Le.Hunting/bon WILLIAM BREWSTER,} EDITORS, SAM. G. WHITTAKER, select V ottrg. A rellifiglit tWL Should you ask me whence this dunning, Why these sad complaints aril murmurs, Murmurs loud about delinquents Who have read the paper weekly. Read what they have never paid for, Rend with pleasure and with profit. Read of news both home and foreign, Read the essays and the poems, Full of window and instruction : Shcisld you ask us why this dunning, We should answer, we should tell you, From the printer, from the mailer, From the prompt old paper•maker, From the landlord, from the carrier, From the man who taxes letters With a STAMP from Uncle Samuel— Uncle Sam, the rowdies call him— From them all there comes a message, Message kind, but firmly spoken, "Please to pay us what you owe us." Sad it is to hear such message When our funds are all exhausted, When the last hank•note has left us, When the gold coin all has vanished, Gone to pay the paper•maker, Gone to pay the toiling printer, Gone to pay the landlord tribute, Gone to pay the active carrier, Gone to pay the faithful mailer, Gone to pay old Uncle Samuel— Uncle Sam th, rowdies call him— Gone to ray the Western paper, Three and twenty hundred dollars I Sad it is to turn our ledger, Turn the leaves of this old ledger, Turn and see what sums are due us, Due for volumes long since ended, Due for years of pleasant reading, ' Due despite our patient waiting, Doe despite our constant dunning, Due in stuns from two to twenty. Would you lift a burden from us ? Would you drive a spectre from you ? Would you taste a pleasant slumber ? Would you have a quiet conscience ? Would you read a paper paid for? Seed us money, send us money, Send us money, send us money, SEND THE closer THAT YOU OWE vol t:').eneral A Surplus of Doctors. According ton correspondent of the Medical World, physicians have multi. plied so rapidly in this country that newly fledged M. D.'s are puzzled to find a com munity which require their services. They are exceedingly numerous in the Eastern cities, while the West is actually overrun with the sons of Esculapius. The writer says he has recently made an extensive exploration to and over the fur-off West, and finds the condition of things as stated Is all the thriving owns and settlements in Minnesota, Kansas and Nebraska, there are more medical men than patients. One or two invariably monopolize all the busi ness worth having, but even the most cele brated are'poorly compensated, while the prospect is not bettering. The writer very wisely counsels his young brethren to be come farmers. The Usury Laws. As usual, energetic efforts aro being made in various quarters, to have the usury laws of this State repealed. The movement is urged with great energy in Philadelphia, where every appliance is brought to.bear to remove all res trictions on the rate of interest. We hope that tltis proposition will not meet with fuvor in the Legislature. The repeal of the usury laws would, in our opinion, be injurious to bu siness throughout the country generally, and no special advantage to solid business men ev erywhere. A CURE FOR SCARLET FEVER.—As you have published some excellent arti cles on that scourge of youthful and in fantile life, scarlet fever, permit me to give to the public through your columns, a very simple and effacacious remedy for the ter rible sownese and ulceration of the mouth and throat in aggravated cases. Take equal quantities of honey and sweet oil— both should be pure—say one table spoon ful of each, or one tea spoonful; heat it on a sheet of glazed letter-paper over a spirit or fluid lamp, and give the patient,sat fre quent intervals, small quantity, as cold as it can be taken. it can do no harm, and as in some cases, where the collection of muscus in the throat and mouth almost produced suffocation, saved the patient's life.—New York Evening Post. Bane-rooreo tx WINTHB.—The Auburn Ad vertiser says that John Ford, one of the ocean. trio citizens of that town, declares he knows the weather is getting colder, because his feet are so muds warmer than usual. For two win ters now this man has gone barefooted. He says his feet are never cold. Ho wears shoes is the summer, but nothing can induce him to do as in the winter. Sir It is said that the Cincinnati ladies "do up their curls" with hogs' tails, and when ask• ed to marry, answer "oui, oui, oui?" isctliang. .p[pp,g3t LIMIEO Light is daily coming in upentlTeWorld of mind, and by the help of clearly estab. lished lads, arguments may be adduced which will have a stronger tendency to compel men to take care 01 their health, than any which have arisen from con science, money or duty; that is, the argu ment of Shame. Let men fully understand that certain bodily affections to crime, and that crime thus committed confines to the penitentiary, then may the community woke up more fully to the sentiment, HEALTH IS A DUTY. and therefore, the neglect of its preserva- tion, a sin, which in the natural progress at things, lease to loss of health, and life, and honor. In a recent trial of a forger, who han dled millions of dollars in a year's busi ness, the defence was that he was insane. Among the evidence offered was that he could sleep only three or four hours out of the twenty-four. In a previous number we stated, that a growing inability to sleep was a clear indication of approaching in sanity, and on the return of sleepfulness, *the intellect becrtme clear, There were other symptoms. There was the sound of trip-hammers in his ears; blacksmith's sparks before his eyes, and and there was a pain in the head a large portion of the time. These symptoms, lasting so long, had at length so affected the brain, ns to destroy all perception, or comprehension of the effects of crime ; and when the or gan of a man's percep:ion is destroyed, he will plunge headlong, and with utter reck lessness, into any kind of wrong-doing of which circumstances threw in his way —arson, robbery, murder, anything; and, if not detected or prevented, the crime, whatever it may be, will grow into a habit, and habit is second nature; consequently, he will revel in it, it becomes his meat and drink, and he would rather do it than not. Hence the prisoner declared without hesi tation, that if he were released he would do it again; that he rather liked it, and no thing could ptevent him but cutting off his hand, if it came in the way, to forge paper. It was shown in the trial, that there was insanity on the father's and mother's aide ; but no indication of it on the part of either father or mother. It is well known however, that insanity, as well as personal natures, overleaps a generation or two. Often a child bears a striking resemblance to a grand parent, without a lineament of parental feature. The acts of the prisoner were admitted by his counsel, and the question of guilt or innocence, rested on this—was he insane or not The use which we wish to make of these developments is practical, and is of high importance. A wise and stern medical treatment would have deferred, if not pre- vented, the combination of events. And how The prisoner was under the habitual in fluence of constipation, and an anodyne, which intensified this constipation every hour. while the principle of the medical practice in this case, was to let the bowels take cure of themselves—which they did not do. This individual was never seen by his business associates without a cigar in his mouth ; he smoked fifteen or twenty a day. The immediate effect of smoking tobacco falls on the brain, excites it; dur ing that excitement lie could not sleep, and the reaction .vans so low that he could not sleep ; only a troubled repose was possible during the brief transition from one to the other. During the excitement, the brain ran riot in the direction of the opportunity, and expended its energies in that direction, but during the reaction, power was not left to carry on the bodily functions. The effect of constipation -is to thicken the blood, to make it more impure; hence more unfit for healthful purposes. The more impure the blood is, the thicker does it become, the slower is its progress, and if nothing is done to alter this state of things stagnation and death take place. Stagna tion means accumulation, for the moment the blood stops in any part of the body, the coining current flowing in, causes un accu mulation, precisely as in the closing of a canal gate, or the damning up of a stream. This accumulation in the blood-vessels dis tends them, causes them to occupy more room than nature designed, consequently they must encroach on their neighbors.— The neighbors of the blood-vessels are the nerves; hence the nerves are pressed a gainst ; that pressure gives what we call “pain." As there are nerve's every where, a point of a needle cannot be pla ced against the surface of the body without some pain, which shows the universality of nerve presence ; hence, we may have " LIBERTY AND UNION, NOW AND POBEvER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE: " HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1857. pain anywhere, and will have pain.if there is pressure. This accounts for the steady pain in the head. The excitement of the day sent the blood to the broils too fast, the repose of the night was too short to allow of Its removal ; besides the energies of the system had been overtaxed, and there was not power left to remove a natural accumu lation, let alone the extraordinary. But there is a law of our body, whereby pressure from any cause not only gives pain, but may destroy the part pressed a gainst, and consume it, by dissolving it in to a gaseous and fluid substance, which in this condition will be conveyed out of the body. A band put around an arm of a foot in circumference, will, if tightened every day, in a time not long, reduce the circumference to six inches. Constant Pressure cannot be exerted against any portion of the human body without impair ing its structure, or causing its diminution and final destruction. These are princi ples of universal admission. They are first truths in medicine. From some unknown cause, this accumulation and pressure was determined to n particular portion of the brain, where fearlessness of consequences is situated.; and we believe, if the prison er's brain could be examined this day, that portion of it, most probably small in the beginning, wit found almost wanting having been desMyed by long continued pressure, or to be of abnormal structure. We believe that a medical treatment, which would have smrnly interdicted the use of the cigar materially at first, and gradually thereafter, until its final extinc tion, together with securing a natural con• dition of daily diet—and kept him there-- would have saved him and all his from the subsequent calamities, Artificial excite. meats, whether from tobacco, opium, or al colt I, if largely persevered, will work ru in to mind, body and soul. It is right that it should be so. o.nnipotence has-ordain ed it. tf a man is in a physical condition which impels him to do what is illegal, or if he be in a mental condition which im pels him to do what is illegal, the question whether he is to be punished or not de pends upon the manner in which he be• came subjected to that condition. If such condition be the result of birth, or by a fall or stroke, or other occurrence out of his control, lie should go free .of penal suffer ing ; but if he placed himself in that condi tion by the unbridled indulgence of his appetites or his passions, he ought to be made to suffer a just penalty, whether he knew that such indulgences tended to such a result or not. It is a man's duty to in form himself of physiological as well as ci vil law. Ignorance of the former ought not t) work his escape, any more than the latter does; otherwise a man has only to get drunk to secure impunity from any crime which may be committed in shut condition ; thus all penal statutes become a farce, and anarchy rides rampant through land. So also, if a man perverts his moral sAnse, and by a course of vicious reason ing persuades himself that he ought to commit murder, and thinks of it so much as to feel impolled to murder some one, he is properly amenable' to the law of the land. It is no very difficult matter for ordinary minds to persuade themselves as to any desired course—that it is right ; that there is no harm in it ; and that, if they meant no harm by it, no blame could be attached; but if for such flimsy considerations, men are to be excused from penalties, there N an end at once to all law and all govern ment, The conclusion of the whole matter is this. Every man should be held responsi ble for his deeds, unless they are clearly proved to be the result of a physical, mor al, or menthl condition which he had no agency in originating, or exaggerating to the criminal point. Hence the prison er was convicted. Kr 'Shun, mine Shon,' said a worthy German father to his heir of ten years, whom he had overheard using profane language, 'Shen mine Shon, come here, an' I viii dell you von little stories. Now, mine Shon, shall it be a true story or makes believe ?"Oh true story of course ! answered John.' 'Ferry veil den—dere vas once a goot, nice oldtshetleman (doom like me) andt he had von dirty liddle pay (shoost like you.) Andt von day he heard him abwearing like a young fillian, as he vas. So he vent to der winkle (corner) andt dook out a cowhides, (almost as I am toing now,) and he dook her dirdy liddle plackguard by der gollar, (dis vay, you see !) and voloped him, shoost ao ! And and den, mine tear Shon, he bull his ears dis way, ;Ind shmack his face dat way— und (tell hint toga mitout his subber, shoost as you vil4 do dis efening.' REVOLUTIONARY INCIDENT, The hero of the following thrilling sto ry was embodied in the person of a stout blacksmith, aye, an humble blacksmith, but in his stout frr me, hardened with toil, throbbed as generous en impulse of free dom as ever beat in the bosom of La Fay ette, or around the heart of mad Anthony Wayne. It was in the full title of the retreat that a follower of the American camp, who had at least shouldered a cart whip in his country's service was dragging a baggage front the field of battle, while lame short distance behind, a body of continentals were pushing forward with a body of British in pursuit. The wagon had arrived at a narrow point of the byroad leading to the south, where on either side, affords just space sufficient for the passage or the baggage wagons, and not an inch more. His eyes were arrested by the sight of a stout muscular man, apparently some forty years of age, extended at the foot of a tree at the very opening of the pass.— He was clad in the coarse attire of a tne• chanic. His coat had been flung aside, with his shirt sleeves rolled up from his muscular arm, he lay extended on the turf with his riffle in his grasp, while the blood poured in a torrent from his right leg which was brokon at the knee by a cannon ball. The wagoner's sympathies were arres ted by the eight. Ele would have paused in the vory instant of his flight, and pla ced the wounded blacksmith in his wagon, but the stout hearted man refused not go into your wagon,' said he, in his rough way, 'but ['II tell yoil what I will do. Do you see yonder cherry tree on the top of that rock that hangs over the road ? Do you think you can lift a man of my build up there? For you see neighbor, he continued while the blood still flowed from hie wound, never med led with the Britishers until they came trampling over this valley, and burned my house down. And now I'm all riddled to pieces and !taint got more than Id• Minutes to live but I've got three balls in my xat tridg..l bpx, and {4a just ;trap me up against that tree, and I'll give the whole three shots, and then,' exclaimed the blacksmith, die,' The wago.er started his horses ahead, and then with a sudden effort dragged the wounded man along the sod to the foot of the tree. His face was to the advancing troopers, and while his shattered leg hung over the bank the wagoner rushed on his way, when tha doomed blacksmith proceed ed to load his rifle. It was not long before a body of Amer ican soldiers rushed by with British in pursuit. The blacksmith greeted them with a shout, and raising h;s rifle to his shoulder he picked the foremost from his spirited steed with the exclamation: • 'That's for General Washington!' In a moment the nil's was reloaded; and again it was fired, and the pursuing Brit. lab rode over another of their :lien offi. cers. .That's for myself,' c ' ith and then wi.h a hand feel. ing of approaching de dad, raised his rifle fired his I. an. other soldier kissed the sod uiv eted in the eye of the dyin:.; cksmith. 'And that,' he said, y voice with strengtheneil almoit into • • -bout, 'is for mad Anthony Wayne!' Long after the battle of Brandywine was past, the body was discovered against the tree with the features frozen in death smiling grimly, with his right hand still grasping the never-failing rifle. And thus died one of thodhousand brave mechanic heroes of the reirplution ; brave in the hour of batik, undaunted in the hour of retreat. and undismayed in the moment of death. UNCLE TORY AT A DISCOUNT.-A la dy, whose kndness to animals amounts al most to a mania, was ono day sadly annoy ed by a blue bottle fly. Calling her maid she bade her catch the fly, and without hurting it, put it out of the window.— Seeing the girl hesitate to raise the sash, she inquired the cause. 'Why, madam, it raws so very hard,' answered the mis chievous creature. ' , True," replied the mistress, 'put the poor thing in the other room.' EDITING A PAP;LL OUT WEBT.—The editor of a paper published at Lake Su perior, after having been without a mail three week; says : Should the mail not arrive this week, we shall make our regular issue next Tues day ; for this number was made up from an old magazine a religious almanac of last ) ear ; and so long as thin material holds out, we shall be independent of the mails. flVitffa Aqua-fortis Operating on Old Joe. In - the pretty village of Haddonfield, New Jersey, some years ago there resided an old fellow who was familiarly known in the town end country around as "old Joe." He had no particular occupation, except doing "chores" or errands—nor any parti cular location. He ate where he could get a bite, and slept where he could find a lod ging-place. Joe was a regular old toper, and Jersey lightning had no more effect on his insides than so much water. He generally made his head-quarters at the lower tavern, for there were two in town. He would sleep and doze away the after noon on an old bench in one corner of the bar-room, but was always awake when there was any drinking going on. When he was not asked to drink he would slip to the bar, and drain the glasses of the few drops left in them. One afternoon, Dr. Bolus, the village, physician, was in the tavern, mixing up a preparation. He placed a tumbler half-full of aqua-fortis on the bar, and turned around to mix some other in g•edients. A few moments afterwards he had occasion to use the poisonous drug, when, to his dismay, lie found that the tumbler had been drained to the last drop. 'Mr Wiggins,' exclaimed the Doitor, in affright to the landlord, 'What has become of the aqua fortis I put on the bar a few moments ago ?' don't know,' replied the landlord, 'u n less Old Joe slipped in and drank it.' In this suspicion they were both soon confirmed, for the hostler said he had seen Old Joe take the fatal draught. The Doc tor knowing that he must certainly die, after such a (lose, instituted a search at once. After some hours spent in looking through the barns, out-houses and wood for three or four miles around the village, he was abandoned to his fate. It was a cold night, and as the village topers assem bled around the blazing hickory fire of the bar-room, nothing was thought of or talked on but the unfortunate end of poor Old Joe. Some four days having elapsed and nothing having been heard from Old Joe, they all came to the conclusion that he was ' a goner. The Doctor, about this tune, had to visit it patient some eight miles distant ; what was his surprise when about f i v e miles distant from' the village, to see Old Joe in front of a farmer's house splitting wood. 'Why Joe,' said the Doctor, riding up to the fence, 'I thought you was dead and buried before this., 'Why, whet made you think that, Doc tor t , said Joe, leaning on his axe handle. 'Didn't you drink that dose I left on old Wiggin's bar, a few days since .Yes,' replied Joe, half ashamed to own it. 'Do you know what it was V • asked the Doctor. 'No,' returned Joe. 'Why, it was aqua-fortis—enough to kill a dozen men.' 'Well, now, Doctor, do you know that I thought there was something queer about that darned stuff, for after I drank it, every time I Glowed my nose I burned a hole in my pocket handk,rchiep Milking by Machinery, A New liamishtre Yankee has recent: ly applied for a patent for a milking ma chine, arranged by attaching four long flexible tubes to an air tight-pail, upon the side of which is a small air-pump. The tubes are applied to the teats by means of India rubber sheaths or sacs. The wor king of the air produces a vacuum, and the milk runs out into the pail. The in: venter is quite sanguine of success, but if our theory be correct that the cow will not continue a full secretion of milk without mechanical manipulations on the bag and teat this machine will also prove a failure. Experiment will be the only safe test of their value. If those machines era brought into mar ket, let them be tried by milking a num ber of COWS alternately, with and without them. Thus, three or four cows mny be milked with the machine for two weeks, and two •veeks without them, and the a mount of milk be carefully measured and noted down each day. At the same time an equal number of cows should 'ors milked without the machines while the others are milked with them, and vice versa. This will show whether any increase or dimin ution is to be attributed to the manner of drawing the milk, or to other circumatan oes, such as vibration in kind, quality or amount of food. Nu' A story writer says "Florabelle clasped her wide white brow with her two hands as if to still the thunder of thought booming through her brain!" How her head must have ached with such a noise iu it. Florabelle must be the young lady whose "eyes omit lightning flashes." Rascality Abounding. The Gospel is preached to the people regularly. all over our country—religious papers and magazines are circulated in families, and many valuable persons set good examples before the world—but not withstanding all this, and more observa tion teaches us, that rascality abounds in all classes of society. Petty thefts are daily committed—such as robbing money drawers, stealing clothes, and dry goods, chickens, ducks, corn, and other eatables. strolling vagabonds, dealing in counterfeit money, and diseased horses, are all over the country. Gamblers, ;ravelling and local, and resident rogues, are all on the alert. Pious villains, with Faces as sanc tified as the moral law, are keeping false accounts and swearing to them, for the sake of gain. Whiskey shops are selling by the small, in violation gf the law.— Drug Stores are training up drunkards in high life, and affording facilities for Sab bath drinking, which can be lig no where else. The rich are oppressing the poor, and the poor are content to live in rags and idleness. Country dealers in produce come to town and exact two prices for all they have to sell, and the owners of real estate in towns, are asking double rates, to the injury of business, and the growth of towns. Banks and Corporations, intend ed for the public good, have their favorites, and are partial in the distribution of favors. Families persecute and envy each other.— Individuals slander their betters. Persons of low origin put on airs, and falsely pre tend to be more than they are. Cheating and misrepresentation, are the order of the day, generally. In politics, there is very little patriotism or love of country, while demagogues seek to be misled, and ouild up their own fortunes at the hazard of ru ining the country. In religion there is more hypocrisy than grace, and the big gest scoundrels living crowd int) the Church, with a view to cloak their rascal. ly designs, and more effectually to serve , the Devil! In a word, rascality abounds, among all classes, and in all countries, The Devil to auaktng abrona In upon d.y. light, oul the precaution to dress himself ! And if the proseut generation of men, could see themselves In the Gospel Glass, they are as black as Hell !—Parson Brown• tow. The Boomerang. This curious weapon, peculiar to the Australian, has often proved a puzzler to men of science. It is a piece of carved wood nearly in tha form of a crescent, from thirty to forty inches long, pointed at both ends and the corner quite sharp. The mode of using it is as singular as the wea• pon. Ask a black to throw it so as to let it fall at his feet, and away it goes full for. ty yards before him, skitnming abng the. surface at three or four feet from the ground, when all at once it will suddenly rise in the air forty or sixty feet, describing a curve and finally dropping at the feet of the thrower. During its course it revolves with great rapidity on a pivet, with a whizzing noise. It is wonderful so baba. rous a people have invented so singular a weapon, which sets the laws of progres• sion at defence. It is very dangerous for a:European to try to project it at any object, as•it may strike himself. In a native's hands it is a formidable weapon, striking without the projector being seen. It was invented to strike the kangaroo, which is killed by it with certainty. An Imaginative Scene. The night alter theelection of lion. Si mon Cameron, must have been one full of incidents the most ludicrous. In our mind's eye we con see John %V. Forney breaking for Mt. Joy, like a "whipped spaniel, with his tail between his legs !"—Montgomery, the Congressman from Greene, taking Charley Black by one arm and Shesh. Bentley by the other, and hurrying to the Editorial sanctum of the Patriot and Un ion, to notify Hopkins, Jr., that he had better make 'a speedy sale of the lumber purchased for the erection of a gallows in the Hall of.the House, upon which to sus pend recusant Democrats ! The train for the West contained Hopkins, Sr., in de• apondent mood—contemplating from the car window well•defined "'nemesia tracks" in the snow ! Some fifteen or twenty other Senatorial aspirants breaking for their respective hotels for their carpet. bags—some for home—others for "Wheat. land !" Hopkina. Jr., absent front Banc. turn—upon examination of premises by "printer's devil," found in cellar, hid un• der aforesaid lumber ! Simon Cameron down at depot chartering train of burthen cars to transport oysters, charnpaigne, Good time that night !—Ex. ear Never contradict an angry wo man. Never do it. VOL. XXII. NO. 7. An' indian Story. Speaking of Indians, we have an old chap here wbo has lived a number of years on the frontier, and whom we shall calf Capt. Perry. He occasionally takes rath er too much of the 'inspiring fluid,' and, like others who have passed through an eventful life is fond, when in this state, of relating his 'hair breadth escapes;' and also., like most others, magnifies them to a somewhat unwarrantable extent. Being in the 'Prooery,' the other day, while the captain was relating one of his adventures which happened near some lake, the name of which I do not remember, he stated that it occurred on the Fourth of July.— after performing unheard of prodigies of vallor, he was finally forced to run. This he did, and shortly afterwards found him. self on the bank of the lake, which was 'frozen solid all the way across.' With. out a moment's hesitation ho started over, followed closely by the Indians, three in number: When about a mile from the shore, he perceived the Indians were be. coming scattered; and, stooping down he picked op a hoop pole and killed them, one at a time, as they came up. 'Why, Captain,' asked a bystander, how could the river be frozen over on the Fourth of July--and how came a hoop pole that far from the shore 'Urn ! Urn !' grunted the old man, (with a hic !) 'what do you know about Indians ?' MODERN DWOVERIES Coxswains° SCRIPTURE.—At the recent meeting held in London for the purpose of establishing a museum for the illustration of the Holy Scriptures, Sir Henry Rawlington, dis tinguished for his researches at Nineveh, BM that be bad been enabled to trace Oriental records by means of the monu mental inscriptions now in the British mu seum; from the time of Abraham's depar ture from Ur of the Chaldees, down to that of Alexander the Great, a period of two thousands years; and that whenever the history people,ca me therei wasncontact t t v h i e th co th u a r rof of theJewish rninesdPnra hnt wan thaw. rap ords and the details of Scripture—the same names, the same succession of Kinge the same acts. JUDICIAL DECISION OF A BAD DINNER. —The late Judge Dooly, of Georgia, was remarkable for his wit : ""At one place where he attended court, he waa not well pleased with his enter tainment at the tavern. On the first day of the court, a hog, under the name of a pig, had been cooked whole and laid up on the table. No person attacked it. It was brought the next day and the next, and treated with the same respect : and it was on the table on the day on which the court adjourned. As the boarders finish ed their dinner, Judge Dooly rose from the table, and in a solemn manner address ed the clerk. "Mr. Clerk," said he, "dis miss the hog until the first day of next court. He has attended so faithfully du ring the present term that I don't think it will be necessary to take any security." A Nowt DEBD.--Some months since, a poor German neighbor of Gerrit Smith was charged with murder. A singular combination of unfavorable circumstances induced a general belief that he was guil ty, and the public excitement against him was very strong. Mr. Smith visited the suspected man is the jail, and became con vinced that he was innocent. In the face of a hostile public sentiment he volunteer, ed his services as counsel for the German, spent nearly a thousand dollars from his own purse in collecting evidence, and ar gued his case before the jury. By his un tiring exertions the very dark cloud of un favorable circumstances was cleared up, and the innocence of his client made mani fest, not only to the court and jury, but to the public. Mr. Smith, with characteristic beneficence, crowned his magnanimity by giving the poor German a small farm and five hundred dollars in money. Nobleness like this is its own praise and its own re. ward, We wish that itwas less rare. Passzaviwo Eons.—Take a seine and cover the bottom with eggs ; then pour boiling water upon them sufficient to give them a thorough wetting, permitting the water to pass over through the seive.-- Take them out and dry them in bran, the small end down and your eggs will keen for ever. War Recently, a negro, the property of Mr. Fletcher, of Lausens ‘..lounty, Geor. gin, told his master of a singular bank of deposit, in which he invested his spare change. lle confessed that he had, du. ring three days, swallowed twenty-five gold dollars, which he had stolen.