BY D. A. & C. H. BUEHLER - -VOLUME XXVI.I Mother, can thloi be Glory 1 • . A TII BILLING !FARR ITIVE. 1 At thie Moment Morgan looked up and I Glory, Carnage and Misery. , - recognized the handkerchief that bound Gentlemen who are in the habitof sing- Jame, Morgan was a native of Maryland. I the head of the savage, and knew it to be or saving fine things in ,irsise and He married at an early age, and soon ; his wife's. This added renewed strength commemoration of r after Fettled at Bryant'. Station, in the to his body, and increased his activity to i .The big wars, that make ambi virtue," wilds of Kentucky. Like most pioneers fury. He quickly threw his left arm a- I would perhaps be just a littl less enthu of the West he had eat dean the cane. round the Indian, and, with a death-like siastie in their praises couldi . hey be per• built a cabin, deadened the timber, envie- grasp. hugging feet to his bosom, plunged suaded to sit calmly down a d ea/ask* sed .1 field with a worm fence, and planted his knife into hitrside, end he expired in i The coat, in blond and mice alone, or some corn. It was on the 17th of August, his arms. Releasing himself from th e that imperial, royal, ify , yal, and right rascally 1782. The son bad descended; a pleas- savage, Morgan crawled under a small ldiveredien, aggressive war. We limit the wit breeze w playing f sohirough the surs oak, on an elevated piece ~of ground, a cost to blond and misery, because we are rounding wood ; the cane bowed through ' short distauco from him ; the scene of ac- quite certain of the sheer impossibility of its influence, and broad leaves of corn wa- Sion shifted, and he retained undiscovered ' even 'approximating to an at:Curate esti• red in the air. and uuscalped, an axious spectator of the mate of the damage that is dohs to human Morgan had seated himself it. the door betle. progress and to human comfort by the of hie cabin, with hie infant ma hie knee. It was now midnight. The savage band I very smallest of battle-fields.' •We have His young and happy wife had laid aside had, after taking all the scalps they could before us a rather curious autirtaty of the the spinning wheel. and was blandly enga- fi nd, left the battle-ground. Morgan was I killed, wounded, and prisons!'" of all the god in preparing the frugal meal. That seated at the foot of the oak, its trunk 1 contending parties in the Eutopean wars afternoon he accidentally found a bundle supporting his head. The ragged and me lof the last half century 0r.t0.. Not a I of letters which he had finiehed reading to even ground that surrounded hint was !Nord word is said shout the Euroitean' doinis his wife before he had takers hie *eat in covered with the slain, the once white and i 1 in Asia or Africa. The Sikhs and the the doer. It was a corr e spondence in projecting rocks, bleached by the sun and Affghans, the aborigines of Algeria and which they had acknewloakein an early and rain for centuries, were crimsoned with lof the Cape of Good Hope, sae - ardent attachment to each tither. and the blood :hat had warmed the heart and ani °Unsept, unhonor'J, and eiliune." perusal left evident !vac% snf joy- in the fa- mated the bosom of the soldier. Navarina and Acre, 13(indheend the red ees of both ; the loth' infant, too, seemed The pale glimmering of the moon oc- I battle grounds of Hindostan Illid no plane to partake of its pt. , tits' kind. feeling-. by easionally threw a faint light upon the : eheerful smile., play TIATat tr ant infan- in ineled bedie• of the d, atl ; then a pas. ' in our summary. We include only Euro tile e wressee. sing ( l o ud enveloped all in darkness, and perms, slain, frightfully mangled, end made Prisoners on European gritted. With While thee aereeahly employed, the pave additional terror : to the feeble eries Peen ear"a" prior tolhe murder-- report of a rifle w Liv heard - aut.:her ft d• of a few still lingering in the last agonies; yen strictly -e we t 1 o lowed in rptiek .a5,,, ,, ,-.1 .n. el egin of protracted death,, rendered doubly e "P-1 ous passage of the bri d ge of L o di not concern ourselves ; bfrr beginning spring m his fe t, h ran to the palling I.y the hoarse growl of - Chu bear,' with Lodi with its dead ant i 'ltiounded to doer. and they sitn ti ulta•- aie 5 r Lem , .1. the I • mil howl of the moll, and the shrill, , "Itelt Ins !" Tie -1 tor was '''''' "3. bar- ' lid "'led notes of the wild en' and the I the Lumber of 4.000, and lacleditig die va- tines combats from the bridge of Lodi to red, a n d the next instant their feats were panther, feeding on the dead and dying, , to %Valerie°, Seth included, we have a re 'heed by a hold am! sp rot,: attack of a \ 1 It'.l:ail 1/..11( Id the scene with !D'art rend grand total of 901.329 as the sum of de co!!! pirtv , if lo hot.. if , e -easatif us, and looked forward with ''' • . . • el ruction wor k e d by war in Eumpe alone, Th • shin c' , ll I not b- yos-----f tlly de- chi at. itl,4,v of desp fir en lie• ee n end a s hy cum . parata vele fee I, an I /tine was ;:, • tl•-. "dereen. A largo ferocious kOklipt hoar, covere d and in the course of co I, lustre In 1 proutt4. s eel doei i -a.— all over with blood, now approached hint ; brief period 1,1 hal' a century ;dud in feet we have a just right to say Liu:it oven that Whit, he was it. the act of e- , 11--.1162: her he tlrrew himself on the ground, and si , startling statement falls shalt, very far niolor the flo tr., a tir_tht r'. r• - • .'”:...: "CI r- 1 nil) comm ended his 5....1 to Heaven, and; , ..„„.snort, of the truth. Napoleon PO notori• I came h er :.Ere ar, ft . ' .....a - 1 lal , infant, In 1 a • -1 - ' " r • li d' - ''" l ' i s ''''''"" •l in ' I.t. --- islv understated his own losses on all God of the battle, hear us now, and yet thy will be . but ait afraol, that its •-rto-- wonl.l betrir The seliete mimed slowly passed without t. ' done,great Oeeasinlifi that when a than %visited place ~f e 'mash:ten. Set- Le...is/4 I netieine Into Morelli' raised his head - - , A cater fora brother mourns, a nuatwr tor her i '••• ~ - " • and - ' • ~.,-,,. ' to give the II attest told nuts: empnatie de• eon ; ' giz.at silently tilsoi i: ; a mem. teary lva" alinat In inter his t flanks lin his mai to air .n il y statement I ce h all oy to nail „ We cannot sham the glory now—but ask Thee , struggle bet we•ot dots,..val 4. • - a- -, tl'.o t ~6 iliteXpeeie 1 pl eser% at i in, when the cry oft it .s , 'as Janie as a bulletin ;” ani the -e are still to save rA we She mos. more prood her child to a pace of wolves i»ened upon him, and a-, The noble hearts of Engl an d, th e beautiful and her bosom, an I a of,n 5.1 , --•I tt with itii- w tk,o t o I hint t o it sell.e. of danger. lie , i i i not .his, . imperlai and royal opponeites were in no 1 pattuniate hoolern... The enfant, alarm- placed !lit bawls over his eyes, f ill ~ on t degree more truthful than lie as to their! _ A True WII re. , ,d it the pr • :' , l-n ,nof t- ars :kat f-11 tip .ti hee, and in silent agony awaited his I statements of killed, wounded , and rms. I ~ es ,hi -le. le .I.• 1 in 1 ,, ... I1: 1 4 ... IJI .. fate. I Ski is no true wide who sustains not sing. It Is only ton probable that a MILL-1 her husband in the day of calatuitr, also, threw its little arms around her task and He now heard a rustlinc . ; in the bushes; I Ho. is far nearer to th e veal number than! seeps Jpploaelleil, a cold chill ran °wet him. is not, when the world's great fume [mike t ' lee r': ai r I- I that whieli we have given. •.; million the heart chill with anguish, his guatili in , •'" i " . ; " i nn ' • helr '7 . , I.:: ."' "h ",', the In'agniatloll, creative, busy imagination, t I butchered and horribly man led in fifty , ell I . or ii , iost " svi i rie •lA,r - 1 , 1.,, i f os.. was :.covet} employed; death the most Itar , „ a angel, growing brighter and more be., , ,i I w i in sorb a small potsion of the 1. Intl, in a - , eft. 'told-rine ton'. 3. L/` IT- ntlrribit: awaited him ; Lis limbs in all fid us misfortunes crowd around Lis pith. . earth as Europe !—Portleed "State of 1 . 141 HI . 'infant from Eat-. wife. • hastil took probability would be torn from him, and he m a i m. " , Then is the time for testing whether the sweetness of her temper beams only- ‘,llll up his gun, knife aaii hea :it -t, ran up the devoured alive. He felt a touch ; the vi m. tm, ill Ider that pal to the cbatuier. and drew till spark was almost extinguished. Ate transient light, or like the' glory lw more violent than •the nit after him. In ain amens the deer was other toue . first, morning star, shines as brightly under the clouds. H its she then. vut ii eriGt - is I f burst open, and the savages cotes& .1 w - ' l --ild he was over. :„ The cold.esweat charming ? Does she say a ffl iction eau- I By thus time Morgan bed seemed his ran (been in torrents ; his hands were vi nut touch our purity, - and should n.ut , Child iu a big and Liebe.' a: to his .rack, /tlently f weed from his face. The moon teach our love. Does tube try ha pp). l i and then throwing off ~...., clip!„..A. passed from under a cloud ; a faint ray qby from the cabin roof, be reentetely leapf.l beamed upon him, his eyes involuntarily little inventions to lift from his se e spirit the burden of the thought ? to the ground. He was as-stilt-1 hy two In- opened, and h 44• beheld his wife, who, in a LW;. A. the first appv.a..-bed be knock- scarcely middle voice, exclaimed : "My There are wives—nay, there are brines I d '" I h who, when the dark hours come. 1 til I him d "" " wi th the bu-t eu ' i of hi•• guu. hesbind '. my husband !" and fell upon " The other• I en ii van. •rsl with uplifted t tura- lit- Mouin. repining and upbraiding—thus adding to outside - anxiety the harrowing se I , it ! "wk i 31"rg'n lest la" kli'l gun. and vb.-A Morg to now learned from his wife that t es 0 domestic, strife—as if all the bl line would '''• after the Indians entered the hous) they The savage male a blow. tuis-fxl. but fund situ-spirits, of which they drank make one bur black or wino., or change I the decree glee forth. Such hoots we 1 severed the ei•rd that bound the infant to ft,•(dee An altercation seen took place ; his back, and it tell. The een- e st over one et them Ireton% ed a mortal stab and fell; trials are but stops in a golden teller,r, that our darkness is heaven's lieht ; 01 ibi,. ri 1 the child now lave-une warm atci fierce. and the blood tan through the floor on her.— which, 1 , 1 we ascend, we may at lust val : i WaS tarried on with knives cony. The es- Believing It to be the blood of her hes that eternal light, cud bathe forever in its I hest and athletic M wean at leneih got baud, she shrieked aloud, and thus be the aueen4leri..y. it 1141 11. rs. laa , b hayed y eat, the place of her concealment. She fullness and beauty. "Is that all ?" and the gentle free of rata bled freely ; but the stab, of the was instantly taken.tnil bound. The par par- tho wife beamed with joy. Her husband whn° i"l"e"°nt deeper , r d d's per. nail ty, after hr ' , lug tire to the house, pro them • so. mg. , fell to t rt. • e utla 31.1rg.:313 ha-, Lt . t . 1.11. - d 11l Bryillit ' ll Seabee. had been on the verge of distr letion— illy c o nk up the child an : I hurries! ell his earthl y possessions were gone, and I nOn the day of the battle of the Blue feared theeessult of her knowledge, the had The "di"' in t he "es"- I's- le e eel" Le ks. .1 horse with it sa d dle and bridle been so tenderly cared for all 1„-r life ! g. " l in ri l, i Ir Ikt ~ tt ,' u 'g 3n4 Pi"d-rwg• were ant rushed by her, which she knew to he her i pteii n .e t4.11:.0 ,, t t o the yard nut', But says Irvin's beautiful story, ett friend io husbend's. Ourin.• the action the to pre'. advised l the one that h o d Fes • it loocke I /an gave , Bien to give not glee!, his ,• t ,.. neniers were left unguarded ; they in ide their Ijils of r,•tfirtiiii • tier slumber toilet eyelids until lie hail un- - e life. e"`l nalise-I them 10 , e , ape and lay intievaled beneath some th e .eent • Of acc t m. 3I •r_ in was di.- , r- i ii 1 i • b it of 1% • ‘f folded to her all his hapless cuss." 1- iet, n•irt le an t ii_ met. . ter And that was her ateew er, il till the ' '.' I ' enu r e hat, .t- icir-u•s l. and a d, 4 , Tilt th, I „di ii.. Ira.! ft • turti,•il trout the lin r-I p•ni lii. trail .l4.- s t e e l u p o n by a ll t h e smile of an ngel— u s th at all! I f of 41 by u suit, and left the Little round, rile, withL. Iloe. I h a- h ur l an•l a iv: it I, he m. your sadness It was aerie. Let thn • ., saenei.r per , un , who ,sniped with her, beautiful thinga be taken—all this nine•ti. in I "' lli ill tlre - is' 1 of a imun 'I 'lee , nin n,•teeny 1 to make search fir don dor let it go ; I care not for it-1 ..1111 an it I, . . its•ripp I ilk la brus. but I'l f n , • „1,... 1 „ • i i f „ma the boll, andlining, t „ (see for my heseseens love a n d t .„„ , 1 0 0. e s' 'e I Inn Inn 'I n. pun- - "• F.: , lin: In int- to .arc them if possible fr o m the beasts of I I " ne-ib •1 , loran or. tz e a, • Laratinz 3111- 1 , r ,•- . You shall forget in my ilreetion ill it, y oil y 1 ecr searching for sonie time, and were ever in prosperits —,,,,1). still I nns , "' ' l . '' u"; t I ''' , '"'" l -' " 1 '!"' k"' i• IF' '-""''- almost di •p airing of success, She fortunate fil II I W , ` , I 1.1 It mitt suh'lin a f,•w 1 , i 1,,,. ~, ni l h im. tue, and I will aid you t. f bear the,' little y ark ot lion, th-a tire! ALL! In inzlit hint • • fli 'of Col.l • found 11 reverses with eliecriultiots. p i e y Logan. or Su to the gr fulll. l! love her ! her a man must revel- gan an .I his wife, and restored them -hurt time he r.aeh•ol t h e h mse o f to their friends, their iufaut and their ~ once. ay, and liken her to the very at•elt. Ina . he le ither. uli i rest I. I rear Bryant - h ome for each a woman is a liviug revelation et e t in ei, at Lexington, where he h. ft the Ilearen. -- child, and the brothers left f.r the -iwel- , Cratous ST A.TISTICB.—SOnIe statistical BEAUTIFUL PRAYER.—Lord, bless nod ling. As they api.r neht-J. halo br le genius declares that " ore m money is ex preserve that dear person whom thou hest epee their view ; 'is st."pet gon-iene-1.. his chosen to be my husband ; lot his rife be fears Inerea , ell, and th, mo-I 3-rninz i n, z pended in the United States for segars long and blessed, comfortable and lily ; , apprehensions crowded 'icon his mind than for all the common sc!tools in the and lot me also become la greatoomfort, and Emerging from tee ealw-drake. he beheld Union." A wag who is undoubtedly al , blessing unto him, a Auer in all his joys, t his house in 'Lame, and almost burnt to lover of the weed, seeing this statement I es refeeslenent in all his sorrows, and a the green& meet helper for him in all the accidents "My wife !" he exclairessi, ashe ins...- going the rounds of the papers, gets off die' and changes of the werld ; and make me sod one hand to his forere ad, and grasped following: amiable forever in his oyes, and very dear I the fence with the other tois-vppot his tot- It has been calculated that the cost of to him- Coke his heart to tan in the tering frame. He :.seed Vii the ruin and washiog linen, that might (lace been worn dearest union of love and holiness, and , desolation before hen, mit - ant:el a few a tiny longer, amounts to enough in this seine to him is all sweetness, charity and I pace, and fell exhausted to _the earth. country to more than defray the expel'. compliance. Keep me from all ungulate- I Morning came, awl the luminary of sec of the American Board of Foreign ness, and ill-humor, and make me humble Heaven arose and still reemi him seated Missions. and:obedient, useful and observant, that, , near the expiring embere. In his right The expense of buttons worn on the we may delight in each other according to j hand hotheici a small stick, with which he barks of our coats, where they are of no thy blessed word and ordinance, and both I was tracing the name of "Eliza . " on the earthly use, is equal to the support of all of us may rojoioe in thee, having our per- ; ground, and his left hand lay on htsfavor- the orphan asylums. don in the love and service of God for.lite dog by his side; hooking first on the The value of tads to dress emits (of no ever.--Mother's Magazin - a. I ruin and then on his dog. with evident ratite in reality for warmth or conveni signs of grief, 3lorgan =me. The two ence.) is actually greater that the cost brothers now made search, and found some of our excellent system of common bones - burned to ashes, which they Bath- schools. ered and silently confined to the mother I It has-been estimated that the value of earth, beneath the high spreadingbrattehes n old boots throw!' aside, which might have of a venerable oak coesetented by the pu- . been worn at least a day longer, is more rest and holiest recollections. than enough to buy a flannel night gown Several days after this, Morgan *as :a- for every baby in the land. gaged in a desperate battle at, the leaver I Also, that the cost of the extra inch on Blue Licks. The Indians came off victo• 1 tall shirt collars of our young men, is e riously, and the surviving whites retreated qual to the sum necessary to put the Bible across the Licking, pursued by the meaty into the hand of every one of the Pats for a distance of six- and thirty miles--; gonian giants. - James_ Morgan was among the last who!, crossed the river, and was iu the rear until 4 - "Will you take this woman to be your the hill wits descended. - As - be beheld wedded wife?" asked an Illinois magistrate i - the Ihdians appear on the hill, ha felt 'of the masculine of a couple w ho - stood up and saw his wrongs, and recollected the' before him. ~ Well squire, you must boa lovely object othis affections. fle urged carnal green hand to ax me such a queition , his horse and pressed to the front. While I ss, that ar." ~D o you' think that I'd be in the act of leaping from his saddle, he ,such a plagued fool as to go to the bite' received it rifle ball in his thigh and fell; tient, and take this ar gal from the qisittin' the Indians spring uponhint seined him; frolic, if I wan% tie! ermined to halm hair. by the' bait, • and applied the scalpiarleiDriiit on' with' your ' business and don't _ ' ' ' as fablishAtteillioni." - -i B Y J. F. CARPENTER Firs: Voice Mother, can this be glory, of which men proudly tell, When imaging of the fearless ones who in the battle feill . Where is the light that cheered our home, it, aunohlim and its joy Ours was, they say, the victory—but, mother, whereethe boy Second Voice My boy ! f see him in my dreams—l bear his battle cry, I know his bravo and loyal heart—he does not fear to die. E'en now methinks I see him still his country's banner wave On—on! and win a deathless Cone, my beautiful, my brave. Ood of the battle, shield him eti!!, and yet Thy will bo done sister fora brother prays, a mother for n Pol. ; We reek to share nn glory now--we a'k Thee but to save The noble hearts of England, the beautiful and breve First I hire Mother! I know thy courage well—thine is on ancient race. Yet while thy heart an proudly swells. a tear steals down thy face; E'en now you guess the fearful trot h—atill, still our banners nave, But ou that dreadful battle field, where sleeps thy young and brave T Second Voirt Yes—yes, I know it must he 110-4 told not all my dream, I saw my pliant boy ride forth, where crimson flowed the stream ; I hear the shouts of victory—cease, cease th..so sounds of joy, They cannot glad a mother's heart, inc gise me back my boy. A WOODEN. BABY.—At Chicago, re eently, a beggar. woman went. to a door apparently; with aobild in her arms, which she seemed to, be soothing with endearing tones and, gently waving it to. and fro, as mothers are wont to do when their little ones are in trouble ; she was' at the same time weeping, and altogether the appeal was irresistible to the kiad•bearled lads of, i Ate house, who gave her. a good supply of .Aa she handed it to , her the. woman in moving ber arma,to receive it; let a s tick. of ; wood I • • ed,whatl", exclaimed the lady, Pis this the 'kind of a babr you are earryieg, The benarileonicin,,wbo appeared to be intoxicated, gurgled 4(ir likesa .vixon;.' and, left her to Prlultiee herimpoaition elsewhere. Iti.lifefeehalliOnd many/men that are great and sante men. ; that are i pod, hitt few men ,thaiare both great and good.— (WM,. • - GETTYStURG, PA., FRIDAY EVENING, M . AY4, /855. "FEARLESS AND FREE." PLANTS IN OUR BED-ROSSII.I.4Ik - Benton, in the Connie GarilAK''tett allikti that«although it, it quile~iT~lt~istti~jfltitiC~F It vitiate the air of a room to compara- ! lively a fractional degree, it is equally as , certained that they consume and destroy a great deal of fool air ; and that without foul air, such as would kill a man, 'plants could not he kept alive at all. We garden ers know this fart from our every day ex prrience ; we can lint grow plants so well or so quickly, in the sweetest sir, as in a stinking hotbed. All-the animal creation vitiate the common air every time each one breathes the breath of life, or life.sus. • tattling air : and were it tint that all the vegetable kingdom depend on this vitiated air for part of their subsistence, and a g real part. :00, this world would have been at an end as soon as animals covered the fare! of the earth. Therefore, and without the shadow of a doubt, plants are the best pori.i tiers of all the agents that Ilan, yet been known to cleanse the air of a bed-room, or ally other room in II house, provided al-! ways that such plants are not in bloom. or, at least. do not bear a bloom with a strung I seen t." 1 N )IATEItIAL FOR BUILDINO.— We were snow') yesterday,v•spuenuen brick," made of lone and sand, which appears as says: though it would lake the place of the emn. i learn that Fanny Fern's portion of the profits on the sale of 'Ruth Hall" mon clay brick altogether. It is very ‘; smooth and bard. It is larger than the already amotnits to some 815,000, and common brick, with vacant Spllee in the pro fi ts of din publishers to nearly an centre. We ale informed that the lumen- cquai sum. Ruth is now rich enough to als used iu the manufacture of these bricks, buy lids self a Busy wilde Cottage on the ere simply h:ne and sand, the proportion the banks of the Hudsua, and all the copy. being about eleven parts sand :0 one part! wright and newspapers interests of the lone, and they can be mania:were(' at a I whole -Ellett" family. And still the de less cost than our common clay brick. mend for her works is undimished, and a The bricks can, of course, tie made of "Sequel to Ruth Hall" is in a hot stale of any form or shape, according io taste. It incubation. is fully equal to sand stone. Fhe advan tages are the facility with which they are manufactured ; lathing and p4stering be come unnecessary, and the quiside and inside of the wall is made atthasaine lime. The chemical change which t4es place in the manufacture of the Lai* hardens them so that they are not more affected by the action of the atmosphere than stone. It is not affected by frost, andqxperiments which have been tried to test its strength and other qualities have resultid satisfac torily. Scientific men haves 'examined the material, and have arrivedst the saute conclusiun.--Cincinnati Gazve. Hope. The wretch condemned with lii to pert, still. still, on hope relies; And every pang that rends the heart Bide expectation rise. Hope like the gliinmering tape s light, Adorns and cheers the way ; And still, as darker grows . the I ght, Emits a brighter ray. it WHAT Is A SNOB I—A snob s,that man or woman who is always pr ending be. fore the world to be somethi better— especially. richer or more fa tenable-- thanthey are. It, is one who thinks his .position in Me contemptible, a !'is always yearning or striving to forcer , itnielf into one above, without the educati ti'or char acteristics - which belong to it one, who looks dewit upon, despises, tm over-rides his .inferiors, or'even squab' his Own Standing, and is tier ready wbrehip; faiv,n upon and flatter itled men; noybecause he is.* gclOtipalk wise , man, or a christiari man; but bees , • • be, has the luck to be rich or cane' ' 4%1 shall,be tat home 'next San a yogng - ladt4ind at atm fa beau ;to the doer, who,Seenied whit wavering in his attattluris "SO shill'i," was his reply. . Taw KINNEY EXPEDITION. --..m. New! WHISTLING AT FALSEHOGD.—A clergy- York Post publishes a correspondence be, man in Scotland 'desired hie hearers nes.. tween Amos R. Corwine, late United States er to call one another Hari, but • when aris , Consul at Panama, and Col. Kinney, • one said what Was not true, they ought to from •which it seems that the Colonel sep- whistle..'' arated arated himself from the Central AmeriOan J On S u nday he pre:Wird sermon on .__ . . . Company in cotisequence of doubt as' to the validity of the title to the lends which they proposed to colonize, the Nicaraguan' government never having admitted the Ie• gality of the Ilfrisqueto king's grant.— He has. therefore, changed his plan, aid proposes a settlement on lands granted by the Niearquan government to J. W. Fab. ens, the United States Consul at San Juan and others, for mining, agricultural, and commercial objects. FROM MEXlOO.—The New Orleans.pa pers have accounts from the city of Mex. ico to the sth inst..• President SANTA ANNA had returned to the capital from his southern trip and departed for Yucubaya on the evening of the 4th inst., from whence he was expected to return on the 9th. Rumor stated that he would than proceed on his expedition to Morelia.— Gen. ALviinez had been met and defeated by the Government troops at Cajones.— His ermg was completely annihilated. and he was fornejl to save himself by Right-- All his cannon, arms, and camp equipage were captured. CORWIN COVICIDENCK OF Noses.—The , counties in Nebraska, it Will be remem , bered, hear Admintstration names. Pierce, Douglas, liarnek. etc. The following proT ceedinga the Nebraska Legislature are reported :—A Resolution was offered by , Mr. Cowles, of Pieria:, eominendatory of the course of Messrs. Douglas and Rich- Inbrn, of Illinois, in the passage of the ! Rill organizing the 'Territory. and in the / vindication of ril'opplar Swereignty ." After a somewhat animated debate, 911 ! motion of Mr. Richardson, of Douglas, it ..laud on the table I" SEVERE SENTIKNON FoR MORT WALK IING.— ha the Police court at Boston, on Thurstriy. Judge Russell sett !Priced Miry Jones to five years imprisonment in the house of correction. on the charge of night walking. This sentence is under the law passed by the legislature. The court upon learning that her lather died on Wed nesday night, gave her an opportunity to forthwith leave the city, stating that if she was ((Hind there within the five years, she would he immediately taken to the house of correction. SUAKESPERIS 1:!N CoyeTcusNmis.=4 l / a a• 'ter:zr:fiitarirel butt , the 'fispiia live In the •fi „ the Mg ones eat up the little ones. I can compare our rich misers to nothing ao fitly .usto a whale; it 'plays and tumbles, dri• vine the poor fry before hint, and ut last devours them all at a mouthful. Such whales have I heard of on the land, ‘4llO never leave off gaping till they've ' owed the whole parish; church, eleeple, 1 bell and all. The fires in the woods, at the South, still combine their ravages. Dr, Smith, on James river, in Chesterfield Co., Va., the Itichinond Despatch ssys, has lost 3.000 cords, vidue.l at 810.0110. The dwelling and out-houses of Thos. Friend have been consumed; aiso, those of 13. Frank lin. About $50,000 worth of proplrty in that colony alone has been consumed.— lu Blailett county, N. C , the loss is a-1 bout $15,000 wioth. Anti old lady and! her daughter in Wayne county, N. were surrounded by the flames and burnt to death. 1 COM FORTABLI* PRoV i Foß.—The New York Mirror, which appears to be the seini-oiliinsl organ of Fanny Fern, AN UNANEIWKNABLE ARGIUMENT.-A t an association dinner a debate arose as to the benefit of whipping in bringing up children. Old Mr. Morse took the affirma tive. fits opponent, a young minister, whose reputation for veracity was 1101 very high, affirmed that parents often did harm , to their children by punishment, front not knowing the facts of the case. "Why," said he, "the only time my father whip- I ped me was lor not telling the milk"— "Well," retorted the Doom, "it cured yon didn't it ?" The Doctor beat. . , OAL's WASTR.—k school boy "down East," who was noted among his play fellows foi his frolics with the girls, was reading alound in the Old Testament when, • coming to the phrase, "making waste .planes glad," lie was asked by the pedagogue what it meant. The youngster paused—scratched his head—but .could give no answer, when up jumped a more precocious urchin, and cried out, "I know what it means, toaster. It means hugging the 101 . 0 ; for,Tom Rose, is tillers hugging 'em around the waist, and it makes 'ism as glad as can be.".. SCALDING MILS.—In Devonshire, &I land, where dairying is extensively prac tised, the milk intended for the churn or cheese is scalded as soon as it cornea front the cow. This procees is. said to ob viate, moat :effectually :=the the natural tend encies of the milk to sour in warts weath- f. er, and when intended for - hinter making, secures °the advinitr.o' of "sweet mhlk or family use, after-thweraam is. reitioired-. A soldier on trial torlitibitual drunken _netts . ; was addressed . bv, .President. "t i risonor,you hate 4144 Ole prosecutintk. for . inadinal . drnrikenn4 ; what base you .. to say in de(' 4nr plothing,igeow your hopor./sta ‘ t habitu al thirst.._ < , Melt," Wird her bb.soma the parable ii"f the Ii evs and Gabes, and-be. ing at a ' loss to entail); he eald that the loaves were not like those now,a daYs, they were RR . hist as the hills tit Scotland: He had scarcely pronounced the words when he heard a loud ' "Whet'a that?" said he, “who calla men liar 1" "Ws I; Willy McMinnhl, : the baker," Well. Willy, whet objections have ye to whet I told yor • , : "None, milder John. onlv.l wanted to know what kind of °lrene they used to bake thine loaves in?" . • • • • DICLICATR MUNIVIOENCE.—AnBIIIIday lam. among the contribution, at, the; Church of the Holy Communion in New York. to Ilse St. Luke's Hospital, , was a roll of five one thowand dollar bilk They wend' dropped so quietly into'lhe plate, it is said, not even the gentleman ' who received them knew Irma whom pies came. • • , • • The Infest folly enjoined by the god ! (less of fsbition upon her adjacent devotees, the ladies of New York, is the, wearing ttc bonnet ribbons four feet long. The, bon net, meanwhile, continues td 'recede from public observation. They have long been invisible to the asked eye—of the wearer; and they now threaten to run entirely to ribbon. lady who must be a relative of Mrs. Partington, we think, -by marriage," 'was entertaining some friends with a leg, of mutton at dinner, the other - day; when - one oilier guests remarked that the elution was exceedingly line in . 4 0h - , - "yt:e," said she, "my husband buyi the best. He is a great rmicae." "I some for the saw, sir." ~ What saucer ?" • Why the saw, sir, that you borrowed." "I burro:yea no Pauper." "Sure you did, sir, you borrowed a saw, "Get nut, you rascal, I• never ettw'yeui saucer." "Be dad but you did air, there's thesaw sir, now sir." • • "Oh ! on want the saw. Wdy didn't you gay so I" n ' .'Peter, what are you thting IQ that bay?" said a tielitThnatiter.. ; know 12401041 r. thkiailta 4Ogiorair. Apples to ahuiii;itilo. - anil , now hii matter shoutil give 'ein hark." nWell, why don't you do it 1" "Cos, sir, he wauldforgel how many is left STRUCK 1111 LIMITNING.--Al ArcOitt. Madison county, Missouri, on the 17th instant, during a storm. the lightning struck the A roadie 'High Schou!, and . four bort, pupils of the instittition, who were asleep in the building were burned to death. STRAW FUR TORIATORS.—Set prw tops. toe plants early, and tend them well till the Iruit begins to set, then cover the ground completely with short straw. six or seven inches deep. This works admi rably—the vices need no props, and will stood drotVemarkably. 'roast given by a bachelor at a"bangtiet" in Pottsville : "The Women and Coal of Schuylkill comity—oh. how desolate would be the fireside without them !" Mr. Jueture Ashurt had is long, lanky vissa g e, winch led Erskine to pen the fullou'ing couplet: Judge Ashen, with his lantern jaws, Thiows light upon the Elielish idYlll. A WFUL.—"Ain'i you afraid you will break, while falling so?" said a chap in the pit id a circus, to the clown. " Why so?" asked the latter. "Because you are a tumbler," replied the wag. 'l'he clown fainted. WORLDLY Wienom.—The greateSt rogue generally contrives to get tile most . credit. The greatest truths are the siniplest ; so are the greatest men. God hears the heart without words— hut he never hears words without the heart. The friendships of the world are • often confederacies in vice, or leagues fo pleas. ure.- Modesty is a handsome dish cover, which makes us fancy there must be some thing very good beneath it. A boy was asked 'who made - him.— With hia.hauds levelled a (clot above the floor, lie replied : ' ..(;011 mach II Ii the baby, so high, ; and l grew !he rest." ; Foppiry is never cured ; it is the bail stamina of the mind, whieh, like titian) of the Mly, are never rectified : once a cox comb, autl,slways a coxcomb.—Johnalon. 11 — 'ARO& ITAIJL.—We learn that 4 11111/1 Or 80.000 liencinge was wade at On Aiken dale landing on Monday la4t.--.lllesuildria, Gazette. • Louie 'Napoleon has , purchased Mal inaison. ilot residence of his grandmother, the Empress Joliephine. an? young 'ladies makes ,foals of 'themselvesby the looking glass, and many yonng men by the wine glass.' ‘.l . say, Pus iiiiitono man ea gund as er t" • 6 01m:tune he :14; and - a kraal deal bather." • A hatter ade,ertisea that Watt* on the Mimi" is of great importance, butwhat's on the head is of greater. ' , • " ktothiag eleieitea us so — mach as' the Prearitre a spinitsiflitbib , Y*l lafthriVr ko our own.. • TWO DOLLARS' PE& ANNiIM. From the Delivers County Repbbliemo. Clroieltati Corn. ' Agreebly to your request, 1 flee you ithe'modus operan4i . by "eh the crop of ecira; you alluded to• a few. weeks since, was raised : • keretoforo„as a general thing many of our farmers have been satisfied with grow• ling from flute to sixty bushels of corn p sere, but timer' have changed, and land has become so valushle in our comity, that good husbandry and care are required to produde a paying crop. MY method of cultivating the crop of *which yott slioke was as follosis: I I spread broadcast on my sod, about 80 loads of stable • manure to the acre, broke it up in the last week in April, from eight to ten inchea deep. The ground , was then thoroughly harrowed, end marked but three by four feet. A compost made of ,excrement, fowl manure, rich soil and plaster. was pot in the hill before drop ping: and the corn planted about the 10th of May. In due time, all the euperfluous stalks were removed, leaving but three to the hill. , The ground was worked with the evltivator itlone, rind the crop flourish ed during the summer. About the 10th of Nov. two persona 'measured off &nacre, ten to sixteen perches, from the middle of the rows each way. There were sixty shocks to an acre six by eight hills. The I barn was measured by a master mechanic and an assistant, and it was hauled in, and , there, were seventy-six barrels end two bushels of ears. One of the men shelled a barrel, and it exceeded one Uusliel and a half," by about:halt a pint to the, barrel. Six ears and : - a hull made -a perk of corn : making one hundred and fifteen bushels to the acre. The compost in the bill pushed the crop op until it reached, the manure and soil below, which- fed at the time it most nettled-nourishment—at ea ring time. The vim' was a•mixture or the long, white Ore it and gourd seed...-. The white gave,it length &and size of cub. while the latter give depth of grain having in the three combined, that which no single one possessed. • MY ergot, ;was treated last pear in the same manner except that part to whioh tnperpholikiliate of lime .was applied in the The-aoii was a 7 clarlottin, and two yeiramgo had about eighty bushels of banilla ashes, per are, spread upon it Corn and Cob Meal. The, grinding;of corn and, cobs, together, ' which, we have, heard ridiculed ,very , much fornimiy, has now become so PtriP.olo 4 o,64l4tfaftrt , boOgieon: nutriment to be thrown sway. Our experience heretofore in regard' to its use is this; for those animale,that chew the cud it, is a most excellent provender, but (or those that do not It is not so vain able: 'rims, for oxen, cows and sheep, it is a capital feed. ,These animals, after what they swallow in the warm vat, rail+ ed the first stomach or paunch, have iho faculty of throwing it up again in. etnall, Portions called cud, and chewing it over in a leisurely manner until it is ground very fine, and then after being thus thor oughly mingled with the saliva, swallow ing it again into mintinr stomach, where all its nutritive matter is extracted by the proper organs created for that pur pose. The horse and the hoe having no such organs to re-chew, do not derive so much benefit from the ground cob, as the mai. mule above named. Hens derive more benefit from corn and cob meal, than they do from meal alone. In fowls of this class there is an spparatus analagous to animals that chew the end. First they take dry fond into their crops, here it becomes soaked as if it were in a warm vat, from this it passes into thegiz / zard, which, furnished with gravel stones, acts the part of grinding fine, •Ity aid Of the strong muscles of that orgen4Whatever passes into it.. Here the particulars ot the cob meal, thoroughly pulverized and, mingled with the gastric ;juices,' be-. come, dissolved, and ,form nutrition for the body. • ;,. We do not mesa to say-that,ennt and •: cob.meal is not good provender for horsed and hogs, but that they do not,derive en much, benefit. from pound her pound. or,. bushel for bushel, as oxen, cows, dtc.; --Blaine Femur. , POTATOICB;-- , The Lafayette (Ind.? COM.. _,... . ler gives the following unproved plan of planting potatoes : . . I ' • 'Let the fanner or the gardener select some refuse lot, or , part of a lot. of sod ground.. Do not plough it: but Wien plant, .• ing dune comes, say between ,the 10th Of May and Ist of June. , place, potato cuttingss . on the grass of the, said ground. front 1111.. 1 in lO inches apart. using . about the same • ! amoutti.or perhaps. a little more seed then is used in the ordinary way of planting...— , ()over the ground tbus sown .with coarse • straw. corn milks. leaves, or any other re. fuse matter .of the Aind. to a depth 4:46 to. 10 inches—just:enough sto kill. the grail and ,prevent it growmg. , The potato vibes ,' will find their way' through the covering without difficulty. and form a mat, which - will , pravent the attest or other covering,, from being blown off by the wind. ' Pots.' toes planted'in this way will need noplow: tug or hoeing. In the fall, when the vines are killed with frost; take a strong rake and uncover the potatoes, Which will he found Covering the ground. large, dry and clash enough fur the dinner kettle, without i washing. _ The ground will' be &Untie I have lost - none of its virtue, •but will, io fact, be enriched by this process. 1 LIVING IN Kralsmi,—You borrow yaw *, neighboen trying pan, book his bitemi, and make Ms bens lay in your own nail. Doughnuts grow on the bushes. 14$1 perch% oysters ran ' be • found oboe. ' For people of limited mane and no principles, Kansa% optins:‘W WW area for emnfort. ' • myilt is mated that atifileieaS minsta*ki daily ; manufactured in , Rhttor make ales female in the Suns s I giliBER 8;