TEIIMS OF TlITBJJAMEjrICA!.' ( . H. B, MAS0, . .? F caCieeaae in JOSEPH ElgEL?.' S PaornisToaa. Jr. it. jutssum, E4ur. , , '.. , " ' j , Qles in Cenrr jlUey.jn the reqe 0 If. Jo- r'a Srwc.) !-' , TH E " A MErTiffAV UlwbiwKi'd every atur. day tf TWO DOLLARS per annum to he paid half yearly In advance.: No paper discontin ued till Atl arrearages are rait). . Noeislncriptiona received for less period than it lowTti. All enmmunicsllnne or letters on bttslneae relating to the office, 14 insure attention, must he POST: PAID. ' ' ' " "; H. B. lASSEB., ATTORN EY AT LA W; BTJXTBTOY, PA. Business attended to in Ibe Ctiuntiee of Nor thuml erland, Union. Lvcoming and Columbia. ., , Refer to I J - P. ft A; RevncaT, Lowta ft B iimo. Pemssa-ft SsnnoaAss, PA4 RaijroLna, Mcr At ft Co. 8rara.- Goon ft Co., CIT7 ATJCTIOIT STORE, No. 31 North Third street, v ' ' (at -rev. rtTT nTt.) ' JHILADHLPHIA. C. C M A C K K Y, Auctioneer. TO COUNTRY fiTORE-KEEPEK. . IVeJNINO SALES of Hardwaie. Cutlery, 4 Saddlery, Whip. Boote, Shoes, Hats, Csps, Guns, Pistols. Clothing, ; Wstche arid Fancy G.mds, 1: At Meekey'e Amnion Ntore, 8 I North Third etreet, near the City Hotel. . - '. ' The attention of Country Merchants ! invited. The Goods will lie Id in lot to auit purchasers, and ill Good offered will be wa'ran-e.l equal to the represeniyii.in that may be mad of them. N. B. A Urge aaaorimarit of Goods at Private Bale. , Jan. 16 1847. ly. HEAP WATCHES. The Cheapest Cold tand Silver Watches IN PHILAPKU'lilA: GOLD Levera, fall Jeweled, Silver do. do. i ild Lepinrs, JewrHrit, , tiWer. . do. da. ilr QuDriicm, fin qutity, Sold Watchra, plain, ilver 8iectclra, !o Id Pcnrils, ''old 1) receipt. f.4S00 . 53 00 30 00 15 00 10 no 15 00 175 ? 00 '4 00 Alan, on hand, a Urge onml of Gutd and 'nir Brarelrtr, finder rinRe, brert pina. hoop ear ngs old pane, silver aponna, augar tornta, thira , gold curb and fib chuine, urd krya id jewellery of eteiy dffcripiton, at equally low irrs. All I waul i a call to convince cuslo r. ' " All kinda of Walchea end Clorka repaired and nrnnterl to keep good time for one ytar ; old Id or silver boi ght 01 tkn in exchnnee. For aale, eight day and thirty h.ur br eloc, i LEWIS I, A DOM US . Witch, Cknk and Jewellery Hiore. No. 413 rkcl ftrrct, above leeuth, uorth aide, Phiia- a. ...... . Xj" hav eorne Gold and Silvei Levers, still rh cheaper than the nbove pricea. ' 'hilaAm, Ihx. 6. Itj46. -ly .- . To Tiie I." b.o'r O. F. . av. ;& e.;. II. 8 T O k E S, nufaclurers of Premium Odd - Fel lows' Reralia, ; 194 Marlttt Street) PHILADELPHIA, First Clothing Store below $ib StrrcU HE ruWctibers having taken the premium at Franklin Institute, at the last exhibition, for irwt Regalia, the invite the attention of the - to their establiahmmit, where they will find a did ansortnieol of P.l. and Encttmiiment Re . " They alo make ti order for Lodge and .mpmetita, Rrga'ia, 8ahea, tJoume and s. and furninh veiy -thing requieiie for . the .-uieiice of new Lodges ot Hniemiimen,. J. W. STOKER, ' K- D.ST'KES. iladelphia, Dec. 19, 1846. ly : - AUCTION STORE. 6 North 3d st., third door above - Market Street, . ; ;. FHIL&D8LFHIA, LE EVERY EVEMNtJ, of a general as Hirtment of Foreisn and Domestic Hardware, ble and Pocket Cutlery. Truuka, Locks, -Laicheu, Uolia. 8w, Saikllery, Whips, Boots, Shoes, Hais, Csi, Guns, Pistols, .Trimmings, Clothing . and Fancy G.hmI. . e attention of city and country dealers is in- The Goods are frevh. and will be warranted to Ihe reprpeiitaiiona thai may be made of BAYLI3&. UROOKER, Audionerrt, No 6 North Thud t B. Purchaseis can have their Goode pneked. it invoices of Goods have been received to lie : piivsie sale. - ladelphia. Dec. 19th, 1816. ly ' Counter rellern' )EATH BLOW. puWic will please observe that no Brandrath la are aenuine, unless the box hsa three U- pon it, (the top, the si.le and the Uiltom) ontaining a fic-similcaignature of my hind 5, thus B. BntaoaB-m, M. D. Theawla. a engraved on steel, beautifully dsigned, e at an eipem of over $2,000. Therefore leseen that the only thing necessary to pro- e medicine in ita purity, is to observe these 1. . - ember the lop, the side, and the bottom. Ilowing respective persona are dulv auihuri d hold EHTinOATES Or AQUKCT ' le sale of Hrandreih'$ Vegetable Vniversa. rui. bumberland eounlv 1 Milton Mackey ft eilin. Hunbury H. B. Mjsser.. M'Ewena- relsnd ft Menell. Northumliland v m. 1. Georgetown J. ft J. Walla, n County t New Berlin Bogar ft Win iolinsgroe George Gunjrum, . Middle Isaac Sanitb. . Bsaveriown David Iluhler. lurg Wm. J.May, Mifflinsburg Menarh '. Hartleton Daniel Long. Freeburg . C. Mover.' Iwisburg Walls ft Green, labia county 1 Danville E. B. Keynolda Berwick tthuman ft .Rittenbogse. Cai. C. G. BrobU. Bloomabura John R. ' Jetary Town Levi Bisel. Washington IrCay. Limeatone Belli'. & MsNineb. rut that each A goal baa aa Bagre4 Cer f Agency, eoouiniog a repreaenUiion of VNDRETH'B MaDitfaclory at 8ing Sing, n which will also be seen eiacf copies of labels now used upon the Bnndnik Pitt deluhia, ofiice No. 8. Nmtb 8tb stieeL B BRANDKJ5T1I, M. D. 34 th, 1143. 1,1 K3 UJ Jl-N ..1 ,.: Absolute acquiescence in the deeMone of 'rtie Ily IrlaHHPr A. Elely BXTli AOttDlAriT tttf RgTIG ATldlV lit i rnnncB. ' i- Tht allrgtJ attempt nf Ctmnt Nirtlerontktbvet n , . , r. , Children., ... , , .,, k .Th firfumalieCM connected with thfl rir. Clio of the children of Count Mortier, at the Ho ld Cliatham, in Pari, on the 7lh of NvemKer lant, at the moment whea he stippnaerf to be about to immolate them, mttat be frreh in the riaadpr'e recollection. Since that time hi lami ly hare inatitotea proceeding for the purpose nf hvirC ni property placed in ther hahda of euarb'.iaii" lunatic, which he haa, however, rcaiated, upon the grounds that he was not mad; and thai atuSonch he misfit hae determined to commit sn'ciuy ,0 relieve himtcll of the miaery canned by hie wi.'eVmiaconduct.yct that fie Lad no intention of hartninp hie childrr-n, and that a determination to commit eiiicido by tio meanB implied alteration ot mii-d. . . . , Thia rxtraordinary caa' came on before the Tribunal of the Seine, on tht,' 10ih orDecembor, when Mr. Baroche, on the pari of Count Mnrti er, resisted the interdiction applied f,r. The care of Itia elient wou'd fully appear in the fol lowing letter, written the motninu of the alle ged attempt, ind addrneaed to hie wife. Nov. 7, 18-17 When thee tinea etitli have reached you. your sort, your daughter, and my- celfahalt have ceased to exist. Our prematura end will have been the inevitable result of your machinations, and of your infamous conduct to. wards me aince the birth of my da'jeliter. You have driven me from your bed, inflicted on me the eeverert humiliations, and the most poig nant for a' man of honor to bear. 'I have horn all for the love and honor of my children. I have not loved you I have adored you ! Your j request tr remain at Paris, your every wisi and desire, have been gratified' with aa much eager ness ae happiness. Nothing, however, could satisfy your intractable character. When, three years aince, you were at Paris, and I ;at Turin, convinced by four ycara' experience that I was ste'ul to V(iu, I oflered you an honest lib. rty libbertv hannft ;)but that was not what suited you. I then told y u in my Jetter every day, 'It, aa I think, you have moral or physi cal averelon to nte; be candid and con tew it. I do not ask you on thia enbject to enter into minute explanat ona; merely answer fne, yea or no. 11 yonr reply in in ttieanirmattve, 1 oner letter to several persona. 1 wisn to lear me you a friendly "separation t for the life we now mnek of hypocrisy from your lace. In a word, Ipad does not suit either ihe' one or the others I wih to prevent you the power of showing nor Ta It honnr&b'.e fo eilhrr of 'us.4 ' You teffose. j your face in the open day.witbout my blood and to share bed--yon refuse to bear children to'j idyour children .appearing on it. I wieh me. ' Why. then, did you mrryV ( entroited ijijaflix Ihe iaal of ignominy tn you. That is you to return to your father, and t 'promised to J what you have wished to dp to me and my chil lea've you our children. That waa aurely, thejdren.-. My last. thought will bo one of ex- era greatest sacrifice that I coutd make. I propoa- j (inn aod curves on you, aa well as on your mi- ed also to return vou your fortune, and to make I an allowance uf 20,tXK)f. per annum, as long aa I should remain employed, for the support and education of my children, as I would not they j ainHild oeah expt-nse to your fattier. You have j persisted in pieierving silence on the subject ; and since my'return lo Paris, and have demand- ed an expUnation, you replied.- "When you shall have driven me from your hnuao it wil! be time enough Kir me to seek an asylum with my lather." It ia not an jioneift liberty that you wish you wioh ecandal ; you seek to attract public attention. ., 1 would not allow it. . When you returned with me to Turin you were mie treat nf my house, which did" nut prevent yoa continuing to humiliate me as a husband, and aa t man before the public. -You walked the etreela alone in opposition to my representation and to the custom of the eountry in which I held an official ait nation.' ft waa a humiliation for your husband ynu wished to exasperate him, and to compel him to drive you from hia house. "When, three months since, contrary to my drairea, and, perhaps to my duties, I waa com- j pellcd todt'insnri leave ofabepnee to accompa- 1 ny ynu. here, I had a - presentiment of what would hnpp. n. At Ostend ynu were very ae vere and eroel lowarda me; ynu refttaed me the drestine case. I would pot die so Cj'iirk for yon. The imntienee and annoyance of being obliged through kindneaatotake eare of myself were imprinted on your countenance. You bronght me those dispoeitinnt to my poor mo Iher, whom you have covered with humiliations of all kind. To avoid aeeing her die of an at tack of apoplexy, I was obliged to force yoa to leave her house. In thia I fulfilled your desires; for letter, evidently written four houra before your departure, and found in your bed, announ ced to me your fight, and your abandonment of your children. This paper alone would havu been sufficient to condemn you before a tribunal lo anything I bad wished ; but I hate )he er.'utt and acaadal to which your deatiny tod the ad vice to which youbave listeoed appear to com pel you.' You are to day triumphant you beat reduced me to despair. You have your . full liberty; nothing shack lea you. Husband aod children are annihilated. That ia what you wish thai ia what you have sough: for for a long time under the mask of humility and reti gton. ' You are now mistreaa of your fortune and your time ; you tan amuse yourself, and you a. ill have time to satisfy your lovers, be cause you choote thetn from that c'tre of tocte. iU ViJ H.U, LL AND- SHAMOKIN JOURNAL: li.. majority, the ital principle tt Republiee, from which Suubury, Northumberland Co. ty who make Ihemaelvea 'pairj of the aervieff they render. You have apnknn In my family of the crne aij Perpe., You e rgoqtiently. ob lice me to )inlse aecret which 1 abould otherwise hare kept eacred. In nur worst day I have never wiehetl to make allusion toil." u ' M. Rarnche then diaenntinued the reading of the letter, which he said wan not fit for the pub lisher. He, however, in few words elated the purport of what he was compelled by senee of decency to withold, Count Mortier waa ill at Beror-f his wife coming to hja bedeider told him that ah waa tncitnte dating it from about thrre mnntl.a. IUt huRhand exclaimed that it waa impiHaiblej he had then to support the re proaches of Ilia father-in law. Havintr after warrfa learnt that the fact of her having been rncicnt waa correct, and that ahe had mincer ried ; he thim drew the conclusion that he had been dishonored. Thia (said M. Baroche) waa the purport of that part of the tetter which he refrained from reading. Ho then resumed the rcnding'tif the letter: '' "' ' In this painful pot-it ion I hnfj but two things to adopt: to dishonor you and my children, or to keep ailent. I resigned myself to it ; I kept my thsme within my own breast, and I forgave Ju . What haa been Ihe return made for my efner.ity 7 Yju have made me submit to a life .which is worse than that ol a galley slave. . 'If I have joined my dear and unfortunate children in my asd fate, it is becauxe I wished to withdraw my daughter from the shame and ignominy which you would reserve to her; she would become the prey, and the victim of one of your lovers. You would place her in hia bed, for your heart is corrupt enough for that. As to your, son, the poor child has euch a precocity of intellect that he has fully understood the sor rowful condition of hia parents. 1 He compre bends all the shame which you will throw .on him he is afflicted at it, and bestows on me the most tender attentions. I prefer seeing those two angels of my creation in heaven, rather than they should be in your infmnou hands. Your mm would eoon have covered you' with hia contempt and scorn, and would have called you j to account for the premature death of hia rather, and for the shame which you have cast on him. I give you notice that I send copies of thia serahle father. I -. Comtb Mortikr.' 'Sunday Morning Nov. 7, 1847, P. S A few words more before I die. , If your Chirac- ter had not been pitiless and promt, I ahould ,8V0 demanded a taat in'erview with you. I phonid, perhap, have given you my hand and piriinne(i mv hame and that of my unfortunate children. But no, the wile who does not fear to dishonor husband and children, to drag them before the tribunals, and In cover them and her self with mire, that woman ia not accessible to any feelin? of honor or delicacy. I have there fore renounced my attention, and stifle that in stinct of my heart, which won Id have sought one taat mtetview with you. 1 have not atrenth to add more. Adieu ' ' ". ' Half past Twelve Kejnicel my agony hee endured since five o'clock thia morning. ' I tremble before my poor children, whose exis tence I mu'et shorten in order to remove my daughter from your inl'amoua hands. No you filial I never havo them, in spite of your advisers. The ignomino'ia advice of your execrable fa ther, whom you wi',1 one day curse, not withstand ing the memoriee which you have drawn up to cover me with infamy, with our children. Our blood shall be Imprinted on your countenance, and then, wherever your effrontery and your assurance shall ed you, you will excite horror. viz irii.i M. After concluding the reading of the letter, the learned gentleman went on to obaerve that although the charges brought against hia wife were of the moat eerioue charactar, yet there waa nothing lo indicate mental alienation. The learned gentleman then went on to comment on the different evenla which took place on the 7th November the day on which the above letter waa written. In the morning of that day the Count sent a message to hia wife; but the ana- wrr returned waa thai ahe could not see tho children, aa she waa engage-! with her man of business., Tbia refusal induced the Count to send Ihe above letter. What, was her conduct on receiving i'. If ahe had. believed in hia threat of suicide and two-fold murder, her ftrtl idea would have been to run to ihe Hotel Chath am, and endeavor to calm Ihe agitation of her husband f but alie did not do thie. She left the house to proceed, perhaps, to the prefect of police, er to the Chancellor of France. What ia eertain, ia, that no intimation waa gi ven to Couul Murtier, who remained e'lut up with ti children until half paat two, a period I of more the n two hours a pre te the fret lest "A Vffi n jj no there i no appVel bat to fore', the vfut principle Pa. Satardaji Jan 22, IS48. anxiety.- Had be eerinusly contemplated etti cide, he had abundant' time to have effected it. At nan pasi iwrytne commissary 01 ponce arri ved, when Count de Murtier, thinking thai sjme attempt would be fnade on hia liberty, attempted to barricade himself. He declared that he would allow no police officer to enter. The commissary of. police, . who r'mamed at the door, heard no Ihreala nf alieddins b'ood. On L thACjiyitrary h C-imv was calm t he asserted hia righta and entrenched himself behind Ihe sa- cred prjnciplea o personaj hbprly,f The learned gentleman -then went through the detailaof the plana which had been resorted to to enter the apartment,' and finally to disarm nd trke the count into custody, and then pro ceeds) to read the interrogatory which had la- ken place, in order to establish the fct nf the iinniindnessnf the mind ofCotint Mortier, and concluded hit address to the jury aa'ollowa: As magistrates and men, I call yotir attention to the facte of Ihe care. It is for Count Morti er a matter of lite or death. Rer him condemn ed, although Calm and in Ml possession nf his faculties to reside with madmen .' Iy;t him be, therefore, immediately get at liberty. . The proceed inga were postponed for a week. in order lo five lime for the reply of tho coun sel of Omntee Mortier. Monday,' the lllth Dec, being appointed for be hearing nf Ibe counsel on the Countess Mor ier's side, the Court of Premiere Instance was crowded at an early hour. A great number of he family connect inne of the two parties were present, having entered by the private door; nd when at last the public were admitted, al. most every seat was already occupied.. At half, past 10 the president took hia seat, and the pro cepdinga then opened. The counsel for the countese went into a long account to prove thit the count was or an uneven temper frequently very violent and eccentric.! . M. Thrveniti, the Advncat dn Kni, then bronchi forward his reqnisitory. He declared that he bad no ohjectiona to offer in point of form ; he accepted the discussion that waa to ake place, whether on the basis of common law, or on the law of 1838. The only question lo be examined waa, whether or not Count Mortier waa mad. An affirmative decision waa probable. The1 letters ot the 7th of November, which were not only addressed to Madame Mortier, but lo per sona at too great a distance In he able to prevent he execution,, of the horrid intent inna of M. Mortier, were evidently not intended merely to cauae hie wife lo return to him. There were. moreover, previous to the sflsir nf Brtiffes, other scenes of violence, which had been proved by a number of witnesses, and yet nothing; positive had resulted from it. M. Mortier would be a pain interrogated, aa well aa the medical men. nd an inquiry instituted; until that had been done, no decision could be come to. After the Advocat du Rni had concluded, the Court adjourned, deferring its judgment until the 15th. Leap Vxa. Tliia year ia called leap year. because it is the ladies' piivilege to jump into the arma of Ihe man ahe fanciea. To prove it a r-o, we quote from an old work, printed in IfifK). entitled "Courtship, Love and Matrimo nii" In Ihe Chapter inlitled When' ye girlea ehall sparke ye raenne," the learned author thus speiks "Albeit, it ie nowe a parte of ye Common Lawe, in regard to re eocial relatione of life. that aa often as every beaexitle year doth return ye ladiee have ye sole privilege during the time it cnnlinueth, ot making love unto ye men, which they may doe either by wordee or lunkes. aa unto them it seemed proper ; and, moreover, no man will be entitled to ye benefit of clergy who dothe refuse to accept ye offer ol a ladye, or who dothe in any wise treat her propo.-al with slight or contuinly." Therefore, ladiea. you must comply with the law, and, bringing your csptivo up to Ihe altar, allow them benefit of clergy. AaHtBiCAN ArrLae The London Sun saya : "The arrivals of applee from Ibe United-States of America are beyond precedent in extent, aud the quality ie remarkably fine, la seversl in stances vessels arriving from- Nw York bave brought aa many aa nearly one thousand pack agea of thia fruit, of the eicellent description known as the American Naw Town Pippin " DcscHASKLLia, the greatest whist player in the world, dying at Paria, the principal whist elub there put it$ twdt intt mermrit voted to play for three months only with cards black edged. Thia remarkable man ia laid to have had the genieue of a Newton applied to gamea of chance. Hia power of combination waa wonder ful. He bad become an arbitrator of all disputes in such matters, and bia chair, when be played at the Club-bouse on tbe Boulevard Montmartrt, waa suriounded by tbe curious ia a crowd. Tualatin FaMiag caused Ihe death cf one hundred aad fifteen tbouaand one hundred and twenty-nine persona, according to Mr. Crattoa, a member af Failiaarat. .TTvn A TvT ' I V I I anJ immediate 'parpnl of daapotiam. Jarraatoa. Tol. SIVo. 1ft Whole IVo, 8S9 . L'J.."Jgg"5B?J.. I L JJI Jt-X 1LS , Port re II e General Taylor. The following pleasant and graphie "pen and- ink alic'eh" of General Taylor, ia from the eb' pen nf the Rev t)r. Wighfman. senior editor of IhH Southern CJirintinn Advncntri D.iyhraak overtook us just below Bib n ftotige, on tho left bank of ihe river. We have pa'"d during ihe night that most p!ctiirque portion of the river called the coast. The alluvial margin on ho'h sides of the. rivr spreada in breadth from ronr hnmlred yards to a mile and a half. Sugar plantations touch each other, and ele gant residences stretch out as faraa tbe eyo can Pillow Ihe bold enrvea n' the. river. After ihe run of 155 miles, ih Mississippi looka note whit narrower than at New Orleans; its aver age width is about three quartera of a mile. At Baton Rouge, where we touch a few minutes to take in pissnngers, th'-re st finds, in company with two or three other gentlemen, an elderly, plain looking man,' who after a brief leave-taking, rome on board. We shove tiff, the break fast bell rings, and we find oar way to the table. I observed that the entrance of our new fellow voyager' oecnsioned'a subdued remark,' and brought upon him the curious glancea of sever al spectators and whispering to the clerk, who was abotit to take the head ot the table, I asked who he wiia. "General Taylor," waa the reply "Indeed 1" Locky chance, Ibougbt I, that threw me on board this craft. There w aa the verita ble "Roiiih and Ready" sitting opposite me sipping hia coffee; the nioet remnrkHble man, m many respects, in tint Western hemisphere. I had missed the gorgeous spectacle of hia New Orleans reception the most magnificent affair which had ever shaken that city with excite ment; but vastly better, I had him now where I could see and study the man a man whose name belongs to history, and whose achieve ments pIsco him side by aide wi'h Ihe great captains of the world. The first thing that t-trnck me was hia simplicity, an unfailing attri bute of true greatness. He ate, and curried himself with the unstudied ease ot a little child. You would ha ve snppnsed him some plain coun try gentleman, wha dreamed not of attracting a look or calling out a remark ' All right in that line thought I, but how different hnking and better looking than Ihe' million of litho eraph likenea which stare ynu in the face at the shop windows and every where else t There ia in the living orginal t.one of that extreme breadth between the chin and the back of Ihe head, very little of the protrusion ot the lower hp, lo be f-und in the -Itihngrapha. In a word, they are a bundle ol caricatures, one and all. . lie ie precisely ihe height of ycur pre sent correspondent ; has a considerable sprin kle of gray hairs, isG'J yearsofaje, erct and fi'in when on hia feet, with one of the kindliest expreiisions'of face you ever saw. He bad on a common blue frock coit with flat buttons, the covering of which was worn off, showing that it belonged to an order of things which pissed away fome two or thn-e years ago. Still hia dress aa a whole was sufficiently becoming, tho' exhibiting no trice whatever of the military. As we rose from tbe breaklast table t waa in troduced lo the old hero I lold him I waa from South Carolina, and rejoiced in the good fortune which had allowed mo to see him and tell him how much the people of may native Siale honored and loved him. Hie eyes filled with tears a he shook my hand w irmly; ani I saw that the simple assurance of lovo could affVct profoundly a man who laced Ihe storm of battle with a nerve that moved. His con vers 1 lion exhibited fine clear, common sense, with out the slightest tinge of any sort of affectation or personal vanity. In the course of the dsy he gsve me the details of the great batl'e of Bocna Visit, the key to all the successes of the American arma in Meg co. Hud that field been loat, tbe fate of the war would l-ave been entire ly different, even tho' indomitable courage might in its long run have cut ita way to the Mexican capital. That v ctory, wonugaiost odd so vast, ga ve a prestig e to American valor that made the subsequent battlea conipiratively easy af fairs. Hut I must put a nub tiron my gallop ing pen, or you will never see the end of this epistle. The General remained with us until I after break'ast the next morning, and waa land. ed at hirown residence, on the river, some dis tance above Natchez. I smiled to ae ihe re publican simplicity with which a couple of hi negroes, field hands, who happened to be at ihe landing, walked up as he pot on shore, and ehonk hands with him without doffing hat or cap, and th expression ol delight with which they locked into his faceaahe spoke kindly aid familiarly lo them. Our engioe bell rang as soon aa he touched ihe sb. re, and we were ob. As Aaxassiaa'a ftaooaos I) y, run up ataira to Ni. 20, and bring down my baggage hurry, I'm about moving,' aid a tall Arkan sas meat axe looking person to a waiter at one of our crack hotala. What is your baggage, mam. vnd whar is heV SVhy. three pUu t pck 0f 'tit t Vowie bniteanti. wU Ye",, glld bewail under ..y pi'.lo pi w . 0 78 . - I 00 Every aubseq ten tinsetlro,, ... : . tS Verly Advsrtisereeu'e 1 one column, S3A ( half column, (18, three eeuarra, $I9 two squsrea, f 9 1 one square, $ HeltVyeavty o column, $11 half column, lt three sqrarea, $8 two square, fS; one equate, Jt3 60, . . . , -, Advertieemente left without directions as to iie length of lime they are te be published, will te ermtineed until entered out, aod charged aoonrd., ingty. ... (Sixteen tinea or h-ea make a aquare. Tub Ejfrcnoa op AcaTan. A correspondent of the Newark Advertiser, writing from Vien- na, givea the following not very flatterin; de scription of the Emperor of Austria; "Hia Msjesty of Austria la a short, ill made man, with a head by far too large for hia body, and which (the head) he move, cnnattntly a bout in a sort of nervons, mechanical, twitching manner. Ha stands, I should judge, not more thao 5 feel 3, ond ia fast approaching three score, Hia countenance denotea any thing but intellect, having a dull, unmeaning expression, plainly indicative of both mental and physical imbecility. It is well known that his mind weak ; he passes much of his time in trifling amusements, in eating and alecping, and i but a more machine in the banda of the Km pr east and Meternich. It gave me a thudJer of mel ancholy to see such a man, and he the ruler of millions, pass, through all that aplendid army of noble looking men, on many of whom God had plainly set the inprint of genius and power It U said that an eagle shot by one of hia cour tiers, was brooybt to him, and on being to'd that it was an eagle, be denied it, saying. 'No, no, an eagle ia alwaya double-headed' the lat ter being tbe national emblem of Austria." At Acstbiaw Palace. Prince Leichenstein'a residence at Vienna ia a epecirren of the im mense coat of some ot the Austrian palaces. A correspondent of the Newark Advertiser givea the following account of it; "For a couple of hours I wandered throuph apartments filled with the most costly end lux--urioiu furniture reminding one nf the fairy palaces described in tho Arabian Nights; ndr rora covering the w hole side of a room, chiin deliera of rock crystal and gold, floors o! po'ish ed wood laid in curious mosaic, sta'uary of Car. rara marble, bronse of rare workmaphhip, thf. wallscnvered with rich silk and gold brocadtj, ceilings of immense height painted in tresco au 1 arabesque, etarcasea, halls and columns nf poti ti ed marble and gypsum mosaic tables, Sic. In a word, the interior decorations of this superb palace cost 8.000.P00 florins, or 4 000 0(10 dol larsit fnr exceeds any two of the hundreds I have seen, and ie ruperior to that of tiie Empe ror's in splendor Iti princely inl.ahitnnt h-s. an income of upwards of 81.0(10.000 yearly, aid) is the owner of 99 estates and palaces. N ieu jecis of Austria can possese more than ifcu number, unless lie keeps up a standing army so be controlled by the government. The Pricce, therefore, contents himself with hia 09, i,ot caring, I suppose, to piy too dearly for an addi tions! one." FionTtso Passos We have seen it stated that ona-of the eompaniee from Misisippi, at the battle of Buena Vista, Mas cnmmsMjeil by a .Methodist minister. Just before tbe battle com menced, and whilst the troops were fornin g, it it said he delivered the following pithy prayer, at tbe head of hia company : "Be with us thia day in the conflict, oh Lord ! We are few and the enemy are many. Be with t us as thou wait with Joshua when be went How a from Gilgal to Beth ho ran and Ajalon, to imi tbe Amoiitea. Wg do cot a.k tbee for tbe s and moon to atand still, but grant ui plntyf daylight, and no cowards Take old Kouh and Ready under tby special charge. Ameu ! March. Hia company performed prodigies on the fielJ that day. Gi.adutoiai. Scent ix Couai In the County- Court held in Troy, N. Y., last Fr day a week, beore Judge C. C. Parmlee, two lawyeis, named Z, Haynr.er and J P. Conn, got into a fight, the latter giving tbe former the lie and then striking him Coon waa twice knocked down by hia insulted opponent, in the melee, and in attempt ing to rally and pursue the fioht. Il.ymer seii 'J. him by the hair and heat bim unmercifully, until. Judge Parmlee dragged bim off by main force. A DsscatrTiorrer a Msxicas Lrrtao. Black, en a man in the aun ; let bia hair grew longer and tangled, or become filled with vermia ; let : bim plod a boat the streeta in all kinds of dirt foi -years, and never know the use of brtuh er towel 1 or water even, except in storms ; let bim put 01 1 a pair of leather breeches at twenty, and wee r thetn antil forty, without chatgs or ablut on ; and over all place a torn and blackened and a tattered blanket begrimmed with abominationi ; let him bave w ild eyea and shining teeth, a nd featurea pinched by famine to abarpness ; tret 1st bared and browned, and (if female) with two or three minaturea of the same specie tottering f. ter ber, and another certainty atrapped to br back ; combine all tbeae to your imaginat ion, and you bave a receipt for a Mexican leper o. Brantz Mtyeri Slexi co. TvAaapGi.il tea. A minister expreaainf bia tbankfulnese to a brother clergyman lor a merci ful deliverance, said : "Aa I waa lidir g bere to day, my horse atumbled, and caor.e very ar throw;0g me from a bridge, where tbe fall wouli tava killed ma en tbe spot; lM I rl. taped unhurt." ( ran tell you something mare tbai that," said tbe ether, "ae I rede here to-day iy harae did at stamble at all 'i We a te apt te feil tewiraoa raise. I sqaare I insert ian, . I A t 1 de V ! ". I , do a i'4e a 7 '