Br 'IL. J. STAHLE 3r YEAR. TERMS OF THIS PAPER `The Republican Compiler is _published every M morning . by HANNA' J STAIi LE, at $1,75 per annum if paid in advance-42,W per annum if not paid in advance. No stitt eoription discontinued, unless at the option of the publisher, until all arrearages are paid. friar Advertisements inKerted at the usual rates. Job Printing done, neatly, cheaply, and with dispatch. ler3fice in South Baltimore street, direct lv opposite Wampler's Tinning Etunblish ta int, one and a half squares from the Court house, "Cosettr.a" on the sign. G. F. BAILEY ,S; CO., Successors to June d• Turner's Superbly Appointed CLUB AID 11EXAGERIE fa. Joh i n Shay, Equestrian Director; W. H. Austin, Manager; N. F. N i piith, TreaFilirer ;--Clown, Jim Ward; Ring Master, Mr. Shay. We.. Will exhibit at GE TT YSBURG, on TurAday, Sept. Ixt,lic 57. l)oors open at 2, P. M., and at 7 s in the evening. Admission 25 cents. No halt' price. To see both exhibitions. Ihe great Equestrian Troupe and Splendid Cvllection of • WILT) ANIMALS will be exhibited under the nine canvass, for only one price of Admission. The company will enter town on the day of -exhibition at china ten in the forms:i. in GRAND PROCESSION. accompanied by the superb Ameikim Brass Band, of twelve Wind instruments.hn their elegant Music Carriage drawn by Twelve Ho set;; and alter proceed." ing through the principal streets, will halt at the ground of Exhibition. The performance will commerce with a new and beautiful cavalcade, entitled the PER SIAN CAVALRY! Introducing in a series of rapid and skillful evolutions, the world re nowned exercise,' of that warlike people. illus. trating with great truthfulness the review, the charge, the, retreai and the rally. This Itril• liant spectacle sill be represented with new and costly trappings, costumes, appropriate taiusic, Lc. N )% el Gymnastics and len)tattle Feats by .Mr. NICHOLS! Among the performances .of Mr. Nichols. will be seen the hewly invent ed Rope Feats, called the Fireman's Ladder, elegant display of Athletic Still, Eleratit Scene Act itt Changes. by Mr. W. Attms.ritoN(;, in whit h the rider will give illustrations of rarittlisn ell known characters horseback, accompanied by rapid changes of costume, ei..presmile patituniiinictietioll.ap propriate musk, Splendid Act of llor.eninnship. Mr. LUKE .1111 ).111..5. in the course of which this Ree..lll - I shed and intrepid rider w.II display his graceful and rapid fats of equitation. -CurintFc awl nitere , ting feats of Balancing on horseback. by VASTEILSII AY. Itrilliaut ilb4.lay of Horsemanship, by :kION:i.4IENOIT ! upon two and foor highly tr 61141 horres, exhibiting tt most perfect cum itiarttl of the tool the astonishing in stinct and oheillellee of the noble Itorees, Thriiling feats upon the Trapez. or 4 iy aminfliuui, by 3lesNr.a. W.11:1! £ NICIIUL.S, a perfornianve 6..,L.irin g the gre.ite•t awl mural nerve of the artists t.,aehiete. Lofty awl Eurryetir - .Icrobate Feats and elegant liymiistiex, by FLETc I I ER. A graphic representation given of Hurdle Jumping. Fence leaping, &c., he Mr. LYONS, on his fleet and beautiful charger, without paddle or bridle. Elegant and vig,.n no ,exereise-4 by the Troupe, in Tumbling. 'Vaulting, and Summer wetting, in the entir,,,e of which the folloring velelantedartiat4 will di%tiliguiall theni.'elves, Ail: Messrs. J. ILialett, Jim Ward, the Clown, W. Ward, Kincade, Luke Rivers, Mabter Shay. Mr, S.domon and Master Dick. JIM WARD, the Clown, will perform a ouic Sonic nit 11 in... hack. in which he will lientottate with admirable dexterity uf changes the fillowirigehnructerg—The Gipsey, Female littechus, God of Wine. Feats of Posturing and 31uscular S.rength. Ly Mr. SOLOMON. Elegant art of Lally Equestrianism, by Meul'tk ADELE DUWAS, trom the Parisian Cirrus and London Amphitheatre. in all those heautiful Tours de Grace., and agile feats of Equestrianism, for which her school is so justly aml widely celebrated. Tue greatly ;166,11.mi:flied French Rider, .Moths. BELOIT, will give an exiiihitiim of his purpri.ing art sus LA JONG LEUR --A 411EFAL. in the course of which he will perfunw Turman feats of wonderful dexterity to halancitis." Balls, Spinning Plates , throwing playing. with S irks, Le., during the then of his horse around the The entertainments will he enlivened and alternat.lsl with the performances of a OP SABLE MI NS NIELS! in which Mr, )10.ILLItIAN, the Original Bob Ridley, And Mr. ti'SOW OEN; the accomplished Banjo j'hiyer . ,'wlll sing a variety of Popular Negro 31efoiliii:Chorussett, Dant-es, Jigs. ,Breakdowns, dc. The entertainments will .eouul'ile with a COMIC AFTEIiPIECE. Aug. 17,'11t.17. JOB PRINTING. Or We are better prepared than ifeyeor to execute Jos PRINTING, 41 itB F0u1i944 bralicArs. With two Presses, *tad IR unusually large assortment of jobbing fetter and other materials, the public may rest assured that for neat ness and expedition in doing work, the COMM= ' o*e " can't be beat." Spouting ! GEOIIGE sad lieu, Wimplei will make /luaus Spouting anal pat up the same low, s for cash or coustry products. Farmers and all ,others wicking tkeir houses, Marna. lc., spout. ,Ml, would do welt to give tbois a call. U. 4 11. 11 7 1.31PLF.R. April 18, 1853. 11 A LARGE Assortment of STR.4.IV GOODS, ..t.A_ just received, and fur sale nt Bitis•cmttz .1 .Arcumistrciet. BONNETS, Ribbons, Parasols and Shawls, to be bad very cheap az FALINESTOCKS'. irrIIREADS, Pina, Needles, Thimbles, La i, dies' and other Combs, Buttons, Hooks ,and eyes, Tooth Bruahes, Lead Pencils, .4 11 t4 61 , cheap at VOtt anything in the Flour, Grocery and jr ; Provision line, call at GILLESPIE & THOMAS'. EVAkFibRY STATIONERY— any quan f shy and the best ah)ck ever brought W .v 44 place. Lf you doubt it, cull in and see for yoerielves—st SCHICK'S. c iAt tpxr Bivig, Trunks, Umbrellas, and Caws, st 4 00SEA.N a PAXTON'S. A DEMOCRATIC AND FAMILY JOURNAL. rut THE LITTLE POFPIN. Wepwrlffrimegine anything moreexquisite of the kind than this poem, by Mrs. fI. L. Bostwick. It is one of those poems that one cannot see to read through : 'Twas a tiny, rosewood thing, - Eben bound, and glittering With its stars of silver white, Silver tablet, blank and bright, Downy pilluwed, satin lined, That I, loitering, chanced to find, 'Mid the dust, and scent and gloom OI the undertaker's room, Waiting, empty—ah! fur whom? Ah! what lore•watched cradle bed Keeps to-night the nestling head, Or on what soft, pilluwing breast( Is the cherub form at rest, That ere long, with darkened eye, Sleeping to no lullaby. Whitely robed, and still, and cold, gale dowers slipping from its hold, Shall this dainty couch enfold? Ah what bitter tears shall stain All this satin sheet like rain, Anti what towering hopes be hid 'Neath this tiny coffin lid, S:arcely large enough to bear Little words that must be there, Little words, cut deep and true. Bleeding mothers' hearts anew— Sweet pet name, and "Aoao Two" Oli! can sorrow's hovering plume Round our pathway cast a gloom, Chill and darksome as the shade By an infant's coffin made? From our arms an angel flies, And our Rtartl ed , dazzled eye•, Weeping round its vacant place, Cannot rime its path to trace, Cannot see the angel face! Zht Zrint.4itr. Letter from the East. Jerusalem—The ILdy Si'rileher, the An cient Temple 11'a1l—Clbeet—Newly Diwhrered Cdrerns under the City-- Bethlehem—Grotto the _Vativity— Ca re of .Adullum. Correspondence of the \ew•Tork Dolly Nowt D.►Yssccs, Syria, June 1, 1557 My journey outruns my letters. (*amp life affords but little time for (-or ruspondenee. After a fatiguing day in the saddle, one hurries to the luxury of a hard bed and is &pi' wrapped in forgetfulness ofall things earthly. Thus' I have traveled on to this ancient city, having traversed the whole extent of the holy Land from Bt orsheba to Dan. As I remain here some days I will resume my letters. !Duero is little new to be said of Jerusalem—there is no city on earth in which more informa tion has been gathered. Possibly its picture may be as fresh to the minds of your readers as it is in my own. I lin gered Viere a fortnight and never left a city with more regret. Concerning its s icred localities I have nothing new to offer. I made no investigation, and had no. theories to establish. While superstition on the one hand has multi plied the holy places, unreasonable pre judice on the other has labored to sap the foundations of many a tradition, unquestionably foanded on truth. It is better to believe than doubt; and here, on the altar of Chnstianity, alind char ity should willingly overlook the faults of some of its followers, while it mer its them on the common ground of in terest to Him who was its founder. I went to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. A burst of music met me as I entered ; A pealing organ was ringing and &being among the domes and vaultings and caverns of this an eient, sanctuary. Rich incense floated in the air. A choir of rfiany voices were chanting a latin. service. Beneath the great domo a procession of priests with censors, books •and tapers was moving with solemn step around a small orna mented structure covering the venerat ed spot where Christendom has wor shipped for at least fifteen A undred gears. I did not understand the services, bat I remarked what appeared the deep solemnity and earnestness of those Who were partakers in it. On several occa sions I went all over tho church, an in tricate assemblage of many chapels of very irregular forms and positions, but returned always with great interest to the sepulcher, which, whatever may be thought of the truth of its pretentions, is certainly the most solemn of shrines. This little chamtier, but a few feet square, admits but four or five persons at a time. Pilgrims are constantly en tering and departing. Noiselessly, with deep awe upon their countenances, they drop upon their knees, and press their lips and foreheads against the plain marble sled that covers the reputed se pulchre of Christ. A number of bunr lug golden lamps hang above the tomb. From time to time a silent priest, con stantly in attendance, sprinkles a fra grant shower over the kneeling vota ries. Not a word is uttered. So pro found is the reverence that even whis pered prayers are suppressed. One can almost hear the throbbing of burden ed hearts that have borne their sorrows hither, perhaps from the ends of the earth, to lay theta down at the grave of the Redeemer. Is it an erring and su perstitious feeling that prompts a devo tion so ardent? "Christ is not here— He has risen as He said;"—yet an an gel voice seems to whisper through the GETTYSBURG, PENN'A.: MONDAY, AUG. 24, 1857. "Come see the place where the Lord lay." All this may be a decep tion. ' Perhaps the reverence of ages errs ! The true sepulcher may be north or east or west—a hundred or a thous and yards. Who knows? What mat ters it? No such petty question of lo cality affects the interest that roots me to this spot. Here, on this very stone,.thousands and tens of thousands, for centuries and tens of centuries, have bowed and sobbed and prayed. Kings and beggars—lowly and great—all clas ses and degrees of men, brought hither bye common impulse, have acknowledg ed one common faith, and joined in one common petition for a share in His re demption, " who died, and was buried, and rose again." Pretended though it be, is there nothing that attracts us to the Holy Sepulcher? From the root of the Governor's house on the site of the Tower of Antonia, I had a clear view directly down into the area of the Mosque of Omar. Moslem bigotry refuses the Christian a close survey. This sacred mosque, reverenc ed next to that of Mecca, stands without any doubt upon, or very near the site of the great Jewish Santuary. Arehi tectually the building is far from hand some. It reminds one of a locomotive " round house" in a railroad depot. lt seems, however, to be richly finished. The plan is an octagon, the central part covered by a dome. The exterior is a mosaic of tiles or colored porcelain. A large open space surrounds the build ing, planted with trees and furnished with ornamental Mums, screens and covered places for prayer. In the latter were - numerous turbaned heads bowing in repeated prostrations. Just outside the northeast angle of this area is the Pool of Bethesda, now dry and partially tilled with rubbish. Near by, the Gate of St. Stephen opens upon the valley of the Kedron. Pass ing out of this gate, and by the scene of the first Christian martyrdom, I walked southerly along the ancient temple wall. Much of the original massive masonry exists in the lower courses, where it was protected by the ruin of the superior parts. The stones are of great size, four to five feet deep, some measurir g over twenty feet in length. They are the "great stories, costly stones and hewed stones," laid by King Solomon himself. The whole size of the temple's area is 801110 1,000 by 1,500 feet. At its southeast angle . the ancient masonry is well preserved. Some of the courses here are six feet in depth. The contrast ofthis solid stone work, with the subsequent patching and completion of the wall, is very striking. Several different epochs of ruin and re construction are visible along the wall. The average height of the wall on the south and east side appears about sixty feet. It may have been much loftier formerly, before frequent ruins raised the ground at the base. The "Golden Gate" now built up, is near the centre on the east side. There are two arch ed portals with richly sculptured archi traves. Looking through a loop-Lo e, I saw vaults and columns within. The construction is very ancient and may with propriety be referred to the time of Herod. Some make it many centur ies earlier. Passing over the dry bed of the brook Kedron and by the alleged tomb of the Virgin and the Garden of Gethsemane, I climbed the steep slope of Olivet by the path leading. to Bethany, many a time trodden by the Saviour's feet. Groves of olive trees still cover the face of the hill looking toward the city Among them the Son of Man used to wander with his disciples. Here he tit tered his pathetic lamentations over 'Jerusalem, and here he prayed in agony on the night in which he was betrayed. Ascending to the summit of the nioun- I tain I climbed the turret of a building connected with the ruined church of the Ascension. The north end of the Dead Sea is clearly visible from thin point,.l the desolate mountains of Moab . and Atnmon, the hills that encompass Jeru salem, and the entire extent of the city itself on the opposite side of the deep glen of Jehoshaphat. This scene, the most suggestive, the most deeply inter esting on With, I will not describe. Who does not know it well. My pre conceived idea was only modified by finding the outlines of the lar.dscape (toward the city) less strongly undula ting than I expected, and the general face of the country more fully culti vated. Descending further to the South I passed among the ten thousaind Jewish tombs that pave the whole purface of this part of the mountain. Ih the bot tom of the val3ey - are the so-called tombs of Absalom, Zachariah,.lehosha phat and St. James. They are excava ted from the rock mncii in the Petra style. From thence skirting the south of the city, I entered it by the Zion Gate. One morning I made the circuit of the walls on the fortifications from the Jaffa Gate northerly to St. Stephens, embracing the principal circuit of the city.. This walk gave mea perfect ides of the topography of Jerusalem. I was particularly struck with the depression that runs through it northerly from the Tyropcean to the Damascus Gate, divid ing the city into two distinct portions, and with the fact that the temple area is overlooked by all parts of Jerusalem, excepting a small portion of the Jewish quarters. There are largo unoccupied areas within the present walls. These are filled with ruins of arches, vaults and massive masonry, more or less buried beneath the accumulations of ages. With a considerable party, in compa ny with Bishop Gobat, of the English and Prussirch, I visited the Greek and Armenian Convents. We "TRUTH IS MIGHTY, AND WILL PHRVAIL." were formally received and entertained in Oriental style with k•offee, pipes, and refreshments. The superior and fath ers who did the honors were noble look ing old meo with venerable white beards. Thy Armenian Convent is very rich. Its church is superbly ornamented. The doors of the shrines are richly in laid with pearl and tortoise shell, like the wookwork of St. Bruno's Chapel, near Granada. Afterwards some of us visited the n ewly dieorered caverns, which extend under the city. The entrance is outside the walls, a little e tat of the Damascus Gate. Entering by a small aperture we found ourselves in an immense chamber, extending by various b r anch• es to a great distance. The whole has not yet be I I explored. The place has the appearance of a natural cavern, en larged by quarrying. The marks of artificial, excavations appear every where on the rocks. l,nonense amounts of stone have been removed fron► these cavities, but when no one can say. The labyrinthine ramifications extend toward the temple. and may be connect • ed with the subterraneat► vaultings be lieved to exist there. It would require no little dine or labor to explore the-4e chambers fully, but the investigation would be one of the highest interest. The rock is soft light colored limestone without distinct stratification. From then c e we visited the tombs of the kings. This is a large excavation in the E.•vptiati style, with numerous diverging chambers C intain'ng niches for the dead. Tradition ask ~oes the works to the kings of Judah, though sonic consider it oft he time of the Em press Ifelena. The small interior cham bers of this extensive catacomb were each closed by u stone door opening in ward. The broken doors, solid panell ed blocks of limestone, still lie in the tonilk!. They hail projecting pivots above and below, fitting into corres ponding recesses in the hilid rock. fhe principal entranee into he vaults from the portieo was below the level .of the floor and apparently concealed. This door is singularly closed. A cir cular stone about fiour feet diameter, by fifteen inches thick, rats across it. It stands on edge, fitting into a recess when in place, and into u long channel when clients'. The arrangement is in teresting as possibly similar to that where the Angel rolled buck the great stone from the door of the Saviour's sepulcher. We visited Bethlehem...ix miles south. Riding through the little city on the Kalmyk Of its conspicuous hill, we went to the convent which includes the site of the nativity. Passing through a low iron door, we entered the large church built by Helena 1,500 years ago. It is the oldest Christian church now standing. The building is u large and rich obe, somewhat resembling the basilica of Santa Maria Maggio' e in Rome. Thence we descended to the celebrat ed grotto w hich lies beneath the chan cel of the church. Here in a cave in the original rock is the site which from the earliest ages has been handed down as the stable where the of God. took upon him our flesh. It is a small chap el, where numerous lamps are kept con stantly burning before an altar, beneath which is a silverstar bearing this inscrip tion : "ilk de Vireos )/aria 311.414 ['bridals oaten eat " There are two other altars in the grotto. One with a marble manger is intended to indicate the spot of the shepherd's adoration, the other that of the Magi. Good pictures hang over the two altars. The other ornaments of the chapel, excepting some lamps of precious metal, are quite plain. Near the grotto of the Nativity is that of St. Jerome, (containing his sepulcher.) whore he spent several years of his life and wrote the Vulgate translation of the Scriptures, and where also occurred that " last communion" so vividly paint ed by Domenichino. Of the verity of the tradition which fixes the scene of the Nativity in the grotto of Bethlehem, hut little need be said. The question has been ablyexam ined, and though some still doubt, ma ny are convinced of its truth. The church was built only some IWO years after Christ's crucifixion. The locality of an event like the Messiah's incarna tion would not be likely to be lost in so short a time. The City of Bethlehem is a small compact town, and undoubt edly on its original site. This grotto at any rate cannot be far off from the manger to which Joseph and the Virgin resorted, because there was no room for them in the inn. The eaves in this country are used as pens for cattle and sheep to this day. I have seen them so employed both in Egypt and in the Valley of Jehosluiphat. It is of' small profit to dispute about precise localities. On, or very near this spot, occurred that wonderful event which awoke the songs of • the angels in Heaven—the promised Messiah, "conceived of the Holy Ghost, was born of the Virgin " From Bethlehem we pursued oar way southerly along the aqueduct of Solo mon, which runs on the side of a steep stony valley. In the bottom of this valley, a few miles up, there is an agri cultural establishment connected with the English Mission on Mount Zion.— We descended to visit it. The narrow base of the valley is cultivated as a gar den , planted with fruit-trees and flowers. The establishment is designed to cul tivate industrious habits among the na tives, and to develop the fruitfulness of the country under proper tillage. We took our noon lunch in the garden un der the shade of a spreading fig tree, and then set out to visit the cave of Adullum, about an hoar and-a-half to tho south-east. The path leads down the same valley. It is,very narrow at the bottom, with sides rising rocky and steep. Atter leaving the Burdens there is but a Scan ty vegetation among ledges and great blocks of limestone which cover the ground. Soon the descent of the val ley becomes very great as it begins to plunge downward toward the deep de pression of the Dead Sea. Leaving the bottom, now become a wild glen, we fol lowed a sort of goat path along Ow side, where our mountain ponies scrum ' bled among rocks and loose stones in some difficult and dangerous places.— We left the animals at last at the ruins of an extensive establishment, once per haps a convent. standing in a wild and desolate spot. It is on a steep hill side, looking down almost perpendicularly into a gulf of several hundred feet.— Wild cliffs rise on the opposite side of the narrow glen, whose windings are seen for some miles below, descending rapidly and tilled with mountain debris. In this strangely savage region the youthful David dwelt when he fled from the hand of Saul. Here he gathered together a company of outlaws, over Whom he became a sort of robber captain. llalf a mile beyond the ruin, in the side of the precipice along which are the evidences of an ancient road cut in the rock, we came to the cave. A small aperture conducts by several windings into an ample cavern with a lofty roof. Our candles could scarcely send their rays to the rocky Diverging- passages lead from this hall, one of which penetrates the mountain a quarter of a mile. The opening in some places isjust passable on thirhands and knees. There is room in the cavern for the coneealment of quite a body of ' men. The cave of dullu in is mentioned in I Sum, xxii. It is supposed that David composed here the 57th and 1-12 d Psalms. Ou our return we descended by a ' scrambling path, and pursued our way among the loose rocks in the bottom of' the valley. After some miles of this difficult travelling, where we were often obliged to dismount and lead our horses, we left the glen by a lateral opening on the north,ascending toward Bethlehem. The country immediately about the city is remarkably well cultivated. The steep hillsides are terraced and planted with figs and olives. At the bottom of the valleys are grain fields. In some of these Muth the Noabitess followed the reapers of Boaz. In one of the deep val e s iv pointed out the place where the shepherds received the angelic visi- I tat ion. Climblng the hill to Bethlehem by a steep rock• road, we stopped to see the ancient well fir whose waters David longed in the wilderness. It .stands under an old vaulted portico just out side the town. There are two curbs of marble, mach worn by the friction of ropes. A crowd of girls were busv at the well drawing water with little leathern buekgts and pouring it into large skins, which they carried off on their shoulders. The scene was qylite an Oriental one, and the damsels them selves were many of them very pretty. They were as usual loaded with heavy silver bra( ele's and with strings of coins on their foreheads. They drew water tbr us to drink in the patriarchal style, while we stood admiring the sim ple manners which have existed in this country unchanged since patriarchal days. on another occasion we took a jour ney of two days to the northward of Jerusalem, visiting a number of scrip tural localities. We slept at Bethel, perhaps on the very ground where Ja cob laid down to rest, and where he 4 dreamed. The country is a succession of high, stony hills, with but little culti vation. As respects its fertility, Judea is the least inviting portion of Pales tine.l The villages are nearly all ruins -of ancient towns, once strongholds sur rounded by walls. They are almost in variably on the summits ofbills, located with reference to defence. The popu lation is now small and wretched, lic- I ing in hovels, or in the half-fallen yank ed houses of their predecessori. The buildings are all of gray limestone, with domed roofs of mud or stone. The men always go armed with guns and swords. The women wear a great deal of orna ment, generally composed of numerous silver coins bound in an arch over the 4head. The little children aregood looking and many of them have re markably pleasing countenances. Un der proper culture they might be train ed up into a respectable community.— Their case is almost hopeless, however, 'tinder theprlsentgovernment—Moslem bigotry and the unfavorable forma, of _Christianity in the East. From Bethel wolraveled westward down a dee_p valley, whose waters flow into the Mediterranean. Down this pass both Joshua and Samuel pursued the muted ranks of the Philistines. We ascended to the upper Bothoron, an, ancient fortress on the sharp summit of a projecting knob. The view from hence is very broad to the westward, the central chain of hills titat runs through Palestine breaking off here suddenly nearly 2,000 feet. The ranges fur to north and south across the low lands, including the plain ufSharon'and the land of the Philistines, bounded by the sea at the distance of some thirty miles. On this lofty elevation the con quering Joshua is thought to have stood when he commanded the sun to stand still upon Gibeon and the moon in the Valley of Ajalon. The latter is a green valley distinctly visible to the west; the former a small town some miles off to the southeast. I hive no room togireyou an amount of my journey to the Dead Sea without swelling this letter to au unpardonable length. I reserve it, therefore, ae well as some notes of my further ramblings through Holy Land, and of blunascus, which is a quee?r l / 4 place, the most thor oughly oriental of all the cities of the East, for another occasion. tt H." niortilanemo. Editorship. We have known a very learned gen tleman to obligingly bring us a contri bution with the remark, that as we were continually occupied, it mist doubtless be quite an accommodation to receive a good article once in awltile —and on examining the "good" article in question, we have found three gross grammatical emirs, divers sins of awk wardness, and two words mispolled in the first and second sentences. A lec ture, which will bear printing as it is delivered, is an exception ; and, in a word, there are very few men, who have not served a regular apprenticeship in the types, who can sit down, and, with out " halt or let," express their thoughts readily and fluently in writing. Yet, with all this, we daily meet with gen tlemen who, because they have made an occasional hit in a letter to a-friend, or have elaborated a drawling story or poem in some incautious paper, talk dashingly of journalism, and graciously inform us how they would make things fly round, if they were only editors. Singular—every man,no matter how stupid he is, always seems to be morally convinced that if everything else fails, ho can either manage a small farm or edit a paper—and experience shows that where there are a hundred educa ted young men capable of successfully practicing a profession, there is not more than ono or two who is really enough of a genius, a scholar, and a man of practical sense, to make a good editor. In fact, though all the world reads papers, there are ver}• few out of the business who have ever taken the pains to acquire much ixformation rela tive to it—and the natural consequence is, that its difficulties are unappreciated. 4-Boston Investigator. One of the Want., not Supplied.—The New York Post, referring to the abun dance of good food produced in the United States, and the scarcity of indi viduals competent to prepare it for the table as it ought to be prepared, says: " We want schools for nooks as much as for physicians; even more, for people want to eat every day, but they only want. a doctor occasionally; and they would want one much less frequently if they were better fed, that is, if their twere better prepared. How often oVs it happen that the professing cooks know how to make good bread or to boil a good potato or a cabbage? It is As much as a man's life is worth to tray el through the interior and less fre quented portions ofour western country, so apt are they at spoiling the produce of the soil in preparing it for•the table. In three months a man or woman of fair intelligence could be taught more of the art of preparing the gifts of Providence for the nutriment of Man than is possessed by ninty-nine hun dredths of the most experienced of our American cooks. Who will move in the matter? Who is prepared to take his rank among our great national benefac tors by setting such an institution in motion ?" 11611 - Marshall Caste!lane, a rigid dis ciplinarian, called out the garrison of Lyons one sultry day and made them go through all the movements and inci dents ot' a pitched battle on a small scale. In the midst of terrible volleys of musketry, executed at his orders, he observed two grenadiers who, over powered by the heat and by exertion, had quietly fallen on the grass. He im mediately rode up to them, bursting with rage, and exclaimed," You coward ly scoundrels, what are you doing here? While yqur comrades are fighting, you are sleeping! Actually doing nothing !" " I beg your pardon, Marshal," said one of the grenadiers, " we are acting the slain in the battle." The Marshal smiled and turned his horse. ler" You have no ducks beret' said a Yankee, who was on a visit to the fens of Lincolnshire during the shooting season. "I was on the Chespeake once in the duck season. The boys got tired of shooting with their double-barrels, and we got a cannon from the town, loaded with a bag of B B shot, hatilod her to the river, levelled her and tired. I tell you ducks was that We gather ed three thousand, and the crippled got away. But that was not all, for the bag the shot was in fell over the bead of a greyhead when it came out of the cannon, and I taught him before he got clear." mar •By the year two thousand, it is probable that manual labor will have utterly ceased under the sun, and the occupation of the adjective "hard-fisted,' will have gone forever. They havo now a potato-digging ma chine, .which, drawn by horses down the rows, digs the potataes, separates them from the dirt, and loads them up in the cart, while the owner walks along side, whistling, with his hands in hi's pockets. 16rA Judge charging a jury had oc casion very frequently to make use of of the words mortgagee and mortgagee. The foreman of the jury asked the judge the meaning of the words. can - didly confessing he di I not know their import. His lordship tiwetiously ex plained them thus: 4 , 1 NOD to you—you notice me; I'm the NOD-U, you the gOD-EL" TWO DOLL :U{B A-YEAR. Brigham Young a New Yorker. , Both Brigham Young and Heber 11. Kimball are New Yorkers. Brigham lived near the line dividing Ontario old Monroe counties, in'the town of Victdir, at the time he became a Mormon. Ho hail always manifested a proclivity to religious fanaticism, or ratfieilu) was a lazy rapscallion, good fbr nothing ef cept to howl at a camp meeting. lie lived in a log shanty, with a dilapidated i patient, suffering wife, surrounded bytui, host of tow-headed children. Occaski r ally he made ups lot of axe helves s 'd traded them off for sugar and tea; ?rt other fits of industry he would d a day's work in the hay field for a nei h bor. hoe the potatoes in his own little patch, or pound clothes for his 4ife on a washing day. But his special Mis sion was to go to camp meetings and revivals, - - Were he managed to get.'his daily bread out of the more wealthy brethern, in consideration of the unction with which he shouted "ga-lor-ah '."— On such occasions lirigham took no thought of the morroiv, but cheerfully putting on his old wool hat, would leave his family without flour in the barrel or wood at the door, and telling his wife that the . "Lord would provide," he would put, off for a week's absence. Poor Mrs. Brigham managed by. .borrowing fr rm her neighbors, with the, small hope ot'paying; choptied the wood herself, and with an old aun-bonnet— Navarino style L-went to the spring af ter water, thordughly convinced that her lot was not of the easiest, and that hei husband was, to use a western ex pression, an "ornery cuss," in which sentiment all who knew him joined.— People were getting very tired of Brig ham when Mormonism turned up. lie was just the man for the religion, and the religion seemed expressly adapted to him. He became an exhorter, held neighborhood meetings, ranted and howled his doctrines into the minds of. others as weak as himself, arid finally went west with the rest of them, where he has developed his powers, until the poor, miserable, rustic loafer is govern or of a territory and the chief prophet of a great religious sect. He has just the mixture of shrewdness and folly which is required fur Success in fanati cism or quackery-. • A wiser man could not hold his place. A man must be half fool and halt' knave to be a successful quack. j i, Hebei C. Kimball, was a man of more respectability. He was born a fanatic, and if he were not a Mormon would- tv something else just like it. In 'h4l,. church—he was a Baptist originally—* ho was one of those pestilent fellows who want resolutions passed at church meetings withholding fellowship from somebody else, and insist on having a political codicil added to the Bible.— We believe he had some property. Ile - , has much more talent than Brigham Young, but is inferior to him in the ele ments of quackery. He has very re spectable relatives now living in the part of Monroe county from which he started. A Hen House Ravisher.—ln Albany a few days since, a ben house belonging to a Mr. Phelps, was broken into and ' robbed. Mr. Phelps being angry, al lowed thathe would "lay for the thief," and shoot him. This drew out the fol lowing reply : To Mr. Orsin Felps :—Bain one of ' that are clas that gets poltry.anny way it can be got, and understandin from your advertisement ins newspaper that you have sum chickens left, and that you'd got a pistol and sum bin pil to give to the man what stole 'em, this is to certify that I shall come to-night, and I have got a howitzer with me crammed ' fall of miles, tax and other iron implu monts. I hay marked your size on the side of a church, and been practisin on , it for a week, and don't think I can miss vou. So elm on with your pistil and blu pil. After I get through Bring - at you, I'll carry home the "dada' oa the howitzer. A' HEN Ilousa RAVISHER. One bul of the Railroad /n.—An Ala bamian, a few days since, went out to see the depot of the Mobile and Ohio Railroad. Near the depot wereeeveild Irish divymen. Thinking to quiz them, ho shouted to one— " Has the railroad got in ?" "Ono ind has, sir," was the prompt response. • /WA ioman is _either worth a good deal or nothing. If good for nothing, she is not worth getting jealous for; if she be a trne woman, she give ni) cause for jealousy. A man is a brute to be jealous of a good woman—a fool to be jealous of a worthless one; but is a double fool to cut his throat for either of them. IfirWidow Grizzle's husband lately died of cholera. In the midst of the most acute bodily pain, after the band of death had touched him, and while writh ing in agony, his gentle wife said to " Well, Mr. Grizzle, you needn't kick round so, and wearall the sheets out, if you are dying !" - , /® - Some " queer fish " in St. Louis, in allusion to the " bill for the benefit of married women" before the Missour► Legislature, asked it they , had better not do something for the henatit of the single ladies, and not trouble themselves about other men's wives. flia - Punch says that every family. , ought to keep a kitten to surnlse a t children. They should also keep ' dren to amuse the kitten. siTA philosopher who had marriethr, vulgar but amiable *I, used So call lker' Brown Sugar," beeanse,, be asitl,Auw. NrSei sweet, but unrefined!' , • B 0 NO. 48.