TEIUI9 OF THE " AMEltlCAlV." K. D. MA8SER, 3 PmuHiM ass JOSEPH EJSELY. $ pRoraiSToas. H. B. Tf f SSKH Editor, OJicein Centre Mr, in the rtar of H. D. Mas- ter $ Sture. THE AMERICAN" it published every Satur. day it TWO DOLLARS per annum to be paid half yearly in advance. No paper discontin ued till a tii arrearages are paid. Mo subscriptions received for a leaa period than it mouths. All communications or letters on business relating to the office, to insure attention, must be POST PAID. SUNBOTY AMERICAN. rnicxs of adveiitisevc. t squsre 1 insertion, . . . 10 60 1 do i do . . . 0 T5 I do 3 d. . . 1 00 Evry suWquent insertii n, . .0 3 Yearly Advertisementet one column, f6 half column, $18, three squares, $!!( two squares, f 9 ( one square, f 5. Half-yearly t one column, ft 8 t half column, f 12 t three squarea, $8 two aquarea, $5; one square, $3 fiO. Advertisements left without directions as to the length of time they are to be published, will be continued until ordered out, and charged accord AND SHAMOKIN JOURNAL. Absolute acquiescence in the decisions of the majority, the vital principle of Republics, from which there is no appeal but to force, the vital principle and Irnmediaie parent of despotism. Jirttaso. My Manser & Elsely. Sunbury, Northumberland Co. Pa. Saturday, August 5, IS 13. Vol. 3 IVo. 45WUolc Xo, 119. ingly. CJ"8hteen lines make a square. The Confession. There's somewhat on my breast, father, There's somewhat on my breast, The lWe.lonir. day I sigh, father, At night I cannot rent; I cannot take mi rest, father, Tho' I would fain do sn, A weary weight oppresseth me A weary weight of wo ! 'Tis not the lark of roM, father, Nor Ixck of wordly pear; My lands are htonil and fair to see, My friends are kind and dear ; My kin are ri al and true, father, They mourn to are my Brief; But oh ! 'tis not a kinsman's hand Can give my heart lelief ! 'Tis not that Jenet's f.dse, father, 'Tie not that she's unkind; Though busy flatterers swarm anund, I know her constant mind. Tis not her coldness, father. That chills my laboring breast Ii'h that confounded cucumber I've ate and can't digest. Blackwood' s Magazine. BiAUTirrt.LT Patiiktic A country editor thus gives voice to his sorrows, in "breathing num bers" Oh. ever thus from childhood's hour, Ve'e seen our fondest hoes decay ; Ve never mixed a calf or cow, or Hen that laid an egg t day, But it was "marked" and took away ! Ve never f-J a fucking pig. To glad us villi its runny eye, But ven 't vos grown up f t and big, And fit to roast, or Imil or fiy Ve could'nt find it in the sty. The Four Age of Maids. A Germon writer, M. (I. Saphir, 6ays, maids hove four ages, viz : the golden Irom 10 to 21, the silver ace from 21 to 28, the plated from 2d to 35, and the iron age from 35 to the end, In the golden age everything is golden gold en lock, golden dreams, golden hopes, golden thoughts, &.c. The voice sounds like virgin gold, the heart is pure gold. The fact is they have five bars of splendid gold, No. 16, 17, IS, 19, and 20 ; but alas ! but few of them carry them to the mint of reason to have them coi ned. . When a girl is once three times 6even years, the glittering gold is gone. Her early yeulh, the dcjmnrr a la fourchctte of nature, is past ; gir!tt of that age are no more kept like gold me dals in morocco 1kxcf, Lut commence like sil ver, to circulate among tho people. The se ven years Irom 21 to 2S, are employed in an in cessant war upon the brutes, who but too fre quently imitnte the example of Frederick the (ireut, and await the assault behind entrench ments. Girls are morit interesting at thatage. Instead of imitating the larks, in soaring so high that but fev may hear them, they take their flight nearer the earth, like swallows in rainy weather. In that age they are the most amiable, and have the best opinions ot men ; ot course they are on that account most easily ca ged. The plated age is from 28 to 35. Gold and silver are gone, and they resort to the various processes of gilding, silvering and plating. They are less piquant and more piqued. They look upon men with a considerable mixture of contempt and hatred. They become again re' served and prude. If they have affections, they are at best plated ; they may endure, if of good workmanship; but they have not the value of either gold or silver. The iron age is the universal death of sen timent The thirty-fifth year is the equator of human life, which divides it into the Southern and Northern hemisphere. On the Northern there is no Paradise for girls. They now write their farewell letters to all hopes and wishes. They conform to iron necessity, and resign themselves to the iron tooth of time, awaiting the day when gold, silver and iron, will have no sound, and nought but the soul ever young and fresh shall rise from its iron casement History or the Influenza- In 1560 it pre vailed in Europe, and is spoken of as a pestilen tial and epidemic cough. In 1713 (just a cen tury since) it prevailed the world over, and re ceived ita present cognomen. In many dis tricts in Europe scarcely a family escaped. It appeared in April and went oft in June. It svas never fatal, except to aged persons, or those affected with pulmonary disease. The French called it La Grippe hoarseness. It anoe.rod anain in Europe and America, as we learn from a writer in the Try Whig, 1702. Also 1772, when dogs and horses were also ul 3icled. In 1762 it was equally univerbal, and followed aevere atmospheric changes. It met its victims on land and sea. In St. Petersburg, 40,000 were affected by it in one day. In 1630 it appeared again, and was followed by the r'uo. lera, Iu 1833 it succeeded that fearful die aa, Iu progress is like that progress of most ipidtraiea, from east to wast, and is preceded ty great atmospheric changes. TUB RUINS OF POMPKlt. C3 A correspondent of the N. N. Tribune, who is travelling in Italy, thus describes his visit to the ruins of the city of Pompeii : We at length reached the gate of the ancient city, where we left our carriage, and commen ced the strangest city promenade I ever made. We first entered the house of Diomed, one of the aristocrats of the city. We descended into the damp, dark wine cellar, where the bones of his family were found, whither they had fled for safety from the storm of the ashes and fire that overwhelmed them. There, against the sides of the wall, amid the earthen wine-jars that still stood as they did on the last day of that wild tempest, was the shape of the out stretched arms atid the breast and head of her who hnd fallen against it in her death-agony. Nothing remained but the bones and jewels to tell the sad story of her torture and suffocation in that dread hour. But I cannot go into de tails. They have been written over a hun dred times. There were baths, and dressing and dining rooms, and work-shops, and wheel- worn streets, where the living multitude had moved and luxuriated and toiled. We saw tombs that were themselves entombed. We saw the room for washing the dead, where the living were suddenly buried unwashed and un- coffined; the beer-shops, with the mark of the tumblers still fresh in the smooth marble ; the mills-stones that still turned to the hand in the self-same way they turned nearly two thousand years ago. There too was the brothel, and theatre, and daneing-l.all. The secret orifice through which the priest sent his voice to the statue, to delude the people into the belief that Rod had spoken, was now disclosod. I walked through the house of a poet, into his garnished sleeping apartments, forming, in their silence, a part in a greater drama than he had ever conceived. I stood before the tnvern with the rings yet entire to which the horses were fastened, and where the bones of a mother and her three children were found locked in each other's arms. Temples were overthrown with their altars. The niches in which stood the gods were left empty, and the alters before them, on which smoker! ihe sacrifice, were si lent and lonely. Columns fallen across each other in the courts just as that wild hurricane had left them, pieces of the architrnvo blocking- tip the entrances they had surmounted, told how fierce the shock and overthrow had been. One house was evidently that of a remarkably rich man. Mosaic floors representing battle scenes, precious stones still embedded in the pavements of his corridors, long colonnades. and all the appurtenances of luxury, attested the unbounded wealth of the owner. But no bodies were found in it. The rich man had fled with his portable wealth before the storm came. We passed through the temple of Ju piter, the court of justice, the forum, the mar ket-place, and emerged into the country, I mounted an old wall, covered with earth, and looked back on the disentombed city, and beyond on Vesuvius. There it stood, solemn, grand and lonely, sending up its steady column of smoke, a perpetual and living tomb-stone o- ver the dead at its feet I could see the track of the lava on its wild and fiery march for the sea, and could imagine jus, how the cloud of ashes and cinders rose from tho summit and came flvinir toward the deserted city. Foot after foot it piled itself in the streets, over the thresholds, above the windows, and soon till it reached 20 or 30 feet above the tops of the hou ses. I could behold the sea where the young er Pliny came, and, impelled by t fatal curios ity, would land, till, blinded and suffocated, he too fell with the victims that perished. From this we went to the amphitheatre. where the gladiatorial shows were held. H is a magnificent area of an oval form, and suffi ciently capacious to hold 15 or 20,000 specta tors. There were the dens where the lion were kept, and there the very ateo in which men fought and fell. I stood at one end and shouted, and the answering echo came back clear and distinct as a second voice. It en hanccd the solitude. Some have imagined lha spectators were assembled here at the time of the overthrow of the city, and as they felt th first alepofthe mighty earthquake that herald edits doom, they rushed in dismay from their seats. But this could not be, for Pompeii did not fall by an earthquake, and the mountai long before the eruption, gave ominoua sound of the coming blow. Dio relates that spectres lined the summit of the mountain, and unear'k'n. ly shapes flitted around its trembli;, sides. Tii is was doubtless the mist boil!,,g up from its confinement through the e.Vacks and shooting into the upper air. 7'liny himself says in his epistle that he. uw from Misenus, 15 or 20 miles diitnt from Naples on the other aide, a e'oud rising from the mountain in the shape of a pine tree, and shortly after embarked for the city. The groaning mountain was reeling a bovethe sea of fire that boiled under her and struggled for freedom. It was not a lime for amusement. Terrified men and women ran for the sea that also fled back affrighted from its shores, so that even Pliny cotild not land before the city, but was forced to proceed to Stabitc. The bellowing mountain, the sulphur ous air, the quivering earth, would not let a ityeven so dissolute as Pompeii gather to places of public amusement Consternation reigned in every street, and drove the frighten de inhabitants away from their dwellings. This is doubtless the reason why so few bodies were found. Those that perished were slaves or those who tarried till some falling column or wall blocked up their path, and the descending cinders blinded their sight as they groped about for a way of egress. Fear and darkness (for day was turned into night,-) might have enthral- od others beyond the power of moving. And 1 was standing on the same pavement those terror-stricken citizens stood on two thousand years ago, and was looking on the same moun tain they gazed on with such earnest inquiry nd fearful forebodings. Then it rocked and swayed and thundered before the pent-up for ces that threatened to send it in fragments through the heavens. Now silent and quiet it stood on its firm base. Yet to me it had a mo rose and revengeful look, ae if it were conscious of the ruin at its feet. The excavations are more extensive than I supposed, and the e fleet of the clear light ot the sun and the open sky on the deserted pavements is peculiar and solemn. A visit to it is an epi sode in a man's life he can never forget. An old column or a broken wall left ofa once popu- ous city interests us. We stand and muse over the ruined pile till it becomes eloquent with tho history of the past If one single complete temple be found, how it increases the interest. But to wander through a whole city standing as its inhabitants left it in their sud den fear, increases tenfold the vividness of the picture. The little household things meeting yon at every turn, give speciality to the whole. As I strolled from apartment to apartment, I almost expected to meet someone within the door. I felt like an intruder as I passed into the sleeping rooms of others as if I were en tering the private apartments of those who were merely absent on a ride or a visit. The scenes were familiar, and it appeared but a abort time since the eyes of those who occupied the dwellings rested on the same objects. In turning the corners of the streets it would hard ly have surprised me to have met the inhabi tants just returning and looking on me as a stranger and an intruder. It required an ef fort to convince myself that these streets and these dwellings were thronged and occupied for the last time nearly 2,000 years ago. I assure you the struggle was not to call vp the past, but to thake it off and when 1 finally 6tood at the gate and gave a farewell look to the lonely city that faintly slione in the light cfthe setting sun, a feeling of indescribable sadness stole over me, and I rode away without the wish ever to sec it again. A Discovert of an Original Pictvre by Ri'df.ns has been recently made in England, says the Boston Transcript, under somewhat singular circumstances. At a sale of the ef fects of a deceased gentleman in Sheffield, a picture- was put up in which there was no figure apparently discernable, but which, after some hesitation, was knocked down for Is Od It was afterwards purchased of the buyer for 5s., and the new possessor proceeded to wash it, which caused several of the figures to appear while wet This led to a resolution to send it to London to be cleaned ; and the old varnish being removed.it turned out to be a very fine old picture. It was returned to Sheffield, with an offer of 160 guineaa for it, and the biddings have since advanced to 350 guineas, at which price, however, it is not to be had. The pic turo consists ofa fine female figure, standing upon a car drawn by a lion. One child nestles in her bosom, others cling to her robes, others follow herear, while one rides a lion. Severs other refund little ones, with cherub wings, fly about her. The style of the painting, and some other internal evidence, have satisfied several eminent connoisseurs that it is a ger 0. ine Rubens; and this is confirmed by an (,ld etching of the picture, which is called "The Triumph of Christianity, by Rubens." Unnatural Ce CfXTT An advertisement appears in tl,0 New York Sun, wherein the writer cts forth a case ot oppression and cruel ' on the part of the lair sex, of which we think the civil authorities ought to take cngnizsnce. He saya that "after walking with a ludy from Fourth street to Union Park and back several limes, and going to church in the evening, and then to see her home, when we got there, I ex pected her to ask me in to rest myself but no; what do you think she said J 'twill not ask you in, became I know you are tired, and have a long walk before you: H The adverti ser appends the request that Ihe editor of the Sun would publish hia statement, "as possibly aha may Uke the hint, and never aerve another person so." filekens and his Slanders. The Philadelphia North American adminis ters to Mr. Dickens, in the annexed article, a well merited enstigntion for the slanders on this country contained in the last published number of his "Martin Chuzzlewit": We have placed norm our first page an ex tract from the new work of Mr. Dickens' Mar tin Chuzzlewit, brought by the last steamer. It will be remarked that the excellence of the ketch of the American manners which it con- tains ia endorsed by the Britannia, a bigoted ! ar.d virulent Tory paper. Mr. Dickens, as a professed friend of the people, and of that po'i- : tv. whatever name it mav tuke. vl.ich secures to each individual of the community the largest share of right and weal, must be gratified doubl es?, at the endorsation of such capital authori ty as the Britannia newspaper. At home, Mr. Dickens has endured, as every aspiring young man must in the progress of his career, the silent neglect, or what is worse, the active patronage of the aristocracy. He has fel? his dignity as a man, the heaven de rived and aspiring man, assaulted and wound ed by musty and barbarous usage. He has seer, not merely the corpse, but the strong panoplied active body, and powerful spirit of the Norman conqueror and his barons, riding over the genius of the nineteenth century. He has seen at home merit tremble, cringe and starve, while rank has been fed and pampered by means wrung out of the despised people. The veritable Charles Dickens the man who wrote poverty's and humanity's sad drama, Oliver Twist who is known wherever the English language is spoken, by virtue of his own mind not the beggarly, social almsman of a departed ancestry not the retrospective appendix of a family vault supported by gilded coffins not these but a primitive identity who stands erect, self-relying, self-supported, a thinker and an actor in his own age a fountain of truth for the living, not a spunge of folly from the dead this man Dickens, so armed and incited, has seen himself looked down upon as inferior, if seen at all, by the artificial creations of Kin? and Iiord. So regarded at home, but writing for the people, he earned a reputation which echoed to this country, and rebounded across the Atlantic with redoubled power. After Mr. Dickens had been rendered illustri ous, partly by our applause, he came among ua v nen was me pen ever so nonoreu : iiik .... i j. i i- shed triumphed for once over blood-shed, the pen overcrowned the sword. The author became the hero. A trad ng population a yard stick. pound weight, cent per cent, community, left off measuring, weighing, and calculating, for got for the ounce staples and dollars, to do ho moge to simple, manly genius, that had no thing to bestow but its intellectual riches. A great theatre was thrown open. Ait, poetry, living beauty, political and military dignity, civic worth, all contended therein to do him honor. There waa no patronage for him. It was homage. Who is there h"re to assume a social apex, and sojiint approvingly on original genius? That Mr. Dickens did not find. He went to Washington he found the President living like other people, and he was received as an equal. Doors flew open to him hospi talities, friendly acts and counsels every where attended him. If his books had been before bim, and he could not travel incognito, why did ho write them! But for the sequel. The man so situated at home, and so trested here, pretends to prescribe local manners whxh ho had no opportunities of studying. Guided by the spirit of gratitude he would have beeti tolerably safe. lit paint- ing the arcana of private life, a tolerablo kind view of it a philosophical understanding of its good points and its foibles, would have se cured him against his error. We uo not hesi tate to say that the sketch of the "geiitetlest society" of New York, put forth by Mr. Dickens, is as untru, a fact as it U ungrateful in spirit, and koines from him, of all men, with most unseemly grace towards the people of that splendid city, who treated him so nobly. We have been occeaionally in New York society, and never witnessed such flaming vulgarities as Mr. Dickens depicts. We never saw young ladies in indecent positions in rocking chairs, or heard their fathers twadding to Ilnlishmen about 'nature's noblemen,' and so forth. We never saw a militia 'general' behave like a blackguard in that society. All ull is carica ture. An ungrateful heart dictated the w hole of it. We do not hesitate to ssy that Mr. Dickens was very, very seldom, if ever, offended by per sonal or national allusions while in this coun try. On this head we quote the following, from Mr. Buckingham, a British authority. Speaking of Canada, he says: 'Every opportunity is seized of disparaging America and the Americans, and speaking of them with unmeasured contempt. Indeed, 1 heard more of thu feeling expressed in Toron to towards the institutions and people of the United States, in our short stay ol'threc week, than I had heard of censure or condemnation of English institutions and English people during all the three years that we have passed among the Americans. We heard more abuse of America and the Americans, from the mou'hs of British Canadians in a few weeks, than we have heard of England or the English in the United States during as many years." Mr Dickens would have thought more of the Americans if they had thought less of him, nl' very easily rained it would seem, by "me fatal rule, is little prized. Mr Dickens cannot overtop the edifice of courtly conven- nonaitsm. IV.sst as he rmv, he has not arrived fit that point when he ran philosophically look at Man as heaven has 'nado him. and no ns he is enric itured by institutions. Here, Mr. Dick- ens found nothing to look up to. A prosit number of facts and but few evnilm's met his view. He is not the firt-t fnre'irtier who ha been in similar dilemma. The head will crow dizzy if on an unaccustomed height, no matter how many heads are in company. The charac ter of Mr. Dickens is fixed. He cannot get over the influences of his rducatien. lie looks up to established rank. Finding none univer sally recognised here, he was at a lo.e; he can not now reconcile himself to tho fact that hu man nature is self-honored. If his object be to degrade mr.n simply as such man without title or family he is in a fair way of succeeding if he persists in utter ing his views of a society which he hardly ever saw. His observations were confined princi pally to the pig in the gutters of New York and tnthe imported misery of Five Points. We have no quarrel with Mr. Pickens. We wish him a less ticklish position than that which he holds among the great, so called, of his own hiH,l. He has !ot the genial admirinjr sympathy of this country, and perhaps he may take re'tige in the smallest favor thankfully re ceived, such as was bestowed on Mr. Bulwer when he obtained a Baronetcy. Hammeri.no orr Danish. In the settlement ofa case at Rngor, relative to an estate in St. Thomas, a document was produced as evidence, which was written in Danish, and contained 40 foolscap pages ; but there were none who eouU translate it. It was sent to Mr. Burritt, of Worcester, known as ihe learned lllacksmith, who returned ii translation of it, w hich is srxv ken of very highly by the ediior of the Whig. In a letter, Mr. B. remark that the translation cost him twelve days hard labor, for which he presumed the sum of $1? would not be on un reasonable compensation, as that would be "a bout what any other blacksmith would charge, provided he could do it with the hummer and tons.-'." I.NOENiots Deviceof aConvictto Proctre his Pardon. The following letter from a con vict in the e'ing Sing Prison, to a comrade of his in this city, was found ia a bag in his cell. We publ sh it trrhatim. Here Frend git up a pcrtition this way for to have Sundoy School and Bible classes and our I.ybrary of Books A gane te'l them that you want to lay before the inspector of the Prison git printed bed for it 20 or 30 and bond it to different Ministers of churches and tel them that you will call on them Tor it at sntch A time and w hen you git 8 or fore Ihi nsarid signers t'ike rf thein heds and pvit them. All to pethar and then poot A bed on A copy ot my trial and then go to Judge l.itv.s'u Jmliic Sanilford Jtnlgr? Morris the Mure, RnJ the Jnree that convicted me you can rind out wrwe they Live by my lndictrr,pii hot ri thom AH to sifn it before yoi poot my cae to it. . Y. pprr. An Enoi i-h General I'm n i i km k O cotlagt window near P'vio-' t'.- f i. - in rr ; "I P,ui-li C. 'iv 'i, rv"i'''-Mi!t Smith, taclieth yong (irls and Buoys toiade and rile dale'h in mole cntuhiU nhugar plums rinh-lites, coine!, mole traps, moue traps, spring guns, and all other sich mattersteeth distract ed, blid drawn, blisters. Pils, mixture maid, also nails, and bosses shoed, h pome salts, and enrnes cut, and nil other tilings on rasoiiatiie Tiirmes. N. B and also my Misses goe out has man whidwife in the cheepest way posu hie." Dub. Mfd. Press. Franklin and Greene. While tho Ameri can Army, in 1773, wasbesieging IWtoti, Con gress sent to the camp a special committee, at the head of which was Dr. Franklin. Gen. Greene, in a letter dited "Prospect Hill, Oct. 10, 1773," and addressed to Gov. Ward, thus describes the impression which this great phi losopher made upn him : "The committeo from Congress arrived Inst evening, and I had the honor to be introduced to that very great man, Dr. Franklin, whom I viewed with silent admiration during the whole evening. Atten tion watched his lip, and conviction closed his periods." Beautiful tribute ot one great man 'o another, both of whom were among the fore, most in liberty's great struggle, and both fra grant with revolutionary jeuowa. Short Skntence from Good Thinkers.- Moderation is the ailken siring running through the pearl chain of all virtues. A mother-in-law sermon seldom takea well with an audience of daughters-in-law. Pastime, like wine, is poison in the morning. He that is proud of the rustling of his silks, like a madman, laughs at the rustling of his fet ters. God is better lodged in the heart than in great edifice?. Emulation looks ont for merits, that she may exalt herself by a victory ; envy spies out ble mishes, that she may lower another by t de feat Histories make men wise; poets, witty ; the mathematics, subtle; natural p'iilooihy, deep; morals, grave ; logic and rhetoric, able to con tend. ' That man has too high an opinion of himself that is rnly afraid of thunder and o! earth- qua k"8. losses sre insufferable to those who are not accustomed to lose. Virtue dwclis not upon the lip of the tongue, but in the temple of a purified heart. Ttic Force op A r petite. The Richmond Star states that a woman in that city came so near dying from intemperance that her friends had a shroud made for her, presuming that she could not live long. She, however, recovered, and the first tiling she did was to hasten and sell the throudfor liquor ! Qviet Mvrder. The New Mirror gives a recipe for killing a woman quietly. Take a young lady, and tell her that she has a pret ty foot. She will then wear small thin shoes gor.ut'in the wet catch a cold the cold will become a fever arid she will die in a month. Better than Medicine. 'I have been doc- tering myself,' said a languid fair one, with a smile, to a bluff, though kind doctor, who was feeling her pulse Ah, how T Why, I have taken Brandreth's pills, Parr'a pills, Stainburn's pills. Sands' Sarsaparilla, Jayne'a Expectorant, used Dr. Sherman's Lo zenges and Plaster, and ' 'My God, madom,' interrupted the astonished doctor, 'all these do your complaint no good.' Not then what shall I take V pettishly in quired the patient. 'Take !' exclaimed the doctor, eyeing her from head to foot. 'Take!' h exclaimed again, ofler a moment's reflection; 'take ! why take off towr corsets .' Precocity Produced by Kdi'cition. Wa believe the following belongs to John Neal : The hot house system of education is doin wonders for the youth of our land. The boy kicks off Ins diaper and frock, and jumps into call-skin boots and a long tail coat. lie changes the nipple for a segar, and the sugar teat for a quid of tobacco. The girl is either a baby or a lady. Sha makes one jump from her nurse's arms into her husband's and of course is finished. The Last and Best. A correspondent of the New York Spirit of the Times, says : "Sam Laughman's last is right good. A chap walking out, came across 'old Mose' sitting in the broil ing sun, fishing. 'Well, M.we,' said he, 'what in the world are you doing thar V 'Fiffm !' (fishing.) 'What V 'Fiffm !' Tithing well, what's the reason you cau't t ilk ? what's ! i mr mouth !' 'Oh, nuffia but tcums (worn !'-r bait!' I halloed for old Izaak, when Sim a pened his 'wum' box. AnvnoNri The "Fair One," t!ir Vices' n , The Forum says "If fair on"- run af t.T Mi .-tiV they must expect to be hImV.Jj- tie-.l." Pimno I P the Aoony. "The forked light nings illuiniimted the vaults of heaven peals of thunder shook the earth tho wind racked the moii'it'iitis, and the rain descended in such torrents that the ducks could swim in the gut. I.iufrty- Liberty ia to be the collective bo dy what health id in every individual body. Without health no pleasure can be tasted by man ; without liberty, no happiness can be en joyed by society. Bolingbroke. It was a proverb of Anarcharsia, a Scythian philosopher, that the vine bore three branches ; first, plea.ure ; secondly, drunkenness ; third ly, disgust. Bv constant temperance, habitual moderate exercise, and unaffected honesty, you will avoid the fees of the lawyer and the sheriff, gain a good report, and probably add to your present existence at least ten years of active life. Burke once remarked to Garrick that all bit ter things were h"t. "Ay.'said Garrick, "what do you think of bitter sU weaUuer V