c funiiiii Rettpqraptr,----Bnuttit to riferalttrt,, 2grititliare, Dimintr6 anh etturtil siirontration. II /Or BEATTY,. proprietor darbs. ate. C. S. B.ammxt 1 - 11 E 3 'EL:Fe' i.:LLY offers his professional s r t..cs to ti 0 citizens of Carlithle and sur • rouodi 34' coilnir3„ 0111 un I roil ncr in South Hanover street, direc onliqs,te the " Volunteer Office." • 20, 1853, Dr. 01130110 E Z. BRETZ, my.. perform all "'"'ltillavir . .galrvo operations upon the teeth that may be re— required for their preservation. Artificial teeth inserted, from a ainglo'tooth to anontiro set, of the most scientific principleti: 'Diseases of the mouth and irregularities carefully treated. Of floe at the residence of his blether, on North Pitt Street. Carlisle 13-11ORGIO XIGE, JUS VICE OF I'H.E, PEACE. OF kles at his residence, cornet of Main street and the Public &Intim opposite Burkholder's Hotel. In addition to the dotted of Justice of the Peace, will attond.to all kinds of writing, such at (leads, bands., mortgages, indentures, ax.icl es or agreement, notes, &c:' , ;arlislo, an 8'49. . , oB I. C. LOOTYLIS, WILL :perform all operations upon the Teeth that are requi red for their preservation, such a#,Scaling,Filing . Plugging, &O, or will restore the loss of them, y inserting Artificial Teeth, from a single tooth to a full sett. Kr Office on Pitt street ; a few d tors south of the Railroad Hotel. Dr. L. is oh ent from Carlisle the last ten days of, aveur month. CHU' CH LEE AND RINGLAND tnr axILE3 UMW - 3 .or,..Ecarri) AND STEAM . SAIAT EW CEP4BERLAND. PA. DR. S. B. lanprillt, inkFFICE in North Hanoverstreet adjoining Uff Ms. Wolf's store. Office hours, more par ticularly from 7to 9 o'clock, A. M.. and from 5 to 7 o'clock, P. M. fionelB'o Dr. TORN S. SPRIGGS, OFFERS his nrcifessional• services to the people of Dickinson township, and vicinity, Residence—on the Walnut Bottom Road, one toile east of Centreville. • febPypd G. a coLE, A 1P 0 R Y-A '.l" .1, 4 A W, will intend tll, ,Promptly loan business entrueted to him. °Kee in the room forineriv occupied by.Wir- Dam Irvine, Esq., North Illanover St, Carlisle. April 20; 1850. ' ' HENRY S. WOLF, ATTOR.IrE r • T Office, No.. 2, Beetent's Row. ALL professional business strictly attended to. The German language spoken as read ily as the English, [Sep 14, 1853 Oibutation" Carlisle Female. Seminary.' iuriss ES PATHS will commence the StIMMER..SESSION of their Seminary on the second Monday in April, in a new and commodious school room, next door to Mr. Leonard's, No•th Hauover Street. east ruation tn the languages on( ‘ ‘rowing, no extra charge. i..l4ht by an experienced• teacher,at an extra charge. (sept3tf) Classical and titerary.Sigh Cphcol. NEWVILLE, PA. THE Winter Session of this Institu tion will commence on TUESDAY, the Ist of November next, and continue 5 months. In tile department:Of instruction the Principal will 1,0 aided by competent Assistants. All care aml,diligeneo will be used to prepare youths either for teachers, or for, the ordinary busi— nesses of life, or for College. TERMS—For, Tuition, Boarding, and Lodging , $5O All other expenses extra. For" farther particulars address the tinder= signed, at Newvillle. ROBERT McCACHREN, Principal. Octl2 Plainfield Classical . "Acadeniy • 'Near Carlisle, Pa. THE 15th Session (five months) will con' :nonce Nev. 7th. Thobuildings are new and 'extensive (one erected last. Fall). The situation is allqiiat can bit desired, for health fulness and moral purity. Removed ;from the excitements of, Town or Village tho ..Student may here, prepare for College, Mercantile pur suits, Sz.e. All the branches aro taught which go to form a liberal tducat on.' A conscien tious discharge of duty has secured, under Providence. the present flourishing condition of the institution. Its future prosperity shall be maintained by the seine - means. Terms—Board and Tuition (per] • session). $5O 00 For Catalogues with full lnfofmation address R. BURNS, - Principal SqPropriefor. Plainfield, Comb, Co., Pa. THE. POLYTECHNIC COLLEGE Of the State of Penneylvnalia. South West Corner of M'arket Streit and West Arri Square, Philadqphia. THIS Cidlege, incorporated by the Legisla ture, April, 1853, - ts designed to afford a thor ough Profeleional Edneationfo students tnten• dolt for ENGINEERING, AGRICULTURE and the MECHANICAL and CHEMICAL ARTS. The Trustees announce that the Lectures on Chemistry and its application to the Arts will no, commenced in the Lecture Room of the Colloge by Prof. ALFRED L. KENNEDT,'M. D., Tuesday Novembe: let, at 12 o'clock, M.. and bb continued on Mondays, Tuesdays,' Thurs days and Fridays, throughout the session, The Analytictil Laboratory is also open (or Students in Practical Chemistry. - • MATTHEW NEWKIRK, Pres't Board of Trustees. JOHN McINTYRE, ' • Trustee in Cumberland county JAS; HAM. rLT 0 N 4E B 'l. (nov2's3 W'HITEI HALL Three miles West of,rhirtihurg, Pa. THE SEE't.',P SESSION ;will commen ce on Monday. the seventh of November next. Parents arm Gnardians and others interested ars roquditi3d to inryttire intoahe Merits of this 'lnstitution. rho situation' is retired, pleniant,. healthful and convenient of access; the course. of insiructiort is extensive and thorough, and the accommodations lire ample. • • • 1: Instructors. • •• r !NM). Denlinger, Princyial,landteacher of Lan., 7:Zones and Mathematics: " ' • Dr. A. Dinsmore, A. M., teacher'of Ancient 'Languages and Natural Science.. B. 0, Dare, teacherikif Aldthematits'ond :Nniural Sciencla. Coyle, Teacher of Music. T. kirk • White, tencherof rPlain.and, Orna mental Penmanship., Terime. - ' 'Boarding, Washing. and Tuitiota. zn English per session (5 months);, $5O 00 Instruction in Ancient or ,Modern I.f..anguagett, eaoh, , 5 00 ,Inscrumental Music, " 10 00 'Won Circulatieand othOr information address D. DENI r INGER, , eop7 11 , 4:limeSIIFIL!2.0Eq3KlitT Tut' :underaigned offers , his Ma'rclhant stt:tho •Crulisle Iron Works, for rant afrom4ho IlistrirApril next; . ;4 , .• , .ronw2B* , r= ;.!.PttEkriE. THERE ARE TWO TIIINGS,RAITII LORD 'BACON, WHICH MARE A' ‘ NATION GREAT ARID I%On'. from the tit. Louie ihtelligeneer A LAY OF LOVE. =lll 'Tie evening around me, 'Tis morn in the skies, Por the stars waked from sleep, Are just opening their eves. Soft zephyrs are floating • O'er valley and len, While memory is dreaming 13eloved one Of thee. If I were a song -bird, - I'd Ily to thy side, And hover around dice Whatever ketide; Mistaking thy lips, love, For rips cherries twain, I'd taste of their sweetness ,Again and again. • If I were a floweret, Beside thee I'd bloom, And fill thy, heart's chambers With sweetest perfume. Thy beautiful smile, love, My sunlight should be; And thy teardrops of grief Should be dew-drope to me WI were a sunbeam ' . I'd steal to thee now, ` • And with thy light tresses Would rest on thy brow; There, nestling among them, In silence I'd lib, -And rend all thy thoughts Through thy soul-speaking eye 0 • If I were a zephyr I'd flit from above, And in thine ear murmur . Low whispers of love; I'd weave round thy spirit A mystical That Oblivion's fingers ' Might never dispel]. If I were a dew-drop, At twilight,s soft hour, When slumber the blossoms, I'd glide to thy bower, To me would thy check seem A' bright blushing rose, And resting upon it I'd sweetly repose. ' If I were a Tine, lore = . A frovine— Aroundclinging rine— round tliy•affeotions . • • My tendrils should A beautiful dream, then, ..Existence would be, I e'en grief would he welcome If shared, love, with thee! __-_~~iPff~P~. THE FORCE-OFAIABIL-L ILLUSTRATED DY NUMEROUS EXAMPLES The influence of habit extends far and • wide. .It is observed in the vegetable world, prevails among the lower creatures, and is of it power in the human race. Plants beeottio habituated to new climates and new soils, but in general retain some habits which point out their foreign origin, though flourishing at the time usual in tly country to which they have been removed. ltny plants'still•blossom, ac cording to old habit, at the season for their bloom in their native country—co we may thus learn that fetch as flower twice with us are natives of another land. When we talk of training animals, it only means that we are giving them habits which ncodfOtl to us. It is,_ indeed, very. wonderful that wo should be able tegive them habits which are contrary to their nature.— There is no animal with which man becomes familiar that is not influenced by the habits which be ludic - ea. Many surprising easesire on record, and few have not witnessed it them- . tellies, in the creatures they domesticate. 'Sire have otirselica Aeon dogs who bad the habit of _quitting the dining room the moment the din ner was laid upon 'the _dining table, and who never ittempled to follow .their owners on Sunday, though eageito go out with them on every other day. Nay, it is said that the in itials in the: London Zoological Gardenti never look fur food on Sunday, though impatient, for it bn every other day at the acotistouted hours. The appetite in all' creatures appears to be under the influence of habit. Tho different periods of tha day In which the various class es of men feel the oravings of appetite and the inclinatiesfer ; rest, hunger coming at the.ap pointed-hour, and sleep. at the time fixed for it, show how all our propensities are swayed by habit:: The senses are in a remarkable manner under its influence. The sight has, been known to habituate itself to a portion of light quite insufficient for unpracticed eyes.— A prisoner confined in a cell, apparently dark ~ t o all others, was' enabled to 'distinguish the minutest object about him by the light admit- tad through a very slight chink in the wall.— Sailors, in the habit. of exercising their sight on distant objects, can discover what're Shea. lutely invisible to common eyes. Indiaits, and others in the habit of listening with attention, lest they should be overtaken by danger, aro ; known to detect sounds which never roach un practiced ears: Habit will even in a manner subs'tituto one sense for another. Those who have lost their aigbt are often found singularly acute' in the Beebe of hearing .and of A touch. The deaf mutes are remarkable for their • keen and oh- . servant °yea.. One limb le often known by ,habit to' supply ihe 'place of an injured one.— . Whether .there be a tendency to uso,the right hand more than the left; or whether it arise' 'from the earliest training, is a disputed point ; .--.but It is axell,known tact that the most un practiced ,lepihand. nen .be brin.ight by habit to uutlie"up . ,rei,tiiiet :trefielenoy of ,the right, abe n ld it . hoe tort its cunning., • A. Tog ;extraordinary power of babli‘ is that of its diminishing the effects of poleon: Opi- , • utn't!onetnntly tektite; and its 1 116aetgilidually ;'ineivatied till they arrtOotOO4,Aer gequantity; produces none of the fatal effeeta which' it would those not In the habit et using . , The Tuna Onforihnn constantly, nometitheiva dram at tt,tltne,;,..withoutill effects. Confirmed opium-paten' eau take at once nexepoincif, the ' , drug as Would have , theta hadshey ken it in the first iuetnnpo when they' first •gan to' Garchis rob !lotto' mentions, baring,seen a man at, c.loti that cerammed ten drainaln`lbree.ileys,,!andyet,sep'alte,under CARLISLEI starniinifY.',' It has been itscertalised that ow infants and young children who are peculiarli susceptible to the effects Of opium, and Whl are liable to be poisoned by very smell daces} may be habituated by degrees to' take larg I quantites. It appears by a statement mad by Mr Granger of England, in the report I i . the Children's Employment Commisaion, tht.l opium is administered in the factoty districts, as soon after the birth as pnasible. The dos is increased gradually, till the child takes fro! fifteen to twenty drops of laudanumat °nisei This is given,it for - the purpose of throwing i into a lethargid 'Ettupisi—an' astonishing faed• when' it is known that children of the BRIR•i ago in health would be killed by five drops. Habit not only reconciles to what is painful, but often makes it necessary. Sir George Staunton, when in India, Went to see a man who had committed murder. In order to save his life, and what Was more valuable, his caste, lie CubMitied to the penalty of sleeping on a bedstead for seven years, without any mattress the whole surface of widish was etuddeAttith points of iron resembling nails; but' so' sharp as to penetrate the flesh.' It was in ths fifth ' , Oar of his submission to this punishment that Sir George saw him. His skin then ex actly resembled the hide of-a-rbinoooros,--but. Mori callous. On this miserable bed he could lat• the time, from habit, sleep comfortably ; Sind ho declared that he thought it probable that, when released, ho would continue that systeni from choice which he had been obliged tdadept from necessity." Most, people have a particular seat at the table", and feel a little put out of their way if placed in another. One, remarkable for hits wit, being placed differently from usual at dinner, disappointed a whole pompany; who had been invited that they might be amused with his agreeable sallies. He was moody and dull,--and-might -not himself have-Amen-aware of the cause whiCh made him - so uncomforte ble. Habit. oven asserts its influence in sleep. Wben,morn out by fatigue and hardship, the soldiers pursued their marches in Spain when fact asleep, infantry and cavalry alike. The little children empleied all 'day In a factory continued to ply the busy task throughout their slumbers at night.; the little fingers are seen as if employed in the wheels with the cotton. The rope-maker, who works inde fatigably at his trade all day, continues to do' so in hie sleep. The habit of reflection which withdraws the mind from the'passing scene is also wonderful in its results. The answer of Domenichino, when blamed for being so slow in finishing*n pleturombioh'wan bespoken—" I am ceritibu •ally painting it within- myself."—ieveali" ones the :habit of man of genius. To this power of following their pursuits internally, we are indebted for the noblest discoveries and happiest results. When Sir 'nano Newton was asked how' he made his discoveries, be replied —"By continually thinking of them." There aro innumerable instances of habits 'continuing long after the causes from which they were aeqiiiied had ceased to exist. Snuff takers, whose habit is quite inveterate, can almost always trace -its commencement to some painful cause, Which, made it necee4ry that they should keep awake. Two ladies that we know often lamented their state-as eonfirr ed snuff-takers. It was during a time of dis turbance, when they expected that their house would be attacked, that they took an occa sional pincli,of snuff at night, that they might not fall asleep— The number-of- pinches have gralually increased. The 'country becanse quiet, and the ladies oonfirmedsnuff-takers. The. Spectator mentions that Dr. Plott, in his 44 History of Staffordshire" tells us of an idiot, that charioing to live within the sound of a clock, and alWays amusing herself with count ing the hours of the day whenever the clock Struck, the clock having beet spoiled by neci dent, the idiot continued to strike and count the hours `without the help of it. The importance of ieduelni good habits among sucks are within our influence is too evident to need enforcing. These we must remember cannot be the result of set lessons, but must be the growth 'of time., That the mind 'should be given to elevated subjects, usefui - occupations, and intelleetiial pursuits; will go far to form an amiable character.—. Those who fancy that evil habits eon.be relin quished at pleasure, are fatallymistaken. The habit of swearing,.iftencs contracted, is rare ly, if eve:r, given up. That of drinking, Which in almost all iustances potties on:bydegrees, is remarkable for its inveteracy. even in the last stage of misery which it brings on—the deleriutn tremens--there is an absolute nem : eity for the permission of the indulgence to a cm Mitt extent. COPPER :VS ClipLEßAi—tt ie stated that many of the citiiens of New Orleans have pro• vided thethselves with pieces of copper, about six_inelthe long and three Wide, which they carry at all times about them as a sort of prateetion against the cholera. They hero beer' induced to this'e ?nrse,by an' alleged din. covery by Dr. ford, of Paris,• who states that in certain streets,of that capital, as wo3l vs in other cities, while the cholera provailed'in most every. other quarter, every coppersmith retained his usual health, and not a cholera ease occurred among theta., , The copper fount, drithi . in Paris number titOusandkt woritmen; scarcely, any of whom fell violin - its to the ohol• era 'of of 1832, or of 1849. '" • RELIC OF SirPRROTITION.—During the impe rial visit of the Emperor and Empress of France to the Cathedral litineinii; the ,bishopand olar gy'rprosented to them the reputed liertd of St.. Jelin tbe Baptist, irldab .Ime been in the cue: tody of iho cathedral for ,800 years. It was brought from Constantinople "ft the' 7 lime of the Crusaders, and ,is Preserved in cry staland enshrined in - gold. The shall has hoen . rodui ; ed to tbo frontal bone and upperjtv,w. A smell hole in Bono over the left eye is belleve4.to have been caused by the, jinife,of the oicou..' tioncr. The'repo le in,great veneration Ite...lllre. , Douglasi , who'lvne found guilty at , NorfulkOf keeping u . sehoof far colored pereono, atatod hula chance:given her Ao:oen t ape, whiph-ahe has ' taken' advantage of - and gono. North: ' ' MAIM PROSPEROUS—A , FERTILE SOIL AND ,8U5T,..7 0 R1111110P5.,-7-"TO WHICH LET ME• -ADD KNOWLEDGE AND FREEDOM,LBi s h. o p Hai! PA., VirIFMNESDAT, 31liactlantatim, ITHE'DIOONTAIN HEROINE We have many extraordinary , instances of female courage , but we know nee!, more stri king, tiMugh less noticed,. then that! of the young. -the beautiful, the unfortunate. Lady Jane Grey, - who on the morning of hdr exoecu, tion, putting lier 'mild to her neck, said, "They tell are the executioner is very exper,t, and I have but a little neer," so my trouble will soon be 'over. But the presence of mind and fortitude of virtue were never more 'strikingly displayed than in the instance which ocourred:ivhere the Sierra Moreno rears its bend above:the dark rolling clouds; and - where, also, Nature in liar rudest fOrm displays to the weary travelle -- r a , wide; and drearg prospect of barren wilds, dis parted rocks, felling torrents, gloOng'fo4sts of pine; opening chasms, and all thedafiveriety that makes Nature terrible, without it single. gledie of sunshine to scatter, ni it were, the haunts of civilized men; where the' Wild winds ~ whbitle, and the tempests roar; stands the cha teau, of Count do Rontlevilleosherethe »arrow path lends the t-sveller round the mountain's summit, and ware practiced mule carries its burden in securitg, though the ele vation oran inch would precipitate beset and rider over a precipice of three hundred feet . high. On this spot pere.hedlike no eagle's nest is the seat of hospitality to b'e found. The Count, who. is lord of the volleys below, chooses here to affix his abode. Ire is fond of field sports, and mountain scenery; to bring down the haWli and falcon,..do wind the thicket after the wolf and thefox, and to spring:from , rook to rook with giant bounds aftlii• the fleet chamois; constituted the amusements of the day. Ai _evening's elesoloopoLids door. to the way-worn traveller, to - rouse the fire on the hearth, and spread the table with plenty, were his' predoininant delights. ''Tkiolfsinds have tasted of his liberality, and wheekor-belvisited the smiling fields below, the lispidge of chil dren, the benedictions of the aged, proclaimed his'passage. Ho passed his life Without ostentation, and , bad not a male servant in his tetinue. One little-gir i native of Estremadnra, aged nine teen, was selected to attend upoti Its person, and he treated her as Me own child. One eve ping ho had been out late, and on bin return ho threw himself upon a touch, aid sank into repose. Dorothea, aware that ho would not ,require her assistance Any more, rotiretlie rest, and en did all the servants. About one in the: morn • ing, a banditti 'at the heed of rtni dolphArsedaili, so long the terror of Spain , thundered at the gates of the chateau and soon .buest them open. They tore the mehittls from • their beds, and 'with horrid imprecations made them disclose where their little treasures were deposited; and some they put to instant death. The noise awakened the Count who rushed un armedlnto the hall. Rodolph Vascalli seized him by tho throat, and writ/ on rho point of stabbirtg him, when Threaten, the little maid of Estremadura, entered, bearing n'eatidle.— .. -The robber started at seeing her, refrained from hireidow, and loosened his grasp. The fine form of Dorothea, robed. 2 in' 2,- flight attire, appeared .as a beautiful vision, 'or -'"a spectre from andther,6ncl a bettor world. The work of death was going on at the extremity of the ball, and over the marble floor streams of blood flowed in torrents. "Stop," said she, "the work of death, and follow me; you want money, and I will con . duct you where.it is to be had.":, - . " • "What pledge have I (sr thy troth?" said Rodolph, leaving hid hold of the Count. • "The pledge of blood--the tie of nature—l am thy only sister." It was so: Rudolph with coMraCnding'7ol? o ordered his band to desist front murder and re tire, while he rompoliedthe Count to sit down under a pledge - hot to rise until he bride him. " Reeollecf," said he, "my sister, for such thou art (however thou contest), I know no ties but those that conntct me with my folloir ere. I have Checked the stream of death only to open the mine of gold." ;'Follow me," said Doreth ea, "and ou shall have wealth beyond your hoped and wishes." Slowly they winded up the Gothic staircase; the moon alionp sickly through the arched and. ivy covered 'windows ; no sound was heard Cove that of the whispering wind ef. the night, that appeared to mourn for those.lives that had recently passed away. They reached the summit of the eastern tower. " I bear," said Rodolpb, "the murmuring of my band, vho aro awaiting my arrival with the booty." "They shall hot long Ivolt-thee," said Doro- thea, and at that moment they were at the edge of the turret. She dashed her light to the earth, and seiz ing Rodolph by the eltirt i of his oalbrn, hurled him from tbe. bottlethente. He fell amidst his I followers, and his blood spurted in the eyes of his murderous myrmidens, Aranzeinent seized them alLi - 'Dorpthea hastily ring thebdil - that communicated with the convent below, and fired off the eighlil gun. The band fled in all directions, iniegining a farce was concealed in the ohnteau; and Dorothea, rushing down rale. 'ed thd Count in her armEirwherein, ebb ever o' 7 - ter rested'as a laved andloving wife. Rodelph yes indeed, her brother, but had long been a 'detestable Murderer, She,,theroiOre,ahhorred . his deeds, and on this porqOus :oocisilon elm saoritioeu him , on the • shrine of dutr. The chateau still stands ; the ; 00U14,and .countess. Mill exist, and distribute their hospitality more generenely.ihan beforM. and the traveller, .as ho pasties ever the dreary hoigliapf:,tiVe Bier ra.lforenn,' shudderingly ; , murmurs the' Mime of Rudolph Vasealll; end blesties th 4 of Dore then de Roridevillo. SETA great . man . lo one who in eomo sense or.other, adds to,the World's poseesiona ; be it in govermnebt; in Ploetry,`,4la.philOeOphy, he • le a . bringer into life—a' builder,' tiereator, • a planter, and inventor,—in someaort, a doer of . thaVw.l4eb,anbodY, e!eq had dime Were 111M,' and wbiab nobody, then, beniabahitneey, Beent-' orlprepared , to•do..:ittiow, it:ie very ,certain, tbat„tho ropily , foes wino of it° • possessions. 'A, truth ofi I. anknown ktniwn; for. , ; CFRIBER 11:853. .svoßms,A BOUT 11011SLIti The following given on the au thority of Di. Mancionol, of.Tielinst, well known for his greattalents as a naturalist:— o.A , gentleman with whom tlidoctor was ac. quainted had a horse, which had been °beer. 'red to disengage his head from the halter, then to open, the door of the stable, and go out in the middle of the night only, and regale himself upon corn inn field at a considerable distance. Tlie horse returned to his stall before the brook. of day, and had continued this practice for some time without being deteoted. Ho adroit ly opened the door, by drawing a string fasten ed.to the latch, with his teeth: and, it is.said, teat on returning to the stable, he shut the door." Between tho years of 1750 and 1760, a Scot tish lawyer of eminence made a journey to London. At that period ouch journeys were usually performed on horseback, and the tray yeller might either ride post, or if willing to travel economically, he bought a horse and sold him at the end of the jonrney. The gen tleman above alluded to, who was a good judge of horses, as well as an e'seellent horseman, had chosen the latter mode of travelling; and sold the steed on whiOh he,rode.from Scotlan.l. as soon /IQ 11Q mixed. in_London—_With_a_view to his return: he went to Smithfield to punimse a horse. About dusk a handsome ono wee of fered at so cheap a rate that lie was. led to suspect that the animal was unsound, but as he could discover no blemish, ho became the purchaser. , . Next wonting he set out on his journey ; hie horse had, excellent pncesG • and the few first miles, while the road was well frequented, our'lrovellCr spent 'in congrdiulating himself on his gdod fortune in having mado so good a bargain. On Finchley common, and at a place where the reed ran down a slight ascent and the traveller mot a clergyman driving a one horse chaise. There was no body within sight, and the horse by his mance uvre plainly intimated what had been the pro fession of his former owner. Instead of pass ing the chaise, he ran close up to it and stop ed it, 116,itrg-ii6 ° .doulat but his rider would ,erobraCi6o fair an opportunity of exercising his vocation. The clergyman never doubting the identity of the equestririii, produced hi; purse unsalted, and assured the astonished lawyer that it was quite unnecessary .to draw his pistol, as he did not^intend to offer any re sistanow The traveller rallied Ids steed, and with many apologies to the gentleman ho had so innneentlyaltud unwittingly affrighted; pur sued his journey. • The horse' ext made the same suspidious approach to:a coach, from the windowo qr. blundorbus Wes levelled, wiih denun ciations of death and destruction to the rider, though sect:less, ITS ho used to express it, of all offence in word or deed. In shoiyafter his life had been once or twice endangered by the suspicions to whwtt the conduct of his horse gave rise, and his liberty as often threatened by penes officers, who were dispos , ed to apprehend him ns the notorious highway. man who had formerly ridden him, lie found himself obliged to part with the inauspicious animal for a mere trifle, and to puicluwe at a dear 'rate, ono less showy and, of inferior action, but of better moral habits. , When Dr. Smith practised in Dublin he vis ited his patients on horseback, and had no other servant to take care of his horse, while in their houses, but his dog Closer, to whom he gave the reins in his mohth. The horse stood very quietly, oven in that crowded city, beside his friend the dog. When it happened - That the doctor had a patient not far from the place where he paid Lis last visit, he did not think it wcrth chile to remount, but called to hie horse and Cmsar; they both instantly obeyed, and remained quietly oppoilite -the - door where be entered, until he came out again. While he remained—in--Meryborouhh, Q ue - fm's county, the horse seemed implicitly obedient td his canine friend as he could pee_ anybe to his WrOolli. The doctor would go to the stable, accOmpanied by his dog, put the bridle upon his horse, and giving the reins to the former, desire him to take the animal to the water. , They both.understood whet was to be done, when off trotted Creser,lollowed by llM,horse, who frisked, capered, and played • with-the dog all the way to a rivulet, at the baelt of the town, about three hundred yards distant from the stable, and when the horse hod quenched his thirst, both returned in the same playful manner as they ha I gone out. The -doctor frequently desired Cresol' to make the horse leap over this stream, which might be about. six feet broad ; the dog, by a kind of bark, and leaping up to the horse's head, intimated to him what ho wanted ; which woe quickly understood; and cantered off, preceded by Cresar, and took the leap in a neat 'and regular style. The dog was thep desired to bring him back. again, and it wasopeedily done in the same manlier. On one occasion, Coeur lost hold of the reins, and as soon as the horse cleared. the leap, he immediately trotted up io the dog, who took hold of the bridle - and-led him through - the water quickly. Tuu POPE'S '4UNOIO AT PITTBEURO.—Bedi ni, the Pope's Nuncio, was, on Sunday last, in Pittsburgvescorted to Church by a large pro cession, 'composed of the different Roman Catholic. Societies, bearing banners with ap propriate, iinecriptioue. Considerable excite ment ensued, and atm' service, when the Nun cio, nocompuhied by some ruffians, stepped for ward and puffed cigars into their faces. One rudely pushed Bishop O'Conneronistaking him for the Nuncio. The ruffians were chastised on Boring the 'perfortnunco of Mass, Bishop O'Cooper received a letter from ilay,ol; 'dating that complaint had beeo mudo.thot the Sabbath_was about , to be violated by firing oun, non, ntunio,Sr.9„ and fishing the Bishop to in terimeo.,, The Bishop 'replied thnt he lied no. {ignited& of such d demenetration, which would be rondo withopt his .opproval...'Ehe Mayor responded, onotlier letter; ,which recognised ihe right:of the,movumerl, in Bogor 9f prote?tion ,against,,,,dieord s ezly and lawless fi9 l 9,rfPr9P.P. Tip Nuncio is, .011 hero, and to-day Adsited . Seyero Roman Cultiolie boner:dont institution. Itia.Seriattnas imes ou next Sabbath: SIGIVI'S • IN, SWEDEN • There is nothing strikes n stranger more forcibly, if he visits Sweden at the aeasen - of Vie year when the 'days. are at the longest, than the absence of the night. Onr country- Men, Dr. Baird, tells no that he had no concerfr don of the circa produced, before his nrrivnl at Stockholm, five hundred miles distant from Gottenburg. lie arrived in the mottling, and in the afternooff'went to see some friends, lie had not taken notes of time, and returned-a bout night; it was as light as it is here half an hour before sundown. You nee distinctly.— But all was quiet in the streets;' it seemed as if the inhabitants had gone away, or were all dead. No sigiM of life; the atores_and shops were closed. • - The sun in Juno goes down in Stockholm nt a little before ten o'clock. There is is great il lumination all night, as the sun passes round the earth towards the North Pole ; and the re- Motion of its rays is such that you can see to rend at midnight, without artificial light.— There is n mountain at the head of Bothnia, where, on the 21st of , June, the sun does not go down nt all. Travellers go there to see it. A steamboat goes up from Stockholm for the purpose of berrying those who are ourions.to wifnesa th - egreat;rilmnomenota. It occurs on ly one night. When the sun goes down to the horizon, you can see the whole face of it and in five minutes it begins to rise.. At the North Cope, Inttitude 72 degrees, the sun does not go down for several weeks. In June it would be abotit twent.i.five degrees a- Itove the horizon at midnight. The way-the people there know that it is midnight, is—they see the sun rise. The changes in flieslt high latitudes, from summer to winter, are so great, that we can have no conception of them at all. lathe winter time the sun disappears, and is not seen for weeks. Then it comes and shows its flee. Afterward, it remains for teri, fifteen or twenty minutes, and then descends, and finally it does not Bet at all, but makes al moilt a circle round the heavens.. Dr. Baird . was asked how they managed about hired per sons, and what they considered a day. Ile aoold not say, but supposed they worked by the hour, and that twelve hours would ho con- .) sidered a day's work. Birdi and 'able - Mils -.take their accustomed rest at the usual hours. The Doctor did -not - knew how they learned the time, but they had; and go to rest'whether the sun goes down or not. The hens take to the trees about 7 o'- clock, P. II.; and stay till the sun is well up-in the morning: and the people get into the hab it of late rising', too. The first morning awoke in Stockholm, he was surprised to ace,the sun shining into his room. lie looked at his watch. TO found it was only three o'clock! the next time he awoke, it was five o'clock; but there were no persons in the street. The Swedes in the cities are not very industrious, owing prob ably toile climate. ILN AGED DIAN ' Mr. George 'Roush, residing in Mason county Va., on the Ohio river, is now' in his 04th year, having been born on the 19th day of August, 17601 He has 1u" children, 75 grand-children, 101. great grand-children, and 4 great-g;Tat grand-children-, lie is_ halo and hearty, and can ride on horseback 90 miles a day with case. Efe. has resided in this section of coun try since ho was very young, and relates tales of early border life with much interest. He tells a story of his being on' horseback, when quite young, on a young horse, and hav ing ridden ton house on the outskirts of Pitts burgh, around which were some Indians col lected. As he came up a big Indian earns out of the house, stepped up, saying, .!ine good friend," and offered him ono hand while he Blipped oft the horse's bridle with the other, and gave it a severe blow. -The frightened horse ran for miles at the great risk of the ri der's neck ; but he at length brought up at a form house, where he , porroWed another bridle and rode back. Before lie reached the house, :le cut the but of a hoop-pole, and rode up hol ding it down'on the opposite side of_ the horse with one hand. All the Indians weit:(Vout sit ting on the 'ground. The big Indian again pine up laughing, "me friend me fun." lie rose up in his stirrup=, 4tid strgok the Indian Sot as he was about slipping off hi. bridle the second time, and then putting spurs to his horse rode off. There was a bend in the road,. end the whole troop of Indiana cut across the field, whooping like devils. Ho but just es caped with his life. He heard afterwards that the Indian never moved ,after he struck him, lie did not tell it nor . visit Pittsburgh again for years. —Wheeltpy Times. JUSTICIE.—Rich Specimens.—ln Rockford Il linois, a man convicted of brutal murder, com mitted wilfully and in cold blood is • 'sent to the ponotentiary for one year; In. St. Louisa man charged with an attempt to kill, hifs boon son• tenced to imprisonment for ninety years. In Cinoknnatti, a man who committed a _tour_ derous assault in the etrets, iu open day_ has has just Been acquitted. In Louisville, tho vil ian IVard who shot a teacher in his sltool room, Is in confinement awating trial ; but is too rich to be put in the common jail, so ho has a room to himself where Ito lives in luxury. Every lawyer in the city has boon retained for his do• fence, and it is openly asserted that his money will clear him. ' With such examples botoro their eyes,'"is it strangolhatMen will taketheVxcoution of tho law into their own hende? fIEDf"'A *man with, enormous feet waspen-. cured for n pair of boots, and onquireg of the man when lie waaki have them finished. 4•By Wodnesdax i y . ii:does . not ra4l,"..svas the reply. !'lf it does not rui n What has rain to go—, with the 'boots?" "Why, do you auppose , I, *mid build a pair of boots for year feeCin the hotted" • , . • • „ , • „tar• When you hear' a speaker using lonc. Waisted' yvoeds,nnd,fqur•etory hifalutin goner.” allY,trsbO tup your mind that nature forgot to Ot any brains 1111413 r his het : Stoop worth; aro gonorolly piled up to cover the lack of. sense in hint who utters them.,Short, sharp, crisp words, and good, souse, , go in the same oonipany, no naturally no girio,,tiqqaortsp, bean x and another now bounat. Llv.Ne. 13 A YOTJIVG HElttl In the Madison .Indiana Daily .Arguty p of Dec. let, we find the following neconnt of the ' martyrdom of tin American bOy—n youth of whom our nation may he prowl—who died be cause lie would not toll a "Our readers will probally all remember the story of:the Norsiegiatt boy at,Ohicngo, who woe drowned by some older boys because he refused' to assist them in robbing an orchard.. . Some of the papers at Chicago now raise doubts as to the martyrdom. of the boy, and attempt to-eccount for his death in acme other vrt. , than suggested. It seems to such that heroism, of the kind imputed to the boy, do t es not exist in the world at the present time.— Such editors underrate humanity. A ease of Morel heroism exceeding that imputed to Hnud Iverson, occurred in Marquette county in this State, a little over a year since, the facts of which were esteblished by judicial investiga tions, and were . related to us by Judge Leta bee, who presided at the trial. A beautiful, fair haired, blue-eyed boy about nine years of age, woo taken from the Orphan Asylum in Nlilwaukie and adopted by a resoectable far mer of Marquette, a professor of religion end a member of the B.ptist persuasion. A girl, a little older than the boy, was also adopted into the same family. Soon after these chil dren were installed in their new borne the bog discovered criminal conduct on the part of his new mother which he fold the little girl, and it thereby Clime to the ears of the woman; site indignantly denied the story to the satin" faction of her husband. and .insisted that the boy should be whipped till he• confessed the l'alseheed. The man—poor, weak bigot—him celled by it sense of religious duty, proceeded 'to the task assigned him, by procuring a bun dle of rods, stripping the child naked and i uspending_hina by a cord to_the rafters_of the _ I louse, and whipping him at intervals for ver two hours, till the blood ran through the poor, making a pool upon the floor below; topping only to restnnd interrogate the boy, ?'ad getting no other reply than 4 Pit, I told l!ie truth—l cannot tell a lie;' the woman all the.abile urging him to 'do his duty.' The oor little hero, at length released from his )rture, threw his arms around the neck of is tormenter kissed him and said, 4 Pa, I am 17 cold,' and died. It appeared in .evidence, pon the trial of tLis 4000 and woman for larder, that the child 'did tell the truth, and ull'ered death by slow torture rather than tell he. The age of heroism and martyrdom i;ill not have nosed till mothers cease to in till holy precepts into the minds of their in int off-ipring. The man and woman who iurdered this angel child are now in the pen ! tentiary n,t Waspun, to which they weib men- InCed for ten years." • _ YTILLOI9 BUTTER TN WINTER--Put in yolk 'l;ks just before' the butter homes, uenr the n.umiinntion of the °burning. This has been l'Jpentecily, tried, and it makes Tory fine, sweet fitter. It is kept by many ne n great secret, it its great value requires publioity.—Ex fl'imius Paper, A better and more valuable secret in the nuufacture of yellow butter in the winter, ie to feed to the cows clover hay, and from s pint ti a quart of corn meal per day. The butter j;' not only yellow, but rich and finely ffa-. dared, and life, b.: made will doubly.pay , ie cost of this little attent::. l to their feed[ f your hay is not so good as clover, little the quantity of meal, which may be tuned into' slop, short fed or fed dry. Be-. isdes the improved' quality and quantity of bilk and butter, farmers will have the—satis il,ction of `seeing their stock emerge from the I inter in the finest condition. For ourselves, t o have notasto fur composition butter, and ti [.regards the value of the seers(, we think the orld would be as well off had it never been •livulgcd. MANNERS IS THE MIDDLE AGES.—Ruda wero - . • o to mailers then; man ned wife a:e off the same Wencher; a fen . ' wooden handled knives, With o igged iron blades, were a luxury fir the great; e•tilles were unknown. A servant girl held a * rah at supper; one or at the most two mugs of coarse brown cal thenware formed-all the (frisking aparatus i a house. Rich gentlemen 'I are clothes of unlined leather._ Ordinary pot ions scarcely ever touched fresh meat. Noble lontlemetvaratilt little or, no wine in summer. .1 little seemed wealth. Women had trivial arriage portion•—even ladies drossed.plain. 'lli° chief pail of a family's expense was what the males speht inarms and barmy none of Web, however, were very good or very showy ,lad grandos had to lay out money on their lof i;y towers. lu•Danto's comparatively.poliehed' mss, ladies begun to paint - their cheeks by ay of finery, going to the theatre—and to show lies assiduity in spiunin i g and plying their die. FRIVOLITIES.L—"Eihnund, how is it that the uttons aro on the inside of your shirt -collar?" I don't kndw; isn't that the way, mother?" 'No my son; you bare disobeyed me I am sorry p eta; you have been in swimming; else_how touhi you have turned your 'shirt?" The little lay felt that his mother had told the truth ; nd was for a moment silent. However the atiafaCtory explanation, as he thought, soon enured. With a triumphant look and bold Toles' ~ ( 1 replied . ; '...llothor, I—l—gue,ta turned it itt offer - the fence: " ! A SMILE Soo how, beneath the moonbeam's smile; Yon little billow - heavos its tirenst, And (borne and sparkles for awhile, And, mm•mtiering, then subsides to rest. Thus man,- the sport of bliss and care, • Rises on Time's eventful sont And, having n moment there, Thus molts into Eternity!, • [Alopum. WOMAN'S HEAUTIC.-e-It IS not tho smiles of pretty face nor the tint of her oomplexicirt, nor the beauty and symmetry of pornon, nor the . costly dregs or aeoorations that compose we. man's loveliness. Nor is it the enchanting glance of her eye with ,which eho darts .such.. bistro on the teen she deems worthy of friend. ship, that constitutes , her bounty. It is her pleasing deportment, her °hosts ocnvoreation, the sensibility end purity hf:her't'iteiaghts, her affable'and operidisposi Hon; her litypiti4iiiwith those in adrity,'ber'Coinferil4 f An i d:roller. twitfeborrei q ; the htitnbloti4ief sqll4 truf - ' • . 11113