TERMS OF THE " AMEIIICAIV." riucca or ad vkhtm . I square I Insertion, . a 6 1 do 9 do . 0 75 I do 9 da- - 1 00 Evry subsequent insertion, - 0 tft Yearly Advertisements, (with the privilege ot alteration) one column $25 j half cvlumn, tig, three squares, $1 two squares, f 9 ; one square. '. Without the privilege of alteration a liberal discount will b made. Advertisements left without directions at to ths length of time thee are to be. publisher), will b continued until ordered out, and charged aocecd Ingly. (T3Siiteen lines make a square. on each aides sometimes four are inserted. Tb whol is now to be carefully covered with compo sition, or grafting clay, excepting two or three eye of each scion. This mode of grafting is equally applicable lo very small stocks, but being weak must be bound with a cord of bars matting. The following is a good composition: " Crafting Compusitum is made of three parts of rosin, three parts of bets wax, and one part of tal low, melted together ; when well mixed, it is p oar JOSEPH EISELY. 5PnoraiiToas. jr. . jm,issK.t nutor. orriei is bubkbt tmtr, hiab diss, THE AMERICAN" is published sverv 8slur- AND SIIAMOKIN JOUIiNAX: ay at TWO DOLLARS per Annum to be aid half yearly In advance,. No taper diacontin- 'Absolute acquiescence In the decisions of the majority, the vital principle of Republic, front which there Is no appeal but to force, the Thai principle and immediate parent of deapotiamJaff bbbob. ed tin ill arrearage are paid. No subscriptions received for a lesa period than x mohtbs. AH communications or letters on laineaa relating to the office, to insure attention, By Masses & Elsclr. giinbury, Northumberland Co. ra. Saturday, April IS 11. Vol. I-Xo. X.XXI. uat be POST PAIJJ. From the Knickerbocker. TUBS FAX Li OF TILE! OAK. ? er.oaea BILL. A glorious tree la the aid fray oak, lie haa atood for a thoussud -j aars. Has atood and frowned On the woods around, Like a king among Ilia peers: As around their king they atand, m now. When the flowers their pale leaves fold, The tall treea round him atand arrayed In their robea of purple gold. He atood like a tower Through aun and ahower. And dared the winda to battle) ( Ha haa heard the hail, Aa from plates of mall, From his old limbs shuken, faille: II aa tossed them about, and shorn the tpa ' ( When the tor in haa roused his might,) Of the foreststreea, aa a strong man dolo, The heads of hi foes in fight. The autumn sun looks kindly down, B ut the frost is on the lea, And sprinkles the horn Of the owl at morn, Aa she hies to the old oak tree. Not a leaf is atirred, Not a aound is heard But the thump of the thresher'a flail. The low wind's sigh, Or the distant cry Of the hound on the Fox'a trail. The forerte he has whistling plunged. With his axe in the deep wood's gloom. That shrouds the hill, Where few and chill The sunbeams straggling come ; His brawny arm he has bared, and laid His axe at the toot of the tree, The old gray oak, And, with lusty stroke, He wields it merrily t With lusty stroke. And the old gray oak. Through the fold of his gorgeoua vest, You may see him shake, And the night-owl break, Fiom her perch in hia leafy crest. She will come but to find him gone from where He stood at the bieak of dy ; Like a cloud that peals aa it melte to air, He has passed, with crash, away ! Though the spring in bloom and the frost in gold No more his limbs attire, On the stormy wave He ahall float, and brave The blast and the battle firel Shallspread hie white wings to the wind. And thunder on the deep, As he thundered when His bough was green, Ob the high and stormy steep! Night before thi hatrto T Prussian Eylan, from drowning, pOSSOSSCS Strong clains lo 8ir Robert WuW Memoirs? . the attention of medical men. The Perhaps no night was ever so awful, following are a series of very interesting no occasion ever excited a higher inte experiments made by a gcutlemtfn, na rest. The contact of tho adverse a r- med liaise, to test lire power of llal van mies the impprtance of their character ism in cases of suspended animation and objects tho fates that awaited from drowning. . their achievotnnts the events that dc- 'On Thursday last one of rty spa pended on them the presence 150,000 niels wlielpod, having a litter of thirteen, men, impatient for mutual slaughter six of which I took for my experiments, the wintry wildness of the scene, faint- I drowned throe of them in cold water, ly cheered by the partial fires, on whose and kept them immersed for fifteen mi blaze the darkness of the storm rested, nutes, at which time I took them from and whose flames exposed to view the the bucket, and placed them in front of a i-i i l i c , i . suivcxuig gruups -caiciiuuu uruuuu i a guuu lire. iu motion COU!u oe per- knowledge of the Russian sufferance ceived in cither of them. I then nut commisseration of their helpless distress I the front lees of one of them in a iar anxiety for their fate all these kept J containing a warm solution of salt and unclosed the weaned eye and oppressed water, and its hmdlegs in a similar jar, the mind with variety and weight of in each of which was inserted one pole thought. of the galvanic battery; the whole were Scene after the battle from (he same. I then placed near the fire. During the suspension of movements, I The position of the dog being now a few moments were afforded to con tavorablc lor operating on, without the template the field of battle, and never necessity of making any incisions in tho did l moTo tcrrible spectacle present it- flesn 1 passed a very strong shock sell, t Hty thousand brave men since iruug us uuuy ; n movea us nina sunrise killed and wounded, and great lcSs 1 gavc it another shock, which part, being struck by cannon shot, ex- caused its tail also to move. I now posed still on the ground, without the passed twenty shocks in quick succes- means, without the hope of succor. Near sion through its body ; it moved every fifty thousand more worn out with fa- h'b its mouth opened, and I was inch- tigue and exhausted with hunger, were ned to believe that the dog had actually Unable to keep the field, and about to come to life ; but the moment I ceased abandon their mangled comrades, who passing me snocits uie uog was as mo were imploring their assistance and tionlcss as it was previous to my com protection. . menccment. Again I continued the ...The Prussians had provisions; but the shocks, and I noticed that there was Russians had no other sustenance than more motion in the limbs. Considering the frozen snow. Their wants had in- hat, in proportion to the return of the duccd numbers during the battle to sensibility, these shocks would be too search for food in the adjoining villages, powerful for it, I decreased the intensi- and the plain was covered by foraging y i incm, ana passed many hundreds parties, nassinff and rcrrassincr. i" rapid succession. I continued this The French left of0 of their own Ior aooui nVe minuies, tna motion oi wounded, and 150 Russians, under the the limbs increasing as the shocks m care of two surgeons, but without ins creased in number. I now ceased; the struments or means of dressing, without dog still moved : It was restored to life. provisions, and with dead bodies inter- I placed it on a warm flannel in front of minrrled in almost every? room. Tho the fire, and in a very short lime it ap burgomaster of Landsbcrg declared I pcared as well as it was previous to its that 10.000 wounded had passed th' being drowned s it crawled on the flan- this town. Although tlw soldiery and . mau uws lacunar peasantry had, since the battle, been J young dogs. . ' rontinnnllv pmnlnvcd in hurvinc the I now examined the two Other dogs From the Christian Ohterver. JUG IIORIIORS OF WAR. ektrgyman, who weut over the field of battle ef- ttrlthe defeat of the Uussiaus by the King of Tru-isia at Soldin, wrote and published the follow ing account of it At one o'clock the cannonading cea d. and I went out on foot to Soldin, in der to learn to whose advantage the Lit e turned out. loward evening 0 of the Russian fugitives came to ildin, a pitiful sight indeed: some )lding up their hands cursing and rearing, others praying and praising e King of Trussia, without hats, with it clothes, some on foot, others two on horse, with their lteads and arms tied a ; some dragging along by the stir tps, and others by the horses tails, lrhen the battle was decided, and vie- rv shouted for by the Prussian army, ventured to the place where the ca nadinrr was. After walking 6ome av. a Cossack's horse came runnin ill speed loward me, I n.6untcd him, nd on my way tor seven mnes ana a alf on this side the field of battle, I und the dead and wounded lying on tetrround. sadly cut in pieces. Xhe irther I advanced, the more these poor reatures lav heaned one upon another .""his scene 1 shall never forget. Tlift ossacks, as soon as they saw tne, cried ut, "Dear 6ir, water, water, water." tighteous Godl what a sight. Men, pomen. and children, Russians and russlans, carriages and horses, oxen, hestfl, baggage, all lying one upon mntlmr. to the height of a man; seven illages around me in flames, and the nhabitants either massacred or thrown nto the fire. . The poor wounded were still firing it one another in the greatest exaspcra .ion. The field of battle was a plain two miles and a half long, and wholly covered with the dead and wonnded. There was not even room to set my Toot without treading on some of them. Several brooks were so filled up with Russians, that I affirm, they lay heaped n nnn nrAn another, as high as two nirln. and aDooared like hills to the com mon ground: I could hardly recover mv.nlf fivMYi the frioht occasioned by il.rt rrrMt nnd miserable outcry of the AfA. A noble Prussian officer who had lost both of his legs, cried out to me i "Sir, you are a priest, ano preach mercy; pray show me some compassion, and despatch me at once. by the winds while the ground is unfro. zen, it is far more exposed in a hard winter to the frosts which penetrate deeply in loose earth, and sometimes destroy the vitality of the roots. Many farmers choose to transplant trees as early as possible after the frost is out of the ground, and some choose a wet day, or a time when the soil is full of water, supposing the roots are more likely to take hold of the earth at this time than when the soil is more dry but they should consider that the roots in this latitude seldom begin to search for foM before about the first of May, and that by removing the tree in a very w:t time, they can never place the roots so well in the earth as when the mould is more dry and friable. In a very wet time the little fibrous roots are apt to cling together, and instead of extending in every direction as they did while in the nursery, we shall find them in mas ses, clotted and adhering to one ano ther, and it often happens that clusters of roots, covered up in this position, are afterwards found a mass of rotten mat ter. BostonCultJyator. ICK IIOI HKS. Ma.EDiToa: I wich to enquire whether any of your correspondents are familial with tho princi ples of constructing Icb llorsis in ttiluri f A gentleman informad me, not long since, that these necessary appendages of f.rm houses, could be con structed with far lesa expense in the cellar, tbsn in any other situation, He professed not to be fami liar with the manner of constructing them, but spoke of them aa being quite common "ZWn East," aa well aa in many parts of Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont. If any of your readers possess information on thia subject, they will con fer favor upon the public, by giving it puM city through the columns of the Cultivator. II. D. W.. Windham, April 2th 1841. Will some of our correspondents answer this in quiry Meanwhile we sty, that there is nothing very learned or mysterious in the prineiples' of const meting ice houses in cellars as practiced here abouts. A man haa but lo dig a hole, aay four feet, or more if he chooses, square in hia cellar line the bottom and aidee with hemlock boughs, end fill Uie fiL m. .1 r ., a swr Some boughs should also be thrown over the top, which may be covered with a trap door attached to a sqosre frame resting on the cellar Coor. Meat, dead, the ground was still covered with which were drowned and taken from butlet UrJ&e.t r,,cc4 ia VO(IH.;( cn tr,p the water at the same time this one was. They were both dead a plain proof that it was entirely owing to the gaiva- nic fluid that life was restored. The human carcasses ; and parts of the road towards Landsbcrg were literacy pa ved with frozen and encrusted bodies, which the returning cannonwhcels had rather splintered than lacerated. Scene at HeiUberg, from the same. The cannon thundered, and the mus ketry rolled, illuminating the atmos phere with continued flame, till gradu ally the combat relaxed, and the Kus i: i .i .i A little before ten at night, a 'deserter wc?.k lny ift W'i rnm nvr to tr, lL,.s.ai7. and inform. mouon pcrccpuoic. other three dogs 1 drowned in warm water, and kept them immersed for for ty minutes, at which time all motion had ceased. Two of them I had in front of the fire, a nd the remaining one I pla ced in the iars, as in the preceding ex pcriment. I now passed a shock of door, will keep cool end awcet in the hottest wea ther, and when you want ice, all you have to do ia to raise the door and take out the desired quantity. The ice house keei the whole cellar eool, and even aids in cooling the rooms above Jfci'i Cultiva tor. HEPATITIS, OR LIVER COMPLAIXT. Liver complaiut ia described to be of two forms, vz ; Acute and Chrome, which ared.iTerent in their arat and character, and are produced from ulcere on h Liver, which is deseased on the surface or in the preparing lrom the wood, ouuaoie arrangements had scarcely been made, when the dark bodies of the columns were seen sweeping forward. Again the batteries were opened, and the fury of the battle again raged; but the as sailants, unable to force the progress, fled back wrecked and almost annihila ted. The action became then feeble, Oaed Advice from Oorg Washington. To Dvshbob WiHUlHeTOB, Nawauaon, 13th January, 1738. Dear Dushrod, You will be surprised, iierhspa, at receiving a letter from me ; but if the end is an swered for which it is written, I shall not think my time misspent Your father, who seems to enter tain a very favorablo opinion of your prudence, and I hope yon merit it, in one or two of hia lettera to me he c peaks of the difficulty he is under to make you remittances. Whether this arises from the scan tiness of hia funds or the eilensivenese of your de mands, ia mutter of conjecture with me. 1 hope il ia not the latter ; because common prudence, and ev ery other consideration, which ought to have weight in a reflecting mind, ars opposed to your rr.juiring more thsujt bis convenience and a regard to hia oilier children will enable him to pay ; and beeauae he holds up no idoa in the totter which would support me in the conclusion. Yet when I tske a view of the inexperience of youth and the temptations of cities; and the distresses to which Virginia gentlemen are driven by an accumulation of taxea and the want of maiket, I am almost iaclincj to ascribe it in part to both. Therefore as a friend I give you the fol lowing advice. Let the object which carried you te Philadelphia, be always before your eyes. Remem ber it ie not the mote atudy of tke law, but become eminent iu the profession of it, that ie to yield hon or and profit. The first waa your choice; let the second be your ambition. Dissipation ia incompat ible with both ; the company in which you will im prove most will bo the least expensive to you ; yet I am not auch a stoic c to suppose thst you will, or think it right that you should always be in compa ny with Senators and Fhilorophere ; but ef theju vinile kind let me advise you to I choice. Il is ea sy lo make acquaintances, but very difficult to shake them off, howevsr irksome and unprofitable they are found, after we hive once committed ourselves to them. The indiscretion which, very often, they involuntarily lead out into, prove equally distress ing and disgraceful. Be courteous to all but intimate with few ; and let those few be well tried before yon give them your confidence. True friendship ia a plant of slow growth, and must undergo and withstand the shocks of adversity before it is entitled to the appellation Let your heart feel for the afflictions and distress es of every one, end Irl yeur band give in propor tion te your parse ; remembering always the esli- one who taketh that deeerveth charity ; all, hewev- er, are worthy after inquiry, or the deserving may eu(Ter. Do not conceive that fine clothing make fine men ; any more than fine fusiliers make fine birds, A plain, genteel drees is more admired and obtains mors credit, than lace and eubtgidvry, ia the eyes of the judicioua and sensible. The last thing which I shall mention Is first iu importance; and that ia to oib aunts. 7 bis is a vice which is produeiire of every possible evil j equally injurious to ths morals and health of ita votaries. It is the child of avarice, the brother of iniquity, and ihs filher of mischief! It has beon the ruin of many worth; fuciilics, ths Iota of many a man'a boner, and the cause of anicide. To all those who enter the lists it ia equally foacinatiug. Tba nrraru! gauctet u!itrs bra good lUllUnO, reverse. The losing gsme ed into water and wotked up like ahoeaulcer'e wax by hand. Thia composition may be BpfteadV while in a meltod state pretty thickly with a ln ish on very strong brown paper. This paper is to te cut into small strips of a suitablo size, end ia va y thickly applied. In cool weather, may be insanth, r warmed with the breath, no aa to become tdbett si ve, .Mai it Cutivatur. I therefore I cntr6a a tDe former, the patient rs attacked with 1 .1 " .1 I tltMftn ffiain. in lh t.oli-in tC t!m f.ivr m m iw . ... ,t,. ,,, i, i increascu me intensity oi incm consi i im -' ed the general thai another assault de .n th eTen M m inwrporUblc . the p.. m u u owUkeB hj , in fii;i r 1 1 1 ( 1 1 1 mi 1 1 it- v i m in. uuiiamc i . ... - i .: . i . . ..... v.;- i..r. . .1 r...m i .... . succession, iivery IimU moved, the I c,uu " ,u,u m vn u" ater, in toe noe ui mrieving past misioriuncs, goes bellv protracted and again collapsed, pressure exerted m that rwitmn of the mfJsmedonf.onbaj to worse, UII grown desperste he push- . 1 . i ... i l. A M ....l . i ... . . . .I . and the head was raised. At this pe-l OT"1- n" mim v bu m n at every tmng anu loses msaik in a woro.iew nod I Stopped passing the shocks, jn that the first symtoma of Uver Complaint are those g.inbytiji, abominable practice, while thoueands order to see if there was any motion in wn,ca ,E eofrence oi suppuration. m re tnjureu. tho dog, When not Under the galvanic Acute tni Sub-acute varieties, alwjst always ejm. Perhaps you will aay "my conduct has tnticipa- influence there Was none, l again Baenc w,la oraa ch,llT feeUnS aucceejea by heat ,ej (ne advice" and "uot one of the cases applies to proceeded with the shocks, and having of ,kin fe?ereJ ,oneue h,vin8 yeiiowuh ap- a I s.B. a i . ' noticed that tnC IimbS tnOVCd more ra Pr'inc rrrguirieoi ine oowci,TOuv.eM, cooutencanc cbaoget to a pala or citron color, or along their line of tirallcurs, shouted P'an before. I considered it neccs '"llvu"'l ciiuuivy i . .. , . I ... u.l.;,l!..l:.. J;(t.,l,.J i- t.- .v- ; sary iu uccrease uie intensity anu in - "J i when this scene closed, and the massa '.c.a3.0 MUdni,v. u uiu, - . I . . , l. . n L J . . . . . .. r.-t MimlnMa .l.tf - r. .1 .dWih.a L in .1 itli f.,tl( j . u... ,. ,.fiV,rt I which a uiu, u mum as 10 iHircuivu a. i - j -. i uwcuhhsha., uuV ri j slight tremor in the do". I continued in K lying t the right side, nrins sc.nty and high tnmn tnmi. imrnar of war was followed I ""a1" ucluur'" Kllr uur5 .w"""uwu hi i j j by a melancholy din-the groans of the manncr .for abouj vfe mi,!"tcs.' nt f Tir? b,l D'8hU ,od " '11 i ' I which time I removed It from the jars, frequently troubled with Diarrhoea, Tenesmus and t,u..w, t;., biiuv.1 idling tuo i , t,A 9l,U T- P.Im. n.. mnA .nmiiinB. .nJ hs. a considerable. tortured ' , , :. a,:.- v. u. .w.:ii .: tr.,. .V, IUII.I, f 1 llCU IU, IliUIIUIUBllVU SUllta .UW fl'V.I.VP- me." 1 aball be Heartily glad ot it. It will add not a 1 little to my happiness to find those to whom I am ao nearly connected pursuing the right walk of life, It wilt be the crure road to ray favor, and to those honora and places of profit, which their country can bestow as merit rarely goes unrewarded. I am, dear Duahrod, your affectionate uncle, CEO. WASHINGTON. rr:' rrnownl nf the lirrht. or ain, in vain imnl i uc . ana even aeau,. nf other dogs (which were not allowed to .nd ihe fever hi Heavy ram fell in the ; early par of coU 5uin2 lhe vhote 0f the cxperi- U. I chronic tnc nignt, v,nicn rc.uu.cu K' mcnt) wcrc examined ; no motion what exceeaingty w.mcry, u -""T" Cver could be perceived. 1 tried the experienced mucn aistress. " efrect of caivanism on one of these. I uroKe i.ie i renen were nrra, cu , . - wm BUCC 3sful. , onc hour after this aer oi oattte , vui a aauv, ,... j 0ratcd on the olher dog also, but it uaoty aisgusung. engagea .uvuuwu , yajn Thcre w no v- re iiiureuuii uie i obiuc uiuii.u.J3. m9:n:n(T in ,he vital Powers: .fe had lhe ground between the wood and fl , the Hussian batteries, about a quarter " - nf n mile, was a shert rf nnkpd human Orcbnrds-Trinwplantlnit Trees bodies, which friends and foes had du- April is the month which most people rinr the nieht mutually strinned. not Drefer for setting oit trees oi all kinds. n - j i i ia ' . . leaving the worst rag upon them, al-1 Some transplant them in Uctober, and though numbers a i . I i.ivr. in n iiiuiiicr ui an iiuui 11 aw py pain, in vain iminuitu iww.si, . A ,Q hc .,CTrcc.v recovered. The neal coal of the Liver ths pain is much more intense gnertnan mnen counned to tne it affections it is uncertain in ita ter roinauon ; the pain is intense, attended occasional ly with feveruh symtoms, a dry and parched skin, irregular bowels, sallow countenance, freqeuot at- tarka of juandice, the tongue ia scarcely ever free from yelww fur, the appetite bad, and a corruption attacks the fare and back, behind the shoulders, Ac. Da. II t alien's Compound Strengthening Too ic and Aperient German Pills, will, in a majority of cases, produce a perfect cure, and if used s. the very onset of affliction will in every cane arrest the disease. Thia ia not merely theory bnt fact which GKAKT1NU. If you have any treea which produce indifferent fruit, now ia about the time to engraft with better aorta. It ia aa well to have good, first rate fruit, as poor, especially when thia can be secured by ao easy and aimple a method of engrafting. When treea have become old and I'.rge, let some of the niott vigorous limbs near the centre, be selected for the insertion of scions j but it is always best to graft when the trees are young. The practiced nursery men cnl off all the infant trees near the ground, when they are about the she of a man's finger, and plats ths graft on the stock and then the whole sob- aequeut body of the tree will produce one sort of fruit There are many modes of grafting, but the follow- ing ia the moat common i Clt ft Gruftine. Thia mode of grafting is usu ally prscticed on atocks from one. to two ineky in diameter. A. Kr Kallroad. There has been exhibiting at the Merchant's," Sanderson's Hotel, for some days past, a model of a railroad, which peeresses many claims on public notice, Ths ubject of the road is to overcome the diiTicultiee attendant upon crossing mountains, by means of railroad la the present invention, ths manner in which thia, heretofore deemed insuper able, olatacla is overcens, is at once aimple and original. The inventor, Mr. Von Smith, a native of Kuesia, haa erected a large model, which ia open to the inspection of the public, and which will ful ly illustrate advantages proposed to be derivej... The road ia made in a series of inclineJ planes, at the foot of each of which ia a common well, filled with water having a stationary frame which, rest ing in the bottom of the well, reaches to the height or the next inclined plane. At the bottom of tha wall, attached to the frame, ia an air tight hot, hav ing insetted ia the top of it a stop ceck, from Uie handle of which e wire passes to the surface of the water, and is there eonntclsj with a email lever, the top of which is nearly on a level with the road track. Inside this static as ry frame, there is another detachment frame, moving easily up and down. wihtn the limits of ths stationary frame, and to the bs'.t-aa (fit I attached another box, open on th bottom, end having inserted in the top estop cock ia e eimilar manner, end with a similar connection, ilh the surface aa the other. 1'hie moveable frame forms part of the railroad, end it ia by it that the car ia lifted up Ie the next bight. The mains used tot raise the car ia air, which by a very aimple process. is loreee in Urge quantities t ths bottom nf the: well, and in ths stationer 1 jx. The cu when if j rune on to the moveable f.amee, atrike the two U vera, above mentioned, in s-ich a manner aa to np a the lower, and shut the upper atop cock. The air from the lower box, escapes into the upper box, a q J when auffid-nt air is collected, (which occurs tna. very abort time,) the moveable frame rises gradvl illy and ateadily until it reaches the next height, wl jen, by a neat and unfailing contrivance, the dete ched part of the track on the frame ia thiowa from 1 1 hor- isontal into a alightly inclined position, and th a cae, again starts off without any aid. The car, trj ru n ning off, atrikes the lovers again, so as to cloie, i i lower, anJ open ths uppor stop-cock, the airiurm cdi . ately escaping, the frame ainka again to ita fo rmer place. The form of the ear ued on. "this ro J j rtirTxron trm l .. -- - uuginai will Mr. Von Smith. It ia formed so. that but. two. wheels are necessary, they being placed in th e osn- tre of the car, and the eeats on ea:h side, belo m the. level of the track, the Toad being elevated abov.t eight feet from the ground. Ttiia form of car hs as been adopted aa being best suited to the nature of the road to be made, end alo from the fact, ths 1 it is an utter impossibility for the car to be got ofT the trcack. Those who may be desirous of viewing IhLs truly original invention, can do eo by calling at jLa hotel, where the model is in full operation. . S. GaxeUi :. PisTot SaooTiaa Extba. No little Beit' and alarm waa created in one of our principal hotels early yesterday morning by the loud report f a pis tol in one of the passage way a of tbetktr d atory. Some thought that a suicide had been oar ji milted, white othera did not know what -te think, -of an oc currence ao unusual, but their doubu we soon re, moved as we shall ahew. It seems that one of the Iri.h waiter t tlached Ic the hotel had taken a gentleman's v rcoat fron . hie room in order to brush it. Findir g a pistol ir one of the pock els hs drew il forth, and began l examins it At thia juncture a darkey tame int the room, when the Irishman, having no viae tb pistol waa loaded, took eight at&e aabla feUjw am exclaimed- MI eey.me row I of blacking, jiatstraifilitsnjeree like a man, and atand sliH, and I'll plug ye aa ais aa I'd Visa me hand, 'Vy, wy, loyk heeeh, master, said the darks; rolling hiseyea and turning a pale blue fright "l.ook hees'n master, don't you do det don't aii dat pistol mrtf. Wha wha what for yo ehoot ir;' "J' it for a lit ef divarahun, that's all. Be air can be substantiated by the testimonies of vsrious fiW UA,n. .till ..rm a. mntnn fnr tins nfactice persona who have witnessed the estoniehing eflccte VI UIV.OU OLlll i- HIVI U c " ' " I I . . . . , ,. ... I .. ... , . -,, . . J .1 I " t iOr M U II V tained consciousness of iheir situation, the fact that the earth semes more nrm- - . - - o,.mer. .. . " i aa.y, mni ru M , r,ik ortw daylight thiout It was a sight that the eye loathed, but ly about the roots, and that the tree nas euuea . ma warm nam mU B0 negiocx- muck iseareiui.y w , . r.r, ...u Moi ot J(ynn from whir h it could not remove. I nothin-v to do but to crow as soon as ed when the patient can have aeoess to It. Full sihI the top pared amoothe; with a thin knife epbt sooner ejid than done Pat took detibera v... ........ . c, w . j i , ... i . .L r I . I the Warm Weather Commences but we I explicit mreciiona are uennea in me roeuicai me wtoca mrougr, m, cenue, ro me urpiu oi auovu r th, Rrirhtnn (EnclanJ) Herald. nrefer the snrini? season for transplant pampW wbica eccoropuDfs the medtcirw, and can two Inches. ,nj iwrt a wedge to keep it open ft life RCKtored by Gall anlm. ing we do not choose to have a young be obtained gratia of any of the regularly appointed n.i.nicm ,n.rAnrtAd to as a means tree stand six months in its new loca- agenuwno een u eii,cine. tt, nnfrtrtiinntft Scott, the lion Without beginning to grow it Will P"ipl Office and General Depot for the TJ.ii. v. ,Mlv,. .b .... , rr.L : i. ri.im ;. . v. ta v.riK ts.h Si.i. K.n.. diver, and though unsuccessitii in mat aiuuu mute buic uiruugn mo wm.i - t -- particular instance, the vital spark na mo nursery man in iresn toam reccuwy i u.j.u... ... wu.u.u.t-. ving fled, its application in cases of sus- placed about its roots for in addition Adv.rtising and Medicmea must rs addressed ;r0tl peoded animation, particularly fromltotha aanger of its being viowncYerjijwwwwtetWioi the reerjiiion of th acion. The acton ia to pre P! in the, otm cf a wedge with sn ey if pWr bio in 'w4 Bpper part of the portion t'dUi for seed t P rfrfuct success ia the more certain hen this is ths t case. The srioq ia now to be carefully inseited, so I that the inns bark of the scion and of lbs stock may immediate aliet j.. txutj j,,rg. iUKka ruire two sewn, one aim, pttHed ths trigger, and off went the pistol wi a tremendous report Ths ball for it had a "bp pill" in of a largs site juat grsred the darkey'e si and went smack through ths doer, but fortunate it did not happen to eome in eontacl with any "si enough" flesh and Mood. It is needleus 10 e that the Irishman was worse frighter.cd than a man in the party, and has since declared that kwill Diver ticb out of the decaieful things agau ft