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N 4 1 ...0,.„., t ,,,- 4i . d ~..,..-. ; • - - - • . - _.•'',- - . - ,„,,... •- ; - ,--,.. .-. 1,. , -, • ~, . . . . . .., - „ ~ , ./ - '_u . .." - -.-, ' .----- ', . 9 +• and •in tithe be 7. °amen general- favorite - with botti miesgerS and public. - One :, - night,, when she was announced to appear, ins favorite part, a couple of boat- , men fouhd their way into the pit,, near - the foot lights, "particularly an-x -.19M; to see the now' famous comedi. nee. The loose was crowded, and - after the subsidence of the , &peeing', which greeted her appearance, one. of the boatmen slapped'his compan ion on theshoulder, and with an- em phatic expletive, exclaimed : "BiH, know that gal I" " Maw I",said Bill, "dry up." "But I'm darned if , I don't, now, Bill. • It's Sal Flukins, as- sure as you're - born. lEihe's 'old Flukins'a daughter, that used to sail . :the jared NO,' and she used ; to sail with him." "Tom," Solid Bill, "you're , a fooli and it, you WOO% stop your infernal black you% get me put out., ! you 'dust , know a eight if yoU think that's\ her." Tom wu - silenced but not convino, ed. ne,watched the actress in her. motions, irith - intense interest,' and ere long , broke out again . rtell-ye; Bill; that's her—l know 'tie. Yon cant fool me, I know her e too well." Bill, who Wei a,good desl,interest, ed in the play, was out of 'patience at this persistent interruption on the part of Tom. , He, gave hid a tre• meadow, nudge in the ribs with hie elbow, as an emphatic hint to keep quiet. Tom, without minding the admoni. tion, said : "You just wait—l'll fix her ; keep your eye on me." Sure enougb,he did fix her. Watch ing his opportunity : when the actress was very deeply_ absorbed in her part, he sang on; with a voice which rang. thrwtgh .i ca p er i es , ! g ay *ridge l" From the force et habit, the. actress Valiantly and involuntari ducked her head 'to avoid the an tmipated collision. Wommes Laws.—Mark Twain say& 'whenwonien frame laws, the first thing they dowill be to enact : 1. That ,all men should be at horde et ten p. m.,•withont fail: 2. That minr-, Tied men ehoeld bestow isoneiderable attention on their own. wives. IL Thst it shoed be $ lagging offenm to sell whisky in 111110011; and that lines and disfranchinement should `folio* it in ouch places. • 4:. That the smoking of_ cigars _to exceso - should. be forbidden, aid 'the 'smok ing Of Ors be 'Utterly abolished. That the wif - sitould hive the title of ter"own property ate mar ries a man that hastnt any. "Such tyranny, as this, " says ' Mark, , eould never sta nd. Our *As 'noulti could never endure such degrading. .thraldom: !helm), go aWayl - SWe not to' beguile us. of , 'our imperial privileges., Content yourselves with year Tittle fenilnine trifles--your ba-; Vet, lour +, benevolent societies 'and - yeti:, keit* the yournaturni bosses do the voting. Stand' - back, Jo top,. be. - wanting to go to war )ient. Ire Will let Joe teach - school Much as - yen want icy and pay,` You ling 'price ) too ; but beirare t we don't, 'tient ; yeti to crowd us' too much."' I Am so lizoi:•ft*A t i.bo -railroad' iiodi of but via I 0400017 Aka 4" "log- limplog; eta*: HIM Aboa 140 pit bitemtio hirdlisign i n AlWr 1 4 Daisigia! Akoi4 ban bat u ftea.4pingli. by, Vigo. it no for" " 'Mg Tor restes.“ • _ J ' 71:14'r 2.1441869L1''. 4 . 1 - ji 4 n: 4 /4 Rt ,41 1 11:11111IINEM' _..orst cr thinswigAiAlkte4 l 4 - t.;:, , ,! ,JS.J...w.ls! Picgills.tlSCl isis; liSelneg' '4 - OSi, OST: 3 4 ,_ R i V r ci --.1.- P i OnitternalliOnd4 i 10111 an& alnittst • terdureleicitiidinto trealfwittid. liciurekarirokr ' lied' 10 Ahnlilihiro; Alit ithichLbeit:Agn . ool4lo' , -;fir , ,sremccune fine.ewmapooluft tO? ;wheg thelinlight fell aslant ,ripon , ihenaea riiiks; ( ind mike thennwit dyilind brought Ontleithitiltii stuuti omit? oonfiguratiosi mullet theta; IS P d Per PoStuat With the shiS)Tlifi ,aSpphite of ,the sea. In sop" plaessi On the Istger t fillinds;' SU& IS Sour Kong, forinstinee;!thereweie shet--, -ter *alleys; where motile - grostth 'of , bushes and dwarfisik.treeiL cowered? Os ) ) TsskY lialtedpei4L fi PO to our: t . i eyes, whiebbad becu f 'g. only. s 1 few weeks 'before on dui; rick lam, Asst. beantyrof the ley •ss we, sailed between - the wood shoreeof 41,sva andliumatrat this _t seemed! cold and Stern. There drAPA I, El drowsily along, through tera, ander the Tee of to Wu, clothed with lien -their.yery tope, and * candy beaches fringed ery palms, and all the :,fie drawn in Marva lines of ;colored with. the = Warelie and every influefice of and sea, made `captive all list here Abe rooks,. were At tor, winde'to ho aid waiecto'dash upon •'' be afraid of :in a 'term. "the palms and temples" ( we had found t 4e poetry i ehould,'not have to look, the prise: That we 'had left the d owey troP ioi behind us, was, ibd apparent by innumerable. signs, as we began to see the , country and he people more familiarly. The life Which stir red the busy throng in ity and in country, on land and an tq sea, was, not the languid life of trip' 1 society. ‘ l, For patient and untiring i dustry, it seems to., me the Chinese have no elute's. Anything which needs great, labor and but little skill, the) can do better than all the, world beside ; if it be the diggiiig of innumerable' miles,of canale, or the building of great. walls:,that ,stretch half way, ° screen's continent, they can do it.— , l There are'no• more careful, thrifty, , economical 'tillers of the soil than they • even the steepest hill-sides are redeemed from waste by narrow terraces ; and their broader fields are kept as tidily as gardens. They -spare no labor nor ,economy in the enriching of the soil, and work hour after hear to irrigate it; carrying the , water often for, considerable distance in buckets swing across their shout , - d rs. ' They use very little agricul tural machinery, and all their instru meats are of the rudest sort. What, they depend on is the _ceaseless drudgery of patient manual labor ; and by this alone the agricultural -miracle which makes all China one great garden ha* been .wrought. - . The same patient industry and minute economy they have ' carried with them into adjacent countries:— In Borneo, in Singapore and Malac ca, in Java and Siam may be seen the solemn countenance of the China man steadfastly , engaged in money making. In all these lazy lands, among the `multitude of easy drones that sun • themselves in 'idleness, the. Chinamen alone are busy. I believe _they are the only people in tee world, who can live beneath a scorching ‘ tropical sky and yet retain their in dustry and energy undiminished, ' growing neither effeminate nor-sen sual. - Frequently they accumulate : large fortunes ; and always they, seem to monopolize the labor of the , colintry' at their will, developing its resources as they cc uld not have been developed by the native popu lation. Nor is it ever , by any great genius that they command • success, but simply by their plodding indus try. These same qualities also they exhibit in California. Every one ' knows what useful labors they make, how cheaply - they live, bo* neat and cleanly they are in the care of their ' bodies, how steadily and persistently they keep at work ; not very strong nor very skilful, nor very. quick, but quiet and easy and incessant. As ' formerly they built great walls and -great canals, so , at these ends of the earth and in these latter days, they build great railroads. What may they not do in time to come ? With t hat universal Yankee notion ; quick witted, driving, restless, to invent the plan ; and With'this innumerable people ; steady,.patient, fond of rou tine, imitative, to perform the drudg ery_of labor, what wonders of devel opnaent of our continental 'resources .may not the nest score of years ex hibit ? Let our own East furnish the capi tal and the inventivs energy, as in deed it is' doing so abundantly ; pow er of numbers and power of industry almost limitless are pouring in upon the West :fmm that - Other East be yond the broad Pacific. • • :„What the' industry is has perhaps, infiloiently appeared. What the numbers are, how simply countless, how they swarm and multiply cannot - appear till one has been among them- 'Whai reliance they have been acoestonlo to place upon their 'Multitudin .us, and what enormons - posier there is in it, was Well illustrated by an intelli gent Cantonese, during 'Sir Michael Seymour's operations in 1856. It did not seem to those of us who happen ed to bti the'foreign ,"factorles" of 'Canton at' that time, that the vast, throng of people just outside our .gateap,could .weep' us, .: the. river, by their, populousness alone. if they should try it; and it was not reassu ring When this Cantonese remarked one day to somerof us, "You are few and we are mare% , 'twit Chinamen were all to get together, , .and opit once, we could &own out every'En glisbman'in Canton" It wu not n pleasing nor a but way of putting it ; but it was none the lees characteristic for that reasono-= /fours at Borne. . epitaph in a rural graveyard juida thna ; "Here lies Bernard Lightfoot. , labn yes aeoldenhdly billed - in the forty. dah resz of his age. nioniuneut vas meted by his mural family." • • ~-; (-- , - ` • I 7i . .- i :il -or. • ' - . 1. placid'we-, ble moon foliage tn . ' sight of, with featb• - eery was. ace `and : 1 coloring,, And sir :or sernies:,l sharp and; 1 Againit s' coact to if among.' the South travel,iw,e surely, for MEI MEN .f, WiEfEJ .'.' The bait Battle the irigatiHk.4* : N s Bo* po enctifrOln of :OM Ci'the lirriTer);'-vitdChlivelhe''debilla Of; they reCentfierrlble conflict l4.ll6ol-othatolo4, sari _; 1 lodges, on, -- OF, 'en es 'the the - village Of'. Eliek Vettle'e. - ' , band. • The cozifiagratfonl started.l4l.. - .thettoops....was . ..v . so,com- PIO* that "sweet) , - an etS coM. OlmraOter 0.1 44 thii:tlebrii:rif - the 'CoUslOth: brake int'bnree ge' :small - pieretkot-Arntsaned - And tanned; hides. From the immediatcAtituct the village the,party--.rode Aro the top; nrsia 400,,fr0m which pou t "General Ors.' - thy tepia t atatii'. Sherlditi - the! battle ind the positions' biked bi the:different oelninutt,' - :•The -forineg;site rd, -Abe:. lodges Could. be di_ovnetl*,seen, pins .ranging - 16 ^ -.0 1 0 13- and . the_ Jkotilage r in .the. 'Centre.- 'oii,theilght - tifiliC `at the "(Natalie° of' 15 yards; lay, the catmint of- the ponieirOf Abe': tale - Y - Amp •a. These ; covered :about . four ,acres, and numbered not lees than. Afteftbei battle '.was. perfebtls nedersteed'and the ground - well aim- . veyed, Generals Sheridan and Custer,. •accompinied.: by Lieutenant Hale,, forir correapendenr.,. and. a small P4unenCof . trodps, moved down the south bank of: the Winhitti, over the: route tiken - b.tlfijor Elliott 'and the. missing men, in hopes of -recovering.' -the 'bodies. • ,The remainder 'the party spent some time longer in the village. and moved doWn •the bed of the valley of the " The. General's party,.• - moving down the south . bank, ascended a high divide, from which an . extensive, view could ,be. had of the: eurround ing- Country: Descending on-. the other side the • party had proceeded but a hundred yards when the body, of a white man-was found,. perfectly naked, and.covered with arrow, and , ballet hales. The head presented the appeirance of having been' beaten with a war 'club. The top' of the skull was troken - into &number Of .pieces and the brain was lying part ly in, the. :skull and .partly • ou 'the ground. - At firet •it was supposed that the,' body was' that, of Elliott, but 'upon minute examination this was found not to be the case. "-Marking the spot where this body was found i the party continued mov 1, ins down ream. Crossing ; with some difficult ~a small ravine, about the centre of an expansive swell, at a distance of Itwo hundred yards fur ther up, objects were seen lying in the grasepand supposed to be bodies. Their attention attracted in this di rection, the party, moved off for the spot at a gallop. A few minutei after a scene was witnessed sufficient to call forth the rebuke of every he nevolent and enlightened mind gainst the - darkened intellects of the -so called • philanthropists: ' With in an area of -not more than fifteen yards lay sixteen human bodies, all that remained of Elliott and his party.: The winter air swept across the pliin, and with its cold blasts -liad added to the ghastlinees of death the additional spectacle of sixteen naked corpses frozen as: Solidly as stone. -The party here dismounted, and an examination of the bodies was made. There was net a single one that did not exhibit evidence of fearful mutilation. The bodies were all lying with their faces down, and' in close proximity to each other.— Bullet and arrow wounds covered the backs of each, the throats of a num- , ber were cut, and several were be headed/ The body of one of -the horses which the men had ridden out was, seen lying et a distance of fifty yards from the pile of bodies: Owing to the mutilation of the bodies, -and no one present having been sufficient-_ ly acquainted with Major Elliott while living, his body was not at the ' time repogtrzed. " .. " Judging from the - position of the bodies; and -the nature of the ground , surrounding, it is probable that Maj. 1 Elliott -(by • some -it is: thought his 1 horse .. .run away with him) set ont.in 1 the direction of a party -of fugitive Indians. Some of the men seeing the Major start followed and joined. him. It is very probable the party pursued Several miles When they struck the Arapahoes coming. up to the support of the Cheyennes.. The I party being vigorously pressed coin-, menced retiring, and descending the Second divide on the return found themselves edt off by a party of war- ., riors who had Bland up wider cover of the timber on the banks of - the, Washita, and took position In the ra vine,; which out them off entirely from, the rest of the Command. Not being 1 missed in the command until- too late, this little band' was compelled to di, fend itself against the whole force of the Arrapahoe and, doubtless a now" ber - of the. Slow& warriors. 'The- party, abandoned their horses . and probably attempted to force their. way down the river and take' protec- tion behind the: trees where , they. could fight to greater advantage. It is likely, when all hope of rescue and escape was given` up, they detertnin- 1 ed to 111101ifieff • their -livea as dearly, as Possible. The grist where they I lay was trodden down, and a ,ium- 1 ber of cartridge shells' testify to the 1 valo'r of their - defense. until pone J 1 friendly. fatal bullet give them I the only alternative of 11:agape. from the terrible torture to :which they, would unquestionably_ Ear, been, subjected if taken alive. It is 'not likely thit the entire partywee killed: before ' taken but whether • any, and, 'Who, i were taken 011ie; and -thectrybsg 'end terrible moments which followed kill elwaysl.remain-e mystery. All.. - the miasma bodies - were now. found., 'Not one, had beg* left - to narrate . _ the but tibia atorY.: The , lest ' ellices of .htt minity—S proper burisl;--was all that remained:' . • * -.. _ you ire truly. benev ol ent and obaftible;pubsp • you wilt when sea a roxiskbor bt Mikan ask soma oast btu to hole Wm "0 xi," said a littl e O iit#p bad been to the oho* 'Tye 1011 the . eleptine4.. and he walks bsekwyd and ads'irlikib tail." - 1 ;nnm, n...iktiiPatltte:l ,': I When 41 0 :40900.;.wille through tho,,,,process vinouS„for4 irietitaioni; - ir is a_ don:Weal:l,, etiitte, l beam* . ' develops editeatia a f f - Mite - for stronger- drinks - and mere: -potent poisons.: ..I"eitelp , 'Men of re. specAsble lni surroundipgs. do zgytitct:to tU. "ckei-elsiPa",to get,their logo ithithig beierige. " Our - aerie, - ,arp , i, prentieetvetedentei ind 'Other!, .. - iittri ; are „fait filling up the _ detsimited. . moderate .and esoessive! Arinkersdwonid, never balm created] and fitimee Into a itatati a passion fort Inteateating drinks had they depiirid=, sid upon wNslry end 'brandy for' the' ,kind of that vitiated taste. They, .wgilidulls.re been ,ahocked 004, "tart ,alapg tlta ree4,or rip% f httti ,they were tSuiht to believe that} therelias c - no 'berm adoitiier reel .use 01'am:wink wine-L;silne made at:. home, by, the , bands of . their, own moth6i and siiters 7 -wine commgrid 'a by all , the , inetabets of the how l "clrole,'and Crowned with boiedietions, of good and OM men and wenten. The fatal appetite for aloohol is ; forme4 as easily . up;in „wino as. uponi whisky—upon fermented as upoß distilled drioks. Alcohol is the ea me, demon whateveisliasit may assume ' , whatever color it msy put on:. The: beads 'upon the brim of the wine , giasikare eyes of the same serpent whose liquid laii - is ia the decanter of brandy. " Wine is a mocker." It, promises strength, and gives weak. , nese it offers to aid digestion, and prevents the proper action, of the ~ gastric - juice ;. it suggests warmth, to the blood, - and it makes the blood; thin and .cold ; it assumes perfect in:; noCence, and "biteth likes serpent, Sod Stingeth like an 'adder."l is the reason why, we are command-: ed not to " look upon the wine whe n it moveth Cright." It moves in the process of vinous fermentation. I; moves when it is working. Thit is the sort of wine we are not to look upon. Winedoinestis wino—works, "it moveth aright," it passes through: saccharine fermentation first, and, vinous • ferinentation folkiws ; and' vinous fermentation mates alcohol, and alcohol kindles the - .appetite which makel drunkards. Wine, whether domestic or import ed, edadates the taste, or appetite,,or passion to. a point which demands something stronger—something. that will burn more intensely; so- that it seeks and demands gin and rum.. It is a shorter cut than Butler's Batch Gap from - wine to whisky--from mestic wine to fourth-proof brandy. The young man finds the passage from his mother's; cupboard or wine• vault to the bar of the grocery or loon but a step, and then he is not far from the jail.. It is a good thing to grow grapes to be used as food, but .a very bad thing to mike the grapes into wine,because wine-drink= tug is a great curse. The Arabs say that wine is a ,welted ruby, but it, dissolves the jewel of the heart in the Bast ; hence the pledge of Mo hammed to use no wine. • The wine ,drinkers .of France and Germany get drank on wine, and they go from bad to worse r and consume immense quantities of brandy and gin. Al low me to appeal to Christian parents and others not to present the temp tation of 'doniestio wine to their chill dren. Mr. Gough - speaks of a young-lady moving in the most refined circles of - society in this city, who gave her reformed" brother a glass of flo meal° wine,. and three Weeks after- . wards she followed the remains of her beautiful brother to a drunkard's grave. There is an account of a young man of fortune and culture Who fled from this Babylon (New York) to Maine, to get away from. the serpent appetite which was to strong for him. When he thought he hsti cured himself, he returned home and in lees than forty-eight hours killed higairelf drinking domes tic wine. Many of the inmates of, the Inebriate. Asylum at Binghamton; commenced their bad habit of drink ing at the clipboards and sideboards of their own homes. Cleopatra is not the only woman who dissolved jewels in wine. The use of domestic wine has been an im measureablevevil to miltitudee of wo men in all .parts of the land. If - men are the common crockery, women are the porcelain of humanity, ind their exquisite orginizition - sooninf. Ars in, consequence of the use of al coholic wine., It is a fact to 'be' de plored. that there is .a good deal of drunkenness among women, -and in . nine cases otit'of , ten it can be traced directly to, the use of domestic wine. - ' blow the holidays are at hand; and 'male:young ladies will - present their NeurZwit's gust with wine, aud,the young then, so polite and pleasant in the morning, will be roaring drunk' before sundown. What a shame and disgrace it is to 'commence the New-Year or to celebrate Christmas and . Thankisgiving with exhibitions of drunkenneis What a harveit of drunken husbands does the devil reap float drinking Usages which are interwoien with our 'holiday (ma-. terns 1--National Amperance Aduo. cafe. A wow living in Milwaukee has - a sailor husband whom she has not seen for nineteen years hitt receives lettere from him regularly.. Be is a hand on a Liverpool !Packet; making regular trips from ',New York end book. 'Every time he ships from the former port, he . writes his wifethit upon his.arrival ia New York next time, ho will certainly go home: Tha ilk arrives, hut no .bueband. ,Soon. Mimeo the 'inevitable` letter With the lame- intelligenci% Re did intend to come,-but was paid off, 11 , 4- intexica te4t 'Pent money, and Woe to his senses not only pennilesa,bnt *tipped on board the, packet again. Be de ! claret he will never be fooled again, and, goes'l6 work with the idea of gaining means to returChome, and the next trip•is-aaepetition of the old MesnWhile the ~Wife toils and lives in__the hope that some day the truant hisbind will Aome back. isTrks borwse mineing• s tilt of his mo th er asked vire 10 tam. ertirel ltre Johnson gsvi It to me." "And did you think her far isr -"Yet 71 did, but I didn't tell her so," was the reply. =8ER , 35.1 • . DOKEBTIO Wtlllll/- ViritatT. - . Second—To believe the pltibirawititsdrsotAkitootitiati-Agstit . ." . :' • 41Vd.rof idt.,1,413gf • f , .44/949 1 §4.010.41 1 01/14k sl*9o49ll4lltrAissithittitoptokyrio -4104111104114 tootbsiargegood • • . , Arjrif* - 7 1 **44#44 14 1:TY t 4 .1 3 4 4 *.F 99 P-All#ft• 49a r - Fifth-4Tnacton_thirtaissuilition Jibs* eiasisblie • • . Sisth--TdchitsetAimiCAS :, -#4 l K4r qtanoßc ie:hel l o l dit te- P.Ase444 3 , l ,WAnc irtem withont.tur**,)ijiertor cf.; . Tka siOntweirikyrefif for ex= eongile v ,;iiiiii: !lOC ilk, • 'the '`deoisb of *t , iloiersat dMrbs, lohly•to - convulsions, or the more fatal Italy 44114 k agOitie,bgagLac , wear 411 the • -brain k j ur, atriesst i :,,ulerays Protect ffie *Haw— • iieivith:4o:oWwwikek.act which is felt - in itsaltio'COPeiaidalP - bile that lons:filo* lst - other . it nuq :be loner ia' said Wlthhoinenity. 41 ' rieith-4 - ' ciiidtlisi Seibert° take &remed_ y which yorf hi" riot tried ritraelf,or witheat apeeisl wi i t rywbelbat Albs. are or to orth isse t to ;asst after it has • fiari ev to ry, taste. Teritho-alre • sapper for the pomace " the I. brief iime Is. platting 'down the - throat; at, the , expense of 'a whole laight,ofilistiwhed sissimuld a.wisaly iNt40136%146,- Elevet4i4.4z; *tam gfcrisi ion of • the coverinciannethately. aka env ; "Oise, when the &oat, Stupid ..draymark :in NeW Yea - knowS',.thoik':;if . does - - net:finti horse`the mo .meat he ceases w 6& in 'the winter, . will-lose bile a-fewAsys by. .pneumonia. • TwClith-z—To. contend that because tbadirtiest Children's' the the . street, or highway, are. -hearty , and healthy, theofore., it is healthy to" he dirty ; 6 1 '.014 1 cg Ihat"continnoas daily ; ea 'postur in the pare out door air in joy ous unrestrained activities is such a - piSwerful agency for health that those halive tbui are w6ll,in'apite at rags !andlilth. • • • • • Thirteenth—To ,presume to"-repeat later in life,. without injury, the india ,pretions, exposures,aud intemperance ;Which in the flush of youth were prhc `deed with impunity. Fourteenth—To believe that - warm -air is' 'necessarily impure, or tha Owe, cold air is necessarily . more healthy than the confined air :of a crowded Vehicle ; the latter at ninft clan only. cane fainting and nausea; _ while entering sr conveyance after -walking briskly, lowering a window thus while still exposed to a dr a ft, _ will give a cold infallibly, or an at tack of pleurisy or pneumonia, which will cause weeks and months of suf.- ' tering if not actual death within four days. Fifteenth—To "remember the Sal)• bath day" by working harder and la ter on Saturday than any . other day in the week, with a view of sleeping late- next morning,. and staying at home :all day to rest, conscience be ing quieted by the plea of not feeling very well, . , - Ow Efiettoag'a Fteuez-Hzea.—Dorn Piatt tells, for the , first _One in print, den a good story about P ' t Jack son and 'the removal of his - wooden bust from,its pla ce . as fi re-head for. the old ship Constitution'. The story was communicated to D.4'. by Yr. _ Dickerson,- the first A. J.l's Secretary of the Navy, who says :I • "I remember the towering -rage he exhibited when the news readied f na that the fi gure-be , carved in likeness of the Presid e t, had been sawed off by sonic m' sat in the night. He directed to offer a large reward, and sw op he would lung the scoundrel,•soo er or later. " "I offered the - rims and one.. night, some months a ; a man sent into my rooms word thtt -he wished to see me. I ordered tom in, and a rough fellow made ..hisl appearance With a sack thrown °Vac his shoul der. Without saying At wOrd, he slang, the seek ronpd ;and emptied Is huge wooden bead On the floor. "There it is ; air.' No bring old, your bears," said the meet. It was Se grotengse looking - thing, . sewed co directly nuclei the nose. : "'There it is; I say,' he , west on, ' I had nothini agin old Hickory, bat ' that head hadn't-any business on the old Constitution: I'd saw it off vie. Now do your damndest! - "I ordered the fellow under artesS— and taking my carriage, drove to the White House, with the mutilated head in the sack. Giving it to a servant, I appeared :before the Preitt dent, and withoetsaying a word, sit the bead on its nose before him On the table. He stared at it, and tlin at me,and whea.l explained, he buret intik! fit of uncontrollable laughter. "'Why that,' he cried at lengthj.— ' why that is the inostlefitinal graven , image' 1 ever saw. , The old fellow did• perfectly right. , You'vo got 'hirn, you say ;.- well, give him a kick • and my emoplimente,.and .tell bizi_totsaW, l it off again.'" • - . . • 1 A Gaza SAFI' Aprz.—Aeporrespoit- - deAt at Cracow, writing ,on ,the lit says : The famous.-salt mine of Wie licricaz ten miles from Cracow, which bringer; a riot reverno3-to the Auistrian Government of --upward of 6,000,000 florins; (.0600,000,) . is threatened ' With total destruction by a stream Of water which mide its appearance I on the 19th: of last zwinth while tfie worknien were digging in one of the lower f.titeftkie nefitob of PoWal• Tai Mine contain" sAubterrarwrin village _ of shoat a thousand inhabitants, wlin are, in imminent 'danger of losing their only source of living. All tbo means hitherto adopted of preventing the,water from inundating the mine have been - runinextiefirl ; it doien,at the'rate of one -bnildred enbinfeet a Minute; arid has already almost filird the loiter' ilia" WA, rapidly , dissolving th e' salt which it rumen In. *COSIMICA A orwOoOt eogkeerrUe..infiked Vienne, and * :,channetis-heinibuilt— under hie direction. fer octiaminii thO, water and leading, it wag the isiinN brit it is- feared that the wilt columns Which support the' jraverse . shaft+, which' will' be niulerrained - beforertho cork * . be .0 004 4 Woo pad so tingel'lrer ;ritutierxeuf: Oat it is said their total length hi et * to die% tante frijol' Craw* Motu and back, and contain et -tables and prevision maglutines,,decorated with stables of salt whichareillumk Wed on festive,ocesaiona. The mine 'cosi& to baveheen disfavored by a eltePheoLitanied,Wiellorviulfl 7 o.: U came into the poi of Anatrii in 1772,at the first partition Of Polard. ; N 13 ~~~~