most complete assortment of Spring and Summer Dress Goods ever alfered to the public. Our selection hav ing:beeo:made with great care, i and our stock 'Purchasee at reduced proces, we feel prepaied to present inducements such in are rarely offered. , Our stock of Dry Hodda has never been surpassed and with the addition of our last purchase, ,COUfPrising as it does Cloths of all pri te.i'and 'qualities, Cassitueres, Vestings, Keithielti , Jeans, Plaids for Children, Berage De !antes, M. De Laines, Ile ;met Berage Alpacas, Calicoes, Ging. inifisrSHAWLS, (Cashmere, Th ibet, White Crape of every variety.) we chal lenge the county to produce their equal, • regirds , lo quality and price: iHaving added largely, to our variety of . GROCERIES, ..we are prepared to furnish the finest qualities of Syrup, Molasses, Sugar, &c.. Are.; at reduced rates; our stock of Mo laasesand Sugar. is regarded as the most _complete ;ever offered, in the con n ry, We deem - .it needless to enumerate, as we hails always on hand a complete assort ment al Dry Goods, Grocerimllardware, Qutiensware, &c. • To satisfy you of the truth of our artier ,tiont we only ask you to call and examine ,for yourself, if you want bargains. Pall .early at . FAIINJ STOCKS. Sign di the Red Front. March .31, 1854.—tf A FRBSIII SUPPLY. SHE undersigned has just returned friun the . City. with a large assort of FRESH GOOD% ciltieh he is pro- PArOiio..4ell at prices which cannot be best. His stock consists of • . • GROCERIES of all Una, Suga' r's, ;Molasses, Coffees. Teas. Fish Salt Crackers, Cheere, Pick led Cucumbers, &c.. Also. Fruits & confections, 'Oranges. Lemons. Figs, Raisins, Prunes acs . Also, Powder, Shot, Tobacco. Se gall', Gail!ii celebrated German Smoking .Tobseco, and a variety of other articles -Also a firat-rate lasortment of the best 'qualities of ' LIQUORS, Wines and Brandtes, of different kinds, N. H. Rum, Holland Gin, Old Rye, &c. tll of which -can be had on the lowest 'tennis' at the'Store of the subscriber, in ; South Baltimore street, next door to the I...Stiiir office. • •rCTAIso, always on hand a variety of 41tonel.utir, &o.—Give us a call. ' 'EMANUEL ZIEGLER, Jr. Gettysburg, Nay 19. 1854—tf NEW GOODS! NEIV GOODS! ARNOLD has just returned I:frnatthe City with the Largest,Cheapest, 4- Beat Selected Slockof Spring and _ Summer Goods, ever before offered to the town orcountry, Fennsisting in part o r German. French and 11Domestie Cloths, Black & Fancy Cassi mere., Satin & other Vesting% Italian Cltithstfkilt;t -Tweedll, Ky. Jesus, Bsrege B , e Laines, M. Be Laines, IRrito,,Gingliatits, and a great variety of - `ociods Mo'numerous to Mention. Also, la large assortment of Bonnets, Para •aels, &e. 9:34'0i11; and see, as•! am determined !tit !undersell any establishment in the town or Co,unty. • ketch 31 1854.—tf MORE MN GOODS! ir:itio °xi) upPLT. GEORGE ARNOLD iffs just returned from the City with another supply of seasonable Girds, gait** WhiCli. is *Ladles Dress Goods, of every variety, very handsome and cheap. _Skew. Vollars and Cuffs.. in great variety and.of.the latest styles, White and Red Gelpe and other shawls, embroidered and pixie Liner Shawls, Ribbons, a beautiful 'va Bonnets, Trimmings. Calicoes. G . iagliatas; nosiery, Dress Silks, Bonnet 'bilks and Sattins, Edgings, Insertiags, &c.. Ate.,—with almost any article in theDRY 'GOOD line, aslo a lot of •FRESII GROCERIES, all of which will be sold as cheap as they can be had at any other establishment in Alm place. Please call, examine and judge •forlOtureelves. May 12, 1854. • ANTI-NEBRASKA liA.Tb, CAPS, BOOTS & SINES. .ONE ONE, COME ALL,• and tell your neighbors to come. to the Siore -of, the *.Two Extremes," and see the , splendid stock of lIA'fS, AN , CAPS, BOOTS and SIIOES, now open ;log, cit the latest style and of every varie- Ay, suitable for the Spring and Summer • season, for Gentlemen, Ladies and Chil teiren. have made arrangements to bave -Boots and Shois made to order, by the Atext of vorkmen, and of good material, in the quiekent possible time. ' W. W. PAXTON. Gottyatirg, March 31, 1854.—t1 .'''4l(yricE TO. TEACHERS.. Hs_ School . Direeors of Gettysburg alt., district. will receive applications un til Thursday the 3d of August next, from persons wishing to engage as teachers in said dixtricifor the ensuing year. By ortli.r of the Board. c;ns It.-0. - 111e0REARY. July 14. Profrsslonal Cards. BOUNTY LANDS. .1 PERSONS entitled to Bounty Lands under the acts of Con gress of the United States . :•can have their claims promptly and efficiently attended to by applica tion either personally or by letter othesubscriberot his office in Gettysburg. Claimants whose applications have been suspended on account of deficiency in proof may find it to their advantage tocall -10-7-The fee charged is $5 in each case. payable upon the delivery of the warrant. The subscriber will also attend to claims for Perisions for Revolutionary or other services and the location of lands. The sale and purchase of Lana Warrants at tended to, and the highest cash price paid (for the same. R. G. McCREARY. May 14—tf. Attorney at law • D. 1119CONAUGHY, .ITTORNEY .1T Ld (Office removed to one dour West of Buehler Drug & Book-Store,,Chambersbutg street.) attorney and Solicitor for Patents and .Pensions, •. Bounty Land Warrants, Back-Pay sus pended Claims, and all other claims against the Government at Washington, D. C.': also American claims" in "England. Land Warrants located and sold, or bought, and higkest prices. given. ' Lands for sale in lowa, Illinois, and other Western States"; and Ageitus etigagell locating Wammts there: ' • bar Apply to himpersonally cit ., bY otter. • • Gektysburg, Nov. 11, 1653. .; LAW PARTNERSHIP. E undersigned .: have associated T themselves as partners in the Prac tice of the Law. Their Office is in the room long occupied by the senior partner, where one or both of the firm can , at all times be consulted. • • •• The busineras of ConvevaNctrio:in all its branches. will be attend+ to with promptness, neatness and. accuracy. - MOSES McCLEAN. WM. McCLEAN. May 5. 1854.-3 m , DAVID WILLS,O Attorney at Law, ' HAS taken Mr. STEVENSON'S of fi ce. North West. Corner of Centre Square. - REFERENCE.—Hon: Thaddeus Itesons, Esq.. Laneaste.. Dec. 30, 1853. ' • W. A. WOINLEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OFFICE in the South West 'corner o! the Square fortnerly occupied by P. 111Tonaughy. Esq., will attend promptly to all business entrusted to his care. May 12, 1854.—1 y Dr. J. Lawrence fill, DENTJET, ck FFICt in Chambersburg street, It JP one door West of the Lutheran Church, nearly opposite Grammer's'siore, where he may be found ready and willing to attend to any case within the province of the Dentist. Persons in want of full sets of teeth are invited to call. REFERENCES. 1 DT. C. N.BEILLUCHT, Rev.C.P.ICR•orn,D.D, ••lt D. HUitl, Prof. M. JACCIOS, •'R.ff. - Iforiza, •". H. L. DAVOIIMA, " D. GI , " H.A. MunrewavUo Rev. IL .10115s0W. I .. M. L. Biraivcs. July 7. 1848. DOCTOR MOPE, HAVING located permanently in aGet tysburg, offers his professional ser vices to the public. ' IrrOffice and residence in York Street, opposite the Bank. April 28, 1854.—1 y. DOOTCDS/ If" 33 k higinZ) (HOMEOPATHIST.) LATE from Philadelphia, would re spectfully offer his services to the cit izens of Bendersville and Adttuts county in general. 11C - I' olll ce in Bendersville, where he can at all times be fininu and consulted, when not prolesssionally engaged. Bendersville, May 26, 1854.—0 m NOTICE. 'HE undersigned, Auditor, appointed by the Orphans' Court of Adams county to make distribution of the rosette remaining in the hands of ROBERT SMITH, Administrator of the Estate of WALTER Sawn, deceased, •to and among the parties entitled thereto, will attend for that purpose at his office in - Gettys burg, on Monday the 31st of July -ins!, at 10 o'clock, A. M., of which all persons interested are hereby notified. D. A: BUMMER, Auditor. July 7, 1854-:—ul Ladies' Dress Goods. T4ADIES, do you wish handsome dress es, for Spring or Summer ?• If so, call immediately at the long established cheap Store, where we are prepared to exhibit the moat beautiful variety and pret. beat patterns of Dress Goods ever opened. Do not defer the matter too long, nor lose the opportunity of selectin g from the en tire assortment. If you wish to save money and at the same time secure for yourself the prettiest apparel worn, call immediate. ly at FAHNt4TOCKS'.' March 31 2 1854:—tf GEITYSPUIIG; PA., FEIDAY: EVENING, ':JULY `0,'1g54..` Call the Rol!. BY WWI T. BOL/TON Who'is ready for the contest, • Who, with helmet sword and shield, Will go forth to conquer Error, On hifo's battle-field 1. Who will strike st Superstition, his goblin haunted cell, And unlooso the myriad victims, • Fettered by his spell., . • Call the roll. Who will strive, on God relying, With unwavering faith and hope; To pull down the gory scaffold, And the gallowa ropel Who will break the !oke of bondage, And unbar the prison door,. Saying to the tremaling sinner, "Go and sin no more !" Who forgetting self, will listen To sweet Charity's appeal 1 . Who Will labOr foi the lowly . With untiring zeal— Owning bread upon the waters, Not for human praise, ' Trusting heaven again to find it, , Alter many days Calf the roll Who will put what God hes given, Wisely to the noblest use ? Who will clothe the homeless orphan, Fill the widow's cruise, And, liketim of old :amnia. 1. Help the stranger iu his need, Reckless of his name and nation, Heckles of his creed 1 Who, that finds a child.of sorrove, ' Heir to penury and wo, Will not tarry Jo inquire What hasped° it so,. $ Ere be freely shares a pittance • neat 41s . meagre hard-earned store, ' Or bestowal cup of water, Iftecan noitiore I - • -- --- Call the roll. :Who when slander's tongue is busy With skahrient neighbor's name ? Will excuielia.faults and.failings. And defend his fame 1 Who will view poor humannature,' Only on thit,brightest side,' Leaving Ood to judgo the evil Charity Would hide 1 ' ' Call the roll. The Snow of Age. We have just stumbled upon the follow ing pretty bit of mosaic, lying amid a mul titude of those less attractive : • "No snow fall's lighter than the snow of age; but none is heavier, for it never welts." The figure is by no means, novel, but the closing pait of the sentence is new as well as emphatic. The Scripture repre sents ago .by the 'almond tree, which bear hlessows of. the purest white. “The almond tree shall tlntrish"--the head shill be hoary. Dickens says= of ono of his, charaeters whose .hair was growing grey, that it looked as, if, Time . had lightly splashed his snows upon it in passiug. neviasmelts,! . ..—no never. Age is inexorable: Its wheels lutist move'onward —they know not any retrograde Mom ment. The old.man may sit And sing— ."l would ,I were a boy agaiu"---but lie grows older as he sings. He May read of the elixir of youth, but he cannot find it ; he may sigh tor the secrets of the al chemy which is able•to make him young again, but sighing briugs it not. .He may gaze backward with an eye of,longing up. on the rosy sahemes of early years ; but, as one who gazes on his home froth the deck of a departing ship, o7ery moment carries hini farther away. Pm* old man ! he hail little More . to do than to die, • never Melts"—the snow of winter comes and sheds its white •blessings 'upon valley and mountain, but soon' the sweet Spring comes and smiles it all away. • Not so with that upon the brow . of the totter ing veteran. There • is. no Spring , whose warmth can penetrate its eternal frost. It came to stay. Its single flukes fell • mine. tieed-- 7 and,now, it is . there. We shall see it increase until we lay the old man in his grave. There itahall be absorb ed by the eternal 'darknesfor 'there is no age in heaveu.' • Yet why speak of age . in a mournful strain:: It . is beautiful, honorable,' elo quent. Should we sigh at'the 'proximity of death, when life and. the world are so full of empliuesi's ?' Lee tho old eictilt'bc , cause they ars any must weep, hit it be the young, at the long uccession of years that are.before them. Welcome the snow,fire,,it is the etablem of Resulted of rest. his but a temporal crown which shall fall'aethe giiies Of Paradise, to be . re placed by a brighter 'and abetter.-Btf fok) Express., ' • No ,Buslnets,to be a Bachelor. the'vast flowery field of human affec tion, the old liaithelor is the very scare crow of hapiiiness, who drives swig the little, birds that come to steal away the hemlock seeds of loneliness and despair.-- Where is there a more pitiable object in the world than a man who has no amiable creature interested in his welfare ? HOW dismal does his desolate room appear when ho comes home at night, wet and hungry, , and finds a cold hearth; and a barren table —and .a lonely pillow, that looks like the white urn of every, earthly enjoyment ! See the sick old bachelor, in the dark af terneon of life, when his heart is sinking to its sundown I Not a solitary, star of memory gleams over the dust'of his open• grave—no weeping wife to bend like a blessing over • his dying beilL--:no fond daughter to draw his chilly hand into the soft pressure of her own, and warm his icing blood with the reviving ,fires of un failing affection—no manly boy to link his breaking name with the golden chain of honorable society, and bind history in the last volume of the world ho is.leaving for ever. Be has eat and drank, and died ! and the earth is glad she got rid of him for he has done little else but cramp his soul into the circumference of a sixpence, and no human being but his washerwo man will breathe a sigh at'his funeral.. , The sarows of a pure heart are, but the May frosts, which'precede the warm summer day ; but the sorrows . ora corrupt soul are its Autumn , frosts, which , forte! the cold dreary winter. A true business rnsn bears... prosperity , without boastiug, apt! , sue* 34 4 45 , 1 0 4 , out Qrubibliiig. i' , FEARLESS ANA FREE!' A Visit to lir. DOOM, Sisgllsh School Io Calcutta. . . RAIN ! - "R a i , opal's one of the boys. 'What is rain ? "Water from the , sky." Is it produced by to sky itself ? 1 "No 1" How is it formed . ?....."013.1" says one, with the characteristic smartness of the 1 1 Hindu, "Do you not know yoarself ?" I think do; but my present object is to find out whether you know,it. replies ,another, with 'nn air of manifest! satisfaction; "I'll toll .100-I—it is squirted I from the trunk of India's elephant!" In deed : that's a new theiory of the origin of! rain, which I did not know•before. and I I should now like to knciw on what evidence it is founded. "All I can say about it is, my Gum told the so." . • Ilut your Gum must have some reason for telling you so, Did ho ever see the elephant himself 2 "Oh, no 1 the elephant is • wrapped up in the cloud, as in a covering, and no ono can I See it with his own eyes.". How, then, came the Gum to know that . the elephant Was there at all 1 "To be , sure, because the Shastra says so."' Now I understand . ' the matter: You say the rain comes from the trunk of an elephant, simply because the Gum has told you that this account is I contained in the Snastra. "Certainly; for though I .have never. seen it with my own eyes, yet I believe it is there, because the i Horn has told me that the Shastra gape° ; and what the Shastra pays must be true." Your Guru has taught. putt very different theory from that. which say Guru taught me iu Scotland. Would you like to hear it. and compare the two 'together Y. "No- thing•would delight us more," reply save- nil yokes.' in boiling. your rice, what rises from the . vessel ..tliheit.o dry lid is 41d.over is, what,effeet is produced ? . _"lt gets wet." What makes it wet ? "The smoke or vapor." True : and • when'.it - gets very, Very wet, does all the vapor continue to stick to it ?I "No ;, it falls in drops." Very good.— What, then, would-you say of the . vapor), itself? Is it dry or, wet ? "Wet, sure o- nough." Whence s .•then does the wet va-1 por_proceedl "It can only be from the water in the veiiert7liftlic - vapm• -- a - dif- - 1 ferent kind of substance from the water ?I "No." • Whytio you think so? "Because, when it gathers on the, lid, it turns to wa- ter-itgain." Solon' conclude that the va por ie just a pa'rt'of the water in the ves sel ? ."Yes." .What drives it off, then, from the rest, and 'makes it fly into. the air? "It is its nature to do so. Think a moment ; when youtiold a cup of cold wa-' ter iu your hand. do. ( you see the vapor a rising from it ? • "No." , What, then, MUM; the di ff erence • between 'the drinking writer.iu your cup, and the water. that boils then • ce 1 "The' one is cold and the- other is warm."... What makes it wrarm 1 "The fire," So it is 1 I I _tom water waren: b•. _ v the Ere nit you seithe•:-.epor MN front the cold: What must you infer front this f "Thet it is the lire which , in inakiog the water warm, maker, it go into vapor.' After •a heavy tall of rain on the heated ground,' when the sun shines out strongly in the morning, what do ytitt see ? "Great vapors or mists." Where do they come froin ? "From the wet ground." ,Where do they go if) ?, 4. Up to; the sky." it warm 'or•coll up in the sky I "Very cold, high up, so that the fakirs say the water grows hard in the flimaylay et the soure.e ofai , G ge." .When time vapors front the wet ground rise up to this 'cold plane in the sky, what will become rif thein I "Per haps they 'will form into drops, as the vs pors from the boiling rice do upon , the lid of the Whe n a great many drops gather together, will they stay up in the 'ides? always 1 "No ;theY. will fall demi." And when a great, many drops . Of 'water fell down from the sky, what is it? "Bain, to be stiro.". Well, that is the theory of of the' Origin of rain which 'once learned from my ,Geritin Scotland.,. "How nat. ural.' l "—"How like the truth "Sure is true." "Ah ?;•Ali what have I beebthinking if YOur account bo a true One, what hettomes of our Shistra ? 'What becomes :of our Shostra ? your.' account lie a true. one, then our : B4Blra mast he Our .Yhastra must either be not from God, or God niust4ave written, lies. But that irripmisible. The • Shastra is true ;Brahma is true ;•ro `your Giun'S count must he (Mee; and yet,. it. lookit so I very like the truth." Call the roll. Call the toll here was the commencement, or first germ of mental struggle which, only terminated, in the case of some with the entire overthrow of ,ilindooisin. Tlp' to that moment the yeti - nation that it was possible for anything in the , holy Shastras to be falSe, bad never been conceived even as the creation of a fitful dream. Even to hesitate on a point so sacred'and fun& mental,_ must pre-supposo a degree of men"- tat effort which those who have been-nurs ed in the lap of truth and freedom in a Christian land, can scarcely conceive.— And, yet, here was now the sudden injec tion of a doubt, where all doubt was be lieved I to be impoisible---the sudden starting of a suspicion, where suspicion was believed to be an insult to the memo ry of an immortal aneestry--,an impious contempt for the authority ,4of Alm gods.— Yet so palpable were the, facts, ep natural the inference, and so like the' truth; that in spite of such an array of antecedent .an tipathy,- the mind strove in .vain to shake itself loose from a dreaded and hated, but struggling and clearing conviotion.—pu" on India Aliss. IllostEN.-;--Women are like countries the more beautiful they are, theless they are cultivated. Ryon wish to find' mind among the aex, or industry ;among ,a peo ple, make the accpiaintance of a raw-bimed girl,.or take a trill into Scotland. • ' HONEY.-"My husband neglects his home," 'saida lady to her friend; the oth er day. ' "What would you do; -if you Were in my place I" "Use , more hooey," Was the apt, reply. Orie of the German Almanacs remarks that a young girl is a fishing rod—the eyes are•the hook, the smile the bait, the loser klut:Odfienn. and marriage Abe butter to which he is fried., • =MEM Vr°man'fl U)Fe,' Poets have . sungyromancists have . writ ten, and philosophers, have. reasoned since poetry.. and,. romance and philosophy have had ..being, of the depth,: the truth.. and devotion of. that precious..thing called woman'a 10ve.., And yet, though we have all reflected a little on the subject, we find it over new, ever fresh, ever pleasant to think' of. But . what we • despair , of ever seeing realized is, to behold it widely • and properly appreciated. Pew men , who en, joy the inestimable , privilege of having one heart which knows no other idol on earth but them, which looks up, with admiration, and confidence, and devotion to thorn are thoughtful enough to place at its rofty height so rare and precious a And yet to be loved is the first joy of earth. But then, woman's' love is made up of such a world of tenderness, of self-sacrifice,' of devotion, of—let them pardon us for be traying them to the many—of worship for the man of their heart ; is composed of so many various and conflicting elements, that man in the ordinary . harty and bus tle of life k ean scarcely find time to seize, learn and understand. thern. There are, however, two lovers in woman ; the mai den love and the wife's love. The absorb ing, fresh, and pure love of the maid ;re quires more to feed it than' does the 'wife; and hence sho will rarely really love . ex cept it be eome dneWhoin alto can look up to, whom she•can respect, and whom at all events she believes to be superior to 'her selfin intellect or general capacity. Time love of the wife is inure chastened,. and made hpiri'pLirt of duti; hence . she will pardou 'what the maid never . will : hence does She often stood by the meanesit wrotelLtsben he has fallen froth his origin'. al high estate, and become 'perhaps, .so vile, that all else despise and curse, save her . only whose love is even deeper still—his mother.. It is adinnato ..consciousneas.of this which snakes the lover always put on his best behaviour before his mistress, when he is Sensible and whit. and which too often prompts the husband to bo careless and thoughtless in his fine of conduct. 010 Bun. . . . . . The folltilting anecdote is told of the great Norwegian violinist on his first ap . „ pearanee in' this 'tountrys. • After his first 'coneert, when 'Ore Bull reached home, - he felt, uold, coining out Of a warm 'new; and told.the servant to make ' sonic fire. The servant rolled up towards I the Chimney a large bail, put up as wood generally is, .and marked with cliallt.ffire Wood." ' Ole' Bull had' never, seen it, 1)0,- 1 fere, and asked 'the man where he;bought 1 ll ; aiid tins' i'oldii - hail been brought. by a ! eaitiiii4i, who said, he belonged to a wood yard; and *as to to leave it there., On opening t • •he • . age, ... . 1 huge pack what was,lini • Surprise, to find it contained, twenty-two I'violins,and . ..violineellos,' with bowl eow,- Ailete, accompanied by ' the, follywing., eer -1 tificate • "The undersigned,respectively members of different societies, inure or less devoted to tiftwie, hereby declare and , at ., teSt, that from the day of the date hereof, , ! they' hereby . pledge theinsolvet to forego and abandon all and, every speeWs of study 1, and practice on thu aceompanydng inStra r I ments. These, pieces, of wood„,whieh live and breathe under the touch of ,M. Ole Bull, cannot heenitsidered, in the heads of the iiiidersigned,'nu any thing but mere noinbustibles. They therefore request M. Ole Bull to ;commit • them to the flanies himself,, and . to: - regard the smoke - thiit rises front them• as the incanse of,sineerity and repenting devottili to the divinity of 1 his art." Followed by twenty-two bigna: tures. Three days-after M. Ole Bull pro- sided at a great dinner, to which he invi ted all the signers 'of this- extraordinary address. -Bach man found the violin be had given • up, hanging at tlie back of his chair, and to each: was fastened a goldriug, on which was engraved, - oSolitude and Perseverance,;"„ by . , which, in two words, Ihe gently elthled theta for having been so easily'discenrageVand itidicated the Se : l Bret Arita 6wri euciiess. How• to Cook Tomatoes: BAlEED—Ttieivrogs:—Wash them; end cut them in two parts, Minim! the tothato. that'is,' so that The cells, can ,be divested of the. pulp and'seed which they contain. To, Six tomatoes' take a half-pint, of bread erUMbei, • tirie large OniOn,linely chopped, One-mike of butter—pepper and salt , to the' taste, - Fill lhe cells of each piece With, the dresaing ,put tivo halves togeth, er, and tfo theM with - a Piece of thread.—. 1 1 Put them in a pan with an ounce of butter and agill-ot water. set Ahem .in ti moderate qvgliond cook them till tliey,are Whop done, Put .uff the threads and serve • • ,TollsTo Fawertmesu.---Get some alices of veal cutlets; pound and wash them, seas, on them. with ipepper• and salt, , and fry them. slowly AM! they .are :done. They should be of a light brown on hotji sides: ;Stew some tomatoes very dry, strain them through a seive'to get out all,thO seeds, pour the pulp into the gravey after the meat -has been taken - out, and thick'en it with a Mee° of butteerolled in neut. P;!ui this-over the tneat, and serve it hot. Sootiot.to Tomafogs:—Peel fine, ripe toMatoeti, cut them ID small pieces, and put in the pan a' layer' of bread crumbs. then m layer. of tomatoes, with' pepper, salt, and some pieces of butter, then ptit another layer of bread crinitbs• and to matoes, and so till the dish is full. Spread some, beotep ,egg oyer the top, and .pet in the . oven and bake it. .„ FRIED TOIRATOER : -7iYklsii,.l4tlll. ettt thein iit halt, take out ~tlut seeds,. hp 4 season them with peppei and salt. Have ready some melted butter .in a , pan; 'piit them into it, and fry them sslowly. till .verY BekroN ON PETtr`—retit, a Senator , front Indiana, recently wade a speech 'in that State In said that Benton was iu fseor of breaking the Is3oUri oat, promise, tn: wh i e llDenton replies in a fet ter to'the Indiana editor who published the speech : "Sir, your Senator is great liar and a dirty dog,, falsify ing,•puhlic history, for a eritnitt;ilputpette.'.' ,T.hat'e What we plain talk. • , A, Dollsir or Two. With cautious step. as ,we tread ourway Ahrough This intricate world. as other folks,do, :Nay we still on our journey, be able b" view . The' be l hooolent. face'of a dollar ni two ; • For an excellent thing, , • Is a dollarortwo ; No friend ii vo.true As q dollar or; two; . • . 1 Through couotry or Ay l we paps up or down, • • ' Nu passport Co ;odd , . - " Ae a dollir oetwo.' • • Would you read'yourself out of the bache Nee, craw, And the hand of n feitale divhiitt eds..; You must always be ready the handennteld'ilb— Althotigh it would coat you. arloilar ortwo. • Lore's armies era tipped • With s dollar ortwo; • And affietiop is tiained ' By o dollar or 'two • The beet yid - you con meet, In advancing your suit, •'' • lo ilia claquent chink Ors dollar or two. Would't nu wish your it•latencie with faith to And enroll in the ranks of the ranmllled few, , To enjoy a good name and I wbll cushioned pew, You must freely come down with a 'dollar or two, The'goipalis 'Preliehed For a &War ot twa t 1 And salivation is reached • I By a dollar Yen may ain at some times, But the worst of all 'crimes . Is to find yourself 'hart • - • Of a dollituor two. ' - • - [ From 'Ath.noeunt. rurrEßAv or A 2=1)311=1 rittEs.r. A young priestga mere bq—came running - M.(4olomi one milting into the house where I was• staying, and called out to my heat, also'n priest, i'Cmine w:th me; make haste,' for Tang-a is dying " We hastened, to the adjoining house, which was the iihode of the siek man, but found that the king or terrors- had been before us, and the priest was dead. By di is time about a ditzon persons were cOl• lemed,Who were all gazing Wendy on the countenance of thd dead man. Alter al lowing a few minutes to elapse, 'orders were given to-have=-the-body washed and dressed, and removed from the bed to a small room - with an open front, which was situated on the opposite side of the little court. M (myth° curtains were then hung round the bed on which the body was Placed, a damp and some candles were lighted, as well as some stieks of incense, and these were kept burning day and night. For; three days the body lay to inate;-de riug which, time, ,at. stated intervals, font or live priests, decked in yellow .rolies„ chanted their peculiar service. .On, the third dsy'Vetas-fold 'that 'tli4:'''cOOt was readY, and, en expressing a wish to . 46 it, was led into•an' adjoining' temple. there two priests dead ?" said I,' on' oh- Serving •another' coffin Ilia keine platie: said one, , ‘liut 'Wei;second cufliti lielongs :to the pie's, whO'ins deceased, and remain here until it is needed." '• , • • . . On the evening of anti day, when turned troM my labours einong'st the hills, I called in' again to see what was goiniOn; and now every 'different scene presenteil itself. 'And here I rnnst'erleavor scribe the forni ttie 'prehtise'ti, in order that this. scene Miny' be better ' The little helm or temple . trinitiked Of a centre and two ..vingh, the winks being built at right engleS with 'the centre; and forming •vith it three sides a a 'sgMare: a high' wall •ronneeting the two wings, and tin a lite.° court - or Chinese 'garden Watt formed, very small in extent, ,'.A - ticonire , ' table 'was plaited inside' the' central balFor temple, iine•io front of it. nnil - Mieln`frort of each of the two wing;+. E.!tch of these tables were covered with good sur!hiatt rice; vegetables, fruits, milt is ()Vier delicaides . ,'ail' the of ih vegleable kingdom.itittmdind tr feast for Buddha,' whoM these neople - This ()Miring differed froM OtherSwh'icl(l. have' often... Seen in the plirdie . `street' and privant .hinises; in having no aninial fond in any of the -Btidit': hist priestlier - rid inmfess ribluirreitee or taking away animal hid or of eating! anit anal food; and beiree'nb - feed ' the: kilnd. was observed on any of the tables new be- fore me. On two strings, tvitielt! were , hung disgenally across 'the court. from the central temple pi !each of the front wall, were hung, numerous Small parei . dresses Witt Chinese lashiten, and on the 'ground were' large qimittitiee of paper made tip - in tht.iliirut nag:aimed' the etil orof the ingots of ',..4yet.e, silver common In circulation., Tice elq[lipi and Sit cur: were , iotTideil ofreoing to litiodlia,; and was, cerlioly, a cheap may of,. giving away valuable presents.. 4 rude panning. of lluddba was liong up in,the centru of the court, in front to which incense. was burning; ,and these, with mittly other ob.. jects of minor„uote, completed the picture which.was presented, to_ my .view.. ..1h not this very fine I'7 said - the priest to o , le 4. , ihave, you, tini. exhibitions, ot.thiskind in you! co&itry - ?. fouo,pay a,giyit ,io,, the be.lightvil n tip ; With tiandlei, and when..the,seeno lie morP;rai o to return in the. evening. ,niol , . . AbouS eight o'clock , at elght,, au old; priest came.to inlorni, me „unit all yds bghted.up,..that.thectreinoctes werralsititt, in'tiCgin, and. kindly,,indseil, accouts : pany hins: pp our .e oF ail Q t v tlm • tv),oto court was blazing witb-, the.ligh,t,pt,niany candles, the air was- filled w jilt _ ineenie„ and iliesceite alsogedter, bad, ast,,extrsor. &nary aiia , prie,, l ; ctrP'436;l a sort of star-shaped crown on. his -head.' with (our others (Ilan infernir order; tsl - '.re 'u rutting up sintl.'dowu the court, nod! bowing lowly hefore. the ;Images • of:the gods. last they easel-cif • t he.. ; ,, et itros , hall, mot: took their seats at two tahles,—+ priest, if I may call him. so, inn . cupteditte-liead of the room,.and had chair and,table placed ors a higher level than the others, who were exactly in irons of hits,' A . servant now placed a cup of tea .before,eaeh of them{ and the: service *PO- t The:high pciestuttereda facratm.'l tencile jn halkainging: tone: 'bosom:le time great many motions`ion.lr, . . T.WO DOLLARS.MC.OrMt _ • .!f in • " • " ''iliifiti lia` " his finger is he pl' e, n F se It MI her °lgraine tif heel on the ' tibli betoin ' MM.' TWo:little''bdiit.;dr'etileein 1 60'0: t Mournlng ii (Whittilsiriti eitigetreiflisletit4ri. / deg 'them efvel `lntt'hy finies be ore, t 0 t, ~ ble at. which the high prieet, eat .1 sittil„al'i* singular contrast to all thia,s4einiii , lede,'!o r , den, a number cli''ChiVeen''Wefts '0 ittnit tidoklng oh each 'sidti;titicl laiikibiti as, if ° there was a play or some other A i - d , :zi , like tMuseinent. ' The Other Pit ,lii,` lied noivitii ti ad in die' 'Chant,' Whicii 'Wetti itiltrieV, ' tintetealotti, , andat'other'iiiiieViluici iti'd feud, but generally in a inel it imh id If: inn ifi; like all Citint.lite auntie? ' A priest, who was sitting at my eAtew o , now whispered, in my ear that fieiliyia I imself was about to appear. 'lnv: will, not Ilee , him, nor sfia ll 1, nor any one in the. place except the high:priest,,who ie cielh eii in 1110 scarlet robe, and has a alar-ahaltaa crown on his head.: he will, see him.' —4. Slime one out -side now fired three racke4,„ l and at once every somid was hushed ; one I might have heart' a pin drop on the . ground;: .1 and the piieitt at my elbow• whisperetl—.., "Buddha cemes.." • "Prostrate yourselves I alt ! pull your caps off," said one . of the, young nrietds in white, already noticed. The boys immediately took off their, little , white caps. and bent lowly on the straw, 1 cusitioia planed in front of the various al , . , liars. and knocked their heads many, times j on 'the wound. At 'this particular moment I the whole scene was one of the strangest lit had ever been my lot to witness, souk although I knew it was nothing else than delusion and idolatry, I tnuel,confess it 1 penduced an almost superstitious effect on my feelings. "And is Buddha now horn , . in the midst of us 1" .. I asked the gentle , , man at My elbOw. "Yes , he is," he said s 1 "the high-priest - sees himinlibothgli he it not visible to ally one besides." Things remained in this slate for a minute or two; . and then the leader of the ceremonies ; commenced once more to chant in thin drawling -tone I have already noticed, .4 `make various gyrations with his "hands, placing and replacing the rice grains;, end the others joined in as before. < My , old friend the priest, whit had brought met in to see these) ceremonies, now presented• himself and told mod had seen all Melina I t worth seeing, that the services were nearly ; over, and that it was very late and timemi Igo home, 'On our way to our (Wafter/I, he informed me the funeral would take 1 place early next morning, just before - sun; 'rise, and :that if 'I wished to attend lie would'Oall for me at the primer time. i' Earlyt in , :ihe , twilight of next morning: and just before the sane ; •rays• had tinged the peithe: ef the highest' mountains, I . wat! n waketted by the lend report •ot fireworke. • Dressing hastily, 1. hurried:. down to thd house where the scene of • the preceding svntlitig tuned. and foundlrnyself among this Inst of the sorrowful procession, ; tentking Otp the cotirt and hall, 1 found that 'the an, riGtiel had been entirely re. tahlin; were hare 'not a ;pursuit t 4 i any kind remained, and it seemed as if the !grills had hems satisfied with their repast. silver•ingots, trio, and' the'littrherints gaudily painted, dresses which had r heeii presented as an offspring. were 'smoulder= log itua corner of the eourt, 'having been consumed by holy•tire.- • ' • rte 'the • futOral' prer.estrion prneeetled :slowly down, inside the cni6reil pathway adjoining, the' temple:Ale large'bell tolled in Writs , and measure:a 'tones, inelt'ete %Veit, fired note find then. and inimerotis joined in as we went along.. Ilaving reached the last tempt al the range, the body *se placed on twdetnols in front of one of the Mtge imnges, and: Chinn-like, 'befirrepid, ceeding further, all went home to breakfast. This itnportam.businees ,finiahed„,thecas semblymet.agnitriii thi; tern ple and perfnitn ed n abort service, while theenoltee. were busily employed in adjusting the ropes by which they carried the ciiffio. All being ready, two men went outside 'the temple and fired three rocking; and then . the Pro ? eessionetartedo , First Weil two Wye; car rying email flege,on batubon 'poles; then dame tivo.then•beatinebrans • goingii,"lind then came the ,chiermourner, white, and carrying on la entail- tible..Pao dandles which Were burning:some inceutie'. Anil• the monumental tablet. , After - the • chief. .Mourner:caine the -Colliti,•folfritadd .by tho young prieste al =the house to which the ile,peased belonged,. also clad in llwa - the servanni and. Under taker.' and. last el all, a• long - train yof I steed on 'one side of the like, in front of ilietenitile. in order to set A zood view, of the procession as l it winded around the other: • It was a beautiful 'Oetobist morn = ingl the sun was now peeping over the Eastern'utountiiimt, behind•the monastery, and shedding a flood of light on' water. Plito6 and trees, while'every leaf sparkled with drops 01 dew. " 'ln such a 'scene this long and striking proeetsion lad's snort imposing, effect.' The boys with 'their flags,. • the chief ,mourner moving slowly gang Wiiii his candles burning in the Clear the long line of prieste With their shawlit I•Weeils 'and 'flatting garments, the' lake in front, and the hills, coirered tices'autf brushwood b'ehinit;-tverti et mien . . presented to my Stew. 'As' we passed'e bridge; little way front the r temple, a . man belonging to the fatally of 'the' ctecgnd; eil. ailif who (serried a' bail:et- ennifthung, i.ash—a Chinese coin—pres'ente'd arnonW bar of the, followers with a small ram, Which they received with'itiipareiht lance. Most of the priests followed the bier but a shunt distance fromllie 1011,44811 ml the chief mourner? add the in tininie friends, wiili a band•olintiale,.follittv'elilhe body to - i is last. reft nog , place. • The iipat 'erected was • a retired'' and beautiful one,' ;on ',the lower side lit a" kithlf wooded hill. , -Here. willioutfortherceremritties•rhaitthe'firing of some rockets"; ,sire left the tinflhi,•tio• the' surface Or' 't tie .grittiitd, "noveiketil woht thaieh or brieliwnrlt tunny. • ' ' ." The elateholdets in the - pontlntaigsnori bordering on 'Kerteiie, nod in pirig , nig"V' . ono. am holding publia neetittgiyetwhillt thil resolve to setterbi-`4thimiliistirby the , tige tied NeinOHO' "pears" 'unit. opriptitee savaiiffitity!! tlhip ' the Nebrarke bin bus b lo . o ll' i•