V f L". M- m man . Ttnais or tiik AMunci.ix." H. H. MAMS Kit, 1 ruaiisnitn ikn JOSEPH ElriEI.Y. S Pnuhiitoh. J. It. ,n1SSEIt, Editor. Ojjict in Ctnive fVfy. in the rear of II. B. Mas- utr's Slort. Til 13" AMKKIOAV i publialicd every falur day nt TWO liOI.I.AKS per annum to be pjiJ half yearly in advance. No paper disiuiitin. uol till all araraR-s arc paid. No subscriptions received for a less periitj linn an month!. All coinmiinicattona or li'ttem on business relating to tin- i.H'hc, to insure attention, must be rOST PAID. From the Tribune. MAX. Behold Mm settled on the earth, Or vacant o'er its ho-nm ravine i The strnnerat thine, that e'er had birth 811 mnclly fn-rce, so cently loving ! Now like a apr'na-hird in ilie woods. In hi ancestrnl groves he nt'e ; Now p'mighs the wild a il entry finuds. Or with the msr:nir lempett rcl. . lie reams, in nes, from door t i do v, With out-lir'rhfd hand iniiilmiiig J i t T ; Or s'un1 upon hi pn'are fl-mr, The lord of h m'et ami of city. lie vita hmiile ibe aiiminjj s'rr-nms. Hi spirit in the l.nnd Meal ; Or rtifl e boldly from his drchms, 'Jo make his Kdwi vi.-ions real ! In croltoea dim his life move on A riyei-'ifc till hif bend is hoary ; lie swim's where fi- Ida are .wt and won, His hand with Ijr.-tl.or-Iif. od i;ory I He diga the soil he sows the seed, He count the st.ua through heaven catcer- ir'B 5 He mount the wind arid mocks their speed, Omnipotence, itself, scarce fearing ! He aits, in smile, he. ides hi hearth, A fcodnry In law ar.d ordi r; Or pr.mls, "at midnight, o'er the earth, A wild and desperate marauder ! Oh Man ! what h.md ran half portray "I'hy myteriia ho1 ever u if ed ! Thy mill is hid in shrines uf il-y, In veils hy wisdom nrvcr lifted. One Heine, onlv, eVr hid tr-d The pnth of human life Inside thee. To whom llmii wert unveiled. Th oik (Jod ! He, only, lie. did lnt deride thee ! He n thrnnch all thy dark d'e-Ku'ee, A Sort whose dratiny wa heaven ; The veil, imperious lo our eyes, He raised and lo ! thou wert forgiven ! 8. ( Ehoastox. UNBUILT AM AND SIIAMOKIN JOURNAL. EMICAN Absolute acquiescence in the decision of the majority, the vital principle of Ilepublica, from which there i no spp al hut to fore, the viul p in td and linmediae ran-nt of ih-potiaiii. .ltrrsMOi. My Masscr & lHlsr ly. Sunbury, Northumberland Co. Pa, Jsnfmday, April an, isf3. Vol. 3--No. 80--liulo No, 13-1. From Allinon's History of Europe. SAPor,nox. When despatches overtook tho emperor, as they often did. on the road, Duroc, or Caulain cotirt, who rode at the side of the carriage, received and opened the h i?, a d presented tho letters to the emperor without stopping. Di rectly a number or envelopes were seen filling1 from the windows of the imperial carriage ; end it wus evident from the rate at which they who were there on service slept habitually on Htraw wrapt np in their cloak, ready nt a mo ment's warning, ritlir r to mount on horseback and rido twenty or thirty miles without halting, or to take their turn tlir moment the flmporor'e voice was licttrd, in the not lesa fntigtiing duty of nnawrrinir lit depatcheii, oi writing to his dictation. So crowded was his anti-chamber in general with attendant?, that it was not inaptly compared, by those inhabiting it, to the inside of the wooden liorsio of Troy. The faithful Itur-'tan, whom lie had brought from I -gyp', -sunlly a'ept near the dxir ; ho dressed and un dressed the Emperor; end when he rode out, was constantly on hand to bring the telescope, or provide the cloaks and umbrella which might be required f r protection from the wea ther. The true scene ofXapoleon's glory, and tho ; most charaetcrii-tic of tho ruling passions of his ' mind, was hi rahinct This npartment was J never wanting even in t!io worst nccoinmoda lions; the ingenuity of his attendants supplied ( every defect; and if no room could be got, his ( tent was always on hand, which was arranged , for the purpose in the middle of the Old Guard, i Although this important tipartmcnt was over loaded w ith mHps, military slates, and despatch ed the mor-t remarkable nnd uniform regularity was observed in its atrangement ; and it wns so managed that, though the Emperor, no often moved his head quarters, every thing was in the same placeone day as another. In tho mid dle stood a large table, on which was extended the best map of the theatre of war ; and on it was stuck pins, with heads of different colors, to represent his own and his columns. It w ns the duty of the director of the topographic bu reau, to have the maps with the pins laid down the moment that head quarters arrived nt any place ; and almost always the first thing which Napoleon did, was to call for tho map when he arrived ; for he held to it mure 6trongly than any other want of his existence. During the whole night the map was surrounded by twen ty or thirty wax candles constantly burning, and a fine compass stood in the middle of them. So frequently did the emperor call for the map Wtietl Oil hoi ?lbnck, that Cawluiutuuit had a portable one, which kept constantly lied on his bu'ton across his breast ; and he often was re quired to unfold it ten or twenty times in the course of a forenoon. At the corner of the cabinet w.re four leaser tables, at which the secretaries of Napoleon were to.-r-ed over, the letters were uoouicu ( with the mm. lit v ol In-htnina. 1 lie useless I declutches were cut to p;eces and thrown out the same way ; often in nicli quant it ies, as to strew the track of the wheels with little frag ments which, trodden under foot by the horses, or crushed under the wheels of the succeeding carriages, made a white line across the road. Napoleon generally cut these despatches to pie ces with his own hands, nr. if not so employed, worked incessnit'y with the window-sash or carriage door ; he could not remain a moment nt rest. If there were nodes-patches or morn ing reports to read, he had recourse with the Pnria ionrn ils. or the last publications of tho day, with which the drawers of the carriauo were nUvnvs stored ; but they generally shared the fate of tho unimportant despatches, being thrown out of the windows nltera Tew pages had bepti cut tip. In such numbers were these rii-rarled literary novelties thus tossed over board, that the officers of the suit generally contrived to co'lect heo!iidrBhle stones ofdi verting trifles, by picking them up on the tra cea of his carriage. The emperor was insati able tor some'hing new, and opened with avidi ty every fresh publication; but his taste was for solid nnd well-informed writings, not amu sing trifles ; and ho had an incredible tnct in discovering from a few page?, whether there was anv t ilil ' Worth rt'urlinir in the booK. so tl uppcare ' puleon himself nnd thechiet of the topographic depntment, wero to be seen there likewise. The Emperor usually dictated walking about in his green surtout nnd great boots, with his hat upon his bead precisely a he was interred in the grave at St. Helena. As his ideas flow ed with extraordinary rapidity, and he spoke as ARUL'SIKNTM ON TIIK TRIAL OP MICR l 1011. We jive our reader thia week, the following ketch of the speeches of Gov. Vroom anj Oen, Wall, in defence of young Mercer. Tho eminent talents of the speikera, aa well a the exciting na ture of the rase, cannot fail to make them itit'-rest-ing: Tho Hon. Peter D. Vroom described the is sue as a fearful one one of life or death. He admitted that life was taken, that (leberton was killed, and then after a few appropriate remarks, proceeded to analyze the evidence, whichjie did in a masterly manner. Ho then laid down tho law with regard to murder, cited several appropriate cases, and described the prisoner at the bar ns a youth who had not yet attained his majority. lie alluded to his fa ther, who, he said, came to this country n stranger, many years ago, and periled his life in its delenre. Iy pntient industry he has gnthoicd around him n competency, if not a fortune, which henpplied to the education ofn family with which dd had bles.-ed him. You have also seen tho unhappy partner of that fa ther's bosom here as n witness. Their charac ter you may judge, when you remember tint he is an Elder in the Fourth Presbyterian Church ef Philadelphia, and shea communion member. The sister of the prisoner, gentle men, Sarah Gardner Mercer, ns von must nil havo seen, is a mere artless chi'd. Yon re collect the manner in which she met the de ceased, Ileberton. It was an unfortunate meeting, and would to God it never had taken place. She wns walking with a playmate, an other child, whom yon have seen here, a fel low school girl. She observed a gentleman whom she mistook for a Mr. IJostido, whom she had seen at her brother's. Sho remarked, as an artlefegirl might, "why, Mnry, there is Mr. Bastido !" Her companion very natural ly turned to look ; both turned, and Ileberton caught her glance. lie was soon joined by a friend, and both followed tho little girls. Mr. Vroom described the w hole of this first interview of Sarah Mercer w ith Ileberton in a masterly manner, showing that the whole con deet oftho rrirls wns but childish, if; : discreet. He then described the fatal meeting oftho parties and the ruin of the unfortunate girl, and cxhib'ted tho simplicity of her con duct in strong and palpable contrast with the duplicity, cunning and heartles6ness ofherde stroycr. After she hnd been thus betrayed gentlemen, said Mr. Vroom, Ileberton promis i ed her marriage. Is it at all strange, that she believed him! Do wo not all know that n fe male clings to that hope under such circuin stances, like drowning men cling to straws? She had no other hope than a marriage with her betrayer, and it is not strange that she m him Aii-iin nnd ai'ain. When sho wssather ster's, nnd n servant came lo tell her that hi thought, it was no easy matter tor his seeretn- ,-.,.. i.-.i hP.r, f i.r connexion with Heber riesto keep pace with his elocution. To faci litate the expression, a certain number of hiero glyphic symbols were established by h:m to signify certain things ; and they wero not a little curious, as aflording an index of the liffht in which these things were regarded by him. Thus, the tail of the dragon signifies the French army ; a whip, the corps of Davoust ; a thorn, the empire ; a spong, the commercial town. It was the duty of the secretaries afterwards to decipher this chaos, and extend it in proper sentences, which was often a work of no small difficulty, but the Emperor had a singnhir faci lity in making it out. nt the symbo'n had bei-n established by himself. (Men there were two despatches to which answers were to b" dicta ted at the same time one from Spain, another from a distant quarter of Germany; but the complication and variety of the objects to be considered, made no confusion, on such occa sions, in steadiness of his mental gaze. The moment that a despatch wus read, nnd its ben- , , , , . il-.. r rer questioned, an answer to it was commen- hiit. n h s hands, the ephemeral literature or I 1 ' ' 1 . . ! ccd : and not uiifreoneiitlv. while the secretary the dav disappeared a i most as last at it was in- ; . ..t.:., t. f, v,, t rod u red. ton, and wished to see her, w h it did she do She fled to the house of Mrs. Pidcr, and seemed to believe that her only safety lay in meeting Heberti -n. When the unfortunate pirl was bronchi borne to her family, they naturally rejoiced that the lost one had been restored to them, but the mother, with that instinctive doubt so peculinr ton mother, feared that all waa not right with her daughter. She took that daughter to bed but not to sleep ! During that unhappy nievf the ruined girl poured the dreadful tale of her w ron;:s into her mother's ear ! What was th consequence ? In the morning, Singleton went up stBirs nnd met his mother, w ho accosted him in these words, '-Oh, my dear son, Ileberton has ruined vnur si.-ter !" What was the eflect of that revelation upon the imfortunnte prison erl lie rushed wildly into hii sister' cham her; his mother followed, and saw him elas hi sister in his arms. Thnt sister exclaimed Oh! Sinuhtoii. do not kill me!" "No my dear si-ter." he rerdied. "I will not, for I lov von h.-tter than I do my life." It seeire.l ns The anti-chamber of Napoleon duringa cam paignwhether in his tent, in the field, or in the apartment of farm houses, or even cottages, which were dignified for the time with the ap pcllation of the "palace" presented the most extraordinary spectacle. No one could form an idea of the fatigue there undercono by the whole attendants, from the grand Esqnirt Cuu Uincourt to the lowest valets. Duroc and he, ware themselves indefatigable, and, by unva ried exertion and eitraordinary activity, had introduced the utmost degtee of regularity into the imperial household ; but it wa no easy matter for tho strength of any other in atten dance to stand the rigorous services which were eaacted. Person of illuatriou birth or the highest ranksuch a Count Narbonne or Cat) Uincourt were obliged to wait here after night, sleeping on atraw or stretched out on chairs, ready at any moment to be called in by the em peror. Frequently be aroused his attendants eight or ten times in the night when despatches rc- a j riitr ir.sUnt alttnt on ere rctelv.f. A'.! . I .1 .'t l' I.- .1.1.1 1 , .1 yiflhil til one corner was ma King out oriurs oi ine most me i: j urn in g s uo.i niu m-u i- i" importdnt kind for tho war in Spain, the one in J un'orluoate young man ; he rushed down 'he tho other corner was drawing a diplomatic stairs w ith a p'.-t.jJ in each hand; he uttered. note; a third otic wis busy with the orders of twenty brigades: and the fourth with A IH' for the king of Rome. Nothing could exceed tho distinctness with which tho threads of all these varied subject wero preserved in his mind. CiruNO a Cold. Bristol, will your Hal- sam of Iloarhound cure a cold V 'Certainly, sir, you will oblige me then by giving the weather a dose." Get out you impertinent pup- py A Vali'abie Boy. "What can you do, my boy ! "Oh, I con do mowin, considerable, I rides the turkeys to water, milks the geese, card down the old rooster, puts up the pigs tails in papers to make 'em curl, hamstrings the grasshoppers, makes fires for flies to court by, and I keeps tally for dad and mammy whon they scold at a mark !" Whiskered dandies are like eats cut eff their tmel'crsar J they are u-rcler. hoi rid imprecations upon his father und hi$ mother he became a ravin? madman ! Mr, V. cited several strong cases ns iu point, and particularly the case of Ann Bruderick, who bad been seduced, was abandoned when the mo ther of a family, nnd then bec itne the murder ess of her botiuyer. The evidence us f.irllier analyied, the plea of insanity was enforced, and tho learned counsel concluded w ith an eloquent and most feeling appeal to the Jury. THURSDAY, April fl, 19-13. Cm. Wall for the defence, said substantially the defendant here charged with an atrocious crime, is a stranger among you. But a long a the history of our revolution remains, the name of Mercer will bo associated with all that i brave and patriotic. This defendant etand charged with the crime of murder. Il unnecessary for me to go into the detail of the evidence, which ha been produced to prove the hilling. I shall wjn'cnt rmfe'f with the renaik of n col league, that to warrant a conviction of the kill ing oflliherfon by the, hand of Mercer, must have been proved to the sutisfiiction of your minds beyond a reasonable doubt. You will take tho facts on this point as they arc, and de cide according to your 'Consciences. If you bring home the killing to this defend ant, another important question arises. Wns the killing murder! I shall place this now efore you aa murder in the first degree, ifany crime at all. You will therefore have no diffi culty in deciding tho different grades. The law of thisrnsc has been fully explained in tho very eloquent opening of my colleague from Philadelphia, w hich w ill stand as a monu ment of his professional ability so long as the history of this case shnll continue. And I must also be permitted to express my admira tion of the manner in which the prosecuting Attorney has discharged his duty on this occa sion. Did the defendant, when he killed Ileber ton, know that he was committing an offence ngiiin.-t the laws offjinl nnd nature? I shall how from the evidence that ho had not that knowledge. In the Hrst place, wat it an offence 1 This is a lteccFSBry preliminary question, for if the provocation justified the net, then he has been guilty of no crime whatever. Could ynulr.ve visited 'he fireside, and heard the tale of that grav-lmired Hither but one short month before this unfortuua! occurrence, you would have heard that he abandoned the home ofhis fathers, tho hind where the heel of des potism treads down the rights of man, but where generosity nnd the social affections are the birthright of all ; he would have told you that he cimetolhia country that when the American flag wns unfurled during the last war with Great Britain, he fought with Deca tur, nnd your own Lawrence, and Sotners, un der that flag. Ho would hove told yon how he went on by honest industry, for he was but a common sailor tinder Decatur, from poverty to competence. You would hnvc seen at this fireside this voung man; there you would have seen this ronnir oirl. innocent and iin-r inc. She knew not then the doctrine of ill, nor knew that others did. If the heart of this old man then swelled with gratitude to Heaven, he had reason for the feeling. He could say. "my sons are all brave, and my daughters all virtuous." The niter i n which the sacred teel ings burn brightest is the family hearth. The evii'ence shows you how, in" one short month, witliTHttnny one act on the pait of that circle, the evidence slu usyou what a (bang has been effected. The evening of the Gthor Fibmarvthe father received a caut;on to N on hisfjinrd noainM the l.tiertine, o'V-o-? Attorney General has become the apo'oir'st nnd champion. He merely sent a message for her to return home. Parental solitude wns awak ened. The servant did not tell her that her father "had found out the connexion between her nnd Hberton on thnt subject," but simply that she had been seen walking with Ileberton and 1 hrpe the Reporters will mark this ob vious distinction. Her eyes were opened, and she saw the infatuation of her conduct For you will recollect that she said, "Sho loved him;" that he hud promised to mnko her Ins wifn. Then it waa that she fled to those dens of prostitution which her feet had never trod, which her heart had never visited. Then it was that at that fireside was heard the sound of lamentation and woe. Then it was that sick mother left her house at night, nnd went to the mother of Ileberton, for she felt that if Ileber ton could not give back her daughter, a mo ther' heart could feel a mother's woe. She was the younger sister all a brother's nffectiotis were garnered up in that young sis ter. Ho was her natural protector. He appeals lothe hw. for sho has been seen n company with Heberton. Ileberton is br -uhl befor.-. the ni-igistnite, and after giving a flit denial to He clrire, he deliberately (dces his hands on thu railing, nnd with ft-jHIish in-iit;iiity remarks, 'Ayounggirlesme l l.im.r k ul:il tli.'lit 111 V brother W" lit to tf.e door nnd she looked eiioiili lo.e yon lo u; your sister." Why, il that young ti'tm had been as vm dieitie ns he bus Urn n-pr sennd, whutwould he li .vc doiu what would yi u have done 1 He cii.l not s-iy "J weni to the door" b it "my bmlhir went to tho iW," und et he ndd, with fiendish malignity, "She looked enough like you to be your sister." Trunk of 'he fi-elmg of the mother' heart. when she exclaim-, "My ". "'J ". Heber ton has ruined your sister ! Think of the ft el ini'S of that brother w hen h ritshra into s (he room of that innocent heart, w hen sho ex claims, "Ob, my dear brother, do not kill me !' Think of the milk of human kindness which filled the heart of that brother aa he clasp her to his bosom, snd replied, "No, my dearsi'ter, I love you ns I do my life but tell me all !" It was when the story of her wrongs had been peered into his car, tbut reann Wt hei throne. Iiook at the story of this young girl is de. tailed here in all simplicity. She wns abroad with her young companion, to carry consolation to tho heart of a sick friend. They were its buds in the infancy of th spring before) the Moss-ims aro uiifoldc-d .- She is necovtod by Heberton, whom sho has mistaken for Mr. Bastido, un honorable man. She no doubt said to her hart, ho mores and speiksand acts like a man of honor. To her yoting imagination, a man of honor wns not an a man of earth. As the acquaintance progresses, and he tel's her that he moves in the first society ; that he had travelled in Europe, and had been in pre sence of crowned heads ; her fancy is excited and her young heart, already his, clings to him with increased tenacity. The course of Heberton to necompli-)h the seduction was described, and the scenes at the houfe in Elizabeth street were dwelt upon with impressive nnd heart stirring eloquence. A mora brutal deed, ho said, was never commit ted in any community. She yielded her heart to blandishments which she could not resist, but alio fell a Tic- tim only to art, to deceit, nnd to brutal force. I know not, gentlemen, how I should act under such circumstances. In infinite mercy, spare me spire me! The man who could do this could not have any more humane feeling than a brute or a beast. I would not unnecessarily dis urb the ashes of th" dead but when the se curity of the public morals is at stake,! would walk over the crave of nil the roues in Phila delphia or elsewhere. Tho loss of chastity in the female is more de- p'ornble than death. Th" sacred honk nfT rds n i miracle by which the lost rh i'-t'ty of woman baa beeii restore The rase of Virg'-rs. hnd A?p:tts C'fl" litts riticr.sj OP ADVERTISING. I squire. I Imrrlion, f 60 1 do S da . . . . 0 16 I do 3 d t . . . . I IK1 Hvety subaeqnenl Invrll, n, 0 5 Yearly Advertisement l one column, JS5 ) half Column, f IB, three sqnans, It two etjnsTn", f9 ; one. f quite, fS. Half-yearly: one column. fS t half column, f IS I three tqtiarra, f3 ; two iquarea, $ S ens Situate, J:! 50. Advertisement left without direction a in lbs Innqth of lime they are to be published, UI I continued until ordered out, and charged rcord ingly, fj-HUleen lines make a square. 1 was referred to. Vrjvnins prefer".'! the shedding of lis daughter's h'nrd, to geirij- her within the grasp of Ch'i l'U-' ! phtrteej th" knile into her bosom the multitude ri e in his defence and Apnutu Claudius ceased to exist. The ease of T.uret;a and Tarqirn, was also dwelt upon. She had lost what rendered her vaitiatue in me eyes ot nor nustnnd, and she plunfjed the dagger into her own bosom. What do the people here do they rally around the husband of Lucretia, and Tarqviin is hurled from power. So l t us come down to the days of Edward IV, the days of chivalry the history of Richard Neville, the Inst of the Rarons The insult off-red n'y Clward to the daughter of Ne vlle, raised th na'ion eg inn him, and cost htm for a t:r:;e tit" tlirone of England. It h been s.tii! that the day s!' chivalry are n i-t. 1 1 1: not pf r?e bv a woman, with no her guar.!ian than her chastity, may travel frein onn en ! nt the country to the other, un protected every cabman and stage driver every gentleman is her knight-errant and pro- tecto-. This occurrence may be one of the dispen sations ot" Providence, to purify the moral at mosphere. Lady Rulwer has said that man has made laws for the punishment of his own wrongs, but he has made no laws for the protection of wo man. The rights of woman have been commit ted to the protection of the strong arm of the Father and the Brother. In the lnws of chi valrv. the man who assumed the order of knighthood, was bound to protect the females ofhis own household, and it is a feeling which belong? also to the present age. If you assault a woman with intent to vio late, she may stab you to the heart but if you pull a man' nose, or spit in hi face, he can only have recourse to the laws. It is thi prin ciple, that chastity is the very life of woman which makes her the protector of her own honor. I proceed to show that this doctrine is not unfamiliar in court of Ju.-tice. The case ill Belgium cited by my learned colleague, where the husband shot the paramour ol h. wife, is cne where the htitb.md had long diseowrrd that he had been dishonored, and yet, when he -ets the seducer in bis power, he deliberately -hoots him totl.e bent. The uct was commit ted deliberately, premedit'ttely, and yet what diJthe Jury ray in that case: The foreman declared, in a som rous voice, when a-keJ it the prisoner was guilty. "Upon my honor and my conscience, 1 say, on the fir.-t count, .No ! on the second ri err, -o ! en the third count .No It was th irreprrs- .?e ' human nature Tl... e. r r:i ? -y'.Ttfi : r.r.-ther. She del b"..it l v w.-::t into the p.rln o'ber s-J; and shot him t.t th h-'-'.t. It will be hire nrt..n,!:l Pi-.t. there wa i:i-anirv, but it wn inutility pro'ueed by an overwhelming senre t wrnni?. But wo will fo fnm e-isra Vy Reporters. We all know how liaU- they are in be uvsuk en how they can be influenced by money or by feeling. I will go to ease by an inspir.o Renorter II. Samuel the case of Amnon and Tamar. the aister of Absak.m. Yeu will per. erv how stroog is the tcsemUaace between I'l-liLJ lli JJ Jl!JJl.'!?;l'ilJJL.lJ.J-lLJ that case and this. For Tamar lad a brodier Absalom, ani Amnon fell beneath that bro ther's hand. And what was the conduct of David whon Absalom bowed his head belore the king! Ha did not kill Absalom, hut he raised him up and kissed him. I do not say Singleton Mercer Was absolute ly insane, hut I do say that he was in that state of mind, that ho did not know that he wns committing a crime against the laws of God and nature. I care not for the opinions of doctors, when they ate contrary to the dictates of common sense. Doctors learn to look calm ly on the woes of others. Their dogmas ar (he cheats which they put in other men's minds nnd on their owni The Iord has said "vengeance is mine" nnd what the Iird says he performs. The very victims become tho instruments of His Ten geance ! Here was the ruin of the sister and tho disgrace of the whole family pressing on his brain, and yet these doctors come hero and talk to us about reason and insanity, as if human na ture cannot feel. They tell you that to consti tute insanity, there must be delirium 1 btil will it be believed hero that an imaginary evil will sooner drive a man mad than a real wrong. When these cunning doctors come here and tell roti that no one can judge on this subject but themselves, it shews you the extent of their presumption, and the amount o? their ignorance. Take not the opinion of doctors who come hero to swear away men's lives. Every thing in tho conduct of this defendant is stamped with the impress of insanity. We have been called on for the opinions of physicians. Have we not given you the o oinions of one who stood by him in hin difficul ties, nnd who tolls you thnt when ho first v;sited him in prison, tho symptoms wero pre c'sely tho of a person recovering from tempo, rn-y !:i"cy. Tc'l ri" rot that the law requires blood for oo i (;: -re not trim me man who nas urtven this poor boy mad. is not dealt with by an a vchging Providence, when he falls by tho hands ofhis victim. i . - ,' than that he should not have done thia deed. I speak as a man, and not as a lawyer. But when we feci that he ha done right, why, hand him over to that clemency from other. which you all feel, and which may come or may not. The attempt of Lawrence to shoot General Jackson wns refered to, as a case of delusion, end the symntoms there compared with those in thiscise. See the cns of Ann BroJcrick.too, as in this young Mercer, the delusion was in ferred from the act committed. If this young mnn, in the opinion of the jury has been driven to temporary insanity, leave him in the hands ofhis God. If your minds are balanced on this question of insanity, I need not tell you that your doubts in such a case should be allowed to preponderate in fevor of the de fendant. I trust you will bo enabled to arrive nt such a conclusion, that this young man shall again be restored to that society from which he has been torn, snd of which he may yet hee -me an ornament. And when you shall re lease him to the arms ofhis gray-hnired father, the thanksgiving of that fimily circle will as- end to Heaven, that tranquility, if mt happi ness, has been restored, of w liich you have been made the instruments. Some yenrs ago a witness was examined be fore a judge in a case of slander, who required him to repeat the precise words spoken : tho witness hesitated until he received the atten tion of the whole court on him ; then fixing his eyes earnestly upon the judge, began "May it'please your hon.ir, you lie, and steal, and get your living by cheating!" The face of the judgo reddened, and he immediately exclai med, "turn to the jury, sir, iryou please. 'Queer play-billsin the Crcsent city.' Moss. Pau., the modern Hippopotamus, will (by re-qm.-t) balance the Commercial Bunk and its accounts on his chin, and lift a granite pillar by the force of his eye-winkers. This tnutt be secu to be believed. A melting sermon being preached in a coun country church, all tho congregation fell to weeping except one man, who begged tobe excused, n he btlonged to another church 1 A Yankee haajntcnted a plaster so strong that i drawa prizei iu lotteries; likewise tho most beautiful landscape views. I would ndvife you to put your hend 10 i dye-tuh, it' rather red.' said a joker to a sandy beaded girl. In return, rir,l would advise ve;) to put your head into en oven, it's rather fc.ft' was the reply. W( ere are vc.t going V asked Jack of an ncq'ia'nitance 'l o tee a friend.' Well I'll go Willi you, fori nrversaw one yet. The MidniehtCry.'a the father said, when he vol up to warm Siiino pap for the stjualliiig yoong'uo.