- - • - -- - • ,F 7 ) _ _ , • rift-" " IS' egkr - 411114 , . -"\ }' /4- k 4: 4 1, 13 *4 ^ • i~ . m at - - - • 0 7. r•ktr* • - , . 4 4, V11 .41 ISE B . I6jEATTY, Proprietor. ear Do. WE. 31.• C. LOOMIS, WILL perform al ^ V 3 t14,-operations--upon-the - Tooth that tiro requi• rod for their preservation, such as t_;caling,Filing. Pl ugl i ng , &c, or will restore the loss of them, by insorttng Artificial "Fceth, horn astinglototith to a fall soft. IltY''ollico on Pitt street, a few ours smith of the-Railroad Hotel. Dr. Lisa, (i nt the last ton dm of Om v month. Dr. GMOILGE Z. 1116,"E.TZ, performiall operations upon the teeth 'that may be r e 'aired for their preservation. Artificial teeth tiserted, from a single tooth to anentire set, of the in )at scientific principles. Diseases of the inciatit art 1 irregularities carefully treated. Of Doe at the residence of his brother, on North Pitt Street, Carlisle 33.. S. 3. RXISFFER, OFFICE'. in North Hanovdrstreat adjoining Sir. Wolf's store. Otlice lioura't more par- Jularly from 7 to 9 o'clock, A. and from 5 to 7 o'clock. P. M. fiune 18'5 Jr 2. 301-IN 8. SPRIGerS, OFFERS his professional services to the people of Dickinson township, pritl q .,vicirsity, , Residonee—on the Walnut Bottom Road, one mile east of Centreville. fel4l ypd C. E, COLE, A TTORNE T LAW, will attend promptly to all usiness entrusted to him. °like in the room formerly occupird'hy Dam Irvine, Esq,, North Ilanover St, Carlisle. 6s April 20, 1851. GIEfOR(GrEI "Marts, JUS VICE OF THE PEACE. OF FICE at his residence, cornet of Main street the Public Squlre, opposite Burkholder's Hotel. In addition to the duties of Justke of ills Peace, will Attend to all kinds of writing, such as deeds, bands, mortgagee, indentures, articles of agreement, notes, &e. Carlisle, an 8'49. Frash Drugs, Medicines, &C. ac '•I have just received from Philadel. phia-and New York very extensive IrcW additions to my former stock, cing nearly every article of Medicine now in use, toge..aer with Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Turpentine, Perfumery, Soaps, Stationery, Fine Cutlery, Fishing Tackle,— Bridles- of almost every desCription, with an endelss variety of other articles, whichl ant de tormintid to sell at the VERY LOWEST prices. All PhySicians, Country Merchants, Pedlars and others, are respectfully requested not to pass the Obl) STAND, as they may rest assured that every article wip be sold of a-good quality, ad. upon reasonable terms. - S. FILLIdTT, Main street. Carlisle. 6 ''Mas , 30 F. N. rcosrNsuenr.L, pOUSE, Sign. Fancy and Qrnotpental Painter, Irvin's (formerly Harper's) 110 W, . next (Init. to 'Front's Hat Store. He will at• tend promptly to all the :thrive descriptions of painting . , at re isonahle prices. The :various kin Is of graining attended to, such as mahog any, oak, walnut, &c.. in the improved styles. Carlisle, July 14, 1852-1 Y• COURGIhAEE AND RINGLAND, 7.l2t,tvii - Ata3unzia Tt:A it S -DI I L NEW...OLIMBERLAND. 7'1401.4 . '8P OR TaiTlo.ll TB.kl.iintlersigned'are now prepared to freight, 14A nterchandize fr,t; tVPhiladel ai,. phis and Baltimore, at re ' , 11 1 ' - duced rates, with regularity , and despaeh., k „l ',, DEPOTS. - Buzby - kga., 345 Market Street, Phila. Goirae'S.Mall, "Small's Depot,” 72 Nortl street, Baltimore. an2l WOODWARD & SCHMIDT. TAANSPORTAITION. tiE.4l/40,rligned aro now prepared to freight rig) To i rclinnd T in e Iron de Ipl and • - ni , agr-- " s a" a Baltianore, at re duced rutile, with regularity and despatch. :DEPOTS. Freed, Ward & Frett4,.3ls Market Street Philadelphia • A. 11. Burnitz, .704r . i1i 'Street, Bultimoro.. Michael Harr, North St'reet, Baltimore. • r 50p226 mD. R.I.I.OADS. :„ DIEN CLOTHING STORE:- THE sultscrlbcr has just returned from Philiitiolidtia with a wryy. choice 'soh:lotion of CLOTItSjt:C ASSI.SI EKES and VEST IN GS, pearl Drab, Brown and Marbled chith for OVER COATS. .11cSides a splendid lot of FANCY STRIPED C ASSI.MERES, which ho will makeup into coats, pants and vests of the latest styles. Ile will also keep Shirts, Drawers, Under Shirtr,,Shirt Collars, Gloves, Cravats, Hos), oyory, thing liept to a Gentleman's Furnishing Store;'" loving en• gaged the services or w: 8,, Piinxissott, a wolfltnown'cutter, Ito will be able to motto clethos to order in a superior manner, lle is determined not to be excelled by any in the county . as to makr, material or price. Our motto is not to be undersold by any. Give us a call at our store in South Hanover street, directly I,opposito Bentz's store, and see lo yourselves. paARLEs timtNiTz. no, 21085270,T, PILWRIVORIVX SCATAIIS. ' 'PURSE superior scales were invented by . Thomas Ellicott about 25 years ago ; they have been in constant use, and r r tir,safter various improvements are offiired by filo subscribers, rind warranted correct and unsurpassed for aceuracy and databiltty ; after a fair trialOf nat approbett, they can be returned. ' ..„ f t Scales for Rail Roads, Canals, Ilay, Cattle, Coal, Stores, and for weii , jung all kinds of Merchandise, manufacturetrat the old - estrib. Veiled s tand, JVint/i Street near Coates • Street Philadelphia 'ABBOTT & Successors to Ellicott Eg Abbott AGENTS. ' Tnumor k SttAtv., 333 Nlarkot.St., FitANr. Pove PratEville. [eentfillen] . W 'ILL . PJBpEi:,s. zo ; 000 rxnalist • - just opened the largek roisortment of WALL. PAPERS ever opened'in Cir. lisle, consisting al about 0,000 pieces of tiro latest Francis- mid 'Anieri can damns, 'ranging In price from 5 cis to $t 75 : also:Al/inflow Pa. •flars eel Fire• Screens, ,Plain C4den and Blue Papers; &a, POrsOno,wislilOg to purelsOie any of the'above earl 'Solis at least 25. per cent by ealing at JOHN' P:IXNE'S" liar lwara Sttire West Side,of.Nortll'llanovor , , . , Street, CailiSlO: • Oarlisle Vemale.Seelinary.• PAWN ' will commence 'the SitM WI SESSFON of their Sarriinary , on the second NfOnday• in April, in `a new and commodious school 'Timm, next door to Mr. .I,ooncird'4, 'North 'annoyer street. Insiruction , in the languages anti * rowing, no extra charge, n,' Moire tettglit, by an experienced toitaier;at a n extra eliargo,,• • .• • (Xept3tf) ; VirZNEl3..'4=lD zagirortic, ohialaga,- Ifebont ,Mascat, Grapo.'quica, Port and Anohor brand' champigno: Ariaoc 4 Boeton , Rant, • 'Singer r Bandy Gliartyßrindrv , P,aliv'Cogniaa and • Dark B ra „Holland Ilinnad Spar ANDLES norl'potind; . Syrup • nal - oilgra , MOLiALSE%tAVashing , Soda,: 0 . d r , Y. fryaon.limperini and BIatIWPP,A3; r 4% jan l uba'9l ? A l a- . f)t OatVit§l k oereti,ringolrPl.e and Cfllsl. 3AstNl2 I,fi t inik,„ ; _ ~3- o .itrvitlitr,..;. - :. - -I,PtSfek, . .11i . .TitiTtlirt',:' eity#lol4'... liolititi; -- .. Agtitil . lll.lo; . : $ll - si4pa. link OnI.OUI , . %innitittign. THERE ARE TWO THINGS, SAITHLORD BACON, WHICH MARE A NATION GREAT AND PROSPEROUS—A FERTILE SOIL AND BUSY WORKSHOPS,:—TO WHICH LET ME ADD KNOWLEDGE AND FREEDOM. —Bishop Hall - PO t'rltA 11`. AY TUE HON MRS. NORTON a An‘by hin lonnly henrth he ante. VIP shadow of a welcome dream Passed o'er his heart—disconsolate' Ills home did seem ; Comfort in vain was spread around, For something still was wanting found, Therefore be thought of ono whO might. Forever in his presence stay; Whose dream should he of him by night, Whose smile should be for him by day; And the sweet vision, vogue and far, Rose on his fancy like a star. "Let her ho young, yet not n child, Whose light andinexperienced mirth Is 01 ton winged and too wild For sober efirtli,— Too rnin . bow-like - such mirth appdars, And fades away in misty rears. ' "Let youth's fresh rose still gently bloom f - Upon he• smooth and downy check, Yet let a shadow, not of gloom ; But soft and meek, Tell that some sorrow she linth known, Tho' not a sorrow of her own. " Lot her be full of quiet. grace, No sparkling wit With sodden glow • Dtight'ning,hor.purely ohiaord face_ And placid brow; Not radiant to the stranger's eye,— A creature easily pass'd by; But who, once seen, with untold power Forever haunts the yenrning• heart, noised from tho crowd that eelf-sumo hour To dwell apart, All sainted and enshrined to bo Theidol of our memory! "And oh ! let MARY ho her 1311.1110- It Lath n sweet and gentle sound At which no dories deny to fame, Come crowding round, But which the dreaming heart beguiles With holy thoughts and household smiles " With "peaceful meetings, welcomes kind, And love, the same in joy and tears, And gushing intercourse of mind Thro' faithful years; Oh! dream of, something half divine, Be real—be mortal—and be mine I" 'Tis dimpled, white, and oh I so soft, That little fairy hand -It lies Within my own 'so warm, So-graceful in its petitelorm • No.Wordp I can command Will tell the magio, mystic spell ,t Which in thy hand cloth dwelle As to my burning lips full oft That little bond I press, • • Bestowing Love's caress Upon the flake of dimpled snow Which warm with life and youth cloth glow My lady's soft white hand. I lov, to mark the blue - yelps sAll, • Upon that little hand I Each finger tapers, round and fair, And by that much loved hand I swear, While I had my health or land, That gentle hand no ills shall know, No rude touch bid its whiteness glow, That snowy band- Isleve so well. Would it were now in mine, That I might , leOre love's sign, Ills signet, and his sweetest seal On that hand, which, thro' woe and weal, I'll love—my lady's band Father, you have a eon, a darling son. Iro . has facilities for good and for evil, and must act. Each capable of such intense action that both cannot net on a level; one must be in 'some measure subservient. Your son is now young; he has no habits, on principles, no `character. These must be formed, and you bare been appointed by Providence to super intend and assist in this formation. This you must do whether yon'will or not. The nature of the relation existing between yon and your eon render your non-p`articipatiom in the for mation of his character impossible. . rect ids innocent footsteps?flint would you Lave Lim become; -a man in form only ; pendent only of good, with feeble4avering energy •i hip self respect a mero low disgusting pride 7 You can easily train him for this, as ' a thousand have been and nro being trained, unless his mind is very for aboielho commOn ality. Treat him ne a, machine, impress it upon him that ho is a more tool, and he will soon become snob. Make him keenly feel his inferiority, check'all his aspirings; and like sapling bent to the ground, he will soon learn to grow doWnward. But if you would wish him to become , a strong minded, truth loving, whole souled man, treat him as, a man, tbnt is to be an equal. Draw out his hotter nature; strengthen all his aspirings for that which is high; and good. Teach him to curb his strong ;passions, and to attain that self control which enables'man to influence his fellow men.. Lot him feel that he , has the germ of the man within him, which need's only a right cultiva tion to mako it serviceable to himself-and mankind. - Teach him nt all times to bring his notions and motives , to the standard of right, and only right. - BD su'recthat he feel's cordi 7 dance in you .. as a sympathizing friend in all .cases. - Never elevate yourself or depress him :So that ho can approach you only with ari of 'lto has, histiiverld of joys and sorrows, hopes and fears, which, although small to you, 1., ma :all to him, Encourage him to action ; 'phteobeforo him some, ddsirablo object, which ho iy,Pr ), OQ,Uro - .l4,aelidestial. and extra mi. ertich 4 Makii44ls, sonnthing for which to !Ether,. why not Ate,. Let him find by experi ment that ;th Oreidasomething to gain by 'right, Or lose by induCemerit to virtu nun notions v01 ; bo. ;given tin,. , Losrn him to ;• correctlyloo and act for himself • while, young and - under your care,'arid'lA ; feel his drill indiridual respowail3ility,*d 411 1 , s not'bo enticed and deaelvad' when ' . .lbrown upon his ,owA resources. 'Abaco all, early learn him-to look upon God ae hils.rath or, and heavenas his how,' and the chief Cli ;.;jodt lifo hero to Ala good, .; leOeb ; him 'pro'clOPt find 'examplc tolorp Lord andAeop,l ; bl,s, coramandroofits; and it shall, bo t well with thee and'thy house to future gener ations. ' 'port _ THE LADY'S 1-14 ND =3 glit Thine Cult. A FEW HINTS TO A FATHER,' Toward what course of life would you d C4RLISLE, PA., WEDNESDAY., JUNE 8. 1853. Capital, gtorti, FAITHFUL FOREVER. It is a dear delight for tho soul to have trust in the faith of another. It Inalton a pillow of socease for the cheek which is burning with tears and the touch of pain. , <lt pours a balm into the very snuro of.sorrow. It is a Jiopo undeterred, a flowery seclusion into which the mind, when weary of sadness, may retreat , for a caress of constant love; a warmth in the clasp of friendship . foreVer lingering on the band ; a consoling voice that dwells as with an eternal echo on the ear; a dew of mercy fal ling on the bruised and troubled hearts of this world. Bereavements and wishes long with held descend sometimes as chastening griefs upon our nature ; but there is no solace to the' laternesS of broken faith. - Jennie was the morning star of my life. Long before I trod tho manbb Wider deserts of the ' world, I pledged my hopes to her. Sho was so young that my affe , tion came fresh no.dew upon her heart. • She' was'gentlo to me', end tender, and fond, and sometimes I thought that she loved me less for my own sake than for the sake of love. 'So I watched the opening blimm of het:mind. I wondered what springs of truth '- were bursting there to make her a joy and a-blessing on the earth. I knew That every pulse was warm with a sacred love ; but it was not then that I learned-all the deep and aboun ding faith that had, its home in the heart of my-Jennie. Jennie was slim' and graceful, with a light step and a gentle dignity of demeanor, which, with her joyful ways, was like the freshness of shade near a sunny place. Iler face was fair, with sometimes a pensive expression ; it was a good, loving face, with soft, blue, float ing eyes, full of beauty and tender thought.-- A smile always played on the lips—not forev er orgbidness, but of charity, and content, and trust In the future to which tier hope was turned. And often a song poured through those lips, as though some happy bird were nestled in her bosom, and sang with her breath its hymns of delight in4hc joys of life. All this did,Jennio seem to me, and more th - an this she was ; and silo loved me, and I was confident in her affection. Fort was then young, and my heart was warm and my hope was strong: . 1 was as buoyant as the breeze, and my life was for years a perpetual sum; mer's day. It was the time when the pure springs of nature had not been roasted among the fickle and the cold ; it was the golden seti. son when trust is the companion of truth ; it was the first harvest .which garners into the bosoni 'those thoughts and entopons amid which, as on a bed "of , flowers„. hope clings, feeding like a bee." Tho boart.of Jennie was as deeply stirred, but her soul was more serene than mine. There was a fearful storm in Europe. I heard of grim tyrants sitting on thrones, whence they gave their commands to armies which marched to the cast and to the west, and tore up the vineyards, and ,trod down the gardens, and blotted out the peace of the world Anon, there came rumours of a mighty hos t that had melted in the north, and glutted with ite blood the Russian snows. Then there came a strange ambition into my mind. My blood became hot. A calamitous frenzy filled my brain. The name of Glory • consecrated all theo -murders to my imagina tion. I would carry v a flag in , one of those (w -inks. I WOWId mix in the crimson throng. I would myself boar a sword amid those forests of flashing stoat. And I told this to my Dennis. I thought she would certainly bless me as a hero'. I Groughtehe would binda scarf abput my waist, • and bid me go !‘ where glory waits thee," „if I still remembered her. But, when I said I should leave her for a while and come back with honor, and pride, and the memory of brave acts, and the conscious gratulations of a breast that never knew fear she became pale, and looked at me sorrowfully, and fell upon my neck, weeping most bitter tears. I asked her wby she could grieve, and said the danger was - one chance among innumerable probabilities of success. But ells only sobbed and trembled, and proem} me to her bosom, and prayed one not to go. I reasoned with Jennie. I tried to persuade her of the glory of war. I told her how much more worthy of love she would think me when I came back adorned with laurels. (0 how green aro the leaves that bloom from slaugh ter!).l said her imago. would be my compan ion ;, her voice would be my vesper-bell, her smile my star of the 'morning ; her face would be the visitant of my, dreams ; her' love the mercy that would shield mo from every din-' ger, She listened with suspended sobs and trembled, and all the while her oyes were ap pealing to mr.own, and penetrating to my heart to invoke its faith, that I might not' tempt misfortune to blight the early bridal of our hearts. , When. I' had done, her answer Was as if had not spoltsp, for still she only said that I must not go. .Shozave no more reasons now. And I—did Ifleserve her love, when I thought that explubung and persuading wore answers to the pleading tears, and swelling bosom, and quivering franle, and speaking eyes of that 'maiden Niohe shaken by her moinnful fears ? "You will be changed when you return," Alto said. ;' ' . • ' Inhange I I knew I could not 'change ! 'Why slMuld Jennie doubt my truth ? I wouldprove it. .My mind was fixed. My•faney Was flush= ed by ambitious anticipations. •IWas resolied to leave, Jennie, nt length, when her entreat- . les failed, reproaching me, bid so gently, that her very upbraiding sounded ~like a boodle tion. And so it.was. •It was' not even iLO selfishness of affection. It y v ae n Intro, ton der, earnest 'solicitude.; AAA, fold nie 'I Was breaking,faith'WitlthMttn thus going away to: ! engSge'in-Wure IVas itfor this that she bad 'ea= offianeednemy hearty' Was for' ibis she, bad-pledged hci,levs; with ,o:;eryi sa-, it.neWer mine?, Was it for all that I `almnid •take my hand , from the pleasant cares' ef Peace' CorruPt it - in' the 'vilhinics - pf , Wee; that. Ichouldmix,with the worst of r y thlie:l;i3lMUld j ; oiter :or 7lntvoste:cf; poor, end enrollee . inithe glare ortbeir harping homes, And , aeuilsweet , babes uniciefatlMOsi! - and' wives bareavad,.and brides lefedetiolato In tho world? :Oh-no,' ,'lt watt , that brolioP my Pledge.. I wa,Snot true to my early vow. I Was not all for her. I had made n now . for my heart: I had declared I would never enuse anysoriewlo h'er,by denying to her los;o ono of its earnest wishes. And now I was doing this. I wns making her grieve ; I was risking the leaving her desolate to the end of her days. For the Sake of what?, F,or the sake of a soldier's ambition. Ambition I As though to wear the gray hairs or a good old man were not alrobler hope than to die in a trencVor live, shuddering with the memory of carnage, and fire, and blood, 'and all the nameless horrors of a war!. I cannot toll all the horrors of that parting. An infatuation burned homy head, and blind ed me; At length I wont. Jennio's last bles sing upbraided mo more deeply than her first, reproach. When she knew that I should go, she said not ono Moro desponding word ; and then did I feel hew:gentle as she was seroho in the days of joy. But I cOmforted'ityself. I decided that Jennie, good as she was----dear,• loving, noble—could not comprehend the idea of patriotism. And, once, a thought of falsehood crossed my mind. I reflected that I had'neyer tried her—she might not he true" to the absent: it would be good to test her faith. And so I went. Let me forget the horrors and the crimes of that long adventure. In stead-of- two -years I was -away-soy:in-rand from the first I was sad, sick, remorseful.— Nothing but memory recalled to me the thought of love. And then did Jennie's reproaches rise up . in judgment against me. - I was long lost from her during the confusion of that.ter rible campaign. A solid continent now lay between-us, and now an ocean. I heard not of her during four years. Ali I she has for gotten, said I, the fiery, wilful ono to whom she gave her early love. At length I returned; but I wits not he to whom she had said that swept and dear fare well. I wile manned, mutilated, disfigured= a cripple, nn object; •I came home with a fleet filled half with trophies, half with the limb- . less, sightless remnants of a glorious war.— But then it was a glorious war. Yes; in twenty years thie earth had been Ayed with the blood of six millions of men. What a miserable thing—the relict of a man—l looked, when in the sunny summer we bore down the Channel. I thought of Jennie; as the parting cup went round. I already looked upon her as lost ; I had not falsified my - pledge, yet had I not bro ken my own faith in - doubting hers? I repen ted all I had done. Could I bind her to her own? Could ask hei; to take, instead of the manly figure she had last seen, a creature . such as I then_ wps, = . 11 ' L had feelings et.,lL;tpourriaval honour— honor that blomfts dfrait head-tiottor that struts in a red sash, and feathered hat.-. I would release her I As though love were an attorney's bond. As though is penful of ink could blot out the eternal record of a heart's first faithful affection. I wrote to her. I said I heard Cho was unmarried - still. I had come home. I was also unmarried ; but I was maim ed, distorted, disfigured—an object to look at. I had no right to insist on our contract. ' I would not force myself' upon her. I would spare her feelings. I would not extort a final ratification of her promise. I loyed her still, and should always with tendernese fr, remember her ;_but but I was bound to release her. She was free! Free! Free, by virtue of n written lease.— Free;by ono line, when tho interwoven mem ories of a life's long faith wore bound about her heart ; when every root of affection that had struck into ber betom had sprung up with now blossoms of hapo, to adorn the visionary future. Free, by my honorable conduct—when sho cherished as on an altar ,the flame of her vestal love, condo fragrant,by purity and trust: Her loiter was not like mine, It was (illicit, passionate, burning with affection. It began with a reproach, and the reproach was blotted with a tear—it ended with -a blessing, nntLa tear had 'made that blessing- sacred too. Let 'me comp to her. Let her see my face. Let her embrace. me. Let me never leave her more; and she would soothe me for all the paint; I had endured. - ' Not a word of her own sorrows! • ' Scarcely could that happiness be real. And bad my long absence, bad my miserable die-. asters made no change? Was I still, for Ten nio, the beloved of ether days What did you tell her I" said I to my oonfidential rade, the one eyed commodore, a bluff old hero,' with a heart as. warm' as,,over bent under gold, 'buttons. He had tahon my letter, and brought back Jennie's answer. _ said you were tattered -about - the hull, till you were a wreak." "Anti what did she Bay, Did sho.shudder, as with aversion ?" "No; she Bobbed, and cried, and naked me , if you were injured mach, and said ryou must have suffered bitterly; but;•slo said, too, 'that you must dome to her. .MiSs,' Lsaid, he is so knocked - idtout that you won't know him.— He'll frighten you. llo's n ruin. Ile has hardly any body left.' 1 . And then she flushed to the brew; Give hi'm tliat,' she cried, tell hiin to come. ' Ulm has enough body left to held his. soul, I'll cling to him " - • And whore in tale or song, in history or fa ble, is' an 'answer' recorded 'of tnoro heroic beauty? What hall Ito teach tier of honour. n Hers was the honor of the heart;'the truth of the soul; the fidelity and love of a woman born to bless thisivorld. Mine was an honourWorn like a' feather in a cooked Lit; Bice an'apaulift, like, a epur. — It was regulation honor-Hhonor by the rulhi - at"ihe oervioe." Jormio'o was bettor than mine. •-• • • • •! ' • ", I,lived with her near the •old place,: .And aiy wifo,.thalp7o: ,of my, 'early •tlaie,' was akin fond tender, trustful—and, from that tlay,'l hurled tey . ideaaek the pride of War. " • ." . . „ ''Jennto • n , t4i' illy only'glcry, and alio was ornvor 1 '11 , 1 410 minicin -- iiorldtho 'tho'confit. The former 'offeet every thing, the other oppoec ildnig, and th.) , dialr, fail in oaf betide' oquailroalka and atoernhCato ; wont lielievo in .eaperi eionteau4neasoi.4o,,whtle I cgn d gyoya,vpqde cads hie Live 'in the elovf.digeCtion of a court of bankruptcy. , . 31ligrrilonfoug. 'MILE] IS THINE." Sho is thine—the word is spoken, Hand to hand, and heart to heart! Though all other ties are broken, :Thus these bonds shall'never, part. Thou haat taken her in gladness, From the" altar's holy shrine; Oh, remember, in her sadness, tot She is thine and only thine! In so fair a templo - never Aught of ill can hope to come; Good 'will strive,', and striving ever; Make so pure a shrine its home. Each the other's love possessing, Say what care should cloud that brow; She will be to thee a blessing, And a shield to her be thou! KOSSUTH. AND SHAIC.SPEADOZ. Twenty thousand of the English working people, wlio were kindled by. Kossuth*s •elo quence and charmed by his surprising . fainili ority with their langunge, lately opened a pennx.iubscription for a testimonial of their regard to the exiled Governor. A large sum was collected, and the tasteful literary men to whom it was entrusted, deter Mined to present Limn magnificent copy of Shaltspeare, sump tuously bound and emblazoned, encased in a corved Los representing the home of the Brit ish bard. Early last rnobth the .offering was made by Lord Dudley Stuart and Douglass Jerrold ; and, in the course of the patriot's reply, he informed the assemblage how he had studied and acquired, not only the English tongue, but the prificiples .of English liber ty. The name of Shalcspenre," said he, "car ries back my memory as, far ns 1837. For having dared to claim my lawful right, I Was in prison till the voice of my nation's univer sal Indignation released me from it. For months there I was in a damp, lonely cham ber, seeing neither the sky nor the earth, with none of those ine'xhaustible consolations which bciuntiful Nature affords to misfortune and suffering.. And there I was, without book to read, without' a pen to write; there I, was with God, with my tranquil conscience, and with nothing to arrest the musing eye. -Ittlag inntion raiiesits dreadfa wings, and carries the mind in a magnetic' flight . to portentous regions of which no philosophy has dreamed. f gatheredzup all the strength of my - mind, and bade him atop that dengeons soaring, It was done, but I got afraid of. myself. So I told my jailors to give me something to read. Yee answered they, but nothing political, Well give, me SitaksPeare; With nu English grammar and dictionary—thbt you will take, I trust, not to be politiCal ;of :course not, answered they,. and gave it to me, and thoirel sat musing over it. For menthe it wait a sealed bciok to me, as the hieroglyphics long were to Champolion, and as Layard's Assyrian monuments it'll are. But at lase the light spread' over me, and I drank in full eups,With never quenching thirst, from that limpid source of delightful instrue tion and instructive delight. Titus I learned the little English I know. But I learned some thing more besides. I learned politics. What! politics from Shakspeare ! Yes, gentlemen, what else are politics than. Philosophy applied to the so cial condition of man, and what is philosophy Put the knowledge of Nature and of the hymen ycari; and who ever penetrated deeper into the recesses of these mysteries' titan Shakspeare did P He fur-- nished me the materials—contemplative medi a tation wrought out the rest." TILE ARAB lIOItSE Layard; the explorer of Nineveh, who is as familiar with Arabs as ho is with antiqUities, giVes, in his late work on Assyria, some curl. ous details.respecting the true horse of.the desert. Contrary to the popular notion, the veal Arab is celebrated less for unrivalled swiftness than for extraordinary powers of en durance. Its usual paces are but two--ra quick walk, - often averaging four or 'five miles an hour, and a half-runntng canter ; for only when pursued does a Bedouin put his mare at speed. It is the .distance they will travel in emergency, the weight they will carry, and the 'comparative trifle of food they require, which render the Arabian horses so valul4o.: Layard saYs' that he knew of a celeliated nine which had Carried two men in chain or mor.beyond the reach of some Anoyza pursu ers, This mare had rarely more than twelie handfuls of barley in twenty-four 'hours, ex cepting during the - spring when the pastures were, green ; ,and it Is only the Mares of the wealthy 'Bedouins that get oven this aliowance. The consequeneeis that, except in the spring, the Arab horse is loan 'and unsightly. They are never placed under coder during summer,' nor, protected from the biting winds of the desert in the winter.' The : saddle is rarely taken. from their backs. Cleaning and groom ing aro strangers . to them. They sometimes reach fifteen hands, high, and never fall below fourteen. In disposition . they aro docile as lambs; 'requiring no guide but a,halter: yet in the flight or pursuit . their nostrils beeome blood-red,- their oyes glitter with fire, the nec` is urchin], and the mo:ne , and tail are raised and spread out to the wind r the wimp animal becomes transformed. ' :'ThO vast plains ofifilesepotamla famish the best breeds, and those breeds are divided into five rodeo of Iv'hich the c;riglnal, stock :nos the Koneyleh. ,The most famouS belong either to the Shannner or to the - Aneyza ltibes.. Their pedigrees 'lke kept scrupulously; and thOir nodas'o:great that a therenghlY' bred niers is generalii oivnedliy ten or oven' niore persons. It Is not ,oftenthit a-real Afabian can be per chased: The reatonlaibit ne'oeunt of its fleetness cud powers;of "e'raleraneeit is inval- uable to the' Bedniiln, who, once its book, can defy any pursuer but a Oberman'. or AtiOysit with a swifter OlatrOnger:Ontio than:lds ei,v ll ,- . An Ataerliiait'incer, or even tidgnglish'hinitet , , iyould brettit ,idown.ilvtbese pathless , &stifle almost before;: ea Arabian bow° warmed - up to its worb..Where thorough-bred mares hate been sold, they haie , .broughtas 'as/ ell thousand dollars' , ;:bat Aiesel it le understood. arem4,of .the beet recto., JThe - Arab.who cells hismamettn;de nothing 7tlth 4io , gold, and oian not over keep for the next. Bedouin of a 'hostile tribe who 'comes aeresslis path, and who has retained hie mare', will take it from him and defy pursuit . . Layard thinks that no Arabian of tho blood lies ever been seen in England. If this is so we ean.scarcely_ sup, pose that any beim come to Amerioa, and must believe the so-called Artiblana give to our Gov ernment, at various times, to be of inferior breeds. Rarely, indeed, are the thorough breeds found beyond the desert. .It will bo a subject of regret, to It oso who admire fine horses, to learn that the Arabian is considered to be degenerating, the consequence of the subjugation of Arabia, and the decline of the Bedouin.—Philo. Bulletin. GENEALOGIES IN THE BIBLE. Genesis ch s..—Tho Rev. Dr. Cumming says, curiously, that is a remarkable fact that the names' which aro given in this chapter of menu irs and epitaphs, when literally translated from - theHebrew,-contain a propheorof the gospel of Ch'rist', each ono conveying' a great and blessed truth. "Adam is the first name, which means, man in the imago of God;' Seth, 'substituted by e Enos, 'frail man ;' Cainan, 'lamenting e Mabalaleel, 'the blessed God ;, Jared, shall come down e Enoch, 'teaching e Methuselah, 'his death shall sonde Lamech, 'to the humble;' Noah, 'rest,' or 'con solation.' . It is thus that if you take th e e whole of the names, and simply in the order in which they are-recorded,- you- have-this-truth stated by them : 'To man, once made in the imago of God, now substituted by man frail and full of sorrow, the blessed God himself shall come down to the earth, teaching, and his death shall send to the humble, consolation.' This is just an epitome of Christianity." - Tarirtirri. A MODERN BLUE 'BEARD. A man named _Wardle was recently taken before one of the Cou'rity Courts of England, charged with bigawy,•nnd the faots °Belted during the investigation, creating quite an ex traordinary '.nonsa‘ien. The 'original indict ment simply charged William Wardle with in termarrying with Barth Martin, his former wife, Ellen Wcirmsley, being. still alive ; but before the trial' was over, it was proved that thi'`s wholesale polygamist had previously mar-: ried - Bix other women, and that ho stood before the court the husband of eight, living tat 41 Blue Beard himself, if our memory is not treacherous, bad only seven, and avoidod'be ing brought up as a bigamist by - killing them off as fast as he got tired of them. But War dle simply left his wives when the whiminized: upon,,him, and changed his stook whenever the humor took him. . - , • ' At , the : time of his committal at Gloucester, according tont! English paper, six of his wives had been discovered, viz : Ellen Wormsley, whom he married at Manchester; Sarah Mar-' tin, married at. Walsall ; Matilda Griffi; mar ried at Birmingham ; Mary- King, married in the Isle of Man ; and Hannah King, whom ho harried at Dymocici in Gloucestershire. Be sides these, two others have been discovered since hie committal, one of whom has taken to , herself another 4 husband, and' it may be that, like the celebrated razor-strop man, Wardle has "a few more 'left:" l:attend hero and there ovct England. All the eight wives, with the exception of the last were brought to Gle'ucester for the purpose of being con fronted with their faithless Don Juan, and the trial was expected with the deepest interest. The women, were all placed in a room by themselves, and formed quite a harem of every complexion, from the fairest blonde to the darkest brunette; *bile so great was the anx iety and curiosity of the immenso'crowdabout 'the court house to see them, that the officers in charge might have made a handsome spec ulation by exhibiting them also much a Lead. The gossipping public were, however, 'doomed to disappointment. Wardle, in view of the crushing proofs arrayed against' Lim, pleaded guilty. ,Thci Judge clefei?red passing sentence, , but if a man is - sentenced to ten years' trans 7 portation for tearrying -- -more than one - wi'e, this fellow should get a ticket - of leave for at. lenseeighty. If the Judge had the power 'of' sentencing . vim to pass tho remainder of his days in the sera° apartments with all his,eight Waidlq have anything but' O. pleasant life before him. ' TABLE-TURNING WONDERS The Paris correspondent of - N—Y. Weekly Times relates the following:— , • ' The Charivari has aeon some marvellous periment's in the turning of tables and other objects more or less ponderous. Sixteen peo ple the other' ay got into an unliarnest 'omni bits, joined hands and started`the wheels. Its motion gradually accolereted, and it finally landed them at their place of destinatjeo:— But this'll) nothing to un'achievmelt perform ed by two individuals upon the Cilium Ven dome. A gentleman - willing to be'coovinced, 'saw nu invalids' climbing up the spire,'to em brace the statue of Napoleon at the top, lie, called,to hiM to hold out his band, and. the two termed the 'chain eeconnection around the brazen column. But no motion succeeded.—i The gentleman looked at theinvalid.). lie had a silver twee!, No Science had laid it..d'own' an important nondition'that the experimenters have no metal :about them. Al° 'bogged the indalide to remove his nose; which* did - With an alacrity above all praise.' But the 'cottimiz did not niece. 'Thought best to' adjoint." - tO it' • neighboring restaurant, where tbey'dbiodin'it aoli g igeui.er A ine 9 e mind. ,petwoon . Mom li 3 Oy - drank three betties ' of eltantgaigm ,Aftele:,tlM, theY.'againrepaired to, the aolumn,, fortheithe.ehain end waited. This time Was'4ortiPicite.,- I, lot. only did tbe.001 . 7. , 'unin turn but , t he Bttio iron rolling, the whole: 1 5 M ;M3'l/Olin - Me; the 'Ministri of Justice ,and; nil the houses:in sight revolved:With it. The lutalideluid his •silver nose on during the ex perimeni atid it: did not. leaettd interforei.with:lts success: A'cletailed account' , Of' the pliOnemena. , witressed,on thib interest-' 'lng ocecasionils to bo Buhl:aided' toltio 400 'emy'nf•Seleimei: ' •,' ! tgi• Br P ri Pg; ' , lll , 4 4 rer r , V *ll ,? hung on 'Friday noit , protests that ho Is Innoo9nt, and Itlis on gOlty of the murdit i ' - voirmmig Li 11. NO ,3 LET 'Ex Nirniciatin -A rural-philosopher somewhat - advanced in. lifarailtaailiinited knowledge of nature'sinis teries had been acquired wittout the aid of, science, and who know not whether 'a micro scope was " something to eater a new tangled farming machine," was once in corioctsation with a youthful friend fresh from solitiol, who talked to -him of the wonderful develhpnients . made by that instrument; a specimen it f which ho carried about him, While the old man was making a frugal meal in the field at noon, the youth produced his, microscope, :Ind' ex.: plaincd its operations, which he illust i Ited by exhibiting its power upon several bugii t nd a er minute atoms of inanimate matter at harid. ) . To his surpriseAis aged pupil did, not mani fog-much astonishment, and stung by hie in= difference. ho detailed to him how many scores of living creatures ho devoured at every mouth ful, and in each drop which quenched his thirst. At this his hearer was sceptical ; to pi ovo the feet, the boy snatched from his hand ii chunk of rioh cheese which he was then &muting, agd placing it un ,ler the magnifier, the ma 6 I of wrigglinganimalculos was triumphant /vpoint ed. to. The old man gazed up on the ,ight•in differently, and at length; with the ut:nost nonchalance, took another huge bite. ' " Don't" exclaimed the boy,' " don't eat it Ihmle Ben ; doiN you Serr'em-ILSee 'ems ,uirm and wriggle 7" " Let 'em wriggle !" said the old philosopher, munehinz away calm) y, "thiltve got the word on't ; of they kin dale it, I kin," and he delib erately fihished his meal.—Clinton Courant. A PETITION. The :allowing is a copy of a petition re cently presented to the Legislature of Indiana: . 4 Yore petishuner, Susariner BalruM, wad spokfully enjine yore honeribul boddie not tu pass army law to let her husbind off from bur as hur husbind,- bekes ; ho-is a-drunkird , an I übuzes her, a most to dub. she is got eivril mei 'Children, and the are purty ni mike, and in a Marvin eondishin; and shez getting l o old and hez bete awl hur tetho, and kant git nary nuttier., Shea making hur daze livins b y hard nooks. Shez a poor omen; and hez t wash hard, ant-bar husbind iz drunk awl the time. He beetz bur and haant got no rite to leave-hur poor-and -destitoot.... : Eff yore bon ribul bodde hes any feelinz dont ye do H..— Knu . sidderr poor oomans effeekshun fur hur husbind ; due, now, yur houribul bodde li geoms. "And Your potiehunal Preifur yer, awl 'yin honribut bodde & geems.—StratiNNEtt Bar..pm. . The =prim, " Murder wili‘ont," vr : in wonderfully illustrated' hien° detoOtion Of the man who 'was recently execuieil on tens Island. The reporter said,. ".Tho man's stdry' was re markably confuted, tho finger of Prpyidenco as it seemed, clearly indicating . ita'falsity.— Foot tracks were observed in the ground he;., tween the barn and the house corresponding exactly, even to a hole in the sole of the over shoes on Atehinson's feet ; and it' Was proved that until within an hour after the murder, between six and seven o'clock in the evening, a hard frost set in, the ground previously hav ing been wet and sloppy. The prints, there fore, could not have been made in the morning, when the ground was hardened by the frost which had intervened, as it were, to fix a seal oh his testimony of guilt ! • PUT YOUR NAMU IN YOUR nAT.—A. corres pondent of the Providence Post alludes to the recent railroad accidents and the frightful loss of human life by which they were attended, and says that for some time he has' ot travel ed without his name in his hat, with his place of residence, and a duplicate. nfjho direction on his trunk. It. he experigood the common lot of travellers, and gets killed in May of the various ways.now in vogue, the. railway offi eialsovho are always exceedingly polite to tho remains of the passengers,"viill not only. find this, but also full directions: where to apply for money to defray the expenses for.sending home the body. •• . . DS,..There is a power in numbers mentally as Well as otherwise. Who, .for , instance, could be elcquent with nothing fer, an audience but four apple women and : an indentured appren tice? No one. 'Cause why? it, is impossible, and can't.Ve 'Before a nation can pro duce a Demosthenes it must first producernobs. Place Mitt an hundred miles apart,_and such 4 thing as eloquence .would never have been heard, of. Ideas, like horned critters, Are gregarious in their habits, and only become anbilmo when properly hemmed in by sympa thy. \ . . . VirA Chinese' eating saloon has just boon opetied at San Francisco.. We quote from the bill of fare: Grime:Min. Steaks, - .25, ,Bow-yrow Soup, 12 Roasted Bowrriort, • , ; 18 • Bow-wow Pie, • 6, SbaYrs Ratified, , , . The latter dish rather bothers us. ' What is meat by stows ralaed ? • Lot us pause:. per"' Como in, Joe, and leen take a drink." Thanlc le, Thomas, can't attordit," poy for it." " Ob; am not: epeaking of the penny." ". What *Lett?" ~'.Loss t.gr health and energy ),,for.ltell youitthat-it. is, Thomas, :I find to, weak. steady on under ,the influence of, liquor.;.• it doessell enough for half,an hOur, And' then I get lazy azukilloody, want tnore,ind begonia rookless ; ondihat'a why I can't afford Urn') hare's home to dinner 1" : . deponds,a good deal on the way itii.mores. Rush along-ot the rattier a mile a minute, and your' Ommationo will.be , aomo as buoyont 09 a, steak, ,toorket. ~Substlj, /Ule.fer•thht the:inanimate , trawl rof a.oanal boat, and in•leeklitan an hour,your,.apnl.will 10 0 akifrit 30rertIlbor i ing Alder:tMe.ilfkr , Ed*.eP aqa sstippet• .yen.ddn't to Itioetei'....melatto.l4Y.:end dwell'. en q tl t a. 44. vontogestonnaoted with altareaollentes, newer travel behind, ,a horee„that takes .over 'three Minato% to ~ d 5i1 ,. 4. PP°l; , . A '41,11,e.0.4.!!,41?!f3,1!.!! 4iarbA, dog fotohSoho Ono. , 1 , T0 . ,01uo s ion to ottios. - •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers