e ' . . . . _ . . . , ... . .. ._ ... . .. _ • • N . . . . • —••• •11..„ , 4, . ...13/4.... . • t /a. . 4 • \ , t . . , I ....,... L i j i , 7 i I 1 V I L i.„, 1 11 1 A b,,._.,..,_4„,-L,k, l (4,.., 5,,..) ilic, i ~.,.._._ , ,/ tL. .._. „•.,,.... .._. . faiiin Paper---Proottb to Agriculture, fittraturt, science, Art, fortig pouttstic Gentrut juttilipta, pct. ESTABLISHED IN 1813. THE WAYNESBURG MESSENGER, PL'BLISBED BY S. W. JONES & JAMES S. JENNINGS, 'WAYNESBURG, GREENE 00., PA. ti'OFFICE NEARLY OPPOSITE THE PUBLIC SQUARE• _Ea IP 21 111 SLt 42 a SURSCRIPTION.-52.00 in advance ; $2.25 at,the ex piration of six months; $2.50 after the expirtion of he year. LDVERTISEIRENTS inserted at $1.26 per square for me insertions, and 25 cts. a square for each addition insertion; (ten lines or less counted a square.) fa liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. Jos PRINTING, of all kinds, executed in the best style., and on reasonable terms, at the "Messenger" Job Olsce. quesbag 'fulness Cubs. ALTTORNEYS. (Mb. IL. WYLY. J. A. J. BUCHANAN, D. R. P. WYLY, BUCHANAN & HUSS, Attor.y. & Counsellors at Laws JITA YNESB U.RG, PA. W ill practice in the Courts of Greene and adjoining counties. Collections and other legal hilliness wilt re ceive prompt attention. Office on the South side of Main street, in the Old Hank Building. Jan. 28, 1863.-13, M•. Premix. J O. RITCHIE. PURMAN & RITCHIE, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSRLLORS AT LAW, Waynesburg. Pa. -Ersti business in Greene, Washington, and Fay ette Counties, entrusted to them, will receive prompt attention. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. R. W. DOWNEY, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW Office in I edwith's Building, opposite the Court House, Waynesburg, Pa. R. A. iecoxxxia, 311CCONNIELL & MCIMMULIg, OTTORNETS AND COUNSRLLORS AT LAW Waynesburg, Pa. =cs m i a l , ti the "Wright Ili Lae," But Door. ace., will receive prompt attention. Waynesburg, April 23, 1862-Iy. DAVID CRAWFORD, ♦ttoney and Counsellor at I.W.a Office in Sayers' building, in/joining the Post Office. Sew 144861-Iy. A. IMAM. JOHN 'RELAX. BLACK & PHELAN, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW Office in tho Court House, Wayneaburg• Sept. 11. 1881-Iy. PRYSIOI.ANS B. M. BLACHLEY_ L __M. B. 1 1 311ralinallr a S IINOMON, 011ine--Blaalhaayin Bantling, Main St., ItZSPACTFULLY announces to the citizens ot Waynesburg and vicinity that he has returned from e hospital Collis of the Army and resumed the prac tice of medicine nt this place. Waynesburg, June 11, 1382.-11. DR. A. O. CROSS YirMatt very respectfully tender his services as a PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, to the people or synbstinrg and vicinity. He hopes by a due appre ciation nthuman life sad health, and stnct attention to business. to merit a share of public patronage. Waynesburg. January S, DR. A. I. PIGGY EREVECTFULLY offers his services to the citizens of Waynesburg and vicinity, as a Physician and pon. Office °pinnate the Republican office. lie hopes by a due sippreciation of the laws of human life aid beak*, se native medication, and strict attention to business, tio merit a liberal share of public patronage. April M. it..l - 1411VEY, Druggist and Apothecary, and dealer in Paints and Oita the oast eeDbrenne. Patent Medicine*, and Pure Liquors riiratoilkdasal parpasek. Sept. I •, thfit—ly. MMOILANTS WM. A. PORTER, Wholewd° and Retail Dealei in Foreiga.and le Dry Goode, Groceries, Notions, &c., Mare street, tient. LI, 1861-Iy. R. CLARK, Dealer in Dry Goads, Groceries, Hardware, queer ware and notions, in the Hamilton House, topples the Court House. Main street. dept. 11, 1801-Tly. MINOR & CO., Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, .._ series, Queenewnre, hardware and Notions, oppmc Me Green (Louse. Mails street. Sept. 11, BOOT AND SHOE DEALERS J. D. COSGRAY, Root and Shoe maker, Main street, nearly opposite the "Farmer's and Drover's Bank." Every style ol Boots and Slim constantly on hand or made to order. dept. 11, 1861-Iy. N. H. McCLELLAN Boot and shoe maker,Blanhley's Corner, Main street. Boots and Shoes of every variety always on hand or made to order on short notices Sept. 11, 1861—iy. r):(oja). 41114,-1:1 JOSEPH YATER, Dealer is Groceries and Confectioneries. Nodsat Medicines, Perfumeries, Liverpool Ware, Ace., Glue o all sixes, and Gilt Minildtag and Looking Glass Plates. ir.r Cash wild for 'psi eating Ipptes• .tdept. 11, 1861-Iy. JOHN MIJNNELL, Dealer in Girocaties and Confectionaries, and Variety Goods rdenerally..Wilmen's 1. , 1*w Budding. Maisestissit. dept. 11. 1861-17. BOORS, &a. LEWIS DAY, Dealer La illobsol and Mises*mous Books, Bt. Dry, Ina. Madafirsoes and Papers: One door elks, rumen Siam Min Street. Sept. 11, ►ON ly SIJLDINgeI AND 311LAINDINS SAMUEL•M'ALLISTER, 6 e4kee.llB66oaaa and Trunk Maker. old Bank nE Illikinaeniet. Maya. 11, 1861-4.. FIROPER & HAGER, , . maathetime analphosew„ sad Aso en& legit Oases. 401111011.41 iiil—ty. • • J. J. HUITNAN DRUGS glut ntry. A PLAIN TALE. As Amos the blacksmith was working one Young Joseph the idler was passing that The door of the shop stood invitingly neat And Joseph walked thither some new thi hear. The blacksmith worked briskly from morning till night, And, make what he would, it was sure to be right ; When his arm rose aloft with its powerful awing, The blow that came down made the huge anvil ring. The farmers all round who had horses to shoe, Asked first whether Amos the business could do ; He had jobs from the dawn till the set of the sun, For when Amos did work, it was sure to be done. Young Joseph stood watching the blows as they fell , Though Amos said nothing, he saw the boy well ; But busily shaped he and turned round his shoe, While hither and thither the shining sparks flew• At length said young Joseph, "it seems to me hard That a man from all pleasure shOuld thus be debarred, Should work all the day through, from morn ing till night, Hardly stopping to rest, losing every delight." Quoth Amos, not pausing to look up or down, "Better work for your bread than be kept by 4 11 the town ; faith the Good Book, whose precept you may not defeat, "If a man will not labur, then shall he not "Such labor, I'm sum," said the youth, in re ply, "In a fortnight would kill me, if once I should try !" "Not a bit of it, lad; you'd grow active and hale, Whereas you're now looking puny and pale "Depend on't, keeph, there's One who knows best How much we should toil, and how much we should rest ; His ordinance is given, and to it we must bow: 'Man shall eat of his bread by the sweat of his brow.' "Nor shall the decree be penal alone, Since the fall of our world hath such wicked _ edneas strown For ofttimes doth labor drive sins from our head, And toil proves no curse, but a blessing instead. "Thus, while I submit to the rule God Both give, I cheerfully work, and I happily live ; At night en my pillow I peacefully rest, And, by night or by day, sing, 'God knows what is best !" Young Joseph, the idler, walked thoughtful away, An idler no more to be called from that day, But to work with his hands, or to work with his head, Singing, "Toil is no curse, but a blessing in stead." Bisattantnu. WAYNESBURG, GREENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1863. At this season of the year, says the Philadelphia Ledger, whooping cough more or less makes its appear anci in parts of a large city like this, and many people are at very great efforts to keep their children out of its reach. If one half the - pains were taken to carry them successfully and wisely through it, that there are to prevent the infection of it reaching them, it would no doubt be found that in the great majority of cases the whooping cough is the means of conferring an actual constitutional benefit, so that the child will come out of it stronger and better in health, and with more fully develop. ed lungs than before it was attacked. Even as it is, the benefit to a family is on the average much greater than the danger. Not above one in twen ty are supposed naturally to die of this disease It may, however, be doubted if one even dies of the whoop ing cough, except by its producing some other secondary affection, not a necessary part of it, but to which there tas been some constitutional tendency, or which is the result of carelessness or accident. In most of these cases fatal disease either would have ensued without, or might have been averted. The disease itself seems to produce no necessary- ef fect upon the lungs at all traceable on dissection. Tho coughing may, and generally does produce more or less inflamma tion, and this in turn mucus, and all those things put together, may in weakly children, or where the symp toms are neglected, produce a great number of ultimate evil consequences. But the cough itself is strictly a spas modic cough arising from a convul sion of the nervous system, as laugh ing or crying, and it is not like most coughs, a convulsion caused by sonic inflammation producing irritating ef fects, though often causing it. It is a disease, therefore, throughout all its three stages, whose bark is worse than its bite, if properly watched.— Indeed it is only astonishing the amount of suffering a child will go through from its [aroxyms one min ute, and, except fatigue, be perfect ly free from pain and all inflammato ry symptoms the next. Many chil dren are even observed to have a better appetite and finer spirits and better general health, even nearly all the time that the whooping cough is upon them, than at any other period of their lives. Of course the strain of these parox ysms of itself, apart from all the ex pectoration, makes a heavy draft up on the constitution, and hence when the child is weakly or debilitated by other sickness, care should be taken to avoid exposure to it. Young in fants, not knowing how to expector ate, should be kept from the conta gion. It is also preferable not to have children take it in the fall, as it is apt to affect them all winter. But beyond that there is no reason for '-ing pains to avoid it, where chil in are of proper age and in good slth. On the contrary, it is to be owed to pass through the family, as a disease so much as some tg sent probably to produce a her development of health than Id be attained without it. W.heth it is that it takes from the system certain lymphatic or other peculi ity which though up to a certain it is now equally desirable to )el from the system, or whether it simply through the expansion of lungs, occasioned by coughing, lain it is that it often produces a 'ked constitutional improvement. lan) person, child or adult, would take a quill and draw a deep full dration, so as slowly to expand lungs to the utmost, and repeat for five minutes daily, the chest LI soon measure four or five inches re in circumference, and in proper in to the greater amount of 'oxygen is inhaled, the lungs will be kept it from disease, the amount of I digested will be increased, and vital energy, the being and liv power of the invididual, will be tented. Whooping Cough, there should be looked forward to in it comes into a family, as a tnger indeed to make fresh de- Ids upon parental care and ;Lifulness in every symptom, but also to prepare, and as it were d the child to expand its lungs and on a larger scale, on en ,g on a new period of its exist just as the cries of its earliest y' are arranged to give expan -4013 to its lungs at first. Mir" am no more surprised that revezded truths shoed amaze vemieratending, than the blazing aboeld daside my eyes.—Harvey. kg- When 4 ore get GM, oar frienda _ _ difficult t( i : o tt ti m,i, o s it ! 1. • - 'TER BUILD OF ENOLISH WOMEN. t a remarkably practical and well ten article by Dr. R. T. Trail, fished in the Hygienic Tewher, iscusses the comparative "vital tma" 4 4 the two countries thus Ably : "The better vital develop lt of the English, particularly of women and children, has long a subject of remark with tray _s; and we have been in the hab it of alluding to this subject in our lectures on the health and diseases of women. Hence, when the oppor tunity presented, we could not help studying this subject with much in terest. We trace the great differ ence which exists in this respect— and it is even greater than we had supposed—to two sources, the great er amount of sleep and the more ex posure to the fresh air. English mothers expose themselves and their children to the air often and freely as a matter of habit, while American mothers exclude them selves and their children from the fresh air as much as possible.— On the cars, on the boats, in the omnibusses, in the hotels, every where, we noticed' the almost uni versal attention paid to ventilation. Nowhere did we see an English wo man shut a window for fear her ba by would 'catch its death of cold,' and none of the babies seemed to have colds. All that we noticed seemed to be remarkably good na tured. It is almost impossible to travel on a train in America where there are several young children, without hearing continually the cry of distress from some of them. But we heard nothing of this kind in England. We do not absolutely know, from actual observation and experience, that an English baby ever does cry, or can. English wo men are generally lees irritable. less morbidly nervous, than American women, for the reason already as signed—more rest, more steep, more quiet—and this circumstance, of course, has no small influence on the organization and temper of their off spring. And we think this view of the mutter is fully confirmed by a comparison of the waists of English and American women. The effect of early and abundant exposure to and exercise in the open air, is to promote free breathing, enlarge the capacity of the respiratory appara- : tus, develop the vital organs, expand the chest, and enlarge the waist.— And the vital resources of any wo man, or any man, or any animal, other circumstances being equal, mr.ay be measured by the dimensions of the lower part of the thorax.— The English women, as a general rule, will out measure the American several inches. This rule is well exemplified ;in the German women, who exercise much from early child hood in the open air. and who do not lace their vital organs out of all symmetrical proportions to the rest of the body. On board the Bavaria were half a hundred women and girls from Germrny, not one of whom had not a round, full, well de veloped chest, so much so, perhaps, as to be regarded as decidedly un- genteel, by the wasp-waisted fash ionables of upper-tendom in Now York. Another circumstance that tells in favor of better digestion and more enduring vitality with the Eng lish, is a habit of eating more slow ly. So far as diet itself is concerned, there is not very much to choose.— But the American people eat almost as soon as out of bed in the morning, swallow their food with very imper fect mastication, and then hurry to business, all of which tends toe pre cocity of brain and muscular activity, with the inevitable consequence of early decline." ,4 Not the Lord, but Burgoyue." The Rev. James Gallagher used to tell the following annecdote with great zest . During the Revolution ary war, reports were circulated as they are now, either wholly false or greatly exaggerated. In passing from ono to another, something was sure to be added, until the story would hardly be known to the author of it. The people in certain sections of New York were in great con sternation- from a report that Bur goyne was marching down with an immense army from , the lakes, and going to sweep over the whole court try, bringing utter desolation to the inhabitants. An old lady heard the report, and understood it that Bur goyne was going to open the Lakes and let out the water, and drown the whole region. Full of the terrible vision, she ran into a neighbor's to tell her the latest news about the war. "Do you know that, we are going to be drowned ? Burgoyne Is going to let the water out of the Lakes, and make a great flood, and we•shall all be drowned ! Oh ! what shall we do !" Her neighbor, with more intelligence and more piety, di4 not seem to be greatly disturbed, but cthnly replied: "That certainly matt be a mistake. It cannot be torne, tar God hits promised in His Word that be will no more destroy the: inhabitants of the earth with a /w o e , .10 1 , honey! t inovw that, Innoit'onell , the lewd who is .going =to del it— iformist.h" .1 riflllll33ll Day of wrath ! that day of wonder, Which shall lift the cross up yonder, And dissolve the world asunder ! What dread quaking shall there be then ! When the Judge approaches, lie then Sin shall doom, and saints set free then! Trump of judgment, awful-sounding, Shall, the buried dead astounding, Summon all the Throne surrounding. Death shall tremble, so shall nature, When the resurrected creature Answers at the judicature. Then the scroll shall he unfolded, Wherein's written what each soul did, And the world's just judgment moulded By the Judge, with truth invested, Secrets shall be manifested, Nor shall aught eseape untested. What shall I, a shiner, plead then, What protection shall I need then, If the righteous scarce succeed then ? King of Majesty tremendous ! Whose free mercies aye attend us, Pity's fount ! acquittal send us. Holy Jesus! think that even I'm the cause thou cam'st from heaven, Lest I, that day, lost be driven Thou haat sought me—weeping, wailing, Bought me midst the cross's nailing— Let not this be unavailing. Righteous Judge of all olrenses . ! Pard'ning love my sole pretence is, Ere the reck'uing day commences. Wretched, guilty, I lie groaning, E'en with shame my errors owning— Spare me, God, thus humbly moaning ! Thon forgav'st the frail one crying, Heard'et the thief beside thee dying, My hope, too, thou'at been supplying. Worthless pleadings though I'm sending, Let thy pity, with them blending. Rescue me from flames unending. Midst the sheep place thou my station, From the goats by separation, On the right hand of salvation. Whilst the curet are unforgiven, Into flames tormenting driven, Summon me with saints to heaven, Prone and prostrate, I implore thee, A bruis'd heart's in dust before thee, Let compassion then come o'er thee ! A h ! that day of tears and sighing! When the dead shall rise, undying ! Guilty—face the judicature— Spare, then, God, spare me, thy et eature ! THE MOST EXTRAVAGANT WOMAN IN THE WORLD, The Empress of France is probably the most extravagant woman living. Nor is this all ; she has been the cause of the ruinous extravagance in the families of her husband's subjects, and in all countries where the costly fashions she has set have found favor. M. Fould, the Emperor's Minister of Finance, threatens to resign his of fice unless her enormous drafts upon the treasury are curtailed. So cost ly has she made the toilette in Paris, that fashionable ladies are utterly unable to settle their bills for dress, and it is stated by the English press that it is as much as many of them can do to pay the interest on the debts which following the imperial modes has caused them to incur.— The world owes crinoline to the fair Eugenia; and the rougher half of its civilized population does not feel by any manner of means grateful to her for the introduction of the arti cle. She has made her apartments in the Tuilleries as magnificent as the places one reads about in oriental fa bles. The doors of her boudoir are of ivory, inlaid with gold. The furni ture is of rosewood, inlaid with mir rors, gold, ivory, and is upholstered with pale red silk. Srryrnian carpet ing of the heaviest texture covers the floor, and the ceiling is splendid ly frescoed. The desks and portfoli os are of tortoise shell, arabeequed with gold ; and the most valuable paintings of the old masters orna mental,. walls. The beatitifhl wo man who has surrounded herself with these luxuries spends an almost fab ulous amount annually in rare laces an d AU the .most expensive aptielof; of female emanate, bookies, sabeerii- Wag eahoerd /dams is aid of oar% taia seat pchitisal 'her she is *IOW aniktirigtriet*orniam. Th Mil DIES IRE. WE IMB 1213 XVI. 13E! XVIII Empress is thirty-six years of age, (he could but seldom get a moment's and therefore old enough to have I rest. learned prudence ; yet she is more "Doctor," said to, "what a delight prodigal now than in the heyday of ful thing rest is. The bed has be her youth and beauty. The Queen come for me aplace of luxury. How of Louis XVI. was as extravagant, fallen am I now, whose activity was and as fond of meddling in state af- i boundless, whose mind never slum fairs, as Eugenia, and her fool of a bored, and now plunged in a letbar husband suffered her to lead him by gic stupor, and must make an effort the nose. One day they lost their even to raise my eyelid f I some heads,poor things. Would it not be ! times dictated upon digetent sub well for Louis Napoleon to take *the jects to four or five secretaries, who warning to heart ? wrote as fast as words could be ut tered. But then I was Napoleon, ELEVEN REBELLIONS IN THE URI- now lam no longer anything!" TED STATES. One day he vainly endeavored. - Since the organization of the Fed- leaning upon another's arm, - to *alk oral Government, eleven attempts across the room. His llttli,ft sank be have been made to resist its authori- .neath him. "They are exhausted," ry. The first was in 1782—a con- said he, "see, there is nothing left— spiracy of some of the officers of the mere skeletons. Everything must Federal army to consolidate the thir- have an end. I am fiat approach teen States into one, and confer the ing mine; and Ido not regret it, for supreme power upon Washington.— I have indeed no reason to be attach- The second in 1787, called Shay's in- • cd to life." surrection in Massachusetts. The The ne vs came one day - of the third in 1794, called the whiskey in- ; death of his sister Eliza. It threw surrection of Pennsylvania. The , him into a state of stupor. His head fourth in 1814, by the Hartford Con- I fell upon his breast. Deep sighs is vention. The fifth in 1820, on the ' taped him, and for a long time he question of the admission of Misson- uttered not a word. Then, fixing his ri into the Union. The sixth was a eyes intently upon the doctor , he collision between the Legislature of said: "You see Eliza has jast ah.own Georgia and the Federal Govern- ,us the way." ment, in regard to the lands given Death, which seems to have over ; to the Creek Indians. The seventh ' looked our family, now begins to was in 1830, with the Cherokees in ' strike it. My turn cannot be far dis- Georgia. The eight was the memor- taut: I have no longernny strength, able nulifying ordinance of South activity or energy left. I am no Carolina, in 1832. The ninth was in longer Napoleon. The first person 1842, in Rhode Island, between the of our family who shall follow Eliza Suffrage Association and the State to the grave is the great Napoleon authorities. The tenth was in 1856, who here drags out a miserable exis on the part of the Mormons, who tence, who sinks under its high t; resisted the Federal authorities.— but who, however, still keeps Ea- The eleventh is the present attempt rope in a state of alarm. As for me , at secession_ it's all over. My days will soon enri on this poor, miserable rock.' Dr. Antommaechi was an infidel. One day he ventured to assume a contemptuous expression of counte nance, in view of some religious con versation, which was passing be ; tweon the Abbe Vigaali and the Em peror. Napoleon sad to him eevere ly, "You are an atheist, sir. Be an atheist if you will. But lut for me, I will fulfill all the 4uties iii , V3h relig ion imposes, and seek all the solace which it administers." Then !ng to the Abbe he said, "I wish you to say mass in the chapel every day and to eitirtifttne to sat it alter my death. You will not cease until 1 am buried. As soon as I am dead, I wish you to place a crucifix upon my bosom and your altar at mytioad. Ycu will not omit solemnising the sacrament of the Lord Sapper, and offering daily prayers until I am bur- THE DEATH OF NAPOLEON. At 6 o'clock in the evening of the 4th of May, 1820, the Emperor Na poleon died at St. Helena, after a cruel imprisonment of six years.— The latter days of his life were al most exclusively directed toreligious thoughts. He was exceedingly weak, suffering great pain, and often in ex treme dejection. One evening, bat a short time before his death, he made the following remarkable con fession to Count Montholon : "Upon the throne, surrounded by generals, far from devout—yea, I will not deny it—l had too much regard for public opinion, and far too much timidity, and perhaps I did not dare to say aloud, "I am a Scheyer." I said, 'Religion is a power—a politi cal engine.' But even ten, if any one had questioned me directly, I should have replied : 'Yes, I am a Christian.' And if it had been ne cessary to confess my faith at the price of martyrdom, I should have found all my firmness. But now I am at St. Ifelena, why should I dis semble that which I believe at the bottom of my heart ? I desire the communion of the Lord's Supper, and to confess what I believe: I will rot force any one to accompany me there; but those who love me will follow me there." Even in these solemn hours of ap proachingdeath ho had no penitence to express in view of his political career, for his motives .lid been ex alted, and his measures beneficent in the extreme. With gratitude and well-founded pride he could well say: "I have hallowed the Revolution by infusing into it our laws. My code is the sheet-anchor which will save France, and entitle me to the benediction of nosterity. The plan of leaping the Alps was the one first formed at the commencement of my career. I had entered Italy, and finding that communications with Pdris occupied • considerable time, and were attended with much diffi culty, I endeavored to render them quicker, and resolved to open them through the valley of .the Rhone.— I also wished to render that river navigable, and blow up the rocks under which it engulphs and disap pears. 1 had sent engineers on the spot. The expense would have been inconsiderable, and I submitted the plan to the Directory. But we were carried away by events. On my re turn from Egypt, we applied ham mers to the Alps. We executed what the Romans had not dared to try, and traced, through blocks of gran ite, a solid and spacious road, capa ble of resisting the efforts of time. As, restless with pain and burning with unappeasable thirst, he tossed on his pillow, he said, to Dr. Antom macchi : • "This is not me—it is mere exist ence. Death will soon terminate my sufferings. In what state am I, Doctor? Everything seems to weigh upon me to fatigue me. I can scarce ly support myself. Have you not, among the resources of art, anything to revive the play of the machine?"' He bad some fishes in a pond near his door, and was thud of feeding them with crumbs of bread. Sud denly they all died. Sadly he said : "You see very well there is a fatali ty attached to me. Everything I love, everything that belongs to Me, is immediately struck !" - ALt‘ length the hidden disease, wlsice sikpaantly proved itself to be-s, isimseer in the stotnaoh, so prestrated ow MN' .110 could . rarely lesiva' his A N . , pain was so great 'that ' NEW SERIES.--VOL. 4, NO. 85 ied." Thus, day after day, he lingered sadly along, each one rich with his toric interest, until the 2d of May.— The Emperor then was in a burning fever and his mind was in delirium. His spirit was wondering through the scenes of the past, and moved amid the danger of the delft of bat tle. At one time he cried out, wildly . "Steinzal, Douala, Massone, victory is declaring. Sun, hasten, press the charge. They are Quer In his eagerness. with that momen tary strength which deliriajn give, he leaped from his bed, l)nt fell pros trate on the floor. After a few hours the fever abated and•reason returned. "I am very ill," said - be "1 am a going to die. My poor Chinese servants. Do not let them be forgotten. I must take leave of them also." In his will he bad particularly remembered all his friends, and all from whom he re ceived any act of kindness. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon of the 3d of May, after a very touch ing conversation with the friends who surrounded his bedside, he sent for•the Abbe Viwnali and received the Lord's Supper. After the solemn ordinance, the placid expression of his countenance indicated the peace which reigned within his soul.— He slept quietly through the night, and in the morning he said to his valet, "Open the window, Marchan, open it w;de, that I may breathe the air, the.good air, which the good God has made." The night of the 4th was black and stormy. The dying hour had some. The little household at St. Rehm* were all gathered around their dy ing friend. The Emperor lay uneon ecious and motionless upon his pillow, breathing heavily, and occasionally uttering broken and almost inarticu late words. "Twice I thought," says Count Montholon, "that I distin guished the unconnected words, 'Fiance, Army, Head bf the Army, Josephine.' At 4 o'clock in the even ing, as he was tying upon his beak with his right band out of tks !xul, and his eyes fixed, as in dospeotwasd itation, he gently, and without a struggle, or motion, ceased to breathe. Just as the sun was descending be low the horizon, staking behind the clouds of somber and tompostous, the spirit of Napoleon took *OS into the dread unknown Yale of Alba, Napoleon, were the tail ,ntikoo &noes of, the true and love Atte: phine. France and Arwky,,J 'no, wore the last images w'4 l inthe heart• and the gi • . which trembled . sn tOsitips , • lug Emperor.—J 6 AO a C. A6btot. F'