it . I J c.,„11 JJ't. llyitit,ti;tn, q, ~ ,„ 13, - .11 - •Ler, Editor ProlDriator. SEVENTII YEAR v d t ccittchlgnimititiau IS PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY, By „gifctloticle 4a/ea ; AT ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM, PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. I )ÜBLICATION OFFICE in the second sto- L ry of Cnu Raw, on Front Street, five ;figrta East if Mrs. Bury's Hotel, MARIETTA, LANCASTER COUNTY, PEN. If su'oscriptions be not paid within six months, $1.25 will be charged, and if delayed until the expiintion of the year, $1.50 will be charged. Any person sending us FIVE new subscribers shall have a sixth copy for his trouble. No subscription received for a less period than six months, and no paper will be discontin ued until all encamps are paid, unless at the °Ohm of the publisher. A failure to no : . lily a discontinuance at the expiration of the trim subscribed for, will be considered a new \Dv ERTISI nr. RA T : One square (12 lineß, Icss) 50 cents for the first insertion and 25 rynts for each subsequent insertion. Proles and Business cards, of six lines or 1093 ltt *3 per annum. Notices in the reading cAumns, five rents a-line. Marriages and Dvitths, the simple announcement, rarai; hot for any additional lines, five cents a...line. /I 4 recently added a large lot of new JOll nNu CAM) TYPE, we arc prepared to do all Finds o f I , FA a AND ORNAMENTAL PRINT- INC, at short notice and reasonable prices. A liberal discount made to quarterly, half-year ly or yearly advertisers. UPP LEE & BRO., Inuit AND BRASS FOUNDERS, ANDGEN.EItAL MACHINISTS, Second Street, helow Union, COLUMBIA, PA.., o They are prepared to make all kindeof Iron Castings for Rolling Mills and Blast Furnaces, Pipes, for Steam, Water and Gas ; Columns, Fronts, Cellar Deers, Weights, Ice, for Buil dings, and castings of every description; ENGINES, AND BOILERS, IN TUE MOST MODERN AND IMPROVED Manner; Pumps, Brick Presses, Shafting and Pulley's, Mill Gearing, Taps, Dies, Machinery for Mining and Tanning; Brass Bearings, Steam and Blast Gauges, Lubricators, Oil Cocks, Valves for Steam, Gas, and Water; Brass Fittings in All their Variety; Boilers, Tanks, Flues, Heaters, Stacks, Bolts, Nuts, Vault Doors, Washers, &c. 11L A 0 K SIVIITHING IN GENERAL. From lung experience in building machinery we flatter ourselves that we can give general satis-: faction to those why may favor us with their orders. ILI itepairiv promptly attended to. Orders by mail addressed as above, will meet WWI prompt attention. Prices to suit the times. Z. SUPPLEE, 7'. R. SUPPLEE. Columbia, October '20,1860. 14-tf PLUMB DYER, Fashionable Tailors , dr, Drapers, Opposite A. russet's store, Market street, MARIETTA, PA. r HE undersigned having associated them '. selves into a co-partnership, would here by inform their old patrons and the pubic generally, that they will continue the Fashionable Tailoring Business at the old stand, adjoining Dr. Hinkle's og Store, 14.1orket street. Having a fine stock of eidths, &IkeNOS, which they will dispose of and "make up!? on reasonable terms. 13eing determined to give satidaction, they would respectfully ask a con tinuation of past favors. Christian Plumb, Nathan Dyer. Cr Gutting done at short notice. Marietta, Sep. 10, 1859.-tf ' T ENV ELRY.—A large and selected stock of fine jewelry of the latest patterns from the best factories in the country can be found at H. L. & E. T. ZAHIVPS. Cur. North Queen st. and Centre Square, L. eitster, Pa. Our prices are moderate and a goods warranted to be as represented. - WORE NE W GOODS! The subscriber LYE having just returned from -Philadelphia where he renewed and added to his FALL AND WINTER STOCK 01 Dress Goods. Call and see the new styles 4ind learn the low prices, at DIFJP.ENBACJIVS. 100 BAR.REI r .S E ChoI^' R 1) Boxes Valencia and Bunch APPLES , !, Raisins, 520 Bags pared and unpared Dried Peaches, 50 Bags pared Dried Apples, 1000 Lbs. Cod Fish; Fine Syrups, Sugars, &c Dec. B.] SPANGLER & PATTERSON. SPECTACLES to suit all who 0" 1433i can be aided with glasses, can be bought at L. k ZAHN'S, Cor ner of North queen-at., and Center Square, Lancaster. New glasses refitted in old frames, at short notice. pr6-ly CCLOTHS AND CASSMIERS.—A very su perior selection of French and German 90ths, and Cassimers,•and a variety of beati tat Vestings, a new and fashionable lot, just arrived at Diffenbach's Cheap Store. --- I)UGGY and Sleigh BLANKETS of various I styles and at much lower prices than the same grades were sold last fall. Spangler S. Patterson. 7U. A.VO URING EXTRACTS : .1 . " Vanilla, Strawberry, Pine Apple, Almond, Rose, Lemon, Jost received andfor sale at Grove Roth's.' i t SUPERIOR article theectifi Crab gal- Apple Cider, for sale by arrel or gal lun at J. R. Difredbach's Store. CCONCENTRATEP .L Y E, )perior to any nowin use, caplie had at the Cheap Store of Eliffenbach. A GOODWIN'S & BRO's. Plantation fine . cut Chewing Tobacco. TheOLFE'S. best in th 4 world. For sale at W • Tro LANDLORDS! just received, Scotch and Irish WITI-SKIES, warma ted pure, at 11. D. Benjamain3s. Q IX A len NEW T. CRO ENGLAND RUM Al for culinary purposes, warranted genuine at 11. D. Benjamin & Cols. ()ULM'S longcelebrated BANJAM/N CO. TAtIONARY—the largest assortment in town at Grove , .Rothis: inionno , mm•m-- 0 STANTLY on hand, Monongahela rec tified Willakey, 2/c/Ljamin Co, ge s °M to Plitits,. ISiftraturt,gtuu uat, ot tat Hurt, gly . fite arts, 6'Entral Reius of Ike gap., Yotai jinformatitm., fit.j TEE DEATH OE THE OLD YEAR List I list ! • what fearful . tone *as that which Upon the wind of midnight? Nature sounds No knel! o'er earth for tEe departed year, Yet when its lastbreath passed late the void Of the by-gone eternity, I heard Echoed:Within the chambers of my 'soul A sound, perchance the shadow of a sound, Wild, strange and dismal, as it were a wail, A low and blended wail, from all the graves And sepulchres of ocean and of earth Upon the stilly air. Oh was it not The solemn voice of old Eternity Uttering Orie cry, one wild and deep lament, For his dead child! The year, alas ! is gone Forever from the world ! He seemed too strong, ' Too mighty e'er to die. He laid his hand On breathing millions, and they sank beneath The' reen grass of the grave, he blew around The trumpet-blast of battle, and dark-hosts Met in the mortal shock, and when the flame And smoke of conflict had gone by, they lay Liko autumn's red leaves on the plain; he passed O'er earth and,at each wave of his broad-wings, Volcano, earthquake, whirlwind, storm; and flood Sprang up beneath their silent spell and wrought The fearful errands gf their destiny ; Yet now his own great mission done, he lies On scorched and broken pinions with the dead, There, there to sleep. What is time? A giant power, stern, vast, and bodiless, That we may feel bat never see. We gaze With aching eyes into the past, and there We see a thousand shapes of light and gloom Floating like atoms in the, pallid beams Of mournful memory, but the perished yeas Is all unseen. From thence we sadly turn, And, gazing on the future, we behold Dim, countless phantoms trooping from its dark Unfathomed ocean to the lonely shore Of earthly being, but the coming years Are all invisible. And then we pause And gaze above, around, beneath, and lo Our eyes are startled: by the mighty deeds Of the now passing time : the iron weight Of his stern presence rests upon our souls ; We feel the awful spectre touch our brows With his cold death-like finger; and we hear The deep. and mingled roar that rises up From all his mighty doings on our earth ; And yet he has no form to cast its gleam Or shadow on...ypur sight.. The parted year Called forth fiom NV* blooming Paradise Of sweet Spring-flowethe waved his autumn wand And they were not. He woke in human souls Myriads-of hopes and joys and burning loves, That seemed like things of immortality— He tonehed them and they died. Another year, The gift of God, is cast beneath the skies, . And what is darkly hidden in the still And-silent depths of its mysterious months, , We may'not know—thank God, we may not - know. . We only know that with each passing month And day and hour, the low, deep wail of grief, The maddened cry of aptly, the shout Of fierce ambition, the loturthlinder - shock . Of bloody Conflict,and,the knell of death Will echo, each, in one brief moment o'er The sea of time, and then•he swallowed up And lost forever in the onward sweep Of Its unpitying weird. The midnight skies, Are weeping silent tears as if they. grieved For ,the old year, and the pale stars rook . sad And tremble, as if living,Sorrowing hearts Were thrObbing in their breasts. In vain I in Vain I , 1. • The' faded-year is nothingmow.. The iloWers, The birds, the waves, the • thousand melodies Of vernal life and nature will come beck, But he returns no more. The winds:••may search For him in their far journeyings ; the grand Old ocean with its thunder tones may call. For ever to him in its ceaseless dash Beneath the heavens; the bright and burning stars With their high tones of Eden minstelsy May speak his name in their eternal svep Along their flaming paths; the comets wild May seek him by the baleful blaze they spread Through realms of ancient night; but /lone of these:: Shall ever'fin4 hitcy for he liveth not. In all the universe of God. Years die, And centuries die, and there will come a day When the dread angel of the Apocalypse; Standing on land and sea, will lift his band And swear that time shall be no more, - Yet thou, Oh man, will never die. The earth will pass Like a wild dream away, the very heavens Be rolled together as a scroll, but lie, Beneath whose feet the sun and stars are dust, Rath said that thou shall never die. Those great And awful words of the Omnipotent Are caught up and re-echoed to thy soul By all'the world of nature. A deep voice, That tells thee of thy immortality, .peaks in the breeze and in the hurricane ; Blends with the-gentle music of the stream, The loud rush of the cataract ; the peal From the dark bosom of the cloud, and all The thousand mystic cadences of night, Deep mingles with the everlasting roar Of-ocean in his wild unrest, and swells Forever in the angel-symphonies Sung./sy the stars around the midnight throne. The Honduras Government has pardonod Colonel , It udler; who was cap tured along with Walker. BY GEO. D. PRENTICE E:m MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 186}. [Fait " Tim W.tExilt MARIETTIAN." CLEVER FELLOWS. "say what you will, he's a d--dolever fellow.F - - - - That's so." There is a deeper and a more signifi cant truth, contained and exin.essed in the above brief lines, than many'of those persons imagine, upon the end of whose tongues they sit so frequently and so trippingly, almost every day of their lives. Is it not possible, that there may be few other men who are more effectu ally and more peculiarly damned, - than those whose entire energies and substan ces have become - exhausted, in the sui cidal effort to win the empty title of, or being what the world denominates, "a clever fellow ?". The bare suggestion, that such a thing may be, seems like a harsh saying in connection with such a subject ; but, when we desire to present a naked and unadorned truth, with the hope that it may be seen and acknowl edged as truth, we must not disguise it, by clothing it in such a garb as would destroy its potency, and divest it of its penetrating power. "He who spake as never man spake," never minced his words, but called all things, at once, by such names as their internal qualities in dicated them to be, no matter how fair they may have appeared externally: "He that believeth shall be saved, but he that believeth not shall be damned," might probably have been spoken in more eu phoneous language, or in words more musical to tho sensuous ear, than those in which we find them recorded in the sacred oracles, but then possibly the axe would not have been so effectually laid at the root of the tree, or its office so clearly comprehended, as in the words employed. But, like prisons, and pains and penalties in the life of the world, those words are only terrible to the ha bitually evil, and to perverse violators of law and order ; to those whose walk and conversation is in the fear of the let ter and the spirit of the law, or who are "a law unto themselves," they are only regarded as reactive consequences upon the heads of evil doers, in accordance with the immutable principles of truth. But wo are digressing, and returning to the subject again, we by no means wish to be understood as saying, that all clever fellows are necessarily the subjects of the condemnation alluded to, for, as it is among all other characters and condi tions of men, there must needs be a va riety of shades and grades of quality, corresponding to the motives by which men are actuated in their daily lives.— But, let men coolly and calmly reflect Upon their own characters and conduct, and also upon those of other men, with whom they may have had social and com mercial intercourse, and if it does not be come apimrent that the greater number of those acts which gain for the actors the name of a clever fellow, aro as cold, as selfish, as calculating, and as ulterior in all their aims and ends, as any that can possibly disgrace the name and sen timent of - humanity, then they must be too deeply immersed in the false surroud ings of a perverted understanding, to be cognizent of anything that is evil.- "Clever fellows"—so called, by a soft of common consent, claim piiviliges and iminunitieS, that ardaccorded tit no other members'of the community, no• matter how worthy.or how needy they may be.; and this same unlimited„ and indiscrimi nate indulgence of clever fellowS'by , ,so ciety, makes them the most exacting and presumptuous individuala that promen ade the avenues of life—Xodest.worth often shrinks abashed from such a pres ence, and would be a stonished'atits own imperiousness were it ;but - .to Seek the "little finger" of. that "whole hand," which is so arrogantly monopolized by the clever fellow. Is this spurious clever fellowship to be approved, or condemn ed ? and are its influences upon its vic tims and -upon itself, a blessing or a curse ? It is vary probable' that,ander all these circumstances, clever fellows may, from the want of a proper andliza tion of their intentions, believe that they are acting disinterestedly, honestly, and humanely ; and the society and commu nity in which they move, may also ac quiesce in that belief. But, suppose we particularize, drawing upon our imagination, assisted by life experiences, for cases in detail, to illus trate our general thought—let us , see. One man, by fair or foul means, obtains an office of responsibility and great trust ; in which he has the control and dis bursement of large amounts of money, which is to be honestly and legally ap prOpriated, so as ,to subserve the inter ests , Of the community. and the govern ment or institution from which he derives his authority, or his official function - ; and, in that office, and with the literals • it places under his control, he forthwith commences the business, of building up the character and calling of a, clever fel low, in order •that he may be .enabled to attain a higher position in office or in society—a position that perhaps until now, had never entered his. mind. Nor will he be -long in drawing around him a host of sham or. "sunshine" friends, who without stint will award to him, with an abjurgation, the title and position he is so ambitious.of attaining, at least so long as his power, his influence, and his mate rial moans continue to flow, whether they be his own honestly earned dollars, or those confided to his charge for, the use of others. No one can doubt that such a man, and by such a course, may attain his end, so far as wining a title is concerned ; but can it not also be seen how effectually such a man brings con demnation upon himself—and not only upon himself, but upon his family and his true friends, by such a procedure.— It will be apparent that such an individ ual is literally damned ; for; the end must come—a denouncement must take place—and then the loss of reputation "of honor and of just renown," the loss of an unsullied conscience, and the self abasement and self-condemnation which are the consequences of detection and exposure, is surely a damnation of the deepest dye ; and one that, often hurries the poor subject of it into the eternal presence perhaps to encounter one more deeper still. It is very true, that men in such positions and with the opportu nities they afford, are also -influenced in in their conduct by motives of_self-ag grandizement, luxurious.living, and ex cessiveand expensive appointments; but the means thus squandered are in many —if not in the majority of instances—far less than those expended in the insane effort to be considered and called by everOody a clever fellow. -Another man starts out into business under the most favorable auspices, and launches his craft—of whatever depth or capacity it may ho—upon the broad com mercial ocean, with a fair wind and tide before him, and a clear blue sky above him ; thinking only of the distant haven in whose secure and placid waters he soon expects to be anchored without a - peradventure or encountering a super vening storm. That portle most cer tainly would have reached sooner or la:, ter, and with as much of the cargo that he started out with, as would be condu cive to his best interests, and to his present and future happiness, were it not for the fatal error he committed, by turn ing his attention from his compass and steering his craft by that, to the glitter ing but worthless bauble of becoming a clever fellow. It is so grateful to the vanity of man to be regarded as a clever fellow, that its allurements becomes irre sistalle to the poor subject of them, when surrounded by the fawning syco phants which such a presence never fails to attract within its sphere. Patrons to such a man will no doubt come in swarms—much larger swarms than when his motives of action are dictated by a plain and inflexible sense of duty—for the whole community will have "horses to hold, babies to mind, bundles to carry, or axes to grind." Neither will it . be long before -the clever fellow will be compelled to "rob Peter to pay Paul," for his flatterers will not all exercise the same degree of influence over him=--some will be nearer to the throne, and some • farther away ; some will be in a condition occasionally to give—expecting not less than thrice its value in return—but others, and by far the larger portion, will only and always think of receiving. Many of the insects that thus gather around a clever fellow are void of a sting, and are therefore comparatively harm less, but they nevertheless all exhaust and annoy, and each adds its mite to that general damnation of character and substance, which must inevitably follow in their wake. Look abroad and see how many of the sons of men have been compelled to retire from the arena of trade and commerce prematurely, freer the disabling effects, growing out of vain attempts to win the worthless, and al ways equivocal, title of a clever fellow. A third individual may have received what is termed a finished education— • may have been the favorite graduate of some learned institution or college, and may possess all the untried and unform ed essentials of a nseful and efficent cit izenship in any of the various walks of life. Ile may be the possessor of ample material means and a respectable parent age, and large , and influential familyscon nections. Under all these circumstan ces it would seem a miracle that he should not succeed in life and bo the progenitor, not only of a respectable posterity, but also of the i4ai..l the !pock One Dollar a Year_ and the trutlis"whielr contribute to the wellbeing of that posterity, in time and in eternity. But elatel bar to all this, is, perhaps, the narne . of a "clever fellow" which he won at college or seminary:— The time and'Men& necessary to stistain successfully such acliaracter absorbs the whole man and all his energies, both physical and mental, and leaves very•lit tle to be devoted to' the maturing, per fecting, and carrying. into practical op eration, those virtues and principles, which in an elementary forM had been inculcated and partially appropriated, during the earlier years of youth and , manhood. This state of things if per sisted in, brings the usual damning ef fects in its train ; even if the surround ings of such a man shoUld he too refined, externally, to indulge in obscurity or ob jurgation ; for, there are such things in the world as "whited sepulchers" that are filled with "rottenness and dead mons bones ;" and refinedlieentiousness or evil in any form, is more sweeping and farther reaching in its dainnation— and also damns its victims lower—than that which has been indulged in more grossly and revoltingly because more ig norantly. The consequences and the injuries incidental to a fall, are always proportioned to the elevation from which the individual has fallen, and every deep observer of the progress which men are making in this world, is compelled to look with sadness upon the moral skele tons that here and there abound in so'ci ety, who are the unworthy representa tives of the once opulent and elite of the land, but who have fallen victims to excesses; growing out of attempts,'suc cessful or adverse;to becomein tiatne, a clever fellow. But it may be asked, are there 'no truly clever fellows? or is it criminal and therefore necessarily dam ning to become such ? To the first ques tion we are happy to answer, yeel to the second we unhesitatingly and un eqUivocally answer, no ;—notwithstand-- ing it has passed into a proverb, that "worth makes the man the want of it the fellow." There are clever fellows by scores in this world ; more than have ever receiv ed any credit for being such, and whose actions being governed by a high sense of duty towards all classes of society, they never court any credit for being such. With such persons charity al ways begins at home, but instead- of end ing there, it goes out wherever it may lawfully find anything to do, by and through lawful means. The truly clever fellow is always - charitable ; not alone that kind of charity which seeks, to make a display of almsgiving ; but a charity that-has regard -to the sentiments, the feelings, the opinions, and the.rights of others. The truly clever fellow also only gives that which is his own, or that which has been placed in his charge to give in some other name ;. and -to ,givo it under such circumstances and at such times as will subserve the greatest use. It need scarcely be asserted that the larger mn ber of those who , have earned the: rep tatien of being clever-fellbsis, have 'done it at therexPense of Othershave given . and in one way or another Squandereil at haphazzard, the Substance that never belonged to them,' and for which they hive never been able to make an ad - Tide return-Lthis need not be asserted here at any.lenglh, for it-is too apparent to the most superficial observer. Yes, there are legitimate clever fel lows—thanks for these green spots in the social desert—there are clever, fellows, but they are those who are actuated by a sense of sterling and inflexible, yet chartable duty, in their intercourse with their fellow men, ttir There was an old Farmer who had one hen that, not content with her proper sphere of action, was continually endeavoring to crow. At last, after re peated attempts, she succeeded in mak ing something like a crow. The farmer was taking his breakfast at the time, and hearing the noise went out, but soon re turned,- bearing in his hand the crowing hen, minus her head. " There," said he, I'm willing hens should do most- any thing, but I ain't willing they should crow ; it's setting a bad example." .itirMrs. Gaines' great suit is set down for trial in January, in the 'Supreme CourtjNo. 66 on the calendar. It in volves about two-thirds of the city of New Orleans. All parties lave arrived in Washington, and are preparing for the case. • ' MEM ;Er Queen Victoria-Is a -goCni Woman • —she bonght, ilea Wealsteads and presented them to the 4poor fe4le of Balmoral,. FRANCE AND SECESSION : The New York Comthercial. Advertiser, in a very ante articleon theinterference of France,. IXES The pbsition of France and of Louis Napoleon towards the seceding States, is . nciw a topic of conversation as it has heretofore been of speciltilion.: Reliable intelligence has been received to the er• feet that the Emperor of France declines to pave the. way for negotiations with South Carolina. OverturCs have already been made to him and , his recognition has been solicited. He states that even if the ind,ppendence of South Carolina, and if a southern confederation is recog nized by the northern States and by the rest of the Union, France cannot toler ate the idea on which this separate es• istence is based, and she will not endorse the system of slavery or the revival of the slave trade. This intelligence is rather dampening to the heated spirits of the secessionists, who had Counted con fidently upon French 'sympathy, and, if necessary, intervention. But the whole policy of France is in the line of human ity, and against such a denial of rights as is contemplated arid maintained by the south. MARRIAGE IN HIGH LIFE: On Thurs day evening of last week the marriage of Mr. A. Berghmans, the Secretary of the Belgian Legation at Washington, to Miss Lily Macalester, daughter of Chas. Macalester, Esq., of Philadelphia ; and Vice Regent of the Ladies' Mount Ver non Association, took place at the resi dence of Mr. Macalester. The ceremony was performed by the 'Protestant as well as the Catholic form, the civil service having previously been performed, as in European Catholic countries. The bride was attended by seven bridesmaids, the first being Miss Harriet Lane, the niece of the President of the United States.— The groomsmen were all , gentlemen at tached to the Diplomatic-service. The bride and groom departed for a brief vis it-to New York. The 'trousseau, of the bride, and the dresses of herself and her attendants at the wedding are described as surpassingly beautiful. ar Wm. Smithinian, who is a na tive of England, a millwright, for many years a resident of Juneau county, Wis., arrived at St. Louis last week from Mem phis, and exhibited the marks of fearful lashing and abuse received at a place called Sanatobia Station, in Mississippi, on the Tennessee _and Mississippi' -Rail road. lle was Charged, on arriving at Sanatobia, with tampering with a slave, and although protesting"entire innocence, was taken out, stripped, received two-- hundred lashes, and `afterwards 'tarred and feathered, and threatened' with hang ing if he did not leave :in five ',minuets. The Southern people have an-wytiya.fors obtaining all 'the dyrdente they itatt -to _ convict any obnoxioUS man ofa cflied.— They sieze a slave, threaten and lash him, till, to escape insufferable torture or death, he "confesses" that the l ivtite ob ject of hate had `i tampereiP With him, and theUthe crime is stiftelentlY proved • to justify indignity, brutal abuse, and ev en actual murder. We read of Such .ati torted confessions id' the dark ages Of rope with indignatiodand horreOftit this is the " dark age " in the eitreMe South. They talk-of our- laws as " in famous," while they Abel:l - selves - regard their own laws - but as ropes of timid in cases where Northern men should be protectee ' " Cr The Smithsonian Institute is pre paring, by order of Congress, a most in teresting report on agricultural meteor ology, which will be a welcome boon to our farmers. Besides .meteorological statistics collected during the last ten years, at nearly four bundred stations, it will contain the arrivals and departure of birds, fishes and migratory animals, and also a time of planting and harvest ing of crops, &c., at the different points of the United. States. . RANTELLus go' A Bangor, 'Me., bully attacked Smith, the razor Strop man, with EL tor rent- of abuse. Unable to stand" it 'shy longer, Smith put down his bo:sliet, took off his glasses, and said—" 11Sy frignd; only get mad, once in fourteen years, :lAA this is my time—Pcn!mad nll thriaisti.." With this remark, ho p~chBl aid whipped the fellow taltgiti ftil the conceit out of' • *V . A. French machinist,-named-Baird, has *it invented &mover/Met; fottin'sjo, which is said tee loe a terrible anachine, propelled •by.ptealh. , It -id. dionnted :on wheels; ,and at- - :seme4 future' day ke expedited into an 'enemy's camp; to deal out the destroying- missiles with which it is well supplied. NO. 25.