El ~, Tt la i iiit if .,. ‘ji: N tiginiiiri,,--. 7 .-,lq . etilito ht . T..,litipikrt,. Oitttitijili t - . :,,:i. : : . : 41 : 1itiq , _..!-:',..,2(.l4l . tihilittri i - ', 4 ,s4.ll.ili,Pgi s i I : , aiilif ..- 1 :, ---- :(0 - txtrot ..-litiatiiiiititii IE. BE A.TTY, . proprietor loth'. DR. X. C.ZOOMIS, 1, WILL perform all operations upon the vv„ - Tcoth that are requi rej for thair prc~urvniiou, such asl , :caling,Filing &c, or will restore the loss of them, ay. ins erting . artificial Teeth, from a single tooth , a lull sett. 0 - 01Ilee on. Pitt street, n few d ,ors soith of the Railroad Frtel. Dr. L. is of eat from earlisls the last fen days of eve'‘. month. Dr. GMCPELS.tn Z. BREITZ, %1 ILL perform all o orations upon the teeth that may bOre— re luirod for their preserir,ttion„ Artificial teeth taiertad, Irani a single tooth to nnentire set, of tit In tst siientific prinCiples. Diseases of the nt t ithanl irre%tilaritics carefully' treated. Of •e at the residence of his brother;. on North Pitt Street. Carlisle DZ.. S. nnarrEn, F[ 0 in Non!j lja:tover street adjoining p tlr. AV )If'.9 sitSre, (Mice hours, more par rly fr ) a 7 to 9 o'clock, A.M., and I rom 5 to 7 a'clo •il. P. 91. (MOO B'sl 301-1 N 8. SPIRIOGS, OFFER 3 his professional scryie , s to the pcoplc of Dickinson township, and vicinity.- Residence--on the Walnut Bottom 'Road, one mile east of Cetareville. fcb2lypd G. 3. COLE, TT O H N E Y AT LA IV, will attend 11,, promptly to all hrt,iness enotoPted to Odiae in the room formerly oceopied by Wi!- Ilam Irvine, Esq , North IlanoVer St , April 20, aponam mem, JUS VICE OF THE PEACE. OF r•tcs at his residence, cornet Of Main street al lii Paoli,: S.lutre, opposilv Burkholder's II 'tel. In addition to the detiel of Jasti,o el th•i Peace, will -attend to - ail - kinds of: writifig, lack as deeds; bands, mortgages, indentures, wields ol • 'agreentent, notes, Sic. ap 8'49. DR. C. S. BAUZR RESPECTFULLY offers his_ruples.siona servi:es to the eitlzens'of Carlidle and sue rounding - Country. ; . , 011iceand rosideisee in South Hanover street directly apposite to the " Volunteer Water" Carlisle, Apt 20, 103 Fresh Drugs, Medicineg &c. &c I have justreceived from Philadel‘ phiu and N v New York very eensive additions to my former stork, embra clog nearly every snick .ol Aledieine nn +Ps, ty itt use, toge,der with Paints, Varnishes, Turpentine, Perfumery, Soaps, Stationery, Fine Cutlery, Fishing Tackle,—. Brunets of almost. every description, with . . cndelss variety of_ot her articles, which I'am d.- termtned to'sell at the VElll' Lowrr-- prices. All Physicians, Country Merchants, Pedlars and others. are respectfully requested not to plass the OLD STA ND, ns thpy may rest assured that' every article will be sold-of a good quality, and upon reasonable terms. _ S. ELLIOTT, Main street. May 30 F. *It.OSIINSTELEL, f o LT - 31i", di n. Cvxncv and Ornamental P tinter, Irvin's (formerly Harper's) Row, over do ,r to Trout's Hat Store.. He will at• teal promptly to all, the .I', .)ve descriptions of iniotia;, reißonlltle prices. The various k., ) la 0 1 L r dnim s - attended to, such as mahog. anv. nob, a Joni , &e.; in the improved styles. C uly 14, 1 3 52—1 y. CHURCH t LEE AND RINGLAND, aQ E M AND STE AVI • S /1,127 ' IVE ITa C B E ItL AND PA . T R.Wir SP 0 ET.4ll7O.Thr. T;1 E undersigned arc now prepared,to freight pAra. f; 1 , 1, a t I t ') d r o o l : 7_g t. • dueed rates, with regularity and deavutelt._ DEPOTS. Bozby & C 0315 Market Street, Philo Go)r.to 6' til l,t Depot," 72 North Steel, ;lultimore. ml2l WOODWARD & SCHMIDT; =I 3OZ-Zr3 W. 33 . 11L1A &. CO., 'A N D GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, HO ‘y ARD STREET, Oppusilc Cemre, I BALTIMORE. TaIIWSPORTATION. T allundersigned are now-proparod to freight tnorchandizolroot I Baltimore, a and M at re., &load rate's, with reguloDity nod deapaich. :ll[oo _ Freed, Ward & Freed, .315 Market Street, Pailadelphia A. 11. 13,,,nitz. 75 North Street, Baltimore. Michael Herr, North Street, Baltimore,.‘ 50p5213111 J. e D. 11110 ADS: .10,000 PIECMS! 'fi - rIAV-,t; just opened the largest assortment Ii of WALL PAPERS ever opened in Car• lisle, consisting of about 0,000 pieces of the lategt French end American designs, ranging In price (roes 5 its to $1 75, also Window Pa _ wrs and Fire Screens, Plain Union and Blue papers, &c. Persons wishing to purchase uny of the above can save at least 25 per cent by calling at .1011 N P. LYNN'S Hardware Store, West Sidu of North Hanover Street: Carlisle. Carlisle •Female Seminary,. iIvErISSES PAIN,E will commence. the S( 7 . UER. SaiSION of their Seminary on the second Monday in April, in a new. and Commodious school room, next door to Mr. Leonard's, No•th Hanover street. I incruction in the languages atu rowing, ao )xtra charge. ity'an experienced toacher,tit extra charge. (Sept3tl) Tartagiaavx t. margwz, Irolesale' a iid Druggist, ERAS just received a large and W . Ol. selected 2 smolt of 'American, French - end:- Ongiish, 3hemienis, Drop, its; 'lo,ve-Stutra, &c. At this sterk PhysiclAnPl•can' eiv on h tiling prosurip_tipo mopoundod. STORE FOR SALE. Tug Sunni - unit! witthing.to retrove to outrage in other pitranilrrt affeta:akpts:: ate fialo; on ren+onnhlo tcyttitiltio.oodlc, , OF. , ,00 os, embracing tho .iitivie,ty"hopt , in country Stotte, Amyl-tot:nun wishing to engage in - dhe.Mor 'hula bitsitioso,would do"tvotl - to timbrodolltio; worninii3i;ne tho stook will cot - tyke ,fa:reirt' y with any s to o k of 1400a8 itt the - county', and is Itrnation fen- hintinito if§:opp of the hoot -- )n, enlinti;VElThrlAidilled in Jim. . unct, alftlttin ' village of gittringfiettli,,eed..je'';he idst of a roetito and produaovo neittlttierlibud. , )i• prticalarkeet4lrpes:,tho undensigneil ••• • • JOUN HOOD. July 91, 1853- tr. J&EN ARI•: TWO THINGS, sAITH LORD BACON, WHICH MAKE A NATION GREAT AND PROSPEROUS=A ..tERTILE,SOIL AND . DHSY WORIWIOPS,L;-TO WHICH LET M ADD : KNOWLEDGE AND FREEDOM.-Bishop ..- MEI THE UNGUARDED 1110HEATTy Yes, my lips to-night have spoken Words I snit] they should not speak; And I would I entild recall them— Would I had tint been Po wenlc. Oh! lull one Unguarded moment: Wore it mine to live ng.l”. All the strength of Its tenipintlon Would appeal to me in vain. Trite, my lips hove on'y uttered %Viva is ever in my heart; I omit harpy %Viler, 110Aillil hum, Wretched when we ore apart Though I listen to lil• praises . 4. Always longer than I should : t toy heart can never hear them • /lolls° °Pen as it would. And I would 110 t, (MOM not, pain him, 11 - ould not for the witrld ofend; I tvrould have hint know 11 . 1ke.111111 • As n brother, no a friend; DM 1 mean( In bet:pone secret .• In toy bosom ulways For I never moot to tell hint • Thet,l.loved I did. 31arrirb picturts THE TWEEE WIVES. Mr. Jecluthud Spike was an eccentric bache lor of fifty. His mother died in giving him birth, end•it would seem that the mother heart died with her, for from that hour the hhpless Jeduthun seemed te'llave no perception of feminine excellence, and diverted himself with ridiculing the foibles of -the sex, whose true Character was to him a despised enigma, 7/is a babe, he was fed end tended by an invalid brother many years his senior; and lib after wards grew in stature. find a hard, ungenial kind 'of wisdom, without -much matronizing from anybody. As years and possessions in creased, be boarded at is fashionable hotel, -where the cook and attendants were of his own sex, and ignored the address of his laundress' His predispositions against matrimony were Confirmed and strengthened by the fate of the brother alluded to, who married somewhat Into in life, and after ansinhappy connexion of seven years! duration, left his widow, a per manent inmate of-an insane. asylum, and - his three boys to the guardianship of their uncle. Tlin recipient of this unexpected legacy, who had till then loved nothing in the whole of his miserable life, felt - a - strange pleiisure in the, duties of this new and unsolicited relation. The docility with which the little fellows ac commodated themselves to the, oddities of-the eccentric humarist,_their unquestioning faith in hie most Startling dogmasi, and their artless; exhibitions - cif poriiinal attachment, won upon his isolated-nature to,a degree that surprised himself. It seemed that these helpless chil dren were destined uncouscinnsly to fulfill° the lonely old-man that feminine mission with out which human life is a failure, and happi ness a myth. With a devotion and patience hardly to be expatcl of him, lie reared the fragile boys to manhood, gave them all needful advantages of books, and schools, and pocket• money, and at last saw them aIl established in _business, and-in-a -wapdo-credit-to-them-- selves and their connexions. Judge, alien, of , his painful astonishment when all three waited upon him in a body, to nniounce that they had jointly and severally formed the audacious resolution of committing matrimony. ' Neither would have dared approach the subject alone, and though countenanced by each other, they felt so much gratitude, reverence, and compas sion for the prejudiced old man, that they fairly trembled for the result. When the confession was made to Mr. Jedu tioni Spike, he turned his haeld on the agitated young men, and walked quickly to the win dow. After standing silently for some minutes' ho turned and said very calmly: . "Well boys, I have nursed you through the measles, and the scarlet-fever, and the whoop ing-cough, and I did my hest to alleviate what I could not prevent. You are now the vi: time of a diseash quite as general as the other, and t for which there is no remedy but experience ...Neither precopt_nor exiiiiite"—here his lips qtrivCred slightly—" have been of any avail in your case. Go, then, and marry, if you will give my full oonrut, on one condition only. It -4 that you nil present yourselves in three yeafs from Able day and hour, and declare Solemnly, upon the worth of your remaining manhood, whether you are unhap44 why. The causes of Misery in';fiery various, but the result is uniform. I will ex cuse you now, boys, as I have an appointment, with my tailor." It is needless to say tltnt tim three ntifih i ews availed themselves of the ,permission thus unwillingly given, and that any self-reproaches they might feel rft defeating tha cherished wishes of their, ' kindest ' benefactor, did not, . seriously embitter the lioney-M'oon. The three years that followed stole a handful of grey hairs froin the held forehead of Jeduthun 'Spike, and; as if ashamed of the theft, secretly restored them hidden among the chestnut leeks of his.young relations. -And as a farther •es'. Motion, the stone eilsnt agents transferred unnoticed a portion- of the hopeful tendernhes of the youthful lienediels to,refriesli the' with:, ()red heart of the disapPidnted bachelor. TIM time for the interview so long pticipaCed, ar ' riiMtrat lust: In the luxurious rooms of the, lonely uncle, Henry and Charles, the two elder nephews, waited impatiently the arrival of the -younger. 11133333210 It is useless looking for - .Edward," said , ;Charles,jabist. t. We shan't' see him before ,4;stening:7llis wife is now looking for - a needle •46 - tiorn his stockings,, and replace the missing \ - .buttond upon his oont."%` , , Ydtas he 'spOlte". n . olteerful stop was heard. .without t the tardy brother entered the room , breathing quickly, and with a smiling npology, . . for his delay; The two who had first 'arrived, •esehanged meaning glances, but the merciless uncloseut short .their merriment, by 'saying _ gravoly Henry;46 , boy, you are the oldest. lila jug, that you should load upon tide ocoaeloti. Toll us frankly, how do you gnjoy'lnarried The yonng man paused for a moment, then; ~nrtrtj. E15114EMII! CA.RLITSLE, PA., WEDIVEgDAY, A.UGITSI I . ! ES•S 3 . with m comical grimace that but ill-coneealed his reluctance, lie replied: "It is is bitter dose to swallow, I confess. Uncle, you aro revenged." There was n slight movement of surprise, for Mrs. Henry Spike was recognized as decid edly notable. "•I thought," said the uncle, drily, " that yours was &pattern wife." "Only too much so," returned the nephew.. " It is my.belief that she was modelled upon the most approved patterns and made nib order. If ever there was a'machitio for per forming mechanically every col:v[lrd virtuoi it is Mrs. Ilenry,Spike. She never loses her temper; indeed, I doubt if •alto has any to lose. She never betrays nuy flutter of vanity or wounded feeling,,,To the calmness of a statue, she adds an instinctive _perception of decorum, a rigid adherence to rectituslec'.l leaves nothing to hope or fear, and very little to enjoy. Nothing can diturlt her. When our infant was dangerously ill, she moved about-his cradle with the canto unperturbed Composure, and dropped his last cordial, as we thought, into the cup with an untrembling hand." 't I hardly sec how you came to marry her,' remarked Edward, par parenthive. " She was pretty, and 1 mistook her natural ,roses for blushes, and her silence for deli Cato reserve. I was muck 4 moved whea--uhmonce left me in tears ; I have since learned she had .the tooth-ache. I can never find in her dc- portment anything to forgive, and 1 ant tired of praising where correctness seems inevitable, Besides, site don't care for prhise. She was wound up at birth, and, her heart pulsates with the regularity of a pendulum. If I should hang myself some morning of - puregnui, know-she would err nge everything for a re spectable burial. My condition is desperate. In passing through New York last winter, I religiously.nvoided seeing Lola Montez, for I knew I should be smitten-at it glance. The slightest touch of human frailty seems ribno lately refreshing. Speak, brother,; 'be added, after a brief pause, " and in mercy point' out some defect-in Mrs. Charley " Mrs. Charley Spike," responded the per son addressed," is not absolutely stupid, nor entire)) , indifferent in matters 'of feeling. She givgq-some ;variety to life in point of temper, and permits the to hope to please as well as tear to offend. But like your Rectina, she has, alas? one paraniMint idea.'Order is [leaven's first law,' and it is not the less diet of my immaculate Vesta. Especially does she insist upon the most t-imtless neatness,.at the expense of all other considerations. I discov ered soon after my marriage that the world teas a little too good to livo in. The parlors were shot up to . 'el'eludeith9 flies; the oham 'hers, to avoid the dual. :The dining room furnitm:e .waS; robed in Holland covers, and ug - ty mats deformed every square yard actor poling. Canaries wore-banished because they littered -their cage, and my , pot spaniel dis missed for neglecting to wipe his feet. Then pickles spoil the cutlery', and eggs corrode the silver; coffee is liable to stain the linen, and even butter', if incautiously used, may he the parent of a grease spot. Cigars - I have long since abjured, because spittoons ore an abomi nation If I sit, it is Mr. Spike, your chair ma rhs-the-wall,Ler-• Charles,- yea- are-rocking upon the rug.' If I walk, it is, Pray leave I your boots at the door, Mr. Spike, and let me bring your slippers, I sometimes think I will remove to on hotel, and send buns my com pliments daily in a perfumed note. I shall expect soon after to sec the whole establish ment modelled in wax, and 'reposing under glass, like a collection, of fanciful wonders. Come,'Edward, your wife is'no Paragon, luck ily. Confess your misery, and dont detain us long " " Mine is not a pattern wife, certainly," was the response of the younger . brother• "S e fiels not distinguished for order, nor fault less in neatness, nor unerring in discretion. She is very far from being a piece of clock work, and Mere'is a great uncertaintYi - Ohnia- --- times delightful, sometimes painful, es to - what she will attempt, and whether the result will be success or failure. 'There is room for doubt as to particulars, none at all.as to the general .0 tendency -of her -conduct. She- is .as ;true hearted a woman as lives, and thatothich site delights in must be, happy.' You may smile if you choose, but I do most 'frankly assure you that I am-liappy. I know not what Bea trice is doing at this moment, but I feel sure that in aims and efforts, she is true to herself, to me, and to her. Maker. lam sure that she loves me mere than all the world beside, but not so mush as she loves truth, and duty, and self-respect. Her errors are all mistakes. They area the redundancy of a loving, generous, richly-gifted nature. 'She is no irodel house wife, but she has made, great improvement, Mid she has the strongest incentive to improve ment, a strong 'rnd unselffsh,ttffention.i It is true that I was delayed to-day by waiting for a few last stitches from her practised needle, not however upon my clothing, as I ime you ,but upon a pair of slippers she has just Wrought for uncleJeduthun.felet me see them.tried, aiy dear sir. I have an idea they will fit You." Why, yes, tolerably," said the good man, Who seemed more, gratified than bo oared to acknowleclgo. " The .trutb ha added, speaking with hesitation; as if he felt the need of an apology, "The truth is, I ant - going to live with Btlward t and give lessons to Beatrice in housekeeping." l 3 'lt is a fact known to science that when we have a warm' season in this' country, - the reverse .is experienced in -Europe. Intl& it has been so hot and sultry hemp'. the last few weeks, in EuropB it has been cold and in clement. The circumstance is Recounted for in thi4 way;—that.. the' zone of innumerable itiderostle in their revolutien . are non% in such. position.bettieen the 'earth and sun, as to shut off the solairays from the Eastern Henti, sphere, .ttid tojeave them. strike 'without oh: struotion upon , tlio : Western. , • Te'.theso mine asteroids Are ascribed 'these phenomena : of 64 darkdays"'which, at seieraVailferent 40- riOds have astealshed the; peciide nf the earth.' .fittA Necessity . knows ,no low." W Oll , nenessity is like' n great !pony lawyers, • AmuDing. A HOG IN A COURSE OF SPROUTS The Now York Spirit of - the Times is, .'we believe, responsible for the folloyingeapital sketch. Faleonbridge,' ita nether, has 'evi dently seen the 'oritterS!:p.utthrstugh.i Conscience silken! but !mint they got a lot of pork hero?' said a looker-on in Quinoy market Vother day. Pork?' eehoe's a decidedly Green Mountain biped; at the elbow of the first speaker. lies. I vow it's quite 'astonishing how much pork is sold hero, and . et up by some body,' continued the old,gent. 4Et up,' says the other,..whose physical structure somewhat resembled - a,fat lath; and whose general contour made it self-evident that he was not given to frivolity, jauntily fitting coats and breeches, of perfumed. and fixed barberalito extravagance. Et up?' he thoughtfully and earnestly re peated, aa his bands rested in the cavity of his trousers' pockets, and his eyes rested onl, the first speaker. , 'You wern't. never in Cincinnaty, I guess?' No, I never was,' replied the old gent: 4 Nehr wail Well,. I caPclated not. Never been in a pork house?' • No,' sold 1130 old golf, Is - this anything like a riOrk houie v 'Pork house ?' says Yankee. Well, reckon not—don't begin—t'aint notbin' like—not a speck in a puddle to a pork house—a Cincin nati pork house!' . ' I've learn that they carry on ale pork business pooty stiff out there,' says the old gentleman. . P9oty stiff? Good gravy, but don't they? 'Pears to me I knew yeou somewhere 2' says our Yankee. You cautiously answered tho old gent._ . laintSquire Smith, of Maoun-Peelier ' My Llama's Johnson, sir.' • . Johnson l Oh, in the tin business 2' 011,.n0, I'm not in busin.ess at all, sir,' was the reply. 'No! Oh!' thoughtfully echoes the Yankee. • Wall, no nuttier. I thought p'raps .).eou were from up sour way. I'm -firm-near Mooun- Peelier, Stitto of Vermont.' Ali, indeed !' • . • Yea--a-s.' 'Fine country, I'm told,' says the old gent. Yen-a-s, 'tie,' was the -response of the Yankee, who seemed to be revolving eel:nothing in his own mind. ..‘ Raise a great deal of_ w001.. 1 4r.. - ,, sheep country?' • ‘tisireat on sheep. • But sheep alranoth in' to the everlastite hog orop I' • •• Thiult- not, ell'r said - the old gent. ~ 1 snow teu pucker if I haint aeon more pork in Cinoinnaty than would bust_thisluild. in' clean open !' ' You don't toll vie so - By gravy, I dou though. Yoqu r paint never bin in Cincinnaty 'Never.' 'Never in a pork house?' ' Never.' ! Wall, you've ?learn tell of,,Ohio, I reckon?' 'Oh, yes! got a daughter living out there,' was the answer Ycou don't say so ?' "I have, in Urbanna, or near it,' said the old gent. ' Urbanny I Great kingdom ! why, I know ten men living nout there; one's tradite— Vother's keephe school; maybe .yeou know 'em—Sampson Wheeler's one, Jethro Jones' t'otber, Jethro's n cousin of mine ; his father —no, his mothor—married—my name is Small —Appogeo Small, and I was jist MAW, tho hog crop, Cincinnati pork. homes.' 4Ye-a-s I wall, I went nout West last fall; stopped at Cpcinnaty—teu weeks. Dreadful nice place, by gravy, they do business there; beats salvation ham they go it on steamboats —bust ten a day, bUild six!' 4 ls it possible I" says the old gent. glut the hogs—' Deu beat all. I. went up to the pork hous es'; fust thing you meet is a string—'bout a mile Icng, of big and littlecrulers,greasy and sassy . , as sin ; buckets and bogs full of scraps, tails, ears, shanks and ribs of hogs. Feller up this line and yeou comp to pork houses. end yeou go in, if they let.yeou, and they did me, so I went to an almighty large haouso— big as all aout doors, and a feller steps up to me and says he— . Yeou'rs a stranger, s'potte Yeou do I! says I. • . • Yes,', says he, I spoils so,' and lup and said I was. s Wall,' says be, of yeou want to go over the haouse, we'll send a feller with you.' So I wont with the feller, and lie took me away back, dainvp stairs—aout in a lot; and everlastiu' yeou should jist soon. the hogs! couldn't caount 'eui in three weeks. alma gracious!' mtolairns tho old gent. Fact, by gravy 'Sea squealin', - klekia , and'gain' 'on, scab cussin' and hollerie by tl e fellers pokin"em in 'at one cond, of tko lot and punchin' 'em [tout it Saab a smell of,hogs and fat brissels and hot water, I swan ten pucker,l never - did cal'olato, on 'afore!' Wall, as fast as they driv'm in by . droves, the fellers kept a oraewin' 'cm daown towards the. pork haouse, ',there two fellers .. kept a shootin'''on 'em daown, and a hull gang 'Of the all firedog dirty, greasy looldn' fellers aout— 's-tuok 'oin, hauled 'em daown, and afore you oeuld say Sam Patch, them hogs wore yanked aout of the lot—kilt and scraped , ,„' 'Mighty gOiok work, I goose,' soya the old ' Quiok work! Yoou ought. to' eleo many bogs don :yeou'oalci'latO .thorn fel lers kilt and sorapod a clay 4' '% • 'Conldn't . possihly say—hundred t expeet.' (Hundred! Greet I 000 'out kill thirteen' hundred in ten 'hours-:-Ald golly l', . a doift sr; 't,° • , • ' ,'4lMd•rk, (oiler, With, greaSe - emnigh abeout him , to, i make." *net: et" eatt'sestp;, , •stild thotudien they hurried 'em up some they tibial, scalded And tioriiped'ten thousend hogs to iday; and when they lint on steam twenty ME thousand poykors wore killed off nog- ont ; up in a oingio day' : .1 wanCto know!' . 'Yes, sir. Wall, we tv ' ent...intOlhe hnonse, where they scalded the critters as feat as they brought 'em in. By gravy, it was =rain' bow the' bristles flew ! Before a' bog know what it was abaout he was bare as a pumpkin, a hook and tackle in his snout, land - up they snaked hint on to the next f100r.., I vow; they - a shakin' and'''sbakin"em in and up through the scuttle, just in one stream!' 'Let us go up and see 'era cut the hogs,' says, the feller.' Up we goes. Abaottt a hundred .greasy fellers were a hacken on 'em up.. By golly, it was death to, particular people the way the grease flew. Two whacks—for'e and aft, as Uncle. Jeerres used to soy—split the hog; one whack by a greasy feller. with an everlasting chunk of sharpened leen, and the hog was 'quartered,; grabbed and carried off to another block, and then a set of saysgerous lookin' chaps layed to and cut and. skirted around— hams and shoulders going one way, sides 'Lind middling another way; well, I'm screwed the hull room didn't 'pea; to be full of flying pork,in'hanis,•sides,scraps and greasy fel lers—ripple', and tearin'. Dimwit in the other place they were fryin' 'out the lard—fillip' barrels from a regular river °hitt, comin' out of the averlastin'biggest bilcrs you ever did see, I vow. Now, I asked the feller if such hurryin' a hog throUgh acourea of spraouts helped the pork 'any, and ho -sniff it didn't make any difference, ho spected,' •He said they were .not hulryin"em, but if I would come in some day when steam was up he'd allow me quick work in the pork business— knock daown, dreg aout, scrape, cut up, and !laic the infg - in' the barrel before ho got through squalin Hello! say, Squire—gone !' The old gent was gone—the last brick hit him! 31liorgitancoug. THE STO.RIII 1703 For ono hundred and fifty 'years past an annual sermon has been preached in the •Bap ist meeting house, Little Wild street, Londgpv on the twenty-seventh of Noyeufber, in com memoration of the extraordinary- storm of- November 27, 1703, which' was.constjerecl the most terrific tempest:throughout Europe which the world has known since the universal' deluge. Its moral lessons were considered so important tliat . a member of the church left a, 'um" of money the interest of which ehould be appropriatcd,forever to surport a sermon Vii — eneli anniversary of - the event, which is, usually delivered by some of-the most-eminent 'ministers in the British metrop,olls, and. has obtained the name of'"" The Storm Sermon." Several of them have been printed. The late Dr. Samuel Stennett; a pastor or the Little Wild street Church, and author of the hymns which bear his name, in his printid sermon on the subject, in endeavoring to ac count-for the storm, says that, "having most probably token its rise in America, it made its may across the western ocean, and, oollectitig confederate matter in its passage over the seas, spent its fury on those parts of the world whither. his army of terrors" was principally .commissioned." A strong west wind set in about the middle of the mouth, the force of which increased every day till the 27th. en the 24th the storm commenced, which reached its height three days afterwards. The vio• lence of the wind produced a hoarse, dreadful noise, like one continued peal of thunder, and the' excessive • darkness - of - the night added horror to the scene Many lives were lost, especially in London, not a few meeting death, in its mast terrific forms. And grOnt, indeed, was the loss' of property. In London end its i vicinity more on eight hundred dwelling houses were laid in ruins, above two thousand chimneys fell to the ground, end the lead which covered the roofs of one hundred churchett yin., rolled up and bustled in prodigious quantities to great distunoes.!' Nor ;cies the devastation lees throughout the country. In one extensive plain on the banks.ofthe Severn not lees than fifteen thou sand sheep wore driven into the river and drowned,; and in the county of Kent alone Lipore . .tlian two hundred thousand 'trees were torn up by the roots. . The ravages of this awful storm were at sea still more tremendous. It was computed that pot less than three bundred`ships were entire ly destroyed, among which were fifteen of the British royal navy, containing more than two' thousand seamen, who .. , 'sunk as lead in the mighty waters," The whole loss of property ryas estimated at four millions of pounds money, of lives about eight thousand, and o cattle without number. Towards the evening of the twenty seventh it pleased God gradually to abate' the severity of the storm, till it became an entire calm; and men left the retreats in which they had takeii refuge to. view "the desolation which God had mado'iti the earth." • It will bo read ily supposed that this was done with a.variety of feelings, in accordance with thpir ditTerent characters. • • In Many, oases those who had been most WlyAl with terror and, confusion, having Mid their fears removed, dreadfully perverted . its moral tendency, and proved that "let favor be shown to the wicked, yet will they do wick- Shakspeare's plays of the. Tempest . and'Aleobeth wore twice acted inlho, week ;Succeeding thiSawful oyent, and onq.of, them eattaily a week , after the storm has arrived at its.greatest,fury. ,On the whojo, however, the general impressloW • was. salutary, anti 'ho who hiapght thestormy wind out of hie treas ures eaused,it te fulfill hie word:. .floyak au thority. appointed a day of ,humiliation and prayer,'and the, senso,of the 'nation Was a.i pressed by immense orowdefOr ii(totOod instlio . warship Ott.ittat - iabicOn'tlaY.- Itlany - roviortoi humble gratittiilo the tielivorinaii 'OW bait W rought • for •• • „2, UMW ORD Or KINDNEBI3.‘ , .;-4t 18 a 800 YWCb 'ergo when dcgpped,by ithanso, is euro to spring up THE; HANK OF' ENGLAND: A correspondent of the N. Y, Observer says: "I have been making..a most interesting, and, instructive visit to the Bank of England. For admission into thelnterierof this remarkable building, to observe the operations of an insti tution that exerts more moral and political power than any sovereign in Europe, you must have an order from the Governor - of the Bank, and this was given to me through the Borings, whose kindness, especially that of Mr. Stur giss, I have constantly experienced." , The Bank building occupies an irregular area of eight acres of ground; an edifice of no archi tectural beauty, with not one window toward the streets, being lighted altogether from the, roof 'of the enclosed areas. The ordinary business -apartments - differ - from those in our banks only in their extent, a thousand clerkEt being constantly on duty, and driven with. business at that: But to form en adequate idea ofmhat the babk is, we must penetrate lts_recesses, its vaults and offices, where we shall see such operations as are not known in Well street. I was led, on presenting my card of admission; into a private room, where the notes of the bank received yesterday were now examined, compared with the entries on the books,'and stowed away. The Bank of Eng— land never issues the same note a second time. It receives in the 'ordinary course of business about £800,000,•er $4,000,000, daily in notes; these are put up in - parcels' 'according to their denomination, boxed up with - the date of their reception•and is kept ten years: at the expir ation of which period they are 'taken out end ground up in the mill which I saw running, and made again into paper. • _ If in' the course of those ten years any disputeln business or-law-suit tthould arise , concerning the payment of any note, the bank can produce the identical bill. To meet the demand for notes so constantly used up, the bank has its 'own printers, its own engravers, all at work under the some' roof; - and it even makes the machinery by which the most of its -own work is done. A 'complicated but beauti futl operation - is a register extending from the printing offices, which marks.. every sheet which is struck- off,from the. press, so that the printers cannot Print .II single sheet Of blank notes that is-not recorded in the bank: On the name principles ef expelness a shaft is • made to pass from one apartment to another, connecting, a clock in sixteen business wings of the estahlfshment, and regulating them with such precision that the whole of them are al ways pointing to the same second of ttxtie. "In "another room was a machine exceed• ingly simple for detecting light gold coins. A row of them-drop 'oho by one upon a spring scale : if the piece was urtheat:lndard weight, tho scalnyose c to.a certain Ilight; and the coin slid- off Upper ne lido into boil if less than the standard weight, the scale rose to a Cer tain height, and the coin slid off , upon the other side. I asked the weigher_what_was tho average number of light coins that came into his hands, and strangely enouglibe said it was a question he was not M o tored to answer. The next room I entered was that in which the notes are deposited which aro ready for issue.' 'We have thirty-two million pounds sterljn thi s_ ream:. the . °filo en.r.emacked .to me; " will you take a little of it ?' I told him it Would be vastly agreeable, and ho handed me s. million sterling, (about five millions of dollars,) which I received With many thanks for his liberality ; but ho insisted on my de positing t uh him agaiti, ns it would be hardly sarAto carry so much money into the street. I very much fear that I shall never see that money again. In a vault beneath the floor was a director and the cashier, counting! the : bags of 'gold which men were pituhing down to them, each bag Containing a thousand . pounds sterling just from the mint. This world of motley seemed to realize the fable of Eastern wealth, and gave me new and strange impressions of the magnitude of the business done here, and the extent of the influence of this one institution on the Commerce of the world." • HIGHLAND MARY Highland Mary Ives Mary Campbell, from Campbelltown, in Argyleshiro, and lived in Colßalch], in -the humble situation of dairy- Maid to Col. Montgomery. She also lived at one time as nurserymaid in the family of Burns' friend and patron, Given Hamilton, where ho visited her. Mary bad gone to the West,llighlands to make arrangements among her friends for her .marriage with the poet, and on her return to Greenock—where it was appointed they should megt—she was seized with a fever, 'of which she died, a few days bofoi'o Burns over heard of her illness. This was 'the cause of their sudden separation Although Mr. Denham travels over some of the groupds touched upon by "Heating Jack," yet nehe relates the incidents, many of them unknown to the, general reader, we belleyeit will repay for the time lost in the perusal:— " Most people, most reasoning People," writes fithrefle Denham, " nro more orles9 acquainted with the bard's two beautiful effusions,—High land Mdry." and the address to ' Mary in Heaven.". :Poor highland Mary was a beau tiful, interesting end innocent young creature —for humtin 'loveliness, goodness and great noes . "Can ne.tle In the lowly _ • An peel's, In ensile Me.' And ,though' brought up in humble\eireum stances, Mary had charms which 'attracted many 'veers ; "and" says Allen ,punningham, "There was notwanting the tomptatiOns, to allure." But notLiug could win Lei:awl tious from the peasant poet—they:mart:am trothod.. Mary was to.go hornet°, the Wallowa fiighfande M make arrangements for. their. marriage: mAnd theiradien;" saysVionteek; mn ;author,. " wait! performed in' ''a' striking,' wiOring way.: The 'layer§ stood' on- opposite sities'of a email brook;, facM : te face : : they laid their hands In the runt:deg. streams holding 'bible between them, pronounced theit'lrowsto be faithful to,oach other, and parted, never to meet'tlgaialk!," • By way of cantinuation,' Burns' own words' aro: ." At thooloso of 'the folloriingantittnn,' . she Messed tke sea to 'meet me at Greenock, whore she had sohroely landed, when elm weui seized with a matignot eV ; ror Mit . le filed VOLUME Ll.l 1.: her to' her grave in a few days befo . re I even could learn of her illness Tho Bible they made use of on their final parting, was after wards in the possession of Mary's sister, on. each of which is inseritied a quotation from itself In Burns' handwrhing. On the fast— , " And ye shall_uot Swear by my name falsely am the Lord." , On' the seeend,—" Them shalt not forswear thyself, but perform unto the Lord thy oaths." There is somethitig exceedingly touching in this phase of poor Burns' existence, and the pathos and deep feeling evinCed in these two admirable poems can well attest how the sen sitive heart must. have writhed under the har rowing affliction which wrenched the tender est, dearest chords. Leng songs pall upon the ear, and 'tis customary to abbreviate them in singing; but I cannot see bow one link of this sweet chain can be spared without morring its beautiful symmetry. May God amend the taste that can mutilate "Highland . Mary."' A VALID.DEFECNCE. Roaring Ralph Stackpole was one day ar raigned before a country court in Kentucky, On a charge °fliers° stealing, and matters went hard against him,, his many offences in that line having steeled the hearts- of all against him, and tbo proofs . cehis - guilt. in this particular one instance, being both strong andmapifolk_blanylut mum and n 4441,11; eye was bent upon the poor fellow, whin his counsel rose 'to attempt a defence, which he did in the following terms: , " Gentlemen or the Jury," said the man of law—" here is a man, old Captain Ralph Stackp'ole, indicted before you ottthe 'charge of stealin' a horse, and the affair is purty - well proved on him." .-Ifere there-was a murmur beard throughout the 'court s evincing much approbation of the counsel's:frankness. • "Gentlemen of the Jury," continued the orator, elevating his voice, "what, I have to say. in *reply is, first, that the' man that', old Captain Ralph Stackpole, - - did, in the year seventeen seventy-nine, when this Old State of Kentucky, and particularly_those partsad jacent to Boar's Grass, and to, the mouth thereof, 'where now stands tbo town of -Louis-. ddle,wu4 overrun with yelpin'lnjun savages —did, I say, gentlemen, met two'lnjun save gee in the woods on Bear's Grass, and tuk thur scalps single handed—a feat, .gentlemen_ of the jury, that aint to be performed evew day in Kentucky I" More there was consider able tumult in the Court, and several persons began to swear. ep • " "Secondly,. gentlemen of the jury," or claimedlle attorney at law, with a still loader voice, ". vi;rat . I have to say secondly, gentle mon of the jury, is,.that. this - same - identical prisontr atthe bar,. did ; is the yenr seventeen - eighty-two, - meet another Jrtjun savagein . the. woods- 7 -a savage armed with ritlo, knife and tomahawk=and met him with -t--what do you suppose„gentlemenwith_gun, are and scalp er, in like manner? No, gentlemen of the • jury—with his fists! and" (with a voice of thunder) "licked 'him to' death in the natural way! Gentlemen of . the jury,_pasa verdict upon the prisoner—guilty or not guilty?" The attorney resumed his seat, his argument was irresistible, The jurors started up in their ..box,--and -roared---out-telaman, "Not yujlty " ADVERTISING ron, Pittsburg 'Despatch tells a story of a Now Yorker who advertised fora wife. This brought him a letter from a lady in Pittsburg, which led to a cot respondence, and"tben a visit en his part. I The . courtship was, however, broken , off .by tho "old folks," who put a veto on the pro ceedings. Some time after the object of his unrequited passion addressed him a note re., dewing her protestations of affection, and of fering to elnpe,if desired. She fixed a time for the affair to. ccute 'off; but as her father wae opposed to the match, he wouhCfurnish no funds for the necessary preparation, and she hence suggested that her. adorer should forward the needful. Ile promptly responded„ by transmitting $4OO by mail to her address,, to procure jewelry, dresses, &0., &a. The gentleman, at the appointed time arrived in Pittsburg—having heard • nothing from the damsel after sending her the funds; but the parents refuse to have anything to' do with hint, and the daughter refuses to see him, is in a most.deoided " ffx."--ttw O wife, no me... ney, and undecided whether to enter suit for obtaining the money under false pretences, or to pocket the Wit he has bought at so dear a rate. Ax ASTONISHING, .YouTu.--The Oineinnatti. Gazette says that Irm• Marcy, a colored boy from Kentucky, who was in that city last week. can add up columns of figures any length divide any sum,. multiply millions by thous ands, within flea minutes' from the tim&the' figures are given him, and with such exactness as to r i sAder w it truly wonderful. Oa Friday,• in presence of a party of . gentlemen, lie added' a column of ficures, eight in a line, and one hundred and eighty lines, making the sum total of several millions, in about sir minutes. The feat was so astounding, and apparently inore dible, that several of the party took of their coats, and, dividing the sum, wont to work, and in two hours after they commenced, pro= duced identically thb same answer. Tho boy is not quite seventeen years of age ; be cannot read nor write, and in every ether branch of an English educatiorris entirely deficient. started on Saturday for the World's . . PAYING . FOR PAvsn.r—Tho 'following eY tract, in regard to delinquent sub?oribers, we take Xrem tho• Germantown, .04;praph: It speaks the sentiments,of the Preis, generally, yvholi it says—" Except:the, (malt 'system ig tutoinsiVely adopted,and .rightly , observed, we. k l i o w of no business whose bills are to difficult to`oollcot., This is not beSauee the subecTlhers are unwilling -to pay, but .it is principally , owing to pure neglect. inch 'one itatigines that because his.year's indobtodneis [mounts 'to so small a sum, the printer 'cannotts tough in want of that ; without for'ti'moinent,thiolc. ing that the fruits of bit '.entire,businista mride np of exiiaillancivlittle euchdittliibuinve; and timt , Gte - aggrigate 'of altibesuldseritanii". - ii byte ,abd , without Whielf:GM:pnidielMr email natleitesjpilo mtintli:4sdutiitio::CO Issue, bin