II it, 11:. li r t "t IC l', .;-,.- .. i CI J. STAIJLE --- - 3D7 T AR. TERMS OF THIS PAPER “. --- . . • •••TI/4 ReplaWirau Contpi/e.Lia publiahad ai 516kt:1y - li/on-ling, by ritNlY.r. Si SIT Lt. at P 75 per unnu tn if paid in adrquer—s2,ol tein atinn if not pail in advanne. No Nub sarifitintr di mti,ti ti n 1 1 01. Lia lp o i at the option o r tilli" tildip , bi.r, until all arreamAgem ore paid: I A.lt - Pni-elarmt% in-er.t.4l at the 11A11111 Ade .' .!(.11 Priliting .I,die, n'eatly, cheaply, atidiwith (licvat,h. --,--, liti ft otP oppodtl zik l / 4 t, one d Ti' e, "Coy a South Bal t mato Rt reet- Wanl[beg Tinniitg Eytablish -a half piquarem fru`m - thee Court ruti" on the sign. iti t ur o r tLUMiI,E CIIESNCT AND LOCUST _ AST CHANCE! ay, the :talk of krty di! at !Willc iStle, on the in Iliimiltmitit , n township, VALCARI, , - ~ Tying on the •0:`•-,,..../..„4 fn Mar-kAll's to i• 4 and adjoining •-• lusselnian, Abraham Scott, and others. Alia), FIVE 't MIIEIt LOTS. - • I from Myers' . w Mill. to the l fining land 4 ' ' CoFp,n ad others. The.c FIVE to TEN ACRES ed with prime young Lo imber, equal to any in the a wishing' good timber So avail themselves of this! lire them. fl commence-at - 12 o'clock, : ing on the road from Mar-; itiiirings, near the late re.i- linaikt--ut which point! :ill attend two days previou. w the Lota to any persons lie the eame. J. It. PAXTON. "fa' t 11: - Pot 'Gifu, ILL he prfkmisei e nit st 'Lot roll"teadjng fr tti/4130ht Sprig, litiati tleiniel prX Other t 4on the roi ltiMl by Slo c ith's . Ca.l l Jileiito 'Softer, Wi, Llrtti ererzge fr a ee~clf, end are coy' end 104 Chesnut hiNinrrtaln. Per* trill do rrel o ntty t 0 P ti *ate X:, nn the Lotot stairs.to the 0,1 Mime of 'Elijah fiat prider*lgnod tittlyo ante, co P wTttlida to spa 1 "TO 11101 Qt.:4OD 'Prosisals will be received at, the "-- 7 ;;Ribco,s4 tlic Cottuni.csioners of Mains Ci t y. until 7',4,,,,, ;he 2118, inst.. fur build ing. ~.IVOi/DE BILID ;E. (without A roof) aieffoy ...lliiddy Attu." on the road leading Inina ' Gettyslitt to Fair:leld. near John , tqlbati g y,t. 1 c bridge is to be one span. 3i 4igt in lea ;; b. 113iet and speciticat.ora ft . l bridge it be seen on the day of let \` q tr nr by applic4tion to the,kgerk•of the Cum- GE011f;h: MYER& ? ' ...,1 11. A. PICKING. g ,1(JSIAII LI IiNNER, ;." . t ilAtesti--4. M. VA isKs, Cleric. .liiky 11. 185 td : • 1— Tivio ' VILX I,INES . TO I. Nu t' Ell. 1141 XVI A AC(` J 1 MO D.A TIONS.—The on 41.111•41 e upend 'citrus liia•thanks to the pubti Smythe retwunrugt•tint heretofufe exteruhd to hue; and takes ple, ure in ininnuncing that he halineourp!etell .itr4igettientt by n IsithiTl4o 1).1.1 ' LISP'S of •,..E,_ . I 'osehis will run he eeu tiettys.. TO O . bint sad thintwer, n diunect with the trains to teal hum Bain ire. York. Ilarnalourg. Pllibuletphia. ite.. desiring tickets or itiforeasuon will call the undersitrievd. or on CRAWL= TATE. • Tie I. Agent, at the Eagle 110114. in Chatoliersh rg street. - (10/' Special attend. given to all packages. •, ha: tar attire. &tisanes.: naricated to the under si-iteil between Gettysburg and Hammer. whale* a 111 • be. proutpq and carefully attend. eel ioi I.o?•The unrienupried has also effected sr. nuagetitents by whireh hen ill tremble to supply 4.l4wheii.. Stagtesi. kc., fur Funerals and other ocdtiamisi M susletate (*urges. _ -a . 1 ,' , NI4IIIOLAB WEAVER. Unteriburt. April 13, 11557. .. .'• JUILROAD NOTICE, • , ' :Pay Vp! Vl‘l7l:ll .l t'ic u st. of ,„ t . h° ll l :l " i a lt r it; )r e D :C l u r t "c ru t l7 a ntoa is bervior given to the Stockholders thaf pm FII:ST INSTALMENT on each oi ahat, : afswelt will lee r aired to Le paid in W Erste..s.t I livEis.Trett rer of the Compel. am ykr kejiwe the .28M (T. of :tray, and that hereafter tia said (Sate of oh wouth the rep till. ,ty , 4t.alinent4 will be e and payable.— Payments can also be in.iacqt.o any of the Di rector.. E. F. tslloltß, Sc'..y, :lay ,11,, 18:.;7. 3t . - lil iden ANC OF ei r IITITSDURG, lit . y 5, 1857., rE 'President and Directiirs of this Inge. osidtbn hare this day decitired a Dividend o4' ?OUR PER CENT.. peyableion or after ilhe 11th inst. J. B. McPII}.II,S(S, Cornier. • gil t % 11, 1857. 31 I (sollllet4 ! i 3011110136 1 :, UlBB di eCREARY has jest returned fives 171 the city with a new and bettettiful assor t l.- went of BUlllt - T3 ''' , ..7.1V3'.7 . . 1 4' Drint of the moat fashionable styles, whieh she iii viten the Ladies to all and etanzina, conlidslit chacthey will be pleased with her selections. Miss McCreary will carry on tLe MlLLl- NElLf.buninssts, is all its blanches. and hopes by her superior work and reasonable paces, to merit thtuatron!ge of her friends. Gettysburg, A - pill - 20, 'MT: 3m If in & An ghinbaugh, i ' ' STILL .1-11.11.4 D: W'V* Jan mceiiing a 'ultimo; i t: W I maw, Caps, lispot,s St Shoes? --430Norteey , finest Spring styles. sod. is . lins st. small prat*. Call anti see , • purchasing elsewhere. Remo- WA ober "Aix, Paxton's old stand. Chanib&a• Ant t mita. Mardi 23. 4wwittuur! rigilSGE s &leery—W*lNpler will wake iliaarSpoadie obi pot up the same low., - for dedikfirriotty:ipeedgeo. Fertwers and all othic4oooll thitt. hphsee. bwrtui. Le. spout ed. Aftwelttw sire thew 4 call. G. L 11. WASIPLEIL A • 18. 1863. ti II ME WILDE itM. On aturau, liSielM4 .simerissent Oxinsh, &tat; sad Wellies* _-.g. to ipe bad BBOTHKRS. _ . A DEMOCRATIC AND FAMILY JOURNAL. En *tot 1141 - The followingcurious specimen of al literation evinces inure ingenuity than any thing else of the kind with which we are ac qtesiated: • The Siege of Belgrade. An Acustrian army, awfully arrayed, Boldly, by battery,' besieged Belgrade ; Owineek commanaers cannonading opme, Dealing dpstruction'sderastating doom ; F. yety nate:lvor engineers For fitne-, for fnrtcmefigh tler—fu riling hay ! Generals 'pliant generuht.grapple—greeione . God! how honors heaven herfic hardihood! Inferiase, indiserissinsen, in ill. Kinsmen kill kindred, kindred kinsmen kill+ Labor low levels lunge it loftiest hoes ; Men march 'mid mbundis, 'mid noise, 'mid MUTII • ria a mine*: No. noisy noxious numbers notice naught Of tolltwurd ulismiclea opptting ought! Poor pat riots,partl v purchmsell,partly pissed. Qait quaking, galckly "qua cr, quarter" guest ; Reason returns, religious right redounds, Not arrow stops pinch sanguinary sounds: True° to the', Turkey! triumph to thy •• I Unjust, unwole. unmerciful Llcraitte! Vanish vain victory ! vanish victory vain"! Wherefore visit we vrarfure! Wherefore welcome whore Xerxe., Xinienas, Xaathus, Xavier? Yield, yield, ye youths! ye yeomen yield your - yell! Zeno's, Zarparterr's, Zoroaster'ssea/ ; Attracting all arms against acts appeal. ~~~~~~~~~l~~c;~u~. A Ruined City. Petra, the exenvated city, the long I lost capital of )Mom, in the Scriptures ' 1 ant profane writings, in every language in which its nettle oecur.s, signif& a rock, and through the shadows of its early history we learn that its iuhabi ; tants lived in natural elects or excava ! thins made in tke solid rock. Desolate as it is, we have reason to believe that it goes back to the time of Esau, the' "baiter rlf Edom ;" that princes and dukes, eight successive king and again a tong line ofdukes welt there before any king "reigned sraeli":and we recogniae it from the - earliest ages as the central point to whielt 'came the in , habitants of Arabia, Persia,. and India,- laden with all the precious commodities of the East, and from which these commodities were distributeel through 1. -, vpt Palestine, and Syria; and all the countries bordering oti the Mediter ranean, even Tvre and Sidon, deriving . their purple unad3 - es from Petra. Eight hundred years before Christ, Amain'', 'the King of Judea, "Slew of Edon, in the valley of Salt, ten thousand, and took Selab Oho Hebrew - name of Petra) by war." Three 'mink's'', years after the last of .the prophets ! , and nearly a century before- the Christian era, the ; o King ofArabia" issued from his palace at Petra, at the head of fifty thonstiod men, - horse and foot; entered Jerusalem, and, uniting with i the Jewa, pressed the :- i-ge of the temple, which was only raised . by the advaiwe of the Romans; mud in the beginning of the second cen tury, though its , independence was lost, Petra wig , . (gin the capital of a Ro man province. After that time it rap , Illy declined; its history became- more obscure. For „more than, a thoturand yetlN. it was . C6threlettt"bi l t 4 t(kli'e clrit lined workt;• and nn fiF its tifseirrery by Burckhetoi in'lBl.B, ereept to the wan dering liedouilitt, its very aite .Vtaa Uri known. . . . And this was the cl,f,y'at . whose door I stood. In a' flaw woridk, `thiii ancient and extraordinar7 city Ss situated with in a natirtnlamplithanttc oftwo or three miles in circumference, encompassed on 1 all sides by rugged mountains five in six hundred fOtd, in 4eight.. The whole 'of this area is no* a waste of ruins— dwelling houses, palaces, temples, and ladtrpl arches, all prostrate together in nstingttisitable. 4 confusion. The *aides of the mountain* are cut smooth, I i in a perpendicular direction, anti tilted with long and cohtinned rn ngeoof dwell ing houses, temples, and tombs, eaca vated with vast labor out of the solid rock; and while their summits present nature in her Wildest and most savage form, their bases are adorned with all the beauty of arehitectare and art, with i columns, and porticos, and pediments, and ranges of corridors, enduring as the mountains oat of which they are hewn, and fresh twit' the work of a ge n_ i oration that Lud scarcely yet gone h . y. In front of they,reat temple, the pride and bounty of Petra-of widek more hereftfter—l saw a narrow opening in the rocks e xtictlr cerrespo ding with myconception of theobjeet kith I wns seeking. A full stream -ater was gashing through it., and lag up the c , whole mouth of ! the pasSa 1 - ounted on the shoulders of one of N' Bedouins, I got him to carry m hrougit the swollen stream *tthe oath of the opening, and set, me d -a on a dry place a little above, whe e I began to pick my way, otcasio ly . taking to the shoulders of my fol era, and con tinued to advance more an a mile. r was, beyond all pe tutu, in the great 'eatra nee I was king. There could not be two such, a I should haye gone our ' to the extrem dof the ra, None, 'bnt my Bedouin' denly refused .me the Atrther use of ((boulders.— Ile bed been some bi ()Oberlin . and 0 begging 'me t 6 veto and now peel. dig)* refused to go further, and; in faet, tarned about hi ' If, 'I was anxi: Oita to proceed, but d not like wad ing tilt° my knees water, nor did I feel very Ilasobiti 'where - I migbt ( expose myself to , as be seemed to intimate. t - .r . . . t 1 GETTYSBURG, PEIiTINA.: °MONDAY, MAY , 25, 1857. While I irglA k }Radiating another of my Meet came running up the ravine, and shortly after him Paul and the ahiek,breatllesS with haste, and crying oat low gutturals, ' El Arab! El Arab!" The Arabs ! the Arabs! the Arabs!— This was enough for me. I had heard sorrw,' of El Arab that I had become nervons. It was like the cry of Deli lah in the ears of the sleeping' Samson : "The Philistines aro upon thee." At the other end of the ravine was ,An on eampenent of the RI Atoning; and the ahiek, having due regard to my eem mtinleation about money matters, had shttnned this entrance to avoid bringing me the horde of tribute gatherers for a participation in tho spoils. Without auy deviation to explore further, I tamed towards the city; and it was now that I began to teal the powerful and indelible impression that must be pro dueed on entering through this numn ta• ous passage, the excavated city of P ra. or about two miles it lies between gh and precipitous ranges of rocks, min five hundred to a thousand feet in height, standing as if torn asunder by some great convulsion, and barely wid e enough for two horsemen to pass abreast. A swelling stream rushes be tween them; the summits arc wild and broken; in some places overhang ing the opposite sides, casting the dark ness of night upon the narrow defile, then re ceding and forming an opening above, through which a strong ray of light is thrown down, and illuminates with 4!Th blaze of day the frightful thaw below. Wild fig-trees, oleanders, ai;o1 ivy were growing out of the rocky sides of cliffs hundreds of feet above our heed's; the eagle was screinning above ns ; all along were the doors open of tombs, forming the great Necropolis of tip city; and at the extreme end WaS a large open space, with a powerful body of light thrown down upon it, and ox- , hibithig, in ono full view, the facade of a heautifal temple hewn out of the rock, with rows of Corinthian columns and ornaments standing out fresh and clear, as if hut yesterday from the hands of the sculptor. Though coming directly from the banks of the Nile, who the preservation of the temples exeit the admiration and astonishilient of very traveller, we were mused unit e. •ited by the extraordinary beauty and m -eel lent coudition of the temple. at Pe a. Even in coming upon it as - id, at disadvantage, I remember that Paul, who was a passionate admirer, of the arts, when he first. obtained a glimpse of it, involuntarily cried out, and, cony-' dug on to the front with n vivacity never saw him exhibit before or after- wards, clapped his bands and shouted , in eestacy. To the last, day of our be- I ing together he was in the habit of re ferring to his extraordinary fit of en- f thnsinem when he first came npon that temple; and I enit 'well imagine that, ! entering by this narrow &tile, with the feelings roused by its extraordius . try and romantic wildness and beanty,,,the first., view of that superb facade mast pro-i duce an effect which could never page t away. - Even now that I have returned to the pursuit* and ught.seigrossing incidents of a Mb naiest city in the world, often • tiona as wide ly different as nil., darkness, I see before me the cede of that temple. Neither the Colloaeum at Rome-, grand and interesting,. as it is, nor the ilium of the Acropolis at Athens, nor 1 the Pyramids, nor the mighty temples 1 of the Nile, are so often present to thy, _memory. Leaving the temple and the open area on which it. fronts, and following Owl Stream, we entered another defile math **dor than the that; onseaeh Akio of ! which were ranges of temps, with setilp- , t West doors and (Amend; .and oit. the left, in the: bosom of the ntountaitsy. hewn out of the solid rocks, isle large theatre, circular in feria, the Ohtani in (rout fall ng, and containing thirty-three rows of seats, capable +of • containing more than three theasand persons.-- Above the corridor wits a range of doom opening to chambers in the rock, tho seats of the princes and wealthiest in habitants of Petra, and not ,ardike a row of private boxes in a moderniiheatre. The whole theatre is at this Any in • Old S'perfacieslL-The , latest optical sneh a state of preservation, that if the novelty is thei night 'spectacles, made tenants of the tombs could o nce m ore ,on the principle or own., e re ,r, by which rise into life they might take their phi ' time dial on '.ll steeple mile' distant elm its setts arid listen to the deelama- Ibbe seen when it is so dark that one can time of their favorite players. n f t ee ; t. with the naked eye. .s too large to ho nn the Killneee of a ruined city , is no i llrZk The w i i i h i - 4t i ru lf i7e . where so impressive as when sitting i i ornam4ntal appendage to a man's face; on the steps of its theatre, (nice throngt! ; bet-if will be useful in certain cases. ed with the gay- and phusnre-seeking, but now given up to solitude and des olation. lbw after day these seat" hail be 9n fillet, and the now rocks hat echoed to the applauding shouts of thousands; and little coned an ancient Edninite ima g ine that a stranger from a then unknown world would ono day be wandering among the ruins of the proud and wonderful city, meditating, npon the tate ofa rave that has for ago@ passed away. lVhere are ye, inhabitants of this desolate city? ye who once sat on the seats of this theatre—the young, the high born, the heaatithl, and the brave— who onto rejoiced in your riches and power, and lived as if there was no grave ? whore arc ye nowt Even the very tombs, whose open doors are stretched away in long ranges before the eyes of the wandering traveler, cannot reveal the mystery of your doom; your dry bones are gone, the robbers have invaded your graves, and your very ashes have boon swept away to make room for the wandering Arab of the desert But we need not stop at the days *bons gay population crowdod this theatre. In earliest periods of recort/tO time, long before this theatre was built, "11147111 IS */(4ITIr f , ~,,44R,WILL PREVAIL." , t ' 1, and lops il t efora tho.)r,agie muse was known, a, sieat ei,ffood lucre ; . when Esau, having *{d ins .biktiright,for s, mere of potsagt; wale to Aria portion among tho iummtaiho.' of Teir, and Ed M . , 41N1V0111011 1 fitt(ll:44l*, W 'ain presurrptnmk itn(r • htrii : , , itty, until, in herWle r tefit4 a vamage eppnt,rs,,,*4oTom egad unto 'lamely inthinh .0441 t !net .poi ti by me, lest eareor.eat optima thee with tile sviood,Y , ' '" Amid 'all %the' ite4fitle tredernnehttiont trgaNAt'46 littnefnfitititterti;"hdir . 'cities and ia t ikliit,44 14404 Viis!pri:alei rityauieng ,tift , trielfj„ aceihtletto forlts ' extraordinary taatk, wait aiwaysperked as asa cot of extraordinary Yen mum*. 44 I ham; atnialf, ,l the Lord, "that Bnrrith the strong' tir for: titled city) shall . heerna4 desolation, a reproach;and a, Wake: and a curse, arid all the cities therentshall lie a. perpi4- mil waste. Lo,, I wiU niake thee annuli, among the heathen mid despised among men. Thy• terribleness hnth' deceived *theLi, and thd 'pride of thy heart ; oh thou that dwelfest in the efetta of tote roekS, that !mildest the height of the hill, though thou Klamath:it make thy nest as high as the eagle, I wilt bring thee down fmm --thence, saith the Lord. They shall tail the nobles there of to the kingdom, but. none shall be, there, and all her princes shall be noth ing, and thorns shalt come up in her palaces, nettles and brambles in the fbr tressee thermir, and it slitt. II hat itatiou fur dragons and a court or owls." - I would that the skeptiv could stand, a s I did, itinoug the 111)118 Of this env among thd - rnekA, :iii,l - there open the warred book anti' read the : of tiredoin pottsmun, written op , 1 te plant. Wee fiat.; of in the world. I itt•ti ille s ~, WA cheek pale, • - •lifitt' lip' (I. / t 1 . hi. heart qttlikilitt with 11.1 tr •••••, A all city orieniont,tot hint in a 1- nod poworful iit.lro of tile tie ~f the dead. t e tt oty t ' ,lie would not be- 1 ' lioye 3to,ael , mid, flit‘ Pr . ophots, he be lioYos ti r o! hand-wtlithv orlioll ltini4elf in the iltliipptioft24473ttirtieil Valli tIIVUII ti 11 illl s —V eh S 6 8 TildOtt. ) ' ' Proofs of liariage Cottraqt. A cusp Pt: breach .of palmitin of mar riage l ) as recently teen tried at _Roches ' tcrr,,Vew which'the following is given as the substanee of the Judgv's charge to thejury :—Tho Judge ed that it was zioteeeeseary to maintain the existence of a promise of marriage to prove that, defendant in express wort' or terms made a promise to plaintiff'. Any vircitnistanees Which usually itmompany parties whilo hold ing the relation of an engai., , erent of marriage might properly be laid before a jury, *nd it' sufficient to warrant .the vitt FJ that each nu 10ageinent ed it was all the law required. •/t u, Nut nreestarrtlurt there' sludi be a ptconite (if marriage dirbt ',bra ten1409!),---snif, aura prounxi, is rriprireri, .Fresiaent ,, visita of the parties-retiring from tho notiety of otheco—sooking tt, be avast try them., sinless--expmeao ref *t ttioinneitt-- pro , :ent,4---Lroing togethercti) . plares of am tisement—walks-trail occasional re marks. in hearink et' others, are eitenth st mires nom:illy relied up► to prove that n rn neria,ati ofigageatent tot ik ari, zothly pe6uot t 4 iton.Krt , wpm* the' mind, they 'are all' thatisfnehassare to alifitrer the law,- ' Dingo' 101 Mks ifillOsanio.iThe Duily rang/Was a !moan sail/olio (tomtit' ors oho '2(l 'luau, , t,f , tlfirga , 141 Oilhism; youngest dasgkrongfit tie . Putt Joan.: C ,Cuanoss. • itissiAlaituilit+ vrivatjady of theanust ramxittiil 1 1unt undiniAlit tool—of mu th• isP{elli edenywfob*fogatnr End trnyhi .kindru.4sr of disrirosition. She wait a toruminfiegnii of the Npisea pui , t'lntrnhi.. 1 • • - - -- • Ofin_ i ..tioe.stugiii•ffilv. - r - AboPt 050 hnyhrlaof Ahlweil, of. tiiiot tli;1!? hay° been Aistriinged tiosirP4ttint; Nice Otis ses , - Bon. It is tlynkg4,lty o t ry, v, that this, pule Is.iles,tins444o tee f ig , vsted as 4 tensi.vely tlip ryi.464# Ws sPi an c.orniAeAting,4B i 4 doNoi t 4 !Li° salukt ante, stigarfox,nutn.- sail provsadoor awl grain For boast. • - A TAnth . rn —i,--It nifty have htsen in print Aofort., Ant it wilt linwr voyoftt ing nnw: a_Vfothtv," tniirt NAN - , looking op to tliostitrry%klos ono bright "Ititnt n'dotigiiihtt pinto Amy en must h 4, when its wrong is go beitutifiti." nrainrketi, and wo v1)( 1 .4 11 1%43 its ,tratlt, iliac *u alitur's (ht tieti even in a en.lu euinpanitivoly‘ rrtant, oruouti•i! an l untli3ukful. Show 1w pruisere"invo J iat Jetvi theta tlivir (huller; and find* &wit with, hint worn - than tho dulith" o)nvenitnt Blisets4lo.-14 i►lind ntaa, led by q dog; wl►ilo wtottiorittg ie the r'trealty of Paris, boa hiP. 4uis. Niied by some ea►t• p►wting; .lostootly ofkettlng lzih eyes, he, ewe oho., ant Qvartakittg the thief; eadvelltal i►inz eiverely, affair, whit+ LIU elgeed laic eymi and fell to beg ging *Knit, let-hr- ' iliisn4 ,l4l 9rAfPhiliodelphia, is now engsgat, i -i! wcttlßrg• a nwaloirof, tha late Dr. Xlishal.4ent Kaaer—lt can scarcely fail to.provp Apt only a strilaing r nh . %rogue , narrative of the aurppr of 1 intreped adventurer, bnt also an iu t ligent delineation of his character. ~-.~~ a~: A Startled C4mgregation.-9_t Cleves, U;unilton eminty:o*, April 1 5 tits (Re cording to a letter, in the d'hihulelphia plittetia,) t Eckman, a' gralthy cit izen of that place,' s'us taken violently ill in the morning, and 'Tinkling the prompt. services rd two doetormo-ceeited his ‘!finietus" alt - kut. five : o t **.lock same day. Nest morning the &pliant 4k man was stowed coffin, and jolted in a market Wat2;oti 16 'fife Berea Church, a di stance ortirn•miles; 'where it tluncral sermon .yeas pre liar) by Rey: Wiu. Li*. The sokum serviresi about concluded, the last hymn,was, read, and the choir was about to "strike up," when they were stvideniv annoyed by discor dant- and Yert- dim - isle:a sonnets. and kicks,'Aiehii , seamed obvious were go ing on inside the eoftizz. You ?nay pos sibly imagine theN n ati &nue eonsterhe tion iu, that meeting house fur a feW minntes. At least half of tlw congre gation broke for' !the door, and the bal. Imre were about la "tbilow snit," when the Rev. Mr. Left descended from the pulpit, and in a lout yoke ordered the coffin to be speedily opened ) , which was done, when it was found tlrat Wat. was not only nave and kicking, but was struggling manfully to free hi m , elf from him—inviteriotts . confinement. The blood li - us hewing freely from his mouth and nose, Out in a very low min utes he was able tO spak. Re was ear rasi to the house of Abram Patterson, Esq., about two hitmired yards from the eharch,rn l'a physician sent for, who re mained with him until the next morning, when ho was &ble to walk about the row n. -- *EYThe I)tilatque Express rvlaiec that a woman recently tame to the Minnesota lionme in butdeitit, with a young And after stoppinga day or two, inuidun ,jeft, minus the baby, rtn,) did not re am. The landlord happened to he over nil hthuquo, and toient hitt the eirenm stanee to a couple of friends. married but c hildle s s, one th4tin proposed to adopt the little oat' as his own. The other immediately made the same prop vsit inn , w hen a quarrel, arose as to which of the wpnld-lssi " parents" shonid have the ititautile a-aif. Finally ma ap peal was made to the dice lox. Quite a flambe!. or people; gathered around the table, interested siwetators or the sin. grithr contest, and the winner; named H Kesler,' was greeted with a shout of ap plause.,. The chitin. a pretty little girl three ?reeks old, and its mew-found pa rents Are brinnningpver with happiness. A Female .li'ietia6Ptis Duel—The cor m4ixsatlence Of Batas has the 14 Alowing aeeoliat of a fentahlreligiong duel: The Swiss Protlstauts are absorbed by a setio-comie totte. It is a feminine duel whiell.has&t tiltet) klaeF,49}ropos to theurnadtelf • iiiitigthittriie'ttreen th e diseipios, of Lathitqf and Cal-via. Two ~ .1-41ang wpmen, tote tem of Berne. male fahatieaH)y,their r' tflipez, and the indi vidna interpretation wind k is'suggoited, cottld not agree irpott a point of (100 rice, am! guar( agreh4l to remort t4)•l'i Iree t 4) settle the tinestiow.i The plitee,of meet ing . was the most, phseare part of the neighlitying wood, the hour fixed was eft) o',cloek.--set!onds b:td proeured the tOcel Weapons, for the (had • was to ho tiing,ht ,wi Lk kwi)rds,, 'A tier several live ly thrusts, one of tit fair' rotritorttints received a seVere woli ad in the knee, and 111 itTpen the grAnstainting;. ' 'llia vont: bat eessol, -hilt oar Inv (i- (Aspirin in yeti i ctintit,,lfli o. 'already 01141 It goad n alit 'isr of adherent K. )t , if; al now .eloment of disourir with tilt) Borne*. It laus afrost edipsed tlt '.Neufshatel ;gees tie*. 4, . • . , 4 ¢drice to Ladies..l. VermotlVATtPl' gives the- following ntAyiee to , II"' , " When yon have go &man tattle stick. it* po i nt l -41tat im i . -ben lie propoves-- don't ttwt% itiva,t f n, t head, or-affect a bfitsit, oriefurhus Lo : ft, or ask for more - -ttine; all those t ricks lee untletlfjxyl pow; .bat just Iwk him riiiit in the' face, give hirelt'lliiutl4:'ittol an hitu to ,go autl ogler--T cradle:" N • , ..airtliis the way; they.tita to kw in Ttirke . Tex pritnitllte and brief. On lv two witnessom aro allowed- to•teettii'y.- Ir they - , munot estnAktlslt the, ,4„:40e, tli‘e judge orders it out of court. No law yers are allowed to alien their motiLiiit. The Sentence ' is inttd known at the.tirmo by the etki IS, are •ktile Illirty that ping theitnit. r that was the way ive did thinizs . tMutt things gu on shout as monthly as they du now 11" e only Dar iatnrsnatinn, von know. • V. .11,u1Aly-&ife rre3l 4 lh 4 q l 4 l invoitteil a untteli tii tt cie,Liclreit fluty pl:ty with or ent without di(nger of k iln; burnt (.4. tipped with ehloriftioerf poi:l4l;4e, )eitiell Ines no poileonott-4.eittulitieseuncrwill wit ignite by friction. lint it iLtnitets.npoo , being ruhheelou earil-votir t i „ iting pho , t- Thorns rotig.,4, .1l41• article, kit id nei ther poitionoter NfiloB l llo#y itteelf of There ,earl accidental fire?i front the use matches. Raising Carmts.--41vorte NV:. • t'afiki detaiis in the Albany qitlitivator. aft eLN4 pertinent which babas xaafiesi4 finding varrots upott,swardjind. Lastli?nr t he plon,ilied tte 10th 'df and planted' about the! 20th. ' The patch had no :manure, aneWas not,boad, cul tfrated; riot ploilgidd; afti , r plahtin*. What - fa*.aieede •ekne ap wi;repulleti Out, ono man cleari ago bait ay soma day. His care and laboratoravery liOtt, and his yilld coinparatiVoly so, or 4t}iti busk ins per acre. Evon•this wastWiee m great as it would irate yielded of pota toes. The whole expense, interest on land included, was only Indy or four cents a bushel SingshirOtalithi Sparpi Sperm whales arc of ,the, porygnmons class, and r are not mated, or et in pairs, as IA the case with 'the right *hare. They are ors (*violate color, and who nndistatrboi Lure font:din !Urge 4 ‘mottoolsr whieh -46140- -generosity -tow whales pro tected on the outskirts, shout, two mtle44 off, hy two yr three enormous plait; whales, called sogers." These sail in among the 144)001 alternately, at railroad Arced', 'tnid sometimes' meet with queer reeeptions ti.ost harpoons lying in wait for them. It is said there are some of these old segers which are a dread to all whalemen, and which are shunned on the least suspicion. Th 6 tonnage of a grown whole is enormities. 11' den a came ss of on e in disposed to si o k, no eahle of iron or rope has ever been known to sustain it. When harpooned and not badly hart, they settle down generally. about one thousand fathoms before they MoVe off or rise to the sur face, holey aft the - Hoes of the boat are required for paying out. The head of fi larg4e sperm %chide about 85 tons, and 45 :barrels of pure sper maceti have been taken from his ease, which is a mere y.cin in his head COlll - with the remaining part, which consists offour-fifths of the head, And is called " white horse "—a sinewy gristle, Which is impenetrable to a sharp axe. Larei' copper bolts have been found im bedded in the heads of some of them, caused by their attacks and destruc tion of vessels on aims bottom of the sea. light and L;fe.—A curious experi ment, perfinaned by the physiologisi Edwards, demonstrates the influence Of light on a certain form of animal devel opment. lie pmeured .two perforated boxes of equal size, one math of trims invent materials, the other of perforated tin plate. Into each or these boxes he put an equal number of tftlipni . and this (lime intim:1 1 4M the two Innir's in the water of the Seine. The conditions to which the little things were exposed w l he seen to he identical, except i 1 the particular of light—ono, set of tadpolel s enioyed the rays of thir sun, - the otherset remained in darkness. All the tadpoles on which , the sun , shone passed in due time to that higher state of existent*. which ambitious tadpoles, look forward to—they became fogs. A lest enviable Ate ,awaited-the ge- . nigh teil tad pol ; only two out of every dozemof the latter succeeded in passing into the existence of tots. The result of this experiment demonstrates how powerful is the influence of light on one of animal development, and 'ring , ' -ests further exailanation concerning the effects of light and darkness on the higher orders of animal life. 1===:11 PoiAoned Lipmrs. —Dr. lliram Cox, chemical inspector of adooltolie liquors in ('ineimiati, says that during two. years he has made 249 inspectiOns of'. various kinds of liquors, and has found g Ili pre t lin ft nice-telitii theft/ thins, and as great pciation of Litton pois onous concoctions. tpt* brandy h does not lsilivve there i*ont gallon , of . pure in ' a hundred gallons, the imitations haring corn whiskey for a basis, and various iioisoitrutaneills for the conditnentm. Of wines,,tiot a gallon fit' a thousand, pur- Mprting to lie sliCrry, port, or sweet ttlagu, is pare, but, they'are made water, sulphuric acid, alum G uin es pep pt.T. borse4.adish, and many ofthem without a-single drop of aleoholl.e.,epir its. Dr. Cox warnin.ts there..are not t i) u gailoas of genuine Tort wine in (u -citnnati, , In his inspeqiana he `i}aa fotiml only NT from DD per cAlt: itlenholie dr?t, mileri it idioald' fmrn 44 to iO, ainl-seine iffittedw' tniatdaulphfilie acid- onetime 4n ra quArt tat cat.a bolo through as nun:l'B.4(4)/I*h r As.whisko is now the favorite bever age, thee facts are worth eonsideilltiOnl• If nhiM fift y' of these ail nit !Tatou could he caught and:hung, it would be a Wes sing to the 4..onun unity. , tellow in North Carolina liter ing.bena put in" jail for marrying this* teen ,Nvives, recently mndu, his rsptpe. A k, , r ntleinan afterwards recognizadlutu 'and arrxiotia to seenaMtlibrewurd for'hiu .apprehnn ityviteif him I,6(Eniner tkhd then -slyly. slippnd att.. in .putrait of a constable ; but great ti-as hat , orror ull - his return to find that the cu prit had lthscoiid with his own wirti I IkirMiss qally Martin, daughter of the late Dr. artio 4 . w 4 ho is worth 10,- ,000 in h©r n right, and had been brought up by two old mid, aunts in se ehotion from "the world," eloped last, month from Xenia, Oltio,with a Lad intmett liovrl, with whom she hail been aeirtnil uteri but two or three weeks, by Itittithri of stolen interviews. , .3Eintstal" Te(owls(' Dinner.—The (linnet table at the late railrontl figtirat in MomphiaNtios ticarly three gotirtem ofd milk+ long, and itail on it 14,04)0 plates anti dishes, 2,500 iltts_. beef anti mutton, 751rong, 611 pigs, 125 turkers, 30t) clt k. e ll s; I'4o beer tongnes, 10 flarrels hf po t:ttotok, 'lB hnstrota tothol, VI barrel , ' fro water, 500 rake, besides Talon's, al monds, osaqges, Sums 15,(Mi I Vr, 2,1,000 persons parto4, of the ditifivr. ger-1n Andover, last Ve4lllr, 131) premi um were offered to tbe.Loy who would 4 destr . oy the largest moldier eaterpii- lar's hosts. otumquenee was OLIO, nests were destroyed. Th i s yenr , i 1515 *re offered in, similar premituns.— This is a good plan. .A skirt has been made for a lady in Philadelphia, whiCh von tai ns 34yarfis. It is rather hard "getting viand' that tor . I , Thift im a grate proepeet,"as the prisoner Raid when he peeped out of his: -tiodovt,. TWO TX) LLA RSkitsdriliAft' Letter fromstire KEnatai.,lowA Apra 24 Mqiit:.,4 taro Sraum--Iliqingall,,Kittptett , time. I take trilnantaw di& yriting..theseklinosAtm,iewarypper; for the bonotit of : von and your madam, in ,tvtotrd to our 'country, weatheit, market" de. , 1•, 1 .1 nib . This is a very backward seamen - 8W rather cold yet to do • mueli,:espeelallt asrugards eat door tuber. rt b., Tiber, will be this-season, 46• bria pads in Operation, mast althorn-4in* large 'teal(); We .had 26i3rardidaatyear< and had only a few briekle£44l)oo,ooo) to commence on this season,. notlernti quarter-enough to Supply onrtiewunadt, and rollat 6 ard I dollars rec &Susan& There were 12th baiklingkerectoddsat year, .200 more then we antieipated% and there is no doubt that-there will bt at least' ?MOO pmt np this•year.. AlL'hei4e will have to he morn than thatneambei erected, in order to secure the - tides , t4 the lots ; but of course !Some oirtheti. will have to back out for wintot WU ing material. ,; We have a population; aooording+ te our list coastal, whiolu was tubed 111 Juno last, of 14,000 people, and Abe *of , is supposed to contain at present t " 18,000 inhabitants. Our laminae- as. fillet, from garret to 'cellar with-lees pie. Rents are high; you' cannotsettli a room 12 t 14 feet for litstkas..f,u4) i per month - in advance. ' People are leaving here by haniniredis for want of houses. Go out wheut yell please and the inquiry in, "sherd ran I gets room or two?' The fhat 114:114 cannot build enough houses. Wo , lisr• about 200 business houses here; *We. 100 of them are doing a wholesilleiftsdi new, ranging front $50,000 to $8( 1 0,41100? Keokuk does more wholesale latudnest than any other town in the .statti-af Tows, it being the taitarestlieintiblithe State to the Eastern and BissiberSt markets. amnion sense will , ambit any man that freight can he4N-qtete by water titeaper thaw by raihield,i-A , Mere we arc at 4e foot oe tidal rapids) and head ofgoodsavijoition, whieiresot he boated at aii4inies, .except fess months of ice. 'The Southern. marked must nom. bere-- , New , oarLsants. below,ill • 'teach us that mob/ ~ i dd railr4de, are progressing - finds. Keokuk, Fort Demornsa and itioneaslJ to road is progressing rapkilyi; t net road is finished 20 miles, etas arti. rarna ning on i t now, and :therteviill beeft alga; of it finished by , the 4th-or Juip-bob Benton's Fort. The' Keokuk, Motint..,:, pleasant and Muscatine road . is prixi . progressing finely. We have *charter' tifr no eastern outlet, which is partly,' believe, under contract. ' There . is ,ataw another road in emtemplation,. %omit Kiokuk to Kansas City, Mo., oppoaltai Kansas Territory. • 2 --1•• Speculation runs high herei Le I have inereused it the rime of tOO Oil vent, lunge last year, ,and there is stilt) the gres test open ingere. ftxr oipbeatitidiff in the world, I presume. • Lots 'aro 54 by 140 feet, and. v aro sold nnliktin't, street as high as $51)0 per foot. every lot *Akin pr oixirtion to IneutionVf I presume we have about as gtied' , l) ntizrket ea thorn is in the Unit ed•Stattts.4 For inateneo,'white beaus, whiCh thslol4 era ean , raiseiu abundance hew, Avl9illilo 0n1y,83,00 per hturiail.; Potatoes, $1,1141a an' st,i4o , lpert bushel ; •Flour 87;00:1e1 803)0 per ; Butter, the Ito* lb:; It paid tte cents for, and, eons :mostly into 86`mntsper lb.; Onions 83,00 per Inkfli• es; Ltsrd 15 rents perl6; m 4 eoteayil thing Ellie; in proportion. Wood -UO10) per cord; 'Owl 40 eetits per lolltel,t-::- 1 BrleWiyers get (ruin $2,50 to 08,00 r fo dav ear'pen term a nd joiners $2,00; a 44) tap: per +lv, laborers $1,25 ttnd , Bl,oo-' per , •day. ,The Fstreetm aye being IML) proved rapidly. The Ineation. 1 8 •Tt T lef mneh broken, but It is alt.° thelmaking4 of this place. It retains a great: inayq people, hod gives enTployinent * hun dreds. I• linYe a Ar.oftfl word to some of. yolir fawn'''. They are very much need'ed t here. The thrilling community aretoif • µcame. Farmers are ma'fag fortilnele hero. They gut almost aft ' ‘tillcsrf wish to a , k. Also gurdeners--we 'Newt 3 or 41,ft) of them, nn a large scale.- tables were very high all the timc • list t year. The first caldmge sold • ittt market at 50 cents 'per head, MIA :23 1 cents the lowest. The Ukanty of fifertni ing in our prairie country - Isyltat, don't take a man's life time to ntakti thrill. Ho can makes ~L, o od thrm chlBrt year, when it takes loyearf i‘ittfratlieo land ta-do the alums amount of gettitig , oilt farm. ; I'll Blot-e, Mr. St3ble, fox this 4initi.:4-ut Perftt* I wilt write ugain, if' ~nlrtliitil'+ thix jet t i tr fit, for ri filiftein your ephigials. You . !nay rdy these,•- , being fuetr„ Yours, res,petrutly, .prepare:: Preparr the ere 4) the world corning to an end ou the. 7 .:pt4i rlf ye.xt."Juno, the Mt.. ITerno4, llgußig t offers the following Con.,ol4lii?u t A.Al l it: way einievru :" "But if the world slioutft cirlft 41)Hlk, end, there is one ehtsa from t faioui• It . t;art 7 -/' --;:k‘vtit),YlFol44' ;11 be their down la ~yai tempt to b de ibc eotilleelhirti! is pp Cel yU for Oil foj reaemetion. prtuter by. i.lip 121 receipt, so tbitt,St,,. within tiaeg4l.es.., A hint to the wise tigirLawrcte. ed spot." The' The .city goo - ' to . t MEI Pi 4/ 1,1,,,0 ratil el it ISTY N# ....,,,,, ' r - t 4.4