YOL. 2.-X0. 38. BY S. B. ROW. CLEARFIELD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1856, L1FEISRF- BT n v.. x.ocr BXX.OW. Ufa real Lifo is earnest ! Ami the grave is not its goal ; "Dust thou art. to dust returnest,' Was not spoken of the sol. Not enjoyment and not sorrow, Is oar destined end or way; But to act that each to-morrow Finds us farther than to-d y.. Art is long, and time is fleeting. And our hearts, tho' stout and brave, till, like muffled drums, are beating' -Funeral marches to the grave. . ,r In the world's broad field of battle, In the bivouac of lifo, Be not like dumb, driven cattle! lie a hero in the strife ! Trust not the Future, bowe'er pleasant, Let the dead Past bury its dead ! Act act in the living present! Heart within, and Goo o'erhead ! Lives of great men all remind us We ean make our lives sublime ; And departing, leavo behind us, Footprints on the sands of Time ; Footsteps that, perhaps, another, Sailing o'er Life's solemn main, A forlorn and shipwrecked brother, Seeing, shall take heart again. Let jus. then, be np and doing, With a heart for any fate ; Still achieving, still pursuing, - Learn to labor and to wait. EGYPT. Our late Minister to Greece, Mr. Pryor, made a visit to Egypt during his absence, from which he wrote the following Interesting letter to the Richmond Enquirer: Cuito, December 17, 1855. I need not protest my reluctance to post pone my return on any pretenco of pleasure or profit. I am tired of travel, and I long for homo with the passionate yearning of an exile; yet I could not resist the temptation of a visit to this famous land. If Egypt yields to Greece in classic inter est, in the seductive influence of luxurious climate it claims an incomparable fascination. It is the Elysium of reverie. Under tho soft, but subdued glow of its cloudless sun the spi rit relaxes its stern self-restraint, is dissolved into a state ofr tranquil meditation, aud floats freely and peacefully over a land where all the energies of nature appear in repose. Xor is Egypt wanting in the higher interests of his torical association. Here the most eager am bition of research is bewildered and baffled a mong the mysterious monuments of the remo test antiquity ; here the imaginative mind Cuds stimulus and sweep for its highest flights. Since my earliest reading of the Pharaohs and tho Pyramids, Egypt has been the land I most desired to explore. At last this wish is partially gratified; but you must be content with a very imperfect record of my impres sions. Alexandria disappoints me. Besides the ob elisk, which tradition distinguishes as "Cleo patra's Needle" and "Pompey's Pillar," a col umn with a beautiful porphyry shaft and bar barous stone base and capital, it possesses no monument of antiquity: No lingering ruin attest the splendid civilization of the Ptole mies, much less of remoter times. The city presents a repulsive picture of native degrada tion aud foreign refinement ; but the European quarter does not possess enough of elegance and luxury to compensate for the 111th and bar barity of the predominant Egyptian popula tion. However, since the trade of the Indies has reverted to its ancient channel across the country, Alexandria has recovered something of its former fabulous splendor. It is the cen tre already of considerable commerce, and people predict the revival of its prosperity when the Mediterranean and Red Sea are con nected by canal a project now in execution. Alexandria occupies an important position In the relations of the globe, but its immedi ate locality is destitute equally of commercial advantage and picturesque effect. It is situa ted on a low and sandy shore. Its harbor is neither deep, spacious, nor secure. My dis appointment in Alexandria increased my im patience to see Cairo, where I was promised such instructive memorials of antiquity and such interesting representations of oriental character. But first let mc ojpre33tny admiration of the ''Valley' of the Nile." I hnve seen 'it under conditions peculiarly favorable to an apprecia tion of its glories, and I do not hesitate to af firm that they are ' poorly celebrated in the most gorgeous descriptions. If it is the mid dle of December, the appearances of nature "contradict the calender, and seem to convict hie of confounding the seasons. The ther mometer stands at 77 deg. Fahrenheit; the sun glows with summer's heat, and the atmosphere pulsates with the passionate throbs peculiar to the most ardent season of onr year. Skirting &long tho southern bank of the canal which connects the waters of the Nile with the har bor of Alexandria, the railway traverses a por tion of the most fertile land in Egypt, and gradually unfolds a scene which equally ex cites tho astonishment and the enthusiasm of the spectator. All his ideas of the succession of seasons and of the possibilities of agricul tural productions are confounded. , The fal low fields are covered with the luxuriant vege tation of a tropical region. The crops are in every stage of preparation and progress from seed-time to harvest. ; The young wheat car pets the ground with verdure before the labo rer garners the gray sheaves of the old growth. Here an Arab, in scanty dress, with a plough of the rudest device and a pair of lazy oxen, I breaks ground for a future crop. There I see the same corn with stout stalk and silken car ; and in another place the women of the village are preparing the ripe seed for the mill. In immediate proximity are fields of barley, rice, millet, maize, wheat, sugar-cane, and cotton the last with blooming boll floating on the sur face of the artificial lake which supplies its thirst. ' Such variety and prodigality of vege table production, nature presents in no other region of the earth. The soil is a black mould of spontaneous, rebundant, and exhaustless fertility. Man has but to break its surface, scatter seed, and reap an abundant harvest. No severity of season limits him to a single crop in the year. As he expends but little la bor, so is he exposed to no disappointment. As he is not condemned to await the succes sion of seasons, neither is he dependent on tho uncertainties of weather. The science and researches of the present day confirm the figurative declaration of Ilerodotus, that "E gypt is the gift of the Nile." It is the re ceived theory that the original soil of the val ley is a barren sand, which, in the succession of ages, the river has covered over with an in exhaustible deposit of alluvial. But this is not the limit of the beneficence of tho Nile. The deserts which encircle Egypt absorb all the moisture of the atmosphere, and rain rare ly falls. In the intense heat of the climate the earth would parch if the Nile did not re fresh it with a periodical supply of water. The river begins to rise in May. The people watch its progress with intense anxiety, for the extent of its overflow distinguishes be tween a year of plenty and a year of famine It subsides in October, leaving an abundant blessing behind. Before it retnrnsto the chan nel it recruits the energies of the soil, and dis tributes a supply of water over the land. This water is carefully collected in artificial ponds, and is dispersed in a thousand channels as the exigencies of agriculture require. No where is the system of irrigation so complete ; no where arc its means so clumsy and imperfect Its instruments are still the same that were employed in the time of the Pharaohs, and no improvement has facilitated the use of the wheel and hand bucket. Throughout a course of twelve hundred miles the Nile receives no accession ot water; yet neither the drain of evaporation, nor the insatiable thirst of the desert lessens its volume or impairs the majes ty of its march. It flows now as it did four thousand years ago, distributing its bounty with a lavish hand, yet sustaining no reduction of its regal resources. - There is no parallel to this phenomenon in the physical world ; only in the extravagance of Eastern fable do wc read that the prodigal generosity of an Abdal- lah of the land could abate nothing of the ex haustless wealth of an Abdallah of the sea. The current of the Nile is sluggish. Its waters are not less muddy than our Mississip pi, but after filtration they are deliciously pure and sweet to the taste. Its banks are low, so that tho eye ranges over the valley without in terruption. Steam made us independent of adverse cir cumstances, and I watched the laborious move ments of innumerable lateen sail with selfish complacency. Some were laden with corn and fruit ; others betokened by tho gay flag float ing from the mast that they carried a party of voyagers to Thebes and the Cataracts. Nude Arabs pulled these slowly against wind and current ; others skimmed litditly on with a fa voring breeze. - We hiia full complement of passengers, and our party was grotesque from variety of race and costume. Every tongue, from familiar English to harsh Arabic ; every color, from the fair Circassian to a Nubian ne gress ; every rank, from an American commo dore to an Egyptian sheik; every creed, from Protestant preacher to Mahommedan mufti ; every dress, from Parisian pants to Turkish trowsers all were crowded together on the diminutive deck of our steamer. A corpulent Turk, smoking his chiboque, presented a per fect image of , indolent repose. A party of young officers from the Saranac," scheming to elude the vigilance of the eunuchs and pen etrate into the presence of the Pasha's harem, sustained the national character for energy and enterprise. An Egyptian soldier, fresh freni the Crimea, recounted his fabulous ex ploits and received the applause of an admi ring circle. A pious Mussulman mounted the wheel-house and performed the ceremony of evening prayer with elaborate devotion and ostentatious humility. The valley of the Nile extends so far in un broken surface on either side that the eye can not trace the boundary of fertile fields and lux uriant vegetation. A few scattering palm trees and a group of huts mark the site of an Egyp tian" village. A diminutive donkey, a camel moving with a meekness of mein that speaks its sorrows and propitiates pity ; myriads of a quatic birds, among which I distinguish the snow - white ibis and pelican of brilliant plu mage ; a promiscuous flock of sheep, goats, and cows, with shepherd and driver, are the on ly figures in the seene. The measured move ment) of man and the idle browzing of beast harmonize with' the comparative vacancy of the landscape, with the motionless shadow of the turlaned palm, the soft glow of the sun, and the Nile's sluggish waters, produce an ef fect of tranquil repose in the aspect of nature which cannot fail to smoothe even the last sympathetic fpirjt, . ' . : . ' - . Cairo makes no pretension to picturesque beauty of situation, but this deficiency is com pensated by other rare attractions. No where else does the traveller find so many surviving monuments of Sarenic civilization and such interesting exhibitions of Oriental life. Un like Constantinople, Cairo occupies no middle ground between East and West is in no tran sition state of semi-civilization. Ilere I find the Asiatic character uncorrupted by contact with politer people and the fierce fanatacislii of the Mohammedan faith unsubdued by the pretensions of rival religions. : ' Every thing I see surprises me by its originality, or recalls some recollection of the romantic reading of my youth. The houses, with arabesque front, projecting gable, and latticed window; the ba zaars, rich in gems, silks, and precious per fumes ; mosque and minaret of the pure Sar acenic style ; turbaned men and veiled women these are some of the features which impart to Cairo its peculiar interest. ' ' An avenue of sycamore and acacia of profuse foliage and impenetrable shade conducts from the gate of the city to the palace of the Shoo bra Gardens. The road is perfectly smooth, runs alone the bank of the Nile a distance of three miles, and terminates in a spot where the capricious extravagance of Oriental luxury has wrought its most fantastic wonders. The Shod bra Garden is more like a haunt of fairies than the resort of men. In tho shade of orange groves, the murmur of fountains, the fragrance of flowers, and the golden glitter of every va riety of fruit, the immagination realizes its vi sions of a terrestrial paradise. Tho walks con verge to a common centre, where a graceful kiosk stands, but its modest beauty is eclipsed by the splendor of the Pasha's palace. Ilere a profusion of pearl, silk, and porphyry, floors richly inlaid, walls and windows fantastically painted, baths of purest alabaster, Persian car pets of incredible cost, and divans of crimson velvet, present a gorgeous picture of barbaric pomp and luxury. The citadel is to me the most interesting spot in Cairo, rather for the magnificent view it commands than because of its proximity to "Joseph's Well" or as the scene of the massacre of the Mamelukes. The "tombs of the Kalips," the ruins of Heliopo lis, and a back-ground of boundless desert are visible to tho cast ; to the south the quarries and castles of Mount Mussaltcm and the inter jacent plains ; to the west the aqueduct, the ruins of old Cairo, the Nile, and the lovely is land of Rhoda, the village of Gizch, the Pyra miJs, and far beyond all the limitless sweep of the Lybian sands ; to the north the green fields of the distant Delta; below the city of Cairo, in all the variety of dark grove and intricate street, of palace and hovel, of mosquo and minaret The Pyramids are situated on tho border of the Lybian desert, a morning's ride from Cai ro. We crossed the river just above the island Rhoda, where I saw the Nileometer, and where tradition affirms Moses was discovered in the bulrushes. We landed at the filthy village Gi zeh, where hens never set and chickens arc hatched by artificial heat. A devious path tra verses fertile fields of corn and wheat, and leads us to the object of our journey. At first sight the Pyramids suggest the idea of a vain attempt to rival the mountain monuments of nature, and they impress the beholder with a conviction ot man's foolish ambition and mis erable impotence. ; ; '" - When, however, wo stand nnder the shadow of their stupendous form and see their summit . resting amongtho clouds ; when we reflect on their remote antiquity and myste when we recall the great events of which they have been the silent witness, and recollect the heroes of history who, from Alexander to Na poleon, lave mused in their presence and been inspired ty their grandeur ; when we contrast their immutable duration with tho vicissitudes of humai fortune, think how, having survived the fall f empires and the doom of dynasties, they seen to struggle successfully even with destiny itself; when we extend our. view for ward int futurity, and foresee the countless ages they must endnre after the men and things of the present day have perished from exis tence, perhaps from memory, then they impose upoa theimagtnation with an irrcsistable pow er r pathos 'and sublimity. Contemplating then in this mood, I was impressed as certain ly n monument of man ever impressed mo oelole. i i i.ept m the direction of the Mussaltcm Mountains, the view from the Pyramid of Che ops flubraces nearly the entire extent of E gypt You trace the valley of the Nile through out it course, and appreciate its almost fabu lous krtility by contrast with the barren sands arourjl It. The figure (and it is no fanciful c.oncet) of a line of dark green velvet drawn acrosja golden ground will convey to your mindtn image of the aspect of the country. The c lors did not mingle by insensible grada tion, lit - are divided by a deep and ; distinct landmrk. A single step measures . the dis tance etween a soil of inexhaustible , fertility and a leak and boundless waste of desert. -- Aft' the fatigue of our ride a lunch of mel on am fruit refreshed us tor the survey of the intcri chambers of the Pyramids. They are appro; hed through a narrow and intricate pas sage, 1 Inch tho adventurous stranger pursues by thought of a torch and the aid of an Arab guide.) The dark caverns haye long since been despo ifd of their illustrious d6ad, and are now tenanted only by bats, who resent the In vasion of their territory by scream and flatter. The "King's chamber" is tho most remarka ble room. It is of the size of a decent parlor, its walls arc of polished marble, and an empty sarcophagus occupies its centre. The spirit of silence and solitude which perpetually broods here impresses the mind with an unspeakable sentiment of sadness and solemnity.: Yet the mysterious sanctity of the place did not pro tect it from the violation of profane amuse ment. Our Arab guides performed a dance in the chamber of death, and broke its profound silence with the echoes of their barbaric cho rus. The leader of the dance beat the mea sure of his steps upon a vacant sepulchre of the Pharaoh's It was a scene of the most dis mal hilarity- a spectacle in which were repre sented tho strongest contrast of gaycty and gloom, of mirth and' melancholy. Tho glare of our torches faintly disclosed the wild move ments of the Bedouins, but their hideous yells resounded through the remotest caverns in the chamber of death. I was glad to escape from its oppressive air and sad associations. The sun was so nearly set as to allow only a super ficial survey of the Sphinx and the Catecombs; nevertheless,' I am satisfied with my impres sion of the Pyramids. Our return to the city gave us an opportunity to admire the serene softness of an Egyptian moonlight. The Government of Egypt is the most des potic and oppressive on earth. Tyranny, vice, superstition, ignorance, and disease have de graded the people below the dignity of human nature. In the prophetic denunciation of I saiah and Ezekial you may read the condition of this country. Egypt is, indeed, the basest kingdom of the earth. " THE WILD MAN AGAIN, A correspondent ef the Caddo Gazette, wri ting under date of 28th March, from Parailifta, Arkansas, on Upper Red Jlivcr, states that the cold during tho present inter has been in that region the severest within the memory of rnan. The rivers were frozen solid, and the plains presented an unbroken sheet of snow The writer relates the following story of an at tempt to capture the famous wild man, who ha been so often encountered on the borders of Arkansas and northern Louisiana. ''In my travels I met a party from your coun try in pursuit of a wild man. They had struck his trail at a cane-branc bordering on Brant Lake and the Sun-Flower Prairie. I learned from one of the party that tho dogs ran him to an arm of the Lake which was frozen, but not sufficiently strong to bear his weight, which consequently gave way. He had, however, crossed, and the dogs were at fault "One of the party, mounted on a fleet horse, coming up, encouraged the dogs to pursue, but found it impossible o cross with his' horse, and concluded to follow the lake round until he could ascertain the direction taken by this monster of the forest. On reaching the oppo site side of the bend, he was surprised to see something in the lake like a man breaking the ice, with his arms, and hastcnencd under cov er of tho undergrowth, to the spot where he expected him to come out. He concealed him self near the place, when he had a full view of him, until ho reached the shore, where he came out and shook himself. He represents him as a stout, athletic man, about six feet four inches in height, completely covered with hair of a brownish cast, about four to six inch es long. He was well miisccled, and ran up the bank with the fleetness of a deer. - meref??toa H bo CS!!H, tcriouspurpoeVrgunlbut to'take j. - mg him alive, and hearing the horns of his com rades and tho howling of the dogs on theoppo site bank of the lake, he concluded to rido up and head him, so as to bring him to bay and then secure their prize. So soon, however, as the wild man saw tho horse and rider he rush ed frantically toward them, and in an instant dragged the hunter to the ground and tore him in a dreadful manner, scratching out one of his eyes and injuring the other so much that his comrades despair of the recovery of his sight, and biting large pieces out of his shoulders and various parts of his body. . . . . "i no monster then tore off tho saddle and bridle frem the horse and destroved thm. ami holding the horse by the mane, broke a short piece of sapling, and mounted the animal, started at full speed across the plains in the di rection of the mountains guiding the horse with his club. The person left with the woun ded man informed me that the party was still in pursuit, having been joined by a band of friendly Indians, and thought if they could find a place in tho mountains not covered with snow, or a canebrake in the vicinity to feed their horses, they day or two." might overtake him in a The Two Inkstands. The Inkstand used by the plenipotentiaries was "specially manufac tured for the purpose. It Is a splendid work of art, in the style of the first empire, and the cost is estimated at 11,000 francs. English Paper. : ' v . -.. :. -u ,.j ". , - - The Inkstand "usetlTjy'Jefrerson, in writing the Declaration of Indepcndencedid not cost one franc; and the writing, will stand long af ter tho Paris Treaty as been buried in the rubbish of fallen despotisms. . . " .," - Ir toc wish to know whether anybody is su perior to-ho prejudices of the world, ask hiiu 1 to draw a truck for you. t - A CAPTIVE RESCUED The San Francisco, California Herald, re ceived the following interesting account of the rescue of a beautiful young American girl, named Miss Olive Oatman, from a Slavish cap tivity by tho Yuma Indians. The whole nar rative is of painful interest t Steamer Sea Bird, at Sea, March 9, lStJ. By the last arrival from Fort Yuma, I am enabled to give you the ' details of the rescue from the Mohave Indians ofa youngjand beau tiful American girl, who has been a prisoner for five years. Having mado considerably in quiry in Los Angelos and vicinity, I have suc ceeded in collecting all tho facts attending her capture, thcimurder of her parents, &c, which are willingly placed at your disposal. On the 10th of March, 1851, a family of em igrants, named Oatman, from Iowa, en route for California, composed of Lorenzo Oatman, wife and seven children, (three boys and four girls), while eucaraped about one hundred and twenty-five miles from the mouth oftheGiU river, were attacked by the Mohave Indians, and all but one boy and two girls massacred in cold blood. The boy, in the dark, succee ded in escaping, and was picked tip on the following day by a company of emigrants, a bout forty miles from the scene of the murder. The little fellow was perfectly exhausted when found, without hat or shoes, and covered with blood. After recovering sufficiently to tell tho tale, some of the men started on to ascertain if anything could be done, and on arriving at the fatal place found the boy's version was, alas ! too true, the bodies being then half eaten by cayotcs. Enough, however, was ascertained to show that the two youngest girls were mis sing. The boy is now living at tho "Monte," near Los Angelos, and distinctly remembers that horrible night. For years nothing had been heard of these two young girls, and their fate appeared to be wrapped in mystery. About five months since an article oi letter was published in the Los Angelos Star, stating that the Yumao Indians had offered to exchange two female prisoners with the officers at Fort Yumao for beads, blankets, &c, and that tho latter had refused to trade with or purchase tho unfortunate suf ferers from the Indians. Col.Nauman, U. S. A., who was at that time en route for Fort Yu mao, immediately inquired info the subjeet, but found the charges against the officers whol ly without foundation ; and fearful that by some possibility there might be some prisoners never before heard of, sent out runners to the different tribes offering heavy ransom for their recovery, in answer to which a Yumao Indian of the name of Francisco, came in saying, "He could find a young girl ten days travel from the fort." Beads, blankets, &c, were imme diately given him, and in twenty days he re turned with Miss Oatman. When brought in she was drossed as all the females of the Yuma Mohave Indians, and on a white man approaching, threw herself pros trate on the sand, and would not rise until suitable female garments were brought her. She had almost entirely forgotten her native tongue, being only able to speak two or three words. Being asked, in the Indian language, her name, she replied "Olive Oatman ;" is ta tooed on the chin, and bears the marks of hard slavery. Her arms, wrists and hands arc large ly developed. Was a slave for two years with the Mohaves, who sold her to the Yumas. nrnrn.rr.cf cUfnr .nhnnf sir mnntr.cJ.o- J o V-- (jjju.-rt'oviiif. me nairoi me of a light golden color, the lndians colored it black using a dye made iromthe bark of the meskeet treo. Sho-cra then eleven years old when taken prisoner which will make her sixteen now, though she is more fully developed than many girls of twenty. The officers at the Fort have clubbed togeth er making up a purse for her, and furnishing such clothing as is necessary ; also, have pla ced her in charge of a female residing there, ana where every care and attention will be paid to alljher wants, and until any relations or friends may come forward to relieve the loorgirl from her present deiiendent position and endeavor to wean her from all sava tastes or desire to return to Indian life I hope that some of our philanthropic San Fran cisco ladies will offer their services to either provide a home for her, or use their influence in procuring her admission to tho Orphan As- sylum. Jos. A. Fort. raciffic Ex. Co.'s Mcsscnser. Southern Cn.isf . The Sisters of Mercy, of San Francisco, have notified the friends of Miss Oatman. the younc lady recently rescued from tho Indians, that they will receive her into their care As exchange paper, the editor of which, no doubt lately "set up" with a widow, goes off thus : "For the other half of a courting match there is nothing liko an interesting wid ow. There's as much difference berweon cour ting a damsal and an attractive widow as there is between cyphering in addition and double rule of three. Courting a girl is like eating fruit, all very nice as far as it extends, but do ing the amiable to a blue-eyed bereaved one ir black crape comes under tho head of preserve's -ii-rich, pungent, syrup. For delicious court ing, wo reper, give us a live widder.' A soctbbr! editor has purchased a race rinrsn at an exnr.nxA nf so nnn fx 4 1. ol catchiua oers. - a It is understood that our Minister to Spain Mr. Dodgei finds himself unable to procure a settlement of our many claims npon that gov ernment, beyond the mere shadow of a prom ise. He writes that the Spanish government have admitted the justice of our demands, but that their treasury is exhausted by home de mands, and that they have not means to pay off their indebtedness to this country jast now. and ask for an extension of time. And this. notwithstanding the Washington Union' has, on several occasions, stated, as if by authority, that all American claims on Spain had been promptly settled. The organ is at mendacious as the administration is weak, and inefficient. We know not wlicther tho administration is responsible for the lies of its organ, but wc do know that it is destined to lie just as flat in a very few months. Louiirille Journal.' A Sxeixgext Law, relative to Insurance iVgencies of companies located out of the state, has passed" our legislature. It prohibits un der penalties any company doing business without a bona fide capital of $200,000, safely- invested, and aa attorney on whom process may be served, a sworn' balance sheet of its affairs to be filed with the Auditor General and published in the counties where agencies are established and license to bo taken out, at a cost of $200 per annum in Philadelphia, S150 in Lancaster and Allegheny, and $100 in any other county with a tax of three percent on gross receipts. . Agents are to give bond in $2,000 to comply with the law. District Attorneys are annually to investigate the con dition of companies, and report to the Audi tor General. The law goes into effect on tho 1st of July. , . Whose Bavy is Ir f The Boston Tost has a' Paris correspondent who writes that there were those so given to unbelief in the implicit hon esty of Louis Napoleon as to credit the rumor that the "sound, lively boy" who has been palmed ofl upon the empire, is nothing but an usurper, and that he takes the place of a cer tain girl baby who Was the real heir. The a foresaid rumor was.to the effect that, for sorao time previous to the Empress's accouchmcnt, it was well understood that whatever tho event might be, a fine healthy boy would be ready to be presented as the legitimate child of the Empire. This being so, at once accounts for the fact of the King of Algiers being as big at his birth as his nurse's baby at two months old. A slight Mistake. L nele K is rather a tough customer ; he lives next door to a pioua methodist. Not lone since a circuit minister knocked nt the door of Uncle R ', who inqm red into the nature of his isit. The strange remarked that he was a circuit preacher, an desired to stop over night. Says Uncle U , "What in thunder a; earthquakes, d'ye e'pose I care for your c cuses I don t want anything to do with yo plagy old circuses V into the wrong pew. -Tub Mis?i93irn akd Gvtr. The Mississi; Legislature have adopted resolutions relat to the re-opening of water communication tween theMississippi river 3nd theGull'of M ico, byway of Lake Ponchartrain and L P'TgllC, anu lia c .fcMW.Icrweu niemoerS Ol C if iNnOUfl Ijliul!,,,". o"-j mi;, u jtvasjiuv, u appropriat lor that olyect. The old channel was ch by Gen. Jackson, as a military measure, signed to protect the city of New Orlea gainst invation by tho English in 18H-1" A lady in the County of Goochland. recently gave b?rth to three living dauch all of whom, as well as the mother, were i well at last accounts. It is said that dij Monroe's Administration, a lady of Loui gave birth to four sons, whom the ni nasnington, Jeuereon, Madison and MoJ all of whom lived to manhood. The sam-J - viu "oiiuu uiviuer 01 mini children. .-A Good O.ne. A gentleman, in his - vauiu ia ausvrcr a Call 1QT S9n pie pie, owing to the knife slipping on thj torn of the dish, found his .knuckles bur the crust, when a wag, who eat jast opl to mm, very gravely observed, while hj his plate: Sir, I'll trouble you for pie, whilo your hand is in !' Fvnch indulges in the following con conundrum : Which in of greater value prythee. Bay. TbeBriIe orBrider room? must rhn truth Alar, it must! The Bride is riven x no ricgroom e olln regularly eold. ExcEEMNCir modest young ladv- this a very pretty baby, Mr. Brown V "Yes, my dear. Boy or girl V Ye "He belongs to the female per The max who"held an ofS let go for the purpo ottrttn short time, when tf-ffiE not been heard i " aside , plSAL ESTATE TOR PAL er effers for Vj, v-.vT' 3 t t .i.r ?-t: ?48. ca ts i 4W - -