I] Rumumrs pAvel II T O. vthilmakt. Ell . • Out in et untli lite naked feet, I saw the .drunkard'slittle daughter; _Her tattered' shawi was She little knew,.for no osie taught her. Her skin was fairher auburn hair Was blown abcpt pretty forehead; Her sad white face wore sorrow's trace, And want and woe that-were-not borrowed. Heart-broken child, she seldom smiled. - Ildpe pronounced her no bright to-morrow, Or, if its light flashed on her night ' Tken up eame darker clouds of sorrow s , Sheiefil l Acire: W.tfitigoillo 'Pio wood to keep the fire a:burning;" The child teas still, the winds so chill,' . /ler thin, cold blood to km ions turning. But-men well fed and warmly alma; • admit fashion;'- Pass.'44l;kpo:(lo - ,# ll 9i:aiits:,4pe; ' gvi l To them for pity 0 r n c nm,41,01;,, - "•:,," ‘ „, Lone fled that night : and then tho light Of rosy day in beauty shining, Set dome and spirb and roof Cu tiro, And shone on ono beyond repining. Alone—alonn- 7 .as ockld stope, - Where tielfirirafent bier:tone& 4er., - ;1 • In - winding sheet of snow and slyer, Was found the drunkard's lifeless-daughter. NOVEL .444G1M4i Rev. fihomes , writes a statement of facts' and comments as follows in his "Friday Miscellany"' I n the Elmira Advertiser. "It is not common fey doomed men to 'faint away' 'last"Oefor:e they are banged, but this is what William C. Bell did on the scaffold at) Alton, Illinois, on the 12th ult. Most cases a matt !sinking into ,Insensibility. before tine woald', have been fan ned and bartshorned into life nein, and then have been putt° death with all the terror and dignity of the law. But the hangman Alton appears' to have been of a /oild And Considerate na ture; for he hastened to finish off Bell before he could return to consciousness so that in seven minutes be was dead; and in.twenty-fivelninutes be was in his coffin.; Of course this hasty ,Way of doingthings - deprived the company of a neat theological speech from a dying sinner; but the deprivation was per haps, no great-loss. "To send a man mit of this world to give an Account .of t Wlintself before :the Judge of all the eartli, has never seem ed tons a vary great hardship or ernelty It idnkit'ebriceiva'ble thattiod tref s an man well or ill because of what; other men may _have done to The judgment of GO 1) according- : ccording . to . 4110. •EverY:inal .3 gives . 4oootiXit: him!- ' self.4-Ilanginga man is like sending 'a boy 'hot*, sOptioltO `his fatllt