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All Lettersand Communications addressed to the Editor by mail must be post-paid, or they will not be attended to THE GARLAND. —"With sweetest flowertenricled. ' % j From various gardens cull'd with care.",) SELECTED FOB TUE STAB AND DAWNED LAUGHING IN CHUITed. DEDICATED TO currAm LADIES OF TUE CHIIIICII CIETTIA 1111116, PA. 'IAn eye lit dp-with harmless glee, A gay and happy tone, And smiling lip, have charms for me; And no good reason can I see, Why teeth, that shame the ivory, Are never to be shown. But yet, dear girls, I must confess, Though you may think it odd, That I would lovo you none the less, Did your sweet faces but express Something liko'decent seriousness, When in tho house of God!" DID I SAY THAT I LOVED mutt I have listened oft, to the converse soft Of my cousin Mary Moore, As we sat in the shade, by the spreading made Of the tail-tree over the door;. Did I say that I loved her? oh, no; But her words as they fell, Had a musical swell, And a chastening, softening flow. I have laugh'd with the beck of her merry eye When my heart with griefwas torn; Was as clear and blue as the limpid sky On a cloudless summer morn; Did 1 say that I loved hell oh, no; But her heart was as light, And bar eye was as bright, As are those of the mountain doe. I have sigh'd as I heard a measured tread Come pacing down the hall; And have frown'd at a glimpvo of the frizzled head 1- Of a beau on an evening call; Did I say that I loved her! oh, no; But thorn's naught that my eyes Ever saw to despise So moot as a tall whiskor'd beau! alII:0(92/TI&S"la00Cz30 From tho Christian Keepsake, for IMO. A Scene on tho Ohio...the Solitary Grave. DT nay. T. TODD. Beneath von tree where rolls the flood— Ohio's gentle wave— There stands the stone, still mark'd by blood, And there the stranger's grave. • *' * It now rained in torrents, and I took shelter under the branches of a huge hemlock which stood near the bank of the river. Seated upon a decaying log, 1 was in a fair way to rest, and even to sleep, for not a drop of rain could penetrate the cov ering of the giant tree whose arms were spread over me. Just then the hunter's dog came bounding towards me with a cheerful look and wag of the tail which seemed to say I you are just what I was looking for.' He opened his deep mouth, and a single bay brought his master to my side. His hard, weather-beaten, yet kind countenance lighted up, as he gave me his sinewy hand ; but the smile and the light passed away in a moment, as the heat light ning of summer will flash across the whole face of the cloud and bo gone in an instant. I had never seen him so moody before, and for a long time sat silently watching him, to see if the clouds which I saw, werethose which precede or those which follow the storm. In a short time the paddles and the ma chinery of a steamboat were heard, and in a few moments more she was in sight—a vast floating ark moving with amazing ra pidity and grandeur.—The shower had driven the passengers under cover, and though she was crowded with human be fogs, yet scarcely one was to be seen. gazed upon it as I would upon a moving thing in beautifulliorame—they were all strangers to Mt: . It is astonishing to no ticehoW i3ifferently we look at a moving 'aieamboat full of entire strangers, from what we do if ire know it contains one be ing whom we know and love 'I The boat moved on. ns heedless of the hunter, his dog and myself, as we could possibly be of her. We had not spoken a word since she came in sight; but just as ,she rounded a point above and was going out of sight, the old man broke out—`Ay, ay, she can dou ble the point safely enough now, and go puf ling on as proud as a boy with a new rifle. but I have seen the day when she would not dare go so near that point, or if she did, she would soon be glad to be otT at nny rate. She's a grand creature though and goes like a hound.' What are you thinking of, friend Ro gers? —What day are you thinking of, when that point was so dangerous ? The trees and the banks look to me as if there had been no great alteration there since your day.' No, no the banks and trees stand just as they did. I said nothing about them ; but you Yankees are always for skinning the bear before you have caught him, and this )ou call drawing inferences.' Well, well, I own I was on the wrong scent for this once, but do tell me the story . for I can not but draw the inference that you have some story connected with that bend of the river.' At once the face of the old man became sad and melancholly. He was silent again, and began to repent that I had pressed him. He leaned upon his well-tried rifle, and I thought could see his keen eye moisten. 'Difl 'you notice that I felt bad when I came find found you here ?' Yee, I noticed that you were silent, but did not know it was because you found me here, trying to keep dry under this hem lock.' 'On the wrong scent again 1 But look this way, Do you see that grave down in that little hollow with a stone at its head l' ' I do indeed, and wonder I had not seen it before.' It's easy to see things when they are shown to us. I have pointed out many a deer to a young hunter when he was just going to see it, and wondered why he had not. But that grave, and that point, and my story are all connected. The story however is short, and now that we are here, I must think it all over again, and L may as well think aloud and let you hear it. It was many, many years ago, long be• fore such a thing as a steamboat was heard of, or dreamed of, that the event happened. I was young then, strong, and full of life and hope ; no one seeing me then, would have thought that I should ever becotne this withered old men.' ' As straight as a rifle, and as strong as a buffalo, and with an eye and an ear as keen as an eagle's,' said I. Yes, I can yet split a ball on the point of a knife at two hundred yards, but this II not bo long. My hand same trembles. But don't you talk if you want my story.' Go on, and I will not interrupt you a• gain.' " Well, it is now nearly forty years since I first saw the glorious Ohio. I shouted when I first saw it; I have koked. it ever since, _and when I die, I tiolittAshall be buried on its banks. On u eeNii. day I . engaged to go down the river tO''Ke - ntucicy, with Captain Ward, as he was removing his family from the East. The journey was long, and at best would be tedious. l went as a kind of pilot, for I was well acquainted ith the river, , ,rid t all points of danger. ho country wa9:llien full of Indians, and no settlementio of ntlY note had been made in Ohio. The whites and the Indians too were continually making war upon each other; I do not know who was the most to blame s . The whites killed the most and the Indians were most cruel. We purcha sed an old, crazy, square-built boat, between forty. and fifty feet long, and about eight or ten wide. We contrived to spike on a sin gle pine plank on each gunnel, and this was the only thing we had to defend us. We had a heavy load, furniture, baggage, hor ses, pigs, fowls and ploughs, besides nearly a dozen people. These consisted of the captain, his wife, and their young children, a widow sister and her son, besides several men to manage the boat. When we left we were fearful lest the Indians should ut tack us from the shorq, but, we knew that by keeping in the middle o . f.tli,e• river, we should be beyond the roach Ot .thor rifles, or could be in a few moments:—Thus we passed on for several days, till we supposed we were beyond the haunts of the Indians. Oki day just at sunset, alter we had become tired with rowing, we let our boat drift lazi ly and carelessly along on the current. We were just getting ready to pin up for the night. The mother was promising the children a good run on the shore. The widow was getting out the provisions, and making arrangements for our supper. The captain and his nephew had hold of the oars, and moved them only just enough to allow me to steer the boat. Rogers," says the captain, suppose we put in this siee of that point, and tie our boat to one of those big trees, and there en• camp for the night.' It's a right good place, captain, and I like it. Besides, I thought a few moments ago, I heard wild turkeys just over the hill, and I should like to have one for supper.' 'So we put in towards the shore, and had got within about fifty yards of that point around which the steamboat had just passed, when I heard a stick clack as if broken by tho foot. A deer,' said the captain. No, no,' I shouted, 4 row, row for life, or we p 7 all dead.' At' that instant down rushed scores of Indians to the shore, with a shout that made the hills across the river echo it back a gain. The murderous creatures rushed down to the water's edge, and presented their guns and opened a heavy fire upon us. In an instant the young man snatched his rifle, and rising up his hill length, fired at G. W.A.OZINGTON 'BOWEN, 'EDITOR Zr. PR.O7P.IETOP.. "The liberty to know, to utter, and to argue, freely, is above all other libtrties."—Miuron. sanewzreatTnacuo wazixocalr9 azaraoza aacriso the nearest Indian who had a shaggy head dress. The Indian fell, and so did the young man at the same instant. As he fell his ore dropped overboard, and the rowing of the Captain brought the boat around and still nearer. The Indians yelled, the wo men screamed, the horses were falling and plunging, and bullets wero flying thick around us. Yet above it all ; the voice of Captain Ward rose clear and cool—'Ro gers take my oar.' I twit it ; and he at the same instant seized a piece of plank, and rowed to such purpose that in a few minutes we were out in the river beyond the reach of their rifles. We know they had no canoes, being on a huntina r' excursion and that we we're then safe. But oh ! what a sight ! the horses were all dead or dying, one child badly wounded, the boat half filled with water, and the young man in his blood in the bat. tom.of the boat. By this time the coolness of the Captain was all gone. He lay down by the side of his nephew, whom he loved as his' own son, and exclaimed, 0 John! John !. '0 Lord have mercy 1, have mer. cy I I 'have brought the, ildiOr,boy to his' death !' But the widowed nibther ! She was pule as a sheet : but she came to her son, raised his head in her lap, and opened his bosom where the blood was coming out still. Ho was yet alive. John,' said she in a sweet voice, as it speaking. to a tab°, John,' do you know me? rr My mother,' said he in a whisper. ' Can you swallow, John ? said she, put- ting her hand over and dipping up some water from the river. He tried, but could not. My sop do you know you are dying V. Yes, mother; but are you hurt V No, no; but don't think pf me noWit Can you pray with the heart now, my dear son 7' Ile looked up a moment, and gasping said, God be merciful to me a sinner for the sake of Of Jesus Christ,' said the mother, for he was gone. She bent over him a moment as if in silent prayer, then kissed his lips, and for the first time, tears filled her eyes. Till that moment you would have thought she hair been talking to a little child going to sleep--her voice was so, calm and so mild. She was a widow, this was her on• ly child and a noble fellow he was. But she was a religious woman. I never saw religion like that before nor since. It was ;--'God has done it and he-cannot * g Wo lay off in the river till dark, and then came silently on shore on this side for the night. We dared not light a candle, lest the Indians - shiltild see it., We milked our only cow anattid the childitn, and got kliaiit,to sleep. Nft,then brought the body 4,-I,heyoung man upThe.biank and when the Moon hose up, we dug that grave which you see yonder. We had to bei,cnreful not to make a noise, nor even to;lsliep aloud. But after we had opened the grave and were ready to put the corps in it, the wid owed mother spoke. Is there no ono here that can offer a prayer as wo bury my only child? There was no answer. We could all sob, but wo had never prayed for our selves.—She then knelt down, the widow, and laying her hand on the bosom of her boy, she, in a subdued voice, uttered such a prayer as few ever made ! She was calm as the bright waters at our feet. And when she came to pray for all of us—for the poor Indians who had murdered her boy when she gave thanks to God, that lie had so long comforted her heart with her boy, and wSen she gave thanks that God had given her such a son to give back to him—it was awful we could not but sob a. loud ? You preachers talk about sublimity, but if this was not it, I do not know what is. Well, there we buried him, and there he sleeps yet. In thif morning I got up at day light, and came up hero to place that stone at the head of the grave. It was bloody, for his head had rested upon it. I found the mother was here before mo— perhaps she had been hero all night. She was trying to do the very thing, and so, without saying a single word, I took hold and helped her put the stone nt the head of the grave. It, is now nearly sunk in the ground, bu; it siandi.just now as we placed it. When %Oa hlad.'done, the widow turned and said ' Eitlit:•the tears came and I was thanked fnoZiLth:' I'have sat on this log many times, and tVeuklieciver the whole scene : and though the n*46o. has been in the grave many years,' yet Lcan see her yen now, just as she looked when she tur ned to thank me, and can hear her voice just as it sounded when she spoke to her dying boy. I have never seen such religion since.' Well, Rogers, though you have never seen such religion since, because you have never seen such a call upon a Christian since, may I not hope you have felt some• thing like la' ' I am an old sinner, and have a hard heart ;' and the tears ran down his cheeks. We conversed a long time, and it was good to do so. As we rose up and cast a last look upon the grave, and upon the spot where the Indians fired, I said— ' Rogers, would you like a picture of this story ?" I have Weir, on my heart, and need no other; and yet, perhaps my chil dren could understand it better if they had one. But the story don't need a picture.' ' No, nor would the picture need the story. Gov. MORTON, of Massachusets, has sign ed the bill repealing the license law. SPEAKERS OF THE NATIONAL HOUSE OF 'REPRESENTATIVES. Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg, of Pennsylvania, was the first Speaker of the House of Representatives. He presided in the first Congress from 1789 to 1701, and in the (Ford Congress, from 1793 to 1795 His father, Rev. 11. M. Muhlenberg, was a native of Germany, ai,d came to this coml. try in 1742. He founded the first Luther- an Church in America ; was eminent for learning and piety ; and died at• Philadelphia in 1787. Frederick was his second son, and was born about the year 1750. He was a member of the old Congress, as early as 1776 and was a member under the Con stitution, from 1782 to 1797. Jonathan Trumbull, of Connecticut, was Speaker of the second Congress, from 1791 to 1703. Ho was a son of Gov. TrumbUllt of Conn., end was born 28th of March, 1740 ; graduated at Harvard College 1759; was an officer in the army of the Revolu• lion from the commencement to the close of the war, being most of the time Secreta• 4.llAnd first Aid of Gen. Washington; was ti..inhmber of the House of Representatives from 1789 to 1795, and of the Senate from 1705 to 1796, when he resigned ; was elec ted Governor of Connecticut in 1798 ; and continued in that office until his death, 7th August, 1809. Jonathan Dayton, of Ntw Jersey, was the Speaker of the House from 1795 to 17. 90. He was a gradmite of N. J. College 177 .;, i t was a member of the House from 179 6'1799, when lie went into the Sen ate, was a member of that body up to 1805. - Theodore Sedgwick, of Massachusetts, was Speaker of the 6th Congress, from 17- ,99 to 1801. He was born at West Hart. ford, Conn., in May, 1746 ; was educated, but, on account of poverty, not graduated, at Yale College ; commenced the study of Divinity, but soon left it for the law ; was adrinitted to practice before he was of age, and immediately removed to Massachusetts; was a member of the old Congress in 1785 and 1786 ; a member of the House under the„Constitution from 1789 to 1796, then a member of the Senate to 1799, when he went again into the House, and served till 1801. On leaving Congress, or soon after, he was appointed aJustice of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, and held that office till his death, 24th January, 1.813. Nathaniel Macon, of North Carolina s wns Speaker of the House from 1801 to 1807. He was first elected to the second Congress, and was a member of the House from 1791 to 1815 when he went into the Senate and served thirteen years, giving him an uninterrupted Congressional life of thirty seven years—a term never exceeded by any but Gen. Smith of Baltimore. Mr. Macon was a great friend of the eccentric John Randolph of Roanoke, and it has been said that the principal reason of his being superseeded by Mr. Varnum, was the wish of the House to see the chair filled by a man who neither feared nor loved the eloquent descendant of Pocahontas. Joseph Bradley Varnum, of Massachu setts was Speaker of the House from 1807 to 1811. He was born about the year 1750, was a brother of Gen. Joseph Mitchell Var num of the Revolutionary army, and was himself a soldier in the war. Ile first took his seat in Congress in 1795, and continued a member of the House till 1811, when he went Into the Senate and served ono term, (six years,) in that body. He was of Dra cut, Massachusetts, where he died on the 11th September, 1821, aged 71 years. Henry Clay, of Kentucky, was Speaker from 1811 to 13th January, 1814, when he went on his mission to Ghent. He was again Speaker from 1815 to 1820, and from 1823 to 1825. Mr. Clay was a mem ber of the Senate one year, commencing in 1801, and another year commencing in 1810. He -was of the House from 1811 to 1821, except ..whtle at Ghent, and again from 1823 to-1825, when he was appointed Secretary 'or•Stilte by President Adams, and continued iu - that office till Mr. Adams retired from 'o(114 - in 1829. In 1831 he went into the Senate, and has since remain ed in that body:. His present term will expire in 1843. . • Langd6n Chi. es, of South Carolina,when Mr. Clay resigned to' go to Europe, was elected Spetiker fo s r the remainder of that Congress, a.little more than a year. Mr. Cheves was 5 sears in Congress, from 1810 to 1915, and was President of the United States Bank sometime previous to Mr. Bid dle's appointment. John W. Taylor, of New York, was Speaker from 1825 to 1827, and we believe for a part of the 16th Congress in 1820. Mr. Taylor was a graduate of Union Col lege in 1603, and was a member of the House from 11413 to 1833—a-longer period than any other New Yorker. The aver age time of Congressional service, with the New York 'members, is but three year.— No other State in the Union makes so fre quent changes in her representation. Vir ginia allows the longest term in Congress. The average term of her members being six and a half years. Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia, was Speaker from 1821 to 1823, and a member of the house from 1814 to 1825, and again from 1R27 to 1830. Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, was Speaker from 1827 until appointed Minis ter to Great Britain. Since that time the chair has been occupied by the sons of Ten. nessee—John Bell and James K. Polk, un til the last year. At the commencemetit of the present session, R. M. T. Hunter, of Virginia, was unexpectedly called to the chair—the duties of which ha has hitherto had the good fortune to discharge very much to the acceptance of a!I parties,in the House and in tho country.—Ereter News Letter.! A DISGRACEFUL CASE.—The particulars of a painful case are recorded in a late number of the Haverhill, N. H. Whig. A soldier of the late war was permitted to per. ish in prison for debt. Surely this circum• stance alone should produce a spirit among the people of New Hampshire, sufficient to cause them to erase from their statute books an enactraeliWdisgracef4 to the State and to the ages ;The Whigll4"Jecorde,the case : • • " Died at the Common Jail in this town, where ho had been confined for debt,' and ,after having taken the benefit of the act for :the relief of poor debtors, retained as secu iety for the payment of hts board bill, on the 3d instant, Mr. Ebenezer Eaton, aged 65 years—a soldier of the late war, whose valor won for him the7scars which insured from his country a pension of $4B a year. The case of Mr. Eaton was a hard one;— the object of charity in the eye of the gee. eral government, for the performance of arduous duties and the peril of his life in the defence of the country in the servive of which he was disabled—his days dwindled to their shortest span, his incarceration cannot - bo viewed in any other light than that of the most malignant and heartless tyranny. Had he been young. had he giv en evidence of having concealed property, the case would have been different. But this. was not pretended. And for the crime of being indebted to a man who must have known his circumstances long ago, he was cast into prison, the last abiding place of the felon, the incendiary and the cutthroat, to drop and die as one whose hand had been turned against his brother and his country. Shame where is thy blush V-"-- 4 Law where lingereth thy justicel' " We often come across a good thing go ing the rounds of the papers in shape of a toast given at some celebration or other. This is the last, and is certainly a good one :—TUE GLortrous THIRTEEN STATES OF 1776—Like the faithful servant men tioned in Holy Writ, they can this day ren der an account of their talents: " Lord thou deliveredst unto us THIRTEEN talents;" behold we have gained beside them THIR TEEN talents more. STATISTICS OF DRINKING.-By the fol lowing..curious " statistics of drinking". it will *sedn'that Scotland in proportion to her: population, consumes nearly twice as much spirits as Ireland, and over three times as much as Englund. Spirit Drinking.—The spirit shops in Glasgow amounted, at the last census, to one in every ten houses throughout the ty. The proportion is, of course greater in the low districts. The following is the amount of spirits consumed in England, Ireland, and Scotland :—England, popula Lion, 13,'97,187; galls. ofspirits, 12,341.- 238. Ireland, population, 7,767,401; galls. of spirits 12,293,464. Scotland, popula• tint), 2,365,114; galls. of spirits 7,767,715. Thus it appears that the quantity of spirits annually consumed in England, is seven pints and one ninth per head on the popu lation; to Ireland, rather more than thir. teen pints per head; and in Scotland, (wen. ty-three pints per head. When the drunk ards in Glasgow become too poor to stati ato their appetite for spirits, they now re sort in a great measure to laudanum, which, in an unadulterated state, is consumed in considerable quantities, and regularly sold by many of the chemists. Mr. VAN Bungtv's native county sends 3 whig members to the assembly ; his native district sends three whig senators—his na tive state has declared three times for the good whig cause. The Uniontown, Pa. DeMocrat Antes that on the 7th inst., n box containing 81100 in specie, was stolen from the marl stage between thnt place and Somerfiold, the pro. party of one of the passengers, a gentleman of New. Ark, Ohio. It is said that the rob. ber assisted in loading up the stage at Uniontown—that he was very acemximoda ting and polite to the passengers until night enabled him to filch the box from the stage. His name is Wright, a stage driver, known at Uniontown, and it was believed he had gone west. PENNSYLVANIA COMING !—One. of the most distinguished and influential support ers of Mr. Van Buren in Pennsylvania in the last Presidential Contest, to a private letter to a friend, gives the following glad. dening intelligence with respect to the Pol itics of that State: " I have only time to say that by Gov. PORTER'S Message to the Senate, he has put the seal of his influence upon the whole Destructive party of this State. It kills forever the prospects of Mr. V. B. in Penn.' sylvania, which will in November next give for HARRIaON a greater majority than any State,in- the Union." A Hoax.-4, Michigan correspondent of the Albany Argue states that the story a. bout a wild child discovered somewhere in that State, is a hoax. The oldest house in the United States, so far as can be accurately ascertained, is now standing in old Guilford, Conn., which was built in the year 1639; cons2qtiontly, it , is now 200 years old.' wia.riaomas Jp(i)o cave MUNIFICENT BECIVESTB.-M r. T. Hill, formerly ofSouth ambcth, London and very recently deceased, !ell by his will nearly half a million of dollars for charitable pur poses. Among the bequests of this gentle man we notice the following : London Missionary Society, £20,000 Home Missionary Society, 20,000 British and Foreign Society, 20,000 Irish Evangelical Society, 20,000 Deaf and Dumb Asylum, 2,000 School for the Blind, 2,000 Middlesex Hospital, 1,000 Female Orphan Asylum, 1,000 Female Orphan School, Lord Eldon 's School, Licensed Victuallers'!School, It is stated that the amount bequeathed by Mr:Hill is larger than was ever before given by an individual for charitable purpo ses, with the exception of Mr. Day the part ner in the celebrated house of Day & Mar. tin, blAking manufacturers. This gentle. man left' £lOO,OOO for the purpose of en dowing a hospital for blind persons, having himself been blind for many years before his death. The establishment of Day & Martin is one of the most extensive in the city of London, and the premises look as if they were the grand depot of a large for. warding company, engaged in sending off merchandise to all parts of the world.--.N. Y. Com. Adv. -••• • LANCASTER Comm.—Within a circuit of fitly miles of Lancaster city, Pa., there are one hundred and two iron manufactor ies, and one hundred and forty-two Flour ing Mills, the latter of which consume five millions of bushels of wheat annually.— North. Amer. An improbable story is told in an English paper, of a very heautiful girl only 15 years of age, who had just been discovered in boy's clothes 'on board in East Indiaman. It is added that she had done duty for five years, without licir /lax being detected, and that she is the daughfer of Lieutenant Ar nold of the Royal Navy. BREACH' OF Mama:WE PRomrsE.--ite cently at West Chester, Pa. Miss Eliza Ann White recovered 81500 damages from a fickle swain named Albert Hinamen, for .a violation of a marriage promise. The earthquake felt in the Valley of the Mohawk, at Herkimer,Jan. 16th, was also noticed at Trenton, N. J., in the same limertono.region. VELOCITY or LIGIITNINO:-It has lately been ascertained by a series of ingenious experiments, that the velocity at which lightning, or the electric fluid, moves, to not less than 200,000 miles in a single sec ond of time• A Gentleman, the other. evening, ended an oration in favor ofthe fair:sex with these words: lith, sir, nothing beats a good wife.' I beg your pardon,' rejoined one of the company,' a bad husband does. There are said to be in Ireland, at this moment, five millions of acres of waste land capable of cultivation, and yet thousands of people in that ill fated country can scarcely get potatoes enough to keep them from starvation. THE RECENT FRESHET.--TllO Washing. ton, Pa. Examiner of Saturday says : " On Tuesday last (the 11th inst.) the flood in the western waters was greater than it has been since that of 1R32, when such disastrous consequences by loss of life and property took place. The Ohio is said to have been 40 feet higher than low water mark, on Tuesday. The bridge at the mouth of Cross Creek on the Wellsburg and Steubenville road, has been carried away, and other serious losses, to a great extent, along the Monongahela, Allegheny, and Ohio rivers, and their tributaries have oc curred ; but no lives lost that we have heard or. It is worthy of remark, that the high flood of '32, and that of TuesdAy last in the Ohio, were on the same day of the month, the 11th of February, and we mention it as another coincidence, that they were both in leap year." Mon LAW.--It appears from the Vicks burg (Mississippi) papers, that the terrible exhibition of mob law, which disgraced that city, a few years since, in the destruction of the gamblers, has not answered the purpose. They have again returned, and resumed their occupation ; and a public meeting has been called to devise means to get rid of them. The papers warn them to be off is time, and do well so to warn them, both for the credit of the city, and the lives of the accused. A Grarrr or GIANTS. — The proprietor of Peale's Museum, in New York, has procu red an engagement with a giant subject of King Leopold. The man is between 84 and 9 feet high, well proportioned, and of enormous strength. It is said that he can raise from the floor three men of ordinary size hanging to each arm at the same time ; and on one occasion be threw a man weigh ! ing 170 pounds upon the roof of a two story house. The Spy in Washington, a careful obser ver, says that news from all quarters is high• ly favorable to the cause of General Mini. Bon, and he feels no doubt of bis election. We have some reason to know that appre hensions are entertained of this result at dm White House. 500 500 500