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J. 1U1Y. rilL 1'KOII) MISS MAC 1SSUD1L, A LEGEND OF GOTHAM. terribly proud was Miss Mac Bride, T:e very personification of pride, is ac mimie'd along in Fashion's tile, ilown Urcadway on the proper tide When the golden sua was setting: Tercwas pride in the head she carried so high, P;:Je in her lip, and pride in her eye, il a world of pride in the very sigh TLr.t her stately bosom was fretting; A ;':gb that a pair of elegant feet, Sindal'd in satin, should kiss the street lie very same that the vulgar greet ii common leather not over neat Fcr such is the common bootintr : lid Christian tears may well be shed, TLa even aniung the gentlemen bred, lie glorious Day of Morocco is dead, AaJ hay & Martin are reigning instead, a much inferior footing !j 0, terribly proud was Miss Mac Bride, Pr.ai uf her beauty, aud proud of her pride, A'-i jroud of fifty matters beside That wouldn't have borne description ; r.-oui of her wit, proud of her walk, Priud of her teeth and prou i of her talk, i'rcui tf -knowing cheese from chalk,'' vz a very slight inspection! Pr'X'i abroad, ar.d proud at home, Pre-ad wherever she chanced to come, K-in she was glad and when sho was glum, Prond as tiie head of a Saracen f,Ter :he door of a tippling shop, bond as a duchess, proud as a fop, 'Proud as a boy with a bran-new top," Proud Leyond comparison. It seems a singular tldng to say, But her very senses led her astray lUspecting all huurility; I-south, her dull auricular drum, -uald find in Ilumlle enly a "hum"' L.1 heard no sound of "gentle" coma Ii talking about gentility. 'au Lowly meant, she did not know, f r she always avoided "everything low" With care the most punctilious ; Aai still queerer, the audible "tuper-silly" slit never had found -la the adjective supercilious I Tie meaning of Meek she never knew, wt imagined the phrase had something to do -i "Moses" a peddling German Jew, "lo. hke all hawkers the country, Was "a person of no position ;" :4 it seemed to her exceedingly plain, - the word was really known to pertain, c vulgar German it wasn't germaiue, lo a lady of high condition 1 j'tt ter graces, not her grace that was in the "vocative case" !--'J i with the touch of her icy face, Sat very stifiiy npon her 1 n never confessed a favor aloud rne of the simple, .common crowd coldly smiled and faintly bowed, Asvho would say "you do me proud, . Aid do yourself an honor I" Jrjyet the pride'of Miss Mac Erido, though it has fifty hobbies to ride, Had really no foundation ; tDe fabrics that gossips devise a se single stories that often arise -w prow 'till they reach a four story fiize, as merely a fancy creation ! Js ewiona fact as ever was known human nature but often shown IW? 1 rfastle &ml "tte, q ke P'fis of a certain breed, a manage to hve and thrive on feed ' As f 00r " a paviper's pottage. - mJtWlt,5houlti neTer have made her vain, An l fa,CC' sufficiently plain ; Ad "ns until Bh hoarse, --n0te3 a banker's force, "Fc . Such Eotes as we never endorse, n7 acquaintance of ours. f L t td was uncommonly high; W a Sk r ?riJe first PtrMHl Ler eye - ' But iJlu 1 oa tLe neLt of thc 6ky ; Ail in taVin u ewious passion ; g her wealth worth, . People of rank and foshion. - u2Table'tMnConwrth,' Sf Pride of . birth UridSour fice Democracy! " Wrcd years, . . at eTr . F t0 save 11 r2 uneers Is aT -Ughter' flcer9 an,i Jee"' v.iaa Aristocracv. nN11. v"611' Fnch and Spanish,' (rin; ,h litn Dutch an1 Daaiiih, - . ew veins until they vanish . o .Srte COEglomeration. . . VrjWt?TngIo1of "ood Indeed. ' ' D th circulation Depend upon it. mv snnKKlcK ;-.i J our family thread you can't ascend, Without good reason to apprehend ou may find it waxed at the farther end Hy some plebinn vocation. ' Or, worse than that, your boasted lino May end m thc loup of stronger twine. That plagued some worthy relation. But Miss Mac Bride had something besido iter lofty birth to nourish her pride i'cr rich was the old paternal Mac Bride, According to public rumor; And he lived up town, in a splendid square, And kept his daughter on daintiea rare, And gave her gems that were rich and rare. .. j.iicov rings ana tuings to wear, And feathers enough to plume her. An honest mechanic was John Mac &ide 1 As ever an honest calling plied, ' Or graced an honest ditty; For John had worked in his early day In Pots and rearls," the legends say And kept a shop with a rich array With things in the soap and candle way, In the lower part of the city. No rare-avis was honest .T.-.J,n i (That's the latin for sable-swan) I Though in one of his faucy flashes, I A wicked wag, who meant to deride, i Called honest John "Mr. I'hceniz Mac Bride, j Because he rose from his ashes." j Little by Uttle, he grew to be rich, By saving of candle ends and "sich," j Till he reached at last an opulent niche, I No very uncommon afiair; 1 For history quite confirms the law Espresred in the ancient Scottish saw : j A Mickle may come to be mair! ! Alack for many and ambitious beaux, j She hung their hopes upon her nose ;' i ( The figure is quite horatian) ; Until from habit the member grew ! As very a Hook as ever ye knew i To the commonest observation. ; A thriving tailor begged her hand, ' 3ut she gave thc fellow to understand ! By a violent manual action, She perfectly scorn'd the best of his clan, : And reckon' J the ninth of any man, ' An exceedingly vulgar fraction! I Another, whose sign was a golden boot, i Was mortified by a bootless suit, j In a way that was quite appalling; i For though a regular suitor by trade, 1 lie wasn't the suitor to suit tin m,.;, Who cut him off with a saw, and bade. The cobbler keep to his calling. (The muse maid let a secret out; There isn't the faintest shadow of doubt. The folks who oftenest sneer and flout At "the dirty, low, mechanic," Are they, whose sires, by pounding their knees Or .coiling their legs, or trades like these, Contrived to win their children's ease ! Trom poverty's galling manacles.) A rich tobacconist comes and sues, And, thinking the lady would scarcely refuse ' .i. uuu ui iiis vca:ia ana noeral views Began at once with, "If you choose; And could reallv lnvi hm But the lady spoiled Lis speech in a huff. With an answer rough and ready enough, To let him know she was. up to Enuff, ' And altogether abdve him.' A young attorney of winning graee, Was scarce allowed to open his face, Ere Muss Mac Bride had closed his casa With true judicial celerity. For the lawyer was poor, and "seedy" to boot And to say the lady discarded his suit ' Is merely a double verity. ' The last of those who came to court Was a lively beau of thc dapoer sort Without any visible means of support A crime by no means flagrant ' In one who wears an elegant ooat But the very point on which they voto A ragged fellow a vagrant. A courtly fellow was Dapper Jimr Sleek and suple tall and trim, Aud smooth of tongue as neat of limb A maugre his meagre pocket; You'd say from the ditterinr- tn'c ,n That Jim had slept in a cradle of gold, With Fortunatus to rock it. Now Dapper Jim his courtship plied, (I wish the fact could be denied) With an eye to the purse of the old Mac Bride, And really nothing shorter. For he said to himself in his greedy lust, Whenever he dies, as die he must, And yields to heaven his vital trust, He's very sure to come down to dust In behalf of his only daughter. . And the very magnificent Miss Mac Bride, Half in love and half in pride, Quite graciously relented ; And, tossing her head, and turning her "back No token of proper pride to lack, To be a bride without the Mac, With much disdain, consented. Alas, the people who've got their box Of cash beneath the best of locks .Secure from all financial shocks, Should stock their fancy with fancy stocks. And madly rush upon Wall street rocks, - Without the least apology. Alas, that people whose money affairs Are sound beyond all need of repairs, Should ever tempt the bulls and bearg Of Mammon's fierce Zoology. Old John Mac Bride, one fatal day, Became the unresisting prey Of Fortune's undertakers ;. And staking all ou a single die, , Ilis foundered bark went high and dry.' Among the brokers and breakers-. . - ' r At his trade again, to the very shop here, years ago he lei it drop, .. . He follows his ancient calUng; Cheerily too, in poverty's spite, - .And sleeping quite aa sound at night, As when at Fortune's giddy flight, He used to wake with a dizzy fright. From a dismal dream of falling. "WE GO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE WAV ; HEME, Mill ii m But alas, for the haughty Miss Mac Bride, Twas such a shock to her precious pride ! She couldn't recover, although she tried, Her jaded spirits to rally. 'Twas a dreadful change in human affairs, Irom a place "Uptown" to a nook "Upstairs," irom an Avenue down to an aUey! 'Twas little condolence she had, God wot From her troops of friends, who hadn't forgot The airs she used to borrow: They had civil phrase enough' but yet " 'Twas plain to see, that their deepest "re-n-et" Was a dificrcnt thing from sorrow. They owned it couldn't have well been any wors To go from a full to an einrjty purse: To expect a reversion and get a reverse Was truly a dismal feature. ' Butit'wasn't strange they whispered at all That the Summer of pride should have its Fall "a quite accorumg to Mature. And one of thc chaps who made a t un, As if it were quite legitimate fun To be blazing away at every one AVith a regular double loaded gun, Bemark'd that moral transgression Always brings retributive stings, To candle makers as well as kings ; For "making light of cercous thaiss" Was a very wick-cd profession. And vulgar people, the saucy churls, Inquired about " the price of Tearls," Aud mock'd her situation; "She wasn't ruinor! timi- t--,,,..- Because she was poor, she needn't in ope Few people were better off for soap. And that was a consolation. And to make her cup of woe run over. vicsrani, araeni, p lighted lover 1 Was the very first to forsake her; ; " He regretted the step, 'twas true iiiw i;iuy una priue enough for two, But that alone would never do To quiet the butcher and baker. And now the unharr-v Miss Mno P.rU. The merest ghost of her early pride jjvnuus ner lonely position; Cramped in the very narrowest nicha Above the poor and below the rich; Was ever a worse condition ? ilOBAL. Because you flourish in worldly affairi Don't be haughty and r.ut on ; i "iiu luouicui pnue oi station. Don't be proud and turn up your noso At poorer people in plainer clothes, But learn, for the sake of your mind's repose, That wealth is a bubble that comes and troee W!tll I n c- 1 f ... uu irouu fiesn, wherever it grows Is subject to irritation. ' Tlie Floivcr-Girl of Wyoming. - Ingham, the Painter' has left after hfm a por trait of the Flower-Girl of Wyoming, which is regarded ly connoisseurs as a work of art of great merit. Connected with this picture of the Flowcr-Girl, is the following romantic, but real ly authentic fctory: Many years ago a gentleman from England was travelling at his leisure, in the coaches of the United States mail, down thc charming val ley of Wyoming, and on a certain occasion chan ced to tarry for a short time in the village of that name. It was mid summer, and while en joying his after-dinner cigar on the portico of the tavern, a young girl suddenly made her ap pearance, offered for sale, in the innocence of her heart, a basket of fresh flowers. II pur chased a handsome bouquet, and when the coach was ready, continued his journey. AVeeks had passed on, but wherever he wandered he was continually haunted by the surpassing love liness of the unknown flower-girl of Wyoming, and he soon found himself once more a sojour ner in the viUage inn. He had by thi3 time be come so deeply interested in the stranger girl that he had made many inquiries about her con dition, and found that she was the only daugh ter of poor but highly respectable parents. With these parents he finally became acquainted, and in the process of time obtained permisi ion to place the daughter at one of the principal sem inaries in the country. While she was storirg her mind with knowledge, her benefactor was living in England. Time passed on : he retur ned to Wyoming, found the rustic flower-girl an accomplished lady, offered her his hand in mar riage, was accepted aud married, ; and after set tling a property on his American parents, crossed the Atlantic with his bride, and settled in one Of the pleasant vales of England, where he now lives in the enjoyment of every thing which Wealth and education can afford. The picture in question is an actual portrait, and was taken from a sketch which thc artist painted on the very day the English stranger purchased a bo quetof the Flower-Girl of Wyoming. A Brace of Cutting Impromptus. Fox, the celebrated orator, was one day told by a lady whom ho visited, that she did not care " three skips of a louse for him." He immediate, ly took out his pencil and wrote the following lines : x "A lady has told me, and in ber own house, That she cares not for me 'three skips of a louse,' I forgive the dear creature for what she has said, Since woman will talk of what runs in their heads.' After Burke had finished his extraordinary speech against Warren Hastings, a friend of the latter wrote the following impromptu, which can hardly be surpassed ; " Oft have I wondered that on Irish ground No venomous reptile ever yet was found ; -. The secret stands revealed in nature's work She taved h'.r venom to create a Bubjli I" WHEN THEY WTrt ,P" 1U LE4D WE CEASE TO Anotbcr Project, and a Wild Cn uuxu, an LDghsh naval officer, who be- . b " . rCCCnt "eyiug expedition at Bch nng Straits, offers to go in search of Sir John Franklin over land. He proposes to travel by way of St. Petersburg, Moscow, Tobolsk, Irkutz and Jakoutz, to the mouth of the Kolyma, and ther CO commence exploring thc coast of Siberia east and west, a distance Uttle short of 10 OtJ miles. He does not ask for a party, but merely for a companion and servant: and he tlm, - the expense attending the journey would be tri- mg,jn comparison to fitting out ships. The English Admiralty declined this offer; but a -reed to grant film an unlimited leave of ab.c if i, could prosecute the journey by private subscrip tion, lie will, therefore, apply to thc Russian Emperor for free conveyances through hi minions. He proposes to proceed first to St. i etersourg, and lrom thence to Moscow bv rail way; from Moscow to Irkutz Teligi, on sledges, a distance of 8544 miles, and from Irkutz toJa koutz, also on sledges, a distance of 1821 miles. The whole journey occupuying about i months. At Jakoutz all regular travelling conveniences terminates, and the 1200 miles to the river Kol yma, as well as the 2000 miles of search, would have to be performed in a manner best adapted to the resources of the country. In 1S54 the task might be completed, if, unfortunately, be fore that time, no traces should have been found of tho missing ships. Kxagsreration. If there be any one mannerism that is univer sal among mankind, it is that of coloring too highly the things we describe. We cannot be content with a simple relation of truth we must exaggerate, we must have "a little too much red iu the brush." Who ever heard cf a dark night that was not "pitch dark ?" of a stout man that wa3 not "as strong as a horse ?" or of a miry road that was not "up to the knee ?"' We would walk "fifty mUcs on foot" to see that man vho Lever caricatures the subject on which he speaks. But where is such a man to be found ? From "rosy morn to dewy eve," in our conversation we are constantly outraging thc truth. If some- nuamaiciui in tue mgut, "we have scarcely had a wink of sleep;" if our sleeves get a little uamp iu a shower, we arc "as wet as if dragged through a brook;" if a breeze blow uy while we are in thc "chops of the channel," thc waves arc sure to "run mountains high;" and if a man grow ricbVwe all say' that "Le rolls in money" No later than yssterday, a friend, who would shrink from' wilful misrepresentations, told us hastily, as he passed, that the newspaper Lad "nothing in it but advertisements." COOd. The editor of the Bunkum lag S(if, heard Jenny Lind sing during her first series of con certs in New York, and thus speaks of the fact : "We have heard the celebrated Swedish cocka trice. We traveled some miles (free ticket) and waited on Barnum. Sez he, "we give no tickets to the outside press." Sez we, (with an edito rial leader in our eye,) "we'U buy one." Sez he, shaking our hand, "that's right." We bought a walking ticket, and took a stand, away out in thc Bay of New Yoxk. ' We heard her. A friend of ours, when shc"got up in a-b-ub said, "cut my straps and let nic go up!" We said, "don't ex pose yourself." Her voice is not square, it is cf an oval texture. It will suit the ear of Bunkum. When she got up in the susUnuto we stood agash; but when she tried it on with the jlauio, the ollijato, and sunk down to the crupper-noics, wo knocked under. She has no merit as an ar tist, but as a singer, she is good! That's our opinion. The price of good seats is six dollar?, but the "Outaide Press" can get walking tickets at one dollar." Iompeii. A recent letter from an American gentleman in Naples, says : "Vesuvius is calmly smoking, and seems dis posed to rest himself from he fatigues of Lis devastating labors of last' year. Pompeii is slowly appearing above ground. About 20 la borers are kept at work, who managed to get off a cartload of earth a day frem the superincum bent city. Not ono half of the entire city is yet excavated. The earthly mound which covers it is an exceedingly beautiful and rich vineyard, with houses of peasants scattered ver its sur face. A portion of the sea wall has recently been unearthed, which goes to confirm the opin ion that thc sea. now nearly one milo distant, once laved the walls of PompeiL" : The Colossus of Rhodes. The Colossus of Rhodes was a bronze figure, fashioned by Chares, a disciple of Lysippus, three hundred years before Christ; and probably thc idea was first conceived in the copper smith ery of -Lysippus. Its height was one hundred and five feet, . Its thumbs were a fathom in cir cumference, and each finger is said to have Lecu fuUy as large as an ordinary stutue.- Ships passed between its legs on entering the harbor of Eixotks, which they spanned. This statue was upset by an earthquake, when it had stood seventy years, and after lying on the ground for nine hundred years, was finadly 6old to a Jew merchant by thc Saracens, who loaded nino hundred camels with the fragments. FOLLOW Tiic First Lesson. No teaching like a mother's ! no lessons sink into the virgin so cf childhood so deeply as those learned at a loving mother's knee; the seed sown thus and then, may be hidden for years ; but it fctiil lives, and influences the life and actions of the learner ever thereafter. Ill fu.re.sit with the man who has no remem brance of kneeling; as a child," beside his moth er's knee, and learning his first lessons from J.rr lips. He knows nothing of life's holiest memo ries; and great is the resposibilitv of that moth er who confides her child's first tiachin-r, another who allows a stranger to write on the tablets of her child's mind that which will bias its whole life career, and be as indcjtructablc as the mind itself. The lives cf thc great men of history, most of them and when we say great men, we understand good men prove this. They have looked back to the time when their teacher wa3 their mother, and thence have tra ced a silent influence that was ever about them "still, small voice" heard amid the loud tur moil of bu?y life ; though "Chances mocked and changes filled the cup of alternation," j. that chiefly led them onward, and set them in high places in the sight of their follows. And great men have loved the memory of thece mothers ; other loves may have possessed them the love of honor, of fame, of woman ; but the Jove of her who framed their cliildish ac cent and fvrnied their minds, has transcended all ; set as a star apart, and worshipped when they look to heaven. Other loves may fall in to "the sere, the yellow leaf;" mny have been mingled with suffering, and have left regret and disappointment behind ; but this, beginning with the first breath of being, ends only with its lat. It docs no good. Some tins have a seeming compensation or apology, a present graification of some sort ; but niijrcr has none. A man feels no better lor it. It is really a torment ; and when thc storm of passion has cleared away it leaves one to see that he has been a feci ; and he has made himself a fool in the eyes of others too. Who thinks well of an ill-natur6d man, who has to be approached in the most guarded and cautious way ? Who wishes him for a neigh bor, or partner in business? He keeps all a bont hira in the same stato of mind as if they were living next to a hornet's nest or a rabid animal. And as to prosperits in business, one gets along no better for getting angry. What if business is perplexing, and everything "goes by contraries" will a fit of passion make the winds more propitious, the grounds more pro ductive, the markets more favourable ? Will a bad temper draw customers, pay notes, and make creditors better natured? An angry man adds nothing to the welfare of society. Since then, anger is useless, needless, disgraceful, without thc least apology, and found only "iu the bosoni of fools" why should it be indulged at all ? Patronage to I'rinlers. It is stated that the day after General Jack son's inauguration, twenty four editors of news papers, marched in procession to the President 'to get their pay.' Poor old man. he was to be pitied. Among them was Noah, of the Advo cate, and Hill of the Patriot. Noah, was a man of ease, and to appearance, well fed. Hill was lean and a very Cassius. Noah, a cunnin shrewd fellow, stopped thc procession and pro posed a different order. 'Here!' said he 'Hill you are the ugliest of the clan, and of hungry aspect enough, 1 am fat and plump. You will lead U3 ou, ; and as soon as the old President sees this picture of starvation; he wiU surrender at once." Well it worked like a charm. They entered the palace in this order; the President was sent for and entered the room. He started back Good God! gentleman, take all you want." The old hero, though his nerves never forsook hin in battle, could not stand this but surren dered at once, and twenty three of twenty four obtained at once, and the twenty fourth; for be ing left out, let out the whole storv. Tlie President and his Coachman. Hon. T. Corwin tells the following story of the present incumbent of the White House : President Fillmore, upon his elevation to th Presidential Chair, was ohli with thc dignities of Lis new faUtion, to purchase ' . .diuu,;c uoiaes me horses were obtain ed aud Mr. Preston, of South Carolina, offered to dispose of his fine coach, which was accor dingly sent to the new President for his insncc tion. A Irish Jemmy, the White House Coachman, was on hand when Mr. Fillmore called at the stable to insnect it. and wish; Jemmy a- to the fitness of the coach, asked if he thought it fine enough. " Och, it's a good coach, your lienor," said Jcmiuy. But is it good enough, ' Jemmy ? " said thc President. Jeiumy, with a doubtful scratch of the head answered again, in the same manner; when Mr! FiUmorc, wanting a positive answer suid : "Jemmy, do you think a second hand carriage would do for a President? " "Och," said Jemmy, "remember vour honor's M QOn,.1 linn.l T ? 1 . 1 . " - -"'- uiuiu x ivsiueui ana sure it 3 just right The President took the coach. ' Q VOLUME 8. HHMBEH II. From Our Exchanges. One of tbe most distinguished of the Hunga rian Generals who were takc-u prisoners and ex ecuted by the Austrian?, bad the singular nam, of Ernest Kiss. He was a wealthy proprietor owning twenty-three Tillages, and "was a man of excessive personal elegance as well as of chival ric courage. HejrcguJarly sent Lis linen all tha way from Hungary to Paris to be washed was, in similar respects, a D'Orsav .. . Bayard. His coolness in danger was remarkablo and it is told of him that one dav. within of an Austrian battery, making an observation -rcu ms servant to brir- him a cup of chocolate. A shot took it from his hand and killed his horse. " Clumsy ra-cals V saij KjS9 " they have upset my breakfast." When taken out with three others to be shot, he was superbly dressed. The order was given to fire, and hia companions fell, while he stood untouched. "iou LaTe forgotten me," said Kiss in his usual tone of voice. The corporal of the platoon step ped up and fired, and, the baU striking Lim in the forehead, he fell dead without a struggle. The Editor of the Cincinnati Enquirer recent ly saw a man who had a pocket knife upward, of eighty years old. The blade was about four in.-hes long, and an inch wide, roundine at tb , point. It was manufactured by an Indian in th Mackinarr country. The blade had formed part of a sword taken from a Frenchman in the cel. ebrated French and Indian war. The bone on one side of the handle was from the thigh of an Indian, and that on the other from the thicK- , bone of an English soldier, killed on the Heights ot Abraham, m Canada, where Gen. Wolfe lost his life. They seem to be lenient to roguery in the back woods if the roguery is smartly executed. A young woman lately dressed herself in male at tire, Ftole her father's horse, and went off to ! SCCK cr fortune. She was caup ht. however and I bought home. The editor who tells the story comment;, upon it thus . " She is a girl who will make her way in the world, and presents a riiLt smart chance for seme fellow who wants a wife." The passenger cars of one of the English rail way companies furnish eleven miles cf seat-room which would 'accommodate forty thousand per sons. The surface cf the goods' cars is equal to eleven acres, sufficient for the stowage of forty one thousand tons. If all the wheels of all tLa cars belonging to thc company were made into one great wheel, that great wheel would be seventy-two miles in circumference. A farmer in Scotland, whose hbuse was re cently attacked at night by five robbers fought them for an hour, with horse-pistol and revolver, his wife standing by loading the pistols, and ex horting Lim to " take ste-dy aim." The rascala at length, by burning damp straw at thc bottom of thc ttairs, forced the heroic pair to a surren der ; when the canny Scot plied them with whis key to such a degree, that three of them wcra found next morning in a drunken sleep ia a ditch near thc house, and probably aU the stolen pro perty will be recovered. Gov. Young, of Utih, the Mormon Territory, has, it is said, ninety wives. He drove along tho streets, a few days since, with sixteen cf them in a long carriage fourteen of them having each an infant at her hosom. This stut-mcnt is en dorsed by tho returning Chief Justice and Sec retary. It is very well, we think, that President Fillmore bus decided upon removinc this mpr- . ican Turk ; for a innn with siich a family to look 1 j- . " aitvr, can have precious little time to attend to State affiurs. A letter from Washington dated the 11th inst., says that Dr. Jackson of Philadelphia, who was sent for to attend Mr. Clay, came down with his friend J osiah llandalh The Doctor declared the disease bronchitis of the right lung. ' Mr. Clay requiring repose, will, at his physician's request leave here to-morrow or next day for Philadel phia, to stay either at Dr. Jackson's house, or at that of his friend's, Jesiah Randall. It is thought that Mr. Clay will yet recover by skillful treat ment. The American Cemetery, in Mexico, construc ted with funds supplied by Congress, Las been finished. It is near the city of Mexico, and the remains of the Americans who died or were kil led during the Mexican war are to be removed to it. It is laid out along side of thc EuglLh burial ground, occupuying about two acres, and enclosed by a thick wall, fifteen feet in heb-ct - tac entrance is turough an arched gate-way, a bout twice the height of the wall ; upon the arch is a figure of a cross. Tho whole work is of an appropriate and substantial order. lhe work on the Washinston National Monu ment has been suspended for the season. It has now attained the height of one hundred and four feet from the surface of the ground, and if it advances with the same rapidity as it has so far done, it wiU in a few y ears reach its anex at an elevation of nve hundred and seventeen feet, for ming the loftiest structure in the Iau ltussel, Union candidate for audi tor in Mississippi, being called cn for a speech, began thus: ' ' "Fellow citizens, you have called on me for a few remarks. 1 have none to make. 1 Lave no prepared speech. Indeed I am no speaker I do not desire to be a rpcak;r; I only want to b an auditor. rf i t -A - ! 1 f t j v. '