&ATE3 'OF ADYERTl3lXa.l,4 tHMltlMMtJMf M CO BUtf i tolis4t jwt i ' ' ' '' 34 00 QotrtM lnwi on jr ' 1104 ftpveiit If oicti, ytr lilt ' . 4n 0rd f got Bar this lis liatt fr ;nr ... i . .. . i so HarrluK d dtttb Botir frt. : J. A: PENROSE, D1ALIK IN r r y o o o r s , HOTfOXf, BOOTS SHOE!, 4JUBKNSWARK AND GROCERIES, CKMTCR 8TUEET, ft.r wttt of AWxsndtr's Drag it-re, t ' ' , . ' ... MConnolsville, O. [From the Hannibal (Mo.) Republic, Nov. 23d] An Incident at Hannibal--Somewhat Funny and Very Embarrassing. ibartassln-, ,, ... , ,. .., , jA little incident was related to, tjs last evening, which we consider quite rich, and did. we not know .the gentle man who mado the blunder, wo would roost certainly think somebody, wan tight, maybe. The incident occurred at a private boarding-houso in this city, about lour o'clock yesterday morning, and was related to us as hav ing thus occurred : A certain 3ouug gentleman, who boards at a certain private house a respectable house, too had occasion to remain away from his bed until lour o'clock in the morninv. This is not uncommon with young gentlemen in our city this particular one, especially. Some time after tea, on the evening of that eventful morning, two beautiful, buxom young ludios from the country, friends and acquaintances of the land lady, arrived. . Beds being rather scarce, and the young gentleman not expected to bo homo that night, with out a word of explanation or warning, una of the young ladies was placed in the young gents room. , Asa matter of course, utter going through tho usual manipulations unhitchjug clasps, but tons, books and eyes, &c, tho beautiful damsel was properly arranged for . ta king charge of adowny bark, and ship ping for the land of dreams. AVe will leave the dear creature in, .her slum bers, and see whut has become of the young gent., . It is now nearly four o'clock in the morning. ' , All nature is hushed in Bolemn stillness. .'. The gentle brceza, ,of. moraine, eoftlv. tondcrlv .sighs as it, kisses , the ', check of the gentleman, who at this hour we find .wending, his way homeward.'. ' The twinkling stars, look '.down from tho .blue canopy above and merrily dance us though they enjoyed the prospect , for a scene, . Young gent not , wishing to awaken tho inmates of his boarding house, cautiously approaches the door, , and, after carefully inserting his night key, is pleased to find the bolt yields without a squeak. Ho softly feels his way to his room, littledrcamingofwhnt he Would be compelled to witness in a few. short minutes... We'd leave the reader to imagine tho result, but, as the , story is a peculiar as well as a fuuny one, wp'ro of the opinion that we'd better tell tho whole of it. Young gent approaches his room, and' knowing the location of- the furniture, ic , being -without "matches, etiters the room, doses the door, and ! immediately dis robes himself. - Without further cere- many he throws his weary limbs and body upon the. beds As, a mutter of course, he was somewhat surprised to . .iind his bed occupied, and, wishing to know who his bed-fellow was, ho rolled ! over and gave the young lady as rude . ' as it inayseem a dig in the side, in "ouiring as he did ' so: "Who1 in the '"devil are you?" 'A slight movement ' on the part of the young lady followed " tbi demonstration,-, and then - very ' frantically she exelairaod, "Good God! -and in an instant she was standing in the middle of the room, frightened so . badly that she was pnable to say a . , word. The young gentleman ducked his head ui.der tho covering, and in this position endeavored '. to explain. Young lady slid' out, and, wo have boon . informed, failed to appear at the break fast table at the " proper lime. Tho '- position was, wo would judg so-at least, A very trying one, and both par " ; ties have our sympathy! :, i .1 1 1 . m t m A Gloomt Honeymoon. Dr. La Force, of Agency, married a Miss Dud ley,, last Thursday, and the happy . ' couple started on their' bridal tour, '""They arrived at Burlington, and took dinner at the hotel. - The fair bride never looked so lovely, and the heart -. of the husband u was joyful..,, While they were Boated at the table, the fuco , ot the bride, suddenly . underwent : a , change; the cheeks grew palid und the . ,,eyes sturpd wildly around. The' Doo. tor immediately noticed the horrible, transformation, and caught her in his arms.' But 'affection was powerless' to " rescue. Tho poorman soon discovered "'! that he wus holding in his embrace a maniac wife. 1 Without a premonitory, symptom she had thua suddenly be 1 -.come insano, : Tho Doctor returned to t:t Agency,. the next day, bearing-with ... him the wreck of his own bcuutiful , . wffo.--Ottumwa (Iowa) Mercury. " '' JW A teacher said to a little girl oV ' 1 ichool,t"lf a'nautfhty girl should hur( '""'yoti, like; good litile girl, you would 'forgive 1 her, would't you'!, '"Yea, : marm" she replied, "if I couldtft catch k-- hT," ... .. . , . f us TBI ..sIJlI. ;i VOL. 1. ArCONNEI SVILLE, vi;A' ... DEClfiMBEIl 7, I860., NO. 19. Fenianism in Ireland. Great Excitement About the Expected Insurrection. [Dublin Correspondence, of N. Y. World.] -Affairs in Ireland at present are in the most uncertain state they havebecn for many yenrs. Tho people are in a stale of excitement bordering on mad iicm; the Government is bewildered and preplexed; the military authorities are drilling and maneuvering; the police are arresting and locking up; the pris on officials are complaining of want of accommodation, and tho civio dignita ries aro ussfi-iiiig there is no ciiubu for alarm. V Why. is this thus?" as your talented countrymen, A. Ward, would ask. Well, I will toll you. FENIANISM REDIVIVUS. For some months past the English Government and tho loyal portion of the Irish people have been flattering th'innelws that Fenianism was dead. The wholesale arrests effected under the suspension of tho habeas corpus act, the garrisoning of the country, the suppressing of the "Irish-I'eople," and tho punishment inflicted on the con victed Fenians all these- things were thought by the English Government to have had such a terroiising effect on tho disuffected musses that they would immediately repent, obtain absolution of a notoriously anti-national priest hood, and take theoath of union, prom ising allegiunce to their parental rulers, it hud lulled itself into fancied securi ty, and the Fenians were being looked upon, as before the arrests, ns mythical beings, who, if they did at all exist, merely - uttered threats in America against Canada, which they never in tended to sabstuntiate, but had .forgot ten nil about Ireland and . an attempt ati rebellion there. But , from this dream of security there has been . un awakening. The Government finds it has been unable to kill tho Irish senti ment and denationalize the Irish pco- 5 ile, and find that, far from eradicating 'enianisnt, : it has strengthened ... it; that far from - living out of danger, that danger is more immediate thun ever.- , i.r , ; -: u : : HOW THE AWAKENING CAME ABOUT. banishing so many persons to Amoricu who had come bver to preach the doc trine of freedom to an opprofscd race, any could be found so regardless of their own safety as to repeat tho at tempt. With myriad detectives of tho keenest sagacity there wus no escaping arrest if they did' come, and with tho gold bought services of 'diT American Consul like West," they were satisfied, if o.nce arrested, even United States citizenship would avail them tittle; and yet Dublin, Cork, and even Beliast, at tho-present moment, swarms with sus picious personages. These "suspicious personages." ' although not' wearing squaro-tocd boots, nor speaking with a nasal twang, nor guessing, calculating, nor reckoning, nor yet call for 'ipoek lails" and 'smashes," "juleps and "whieky-skiiis," aro known to be Amer icans, and are kept under tho strictest espionage, I luivo s-ifn numbers of them, and spoken to several iu my ca pacity as your correspondent. I know them to bo Fenian agents. " Some of them put up at the best-' hotels ' in the City, and show un extraordinary amount of skill in evading the vigilance of the police, for each is well aware he is watched. TRAITORS IN THE CAMP. t , Where is the man who has not his price? Who in this sordid ago will talk of being incorruptnbU ?. and when was there ever a political organisation, however noble , iu Its aims, without a traitor some baso, unworthy wretch,' who, for t'fillhy lucre," would not sell his compaions? , Probably nowhere has this traitorous faculty been more largely developed than in this unhappy county. . Jimmy O'Brien in '98, and Pierro JJaglos in 'C6, vied with one another in villainlynnd, even now, in Ireland,, thcro are O'Briens, Nagles, and eveu Castlerenghs't who, sufrifiuing all the noble instincts of humanity at the altar of .Mammon; scruple' not to sell their countrymen., I know not it' James Stephens be a spy I think not; many hero assert he ii but I do know that every plan and every action of tuo Jiemun organization ismauo known to England; and not only tliat,Lut that if sho liked she chould ut this moment Jay her finger on every Fn:au in Ire land.. . You may ask ine how is this, and why she, does' nut arrest them. I You may suy that England bouyted of tins knowledge months ago, ana yet 1 was palpably-lit fault, 'Even so,' but siuto that time,' within tho lust throe' weeks, tho British . authorities ' have been put in possession of information (.l a, if FcnianUm ' 'bo . treason, and if the piinitJimciit of treason be death, would congn ono-half the adult malo population, of, tho. country to the gal lows v .Then wily she does not da so I will afterward show." 'Permit me now to ptute a point. Some'five weeks ago, a map 'came to this country, Sutton1., or Putton, I can't say which,, bj? name, lie ws said to be the accredited agent of Stephens here, and vested by him with lull power; intrusted by mm with all the seerets of the organization. This man has been bought, and is at this moment doing the work hot for which he may have been sent hero by James Stephens to do, but that for which he is paid by the British Government. THE BRIGHT DODGE. Leaving for a moment this branch of the subject, let mo speak of the re cent Bright reform banqoct nnd meet ing in Ireland. John Bright is well aware that, however reform may suc ceed in England, it would by no means work in Ireland. The English Gov ernment knows of this, and know also that he can never bono to carry through such a movement in Parliament. View ing, then, the disloyal, the undoubtedly disaffected state of the Irish people, he (Bright) was sent over here to distract public attention from Fenianism, to convert For inns to the old doctrine of "agitation" preached byO'Connell, but which never did any good for Irelund and never will. The Irish people are dissatisfied, and justly so, with the laws that now govern them; but give them a code of laws as just as tho an cient Breton, as faultless as those of Draco, tho Grecian legislator, and re membering the wrongs of centuries, they will still hate England, still bo dissatisfied, and still be Fenians. It is not with the present that they quarrel, but with the past. Whether this would be just or not, would be outside my povince to argue. I am satisfied it is the feeling of the majority of tho Irish nation. Thus John Bright has undoubtedly failed in his mission. His eloquence und I listened to it, on tho two occasions he spoka in Dublin, with pleasure fell on listless ears. His auditors knew, when he spoko of "justico to Ireland," that it were im possible Of attainment in his way, and, though they perhaps heard with pleas uro tho Orator of the people, they heeded not what he said. The people wont separation from England, and this alone. ' . A CHANGE OF PLAN. With the knowledge thus Attained, England has discovered that a revolu tion cannot bo stifled. ; She tried that plan by suspending the "act1" as said, and found it inefficacious. Now she is determined to let the storm come and strive to weather it, to let tho Fe nians rise and fight it out Arrests are becoming less frequent, though the sume vigilauco is exercised as before, and all tho attention is turned not arresting u rebellion, but to suppress ing it so soon as it shows itself. With this end, additional numbers of "cock ney" detectives have boon imported hither. These are distributed through out the country, and scarcely . a town land is there that has not its specjal. Dublin is full of them, fipperury warms with them. Kerry, Cork and Wexford all the counties in Ireland, in fact, have their share of these ob noxious personages. This secret ser vice force is under complete organisa tion, Sir Thomas Darcon, of the Castle, and Lake, of the constabulary, being at the head. Bi-weekly reports are made from each man to headquartors, and from these reports a weekly statement is sent to Irish Executivo. Thus everything occurring in the country is known, almost as soon as, it takes place, to tho Government. On these reports, tho military force under Lord Strath nairn, formerly Sir Hugh Roise, manipulated, weak points aro strength ened, and strong ones made even more strong..-,.-. ., . ,.i .,,- , ...... , WHAT THE FENIANS ARE DOING. ' As tho first of January approaches the hopes of the Fenians are rising. They have no doubt but that Stephens will fulfill his promises of coming back to Ireland, and there is a rumor hero that ho is already on his way. Though the Government has' undoubted facili ties for procuring information as re gards the working of Fentanism hero, unfortunately I am not so well situated. I can. through certain officials here, hear of the movements of the Govern ment; but, even though 'your corres pondent, I cannot b! sufficiently high for unscrupulous traitors.1 Their figuro Is rather too lofty for my exchequer. However, I can put you in pocsion bf some few important facts. During tho past Six weeks no less than sixteen thousand revolvers have been distribu ted through' tho - Fenian circles in Ire land. These weapons hove been in tho city, stored, for some time, having been purchased by James Stephens from an English manufacturing house. This will probably explain his seeming relqctHiu-e to accunt for' moneys re (oired from r John Uiichel. Did he stuto Mio purchased ' with the mbney arhis and munitions of 'war, he would, of course, be compelled to give some in formation ns to how he bought them, and from 'whom.-- ' The "boys" in the different sections of' tho country arai drilling and practicing themselves in the ue of the revolrer and 1 ifle. 1 1 am told that in the mountainous districts this is carried on extensively. The vacancies cansed by the arrest of those under the suspension are said to be all filled.' 'This carrying' on of prepura tloa,' under' sue 11 difficulties, plainly denotes the iudomiUble energy of the Celtic race, and their determined reso I lution to in est th'eir old enemy, if Ste phens only his Word. 1 MILITARY PREPARATIONS. I The various barracks in and about Dublin are being put in A state of de fense. It will be necessary, in order that your readers may understand this portion, ior.me to say a few words on the fortifications of this city. Passing over the fortifications of the harbor and coast as unnecessary of description in this instance. I will bring you Into the heart of tho citr in fact, to the castle. This is but a castle in namo, having none of those attributes or sur roundings one is authorized always to connect with the idea of a castle. It is simply a collection of offices,' three guard rooms one at each entrance n small tower, A handsome chapel, and the vice-royal appurtmcnts, or the town residence of.: tu Lord-lieutenant There is a thorougfare through the castle yard, the walls on cither side being pierced for small guns, and pro sunting an appearance of strength. The guard at the castle, within the last week, has been largely increased, and the castlo gardens havebecn beautified by the introduction into them of two pieces of artillery. Contiguous to the castle is Ship street barracks, capable of accomodating some 2,500 men. This barrack is now quite full; but, as these men are merely for the defense of the castle, should un occasion arrive it is not in itself a place of strength Outsido the city there are, on the south side, Portobcllo, Richmond, Beggar's Bush and Bridgo . Barracks: on the north Bide, the Royal an- Aldboroug Barracks. These govern all the ap proaches to the city, and can accomo date in all som45,000 or 16,00(1 men. All these barracks are being put in a state of defense. The ordinance offi cers aro hourly engaged In tho work. The walls around them are Wing strengthened in many places, and flank- uig projections, wim various loup-noies commanding the various points from which an attack' might be expected. The jails are being similarly fortified, chevaux dt frite are boinz put in every avavailable place, and the guard in all cases is being doubled. These pre para lions are not confined to Dublin and its environs. ' Similar ' works Are being carried out through the provinces. Tralee Barracks is being greatly strengthened; Limerick the same way, and a large number of men ; are ' en gaged in strengthening the old fortifi cation of Ath lone Castle. THE POLICE AND CONSTABULARY. Preparations are now entirely con fined to the military in the .country. The Dublin metropolian police, about twelvo hundred strong, are being put through a course of diligent train ing in thtj use ol the cutlass and revol ver. They ar seen, daily drilling in tho castle yard, are really a fine body of men. The . country, constabulary have also got orders to perfect their drill. , These forces will, of course, be brought into, close contact with the enemy in case of a lising; but England need not depend on other departments of tho police forco for an excess of loyalty, as both are largely permeated with disaffection. A RISING AND ITS RESULT. is Thus both the government and the Fenians anticipate a rising. What the result may be is hard to toll. Wero I to write you my opinions, I would say a sueccbBful rebellion in Ireland at Iiresent was as impracticicuble as in 7D3 or 1843. A largo portion of the Irish people are undoubtedly opposed to an attempt, and say thut, if mado, it will prove a greater fiasco than the cabbage-garderi movement of Smith O'Brien- Many think otherwise, and assert they have good reasons for thinking so.' ' I have given you a state ment of what England knows, what she iB doing, and what she intends to do, and will leave your intelligent American readers to judge for them selves. It is generally believed that the rising will take place here on Christmas eve, the 24th of December, and that the day celeberated ns the natal day of a world s Savior will wit ness a sTrugglo for dear old Ireland's liberty.' May God bless the green I HS"" The Minnesota are proud of Hie magnificent school lunu ot their State. The permanent fund arising from shool land sales up to the first ol last vear amounted lo 8!)83.58. 85. Add to tliis the proceeds of the sales of tho present year, and there is a grand total of one mill'on three hundred and twentv-six' thousand ' eight i hundred and nlnety-thrco dollars. If the re maining lands should bo. 'sold at the same rate, tho 'total proceeds would amount to nearly1 twenty millions of dollars u truly magnificent sum, - the interest upon which alono, if properly invested, would bo one million dollars per 'annum.' ' ' T-' 1 ' ' ' ' 1 1 Vsju'Tw'o members of tho 'Vermont Legislature have rofused to take their extra pap voted by the General Assem bly. '' They are both young men, nnd as they grow oldor they will know how to -put tip with such " hardships better than they do now. '- j.h ' , -. 11 ,L . 1- ' 1 t:-.) ' It is said that a brother of Pres ident Pierce ' Is making temperance speeches in Nw Hampshire. : Meteors—A Brilliant Display Seen on the North Coast of Cuba. The editor of the Matanzas (Cuba) Licio, on the night of November 12 and 13, counted, thirty-nine brilliant meteors, the majority ol them between the hours of 0110 and two in the morn ing. . On tho night of November 13 and It, the number observed was much greater, being threehundred and forty in all. Their appearance was as follows: From six to seven P. M., two inotcors, with trails four degrees long, ono ot six degrees, one with notrail. Between eight and nine P. M., ono meteor, with luminous trail covering seven degrees. From nine to ten P. n., two nieteore, without trails, and one of six degrees of a luminous emination.V .From ten to eleven P. M twelve meteors, eight of which had trails covering from two to ten degrees of space; some of these me teors were very red in color. Between eleven and twelve P.M., there appeared ten meteors, similar to tho preceding. From twelve to one 'A. M., thirty-six made their appearance, many ot them of first magnitude, and some of them lasted one or two seconds some even longer. Between one and two A. M., sixty-five meteors appeared; 1'iom two to three, eighty-one. Some of theso were very brilliant; four oflhcm started from the star Gamma Leonis. Between thre and five one hundred and eleven appeared, of which nine were from the Lion. Between five and half-past five seventeen appeared one Irom the constellation .Lion. On the night of November 14 and 15? sr counted one hundred and twenty eight between the hours of 7 P. M. aud 5 A, M. The editor of tho Licio prom ises to give a detailed account of these meteors in a future article. He con cludes by saying:' "For tho present it suffices lo say that we have had- the good fortune ofseeingthe great shower. Most probably tho heavy portion of the shower passed over us iu day -firms, so that we caught a glimpse merely ol tho end 01 the shower on tho morning of November 14. However, from the data afforded this time, it is proved beyond doubt that tho period ot recur reuce is from November 12 to 14. It is likewise shown that such showers occur about ' November 27-29, from December G-12, April 22-25, July '17- ZG, and AUgust in making the observations above recorded, benor Pretas was assisted by Sen ores Burnet, Manuel 1-ebles, Kftardo Cay and Pla cido Gener, and other members of tho Mantanzas Lyceum. - ' The Next Deluge. A French work recently 'published, maintain thut every lO.&uO yeurs, the waters of tile sea pass front 0110 )oU to the othor, submerging andorerwhelm ing in their pussago tho earth and tall its inhabitants. According to the au thor of this theory, M. Paul deJouven eel, tho Just of these deluges occurred 4,500 years ago; the next ono is due in 6', 000 years more. M. Jouvencel re counts this great cosmical drama with the vigor and pictoral effect of an eye witness. ' Six thousand yean sixty centuries then, only, aro lett to us wherein to do our wholo world's work, und to completoand perfect that civili zation which lias yet hardly dawned 011 the greater number of mankind! Sixty old men touch hands across the interval between tho present moment and the lust hour of the world us it ex ists; then all will be finished, all ' con sumed, all will disupponr! The sea for 10,500 years in its immeasurable depths will crush out our history and leavo uothing of it all but A few ioSsUb! - so, at least, stiys M. Jouvencel- ' Chilian Statistics. The present population, of. Chili is stated at 2,034,043 persons; in 1801 it was 1,048.804. its area is 240,052 square miles. In 1804 its export and import trudo ainountod to $5U,135,03. It is said tbat eight hundred and thirty-two of its inhabitants are over one hundred years of ago, some of them having attained the ripe old ago of one hundred and forty. What a Porter May Earn. ! Recently tho head-porter of Trinity College, Cambridge, England,' died, and it appeared that while ho. held that situtivn ho save, nearly $100,000. His chief porquiste was a fee of a half penny for eacti hitter delivered to the under-graduates . of the college from the post-office, und us there are about six , hundred , under-graduutcs, this amounted to nq small sum. Tho trus tees of tho college have forty applicants for the vutant position,- to winch a sal ary of l,OQ0 attached. rf.i..j ' - . ":. TiiEi Mormons threaten , to r invade Lowell, Brigham Young said in A lato discourse ut Suit Lad ; , . The last time . I was . in , (he 'city. of Lowell there, fourteen" thousand . more female than .males in, that cno city. That is many j-ears ago ..Thiy.live aud die in- a single statw,. and ai fur gotten. Have they filled .the measure of their creation, and accomplished the design of heaven in bringing the n iincn the earth? No; they have wot. , Two thousand God, fciir.r.L' men should go there, asd take to . homooivos seven i 1 . -i t WITOS JJIOIJV , ! It FX ""Otlteirtatfar- OSU4,athWt Crx.rr FWII farti rcDMstirtv evert f rihat MOBJtrxa. f C It H I 1 Fr one TV. iyM U aiivynra - - ft M tor ls Month. M)bl In ndrtix-S - - i OS for lbi nntli. puj.li t ' niv.net m. r it' MBiiRK k IK LIT, rnblifhrn. Curious Behavior of a Portland Girl. A beautiful y ng lady of PoftTnad' ("exposed" in a letter to- thw-fcc von ilersid), frequently, during, the, pa?d year, has been in tho habit - of getting herself upas an aged man, and go to town on the cars. In her disguise she Would stroll about the city to her heart's con tent, and return home to tell the' -few friends in the secret of the iin she had enjoyed. If spoken to she feigned deaf ness. ' The venerable form had become quite familiar in the streets of Portland; but none dreamed that beneath - thoiy grny hairs nestled soft auburn ringlets; that beneath those ' green 'goggles sparkled A pair of roguish ' eye; that the seedy old coat covered honhUrv that might rival thoso of Venus; that' within those tattered unmentionables were the supple and rounded limbs xt blooming yo-tng womanhood; of ' thay unusual stoop of the :-'old geMleraan" was quite nocesssry to conceal A "cer ta'n plumpness about the front part of the waistcoat. But th romantic yoonr heroine came to griff. ' Protracting her strolls too Ion? the other day, tlu train was just leaving - as sho ' limpai into the depot. A smart run enauied -the foolish girl to throw herself upon tho rear platform, but just as she did so away went hat, wig and goggles Two irentlemen on tho rear platform were considerably astonishod, but the young I.J I tf . ... - . ' ! .1 A laay naa suiiiwieifv T7rerein:o 01 mum vo explain in a few frightened sentences the po'it'on of affairs, and it beinff nightfall, the gentleman, who proved to be the genuine article, got the girl to her home without further publicity". A Bold Feat. I The following, from tho Bafalo Ex press, is rather difficult to believe but it may be true: .: . 1. ,; .. A painfully intense excitement was experienced by hundreds of . people i. 1 xt." . rr living aiong ut lagrw river on Auesuay nfterffoon, at the sight of a vessel, with three men on board, boing rapidly borno down, with the current toward the falls. without any apparent possibility of rescue from the shore. The facts are as follows : : i i' , ' As a Biuall Canadian trading scbaon er, the Whip, Capt.. J. T. Yountf,. was being to-ved out of Chippewa Harbor' by thotng Buffalo-, the line by which' she was attached to :the tug was brqr ken by the strength of the current, and sho was swiftly carried down toward: the rapids abovo tho falls. The cap tain and two men on board BT t once that they were in imminent danger having 1 neither anchor , nor small boat, and being in such a position that no one dared attempt their rescue froni tho shore. 1 By this time hundreds of people wero gathered along the banker expecting nothing else than cortsin de struction to the vessel and - hertrew; but when within a couple of hundred yards of the commencement vf. ,tlie ro'ui, tho cool head of the Captawi concii'ved an ' idea which pavwl tlo lives of tho whole parly as woll f tu.o vessel. There was qu. to tt gale blow ing up the river at the time, and tho master, with the aid of the two.; men, hoisted all suiL and s.iilei out of the very jaws of death, against tho powerful current of tho river. fibs?IuB lr landing soon after at Hog Island, jo safct, having gone further, down the Ningra river than any. othor man ever did in a bout, and escape, . ,'- ,.; lhe admiration and i-eitel of the poo pie along tho river banks, upon tho ex ecution of the Captains plan; iound rent in frequent cheers when it; became- ap parent that his efforts would proyoeuu oessful, - ' - ' . i , .. . -i::jju -.. ; .., ,, , r.!, ft- A member of theHporting ,ra fruternitv in Denver , City, who isaf flicted with , the cvuinnpUon,; has wagered Ally dollars against, a coflih. worth the same amouut, that ho , will die before tho first, lay f January noxti The colli 11, in the event of death, to be used as his last earthly-habitation. This is an evidoiico of the i-uiiigc. pas sion strong in dcalU. .,, .... a 0 j 1 , .m m m . . if ft&Brigham Young is; luxu;-iatuii in the . honeymoon -,of, his . forty-fiftli bride, a beuutil'ul Euuisli girl , of seven teen. Ho bus just lost his twenty fourth wife, who was buried without any ceremony, tr oven notjep other dtathJ :. . . lf;-jy, twr Tho compliment of a'Af estern clergymen to his female worshiper, is worth rooordiiij': . "B,aot proud that the biassed Lord paid your sx. the. dis tinguished.; compliment of ,ppe.Vinff first to a i'ouialo after tti0 rcsijrrocUoii, tor it .was only, done, that' V gjad ti dings might spiMud, tVf pOncf-j;, jn', i -1 - 111 1 . imm 1 1 1 1 1 ,, . , r, Djy Arteram Ward says ,"Let us be happy, and live witlirj our niens, even if we have to borrow money to do .it with.'!. '. .-.-). - i .,fS . A. nViss oi copper weigh ing?15, 1 jiounds , was recently bi-QuUt to Pittsburg from tho Lako Superior re gion. , It was i.a iia'ingio jiuggct, and i tluimod . to bo the larvst ono eve iaincd' '"' ' ; ' ; ;'y ')'' ''-"vj y.A.iiAROB Fef, It is said that Chi . O Vouuep recovered a fe of ;u0,t!00 l,. the Jumel.wijl case. ' ' ' v i . y 1--.