BY DAVID OVER. THE BLEST ONES AT HOME. TCNB —"OU Hoiks ai Home." Away on tho banks of life's bright river, Far, far away— There will niv heart be turning evt+, There's where the blest ones stay. All through this vale of sin ami sorrow Sadly 1 roam. Still longing for the dawn of the morrow, And for the blest ones at home. All without is dark and dreary, Everywhere f roam, Oh. brothers, how the heart grows weary. Sighing lor tlic blest ones at home. Thro' all earth's sunny scenes I wandered In youth's gny morn; iUw many precious hours I've squandered How many mercies scorned; When seeking sin's delusive pleasures, Wretched was I, Cut now my heart has found a treasure There with the blest ones on high All without is dark, &c. One hour there is, forever bringing .Memories of love; [singing t'was when my sighs were changed to Of the blest ones above; When shall I see my Saviour reigning On iiis white throne t When will be hushed my heart's complaining There with the blest ones at home. All without is dark, &c. Bayard Taylor in Lapland. The Return to Muoniovarn. MrosioVAUA, Lapland, \ Jan. 22, 1857. t While at Kautokeino 1 completed my Lapp ouifit by purchasing a scarlet cap, stuffed with eider down, a pair of bcrlliegcr or reindeer leggings, and the komngt/', or •broad, boat shaped shoes, tilled with dry, soft hay, and tightly bound around the an kles, which are worn by everybody in Lap land. Attired in these garments, I made a very passable Lapp, barring a few super fluous inches of stature, and at once rea lized the prudence of conforming in one's cOfttnme to tho native habits. After the first, feeling of awkwardness is over, noth ing can be better adapted to the lhdar Winter than the Lapp dress. I walked about at first with the sensation of having each f.ot in the middle ola large feather I>cd, but my blood preserved its natural warmth, even after sitting for hours in an open pulk. The baUiujer, fastened arouoJ tho thighs by dinning sitings of reindeer sinew, are so covered by the pocsk that one becomes, for ail practical purposes, a biped reindeer, and may wallow in the snow as much as he likes, without the possibility of a particle getting through his hide. Tiie temperature was, nevertheless, sin gularly mibl when we set out on our re turn. There had been a violent storiu of wind and snow the previous night, after which the mercury rose to IG dog. ahovc zero. We waited until noon before our reindeers could be rolleetcd, at:d then set • tf, with tin; kind farewell wishes of tho four Norwegian inhabitants of the place.— 1 confess to a feeling of relief when we turned our faces southward, and commenced our return to daylight. Wo had at last -.••en the Polar night, the day without a -unri.-e, we had driveu our deer under the arches of the aurora borciilis, we had learn ed enough ol the Lapps to convince us that further acquaintance would be of lit tle profit, and it now secured time to at tempt an escape frmu the limbo of Heath into which we bad ventured. Our faces bail already begun to look pale and faded from three weeks of alternate darkness and twilight, but the novelty of our life pre served us front any feeling of ml prevented any perceptible effect npon nr bodily health, such as would assuredly have followed a protracted experience < f lie Arctic winter. Every day now would iirinsr tis further over the steep northern -tumlder of the Earth, and nearer to'that •treat heart of life in the south, where her Mood pulsates with eternal warmth. AI ready there was a perceptible increase of the sun's altitude, and at. noonday a thin upper slice of his disc was visible for about half an hour. By Ilerr Berger's advice, we engaged as guide to Lippajarvl, a Lapp, who bad for merly acted as postman, and professed to he able fir find fiis way in the dark. The wind had blown so violently that it was probable we should hive to break our own road fur tho whole distance. Leaving K iutjkeir.o. we travelled up the valley of a frozen stream, toward desolate ranges of bills, or rather shelves of the table land, running north-east and south-west. They were spotted with patches of stunted birch, but elsewhere bare and dismal. Our deer were recruited, and we made verv good progress while the twilight lasted. At oiu Lapp tents, where we stopped to ntake ih'j'ifrics a', opt the ice, I was much amused A Weekly Paper, Devoted to Literature, Politics, the Arts, Sciences, &c., &c—Terms: Two Dollars per annum. by the appearance of a group of children, who stiikingly resembled bear cubs stand ing on their hind legs. They were coated with reindeer hide from head to foot, with only a little full moon cf tawny red face visible. We stopped at Siepe an hour to bait the deer. .The single wooden hut was crowded with Lapps, one of whom, apparently the owner, spoke a little Norwegian. lie knew who we were, nud asked me many ques tions about America. lie was most anx ious to know what was our religion, and what course the Government took with re gard to different sect?, lie seemed a lit tle surprised, aud not less pleased, to hear that all varieties of belief were tolerated, and that no one sect possessed any peculiar privileges over another. -(It is only vory recently that dissenters from the Orthodox Church have been allowed to erect houses of worship in Norway.) While we were speaking on these matters, an old woman, kneeling near us, was muttering prayers to herself, wringing her bauds, sobbing and giving other evidences of violent religious excitement. This appeared to be a com mon occurrence, as none of the Lapps took the slightest uotiee of it. I have no doubt that much of that hallucination which led to ilie murders at Kautokeino still exists among the people, kept alive by secret in dulgence. Those missionaries have much to answer for who have planted the seeds of spiritual disease among this ignorant and impressible race. The night was cold and splendidly clear. We were obliged to leave the river on ac count of rotten ice, and took to the open plains, where our doers sank to their hol lies in the looso snow. The leading ani mals became fractious, and wc were obliged to stop every few minutes, until their par oxysms subsided. I could uot perceive tbat the Lapps themselves exercised much more control over theui than we, who were new to the business. The domesticated reindeer still retains his wild instincts, and never fails toptotest against the necessity of labor. The most docile will fly from tho track, plunge, face about ami refuse to draw, when you least expect it. They aro posses sed by an incorrigible stupidity. Their sa gacity applies only to their animal wants, and they seem almost totally deficient in memory. They never become attached to men, and tKo only sign of rccogltion they • s how, is sometimes to allow certain persons to catch them more easily than others. In ■ point of speed they are not equal to the horse, and an hour's run generally exhausts theui. When one considers their size, how ever, their strength and power of endurance seem marvelous. Ilerr Berger informed rnc that he had driven a reindeer ftom Alten to Kautokeino. 112 miles, in twenty-six hours, aud from tho latter place to Muonio vara in thirty. I was also struck by the remarkable adaptation of the animal to its use<. Its hoof resembles that of the caiu cl, being formed for snow as the latter fo*" sand. It is broad, cloven and flexible, the separate divisions spreading out so as to present a resisting surface when the foot is set down, and falling together when it is lifted. Thus in snows where a horse would founder in the space of a hundred yards, the deer easily works his way, mile after mile, drawing the sliding, canoe-like pulk, burdened with his Blaster's weight after him. The Lapps generally treat their animals with the greatest patience and forbearance, but otherwise do not exhibit any particular att-ichmeht for them. They are indebted to them for food, c-lnthing, habitation and conveyance, and their very existence may therefore almost be said to depeud on that of their herds. It is surprising, however, what a number of deer are requisite for the support of a family. Von Koch says that a Lapp who has a hundred deer is poor, and will ho finally driven fo descend to tho coast and take to fishings The cows aro never made to labor, but are kept in tho woods fo r milking and breeding. Their milk is said to be rieli and nourishing, but 1 have not yet hwl an opportunity of testing it. The cheese made from it is strong and uot particularly palatable. It yields an oil which is the sovereign specific for frozen flesh. The male deer- used for draft arc always castrated, which operation the old Lapp women perform by slowly chewing the glands between their teeth until they are reduced to a pulp, with out wounding the hide. lhiring this journey 1 have had ample opportunity of familiarizing myself with rein deer travel. It is picturesque enough at the outset, but when the novelty of the thing is worn off nothing is left but a coutinual drain upon one's patience. Nothing can exceed the coolness with which your deer jumps eff the track, slackens his tow rope, turns around and looks you in the face, as much as to say: "What are you going to do about it ?" The simplicity and stupidity of his counteqauce seem to you to be admi rably feigned, and unless you aro an old hand you are inevitably provoked. This is particularly pleasant on tbc marshy table lands of Lapland, where, if be takes a notion to bolt with you, your pulk bounces over the hard tussocks, sheers sideways down the sudden pitches, or swamps itself in beds of loose snow. Harness a frisky sturgeon to a "dig-out," in a rough sea, and you will have some idea of this method of travel ing. While 1 acknowledge, the Providen tial disposition of things which have given the reindeer to the Lapp, I cannot avoid thanking Heaven that I am not a Lapp, and that I shall never travel again with reindeer. The aberrations of our deer obliged U9 to take a very simuous course. Sometimes wo headed north, and sometimes south, and the way seemed so leng that I mistrusted the quality of our guide; but at last a tight shone ahead. It was the hut of Eitajarvi. A lot of pulks lay in front of it, and j the old Finn stood already with a fir torch, waiting to light us in. Ou arriving Anton was greeted by his sister Caroliue, who had come to visit soma relatives at Altengaard. She was in company with some Finns, lmd wandered about for twenty-four hours, ex posed. Think of an American girl sitting with the thermometer at zero, aud the snow beating upon her, and neither rest nor food for a day ! There arc few who would sur vive twelve hours yet Caroline was as fresh lively and cheerful as ever, and immediately set about cooking our supper. We fouud a fire in the cold guest's room, the place swept and cleaned, and a good bed of decr-skiuiu one corner. The temperature had sunk to 12 dcg. below zero, and the wind blew through wide cracks in tho floor, but be tween the fire and the reciprocal warmth of our bodies wc secured a comfortable sleep— a tbiugof the first conscqueuce iu this cli mate. Our deer started well in the morning, and the Lapp guide knew bis way perfectly. The wind had blown to strongly that the track was cleared rather than filled, and we slipped tip the long slopes at a rapid rate. 1 recognized tho narrow valley where we first struck the northern streams, and the snowy plain beyond, where our first Lapp guide lost his way. By this tiniest was be ginning to grow lighter, showing us the dreary pastes of table-land which we had before crossed in the fog. North of us was a plain of unbroken snow, exteuding to a level line on the horizon, where it met the dark violet sky. Were the color changed, it would have perfectly represented tine san dy plateaus of the Nubian Desert, in so ma ny particulars docs the extreme North imi tate the extreme South. But the sun, which never deserts rive desert, had not yet returned to these solitudes. Far, far away ? on the sdge of the sky, a dull red glimmer showed where he moved. Not the table land of Pamir, in Thibet, the cradle of the Ox us and the Indus, but this lower Lap land terrace, lias the designation of the "Roof of the World." We were on the summit, creeping along her mountain rafters, and looking southward, off her sh' Iviug caves, to catch a glimpse of the light play ing on her majestic front. Here, for we seemed to look down on the horizon, and I thought of Europe and the Tropi.s as ly ing below. Our journey northward had been an ascent, but now the world's steep sloped downward before us into sunshine and warmer air. lit ascending the Andes or the Himalayas, yon pass through all cli mates and belts of vegetation between the Equator and tho Bole, and so a journey duo north, beyond the circle of the sun, simply reverses the phenomenon, and impresses one like the ascent of a mountain on the grand est possible scale. In two hours front the time we left Eita jarvi we reached the Lapp encampment- The herds of deer had been driven in from the woods, and were clustered among tho birch bushes around the tents. We had some difficulty in getting our own deer past them, until the Lapps catuo to our assistance. We made no halt, but pushed ou, through deeper snows than before, over tbe desolate plain. As far as Palajarvi we ran with our guuwales below the snow-level, while the foremost pulks were frequently swamped under the white waves that broke over them. We passed through a picturesque gorge be tween two hills about 500 feet high,and be yond it came upon wide lakes covered deep with snow, under woich there was a tolera ble track, which the loading deer was able to find with bis feet. Bevond these lakes there was a ridge, which we had no sooner crossed than a dismally grand prospect opened before us. We overlooked a valley basin, marked with bolts of stunted birob f and stretching away for several milest o the foot of a bleak snowy mountain, which T at once recognized as Lippivara. After round* itig its western point aud turning southward BEDFORD. PA., FRIDAY. JUNE 5.1857. again, we were r jribed with tho sight of some fir-trees, from which the snow had been shaken, brightening even with their gloomy green the white monotony of the Lapland wilderness. It was like a sudden gleaiu of suushiue. Wc reached Lippajarvi at twelve, having made 28 miles of hard travel in five hours. Here we stopped two hours to cool a meal and change our deer, aud then pushed on to reach Palujoki the same night. We drove through the birch woods, no longer glorious as before, for the snow had been .slmken off, and there was no sunset light to transfigure them. Still on, plowing through tfrep seas in the gathering darkness, over marshy plains, all with a slant southward, draining into the Muonio, uutil we reached the birch en ridge of Suontajarvi, with its beautiful fits rising here and there, silent aud immo vable Even the trees have no voices in the North, let tho wind blow as it will. There is nothing to bo heard but the sharp whistle of the dry snow—the samo dreary music which accompanies the African si moom. The night was very dark, aud we began to grow exceedingly tired of sitting flat in our pulks. I looked sharp for the Falajock Ely, the high fir-fringed banks of which I remembered, for they denoted our approach to the Muonio; but it was long, long before wo descended from the marshes upon the winding road of snow-covered ice. In vain 1 shifted my aching legs ar.d work ed my benumbed hands, looking out ahead for the embouchure of the rivar. Braisted and I encouraged each other, whenever we were near cuougb to heat, by tbts reminder that we had only one more day with rein" deer. After a long time spent in this way, the high banks flattened, level snows and woods succeeded, and wo sailed into the port of Palajoki. The old Finnish lady curtsied very deep ly as she recognized us, and hastened to cook our coffee aud reindeer, and to make us a good bed with sheets. On our former visit the old lady and her sous had watclied us undress and get into- "ds fnr*- casion tl iec buxom daughters, of ages ran ging from sixteen to twenty-two, appeared about the time for retiring, ami stationed themselves in a row near the door, where they watched us with silent curiosity. As we lmd shown no hesitation.in the first wc determined to be equally courageous now, and commenced removing our garments with great deliberation, allowing them every op portunity of inspecting their fashion and tho manner of wearing them. The work thus proceeded in mutual silence until we were nearly ready for repose, when Brais ted, by p tilling off a stocking and display a muscular calf,suddenly alarmed the young est* who darted to the door aud rushed out. The second caught the panic, and followed, and the third and oldest was therefore obli ged to do likewise, though with evident re luctance. I was greatly amused at such an Utisopihisijcatcd display of curiosity. The perfect composure of the girls, an 1 the steadiness with which they watched us, j showed that they were quite unconscious of having committed any impropriety, This morning was clear and cold. Our deer had strayed so far into tho woods that; we did not get under way before the fore noon twilight had commenced. We expec ted to find a broken road down the .Muonio, but a heavy snow had fallen yesterday and tho track was completely filled. Long Isaac found so much difficulty in taking the lead, hid deer constantly bolting from the path, that Anton finally relieved him, and by standing upright in the pulk and thump ing the Jeer's flanks, succeeded in keeping up the animal's spirits and forcing away- It was slow work, however, and tho sun, rol ling his whole disc above the horizon, an nounced midday before we reached Kyrkes suatido. As we drove up to the littlo in t , wc were boisterously welcomed by Hal, Ilerr Forsttom'.s brown wolf-dog, who had stray ed thus far from home. Our deer were be ginning to give out, and we were very anx ious to reach Muontovara in tiiuic for din ner, so wo only waited long enough to give the animals a feed of moss and procure some hot milk for ourselves. The snow-storm, which had moved over a narrow belt of country, had not extended below this place, and the road was conse quently well broken. We urged our deer into a fast trot, and slid down the icy floor of the Muonio, past hills whose snows flash ed scarlet aud rose-orange in the long splen dor of sunset. Hunger and the fatigue which our journey was producing at last, made us extremely sensitive to the cold, though it was not more than 20 deg. below zero. My blood becamo so chilled, that I was apprehensive the extremities would freeze, and the most vigorous motion of tho muscles barely sufficed to keep at bay tbc numbness which attacked them. At dusk we drove through Upper Muonioniska, and our impatience kept the reindeers so well tn [ motion that before 5 o'clock (although long after dark,) we were climbing tlie well known slope to Heri Forstroui's house at Muoniovara. Here we find the merchant, not yet departed to the Lapp fair at Ktrcs snando, and .Mr. Wolley, who welcomed us with the cordiality of an old friend. Our wing room at the carpenter's was already warmed and set in order, and after our rein* deer drive of 250 miles through the wildest parts of Lapland, we feel a home-like sense of happiness and comfort in smoking our pipes before the familiar iron stove. Tho trip to Kautokeino embraces about all 1 shall sec of Lapp life this Winter. The romance of tho tribe, as 1 have already said, has totally departed with their conversion, while their habits of life, scarcely improved in the least, are sufficiently repulsive to prevent any closer experienoo than I have had, unless tiie gain were greater. Mr. Wol ley, who has been three years in Lapland> says that the superstitious and picturesque traditious of the people have almost wholly disappeared, an ! the coarse mysticism and rant whiuh they have engrafted upon their imperfect Christianity does not differ mate rially from the same excrescences in more civilized races. They have not even (the better for them, it is true) any charactoristic and picturesque vices—but have liecorae, certainly to their own great advantage, a pious, fanatical, moral, ignorant and com monplace people. I have described them exactly as J found them, and as they have been described to me by those who kite w them well. The readers of "Afraja" may be a little disappointed with the picture, as I confess I have been (in an artistic sense, only) with the reality, but the Lapps have lost many vices with their poetic diablerie, and nobody has a right to complain. It is a pity that many traits which are really characteristic and interesting in a people cannot bo mentioned on account of that morbid prudery so prevalent in our country, which insults the unconscious in nocence of Nature. Oh, that oue could iur : ItaTc the fiortesT flttmm'CrTlie old trav elers—the conscientiousness which insisted on telling r.ot only the truth, but the whole truth! This is scarcely possible, now; but at the same time I have not been willing to emasculate nty accounts of the tribes of men to the extent perhaps required by our ultra convent tonal ism, and must insist, now and then, ott being allowed a little Flemish fidelity to nature. In the description of races, as iu tfio biography of individuals! the most important half of life is generally omitted. B- T. From the Sun Francisco Bull din. CHINESE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA 1100 YEARS AGO. The Spaniards discovered America 849 years ago. The Welsh claim an earlier dis covery in favor of their I'riuco Madoc. Th e Northmen, of the lltb century, claim the honor ol the first discovery at even an earli er date. But the Chinese claim it prior to them ail—ata time, according to their his tory, about 1400 hundred years ago. In Chinese history wc find descriptions of a vast country 20,000 le to the eastward, across the great ocean, which, from the de scription given, must be California and Mex ico The account statest the several Bud hist priests at Uingehsu, about A- H. 469, having arrived there, reported tbat Fusang (America) lay to the cast alout 20,000 le, or 9000 utiles from Japan: and that iu A. D. 450, five mendicant priests had went there and distributed Budbist tracts and images among tho inhabitants, which by that means changed t heir customs, as Budhism was not formerly known to them. The description of Fusang, as given by the Chinese historian, differs but little from that given by the Spaniards, when the conquered Mexico. He calls the country Fusang, from the name .of a particular tree that grew there and which he describes thus: "The leaves of the Fusang, when first produced, resem ble those of tho bamboo. The inhabitants cat the fruit, like pears, and weave its bulk into clotb for clothing and articles of embroi dery. They have book s , whieli arc written on the back of the fusang." Of this tree (the maguey) I'rcseott says that its "bruised leaves afforded a paste, from which paper was made: its juice was manufactured into an intoxicating beverage, pulque , of which the natives to this day are excessively fond; its leaves supplied au impenetrable thatch for the more humble dwellings, thread, of which coarse stuffs were made, and strong cords were drawu from its tough and twisted fibres, pins aud needles were made of tbe thorns at the extremity o( its leaves, and the root, when properly eooked, was con verted into a palatable and nutritious food. The niague, in short, was meat, drink, cloth ing tod writing material for tbe Aztec.— Surely, never diduaturo enclose, in so com part a form, so many of tbe elements of hu man comfort and civilisation " Again: The Chinese historian states "that they had no iron, but they possessed copper. They did not esteem gold and silver." The use of iron was unknown to them, bpt they found a substitute in au alloy of copper an,] tin with which they could cut meta! and stones. Silver, the great staple of the coun try at the time of the conquest, may have, a thousand years Citrlier] been unnoticed or uncoveted by them. By carefully examining the Chinese histo ry, and comparing it with that of Prescott's "Conquest of Mexico," we find but few points of difference. In their treatment of criminals, habits of the judges, religion, and in many other respects, they agree with each other so well, that no doubts need be entertained, in tbc least, regarding the au thenticity of the Chinese accounts. The re ligion of the Aztecs was in most respects like Budhism. Their arts, institutions and customs were almost the same as tliQsp of the Chinese. By a careful examination and contrasting of both histories inquiring winds will not doubt in the least that the Chinese discovered this continent a thousand years earlier than any other nation. Most people in California bare noticed the similitude existing between the Indians and the Chinese, both in feature and tho oc cent of their nionosylable dialects, and from my own experience 1 find them nearly tho same. The Chinese aioe-nt can be traced throughout the Indian language; though most of the Digger ludians with whom 1 have conversed speak a great deal of the ancient Aztec language. Not wishing to pursue this subject much further at present 1 will transcribes few words for the purpose of showing the analogy, as follows: Indian. Chinese. English Nang-a, Nang, Man. Yi-soo, Sua, Hand. Ceok-a, Kook, Foot. Abk-a-soo, Son, Beard. Yuet-a, Yucr, Moon. Yeeta, Yat, Sun. b'tyta, lioto, Jiueit. me mi, K(4njg, MIiRW- Ho-ya-pa, Ha-ab, Good. A-pa, A-pa, Father. A-ma, A-ma, Mother. K<>-le, A-ko, Brother, Ko-chae, To-ebae, 1 banks. Ncgam, Yam, Drunk. Koo-lae, Ku-kay, liers. Koo-chuc, Chue-Koo, J log. Choo-koo, Kow ehi, Dog. Ti yam in the Indian language means niht. Ti-vatu in Chinese means the god ot the moon or night- lloe-nia iu Indian is the situ, lieu-ma in Chinese means the god of the sun, or day. Wellae is a word com monly used among the Indians to designate a friend, it also means ntuu. Walla in the liiudostuuee means a man. Numbers id other words could lie given, but 1 shall uiakc these suffice for the present. No doubt need be entertained concerning the assertion of the Chinese in coming to this continent at au early period; nor can we interpret coincidences so universal, so iniuute, so remarkable, without coming to the conclusion that they both sprung from one common source. The Chinese Fusang is no other than the American California and Mexico; nnd the Oriental discoverers consequently claim the honor of the discov ery a thousand years earlier than any other nation. The period when the continent was first discovered may still remain a mystery, hid deu in the deep recesses of the past. It ever it is found, it be almost likely in some of the Oriental records, for in them we find the .most ancient history, whose dates, teach ing in the night of time, inform of races uow extinct, whose crumbling monuments attested a civilization different from that ot the modem world. These anciout races pro gressed iu some arts, which to us arc almost unkuowu; aud they must consequently have attained a degree of refinement which many of us at preseut know but little of. Yet withal, they seem to us o have been in ig noraoee, because wceau but taintly see them through the datk clouds from which we have issued. JAMES II EN LET, Chinese Interpreter, Chinese Camp, Tuolumne County. A SNAKE TALK Says the lawer: "Animals sometimes vi ry nearly approach reason in tbeij cun ning." ' I got interested in the study of serpents, down in Arkansas, where I spent the most of last year. I don't knosrwhy, but I was constantly watching them in new sitnatiofi#, and surrounding t.bem with nov 1 expedients. Of all kinds 1 experimented o>t with rat tlesnakes and copperheads. "One afternoon I seated myse'f on a little knoll in tie woods to smoke and read—for I always had a book or newspaper with mo -T-auJ bad been enjoying myself for some YOL. 3(1, NO. 23. time, when I espied a copprbead making for a bole within ten feet ,f where I sat" Of course [ threw down my book and segar,and proeeeded to try a hew experiment. Aa I soon as I stirred the rascai made a rush for | the hole; but I cauglit his tail as he got nearly in and jerked Lira some twenty feet backward. He threw himself into a coil in no time, and waited for me to pitch in. But I concluded not to let fliin try his hole agaiu- After a while he started for it stopping when I stirred, to coil himself up , but as I kept pretty quiet ho recovered confidence and again went in. Again 1 jerked him out. Wo sooner did he strike the ground than he made a grand rush for the hole in a straight line for mv legs ! But that d'idu't work, for 1 got out of the way, and gave hiui another flirt! "This time he lay still awhile, appearing to reflect on the course to be taken. After a time be tried it over again, though rather slowiy. After getting his head a little way in, he stopped and wiggled his tail, as if on purpose for me to grab it. I did so, and quicker than a flash lie drew his head out and came within about a quarter of an inch of striking me in tite face. However, 1 jerk ed him quite a distance, and jesolved to look out next time. Well he tried the same game again, but it wouldn't work I waa too quick for him. "This time lie lay in a coil half an hour, without stirring. At last, however, he tried it once more. He advance to within five feet of the hole very slowly, coiled again, and then, the rascal! got the start of nic by one of the cutest things you ever heard of. "How was that we all exclaimed in one breath. "Why," said the narrator, sinking his voice to the arme of solemnity, and looking us honest atid us sober as man could look, "why he just turo*'d his head toward my hand, and went dowu that hole tail first !'' From the I+ondori 'liru vixrrii OT ■— i uaoi J/nuuuiiin OF UEOKGE 111. The last of the children of George 111. has departed this life. Her Royal High ness Mary, Duchess of Gloucester, expired Thursday, April 00, at the age of 81. She was boru on the 25th of April 1776, and, consequently had long passed the ordinary limit of human life There were thirteen children born from the marriage of George 111. with Queen Charlotte—George Prince of Wales, after wards George IV.. Frederick, Duke of York; William, Duko of Clarence, after wards William IV.; Edward, Duke of Kent; Earnest, Dnke of Cumberland, afterwards King of Hanover; Augustus, I)ukc of Sus sex, and Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge— Of the six daughters three died unmarried, and three were married, the names in the order of birth, stands thus: The Princess Uoyal, Charlotte Augusts, who died unmar ried; the Princess Elisabeth, who was mar ried to the Prince of Hesse Hamburg; the Princess Mary, the lady just dead, who wr married to her cousin, the Duke of Gloucester; and, finally the Princess Sophia and Amelia, both of whom died unmarried. With so copious a race there was little danger of a disputed succession br of a va cant throne. It is singular, however, bow few are the representatives of this numerous family in the present generation. Queen Vict or i tbc King of Hanover, and the three ehildren of the late Duke of Oambiidge are we believe, now the only survivors, and the Princess daughter of George IV. is the ouly one who has passed away. There is however, happily, but little chance that the royal family of England will be speedi ly exhausted. But a few days before tbe venerable Duchess of Gloucester was sum moned from this world a niub child was bcrn to the Qoccu of England, so that Mb orderly succession to the British throne would appear to be among the events on which one may calculate with reasonable certainty. POST OWTCF. ANECDOTE. —Tbe New bitryport lleraid telis the following Post office anecdote: A rap at the delivery. Postmaster —"Well, uiy lad, febat will you hsvel" Boy—"Here's a letter, she want's it to go along as fast as it can, cause there s a feller wants to have her here, and aue'a courted by another feller what aiut here, and she wants to know whether he's going to have her or not." Having delivered his message with great emphasis, the boy departed, leaving the Postmaster io convulsed with laughter that he could make no reply. GOOD PAJ.— The salary of Louis Napoleon is five million dollars a year, and bus reve nues from tbe palaces one milliou and a quarter a year.