fmS , J JBL K M. " S VOL. 2.-NO. 2G. CLEAEriELD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY C, 1856. BY S. B. ROW. : THE DUMB CHILD. She is my only girl, . I aked for her as some most precious thing; Tor all unfinished was love's jeweled ring, Till set with this soft pearl ! The stales that time brt forth I could not see ilow pure, how perfect, scemc 1 the gift to me! 1 ' Oh ! many a ?oft old tuno I used to sing nnto that deadened ear, And suffered not theslightcst footsteps near, ' ' Lest she might wake too souu ; ; And hushed her brothers laughter while she lay. -Ah I nccdloss care V I wight have let them play. , ' Tws long ero I beliovcd That this one daughter might not speak to me ; Waited and watched Ood knows how patiently How willingly deceived. : 'Vain Love was long the untiring nurse of Faith, -And tended llopo until it starred to death. Oh! if ehe could but hear For oiie short hour, till I her tongue might teach To call mo mother, in the broken speecn That thrill's the mother's ear ! Alas! those sealed lips never may bo stirred, To the deep music of that holy word ! My heart it eorcly tries. To eta her kneel with such a reverent air Ecsido her brothers, at their evening prayer ; Or lift those earnest eyes, To watch our lips, as though our words she knew, Then move her own, u she were speaking, too. I've watched her looking up To the bright wonder of a sunset sky, With such a depth of meaning in her cyo. That I could almost hope The struggling soul would burst its binding cords, And the long-pent-up thoughts flow forth iu words. The song of bird and bee, The chorus of the breeies. streams, and groves, All the grand music to which nature moves, Are wasted melody To her; the world of sound a tuneless void; While vea silence hath its charm destroyed. ' Her face is very fair; ITr blue ye beautiful ; of finest mould The soft white brow, o'er which, in waves of gold, - Kipplea hor shining hair. Alaa! this lovely temple closed must be. 1'or lie who made it keeps the master-key. ' 'Wills Ho tho mind within Fhould from earth's Babe4-clamor be kept free E'ea that Jl is still, small voice, and step might be lleam at its inner sunne, -Through that deep hush of soul, with elaarcr thrill ? Then should I grieve? O, murmuring heart be still ! She seems to have a quiet senso Of quiet gladness in her noiseless play, fchohath pleasant smile, a gentle way, Whose voiceless eloquence Touches ell hearts, though I had once the fear That eveu hor father would not caro for her. Thank God it is not so ! Andv when his son are playing merrily. She comes and leans her head upon his kuoe. O, at such times, I know, By hii full eye, and tones subdued and mild, llvw fci heart yearus over his silent child. Not of all gifts bereft, Even now. How could I say aho did not speak ? IVhahreal language lights her eye and check. And repders thanks to Him who left Unto her soul yet open avenues For joy to enter, and for love to use I And God in love doth givo To her defeat a beauty of iks own ; -Aai we a decper'tenderness have known Through that for which we grieve. Vet ehr.ll the seal be melted from her ear Yea; and my voice shall fill it but not here. When that new senso is given, What rapture will its first experience be, That never woke to meaner melody Than tho rich sogs of Heaven To hear the full-tnnod anthem swelling round, While angels teach the ecstasies of sound! THE DEMON IN TIAWKSON'S HOUSE. Trom tho Fhil'a. North America. Tho coals are glowing In the grate. A red and cheerful light spreads over the little sitting-room of William Hawkson's hoase, show ing the plain, but neat and clean carpet,-and chairs and tables, with the pretty prints fram ed upon the wall Mary's guitar and William's Yiolin presiding, like the spirit of harmony, over tho domestic comfort of the apartment. !Baby Bell has bummed herself to sleep, rattle in hand, in tho cradle, and her brother, ol threo years, romping Harry, has paused in his play to watch the flitting smiles upon her dim pled face. From the room back, used both as kitchen and dining room, comes a warmer glow, and the inv iting savors of cooking meat, nvhilo the song of bustling Mary JIawkson rings merrily in contrast with the wind's howl ing and moaning among the snow-drifts out of doors. Six o'clock has struck, and William is expected from his carpenter shop. William works hard, and steady, for ho has a precious object in view that of securing a house of his own. ' At the end of every week, a portion of his earnings is placed in Marj-'s' hands, to be added to the store in the corncrof thc topmost drawer in the bureau, for the money is too val uable in the carpenter's eyes, to be entrusted to the keeping of the best established saving fund. It is Saturday night. William at length ar rives wearied, and covered with snow. But his manly cheeks glow, and his blue eyes brighten as he shakes the snow from his rough overcoat and cap, and enters the home of his heart. ' Mary advances to greet him ; tut the color flics from her check, the song suddenly ceases,; and she heaves stranje si-hs as sho goes to give her husband the welcome kiss. 7 What can produce such a change amid so many endearing comforts? ' "Hurrah ! Mary," cries the bold, frank voico of tua carpenter, "its hard work, but tharik God and yon, Mary, two more weeks will make up the sum that shall place us in our cwn home ! Come ! give me a hearty hug and one more kiss! That's the way ! Bless the lit- tie darling she's asleep'. Harry, take caro of that coat, it's too wet for you to handle. There's the .money, Mary, and now let us go to supper, fdr I am very hungry !" In the ccstacies cf hi joy like a sailor, whose heart bounds, as after a voyage of peril, land comes in view, ho does not observe the tear trembling in Maty's eye, or the iluttering voico with which sho responds to his greet ingsand then they proceed with the evening meal in the carpenter's home. The two weeks have passed away upon the path that has no returning step. It is Satur day night again in the carpenter's home, and William is expected from work. Mary Hawk son has been seated before tho grate for a full hour, to the neglect of supper, Baby Boll, and even the importunities of little Harry. The glow of the fire falls upon a face, pale and deathly in its expression and meets the fire of eyes in which wildness and sadness strange ly mingle. Suddenly she starts up, and her thoughts speak out I will, I must make another risk!" and then sinking into the chair again, falters forth, "but God in heaven, what will that avail ?" A footstep is heard approaching the house. She dries her tears a3 well as she can, and awaits with a fearful tremble, the eoming cf William. His hand is upon the knob,and as a spasm shoots through the heart of tho wife, the joyful carpenter bounds into the room shouting "It's done, Mary it's done. Here's the money, the last of tho sum we wanted. Quick ! bring down the box, and let us count the whole, to be sure that we have not bean mistaken. Quick ?" Why docs he turn a glance of surprise upon Mary surprise even in the glow of joy ? The wife rises to her feet, but seems scarcely able to stand : she turns upon her doting hus band a look of utter despair, and then sinks down at his feet. . "William husband forgive forgive ?" sho tittered, but could not proceed. "Win', Mary-r-how what's the matter ? there is nothing to forgive, love. Here's the balance ot the money we shall have a house of our own, and then when there's no rent to pay, yon shall not spoil your pretty hands in the kitchen any more," says William, endea voring to make her rise. "William William you have no money," sho answers, and sinks to the floor. . The carpenter stands like one stricken with tho thought of approaching death. "What do you mean ? Iluve you been rob bed ?" he at length asks in a husky voice, and iho glow of Lis cheeks change to an ashen hue. ';Xo, no you have been robbed, and I am the thief! William" sho now musters strength enough to say, "hear me, and then let me die, as I deserve. I have abused your confidence. The money you have given to my care, has been spent in the policy shop, even to the last cent. I was induced to try my fortune there, and have ruined both you and rnyself. Oh! forgive me !" But the agonizing cry for forgiveness falls upon cars that convey but unmeaning sounds to the carpenter's brain. He has heard but a portion of the narrative of ruin, and the ap peal for forgiveness is answered by a mani ac's hollow laugh ! The carpenter utters but tho one word :devil" dashes his wife to the floor, and rushes wildly from a home that he can know no more ! Days pass away days of fearful agony and despairing search on the part of Mary Ilawk son and of grief on the part of tho poor car penter's many friends. And then, among the masses of floating ice in a dock on the Dela ware, the hair of a corpse was discovered mattiug upon the temples, and the eyes were seen gleaming with a frozen stare. The body was hauled upon tho wharf, and before tho Coroner arrived, a woman's wild shriek start led the laborers on the wharves, and Mary Hawkson was raving over her husband's body. And, though the corpse now moulders be neath the snows of the church yard, never since has the wife, so fatally weak so sinned against, yet sinning ceased to rave, like a fury, over the ruin tho policies wrought. THE .UATTEIi-OF-FACT 31 AN Here is a very amusing picture cf that spe cies of odd fish known as tiio Malicr-of-fact Man .- "I am what tho old women call "An Odd Fish." I do nothing under heaven without a motive never. 1 attempt nothing unless I think there is a probability of my succeeding. I ask no favors when I think they are not de served, and finally, I don't wait upon the girls when I think my attentions would be disagree able. I am a matter-of-fact man I am. I do things seriously. I once offered to attend a young lady home I did, seriously; that is, I meant to wait on her homo if she wanted me. Sho accepted my offer. I went homo with her; and it has ever since been an enigma to me whether she wanted me or not. She took my arm, and said not a word. I bade her Good night,' and she said not a word. I met her the next day, and I said not a word. Met her again, and she gave me a two hour3 talk. It struck me as curious. She fuarod I was of fended, and couldn't for tho life of her con ceive why. She begged me to explain, .but didn't give me tho ghost of a chance to do it She said she hoped I wouldn't bo offended ; asked me to call ; and it has ever since been a mystery to mo whether she really wanted me ' to call or not. "I once taw a lady at her window. I tho't J 1 would call. I did. I inquired for the lady, and was told that she was not at home. I ex- j pect sho was. I went away thinking so. I rather think so still. I met her again. Sho was offended said I had not been neighbor ly. She reproached me for my negligence; said she thought I had been unkind. And I've ever since wondered whether she was sor ry or notr "A lady once said to me that she should like to be married, if she could get a good conge nial husband, who would make her happy, or at least try to. She was not difficult to please, she said. I said, I should like to get married too, if I could get a wife that would try to make me happy.' She said, Umph!' and looked as if she meant what she said. She did. For when I asked her if she could be persua ded to marry me, she said she would rafher be excused. I excused her. I have often wondered why I excused her. "A good many things of this kind have hap pened to me that are doubtful, wonderful, mysterious. What, then, i3 it that causes doubt and mystery to attend the ways of men 1 II is the want of fact. This is a matter-of-fact world, and in order to act well iu it, we must deal iu matter-of-fact." ROMAN CATHOLICISM IX AMERICA. Bead the following extract from a Roman Catholic paper of wide circulation in Western New York, edited by Father Oertel, of the lioman Catholic persuasion. Says he : "Whoever undervalues the spiritual power of the Church iu the United States, wanders in a fearful labvrinth. We have not only sev en Archbishops, thirty-three Biihops, and sev enteen hundrod and forty Priests, all in the service of the Pope and tho Church, but we have also thirty-one colleges, thirty-seven s?minarics, and a hundred and seventeen fe male academies, all founded by the Jesuits, bringing danger and death to unbelief, and mischief to American Know Xolhingism and radicalism.- And tho hierarchial band, which, like a golden thread, surrounds forty-one dio ceses and two apostolic vicariates,and stretch es from tho Atlantic Ocean to the still waters of t'.u; Pacific. and maintains an invisible. secret. magnetic connection with Homo tin? Hierar chy is to us a sure guarantee that the Church, perhaps after severe struggles and sufferings, will one da come off victorious over all the sects of America. It is computed that there arc at present, more than two millions of Catholic inhabitants iu the United Slates, who are baptised and confirmed Catholic soldiers of the Lord, and who, at the first summons, will assemble iu rank and file. Then will men not undervalue the power of the Catholic Church in the United States. I will scatter sand in no one's eyes, and therefore I stand foith openly, and directly declare, that the power and influence of the Catholic Church ais stronger than many believe. Whoever doubts this must be cither a fool or blind." We learn further from an incidental remark in the same article, that the Catholic Church last year, had already eighteen hundred and twenty-four churches, and at present the num ber is still larger; that besides Cincinnati, St. Louis, New Orleans, Charleston, Georgetown, and New York, which an article in the All gemirio Augsburg Zeitung, on the same sub ject, designates as the bulwarks of the Cath olic Church in North America, Baltimore, the metropolitan -seal, the head-quarters of the Fathers of llodemption, who there, have their provincial, is a Catholic division; that Phila delphia w itli its Jesuits, Iledemptorist3, Au giislines, and with its distinguished clerical seminary, possesses rich churches and the re gard of the ruling clerus; and that Pittsburg, Bufi'alo and Milwauliie are each tho residence of a Bishop "who, w ithout noise indeed, but with astonishing results, labors in his widely extended diocese, but who is surrounded by a clergy as distinguished for wisdom as for zeal and self sacrifice." Father Oertel thus presents the great and disciplined army of his wily church and then turrs to upbraid the miserable heretics, who hesitate to woiship his relics and be overawed at his mummeries. How long Sons of Amer ica, will this intriguing and ambitious Catho lic priesthood permit us to rule our own coun try? Archbishop Hughes has already notified us, that if we don't like Romanism, wo must move out of its wav. Conn. Courant. Savage Puxxixg. A Western paper having stated that Judge Douglas was a man of 'loose habits.' Prentice replies that on the contra ry he is often very "tight." Another remarks that he has gone to Cleveland to try "the wat er cure," and to this is added that drinking water only will remove his malady. Political Wit. A letter-writer . speaking of those Frecsoilers who prefer Lewis D. Cam pbell to Nathaniel P. Banks, for Speaker of the House, compares them to the Scribes and Pharisees, who "strain at a Nat and swallow a Campbell." "That's So !" New clothes ate great prom oters of piety. A new bonnet or a new dress will induce a girl to go to church at least twice on Sunday, where sho did not go once before she got it. Bo attentive to your neighbor at the dinner lablo: nass hnr pv.tv tliinsr she rctlllires ; and f L o - - M. it she would unwittingly raako aa ill-natured remark, pass that also. EAST DAYS OF JUDGE JEFFREYS. In the new volumes of Macauley's History of England is the following account of the last days of tho notorious Judge Jeffreys : "Among tho many offenders Avhoso names were mentioned in the course of these inqui ries, was one who stood alone and uaapproach ed in guilt and infamy, and whom whigs ad torie3 were equally willing to leave to the ex treme rigor of the law. On that terrible day, which was succeeded by the Irish Night, the roar of a great city disappointed of its re venge, had followed Jeffreys to the drawbridge of the Tower. His imprisonment was not strictly legal; but he at first accepted with thanks and blessings the protection which those dark walls, mado famous by so many cries and sorrows, afforded him against the fu ry of the multitude. Soon, however, he be came sensible that his life was still in immi nent peril. For a time he flattered himself with tho hope that a writ of habeas corpus would liberate him from his confinement, and that he should be able to steal away to some foreign country, and to hide himself with part cf his ill-gotten wealth from the detestation of mankind ; but till the government was settled, there was no court competent to grant a writ of habeas cor pus, and as soon a3 the government had been settled, the habeas corpus act was suspended. Whether tii$ legal guilt of murder could be brought home to Jeffreys, may bo doubted. But he was morally guilty of so mauy murders that, if there had been no other way of reach ing his life, a retrospective Act of Attainder would have been cl-raorouslv- demanded by the whole nation. A disposition to triumph over the fallen has never been one of the besetting sins of Englishmen ; but tho hatred of which Jeffreys was the object was without a parallel in our history, and partook but too largely of the savageness of his own nature. The people, where he was concerned, were as cruel as himself, and exulted in his misery as he had been accustomed to exult in the mis ery of convicts listening to the sentence of death, and of families clad in mourning. The rabble congregated before his deserted man sion in Duke street, and read on the door, with shouts of laughter, tho bills which announced the sale of his property. Even delicate wo men, w ho had tears for highwaymen and house breakers, breathed nothing but vengeance a- gainst him. The lampoons on him which were hawked about the town were distinguished by an atrocity rare even in those days. Hanging would bo too mild a death for him; a grave under the gibbet too respectable a resting place ; he ought to bo whipped to death at tho cart's tail ; he ought to be tortured to death like an Indian ; he ought to be devoured alive. The street poets portioned out all his joints with cannibal ferocity, and computed how ma ny pounds of steaks might be cut from his well fattened carcass. Nay, the rage of his enemies was such, that, in language seldom heard in England, they proclaimed their w ish that he might go to the placo of wailing and gnashing of teeth, to the worm that never dies, to the fire that is never quenched. They ex horted him to hang himself in his garters, and to cut his throat with his razor. They put up horrible prayers that ho might not be able to repent, that he might die the same hard-hearted, wicked Jeffreys that ho had lived. His spirit, as mean in adversity as insolent and in human in prosperity, sunk down under tho load of public abhorrence. His constitution, originally bad, and much impaired by intem perance, was completely broken by distress and anxiety. He was tormented by a cruel infernal dis ease, which the most skillful surgeons cf that age were seldom able to relieve. Ono solace was left to him brandy. Even when he had causes to try and councils to attend, he had seldom gouo to bed sober. Now, when he had nothing to occupy his mind, save terrible rec ollections and terrible forebodings, ho aban doned himself without reserve to his favorite vice. Many believed him to be bent on short ening his life by excess. He thought it bet ter, they said, to go off in a drunken fit than to be hacked bylvEicn,or torn limb from limb by the populace. Onco he was roused from a state of object despondence by an agreeable sensation, speed ily followed by a mortifying disappointment. A parcel had been left for him at the Tower. It appeared to be a barrel of Colchester oys ters, his favorite- dainties. He was greatly moved; for there are moments when those who least deserve affection are pleased to think that they inspire it. "Thank God," he ex claimed, "I have still some friends left!" lie opened the parcel, and from among a heap of shells out tumbled a stout halter. It does not appear that ono of the flatterers or buffoons whom he had enriched out of tho plunder of his victims, came to comfort him In the day of trouble. But he was not left in utter solitude. John Tutchin, whom he had sentenced to be flogged every fortnight for seven years, made his way into theTower, and presented himself beforo the fallen oppressor. Poor Jeffreys, humbled to tho dust, behaved with abject civility, and called for wine. "I am glad, sir," he said, "to see you." "And I am glad," answered the resentful whig, "to see your lordship in this place." "I served my master," said Jeffreys; "I was bound in conscieuce to do to." " Where was your con science," said Tutchin, "when yon passed that sentence on mo at Dorchester!" "It was set down in my instructions," answered Jeffreys, fawningly, "that I was to show no mercy to men like you, men of parts and courage. When I went back to Court I was reprimand ed for my lenity." Even Tutchin, acrimonious as was his na ture, and great as were his wrongs, seems to have been a littlo mollified by the pitiable spectacle which he had at first contemplated with vindictive pleasure. He always denied the truth of the report that ho was the' person who sent the Colchester barrel to the Tower. A more benevolent man, John Sharp, the excellent Dean of Norwich, forced himself to visit tho prisoner. It was a painful task, but Sharp had been treated by Jeffreys, in old times, as kindly as it was in the power of Jef freys to treat anybody, and had once or twice been able, by patiently waiting until the storm of curses and invectives had spent itself, and by dexterously seizing the moment of good humor, to obtain for unhappy families some mitigation of their suderings. The prisoner was surprised and pleased. "What!" he said, "dare you own mo uow ?" It was in vain, however, that the amiable di vine tried to givo a salutary pain to that scar ed conscience. Jeffreys, instead of acknowl edging his guilt.exclaimcd vehc ueully against the injustice ot mankind. "People call me a murderer for doing what at the time was ap plauded by some who arc now high in public favor. They call me a drunkard because I take punch to relieve me in uiy agony." lie would not admit that, as President of the High Cornrnission, ilc had done anything to deserve reproach. His colleagues, he said, were the real criminals ; and now thiy threw all the blame on him. He spoke with peculiar asper ity ot Spart, who had undoubtedly been the most lmraaas andmodcrate member of tho board. It soon became clear that the wicked judge was fast sinking under the weight of mental and bodMy .suffering. Dr. John Scott, pre' herniary of St. Paul's, a clergyman of. great sanctity, and author of the Christian Life, a treatise once widely renowned, was summon ed, probably on the recommendation of his intimate friend Sharp, to the bodside of the dying man. It was in vain, however, that Scott spoke, as Sharp had already spoken, of tho hidious butcheries of Dorchester and Taunton. To the last, Jeffreys continued to repeat that those who thought him cruel did not know what his orders were, that he dc- served praise instead of blame, and that his clemency had drawn on him tho extreme dis pleasure cf his master. Disease, assisted by strong drink and misery did its work fast. The patient's stomach re jected all nourishment. He dwindled in a few weeks from a portly and even corply man to a skeleton. On the 18th of April he died, in tho 41st year of his age. He had been Chief Justice of the King's Bench at 3.1, and Lord Chancellor at 37. In the whole history of the English bar there is no other instance of so rapid an elevation, or of so terrible a fall. The ematiated corpse was laid, with all privacy, next to the corpse of Monmouth in the chapel of the Tower. Ax Arkansas L.EGISI.ATOR. a mcmoer e- lect of tlie lower chamber of the Legislature of Arkansas, was persuaded, by some wags of his neighborhood, that if he did not reach the State House at ten o'clckon the day of assem bling, he could not be sworn, and would loss his seat. Ho immediately mounted, with hunting frock, rine, and bowie knife, and spurred until he got to the door of the capital, were he hitched his nag. A crowd was in the chamber of tha lower House, on tho ground floor, walking about with their hats- on, and smoking cigars. These he passed, ran up "stairs into the Senate chamber," set his rifle against the wall, and baw led out : " Strangers, w bar's the man that swears me in ?" at the same time taking out his creden tials. " Walk this way," said the clerk, who was at the moment igniting a real Principe, and he was sworn without inquiry. When the teller came to count noses, he found that there was one Senator too many present. The mistake was soon discovered, and the huntsman was informed that he did not belong there. "Fool who with your corn broad ?" lie roar ed ;" you can't flunk this child, no how you can fix it I'm elected to this ere Legislature, and I'll go agin all banks and eternal improve ments, and if there's any of your orratory gen tlemen wants to get skinned, jest say tho word, and I'll light upon you like a nigger on a woodcock. My constituents sent mo. here, and if you want to floor this two-legged ani mal, hop on, jest as soon you like, for though I'm from the country, I'm a little smarter than any other quadruped -you cau turn out of this drove." After this admirable harangue, he put his bowie knife between his teeth, and took up his rifli w ith, "Come here, old sukc, stand by me, at the same time pointing at the Chairman, who however, had seen such people before. After some expostulation, the man was pcr- snaded that ho belonged to the lower cham ber, upon which he sheathed his knife, flung his gun on his shoulder, and with a profound cottgree, remarked; "Gentleman, I beg your pardon. But if I didn't think that lower room was a grogsery, may I be shot. A SPOUTING ADVENTURE. BT A BACKWOODSMAN. I have often seen accounts of "hair breadth 'scapes" in such cases, which very wise peo ple who know nothing about it in more civ- ilized places, have charged to the marvellous, but which we of the woods, at least many of us, know to be not only possible, but highly prob able, and in some instances, by sad experience ; in illustration of which, I will endeavor to de scribe an adventure of my own. In 1837 I re sided on the banks of the Mississippi, (C. VT.,) as I had done from my infancy. I was then, about 13 years ago, stout and athletic, and pas sionately feud of wild scenery and sporting adventures. Tho month of October had ar rived the great season for partridge and deer shooting ; and in accordance with my almost daily custom, I sallied out with my fowling piece ono barrel charged with a ball, and the other with small shot. I had succeeded in bagging some small wares, and in passing a creek observed a raccoon busily employed turn ing over the stones in search of frog, worms, &c. Without giving the matter much thought I succeeded iu removing "Ursa Minor" to an other, if not a better world ; and being rather corpulent to carry through the woods, I hung him upon a sappliug, intending to send for him the next day ; and as the part of the coun try iu which I was did not aQbrd large game, I charged the second barrel with shot also. I had proceeded perhaps a mile, and was cross ing tho outskirts of a Tamarack swamp, through a succession of narrow and rocky glens, w ith high and precipitous sides, and had sprung from a rather high rock into a rift of not more than three feet wide, when I perceived the eyes of au immense buck glaring at me, at not over ton feet distance. A glance showed mo that he had no means of escape except over myself; and aware of the desperation of this otherwise timid creature, under such circum stances and at this particular season, I formed my resolution iu an instant. I cocked both locks, placed my fingars on the triggers, and resolved to wait his spring, as I did not think my charge would injuro him except at the very muzzle ; I then knelt upon one knee and watched his eye. All this took place in a very fjw second?. At length tho haunches and ears were drawn back, and with a tremendous snort he bounded in the air, with the evident intention of de scending upon me ; quick as lightning both barrels wero discharged full info his breast, and I received a shock as if from a pile cn- ine, which deprived me of all sensation. A- bout three hours afterwards, I was brought to a stalo of partial sensibility by something lick ing my face, and something growling and scratching my clothes ; but being very faint I did not lookup until enormous paws tore flesh with them ; then, indeed, I did look up, when, what wr.s my horror,io 6ee a huge bear, coolly licking tho blood from my lacerated breast. Weakness, more than self-possession, kept me still a moment, while two half-grown cubs were tearing and scratching my legs and feet. Tha desperation of the case aroused me to sudden enersry, ana, mv rigut arm Doing woKcn, l slowly stretched my left hand to iny back for my hunter's knife, resolved, if such can be called resolution, to savo my life if possible. I had get it drawn from the sheath, and was watching a favorable opportunity to plunge it into tlie brute's throat, when, with a frightful roar, it fill across my body, apparently in tho very agonies of djath. A fearful struggle en sued, which soon put a stop to my feeble ex ertions. When I next became conscious, 1 was seated leauing against a rock, and a stal wart Indian youth, who had. been my compan ion in many a hard day's hunt, was busily en gaged in binding up my wounds, with leaves, and strips torn from his owii scanty garments. Not being able to take me home that night, ho mado a fire and nursed me as a mother w ould a child, and the next day carried me by easy tages to my. parents. It appeared that he had called for me, but being told that I was only gone a few minutes, thought that he would make up to me ha ac cidentally came to w hero I had shot and hung up the raccoon, but found that some bears had broken tho sapling and eaten their cousin. He then struck their trails, and followed them to where he saw the old na apparently devour ing something, he did not know what, no fired, and being aware of their tenacity of life, waited to re-load his rifle era he ventured to advance a sad job lor me, as by its dying struggles I have been maimed for life.- It is worthy of remark that the deer had been so close upon me when I fired, that his chest was singed, and that the barrels of tho gun wero found nearly eight inches deep in the wound formed by their own discharge, while I and the stock had been driven upwards of thirty feet by tho forco of his spring. . Such arc soma of tho perils of the back wood's sportsman, and which with , many oth ers, equally romantic, is an o'er truo tale, as I and man- others know by hard experience. No franking privilego exists in England. Even the Qucca has to pay her penny. ." "