jcjjf . li" BY S. B. EOV. GLEAREIEED, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST L5, I860; TOL. 6.NO. 51. THE SOUL. "WVre yonder King of day sod night, One blazing diamond of light, The boundless space thro' which it roTTd A sea of limpid virgin gold : Were yonder moon to human sight, A pearl that only shone by night, Whose falling beam of pplendor breaks, The breast of countless silver lakes : Were every star that decks the sky. A gem of brilliancy on high. Which Nature's Uod had made to tell liisoaskct inoxhaustible : What were all these. O man ! if wise. To give for that which never diej ? Oh ! luk the planets, aa they roll. The worth of thy immortal soul. THE OAKEN CHEST. TRANSLATED FROM THE GEBMAX. In Modena, in the vicinity of Riggo gate, the proud colonnade of an old palace attracts ihe eye of every stranger. If ho walks thro' the magnificent portal, and the sumptuous 'state rooms where the eye is dazzled and the aetise bewildered, he thinks he will retain a, recollection of the splendor he 1ms beheld; but he wauders on, passes out of the houses that he entered with wonder and amazement, and he will certainly fuel a slight shudder of dread as he casts hack his glance, and his mind Mill alone be occupied ly an oaken chest which he saw in the palace. It stands in a large, spacious room, against one of the bare walla that have no other ornament than a wo manly portrait, which hangs over this, with carvings richly supplied, dark chest. If the glance of the visitor falls on this picture, which beams forth afullss of beauty, splen dor and youth, be will deem the room which before seemed so bare and empty, sufficiently ornamented; bethinks they did right not to tring any other picture into this room, as none would be worthy to bang by the side of this one. As the searching eye of the visitor sinks deeper and deeper into the blue depths of an expression betraying an inexhaustible source f love and resignation, ho feels by continued gazing on a face beaming with happiness and beatitude, a sense ot satistactiott stealing through his beart,that there is on earth some thing that has the power to transport us into Heaven ; he does not leel a presentiment that be is standing at the grave of all that is look ing down on hi in with a look of almost super terrestial splendor. The young maiden whoso mile Sempieri gave with such wonderful fi delity in the picture, smiled even more happi ly in that hour when the painter, with master ly hand, at the request of her lover, fastened tier features into the canvass, on waich they "are preserved, after hundreds of years, in magical gract and beauty. It was on her wedding day. She was one of the loveliest daugrtrrcrs'TPthe nohlo house f Orsinis was betrothed to one of the hand aomest and most knightly princes of the old and powerful rnce ol the (Jolonnas. Through the love of these yonng hearts, the deadly hate which had existed between these two families lor years, was not only ended, but changed into feelings of the warmest friend ship. Loud shouts of laughter and rejoicing rung through every room and hall of the proud, magnificent palace on the wedding day ; and Jf here and there a remnant of the former an imosity still brooded, it would vanish before the smile that beamed from the charming countenance of the young and lovely bride, reminding one of sunshine in opring ; It would disappear at the sight of the overjoyed bride groom, o'er whose lace flitted the rays of pur .'kt bliss. The joy and rapture of the united entered ihc hearts of all that witnessed their happi iess, and all rejoiced with them. No one oould resist the serene and cheerful atmos phere that pervaded the beautiful festival, and each one in overgushing joy sought the pleas ure that best suited their tastes. Towards evening the varied crowds of guests rushed forth from the sumptuous parlors of the house, into the gardens, brilliantly illumi nated with a thousand variegated colored lan tern, into which above all the moon poured its ott and mellow light. Suddenly the face of the groom, wearing serious expression, ap peared among the many happy groups, and in astonishment they asked him what had caused a shadow on his countenance, which but a few minutes before beamed forth joy and happiness. "Icannot find my bride!" lie cried hastily, and in tones betraying the anguish ol his soul, he added, "She toid me a while ago that she would hide herself, and in a place that I never would think of looking for her or find her. She seems to have disappeared completely, not o vestige of her remaining." They laughed at the prince for his apprehen sion, and jokingly aided him in searching the orange grove but in the hearts of the most cheerful there was uneasiness, as the night ad vanced; the festivities drew to a'close, and, In spite of the most diligent searches.no trace of the bride was visible. Greater and great er grew the anxiety, and more eagerly were the house and garden searched as the night shades descended ; but of all the hours spent in breathless suspense, not one of their slow, and to ever' guest painfully gliding seconds brought back the lost one. Words of distrust were uttered by the la menting Orsinis ; and answered with outcries of sedition by the offended Colonas ; daggers were drawn on the ground where only a few hours before pledges of ever lasting,friendship were made, and the glittering blades of swords flashed through the dewy foliage, where be fore brilliant eyes beamed with love and hap piness. It was a frightful, terrible change ! The more affecting, as during the preceding pleasures no one had the least apprehension t a rupture! But though they blamed and acenssd, though they defended themselves and called on God and all the saints to witness their innocency ; though they endeavored to wash out injuries with blood, and carry away with passion many a heart was pierced with urk suspjeiou, neither an imprecation, a ruur tter nor cry of despair nothing nothing brought back U.e lost bride. The place of Orsinis was closed after the marriage which ended so tragically; desolate remained the halls, where pleasure and happi ness were changed, as it were, with lightning peed, imo grjef and despair. Only after Hundreds of years was the long-closed portal opened by one of the descendants of the no race of the Orsinis, and light and air were once more allowed to circulate through the rooms that had been veiled in night and dark ness so long. b ?he.clo8el house was restored to pleasure 2t k1 llth when 008 da.v-the eye of tbe lady & botiaefWhnt walking through the rooms on the arm of her husband, fell on the oaken chest, standing solitarily in a large room. This old chest-pleased the young woman. When she heard that it descended f rom a Ve netian lady of nobility who allied herself with the house of Orsinis several centuries ago.and that she brought it to Modena, and in wbich ever since the costly wedding robes of the Duchess of Orsinis were retained the curios ity seized her to know w hether after so long a lapse of time any traces remaiucd of the rich costumes of past ages. She ordered the chest opened. The lock was rust-bound, and its ingenious mechanism long withstood all efforts ; but at last the ob ject was accomplished. But who will des cribe the horror of the young Dutchess, her husband, and that ot the servants who opened the resisting lock of tbe chest, when they all, on raising the lid, beheld a skeleton reclining in the dust of decayed brocade garments. With this stiring of pearls Count Colonna once begirt bed the lovely bead of his young bride, when Sempieri painted her portrait, and with these rows of pearls the fair being on her wedding day fastened the orange blos som with which her golden curls were entwin ed. This necklace was the first terrible vestige of the over-happy bride, who once in the Orsini palace disappeared so mysteriously! This dreadful discovery was followed up which was made after so long a period of time, and soon there remained no doubt but that this fresh and blooming life found death in the oaken chest. The skeleton and the pearls were again low ered into the awful depths of this terrible grave, and over the same was hung the pic ture of the handsome young bride. So the room , in the Orsini palace is, to a cct taiu degree, a churchyard, or vault for the dead. There has, 'tis true, but one spirit lound test here, but what may this heart have suffered, this one mind endured, ere dt-ath re leased both, and broke the bright eyes which even now sparkled through the gloomy space, and once so happy and full ot hope, looked fondly on the world and into the seeming gol den future t Many persons, says the Historical Magazine; for June, are under the impression that the name given to the State of Pennsylvania ori ginated from the influence exercised by Wil liam Penn on the Councils of England. Such is not the case, as is proved in the following extract from a letter written by William Penn, dated January 5th, 1081 ; "This day, after many waitings, wjtehings, solicitings and dis putes in couucil, my country was confirmed to me under the great seal of England, with powers and privileges, by the name of Penn sylvania, a name the King would give it in fa vor of my father. I choose New Wales, being a hilly country and when the Secretary,' a Welshman, refused to call in A ew Wales. I proposed Sylvania, and they added Penn to it, though I was much opposed to it, and went to tbe King to have it struck out. lie said, it was past and he would not take it upon him; nor could 20 guineas move the Undersecretary to vary the name ; for I feared it might be looked on as vanity in me, and not as a respect in the King to my father, as it really was." A Hit at Heroic Doses. Dr. Oliver Wen dell Holmes, who seems to understand physic as well as he does poetry, at a recent meeting of the -Massachusetts Medical Society, uttered this sarcasm on the American creed for medi cine : "How could a people, who have a revolu tion once in four years, who have contrived the bowie knife and the revolver, who have chew ed the juice out of all the superlatives in the language in Fourth of July orations, and so used up its epithets in the rhetoric of abuse that it takes two great quarto dictionaries to supply the demand, which insists in sending our yachts and horses and boys to out-run, out fight, and check-mate all the rest of crea tion how could such a people be content with anything but heroic practice ? What wonder that the Stars and Stripes wave over doses of ninety grains of sulphate of quinine, and that tbe American eagle screams with delight to see three drachms of calomel given at a single mouthful." Charmed bt a Snake. The Rochester, X. Y. Union relates the case of a child, two years of age, daughter-of Mr. Davis, in that city, charmed by a snake. One day Mrs. Davis found the snake in the arms of the little girl, who was fondling it as she would a kitten. The mother was naturally much alarmed by the apparent peril in which she saw her child, and seized a stick to destroy the reptile. The snake slowly retreated, showed its tongue, and hissed at the mother. The child cried, and begzed so hard of its parent to desist, that she allowed the snakto retreat to its hiding place. The child apparently thinks of noth ing else butber companion the snake, and, under the fascination, is suffering a physical decline. She now weighs but eighteen pounds. Physicians have advised that the meetings, which take place as frequently as the child can get out of the house, be gradually interrupted, until they be entirely broken off. Interesting Incident. The death of Mr. Gales, says the Albany Evening Journal, re vives a reminiscence of the only time his pa per, the National Intelligencer ever suspended publication. It was a warm and able advocate of the Madison war policy, seconding the ef forts of Clay and his compeers, and so power ful was its influence that when Gen. Ross, in command of the British troops, entered the capitol after the unfortunate affair of Bladens burgh.his first inquiry was not for the Capitol, the President's house, or the departments, but for the National Intelligencer office, and it was the first establishment demolished, caus ing a short cessation in its regular publication. With this exception the Intelligencer has been published regularly for sixty years. The scales of iron that accumulate around the anvil in a blacksmith's shop tfre more valuable than manure for peach trees. A shov elful put around a healthy peach tree will be very likely to keep it in good condition; and it is said that trees already diseased have re covered by tbe application of these scales. Iron in any form will answer a good purpose. The first fruit of the treaty with Japan has ripened in the shape of a large exportation of an excellent quality of tea and of an amount of raw silk estimated to be- worth $1,000,000. The whole amount of the purchases from this countrjfcof Japan productions is estimated to exceed five millions of dollars.. Thia, for six woatbs, is a pretty heavy business. WHO AEE THE DEUSES! These rude mountaineers, whose name, a few aays ago, hardly called up any distinct idea of race or locality, have suddenly been invested with a tragic interest,' and one feels a curiosity about their history. Obscure as they have been imuerio, me Uruses of Mount .Lebanon havo earned an indelible record, though it will bo written in blood, in the history of the nine teenth century. Burnt and depopulated towns desolated fields, orchards and gardens and neaps ot butchered men, womeu and children mak their destructive path around the foot of Mount Ilermon, and down the lovely slopes aud quiet vaies ot Lebanon. The Druses have not borne h.iiherto a partic ulaily bad character among uncivilized races Uiuuon calls them "a free and warlike people the Druses of Mount Lebanon," and dispatches in a few words, "the little that is known.or de serves to bo known" about them. The travel ler Clarke, speaks of their "openness, sinceri ty, and engaging manners." Another account represents them as "eminently tolerant living on good terms with both Christians and Mo hammedans." Rude and barbarous thev un doubtedly have been but the incredible ferocity receutly diaplayed has not been thought neretolore to be a feature ol their character. To steal, and if necessary, to murder, are of course universal maxims among savages, es pecially those who inhabit w ild and mountain ous regions. But the Druses, in this respect, nave compared javorrbly with the fierce and predatory Koords, who live in the ranges ot mountains taithest East, on the confines of lurkcy and Persia, though still within the limits of the Turkish empire. One of the Koordish chiefs frankly admitted to Dr. Grant, that robbing was their trade, that thev followed it with murder to prevent detection, where their victim was of sufficient consequence to he feared and even when be was too poor and weak to be an object ot dread, they did not let him ojjf without scourging. So true it is, that cruelly becomes an appetite, a demoniac de light in the sufferings ol others. But the Druses have not been thought to carry on their plundering profession with unnecessary cruel ty. A fact wbich lends strong confirmation to the general belief expressed by the Euro pean journals, that the Turks were at the bottom of this bloody business in Syria. The unparaleled ferocity which distinguishes it is, in fact, rather a 1 urkish than a Druses charac teristic. The oiigin ot the Druses is veiled in mys tery. Some writers give them a descent which partakes of the romantic. A French gentleman, it is said, of the noble family of Drnex, led a regiment under the command of Godfrey ot Bouillon, in tho crusade of the eleventh century. . Pressed hard by the Sarac ens ou ojieoccesion, and separated from the general arm-, he withdrew into the deep passes of Mount Engaddi, near Bethelem where he fortified himself against the enemy. The sub sequent reverses of the Cnristian army left him enclosed as it were by the Saracen power, and made his separation from the European force perpetual. He made good his defence however, against the Saracens, and finally, withdrawing more deeply into those inacces sible mountain ranges, he settled a colony there which, by a corruption of the name Druex, were in later times called Druses. Others say that these Druses are the same as the Davazes or Dasazes, described by the his torian Elmalin. One horriible circumstance of identity at least exists between the two ra ces. It is the incredible incests which their code allows. Parents and children, brothers and bisters, inermarry among the Druses with out the slightest compunction. Their precari ous and brief connections hardly deserve, however to be called. Tho Druses divorce their wives as often as caprice may dictate. Others suppose them to be of Arabic origin, and a heretical ofishot from the Mohammedan system in the tenth century. Gibbon describ es them as a set of Mohammedan separatists, who followed a crazy and blasphemous fanatic by the name of llakern, almost equally an ene my of Christians and Moslems, in the eleventh century. Certain it is, says Volney, that they have a contempt for all that Mahommedans hold sacred. They do not practice circum cission, prayers, fasts or festivals, as enjoined by the Koran. They drink wine, eat pork, aud practice all kinds ol abominations in the eyes of strict Musselmen. The confused med ley presented by their language, rites and tra ditions, has baffled and bewildered tho most sagacious and learned historians, -who have made them the object of antiquarian research. These savage mountaineers scarcely number 50,000, while there are in Syria 250,000 Ma ronites and Christians of the Romish Church, and 350,000 of the Greek Church. Among these 600,000 Christians, the Druses are rav ening and destroying like wolves in a flock of sheep. To such an extent, have the Christian populations of Turkey been dispirited and de moralized by long and cruel oppression. Verily the yoke of Turkey is "an iron which entereth the soul." It is time that the yoke was broken high time at least that the indig nant humanity of Christendom should demand that it be no longer bound on the necks of our Christian brethren by Christian hands. The Druses themselves.will of course, be impenetrable to Christian and civilized influ ences, so long as the Turkish power remains unbroken. That empire is now like a vast ruin of some old dismantled castle, whose crumbling walls and subterranean passages are fit only to be the haunt of robbers. That Eu ropean power which shall boldly demolish it and open the space at least for the erection of a new structure more in keeping with the ad vanced humanity and civilization of the nine teenth century, will have the approbation and the thanks of Christendom. Presidential Election Day. An act passed Congress in 1845, "to establish a uniform timo for holding elections for electors of President and Vice President in all the States of the U nion." This act fixes the election on "Tues day next after the first Monday in the month of November," which this year is the 6th day of the month. All the electors must be cho sen, or appointed on that day, except in the Electoral College, or where a State has failed to effect an election on the day designated. The Augusta, Ga., Chronicle says that Mr. Senator Toombs in a recent speech he made at Warrenton, frankly admitted that Col. Bell was "as sound as himself upon the Slavery qustion." .' ; ' When a wife kisses her husband, and looks unutterable afieftion at him, she is In want of a "twanty-spot," A TOUCHING ST0EY. The following affecting narrative purports to uve oeen given by a lather to his son, as warn ing derived from his own bitter experience o grieving and resisting a mother's love and counsel. "What agony was visible on my mother's lace wnen she saw that all she said and suffer ed failed to move me ! She rose to go homo auu x lotiowea at a distance. She spoke no more to me till she reached her own door. "it is school time now," said she. "Go my son, and once more let mo beseech you to ininii upon what I have said." "I shan't co to school." said I. She looked astonished at my coldness, but replied nrmiy : Certainly you will go, Al lred, I command you." "1 will not," said I in a tone of defiance. "One of two things vou must do.Allred ei- ther go to school this morning, or I will lock you in your room, and keep you there till jou are ready to piomise implicit obedience to my wishes in the future. "I dare you to do it, can't get me up stairs.' Alfred, choose now," said my mother.who laid her hand upon my arm. She trembled violently and was deadly pale. "If you touch me I will kick you," said I in a terrible rage. God knows 1 knew not wnat l said. "Will you go Alfred ?" "No,' I replied, but quailed beneath hereyc "Then follow me," said she, as she grasp ed my arm firmly. ' i raised my loot oh, my son hear me! raised my foot and kicked her my sainted mother ! How my head reels a the torrent of memory rushes over me ! I kicked mv moth er, a feeble woman my mother ! She stag' gered back a few steps, and leaned against tho wail, fetie did not look at me; I saw her heart beat against her breast. "Oh! ITeavenlv Father." said she. "forgive him he knows not what he does!"j i ue gardener just then passed the door.and seeing my mother pale and almost unable to supsort herself, he stopped. She beckoned him in. "Take this boy up st3irs, and lock him in his room," and she turned from me. Look ing back as she was entering her room, she gave such a look of agony, mingled with the most inteuse love ! it was the last unuttera ble pang from a heart that was broken. In a moment I found myself a prisoner in my own room. I thought, lor a moment, I would fling myself from the open window, and dash my brains out, but I felt afraid to do it I was not penitent. At times my heart was subdued ; but my stubborn pride rose in an nstant, and bade me not yield. The pale face of my mother hannted me. ; I flung my- seit in bed and soon leu asleep. Just at twi light I heard a footstep approach the door. It was my sister. "What may I tell my mother for you ?" she asked. . "Nothing," I replied. "Oh, Alfred ! for my sake, for all our sakes, say you are sorry. She longs to forgive you.' I would not answer. I heard her footsteps slowly retreating, and again I threw myself ou the oed, to pass another wretched and fear- ul night. Another footstep slower and fee bler than my sister's disturbed me. A voice called me by name. It was my mother's. "Alfred, my son, shall I come ?" she asked. I cannot tell what influence, operating at that moment made me speak adverse to my eeimgs. Ihe gentle voice of my mother thrilled through me, and melted the ice of my obdurate heart, and I longed to throw my self on her neck ; but I did not. But my words gave the lie to my heart when I said 4I was not sorry.' I heard her withdraw. I heard her groan. I longed to call her back. But I did not. I was awakened from my uneasy slumber, by hearing my name called loudly, and my sister stood by my bedside. "Get up, Alfred. Ob don't wait a minute ! Get up, and come with me. Mother is dying.' 1 thought t was yet dreaming, but I got up melancholily and followed my sister. On the bed. and cold as marble lay'my mother. She was not undressed. She had thrown herself on the bed to rest ; arising to go again to me, he was seized with a palpitation of the heart, and borne senseless to her room. I cannot tell you with what agony I looked upon her; my remorse was tenfold more bit er from the thought that she would never know it, I believe myself to be her murder er. I fell on the bed beside her. 1 could not weep. My heart burned in my bosom ; my brain was on fire. My sister threw her arms around me, and wept in silence. Suddenly we saw a light motion of mother's hand ; her eye's unclosed. She had recovered conscious ness, but not speech. She looked at me and moved her lips. I could not understand her words. "Mother, mother!" I shrieked, "say only that you forgive me." She could not say it with her lips, but her hand pressed mine, bhe smiled upon me, and lifting her thin white hands, she clasped my own within them, and cast her eyes upward. She moved her lips in prayer, and thus she died. I re mained still kneeling beside that dear form, till my gentle sister removed me. The joy of youth had gone forever. Boys who spurn a mother's control, who are ashamed to own that they are wrong, who think it manly to resist her authority, or yield to her influence, beware ! Lay not up for yourselves bitter memories for future years. A Good One A Paris journal says that a Yankee was politely invited by a Chinese mer chant to make him a visit at his house, and that the Oriental host overwhelmed his acci dental gueSt with hospitality, providing for ini a splendid sort of throne, in his best room. and inviting a continual concourse of friends to pay their respects to the distinguished stranger. The house swarmed from morning till night with courteous, obsequious andadmi- mg Chinamen, till Brother Jonathan began to be abashed by the homage he received. But one day the Yankee, having picked up a rudi mentary knowledge of the Chinese tongue, stopped, on entering bis friend's abode, tope- ruse a magnificent inscription over the door, which he found to run as follows: "Here will be seen a real live North American a species of creature rare in this country. Ad mission two cents, payable on going out. Thk Summer of I860. The present summer promises to be memorable for hurricanes, hail stcrms, hot weather, big crops, astronomical wonders, an unusual influx ot Asiatic and Eu ropean royalty, and a superabundance of Pres idential candidates. EARTH'S DEVILS. The Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, in a recent discourse, thus draws a picture of that large class ot men who delight in tempting to ruin the innocent and unsuspecting : "It is not the indiau alone w ho loves to car ry the scalps he has taken in battle ; there are thousands of beings,male and female, who love to carry in sight the number of victims they have seduced or corrupted. to count them over and boast of their crime. There are men who love to corrupt young, who love to teach them fallacious vices, and seduce thesn into evil compliances, to put tho leaven of perdi tion into their souls, and wait till it begins to leaven the whole lump. They seem to have a horrible gloat of pleasure in doing this. They resist all the efforts of their victim to break away ; and if he does get away they pull him down again and God lets such men live ! Did you ever see a spider spinning his web in the corner! With what delicacy of his loom does he spin all the web! how it shines in the sun ! and who has spun it all right ; and after spinning it he makes himself a little hole, In which he goes back and lies in wait for a singing fly that has survej-ed and philosophiz ed the Universe, lie looks upon the web, and the moment he touches it how the spider rush es out to seize him ! and if he be a small in sect, and a large spiderie will bite him aud roll him up in the web ; or if he bo a large fly, he commences rolling up and preparing by and by to eat him ; aud if, for a moment the poor little fly turns to escape, how he rushes out and instantly seizes him again, and rolls him up and up, over and over, more closely than ever, and then drags him down to some corner! I have seen men treat men just so. They spin just such webs, and then sit in some dark corner till they wind their coils arouud him till he is hopelessly entangled in the web; leading him in their infernal work, and rolling him over and over again in its meshes; and if the poor victim begins to. sing and buzy in his efforts to break away, how I have seen them rush out again and carry them back and utterly ruin them in their house of infamy ! Wiiat we are made of. Tho following is from an article by Oliver W. Holmes: "If the reader of this paper live another year, his self conscious principle will have migrated from his present tenement to another, the raw ma terials even of which are not yet put together A portion of that body which is to be, w ill ri pen in the corn of his next harvest. Another portion of his future person he will purchase, or others will purchase for him, headed up in the form ol certain barrelsof potatoes. A third fraction is yet to be gathered in tho Southern rice field. The limbs with w hich he is then to walk will be clad with flesh borrowed from the tenants of many stalls and pastures, now un- concious of their doom. The very organs of speech with which he is to talk so wisely, plead so eloquently, or speak effectively, must first serve his humble brethren to bleat, to bel low and for all the varied utterances ot bristled or feathered barnyard life. His bones them selves arc, to a great extent, in posse and not in esse. A bag ot phosphate ot lime, which he has ordered from Prof. Mapes, lor his ground, contains a large part of what is to be his skel eton. And more than all this, and by far the greater part of his body is nothing at all but water, the main substance of his scattered members is to be looked for in tha reservolr.in the running streams, at the bottom of the well, in tho clouds that float over his head, or dif fused among them all." Never Boy What You Don't Need. If the poor-house has any terror for you, never buy what vou don't need. Before you pay three cents for a jews-harp, see if you can't make just as pleasant a noise by whistling, for which nature furnishes the machinery. And before you pay seven dollars for a figured vest, young man, find out whether your lady-love would not bo just as glad to see you in a plain one. that cost just halt the money. It she wouldn't let her crack her own walnuts and buy her own clothes. When you see a man pay $5 for a Frenchified toy that a philosophic lankee baby will pull to pieces in five minu tes, the chances are that he will live long en ough to realize how many cents there are in a dollar ; and if he don't he is sure to bequeath that privilege to his widow. When a man ask9 you to buy that for which you have no use, no matter how cheap it is, say you are sure some one else wants it at an advance. Money burns in some people's pockets, and makes such a pesky hole, that every thing that is put in drops through past finding. - Republicanism in Washington. A Wash- ngton corrospondent says a laige number of Southern people are traveling Northward now through Washington, and they express uni versal astonishment at the strength of the Re publican sentiment in the Capitol, and its tol eration in a Southeren city. They are frankly nformed there is some doubt of its being a Southern city any longer; that Republicans claim their intentions to simply convert it into a tree national city. There is no doubt that a rapid revolution is taking place in the senti ments of the population of Washington, as it becomes better acquainted with RepupHcan ism. Success to it. . Mr. Douglas has been giving it out in his recent speeches that Mr. Webster endorsed the Sqatter Sovereignty principle. Now bear the old expounder in his i th of March speech of 1850 : "Sir, wherever there is a particu- ar good to be done wherever there is a foot of land to be stayed from becoming slave terri tory, I am ready to assert the principle ot the exclusion of slavery. I am pledged to it from the year 1837 ; I have been pledged to it again and again ; and I will perform these pledges.' An ingenious French philosopher is at pres ent maintaining the hypothesis that the feed- ng of the negro races continuously on exclu sively animal lood, would effect their conver sion into white men. Lie grounds his belief mainly on the fact that in some districts where a large quantity of food is consumed, the pe culiarities of the negro physiognomy are con siderably reduced. Guess agaic, Doctor. , "Good morning, Mr. Grumm ; what is the news to-day?" "Ob, there's no news; my wife was sick - yesterday, and didn't go out ; no news no news." . A Yankee in Panama sought shelter at the American Consuls from an earthquake be thought even the earthquake would respect our nag. f . . , THE TETJE ELITE. -Every-body has heard the designation "trua blue," applied to Presbyterians. Dr. Murray, in his speech before the assem bly of the Free Church of Scotland, at th tri-centenary celebration, playlully refers to its origin : "I havo often been asked why wo arc called "true blue." I did not know how to answerr But I asked a Scotchman. "Well" said he, "wheii we were persecuted, the ministers us ed to go to the mountains, and when they were going to have communion they held out a blue flag, which was an invitation to the peo ple of the coilutry around to attend ; and their descendcuts are called trne blue from that." That is one explanation, bat I have found out another for myself. A few years ago I was In . Naples aud Rome, and went to Pompeii, where I spent some time among its splendid frescoes of variegated hues. All the other colors had faded away, but tbe blue was as bright as the the day it was put on, although it had beeu buried for nearlv two thousand i years. The true blue never gave out that is tho meaning of it. (Laughter.) The blue. Presbyterianism is so blue that it never give out." The Japanese and the Ethnological Soci-. ett. Tho committee appointed by the Ethno logical Society of New York to hold an inter view with the scientific members of the Japan ese Embassy have furnished their otSciial re port, from which we make the following ex tracts: . The subject of nn embassy, alledged to havt been sent from Japan to Rome, A. D. 152Sr was broached. Matsnioto stated emphatically that no formal mission to a foreign country ever cccurred previous to the one of wbich ho is a member, accredited to the United States. He observed that some 278 years ago, several young men, connexions aud representatives of. three princes, visited Rome, but without any governmental authority. As it was rumored that some members of tho Embassy had become indignant on their peoplo being compared to tbe Chinese, wo wero a- greeably surprised at the candor and magnan imity of our informants, when interrogated re specting tbe sources whence they originally derived tea, silk, porcelain wood engraving. paper, printing, aid gunpowaer. 1 he answer was,uuinformly,"Chind." As itseemspossiUie, if not probable, that navigation was as early developed by the islanders of Japan as by tho natives of the neighboring continent, their opinion was asked respecting tho origin of the mariner's compass. The answer was thesame,. and as promptly given, "China." Indicative of views and feelings untainted with national' prejudices, these replies are characteristic of superior minds. They were surprised on bein informed that the seamen of Europe and Amer ica are indebted to the same-so-urco as them-.' selves for that invaluable gift of science to art. When asked if such books as that before vts (one printed in colois) vere rare, the reply was they were very common, "in much plenty." The report of old travellers .was confirmed, that the Japanese have what we call encyclopedias, or dictionaries of arts, and col lections of manuals '" like this, numerous, as it would seem, and certainly as. fully illustra ted as any modern French scries; and at one fifth the cost, too cheap as we may think, the Parisian issues are. So far as regardstbe pro duction ot a cheap and useful literature, Japan may be said to have been centuries in advance of Enrope. The cost of this book. was. about eight to ten cents. A Man with a rag bag in his hand was pick ing up a large number of pieces of w hale-bone which lay in the street. The deposit was of such a singular nature, that we asked tho quaint-looking gatherer how he supposed they came there. "Don't know," he replied, in. a, sqeaking voice, " spect somo unfortunate fe male was wrecked hereabouts." It is believed in Washington that theduun. ion letter was planned for and submitted, to a meeting of leading Southern meti, who are concerting a secession league an the South, and have gone so far, as to appoint, secret a gents to asertain what will be done by foreign governments incase their plans are carried out. Isn't that treason ? M:jor Culbertson. who has jest come from the Rocky Mountains, says that the head: wa ters of the Missouri and Columbia rivers aro so close together, tint he at one time drank from the Missouri, on the cast side of the Rocky Mountains, and in half an hour afterwards from the Columbia on the Pacific. Gov. Ramsey of Minnesota has offered a re ward of $250 for the persons who, on July 20, kidnapped from St. Paul an alleged, fugitive slave, named Henry Sparks. They carried him oh without any legal forms or any warrant. Manx surmises have been formed about tho oil found below the surface of the earth in Pennsylvania. The best out yet, is that it has been put there by Nature for the purpose of greasing the axis that the earth turns upon. Th nnmlwr nf offin'-s in tho refrular armv of the United States who have risen from the ranks is 23. It is not generally known that there is, a law providing for the bestowal of commissions on deserving soldiers,. It is said that there are at present in Enrope 18,140 actors, 21,600 actres&es, 1,7.73 managers of theatres ; and the number ol persons attach ed in one way or another to dramatic estab lishments amounts to 82,000- It is said that there are now running on tho railways in the United States not less than 3000 passenger cars, and some 80,000 freight cars ; under the whole pf which some 688,000 wheels aro running. The "M'Keesport snake" lias been seen a gain. The individual who was so fortunate as to obtain a sight of the varmint estimates it to bo about the length of two coal barges or thirty-five feet. Tho people of Downingtown, are making efforts for the establishment of a Bank, under tho free banking law passed last winter. Shares of stock, amounting to over $50,000, have already been sold. A man once asked a company of little boys what they were good for 7 On little fellow promptly answered, "We are good to mat men of."