LEWISBURG CHRONICLE BY 0. N. WORDEN & J. II. C. IIICKOK, CoKREsroxDixG Editor. Z)t fttoisbnrn Chronicle. FKIUAY, DEC. 21, 155. Something for the New Tear. We liave been requested to say to our readers and let each one tell a neighbor that the instructions issued by the Tost Master Gcueral in relation to the prepayment of all letters by stamps, takes effect the 1st of January, 1850. Absolute pre-payment by "stamps or stamped enve lopes" is required on all letters to places within the I'uitcd States, after this month. Great care should be taken, as well in pre paying the proper amount on letters above the weight of half an ounce, as to place stamps on single letters before dropping them in the Officc.othcrwisc the Tost Mas ter is not authorized to send them. The Post Master General intends to carry the provisions of the law into effect, and calls upon the Post Masters to provide themselves with stamps and stamped enve lopes. It is not intended that Post Masters shall affix the stamps, but to keep them on hand, so that all persons having occasion to use, may readily obtain them. Whether agreeable or not, this is the rule, and must be regarded. - Pennsylvania Telegraph. This journal, advertised in another col - umn, we think will supply the want, long felt, of a thorough State Newspaper at the Seat of Government. Col. M'Cllre is one of the most energetic business men, and able and popular editors of the day, and will we suppose devote himself to the work exclusively. Of Senator Sellers' ability as a writer, we know nothing, but if he writes as well as he runs, he'll do. The Company has ample means to carry out their great undertaking. The price to clubs (under the advance system,) is not half what similar papers have been sent out for heretofore. The Tdrgraph should start with 100 or 200 subscribers at the Lewisburg Post Office. A Lesson". It will be remembered that by a "fusion" of Softs, Hards and "Liquor fellers" in New York State, Samuel L. Scldcn bad about 10,000 maj. over Corn stock (Am.) for a Judge of the Supreme Court of that State. The State Board of Canvassers, however, we see it stated, have declared Comstock elected, in consequeuce of incorrect returns. In New York county, where Selden had a very largo majority, his whole vote was returned far Samuel S. Selden instead of L. Now whether the L. was mistaken for an S., or whether the Clerks were so much opposed to the Liquor Law that they repudiated the L. by occas ion of ower-0 be-joy-ful-ing, or otherwise, it defeated him. Samuel L. SAelden also I had some votes intended doubtless for ' Samuel L. Selden. So that, although the three "Samuels" together had more than George F. Comstock, j et Sam Comstock is 15,000 to 20,000 ahead of any one of 'em, and the. whole "Sam" Ticket is counted "in." -We sec several gentlemen suggested in various tarts of the State as the next j Democratic nominee for Auditor General, j Mr. Banks we do not sec named. N Hat is , meant by this? Mr Banks has cotfesscdly ! no superior in his party for capacity ana integrity ; and nts experience is worm something. any change may have an i j .i. overtwaru iu, ... j .- unjust If Banks is the best man they j have, let them honorably try to retain i him ; if Brawley is not the best for his j station, let them try to get a better. Do 1 not punish one for the sins of the other. Sheridan's Calendar The following old dish of rhyme on the weathcr,has been styled "Sheridan's Rhyming Calendar," and, although intended for England, will apply well to America, this year : January snowy, ") July moppy, " February flowy, August croppy, j March blowy, ) September poppy, ) April showery, ") October breezy, May flowery, November wheezy, V June bowery, J December freczy. ) i-In the Chronicle of 2lst Sept last, is a "Wild Wood Song" of former days, the authorship of which was said to be unknown. A gentleman frem Delaware : . . Co.. N.Y.. informs us that Wm. Beach, of j Franklin, in that county, was the author. He was a man of a poetical turn, but of irregular habits, a basket-maker by occu pation. Ha removed to Indiana, and died, at an advanced age, a Methodist preacher. " Cameron, .sq., 01 i.cwisourg, uas . n I . it . II.L . ' .. . - i 1 ... been elected i'resiucnl 01 me iau. 01 Northumberland. John Taggart, i.sq., j who for a long series ot years nas Deen me ; able and efficient President of this institu tion, retires with the good wishes of all the business men, who have transacted busi ness at the Bank, while under his Presi dency. Danville Democrat. Tbo Tribune says George Law spent ' 110,000 to carry New York State for the ! Know Nothings at the late election. The Arjus says if he has so much spare cash, ; he had better come to Easton and settle the washer woman's bill he forgot to pay, when ho left there a few years ag. So ' "Murder will out I" UJ .... r-y - , i w0, three, or even lour uours ui B1Uw . - f , . , . t f II it is simpiy ma tucy , boll; not too much.- 0ne uime. will T . . . . a ' , excuse for throwme iimirrM t ,!, a K h -nrn meal or ! . . - ' b . . ' R. CORNELIUS. The Itcauly or I.lle. Trulr tli- liphl i wwt, and plriKant thing it 1 for the -yrt to hrti.-lit tlie tun " Kishj Si'LoMuft. Life is beautiful. Its duties Cluster 'round each passing day) Vhn tneir sweet and solemn voices Warn to work. In watch, to pray. They alone such blessinss forfeit. Who throneh sloth their spirits cheat, Or, in srlfih stupor sitting, See the rust their armor eat. Life is beautiful. Affections Thrill with joy its golden string. In its pcn blossoms nestle, liirdlike 'mid ils tranches sing ; Smiling, rork its cradle slumbers, Guard with pride its youthful bloom. Fondly kiss its snow-white temples, Dew the turf that decks its tomb. Life is beautiful, with promise Of a crown that can not fade ; Life is fearful, with a promise Of an everlasting shade. Mav no thoughtless worldling scorn it, Wandering wide in folly's maze ; Duty, lore and hope adorn it. Let the latest breath be praise. ONE DIME. 'Tis a little sum 'tis often given for a drink or cigartis soon burnt out and was,ea- " laKC3 lcu almcs 10 maj" j dollar' and dollar 13 COmm0a Pr,C0 for ! a B'1Delc mcaL II 18 soon f cts j re not lastinf "tea lt Prod"ces dyspeps.a, and then it often costs a hun- dred dimes to purchase medicine that does ot cure the disease. 1 To thoso who never dine for less than a i dollar, how unsatisfactory would be adin- j ner for a dime. Header, have you ever : reflected how many entire families in this city, where food is so dear, dine every day for less than one dime ? Did you ever think of bestowing one dime for charitable purposes, and how much good that would do? What if every subscriber to TlIE Weekly Trihuxe should give one dime with his subscription, to be applied to the necessities of the needy and deserving poor jn tu;a c;lT u;j y0U ever consider what a suln lt WOuld be ? Look at it 137,000 subscribers at one dime each is S13.700. What if it were applied to purchase bread, 'say at five cents a loaf? It would buy j 1,740,000 loaves of bread. What if we 1 should announce that such a quantity of ; bread was about t j be given to the poor in this city ! The whole land would re joice. How much can be done with one dime ! j Let us sec what we would do with it if we had Lut one only one dime in the world and yet with that must provide j for a family consisting of a mother and i four chil Jren for a whole day. We would j not buy bakers' bread at sixpence a loaf i very small loaves, too, never weighing ! over a pound, however moist or however i adulterated with corn, potatoes, or buck i wheat, which are harmless or with plaa ! in. nf lime. alum, sulohate of zinc. ' ' . . . . t many otuer aeicteriuus substances. No, wp would not buv bakers' bread with our dime, nor would we buy fine flour at six or seven cents a round, else some of the ' children would go hungry. We might buy corn meal and make a cheap cake, or j I , not of mush, or a larger pot of porridge, . , . tw0 pounJ8 0f homminy, , , nnr oul . fetd tLe fami, ! on(j fuU mcal lut to thu lMcT articlo J tbere h one 0i,jt.ction. Where is the fuel u come fro;iJ t0 cook thh mcss?for COrn mofe tLan an). otuer gra;n rcquires cook uoininv na sce TLcy rc(luire icagt cooking, but thcv cost w;th ai tnu;r water and they are more ti,an j,tf watcr two cents and a nair a pounii at rcta;L Then they are not cheap food after all. It will not do to spend our dime for pota toes. What then ? It is no easy study to learn how to procure the most human food for a dime; to ascertain how many hungry mouths may be fed how many empty stomachs satisfied, for one dime. It is a study too much neglected. It should be taught in all Public Schools. Certainly in all Charity, Industrial and Ragged Schools where children are fed as well as taught. What better wisdom could von teach them than how to procure the most food for a dime ? It is a little coin, .... . l . 1 Ti 1J out it can do maue to expauu. n w be real charity genuine chanty practi. cal charity to teach such scholars econo my in food ; not how to eat less, to live noon less for. Heaven knows, some of them live upon little enough now but to teach them what to buy, in case of cmer artnnv with & littlt ioin nnlv nnn dime. 6 Jt 1 w fa w karned that le and wfl -t tQ We ,carne(j u of won,antnat iS) the practical operation f ;tthouh ghe gays gne carncj it 0f us, from something she read about ccono- mizing food in The Tribune. "I had," said she, "ono day last week, only one dime in the world, and that was to feed me and my four children all day ; for I would not ask for credit, and I could not borrow, and I never did leg. I did live through the day, and I did not go hungry. I fed myself and family with one dime." "How ?" "O, that was not too." all. I bought fuel iD! to mane li paiaiauic auu wuuieauuie. . , , . . , c ...,. .,u r . l.ii i t. i - . n.. : .:" ''- - j this X cut up into bits, and soaked tt nab tueu i uiaujca i jjui. fihptt "What, with ouc dime ?" "Yes, with one dime. I bought two cents' worth of coke, because that is cheap- er than coal, and because I could kindle it with a piece of paper in my little fur nace with two or three little bits of char coal that some careless boy had dropped in the street just in my path. With three cents I bought a scraggy piece of salt pork. Half fat and half lean. There might have been half-a-pound of it the man did not weigh it. Now half my mo ney was gone, and the show fir breakfast, ainner, ana supper was certainly a very poor one. With the rest of my dime I bought four-cents' worth of white beans. By the by, I get these at night, and soak ed them in tepid water on a neighbor's stove till morning. I had one cent left. I bought one-ccut's worth of corn meal, and the grocery man gave me a red-pepper pod. "What was that for?" "Wait a little you shall knew. Of all things, peppers and onions are appreciated by the poor in Winter, because they help to keep them warm. With my meal I made three dumplings, and these, with the pork and pepper-pod I put into the pot with tbo beans and plenty of water (for the pork was salt) and boiled the whole two hours ; and then we had breakfast, for it was time for the children to go to school. We ate one of the dumplings, and each had a plate of soup for breakfast, and a very good breakfast it was." "I kept the pot boiling as long as my coke lasted, and at dinner we ate half the meat, half the soup, and ono of the damp lings. We had the same allowance for supper ; and the children were better sat isfied than I have sometimes seen them when our food has cost five times as much. The next day we had another dime it was all I could earn for all I could get to do two pairs of men's drawers each day at five cents a pair and on that we lived lived well. We had a change, too, for instead of the corn meal and beans, I got four cents' worth of oat meal and one cent's worth of potatoes small potatoes, because I could get more of them. I washed them clean, so as not to waste any thing by paring, and cut them up and boiled them all to pieces with the meat and meal." "Which went furthest?" "I can't say. We ate it all each day, and didn't feel the want of more, though the children said, 'Ma, don't you wish we had a pieee of bread and butter, to finish off with ?" It would have been good, to be sure ; but bless me, what would a dime's worth of bread be for my family ? But I had another change next day." "What, for another dime ?" "Yes ; that was all we had day after day. We had to live on it. It was very hard, to be surcj but it has taught me something. "What is that?" I'"ur " "" " 6"-" Reaper than lacy do, if they only knew h t0 economize their food. You have told them how, but they are slow to learn or loth to change from foolish old practi. "What was your next change ?" "Oh, yes, I was about to tell you that. Well, I went to the butcher's the night lit- declare and over night an all-important process for soup, or a stew cooking it in the same water. Then I bought two cents' worth of pota toes and one cent's worth of meal that made the eight cents ; two had to go for fuel every day, and the paper I got my purchases in served for kindling. The mcal I wet up into stiff dough, and work ed out into little round balls, about as big as grapes, and the potatoes I cut up into slices, and all together made a stew, or chowder, seasoned with a small onion and part of a pepper-pod that I got with the potatoes. It was very good, but it did not go quite so far as the soup, either day, or else the fresh meat tasted so good that we wanted to eat more. But I can tell yon, small as it may seem to you, there is a great deal of good eating in a dime. So there is what a pity everybody don't know it What a world of good might be done with a dime. Reader, have you got a dime- that is to spare only one dime t Give it to that poor widow. Give it ? No; you owe it She has given you twice its value, whether you are one that will feast to-day on a dollar, or be stinted with a dime. She has taught you what you never knew before the value of one dime. What a pity so many should be thrown away. What a pity we could not teach this lesson of economy in food to the thou sands who will suffer before Spring for the dimes wasted, through ignorance, when dimes were plenty. Knowing how to use a dime might often save a family from suffering from beggary from degrada tion, "lis a small coin it will buy five copies of this paper. What if you invest it here and give this to those who would profit by learning how they can live, and satisfy the hunger of five persons all day , fur one ii ME. X. Y. Tribune. ' ; froisbnrg, Union County TI1K KAIL. Jobs Hokitwell, who never does anything ill, has 'carried out his principles' to the letter in the subjoined Epistle to The Knickerbocker. I met him in the cars. Where resignedly he sat His bair was lull of dust. And so was his cravat. He wa, furthermore, embellished By a ticket in his hat The conductor touched his arm, And awoke him from a nap. When he gave the feeding flies An admonitory slap. And his ticket to the man la the yellow lettered cap. So. launching into talk, We rattled on our way. With allusions to the crops That along the meadows lay Whereupon his eyes were lit By a speculative ray. The heads of many men Were bobbing as in sleep. And many babies lifted Their voices np to weep; While the coal-dust darkly fell On bonnets in a heap. All the while the swaying cars Kept rambling o'er the rail. And the frequen; whistle sent Shrieks of anguish to the gale, And the cinders pattered down On the grimy floor like hail. When suddenly a jar.l And a thrice-repeated bump. Made the people in alarm From their easy cushions jump, For they deemed the sound to be The inevitable trump. A splintering crash below. A doom-foreboding twitch, As the tender gave a lurch Beyond the flying switch. And a mangled mass of men Lay writhing in the ditch. With a palpitating heart My friend essayed to rise; There were bruises on his limbs And stars before his eyes. And his face was of the hue Of the dolphin when it dies. I was very well content In escaping with my life. But my mutilated friend Commenced a legal strife, Being therennto incited By his lawyer and his wife. And he writes me the result. In his quiet way, as follows i "That his case came up before A bench of legal scholars. Who awarded him his claim Of $1500." Poisons and Antidotes. It not unfrequently happens that serious distressing results are occasioned by the accidental employment of poisons ; and it occurred to us that we might possibly do a service to some of our readers presenting them with a brief and compendious list of the more common poisons, and the reme dies for them most likely to be close at hand. Acids. These cause great heat and sensation of burning pain, from the mouth down to the stomach. Remedies, magne sia, soda, pcarlash, or soap, dissolved in water; then use stomach pump, or emetics. Alkalies. Best remedy is vinegar. Ammonia. Remedy, lemon juice or vinegar, afterwards milk and watcr, or a flaxseed tea. Alcohol. First cleanse out the stom ach by an emetic, then dash cold watcr on the head, and give ammonia, (spirits of hartshorn.) Arsenic. Remedies, in the first place evacuate the stomach, then give the white of eggs, lime water, or chalk and water, charcoal, and preparations of iron, partic ularly the hydrate. Lead. White lead and sugar of lead. Remedies, alum, cathartics, such as castor oil and cpsom salts especially. Charcoal. In poisons by carbonic gas, remove the patient to the open air, dash cold watcr on the head and body, and stimulate nostrils and lungs by harts horn, and at the same time rub the chest briskly. Corrosive Sublimate. Give white of eggs freshly mixed with water, or give wheat flour and water, or soap and watcr, freely. Creosote. White of eggs and emetics. Belladonna. Give emetics, and then plenty of vinegar and water, or lemonade. Mushrooms, when poisonous. Give emetics, with plenty of vinegar and water. Nitrate of Silver, (lunar caustic.) Give a solution of common salt, and then emetics. Opium. First, give a strong emetic of mustard and waetr, and then strong coffee and acid drinks ; dash cold water on the head. Laudanum. Same as opium. Nux Vomica, (Strychnia.) First eme tics, and then stimulants. Prussic Acid. When there is time, administer chlorine in the shape of soda or lime. Hot brandy and water. Harts horn and turpentine are also nseful. Oxalic Acid. Frequently taken for epsom saits. Remedies, chaik, magnesia, or soap and water freely, then emetics. Saltpeter. Give emetics, then copi ous draughts of flaxseed tea, milk and wa ter, and other soothing drinks. Snake Bites, Ac. Apply immediately strong hartshorn, and take it internally, also give sweet oil and stimulants freely ; apply a ligature tightly above the part bitten, and then apply a cupping glass. Tartar Emetic. Give large doses of tea made of galls, Peruvian bark or white oak bark. Tobacco. First an emetic, then as tringent tea, tLeu stimulant. ytmilmk. Verdiuris. Plenty of white of egg and water. White Vitriol. Give the paiieut plenty of milk and water. In almost all cases of poisoning, eme tics are highly useful, and of these, one of the very lest, because most prompt and ready, is the sommon flour or powder, a teaspoon ful of which stirred up in warm water may be given every five or ten min utes, until free vomiting can be obtained. Emetics and demulcent drinks, such as milk and watcr, &c, should be administer-1 tone, and let there be a meaning iu your ; Tho world will take notice that this cd without delay; the subsequent man- I smile; and your girls will marry yes, i war on the part of the Free State combat agemcnt of tho case will of course bo left ! ' marry in haste, and repent at kicure." j ants, is one of defence. The Missouriaus to a physician. Hartford Timet. The Senate's Committees. Washington, Dec. 12. The Senate has to-day been engaged in electing its Committees severally by ballot a most preposterous farce, as the Com mittees were all cut and dried in Demo cratic caucus several nights ago. Every man is elected to precisely the place as signed him by that caucus, and the ballot is merely a formality to invest the caucus doings with a mocking appearance of Sen atorial action. Many of the Opposition Senators disdained to countenance the sham by voting, since nothing on their part could have any possible effect one way or the other. The Territories is the most important Committee for this Session. It is made np of Messrs. Douglas, (Chairman,) Jones of Iowa, Collamer, Bell of Tenn., Sebas tian and Biggs. Of these but Judge Col lamer can be expected to favor the appli cation of Kanzas to come into the Union on her Free-State Constitution ; he only can be expected to reprobate and practical ly oppose the schemes and high-handed proceedings of the Slavery Propagandists. The Jwiiciarg is the Committee next in present consequence. It is made up of Butler of S. C, (Chairman,) Toucey, Ba yard, Geyer, Toombs, and Pugh all ac tive rcpudiators of the Missouri Compact, all upholders of the Fugitive Slave Law all bitterly hostile, to any practical asser tion of the Equal Rights of Men. Only one is faintly opposed to the dominant party, and he (Geyer) is a Missouri Whig, two of whose colleagues in the House vote for Richardson for Speaker. Four are from Slave States; the others (Toucey and Pugh) have been emphatically repudiated by their constituents for their devotion to the Slave Power. This is the Committee to which any action impelled by the op pression of Passmore Williamson, or any Judicial question growing out of the late outrages in Kanzas, must be submitted. Military Affair are rendered of grave and pressing consequence by the peril of broil and bloodshed iu Kanzas, and the invocation of Federal interposition therein, The Committee on this subject is composed of Messrs. Weller of Cal., (Chairman,) Fitzpatrick, Johnson, Jones of Tenn., Iver- - son and Pratt four Democrats and two neutrals, five of the six from Slave States, all six supporters of the Nebraska Iniqui ty, and every one hostile to the Free-State men of Kanzas. Such is the fairness with which our masters prepare to consider the claims of Freedom in the comiug struggle. Indian Affair, touch the interests of Slavery a?ain the Cherokee.. Win h. come fanatical slaveholders under the joint influence of National encouragement and Missionary recreancy to gospel right and liberty. A bill, proffering a bounty in land to slaveholding by Iudians was re ported to the last Congress. The Commit tee on this subject is consequently com posed of Messrs. Sebastian of Ark., (Chair man,) Rusk, Toombs, Drown, Reid and Bell of Tenn. from Slave States, and all Democrats but the last. That is ma king the thing tolerably snug. The District of Columbia is a nice Com mittee to be on, by one who likes good dinners and other good things, and it is another watchtower of Slaveholding ascen dadcy. The District is always crying "Give! Give!" to Congress, and it will get nothing but sour looks from a Slave holding Committee unless it maintaius an aspect of loyalty to the peculiar institu tion ! The Committee thereon is conse quently composed of Messrs. Brown of Miss., (Chairman) Pratt, Mason, Allen and tleid all Nebraska men, all Democrats. and all but Allen red-hot slaveholders. But why pursue this analysis J Brief ly, Slavery guards every aspiration for Impartial Freedom as though it were trea son to the country. Committees which can nowise affect Slavery are mado up with some show of fairness. iV. 1". TriOune. OLD MAIDS. "Oar Fire Engines may they be tike our Old Maids always ready, never wanted." There it is, again. "At a public meet ing, a wag gave in this toast" did he ? What a refined wag he was wasn't he 1 He aught to have been promoted to the office of hooking vp rags from respectable gutters, forthwith. But not a word about i the gentlemanly editors who have handed down this speech, for human edification, from time to time not the first whisper for a wag is a nobody, but an editor is one of "the powers that be." "Old Maids !" indeed ! Mothers, do you hear that word? Have you daughters whom j TWELFTH YEAR..... WHOLE NUMBER, 610. $1.50 feb Year, alwats ts Advakci. ! you wih to rush into niatriiuouy, as the horse rushes into battle, not knowing why I LiOerty and Slavery, begun ! they run ; but frightened by the consiant j Kansas is the theatre of physical war. spurring of their friends, and that vocifer- i Hostilities between the Democratic princi ous scream in the rear " old maids ! old , T't '"J e aristocratic element of Slave maids !" We say. solemn!-, if vou are j willing to see them plungj headlong into a sea of misery, whose waves roll on un- broken to the shoro of eternity, talk to them daily of " fiJg. ty old maids," " 'a - dies of unmentionable age," "antiquated spinsters," etc., and speak in a peculiar ho are these "old maids?" UdscI- ' re the aggressors. Tbey were incursion fish, devoted daughters, giving their best . !s usurpers of government tubvertera days to the service of declining parents ; j of lawful authority and sheer free-boot-faithful sisters, lending a band to help o'er ers upon the politics and tie right of a wearied mothers in training np their little free people. ones, or taking their places as foster moth- Whift true men throughout the world, ers to the little ones, when those mothers will freely give their sympathy to the men are gone. -'Old maids" are, with few ex-1 of Kansas, and their justification too of ceptions, plain, unobtrusive, high souled, and intelligent women. "Old maids" have time to become intelligent, and they im prove it. They don't have to sit down af ter the cares of the day are ovcr,and, weary aud worn as they arc, rock the cradle with one foot, while they ward off the two year old baby with the other, both hands busy with old clothes for five other little daguer reotypes of lomtlotlj away iu the eatiug saloon ; or may be, at the theatre ; or, to put the best face on the matter, quietly reading the last new work in the parlor. "Old maids" have no wrinkles in their fa ces before they are thirty-five they are net like crooked apple trees at frty, and as withered as dried apples at forty-five. Xo, no, single women retain their beauty and elasticity of spirit until an advanced age ; for, those little, drooping, tiny vexa tions, which wear away the hearts of the married so early in life, need never reach them. Single women, as a class, are not "fijgety, cod hard to please ;" on the con trary they are patterns of paticnoe, and everything "lovely and of good report." But they are often reserved ; for all eyos are npon them, and they are unpleasantly conscious that they must hold in check their own warm, trustful natures, and call no man brother, lest some human hornet buzx the thing abroad. "Old maids" are the friends of the lone- ; 'j 40,1 6a'J Jct even in the highest social position, they feel, at times, unkind- ness and neglect ; and women, who should love and respect them, forget their great worth, and join in the laugh at their "od dities and old maidish ways." What won der, then, if "wags" dare take their names upon their lips in promiscuous assemblies? and better men, who should kick them ! out 8taDI DJ mi listen '"tncij? and what wonder, when women read such dirty "toasts" " that which heads this article, "out a blush and a frown, that editors UBd room for tUcm ia thcir "columns of ! C Jt al I 1' 1 1 luu olm 5U ,UCJ are uanaiea rouna over tho world, and the sensitive spirits of a Iarre clas nf excellent wnmpn nr wnr.TwI. ! cd, a"ain and aMin. by the hundred times ,. , "-"ia I i -1 " " j . . ..v uvu b unit; ti; ( ! rliif uinjrl.. v.mn tti... J . f 1 : j or '"?,) who tas not had, more than ' cncei an opportunity of marnapj. W hen wo liwa uiuuuu us, uu sec a countless . , . . ' ... nost of married women degraded into mere .., ... , . , . ch.ld s nurses and kitchen maids tor their inferiors ; men too stupid too know their worth, or appreciate thcir self imraolstior,; we thank God that a blessed few remain who have not purchased tickets in the great matrimonial lottery, whose most substan - tial prizes bring with them sorrow and care, as well as happiness. Yes, we re - joice for thcir sakes, and for tho world's, that there remains, unfettered with house- hold cares, a noble band of womcn,"ready" for every good word and work; pattirn daughters, unselfish sisters, foster mothers of poor orphans, angels at the bedside of the sick, stars iu the mental firmament. "Never wanted." We have not the least doubt but that very "wag," whose sublime 1 itticism has been so much admired, offer ed himself to some ten of them,(we'il war rant, if he wrote lovo letters, he didn't pay the postage,) and that "toast" was the re-! sultof long studied revenge, bocause they . wouldn't have him. Poor, old, crusty j beuedict that ho is a left banded blessing be on him. May nobody pity him when j he is down with the gout, nobody help on bis overcoat when he can't get his bands to bis head for the stitch in bis back ; no body read to him when his eyes are dim ; may his shirts be buttonless, his nightcaps j bestriuglcss,his handkerchief un-bemmed, i may his bread be sour, his coffee be settled j with lamp oil, and his beef be burned to a cinder; may bugs, fleas, caterpiliers, and ' mice share his miduight pillow ; and may all these things, and more also, be upon I i .. e... u v.. -t - i --r : . tuc uia. cuiiui w yu i.ui in La uia aiiiuuti fli I j ter this date ; and may all these things be upon hitn all others, who utter, irrever ently, that honorable title "Old Maid." E. X. W. II. I'Uttto Gazette. During the year 1853 one hundred and sixty-five men were hung in the United States for murder, sevrn could read Ot this number only ; au 1 write. What a lesson The Physical Straggle, between i labor society, have transcended debate, ani ' 'be contest of Politics, and come at lat r where it was inevitable that they must come to arbitrament of the rifle and th 1 revolver. The free soil settlers of Kansas, ! and the Missouri Propagandists of Slavery ' are confronted in actual battle. any, the ex'remest vindication by th'tm of their rights, is there not great probability that the feeling of forbearance or of res pect even, for the alleged rights of Slavery in this Union, will undergo ehangc ? Can limits be put to a physical strife once in augurated in the United States, between Freedom and Slavery ? If Slavery ap peals to the rifle, would it be contrary to God's providence and the course of Justice, if she perished by the rifle ? The crowning dishonor of onr Federal Administration is at hand, if it has in structed Gov. Shannon to sustain the Mis souri ruffians. This tool has called out the militia, to fight tho Free Soilers. What ever be the wording of his proclamation, it is a call exclusive to the lawless bullies of the Missouri and Askansas frontier.-, to shoot, stab, rob, and burn the inhabitants of Kansas, opposed to the establishment within their limits, of human bond.ige. The Federal Republican Government ap proves of, and will covertly, perhaps open ly, sustain Gov. Shannon in his wicked administration of his official trust. We wholly mistake the temper of tho North, if it will behold unmoved this struggle in Kansas. If Freedom be soro pressed there, and calls upon freemen for help, the manhood and generosity of New England and the Middle States, will have died out, if strong arms do not gather about her, enough not only to arrest tha tide of battle, bat to turn it. But w& in voke the spirit of Wisdom, to avert for- J eTr the arbitrament of force between Freedom and Slavery. Bradford Argut. Irish Know Nothings. A Know Nothing meeting was held in Frankfort, Ken., on the ISth inst, at which C. D. O'Sullivan, Esq., a native of Ireland, but a friend to the American cause, made a short and eloquent speech, in which he insisted npon the principles of the justice of the American party. Ia Ireland, he said, he had struggled for the right of Irishmen to govern their own coo a try. It was for that O'Brien and Mitchell anj nil the nthrr Trih nntrinta ht.J wm. i i j v l mi h' . tended ; and be should feci himself an in- i errata and nrnnrtrirA if h aftAiil.l it.it America what he had struggled fur in j Ireland the right of the native sons of j every country to rule their own land. ' "TralnA fnr ha Tr.'clv" k.l I .1- t t . . . t. : to of all the Irish patriots at home "A- r , , . . . menca for the Americans' ooght tola : their BO(to hfre ' What Next? There is a place of j worship up Broadway that has just had placards hung out at the inner doors (like ; an 'ca cream saloon) with this notification, I in I'Ct scrawling black letters, "Stranger ! are requested not to take seats," (then fol- j lows, in the smallest sort of type.) "until j the sexton directs them to a pew." Tha I next thing we expect will be, "Private ' boxes for families," and "reserved seat I until the end of the first act," theatre fash- in- "O temporal O mores I X. T. Express. 'I 1UB ocieuiniu .-imcriran Pays, lue past TM . L- ! . ' 1" . . " . . year we have known the spinal marrow of an ox or cow, applied by three different persons with the most satisfactory results, in relieving tho paiu and securing speedy cures of their felons. This, we are confi- Jcnr w;n he very useful information t many persons. The spinal marrow should be applied fresh every f jur hours for tsra days. Sickness is Ohio. Several parts of Ohio arc said to be afflicted with sickness unparalled in the history of the State. It I is not cotGiied to particular localities, but am)ear, t0 ba Eeneral on the hills as well M i tae Talley.., iu towns as well as in lhe eountry. i CCQtral Ohio, where tha chill!i wcre never Deforo known, they hara t,ccn shaking the people most cordially. " The ttfSr Stolma arrivcJ ' Cincinnv ti, on tho 20th, haviug on board quite s number of slaves, with their masters, on thcir w.iy to Kansas. Tho slaves, were landed on the Kentucky side of the river. Alexander Malum 1'.-. , formerly speak er of the Senate, Suto Treasurer &o., died " "15 " narrisuur on -uouaaj . . I : : l T T l r t A f irged cheek fur 1000 i pi ek at jw t-f the I liici :o ImuLs. 1 latl