Y vT ' ....... "r:K;i..;-i;- in ft tl 55 YOL. 5-m 7, CLEARFIELD, PA , WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER .13, 1858. BY S. B. K0. i.r . Ttf 7N tort 5 f1 rin fV - NUMBER ONE. 'Ti very odd. indeed it is. ThU busy world to scan. And wiluess that most every man - Wo see goes cn the plan Of showing up his neighbor's faults, " ?o all can read who run - Forgetting, ni ind yon. Ml the while The faults of Number One. ' I don't profess to be a saint. Yet think tho great command Of -love thy neighbor as thyself."' Tho lioblest ever planned. . It breathes a spirit so divine. That.-could it once becomo Hut well observed, how very few . Would care for Number One. We"rc all alike : no chanee go by ilf reaching out for 'wore,' iiot satisfied if Plenty casts , Her burden at your door. .We push and scramble, jostle Out Our rery mother's son Put whi.i's the odds? our gate yon know, ' Of course, is Number One. JTi Grmlv set, and rooted deep ; But wouldn't it be strange If we should think 'twould be as well To try and make a change ! lint then, you see, the very fact That we had first begun, Would be enough to choke us off from being Number One. 'Man's inhumanity to man. Makes countless millions mourn ;" While hearts still striving hard with Fate, Pai3 through the conflict, torn Ev anguith, sorrow, pain and woe. "And ask but death to come. To save them from the grasping clutch Of greedy dumber One. The r.oblo motive of the soul. Sowed broadest there, in trust, If sr-rinkled with sweet Charity, Will blossom in the dust." - Then garnered by the hand of Time, When Life's frail thread ia spun They'll fill the granery of rest, Inscribed A, .Number One. THICKS OF A .MEDICAL KTUDENT lir THOMAS F. FITZS1MM0SS. . It was in the yearI839 that my father took the liberty of binding ino to an apothecary, wko was then transacting business in one of tho . . . . t , .:..!.. .. . . . I ninit crowat;a. IIIOIIUU tuililiuij nun mt uiuat fasliionable thoroughfares in the metropolis I had attained the age of twelve when I enter ed the store, and visious of liquorice feasts and lots ol l)-dee-col-log now danced through my brain. Although 1 was jiot allowed to r.huose the profession I would' like to follow, still I was perfectly satisfied, and went to woi ii l&e a hero. Tha first week Iwashed the win Uows, broke the bottles and spoiled medicines; hut the seaond week, Dr. Bolus, chief-cook, owner, and. bottle washer ol the establishment, ' came to the sage " conclusion that I was "old and ugly enough," to commence what he termed the rudiments of the profession at :.once. Accordingly a mortar was put into my hand, into which Bolus had placed some black buttons," as I then called them, and he showed me Low to reduce the "black buttons" to powder. "Now, my boy," said Eolus.Vho was across thin, long bacfc religious, consumptive speci men of a human abortion, "now my boy, you must remember that theso are the beans of nvrvomica, and that they possess numerous and excellent medicinal qualities. But as the present chief object is for yon to remember the Latin terms, so do not furgot that these cylindrical substances, convex on one side and concave on the other, are the beans of nux vom ica." "Oh, yes,"' said I, brightening tip, and im ' agining myself an accomplished apothecary in a moment, "oh, yes, I'll remember ; those are Abe beans of nuts, nuts vomit yer, that's it." "Nuts what I" asked Bolus, sharply. ' "Nuts vomit ycr," answered I, with au inno ccnt stare. "Be cared.l, child, in your pronunciation," said he, "or I may bo under the painiul ne cessity of boxing your ears," and thus syiri, lie left me to powder the "tints vomit ycr," winch I endeavored to do until late in the evening without success,torthc obstinate beans seemed to be made of India rubber. ' It would only bo tiresome to the reader for flic to recount the numerous awkward mistakes I connnitta. Juring the first two years of my Apprenticeship, and iiiotoovlt, they would be devoid of interest; therefore, wo tvill pass ihfm over, and asain commence our tale." During mr first two years I had rapidly pro gressed in all the branches of my profession, but more especially iu chemistry ; and the blundering apprentice, who, two years before, knew not salt from catnip, could no- explain prettv cleverly the medicinal properties of any medicine, from cream of tartar to the "potassy fcrrocysnnretnm." k The eccentric Bolus still owned the store and he scorned to become more and more fret ful and feverish everv day. lie preached and I practiced; that is to say, he gave the advice and 1 prepared the medicine; but, not being satisfied with practising, I determined to preach also, and accordingly, if Mr. Bolus should hap pen to be called out professionally or other wise, and a patient should happen to drop in, I would don a gravo visage, and do myself the honor ot rcpieseuting my superior, Bolus "Prescribe hem haw hard case," and con tribute half the niouey to my porte monnaie. jliinkin? mv advice was worth as much as tho medicine. I was right, for the medicine-was liquorice water, and my advice nonsense. Of course, if these proceedings should be seen ,or heard of bv Mr. Bolus, I would pay the for ' teit of a sound drubbing. However, 1 usually .managed to have "my patients" call when I was certain Mr. Bolus would not be in the store, although now and then I managed to get into scrapes, from which I as obliged to tax xnv ingenuity to the ntmost to extricate myself. ' "it was one dismal afternoon m January, that Uolus left the store for tho purpose of making seme calls in tbo urper part of the city, and l was confident it would be some time ere tic returned. Accordingly, I washed niy lace and hands and combed mv hair a process which seldom troubled me and taking Bolus -asy chair, I threw my feet on the counter, and lean ing back, I heartily wished a patient would make his or her appearance. Fortune seemed to lavor my wishes, for in a'few minutes a stal wart Irishman entered, carrying his hand in a sling- - "Well, sir," said I, as he approached, "can I do anything for you to-day 1" An' are yeself the docthur ?" ' "Yes, sir,' answered I, determined to make a spec, "what is the matter, sir T" i " mWcII.. sur3 1 have a bloody sore finger here, and 1 kern t see it von would le aflher ad visin' me to have it lanshed." "Ah, yes. Let me see, sir. Hem ; case, sir," bad case. Afraid amputation voidable ; lancing best thing." "An" will yersel' lansh id, sur .tVrtMii.lv! sir : but it will cost half a bad una- dol- lar." Haifa dollar is id ? Faith, an it s more n I have. Cant ye give it a wee cut lor a quar ter, and long hie to your Honor : "No, sir," answered J, as ir my dignity usa been insulted. "Xo, sir ; the charge is usual ly more ; but, inasmuch as I perceived your situation in liie, I only asked you hall price." The Irishman soon came to my terms, and accordingly 1 went in search of a lancet for the purpose of performing my first blood let ting operation. It was in vain, however, that I sought the lancet it was not to be found, and 1 was obliged to resort to a dissecting scal pel, which was not much sharper than my own rusty jack-knife. However, uothing daunted, and adopting the maxim "necessity knows no law," I finally clutched the murderous weapon and boldly rushed forth to the operation. , Although my hand trembled as I wr.s about making an inci.tsion with the scalpel, I did very well, ani I congratulated myself upon the successful issue of my first attempt at sut- SL'r". The fifty cents were promptly paid, and my patient took his departure. A week had near ly obliterated the ocenrreuco from my mem ory, when one morning, to my consternation and dismay, who should enter the store but my patient, the Irishman, with his hand still in'a sling. Without being seen, I dodged be hind the counter, in order to escape tho obser vation ol "my patient," who walked up to Bo lus, who was standing with his back to the stove, with the query : " Where is the docthur? "I am the doctor, sir, answered ' Bolus, 'what is your wish 7" "Wish is it ?" answered the Irishman, "be jabers, I wish you and yer lanshin' were at the devil, bad luck to ye." "I am afraid, sir, you have mistaken the person." "Devil a mistake twin brother." it's either you or your "I have no brother, sir." "Thin it's yersel' that nearly kilt" 'But, my dear sir, I do not remember hav ing had the honor of seeing you before." "Oh ! ye doesn't, eh ?" answered the Irish man, drawing forth his hand which I had un consciously poisoned by using the dissecting scalpel, which at that moment I heartily cur sed. "And mebbe ycr docsnt remember cbargin' mc fifty cents fer killin' me, bad cess to yer yaller face and pinched jaw, ye murd herin' ould thief! Give me my fifly cints." "Bat but but, my dear sir," sai l Bolus, stammering; "you must undoubtedly bo la boring under a'mistake. . I certainly do not remember lancing your hand. Jacob ! Jacob!" "Here, sir," answered I, as I crawled from my hiding place, trembling lor fear the Irish man would recognize mc; but thanks to my dirty face and purposely disarranged hair, he did not, and I got on scot-free. "Jacob," said Bolus, addressing himself to mc, "do you remember of ever seeing this gentlemen in this store before." "Xo, sir!" answered I, boldly, for I never told the truth where a lie would answer, and I had but few qualms of conscience ; "I never saw him before !" "There, sir," answered Bolus, turning to the Irishman. "You are undoubtedly labor ing under a mistake." "Thrue," said the Irishman, beginning to doubt himself; "mebbe Im mistakin', but if I am I must be drunk." "Possibly," answered Bolus, quietly. 'Yis, I "must be drunk," and so the Irish man took his departure, believing himself to be intoxicated. This unlooked Tor occurrence somewhat ruf fled the usually grave, but peevish Bolus, and turning to roe be gave me a ringing box on the ears with : "Go wash your face, you dirty lit tle scamp." And these were tho thanks I re ceived for giving my evidence and getting him out of a scrajic ; and I really believe that at that moment I would willingly have given all my ill-gotten gains to have seen the Irishman return. Although I complied with the ord :r without grumbling. Still I determined to have my revenue, and only waited for a favorable moment to make n practical illustration. I bad then been studying chemistry some time, and knfw Wl that the slightest concussion would ignite chloride ot vassium, stilpher and saltpetre, when mixed, and cause an plosion ; and this knowledge I determined to use in furthering my plan of revenge. I was nM obliged to wait long, and I secret, ly chuckled in anticipation of my revenge. A few days alter 1 was ordered to powder some brimstone, but not known to Bolus I had pre viously prepared my infernal compound. Bolus always made it a rule to examine my work, and usua'l gave it the finishing touch himself, and to make 'assurance doubly sure, I had not half powdered the brimstone when I submitted it to his inspection ; not, however, until I bad secretly thrown in a handful of my explosive compound. "Doctor." said I, handing him the pestle, "I eiin't nowder this anv more, will you sec if i - it is fine enough ?" As 1 spoke, Bolns eamo forward, but seeing the brimstone barely broken, bo returned tho pestle and a slap on the ear, (which I duly re gistered in my memory, determined to repay with interest,") aud told ice if I did not pound harder hu would nound me. Here was a nice predicament. If I did as I was told, I would, in all probability, blow my finders oft. and so fall into my own snare However there never was a way to get into a scrape that there was not a way to get out, (at least so it appeared to me.) for instead of noundinsr the ingredients at tho bottom of the mortar .1 cave tho sides such tremendous whacks, that I absolutely elicited the admira tion of Doctor Bolus, who soon arose to make a second examination. Imagine Ins surprise to behold the contents still unbroken. 'What on earth is the matter with this," said he, as he took the pestle from ,my hand to strike the fatal blow, "I never saw the like." In another moment his arm descended, and an explosion such as I never heard before was the consequence; blowing his shirt and coat sleeves from bis arm, aud burning him severe. ly though not seriously. . "Water! water!" he cried m agony "Ja- cob, get me some water." t o n,nii.ftt tho desired article was in my hand, and at Ws request poured it plentifully rtvpr tU! WOUauwu l""iJ; ""-; what had I done ? In the confusion'of the mo- ment I had snatched up the wrong bottle and had bathed his arm with the spirits of harts horn. This was too much for the nerves of poor Bolus, and in the agony which followed, faint ed. Here was another predicament. What could I do ? I could not run tor a physician, and leave Bolus insensible, so I again had re course to the treacherous ammonia ; not, how ever, until I had saturated his arm with lin seed oil and lime water. Under the influence of the restorative, he soon recovered, and then came the tremendous whacks I anticipated niy fatal mistake would produce, although Bolus, who was a worse chemist than myself, always remained in igno rance as to the cause of the explosion. In a month Bolus had recovered and could again attend to his regular business. I recei ved the usual amount of whacks per diem, all of which I managed to return in one way or another with interest. I was then only fifteen years of age, but young as I was, my heart had been hardened and made resentful by the cruel treatment I experienced at the hands of Bolus. I had no pity, no remorse, and alt my thoughts were engrossed by schemes for re venge. I always had some new tries piaiincu and ready to be put into execution, and, with the exception of one or two, such as adultera ting Bolus's tea with senna, and his coffee with aloes. I rarely repeated them. Besides these I invented numerous ways of teasing him. When bis tongue got started I would whistle Yankee Doodle, and when he struck me, I would accidentally break a bottle, or graduate, or spill some expensive solution on the floor; by these and many othr ollcnces the reader can easily lorm a correct opinion of my character. I can now call to memory one day that I accidentally let a bottle fall on Bo lus' foot, spattering his clothes with sulphuric acid ; be gave me a severe whipping, and as 1 always moderated my revenge according to the amoui.t of injury received, so I determined the punishment should be fevere. As the rea der will perceive, it was not painiul, but was at least provoking and ridiculous. The next morning was the time foi its execution. Luckily I had made up an unusually large quantity of the tincture of galls, and having saturated his towel thoroughly, I hung it lip to dry and then folded it up carefully and laid it in its usual place. I then powdered some nitrate of silvcr.and mixing a small quantity of the sulphate of iron with it, I threw in into his washbasin and calmly awaited the result. All the afternoon aud evening I was exceed ingly careful to perform his bidding with alac rity and precision ; and Bolus seemed to be pleased withjmy willingness, for as I was about retiring for tho night, he gave me a glass of root beer a beverage in which 1 had but few opportunities to indulge. However, the thot's of mv revenge were sweeter than the beer and his kindness had iio etfect whatever upon me. I then retired for the night, and, after a re freshing sleep, I arose and had the fire kin dled and the store scrupulously neat ere Bolus made his appearance. Luckily the dye did not color the skin immediately, and Bolus re mained for a short time in sweet unconscious ness or the trick that had been played upon him. About eight o'clock I was sent of an errand, and I was confident that before I returned my compound would have worked the desired ef fect. I lingered on my way back to'the store, almost afraid to enter, but fearful lest my pro longed stay might create suspicion, I at last made my appearance. At first. I did not credit my own senses; I did indeed intend to blacken Bolus's face, but I did not intend to make a tattooed cannibal ol him , but there he stood, tho very picture of despair, striped and blacker than any Ethi opian I had ever beheld. First he would view his hideous physiogomy in the mirror, and then plunge his hcad in a large tub of water, which stood behind the counter. It was in vain that I endeavored to strangle the laugh which spontaneously arose to my mouth ; my risable propensities were not to lie subdued, and I burst out in a loud and prolonged ha ! ha! Icoull not help it, fori never beheld a more comical p:cturc than Bolus presented, as be stood behind the counter. In all probability, Bolus thought he was bad enough witiiout being lauglied at, ami ue could brook anything better than making his troub les the object of mirth or ridicule ; and seiz ing the heaviest bottle near him, which hap pened to be the sulphate of quir:ine, worth !?4, he sent it whizzing at my head, but, (lodging it quickly, bang it went through an expensive pnne of glass and was smashed to atams on the sidewalk. - or course Bolns became more enraged when he saw the Vrmic;.i hU "folly" had cost him, but, a crowd having collected at tiie door, be was obliged to retreat to his "sanctum sanctorum."' It was in vain that Bolus scraped and scrub bed his hands and face with a coarse towel, the obstinate color still remained ; but one morn ing a feeling, such as I never felt before sprang up in my bosom, and I dropped some iodine ol potassium in his wash basin, and for a month after, his appearance would lead a person to believe that he was fast recovering from a severe attack of the jaundice. It is useless to repeat the many tricks that 1 played during my apprenticeship, and always at the expense of poor Bolus ; and I will let it siiftice to say that they were numerous but as everything has an end, so has the first chapter of this tale. Bolus soon died, and at the age of twenty I entered college. Cocnterfeit Money. Forty-two new counterfeits of various bank notes have been put in circulation since last month a pretty certain proof that the talent, labor aed risk of those concerned in this ille gal trade meet with a substantial leward. Were counterfeiting unprofitable, men would not engage in it ; but, when it is found that banking institutions are careless about the matter, and tho commercial public generally rather indifferent on the subject, counterfeit ers will proceed with their woik at all hazards. The only way to account lor the lukewarm -ness generally manifested towards propositions to stay the flood of . worthless money thrown into circulation, is to believe that the losers by counterfeiters are chiefly persons who work for wages, upon the mass of whom the taxa tion of counterfeiting, in the aggregate, falls with great severity, several millions of dollars annually being made and scattered throughout tho country. This is a condition of things that require a speedy and effectual remedy, and reflection has convinced us that the only check to the evil is to be given by instantane ous publicity. niVSICALIlISTOUYOFTHEEARTII BT PROFESSOR AOASSIZ. , It is something to be able to show by mon umental evidence, and by direct comparison, that animals and plants have undergone no change for a period of about five thousand years. This result has had the greatest influ ence upon tho progress of science, especially with reference to the consequences to be draw from the occurrence in the series of geologi cal formations of organized beings as highly diversified in each epoch as those of tho pres ent day ; it has laid the foundation for the conviction, now universal among well-informed naturalists, that this globe has been in ex istence for innumerable ages, and that the length of time elapsed since it first became inhabited cannot be counted in years. Even the length of the period to which we belong is still a problem, notwithstanding the precis ion with which certain cystems of chronology would fix the creation of man There arc, however, many circumstances which show that the auima'ls now living have been for a much longer period inhabitants of our globe than is generally supposed. It has been possi ble to trace the formation and giowth of our coral reefs, especially in Florida, with suflicent precision to ascertain that it must take about eight trousand years for ono of those coral wallsto rise from its foundation to the level of the surface of tho ccean. There are, around the southernmost extremity of Florida alone, four such reefs concentric with one another, which can be shown to have grown up, ono after the other. This gives for the beginning of these reefs an age ot over thirty thousand vears; and yet the corals by which they were all built up are the same identical species in all of them. These facts, then, fu-nish as di rect evidence as we can obtain in any branch of physical inquiry, that some, at least, of the sticciesot auimais now cxisu-.ijj, iuvb uccu m pvisfencn over thirtv thousand years, and have not undergone the slightest change du ring the whole of that period. And yet these four concentric reefs ore only tha most dis tinct of that region ; others, less extensively investigated thus far, lie to the northward indeed, the whole peninsula of Florida con sists altogether of coral reefs annexed to one another in the course of time, and containing only fragments of corals and shells, &c, lden tical with those now living upon that coast Now, if a width of five miles is a fair average for one coral reef crowins under the circum stances u nder which the concentric reefs ot Florida are seen now to follow one another, and this regular succession should extend on lv as far nTtli as Lake Ogcechobec, for two decrees of latitude, this would give about two hundred thousand rears for the period of time which was necessary for that part of the peninsula of Florida which lies south of Lake Oseechobee to rise to its present sontnern ex tent above the level of the sea, and during which no chanees have taken place in the character of the animals of the Gulf of Mexico To form adequate ideas of the great physi cal changes the surface of our globe has un dergone, and the frequency of these modifica tions of the character of the earth's surface, and of their coincidence with the changes ob served among the organized beings, it is ne cessary to study attentively the works of Elie de Beaumont. He, for the first time, attempt ed to determine the relative age of the difler ent systems of mountains, and showed first, also, that the physical disturbances occasion ed by their upheaval, coincided With the suc cessive disappearances of entire fauna?, and the reappearances of new ones. In his ear lier papers he recognized seven, then twelve, afterward fifteen such great convulsions of the globe, and now he has traced, more or less, fully and conclusively, the evidence that the number of there disturbances has been, at least sixty, perhaps one hundred. But while the genesis and genealogy .of our mountain systems were thus illustrated, paleontologists, extending their comparisons between the.los silsof diilerent formations more carefully to all the successive beds of each great era, have observed more and more marked differences between them, and satisfied themselves that faun:e also have been more frequently renova ted than was formerly supposed; so that the general results of geology proper, and of pal. ;eoiitology concur, in the main, to prove, that while the globe has been, at repeated inter vals, and indeed frequently, though after im mensely long periods, altered and altered a gain, until it has assumed its present condi tion ; so have also animals and plants, living upon its surface, been again and again extin guished, and replaced by others, until those now liring woro t-nllc.1 into existence with man at their head. The investigation is not in every case sufficiently complete to show everywhere a coincidence between this rono vation of animals and plants, and the great physical revolutions which have altered the general aspect of the globe, but it is already extensive enough to exhibit a frequent syn chronism and correlation, and to warrant the expectation that it will, in the end, lead to a complete demo nstration of their mutual de pendence, not as cause and effect, but as steps in the same progressive development of the a plan which embraces the physical, as well as the organic world. In order not to misapprehend the facts, and perhaps to fall back upon tho idea that these changes may be the cause of the differences observed between the fossils, ot aitterent pe riods, it must he well understood that, while organized beings exhibit through all geologi cal formations a regular order of succession, the character of which will bo more fully il lustrated hereafter, this succession has been, lrom time to time, violently interrupted by physical disturbances, without any of these altering, in any way, tho progressive charac ter of that succession ol organized beings Truly this shows that the important, the lead- ins feature of this whole drama in the rtevel omnent of life, and that the material world alioids onlr the elements for its realization The simultaneous disappearance of entire fauna;, and the following simultaneous appear ance of other faunae consist of the greatest variety of types, in all formations, combined everywhere into natural associations ol am mals and plants, between which there have l een definite relation at all times, their origin can at no time be owing to the limited infill ence of monotonous physical causes, ever acting in the same way; . Here, again, the intervention 'of a Cruator is displayed in tho most striking manner, in every stage - of the history of the world: In the last two months, 1,666 people have died with yellow ftverat Nw Orleans. f the Burning Moun- f tains in enmylvania. Nearlv twenty 'years ago a coal mine at Coal Castle, in Scuylkill county, icnnsyna nia, was set on tire by the carelessness of some . . l .. .... L-1 r ( it. lint miners wno were eugagcu wi i's - ; who paid the penalty of their fault with their lives. Yet ever since nas inju::cium:" to burn in the deepest recesses of its cavern ous heart, and the mountain that contains h still continues to emit the smoke ana gas oi an active volcano. It does not belch forth streams of melted lava, nor will it ever do so, but the probabilities arc that it will coatihuc to burn for a hundred years to come uihvm the adventurous miners of that State excavate the coal which feeds the fire before that period arrives; and, intact, the process of excava tion is now going on, and the miners are at work hundreds of feet below the base of the mountain and the' lowest point to which the fire has yet reached. It has extended on the vein of coal which is known as the Great Mammoth, or "Juzolar" vein, ranging from thirty to ono hundred feet in thickness, over a ; mile from east to west. 'Ahc water luuuiujj : from tho mouth or the old mine is as noi as the waters or the Hot Springs in Bath county, this State, and fornt as bold a stream as that flowing from the White Sulphur Springs ot Greenbriar. The cases wuicti ino water con tains are carbonic acid gass and nitrogen and i tiw. minor I substances tu incii)allv sulphate of ' iron, sulphate or magnesia, or epsom sans, ammonia, alumina, &c, with sulphuric acid iind r.ii-hnnic acid lim lilllliriiii naituvi imw a i of Pennsylvania arc found to possess virtues The mineral waters of the Burning -Mountain not attainable to all toe materia medica of the healing art. And cilbrts arc now being made to render the water accessible to the public in the shape ol baths an wells. Mr. Salathiel Harries, a gentlemen engaged with Mr. De Bow in developing tho coal, lead", and otber minerals of Virginia, and now at Farniville, in Prince Edward county, was the person who. th imminent risk of his life, brought out the bodies of the unfortunate men who first set the Burning Mountain on fire. It was a fearful undertaking, for thelestroyitigfumes of llie azote and carbonic acid gas filled every hole and corner of the mine. But Mr. Har ries is a fearless and reliable- miner, aa well as an intelligent man, who has seen more mining life adventure and accidents ia the deep dark bowels of the earth than any man probably now living. He has been engaged in the deepest mines in tbe world, and has wandered for miles beneath the raging billows of the sea. He was one of the first to open the an thracite coal mines of Pennsylvania, and has long been successful in exploring new regions for coal, iron, &c. To such men will Virginia owe her future existence as a mining and man ufacturing State, in connexion with her own capitalists and enterprising business men. Richmond V a.) Rnqvirer. Paul Korphy, the American Chess Hero. Private letters to the editor of the Chess Monthly, brings later intelligence from Mr. Morphy than is to be found in our files. His match (for 5S-"0 f rancs a side) with Herr Har witz stands ; Morphy 3 ; Harwitz 2. The Cafe de la Itegence, the traditional locale of Paris ian chess, and the scene ot Philidor's, Descha- pelle'a and Lalourdonni" triumphs, is crow ded with spectators whenever our countryman plays. A gentleman now in Paris writes as lollows : "The greatest ot living French sculptors, Lequcsne, the pupil and successor of Pradier, has asked Mr. Morphy to sit to him for his bust in marble. The. lmst will be exhibited at the Exposition des Beaux art This is I think, the greatest honor that has yet been conferred on Mr. Morphy. But I do assure you they treat him her like a God lie dines with "his Koyal Highness the Duke of Brunswick, on Sunday. The other night, ai the Theatre Francais, half the audience stood up and looked at him he perfectly un conscious until it was pointed out to him. Ev erybody seeks introductions to him, and the old tilavers of the time of Labourdonnais treat him with the greatest reverence." After fin ishing bis match with Ilarwittz, Mr. Morphy will proceed directly to Berlin and Breslau, to meet Anderssen, I-ange .Mayer, wno, wnn Yon der Lasa, are at present the great expo. nents of German chess. It is a matter ol much regret both to Mr. Morphy and ins aamncrs, that the diplomatic duties ot Yon der Lasa, (who is the Prussian minister at llio Janerio) precludes the possibility of bringing about a meeting between these distinguished players. The last Illustrated -Vcir, of London, gives a portrait and life of Mr. Morphy, together With the eight games played blindfolded by him at tho BiruiiugUain uicoting. A He&i&rkahle Case. The following narrative is from the columns of a Philadelphia paper of yesterday. "The wes tern line, which left Pittsburgh for Philadel phia, at noon on Wednesdas', conveyed a free passenger, without the knowledge of the con ductor of the train, for a distance of about 210 miles, between Pittsburg and Miflln. Upon arriving at the latter place, the inspectors, who arc in the habit of examining and testing the wheels, &c, to guard against accidents, dis covered an individual weighing about ISO lbs. stowed away immediately under the car, upon one of the tracks, covered witn dust ana airt to the depth of an inch. When taken out by the employees of the railroad company, he was unable to stand, and would have no doubt expired by suffocation, long before reaching Philadelphia. This hazardous ride was under taken to save the fare, which is about $5 50. After giving the traveler a washing and night's rest, the conductor s&nt him on towards Phil adelphia." This is one of the most extraor dinary cases which has ever met our notice. The train referred to was the fast line, and it is a wonder that the "individual" managed to escape with life. lie certainly will not speak very highly in future of the views on the Pa. Railroad. The lion-killer, Jnles Gerard, in a letter de scriptive of a campaign against a monstrous lion, states that in the Algerian subdivision Bono that there aro at present no less than Six of these ferocious beasts, who haye des troyed in one year ten thousand head of cat tle." In his hunting excursions, Gerard, now makes use of the Devisno bullet, which ex plodes in the body of the animal. A woman has been arrested in Albany for stealling old iron ; she had fourteen pounds of it secreted in ber bosom, ner offense weighed heavily upon ber. n Mifouri Called to Choose. From an editorial rn tbe Jlftiwiirt" Democrat, of the 25th inst., we clip this passage: A choice of destinies i3 now presented to Mis souri. Either tne industrial system f the -South, with its incapacity for progress with tho condensation of its population in two casta a immutable as those of Brahma a plantation aristocracy, and hordes ot negroes subdivided into communistic pla'oonswith the contrac tion and attenuation of all pursuits, except tho primitive one of agriculture, the interests of which become despotic and exclusive; with its stagnation and repression of intellect, ex cept in politics and lawthis, or the grandeur r.f ri-..i. MMMPtr. with ifs sublime movements, I :. ...i;viiv it oxhnimtli-ss energies. boundless aspirations, multiplicity or voca tions and infinite growth in al that man cars or toils for Missouri has now the privilege of choosing. Her destiny is not yet fixed ; she is still debatable land, and the principal battle-field of the warring systems of free and slave labor. As iTfcx for Boys. "Be kind to your sis ters," is the caption of a stray paragraph that wc find floating around on the sea of newspa perdom, like "Japhct in search cf a father." It contains some good advice which we espe cially comroeud to the boys. Boys be kind to vonr sisters !" There is a whole volume of EOod council in that brief line; Yon may live to be old, and never find such tender loving friends as these sisters. Think how many things they do for you, how patient arc they with vou, how thi-y love you tn spue oi au , . - f . your ill-temper or rudeness, how tnougntiui they are for your comfort, and be thoughtful to theirs. Be ever ready to oblige them, to perform any little oflicc lor them that is with in your power. Think what you can do for them, and if thsy express a wish, bo ready to gratify it if possible. You do not know how much happiness you will fiud in so doing. You never yet knew a happy and icspected man who was not in youth kind to his sister. There is a song which says : J 'Be kind to ycur sister not many may kno The depth of true sisterly love; . . Tha wealth of the ocean liei fathoms below The surface that sparkler above- Aihlterated Beyerages. Drugged and adulterated liquors are producing their natu ral consequences in the increase and fatality of diseases resulting from intemperance. Thirty-five years ago delirium treinans was a disease almost entirely unknown in this coun try, although wine and spirituous liquors wero then to be found on the table and sideboard of nearly every decent and comfortable house in. tho land. This terrible malady is not only more frequent, but it is yearly assuming, as hospital physicians have shown by statistics, a far more incurable form. Indeed, it has been sn!TfT,,s(od that delirium tremans is nothing more nor less than a specific disease caused by the habitual introduction at specific poison into the system, and that thfs poison is noth ing but a drug, or drugs, Surreptitiously intro duced into nearly every variety of intoxica ting liquor -A". I": Mirror. Texas. From the returns of the censna of Texas, now nearly completed, it is ascertained, that its population will not fall short aT lour hundred and fifty thousand. No State, in any section of the Union, exhibits a more rapid growth or greater evidences of singular pros perity. Iu eight years it has more than doulv led its number of inhabitants, while its pro ductive capacity has been developed in a still higher ratio. The same impulse which sends a ceaseless tide of emigration into the North western States and Territories, is giving an extraordin.-.ry vitality to this vast Southwest ern region, outlying on the borders of Mexico. A Liquor Inspector. The Legislature of Georgia has passed a law authorizing the ap pointment of a liquor inspector, whose duty it shall be to examine and thoroughly test tho poisonous ingredients contained in liquors, and should they find any strychnine or other poisonous drug in any liquor, the person sell ing the same is ordered to take it out of tho State: and it he sells any drugged liquor, knowing it to be such, or after its inspection, he is to pay a tine of 5100 for the first offence, Sl!00 for ti.e second offence, $400 for the third j otl'ence, and f 1,000 tor the fonrth. SticiPE for Lov of Home. Tho Ktsins Sun Ind., Yisitor, states that Mrs. JIary Mont gomery, a widow aged about 03, who had lived on a farm in Switzerland County, Ind., for forty years recently, at the solicitation of her children sold her property, and was about to remove to Itising Sun. Her attachment to the locality where she had spent so long a time, and the excitement of removal, howev er, so agitated her, that in a fit of frenzy sho cut her throat, and was found dead in her bed, a day or two before the time fixed for her de parture. The difTerencc lietwaen rising every morn ing at G and 8, in the course of 40 years, am ounts to 49,000 hours, or 3 years, 121 days and 1G hours, which wilt afford eight hours a day lor exactly ten yers, which is the same as if ten years were added to a man's life. . What an-important consideration is this.; Sleep from ten at night till six in the morning-" is sufiicieut for any man in good health ; in- deed, such early rising is necessary to pre. serve good health in either man or weman. Pension FR.irn. Snspicion has for a long time been entertained that frauds on the Pen sion Hepartmeut had been carried on in Wes tern New York to a great extent. - Within a few davs, the United States Marshal has made , several arrests. Tho principal operator is a man named Albro. The extent of his opera-' tions is estimated as high as seventy-five or one hundred warrants. Two Magistrates and a lawyer, who are implicated, have been ar- , rested. Balloon Racing. Mons. Godard aeronaut, has challenged Prof. Stelner, ol Philadelphia, ; to race with balloons, at Cincinnati the bal loon going the furthest distance to be declar ed w inner. Mr. Steiner has accepted tho challenge. - --- He who does best, however little, is always to be distinguished from him who doe nothing- . s - , . : f. i t .-: mmm . Every man ought to have a wife. If a man. is happy married bis rib' is worth all the other bones in his body.