1 r v- . - . . ..- . .......... ; :M S B. ROW. TOL. (f-JVO. 30. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, . 1860. I WOULD ROT. - I would not kiss the sweetest lip : Unless it kissed me too ; ! As well as from the young rose bud sip Tho morning's clear cold dew. Nor clasli a hand, though soft and warm , Unless it pressed mine own ; I'd rather love the perfect form ,; , Carved out of parian stone. I would not worship eyes, though bright . '; And beautiful they be. Unless they bend their living light On me ;and nly me '. I would not love a form that heaven Itself hath stamped divine, If I but dreamed her love was given To other heaven than mine. ADVENTUBES OF DB. CADLWELL. ' In a work, entitled Women of the Revolution, we find tho following sketch : Tho Rev. Da vid Caldwell, a Presbyterian minister of North Carolina, was very much subjected to the per hecutions of the loyalists. Atonotiine,wbilehe was absent, a party of British came to the house and occupied it, taming Mrs. Caldwell out of doors, who was obliged to seek refuge in the smoke house, where she remained lor two days with no other food than a little dried fruit. Alter remaining lor two days on the plantation, during which time they had des troyed everything, they prepared to leave ; but before doing so, iu order that nothing should bo left undone which their hatred could aoggest to do, tho valuable library ot Dr. Caldwell, containing books that it was impos sible to replace,and manuscripts that had cost years of study and labor.was wantonly burned. ' A largo tiro was built lor the purpose, and the ' books brought in armsful and cast upon the flames. The persecution of Dr. Caldwell continued while the British occupied that portion of the State. His property was destroyed, and he was hunted us a felon; snares were laid for him, and pretences used to draw him lrom his hiding places ; he was compelled to pass nights in the woods, and ventured only at the most imminent peril to see his family. Often he escaped captivity, or death, as it were, by a luiracie. . At one time, when he ventnred home on a stolen visit, the house was suddenly surround ed with armed men, who seized him before he could escape designing to carry him to the British camp. One or two were sent to guard him, wbilo the others were sent to get such articles of provision and clothing as could be found worth taking away. When they were nearly ready to depart, the plunder collected being piled in the middle of the floor, and the 'prisoner standing beside it with hisguard.Mrs. Dunlup, who with Mrs. Caldwell had remain ed in an adjoining apartmeut, came forward. .... With the promptitude- and presence of mind lor which women are often remarkable in such emergencies,she stepped behind Dr. Caldwell, leaniug over bis shoulders, and whispered to , Lim as if intending the qnstion for him alone, , ' -asking if it were time for Gillespie and his ,. men to bo there. One of the soldiers who Mood near caught the words, and with evident alarm demanded what men were meant. The lady replied that she was merely speaking to her brother. . In a moment all was confusion, the wliolo party was panic-struck,exclainations and hurried questions soon followed ; and in the consternation produced by this ingenious, though simple manoeuvre, the tones lied pre cipitately, leaving their prisoner and their plunder. The name of Gillespie was a scourge and a terror to tho loyalists, and this party knew themselves to bo within the limits of one of the strongest Whig neighborhoods of the Mute. The plantation of Dr. Caldwell and his brother Alexander were near each other. One evening, during Alexander's absence from Lome, two soldiers entered bis house, and be gan rudely to seize upon everjthing they saw worth carrying ofl, having ordered his wife to prepare supper lor them. They were suppos vd to belong to the army of Cornwallis, at that time foraging in the neighborhood. .Not know ing what to do, Mrs. Caldwell sent over to her brother-in-law for advice. He sent word in answer that she must treat them civilly, and have supper ready as soon as practicable, but she must observe where they placed their gnns -and set the table at the other end of the bouse. Jlo promised to come over in the meantime, jind conceal himself in a hay stack close by, and she was to inform him as soon as the men sat down to supper. These directions were implicitly followed. ' The house was a double cabin,containing two rooms on the same floor. Whilo the men were leisurely discussing their repast, Dr. Caldwell quietly entered the other apartment, took up one of their guns, and stepping to the door of tho room where they were so comfortably oc cupied, presented the weapon, and inlormed them they were his prisoners, and their lives would be the forfeit should they make the least attempt to escape. They surrendered immediately, and Dr. Caldwell marched them to his own house, kept them till morning, and then suffered them to depart on their parole. AVnAT are we Comixq to 1 The N. Y. Ex press gives an account of the elopement of two children from Albany, week before last. The boy, James Baylis, is 12, and the girl, El len Shurrer, 13 years of age. They came to New York in a steamboat. The police had been notified to apprehend them, but the dis patch did not reach as soon as the boat, and so the young "lovyers" landed before the po lice got to the wnarf. It was, however, final ly ascertained that the fast young lady had an acquaintance living on the Eigth Avenue ; and the police, supposing that the couple would proceed there, watched the house, and canght them entering it towards evening. They were much surprised at the turn aflairs had taken, and did not relish going to police headquar te To girl said she had not become a wife, though wanting to be one, but supposed that for the present she would have to give up all hope, owing to the "great fuss" her folks had created; neither she nor "Jimmy" had been treated well at home, and they knew no better course than to come to New York and seek their fortunes together. They had $3 when they started, one of which they paid for a state-room, and the rest they had spent. The girl is a bright, intelligent little thing, quite pretty, but rather forward in her manners. The boy is a fine looking lad, and seemed to be alarmed, which the girl was not. Both were poorly dressed, and the supposition is, that having been ill treated at home, tbey took this means of redressing their grievances. Truly, we are a fast people. ILLUSTRIOUS DUNCES. An interesting chapter might be written on the subject of illustrious dunces dull boys, but brilliant men. We have room, however, for only a few instances. Pietro di Cortona, the painter, was thought so stupid that he was nicknamed "Ass's Head," when a boy ; and Tomaso Guidi was generally known as "heavy Tom," (Massaccio Tomassaccio,) though by diligence be afterwards raised himself to the highest eminence. Newton when at school, stood at the bottom of the lowermost form but one. The boy above Newton having kicked him, the dunce showed his pluck by challeng ing him to fight, and beating him. Then he set to work with a will, and determined also to vanquish his antagonist as a scholar, which he did, rising to the top of bis class. Many of the greatest divines have been anything but precocious. Isaac Barrow, when a boy at the Charterhouse school, was notorious chiefly for his strong temper, pugnacious habits, and pro verbial idleness as a scholar ; and he caused such grief to his parents that his father used to say that if it pleased God to take from him any of his children, he hoped it might be I saac, the least promising of them all. Adam Clarke, when a boy, was proclaimed by his fa ther to be "a grievous dunce ;" though he could roll large stones about. Dean Swiit, one of the greatest writers of pure English, was "plucked" at Dublin University, and only ob tained his recommendation to Oxford "speci ali gratia." Tho well known Dr. Chalmers and Dr. Cook were boys together at the parish school of St. Andrews ; and they were found so stupid and mischievous, that the master, ii ritated beyond measure, dismissed them both as incorrigible dunces. Tho brilliant Sheridan showed so little ca pacity as a boy, that he was presented to a tu tor by his mother with the complimentary ac companiment, that he was a hopeless dunce. Walter Scott was all but a dunce when a boy, always much readier lor a "bicker." than apt at his lessons. At the Edinburgh University, Prof. Dalzell pronounced upon him the sen tence that "Dunce he was, and dunce be would remain." Chatterton was returned on bis mother's hands as "a tool, of whom nothing could be made." Burns was a dull boy, good onlv at athletic exercises. Goldsmith spoke ot himself as a plant that flowered late. A 1 fi eri left college no wiser than he entered it, and did not begin the studies by which he distin guished himself, until he bad run over halt Europe. Robert Clive was a dunce, if not a reprobate, when a youth; but always full of energy, even in badness. Hist family, glad to get rid of him, shipped him off to Madras ; and be lived to lay the foundations of the British power in India. Napoleon and Wellington were both dull boys, not distinguishing them selves in any way at school. Of the former the Duchess d'Abrantes says, "he bad good health, but was in other respects like other boys." John Howard, the philanthropist, was another illustrious dunce, learning next to nothing during the seven years he was at school. Stephenson, as a youth, was distin guished chiefly for his skill at pulling and wrestling, and attention to his work. The bril liant Sir Humphrey Davy was no cleverer than other boys; his teacher, Mr. Davis Gilbert, said of him, "while he was with me, I could not discern the faculties by which he was so much distinguished." Indeed, he himself in after-like considered it fortunate that he had been left to 'enjoy so much idleness' at school. Watt was a dull scholar, notwithstanding the pretty stories told about his precocity ; but be was, what was better, patient and perseverant, and it was by that means, and by his carefully cultivated inventiveness, that he was enabled to perfect his steam-engine. What Dr. Arnold said of boys is equally true of men that the difference between one boy and another consists not so much in talent as in energy. Given perseverance, and energy soon becomes habitual. Provided the dunce has persistency and application, he will inevi tably head the cleverer fellow without these qualities. Slow but sure, wins the race. It is perseverance that explains how the position of boys at school is so often reversed in real life ; and it is curious to note how some who were then so clever have since become so common-place; whilst others, dnll boys, of whom nothing was expected, slow in their faculties, but sure in their pace, have assumed the posi tion of leaders of men. The author of this book, when a boy, stood in the same class with one of the greatest of dunces. One -cher af ter another had tried his skill upon 'm and failed. Corporeal punishment, the fool's cap, coaxing and earnest entreaty proved alike fruitless. Sometimes the experiment was tried of putting him at the top of his class, and it was curious to note the rapidity with which he gravitated to the inevitable bottom like a lump of lead passing through quicksilver. The youth was given up by many teachers as an in corrigible dunce one of them pronouncing him to be "a stupendous booby." Yet, slow though he was, this dunco had a dull energy and a sort of beefy tenacity of purpose, which grew with his muscles and his manhood ; and, strange to say, when he at length came to take part in tho practical business of life, he was found heading most of his school companions, and eventually left the gt eater number of them far behind. The tortoise in the right road, will beat a racer in the wrong. It matters not though a youth be slow, if he be but diligent. Quickness of parts may even prove a defect, inasmuch as the boy who learns readily will of ten forget quite as readily ; and also because ho finds no need of cultivating that quality of application and perseverance which tne slower youth is compelled to exercise, and which proves so valuable an element in the formation of every character. Davy said, "What I am I have made myself ;" and the same holds true universally. The highest cnltnre is not obtained from teachers when at school or col lege, so much as by our own diligent self-education when we have become men. Parents need not bo in too great haste to see their children's talents forced into bloom. Let them watch and wait patiently, letting good exam ple and quiet training do their work and leave the rest to Providence. Let them see to it that the youth is provided by free exercise of his bodily powers, with a full stock of physi cal health ; set him fairly on the road of self culture ; carefully train his habits of applica tion and perseverance ; and as he grows older, if the ri?ht atnfl be in him. he will be enabled vigorously and effectively to cultivate himself. At a sale of real estate in London, the prop erty sold at the rate of $4,000,000 per acre. The National debt, according to Secretary Cobb's showing, is $60,202,277 66. ANCIENT EUINS IN THE UNITED STATES. Dim and mysterious is the early history of man on this continent. It is enveloped in thick darkness, never, It may be presumed, to be penetrated by human research. And yet the ruins of ancient cities are frequently dis covered, that tell of a race that has long since passed away probably exterminated by the ancestors of our present Indians, who are also last departing from the human family fairly dying out, before the ever-advancing in fluence of the palefaces. But these monu mental cities indicate great populations, and prove the existence ot mighty men of old. A new 8timulous is likely to be given to A merican archaajology, by a discovery recently made some ninety miles north-east of Fort Stanton, a long account of which has just ap peared in the Fort Smith (Ark.) Times. We condense. The plain upon which lie the mas sive relics of gorgeous temples and magnifi cent halls, slopes gradually eastward toward the River Pecos, and is very fertile, crossed by a gurgling stream of the purest water that not only sustains a rich vegetation, but perhaps furnished with its necessary element the thousands who once inhabited this present wil derness. The city was probably built by a warlike race, as it is quadrangular and arrang ed with skill to afford the highest protection against an exterior loe, many of the buildings on the outer line being pierced with loopholes, as though calculated for the use of weapons. Several of the buildings are of vast size, and built of massive blocks of a dark granite rock, which could only have been wrought to their preseut coudition by a vast amount of labor. There are the ruins of three noble edifices, each presenting a front of three hundred feet, made of ponderous blocks of stone, and the dilapidated walls are even now thirty-five feet high. There are no partitions in the area of the middle (supposed) temple, so that the room must have been vast ; and there are also car vings iu baa relief and fresco work. Appear ances justify the conclusion that these silent rooms could once boast of halls as gorgeously decorated by the artist's hand as those of Thebes and Palmyra. Ihe buildings are all loopholed in each side, much resembling that found in the old feudal castles of Europe de signed for the use of archers. The blocks of which these edifices are composed are cemen ted together by a species of mortar of a bitu minous character, which has such tenacity that vast masses of wall have fallen down with out the blocks being detached by the shock. We hope, ere long, to be favored with full and descriptive particulars, as it is probable that visits and examinations will be made amongst such interesting relics of the unknown past, by some of the United States officers attached to the nearest fort. What Toney Don't Believe He don't be lieve that a man is any wiser for having A. S. S., or any other letters, tacked to his name. He don't believe a lawyer is any keener be cause he wears a pair of spectacles. He don't believe that Schoolmasters, Physi cians, and Ministers like to be contradicted a whit better than other folks. He don't believe that all lawyers are rogues, any more than he believes an eel is a snaKe. lie don't believe that the most industrious man likes to work except when he can't help it. He don't believe that two young lovers like to be caught with their arms around one a nother. .... He don't believe that a young lady ought to b married belore she is twenty-one at least. (He don't believe that young gentlemen sho'd marry before they are able to support a wife. lie don't believe in getting up early in the morning, without going to bed early at night. He don't believe a man is a fool because he can't make a speech. lie don't believe that because both wise and windy begin with a W, that they end in the same thing. He don't believe that a lady is much the worse for wearing a bustle, though he deci dedly prefers coffee-bags. In fact he don't believe in a great many things that others believe in, and the result is that he is voted an oddity and a bore, and we don't believe that Toney has justice done him in general. A Lawyer's Oration. We remember once, when young, living in Hampshire, they dedi cated a new bridge, and invited a young law yer to deliver an oration. The lawyer had never yet, after a fortnight's practice, had the honor of being retained, and the opportunity of establishing a reputation was admirable. The day came,and with it to the bridge came the multitude and the orator. He had made no written preparation, that being as he had been told, unlawyer-like a lawyer being sup posed Ho be capable ot speaking any num ber of hours, on any subject, in a style of thrilling eloquence. So our orator trusted to the occasion. He stood upon the platform, and, amid the profound attention of his audi ence commenced : "Fellow-citizens Five and forty years ago this bridge, built by your enterprise, was part and parcel of the howling wilderness." He paused a moment. "Yes, fellow-citizens, only five and forty years ago, this bridge, where we now stand, was part and parcel of the bowling wilderness.' Again he paused. (Cries of "Good, good, go on." nere was the "rub." "I feel it hardly necessary to repeat, that this bridge, fellow-citizens, only five and forty years ago, was part and parcel of the howling wilderness ; and I will conclude by saying that 1 wish it was part and parcel of it now." Singular. Time roa a Marriage. A loving couple in Memphis, Tennessee, were last week married under the following singular circum stances : Tbey were taking a carriage drive in one of the principal streets in that city, when they chanced to meet a Judge Hill, who was riding leisurely along upon a favorite donkey. Tbey at once accosted him, and requested him to unite them in the holy bonds of wedlock. He acceded to the proposition, and, without dismounting, performed the ceremony, ma king the occupants of the vehicle one, and having for witnesses the mule and two or three persons who were passing at the time. " ' An old washerwoman used to bang out her clothes to dry on the railings of a church, and after repeated prohibitions from the church wardens, she at last came out with the follow ing burst of eloquence : "Bless ye sir, ye wouldn't a go an' take the bread of my mouth would ye ? 'Sides sir, cleanliness comes next to godliness, the parson says." A HAPPY PICTUBE OF TOM C0EWIN. The New York Herald's Washington letter writer, in a communication dated the 22d, gives the following brilliant sketch of Tom Corwin. It is Tom Corwin,' and not a call of the House, that has drawn away the members of that body in the lump from the speech of Sir. Douglas. The Little Giant,' in the recitation ot his Illinois campaign against the Black Re publicans, was an old story ; but the report that Corwin was in the House and right amoag the fire-eaters, in a general and sweeping re ply to Barksdale, ot Mississippi, was an at traction which conld not be resisted. So long ago as 1840, Tom Corwin, the Wagon Boy,' had won the title of the greatest and most fascinating stump speaker 'west of the moun tains.' Since that day he has been a member of the United States Senate, Secretary of the Treasury, and Governor of Ohio, and now re turns to the House of Representatives, of which he was a member with Henry A. Wise, and Fillmore, Toombs, and Stephens, when they all belonged to the good old Whig party. Mr. Corwin is some five feet eight inches high, and looks to be not over 50 years of age. He is a solid and robust man, with a round, full, jovial face, sparkling with fun and glow ing with the reflections of a generous and in telligent mind. His complexion is as dark as that ot Daniel Webster ; and we believe that Mr. Corwin attributes it to the fact that be is descended from the ancient oriental royal Magyar, a race of Hungary. He occupies an aisle on the Democratic side ; he has gone a mong that party so that they may hear him ; the Republican side of the House is almost completely vacated. There are half a dozen members in those benches. Their usual oc cupants are crowded around Corwin and fused with the Democratic party and the South A mericans, for the first time this season. Mr. Corwin has been upon the floor an hour. He has proved his metal. He has made an impression. In the wide range which he has taken in the examination of the slavery oues tion, and from the inexhaustible historical facts, incidents and anecdotes which he has brought to bear upon the subject, he has se cured the profound attention of his listeners. His frequent sallies of wit and humor are re ceived by spontaneous expulsions of laughter even from the fire eaters, though his general argument is directed to the point, that the extension of slavery was not the policy of tho government contemplated by the fathers of the Kepubuc. The voice of Corwin is soft," round, and flexible. His gesticulations are singularly ex pressive and graceful. He is a dramatic spea ker. He is an orator, possessing in a high degree the three Demosthenian essentials of an orator action action action ! And he also possesses that happy faculty of instantly choosing for the use of the moment, from the treasures of the library with which his mind is stored, any point or factgm history, poli tics, philosophy, law, literature and the living events of the age, which may serve either to strengthen or ornament the fabric which he is passing through the loom. He thus gives something of the charm of poetry to the pro siest constitutional abstractions, and some thing of the weight of a constitutional quota tion to the traditions of romance. He speaks rapidly, and with a remarkable simplicity of language compasses the most recondite prop ositions. Within the space of a few brief sen tences, his voice passes from the mountain top to the valley, or expands from the lowest conversational and confidential tone, inaudible in the gallery, to a climax which starts the, passenger outside the gallery. The complaint of the gallery is that Corwin makes all his ten strikes and spares in a voice so low as to be limited to the favored few just around him. But as he is manifestly devoting his argument to the members of the House, and not to the galleries, the mountain party must be content to catch what they can ; and the reporters must open their ears or they will lose the fre quent point where the laugh comes in. We see that Corwin exercises a powerful magnetic influence over his hearers, not ex. cepting the fire-eaters. They indeed surround him like a body guard, and are listening as good boys listen to a kind, indulgent and com petant teacher of a lesson which they are anx ious to understand. He has reduced the House to a good temper no man among them thinking of pistols or personal assaults while listening to Corwin, He is softening down the irrepressible conflict' while making the very best defence that has yet been made of the anti-slavery doctrines of the Republican party. As Zack Taylor was a Whig, though not an ultra Whig, so Corwin is a Republican though not a Helper Republican. The cross examinations to which be is subjected by the Southern ultras, only serve to bring out his good points. He will not be embarrassed by sharp questions. They rather assist him in his line of argument, and in his pungent, but good-natured responses. But the House ad journs to give him a larger range to-morrow, for they do not care how long he holds the floor. His speech is a new feature in these debates. It is rich in excellent hits, amusing jokes and solid instruction. Douglas is a powerful debater, a convincing debater, but he lacks oriental imaginations, the wit, humor, fancy, poetry, and copious resources of learn ing and study possessed by Corwin. Douglas has studied the law, the Constitution, parties, politics, and the movements of 'parties, thor oughly. Corwin appears to have studied ev erything except the Cincinnati platform. Nor does be make a vain parade of the facilities at his command. They come to his aid sponta neously, and he does not hack them to pieces. Moderation is the key of old age ; modera tion in laborland enjoyment ; moderation in eating and drinking ; moderation in feeling and thinking. Few people die ; the majority are self-murderers, committing suicide by de grees. That is a virtuous community in which there are many bale old men and women. That is an ignoble people among whom many children die, and many youths are sick. For the health of a people, as Miss Martineau used to maintain, is the test ot its morality. She never uttered a truer word. John Kelly, of North Blackstone, Mass., now in his eighty-fourth year, has tended the same grist mill for seventy years, and still de lights in his old occupation. Mr. Kelly was never in a railroad car or steamboat, and nev er a hundred miles from home. Life should be fortified by many friendships. To leve and to bo loved, is 'the greatest happi ness of existence. SOKE STATISTICS OF TOBACCO. The Dean of Carlisle has recently delivered a lecture in England upon the subject of to bacco, from which we gather some interesting statistical information concerning the use of the weed in that and other countries. In 1856, thirty-three millions of pounds of tobacco were consumed in England, at an ex. pense of $8,000,000, to say nothing of vast quantities smuggled into the country. There is a steady increase upon this consumption, far exceeding the cotemporaneous increase of population. In 1821, the average consump tion was 11.70 ounces per bead per annum ; in 1851 it had risen to 16.S6, and in 1853 to 19 ounces, or at least at the rate of one-fourth increase in ten years. There are twelve city brokers in London expressly devoted to to bacco sales, ninety manufacturers, 1568 tobac co shops in London, 7,380 workmen engaged in tho different branches of the business, and no less than 252,048 tobacco shops in the Uni ted kingdom. And if we turn to the conti nent, the consumption and expenditure as sume proportions perfectly gigantic. In France much more is consumed in proportion to the population than in England. The Emperor clears 100,000,000 francs annually by the gov ernment monopoly. In the city of Hamburg 40,000 cigars are consumed daily, although the population is not much over 150,000 ; 10,000 persons, many of them women and children are engaged in their manufacture; 150,000,000 of cigars are supplied annually, a printing press is entirely occupied in printing labels for the boxes of cigars, &c, and the business represents JE4,000,000. In Denmark the an nual consumption reaches the enormous aver age of seventy ounces per head of the whole population ; and in Belgium even more sev-enty-threo ounces, or three pounds and three fifths of a pound per head. In America the average is vastly higher. It is calculated that the ent ira world of smo kers, snuffers and chewers, consume 2.000,000 tuns of tobacco annually, or 4,480,000,000 of pounds weight as much as the corn consum ed by 10,000,000 Englishmen, and actually a cost sufficient to pay for all the bread corn in Great Britain. Five millions and a half of a cres are occupied in its growth, the product of which, at two pence per pound, would yield $37,000,000 sterling. The time would fail to tell of the vast amount of smoking in Turkey and Persia in India all classes and both sex es indulge in this practice ; the Siamese both chew and smoke ; in Burmah all ages practice it children three years old and ot both sexes; China equally contributes to the general ma nia ; and the advocates of the habit boast that about one-fourth of the human race are their clients, or that there certainly are one bun dred millions of smokers. Terrible Tragedt is Virginia. A bloody affray occurred in Franklin county, Va., on Saturday 2oth February, and resulted in the killing of three brothers, named James, Wil liam and Ralph Clements, at the hauds of Vincent Witcher, former president of the Richmond and Danville Railroad, and his grandson John A. Smith. The Richmond Dispatch has some particulars of the terrible affray, from which we copy the following: Mr. James Clements married the sister of John A. Smith, and grand daughter of Mr. Witcher ; the lady afterwards took steps to procure a divorce from him. On Saturday last the taking of depositions in the case was progressing at the office of a magistrate, in Franklin county, near the Pittsylvania line, Messrs. Witcher, Smith, and the three Messrs. Clements and others being present. During the taking of the depositions, Mr. Witcher asked some questions which greatly exaspera ted the husband, Mr. Clements. lie immedi ately rose, drawing a pistol at the same time, and fired at Mr. Witcher. Mr. Witcher, it seems, also quickly rose and drew a pistol from his pocket and as the ball of his antago nist grazed around his abdomen, he fired, striking Clements in the forehead, killing him instantly. Mr. Smith, brother of Mrs. Clements, hear ing the firing rushed into the room. A broth er of Mr. Clements, who had also been attrac ted by the pistol reports, fired at Addison Witcher, a nephew of Vincent Witcher, and inflicted a slight wound. Upon seeing his nephew shot,Mr. Vincent Witcher again fired, striking Clements No. 2, and killing him in stantly. At this stage of the sanguinary affair, Mr. Smith drew a bowie knife, but had scarcely unsheathed the blade when he was fired upon by a second brother of Clements, the ball ta king effect in the shoulder, and producing a painful wound. Infuriated by his wound Mr. Smith rushed upon his antagonist, and with one powerful thrust of the knife completely disemboweled Clements No. 3,the unfortunate man falling dead on the spot. During the af fray Mr. Samuel Swanson, a neighbor of Mr. Witcher was also wounded. So that three persons were killed and three wounded. Mr. Witcher is a gentleman over seventy eight years of age, a lawyer by profession, and is well known throughout the State. He ser ved for many years in the lower house of the Legislature, and subsequently represented his district in the State Senate with signal ability. He was a prominent member of the Whig par ty ,and his name has been repeatedly mention ed in connection with the office of Governor of the Commonweath. An Old Postmaster. Mr. Samuel Milton, says the Charleston Courier of March 3d, died recently in Yorkville, South Carolina, in the seventy-second year of his age. He had serv ed as Postmaster for thirty-eight years, under the Administrations of Presidents Adams, Jackson, Van Buren, Harrison, Tyler, Polk, Taylor, Fillmore, Pierce and Buchanan. Large Convent. The Alton, Illinois, Dem ocrat informs its readers that a large and splen did convent or seminary for the Sisters of Charity, is to be erected forthwith in that town. This will be the largest structure of the kind in the West, covering an entire block or square, and costing $30,000. A merchant who lived at Baton Rouge, La., and who was once worth $150,000, was arrest, ed for vagrancy last week, having in fire years gambled away his entire fortune. It is proposed to raise the Atlantic Cable , and to make an effort once more to link Eng. land and the United States. Doing nothing is so near doing evil, that the space between theni is scarcely discernible. A "EEEKPUL SHEPHERD M Mormonism, says ths Cincinnati Inquirer, is still in practical operation amongst us. On last Friday a tall, raw-boned Saint, with a com plexion very Btrongly resembling that of boil ed tripe, arrived here from Pittsburgh with a couple of wives, but deeming his flock too small to start Salt Lakeward with, held forth as follows to an admiring audience at a house over the. canal, with a view to the perfection of the material necessary to the completeness of his domestic felicity. His text was : "Men is skeerce and Weemen is plenty. " "Brothern and Sistern pertickler the Sis tern : I want to say a few words to you 'bout Mormonism not for my own sake, but for yourn, for men is skeerce and weemen is plen ty." "Mormonism is built on that high old prin ciple which sez that it ain't good for a man to be alone, and a mighty sight worse for a wo man. Therefore it a man feels good with a little company, a good deal of it ought to make him feel an awful sight better. "The first principle of Mormonism is, that women air a good thing, and the second prin. ciple Is that you can't have too much of a good thing. Women is tenderer than man, and is necessary to smooth down the roughness of his character, and as man has a good many rough pints in his natur, he oughtn't to givu one woman too much to do, but set each ote to work. to smoothing some particular pint. "Don't think I'm over anxious for you to jine us, for I ain't. I'm not speaking for my good, but for yourn ; "for men is skeerce and weemen is plenty.' "I said woman was tenderer than man, but $ you needn't feel stuck up about it, tor so she ought to be ; for she was made so on purpose. But bow was she made so? Where did she git it from ? Why, she was created out of the side bone of a man, and the sidebone of a man is like the sidebone of a turkey the tenderest part of him. Therefore, as a woman has three sidebones and a man only one, ot course she is three times as tender as a man is, and is in duty bound to repay that tenderness of which she robbed him. And how did she rob him of his sidebone t Why, exactly as she robs his pockets now-a-days of his loose change she took advantage of him when he was sleep. "But as woman is more tenderer than man, so is man more forgivener than woman, there, fore I won't say anything moro about the side bone, or tho small change, but invite you all to join my train, for I'm a big shepherd out our way, and fare sumptuously every day on purple and fine linen. "When I first landed on the shores of the great Salt Lake I wasn't rich in weemen. I had but onn poor old doe, 'but men is skeerce and weemen is plenty,' and like a keeiful shepherd I began to increase my flock. Wee men beard of us and our lovin' ways, and they kept pourin' in. Tbey come from the North and they come from the South, they coma from the East, and they come from the West, they come from Europe, they come from Ai shey, aud a few ot them come from Afrikey, and from bein' the miserable owner of one old yoe, I become the joyful shepherd of a migh ty flock, with a right smart sprlnklin' of lambs, friskier and fatter than anybody else's, and I've still got room for a few more. "As I said before I'm not talking pertickler for my benefit, but for yourn 'for men is skeerce and weemen is plenty.' Still, I'd a little rather yon'd go along with me than not, pertickler you fat one with the caliker bunnet. Don't hesitate, but take the chance while-you can get it, and I'll make you the 'bell yoe' of the flock. I'll lead you through green pas tures aud the high grass ; show you where you may caper in the sunshine, and lay down ia pleasant places ; and as you are in a pretty good condishun already, in the course of time you shall be the fattest of the flock. Jine in, jine in now ; 'for men is skeerce and weemen is plenty." The appeal was irresistible. At the last ac counts "the fat woman with the calikec bun. net" had "jined in," and two or three others were on the fence, with a decided leaning to wards the "Keerful Shepherd." TnREE Children Burned to Death. A painful and melancholy occurrence took place in Oxford, in this county, says the Oskaloosa, Iowa, Herald, on Friday evening, the 2d inst. The dwelling of Mr. Spencer De Witt took fire between seven and eight o'clock in the evening, while he and his wife were absent at church. The House was burned to the ground ; and three children two girls, one aged nine, the other three, and a boy aged five perished in the flames. It is supposed the fire origina ted from the stovepipe. The wind was blow ing furiously at the time. No one reached the house until it was enveloped in flames. A voice supposed to be that of the older girl, was heard once crying "mercy." All effort to rescue the unfortunate children were fruit less. When the fire had burned down some what, the bodies of the children could be seen in the ashes of the bed, showing that they had retired, and were probably asleep when the fire commenced. Mr. and Mrs. De Witt have only one child left, a babe. In this heart-rendering and overwhelming calamity they will have the sincere sympathy of all who hear of their sad bereavement. The House was part frame and part log, and was rapidly consumed. In a Bad Fix. The Commissioners of Al legheny county have gotf jthemselves into a somewhat unpleasant fix by refusing to obey the writ of mandamus in the case of the Alle gheny county Railroad Bonds. They were brought before the Supreme Court at its sit ting in Philadelphia, week before last, and fined $1,000 respectively ,and ordered to stand committed in the jail of Allegheny county un til the sentence shall be complied with. Jail or Small is doing everything in his power to make the Commissioners comfortable,ad they will undoubtedly remain in their quarters, un-' less released by the people or the Legislature, ui'til they bavo completed the term which is required in default of payment of the 3ne im posed upon them. The Mormons. The Mormons now number 120,000, including good, bad and indifferent. The number in Utah ia put down at 38,000. Of these, 4,617 men have 16,500 wives. Men dont generally like to be hampered, but, it you are going out to spend a week in the woods, you had better hamper yourself. Some men's honesty and decorum are phan toms that feed on the air of opinion, and, like the chameleon, changes as often as their food.