0 ODLLAR PER ANNUM, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: Satnr&an Rlornmn, 11, 1855. |}octnr. GRACE ABOUNDING. TRAN-I.ATED FROM TIIE GERMAN OF I-L'THER. •• Where *in abounded, grace did much more abound." Almighty Goil! to thee, Ilv sbanie ami anguish shaken ; Incline thy gracious ear to me, And leave me not forsaken ; For who that feels the power within Of past remorse, and present sin, Can stand, O Lord, before thee! On thee alone my stay I place, All human help rejecting, Relying on thy sovereign grace— Thy sovereign aid expecting ; 1 rest upon thy sacred word That thou "It repulse him not, 0 Lord, Who to thy mercy fleeth. And though I travail all the night, And travail all the morrow, Mv trust is in Jehovah's might— My triumph in my sorrow ; Forgetting not that thou of old Didst Israel, though weak, uphold— When weakest, thou most loving ! Far though my sinfulness is great, Redeeming grace is greater: And though all hell should lie in wait. Supreme is my Creator; For he my King aud Shepherd is, And when most helpless, most I'm his, My strength and my Redeemer! |tl is r c 113 uco us. [From Irving's Life of Washington.] THE BATTLE OF BUNKER HILL. The sound of drum and trumpet, the clatter of hoofs, the rattling of gun-carriages, and all the other military din and bustle in the streets of Boston, soon apprised the Americans, on their rudely fortified height, of an impending attack. They were ill fitted to withstand it, being jaded with night's labor and want of sleep: hungry, arid thirsty, having brought but scanty supplies, and oppressed by the heat of the weather, Prescott sent repeated mes sages to General Ward, asking reinforce ments and provisions. Putnam seconded the n ijtie t in person, urging the exigencies of the ease. Ward hesitated. He feared to weaken his main I ody at Cambridge, as his stores were de -1 osited there, and it might have to sustain the principal attack. At length, having taken the advice of the Council of Safety, he issued or der- to Col. Stark and Read, then at Medford, to march to the relief of Presentt with their New Hampshire regiments. The order reach ed Medford about 11 o'clock. Ammunition was distributed in ail haste—two (lints, a gill of jowdcr, and fifteen balls to each man. The balls had to be suited to the different calibres of ?iie guns ; the powder to be carried in horns, or loose in the pocket, fur there were no cart ridges prepared. It was the rude turn out of yeoman soldiery, destitute of regular accoutre ments. In the meanwhile the Americans on Breed's Hill were sustaining the fire from the ships and from the battery on Copp's llill, which open ed upon them aUiut ten o'clock. They return ed an occasional shot from one- corner of the redoubt, without much harm to the enemy, ami continued strengthening their position un til about eleven o'clock, when they ceased to work, piled up their cntrem-hing tools in the V'-ar, and looked out anxiously and imjiatiently for their anticipated reinforcements and sup plies. A1 out this time, General Putnam, who had been to head-quarters, arrived at the redoubt on horse-back. Some few words passed be tween him and Prescott with regard tothccn trwhing toils, which have been variously re ported. Tut; most probable version is, that he urged to have them taken from their present place, where they might fall into the hands of the enemy, and carried to Bunker's Hill, to fie em ployed in throwing up a redoubt, which was a part of the original plan, aud which would lie very important .-hould the troops be obliged to f' treat lioin Breed's llill. To this Prescott Stark. Howe immediately sent over to , livid features, and itarticg eye-balls I VOL. XVI. X 0.9. could plainly see, and were engaged in dividing or securing the booty. Tlic glittering eyes of the wrinkled Zingara, for such she was, then turned upon me. It was evident from their expression that my turn was at hand. A tumult of thoughts agitated mv breast. To die thus, after escaping with life from the events of the week ! It was horrible. Already I felt the clutch of those bird-like fingers at my throat. Already I fancied that butcher-like knife, red from a hundred murders, and warm from the old General's side, slowly passing into my breast. I could offer no resistance. My left arm was broken—my ankle twisted —my strength utterly gone. I raised myself partly tip, as with hidious deleberation the pair cautiously ap proached, one on each side. What would I have given at that moment to be heading a " forlorn hope to be struggling with the breakers as when lately wrecked on the stormy Caspian ; to be standing opposite the best saw handle shot in he county Galway ; to be hob nobbing over my father's claret, in my grand father's house, with the blackguard attorney who ruined us all ; to be listening to the un mistakable refusal to marry me of the only girl I ever loved, or to be arrested by a dirty tailor on the eve of a steeple chase, in which I was the favorite gentleman rider. Don't fancy that I thought of all these things at a time, though I never thought so much in a year as I did in those few moments. The ugly Jewish features of the man ap proached me with the fascination of a serpent. I twisted myself round to meet the still more fiendish glance of the woman. They neared me. The clutch of the hag is already at my throat. The knife of the man is upraised.—- Suddenly the chords of speech were loosened, and I screamed—screamed like a horse in the middle of the battle-field. I shall never forget the sound of my own voice in that unearthly cry. The monster drew back, but it was only to look at each other. At that instant I thought of something—with my right hand I drew forth my Colt's revolver.— 1 remember distinctly, during the instant it took to pluck it forth, all the incidents of the two days previous—each time I had fired it, and that there were two charges left when T was shot down from my horse. To snatch it forth, cock it, level it, to pull the trigger, was the work of a second. Down went the man, a filthy corpse upon the ground. 1 remember seeing the shadowy forms of the obscene birds cropful in the solitary tree near me lazily extend their wings as the sharp report rang out. The hag fled a half dozen paces, like a startled glioud ; but she was burdened with spoil, and her foot caught against the very corpse of him whom she had assisted to murder. Before she could rise, I had covered her with my pistol. One! two! three! "She has it!" I cried. But it was not fated that she should enjoy the privilege of instant death. She fell wounded and crippled. Her moans and maledictions were horrible I had struck her, I believe, in the hip joint. At length, 1 conceived the idea of dragging myself from that appalling vicinity ; for these two wretches had made the accustomed sights and sounds of the battle field familiar and en durable by comparison with their neighborhood either in life or death. I was not disturbed again that night, and indeed do not remember much more until I found myself on a litter and among friendly faces. Looking forth, as I was borne away, I saw only one sight in all that ghastly field of death. 11 was the old Zingara's corpse. Plundered in turn by my soldiers, it lay naked, stripped of its gaudy rags, and a monstrous vulture had selected it for his prev, as something more corrupt than all that lay around. My faithful Acbmet told me that for hours after they found me he could uot succeed in getting me to relax ray gripe on my Colt's pistol. If I survive these wars, and ever become a respectable citizen in '• ould Ireland," again, that weapon shall be a precious heirloom to hand down to my children's children as the instrument of my providential escape from such a death. THLKURAPFIIC.—When it was first reported that Professor Morse had succeeded in convey ing intelligence between Baltimore and Wash ington through the wires of the Magnetic Telegraph, old savant, who had been a school master and a member of the Legislature, gavo it as his opinion that the report was " a humbug !" lu fact, from his knowledge of "astronomy," he said the thing could not be done ! Shortly after, O'Reilly's men were seen setting the poles directly by the old man's dwelling. Ouc day he joined the crowd who were witnessing the operation of stretching the wire. Upon being asked what he thought of the matter then, lie hesitated a moment, assurn ug an air of importance, and then replied " Well, gentlemen, while in the Legislature, I gave the subject considerable attention, and after some investigation and reflection, I have come to the conclusion that it may answer very well for small packages, but will never do for large bundles—never 1" WIT AS IS WIT. —At a social party a few nights since, no matter where, a lady a.ked a lawyer, " Why is coal like a celebrated law book ?" " I have no doubt of its being Black stone,''replied the lawyer. "But," said the lady, "we burn Coke also." "True," said the lawyer, " but at most of the coal-yards you get a very Little-tou !" L-7U Physicians rarely t ike medicine, 1 w --v rs seldom go to law, and ministers steer clear of other parson's churches. Editors, however, read all the papers they can get. K-g- Our tempers arc like an opera glass, which makes the objects look small or groat, according to the end we look through. eg- Put a spoonful of horseradish into a yai of milk, and it will remaiu sweet for several di.y?. aar You may depend upon it, he is a good man, whose intimate friends ere all good.