. • •• • „._ : : :', : ,; '. .2' •:,',' -.' -:, •,- - : . .;-' 1 .::;•:: 1. '•-•:,, ..7 -'' '':. • :::,.7.t• '; : "7 :- % 7- . 1 :::.:h;Ps- - e r - ' .et171.7'.1...,:,:-.2:L.c _,,:.. , :' . : - •7,:1i:_..g '.'' •'• . - -1-- • o,' —1 -! ''•-•' .-' • •,•• • , • ' W•• ' ' -- • ..-ii- - - _ • ..- •. , !.; 1•;.•. • ,v, ii ri t -•;!1. - „,.,.,.i i , .-, , A.;-2.1".%-.44,-.. • .-''' OS. :,• 'ice%. ... ' .l- - -- - - - = - •:. '44-, - --, -1.-t---H-r:':.1:-',..F7 _ .' --- ' r , ...,. .:,•, ,:.:. ; • ' , ' ._E ,., ' • '''; ' ' Z 'o= •'-. '''' '''' ''' ' 1 .-- ''' : ! i i it ' l . ), ‘ • 4 4'. ''.•'' '-. I 40 1 : 1 " 1 ' .• :,' ~ ' ' ' •'-- '-'''''''----.=. :'' - - -- - - -- r• - = - -':--As ' ' . __ . ---gr-A-,;-%, _ c „..., \..: , 1.4 .- t .s ~.:,,,., ~ ,, , ,.4 4:sty z. ; ... 1 . , ; - , , i!,- ,„ -7,, ,4... „ ~- ~ :-------, - ----a .. v ., ;-:,;,.., , ~.-----7---A-'_, ~.;:. _ _. , .F..;- -- ...T,-, ~ 1 ~,,,,.,,,,-„,,-: .., i -- ~ - 1 . ..' 4 ' ---` ' : - :::-- - .F- - "f' - ' ----- --- --: ' : .------,, - ' .,-,-.. . ' --' ,- - .-:::_ '.-.4-. -r.) ' ,-: (, .1 .•... ' 1 qi''7;io-- hian. 4 ,'. -0 3 7itik1....Avr.. , 140.M.. , 7;z:7 , --r.,. ' .. -,=- : 2 . , ..__ -,- -- ,__ • _. '• , 4 ,___-=-_-:, __--- t - k s . ST - -c-,..____.„ . z -__• :A, it--.2Z, ~...;,-- - 7.1‘ .. • _------ .7". '',.; ' --:=--- '. ' 7' .' ' - 'il'i)'''. - :"-'1:,t;:; - .F" , /ir- 44 ..C.1:: . ,,.,-Yi4Ar--r !). ..',' l '•- -,-- - - - --- W .. '' - '7,_ ---'. .- ---- = - _ -•-- '''-'-'''''''''''' ''' .. --!=_!_q ' ' - ‘ --- ' 4 ' T '. '-- -W t • - -- = -----7-- - '' '''' '' '' ' ' ---- ' , ;_. l :''' •• 813 . 1 f.:, . ...,-,---, ••=7 , " r ^' - ' "=---• ...., ~.__ ''-• I ' l `.yilittau itejki fil,,, _,_:. ' - ____'!?,...' ' '•: • ' ? • • .., . - . .. .. , . " .. A' .lanlillif -',o...etufiritiit..ty,..:-7-1/P.Otiii.'-.ijil..-.::Tf,,iiti.iiitii,'ri':::..eititiffi.-10:;:;: E- -Proprietor-. Zar6l - 7. DR. I. C. LOOIVUS, WILL perform an operations upon the Teeth that aro requi red for theirpresurvation, such as Scaling,Filing. Plugging, &c, or will restore the loss of them, b y inserting Astificial Teeth, from a single tooth to a fall sett. fcr Office on Pitt street, a few d tors soother the Railroad Hetet. Dr. L. is oh ent from Carlisle the last ton days of ()vet v month. ~R'. • 3Dr. GEORGE' Z. BRETZ: WILL perform all liwyr . W operations upon the teeth that may be re— required for their'preseritation. Artificial teeth inserted, from a single tooth to nnentiro set, of the mist scientific, princiPles. Diseases of the mouth and irregularities carefully treated. Of lice at the residence of his brother, on North Pitt Street, Carlisle DR. S. B. ilsErrmit, Ort s FICE in North Hanover street adjoining Mr.• Wolf's more. Office hourhiMiore par ticularly from 7to 9 o'clock, A, M., and from to 7 o'clock. P.M. flunelB's. Dr..7OPCN S. SPRIGGS, OFFERS his professional' services to the people of Dickinson township, and vicinity.- Residence—on the Wain& Bottom Road, one mile east of Centrevi lle. , fob 213,0 COLE, 1, TT ORN EY AT LAW, attend promptly to all business entrusted to him. Odic:6 in the room formerly occupied by Wil lie n Irvine, Esfli., North Hanover St, Carlisle. April 20, 185:3. . . GI3OB.GE MGM, jusTlcE OF THE PEACE. OF FICE at his residence, cornet of Main street and-the Public Square, opposite Burkholder's Hotel. In addition to the dillies of Justice of he Peace, will attend to all ki,trdli of writing, such ai deeds, bands, mortgagts,) indentures, articles or agreement, notes, &c. Carlisle, an 8'42. BR. C. S. 3311.1 KER 'l3 ESf','ECTFIXLY oiTers hie professional it services to the citizens of Carlisle and sur • rounding country. OlS'e and residence in South Hanover street, directly opposite to the " Volunteer Office." Carlisle, Apl 20, 1853 Fresh Drugs, Me dielnest &c. &c I have just received from Philndel• phia and New York very extensive VA additions to my former stock, embra k..ii clog nearly every article of Medicine "`=---- now in use, toga; oer with Points, Oils, Varnishes, Turpentine, Perfumery, Soaps, Stationery, Fine Cutlery,,Fishing • Tackle,— Bruhes of almost every escription, with ondelss variety of other-articles, which I am de.. tormined to sell at the VERY LOWEVI prices. , All Physiciaim, Country Merchants; Pedlars and others, are respectfullyiequested not to pass the OLD STAND, es they may rest assured that every article will be sold of a good quality, and upon reasonable terms. S. ELLIOTT, Main Btrech. May 30 F. N. RO.SENSTEEL, o usE, Sign,' Fancy and Ornamental Paintor,lrvin's (formerly Harper's) !tow, next door to Trout's Hat Store. lie will at• tend promptly 'to all the above descriptions of painting, at reasonable prices. The various kin 14 or graining attended to, such as mahog any, oalc, walnut, &c., in the improved styles. Owlish!, July 14, 1852-Iy. CHURCH, LEE AND RINGLAND. C51"4 212 Era Fr a-z.uasizir AND sTr.AIVI -SAW =ILL EW CUMBERLAND. PA. • _ . TR./11J1.SPORTATIOX THE undersigned aro now prepared tofreight merchandian from Philaclol phia and Baltimore, at re• duced rates, with regalarity and despatch. iDEPOTS. • Buzby & Co., 345 Market Street, Phila. Geo:.la Small, "Small's Depot," 72 North Steel, Baltimore. an2l WOOD WARD & SCHAIIDT. JOHN W• BELL, BENJ. DARBY .TOECN 11112ag. & CO., 2--qu GENERAL COMMISSIONS MERCHANTS, HOWARD STREET, • Oppoitte Centre, 13r ,BALTIMORE. TRANSPORTA ir,l ON. VIE undersigned are now prepared to freight 540.1, merchandize from 41a , Philadelphia; and "Rai' Baltimore, at, re. d aced rates, with regularity end despatch._ . ;DBPOTS. Freed, Ward & Freetl, 315 Maihot Street, Philadelphia A. 11. Barnitz, 9G Wirth Street, Baltimore. Michael Herr, North Stroot,•Baltimore. sep226m • • J. & D. RHOADS. 10,000 PIECES! just opened the largest assortment I of %VALL PAPERS - ever opened in Car• lisle, consisting of about 0,000 pieces of the latest French and American designs, ranging In price froin.s ets to f,t 75, also Window Pa• pars and Fire Screens, Plain Green and Blue Papera, Sac, Persons wishing to purchase any of the above can save at least 25 per cent by calling at JOHN P. LYNE'S Hardware Store, West Side of North Hanover Street, Carlisle. Carlisle "Female Seminary. mirISSES PAINE will commence the SOMMER SESSION of their Seminary on the second Monday in April; in a new and commodious 'school room, next door to Mr. Leonard's, North HauMier street. Instruction in the languages an, 'roving, no extrtreharge. Music taught by an experienced teacher at an extra laliarge. teept3t() VrititiZa:Da Wholesale and Ratan. Druggist, Carlisle. linfAS just received a largai and well selected IA stuck of American, French-and English Chemicals, Drugs Medicines, Paints, 04, llyeStutra, &C. 4 At this store Physicians can rely on having their. prescriptions carefully emopounded. STORE FOR SALE. • THI suBSCRIB'EIt ! Wishing to remove wort to engage Mother. pursuits, offers at nri vote sale, on reasnnable terve his STOCK;OF GOODS,' embracing the usual' variety lccin! in a country Store,' Any person wishing' to en g age In . the Pifer canal° beisiness would'e wellto embrace this opportunity, as.the stock Will, compare favors bly with any stock of goods in' the 'county, and the lOcation for' business is one. of the beet in the county, being attested in the healthy, and romantic village; of Springfield, end in the midst of a fertile land produotitfe fleighbOrllooo. For partiCulars ttddresathextideraigned at Big Spring P.. 01 JOHN. HOOD. July 27; 11353.- tf. TIME ARE TWO TBINOS,' , &MB LORD BACON, WHICH zur‘i A NATiON dREAT AND PROSPEROI.IB,--A BOLL :AND BUSY weEKEHops t _LTO WHICH LET ME ADD ICNOWLVDGE AND PREEDO,3I.-- - iisho, Halt Stott:J.& S1)op. NOTICE{ /SHE heretofore e'xistitig firm of M. & L. Steiner, has been dissolved for a Elliott Time and have again united under the firm of Steiner & Bros. S h Garnet' of Market Square. Hoping under the increased firm of Steiner Bros. to have on increase of their former business. They have now - every facility one will snare no efforts to please then customers they having made arrangements with the lor• gest importing houses of Baltimore and No . w York so as to receive the first styles of Goods that come to those markets, and at the LOW EST PRICES! Thankful for plat patronage they solicit a continuance from their old customers, end respectfully invite all, others to exanine their new style of superior _ SPRING & SUDIDIER GLQTRING, all of • their manufacture, and making as corn, plate an assortment as can be found in any store in the United States• As follows: DRESS 1. FROCK COATS, of the best qualities et Eneish and Frene fi Cloths, made and trimmed in the very best style; single , breasted Albert Coats, a new style, well adapted to business men, of French black and colored cloths, at very ilow prices ; single breasted Frock coats of French cloths. close imitation of the fine dress frock coats at half price; spring Sack Coats of cloth, case'. -mores and tweeds, various colours and prices. PANTALOONS, . French Black Doeskin and Fancy Caseimors of ervery description. • . VESTS! VESTS! ! VESTS!! ! Rich Fancy Silks and Satins, Black do, Bom bazines, Valencias, Marseilles, and Chanice, at all prices. 11.01" S CLOTHING, A lull assortment of Boy's Clothing. FANCY DRESS ARTICLES, emliracing all the new styles of Fanet Grams, English Satin do, sec. Gloves—White,, black and col'il 1.11, Lisle and cotton of every'description. no, and Carpet Bogs of impeller finish an ! 1,,w prices. Suspenders of. superior I' re it h,Ln• glish and American *manufacture, Uni,el • shirts and Dro•Wers of fine Merino, net jean and, muslin, of eyery description. I. ~ n broth - is of silk and cotton. very cheap. All of which will he sold at the lowest prices whole• sale or retail. Remember the Stone House, corner of the Public Square. = STEINER & BROS. Carlisle, May 18, 1853. . BARGAINS! BARGAINS!! At OGILRY 2 9 Wholesale, and Retail EMPORIUM. X. AM now renewing my second supply of Summer Goods, and will sell thorn °lichen,- er than any other house in the county. It is impossible to enumerate—auks it to 1E13 , 01m: our stock of Dry. Goods is immense ; - embra cing every article in the line, and at prices astohishinglrlow. • Tho ladies patticularlyrtre invited to call and a, amine dur new -stock of- elegant DRESS , GOODS—Crape Shawib, Bonnets, -Ribbons, Needle Work, &c. - &c Our assortment of Gentlemen's Weal' ie full and complete; consisting of Cloths. Cassimeres, Cashmarets, Vesiings, ' Cotrodnades, &c. &c. CAR PETINGS Sr. MATTIN GS. A fullAsservnent et Imperial, Ingrain, Cotton and Wenitian Cnrpetinge. mattin g . of every finality and width. Also a new and large assortment of Ladies' And Children's 3atters, Jenny Lind and Bus kin Shoes at very ow prices. Recollect the .' old stand." East Main street. June I, 1853. CIIAS. OGILBY. CANT. BE BEAT! Second Arrival of Summer Dry-Goods. THE subscriber respeepully informs hi friends and numerous customers. that he has returned from I=biladelphta with a large assort. meet or Summer Goode, which will be sold at astonishirigly low prices Cloths, Cassimeres; Vcisting,s. Muslims, Calicoes, Gingham's, Bonnets, and flats, Ribbons, Glo;es, Summer Cloths, Lawns, Mitts, Pant Stnifs, Handkerchiefs, Ciilltirs, Edgings, Handkerchiefs, Laces, Stockings, Summer 'Silks Parasols, &c. BOOTS AND SHOES. A largo assortment of Men's IVomen's and Children's Boots and Shoes, Jenny Lind an] Buskin Shoes at very low prices. Colored and White CARPET CHAIN, A large assortment of GROCERIES, such as Sugar, Coffee, 'Molasses, Rico, Teas, lice'. 'Plitt attention of all who wish good eargaina is solicited, as great inducements can be offered to purchasers. Don't forget the old stand, Humerich's cor-, nor, North Hanover Street, ifnrEutter, Eggs, Rags and Soap taken at market prices. .1.4, W. WOODS. A gt. Carlisle, June 9, 1853. CULPS,PATENT PORTABLE CIDER EMILIA • AND PRESS, rri It E undersigned having purchased the right .of Franklin and Cumberland coun ties, Pa., and Washington county ,Ald. for CULP'S PATENT PORTABLE CIDER MILL AND PRESS are new manufacturing machines under the immediate supervision el Henry Shepler, a practical millwright. Orders will be received and filled with promptness.— All machines will be warranted. By this machine, which can be conveyed on a wheelbarrow ; one man • and a boy can make from five to tight l barrels cf cider a day,willi ease, and the cider is thoroughly pressed from the pomace. The labor is light and the ma chines aro simple and permanent. This machine was exhibited at the State Agricultural Fair, id Lancaster, and tested with several others, and the ccimmittee awarded the premium to it, The machines are warranted to perform wilat is herein stated. Orders ani respect fullwiolicited. N. B.—The prose cMinected with the ma chine can be used for pr'easing currants, and cutting vegetables for leading stock. JACOB HOICFI. HENRY SIMPLER, May 11r1.953..6m Chamberaburg Beaoherio Dlatohleos Cordial. THIS medicine' has never known to fail In curing Cholera Morbus, in, from 10 to 15 minutes. ' Cholera Infantum, or summer corn• plaints of children, Dysentery, Diarrhea, &c, in from le to 24 hours. It is certain and safe under all circumstances, having been fairly tested in upwards [of four hundred cases with• out a single failure. Lot every family provide itself with at least one bottle of this invaluable remedy, Try it, and it will recommend itvell It Is prepared upon purely scientific principles, and cannot be Justly termed-a quack medicine, unless science be quackery. For vale by 8.,J• KIEFFER, Drugglst, qmith Hanover Street, A few doors south of the Court (louse June 32, 1833. Carlisle. -" W4NTLD. •BY a youn g , ' ' married man, a situation as Principal. er assistant tetfcher in a clasical 'Academy_ or , Fieminery. - THe — lias had' bevoral 'years experience in'tenching;_and has ? for Prime time, been connected with a flourishing Aced emy in spiral Pcmisylitinia. Ho will pimince unexceptionable references and testininiiiiils, boils nisiortheloss. cry willing to lie strictly 'examined as to his qualifications: 'A slated salary would be prefeted to anincomo 'subject to contingencies; even though - it be, lose titan might otherwise be received.. He, Would 'very, mita prefer going west, but tiny ,nommuuKation which may be received will meet. with due attention. Addrcseimmedistely„ • ':" ACADEMICS." • Cum'd. Co, Pa: 'Woodward 1r &lan' PRODUCE DEALERS; COMMISSION & • YOR,CVARDING MERCHANTS, novISS CARLISLE. - PA.; wiprolipT9 - 4y, - Atr6uiT 10,- 1853. portni. From tha Muslcnl %Writ] and Mors WOULD YOUI DV A LefICD w•rto . ilaby evolving on your knee; While you sing some little dilly, Pulls your_hajr or thumbs your" ee," tyould you think it wasn't pretty, Toll me, could you? If you owned "the baby," would you? Wire, with arms ohm your neck, Boys you look-just Ilko the hohy ; -Wants soma cash to muke a " spec;" ' Ankyou would refuse her—may bee— Could you I should you "V 11 you owned "the woman," would you I 1¢ labor, little girlie, Little care and lute cot ; Would you nigh for single life I Would you murmur nt your lot 1 • fell toe, rhould you 1 If you owned • "lhe collage," would you"; Health and comfort, children fair, %Vile to meet you at the door, Fond hearts throbbing, for you there; Tell me, would you ask for mire 1 Should youl cou'd you? If you owned 4. the ready," would you l From the Knhhrrhockor TILE ROMP) I'D Lniin ‘ , lNlkindw'-iike-to.itove a cot -- Fined on setae sunny slope, a suet Five acres, 1110 M or lee=, With motiteo cedars, cherry tree•, and poplars whitening in the breeze. , "Twould suit toy taste I gue3s, To have the porch with vines o'erhung, With helle . of pengant vvoutiblua swung, In every bell a bee, And round toy lattice window spread A clump of roses, while and red. To solace mine and me, I kind'O'ill ink 'I should TO hoer around the lawns n choir Of wood-hints singing sweet And Ina dell I'd have a brook, Where I miglit set and read my book. Snch should he my retreat, • Far from the city's crowdsmnd There would I rear She girls and boys, (I have some Iwo or flirted And ((hind Heaven should bliss my store With five or six or seven more, - Yldiv happy 1 shouldim L't Sara di* From Cliambkra , Jouriml GIIIIRDED SECRETS. WHAT 'woman is there that confesses not td. the possession of a guarded secret? School girls have their cherished mysteries; but these pass froni mouth to mouth, till, like the witch es at"seventh hand," all their' magic dies out. It is not of such wo would speak, but of that sterner and more stubborn secret which,is the life in life, which occupies the soul's inner and most secret chamber, and is the heartitt holy of holies ;.a joy, or a dread, or a pang—most commonly the last—through life; a thing that weaves itself, with more or less intensity, into every act of our 'daily struggle on earth; is with us when we rise to a new sun, and lies down with us in the dark ness; our accompanying shadow, go whore we may, and do what we will; that mocks us when wo smile, counterfeits all our:agonies; and to lose which would be something like that loss of soul pictured in the well known German legend.. That the constant presence of our secret within us and around us has its meaning for good, who shall doubt? Our human woes would not be allotted to us—ny, oven as our daily bread—were they not ne cossarylo .the . nourishment of a higher life than that which perplexes us bore. Our wandering spirits, over lost and restless, must, like the fabled children in the wood, gather their food from off the thorns. There is, in truth, no teaching lido the teaching of a greta and master sorrow. There are few places filled with more start ling materials for tberomancist than the much neglected secret' (Waiver. Secret passages, hidden vaults, tapestry veiled doors, .traps lending downwards through the floor, and es capes opening upward through Alm skylight, we have in abundance; but the narrow and apparently insignificant receptacle that holds within it, unseen by vulgnekres, the hoarded secret of a heart and of a lifetimo—nay, per haps more=the darkening presence of a household, the "skeleton behind the door," seems altogether to have escaped the vigilant research of the curious. Relics—some saint ed, some profane enough—hung visibly about our very doors. We are all familiar with relics of various kinds, from the sentimental lover's hair filled locket down to the religiously guarded " heart of Montrose." , Some people aro essentially relic lovers, and will make far off pilgrimages for' the bare sight of an iron . belt or a knotted cord vouched for as the (mi tigatory badge of some mouldered monk, and feel a strange gratification in being permitted toliss the duet from the worn stones trodden by the feet of those nvhose once unhonored grave centuries have sine() hallowed into something akin to the divine. From the mys tic to the real hi ti wide bound, and few oaro to take, the' leap. But, leaving to the star gazer his more dazzling horizon, let us gather round us for a brief space the lowlier interests of humanity ; lot us look with .reverent eyed into the secret drawer. Itligrandmother had an old fashioned cab inet, portioned out, itsirns the method of con structing sucli , ootnruotlitics in. her day, into sundry small shelves, drawers, and odd covered boat; The centre compartment of this same old chest opened like a door, having look - and key, and within was a long slidieg, drawer, ,occupying the entire : depth of the cabinet. That this drawer something vary precious was , Marini,- all her children knew. None, however, dared .'to pry into_ their Mother's guarded secret. ,Ilor husband, it was . moro• than suspected, could have thrown sot light ort,the matter;,but,he was never known , to do eo, and silence rested upon the, unknown oe cupout of , the drawer the. mystery remained a mystery uP to the day of trig good grand mother's death. But when the cold,herld eriai / % 'no niore unlook n, cabinet than it 'Oen unlock the'cfoor through which the *crca; conscious life.has passed; and when the palsied foot, 'lying stark. in its ditsti dwelling, 'so more mounts the: stair 'to gni:tided treasure beim of all , that was once so ilearthen comes the revealer; comes, 'perhaps, in 'tlio forth — of a piling sick nurse, one of thoie death' watches at the sight.nf *71100 ' 3 the livih quake. Or it may be that hands more tender deal in greater reverence with the departed spirit's oast off apparel, hoisting timed for the sleeper's sake those forsaken relics wept and prayed over by the waking eyes that are never more to weep and pray - on this earth -In the present ease, it was so. - :The con tents of the secret drawer - wore committed to, the flames, in aceprdanse - witOte expressed Wish. of the dying. But- some tow or other the secret oozed out. It .would• appear that, like most other grandmothers, mine had early in life bad a love affair—as that deepest strik ing.ef all woman's experiences is somewhat irreverently termed. It was the did story: the Man she loved went abroad without having spoken just that one 'word for which her soul thirsted, and which, nevertheless, bad found a thousand other utterances . scarcely to be mistaken. For years there was a dreary silence between the two. Then came my grandfather, with his °moat courtship. Un der the feeling that elie_4tas--not-justifiedLin cherishing a predilectioii so !apparently num 'ended to by-the earliest object of bar affec tion, she yielded, afterri prolonged struggle, to my grandfffther's suit. .No sooner, howev er, was she formally engaged to him, than there came a letter in the. old,unforgetten handwriting! 0, you who have ever listened with beating hearts for the:postmen's knock, fully prepared for all it might bring, think for ono moment how the corning of this letter, long even unhoped for, And now too late, knocked at the heart of her who received it! Now, my grandmother had a conscience, and a more than commonly tender one. Her first Impulse, of course, wns.to tear open the-let ter; but a - secoud thought stayed her band. She bad long ngliinode this fact of this early attachment known to my grandfather. Whet she now did, then, was at.onee to tell.him she had repeived such n le.tter",i and that, as his affianced- W ith,qabe could-net- and-would - not read it. Was she fantastiOn her notions of right and wrong? I slo :rnit,!.believelto ; do not think she could have dense better or a wiser thing. ,Out eif . ,..hnt , ,-tiot,.ne!rosufferlng could possibly fall upon tliolnan to wheel' 'silo was Tiltlifged, - and wlfase happiness was hence forth in her keeping, "thot# . triteli of Paln bore heavily 'upon her. That - t - liffer, trlth its unbroken - seal, lay, ell her life, shut up in the old musty cabinet, where Irritood revealed at last. That, acting up to the truest .spirit of her intention, she fought long arid victoriously against the desire to faffront what those hidden characters contained—whether or not they bore that assurance of love which once would .have been joy unutterable=we are bound to believe. Upon ono solitary occasion alone was she ever seen to wrestle with her tempta tion. After a meek endurance of one of my grandfather's fits of-passion—for ho had a stormy temper—she was found seated, weep ing bitterly, before the Open door of that guarded chest wherein lay the unbroken seal. - Solemn as ouch subjects mast b - c and are, there is a blessed comfort in the thought of them. It is a gracious thing to feel that there is something, be it what it may, of real truth —of lasting good, something which neither time, nor trial - , nor the common wear and tear 'of actual, dull, every day life can crush out of a mon. But, soft! let me pause.. I said that nothing can crush out of a man. Do men - know anything of 'Bitch 'relic's as I speak of? I am ignorant; I cannot say; but I should fancy they do not. The steady, un faltering devotion of a Ipng life to one thought and ono remembrance I own I never folind, save in woman I myself confess to a few hoarded relics— Heaven o lorbie that any woman should' be without them! But these are yet under the sear, that lies so heavily on all living lips. Some day, perhaps—but we,_none of us, like to think of that,-strange hands may overhaul them. Pity it is. that so few of us have strength ortioul enough, or, it may be, ward ; ing time enough,, ere the great Itevealer steals upon us, to enable us to put beyond the reach of_ancrilegious eyes our most darling secrets! 0, could we but summon the nerve to place them with our own moving.fingers upon some funeral pyre!' Could we hut watch them slowly consuming! But no; wo cannot do this. While we hnve life, they 'are ours. It would seem like bidding an eternal farewell 'to our proteedug genius, to put away the guardian spectres of lost hopes, dead loveS, and mystic meniorins. No! .Let us treasure them while we yet walk among the-living. But, 0, may some kind and pitying hand,. when we lie silenced, burithem With us, en profaned by a single look.! • A singular instance . ofthis silent treasuring up of one aolitery thought, and in the breast of a child, fell under my knowledge not long ago, while staying by the sea side, at the hods° of come old friends, were at the same time visited by a 'little girl of about aeven years of age, who had poen sounded to their'oare, in order that she might have the benefit' of the sett'hathing, recommended for some weaknoss,of.tho spine, under which the child, suffered. , She• was the loveliest little creature- i-orer.,b,Cheld. 7 quiet and shy, too, though least, so With me, for whom she at one took a Strong OUr hostess, who every night made ~a Point of seeing her Yonug charge put comfortably ;bed,:alwayit yountitted iu tho room until theehild,h4d said her prayers. Mien- her ordinary devotions t riad boon goee throndb aloud,, - the child-invariably; bent down her. head,upon the, bed,ist the side ;of - which she knelt, and offered up sense prayer silently within herself; What this prayerwed, nothing_ could induce her to roveal.,„,. Her parents were questioned'about it; but • though perfectly aware.tat the fact, they,were,,priablt3 _to solve the question.' 'lt, mai of course a thing.alte gother too sacrilff to bo Intruded 'on, by-cany forceful appeal, and all parties, remained: in their ignorance, I own that when first I was told of it, .tho "secret appeared to me to'be of -Al:rii'll,ititt6 ,- , I,*ll::iiTise - - { rnit' . : Oineriil'. .sifi)rinttiio,.: to,stronge aucl unearthly :a chnrpapr,4fiat - I trembled ns one who suddenly stands fraied by a 'spirit, It seemed like a silent commu ning with angels. Feeling very anxious to witness with my own eyes what interested me so deeply in the telling, I ono night, with my little friend'seonsent, accompanied her to her room, As usual, the prayers weTerepeated aloud, and then followed the silent Offering up 'of that pure young heart:.• Sc, holy - was - the hour, that I held my breath for very reverence, the tears , springing to my eyes with sudden ,emotion. Surely angelic hosts hovered above that small hplied down head, on whose golden logs a halo seemed to rest! Whatever was, that silent; guarcled,-and mysterious prayer— and sometimes it struck me that it might pos sibly have relation to either a dread of dying, :or to l'or anticipations drier near heaven, as she was at the time out of health—whatever that prayer might be, that it was a beautiful and a pure one, I em sure—the purest- and the best, perhaps, in anho loag catalogue of guarded secrets. One secret, which in every ago has been most Carefully end religiously guarded—guard ed in terror and disimay, through inconceiva ble wrong end suffering, through life and up to the grave's brink, not perhaps even then to be rendered up to • those ; who dtnivl around scattering their last tears with the " dust to cluse"L-is the secret of birth. Inst.:moos of the kind alluded to aro so numerous end so startling, that it would be difficult to invent any story surpassing in interest the already written and attested records of that most thingerous secret. There are few familia who cannot recount, from the oral- traditions of their house, some legend tanning -on the subject—strange glimpses of some half de veloped tragedy, if not so terrible as that of tl.e "Family of Montorio," yet sufficiently suggestive to the dreami of their bear ers for nights to come. Such tales I remem ber to baie heard in - Scotland. _Dee, in poi.. tiouler, struck me as moot singular, becauie, though generations have been born, and .have I :Passed out of being since the occurrence nar rated took place,'no clue was ever ,found to the secret so, cautiously and mysteriously guarded. The 'following is. an outline of the tradition: A couple coming whence no man knew, an. rived one sharp-Winter niglit,-amid - the' smoke of Edinburgh.... The wire was. younger than het...husband by - sotna yeari, and, possibly from ;the fact of this disparity or, age, looked tip to 'Mtn' with tt..rceling- , el . ruyerentral devedien, be.. lontirift: r ather. p,..n It ras'i;tre,A;.:l,4,44", Wo'ligef•kiiith; tbiit sh, had ; yeen _ do letT _life, laid down for her Self a laW - of niore - sitriot and unquestioning .obedience than is usually (.practised-by even the hest of wives. :The suit Of this blind submiSsion, as will be : Seen, must have horn hard upon:a pure heart add 'tender conscience, suck r hers were repro sented to have been, though, not perhaps until • added years had brought home the rightly understood by few, that no mortal, even though be be' a husband, has a right over any other human soul, authorizing him to rule its obedience contrary to God's higher law. The married pair, would seem had been United for some years , yet no offspring had been granted to their prayers. It was now that, whilelivingiu the utmost retire.ment,.in an obscure street, the husband huroduced to his wife an old •Scotch nurse, bearing in her : arms a new born child. This child, said by him to be the posthumms son of a _dear friend, recently deceased, lie represented it was his interest to adopt, and produce to the world as his own. To insure his wife's aid in the pro. ject, ho carefutlly concealed from her whatever deep-laid schemes were working in his own mind—made vary light of the affair—asserted that it was but to servo a temporary , purpose, and that, the object in .furtherance of which this singular deception was to bo carried on once attained, the whole thing shotild then be revealed'. A quick instinct of wrong, in the mind of the ry oung wife, made her tit first hesitate; but the:recollection of that strict abnegation of her own will to which she bad vowed her self nt last prevailed over her scruples, and the pleading looks of the helpless little orphan, lying safe and warm within her arms, molting her soul. she took the forlorn babe to her bo-, corn, and bestowed upon, itheartily amother's care. The child. proved sickly, a weary bur then to any but a real . mother': yet its foster parent; though young and unused to such a' charge, never for a moment shrunk from .the 'responsibility she had incurred. The conse pience naturally was, that the boy learned , to love bar strongly and entirely. But towards his reputed father be at all times evinced a a most strange and unaccountable aversion, amounting to an instinetive,horror and shrink ing from his pretence. When the child had grown to be about a year old, Mr A—g, the gentleman In question, his plans now appar ently matured; resolved at once to introduce his protege to .his fainily, as.hie own legitim ately born. son and heir. Mr. A—g was 'a descendent of ona of the old border families, renowned inhiiitory for many a raid and many a foray across the English frontier, and, judg lug from hie deeds, the unscrupulous character and adventurous spirit of the early , freebooter would seem ,to have been. transmitted down through many generations, little, modified by the march of centuries. And now came the poor wife's trial. • In her. husband's home, and under the ,eyes of his kindred and household, she was soon doomed to feel bitterly how a single . deceplion inevitably loads . to numerous others, and how one fdlsehood entails' the . . , , necessity of a thousand morz . te follow in its wake.inethcr in ;seeming yet n o fi ' mother In truth, her entire, ignoronee,Oonderaing oil that related to the'hirt)ii of lierlniDpesed child became-a. subject of ridleiiieWitli-tlie &Maki members of the feMity,:: , Seiner or iaier''be-' trayal seemed latvite*.,,, t , Win tidi the worst, was, to. etitne;..,Zi&neerini*,,44 - the impontureheen 'Crirrietl,Owt"Secetnisfellyi than, the young, Wtfe ' found h'Otilf. ' !!!?'fi l ,9:P 9i( l o ° ther Herevias' Riven,el3,,t4. hirtfirtghof her own blind In favor of a:Art:ingot . 1. 111 1 *onfinn that the - fact of tbe imposition 'of the adopted child :teuld . bo . proved, but.., ,what 'humiliati'on trust Isocompany snob a aoilfession—mbit a . vvenringlissuct - Of law Picaeedings might no be entailed by the admission I TO then:larded pair, years of torturing anxiety and , etrange discord followed, Heart burning!' of many kinds unavoidably arose out of, a state 01, things So unnatural. The real MI became, a spoondary consideration In the household, the very servants seeking favor with tho presumed heir, and looking down on the tt iounger bro ther." All this time the mystery was still main tained. Whence the -adopted bad come. and to whom he belohged of right, wee throughout kept a guarded 'secretfrom the Wife—her hus band's solitary admission to her being to the effect, that the hoy'it mother was a Indy of no-' ble birth i of the -father. be never. spoke.' Meanwhile; Mr.' A-g made itiquent'and' sodden journeys from bomo,'no iliifilcnifer'7l2ll - or for what: purpose, alwaykileinritingalt • unexpectedly as he had depariaif . ." After these' absences be was observed to be eootny, nay t ' almost fierce in his temper; his irritalion shrkw-' - log itself especipily towards the'child . of his' ad •ption, between whom and hiniself et•tnottal! antipathy appeared to exist, and to increase with the boy's years. What mlghtlave been the issue' in after years; it is needless to sur mise: The Gordian-knot of all-this -evil was suddenly and unaccountably out by that un-. seen band, which has undone many another coil of mischief in the world. One day the adopted obild wee found drowned in the Tyne, which rolled its waters through Mr. : A—g's estate. There was a hurried and unsatisfao tory inquest held on the body and..all was done.,_. Through one breast—that of the wife —a secret shudder ran. A sickness as of death fell upon the heart of her Wbo alone knew what bidden temptation might.have lain_ in wait, like the wierd sisters of Macbeth, urging on the man with whom her fate was• bound up to the commission of "a deed with out a Immo." From that hour a blight fell over the fated hotise., The very rooks (so my informant told me) disappeared from their customary haunts. Mysterious sights and sounds visited at eyrie hours the old border. mansion. Ne,y, report even went So far as to say, that the ithentom of a - ghastly child rose: Up, from time to time, before the oyes of Mr. A—g's descendents, es if the sour of the de , parted refused to rest until, the secret of its birth,:or_perhaps of its ,dreatl3s--was-revealed. But to this day:1111 is• enveloped in mystery. , It is true JIM! the barelact of the imposition of such h-childit, plane of:a - real heir; iii course': of lime, and .after ' the death of gpt.rentoreitahroattl. bet the aotualptirentant hf71 . 601114ti1d? . 141516 itiptistdre ataeiii#teaakehigue,or'.t4ae gear4tkeepietaj which, the grave rettieeeto render up. • - Rligctitanntig. TILE SOCIETY OF LADIES. The following portizOnt remarks occur at the closo of au iirticlb on the dangers of "Col lege Life;" from the pen of a New York cler gyman, which appeared in tho Now York nmes : • The society of ladles hue done much forms all my life !Ong; and it was the salutary, sof tening influence of such associations, that with God's -blessing, restrained one from many nu' excess into which I might otherwisehave been led while receiving my education. It is a bad sign when a young man has no relish for such company. Whatever be a man's station in life, whether high or low, ptiblic or private, he will become a better man, and escape many a disaster, if he will listen in duo season to the voice of the intelligent and the refined among the other •ox, Not only do they generally excel us in their nice ,perception of the pro prieties of life, and in their tender sense of duty to both God and man, but they are equally before us in their instinctive facility of fore seeing evil befOre it is upon us, and of wisely discerning the character and motives of men. It was not all a dream which made the, wife of Julius User so anxious that ho should not go to the Senate Chamber on the fatal Ides of March ; and, had ho complied with her en treaties, he might have escaped the dagger of Brutus.. ,. Disaster followed disaster in the ca reer of Napole . on, froni the time that he ceased to feel the.balatMewheel_ofJesephine'e:intiu= coon on his iiniiiituous spirit. Our own Wash ington, when important questions were sub. mitted to him, often has said that he should like to carry the 'subject to his bedchamber before he had formed his decision; and those who knew the clear judgment and elevated purposes of Mrs. Washington, thought all the better for•wishing to make her,a °pa dentialcounsollor.,lngeed, he great majority of men who_ have acquired for' themselves a good and great nerve,,-were not only ruarrie . sl men, but happily married—" both paired and matched." ' :A.BRAUTIFUL COPLIMENT.—SteeIe paid the finest compliment to a woman that perhaps was over offered. Of one woman, whom_Con grove had also admired and celebrated, he sayes , that, " to have loved hirmas a liberal educa tion.: " Ilew often," 'says, dedicating a volime to his wife, "has your tenderness re- moved pain from my sick head—how often, s4uish from my Afflicted heart. If there aro suph things as gnardlin angels are thus einployoci., I minuet believe ono of 0?0,1t° bp more good ip inclination, or more c4TriFing In form than MY wife." flisbionstioami to warm and his eyes to • kindle , when , heprota, with a aood...itrict beautiful, Woman, 414 it is heart, es Well as with his hat that ho Solutes her. .T'fisrikeroY. • ittinnia.T.Uran.7-The Selenqe ,siiii,'lfiar`„tifis article, is the :forta''oe, 04tentee , in. ;i i t .tpl u d' for 'malfitio n'rll6olol;teetb;•gbine' sa`4oitatim:'',Tt.,aade": The adlieSion.iii plate; it esti bo moulded tcf r perfection tfretili every: inequality of the guinfi'and teetti,'and lioreiatum; 4erie; to the When they`,boMiniC p`altiful tiffc wasting away of Fun]; Added toAllifSe is the - elastitilty of the : material; whichviiiwietely' • . obviatia the inedevenlences th'at ;Oise' frier. any motion with artificial teeth other means. .;• VOLUME Llll. NO 47 SCIENCE FOR EVERYDAY LIFE _ • A Variety of interesting at a important 'OA' pers were road -before the 'Americana BoientiAo Association, dining its late.session at Clive land. land. W'm IL Thomas, Esq., of Cineinnattr, - read an essay which discussed the indications Of weather, as shown by many animals, in sects and plants; and was fall of facts; rgany of them new, and of , eoientific explanations Al.• themselves. Birds, it asserts, invariably shep by the way they, build, their; nests, whether a seasen is to be . iviedy or `otherwise. If the former, they thatch. the' nest, between the. twigs and lining. If .tl4, latter, they emit these precantione; If a dry season is in pros, pect,. they build in open places. If o.wetone,- they ohoorsheltered spots. - A careful °beer : . - ration of those peculiarities will efferd, Mr. Thomas says, a, certain criterion, early in the . !spring; pfilte coming weather. ..finaile also reveal, by their habits, whother , rain Jambe ,expected or not. oeveral i species of the};e animal inveriablreseend the etems.el, Plants two , dayefiefore a min, in 'order to place themeelves'on a leaf, there to imbibelhe water, for they never drink. ether species have ta bercles that rise frock. their bodies generally ten days before a rain, there being.a pore at the end of each tubercle to imbibe the water. °titers grow yellowish whits -just before a rain, , returning to, a darker color after rain, Locusts Map foretell rain by sheltering themselves under the leaves of trees, and in bellows and trunks, as soon as, by the changes in the at mosphore, they disCoverthat rain is-impend— ing. Moat leaves of trees areelsobarometers, for if 'a rain is to bo light, they turn up eo as to receive their-fill of , water, while for a long rain, they double. so Be to conduct the water away. - ' • Another member, Professor Drooklesby, of Ilartford,.road a . Paper describing a spring, near his residence,. whose watere.rose invari- . ably beforq a rain. Ile suggested that the diminished -atnfospherio pressure which pre cedes n rain was the cause of the phenomenon, and reoommendedlhat observations should be , made over the whole country to ascertain whether the phenomenon was general or only eacepfioDal. It.would bo curious if the for suer could bo established, and not lees useful• than curious, for, if nature has made every spring a natural barometer, the fact will be of Vast benefiho know. . 7- trAs?;,;-411E.'N .The vicious early„ they fall like et* 'dewier tumble likeyfrecks und.rnirut into the gra;:rez—e fteti e t le i quite lonng, !tiniest atweya Wicke'd litiys." The world at once ratifies the truth,' and assigns the:rc4SOn "hy describing'tkte - Ais: , Soliattlis 4 fast ineri . ;": that is, they r ays fast ; ' thei spend theit'.ewelve - hettis in six, getting through • the tihole before' the meridian, and dropping out of eight and into darkness while others are in the g,tow and glory of life. Theii sun goes down while yet It Is day"— And they might have helped it, Many a one dies before ho need. Your men of genius, like Burns and Byron, to whom, when dissipated and profligate,, thirty-seven is so fatal; and your obscure and 'tuneless "wandering stais," who. waste their youth in libertine'indulgEnce .—they CA.NNOT live long. They must die early. They put on the steam till they blow up the boiler.— -They-run-at-such - a rateiiparthe - fire goes out for want of fuel. The machinery is destroyed by reckless, speed and rapid wear, Nothing can save them. Their physical system cannot stand the strain they pat it to ; while the state of their minds is often such, that the soul would oat the c substance of the most ro bust body, and make for itself a way of 'escape from the incessant hell of its own thoughts. A NEMO READING OF' SHAKSPEARE In a country town ° down East," a Demo cratic newspaper was started, Which depended mainly for its support on the contributiOns of the "faithful" in that region. Its motto was: "Bo just, and fear not."—Slorkspeare. An old farmer who bad been 9uite r aotivo in promoting the ititereste of this newspaper en terprise, took up the Ssrat number and , coin mencod reading it, with laudatory comments. As he read the motto, his face flushed with honest enthusiasm, and he exclaimed: "'Fear nut Shakspeare'--30, that We won't, 'nor any Wei:o 7 o7lV oldlederali# I" =MM The following anecdote of an indestrions Gannon employea as a !filmier it the Naval icadelny, Annapolis, is even in tho epubti can : • After iompleting a ga:y'e work in the hotteatt weather in 'June, he was heard to gay to hie wife, on his return home,-- , ' I has earnt one' tollar and a leiy, and if dere was no night, .could works and make as much more in de next den hours, and den I would have two.tol hart and a quarter, just tonble what' it got.' I , wish de (louder and lightniati Would come and knbek fie night tiway,'and' make .two bye io• one." Aannernmr ersre Drrssannon.,—Sentiments. join men to map, opinions. divide,thern.. The. former are , elementary and concentrate, the. letter are !mini:matte nod :matter. orhe Mead e/lips of yroulkare founded on sentiment; tLe diesensions of age result from opinion.. If we oi?uftl 111113 at , an early age—if, forming opr onn.emle of, thongii, could tittle's° a 'thorn) r/evref that of.utliers, and nien of those 'that are opposed to "ours—vie, should. tietitbe ; more tolerant, ; and , endeavor to 'reardte by 'sentiment , riot is • divided. and !:iiiipenied.—" Goethe ' - i see.: Afe,low.coming from the top of the Villeghanice to New York in winter, Ives naked taitother it ills ne cold there es in the 'city. I4e %Mt% poi:stay been' at some nerreit folieet sehooT i ' for he glanct4 at' the therein meter. "Horribly cohi," said he'; they have no• thermometers tljero, and, of course, it gore just as'colit Mra , . rnilipgtptits!!imukrjr.piem upon, beln~ told Iforici ,ki#. where b. r c eided they 1104 pO4tlf,ourr Afix)o'.'ii, ear, Lel isly 'you' Imile up to, tho Pujlnepit;,oo: xpi.mg , ,tepow . la here cos a odurtiiktlhrat ary.et4l" 2'•.• ' • • . MI