,fs' 7 l"ii -„ , r nnf Ittgbol4 _ - r s, 41 411 0 ° On i t li t4 r . BY JAS. CLARK. TWO YEARS OLD. DT C. I. PERCIVAL. Playing on a carpet near me Is a little cherub girl; And her presence, much I fear me, Sets my senses in a whirl; For a book is open lying, Full of grave philosophying, And I own I'm vainly trying There my thoughts to hold; But in spite of my essaying They will ever more be straying To that cherub near me playing, Only two years old. • With her hair so long an,: flaxen, And her sunny eyes of blue, And her check so plump and waxen, She is charming to the view. Then her voice, to all who hear it, Breaths a sweet, enchanting spirit -0 ! to be forever near it Is a joy untold; For 'tis ever sweetly telling To my heart with rapture swelling, Of affection inly dwelling— Only two years old ! With a new delight I'm hearing All her sweet attempts at words, In their melody endearing Sweeter far than any bird's; And the musical mistaking Which her baby lips are making For my heart a charm is waking, Firmer in its hold Than the charm so rich and glowing, From the Roman's lips o'erflowing; Then she gives a look so knowing— Only two years old! Now her ripe and honied kisses (Honied, ripe for me alone) Thrill my soul with varied blisses Venus never yet has known. When her twining arms around me, All domestic joy hash crowned me, And a fervent spell bath bound me, Never to grow cold, 0 ! there is not, this side of Adenn, Aught with loveliness so laden As my little cherub maiden, Only two years old ! (Louisville Journal. TOO WILLING BY HALF. ♦ Hoarding House Sketch. BY THE YOUNG 'UM Many of onr readers will recognize the point of the following joke, which we heard related "long time ago," but which wo never saw in print. It is a "good 'un" and will bear re-tolling. When Gen. Jackson was President of the United States, he was tormented day after day by impor tunate visitors, (as most Chief Magistrates of this great country, ore,) whom he did not care to see —cad in consequence, he gave strict directions to the messenger at his door to admit only certain persons, on a particular day, when he was more busy with State affairs than usual. In spite of this peremptory order, however the attendant bolted into his apartment, during the forenoon, and informed the General that a person was outside who claimed to see him, orders or no orders. "By the eternal!" exclaimed the old man, ner vously, "I won't submit to this annoyance. Who is it I" . Don't know, sir." " Don't know 1 What's his namo 7" "His name? Beg pardon, sir, it's a woman." A woman ! Show her in, James, show her in," said the President, wiping his face; and the next moment there entered the General's apart ment, a neatly clad female of past the .middle age," who advanced courteously towards the old man, and accepted the chair ho proffered her. Be seated, madam," he said. " Thank you," responded the lady, throwing aside her veil, and revealing a handsome face to her entertainer. " My mission hither, to-day, General, continu ed the fair speaker, "is a novel one, and you can not aid me, perhaps." "Madam," said the General, "command me." " You are very kind air. 1 am a poor woman, General—" "Poverty is no crime, Madam." "No, sir. But I have a little family to care for —I am a widow, sir; and a clerk employed in one of the departments of your administration is in debted to me for board to a considerable amount, which I cannot collect. I need the money sadly and I come to ask if a portion of his pay cannot he stopped, from time to time, until this claim of mine —an honest one, General, of whic4 lie had the full 'ano--shall be cancelled." "I really—Madam—that, is, I have no control In that way—how much is the bill 1" "Seventy dollars, sir; here it is." "Exactly; I sec. And his salary, Madaml" "It is said to be $1,200 a year." • "And not pay his board bill 1" "As you see, eir—this has been standing five Months, unpaid. Three days hence, he will draw bie monthly pay; and I thought if you would be kind enough to—" " Yee, I have it. Go to him again, and get hie note at thirty days." " His note, sir I It would'ut be worth thepaper on which it was written; he pays no one a dollar voluntarily." " But r he will g,• you hie note, will he not, Madan " Oh, yes—lie would be glad to have a respite in that way for a month, no doubt." "That's right, then. Go to him, obtain his note at thirty days from to-day, give him a receipt in full, and come to me this evening." The lady departed, called upon the young lark, dunned him for the amount—at which he only smiled—and finally asked him to give her his note for it. ' "To be sure," said he, "give a note—sart'n. And much good may it do you, mum." "You'll pay it when it falls due, won't you, sir —thirty days hence'?" "G, yes—sart'n, of course, I will; I always pay my notes, mum, I do !" and us the lady de parted, the knowing young gent believed he had accomplished a very neat trick, once more. "I wonder what the deuce she'll do with that note? Gad ! I'd like to settle some of the other accounts in the same way. Hope she'll have a good time getting the money on that bit of paper. Jodn Smith is rather too well known for that!" And be turned, with a chuckle, to his hook again. The poor boarding-house keeper called again upon the General a few hours afterwards. "Did you get the note, Madam ?" " Yes, sir—here it is." The President quickly turned it over, and with a dash of his pen, wrote the name of Andrew Jackson upon the back of it. " Take this to the bank to-morrow morning, Madam, and you can get the money for it," he said hurriedly. The lady acted accordingly, and found no diffi culty in obtaining the cash for it at sight. A week before that month's termination, John Smith received a notice to the following effect:— BANK OF WASIONOTON, 1852. Sir:—Your note lor seventy dollars, is due on the 27th inst., at this Bank, and you are request ed to call and pay the saute. -- Cashier. " Ha, ha!" screamed John, upon reading this brief note. "A capital joke that. Can't come it, mum—can't, no how. Scarecrow—left for collection—l • understand—won't do—no go !" And John. very soon forgot it. But pay day came round again—and John took his monthly stipend once more, $lOO, from the Cashier of the Department, as usual. As he pas sed down the Avenue, the unpaid board-bill en tered his head. " Who, the deuce, now, has been fool enough to help the old 'ooman in this business, I won der 1" said John to himself.—" Gad ! I'll go and see. It's all a hum, 1 know; but I'd like to know if she has really fooled anybody with that bit o' paper ;" and entering the bank, he asked for the note "left there for collection against bin?" " It was discounted," said the teller. "Discounted ! why, who in this world will dis count my note ?" asked John, amazed. " Anybody, with such a backer as you have got on this." " Backer ! Me—backer, who 'I" " Here's your note ; you can see," said the tel ler, handing hint the document—on which John instantly recognized the bold signature of the then President of the United States! " Sold—by Moses !" exclaimed John, drawing forth the money with an hysteric gasp—for he saw through the management at a glance. The note was paid, of course, and justice was awarded to the spendthrift, at once. On the next morning he found npon his desk a note which contained the following entertaining bit of personal intelligence:— To John Smith, Esq. : Sir :—A change having been made in your of fice, I am directed by the President to inform you, that your services wiil no longer be required by this department. Yours, - Secretary. John Smith retired to private life, at once, and thenceforward found it convenient to live ou a much smaller allowance than twelve hundred a year! The Irish Soldier. Frederick of Prussia had a mania for enlisting gigantic soldiers into the "Royal Guards," and paid an enormous bounty to his recruting officers for getting them. One day a 'Terming sergeant chanced to spy an Hibernian who was at least sev en feet high ; he accosted him in English, and pro posed that he should enlist. The idea of a milita ry life and a largl bounty:so delighted Patrick, that he at once consented. "But," said the sergeant, "unless you can speak German, the king will not give you so much." "Oh, be jabers," said the Irishman, "share it's I that don't know a word of German." "But," said the sergeant, "three words will be sufficient, and these you can learn in a short time. The king knows every man in the Guards, and as quick as he sees you he will ride up and ask you three questions; first his majesty will ask you how old you are. You will say twenty-seven— next how long you have been in service; you must reply three weeks—finally, if you are provided with clothes and rations; you answer both." Patrick soon learned to pronounce his answers, but never dreamed of learning the questions. In three weeks he appeared before the king in review. His ma- ' jetty rode up to him; Paddy stepped forward with "present arms." "How old are you 1" said the king. "Three weeks," said the Irishman. "How long have you been in the service 1" asked Isis ma jesty. "Twenty-seven years." "Am lor you a fool'?" roared the king. "Both," repliedrat, who was instantly taken to the guard-house. iirA LOAD or Gums !—Yesterday the cars on the little Miami Railroad at one time brought down two hundred and eighteen girls, from twelve to twenty years of age. They came from " Yan keedom," and are going to the new factory now just starting at Carrolton, (Ky.) The girls were most of them, good fresh looking specimens of the great Yankee country.—CincianattCom. HUNTINGDON, PA., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1850. THE PILOT'S REVENGE. BY BYLVANS COBB, Sli. It was towards night on the 21st of September, 1893, a small English war-brig, which had been fitted out for the suppression of smuggling, was lazily creeping along over the heavy monotonous swells just off' the coast of Galaway, and on her deck was being enacted a scene of somewhat more than common interest. The day before she had captured a small boat laden with contraband articles, together with an old man and a boy, who had charge of them; the captain of the brig, whose name was Draliutt, had ordered that the smuggler should bo put in irons. To this indig nity the old man made a stout resistance—and in the heat of the moment be had so far forgotten himself as to strike the captain a blow which laid him upon the deck. Such an insult to an English officer was past endurance, and, in punishment of his offence, the smuggler had been condemned to die. A single whip was rove at the starboard yard arm, and all hands were called to witness the exe cution. The rope was noosed and slipped over the culprit's head, and the running end war rove through a small hatch-block on the deck. Until this moment not a word had escaped the lips of the boy. He trembled as he beheld the awful preparations, and as the flital noose was passed and drawn tight, the color forsook his cheeks, and he sprang forward and dropped upon his knees before the incensed captain: "Mercy, sir; mercy :" "For whomi" asked the officer, while a con temptuous sneer rested upon his lips. " For that old man whom you are about to kill." " He dies, boy." "But he is my father, sir." " No matter if he were my own father, that man who strikes an English officer while in the perfor mance of his duty, must die." "But he was manacled, he was insulted, sir," urged the boy. "Insulted!" repeated the captain; "who insult ed him 1" " You did, sir," replied the boy, while his face was flushed with indignation. " Get up, sir, and be careful you don't get the same treatment," said the captain in a savage tone. The old man heard this appeal of his son, and as the last words dropped from the lips of his cap tor, he raised his head, and while a look of utmost defm.nce nassed aver his features, be exclaimed— .. "Ask no favors, Robert. Old Karl ii.ntock can die as well now as at any time—let them do the worst." Then turning to captain Darcutt, he changed his tone to ono of deep supplication and said— " Do what you please with me, sir, but do not harm my boy, fur he has done no wrong. I am ready for your sentence, and the sooner you finish it the butter." "Lay hold of the whip," shouted the captain— " Lay hold every man of you and stand by to run the villain up." In obedience to this order the men ranged them selves along the deck and each one laid hold of the rope. Robert Kintock looked first at his father, and then he ran his eyes along the line of men who were to be his executioners. But not one sympathising or pitying look could he trace. Their faces were all hard and cold and they all appeared anxious to consummate their murderous work. " What?" exclaimed the boy, while his lip trembled and a tear started front his eye, " is there no one even who can pity ?" " Up with him," shouted the captain. Robert buried his face in his hands, and the next moment his father was swinging at the yard arm. Re heard the passing rope and the creaking block, and he knew that he was fatherless ! Half an hour afterwards the boy knelt by the side of a ghostly corpse, a simple prayer escaped his lips. Then another low, mourning sound came up from his bosom; but none of those who stood around knew its import. It was a pledge of deep revenge. Just as the old man's body slid from the gang way into the water, a vivid flash of lightning streamed through the heavens, and in another minute the dread artillery of nature sent forth a roar so long and loud that the men actually placed their hands to their ears to shut ont its deafening power. Robert Kintock started at the sound, and what had caused dread in others' bosoms sent a thrill of satisfaction to his own. " Oh, revenge, revenge I" he muttered to him self as he cast his eyes over the foam-crested waves which had already risen beneath the power of the sudden storm. The darkness hnd come as quickly as did the storm, and all that could be distinguished from the deck of the brig, save the breaking sea, was the fearful, cregggy shore, as flash after flash of light ning illuminated the heavens. " Light, ho," shouted a man forward, and the next moment all eyes were turned to a bright light which had suddenly flashed up among the rocks. The wind had now reached its height, and with its giant power it set the ill-fitted brig directly upon the surf-bound shore of rocks and reefs, and every face save one was blanched with fear. In vain did they try to lay the brig to the wind, but not a sail would hold for an instant, until at length the men managed to get up a fore and main storm-sail, and then the brig stood for a short time bravely up against the heaving sea. But it was evident that should she succeed in keeping to the wind, she must eventually be driven to the shore, for the power of the in-setting waves was greater than that of the wind. "Boy, do you know what light that is 1" asked the captain, as he stood holding to the main rig. ging to keep his feet. " Yes, sir," replied Robert; " it is Bullyinore's crag." " What is it there for 7" "It marks the entrance to a little harbor which lies in the back of it." " And can it be entered by a vessel of this size?" asked the captain, while a gleam of hope shot across his face. " 0, yes, sir; a large ship can enter there." "And do you know the passage?" " Yes, sir; I have spent my whole life on this coast, and I know every turn in it." " Can you take the brig in there in this storm?" "Yes, sir," answered the boy, while a strange light shot from his eyes. "And will you do ill" eagerly asked the cap tain. " On two conditions." "Name them quickly." "The first is that you let me go in peace, and the next, that you trouble none of the smugglers, should they happen to be there." " I will promise," said the captain. " And now set about your work. But mark me, if you de ceive me, by at. George, I will shoot you on the moment." The brig was soon put before the wind, and Robert Kintoek stationed himself upon the star board fore-ymd•arm, from whence his orders were passed along to the helmsman. The bounding vessel soon came within sight of the rugged crags, and the heart of every man leaped with fearful thrills as they were swept past a frowning rock which almost glazed them as they passed. On flew the brig, and thicker and more fearful be came the rocks, which raised their heads on every side. " Port !" shouted the boy. "Port it is." " Steady so." " Steady it is." "Starboard, quick!" "Aye, aye, starboard it is." " Steady so." " Steady it is." At this moment the vessel swept on past an over-hanging cliff, and just as a vivid flash of lightning shot through the heavens and revealed all the horrors around a loud shout was heard from the young pilot, and in a moment all eyes were turned towards him. Ile stood upon the extreme end of the yard and hold himself by the lift. In a moment he crouched down like a tiger after his nrul than with nnn Icon he resulted thee pro jecting rock. "Revenge 1 revenge!" was all that the doomed men heard, and they were swept away into the boiling surge beyond. " Breakers ! a reef!" screamed the men for ward. " Starboard quick I" But 'twas too late! Ere the helm was half up, a low, tremendous grating of the brig's keel was distinctly felt, and the next instant came a crash which sounded high above the elements, and the heavy masts went sweeping away to the leeward, followed in a few moments by large masses of the ill-fated vessel's wreck and cargo. Shriek after shriek went up from those doomed men, but they were in the grasp of a power that knows no mer cy. The Storm King took them all for his own ! The next morning a small party of wreckers came down from the rocks, and moved along the shore. It was strewed with fragments of the wreck, and here and there were scattered along the bruised and mutilated forms of the ship's crew. Among the party was Robert Kintock, and eager ly did he search among the ghastly corpses, as though there were one he would have found. At length he stopped and stooped over one upon the shoulders of which were two golden epattletts.— "rwas the captain of the brig—the murderer of his father 1 The boy placed his foot upon the prostrate body, and while a strange light beamed from his eyes, and a shudder passed over his coun tenance, he muttered : "Fattier, you arc fearfully revenged!" . . The boy spoke truly. Fearful in its conception, and fearful in its consummation had boon that " Pilot's Revenge." The Poetry of Agriculture. The principles of agriculture are exceedingly simple. That they might be made so God himself was the first great planter. Ho wrote its laws, in visibly, in the brightest, lovliest, and most intelli gible characters, every where upon the broad bo som of the liberal earth ; in tho greenest leaves, in delicate fruit flowers ! But he does not content himself with this alone. He bestows the heritage alone. He prepares the garden and the home be fore ho creates the being who is to possess them. He tills them with all those objects of sense and sentiment which are to supply his moral and phys ical necessities. Birds sing in the boughs above him, odors blossom in the air, and fruits and flow ers cover the earth with a glory to which that of Solomon, in all its magnificence, was vain and valuelesss. To his hand we owe these fair groves, these tall ranks of majestic trees, these deep for ests, these broad plains, covered with verdure, and these mighty arteries of flood and river, which wind them along, beautifying them with the love liest inequalities, and irrigating them with season able fertilization. Thus did the Almighty Planter dedicate the great plantation to the use of that va rious and wondrous family which was to follow.— His home prepared, supplied with all resources, adorned with every variety of fruit and flower, and checked with abundance, man is conduted within its limits, and ordained its cultivator, under the very eye and sanction of Heaven. The angels of Heaven descend upon its hills : God himself ap pears within its valleys at noondsn Its groves are instinct with life and pnrity, and the blessed stars rise at night above the celestial mountains, to keep watch over its consecrated interests. Its gorgeous forests, its broad savannas, its levels of flood and prairie, are surrendered into the hands of the wondrously favored, and newly-created heir of heaven ! The bird and the beast are made his tributaries, and taught to obey him. The lark summons him at morning to his labors, and the evening chant of the night-bird invites him to re pose. The ox submits his neck to the yoke: the horse moves at his bidding in the plow: and the toils of all are rendered sacred and successful by the gentle showers and the genial sunshine, which descend from heaven to ripen the grain in its sea son, and to make earth pleasant with its fruits. " Ask and ye shall Receive." A new sect has arisen in England, whose prime article of belief is the power of prayer. They aro called by some the Craik and Mullerites, from the names of the principal elders. All they want they pray for, and, strange to say, they get it. Not long since they took it upon their conscience to build a magnificent orphan house. Their design was beneficent; the institution was greatly needed in the district; but, instead of adopting the ordi nary machinery of charity, by appeals to the rich and benevolent, they simply fell on their knees and appealed to Heaven. The responses came in from every corner of England, from many cities on the continent and in America, and in every va riety of form. From one contributor came a pen ny, from another a boot jack, from a third an ancient coin. The farmer forwarded a cart of manure, the merchant a hogshead of sugar, the land owner the product of the sale of a tree cut down for the purpose. Women sent in theirgold en trinklets, men their clothes. Tables, chairs, sacks of flour, flitches of bacon, sides of beef, beds, tooth-picks, coats, hats, shoes, wash-hand stands, and so forth, came pouring in. The money contributions were half-pence, shillings, pounds ; the latter in hundreds and in thousands. All these things came, it is said, as the leaves in faith. What is certain is, the building is there. In ar rangement, proportion, complteness of design and detail, it is one of the noblest fabrics in England. It is already occupied by three hundred children, and the same means by which it was erected in the first instance, and is now maintained, are about to be employed for its further enlargment. No one is personally applied to for a farthing: the whole is left to the secret influence of the spirit.— Yet according to Herr Muller's statement, stran gers whom he has never seen, to whom he had ibp en.... have even him for his orphans not less than £33,868 I Is. in answer to his secret prayers. A religion like this must I engage many followers, and take the lead of Mor monism and kindred modes of faith, provided the responses to future prayers are as successful as in the case of the orphan house.—(Sunday Dispatch. fidelity, Neer forsake a friend.—When enemies gather around—when sickness falls on the heart—when the world is dark and cheerless—is the time to try true friendship. The heart that has been touched with true gold will redouble its efforts, when the friend is sad or in trouble.—Adversity tries true friendship. They who turn from the scene of dis tress betray their hypoericy, and prove that inter est only moves them. If you have a friend who loves you—who has studied your interest and happiness—be sure to sustain him in adversity.— Let him feel that his former kindness is apprecia ted, and that his love was not thrown away. Real fidelity may be rare but it exists in the heart.— Who has not seen and felt its power I—They on ly deny its worth and power who have never lov ed a friend or labored to make hint happy. The good and kind—the affectionate and virtuous, see and feel the heavenly principle. They would sacrifice wealth and happiness to promote the happiness of others, and in retorts they perceive else reward of their love by sympathizing hearts and countless favors, whets they have been brought low by distress or adversity. REMARKABLE INCIDENT.—A singular occur rence happened in the village of Piedmont N. H., last week. Two little children, one five and the other three years of age, having strayed from home, and not returning at dark, inquiries were made for them by the parents, and as no trace was found of them, a general search throughout the night, was made by the people of the village. In the morn ing, the children were discovered in an open field, lying upon the frozen ground, and locked in each other's arms,—ono sleeping soundly, and the oth er awake. Although the night was a severe one, the little ones have shown, as yet, no ill effects from the exposure. It is truly wonderful how two such little children could pass a winter's night upon the cold frozen ground, without perishing. li The Sabbath. The Sabbath is God's special present to the working man, and one of its chief objects is to prolong his life, and preserve efficient his working tone. In the vital system it nets like a compensa tion pond; it replenishes the spirit, the elasticity and vigor, which the last six days have drained away, and supplies the force which is to fill the six days succeeding; and in the economy of exis tence it answers the same purpose as, in the econ "iy of interest, is answered by a saving bank. The frugal mist who puts aside a pound to-day and another pound next month, and who in a quiet way, is always putting up his stated pound from time to time, when he gross's old and frail, gets not only the same pounds back again, but a goad many pounds besides. And the conscientious man who husbands one day of existence every week—instead of allowing the Sabbath to be tram pled and torn in the hurry and scramble of life, treasures it devotedly up—the Lord of the Sab bath will keep it for him, and in length of days and a halo old age, give it back with usury. The savings bank of human existence is the weekly Sabbath. VOL. XV.--NO. 51 Sad Case. ACQUITTAL OF JACOB GREEN, CHARGED WITH THE MURDER OF TIIE SEDUCER OF RIB Wl3ll. The Delaware Republican gives the following account of the trial and acquittal ofJacob Gann : " Jacob Green was tried on Tuesday last, at New Castle, for the murder of Abraham Redden. It was proved that Green was married about six years ago, and lived happily with a woman to whom he was much attached, and that Redden seduced her front her fidelity to him. He would frequent. ly take her from her house and keep her away all night; and there was proof of adulterous inter course. On Green accusing him of it, he said— " Yes, I have bad your wife, and will have her again whenever I like, and if you don't keep quiet, I will blow your liver out." He carried two pistols loaded for the avowed purpose of shooting Green, and on one occasion assaulted and beat him severe ly. lie loaded these pistols with slugs on Satur• day, the 20th of July last, telling his own wife that he intended to shoot Green. That night ho took Green's wife from her house, and kept her out all night. Green discovered the guilty pair about day-break the next morning; went some two or three miles and borrowed a gun ; returned and found Redden sitting asleep in a neighboring house, and shot him thro' the open door. Ile immediately surrender ed himself. After being tried, he told the story of his wrongs in so affecting a manner, that he drew tears from the officer and all present. He wound up by saying—" Now, Mr. Hickman, had you been in my place, would you not have done as I did I" To which the officer religiously, but feelingly, re plied—"lf not restrained by divine grace, I think I should." Green begged to see his wife, and she was brought to him. He put his manacled arms around her neck, kissed her, and gave her his for giveness; and was taken off, ho said, to die for the love of her. He was mistaken. The law in Delaware makes it no higher offence than a misdemeanor for a hus band to kill a man found in the act of adultery with his wife, and the jury considering even that as beyond the guilt of this defendant under the circumstances of aggravation and outrage presen ted by Isis case, acquited him entirely. Tho unhappy man, on being discharged from the dock, was received bye crowd of friends, who gave three hearty cheers when they had got into the street. The guilty wife was not there; and the widow of the deceased contributed, by her testi mony, to the acquittal of the man who slew her own husband. Erin vs. Cape Cod. Tinder thin eantion, the Lycoming Gazette intro. duces the following good thing to its readers, and as we think our's will enjoy it, we transfer it to our columns : We were much amused at an encounter of wits which came off between an Irishman and Yankee the other day in our hearing, and which we regret we cannot give verbatim. After some preliminary discourse, in which by an apt "guess" or two, our friend from the land of codfish, introduced himself into notice, he said to Patrick ." . ""Abeout what might be your name, sir? Guess fur want of a better we'll call you Far-down." "And Kurd-up would be an illegant name for yerself, me jewel," retorted Pat. The conversation shortly after turned upon re ligion, and a stout argument was maintained—one fiercely affirming, and the other with equal em phasis denying, the doctrine of predestination.—. Pat was the predestinarian of the two and after warmly arguing for some time, with au air of tri umph wound up with the following conclusive and clinching ultimatum: "What is it to be will be; won't it!" "Yes," said Jonathan. "Well, thin, be jabers, suppose a man is born to be drowned—won't he be drowned?" "Wall," said Jonathan, drawing a very long breath, revolving his quid slowly towards his left cheek, and preserving the most imperturbable gray. ity—"w-a-l-I, that depends entirely on whether he goes near the water!" A Miserable Miser. An old beggar woman, by the name of Elizabeth Murdock, lately died in the city of Cincinnati, as every one supposed, in a state of extreme denim tion. On the night of her death, a lighted candle was placed upon a stand beside her bed, her idiot daughter, a frightful hunchback, being the only at tendant, though a part of the time the physician was present. The old woman opened her eyes, and perceiving the burning candle, ordered it to be blown out, saying that she could not afford it.— When she was taken sick, she ordered the chest which was, after death, found to contain $4OOO in gold, to be placed near her bed, and she kept it within reach of her arms during the whole of her sickness. When the death struggle came on, and she was told she must die, she flung her-self upon the chest, and clawed at it, in a phrenzy of avarice until she tore the very nails from her fingers; and while thus embracing her treasure, her spirit took its flight. An old stove, in the room, was found after her death to contain a considerable amount of silver and copper coin, carefully stowed away. 'rho money and effects have been placed in tlao hands of an executor, appointed by the court. Iu 1840, when small change was scarce, this woman made a handsome speculation by selling the small coins accumulated by the beggary of herself and her idiot daughter. The latter was generally flog gad upon her return at night, when she did not make a good day's work, and always whipped be fore she was sent out in the morning. The cries of the poor creature, while under the lash of her avaricious mother, have frequently excited the in dignation of the neighborhood. The poor idiot herself was ailwrwarflat attacked by the cholera, and is now probably numbered with the dead.