1 I 1i " 3 I j IF THE ELE3SING3 OF G DVE31N1IEHT, LIKE THE DEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE DISTRIBUTED ALIKE UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW, THE HICH AND THE POCK i NEW SERIES. EBENSBURG, JULY 13, 1854. VOL. 1. NO. 42. ft 4- 1 Ij 1 T 15 15 Al 8 : TIIE DEMOCRAT & SENTINEL, is ' publish ed every Thursday morning, in Ebensburg, Cambria Co., Pa;, at $1 50 per annum, if paid is advance, if not $2 will be charged. ADVERTISEMENTS will be conspicuously in serted at the following rates, viz : 1 square 3 insertions, $1 00 Every subsequent insertion, 2! 1 square 3 months, 3 00 " " G " 5 00 1 year, 8 00 col'n 1 year, 18 00 1 " " " 30 00 Business Cards with one copy of tho Democrat & Sentinel, per ye;r, 5 00 DEEAKS AND REALITIES. BY WILLIAM P. aiCLCUIXOCK. Oh! for an hour in tho haunts cf childhood, Down by the verge of the shady wild wood ; Oh ! far an sight of the olden places ! Oh ! f r a glance at the dear L imc faces ! Oh ! for a day on the hcath-clael mountain ! Oh! for a draught at iu viad-woed fountain! Oh! for a sail on the sun-bright river. Gliding in music and beauty ever ! Oh ! how my heart would beat free and lightly, Oh! what a hope would shine grand aud brightly, lighting the void of the dark hereafter, Loosing the springs cf my care-bound laughter, Filling and thrilling with joy all over The heart and soul of the grieving rover, Breaking, with power, aud a spell Klysian, Bright on the sense of iny tear-dimsned vision, Striking the chord of a muaic lighter, Painting the sky of a Future brighter, Long-lost joys from their slumber waking, Killing the grief that has left mc aching, Songs of my youth in the distance singing, Dreams of my youth from the dark Past bringing, Honors and wreaths I would win by striving. Oil consuming and WLjdom hiving, Fame, like a star shining bright in distance. The radiant light of my young existence. Sweet are tlx words of my mother's blessing, Fondly and close are her arms caressing ; Filled is my Lxvrt with a bliss past telling, Thickly and fast are my tears down welling ; Tender aud kind is the earnest greeting By the old fireside at our bless lirst meeting. Woe is me, heart cf mine, why art thou dreaming? False arc' the hopes that are o'er thee' gleaming ; Far, far away o'er the heaving ocean Lies the home thou 1. v'st with a deep devotion ; Tirae rolls on aud will roll for ever, liut thy childhood's home shall receive thee never Many a dark and a dismal sorrow, No hope to-daj" and no hope to morrow ; Many the hard and tad privations Shall wound thy pe-ve ar.d shall test, thy patience, Dark is the skein that thy fate is ginning, Wretched and poor thy rewards for the winning ; A sunken eye, and a young cheek faded, A care-worn brow and a heart grief-shaded : T iiese shall lc thine with a gloom e ternal, Ivilling the flowers f thy fancy vernal, Blighting whatever cf life seemed fairest, ' Taking whatever thy heart prized rarest Dole and sorrow, and both undying, Summer friends far away falsely (lying ; "Want at thy door and no sue t near thee Despair at thy hearth, and no friend to cheer thee; Want at thy door and thy children weeping, Vigils of hunger the long nights keeping: Tlx; ills shall wound, these ills shall sting thee, Hours pass away, but no pleasure bring thee Thorny thy way, by no hope attended, Thy feet must wend as they aye wended, Thou canst not stay, r.nd thou must not linger, liut follow thy dark fate's guiding ringer. Till earth resume thee, till life is over, Thino is the lot of the wayside rover, On, on, sad lieart, by thy dark fate driven ; The poor in spirit are heirs of Heaven. Farmer's Girls. Up In the early morning, just at the peep of day, Straining the milk iu the dairy, turning the cows away. Sweeping the floor in the kitchen, making the lieds up stairs, Wasliing tho breakfast dishes, dusting the parlor chairs. Brushing the crumbs from the pantry, hunting tho eggs at the barn, Cleaning tlic turnips for dinner, spinning the stock yarn, Spreading tne whitening linen down on the hushes below, Ransacking every meadow where the red straw berries grow Starching the "fixens" for Sunday, churning the snowy cream, Rinsing the pails and strainer down in the running stream, Feeding the geese and turkeys, making the pump kin pies, Jogging the little ones' cradle, driving away the Hies. Grace in every motion, music in every tone, Beauty of form and features thousands might covet to own, Checks that rival spring roses, teeth the whitest of pearls, One of these country maids is worth a score of your city girls. Helen M. Ladi. Madame Sontag. Madame Sontag, from her arrival in tins country up to the close of her Mexican enga gement, had cleared $100,000, and she had calculated that another season or two, with her new compauy, would have nearly doubted this amount. Her agent in Europe had conclud ed engagements for her return, which, in forty tiighta, would have brought her G0,00O more. It is but a short time since she pur chased a noble chateau and domain in Germa ny, with a portion of the proceeds of her Ame rican tour. 5uMany a young lady who objects to be VJRed under the misletoe haa no objection to be kissed under the rose. A compositor made an error in the above, rendering it to say, "has no objection tobe kissed under the note." GoTniNKrjfG before you speak. "Does smoking offend yon ?" asked'an American land lord of his newly arrived boarder. V "Not at all, BirT' "I'm very glad to hear it, as you will find jour chimney is given to the practice." JEwrllariraiia. H a r r i a g e. Upon no subject is so much good advice given as upon that of matrimony, yet every one knows how seldom such good advice is listened to. It is not in all circumstances that people can listen to reason, and it is very certain that pccple in love seldom do listen to reason. It is also a truth, scarcely to be questioned, that, with the circumstances of falling iu love, reason has almost nothing at all to clo. Taste, perhaps, has something to do with it, and temperament a good deal ; but, discernment is for the mont part at fault upon such occasions, and judgment is not called upon to act This is a very serious matter, and must be admitted to be so when vre come to consider the very important engagements to which mere personal attachments give rise. Doctor Johnson, while stating that is not dis covered that life lias anything-more to be de sired than prudent and virtuous marriage, ob serves that there is nothing with so much se duces reason from vigilanc e as the thought of passing life with an amiable woman : and he warns the gentleman whom he addresses that love and marriage are very different states; arid that those who are to t-ufier often for the sake of one another soon losa that tenderness of look and that benevolence of mind which arose from the participation ofunmingled pleasure and successive amusement. The pk-asaittct pari of a man's life (says Addison) is generally that which passed in courtship, provided his passion be si ac-ere, and the party beloved be kind, with discretion. Love, desire, hope, and all tho pleasing emo tions of the soule rise in the pursuit. The hope, then, is more pleasing thnn the jKHsecsion of that which lias been hoped for, but that which is most curious in our consti tution is, that th'u sort of hrpe is ready to spring tip afresh in spite of known realities which fight against it. When Johnson heard of a man who was going to marry a second time he said it was the triumph of hops over experience. r-'eh'om has a commonplace mat ter been resolved into a happier abstraction. The continental tendency of hojc to tri umph over cxperieuca m such cases is not (uougli con:-ic!ereuby .'hose vehement reformers of the institutions of" society who desire to fa cilitate the process of divorce, and, in short, to enable people to separate when they f nd they clo not live happily together, with as much facility as they could unite, when they believ ed that union would insure their happiness. If any such facility were Emitted, which it oouM not be without setting aside altogether the re ligious character of marriage, it would be found that the hope of forming new ties more agree able than the ould would ever be rising up, in spite of experience, and that inconstancy would be promoted without promoting happi ness. In this ease, as in thousands of others, the philor:phy of bearing the ills wo have, rather thin fiyiug to others, that we know not of, in practically the best for us ; and the greater liberty of divorce would turn out to be 011I3- a greater burthe n. To return to Addison. Seeing thai court ship is so pleasant, he wisely, advices that it should be of long continuance. . This is a point upon which doctors differ. Doctor Ad dison, however, expressly says, that those mar riages generally abound most with love and constancy that arc preceded by a long court ship. The passion should strike roof, and gather strength before marriage be grafted on it. A long course of hopes and expecta tions fixes the ideas in our minds, and habitua tes us to a fondness of the person beloved. Wordsworth supplies a charming illustration cf a love of this kind : "There was a youth, v. hem T hail loved so long, That when I loved h.iro not I cannot say : 'Mid the green mountains many a thoughtless song We two had sung like gladsome birLs in May When we legan to tire of childish play, We seemed still more and more to prize eac h other, We talked of marriage and our marriage day ; And 1 in truth did love him as a brother, For never could I hope to meet with such another." The most serious point of all in wedded union Addison just touches upon, and pursues the point no further; feeling, perhaps, that it was better to suggest it to reflective minds than to dwell upon it in a familiar essay. "There is nothing of so great importance to us," he says, "as the good qualities of one to whom we join ourselves for life ; they do not only make our present state agreeable, but of ten determine our happiness to all eternity." Mistakes of the Telegraph. We have already had occasion to tell some queer stories under this head; but we find one in the Detroit Advertiser that beats the lot. It seems that a few clays since, a gentleman telegraphed to one of the western cities to gain intelligence of his daughter who was ill. In return he received a laconic reply from the physician, which purported hat he was a grandfather. "Heavens!" he exclaimed, throwing down the missive as if it had been a hot cinder. "My daughter a child !" Then striding to his closet, he grabbed his hat and coat, and struck a bee line for the cars, mut tering : "A pretty muss child-r-my daughter in kucIi a nredicament, and unmarried too ! Oh such a disgrace !" In a few hours he was at the sick room of his daughter. The physician wa3 surprised to see him so soon, but politely told him that the "girl was getting along fine ly." "So it is a girl, hey V" grasped the fa ther. "Of course," said the doe-tor, "don't you call your daughter a girl?'? ."Ahhum yes but-4he eh child V" 'Child !" wondered the doctor, "what child ?" "Why sir, dhl you not send that despatch V pettishly exclaimed our friend, as he handed to the doc tor the despatch be had hastily picked up from the floor before he left home The doctor looked at it, and a broad smile was visible upon his features. "I sent you a dispatch, butlleaven knows it never contained such news as this. The one I sent intimated that voux daughter was just through bavins a j chile ! ' It is added that the relieved papa of? ' fered to treat if the doctor would keep still. The triple Murder in Tennessee. lynching' tt cf the Murderer. : . The following particulars of this horrible affair have come to band. A letter in the Athena (Tenn.) Post runs as follows : Daxbuidue, Tenn., June 20. "A tragedy has just been enacted in this vicmity more awful and horrible than has ever before occurred in any peaceful land. Elijah Moore and his wife had lived together some years upon a farm on French Broad River, near the mouth of Chueky. They had no children.' Miss Lotspeech, thj-"f of Mrs. Mcorcfwas living with them.- - rihe was a 3-oung lady much esteemed by her acquain tances as amiable, prudent and modest. Moore and his wife were clever, respectable people. He -owned a negro man named Tom, about 22 years of age, who hid been raised in the family and admitted to many familiari ties and liberties, such as are too often allow ed to slaves by those who own but few. This slave and two small free negro boys hired by Moore, worked on the farm. The slave Tom had been insolent to the family, and especially to Miss Lotspecch, and ought to have been arrested, but Moore was desirous of having his labor in the crop at thi3 particu lar time, and was perhaps somewhat afraid of the negro He therefore suffered the negro still to live in the family. On last Wednesday evening the slave, Tom, sent away the free negro boys to their mo ther's not far distant, and in the night entor el the house where Moore and his wife were in one bed, and Miss Lotspeech in an other bed m an opposite corner of the same room. He entered the room with a lamp and an axe. He struck Moore in the head a blow with the edge of the axe, causing such instant death that he did not, when first discovered, appear to have moved. Several wounds, apparently given with great force with the axe, were found upon and about his head. Mrs. Moore awoke, sprang from the bed and contended with the negro in defence of her husband. The negro infberte 1 several wounds upon 3Irs M. similar to those upon her huJiand and lifting her from the floor, threw her upon the bed, where she diel in a few minutes. Whilst the brief contest was ponding with Mrs. Moore, her sister Miss Lotspeech, start ed to her relief. The negro struck her upon the srm and broke it. lie then threw her upon the bed and violated her with, many acts of barbarity and inhumanity not to be repeat ed. Her screams alarmed the negro so that he killc-d her with a blow upon the back and then made his escape. The next dav the whole neighborhood ns- J 11 .1 1 "it 1 .il r-i-uiu.eu, amj. uu vnJ were mere v iuat me sight of the murdered dead was the most aw ful they had ever seen. Th-3 whole neighborhood turned out upon a diligent f careh for the murderer, and cn Fun day he was arretted, not, however until he had received a severe flesh wound from a ride hall. He made a full, though not voluntary confes sion, which is confirmed by other evidence. On Monday, after general public notice throughout the country round, in the presence of au immense Assembly, the negro was chained to a stake aud burned to death and to ashes. iriLL ANOTiIF.Il account. Daxbriik. e, June 19. KJi'ors (rittun: OnWednc-sday night last, Mr. Elijah Moore, and his wife, and his wife's sister Miss Jane Lotspeech, were all murdered by a negro man named Tom. . The excitement was intense, and the whole coun try rose up in arms, formed themselves into companies to hunt for him. and on yes terday he was overtaken crossing C'hucky ri ver, about twenty miles from this place, and was immediately fired upon, one shot taking effect in his right arm. lie immediately turn ed and gave himself uj to the pursuing party, who took him to the house of Mr L. D. Franklin, where, by screwing his fingers and then his hands in a vice until all the bones were mashed (and other treatment which can not be mentioned in print,) he acknowledged that he had committed the murders. He says that he had conceived a strong and irresistibe passion for Miss Lotspeech, and made several proposals, which were alway re jected with indignation, that he had told her if she eviir informed on him. that ho would kill her, aud thus prevented her from telling his master, but on last Monday he made another attempt, when she immediately told her brother-in-law, Mr. Moore, who talked to him about it and threatened to whip him ; he then determined to enter the house, kill Mr. Moore and carry MissL. away, while another oS- was to take Mrs. Moore ; but in killing Moore, Mrs. Moore waked up and caught the axe, which he wrested from her and struck her a violent blow on the head, mashing her skull and thus rendering her incapable of further resistance, but not causing immediate death. In the meantime, Miss L. awoke, and struggled to prevent his killing her; he coolly informed her of his purpose ; she begged him to kill her : he struck her with the axe, and broke one of her arms at the first blow ; at the second he stunned her so as to make her in sensible ; he then accomplished his hellish purpose. Mrs. Moore, in the meantime, mov ed in her bed, and he went to her, and split her skull open with .the axe ; went back to Miss L's bed and a second time violated her person, and then split her head open with the axe. He then opened the door, - and quietly put ting on his shoes, got into a canoe, turned it loose, laid down in the bottom of it, and went to sleep as though unusual had occurred, and did not awake until lie naa noatea several mi les down the river. The whole annual of crime do not 6how such a hellish, fiendiah crime, accompanied with so much coolness. But he has meet his doom. He was to-day tied to a tree, in sight of his masters' house, a large pile of rich pine built around him, and then set on fire and burnt to ashes, in the presence of 12 1500 persons, who did not leave the spot until ho was completely reuueca 10 apns. Horrible Railroad Accident. An accident occurred on the 4th July by the collision of an excursion and the regular train, seven miles from Baltimore, on the road between Little York aud Baltimore. Twenty-eight persons were killed, and many others were badly wounded, some of whom will die. The names of the killed arc as follows : Hen ry Reynold.", Benjamin Merriman, Mrs. Ro binson, Henry Clay JefTerles, son of Madison JLTories, who also had his log broken, William ;f tr..":- Martin Boyd, Michael Cn lack. Tho mas 1'ersey, David : Murray. Henry Rose, Frederick Comb, George Berill, Patrick F. Amoy, Michael M'Crow, Robert Preston, Ja mei Rhoy, William G. Bracken, John Lari mei, JR. B. Eriekson, Louis Cochrane, Mi ehatd Finch, Geo. D. Field Among the wounded are John.Sc'ott, conductor, both legs broked, and twenty -seven others have nearly all their legs broken. The two traius came to gether turning a curve. .Some of the victims were held fast by the wreck for upwards of an hiur before they could be relieved. Manv died'of the heat from the locomotives and other injutics ; before they could be extricated, se veral were almost roasted alive Mrs. Robin son Ira literally torn into fragments. Tie coroner's jury rendered a verdict, char ging the cause of the accident to carelessness on tic past of Mr. Scott, and to gros.3 negli gence on the part of the Company in failing to gijre their rules in more explicit language. r . . . ' Brilliant Meteor. Tie Charleston Mercury mentions the appear ance m that city ou Thursday last of a brilliant meteor. Its flight was unbroken, brilliant Wyond example, lighting up the whole western heavens in its course, and bursting into numerous frag ments of bright wliite light very much in the mau ikt if a rocket of great sie. During its, passage, the light was so strong that a printed page might be read by it. I Polite Invitations. What one of our fraternity has not lt-en I .on and dozened out of an "editorial notice," by indi viduals who pay in polite speeches. We com mend to all thoughtless j;eop!e, who forgrt to leave a '"quid," when they take the jUo," the following "'lirst rate notice" from the Hartford CuurMit : "Newspaper editors get a great many polite in vitations. Mr. B., from the great Ktale of Mew Yorkj comes in, takes oil" his hat, and is very glad to bee the editor indeed, he is happy iu making his acquaintance. He has a hotel, a phiugh, a re volving churn, or a freezeless pump patent and desirvs to sell. Hopes the editor will go right over, look at it, describe it, puff it f.r nothing. La this way frequently gets an advertisement iu the cilitotial twktmn.-,- -worth JftO "to trine; at least, and than he is happy if he never sees the ctutjr again. Another lias a i.unous iUii, witii very particular points of excellence, and he has a j ar. of block at. home fur sale. The ctlit. r will go est a mile, look at the bull, and ad vertise the gentleman's stock, editorially, for nothing. Another has a lung baromete r, set iu pearl ; he desires the editor to blow npou it to try liis wind and then to loose no time in sounding forth tie merits rf the lung barometer. And so on to tit- end of the chapter, rii-rioiisly, do these ven dirs of patents, stoc k, and wares ever chx-am that tliir business, like the dry goods or grocery mere-rant, is a legitimate subject fur advertising that the editor's time is valuable that it Costs him large sums of money to set his type and print liis piper and two or three dollars will buy a rpace in his advertising columns that it will be seen by fourty thousand people ? And what would they think if the editor should run after them, saying : "I have a family please to send me a fat steer a valuable plan : a new churn a patent pump iu thort the most valu able thing that j'ou deal in." You would say : "by these things we get our living they cost us money." So with the editor by his time his types- the space in Us paper aud the sales of his wares, he gets a bare living." A Slight Kistake. Ye don't believe the following anecdote has leen printed, and it is too good too be lost : One da-, no matter when, an honest Hibernian strolled into one of our churches, no mat ter where, on communion Sunday, and as the invitation usu ally given "for all iu regular standing," etc., he licing somewhat verdant iu matti-rs of this kind, thought he would stay, too. Accordingly, he re mained in his obscure pe-v, and waited to see how matters would move. Soon a venerable man aj proached liim, ami oflered the bread and cup. lie bxik a generous sup of tho latter and some of the former, and the good man passed along. Going back to the desk a request was made, if any had been omitted in the distribution, they won hi ri-. What was the deacon's astonishment to see the occupant of the stranger pew rise, and with a je culiar beck of tho linger, motion him that way. Observing the sign, he walked towards the lecko ner, who rose as lie approaoed. and shutting his mouth with liis hand, he leaned over the aisle said m a subdued tone "Have you any chaze V The horror-stricken functionary tottered back, without answering, and the tnvuflT was left to his owu reflections upon the deficiency of the en tertainment. 05-A soft answer not only turinnl away wrath, but a playful reply averts the shaft of ridicule, and good humor effectually disappoints the attacks of malignant wit. The witty and profligate Lord R'cheatcr met the celebrated Barrow at court one day, and ac costed him with the determination to make the pious man ridiculous. "Doctor," said his Lordship, bo wing low, with much solemnity, "I am your to the shoe tie." "My Lord," replied Barrow, re turning bow for bow, "I am yours to the ground." "Doctor, I am yours to tlx? centre." My Lord, I am yours to the Antipodes." . "Doctor, I am yours to the lowest pit of hell." "there my Lord. 1 leave you, savl Harrow. The court smiled and the wit was disconcerted. t3-We don't understand why a magistrate al wavs adilrcsses a female as "My good woman. , We don't understand whv the baker always laughs with the housemaid when he leaves the bread. Wa dem't undcrstanil why, when a vocalist is encored in a song, he-'s sure to sing sometmnj else. . Wc don't understand why a woman leks al wavs pretty in a gig. We don't understand "how to live like a gent leman on a hundred a year. . We don't understand why we never won any thine in a Tafflc. We don't understand what shabby gleves have to do with going to church,. . . - A Funny Scene in Broadway. On Saturday afternoon a a gentle man of portly form, who holds a minor judical o".ce although he passed his minority full of forty years ago,) was proceeding up Broadway with a large box of Cre-crackers under his le ft arm and a package of torpedoes in his right hand, and his he-art full of paternal affection for his boysvwho were to be made happy on the rourVi," he meet a friend and const it utioaal earnestness -began to expound. Presently in his ardor be brought his right ban 1 (which f.-r the moment forgot its gunnii-g.) full of tcrpe does forcibly upon the box under his left arm, when crack ! snap! fu ! bang! went the torpe does Ladles sen-amend, men sprang, horses jumpeJ, Loys rallied, tud pc-liec-mcn gathe red, making ou: amiable and portly friend the centre of attraction. Some of the explosives had fallen upon the walk, and as the crowd gathered they went offunder their feet, there by confounding the; eonfu.-ion. Ultimately a throng gathered nearly nearly as large as the late Policemen's meeting, from which our ju dicial, but injudicious friend retired, with all his blushing honors thick upon him. lie is now prepared to take the aHlrmative (and if necessary back it with a bet) of the question whether Torpedoes willcxploe. Cad Fate cf an Inveutcr. M. Leroy, an inventor of Paris, hr con sidered himself on the joint of fin:d success, has fallen a victim to his own machine, a steam vehicle running upon the ordinary po-roads of France. 31. Ivroy was traveling in it to wards the Fnglish Channel, where he wa? to ship it to London for exhibition. While des-cc-nding a hill, the engine struck an obstacle, tipped over, and poured the contents of the beiler on M. Lercy, who was too badly scald ed to hope for recovery. He 'had sp-nt ten years aud all his money iu pe-rfe-cting his in vention, aud hardly deserved to scurvy a re taliation. The engine was of eight horse power aud was patented in France. llarriage of a whole Family. March 20th. at the residence of Capt. W. E. Molthrop, Wnpato, Washington county, Oregon Territorv, bv the Rev. Dr. McCarty, Minister of Trinity Chrrch, Rortland. R. P. Meade of New York, and Lucy M. Molthrop, Benjamin Starke c f Portland and Klizabeth Molthrop, and John C. Kissua, of San Fran cisco, and Lydia E. Molthrop, lately of JN'ew Haven, who with his family left that place on ly last fall.. to take up his residence, iu that far off country. Ytat it Leads to. The present course of the opponents of the Democracy tends directly, inevitably and rapidly to the ultra abolitionism of Garrison and Phillips to the open repudiation of the constitution ; and that must be the ground and basis of the --new party" which is to be formed by all the elements and factions opposed to the Democratic party. The leaders in this move ment arc openly tailing ground openly repu diating the obligations of the constitution. It will be seem that Senator Sumner, after taking a solemn oath to support the constitution, has declared in the Senate that he does '-not re cognize any obligation imposed by that instru ment to return a fugitive slave," although that is as expressly enjoined as any other. And this is the positin of other leaders in this new abolition crusade, in which the whole whig party has joined. It is the very doctrine and eourap of those whe eleimunee the constitution ns a "covenant with eleath and an agreement with hell," and who declare that the path to the attainment of their objects "lies ovt-r tho ruins of the American church and theAr.ierican Union " To this ground the course of the whig and abolition factions tenils and israpid ly approaching; ami all who join them will ultimately find themselves upon the platform ! of Garrison ami Phillips. Democrats who are urrre.-d to unite in this abolition movement should think of this. If they do not intend to become avowed disunioubts, they will adhere to the Democratic party. fr-A clergyman catechising the scholars iu a Wisconsin school, askel a little l-y how he thought Jonah felt while in the whale's tally?" "Pretty well clown iu the mouth, sir," was the prompt reply. 'Jr?-Mrs. Mr' Shaw, wife of Sidney Phaw, of Columbiaville, N. Y., committed suicide ast week by taking arsenic. She was sixteen years of age, and leaves a baby seven months old. She is said to have been a woman 01 rare personal beauty, aud superior intelligence. The new Catholic Church at Dorches ter, near Boston, was blown up with gun powder during yesterday, and nearly deStroy ed. There is considerable excitement, and some accuse the "Know-Nothings," others ay the Catholics had deposited powder and arms there for the protection of the church, and that the explosion was accidental. jf-jr'! have a good ear, a wonderful car, said a musician in the course of conversation. So has a jackass," replied a bystander. ECSuThe State debt of Mississippi, amounts to g 12,000,00. fty-At a hotel: a short time since, a girl inquir ed of a gentleman at a tabic if his cup was out. "No," said he, "but my eoiTee is. ' The poor girl was couside-rablv confused, but determined to pay him in his own coin. W lule at dinner the stage- drove up, ami seve-ral coming ire. the gentleman asked ; "Des the stage dine here 7" "No sir," exclaimed the girl, in a sarcastic tone, "but the passengers do." G3-"Know thyself," is the Greek maim. Rome people world have a very small subjct to work upon, if this docimient was fully carried out. AliRlVAL 6F THE AKXILICA. f Frthir Succcst cf the Tcrk$. Contpirary to assattinate XTapdcon. New Tons, July 6. The steamer Arnuica arrived at Halifax, with dtCb to the 24tu The Turks on the 10th sailed out cf Silistria and attaeked the Kuiiinns in their trenches. A sever battle c-rsucd, ending iu the total discomfiture of the Ilus. intiD, v. he) were ptirsuwl by the Turks and tie 1 across tho Danube. They then destroyed Ui Rest;.:!! si--r? wvrV.s. It i. ccr.ridered that tLLs victory will cbang the face C'f the campaign. con-piracy to ns-HHb';r.Me Nnpolexn ha been dise-ove n .1 in the South cf Trance. One hundred and f fty jirrc-ts have tc n made-. Complicated ucgotiaticiiis coi.timie. The papers announce that en tho Kth ult., 0. Priiiee J'a-kie-wiUch received orJeia fre'tn St. To-tcr.-burg to retire Vyor;d lYuth. The Paris Moritenr announces that cn tho lEtb of June, the Turks made a tre meDcloUs sortie from Siluliia and arraeked the Kussians with great fu ry, (un. Sri eiders Tcceived a woumb rcndeiring air.putati.-': ( f the left leg neresrnry. Prince Oort- '.-hake ?ff re; :v;-d a r'anj-ereum woun.l. The Itu-sians had tprui.g three mines bcfro Si listna with -ul ehn.upe ttnd v er? prepared to mount the esj-cted bie.-ai b, vhen the y were attacked oa three sl-h-s by ih" Turks with fe-aiful slaughter. The Uuf-ir.tis l'e.l. The Tevki.-h brigade frm Shnm'a ne:ccce-:!ixi iu entc lipg i-ih.-tria on the 14th. Toe Kussi.m wre e-in;-.l. .ye-;l on the 14th and 10th i.i rem ivk;? tLeir dr-ad. Thie Russian Ge nerals ('' kii'e.'.l. Tho gwrisoa of Rustscbuk went over to the Is land of Mkan and Jc-ti yc J til the Russian woikt there. lien. Crotenhichn'o dividoa I fdd to have d feated two Turkish brigade, with C,000 cavalry and 40 guns. The Turks have chiven the Hussites outefTur tukai, v.kkh tl.y occupied with a rtrorg Ear-' rison. Gen. Ludcrs is among the wounded tt Sili tria. It is said much disunion exists cmrng the Rus sian generals at head cutters, pulnbly induced by ill eucress. Austria's umrmens that Ru-'sia thould evacuate the l'rincipalics, it is !aiJ, has caused the utmost irritation at St. I'eltroburg, and au aunt-r is un der dicui-n. rririeera.;kiewitsch, who was on the roadtoJas sey, is said to liavo been ordered to return to tsk SiliMria at auy cost. Advices frim Turin ti the 10tht state, that. Judge Gably was charged with a preliminary to ' inquire into the- guilt c,f parties chargt-d with th assassination of the Duke of Tai-ma, who wm mor tally wounded with a poign&rd in the streets of Parma, on the loth of June. Madrid advices to the loth ststo that Generals Orlando anel Messina were arrested on a charge of hat boring Gen. 0:Doniicll. Messina cleared and Orlando was tent to Galizaa. Despatches fivm Vienna state that a convention was ce included at Ceiiistanttn plo between Austria anel the l'orte, relative to the Danulian principa lities, the conditions being that, if Russia volunt arily retires, the Austrian troops will enter the principalities, ai.d form a defence between Russia and Turkey; if Rust-iu refuses to rctiie, Austria will tnke such steps as may appear iieccstary to insure her ele ing so. The Russians have been surprise! and bcatm by the Circassians unde r bchauiyl at Rariel Tat. The death cf Muska Raslia at Silistria, is exm firmed. A t?legnphic despatch btutcs that at a confer ence at Tescbcin. it was decided, that Prussia would not formally declare war cn Russia, but would place a portion cf the Prussian army under the order of the Rmperor of Russia. Gen. Iumeneierlrg has succeeded 1o the chief command of the Russian forces in the Danube, ia consequence of the wouueht received by Gen. Lu elers, who had his jaw carried awty by a cannon ball. A telegraphic despatch says theErplish fleot of upwr.rels cf forty vessels & signalled off Cron stadt. At Silistria, G.-Ttscbakc'ffas severely wound-e-d. Gen. S.;hi!ders had his leg shot off, and two cither generals were killed. The rnmage aniung the Russians was dreadful. They re tired, fighting, across the Danube. Pur suing the ir advantage, the Turks crossed an arm e.f the river, t-Azed the Isle cf flope, and blew up the Russian r-ie-ge-woiks thereon. The Turks theu erected te-mN-.rary batteries on tho Iiulgurian Iwiik of the river, Ve fire the north face of the fortress. The Russian butaoioiis, east and west, immediate ly retmeteel in gotd order across the river, destroy ing their bridges. The Russians, at the latest accounts, were in the vicinity ef Ka'aiatcb, swaitingrtiufoi cements and oxlt-rs. The victory was gainexl entirely by tb Turks. The whole plan of operations in Bulgaria must now be allere-il It i-; sn. 'Tt'ivml that l'tu-kiowituch. will order the whole Russ'.r4 force to fail back 00 J;ts?y. Lac this the Russians liave probably re linepiishcd all their positions on the lt-ft bank of the Danube, excepting the forts of Uorsovia, Mutschin, and L'scakatcha. The axprehcn&ious of ti.3 advance of tlx Balkan are at fin end. The Ru.ian accounts from Bucharest admit that the operations against Siberia are suspend ed, but spy the si' ge has not V"cn finally raised. The Russians have tvaev.stod Mopieshi and SSia uila. Five thousand Turks occupied Turtukai. but the r-.pieirt is deubted. The Tu.ki: h parrisou at Rustschuk crosssd fhiirgcvo, r.nd kiiiexl fcOO Russians; they have ta ken 9 puns. Advices frm M.issonghi, Greece, state that th in-urn-ctie):! wa tot illy extinct at Lpirus, but Tuikish troops have tacn sent to Thessaly, whera the insurgents re fused to FV.lmit. The- emperor e.f Auf-tri is resolved, if an eva sive answer corr.e-s fre.im Russia, Austria will fer waid a tiual ultimatum, ck-mauding a categorical reply within fight clays. It stated that Napoleon lias irthnated to tba Austrian government, that the French will inter fere to sut jiress revolutionary movements inllun gary and Italy, while the Austrian tnx,js are en gaged acair.st Russia. A Russian loan of 1C.00O.0CO c frubh-s, at I per cent, was ne-gotiating at Hamburg at 37. tThe Fourth July have been a univer sally hot dav. At Philadelphia, the thermo. mettr reae-hed iu3; at Baltimore 90 ; at Cin cinnati lS, and at Washington 033 in thet I"A Husband having entered tho room ord Tvns.tnkinT th ncron. etubracod th wife 'of his bosom from behind. "I beg par don, my dear, but I thought it was Aune. r