" WE GO WHE2E DEMOCRATIC PEINCIFLE3 POINT THE WAY ;WHEH THEY CEASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO FOLLOW.' roLFME mi. t K 31 s. Ihe "MO LX'TAX 8EXTIXEL" is publish id every Thursday morning, at Two Dollars per juaum, payable half yearly. So subscription will be taken fur a shorter perU'J th in six months ; ami no paper will be j:sO"Ut;nucl until till arrarages are paid. ..A failure U notify a discontinuance at the expira tion of the term subscribed for, will be consid ered as a new engagement. fZi. .11' VERTl.SEMEXTS will be inserted t the loll'jwing rates: 50 cents per square for tue tirst insertion : 75 cents for two insertions; 5.1 fur throe insertions : and l2-" cents per square t'crvirv subsequent insertion. A liberal reduc tion made to those who advertise by the year. A'l :i Iwrtisomenls handed in must have the j.r ; r namovr of insertions marked thereon, t,r tin .' v;!i be puhlUhed uiuil forbidden, and c'-ur.'i 1 in aeoovdauec with the above terms. JV.A: letters and communications to insure ;t:i.:..i"U must be ji'tt j.aal. .1. J. I21E1. L - - PAY T2IL" PRU'TUl. The following has to be published every fall, &r.J we inny a? well do it now as at any other Lsie. 0 here goes : Here comes winter, here comes winter, Sit'.'rius of hall and snow and sleet Taj the Printer I'yy the Printer, Let him Warm his hands sud feet. Ilor,' tomes winter, here comes winter, Whitening every hill and d:i!e, Pay the Printer, pay the Printer, tend your money by the mail. T.iy the Printer, pay the Printer, A'.! remember his just due, la e M winter, in cold winter, lie wants cash as well as you. Jame-; Ilittliiinaii antl llic TTacs oi" "Labor. The following is that portion, cf Mr. Cuc'aan v.i'i fj.eech in the U. S. Senate, iu January, 1S10, &u the Independent Treasury, which has ti'ea so much and frequently misrepresented ly the Whigs : "Eat the Senator from Kentucky (Mr. Clav) leaves no stone unturned. He says that the- fr;enis of the Independent Treasury desire tj j sMblisu au exclusive metallic currency, as tho j """u au uca.uigj lurougaout me LUion; tuJftiso, to redvtca the wagss cf the poor man's labors so that the rich employe may be enabled tu seli his manufactures at a lower price. Now, ; .r, l deny the correctness cf both these propo- I hundred aud sixty-five broken hanks to which I i tions, and, in the firs: place, I, for one, am j have referred? Certainly it was not the keen rut m fiver of estaolishiug au exclusive metal- and wary speculator, who snuffs danger from to currency fur the people of this country. I j afar. If you were to make tho search, you desire to see the banks greatly reduced in uum- i would find more broken bank notes in the cot Ut; and would, if 1 coull, confine their accom- 1 tage3 of the laboring poor thau any where else. mvJatious to such loans or discounts, tor limited i And these miserable shin-plasters, whore are r"i ) Is, to the commercial, manufacturing, and i they ? After the revulsion of 187, laborers t'il.ng classes of the community, as the ordi- ' wero glad to obtain employment on any terms; tiry course of their business might render j and they received it npon the express condition n-eesaury. 1 never wish to see farmers and that they should accept this worthless trash in a?cLan;cs and professional men tempted by the 1 payment. Sir, an entire suppression of all fic.hty of obtaining bunk loans for long periods, j bank notes of a lower denomination than the to abandon their own proper aud useful aud value of one week's wages of the laboring man respectable spheres, and rush into wild and ; is absolutely necessary for Lis protection. He titravagant speculation. 1 would, if I could, ought always to receive his wages in gold and riJically reform the present banking system, so : silver. Of all men on the earth, tho laborer is 3 to confine it within such limits as to prevent most interested in having a sound aud stable ture suspensions of specie payments; and ' currency. w t:iout exception, I would instantly deprivo j All other circumstances being equal, I agree and every bank of its charter, which with the Senator from Kentucky that that coun MulJ again suspend. Establish these or miu- j try is most prosperous, where labor command reforms, and give us a real specie basis for j the highest wages. 1 do not, however, mean by "Piiper circulation, by increasing the deuom- I the terms "highest wages," the greatest uomi-i-auouof banknotes first to ten, and afterwards i nal amouut. During tho Kevolutionury war, l'j twenty dollars, and I shall then be the friend I one day's work commanded a hundred dollars Lr't the enemy of banks. I know that the exist- j of continental paper; but this would scarcely of banks and the circulation of bank paper j have purchased a breakfast. The more proper -re so identified with the habits of our people j expression would be, to say that, that Country - mij cannot be abolished, even if this wero ; -i'ULle. To reform, and not t dcsinw motto. To confine them to their appropriate j, . - , uu 10 prevent tnem irom nunisterm tOt' I J2 iq..It of wild and reckless sneculatinn 'lv ! i J J tj be d'S1"Ut l0aUS issues' is a11 wuicu 0 uSbt tuccJ3 liUt B 1 tlia11 Sa" If exl,cri" Iroveit t0 be impossible, to enjoy j ,f 2 which well regulated banks would la , at tlje sani time, continuing to iriT Vhich tLe Wild excesses of tlie J'i.t banks have hitherto entailed upon the try, then I should consider it the lesser evil la-cr" . tLCm aUSetLer- W to State Legis- tLat? Sh - l tl'eir duty' 1 d DOt LcUeYe ' tvcr become necessary to decide on ?eU" UUmiUtiVe Ktu"6 U.lso cl'ged by the Senator from i,e" Wltl1 a dtsire to reduce the wages of urmeaUr.maUS labr' We have becu oftc !s soiuttrriinuns n our 8idc of the Louse- 11 Scuu-or -nCW Under tbe 8un' to Lear tho 10 vai"n'i lU fri0nJs attribute to us a desire of'tL We'lllhy nnufacturcr, at the ex .;., m, ; lab"-ing man aud the mechanic. 12 tLe tl '7'' 1 re'peci the lah(ring man. Labor tCf "l0n f tL WCaltL f eVCry couatr 5 5P;ct) b J"ec lulJorers of the North deserve re- ce lht'ir l'rohity aud their intelli- .v.wm iuui i tnouia uo tliem all the rminlnoii .1 .1 CB1. jrin-, lnost consideration for the titutfo man From thc veiy nature of. our :hhS' Whe(;l of frtuneis constantly i-iv ,? Td produciuS such mutations in pro comc t tLe WealtLy U1n of to-day may be a'th l0&r laLorer &f to-morrow. Truly wuu takes to itself wings and "flies lHrg frtune rarely lasts beyond the third generation, even if it endure 80 long. We must all know instances of individuals obliged to labor for their daily bread, whose grand fathers were men of fortune. The reenlar mo- cess of society would almost seem to consist of the efforts of one class to dissipate the fortunes which they have inherited, whilst another class, by their industry and economy, are regularly rising to wealth. We have all, therefore, a common interest, as it is our common duty, to protect the rights of the laboring man; and if I believed for a moment that this bill would prove injurious to him, it should meet my un qualified opposition. Although this bill will not have as great an influence, as I could desire, yet, as far us it goes, it will benefit the laboring mau as much, and probably more, than any other class of society. What is it he ought most to desire? Constant employment, regular wages, aud uni form reasonable prices for the necessaries and comforts of life which he requires. Now, sir, what Liis been his condition under our system of expansions and contraction ? lie has suffered more by them thaii any other class of society. The rate cf his wages is fixed and known; aud they are the last to rise with the increasing expansion, and the first to ."all when the corres ponding revulsion occurs. lie still continues" t j receive his djllar per day, whilst the price of every article wh.ch ha consumes is rapidly rising, lie is at length uade to feel that, al though he nominally earns p.3 much, or even more than he did foi mer'y, yet, I'r-. m tSe in creased prices of til 'Le neeess-u-ies'of life, he cannot support his fiu.ily. Hence the strikes for higher wages, ud the uneasy and cocking feelings which have at difi.-rcut periods, existed unions; the laboring classes. Lut the expansion at length reaches the exploring point, and what dues the laboring ian now suffer? lie is for a season thrown out of employment altogether. Our manufactures s.re suspended; our public works re stopped; our.piiva.te enterprises of di lit rent kinds, are abandoned ; and, whilst osiers r.re a.Lle to weather the storm, he can scarcely ootaLi tho ntiutus of bare subsistence. Agai;:, sir, v.ho, do you iuiipose, held the greater part of the worthless paper of. the one i most prosperous where labor commands the greatest reward, where one day's labor will pro cure not the greatest nominal amount of depre ciated enrwiifiv. lint nwit nf tlin nnntu-i f .m.l ' iv j uim comforts i,f life. If. (!ir-n.fi-o vnn' vI.a..i,i !.. " ' J-VKM. . I U U I U J 1 LI somc degree, reduce the nominal price paid for IuLor by reducing the amount of your bank is- sues within reasonable aud safe limits, and es- tablishing a metallic basis for your paper circu lation, would this injure the loborer? Certainly not; because the prices of all the necessaries and comforts of life .are reduced in the same proportion, and he will be able to purchase more of them for one dollar in a sound state of the currency, thau he could have done,, in the days of extravagant expansion, for a dollar and a quarter. So far from injuring, it will greatly benefit the laboring man. . It will insure to him constant employment and regular prices, paid iu a sound currency, which, of nil thiags, he ought most to desire; and it will save him from being involved in ruin by a recurrence of thoso periodical expansions and contractions of tho currency, which have hitherto convulsed the country. . , . Tho sound state of the currency will have another most happy effect upon the laboring man. lie will receive , his wages in gold and silver; and this will induce Lim to lay up, for future use, such a portion of them as he can spare, after satisfying Lis immediate wants. This he will not do at present, because he knows not whether thc trash which he is now compelled to receive as money, will continue to be of nny value a week or a month hereafter. A knowledge of this fact tends to banish econ omy from his dwelling, and induces him to expend all Jus wages as rapidly as possible, lest they may become worthless on his hands." EBENSBIIM, TIIMAY, JiSOJRY 22, 1852. J' rem UIIsoh's Tales 0 the JJordcrs. THE SOLDIER'S RETI KX Seven or eight years ago, I was travelling be tween Ikrwick. and Selkirk, and, having started at the crowing of the cock, I had left IVIelros before four in the afternoon. On arriving at Abbotsford, I perceived a Highland soldier, ap parently fatigued as myself, leaning upon a walking stick, and gazing intently on the fairy palace of the magician, whose wand is since broken, but hose magic still remains. I am uo particular disciple of Lavatcr's, yet the man carried his soul upon his face, and we were friends at the first glance. He wore a plain Highland' bonnet, and a coarse gray coat, but toned to the throat. His dres bespoke him to belong only to the ranks, but there was a digni ty in his manner, and a fire, a glowing language iu his eyes, worthy of a chieflian. His height might exceed five feet nine, and his age about thirty. The traces of nianly beauty were still upon his cheeks, but the sun of a western hemis phere had tinged them with a sallow hue, and imprinted untimely furrows. Our conversation related chiefly to the scenery around us, and we had pleasantly journeyed to gether two or three miles, when we arrived at a little sequestered burial ground by the way side, near which there was neither church nor dwel ling. Its low wall vns thinly covered with turf, and we sat down to rest. My con.i.anion became silent and melancholy, aai his eyes wandered anxiously among the graves. "Here," said he, -'sleep some of my father's children, who died in infancy." He picked up :i. small stone from the ground, and throwing it gently about ten yards, " that," added he, " i- the very spot. Hut, thank Clod ! no grave-stone, has becu raised during my. ab sence. Iti-j a token I shad find my parents living and," continue 1 he, wi:h a s.gh, "mny I also find their, love. It is Uard, sir, when the heart of a parent turned against his own child." . . " " . . lie dropped his head upon hu breast for a few moments, and wa siin?, and hastily raising his fore-fifigsr to 'his eyes, seemed to dash away r solitary tear. Tlteu 'turning to me, he con tinued . . . l'ou may ; think sir, this is weakness, in a soldier; but human hearts beat beneath a red coat. ' My father, whose name is Campbell, and -who was brought from Argyleshire, is a wealthy farmer in this neighborhood. Twelve years ago, I loved a being gentle as summer moon. AVc were children together, and she grew iu beauty on my sight, as the star of evening steals into 1 glory through the twilight. But she was poor ; and portionless, the daughter of a mean shepherd, J aud our attachment offended my father. He ( commanded me to leave her forever. I could not, and he commanded me to leave Ids house. ' I wandered, I knew not, and I cared not whither. Hut I will not detain you with my history. In my utmost need, I met a sergeant of the forty second, who was then upon the recruiting ser vice, and in a few weeks I joined the regiment of proud hearts. I was at Brussels when the wolf and thc raven sang at midnight through the strceis. It was a herald of glory and death. There were three Highland regiments of us three joined in one joined in rivalry, in love, and iu purpose ; aVJ, thank Fate ! I was preseut when the Scots Grays, flying to our iiid, raised the electric shout, 'Scotland forever!' ' "Scot land forever !' returned our tnrtancd clansmen; 'Scotland forever!' revcrbated as from the hearts we had left behiud us, and 'Scotland forever!' re-echoed Victory! Heavens," added he, start ing to his feet, and grasping his staff, as the enthusiasm of the past came gushing back upon his soul, " to have joined in that shout was to have lived an eternity in the vibration of a pen dulum." In a few moments, the animated soul that gave eloquence to his tongue, drew itself back into thc chambers of humanity, and resuming his scat upon the low Avail, he continned "I left my own regiment with the prospect of promotion, and have since served in thc West Indies, but have heard nothing of my father nothing of my mother nothing of her I Jove !" While he was speaking, the grave digger, with a pickaxe and spade over his shoulder, entered the ground. He approached within a few yards of where we sat. He measured off a narrow piece of earth it encircled the little stone that the soldier had thrown to mark out the burial place of his family. Convulsions rushed over the features of my companion. He shivered ; he grasped my arm ; his lips quivered ; Lis breathing became short and loud ; thc cold sweat etood trickling from his temples ; he sprang over the wall; he rushed toward the spot, " Man!" he cried in agony, " whose grave is that?" ... "Hoot! awa wi' ye," said the grave digger, starting back at his manner, "what ua' away is that to gliff a body ?, Arc ye daft!" "Answer me I" cried the soldier, seizing his, hand " whose grave whose grave is that?" " Mercy me !" replied the man of death, "ye are surely out of your head; it's an auld body they ca'd Adam Campbell's grave ; now are ye anything the wiser for speeriu ?" "My father!" cried my comrade, as I np- H . . U1S nanus togetner, he bent his head upon my shoulder, and wept aloud. I will not dwell upon the painful scene. Du ring his absence, adversity had given the fortune of Lis father to the wind, and he bad -died in fen humble cottage, unlaiaenttd by tie friends of prosperity. . . ... . At the request of my fellow traveller, I accom panied Lim to the house of mourning. Two or three poor cottagers sat around the fire. The coffin, with the lid open, lay across the table near the window. A few white hairs fell over the white face of the deceased, which seemed to articulate clearly that he died from sorrow rather than from age. The son pressed his lips to his father's cheek. He groaned in spirit and was troubled. He raised his head iu agony, and, in a voice almost inarticulate with grief, exclaimed inquiringly, "My Mother!" The wondering peasants started to their feet, and in silence, pointed to a lowly bed. He hastened forward he" fell pn his knees by the bed-side." "My mother ! O, my mother !" he exclaimed, " do you too leave me I am your own son your own Willie; Lave you, too, forgotten me, mother?" She, too, lay upon her death bed, and the tide of life was fast ebbing; but the remembered voice of her beloved son drove it back for a moment. She opened her eyes ske attempted to raise her feeble hands, and they fell upon his head. She spoke; he alone knew the words that she uttered they seemed accents of min gled anguish of joy and of blessing. Per seve- ; ral minutes Le bent over the bed and wept bit- j terly. He held her withered hand in Lis: he started; and the Land beheld was still and jlifeless! ' j He wept no longer; Le gazed from the dead ; kody of his father to that of Lis mother; Lis I eyes wandered wildly from, one to the other, he I smote his hand upon his brow, and threw him - se'f npou a chair, while misery transfixed him, as if a thunderbolt had entered Lis soul. 1 will not give a description of the melancnoly funeral and the solitary mourner. The father's obsequies- were delayed, and the son laid both his parents in the same grave. Several months passed away before I gained information respecting the sequel of my little story. After his parents were laid in the dust, Vt'illiam Campbell, with a sad and anxious heart. made inquiry after Jeanie Leslie, tLe object of his cany afiecUons, to wLout we Lave alluded, For several weeks his search was fruitless; but at lengtn ne icarneu mat property had been leit her father by a distant relative, and that he now resided somewhere in Dumfrieshire. In the same garb which I have already de scribed, the soldier set out upon his journey. With little difficulty he discovered the house. It resembled such as are occupied by the higher class of farmers. The front door stood open. He knocked, but no one answered. He ap- proached along the passage he heard voices in ncr form is fragile and slender, and her move an apartment ou Lis right agaiu Le knoeked, j meuts and attitudes are very graceful. TLere is but was unheeded, die entered uninvited. A a natural ease in Ler step which is charming, group was standing in the middle of the floor, j Xeither Ler legs nor feet have anything rewarka and among them a minister, commencing the . Uo about thenu Her leg is rather common, aud marriaee service of the Church of Scotland. The bride Lung her Lead sorrowfully, and tears were stealing dowu her checks she was his own Jea nie Leslie. Tho clergyman paused. : The bride's father stepped forward angrily, and enquired, "What do you want, sir?" but instantly recog nizing his features, he seized Lim by the breast, and in a voice Lalf choked witL passion, contin ued "Sorrow tak' ye for a scoundrel! What bro't ye Lere, an the mair especially at a time like this ? Sir, I say Willie Campbell, get out o' my house, an' never darken my door again wi' your ne'er-do-well countenance." A sudden shriek followed the mention of his name, and Jeauio Leslie fell into the arms of her bridesmaid. 'Teace, Mr. Let lie," said the soldier, pushing the old man aside, "since matters arc thus I will only stop to say farewell for auld laug syne ; you cannot deny me that." He passed towards thc object of Lis young love. She spoke not, she moved not ; Le took Ler Land, but sbe seemed unconscious of what he did. And, as Le again gazed npon her beau tiful countenance, absence became as a dream upon Ler face. The very language he had ac quired since their separation was set aside, Nature triumphed over art, and Le addressed Ler in the accents in which he Lad first breathed love, and won her heart. "Jeanie," said Le pressing Ler Land between Lis "it's a sair thing to say farewell, but at present I maun to say it. This is a scene I nev er expected to witness ; for oh, Jeanie ! I could have trusted to your truth and to your love, as the farmer trusts to seedtime aud Lurvest, and is not disappointed. OL, Jeanie, woman ! this is like separating thc flesh from the bones, and burning the marrow ! But yo maun be aniiher's now farewell ! farewell !' "No, no ! my ain Willie !" the exclaimed, re covering from the agony of stupefaction, "my hand is still free, and my heart has ever been yours save, Willie, save me I" and fchc threw herself into his arms. Thc bridegroom looked from one to another, nnx'loring them to commence an attack upon the intruder, but Le looked in Tain. The father again seized the old graycoat of the soldier, and almost rending it in twain, discovered, under neath, to the astonished company, the richly laced uniform of a British officer. He dropped the fragment of the outer garment in wonder, and at the same time dropping his wrath, he exclained, "Mr. Campbell or what are you? will you explain yourself!" A few words explained all. The bridegroom a wealthy middle-aged man, without a heart, left thc house, gnashing his teeth. Badly as our military honors are conferred, merit is not always overlooked, even in this country, where money is everything, and the ' Scottish soldier Lad obtained the promotion Le deserved. Jcanie's joy was like a dream of Heaven. In a few weeks she gave her hand to Capt. Camp bell, of His Majesty's Bcgiment of Infan try, to whom long years before, the had given her young heart. First Appearance cr Ioia Montez, on tiie Aiiierlcim Singe. The New York Courier and Enquirer, in no ticing the first appearance of the renowned Lola Montcz, at the Broadway Theatre, on Monday night, says: " Though the audience was large, It was net at all brilliant, owing to the almost entire absence of ladies; the appearance of the house being rather that presented at a political me&Ung, than a theatrical entertainment. She was received with vociferous arplavse upon Ler first appear ance, bnt succeeded in arousing no mtrks of ' TCIT "rar7n admiration t:ur:i: the performance, ! As a daneer she Las not much merit, and webe- ! Lve Las never achieved muck reputation. Her j person 13 slight almost to racagerness; her eyes j and rr vtry fine, and the expression of her i face TC17 seductive." 1 Webb is, no doubt, induced towrite thus ! slightingly of Lolc, on account of L;r hostility to Austria and frici.J slip fcr perfect liberty. The llernU of last evening, thus discourecs on the same subject: . " In a few minutes she made her appearance 011 the staircase, representing a winding path down a mountain, when she was greeted with tremendous applause. She remained on the spot for some time, courtesying low to thc audi ence, who continued to applaud Ler for beveral minutes. She then, descended irracefully, and j on reachiDg the stage, was received with another burst of applause, which the again acknowledged wjth a lady -like bow. She was neatly dressed , a3 a Tyrolean; she looked very thin and cirbsh far younger than she is; in fact, not more than sixteen years. She ha3 an uncommon face ; it is of an aristocratic mould, and mein, and there is something fascinating in the expression. But she is not so very beautiful after alL Her eye is a fine blue, which is set off by beautifully arched brows; but Ler mouth is by no means pretty. Her chin and neck, however, are fine. Ler foot certainly neither andalusian or diminu tive. The colored engravings iu tLe shop win dows are not like Ler. SLe is not so en Ion point or so fleshy as they represent her. . "The whole performance lasted exactly 40 minutes, and just concluded at 9 o'clock. Lcn tLe curium fell, she was cal!ed for with great vehemence, and on coming in front, was re- I ceivod with great cheeriug. She said in a weak voice, and rather foreign accent, pronoun- ciug the article 'the' as 'de' 'Ladies and gen tlemen 1 thank you from the bottom of my heart for the very kind reception you have given me, a poor stranger, in your- ao&Ie land.' She then withdrew. " Her dances were short and simple, and she performed nothing that could be called a feat.' .None of these performances were her pecu liar Spanish dances, in which she excels. As a datiseuse, she is decidedly inferior to Cerito, Madame Augusta, and others, but there is a nameless grace of nature about Ler person and movements, wLicL, with Ler history, gives her au attraction that a better artist could not couii mand, but which, however, is not destined to be very lasting." Tlie Safe oriVilliam Ienn. The editor of the Cincinnati Nonpareil has had the gratification of beholding a dilapidated spe cimen, in the shape of an iron safe,' that edip ses all the antiquities that ever before come urje der his supervision. It passed through that oit the other day on its way to St. Louis, at which, place tho antiquity is to receive a prominent lo cution in the Museum. This identical safe is the veritable one that Win. Pcim brought from England, and it was on the ground where he treated with thc Dele ware tribe of Indians on the Delcware. The safe is singulary and inge niously constructed, and contains several com partineuts which, bo says, would puzxle the in genuity of any person in this age to ascertain their whereabouts. The name of Wm. I'enn is prominently carved upen one of the inward plates, the letters carved in an awkward form. NUMBER Id.' The High Ocstiny of our Country Upon this point we find someth ing very ap. pbcable in tbe language of Mr. Justice McLean. wuo in a cnarge delivered to the United State 9 urand Jury for the District of Ohio. 1838 reference to the then recent enterprise by cit in lzens of the United States against tLe British possesions in Canada, said : "The great principles of our republican insti tutions cannot be propagated by the sword This can be done by moral force, not physical. ' "If we desire the political regeneration of op pressed nations, we must show them the simpli city, the grandeur and freedom of our own Gov ernment. We must recommend it to the intelli gence and virtue of other nations by its elevated and enlightened action, its purity, its justice, and the protection it affords to all its citizens, and the liberty they enjoy. ' "And if, in this respect, we shall be faithful to the LigL bequests of our fathers, to ourselves, and to posterity, we shall do more to liberalize other Governments, and emancipate their sub jects, than could be accomplished by millions of bayonets. "TLis moral power is what tyrants Lave most cause to dread. It addresses itself , to" '.tho thoughts and judgments of men. No ph vsical force can arrest its progress. Its approaches are unseen, Lut its consequences are deeply Jfelt. It enters garrisons most strongly forti- neu, ; ana operates m thc palaces of kings and emperors. "We should cLerisb tLis power as essential to the preservation of our own Goyernment ; and as the most eEcient means of ameliorating the po litical condition of our race. ; And ibis can only be done by a reverence for the laws, and by th exercise of aa elevated patriotism." . 4 TIic Cflilo Frozen Over. . Intense as the cold was in this neighborhood, a few days ago, its severity was paralled at th same time in oilier localities. . At Cincinuatti the Ohio was frozen over" tho ico oelng tnlclier than it lias been known to bo for years. We learn from one of the papers of that city, that drays, wagons and cattle crossed daily, .the novelty of the scene attracting large numbers of spectators, to view it. Ou Sunday a week it is estimated that twenty thousand people crossed upon the ice. In tbe midst of the cold enjoyment a scene occurred which is alluded to as follows by tLe Commercial: "At a time when a vast concourse had assem bled upon the ice, a gorge which had for some time swelled th" water above it, gave way,' and the frost bound bridge sunk to the surface of tha water with a tremendous crash. Terror" was depicted on every coutenance. The arms of wives were instinctively thrown around their husbands, and the arms of modest maidens on this momentuous occasiom, were thrown around the stalwart forms of their gallants perhaps for the first time. Some of the gentlemen recipro cated the embrace, while others as much fright ened as their fair companions, sought safety in flight. The ladies not wishing thus to be deser ted in the time of need, caught hold of the skirts of their gallant's coats, as they fled for life, and more than one 'dein foin" fellow was seen streaking Lis way up Walnut street, minus a cloak or the tail of bis coat. Son, however, it was found that, the danger was ouly imaginary numerous jests were passed upon the unlucky who deserted their "heart's idols" in the mo ment of danger, and the unfortunate ladies ad monished to choose husbands and gallants that would str.nd by them in storm as well as sun shine. - - One of the leading Government papers of Prussia contains a long article on the growth of the United States, and the danger which this gigantic republic threatens to the monarchical countries of Europe. According to the writer, we Lave already millions in reserve, and a large fleet ready to pounce down upo& Europe at the first favorable moment. The article- warns the nations of the danger,, and advises them to watch carefully the conduct of our Consuls, and Am bassadors, aad,if necessary to send tliem out of tbeh? country. It suggests that the Euxopaans should keep on thc defensive. A Bremen paper replies to this iu capital style. The Editor says that the chief danger to Europe is to be looked for from the side of California The United States think first of annexing all the islands of the ocean, then China, and after stopping in Si beria to release the prisoners, to overthrow Russia and so on through. Europe. The article in the Prussian paper- was too absurd to be an swered in any cthar- way than in a joke, and tha Bremen writer, did it up as it deserved. A Small Great Spy Glass. We sec U ftated in some fore'gn paper?, that a spy glass has been exhibited in London of no greater diawetcr than a walnut, yet so power ful that the lineaments f a person's face can be read - by it a-t-the distance of a mile and half. It weighs only one and a half ounces,. ad can easily be carried in tbe pocket of a gentleman's vest. We Lupa bouiq of our opticians- u ill go to work and construct lik telescopes, 1 sa that we may have the pleasure of carrying ucbhandy instrument continually abut eas rersn.