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A- r * - - . - -- - WiM. F. DURISOE, "We will cling to the Pillars of te Temple of oKr Libertiea and if ittfmustfalL,1o will Perish amist the Ruins."OE O RA NE PUBLISHER. VOLUME Xi. b. - -1 NJ1V WTERMS. Two DoLLARs and Ftyl CENTs, per annum. if paid in advance---$3 if not paid within six months from the date of subscriptinn. and $4 if not paid before the expira-tion of the year. All subscriptions will be continned, unless otherivite'cidered before the expira tion of the year ; but no paper will be dis cantinued until -ill arrearages are paid, in 5-sat the option of thee Puwblisher. Any person procuring five responsible Subseri bars, shall receive the paper fur oune,year, gratis. Anygsrsia-rs sonipictonSlyinserted at7a - cents per square. (12 lines, or less.) for the first insertion. and 37. for each continuance. Those published monthly or quarterly. will be charge $1 per square. Advertisements not having the number of insertions mnarked on them, will be cintinaued autil ordcred cut and charged accordingly. Conmanications, post paid, will be prompt ly and strictly attended 'to. THi. NEW TI4ON. OR ROMANCE XN LONDON The fellowing piece otf poetry, taken from Part 1l. of this Tale. is one of the sweetest things-that can be found is the language. It is the very soul itself of pa' etry. ' And far as sweep the seas belo w, My sails are en the deep; And far as yonder eag.les go, 11My flag on every keep. Why o'er the rebel world within Ex!endlth not the chart ? No sail can reach-to arms can wim The kingdom of a heart!' So sigl'd the King-ibe lin-len near; A listener heard the sigh, And thus the heart he did nut hear, Breathed back the soft reply. * And for as sweep the seas below, His sails are on the deep; And-far as yonder eagle gno, H is flag on every keel; ;Love,. tko art not a king aloe, _ dfpth slave and. king thou alt h se p to own ke iaodiau.ta eari . *. So sigh'd the Maid,the linden noar, Be-neath the lonely sky! Oh, lonely not!-for angels hear The humblest human sigh ! His ships are vanish'd from the main, His banners (iom the keep; The rarnage triumphs on the plain - The tcmpaest on the deep. The purple and the crown are mine,' An Outlaw sighed-- no more; But still as greenly growa Ilhe vine, Around the cottage dour ! A shelter from the hunter, Maid, And waler from the spring!' Biefote the humble cottage prayed The man that was a King. Oh. was the threshold tha:at he crost The gate rn fairy gr'tn t ? fie wuald not for the ki~ullont lust. h-ave changed the Lin.lin m ot n Fromhlke . outhern Journal. FtOR I DA. We are convintci that no otler Sta:e holds out such inducemnits ti amigrants as Floria. Te m dues.'.s of its citate;. the productiveness ol its soil, the variaty Iof its vrduable staples; puinat it out as oane , of the finest dlist ricds of rcoaty onath globe. We say ther prodfucticaress of its soil-for thougha supaerficaal obs--r vers hadve represented its land as b arrene -the returns whitch have rewarded the labors of otur planters --full crops of' rot ton, sugar-cane snoerior to atap before' seen in the United Satates-shoaw how itncot rect are their stalement. Thea fact is, we are assured thwit lands of'ordinaary qualaity in Fiorida, yiaeld far more abtun dant ciops thran thos~e oif similar' alpear ;ance in the neighaboa intg Stat- s: pet sons comaing from abroad are on this account mislead in the estimate which they foam of the character of' its sot!. That there is muceh poor land intersprseda amidst -that wihich is proaductive is adm tred. Thlis instead of being an objection, is at pr esenft, we think, a strong recommen d ationt to Florida. While agricultur ists may readily supply themselves with an abundance of' excellent lands f'or tillhage, these poor pine lands sup~ply the most dliughitful and salubrious sites for resi dences, secure from the unpleasantness of crowvded settlements, and furnish fa cilities for raising steck rrely equ:alled. -That there will anver be a heavy slave population throughout the state is taue. We. hlave no such tracts of' land as those ptries- in Alabama and Mississippi, which gather upon their smn face imnentse multitudes of slaves, to) the almost en tire' excltusion of whit's. And so much the better that wre have not.- The-char a cter of the lands ina Floaridt insures us iust te population whichl we desire. There will be a pre ponderance ofwhites. Our citizens will 'generally be .men. of .ut.dr, thnelehsuffcien( means, rath-, er than of inoreinato weah. White families will be sufliciently numerous td sustain the best of schools, which is im pussible n here the great mass of the po pulation is black. We assert, then, again, that as Florida has an ampi. abundance of prodtuctiv soil, we rather rejoice that it is w-thout those largo bodies of rich hind whirch engender disease, and call into exisrence a state of society by no means the most desirable. LIany persons are deterred from set ihug in Florida from apprehensinn of sick,. ss. We asset t tiat the most care ful inquiry which we h ve beent able to make, concur'ent testimony of settlers from A!abama, Georgia, the two Caro lioas, Virginia, and even farther north, brings us io the conclusion that thire is ot a mnore hal-hy state in the Union. We k4now not a single individual who duinks of leaving Florida on ecclunt of its sickness A physician was to-day. mentioned, who after trying several pla ces srapposed to be sickly, had to leave fer Texas itt search of patients. A word in regard to the products of Florida. Though our own citizens are bur parti'lly acquainted with the capa bilities, yet enough is known to bhlw. that i is d' stined to be, in an important sense, :he most inleiendent phlnting couutrV in.tle Union. So many are, its v.unt;abh.1 staples, that we can scare- ly tearr a time., when th.-re will nem be some arti!e which Fluridians can raise, which will fird a ready 5,ie at. proifitible rates. Rice, Se-a-Island Cotton, common Cot ton, Snear Cane, Cubna Tobacco, In d ian Corn, the varwie is of tropical fI nits, (to go nor further)-oun anis nn ier thiw g, nial power mf a southet n sun, need only the efforts of the laborer to produce all these in luxutiant abutndance. Ve venture the opinion that nowhere els.- i" the toil of the agriculturist re% wa' ied with such profuse returns. We would then, from the purest mo ties, call the attention of persons desir otis of improving their condition bvyem gration,. _to theinducemients whlich Flor-. may be compared wit those of Teis or any other new country.' To all clas ses we wsould say come ! Are you rich ! You will here find a country where ynor wealth nrav be increased, and a clirntYb in which your fiches may he enjoyed. Are your means moderate ? .Florida of= f.-rs you delightfol. settlements--chep (ands amidst people of simph- hahis, .aid plain manners-removed from' t!:qse e'mptations to extravagance in dress, ated de t, and equipage, which makes ;it so difficult for you to get along in older and more aristocratic communities. Are yenn poor? Do you find it difficult to support an increasing familk I Then we say .bv --l -t1mans cnme to Florida. No -n hese else can i en obtain so readily. rn ,rtin dance of .l n h a is ncces.ay to make exierce comfortfble. Said a pl.aiid old V"ginian a few days sitiee,."his, sir, is he country for a poor nian. Alt I that I aik is :it he shalH w..rk .two hours a day and lie n ill make a tivina.' Se almost r egret i.hat :the ease t with which hunt an life can he-tsuppo*ited -in iEori'la, hioltis out so great a temptatrun to idleness. . SIR JAM1ES MACKINTOSU. Th~ough the following letter is old,.and hats becen reaud by manty ofour readers. we are yet unable to resist 'he temptation to publish it int our paper. .It is wiorti.read. ing over an huendred uiesei, It ias raised its author higher ini our estiztiion, end given us a mnore, exalted notion of his tin derstanding and .bis flearf,-han.all the rest of his productions .iut togettier. 'Ihu cel ebrated D~r. Parr. said "tihat be. never re ceived from mportal mnan, a letter, wiridh, iu pint of compositioni could be comupared with it." '4tlow me, in justice, to her nmemory, to tell you wht shte was, and wheat I t)wed her. I was Leuided in my choice only by the bind ,afletion of youth, and might havee.formecd a counnection io which a shto'rt-livecd-passinn would have been follbadr tyy repetance and distrust; but I fouind an intelligent companion,-.a ten dr friend, a prudent m'onitress, the most faithttul of wives, and as dear :a mothter as ever chtildien had the mis fortune to lose. Had I mart ied a wo man wvho was easy or giddy e.nough to have been infected by mny imtprudernce, or wvhto had tudely or harshtly attecnTp ed to correct ir, I should, in either case, have been irretrievably runed ; ut for. tune, in either catse, wvould, with my habits, have b.-en only a shorter cut to destruction. But I met a woman, who, by thie tender management of my wick' edess, gradually corcected the mest perticiouis of .them, and rescued me from the. dominion of a .degrjding and ruinous vice. She became prudent from i.cion ; and, though of the iniost gen. erous riature; she was taught economy~ ind frugality by her love -for ine&. Dui. ring the most critical period of my life, rshe preserved order in my affairs, from the care of which she relieved me ; she gently reclaimed me from dissipation ; she propped my weak and irresolute na ture ; she urged my indolence to all the exertions that have been useful and creditable to me; and she was perpet ually at hand to Adnonish my heed lessress tud improvidence. To her I owe that I am not a ruined outcast ; to her whatever I am ; to her what ever I thad be. In her solicitude for my in, terest, she never, for a moment, forgot my feelines or my character. Even in her occasional resenment, for ubich I but often gave- just cause, (would to Goad that 1 could recall these moments !) she had no sullenness or act ionv ; her feelings wero warm and impetuous, but she was placable, tendler, and constat t; site united the most a-tentive prudence,ro the: most generous and guileless nature. with a spirit that disdained the shadow of meanness, and with the kindest and me'st honest. heart. Such was shet whore I !save lost ; and I have lost her when her excellent natural sense teas rapidly improvine, and mo:;ldering our tempers to each otle-; when a knowledge of her worth ha d r, fi'ed my vointbfal love intlo f ientdship, before age Ii;el d4 flvi d it of much of its original aador6 I lost her, alas ! (the choice of my jouih and the pnettner of my misfortunes,) at a moment when I aid :':C prospect ol her shareing my better days. This, nmy dear sir, is a calamity wIiirh the prosperity of the world cannot repair. Tt. expect that any timg tn, this side! of lie grave can make it up, would be .a vain and d. iusive expectation.. I fI hied lost the giddy and thoughtless companion of prosper its, the tforld could easily have repaired my loss; but I have lost the faithful and tebder partno of my misfortunes; and my onfy consolation is in that Being, tinder whose severe, but pater pal cieas:. tisemtient, I ant cut down to the ground.' of G. Vit ine or two others, %sho were supping-at the Bugle Inn, at N, wport, agi ed to amuse themselves jn this manner. A scene frons "Oth'ello" was -fx'd upon-Othello by the Colonel, who' in order to look the character, blackened his face all over with burnt cork. The night was far spent, when Lady "'s coachimar., who waited to drive tin Coleonel home, and who had made sev eial attempts to get the CUlonel away, and sent up word that "lie couldn't keep his horses uut any longer, and if the Colonel didn't come immediately, he must di ive directly to S-, without him." The litter not wishing toe c.em, promise an old servant, instantly com pied,.and dismissed the carriage :it the lode, walked up to the house, let hin. self in w itlt the latchkey, and went sti ,ight to bed, quite oigetting that his fact was blackened all over. In the morning Ldy C- awoke, and turnino:.rounid, -discovered a olack man snoring b her side ? Too much frightened ti sci) am;hy jumped'ont of the bed, rangL the bell 1ei i.eusly, and w.nnd herself its the bed-curtains. In rushed the lady's maid and house geepe'r. .'Ohin e'ami! what's the matter ma'am!' ciehd buith in a bieat h. 'Nothing hiapor'ned ad the Colonel, I hope, mao'am ?' s:Eid the bttler at the door. '[Hope maisfer ain't took whh a fit, ma'atm pursued the' ,footman, peep ing over the butler's shoulder. 'Ole ! take it away ! t.'ke it away fi cried Lady C-, speaking evith great difficulty, and. giving herself another t wis' in the bed.curtaihis. 'W~hai is it mua'am 1' said the femme de chambre, frightened out of hem wvits. 'Is ii in the bed, nha'am 1' inquired the hiousreckeper, warldhlng up to it, 'Kna ai-aw, Knauaw !' snored the slumbering Othello. 'Thieves ! Murder !' screaming the womten, runtning out again. 'Doni't be alarmed ma'am !' said the butler bolting in, followed by the foot man and groom, armed with whai weapons they coul,d lay their hands on, 'we'll soon secur' te fascal. Lads, mind your heads!'-and with this his gallantly flouiished the Colonel's sabre, which Ito had appropriated to hintself; and supporte'd by the rest of the party, appionchedi the bed-. 'Hallo!' roared the Colonel, starting on his head's antipezdes,- for he had beori awakented byv tbe: hubbub. ' Old Nick !. by gum !'.-cied the groom, overtrning his.- compatriots ir his eaegertness; to t-eape. 'Helti! Murdet 1' vociferated Lads 'C-, stamping and jerking down~ the bell pull. 'Help ! ,Mnder 1' reiterated the foot' man. scrninhina''t o the ronnm'n n'll fours, as if he wifr acting.a stage hound in some mytholoeical charade. 'Here, Tom t1Dletk' Came back you rascals!' cre 'fb,.wildered ('olonef, throwing his rcap after them. 'Joha! you-old od u et up ! where's your mistress 1f you don't get up this instant and-ll me= the meaning of all this, an1 keen "creaming.behind the curtains here fli he bolster at you, I will, yo id villain! Are you mad ?' 'Bless me ! is it you, sit ' said the butler, rising an rubbing the small of his back. 'Ldr tay:dear 1s i you! cried Ladj C-, peepingd 'Me, to be sureit is !' What were you all so frightened or ? Did you take m.- foir the devil? " 'We -did, indeed,-sir,' said the butler, as soon as he could speak. 'And no wonder I' cried Lady C-; laughing heaitily. .'What in the name .of God have you. done to your face, my dear 1' 'Face !..What's the matter with my fac. ?' inquired the Colonel, who had forgot all about- the previous nights theatricals, 'Nay, you best know,' rejoined .his better half. John, bring the Colonel thai, Blass.' 'Elh ? Oh 1I recollect now,' said ihe Colo10el,' looltng atrhimself, 'Ha ! ha ! ha ! He ! hol ?apir al ! Glorious ! Ha, ha, ha !- ho o ! ho ! How H-, and thi- rest o?"'&will laugh when they hoar this. To 'you nay go.' And when the servt ~had-left the room, he explained the -matter -English Pa per. PUEM2ATURE-INfER "EN'. Alarming. Staeinert.--T ha custom of premature btiwl in France-or rasher the law, for w W lieve it is a matter of police: reguia whaiever irguments f'ond po may have to recom -mend :i a iosed. by ce -of such. thj~ih ~oimiued: of that, is one f those curiois social problen'is,1:our atire against which is only disarmed by remembering how many such obstinate errors there are umongst ourselves. The number of living interments that have beets interrupted by accidental cir cumstances. alone, in Fiance, since 1833, amounts to 94 ! Ninety-four at tested cases, in which the living have narrowly escape(d being laid amongst the dead !-the wrong of the premature death being nothing to the ho.ror of that- inconceivable awakening in the grave ! 1n the eye of common sense, judged by the rules of the most ordinary inference, each one of these cases, not so escaped, would have been a murder; because thi plea of non-intention can not be allowed -to a law which tanks it -against such evidence as this. Of these ninety-four cases, 35 persons re covered spottiftieously from their leth aIrgy at the moment when the funeral ceremonies were about taking place; 13 were aroused under the stimalus at the busy hive- and grief about them; 7 by tle' fall of tie coffin which inclosed thema ; 9 by the pricking of the flesh by siywirgaepithe slirtud ; :5 by the sense of suffocation in their rhoffins; 19 by acci dental delays which occurred in thec, interru~em (how significant is this term !) and 6 by voluntary delays suggested by douhi as rb ihe 'deathr !- These, then, a tre they who lia've escsped; now think of the whole numerous family of trances and epilepsies, and remember hbat the po'pulatio'if I' Eraoce are habitually -huddled intditheir narrod. heniesitfiin four and twenty, or at most eight and forty.hours efter death--before the grim coniqueihu has had time,.in most cases, to 'hang his ensignl-thlre' Ere yet that deciya efracing fingers Have swept the- lines where beauty lin gers. . . and then - caldbite; if- you dare, the numbers whom- -no such- intervening angel came, to resep~e .frons this incon ceiable horror. On that'head the sta. t.istics, of course, a re silent--but not negative. 9 f all but these 94, the grave keeps the secret ; but renuamber that of all-who, since- 1833, were about to be bhiriied alive, these are the favoted of accident;;:ihen tale6 to-your Tables of -Chances, and tremble beibre the resul, ting relative figures w~hiih they present! And for all -this' am'ount of horror "the cure is easy." lI England; no man is laid in the-giave till signs have set in oi -that coming -derruption1, wh ich, however the hepru may shrink -from it, relieves at le~astfromn.the! most t'erible fear'-of all. InFaci theideazd must be pit away so soon, it shonld be by fire, as- of old; 'or uat leaut,-the surgeon should operaui -in nofey,. before the coffn~-id-be etised. A suscriber of tlie'.Christian Advin cae blng cald on to pay a bill 'f N7 60 for that paper, excused himself by saying that in' the first place he never or dered the paper, afid i lie did he novel got it ;, and if he did it was an agent; and: besides' he paid. long ago, and if he did'nt she has.got noihin' to papy.ana.if be. had, he cooJd plead: the act of linii tation. Of course he.ought to be excus ed, and have the.-paper sent atirother year gratis.-Tallahassee Jourual. Gin. Houston.-tThe Columbia Ob server relates' the following scene con necred with the remarkable history of this man: Whe, Gen.: Hotision abdicated the office of Governor of this State, he left his home, eschewed civilized life, and sought a new home and a new wife u mong the Indians in the far west, where he lived for sotme years. On his return to Nashville, there were none-perhapq only one person-who treated him oth erwise than with neglect or contempt, so low had the wheel of fortune, or rather his dissolute life, turned him. He was now in an Indian costume-at least he wore the cap, hunting-shirt and mocca sins. This was his. second love. Stung, no doubt, 'ith mortification fdr this cold neglect ofsorne, and' open contenipt fur others, ie' bore himself with equal indifference towards the com munity in which he had lived once high in office. And when about to 'leave Nashville, with an object that was then utithought of, or esteemed visionairy- Gut which was full of conscq'uences, he pas sed along the stets to the landing, beat ing a rile on his shoulder, unheeding as he was unhonored except fly the Burios ity of the ifidaltitude, Taking his posi tion upon the deck of the boat :which was about to bear him from a feld of shame to one'of glory, at least .in the. eyes of the mass, he rested his rifd upon the dock, lo::ked his arms and leaned his - tall and eleganr figure a'gainst the pilot house to waituthe departure of the boat:. .At this stran'ge,po&ud bearig, ti-eu pstyof the crowd that'hiad '.tssej..d'a st as the boat rdunded oft, ihree cheers for Houston were given ; but mute and mo tionless lie returned neither fooc nor nod. Another round followed brit his face wps turned to the "halls of the IMontezumas," and his back. to the city in which Ie! was yet to-be fhailed as "the hero of San Jacinto.". 0 Fortune ! thou art an arrant .." Louis Phillippe's Family.-The Eu ropean correspondent of the Philadel phia Ledger, uses the following la'n guage; in reference to the present royal family of France: " The alliance be tween the sovert-cf Fm..nce and En gland forebodes .no good to Ameiica although it is 'but: ton probable that it will not survive the death of Louis Phil hippe. The crafty old King seems to have trought of this, and provided even for such an emergency a candidate fot popurlar fsvor. out of his own loins. Should it become' necessary. for the French Government to go to war, there is still the Prince de Joinville, who will be the idol of the warlike 'party. One member of the royal family, the Duke of Montpensier, is even permitted to get tipsy and to roll occasioniilly in the gut ter, in'comuinemoratioin of the wtys and moans by which his father succeeded to the throne. 1The Dukes' d'Aesmale is merely an inveterate sitoker and a bioon companion that re.mindls you of the'gbid en days of ile Republic. 'Salute-et fraternitc ?'. Louis Plihippe, infact, has a~ whole assetrtmnetnt of children and grand children, front which the var iety of F.tanch tastes! ii-. 'suited. If it is not one it's the other ; the main object is the preservation of the monarchy and the succession in the family of Orleans. - *i Nw Yona, A pril24. SRiot in Brtocklin, last niht.-Ru mors reachtus, as we go to pv-ss, of a severe conflict having taken place, last night; between the Irish and German lat burers who have been employed at the Atlantic Dock. Several hundred Irish, (who, apparently, have been waiting for the withdrawal of the military, which took place two. days since,) armed with brick bats, clubs, stones, &c., attacked the Germans as they were leaving tireir wotrk, about seven; o'clock, and succee ded in bruising and manglinig a hmumber of the latter, as well as breaking the limbs of several ; we also learri thiatlone of the Germans died on board-the ferty bnat while being brought to this city. T wo of the Germans wete.-seeri' endea, voring to escape through sin alley since when their friends have been urna bld to id them.- 'It is feared many lives' hat~e been lost. . - . .A civil posse,7wo hear, brei'collecting to 'aid 'the Shbriff in ide ntifing'th' rtngs leaders'. A Gernait ho 'was 'pre, has nianifektddI his wigirige'4 g(9?4 to the gi'annt nc/tnieri 'bw.-theUls f, and tQp o.ihfrouh all their shantees aqd point oup hose be saw engaged, id the 'rot. This 'ma 'escaped by leaping over several fencses, and can identity those who ,were in pursuit of him We ddrstead the'Ferry-Master at the South' Ferry, would not allow :te Germans to go over this.norning.) P. S.-It id ascertained .that two Germans were killed,and it is.feared that the loss .:of life is, greater than at. prseni apipeais.,In the afternoon, prto g vious to-the.ddiragd alladed to,'lar a numbers of Irishmeni were seen sauna. tering about the~groceries and. taverns is Atjantic st." 'Toards "night, they had become .'pretty well intoxicated, 'and stood aboul the streets in knots, de claring their. intention.to attack the Geri mans, when they passed homeward. Info niation 'of their 'movemenis . was conveyed to the laborers, who were cau tioned befre' leaving their work; not to go through the streets wheie the. Irish were cougregited. They either did. no: understand thit precaution or dipended on their 'own arins for defence. Acom pany of them had just reached the midst of the 'rioters, when they-were assaulted with stones, clubs, knives and other wetlpons. - -:The Germans retteated, but were pursued by the Iaish,.add it is feared, that quite a durizber- were despatched and put out of sight. Quite a number-of German women were over to Brooklyn this inorning, looking for missing reIa' lives. . - The ido' ien wlhowere chased down Kelsey's alley, are given up for lost;'as rio race can be discovered-of theniafter they entered the ni'roiv passaga, from ivhich tliere tvas no.reti eat. The mob consisted about 50.or 60 -- Irishmen, who an0 o b trangers In Btoriktvi' A' es r of te Ger' mans iiad their Ii ",kenandiseve ral received'serio njuties on their. heads, friatuhe iyea ons of their oppo 'in =ws gyrat se g,- -t e -, .- = citenr-nt last week." Tha.Yeportis that the Judge of the Circuit Cdourt, thturs ine; session,'gave-the-grahd jury specially it charge the subject of ganibling-,isnd re1 quired them to enforce the Taison that-., subfet. Tue jury, in pursuing theiir examinations - urn-moned before then, Mayor Oury, refused. to answer a question and there. upon was committed to jail for. a con icmpt of court, and until he would an-' seer. - In the evening the excitement amung the,einzens of the town became very great, andjthey threated to deaol, ish the jail if Mr. Ourv was not- libera ted. At Len'gh the excitemeut became so great and the demonstrations so tine: quivocal, that' to protect the county property, he was liberated. The next day, 'we are also told, two members of the bar had a personal conflict, growing out of the same matter.-St. Lou. Rep. Biblical Curiosity.-The 21st verse of Ezra,-chapter 7, contains every letter of the Alphabet, and is the one tiius dis tinguished: " And I, even I Artaxer xps the king, do make a decree to ,ill the treasurers which ,are beyond the riv~ er, that whatsoever Ezra the priest, the scribe of the law of God i H-aven shall require of you, it shall bedone' speedily." - . Yankee Doodle ina A'usria.-We eli p t he following paragraph froin a letter in' the. New York ileraild, daie d.VYiknaa, Feb. 5, 1846: "Vieux Temiliaineen perfortni'ug for aome time in; he 1 msperial Opera Hnues. rnd his popularily in a city where rpnus~ic of every kind is su closely er lticise~d, must. be highly flattering to him. lie is decid edly a great ravorite, and is alw ays wa'rrmly received. A few evenings ago I was p:-es - ent at one of bis performnaurees, arid wxit nesed an occurrence wvell calculated to excite she embhaisiasm of an Americau hear:. Vieux Temps had finied-a lseries . of his pieces with the.Cgnival of Veujed -he was called osumtdiaii,, when hie striick - up Ya: kee.'Doilile with variatio~ns -' This. set- the whlole audience..inud p ei-feet upror.'- Americaner!' cried out.oneote Austrnans ; *Bravo!'a hundred others.; and you may well imaigine 'lhat we A piericane, three or four in number, ..found .if ratheir difficult to sit still derring ihis endhsii -tic expression of feeling for our belovgd fou n try. Acc he close nfrhecpiece.tseapplause was unbouuddl.,V'ieux Terppjps'cgiled oust t'htee,timnes hefore the curtisin fell, ahd~ twice sfierwards ; the'andienck eash time receiving him standing, andgreinog him standing, id greeting him with 'rotunds otelyplause, while nearly il the, lMI'ied ini the hionsejdvere clappiog .ibei*:han'ds t'd tijd best of tfreir'abilities ."Tfid'is gne boy in .tbis house kno' n as, the Engish loix; 1east mny eyep owarnis it .sud fian'd igj. ceoir ii -bisetrs or the' scene~ I pi-obaliteflecting on Bunker ill, 'i ington,: &c - -- i -Te Amerdan-'Miiication Table." Herald place ove iturnlrs~ Ii.!