*tar Si Utiostlit/trait Sattsurt. VOL. 5--NO. 48.] THE GARLAND. o *. . •L •i e - v4 cm - , -"With sweetest flowers cnrich'd, From various gardens man] with care." TIMM ARE SOUNDS OF MIRTH. There arc sounds of mirth in the night-air ringing, And lamps from every casement shown: While voices blithe within are singing, That seem to say "Come" in every tone. Ah! once how light in life's young season, My heart bath bounded at that sweet lay, Nor paused to ask of grey-beard Reason If I should the syren call obey. And sec—the lamps still livelier glitter, The syren lips more fondly sound— No, seek, ye nymph, some victim fitter To sink in your rosy bondage bound, Shall a bard, whom not the world in arms Could bend to tyranny's rude control, Thus quail at sight of woman's charms, And yield to a smile his frco born soul? Thus says the sage, while, slyly stealing, The nymphs their fetters around him cast, And, their laughing eyes the while concealing, Lcd Liberty's bard their slave at last. For the poet's heart, still prone to roving, Was like that rock of the Druid race, Which the gentlest touch at once set moving, But all earth's power could'nt shako from its base ORIGIN AL. For the Getlysburg Star and Republican Banner ON THE VARIETIES or THE HUIVIAN RACE. No subject, perhaps, has afforded a more fertile theme tbr speculation, and a more prolific source oferror, than the origin and cause of the different varieties of the human race. The most distinguished naturalists, both of Europe and America, have devoted much time and attention to the subject,with out, however coming to a satisfactory con clusion. Many ingenious hypotheses have been advanced, supported by profound learn ing and argument; hut every one, however plausible its aspect, is liable to serious ob jections. It is now almost universally conceded,that there is but one distinct species, and that the great diversity of flint) and features that is to be found on various parts of the globe, are just so many varieties of the same spe cies. It is maintained by some writers of celebrity, that the Mosaic account furnishes us with evidence, that the several pi ominent divisions have had so many d istinct origins from various sources. In confirmation of their hypotheses, they refer to that creation of man that occupied a portion of the sixth day, and to the creation of Edam and Eve the immediate progenitors of the Hebrews, which is subsequently related in another chapter of Genesis. Other passages in re lation to Cain, they contend necessarily pre suppose the existence of human beings an terior to Adam and Eve, or he could not have obtained those implements of husband ry of which Moses gives an account; they also confess the difficulty of conceiving why ho should betray symptoms of fear upon leaving his father's house, that any one find ing him might slay ,him, or that he should go into another country and marry a wife and build a city, if the descendants of his ancestors were the only human inhabitants on the lace of the earth. However lucid and ingenious the argu ments, a careful perusal of . the Mosaic writ ings cannot fail incontestibly to prove, that those various relations refer to one and the same species. It is presumed by a cele brated English writer, whose opinions are entitled to much attentiori, that those pas sages in reference to Cain, are not inconsis tent with a single creation only. Food, climate, mode of living, with a combination of other causes, are considered amply suffi cient to account satisfactorily for the differ ent varieties of our race. Those causes, either individually or collectively consider ed, are totally insufficient to account for the diversities of color, form, features and ex pression that are to be found among man kind." The European, who inhabits a temperate climate, undergoes no change, either in color or features, during a protracted residence in the tropical regions, the temporary change effected upon the color of the skin, by the scorch;ng rays of a vertical sun, excepted, the dark tinge immediately disappearing as soon as he returns to his native clime. Hut the offspring of those Europeans, who have long been resident in the West Indies or oth er Equatorial regions, are in form and color precisely similar to those born in the tem perate climate of France orEngland. Neith or do those children born in hot climates, whose ancestors 'emigrated thence from a mild climate, differ in the smallest degree from those from whom their ancestors origi nated. The same observation applies to the Mon golion variety; the Chinese, who inhabit a warm count ry,are no darker than the Green landers, who belong to the same variety, in. babiting the seventieth and even the seven ty-sixth degree of North Latitude. The Greenlander, who, in consequence of the extreme cold, is obliged to spend a great portion of the year under grouirtl, is as dark _colored as the Chinese; and those parts of the bodies of the African and other dark varieties, protected by clothing, are as dark as those immediately exposed to the influence of the sun's rays. The color, then, appears to' be dependent upon some inherent peculiarity of the varie ty, without regard to climate. The white and the black man are promiscuously scat tered over the thee of the globe,independent. ly either of climate, food or manner of liv• tkii white man in one place subsisting wholly upon vegetables, in another upon ani " I WISH NO OTHER HERALD, NO OTHER SPEAKER OF MY LIVING ACTIONS, TO KEEP MINE HONOR FROM CORRUPTION."--.SHAKS. mal (Odd; in one country in a state of mill. zation, in another in a state of barbarism,in the torrid, temperate and frigid zones. The same is true of the black nmn. The form of the skull, also varies mate- I rially in the different varieties, without re gard either to climate, food or any of those causes already recited. In the European or Caucasian vuriety,the forehead is prominent, and the superior portion of the skull much more expanded laterally, than in the other varieties. It is upon the greater expansion of those parts, and the consequently greater development of the brain, that the superior intellectual capacities of the European, (which no one scarcely any longer doubts,) depend. From man downward, as the scale of intelligence lowers, we also observe a cor responding retrocession in the forehead.— The ancients were well aware of the fact, that a prominent forehead was almost uni formly an indication ofsuperior intelligence; hence the Statues of their favored gods, re nowned for their wisdom, all exhibita bold and projecting forehead. It is true,that we occasionally hear of highly intelligent indi viduals among the sable sons of Africa, but such instances are extremely rare ; excel). tions,only,Which prove the general rule. The Ethiopian, in physical conformation, does obviously approach nearer to the inferior animals than the European. The narrow receding forehead and other physical pecu• liarities, which it would be unnecessary to particularize,evidently indicate,that the dif ference does not depend merely upon food, climate or inede of living. View the Ethiopian recently imported from the burning climes of Africa, and him who was horn in the temperate regions of North America; in firm and color, they are still the same. In point of intellect, the Eu ropean is vastly his superior. No Athens or Rome ever flourished amongst them. It is the European variety to which the world is indebted for a Cicero and Demosthenes; and in more recent times, for a Pitt, a Fox, a Washington and Franklin, and a galaxy of others who have shone with such brillian cy in the firmament of literature, science and the arts. It is to the superior intelli gence of the European, that the children of Africa are indebted for the blessings of civ ilization, science and the arts; and judging from the progress they have made in the latter two, we here very little to anticipate• from their acquisitions. Whilst they are dependent upon the European for the great est blessings they enjoy, they are also de pendent upon him, (to his eternal disgrace,) for their greatest sufferings and misery.— The want of opportunity may perhaps be urged in their defence; they were no more destitute of knowledge originally, than that variety of the human fiimily which has made such rapid progress in every species of im provement. We are of necessity obliged to refer the general ignorance that prevails amongst them, to some original cause of a mental character. Far be it from the inten tion ofthe writer, to justify the severity with which those unfortunate creatures are too frequently treated, uporithe principle of their ignorance; instead of that being a justifica tion, it should be the strongest incentive to enlist our sympathy and commiseration in their behalf. It is noble anti magnanimous to treat inferiors with lenity. The causes of the different varieties of the human race, yet remain to be explained. The subject is shrouded in darkness, and we have not obtained the means necessary to dispel it; until then, we will be obliged to grope in the dark, and amuse ourselves with such theories as we may chance to stumble upon. One of the most plausible theories in relation to the cause of the different va rieties of our race is by Laurence, an Eng lish writer of deserved celebrity. He'sug gests that a distinct and permanent variety may be produced by accidental deviations from the original species, and that byahe union of those anomalies, without intermix ture with the original, the offspring would after several generations be radically chang ed, with perhaps scarcely a feature remain in common with the original. Thus he thinks a permanent variety may be estab lished. It is like all others, liable to objec tions; for if varieties were thus formed, it is probable that we or our ancestors should have witnessed the formation of one at least of those numerous tribes of varieties of the human race. Not a single instance, how ever, of this kind is to be found on record. In a recent popular work, by an individual who stands high in public estimation for the profundity of his learning, It is observed by the author, that a thousand or more years are requisite, before the influence of climate, and of the other causes enumerated, is exer ted; and that the same period would be re quired for the residence of the African in a different climate, before every vestige of his peculiarity would be effaced. He states,that he does not doubt, that the African would become entirely white among us in five or ten centuries. From the facts already stated, it is obvi ous that climate, and the other causes men tioned, are insufficient to account for the striking peculiarities manifested in the'va rieties of the human race. But even ad mitting it as a fact that climate does exert a great influence,it is not reasonable t?FtUfer that the African would become white a mongst us after a lapse of five or ten or even more centuries; because it is well known that the native Americans, or Indians, are of a red or copper color—consequently, if climate have the tendency to change the native hue of the African, he would in all probability turn red. The" African would not, as the author referred to would have it, E 7 ROBERT WHIT Iht=lZToll, EDITOR, rt7137.110H:R AND pßoprzliTort. watiriwavartKace,, infamazatzt o aLtaratzt e. acme. turn white—but, on the contrary, the white man,as well as the black,would turn red. The cause of the numerous varieties of the human race, is enveloped in mystery ; and he who modestly confesses ignorance, is perhaps nearer the truth than ho who has spent years in searching for the cause; for ofientimes when we are in ssarch of truth, our favorite theories carry us further from the goal, than we were when we set out. The African differs from the European,both mentally and physically, whether he inha bit the torrid, temperate or frigid zone. Reasoning analogically from the inferior animals up to man, we are able to satisfy ourselves that there is but one species, hay hg but one origin—and that the numerous varieties we observe,'are but so many varie ties of the same species. F. The following is a passage from a Poem on enthusi asm, by JOHN . L. Lewis, of Pen Yan, N. Y. which received the premium offered by the publishers of the New England'Galaxy, for the boat Poem. Extracts from the Life and Treason of Bendict Ar nold, by Jared Sparks. OAPTURE OP MAT. ANDRE. It happened that, the same morning on which Andre crossed Pine's Bridge, seven persons, who resided near Hudson's River, on the neutral ground, agreed voluntarily to go out in company armed, watch the road, and intercept any suspicious stragglers, or droves of cattle that might be seen passing towards N. York. Four of this party were stationen a . hill, where . they had a view of the roa a considerable distance. The three othe awed John Paulding, David l ot Williams, and Isaac Van Wart, were con.. scaled in-the Wishes at ififoiner - place • iin - fil very near the road. About half a mile north of the village of Tarrytown, and a few hundred yards from the bank of Hudson's River, the road cross ed a small brook, from each aide of which the ground rises into a hill, and it was at that time covered over with trees and under bush. Eight or ten rods south of this brook, and on the west aide of the road, these men were hidden; and at that point Andre was stopped, after having travelled from Pine's Bridge without interruption. The particulars of this event I shall here introduce as they o are narrated in the testi mony given by Paulding and Williams at Smith's trial, written down at the time by the judge advocate; and preserved in manu script among the other papers. This testi mony having been taken only eleven days after the capture of Andre, when every cir cumstance must have . been fresh in the re collection of his captors, it may be regarded. as exhibiting a greater exactness in its de tails, than any account hitherto published. In answer to the question of the court,Paul ding said: " Myself, Isaac Van Wart, and David Williams,were lying by the side of the road about half a mile above Tarrytown, and a bout fifteen miles above Kingsbridge,on Sa turday morning, between nine and ten o'- clock, the 23d September. We had lain there about an hour and a half, as near as I can recollect, and saw several persons we were acquainted with, whom we let pass. Presently one of the young men who were with me said, "There comes a gentleman like looking man, who appears to be well dressed,and has boots on,and whom you had better step out and stop, if you don't know him." On that I got up, and presented my flrelock at the breast of the person, and told him to stand; and then 1 asked him which way he was going. "Gentlemen," said he, "I hope you beloog to our party." I asked him what party. He said "The lower par ty " Upon that 1 told him I did. Then he said, "I am a British officer out of the country on particular business, and I hope 1 you will not detain me a minute; and to show that he was a British officer he pulled out his watch. Upon which I told him to dis mount. He then said, "My God, I must do any thing to get along," and seemed to make a kind of laugh of it, and pulled out General Arnold's pass,which was to John Anderson, to pass all guards to White Plains and below. Upon that he dismounted. Said he, "Gen tlemen, you had best let me go, or you will bring yourselves into trouble, for your stop ping me will detain the General's business;" and said ho was going to Dobb's Ferry to meet a person there and get intelligence for General Arnold. Upon that I told him I hope he would not be offended, that we did. not mean to take any thing from him; and I told him there were many bad people,who were going along the road, and I did not know but perhaps he might be one." When further questioned, Paulding repli ed, that he asked the person his name, who told hint ,it was John Anderson; and that when Anderson produced General Arnold's pass, he should have let him go, if he had MISCELLANEOUS. WOMAN'S LOVE. But Woman's Love, a treasure richer far, Than all the trophies of the victor are; Oh' let the heartless, selfish worldling deem, That 'tis the fancy of an idler's dream; The frigid Platonist may preach in vain, 'Tis but the fiction of iftie Poet's brain; His frozen heart could never taste the bliss Of mother's love, or gentle sister's kiss. Sweet as the moss-rose in its earliest blush, Is her affection in its first warm gush; Like sparkling , ruby, is its crimson glow, Or silver founts which in the sunbeam flow. 'Tis like the snow upon an Alpine height, As pure, as stainless, and as dazzling bright, A talisman of virtues rich and rare, The brightest jewel happy man can wear. Its clinging fondness never is estranged, It ever burns unchangeable, unchanged. Nor chilled by time, nor overcome by fear, It soothes the soul, and dries the falling tear, So mild and beauteous, ardent, yet so calm, Purer than air, more healing than a•babu, Enthusiasm tests its lasting truth, In woman's heart it reigns in age and youth. In every changing circumstance of life, Child of Enthusiasm, mother, maid or wife not before called himself a British officer. Paulding - atso - said, that when the person pulled out his watch, he understood it as a signal that he was a British officer, and not that he meant to offer it to him as a present. All these particulars were substantially confirmed by David Williams, whose testi- mony in regard to the searching of Andre, being more minute than Paulding's, is here inserted. "We took him in the bushes," said Wil liams, and "ordered him to pull off his clothes, which he did; but on searching him narrowly we could not find any sort of writ ings. We told him to pull off his boots, which he seemed to be indifferent about; but we got one boot off; and searched in that boot, and could find nothing. But we found there were some papers in the bottom of his stocking next to his foot; on which we made him pull his stocking off, and found three papers wrapped up. Mr. Paulding looked at the contents and said he was a spy. We then made him pull off his other boot, and there we found three more papers at the bottom of his foot, within his stocking. " Upon this we made him dress himself, and I asked him what ho would give us to let him go. He said he would give us any sum of money. I asked hire whether he would give us his horse,saddle,bridle,watch and one hundred guineas. He, said 'Ves," and told us he would direct them to any place, even if it was that very spot, so that we could get them. I asked him whether he would give us more. He said he would give us anyquantity of dry goods, or any sum of inoney,and bring it to any place that we might pitch upon so that we might get it. ' Mr. Paulding answered, "No, if you were to give us ten thousand guineas, you should not stir one step." I then asked the person who called himself John Anderson if lie would not get away if it lay in his power. He answered, "Yes, I would." I told him I did not intend that he should.— While taking him along, we asked him a few questiOns,and we stopped under a shade. He begged us not to ask him questions, and said when- he came to any commander he would reveal all. "He was dressed in a blue over-coat, and a tight body coat, that was of a kind of cla ret color, though a rather deeper red than claret. The button-holes were laced with gold tinsel,and the buttons drawn over with the same kind of lace. He had on a round hat,. and nankeen waistcoat and breeches, g anne t and drawers, boots, The nearest military post was NortilfAti tle,where Lieutenant Colonel ClAstesoN was stationed with a part of Sheldon's regiment of dragoons. To that place it was resolved to take the prisoner; and within a few hours lie was delivered up to Jameson,with all the papers that had been taken from his boots. LOVE AND !MIEN DSFIIP. The birds, when winter shades the sky, Fly o'er the sea away, Where laughing isles in sunshine lie, Aud summer breezes play. And thus the friends that flutter near, While fortune's sun is warm, Are Startled if a clould appear, And fly before the storm. But when from winter's howling plains - Each other warbler's past, The little snow-bird still' remains, And cherups 'mid the blast. • Love, like that bird, when friendship's throng With fortune's sun depart, Still lingers with its cheerful song, And nestles on the heart. It was among the loveliest customs of the ancients to bury the young at the morning twilight—for, as they strove to give the soft est interpretation to death so they poetically imagined that Aurora, who loved the young, had stolen them to her embrace. In marriage, prefer the person before wealth, virtue before beauty, and the mind before the body—then you have a friend and a companion. MILTON was asked if he intended to in struct his daughter in thedifferent languages, to which he replied, "No, sir, one tongue is sufficient for a woman." In Sweden there is a strange supersition, that the nobility and great men possess on Christmas a temporary power of self-trans formation into wolves, when they devour sheep, empty the beer cellars! &c. A New South Wales native thus describes a parson.—"He white feller—belong to Sunday—gets up top o' waddy,pile long cor robbera all about debbill, debbill—and wear skirt over transit." An old lady was apt to be troubled in her dreams, and rather superstitious withal, in• formed the Parson of the parish that on the night previous she dreamed she saw her grandfather who bad been dead for ten years. The clergyman asked her what she had been eating. "Oh, only half of a mince pie!"— “Well," says he, •'it you had devoured the other half you might probably have seen your grandmother." HORT SPIDERS MARE BRIDGES.—SODIe of the most distinguished naturalists in the world believe that spiders have the art of crossing streams of water on bridges of their own making. Mr. Spencer relates the fol lowing curious fact. "Having placed a large full grown ,spider on a cane planted upright in the midst of a stream of water, he saw it descend the cane several times, and .remount when it had ar rived at the surface of the water. Sudden ly he lost sight of it, wholly; but a few min utes afterwards, to his great astonishment he perceived it quietly pursuing its awn way on the other side of the stream. Having spun two threads along it the Cane,had Cut one of them, which carried by the wind had become attached to some object on the bank, and so served the spider as a bridge across the water." VARIOUS MATTERS. According to the report on Executive Pittronage, by Mr. Calhoun, there are 100,- 000 persons red with Treasury pup, in the. United States! LEGISLATION EXTRAORDINARY.-- M is- Souri Legislature, Jan. 1. The Speaker laid before the House a communication from His Excellency the Governor, inviting the members to take a glass of wino with him at 3 o'clock--whereupon the House adjourned. The Selrct Committee of the Virginia Legislature, appointed on the subject of in• creasing the Banking capital of that State, have reported in favor of the establishment of a new Bank at Richmond, with .a capital of 82,750,000, with several branches in dif ferent parts of the state. The Richmond Compiler says—We.hear of a distressing affair, which occurred lately in . Nottoway county, Va. Dr. Grisham and Dr. Jackson had some altercation on the subject of the political movements of the day, when the former shot the latter through the body, of which wound he died in a few minutes. We cannot detail the particulars with precision. MIssIssIPPI.—A bill is before the Legis lature to establish a Bank to be located at the town of Jackson, of Five Millions of Dollars! Also, for another Bank to be es tablished at Rodney. Although this beau tiful Jackson administration is for a gold currency and for putting down all Banks, there will be ten where there was one, be fore their crusade commenced. - Major PETER MUISLENTIERG Of this place, says the Reading Chronicle, has beer. nomi• nated by the President, and confirmed by the Senate, as Paymaster of the U: States Army. Legislatures of the Uniom From the Boston Courier. Maine Muse of Representatives,. not less than 100 members, nor more than 200. Se nate, not teas than 20 nor more than 31. -:Massachusettel Senators,4o. Represen tatives, 605. New-Hampshire. Representatives, one for every 150 polls, and over that, one for every 300 rateable polls. Senate, 12 mem bers. Vermont. Every town sends one Repre sentative. The Council consists of 12 mem bers. Rhode Island. Representatives, 72. Se. nate, 10. Connecticut. Representatives, 208. Se nate, not less than 16, not more than 24. New York. Representatives, 128. Se nate, 32. New Jersey. pcpresentatives,so.• cil 14. Pennsylvania. Representatives, 109. Se- nators, 33. Delaware. Representatives, 21. Sena tors, 9. Maryland. Delegates, 80. Senate, 15. Virginia. Delegates, 134. Senate, 32. Delegates never to exceed 150. Senators,36. North Carolina. House of Cominons,l24. Senators, 62. South Carolina. Representatives, 124. Senators, 45. Alabama. Delegates, whole number not to exceed 100, nor less than 60. Mississippi. Delegates, never more than 100, nor less than 38. Senate, not less than one quarter, nor more than one third the number of Representatives. Louisiana. Representatives,not less than 25, not more than 50. Senate,l6. Tennessee. Representatives. 60. Sena tors, not less than one third, 20, nor more than one half, 30. Kentucky. Representatives, not more than 100, nor less than 68. Senators, not more than 38, nor less than 24. Ohio. Representatives, not less than 86, nor more than 72. Senators, not less than one third nor more than half the number of Representatives. Indiana. Representatives, not less than 36, nor more than 100. Senators, not leas than one third nor more than half the Repre sentatives. Illinois. Representatives, not less than 27,n0r more than 36. Senators as in Indiana. Missouri. Representatives, never more than 100; every county one. Senators, nev er less than 14, never more than 33. Michigan Territory. Legislative Coun cil, 13. Arkansas Territory. Legislative Coun cil, 5. House of Representatives, 28. Georgia. Each County sends one Sena tor, each County sends . one . Representative, but none exceed more than four: Congress of the United States. House of Representatives, 240. Oenators, 48. YORK, Pa. Feb. 18. A NEW IaGAL A tattoarr v.--W hen King Philip, of Spain, seeing a man at a distance indulging in the most extravagant expres sions of mirth, observed that "he must be either a fool, or reading Don Quixotte," he little thought that that profound work would ever be quoted in a court of justice as a legal authority. But on a late occasion is this .plase, that 'event actually occurred, and 4th [WHOLE NO. 256.- Don Quixotte, 182, London edition; 1820; was produced by.n . learned counsel and taken down by the preSiding judge; with a moat amusing and amused gravity, as an appahte maxim of law, the gentleman who brought , it forward . Observing that the adventures of the famous "knight, of the rueful counte-, nanco" would survive when ail the lumbei end rubbish of the books of the profession shall have perished. What is also rather nut of the commof order of judicial pro-, ceedings is, that this novel authority was, cited not to throw around the subject the, mists of technical obscurity, but to Menai— nate it with the too-much neglected light oC common sense. When this old-fashioned, criterion of justice is introduced into our courts, we cannot but think that the gentle!, man of the green bag will tremble for flew fees, and the uninstructed multitude will have just cause to suppose that the milleni• um has commenced.—Republi+: MURDER.—The Newburg (N. Y.).Gai. gives the details of another horrible niurder,, of a wife by her husband, In the domestic, sanctuary—the direct result of drunkenness"! Our only purpose, in recording such atroci ; ties, is to aid the cause of TEMPERANCE, bv, the awful lessons which they convey. T 1 e Newburg paper says: The murderer is named Peter Crines.— He returned home drunk from a wood frolic , sent one of his children for a whip, with, which he beat his wife till it.was worn out.; he then went himself for others, and tea: her till he had worn out seven whips. He, also kicked and stamped Upon her, threw her upon the tire and dragged her out again; until she had become almost senseress. He then placed her upon , th 4 bed and lay beside, her. In a short time inconsequence of her, groaning the unfeeling wretch kicked hei upon the floor. After leaving her there a while he arose, and again laid her on the, bed, saying to his little girl that her mother, was dying, but refuseA to let the.alarm given to the neighbors until about an hour after her death. This brutal murder wad committed in the presence of his family, the oldest .4 girl of 13 years of age, who were de., terred from giving the alarm,hy to threats, of the father to kill them likewise. The, mother was the daughter of a respectable 'lnhabitant of Minisink and has left five"ohil: dna. Critics is now in Goshen j a il. , 7:he following statement of , a cgrrman aetit or tne Boston Sentinel, is Vouched for t by the editor of that journal:—Aaron and. Ratiert; two brothers, who lived in the town of S. in the county of Worcester, and whoa died near the close of the last century, .itaif . each born,o him twenty children,each bri4h er had two wives, each wife of each husband: had ten chi4ittp i and each of the four wives had seven sons and three daughters, One fact more--one e—onc,ofeach family only survive?" and that one in both cases the youngest bor n REFUSAL TO BE PARDONED.---A. Very Cu-; rious bit of personal news has arrived this week from Sweden. Captain Laidiberg,', wtio had been pardoned by the.king, after being convicted of treason, persists in repu-, dieting the tavor.iritended him,and declares, his resolution of dying by the hands of the executioner. He will die, he says, in pre ! . fereicer on his birthday the sth November,', believing "that his head falling under the executioner's. axe will cle more Service t'o' his country than if it remained on his she* ders." The authorities have been attempt ing to reason with him, but he is quite exorable! • , An OLD Musnmr.—A musket bas been recently found at Gum Swamp, near ,Cam den,'S. C.; which was identified as being ; once the.property Of a French negro ‘ 'namnd, Levi, who accompanied Gen: Lafayettn to, this country, on . hid first arrival here, and: who continued in the service to the end of the war. The musket was hidden by him after the defeat of General Gates, being too cumbrous to carry. The barrel was eaten through the centre by, rust, and noteith: standing its long burial in a damp soil; yet the powder with which it was loaded;explo ded by application afire: • CHESAPEAKE ANH OHIO regret to have to state the fftiture,yestei day, in the House of Delegates of Virginia,: by a majority of nine; of the bill giving guaranty' of the State to the payment of iri c. terest upon a loan for the use of this Com 7 palm The danger of the precedent of the State's becoming endorser fqr cornknies, seemed to be the principal influence operat ing upon those who voted against the bith though some members indicated their qppo-, sition to in ,on account of the Canals being what they termed a border work: We are ; inclined to think anadditional approplatton on the part of the State would Save met with, more favor; and been less liable ttiplausible - objections. But for the late period of thf session, we should think such an applicathin might yet be presented with success. Vir. ginia having "put her hand , to the plough, will not look back." She will not leave ,s, company, in which she is a partner, to lan. guish for, want of a helping hand at a cal moment.---Richmond Compiler. The Legislature of Canada have three`;' regular salaried reporters, and pay fouttistp__ pars for the official publication of tba bates. This liberal policy secures correct reports, and avoids much of the tuthiraee• and misrepresentation of which parties COw - plain in this country.