NY IL, A. is 0. H. BUEHLEL vwn--.12. 1 From the People's journal. THE BATTLE OF CHANGE. ST 01111111111111 ITATICAT. A stenetrarre, very extensively engaged in commerce, and located upon the Long Wharf, died February 18,1000, at the age of seventy-five, intestate.- His eldest son administered upon the estate. This old gentleman used pleasantly to say, that, fbr many years, he had fed a very large wis her of the. Catholics, on the shores of the Mediterranean, during Lent, refering to his very extensive connection with the fishing business. In his day he waicer tainly well. known ; and to the present time is well remembered, -by, some of the :.old ones down along - shore," from the Gurnet's Nose to' Race Point. Among his papers, -- pieltege, of - eery considera ble size, Vas found after his death careful ly.tied op, and labelled as follows : "Notes, due-bills, and accounts against sundry persons, down along shore. Some of these may be got by suit or severe dun ning. But the people are poor ; owes of them have had fishermen's luck. My children will do as they think best. Per ' haps they will think with me, that it is best 'to burn this package entire." "About a month," said, my informant, I ..after our father died, the sons met togeth er, anj, alter some general remarks, our elder brother, the administrator, produced this pack age, of whose existence we were already apprised, read the superscription, and asked what course should be taken in regard to it. Another brother, a few years younger than the eldest, a man of strong, impulsive temperament, unable at the 'Mo ment to express his feeling by words, while he brushed the tears from his eyes with one hand, by a spasmodic jerk of the oth er, towards the fireplace, indicated his wish to have the package put in the flames.— It was suggested by another of our num; ber, that it might be well, first, to make a list of the debtors' names, and of the dates, and amounts, that we might be enabled, as the intended discharge was for all, to inform enelt as might offer payment, that their debts were forgiven. On the follow ing day, we again assembled—the list had been prepared—and all the notes, due bills, and accounts, whose amount, in cluding interest, amounted to thirty-two thousand dollars, were committed to the TO MT MOTHER IN HEAVEN: I flames. Oran Ilmaglite are heaving in the world's wide breast ; The, time is laboring with a mighty birth; ' The old ideas hill. Men wander up an4.down in wild intent.; A sense at dings preparing for the Earth Broods over all. Titer* lea a gloom on all things under heaven-7A (loos portentous to the quiyt men Who see no joy In being driven *ward from change, ever to change again; Wko never walk but on the beaten ways, And love the breath Of yesterdays -11108 who would rather alt and sleep Whew sunbeams through the ivies creep, Raab at his door pad sll alone, Eisislisas of neat or distant wan, Thin trakiandlisten to the moan tlf storm-vesed Wefts, nodding to the stars— Or bast./kr off, tba =dam** MU Of billows, whits with smith, battling against the • shore, Deep on their troubled ands the shadow lies; And in that shadier come and go, Wbilelltfol lightnings write upon the skies, And mystic voices chant the coming woe, Titanic phantoms swathed in min and fiame— The mighty shapes of things withodi a name, Mingling with Sums more palpably defined, That whirl and dance like leaves upon the wind; Them, marshaling in long array their hosts, Rush forth to battle in a cloudlike land, Thick Phalanxed on throes far aerial coasts, As swarm the locusts plaguing Sainarcand. Oh who would live, they cry, in time like this I Atime otcoudict fierce. and trouble strange: When old and new, over a dark abyss. Fight the great battle of relentless change ! And still before their eyes diacrowned kings, Desolate chiefs, and aged priests forlorn, FO4 ht,—confused—with all incongruous things, Swooping in rise and fall on ponderous winds— While here and there, amid a golden light, Angelic faces, sweet as Summer morn, Which gleam an instant ere extinguished quite, Or change to stony skulls, or spectres livid white. Bo got to me—oh ! not to me appear I gloom. I see a brighter sky, If the healthful motion of the sphere; Andlyingtiown upon the grass, I hear Far, he away, yet drawing near, A low, sweet sound of ringing melody : I see e swift•winged arrows fly ; I seeahaide *MI the combatants; I know the cause for which their weaponsflash, I hear the martial music sod the chants, The shock of hosts, the armor clash, A. thought assets thought; but Au beyond I use, Adown the abysses of the Time to be, The weil,wou victory of the Right; The flying down of useless swords and spears; The reconcilement ardently desired Of Universal TROTH and Murex— Whose long estrangement, fillingearth with tears, Gave every manly heart, divinely fired, A lingering love, a hope inspired, To reconcile them, never more to,sunder. Far, far away above the rumbling thunder, I see the splendor of another Jay. Ever since infantlime began, There has been darkness over man: It rolls and shrivels up I It melte away ! DV 111011/111 VI T D. Dear wilier, in the silent hours of night, When stars around me shed their chastened light, I think of thee, and mourn thou art not here. With while to blew, and kindly word to cheer. Ah, mother, life is but a thorny way ; When longest 'tie at beat a little day,; A (keen ofsunshine, and anon a donut The bridal robe, soon followed by the shroud Deet mother, sadness fills my sleepless eye, And tears fast follow the unconscious sigh ) But still the heart o'eurtielmed with heavy pier, In thought of thee, lieu mother, finds relief. Bear mother, be thou still the watchful guide, In honor's path of him who was thy rids; So shalllny feet, from snares of error free, Treed only paths of truth, toward Heaven and thee.. - Wan rxs Arrurr.—Mr. Willis, wri ting to the Home Journal from Cossen's new hotel on the Hudson river, relates the following : "Within a stone's throw from the por tico of the hotel, upon a knoll half hidden with trees, stands one of the most beauti fel structures of its kind in this country—a Moe church, of English rural architec ture, built by the painter Robert Weir.— The story of its construction is a touching poem. When Mr. Weir received ten thousand dollars from the Government for Lis picture on the panel of the Capitol, he invested it, untouched, for the benefit of his three children. On the death of these three--soon after, the money revert 4mi to him, but he had a feeling which for- bads him to use it. Struck with the fa eontblenein of this knoll under thd moun- Anowil e Wu aa to for a place of worship, mud , y the alUsge near by ,he applied al* it Mr. Conene, on whose property litatookwhe at once made a kr* gilt of it dor she purpose. The painter's taste and thew /russet to work, and, with the mon ..sy lid hies by his children, he erected this st,rplissed heautifkl structure in a memo utility-. Its bell for ere. sting isstrice sounded a few minutes ago— AO.teat indented, •apparently, with the I,,,iiiiilhatiowned all, and making sweet Antsis liming. the mountains that look down suet_ ilir.,Weir named it "The Church 4 the Holy Inaocents." Tinto. mil roasvita.—Lost wealth nay be regained by a course of industry aka wreekof health repaired by temperance -i..krgotten knowledge restored by study ..ai.sdlenated friendship soothed into for giveness—even forfeited reputation won Iblek by penitence and virtue. But who ever again looked upon his vanished hours 4 . recilled his slighted years, and stamped then with wisdom—or effaced from hea iieit's record the fearful blot of a wasted Sigournev. Uspresstons are made on childrer as ttioks, by constant droppings of the lit ,de influences. What can one drop do ! Ton scarcely see it full; And presently it rolls away or is evaporated ; you can tata, even with a microscopee, measure the Utile indentation it has made. Yet it is 4161 constant repetition of this trifling agen cy which furrows, and at length hollows out the very granite. PAYING AN - ODD DEBI'. "It was about four months after our father's death," continued my informant, "in the month of June, that, as I was sit ting in my eldest brother's counting-room, waiting for an opportunity to speak with him, there came in a hard-favored, little old man, who looked as if time and rough weather had been to windward of him for seventy years. He asked if my brother was not the executor. He replied that he was administrator, as our father died intes tate. 'Well,' said the stranger 'l've come up from the Cape to pay a debt I owed the old gentlemen.' My brother," contin ued my informant. "requested him to take a seat, being at the moment engaged with other persons at the desk. "The old man sat down, and putting on his glasses, drew out a very ancient leath er pocket book, and began to count over hir money. When he had done—and there was quite • parcel of bank notes— as be sat, waiting his turn, slowly twisting his thumbs, with his old gray, meditative eyes upon the floor, he sighed; and I knew the money, as the phrase runs. came hard—and secretly wished the old man's name might be found upon the for given list. My brother was soon at leis ure, and asked him the common questions —his name, etc. The Awiginal debt was four hundred and forty dollars—it had stood a long time, and, with interest, a- I mounted to a sum between seven and eight hundred. My brother went to his desk, and. after examining the forgiven list at tentively, a sudden smile lighted up his countenance. and told me the truth at a glance—the old man's name was there ! My brother quietly took a chair by his side, and a conversation ensued between them, which I never shall forget. 'Yokr note is outlawed,' said my brother ; was dated twelve yeses ago, payable in two years; there is no witness, and no inter est has ever been paid ; you are not bound to pay this now; we cannot recover the amount' Ilir; said the old Man, wish to pay it. It is the only heavy debt I have in the world. It may be outlawed here. but I have no child. and my old woman and I hope we have made our peace with God, and wish to do so with man. I should like to' pay it,' and be laid his bank notes before my brother, requesting him to count them over. .1 cannot take this money,' said my brother. The old man became a larmed. 'I have cast simple interest for twelve years and a little over,' said the old man. .1 will pay you compound interest, if yousay so. The . debt ought to have been paid long ago, but your father, sir, was very indulgent---he knew I'd been unlucky, and told me not to worry myself about it.' "My brother then set the whole matter plainly before him, and, and taking the bank bills, returned them to the old man's pocket-book, telling him that, although our father left no.formal will, he had recom mended to his children to destroy certain r notes, and due bills, and other evidences o. GETTYSBURG, PA. FRIBA EVENING, AUGUST 17, 1849. debt, and release those who might be le gally boand to pay them. For a mom , p the worthy old man appeared to be iM—pe fied. Alter he had collected himileif, and wiped a few tears from his,eyes, he stated that, from the time hiti'fietard of our fath er's death,.he had .riked and scraped, and pinchthl and spired, to get the money to- gether, forihe payment of this debt. 'A bout ten days ago,' said he. 'I had made up the sum within twenty dollars. My wife knew how much the payment of this debt lay upon my spirits, and &drilled mete sell a cow 'and make up the difference, and get the heavy bonbon off my spirits. I did so—and now what will my old woman say I I must get back 'Atha Cape and tall her this good news. She'll probably say over the very words she said when she put her hand on my shoulder as we parted— ./ have never seen the righteous man for saken or his seed begging bread.' After a hearty shake of the hand, and a blessing upon our father's memory, he,went upon his way rejoicing. "After a short silence—taking his pen cil and making a cast--.There,' said my brother, your . part of the amount would be so much—contrive a plan to convey to me your share of the pleasure, derived from this operation, and the money is at your service." Such is the simple tale which I have told, as it was told to me.—Boston Trans cript. LEPROBY.—The awful disease of leprosy still exists in Africa. Whether it be the same leprosy as that mentioned in the Bi ble I do not know ; but it is regarded as perfectly incurable, and so infection, that no one dares to come near the leper. In the South of Africa there is a large lazar house for lepers. It is an immense apace, enclosed by a very high wall, and contain ing fields which the lepers cultivate.— There is only one entrance, which is strict ly guarded. When any one is found with the marks of leprosy upon him, he is brought to this gate and obliged to enter in never to return. No one who enters in by that awful gate is ever allowed to come out again. Within this abode of misery there are multitudes of lepers in all the sta ges of the "disease. Dr. Ilelbeck, a mis sionary of the Church of England. from the top of a neighboring hill, saw them at work. lie noticed two particular' yspwing peas in the field. The one had no hands, the other had no feet—these members be ing wasted away by the disease. The one who wanted the hands was carrying the oth er who wanted the feet, upon his back, and he, again, carried in his hands the bag of seed, and dropped a pea every now and then,' which the other pressed into the ground with his foot, and so they managed the work of one man between the two.— Ah ! how little we know of the misery there is in this world. Such is this prison house of disease. But you will ask who cares for the souls of the hapless inmates ? Who will venture to enter again t Who will forsake father and mother, houses and land, to carry the message of a Saviour to these poor lepers t Two Moravian Mis sionaries, impelled by a divine love for souls, have chosen this lazar house as their field of labor. They entered it never to come out again. And, lam told that, as soon as they die, other Moravians are quite ready to fill their place. HOW TO ACQIIIRIII WEALTH AND A WIFE I AT oNcs.—"A scheme has been projected," says a Barcelona paper, ••by a poor bat tal ented young man here, anxious to form a matrimonial alliance with a lady, likewise without fortune, which has for its aim the assurance of a competence to the contract ing parties. For this. purpose the would. be bridegoom proposes making a raffia of himself, and with this view has issued five thousand tickets at a dollar each. ' The female who shall draw the prize, no mat ter what her position may be, will be entitled to full luformation respecting the physical and moral qualitiesof the gentle. man, who, on his side, will also be agord ed the same advantages. If both agree to conclude the projected alliance, they will possess a capital of five thousand dollars to support the charges incident to matri mony ; bueshould either - object s - the mo ney is to be divided equally between them, each being thus furnished with a dowry to enable them to make a choice in which chance snail take no part. The plan is an ingenious one, though i& accomplish. ment is beset with difficuties. To what a pitch has calculation and speculation reach ed 1" GREAT MEN 1--Great men stand like solitary towers in the city of God, and se cret passages running deep beneath exter nal nature, giving their thoughts intercourse with higher intelligence, which strengthens and consoles them, and of which the labor ers on the surface do not even dream. 'THE HARVEST.—A countryman sow ing his ground, two smart fellows, riding that way, ono of diem called to him with an insolent air, " Well, honest fellow, 'tis your business to sow, but we reap the fruit of your labor." To which the emu tryman replied, " "fie very likely you may, for I am sowing hemp." “PIARLEBB AND FREE.” moNzny's Mezroar.--Authors gen ieem to thia ki khat the monkey race ere not capable of fling lasting impres sions but their ory is' remarkably tenacious when awl g events call it into action. A MOD , hioh was permitted to run f r ee hod, - endy seen the men servants in the gweili ittry kitchen, with its huge fire-phase, e down a powder- horn that stood on chimney.piece, and throw a few grains to the are. to make Semima, and the ,of the maids jump and scream, whbsis, ey always did on such occasions very ttily. Pug watch. ed his opportunity; when an lifter - stilt and he had the kite entirely to himaself, ha clambered up, * possmution' of the powder. n, perched himself very gingerly on' obi side of the horizon. tid wheels placed flee ithe support of rano& pans, right over the waning ashes of an al most -extinct wood.ike, screwed' off 'the top of the horn. and r e versed it over the grate. The explosion sent him half way up the chimney. Before he was blown up, he was a snug, trim, well-conditioned monkey, as you would wish to see on s summer's day . ; he emne dowtje carbons;„ ted negro in miniature, in an avalanishe of burning soot. The thump with which he pitched upon die hot ashes in the midst of the general flare-up aroused him to a sense of his condition. He was missing for days. Hunger seism drove him forth, and he sneaked into the house, close sin. ged, begrimmed, and looking scared and devilish. He recovers/ with care, but like some other great parsonages, he nev er got over his sudden eleiation and fell, but became a sadder, if sot:wiser monkey. lf ever Pug forgot himailf and was trouble. some;you had only to mks down a pow der-horn in Ids presenco, and he was off to his hole like a shot, streaming and clat tering his jaws like a ptir of castanets. As ALLIGATOR STORT.—The following is a strange account °fa Lake full of alli gators in the East Indies, taken from the Anglo Indian papers : u We made an exeurtinu lately to-what is here called a Mugger Tank, a lake of al ligators, which lies iR i small and beauti fully situated grove of trees, surrounded by a range of kW hills; about nine miles from Kurrachee. After having , breakfast ed, we proceeded to the spot where these hiddeous monsters were congregated.— They are held sacred by the natives of the • country, and are regularly fed by the con tributions of devotees. The tank is more like an °coalmen meadow than a lake, having deep channels intersecting each other, and is litterally alive with these huge u muggers," some basking on 'the knolls and ridges, others floating on the surface of the deep water. They were of all sixes, front a fait or two to twenty or twenty. feet in length, and balky in proportion.— Having purchased a kid, and cut it up on the batiks, there was a universal opening of their capacious jaws. which they kept distended in expectation of having a piece of flesh thrown into them. and are too lazy to make any further demonstration. The native keeper who feeds them began call ing to them, when they came one by one lazily along, and waddling on to the shore, each took what was given to him. The rapidity with which the poor kid vanish ed. head and heels, was truly astonishing. They knew the keeper quite well ; and if any one should take up what is not thrown to him the keeper makes him drop it by striking him over the snout with his stick. Their jaws are certainly dreadful clap. traps, and the crash they make when brought together is horrible, crushing the bones even of the head of their prey like so much mush. It is probable, setting aside motivesof superstition, that the in habitants now find it necessary to feed these voracious monsters, for, were the supplies to be stopped. they would become dangerous neighbors. In fact, they do at times pick up and devour a stray child left on the banks by accident or design.— There are here three hot springs, one of which supplies the tank, and is of a tem perature of about sixty-six degrees. The two others have a temperature of one hun dred and eighty degrees. The, water is sues from the tick as pure as chryoud;Ond in great abundance." THE GRANDEUR OF MAN.--" The birth of an infant," it has been truthfully said, is a greater event than the production of the sun. The sun is only slump of sense less matter; it sees not its own light; it feels not its own heat; and with all its grandeur. it will cease to be—hut that in hint, beginning to breathe yesterday, is possessed of reason, claims a principle in finitely superior to matter, and will live through the ages of eternity." Let the immortal mind shed its lustre upon the world. QUEER CALCULATIONS.--The editor of the Yankee Blade says : "It would be a curious sight to see all the babies in the United States under five years of age to gether ; they would be a pretty collection of 2,400,000. What a equalling there be should they all get spanked at the same time, and what a great heap of sugar plums it would take to quiet them !" Gamma, BEn.—The following anec dote is going its rounds in Vienna con cerning Bern. For many years he has had forbodings of his death. He himself has for many years assigned the year 1850 as the term of his existence. During his stay in Paris be once dined with the North American ambassador. The conversation fell on forebodings, omens, and the like. The ambassador laughed at them, but Bem declared he firmly believed in them, and related how he had thrice seen, when in his twentieth year, his own grave stone, with his name, and the date of 1850 on it. Bem received in Tran sylvania several dangerous wounds, The Physician shook his- head, but Bern an swered it quite calmly by saying that he had another year to live. On the faith of this vision, Bern exposes himself to the hotted fire, and declares that the hall which tdiall bit him mortally will not do so before the year 1850. THE WORLD A nett POND.—An ex change paper' ays, the world is a great fish pOnd full of eeli end suckers." Now, if there were not worse fish s mong the Muslin and inAtenunts than eels and suckers, one could get along tolerably well. But there.are as many kind of mon stare on the land as there are in the mighty deep. 1 Every kind of fish is represented by men, from the whale or capitalist, and shark or land monopolist, down to the mi ser or muck worm. There is the sword fish or warrior, and Marko of different kinds, such as priests, / lawyers, doctors, and other loaferr. Then there ara squibs or political editors, squirting their blinding ink in the eye. of honest fish ; also lob sters, erobs,jial:fig, and so on, down from the whale that swallows small fish, to the Liam or muscle that burrows in sectarian mud, or the tad-pplo of fashion that , wrig- gifts, about in shallow water. All the inhabi tants of the ocean are represented, not ex cepting the mighty keialhan or. the old re rperd himself, and nearly all are preying on those weaker than themselves. .Talk about nothing but eels and suckers t Why, man 1 if there were nothing else in the great fish pond', every man would havi en. joyed his right to liberty and the use of the soil long since; all would have. had 4* home of some sort, and grinding and op.. pression would not be known—the world would be more like a paradise than a fish pond. WEBTeRN ETIQUETTE. Our Yankee -, traveller who saw the live Hoosier has again wriiten to his mother : ""Western people go to their death on etiquette. 'You can't tell a man here that he lituwas you can down east, without fighting. A few days ago. a man was, tai ling two of his neighbors in my bearing a pretty large story. . . Says LAEltrenget that's a whopper?". Says he, "I.ay there, manger I" And in a twinkling of an eye I found myself in the ditch, a perfect quadruped, the worse for wear and tear. Upon ano ther occasion, says 1 to &swan] never saw before, as a women passed, "That.isn't, : a specimen of your . western women is it 1" Bays he. "You are afraid of the fever and ague, stranger, ain't you ?" "Very much," says I. "Well," replied he, "that lady is my wife, and if you don't apologise., in two minutes, by the honor of a gentlemen. I swear that these two pistols, (which lie held cocked in his hands) shall cure you of that disorder entireli—so don't fear stranger !" 801 kneltdown and politely apologised. .1 admire this western coun try much; but cursema if I can stand so much etiquette ; it, alwais takes me una wales."—Chicago Democrat. The late Mr. Jarvey Bush amused ue once with a story told of a brother barris ter on the Leicester Circuit. Al the coach war about starting after breakfast, the modest limb of the law approached the landlady, a pretty cuakeress, who was seated behind the bar, and said he could not think of going without giving her a kiss. •, Friend," snit! she, ", then must not do 4 , Oh, by Jupiter, I will," replied the barrister. Well, friend, u thou haat sworn, thee may do it, but thee must not make a prac tice of ii." TOUCIIINGI THE OIIIPATIIISS.--." Anal, Pat, and why did you marry met Just tell me that—fof it's tneself that's had to maintain ye ever since Father O'Flartugan sent mo to yer house." Swate jewel," replied Pat, not relish. ing the charge ,"and it's meself that hopes to live to see the day that ye're a widow weeping over the cowld sod that covers me, then, by St. Patrick, I'll see how you get along withobt me, honey dear." CHINESE MODE OF ADMINISTERING OATHS. —Tho witness is made to kneel, and to break a saucer on a bar in front of him. The following oath is then administered: " You shall tell the truth, and the whole truth ; the saucer is cracked; if you do not tell-the truth, your soul will be crack ea like the sweet." DEVIL'S FUNERAL SERNON.—.OIIO of George Llppord, the neighbors of the Rev. J. C. as The slippery character of George Lipper,' es a we have been informed, thinking in play Politician, and his inflated mannerism as a penny. a-liner, have excited considerable sport, particular. a joke on him, met him in the street and addressed him thus : ly as he has the vanity to imagine that he is a Min of great consequence, and has been very oatenta "Mr. , wish you to preach a fu- c . tnus in proclaiming his latest political flip-flap.— neral sermon." Thew acquainted with George's bombastic pro "Ah, who is dead 1" inquired the Min'. ductiona, will recognise in the following sketch, from the Trenton Gazette, a most capital imita tion of his style, both in the language and in the horrible slimly of bristling exclamation points with which he habitually tips off his popgun semen cent "'rite devil," was the reply.. "Well. and you wish me to preach a fu neral sermon." do." • "Very well, I will do it." So the time and place were Ihed for the service, which being being in a private dwelling, seats were provided for the au dience, the front one of which the min later kept from being occupied till the peo ple had all collected. Ile then addressed them in the following manner : •"It is a custom where I have generally officiated on funeral occasions, to reserve the front seats for the friends of the de ceased. I have accordingly kept these in reserve for the connections of him whose funeral sermon I am requested 'to preach, who le, as you are probably aware, th e devil. “Now, before I commence, I wish his children and mourners to come forward and occupy these seats.” As no one o beyed the call, he remarked again— , 4l do not- know but that the old gentleman has a number of children pre sent, 'And Should be glad to have them comply . with the usual custom of mourn ers." "1 though it would turn out so t the father is not dead, or his children would shim proper respect to his memory, so I shall address you on another subject."— He then preached them a faithful sermon. We heard this story and did not believe it,:but afterwards meeting with the minis law himself, we inquired if it was true, and he said it was.—Olive Branch. Africa needs to be explored. There are not less than three opinions upon the point of its population. By some it is stated at forty millions, and by others at ninety mil lions, and again at one hundred and thirty "Husband, do you believe in the special judgmenta'of Providence upon individuals ht this life ?" "Yes, my dear." • 6.1.)0 you indeed f Did one of the judg. menu ever happen to you ?" ..Yes, my Jove." •t When srae it, husband 1" esWherr I married you, my dear." Wire fences have been iittroducal upon farina in. many ports of the country, and prove very - useful as well as ornamental. The testi►nony in their favor is very strong. They can be built cheaper than common fences; and answer every purpose as well it not better. The average duration of life amongst the working classics of England—the most numerous elaues--is estimated at about twenty-eight Years—the duration of the aristocracy is estimated at forty-six. The Emperor of Russia has issued a pnielatriation olrering R reward of twenty thousand dollars for the head of Gen.Bein, the Polish. General, at the present time heading the Hungarian army. "What's the matter, John? hove a Bible at mo and hit my head." Well, you are tho only buy of the family on which the Bible ever made an impresion— ory us long as you please," There are one hundred and six thou sand and seven hundred poor, sick, crimi nal and debauched people in Berlin, the model city Of. Germany. A PpuTicrisN.—There is a man in Illi oois, named Barrow. who has - ehanged his polities so often that he has now got the sobriquet of wheel-Barrow. "Do make yourself at home, ladies," said a lady one day to her visitors. “ I am at home myself and I wish you all were." A Frenchman wishing to tell a fat lady she was very considerate, said :—"Mad am, you aro very considerable." The Austrian soldiers receive but four cents a day. Killing their brethren for four cents a day l What an occupation ! The passions, like heavy bodies down steep hale, once in motion, move them selves, and know no ground but the bottom. By . (wooing the tongue of the patient, physicians find nut the diseases of the body, and philosophers the diseases oflthe mind. While you are in the habit of intempe rance, you often drink up the value of au acre of laud in a night.—Father There have been six thousand seven hundred and eighty-two suicides in France during the last thirty years. It is computed that the rats in tlie States consume six million* o( dollars worth of grain a year. A theps (Greece) bus tug opty.tu9 jour nals. ' Gaze nut on the hietTligho of olhOrb• TWo DOLLARE PER 'APIIVIIk. INEW SERIES-NO. 134. THE ROMANCE OF HUMBUG. A TN*ULM; STORY •T °WILDE PAIDLIP It was night in the •Quaker City IV A small man in rolling eyes and big shirt collar, sat at a desk above which. gleamed a vivid fire, issuing from a curi ously wrought Iron tube. The light was of gas. The small man in the rolling Cyan and a big shirt coliiir was of gas also ! TFIRRIBLE comma:cc , l" " "I will do the deed," hissed the anima ted gas pipe, through his clenched teeth, as he seized a pen and spread a white scroll before him ! "I will do the deed!" And that fierce man, in that Quaker Ci ty, in that chamber, by that gas light, wrote these fearful words— "l REPUDIATE GENF:RAL 'CAVIAR!! !!" Had the falls of Niagara been suddenly turned into Vesuvius, amid the plaudits of the concentrated thunders of the universe, backed by the coalesced lightnings of il limitable space, and the whole been hurled in conglomerated night-mare upon the re pose of Old Zack, the effect could not have been more bewildering to the doomed Pres ident than was that awful sentence. EMI= IMPORTATIONS AT NEW YORK.-..ThO quantity of Foreign Dry Goode which were entered at the Custom House of New York alone for the weekending on Satur day evening last, amounted to. NINE HUNDRED AND TEN THOUSAND, FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS—almost a million of dollars in a single week, while our Factories are closing and the people are idle., A gentleman from Philadelphia, assured us, a few days ago, that more Steam En gines were standing idle in that city and vicinity, than have been known within the last ten years. This accounts for the un usually slim demand for Coal at this sea son of the year—but throw up your hats, boys, and give three cheers for the Tariff of 1846—Locofocoism declares it is the best bill ever passed for the working-moo -of this country.—Miners' Journal. A mtw Issas has been raised in Spar tanburg, South Carolina. A man named Barrett was arrested and imprisoned for circulating incendiary publications. A let ter in the Post office, addressed J. E. Thomson, was suspected to contain evi dence of his guilt. The Postmaster at first refused to bring the letter into court. He was arrested and put in jail, and then gave bond to appear and produce the let ter. This raises the question whether the State authorities have a right to overhaul the mail, and cause such letters as they suspect wbe opened. The Smith Caro lina papers are in arms, anticipating a di cision against them, and vow they will resist to the last extremity" rather than yield the ground they have taken. The Spartanburg Spartan is quite ferocious. —Richmond 'Ames. ROKANCE or MATRIXONT.--TllO PM*. town Ledger mentions a recent matrimo nial alliance in that neighborhood, in which the happy groom was just 29 years bid, and his blushing bride only 88 ! The same paper records another singu lar incident in the matrimonial line. A venerable couple, not far from the ripe age of "three score and ton," applied to a Potts town clergyman to make them one in the silken bonds : .but he was compelled to postpone the ceremony, because the old greybeard could not tell hint the Christian name of his companion. Ile was a wi dower of three months standing---she.a wi dow of ten months. DEATH FROM . LAUDANUM.—Mrs. Organ, residing at 51 Elizabeth street, N. York, being seized with cramps in the stomach on Sunday morning, her husband procured three cents worth each 4,camphor and laudanum, which was administered to her in four doses, at different tins. The woman soon became stupid and lost her senses, and, although three physicians ex• cried all their skill, they failed to revive her, and she died during the evening. CHARLES ELLET, a distinguished girl! engineer, says that the navigation of the Ohio river may be made permanent throughout the year for boats drawing &re feat of water, by the construction of re servoirs that would not cost over 11600,000. Say, Jeff," mad a tlarkey to a clonal of his, " uan you tell me the reason why 'women never have boards ?" ' . 't Why, Jonue, 1 don't know al t was unloas it is bokose do• Lord didn't Mdkilws tad dam to occupy the toll= position. Dot`' day was'ut calculated for the same par. pose as Us WWI. " Irbst Iyha! yba.' yea an tie mcw, ignoramus nips I ebbct souls .1144 why dat am not de reason. de reason ma jetty simple. it ant bokase dey cats% keep their mouth shut lung enough to got 144114:1