BY D. A. BUBBLER • VOLUME XXVII. 1857—A Magazine for the Homes °fest People! Graham's Magazine. PROSPECTUS of Vol FiftyofGralram's Anierierih Plustraled National . Magazine, the Pioneer Magazine of the Country. estab lished in 1827. Watson & Co. ' the new pub lishers of "Graham's Illustrated Magazine," announce' to the Ladies and Gentlemen of the United States in general, and to the former Pa trons of the work in particular, that it is their intention to make usis of all the immense re sources at our command to produce a First Class Magazine. To this end no exertion or expense will be spared. , The best Literary and Artistic Talent will , beemployed, and nothing that capital, tastpiir enterprise can accomplish will he wanting. to make this Magazine more than ever deserving the liberal support so gen ,eronsly extended to it during the past thirty years. Every number will contain two tine steel Engravings; one Illustrative of some of the most popular Pictures of the day, engrav ed by the best artists ; the other a beautiful colored Steel Fashion Plata drawn from actu al articles of Costume, and colored by the best artists. These Fashions have always been pronounced superior to anything of the kind ever published in this country. They will still continue so. Fine Wood Engravings will illustrate many of the articles published in each number. For this purpose wo have en gaged the services of Messrs. ,Londerback & Baum universally acknowledged to be the best artists in this city. The Ladies' Work Table : Under this bend we shall present in each number a great variety of useful and or namental Designs and Patterns fur Crotchet and Needlework engraved from the articles themselves, with full directions for working, where necessary, so that any lady may under stand them. When desiredwe will furnish the articles themselves, already made up, or merely stamped, ready fur working, with all the requisite materials. All the latest.styles of Costume for ladies and children will be copied from the newest Patterns, and fully described and illustrated in every number., The Fashion department of this Magazine will be fully equal - , and in ma ny respects superior, to that of any Magazine, published! The Literary contents of Gra-1 ham's Illustrated Magazine will combine all that is useful, instructive arid entertaining,! consisting in part of Historical Romances ; Sketches of Travel: . Tales of Society Transls- 1 ions :. Gems . of Poetry : Interesting Extracts (with New Works : Criticisms ; Fairy Tales; Tale of' the Wonderful : Useful Sketches; Fashfunable.Novelettes:-Fashion Itemsl for the Ladies: Hints for Ornamental Garden- I `mg: Editor's Chit-Clint; Humorous Extracts: Sea 'Stories; Table Talk: !kid Editorials 0111 Interesting Subjects: Yankee Travels: Short 'Biographies; Recipes for the Toilet and (louse 'hold; tend in fact u judicious selection from all the various matetial necessary to produce a Magazine acceptable to the whole people.. Ladies about forming clubs of subscribers are rtspiested tocompare ..Cirtiliatit' With auk. • Ether- - MaAifittiti7:ololla44igialvti are conti dent :their 'own good' taste and correct judg ment will decide, in our favor. Gentlemen 'who are about to subscribe for a Magazine for their own reading. or to present to their lady friends, should procure a copy of 'Graham 4 and examine it thoroughly, and then seeif 1 - any other periodical presents equal induce 'tricots for their subscription. The S:eel En }tracings are gents of art: the Colored Fashion 'Plates beautiful: the 11'ood illustrations fault less: the rending matter choice and interesting. In ono word, it ma Magazine to adorn the con tre table of every lady in the !and; to shed cheerfulness and light around the fireside of the tvhole people! The twelve numbers of 'Graham' for the year 1857 will comprise one of the most mag nificent volumes.pver issued. containing in all 1200 pages of rending matter: 100 fine Wood Engravings; 12 beautiful colored Fashion 'Plates; 12 handsome Steel Engravings: 100 Engravings'of Ladies' an&Children's Dresses: 50 Conde Illustrations; and over 300 patterns of Needlework, &e. TERMS: One copy, ono year. S 3: two copies.3s: five copies, and ono to getter up of club, 310; elev en copies, and,one to agent, 420. Just think of it! Graham's Illustrated Magazine, ono year, for the low price of Four teen Cents per copy, when subscribed for in .clubs of six or more. Graham s Illustrated Magazine will be sop plietl to subscribers pundually, and at asearly a day in the month as any other Magazine published. Send in your subscriptions early to thepub ,lishers. ' .WATSON & CO., 50 South Third street, Philadelphia. • E;17724 NOTECE.-'—Subscribers sending Three Thillars for ono year's subscription to •Graham,'' will receive •a copy of Graham's Ladies' Paper, for one year, without charge. Detniber 1, 1850. . DALLEY'S MAGICAL PAIN EXTRAC TOR—There never has been a discovery made iu Materia • Modica, whereby pain can be so quickly allayed, and where parts in a high - state of intlarnation can be so rapidly, re duced to their natural state, nor where wounds and sores can be so thoroughly and rapidly heiiled, and decayed parts restored without ei ther scar or defect, than with DALLEY'S MAGICAL PAIN EXTRACTOR. - - In Cuts, Wounds, Sprains and Bruises— costialities to which children are_constuntly subject—the action of the genuine GALLEY'S PAIN EXTRACTOR, is ever the same 'Bow' much Pain and Suffering may not'thus be Prevented I itlorover, Life itself is often 'dependent upon having at hand the Genuine 'HALLEY 12',XTRACTOR, and for particulars of which r respectfully refer to my printed 'painplilets for the truth of which I hold myself responsible'. NO case' of Burns and' Scalds, no matter how `severe; has ever yet, in any one instance, 'resisted the all-powerful, pain•subduing and hetiliiig qualities of the DALLEI"S PAIN EXTRACTOR.. ' •,' No .Paia,Eitractor is' genuine unless the 'box' hitti upon its Steel Plate Engraved Label with the signatures,of,C. V. CLICKNER & piciprietOrs,'' Mid HENRY DALLEY, manufacturer. Price' 25 cents per bor. 116.:All eiders should be addressed to C.,V. tlickeaer & Co,, 81 Barclay greet, New York. Nov2B 10t A DYE FOR THE HAlR.—Perfection is not. attained by . . indolence and ease; there is no acioss-lat' road to universal favor. The world will not be blown like eitaff . iiito a chan nel indicated by imitators. Witt.esi the fast anchored faults -of BATCHELOR'S HAIR ,anchored won by watching when otheri sle p t, p sus tained by its Intrinsic wor an ruthfullneas 'to nature. Warranted not to disappoint. the :lopes'of those who use it. Made and sold, or' stpplied, at. the Wig Factory 283 BroadwaY, BewlYorle -=Seerthat , each box has -Wit. A. BArcnet.oa on, no others are:genuine. • THIIiLDREN , S Shoes of every variety,. and 'N-r•ahtes at BRINGMAN & ALIGBIN BAUGII'S puccessors to. .W. Pauctoa. exr.Blanks.nf, alfkisale• for sale at tkit office. MY SCHOOL-GIRL DAYS. BY AUNT Ltror I REMEMBER, I remember All my childish days at school ; When I pored o'er simple pages In the air of morning cool ; When I read old Peter Parley, Like a bonk•worm, through and through, When I shunned good Lindley Murray, And dull Colburn's "two and two." I remember golden pleasures . Brought by Wednesday afternoon, How we ran through blossomed hollows In the leafy month of June ; How we caught the autumn showers From the nut-tree's laden bough ; How we scaled December ennw drifts : Wherg are all those children now ? I' remember, in our school room, Ono low window where I sat Eyeing, with halfpitying envy, Some untutored..dog ot cat ; Measuring the lengthened shadows Thrown by elm•trees on the floor ; Did the teacher catch my lances ? Eyes played truant then no more. I remember her, our teacher, Sitting in her chair of state, Holding for each reverent pupil Springs of good cr evil fate. One and all, we loved and feared her, Though we oft her patience tried, And her smile to us was sunshine ; Dark the day when 'twos denied. I remember those old school-days— Fringed with rainbow tints they pass, When, as now, I hold before me Memory's prismatic glass. Schoolmates I some of you are sleeping Cahnly 'neath the silent mould ; Some have grown to prudent matrons ; 1, methinks, run growing old. A TIMMS!! LADY Bismixo.—Her attire is first removed. An attendant takes a glove— every day it is a new glove—of undressed silk. With the disengaged hand she pourS over her mistress basin after basin of warm water.— Then by means of gentle friction of the glove she slowly removes the salts and impurities which are deposited on the skin. This finish ed, the attendant covers the lady from head to foot, by means of a mob of downy silk, with a lather made of particular emollient soap, pe culiar, we believe, to Turkey. Upon this soap depends much of the pencil-like softness and snowy whiteness of the skin for which Eastern women always are so remarkable.— It has the reputation of removing stain spots and freelele#!4i...4Are n ot, ea ItlTutiole. This part of the matter having been carefully performed, the lady is again . deluged in waver, heated to 110 to 120 degrees, and poured over her person from a taus (ba sin) of silver. Large towels—we might call 'them sheets—of the finest muslin, richly em• broidered with lloWers and gold, are wrapped around her ; she is led into a saloon, where, reclining upon a heap of cushions, she sinks into a soft dream-like languor, that might be- cone faintness were it not for the assiduity with which a slave fans her. A. NOBLE Fentow.—On the morning of December, Ist, four little boys broke through the ice on the lake near their school house, in Waterville, Wis. Tho villagers hastened to the spot, but the ice was so thin that none dared venture to their aid. At this moment, just as the boys were sinking, a young man, eighteen years of age, named John Adams, sprang forward, seized a fishing spear, and leaving most of his clothe. on the bank plung ed into the lake and saved two of the boys. He then made a dash, and saved the third.— Adams was now almost exhausted, but the mother of the fourth boy was standing near, in horrible agony, and Adams said to her, "I will save your buy or die."„. Tying a ro . pe a round his waist, ho told those on shorrk pull him if he sank, and cried out, "Stand by the rope, lam going to him." He then plunged in, and breaking the ice with his bands, seized the boy wbo was sinking for the third time, carried him ashore, and restored him to 10 mother's arms. THE Rev. DL BELLOWBj of Now York, re. cently delivered an excellent address on mirth, in the course of which he remarked: For my part, I say it in all solemnity, I have become sincerely suspicious of the piety of those who do not love pleasure in any form.-- I cannot trust the man that never laughs; that is always sedate; that has no apparent outtste.l for natural springs of sportiveneas and gaiety that are perennial in the human soul. I know that nature takes her revenge on such violence. I expect to find secret vices, malignant sins, or horrid crimes springing up in this hot bed of confined air and imprisoned apace; and therefore it gives me a sincere mural gratifica tion anywheN ancljn any community, to see innocent pleasures and popular amusement s resisting the religious 'bigotry that frowns so unwisely upon them. Anything is better than dark, dead, unhappy social life; a pray to en nui and morbid excitement, which milks from unmitigated pe i ritinism, whose second crop 'is usually unbridled license and inamous folly. • WHAT NErr P :'A'gentleman named Hall is said to have devised a mode to keep open, he I thinks, the Hudson river from New YOrk to above Troy, and the Elie Canal in winter; and is about applying to the Legislature for a law permitting him to levy toll on boats and vessels passing through them, to defray' the expense. His plan is tbe construction of an iron pipe, about six inches inches in diameter, throughout the line, to be heated by Mean? I. He Is said to be sanguine of Success. j "1r You Evsa TTNX. or MARKTINTI MA W , - 11 .% SON said an °azimut parent to bin heir, t r selectl;e whole anthusbaml - was hung, that is the only way ti prevent her throwing his memory in your face, and making annoy ing comparisons." •liEvirt that won't prevent eselairited is crest, old bachelor, "she'll tbeareise him and saj bugler would be too good for yon." GETTYSBURG, PA., FRIDAY EVENING, JANUARY 30, 185;7. DICKENS IN AMERICA. The venerable yet vivacious Honorable 4 Claim or TailLittszata4ass.—M. de Li- John. Barney, of this city, has ,in press a very martin& in his "History nf 'the Girondins," piquaut "Sketch Book,"'which is likely to re• published in Paris, giveS•tte following account fresh the American mind in both political and of the French national air, The .Marseillaise. ' social reminiscences: The following chapter"ln the garrison of Strasburg was quarter . . oh Dickens in America will be read with pe- ed a young artillery offlopri named Ronget de culler interest : Lisle a native of Leiria de Salnieicin the Jur& In Boston, I saw, on his landing, the accom- He had a great 'taste - : . music and poetry, pushed writer of tales of absorbing interest, the and o ft en entertained- hi [comrades during .fli fop and the scholar, Charles Dickens. He their long and tedious hou in ths garrison.— came heralded as the most happy and success- Sought a ft er for his Milli , .and poetical tel. ful delineator of innocent suffering children of ent, he was a frequeitt etilllhnillitir guest at original character in humble life. He hid the house of one Dietrichiiin Alsatian patriot, insinuated himself into the hearts of his read- mayor of Strasburg. '. ~ ;if ' - erg, and nestled in their inmost recess. The "The winter of 1792:. ie a period of great simple, innocent, bewitching child induces scarcity at Strasburg ! The house of Dietrich 1 every parent to wish his own might resemble was poor, his tablewasfraFal. but a seat was' little Nell in her winning attributes of guile. always open to Ronget dM. alai& less meekness and patience under suffering— "One day there wail nothing but bread and bright intelligence, piety, an abiding faith in some slices of smoked ham on the 4able. kind heaven's mercy to an afflicted child. IDietrich, regarding the yoting officer, said to His quaint humor heralded him in advance, him, with a sad serenity, "Abundance fails at and apologized for the adulation which was lour boards, but what mitten that, if enthusi showered upon him. Boston was in ecstacies. aim fails not at our civic fetes nor courage in It was deemed a dispensation to have been !the hearts of our soldiers? 4I have still a last ... the first city to receive and welcome him.— I bottle of wine in mycellar.Bring it," said he The doors of each hospitable mansion opened I to one of his daughters, "and let us drink to wide on golden hinges to receive him. Plays !France and Liberty! Su:Abut:kr should have were written and performed, in which he and its patriotic solemnity. IS :'Lisldolust'draw his most prominent characters were persona.; from these last drops one ofthose hymns that ted, true to nature. He was overwhelmed I raise the soul of the peoplei',l , with invitations to balls, dinners, &0., his auto- "The wit e was brought and drank, d'iter graph solicited, a lock of his hair implored, which the officer departe4 , The night was iof which he had as bright a cloud of sunny ! cold ; De Lisle was 'thOtlihtfUl. , His heart locks as e'er - adorned a woman's brow.) Be ' was moved ; his head heated. Ho returned had to employ more than one amanuensis to Istaggering to his Solitary room, and. slowly answer his huge pile of notes. His anti-chain- sought inspiration, soinetirtieit in the fervor of ber was crowded, and it required patience to: his citizen soul, and anon ci !! the keys , of his await your turn to be admitted into his august; instrument—composing ne thebefore air the ebe ppresence. I have never witnessed moremug -' ' words , and then the word f :, 1 fore t.be air.— nificent entertainments. The grand ball given ~' He sung all and wrote nothing, .and at last, to the Prince do Joinville only surpassed them : exhausted, fell asleep witidds' hpad resting on in splendor. On that occasion an terial tunnel ' his instrument, and awoke. tot , until daybreak. was thrown across the street, to connect Fan- - "The music of the nigh). returned to. his veil Hall with Quincy Hall. The ball was in !mitid like the impression of a dream. He Fanueil—the grand supper in Quincy. Those 1 i wrote t, and ran to Died ri ch, whotti he found who have been in those two can appreciate ' in the garden digging ' wilder lettuces: The their magnificeuce. It cost eight thousand wife and...daughter of 'the';Old man Were not dollars, and was graced by the presence of all ; up. Dietrich awoke; theirt,'ind celled in some the distingue of Boston. Nothing could be friends, all as paiiftionehsl4finself for Music,l more magni fi cent. It lives in my memory as l and able to execute thii,:4mPoSitioa ,of De unparalleled. I Lisle. At the Grat,tittiezit'Adtahe gralyPale pale, In New York, the wharves were, crowded at •at the second teertt*W ' d.',-41,,,,..,__t le thin 4**,iartrugt4-to'greet•lub arrival - orstart-auttrtent of tintlits ... steamer's precious freight. Streets were lined lof 'Dietrich, his daughters, hirnielf, and the :with spectators. The windows of the houses ' young officer, threw themselves into each opposite and around the hotel were hired at other's arms. ridiculous prices to witness his egress; and the I The hymn of the country was found. Exe same prodigal attentions lavished upon him as . cuted some days afterwards in Strasburg, the in Boston. - Inew song flew from city to city, and was play. Philadelphia idem ; and in Baltimore I led ! ell in all the popular orchestras. Maraeillaise off the game of tomfoolery. ; a dopted it to be sung at the sittings of the In answert n invitation to be honored by clubs, and the Marseillaise spread it through having him g ce my saloon, I received the Frauce, singing it along the public roads.— following ch acteristic response : -I From this came the name of'Marseillaise: " Riettmoxn, VIREINIS, Satniday night, 19th of March, 1842. 1 My Dear Sir : I have time for but one word. I thank you for your kind letter. On Wednes. day evening, at 9 o'clock, I have booked my self to be at your disposal. In great haste, faithfully yours, CHARLES DICKENS. My house was filled to overflowing—jam sails ad sails faciendum. The privilege watOolicited of being permit ted to stand on the landing of the stairway to see him pass up. His precious autograph was held up to gratify admiring spectators. The only redeeming feature of the fete was that the truly noble, accomplished and beloved gentleman, scholar and author, consented to accompany him, and give grace, dignity and attraction to the assembly. Washington Irving condescended to play second to the foreigner whom all delighted to honor, peo hae vice. It was a vicious depravity of taste, which nil have since deplored—these adulation.% •'• be stowed on this consummate fop and conceited coxcomb i all were r paid by gross libels, un founded slanders, which I shall not conde scend to record. Chief Justice Taney and family were an, nounced. "My hour for receiving is past," re plied the inflated foreigner. My estimable friend, Christopher Hughes, thus reproved him: "Dickens, had my lord Chief JustiCe Denman honored you witha call, would you have dared to refu•u NM?" "Certainly," replied the inflatbd coxcomb, "if my hour of admission had passed." "Chief Justice Taney is, in hitaself, the most elevated man in his country—second in rank only to the President—and it will form a bright privilege in your life hereafter, to say you were permitted to tate him by the hand." "Mrs., Dickens is about to drive out to see the picturesque hills surrounding. Baltimore." I replied :''We have ample time before. the setting sun." • He then condescendingly said: "You may shoW him up." • ' • In Washington, tho Hon. Secretmy of War, waiting in his anti-chamber, hoard the same response:: "My hour is iast." Ho-was at the President's levee herequested that Mr. Spen cer might be informel that ho tbou was willing to be introduced to him.. "Tell him my liOur for receiving him is past," replied Mr. Spencer. A HARD Err.—One of the most outspoken of Methodist preachers was "Vld Gruber."—. He was a 'real 4 •Hard Shell." OU One occa sion, he"assisted in divine worship,, where a young Presbyterikt 'clergyman preached, vie. lently agninst some of the doctrines _Of Metito• Brother Gruber was asked to close the cervices withprayer, which he did, end, as is' customary; - prayed - for the - minister.: "Oh, Lord,'.! said he, "bless the preacher 7rho has preacdied to us this morning, and.• make his hearses soft as his head's. and then he'll do ;tome good.—Sierra Dmaorintre. afritemember the--printer.• IiFEARLESS.AN)) FREE." THE' HARS4LAISE. A PATENT JoEL—The , authenticity of the subjoined is fully vouched for by the fact that • t the inventor thereof has secured a patent.— ' The danger of allowing.patent medicines to "lay around loose," is fully set forth in the fol lowing: A venerable lady, who resided in a suburban cottage, kept a few hens for, her I amusement. In feeding theld one daY she wet her feet,lind a severe biliot*attack resulted. She sent - for a box of anti powdens, and was about to take a dose, when the area suggest ed itself to her that Nature was nature's best restorer, and she threw them, into the garden. In a few days she found herself fully recovered, and, with a sharp appetite, and looking at her chickens, she resell/41th have one Wed for dinner, and her neighbor's son soon brought, in one with a dislocatad neck. After thirty minutes she took it from the ilot, only to find it like a stone, and she replacei it, and gave it another trial, with no,better incest!'; and the third time she tried it, until ir'two hours and a belf she gave it up a tourn subject. The trouPle was this—the chicks had partaken of the aeti-bilious poeders, and ,there wda no "bile" left in them 1 Oust Jesass ox vas STAND.—"James, come np, here. How is New Jerseyboanded ?" "Bounded all over by the Osmden and Am. boy Railroad, sir." "What are ita natural prodicts ?" "Sham banks, sand bank fishnets, and three•cent' lightnings!' "What are the Jersey,Flats "Mist of the inhabitants, air'' "What is a Railroad Directo ?" "A practical unde v rtaher." "What is his business ?" • , "To put an end forever to he business of passengers." • • • "How many conductors ire Thoessary to the proper'conductof the affairs ofh railroad,?" "Well, there is generally oni to every mile —but it requires more than onto a collision:' "Whit is meant by the term 14iitchibg WTI" "Why, taking a short out to a sudden de mise r Noo boy. too'll be i'resiiint tiom,il day." INES-Most of the .towns nortl of us: have been visited with Snow, and shcenlling off the sidewalk has become a eerie" ; business.-- Paths for gentlemen are soon opnitd. hue in some 'of the "larger towns they 4re : talking of special appropriations for shovelng thetri oub wide enough to admit the free patage of ladies ith hooped skirts, and with IWitchiog off places at intervall so thitt whci two akirts happen to Meet they ,can piss. - 1 / 1 54he Puritan Recorder snis np the sta. L t/stics of triangtllicali-eligion hvormonntry fellows i—Oyer ,thirty thousand writing Minis ters of the Gospel > , sustained by 'our millions oemmnaicants, ata heard by. Warm mill. ions litchurch going people. Obutl ProFarth "flinty millions; i freligions .entsibutions, twenty-four millions per annum. WHOSE ALE i 9 IT. , . "Will yon give me a glass of ale, please asked a rather seedish iooking person, with an old but well brushed coat and althost too shiny a hat.' ' ' It was, prOdneed by the bar-tender, Cream ing over the edge of the tumbler. • ' '• "Thank you," said the recipient, aisle placed the glass to his lips. Having finished it right off at a swallow, he.smacked his lips and said.: "That is very fine ale--,--vers. Whoso is it?", "It is Harman's ale." "Alt 1 Harman's, oh?" Well, give us;one 'lt was done and holding it up to the light and looking through it, the cennotsseur said-- "Pon my word, it is superb ale--superb! clear as Metier's. I must have setae "more of thati dive me a mug of • .The mug was furnished, but before putting it to his lips, the imbiber d,'Whose ale did you say thig was ? I'llarman's," replied the bar-tender. ' The mug was exhausted, and also ,the vo cabulary of praise; . and it only remained for the appreciating gentlemen to say as he wiped his mouth and went towards the door--"llar man's, ale, is it?" I know. Harman very walla . I shall See him soon and settle -Withhim fur the two glasses of his Incomparable brew!" Paerrf G00n. , --A few week agoa aubstan tial farmer of this county, a staunch republii can, hada hired man, an unyielding democrat. The farmer, accustomed to attend church bitudelf, tried-very hard to prevail upon the ,man: to do likewise, but in vain: - 'rhe man persisted in spending the Sabbaths in'hunting or fishing. On - being pressed'for'the'reason why ho would not attend chaich, iinswei. was, "Because 'the wittistet is forever preach ing politics." 0 . • •-, . The &ruler, thinking, the •argument would be overcome, if 1:p cRu4l 0111 .91i1t tha man to attend, 'hired hitn Qtl a, certain Sabbath on returning home the man said "There, it . waa'juat as I told you would be —all politics, from beginning to end." "No;" Said the farmer "not 'so there was not a word of politics in the whole discrairsot "Yes," said the man, othere was. • Theteit was politics." "Why, what was it?"; asked.the farmer. . man ;p the republican aefiriel7.43e taivea r where irliFifei iniatia - deiko• crate appear?" ".tlo, it 'was not," was the reply. "On the contrary; it was, "If the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear r • know it," was the answer ; "but darn him 1 knew what he meant P—Wayne Democrat. PARSON BROWNLOW AND MS JONISBORO' CUSTOMEREL—The last Knoxville Whig con tains a characteristic and pathetic appeal from its editor to his' former customers at Jonesboro', where the Whig was originilly published. He offers to take bills on the Bank of East . Tennessee, which are worth 20 cents to the dollar, in full paymetit, l and adds: "Persons wishing to square up with us can now do so. , lf, however, they wish to get off at a cheaper rate, they can - withhold oven these bills; and we promise during the cam. lug year, to receipt them in full through the paper, forever, and file' oqr claims against them in the High Chancery of Heaven, and let them settle with their God in the World to Come "And to leave all withont'exense, we fuller agree to take Shanghai chickens, 'hoopskirts, boot jacks, broomcorn, babyjunapers, fishing tackles, patent medicines, sucking pigs, frozen cabbage, old clothes, colt's revolvers, second hand tooth•brushcs, , ginger•cakes, parched corn, circus tickets, or any other artiele'found in a country retailitore l" Fousai AT LAST.—Tom Kirkliam' used to tell of a friend of his dropping in'about dinne4r flute on an old lady, who invited hinfto draw up to the table. , Tbere was a hugh, pile of the pot order for dinner. ,Theoldlady helped him hountifully, and he t being hungry, was doing justice to it. "Stranger," said the, old lady, "you will find almost every kind of meat in that pie.'' "Yes, madam," said'hii, "and fish, too,' as he drew from betwenn his'lips what be' imagiWed was the backbone of a•red horse. suckers. "Lord have meter!" exclaimed tho old woman, "if that stint our fine-tooth comb that Billy lost two weeks ago. ' Sap-"Prat chum in geography, come up and let's see what you know.`' Bill Toots, what' is a' "A thing mother wears around her should ' • "What is a pain ?" • 0 "A tool used by carpenters for ensoOthing off biiards." "Wbst is t - desert ?" "Goodiee after dinner." I "That'll do 'ye yon, goodies liter: School." • • - r A Contostm—A. few weeks "ago Cherles fichoek, of New Philadelphia, Ohio, Oas cutting into a large log, when, his axe struck asata'non leaden slug, weighing tStrii. end a half ruinds, which was imbeded in solid wood about five or six inches -from the surface. The tree. from which this 'Ong was taken. grew iu the river. 'nearabout' two miles from the - town, and near Where 'Oen Wayne and his army en'. , camped during the summer ef1794; when he . . marched to the : Northwest Te.rritexT.toitttick the Milani indieTui. -- Thiirobability is that it was fired fiiii:ollo of his cannons, and, lay ion= bedded for mots than half a aatury, serif folls,, , wl,:pain;thento Joonld, be paining in erOry,l • otiee, I 118.Girard College contains ils orphinir A SNOW STORM: 'Tis a fearful night in the winter time, Ai cold as it ever can be 3 • • The roar of the storm is heard like a chime Of theewaved in in angry sea. The, oon is full, but her silver light . • - The storm dashes out with his Wings to•night; And over the sky, lien) South to North, Note star is 'seen as the winds come forth, In the strength of 's mighty glee. • . All the day the snow came down—all day— As it never came dOwn before, And ovee the earth at night there lay Some two or: thiee feet or more. : The fence was lost. and the wall of stone ; • The 'windows Welted and the well•curb gone The haystack grown to a mountain lift ; And the wood pile looked like a moster drift, As it lay , at the farer's door. As the night satin came hail and snow, And the air grow sharp and chill, And the warning roar of sullen blow Was heard on the,distant hill ; And the Northei dee on the motintain peak In his breath bow the old treed writhe and stiff ek Ho shouts aiong the plain ho I ho I Ile drives froin hid nostrils the blinding 'noir, And groadavith a savage will I • •, MISCELLVVY. ••• • • Ladies' fancy work-Talking.! • ' The, more women look in their glasses, the less they lodkin their; houses. • • According to the tate ceesus,.the num ber, Of,Protestan Is in Hungary , is 2,792,.i25, The quickest way to make eye -water is to inn your nose against itlanimiet. As we must rthidei an seem:lnt for ei,G- • ry idle Word so must we likewise of our idle % baker bag invented a new kind of east. ' makes 'bigad go light 'Oat . a pOund of it iveighs only, four ounces. . The Harrisburg Herald speaks of a new tonnten felt $lO note on the Harrisburg Bank, "Be moderate in all things,7 as the boy said. to his , schoolmaster when the latter• was whiliping him, • • ' ' "Wilke up. here, and pay for your lodp tnge~" said the Deacon ae hn nudged a sleepy stranger with the contribution hox. • • The first woman who appeared oti the English stage was . lifrs. Coleman, in . 1655. .. Prete:lonely, men enacted woman ' s character.. Speaker, 'Banks, , in a. recent lee tdmil tsteldiCted*ihat tittOodloyar the - NUM/sip: pi will be thit beat of the greatesi''city in the . , It ie said that the first peraonage who wore hoops is lady Saturn, one of the ladies in waiting upon the sun. authority for ffisbion that. • Eliza Cook very truly says t---"To ap. preciate the value of newspapers, we have on' ly to suppose that' they were to be totally dis• continued for a month." A child in Oswego, left alone in the cradle' by Hi 'mother, with a box of matches for a plaything; was found oe the tnother'a're , ,• tura bnrned to death, . • . • •' The parent who'would train Up a child in the way it should go; must Rein the way he l woud trait up his child." aml, before ' Egpeis • precept. . , A character *Melt combines Alm lave of enjoyment with, the love. of linty, and 'the ability to perform it, is one whose unfoldings give the greatest promiee of perfection. . • A country, editor having ,received two gold • dollars in advatiee for hie , paper, Rays thnt. he alloira his, child to play *Blithe other children, as wino. 1 "You look rather, got." said the tea- kettle to the pan-eake. "I ;could' fake -that as an insult," said the pap.cske 'but r am aware th You haye beeisteaming ... On Christmas Day a new and beautiful marble pu it wee found in the First Baptist Chnrch. (Rev. Mr. Caldwell's,l standing in the place ()AIM former desk.—Beingo't4hig, A sailor , being asked how he liked his bride, replied :--"Why;% d'ye see, I took her for to he only half of me, WI the parson says ,; but dash.me if she islet twice as much ae r.— i I'm only a tar, and she'sa tartar.. • • It was a pertinent and forcible saying of the Emperor 'N'apobion, that a "handsome woman pleases the 4; beta good woman pleases the heart. The one /13sjeivil and the other is a treasure's /The ' total number= of ships buildt at .. Quebec during the year 185 f, *as 'forty-two, with an ita'regefe tonnage of 33,235. Thire are now upon the stocks:thirtysevenvessels of an aggregate tonnage of about 22,115 tons. The New York Tribune says the daily receipts of poultry for the 'last tell days of 1856 averaged 206 tons * day, making 2,000 tone, or four millions, of pounds of turkey, leette,'ducks, fowls, arid game birds. 'man who ''proposed't* ,write tionney of the Etiglisli langua ge, on 'being asked *hat he anderstood, the word "patitql °gYt. to p leat! , " u Pweed? "WhYP , the art of road-niaking, to be sure." . Horace areelY; r v e ,i in London, wrote borne "that he hid paid to several Mod 'el boarding balsa, in one of which he saw a newly'lnvented , "brick,"*hich sit ask him fav-' otibly I" „ ' Wiz tin Joseph's ;Irothera were leaving p) rlturn home, he kindly and wisely paid to thorn, "Sea that ye fallnot cm 6 bythe way. '! How pleasantly; woold all live, ifthia advice were generally remembered. , instant editor says be is hand up flir cash, and if kis subscribers haven't anything ,elletihey may bring in wood, but nostick's so 'crooked that his wife Fan% twist, 'eta arow ? d t e.tileierpot, nor logs so tough that the devil - Teich your children, by language or precept, haver to wound a person's feelings because he bolds an bunible sta tion in life—be• , , , . cones he. / 11 . lxxirlY s elsd'—because be is awk• ward—or becalise,the God of Nature has be. slowed upon him kdaikei skin than theiii. TWO t;OLlAltii NUMBER 47. The report that it.was ,go;eold dar Jttst week. acio,brenkofF a, tijarerine Ingag, meat b 7 the freezing up of the young ,menls. passion, is doubted by the ladles. Thrgener• al effect of cold nights ie to bring the iaarritigo fevei to a crisis.:, " A Frenchman, being troubled with _tit, gout,wiis asked what difference there was ,ber, tween that aud the rheumatism., ‘'One sery, great d4ference," roPlitUl MOnsieur, "snpposp you take, one vice, put Ze finger In, yop turn the saiew till 'you'ean benimo rheumatism den 's'pose •yoti give' hilll''OAd turn more—sat is ze gout f" . ,;•,. .dear, hold up your , hoof!, and tell the gentleman how much wice nine limbos:" "Teti "Oh fie guess '404/I." "Tor,Olve."', teal]."' l'Fberaieti." • • "NU." ( teen." "No:" "Sixteen:" "Nci."" "SeVefit teen." "No." "Eighteen.l, "Right.? moth er's own di/tiring, 'That: boy, / thinking ? will make 7 a figure in the world." •A ieCent. coriefavilwas keld iittitOitieoti tho 15th' of December, in which the the Rennin 'Church' in Mexico and America was considered:l Thel'ope complaitiS bifterly'of the doings:of the new:gavernMeut, of Mexico, .and declares all the measures vihichlit has thicellaguills,k!h!ttukalflritY Pf tin? Hofftob ie Cha i r, ,to !bltt,4llll se. dl• flounces the Priests who obey'the )Hire' of countries in which they live, rather' thaU instifictions feirWarded theit from:Route: •i 1: CAN GOI4 SEE Ttlit,OCGa THE,ClitAgt Children hale generally'a 4aguit'intpiessioti of the'fee Othfillieienee; but Willie iteprent tridit'is brought : out:With distinetnisd'and . fon* , it is controllinipoweiin keening them 11.6 in , One of our, exelutuger, tells a IloOr tun' at boy, wito watcled to confession of,a wrogg Fiction .by the thought thpt ped bad . seen Mtn eommit , " 1 1 lady came home fromab'oppingone7m and was riot ail usual by the glad Weleome ' of her •little eon. , • BeemecFehj , ::of,/i'er akulked hito,the entry, himg.aboatthe garden, and I routrd Le 4e m9 l l3witty Bridget rlten 11 1 11! common. ,Tho mother ,could account this manner. , Wis'tn she win M;dredsing: MO foe' bee, "Mother," he "Can God seb ttiO4// t crack in the o'6mA : door?"' 1 agotitowt,i,'7L .i 4 .xsitit,Ot ;i; "':tub Call be see trteit it is all ilarletherell • "Yes. l ! .answered the'mother, "Gotftan see °rely where Wittl•ie ever,' 1 11 09 2 !-• • "Then Cod saw me, and he'll tell yen, moth. er. 'iYhen yenwereioi.C. I into yi,;lll` elms- et; and ' I "took tniditte by the flake :r runi solty,'Qery'sorry,"iroul, bolting his head Is d 'F . - mether's lap, he burst out osiing. , • Poor little.boy 1 all daylte Inn) been Isantiog , to hide from his toptber, jurotee , Adam ;;and ' Eve, after they, bad disobeyed God, ii44d 1141 from his presence in the gerdenot.4len t , Guilt litede 'thanafraid putt a 'gulf liat!, tiveeit hiin'and Lta Mother; 'roe bee hOCS bitt wniug doing Separated him from Wt. , 'het watt-no longer at in'her sight. His peace was gone. This 'is the way sin divides ud Awn God. We don't love to be in,eight., We,are not happy 'Wo bide array from Him , • and try to ferget ''• Ildw did George' get' baok' to: his Mother f• How did :he get rid of his feeling guilt 'aelf shame.? He took the be and only true way s by; repoting- and confesdiug , water, fer.Pve hin t ' sweets of nestling eluie beside lier,autl loving i to be irt her dear Society. He was restored to, L'Or confidence atidlcve: ' ' lartlestroz OF a ,NRITfIeAPIZIL , LA school.: teacher who has been eugakel long.tirne his profsssioaan4witness the I . n . ppenci k ori k ,,. newspaper on the mindsof a fittnily,ot,phiKreti A writes to the Plitor of the Ogdeuebargh Sea :fib:rigid folloWp": • ; ; ; i.; ; .4q b a y, found it ,to be The unireiaal sritbOut exception', tbat those acholura, of Wilt sexes and of all,ugea lrbo Bove uNeosalotiowp, pupera at hire, tvbea coniparud Iritb#ose z who hive :not, are rAe 1. better readers, excelling in 'pi:outrank., tioti, and coniequently read more undeMian-,, 2 They are better spellers and define Wordiei witkease and accuracy. • , 3„.„ They obtain a practical knowledgw Of 1' geoglphy to almost half the time : it tegnirea,; otinMs the newspaper has made them femiil• far with the hicistioris of the most , important places, nations, their_governmenti and donigi on the globe 4. They are better'Osttnerians, for having s become ao familiar with every 'variety in this ,trwspaper, from 'commonplace advetisemeut to the finished , and ,classical oration of the statesman, they more readily comprehend the meaning of the text, and emissiquently analyse, its construction with acenracis - • Woos.'.—There are queer stories tdid about the origin of the use of various 'articles—one of these relates to wool, and is to he end that: Bt. Clement, a holy num, being fenced to flee from his persecutors, found Lis feat so buttered by long continuous travel, that he was iiiduced -to put a little wool between Lis sandals endltbs soles of his feet: v oll'continuing his journey, : the v;armtb, moisture, motion, and pressure of..- , the feet worked the wool into nankin:dr i t compact substance, and it to be intro. ,-;`- duced in the manufacture of many articles I HON. WILLIAM WILKIMEL Otte iMMlteibl. Detnocratic Senatoz.from this county, wee 79,7 , -. •_t yours of age on the 3rd inst., the day, of dm, ' • meeting of the Electoral College, of wbiels he , was President. lie has sounded ,nearlY all the depths of political honor, baring net ; ~.. State Senator, &Member of Congress, 4 L.: B. District Judge, Minis'er to Daubs, sad io.spir • , Senator from the 22d District of POOlOhlit,i, uie.—.Kftsburgbi /bat 1,111 =NM