MB .4-' : _ltunitti .'ReilioinprT,77:77..lotinifik..'":lld:',..:L',it'riifit,i'i..'i:.,..et#:llj:ii:::: MI BL 4T Proprietor. antatiott. Carlisle Female,Seminary. IVIISSES PAINW will commence the SITiVINIER SE3S,.ION of their Seminary on. the second nonday in April, in n new and rm•rintodmus school room, .next door to Mr. Leanard•s, No-th Hanover street. Ilstroetion in the languages an. 'rowing, no extra charge. qustc tti..4.l)t by n exiierienced toticher,at an oxtra charge. (sept3tl) Plainfield Classical Academy Near Carlisle, Pa. rninE Ilith Session will commotion MAY Ist. lt A retired and healthful location, with thou , ouch instruction in the various. departments 0.1 Classinal or Mercantile education. 'farms—Board and 'ruition (per sessiortj; • - - - - • 860 00 ta'A4r_Gat4lvgit2s with full information, address K.:131112. P/ipcipa/ & Proprietor. Plainfield, Climb, Co., Pa. Vit1189733 BALL C,f.t. D INKS. Three miles West of Harrisburg, Pa. T HE SEVENTH SESSION of this flour- fishing Institution ill commence on MONDAY, the la day of MAY next, The ad vantage's which it allot ds, it is'heliexed, are ,rn superior -character, and parents and guardians are' solicited to inquire into its merits"before tir.ndiag their sons .or wards elsewhere. It is tavoraltty_sitosied; the instructors are nil com pc,•ent a7fd oxperieneed men; the course 'el in struction is extensive and thorough, and special attention is paid to the comfort and health of the students:" Terme. Boarding, Washing, Lodging, and ' Tuition in Englishomd Vocal flu. lie, per session (s'months), Instrnetion in Ancient or Modern Languages, each, 5.00 Instrumental Music, 10'00 For Circulars and other information address D. DENI,IN GER, Harrisburg, Pa. Mar .8 Young Ladies Select School, CARLISLE, PA. THE summer, term of this stbool will com mence on MOnday, May let. The patro nage-of the citizens is again respectfully soli cited, and parents in the-vicinity who contem plate sending their'daughters away for educa tion, are invited to make inquiries concerning the merits of this school. The tuition ranges from $5,00 to $B,OO per quarter not including Drawing, Painting and Fancy Needlework, which are charged, each, $2,00 extra. - A few scholars can be accommodated with board in the family of the Principal. References in Carlisle.—Judge Watts, Judge Hepburn, R M. Biddle, Esq., Geo. W. Hither, Dr. T. C. Stevensan. • MrM. J. F. DOWNING, Principal April 5, 1854. CUDI'D. Vii LEI INSTITUTE, (MALE AND FEMALE.) At Mechanicsburg, Pa. It EV.' JOS. S. LOOSE, A. ai , Bet. W. H. SUPER, A N., Principals; assisted by ex perianced Teachers. .This Institution opens its summer session- on, the Ist of.-MAX. The buildings are new and commodious, the rooms large and well ventilated. 'Parents and Guar dirine are invited to come and see this Institu tion, and inquire into its merits (as rare ad vantages aro a ff orded,) before ending their sons and daughters elsewhere. Besides the regular literary and olassionl'-course of the Institution, instruction is givenon the•vririous musical instruments, such as Piano, Melodeon, us well as on Brass, Stringed and. Wind Instruments. TERMS,: Board Room and Tuition in English branches & vocal •musis per session, $55,00 Latin, Greek, French & German each, 5.00 Music—on Piano or Melodeon, 12,00 For circular address JOS. S. LOOSE, Mechanicsbarg, Cumberland co. Pcnu'a march 29-2 m. . tar6s: DE. GEO. W. .ILVE/DICIX TIENTIST, carefully a..tends to all operations IF Upon WO teeth and adjacent parts that dis ease of irregularity May require.. • He will also twain Artificial Teeth of every description. such no Pivot, Single and :Block teeth, mad teeth with Contitionua Gains;" end will con struct Arttficial Palates; -Olituraturs, , ting Pima, and every appliance used iii the ThatarArt.—Operating Room at thi residence or Dr. Samuel Elliott, East High St. Carlisle. Dr. GEORGE Z. lasmwz WlLLertain nl - - operation! upon the teeth that may be re rimaired for their preservation. Artificial teeth inserted, from a single tooth to anentire sot, of the in ISL, suio t ific principles. Diseases of the in tat:hand irregularitios•carefully treated. 01 ft to at the residence of-hie brother, on. North Fitt Street. Carlisle Dili. X. C. LOOVIXS, WILL perform all li v e, operations upon the „ •• . loath that ore requi• red for their preservation, such as Sealing,Filing Plugging, tire, or will restore the lose of theni, by inecrung Artificial Teeth, from a single tooth to ft fail sort. fj"Oflice on Pitt street, areal; d tors south of tho Railroad Friel. Dr. L. is ab 'ent from Carlisle the last ten drive of °veil' `month. ••• • , ' F. N. RPSEASSEELIit. (fUSE, Sign, Palley and Ornemental 11. Painter, trviti's tlormerly;llarpor's) Row rmxt do Ir to Trout'S flat -tore. Ile will at• Li.l I pr .).1111y to all the shove descriptiens 01 1,1616;4, at relsonable prices. The various kin la 01 :;raining a tended to, such as ma hog . !my; elk, wilnnt , &c., id the improved on yles C July .14, 1852-Iy. C. S. Ban= ESPEGT ULLY (dyers hie prol:eesioila acrvine to the eitizonsof Corliele and eur• rounding country. and residence in South Hanover street, directly onlineild to.tha ". Volunteer Office." Corlislyt, •111120,'1953 , ' • • G. D.. COLE, A • TV - 0 RN EY ATL A W, will :Wend priimptlyto all business entrusted to him. in the-room formerly oboupied by Wil liam leyiim, Earl:, North Hanover St , 1852 i • " ' R. *II3CIZIPMEIIV, . ArIiPPRI tf; in' North fltuioverstrUct adjoini9g, Nt. JP Itr.•Wolf's'sfortr, 011 ice hours, thore ticularly from 7 t 0 .9 'o'clock, A. M., and Irom to 7 o'clock. P. n. dik .PUOILIJ/G1 . ~•BOOK.BI .1100..K,8,0 • Year in Turkey, by Ulade. , -.: - 'Hope and 'Mishaps,.by'Groce Greenwood.' t Greenwood Leaves, • ; sdo , , do -' • Th 6. adyentaree of a Coantry . .Mort haat, by the author of c' Wild Weetrrn,Sretiee." Tho Two Roada---.Mo.ltight. nnd: tho Wrong— published by:Lippineott,'Gramho'& C o . The Lamplighter......:. • , . . • . Potipliar Panora heet,Saelety in NeW York caning on FroirTrerip of Americo, , • Almiittlways on limid a.lorge tioaoritnorittifi Billion' Books, Stationery, &e, forlialo tiye • May 3.) A, . M. PIPER, tat. „ . . E TWO' THINGS,' SAITH ' LORD BACON, . WHICH MAKE 'A N'ATION( R I BA , D IMOSPEROUS—A 'FERTILE' SOIL AND' 813.§:r :WOnKSIIOX,S;44,O,.:wmen • ADO KNOWLEDGE AND :FREEDOM.—.O THERE 'AR [We find the foltowing beautiful poem going tbe iintuds 'of the pres 4, credited to the late Bev. Dr.Atstans, and said to 'have been t, written an the occasion of the death of a sou of Dr. C's., whoni he greatly loved." But this is not so. 'The author is T. D. ROBINSON', of Newburyport, Mass., and was 'published first in the Now York Tribune, and from thence found its way into the columns of a few papers iu the Union. Subsequently it was copied to. the journals across the' Atlantic, Dr. Chal mers tretked, with the-authorship, and again, finds its way into the columns of the Ainerican press, which unmindful and unwatchful of war own literature, bestows the highest encomium on anything foreign, just as if "notiiirig good could come out of Nazareth " "Honor to whom honor is due," is a precept seldom borne in mind.] I am alone in my chamber now, . And the.midnight liour is near,, Dick ; And the luggot's crack, and , the clock's dull Are the only sounds I hear. And over my soul in its solitude, Sweet feelings of gladness glide, For my heart and my eyes Are full when I think Of the little boy that died. I went one night to my father's house— Went home to the dear ones tsil And softly I opened tb 3 garden gate, And softly the door of the ball. My mother came out to meet her son— She kissed me nod then 'she sighed, And her head fell on my neck, and she wept For the little boo that died. $55 00 I shall miss him When the flowers come, In the garden.where he played ; I shall miss him more by the fire-side, When the flowers have decayed. I shall ewe his toys and his empty chair, And the horse-he used to ride; And they will speak with n silent speech Of the little boy that died. We shall go home to ottr Father's house— To our Father's house in the skies, Whel•o the hope of our soulSshall have no blight • • Our love no broken ties. [peace, 'We shall Warn 00 the-banks of the river of And bathe in the blissful tide, And one of the joys of our heaven, shall be The little boy that died. , mrigiiiu[bitettrg. - y For the Herald NOTES BY THE WAY. No. WI Southern Fortning My last was devoted to a fev!.crude remarks upon the' state of agricaltu're in Maryland ; in this I will continue my observations upon the same subject, and note the peculiarities which distinguish the farming of eastern Vir ginia and North:Carblina. Agriculture, like every thing else, is back ward, and when . compared with the modes of tillage in•Vennsylvania, does not merit much' consideration.' Southern plantations are, in reality, very different from the representations which are' usually given. My 'idea of one, was a stretch of land, as far as - the eye 'Can reach, under'a high state of cultivation; with a mansion, surrounded by a number of com fortable houses for his servants, occupying n -commanding position, which affords the wean thy planter the pleasure'of beholding his fields groaning beneath the burthen of a luxuriant harvest; indeed combining all the pleasures of country life. But mymexpectations were not realized. In stead of beholding fields regularly laid out, irregular patches met my view:- Slost of the land cultivated is upon the borders of the streams, whilst the uplands are still covered by the virgin forests: 6d much the larger portion of the land which constitutes a smith ernSplatitation remains uncultivated. But, as the country is sparsely inhabited, the natural increase in the value of the lands and uegroes preserves the wealth of the proprietors, which is not diminishing, but increasing at a slow rate. The planters av a general thing, are monied men, but when we compare ti section of the souih with a sectictn of the same di pensions in the north, we find that, aggro gntely, the wealth of the south Is much less than that of,,the sections north Alaeon and Dizon's line. The disadvantage-ranting from one mauls possessing large quantities of land is lamenta bly exhibited throughout the southern por tions of the Union. If industrious white men could be induced to settle here and cultivate the soil, instead of trusting to the labor of uninterested blacks, we would soon observo different state of thing.... • r The highest ambition of a southern farmer appears to be, that. he may do nothing himself and have as large a number of negroeB as lie can possibly feed, priding, himself, without doubt, more upon the force he can muster thou the advantage he should receive, from their labor. A force of slaves, numbering from twenty to twenty five, all told, large and small, young and old, does not accomplish more than about four or five white men at the north, and so it is often, the case, that upon jarge plantations it is difficult to make' " both ends meet The farther south we advance, the difference iti tillage; crois produced, and utensils tisdil becomes more • npperent. Tobacco, corn and somo'wheat era the principal crops. • Corn is 'used a gteat deal(for food, the - baking of which is the fat t otitiffif Om negro cook. -Flour 'are et ounsilittrable ilititances D itpart. and 'it. is ' extremely ' dimbtful. whether the flour meou. factored in many of them would,be 'considered marketable iti 'the 'exporting cities., I arailed . myself - :of an Opportunity to eitariaitio , the structure niamachinery of two mills in North Catelinn.' The ono was not cipable of doing merchant work, raid its gearing was rude end unwOrktimnlllio. •tobsorred a-fixtnrefor sift ing corn Meal,' different from any . , I lutist heron. „. • • seen—a sliding 'rectangular sievo,•moved:bi being 'connected With another pare ortho-tna: cbinery. , The other was upon-a largersealo,' :but not much superior in other respects. no farming, liter Mils display very little; perfection of workmanship.; filtnitlf right hand ploughs are used to some .ettent; hut Most. or the ploughing:ls . done- with :ehtrrel pl9ughs. One kind which is generally used, tailed the put% CARLISLE,. WEDNESDAY, MA;Y Dutch plough, consists of' n board and sidling,•without coulter or shear, and is drawn by one horse. It stirnthe ground to the depth of three or 'four inches, without 'bringing to the.. surface any or very : little of tho lower portion of the soil. Through curiosity I tools . bold of one of these ploughs, and was sur prised to' notice with what ease they can ho regulated. They would bo useless in a heavy clay soil, but as the land hero is sandy they do pretty well.' Pennsylvanians would look upon such tillage as the surest way of impov erishing their lands, whilst the Carolinians . _ imagine that they merit the reputation of be. ing successful ngriculiuralists. if the Smith sonian' Institute, the Bureau of Agriculture, or some association, 'was' to offer . 11 piemiuuf kir the bUst.mode 'of impoverishing and killing. land, the enetern portion ofW - i v- 4okt pails of North Carolina would likely be the euccessfal com'petit'ors for distinction. The manner of stacking their grain is sin gular and ludicrous. The modes operandi of bnild:ng these staoklets, as I would, call them,' is to place a pole about ten feet in height in the ground for a support, and then to place la) era of.grain so that thelops all meet in the centre, and can he fastened to the pose. • Judg ing from their size I feel safe in saying that there is as much as fifteen or twenty dozens of oats in one of them. I have been informed that such a thing as a double stack containing from twenty.fiva to dirty dozens, is of no un common oczurrence. It in decidedly amusing to see fifteen or twenty or-these stacklets stretched along the thoroughfares. Very little attention is paid to manuring. When a field becomes so poor that it will not produce any crop, it itereshecHated by resting it, that is by pormifting it , to lie idle for a number of years: Scrubby pines soon grow thickly upon it„ which are said to have the . desired effect. If the uplands were tilled and the meadows were permitted to lie in grass, this country would be capable of producing superior cattle, but very little attention is paid to grazing, and the consequence is that but little fine stock is reared. Herd grasi, a spe cies similar to our timothy, is principally grown. There is a kind called broom grass, which is considered injurious to the land.: It grows principally upon poor lands, and when young and tender makes tolerably good pas ture, but when old is entirely useless except in making brooma. Clover is almost unknown. A gentleman informed mo that ho was the only fanner, that ho knew of, Who bad any sown, and that he sent to the north for it. By the way, the southerners are continually speaking of the aggressions - of the north,. whilst almost every comfort and improvement_ which they possess, comes from the northern cities, and this preference fOr northern manu factures, is assigned as ono great cause for the backwardness of the south. If a. man wants a slab of marble, he will pay the freight from New York or Philadelphia ; sooner than put up maeltinery to prepare the marble which lies buried in the hills around him. The climate of North-Carolina, during the winter is much milder than that of Pennsyl vania. Very little snow falls, but rain makes up for the deficiency. The inhabitants com plain of the cold as much as we do in higher latitudes of our climate, but the difference in severity is very apparent to one changing his location in the winter time. .Gardening com mences in February, and peach trees blossom in the commencement of 'March.. But,' a's' 'the weather is remarkably changeable in the spring, they run a great risk of being, nipped by the frost. An observation which was omitted in a for mer number, I will now ,make. Teamsters, when upors,the road, are in the habit of camp ing ist night. During the nights I spent in the stage, my attention was attracted to fires by the wayside. They proved to be enamel). ments of wagoners, and from the remains of camp fires, which are to bd seen by the'road side dteppear t e to be a general custom. TITS 1111811 GIRL'S STRATAGEM—An amu sing instance of Ilibernion simplicity is afford ed in the following little story, told us• by a -friend, in whose words we give it : 7 - Molly, our housemaid is a model one, who handles the broomstick liken sceptre, and who has an abhorrence for dire undo sympathy for . soap-suds that amounts to p a passion. She is a bustling, buiy, rosy checked, briiht eyed, blundering Ilibernian,'who hovers about our book shelves, makes war upon our love papers, in the shape of utidus:ed and unrighted =- Mrs. One day bile entered our library in a.confa sed and uncertlin.manner, qnite different from the usual bustling way. She stood at the door with a letter between her thumb and fingerer:telt she held out at arm's length, as ‘ tdici'hO n gnapowder plot in ler grasp. In answer to ourinquiries as to her business, she answered: • ' . • "An'- it please yer honor, I'm is poor girl, nn' hnn't much laming, an' ye see,, place yer honor, Paddy O'Reilly, and the better than him don't brathe in old Ireland, has been wri ton' mo n letther—a love latthei, plose yer. .honor, au' • 'filoptbssed at her embarrassment, and Off ered to relieve it, by reading it to her. • Still ,she hesitated. :while the twisted,a bit of raw cotton in her fingers. • "Sure," she resumed, "an' that's just.what I want, but it "isn't' tigintleman like yerself that would be likin' to know of the secrets be tween ok, nu' so; (here she twisted the, cotton : quite Nervously) if only plane yer honor, while yer radipg it, so that ye may not bear it yerself, y'll fiat put this bit o' Cotton in yer eora on".stop yer an' then the allergia 'it be unbeknown to ye!" Ve.badn't the heart, to refuse her; and with the gravest face possible, complied with her request; but often since we: have Wished heartily as we related :theiricidene.—N. ...TOIIOIIITICI 'PROOFS OH /4C1A1113. , —T '.boye re • said , Titmarsh, for eierrman on boar.. that ehipo /Coot the captain down ,to.the oree , —down' even to the cook, with' tattooed arms' sweating among -the saucepans. in the galley who used (with a totiching affection) to,,sen no looks of hair itr the soup. w . . .. ~ ... .. . .. ..... ~... .. litta. front . inaly. -. ! - •••. .., .. . . " IN,' tiib;iiiiritlA- . . ' TUE MORMON couN itir.l.[ GREAT SALT:LAKE CITY, MOATI.TER4 1 '- . March 4th, 1854, .4 .:. 'Mr. Firroat—The reel' of stern oldTitne„ has not yet completed one revolutiOte'aiticel' left Carlisle to seek my fortunes elsewheie; Last year, on the 11th day of April 1 bide farewell to the "court town of Petinsylvania," and now on the 6th of March of '64 I find my self some four thousand miles farthSr towards sundown, in 'a vall:eyof the Rocky Miiiintuins. Thinking that. O . tleOription of this; dOti . iry nd;it . s.inhabitants, and in•fact.tho vast extent between this territory and. the - Stitee=ntraprikiniihicteiritorrof RefitakititT which will in all probability soon be ppm fey settlement—might prove interesting '4O : the readers of the herald, I :respectfully 'submit what follows. The country between Independence, Mo. and Fort Kearney, in Nebraska territory, is, as a general thing,'well adapted to the principal objection being the soarceiti of tim bet'. It is well watered, and in *soinn'''pleees good crops tire raised, without irrigntlon,*by the civilized- Indians, and also at 'thedifferent Misslonb. The principal streams are the Cali (Kansas) river, Big , Vermillion, lion, Big and Little Blue river; and creek, none of which streams are nrivigabld for steamllmits. Flat LoatS run ftp the tintinn river as far as Port Union. The first tribes"Of Indians through which the entigrant'pASSee after leaving die Missouriline-at Westport, are the Shawnees and Potinivattomies, thdiej'how - - ever, are nearly all civiliie I, and most of them have good farms under good oultivatlon. 7 - IVithin ten miles of the Missourilitietheisi tire three _Missions, .viz: Methodisti-'oattiolio and Quakers; besides numerous others areencouu tered within a hundred and filly milesnf those above named. Thetbat tribes between those' above named and Fort Kearney, are the Otoes and Pawnees. The Otoes, however, are noth ing more than a band who. have. detached themselves from the Pawnees. Both tribes aro very thievish. Fort Kearney is scarcely deserving of the name of fort, from the Met of •its being noth ing more than a mere India?' stockade. The houses aro mostly built of adubeeg, nod Covered with sod, there4ira however • several frame buildings there. 'At the time It was there there were only about thirty men at the post, under the command of some pompons qaptain. I have no doubt the duties of fk !icor poral's guard"-proved Ter.v.Asduotra to him. At Fort Kearney the emigrant first strikes the. South Platte (shallow river.) This stream is as wide as the Susquehanna at Harrisburg. The country on the south side of the river for about 160 miles is relnarkably,beautip4• From the river for a distance of twenty, miles south; the country ie undulating and terminates in lofty bluffs. I would style them mountains; at least in most places. At the season of the year in which I passed through this country, the OMB was filled with buffalo. This coon 'try belongs to the Sioux Indians, who are, in. general, very peaceably dispDsed, and boast of having never shed the blood of "pale faces."— After crossing the South Platte, it is a dis tanco of some twenty - miles along the Califor nia road, to where the North Platte first pre ' Bents itself to view: This river is rather deeper than the South Platte, though not half as wide. This river is foil - Owed by the emit"- grant some three hundred miles. Along this river there is a vast prepontleranee of bad land over tho•'good, espeolally after leaving Fort Laramie;" fOr already is the near approach of the Rooky Mountains felt. • Fort Laramie is more deserving of the name of 'fort than Fort Kearney. There were a a good: many 'soldiers at this place nt the time I passed. Near Laramie can be seen the ,holebratecl Laramie Peak . , of the Rocky Moun tains, on which snow is seen at all seasons of the year. After. leaving Laramie the emi grant' follows the devious windings of the Platte for. a long distance, and strikes the Sweet Water nt Independence Rook, and is now, travelling through the mountains. After sulking the Sweet Witter the• road. follows the course Of the river to .tho•'" South Pass.? The "Pass is very different from any idea that I had formed of it. :Instead of being a deep chasm or file Mountains, it ib nearly level.- Fo.some time before resetting it .you gradually ascend, nod by the time you reach the Passyou aro 7008 feet above the level of the .sea. This thou is the dividing ridge between the Atlantic encl . Pacific. -Immediate ly en the weal silo -Oft-,the ridge nre the•.',Pa- CM() and' it seemed 'rather novel to me to see this no well as all other streams on this side of the 'Mountains, running west; Front the South Pees to this place it is a • distance of two hundred miles. From there to this place there ore several considerable streams, viz: Green, Boar and Weber rivrirs. Min Bridger is situated between' Green and I Bear rivers. It is a mere Indian' trading post. established years ego by a 'Mr. Bridger,' of Virginia. The last compelled' him to evacuate it last summer, for a breach of the UniteeSiates laws, ft . :welshing the Utah Indians with arena and ammunition,-thereby endangering the lives of the citizens of Utah. Although the Indians of this territory corer:Bin ted various depredations during hip". summer, I do not think they : did so at the Instigation of Bridger.' • ; ; Lest fall tho Indians attacked the U. pogrephical Engineers, engaged in'eurveyinia Tonto for the Nellie Itailread, near this Val• lei, and kiilled,Bepi. J. W. puneison and eight men. 'the .time the ICi47, , wer'e ettncked, they wore engaged eating their bre:dmit, and of coursii ashewor of 'arrows would be likely to throw-thein inte,Oonfusion.of which advent.. tago, the ICOUrrc promptly availed thernaciVes The Mormens feel .very ozimfiiint; thaitge central route from Bt..LooiliAhreugh the SOuth Pass, by way of this Most be the no adopter! . for the "litichlie Railroad, and have r onibearibed $1,000,000 *Weide Its conairuotion, rqute, Should bo adopted . I think, .however, ~that tho„Motophls route by ,way ,of.,the,,Tejoett be adopted. . After tho final expulsion of the Itfor -,,,•.,,, •,-; *p: '''' ...,„,,,,,,, p ,...„, titi , tir. „„ r „ : , .. Igrirtifiarp, :from the city of Nauvoo; ill.; they removed tb this valley, ivincli ttros at that time a provit4e 'of Mexico, but woe ceded to tbe United Stains by the tretitynf Guadoloupe Hidalgo. It is n Very'wortidess piece. of land. No crops can be raise l without irrig'gtion. , ,The Mormons have been hero some sit Year's, and' ifie'pciPtilation of Ilia different willies, (of which this is the one,) numberiittomeclo,oo. 2 Great Salt Like City contains a population of about 10,000, and is situated 'five miles west of the tothporingos Mountain's, pad twenty ' east of the drerii Salt Lake. .It puntaint sevpialgood 'stores, a Social'Holl,, the Tabernacle and set , - era' other good baildings. The.uildingi3 are all constructed 'of adobies. Brigh'am'Young acts as President':of the:Chnreli,,Prephet of the Mormons, Governor Of the ,Te'rritory, and 'General - StifetTirten - defirefiridieri Affairs: - it is very queer how remarkably cheap; titles are in this country: President Brighain hos for T ,ty-seven ivivca, and'l am told about one hun dred children. ilebere..Kinattallbessevehty two-wivea; he ' IT Second Cotincilor': Polygany'PreVails to it great extent among them. I went to their Tabernacle on several hear them . , . occasions to hear them preach but alwayaye tired rroin the' place in diigust before ifie end of their ceremonies. When they preach, they du not select hay Scriptural liaitisage, but in. (1151ga in vituperation and 'obscenity agninOt the American people and government; All persons who do not belong to them arontyled, "GePtiles,V 'lbove heard'Some of their elders; make use of Jangunge in ,referenceto the A mericans, which is too obscene for :ears po lite. Brigham Young professes to he the ju : nior brother of our Saviour: but I hope the day is opt far distant when they-shall have to make atonement to the Amoricaa people for past ,transgressions. All kinds of prodUco and Wierchandlie com mand high prim ',hero. Flour in ' w.erth per hundred, and will. in all probability bring $lO before the new crop can be brought into Market. Collee is worth 7:5 cents per' pound ; sugar, do; soap 60 . oents per 'half pound bar; whiskey. $9 per gallon; tobacco, $1 per plug, and everything else in proportion. ' Yours respectftilly, w. n,,11. BURNEY. Or)ijritliug glutttes. FAHOUS.TRIALS IN KENTUCKY. The ". determination of the Warm trial, in Kentucky will pardon, if it should not impart I interest, to the nooount which follows of some .of more, ram.rhaWA .. (nails of murder and street assasinition, whioli'have occured in that ;,Commonwealth Within the memory of'the pres ent generation. A lute number of the Ercuis• sill° Journ3l remarks upon the fact that few or no instances of violence, in open day, re sulting in death, are Capitally punished either in Kentucky or any other portion of the South or Southwest. This, for the peace of society, is Unfortunately ro ; but we doubt whether, In the bloody catalogue of this description of crime, there is a single instance so nearly ap proaching wilful, deliberate and unprovoked murder, in the first degree, without the apo logy of sudden heat, or the maddening influ ence of drink, or the manly plea of an equali ty of chance, as the shooting of Professor Butler.• The ^ly39 of Shelby, at Lexington, to which we shall presently refer, is the nearest, approach to, it, and this.has the extenuation Cal drunkenness, which its parallel has not. The killing of Henning, the editor of the Kentucky Gazette,-in his aim office, by young Charles Wickliffe, in 1838, was one of the,un happy results of the ritilent political exCite- Metdof the period betwiien the respective ad herents of Mr. Clay and Gen. Jack Son. The 'excitement atiouttexingt'on,'as about the Her= mitogc, ran into bitter personal The Wickliffe family' ,were then divided" in polities. Robert Wickliffe, Senior, whose eon was embroiled in this difficulty,' was profes sedly a friend of Mr. Clay; which led to a very personal philippic against his family in the GazeffC, thO'Jackslii organ, over the eigna tiira of Denham!: 'The editor, although he had every reason to know that the author would be held to 'responsibility, refused, on the de inlind of young' Wickliffe to surrender his titans; an altercation ensued,' and Beaning, the editor, was shot dead. The greatest pos sible. exciteincnt, both of a personal an J party 'nature, followed, and the trial of 11Viokliffe was not permitted to take place until many months after,' when the Adams administration had given plebe to General Jackson, and Mr. Clay bad returned to his profession at Lexington. That gdrilleinaw in wheat cause, Wickliffe had, in a measure, become involied in the charity murder, appeared at the, Bar in .his defence. His speech on the oebasion was ono of remark able fire and eloquenbc-appealing loss.to the sympathies of. the jury on behalf of the pris• onor, ,than exciting their prejudices against and contempt for the man who had left Ben. -fling at the post of real danger,..which.they. had not the manliness to occupr.thotriselves, though willing to use, throiigh hie columns,. the weapon of the skulkingbravo. These men were 'Mr. Clay's, bitter persecutors, in tile can vass 0f..1828, and be had little reason' , to res pect and , less to spare them. ow a capital trial, .involving the life of Ids friend, and. which tapir work had ,brought abouty Tlie result was theltAuittal of. but neither his cul pability as principalo nor, Mr; Clay's positien . ne C(4infie4 will compare with the Ward case Or its 'volunteer defence by,Mr..Critteciden.— Neither the motive to the killing nor the duty of .tito advocate was the sante," do not know Butt Mr, i3lay won repaid, ilinfter years, for ,hisoerricein this remarka. ble Arial; by, the , gratitude, of tho Wickliffe ; The, '..0.1d Doke , Rebert—ak the sen; for,,.beottuse of blueStensivo landed eStalemas :called—never,„loved overmuch.,-? .Personally, they .hadi , been colemporarles.ut the, Lexington , Bar, 'rind , Imoding , and attll , o members of the name influential. oommAnltY. But Mr. Clay was the superior In commanding influence,, : ftrespeotlye of, ,pelittos,,awd !. Mr. Wickliffe was rich and ambitione,,hot pec,pepi• nlnr frith tho mantis, ~,T4e-youpg POW,- RA hOrt, Jr, like his father; fell Into the support of General 11arrison, ,in, tut after his death, became a Tyler man, was sent upiiitegg atilt lEEE to Turin as Chargeal' Affairs, at which Court she mairried on Itnlinn.lady, oral Was continued 'at the same }milt, as.a Democrat by' Mr. Polk,' and died some years after liis recall by Gen. TayleE z His' father deceased, if we mistake: not,,only a year : or two niei. Young ClUirles;, who was acquitted for killing Henning,. met a violent death bimeelf, some 'years after, in a duel with young Trotter, of Fayette county.— They fought with rifles, and Wickliffe fell on the first fire. The affair ruined Trotter; He beCami n deepfirate unhappy man, and was subiequently involved in a personal difficulty with Mr. Prentice of , the Louisville Journal,, and'came off second beet in a street attack up.' on that ientdetnnn with pistols. ' In 1888, just ton years after the.ocurrence at Lexington, to which re have alluded; a des- Orate and wholesale befehery — thok - phiao at the G tit Bosse, in Louisville, and for which. the. homicides wore so execrated by-the coin-. tnutilty, that their'counsel moved a change of venue to Harrodsburg, where they worn tried . on two counts, murder and manslaugker,' de- fended with great ability by S. S, %Prentiss; of Milteiesippi, of which State the prisoners were citizens, rind acquitted' on the plea of selTde fence. A case of juitifiable homicide was cer tainly made plausible, if not entirely conclu sive, as' the prisoners were called upon by a party,. said to be armed, Tor explanation Or re- dress,at their osvu'hotel, for an assault wliic,h one of them bad made upon a merchant tailor on very. slight' provecation, the same day.-- The, most herrialeature of the affair, and the one ghat excited the greatest- ind•gnation, was the summary use of the Murdrous bowie-knife. No 'parley was held With the assailants. Ono of them * was literally cut to pieces, and anoth er fatally stabbed ; the prisoners owing to the inequality-of weapons. ooining off with. littte injury. The original dispute was about.the fit of a wedding suit for one 'o the pristmers. , The wedding, came off, we believe, before the, trial and acquittal, at Harrodsburg"; . the pris oner being at large, on bail. Another unfortunate affair took place in Louisville, a few'years after this, with theoir- - cumstances of which our memory is not Onr-* Ocularly charged. Itresulted in the death by' shooting of Mr. Leonard Bliss, a young gentle man of literary pursuits from one of the Nor thern States, the- friend and assistant of Mr. Prentice, of the Journal, at the hands of Mr. Godfrey Pope, connected with a rival paper.— The provocation was slight, and :.the' fate of s poor Bliss universally regretted, althougfi Pope on a change of venue to Shelby count, we be lieve, was acquitted on his trial. The last case of this character to:Which WO propblie to refer, was che_unprovolled murder . of a young drug salesman in the Phcenix Ho tel at Lexington, by a member of the Shelby flintily. There was no previous acquaintance or altercation between Shelby and his uneffen ding victim. They met at the didner table; Shelby intoxicated or labort3g under the eV teem of intoxication. The fancied insult which prompted him to use the fire arias, which are almost as commonly worn by the. idle or sport . - ing young bloods of the State es side arms by the nobility in England a century or two ago, was that:tile salesman took the liberty of eye log him across the table, for which be was commanded to desiit, and on making some quiet, or, perhaps, d' nifim pr indilforentre ply,re ivas shot throw e heart. Tho oc currence was Sudden, u filled.' for, and des. tardly in the highest degree, but it was the act of a maddened inebriate, whose wealthy and influential family employed the ablest counsel—Mr. Clay of the number, much to the regret of many of his frientis—to defend him on•this plea, as they did do, successfully. A,correspondent has called our attention. to another murderous ocourronce, or, rather, series of 'deadly 'affrays, , be tweenl two families in 'Garrard county. But thiswd4faciilly feud, coming down from one goaeratioit .to another, iu Which both parties were, in alurge measure, culpable, and the fatal 'events of which are acatcolito be qupted as an illustration. cif this course of oricuintil iuFisprudanoo in the Com monwealth. In the capital offences in Kentucky, punish ea as ouch•.by the death• penalty,:there aro two' or three very remarkable Oases'of eireum stantiannurdtir;- by lying in wait for revenge, ,or shooting with intent to rob', the records of which are refreshed by the Ward trial. The murder of Baker by Deslla, in 1825, we have idready referied to, but without alluding to the attempted suicide of the murderer while lel to a surgical operation on his windpipe, which he cut with a razor instead of Miffing the carotid 'artery.--The act of the murder of Baker was not seen by a single wit ness. Tho last person seen with him was Denim, and the first person to whom his ready mony was traced wati Naha. Be would never confess the crime, however, and it was found exceedingly difficult to fasten so horrid a crime upon the son of the Bovernorof the Common- Wealth, committed for • the Meau motive of en joying his victim's money, about $6O in amount. There was an earlier occurrence, under aim!. liar cirounstanoes,' es' early as 1819-20, in Oki county of Barren, for ,which. the supposed -murderer. John Hamilton, Was oonvioted nod executed. The 'Mending of Hamilton's family was as inconsistent with the crime ne His father was a wealthy and exemplary mem- , her of the Presbyterian Church, and the'atato end oircutnetnnees of his brilthere And sisters rather above the ordinary , plass of country so ciety. They were esteemed proud or haughty. • by oleir neighbors, Mid this wee the, great misfortune to the supposed . murderer en the ~ , • tinyAif his, trial. family hindrefteenahl! share, of wealth..,e,xemplary ,v/itl:t 2 al„-but,not popularl in, their,benring, andteo pyou'd to turtke choir wealth influential., John Ilmoilton was the eldest son. 11e. was a bold specedator,, and made his ammo! adventurpep Novr Oricans, cooductedst that dayohjelly,on Pat-boats; the•master and bandsrpturuipg by steam or overhand through the , Indian coon- I try, On,otto of theatt.irlPee,"All , Miltell fell in with a Dr-.Handerson, of Notches, on .his way to Kentucky, to purchase,pegroes for the plan- '1 tationstbse settling on the lower,l'ilississippi. Hamilton Mae ainitun r of the world, of pie 'slog address and, -captiv,atini,nt'apners. He soon 'Won Banderson!evonfidepoO, and took him,: to ,hiq father's house. which, he made his tempn ary home, He had a large amount of money I . (0-tuetni =II CM witn.iiim, in U.lted States Banknotes. „Alt el , morning the twoeet out together at or before sunrise, Sanderson.to go to a distant part of,!. tho'neighborhood to leek at some negroes. 1.0 , about an hour, by the sun, Hamilton and e stranger were sean'to pass a cabin, by the roadside, and soon after.the witness, (a Milk woman helonging to the oabin,)•heard: what , she suppoSed'te report of•ti gun.: The • horse of Sanderson retareed 'that day; to the house of the senior Hamilton without hie sad dle, and JOhn Hamilton went•to the town of Glaigow, some twelve milie'distant, also the same day, where ho . paid,eff certain debts in United States Bank noterii. The disappearance, of Sanderson some weeks after ted.to•inquiry and search. The eircomstance of the repork , of the gun was' mentioned by'the woman of eabin e -the vioinity---was -searched by—a-large-; party of neighbors, and the' body of a Breen , per, his saddle and riding, trousers' disetivered' in a matured well or, sink In; the woods. ; The , body was mach decayed, and the head mutila•— led billiri'.latalekot. :•The -tiding habit was identified Sandoraon's ,by a metaber•,of flamilton'slamily, and the saddle and. return edhorse... were cOnfessedly -the same that be started with on the 'morning - of his'disappearo. (MOO The circumstances against Hamilton 'were strong, but. by !id means conclusive. The predjudices against Ale (lewdly in the immedi- . ate neighborhood, caused the evidence on the , trial to be pushed to the axtretne He protested .his innocent:le to the Jest. He , could not even acooneffor some of the oirouni , .. stances against. him, bat' he Conk' not okrs.' lisp an. alibi, as against the testimony of the: prineipal • witness, and ho was hanged, after_ his family had spent thousands in his defence —and the murder remains, in the estimation • ofthe few who ,deemed him incapable of the deed, an unexplained mystery, to this day. The last capltill oaso wl , ioh ,we shall avert to, occurred in 1825, antl..was.oo of, eingehte revenge, fora wrong to which the murderer voluntarily made himself a party aeveralyeara after it was comliaitted. His name was Dean: champ. His sympathies were axoited by, the :foittorn condition of a Miss Cook, residing in one' of the Green River ()aunties, whose sedum• tion had 'been attempted; perhap's' accost plish4 ad, by Dr. Solomon Sharp, who nfterviardri married and removed to Frankford, the•capi tal of the State, to practice' his.profession.— Beauchamp solicited the hand'of Miss Cook II marriage, and was accepted. Ile then assu med her championship in right of husband, and tecretely determined to aveliga.,her Wrongs. Di, made the journey to Frankford to this.end, armed with apoignard, proceeded under cover of the night to Sharp's. reeidene. l first making himself familiar with the locality, used the name of ti.well kncirrnttiend to deboY him to the' door in hie night olotheS, gave the fatal stab, and disappeared from the town.--v It was some days before the tree!) .of the es- ssassin was discovered. ,He was then pursu-. ed, arrested, tried and convicted, but wholly' on circumstantial evidence, as he had taken good care to disguise his entrance into and departure from the town of 'Frankfort. After his conviction, and while awaiting his doom in prison; ho prepared with his own hand a full narrative and eonfeSsion of the motive and guilt of the deed, and when the day of xeott. (ion errived, his wife, who was suffered to re main in prison with him, and himself, mutual:- 1y administered poison, which speedily ended her miseries, but not so his own. Ho wat borne to the gallows half dead, a horrid epee. mole of the effects of mental and physical ag ony, and executed in this condition by the sheriff of the county. The publication of Beauchamp's confession caused much..eensation throughout the coun try. There was. a degree , of wild romance and of. inranm chivalry in the motive of the deed; which' with the incidents of its deadly. execution, end of the final 'catiietrrinhe, gave to the TRUTH of the. narrative, a litrangenese that required no color of !rtartou to heighten its interest or effect..:—.N. - Yi Times. • • - zear.. Sonny, do you 'know your letters?' Yes, sir, two of 'em." Possiblo, what era; they 7" Let'ergo and let'or rip." " filbert boy, go to the tub, Und wet your hair : e brain of, such fertility can't be kept too moist. GOOD PnrztOne of the uninficinied path roasters, out in euokerdom, who found among the post office 1148 nalausirtolthe offeat that. "each postmaster may be nllovred two Innis rot. delivering from his olio to a subscriber each newspaper not chargeable wit h:postage," sent in his bill to the department for deliver ing the only Paner tiont to his office, and told them that, as his wife was out of the article, they might send himacouple of coffee miUaF „, Mr Thera is an eacentrio and very worthy man in Rochester who enjoys the, blesaing of a long life and good health, and who has raids preParattous itilullforthe final disposition Of hls remains when death'eball have rentoVed the animating prinolplM,elsewhers. He has pro. cured his cofilin and plOoed it under his bed. thus making his. final bouse a constant mod- Va. an each ' returning nlghythat lie Is one day nearer the retreat which it lotottfford the body•whemlife's fitful dretim `,” -A LAUNDRESS Rho WAS employed in th* family or.oiie ourdietinguidied men, bald to .him .eigh Only "think,' your excellency, how lithe money wotild make me hoppy. • . 4 ? Tr , tliht is all, you ishelt tw he it,"'eudfe , . go to her. ' ~ , , immediately, r? it ' • , ' She lookod.at . it with joy , Tut thaztkiblueett, nod before the old'gentlemau was out of ben. 'ltli'exoloyined, "I Wish I had' mad two' hen- , .fltirAn irlehMan hltSirig lately bbeo put bte . . trlal for some offence, pleaded not.guiltY ; And the jury belngla,.:the prosecuting attorney preeeeded to call Mr. gurkleson as tyiti3 the ntmoet iCtieoenee,'Patridle,turned his '" face to the court, and acid '.Do I underetaiid, `your honor, that Furkilleen to to be a. witness format agiiin The judge said, drylY;l4 iieeme'so. " Well thiO, your houor, ; l pied. guilty, not because I. em guilty, for rmste ht. nooent ae yer kotte'r% ducking babe 45 the,brlet„ but 3i4 . 49 aciiecisito wing: MOjeil:Cil* ion'a • ~; VOL. LIV NO 38