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Six lines or less, ' $1 50 $3 00 $5 00 One square, 3 00 5 00 . 7 00 Two squares, • 5 00 8 00 .10 00 Three squares, -7 00 10 00 15 00 Four squares, -9 00 13 00 0 0 00 Half a column, ' ' 12 00 16 00 .24 00 One column, 0 0 00 30 00 50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, one year, $3 mi Administrators' and Executors' Notices, § - 1 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will he continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. #3ditital aiTV Attistritantum. From the New Haven Register • - CAMPAIGN SONG. John C. Fremont is the man, • ' Because he is the man, sir; And the reason why ho is the man, Is because ho is the man, sir. John C. Fremont has eaten "dog;" Oh, don't you know he has ? Oh, yes, I know he's eaten dog, Becauso I know he has. John C. Fremont—that's the game— That's the game of Kansas: Then there is a Burly-game, That's the game that answers. . , At the battle of the Nile, He was there all the while, Rotten meat is sure to spite. If you keep it a great while John C. Fremont is on the track, Because he's on the track, sir; And the reason why he's on the track, - Is because he's on the track, sir. THE VISION Or "Truth stranger than Fiction." During the. early part of the reign of George HI, there lived in an obscure village of Ireland, a family in the middle walks of life named Gunning. They were_ not richly endowed with this world's goodS, but pos sessed sufficient for all the comforts, if not the luxuries of life. - Matthew Gunning was a • fanner by profession, (if so it may be called,) and had he, possessed that spirit of frugality, 'whiCh seems almost unknown to the Irish nation, he might have been a wealthy man, as it was, he generally followed the principle of "lettin ,, a to-morrow take care of . itself." His wife has been the village belle, and still retains traces of that extraor dinary beauty which had excited the admira tion of all who beheld her. Two girls Were the 'sole fruit of their union, who prOmised, even in infancy, to equal if not surpass their mother in personal charms; and that mother's whole soul was bound up in them. Being near of an age, the children were constantly together; and the sprightly, Lizzie and the fair Louisa Were spoiled by 1,),)t1i young and old in the village of Z One summer afternoon, fatigued With their sports the in fant sisters threw themselves upon the grass beneath a willow that enshadowed their parent's cottage, and with the fair round eheeek of L - Juksa, pillowed upon the sunny tresses of Lizzie, and their dimpled limbs and snowy robes thrown into strong relief by the rich wavy sward, they, presented a picture which Lawrence would have longed to canvass. The mother as she sat with her spinning wheel in the deep embrazure of the window, watched, them as they slept, and unconsciously her thoughts wandered into the future ; and, with a mother's fond anxiety, speculating upon their future,career. As she mused she, tGo, fell into a gentle slumber, and the visions of her musings as sumed, as it were a tangible shape, "a loeal habitation and a name," and like a phantas magoria passed before her. She fancied her self in London, that great city of which she had heard so much, and she seemed an in visible spectator of a scene that far surpassed her proudest hopes ; she saw her lovely daughters appearing in the perfected beauty of womanhood, as actors on the busy arena of the aristocratic world. Peers and peeress es, prelates and statesmen, even royalty it self seemed to do homage to their unrivalled Throngscharms. Thros of admirers worshipped at the shrine of their beauty ; and one, dis tinguished from the rest by his haughty bear ing and the glittering star upon his breast, knelt at the feet of her youngest born, her bright, haired Lizzie •, and she thought upon that regal brow and airy coronet, formed of the ducal strawberry leaves, rested as if it hail found a fit abiding place. Delighted she awoke, and with the glittering vision still filling her imagination, she started to find herself in her own humble cottage, and her children still sleeping beneath the tree. She mentioned her dream to none, but the memory of it lingered for years, and with a mother's fond partiality she whispered., "why should not such things be?" Time sped on, and our heroines increased in' beauty and years ; they received the best education the place could afford ;, and the worthy cure, seeing that their minds soared far above mediocrity as well as their persons, formed their ductile. powers to such a degree that they were soon fit to grace any circle. When Louisa was about seventeen their mother died; and on her death bed. exacted u solemn promise from her husband, that be fore the expiration of six months he should take them to London ; then, for the first time, relating her dream she begged him to remain there a year,at least, and at the end of that time, if they had not attracted notice, he might return with them to his native village. Had it been anywhere but at the dying bed of his wife, Matthew Gunning might have smiled at the ascendency which the imagina tion had been allowed to gain over the judgment; but, although he desired no high, er destiny for his children than too see them the wives of respectable men in their own sphere of life, still he would not refuse her last request and made the required premise: Could he have forseen the future. As soon as the daughters could become reconciled to the thoughts of leaving the (*.rave of their beloved mother, and the many endearing associations of their childhood for the vast city, where they would be, "unknow ing and unknown," they started for the great metropolis. They arrived, there in ,June, that month whose delights the tyrant Fashion has compelled the aristocracy of Britain's isles to forego, and obliged theni to remain in• the city when they would fain be reposing beneath the shade of those gigantic trees that wave proudly over the ancestral homes of England's haughty nobility. Matthew Gunning,• willing to fulfil his wife's wishes as much as possible, took lodg ings in' a fashionable hotel, and ere many weeks had elapsed London was in an uproar. Who were those angels ,that had suddenly appeared as from Paradise ? • The Vitrore," as Hortice Walpole calls it, was unparalleled. The young nobles; whose tastes were satiated ..$1 50 WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL. XIL with the usual London belles; begged their stately mammas to leave their cards upon our heroines, if they wished them ever:to. as sist at their monthly balls ; and if the aristo cratic parent refused, upon the plea of their being "nobodies, the •youthful peers de clared they would repair to the club whenev er their mothers and sisters particularly de sired their escort. And. so it went.; day . after day, week after week, the gate- of the hotel was "thronged with England's proudest and noblest, and the eyes of :the fair Irlandaises were almost daz zled by the array of brilliant . names, 'Whose cards.were hourly sent to them ; and even Matthew began to think that his wife was not so foolish as he had once deemed her.— From the Duchess to the baronet's lady, from the peeress, , who boasted of descent from the Plantagenets, to the parvenu of yesterday, all alike strove to do .them honor; and more than once has the proud duchess, in whose veins flowed the - blood. of Kings, found her rooms deserted. on the night of her most ma,m nificent fete;•bedause why ? she neglected to invite the Ounnings ; and, to her mortifica tion, she would hear that the rooms.of the rich banker's wife were crowded. the same evening by the elite of the nobility, 'and the magnet of attraction Was the fair sisters.--: These few solitary exceptions gave way be fore the overwhelming tide of excitement that was rushing on like a mighty torrent; and the usually invincible aristocratic walls of Almack's fell without a blow, before the irresistible power of beauty. And now had their mother been alive, she might indeed have thought her fairy dream fully realized. No person who was not a spectator Can hardly conceive of the rage for the fair sis= ters that was evinced by the fashionable world. 'Walpole in his letters, speaks of it as the most extraordinary thing that happened for centuries. Selwyn, the famous wit, was a devoted friend of the eldest sister and evinc ed it for many. a . year. And now came the sleeper's dreani ?' ; The Duke of Hamilton, one of the most courted .and admired of the unmarried nobles, - and at whose approach managing mammas fanned themselves violent 7 ly, so as to appear unconcerned, and the un conscious daughters looked down and:smelt of the boquets, whose movements were watch ed by many a glittering eye and anxious heart he, the young and haughty Duke of Hamilton and Brandon, was vanquished by the charms of the young Elizabeth ; and be fore the end of the season, the ducal coronet was in reality placed . upon those shining tresses. In the course of a fortnight from her sister's marriage, Louisa married the Marquis of Coventry... The rest of their career is known tb all the world ! Who has not heard of the shoema ker who made upward of two guineas by ex hibiting a slipper, he was making for Lady Coventry at a penny a head ?- And also read, with amazement of a thousand persons who sat up all night around the doors of the hotel to see the Duchess of Hamilton enter her carriage at au early hour in the morning ? Who would ever have dreamed thatthe daugh ters of an humble Irish farmer should thus become an integral part of that haughty ar istocracy of England ? But so it' was, and the bright haired Lizzie, who reclined beneath the willow, hushed to sleep by the music of her mother's spinning-wheel lived to become, the wife of two Dukes and the mother of four! (For after the death of her first husband, she married the Duke of Argyle.) There is scarcely an instance on record which more clearly proves that "truth is of- - teatimes stranger than fiction," than the his tory of the motherless daughters of Matthew Gunning.—Lady's Wreath. Mother's Love Think of thy childhood! Ilast thou ever tasted pleasures sweet .as those ? Were ever garlands so fair as those entwined by a mo ther's hands among thy ringlets? When re bellious passion roused the demon in thy na ture, naught quelled the tempest like her whispering chiding. When, agonized - by burning fever, the fragile form. tossed to and fro, in convulsive effort for relief ; no hand but a mother's could soothe the throbbing brow, or prepare the cooling draught - which seems real nectar to the parched lips. Pause, then, young man, in thy career, if the path thou art treading evoke one lingering blush upon thy cheek, one emotion of shame! Bethink thee it is ploughing. deep furrows in thy mo ther's heart. But, if after firm investigation, conscience upbraids thee not, walk proudly on in thy manly independence, heaping un told wealth of joy upon that dear one's head, who watches o'er thy pathway all the, live long day. If worldly wealth be thine, how happy wilt thou . be to ,surround her with the luxuries all-powerful gold will command; if poor, redouble thy earnest attentions, and gas will give greater joys than the wealth of the Indies could purchase.: If disease fast ens its deadly grasp upon her, be thine the task to cheer the weary sufferer; let thy voice whisper comfort and support. Thy love shall win her to partial forgetfulness, or nerve her to endurance. .Maiden, in thy carelessness forget not her who, .l.oves thee best. The world offers many gay,„pictures, whose vivid colors will entice thy lively fancy ; take heed, then, lest they so absorb thy judgment that selfishness ensue, and a devotee to pleasure, thou last scarce time or disposition to return a share of the same gentle offices that made thy earlier years so like a happy dream. Be warned in time of these seeming trifling temptations, -which lure the brightest and best from a mother's side. When she suffers, be thou,ke turn the nurse; pillow the aching head upon thy bosom, and while busy mem ory recalls the time .ivlien her arms held thy tender form in a eloso embrace, renew thy resolutions of a better future, and keep them while there yet is time ; before the ear is clo sed to the repentant sobs that burst from the full heart—before the eyelids droop forever o'er the eyes that met thine so oft in loving pride—prove thou art human. Give back some love for the wealth she has poured on. thee.—Phrenological Journal. - Del; A house without a woman is like . a world without a sky—dark and dreary. El 0 THE GREATEST TYRANT- IN THE WORLD. tN AUTOBIOGRArrfr. I hope I may not be charged with egotism when I proclaim myself to be a most remar kable character. It has never, probably, fal len to the lot of any other one personage; known to history, to accomplish as much in a single lifetime as I have achieved. This is, the only apology I have to offer for obtru ding upon the attention of the reader this brief autobiography. I was born in that region of the globe far thest toward the rising sun. But I have not the means of knowing the precise date of my birth ; but; from my: remembrance, it was a long time ago: „Of course I can not minute ly describe every .thing that took place at that interesting moment, of my existence— remember having heard a'great deal of noise and confusion—a frightful , clattering of ma chinery—and there seemed to be no small degree of excitement about that time; though, that being the - first moment of my experi ence, I may have over-estimated the interest that seemed to be manifested on the occasion. I was born a slave—that is, if slavery con sists in being owned entirely, soul and body, by another. And, what may seem a little strange, I have no remeMbrance of over be ing discontented, or.dissatisfied with my con dition. In all my experiende and intercourse with society, and this has not been very lim ited, I can scarcely be said to have ever had any fixed or definite will of my own. I have moved quite at random, and, I may say, - with perfect recklessness, utterly regardless of my own interests. ...No one could ever be more indifferent as to results. Althdughl was born a slave mysel4 as al ready stated, and have never obtained.my freedom, nor even attempted it, yet, astonish ing as it may seem, I have held in absolute bondage a greater number of human beings than any slaveholder upon whom. the sun ev er shone. In the broadest sense of the word, I must admit myself to be a tyrant and a des pot. I have imposed the chains and fetters upon thousands and thousands, and fully in tend never to manumit them to my dying day. "- • Although I have on my plantations nearly every color , with which the human face is tinged,'yet.l. own more whites than blacks .- 1 find it quite as easy to subjugate the for:. nier As the latter—indeed, generally, they are much more willing to kneel at my feet 'and submit to my authority. It is no slander to call me the most extensive cruel, and heart less slaveholder on the globe. It is a matter of principle with me to en slave without scruple whoever -1 finditin my power to victimize ' • no matter from what walks in life,l may find 'it for my interests` to make the seection. Among my slaves are some of the most: proud-spirited and haugh ty, as well as intelligent and aristocratic, characters in the -world. I own many law yers, doctors, clergymen, merchants, artists, mechanics, and bankers—have at my com mand thousand's and thousands in California, Australia, on the shores of the Atlantic and Pacific, in the frozen regions of the North, and sunny climes of the South, -in the dia mond mines of Brazil and Golconda. I ex ercise unlimited dominion over the sea as well as the land. I send barges, schooners, ships, and steamers, manned with my slaves, over every river, lake, sea, and ocean of the entire globe. I make them build edifices, temples, villages, and cities, and dedicate them to my service. I make my slaves work, many of them, night and day. I send. forth armies and ar mies of them, to toil and sweat, from early dawn till dusky eve—make them build work shops and manufactories, and stock them with wheels, looms, spindles, and human fin gers. I sometimes dash them headlong out of existence, by scores and hundreds; on steamers and railways. I do not hesitate to marshal them upon - the field of death, arm them with every instrument of destruction which fiendish ingenuity lies invented in mod ern times, and command them to butcher each tither, and wash the earth with rivers of hum*. blood! I own armies and navies, with all their im plenlents and. instruments of cruelty, and all th; z ir means of slaughter and carnage. Mus k ts, bayonets, swords, pistols, rates, dirks, poniards, cannon, and ammunition of every name and description," are manufactured. at my bidding, and used at 'my discretion. I create war, and dictate terms of peace. I can buy souls and bodies whenever and. almost wherever I make the attempt. Thou sands will cheerfully ,give up all they hold most precious in existence to enter my ser vice. I Make, many of them sell to their,fel low-men liquid fire by the gill, to secure' my smiles. They will rob, steal, murder, swear falsely, overreach, .strip the poor widow, and turn orphan children, for my sake, homeless and houseless into the streets. _ I have had many 'a. race in the course of my life—have been chased and hunted from. sea to sea, island to island, continent to con tinent, mountain to mountain, and from the rivers to the ends of the earth. Yet all the world is ready to do me homage ; and there is nothing so. mean, low, Wicked, and detes table—no crime so dark and villainous, that troops of my servants in every clime, willnot most cheerfully perpetrate for my sake, have been vilified, slandered, courted, petted, flattered, and eulogiied, kidnapped and denounced, imprisoned end pardoned.-- My powers seem to be almost omnipotent.— I stir up neighborhood difficulties, and. hush them—get up lawsuits, and settle them--buy characters, characters, and sell them—in short, I have done almost every thing i; but never got into a' sweat myself. I have been a great travellervisited eve ry latitude and longitude, where ships . have floated on the deep, or human feet have mark ed the soil of earth—have been invited into and visited every kind of society--=associated with the very worst, as well as the best of fam ilies. I have frequented grog-shops, gam bling-saloons, counting-houses, custom and post-offices, mercantile establishments, banks, exchange brokers, brothels, and lottery-stands —have often gone with the missionary -to liEl HUNTINGDON, PA., OCTOBER 15, 1856. -PERSEVERE.- , - heathen lands, _assisted him, in his work, of charity, and aril a'refrulai attendant upon the servics of the Church throughout the world. No*, reader, after all the statements I have madeln reference to my vast powers, if you shall be inclined to doubt the truth of my as sertions, or regard me as an egotist, you will change your opinion when I tell you my name is the Extraordinary Fight with a Bear. Captain Hall, of the schooner Adriatic, sends to the editors of the Chicago Trilnene the following exceedingly interesting account of the capture by, himself and five of his crew in a small boat, of an enormous black bear, which they found swimming across Bay do Noque Cnic..kso; Aug. 30, 1.856.—At the request of my crew. I have written the following ac count of an encounter with a bear. The names of the crew are' D. M. Payne, mate, and C. Westmore, Daniel McLennan, John McLennan and George Settard, seamen, all of whom participated in the rare and exci ting sport. On Monday, 25th inst., while lying at an chor with the schooner Adriatic, at the head of that beautiful land-locked harbor, Petit Bay de Noque, an arm of Green Bay, pro jecting.from its northern extremity some fif teen miles into the land toward Lake Superi or, my attention was called by the crew to a large black animal on White Fish Point, which on examining with a glass, proved to be a very large black bear just taking to the water, with the intention apparently, of swimming to the opposite shore of the bay, which at this point is over a mile wide, the distance being divided by two or three small islands. I immediately ordered the boat to be made ready, which took some little time, as a spar with sail attached had to be unshipped. Be. fore this could be done the bear had reached nearly half the distance from the point to the first island, and it became necessary to use dispatch, in order to prevent his gaining a footing upon it ; for, with the weapons we had, it world have been madness to attack such a formidable monster on land, The boat WO,S manned with fear oars and a clum sy paddle, made of an inch spine board, which was used to steer, with instead of a rudder or fifth oar, of which we were minus. The wind was blowing very strongly from the Northward ; being about a beam for the bear, and directly ahead for us. In our haste we took no weapons but an old dull axe and a coniinon biead. knife—indeed we bad no oth er, unless we had taken some handspikes and one or two more 'knives similar to the one we took, but which were not just at hand. The bear was about a quarter of a mile from us when we started. The men were all good oarsmen and we soon overhauled Bruin. Just before reaching him two of the oars were shipped, one being taken in place of the paddle to steer with, by . 11Ir, Payne, who managed the boat very adroitly in the sinu ous chase which followed. One of the crew taking the axe, and myself the knife, we sta tioned ourselves forward, ready for the at tack. The bear swam from us as we approach ed, and Westmore, who had the axe aimed a blow at his head, intending to cleave hie skull, but struck a little too soon, inflicting a keep wound in the neck, at the same time cutting off the top of his ear, but did not touch the spine or any important blood-vess el, and. the wound had no other immediate effect than to enrage him. He turned toward the boat in a moment, showed a set of tusks that would have done honor to a wild boar, and gave a deep growl, more like-that of a lion than any thing else I ever heard. He did not attack the boat at this time, but struck out with all his might for the nearest island. He was a powerful swimmer, and the oarsmen had no light task to head him off. As we came up with him again he eluded the second blow aimed at him with the axe, and it was lost overboard, which left us with no weapon but the knife. As we came up with him the third time, I gave him two thrusts in the neck with the knife, one on each side of the spine, seudiug the blade in up to the hilt. He now turned upon us and attacked the boat, growling with terrific fierceness, As he came up, I gave him several thrusts with the knife, avoiding the passes made with his powerful jaws, one concussion of which would no doubt have broken off my arm. Striking the bow, the blade of the knife bentnearly double, render ing it useless for the time. I then seized the pine paddle and gave him a blow upon the skull that shivered the paddle in pieces, but which seemed to have no effect whatever upon the bear. Ile now got one paw upon the gunwhale of the boat and seized it with his teeth, .4t this critical moment the oars were brought into requisi tion by the mate and crew, and several well directed blows from them coming down up on him at once, forced him to relinquish his hold upon the boat. Had he succeeded in getting into the boat, we must have retreated into the element he had left, or fared worse, Re now sought safety again iu flight toward the island which we had considerably neared during the fight. We immediately pursued again, and I im proved the time to straighten my knife blade, and as we came up, gave him another thrust in the neck, and then seized him by the low. hair .• • upon his rump. The velocity of the boat brought his head under it, as I was in the bow, and the men urging the boat for ward, I could very easily hold him in this position, notwithstanding his powerful strug. gles, he having no footing upon the bottom. While struggling he struck the side of the boat with his open patia each nail taking a Alp out of the plank. His struggles grew weaker, and finally ceased, when we suppos ed him dead and hauled him into the boat, and pulled for the schooner. We soon per ceives 3. that Bruin was not dead, but appar ently "playing possum." e lost no time in securing his hind feet as well as we could, to the forward ring of the boat, with a. very short piece of small, .:...:.: . . ~..i.,:.: . . . : _ l'" l' * ' . ' ...:::.::. --.. C.i.." . ALMIGHTY DOLL;MT. Editor and. Proprietor. half rotten hemp rope that happened to be in it, but as , the animal began to arouse, we were not without apprehensions that he still might have sufficient strength to break this slender fastening, and drive us out of the boat or escape, and having nothing to des patch him with, we pulled for the brig Gene va, which was lying near by, and called to her crew to get an axe ready for use. As we came alongside, the bear rose up on his four paws and reached with one of them an incredible distance, made a pass at one of the men, just grazing his clothes with his claws. Mr. Payne took an axe, handed down from the Geneva, and getting behind him gave him a blow upon the, head that completely smashed his skull. We then pulled to the Adriatic with our prize, proud enough, you may be sure, of the feat we had performed in taking him. All this did not occupy over twenty min utes, and no one on board the brig mistrus ted what we were about until we came along side with the bear. The blow on his skull did not kill him, although it knocked him down and rendered him harmless. So tena cious was he of life that he did not die till his jugular artery had been cut some ten minutes, and he .had lost some gallons of blood. We had no means of weighing him, but he was variously estimated by those who saw him and who pretended to be judges, at from 360 to 500. As ho hung up dressed, his carcass meas ured, from the gambrels to the tip of the nose, a little over 7 feet. One of his arms, with the shoulder, weighed 36 pounds. His hide measured, stretched out to dry, 6 feet 7 inches across the, shoulders between the paws, and 4 feet 8 inches across the belly.— A French pioneer says he is the largest bear of the kind he ever saw, and the first killed by whites in that region. I heard, however, from another source, that some years since one was attacked in the water in that vicini ty-, drove the attacking party out of the boat, to which he betook himself,' and was shot while quietly enjoying the possession of his prize, by some hunters who happened to be near by and came in another boat to the res cue of the drowning fugitives. J. B. HALL. A, Pleasing Incident Some three or four months since, a poor, emaciated care worn man called at the resi dence of one of our citizens to solicit the job of carrying in a load of wood which he ob served lyino. before the door. The lady of the house, who ever has a kind word and a helping hand forthe poor and needy, having a curiosity (most women are more or less cu rious) to learn the cause of his misfortunes, questioned him concerning it. Seating him self, (for he was scarcely able to stand, and while tears filled his eyes, he told his story. He had emigrated to this country from the city of New York, where he had left a wife and three children in good circumstances, to seek a home in the far off West. On arri ving at Marysville, he was stricken down with sickness, and being a stranger, he ap plied and was admi i tted nto the hospital, where he laid some time—till his money was exhatisted and. his health somewhat impro ved, when ho was discharged. After wan dering about the streets for two or three days, vainly seeking for work enough to procure food sufficient to satisfy the ravings of hunger, he had espied the wood before the door, as a last resort, ho had applied for the job of car. rying it in, which he was willing to do for a crust of bread. A torrent of tars gushed from the poor invalid's eyes at the close of his story as if his heart would break. A few kind words soon rallied his drooping spirits, and a smoking hot breakfast in an incredibly short time afterwards lent strength and vigor to his languishing body, The work was completed and paid for, and a few days provisioning given him when he trudg ed off mountainwaril with a lighter heart, heaping all the thanks on his fair preserver that a greatful heart could suggest, Now comes the sunny side of this "o'er true tale." A few days ago a well dressed, hearty looking gentleman called on the lady above alluded to, with a smile on his face and his honest hand extended ; but not re membering ever to have seen her visitor be fore, he was compelled to revert to the inci dent above described in order to bring his identity to mind, He took up the thread of his story where he left off three month pre. viotis, and finished it in substance as follows! His wife had learned of his misfortunes, and like a true woman immediately sold her pro perty in New York, and took passage with her three children for California, where they arrived safely with a snug sum of money, They found the husband and father pros pering ; soon a ranch was bought and paid for, a few miles from Marysville, and now he had dropped in to leave her a loadof wood, a basket of eggs and a roll of fresh batter-- all of which was produced off his own ranch, and hauled to town with his own horses and wag . on—saying "he never would get done paying her." Thus in the short space of three months, has a penniless wanderer been converted into a prosperous and valuable cit izen, The above story is but poorly told; but it is done more for the purpose of show , ing that among the many unworthy appli- Cants for charity there is occasionally found one that serves to verify these sayings to the good book—"CaSt thy . bread upon the waters and after many days it shall return to thee," —Marysville Express. MARRIAGE AN Er.turairc.—A Pennsylvania editor says that marriage has broken out amonghis neighbors, and that it is spread ing with frightful virulence all over the nor thern end of the country, carrying off hun dreds of his subscribers... hundreds of ca ses he says, have come under his own obserr vation, all of them hopeless—once seized the victim is a gone case ; the only thing that can be done is to call in a clergyman to prepare him for his fate. Having had the complaint before, he says, is no protection against it.— A widow who had caught it years before, and was slowly recovering from its effects, suffered a relapse, and was now lost beyond recovery. She has married a second time. Once I assisted at the soiree dansante of the Cortr.tss of Fritterfield. ,The most brilliant star in that galaxy of *llion was the young and lovely Marchioness of Fiddledale. saw her dancing in the hall. Around her snowy brow were set five hundred pounds ; for such would have been the answer of any jeweller to the question; "what are those dia. , monds ?" With the gentle tub:dal:ions of her bosom, there rose and fell exactly thirty pounds ten shillings. The sum she wore in the guise of a brooch of gold and enamel. Her fairy form was invested in ten guineas,, represented by 1 , ..! Blip of lilac satin ; and this was overlaid by thirty guineas more in two skirts of white lace. Tastefully disposed down each side of the latter, were six half crowns ; which so many bows of purple rib bon had come to. The lower margins of the thirty guinea skirts were edged with eleven additional guineas, the value of some eight yards of silver fringe a quarter of a ydrcl in depth. Her taper waist ; taking zone and clasp together, I calculated to be confined by forty pounds sterling. Her delicately-round. ed arms, the glove of spotless kid being ad ded to the gold bracelet which encircled the little wrist, maybe said to have been adorn ed with twenty-two pounds five and sixpeucei and, putting the silk and satin at the lowest figure, I should say that she wore fourteen and sixpence on her feet. Thus, altogether, was this thing of light, this creature of love liness, arrayed from top to toe, exclusively of little sundries, in six hundred and forty-eight pounds eleven shillings.— , ,Tos. Hume. NO. 17. A LIVE SNAKE IN A LIVE MAN.---A gen tleman, whose name we did not learn, says the San Francisco Golden Eagle; arrived in this city from Bird's Hill, for the purpose' of procuring surgical advice in relation to the possibility of removing from the stomach a large snake, which has inhabited that localiz ty for the past fifteen years. Exactly at what tune the reptile was taken into the stomach the sufferer is not aware. He felt its pres ence in the vicinity of the kidneys many years ago ; but the pains experienced, although sometimes acute and troublesome ? occasioned no alarm until about two years since, when; one day feeling quite unwell, he placed his hand upon his bowels, and distinctly felt the' snake crawling within hint: Since then it has grown enormously, and has attained a length of at least fifteen inch:- es, and a size round the middle of five or six. inches. Its proportions can be pretty accu rately ascertained, as its entire shape is fear fully obvious to the touch. It is quite active, and possesses an insatiable appetite, judging from the amount of food and water consum , ed by the sufferer, who is continually parch- , ed with thirst, and not nnfrequently requires from three to four gallons of fluid daily.— Through the recommendation of an Indian, he has lately found considerable- relief from the incessant thirst by drinking water libet-• ally diffused with vinegar. He has made several ineffectual attempts to dislodge the "varmint" by starvation and the free use of stimulants. On one occasion, he abstained from both food and water for three days, in the hope of bringing the occu pant to some sort of terms. The first day, the snake became uneasy ; the second, bois terous ; and the third, furious, but still the man held out. At the end. of the third day, however, his snakeship commenced an attack upon the walls of his prison, with what ap peared to be a tolerable full set of teeth, and, the result was an immediate supply of food more agreeable to both parties. As may be supposed, the man is reduced to a perfect skeleton, under the extreme tor ture of mind and body preying upon him night and day, but he does not despair of finding a surgeon in the city sufficiently skill, ful to make an incision in the abdomen and remove the reptile. We have read of simi lar cases ; but this is the first that ever came under our own observation—and we hope it may be the last, for we have felt "all averisb." ever since. NOT Ben.—A correspondent of the Cin cinnati Times from Burlington, Vt., relates the following: I am reminded—speaking of cheese--of a little anecdote the stage driver told me yes. terday. We were passing an old farm house with an untidy yard and dilapidated out buildings, when he said t "A Boston man got off a pretty cute speech to the owner of that place, t'other day," "What was it?" I asked. "Why, he called at the house to buy cheese, but When he came to look at the lot, he con cluded he didn't want 'em, they were so full of `skippers.' So he made an excuse and was going away, when the farmer said to him : "Look here, Mister, how can I get my cheese down to Boston the cheapest?" The gentleman looked at the stuff a me. ment, and saw the maggots squirming, an 4 said: "Well, I don't know : let 'em be a day or two, and you can drive 'em right down 1" It seems to me the answer was somewhat `pertinent to the occasion,' ABSENCE OF Mxivn.—Cases of this sort have been quite rare lately—undoubtedly owing to the hard times, which render it necessary for every man to have his wits about him—yet several instances have lately come under our cognizance. One was that of a temperance man who went into a house for the purpose of talking seriously with inmates on the subject of their habitual in , .; toxicatiom Intending to reach out his hand• to the master of the house, he took hold of a; brandy decanter and did not discover. .h' mistake until one of the company b 0 26- out to him not to drink the whole. 4Erl parish minister once took occasion, in the pulpit, to describe) the deVotioziul and solemn effect of the organ, in public worship, and to solicit a contribution from the con gregation to procure one. On coming out of church, a gentleman observed to a friend: fI w ill give nothing towards the organ ; mean to present tho table of command,. ments," "I advise you," replied the friend, "to keep the commandments, and give something elso *to the church." ve, The following, fro& the Westfield Transcript, is p, decided drive, and falls with tolling effect upon the prpvAiling vxity of the fair sex : A Q4tirk,----The managers of the A.gricub tural Ball would take this method of express_ ing their regrets, and o'ering their apologies to several ladies of this village, who received cards of invitation, but were not called for by the managers, They would say That the neglect was unavoi4abh), not intenfional, and was caused by the present style of ladies? dress, each lady occupy-in g the whole of the carriage, thereby m ki ng it necessary to transport them to the Hall singly, until the lateness of the hoUr precluded 4- .. his possibility of calling for all. The Value of a Pine Lady.