VOLUME XVII. BALTIMORE LOCK HOSPITAL. WHERE may be obtained the most speedy re. medy for SECRI;IT DISEASES.—GIeets, Strictures, Seminal Weakness, Pain in the Loins, Affections of the Kidneys, and all those Peculiar Affections arrising from a SECRET HABIT, particularly the youth of both sexes, which if not cured, produces Constitutional Debility, rendering JGa•riage impos sible, and in the end destroys both Mind and Body% YOUNG MEN Especially, who have become the victims of Solitnr•,y Vire, that dreadful and destructive habit which annually sweeps to an un timely grave thousands otyoung men of the most exalted talents and brilliant intelect, who might otherwise have entranced limning Senates with the thunders of eloquence, or waked to eestacy the living lyre, may call with full confidence. Married persons, or those contemplating marri age, being aware of physical weakness, should imraediatedly consult Dr. J., and be restored to perfect health. DR. JOHNSTON, Office No. 7 SOUTH FREDERICK STREET, SEVEN DOORS FROM BALTIMORE STEET,Eatst side UP THE STEPS. Ire BE PARTICULAR in ob serving the NAME and NUMBER. or you will mistake the place. A CURE WARRANTED, on NO MARCH: MADE, IN FROM ONE TWO DAYS. . . Take NOtice—Dr. Johnston's Office is in his dwelling, UP THE STEPS. His very extensive practice is a sufficient guarantee that he is the on ly proper Physician to apply to. DR. JOHNSTON, Member of the Royal Col lege of Surgeons. London, graduate from ono of the most eminent Colleges of the United States, and the greater part of whose life has been spent in the Hospitals of London, Paris, Philadelphia, and elsewhere, has effected some of the most as tonisßing cures that were ever known, many troubled with ringing in the cars and head when asleep, great nervousness, being alarmed at sud den sounds, and bashfulness, with frequent blush ing, attended sometimes with derangement of mind, were cured immediately. A CERTAIN DISEASE.—It is a melancholy fach that thousands fall Victims to this horrid dis ease owing to the Unskillfulness of ignorant pre tenders, who by the use of that deadly poison Mercury, ruin the Constitution, causing the most serious syMptoms of this dreadful disease to mike their appearance, such as affections of the head, throat, nose, skin, etc., progressing with fright ful rapidity till death puts a period to their dread ful suffering, by sending them to that hoarse science no traveler relates. TAKE PARTICULAR NOTICE.—Young men who have injured themselves by a certain practice indulged in when alunc—a habit frequent ly learned from evil companions, or ut school—the effects of which are nightly felt, oven when asleep, and if . not cured renders marriage impossible, and destroys both mind and hotly. IVhat a pity that a young man, the hope of his country, and the darling of his parents should be snatched from all prospects and enjoyments of life by the consequences of deviating from the path of nature and indulging in a certain secret habit.— Such persons before contemplating. MARRIAGE, should reflect that it sound mind and body are the most necessary requisitsts to promote connubial happiness. Indeed, without these, the journey through lifb becomes a weary pilgrimage. the prospect hourly darkens to the view; the mind heroines shadowed with dispair, and filled 'with the melancholy reflection, that the happi-ness of another becomes blighted with our own. CONSTITUTIONAL DEBILITY.—Dr. J. adi resses young men, and all who have injured themselves by private and improper indulgence. IMPUISSAN4—These are soon: of the sad and melancholy effects produced by early habits of youth, viz: Weakness of. the Bach and Limbs, Pains in the head. Dimness of Sight, Loss of Muscular Power, Palpitation of the Heart Dys pepsia, Nervous IrritabilitY,Delangenients of the I:anctions, General Debility Symptoms of Consumption, Ac. Atentally—The fearful effects on the mind are much to lie sheathed; Loss of Mennary, Confusion of ideas, Depression of Spirit, Evil Forbodings, Aversion to Society, Self Distrust, Love of Soli tude. ese. are sonic of the evils produced. Thonsands of persons orall ages, can now judge what is the cause of their declining !with. Los ing their vigor, becoming weak, pale and emacia ted, I ive a singular appearance about the eyes, cough and symptoms of consumption. Mt rried yersons;or those contemplating marri age, being aware of physical %realm., should immediately consult Dr. J. and be restored to perfect health. OFFICE.,NO. 7, SOUTH FREDERICK STREET, Baltimore, Md. AL S O ROICAL OPPERATIONS PER FORMED.—N. B. Let no liaise delicacy pre vent you, but apply immediately either personally or by letter. Skit Diseases Speedily Cured. TO STRANGERS.—The MOW thousands cur ed at this Institution within the last ten years, and the numerous important Surgical Operations performed by Dr. .1., witness by the Reporters of the papers, and many other persons, notices of which have appeared again mid again before the public, is a sufficient guarantee that the afflicted will hind a skillful and honorable physician. As there are so many iynorant and 'worthless quacks advertisiny themselves as Phisicians, ruining the health of the afflicted Dr. Johnston would say to those unacquaintM with his reputation that his ereaentials or Diplomas always hang in his office. WEAKNESS OF THE ORGANS immedi ately cut ed, and full vigor restored. LL LETTERS POST PAID—REME mrs SENT BY MAIL. Jan. 8. 1852.1 y. KING & MOORHEAD, WHOLESALE GROCERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANT'S, AND DEALEIIS IN BACON, PRODUCE, AND PITTSBURGH • MANUFACTURES; • No. 23 wool, ST. Pmrsnunou. l'nrticular attontimt paid to the sale of Blooms Dad Pig Metal, and Caen advaircos made. March 4, '52.-6m. 11. W. SMITO, DENTIST, HrIXT.ING DON, P.n. (Office opposite Couts' Hotel, Dlurket st.) A LLEtiIS REVOLVERS, and various othbr kinds of Pistols, at the lowest prices, at l~ ~~ unthx g bott GOOD NIGHT--A SONG. Good night, good night, my dark-eyed love, The stars are paling in the west; Yet ere away from thee I rove, Oh clasp nit to thy throbbing breast, And let me know the holy bliss That trembles in a parting kiss. Good night, good night, the day beams rise, 'Tis time, and yet I cannot go; But gazing in thine azure eyes, Their mystic spell would only know; But fare thee well, the morn is near, I may not linger, loved one, here. Yet ere 1 go, oh say once more That thou wilt love me fondly still, And memory will repeat it o'er With wild and pure delights, until We meet again in this dim light, And softly breathe a sweet good night. THE FIELD OF BUENA VISTA A correspondent of the Richmond En quirer thus describes the field of Buena Vista, long after the sounds of the battle had died away; when the roar of cannon, the groans of the perishing, the shouts of the triumphant had all ceased, and the vulture and the jackal had retired from their horrible repast. Such a picture gives us quite as vivid an idea of the terrors of such a conflict as would the actual scene : I first rode near the battle field of Buena Vista with some half dozen officers, one of whom was Lieut. Benham, Topographical Engineer, who shared the perils of the fight. He first led us by the long ditch, where repose the remains of the Americans who fell in the battle. A hundred yards fur ther we came to the narrow pass between the base of a high hill and the deep canons or gulleys which the Mexicans call Augos turas, (the narrows) where was stationed the battery of Col. Washington, with a small ditch on the right, in which lay two companies of marksmen; and on the high hill to the left, behind some loose rocks, hastily piled up, were posted some Illinois troops. A deep ditch was dug across the narrows, which are not more than thirty feet wide, in front of the battery. Next we passed up the valley, eleven hundred yards distant, to the spot where the discharges of Washington's battery stopped the onset of the host of Mexican cavalry that attempted a charge on his po sition. A few hundred yards further, be hind the hills, is where the Mexican legions concentrated before the commencement of the action. From the last named point we ascended to the plateaus, where the main action took place, which, at a glance, ap pears to be a vast plain, but which, in re ality, is broken by many ravines, stretching down from the mountains. Here and there on the field we passed au arm, a leg, or a skull of some Mexican, or a pile of their dead, who having fallen in battle, were has tily and slightly buried, and afterwards un covered s and mangled and scattered by beasts of prey. Passing further on, we looked upon the spot, beside a little bush, where Lincoln was laid to bleed to death; and down in a ravine we arrived at the place where fell the amiable Clay, fighting to the last. There, too, fell Harding; and near by lies the Mexican (and his horse) whom Harding slew in his last moments. Here is the spot where Bragg made his memorable stand, and here, also, lie his dead horses; and out there in front is a huge pile of dead Mexicans, whom his grape-shot cut down, and whose shrieks and groans arose above the noise of the conflict. Buttons and caps, and shoes, and fragments of various other clothing, and grape-shot, and bullets, and cartridges, and flints, and fragments of bombs, we met at every step. Over the whole field, eight miles in diame ter, numerous evidences existed that there had been a fearful struggle. At the head of a ravine we reached the spot to which Benham. was sent by Gen. Taylor to recon noitre the enemy, after one of their repul ses. Benham observed a crowd of Mexi can lancers about half a mile distant, ap parently in much confusion--some seeming anxious to come and fight again, and some anxious to go the other way. In a few seconds, however, ti cannon ball struck the ground on his right, and within ten feet of Benham—half a minute longer, and anoth er ball struck about the same distance on his left, Thinking the rascals might split HUNTINGDON, PA., THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1852. he speedily vamosed down the ravine, to make his report to Gen. Taylor. Then came the "tug of war"—and long and fearfully the battle raged. By scores the Mexican chivalry sunk down beneath the sweeping showers of grape and rifle bul lets. Well did they fight, for Mexico's beloved and greatest chief was a spectator of their struggle. And many a brave. American, too, was destined to heave his last sigh afar from the home of his child hood. The battle of Buena Vista produ ced a gap in many a happy circle, both in Mexico and America; vacant places were made which never can be filled again on earth. No prisoners were taken in battle; and the Mexicans, beaten, cowed, and star ving, retreated at night in wild confusion, leaving their dead and wounded to the ten der mercies of their victorious enemies. The Catacombs at Palermo. A correspondent furnishes the following description of the Catacombs of the Capu chin Convent, at Palermo, Sicily: Chief among the wonders of Palermo are the Catacombs of the Capuchin Convent, near the I'orta d' Ossunia. It is said to be a place of antiquity; many of the bodies have been preserved in it for centuries, and still retain much of the original fresh ness. I had heard of these catacombs in Paris, and my visit to Palermo was induced chiefly by the extraordinary account given of them. Entering the ancient and ruinous court of the Convent, distant about a mile from the city, we were conducted by a ghostly looking monk through some dark passages to the subterranean appartments of the dead. It was not my first visit to a place of this kind, but I must confess the sight was rather startling. It was like a revel of the dead—a horrible, grinning, ghastly exhibition of skeleton forms, sight less eyes and shining teeth, jaws distended Lnd bony hands outstretched; heads with- Ott bodies, and bodies without heads—the young, the old, the brave, the once beau tiful and gay, all mingled in the ghastly throng. "We walked through long subterranean passages, lined with the dead on both sides; with a stealthy and measured tread we step ped, for they seemed to stare at the intru sion, and their skeleton fingers vibrated as if yearning to grasp the living in their em brace. Long rows of upright niches are cut into the walls on each side; in every niche a human form stands erect as in life, habited in a robe of black, the face, hands and feet naked, withered, and of ashy hue; and grizzled beard still banging in tuffs from the jaws, and in the recent cases the hair still clinging to the skull, but matted and dry. To each corps is attached a label upon which is written the name and date of the deceased, and a cross of the image of the Saviour. Soon recovering from the shock of the first impression, I was struck with the won derful variety and marked expression of character in the faces and forms around me. There were progressive dates of death, extending front remote centuries up to the present period, the niches being so arrang ed as to admit of a regular order of depos ite. Many of the bodies stood erect as if just lifted from the death bed; the faces colorless, and the horrible agonies of dis solution stamped upon the features; the lower jaws banging upon the breast; the teeth grinning and glistening between the parched lips, and the black hue of sickness 'about the mouth and around the sunken sockets of the eyes; and in sonic the sight less orbs were open and staring with a wild glare of affright, as if peering into the awful mysteries of the unknown bourne from whence none return, while others wore a grotesque laugh of derision still more ap palling, with the muscles of the mouth drawn up, the eyebrows lifted, the head jilted knowingly on one side, the hair mat ted in horny tufts, the bare spots ou the skulls, like the piebald wig of a harlequin; the skeleton arms stretched: and the bony fingers spread as if to clutch the relentless destroyer, and wrestle with him to the last. These I fancied wore lively fellows, who, were carried off suddenly after a midnight' carouse. I sat down on a box containing a dead child, and looking up at the row of haaiaa nannuita that attraatari my vint;no T saw among others an old gentleman, with knitted brows and Lantern jaws; ranges of bodies stood on each side of hint as if laughing, talking, praying, dying, suffer ing, listening, rejoicing, and feasting, at the banquet of death. Ono little man, in a dingy suit of black, sat in a corner; the end of his nose was eaten off by the worms; his mouth was compressed and had a pinch ed expression; his hands grasped eagerly at something. There stood in another part of the vault a fiery orator, with open mouth and dis tended arms. The head was thrown back, the breast partially bare, a few tufts of black hair fell from his pie-bald skull, his round staring eyes were stretched open, and his eyebrows arched high on his wrink led forehead; he looked towards heaven for inspiration. I fancied I could hear the flaming torrent, as it blazed and crackled scintilated front his thin ashy lips. It was the glowing eloquence of an ardent soul that left its parting impress upon the clay; the form yet spoke, but the sound was not there. Passing on from vault to vault, we saw here and there a dead baby thrown up on a shelf—its little innocent face sleeping calmly among the mouldering skulls; a log or an arm, or an old skull, from which the lower jaw had fallen; now a lively corpse, jumping with a startling throe from its niche, or a grim skeleton in its dark corner chuckling at the ravages of the destroyer. Who was the prince here? Who was the great man, or the proud man, or the rich man? Turning away from this strange exhibi tion of death's doings, I followed the old monk into the vaults allotted to the women. Here the spectacle was still more shocking and impressive. The bodies wore not pla- Ced in an upright position like those of the men, but were laid out at full length in glass cases, the wall on both sides being covered. The young, the gay, the beautiful, were all here laid lowly in the relentless embrace of death; decked out in silken dresses, la ces, and jewelry, as in mockery of the past. Ono corpse was a young bride who was stricken down in a few brief months after her marriage. She was dressed in her bri dal costume ; the bonnet and veil still on, the white gloves drawn over her skeleton fingers; a few withered flowers laid upon her breast by the mourning one she had left behind. Through the thin veil could be seen a blanched, grinning, bony face; sunken sockets, marked around with the dark lines of decay; and her long hair was drawn in luxuriant masses over her wither ed bosom. It might be supposed that the air of the catacombs is in some degree affected by the fresh bodies; but this is not the case. There is no offensive odor, and thdivisiter would scarcely know, if he did not see them, that he was surrounded by the dead. I could perceive no difference in the atmos phere of these vaults from that of any oth er subterranean places, except a slight smell of mould, not altogether disagreeable. The fresh air is admitted from the top, and it is to its extreme dryness that the pre servation of the bodies may be attributed. Dr. Franklin's Toast. Long after Washington's victories over the French and English and his name fa miliar to all Europe, Dr. Franklin had chanced to dine with the English and French Ambassadors, when as near as we can re collect, the following toasts were drank : By the English Ambassador : "ENGLAND.—The Sun, whose bright beams enlighten and fructify the remotest corners of the Earth." The French. Ambassador glowing with national pride, but too polite to dispute the previous toast drank : " FRANCE. - Tho .Moon whose mild, steady and cheering rays are tho delight of all nations, consoling them in the dark ness, and making their dreams beautiful." Dr. Franklin then arose, and with his usual dignity and simplicity, said : 4 , OEonGE WAsutNoToN.— The Joshua who commanded the Sun and Moon to stand still and they obeyed him." fIrA friend of ours thus eulogizes his musical attainments—l know two tunes, the one is Auld Lang Syne—the other isn't—l olurava Ginn thn lattav °CfArlrtttti: we. A DOCTOR AS 18 A DOCTOR, A self-sufficient humbug who took up . the haleness of a physician, arid pretended to a deep knowledge of the healing art was once called to visit a young man afflicted with apoplexy. Bolus gazed long and hard ; felt his pulse and his pocket, looked at his tongue and his wife, and finally gave vent to the following sublime opinion: "I think he's a gone feller." "No no!" exclaimed the sorrowing wife," do not say that." "Yes," returned Bolus, lifting up his, hat and eyes heavenward at the same time, "yes, I do say so; there are't any hope, not the leastest smite; he's got an attack of nihil fit iu his lost frontis—" "Where?" cried the startled wife. „ In his lost frontis, and he can't be cured without some trouble and a grcat deal of pains. You see his whole planetary sys tem is deranged, fustly, his vox populi is pressin' on his advalorem; secondably, if not more; thirdly and lastly, his solar ribs are in a concussed state, and he ain't got any money, consequently he must die.” Elizabeth Parker's Case, It will be remembered that some time previous to the abduction of Rachael Park-' er, the colored girl, from Chester county, by McCreary, that her sister Elizabeth dis appeared and could not be found. A girl of her appearance and age had been taken to Baltimore, under another name, by this same McCreary, under pretext of her being a slave, and delivered to the pretended owner, who sold her to a slave dealer, and the latter sent her to a dealer in New Or leans. Some philanthropic individuals in Baltimore, who deserve the highest praise, have been unremitting in their efforts to ascertain the identity of the girl sent to New Orleans, and we learn they now as certained to a moral certainty that she is no other than Elizabeth, the sister of Ra chel. She was taken from Matthew Don nelly's, in the south western part of Ches ter county. Some seven or eight citizens of Baltimore have entered into a bond of $l5OO, to pay all counsel fees, and other expenses of bringing her back from New Orleans to Baltimore, to have a trial for her freedom. Mr. Schoolfield, the person in Baltimore who claimed Elizabeth as his slave, had agreed to this arrangement some time since; and at the last advises the friends of the girls entertained the hope that he would ratify it. The State ought to make common cause of both these ca ses.—Village Record. A REMARKABLE MAN.—The German town (Ohio) Emporium has an obituary notice of Mr. John Shafer, who died in that vicinity on the 24th of March, aged sixty two years. The notice concludes with these surprising statements : The deceased was the largest man we over saw. The coffin was sufficiently large to contain five men of ordinary sue; meas uring in width three feet four inches in the clear, and three feet in height. Three men could have worked in it . at the same time, with convenience. It required six men to take him from the bed on which he expi red. This was done by raising a platform —removing the head-board of the bedstead and taking him out end-wise. They could not get the coffin into the house, but by ta king off the door-facing of an old vacated house that stood in the yard, they got it into that and carried the corpse thither on three empty bags. A wagon and four hor ses stood prepared, and ten men placed the coffin and its contents upon it. In letting clown the coffin into the grave, they had two lines doubled—one at each end and one large well rope in the middle; and sev enteen men to let down this great sprinkle of mortality into its last home on earth. His weight was not known. WItEAT.—The amount of wheat and flour in store on Lako Michigan, according to a 'correspondent of the Milwaukie Sentinel, is less than in any Spring sines 1845; and is less than one-third of the quantity in store at the same place on the opening of navi gation iu 1849. In that year the amount of wheat alone to say nothing of other grains,' exceeded 2,000,000 bushels; au amount greater by one half than that of all grains onnthimui thin VOA, NUMBER 18. STEAMIE ATTEMPT TO COMMIT Sig. CIDE.-A Frenchman, resident in London recently conceived an entirely new style of self-destruction. Ile first bought an egg in the ivarkct, extracted its contents (by ('suction')' and filled the shell with about three ounces of gunpowder. Then going into a very crowded thoroughfare—me pre sume to give eclat to his enter rise—lie placed the infernal machine Wsuouth, and 'touched it off' with a match. Instead, however, of blowing his head to atoms, the powder, when ignited, merely poured forth a stream of fire and smoke from'the aper-. tore in the shell, but without doitig any serious harm to the man. The astonish ment of the passers-by at beholding a hu man mouth suddenly become the crater of an active valcano, may be imagined. Theo disappointed man was taken into custody by the police, and conveyed to the hospital. HANDBILLS IN NEWSPA.PERS. —There is a law, not generally understood, which prohibits the circulation of handbills by enclosing them in newspapers. The law was passed in 1825, and the penalty for each offence is forty dollars; yet it is scarce ly ever heeded by publishers in the coun try. The Postmaster of Rochester re cently received a note from the Post office Department, directing him to "exercise vig ilance in seeking to discover any violation of the law, and notify the Postmaster Gen eral of any case that may come to hie knowl edge, to the end that he may direct him to prosecute the violators." Take heed you who have offended.—Buffalo Com. Adv. WHAT A COUNTRY l—The Cincinnati Commercial piles up the agony and goes in with a rush, in a shouting paragraph as fol lows: "We have the longest railways and tele graph lines, the best wives, the fattest chil dren, the biggest rivets, the fastest steam boats, the worst police, the most adroit ras cals the sun ever shone on, and we can put a chunk of ice in one of hall's safes, chuck I said safe into Mount Vesuvius, haul it out after years, and cool a lemonade with the contents. In short, we are a mighty mass of conglomerated usefulness, each fragment doing the best for itself, but all making one mighty big circumference for the - whole, as the hunter said when he split a rail for a ramrod." INFANTICIDE.—The bodies of two in fants, wo are informed, were discovered in Delaware township—one in a' large pond of water near Stitzel's Lanyard, with a rope around its neck, and the other under or near a pile of stones in an open field within a mile or two of the same place. The in quest had hardly adjourned their setting on the first case until they were again sum moned to pass their verdict on the second. The inhuman mothers will without doubt be sufficiently tortured by the serpent tooth of conscience for the diabolical sacrifice of infant innocence; but we would like to see the just vengeance of the law cxecuted against the murderers.—.llfiltonian. 11 - Crimehas alarwhigly iuoreaaea in this oity within the past month. Hardly a night passes that the most daring burglaries are not perpetrated in some part of the city, and notwithstanding the violence of pub lie opinion against the robbers, and the certainty that if caught in their acts, the rascals would iu all probability meet with instant death, they seem to grow more emboldened as they continue successful.— San Francisco Paper. NEWSPAPER BORROWERS BEWARE.- The death of Simon Stevens Esq., a re spectable citizen of Newbury, N H.,- was caused by a newspaper which ho had bor rowed, and was carrying Lome, when the wind took it away.—He chased it through the drifted snow and died of fatigue soon after recovering it. THE COBBLER'S LAST WORDS.-.I feel that I was weaker each succeeding day, and that I am fast approaching my cael;— a few more stitches and all will be oVer— in heaven there is rest for the weary sole; —earth bath no sorrow that heaven cannot heel.' Raving said awl Ire wished, he calm lv breathed his last.