4 is Srootcb to foiitirs, literature,1 Agriculture, Science, JKoralitn, nnb eneral Intelligence. VOL. 13. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. SEPTEMBER I, 1853. NO. 45, '1 Published by Theodore Scliooh. TERMS Two dollars per annum in advance Two dollars and a quarter, half yearly and if not paid be fore the. end of the year, Two dollars and a half. No papers discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at the option of the Editor. IO Advertisements not exceeding one square (ten lines) will be inserted three weeks lor one dollar, and twenty-five cents for every subsequent insertion. The charge for one and three insertions the same. A liber al discount made to yearlv adrertisers. IE? All letters addressed to the Editor must be postpaid. JO 15 PRINT I IV G. Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain uud ornamental Type, we are prepared tocxecuteevcry description of Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads Notes, Dlank Receipts Justir.es, Legal and other Blanks, Pamphlets, tc. printed with nealnes3 and despatch, on reasonable Itrmi, A.T THE OFFICE OF THE JEFFE ETONIAN. TOE WELL IN THE WILDERNESS. A Tale of the Prairie, founded om fact. BY MRS. MOODIE. Richard Steel was the son of one of those small landholders who are fast dis appearing from merry old England. His father left him the solo possessor of .twenty-five acres of arahle land, and a -snug little cottage, which nan descended from father to son, through many gener ations. The ground plot, which had been suffi cient to maintain his honest progenitors for several ages, in the palmy days of Britain's glory and independence, ere her vast resources passed into the hands of .the few, and left the man- to starve, wasj "not enough .to provide for the want: ... ! our stout yeoman and ins lamily; which : consisted at that period, of three sons and one daugther, a lovely, blooming girl of ten years or thereabouts. Richard and his boys toiled with unceasing dili gonce; the wife was up late and early, and not one moment was left unemployed; and yet they made no headway, but ev ery succeeding year found them in ar rears. 'Jane,' said the yeoman, one evening, thoughtfully to his wife, after having blessed his homely meal of skimmed milk i nnd brown Wd 'eonMafc tli.P not, h:ivp piven U9 a little treat to-night? Hast ' 1 thee forgotten that it is our Annie s birth- aJ' 4JNo, Richard, 1 have not forgotten; how could I forget the anniversary of the ! day that made us all so happy? Buiimuu tuu L"a ui, times are bad; I could not spare the mo ney to buy sugar and plums for the cake; and I wanted to sell all the butter; in or der to scrape together enough to pay the shoe-maker, for making our darling's shoes. Annie knows that she is infinite ly dear to us all, though we cannot give her luxuries to prove it.' 'It wants no proof, dear mother,' said the young girl, flinging her round, but sunburnt arms about her worthy parent's neck. 'Your precious love is worth the wealth of the whole world to me. I know how fond you and dear father are of me, and I am more than satisfied.' 'Annie is right,' said Steel, dropping his knifo and holding out his arms for a caress. 'The world could not purchase such love as we feel for her, and let us bless God that, poor though we be, we are all here to-night, well and strong, ay, and rich, in spite of our homely fare, in each other's affections. WThat say you, my boys?' And he glanced with pater- nalride on the three fine lads, whose cannofc hear to give up that which now is j ved in frightful gloom. I fancied I heard j ehoulde and scttjn(f bis tccth and hold healthlyand honest countenances might; for lUe promise of that which shall be. ! a low growl as 1 stooped to fill my pail, ih be ftcadilv aimed at a wen De contemniatea with measure. anaifr ii i i . i ., i i i afford subjects for hopeful anticipations X i I I for the future. 'We are happy, father,' said the eldest, ' cheerfully. , 'The cakes and spiced ale would have the firmest mind, and urge the proud,un made us happier,' said the second. yielding spirit of man to cleave so strong- lother makes such nice cakesr 'So Bhe does,' cried the third. 'It seems so dull to have nothing nice en An- rue's birth-day. 1 should not care a ng if it were Dick's birth-day, or Owen'p, or mine; but not to drink Annie's health seems unlucky.' 'You shall drink it yet,' said Annie, laughing: 'In what?' asked both the boys in a breath. 'In fine spring water!' And she filled and fruitful soil, were urged upon him their mugs. -m the strongest manner. The merchant 'Better God never gave to his creatures. 1 had a scrip to dispose of in that remote How bright it is I How it sparkles! I settlement, and as is usual in such cases, will never from this day ask a finer' be 00nsulted his own interest in 'the mat drink. Here is health to you my broth-'ter ers, and may we nevor know what it is to' lack a draught of pure water Annie nodded to her brothers, and- drank off ber mug of water; and the good natured fellows, who dearly loved her. followed her example. , w j Oh, little did the gay hearted girl think, in that moment of playful glee, of tho price she was one day destined to pay for a drink of water! Tho crops that year were a failure,and the heart of the strong man began to droop. He felt that labor in his native land would no longer give his children bread, and, unwilling to sink into the i house, and the neatest farm in the dis lowest class, he wisely resolved, while he ; trict. He would raise the finest cattle, retained the means of doing so, to emi- the largest crops, and the best garden grate to America. His wife made no op-' stuff in the neighborhood. Frugal and position to his wishes his sons were de- industrious habits would soon render lighted with the prospect of any change them wealthy and independent. for the better, and if Annie felt a passing Hi3 mother listened to these sallies pang at leaving the daisied fields, and , th a delighted smile; and even the grave f , , ,11, i i.j ' yeoman a brow relaxed from its habitual her pretty playmates, the lambs, she hid , Annie entered warmly infco her it from her parents. The dear home- brother's plans; and if he laid the found stead, with its quiet rural orchard, and ' ation of his fine castle in the air, she ccr- trim hedgerows, fell to tho hammer, nor was the sunburnt cheek of the honest yeo man unmoistened with a tear . - when no - uucu t nwiuuu aiu rnm , n A A aA f flirt nnrtrmftll o nncprtcoml !ot toe lord ot the manor. After the sale was completed and the .., nil i ci i i .i money it brought duly paid, Steel lost no time in preparing for his emigration. In less than a fortnight he had secured their passage to New York, and they were already on their voyage across the At- JO lantic. Favored by wind and weather, after the first effects of the sea had worn off, they were comfortable enough. The steerage passengers were poor, but re- : . . ' J made several pleasant acquaintances a momr them. One familv especially at- tracted their attention, and so far en"ared . ' - incir aueciions during ineir icuious voy age, that they entered into an agreement to settle in tho same neighborhood. Mr. Atkins was a widower, with two sons, the ages of Richard and Owen, and an elder sister, a primitive, gentle old woman,who had been once both wife and mother, but had outlived all her family. Abigail Winchester, (for so she was called,) took uu uspewai lauoj- c uui auu.c, u :t r i - a : i, she fancied that she recognized a strong - . , i resemblance to a daughter whom she had j . I0?c' "cr auecwun wai uiij leuuusu 1. ii. , i.:,i :i .i, t. tt,.,o,i i;f ! lUK S"1' MUU' a LU""3-U" " 1 I 1 - nUAi.l?An f I r- n I n . T-r. "V Till! ff-nf 1 , . B tuue to luiiiaii lor uur guuu upnuuu. rp,.. .A t,tPi: ! m, i i i i.i.iL.idi 1 J r J ae before thc SCarlefc eCT h;0AC J"' havoc among the younger portion. Steel s 'Mother where shall we get water? loaded .fc ba and houfc whole family were down with it at the asked Annie, glancing wistfully toward utterina word ieft the house. same time, and, in spite of the constant , cir P'J ca!k5 ' h.av ?eD n0 .11ndl,ca" , Day still lingered upon the open prai ,' , . . , . tions of water for the last three miles.' ! rtr , 4, ,5 . cU nursing of himself and his devoted part ner, and the unremitting attentions of Abigail Winchester, who never left the sick ward for many nights and days, the ' two youngest boys died, and were com- . , , t i , i mitted to the waters of the great deep be- fore Annie and Richard recovered to a . , i , mi consciousness of their dreadful loss. This threw a sad gloom over the whole party. Steel said nothing, but often retired to . . , . , -i i i ' some corner of the ship to bewail his loss j in secret. his wne wa3 wasiea anu . worn to a shadow, and poor Annie looked the ghost of her former self. 'Had we never left England,' she tho't my brothers had not died.' But she was wrong; God, who watches with pa rental care over all his creatures, knows the best season in which to reclaim His own; but human love in its yearnings is slow in receiving the great truth. It lives in thc present wers over the past, and - ... J.UB lUHUlb DUlUreU ULLj ,a f,,f iv, n,;na r time, has always an awful aspect. A perfect and childlike reliance upon God can alone divest us of those thrillin 'doubts and fears which at times shake ly to kindred dust. The tight of the American shores, that the poor lads had desired so eagerly to geCj seemed to renew their grief, and a Eadder party never set foot upon a foreign strand than our emigrant and his family. Steel had brought letters of introduc tion to a respectable merchant in the city, who advised him'to purchase a tract of land in the then new State ofIUiuois. Thc beauty of the country, the fine climate, gteej thought that tho merchant, who -was a native of thc country, must know best what would suit him, and he not only ! became a purchaser of laud in Illinois, 1 w;nrWfl hi new friends to follow his 9wuvw- exainple. We willpass over their journey to the Far West. The novelty of the scenes through which they passed contributed not a little to raise thejr drooping spirits. Richard had recovered his health, and amused tho party not a little by his live ly anticipations of the future. They were to have the most comfortablo log : tainly provided the cement and all the jiiiULCi ma Lunula. till. 11 1U11 1UUIU IliU lUblll 1U1V:IV1 from habitations of men, and deeper 1 1 1 i j 1 M J 1 1 i anu aceper into ine wiiaerncss, tuu biuru realities ot their solitary locality occame ' hourly more apparent to the poor emi- grants. They began to think that they . p . L , l J . .. . , . . J - bak into thle ed as ! thev were with tho usaces of the country I ' j j a jt j But repentance came too late; and, when ' at length they reached their destination, I,, -1., , . . il . . .1 . . ! : tuey louna tncmseivcs upon tue cage or a I vast forest, with a noble open prairie ; stretching away as far as the eye could j reach in front of them, and no human habition in sight, or indeed existing for miles around them. In a moment the yeoman comprehend ed all the difficulties and dangers -of his situation; but his was a stout heart, not easily daunted by circumstances. . Ho strong arm; and he was not alone. Richard was an active, energetic ladnd his friend Atkins, and his two sons, were a host in themselves. Having settled with his guides, and ascertained by the mans, that he had received at Mr. 's L O nAppnpenn TiiffnrAiiu pnnciinninn : ti i : t I H I .1 l . .1 j jm 1 i. WA U lli v u ii u Li l U w. v " " 11 . ... r ... :i.r a ICIH lor iue nigiii, auu cujiucicu uuu collected wood for their fire The young people were m vnntitinc irith run nnnon riT vnrmiro rn '!" . V " , .'. dolent with blossoms, that lays mill mg ,. , , of the sun before them: ... i never did garden appear to them so love- 1 1 L - 1 n . i- t7lrrtV-r.-' r C CTTrtrtfo , , , Jt -r , , , c v ium uj - ture with such profuse magnficence. An- tnrc with such nrofuse macrnncence. An- nie could scarcely tear herself away from the enchanting scene, to assist her moth- Ler in preparing tneir ovenmg meai. Annie has raised a startling doubt,' said Steel; 'I can perceive no appearance of stream or creek in any direction.' 'Hist! father, do you hear that?' cried :lMd ' is music to me just now, for 1 am dying ; . h tM , anJd seiz;D the c ran 0 in the directfon of thc discordant sounds. , xi jiii i j j It was near dark when he returned . , with his pai full of clear, cold water , T 1 J 1'IM. - 1.: C 4l.in fV.An ,, . ... . , - 5 tneir tnirsi, Deioro usiiiug auy tjuusiiuus. Wbat delicious water as clear as crvstal as cold as icel tlow lortunato to obtain it so near at hand exclaimed J . ... . - , f rerai in a weain. A tt Kitf if ia in n n nrrln n!nrn ' Rfiirf Richard, thoughtfully. '1 should not like to go to that well at early day, or after night-fall.' 'Why not, my boy?' 'It is in the heart of a dark swamp, ! just about a hundred yards within the forest; and the water trickles from be neath the roots of an old tree into a nat-1 nra stone tank: but all around is iuvol- j who n inrrii snnck P( pnnirp rrinittii ironi I - - r o-- i i if I i l i i 7,. : .,l between my feet and darted, hissing and j j rriin - t t u rni i lnin i iiiti u i ikimii'i i you must never let any of the people go alone to that well.' Tho yeoman laughed at his son's fears, i :. ti party retired into -ii r c n e with fatigue, fell and shortly after the p the tent, and, overcom asleep. Thc first thing that engaged thc atten tion of our emigrants was the erection of log shanty for the reception of their re- j cctive families. This important task a spect was soon accomplished. Atkins prefer- red the open prairia for the site of his; j but Steel, for the nearer proximity of wood and water, chose the edge ot the forest; but the habitious of the pioneers were so near that they were within call of each other. To fence in a piece of land for their cattle, and prepare a plot for wheat and corn, for thc ensuing year, was the next thing to be accomplished; and by the time these preparations were completed the long, bright summer had passed a way, and tho fall was at hand. Up to this period both families had enjoyed ex cellent health; but in the month of Sep tember Annie, and then llichard, fell sick with intermittent fever, and old Abigail kindly came across to help Mrs. Steel to nurse her suffering children. Medical aid was not to be had in that remote liriT.nrtd cmmln rnnidfiiail will (111 l'MW ""u r1"1. 'r" were perfectly inefficacious in their eitua- tiou, the poor children's only chance for ufe was their youth,?. good, sound con stitutien, and the rhercifal interposition , 3 . , , , . , . ., . ready for him upon the table, estate, he set about unyoking the cattle : cagk , . h(j t which he had purchased and securing ! nofc , of a benevolent and overruling Provi dence. It was towards the close of a sultry day that Annie, burning with fever, im plored the faithful Abigail to give her a drink of cold water. Hastening to the water cask, the old woman was disap pointed by finding it exhausted, Richard having drank the last, drop, and was still raving in the delirium of fever for more drink. 'My dear child, there is no water.' Oh, I am burning, dying with thirst! Give me but one drop, dear Abigail one drop of cold water. Just then Mrs. Steel returned from milking the cows, and Abigail proffered to the lips of the child a bowl of new milk, but she shrank from it with disgust, and sinking back in her pillow, murmured, 'Water! water! for the love of God! give me a drink of water!' ! 'Where is the pail?' said Mrs. Steel; 'I don't much like going alone to that well, hut if is sf Til hrnnd rkv. rind T know that: ! in reality there is nothing to fear: and I cannotbearto hear the child moan for! drink in that terrible way.' 'Dear mother,' said Richard, faintly, j don fc S 'fatb,er be 1U soon5 wc ! stnn it-n i r till f hnn ' 'Oh! the poor, dear child is burning!' cried Abigail; 'she cannot wait till then: do, neighbor, go for the water, I will stay with the children and put out the milk while vou are away.' Villi IfUlb Llll LUUiJi Mrs. Steel left the shaniy, and a few minutes after the patient, exhausted by suffering, fell into a profound sleep. Ab- ?rnil hiisWhorsplf sr.fi.rlinrr the milk-nans. q I J i . . ..1 1-1 and m her joy at the young peopie s ces- r . i .i i . ... Kh' an hour Lad c. , and thQ y u of evcnh , had faded into night, when Steel retura ' ed with his oxen from the field, j The moment he entered the shanty he ; went up to the bed which contained his sick children, and, satisfied that the fe . vcr was abating, he looked round for his supper, surprised that it was not, as usual, and i day in the burning sun, a man wants to have , . , - mfn r.W r f. :lt M Winch t are ' berc? Where is my wife?' .luercirui goouness. exuiauuuu iuu um r t i i I! 1 .1 il. .1 J woman, turninir na woman, turning pale as death, 'is she not . , ; , , 'The well!' cried Steel, grasping her A, . , , 'lhis hair hour or more.' Steel made no answer his cheek was as pale as her own and taking his gun from the beam to which it was slung, he riU, UUU U1U lllUlllCUt UC CIJIVJIUU iuu uuou it was deep night. He crossed the plain with rapid strides, but as he approached the swamp his step became slow and cau tious. The well was in the centre of a jungle, from the front of which Richard v , i i i , ? M-ixrf had cleared away the brush to facilitate their access to the water. As he drew near the spot, his ears were ohilled by a de 1 ' u and the crunching of t J gomc vounn i rr the bones of its prey. The dreadful truth, with all its shocking, a heart-revolting rcalitj', flashed upon the , y - , f ,. mind nf tho rnnmnTi. nnd tor n. moment n . h- Q q faig riflc flnd o . ' dropping down upon his hands and knees, and nerving his arm for a clear aim, he directed his gaze to thc spot from whence the fatal sounds proceeded. A little on one side of the well a pair of luminous eyes glared like green lamps at the edge of the dark wood; and the horrid sounds which curdled the blood of tho yeoman became more distinctly audible became more distinctly audible. - . - . . . SslKlUU ucn ecu tuuni; iiiun iull uaua ui uiu. Thc . t of rifle awokc the far i. i t. i:., v.n r echoes of the forest. The deer leaped up from his lair, the wolf howled and fled into the depths of thc wood, and the panther, for such it was, uttering a hoarse . , ' . . , ,. growl, sprang several feet into tho air if. ' , , . c then fell acroi3 thc mangled remains of of his victim. Richard Steel rose from the ground; the perspiration was streaming from his brow; his limbs trembled and shook, Lis lips moved convulsively,, and he pressed us nanus upon ms neavi ng urca.i 10 keep down the WV1VUU Uil VWUJUii'J V. ' a yi ta ted heart. It was not fear that chained him to the spot, and hindred him from approaching his dead euemy. ifc . was horror, lie dared not look upon the mangled remains of his wife the dear , partner of his joys and sorrows the1 campanion of his boyhood the love of his youth the friend and counsellor oj his middlo age the beloved mother of ' his children. How could ho recognize' in that crushed and defiled heap his poor Jane?. The pang was too great for his' agonized mind to boar. Sense and sight aliko forsook him, and staggering a few paces forward, he fell insensible across tho path. Alarmed by the report of the rifle, At- kins and his sons proceeded with torches to the spot, followed by Abigail, who, unconsoious of the extent of the calamity, was yet sufficiently convinced that some- thing dreadful had occurred. When thc full horrors of the Eccne wore presented to the sight of the terror-stricken group, their grief burst forth into tears and la mentations. Atkins alone retained his presence of mind. Dragging the panther from the remains of the unfortunate Mrs. Steel, he beckoned to one of his sons, and surrrrested to him the nrnnrifttv of instant- ly burying the disfiurd nnd nv7';liM frW ''"p. Coffin laiu in thein showed body before the feelings of her husband their tops above the surface of the earth, and children were agonized by the sight. ; On these was piled dirt to the depth of a First removing the insensible busband : foot or more,but so loosely, that the myr to his own dwelling. Atkins and his sons iads of flies found entry between the returned to the fatal spot, and conveying looSe clods, down to the cracked seems of the body to tho edge of the prairie, they tho coffins, and buzzed and blew there selected a quiet, lovely spot, beneath the their ovaria, creating each hour their new wide-spreading boughs of a magnificent hatched swarn3. chesnut tree, and wrapping all that re- But no sound was there of sorrow with -mained of the wife of 'Richard Steel in a in that wide Clhenna. Men used to the sheet, they committed it to the earth in scene of dissolution had forgotten all solemn silence nor were prayers and touch of sympathy. Uncouth laborers tears wanting in that lonely hour to con- with their bare shock heads, stood under secrate the nameless grave where the Eng- the broiling heat of the sun, digging in lish mother slept. , the earth; and as anon they would en- Annie and Richard recovered to mourn counter an obstructing root or utump, their irreparable loss- -to feel that their ! mother's life had been sacrificed to her maternal love. Time, as it ever does, softcned the deep anguish of the bereaved i P . Whfin.l T)nr nrr t hp. nnsuinor summer. their little colony was joined by a hardy i t i ii , t ? nana oi xntisn ana American piouuia. The little settlement grew into a pros perous village, and Richard Steel died a wealthy man, and was buried by the side of his wife, in the centre of the village church-yard, that spot having been chos- en for the firat temple in which tho emi grants met to worship in Ilis own house, j the God of their fathers. I The Pestilence at New Orleans. From the Cresent. An 5. 11 . To verify the many horrible reports of the doings among the dead, we the other day visited the cemeteries. In every street were long processions, tramping to solemn tunes of funeral inarches. In the countenances of the plodding passengers were the lines of anxiety and grief, and many a poor was festooned with black land white hangings, tho voiceless wit- Jesses of wailing and sorrow. On the one hand slowly swept the long corteges of the wealthy, nodding with plumes and drawn by prancing horses, rejoicing in their funeral vanities; on another, thc hearse of the citizen soldier, preceded by measured music, enveloped in warlke pan oply, and followed by the noisy tread of men under arms; while there again the pauper was trundled to his long home on a ricketty cart, with a boy for a driver who whistled as he went, and swore a careless oath as he urged his mule or spav ined horse to a trot, making haste with another morsel contributed to the grand banquet of death. Now among the stee ples was heard the chiming of bells, as of Ghoulcs up there; rningling their hoarse voices in a chorus of gratulation over the ranks of fallen mortality. Anon from some lowly tenement trilled the low wail of a mother for the child of her a.Ts.cujn, while from the corner opposite burst the song of some low bacchanal, mingling ri baldry with sentiments, or swearing a prayer or two, a3 tho humor left him. The skies wore a delusive aspect. A bove was all cloudless sunshine, but little in keeping with the black raelancholly that enveloped all below. Out along the highways that lead to the cities of tho A a A or oill llin 4nniT Ai n nvt 1 rtrrtn.'lc? ui;uu, auu a nil iuc ti urn i ui iuuu uivivnuo 1 knew no cessation. Lp Tolled the vol- times of dust from the busy roads, and the plumes of the death-carriages nodded in seeming sympathy to the swaying cy presses of tho swampj enveloped in their dun appareling of weeping moss fit gar niture for such a scene. At the gathering points carriages ac cumulated, and vulgar teamsters, as they jostled each other in the press, mingled the coarse just with thc ribald oath; no sound but of profane malediction and of riotous mirth, the clang of whip thongs and the rattle of wheels. At the gates, the winds brought intimation of thc cor- ruption working was laden withth within. Not a puff but atmosphere from . rotten corpses. Inside they were piled t,y ht.es, exposed to the neat oi the sun, O UllLii tliLU UUI I UULlVHi k 11 i 3 11 ii " lUVli coffin lids, and sundering, as if by nhvs ical effort, the ligaments that bound their hands and feet, and extending their rigid limbs in every ourte attitude. What a feast of horrors! Inside, corpses piled in pyramids, and without the gates, old and withered crones and fat huxter women, fretting in their own grease, dispensing ice creams and confections, and brushiug away, with brooms made of brushes, the green butterflies, that hovered on their merchandize, and that anon buzzed away to drink dainty inhalatioil from the green aud festering corpses. Mammon at the gates was making thrift outsido by tho hands of his black and swearing minions. that tendered sweet meats and cooling beverages to the throngs of mourners or idle spectators, who, inhaling the fumes of rotting bodies, already "heaved tho j gorge;" whilo within the "King of Ter- rors" held his Saturnalia, with a crowd of" stolid laborers, who. as they tumbled the dead into tho ditches, knocksd thera "a bout the mazzard," and swore dread oaths intermingled with the most dreadful j sounds of demoniac jolity. Long ditches were dug across the hu man charnah Wide enough were they to entomb a legion, but only fourteen , would swear a hideous oath, remove to 1 another spot, and go on digging as be- fore. Now and then the mattock or the , spade would disturb the bones of some . r .1 1,1 r il , former tenant or tue mouiu, luiguueu there amid the armies of the accumulated i i: .1 flm cl-iirrlv 1-iTinrpr Trith a -cinflmq. nnd the sturdy laborer with a - w j mf give would hurl the broken fragments on the sward, growl forth an energetic d n, and chuckle in his excess of glee. Skull bones were dug up from their long sepul ture, with ghastlines3 starting out. "From each lack-lustre, eyeless hole," without eliciting an "Alas, poor Yorick," and with only an exclamation from tho digger, of " room for your betters!" Economy of ppace was the source of calculation in bestowing away the dead gantic proportions to the size of Titans. The central projections of their coffins, left space between them at their heads and heels, How should the space bo saved? Opportunely the material is at hand, a cart comes lumbering in, with corpses of a mother and her two little children. Chuck tho children in the space at the heads and heels of the Titans and lay the mother by herself, out there alone! A comrade for her will be found anon, and herself and babes will sleep not the less soundly from the unwonted contact! The fumes riso up in deathly exhala tions from the accumulating hecatombs of fast-coming corpses. Men wear at their noses bags of camphor and odorous spices for there are crowds there who have no business but to look on aud comtemplato the vast congregation of the dead. They don't care if they die themselves they have become so usd to the wreck of cor ruption. They even laugh at the riotings of the skeleton Death, and crack jokes in tho horrid atmosphere, when scarcely they can draw breath for utterance. The stoical negroes, too, who are hired at five dollars per hour to assist in the work of interment, stagger under the sti fling fumes, aud can only be kept at their work by deep and continued potations of the "fire water." They gulp deep draughts rf thc stimulating fluid, and reeling to their tasks, hold their noses: with one hand, while with the other they graep the rpauf, heav nu il mouM, and rush back to the bottle to gulp again. It is a jolly timo with these ebon labor ers, and with their white co-workers as thoughtless and as jolly, and full as much intoxicated as themselves. And thus, what with thc songs and ob scene jests of the grave diggers, the buz zing of the flies, the sing-son cries of the huckster women vending their confections the hoarse oaths of the men who drive the dead carts, the merry whistle of tha boys, and the stilling reek from scores of , , , , , , i ,,.i. nP caniihirn Anr,o nnrl nml.h IiilfT II If 1 TV 111 11L WUkbUt V AWMVM hbwu.uw draws the curtain. t w Encounter with a Whale. A boat's crew of five men, prosecuting the whale fishery at St. Mary's Ray, after a long pursuit, harpooned a calf whale j on the morning of Monday, thc 11th ult. : The monster, directly upon being wound ' cd, rushed in every direction with the ut 1 most velocity, giving the men a warning ' to be cautious and prompt; at one time the fish darted furiously towards the : boat. Theso exciting and hazardous : maneuvers continued a considerable timcj when the dam of the young whale, an ii i . i .1 . . . , . ;tlr;f.,i . to coasider. it stru"k thc boat amidships .1 and cleft her in two. The men lucklv escaped destruction, but were precipitated in all directions into the sea, where they succeeded in keeping themselves afloat by holding on by the oars and broken boat. For a considerable time they were thus exposed in this perilous situation, until some persons came in a small boat to tbeir assistance. Directly after they got into the small boat, nothing daunted by the recent hair breadth escape, they renewed their chase and fiually succeed ed in capturing their prize; Who will say they were not brave, manly fellows? St. Johns (N. F.) Courier. jg He who hate's his neighbor, U miserable himself and makes all around miserable. r- figT Beauty eventually deserts its pos- cssor, but virtue and talents accompany him even to theorise. - v-4 yimife rimMk