V v. . 1 ' BY JOHN G. GIVEN. MIS OE L L A II 2 O U S Pctlicoats a Ttst of Womanhood. Mrs. Swisshelm editress of the Pitts lWg Saturday Visitor, makes petticoats the test of womanhood, and will hear of WO compromise nor coalition with the oth ,r .sex, except upon the entire abandon ment by the ladies of. the pantaloons.- Mrs. Swisshelm defines her position in an article commenting upon Mrs. Fanny Kem ble's reported appearance in public places attired like a man. The following is an extract from her protest: "But we cannot still believe she dresses really like a man. If we did, we should think very little of her. Most likely, her rambbling, fishing, exercise costume, so much talked about, is some fanciful im mitation of boy's surtouts something like tho short dresses and drawers worn by missis. Mrs. Butler certainly has too much sense too much taste to appear in straight coat and pantaloons. Our long wide skirts are indeed a great impediment in rural exercises. We have often felt this in walking through wet grass, getting over fences, and clambering round rocks. A short dress, and some substitute for pan taloons, would be a great convenience in such excursions, provided the costume was sufficiently marked and distinguished from men's apparel. It would be too hu miliating to be met and mistaken for a man We should a great deal rather be arrested as a sheep thief. We shall use all our in fluence to preserve man's right to his pan taloons inviolate. They ought to be his, and his only, for they are too ugly for any body else to wear. "But the best distinction between the sexes is the beard.. Why do not all men wear the beard, or some part of it? A smoothly shaved or beardless man meets our ideas of manhood about as well as a square shouldered, shingle shaped woman meets our notions of womanhood. There is very little difference between the men tal formation of man and woman, still there is a difference; but the physical structure is another matter. Nature has made the lines of difference very marked and strong and the more perfect the developement of either, the greater the dissimilarity. A Venus with the muscles of a Hercules would be a fright. Art should not inter fere with natuie's arrangements. Let m en look like themselves, and women like wo raan. Let nwji'keep their distinct apparel their strength, and their ugliness in wel come. Nobody wants either unless in deed Mrs. Butler has taken a fancy to their clothes; and if she has, she should be court martialed, and deprived of her woman's commission. Poetry of a Steam Engine. There is to our thinking something aw fully grand in the contemplation of a vast steam engine. Stand amid its ponderous beams and bars, wheels and cylinders, and watch their unceasing play; how regular and how powerful! The machinery of a lady's Geneva watch is not more nicely adjusted the rush of the avalanche is not more awful in its strength. Old Gothic cathedrals are solemn places, preaching solemn things; but to him who thinks, an engine room m-.y preach a more solemn lesson still. It will tell him of mind mind wielding matter at its will mind triumphing over physical difficulties man asserting his great supremacy intellect battling with the elements. And how ex quisitely complete is every detail! how every little bar and screw fit and work to gether. Vast as is the machine, let a'bol1 be but a tenth part of an inch to0 long or too short, and the whole fabric is disorgan ized. It is one complete piece of harmo ny an iron essay upon unity of design and execution. There is a deep poetry in the steam engine more of the poetry of motion than in the bound of an antelope more of the poetry of power than the dash of the cataract. And ought it not to be a lesson to those who laugh at novelties, and put no faith in inventions, to consider that this complex fabric, this triumph of art and-science was once the laughing stock of jeering thousands, and once only the waking fantasy of a boy's mind as he sat, and in seeming idleness, watched a little column of vapor rise from the spout of a tea kettle! Singular Ignorance. A countryman being in Buffalo lately and after being shown the sights by a friend, suddenly asked" But wheie is the Buffalo plat form?" The gentleman accompanying him explained with some difficulty in restraining himself, that the staging put upon that occasion had been takendown after the performance was over! CPThere appears to be a great gath ering about these premises," said a pretty damsel, as she put on her new skirt. 4Yer,' quickly added her cousin, "and 4 great bustle too." 'WE CO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE WAY; The Bolllc Trick More the Queen- ' The following, from the Caledonia Mer cury, throws into tho shade Blitz, Ilerr Alexander, and we do net know but it goes ahead of the old gentleman himself. "On Monday, prince Albert's birth-day, during the festivities at Balmoral, the wi zard of the north, professor Anderson, was present, and was asked if he would perform the fiat they had heard bo much of hi having done successfully, 'The In exhaustible Bottle.' "On receiving the royal command to perform it, he called for a champaigne bot tle, and handed a large number of glasses round, and asked lord Portman what he would drink. His lordship replied, whis key; whiskey was poured out. Air. An son preferred brandy which he got. Sev eral demanded wine, which passed freely; and one of the proprietors of the royal distillery, Mr. Begg, thinking to baffle the professor, asked him if he would give him j a glass of his best Lochnager whiskey. I No sooner said than done; and the Loch nager whiskey became in great demand. A large number of additional glasses were distributed, and some called for Irish whiskey, numbers brandy, the Highland rs patronized Mr. Begg; when Lord John Ilusscl, perhaps like Mr. Begg, wished to : try the wizard's skill, asked for a glass of rum, wnien was immediately supplied, and his lordship pronounced it excellent. The london portion of the domestics and police called for gin, which was freely poured out of this extraordinary bottle; and the wizard was returning to his seat, when his royal highness, anxious to test the bottle presumed, as he was'returning, that it was exhausted asked him if more could be poured out. Glasses were bro't for her majesty and prince Albert, and on being asked what they preferred, requested Begg's best Lochnager, which immediate ly ran forth, and her majesty and the prince, tasting it, acknowledged its purity; and the wizard gave the bottle to the prince, and asked him to look if it was empty it was. Mr. Anderson brought some water, and in the prince's hand, fill ed it, ordered glasses, and asked the prince what wine he preferred. Port was se lected. The prince poured out port, then milk, then champaigne, then broke the bottle, and in it was discovered a beautiful turtle dove. Philadelphia Lawyers Beaten. The following card of a new "beginner in the Law," is so decidedly original, that we publish it free of charge. Mr. Coxson must be well read in the Levitical code more so, it is fair to presume, than in llo man pandects. But read his card: Our Country, oar Laws, our Side. John K. Coxson, attorney at law, tenders his professional services to the citizens of Jefferson county and the public generally. He can be found at his office in Punx satawney, Jefferson Co. Pa. Collections entrusted to him of money Will be attended to promptly in any part of the State, and shall be placed immediately in the hands of good collecting officers. He will council on all matters touching the laws of God or man, taking no fees for the former; for its fruits of peace yield a sufficient reward; its summary is love thy neighbor as thyself, and owe no man anything. By strict obedience to this first code, most likely you will never call on him for council on the second; but if you desire to leave the quiet waters of peace, and to tempt the troubled seas of discord and commotion, he will stand your pilot through hells of strife, and waft you gent ly over yawning elements of hungry ruin, howling to swallow wrecked estates, that when you have once more set your foot on terra Jirma, like Moses and Aaron, you will rejoice over Korah, Dathan and Abiram, or like Miriam over the host of Pharoah, that horses, chariots and every thing pertaining unto them, except what the law allows them, are engulfed into the Ked Sea. J. K. Coxsox. Oct. 1, 1849. Vox Popttli. That maxim is of earth, of fallible man which says, 'The voice of the people is the voice of God. It may be, but with equal probability it may be the voice of the devil. That the voice of ten millions of men calling for the same thing, is a spirit, I believe; but whether that be the spirit of heaven or hell, I can only know by trying the thing called for by the prescript of reason. Even then that knowledge must be infinite, embracing the whole cycle of God s universe. Bet ter said, by the same, 'Public opinion is the average prejudices of the community.' 07" A young lady engaged in writing, observed to a clergyman present that she was a Scribe; To which the man in or ders, with a sagacity and clerical discern ment truly, creditable, replied, 'And fair I see, (Pharisee.) EBENSBURG, THURSDAY, Terrible A (Tair in Boston. Awful Murder cf Dr Parkmaa. - The disappearance of Dr. Parkman, well-known in Boston for his wealth and eccentricities, and which was mentioned about two weeks since,-has resulted in the supposition that he was cruelly, brutally and wantonly murdered,- and his remains or a portion of theni, destroyed. - The good city of Boston has been harrowed by the details of the supposed murder. Up to Friday, of last week, the most frightful rumors were circulated. All sorts of re ports had been flying from tongue to tongue, and the police were dragging ri vers and scouring woods in search of him, when of a sudden it was asserted that he had been murdered by Professor Webster, of the Medical College, and his remains partially burnt. The high standing of the parties their social position, moving in the most fashionable circles of Boston their advanced ages, the victim being 60, and his supposed murderer 55 years of age all tended to increase the excite ment. Suspicion haa rested upon Professor Webster by persons employed at the Col lege, owing to the fact that Dr. Parkman was known to have called there about a note of the Professor's for S125, which he held. Dr. Parkman was not seen to leave the College, and a Mr. Littlefield stated to the other professors that Mr. Webster had been locked up in his own room for a length of time that aroused his suspicions. A secret plan was laid to search the apart ments, which was commenced by break ing through stone and brick walls under the chemical room, occupied by Professor Websler. There, in the well of the water closet, was found part of a human body the intestines having been taken out. The search was continued, and parts of two legs were discovered. The head, hands and feet were gone. In the ashes in the fire place, particles of gold, teeth, &zc, were found, which were identified by the dentist, as those belonging to Dr. Park man; this was' confirmed by the discovery of a jaw bone- A pair of trowsers belong ing to Professor Webster, withbllood up on them, was also found, and in a tea chest, covered with minerals, other mutil ated remains; a saw with which it is thought the head was cut from the body, was also found. Of course, these eviden ces being found in the apartments of Prof. Webster, to which only himself had access, were sufficient tocause his arrest. The officers of the law proceeded to his house at Cambridge, and there found him bidding adieu to o gentleman who had been visiting there. The officers told him they wished him to proceed to the College anil aid in searching for the re mains. He complied readily, but instead of conveying him to the College, the car riage in which he was placed, proceeded direct to the Lcverett street jail. This seemed to surprise him, and he asked the officers the meaning of it. lie was in formed of what had transpired at the Col lege, and the effect upon him is described as appalling. The next day he was con veyed to the college, to witness the putting together of the mutilated remains. Vari ous stories were published of his manner on that occasion, but the truth is, he was perfectly calm, though quite feeble from the effects of his arrest, and having passed the night in jail. In addition to the foregoing, we find in the Boston papers of Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, long accounts of the state of things there. They do not, however, contain any additional particulars, further than that the family of the late Dr. Park man had taken the mutilated remains found in the College, and had them buried with due ceremony -satisfied of their identity. Professor Webster was arraign ed on Monday, and committed by the Court to await the decision of the Grand Jury for the January term. He was at tended by his counsel and friend. Frank lin Dexter, Esq. He is represented to have gained his equanimity, and to con verse quite freely with hi friends. His family, at his residence in Cambridge, consist of a wife and three daughters, the youngest of whom is 10. His eldest daughter, aged 23, is married to Mr. Dab ney, the present Consul at Fayal, and is abroad with her husband. Those at home are merged in the deepest despair, at the position in which the father and husband is placed. Those who best know Pro fessor Webster, do not believe him guilt' of the crime, and suspicion has occasion ally rested upon others, but upon exami nation it proved to be unfounded. Others assert that if the remains were those of Dr. Parkman, they were placed where found for the purpose of entrapping Prof. Webster. He has not, however, attempt ed any explanation, and we confess, from all we have seen, appearances arc strong ly against him. The supposed remains o( Dr. Parkman were buried from the residence, No. 8 WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO DECEMBER 20, 1819. Walnut street, on Thursday morning. A large concourse of persons were present, mostly attracted by curiosity. The funer al proceeded to Trinity Church Cemetery, where the remains were deposited in a vault. From the Boston Herald of Tuesday; One of our reporters visited Cambridge last evsalng, and ascertained that on Sat urday night Marshal Edwards, in conse quence of apprehensions by the Mayor, that an attack might be made upon the the residence of Professor Webster, on Garden street, assembled 25 special po lice men, who were directed to patrol near the house, without exciting suspicions of their object. No attempt, however, was made to molest the innocent occupants of the house, which is not owned by Prof. Webster, but by Jonas Wyeth, Esq. Our reporter also learned some facts in relation to the personal history and family relations of the Professor. He is the son of the late Redford Webster, Esq., for merly an affluent resident of the north part of Boston, where he died some time about the year 1831, leaving about 8 10,000, which, we learn, is conveyed as a life es tate to Professor Webster, and at his death, to his children. Young Webster, while in College, was not considered passionate or fractious, but rather chicken-hearted, as one of his college mates expresses it. He was nervous but not quarrelsome. After he had graduated, he went to Europe, and finished his medical education in England and Scotland. On his return from thence, about the time of his father's death, he stopped at the Azoras, and became ac quainted with Miss Hinckley, now his wife, at the port of Fayal; she was then residing with her father, who held the post of American Consul at that port. He married her there, and returned to Cam bridge, and lectured at the college for a year or two, when he was elected profes sor, in the year 1837. Since then he has resided in Cambridge and I123 lectured upon chemistry, geology, .-nin.-.vr-'logyj j&jtjpaibnd'ge and in U.I chy, and was in -T&ipt of a salary, and from tickets to his lectures at the medical col lege, at the time of his arrest, of from two to three thousand dollars, which from his carelessness about money matters was in sufficient for his wants, and kept him al ways in debt. His family' now consists of a wife and four daughters, ihe youngest sixteen years of age, and the eldest about twenty-three. The oldest is married to Mr. Dabney, the present Consul at Fayal. The other three daughters reside at Cam budge, and with their mother, are in deep affliction on account of the arrest and sus picions of their husband and father. The feeling entertained among the citizens of Cambridge, who best know Dr. Webster, is, that he is innocent of the charge on which he has been arrested, or that if guil ty, some unknown provocation must have induced the fatal attack. Our reporter called last evening at the jail, and ascer tained that the professor had passed a quiet da)r, having partaken of his meals regular ly, and being free from that alternate ex citement and gloom which characterized him for some 24 hours after his arrest. How to tell tiic Hour of Day! Seat yourself at a table. Attach a piece of metal (say a shilling) to a thread. Hav ing placed your elbow on the table, hold the thread between the points of the fore finger; and allow the shilling to hang in the centre of a glass tumbler; the pulse will immediately cause the shilling to vi brate like a pendulem, and the vibrations will increase until the shilling strikes the side of the glass; and suppose the time of the experiment be the hour of seven, or half past seven, the pendulem will sirike the glass seven times and then lose its momentum and return to the centre; ifyou hold the thread a sufficient length of time the effect will be repeated; but not until a sufficient space of time has elapsed to con vince you that the experiment is most com plete. I need not add that the thread must be held with a steady hand; other wise the vibrating motion will be counter acted. At whatever hour of the day or night, the experiment is made, the coinci dence will be the same. tSIn a certain district in the Highlands, one day, some years ago, the bell-man made the following proclamation: 'O yes! O yes! O yes and that's three times you'll a betak' notice, that there will be nae Lord's day here next Sunday, as the laird's wife will hae a muckle washing, and she wants the kirk to dry the clase in.' - Chicago is said to be the largest beef-packing market in the Union. The amount already packed there this year is reported at 00,000 barrels, some 20,000 beef cattle having been killed in the last seven weeks. FOLLOW. Ecmarkatle Reck in Lake Superior. One of the most remarkable rocks of .which we have any knowledge has lately been, discovered in the middle of the Inland Sea, Lake Superior. By a gentleman who has lately returned from Copper Harbor, we learn that a shaft of trap rock has very lately bc-ini discovered rising in the lake from 150 o 200 miles from land and ascending above the water a distance of not above four feet. What renders it more extraordinary, is that it stands en tirely alone; and all around it so far as examinations have been made, no bottom has been reached by any of the lead lines used on the lakes; and the point of the rock itself does not extend an area of more than six or seven feet square; and so far as observation of it has extended, it does not appear to enlarge in size as it de scends. It has alread', he states, become a source of alarm to the mariners who na vigate the lake, who take especial care, in passing, to give it as wide a berth as pos sible. It is too small too remote and danger ous to admit of alight, and therefore its removal will doubtless pertain to govern ment. A single blast from a bore of suffi cient depth would do it; but the surface' of the rock being so near that of the water, and the space so narrow as to forbid any regular lodgment for workmen, they would have to be attended constantljcby a vessel of sufficient size to resist any sudden storm on the lake; and would also have to be kept constantly under wa', as no har bor or even bottom lor an anchor is with in a day's sail. The discoverers relate that the rock ap pears to be a place of general resort for the salmon trout of those lakes, as they found them in almost incalculable num bers; and having during their short stay caught several barrels with no other in- j strument than a rod of iron, on one end ol which they turned a hook. They tried with all the lines on board for soundings immediately round the rock, but.wjthcnt success. Such a vatoluy-n, could it be exposed to vieV, would laugh into ridicule Cleopatra s .Needle, Pom pey's Pillar, the Colossus of Rhodes, or any production of ancient or modern art. Detroit Free Press. The Power of a Vote. One single vote sent Oliver Cromwell to the long i parliament, harles Stewart to the scaf fold, revolutionized England, and made Great Britain free. Four votes in the city of New York, made Thomas Jefferson President of the United States; one vote gave us the tariff of 1842, and gave us Texas: made war upon Mexico, slew thousands of our peo ple, and purchased California with their blood, turned thitl'fer the tide of emipra- , - - 0 tion, and will change the destiny of the world. Definite Answers. Wc had to laugh ! at reading the answers, 4to a correspond ent' in the Bunkumville Flag Staff. He asks about the 'Falls,' and the editor says: 'How many gallons of water goes over the Niagara in an hour we dono, as we have no slate. Howsever, a good many, we do think, and probably more than we think. A friend of ours has made a cal culation how many miles all creeping tilings in God's world would creep in one hour, provided they took it easy. And the total summum bonum, if we remem ber right, was extremely much.' A Royal Argument. Frederick the Great was very fond of disputation; but as he generally terminated the discussion by collaring his antagonist and kicking him, very lew of his guests were disposed to enter the arena against him. One day, when he was even more than usually dis posed for an argument, he asked one of his suite why he did not venture to ex press his opinion on some particular ques tion. 'It is impossible, your majesty,' was the reply, 'to express an opinion be fore a sovereign who lias such strong con victions and who wears such thick boots.' rTThc freshmen at old Dartmouth made themselves quite merry over the fol lowing conundrum: 'Why is the sophomore class, studying trigonometry, like the scribes and phari seesofold? Because they are a wicked generation seeking after a sine, &c.' The sophs retorted by the following; 'Why. is the freshman recitation room like that remarkable tree whose leaves quiver in the slightest breeze? Because it is an ass-pen (aspen.)' n?JA Mr. Hughes announces himself as a candidate for agent of the Stale of Indi ana before the next Legislature, and con cludes by holding out an inducement as follows: "If elected I 'stand the oysters,' if brat 1 slope." VOL. G. ISO. 11. BlilitarY Glory. There is something inexplicable in the reverence paid by men to honors won in battle. The world's history appeals, in deed, lo be preserved rather in the history of batde fields than in any other way. It is very true that thestruggle gf man with hisfellotr martha-sbeen incessant, and the contest for power -offamc' make up the daily current of political events; but that will hardly account for the fact that whilo a?few men worship at old shrines ofleam ing, and do homage to the divinity dwel ling in them, by far the greater portion of the race are better satisfied with viewing battle fields, and relics of hard blows, bat tered swords, and like evidences of man's hatred to man. Few who visit Greece care to search out the favorite resorts of the old philosophers; but all rush to Mara thon or Thermopylae. Even in countries made interesting by modern events, few care to remain for any length of time in the houses of great or good men, or to tread on ground hallowed by the footsteps of departed worthies, while the mass pour steadily to Waterloo, to Culloden, Mars ton Moor and a hundred similar places, renowned. as soil fertilized by the blood of men. If further illustration of the fact that men worship military glory, were needed, it maj' be found in the attention paid to soldiers who have fought bravely, compared with that paid to men who arc only known as giants in intellect; but no proof is required. An illustration is afforded by an anec dote of Kosciusko in his retirement, not long before his "death. He then resided in a cottage in a village of France; and du ring the invasion of France, a Polish regiment passed through the village. Some outrages M'ere committed by the soldiery, and Kosciusko, an old and feeble, man, came out of of his cottage and ad dressed them. -When I was a Polish soldier, saidhe, 'we did not do thus. 4 Who are you, that speak so boldly J' asked an officer very rudely. I am KosciuskOjJ was the quiet v'Ayt The natue run from rank to rank, from corps o corps, until it grew to a shoot of intense devotion, and the inarch abandoned all gathered in a mass around the veteran defender of Poland. .V. J". Journal of Commerce. .2 Pretty Conceit Some one says of the roses how they became red: 'They were all of pure and spadess white when iu Eden, they first spread out their leaves to the morning sunlight of creation. Eve, as for the first time she gazed upon the tintless gem couid not sup press 'her admiration of its beauty, but stooped down and impressed a warm kiss upon its snowy bosom. The rose stoic the scarlet tinge from her velvet lip, and yet it wears it. It would be too bad to mar the beauty ol so sweet an idea; but it is said that white handkerchiefs arc frequently made red now a days by rubbing them over 'rosy cheeks.' Sunday Globe. m'Mr. Jukes, how are you? You look well.' 'Yes, I hold my own pretty well.' 'And somebody else's too, accor ding to my figures,' muttered a grocer, who caught the remark as he passed by. tjf An Irishman and a negro were tight ing a few days since in Philadelphia, and while grasping with each other the Irish man exclaimed: You black vagabond, holler eiiuff! I'll fight till I die." So will I!' sung out the negro. 'I al ways does," rr'How docs the thermometer stand?' asked a father of his son. 'It don't stand at all sir, it hangs,' was the reply. 'Well but I mean how high is it.' Uustabout5 feet from the floor,' 'Pooh! you fool how does the mercury range?' 'Up and down perpendicularly.' nMen generally look with distrust upon each oilier. The wealthy one, like a dog in the possession of a good bone, watches it jealously, aud snarls if a lean half starved cur approaches within smel ling distance. How is it possible to expect that man kind will take advipe when they will not so much at take warning. Fortunes Favorites 'The favorites of Fortune' are like men on horseback. The power tbe speed the activity the curving and prancing, are in the dashing charger, whose beautiful proportions and gay trappings set off the man. All the ri der has to do is to set on his horse with ease, and to be carried about to admiration who, if he happens to catch a fall ten chances to one, lie baeqks Ins neck,- .2 mrricrn Cabinet