Tug oa oa your rs the day's on the wane. • ilivd.the twilight isAleetwit c iing fast; lo . ..For the eodsin the sky sho the hurricattri igh, , -AnahitYsglee finom the face of the bkt pt. lewd, on yo4r oars -;..for the sun' it. dawn. Aud the was are like hods in pl ,; The stars they aireAed, and no- in . r ceerbeard Or to point-vireo cheer obr lone a). -Rise on your oars—let the brig t star of ... Pfieseen ,mid the tempest's wit. r oak; 'And cheer, lads! or we, who wer •borol oo th sea, Hite weathered midi compels ~:fore. 'Rest on youroers—for the taven . , And the tempest mhy bluster till more, For the bold •and the breve are .eow Freed from the wave, 'Where they hiterdamed so lonely and Into. - THE DEA 111. W ARRAN /rho mist 6f the morning still hung ' , heavily on the mountain top,' above the village of Redchtf, but the roads which led,.towarlis it were crowded with the va ried popuhition of the surrounding country 'from far and near. At A lesbury the shops ware closed ; the hanimer of the-blacksmith laid upon Pita a wagon of any , description was to be seed in the street, -and even the bar of the-tavern wati;ocked, and • the key g,,ne with -its proprietor to ward the cliff, as a token Klan era which as without a paraellel' in the annals of the place. And save here and there a solita- Ty head looking through a broken pane, .in - some closed up house, with en air ofsad , disappointment, (trine cries ofwlittie nurs •ling was heard, bet. , kening - that in - the gen •eral•ilight,.it has been left in unskilful hands, or mayhep here and there'll sulaa 'ry, ragged, and ill•natured dog, .either -seeming but half appeased by the,pr ivilege of a holiday, granted on condition of-stay ing at home, the whole village presented a picture of desertion and silence; that had 'forever been unknown'tiction). But in proportion as you-drew near the ponderous in the midst of which the . little town of Redcliff wee situated, 7ou mingled again in the thick bustle and rpo tion of the world, of men, and women, and .boys, and holies and dogs, and all living, 'moving and creeping things, that •habit . the wild distpiotv of.Pennsrtvanim The •village was crowdedlo overflow• , ing;long before•the sun had gained a suf •ficient altitude to throw its rays upon the/ deep valley in which it lay. There the bar was crowded, and the fumes nf•tobac co and whiskey, the jingling of small change, and the perpetual clamor of the throng, srts sufficient *to rack e brain of common flexibility. In the streets' there was•the greeting of old and long patted ac .quaintanues: the bartering At horses; the settling of old accounts; the buftionry of half intoxicated men; the clatter of women; the crying and hallowing of Oildrett and 'boys, and the barking -and go:trolling oT stranger,idngs. To look upon 'the scene, to mingle with the crowd, to listen to the conversation, or to survey the countenance of the assembled multitude, would lead to satitifactOry solution of the cause for which this mails of heterogeneous matter was congregated. Withib the walls dr the old stone jail, at Ore foot of the mountain, a difTerent scene bad beep that morning witnessed. There •clasineB ; to a stake in the miserable dun geon, II Imp, and scarcely illuminated by one ray' of light, now lay the •emaciated form dime whose final 8 innt seemed near at hamb• A few hours before, his wife and little daughter had travelled a hundred miles to'meet him on the threshdld of the. grave—_ithey me:, and from that gloomy vault the song of praise ascended with the ascending sun, and the jailor as he listened 4o the melodious voices' of three persons whom be looked poi as the most desolate and bind of all in:the wide world, blended sweetly together and chatinting the beautiful hymn: wit is the Lord, should I distruet Or contradict his will'," . • almost doubted the evidence of his senses, and stood fixed in astonishmewc et the massy - door: Could these be the voice ul a murderer, and a murderer's wife and child. The brigand to be final interview had pawed however—those unfortunate ones. ' bid fondly commended each other to the keeping of their heaSenly parents, and parted —heou fare the assembled mult i• lode on the scaffold, sad they as they and to return by-joarneyo to their sorrnwfir home; the convict were oat frith sickness and watching, now !dept. • His !name was John Creel, his place of rasidettlee said to be in Virginia, He had been taken up' while travelling .from the nortireard to his home; and tried and von "acted et the county: town some miles die tant, for the murder of a fellow traveller, wheitail borne his company from the lakes, who was ascertained to have a large sum of entiney with him, and who was found in the loom in which he sleprvato country inn, near Redeliffa, with.his throat Crewl always had proteitted his innocence, decliiit that the deed was pet petrified by someone while he was wdeep,'biit the cit.. cumatances were against him. and though ; 4 1t . tii si "itia the Inoue wean senteniiid to be hung,,and was removed to erATURDALICAIIQRNIN4 OC ° T. t zt3M3a the uld-stonesjail•at Redcliff for security, " - - 2-r the county prison being-deemed unsafe.--w "frp-Te"ts. Meeks, Caids;.Bills of Zeittig This was the ilay'ttfe execution was to take dia Namilmas of olerVaosi iitww. loaaY Priatt 4l -!1., Pact's —the - seta Id was alregdy erected— kis ° ig" et 641 " e° casinPrjer s • the crowd , pressed round the budding, and frequent cries of"bring out theAutuieter,7- Wet e" heard. The sun lit' heat tat& the hour of eleven; and .there"copld he no more delay—ihe ceti wan entered' by the officers in &mil:lance, who roused tam oittEltbe information' that all was ready without; and bid him hasten to his execution—they laid'handeupon him end pinioned him tight,- whilihe looked up toward heaven in'as triiiiShment, as ohe - new-horn, ntily said, “the dream, the dream;Mr. : Sasorir Snid the sheriff, "-Yon -would de -rosin great kindness if you would 'dream' yourself and me out tit this cursed metope.' "1 dream_ ed," replied the convict, %ghat while yin read the death warrant to me on the-scaf fold, w man comer through -the crowd, and stood before ue in a 'grey' dress, 'with a white hat -and whiskers, and that a hirdtuttered over him, and sung distinct. --Lewis, the murderer of the traveller." The officeri& jailor held salt chfc'nnittil tenon, which coot dan a determination to look sharp after the matt-in grey, with the white hat-accompanied with many hints of resignation of the prisoner, and the pos sibility of his innocence being asserted by a -supernatural agency—'the prison doors were-cleared, and .Creel, pale and feeble, with a hymn ;book in his-hand, and a 'mein of all meekness and humility wasaeen•tot , tering from tbe prison to the - scall:ild. -He heal nu -sooner ascended , it than, his eyes • -began to wander oveethe vast concoUrse of people around hint with a scrutiny that seemed like faith in dreams—and while the aheriff read the warrant, the convict's anxiety eispearell'to 'increase—the looked -and looked again, 'then raised hie hands and eyes a moment - tiovardsi he cleuraky. as it breathing as)last ejacuhititat, when lo! as he resumed his first position, the very person he described, mood within six feet rof the ladder! Theprisoner'S eye caught theaight, end 'flashed with fire- while he called out, ...there is . Lewis the murderer oPthe traveller," and the jailor at the same moment seized the stranger by the collar. At first - he aitempted\tit escape. but being secured, end:taken before the !tlagiatrates, he coßfessed the deed, deta.l2.d all the Par• tieulani, delivered up part of the money, informed where another part wae hidden,' and was fully committed for trial—while Cieel--was turned -loose, and, hastenedllike a man nth cif his-senses, rrorti 't he acaffuld Three days had elapsed—t Creel had vanished immediately after his liberation, when the.preteniled , Lewis stitonithea - anii confounded the magistrates 'by declaring Creel to be her husband—that she .had assumed the disguise, and performed the whole pelt by his direction; that he +ad given her the money which he had till•then successfully concealed about his person; and., hat the whole,-from-the prison'tn'the scaffold scene, was a contrivance to effect his escapci, which having effected, she was regardless of consequences. Nothing could he dine with her; she wee again set attiberry, and-neither-her nor her bus. baud were heard of again. A Nests Sewetainer.—Major Heath, one of the survivors from tne Steamboat Pubaski. dis suaded his comrades in distress from committing murderoin the following manly language. ' •i‘Ve areS.hristians" said he, nand we cannot innocently imbrue our hands in the blood of a fellow creature. A horrible-catastrophe 'has de prived hundreds df their thvas,•brought sorrow to many a hearth, anti thrown ustipott the mercy of the winds and waves. We have still life left, let us not give up all manliness and sink to the brute. We have all our thoughtiabout us, and should face death, Whidhseetrieror later must crvertake us, with the spirit that become. us as Christian men. When the hour arrives, '1 lay denim my life without a mut mer, end 1 will risk it now, for the safety of any one of you, btu I will never stand by and see another sacrificed that we may. drink his blood and esuhis flesh!" The dissuasive appeased then': and famiihed,. and desperate, and insane as they were, no vin. lenee was afterwards proposed, and be had the eatisiactom to come "trete to land with his eom panions. This single speech, with ehe•rest saf his conduct whfle oil %fragment of the 'wreck, cave us an opimen of his moral courage and es- - cellent qualities, altogether, above what any feat of arms could have done. And seeing that his coolness under these most trying circumstance must free him (rum every 'sospicton of cowardice, and also that his profession of arms must forbid the idea that he is prejudice, unteashoshle e. gainst warlike deeds.—his relliiment above too led is entitled to very great attention. ''As Chris. tittle, it became them to use no violence, even .to preserve their, own lives from famine. As men, it became them calmly to watt the event of their sufferings,' 'Pits was the suhiannee 'of his ad. rice, ind.his whole tieomanooe showed that he .was himself under the influence of the principles whrclrhe fintillnwn. fur others. • If tech sentimentscould be maAe to prevail among our people Ind titters, imeogy eere and ow_ sena, the republic would stand on a basis much firmet than emikl be secured by any amount of power in &feta . and armies: that is, it would rest safely on the inenty virtue of its citizen% retying on the smiles of the Divine Providence for pro tection and pnwprtity. Wilma Blockade.— We learn that it is th e uneunon of the Secretary of the - rsitt vy to estahli•h a tine of steam government pockets between New York and New Ot; lean" during the continuance or the can Blockade. This is a prudent sad we have no doubt will prove s rains. ble aintilary to our naval force in the West-Indies. Harvt Verdsct.=ln the ease) ,t Ilarrara..•tried last week in New York for the louder of Casey, thelitiry ham.agreeo upon veitfittl of manslaughter, • SE~JLB' J MOM VIPSIM6I.E. .„. 6 ' ocr'%we must accord our hearty mantis, to thlnieftiends,'whti have Ihrborm`witlyas during the recehrpolitical cdrnest, and est peel/111y to - slims* who - tavediffered 'with us itropinian. That the generid teader has found but little .to interest Cannot be denia, and we can ally say that f our en deavors in future will be to make amends kir The: recent exclusive . political charac ter of Our paper. ; `' OUR. NEW PROSPECTUS. • 'Phe':Pairons of the •Journal *ill :per ceive that we have' this day issued a pros pe clue, embracing proposals for enlarging and otherwise improving this tpeper. It is the wish of its proprietor' to render the " Miners' Journal" inferior to none in the state, in Tnint of-general usefulness and miscellaneous intelh'gence ;• to. dravi 'from foreign papers such a summary of:trans:it lantic news, as will be interesting to . the adopted citizens of our country, and to 'keep upa correct statement riled improVe men is ;13tUh'inedhunicilitrid aclettvifie, which. :may be useful to die coal. - Vegion. With ihese views we have deter mined to enlarge, that ii,, if our friends shall evince by a cor responding' and increased •subscription, thenrconeurrenee -in our itiews. We tm ly"rierso patronage" to Carry out our scheme. The body of the prospectus itself, em braces our more extended wishes and terms; we only require 'an increase nf sut,s'ribera without any increase of price to our present patrons. We therefore trust that those of our fiends to whom they mey be addressed, will oblige us with their exertions to secure it. sufficient num ber of additional names to render the plan we have pomosed safe, and we priimise them every exertion to reader our Journal -e medium liar ilielestinuseinent end instruc tion. _ • , . Arr We are extremely sorry to hale raised the hopes of our friend Chandler, only to - prostrate them again ou'the result in our County. Scbuytkill bus bowed Juan 'before the idols of 'Van turenisrn, and is siubboro in her heresy. We did hope to have raised a j glad about of victory, but we have been out -generalled, out ma .nouvered and touted; the atiticipateik - song of triumph dwindles into .a lamentation for defeat; and all oar Welsh, Latin, Irish; Scotch, and English', have beett , thrown a. .way, We , have 'how only to laugh it long faces, and smile as our card castles one by Jane come fuelling down I The Whigs of Schuylkill are defeated, but ..we . diu.game; we ciurtruw *yet, and -have the proud consciousness that eadh man has done his duty: ~ As the editor of the Uni tertStates Gazette has made a recent tour among our coal.filreti mountains, we need hardlY irifbrm hint that our Borough and w i ton 915 vicinity is r a miniatur Babel, and that niust accbunt for the !con ~' of tongues' d.bservilb e in oar last week v a Journal. We tried to "call, up wpirks:frorn the vast}; ( 10,p,. - . l ,tipt they would not, comOr"in-fart our county has heen„ .l. 4infirsion worse coprourated." + . Stiil ittUrllll We give in: another column ; the ;Arniel . returns of our Cutitityt it will heaeen that . t lie-Sfic.,reased more. hall TM' '11 4 0.) beyond all-the esictilaiiiinv df either pert y. TheGubernatatial vote 1%11333 wan24l3 - 4 with- riptijotaty 1)1795 for the A;intinia tratine !thirty; vraihalee thin year:o36re thin. half that . nuniber in, addittbd, and ibelocos v hiaeli dl galy '7OB, beihg a gain or 84 ~viates, and alit tittle is better than done; why we must. content ourselves with`this. it will he seen •that 1 . tatting .every ihingtititerctprileration, we have nothing to reprOach cairsejites with: we have ^scotched the snake,, not killed it." The most satigninis - never hoped for, a higher . Whig votelba*Vsoo, - and it. is in the unparalettled inereaao that we have been beaten. The avenues to . iotiviet - in• .f.trtriatiotrtteer The larger portion of. ibe surfaCe of oar tenety ate blocketep by prejudice, mistepreseittation and party tact: the Whigs ate giant-litte in spirit, • but their energies are criPpled. In the Coal region, our gain - has been . immeinie,, Wit Ogle is a country spirit which IA jeer. Altls Oie its riaing prosperity, and - will go against ita interest, and Vote differeetfrini. 'it oti - any result. %weave fuand' out we.are but infanta in politics, Comp:red: With . fbe old experienced tacticians Who are arrayed a gainst ue.. we have we Politicians by pro; Cession in mat reify{ ,we do not •Onderatand the various modes of chsinging, and mixing, mid counterfeiting ticlitta; if we did, we could not descend' taint. We have no In• terested mail contractors or , office holders *to besiege the pills ): and pleas in doubtful votes: we had Intone lemongstus who could' - demeawtheinselites to maketilie quota. garbled extratite,estparte statements or throw 'tanks. all , Moral obligilion, and *roar to lie it out/ We are not actittainted with the a.cana of modern politics; we hare. .beekbeateti by weapon - 1 which we were Saadi to handle, -and. if we cannot our titirstives• with having . redeerned our Como ty,_ - •wn can atleast;,., with the, :reflection that the Whig party haire greatly increil* et}; and that,; ins mitch- larger ratio than nur oprinentii, and I we promisisocreelvea „that m a vftry abort iime,s'loco futiiiim '4l tebte r id from tie *ark* ; , • rr7l9 *FE *ili*-IStNDED:3 . 'Wtill s Abe elettionlrover, thertace is ° run, iiiid we are either saddled with a Sub 4Freasery, or our state will rise up retigoz. 'ed bly, new impulses, tocnosuirunath ,its 45aitt plans of imprkivetnehtittidlnlettial transportation: The ptilnician rests frau' •hilitiatior, the editor lays down the inmate. tipped , pen,'dfisets the ink-stand of ad, dad' feels, as 'l3 Herein might, shbuld V.tna he removed frilitntieVinstirativform. 'Tile, nifirtidd man again seeks hireivingrlm side, away from metnings and ceinutitteti s the 'lawyer resumes' bus digest, end ' the midnight lamp is again isitining truoisgh the student's easement., Let us. then forget the • past; -let 4tll former biclerings be merged • in stitiiifity, 'and' let the -general welfisie of sll be again 'Mir philan‘lieupic deterininaticm• . "* We gin:mild te'menshei the nithre if the political • elements ; the furiously agitated winii 'which"lends ' the tempest its force, and robes the hurricane in all its violence, is the same gentle breeze which when un excited, fans the cheek•witb perfumed airs, anti kisses the rfplet on the tranquil sum mer kite. Let us then cordially, frankly and freely restore social 'feeling; 'let us mutdaHrexterrd the right hand of wind fell lowship; let , the two sts form a junc• ti.:in,;iind thrus'conjoined int nne broad riv: er,1114 on calmly but, eitically in uni ted led strength.' With last Tuesday's result, be it what it may, we 'bury all unkindness ;' Solt if the zeal of prosecuting! our favorite ticket, has at any time led.us to the coin. mission of thoughts, wortl,-tir &Woo, wflictr, may have hurt the ieelnigs of another, let our country be the common meditator to reconcile conflicting interests, unite our •sundered ties, and make us-rel. - Wye to live for thatcountry, and fur tier welfare only ! NAYLOR d; INGtRSOLL. We are es Much rejoiced at the succe4s of Mr. Naylor as•we shall be if Joseph Rituer be re-elected Governor. it has 'been tbapecullar wish OfttieGeeeral Gov ernment . to sectire The 'election o the "woutd be tury," in order to make hits a leader of their party. They have boldly' asserted that if money bobIU procure his. suecers,•it should•not bb wanted. AU the influence, corruption and finesse o 9 the Van Rureniste, have been thrown into the scale,' but, the third district has done itself Irmt honor, and shown that thelreie de mocracy of our country cannot be bribed, brow beaten or deceived. An Autuwutal view.—Mount 'the bill west of our Borotlgh, Imik down the gorge of the Sharp Mountain, where the Schuyl. kill breaks through orrits southwankcbtifte; obierve•thinotified fdlitsge df the trees, the lihay ilihrof the cant', and the:placid river in' the &ranee, and it will amply'compen mate you for a half hour's 'walk. The 'ex. treme worths weather of the past summer hits made the diversity of•tints more varied than ever, and there is nut a sweeter view any where-thiseide•of Mahomet's paradise. Beautind and inctureklue as is our whole vicinity, this is-the diamond gern'Of the whole.. Our town like is,panoratnic dletv,! is 'if our feet; here and there through the foliage Orthe sun.liglited valley the crystal river it seen peepinv,And then bout din:: away to the witith; the towering mountains which' overhang the stream seem like. 'the . work of Titeneoutiil • - "The:loose -creksiviih ihreitening Mask .la l / 4 " tatterinr 'o'er the hollnw pass, As if in infant's touch t.rotild urge . • Their headlong passage deir . the verge." The scenery of Sehnylktll county wily in a few lOW yeinv Isdld a vonspichous' placem (he-port folio of 'the artist, and the iketch Imolu 14 the tourjst; every diversity of view from - the. quiet. domestic adebbs of rural life, urthe bold thalaiitip grandeur of irrnwning tucks and beading intwiltaino may attract the eye. We have no Niaga ra, or Cattskill, but there it much to utter eat ofplaridAseauty and imposing Magnifi cence.. 77se Abduction ehse in N. Y.—Then, has been_ a great excitement in New York ,in . consequence of two of the crew of the ' t ench shiplilexander, having been soine . ;time ego-educed -1m board the frigate Di.: don and taken" away. I'he Alexan - der, it: 'nay be - recollect:o pot into'Newport (R. J-).SotOe tiobe ago and wes seized 'by the authmilies, Anti, these Awn persons after-. wards hailed by the consul general at that place. It' ippeans Frenc'h duverti , went attached more itnportance to this affair. than wiken Fathom the reasons for. The Visit .of the Prince De Joinsille when in ibis country to Newport in his frigate, and the *Trivets* the Dtdon in the port of N. "YOrit.withotit in, (ostensible haiiness libOt ly after, ohtinly show that the abduction lo these men has been maturely deliberated.. • There has 'been much discussion in New York in this affair. Many have been examined. and, the result ofthe investiga tion has been - the arrest of Mons de 1.1 Fiechelle, whOtOlds gretfelieire the rank - OrVice consul, ,Sltretary„ oreome such an (Alice. He attatbas a deal of iniportance to himself and threaten* bombs and COD: `grave tockepa 'in consequenceof the indig nity. Ile Odd the Officers sent to Arrest' hitn,....that "4 fiance got Algienefor Arne slap in de fe - ce; and Lat'France Will get die. toentrji for die.' ; The affair is seriously becoining important, as initolving cottons., late Oglota, and we 'ball. look watt 'some anxiety to tie result: • In the mean time if • France Shedld declare war. We'll not fof - , get to. mention it.. Nowt Verona ! - i e ng ram e . ;Gaze tte 411 font:4' - i t ' "iii — ii '9 ' shows same 66 the skdrantagea arising from the use oPiiithriate • the remarks aic to the' point, and wtifeeltreat confidence l i 11110 7 the time i s not far dialaftt,iben mad will- be entirely superseded 'by. IBA" ore corripkt and certainly more • ecohlitnical produce hf our Pennsylvania-mtiii.s.' :i• Anthracite Coal for Stealth , • Beats. !quell complaints is justly made bi the tialasefigets"in Th e :,.Great Western, ..: the dirt. arising from The use .01 bitum lnous cost which : , while it /gives 'a . blase fott the boiler, is must bountiful in its INCA, itooty smoke, which it spreads upon eveky'dhject .in the vessel. Anthracite coal is' not 'lie. ble to this objection, and should any steam altip lie bitilvto run between' Philad4lplua ,and•gurope, we may expect that t he fur. 'Jades will. be ed construtted as to admit of the use of the Clean, 'dear burning and cheap fuel which the mountains of peon sylvania produce in co abundance,Wholly unknown in any other portion of t the world.• That anthracite can be tilled to great advantage in propelling steamers, has been abundantly prevyd: A fliendi y „ tithe was travellingdfew w*ks since frond! Port land To Bdtfon; faund that lintbracitie was 'Used entirely fur the large boat that plied between - those two cities, and very little al. terations had - been trued° iv' the Audio° to change it from a wood burner toe coal burner. 'The grate bad been raised; some' inches, and a fan wheel was riigedin front nrtheSre. 'nit! WhOte was c'Einduct. I'd With ease, •aod without any difficulty consequent upon the hardness of die coal. Now it is remarkable that Mainei which is emphatically a wood state, supplying as et does . luinberfor 'Many, other stales slid, for Me 'West' Inaies. anti 'cord Wntiii fur Bostpn, should resort to 'anthracite ;6141 to propel her steam nichinerf, PeOn- . .ylvania, which does tasprly -the Moiled States, anti can supply the world, fr ith an thracite coal,'Uses Wondio her attain hosts and locomotive engines. This rama , ka• tile difference extends still further. I I Mary. land Is a wood state, supplying OW very pine wood deed in the - steam titsafa of Pennsylvania, White in Mirylind - fhit loco icolivesstearn engines ire propel) 41 by, an thracite coal, taken front the trfountnins on the north side of Pennsylvania.;, A sin gle do mpany. in that state purchised this year (loin a Pennsylvania coal company, 'B,OOO tons of maltreat . % iiietbe its°r of their steam engines. . While speaking of the steattihoats of Maine, our,hithriherit ttiiirilioneo the a. mount Ofeknil usedie a trip frottkPortlaoci to -Boston. lite lat!toiie-es the ,eompare twatititit of bal and wood, etbich we Will hereiftlir state. 0 - It appears to us that the subjetiis one •of great consequence An the eitrairs of the United States—to Pennsylvanian! certain ly. But • the amount of worst burnt in . eteath•engines is already enormous, and is increasing at a rite thin mdlt miike t friglit.• lul havoc with our forests, Whiter. coal may be dug withotit danger from diminution, and with evident profit to the community. MISCELLANY. ~ A - Blunder.—Some of the Erigliali: Jou/millets know 'shout as tol3o -fif this it'tnotry, as weldo t'il . Kaufactiatita; or a cat I. ? does al 't he use of boxing-gloves. A re• late cottrt lour al ails that the Queen to ceittty wide e elegant hatlately sent her by, the State of Massachusetts by their fide. Representative Carl King I Now the fact is friend Carl, though he has. a. &Ingle name, is an Wiliest, tutisratending, plain citizen 'Of New York,'neier was in any office, anti Merely sent it 14 allow that Yankee 'I and could rival Tuscidy and even Leghtdrn in the minUradture Of bonnets. We must geed the itchuol 'miller titier 'to the 'Court 3Outna l l. - I • Interesting Correspondence.#—New sub. scribers writing to editors, end enclosing money in advance!! danatin:tord butrhain i ab reigned his office in Canada, in consequence of Loril Breugliani's:opposition to his mess. urns, lie will not be butted.off his path; he is a bull of the true Durham breed. &Died , olVhe Ifariet.—'lime, rather slack;, glue sticks in the market ; casior oil, uninteresting to fakers ; scythe blades a sharp dement(.; Russia duck going dOwn ; hops very tiltely ; licaeed tending upwards ; whiskey, heart Molders will probably experiences /a; wtil, the'rels a 'dectf of life in southern wool ,} 1 hogs, none retailed; no nevi feature ih the cattle market ; disposer brisk for the 'heals supply ,of rikamifiretureo_ , ; and sheeting, vireo 'and *one. - 1t • . , .1 the Loin A not Densb.-4 Wenilemso visiting the Deaf and Dumb irilititution at Paris, asked one, of the pupil's "what is e ternity 7" and received this beautiful ens wer, "it is the life.tim'e of the Almighty." Ali f *Ay ias -Fri . xrtA ie s Otte Date! --Married ail "Haverville . ( en)• Edward G. Worth, tehliks Ellen D te, who has attained these of 27, and a only thirty five inbirek in height, her metier was also a dwarf. • flumbir i f a A n insect ab ut the size or * bee hut , srithout Wings, and?ending forth a humming sound has beet! doing dam. age' to the southern crops. Diferesee of Opinitut.-,-;pne.trstraller it ti says Queen Victoria is i.Z:anathei that** is plainly pretty. ant) thi last MA As is pretty plain. I. Caner=liew—The Ne !wives have held a eonvelill Their ripothtiolis 'and add tiptllien oG , they propoimiin the,,,Ciinstitution to make, the freasits* elective in Congress, -thus preventing litiiyes at .prettem existing. determined .tol gri against t this.:Wilkensure the .. Seward. • • • I Georgia. -A slip from the At tietie Chronicle contains returns rem tenrcOuri ties which show -4 -nett gai , of abdut 90b in favor of the Whigs sin e. 1834 All. subsequent returns tend to vine a horrei pi:aiding gain throughout 11 a state,l es die counties lieei . d *from are t °se where Mr. Calhoun exerts most ird ence. if as i s . hoped, the entire 'WhigTi cket shinild tie elected, it still unike.a-isti -of eight mem bers in the next Legi4atu' . s .. ; 1 Lang . (*Lt.— Five b there o South -1 ampton Mass. named Od ~ are - is an av erage six feet one inch in eight ! The Wenther.—After !the let storm the weather is now clear sind cold. Stoves are io demand, enaractiveand vihions of Joe. 'Silves 'a and hot whis ey punch begia 1 1, to float hettre our mind's eye. j '/Ars'aiiii •ets, - -In spirits 'and tout of spirits—in o ce and out of o ffi ce—pi pock et; and out o f pocket —in / luck anti out of tuCA - -14a hoes and out qf 'himesiere the leadinglpolitidal syniptonisi of the d y. Slop liAng . —The b ick hotrim occu pied by M r.i Genvaia as residence and e. tailor's shopn Merriiime Street ?indent% has been lif i ed by screw and moved back 11 feet - withut taking d wn 'the chimney. losaa.=-A sea reheat id t tiller th present election campaign (or hose wt o cannot settle their 'I ouie yetis. I , Going, :gone 1— A a ,litreasimer from Indiantown (Miss.) nam d gni,' tGowing, has ebsquatulated with the Gotieroment along-box, and $9,300. "Thustrunir the world away." _ • 1 l .., - Stara Intiat Jaw I—lihe N. V. papers ire btu on the high pessure !principle aeliinit all the steamhoi ta' dietitian not passed inspectors. T is right gen. tlemen, blow them up o 'they wi take the same liberty with, you! 1 GcroFl.-Mhy is a hi ceasityl Because he v_ What's in a Name! is lecturing qn the m.. or air; at t& Sturman, Half persuaded/ bile have resolved. on a nrspecie pity manta an of 'OctOber. A Lumber Man!—.. says.a drowned body, lumberman, wasi'dra: "..sivrnbee'behr,ththr` know he was a lumber wooden legl Emigration.--A H Empire Suite of N ..Seisimed! • 1 A in . ° Reign- -- A Wheeling, (Val on of the new rein which drought. Coi. Altitoele 018 'l. the Metleith Chit doe. The folloising ha y kit Its from the Phila. Gazette: the. n n-tomniattal Predi dent is painted to the ife: Tea Paistosiir having returned to Washing ton, it is Prot Air to Mantiniit • feeri of the perils to which btu precious existence Wet subjected, on tile Why trove IRinia thither. On Irish* night at the Sulphur,. we forget the color) he slept it the Mme apaitmcnt with a I :damp towel,. the consequence of which was that he caught en egregious Old. On the morning he left, arifiqginian who We licit good bye., ob. /retied that he had aloaday lbr.trarellms. 'replied, "there are differed of Opinion oh that subject, my dear sir, and myself on a tbpie so shall delayihe impress .'• van pea Mr. Boit:sat. mY. • irsy," • evry lionidderable calibre 'of a sonnet Of his,which ing &arta!' "Bees."--The. President oceationally moved his with , the vipW, 4 " time by the closest obeer ly. As thia however, Yerrithied.bY the escort, i I der4 Oa Isokiiig at t Via sneeze? thriee; the m er, Ull time s .itisided,, and Matey ihireAt anhat • ; to Amoral _wish - a ioitio TheiCinterestina. patkas of the Richmond add, - that the President way Of throwing his leg iitoneraa Aram, Th top of Wit tinadroPed. h bideverity wherewith attsinedi his ottest Memnon pirtkittiars Etstrateofihe nation, mi would Se (o inter qttimr_. ' One. bunk : nee, detat'a r lationery argon. ed. , N withstanding , hi the at iii.Airium. Matitera'aity Of it in,th ten iSaffrOisiimphr hot:of l itiakt g iiiph. Vol tdiffice .reeinni the “solptit4roipa .nil thong the 4 Prpaitient to Virgin eitlrink as .a reps Mir naste ipon the imp, of Aineritati tutu& , ="tbOiriabei., Ants 0 H ril mem f York timer. it Syracuse. L are highly Isitereoon is . geereOry bf : ik Ho Woes of the exeleutiv:e they h wise ;e Sub. rea a -1 reticle - Mi. A lawyeS like 'Cie. as no ksio." • I, A Mt. .Bellowi !hanicel properties laminae in New he ^Batts or Mo , rtial'iOsumptioh ad eitir •the fink Monleal paper I pparent I hit 'ilfh • • cett ' i taf the-It. ty t Hqvr do they an, didibe have he Whigs of the York are bound _, • lute w'as firm at commencement succeeded the 'late • J aesigi3 inenpory, de Affolis in Toon- mot . willing to commit Smon to the people. I s of my!, views until I tome! . .,.EOners). fly the . "om it& is a poet of 1, The (lobe has spoken on accognt of its not be- lines-is considered a • ' 11l 'err i thoughtfok^and ntousliikhily in the car / Will epnceived at the 'era. of rpiing. more easi • as not misnimmitsly ol io mentioned with diffi a eon, n+r the Potomac, scalar ejritatiim. howes; the efferits pawed . away. njunct i that he would saki(.t it turned out bins arstgivan in antic'. niter; We ought to lalts 11 Most picturesque . , noel. a 'saddle. when he who hate seen him on to wolidered at the ent er cloinli the beast, and e." Other eqoallr m.o. reepecilo thlebeif Ma. ght he Mentioned, but it ataabc Pier, of the En. cxemplirging the.Presi may IMlnever b e a indulg: handsome remark upon is said. 3hat when he ew . naPers,iihe generally t a te some other 'interjector!. tines indeed would not loweelkie events or the tt-exect4ing" minion of ia. la Will glee himnal Moan Amulet. and envoi lehalde scroll of 'gee, Ili ail abdomen. ' I*, Afacramtest, hose'