it 'J 1 1 I I II II II I It? "WE GO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE WAY; WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO FOLLOW." ffTjjn. BHEY. IMSBIUIIT in8SL"" ItME T-MM U TI1K BLIXO IIOY. BY DR. HAWKS. (The following beautiful lines, from the pen r the Rev. Dr. Hawks, Lave been handed us for publication. They will .find numerous admirers among the discriminating readers of JUS HOMK JOCRSAL. It was a bleeeod summer day, . - The flowers. bloomed the air was mild. The little birds poured forth their lay, And everything in nature smiled. Iu pleasant thought I wandered on, Beneath the deep wood's' ample Bhadc, 'Till suddenly I came upon Two children who had thither strayed. Just at an aged birch-tree's foot A little boy and girl reclined, His hand in hers she kindly put, And then I saw the boy was blind. The children knew not I was near, A tree concealed me from their view, 15ut all they said I well could hear, And I could see all they might do. Icar Mary," said the poor blind boy, "That little bird sings very long; y, do you see him in his joy, And is he pretty as his song I "Yes, Edward, yes," replied the maid, "I eee the bird, on yonder tree." The poor boy sighed, and gently said, "Sister, I wish that I could ace ! "The flowers, you say, are very fair, And bright green leaves are on the trees, And pretty birds are singing there How beautiful for one who sees 1 "Yet I the fragrant flowers can smell, And can feel the green leaf's shade, And I can hear the notes that swell From these dear birds that God has made. "So, sister, God to me is kind, Though sight, alas! He has not given; But tell me, are there any blind Among the children up in heaven?" "No, dearest Edward, there all see But why ask me a thing so odd?" "Oh, Mary, He's to good to me, I thought I'd like to look at God!" Ere long, disease his hand had laid On that dear boy, so meek and mild ; His widowed mother wept and prayed, That God would spare her sightless child. lie felt her warm tears on his face. And said, "O, never weep for me, I'm going to a bright bright place, Where Mary says God shall see. "And you'll be there, dear Mary, too; But, mother, when you get up there. Tell Edward, mother, that 'tis you You know I never saw you here!" He spoke no more, but sweetly smiled Until the final blow was given When God took up the poor blind child, And opened first his eyes in heaven ! Our Xew York; Correspondence New York, August 3, 1851. EDITOR OF THE MOUNTAIN SENTINEL : The racket shin Devonshire arrived here from 1 Portsmouth on Saturday forenoon with a large I number of passengers, among whom were forty- Mven officers and men of the Hungarian arny l iili their wives and children. Some of, them erc noblemen and civil officevs of high rank j All but three of them have bc.fen in London for some tune past; and the others have recently jcome from Constantinople. Three of the offi 1 Jers ith the wife of one of them, passed yes- terday afternoon at my house. They felt san guine that Kossuth will soon be at liberty to n i j- mis or some other country. Hie ladies of the party appear to be spirit-bro-Tt ffiwe, vm those of the highest "uik, assured me that they are willing to occupy uiemselves in any way, even in manual labor, o earn a competency. . Most of these warriors aroyourig men of from gnteen to twenty-three years of age. One of "?we youthful patriot has fought in eighteen A . , batUes. hB been several times 1 ,&UhouU te is not yct twenty years of W Vs reEuar lady-killer; he had not ea on shore six hours before he mad an evi- l'nnV?pr,CSsion oa the hcart of a JOwg lady of i Jom'h. Perhaps fortunately for him, Cobftn.. : ?- tOHirPi. oi ner property. The for a Brim T Vl sevep of these gentlemen t he asS?. 40 be formed t Pieced to Jennv f lbc Creole revolutionists. m sail foiii 8lC1 troupe,, and will, it is tooftk fh. BYerpul abut the middle of this spaSs'Sr if iD, wilh telegraphic ctbaSar-CharIeston' New Orleans, and the , rw t lUS' containing various versions 'Won of C Iasurrection- The Cuban Dccla ew'yallo p- eac haa bcen rushed in it hichlv tkF Ptj Paners. some of which praise Ie doJimenl6 Ca"S U "a firm and Here outhr u 13 insurrection were a fcy a iari. 0Pultt indignation, caused Spanish rL arbltrar7 and unpopular act of the Maltha Vrninent, I-should be inclined to 8'n the r?r 'Shtly ; but there is no ditigui ipatcd f iTat .the Cubans wish to be eman W4 hundr paniah control, and that thousands uJiecuj of thousand of persons in the United States arc ready to assist them in anv way and every way, in their efforts to secure independence. Under these circumstances Cuba must soon be independent of Spain; and however much you, or I, or others, may attempt to frown down in tervention in her behalf, by American citizens, I am willing to stake my reputation for fore sight, upon the opinion I now express which is, that Cuba will soon have two Senators in Washington. She may be beaten in this attempt; but that matters not. Natural causes w ill force her into the Union before many years. Beside, those Americans who arc opposed to the annexation of Cuba are merely negative iu their opposition ; while those in favor of it, are positive and active in their efforts to bring it about. I endeavor to be non-committal, you see ; and 1 thiuk I generally succeed pretty well, although, in looking over what I have written, 1 sec that my statement of what I consider to be the facts of the case, Vould be thought, by politicians, indicative of my favoring the Cuban movement. The pleasure of an intimate asso ciation for some months with Martin Van Buren may have had the effect of making me somewhat guarded in my expressions. Durii.g the commencement at Hamilton Col lege a few days since, on the conclusion of an address by Mr. G. 1. It. James, the eminent Historian and Novelist, an individual (I believe it was Hon. J. A. Spencer,) called on the Band to strike up "Rule Britannia," as a compliment, I presume, to Mr. James. Whereupon, one W. E. Robinson, a gaseous Hibernian genius, who is occasionally permitted to perpetrate bombastic expressions in the Tribune, under the signature ' of "Richelieu," for some reason or other that I cannot conceive, except it be that he is its bore no newspaper establishment is complete, you know, without its tolerated con tributor, or" Lore mounts the high horse, ex presses his hatred of Britannia, and fumes and frets in the Tribune at such "treason to the State." Now, although I can well understand that Mr. Richelieu Robinson must have experi enced unplcasaut sensations, or finding that his oration to prove America not to bo Anglo-Saxon, but Celtic, did not "take," and that Mr. James' discourse was received with incomparably more lavor; still, l do protest against the injustice of arraigning Mr. James as a perjurer, because, forsooth, it is stated that he has, in Milesian dialect, "declared his intintions," and that, therefore, for him to feel any gratification at the sound of an English national air is nothing short of the rankest treason, and the basest perjury. New converts arc always the most fanatical, and superlatively, sickening in their protesta tions of devotions ; and, as Mr. Richelieu is only a half-fledged citizen of our country, it must be to his new-born zeal for our honor, that we must attribute his lack of charity and justice; for I cannot imagine by what rule of equity or com mon (Anglo-Saxon) sense Mr. James can be held responsible for the acts of others, whose only crime, it appears to me, was a rather ardent admiration of Mr. James' genius, and a perhaps indiscreet mode of evincing it. Now, our wisest statesmen do not imagine, like Mr. Richelieu Robinson, that any being worthy of the dignity of American citizenship, can be, by any possibility, so void of lovo of country, as to be able to excoriate, in a moment its every trace from his breast, neither are they inclined to place any reliance on the loyalty of such men, if, indeed, another beside Mr. Riche lieu Robinson can be found ; so they have wisely prescribed five years, as the probationary term which an alien shall pass before entering on the rights and duties of citizenship ; in. order that his sympathies and attachments may be gradu ally weaned, not immediately and violently wrenched from "Home and Fatherland." If. then, Mr. James really did feel gratified, it, would be no very heinous offence, as he is Only in the first year of his pupilage. But the attack on Mr. James. sa--lgc, coarse, ungcntlemanly, and ridiculo7ag fta ;t j food for serious reflection. For if it once gocg forth, that an alien, on becoming a citizen of our country, is bou;aa to extirpate a3 noxious weeds in the garden of his soul, all pride in the heroic dees. or his forefathers, and in the glo ries wJ'.ir;a are revealed in the pages of the his tory Of the land of his birth, together with all sympathy in its future destiny, or else be bran ded as a perjurer and traitor, we shall deter many an honest, noble-hearted man from joining our ranks, and shall have to depend for recruits upon the mere serfs of Europe a faction-riven race, whose country is galled by a foreign yoke, riveted on its neck by the arts and treachery of native demagogues a race whose history is so stained by the crimson flood of intestine vio lence, that it docs not furnish one instance of united effort to raise their distracted country to the dignity of a nation. Yours truly, FITZROY. A Blitz Trick. While Blitz was in Norristownj says the re porter of the Herald, he made a purchase of ap ples in one of the confectionary establishments, and in tho presence of the lady in attendance, quietly cut an apple in two, and out tumbled a gold ring. He inquired whero such apples grew, and cutting open another one, out came another ring. . The lady manifested very great surprise, and in view of his good luck so far, Blitz offered to purchase her whole stock. This she declined, telling him that there were no more for sale. After he left, tho lady in antici pation of a golden harvest, commenced cutting up her apples, and after demolishing about a dozen without finding what she was in search of, Ehe gave it up as a bad job. Consistency. :. The Whigs seem determined never to do any thing to bring discredit on their character for consistency. At their recent State Convention they nominated, as their candidate for Presi dent of the United States, one of the HEROES OF THE MEXICAN WAR; and at the same time nominated for Canal Commissioner of this State, a man who, in Congress, voted against furnishing the soldiers of that army WITH THE NECESSARIES TO KEEP THEM FROM STARVING .In mtyaivr. TWO WEEKS LATER FROM CALIFORNIA. ARRIVAL OF THE STEAMSIIU EMPIRE CITY. $1,700,000 In Gold Dust. New Yohk, Aug. G, 1851. The steamship Empire City arrived at her ----- - .u .uiu V lJ " - - w v v.wa tuia mut tiiu .bringing tho-OUiforni a mails toVuTy let, two it. . ' nee us ia,ier man previous accounts.- - - The California mail for Phila.le.lr.hia trill ho, received there to-nis-ht. The Empire City has on freight $1,400,000 in gold dust and S300.000 in the hands nf pas sengers. The number of passengers is four uuuuicu. Aaron Saumn, of Philadelphia, died in Sau Francisco on the 15th of June. The Gheat Fire of Jlxe 22J TTia Rnn Francisco Herald says that the fire commenced at 11 o'clock on tho 22d of June, in a frame house, on the north side of Pacific street, about twenty yarus irom l'owell street. It was un doubtedly the work of an incendiary. Down Pacific street sped tho fiery storm, stopmns not for a second : but fore the now fast rising winds to Washington street. In the meantime, while tlm o-rtprni; it was spreading north and east; at about 12 o'clock the flames had comnlpto Washington street on the Plaza. Despite every effort, it crossed over to the house at the north west comer of tho Plaza: cnnmmixl thn abode occupied by Burgoyne and others, to- - A 1 '.I " . . . Kciui-r wiiu. some nail uozen others between that and Bunont street. It south, by untiring industry, at the County T-. :i I" 1 , T . - -. r . . uuuuiug, occupies ny justice Aicuowan ana numerous others. It was making fearful head way towards Montgomery 6treet. -- lhe "JLlta talionua" newspaper office with stood the flames for a while, hut it tnn fwn he- fore the fiery blast that swept around it. The new Jenuv Lind Theatre, on tho Snnn was consumed. All the houses on both sides of Washington street, between Keampv nn.l ATnnt- gomery streets, except the Verandah, the El AJomuu, una uurgoyne s new banking house, shared the same late. The small frame on Montgomery street, on the site of Delmonico's, took fire, and the block on the "opposite side of j the street was in imminent danger for a long time, but by the tremendous exertions of the citizens, it was saved. At this point the fire was stopped, but it extended still further down to Washington street, as far as Jones' Alley, consuming Cobb & Co.'s Auction House, on tho east side of that alley Towards .the .north, everything went down before the flames at Broadway was stopped. Sansom street seemed doomed, but it, too, es caped, the fire stopping at its eastern limit, about half a square from the street. BiiLDi.NGS Bikaei). The principal buildings that were burnt arc the elegant new Presbyte rian Church of the Rev. Mr. Williams, on Stock ton street ; the large brick building at the cor ner of Jackson and Dupont streets, occupied on the second floor as the armory of the First OVl fornia Guards; the Adobe on the Plaza the Alia California Office; the Jenny Lind ThptrA City Hall; City Hospital, and the Mne new four story brick building of Mesas, Maskwald and Caspar, ui Jackson street, n.ar Kearney. Thn1D,SGf S-17?DI15T Burnt Bisteict. Those saved wit uu tLo burnt district were the UEdll'-ES. the Custom House, Ve randah, El Dodo, California Exchange, all the ureproo. n.ouscson Montgomery street, between astiirigton and Clay; Bolton, Barry & Co.'s udings on Merchant street ; Kclsey, Smith & Risley's, and Biddleman's, on Merchant street. The Union Saloon and the houses opposite, to the astonishment of every body, escaped. It was expected at one time that the Post Of fice would go, and a general movement of papers and valuables was made ; fortunately, the fire stopped at the County Building. Incidents op the Fire. The City Hall, tow ering four stories high, and built of combustible materials, burnt like a fiery volcano. The sight presented, a3 the flames obtained possession and shot high into tho air, was grand beyond description. All tho officers of the courts and of the city government, succeeded in saving their records. The City Hospital soon after took fire, and here the scenes of distress, as the unfortunate inmates, some ninety in number, were brought out, was harrowing. Many who were burnt in the former fire, and by tho explosion of the steamer New World, were still under treatment. By the untiring exertions of Dr. Chapin, Mr. John Cotter and a number of the benevolent persons, they were all removed without any se rious accident. As soon as tho fire broke out, Burgoyne & Co. removed all the.ir books, papers, and deposites to their now bnnking house, cor ner of Montgomery and, Washington streets. None of the other bankers were burnt out. ; The Alta California wa3 the only newspaper that suffered. Lives Lost. Since the above was written, wo have heard the names of two persons who were burnt to death Mr. Bach, of the firm of Bach, Barnett & Co., and a Mr. Lyon. A man was shot dead by an officer in Bush street, for plundering the property placed there by the sufferers in the fire. The number of buildings destroyed is not less than five hundred, and the loss is estimated at three millions of dollars.' Avast amount of lumber and building materials were destroyed. The greater portion of the burnt district was occupied by dwelling houses, and but few heavy stocks of goods and merchandise were burned. The persons burnt out were generally of the poorer class. ; The fire was undoubtedly the work of incen diaries, and several arrests have been made, but tho persons under arrest have not been proved to be tho parties actually guilty. . ; ; : The excitement created since the fire," says tho California Courier, against the numerous desperadoes living among us, has resulted in a determination on tho part of our citizens to pre vent the landing here of more persons from the English penal colonics, unless they produce tes timonials of character. The Vigilance Commit tee, and their doings generally, have been sus tained by tho community. MiscELLANEors Camforitia Items. A horri ble murder had been perpetrated at Sonsra. Some persons whn- Mr tv .... , . the Sonora Herald, went to the room of one of the editors Dr. L. C. Green, dragged him from his bed and shot him through the head! ThS also killed two other persons connected with the office, aivd killed or wounded three or four others who went to their assistance. A row Lad occurred among the miners, near Carson diggings, in which two Americans and tb-e t?vr.r Mexicans were killd. . Colonel Barbour's division of the Indian Com mission was at a stand still, for want of funds Dr. ozencraft was progressing at his own ex- Two men, named Watkins and Brier, had been found guilty of burglary and sentenced, one to ten years' and the other to five years' imprisonment. J A party of nine men, under Captain Fitz Pat rick, had been cut off at Rogue River, and all murdered. During th night of the great fire, Lewis Pol lock, was calied from his bed, and upon making his appearance, was shot dead by a man named Samuel Gallaler. The citizens f Marysvillc have formed a vigi lance committee for the protection of life and property. Quite a large company of Mormons, from Salt Lake Valley, had arrived at the Los Angc los Valley. " The account from the mines and placers are very encouraging. , .- The prospect of good crops throughout the country are alio encouraging. Our city is sointr un acain vfmr ocf t. hundred buildings were erected during the past tv sn.. A FOBTXIGHT TV rAT.lFfinvf i Tha a-rntn-m caused by the villainous does among us has resulted in a determination, on the part of our citizens, in tvtptiiii no f-w j - v . -J .... no possible the lan Jin cr of nersnns fmm tlm nonii colonics, unless they produce testimony of cood , luointux, xuuouier ueicrminauon is, to send Jl .41 1 1 . .. - . . I OUt Of -the COUntrv as in .anv- no nnssHiln nf 1.n abandoned gang who infest our city. ' Much discussion has resulted in consequence of the formation of the Vigilance Committee and their subsequent acts, but fliev have crpnAmllir been sustained by the community. To thinkin" and disinterested men, the cry that they are op posed to law and order sounds rltlioulnna fVf.Tii the fact that wo have had no order because no law was administered until th rnmmittpn trna formed, and had '-forepd anm a innu!nnnicii -,f 1 w V.U JJ. V v uicir uuues upon uie ucunquents. In the City of Sonora, a worthy citizen, Capt. Snow, having been brutally murdered, and two of the as?assins having been taken in a few days afterwards, they were tried and hung by the populace, and buried in the grave which they had dug for their victi;-r , .. A marauding party of twelve men, command ed by a Captain Irving, were all killed by the Indians tf the Cohuila tribe, near Los Augelos. There is a prospect that Mr. Iloatling's pro position , for supplying the city with water will soori b& commenced. A party which left Trinidad to explore the Sparta country, had arrived at Trinidad. Seyeral days during the past week were hot ter than experienced for a long time. The heat has bcen extremely severe in the interior. Tho citizens of Marysville have found it neces sary, as have our own, to form a Vigilance Committee for the protection of lives and pro perty. Accounts from the mines and placers are very encouraging, especially in the rotten quartz dig gings. The prospect through the country for good crops is excellent, and a vast amount of vegeta bles will undoubtedly be produced. There has been a quartz mining Convention held in Mariposa county, at which some very important resolutions were adopted. CnixAMEN Coming. The San Francisco Tost says, a vessel arrived from China a few days since "with 223 of the Long Queues and Flaun ting Breeches gentlemen, from the Land of the Celestials. The number of shoemakers among them is two hundred and twenty-one, also one lawyer, and one doctor. All their names except four commence with A. Small l'otatocs. . It3 a custom with builders and mechanics to rais-3 nag after the erection of a new house, or the JGainting of an old one. In pursuance of this custom the painters now -engaged in paint ing tho Capitol raised a flag on tho dome ; and ono of the journeymen, as a matter of amuse ment, painted upon it "BIGLER." This so insulted the high dignitaries of Federalism, that the Secretary of tho Commonwealth forthwith ordered the flag to bo taken down, and the poor jour to be discharged. . Tho master painter be ing a true and faithful Whig took down the flag, "but it required a consultation to determine whether the jour should bo discharged, lest funds might bo needed from a Democratic House next winter. Investigator. Common Men. Common men till our soil and manufacture the useful, necessary and ornamental articles of husbandry, machinery, convenience, dress and luxury. Common men pay our taxes, and bear the burthens of the government which protects the fop, the dandy and all uncommon men in their legal and just rights, equally with the most useful citizen. Common men perform our labor they make our canals and railroads, they manufacture our lumber. Common men are laborers, farmers, mechanics, raftsmen ; men who are with the people, the people, and know the vants of the people men who have in common with the masses of the people a com mon interest to promote. Such as the men se lected by the Democratic party as candidates for tho suffrages of the yeomanry of ' this Com monwealth and yct, these men are sneered at by the aristocracy as "common men." les, fellow-citizens, the Governor's organ denounces Col. Bigler and Gen. Clover as "nothing but common men." Intestigalcr. Beautiful Sentiment. John C.Whittier, the Quaker Poet, in writing aDout insu Emigrants among us, says; " For myself, I confess I feel a sympathy for the Irishman. I see him as the representative of a generous, warm-hearted, and cruelly op pressed people. That he loves his native land that hi? patriotism is divided that he cannot forget the claims of lug mother island that his religion, with all its abuses, is dear to him does not decrease my estimation of him. A stranger in a strange land, he is to me an ob ject of interest. The poorest and the rudest has a romance in his history. Amidst all his apparent gaiety of heart and national drollery and wit, the poor emigrant has ead thoughts of the oulU mother of him,' sitting lonelv in her solitary cabin by the bog side recollections of a father's blessing and a sister's farewell that sister loved so devotedly and hauntin st him a grave mound in a distant church yard, far be yond the 'wide wathers,' has an eternal green ness in his memory ; for there, perhaps, lies 'a uarint child,' or a 4 sweet crather who once loved him' the New World is forgotten for the moment; blue Killarney and the Liffy sparkle before him Glendalough stretches beneath him its dark, still mirror he sees the same evening sunshine rest upon and hallow alike with na ture's blessings the ruins of the Seven Churches of Ireland's apostolic age, the broken mound of the Druids, and the round towers of the Phoeni cian sun worshippers, beautiful and mournful recollections of home awaken within him and the rough and seemingly careless and lieht- hearted laborer melts into tears. It is no light I thing to abandon one's own country and house hold gods. Touchingly beautiful was the in junction of the prophet of the Hebrews Ye shall not oppress the stranger, for ye know the heart of the stranger, seeing that ye were strangers in the land of Egypt." Jolui Strolim and tlie Mexican Soldiers. . The Mexican heroes are beginnning to speak their sentiments in regard to John Strohm, the Whig candidate for Canal Commissioner, who voted against the supplies to our gallant army whilst it was nobly maintaining our national honor in Mexico. Among the toasts given at the celebration of the 4th of July in BlocmfielJ, Terry county, was the following: Joseph Fry, (a volunteer.) The volunteers of Terry county when we were fighting the battles of our country and carrying our flag tri umphantly through, John Strohm was voting to starve us in the enemy's land, and we will now vote him into oblivion. This is in the right spirit. No soldier, no real friend to the soldier, can aid in the support of a man who was so lost to every sense of pa triotism as to vote against even furnishing a crust of bread to these gallant spirits, who were fighting their country's battles on a foreign soiL The nomination was an insult to every patriotic Tennsylvanian, and the result of the election in October will 6how that the insult has been pro perly rebuked. Investigator. Virginia The South-Side Democrat tells the following anecdote of the late Gov. James Baedocr: Gov. Barbour was a candidate to represent his county in tho State Legislature, and was opposed by an illiterate man named Davis. The Governor, in his speech on the hustings said: Fellow-Citizens, I had the honor to represent my county for several years in the Assembly of Virginia ; I was for some years Governor of this ancient and venerable Commonwealth; I, was for a considerable time a representative of this district in the Congress of the United States; I bad, fellow-citizens, at a subsequent period, the honor to hold a seat in the most august legislative body in the world the Senate of the United States; at another period I had the place of Secretary of the War Department in the administration of John Quincy Adams, and was afterwards Minister Plenipotentiary and Ambassador Extraordinary near the Court of St. James; and now, fellow-citizens, you may picture to yourselves the humiliation that I feel at finding myself hero to-dajr engaged in a damned little pittiful county contest with Tom Davis. Independence A Western editor lately offered his hat as a prize for tho best essay on independence. The following obtained the prize : "Natural Independence is easier imagined than described: personal Independence consists emphatically in being situated in a clean shirt, drawers, socks, and a nicely blacked pair of boots, with at least a dollar and a half, and a clean cambric in your pocket all on Sunday morning, with your wife on one arm, and your baby on the other, taking your own course towards your own church, to sit under tho ministry of your own preacher, in tho blissful expectation of doing your own snoozing, in your own pew, wherein no one dare venturo to nudge you with his elbow, or ticklo your nose with a straw." 2? An editor oht in Towa, says they don't brag of the size of their babies, but they are a most uncommon tuie crop. ' - : A Kew Feature. A Basd or Gypsies, says an Eastern contera'-' porary, lately landed at New York, among the immigrants brought from Europe by an emigrant ship. They are now encamped, with their cov ered wagons, in the neighborhood of Hoboken, and report themselves from ' the vicinity of Durham and New Castle, England. The women ana children are said to possess the peculiar physical, features of their strange race, havinir slender figuresand an abundance of black hair. The-men pursue the business of. tinkers, and the females cook their meals by-fires made in the open air. It is probable that we are in debted for .this importation, of humanity to the increased facilities for immigration afforded by steam navigation ; and should this small necleua of a new race of people which we have acquired in these Gypsy immigrants be enlarged by ac cessions hereafter, it may be reserved to the United States to solve the problem whether it is possible, under any form of social and political institutions, to amalgamate with other races a strange' order of cosmopolites, who have, imme xnorially, bcen nomadic in habit, and intolerant of any admixture with a different people. Dcalli of M. aguerre. The death of the celebrated discoverer of the' daguerreotype took place at Brie, a village near Faria recently. He distinguished himself early as a scene painter, by the happiness of his ef fect in light and shade. The chapel of Glen- thorn, at the Ambigu, the Rising of the Sun in les Mexicains, were saluted by the audienco with enthusiastic applause. His inventive ge nius then erected the Diorama. Every one re members the series of enormous pictures of ca- thedals,. of Alpine scenery, - producing almost the effect of illusion upon the spectator, and di versified by magical changes of light, which M. Daguerre exhibited in the Regent's Tark, Lon don. Later, he succeeded in immortalizing his name, by fixing the images of the camera ob scura, and realizing, in an instant, effects which leave at an immeasurable distance the most elaborately-finished engraving. , . The Wheat Crop oflS51, The reports from the various grain-growing parts of the Union, indicate that the wheat crops of the present year will be the heaviest ever taken from the earth in the Western States. In Ohio, the crop is a very large and fine one. In New York, Indiana, Michigan; and Wisconsin, the yield is also very large, and the wheat of the very best quality. In Michigan, particular, ly, the yield exceeds anything ever known, even in Michigan. In the northern and western parts of the State, and also in the southern tier of counties, the wheat crop is said to reach from one-quarter to one-third higher than at any pre vious season. It is the same with every other species of grain except corn. Singular. ' The town of Athens, Illinois, has been de prived of several of its most valuable citizens, we quote from the Cincinnati Inquirer, by strange disease, unknown to the physicians. A merchant had received a box of goods from Europe, which he opened in the presence of fivo persons. Every one of these persons took sick and died. The disease soon spread amon? those who attended upon them, and among others. In one family six persons died. A complete panic ensued; and we arc told that more-than one half the people are absent from" the town. Free Flag or Cuba. The great banner of free Cuba, which floated over the procession of Cuban sympathisers in New York, and from other points," is a red tri angular piece, with a white star in the centre. next the staff, from which extend alternate blue and white stripes, three of each. A wicked wag once courted a buxomf housemaid, and when he should have been pre pared to marry her, decamped to parts unknown. "Well, Ann," said her mistress, "you've lost your lover, havn't you ?" "O, no indeed, marm, he'll come back, for I have his promise to marry me, and in writing, too!" "Indeed, let me see it, won't you!'! So out from between the leaves of her Bible, Ann produced a sort of promissory note, reading as follows: "I promise to marry Ann J , ninety days after date, value received. J. B Snooks wonders where all the pillow ca ses go to. He says he never asked a girl what she was making, when she was engaged in white sewing, without having for an answer, " A pil low easel" JCgJ Tim W'ait, the drollest man living, being told one day that he looked rather the worse for wear, replied "The fact is I havn't slept a wink for three nights last night, to-night and to-morrow night J" tS Why is Governor Johnston like Santa Anna ? Because he is stcmmnq it. Why is Governor Johnston like a piece of iron in the hands of a blacksmith? Because he is hound to be beaten. ; Jgj Few envy the mtrit cf othen ta.it har any of their own. - I