TLTN1BOTY AMERIC AN. AND SIIAMOKIN JOURNAL: imci:s or AmrrrrisiXG. I square 1 insertion, 1 do S do ' 1 do 3 do fO 60 0 TS 1 00 0 85 F.vcry subsequent incrticn, Yearly Advertisements, (with the privifcgn ot alteration) one column 25 ; half column, fH, three aqunrca, $12; two squares, f 9 ; one rquate, $5. Without the privilege of situation a liberal day at TWO DOLLARS per annum lo bo paid half yearly in advance. No paper discontin Ucii till Al.t arrearages are-paid. No subscriptions received for a less period thin aix mouths. All communications or letters on business relating to the ollico, to insure attention, must be POST PAID. discount will bo made. Absolute acquiescence in the decisions of the majority, the vitalprinciple of Republics, from which there is no appeal but to force, the vital principle and immediate parent of despotism. Jxtraaso'v. Advertisements lolt without direction ss ti tba length of tiinothef aro lo bo pi.blihed, will b continuod until ordered out, and ciiurged accord ingly. Cj"Sixteen lines mrtke a equnra. y Masscr & Elscly. Siinburj, 2VorlIiunib?iland Co. Pu. Saturday! June , IS II. Vol. IXo. XXXTII. TERMS OF THE AMEIUCAX." HENRY B. MASSEK, PiiTi.isnitns ao JOSEPH EISELY. $ PaoraiKTon. It. It. njliSEItf Editor, ortlCI IS M4RKKT TlttET, HXAB cm. THE AMERICAN" is published every Salur BALLAD. The Lamont of the Irish Emigrant, ponrtraying the feelings of an Irish peasant, previous to his lea ting home; calling np the scene of his youth un der the painful reflection of having buticd his wifo and child, and what hi feelings will be in America. Written by the Hon. Mrs. Price Blackwood. I'm sitting on the stile, Mnry, Where we ;.t side by side. On a bright May morning Ion? ago, When first you were my brides The coin was springing fresh and green. And the lark sang loud and high, And the led was on thy lip, Mary, And the love light in your eye J. The place is little changed, Mary ; The day as bright as then, The laik's loud song is in my ear, And the corn is green again I Uul I miss the soft clasp of your hand, And your breath warm on my cheek, And I still keep lisl'iiing for the woid : You never more may speak. Tis but a step down yonder lane, And the littlo chuich stands near Th' church whpre we were wed, Mary, I see the spire from hcje ; But the graveyard lies between, Mary, And my step might break your rest. For I've laid you, darling, down to sleep, With your baby ou your breast. I'm very lone now, Mary, For the poor nrnko no new friends ; But oh ! they fovc thee better fir, TJip fcwrwn father sends ! And you were all I bad, Mary My blessing end my pride ; There's nothing left to circ for now, Since my poor Mary died I I'm bidding you a long farewell, My Mary, kind and true ! B.it I'll not forget you, darling, In the land I'm going to; Thry say there's bread and work for all, And the sun shines ulwnyg there ; Dut I'll not forget old Ireland, Were it fifty times as fiir ! And often in those grand old woods I II sit and shut my eyes. And my heart will travel back again 'Co the place where Mary lies; And l'il think I see the little stile Where we s.it side by side, And the rpriuging corn and the bright May morn, When first you were my bride ! A Capital fetory. The last New York Spirit of the Times has an admirable story, called The Bio Bear of AnKAxsts." We ake a fragment showing that small lusquitoes would be of 'no use in Ar aiisias,' and setting forth Uiq merits of certain dog. 'Where did all that happen!' asked a ynical looking hoosler. 'Happen! happened in Arkansaw; there else cou'.d it have happened, but l the crea.Vion State the finishing up ountry a state where the sile runs own to the centre of the 'arth, and go cfament gives you a title to every inch f it. Then its airs, just breathe them, nd they will make you snort like a orse. It's a state without a fault, it is.' 'Excepting musquitoes,' cried the oosier. Well, stranger, except them, for it re a fact that they arc rather cnor lous, and do push themselves in some hat troublesome. But, stranger, they ever stick twice in the same place, and ivc them a fair chance for a few lonths, and you will get as much above lcm as an alligator. They can't hurt ly feelings, for they lay under the skin ; nd I never knew but one case of inju- resulting from them, and that was a nnkee: and they lake worse to for gncrs anyhow than they do to the na ves. But the way they used that fel w ! first they punched him until he veiled up and busted, then he sup-ner-t-ted. as the doctor called it, until he as as raw as beef; then he took the jer, owing to the warm weather, and tally he took a steamboat and left the nintry. He was the only man that ;cr took musquitoes to heart that I low of. But musquitoes is natur, and never find fault with her; if they are rge, Arkansaw is large, her varmints e large, her trees are large, her rivers e large, and a small musquito would j of no more use in Arkansaw, than caching in a cane-brake.' This knock down argument in favor big musquitoes used the hoosier up, id Hie logician started on a new track, explain how numerous bears were in s 'diggings,' where he represented em to be 'about as plenty as blackbcr is, and a little plentifuller.' Toon the utterance of this assertion. timid little man near me inquired if c bears in Arkansaw ever attacked e settlers in numbers. k 'No,' said our hero, warmincr with the I subject, 'no,' stranger, for jou sec it arn't the natur of bar to go'in droves, but the w ay they squander about in pairs and single ones, is edifying. And then the way I hunt them theold black rascals know the crack of my.gun as well as they know a pig's squealing, They grow thin in our parts, it freight tens them so, and thev do hate the noise dreadfully, poor things. That gun of mine is a perfect epidemic among iiur 11 nui waicuuu. cioseiy, u win go oflfas quick on a warm scent as my dog Uowic-knile will; and then the dog, whew! why the fellow thinks the world is full of bar, he finds them so easy. It's lucky he don't talk as well as think, for with his natural modesty, if Jie should suddenly learn how much he is acknow- lodged to be ahead of all other dogs in the universe, he would be astonished to death in two minutes. ' What" season of .the year do your hunts take place?' inquired a gentle- manly foreigner, who, from some pe- culiaritics of his baggage," I suspected to be an Englishman, on sonic hunting expedition, probably, at the foot of the llocky Mountains. The season for bar hunting, stran- cer, said the man of A rkansaw. 'is pen- erally all the year round, and the hunts take place about as regular. I read in history that varmints have their fat sea- son, and their lean season. That is not the case in Arkansaw, feeding as they do upon the spontenacious productions of the sile, they have one continued fat season the year round though in win ter things in this way is a little more greasy than in summer, I must admit. For that reason bar run with us in warm weather, but in winter they only wad Ar t.'o, ri .' - - . i die. lat, lat! us an enemy to speed j. Urns, over, ,i3 ta.' plenly of it. I have seen wild turkeys, from its influence, as ccntle as chickens, llun u., ; r. i ,i:.;., i ,t a oar in this lat condition, and the way ;t ;mnme ,t, r . ... ; it impiovts the critter lor eating is a- . 1 e w mazin; it sorter mixes the ile up with the meat until you cant tell t'othc from which. I've done this often. I recol lect one pcrty morning in particular, of jiuiiiu- mi viu in; ifcjuuw on uie sireicn, and considering the weight he carried, he run well. .But the dogs soon tired 1,;.. j i ., nun down, and when I came ui with i,: , . -ft ' . , mm wasn't ho in a beautiful sweat I IT1 rrllt fnvfif nm tlirn f-k enn luc , .... ...v.., .v. ov,v ,11.11 .u.,SuU Bu, ui u, H.uiu.1 .i .cci, and his sides sinking and opentng like a bellows, and his encuhs so iai ne couldn't look cross In this fix I blazed at him, and pitch me naked into a briar ,.t, i'.i , ' i t u , . i-.i path it Ihe steam didn t come out o the ! bullet hole ten foot in a straight line. niL ,i I, f .i 1 he ic nw, I reckon, was made on the i i ' I , i . hish pressure system, and the lead sort of bust his biler.' That column of steam was rather curious, or else the bear must have been warm,' observed the foreigner with a laugh. 'Stranger, as you observe, that bar was warm, and the blowing off of the steam showed it, and also how hard the mimim n.iu uc-un run. j nave no uouui if he had kept on two miles further his insidcs would have been stewed ; and I expect to meet with a varmint yet of extra bottom, who will run himself into a skin lull ol bar s grease: it is possi ble, much onlikelicr things have hap pened. Where abouts are these bear so a bundant?' inquired the foreigner with increasing interest. Why, stranirer, they inhabit the neighborhood of my settlement, one of the prettiest palaces ol Old Mississippi a perfect location, and no mistake : a place that had some delects until the river made the cut ofl, at 'Shirt-tail- bend,' and that remedied the evil, as it brought my cabin on the edge of the river a great advantage in wet wea- ther, I assure you. as you can roll a bar- rcl of whiskey into my yard in high water, from a boat, as easy as falling oflfa log ; it's a great improvement, as toting it by land in a jug, as 1 used to do, evaporated it too fast, and it became expensive. Just stop with me a month or two, or a year if you like, and you will appreciate my Place. 1 can give you plenty to eat, for beside hog and nommy, you can nave oar nam, and oar merging into the wished for consumma sausages, and a mattrass of bar skins to tion. The last scene in this tra"ic plav . I.-II - . II J ivl ii . .. -' .- steep on, ano wnu cat shin, puueu uu hull, stulled with corn-shucks for a pil- low. I hat bed would put you to sleep if you had the rheumatics in every joint m your body. I call that ar bed a qui- etim. Then look at mv land, the co- vernment arn't got another such a piec e to dispose of. Such timber, and such bottom lanJ, why vou can't preserve any tiling natural you plant in it, unless you pick it young, things thar will grow out of shape so quick. I once planted in those diggings a few potatoes and beets, they took a line start, and after that an ox team wouldn't have kept them from growing. About that time I went otrto old Kentuck on business, and did not hear from them things in three months, when I accidentally stumbled on a fellow who had stopped at my piace, wun an idea 01 otiying me out. How did you like things ? said I. Tret ty well, said lie: the cabin is conve- nicnt, and the timber land is good, but that bottom land ain't worth the first red cent. Why? said I. Cause, said he. Cause what ? said I. Cause it's full of cedar stumps and Indian mounds, said he, and it can't be cleared. Law said I, them ar cedar stumps is beets, and them ar Indian mounds ar tater hills, as I expected the crop was overgrown and useless; the sile is too rich, and planting in Arkansaw is dangerous. I had a good sized sow killed in that same bottom land; the old thief stole an ear of corn, and took it down where she slept at night to eat ; well, she left a g'UfS1" two on the ground, and lay down on them; before momine the coi n shot up, and the percussion killed her dead. I don't plant any more, natur intended Arkansaw for a hunting ground,-and I go according to natur, Southern Chronicle. TIic Opium SmohlRS Sliop. One of the objects at this place, tlftt l had tiie curiosity to visit was the opi . . . . . um-smoker in Ins heaven; and certain' ly it is a most fearful sight, although not so degrading to the eye as the drunkard "tim pints, lowered to mc evei oi me , ' , ' ,, . ... ... . "S' i Jt 1 i a .1 I i r . ' '"Y'i i T .' r,'Itldauc,,ce ,,'as something more awiui lo uie gaze man ine uesiiainy oi i v?-. i . , - , the latter. 1'ity. it possible, takes the i r .1 r V . i .i n 1 1 f " r n( lint lrr rrc no n-n 1 1 n t - 1 1 tl.r. faded cheek and hassrard look of the being abandoned to the power of the drug ; whilst disgust is uppermost at the sight of the human being levelled to the beast by intoxication. One of the streets in the centre of the town is whol iv uuvuicti icj wiu siiiu ui mis puisuu ; . . - -l i and here in the evening maybe seen, ,-,.., i, ii i. ly devoted to the sale ol tins poison n i'l i , 4 li lot. '' I 1 1 n ri V r . hi. . . J ' vr..,,. , ,.f I'll nncn c.w.l.- c.l cf.r ,,lcir dcpravcd appetite. Tl wherc J f!moke arQ ic rooms surroun- i ,i i .. . -.i. . i i.:..,.i ' i ' ...n.. tti 1.... .1 wwt ...... n.l 1 I.. i t , i , i r mm side room is devoted to gambling, l ie i f v f limo i n moil nt nnnnt ntt npli iti i-ti. ' ' , . i ,t , ,i i i r meter, and tlic aperture in the bow , for , n .i the admission ol the opium, is not larger . i nn ..-i i " red with some kind of conserve, and a very small portion is sytlicient to charge it, one or two w hill's being the utmost that can be inhaled from a single pipe ; and the smoke is taken into the lunirs as from the hookah in India. On the beginner one or two pipes will have an eflcct, but an old stager will continue lor hours. At the head of each couch is phced a small lamp, as fire must be hclj to lhe dm duriu" the progress of inhaling; and from the difficulty of fil- i;nr, ami nrm.m lv liMitinrrtl .l.oro 0 i - j "0 is generally a person wno waits upon II - . v .. them to perform the oluce. A fev days of this fearful luxury, when used to excess, will give a pallid and haggard looii to the lace ; and a few months will even chanzc the strong and healthy man into little better than an idiot skeleton. The pain they suf- ler when deprived of the dru?, after long habit, no language can explain; and it is only when under its influence that their faculties are alive. In the houses devoted to their ruin, these infa- tuatcd people may be seen at nine o'- clock, in all the different stages; some entering half distracted to feed their craving appetite they had been obliged to subdue during the day ; others laugh- ing and taking wildly under the etl'ects ol the first pipe; whilst the couches a- round arc filled with their different oc. cupants, who lie languid, with an idiot smile upon their countenances, too much under the influence of the drug to care for passing events, and fast is generally a room in the rear ol the building a species of dead house, where he stretched those who have passed into tho state of bliss tho smoker madly sccks an emblem of the long sleen to which he is hlimllv Imm mrr TLord Jocclyn's Six Months withthc I Chinese Expedition. v Rrnovat.'on or flic IcacU Tree. The editor of the New England Far mer savs that a man residing in Cam bridge, informs liim that charcoal pla ced around the roots of the deceased peach stocK was serviceable. He im mediately removed the soil from around the truntvof a sicidy trcs in his garden, supplied its place with charcoal, and was surprised at its sudden renovation, and subsequent rapidity of its growth, and the tenacity with which the fruit held on to the branches, and the unusu al richness of its flavor when matured. Heavy Hos. Warren county is as hoggish a por tion of the State as any other. No part of Ohio, aflbrds better soil, better far mers, better crops, or bettor stocK. Messrs. Price fc Enless of Springbo rough, Warren county cut up during the past season 11!9 hogs, good sized pigs too. One weighed 811 lbs. netl ; one 510 lbs.; 082 averaged H00 lbs.; 79 400 lbs. each. The 600 lbs. pig was half blood Berkshire. The Warren boys can go to the head ! Cleaveland Herald. Munnfactur of Sink In lh fnliad States. There are twelre Stairs in the Union which en courage the culture of Silk by special bounties. In the LrgUlaicire of New Yoilt a similar jmliey has been ailrocatcJ and has probably before now receiv ed the sanction of law. We find in a Northern paper the following state ments of facts relative to American Silk : The silk of America is found to contain fibre stronger and of a quality superior to that of almost any other country. Specimens have been exami ned by the Chamber of Commerce nt Lyons; and other Intelligent Frenchmen, both here and in lint country, have examined and attes!d the truth of this important fact. The cause of this superiority may bo traced eilber to soil, or what is more proha blc, to our fine and serene climito during summer. Not long since specimens of American raw silk, were shown to a veiy intelligent ribon-weaver from England, and he pronounced them altogether supe. rior to any European or India silk he Lad ever wo ven in his native country. This speaks loudly in favor of the quality of Ameriean silespccial'y such as is produced in the Northern latitude. The co coon from which this silk was reeled, were made on the cold mountains of Litchfield county, Conn Silk is also successfully raised at Penobscot, Maine, in 45 deg. north latitude. In further proof of t!io good qualities of American silk, Mr. Whilinarsh, nf Nnilhampton Muss., who in 18L!'J had pjwer looms sufficient lo turn ofl"4,00l) yards tf ribbon daily, be tides machinery for sewing silks and braid, hh "I have used the si;ks of France, Italy, Tuikey Chi ni and bengal, in the prognrs of manufacturing, and give the American the preference by twenty -five per cent." It is alo an ascertained uct, Hint Iroin a givjn quantity of cocnons, one-third more silk may be reeled in France or Italy; and the loss ot worms has not been as much in this, ai in tlios? countiies, The imposition of ilk goods into ibis country for the year ending Septemlicr 2!ih, I SU'J, amoun ted to $23,800,01)0. It is estimated that during the last ten yeirs tho United Stales have paid more than $ 150,000,000 for silk manufactures of foreign production. The attempts at the culture of silk in the t'nited States have been made chiefly in the Northern States. Massachusetts piid last year in bounties to the growers of silk nearly three thousand dollars Dut it will occur to every one that the climate of this latitude and farther South must be better adip- ted to the culture than that of the more northern portiona of the country. Tho imposition of a twenty per cent duty on French silks would be of great service in promotin; growth and manufacture of the article in the t'ni ted States. In the whole list of our imports there is no item which can with more propriety lie mnde the subject of such a duty. It would yield a hind omesuin to lhe revenue ; the tax indirectly ievi.d by it would be drawn chiefly from the wealthy and the farther bcnelicuil re-ult from tne import would be to e;ie uragfl the culture and manufacture of si'k at home. B ill. American. Su Mir We have just seen a specimen of Map Pin. ting iu a style which we believe is enlere ly new. It is a mip of the United States, printed on a handsome pongee silk, in the fotm of a pocket nandkercheif, and it may be Used at pleasure either for the ordinary pQfpoaea of that necssiry imple ment, or for lhe sole purpose of reference for the ae curate geographical information which it contains. or it may be made to serve both purpose at the same time. It ia printed and published by Mr. Joseph V. Tutlle. The engraving is by George W. Doyn ton, from a new, and we believe accurate drawing made fur the purpose, containing the usual details of a map of the site, with scale of the heights of mountains, length of rivers, Ac Boiton Dully Advtrltitr, A mote gloiioua victory cannot ba jn'lneJ, over another man than this, that when '.'ne iujuiy beg ni on his part, the kindues shouLj begin on our. Important Discovery, Last Fridsy Di. tiuchonnan gave a lecture ox planatoiy of a new discovery in the ncrvou system, by means of which he ia able in some instances to control both the minds and bodies of hi patients, The pi nib men and ladies who have been the sub jects of his experiments declare that they feel the current of their thoughts and feeling changing from ti'r.e to time, without having the pi vrer to prevent it. At one lime they think of the past, at another time of the future. Their idea are borne times clear and snmrtimos confused beyond the power of recollecting themselves. At one tune they are lulled into gentleness and good humor st another, they arc transported beyond all self control by f.-eiings of a desprr te and pugnacious character. We have witnessed but lew of the experiments its j as I ourselves, and consequently are rather skeptical to the reality of the feeing produced. At the pub-' lie Icc'uro three gentlemen weie experimented up- Tho fir-t attempt ws to produce drowsiness and sleep. In a sliort time droweincrs became ap parent. The eyelids of the gentleman fell and his head reclined. His hands bcciine cold, clammy and benumbed ; they were agitated by convulsive trem- lings, of which he srrmcd to be unconscious, and he was unable to keep them still. The effect pro duced b.-ing comideicd rather too powerful, Dr. 13. in a few moments revived him without going o fat as lo produce sleep. The principal experiment upon the second gen tleman was to cause the thought to wander and . . ..... a cxcito memory or reminiscences, in mi tne doc tor succeeded rcmaikably wall. At fiist the gen tleman remarked that hi thou gate were scattering and confused ; then that they were upon his past life; and, finally, that he could think of nothing but hi childish spoils and the days of hi infancy The experiment upon tho third gentleman was to excite the pa.seioiis and produce impatience, an ger and leseiitmeut. In this the doctor was also sue cessful, for in a few minutes bis feet and legs bt' gan to work in a violent manner, and he remarked that he woulJ like to stamp something. In a mo ment more he sprang to his feet, with a stern aud determined cxpiession of countenance, but shortly- recovered hia self-possession. Ark. Times, UlcliartUni.' Arttlerattd Steamboat, We have befote us a drawing and description of a new kind of steamboat, invented by Col. J. S. Hi- chaulaon. Its leading peculiarity is, that by means of a huge balloon, or gas-holder, shaped like a cu cumber, and extended lengthwise over the boat, (or rather boat, for there are two hulls connected by a deck and saloon above,) the latter is raised out of the water, except th keels and paddles of tho wa ler wheel, thus reducing the reactance of the wa ter to almost nothing, end yet using it for tho pur poses of propulsion and steering. The plan is in genius, but how it v-!ll succeed in practice, we shall know better when the experiment is mado. Col, Kicliaruson and his associate have announced their intention to builJ and put in operation one of these boats in the North Iliwr. The Balloon is to made of duck and divided into seciions, so that in case of I cing perforated by a vessel's boom, or other cause, on'y a sma'l part ol" the gu3 would escape. Snppotinj the plan to operate in practice as it pre s-nN it-elf iu theory, a rate of speed would be at tained that would distance all other travelling ex pedieii!. It is ea-v enough to see, that with s eam power applied to the water as in other steamboat and wi;h littlo resistance from the water, the boat must aj ahead" with asloniehing rapidity. .V. Juui Com. Fearful C'olllflon. The terrifying collision which occurred at sea a short time since bet n evil a Philadelphia ship and another unknown, is thus described in tho Noilh American : The packet ship Su?quehinna, as she lies near Walnut t'.rcct wharf, is a cuiios ly. She has liter, ally been rescued from the jawa of the great deep. Sue came in collision with another ship off the Hank of New foundland on the 8th hint, at 4 o' clock in the morning. The night was not dark, but the sea was running high, and they did not dis cover each olhet until the fearful collision' The Susquehanna's bowsprit is taken off clean, and the cut-v.it'r torn anJ wrenched from the thip iu a way which shows the encounter must bae been tremendous. She was running at the late of nine knots, and shipping sets constantly at the lime. Tho impression on hoard the ttus.iuehanna is that the blow was so hard and so near the centre of the other ship, lhat she must have been totally disabled, if n t stove in, causing her to sink immediately. Afier lhe collision, she dewed rouud and grated pat tie Susqjchanna, with such rapidity, tbtt no opportunity waa given to discover who the wa or tha 'extent of her injuries. Ilia irripressinn on botrj i that sha wss an East Indismao, or some ship of the Urges class; ami as tba cut-water of the Suiquebanna 1 lake low down, sha waa upon the lop, ofa sea at the moment of the col'.i slon. Consequently the oilier ship must have suf fered the more severely. No cries were heard, and in the confusion of the crash, and anxie:y for self preservation, no distinct knowledge of the charac ter of the olher ship could be learned. The opin ion on board is, that the man at the wheel of Ihe ill-fated ship must have been killed instantly. The whole of tho painful encounter is only another evidence of the unavoidable, hazards of navigation. Perhaps the ship instantly foundered, and in one 'MI awooj." all on board ei u.luivd inio eler- nity together. If eo, her futo will never satisfacto rily be known, and the history of thc engulfed with her must continue to ba involved in doubt aud obscurity forever. An Iitlcvesttiisr Itrl'n. VVn.iUM SifiKisn, Kq. St. John's Berkley, (9. C.) who now own the Revolutionary liatt!nro'i:iJ. of Ihe I'uittu; hi put the editors of the Charles ton Curiler in possession of n old-fahinn-d En glish gold watch, dui up very recently ne r tb.9 foundation of lire celebrated U rick House in w'uich the British, look shcl'.cr, and by meens of which, they r.era cnrbled to check tho till iVn vi.-t,-rioj American under GakE.vr., at the L?ttle of ilia Ivi. taw, and thus to prevent the censummatinu of tl. American victory. The wtlcn is a small one, ctv- cloiej in a gold cave, an'l t!ie golden portion of it is in complete preservation, but t'tc brass and steal of tho woiks tie in such a state of rust a lo lender it incapable of rejloraticn ti ik.j without a suU'.i tution of entire naw works. The ery-aal i: perfect nd so are the hands and face, tho hour t are deno- sd by numeral Ictom, and '.ho minutes by figutes- On tho enamelled fice eppa ar, in capitals, "Du chesne," and in smaller lo'ters "London." Iu tli interior, '-DI. Duchesne, LonJan," al:j indicatit tho maker' name, and the number is "5993. This islic doubtless belonged to o:r.o Dri'.L-h or American officer, who bore a part in that celebra ted pafttge cf arms, at orlce so f Jit of glory, and so auspicious in its results to the Ancriran cau II wes probably in the fob of one fell on that memornl-le occasion, and was burried with him. and it would be curious wero this publication to b he roe4n of ident'fin; the former owner. An exquisite Fell or the fall ofan Exquisite. Yesterday about noon, while a your.g knight of tho murlnche, apparently a strar.Ri-r in this city, was walking up Baltimore street for the purpose, no doubt, of exhibiting hi well braced form and h-ilf artii'ieiil peJestrinn members, he accidentally placed ono of hi hih heeled boots upon an orango peeling which had been carelessly thrown on the pavement This caused his fost ta give way, and down came our hero, sprawling like a thing of lift', at full length. 'Monsicr Tcns;r," (we. must give him this name in the absence of his rca! o;p.) al though not hurt, appeared axaxingly mortified. To make the matter s'.ill wor-e, he, in r'te-np'ing to regain his position, shook off one of his long oa.k glossy whiskers, which, of cou:se, was false. Tl'.i '. however, he did not discover, owing, perhaps, to the extreme ncivous excitement caused by the sad den transition from so elevated to so Lnmllo a po sition. Hi promenade had not been extended . ry far until the bristly ornament of his downy check was missing. This caused Monsieur, a he w.ie, well aware, to look rather odd, and he quickly er plied hu delicate fingers t3 tha rthe cheek, snilc'.i eJ. tTtlio icmaining whi.-ker end slipil it into liis pocket. Thus was Sir WliLUerdiulo deprived rf a part al least of his false plume. oivl rendered a living r.buke to tho-ie who tre i:i tho habit of wcai ing 'A.Ball. Ocean. Poktrt. It is a f ne tiling for chilJr-n ta learn to make ver-e ; but when they come to bo men, '.bey most speak like other men, or they will be Ie.ujheJ at. Il is ridicuW-i to epeak, crwiito, or preach in verse. As it is good to b arn to dance, a man may learn his leg, to go handsomely ; hct it ia ri dieulous for him to dance when ha h.Juld ga. It is ridiculous for a lord to print veras; ills well enough la make them to please himself, but t make them public is fochsh. If a man, in a pr.vcto chamber, twirls his bind itringv, or ilay with a rnsh to p'ejse himelf, it ii weii enough ; but i! ho should go iuto Fleet-street, and s't upon a s:a!l, an J twirl a band string, or pby with ush, then ail the boy in the street would lairgh at him. Verse proves nothing but the quantity of syllables; they arc not meant for logic. TuL.e taik. The custom amon; the Coj'ar'is is ta allow tho ladies to choose their own hnYoand. When a young girl takes a fany to a young fellow, ahc gow to his parent's house, signifies Ur u'-niio:u, ocj there sticks, un.il th other parties coma li terms. By this happy anaugement lh-.:o are no spicste.- left on hand ill that countrr. Duess, hut CssniiTl. Would the recolec tion of the following remark by Steele, do some of us any harm now a-Jays! When a person ff-' carter, he bus u.-!s-..l himself clean ta no purpo-e. The c'oi'uing nf ccr minJa is certainly to be regarded before that oi our bbdie. To betray in man' talk a corrupt iuinuis nation is a much greater JiTeuce agtinl the con versation of gentlemen than any negligence of Jrtse imaginable. A Ceicaf OasToa. An Abolition lecture by the name of Boyle while in the exercise of hi location at Sharon, Maae, a lew days aince, had about nine oi.-ci of c;g thrown al bim by set of rowdie. Many of them did good execution, much to tho amusement of the engineer, but Boylu stood his ground, and aftv tLeii anrounition waa exhausted, relurneJ the Cre by "haid argmellU for about an hour. Mixii"t Comas. Msrried, in New Voik, hy the He. Mr. Whttr, Henry Black, Ksq. of Ora'igt county, to tlia Crny, of Grtcn caunty, audi daughter of Henry Brown, of Bltuhill, Maine. ' Look out fat young rainbows. ntttlntrk jinicricsn.