1 - " "" II I JUM K "' I Ul k'Kici:s or Anvi.m isixcj. I square 1 Insertion, . . . $n so 1 do t do . . . 0 75 I do 3 do . . nt) Kvery subsequent insarlinn, . n 25 Yearly Advertisements t one column, (35 ; half column, (1 8, three squares, $12 ; two squares, fD ; one square, fS. Half-yearly: one column, f 18 ; half column, $12 ; three squares, f8 two squares, $5; one square, fi 50, Advertisements left without directions as to the length of time they are to be published, wilt be continued until ordered out, and charged accord ingly. Cj'Slxteen lines make a square. Tcnais or the "American." H. D. MA8SER, 1 rcstisnsns ash JOSEPH EISEI.Y. $ PaoesitToss. SUNBUEX AMERICAN. It. It. tl.1SSEHf Editor. Office in Centre Alttyjn the rear of II. It. Mat ter t Slore.) THE" AM ERIC AN" is published every Satur day at TWO DOLLARS per annum to be l'ni J half yearly in advance. No paper discontin ued till iLt arrearages are paid. No subscriptions received for a leai period than six months. All communication! or letters on business relating to the office, to insure attention, must lie POST PAID. AND SHAMOKIN JOURNAL Absolute acquiescence in the decisions of the majority, the vital principle of Republics, from which thore is no appi al but to foree, Ihe vital principle and immediate parent of despotism. Jr.rrinaos llj Mnsncr U ElMCly. Sunbiiry, IVortlnmibcrlaiul Co. Pa. Katimlay, June IT, 1S4?1. Vol. 3 Xo. Whole JVo, 144. Tlie f llnwing Manns are from the pm of the late WILLIAM PIATT. Printer. Like all his production, they hrcathc the sentiments of a heart lit up with the truct feelings of affectionate tender ness. None will road hut to admire them : , I.yroming Gazette. The Younff WMow. Ye hid me mingle in the dance, Ai.d smile among the young and gay They aiy that gri.-f will dim my glance; And turn my raven treses gray. I care nt yet I sliive In bow, In meeknefa to my lonely fate I dry my tears i.ml smooth my brow, The while my heart is desolate. Whsn la-t I j-tined the festive throng, I heard it seemed my brain to sear A stranger breathe the very a ng That first he warbled in m ear, Tlie words ilw tune, but h ! that tone ! What living lip could imitati : Mid laughing crowds I stood alone, Unutterably desolate, I miss him by the cvcnng nentlh I miss him tt tbe silent meal But keenest in ihe bower of mirth AIyjiylef solitude I feci ; lint la'e 1 saw a happy bid Sniile fondly on her wedded male, While I Oh"! would thatl hai tired, With him who lift me desolate. Ye spe.ik of ivcahh In mammon's mart, Theie'a not single boon I crave ; Gold cmnot heal ihe broken heart, Nor bribe the unrelaining grave ; It cannot fill the vacant slate, Whpre once my honored husband sate : Nor fill my heart's convulsive beat Nor make my home less desolate Alas ! ihe base on which we built Hope's fairest fabric is but dirt And laughs the heart when God has willed To lay his cha-te-ib g fing. r there A brighter happier dieam than mine, Did never love and hope create : I bowed before an Earthly shrine, And Heaven has left me desolate. And yet nut so: my s ul be calm The hand that mit th will suMain ; Thou hast a heljx r on whose arm Tlie mourner never leaned in vain. O ! may that arm the pilar im guide By the straight path and naTiw way, To where the loved in bliss abide. And hear! no more are detolate. From the AVir Orleans Tropic. HIOaUAPIIY of momiok KDWAnns. Monroe Edwards was born in Kentucky, liis father removed to Texas several years prior to the rewilutitiH which separated it from Alex ico, ami died their previous to that event ho was a very respectable mini, both by hi habits, connexion? and associations. Monroe received a plain education in his native state, and com mcuced life in early manhood in Texas he was not particularly employed prior to tho Re volution, except nt one time as a clerk in the counting house of Morgan & Reed, who did business at Galveston Bay the reputation lie Ii.'fl with his employers was by no means en viable, and but little calculated to advance his interest in a mercantile career in that country. The grand drama nf his eventful life, coin menced in the winter of '3.J "10 when nt the c:ty of New Orleans, lie became acquaint ed with Mr. C. Dart, formerly of Rodney, Miss., and having a firm in the city of New Orleans, under the style ol Franklin & Dart, and C. Dirt& Cm, of Natchez. Dart had become embarrassed, and not hav ing the means of paying his debts, after revolv ing many means of extrication, heal last fell upon theone of buying s'aves in the Havana, where they were cheap in comparison with the prices in the United States, and settling them on a plantation in Texas, where the lands were only one 20th of the price of fine cotton lands in the south west, and where the climate had been represented to him as peculiarly adapted to the production of the cotton plant, in its greatest perfection from which prrject he honestly expected in a few years to realize ample meais for the extinguishment of his debts, and have besides more than a competen cy for his wife and children. But there were difficulties in the way he was neither practi cally nor theoretically a p'auter nor had he any turn for that sort, of business. In addition to thi", if lie gave his personal attention to the plantation, he would have to remove hi futility there, deprive his children of the advantages of education, and expose his wife, w ho w as an amiable and accomplished woman, to all the hardships and troubles incident and inseperable from pioneer life; and in addition, if he assum ed the control and management of the proper ty in person, and had things in hia own name, he might have been pursued by his creditor in the United States, and broken up before he had had time to realize the very means with which he expected to pay them, and so defeat the very object he had in view. At this stage of hia meditations he met Mon roe Edwards, who readily entered into his plana, and promised an entire devotion to the success of the enterprise. Edwards had no money, but in lieu thereof ho was to furnish talents, vigor, enterprise, &c, and to cover the property in his own name. Part furnished nt the outset JJi'iO, 000 in gold and United States Bank hills, which were equivalent at that time to specie, and they left the city about the close of the year '35, for the Havana, where Dart succeeded in negoti ating from the house of Knight &. Co., a loan of $35,000, thus swelling their cash capital to $3,000. They bought and landed in Texas, on the Brazos River, some time in February '30 about 220 extremely likely and valuable young negroes, none being under 10 and very few over 20 years of ago. While in the Havana an incident occurred, which plainly indicated what, in a suitable field of action, might be the future career of Ed wards ; not satisfied with the large gang of negroes which Air. Dart had fit illy purchased for him, ho decoyed a likely negroe boy onboard of the vessel, and there conceited him with the view of kidnapping him ; his owner discovered it and wax about toapply to the authorities, w hen the thinjreame to the knowledge of Air. Dart, who by great ex ertion hushed the matter up, by paying the sum of Arrived in Tex is, Edwards pretended to commence the business of planting bought an indifferent tract of land for the section of coun try in which he proposed to commence his la- Ws, and nt a very high price on o credit he knew nothing uf planting nor did he take the requisite pains to inform himself nor did lie seem disposed to give the least personal care or attention to the matter, being seldom on the plantation himself, and employing overseers not for their fidelity and ability but for their chean- ncss; butlliere was one thing he did under stand, however, ond which he lost no time in indulging in, and that was splurging he wore the best clothes, rode the finest horses, ami olten travelled with a servant ; his appearance in the little villages in the country was sure to produce n great sensation, from the superiority oT Lis equipments over common travellers. He spent a large portion of each year in the United States, and at last for the purpose of n muscmcnt, greater expansion of mind, and more complete improvement in the grand art of financiering, he resolved to cross the Atlan tic and had the taste to select the occasion of the crowning of Britain's youthful Queen. Meantime Dart, who was living in the Uuited States, principally at Rodney, .Mississippi, could get no account of how things were going on in Texas, and was in the deepest ignorance of the condition of his partnership a Hairs in that country. He knew but one thing with certain ty, and that was that he had not received one dollar of profit w hatever. Under these c i renin rinnre?, Ed wards being not yet returned from Europe, ho determined (18H1) to visit Texas, and personally investigate the state of his busi ness and property in that country. He did so, and fiiund every thing in so deranged and em barrassed a condition, that he employed a law yer, and sequestered the whole property as a Inst means of obtaining his share of the same, and at the same time securing Knight Si Co., for whom he very honorably entered upon re cord a confession of judgement for the 30,000, w hich had been burrowed for the concern in the Havana, Sinn afterwards Edwards returned, and hearing upon bis arrival in the United States ofDart's energetic proceedings in Texas, not at all abashed, he in due time makes his appearance in Texas, armed with two forged deeds the one relating to the land and negroes, and the other to the inferior transactions of the partnership by which it appeared that Ed wards' was the owner of everything. The for geries had been made by taking two letters of Dart's written to Edwards from Rodney, Mis sissippi, and extracting every thing but Dart's signature by means of some chemical agent, and as in the process trie texture of the paper had lieen destroyed, the deeds were written by means of the principle of the manifold letter writer, in which no fluid is employed. Dart boldly proclaimed the forgery, hut as Edwards had greatly the advantage of him in coolness and dignity of manner, the general impression was greatly in Edwards' favor, particularly as Dart was thought to be a weak man in business matters, and Edwards was known to be ex tremely keen. In the meantime, Edwards had the deeds recorded in the counties of Harris and Drszoria, and proclaimed Dart as laboring under a monomania upon the subject of his Texas estates, and wondered why hia fi lends did not take care of him, and offered to subscribe liberally towards his support in some fit recepta cle for lunatics. But the sagacity and persc v era uce of Dart's lawyers at last established the forgery, and Edwards lor the uttering in Brazoria county was incarcerated to await his trial at the regular term of the court, for the crime of forgery, punishable by the laws of Texas with death. He was taken from Ihe jail in Brazoria by Habeas Corpus and removed toTexana, where the question of bail was, by a circuit judge of Texas, determined in hia favor amount jit 10 000, Texas money. Immedi ately after this, a new capias arrived to arrest him for the same offence, to wit, uttering the forged deeds, by recording, in the county of Harris, but he narrowly escaped and reached the United Slates, kidnapping as he left three or four of his own negroes, w ho were under ju dicial sequestration, whom he brought to the United States and sold, with the exception of one negro girl, the same whose namo fre quently occurs in his trial in New York. His subsequent history is well known, how he went to England w ith forged letters of introduction from Air. Webster to Iord Spencer borrowed X2(K) of Lord S. and dined with "the gentry and nobility of the country for Severn! mont hs, and at Inst getting out of funds returned to the United States in and committed the great forgery for which he is now in the peni tentiary of tlie State of New York. The AVI fe of Lafayette. The following is an extract of a letter writ ten by tafayelte, in the year 130, after the death of his wife, to AI. Ijitour AInubourg, trans lated from one of the last volumes of the Ale moirsof Iafayette, Intcly published in France : "During thirty-four yenrs ofn union, in which her tenderness, her goodness, her elevation, her delicacy, the generosity of her soul, charmed, embellished, did honor to my life. I was so ac customed to nil that she was to me, that I did not distinguish her from my own existence. She was fourteen jears old, and I was sixteen when her heart amalgamated itself with all that could interest me. I thought I loved her, that 1 could not do without her ; but it was on ly when I lost her that I was able to discover w hat remains to me for the close of a life which had been so diversified, and for which never theless there remains no longer either happi ness or even content. Though she was attach ed to mo I, may say, by the most passionate sen timent, I never perceived in her the slightest shade of authoritativeness (d'exigencc) of dis content, never any undertaking. And if I go back to the days of our youth, I find in her, traits of an unexampled delicacy and generosity. You saw her always associated, heart and soul. in all my sentiments, my political wishes, enjoy ing every thing which might confer honor on me, still more as the would say what made mr to be wholly known, and more than all, glore fy ing in those occasions when she saw me st crince glory to a sentiment ol gixidness. Her aunt, Madame Tcssc, said to me yesterday, "I never could have imagined that one could I such a fanatic for your opinions, and yet so fret frjm party spirit " Indeed, her attachment to our doctrines never for a moment abated her in diligence, her compassion her good will for cr sons for another party. She never was soured by the violent hatred of w hich I was the object; th ill-treatment an.I injurious conduct towards me, were regarded by her as follies indifferent to her, from the point from which she looked at them, and where tier good opinion chose to place me. Hers was a most entire devotion. 1 may say thut during thirty-lour years, I never Buffeted for a moment the shadow of a restraint that nil her habits were, without affectation subordinate to my convenience, that I hud the satisfaction to see my most sceptical friends us constantly received, as well beloved, ns mucl esteemed, and their virtues as completely ac knowledged as if there had been no difference of religious opinion, that she never expressed any other sentiment than that of hope, that in continuing to reflect, with the uprightness of heart which she knew belonged to me, I should finally be convinced. It was with this feeling she left me her last regards, lagging run to read, for the love of her, some bonks which I shall certainly examine again, with new inter est, and calling her religion, to make me love it better, pertect freedom. "She often expressed to me the thought that she should go to Heaven, and dare I add that this idea was not sufficient to reconcile her to quitting me. She often said to mn, lite is short full of trouble, may we meet again in God, Alay we pass eternity together. She wishei me, she wished us all, the peace of the Iird Sometimes she was heard praying in her bed One of her last nights there was something ce lestial in the manner in which she recited twice in succession, with a firm voice, a pas sage of scripture applicable to her situation the samo passage which she recited to lie daughter on perceiving the spies of Olmiitz, Shall I speak to you of the pleasure ever re newed, which an entire confidence in her gave me, which was never exacted, which was re ceived at the end of three months as at the first day, which was justified by a discretion, prnofagainst all things, by an admirable under standing of all my feelings, my wants and the wishes of my heart. All this was mingled with a sentiment so tender, and an opinion so exalted, a worship, ifl darod so fo speak, 60 sweet and fluttering, more especially gratify ing, as coming from the mot perfectly natural and ipccre person who ever lived." Drlrstiar.il, tlie fir nut -Turner. Air. Willis, in a letter to the National Intel ligencer, thus pleasantly describes the perfor mances of the celebrated Herr Drlesbach and his Beasts, now exhibiting in New York city ; '1 have spent an afternoon, since I wrote to you, m the '801111111 kingdom of Herr DrieH- bach. Four elephants togelher were rather an uncommon sight, to say nothing of the meln- drama performed by the lion tamer. There was another accidental feature of interest, too the presence of one or two hundred deaf and iimb, whose gestures nnd looks of astonishment quite divided my curiosity with the show. Spite of t'to repulsiveness of the thought, it as impossible not to reflect how much of the ifferenre between ns and some of the brute nnitnals lies merely in the gift of speeh, nnd how nearly some human being, by loosing this ift, would he brought to their level. I was struck with the predominating nrurriflMook in the faces of the Imvs of the school, though there were some of the female children with coun tenances ofa very delicate and intellectual cast I was nn hour too early for the 'perform ance,' and I climbed into the big saddle won by Siam,' and made a leisurely study of the four lephnntsand their keepers nnd visiters. I lint not noticed before that the eyes of '.hese huge animals were so small. Those of' Hanni bal,' the nearest elephant to me, resembled the eyes of Sir Walter Scott, and 1 thought, too, that the forehead was not unlike Sir Walter's. And, as if this was not 'resemblance enough, there was a copious issue from a pump between his forehead and his ear ! (What might we not expect if elephants bad eat paper and drunk ink !) The resemblance ceased with the legs, it is but respectful for Sir W alter to say ; for Hannibal is a dandy, and wears the fnshionable gaiter trousers, w ith a difference the gaiter fitted neatly to every toe! The warlike name of this elephant should be given to Siam, for I the latter is the great warrior of the party, and in a fight of six hours" with 'Napoleon,' somu three months. since, broke off both his tusks. He looks like a most determined bruiser. Virginius' (the showman told me) killed his keeper, and made his escape into the marshes of Carolina not long ago, and, after nn absence of six weeks, was subdued and brought back by a former keeper, of whose discipline be had terrified recollection. There are certainly different degrees of amiability in their counte nances. I looked in vain for some of the wrin kles of age in the one they said was much the oldest ; unlike us, the.ir skins grow smoother with time the enviable rascals ! I noticed, by the way, that though the proboscis of each of tte others was as smooth as dressed leather, that of Siam resembling, in texture, a scrub bing brush, or the third day ofa st iff" beard. Why he should travel with a 'hair trunk' and the others not, I could not get out of the show man. The expense of training and importing these animals is enormous, and they nre consi dered worth a great ileal of money. The four tcgether consume about! wo hundredweight of hay and six bushels ofoats'r diem. For tunttely they do their own land transport ition and carry their own trunks. "At four o'clock Siam knelt down, and four or five men lifted his omnibus nt a saddle upon his back. The band then struck up a march. and he made the circuit of the immense tent ; but the effect of an elephant in motion with on ly his legs nnd trunk visible (his body quite co vered with the trappings) was singularly dro'l. It looked like an avenue tuking a walk prece ded by a huge e itterpiller. I could not resist laughing heartily. After one round Siam stop ped nnd knelt again, to receive pnssengers, The wooden steps were laid ngainst his eye brow, and thence the children stepped to the top of his head, tho' here and there a scrambler shortened the step by putting his foot into the ear of the p-itieut aohiul. The saddle was nt last loaded w ith twelve girls, and wild this 'feerful responsibility' on his back the elephant rose nnd made his rounds, kneeling nnd renew' ing his load of 'innocence' at every circuit "The lion-tamer presently appeared and as' to'iislied the crowd rather more than the ele phant. A pr-ilogue wns pronounced, setting forth thut a slave was to be delivered up to tho wild-beasts, Ac. A green cloth was spread be fiire the cage in the apra tent, ('perilous work," I thought, among such tender meat as two hun dred children,) and out sprung sudJenly a full grown tiger, w ho seized the gentleman in flesh. colored tights by the throat. A struggle ensu es, in which they roll over and over on the ground, and, finally, the victim gets the upper hand and drags out his devourer by the nape of his neck. I was inclined to think once or twice that Ihe tiger was doing more than was set down for him in the play, but as the Newfound land dog of the establishment looked on very quietly, 1 reserved my criticism. "Tho llt rr next appeared in the long cape with all his animals lions, tigers, leopards Si.c. He pulled them about, put his hands in their mouths, nnd took as many liberties with his stock of peltry as if it was already made in to mn IVjir ml tippets. They growled and show ed their teeth, but came when they were cal led, and did as they were bid, very much to my astonishment. He made a bed ol them, among other things putting the tiger across tho lion for n pillow, stretching himself on the lion and another tiger, nnd then pulling the leopard o- ver his breast for a 'comforter' ! He then sat down nnd played nursery. The tiger was as much as he could lift, but he scaled him upright on his knees, dandled nnd caressed him, and fi nally rocked him a pp.irently asleep in his nrms! He closed with nn imitation of Fanny Ellsler's pirouette, with n tiger standing on his back. I was very glad, for one, when I saw him go out and shut the doer. "A man theu brought out a young anaconda nnd twisted him round his neck, (l devil of a boa it looked,) and after enveloping himself completely in other snakes, took them ofTagain like cravats, and vanished. And so ended the show. Herr Driesbach stood at the dixir to bow ns out, and a fine, handsome, determined looking fellow he is. Matrimonial llornplpei The following amusing sketch fiom a recent ly published little Work, entitled "Georgia Scenes," is well worth reading. The writer is onn visit to Mr. Slang, whose wife is the mo ther ofa child nliout eight months old. The child in the adjoining room begins to cry in the nurse's nrms. The nurse is a little "nigger," nliont fourteen years old. 'You Rose,' said .Mrs. Slang, 'quiet that child.' Rose walked and sung to it, but it did not hush. 'You Rose, if you do not quiet that child I lay I make you.' 'I is tried ma'am,' said Rose, 'an' he wouldn't get hushed.' (Child cries louder.) 'Fetch him here to me, you good-for-nothing hussy you. What's the matter with him ? reaching out her arms to receive him. 'I dun know ma'am.' Nhei uhum nho ma'am!' (Mocking and grinning at Rose.) As Rose delivered the child she gave visible signs of dodging, just as the child left her arms, and that she might not be disappointed, Mrs. Slnng gave her a box, in which thore seemed o be no anger mixed at all, and which Hose received as a matter of course, without even changing countenance under it Da den!' said Airs. Slang, 'come clong e muddy (mother.) Did nassy loeey (Hose) pague muddy tweety chilluns !' (children) press ing the child to her bosom, and rocking it back ward and forward tenderly. 'Aluddins will whippy ole nnssy Yosey. Ah ! you old uggy Yosey." knocking at Rose playfully. 'Da den ; muddy did whippy bad Yosey.' (Child con tinues crying.) Why, what upon earth ails the child ! Rose, you've hurt this child some how or other !' No ma'am, cla' 1 didn't I was jist sitt'n down dar in the rock'n chair long sideo' Aliss Nancy's bureau, an' wan't doin' nothin''tall tohim.jis pin v in' wid him, and he jis begin to cry herself, when nobody wan't doin' nothin' 't nil to him, and nobody wa'nt in dar nurther sept jis me and him I was' 'N'hu iihing nhing and I expect you hit his head against the bureau.' I;t muddy see where ole bad Yosey knocky heady 'gin de bureaus. Muddy will see,' taking off the child's cap, and finding nothing. (Child crips on ) Aluddy's baby was hungry, Dat was whnt ails muddy's darling, thsweety one's; Was cho hongrey an' nobody would givy lity darling any sing 't all for eaty !' (loosing her frock bo' som.) .'o, nobody would giin tsliweety ones nnv sings fo' eat 'tall.' (Offers the breast to thu child, who rejects it, rolls over, kicks and screams worse than ever.) Hush ! you little brat ! I believe it's no thing in the world but crossness. Hush ! (shak ing it) hush ! I tell you.' (Child cries to the ne plus ultra.) 'Why surely a pin must stick in the child Yes, 'e bad pin did tieky chilluns. I.et muddy seo where the uggy pm did ticky dpnr prettnus creter (examining.) Why no, it isn't a pin. Why, whnt can bo the matter with the child! It must have tin chid it? surely. Rose, go hi ing me tho paregoric off the mantle-piece. Yes, muddy's baby's didhabe tolic. Dat is what ails muddy's prrtttious darling baby.' (Cross ing it to her bosom and rocking it) (Child cries on.) Rose brought the paregoric, handed it, dodg ed and got her expectations realized as before. 'Now bring me the sugar, and some water." Rose brought them, arid delivered both with out the customary reward ; for at that instant, the child being laid perfectly still on the lap, hushed. Tho paregoric was administered, and the child received it with only a whimper now and then. As soon as it received the medicine the mother raised it up and it began to cry, 'Why, Lord help my soul ! what's the matter with the child V (rising and walking toward Rose.) 'Cla', missess, aint done nothin' 't all was jis sittin' down da by Alias Nancy's bu ' 'You lie, you slu'V (hitting her a passing; slap,) 'I know you've hurt him. Hush, my ba by,' (singing the Coquette,) 'don't you cry ; your sweet heart will come by 'an' by ; da de dum dum day, da dc dum diddle Jum dum day.' (Child cries on.) 'Iird help my soul and body ! what can the) matter be with my baby V (tears coming ino her eyes.) 'Something's the matter with it; I know it is,' (laying the child on her lap and feeling its arms to see if it. flinched in any par ticular part.) But the child cries less whilo she was feeling it than before. Yes, dat was it ; wanted little arms yuhbed. Mud will yub its little arms.' (Child begins crying.) 'What on earth can mike my baby cry so V raising and walking to the window. (Stops at the window and the child hushes.) 'Yes dat was it did want to look out'e win dy's ! See the petty chickens. O-o'O'b ; Ixik nt the lieuty, rooster ! Yonder's old aunt Betty pickin' up chips fo' bake bicky, (biscuit) for good chilluns. flood nunt Betfv fo' make bicky fo' sweet baby's supper.' (Child begins a gain.) 'Hoo-o o See windy.' Knocking at the win dow. CChild cries ) 'You Rose, what have ynn done to this child! You little hussy, if you don't tell me how you hurt him, I'll whip you as long as I can find yon.' 'Alissus, I 'cla' f never done nothin"t nil to him. I was jist sittin down da by Aliss Nan cy's bu ,' 'If you say Mist Suncy't bureau to me a gnin, I'll stuff Miss Nancy's bureau down your thront, you little lying slut I'm just as sure you hurt him as if I'd seen you. How did you hurl him !' Here Rose was reduced to a no plus ; for upon the peril of having a bureau stuffed down her lliroal, she dared not repeat tho oft-told talc, and she knew no other. She therefore stood mute. 'Jnlia,' said Mr. Slang, 'bring the child trj me, and let me see ifl can discover the cause of his crying.' Air. Slang took the child and commenced a careful examination of it. He removed its cap, nnd beginning at the crown of its head, he ex tended the search jlowly snd cautiously down ward, accompanying the eye with the touch of the fingers. He had not proceeded fur in this w ay, before he discovered in the right car of the child a small feather, the cause, of course, of all its wailing. The cnue removed, the child soon changed its tears to smiles, greatly to the delight of all, and to none more than Rse. A Monster. Some time since we gave an account of a man who had been confined in our workhouse for nearly forty yenrs. He died a 6hort time since at the age of about seventy. He was deaf, dumb and blind, nnd for more than thirty-nine years bad been confined in the cells, of the house, and during this length of time had no communication with a single individual and lived more like a beast than a human being. He slept on nothing but bard boards, and wore only a shirt and pantaloons. His food was dai ly banded him, when he would rise, take it and eat, and then return to his board, where ho lay curled up till another meal was brought in. His name was Alayo. In this manner he lived, occupying but two cells; unc in the cellar in winter, and another in an out-houso in summer, for this long period. Previously to his confinement in the poorhouse, he'was for five years a tenant of the county jail. It is said that he was bright ami active when a child, but severe sickness destroyed his speech and hearing. Possessing a violent temper, and depraved withal, he committed various crimes, which induced his friends to confine him. Ho once set fire to his father's house. When ta taken to jail bis anger was so intense, that he tore out his o'ii eyes with his own hands, and thus tW forty years was deaf, dumb and b iud. Portland 'litiune. How Emji.imi N wsi'ai'krs i HK.-O i.i Journal, ot liberal pontics not ueciutu r. . -! lulitv. savs that w ith the OACCpt'.or. tf'.ii- !:!. of Kent, the late Duke of Suss, x . s ihe . i'.:y honest man among the sons ot George the Third ; that George the Fourth was a heart less debauchee the Duke of York a systema tic swindler and blackleg and that ot the two survivors, the one is a villain and the other a fool. Ar. 'mn. Nothing is more easy, says Mr. Paulding, than to grow rich. It is only to trust nobody ; to belriend none ; to get everything, and save all we get, to stint our lees and every body be longing to us ; to bo the friend of no man, and to have no man far your friend ; to heap inter est upon interest, cent upon cent ; to be mean, m s-rsble despised, lot some twenty or thirty yeata, and riches will come as sure as disease and dUappoiulment