4L e t . ct HULLER. APO" 4411 , 446 • AFle, . [ V th e. ana •. • • , • 'Whoetut toroth ' MAI, 'unadorned and, though it charm With fervent love a thousand bosoms warm. 1 Otaieddli, motet humility-- Imre* the& , %corer loveth iotymyt ova with kindliest beams Prißietie fiOdlthe heart and gladdening streams 4oNtlit to gaging (fOO3 thIS soul— Whoever lovoth Gandor, thil dAveth from the happy heart Ihseelt, sad fearless openeth every pert • To meet the eye of friend or foe... , Laved' thee. ' , Whoever loveth Tenderneei of hind, that ever stands beside 7'he and, tho 'tie but a worm thatheth died, Poets krth in (Mrs her lovely ourrow— Loveth thee. Whortarloyeth• Madam, that I;omath with a kindling pow'r, End' orithridew hrings'to the thinning flow'r, 'cn4 Waketh up the cloudy heart— toroth thee. Whoever loath Piety, that likedßeet angel of earth, Giving man promise of a nobler birth In the Eternity to come—. • Lovoth thee. Pennsylvania College, 1849. A CHAMBER SCENE She reels from her untroubled sleep, And put oxide her soft brown hair, And in a tone as low and deep, As (ore's first whisper, breathed sprayer Her pow-white hands together pressed, Her blue aye sheltered in its lid— The folded linen on her breast lest swelling with the charms it hid ; And from her long and flowing dross Eseapal a bare and slender foot, Whose (ail upon the earth did press Just like a snow-flake, soft and mute ; And there, from slumber, soft and warm, Like a your spirit fresh from heaven, - She bowed ha fight and graceful form, And humble prayed to be 40h, Got! I if souls unsoiled as these, Need daily mercy at thy throne— If she, upon her banded knees, Our loveliest and purest one— Ache, with also* so pure sad bright, We 40111111 her seam Astray child of light— If rho, with these soft eyes and tears, Day attar day, In her first years, Newt kneel and pray for grace from Thee, What ter deeper need have we — 7 - 1141 w hardb..if iht.niamiluaten, Will our wad errors be forgiven ? TBANNETTE AND JEANNOT The feriewing little song is all the rage in Paris. Th words are by Charles Jeffreys. Yon are going far away, Far away from poor Jeannette, There is we one left to love me now, And you, too, may forgot ; But my heart will be with you, .Wherever you may go— ' Can you look me in the face And say the same, Jeannot When you wear the jacket rot, And the beautiful cockade, Oh, I fear you will forget All the promises you made; With the gun upon your shouldtr, And the bay'net by your side, You'll be taking some Frond lady, And be making her your bride. Or when glory leads the way, You'll be madly rushing on, Never thinking if they kill you, That my happiness is gone ; If, you win the day, perhaps. A General you'll be, Though I'm proud to think of that, What Will become of me 1 Oh,lf I were Queen of France Or still bettor Pope of Rome, • I would have no fighting men aboard. No weeping maids at home ; All the world should be at peace, Or, if Kings must show their might, Why, let them who make the quarrels Be the Only men to fight. TEE halm Meastaon.—Marriage is of adds prior to sin itself—the only relic of t► waive that is left to ns—the one smile that God let fall on the world's innocence, lingering and playing still upon its sacred visage, The first marriage was celebra ted before God himself, who filled, in His rein person, the office of Guest, Witness and Priest. There stood the two god-like forms of innocence, fresh in the beauty of their unstained nature. The hallowed shades of the garden, and the green car peted earth smiled to look upon so divine a pair.. The crystal waters flowed by. pure end transparentas they. The unblemieh- ed dowers breathed incense on the sacred sent; rotrwering to their upright love. An teen round of joy from all tho vocal fia to,retiA!ine the hymn, a spontaneous nap- tial harmony, such as a world in tune might yiekloerts diteorri was invented. Religion blittiettehir' two Children thus, and ted )01 1 Winelc)11( 0 ;to begin her wondrous 11 10 4 RIN, • The,. first religious scene th e y koeullras theit own marriage before the Lord leerned to love hiM as theirs's:pester said sealer of their love to mak other r.ised if - they had continued in theWlifiltilittnisli; life `weuld'have been ltritiitiddedWrirship--a sacred :nye tel'octfpytte "tenses and communica . *ph i , T4y . .tli4lnot pontinue. Curiosity triumphed over itufabeace.. They 'tasted 111:41t4"Nt0ir:4,3,' `their te ll ,' Man is anv il ; titan's heart and woman's heart lontirk/Rprithit 'Thu' Brit hearts were. Jleautirli ins; debased. Smetiow,andyteare are. in the world's cup. ~riHtßriWeiit' , ai►ay all parndisean mat la t 4 the world is bowed under curse. atilt one thing remains as it was. spared one token of the inon;lMl world; and that the dearest, to terx. y forever of the primal love.— marriage. This one flower of r l, iga la , bloomint yet in the desert of 4 tom ar. Bushnell.. lennuenot a j est were none can take Thissaris in mirth. ;,.,..11,estot too-hasty to believe flying re ports to the injury of another. AN BuIP.EXOENT IN OLDEN TIME. The Dowager Lady Ashburton died of ' Gosport, England, a short time since, and her history contains materials fora splen did romance. This lady was an Ameri can, and among other incidents of note`re corded in connection with her name, the Mowing will be read with interest : “ She was the daughter of Hon. William Bingham, a Senator of Congress, and fifty years since, her father was a wealthy and prominent merchant in Philadelphia. He was *man of fashion, and the family were among the leaders of the ton in the Quaker city, at that per'tod. Then he was identi fied with the interests and institutions of the Grilled States ; he was recognised as one of the aristocracy, and was always remarkably attentive to the nobility visit ing this country. About the period he was elected by the State of Pennsylvania to the Senate, then sitting in Philadelphia, he built what was then called a splendid and costly mansion, occupying an entlia square of ground, with gardens and all kinds of embellishments, enclosed by a brick wall, fronting on Third and Spruce streets, and now known as Head's Man sion House. Mr. Bingham entertained strangers, Senators and the Cabinet, with princely hospitality. His family led the fashions of those times, and a very friend ly intimacy existed between him and Gen eral Washington. The French revolution drove several noblemen to the United States as exiles, among whom were two professed duellists, Count de Tilly and Viscount de Noailles. The Viscount either brought letters to Mr. Bingham from General Lafayette, or he obtained an introduction to him, which led to his admittance as•an inmate in the fami ly. Having acquired the confidence of Mr. Bingham by his address and accom plishments, he managed to introduce the Count de 'Filly into that hospitable man sion. The Count was as noted for his profligacy as he was for his skill with the small sword ; and understanding all the arts of a seducer, he soon obtained the good opinion and admiration of Mrs. Bingham and Miss Maria Matilda Bing ham, an only daughter. • In those times, and even since, a noble man—French, English, or German—wee received with marked attention in all wealthy, families. There was much pa. trician blood coursing through the veins of the young Republic ; royalty and nobility were not then, as now, at a discount.— Marquises, Viscounts and Barons were li onized whenever:they made their appear ance, and young ladies were enamored with the titled. This Count de Tilly soon per suaded Miss Bingham to elope with him, and also bribed some clergyman to unite them. The city was not then very popu lous, and the whole world of fashion was thrown into the greatest excitement, at hearing that Miss Bingham had run away with the French Count de Tilly; and Mr. Bingham himself—a very honest, well meaning, but not very distinguished man, excepting for wealth—was dreadfully mortified at this rash step of his daughter, not then sixteen years of age. The whole city called it a vile abduction. The great est indignation was everywhere expressed; and Captain Barry, commanding a packet ship, and a - man of fashion, took occasion to thrash the Count for some insolence.— The couple was forthwith separated, and the affair was the subject Of tea-table con versation for some time—such an event seldom occurring in those quiet and inno cent periods. Mr. Bingham almost sunk under the blow, but it became necessary to open some negotiation with the Count, to buy him of, as he only ran away with the girl for her fortune, The Count, in the course of these negotiations represented himself to be deeply in debt, and that it was im poisible to leave the country without sat isfying his creditors to the amount of 25000 in ready money, and an annuity of 2000, which was paid and secured to him, and he left for France, the marriage having' been declared fraudulent. Mr. and Mrs. Bingham never recovered tom the shock, and died shortly afterwards. A young English merchant, by the nacho of.ltaring. eubsequeatiy, aiiived in Phila delphia with letters to Mr. Bingham, and forming 'an attaehmOnt for hie daughter, married and carried her home. Her hug. band, afterwards the head of the great banking-house of Baring an Broth ers, was created a Baron under the title of Lord Ashburton, and was the negotiator hereof the celebrated Ashburton treaty. The dowager, Lady Ashburtcl, recently duties ! . ell, was the girl who had excited so much attention and polite gossip, when run away with by the Count de Tilly, some fifty years ago." "He was up betimes, who found a puree of gold," said the father to hie aleeppbead ed boy. '"Ay, father," replied the son, "but he watt up before who boat it." Be not endues to know the affairs o loth "I'm walking with the staff of life," as the thief said' when he left a baker's shop with a loaf of breed under his arm. GETTYSBURG, PA. FRIDAY EVEN.ING, AUGUST 24, 1849, A COLLINS LARK. The following capital story Is told by "one who knows," of Dr. Mortar, and cannot fail to amuse our , readers. On one occasion, several of the students of South Carolina College resolved to drag the Dee. toads carriage into the woods • and fixed upon a night for the performance of the exhibit. Oneof their number was trou bled with some compunctious visiting*, and managed to convey to the President a hint that it would be well for him to secure the door of his carriage house. Instead of paying any heed to this suggeetion, the Doctor proceeded on the appointed night, to the carriage house, and ensconced his portly'person inside the vehicle. In less than an hour, some half a dozen young gentlemen came to his retreat, and cau tiously drew the carriage into the road.— When they were fairly out of the college precincts they forgot their reserve and be gan to joke freely with each other by name. One of them complained of the weight of the carriage, and another answered by swearing "it was heavy enough to have the old fellow himself in it." For nearly a mile they proceeded along the highway, and then struck into the woods, to a cov er which would conceal the vehicle. Ma , king themselves infinitely merry at the I Doctor's expense, and conjecturing how and when he would find his carriage, they at length reached the spot where they had resolved to leave it. Jpst as they were about to depart—havint once more agreed that "the carriage was heavy enough to have the old Doctor and all his tribe in it," —they were startled by the sudden drop ping of one of the glass door pannels, and by the well known voice of the Doctor himself, who thus addressed them :—"So, so, young gentlemen, you are going_ to leave sue in the woods, are you ? Sure ly, as you have brought me here for your gratification, you will not refuse to take me back for mine. . Come, Messrs. —, and --, and —, bucklp to, and let us return : it is getting late l" There was no appeal ; for the window was raised, and the Doctor resumed his seat. Almost without a word, the discomfited young gentlemen took their places at the pole, at the back of the vehicle, and quite as soon, and with less noise, did they retrace their course. In silence they deigged the cad= riage into its wonted place, and then re treated precipitately to their rooms, to dream of the account they must render on the morrow. When they had gone, the Doctor quietly vacated the carriage, and went to his house, where he related the story to hie family with great glee. He never called the heroes of that nocturnal expedition to any account, nor was his carriage ever after dragged into the woods at night. PIIIJIONAL Ta•rrs or HON. Joint C. CALHOUN.—Less is probably known to the public of the personale of the great expo nent of South Carolina opinion, than of ny other of our eminent statesmen. A number of facts in reference to his person al habits, etc., have recently been disclos ed, which will prove of interest to our read-. ere., The family of the Senator consists of Mrs. Calhoun, and seven children. Of these, one. son is a planter in Alabama, the next a captain in the army at New Or leans,—the eldest daughter is in Europe, wife of our charge at Belgium. Of the three sons at home, ,one is a physician ; the others are young men of 20 and 18.— Mr - . Calhoun has upon his table every thing of Southern production, but is him self a spare eater. The view from his house commands distant mountain ranges 40 and 00 miles away. His study is 20 feet south of his mansion, has but one room and one door. His library is not large, but choice, and most of the books relate to the Union and her interests. The key of this build ing he keeps always under, his immediate control when at home; No one enters it but himself, unless he is there. His house stands on the Seneca fiver, 1000 feet above the level of the sea, and 200 feet above the river. There are per haps 70 or 80 negroes on or about the place. The largest part of his negroes are in Alabama, where•he owns a large cotton plantation, nutlet the ,nuteagstuisst of Ads eldest son. Mr. ,Calhotin hai a *Wier. manner of ditching, drainage and 'planting_ of such utility that his tteighbora regard; his as a model fanner. His crops are rep.: resented as far habit' thnoutany'other aultivatorin that,rogion of country. His farm Is known as Fort Hill, • from 'a fort which once stood there in 'the time of the revolutionary war. 'Calhoun's hub. its are very reg6lo, He rises at, 4or b o'clock—exercises on horseback, or in a long walk over the farm far an hotir ; writes until breakfast at 8, and, after breakfast, is busy in his library until one or two. On Friday, which is mail day, ho rides to the village. His newspapers, of• which large numbers are sent to him, are spread in the hall for the use of his visitors. Ile is very hospitable, is a great lion even in the very neigbor hood of his own house, and in all the pri vate life, is a most estimable, upright, and "Onorable man. 44PEARLESe AND rnE.,, A OCENLOS - lIIS MLE. Blackwood's Ithriaiiitte, in a Review of Werne's uNarretive Af st Voyage up the Nile," furnishes the feNewilog description of some of the ettelte scenes pained through ""We can can cow:else.* things more ex citing than such' a ire as Mr: Warne has accomplished and Sorded. Starting ipt from the outposts of 'nation, he sailed into the very heart of ries, up a streams whose upper waters 1h . 1 for the first time, were furrowed by v ~. , , larger than a sa vage's canoe—a of such gigantic proportions that its Width, at a thousand miles from the sea, g* it the aspect of a lake rather than of eh:V. Thelirnte Ore» ation were in propo 'rt* to the magnitude of the water course. . 4'he hippopotamus reared his huge itheorabove the surface, wallowed in the gulliert that on either hand' run down the streain ; enormous croco diles gaped along the shore ; elephants. played in herds upon .the pastures ; the tall giraffe stalked amok the lofty palms ; snakes, thick as tried; lay coiled in the slimy swamps ; and anithills, ten feet high, towered above the rushes. Along the thick , ly peopled banks, hordes of savages show ed themselves, gazing in wonder at the strange ships, and making ambiguous ges tures, variously constr4ed by the adventu rers as signs of friendship or hostility.-- Alternately sailing and towing, as the wind served or not; constanity in sight of natives, but rarely communicating with them; of ten cut off for days from land by intermin ble fields of tangled weeds ; the expedition pursued its course through innumerable perils, guarded from most of them by the liquid rampart on which it floated. "Lions looked hungry, and savages shook their spears, but neither showed a disposition to swim and board the flotilla." Winnearoaca.--An anecdote is related of Miss Wilberforce, the philanthropist, which powerfully illustrates the grand al pha and omega of warnan's mission.— When far past " extreme youth," and the hue of the " sere and yellow leaf " had be -1 gun to displace the roses and lillies of her cheeks, she accompanied her father in an electioneering tour through a country where ho was menaced with a tremendous oppo sition. By her strenuous efforts among the wives and thiuglitters of .the_votereon_d her woman's tact,,.... which intuitively opens the way to a ready appreciation of character—among the latter themselves, she was mainly instrumental in securing Mr. W's election. In the glorification of the triumph which ensued, her father's supporters enthusiastically cheered the lady before the doors of the hotel at which , they put up, crying out with stentorian voice, " Miss Wilberforce forever ! Miss Wilberforce forever!" In the midst of the uproar she stepped forward on the bal cony, and waving her hand, intimated a desire to be heard. Silence, immediately took place—a pin might have been heard to fall when gaily she:littered these memo rable words : Miss Wilberforce forever ! Not so, gentlemen, if yon please ! Am the only one of all your female acquaint ances whoin you thus forbid to change her name? That is not gallant—and I pro. test against it , with all the „ardor of a true woman's best hopes!" his needless to say that a thunder of applause broke forth, and as the witty lady retreated into the hotel, her name was again echoed far and wide on the air but sedulously divorced from the hated words. uforever." yMiss Wilberforce, it is said, was afterwards married, and thns • it seems, she had her will by force. CAMPBELL TO THE UNITED STATES. United States! your banner wears Two emblems ; one of hoe ; Alas! the other that it Wars, Reminds ue of your dame I The white maa's liberty in types !Stand blazoned by your stars-- But whit's the meaning pf your stripeal They mean your negroes' sears. Hon. Gee. Lux; wa axe akin: Ix lISTM. England I wham* tame each glowing hoe, l'hatainta your 6.g of inetear•light f -T • The finalising wei, tbe deeper blue, • , creiled with the woneheaii'a pearly white! . The blood aid btubw—tba it•ava the arm, Let Aabile partial; million! speak; The Warta—it tell' of color Etta ' Prom start/Int Erhee pallid *eh! This reply; Much more, fairited and Po et'than attack, wait s caito.l tut bell, irbo anknostiodged Its receipt and its merit; by sending ,Lunt - a. complimentary letter tett a iipiondideditikm of his (Camp , WOO work!. ' ' Here it a little nest of Contradiction for thi'lovers of the curious., 'Our language is rich in' the materials of punning. . Fsurr."--The word “Fast" is as great a contradiction as we have in the language. The Susquehanna was fast because the ice was immoveable ; and the ice disap peared very fast for the contrary reason— it was loose. A clock is fast when it goes quicker than time. Bat a man is told to stand fast when he is desired to remain stationer •; people fast when they have nothing to eat, and eat fast consequently, when opportunity offers. Every 'married man should let his wife have the management of the Home De partment, and give her, us Secretary, the control of the different Bureaus. It won't do, however, to let her have the control of the War Department. ANOTHER LETTER PROM MM. JACK DOWNING. Musa au Divot's side of ilistt Rear. August 11, 1849. My, Dun Ma. Rum: You don't knOw bow glad I be to see how you have spooked Up, since 'my last letter to you.— You ate rely giving it to the cortupt•qtribe elle Administration" pell-mell. I should think every udolt," and every "butcher," and Nosy uNero" among 'em must have bonged eyes by this time. You do give it to 'cm right and left about right., Un ele Joshua says you Broths Thu flyer of Our party, lad can whip any body the Feds an bring into the riog. Bat nowl begin to feel uneasy for fr...sr 'you'll overdo your self and break down, and then we shut have nobody to take care of it. .Don"t you remember the story, of the lame ele phant that wu used to help launch vessels 'I One time they put him tolaunch a vessel that was too heavy for him. Alter be tried once or twice and 'couldn't deft it, the keeper called out, "take away this lazy beast and bring-another." At that the poor elephant roused up and put his head to the vessel again, and pushed and strain ed himself' so 'hard that he laid down and died; Now, I don't want your to - do so. When I writ that letter to you two or three weeks ago to rouse you up a little, I did'nt mean to make you so furious that you should run your head agin the Administra fion so hard as to break your neck, or , strain youreelf so much as to fall down dead. Nor I didn't mean that you Out& kill off all the Administration, smack, mooth, as dead as herrings, in two months.. I meant to give you two or three years to do it in. Any time before the next slop-1 lion-would-do. " - If youtthouldkill-"em right off before we have time to chuffs anY : l body to take their places r you would have all the Government on your own alioUld-' ors, and rm afraid it would be too much for you. So I think you had better try tb cool down a ; it. ain't prudence 10 . keep so hot all.the time. That is, I mean on your own account, for fear you should overdo yourself and break down. And then again there is such a thing as drawing too long a bow to hit the thing you 'shoot at. Major Longbow used to be quite un lucky in that •way. You con Otakefolka believe a middlin sized fish story, if you tell it well ; but if you try to `back it up with a tarnel great cock-and-boll story. they'll go right back again and swear they dont believe the fish story. It's danger ous loadin guns to heavy, for then there's no knowing which will get the worst of it, him that stands before the muzzle or him that stands behind the britch. So I hope you'll try to cool down a little, for I'm sat iefied, since my last letter, you an firing away your ammunition too fast. And, be sides, I don't think it's right for you at your time of life io be fighin so hard. Nor I don't think it's necessary outlier'; foT things is brighenin up all over the country. Our party is all coming, together again, and going to carry all afore 'em. It's true the flocks and herds of onr party has been dreadfully broke up and scattered about. The oxens didn't know their Owners, and the sheeps hadn't no shepherds, and the Taylor wolves has beim prowlin about the country and carried off a 'great many 'of 'em. But from what I hear all over the country now, I am satiefied, they are all , cotton together again. and on a new plat form ; and that platform is Mason and Dkcon'a side of Salt ,_ ;Mr. John Van Buren is shoo-sh'ooin 'all Over. the Northern States, and driven of 'eta up and headin of 'em all as fast as he can towards . Mason and Dixon's side of Sale River.— Mr, Calhoun in the Southein Stites is whistlin round his springy rattan, making the hair and akin fly. and he*diu ' our all• up towards Mason and Dixon's iitle of Salt River. t And Gel. Benton is' cracking his long whip all over, the greet Western country, and houlin 'em Al across the pray ries towards Mason and , Dixon's side'of Salt River. , , And Mural Ous stands, yotiknow, where he always has stood. on Mason and tilion'eeldiof Salt River, with hatulful dealt n one •hand and a nub of corn in 'Whet, and lookin all round and calling' of 'ant to come to him and he'll Ibed''em, fro . you pee we have every thirig4oioune l'hin g s look bright ahead. It woolt be long before all the scat tered flocks and beards of our party will he got together' on this new platform on Ma gill' awl Dixon's side of Salt River; and then we'll have things all our own way, and CI ineral Taylor -and the Wilmot pro viso may go to grass. Postacriii t.—Mjr dear old friend : I've'; jest gPt the Union of last Thursday, and I'm amazingly struck up, and my feeling is badly hurt, to see that you've got so be-' wildered that you seemingly don't know me. It's a melancholy sign when old folks get so bewildered that they mistake their oldest and best friends one for 'toth er. Why, your head is turned right round. How cot/it/you say that I was " a fictitious Major Jack Downing " and that my last letter to you was a " trashy forgery ; " and that you would " strip the mask from me I" I teel bad now about writing my list letter to you ; for l'in afraid you took it too hard, and have strained yourself so hard agin the Administration that it's turn ed your head. I beg of you now, my dear friend, to let all drop right where 'tis ; leave Mr. Burke to do the burkin and fight in, and you go right out into the country and put yourself under the " cold-water cure" and see if your head won't come right again. I " fictitious," and you going to "strip the mask from me ! " Why, my dear friend, if you could only be up here five minutes on our new platform, on Mason and Dixon's side of Salt River, and jest lift the mask off of my face one min ute, you'd know me jest as easy as the little boy knew his daddy. Your head coukrot be so turned but what you'd know me ; for you'd see then the very same old friend that stood.by you and Gineral Jack son Mete, sixteen, and eighteen years I ago; the same old friend that coaxed up Gineral Jackson and made him forgive yoit for calling him such hard names be fore be was elected. It's very ungrateful for rot to forget me now, that is, if jou was in your right mind. For I'm the genie old friend, the same Jack Downing, that was born and brought up in Dow fling vine, away down east in the State of Maine, and that drove down to Portland in Jinnerwary, )1330, with a load of axe handles and bean-poles, and found the Legislater in a dreadful snarl, all tied and tangled, and see-sawin rip and down a whele fortnight. and couldn't choose their officers. I found my axe-handles and bean poles 'wouldn't sell, so I took to poly tin and , went to *whin letters. The Leg baster lord and fout all - winter; but I kept snide, and.at last I got'em straitened out. I kept on wrifikfor a whole year, and got the polytix of - Mains pretty weU settled.— Then lsee flineral Jackson was getting bite iamb* Usti footed it on to Wash ioguin to give him a lift. And you know I always stuck by him afterwards as long as he lived. I helped him fight the battles with Riddle's monster Bank till we killed lie: I helped him to put down nullifi cation, and showed exactly how it would work if it got the upper hand, in my letter about carrying the raft of logs across Seba- F. Pond, whettDM Johnson got mad and swore he'd have his log all to himself, and so- he-cot the lashings and paddled off on his-log alone; and then his log began to roll and he couldn't keep it steady, and he got ducked head over heels half a dozen times,and come pesky near being drown'd. And that wasn't all I did to keep off nulli fication and help pot it down. I brought on my old company of Downingville ma litia to Washington, under the command of, cousin Sergeant Joel, and kept 'em there with their, guns all loaded till the danger war over. And I used to go up nip of the Congress house every day, and keep watch, and listen off towards South Carolina, so as to be ready, the first mo meat nullification bust up there, to order Sergeant Joel to march and fire. The Gineral always said the spunk I showed was what cowed nullification down so 'quick;, and he always felt very grateful to me foe it. Well, I stuck by the Gineral all 'weatters ; and I kept writin letters from Washington to my old friend, the editor of the Portland Courier, and kept old Hickory's popularity alive among the people, and didn't let nobody meddle with his Adn;inistradon to hurt it. Well then, you know, the Gineral, in the summer 'of 1832, started off on his greed tower down East, and I went with him. Yon remember, when we got to Philsdelphy, the people swarmed round him so thick they almost smothered him to death ; and the Gineral got so tired shaken hands that he couldn't give another shake, end come pretty near faintin away ; aid then I put my band round under his arm and shook (or him half an hour longer, arid so we made out to get through. I sent the whole account of it to my old friend of the Portland Courier. Well, then, we jogged along to New York ; and there, you remember, we come pesky near getting a ducking when the bridge broke down at Castle Garden. I sent the whole account of it to my old Portland friend.— Well, the next day, the "original" Major Downing published his first original letter in a New York paper, giving an account of the ducking at Castle Garden. Nobody I couldn't dispute hut what this was the true giniiine "original" Downing document.l although my "vile intimations" of it had I been going on and published almost every week for two years. I say nobody couldn't i dispute it, because 'twas proved by scrip ture and poetry both. For the Bible says, "the first shall be last, and the last first ;" and poetry says, "coming events cast their shadows before." So the shadows, the "vile imitations," had been flying about the country fur more than two years before the original event got along. I hope your head will get settled again, so you can sec through these things and understand 'em, and know me jest as you used to. I can't bear the idea of your not knowing me, and thinking I'm "fictitious." Du try to refresh your mind a little; think how I stood by you and Mr. Polk., and helped you along through the Mexican, war ; and how I carried trill dispatebal TWO DOLLARS PER ANNVIIV:). NEW SERIES-410. 135. irons Mr. Polk to Mr. Trist,in Mexico, and how I carried a private message Mot* you to Gineral 'faylor, to try to mu it out of him which side he was coming out Good bye, my dear friend ; I hope next time I hear from you you will be recover ed and in your right mind, so u to know me and see that I ain't "fictitious;" for you havn't got a truer friend on Mssbfl and Dixon's side of Balt River than your old friend, • - MAJOR JACK DOWNING [ DEFERRED PARAGRAPHS.? OPINIONS OP TOR Ptuess.—ilk man who , would cheat a printer would steal a meet ing house and rob a church-yard. If be has a soul, ten thousand of iis size would have more room in a musquito's eye than a bull frog in the Pacific ocean. lie ought to be winked at by blind people,and kick ed to death across logs by cripples.—. nn Harbor IJ'olvcrine. Yea, thousands of such souls as that man's would rattle in a mustard seed.— dance contradances upon 'file point of a wasp's sting—or march abreast through the eye of a cambric needle. A solar microscope would fail to discover them, and when found they would not fill the smallest cranny in creation.—Post. Amen ! such a being would steal the', molasses out of a sick nigger's ginger cake —take from a drunk man's mouth his last "chew" of tobacco—walk all night throUgh the rain to deprive a blind sheep of its foal.. der—travel fifty miles on a fasting stomach to cheat a dying woman out of her .c 05 04 —and steal the wax out of a dead dog's ear. Such a man ought to be tied ,to sheep's tail and butted to death.—,Flik_ rence .Enquirer. A. PORTRAIT HY ORRELEY.-111 a War dated at Cincinnati, Mr. Greeley takes the' following portrait of a stage coach corn' panion. It is well drawn, and will at swer many living originals in the world; "I lost at Wheeling my three compan ions of the mail coach, two of them fair,: worthy men : but the third deserving of special mention. lie was in Ohio retail er of tape and a chewer of plug tobacco, some thirty years of age, who had set up for a wit on a very small capital of low . humor, and had a very narrow escape from turning out a natural fool. It was his • chief employment through the day to hum-. bug those'we met or passed, by pretend ing to hold out to them some valuable pa per, or to call them back under the pre tence of having sonic important communi cation to make. Ills standing topic of re mark was the fair six, for whom he pro fessed and doubtless felt the admiratiotko hog has for artichokes. 1 - lost him, quite resigned to the probability of never meant hint again." TIIK PEACH CoNOKKAS AT PARII,-..—The late foreign papers state that the French Government has given. full authority for the holding of the Peace Congress in the French capital, and have expresied their warm approval of the object of the meet ing and the motives of the projectors. The English delegation will comprise some hue, dreds of gentlemen from different parts of the United Kingdom. ➢Zany also will at tend as visiters, without being personally identified as members of the Congress.— The American people, it seems, are to ho represented in this Congress by nearly st hundred members. So says the Engliihk authority, and that the English and Amer , . ican delegates will proceed in one patty from London by special train on the SW of August. Tee PURCIIABE OF CUBA.—The WilF4l ington correspondent of the Boston &Imo says it will . be the special duty of the neW' Minister to the Court of Madrid, Gen. Bar ringer, to procure a reduction ditto error mos duties to which the produce,of the U nited States is subjected when imported' into Cuba, adding that the late adrninitinS-, tion made a standing offer to the Spanish Government of It 100,000,000 for the Is land of Cuba. but that this offer has been or will be withdrawn by the present ad ministration. A PLEASING INCIDENT...74IIOK the thousands to whom Father Mathew admith , istered the pledge' in the Catholic Chi eh. es, at Boston, last week, was the Rev. Ca, kb Stetson, a Protestant, who received it with all the solemn ceremonies employed iu the ease of Catholics, at his own re. quest. He said to Father Mathew that, could see no impropriety in any person professing to be a christian recognizing the . significance of the sign of the cross tie the emblem ofinaterradernption. SNAKE STORY.—TIie Stotbury Anirri.J ean is credibly informed theta greenhouse , snake, about 18 inches long, was thund creeping into the mouth of an infant child of George Shilp. The child was asleep when the mother came in, and in her first attempt to draw it out she tors'offpart ot the tail. She dm grasped it with the blanket and extracted it! St uttered about half h@ hlOOl l / 1 •''; 211.0 01 1 1111110114 focateirtibOutlarr . ntituitfih A . erred, and vomited:Witt