2 BETTER LATE THAN NEVER. Life Is a race wlicre some succeed, "While others are beginning; 'TIs luck In some, In others speed, That give an early winning; lint If you chance to fall behind, Ne'er slacken your endeavor. Just keep this wholesome truth In mind '"TIs better late than never !" And if you keep ahead 'tis well, But never trip your neighbor; 'TIs noble when you can excel lly honest, patient labor; Hut If you are outstlppcd at llrst, Press on as bold as cvtr, Itcnicmbcr, though you are surpassed, " 'Tis better late than never !" Ne'er labor for an Idle boast, Or victory o'er another; lint while you strive your uttermost, Deal fairly with a brother. Whate'er your station, do your best, And hold your purpose ever; And if you fail to do the rest, " 'Tis better late than never!" Choose well the path in which you run, Succeed by noble bearing; Then, though the last, when onco 'tis won. Your crown Is worth the wearing. Then never fret If left behind, Nor slacken your endeavor; But ever keep this truth In mind "'Tis better late than never!" THE BOLD SHOEMAKER. A Revolutionary Incident of New York. ONE night, in the middle of June, 1778, a couple of flat-bottomed boats left the Jersey shore, from the bay inside of Bcdlow's islnnd, and pulled, un der cover of the darkness of the night,out side of Governor's Isluud, for Gowannus, Bay, on the Long Island shore. The two boats contained twenty Jersey mili tiamen, under the command of Captain Marrincr. And who was Captain Marri ncr? Marriner was a New York shoemaker, who had been apprehended by order of Mr. Mathews, Mayor of New York, soon after the British entered the city. Ho had been a noted whig, but for some pri vate reason did not leave when the Amer icans retreated, and on his arrest was thrust into the Provost, where he was treated with great inhumanity, lie con trived to make his escape, swearing vengeance against Mayor Mathews. Having learned that Mr. Mathews occa sionally stopped with his family over night at Flatbush, Long Island, Marri ner made up a party to carry him off and this was bis object iu crossing New York Bay at midnight. Carefully avoiding the men-of-war at anJior, the two boats pulled across, one keeping directly in the wake of the oth er, and they reached Gowannus . Bay without notice or molestation. Drag ging the boats up on the beach, it being low water, Marriner, with fifteen men, leaving the other five in charge of the boats, struck across the hills for Flatbush. His men wero all well armed, for there were patrolling parties of British and Hessians day and night, over most of that part of Long Island ; and if fallen in with they knew tho couscqucncesmust be desperate on both sides. Many of the officers who had been taken at Fort Washington two years be fore, were parolled on Long Island, and were billctted on the farmers in and about Flatbush. Among them were Colonels Miles, Alice, Rawlins, Major Williams, Captains Stewart, Poster, and others. A Captain Flahaven, who was confined in the Provost, at New York, with Marriner, had also been quartered at Long Island. Jacob Suydam was a Dutch Tory farm er at Flatbush, and, for aught that we kuow, some of his descendants still re side there. lie was a well-meaning kind of man, but loved more than all tho two ilullars per week which was allowed him for boarding such of the American offi cers as, by order of the British coinmis sionary, Loring, were quartered at his house. Captain Graydon, in his interest ing memoirs, has left some rather curious particulars of his mode of living whilst a prisoner at Jacob Suydams. For break last they had a dish of weak bohca tea, sweetened with a muddy substance called sugar j bread half baked for fuel, owing . to the neiCBiitics of the British army in New York, was very scarce with a little stale butter. For dinner, Graydon says they had ot first a little boiled pickled beef; but this being soon eat up, clippers or claniB wero introduced in its stead, with a few vegetables occasionally. At supper they had "suppawn," with butter milk, sweetened with molasses a meal that at first ho could hardly stomach ; but at length he came to like the suppawn, buttermilk, and molasses better than his breakfast or dinner. Suydam furnished the best he could afford for the price in those days, particularly as American offi cers wero poor paymasters, for they sel dom received any pay themselves. The simplicity of grace at meals, as shown by Jacob Suydam, was quite prim itive, and we believe it still exists among tho Dutch farmers, who have not entire ly forgotten the customs of their ances tors. On sitting down to his meals hon est Jacob would cock his head on ono side, clap his hands together, shut his eyes, and remain in this silent attitude for about a minute. This was his grace over meals in which singular mauncr those around joined in if they chose. Jacob's house, or rather houses, for it was a cluster of them built at different periods, had in front a piazza which ex tended tho whole length of the building. This part of the house was occupied by Thopylact Bache and family, a merchant of New York, who remained attached to tho royal cause. The dwelling in which Mr. Matthews, the Mayor of New York, resided occasionally, was nearly opposite that of Suydam. On the night of Mar rincr's landing, the only persons at Suy dam's, with exception of the family, were Captain Forrest, of Slice's regiment, tak eu at Fort Washington, Major Moncrieff, of the British army, (father of the some what notorious Mrs. Coghlan), und Mr. Bacho, of New York, and his family. I have remarked that it was a June even ing. The day had' been hot and sultry, but now a cool breeze played along the piazza ; and although the hour was lato, Captain Forrest Major Moncrieff, and Mr. Bache, with his wife, were enjoying the calm beaty of the night. " 1 tell you what it is, Forrest, my boy," said Major Moncrieff, a fine, bold specimen of a British veteran " you had better abandon the side of Congress. It is no use contending with the troops of his majesty; your Congress and Wash ington have now been trying the game for three years iu vain, and they must soon give in. So join us iu time, my boy." " Why, major," replied Forrest, " for tho same reasons I might urge you to join mi cause the cause of tho people. King George the Third, the most power ful monarch on tho globe, with the lar gest army nay, armies ever seen on this continent, has in vain endeavored, during the three years you speak of to conquer Congress and Washington, but it is not now as near it as he was the first year. So coujo over to us, major! Come over to us!" This was in a tone of rail- ery. " You forget, Forrost, that tho bull dog worries before- he kills," remarked Mr. Baclie, joiumg in the conversation. " Aye, and sometimes tire3 himself to death in so doing, I am told," replied tho American officer. " I have been a prisoner two years, and shall probably re main so one or twoycars longcr,if joining the royal cause is to be my only chance of obtaining my freedom." " What stubborn men you rebel officers are!"' said a female voice from a corner of the piazza. " A short time ago I heard that handsome Marylander, Major Wil liams, whose fine appearance has captiva ted most of our New York belles declare he would not marry a lady, were Bhc beau tiful as Venus, and had the dower of a princess unless she was a whig." " Probably he would not have said so, had Mrs. Bache boon single," answered Forrest, with the gallantry of an officer. " Keally, I must give you continental gentlemen the meed both of gallantry and compliment," was the reply of tho lady. , Suydam's negro, Hans, who had been probably attending some frolic of his sa ble race at a neighboring farm house, came aloug tho road singing : 1 De relKils, da Is gone to pieces, Washington hab lost his breeches; In do Congress no more speeches Yah, yali, yah! Croat King George he hang do boobies. De debbil tako do Yankee Doodles Yah, yah, yah I Yah, yah ! he hab 'em all, . Forest burst into a laugh as he heard tho negro's song, in which the party on tho piazza could not help but joiu, it was sung in such a comio negro way. It was one verse of a song which somo jovial British officer had put together for the negroes on Long Isluud, and was much sung by them when at work. Hans con tinued his song, though it was evident he was well under the influence of liquor : Nlgga, royal come from Guinea, When he little pickaninny; Dam for rebel he beglnny Yah, yah, yah t Washington he berry bad man, Debbil take 'cm such a mad man Yah yah, yah! Yah, yah, he hab 'cm all ! Cicneral Howe, he berry brave boy Washington, him am a knave boy; Cot eh and flog him like a slave boy Yah, yah, yah! How do red-coats make 'em run! Kill de rebels cbery Hans did not have on opportunity to finish the last line, for a hand was placed over his mouth, whilst an athletic gripe seized him by the throat, and a stern voice, in a low tone, but audible to those on the piazza, exclaimed : " You black scoundrel, if you sing an other verse of that infernal song, or breathe a syllable, I'll cut out your tongue you thick-skulled son of the devil !" The parties on the piazza heard this distinctly, but the night was too dark to perceive anything on the road. Half a minute, however, sufficed to explain the affair. Five or six men appeared on the piazza, completely armed, the leader ex claiming in the same low, but distinct tone : " You are all my prisoners ! Remain quiet and you shall suffer no harm ; raise tho least alarm, and I will shoot whoever attempts it. Is there any American offi cer here '(" It was Marriner. 'Yes," said Forest I am one." " Good !" said Marriner. You. shall have a chance to sec the continental camp again. But where is Captain Flahaven '( 1 must save him This is Jacob Suydam's house, is it not?" "You are too late to save Flahaven, I am sorry to say. lie was taken from his parole yesterday, and carried to the city." " How unfortunate ! To release him was one of my principal objects. We were comrades in misfortune in that cursed Provost prison in New York. Who are these people V Forrest briefly told him who they were, and Marriner replied that the lady could go to her chamber unmolested, but if she made the least alarm her husband would be the sufferer. lie placed a guard of three men over Mr. Bache and Major Moncrieff, and observed to Forrest "As you belong to the continental regu lars, captain, I suppose you are rather above becoming a party to my exploits. Remain here, if you please, my destina tion is Mr. Mathews' house. That gen tleman I understand is at home; and if I get hold of him, he shall pay for the treat ment I received at his hands." Marriner and his party immediately went across tho road and surrounded the house of Mathews, the Mayor of New York. The doors wero all closed and fastened, and it became necessary to DrcaK open tne principal entrance an act which took some time and made some noise. Mathews, who was really in the house, but in bed, was aroused by his wife, and cautiously looking out, perceived at onco that it was a rebel party, and that escape was impossible. Fortunately for himself he was not perceived. " I have but one course to pursue," said ho to his wife. "Give me a blanket I have no time to dross myself: the roof is fiat, and tho party will not think of searching for me there.. Call up tho ser vants, while I ascend, and bid them say I left for tho city at dusk last night." Seizing a blanket, ho crawled out of au old-fashioned dormer window, which was some d'tauce from tho gutter, and made his way on to the roof. Mrs. Mathew's had hardly time to call in the servants and give them their orders before Marriner and his party entered the house. Previous to their so doing, she had the precaution to thrust her husband's clothes out of the window on to the gutter be yond sight. " Your servant, madam," said Marriner, as he had entered the room, whero was Mrs. Matthews iu her night dress, sur rounded by two or three affrighted do mestics. '' I come for Your husba nd tell me where ho is. 1 assure you uo harm shall happen to you." " My husbaud is in tho city, I hope." Marriticr's eye glanced over tho apart ment and towards the bed. "He was here madam." "Very true yesterday." " Search the house, men, but disturb nothing." A thorough search took placo in the house, but no discovery of tho fugitive was made. In tho meantime an alarm had takcu place. Guns were firing at a dittance, and somo of the neighbors had dispatched an cxpressto Brooklyn for troops. " , Marrincr, finding ttfat Mathews, his chief object, had.aecaped, ordered his men to cross over to Suydam's. Here he ordered Bacho and Moncrieff to go with him to his boats as prisoners, Captain Forrest rejoicing of course in his own good fortune. Ho had been a prisoner two years, and now he was about to be free again. The party of soldiers made their way as fast as possible to their boats, from which they had been absent obout two hours, and alarm guns were rapidly firing in all directions. It was fortunate for them that they did make haste, for the five soldiers left in charge of tho two boats hearing the guns fired, supposed Marriner and his men had been taken, and made off as quick as possible in one of tho boats, for fear of being captured themselves. Justus Mar rincr and his party with their prisoners reached the beach, the tide had ascended high enough to float the remaining boat, and she was about going adrift. Getting on board, they pulled for the Jersey shore and reached it in safety, where Mar riner dispatched his prisoners with Cap tain Forrest to head-quarters. Tradition states that Major Moncrieff bore his cap ture with a soldier's fortitude, but poor Mr. Bache was overwhelmed with grief, which was only allayed when ho was re leased, by Washington's orders, on parole. Jake's Blind Horse. IOIt twenty-three years, old Jake . Willard has cultivated the soil of Baldwin county, Va., aud drew therefrom a support for himself and wife. He was childless. Not long ago Jake left the house in search of a missiug cow. II is route led him through an old, worn out patch of clay land, of about six ucrc3 in extent, in the center of which was a well twenty or thirty feet deep, that at some time probably had furnished the inhabi tants of a ruined house near by with water. In passing this spot, an ill wind lifted Jake's hat from his head, and maliciously wafted it to the edge of the well, and in it tumbled. Now Jake had always practiced economy, and ho immediately set about recovering the hat. He ran to the well and finding it was dry at the bottom, he uncoiled the rope which he had brought along for tho purpose of capturing the cow, and after several attempts to catch tho hat with a noose, he concluded to save time by going down into tho well himself. To accomplish this, he made fast one cud of the ropo to a stump, near by, aud was quickly on his way down the well. It is a fact, of which Jake was no less obvious than tho reader thereof, that Ned Wells was in the ruined building afore said, and that an old blind horse with a bel 1 on his neck, who had been turned out to die, was lazily grazing within a short distanco of tho well. Tho devil himself, or some other wick ed spirit, put it into Ned's craneum to have a bit of fun ; so he quietly slipped up to tho old horse, and unbuckling tho bell-strap, approached tho well with a slow and measured " ling-a-ling, when J ake cried : "Oh,my ! that old blind horse ! he's cumin this way sure, ain t here ! got uo more sense than to rail in Whoa! Ball ! Whoa !" But the continued approach of the " ling-a-Iing" said just as plain as words that Ball wouldn't whoa. Besides, Jake was at the bottom resting, before trying to " shin it up tho rope." "What shall I do?" he said, "the old horse would be a-top of me before I can say Jack Robisou. Whoa! whoa !'' Just then Ned drew up to the edge of the well, and with his foot kicked a little dirt into it. "Oh, Lord" exclaimed Jake, falling upon his kuees, " I'm gouo now! whoa! "Now I lay me down to sleep" w-h-o-a, Ball ! I pray the Lord uiy soul to" w-h-o-a, now! whoa! Oh, Lord, have mer cy on me.' " Ned could hold iu no longer, and fear ing tlmt J ako might suffer from his fright, he revealed himself. Then he made tracks ! Juke was at the top of tho well iu " double quick," and his wrath was well, it cau better be imagined than described; aud if ho learns who wrote this well, this will probably bo the last you'll ever get from me. 1 At Vicuna a manufacturer has carried out the happy idea of printing pockct-haudkcrcliiets with maps of the tlic.it 10 of war. They have becu a great success, every body wishing to poke his nose iuto Alsace and Lorraine without risk. SUNDAY. READING. The Highlander's Prayer. 1 Scotch Highlander, who served jt. iu the first disastrous war with the American colonics, was brought one evening before his commanding officer, charged with the capital offense of being in direct communication with the enemy. The charge could not well bo preferred nt a more dangerous time. Only a few weeks had elapsed since the execution of Major Andre, and the indignation ot tho British exasperated almost to madness by the eveut, had not yet cooled down. There, was, however, no proof against the Highlander. He had been seen, iu the gray of the twilight, stealing out from a clump of underwood that bordered ou one of the huge forests, which then cov ered much the greater part of the L'nitcd Provinces, aud which in tho immediate neighborhood of the British, swarmed with the troops of Washington. All the rest was mere imagination and conjecture. The poor man's defence was summed up in a tew words, lie Had stolen away from his fellows, he said, to spend a lew hours in private prayer. " Have you been in the habit of spend ing hours in private prayer ?" sternly asked the officer, himself a Scotchman and a Presbyterian. Tho Highlander replied in the affirma tive. " Then," said the other, drawing out his watch, " never in your life had you more need of prayer than now ; kneel down, sir, and pray aloud, that wo may all hear you. The Highlander iu the expectatiou of instant death, knelt down. His prayer was that of oue long acquainted with the appropriate language in which the Chris tian addresses his God. It breathed of imminent peril, and earnestly implored the Divine interposition in the threatened danger, the help of him who in times of extremity is strong to deliver. It exhib ited, iu short, a man who, thoroughly con versant with the scheme of redemption, and fully impressed with the necessity of a personal interest in the advantages it secures, had made the business ot salva-" tion the work of many a solitary hour, and had in consequence, acquired much fluency in expressing all his various wants as they occurred, and thoughts as they arose. " You may go, sir," said the officer, as he concluded ; " you have, I dare say, not been in correspondence with the enemy to-night." "His statement," ho continued, ad dressing himself to the other officers, " is I doubt not, perfectly correct. No one could have prayed so without a long ap prenticeship ; fellows who have not at tended drill always get on ill at review. Ihujh JUili r. Frederick and his Pnge. Frederick the Great, King of Prussia oue day rung his bell, and nobody an swering he opened his door and found his page fast asleep in an elbow chair. Ho advanced toward him, and was going to wake him, when he perceived part of a letter hanging out of his pocket. His curiosity prompted him to kuow what it was, and lie took it out and read it. As he was a kind-hearted king, let us forgive his doing what he had no right to do without leave. It was a letter from this young man's mother, in which she thanked him for having sent her a part of hjs wages to re lieve her misery, and finished with telling him that God would reward him for this dutiful affection. Tho King, after reading it, went back softly into his chamber, took a bag full of ducats, and slipped it, with tho letter, into the page's pocket. Returning to his chamber, ho rang the bell so loudly that it awakened the pnge, who instantly made his appearauce. ' You have had a sound-sleep," said the king. The page was at a loss how to excuse himself, and putting his hand into his pocket, to his utter astonishment he there found a purse of ducats. He took it out, turned pule, and looked at tho kiug, and burst into tears without being able to ut ter a single word. . , " What is the matter '!" " Ah sire," said the young man throw ing himself on his knees, somebody seeks my ruin. I know nothing of this money which I have just found in my pocket!" "My young friend," said Frederick,. "God often does great things for us ii our sleep ; send that to your mother; s-i-luto her on my part, and assure her that I will take caro of both her and you." Ufc ..,. - - -