PtgDernocratic Watcliman, LLEP'ONTE, —For sonic reason or other, 'on known to us, the "Copy - of ,"Wenring the Crow," for the pre.eot number of the WATCHMAN, ha 9 Wed to Make it 9 ippeetrance. We know that it AS ill lie a disappointment to many of our rend ere, but not more no, than it t. to our THE PARTING HOUR ' [The Whoring eXpilaue poem, says the Pbrtiatid 801/111.10 (Aminseretat, wet. written it ) the late Edward Pollack, tie gift, .1 poet, mi the th of January, IC .7 Avid hn., paver been published. It can given the poet to a friend who was about to th pat a learner for Oregon, Polhwk \nv ' fake this; yop ray, pet haps, read and appieetate the laillaltliMont long after I hate t e.a,d 1,, be among the lining There's something in the "ruling hour" Will chill the warmest henr Yet kindred, comrades, lore, a, ft wilds, Are fated all to part, But this l're seen—and lost, a pang U.S pressed it on in) tlllll,l - one whogoes Is happier Than these helosee. behind No matter x hat th 4 journey Adventurous danger.)• far To the wild deep or bleak it nlirr, Tn •olttiole, cMvu"— Still I.IIOITIet il mg elia'or , the heart that 4,1 r In all of human kind, And they who gu are httypit Than those they lento 1W11;t1,1 The hr de gore to the bralegraan ham With doohunge and with Plat ttaelenot llore her rnailnlvr •pren.l Aaron* her cloudy fear.; Alan! the mother oho 1V111.111.C. Whet comfort rant •he Mad Rut thla--the gone to hamo, r 'Chan one }he leaven he Have you a friend—a comrade dear' An old and valued (need , Be sure l our term of sweet eonrour4e At length A 4 hi hose an end' And when you part—as part tout in will— Oh, take it not unkd If be who goes le happier Thu) you Its leaves behind I 4 God will. it •0.-ant; to The pilgrims on their wan Though wash and won, more rise ei WI a Than a the real Alio may, And wheel, at lard, poor Irian subdued Lino down t' .WWI rnalloed, 1.1 'Vh• h n e lltZ t ne t ;t i e I ett l . e 1r:11111171' Uric°lon's Religion We have said that the loyal men of the "higher civilization' . were intervie ly sensational. In the good old days, in the life time of the Colistitlllll - 1n of the United States, this sensational mania found exercise in an ovation over an escaped runaway negro, a fen. tival to a Japanese Tommy, or in tiani ing pictorials of prize fights, and total ter), tril r; Since the 0% ertbrow °four republi form of government, the , sensationalitits content thenc.elves with big Joni ficatteins at funerals 'I bus the remains of Mr. Peabody mere carted atmut bunt ton it to town, 1111,1 hip,iiess houses made firstelass advert ieemeni. out of the dead man's hone. The ob. Sequies of "Clifton Haase Burling game," the big queue from China, did not furnish so good an ads ertising me dium, but aflorded a capital merry making. The funeral ni Rea. lieoree 11. %llamas was splendid, rim nnh for adv erlisement, but Mr self laudation All the brat es of the ggrant army re lotion had their speech,. ' ',Lout the perilous exploits they had peilormed, tinnier the rt e of the itlnstnuu VI rgtti lan. They bad moat glonou reeoll Vl' trouts of themselves &nil of the words ot approval spoken 14 the dead hero, when lie saw Or heard of heir pront,e Old Tau," us he wan usu;illt eagle 1. hated clap trap, Cubs and leatiterm, a n d all kinds of S11:11118 II he could uult have lookea...u,p IrDin ilie Dltti r of lot al souls, how lie would l ii e longed it, kick the play unnigeri,'. But the wont delicious and et d ui-tie NellSlo/011 ever enjoy I.') the loyal North was to the case vii Mr. Lin, I.is going oil ass tit the high Irai4e,i, style iv nit all the Litt:writ:4i aert:oitipii iiimetits, all, dress uncle, no a light:, and music! It wui et/int:6l,ll,g to he 01; no vulgar, shishl) affair the eau,4ed ma r tyr was the 1,1,4 of the Patton whileltvnig, void his tragic end tug igraWied the national vanity in the highest degree. Kenible and lite elder Booth never got tip anything better. Ildrir. Lincoln, too, play td tile part of V 1141.,, sit nw vi•Cy affect she anew bereall upon the dead body, wislit%.l that. she bad died for him • wondering win they had murdered the mint and lett the stoner behind. Oh I it min beautiful, and kow the nation enjoyed the -imitation ! Then, in her sore herenveindlit; she shut herself up, would see no 01.1. Inn carpenters and upholsterer..., whom she employed in packing up ten boxes and tile hales of S propertt to be trans ported to the lone homestead in Illi nois. And then, in the desolation of her widowed heart, she bold six of the martyr's shirts A gorgeous tier if; gat up at the na tional eAense and the martyr is put on exhibition, first at Philadelphia. Flo ‘ wers, fremh-ftwers, are brought by lovely ladies and laid reverently upon the collie... One of the lair donors niapagee to get up a respectable faint —probably overpowered by the odor from the metallic box which contained the martyr aforesaid. The lipeetators are enraptured. It is a sensation o the first thegfiltede. So they grateful Ty stint, ld 111:11, thp Mimes of thernWeut &pith, And iii lair lerttera the name of O gillf!, 114,tyllkwhu falated: to 40'5 Ark; itootlice pig, 8110 W, anottoetaturi of flowers, yojio. faint ing. On up the tiudson ; anot h er ex thibttolle4rifrri,7,6ights teat*, and 14ti;lid rid &Wit " •A ' tr I Phila. llit twit -Lposaildy be -414,e; c . ettiee thal"littys,l)9N ti), (be at~Toa'iv.t 8 1 4 trq.4.l)incifl wax, • 94144%. 1 14' 91V944., ' paoll; Out m hoe,at,Orena . 1 / 'Wks es ilult• Now occurs asingeleede/ity in the per; fortnance of the last sensational rites. i s o me devotad loyalists ,had made at I present, of a burial lot, itoping to hand down glicir mtnies‘tolhe lat#st getter noon ha cOtieection with the illustrated martyr, mud to secure forever a' tirst clit-s advectits4sut,torltihitir Anteing's. lint. the agouisidol in tie depths of her anguieli, e et o let use nor ,ht r be"plante *t re,. n4I IV fie -shli pie titloof tie e t atOttilittle .oiretr to ($ her. The ad Trtising Aoliors said, No,novet!" ID Was a rich sensation, almost equal to Mat of the Booth per formance in Ford's Theatre, at Wash.. ington. Ittit, then, the scandal might slarrmget the party, and so a comprom, Ise was etfee(ed between the 'neon/4okt hlgovidois and the advertisers.. Tim, ' tortyr was buried at last. And now the artists go to work to I get rip fresh.setisations. Beautiful pic tures are produced representing the ' triumphant entry of Abraham Lincoln ' into Heaven ; Washington crowns hint with float er-, cherub angels warble aroursi him, golden, harps strike up anthems ot welcome. Millions of these pictures arc sent out, ,tail picture nest ers grow rich, and the last 'sensation is better than (he first 'rue nation is still not surfeited with the sensational tenet. So the irreprea slide Geo. 11. Poker, the indomitable ' poetaster ot l'hilaslelphia, gets up a litchi-drama called the "Celestial lies A rein," The marts r and the slain Fed oral generals are represented as reviews rug Ille shun Fisleral (roors in the pres s mice of the I'ItI•NCE OF PEACE!!! flits is the grand crowning sensation tit' all, anil the local bear( has enjoyed it exitinsitel. It has been a feast •of am, on the leese The tint or sit blas phemy hanging around it making it ilel 'emus to the god]) loyalist. But the richest thing, in connection a ith pictorial and pectin'. representa I twits of the Banded marts r in Paradise, is this. ale belie% eft iii nor Lenten, ' nor hell, nor God, nor angels,:nor ile, il. In his more genial moments, Ile , helloed in (bid and heaven, but not in hell. In hit seasons of mental gloom, ' which were very Irequent, he was an 1 ,il/1/.ist. I W. 11. Herndon, Esq., the law parts tier of Mr. Lincoln before Inn election to the Presidency, : has 'written a letter to the Toledo Moo) Index, a Inch has beets copied into Forney's Chronicle. 'Die first 1.. a InNal paper, the second Is the organ nil ley :thy . so tie Lake it that loyalty has endorsed the letter as genuine and rehalle. Mr. Ilerichai hiniselt i s aliat lie calls a Theoh, and he contend-1 that Mr. Lincoln aas the' same a licheier in one God, but a scoffer at Christianity. IVe give court' . \inct rect.'s, premising that the tlalies are ours and Wit Mr:llerudon'o. I , SraiNtitill.l.O, 111. Feb. lh W7O. 1 MIL Annul. : Koine time since I la.oin iced you (hat I aisuld scud It Icier in relation, to Mr. Lincoln's religion. I do so unto. Itefore entering on that question, one or two preliminary re marks %sill hell) us to understand why he disagreed with the Christian world In ILI prlliCliolvii as well as in it, shoot 0, - .it In the firs( place, Lincoln's mind wiLt a purely logiral mind; secondly, Lincoln ass purely a practwal 'nem Ile had nil homey or imagination, sold not much emotion Ile has ft realist s- otiolite , eol to an idealist .1.. , a gerrir al rule, it not true thnt a purely logolal mind has not mliell hope, if It ever lilts Mit/i lit the uoisern awl unknown Mr. Lincoln had not much hope and no Idith iii things outside of the domain ot demonstration ; he mi., so coin-hinted --•n orgamunii--that lie could belie% e nothing unless his seines ot logic could rear li ii I have °lien rival to lion a bra isniit, a decision, or something I fancied , lie could not understand It till":"Mie took the book nut of nit , hand anti read the thing for honed'. Ile could scarcely understand anything st al e ,* lie liaff time and place lived iii his mind I hPearne !Mill/laded Millh Mr. Lin coln in ltel-t, and I think I knew him well to the day of his death. hit iiiiritl ; when a mint in Kviillleltl, i•110 1 / 1 eil a egrtatthgloytth an utotucia) nature, a I soenlifir alsitractethiess, a boil.] and during skepticism. lii Indiana, from 11(17 to Is3o, It maniteatml the same spialsoes or attributes iis in Kentucky ,• it only inteasitied, slcteloped ite•elf along those line*, in Indiana. Ile came to Wittills in 1830, and, after smile lit (le roving, settled in New Salem, now in M.ensird count-1, Illinois. This vil .!age hes at,otic testa' liiiiii , ' tiOriliViek of this tilt. li use leis dust Mr Lin coin I.e, :one ai. i ii.iiiiteil with a elms of wen the world never saw the like ot bettore tor Mince They Kerr large men -Lai ile in Lod) am( large in mtnid ; lined tiS whip, and never to lie fooled. rite) acre a bold, daring, and 11•Ckleiiii yet of men; they were men of their own minds—believed whet wits tletlioll strahle-- were men of -great common pence. With-tltese men Nis. Lincoln was thrown ; with them he lived, and with liitlll he moved and allitust had fns being, They were ft.! tics all scoffers some. a a a a a 1 "Ipwas here, and among these Iwo pie, that Lincoln was thrown. About the year 1634 he chance) to come across "Voltielv . B 'Rohm," and some of Paine's theological works. He at onto seised hold of them, and aantint tated,theot.tuto his own being, Kol• t a tt y mad Paine becanto a part of Mr. Lincoln Iront 1134 fo, the end of lom nre. In 18:15 lie wrote out a Smell work nit "Infidelity," and intended to have it publtithed. It was an attack upon tha--whole g=onini Di Crtstinni ty, apd especially was it an ,attack upon the idett that 3esus Was the Christ, the true And only hegottott Ron of (16,1, as tho Chriatina wet-id contends,' Mr. Linqtd a POW ntthe glott st• Now Salem, e9pi pet bluff), for ; Mr. ;iatopel Ili I I, a merchant atnrjtstinenter of titneptace. Afitl I"tver , e *cry friendly. ekeptie al that Anne.) 4 1 in4lri, one, any, after }he book }TfOr goo li f it -16 "440,4 to Mr . 11111-. bis al r rie t :' forint:Stgot d oft to fell hOw Hill tried tO parkin& Lincoln not to publish tlte , boOlt,'lteat it altonhl dant age his political career. Lincoln was resolute abqiit the publication and Hill snatched at the inanusegipt, ran;inlo aher rosuoi and thallinv it intio'the fir !• , l 1 nether ' tregOt lie etre 1 fr. L col ran • for' Congres s itgqnst he tell: Pierkartairightt, in lb. yea ) 1 oit,l N. j t Lin that eon tetitli als cuied, f *ling an ittitilel, If riot an atheist s, lie never tleo4d the oliarge—would not—"would die first : 0 in the first place, because lie knew it could and would be proved on him : and in the second place, he:was too true to his own convictions, to his own PCIII Ito deny it. From what L knew of M. Liucolti, and from what I..have heard and verily believe, I can say : first, that lie did not relieve in a special creation, his Idea betting that, all crea tion was nn evolution tinder law : sec ondly, he did not ' , clime that the lb tile was a revelation from 140.1, as the Christian world contends ; thirdly, lie did not bel it.% it in miracles, as under stood by the Iliristian world ; fourthly, he believed in a nin crsal inspiration and miraeles,under I:sw ; fifthly, lie did not hello e that Jeans was the Christ, I the Son of God, as the christ an world contends; sixthly lie believed that all thing., both matter and mind, were governed by lawn, universal, absolute, and eternal. All his speechel and re mark. in Wash i tigton conclusi % ely prone this. Law, inns iii Lincoln every 1 t hi ng al, I ..pocuil interference Olains and L lelti.inn , I know whereof I speak. I used to loan Jinn Theodore Parker's works ; I loaned hint Eine! , son, soinettinvs, and other writers, and be %%o'll,l Lutnetiines read and some * men would nut, I suppose nay, know "When 3fr. Lincoln left thin en \ for Wanltittiztol%, I knew lie hail tinder gone ito (littlige in bin religion.; opm vim, and lie held ninny of the ('lit an in • ahltorrenre, and among them wan thin one, namely, that God would lorgive tie sinner for a 1,,14.11,01 if iii, latVO. L1110)111 ( ;id C 011 1 ,11191 forgit e , I th a t punt-ihment would follow the tin , that Christ mutt v wne wronz in tench ing forgrineen; that it tended to make man Fin the in hope that tiod would in cuse, and -o forth, Lincoln contended that the tninkter should teach that (lid Lan affixed ptitoshment to , tn,and that no reinnitanee wand bribe lIIITI to revolt it. In one e•ent,e ul the aura, :\lr Lincoln 1%11,4 a Unlner-qtlikt, and In another .01.0 lie alto but lie was a Theist, an we ant, under stand that word , lie watt so lofty, tree- It, unt i nt‘titall‘, hot Nt, !tn.] ( , penile, ;then our lit. stews. Mr Lincoln wan will.p,ed I 111,111 . % people in that rill, to he ;ill Atliei , t. and conic still in. I ran put that hopponition at rent forever. I hold a letter of Mr. Litle.oln m tut hand, addrenned to Inn step brother, John I) Joh nnon, an d trtted the 12. th day 3amiltr Ilere follows tine hotter, upon which Mr Ilernilon cninmenta thus: it neetnn that )Ir. Ltnecati he lie% ea ui (it'd nn , l 11,111wrailly, nn in t , ll tin beaten n Filer. lie belleved in no Lill all.l 1,,, ionulalirnent in the fin= tore world ,ittehuso (Ara .11r. Lehr.lo fa big mo ments of melancholy awl ,mole war lir, yq ,, Y /he and .1 dirt 4ira ',Mel/Ulf.? quit(' wholly du-film , ' Alhe,grit. In kts harp/ wurruntl4 bricmibf inclng buck lo Theism, and dwell Mere. It is po.3sible lhat :11 . r I.moulli uu, nut ulnnt, res ponsible fur i , ,bat lie•totiST - or thr4iglit, h 4) I riteroe, 55:14 111 , 4 ttlelfifleh , ll3 " Mr ifern.lon then greet on In shoo that Mr. llollit I knew that he war, leIIII no uqtruth ahem, to Lis "Lite of Li:10 , 111, " reprChC,,th ( . 110 Mart) r tII Laic been It chriat r iall: tar more brief extract 19 all that we can ve • I ‘lo not remember of ever seciug the cord Jeits ur Christ m print, QV uttered 11 Mr. Lincoln If he has the*OAvor.lA, they ran be found Ile ueol the word Cod hut seldom. I never liettr.l him uhe the name Of Ghrtst ur Jesus but to confute the idea that II,• an. the Christ, the only awl truly begotten son of Grnl, am the ehriatian . world undermittiiil it." ' ! ' lint tt etrangr f , ettillt. theme Ito :LI men of the "higher civihiattou , but the mtrangeat thing about the m 1.4 their Neleviiim 01 'dolls before wlliellito i'd,ll,l o wii and wormliip. They are late ralk "IVor.hipper4 of .vler2Ryr ,:0,14' --,timtl her n Quickly Quiekly voting man I Life is short A greet, work Is ['enure you. It you aunld surketsl in business, aim your way to honor, anfl mme tour soul, mint fln with your might what )011/ handy find to do. The sluggard flies. •I'hi• .hell fit time rolls over him and crofflies lion while he «deeps. Aim high and awl. hard. Lite is uorth the hi mg, and Ilea% en worth the gam fool all will be won or lost while the fifty goeth nwny. quickly, ye men of humus:ea and iiiightlYoar life is Inure Ulan half gone alreafly. Vuu have passed the crest of the and are looking towards the setting sun. That young roan who walks by your aide and calla you lather is Agroaftua tall and man-dike, and begins to bilk of the great things he %sill .1.10. lie will iucrease, but }•oil will decrease. If you have any thing vet to do fur your Goa or your own soul, yid lIIIISt do it quickly. glattlevra are eQ frog, and the night conieth. • Quickly, ye aged Ince you thought threw ifeore and ten to he an entllees trine to paits'away. They have tame and pone. They have left their mark upon you.. (lave the, felt any loon notenoi of good done or made record of a cod aiorltterti"Y - rro -have conic to logirialLiee Awl ixecubling. You have come to utaetgrly faith, and tc:).pe that looks stealifantly to the end 7 Alf quldkly, •rlgm toth6tf; tihd gray haired eitett I 'Already the meager) gere of death begin to tender their 11 eiv• icea, and thet cad ie at, hAntl. THE LATEST SONG tiOtita—Wife at the piano; brute of a hug• twain, bag no more soul for mime than Ilia hoot, m an sitioining apartment, matting hill toilet. Oh nobehlds The if I weep Oknee, Wife, and dew Oita button on.) Htfelt )min es mine (ph never/Hoop; ("Monde he flireiroTherl gone)) v For UhrevOlte ;lord rhkge grim!, weals, w fe, gut being your sOIRAGM.) And fhty'a vote* girls ne (The child I Seed Loral Inea at my ruore) No balm to ease the troubled heart, ( Wild starched thl, bosom I declare) That vrrithea from Ilate'e envenomed dart. onongla to make a parson sacra I) When faith In man Is given tap, (Hew plagpey shtftiese Ere memo women f Then Sorrow fills her bitter cup, (11l liars to got any other linen I) And to its leen the white lips halal tralth say, he's cemfaig tomight,) While Mellee yield., her mockinglangh (With A., and Jones, and Wright.) ii, ttonl.l I stifle iu rry.breaftt (.1.11.1 tall will 'bring some prime old 4herry)) This aching heart, and give it Hiatt -• (Well inset some eggs for Tom-and-Jerry ) ('nullLethe's waters o'er me roll, (The, wt....kings would look better megd• tt') And bring °bait ion to my aged— (When will von-hate that,litty-endelly Then Happy 1. In tither skies, ne,t better hate the oysters fried!) Might find thfildve,that earth denies (There' now at Hull my dickey's tied I) —New iNtk Clippet An Incident of the War of 1812 In the summer of 1812 1 witnessed a most exciting ape - Finale from the lit• Ile round windows in the easterly end of the old Statet-.1.14uae. Commodore Mull and n nuniber of his officers fend brave tare were chicon e.l up State street to the Exchange Coll e y House, where a banquet was in uniting for them. They had just returned in the frigate Constitution, "dtlfl Iron:tides," after her successful cruise, during which she raptured the British frigate. (liter rit re, utter a brief and bluo,lc fiction, It is related of Captain !Intl that he will dad in a pair of Nankin panta loona; the day being very hot, itnidthe excitement of the ship to get the weather-gauge of the enemy didn't tend to allay a profuse perspira tam. Meanwhile his lieutenants were continually coining to hini, inquiring, "Captain Hull, shall we fire'•• "No," said lie, "when I saw the word, then let them has e it." 'Watching the fit vorable opportunity, lie exclaimed, "X ou!' and fitting the wont to the ac min, raised his foot and stamped a n emphatic '•Npiv t - --but the force of his act, being more than nioist Nan km could hear, lie split his pantaloons, its the tare•md, "from clew to ear ring, nuuultaneouely with the tir.t All lii - inton was in a state of exul tant exeitentent, am, the cheers and lir.zati and Waving 01 lintidkerchieln went roil)) '•with a will"—State street wan attic! In the mid-t iif all thin excitement, and mine happier on that day, ACM ,John A., who, tinder peculiar circwtn• atances, carat paeccuger in the trig ate. It k gal.!, "facts are stranger than fiction," an.l his (APO MU) an apt illus tration Milts saying—RA I shall PA tOrtil—b , lt to my story. tlapt..l., master amt owner of the I.tig II mon, tinilel from Boston to Ca ,l./, Ow ar %Va. nrel , for a cargo of cab, taking with him his son with admirable taste and nn almost. ,11,11 n, a Ind about tioirteen years of inatinetive pere.eptrtni of the taicoming, age. .lint riean women abroad tiro to his retlirti totagr, deuplV lailene - Mit*trip all competitors in the art or (war ha. mg commenced uteaunhtlel , dressing - Plifriam•3 Ilagazine he wa* plodding quietly along, when he , li-revered it large phi!) bearing down upon him, which proved to be the littlish frigate Uuernere, Capt, pacre, l'apt .1., was ordered on board 1114 paper-, and as there was nn altor rout e, he ... complied. Capt. niter e‘ftinriing the ;papers, declared the brig a price, arid her Crew Anson err, Capt. A., stated to Inc captor~ dial this Silt, an excet , lirigk hard p,t%e for him, iN bitilittle all was inve.)ted in the ves,el and cargo, and it would beggar him, to vt filch Capt ()acre*, who. by the way, Lelia% ed m it !Mot gvnUvuruilt manner, replied that he might rati.oni his vegse,,L , and cargo raid (',apt. A., I have nothing t• ransom with Well, said Ilacree, give me a draft NI Boston for $- -- and av I was you /14.114411110L1 oil board, II take fo m as a hostage for the faith till paym e nt of the same—and will give you a pass through the bleckedni g woad rtm, le.11:001/ ./(441 A., w as transferred to the deck or the frigate rbierriere, and the draft being given, thev pursued (heir several ways—the old brig plodded on, was overhauled li) the s q uadron, the Admiral of which gave 'apt. Ibteres e- -well tint a blessing. for permitting' her to pass - hut alter this ebilllttion of wrath wa-v over, allowed her to go. Meanwhile the frigate cruised eight days, when the rry went birth, a sail ! a frigate ! a 'Yankee frigate! clear away the decks and prepare for fief ion. John A,, was called into the calati,and Capt. Itacres asked John if lie would go into the 'mizzen top with the boys (liy the way, there were t,ev eral renewtile Yankees on hoard); but on a peremptory refusal to fight own countrymen, he was ordered to the berth deck, Dacres saying he was responoble for his safety. Hardly htt.l the boy got there, when bang t Crash crash ! cams the sounds above, and the dead, dying and wounded were rapidly br oug ht down, and, brood flowed like water. A terrible period of suspense entitled, and then the cheer of victor,. But to whoa) was it awarded; to onr enemies, or was it, ours? „Soon atupvntle and. *we were ex. Changed fur joy. 5,01 th ,nall had site. combed, and now clie transfer of pris oners to old Ironsides And the boy, .fohh stood/again beneath; his dent old flag.. . • Lucky was it for John that liepos. Bossed the-true Yankee gritand refused to act with the boys, for, ne the old song saj;s— "The-44AL Latgadiatteltiladrd, Bropgbt o th o ,, ;.•,1 'KZ.; refit? " Whjdh „ , After cruising for agme, days,, the Constitution meanwhile having ,blseen the disabled nuerricre'up, cart. , Dull wow returned to Bostou—and .11,5‘ ea, the pilotcarne on board, he saw J , n 1)( y i t the way, he was a e Di , ItYr, at the devil ,are Jon d ng hate?" he' x elairnadt• "Do yo know Ilse bey?" said Goalmodoee hull. "Why : les; he's akn old ticnusintanag', 'W . F II , then," said ths!Conamodo ";akeNien and hie baggase ashore in your boat to 11 is parents.' nacres was taken to Boston and lodged at Concert Hall, and treated with the generous hospitality ota mag nanimous Me, After about twenty days the old brig )(want and her briny cargo came saii• ing up the harbor, and tire father was overjoyed and surprised to find his boy hid preceded him and arrived home tinder such happy circumstances. Suffice it to say, the draft given to nacres was paid by the consignees up on presentation, • The hoy John ,subsequently went to sea in the private brig Rambler, which was so successful, and was put on board a priLe (schooner) taken. lie was captured, taken to England, and was in Dartmoor Prison at the time of the massacre. Alter the war he thr many years commanded ships in the India trade, and now at a good 0 . 141 age ei enjoying "otium cum digit/tate, - the remem brance of having ildne Ida country some eery ice,— Boston Transcript. Beauty of American Women Nature has endowed the American lady with a profusion at rich gifts far beyond her less Invored Rioters abroad. really great beauties. are compara ely rare - and even on lid, point the (lit ersity of taste may lead to a difference of oplnlon —the majority of women are more than merely fair. They are, almost without exception, delicately made, and in this re-pest very different Iron die rohus. t.p)e of the .Errglish girl of the period, with her ruddy color, and full form ; and her deep masculine voice, arid still inure different from the heavy, angu lar German girl, who couitimes su niyitWertowsly an immense amount of sentimentality milt an unlimited ap petite—. The neck and the extremities are unilormily so small that European iqablishinelits have to make collars; hloie+, and blinem especially for the A merican market, certain Firiem of thee three articles tieing utterly twpsitlablei ru Europe. Henee, spent the Amen can girl readies her natural heaven, Paris, and has been fur a few weeks in the hawk or French arth-ts, she is simply perfection. She outshinee the Perlman oil her owl) privileged ground 111( . 11 IS 11l ioneinber n heir ew York beam) rho tpoted Paris when the Emperor wan will l'rwodimt, and the furore hex erepiente toilets created whenever she appeared at the opera, at. the Elyeee, or at the Bow, Younger men net d not be reminded of the recent. rivalry between one of their beautiful ernintrywomen T ad the brilliant Met ternich, and the desperate but futile efforts tnade by the great arbiter ul fashion to nri,t the crown ul I ictor) from her hawk. great natural advantage. in healitv aridgrace LOAD M I , ' At I. tlt 14 A Hot —The following alowdote of land Aliteaulay is taken (roll, a letter o alien by a '4•otell school boy, durimr, 1114 VaCti (loll, to Ids hither in r: r , ll, dated 'Claplinn, September YU, (8111. ' After describing his journey from the hout,e of ),Itit tutor at,,Norfulk, arid his arrival at 6tipllann, he goes on . "NEN. Mite (inlay ham got the firo , t family of rhil tin-en I ever saw. The oldetnt of them, of ten, cattle at ten-time RIO shook handy laßk.t heartily. A keen dispute aro-ie. before', Iwo arid hit tas• ter about Scotland and England insisted that Ile 1121. a Sentsmtin, and that he shottlit henceforth be called Tam inotead of Tom. Ile called one ()flits ei'tere dean, in•dead 01 datie,and a younger brother .loch, imntead . of John,whieLA.pntfhenn quite furious. It Wftli goal -- lon how fiercely they fought. - The writer of tine used often t o .peak of Nl:leanly.% aw the very cle% ere , t buy he e‘er met, oak the one exception, of the hue John I/11,nm Lockhart. Both of these boys were in co:aqua reader', Abraham Limoln used to say the best story he mer read of himself' was this Two (loahen•mseH were travelling oil the railrMul, and were heard discos sing the probable termination of the war. "I think," said the first, "that Jettettion t4licceo(.'"• Wily dues thee think so "Because Jefferson is a pm) mg man!: "And so is Abraham a praying mart, ' objected the other, " but the Lord will\thitik Abra ham is joking,' the first replied, con. CIIIRI eel y. A HOMII with wtielt the Prrrich pm. pieare quito fumil Lar--bom-bast. Wti tem ckew n bonnet eons') to be a bonnet? When it becomes you, my dear. , CoNstnEitir‘u that the Pacific Rail road i 4 to become the medium for trans porting of eastward, we presume the track is laid with the Trail. IT is generally supposed . that Old Ocean allows a free passage to every body, yet it is R fact fhat there are thou sands of deiid beads at the bottom, --An aid lady named Clarke, aged alxnat sixty years, • realdent Woodqe, twit' Jaimetown, (el, dead, on Monday morning last, while standing at a table welshing diShee. —A coupe of sI ng Mar people, R mate and' II female, appear - ea In Johnsto — w — nrist week and preached, as the PublictEkilliith. ,They were c1a44,44 Shaker coPtuiclulloo,4pPC4r.Spr°r7 Godly outside. Ile au& man 'preached that ehrlit 'WOuildr Wettin 'rhYee month m, bdi clict , ,flel, 14p to ! who., wiLy,,or 4'or what purpose. rho female man preached a aermonhn womah's rights and tree love. The clergyman were out to here them. All Sorts of Paragraphs LTour linibet-LAunhearns„ Twaendst pordlnr wash—wkitewasli. PLEADING Wt tlio bar—begging a drink. Tux swootnors of lifo—our coffee.). tiotTeTre. OLD men are mowed down, hut babiei are cradled. A BELL} doeiei . rtlwayx gi•a the Lest tone to society. Nor the chimney for a studio— ono that won't draw. To say of a lady'she is .no is afoul assertion. la a temparance lectuce synonymou s with a water F pout?... WHAT RAH) would cennileds inefer 7 The brrh of n bey. Tut; kind of p u nishment 6, vcirh—papor hangings. S o of fall—banana and or. now, peel on the sidewalk nit: girl of the period's favorite eve ning hymn (him)-her lover. FultNEr says "the Renate 13 sound IL is pretty much all sound. Wu EN riding on a donkey, what fruit do you rrprepont? A pear. ORLFI EY is discoursing on "tin. folly of lying " He ought to know. A CAPITAL letter—The proppe • hold er who lets his houses nt reduced rate.. IF you wish to 'see a woman go my a flash, just accuse her of wing o,y wily of giving a loan a itoolon of rising in the world Knoeft him down. Tae bachelor has to look out f ,, r number ono—the married man for ❑am ber two N E of our Iftwyera venturfN to n ,,, rt tlint courting ig not altogt•ther n hlhwr .,f love, • As' anomaly—that the river sh.ell.l be rising when it is constantly goin , 4 down. To limp warm of ft cold dtty, women doublo tho (aim mind man double Cho horn. To cum corns ; hold your foot by ti) stove until the corn pops. Saul t , ,:be a All ro cure. " Yousu ladies of tho lower parlor is what tho kitchen girls of H' ton c:111 themgelvei A NionKn rnin.trol ought not An Neither nitt.t he be with.,ut bone:, Wisgsw owtrriod man bP04111)011444),04i, it 1 , 7 perfectly proper for his wife to pull his oars. . Ton Suez Canal is like the style of some writer—tt. flows ruioothly enough, but hicks depth A QVP.ATION' of color—W6lll,l I° b•• proper to cull an Ignorant colored labor. or a green hand ? LIAT clum ought never to the ‘ltiL consumptlon ? Nlerchunti w ith !It inm che4l.4 Wurc beaux beennlp 'nose in tb. lr .)„ni t ; Iwlue, hhould Kiva them thu Bonque. SOM OfICI inn:, about our ,00 ( .1 *l% Crll ment A 3 how ndmmi•torod It I+ f'r nothing. A f'ONTRM PORA RY that Ot e r all Lull-room doors should Lo tuncritnA, "Fool, out for tho train I r hi nlrunq enough to trinkol a WWI h - jan inn hoad when he ha, 0111 V bah f-il-c ro w n I TILL tart ft - going to po! —3l r 100 mote.' In strike out filo paragraph relating to cat Iron pots WII an' told to ha% o hop, and gust , but %% hat can a f q.vero Uue du w bort li Lau no longer got nny trust Wu) are there three ohjeetioN. t takin4 a glean of brawl) 7 ller au there are three E.eruplea to a drain Vous() women often keep their by lean. " Ye.," 511)1+ Grurowig , 1,0%e like heel, ie pre , erved by brine' "Wii tr's in a name'?" A prinr.pni upholder of giving women "fair play in England bi niumal Playfair. AN Indian from thu far fi dreadful savage, wonders how it is that almost all our woolen are bump-tau Led IT li Said:that ever*thing II u prorr element, but when a 1111111 drink , flAh ht. tnlituni tstais to mutter. It TVAIAT,V. prenehor runrrieri n ma plo intoly in lowa. At t h e and .0f the ceremony the ininttler kissed the gr..n] TH JaPan"Se clergy puw u% or) tif. teeen tnlnnu, in their diceour— and -iv, to their e , mgregation, "lAA 119 hairs hrnoko " "F014.0w your nose and you arc to he right," mayhe kit it i 4 not every ono that retr i es to Ii Ulu' no‘ed around , / , ' How tunny wives aro you allowrd by the prayer Wok? SI/LIAXIII, 164. fw tor hutt , r, 4 wor,u, 4 richer 4 poor,r t , da l Bi x teen. Stlll.llltCl' for a debating a socirty 'Which can citota the moat initiery an audience, \l lQeen 131.1011unit:1 or the Ilutchi SOD flintily, • Hilmtitute fer the the cradle. Givu women' 'one of plena of furniture anti they will not de sire the rither. AN Illinois grave-digger, who buried a 'nap mimed Button, Boca a 101 l to ho widow nit follows • "to making ono but ton-Hole, $2 60.0 'l'nx beginning of wisdom is to now know. noting 4n uncommon number 01 i i :co hce fkbotil. jth,,t, ow who hat ep nrontly just begun ?tf(Yttrium used >e proVide n switch fur thdirldsleaphtera 'from the nearest bush ; now the cht , ughtga gots her own switchei fropi lUp hair-drplera. IN Paris there Is current saying that Where'il Preticlinian trends five francs an Kagoliiitiman wtll spend twonty, and an' Anleainjut 11IAy• - A YOUNG lady who has boon studying finance for some time past, wishes to kW)* wilAthbr the, day , rate of gold fa -beta thlertuttabsi or siigar. live( greet 911114 al life aro said to :VgglkAMS. ttPyppipo bias, tight a Iv As 14 and cross women. The list di ttilePleithe I • l A l sl4l 4 tiltisorrlikOki"-*Arito LA know ,w , ls7 , ,;aihicinklow York bag k City Chain berlo,llAlt s.4couldo't also home 4 Chain I hermitic!7 Wo iFivo It: up.