. _ .. . . , . . , _ ... . _ .. . • _ A . __. - . .4. , .. _ •4. . , , -4 4114 T qts 0.----- - - ' • . ' - . . _ ____ . , . ... . ~,v .- •J. •-...-Y.4e= • z ---- •', L - _ - ,__ , ' '—'--- --.--- ", • , -----=--- lit-''-.' . ____ .;._.. - t ± : N: -:-- f , , E . ' ' . W, . , . _____ . _____ . 1 \ h•A ,14 . • ..t )- t • W --- ON .- I ff . - M s - ------ ' - ---- ' ,---, -+ • 4, vs to 1) __ . .. ,W----,•, ~, ‘ 4-, .4-1e 5 4V4197 , •_ s. • . —-..._ -_---- =•-----'---------- • ' -_- ------_-_- --_- ===s-__- -- - - 4' 'A\ c ,- ,t.: • ..,..-,•,-.^, ‘ ~... :r.... ..•:-.... - AAa4,.= A , .1 . A , . 4 r*. 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Dr. L. is al , ant , tho last' ten days of cooly month. Dr. tall D11.*33 Z. 21.11rrZ, ,-- WILL perforni al •• vAick.i?--) • • ' nporations upon the - teeth that may be re. ro wired for their preservation. Artificial teeth inserted, from n single tooth to onentire set, on the ITI ist scientific principles. Diseases of the M 3 .1 th ut.l irregaittrlties carefully treated. Of. fi.lo at tho residonho . of his brother, on North,- Pitt - Street', Carlisle F)dl. u. IL MEXI62-MR.I : 4 - A k Ft LCIP: in 'North Hanover et - root adjoining Wqll.e.plore. Office hours, inorcVar ,l :•llarly fro'ni 7 to 9 o'clock, A. M., niia tram io 7 o'clock. I'. M. ritinclB'si . :ORA DAY & HERRING, • q l ,.‘,r [NG ai:iociated thetnii,civca togetlicrio the practice of Medicine and its collateral ofri.lr their professional 'scr i victis to ,the tittiOoll3 of Uee'lanicoloitig and adjacent, Lout v I i2ti to COMM Dr..,732 - EILT.S.:2IIIOEGE, OFFERS Ilia s ioual servic s to the people of Dickinson 'thwnbliitt, and vicinity.— Residence—on the- Walnut - Bottom Road, one mile east of Centreville. feb2l amom.a-33 EGZ, jus rIcE OF THE PEACE. OF FICE at his residence,wornei of Main SlrCci and the Pantie :i g nore, opposite Burkholder Hotel. In addition to the ditties nt eof the Peaee, will attend 'Ewalt kinds of writing, Bach as deeds, bands, mortgages, indentures, articles of agreement; notes, &e. Carlisle, an 8'49. Carlisle Female Seminary comins.need its Fall 'Fens ut t It Ist Sopicaitier, care of Nliss Pn cue PAIN 1, assisted tiy i•ompetenl teachers._ ...._ _ _ _. .. _ ... . [lvry:floe iii the fanguages and drawing, no extra charge. M. fife t I I.4'tt he an experienced feaeher,nt n oxfrachar:lo.(sent:lff) .. Fresh. Drugs, liledicines, &e I . have . just received from l'ilthaltd • plea and New York very exit:J.lv( 'fr.z.,„ additions to ray ureter stock, multra • as mug nearly every , srtiele.of Medicine It Ay m 030, to t ze .ler WIIII Tarpontien, Perfumery, Soaps, Stationery, Free Cutlery, Fishing Tackle,— Bruhos of. almost every description, IN lilt an endelss variety of other articles, 'which I ate de tormined to sell at the Vuir Low FST prices. All Phyiciatis, Coutnry Merchants, Pt dlars end (Idlers, aredmspectfttlly requested 1101 to pass the Ohl) STAND, as they may rest assured that every article will lie sold 'of a good quality, end upon reasonable terms. S. ELLIOTT streo. Carlisle MEM 1V1LL1A.:1.25 & .IAII.0 7 .0.1.22. M., N PAV V 11. L E .. PA. gA 4 F..1.1:E.11-3 IN lIAP,DWA RE in nll its bt v trhoty for and ornatwent. Also, Shoe M_frocee, OikiPanos, R. , ,k and Rifle Powder, &e.. Cedar Were, Rip es, Brushes, Trunks, Baskets and Conch &c. They have on hand or will furnish - evcrytht ni; in the BOOK and STA - Th'ry have an lixtensivc ua••t:'ry of TIN WARE for wholesale tt retail. House and Barn. Spouting well and optly done. They have Si) extensive S PO VI.: Warehols , , where may be found the 12,,tt a fproved if.oterns of Pador. Coal and Gosh haves, The public attention is directed particßlarly to the Lancaster Keystone Cook Stove, Tor sale evoluaively by them; the heav iest an l'obeapest stove in the market.' It will he borno\in mind that their Conk Sieves arc the cfarlapOt offered for sale. All other • cods so d as chosp for cash, as the cheap , cheap er c heapest • , [ Newvilla,sepP24 a , . N. rtOSENSTEEL, 5 - 11 - OUSE, Sign. Pansy rind tdrontnental - I Painter, (lorrnerly Harper's) ROW, naxt dom. to Trout's Hat Store. Ile will at. tend promptly to all the descriptions of valor! - t tenslit t‘de prices. Tho various kin or : uniting. nuclide.' to, suel, ris mahog, any, odlt, maln tt , &e., in the improved styles Carlisle, July 11, 1552-Iy. CHURCH E J,EE AND RiNGLAND AND S T /LIVE S4l Vir NEW CUMBERLAND. PA. 2 1 11e. 1 1.4 S' 0R" ti' T Teal 'r LIE tinclersigudd'ore now prepared to freight pain and ut r t ±2. dared rate with reg , alarity .1 deePatelt. DEPOTS. llitzby & Co., 315 Mnrket Street, phila Georn Small, "Small's Depot,'' 72 Not street, Baltimore. no?! WOODWARD & SCIIMID 1. AN S olt T T 3:V • Tap, eadorsigned are cow prepared to freight merchandize-!ruin c1,V 7 1-1 • 41,trof-' 931thilatielplea and tg., 1 1, TV Baltimore, at re• duced rates, with regularity and deiputch. DEPOTS. Freed,-Ward-Bt. Freed, 315 Market Street, Philadelphia -- A. H. Barnitz ' 75 North Street, Baltimore. Michael Kerr, North Street, Baltimore. eep226m J. & 1) RHOADS. NEW. OLOTHIN4 STORE, THE subscriber has just returned from "Philadelphia With a %cry choice selection of CLOVIS, CASSINI E RES ~ad VESTIN US, Pearl Dial), Brown and Marbled Cloth for 0 VER COATS. • Besides a splendid lot of FANCY STRIPED C ASSIMERES, which ha ,will make up into elate, pants and' vests of tho latest styles. Ito will also, keep Shirts, Drawers, Under Shirts, Shirt Collars, ''Cleves,. Cravats,. nose, indm!tr, overy thing kept in a Gentleman's Furnishing Store, llnVing en gaged the cervices' of W. B.• PAIIICINNON, well known cutler, Ito will be ,able to make olothos•to order in a superior tnanner. lie is dotorinined not to , be excelled by any in the county as to, make, Material. or price. Our motto is not to be undersold by ' us n-call at,our store in 'South (Isnot/or street; directly Lopposito Borate's store, and see.- - to yourselves. CHARLES ; DARNIVZ. nova 24,185270, .• 5. 'L ScAlums. ~ .TIIILSE intender .scaled wore invented by themes Ellicott about 25 years ego ; they have boon in constant use. and now. after • various improvenientsare. °Mired by the stibseribers, and warranted correct 'and unsurpassed for Acurney and dulability q after a liar Alai > if not appr , ate4, they can bu returned." S'adiss tor Rail Roads, Cando, 'fitty. Cattle. Cotil, S , ores,.and ter weighing all kinds of Merchandise, intinufaCttirod ni'the old ostnbii' fished stand. Math Btreet 'near,Contes • Street, Phitadelplia ABBOTT . I :StiechosOr o to B//iciito„.4 'trtumAii Sr, Snow, 3553 1 ,1 tartlet FRAryX :iBelllB3llll . . Tit o shi ft h a t market liriod 'id CASliici' for" WIIRAT dolivordd at'the VAitiann'94Vll4 (!O-dpri7 Gdpti rhpo)'in.'Woot L Penneban) tnlvnb',. , ; ,- .. • , _,MARSH4I,I.44M-Eei .0•J1). 1 .... Santillt 3lr:fOritOtt ,- . 7.l3tittitti - -- lit :rity, , prittrr', - _ Ettitiqin#, - - ARE TWO THINGS, SAITH LORD BACON, WHICH MAKE A. NATION' GREAT AN 0 THE t :" Old Winter" is going away, aback! How icy and cold he's been,' But a pi•etty young maid he'l! meet in his track, And she'll curtsy and smiletill be turns his back, „For she'll frigh 'it him off with a wonderful knack ; This maiden will s on be seen. This prettY.young maid, whose name is Spring, - Is full of mirth and glee, She causes'tho birds to stretch the Wing, AMllbet loaves to put out under which they , And opens the buds the flowers':to bring— A sweet little maid is she. "Young Spring is a frolicsome girl, I not, Too full of her fun for me," Said Winter, "she tears the clothes frouviny bock, And causes the streamlet's prison to crack, And dries up the path end the slippery track— So unping,and playful is she. Young Spring comes on with a beautiful grace, But not very shy is she ; For she cracks her,jolces in old Winter's face, And kisses his cheeks as' Ile flies apace, While she melts the tears in his sturdy face— A: pert young lass is she. She brings the latest fashions along— A gay little miss is'she ; She posses amid the admiring throng, And touches the lovelies notes of song, But gay as she is, she never thought wrong, hot• she's clothedrin Nature' array. This sweet little girl—when she travels forth— So pretty n maiden is she; Th folks all leave their winter hearth, And sally forth with a cheerful laugh, Fe, she strews pretty flowers along their path-- 'd - bcuntifol maiden is she. - This Spring is a coquetting girl, I fear, For her lovers are many I see, She kisses their cheeks and dries up their tears, And makes an end of their chilling fears, While they pour in_love.to her listening oars; For very bewitching is she. Young Spring, intends, when old Winters's afar, Young Summer's n•ife to be ; Was there ever wedded so pretty a pair? For he is su rich, and ohe is so fair! And n joyous wedding they'll prepare, , .And On re'6 an invitation Tor me. The Spanish call proverbs pegurnos cvangelioa gospels;' Mr. Trench has made use of some of them as' texts from which to preach sermons, rather tiresome and uommon place. But his hook is on the whole, enter 'tining. He has brought together many rare proverbs, and although he merely skims over his subjects, his work may serve at least as a fingLr-post to point out to others a direction in which they may find amusement and profit It would, indeed, 'be a curipus subject of re search to investigate, not the date of proverbs —for most of them aro antediluvian, and floated about in the ark in the minds of Noah and his children—but the time when they assumed their present dress, Mid then, as Torriano has done in his Italian collection, to arrange the'm iu classes according to the key , idea of each. • ' What wondetful monuments of antiquity arc these'pithy sayings, in which tit!: experi ence of mankind, of their rellltion to nature, to each other, and to God, is recorded—these "winged words," which have flown safely over the black abyss of time, in which so much human knowledge has been engulphed—and are now brisk and Gill of life as ever, hover ing about the lips of men. Mr. Trench is much exercised to define a proverb satisfactorily. An adage is ad agen:,, duo apta—apt for notion and use. Maxims are maxima, the best sayings. But a proverb whatiz it? It is both, and something more A proverb is the " wisdom of many," ex pressed so well by the wit of one that the rest of- mankind seek fur no other mode of --rendering the thought, Mit use this one pro eerbo as if it were a word, If it be not in this every day use, we may have an excellent adage, aphoism, njaaim , but no proverb.— There is nnother,dequi'slte which we think , Mr. Trench has overlooked. Proverbs should have no known parents. They are foundlings of wit. A quotation may be us hackneyed as " how &ye do," but it remains a quotation still. Some one has well said that three things go to' the making 'up of a proverb : shortness, souse and salt. If rhyme and nl,lite•ation do not come utider.the head of "salt," they may certainly bo added as a great assistance. The ear likes to be pleased as" well as the mind. How the jingle completes some of-our compact and salted English Proverbs, and fixes them in the memory ; such as, " Harm watch, harm catch ;" "No pains, no gains ;" or its' proth er, "No sweat, no sweet ; " Haste makes waste ;" "Wits gees a borrowing, goes a sor rowing," and this .one, known to writing mas ters "Little strokes fell great oaks." " Out of debt, out of danger ;" "East' west, home hi best ; " Forewarned, forearmed." proverbs ore found in many languages, "Qui }wend, cc ? end " is-a gtiod rhyme and a short -saying; but the German -tt Volt, WV' is shorter—in fiict the shortest known proverb. It illustrates the connection between, fullnalis and folly, great prosperity and insane pride.' The Italians -say 44 Tradudlori, traditori"— translators ate traitors. On this theme, St. Jeroine made a holy, pun. He complained that the Latin versions .of the Cirek Testa ment,.eurrentin the church in his (lu, were too many of- them not versions but evereioties: The medieval Latin furnishes ashortrhyming proverb, " Qualms vita, finis i(a.'t Even in Greek, limy said ,, "rathemala Idalhcmaia " Sufferings are•teachers. If Mr. Trench has preached fogyish homi lies from proverbial trxts, it ie the' fault of Mr. Trench and not thelittle gospels.' Many of them Sidemen himself might .have noted down with satisfaction, 8 . 0 full are they of, truth and souni teaching. pore is a lesson to' e expectant: "Ile , for dead men7s - shoes may gci barefoot."' Thiothineee proverb ; tO be written in letters of gOldl. , One hoe'never so much need of one's wit as Alton one, has too,do with a fool.!' And no might well be this one from' BPain ." By 90.,streot of 'bye aiid bye' ono the oh pi %Mr" Apd this one, which pboy-Rioltard MI pottrtf. VOTING SPRING' IS COMING 111 o f bri of `-lAiikTbom _ PROVERBS; CARLISLE, PA" ,WEDNESDAV, 11:PIEUL emitted in his almanao: " The groat is ill saved which ehames its master." The Ger mans tell us " One foe is too many, a hundred friends are too few." The Persians say grace fully, " Speech is Biliwn, silence is golden." But. the blunt Italian proverb, Silence was never written down," is more effective 'than tile oriental poetry. Not more effective, how. ever, 'than' this other of the some people, which is highly imaginative " Time is an inaliennble file ",--ne unpleasant ns Here is a wise saying of the Persians: " Of four things every man hoe more than he knows—of sin, of debts, of years, and of foes." A warning from the Turkish : "Curses like chickens, always come home to roost." One still more solemn from the Greek: " The mill of God grtrids,late, but grinds to powder." Another Greek' selmon, in On Same vein, is quoted by Emmerson "The dice of God are always leaded." "When the Devil cannot come he 'will send," the 'Germans say with truth, and the Italians. with equal truth and more humor: " lie bath need of a long spoon that eats with the Devil." "There is no worse' robber than' bad book." This is Italian too, and may serve, if they like it, as a motto for the getteraup of cheap publications. St. Bernnrd made a curious use of a prov, orb qn the angels; wishing to show a priori the extreme probability of their eltive .minis try in the service of men, lie quotes the Latin proverb, Qui me amen% amat et canton meum, and argues thus "We are the dogs under Christ's table ; the angels love him, therefore they love us." Lord Bacon has written, as eierybedy knows, that the geninS, wit, and spirit of a nation nro discovered in its proverbs. Following the hint, Mr. Trench devotes a chapter to this , aspect of proverbs— but, as in the rest of his book, be only gives us a glimpse of the sub- ject, sufficient to show what a field of interest ing criticism was before him. In the_genuine Roman proverbs, which .are few in number, he perceives a practical Inisiness-like sense. They bear Witness to the interests in agricul ture which distinguished the old Italians. For instance, we have from Cato: What is not needed is dear at a ffirtbing," n proverb after Poor Richard's own heart. And this - acute proverb has a from of the farm, '• men cut broad thongs another man's leather." The Spaniards have nn enormous stock of proverbs, as every reader of the picaresque noels has noticed. Juan Triarte, fbeir great collector, brought together about. thirty thou - sand. Mr. Trench remarks in them "keen good sense, stately humor, and 'a chivalrous ' spirit," and p ives us. a specimen: "When thou scoot thy house in fltmesoi pproach and - warm thyself by it." The English - Would havti said, " approach and put it out." How well they sneer at their own weakness, iwtheir famous saying, Cosas de Espana, for ; any ab surd piece of carelessness or neglect; ns for instance, when Charles the Third's army marched against Portugal,' and reached the frontier before it was discovered that they had brought no powder. " TheTtalian proverbs," says Mr. d'israeli, " have taken a tinge from their deep and politic genius, and their wisdom seems wholly concentrated in their personal interests. I think every tenth - N.o%mb in an Italian collection, is some cynical or selfish maxim—a t book of the world for' worlfilings." Oar readers will remember Dr. • Ilic'eabocea and his fund of Machiavellian proverbs in Dulwer's last novel. There is no denying the the truth of these sometimes sly and some times bitter maxims. They are eorrect views of one side of human nature, and they show' on which side of human nature they haws looked. " The river past, the saint mocked," a' foreign relation of our " When the devil was sick, &c." "When rogues go into procession, the devil holds the cross." "If thou suffer a calf to be laid cn thee, within a little they will. clap on the cow." "Who paints me before blackens me behind." " Every man draws the water to his own miil." Hero is a, really vicious one which the old German divine might have included Wilds' wen lc, Ungodly Proverbs and their Refutation. " A sin concealed is - half forgiven." "If the monkey reigns, dance before him," is the tone - of the East and of Egypt, when the ono man-poiver is Abso lute. "Rica the hand which thou mast not bite,." shows even more clearly its origin in the land of servility, and selfishness, and re venge. Do no good and thou shalt evil," is of Asiatic descent, but it sounds not unlike M. de Fontenelle. Other Proverbs show 'their nationality by some local coloring or turn of phrase, as the Turkish, "Death is a black camel which kneels at every man's gate," and the English, "A fair wife and - a frontier castle breed quarrels," evidently is older than the union of - the two • crowns. • Many proverbs nro found in every language in different dreek 'hut identical in meaning.— " Coals to Newcastle," is a).remarkable in stance. The Greas said : " Owle to Athens." The Rabbis: "Enchantments to Egypt"— The Persians: "Pepper to Ilindostan," and the Medisevals: " Indulgence to Rome." Our old, friend.--" Ono must not look a gift-horse n 'the mouth," is used by Jerome, a father Of the fourth century, who replied tartly to a criticism on writings of his, that they were a voluntary offering on .his port, and quoted the provetb. Ne nlso end it in the rhymed latin proverb of the .middle ages. "Si :quit' dat. munos. ne qua^re in dintibus annoy.,'? "Liars should have good memories," is also cited_ as an Old proverb by Jerome. Since proverbs are the expression of every general experience of- humanity, they are of all kinds—Many es bluntly coarse ne others , are Imaginative. ,SOlllO flatly contradict each' other: "Common fame is Seldom to blame". is negatived bylThey_say is half liar," and the democratic .orez yopuq vox Pd," come. . thyme is rendered by the English, "Jho.voice of the ninny is the voice of a zany." Tho English s!' Lies have no legs," is manifestly untrue ; lies have no many legs tfs a centipede, and as' ntnnyliies as a cat. Lies; .too,, Wive i : ings to fly 'l4wither they cannot enter]. Let tt,tielopco get its growth, and.it is, almost possible to cripple it so that it cannot mime.' Another dam of Tiniverbe aro satirical upon oltaiesqer. and professions., .roolicoriulin..for the iargeoialuiro.of armoring proverbs;: 'Wools grow. with out wetering,"..Tho ppapieh',ittesoOd,,;:\; A foo),:inlonir Liki . tVie tibia pieto fool" _ OIL AND BUSY' PROSPEROUS-A FEATL BUSY -TO Widen LET MI ADD KNOWLEDDE AND FREEDO.3I.-Nisho, LE:::0 Tho lawyers always meet wit " flings." " Les , Bla ne quista,!! is untransla'eable. .Pby siolans aro seldom spared. A riediteval 'Pro verb says of them, " (Ai trey ,medici dud ,othei." • The Germans have, "Vat so bold as a miller's neoltcloth„which takea a knavat by the 'throat every morning 2" 'The Italians have many proverbs of contempt for the vi/- lane, or peasant. In German collections ny of like character will be foiMd upon the Bauer. -There are plenty, too,yn mediaeval L'atin, among others, this triploillyme, "Rue , tica oats en optima, fleet, et peractita If we; compare the modern Meaning of the words villain, knave, and others e ;of that kind, With their etymology acid,anciont signification, we can form, perhaps, a pretty lorreet idea of the character of the class of Men who were called by them, or,nt least of tke •estimation in which they were held by their betters. The monks were not left unscathed by these Pellets of Wit. "If you have 'offended a clerk, kill him, or else you will never have peace with him," and •" Take heed of nn ox before* a horse behind, of a'Menk on all_ sides." t 1 Among uneducated people, thought end speech are glairto avail themselves of these muscular little sayings. To the 'ignorant, proverbs ore indeed lessons-n lex non acripta for every-day life. And; as in the case of the common law, very often sad misrepresentations of n rule occur. How many selfish people have fortified their unwillingness to do fOr others, by that excellent 'proverb, "Charity begins at homer Men of education seldom express themselves in proverbs. It is not considered well-bred . to do so, 'Proverbs aro of the same kindred as slang; and although the relationship is distant, a kind of family likeness is often perceptible. .Neiertheless, an occasional proverb, well -applied, is never out of place. And often: in a moment of un certainty as to what course of conduct we shall pursue, some " little gospel" flashes a cross the mind, and instantly' decides the question. George Herbert, under the title of l'Jacqur Prudentuni," made a collection of about 100 proverbs.' Herbert died in 1632. It is 'sing ular that in a collection cd — tho seventeenth century, among hundreds in present use su h pruverbS as, "Where there's a will there's a way ;" " A piece for everything, and every thing in its place;" "Needs m'ast go when the devil drives," and Tell the truth_ end shame the devil,' should not be found. Quite a number of poor Eicher:Ps pf2verbs occur there-; for . instance, Silks and iiitins put out the kitchen fire." Some of Herbert's are worth minting: "lie begins to die, that quits his 'deSii•es." "Ito pulls with a long rope that waits for another's death." " A lion's skin is Inter elleap."— •',He that comes of a hen must serape." "I wept when I was. born, and every day shown why." "A woman and a glass lire ever in danger." "A married man turns his staff into a stoke." "A fool knows * more in his house, than a wise man ip another's". ng worthy of all commendation " God comes o see without a ,bell." This reminds us of the Latin, ^ The feet of the avenging deities are shod with wool." And there is one which' requires to be taken ivith many grains of ex planation " Ito wrongs not an old man that steals his supper from him." About this loot there can be no doubt, in your own place and no ono can mako you rise."—Evening Post. [SLAVE lIIARRET AT MEMPHIS. A correspondent of the Chicago Daily Tunes gives tho following description of some things lia"Saw nt Illeraphis: "I landed at this place on Christmas morn ing. The first thing that met my eye, stand ing on a high bank facing the river, was the following inscription in largo letters, upon a fine building, with piazza and pillars in front: Bolton, Dickens, & Co., Slave Dealers." In addition to this, I soon found two others_ ea one of the principal streets in the city, situa ted nearly opri'osito to each other. Tho sign Of One 'read thus Byrd.llill, Slave Market ;' the oilier, Ben Little, Slave Market and Liv ery Stable.' I visited limn, and was invited to 'walk in and look at the stock.' Oh, how my whOle being recoiled at the thought.— There were mon and women, girls and:boys, of almost every shade of complexion, ranging in ago from ten to thirty or forty; all well , dresse", as you see nol , 'cither slaves, excepVnbmo-fa cored body servants. Some. oriligt - Caf look ing young women were attired in beautiful de lain, made in the faslidom too. 'When a stranger goes it!, - they are quickly arranged upon seats on either side of the room, and they watch with interest a ay ono they suppose , intends to buy. Of court to you can examine teeth, limbs, &a, .and on 31 for any exercises from them yen may cheat to. They tire taken out every day, and walked; around in a large circle—the mon and boys under one lender and the females under another. I was not permitted to look into t ;heir, place of confine ment for the night, but.' only saw the grated window. Near by ni aa horses and mules for' sale, and they aro fat ' and sleek, because 'in tho market. For the same reason were these men and women well dressed." Rears.—Grano freourrood, writing from Rome, givoo graphic. doeeriptione of. ivhat oho sew and hoard in th ,at ratiowned city, ; . Among other items of whj 'di we' halm azt.nezoimt in hor lest letter, she. says : . •.' " lYe found our wolves standing before What, wo woro told were: the miraculously proservod• remnants of the 13rxdlo in which Mary concei t rooked the Infcr it Christ. In ,an immense oases itscrit,of ca:Oret of, gold and glaSs, , are kept- thrnio woniterful relies—two or three pieces of old wood, worta-eaten, , and partly Thorn' is tiothiugl in their ?Min to, indient,e that thedr *wore ever pa'rte of anything like a cradle,' and so altogether rough and cluint':7 are th.,y, that I, feund more natural than' irroveVen4 : the ' , remerir.. of A lOOOSe 010 mien,. ;who, stood - : near . Well; all I have to•etty.'is,:'Elt. Joseph teems to have -boon bit t a bad oarponter:''' r • Yet I saw vorn.. 6 l4l l iBP , I , ! ich - hki !/.dt.lorAng Iv irst into t:iituro, 0i 11403ight,of thetio'formlosq pietas of woad, and biatal rldierel4ll(iiithelt: roses, litii: their''.ll4iiii 'tains ''softlinedk , cwlt4 something' . li„ko 'te'yo . i4noo `Via - cloiottiiii, : ind smith Moir s.tupyl eyoa gllatoning witl/7.k ift,i' or somethin g Inset 4 . 0u1.! , , . 41 • Agritilliurt s Ditqilrs nit etnetul ". 1853:- "'PIIItOQGn IN NINETEEN 110IIIt8:" This is the promise of the advertisement of the now route from Philadelphia to Pittsberg, and I believe it is fulfilled every dny. What that journey has been, I have some opportuni ty of knowing from a manuscript journal in my, possession, kept by Matthew Clarkson, Esq., in the year 1766. Mr. Clarkson was a merchant of Philadelphia—foi several years Mayor of that city—and appears to have gone westward on behalf of some company with ,whichlre was connected, whose obpct was to carry on trade between Philadelphia and the Mississippi. He set out on horseback, with a servant, August 6, 1766. Oaths first day he met wagons loaded with skins coming from the West, and overtook others "loaded with pork going for the King's - rige to Fort Pitt"-- the name of the -settlement Which the English gave it in theplace of,Du 6esne,and,,which wits afterwards changed to Pittsburg lie lodged at "The Ship," thirty-five miles from Philadelphia. The next day (Aug. 7) ho dined at " The Duke of Cumberland," and reached Lancaster evening. On the Bth crossed- the Sus= . quell:won at Wiight's Ferry, and reached York. On the 9th- crossed ConeWaga creek, and arrived at Carlisle, where he rested till the 12th, when he resumed his journey with a stronger horse, dined at Shippensburg, and lodged seven miles further on. On the 13th, at the ''Burnt Cabins," he overtook thirty-two horse - loads of flour on the way to Fort Pitt, and mentions cattle going the same direction, and 3 "3kins" coming eastward. "This day's journey [thirty-four miles] her been extreme ly tedious and fatiguing; the road, except the first ten miles, was nothing hut rills, moun tains and stones, until you pass the Burnt Cabins, when it is tolerable, but hilly." August 14th —From Littleton took break fast at the foot of Sideling hill ;. dined at the crossings of- the Juniata; lOdged at Bedford. Here he i stunned for a day, and purchased an interest fin the tracts, of land in Cumberland valley, Danning's creek and Woodcock valley, mostly in the vicinity of Bedford, containing in all eighteen hundred acres, for one-half of which he paid £OO, ($440.) August 16th.— , -At the foot of the Alleghen ies, he found an encampment of Indians, un der the command of Capt. Green, who were engaged in gathering whortleberries. Lodged at Stony creek. Next day dined'at Ligonier, and lodged at the twelve-mile run. 18th.—To Brushy run, Turtle creek, and re lobed Port Pitt just after dark.. Thus he got "through in ten days," without counting stoppages, happily without being' tantalized, as ho jogged along under a hot sun, with n fore-knowledge that his grand children would make the same journey "Hire' in 10 hours." His journal Mentions, indeed, a "conductor of the trail," but it was cf Con estoga wagons, not of cars and crates. When ho reached the embryo 'city of - Smoke, he found no sumptuous hotels inviting him to repose. Upon his arrival, he says: ",1 was stored away in a small crib, in blankets, - in company with flees and bugs." He took a walk to "the ship yard ; found four boats fin-: . billed and in the water, and four more on the stocks; business goirg on briskly." Palmy days, those, in Pittsburg; said boats being probably bateenux, not much greater than sue! as aro now slung at the stern of the steam iiiidistars that lie or ply by hundreds in ha waters, -fl say The fort was under the command of Major Murray, who gave Mr. Clarkson his lodging in the barracks; but on account of the mis erable condition of accommodations for board ing, he usually made his meals on 'bread and milk at the store." The officers of the gar rison were Capt. Belnenvis. Lieutenants Mc- Coy, Mclntish, C. and C. Crnnt, and Hall.— Dr. Murdock and Rev. Mr. McCleggan, chap lains, who preach alternately in Erse (Scotch) and English. In en afternoon's ride from Fort Pitt he found an Indian settlement of Mingoes. He mentions the arrival of a Seneca chief, who had been to the Illinois, and brouglit from that barbarous region, over his own post track, a pacifet of letters to. the civilized cast, from the commander at Fort Chartres, near thq present St. Louis. The latest.date was June '21. , The news of the day was that provision was scarce and dear. Indian flour being at 6 shillings per hundred; ordinary buffalo meat at 4 shillings .per pound. "The French on opposite side of the river in plenty." The mail from Fort Pitt was sent monthly by sokliers to Shippensburg, which MB the near-' est pcist office. Mr. C; mentions the breaking of his thermometer us an irreparable loss.— In these days it'ivould probably be accounted too small an article for the great blasts of the glass furnaces to condescend to make.— " No ropes for painters here ;. and no pros pect of being able to supply this defect.' • Mr. Clarkson was engaged in loading boats 'at Fort Pitt to transport merchandise down the Ohio to Fort Chartres, on the Mississippi. He engaged a Seneca chief to accompany him; probably as a guide, interpreter, and protec tor through the tribes along the river,.some of whom were not in a friendly state. •Bofore oontienting to • Kaytishuta said "he'muit go • and see' his famili , at the White' Mingo town and the warriors of all parts of Ma na tion, and know holythings stood there. Nor this purpose he wanted a couple of bottles of rum:" This article was not so easily obtained 'in Pittsburg as it is now.. +' Sixteen kegs 'of spirits arrived on pack horses."' On the 8d of Eloptember the wagons arrived , from the ()apt ISith the . mercheediso for the loading of the 'tiottts. The Indianand;aeompanion were to . 6vo• .loitibuolie'for their sondem besides an interproter`tOwelyedollarti - kinonth. At 'this point"the' cooper's ehOP Was'lMrnt,,and the traders'litidito' Other', way Of . prlooMing ()milk to pack,the'flotir ,About, tlus r time the ReY. MtiirS;Datfiad and ,l;lostky . iirriYad ‘ 0 4 .11, nrslatie,uteeng, the Indiane.tp.proaoh the 10th t3'elitember,tltehoat : left roit *itt,,ana oq i5ll O . :nth ofiiiSiee; tiede of _the hoot? seems to,hafq.been Obleilti!ith, the In 4 "(Anne fer paltry: ;They, hought - .henvoi, wile;; ottot., bear deer,muskrat, wolf, Ratko!, p2n-: tin, raccoon; fox; and wild oat. A, momoi•apliun male at Fort Chartres says, Ribrellantong. "the boat; from Ntiw''Orleane of the largest size carry abont'po hogsheads of claret; 22 to 24 men, who Italie about 900 livree each. Three months are" accounted a good passage. A hogshead of claret on freight pays 800 li area." This mention' of claret is explained by romembering -that the _Mississippi ,was _at that date a French river, as to its settlement. —irrenton,Cazette. TROUT FISHING Trout fishing is at the best while the lilac is in flower, and after the'oldcr has come into flower it begins to decline ; ,this holds good in all latitudes where the Trout is to be found, and where the lilac and elder bloom. During the month of April, trout may be angled - to nt all times of the day, from sunrise to sunset, with nearly the same chances of success; but, as the season, advances, and the heat 'and brightness of the sun's rays become more in tense, while the water gradually .becomes smaller , tied clearer, the best time is from dawn till about nine in the morning, and from four in the afternoon till sunset. ,By far the most pleasant mods of angling for trout is with the-67 - and we may here observe that ths fly which will, tempt trout to.rise in-April,- loses none of its seductive properties as the season advances. It is - generally observed that trout do not take the fly freely either in gloomy weather, or when the sun shines bright. April weather—an alternation of sun shine and cloud, with a moderate southwest breeze gently rippling the surface of the ' stream—is the most favorable for the fly fisher all seasons of the year." In April; and in early spring generally, trout are more die •pcsed to rise at the fly about midday, than when the season more advanced. At the latter period, they are more inclined to take the worm about Mid-day, more especially in streamy places, just 'above the liead of a pool, 'when the water is clearing after a fall of rain. This fish has ever been the object of the an glees art.. In the very name of trout angling there is magic; and the practised angler en joys no sport with so keen a relish, as trailing for these beautiful fisli in clear and limpid streams. • 'FILE TREIIENDOUS ADVENTURES, AND THE MIGHTY DEEDS, THE RINE,DOWN ' ALL. LIFE AND DEATH, OF A. JACKS. =SZE It was night ; nowhere, and nowhere was as dark as a bottle of'ink in tho bottom of a well, and upon a rugged throne of petrified turtle soup stood the mighty A. Jacks, eating a slice of buttered beeswax, occasionally wet ting his parched lips by drinking fluidical flap jacks turned over. Around him stood his courtiers I ' , Bring forth the whangdoodle, and place it on the bewgeg!" he exolamed with a terrific "voice, at the come time cutting - off a courtier's head with the sharp edge of an illuminated cotton bale. 133133131111 The whangdoodle was placed upon the hew gag, and A. Jacks descended from his throne, twisted a double-headed fish-worm into a cork screw, drew a cork from a spectral phial, and— EMIGRE Too horrible to relate!!! !I =MBE OA of liis courtiers, named Fuzxyrinktum, bccanid incensed, transformed himself into an imaginary rhinoccrous, swore eternal revenge, created a rebellion with remorseless end san guinary fury, end assassinated the grandfath er of rioboara,grandmother, by compelling him to swallow tt' few,frionseed candle-boxes, crosswise. 4. Jacks buried his grandfather, then buried ,himself in a pot of porter—heels up. DEEM A. Jacks became lonely, and, - in order to amuse himself, sold out his interest in a vast estate which ho didn't own, and resolved to travel for the benefit of his illness. MEBSTIM He travelled t I 1 MN= — He first journeyed to Oliferu, near Egypt, on the ice, bound by thO eoast of Brazil with in a miles of Oregon. nil then found his long- ost sister, who had married the remnant of an Egyptian mummy, in good preservation. She gave 'the weary A. Jacks a grand feast, conflating of 'stewed lard and fried shoe-pegs. CIIAIPTER TM., AND LAST. The collation being indigestible, the heroic A. Jacks. and•all present, -were bilged to die jest. WASHINGTON'S WATCH. The Christian Watchman ielates the follow ing striking anecdote of Washington, in illus tration of the practical good sense which ho manifested in everything. The incident speaks volumes upon tho character of the Father of of his Country:. "his personal friend, Gov ernor Morris, was, about going to Europe, anti Washington, slum with heveral letters of in troduction, gave • hips this `charge,''To buy him, at Paris, a flatgold watch ; not the watch of a fool, or of a man who 'desires to make a show, but of which thiinterior construellon'shall be extremely well eared for, and Ms exterior air, very simple.' What amine of wisdcnn do these words suggest about men, as well as watches, . . thointerior well oared for, and the exterior , air very piratdol'. Bpyp.apq,girle, remember "Wathington'a , Watch, and be, Just .lilcolt7 names wero: unlinorrn 'among, the • As late,'l Gaye the Boston Trinnitipt, "no the )77 fon. I menO IMA middle One, But, slime that pe ried;:ohildron hiip:been 'christened Nvflh from two to four.‘gtvoir names.; No haie 'examined the list of names of the children in some of our publio solicols. -- The result of the. that 'of ,tho 'Anicriesti , children 'eighty -'t, iiiiedpq,,o,3/Y bad , thor 3 9.f 6.4134111 name. Only sOreuleen_ children in aT.infrodi , .bad d single hence. Twenty nue per lient: - 4ri.. thOseltinths' ihreeknimorft'gliWeitrigits:v: The Irish populationloinain oonti! .t with but, V MEM OLUME Llll. No 34": A CHAPTER ON HOUSEKEEPING. I never could see the reason vvh. housekeepers millet, of 'necessity, ("entippes. f once had the misfortune to be domeeliciited during Ihe mummer months with 'one of 'thie GM . , I shotild like to have seen the adventurous spider that would have dared' to ply his cunning trade in Mrs. Carriot's pietnises I Nobody was allowed to sleep a ivink.after daylight beneath her roof. Even her old rooster crowed one hour earlier than any of: themeighbors.:' ahead" was written on every britamstiek is . the establishment. She gave her husband his breakfast, buttoned him_up_in his overcoat, and put him out thofront door, with his face in the'direction of the4tore, in less time than I have taken to tell it. Then she snatched up the Mix little Carriots ;• scrubbed their faces, up and down, without regard to feel ings or pug noses, till they shone like a row of milk pans. • • " Clear the track" was her motto,, washing and ironing days. Sho.nevor drew a long breith till the washtubs wore turned bottom upwards. again, and every - article of wearing 'ap‘parol sprinkledifoldedi-ironek and4eplaced bh tka backs of their respective owners. It gave me a stitch in the side to look at her l - - "As to her "cleaning days," I never had the courage to witness one. I used to lie under an apple tree in the orchard, till she was through. A whole phitoon of soldiers wouldn't have frigh tened me so much as that virago and her mop. You should have seen her in her glory,. on " baking days," her sleeves railed up tolier arm-pits, and a long check apron, swathed round her bolster-like figure ; the great oven gli:Wv . blazing and sparkling in a manner very sugges tive to a 'lazy sinner like -mpself. The inter minable rows of greased pie-plates; the pail of - rough kind ready and ready gingerbread, the pots of pork and beans, in an edifying state of pro gression and the immense embryo loaves of brown and wheaten bread. To my innocent inquiry, Whether she though thelatter would. "rise," she set her skinny arms - akimbo,marelnt up within kissing distance of my face, cooked' her one sae, and asked, " if I thought the kok ed liki3 a woman to be trifled with hitt loaf of bread I" The way I settled down into ray slip per's, without a' reply, probably convinced her that I was no longer skeptieaeon thntrpoint. Saturday evening she 'employed in winding up everything that was t nwound in the houses—, theold entry clock included„ , , From tbat time till Monday morning she devoted to boot:11165 - dd and Sabbatical exercises. All I have to say is, it is to be hoped she carried some ofcthe fervor of her secular employments'into those' halcyon hours.—Fanny Fern. SIX 'DAYS IX . A • GRAVE An account was given a short, time ago,_ of .we men and a boy having been buried six days and six nights in a marl pit at Beretta ville, in the department of the Seine Inferi eure, and then rescued. A narration of the affair, derived'from the sufferers, is now given in a Rouen paper. During the whole of that time they were without food, without water, Without light,-and almost without clothes ; and , they wore in such a confined place; that, with the exception of the boy; they could not stand upright. Boltard, the eldest man, declares • that during the whole time he did not sleep mire than two hours ; but his two oompan- r , ions, and especially the younger, slept more. They slept b'ack to book. They felt no huti ger, and Boitard says that even if they hod provisions they would not have touched them; 'but they experienced great, thirst. On the fourth day they found a little water thick with 'marl, by digging into .the bottom - of the pit. It was this water probably which preserved, their strength. At first they.heard tie noise of the pickaxes and °spades above nein ; but during the last ,three..idays their. breathing was so loud, as to prevent it' from retching them, and this circumstance natural ly increased their agony of mind ; they also feared the miners were digging in a wrongdi; rection. Ono of thSefl MAL fifty' chemiCal matches and a small piece ' . .of candle ; but, Ahaugh-they-often-triectrthey'colultHsofbr— want of air, cause the.candle to birtr. During the latter part of the time, they be came so exhausted as to , be uneomMioneef their, position ; but they remember' that the boy once, Cried, as if inn dream, "There the rope, Ballard ! lot nd.ascend 1" Only one of them, liottarOWas able to shed tears and when to did so, the boy consoled him by MIL log him that they weresure to be, reseued,—. The moment a breath of air reached them, they fainted, but after a while recovered.— The first thing Boltard said, on being remed, was, " Clive me a pinch of snuff!!! and he took it with intense• delight.:-L•GatignanCe loun ger. • • wriw HOPE It stole on its pinions of snow to thet halfof disease ; .and the sufferer's . frown became' a smile—the emblem, of pones and endurance. It wont to tho•house otmourningotnthfrom die Ups of sorrow there cams sweet (11(1 sheer ful,senge. , , It laid its howl upori the arm.of•tlie poor man, whit*, was • otrotolied ..fortli.;ith. the coin- . .msrid of,unholy impulses , -hint front t.? •dlegraoo and ruiii.l • , ••• ••,. • ; ••, .It dwelt like a • litring.thirigin, thiSimeentirif .... the mother, whose son tarrigdi long ;fillet. the .. promised time• or his- aiming r•rind: it saved her from .dOsolation,. aptl they'" earn thatkil•-•• _lt_bovered about tlte_liead-of-the-youth Who. had become , tba. Isbnidell of society r . anA ledl bini onward'to',works which oven hid enemies, praised. It snatched a taidettfteni the jairii of 'del l *. and rent with nn bld Man tO'Ffeaven. Akio, h epe in good'takatiipi; 'novo' it-- Becixon it on it:that it may depart not. It Will - repay'younitalieS. Life is bard'enough'at - best4.!but hopo obeli' lead thee over: its yioncitairii. and siietitu thee. SiV442urti434'inktei, ,o /P. . 04'44 priid'uned)hy heitionthietnent.t.kodriionnd ° 4ntlee; When yon setotn 1 , 4 VhnlAkindePtiow :these lo matters oonla love ireubled you so opoh. ■ our j_3nan