NEW SERIES, VOL. I, No. 15.] CITARRICK WESTBROOK, EDITOR. AND PROPRIETOR Prietier Of/lee—Front Street, opposite Barr's lintel Publication Office—Locust Street, opposite the P. D. Timms. —The Commala SPY in published every Saturday morning at the low price of ONE DOLLAR A YEAS IN ADVANCE, or one dollar a•rd fitly cents. If not paid within one month of the time of subscribing. Single copies, TERM: CENTS. TERMS or A covriertm so—Advertisements not exceed ing a square three times for Sl. and 25 cents for cacti ttdditimtal Insertion. 'I linse of a greater length in pro portion. teA liberal iltecount made to yearly adver tisers. Jon PRINTING— Stich as Hand-hills. Posting-Nils, Cards, Labels, Pamphlets, Blanks of every description Circulars etc. etc., executed with itealtic ssa nd despatch unit nit reasonableterms. FIRE! FIRE!! FIRE!!! ORWS CELEBRATED AIR-TIWIT STCYTEZ. CJ. TYNDALE No. 97, South Second Street, Philadelphia, wishes to inform his f . riends and the public generally, that he still continues to manufacture and sell the gen uine Air-Tight Stove, with the latest improve ments. After many years experience in the manu facture of these Stoves, he is now enabled to offer to his customers the Air-Tight Stoves with ovens, suitable fur dining rooms or nur series. Ile has also the Air-Tight Steve, on the Ra diator plan, which makes a splendid and economical parlor Stove, to which he would call the particular attention of those who want an elegant and useful article for their parlors. Also, a large assortment of Coal, Parlor and Cooking Stoves. All of which he will sell at the lowest Cash prices. The public would du well to call before purchasinr , elsewhere. IC'Mr. T. would Caution the public against Air-Tight Stoves,made by most Stove makers, as they donot answer the purpose intended. Philadelphia, Sept. 18th, 1847-2 in. li. E. DIOORE 311001101tE &- RISDON, .10EIROIL11.111' TAILORZ No. 70 South Third Street, neatly opposite the .Errhaugc, Phitach ESPECTFULLY announce to their friends j_X, and the public that they arc constantly pre pared to make to order, 01 the finest and best ma terials, and at moderate prices, every article of Fashionable Clothing. constituting a Gentlinan's ll'aldrobe, for which their complete stock of choice and carefully selected Cloths, Cassi uterus, Vestings &c., of the latest and most desirable patterns, arc particularly designed. Their own practical knowledge of the business and a personal attention to every garment, esintples them to give entire satisfaction, and to both old and new customers they respeetlully tender an invitation to give them a call. Haying been fur years connected with some of the best and must fashionable establishments in this country, employing none bat first rate workmen, and being in the receipt of the latest fashions, and best styles of goods, they are fully prepared tu ac cummodate customers to the best manner. Philadelphia, A ugust 11, 1817.—Gm CHEAP OIL STORE, PIIILADELPII lA. RIDGW A Y & KEEIVELE, 37 North Whorvew, below Rare St., e,FFER for sale at the lowest prices, all the aril. 7 Iles of the Oil Trade. Their stock is varied nod extensive, and they feel confident of giving satisfaction to those who call. They have now un hand— Pure Sperm Oil. White Winter and Fall Oils of different qualities Solar Oil. Winierpres.ed Lard Oil. Winter Elephant and Whale Oils. Refined. Racked and Conisnott Whale Oil. Tanners' Oils. Sperm Candles, Guano &c., &e l'hiladelphin. August 14 1817.-2 m. N. 11.—All goods deliveled in first rate order. elLtaL ES STOK GLOBE HALL OF FASHION, No. 2)G, Market Sired, Philadelphia. CLOTHING —A necessary and useful mticle ; it well become; every one who buy, it, belOre purchasing to look and see where it can be bourOtt cheapest. I am satisfied (and reader, you will be) if you favor me with a call and look over my stock of good, you will nut only buy yourself but tell your friends where CHEAP CLOTHING can be had and they will Jo the same. If you come to the Globe Ball of Fashion and do nut find goods twenty per cent cheaper than at any store in the city I think you will say General Taylor never whipped the Mexicans! I think he never done anything else. VrA full stock of clothing suited for the country trade, which merchants and others arc particularly incited to examine. CHARLES STOKES, No. 29G, Market St., 3rd door below Ninth. Philadelphia, August 28,1847.-3 m. Agency of the Canton TEA COMPANY. !it.'7fr-,;' ; - The undersigned being the authorized Illi.ye;,4 l A gents for the sale of the SUPERIOR imported by the Canton Tea Company, of the City of New Yak, invite a trial of their Green and Black Teas, embrac ing the best selections this side of China. Every Package Warrented. J. I). & J. WRIGIIT. Columbia, April 7, 1847.—tf Agency of the PEKIN TEA COMPANY. THE SUBSCRIBER keeps constantly 1,4.7 z: L4 on hand an assortment of Freak Tcas,im '4:4-,4i.lporlrd by the Pekin Tea Company. Any Teas sold by me that does not give entire sails. faction, can he returned and exchanged, or the money will be refunded. C. WESTBROOK, Locust street, Columbia, Pa. April 7,1817. REMOVAL. P. SC id RER has removed ' his NV ARCH and JEW EL- Establishment to the WALNUT FnmsT Bt, ex., recently fitted up by him, between Barr's and Black's Ilotel, Front Street,w here the public can be accommodated, as heretofore, with all articles in the Jewel lery line, at the cheapest rates. Columbia, July 17, 1847.—tf. yOUNT Eagle Tripoli, for cleansing and burnishing all rneulic and glass surfsces, such as Gold, Silver, Brass, Britania, Steel ware, Window Panes, &c. Sold by au21•48-tf. R. WILLIAMS- THr COLUMBIA SPY Written for the Spy and Columbian. THE SPIRITS OF THE MIDNIGHT HOUR. Tue SPIRIT or GLOOM in dun majesty reigns. Environed with mists of Old Night; His wide sable pinions stern darkness maintains O'er the scene of Earth's day-glories bright. Though sombre thy sway, potent spirit of gloom, Yet my soul 'told thy dark courts won ld dwell; And visions created In fancy's-fraught womb, Sweet enchantment would lend to the spell. TiE SPIRIT OF SILENCE broods over tile Broke alone to tile tours mystic sense, Which feasts upon sweet stratus of magical grower, That seem wafted from blissful spheres hence. Oh spirit of silence: wherever night hies, Still hoverebt thou over Ins throne, [the skies, Though he mounts through you calm azure depths to Yet with him even thereon thou clown. Tits smuts or nganrs o'er silence and gloom, At the sal witching hoer of midnight, Sheds an influence sweet, like the opening bloom, Of entire lone newer o'er regions of blight. Oh, spirit of beauty yon gliumering host Thou dishiest the throne with Old Night Creation in chaos again would be lost Were it not for thy presence in light. Columbia, Sept. ghtli, ISI7. 1. c A PICTURE OF THE PRAIRIE. The world of' Prairie which lies at a distance of more than three hundred miles west of the inhabit. cd portions of the United States, and south of the river Arkansas and its branches has been rarely trodden by the foot or beheld by the eye of Anglo- American. Rivers rise there in broad level waste, of which, mighty though they become in their course, the source is unexplored. Deserts arc there, too barren of grass to support even the hardy buf falo—and in which water,except here and there a hole, is never found. Ranged over by the Cam anclics, the Pawnees, the Caiwas, and other equally wandering, savage and hostile tribes, its very name is a mystery and terror. The Pawnees have their village entirely north of this part of the country; and the war parties—always on foot—are seldom to be met with to the south of the white and civil ized Indian settlements. Extending- on the south to the Rio del Norte, on the north to a distance un known, eastwardly to within three or four hundred miles of the edge of Arkansas Territory, and west- wardly to the Rocky Mountains, in the range of the Camanehes. Abundantly supplied with good horses from the immense herds of the Prairie, they range, at different times of the year, over the whole of this vast country. Their war and hunt ing parties follow the buffalo continually. In the winter they may be found in the south, encamped along the Rio del Norte, and under the mountains —and in the summer on the Canadian, and to the north of it, and on the Pecos. Sometimes they haunt the Canadian in the winter, but not so often as in the summer. It is into this great American desert that I wish to conduct my readers. Imagine yourself standing in a plain to which your eye can see no bounds. Not a tree, not a bush, not a shrub, not a tall weed, lifts its head above the barren grandeur of the desert; not a stone is to be seen upon its hard-beaten surface; no undulations, no abruptness, no break to relieve the monotony—nothing, save here and there a narrow track worn into the hard plain by the constant hoof of the buffalo. Imagine, then, countless herds of buffalo, showing their unwiedlly dark shapes in every direction as far as the eye can reach, and up. preaching at times to within forty steps of you ; or a herd of wild horses feeding in the distant, or hurrying away from the hateful smell of man, with their manes floating and tramp like thunder.— ' linagine here and there a solitary antelope, or, a whole herd, fleeting off in dihtance, like the scatter ing of white clouds. Imagine bands of white, snow-like wolves prowling about, accompanied by the little gray collates or prairie wolves, who are as rapacious and as noisy as their bigger brethern.— Imagine, also, here and there a tiger-cat, lying crouched in some little hollow, or bounding off in triumph, bearing some luckless little prairie-dog whom it has caught straggling about nt a distance from his hole. If to this you odd a band of Ca manches, mounted on nobleswi ft horses, with their long lances, their quivers attheir backs, their bows perhaps their guns, and their shields ornamented gaudily with feathers and red cloth, and round as Norval's or as the full moon—and imagine them hovering about in different places, chasing the Inif. falo, or attacking the enemy—you have an image of the Prairie, such as no book ever describtled ade quately to me. I have seen the Prairie tinder all its diversities, and in all its appearances—from those which I have described, to the uneven bushy prairies which lie south of the Red River, and to the illimitable Stake Prairie which lies from almost under the shadow of the mountains to the beads of the Bra zos and of the Red River, and in which neither buffaloes nor horses are to be found. I have seen the Prairie, and lived in it, in summer and winter. I have seen it with the sun rising calmly from its breast, like a sudden fire kindled in the dint dig. tance, and with the sunset flushing in its sky with quiet and sublime beauty. There is less of the gor geous and grand character, however, belonging to it, than that which accompanies the rise and set of the sun upon the ocean, or upon the mountains; but there is beauty and sublimity enough toattract the attention and interest the mind. I have seen the mirage, too, painting lakes and fires and groves on the grassy ridges near the bounds of Missouri, in the still autumn afternoon and cheating the traveler by its splendid deceptions. , I have seen the Prairie, and stood long and weary guard in it, by moonlight and starlight, and in storm. It strikes me as the most magnificent, stern, and terribly grand scene on earth—a storm in the Prairie. It is like a storm at. sea, except in ono respect—and in that it seems to be superior:— the stillness of the desert and illimitable plain, while the snow is raging over its surface, is always 1. N. ILISDON AND LANCASTER AND YORK COUNTY RECORD. 1= COLUMBIA, PA. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1847. more fearful to me than the wild roar of the waves; and it seems unnatural—this dead quiet while the elements are fiercely disturbed;—it seems as if there ought to he roll and roar of the waves. The sea, the woods, the mountains, all suffer in compari son with the Prairie; that is, on the whole—in particular circumstances either of them is superior. We may speak of the incessant motion and tumult of the waves of the ocean—the unbounded green ness and dimness, and the lonely music of the forests—and the high magnificence, the grandeur, and the summer snow of the glittering cones of the mountains; but still the Prairie has a stronger hold upon the soul, and a more powerful, if not so vivid an impression upon the feelings. Its sublimi ty arises from its unbounded extent—its barren monotony and desolation—is still, unmoved, calm, stern, almost self-confident grandeur—its strange power of deception—its want of echo—and, in fine, its puwcr of throwing a man back upon himself, and giving hint a feeling of lone lielplessness,stratsge ly mingled at the same time with a feeling of liber ty from restraint. It is particularly sublime, as you draw nigh to the Rocky mountains, and sec them shoot up in the west, with their lofty tops looking like white clouds resting upon their Mllll - Nothing ever caqualled the intense feeling of delight with which I first saw the eternal moun tains marking the western edge of the desert. From the New York :spirit of the Times. BILL JINKIN'S TROUBLES ON litt: FIRST NIGH.? OF WS 51Atuttmmt Bill Jinkins was a very modest man; and al. though he had mingled with the world at barbecues, shouting-matches, bar-rooms, and at many of the et cetera places where men may occasionally be found—yet he was modest, very—whenever placed in the company of ladies. He trembled when a pretty girl would speak to him, and felt like a cul prit at the stand when he was called upon to "see Miss So-and-so home." Bill could never explain or account for this timidity. Ire would sing, frolic, and be as wild as a Rover, among men, but a pet ticoat would unnerve him instantly. Lucy Ann l.iggons, a young widow, had "set her cap" for Bill and was determined to "head him or die." Bill, to tell the truth, loved Lucy, and was as miserable out of her company as he was timid in it,—but as to "poising the question," that was impossible. Lucy knit purses, hemmed handker chiefs, worked shirt bosoms, and gave them to J in kins, as as well as several gold rings, but still Bill "would not propose." Lucy declared to hint re peatedly that she loved and was miserable when he was absent front her, and her hominess in life de pended upon being his wife—but Bill was dumb. At last Lucy was determimed that lie should "bear thunder," and when he next visited her, after some preliminary soft talk on her part, she very affection ately said, " Billy my dear, when arc you going to ask me to marry you? for I want to get my dress ready." Bill fainted on the spot, and hartshorn and water were applied for half an hour before he was finally restored. "What has been the matter, Miss Lucy ?" " Oh, nothing much; you fainted when you were about to ask me to many you—but I told you yes— and, oh, how happy we will be when we are mar ricd !—I will love you so dearly; and, as you said next Tuesday, why I am willing the wedding should be then—my dear Billy, how I do love you." "I am willing, Miss Lucy," was all that Jinliins could articulate, while Lucy almost kissed him into fits. What a glorious victory! Here we ought to step, but justice to our narra tive requires that we should proceed to the finale. "The "nest Tuesday" had come, and Jenkins was trembling at the approach of evening—sonic thing seemed to barrow up his mind, and to no friend even would he communicate his deep dig tress. "You arc not afraid, certainly, to go up and get married—why, to marry such a beautiful, charming, and intellectual being, as Mrs. Liggons, I should wish that tunic would tly like news upon the Electric Tcleg-raph line. Cheer up, Jinkins—cheer up." "Oh," replied Bill, "you don't know what dis tresses me. I can go up and get married—that is easy enough, but there is something—l know it—l feel it—there is one thing I am satisfied I never will be able to do, unless Lucy will assist me." "Explain yourself," replied his friend, "and if I can with propriety I will endeavor to render you comfortable." But Jinkins could not explain—he dared not—it was his timidity—he saw the Rubicon before him, and he knew lie could not puss it—but he was de termined to get married and trust to luck and Lucy. The night. came—and they were married. All were merry; the laugh, the chat, the song, and the dance, made up a lively party until midnight—they commenced to disperse, and at one o'clock Hill Jin kins was left "solitary and alone" in the hall.— Lucy Ann had retired, and her bridesmaids were oft in a distant room. Bill Jinkins' waiters and friends had gone home with the ladies. Hill was now at the point whers lie thought his firmness would fail him. I lis situation was a peculiar one. He was not certain which was Lucy Ann's room, although he had been told—and even had he known lie could not go to it. The watch cried "past two o'clock," and yet Jinkins was still alone and apparently engaged in perusing an old almanac, which, by chance, had been left in his coat pocket. An old female darkey, who resided in the family, had been prevailed upon by the ladies, who noticed Jinkins' bashfulness, to show hint his bed, and she accordingly introduced herself to him in as modest a style as she well could. Jinkins," said she, " it's past two o'clock." "Oh, yes—l know it—l'm going home in a few minutes. Old woman, where is my hat 1" "It's in Miss Lucy's room, sir—you can get it there if you'll go in. Mr. Jenkins, why don't you go to bed? Miss Lucy is there waiting for you— don't be so modest—the ladies will laugh at you. Come with me, and I'll show you the room, for I want to put out the lights, lock up the house, and go to bed." The old woman seized hold ofJinkins and pulled him along until she got out of the hall, and his gaze was fixed for a moment upon the entry door—but she was determined to put him into Miss Lucy's room, and after violent efforts succeeded. There he stood with the nob of the door in his hand—but the old darkcy had been smart enough to lock the door outside. Lucy pretended for some time to be a sleep ; but that sort of gammon would not answer— at last she said— " My dear Billy, what is the matter?" .1 want my hut!" screamed Jinkins, and Lucy, knowing his modesty, leaped out of bed, and after caressing him for some time, Billy went to bed with his clothes and boots on—and trembled till morn- How Jenkins subsequently managed "matters and things in general," can be known by application to his dear Lucy Ann. Reader, strange as it may appear, there arc Jin kinses all over the world; but the free-masonry of wedded life draws the curtain before the eyes of the unitiated. Going to bed on the first night after marriage must be among the most delicate situa tions in life. Ask your married neighbor how it was with hint We have no experience, exactly, in that way! = BLASTING A HEAD OF HAIR. "Major, what turned your hair white?" "My hair, Jim !" Why, by the Lord Harry, my hair was once as black as it nigger's face in an eclipse. When I was in the last war, it streamed in the wind like a shining horse-tail. But it has got blasted here in the mines." ...But how happened that, Major? You look quite hale and hearty, young enough yet to marry one of the gals." " Why Jim, about twelve years ago, when I first came to the mines, I got into a bit of a row with Jake Ropes, who was one of the bullies then—lick ed up—burnt out now, a niece old hulk—we hod a bit of a fight which began with a game of crack lieu; and I flaxed him like thunder; however, it passed off at that, and the next spring Jakc and I were prospering together. We had sunk a rock shaft fifty feet. The patent safety fuse had just come in fashion, and we thought we would try to blast with it. We had drilled a hole right plumb in the bottom of the shaft with a churn drill, thirty inches deep. Jake staid below to put the charge of powder in. and cracked away the tamping iron, petting in a half yard extra of safety fuse; and as soon as lie got everything right, piled the tools in the bucket, roared out hoist,' and I drew him out with the windlass. Says I, • Jake where arc your matches? Didn't you light the fuse?' 'No,' said Julie ; blow me if I put on tl.at blast. Enough said,' said I. So taking the matches I stuck my foot in the noose of t h e. rope, and Jake let me down, I all the time charging Jake to—'now,' says I, ' an S111)11 as I light the fuse and sing out •tope; do you jerk me out of the shaft quicker than shooting. I got to the bottom, and—l felt a little dubious, but I draws a match across my MI coat sleeve, and touches the blaze to the cod of the Inge, and it be gan to fiz-a-a—• hoist !' says I. Up I went about ten feet, and there I hung dangling." " Jake," says I, " for God's sake—" "What's the matter ?" says Jake, looking down the hole, laughing like a fiend. " Hoist, I screamed. In another minute I shall be blown in—" "0 ! you infernal old scoundrel. Next time jump on Jake when he is drunk, and lick him, will you?" All this time the safety fuse was fizzing away like a haltered comet. I felt the chills creeping, along, my back and curdling and mantling over my scalp. Jake took a pin and stuck it into the frame of the windlass, so as to project and flistcn the handle of the windlass beam ; then looked into the shaft and grinned like an incarnate devil. " I ham you now," said lie ; "just do you hang there, Major, till perdition bids you Mt" And there I did hang for fifteen minutes, with that in rental fuse hissing under me—it was a little eternity of pandemonium condensed. At last the fuse burnt out, and Jako drew me nut of the shaft, scared nearly to death. "Didn't the blast go off, Major?, "Go off! No! Dont you think,Jake had charg. cd the rock with just no powder at all, cracking away there with his tamping rod half an hour to ram the hole full of dry sand ! lie did, as sure as you arc born, Jim—the infernal scoundrel! and when I got home and looked in time glass, my hair was as white as a snow bank—and all the hair•dyc in creation can't never make it black no more ! What is your hair•dye worth a bottle 1" Mortar. LlEntitsm.—The New York Express re lates a touching anecdote, and one well calculated to illustrate the moral heroism of the poor. The editor says:—A day or two ago, a young female visited the Almshouse fur permission to transport a twin sister to the Lunatic Asylum. lln inquiring, into her condition, it was found that she was the only healthy member of a very poor arid afflicted family. flier flither is in the Lunatic Asy lam, and in compliance with her prayer, her little sister was sent to the same desolate abode. Her mother, two little sisters and a little brother arc in fi.eble health, and every morsel of food which they have eaten for months past, has been hardly earned by the daily labor of the little girl in question." What a noble spirit of self-denial and self-sacrifice! Ilow such characters in the humble of life adorn and dignify human nature! = Wit is brushwood ; Judgment is timber. The first makes the brighter flame, but tho other givcs the more lasting heat. • FAUX AFTIIER THE FATVlll.—Yesterday morning, we had occasion to pass down Tchoupitoulas street. In a grocery-store, about mid-way between Race and St. Mary's Market, we happened to sec a native of the "green isle of the ocean," who was giving the proprietor of the store his experience, so far as the yellow fever was concerned. Felix—we'll call him so, for he seemed to be very happy—was read ing the remarks of the Delta on Friday morning last, in regard to the "Leonidas" letter hoax, and his countenance was radiant with pleasure. Ile was dressed in a hair of coarse blue trowscrs, a blue flannel shirt, and a pair4f brogans. The hair had been shaved limn the back of his head, and the marks of the cups were plainly visible on his neck. "Felix," said the proprietor of the establishment, who, by-the-by, is a sandy-haired, good-looking fel low, with a bright blue eye and a heart as big as his own head, "did ye ever have the yellow fever?" "Is it the favir yc mane ? Oh, by the powers, as the cow said to the lady whin she was about pluckin a daisy, its a beauty. I had it lovely. sur, and God bless the docthors say I, that attinded mc." "flow did they treat you, Felix?" "Oh, they blistered and poulticed me. Thin they cupped—cupped did I say? be gor, I Waive they saucercd me ! There was one small man, sur, who had a pair ov gold spectacles on his nose, who wanted to have me take what he called a muslitard bath; thin there was a broad-showldered man, wid a big shtick in his hand, who politely tnuld me that av I didn't have a quart or so ov blud let out ov the back of me neck, that I'd be a coorpsc in the coarse ov a day or so. "Well, and what treatment did you submit to, Felix ?" Thratemint ! Snr, I submitted to all kinds of thratemint; and had it not been that I had a con stitooshun like a jackass, T belaive the 'lhratcmint,' as they call it, would have put me under the ground "How did you feel, Felix, when you were first taken ?" "Pale, Fur? Ile me sowl, I tilt as if there was a blacksmith with a hammer bangin away at the back or me neck, an a could piece or ice soakin in to me warm brain. Thin me legs: Oh mother ov Moses: the starch was all out of thim, sur, and they wur as limber as rags. As for me stummick, as the ould lady said who stuttered whenivcr she thought of vomiting, it spoke for itsilt. Oh, I thought I had Jonah's whale inside ov me, and Mister Moorse's tiligraph in full motion in my bowels!" "How did they proceed to cure you, Felix ?" " How As the blind man said when he wanted to pick up a pin from the fore, I'm not exacly sar tain as to the point. They leeched mo, sur, an the leeches, bad luck to 'em, sucked as if they wur half starved infants an I was their mother. Thin the poultices, an the baths, and the dhrinks hot an could, an the fayvir, the shiverin, an all the other beauti ful sinsations of the lovely disuse, made me fate as if me time was come an I had no money to pay for the same !" "How mild you get cured, Felix ?" "That's more than the like ov me can till. But this I can take me affydavy to. One marnin, whin the two docthors was quarrclin as to which was the best way to kill me, there was a gig conic to the dome, and a man as big as 13rlan Boma= jumps out. lie had a piece of a stump ov a segar in his mouth, an at first I thought he was the Sheriff comin to saize me body. Ile looked at mcas fierce as it I had done him mortal injury, and catchin hould of me hand, he said in a gruff voice, "What's the matter with you?' • Its the fayvir I have,' sea L • You're a poor man?' scz he. .1 am,' see I. 'You be d—d,' scz he; and wid that he gave me, some stuff that cured me in a day or so. I saw him this mornin ridin in his gig, an scz I to him, • God be wid ye, our, for your kindniss to me r lie politely tould me to 'go to h-11, to pay him fur his sarvices if ever I was able, and in the manetimc, if 1 wanted a dollar, to call on him an I could get it.'" " Don't you know the name of the person ?" " Begor I was too sick to ask him for his name , but his fuce though its as ugly as that of the divil's second wife, is in me own heart, and there it will stay till the eyes ov me soul arc blind. Ile's a big, heavy-built man, our, and don't seem to care a d—n what he says ; but he's kind to the poor, and saved the life ov me beautiful self. Some one tould me his name—its a hard name, but may the colored gintleman below fly away wid me if I can remim ber it." Pour Felix scratched his head—he couldn't re member the name of his benefactor, but the warmth with which he spoke showed that he would never forget his kindness.—N. 0. Delta. = ON Ose Cosnmom.—Some years ago, when one of the middle states was framing a new constitu tion, the discussion was warm and obstinate.— Many days had been spent in fiery debate, and the vote was at length about to be taken. Just at that moment a country member, who had been absent fur some days, entered the house and took his seat. Another member, who was in laser of the amend ed constitution, went to him and endeavored to make a convert of him. " You must vote for the new constitution, by all means," said he. " I will think of it. returned the country member. "But you must make up your mind at once• man, for the vote is about to be taken." The country member scratched his head and seemed puzzled. "Conic, why do you hesitate? Will you promise to vote for the new constitution ? I ern sure it will give satisfaction." I will vote for it on one condition," said the country member. " What i 4 that?" "And no other T' " But what is it." " Why, provided that they will let it run by my MEI [Wilor.r. NUMBER, 906. KIDNAPVING tv Maisr..—A resident of Clinton in this county, who has a wife and several children, after coining down the Penobscot with a drive of logs, was beguiled by rowdy companions into a groggery—where he became intoxicated. How long lie kept it up we arc not informed, but before he got through with his "spree" he found himself enlisted in the army for five years. When he be came sober he began to think of his wife and chil dren in Clinton. Either with or without the con. sent of the officer, he went to see them before departing fur Mexico. Their appeals and their grief were too much' for him. Ile did not return to Bangor, and a sergeant was sent after him as a deserter. Ile was not to be found. Neither the wife nor the neighbors would give any account of the whereabouts. Some days were spent in hunt ing fur him. Finally the sergeant told his wife that if she would bring him over to China he would get his release. Relying on this promiee she persuaded him to go with her to China, where, instead of get ting a release, an officer was ready to seize him and carry him off to Bangor, and the poor woman was sent home alone to her children, the victim of a vile deception, to console her now fatherless little ones as best she could, and get them bread as she might. But she did not give up her husband with out an effort. She started off immediately to Bangor, to make a further attempt to rescue her husband. She saw him there, Lut all efforts fur his release were in vain. Ile was carried off like a culprit, to do deeds of blood. Ile was wanted in Mexico to kill other men of whom he knew noth ing, and who perhaps were forced into the army just as he was; who in fact never signed their names to an agreement, drunk or sober. Cases similar to this arc no doubt common, and they will multiply if the war coutinnes.—Kennebec Jour. SnPAnATION IMPOSSIIII.r..—TiIe following is from the Coup icr des Etats Unis, of Saturday. A man and wife, who had been married ten years, were established in the mercantile business in the street St. Denis; having a dispute, they resolved to sepa rate, and agreed to leave the decision of their mat ter to the justice of the peace of their district.— Accordingly limy each went to state their grievan ces to the magistrate. "have you any children ?" asked he. c' Yes sir." 6' How many 7" "Three, two boys and a girl, and exactly here lies the diffi culty, since we each wish to have the care of two of them; decide." "Will you abide by my decis iou " Entirely," said they, both at once. "Very well, my good friends, I condemn you to have a fourth child, as then you may each have two. You may then call on me again." The two parties, well pleased, then withdrew, deferring their sepa ration for a time. Two years had elapsed, and the justice had not heard a word from the couple, until yesterday, when he met the husband. " Alt, well," said the justice, "about that separation?" "Al ways impossible! instead of four children we now have five." ril= NewsrAmes.—There are at the present time, or were in April last, in existence and being published throughout England, Ireland, Scotland, ‘Vales and the British Isles, fire kindred and fifty : five jour nals, including dailies, tri-weeklies, semi-weeklies, and weeklies, senri•monthlics and mollifies. The great majority of these arc of course, published in England. Of this number there were established in 1600, onc ; in 1660, onc; in 1665, one ; in 1689, one; in 1695, one; in 1700, one; in 1709, one; from 1710 to 1720, five; from 1720 to 1730, four; to 17-10, six; to 1700, ten; to 1760, six; to 1710, twelve; to 1780, eleven; to 1790, seven; to 1800, sixteen; to 1810 thirty-three; to 1820, twenty eight; to 1830, seventy ; to 1840, ono hundred and forty-four, and from 1810, to April 1847, one hen tired and eighty; allowing them to increase in numbers in proportion us their waltz° is appreciated. There arc we believe, something near two thou sand different newspapers published in the United States, or over three times the number that are is. sued in all Great Britain ; and it is believed, more than all that arc published in all other parts of the world together. =1122Z NEW FASHION FOR. Ilata.—A letter from New York says :—" I was amused at a new fashion of wearing the hair which has lately been introduced by our super.clegants, and which I saw in perfec tion last evening,. The peculiar thing in it is to re. duce the whole head to the state of a stubble field, and he is the must elegant man who comes nearest to Laving his sconce shaved perfectly smooth. One gent, last evening, wore his hair about a quarter of an inch long, and as its color was red, the effect was ludicrous enough. Thu man looked as though his upper works were set thickly over with short, fiery bristles. However, if others laughed he ad. Mired and, both parties being well pleased, the thing could not have been better." INNOCENCE Proven.—The jewelry alleged to have been stolen by the servant girl, at St. Louis, Elizabeth Itcddick, who committed suicide one day week before last, has been found at the house of her former mistress, and in the very spot where it was placed by her accuser, who afterwards forgot the circumstances. An honest Dutch farmer thus writes to the See. rotary of the Massachusetts county Agricultural Society : "Gentlemen. you will have the goodness to enter me on your list of cattle for a hull." == The value of three things is justly appreciated by three classes of persons. The value of youth by the old, the value of health by the diseased, the value of riches by the needy. En!=: An Indian chief being asked his opinion of a jug of rum, said he thought it was the juice of wornen'e tongues and lion's hearts—for after drinking it he could talk forcrcr and fight the devil.