0 • " 0 _ 1 l' *7l 4." ( 0I 2, 4JIR, VOLUME XVI. S. D. WILLIAMS. JOHN HAFT, JR. ,r 3. D. WILLIAMS di. Co., If hoimale Grocers and Commission Merchants in Doi!grain Produce and Pittsburg ..llnnrctures, No. 116, Wo Street, Pittsburg. AVE NOW IN STORE, and to arrive this week, the following goods, of the most re sat importations, which are oftred on the 17106; easonable terms: --1 115 catty boxes prime Green Tea. 45 half chests do do 46 . " Oolong and Chulan. 100 bags Rio Coffee. 15 " Lagnyra and Jaya. 60 boxes B's, s's,and 1 lb lump tobacco. 35 bids. Nos. 1 an d 3 Mackerel. 204 and i do No. 1 do 2 and fdo Salmon. 50 ,oxes scaled Herring. 1300 lbs extra Madder. 3 hales Cassia, 1 hale Cloves 6 bags Pepper & Alspice. 1 bbl 'Nutmegs, , 2 bbls Ground Ginger, 1 bbl ground pepper, 1 bbl Ground Pimento, 10 kegs ground Mustard 10 kegs ground Cassia, 10 do do Cloves, 2 bile Garret's Snuff, 45 bxs Stearin Candles, 20 bxs Star Candles, 10 do Sperm do 100 do% Masons Black'g 100 lbs sup. Rice Flour, tog ihs S. F. Indigo, 20 dor. Ink, }:,O doz Corn Brootns, 125 don Patent Zinc 50 bxs extra pure Starch, Wash Boards, 25 do Saleratus, 75 fills N. O. Molasses, 15 1,1,1 s S. 11. Molasses, 10. slit Golden Syrup, 25 do Loaf, Crushed, 55011,s seedless 'Raisins, & Powdered Sugar, 50 drums Smyrna Figs, 20jars Bordeaux Prunes, 50 Rat Sicily Prunes, 5 boxes Rock Candy, 2 bcotti (Anna Citrons, 10 do Lo,ua & Chocolate, 5 do Ctiitile & Almoral 12 don Military Soap, Simi, 1 hbl sup. Carl,. Soda, 1 bbl Creani Tartar, I case Pearl Sago 2 cases Isinglass, 2 cases Sicily & Relined 1 ease Arrow Root, . Liquorice, 150 Bath Brick, 1 hbl Flour Sulphur, 100 gross Matches, 100 don Extract of Lem• 5 dun Lemon Sugar, on, Rose & Venills, 1 cask Sal Soda, Glass, Nails, White Lead, Lard oil, &c. Refer to Merchants Thomas Read & Son, Fisher & M'Murtrie, I/ •‘ Charles Miller, .. Honorable John Ker,__.. . _.. liuntineddn, Miy 15, ISM.-1) FITS, FITS, FITS. JOHN A. KING Begs leave to return his sincere thanks, for the very liberal patronage he 11us heretofore received, and at the same time informs a generous public, that he still continues the TAILORING BUSINESS, at the old stand or Jacob Snyder, where he will he pleased to have his friend , eel! end leave then measures. Every garment is warranted to fit neatly, ani shall he well made, JOHN A. KING, Bunt., July, IASI ItaiAND COMWINATION Ot".1:11li Useful, Beautiful and Ornamental EDMUND SNARE BEGS LEAVE to inform the people of Hun tingdon, and the rest of mankind, that he has bought, brought and opened the rirAost, larva and cheapeit assortment of WATCHES 8b JEWELRY ever beheld in this meridian In addition to his unprecedented stock of Witches and Jewolry he is just opening a Most excellent variety o miscellaneous BOOKS, as well es School Books and 'STATIC/NAM% which he is de termined shall be sold lower than ever Sold in Huntingdon. Call In and see if this statement is riot cor rect. Store formerly occupied by Nell' & Mil ler. 117'0Id Gold and Silver wanted, April 21, 1851. TO OWNERS OF y TNPATENTED L A ND S.—All persons in pos k., session of, or oAning imputented lands with- in this Commonwealth, ure hereby notified that the ant of assembly, passed the lath of April, i 8.33, entitled "An Act to graduate lands on which money in due and unpaid to the Ctannumwealth of Pennsylvania,' and which net bus been extend ed from time to time by supplementary laws, WILL. EXPIRE' ON THE FIRST DAY OF DECEMBER NEXT, after which time no ibutememit can be made of uny interest which may Imre accrued upon the original purchase money. It will tiMrefore be highly important to those in terested to secure . their patents and the benefits Of the said act and its supplements during the lime the same will Contintte in force. WILLIAM HUTCHISON', ISAAC PERIWLAL, BENJAMIN LEAS, Commissioners. August 28, 1851. Athe latest style of Bonnets, r 1 1 3e .g m e lti i r ti u i l d i S o l t tlal. Also, children's Flats fo isle by J. f k IV. Saxton. May 29, '5l. 13AGLEY'S Superior Gold Pens, in gold and silver patent extension eases, warranted to tin entire satisfaction, fur sale at Scott's Cheap Jewelry Store. S ILVER SPOONS of the Intent patterns can he had at E. Snare Jewelry• Store. DORTE MONNAIES-8 or 10 differeOt kinds; from 25 cents to 3 dollars nt Scott's Cheap Jewelry Store. SIX DOLLARS and Fi ft y cents for the largest Gold Pencils, at Ed. Snare's Jewelry Store. ASplendid assortment of Ladies Slippers for gala by J. 4- W. Saxton. May 49,'51. THE boot astortwient or Flarclware in town, for sale by 1. j- W. Sitetom. Usy 99,'61. HUNTINGDON, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1851. 1 1 1 e_r 7- • -1'7.; -4, ( zi t E-4 .-_,....... • " - 4; 7. .*, IA 7 , .. 1-1 t-- ; ' t---- ! '0 , 11.7,2 L.T . : : _c, t :g Writ-V4-'47i& BALL OF FASHION AHEAD wrrti NEW CLOTHING! B. & W. SNARE inform the public that they hate just returned from the eastern cities with a lame and splendid assortment of FALL AND WINTER CLOTHING for men and liovs. consist!ta4of 13Inck, Brown, Drab And Blue Overcoats; Black and Blue Dress and Free!: Coats; black satin and figured nests; eassimere 311(1 cassittet Judas; shirts, suspenders, drawers, sucks, &c. ALSO, New York flats anti Bostoa Boots; trunks, carpet bags, umbrellas, caines, &c.; ell of which were purchased extremely low for cash, which will enable us to sell much lower than merchants who buy on credit. We will, as here tofore, sell very cheap for cash & W. SNARE. Sept. 18,1851.-3 m. WATCHES, CLOCKS, AND 0.3 The stibscriber has, by extreme exertion, and with tic nssistonce of n few friends, at hot suc ceeded in opening an assurtment of CI, CLOCKS, WATCHES • . AND " JEWELRY; in the formerly ocenpica lie Dr. 11. K. Neff and Brothe . ,•, one door east of Mr. Livingston's Hotel. in the borough of Iluntingtlon, where he olfersfol. sale a great variety of th& dbdro articles at very low prices. . SN'ntelles and Jewellry will be repaired in the very best manner, all of %Well he will war rant rur one year. . • lie hopes, by selling at, It w prices and paying strict :otentiiin to business, to merit a libera share of public patronage. JOSEPH HIGGER. Huntingdon, Aug. 14, 1851.—tf. FRESH ARRIV IL 0, Nrimir olonG AT THE ENLAnGED STORE OF J./I.IIES AIaGUIRE, Market Square, Ilunti,,,ion, Pa. J. M. informs the public generally that he has just received, and is opening, a large and well selected stork of IVLIAT GOODS, FOR FALL AN!) WINTER, of the finest and cheup•+st ever brought to lion tingdon, consisting of every variety of LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S DRESS GOODS, Of all descriptions nod of th, newest styles, consisting m port of . - Gin:Eh:ors, Calicoes, Barnues, Lawns ' Silks, &:c.; Mnslins, Checks, Linens, Oil Cliintzes, Linen Diapers. Bonnets of the latest styles, Gloves, Ribbons, Laces, Handker chiefs, and everything in the no• lion line. MEN AND BOY'S WEAR, Embracing Cloths, Casimeres, Satinets, Ken. Lucky Jeans, ace, He.hris also on hand a very large and genera' assortment of GROCERIES, QUEENSWA RE, HARD WARE, HATS, CAPS, BOOTS, SHOES, AND GLASSWARE, Together with' all kinds of Goods generally kept in a rountry store. A word to the wise, and my friends in par tieuiar—eall and see me before purehasiiw elsewhere, as I ern determined to give bar gains. Q:7"Piense romonilwr MAGUIRE'S Cheap Store., in Market Square, Huntingdon. Sept. 11, 1851. Estate of Samuel Steel, Esq., decd. LaSt Notice. All persons indebted to the estate of Samuel Steel, Esq., late of the Borough of I luntinzldon, deed., are requested to make' payment in fu/ of the dams re ,, peetively due from them ou or be• fore the second ',Monday of Is;ovember next. Persons neglectinix . to comply with the above notice need not expect any further indulgence. JAMES (.WiN GEORCF STEEL,—Exrra. NOTICE. All persons interested are hereby notified, that Thomas E. Orbison„ Thomas W. Neely and Robert Madden, Assigness of Blair & Madden, for the benefit of Creditors, under a voluntary as signment, have filed in the Prothonotary's Otliee, a final account of their trust, will he exhibited to the Court of Common Pleas of Huntingdon County, on the 2ml Monday or Noventher next, and then allowed by said Court, nide, cause be shown why it shota not be allowed. Tiiv.). Pt. en E M Ell, Prothonotary Oct. 9, G 01.1 ) PENS -8 or 10 different kinds, froi 623 eta, to 10 dollars, at Scott's Cheap Jewelry Store. FANCY Articles in endless variety at E. Snare's Store. r A Beautiful lot of Partition fo :i s i Ve w b . y saxion. May 29, 51. ONE first rate 4 octays. harp. staud MEL D . DEAN for sato. sr Sept 11,1651. ID. SNARE'S. A HOME PICTURE. LIT FRANCIS D. OAOR. Ben Fisher had finished his hard day'. work, And he sat at his cottage door; His good wife, Kate, sat by his aide, And the moon-light danced nn the foln— And the moon-light danced on the cottage floor; Her beninS were clear and bright As when he and Kate, twelve years before, Talk'd love in her mellow light. Ben Fisher lied never a pipe of clay, And never a draa drank he So he loved at home with his wife to stay And they chatted right merrily; Hight merrily chatted they on the while Her belie slept on her breast; While a chubby rogue, with rosy smile, On his father's knee found rest. Ben told her how fast the potatoes And the corn in the lower field; And the wheat on the hill was grown to seed And promised a glorious yield; And his orchard woe doing fair; His sheep and his stock were in their prime, His farm all in good repair. Kate said that her garden looked beautiful, Her fowlq and her calves were fit; That the butter that Tommy that morning churn, Would buy him a Sunday hat; -That Jenny for Pa a new shirt bad made, And 'twos done too, by the rule; That Ncddy the garden could nicely spade, And Ann was ahead at school. Ben slowly raised his toil worn hand Thin' his locks of grayish brown— "l tell you Kate, what I think," said he, "We're the happiest folks in town." "I know," said Kate, "that we all work herd— , Work and health go together I've found; For there's Mrs. Bell does not work at all, And she's sick the whole year round. 'They're worth their thousands, so people say, But I ne . er saw them happy yet; 'Twonld not he me that would take their gold, And liye in a constant fret; My humble honin has a light within, Mrs. Ttell's mad could not luny. Six healthy children, a merry heart, And a husband's love-lit eye." fancied a tear was in Ben's eye— The moon shone ',righter and clearer, coal not tell why the man should cry, But ho hitched up to Kate still nenrer; lie leaned his head on her shoulder there, And he took her hand in his— I I look'd at the moon just then,)— That ho left on her lips a kiss. The following remarkable and eloquent address is said to have been pronounced by KOSSUTH on his departure from the Hungarian soil, upon which he knelt down, opened his arms as if he would embrace its fields, kissed the earth moistened andsMie fified by the blood of its most valuable children, and after addressing a short pray er to the Disposer of all events, pronoun cod the following eloquent Farewell to the Fatherland. God be with the my beloved Fatherland! GOT be with thee, Fatherland of the Mag yars! God be with thee, land of tortures! I shall not be able to behold the summits of thy mountains; no more shall I be able to call my Fatherland—the soil where, on the mother's heart, I imbibed the milk of Freedom and Justice ! Pardon me, my fatherland, me who am condemned to wander about far from thee, because I strove for thy welfare. Pardon me who no more call anything free but the small space where I am now kneeling down with a few of thy song. My looks fall up on thee, 0, poor fatherland ! I see thee bent down with sufferincS ! I now turn them to futurity; thy future is nothing but a great grief ! Thy plains aro moistened with crimson gore, which will soon be blackened by unmerciful devastation and destruction, as if to mourn over the num berlest conquists which thy sons have achieved over the accursed enemies of thy hallowed soil. How many grateful hearts I lifted up their prayers to the Throne of the Almighty ! Ilow many tears have flowed, which would even have moved Hell to compassion! How many streams of ' blood have run as proofs how the Hunga rian loves his. fatherland, and how he can die for it! And yet Last thou, beloved fatherland, become a slave ! Thy beloved sons are chained and drag ged away like slaves, destined to fetter again all that is holy; to become servicable to all that is unholy : 0 Lord, Thou lov eit Thy people, whose heroic ancestors Thou didat enable to conquer under Arpad, amidst so manifold dangers, I beseech thee, and implore thee, 0 humble it not. llehold, our dear fatherhind, thus speaks to thee thy son, in the whirlwind of troub les and despair, on thy utmost boundary. Pardon me, if the groat number of thy sons have shed their blood for my sake, or rather for thine, because I protected im, when on thy brow was written in letters of blood, the word "DANGER," because I, when it was called unto thee, "Be a Slave," took up the word for thee; because I gir ded on my sword when the enemy had the audacity to say: "Thou art no more a na tion" in the land of the Magyars ! With girantic paces time rolled on; with black—yellow letters Fate wrote on the pages of thy history "Death !" and to stoup the seal upon it, it called the North ern Colossus to assist. But the reddening morning dawn of the South will melt this seal! Behold, my dear fatherland, for thee, who hast shed so much of thy blood, there is not even compassion; because on the bills; which. are towered up by the bones of thy fallen sons, Tyranny earns her bread. O see, my dear' Fatherland ! the un grateful, whom thou didst nourish from the fat of thy plenitude, has turned against thee has turned the traitor, to de stroy thee from the head to the sole of thy foot ! But thou, noble nation, bast endur led all this thou ,hast tot cursed thy fate; because in thy bosom, over all sufferings, HOPE is enshrined. Magyars ! turn your looks not away from me: for even at this,moment my tears flow only for you, and the soil, on which I am kneeling yet bears your name! Thou - art fallen, truest of nations ! Thou art thrust down under thine own blow! not the weapon of a foreign enemy, which has dug thy grave: not the cannons of the many stations, who were brought up against thee—they have tottered back at thy Love for thy Fatherland! not the Muscovites who crawled over the Carpath ians, have compelled thee, to lay down . thme arms! ono ! sold then vast, dear Fatherland ! Thy sentence of death, be loved Fatherland, was written by him, whose love to his country I never question ed for a moment. In the bold flight of my thoughts, I would rather have doubted the existence of a good man than that I could have thought he could have become the traitor of his Fatherland ! And thou hest been betrayed by him, in Whoge bawls a few days ago I . laid the 'government ref our country, she had sworn to defend thee with the last drop of his blood. He Leconte a traitor to his coun try because the color of gold was dearer to him than that of blood, which was shed for the independence of the Fatherland.— The profane metal hail in his eyes more value than the Holy Cod of his land, who forsook hint, when he entered into a cove nant with the associate of the Devil! Magyars! my dear fellow sons of the same country ! Po not accuse me, be cause I was compelled to cast my eye on this man, and to vacate my place for him. I was eblived to do so, because the people placed confidence in him, because the army loved him, and he had already attained to a position, in which he could have proved hi 3 fidelity ! and yet that man abused the confidence of the nati n, and in return for the love of his nation treated them with contempt ! Curse him, people of the Magyars! curse the heart which did not dry up, when it attempted to nourish him with the mois ture of luc ! I love thee Europe's truest nation ! as I love the freedom for Odell thou fought so bravely ! The God of liberty will never blot you out from His memory. Be bless ed for evermore ! My principles were those of Washincrton, tho' my deeds were not those of William Tell ! I wish for a' free nation, free as God only can create I man—and thou art dead, because thy win ter has arrived; but this will not so long,' las thy fellow .sufferer, laneldshing, under the icy sky of Siberia. No, fifteen na tions have dug thy grave, the thousands of the sixteenth will arrive, to save thee! Be faithful as hitherto, keep to the ho ly sentences of the Bible, pay for thy liber tVion, and then ehaunt thy national hymns, when thy mountains reecho tho thunder of the cannons of thy liberators ! God be with you, dear convenes and follow suffer . ors! The angel cif God be with you.— You may will be proud, for the Lion of , Europe has to be aroused to conquer the rebels ! The whole civilized world has admired you 'as herre ,, , a:;(1 Cie cause of the iheroio nations will be supported by the freest of the free nations on earth !" frr The velvet moss grows on the ster ile rock, the mistletoe flourishes on the na ked branches, the ivy clings to the mould ering ruins, the pine and cedar remain fresh and fadeless amid the mutations of the receding year, and heaven be praised ! something green, something beautiful to see and grateful to the soul, will, in the darkest hour of fate, still entwine its ten drils around the crumbling altars mid bro ken arches of the desolate temples of the human heart! Ke- A friend of ours says that he has been without money so long, that his head aches 4 , rearly to split" when ho tries to re collect how a silver dollar looks. He says the notion that . 4 welive iu a world of change" is a great fallacy. ( 6 9d) °J OU 400 Americans Abroad. There have been, perhaps, wore Ameri cans in Europe, during the past twelte months, than ever before: Vast amounts of money have been, in this way, spent aboard of which our financial tables give 1 no account, which financiers themselves scarcely ever cotnpute. It is perhaps, not generally knoWn that the Americans arc considered on the continent, the most extravagant people in the . world. In fact, i it is to bo fearinl that our Republic is bet- I ter represented, in Europe, by money than I by brains ; a circumstance not calculated to elevate it in the estimation of foreigners. It is generally the second or third, genera tion of the rich that go abroad. The origi nal founders of families who make the mon ey, and who, to do this, must possess abil ity of some kind, mostly spend their lives at home. It is their children that travel. These often aro of no merit, either natural or acquired. Born to opulence and never put to work, they acquire idle and thought less habits, conjoined with follies of mind and manner that are frequently disgraceful and always ridiculous. At home they waste their time on frivolities; abroad they arc nobility. Hero they know. little; there they learn less. Ihstead of being represented abroad by intelligent men, familiar with their own I country, and with sound principles of ro- publicanism, it is from these fashionable I butterflies that the estimate of us is gener ally formed. Can we be astonished that it is so frequently contemptuous I The ; reverence which these addle-pated travel lers exhibit for rank; the sanctity with which they toady to My Lord This and My Lord That; and the absurd extravagance'' by which they seek to dazzle royalty and aristocracy into admiration of them, is a secret jest to the old world and an open disgrace to the new. It is a common say- , ing in Europe, that the Americans wor ship titles more than any people on the globe. Thus the despicable servility of the few becomes Co cause of a foul mis representation of the many ; and the proud freemen of the United States, who recog nize no man as their superior, are jeered at, in consequence, as sycophants to rank. Of course we do not say that all, who travel abroad arc of the class wo describe. But a large proportion, if not a majority, are of this character, wo fear—and hence the' scorn with which Americans them selves, as well as republicanism, are treat- I cd; on the continent.—Bulletin: Where Paddy Intl:sled to Lay his Land Warrants In one of the cities of the Upper Mis sissippi, situate not a thousand miles from our own, a worthy minister of the Gospel, after dwelling upon the beauty of holiness, and the hatefulness of sin, took occasion to impress upon his hearers the danger of occupying the neutral ground, trusting to merely moral walk, without faith or workl, as being sufficient to insure them a rich re ward in the "good time coining." Just as the reverend gentleman touched upon this portion of his &ninon, a sturdy, weath er-beaten son of the Emerald Isle entered the room, and with that politeness peculiar to the Irishmen, quietly helped himself to a seat, and lent an attentive ear to the speaker. The clergyman portrayed, in an able and striking manner, the beautiful and attractive scenery which every where meets the enraptured vision throughout the boundless plains and delightful groves of this neutral ground, leading the senses captive by their exceeding loveliness ,and filling the soul with sweet contentment, &c. The picture would seem to have had a magical effect upon the Irishman, like the sudden and unexpected realization of some fondly cherished hope; for, without waiting for an application of the figure (of which he was not dreaming) he all at once rose to his feet and exclaimed in all the richness of the brogn", "I thank your honor for the same news, for it's myself that has two of the most beautiful land warrants that a man ever fought for in Mexico, and it's a notion I have to locate them in that same counthry of which you have been spaking." The effect was elec trical. The congregation could not res train their risibles, and the services were brought to a sudden termination by the singiug of a hymn. Poor Pat was a thou sand times sorry for his mistake, and he mistook the congregation fur a "blackguard political meeting entirely," and that if any ono would introduce him to the parson ho would bog pardon "for having unintention ally played the devil with his discourse." We "tell the tale as it was told to us," aud j know it to be true.—Bur. Tel. ECONOMIST. -A man who chows $l4 worth of tobieco annually; and siops his newspaper because be cannot afford to take it. Kr Why does the sting of insects not only pierce the skin, but leave considerable lain? Because the sting is hollow, and convoys the irritating or poisonous fluid within the wound, from a peculiar bag. NUMB ER 42. A Supernatural Well. One of the most remarkable narratives that we have seen in the papers of late relates to the mode in which Cooper's Well—a somewhat famous watering place in Missisippi—was discovered. A pam phlet detailing the facts of the case has been publi s hed. Friini this we learn that the proprietor is, or was, the Rev. l'reston Cooper—a preacher of character in the Methodist Vhuroh. It appears that in 1837 Mr. Cooper purchased the tract of land in which the well was discovered. He built himself a house, and went to work to ob tain water for its use. He commenced digging a well: At the depth of thirty feet a hard rock was struck, when the la bor was abandoned and a capacious cis tern substituted for it. Mr. Cooper, af ter providing this foi his family, proceed ed to Vicksburg, where he had charge of church. One night he had a dream. The figure of a man, with a familiar face, com manded him to resume the digging of his well, and told him that it was all-import tint. The saute figure come again within a few subsequent nights and repeated the injunction, and thus it came week after week for five months, at the end of which periodi doubtless impressed by the appar kion, the digging was resumed. The sec ond effort carried the well through a stratum of rock nine feet in depth ; but ( farther progress was checked by another and harder stratum. The work was again 'abandoned. Two months then passed, I and the same ghostly visitor appeared again in Mr. Cooper's visions with the same commands to proceed with the well. It came nightly until the work was begun the third time. After digging thirty feet farther, with out effect it was again stopped. A year passed away, when the man in the dream came back, with sterner injunctions to continue the well. The fourth digger was engaged. He commenced work on the 13th of Sept., 1841, and on the 10th, three days afterwards, the water came gushing forth in a copious stream. Thus the well was begun and continued a dcpt.h of 101 feet, of which 75 were solid rock. In the last dream which led to the ac quisition of Water, Mr. C. saw the digger he employed, and dreamt also that the wa ter was got, and that this man as it rose to the rurface uttered the words : "I have got water, but it stinketh mightily, so that you can never use it." The same words were actually repeated by this man when, after digging the last time, success attend ed the labor. The water was investigated and found to be of estimable medicinal properties— for the cure of ,darrlicea, dyspepsia, dropsy, gravel, diabetes, general debility Sze. &C. and within the last three years not less than $50,000 have been spent by visitors who have sought it. There can be no doubt that this strange narrative has the authority of Mr. Cooper himself. For the rest we say , nothing.— In these dare of general spiritual mani festations it in Inirdly discreet to doubt anything. Mr. Cooper's character, too, is such that one can hardly question his good faith in the matter. If the story were intended merely as a puff, it would be very clever ; but as it is, it acquires another sort of importance.—. Mobile Herald. FItENCIIMT:N AND PARTS.—The French man's pleasures are all social; to eat, drir:k or spend the evening alone would I;e weariness to him; he reads his news;„icr in the thoroughfare or public gardc;. : I.e talks more in one day than an English:un in three; the theatres, balls, concert,, which to the islander anrcied neon final recreation, are to him a nightly neco.-!ity: he would be lonely and miserable wi Lout them. No where is amusement more :vs tematically, sedulously sought than in Par is : nowhere is it more abundant or acces sible. For boys just escaped from school or parental restraint, intent on enjoyment and untroubled by conscience or forecast, this must be a rare city. Its people, as a ! c ommunity, have signal good qualities and grave defects; they are intelligent, vivaci ous, courteous, obliging, generous and hu mane; eager to enjoy, generous and hu mane eager to enjoy, bat willing that all the world should enjoy with them; while at, the same lime they are impulsive, irreverent. Paris is a Paradise of the Senses; a focus if enjoyment, not of hap piness. Nowhere are youth and its capa cities more prodigally lavished: nowhere is old ago less happy or less respected. [Horace bi•eely. CCU" "My friend," said the keeper of a hotel to an over-voracious boarder, "you eat so much that I shall certainly have to charge you an extra half-dollar." "An extra half-dollar," replied his boarder, with his countenance the very picture of despair; "for goodness sake don't do that; I'm most dead now, eating three dollars' worth, I shall certainly burst—l shall." .