• 1 Tertneof Pub:ferias/a.. Two Dot.t.atte p r annom. payably letai•annual in ildirmice.: aot(ps d within vbet year,ls 450 will be charged.' • s, itrr Pa pets deliteiedhrtlie nett Kideewill be chug:. ed 25 cony, extra'. • t - ' A Wertiseritente eneeiding tweivn linen will be • charged $1 for thteec ineertionv—and 50 'Cents for one+ insertion.' Lvmee o ries In propciiticui. - ' All advenismentstOill be inserted until ordered out unless tffe time The Which they are to be Continued is specillel, and *ill bteht rge accardinglii. ' Yetrly advertisers 'will be charged Illt,per. annum, iselndlubscriptidu to the tiapewith,the privilege of keepi doiediiertisement not exceeding' 2 squares standing tiring the 3ear.andehe insertion of a smaller one in eieh paiipefor three sti4tessive , Ail letteis addressed to the editoi must be popt•paid otherwise nd attended will be paid to them- • All notice, for pieMings.die..and other *mice, Which have heretofore been:inserted grhtis. will be charged 0 cents each.iskeept Mariaues and Deaths. TP , Panspldets; Ciecks, (Ards. Bells Of Lading and Handbills of ete deseriplion, neatly tinted at. this Offleiß at tAk Intitebt 4sh Drina - • • PEA. , " ILPIErial irietz.L. - „ " . f°TTSVILLE. SCIIINLNILL CO. PA. 1 , ii e Thi egant and commodious establish - IN . i t a in : e e,:tA e illr be pin for v' recep tion o: Eton' this date. It has been compleiely refitted. and supplied with fnenitnte entirely ne ar _; the. Bedding;Oc. is of the first qua li ty, and p rticolar attention has been devo. lied to every arrangement that can contribute to corn. tort and conven i ence. • ' The Wines and !Liquors hav,e Seen elected in the main careful and l ib eral manner. wahout regard to espensetri Wan; a d will embrace thetnost favorite *rand and stock. The Proprieteerlicits therefore, ; the support of "Ms I `friends and the travelling community in general. '%hould they think p o toper to visit his hens°, he hopes . itiv nsaidious attention to thew wants, to establish for 'it each a cbaraCtee,,as may ensure a return of their `favors. ' 1 1, FREDIPRICK VESTIMATIVILLEriet . • Propor. Pontine, Pa. pile 22.-1184(L --tf • N. , 1, "The Refe r ie the Basement : story. is . v•ccitiductedliatfer the superintendence o f Mr. Tuba rover., , frikilL ROAD IRON. tA, eMnplete.astrortment of Rail Road Iron from 21Xfi f2m.to IX4 kith: I {TRAIL ROAD TIRES from 33 in. to 56 in. eater• eel dia 'meter, turned & an , Awned. arlitlL RICO ACERS.3O,3in. diameter Railßoad Azle.,4. manufactured from the patent EVCable Iron. RAIL ROAD tkr. 4 LT. for. placing beisar2en the - iron Chair and atone block E of edge Railways. . INDIA RUBBER ROPE manufactured from New Zealand Flax outwit ' - ed with India Rubber. and , intended for Incline Planes . l ustreecived a eomplete as. 'prurient ofdraine,from in. to If in. proved & man ufactured from the best ca • . / ble Iron. ' SHIP BOAT AND RAIL Rif t llAD L- , of different sizes, kept con nsuety on bind and for sale by ar G. RALSTON. & CO.. No. 4. South Front St. Philadelphia 'January 18. : j•CHAlling. Mt 1 . i 111 6 4 i . 3.11,211LT111r, , , -DAVE just received from New Yor k . , N*2ooo lbs superior Smoked Beef, 1000 do ' a newHams, 1000. do i :Shoulders, 1 • 4000 do ; d Dairy Cheese, 10 Bla. i d Small Pork, 10, do • dri No.l, Illackrel, (late Fares) sdo H do Pickled Herring, .2000 lbs. Codfish. All of whieb th y offer on as good terms as earl be obtained elsew re. t Nov. 2S, ' L 48— STORE. HE subscriber respectfully informs the publi c, T 'that he has owned a store in centre Street, 3 -doors below T. Si- J. Beaty's Store corner of Nor. isegian and Centre Streets, where he oilers for sale .. a generalassortmeint of Dry Goods, Groceries, Queeusware, &c. All persons desious of purchasing Goods Cheap for Cosh, are respectfully invited to call and exam. ine for themselvei. • EDWARD HUGHES. November, 21, —4tf Hiller'yand Haggerty 'NAVE received their Winter Stock lof Fresh Jug Groceries, codsisting , of a very general assort. menu. which they Sire disposed to sell at aLsmall ad. vance for Cash. Nov. 28, Plain dc• "glared DeLanes. A ' EW suppl of those beautiful and rfasniona ble goods, It received 'and for sale l3v T. & J. BE AITY, December 5, I. 49 lairrifionism! NOW that the lections of our Country-have de. tided that OfM TIP is to be the next president, and better times being a consequence of that result; the undersigned :would be pleased to receive any Orders in the Boat 'Building line, either at home or from abroad. I am prepared to build any number of Boats—of any size —and alrnost at any price. So come on boys, let us feel the effect of victory. . P JOHN M. CROSLAND. December 5, l 49 . Pottsville' MARBLE I C HANIUFACTORY. THE subscriber-begs leave to inform • the inhalt tents of this Once, and the surrounding country, that he has on hand, and, intends keeping a large and well selecied[quantity of Marble Monuments for traves—and Would invite those wishing to pur. chase to give him[a call, as he assures them that he will sell as cheiip as they can be procured any where in the State, and ;as well engraved; which will be done in either En lish or German, Scotch, Irish, or Welsh huiguate or the dialect. ' June f ' ISAAC TAYLOR, Jr. /5 24 Old Established Passage:Office, CORNER OF fiNS , AND soiree STREETS, NEW TORE. TliE subscribers having completed wit their 'arrangement for the year 1841, for r j? "0,1.- the Prirpoge of bringing out' steerage - passengers, beg leave to inf Tin their friends and the pnblic in, general. that a rst _class erasel will be I detipatchetli from Liverpool to New, York. on the istjsth, 10th, 15th, 20th, and 25th, o f ea c h month 'throughout the year. Passengereon their arrival at Liverpool from the out ports,. wilt be furnished with lodgings and a convenient plaCe to cook in duriiig the time they may be detained; there by bead wirids.or stormy weather--free Orally expense to themstliei--on ap. placation at the nompany's office tu Mr. :P. W. BYRNES, NoSt Waterloo Road, who will, in con. nectiori with his numerous agents throughout Eng. land and Irelaridifford every assistance to those who may be engaged to come out by this company's ships. " Passengers win tie found in provisions fof the passage for Sig eatra; or $26 for E passage, provisions and hospital money. As usual-in enrages. where the persons decline tointng, the money willlbe refunded to those from whom it may have been`reciaved, on their returning the passage certificate. • GLOVER &111'MURRAY. 1 Corner of Pine sod South sta. The subserilieribas been. appointed Agent for the above line, andie ready to recieve the passage money tor thisewhoinisli to rend for their friends, and will aka *Bend to transmitting money, to Europe. For ,patiloolato apply it , the Miners? Journat Office. . 7 1 t. B.BANNAN. Jan..2l. • 1 3 . • - 1— BOOK•BINDERY 1121 BANNAiNtu commenced a Book Models We e minaeot on with, hie Book Store, where all kinds of 'Bcioltili will be bound atthe shottcat mike at low rate". lIMENMEnE . . 7 , _ —......... 6 ____. . rise . . , a I wid teach you to pierce the bowels of the Earth, • and bring ,ont , from the Caverns ofhfenntsins. hfetale l lrhiatwill give strength td , tnar Hinds iutd splOet all, Nature io Ger add • /onset's. " • -i. ":' :' v' '-': ' -- .:'. : . . .. . . ~ , VOLe XVIL BEAUTY i3LBEPINIG; lIT LIEUT. G. W. PATTEN, U. S. Anil?. She slept !; : Alm* her arm of snow Her cheek of rose serenely laid, While wavy curls heav'd to and fro, At every 'sigh ter breathings made; The very breeze which pasted along Went o'er her couch with gentle air, As loth to wake with pinion strong, The thing of joy that stumber'd there. She slept! The thin transparent lid, Curr'd calmly, o'er her eye of blue; But though the earthly orb was The spirit light still struggled din?, -While o'er her lip unconscious wrought A quiv i ring pulse which went and-came, As if some dream renewl the thought' The waking hone had ceaa'd to name. She slept! And as the wandering rays Of moonlight kiss'd her foiehead pale, —Bright truantal nothing loth'to gaze - On charms Which night forgets to veil ! Be marvell'd not, why shapes of air, —Blest works which once in Heaven had shone Enraptur'd with a fora so fair, . For Woniairs home had left their own. 'Florida. This important and privileged period in the life of spinsters' has ended; it has gone out with_ the old year, and will not return again for thnie annual changes, dUring which, {technically speaking) many "an old maid's corner" will be turned, and many bachelor's rosy hope of love and.conjugal;devotion will be changed into cold forgetfulness; or cletermin- M celibacy. Arid why ! For want of courage to a pop the question ! "—Surely it is a false delicacy Which forbids the would-be wooer from following in the steps of his great progenitors, and an equally fas tidious feelim which' prevents the would-be wooed from taking advantage of the time-honored permis sion afforded by the Leap Yor. Alas, for the timid ity of the gentle part of creation ! Many a maiden has lost a good husbPnd by 'her sensitive modesty, and many a man has test a good wife, because the lady could net say likr. Juliet to her Romeo, If that thy bent of love Le honorable, Thy, purpose,, marriage, send me word to-morrow." It seems an easy matter to conjugate the verb .to love,' through all the persons and tenses, and yet how often could love' is the unfortunate stopping place, leaping over love and 'thou fovea.' with precipitate impulse, as if forgetting the necessity for regular con jugation, or that the important 'we love' is 'the con "umation devoutly to be wished. ) But we have no compassion for the loitering bach elor, who has n i7 ind of his own: who, believing that 'That the world all before him, whereto choose,' permits 'diversity to confound election,' and, like a butterfly, hovers from flower to flower, unitaiiii;ing which is fairest or most meet to place in his own bo som, plodding on unloving and unloved to the end of his lonely pilgrimage. We would pronounce an anathema against these wayfarers in this world of woman's loveliness—these pretended worshippers at the shrine of her beauty. They should get them to amonastery, hide their' face beneath a cowl, and ex patiate their offences by a life-time residence in gloomy seclusion. We have said that Bissextile is ended ; it has van ished out of being with 1040, with all its privileges, and will not return again until 1844, a period which will be fraught with changes to all conditions of men throughout the whole of Christendom. The cher ished-anticipations of many a bashful bachelor and buxom widower are prostrated with the departure of this Leap Year—the fair one of their affections has not proposed, and they are left to sorrow over, the trials' of the heart, chaunting perchance with dirge like melancholy, a requiem for departed hope. There is too much shade to the picture, sci turn we to light. Nil de.sperandum ! Never was there better advice given in Latin or English.' The lover should never despair, be he bold or bashful—be' he widowed or a bachelor; there is CO A critical minute in Ev'ry man's wooing, when his misstress may Be won, which if he carelessly neglect To prosecute, he may wait long enough Before he gain - the like opportunity." Therefore take the tide at its ebb, and do not observe Much ceremony in presenting the petition, for suits of love are n6t like suits of law, and cannot well be Carried from term to term without infringement or prohibition. Delays are Proverbially dangerous— they may have proved so in the past year, but be not discouraged, ye unmarried ones I The 'pairing day' accordirig to the calendar, thanks to St. Valentine, has trot arrived. Cheer up, then, look forward to the 14th of February, and despond no longer. There's time enough yet, provided you take the old Father by the forelock,.and profit by our advice. Pop the ques tion on St. - Valentine's day, honestly and manfully, and &Pend upon it you will speed well with your wooing. The novelist James understood the natural feelings Of woman when he drew .his character of Isadore Falkland, who, being asked by an old lady 'why she, who had refused. three good 'Offers, did not marry V replied, promptly, 'because I do not think it worth while to marry without love ; and if the man. that I _could love, does riot choose to propose to me, it is Oita impossible thatl can propose to him.' Putting Leap Year, therefore, out of question, it is the duty of gentlemen to make the proposal, and quite impos inble for the ladiesi to propoee to them. Learn, there; foie, ye lords of creation, the right Conjugation of the verb 'to love,' end, above all things, remember St. Valentine's Day !-Boston 'hanscript. Rich Spinstp..—The will of the late Miss Jane Innea,„spinster, formerly of Piccardy-place. Edinburg, but late of Stow, in North Britain, has just been pro ven in 'the Prerogative Court, of the Archbishop of Canterbury, in Doctor's Commons, by GeOrge Scott, 'John Thompson, Esqs. the executors. The)deceas ed was possessed of upwards of £ 800,000 in the ;funds, and property in differentvarts of Scotland to ' ' i :the amount of 1,200,006, making, together, the, enormous sum of two millions the whole of which' the testatrix has bequeathed; to be equally divid e d a ., mongst all her' relations who can be found, without respect to the nearest of kindred. About five pare since, the testattiibeeamit entitled 'm .0,500,000 on the death of her brother, he haling died inteslate, and she being his only new of hie: It iselmostez. traotdinary fact ;that, notwithstanding the immense wealth of the deceased lady,' her habits were very -Felonious; and; as 'loaf of it, it mai ho only mew ill Weekly by Renjaminlannan ) ottsvlescllolil Co nr 3 , nl, inia. BIbt'IEXTILE. OE =I AND SATURDAY if/KNOW jANITARIe2 . 3; . , y to mention one fact.' :One dark eveningshe ha lf Occasion to ,go up stairs, but would'not even light, a candle, and, in consequence.of . her advanced age, (nearly 60,) she slipped down and brok her leg, which' ac cident .ultimately caused her death. The imonat of probate &ay alone will amount tci a prince ly fortpms, and the supposed , wealthiest spinster in the world (Miss Burditt Coutts,) was not entiiiid to that appellation until the present time. There is ev ery reason to believe that the property of die deaEts ed is the largest ever proven in the Doc , 's Com , mons.--London paper. In these daYs, when boarding schools for young ladies are devoted to the fashionable ologies of the day—such as chonchology, ornithology. ic4byology zoology, and "nob like,- we propose an additional set euce, as a finishing touch to Young ladies' elk:cation, viz : Spinology. Our grandmothers of ohieri time, Who made good wtves for patriotic men that achieved our independence, knew how to spin. They were, too, `expert at weave-ology ; and as to citok43logY, none of the learned ancients could go ahead of them. As a consequence of all this, they enjoyed good health, and such things as dyspepsia and consumption were seldom known. But in modem times those sciences, so honorable to the matrons of the Revolution, have gone out of date. A lamentable degenerazy, both physical and moral, has followed. Then the coon. tag had women, now we belie none. Females have all turned ladies. If our fashionable schools cannot be included to es tablish departments in spinology, weaveology, and the like, we would suggest that some worthy inatronl, —if a number qualified for the business can be found, —should go into our cities and towns and I set up spinning schools to teach young ladies—not how to spin street yarn ; this art they have generally achiev ed already ; but good substantial wool and linnet', in a work-womanlike manner. This should be prepar atory to a High School for teaching the healthy and ingenious art of Weaving; and when they have be come proficients at both, a good knowledge of Cook ology should entitle them to a regular diploma, with the honorary degree of F. W.—Fit for Wives.— Maine Cullivalor. Probably the oldest city in the world, still occu pies the place it occupied in the days of Abraham; and though it has, no doubt, seen many vicissitudes, its population is still very considerable, and its trade is very extensive. Damascus Is called by the Ori entials 'a pearl surrounded by emeralds.' Nothing can be more beautiful than its position, whether ap proached from the side of Mount Lebanon, from the Desert to the east, or by the high road train the north from Aleppo and Hamah. For many miles the city is girdled by fertile fields, or gardens as they are called, which being watered by rivers and sparkling streams, give to the vegetation, consistingprincipally of olive trees, a remarkable freshness and beauty. Though the trade of Damascus is very , considera ble, it has no English establishment within its walls. More than one has existed, but it has not been found to answer; and the trade that has been carried for English account, is either by French, Italian or na tive houses. Of all the cities of the East, Damascus is probably the most oriental—the city which has undergone the fewest changes. The European cos tame is scarcely ever seen; and with few exceptions I believe the Frank settlers have adopted the. Syrian dress. There is at Damascus a tribunal of commerce for the settlement ,of business disputes. It consists V twelve persons—namely, nine Musaulmans, two Christians, and one Jew. .The proportion is inot ve ry fairly arranged with a reference to the numbers of the population of the different religious bodies; but one of the, principal Christian merchants assured me, that on the whole they were tolerably satisfied with the decisions of the tribtual, and it was seldom the Mahomedan majority showed any disposition to act unfaringly to Christians litigants. The Jewesses.—Fontaines asked Chateatibriand if he could assign a reason why the women of the Jewish race were so much handsomer than the man;' to which Chateaubriand gave the following truly poetical and Christian one: u The Jewesses;" he said, u have escaped•}the curse which alighted up on their fathers, husbands-and sons. Not a Jewess was to be seen among the crowd of priests and rah- We who insulted the Son of God, scourged him, crowned him with thorns, and subjected him, to ig nomy and the agony of the cross. The women of Judah believed in the Saviour and assisted him and soothed him under afflictions. A woman of Betha ny poured on his head precious ointment which she kept in a vase of alabaster. • The sinner anuointed his feet with perfumed oil, and wiped with her hair. Christ on his part extended his mercy to the Jew esses. He raised from. the dead the son of the wi dow of Nein and Martha's brother, Lazarus. He cured Simon's mother-in-law, and the women who touched the hem of his garment. To the.Simara tin women he was a spring of living water, and a compassionate judge to the women In ednlttly.-- The daugtters of Jerusalem wept ovet him; the ho ly women accompanied 'him to Calvary, brought balm and spices, and weeping sought him in the sepulchre. u Woman, why weepest thou i" His first appearance, after his resurrection, was to Mary Magdalene. He said to her, u Mary." At the sound of his voice, Mary Magdalene's eyes were open, and she answered, u Master." The reflection of some very beautiful ray must have rested Q n the brow of the Jewess. 1 The Catholic Church in the Mated States.. 7 lt is stated in the Catholic Almanac for 1841, just pub. lished in this city - by Fielding Lucas, Jr., that the Catholic population of the United States is estimated at 1,300,000. The number of clergymen in the ministry is 436, otherwise employed,lo9—total 545. The 'number of churches and chapels is 512: cburch ei building 27 : other stations; 394. There are 17 ecclesiastical institutions, with 144 clerical students. The femile religious institutions number 31, and the female academies, 49. There are in the icmale academies, 2,762 pupils. 'The literary institutions for young men number 24, and the young asen in them 1,591 The number of Catholic bishops in the IThited States, 17. During 1840, the accessions to the priestly Office have been 85. The Archd,ocess of lialtimore,whlch comprises the State of liars!. land and the District of Columbia, has 68 chMehee and chapels, 2 churches ,bisilding, and 10 otheir eta. irons. The number of clergymen in the mini+ry is 380 and ti!enumberotherarise employed, 31. 'plate ere 633 young men in the colleges of this Per o and 630 pupils in the tamale aamieteies.—iksk. SPINOLOGY. DAMASCUS, TEMPERANCE. DEPART MANIA A POTIL I I : A gray-hair'd, withered. bloody-e3ret And Woodphanded, ghastly. ghostly ! A thing of honor, terror, wretibedness an 4 misery, more frightful . than any other affliction known to poor humanity, is that fearful retribution of indul gence mania a potu.. 'Horrible l—toe see men— d, noble in reason, infinite in • faculty, in farm, - and moving so express and,admirable-'—to see gifted and intellectual men, the image of his creator, 00:grated info idiocY and torture by a blindfold puntet of dam ning ruin ! Men seek forgetfulness of careland per plexity, or perhaps some unexpected misfoitune, by flying to the artificial exhilaration of 'drink. 1c Look at a man in the agonies of this horrid affliction, and ask the miserable victim if he would not gladly axchinge his diatresi for any other, or all other ills of life com bined: Is` it possible for human nature to suffer a more complete and lainentable degradation I Man, inoud man, made to Wilk erect in the prpud ten aciousness ofe superior nature—this being that stands lord of God's creation :, crouching in tatnerOy flying firm shadows , seeing iihapesso distorted snit hideous thaeianity:can form nononception of what they are! 0, misery indiscribable! ' ' By an accident we yesterday stood, with chill'd veins and staring eyes, witnessing a spectacle of this kind.' WC were in company witlva physician at a moment when he was called upon to administer relief to the victim. In a corner of the room we found the tortured wretch, crouching and peeping fearfully through ithe rungs of a chair, at a swarm of flying snakes, which he said were darting through the room in ell directions. Bloated terror was in his cotinte nanc,e. He sprang froth the corner and flew from one position to another; in agonizing'alarm. Devils were pursuing him—behind, before, above and below, and all around him objects of. terror and danger ap peared, and instruments of death menaced) him on every band. His eyes , seemed starting from their sockets. His exclamations were so full of misery that the heart ached to hear them. Then again his fit assumed another form, and he ran about the room jumping over chairs and calling to us to see him walk upon the ceiling. Their he raved for liquor,iscrearn a aloud, cursed the world and his own istence, demanded brandy with wild gesticulation, d again I re sunk into grief end tears, complaining that all the world was leagued against him and even de *ls were employed to persecute him. Suddenly he 11 into a sort of waking trance. — He was lifted on he bed, and there he lay, grasping at the air, s ch bor. rible contortions of countenance as made oar flesh creep upon our bones. { The unfortunate wretch has recovere4 as our friend, the physician, declared danger to be pt when we left him, but who may corm a conceptioof his anguish endured during that horrid paroxysm . Years of the severest trials and misfortunes' shouldilbe con sidered luxurious ease in comparison with one hour of such frightful torment of soul and body. I If the condition of eternally condemned spirits ma, be- rc,re vealed to mortal comprehension, surely the iserable victims of this malady experience some foretaste of the sinner's doom. 111 the delight/3'd the 14ichana ban through long years of gaiety cannot repay him for even one of these frightful attacks.- , -The victim seems for a time abandoned into the possession of devils. All that is admirable in his nature seems to leave him, and you look upon a spectacle of demi damnation.' Pity, pain, disgust, terror and profound sorrow are the emotions which are called forth by such a sight. What the absolute horror of the con dition' may be, it is notlikely any may conceive save toe victims; themselves. The misery of night-mare perhaps in some faint degree resembles this extraor dinary convulsion of the human system. How must the wretches envy, and how happy must they deem all those who know nothing of the terrible disorder ! How must they pray, while returning to consciousness 'to be relieved forever from such danger again. How must they curse the fiery liquid that has poiscined their blood and robbed their hearts of every; kindly sympathy belonging to humanity ! o To be now a sensible man, by and by a fool, and presently a beast !" and after serving the 'demon, Alcohol, as beasts for years, then the, beasts. Change to devils! o r 0 thou invisible spirit of wine, if thou bast no name to be known by, let us call thee devil ! devil ! devil !"—N. 0. Picayune. FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. Daring the week, the packet shipi. Garrb ford and Burgundy, have arrived from Europe ing intelligence from Paris and London to tti and from Liverpool and /byre to the 21st The only news from Syria or Egypt Matti progress of the negotiations which are to si whole controversy, upon the terms heretofor - Mehemet Ali is to retain Egypt, and oarre beside. This offer was made to him by Co. Napier, and he has accepted it. The four and the Sultan are making every arrange cony it into effect. `The determination of the present French to maintain an armed peace, has giien ofl Great Britain, Austria, and Prussia., Rep ikons of a decided character on this subject be: made, and unless France lowers her tone, th meot of the Egyptian onestion may not prod beneficial effect in Europe that was expected. Some of the , Paris papers assert that RUE insist on the dePosition. of Mehemet Ali Pachilie of Egypt. A Toulon letter states. that Admiral Hu on has been ordered to sail immediately with six sbi sof the line, to the Coast of Morocco, to demand sat4faction for the insult lately offered to the Freech COMAII at Tangier. Some steamers are to go with the squadron, and if satisfaction is reinsed, the place 'is to lie boar herded. The appeal of Madame Laffarge, rom thejudg ment of the court at litille, in the poison case, has been ,rejected by the Court of Cassllion. fie l yenteen grounds of exception were taken, every one o whieh • was overruled. ' The Hanover Gazette of December 14th, announ ces the conclusion of a treaty of comnierce and no+ gation between Hanover and the United States. The Britannia steamer; from Bostan, tu 4 re" out ' after a passage of fourteen days. We' find op notice of the arrival of the British Queen fr o m liet4• The demand for cotton has continued steady and good: • Priees have (niftier jniproved d on ail quali ties below fair. Thiii la attributed nutirdyltOthe tie:- counts from the Uniteli States to the first Dept:atter, by the Britannia, which 'arrived= the 15th ult., in); reduced estimates of the amp. We gm* below clit, most interealutg tor ofthejournala. • ME 1= I , mt. EIZTI tirrsammarr oisseomon's nairsiss Irr PARIS. The great pageant of interring , the remains of Na. pleat, in the,lnvalides took place on Tuesday, 15th December. The whole line of the procession from the batiks of the Seine to the Hotel' des lovalides was adorned : On both sideit with military trophies, and a more magnificent pageant, all the accounts agree in saying, has never been witnessed, even in Paris. From four in the morning, undeterred by the coldest day that has been experienced during the present winter in France, tlformands proceeded to the sweets( advantageous positionir ‘hich different localities pre sented for the viewingl of the procession. ''At nine o'clock the first gun was fired, '..on the banks of the Seine, at Courbevei, where a park of artillery was stationedl This became the signal for the commencement of the proceedings of , the day. From the temple; erected un the left bank of the river, the Abbe Coquereau and a numerous clergy, in fall canonicals; then issued and proceeded towards , the steamer La Dorade, which had been brought close up to a wooden esplenadeforminga com.nunicatlon be tween the shore and its deck. His Royal Highness the Prince tie Joinville met them as they approached between two lines of troops and, after the exchange. of salutations, turned towards the vessel lined by the sailors from La Belle Finale, a body of whom pro ceeded to raise the cofln, and transported it to the temple, the priests going before chaunting, accurding to the usage of the Catholic church. The remains of the Emperor , were deposited there for - iwo hours, the religious rites which were there performed, having lasted thus long. Thelimmense concourse of people who were assembled ati this spot, viewed this portion of the proceedings in selemn silence, the roar of ar tillery alone sounding, ,through the atmosphere. - At an early hour, the immense amphitheatres erect ed on each side of the avenue leadingfrom the'quay to the principal entrance of the Hate! des Invalides, began to receive those Whom fortune had favored with tickets, and although the number of tickets delivered amounted to 30,000, there was ample accommoda• Lion for at least 10,000 more. tlSAnDxsra, At a little before one the head of the procession was seen c 'ming slowly forward, and the sight be came gradually more and more beautiful. Here it is necessary to give a short description of the ground leading from the quay to the principal entrance of the Invalides. It consiats in a long straight avenue, at the bottom of which, with its back to the water stood the colossal statue of the emperor; the avenue was lined with, the statues of the principal monarchs that France hds produced, and that immortality has already claimed as her own. These stood in the fol-. lowing order • It , certainly was a noble idea to make Napoleon pass through this long line of heroes and of kings, who seemed, as it were,to welcome the mighty dead— the equal of the highest in rank, the superior of the most celebrated in renown, to the illustrious asylum chosen for his mortal remains. At length the car was seen—the mighty car, drawn by 16 black horses, covered with gold housings—the car brilliant beyond compare, and yet neither deficient in taste nor void of mournful semblance. And here perhaps was the most beautiful sight of the day. The central road filled with troops, and the procession ad vancing between the collossal statues, just described, separated from one another by arms emitting a lurid light, while the back ground was filled on either idde by the multitude shut up in the immense amphithea tres provided for the occasion, and by numerous masts, from which tri-c.olered streamers were grace fully floating in the air, formed a eight replete with such beauty and interest, that g those who saw can surely ne'er forget.' As the car passed, each head Was übcovertd; and although the shouts of Vive,Napoleon ! Vive l*Em• pereur !* joined in the cries of • Vive le Roil . Vive Prince de Joinville! were few and far between, a certain degree of emotion prevailed, and many an eye was suffused with tears. Some sensation was excited by a body of noncom missioned officers on horseback, 87 in number bearing flags with the names of 04 87 departments of France, including Algeria. These 'flags were surmounted by a gold eagle with out-stretched wing, and gave to the passing scene the air of a Roman triumph. The foremost of this body was the officer beanng the flag; representing Corsica, the birth place of Napoleon. The car was immediately preceded by the Prince of Joinville, on horseback, in the uniform of captain of the navy, attended by his staff, and accompanied on each side by 200 of the tailors of the Belle Poole, the frigate eespatched by the French Government to St. Helena, to bring home the remains of the Em peror. abinet nee to I I sentn- It been settle ,uce the It was half-past two whin it salute of twenty-one guns announced that the faberal car had reached the gates of the Baialides ; the 'sailors of the Belle Ponta instantly commenced their , preparations to descend the body from the car. • A struggle was here made to obtain a glimpse of the cit Tin as it was borne by thirtg•six sailors into the Penn Royale of the lova tides, white the ArchbishoP of Paris, attended by all his clergy was waiting to *else it. Lis will ,om the The Church of the Inralides.,=The interior of the church was filled - at an early hour by the_ persona who came in carriages, and were allowed to-go in by the southern entrance. Those who went on foot, and entered by the gate-way of the, esplanade, found nearly all the seats occupied rehett they got in. At two o'clock the arrival of numerous generals with their aides.de•camp. and the bustle of , the or derly officers, announced.that the royal cortege from the Tuileries , was at hand, and a salute or 21 guns ushered in the arrival of the 'King. , The drums •in the nave beat a royal salute, and the archbishop pre, 'ceded by _the clergy. advanced toward the end of the nave, as if to receive his Majesty; . but them was some mistake in this pad of the ceremony, for the procession, berme it reached the peat door, was stop. ped, and had to return. . The King and the RoPSI family did not come up the nave;but went at_onetlito the dome. His Majes ty, wearing the uniform of the national guard. t42ok phs REM 4 3- : -. t , " ~.....4_ , ME OE . MI Macdonald, Monier, Masseno; Lannes, Kleber, Desaix, Marceau, Vauban, Conde, Henry IV., Francis 1., Duguesclin, Charles VII, Louis IX, Hugh Capet„ Charlemagne, Lobau, Joutdan, Ney, Kellerraann, Latour &Auvergne, Hotrite, Duguay Trouin, Turenne, Louie XIV., Bayard, Louis XII. Joan of Arc, Charles V. Philip Augusta, Charles Martel, I= - his seat on the Throne prepared for him, to the met of the altar. Near the king *ere the princess and his majesty's aidesqle-camp. . .onike left of the altar wu the archbishop of Paris, with the biihdps assist- • ing—the Cure dee Itivalides, Ind the clergy. In an • enclaseirsesUnear the king were the queen, the prin. mew, end the hidies•in attendance. Under the ,dome, around the' chatafalque, Auk ministers said marshals were stationed, the left ken& of the transept were the members of the Chamber. of :the' Deputies; add on the.right sere the peers and mem hers of the.Conncil of Suite. In taco enelosed seats; were tne judges andinficera of the Courts of Ces sation and Accounts. Nest to them ,on the -richt. were the member° of the Court Royale, the Council General of the Seine. tad blimicipal Council of Paris, having:at their : head ttieirefect of the Seine and the pretest of police, the staff officers of ;the national guard, and the artily, and'the Cauncil'of the Admi rality. On the left were the' embersof the Uni whiny, the lathed° end other learned bodies, end the tribunals of First Instance end Commerce, the staff of the Hotel des Intralides,.prefects endmay ors of departments, &c. -• • • . A little before thtee; two guns, in quick succesakin„, and then 19 others, announced the arrival of the im perial coffin at the entrance of the Hotel. '/ he arch bishop immediately went, with his clergy to receivo it, and to sprinkle it with holy water. At three pre- ' cisely, the orchestra began a soleinn march and the clergy reentered the now clfunting, and moving slowly towards the dome. • At this moment the el. citenientL was . intense—.-the music died away; there was a dead silence throughout the church, and im mediately there was seen the imperial coffin covered with its velvet and embroidered pall, on which was the imperial crown veiled •in crape, borne on the shoulders of the sailors, and some nohcommissaoned officers of the army, surrounded with a closely pressed throng of sailors, with the•young prince behindrihe pall bearers at the angles, and a crowd of officers fol lowing. which moved up the church eta very rapid rate. The effect of this at its first coming intb the nave, when every one testified their respect byre pro found stillness, and all the troops presented arms, wait one of the most imposing parts of Abe cerenuiny. Before the coffin bad, however, reached the entrance of the dome the selccnn march was again renewed, and at length fillest out into a glorioliii strain of hi. um ph. Nothing could be finer. * • I'o►. 4 The Prince de Joinville then presented the body to the King, saying, Sire, .I present to yeti the body of the Emperor Napoleon?` The King replied, raising his voice, i• I receive it in the name of France." , General Athalin carried the sword of the Emperor upon a cushion, and gave it to Marshal Sotilt, rho presented it to The king. His Majesty then addressed General Bertrand, and said to the General, I charge you to place. this pia rious sword of the Emperor upon his coffiti." . This the general did. The musical part of the ceremony was as efficient as the united talents of the great performers who took part in it could make it be. The solemn march play. ed by the orchestra alone, on the return of the clergy, and the entrance of the body, bras magnificent. • After this, the first voice beard was that of qrisi by herself—and it filled with its compass the echo.* of the immense edifice. Lablache's deep notes" were heard to peculiar advantage. ' The service lasted altogether about an hour. It is calculated that there were 7000 . persons in the into- rior of the church on this occasion. The number of national guards of ?iris and the banlieue naer emu,. is estimated at about 60,000 ; the divisions of infant• ry and cavalry, the troops of engineers and iirtillerY, the non-commissioned officers, veterans, gendarmerie, municipal guard, sapeurs-pompiers, &t.,. Instated an effictive force of at least 20,000 men. From a late Foreign Journal. TUE SKELETON HUSBAND. The Baron of Langen Katzbak was,in every as specs, a rather remarkable specimen 'of humanity, for he was long in every sense of the word. Ile had, like all other German Barons, a long genealogy; he wore a long pig tail; his boots were of greitt length; he told long (immensely !Ong) stories; ho was fond of drawing the long bow; measured (row head to foot he was at least seven feet tighl; ha smoked a long pipe for a long time together, aldhie whirrs were as long as a man-o'-war ' s steameil; he had long arms, long legs, a long nose, a long purse, and (though sometimes given to day dreaming) a long head. In short, whichever way you viewed him, he was long ; and certes, it 'will be very, long ere we see his like again. The Baron of Langen Katzbak had a daughter a fair maiden of eighteen, beautiful es an eastern • sprink as it lights up the valley of Roc.habad ; and I venture to be thus poetical, because' she was in ve ry sooth, one of those sunny creatures whose smile teaches the heart to find out whole mines ot, She had long flaxen ringlets ; dark blue eyes; a fair. yet warm complexion; lips like dewy 'rosebuds (thornless ones!) a tournure absolutely perfect; and a grace that made you marvel exceedingly, how she could possibly be the daughter of so elongated sire. So it, was, however; and Ido not, in this • place feel bound to withhold the fact, that she had —what, I hope, few young: ladies are unprovided with—a lover. The gentleman who had been so fortunateas to have earned this appellative was of excellent family, but ungifted with an overabsuidence of the precious metals. To make up for this defi. ciency, he was brave, of manly depordnent, ardint, accomplished, and a tried adorer of the lovely Alice of Langen Katehak ; his own name and style being, Count Ernest Von Slywinkcl. The Baron had, for a long time, tolerated the via- , its of the Count from a settled conviction, thai u his pedigree (to say nothing of his poverty) showed- only thirty-two Counts against forty-six Barons, he could not have the audacity to aspire to his &ugh ter's hand. Ile therefore made him free of his cas tle, and did not disguise,the pleasure he took in tws society ; fur 'Ernest was one of the merriest compan. ion, in the world; told capital stories, was never at a loss for bon mot; loved practictil - joket, could dance all night; hunt, smoke, fight, and drink Rha nish (if he most) with any man. As Alice was rich she had of course many admir ers; and it was shrewdly suspected, that the hump backed Prince Shortstuck was,the elect of the b'aron's will. The Prince ' , stood four feet odd in his boats, and bad a. face like an ogre; but then; his riches were scarcely calculable, and they were sufficient of course.,to cover a multitude 'of deformities. Now as the Prince had found the young lady (much to his astonishment) rather refractory, he, one fine moms ing in June, when the sun • • is 4-.—made the black forest green," •• • "", walked 'at once into 'the baron's apartment,' and throwing his dumpy body and his long golden spurs upon tho sofa, thus addressed the longitudinaUylig. nified personage: , • . Baron of Langen ICMsbak! for the hu4 sic months have I patiently condescended to woo your daughter, and have, during that time, visited her no less than once a fortnight. Now I had really Imag ined 4tat the forty-ninth Prince Von fhortatuck woubthave been—nay,-mutt have been—s Cesar , . in the camp of Love. No such thing; your - dattgh• ter Alice ventures to make herself scarce whenever I dare to approach her; and even ycht, tenon, ofiiite smoked more and talked, less in my presence than was your winit.Prey E bovtis 44 Why to be candid With youi' repriediliebatint,. u I have bad a dream." 2 . 2- •-• • Whet has:thit iiiwittk %it" orb the reinee; ' '