..riia.. ano":_ fittio.Olic(iit7. 143".i.1!.,,ii(..:t.'.1... ED. A. BUEHLER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR VOL. XVI.-51. ORIGINAL, For the "Star and Danner.'' The CUrme. "Cursed be the ground fur thy sake. lathe sweat " of thy brow shalt thota eat thy bread." The curse! the curse! I read it now•, As when the first man felt its breath. Lo! starting from my erimsonel brow The emblems of man's sin and death It haunts us still! Heaven's malison Upon a ruined god-like race: Nor food is gained, nor goal is won, Save sweat-drops bathe the human face The slave, beneath the Tropic's glare, The northmah, in his polar clime, 'rho helot and the king declare The clinging curse of man's first crime! THASMA Far the "Star and Banner." Songs to L " * • *. GE= "Farwell . 1 what drathkabovt the heatt This doubting of the future brings [Louise A. SIMES I'm rudely tossed on fate's dark waves; I grope through gloom_without the light ; No...gleam of hope illumes the grave ' Where love was darkly quenched in night. I came-1 saw thee : from that hour, My heart has throbbed no other love,— Has.neverthrilled et beauty's pots - a!, Dior'kindled at Q. thought above— That on some future distant (lay, -I'd see. thee happy—know thee blest; Then weep my hopeless life away, And sink in gloom to Earth's last rest I would not darken thy bright spirit With the deep pail that shrouds my own; Not for the wealth that kings inheitt,— The splendors of an empire's throne t I would not bare my naked Emil; . For thou wouldst startle at the NVOCi I've borne on passion's raging goal— And shudder, if I would disclose Those mysteries of agony, That wring from out my heart, hot tears Of blood { like lava,—all for thee! • Thus fate my constancy ret cres ! L" * I close this pensive strain! 41s my crushed heart's last minstrelsy— The last deep flow of joy or'pain, Its strings will ever harp to thee ! And it must ever sigh and weep : Alas! in life's warm springs Fvo sown I'o love, and even now I reap Despair. Farewell! I'm sad and lone. I met , thee with a trusting heart 'That knew naught else beneath high heaven But love ;—and, now, oh ! must I part In bitterness ? With heartstrings) riven By quick despair? Affections crushed? Love's last wild hope forever o'er? The soul's fond music coldly. hushed To throbs that bleed, but feel no more ? 'Tis even so for passion's band, Beyond the power of thought's control, Has torn my heart, and like a brand, Has scared the tablet of my soul. What boon can life then bring to me? What can earth's adulations prove I Not e'en that curse of destiny— The doom of dal:Mess, hopelcass lure ! For, though my heart has oft-times shed . Tear, as of liquid fire, for thee; Though long it iclt, and throbbed, and bled, In doubt, in fear, and agony:— That spell is past : n darker doom Than thnt of unrequited feeling, Now broods, like night, in starless gloom, Upon my shrouded soul,—revealing "But mockeries of the past atone - - Of life, and earth, of heaven and truth; Of all, e'en now, that is to come, And all I prized in earl}• youth. This too may pass.--but ne'er the pain, Of thought without the power to feel: MeMory will feed the searing flame, When heart !and soul are stern as steel ! A last farewell I still regret thee, Tho' fate has doomed that we must sever ! And though I never can forget thee, My burning love is quenched forever! HARP OF THE MOUNTAIN. Pennsylvania College, Feb. IS Ili. AUSCELLANEOLTS, A BEAUTIFUL PICTURE The anhexed heart-breathing sketch—which so truthfully depicts the result of the maternal intlu• ence over the infant mind is from an Italian nov• el, "The Lady of .Alilan." • "A mother teaching her child to pray, is an object at once the most sublimeandten der that the imagination can conceive. 'El evated above earthly things, she seems like one, of those guardian angels, the. com panions of our earthly pilgrimage, through whose : ministrations we are incline(' to good and restrained from evil. The image of the mother becomes associated in his inflint mind with the invocation she. taught him to his "Father who is in Heaven." Whet' the seductions of the world assails his youthful mind, that well remembered prayei to his' , Father who is in Heaven," Will strengthen hiM to/resist evil. When, in riper years he - mingles with mankind, and encounters fraud under the mask of honesty ; when he sees confiding goodness betrayed, generosity ridiculed as weakness, unbridled hatred, and the coolness of inter ested friendship, he may, indeed, be tempt ed to despise his fellow men, but he will remember his "Father who is in Heaven." "Should be, on the contrary, abandon himself to the world, and allow the seeds of Self-love to spring up and flourish in his head, he will, notwithstanding, sometimes hear a warning voice in the depths of his soul, severely tender as those maternal lips which instructed him to pray to his "Father who is in Heaven." But when the trials of life arc over, and lie may be extended on the bed of death ; with no oth er consolation than the peace of an appro ved' conscience, he will recall the scenes I of his infancy, the image of his mother, and with tranquil confidence, will resign his soul to his "Father who is in Heaven." The accomplished editor of the U. S. Gazette, after copying the above extract, remarks : . _ "Such an idea is beautifully:old effective ly suggestive, and awakens reminiscences of melancholy delight. At no time, per haps, is the mind more disposed to !evert to the experience of childhood, than when we arc placed in some position directly connected with incidents like them. Iu the twilight quiet of the day, and when the din of business is hushed, and outward ob jects are no longer obtrusive, then "in the heart's deep silence, and the depth of na ture's silence," we examine what report is sent to the chancery - above . ; on the day'i conduet. We go back far beyond, and bring full upon the eye, the time when, kneeling, with hands folded on a mother's knee, a widowed mother, perchance, we looked upward into her face, to catch the dictation of words that conveyed up wards the simple desire of a childish heart, for the will to be subdued, the bread broken in 'season, and of trespasses yet unconceiv ed, or not fully comprehended, all to be for forgiven ; that temptations—the young heart, the infant mind, has its tempations 7 — might be avoided,falling to be raised and to be delivered. This scene, with the amens and the blessings, come all crowding downward, through half a century, to re mind us of what we have lost,'and to pre pare us for what we may attain. At such a season the holy influence of maternal pi ety is recognized, and faith and works, en durance, constancy and succ,esSAare all ..re ferredlittek to suoh - moirritnis b N,ben the buds of virtue were, planted in the bosom, softened by filial love and awed by the in definablesense of the presence into which it seemed, by the humility of position, the devotion of the will and the sanctity of words, to be more immediately brought. Perhaps, we suggest with deference, the special teaching of the mother derives some effect from the manner, and the circum stances in which they are given. It is not in the crowd, not in the garish light of the world, that deep and lasting inipressions arc made. - In solitude Moses bared his foot to listen. In the quiet of the cave's mouth, Elijah recognized the presence by the small still voice. In darkness and in rest Samuel answered to the call. And so the sanctity of theitime, the quiet of the place, and the solemnity that mingles with the mother's affectionate tnonitions, will give depth to their impression, and effica cy tolheir truth ; and such quiets, such so lemn musings, may recall them, with all their potency, to lull, to sooth, to amend." MATERNAL INFLUENCE Timothy Dwight and Aaron Burr were first count's, their mothers being daughters of the elder Jonathan Edwards. The mother of Dwight lived to educate and train her son and to enjoy the rich fruits of her watchful care ; the mother of the lat ter, together with his father, an excellent and exemplary man, died while he was young. Thus early bereft of parental guidance, Burr, with his high intellectual capacities, entered upon a course which has made his name a terror,.both in the so cial and political world. Few men, per- Imps, — ever attained to his enormity of crime; fewer still have experienced more fully the miseries which are the inevitable result of a career of sensuality and lust. " Relt of his sire, too young such loss to know; Lord of himself, that heritage of woe," his evil propensities early acquired' the mastery over his moral powers, and he fell, j even in the meridian of his days, a wreck, a moral ruin, over which were shed 'a na- Lion's tears, and oveAvhosc memory, with ered though it be by the pestilence of migh ty vices, Christianity will long mourn, "As o'er the grave of one whom God endowed With Powers noble and for noble ends? But.who, in sin, *conceived a mighty crime. And fell—no more to rise." As a contrast to the fate of Burr, we may present that of Dwight. In the lan guage of a terse and beautiful writer: "Ile became eminently successful in:'extending the beauties of learning and religion, which heloved, and left behind him a noble mon ument of piety and genius in his written works. Who can but say bt that if Mrs. 1. 1 / 4\ Burr had lived to watch over an pray with her son, those highly gifted you Is might :have purstied the same narrow path, and they might have been equally useful on the earth,, and - equally happy in the hea vens! The Grand Jury of Cayuga has found truebills against Hiram RathbUn, Princi pal Keeper of the Auburn State Prison, and Melanethon W. Cary, the Assistant Keeper, for manslaughter in the case of the whipped convict, GETTYSBURG, PA., FRIDAY E A FRAGMENT. AN OBLIGING ROOM MATE. BY MRS. MARIA LOCITSA. CIIII,TI. I KEEP A JounNAL.---It is an invaluable An anecdote has recently been related aid in the education of children to in- With whizz and glare the rocket rushed to us of the celebrated Vincent De Camp, sist upon their always writing something upward, proclaiuting to all men, ' , Le, .1 well known throughout the South-west as daily— if it be but a line to say another am coming ! Look at me!" Gracefully the most polite nn of the day, and a very day is wasted--in some kind of a diary. it bent in the air, and sprinkled itself in sill- correct actor. On one - occasion he had A teacher,' remarkably successful in the NV ning t out fragments in the; hut the gem-like sparks been driving hard from morning till night developements of his pupils' capabilities, the round was all that ell darkness, and a stick o remained of the n over the rough roads in the neighborhood attributed much of this gratifying result to g i of Columbia, S. C. and alighted at the on- , the rule be adopted of making a diary. of rocket. llv comfortable inn in the place, very bun- every scholar's writing book; In their High above the horizon a radiant star , , inking the shone et ale- gry . and tired: ''" Sticking his eye glass to own words and way each one was required i- -j ' - oi quiet glory, making the night time beautiful. Men knew not when it rose ; for it went up in the stillness. In a rich man's garden stands a paga do. The noise of the hammers told of its progress, and all men knew how much was added to it day by day. It was a pretty toy, with curious carvilig.and gilded bells. But it remained as skill had fashioned it, and'grew not, nor cast seed into the future. An oak noiselessly dropped an acorn near by, and two leaves sprang from the ; ground, and became a fair young tree. The gardener said to the hawthorn ; "When did the oak go above you ?" The hawthorn answered, "I do not know ; for it passed quietly by in the night." Thus does mere talent whizz and lam mer, to produce the transient forms of things while genius unconsciously evolves thegreat and the beautiful; and "castslt si lently into everlasting time' THE VOICE OF CREATION Go out beneath the arched . Heavens night's-pkofoyin - d gleiml"" and Say,. if you can, "Tiiereis no God!" Pronounce that dreadful blaspheMy, and each star above you will reproach your unbroken darkness of intellect; every voice that floats upon the night winds, will bewail your utter I hopelessness and despair! Is there no God ? Who, then, unrolled the blue scroll and threw upon its high frontispiece the legible gleanings of immortality'? Who fashioned the green earth, with its perpetu -1 rolling its wide expanse of islands and amain ? 'Who'settled the foun dations of the mountains ? Who paved the heaVens With clouds, and attuned, amid The clamors of storms, the voice of . thunders, and unchained lightnings that linger, and hark, and- flash in their gloom ? WhO gave to the eagle a safe eyrie where the tem pests dwell and beat the strongest, and to the dove a tranquil abode amid the forests, and•echo to the minstrelsy of licr moan? Who made thee, U man! . Withthy-per fected elegance of intellect and form? Who made the light pleasant to thee, and 'Alm darkness a covering, and a herald to the first beautiful flashes of the morning? Who 'gave thee that matchless sinew of symme-, try and lip? That regular flowing passion • of ambition and of love ! • No God! And yet the thunder of heaven and the waters of the earth are calm !. Is there no light aimg that heaven is not avenged? Are there no floods, that man is not swept under a deluge ? THE SECRET OF. HAPPINESS. Go search the ponderous tomes of hu man learning ; explore the works of Con fucius ; examine the precepts of, Seneca, and all the writings of Socrates. Collect ' all the excellencies of the ancient and mo dern moralists, and point to a sentence -equal to the simple prayer of our Savior, "FATHER, FORGIVE THEM !" Reviled and insulted ; suffering the grossest indignities ; crowned with thorns, andled away to die,' no annihilating curse breaks from his lips. Sweet and placid as the aspirings of a mother for the nursling, ascends the pray er of mercy for his enemies, "Father, for give them !" 011, it is worthy of its ori gin, proving incontestibly- that his mission was from Heaven'! Acquaintances, have you ever quarrel ed ? Friends, have you ever differed ? If He, who was pure and perfect, - forgave his bitterest enemies, do you well to cherish anger ? Brother, to you the precept is im pei-ative ; you should forgive, not seven times, but "seventy times seven." Husbands and wives, you have no right to expect perfection in each other. To err is human. Illness will sometimes make you petulant, and disappointment will ruffle the smoothest tamper. Guard, theft, with unremitting . vigilance, your.passions ; controlled, they are the general warmth that cheers us along the way of life—ungov erned, they arc consuming fires.. Let your life be one of respectful attention and con ciliatory conduct. Cultivate with care the kind and gentle affections. Plant not, but eradicate, the thorn in your partner's path. Above all, let no feeling of revenge ever find harbor in your breast. A kind word, an obliging action, even be it a trilling one, has a power superior to the harp of David, in calming the billows of the soul. ' A ROYAL BANQUET.—A correspondent of the Boston Advertiser says, in reference to the grand ball recently given by Louis Philippe :—"The ball, at which I believe all the Americans in ,Paris were gueSts, was—as royalty may claim to be, an excep tion to all general rules of economy. In' the splendid halls of the "Tnilleries, in a light - beyond that of . day, surrounded by its gorgeous furniture, Statuarx and pie-! tures—with the Music of nore than one! EcuesE.—on the 25th of April there hundred performers, divided into several' will be a partial" eclipse of the sun. The bands, the royal family received upwards degree of obscuration will be about five of fonr thousand ladies and gentlemen, digits in Illinein,s,nearly Seven in Boston, eluding the entire corpse diplomatique and and eleven in Florida,grallually increasing great :dicers of the State; and entertained Ntl,Appronch the Island of Quba, near them at two hundred suppertablcs on.a ser- thesffiiddle of - which it will-hKeentral'and vice of gold, silver • and • chrystal, loaded i total. This will he the laitVrige. eclipse with nil the luxuries ()revery cliniate in the of the sun that Will be visits to,...us : Aktil world." • -• 11 May 26th, 185.1. • a "FEARLESS AND FREE." his eye, he demanded a hot roast fowl, sonic gond brandy and a comfortable room for the night. The landlord was excee& ingly sorry, but he could not give him a comfortable room ; the only place he could sleep would be in a double-bedded room with another gentleman. "Very well," said D.. "Let's have the best you've got." After discussing his supper he turncd in, and was soon sound asleep. His slumbers were doomed to be of short, duration, for before )(mg. he was awakened by cries of "Sir! sir! sir !" from the other bed. "Bless my soul !" cried D. thrusting his glass to his eyes, and endeavoring to peer through the dark ; "What's the matter, my dear fellow? Is tke house on lire, or. are there bugs in your bed !" "Neither, sir ; but, sir, you snore so ter ribly that I can't steep, sir—terrific, sir." "Bless my soul!" repeated D., very much shocked, "that ever I should be so rude as to snore in a gentleman's presence! I real !ly ask your pardon, sir, and beg . you'll Verld.ok' t ; it wasn't intentional, • I aSsure i you. ,, The - 'apology was accepted, a "good night" was exchanged,• and both parties' went to sleep again. Soon, however, a , rumbling sound was heard in D.'s bed', ev ery- moment growing louder, until at last it resembled threatrical thunder. The other lodger, driven almost, to mad- ness, started up and exclaimed, - • "Ry gracious !• this is too much—i can't' stand it. Sir! sirs sir ! Wake up, sir!"" "BlesS my soul! What's• the matter now?" cried D., 'starting up in the, bed; you seem to - be very restless, sir." "Restless, sir? 1 believe you," said the disturbed, one, "you've been snoring again sir, and I - cannot get to sic*" "You don't say so !" said D., "have I been repeating my rudeness to you, sir? I am really extremely sorry, my, dear sir, but Lwaa really asleep. Good night— very serry ;" and he went again, and began snoring as loudly as ever, and was a gain awakened by his room mate's com plaints. "Snoring .again, have I, sir!" .said D.,. "Nell the fact is, I have had a hard day's journey and eaten a hearty supper, and it I snore I can't help it, I have apologized twice, and it is sufficient. I am now a bout to go to sleep again, but allow me to inform you, sir, that if you awake me up again, snoring or not snoring I'll just get up and give you the worst thrashing that you over had in the whole course of your life! Good night, sir." His slumbers were undisturbed.- 7 N. 0.: Picayune. A JAMMU AT FAULT.—Every body in Philadelphia, and out of Philadelphia, we believe (says the Germantown Telegraph,) knows or has heard ocGotlieb Sheerer, a talli robust, well-formed .German, with a small twinkling eye, and a look that tells . you, quite as distinctly as language, that he "knows a thing or two." Being call, ed upon the stand as a witness on One oc casion, he was catechised rather severe ly, (as the story goes,) by Mr. Dallas, who expected to make out a strong point by e.; liciting something something from the fol lowing questions “Were you at Harrisburg, Mr. Sheerer, in December?” ~ A t Harrisburg in December, did you say, Mr. Dalla ?" "Yes, sir, 1. said at Harrisburg in s I)e7 cember." Putting his head down thoughtfully for a moment,-he replied: "No, sir, I w•as not." "Were you at Harrisburg in January, Mr. Sheerer ?" „ At Harrisburg in January, did you say, Mr. Dallas ?”- "Yes, sir, I said at Harrisburg in Janu ary." Relapsing into a thoughtful mood for a moment: "No, sir, I was not at I-larrisbusg in Jan uary ?" • “Well, Mr. Sheerer, were you at Har risburg in .February?” "Did you. say at Harrisburg in Februa ry, Mr. Dallas?" "Yes, sir --,answer me if you please-4' said at Harrisburg in February." Studying for a moment or two as before "No, sir, I was not at Harrisburg in February." Getting somewhat out of patience with him, Mr . D., elevating his tone, demanded: "At what time, then, Sir, were you at Harrisburg?" "At Harrisburg? At Harrisburg, Mr. Dallas ?-=l/eas never at Harrisburg in my life, sir." Of course the Court adjourned instanter. ENING, MARCH 6, 1846. to record at the foot of the page some notice of the day's business.. Thus they learned to write > to spell, to correct their style, to think, and to express their thoughts direct ly and simply, and not one of them but has since borne testimony of the value and ef ficiency of this apparently trifling portion of their school routine. In throwing out these hints for the consideration of parents and tcaehers,,,we also remind persons al ready engaged in the active duties of life, of the value, for future reference, of such a' neat, portable record of the striking inci dents of each day, as can be conveniently set down in a pocket diary. People arc constantly trying to recollect, but vainly, the date of certain incidents, as a clue of ten to.other important affairs, which could be turned to With perfect certainty, if the use of a diary ivere habitual. The prac tice has so many advantages in face that few who have for any time tried the effect, ever give up the habit of keeping a . rep, lar Journal.. It is the anchor of a- IMsiliess Sidi. COSTLINESS OF Themotos.—Christians, in this land of civil and religious freedoin, where every one can do as is right in his own eyes, sometimes complain of the calla upon their purse for the Support of reli gious worship at home, and the diffusion of its blessings abroad ; but CluiatianitY, compared with any of the nunner - obs forms of heathenism, is a cheap religion, apart from its healthfulinfienee upon all the so cial and domestiC , interests of man. Let any one who doubts this, read Rev. Mr. Kincaid's description of the pagodas in Birnah, found in the “Missionary Memo rial," from-which the following is an ex tract : "It was near evening when we came before Men goon. the largest pagoda, or temple, in the empire. The grandiather of the present reigning monarch of 13irmalt reared this vast pile. In the centre of the enormous structure, (covering malty acres,). in a room twenty cubits square, are placed images of each member. of the royal family, made of Pure gold ; and the amount of gold in each iniage is equal in weight to the individual lbr whom it was made ; and alio images of each nobleman in the empire, of, pure white silver, and the silver weighed against each man. Every_ thing about this pagoda is on a scale of vastness almost over, powering. Asa specimen, the two lions that guard the stairs leading from the' river up to the enclosure, though in a couchant posture; are nine ty feet high." THE Btn is PuEctous.—SOrne men neg lect the Bible as other§ neglect a 'valuable picture. It is thrown by and buried a mongst. the dust and rubbish. But when examined, it will prove to be a cost ly original, done by a Supreme Hand : a greater than Rubens, Raphael, or, Michael. Angelo. While - neglected and sullied, it seemed worthless ; it appears now of ex traordinary value. Its curious lines ap pear, the strokes of a Great MaSter's hand are seen, more and more admirable linea ments are discovered, and the soul 'is at least enamored at the contemplation. • • TUE HAPPY GIRL.-Ay, she is a happy girl—we know it by her fresh looks and buoyant spirits. Day in and day out, she has something to do, and she takes hold of work as if she did not fear to soil her hands, or dirty her apron. Such girls we love and respect wherever we find them— in a palace or in a hovel. Always plea sant and always kind, they never turn .up their noses before your face or slander you behind your back. They have more good sense and better employment.— .What are flirts and bustle-bound girls in comparison with these .? Good for no thing but to look at; and that is rather dis gusting. Give us the industrious and hap py girl, and we care not who worships fash ionable and idle simpletons. WISDOM AND VIRTIJE.--Ainber attracts a straw ; so does beauty adthiration; which only lasts while the warmth Continues ; but virtue, goodness, and real worth, like the loadstone, never lose tlMir pOwer. They are the true graces—linked and tied hand in hand ; it is by their influences that human hearts are so firmly united to each' other. INFLUENCE.—Every person has more Or less influence. The greater the talent, the larger the wealth, the higher the office, the wider will be .the influence. Remem ber this, and so live that your good deeds and daily example may lead to truth and virtue. DEATIA, lly LIGHTNINCL , ---M iss Caroline Goodman, an interesting }feting lady of a bontsixteen years of age, daughter of Duke W. Good Mani Esq., was killed by light ning on last Saturday night week, at Mo bile, Alabama, whilst lying in bed • asleep. Her mother and child were in the same bed but escaped without injury. GREAT SNOW bairrs.—The Brooklyn Star reports the snow drifts in many places, between that. city and, the narrows, to be twenty feet in depth ! A. Stam.E. , --Did iteveroceur toyou that the eatly - notes of the birds may bo, like the prayers of children, an offering ofgrat, de 11r protecuOu daring the night ?, TERMSTVVO DOLLAR" PIM IL!IitIPI,3 WHOLE NO. 831 A CAPITAL "GOOfille STORT.-4 coins's:A:lent of the New York Spirit of the Tiniest, tam, the folioed:le—which is very good:— . ~ , , ~, Away down in the "smart ; village" , "uf Cincinnati, there vegetates a certain ,hotel keeper, who, for cuteness, is, "Solite," Ypu .., • . ~ I% i •ty depend. Having been frequetOym2 7 po ed upon while supplying his bountiful' * lar pr with the article of geese, bythe Wiltle, aWake "Buckeye" biaters, he deerhp4 i At high time to .try if cheating ivaiitill.a . game that two could play at. , So, ono mottling bright and early, he presents - himself i bi).. fore one of the numerous firmer's Wagops surrounding the market Squares;4lth a— "I s-s-say, f7r-fr-friend-g-rgOt any g-g.- geese?" [The poor fellow hai Charles Lainb's defect of Speech.] "Yes, sir, fine lOt---" ~ Vie k-gtr-got, up tO.•.iny h-h-house, the all-f-firefiredest set 'of h-b r boys for ig-g-geese, you ever imp; and I want to h-h-head 'em °fro fetis,.wit4 some t-t-tough ones; e-e 7 calet .yOu , p-p -pick me out a few old :t-t-tough h-11-h,-ho fellers ?".', "Well, I don't know, biltlgliess I might find one or two," and so turning over his pile of poultry, he collects on one ,side .of the wagon some eight Or tengeese, whose claim to the title of"old he fellers" needed no corroborative proof of "Nootka Sound Convention," or."Treaty,of Florida," hut might justly be pronounced "eleai.and.un . gpospopahle," .Mine host" eyed the process ofacgro‘ gation with evident satisfaction. "Are 1-t-thOse all . the . t4=tough ones you've g-g-got?". "Yes, sir, and I vote I didn't know I had so many." “Well,” was the reply, I'll t-t-t-take the other 1-1-lot !" TILE BEADLE AND THII - COUNTRT*AWINw A short time 'since one of the beadlti: of N—,- took --a quantity of butter .froin countryman because it. was'> deficient, in , weight ; and meeting him a Pe* days after in a public houie, said to him== • • a you are the man took' - the twenty- 4 pounds of butter from the other day." • "No, :I bean't," replied Bodge: am sure you are," say* the behdle. ' 'I tell you I bean't," replied 'the toun tryman,-"and if you likes, Ilt lay tube o'unea on't." . "Done I." replied thdbeadle, and itlinincw ney was quickly posted. "Now," said the couptiyman,"thou did take lumps of butter from the; butif'lhey had been tWeiny poundt, you'd ha s'e . right to take 'em ; and , this.' .continuedle, very coolly pocketing 'the moneY, , iwilljust pay me for the loss of the butter." SONO OF THE SHIRT,- , A- _EH E kh ` ,at Cambridge. Mass., has invented a lidding machine which will render, the ialios this song more apiireptiatiilian eier, `ll, is very compact not occupying a space of_ more than about six inches each way,. runs with so, much ease that. we shonld,' suppose one person might - easilii , °Pirate , tiventy.or thirty of client, and ~the work is done in a most thorottgli and perfect' ner. Both sides of the seams look 'alit e, appearing hi be beautifully stitched, and the seam is closer and more uniform;han.when sewed by hand. It Will sew stiaight". Or curved seahis with equal facilitY;'aria sci rapidly that it 'takes but two mintit6i to sew the whole length Of, the outiide' of a pair of men's pantaloons. It Sets 400 stitches a minute with pertec &Sae, and the proprietor thinks difficulty in setting I'oo in a 'minute. 'lle thraid less worn by this processand conseq4ent ly retains more of its strengtii.,. The ,sitn'4.. plicity of the' construction Of and the accuracy, rapidity and perfacliqii of its operation, will place it in the , same rank with the card machine, the dtraW braid er, the pm niachine,ancl the coach 1.44 (l`torri —machines, which never 'fait to coniniand , the admiration of every GROWTH AND PROSPERITY OF THE WEST. • —An interesting article in. The : National Magazine Contains, some striking fact con. cerning the growth and, prospects , of ithat wonderful region. , The prochictiVe 'indus ! ;! try of the • nine: States -hindering , on: th‘• Western waters is thus set forth r—Agriml culture, $194,684,805; 'manufactures, , 31341' 227,785;, commerce, 28,322,413;; the' far. 4 , ,, est, 3,370,794 ; . mines, .8,008,378 v . , . eries, 1'1,717—t0ta1, , .5270,521,932:-I! Add, yet the entire . populatiori, according-to the last census, of these nine statesisless than five and a hay millions of people: gle individual in Cincinnati has.,negotiatet drafts through 'the hanks to thei annual -'itU mount of from $20,000 , to 25,000illittihe'. proceeds of eggs shipped from that Aity to! , New Orleans. , . , RESUMPTION 07 STATE FArTI; KUM. r.min.—A bill was presented in the Airy. land Legislature, on Tueiday, introdicnd by Mr. Johnson, for theTundinglofdie,g; rears of interest on the Stat; doelip,to the, first of July next and the rbsuniptiiiii:Of,. payment of interest accruing tinyff#tnik, the Ist of OCtober ensuing. Ti1f,,EF,,V41 1 ,. Of interest funded are to be at Mtn ger per annum. This is truly the most `iri. portant bill of the. session. ~• : DEATH Fitom INTEMPERANthre-;4' Irak named Peter Robey, was recently dead near Upper Marlboto.Md.', , Hiphilf, , been..drinking too freelY , of eprrittionadnit; uors and, got foundred in a, NUM- ilottni• ititt: A his w ay halitie• ;t , TC:7;! .C 4.4 . , The lens notic e we-take -of the% . . 1 injoriertbst ate dun. nn, - thelatetS'il .qujim,-ntotit • ~. a a