ilvintingDon WILLIAM BREWSTER, } EDITORS, SAM. G. WHITTAKER, eZct Voctrg. DUTCH MARRIAGE. You brommsh now, you gout man dare, Vat sthands nbon de vloor, To halt dish voinau vor your vile, And lob her ebermore ; To feed her yell mit sour crout, Pettus, puttermilk and slices, And in all tings to lend your aid, lint till Promote her ease. Yes—aul you voman stlianding dare, Do ',ledge your cord, dish tay, lint you will duke for yonr huspand, Dish ;nap, and him opey ; flat you rill ped . and poard mit him, Vast, iron and rnent his clothes; Laren he similes, veep ven he sighs, Dus schare his shot's and voes. Veil den, I now midin deco valls, Mit shoy and not mit brief, itronounce you both to be one mint, Von name, von man, von peef. I pooblish now dese sacred panda, Dose matrimonial dies, Pelore mine vife, got Kate and Poll, And all dese gluon eyes. And no do saehred Skriptures shay, Vot Cot has joined togeddor, Let no man tare ashunder put, Let no matt dare dem obeyer. And you bridekroom, tare, you Mimi, I'll not let go your kolltir, l'efore you wisher me dish tinp, I/at ish—vare tub mine tollar ? eittt 5t g. From. Patnant's .Vagazine. T 202 1211- Ork VIE 212 E 0o On the 23d day of February, 1836, Gen eral Santa Anna entered San Antonio de Bexar and took possession of the town with out firing a gun. As he advanced to the Alamo, the small garrison of ono hundred and thirty men, under the command of William Barret Travis, retired on the op posite side of the river, determined there to offer such resistance to the progress of the tyrant as their energies and resources should permit, by a ay, ant .a God of battles. Flushed with the conquest, so easily effected, of the town,' the Mexi can commander prepared for an immediate attack on the Alamo. lle ordered breast works to be thrown up on every command ing point, and artillery to be planted wher ever it could be most effective. One bat tery was completed on the right batik of the river by the 25th, and without waiting for others the siege was at once commen ced. It was a dark and gloomy morning, de. voted to a dark and unholy purpose. Ex ulting in the work of death, upon which he is entering, Santa Anna crosses the ri ver in person and establishes his headquar ters in a small stone building—yet stand ing—from which he may the store accu rately perceive the progress of his designs, without exposing himself to his enemies. The signal is given, and before the sun has risen upon those hostile hosts, the roar of the Mexican battery awakens the echoes far and wide, and rouses from their slum bers the yet unconscious inhabitants. But the defenders of the Alamo have not, for a single moment, lost sight of the movements of their wily and implacable foes ; they watch the studied direction of every gun; they s:e the match lighted ; they listen breathless, as if, even from that distance, they could hear the command to fire ; and when the walls of the citadel tremble un der the shock of the iron hail, and the fragments of the parapet are whirled aloft by the sudden impulse, they send back a shout of defiance, mingled with a discharge from their own guns, as distinctive, if not as deafening, as the thunder of their assail ants. Before the smoke tolls away and the re verberations are lost in the distance, while the shouts of the besieged still linger in the ears of the besiegers, the cannonade is re sumed, and for seven hours, without pause or relaxation, fiercely continued upon the walls of the Alamo. But these walls yiel ded no more than the spirits of their de fenders. The fire is steadily returned ; and, though stones are shivered around them, there are stout hearts and willing hands ready to repair every breach, and to restore from the interior whatever may have been destroyed from without. Earth is thrown up; every crack or fissure is closed as fast as created by eager efforts of those who will permit no evidence of success to cheer the hopes of their ene mies. The sun is almost sunk behind the western plains, when there is a pause in the work of demolition. Ttie firing of the besiegers cease for the day, with the Mexican thirst for blood unsatiated. Not a single drop has been shed within the Alamo, Many of Santa Anna's own men have bit the dust before the artillerists and riflemen of the fort ; but thus far unaveng- ed. Darkness falls upon the besiegers and besieged. The former raise new entrench ments to prosecute the assault ; the latter establish a close watch for the night, arid endeavor to seek that repose which shall renew their vigor for the contest, which they know will come to-morrow. The morning of the `2ath dawns and re veals to the occupants of the fort the effect of the midnight labors of their enemies, in the establishment of two additional batter. ice within the Alameda of the Alamo. The bayonets of the infantry, which have cros sed the river during the night, glittering in the morning beams, and the plumes of the cavalry are seen waving on the eastern hills to intercept the expected aid from that quarter. The contest is renewed by a slight skirmish between a small party of Texans, sent in quest of wood and water, and a Mexican detachment under General Sesma ; but this is a mere overture to the grand performance of the day. The thun ders of heavy ordnance, under the direc tion of Colonel Ampudia, are soon roused into action ; volley after volley is poured into the fort, and answered only, except at rare intervals, by the shouts of those with in. There is no pause, no cessation. Still the cannonade goes on; shells fly hissing through the air rnd the balls bury them selves within the rayons; but night again comes on, and the Mexican General in vain looks for evidence of success. Baf fled, but not discouraged, he advances his line of entrenchments, and prepares, with the morning light, to' resume his bloody task. The north wind sweeps over the prairies, as it only sweeps in Texas, a stormy lullaby to the stormy passions of those contending hosts. The darkness is broke only by the feeble blaze of a few huts, fired by the Texans, which had fur nished a cover to the enemy. The flames curl upward with a sickly glare, and their fitful flashes throw a lurid light for a mo ment upon the slumbering army and ex pires. The reign of darkness and of si• knee is nosy restored. active, though engaged in the construction of additional batteries. There is but little firing on either side. Travis and his men, with spirits unsuodued and with energies weakened, but not exhausted, are applying their contracted resources to the purposes of defence. No heart falters ; no pulse throbs with diminished power; no hand shrinks from the labor that necessity im poses. All is confidence and determina tion, and in every breast there is firm reli ance, springing from the holiness of the cause and the certainty of its final tri umph. Sunday follows, but brings no rest to those whom God has created in his own image, and who, in violation of His com mands, are thus yielding to their erring and unhallowed passions. Perhaps within the chapel of the Alamo, consecrated to the worship of the Almighty, and distin guished by the emblem of suffering and salvation which surmounts the dome, heads may be bowed in prayer to the God of bat tles for deliverance from their sanguinary foe ; but that foe takes no heed of sabbaths. Exclusive followers, as they proclaim themselves, of the true church, they doom to destruction the very temple they have erected for its worship; and, kissing the cross' suspended from the necks and plan ted before every camp, they point their guns upon the symbol for which they pro fess such unbounded reverence. The fire of the Mexican artillery keeps company with the minutes as they roll on. Morning mid-day and evening are passed, yet there is no faltering among those who are defen ding the Thermopylre of Texan liberty. Another sun rises and sets, and yet anon thee; still the indomitable hearts of Travis and his companions quail not before the untiring efforts of their enemy. In spite of that enemy's vindictive vigilance, the little garrison receives from Gonzales a re inforcement of thirty-three men—addition al victims for the funeral pyre soon to be kindled by Santa Anna, on the surround ing hills, as a human hecatomb to Mexican vengeance. New. batteries are erected by the beset gers. From every point around the mis siles of destruction concentrate upon the Alamo. The final hour must soon cotno. Provisions are not yet exhausted, but the ammunition cannot last many days longer, Water had long been supplied solely by the daring efforts of a Mexican woman, who, through showers of grape and mus ketry, has threaded the way to and fro be tween the river and the citadel, while her own blood has marked the path. She bears within her the stern and lofty spirit of her ancestors, stretched upon the rocks of Cor tez, and it is not the fear of torture or aeath that can swerve her from her purpose. The siege has continued for ten days.— " LIBERTY AND UNION, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE." HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1857. The Mexican general has received large I reinforcements, and his army now numbers thousands. Ho has been unceasing in his efforts to batter down the walls, but has thus far failed. The triumph is with Travis ; but is written in the heart of his ruthless foe that lie must die, and when the cannonade is suspended on the 6th of March, a small breach has been effected, and Santa Anna has determined, without a summons to surrender, that the hour for the assault has arrived. During ten days a blood red flag has been streaming from the spire of the church in San Antonio; proclaiming that no quarter is to be given to the champions of the Alamo—that blood alone will appease the vengeance and fury of Mexican malice. When the sun again goes down the flag is no longer seen, for the deed, of which it was the sign, has been accomplished. It is midnight; stars are smiling in the firmament, and the repose of Paradise, seems hovering over the armed hosts and hills and plains which encircle the Alamo. The calm is so deep and solemn that the angel of death seems to pause before the strife and carnage which are to follow. A low murmur rises upon the air, which gradually becomes more and more distinct. Lights are glancing mysteriously in the distance, and indicate some unusual move ment. the besieging army is in motion. There is no advance by columns, The force of the Mexicans is so great that the fort may be completely surrounded leav ing intervals only for . the fire of artillery. The place is girdled by a deep line of in fantry; and there are hemmed in and in compassed by another of cavalry. If the first falter or shrink, they must be thrust forward to the assault by the sabres and lances of their comrades. Suddenly the batteries are in a blaze, and, from their concentric positions, pour fourth radii of fire from the circle of Santa Anna's ven geance, verging to a single center. Amid the thunders thus created, their own shouts hardly less terrible, and the martial blast of s hnna.nd Inminn -.a vance to thg Alamo. A sheet of flame front the rifles that never failed, is the answer to the charge. The infantry re coil and fall back upon the cavalry, their ranks broken and disordered by the deadly fire of the besieged. The shouts from the fort are mingled with the groans of the' wounded and dying on the plains, their scattered masses. They return to the at tack, but the leaden shower which they again encounter fells them to the earth by platoons. Travis shows himself on the walls, cheering his cool, undaunted followers,— Around him ore Crockett, Evans and Bar ham, roused to the last struggle, for they know their doom is sealed. In quick suc cession rifle after rifle is discharged, send ing hundrealp their long account. The Mexicans alir again repulsed; they fall back dismayed and disheartened by the dead and dying around them. The bat talion of Toluca, the flower of Santa An na's army, is reduced from four hundred to twenty-three. Men have become for a moment regardless of their officers, and are almost delirious from the cries of an guish of their fallen and expiring com rades, yielding to the influence which no discipline can restrain and no efforts re press. But the breach now appears prac ticable; the disjointed forces, by the aid • of threats and entreaties, are rallied, and once more return to the assauslt. The fire from the Alamo has, for some time, been growing slower and slower. Rifles have dropped front many a vigorous hand, now oold in death, while others cling to their weapons, even in the agonies of dissolution. Ammunition, too has been falling ; One by one the muzzles drop ; and e're the last rifle is loaded and discharged, the Mexi cans gain the wall. Fearfully conspicu ous in that awful moment, Travis receives a shot, staggers, and falls. He dies not unavenged. A Mexican officer rushes upon hint and is about to plunge his sabre into the bosom of the fallen man, when, gathering his remaining energies for a des perate effort, he bathes the sword to which he still clings, in the blood of his enemy and they die together. In the meantime the conflict hasbecome hand to hand, and has been raging hot and thick. The Mexicans have poured into the citidet like famished wolves, furi ous for their prey. Each man struggles with his adversary with the energy of des pair, dealing the death•stroke with rifles, sabrus, of• whatever missiles may be with in reach...ithe Texans nre almost buried beneath the numbers of their opponents. The carnage has been so great that the slain are piled up in heaps. Death stares each survivor in the face, yet still he I struggles on. Crockett has been conspic- I uous in the melee wherever the blows fell hottest and fastest. He had forced his way over piles of the dead bodies of his ene rnieq; and has reached the door of the chapel. Here he determines to make hie last stand. At one glance of his eye he sees that the fate of the Alamo rests upon himself alone, and that fate nothing can avert. Travis has fallen; Evans is no more; Bowie expires upon a bed of sickness, pierced to the heart by a Mexican bayo net ; Bnrham falls directly before him, and he finds himself the only living warrior of the hundred and sixty.thiee who had been his companions. Perhaps at that moment the life-blood creeps to his heart by a natural impulse ; but it is only a mo ment. The description of his position sends it back with the force of an avalan che. His foes glare on him with the fierce ness of demons, and assault him with blows from muskets, lances, and sabres. The strength of a hundred men seems concen trated in his single arm, as ho deals out death to his pitiless and unsparing assail ants. Their bodies have grown into a rampart before him. Blackened with fire and smoke, besmeared with blood, and roused into phrenzy, he stands like some fable and god of antiquity, laughing to scorn the mrlice ancl the power and the fury of his enemies. New fire flashes from his eye and new vigor nerves his arm. On his assailants rush, but it is upon death, certain and immediate. They fall but their places are still supplitd, and so quickly the dead seem to rise up before him like armed men from the teeth of cad mus. At length a bull, from an unseen ri fle, pierces him in the forehead; he falls backward to the earth in the steams of gore which curdle around him. No groan es capes his lips, n) cry of agony gratifies the implacable rancor of his enemies. He dies, and the Alamo has fallen. ot! l t pranta. ts,Nitiaforiai Ipuestion AFTER 8111AKSPEARE. DAN DOUGHERTY'S ORATION OVER THE DEAD BODY OF FORNEY, AS IT OUGHT TO HAVE BEEN DELIVER• El) AT THE INDIGNATION MEETING AT PHILADELPHIA, JAN. 16th, 1857, BEING A SLIGHT ALTERATION OF ACT 3d, SCENE 2d, OF JULIUS CiESAR. SCENE—KeyBtone Club Headquarters. Eater Foster and Brodhead, amid throat, of Democrat. Democrats. We will be satisfied ; let us be satisfied. Foote, Then follow me, and give me audi ence, friends— Brodhead, go you into the other street. And part the numbers,— Those who will hear me speak let them stay here; Those that will follow Brodhead, go with him And Iliadic reason shall he rendered Of Forney's death. nkin. I will hear Foster speak. Nicholson. I will hear Brodhead and con• pare their reasons, When severally I hear thorn rendered. [Exit Brodhead with some of the eitizeustl Foster goes on to the stand. 31ellalcin. Thu oriole Foster is ascended.— Silence I Fos. Be patient till the last. Fellow Democrats and friends hear the for my cause; and be silent that you may hearbe• hove me for mine honor; and have'respect to mine honor, that you may believe ; censure me in your wisdom ; and awake your senses, that you may the better judge. If there be in this assembly, any dear friend of Forney's, to him I say that Foster's love to Forney was no less than his. If then that friend demand why Fos. ter rose against Forney, this is my answer—not that I loved Forney loss, but place mote. Had you rather Forney were elected, and we all tur ned out; or that Forney were defeated, and we kept in. As Forney loved me, I weep for him; as he was ualortunate I rejoice at it;as he was useful I. honor him; but as he was dishonest I slew him. There aro tears for his love; joy for his mis.fortune ; honor for his usefulness ; and death for his dishonesty. Who is here so base to justify the Forrest letter ? If any, speak ; for him have I offended. Who is there sorude that would not be a gentleman? If any, speak; for him have I offended. Whu is there so vile, that would not spurn dictation ? If any, speak; for him have I offended. I pause for a repl, Dem. None, Foster, none. Several veaking at once. Fos. Then none have I offended. I' have done no more to Forney than he'd have done to Foster. The question of his death is enrolled in the Capitol ; his glory not extenuated where he was worthy, nor his offences enforced for which he suffered death. Enter—D•gh•rty, Carrigan, McKibben, Van dyke, and others, with Forney's body. _ _ Here comes his body, mourned by ll•gli -rty ; who, though he had uo hand in his death, shall receive the benefit of his dying, a place in the Commonwealth ; as which of you shall not?— With this I depart; that as I slew my best friend for the sake of place, I stand the same chance myself, when it shall please my party to need my death. Don. Hurrah I Foster ! Hurrah ! 701 n it,, Rankin. Bring him with triumph home to Greensburg. Power. Give him a seat in the Cabinet. Afc.ilakin. Let him be Governor. Remak. Forney's better parts Shall now be crowned in Foster. Reilly. We'll take him to McKibbens with ehouts and clamors. Foster. Fellow-Citizens ! North, Pence; silence I Foster speaks. Foster. Good citizens, let me depart alone, And, for my sake, stay here with D-gh;rty. Do grace to Forney's corpse, grace his speech Tending to Forney's glories whirls D.n D-gh•rty, By our permission, is allowed to make. I do entreat you not a man depart, Save I alone, till D-gh.rty have spoke. I [Exit.' Lehman. Stay, ho! and let me her D-glerty. .WI chell. Let him go up on the platform; We'll hear him. Go it, Dougherty,—pitch in. Dough. For Foster's sake lam beholden to you ? Sargeant. What does he say of Meter? He says for Foster's sake He finds himself beholden to us all. .Fause/d. 'There best he speak no harm of Foster here. Creesicell. This Forney was a rascal. Smith. Nay, that's certain ; We're bleat the party has got rid of him. Rice. Peace ! Let us hear what D;gh.rty can say. Dough• Friends and follow•conntrymen, lend 1710 your ears : I come to bury Forney, not to praise him. The evil that men do, lives after them ; The good may be inferred from their votes. So let it be with Forney. The noble Foster Hath told you Forney was dishonest. If it were so, then it was a grievous fault; And grievously bath Forney answered it. Here, under leave of Foster and the rest, (For Foster is an honorable man ; So are they all, all honorable men ;) Come Ito speak in Forney's funeral. He was my friend, faithful and just to me ; But Foster says he was dishonest, And Foster is an honorable man. He bath brought many converts to the party here Whose contributions did the general coffers fill. Did this in Forney seem dishonest ? When that his schemes have failed, Forney bath wept. Dishonest mess are made of sterner stuff ; Xfih 11 - it&rioworadie man: You all do know, before the late election He gave to a kindly bribe He might have fobbed himself; was this dia. , honest ? Yet Foster says he was dishonest; And sure, he is an honorable man. I speak not to disprove what Foster spoke, lint here I am to speak what I do know. , You all did love him once, not without cause ; What cause withholds you then to mourn for him 0, judgment, thou net fled to brutish, beasts, And men have lost their reason. Bear with use; My heart is in the coffin there with Forney, And I must pause till it come back to me. Rankin. Methinks there is much reason in his sayings. Power. If thou consider rightly of the matter, Forney bath had great wrong. Has ho, masters? I fear there is a worse come in his place. Remak. Marked ye his words? He did not keep that money ; Therefore 'tis certain he was not dishonest. Power. Poor soul I his nose is red as fire with weeping. There's not a jollier brick in town than D;gh;rty. Reilly. Now mark him; he begins to speak. Dough. But yesterday, the word of Forney might Have stood against the state; now lies he there, And none so poor to do him reverence, 0 masters ! if I were disposed to stir Your hearts and minds to mutiny and rage, I should do Foster wrong, and Brodhead wrong, Who, you all know, aro honorable men. I will not do them wrong ; I rather choose To wrong the dead, to wsoug myself and you, Than I will wrong such honorable men. But here's a parchment, with the seal of Buck, I found it in his pocket ; 'tis a letter. Let but the commons hear this document, (Which, pardon me, I do not mean to read,) And they would go, slap Forney on the back, And with gyrating fingers upon nose upturned. Would beg a hair of him for memory And laughing, mention itsto all their friends, Retailing it as a first-rate joke Unto their fellows. Morton. We'll hear the letter : read it Dan Dougherty. Mitchell. The letter, the letter: let us hear Buck's letter. Dough. Have patience, gentle friends ; I must not read it I It is not meet you knowhow Old Buck lov'd him You are not wood, you are not stones, but men; And being men, hearing the letter of Buchanan , It will inflame you, it will make you mad. Lehman. Read the letter; we will hear it, Dougherty. , I . You shall read us the letter; Buck's letter. Dough. Will you be patient ? Will you stay awhile ? I have o'erohot myself to tell you of it. I fear I wrong the honorable men, I Whose votes defeated Forney; Ido fear it. Lehman. They were traitors. Honorable meld , All. The letter I the document I I ;Weer. They were villains, scouuch els. The letter. I Read the letter. Dough. If you have teats, prepare to shed them mow.' You all do know this overcoat. I remember The first time ever Forney put it on ! 'Twos on an Rotumal evening, at his hotel I The day he overcame the Know Nothings. Look in his place how Waionseller voted; See what a dig the envious Lebo made ; And now the well-beloved Foster bolted, And as he threw his cursed vote away. Mark how his pack of traitors followed him. This was the most unkindest cut of all ; For when the noble Forney saw him vote, Ingratitude more strong than traitors' arts, Quite vanquished him. Then burst tho mighty oath, And in his mantle muffling up his face, Even in despite of all Buchanan's influence, On which he so much reckoned, great Forney fell. 0, what a fall was there my countrymen Then, I and you, and all of us fell down. Whilst Simon Cameron triumphed over us. 0, now you weep I and I perceive you feel The dint of pity ; these are gracious drops ! Good friends, sweet friends, lot me not stir you up To any sudden flood of mutiny. They that have done this deed are honorable, And will no doubt wills reasons answer you. I come not, friends, to steal away your hearts I am no orator as Foster is ; But, 118 you know me all, a plain, blunt man, That love my friend l and that they know full well, That gave me public leave to speak of him. For I have neither wit, nor worth, nor words, Action, nor utterance, nor the power of speech, To stir men's blood, I only speak right ou ; I tell you that which you yourselves do know ! Show you sweet Forney's wounds, pour, poor dumb mouths, And bid them speak for me. But were I Foster And Foster Dougherty, there •vere a Dougherty Would ruffle up your spirits and would make The very For(r)est howl in agony and rage. All. We'll mutiny. Ran. We'll burn the house of Foster. Mc"Vakin. Away then, come seek the con• spirators. [Exeunt Democrats with the body. Dough. Now let it work, mischief thou art afoot ; [Enter Wm. Rice. Rice. Sir, Magraw is already in town. Dough. Where is he ? Rice. He and Dawson are at Forney's house Be comes upon a wish. Fortune is merry And in this mood will give us anything. Rice. I hearti him say Foster and Brodhead Are rid like madmen to the Western cars. Belike they had some notice of the people, How 1 had moved them. Bring me to Magraw. Exit Rice. This Foster was the noblest of them all, All the conspirators save only he, Did that they did in envy of great Forney; Ile only in a general honest thought, And common to all, mode one of them, But I must on to see Magraw. ~i~Z CCZX u A CALIFORNIA PEAR.—The Rev. Eli Corwin, Secretary of the California State Agricultural Society, who.arrivcd from California, on Saturday, brought with him a remarkable speci:nen of the fruits of that State, in the shape of a monster pear. It is of the species known as the pound pear, and weighs 21 pounds. It measures 21.1 inches around, the long way, and 14d in ches the other way. Mr. Corwin has left this curiosity at the American Institute.— N. Y. Tribune. , THE EFFECTS or LATlN.— An d rew Jackson was once making a stump speech out west, in a small village. Just as he was concluding, Amos Kendall, who sat behind him, whispered, "Tip 'em a little Latin, General ; they won't be contented without it." The man of the iron-will in stantly thought upon the few phrases he knew, and in a voice, of thunder wound up his speech by exclalming, pluribus u num—sine qua non—ne plus ultra—mul tum in parvo." The effect was tremen dous, and the Hoosiers' shouts could be heard for miles. • .1k t J "I have found," says Addison "that the men who are really the most fond ot the ladies, who cherish for them the highest respect, are seldotn the most popular with the sex. Men of great assurance, whose tongues are lightly hung, who make words supply the place of ideas, and place corn-, pliment in room of sentiment, are the fa vorites. A due respect for women leads to respectful action towards them ; and re spect is mistaken for neglect ot love." elir Among the queer things that have already taken place in 1857, we notice that the bar of Lower Canada has had a baby. A Montreal paper gives him this first-rate notice. "George Baby, Esq., after a highly cre ditable examination before the council, was admitted to the bar. Mr. Baby studied under the Hon. Mr. Drummond, late Attor. ney.Gencral for Lower Canada." VOL. xxii. O. 8. The Pope and the Roman Catholic Church in America and Switzerland. In a secret conclave held at Rome on the 15th of December, the state of the Roman Catholic Church in Mexico, South America, and Switzerland was taken into consideration, and an allocution since pub lished by his holiness on the subject clear ly shows that the Papal influence is con siderably leas in those countries than in this. The Pope complains bitterly of the new government of Mexico, which has completely set aside the elcesiastical juris diction and sequestered the property of the church. We are told that the monastic establish ments have refused to permit the "visita tion" of the bishops, and that some of them have, in open defiance of the canon ical laws. sold part of their property.— The permission given by the government to all seats publicly to practice their re ligious rites, is denounced as an "abomi nable measure, which is calculated to un dermine the most holy Roman Catholic re ligion." After summing up the various backslidings of the Mexican government his holiness declares all the measures which it has taken against the authority of the apostolic chair to be null and void.— The Mexican statesmen are also remdined that the church has the power severely to punish those persons who have the pow er to disobey her behests. That the be haviour of the majority of the South American States towards the church does not give satisfaction will be seen by the following address to the bishops: "You will see, reverend brethern, that we must necessarily condemn and abhor the at tempt of the civil power to overthrow all spiritual authority and discipline, and to insult the dignity and might of the apos tolic chair." The state of Switzerland makes Pius IX quite disconsolate, "so nu merous are the encroachments of the civ il authorities on the rights of the church and of her bishops and servants." After hurling his thunder at those priests who obey the laws of the resntrie■ in whn-h Warded to them from Rome, the holy fa ther entreats the Most High to enlighten the minds of men, and to bring back those gone astray into the right path. As a matter of course, the Wiener Zeitung gives the allocution in exienso, although it is a very lengthy document.—fienna correspondent of the Times. Rather Ton ghish A correspondent of Porter's Spirit, wri ting from Cleaveland, Ohio, declares that a large dry good establishment was recent ly burned down in that city, when one of the large fire-sate manufacturers of New York, who knew they had one of their ar ticles in the building, wrote on and repea ted :he proprietors of the ruined store to state how their safe had withstood the conflagration, and the answer received, was an follows :—"Gentlemen, your sates are wonderful. Nothing can surpass them for protecting books and papers, though they have some unfortunate oppo site effects. One of the clerks, on Satur day bought a Shanghai rooster, and at night unknown to any of us, put it for safe keep ing in the safe. That night our establish ment was destroyed by fire, and its con tents were exposed to a tremendous heat daring the apace of thirty-six hours, at the end of which it was hoisted out, red hot. As soon as possible it was opened, and you may judge of our surprise when we found within it the Shanghai rooster, leaning against the ledger, frozen to death," A SINGULAR FASCINATION.—An English paper relates tho following unaccountable occurrence "One of the most singular instances in connection with material things exists in the case of a young man who, not very long ago, visited a large iron manufactory. He stood opposite a large hammer, and watched with great interest its perfect reg ular strokes. At first it was beating im mense lumps of,Frimson metal into thick black sheets, but the supply becoming ex hausted, at length it only descended upon the polished anvil. Still the young matt swed intently on its motion, then he fel laved its stroke with a oorresponding mo tion of his head; then his left arm moved to the same tune; and finally, he deliber ately placed his fist upon the anvil, and in an instant it was smitten to a jelly, The only explanation he could afford was, that he felt an impulse to do it, that he knew he should be disabled, that he saw all the con sequences in a misty kind of manlier, but that he still felt the power within above sense and reason--a morbid impulse, to which, in fact, he succumbed, and by which he lost a good hand." se- Learn to labor and to wait.