BY D. A. ez C. H. BUBBUR -. VOLUME XXV. BOOKS ) STATIONERY Salle!? 6®®Z357• °/ Prico7and that as low aNi at any Establishment out of tho City. ~',l, CiI..I3II9EIHILER EtURNS his' acknowldegments to JEV.hia 'friends fOr the long continued liberal:patrOnage extended him, and invites attention to his present 'largely in creased stuck of goods just received from Philadelphia and New York. He deems it unnecessary to enumerate the assort trienti, which will he found to embrace elieiy agoods in his line, viz : Classical, Theological, School, Miscellaneous BOOKS and Stationery of all kinds, embracing, as he believes, the largest and best , assortment eyer opened in Gettysburg. • He also invitee attention to his large supply of X'ANCT GOODS', , embrining Gold and Silver pent' and Pen cils, f'en-Knives, Plain and Fade) , Note. Paper and Envelopes, Motto Wafers, Sealing Wax, Portintmeaus, Soaps, Per finnery, ilia., Ste.--all of which will be Gold' it the 10r.20 VERY :LOWEST 1617weS.„pil at Call and examine for yourselves at die old mstablialied BOOK & DRUG store Chambers6urg flreet, a few doors rom thG . tufr 111/biLER:' Bletlysbai, Pit.,Oct. 21, 1855. • . . NEby MARCUS SAMSON is La opened and is now•selling rapidly .atlis,fltore in-York street, opposite the Bank, a very.large ,ehniee and etiettp esiortmeni• of SUMMER . GOODS, to whietelte invitee the attention - of the 'Prib- Wiley ham beelf.seleated with great, • care M r , Abe. Eastern. cities, have kee, hi:night cheap for cash, and' tyill be sat cheap foe' . chSlt=cheaper attb'oiher establishment in Getlyseire. fits stork c mantis in. part of B iiek, Wee; Olo)e,'and' Gr ee n cl.o:l'fi,Cf.!4;fBi.with:lrdak,dreett;- tuid sack Amytt; ; alsn Tweed, clashmeret r I,inen Lustre, Check: Ging ilahr,'S'ea' Grail, Duck' end Sunither Cloth Coats; also s superior; snick 'of PAN'PA'; part of excellent and well made Fretich.• Black Doe-akin Cosaittiere, Fancy: ,Casaimere, Satinens, Vertliie;Cord, Linen, and Cottonade.- 7 'hi mirk' or VEsTS' 'voniprittes every, varialy f a"maribfacture--fine black Satin, Silk, Velvet,. Silk:" white, fancy and bar Shiseittes,'Sunimer cloth, Ste., di , e; ' " , • • BOODSn _PLY NETS,,FLY._NETS or a vett excellent ‘manufacture nod offered at low, prices., I have already , tlisputied,of .* large number of these arti. clot and always to. tho.satisfaction of put , . chasers. Alap'_ pit . hand a largo lot of TRUNKS, ilats, Carpet Balm Umbrellas; 'limits and Shoes, Window - 811 - Tides, Vio iio44:.Aecortkoas. Guitars, Flutes, .Fifes, Mttloticoos ' Mirrors. Razors, :Spectacles, Spootui,Watchee.and Which Guards, silk and cotton, Handkerchiefs, Cravats, Sus. panders, Gloves, Stockings, Spring Stocks, Shirts. and shirt Collars, and a splendid *lsmillst.Bll.ofJBW RIX Y—in fact every thing in the way of . Boy's and Men's furnishing line, gcr•lnrst-rate chewing Tobacco always on :haiid-e't ails article which chewers are requested to try. • ••; ' • • 'MARCUS SAMSON: Jtine 30 4 1854,-11 , • Hats and Caps, g; 311,0321221 VITOOLD inform his friends and the 4ublic, that he has on hand a One iiipangimat of HATS of his own mann lispit:l, His stock includes sa, FINE SILK, FUR, RUSSIA, AND SLOUCH HATS, ~o( all kinds and prices ; and also ..•• , all kinds Of Summer Hats and . - • CAPS FOR MEN AND BOYS. . la-Please call, examine, and judge for youraelyea. The endersigned will not be underaeld'l;y any establishment either in dwelt) , or Country. S. S. M'CREARY Gettysburg, May 12, 1854.-1 y tiROMRIES , ' GROCEIIES! E have just received the largest stock of GROCERIES ever offer ed in the county, comprising ~,21cr Hilda of prime,Sugar, 60 Barrel ,s of best • N. a Molasses,, $ iihtlik of of quality of Syrup, tiiiithei: With a largo assortment 'of Coffee, Rice, Tobaced, '44c. , to 'which •we invite the,pttentiou of purchasers, either, wholel esto,!or, fefait. .. Islow is . , your . time.; for, cheap and desirable Groceries ; the place tb PAIINESTOCKS. Sign of the RED FRONT: 1854.. . . 1 1 1 .4:A.CO.untry-Merchants. EIVIIT' , 'ANO 'CONFECTIONARY, ,11.vBiN0Am:4:S.ELLERS, Rilfolitittlite'Marttifacturem and Dealers lit 4 JOIVFEOTIONARY bF ALL KINDS. " Th' phi rtc Inl at., below see, la op in. 911HE'itteittien Of 'Dealers: is ;requested JR ' to an examination of their stoek; w.~iptll wall be roußd to. be• AT,LEAqT esuakto this Or- FPAEI°N' FitAikKtsi9Call kinds in feel l o4 l , . ~; ,o,,,Opictß pY mail or otherwise PWrinillYliPtActilOri: Joe NUM' UNCS7 000230' CALL AND SEE'THEM' a MISS McCLELLAN.. 111 AS just returned from Philadelphia -am- with a laree and well selecte%l,ps• soriment of. FANCY GOODS of every variety, (to which she invitee' the attention of Ladies and Gentlemen,) comprising fashionable • Bonnets &,' Bonnet Trimmings; Silks, Satins, Ladies' Dress Trimmings,' Velvets, Ribbdns, Artifieials, Black Veils; Blue do. Gloves, Hosiery, Handkerchiefs, French worked Collars, Cambric, Jacionet and Swiss Edgings, Insertings, Minding, Sleeves, Mohair awl Silk Mits L Black Lace; and Embroidered Handkerchiellr, Braids, Fans, Gentlemen's Collars, Combs of - all kinds,Ate., Soml.ndies and Gentlemen are requested to call and ex amine our Goods,. ItKiilgiveuspleasure to show them. . . March bt,'1854.---ir IMAZa VaSTATZ ,11.0.111\14 4 7. T HE undersigned :has made arrange -IL • menta to open an Agency, in Gettys , burg for the sale of- fteal:Estatil, to he invites'the attention of per,sons ing M sell or purchaie yarns or Reel E state. .'I :hive provided s 'Book in which ' will be registereda (fora trilling fee) a gen eral description of such properties se per.. sonewish4Gdispcvseol -vnle,r!" These Books will be open to those (keit:9os of placha,lng property. Secieaj , as to ownership, tern's, 'Arc:. will be. obretved, when desired: • fir7"4ll, further necessary . inform:6 . 6R can•be obtained upon application . ,to,,gic, suliscriber at the Register's office,- or at his residence._ •',;a• -111 - - PAPlJPegLikNiir auggat /I, ONISTIEIfiIfODS! DRA:mLAritr4dl,Au t ieust rAe , tu l rn l ee ‘. j from the City with the - . -` 4 -: 13est'S"Teitttcl Siochol bprigig- ?Ma tiummet•Uroods,-. eyer t befoge offered tithe IdtWOreetintrye consietiugin part tak German`, Frerichiandi Domestic .Clotha. , Black le Fahey 'Catek mores; Satini & other Vestings i • Italiehi Cloths., Coat , Gingliards,l Tweetlk,' Jeans,, , Berege , De Laines; 'De , Laittes',, Priute,,,Ginghams, and.' a great vitiety , of , Goode,too numerous to mention'. a „largo assortment of. • Bontiets,.: Pare-' sole, 6r.d. ' CO - Call and see, as I 'am determined , to undersell • any, establiehthent in. the Town or Comnty. March. 31 1854.--ff " ' R 111' 3 ' . THE undersigned , has iernlised tablishment to the roo6it formerly oc cupied by ALE . XANDER FRAZER, next door to, •Grammer's. Store, in, Chimheralaiiig street, where he , is prepared 44„attlind g to . every thing in ,his line, ofhnsimm i ls, nett a s cleaning ar repairing CiIOCKS ) , WATCHES . &,C;; ' at reasons* prices, I , have now ; have ow,ol bpi(' a, large tmmixiolt, of exCelient oLOCICS'' ' of various etyleir,. which will he sold at prices which can't be beat. Give us a call. • • R. O...SCHWARTZ. Gett o yakkurg, April 28, 1854:—.if S AN HIA I . BATS, CAPS, BOOTS & SHOES, CIO:VIE ONE, COME ALL, .and. !ell 'our neighbors to come, to the Store of the "Two Eittremes,",and see the splendid stock of HATS, At CAPS, BOOTS and r= SHOES, now open ing, of the latest style and of every varie ty, ' suitable for the Spring and Summer season, for Gentlemen, Ladies and Chil dren- I have made arrangements to have Boots and Shoes made to order, by the best of workmen, and of good material, in the quickest posejble time, W. W. PAXTON. Gettysburg, March 31, 1854.—tf Teaehers' Walked.. THE School Directors of Hantiiton 4 n township, will meet ct the School house in Fairfield, on Saturday the 2nd of September next, at 2 o'clock, P. M:. to receive, proposals from .'reachers for taking charge of the different Schools in said town. , ship. tex..The Conn tV Superintendent be in attendance to examins'appliiisnts. D. D. MAHON, Sic'y August, 18, 1844. . , BONNETS. & PA.RASOI,S, Ihave how on hand a ,large seamy:pent - 0 - 'of Bonnets St' Parasols, latesf 'styles, which I have just received, and will Cell cheaper than can be had of any establish.' ment in town, call and see. A. ARNOLD. • w I ll i e e118,1110 " QUee.?aStVare.! have.jug; ;eceiypc.l ft. /OrgPl lot o I QUEENPW,ABE, whiph §01; ' and oN,Ngrs,.Ribb ma 'and Ficiiieio,'a farie u. assilrt"Alit. itte4 etyteg to be round its f '. Y .1,6 t , I , • .;,?; tri•' #IO4IOICILI • • • • tr : Bev. Dr. Beecher and the Traffic. The following are the sentiments of the Rev. Dr. Reeder, upon the subject of Traffic in Intoxicating Drinks, and ford-] oquenee and •expression, and fidelity to &nth, will never be surpassed. Let every friend of the prohibitory law road, and be strengthened in his resolution to perse vere in his pursuit of that remedy : "Ilas not God connected with all law ful, avocations the welfare of the life that now is, and that which is to Goma; and can we lawfully amass I)? operty by acourso of trade which fills the land with beggars, and widows, and orphans, and comes; which peoples the grave yard with prema ture mortality, and the %fork' of woo with victims, of despair ? Could all the forms of evil produced in the laud by intemper ance, come upon us in one, horrid array, it would appal the nation, and put an end to the,traftio, It in every dwelling built by blinul. the atones from the wall should utter all the cries which the bloody traffic, torts—and the beam of the timber should echo them back—who would build such a house 7 and who woulddwelliu it 7 What, if, in every:part of,tbe dwelling. from the, collar upwards; through all the halls and chambers—habbling,and contention:4 j and vice, and groans, and.shrinks, and wailing inT4 4 01 4 hany and by, night f., ,WhAt, if thestold blow, oozed, out. and stood upon th'd Wats; and by preternatural, art * ,all the pitays and hopes ,oftheivietites,deltroy ed by intempewiee, elogla 14 11 4 , ruPaR the walltOn,hnrrid withiintthq„huildink trr-who would rear ettell Q VAINI i ne %Oat, if to eventide acid at mitring Lthe,. airy-fel:Pk .9c• PIMA d r4r,9Yndi 4 bY:iintPnlpertinep seen uttunung the olotil*ios ; and stoolt, wherh the,y reectied, the bene- t following the track of ship engaged in counnerce upon the,,waves—flitting rt. tilwaNi the deck—sitting upon the rigging antlaendiog up from.the hold within, and s . from the waves without, groans, and.. loud ymiiipgB ! Who would attend such stores.?.who, would labor in such dis ti lcriea ? who would,navigate such ships? ! wrien the sky over our heads, one great whispering gallery. brings down up on us all the lanientatiOns and - woe which intemperance creates, and the firdi , Earth, ope, morons medium of sound, sends up front 'beneath the millings of thing thp cons'inerbo Of ardent:spirit had seat thither; them' tremendotis mialtilitig our sense; Would inyigorate our conscience, and give decision,to our purpose, of reform- , mien. But those evils are as, real, as, if the's'tanes di e irery out: of the wall,,and the and night, answeredit—as real as if, day and night, wailiiigs were'henrci in every pert' of the dwelling—autl blood and skeletons I were seen upon every , well—as real, as if the"ghostly forms of departed victims flit- ted abOut the ship as she passed over the billows, uud allowed themselves 'nightly about stores and di-dilleries, (and we may I mill breweries) aud. with unearthly voices acrp,ntned Moor ears their loud lenient. They' areas real us iif ille!,,kyover our heads collect-, ed - and hi-Might 'dom about ea all the notes of sorrow in the lend-Land the firth earth` Weld opeoaavossago , for the, wailing' of aCtllrir to Pu!uu up f,F94l,beneitll.." •ElllB3 , lltondletlit. , • .. , ,WoNZtvattoi./L.PuEssatVartiort..--A wri ter in the'Boston:ReCord'eri ad - an illuitra tiotitofthe Ph:agenda cue , which- God tioinetitnei•exerbises tifer hid people,- - -kev latAs ihti following Mariellend",ineident, and Voi v tches authentieiti • • Poodinot, the founder of the A- Merical Bible ° Society,. was returning in:, his chaise to his borne, late in.ft dark night, frets a court ho bad .been attending many days. 1.110 did not , know that a mewl freshet had carried o ff the, planks from the ' long bridge that' lay in his accustomed path. Therefore be drove right on, as though, there were a bridge there, and reached home safely. II is friends 'inqui red by what'read he came. '•The usual, rodd, ha' replied. l'lmpoisible." . said they, "there are no planks on the bridge.", He persisted, and they, trembling for his veracity or his sanity, eagerly went with him next niorning early. to survey.„°, When arrived, they found the very taneks of the carriage at either end of the bridge and on the sleepers, and the very footprints of his horse on a central sleeper. There 'waino'more to be said---satlity and veracity were bath safe. Some power had I presided aver the instinct of that horse, lul,ordained . the correspondence of those wheels with, the sleepers over which they I passed, and kept. the man in ignorance .of his - danger: Was that power, fate or chance ?. 0 tuy.doubting . friend, I turn from you and listen. to.another voice," Hest thou not heard . that the everlasting ,Ged, the Creator of the ends of the earth, taint ed; not' ileac; is weary ?”. E . ' irP• '•-, " , ~ • ..,,j) e-, ~,, ) , ! .*:: ' `i . 7 t , , . ~ "Bishop'. Wainbright relates a touching incident beautifully illustrative of 'the re ligidu'a•yearnings of thO late Daniel Web ster ' • . , "Soon after I returned from Egypt, and the Holy Land, lwaring that Mr. I:Vcbster was I called upon` him at the 'As tor, as I' Wai'alivays aceustomed ' to de.— Hiti reception of me Was most cordial and affectionate., lle asked me tunny ques tions tts to tuy, Eastern travels, and as I rest to go away, he tookxue by the hand add'said, "I want you to do one thing for me: You have been to,4r to Palestine.-- 1 wish to get the best map I cans com mand, ancl;have you sit down. with me one heur--but one litour, I wish to go with you 'froth plaCe to phicellothlehent, Naz areth, Jetusalem, the Sea . of Galilee, Jor dan, Bethany, the Mount of Olives; and tell as I point, how it looks ; the hills, the trqes, : the rocks,:tho land, !the , water. I can never go there, but I. would look as neatly aster upon every Spot sanctified by the fireseun of ant' blessed Lord, While tabernacled inahe Ilea His eyes filled ,with tears, and be;earnestly, pressed; my hand, ~..11n.ltittides; 1 of emotions swelled A my beat. I•iiitnined the. 'preasitre,,sed .1 • A. ARNOLD GETTYSBURG, Pk., FRIDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER. ; Daniel Webster. iFEARLESS AND FREE." UNEXPECTED ELEVATCON.—.The VidiSßi• tudes of human life are very strange. lta 1830, President Tyler, then a Colonel In the army, wrote a loiter to Gen. Mclsiiel, who had just been appointed Surveyor of lloaton, from which wo make the follow ing extract : I am fully aware that it is impossible for us - to : pursue any profession—particu larly that of arms--for fifteen or twenty ' years without forming strong attachments to it in various ways; and of course, must abandon them with , considerable reluc tance, but there are circumstances which should reconcile: us . to doing so, and to justify us, not only in our own eyes, but that of the community. Could I get a civ il appointment as respectable, with half the emolument another, to it as there is: to the one you have received, and where I could be located 'so as to superintend the education of my children, I would resign forthwith ; for after serving twenty-two years and upwards in the army, all of which time on duty, with the exception of a fee , months; without being stationed two years together-at any one post,during tbat'tinte, I begin to ,think that I need re pose, but ae -I do not, possess influence - entinghtO•priteure a civil appointment of any gratle, - 1 ennsider my doom fixed. Hero ice plain modest officer 'of the U. S. army who in 1830, expressed a sin cere Wish that he could retire from - his la bors upon some office with half the cumin• mast that Goh. McNeil received, and de clared 'Mai he did nbyposseas influence notiglvto protaire'e Civil appointment ; and yet this :IMMO mart beenme a world-re.- nowned General. and, President of the - Ucited-thates; in leak than twenty , year's from -that time.-r ! rr,o.rtiond, AS't,ote of A.One. , Isistir-vvAv TO MAHE IrEA AND COFFER. o..the refreshment .department of the Sitlenbaio Crystal Palace is. introduced, . 'a WSW : Mode of ninking:cioffee anti''tea by hydrOstatie pressure: - 11 is the invention of M. Loysel, a . Freneh chemist, and by its agency he proposes . to achieve the :fol.. Iciwing; resulta—mathely: The produe. tioo of tea and coffee'of peculiar flavor and 'cleerneationl a great economy and saving in the use of the material; With a poilitd of coffee; valued at one • and fourpence r he undertakes to.producken imperial gallon • of 'the infusion, too: strong for ordinary vie, and' of ah liinpid dearness That would . be - quite•unattaintible by. any iither means. 'llis . process „is by; .scientific appliances, anida reeogoition of the known tendency of liquids to find theitlevel.to force the Mflling...lriater•twice throus h the coffee, and thus get hold of the entire principle called cafeine—a thiog,..avlijeti he. alleges, is never dime by Ilie:.Ordidary mode of preparation, lit the firiliaratiou of tea his liikgreat discovery 'is a very shriple one, and one of which every •lintiseJwife may avail herself. M. Loysel says that. he has discovered that •by grinding, the tea the saute manner as coffee, before fusion: Cie qqautity of 'exhilirating fluid - obtained is nearly doubled. The—experi ment is a very empltd one, and May be • safely-.recommended-to all'commisseurs in , the preparation of "the cup that cheers but not inebriates." flaying, says our London authority, had an oppdriiinity of ta'ating'the tea. and Coffee' as 'prepared •by M.•Loysers.apparates, we can vouch for die delicacy, of flavor and limpidity •of. both. The strength did not strike us as satisfnetbry; but-that is a Matter of taste,, and of eourie influenced' by very • simple' governing.eircurnstaires. • Sir Isaac Newton wrote a small work upon the. Prophet Daniel, andeinnther op en the book of ;llevelationS—in -one-of which he said, that in order to fulfil cer tain,prophecies, before a certain date ,was terminated—namely, 1260 years—there should be a mode of travelling of which the men-of-this time had no conception. nay, that. the Imatvledge of. mankind would be so increase that they timald be able to travel at the rate of fifty miles an hour.— Voltaire, who did not. believe .in the in spiration of the Scriptures, got . hold of this and said . : "Now look at the . mighty mind of Neytort, who .discovered gravity, and told such marvels fOr us to admire.-- When be jou.aine an old man and pit into his dotarnie began to study that book . called the Bible ; and it seems that, in or der to credit his falsilous nonsense, we must belieie that the knowledgn of 'man kind Will'he so increased that wo shall ho able to travel at the ta,:e of fifty miles an hour ! The poor dotard !"• exclaimed th philosophic infidel, Voltaire, iu :the self= complacency -of his piety. But, who is the dotard now ?—ff 'heeling , Times. T►eeping Cool.—The Boston Traveler of Monday week, says :--Yesterday afternoon a clergyman, , ant au hundred miles from Boston, preached in his shirt sleeves, and apologized by saying that he pursued the Moro consistent course; he consulted comfort rather than fashion and as we en deavor to make ourselves as comfortable as possible weekdays, ho did not see 'why we should not do the same on the Sabbath. We, however, think that be must naturally be an ill-bred fellow to be guilty of such an act.. A thin coat, without a vest, would have been equally cool and suitably decent. . An, • irwendigry Burned to „Death by his owe Act.--Tho jail of St. Joseph county, lqichigap, at Centreville, was burned on. Sun- . day night last, anti one of four prisoners con fined in yt, and who, while it was burning, can. fessed to . having set it 'on. fire, perished in the flames. The jailor, in ',the .confusion, lost tho keys, and before the man could be retail& by chopping through the logs of which the jail was constructed - , he was•dead. Tim CUBAN SLAVE TFIADE.-A Havana correspondent of the New York Courier and Enquirer, expresses his honest belief that the new Captain General of Cuba is using every effort in his power to put a atop to the Africnn slave trade, and titat ,of the cargoes already landed, large numbers have heen,captured by the government agents. A. fallen , ie lewa jecepg4.lto,jiigh,tho other day soya he err I,lle An. star weol'lefteil; BREACH' OF FAUN' AND ITS CONSEQUENCES. • ' Of the many speeches to which the re• pudiation of the Missouri Compromise has given occasion, we do not reeollect i any so eloquent, so truthful, and so much to the point, as the one delivered by Peleg W. Chandler; Esq., of Boston, in the Whig State Convention of MassachUs'ette, which we - find published in the Boston papers. The injuries to the Union aris ing from the enactment of the Nebniska iniquity are so truthfully depicted, and the point of mischief so directly hit, that we feel induced to publish a portion of hie re marks : "Confidence--the golden chain that bound us together as a common country" —said he, "has been rudely oeYered— when could it again be joined When a gain should we be bound together as with links of iron 7• Nearly,a hundred years ago the great philosophical orator and statesman of Eug. land, when describingthe fate of that un -1100 queen whose beauty and misfor tunes he bad rendered immortal. declared that the age of chivalry had gone, and the glary of Europe was extinquished forever. It Inte , been a favorite theory With some of our countrymen, that the spirit of chiv airy, although extinguished in Europe, had heen.preserved in a portion at least, of our own countrY.L—tlitit the blood of our cavaliers still flowed in the veins of their descendents nt the, tiouth, .. We at , the North had beett acrustorned to assent to' this. We bad Sometimes Taken a pride in the fact r of.which we Were 'riot seldotri reminded, that alth. ()ugh, we, as Napoleon said of the Efiglieli,' were a nation of shop keepers, 'still in a portion of our Country there was a race of blood as good 'ati 'ever tlowed•in human veins. That our South. ern brethren, although rash, headstrong, often unjust, were still as true as steel, re. seniiiig eity'infpoitatiOn'tqlott their honor ; and really to defend their ictutntion' With' their blood, regarding it as• more than But what a shock these sentiments of rcapect had laicly.receivil He desired to state it asst business matt—to' exainitie it in a praetiesl point' of• view. • Thirty • years ago, sit .0 time of vast• excitement. when , the piltpasea of Qle, South were meeting with a arm and victorious opposi. tion, they - hail proposed a 'method of ad justment—a compromise. It was 'Moat isfamom to the North, hut was still adopt ed by the it id of N'ortherti votes. For. , thiry.'years , • it" had . i;crtiained, Nti one sought to!ifisturh t ,ptlier great measeres had been' foutitled upon,and . eontiticied whh had' reeeiV'ed.the full benefit' of thi'arrangement,"rool, rthiy, cub , iviriiiite; and in u ntanner rude and insulting, the" had reins. ed longer to be governed.by this' solcitin IV hen the proposition ie.repeal,the,Ois 7 snarl o,, o aprom ise Was kat akila led, the people'st - the North could scarcely 'believe that d movetnetit so andscinnii could he se.: riously entertained. The South had taken this course , with full knowledge , of ;M t consequences of the act. , In spite of the, earnep-t reiiionstfa'nelio of the living T i mi d the'solemn warnings of thei dead - they' had chnsdn'to open the flood gates of sectional agitation, and adopts course whielamust lorever fasten upon them the stigma of: deliberate breach of faith ; mitlmore than this, a'breach of faith; whiCh; in the pri 7 vote tratessetions "of' 'society, would be universally stigmatized is mean : and die'. hottest. Many years . ago, there lived ; on the banks of thet, Penobscot, just r asits confle. ence, with the dark waters of' the 'Xendus. keag, an 'eccentric old' man by the name of Bodge. • Misfortunes and ruin' had re duced him from a position of considerable wealth. ,The people there,- eapecially those who had kno.wn him in better days, had a ayntliathy, for this decayed old citi zens,,and were not disposed to criticise his somewhat:erratie conduct with much particularity. Moreover, whatever other failings he had, "Old !;edge". was a man ' of truth. There was a theory that he' would shmelitnes steal, but he scorned a lie. This was a distinetion upon which he stood, with something like pride. One summer's afternoon - there came up upon, the lazy tide the old schooner which was then the chief means of com munication with the metropolis, and ,a. mong the crowd of men and boys Waiting - Ito...arrival on the shore, was our friend. A worthy deacon of the village chute!. Mokhim aside and informed him 'with bu siness-like frankness, that lie had a large variety of merchandize on hoard, partici]. larly a tine lot of Salt fish. and he proposed to give Bodge five of the latter, with the understanding that lie was no to take any thing else. Budge hesitated ; "It was a hard ease ; but if the deacon would allow Min to select nine of the beet fish on hoard, he would pass his word," and so the com promise was made. It wasu larger cargo than Bodge expected. The shades of evening began to fall before it was half landed, and opportunity see Med to serve' better than he had supposed. lie repent ed his bargain, but never thought of break ing his word. He lett a course • like this to his betters, but he delitierately brought back the fish he had received; laid them on the wharf 'and: said : 4 TeitColl, rVfl brought back those fish..fact is, Jihinf,e l can do better." . kaugh - ter.] , „ . Now, the fact war, this course was honor and honesty itself, compared with that of men who, alter having the advan tage of a bargain for thirty yeafs; now re fuse to keep. it, and who do 'not propose to return what they had taken under that bargain. Less honest than Bodge, they,' keep the fish'ind break the faith. In any coon of honor upon. earth, this old man would bear the paint' 'from - ttiose 'at the Bouth'who have bniiii . Partitis to thid great wrong.. Chivalry !...He hid-heard that this sticotion. was fountleCon....htttiove tan4v,sutiv, the . 91, an nR9,I I PPRFL:: When thelairivsys tarriicht.tl; itirt was an.stui everything. He had heard of noble knights taken in battle,' wlioae•lives were forfeited by:thii !ewe 'or of war.; had asked the , . privilegeuepartuig to say a ram adien to wile'and children, and who returned to pay the torfeit,' and calmly die. He had already supposed that' chivalry held its votaries to protect the ihnoeeht, to' raise the lowly, to 'befriend those who really needed it, anti nut to side with the power'. ful, and act from interested vieWs. There' was . in our country' an unlortunste Nee. crushed. dowii-trodd,in, miserable. • For, more than a hundred' years they had been the bond slaves of another peofle. 'How faithful they had been I Clinging to their masters under every Misfortune, support ing them in peace, defending them hi war. Father and son, mother and daughter, for many long years they had served without complaint. And here was a proposition to fasten this wretched caste upon a' vir• gin soil. as fair to look• tipon as any •spet on earth ; and to change a political equi librium, so that there could be no hope of redemption.' • Was there no sympathy for the oppressed ? Were they , not to be considered in this transaction 1 Was there no sweet angel to whisper a word in their behalf ? Was honor dead ? The age of chivalry indeed, was gone. Should any, 111811 who claimed to belong to the order, hold up a shield on which was Written the word "Nebraska," he would be expelled, from any court of honor that ever existed, and the hand of beauty would never place on his brow the wreath of victory. Hui it was said that the South were not the authors of this measore ; that it was proposed and carried by Northern. men. So much the worse ! There would have heen.immething of daring, something- al most chivalrous, if they had proposed the measure themselves, But to take it at the hanilsof those who had betrayed the trust committed to their charge, who had noto riously gone counter to the wishes ol.theie constituents, and who had ,aided in hurry ing this matter along, before the voice of the' North could be heard, this was the Course 01 men who were loSt, to, all sense of honor, especially when they must have knownthatNorthern favorers of this , r measure were sealing their ot'n fate.— How - Much more magnanimous fo have refused a boon thus tendered ; to have de dined the generous self-sacrifice of their Northern allies. ; We'llad been told that the prinaiplx on Willa!). this measure was . !Minded, was strictly' Denaacratie : that it wus' merely e,oryiug out the idea °fa republicrn gov ernment, that the people, shall rule. As though an artifice so shallow as this could deceive in a measure which wits intended and was' constructed tit protect'niti extend the institution al slavery in spite of the put. plc I.; l&u1 who were the people ? Wits it pretemludJlist the colored 'race. a race who 'ate citizens in 211assauhuseint.: and rights with others, were;theseto have any voice in this mat rto ? What deeds of audacity were often domain the Hanle of Democracy! :Once up.: ti t op,' o ( cold winter morning, a coun tryinivetitering 'the city, was atuaicted by, the,cry oft!Ilot wince, pies!". llls stomach; pleaded not in vain for a'aliare; but after pay nighis money. he (nand:the food frozen 110007 than Siberian ice', '':You infernal' scoundrel," lielixclaimed, seizing the ven der by:ilie neck, ”why do you call this hot trainee pie:?" "Massa," was ;the reply al the sable seller, "that's the Home on'l Democracy in Nebraska will be Democra- ' cy'ilr time name alone; ' Keeping the Teeth Clean. Al a meetiog of the American Aeademy, 1849.. a paper was, read by .11. 1. Ilim4lltc4,,on the animal and vegetable parasites infesting the teeth, with the ef fects of Oren:tit agents in causing their • removal and destruction; Microscopical examinations had been made of the mat ter deposited on the teeth and .gums of more than forty individuals, selected from all classes of society, in everery. variety. of bodily condition; and in cearly every case animal and vegetable parasites -in great numbers had been. discovered.' Of the animal parasites there were three" or four species, and of the vegetable, one or two. In fact, the- only • persons whose) mouths were' found to be coMpletly • free I from them, Cleansed their teeth four timer daily, using soap once. One' or two of ' these individuals also passed n'thi-ead be tween the teeth to cleanse them inOreyef feetually. In all cases the number' of the parasitea was greater in proportion to the neglect 'of cleenliness: Tho effect of the / application Of various agents was . als6' nu= ticed. Tobacco juice and sinoke did not Mipair the vitality in the least. The same was also true of the chlorine . toothwstilt, of pulverized bark, of iiuda. ammonia,, and i various other popular detergents. The ! application of soap, however, appeared to destroy them instantly. We may hence) infer that this is the best and most proper specific for cleansing the teeth. ,In ell , , cases where it . has been tried, it receives.; unqualified commendation. It may also, l be proper to add, that none but pure white ,j soap, bee from all discoloration, slineitkl he used. —.a mericon .t7nitual of Scienafic Discovery., GOD OF •Atr NOTIIIDL--11(Df. Charles Morgan, of East Troy, Wiscomiin, in giv ing an atoount of a religious revival in that place, says : • An infidel of talent and resp' e'Otabilitv under thd pdtrer of truth boWetl'npon knees and cried in agony "God of n mother, have,merev on mo • His mother is a devoted Ch_ri4tian id the State of New York..., "Ood of my mother ? Bow much is re. vealed in, that simple ezelamation ; how . conclusively it proves that this man had a, mother whose faithfulnes3 felt its imprcss, i on hig soul too deaf) to he obliteritied by, time and ein. • • A very honest chap in Boston Wishes to 601 his horse; adiertisel - bina . as fol. lowa i ' " . : , "For eiale, a broat hoise with a Roman. none, in 'fiie con itiOri.atiti'fond ottravel; lin;'—:liiiiniftg 'id awalloiii titiiei'wihist '4.14 "" ' 1 3,11 . • ..,:e, ".: `, : •!. .. ' ' .' , TWO DOLLAR& PER ANNUM. ; 11 4 111#131111!,16 . ;, • ratemperi F toe In co ' ' ' ' ' Gerrit' Smith, in his sad tO Pik& re telil stituents,' says that "sisi'lliti , ' - ,/ ranee both my lips , and t tarni/e, 4 ' tri 'testify 'against mini digit ittestii,' , 0- gresi, that is not called for ti tike i necessity. .., , 4 "I was present. part 4,06 Died: in which the anal vote 'OMNI/104V • 40644 1 • • ail taken ;* and 'r: was'W . e4ooil,l 4 .o, 'l Congress should avoisdidi ttourtrli f ts*, h sessions, until Congress loves temOstikodo more, and rum less. Milli-did , I' ideating more gross drunkenness than I witnessed ott that occasion. I bad; to rototda,.,urttil A/ o'cloek—fOr I had to remain , until A could record 'my vote against the pr0.04017,1#0 3 After that I hursied sway ? fall of s ham, and sorrow. ...., ' , lt po. happenett that Loia mei., thti Governor of Canada, as by my aide, foi ati hour or more, (luring that evening, of ,ead recollections., The drunkenneee was per : , ceived by him as well as 'by myself. I might rather say, it glared,upon hiss obser,i ration as well as upon m yown. If !nu! certainty, very polite and kind in bun to toll we, as he did in the course of our Isoni. versation respecting this disgiaceful Neuss, that he had witnessed shameful disordec in the British Parliatnetit. Nnverthelosis his politeness and kindness did not relieve me of my deep mortification." &dim:ruts of Veuetables, a., from Nor folk gardeners and vegetables dealers at. Norfolk and yicinity have been doing a largo business this season. The „Norfolk Argus says : , • • For many , weeks the number of blurs', —principally or potatoes—sent . to Near -York, amounted , weekly, to , about The number shipped daily to , the. Pkiledelr phis and Baltimore markets, was abontl e 500 barrels;, in addition to winch, there were bundieds of baiketa and , boxes; of to. matoes; MA" other vegenthlei , sent. on and readily disposed of in the Northern Marl ,. kets. St'titiug the sum at only 12,000 bar T rely per week, end ut average pries 4;4 per bbl., gives of course $80,000; allowing this to continuo, only 7 weeks, gives,,a,re turn of $480,000 for that short period.-, But this , busineas is done ,to some, extant during the 4 reater ; parcipq ot i ,the,y,tr; and wo have said no th ing &boot the present time, actions, in fib, oysters grabs. _go we think five hundred thousand may be Mud.. ed as a,fair estimate for the present Jeer, of the trade in the articles nameid, a probs. increase; of $350,000 since 1852. The Youth of Baltimore.--In Baltimore a few days since, a eountryman was pasein down North street, with his wagon. when ono of the wheels camp off, and he diseover ed that his lynch pin was gone. Afar searching for it Some tithe he offered 114 boys who congregated, a shilling to whoew. or would find it. They then joined in tho Ismail, and in a few minutes one of thtt ' boys brought Lim what be supposed to be the pin. , Having adjusted Atha wheel, he paid the shilling and started off, but had not give more than half a block, before a wheel on the other side came off, when he discovered that the young rascal had Moteo the pin from one of 'the other wheels to obtain the reward. A Sin Slot Ay a, Ony,—A correspondent of the. New. York : Tribune, writing from Cop poke, N. Y , says :—A fatal accident hau -1 poled iu this town on Sunday, the 6th inst. Two men wore out hunting, One Peter Kilmore. had 11 two barrel gun. HO dia. charged one barrel and killed, a bird; hp then brought the butt of, hisgun to tbe• ground. with . the, rtinztle leaning againat his left bremet, dog coming up, jump ed with his fore paws against him, and .wboe his paws came down. they,struelt the, trig. ger of the other barrel, cud discharged - 11 m whole contents in bits breast; and lodged le his 'shoulder. Ifq lingered till Friday, the 11th, when he died. The Ne:ri Hog Crop.—Thci Louisville Courier sap the excessive drought which prevails throughout the groater . portion of Kentucky will exert much influence upon the hog market, as corn will boloth scarce and high, and it is fair to presuine that the hogs will not emit, to the books as large and as fat as heretofore. In fact, we !earn that many persona in the interior • have turned their hogs out, and abandoned all ntterupta. to fatten them for slaughter. California This infant State seems to bo cared foe, as if it were indeed a very great giant.— , - She furnishes yearly large amounts of gold to the Atlantic cities, but< it will be seen that the General Government sends it back in copious streams. The appropriations by the lust Congress amount t 082.608,049, These items are independent of the satirics to judicial and other publiouirmersiand the expenses of the land commission in Califor nia. The 4 17e11 . 00 n Bowares.—Th4 Couri er des pate Dula 'came from Paris that youngliouttparte of Baltimore,lrandaon of Prince Jeronic, bee decided to accept lettarlh of naturalization, and the grade of lieuten ant lu the F,reneh,artuy., Thia ia confirma tory of the atatemeni published e few daya ago. :Ilia res ign ation of, theue runir of lie tenant in . the U nited States Anny,,tiza, ap heretefOre.tit.ate, 4ttu eetwpted by the War Department. The young geutittmereacitata °en of p_ r _eferment are, doubtless, mush DI,. ter iu Fmnpelbun hare. . • 7:erribis Expfosione r -The boiler In $ cotton faciOT r y at,sund, N. Y.', steplated.p few diia ago,"killing one man and *0064 wounding five (Oen. Tile . traiieroher, passing out at the rear of the hnibPng, gld through a email house used for etoratn i struck a large tree, rebounded got Plowed a deep fUrrow lo ,the ground,ttbilly.itcp• ping some twenti :reds froet .thcAumug point. The boiler nap tree „thro? 1 9 1) ,:*141 1 1" tattoo of 80 rods,' paling throligAotaltrgttf of the SuinOw't ,ati. ,d ,, 6 0 40 .04!14, 11444 -At house ' A womatt4lplk,o., f014f9; frool 110 b 4 Owl, 4,1R/Pl ,l l room, w 44 ow. wei•Hget , ,„ posmi l l the DA tefftni . 4,10 .**l4-.. , Iksw i . let fall a piece o f woo affikami, OW to pick it ap;:iihia - tholtilstimowleivi 10, leaving film u0 11 .4' '.. ...... ..., MIME=