1 !'.!? THIOLS OF THE "AMEKICAX." HENRY" D. MASHER, JOSEPH EISBLY. ? rVtLtSIIRItS AHD 5 Phopriktori. . XT. .MNSElt, Editor, (orrici in markst rmtir, mcar rttn. THE " AMERICA N" in published everv Satiir Jay at TWO DOLLARS per annum lo be said half yearly in advance. No paper" discontin ued till ah arrearages are paiJ. No subscriptions received fur a lea period lhan MX momth. All communications or li-uera on msineas relating to the oilice, to inaure attention, nuat be POST PAID. UNBTOY AMER AND SHAMOKIN JOURNAL, Absolute acquiescence in the decision of the tnnjorly, the witat principle of Republic, from which there i no appral but to force, the vii.it piin lde and Immediate parent of deap itiam. J e ntrcao . Ky Masscr & Elscly. Suubury, Xorthunibcrlaud Co. Ta. Saturday, October 10, IS II. To. ll- t. III. A PSALM OP LIFE. (Z?y PrJeiaor Longfellow.) DAT TBI HKAItT Of THE TOirXO Milt fAtO TO TRS rtMIT. Trtt me not, in mournful number, Life i but an empty dieain ! For the (nul i dead thnt ill u ml era, An 1 thing are nut what they seem. Life Is real t Life ia earnest I And the grave ia not ila goal ; Dust thou an, to dust reiumest, Waa not spoken of the soul. Not enjoy mant, and nnl sorrow, Is our destined end or way ; But to act, that each to-morrow Find us farther than to-day. Ait ia long, and Time is fleeting. And our hearts, though atout and brave. Still, like muffled drums an- beating Funerul inarches to the grave. In the world's broad field of hit le, In the bivouac of Life, Be not like dumb, driven cattle I Ilea hero in the strife ! Trust no Future, how'cr pleasant ! Let the Jc il I'ust l urv ila ilf.nl I Ait. art in the living 1'iesi-i.t I lit art within, and Uud o'iri cad ! Live of gr.-at men nil remind us We can make our live sublime, And, departing, leave hih nd us Footsteps on the tarnlaof lime ; Footsteps, that perhnp ano'her, Sailing ii'it IiIlV sn'enai ni .in, A f.nl.ini and h pwrccked It, her, Seeing, shall take bean again. Let u then be up and doing, With a heart for any fate; Still achieving, still )U'suirig, I.earn lo la'nir and to wait, THE ROAD TO IltlX. The following rcjurt of a case nccnlly tritd le c li e I'runiiul LVurt i.f Si. Lout, is full of in- est. To join g men t artiiulaily the rvla inn .Irossca itrtir with prcul ar fone and dirccim as, d it i for their b. n.Gtthat we ie c.tt thiough r columns the voice of warning which it ulte.s : Ua!t. American, St. Louts Ci Imnnl Court. It apart cd fur the l'tnnant. bTATS 1 Indictment for pss- xs. C sing couiiteileit cousins V. Josrs. J money. I'lm defendant in this case was, probibly, twen eiyht years of hp, bul woie the appearance of least thirty five. He bid evidently once been ne looking man; in sta tiru he was something r six feet, and Lis st'Oilgly marked features and nn netit forehead give evidence i f more than nary intellect. It nt Ji u could clearly discover t he had become a prey to the mon-ter Iulemper :e the muik of the beast w as stamped upon his intenance, which gave il a vivid and iininiturul ire. He was placid in thu box, with others who ro to he arraigned upon the iud.ctinenia ptch r.id limit them. All the other had pie d not guilty, i i usual) and a dey Was set f.. their trial. TLe einlarit waa told lo aland up, and the clerk reud him the indictment, which cli urged him with viug, on the 10th d.iv tf August, passed to one .trick Otieal a counterfeit Hill, purpotting to be ucd by the Sd Municipality of the city of New leans, for the sum if three dull rs ; aud upon n n-kc.l the question, guilty or not guilty 1 he i.l, 'guilty puilty !' Then, turning to the trt, be remarked tint, as thu wa the last time ever expecte I to appear in court, he would be d if hecoulJ be allowed to mike a few remark", e Ju 'go told him lo proceed. After a pnute, in ich he was evidently endeavoring lo calm l.U lings, he proceeded as follows May it ptcse the Court In the remarks I shall ke, I will not attempt to rxt. nuntc my ciime or : at your hands any sympathy in passing sentence in me, I know that I have violated the lawa of ' conntry, and justify deerve punishment ; nor u'd I recall the p'bt, or dwell upon the bitter sent, for my own aake. A wih to do good for ters is my only inothe. t alkali with the indulgence of the court, give a ef narrative of my life, with a hope that those ung men uruund a- iniy l..Ve warning by it, d avoid the rock oprm w hich I hae split. I waa rn of resnrttahle rjarent. in the State of New 'sy, and during my childhood, received every at- ilton that fond parent could bestow upon an on- sott. It was early diovrred that I had fundneva f book, atul my father, although in limited eir mot.iures, determined to g e me a lit eral e.lu.-a- n, I wa.wnt lo a h'gli school in the neighbor iod,ai d such was my J rogiew, that at twehe ara of ag", my p eceptor ileclaiei me iialified for I legs, and I accordingly entered una of ihu olJest iiveiaitiesof ihecouu'ry. Uere 1 so distinguished yself that, at mi teen I guluaa ed wih the Coml looriof lh ins ila ion, and relumed homo filled lib the liiiiarn rn pect of auece that lay Uf..re Mion afn r communed lti study ul law, an hen only in '" lh ' I ubiaiuij l.ce..e Aeung upoo lb ahic of frleoda, I detepn'mfil) . ttf my Ibrtuoee In the wattu I eocoidmgly arranged my alT.ira for departure early in the full literati of our c luntry was n w turned off as unfit or 1SJ3, I will not detain you with an account of my seperation from those I held most dear suffice to sav, that I received the blerainga of my parent, and in return, promised faithfully ami honestly to avoid all bad company, as well as their vices. Had I kept my ptomiso I should Lave hern sivc.l this shame, end been free from the load of guilt that hang around mo continually, like a fiendish cul ture, threatening to ding me lo justice, for crime as yet unrcvealed. But, to return, I left my early home, where all h id been sunshine and w hero my pathway had been strewed with flower, to try my fortune among urangcn, and to try my strength in bufTeling the florins and tempest of the world. With light heart I looked forward to the future; and taking the ueu d ronto I snon renched Wheel ing, where I took pas,ir;e on a boat for Louisville. On the bout a game of card waa proposed for a muttmenf, and although I had promised faithfully to avoid such things, still, I argued lo myself, there was nsjjiartn in plying a game for amusement. Accordingly, I joined the pany, and we kept op the amusement moat of the way down. After we left Cincinnati, it waa proposed to bet a bit game, merely, as it was said, to m ke it interesting. My first Impit ssion ws to leave the table, but I wa told that it wa only a bit that I could not lose more than one or two dollar. This urgument pre vailed, for I luikod moral courage lo do what waa for a deckhand on a aleamboat! yet intemperance ha.ldono this much, I loitered about llii city for sever. weeks, and was somnitnrs ergnged in polling up the book i f some I'nm shop, for which I was paid in the I qui I fire, kept for the iccmm ulat on of customers. One evening I fill in company with a man who has lately been lodged in j til for pia-ing counterfeit money. We pi .ycd cards, and I won from him t'.e threo do'lar b.ll in question. Thu next d ay I learned it was a counterfeit, and did not ofT. r to pass il for some day. But at last I got out of all i in payment. I bad no other money I could meet no one who would ask mu to drink. My etitu was l.ke a raging Cie within me, I could not en dure it. I sought a dram iliop offurvd the bill it wua accepted; and when found, a few hours af ter, by the officeis i.f justice, I wa beastly drunk. The evidence of guilt was conclusive; and before my brain was clear of the intoxicating fumes, I waa lodged in jail to await my trial. I am now done. I h ive not dotained the court with any hopo or wish that clemency would be extended lo my case; but with a hope that my ex imple may I e a warning to other young men that those who he ir me may. when asked to play a aociil gime of cinla or drink a f acial glass, think of my fate and refrain. They may feel themselves secure they may bv'ieve they can atop when they please ; but let them rememler Taking: Honey without tlio Jsccs. right. I f.arrd my cnmp.nions would any I was argue.l until 1 was lost. Here the dc stincy of a little money. Influenced by these feel- I fendant unk dewn and nppearcd to be very much infi-i, I played ; ar.d, as the fates would bnve il, I won. Ui f.iie we reached Louisville, wo hud twice doubi IJ the stake, and I found my luck enabled mc to pay my pn-ngti out of my winnings. It was the fi. st lime iver I Tad In t iimr.ev. r.nd my success tin . ed me. At.iio I .l.ie.l. and was Spain sue- eea ful; and, in shoit, I c ntiriU'd to play f.r -mnsrmi nt, until I hud acqui i d a ihirvt for g mihlini;. I re td in a th.iv na villnge in Tcntics-ec. and commenced the practice of my profession under fi j tiring uuepicc, and my first appearance in a ciin. in il comt was highly complimented, ami I s ion l ecameknunn throughout the circu t. Things w nt en thus for moie than a year, and I bebevid my-ell fairly nil the road to fame mid fo'tone. I occasi. tmlly piayn1 lanls; I consult d mys Ifwi h the idea that I only plyid with gentlemen for uiiiuseiiieut. One night I accompanied amo youug men In a gatnii g shop, ami, f..r the fi si l.me in my life, I saw a Faro Bank. My companions commenced betting, and I wa-induced lo join them. Although I did not understand the game. Again I played with success, and when we left the house, was more than two hundred dollar winner. None i.f my companions had been fortunate, and it waa imiste.l that I was the lucky man, and Unit I mu-t treat. We accordingly repaired lo my room, where I ordered wine, at.d he hue we bn ke up we were a;l deeply intoiicred. With me it was the first time, and the next day I resolved that I would never I play card-i again. I allured to the determination j for neatly three months, when I aqniri yielded to I the entreaties of tny dissipated associates. I now played with varied success, and in all cases found an rxcuse fur re-oil ng to the wine b itilc. If I lost, 1 drai k to drown sorrow; if I won I t.eated my good fortune. Thus I pr..gie-scd upon my d..wuwa.J course, until drinking and gambling Dec one my duel employ menu, a l my friends who were worth prescrvi g abandoned me, until my only associates were drunk ir.ls and gam blers, when iihno-t r. ducid to waul, (for I hid left ell I usini s-.) I rutin d a h Iter informing mu ul the eaih ef my fa Let ill .1 f ther who watched over my early yens who loved me so tenderly. And d I act as an affectionate child! No. Vice hid ertmjej the human fieliugs of my heart, aud left only the animal passions and BppC'.ites, aa the letter contained a cluck for $500, a part of my poor father's hard earnings I drownej my griif that ight in a 15..chanalian revil, and in a few daya I wis again penuibss. I will not dwell upon the every day scenes of my life, which w. re such as aay at all times be witnessed at any of the two hundred dram shops of your cily, where wretched men (quainter the little, pittance that justly belongs lo their sulU ring wives and children Bul, to pass on. For nearly three years I have been a drunken wandering outcast. 8ix month ago I received a letter from my dear mother, enclo sing $100, and informing me that she was fast sink' ing with disease, and entreating with all a mother's feeling, In come home and ace her hifoie she died for a time I felt the appeal, and resolved to comply with her request ; and accordingly took passage on a steamboat for that purpose. For two days I re fr -lined from liquor but my thirst became itistip. portable, At Itng h my appetite overpowered my U Iter feeling, audi apoachej the bat and de manded the I quid Die. I was soon intoxicated when I madly sought the gambling t.hle; and he fore the boat leached Louisville, I was s'ripped of every cent. Tliu, ail nop a ti seeing my oymg niotlnr cut off, I remained at Louisville several weeks; iu which tune 1 learned that my mother had died, and ihut l.er la.t bicalh wa spent iu prayei for her w retched child. Fi"in Louisvi Iu I sl ipped on board the ateamer Uiut I. as a d i k hand, and came to ti.i- place, where I wa.d.s. hailed for itiuns.ei.iics. Lit Wily youiij iiisil reflect upon II. is p. dure affected; and for a few moment alienee reigned throughout the court house. j A t length the Jwlge, who i as much distinguish ed for the qualities of his hi art as be is fir learning i s a judge, prooeded in a brief but appropna e manner to pass a. ntence upon tl.o ilef. nd.nit, put ting liia puni-l mcnt m tl e Peniienlinry down to the shortest time allowed by law. KllUn? Visit of the Prince l)e Jolnvllle. The Prince de Joinvill,., who lefi this city ye tP'day for Noifolk via B iltimore, w .a received by the I'rui.'ent with that coidial.ty and consideration to which ho waa so fully entith d by the hospitality uniformly ex', n. led to ur fel o.v cilixens by the Kit g of il.e Fiench. Tin- Prince, indeed independently of any such Fpecial claim upon our ciriUtns, com. s te. onm en did l.y wli ilevei lute licence, h gli hnedinca sedu loUS desire lo make him-e f ag.eeahle, and the most UtiiifiVcted simplicity ol manners, c .11 do lo entitle u gi n Ionian to icspecl and attenli n veiy wneie. His Hoy nt llighnena a. rived in this city ou Wed nes.lay, nn I ivm rece.v, d by the Piesnlei.t at 2 o clock nn the same d.v. On Thuradav he virile. the Navy Yard in the Presi lent' c irriaae, r. indue ted ly Mr. John Tyler, jr. and ('oium.n)ore ,ich d son, and wasiectived with a eompl inenlary ralo of twenty one i;uns. AtUi.cl ck no iliniu wit the Pit hi. lei I in a lare paily, coinimsed of the Corpa Diplomatique, the members of the Cil inet now in thU ci y, L id l'ru.lh.x', brother of the (Juke of No'thurnhrrland. and Sir llunrv Hart, boll ol the Koy.il Nuvy, and many Jistinguis!icJ nfficcrs of out own army arid Navy. In the evening, several bun Ircd inventions hiv. he. n sent out, a ve.y numerous asso.ohl go of ci'iz n uf ull pa tie wee c .lie. ted at Itie Pre.i deui'a Hon e, for w hoso reception all of the apa I- mcnts were thrown open. A Band of Music fr on the Navy Yard waa in waning, end immojiali ly slier ilinner struck up he National Air of "Hail tJuluinl.ia." .,lowed by the "I'arisu nue," and continued to play through out the CM'ninj, which elo-e.l with ilnic.n'. W'u uro grutitied lo be uble to ale that the whole eirert .iiiiiieiit was exceedingly hridimil and agreesb'e, uud altogether Worthy of ll t was, in aomo sort, an act ut national uospiui.ty, MiJi- soman. Various measures have been sujrjjes- ted utiij adopted, ly which the lives of the bees miyht bo spared, while their unnecessary or surplus honey might be appropriated to the comfort of ihose who had trio care of them. It has al ways seemed but line short ttf murder to desirny such multitudes of these lit- tie laborers il any method of sparing them could be introduced; and various improved hives, which have been intro duced to eii'ect this object, have a t dif ferent times been brought before the public. All these have b'jen more or ess useful, some bv invinir more room for labor, and some by placing their stores at the command of the npi iri.in ; still all seem liable lo some objections, and multiplying the methods or bnnni a notice of new ones before the public, mav be ot service. i'he treatment of bees seems to be based on a few facts, or w hich are u sually considered as such, viz: that a larc number of bees, or two swarms in the same hive, will consume but a little more honey, if any, than a small number, or each of the two swarms in separate hives: and that as bees are a short lived insert, iicrtormm their la bors and tlio various ftiuciioin of their lives, mostly, if not altoueiher, in a sin gleyear, the necessity of saving those bees in the fall, that are to perform the labor of the coining vear, becomes more strikingly apparent. The fact, that bees may bo stupified so as to be rendered harmles.?, and vet not permanently in jilted, lias lonu been known; but tins knowledge has not been turned lo prac tical us'! except in very few instances until very lately. The following, w hich we copy in substance from a for ei;n periodical, exhibits a method ol ttirninir this power to use both early and profitable. The writer savs: In autumn I gath cr three or four of the large mushrooms or puff-balls growing in meadow lands, before they are fully ripe, compress them a little, and dry them thoroughly in an oven after bread has been taken out, and keep them dry for use. A tin box two inches scjuare, with a pointed tup, pierced full of holes, with small hole in the sides, made wi hot.t snider is to be provided to contain the pull-ball while burning. It must lie supported on a stick some six orciht inches in length w hen used. As the object is to unite the swarm, from which the honey is to be taken, with another b live over the w inter, a hive of the same size as the one to bj operated upon is placed in i tub with the open end upwards, with hole made in the lower part, in which pnration, and certainty of execution. The writer states that of n great num ber of swarm w ith another, not one had failed of success, lie considers Sep teniber the best month for taking honey in this way; the application of the smoke may as well be done by day as by night. Albany Oult. Cjrrespond.nre of the Times and Star, MiLFOiiu Penn., Sept. 23, 1811 Mr, Lewis Cornelius, of our village, died on Monday morning, Sep, 27, at G u'cioclc. lie was 43 years of ae. lielow I sen. I you bu dimen sions, as taken by his physician af.er he waa la.d out : 1 ect ins. C 0 S Si S 2 a 1 4 a i 6153 lh.-, Height CucLiufereiice of waist body M arm, above elbow " below cloow M wrist " thigh " calf of leg M aiikio Weight (dead) Il is supposed that he would have weighed, U; fore be Was lukcu kick, 0?I pounds. The Mortal Mimaclc A f.ien I who recently travel!, d for sev. rald iys throughout Ireland, stales that although he sa.v thouaan.ls in want and mi ery he did not meet with ntw erso i who wis ml n filed. Well and nobly done, Father Malhew Vkiludtljik a Inquirer. Bonn et Squash. The New Orleans Picayune says they cultivate a sjual in Texas, out of which ladies' bonnets are made. Wo will match our nor I, who bud moved ! ihern pumpkins against your koulhern I"" - I I J t jatjjejirrtciielea v society fcd been the guest ol SlJUilsllVS for head "ij-lilli" any lilJIUt ! distinguished puUie men, and a favorite araJT; lh? ' " , l'u, t""' the stick that sunmi tJ the tin box is set. n this box is now put a piece of fundus or thu dried ball of the size of si hen's e2j, to which fire Ins been commiini- cited, and it is placed in the lower hive. 1 he hive with the bees is now re-ivive 1 fro il its stand, and plated on the oilier. a wet cloth being closely secured n- round the line of meeting t pre vent tho i i tm escape ol Hie sm ke. i ne mi otic fumes are soon tell, by toe bees, winch fall rapidly into the lower hive, the up per onu bein fre p.ien.ly tapped with a slick or the tinkers, to jar down such bess as ni ivnot fall ol the nsclves, or discharge I ho ti from the combs. Th dropping of the bees will be distinctly lieard, and w hen it ceases tho luvo may be taken oil'. Tiie torpid bees are now poured upon a table, and the Queen separated and placed under a glass. J lie bees are Uien sprinkled w ith a thick syrup made of a l;itlo ale and sugar Imiled it minute or two, and applied freely with a feather. They are then returned to the empty hive, and on Ihis is now placed ihu hive with which it is intended the swartn .shall u nite, and the cloth is replaced, so that no bee can escape. In this position they remain for twenty-four hours, or the following night, when tho clolh is removed and thu hive placed on its former stand. The bees in the hive de scend to feed on honey or sugar on I lie sprinkled bees, and in the operation of clearing ihem.a.e so thoroughly mixed, that n distinction is ever afterwards apparent. Thu few bees that remain in the cr mb m iy be killed beforo they recover Ircj.n their stupifaction, and al ter tho amalgamation of tho swarms is complete, the reserved Queen may aN so bo destroyed. She is reserved thus far to cuard' aaainst ihu contingencies. Other narcotics, such as tobacco leaves, folded in paper, prcviouly dip ped in nitre and dried, have been used, but the puff-ball will be found prefera bly to any other, both for case of pre- DrHlv'i Forces In Americas An American gentleman who re cently passed a considerable portion of time in Luglund, and who, while there, devoted ninth attention to an examina tion of nflairs of the Brit-sh Empire, called upon us yesterday, and in the course of conversation took occasion to illtide to the report that has been circu lated, to the eli'ect that thu Ui itish have 30,000 troops in North America and '.0,000 in the West Indies, lie ri ii- cuius the matter an absurity, and says that one half the stories ttiat liae been published in relation to jritih force, power, &c. should be regarded as so much wind, put forth on lite bra"; prm en le. He allirms, and some cf his jt'tlcmeuls upon this subject have al ready appeared in print, tint the Eng lish navy concentrated into one fleet, could not send to sea 00 ships ot w ar lie says he hud anoppertumly last year cl verilviiig the fact personally. 1 heir fleet in the Mediterranean and we now (iiiote from an article recently pub lished by bun in the l'cnnsylvanian, and the truth of which he pledges himself to corroborate, should it be denied on respectable, competent and unprejudic ed authoi ii v ; at a moment of t eat peri and imminent danger, did not amount to more than la ships, and not one of these was fully manned ; some of the ships in the Levant could only man one side ol the ship in casu of light in The French force in the mediterranean last September, was superior to the English in men and iiuus, nor could the English ships bu manned; sailors couli not be procured. "They even sent to the Orkney Islands to the Irishmen, as they returned from their summer fish ing ; some of these sailors were brought to London and shipped there. Crews whose terms of service had expired were not suffered to land, and were transferred to oilier ships, whilst the greatest consternation prevailed on the iver 1 haines and its neighborhood, from the reports ot press-gangs a mode of raising men which al this lime would be followed by instantaneous re volt. The liriiish fleet of any coase- i t (pieiiee was in Hie tast liniia seas or in ( .lima, and in a situation lar mure feeble than the MedKer aiean fleet; it cons. stud ot S '.ii-! ou!,i-e!i or sixteen ships of war. Tim re.t of ihu English ships in cinn nisMi.il, ar tied .ind manned for suliicient service, were very incon siderable indeed. The fleet that Eng land could now concentrate on otir shore, could not cope with our navy, provided our ships were at home and prepared for .action." His views of the Hi'iush army are not les in contrast with (he vapouring statements that arc pt l forih in some ol ihu Canadian an I English journals. ( )n paper and in print, hesas, llicy tnaku a tremendous shew ; but much of what rnins of AoyrrtsoG. t square I Insertion, . f 9 60 1 do 2 do . , (i 7ij 1 do 3 d.i . otl Hvery subsequent Insertlifl, . . 0 ft Yearly Advertisements, f with the privHega of alteration) ene column t2t half Column, (18, three Sijuares, $ 1 3 1 two squares, f 9 ( one square, $5. Without the privilege of alteration a liberal discount will be made. Advertisements left without directions al to the length of time thee ara to l published, will Iks continued unlit ordered out, and charged accord inglv. CjSixteen l'n make a eqnare. tilll."!?gsijsjMw. f rmmm Brunswick, we carefully and scrupu-. lously examined tho composition of tho British Army in north America, and we were unanimous in tho opinion mado up from ollicial documents, that tho whole British force in Xorth America 'id not exceed rSOCO men ; mv own be- ief was, that it did not exceed OuOO men, but I am positive it did not exceed 8000 men. The Times stated tho w hole force to be 20 battalions, and did not even claim mora than 8000. Ask yourselves, be says, where arc the mas ses of men in British America to mako 30,000, or 20,000, oi 10,000 or even 000, The answer is, they do not . exist except on paper ; so far from being a ble to concentrate &000 men, they can not even concentrate 2000 mc in any given point on our frontier, or their own coast frontier, unless it be at tho fortress Quebec. Of the composition of the British piivat-2 soldiers allow ma to say one word: ihey an; generally enlisted from the agricultural counties of England, Scotland and Ireland. U sually youug men are allowed to enlist fiom their fine si:.c and height, and compelled to enlist by dissolute habits or desperate circumstances; these voiuig men thus forced into the army, and fully aware that promMon never takes place, arc usually reckless of all consequences, desert at every opportunity and are dril led into ethciencv and subordination by the horrid lash." The gentleman tuoted is an intelli gent Philadelphian, is a man of proper ty, is a friend of peace, and deprecates war. But, as observed above, he has re sided a longtime in England, has made himself acquainted v.iih the character and resources of John Bull, and is not disposed to be humbugged or frighten ed without sufficient cau.-e. We ne vertheless believe he has somewhat un derrated the ability of Great Britain. B'i'. knell's Reporter. J is thus circulated is moonshine, and in tended to giill ihu nation at home or intimidate pe.;!e abroad. Thus, hear firms, that what are frequcivlv put down as regiments sent to Cnnaria or oilier places, are but mere fragments of such regiments; the various portions of which are scattered all over the globe. He stales that the w ho'e of the regular "British forces iu upper anil Lower Canada, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edwards Island, is compo sed of parts of 'JO regiments, varying from two companies to a battalion, but in no instance are there more than half a regiment, and some imported regi ments have but two companies, no mat ter what their statements can bo to the contrary. A British regiment when full and complete, officers and men, a mounts to SOj, but as the regi nents are never full, it is rare that a regiment can ever muster more than 000 men. lie says that it is a frequent circumstance that pans of two, three, or even four regiments will be mustered under one Colonel, and go forth to the world as so manv regiments; sometimes the commanding odicer w ill be of the grado Cleneral ; then alt these companies flourish as regiments to give eclat to the commander-in-chief. When In London last winter, at a time when a vast many Englishmen supposed the war had already begun, in company with two very intelligent, men from No va Scotia and the other from New The Terror ori'cstilciicc. One circumstance, among the many of a touching chircter which attend the presence of s mortal epedemic in a city, is thus referred to in the New Orleans Picayune of the 12lh inst. "The UxattexdedIIeakse. Among; the many scenes to be now daily w itness ed in this cily, which excite our sympa thy, awaken our coinmisseration.or en list our pity, nn unattended hearse, as it bears its lifeless, burden to the grave, calls up most quickly, from the recesses of the heart, thoughts shrouded in sor row, feelings robed in regret. "Whe.i we see that one horse sombre veiiir le driven by. we observe the indif- ui.ncu with which the black driver hurries along lo thu .grave yard witli his ulseless passt tiger, when we be hold not a soul following stficr, to per form ihfi last sad rites o'er departed friendship, or to j l.icc even tl.o most siir Iu mark of rect gn'tio i ovr the deceased's grave we feel ti .tt the in habitant of tfiat rough unornamented coffin died a desolate stranger ! "But we know not how ho lived whether his journey, even from th ctadlo to the gruve, was one continued I piigrima-jrc oi privation wlictner no whs once the inheritor of wealth, lha possessor of consequence, surrounded by butterfly friends, who deserted hitrs when the summer of bis prosperity passed away or whether some loving w,fe, alTeclionaic mother, or kind hear ted sister is not anticipating bis return to a home long deserted, lo friends long estranged, at the very lime when his dust is being committed to dust, by a strange hand, in the swamps of New Orleans ! "We never see an unattended funeral hot we fe I that we fl nt th ough life on the ocean of unco lawy ourselves; and at such a time .rav Ilea vol to ..vrrt from u a il. a.li so d sUsleful a grave m g'.Hiuiv ; we pray, if it should not be vouchsafes to us to die among our kindred, that we mav a last bo perm tied to broatha our last wL&re wo V tiiown ainorg our friends." Williamson, agaiu Arrested. The notorious individual, wh.ise nam haibeea t f quen ly I ef..re the public in cotintui in with chaj . ges of burglary, has been again arrested at Hani i. burg u the instance of Mr. Leecure, and ia now i a Lancaster jail. We learn that aove al b I'a of at. ding were found ujion him, cf si its and other R XI Js sent to Pittsburg. Also, bills of lading of niercban jiae sh'pped at this port for New Orleana. For tuuatvly, the vessel on board of which the 'aJ for Ni w Orleans were stowed, hsj not lefi jje ,j ver j and the packsgra or boie were lcovereJ and aome of ihern will, we underat-,i l. . . . , . , ''ail, be ojeie. this mom,.,, before hi honor, th. Mayor. It hoped I that ihia well ,imi4 diw Mj w, ihrow aomc ,ghl 0 , rlUHMliif cS-iW. I?