TERMS OF THE "AMERICAN." HENRY B. MA8SER, JOSEPH EI3ELY. PcniltKtlH ABO PnormttTom, It. It. JUJISSEH, Editor. , T orrict in xirket stnttT, mar tun. THE AMERICAN" in published every Satur day at TWO DOLLARS per annum to be paid half yearly in advance. No paper discontin ued till i it arrearafcra are paid. lo subscriptions received for a leaa period than six xoxtr. All communications or letters on business relating to the office, to insure attention, nuet be POST PAID. From the If. Y. Zion'i Watchman. M O II Jl O I S M . Mormon Una Exposed and Refuted. Messrs. Piercy and Heed, No. 7 The .tre Alley, have just issued from the ress on 18 mo. volume of about 54 pa es, with this title. It is for sale at the ook stores, and may be had at this Ifice, at S8 per hundred, and twelve nd a half cents single. This book comprizes the articles hich have appeared in the Watchman i this subject within a few weeks past, mong other testimonies to the necces y of something of this kind, wc give e following. Dr. II. Cowdry, in a ter to the editor, dated Acton, Mass., arch 8, 1838, says : "You have done the church and the srld a good service in your delinea n of Mormonism, of more value than y I have ever seen." From the Maine W. Journal. M o r in o n I s ui . I have been much pleased, Mr. Edi , with a number of articles published Zion's Watchman, showing in a '.)ng light the gross absurdities and (Tably contemptible pretensions of rmonism. I conceive Mr. Suther d has rendered an essential service Jic cause of truth and righteousness, nust have been to him a thankless 1 wearisome task ; but having seen book of Mormon, I am prepared to , he has performed it faithfully. You e published one or two of the num s in the Journal. It would please if the whole review could be spread j re our people through the same me ti. The Mormons have entered this te, and in some instances made con 's to their impious assumptions. y deserve rebuke and the effort of S. in giving it, though ungrateful limself, will, I am persuaded, be of .tantial benefit to the public. It I trust it will, be instrumental in iverting some from theerror of their s in saving souls from death, and ;ring a multitude of sins." ingor, March, 1838. J. D. II. 'e are aware that some of our rea may have thought we were devo more attention to this subject than ally deserved. Rut we are confi- . they Would not have thought SO u hey known as much of the mischief c hthis barefaced delusion is doing m anv parts oi our countrv, as IlUS I j to our knowledcre. It people, every wncre, Knew wnai ormonism is, incj wou.u Manu in in- UJ"U U1 .v.j. vocates. Uut before those who uld do so, have an opportunity or the ans of demonstrating its falsity, in y place, where one of its pretended :phcts and miracle works has made onset upon the people, numbers of :11 meaning persons may be caught the snare, and then every effort to :laim them is denounced as persccu n. Itcad the lollowmg letters. It is a ct, that the Mr. Pratt referred to be 0iir. l rati reierred to ue we learn, baptized quite a ndiyiduals in this city, the w, has, as imber of ind si wimcr, anu nc is still practising his a II .Ml a.' a i in oi ncr places, we are loiu. 11 Will UC seen that tllC lollOWing ICl- r is from a man who was himself a ll. OrmonitC, and a "hlSll priCSl among . ... . ... I cm, and was Joseph Smith, Jr's. pri tie secretary. Kirtland, Ohio, March (J, 183S. o tub Editor or Zion's Watchman : Dear Sir, I learn from your valua e and highly interesting periodical, hich has casually fallen into my hands, at vou are lavins before thc public a ief and (I believe thus far) a correct r-tAKir sf t l-i a r rirmrtn r 1 . 1 1 K wills'!. 1 r..;r. r,.. .k iblic that they are justly entitled to, as e abominations, evil designs, and prac-1 ces of their leaders need only to be nown arid investigated, to explode their 3cp rooted system of heresy, whose ible shades are hovering around the iental horizon of thousands, and is cal- dated to impair in thc minds of the redulous and unsuspecting, the lair . s . rm of virtue and religion. If lean render you any assistance in awarding this laudable enterprize, by ivino- vou a statement of facts that rm of virtue and religion. ave fallen under my own observation, Shall consider that 1 am discharging a mate acquaintance OI JOS. Dlllim jr. notuing mote nor less man carrying inweneci incorporBt,j , corps of reserve, liable to be cal Uty that I owe to God and my fellow and Sidney Kigdon, the modern proph- Smith and Rigdon'. las revelation that they had i,lt0.cviv. wrvke; by thia means tha nation reatures. 1 understand that 1. I. ratt. one ol the twelve modern apos- ... . 'es. an intimate acquaintance of mine, -. i HOW holding forth in your city 5 and have thought that a letter written by limself, to Joseph Smith, Jr., Containing statement of facts in relation to the onduct of said Smith, un4 b Kigdon, . t Abaolute acquleaecr.ee in the declaiona of the By Itlnsscr & Elscly. might be of service to the lovers of truth; especially to the inhabitants of your city. I he following is a true co py of the original : W. Pabrish. "Kirtland, May 23, 1837. "Pres. J. Smith, Jr. "Dear Brother, As it is difficult to obtain a personal interview with you at all times, by reason of the multitude of business in which you are engaged, you will excuse my saying in writing what I would otherwise say by word of mouth. "Ilavinc long pondered the path in which we as a people, have been led in regard to our temporal management, I have at length become fully convinced that the whole scheme of speculation in winch we have been engaged, is of the devil. I allude to the covetous, extra ordinary speculating spirit which has reigned in this place for the last season : which has given rise to lying, deceiving, and taking advantage of one's neighbor, and in short, every evil work. "And being as fully convinced that you, ana I'resident Kigdon, both by a a I precept and example, have been the principal means in icauing mis people astray, in these particulars, and having myscit been led astray, and caught m me same snare by your example, and b' false prophesying and preachins, from your mouths, yea, having done many things wrong, and plunged my- self and family, and others, well nish into destruction; I have awoke to an awful sense of my situation, and now resolve to retrace my steps, and cet out of the snare, and make restitution as lar as I can. "And now, dear brother, if vou arc still determined to pursue this wicked course, until yourself and the Church shall sink down to hell, I beseech vou at least to have mercy on me and my ... i iamuy, ana oincrs wno are bound wun me for those three lots which vou sold to me at the extortionary price of 82000, which never cost you 8100. For if it stands acainst me it will ruin me and my helpless family, as well as those bound with me : for veslerdav president Kisdon came to me and intormed me. that you had drawn the money from the bank, on the obligations which vou hoM inst mC) affd that had -,eft -t tQ t, mCf , of lhe h and couU not hc, whafever course thev mi ,lt 4 n 1- haIU- 4 a a ni...!t l.,.in .l !n Ka I most sacred promises on your part, that , shou,d nQt b(J jnju red b Uiose wrU t nfrcril him the ihrPft lot fr.r tne writinrs. but he wanted my house and home also. Now, dear brother, w ill vou take those lots and cive me up the writings, and pay me the 875 which I paid you on the same ? Or will you take the ad- vantage of your neighbor because he is in your power If you will receive this mlmnnilinn of nrw hr lrvn vnnr enul . . . ' l tution. vou have mv fellowship and es- teemf as far as jt rcsr,ects our dealings between ourselves. iut if , , smube under thc pa;n. fu, neccssitv of preferrinc charges a- gainst vou for extortion, covetousncss, , 4oi.- .,l.ni., ,,r Ir..il.. UIJU lllMlljl UMIUIttUV ' 1 .Ui UlWHILt I I l.ir fir, iinrliiA mlirrinliu inllimtmn For . Mil UU . V. 1 1 I" U .!J.1U- 1 1 . V. . . . . .- , f :nnuonce u.l.:cl. Iej us to make this kind of trades in this socie- ty. Such as saying it was the will of God that lands should bear with such a price ; and many otner propnesvings, . .1 . preachings and statements ot a like na ture. 1 ours with respect, P. P. Pratt.' Accompanying the above, Mr. Par, ri.l, l,!ia m iw th frdUwincr Pttrr which first appeared in thc Painesville (0hl) Republican : Kirtland, Feb. 5, 1838 Sir, I have taken the liberty to send I you a synopsis of some of tho leading features of tho characters of Joseph omith. jr. and Sidney Kigdon, who are styled leaders of the Mormon Church, and it you are disposed, and think ,t 1 tlf . a a. woum te oi service to the public, you are a liberty to publish it. I have for are ai uoeny 10 publish it. I havo for several years past been a member of the Church of latter day Saints, commonly called Mormons, belonging to the quo- quo- rum 01 seventy nign priests, anu an mli- etS, anu nave liaa ail opportunity OI as- I ... . . . .1 certainmg to as great an extent, me re- I a . - . al characters of these men, as any oth- er individual. 1 have been Smith's private secretary, Called to fill tlllS high 1 and responsible Station by revelation I which I wrote myself as it dropped la aa. . " . I trom tne lips ot the prophet, and allho AND SHAMOKIN JOUHNAL. majority, the vitaf principle of Republic., from which Sunbury, Norf liumbci land Co. 1 ! contrary to my natural inclinations, I submitted to it, fearing to disobey or treat lightly the commands of the Al mighty. I have kept his journal, and like Barak, the ancient scribe, had the honor of writing the history of one of the prophets. 1 have attended him in ms private councils, in his secret Cham- Uers ana in Ins public exhibitions. 1 nave penormed a pilsnmasc with him. not to Mecca, but" to Missouri, a dis- ume ui iuw mites, lor me rcaemrmon OI lon.in company With at)OUt tWO him- e n . . . . '. area oincrs, canea tne camp ol Israel, When WC arrived in Clay county, ad- joining Jackson county. Mo., in Wllich aiuu wm iucuicu oy revelation, ana from w hich our brethren had been dri ven, we were informed through the prophet that Cod had revealed to us that we need not cross over and fight as we expected, but that God had ac cepteu our sacrillCC as lie UIU mat Ot i-i.i. -t Abraham, ours being equal to his When DC Olierea lip niS SOU. inerelore WC were sealed up unto eternal life in the name oi jesus .iirisi, as a reward tor - C 1 I a 11 our suuenngs and obedience. 1 have oy ms muu ana penncu down me translation of the Egyptian Ilicrogly- pmcs as ne claimed to receive it bv ui reci inspiration irom iieavcn. l have listened to hjm with feelings of no ordi navy kind, when he declared that the audible voice of God instructed him to establish a Banking-AntUBankins in stitution, which like Aaron's rod should swallow up all other Banks, (the Bank of Monroe excepted,) and crow and flourish and spread from the rivers to the ends of the earth, and survive when all others should be laid in ruins. I have been astonished to hear him declare that wo had 60.000 dollars in specie in our vaults, and 8000,000 at our command. i .... . - . wnen we nau not to exceed G,000, and couiu noi commana any more ; also that we had but about ten thousand dollars of our bills in circulation, when he, as cashier ot the institution, knew that there was at least 8150,000. Knowing their extreme poverty when they commenced in the Mormon specu lauon, i nave ueen noi a nine surnrisea to hear them assert that they were worth from 3 to 400,000 dollars each, and in ,css ,han ninct ja oftcrf be, camc illsoivcnt xvithout any chan c in their business affairs. But such has ItPOri tlia H I 1 1 1 1 ! ' rf t lirC-r l-i -! w Kins rncmcrs, lliat they have assumed the aulhority to cursc or t0 blcss to damn or to save, not onlv this church, but this entire generation, and that they hold their destinies in this world and that which is to come. And such has been their influence over this church in this place, that they have filched their mo nics trom their pockets, and obtained their earthly substance for the pur- pose of establishing a bank and various other wild Rnocul.itinns. in nr.lnr that . . . they might aggrandize themselves and families, until thev have reduced their followers to wretchedness and want. For the year past their lives have been one continued scene of lying, deception and fraud, and too, in the name of God. But this I can account for in my own mind, having a knowledge of their own nrii-:itf elmrnplPH nn.t cnnllmitnl, . I believe them to be confirmed infidels, l- .JW..II11IV.II.J . w,0 ,ave not the fear of God before their eyes, notwithstanding their high pretentions to holiness, and frequent correspondence with tiie Angels of Ilea- VCIl 5 and the revelations of Jesus Lllllst by the power of the Holy Ghost. What avails thC Claim Of SUCh men to holiness of heart, when their examples do vio len " no system ot morality, to say nowiing aooui religion ! iiat more favorable idea can one entertain, who has heard them say that man has no more agency than a wheelbarrow, and consequently is not accountable, and in the final end of all things no such principle will exist as sin. Uon D,,6,', 'mod' ,uch J"P,,eU Dguung iuur P.tcueu 0.u u...cU ., wnin .our . I .a..l I a I . iL I w" OWH """"' hil twihei-m-law, one wun i-.ua iuir, and one 011 womei-ireiaw. one "h a baptist priest, speak. ' agomeut in this place, has red pl'i '. '' he recent 01 volume.. 1 heir man- educed society to a com- P"" "reca. J ne receui ouiragc. ub.c, v.. ' l . .1.- oia piuiungeiauinmeum uaveuououu oelore Uaey took inei- leave of this place between I . . . ... . - ... two u.y. m uct th. tying, fighting, teaimg, si. running uway.tc that have been carried on among I w, is only reducing their theory to practice, and in I some instances they bav not only taught Iba theo- ry, but lava act the riample themselves. And I " fully convinced thai their precepts end nam . I I awples both in public and in priva'e, ait cahuUu-d there i. no appeal but to fore.., the vital principle Ia. Saturday, aiareli 20, 1S41. t to corrupt tho morala of their votirii a, and cast a ahade over their character, which like a twilight of evening w ill goon sittle into the gloom of midnight darkness; and hud it net been arret, d in its mad career, would have traiismitltd to succeeding gene ration, a r-yplcm of hereditary tyranny, and spirb despotism, unparalleled in the annul of Chris Mian church, Iho church of Rome not excepted. Hut they have fled in the night s "ihcy love dark ncssralicr th un liaht. brcauaa tin. if deeds nri) evil the w.-cked flee when no man puraucth." Th nr mine- emi,ii.hm..ni. hwu i.in.i.-r.. Ar. f. ' ' " merly the property of Smith end Rigdon ; it had been .old the day previou. to it. Wing et on fire, by vir ue cf two exicutions obtained against them of one thousand dollar, each, for issuing b.nkinii paper contrary to law. The establishment had fallen into the hands of those who have of lu'e re inonatrated against the wickedness of the above named individuals j and had it not been saoificed upon the si ar of reckless fanaticism, it would no doubt at th time been sprnk;ng the truth aa an atonement for an ill-upt nt life; a well jtrounded conviction of this fact waseviVntly one reason why Smith end Rigdon obtained a revelation to abscond; and that the Pre. must not t .n hazard i .of. fered to be put in requihition against them, ulso that God would destroy this i.l ace by lire, for ita wicked nEsinst bis prnrhots, ond that hU servants are swift messenger, of destruction, by whose hand. he avrngra himself upon bin enemies : this accounts for the outrage. This is but a preface to the cata logue of their inanities that might be enumerated. Out the most astonishing thing after ail is, that men of common sense and common abili'ies should be so completely blinded as to dispense entiri ly wilh the evidence of their senses, and tamely submit to l led by such men, and to countenance such gla ring inconsistencies, and at the same time be made to believe, that they had God for their author, and the happines. and well being of mankind for their end an aim. But the magic charm i. broken at last; superstition and bigotry hae begun to loose their influence and unclench their iion g aiu from this devoted people, who have "bceu lid like the lamb, to the slaughter, and as a sh ep i. dumb be fore her shearers" so have we not dured to open our mouth. However, justice seems to be in pursuit of the workers of iniquity ; and sooner or luter will uvtilaKe ttirm ; thry will rasp a jul and sure retri bution for their folly. This then is the conclusion of the whole mailer; they lie by revelation, awix- ii li by revelation, chcit and deprai'd by revela tion, bis Awn by revelation; and if they do not mend their ways, I fear they will at lal he damned by revel.uon. lhi. tocr..r? -that 1 J I W. PARKISH. we are personally acquain- nutt) and Rigdon, and that the above is a statement of facts, scorling to out best recollection. I.i-ke JnHnv, Two of tfit twelve Johs F. Hovtiis, S A port Ira. Si lv ester Smith, ? Formerly Presidents Leoxard Kicd, cf the teventttt. A inn lean ArtUts Abroad. The Parisian correspondent of lhe Couii rond inquirer, in noticing the success of Mr. Ilcaly, an Am':';n a no- in Pi- , auy that at the re qu vi ui uove.;: lias taken a portrait of Marshal Soult, which is .aid to be superior in point r cen.blaiice and hcuihiii, lu any among lhe "nea oi ine iact aes.tcj usceti.e aru,t ana ms Pic,ure' uJ w" ordi.1Biy introduced to Hi. Majesty by the General, and was most favorably re cUd-bm hi. good fortnne did not terminate The Kinc consented to .it to him f. r . Por lrail tot unn Cas! and is .o much phased with the uiocress of the work.thil he has ordered a co YJ of it for himself. Tho American citizens tesi- T I " dnt in Paris have resolvej to employ Mr. Healy to paint a pormit of.Mr.Ouuot, Minister for For eign Affairs, whoso literary connexion with the name of Washington they propose thus acknowl edging. When fiui-hcd, the picture will be sent home (to the U.S.) tube placed in a suiublcsitu- ation in Ntw Yoik or Washington The Kremlin. Th'. ancient palace of the Cxirs, at Moscow, is f aid to be rising magnificenty from the ruin into whieb it fell during the lire of Moscow on the French invasion. The plan will unite grandeur and coin fort with the peculiarities of the barbarous Tartar ,c "" ,u" winter 00 ,he Ru ian ''" bv one "" ". tons ruct- IVM ill tun uaanriiiciii. mJi y t uiu niiif.ii rv tuuri conve, th. hot air to .11 noint. of .be ed.K.e. Por ,h. UM of the heir app.ieni and hi. yu.g consort, UUjle f(ecleJlll Mi uear The .,anjillg ,rm, of p,,nce j, td , k(.p, at 600,000 men, wboae duration of a. rvice is to ba sitfhl viar.. but one half of thern. aftet havi.ia .erved four yearg W,1 be allowed leave of aie.ue, and be iill uve about half the eiiiica of ruaitainina ao I - - , - - m M . force. I"" I A Unprofitable luinu$. Tit Paymaster Gen eral ol the Mi.soun militia ha made a report, in 1 which it appeals, that what he call, the Mormon - 1 War, cost lhe state of Misaouri out hundred and !'y n.iia dvllurt. I .... and immediate parent of desp.tism.-J.FrEa.o. Vol. Io. XXVI. A Runaway Railroad Train. Duiing the gale on Sa'unl iy ufternonn, a tender and passenger c ir, whicli1 were atauding on the track of the Long Unud Hail road, at Ilickiville, were suddenly art in ino'ion by the force of the rind, mid moved ofT in donble q'ji k limo toward Jamaica. Tin ir progress wat n it arrested till they reached the wooJ ou the New York idi of the villugn above name I. Some etiinnte may pc form ed of the force nt' the wind from the fact that the distance travelled over by lhe c ir. was fifteen miles, and that the tiinj in which it wis accompl'sid wa SO minutes an avarase of a mile in two minut. . The cir was part of a funeral train, and con'aiu- ed the corpse. A locomotive was immediately dts pitched after it, but did not overtake it until it. piugrtst bsd Wen partially stopped by a thick pic.ee of woods, which broke the foice of tie gile. Improvtmrntiln the Daguerreotype. Mr. Datigvrre has author. nd M. Arago to an nounce to the Academie dts Science, that he ha discovered the means of catching a complete image of any nvveing object in less than a second. The New Dcdlord Register announces an improvement, etTicted by Mr. J. Dixon, of Tauton, in this State, which etcerds in utility any other yet made. Hith erto the operation of this ins'rument has been con fined to the production ofpictui. on silver plate properly prepared, but Mr. Dixon has succeeded in producing the etT ct upon liihographic st ne, and. in such a manner, that copies of the picture may be multiplied with as much ed e and cert duty as liilii graphic work, produced in the uual way. Boston rest. Singular Fishing. On Wednesday the 30:h ult., a Newfoundland dog, belmging to Mr. I'amrton, Tontine Hotel, Prcblcs, captured a fine salmon in the Tweed, in the following singular manner. (Hector, for such is the dog', name) U exceedingly fond of the water; ao much .o, that whenever he gets loose from bis chain, he is off to the river, and with the greatest industry brings to land all the drift wo J, dec. fl at ing down the stream. On Wednesday the 30th ult. while thus employed, he was observed by some boy. to dive suddenly under the water, where he remained entirely out of eight for about half a min ute. When he arose again to the surface ke had a salmon in his mouih, which wai struggling to es cape; but he held it fast in his capacious jw, and brought it safe to land, tnd would on no account quit his prize, until he cairicd it safe home to his master. The fish was of the real salmon tribe, and weighed about four pounds. ScAchman. How to Cure a Husband. A woman, whom her husband used fiequcnt'y to sco'.d, went to a cunning man to inquiie how she might cure him of his barbarity. The sagacious soothsayer heard her complaint; and after pronounc ing s me laid words, and uing various gcsticula lioi s, while he fill' d a vial with colored liquid, de sired her, whenever her husband was in a passion, to lake a mouthful of the liquor and keep it in her mouth for five minute. The woman, quite over joyed at so simple a remedy, stnc ly followed the counsel which was given her, and by her silence escaped the usual annoyance. The contents of the bottle bf ing at lat expended, she returned to the cunnir.g man and anxiously begged to have anotb er possessed of the came virtue. "Daughter," .aid tha man, "there was noting in lhe bo'llu but brown sugar and water. W hen your husband is in a pas sion, hold your tongue, and, my life on it, he will not scold you in future." A lloaoiu aVult. A female in Baltimore w as suspected recently by a storekeeier of secreting in hei buijin a skein of worsted, und he insisted upan searchin her, to which she objected far some time, but being threat ened wilh exposure, she consented. lie found con cealed in her bosom the wo-sted, two ihawts, a pair of stockings, and to his astonishment, a pair of tkakt. A Illval fot J. Q. Aitaius ncnaarkable fuse. Mr. Casey, of Illinois, is sa;d to be the most at tentive member of Coiigresi more faithful in at tendance to his legislative duties even than Mr. A dams. During the tiyht years that he ba been a member of the House, he has been abroad only a day and a half, and h is voted on every question (?) taken, with that exception. The Express mention one person who will re meiub. r Iuauguia'ion Day a. long a. ha lives. It was a garr son officer of the Navy, who went to the While House, intoxicated. The President an swered hi greeting with "Sir, I am sorry to see you or any person in your condition, here." This sobeied Liin we gue.-s but it isn't eveiy man who ha the honor to be rebuked by the chief mag istrate of the nation. The man ha that to com fori him at any imW.Amer. Sentinel. Spark Catcher A new contrivance, for tha put pose of locomotive spark-catching, ha been inven ted by Mr. D. Matthew., of Schenectady, N. V. In addition to relieving tha passenger from tha in convenience now experienced by his optica, all dan ger of fire to b appreheuded fiom tha machine ia entirely dona away wilh. On a recent occasion tha inventor placed a pound of powder on the top of ll.e car next to the locomotive, and made thc run from Schenectady to Utica and back, a distance) of 15C mile, without igniting it. prices of AnrrnTisixo. I square 1 insertion, . fo Bf) 1 do 3 do . . .0 75 I do X dj 00 Every subsequent in icrtii n, . 0 8 Yearly Advertisement., (with the pm'lcge t alteration) one column $ 2S ; half column, $18, three squares, $12 ; two .quarts., fi one rqinre, $5. Without the privilege of alteration a liberal discount will be made. Advertisements left without direction n. to the length of time the are to be published, will I continued until ordered out, and charged accord ingly. Clixteen lines make a square. Deatli in the Hall Room. "As the first d nice at tlio Dall la-t evening," riy. lhe Portland Argus of the 5th instant, " wis about commencing, the company was shocked by the in stantaneous deatli of one of their number Mr. Win. Pucker who fell dead just a. Le had lei hi. partner to the floor. Ho was liken directly to tha office of Dr. Wood, in the Exchange builJing, but all lifs had departed." The London Times relates the loliowing occur rence which lately happen' d in tha great metropolis, " Mr. Stroud having occion for a housekeeper to superintend h'l domotic arrangements, adv ar liscd for 1 a willow, or a widow and her daugh let, to lake charge of the upper part if a tradesman's house, and to cotk for him.' Th" w age w: re sta ted to be JC30 per annu n, with c a's, undies, A.C , and oppl cat on was d r.clcd to be made between eleven and thrco o'clock on Tuesday, at No. 69 Tower Sheet. Before the click Mrucli eleven lite widows began to arrive, and soon the street was render- J impassible by the number of fair ones crow- - ding '. 'wards lhe bouse, and in a few minu'e Mr. Stroud'.; sh ip and porlor were filled with woin. n struggling to gain the attention of the advertiser, and clamorously setting faith their qualifications for the situation. A report soon got wind that Mr. Stroud had ad vertised fot a wife, and people flocked fiom all quar ter, to see lhe ladies in search of a husband. Tho widows, young, middle-aged, the thin and stut, the daik and the fair, somu in their weeds, other, gaily a'tired, and many pjorly but d.ceul'y clad, eon i'iued to ariive, and were greeted with laugh ter and shou's by the mob, who gave fiee vent to their j.,kes and ribaldry as the widiwa arrived and departed. At length the confusion and n auc be came so great, that a pos e of the city po'ieo wcro ei:t for, who pieserved a little better order, and af forded free ingrc.-s, f.r the applicants." Miraculous. On Friday last a small boy by tha name of Battle?, playing near Smith & Peacock'. saw mi!!. Rochester, fell over the precipice, a dis tance of 70 f. et. He landed in a snow diift, and the only injury he sustained was the d.alocation of hi. ankle! Rochester Democrat. Mysterious Professions. ' Now Tom," said the pi inter of a country news paper, in giving directions to his appren'ico, "put the 'foreign le.ideis' into thi galley, nnd lucfc 'em up let 'Napoleon' remains' bavu a lugcr head distribute the 'army in the E 1,1' tako up a line and finiah the 'Ornish Minister' make 'the young Princes.' to run on wilh 'the Duchess of Kent' move 'the Keiry hunt' out of the chase gel your stick and coi:cIuie 'the horrid murder' that Joe be gan last night wash your hand and come i i to dinner, and then see that all the pie is cleared up.' Some printer, are devils and 110 mistake. The following toast was recently given alOJens. burg, IVew York; "Woax. A mother, she cherishes and correct, us ; a sister, she consults and counsels us; a sweet heart, she co ts 1 jii conquers us ; a wife, she cjai fori, aiid co.,uos us; without u r whit would be come of us 1" EMC5DAT109 ar Ba.cur.Loa. A mother, .he scolds and spanks us ; a sister, aha led. of and pinches us ; sweetheart, .he coquets and jilt, us ; a wife, she frown., pouts, fri ts, cries, and toiments us ; without her, wlul would there ba to trouble us Buffalo Jlrpub. Fisbiso. Wo learn from the London Quarter ly Review, thai Chaulrcy, the celebrated English sculptor, is an inveterate angler troui-caiching I. bis favorite amusenvnu When Mad nn Mai. bran first visited the great sculptor in his studies, she ad dressed him, from her frank feeding and good heart, with "How happy you must be in the midst of thia your b autiful creation. To which he, with equal sincerity, though a little to her surprise, replied, "I'd rather be a fishing I" A lady of Tarrytown being out in the evening, was accoced by a gentleman w ho offered to escort her home, to which she anaweied, "Cot out y m brute!" He lagged her pardon, when she imrue. diuUly leplied, "Ah, air ! I a.-k y'iur pardon, f r in a stale of uieutul absence, I thought it was my hus band." Reciift roa tub isDiss. Cream may b fro zen by simply putting it into a glass vessel, and then placing the whole in an old tsciiilar'. bo som. The New York Planet has th folio a Ing t "Bill, tbat'a a capital cigar." " Yet, Ned, ao it is; but it will alTord you very little interest, I ant afraiJ, a. it i. solitary and a loan." Hoaoa vs. raoriT. The Circuit Judge in Il linois are so poorly paid that they are compelled, it is stated, t swap hore?a and gamble in order to support theit families. A 8mosb. "You look." sail a German-mind rd and imaginative friend to a pale, haggard smoker, "you look a if you had, got out of your grave to light your cigar, and eould'nt Cad your way back again 1" Paooarstio. V. learn to eliiub by keeping our eyes un tha mountain, thai riso befota u , an it not on th billa that li bshLid.