,7 irftfe. ; . I Eftl CAN . H. B. MASSER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OFFICE, MARKET STREET, OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. 51 iTnmlta ilctospaprr-DtbotcH to JJolWcs, aucrature, Woralftg, iTortfflrt mt& Bomrstfc iletos, Stftmce an the arts, Surtculturr, iWarftrts, glmusrmtnts, fcf. NEW SER1KS VOL. 1, NO. 01. 8UXBURY, NORTHUMBERLAND COUNTY, PA., SATURDAY, MARCH 1 7, 1840. 0L13 SERIES VOL. O, NO. 3$. &S;S TERMS OF THE AMERICA JB. . THR AMERICAN is publihw1 wm Snfnnlny at TWO DOL.I.AKB per imuin lo be paid hnlf yearly in advauce. No tinner rliamiitinned until all arrrfVriffc are paid. All communication or letter, on liusinem relating to the office, to imuro attention, mint ba 1HJST FA1D. . TO CLUBS. Three eopiea to one address, 50ft fceven Do io 10 00 Fiitcen 1' lo 80 00 F ive dollars in advance will pay for three yaar'i subscrip tion to the American. One Square of 16 line, 3 time, livery sutswqneiil insertion, One Square, 3 month, Six month, 4 One year, Busbies Card of Five line., pet annum, Merchant and other, advertising by the year, with the privilege of iiiierting dif ferent advertiaetneuta weekly. Uf Larger Advcrtiemem, a per agreement. ffl on 9.00 378 (KIO 300 10 00 H. B. 2A3SEF.S ATTORNEY AT LAW, cttnbtjiiY". rA. R,ilne.B .Mended to in thctJmmtios of Not littir-1 erlanJ, Union. Incoming nnd Uoiumbia, Huer to i P. & A. KoTotMiT, Low Kit AJJasuus, Pomkhs & Nnonaaiss, KeISOLRS, Mct'ittusii it ( SriHun, 'Jooii &. On., yi'ltilml. THE CI1EVP BOOK STOKK. 32 A1TXELS & SMITH'S Ckkat New fc StcoND iianii Book Siouk, tfurlh Weti cornet of Fourth and Arch Street i'lillnritltihin. I aw Books. Theological and Classiest Book, MitnlCAL BOOKS. MOCRAPHICAL HISrOMCAL BOOKS, SCHOOL hUUKS. SctKSTIFIC AND MATIrMtAllCAL fkKKS. Juvenile Books, in great variety. Hymn Book and Prayei Book, Bible, all site anil prices. w i Blank Bookf, Writing Paper, and Stationary, Vio1h ' and Kilnll. re- Ora price are rmx-h lower than the kemm-ar price, r- Libraries and animll pnrccl of b-mk piirctnuwU. If Hook, imported to orner iroin uniumi. rnilaneipuiH, n i lM y ?OPTE?. & E1TGLISH, GIlOl LKS roMVlKSION MERCHANTS and Dealer in Seeds, 3. Arch St PHILADELPHIA. Constantly on hand a general assortment of GROCERIES T E A S, WINES. SEEDS, LIUUOHS, &c. To which they respectfully invite the attent.on of the public. All kinds of country produce taken in exchange for Groceries or sold on Commission. Philad. April 1. 18-18 BASKET " BIANUFACTOIUT, No 15 SouA Second street Enut tide, down stairs, PHILADELPHIA. HENRY COULTER, tt f.sp; I F.SPEOTFCLLY informs bin friends and pub'ic, that he constantly nee.- u.. t i . i.rdtt ftc.nrtment ol fill nrt'li. i""" Coaches, Chairs, Crad es, market and ttave! ling baskets, and every vaiiety ol basket worK manufactured. Country Merchants and others who wish to purchase such articles, good and cheap, would tlo well to call on him. as tbey are all manufac tured by him inthe best manner. Philadelphia. June 3, 1848. ly G4H1 & SE4I. K SO It AT IXC. VM. G. MASON'. 46 Chcsnut .3 inort ; ahoifind it-, Philadelphia Engraver ol BUSINESS 4r V ISIT1NC CARDS, Watch papers, Labels, Poor plates, Seals and fftampl (or Odd Fellows, Sons of Temperance, &c &c Always on hand a general assortment of Fine) Fancy Goods, Gold pens of every quality. Do Collars in great variety. Engravers tools and materials. . Aeency for tha Manufacturer of Glaziers Dia- Orders per mail (post paid) will be punctually attended to. Philadelphia, April 1, 1R4S y TJatTESTsTmBLCLfSS FIIIST PREMIUM PIANO FOR TBS. MHE SUBSCRIUF.R has been appointeri agent I for the ealof COXKAI) MEVKR'S CELE BRATED PREMIUM ROSE WOOD PIANOS, at this place. These Pianos have a plain, mas sive and beautiful exterior finish, and, lor depth of tone, and elegance of workmanship, are not surpassed by any in the United Slates These instruments are highly approved of by the mot eminent Professors and Composers of Music in this and other cities. For qualities of tone, touch and keeping in tone upon Concert pitch, they cannot be surpas sed by either American or Emopean Pianos. SulHce it toay that Madame Castellan, W. Wallace. Yieux Temps, and his sister, the rele brated Pianist, and many others ol the most dis tinquished performers, have given these instru ments preference over all others. They have also received the first notice of the threa last Exhibitions, and the last Silver Medal by tb Franklin Institute in 1843, was awarded to them, which, with other premiums from the same source, may be seen at the Ware-room No. 59 south Fourth st. (Another Silver Medal was awarded to C. Meyer, by the Frahklin Institute, Oct. 1843 for the best Piano in the exhibition. Again at the exhibition of the Franklin Insti tute. Oct 1846, the first premium and medal was awarded to 3. Meyer for his Pianos, although it had been awarded at the exhibition of the year before, 00 the ground that be had madestill great er improvements in bis Instruments within the past 13 months. Again at Ihe last exhibition of !he Franklin Institute, 1847, another Premium was awarded to C- Meyer, lor the best Piano in the exhibition At Boston, at their last exhibition. Sept. 1847. C Meyer received the fli t silver Medal and nloma for the best square Piano in the exhibition These Pianos will be sold at ihe manufactu rer's lowest Philadelphia prices, if not something lower Persons are requested to call and exam ine for themselves, at the ut .criber. B' MASSER. 6unbury, April 8, 1848 THE CHEAP Brush, Comb nnd Variety STOKE. BOCKIUS AND BROTHER, BHLaH MAMFACTIRERS. AND DEALERS IN COMBS & VARIETIES Ac- 98 North Third, beluw Knee W. and North Eatt canuer of Third and Market ttrett, raZX.ADBZ.PHZA. TTTHERE they offer for sa'e a general assort VV ment of all kinds of Biushrs, Combs and varieties which they are determined to sell Lower than ran be purchased e sewbere. CooDtry Merchants and others Purchasing in lb above line will find it to their advantage to rail before purchasing elsewhere aa tha quality end prices will be fully guaranteed against all .ynin petition. rDlMelpkia, lune 3, I? l-y. SELECT POETRY. THE BATTLK OF BCEXA VISTA. Niglit-sliadows fell cold at the closing day Where the morrow could ace valor'a Contest with numbers; The liivounkcd armies in hostile array, ' Sank to rest, while tlia sentries kept watch o'er their shim hers. 'Jfeath the stars few to fight the proud foe in his might, While, loved hearts nfur, quailed with fear at the aight But the soldicT reposed, with the dreams of the . hrave That the Stars and the Stripes should trium phnntly wave. The drum and the bugle aroused them at morn And they sprang to their arms for the contest of glory i Their chieftain that fing, long defeatlcss, had borne, With a fame that shall ne'er bo forgotten in story. Like the waves of the main swept their horses o'er the plain, While red grew each hill and ravine with the slain ; But they saw through the battle cloud's dark ness, the bravo, That star-flag, though torn, still triumphantly wave. O'er wearied they sank on their weapons to rest When tho night-cloud again on their valor de scended, 'Mid comrades the noUcst, the bravest and best Who slept their Inst sleep where their courage con tended. But when broke the day, O! where were they The proud legions of night ? in their fear fled away ! Then gladly they saw that star-flag o'er the brave In the sheen of the morning triumphantly wave. All hail to the Hero who valiantly led First and foremost the rank of his country' do fonder ! For now we have rallied, and made him our head. First in icace to proclaim him who never sur renders. The laurel wreath fair from his brow none can tear, But still greener shall bloom in the President's chair, And the nation, rewarding the honest and brave, J Shall behold its stnr-haiiner triumphantly wave. historical. THE LAST Sl .M)AV OF f ii.UILES THE II. Macaulay, in his work just published, gives this vivid sketch of thescene at White hall, on Hie last Sunday on earth of the Merry Monarch : "His palace had seldom presented a gay er or a more scandalous appearance than on the evening of Sunday, the 1st of Feb ruary, KiSi). Souk; rave persons who had gone thither, after the fashion of that ap-e, to pav their dutv to their sovereign, and who had expected that on such a day, his court would wear a decent aspect, were struck with astonishment and horror. The great gallery at Whitehall, an admirable relic of the Tudors, was crowded with re vellers and gamblers. The King sat there chatting and toying with three women, whose charms were the boast and whose vices were the disgrace, of three nations. Barbara Palmer, Duchess of Cleveland, was there, no longer voting, but still retaining some traces of that superb and voluptuous loveliness which twenty years belore over came the hearts of all men. There too was the Duchess of Portsmouth, whose soft ! and infantine features were lighted up with the vivacity of France. Hortensia Mancini, Duchess of Mazarin, and niece to the great Cardinal, completed the group. She had been early removed from iier native Italy to the court where her uncle was supreme. His power and her own attractions had drawn a crowd of illustrious suitors around her. Charles himself, during his exile had sought her hand in vain. Ao pi; ot na ture or of fortune seemed to be wanting to her. Her face was beautiful with the rich beauty of the south, her understanding quick, her manners graceful, her rank ex alted, her possessions immense ; but her un governable passions had turned all these blessing into curses. She had found the misery of an ill-assorted marriage intolerable, -had fled from her husband, had abandoned -her vast wealth, and after having astonished Rome and Pied mont by her adventures, had fixpd her abode in England. Her house was the favorite resort of men of wit and pleasure, who, for the sake of her smiles and her table, endu red her very frequent fits of insolence and ill-humor. Rochester and Godolphin some times forgot the cares of stale in her com pany. Barillou and Saint Evermond found in her drawing rojin consolation for their long banishment from Paris. The learning ofVossius, the wit of Waller, were daily employed to flatter and amuse her. But her diseased mind required stronger stimu lants, and sought them in gallantry, in basset and in usquebaugh. While Charles flirted with his three Sultanas, Hortensia'g French page, a handsome boy, whose vo cal performances were the delight of White, hall, and were rewarded by numerous pre sents of rich clothes, ponies, and guineas, warbled some amorous verses. A party of twenty courtiers were seated at cardsaround a large table, on which fold was heaped in mountains. Even then the King had com- Flained that he did not feel quite well. le had no appetite lor his supper; his rest that night was broken j but on the follow ing morn he rose, as usual, early." The introduction of the Roman Catholic priest by the Duke of York, and the last moments of the king, are thus described : "The Duke's orders were obeyed ; and even the physicians withdrew. The back door was then opened, and Father Huddle ston entered. A cloak had been thrown over his sacred vestments, and his shaven crown was concealed by a flowing wig. 'sir,' said the Duke, "this good man once saved your life; he is now come to save your soul." Charles faintly answered, He is welcome.' Huddleston went through his part better than had been expected. ile knelt by the bed, listened to the conver sation, pronounced the absolution, and ad- rv.r.isierea extreme unction. He asked if the King wished to receive the Lord's Sup per. 'Surely ,'satd Charles, 'if I am not un worthy.' The host was brought in. Charles feebly strove to rise and kneel be fore it. The priest bade him lie still, and assured him that Ood would not require the humiliation of the body. The King found so much difficulty in swallowing the bread that it was necessary to open the door and to procure a glass of water. The rile end ed, the monk held up a crucifix before the penitent, charged him to fix his last thoughts upon the sufferings of the Redeem er, and withdrew. The -whole ceremony had occupied about three quarters of an hour; and during the time, the courtiers who filled the outer room had communica ted their suspicions to each other by whis pers and significant glances. The door was it length thrown open, and the crowd again filled the chamber of death. It was now late in the evening. The King seemed much relieved by what had passed. His natural children were brought to his bedside, the dukes of Grafton, South ampton and Northumberland, sons of the Duchess of Cleveland, the Duke of St. Al bans, son of Eleanor Gwynn, and the Duke of Richmond, son of the Duchess of Ports mouth. Charles blessed th'-m all, but spoke with peculiar tenderness to Richmond. One face which should have been there was wanting. The oldest and best beloved child was an exile and a wanderer. His name was not once mentioned by his father. During the night Charles earnestly re commended the Duchess of Portsmouth and her boy to the care of James : 'and do not,' he good-naturedly added, 'let poor Nelly starve.' The Queen sent excuses for her absence by Halifax. She said that she was too much disordered to resume her post by the coach, and implored pardon for any of- lence which she might unwittingly have given, 'she ask lor pardon, poor woman !' cried Charles; 'I ask hers with all my heart.' The morning light began to peer through the windows of Whitehall ; and Charles desired the attendants to pull aside the cur tains, that he might have one more look at the day. He remarked that it was time to wind up the clock which stood at his bed. These little circumstances were long re membered, because they proved beyond dis pute that, when he declared himself a Ro man Catholic, he was in full possession of his faculties. ' He apologised to those who had stood around him all night, for the trouble which he had caused. He had been, he said, a most unconscionable time dying; but he hoped that they would excuse it. This was the last glimpse of that exquisite ur banity, so often found potent to charm away the resentment of a justly incensed nation. Soon after dawn the speech of the dying man failed. Before fen his senses were gone. Great numbers had repaired to the churches at the hour of morning ser vice. When the prayer for the king was read, loud groans and sobs showed how deeply the people felt for him. At noon on Friday, the fith of February, he passed away without a struggle." Pollock, in bis description of tho good man, says : "Ho, by tho way bide laid him down to rest, His head upon a stone, and sweetly sleeps." But another poet bays : 'I would walk A weury journey to the farthest verge Of the big world, to ki-w the good man's hand, Who in Ihe Matte of wisdom and of art, Preserves a lowly mind, and to his God, Feeling the sense of his own littleness, Is a child in meek simplicity." Shelley best apostrophises tho good ninn, in his. lines in Queen Mub, as '-Great in his humility, As kings arc 111 t It) in their grandeur." Small Credits vs. Cash. One of our ex change lwpers gives its readers the following sound advice pratis. If people generally would profit by it, many vexatious and annoy ances might be avoided. "There is no econ omy in small credits, and large ones are fre. queiitly disadvantageous. Pay as you go, wud a good rule in ihe days of the sage and philosopher, Franklin, and time and experi ence have made it more apparent in our own day. Credit.", when ihey are used in tho shape of capital, are sometimes useful, but, as a general thing, in small, every day opera tions, it is wiser to wait the means to pay what you may feel a desire to buy, than to buy and wait for tho money afterwards to pay with. Ten to oee the inconvenience of waiting for the desired article will not be found half so great as the trouble you cause your creditor in afterwards waiting for the mouey. "Pay down" is our motto, aud may be that of every man in health, if he but be gin right." Aunt Betty tells a story of one of her near neighbors, when she lived in the coun try, who was "meaner than parsley." "Why," she says, "whenever he happen ed to get hold of hall dollar, he would give it such a squeeze, that the poor eagle would raally squeal." 1 The pay of an Austrian soldier is four cents a day. GEN. SHIELDS AND IlOft. 9. HREESE. Tho following singular letter from Gen. Shields to the Hon. Sidney Breese, w hom the former succeeds as U.S. Senator, is published m the newspapers. It is a curious produce tion, and shows the amiable state . of feeling that subsists between those two gentlemen Washington, Feb. 22, 1849. Hon. Sidnkt Breese Sir: On my return to this country from Mexico broken in con stitution feeble in health, and still suffering under the effect of wounds, you were the Oliiy man in tho city of Washington who re ceived mo with coldness and uukiudness. When the City honored me with a public dinner, which was generously intended not only as a compliment to me but to my State, you wore Ihe only man who declined to at tend that dinner. You went further; you propigated a report here in Washington, and circulated it afterwards in Illinois, that I was ineligible to the offico of Senator, and this too after I had poured out my blood like wa ter on the battle-fields of my country. You published an article in the St. Louis Republi can, charging me wilh incligihUity doing that which I thought no man in these U. States would have been mean euorgh to do in my cuse even if it had been true; You, however did this knowing it to bo untrue. On Ihissnbject I have simply to sav, that had I been defeated by you on that ground? J had ttcorn in my licart that toit never thonld have profiled your eitccest, and depend upon it, 1 would have kept that vow rigardlffs of consequences. Jt hat, however, is now passed and the vow is cancelled by your defeat. Why 1 address you now is simply this: In 1840 you crave me something in the shape of a final Certificate of Naturalization in Eliinghatn Court. You knew at the time that I was na turalized by law, and by naturalization of my father while I was a minor. I told you the circumstances, and, ns 1 then talked of going to Canada in caso of wtr, you offered to give me a certificate which would simpli fy tho proof in case of difficulty. Now I wish you lo give me a letter acknowledging these facts. I write you a private letter for tho purpose. I should have sent a friend at oneo an 1 imperatively demanded such a let ter, but I felt that in disgracing you I should disgrace the Suite that had made you and my self Senators, and I al wished to give you an oppoi tmiity to make this acknowledgment quietly. If, however, you persist in your courso of iiijrstice toward me ,id mfuso this request, I here give you fair warning. Let the consequences fall on your own head. I shall hold inyselfacqnitted, both before God and man, for the course I fdiull feel bound to pursue toward you. Your obedient servant. (Copy) Jas. Shields. Mr. Breese, in his letter to tho National Intelligencer, says : Not tho least so of the many remarkable 1 passage of this letter of General Shields is the following : ''On this subject I have simply to say that, had 1 been defeated by you on that ground, (the ground of ineligibility,) I had sworn in my hear! that ynu never should have profitted by your success ; and) depend upon it, I would have kept my row regardless of consequences," Certainly it is fortunate for the honor of the country that this rash "vow" has been "cancelled" by my defeat ! Gen eral Shields submits his pretensions to a seat in the Senate to a Democratic caucus of tho Illinois Legislature, nnd agrees expressly, or by the clearest implication, that ho will abide their decision ; and yet it appears that at this very moment '-ho had sworn in his heart" to defeat tho will of the party if it had pro nounced in favor of his most prominent com petitor; and, in order to accomplish his pur pose, he determines to perpetrate an assas sination ; for such is the .obvious import of this language. Such a design and such a deed are revolting to tho American mind, and foreign to tho American character. They are worthy only of the most infamous ages of Italian crime. If our political contests, are to bo mingled with, or followed by, personal violence, how long will our elective system endure? Without . furthur comment, I sub mit this extraordinary passago to the consid eration of candid men. Christians and pa triots, who love aud lespect the laws and in stitutions of our country, and desire to guaid and defend them against all violation. Gen. Shields, says : "In 1840 1 gave him something in the shape of a final certificate of naturalization." The naturalization laws do not recognise "something" or anything "in tho shape of a final certificate" to "simplify proofs in caso of difficulty," or fur any oiher purpose. How, then, could I, a circuit judge have given him any such paper 1 Tho state ment has no fact, legal provision, or proba bility to support it. If it be true that his father was in the country and naturalized, is it possible that Gen. Shields, should know the fact, and not know the State and county where it occur red ? When authentio copies of those natu ralization papers, if they exist, could be so easily procured, is it not strange he should attempt to extort from me by menace, a state ment which, if obtained, could have no legal bearing upon the subject?" What the "consequences" are against which Gon. Shields givee me "fair warning" if I persist in what no sane man will call "in justice," I am equally ignorant of and indif ferent to. One thing is certain, be they what they may, I have not given, nor shall I give hire, any "statement" of the rharaoter re quired, either "quietly," or upon "imperative demand." " In conclusion, 1 will state that I hare nei ther provoked nor desired the necessity that has impelled mo to make this communica tion. I respectfully submit it under the full conviction that it is called for by the circum stances. SIDNEY BREESE. In reply to tho letter of Mr. Brteese, Gon. Shields published the following on the 28th : Mr. Breese has been for may months en framed industriously in disseminating the most injurious reports concerning mo, tho only os tensible motive being that my friends had brought me forward as his competitor, for election to the Senate of the United States. I had been ever since my visit to this city li'st summer, cognizant of his efforts, unceas ing, unremitting, aud reckless, to blast my character Htid rob me of the only wealth to to which I can lay claim a reputation thank God,- without a blot. Immediately on my arrival here I wrote him the letter he has published, accusing him of his baseness. That letter written under tho influence of no ordi nary emotions, was couched in language which under other circumstances I would not have used ; nnd, upon reflection, and by tho advice of my friends, I authorized two honorable Senators formally to withdraw it. Mr. Breeso declined to yield it up, and tho use he has made of it shows by what motive he was actuated. .That portion of my letter which he has dis torted into a threat of assassination, I shall briefly notice. The means ho used to pre vent my election were of such a nature that tho competition between us became a per sonal struggle, and, as his triumph would have been aji endorsement of his calumnies, my character and position were involved in the issue. Tho interpretation he has put upon this threat that is, that I had avowed to as sassinate him -is so absurd that it would be equally preposterous on my part seriously to repudiate such a meaning. That any sane man can believo I wouid havo assassinated Mr. Breese, I have no apprehension. JAMES SHIELDS. AN ARTFUL DODGER FOR CALIFORNIA. It has been rumored that, among tho gen tlemen who have gone to California aro two or three, who woro owing small sums to their tailors aud others. Some color is given lo the report by an incident, which took place on tho sailing of the Duxbury last week. One of the passengers on hurrying to the wharf to get on board saw the familiar face of a sheriff's officer, who was evidently on the look out for him. Here was a check mate indeed. What was to bo done? In twenty minutes tho ship would be under way. How should the unhappy passenger eseapotho lynx eyed vigilance of the agent of the law ? Per plexed in the extreme he rushed into a friends store and frankly told him his dilemma. 'What shall I do?" ho asked; "the passen gers are all on board, and if I miss the chance of going to California, 1 am ruined. Can't you do something for me ? Hark ! they will bo off in ten minutes !" The friend thus appealed to looked around his store, then pulled down a large sugar-box from a neighboring pile, pointed to it, and said laconically, 'Get in ! Quick ! No mat ter if it is stickey. Get in, I say ; or go and bo arrested !" Thus imperatively urged, the passenger made himself small as possible, and ensconced himself in the box. The co ver was nailed on with business-like rapidity by his friend who pushed down the head and arms of the struggling inmate with very lit tle ceremony for time was somewhat pre cious. Having nailed him snugly down, he seized his marking pot, wrote the words "Medicine this side up with care," upon the box, called a hand cartman, tipped him a wink, and gave him half a dollar, to hurry iho precious consignment on board tho Dux- bury. Tho handcart arrived just as the last rope that bound the ship to terra flippa was to be cast off. The Sheriff's officer who was pacing tho wharf in Iho futile attempt to keep warm glanced carelessly at tho box and continued his strides. An unexpected obstacle now oc curred. The man refused to receive tho box, not believing that it belonged on board. But after a variety of wink and blinks from the haudcavtman he began to understand tho "dodge," aud tha "medicine box" was care fully carried on board, "this side up." Of the scene that transpired on its being opened wo as yet have no account ; but the Sheriff's officer continued to shiver and kick his heels on the wharf till Ihe Duxbury was out of sight, and then he retired disconsolate home little suspecting what a trick had been play ed upon him. Boston Transcript. A poetical "lovyer" not long since, sent tho following to his lady love : TO SALLY ANN. Soft is the down on the butterfly's wing, Hotl is the whispers that lovers apeak t Soft is the light that moonbeams fling But softer by ikr is my lady-love's cheek. SALLY S REPLY. Soft am tatere all smashed up, And mush am toft as soft can be ll tit softer am that dirty pup Vot writ thut verse to me ! Go it, Sarah ! never mind join bonnet! Amcdotb. One day a loving husband took his wife's, best pitcher to draw aomo ci der. As he was going down the steps he lipped, aud in order to save the crockery, in jured himself considerably. While he was rubbing his shin very vigorously, the wife very thoughtless of hi hurt, cried out, "Oh, mercy J haveyou broke thepitchoil" "No," ays he, in great wrath, "but darned if I don't" and ging-a-ling went the pitcher against the wall ! SKETCH OF JOHN DC NY AN. BY T. BABISGTOM MACAUtAT. Tothe names of Baxter and Howe roust be added the name of a man far below them in station and in acquired knowledge, but in virtue their equal and in genius their superior, John Bunyan. Bunyan had been bred a tin ker, and had seived a a private soldier in the Parliamentary army. Early in his life he had been fearfully tortured by remorse for his youthfsl sins, the worst of which, however, seem to. have been such as the world thinks venial. His keen sensibility and his power ful imagination made his internal conflicts singularly teriible. He fancied that he wa under sentence of reprobation, that he had committed blasphemy against the Holy Ghost that ho had sold Christ, that ho was actually possessed by a demon. Sometimo fiends whispered impioos suggestion in his ear. Ho saw visions of distant mountain top, on which ho was separated by a wasto of sncw. Ho felt tho duvil behind him palling hi3 clothes. He thought that the brand of Cain had beu set upon him. Ho feared tlxil ho was about te burst asunder like Judus. His mental a- gony disordered his health- One day he shook like a man in the palsy. On another day he felt a fire within his breast. It is dif ficult to understand how he survived suffer ings so long continued. At length the clouds broke. From tho depths of despair, the peni tent passed to a state of screno felicity. An irresistible impulse now urged him to impart to others iho blessings of which ho was him self possessed. He joined the Baptists, and becama a preacher and writer. His educa tion had been that of n mechanic Ho knew no language but the English, as it was spaken by tho common people. He had studied no great model of composition, with tho excep tion, an important exception undoubtedly, of our noblo translation of tho Biblo. His spel ling was bad. He frequently transgressed the rules of grammar. Yet the native force of genius, and his experimental knowledge of all the religious passions, from despair to eestaey, amply supplied in him the want of earning. His rude oratory roused and mel ted hearers who listened without interest to labored discourses of great logicians and He braists. ia works were widely circulated among the humbler classes. Ono of them, the Pilgrim's Progress, was in his own life time, translated into several foreign language It was however, scarcely known to the learn ed and and polite, and had been during near a century, the delight of pious cottagers and artisans, before it was publicly commended by any man of high literary eminence. At length critics condescended to enquire where the secret of so wide and so durable a popu larity lay. They were compelled to own that tho ignorant multitude had judged more correctly than the learned, aud that the de spised little book was really a master piece- Bunyan is indeed as decidedly the first of al legorists, as Demosthenes is the first of ora tors, or Shakspcaro the first of dramatists. Other allegorists havo shown equal ingenuity but no other allegorists has ever been able to touch the heart, and to make abstractions objects of terror, of pity and of love. It may be doubted whether any English Dissenter had suffered more severely under the penal laws than John Bunyan. Of the twenty-seven years which had elapsed since the Restoration, ho had passed twelve in con finement. He still persisted in preaching ; but, that he might preach, he was under tho necessity of disguising himself like a carter. tie was otten introduced into tho meetings through back doors, with a smock frock on bit. back and a whip in his hand. If he thought only of his own ease and safety, he would have hailed the indulgence with delight. Ho was now, at length, free to pray and e.xhort in open day. His congregation rapidly in creased ; thousands hung upon his word, aud at Bedford where he orginally resided, money was plentifully contributed to build a meet ing house for him His influence among the common people was such that the govern ment would willingly have bestowed on him some municipal office ; but his vigorous un derstanding and his stout English heart were proof against all delusion aud all temptation. He felt assured that the proffered toleration was merely a bait intended to lure the Puri tan party to destruction J nor would ho, by accepting a place for w hich ho was not le gally qualified, recognize the validity of the dispensing power. One of the last acts of his virtuous life was to decline an interview to which he wa invited by an agent of the government. A remarkable decrease has occurred in the number of births in Ireland. In one comi ty the falling off in 1848 was ninety per cent. An article in the London Daily Neve attri butes it to the utter physical proatiation of the people. A Bell as is a Bell. A bell weighing eight thousand pounds, was cast at the foun dry of H. N. Hooper & Co., in Boston on Tuesday last. A Quakeress, preaching at Nantuckpt said : "Every tub stands upon its own bot tom." A sailor jumped up and said: "But, madam suppose it has no bottom ?" "Then it i no tub, returned she. quietly, and went on with the sermon. Four thousand orange trees on one plan tation, near Apalachicola. were killed by tha recent frosts. Dr. Geonre Esnv. fbrmerlv of Pennsvl. vania, died at Fort 'Madison, lows, on the Z"th nit. GEN. SAM HOISTON. The New York Sunday Atlas give the fol lowing interesting particulars of the history of this distinguished individual ; ''About tho year 1820-1, he was elected Governor of Tennessee. He held the offtoe a brief period only, when he resigned his responsibilities and honors ; and abjuring civilized life; mi grated to the region west of tho Mississippi, . and was adopted as a son by one of the Indian chieftains. Ho assumed the habits, and clad himself in tho attire of a roving son of the wildfrness. He remained in the forest a year or two, when he returned to the scene of ci vilized life, and commenced the practice) of tho law, in Natchez It was while he was in Natchez that he got up the famous scheme for the conquest of Texas. There was something of the romantic, of tho wild and wonderful in Geo'l Houston' abdication of tho Executive office of Tenne sco. It was an act that few men could or would have survived. It was the result of pasuioj and that passion wa love Ho had been married but a few months when hi abdication took place. His wife was a lady of great respectability, a native of the County of Rutherford! or Maury we forget which and was residing temporarily with her pa. rents, whilst Gov. Houston wa at Murfree' borough, the then seal of the government, at tending to his official duties. One day the lady ordored her carriage and proceeded to the seat of the local government. Arriv at the State House, she sent a message to executive department, informing her huebai that sho had arrived aud was waiting his at tention. Ho returned for answer that he was very much engaged in offiicial duties, that if sho would return to her hotel, he would ba w ith her as speedily as possible. The lady received the message, and direc ted her coachman to take her back again to the residence of her parents. 'If I be not of sufficient consequence,' she said, 'to induce Gov. Houston to neglect all other business to' attend to me, 1 am not worthy of being hi w ife. As husband and wife we never meet again.' All attempts to conciliate and win her back again, proved fruitless, and divorce was the consequence. Stung to the quick, and morti fied beyond all conception. Governor Hous ton left Tennessee and adopted the life of an Indian. (From tha Knickerbnckor BOYS Ba John G. Sane. "The noblest study of mankind is man" The most perplexing one, no doubt, is woman. I Tho subtlest study tlwt the mind can scan, Of all deep problems, heavenly or human ! But of all studies in the round of learning, From nature's marvels down to human toys, To minds well fitted for acute discerning, The very queerest one is that of boys ! If to ask questions that would puzzle Pluto, And all the schoolmen of the middle age, If to make precepts worthy of old Cato, Be deemed philosophy your boy's a sage I If the possession of a teeming fancy, (Although, forsooth, the youngster docWt know it,) Which iio can use in rarest necromancy, Be thought poetical your boy's a poet! If a strong will, aud most courageous bearing. If lo be cruel as the Roman Nero ; If all tliut's cliivalrous, and all that's daring, Can make a hero, then the boy's a hero! But changing soon with his increasing stature, The boy is lost in in manhood's riper age, And with him goes his former triple nature No longer poet, hero, now nor sage ! Highgatc, Vt., December 19, 184$. FACTS IN REGIRD TO SHOEMAKINU. We copied a few days since, a paragraph from a western paper, slating that in Ogna coke, HI., one man had made tight pain of boots in one day, and calling It a great day'j work. Since then wo have been called on by and intelligent journeyman shoemaker of this city, who states that so far from this be ing an uncommon nccurience, he can and docs make eight pairs of boots every day the year round, and is willing to forfeit $200 that ho will make 60 pairs in a working weeki Nor is this a single caso. There are very many equally expeditious, and the fact speaks well for our Philadelphia mechanics tho finest in the world. But what is more, thia gentleman "stole the trade," as it is termed, . never having served an apprenticeship ; and he has now woiked at the business but five . years. Ho served a regular apprenticeship at blacksmithiug, and being thrown out of em- -pioyment at a dull season, .thought he would try the shoe trado. How he succeeded, let this simple fact answer the first pair of (hoes he ever made, was for the same man he now works fur. Among expeditious workmen, a certain number of minutes are allowed for each part of the boot, via : 5 roluntes for rounding up the insole and drawing the upper over j 10 minutes for laying the welt, putting on the heel and nailing it j 10 minnles for trimming and coloring, and S minutes for heelballing making 47 minutes to each boot ' and iu this time it is finished in the most workmanlike manner. Each boot reqnirea about four feet of pegging, say six pegs to the inch, and six inches of nailing ; so that every eight pairs of boot require 64 feet of pegging, and 3 feet of nailing. There being- 313 working days in a year, every workman making eight pairs per day, would use 20,. 032 feet of pegs per year, or about 12 bushels " of pegs, and 2,504 feet of nails, say, about 160 lbs. 1 here is a fixed number of pecs to be used in each part of tha work 2S0 cn the outsols Fhtlwl. Deify yews.