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Duct ? 11. will give ma..particular attention to Suffield diseases, and diseases of women and children. tie wilt also give his attention every Saturday mor..ing, in his office, gratis, from 11 to 1•2 o'• cio;:a, to surgical cases among the poor. January 22, 1851. ' it. I. C. ZOOMS, WILL perform all operations-, upon the Teeth tbat arc requi red for their pruservutton, such as Scaling,Filing, Plugginft, ,&c, or will restore the loss of them, by itiserting,Artificial 'Peeth, from a single tooth to a full sett.fit...7 - Office on Pitt street, rt few oors south of the Railroad. Hotel. Or. L. is ab out* the last ton' days of evem• month. • DXL IVIXLLEB., succeeded Dr. Liplie, formerly practising phy sician of this place, solicits the patronage of the friends of his pre-decessm, and shall be happy to wait' upon all who may favor hint with a coll. n0v13.1 m F. .111.11,1,1112, 111. D. _ HOMOEOPATHIC Practice of Medicine, Surgery and Obstetrics • Drs. A. fl. A: J. STAYBIAN, respec•tufly announce to the citizens ol Carlisle and vicinity that thdy have.taken-the office recently occu pied by Dr. Smith, in Snodgrass "s Row, and wilt be happy to attend to all who may favor them with 'a call-in the various branched - of their profession. We are prepared to visit pa tients in the country at any distance. Charges "=. moderate. [ap9tf 11. CARD. 'llll.. .1 . • W. IiEfIDEL, Surgeon Dentist intbrins his former patrons that ho has re amed to Carlisle, and will be glad to attend to all eallo'm the line of his profession. loet3l 11 CARD DR. J. ILVUGIIMAN, informs his friends and the public, that lie will continue to [wend to all proleiiSional Calls, as heretofore, (nota•ith stuathn reports to the contrary. OFFICE— On East high street._ [mrifs,3in wra. W. ,rEN.E.9.SM, A, 'l' COB NE Y AT LAW, gill practice in the several Courted Cumberland county. OFFICE. in Main Street, in the room Conner y occupied byL. G. Brandebury, E6(l. St - IMMO SlEtarglir, A vr0114,-'Y'' AT LAW. Has RE -LA- MO Vlil) hisollice to Etcetera's Row, two o,3rs Irmo Burkholder' Hotel. [tipr Gmoz.ar. zGaa, • •-• us•ricE OF THE PEACE. 10,y rice at Indresidenee, corner of Main seeet and the Public Spare, opflosite 13erkholder's Hotel. In addition to the duties of Justice of the Peace, will attend to all kinds of writing, ai deeds, b)ndsonortgages, indentures, articles of agreement, notes, &c. Cat lisle, an 8'49. . crash Drugs, Medicines, Ste. &c. ri"---1.-have-just-received from-P-hiladel. phis and New York very extensive 4,- additions to my former stock, umbra cing nearly every article of Medicine .now in use, together with Paints, • Oils, arnishes, Turpentine, Perfumery, Soaps, Stunery, Fine Cutlery - , - Fishing- Tacit le,— ot almost every description, oim an endless variety of other articles, which I tint de ternimed to se:l at the veer' LOWEST prices. All Physmand, Country Merchants, Pedlars her,r 7 nrer-respeettulfy--recittesterfner-to the OLD. STAND, as they may rest assured that every article will be sold.of a good quality, and upomeasonable terms. S. ELLIOTT, Main street. Carlisle. May Plainfield Classical Academy, F . JUR 311 LES WEST SE CARLISLE. The Tenth Session will ?ommence on .110✓1 LAY, Y .51h, 1851. rAI:113 Institution has been established near ly dive years, during which tune such ad ditions and improvements have tic`mi made as to render ti eau of tiro must FL/Mille feud and e• .lIV in the State. Lr rc..; trd to healitifulness it may be men tioned runt no case of . ..serious sickness has oc curred in the institution since it was founded.—• Its mural purity is attested, by the fact that depraved associates, seenes'of vice, and resorts fir dtssipation have no exislenco in the neigh borhood, rho course of instruction comprises all tl.e branches required by the merchant, profession.' al man or collegian., Also, modern languages, vocal and instrumental music, &c. It ds the deterintliation_ol the Proprietor that the institution shall sustain the rqputation it has already acquired for imparting thorough in struction, and inculcating and establishing vir. thous principles in the minds of dhe youth sub mitted to his charge. ' 7ensa (per S'essiort. Five . _Drenthe) 850 00. For catalogues containing references, St.c., address R K BURNS, - ' Principal and Proprietor, Plainfield P. o.,'Cumbcrland County, Pa Apia 2, 1851 • limner HALL , ACADIVIIr Three mileiTrest of Hatriskurg, Pa. --THIS-Institution %valise Upon fer_the_receP tion of Stodeniii, on MONDAY, the sth of littsi, next. The :course of instruction' will embrace. the various branches of a theroUgh English Education, together with tiro • Latin, Greek, French and German Languages, and Yodel and Instrumental Music. .TERMS . Boarding Washing and tuition in the Eng lish branches per see• sion (5 months) Latin or Greolr. ' French or Gorman- Instrumental Music .. For further information address D. DENLINGER, ~niarchs,ly Principal, Ilarrithurg,:r zuro S7s'Z'BN6' ACADMirir THlS.lnstritptim will he open for the recep,- lion of andante, on M ONDAY, the sth of •May;',A:ll.tho.branches ela,sound English and Classical 'Education willibe taught,and students thoroughly qualified. for entering any.elaes to College.•or (lurid for Vividness life. '1 here will be two passions a year, the first commencing on the First Monday in May,.and-lhe second passion on the firet.liitenday in November, of every' year, Circalars will be furnished on ap• &kitties in person or by letters ndilressrcl to the subsotiber at Nqwville. P; 0., Cumberland co. Pa. • [papl y] %V R LINN. NOTICE, TUE Comntissioners of Cumfferland county deem it proper to inform the public, that the a II ed uteatings of the Board of Commissioners swil ,be hold on thin sueond and fourth . Mondays of each month, at which limo any persons haviug huffiness with said Bard, will meet: them at ! noir 011ie° in Carlisle., • " 03 ' •'WM.RILFY, Cl'lc. c , AVE 11 . , 4 017112. Eartormarie FOR A-TRIFLE! persona wishing to rescue their propar , V ty from liro without thd aid of . ituturande companion, ahould huvo their roofs covered witty, liga,te's Patent Imitation Seale, 'or , Fire • and' _irator Proof Paint. , A. Coral Well -covet ed -with this article will last mach ',anger than the' roof unpainted, arid will rainier it - entirely Fire and %Valor Proof. This article ono by had cheap ni_ tho illirdivare Store of merl9 ,--- 15 - 1, 'rlii , ,R,l AL OlL4,..t.twa•ki freni,•coristiliit ; Mid ly kept: an hand' ITTJI3I3AIt,D'S Drug Biora: ,- , - • • ' tniurgAl ___, • TIIETC ARE 'TWO THINGS; SAITH LORD BACON, WHICH MAKE A NATION-GREAT-AX't- ~. ~~~z~~l'L~tYIIIIII~!i. From on English .Ifagazine. EVERY MAN MS OWN LIWYER. FROM THE REMINISCENCES OF AE ATTORNEY A smarter trader, a keener appreciator of the tendencies to a rise or fall. in a .Colonial• produce, sugar 6 more especially—than John Linden, of Mincing Lane, it would - have been difficult.to point out in the wide city of-Lon— don. Ile was not so immensely rich as many others engaged in the same merchant traffic as himself; nothing at all like it indeed,' for I dount f ticit he could at any time have been es teemed worth more than from eighty to ninety thousand pounds; but his transactions, altho' limited in extent, when compared with those of the mammoth colonial houses, almost always returned more at less of profit; the result of his , remnrkable keeoness and sagacity in scent ing hurricanes,' black insurrections, and er mencipation bills, whilst yet inappreciable, or deemed afar off, by less sensitive organiza tions. At least, to this wonderful prescience of •fu ture sugar-value, did Mr. Linden himself at tribute his rise in the world, and gradual in crease in rotundity, riches and respectability. This constant success engendered, as it is too apt to do, inordinate egotism, ,conceit, self esteem, vanity.• There was scarce a social, governmental, or economical problem which he did not believe himself capable of solving, as easy as he could eat his dinner whea hun gry. Common-sense business habits—his fay.o rite phrase—he believed to be quite • sufficient elucidation of the most difficult question in law, physic or divinity: - The scienee.of law especially he held to be an alphabet, which any man of common sense and business habits, eould'as easily master as - lie could count live on hie fingers. • lle drew his own leases, examined the titles of some house property he purchh.scd, and set his hand -and-seal to the final deeds; guided only 1 1 y hie owtt common-sense'spectacles. With such a gentlemen the firm of Flint & Sharp had only professional interviews, when procrastinating or doubtful debtors required 44itit-he-sitotdd _put—on the -scre-A4-a.- process which 1 have no doubt he would himself have confidentially put but fo• the waste of valua • whichAeleg - sti weattl - necessarily volve. Both Flint and myself, were, howev er, privately intimate with hire—Flint more especially, vim 1,,.a known hint from boyhood —and we freqentlY dined with him on Sunday; at his little box at Fulham. Latterly, we had on these occasions met there a IL•s. Arnold and her daughter Cathe rine-L.an apparently amiable, -and certainly very pr'etty and interesting young \ person, to .whom Mr. Linden confidentially informed us, his sun Tom had been some time engaged. "I don't know much about her family," ob served Mr. Linden one day, in the course of a gossip at the office, "but she moves in very re spectable society. Tom met her at the shades; bat I do' know she has sot - nothing like thirty thousand pounds in the funds. The instant I -was informed how matters stood with the piing folk, I, as ti matter of common-sense and bus iness, asked the mother, Mrs. Arnold, for a reference to her banker or solicitor—there be ing no doubt that a woman and a minor Would be in lawyers' leading strings—and she refer red me to Meinirs. Dobson, of Chancery Lano. You know the Dobsons "Perfectly; what was.the reply?" "That Catherine Arnold, when she came of age—it wants but a very short time of that now—would be entitled to the capital of -thir ty-foui-thousand seven-hundred—pounds, be-. queathed to her by an uncle, and now lodged in the funds in the name of the trustees,— Crowther & Jenkins, of Leadenhall street, by whom the interest that sum was regularly paid, half yearly, through the Mekisrs. 'Dob son, for the maintenance and education of the heiress. A•comemn-sense, butT'ness-like letter, in every respect, rind extremely satisfactory; and as soon as he pleases, after Catherine Ar nold comes of age, and into actual possession of her fortune, Tom can thew have her with my fatherly blessing over the bargain." I dined at Laurelyilla, Fulham, about two menthl after thjh conversation, ,end Linden and I found ourselves alone ever the desert— the young people having gone out-for a stroll, attracted-doubtless by the' gay aspect of the Thames, which flows past the miniature ground attached Lo the villa. Never had . l aces Mr. Linden in so gay, to mirthful a mood. • "Pass the decanter," he exclaimed, the in stant the cl3er had been closed uion Tons and' his fiance. Pass the decanter,, Sharp I. have good r,owa' for you, my boy . , now that . they are gene." "Indeed! what may the news be?" - $5O 00 5 00 5 00 Id no "Fill a hampe'r fin; .yourseli; and I'll give you n toast.. ,llere""s to the health and proa parity of the proprietor.of the jlolinford pro- Krty—bonght it for fifty-six, thanmand-Pounds of that yoimg seapegraroo and spentlthrift; . -Palliser—liftoen thousand peunds less than' it cost bin], with the outlay ho has made upon Signed, sealed, deliyered, paid for yestorday:= Ha! bat ho I Leave John Linden alone fora hat'gain! ICY worth aevonty thousand pounds if iC worth a shilling. -I say,''continued he;. Lifter . a renewed spasm of optliertuft Wirth, .t pot a word about it to . anybody--iniadl I promised Pallister, who is quietly packing up to be off to Italy, or Australia, 'or Constanii npplO, or the deyil—ail of. them, perhaps, in auctieSslou—*t ta; mention 'a - word atiant it ,JOHN r. LyNE ~~lnefri. FLOWERS. Each leaflet is a tiny scroll, Inscribed with holy truth, A lesson that around the heart Should keep the 4w of youth; Bright missiles from luigelie throngs In every high-Fay left! Bow were the earth of glory shorn, Were it of flowers bereft! They tremble on the Alpine heights, The fissured reek they press, The desert wild, with heat and sand, Shares too their blessedness ; And' wheresoever the weary heart Tunis in its dim despair, ‘-`, The meek eyed blossom upward looks, Invlting it to prayer! C4IIILISLIq, WEDNESDA.T, till he "was well off—you - understand? ho!" again laughed Mr. Linden.— ; "I Pity the poor creditors though, Bles i. you! I shouldn't have had it at anything lik ; the price, only for his knowing that I was not likely to be running about exposing the affair, by asking lawyers whothe.r an estate in a fain, - ily's possession as this was in Dorsky's - fo.i three hundred years, had a good title tw not.-4 §o be careful not to drop a word or n hint, e , lien to Tom, for my honor's, sake. A delicious, bargain, and no mistake! Worth, if a penny,' seventy thousand pounds. Ha! hal—ho! hot" " Then you have really parted with that e normous amount of money without having, had the title to the esstato professionally ex amined ?" "Title! fiddlestick! I looked over the deeds myself. Besides, havu't I told youthe ancestors of Durala3k, frdin whose executors Palliator purchased the estate, were in posses sion of it for centuries. What better title than prescription can there be?" • "That may ba . true enough," I said, "but still—" "I ought, you think, to. have risked losing the bargain by delay, and have squandered time and money upon fellows in horse-hair wigs in orriertoimertain what I suffidiently well know alr'eadY Tool! lam not in my second ohildhood'yet!" Tt was u less to 'argue with him ; besidea the mischief, if mischief there Was, had been done, and Sib not long delayed entralice of the young couple necessitating a change of topic, I innocently inquired what he- thought of the Negro Emancipationl3.lll - which Mr. Stanley, as the organ Of the ministry, hndintrodUned few evenings previously, and was"rewardeAby a perfectdleluge_of_loquaciousdadignation-ancr. invective f' during a pause, in which burly-bur ly of angry words, I eontrived to make my escape.. . "Crowthers & Jenkins !" exclaimed one morning- gr. Flint,, looking tip from the Times' newspaper he held in his hand.— "Crowther & Jenkins! what is it we know a bout Crowther & Jenkins?" The question was addressed to me, and I like my partner, could not lit the moment pre, cisely recall why those names sounded upon our ears witli a certain degree Of interest as well as faMiliarity. "Crowther & Jenkins I echoed. "True? what do we know atalut Crowther & Jenkins; Qh, 1 have it! they are the executors of a will under which young Linden's pretty bride, that is to be, inherits her fortnl:4!." exclaimed :Mr. Flint, as he put down the paper, and IZlOked me gra'vely lu the face, "I remember now; 'their 'names - are on the list 6f bankruptS. A failure in the gambling corn trade, too. T hops they have no:, been - speculating with the young woman's money." - The wordirwere scarcely out of his mouth when Mr. tifteu wagraliqoalgo;d, and kesent ly-in puilenNu in a state of eon siderable4i4 - , "I told you,' he g ' - `6,;gan`,' some time ago, about Crowthers & . denkins being the persolm in--whooe-name-Cather;ne-Ambid's-money , 4tood--- in the funds?" "Yes," replied Flint; "and I see' by the Gdzette . thefiirCbaria;ro - 0 n 1 3y - ymtr face; that they have speculat, .1 with your intc.nded daughter-in-law's moncy, and lost it." - "Positively so!" rejoined Mr. Linden, with great beat. "Drew it out many months ego. But they have exceedingly wealthy connections —at least Crowther has—who ant, I should suppose, arrange Mies Arnohrs 'claim, rather than their relative should be arranged fur fel- ' , Felony! you•nro mistaken, my good sir;— There is no felony—no kgal felony, I mean— , . in the matter. Miss Arnold can Only prove against the estate like any other creditor•." "The devil she can't! Tom, then, must look out for another wife, for I am credibly in formed there won't be a single shilling on the pound." " And so it , turned out. The great corn firm had been insolvent for years ; and after spec ulating to a frightful extent, with a view to recover themselves, had failed to an enormous amount—their assets, compbratifely speaking, proving to be nil. The ruin spread around, chiefly on account of the vast quantity of accommodation papor they had afloat; was terrible; but upon no one did the blow fall with greator.severity than on young Linden and hls,promised wife. Ills fa, thor ordered him instantly to break off all ac quaintance with Miss Arnold ; and on the son,• who was deeply attached to her, peremptorily refusing to do so, Linden senior threatened to turn him out of doors, and ultimately disin herit him. Angry, and indignant, and in love, Thom as Linden did a rash and very foolish thing; ho persuaded Catherine Arnold to consentto - a private-marriage, arguing that if the indisso luble knot were once fairly tied, his. father would, as a matter of course—he being an on ly child—become reconciled.to what he could no longer remedy. The imprudent young man deceived both. libruiolf and her_ who trusted in hie 'dousing plausibilities. ''Ten minutes after, he • oloSed the marrhu;' cto hit father, he was tur nod almost penniless, out of • doors ; and the exasperated 'and inexorable old man refukd to listen to any representltimai whatever,. iu his favor, by WhomsocvorpreferrCd ; and even - to ,ppartit the mention of his.mirk in his hearing._ • It's of no - use," said Mr.' Pliat, of retin. ping for the last time, owe mission undertaken to extort, if possible, some provision against abSolute starvation for the nowly wedded. coo ple:. "lie is ds oold Ind hard as adamant, and I think,,if possible,, Oven DIM ..of a, tiger Than before. Ho will ho hero presently to givo instructions for his will." "Iris will I Sure; Ito will thaw that up him self, after' his own 'optimum sense, buancso fixation." : . . He .wouldhave 'ungnestionablY have done so a shcrt time sines; but some cvmits 1.1121 t liade lately oecarred, tuive esiii , ierably shaken his infallibility, and he is inoreorix_deformi-: nekhe says-that there shall be no ruiSnike ae to effectually disinheriting Lis 864. lle has mado Ir) or three very heavy .10.50.5, anti his mind is altoglior in a very,ofyikerod and die 'tempered stator" , • . PROSPEROUS-A FERTILE 'SOIL AND BUSY WORKSHOES r —TO . WHICH LET ME ADD 42,1VIEDGE AND pEEROM.--.Bishop Halt — Mr - Lindeir - calledhad- - promised -- te do, and gave us the ivffttewliendi3 of a will, which ho desired to have at once-,formally drawn up. By this instrument ha devised the nolmford estate, and all otheiliroperty, real or personal, of which ho might die possessed, to certain charitable institutione,. in varying proportions, payable as soon - after - his• death as . the property could bo_turned into money. "The statue of Mortmain does not give me much uneasiness," remarked*Ovindictive old man; with a bitter smile. •" I last some time yet. I would have left all tom` you he added, "only that I knevr you would defeat my plans by giving it back to that disobedient, ungrateful boy.".. "Do leave it to me," - rejoined Mr. Flint, with grave empluisi,s, "and I promise you faithfully this—thot the vrisli, respecting it, whatdver it may be, wilt& trembles on your lip as you arefibout to leave this World for a nother, and wh en it may be too late to formal ly revoke thetestament you now propose, shall be-faithfully, strictly carried out:- That time cannot be a very distant one, Jobit Linden, for a man whose hair is as white 'as yours." It was preaching to, the nincle. .Tle was deaf, blind, mute, to every attempt at ottang- s ing his resolve. The will was drawn in accor dance. with his peremptorily iterated instruc tions, and duly signed, sealed, and attested.;=. Not. very long afterwards, Mr. Linden dispo sed of his business in Mincing Lane, and then retired to Ilolinford, but it vas with nothing like the monied fortune he had once calculated upon, the losses alluded to by Mr. Flint hav ing considerably diminished his fortune. We ultimately'olstained a respectable and remunerative situation for Thomas Linden in a mercantile house at Belfast with nhich we were -professionally-acquaintedr-and-utter-securing berths in the ," Erin" steamer, he, With his wife and mother-in-law, came, -with..e; kind of hopeful sadness in their looks and voices, to bid us farewell—for a very long time, they and wo also feared. • For an eternity it seemed, on reading the ascount of the losa;of •the - "Erin;' a feW-days afterwards, with every soul on board! Their names were published with those:ot" the other passengers who had embarked, and we had of course concluded - they bad perished, wlten•i t .letter reached us from Belfiet; Stating" That through some delay. un the part of Mrs. \Ar nold, they hail happily lost their passage in the "Erin," and embarked in the next sten:bi er for Belfast, where they arrived in perfect safety. We forwarded this intelligence .to dielmford, lint. it elicited no reply. We heard nothing from Mr. lAnden for a bout two months, except by oecash at notices in the "Hereford Times," which ii‘ forwarded to the office. relative to the improve ment of the - T.T.idotford , 7-t-4,7.t0,- : begun or cotitcmplatetLby its new waprietor, He very suddenly reappeared. 'I ascool ing my heels in the waiting-room oY t'a 'plum bers of the Barons of the Exchequer Chan- . eery Lane, awaiting My turn of. admission, when ono of our clerks came in half breath less with haste. - -"-Yott-are-Tranted,'-air T --immediatelyt—Mr, Flint is out, and Mr. linden is nt the office, raving like a madman." Ti'instantlitraniferred tiisbusibessi was in attendance at the chambers upon, to the clerk, and with the help of a cab, soon reached honie. Mr. Linden was not raving when I arrived.- The violence of the paroxysm of rage and ter ror by which he was possessed, passed away, and he looked; as I entered, the image of pale, rigid, iron, dumb despair. Ile held a letter and a strip of, parchment in his hand ;- these he presented, - and with white, stammering lips, bade me read. The letter was from an attorney of the name of Sawbridge, giving,no tics of an action of-ejectment, to oust him from the po4session of the Holmford estate, the property, according to Mr. Sawbridge; of one Edward Majoribanks, and the strip of parchment'was the. writ by which the letter had been quickly followed.---I-was astounded; and my scared looks questioned Mr. Linden for further information. "I do not quite understand it," ho said in a hoarse, palpitating voice. • "No possession or title - in' the venders, a niece not of ago—exec utors no power to sell—Palliser discovered it, robbed me, absconded, and I, oh God I am a miserable:beggar!" The 'last words were uttered with a (=vitt sivelserciamsand after a few frightful strug gles,.ho fell Own In . a fit.. _ I had him oomvoy-, ed to bed, and as soon as ho was somewhat re covered, I hastened off to ascertain from Saw bridge, whom I know very intimately, the na ture of the claim intended to bo sot - up ,for the plaintiff, Edwin Majoribanks. , I met Sawbridgo just as he was leaving his office; and ae"ho was in no very - great hurry to turn back, I walked-along with him, and he rapidly detailed the -chief facts about to be embodied in the Plaintlfrivdeolaration.. Archibald Dureley, ones a London merchant, and who died a baohclor, . has bequeathed his estate, real and personal, to his brother Oharlos, and a niece, his .sister's child--two thirds to the niece, and one-thi;d.to the broth er. The Ifolmford property the wilLdireatcd, should be 'sold at 'public auction -when the ..• niecocanne of ago; unless she, by marriage or othernise, : aats,enabled, within six mouths af ter attaining—herAnajority, to pay over to Charles .DuratieY his third in money, according to a itduation * inaile for the purpose by comps= tent assoasors. lite•brether, Charles Dursley, had 'urged upon tho.excoutors to antioiAo the time directed by the will for the sale of the property, and having 'parsuaded the`nieoe to give a written finthei•izatiob..„fer the itumodi.: ate safe, the ohfOtly . , Sawbridge supposed, prompted Itheir- own necessities, sold the este!to accordingly.. but the niao not tieing of, ago when she signed the anthori-- ty to son, her cott r eeut was .31',n0 legal value; and she having, 'tliedintestate,Orth Mojori hor,donehi acid .undenbted. heir 7 at-lltv —for the property.could,lMio not passed from ficr OYCR by_ marriago—xtow'ela i hned .the es tate. . . ' l , ollarloS.Darsloy, :the,,hiother,, , was dead ;, and,' continued 31:r..Sawhriclgo, !'.tho worst of it, , is; Linden will never. got- tv farthing 'of his:poi:Ammo tnimoi from.tls t , endors,Tor they are bankeupt, nor frorn: IZatiliter,;,who has inado porrivatefaorraugthnintta for, continuing! -abroad F out of-liarin , e'reach. It is-just_as tell yOu r " he added as we hook hands at par ting; but you will of cotrso see the will and satisfy yourself. flood by." Here was a precious result of amateur corn -mon sense lawyorship. Linden could only have examined the abstract of title furnished him-by Pallister'S attorney, and not the right of Dursley's executors , to-sell; . or had not been aware that the niece could not possibly, during her minority; subscribe to an effective legal' consent.- • I found Mr. Flint at the °Moe, and quiokly imparted., the astounding news. Ho was as much taken aback as myself. "The obstinate pig-headed old ass," he ex claimed; "it.almost servos, him right, if only for his tom-fool hennas° of Every man hie owo. lawyer.' What did you stiy was the niece's name I" "Well, I- don't remember tl at Sawbridgo told me, ho was in such a hurry; but suppose you go and look over the will?' "I will do so." "This is a very singular affair, Sharp," said Mr. Flint,. ou his return from Doctors' Com mons, at the same • time composedly seating himself, hosking his thumbs into the arm holes of his Waistcoat, crossing his logs, and tilting ,his chair back on its hind legs. "A very singular affair. IVhom,:in the nanie,, of the God of thieyes—Mercury, wisn'khe called?— do you suPposo the bankrupt execittois to bog No other," continued Mr. Flint, with 'a sud den-burst "than Crowther and jenkinsl" • "The devil!—and the niece then - "Catharine Arnold—Tom LinderOs wifa— suppoSed to have been drowned in the Erin.— That's checkmate, rather fanny—not only Mr. Edward Majoribanks, but somebody else -we - -know of. The old-fellow. up_ stairs wont, refuse to acknowledge his daughter-in-law 1101 V, I fa.uoy . . This indeed was a happy change in the for tune of the house of Linden; and Ivti discus sed, with much alacrity, the best mode of tur ning disclosures so Momentous and surprising to thh beat account. As a first step, a letter with an enclosure, was despatched to Belfast, 'Attiring the return of Thomas Linden and family immediately, and the het was to plead in form to the so= tion. This done, we waited Catherine Lin den's arrival in London, and Mr. Linden, se nior's convalescence—for his mental agitation had resulted in a sharp fit of illness--to effect a salutary and just arrangement. Mr. and 'AL's. Thomas Linden and Mrs. Ar nold arrived by the earliest steamer that left Belfast after the receipt of our lette'r ; end ,much astonished were they by the intelligence that awaited them. Catherine Linden was for confirming. the va- T-Lt;,. the Q.klo of. Hotta:Ad ost.Ao by Ler now authoritivo consent at once, as a mere act of common ,justice and• good faith ; 'but this, looking at the total loss of fortune she had sustained by tho knavery of the execatort, and the obstinate, mulish temper of the fath er-in-law, from whom she had already receiv ed such harsh treatment; could not for a mo -rnent-be-pormittecL;--and. it-was-finally _resolv ed to.take advantage'of the legal position in` which she stood, to enforce a duo present pro vision her husband,--and--their Ultimate succession to the estate. John Linden gradually recovered; and as soon ac-it was deemed prudent to do so, we informed him the niece' was not dead, as the plaintiff had suppoSed, and that of course, if she could bo persuaded to ratify the inopera tive consent she had formerly subscribed, ha might retain llolmford. At. first ho received the intelligence aa h gleam of light and hope, but ho soon relapsed into his usual state of doubt and, gloom. "What (land° is there," ho hopelessly ar 'gned, "that holding the legal power, she will not exercise it?": It was not, he said, in human nature, to do otherwise; and ho commissioned us to make liberal efforts for a comprOmise half 7 -bei-tould. .bo_dontent,to lose half .of...hiii_purchase i -money;_ even a greater sacrifice than that ho would a gree to—anything, indeed, that Wbuld not be Utt,jr ruin—that did not invilve utter begga ry and destitution in old age. Three days .after this conversation I. an nounced„tb him that the lady and her husband were below,•afid desirous of seeing him. "What do they say?" ho eagerly demand ed. ' "Will they take half---two thirds? What do they say? ,! I cannot precisely toll you.. They wish to see y3u alone, and you can urge your own views and offers." • • Ile trembled violently, and shrank nervous ly book. ea I placed my hand ou the handle of the door of the private offme. Ho presently recovered in some degree his self-poisession, and passed in, and I withdroW froni the hu miliating but. salutary spectacle of obdurate tyrant Power compelled to humble itself, be fore those whom it had previously scorned and trampled upon without mercy. The legal arrangements which Flint and I had suggested were effected, and Linden seni or, accompanied by his son, daughter-in-law, and Hrs. Arnold, sot off in mitered amity for Hohnford House. Edwin Majoribanks. ahandcrued his action, _ cud Palliator, eluding that-matters wore satis factorily arranged, returned to.Erigitind. We afterwards know that ho had discovered the defect of 'title, on applying to a well-known convoyaucor,',to raise a obusiderable sum . by way of mortgage , and that his first step was to threaten legal proceedings against Crowther,& Jenkids for'the recovery of his money; but - a hint he 'obtalitoil of the futility - of proceedings itgainst them determined him to offer the. es -tato to Linden,'relying on that gentlemen's - Os.; tentatious contempt of lawyers that the'-blot in the title kinbjcioted only to common sense ;spectacles, would not ho perceived.. • ' . t&.Did you ever knOw a person' to relate hls experience ot;O, tire, who was hot au oyo witness to the'faot that 4 , one . ?•inan, :while rO 7 moving the furniture from the house, titrew lookirtg-ASS "Out- of ,-third-stery window, uud afterwards carefully carried down tho audirtnni and shavoi and tongs, and dopos;; itod them with groat care beyOnd the roach of •harni?". Of •oottetio you never did: per, it:i~.aerioualy, wondered whether the Pope's halls tiro as ferocio . us as , ever. • TO_o U It_ 11IECIIANIC. COME LET US REASON TOOETHER."-li iS an undeniable fact, that the great majority of our mechanics arb not 'reading men, that is, they do not read useful and instructive works. We do not mean to say tnat our mechanics, cannot,- and do not read at all, far from it, for they are but few among us who have not re ceived the elomenti of a common education; but we (lo say that the majority do not make a practice of reading works which expand the intellect and improve the mind. The works 5 , which they make a praCtice of reading, tend to grossify and puddle the mind. This is one reason why there are so few among our me chanics 'capable of taking charge of . and man- aging the business they have learned as trades. It is alse'a4Mason why so many of them are rough in spec* and uncourteous in manner. There areniany, very many men in our coun try who were ,once journeyman mechanics, but who now occupy high and impOrtaut pe?itions in the republic. 'We rejoice at this, but we are not a little sorry to add that the majority of them had to leave their trades, and become lawyers,—they at least did not move out from the workshop direct to the - House-of Repre sentatives, or the Senate Chamber. Fillmore, and Douglass, Senator from Illinois, 'were onoo tradesmen, but they arose to-the-present posi tions, not through the tailor's or Cloth-Dress er's bench, but the lawyer's bench. There is not - a solitary individual idOur country, -who has, froni a lowly, elevated himself to a high position in society; but has been and is a read ing man,—one.who has read and does read books that are books. ThoSamechanics who rise to foremen and employers, are' the reading men of the mass; they aspired to be something and turopted t ,the best means to secure the desired ends. Worth and intelligence always command respett,frorr these whose respectis worth striving for. We., aro not pleading forA gross struggle for wealth, although a reasonable Amount of it—as a pro vision for sickness or old age, is a laudable and proper desire, but we plead first of all for an elevation Of character as a means to a sci cial elevation among Men of real worth.— Wealth without worth will never make a man pass among gentlemen, as a' current coin, - but the man who is industrious, inteligent, trusty, and courteous, will always pass for the 'genu ine metal. Industry, honesty, and intelligence are qual ities of character 'more valuable than gold sev en times purified. A talented, first rate han dy mecluMic, without such qualities will never "rise for he cannot he trusted. It is not the olorriiic man who is always. selected to be a superintendent among.hie fellow werkmen ; it is he who combines the greatest amount of a bilities which give his cuiployere confidence in his moria . ,wortli . .. lie have often been solici ted to furnish competent mechanics to • take charge of new establisliments c aud bare found , it very difficult to ,secure, at any . time, the proper. loan ; and no further back than. last `week a gentleSnan writing to us from the South, uses the following language:—" Last Summer, I visited the forth and purchased machinery -for the. marrafacture-of- chairs,- and-after con— siderable trouble hired a man alleged to be competent to superintend the whole business.- - 1 have not yet been able I . si,,commence opera tions, owing to the incompetence in every re spect, of the man in wheal I trusted to super intend my business,; can you send me a man with the requisite' qualifications, and above all let bins be a gentleman?'' , 'We cannot send Lim the tincl.of a map he wants and requires. Our real good men are scarce,—tbey soon find Situations, and we believe there svofild be more good situations for men (manufacturing estab lishments would increase) if we lied more men capable of filling them honorably. and well. We Lave now preached a sermon long e nough for a week's. calm reflection, and next week we Will point out the way whereby young mechanics aro cure to rise.—Scientifie GREAT MEN. Ono of the chief characteristics .of a truly great man, is his refusal to bo entirely moul ded into the form of the •society in which' he lives, and his striking out bold and original paths of his own. Ho' stamps his own mind on the ago in which he lives. Ho often fights with and control soireninstances; rises in, spite of the weight pressing Lim down. Indeed it would seem when the Almighty intrusted great faculties to any man, he placed him in adverse - circumstances in order that-the-majesty and - might of those powers might be better exhibi ted by their fierce struggles with outward. foes. A great nutn,,it is true, must' express; to a certain extent, the spirit of the age, but ho . guides oven when -ho obeys it. Genius sets Up the standard of revolt against old opinions, and_thousands who wore before vacillating -lock to it.. Great minds perceive with clear= ness those ideas of progress.which small minds perceive indistinctly—hence the enthusiasm so common to many great men. They feel so perfectly assured of the truth of their opin ions, that they go right onward in tbelicourse, sustained' by an unwaioring faith .and with; bone of those dOubts rind fears common to in distinct perception. • Your truly great man too, is energetic; he ases•his QWn will, and is not to be shaken from his purpose. AN AFFECTING APPEAL. A learned counsellor, - in the middle of an af fecting appeal in court on a slander suit, let. fly the following flight of Genius: ' "Slander, gentlemen, like alms: constrictor of gigantic, size and immeasurable proportions wraps the coil of - its unwieldi body about its unfortunate victim, and heedless of the ihriekg of ngouy'that•conie from the inmost depths of its ;yintita'S soul, loud and reverberating as the mighty thUnder that rolls in the heavens, it ft niillYiliisake its unlucky neck upon the iron wheels of public opinion, forcing him' first to 'desperation; then to madness; and finally critShing.:_him in the hideous jaws of moral denth. Judgi, give us a chau; of Tobacco !' ; m," What - would' I said. Charles Lamb, "to call my mother book to earth, for ono day, to ask her pardon upon My Maces for. all those act! by )yhioh I give her' gentle Tit pain:" , . ' wa . .An idle brein thO devil's work-atop VOLUME Li. NO. 39 * SCIENCE AND AGRICULTURE•- , A writer for the Enquirer, in illustration of the importance of the application of soienee to agriculture, relates. the foil - owing instructive • experiments : A specimen of a soil Rf good appearance was given to Sir Illimphry Davy, from Lin- ' colnshiro, England, as remarkable for,sterili- . ty. On annalyzing it ho found. sulphate of ron. Ho recommended a top dressing of limo; and the sulphate of iron was forthwith con verted - into the sulphato of limo; a noxious . substance was at once changed into an ele ment of fertility. It was tho boast Of Frank lin that he had stripped lightning of its perils, • and had changed the thunderbolt.„ Chemistry has done more. Poisons are 6hangod‘ by 10 . alchemy into the means for subsisteriee. The Hon. Reverdy Johnston purchased, in 1849, a small farm near Baltimore, in the last stage of impoverishment. Such - . was its re duced condition that Alio last crop was not more than one peck to the acre. He states that all the vegetable matter,growing on :the two hundred acres of cleared land, including ' briars, sassafras and oilier bushes, if careful ly collected, would have been sufficient for the manufacture of ono four-horse wagon of ma nure. He applied to Dr. David Stewart, of Baltimore, an able chemist„who rode out to the farm and procured specimens of the soil, which ho carefully annalyzed. Ho found that it contained an abundance of lime, potash, magnesia, iron and organic matter, duly mix ed with alumna and 'sand. Ono element only of a fertile soil was wanting—phosphoridicid; and of this there was mr-tiace. Ho recora mdaded an application to the soil of the bi phosphate of lime, a preparation, of banal, as the best method of supplying the defteient ele- • ment. The remddy was given at an expense of ten dollars per acre. It wail the ono thing needful. Health was restored to the exhaus ted patient, and the soil yielded last year twenty-nine bushels of wheat to the acre.— Nothing else was applied—indeed nothing else was wanted. Hero was a beautiful triumph . of - sCience. There is no abelut the facts. The experiment came under the observation and attracted the attention of hundreds. It was detailed to the writer by Mr. Johnson himself, and various others worthy of reli. once. It has been - made known to the country . - by the American Farmer:m: - 1u each of these cases, a mere practice:LAl*, mer would have groped his way in the dark, ready to be led astray' by an ignus fatuus in his efforts to find some means of, improvement. lie might have applied lime - Or stable manure. The first would have been Worthless, if not in jurious, and the second would have given no results Ommensurate with the, expense, The same is Probablas true of guano, for though. ' the boot stp4oimouc celllttita as routtrtur twenty two per cent of phosphorus, yet the expendi ture would have been out of proportion to the result, if enough had been applied to give suf ficiency of phoiphorie acid. • . COULDN'T UNDERSTAND. 'I haven email bill against you,' said a per- • nicioulloOlang collearor us lie entored~tTio store of one who had acquired the' character of a hard customer. Yee, sir, a very fine day, indeed,' was the lIM • 'I am not speaking of the weather, but of your said Peter in bond key. 'lt would be better if we had a little rain.' Confound the rein,' continued the collector, and raising his voice, he bawled, 'have , yon. any money on your bill?' Beg your pardon, sir, I am a little hard of-- hearing. I li've made it a, rule not to loan my funds to strangers—and I really don't reo- ognize you.' r I am a Collector for tho Philadelphia Daily Exiinguisher, sir, and have a bill against you; persisted tho collector, at'the top of his voico, producing the bill, and thrating it: into the taco of the debtor. I've determined to endoreo for no ono; you may pnt - your noto book in your pocket book, 1.-- roally cannot endorse it.' - 'Confound your endorsement—will you pay it ?' 4 You'll pay it no doubt, sir—but there's al wive some risk in those matters, you know, so I must decline it, sir.' 4 The money must bo mine to dayl'. 4 Oh yes,,-ninety deys—l would not endorse for a week, so clear out, of my store. It's set. dom I'm prossod upon for an.endorsement, e ven by - friendit—ori the part of •a strangeroir, - youi cond'uot is inexplicable. • Do not force • me to put you'out; leave the premises.' And the bill was returned to the Exifnguish er office, endorsed, .eo infernal deaf that ho couldn't understand.' . Is NOT Tms Tnun?—A judge of a court at Pittsburg, Pa., in a charge recently delivered to a grand jury, concerning tavern licenses,_ used the following language with references to ardent spirits and. its doings: Indepeadont of its ✓affects, individual t , social,' moral, religioulty and political, drink wields.the club—brandish es the bowie knife—hurls the ballet—nerveti the burglar—inspires the thiefand kindles the torch of incendiary. ' It first maddens the 'tiger, then unchains him. . HVAT;I:10 asserted hy tho Buffalo, Commercial Advertiser, on the authority of ad vices received by it, that thoro is a secret plot going on among the Locofocos, the object of which is to forestall public opinion and sdttlo proihninaries neeesaarYto indnco thePresiden. tial nominating Convention to fixupon L. Marcy Locefoco nominee. AVZ.Passing through ono of our markets, a shalt time einoe; - says tho Brooklyn Eagle, we - . enCountered a moat' vender, shonting at the tak of hie lungs—"'Era's yor cheap moat for bo4rders." . . per Tho following is a copy of thejsign up on an academy for tonobing youth; in one - of. Westeril. State. i— , 4 rrcoman 'and .llggiti, School. Teachers. ,Freetizqn: tenches the boy., and Hugy6 the . • pfirTho dilbari# Dutchman Gaya then) is..n man in .Trqy 7ith a noWsclong , thnt bas Jholes bored i4,it o.na u1i0.i . 21.t, fox: n clarion.