■ A"OLU:\IE L OXFORD, N. G., W]:D1nES1.)AY, NOYEMRER 8, 1875. KEMBER 41. TiaE gPOK45ffi FISBIEltY. The sponge-fisiicry is exclu sively practiced by the Greeks jind Syrians ; tliat of coral by the Genoese and Xea])olitans; that of pearls and mother-of-pearl, in Asia by the Oingaleseand Malays, in America by the Indians and negroes. Sponges were formerly c^iught in the Rod Sea and along a great part of the north coast of Africa. ' At present, the fishery is princi pally iiursued in the Greek Arch ipelago and on the Syrian shores; It is open to all nations : but, as 1 have just said, the Greeks and Syrians adono follow it up as a regular trade, and make its pro ducts the staple of a regular com merce with the West. Operations ordinarily liegin early in June, and terminate in October; but the least favorable months are those of July and August. The barks sail from Tripoli, Batroun, the Isle of Rouar(I,Latakia,Kalki, Stainjialia, Castcl-Kosso, Simi, and Kabninos ; each boat usuall}’ carries four or six men. The pponges are found at a distance of 1,000 to 2,000 yards out at sea, on banks of rocks formed by molluscous debris. The finest specimens lie at a depth of twelve to twenty fathoms; tliose collect ed in shallower waters are of inferior quality. At tlie opening of the fsliery, lim Greeks and Syrians arrive at Biiiyrna, Be\-rout, Latakia and RlaYe- in largo sdam^ps, wnich tiioy (k.-mantic i)i er ler^to eCjuip the’bmaii craft suitable tor tim.r o])eratioi)B, and then dis]>erse clmig the coasts. The fshery is (■''luiucted in two ways. I or the common kinds they emplo} tbrec- toothed harpoons, by means of i'h they catch Imid of liio 'But tnis implomeiil will' s])onires, Would injure the imer species and in quest of these, Bkilllij cjveys doBcend to tim bottom of the sea, and caretiilly rmtach tiiem with a strong knife. Hence l-'m enormous dhlcrence of price between the divers’ sponges and tim ]mr])Ooned sjonges. The Greek divers are, as a rule, bolder and more skillful t::an the Syrians. Tlioso ol ih.lnunos and Rsera are the most renownO'i. While they can re-; inaiu in the water longer than the Byrians, their fishing is generaJly more abundant. Tliey dive to a dejitli of twmity-nve fathoms, while their rivals, for most part, cannot descend beyond fifteen or twenty at the utmost The pro duct of th(9 sponge-fishery varies, moreover,-according to the weath er and the cireiimstances. I'n 1827 it was valued at an average of 2 ibs. 6 oz. avoirdupois for a boat manned b}' five or six divers, and this calculation is confirmed by tlie most recent documents. The proportions of the difierent qualities in this total are valued approximatively at one-third of the superfine, and two-thirds for the medium and rough. Betwee-n the two latter varieties, the pro portion varies according to local ity,' The Greeks devote them selves more })artlculai’iy to the fishing of the large sponges call ed Venetian, although they ^ sell them by weight four or five times cheaper than the fine sponges ; but the inferiority in price is bal anced by the macli greater facil ity of the fishing. There has been introduced in to European commerce, witlii!! the last few years, a species of sponge collected on the coasts of the Lucayos Islands, in the Carib bean Sea, which is known as the Bahamasponge. It isof a peculiar ly attractive .appeaiaince, thanks to its fine close tissue, and to the preparations which it undergoes, in order to give it a beautiful pale blond color but k is liard, strong and without solidity. OS'fiE BAIV51. Extracts from the Report *of THE Geological Sinvr/r or XoRTH CaROLIXA, BY pROF. ^Y. C. Kerr. In kliic’iell count3ms found one of the most remarkable iron-ore deposits in North America. It lies on the western slope of the Iron Mountain, (a part of the Great Bmoky range,) in the northeast corner of the county, 8 miles from the Tennessee line, and a-bout a mile fiom theraind torrent of Elk ifiver, the }>nncij)al afliuent of the Watauga, it has been long known as the Cranberry Ore Bank, from Cranberry Creek, -wliicli fio-ws at 'the foot of the steep mountain spurs, on which it outcrops. The prevalent and characteristic rock of the mouuTains in this localiW is hornblende, slate and syenire, and is on the northern margin of a mountainous ledge of such rocks, tlint the ore-bed occurs, gray gneisses and gncissold slates coming in be^roiid In immediate succession and association, in paj't. The ore is a pure magnetite, massive and generally coar.se granular, and exhibits strong polarit}'. it is associated with pyroxene and epidote, in certain parts of the bed. The steep slope of the mountain gorge and ridges which the bed occupies, are covered with bloc.ks of ore, often of luiudreds of pounds w^eight, and in many places, bare vertical ■•vails of massive ore, 10 and 15 feet tliick, are exposed, and the trenches and open dig gings, ■which are scattered, with out order, over manv’- acres of surface, every where roach the solid ore ■within a few feet of the surface. The length of the out crop is about 15U0 feet and the breadth 200 to 800. A large quantity of ore has been qiiarriod and smelted liere during the last two or three generations, but no mining lias been done, the loose and partly decomposed and dis integrated masses of ore and magnetic gravel mixed with the surface earth, having been jire- ferred by the ore diggers, as be ing more easily obtained, and much more readily stamped and granulated for the forge fire. Idre smitlis and farmers of the re gion w'ill use ito other iron, if the CranbeiTy can be had, and they willingly pay fifty per cent more for it than any other in the mar ket. The softness and toughness of this iron is very remarkalile, and its tensile strength, as test ed by the E'nited Stafi's Ordr iiauco Department, ranks with that of the best irons known. The blooms from the Cranberry forges have been extensively us ed in Baltimore for boiler iron, and commanded fifteen dolkars a ton above the market. In quali ty it is unsurpassed l)y any iron in the world. Awd in regard to quantity the bed much exceeds the groat deposits of Missouri and Michigan, and at least equals auTthing in the Champlain region. So that it lias not probably an equal in this country, it lias been recently sold to one of the leading iron manufacturing com panies in Peus^’lvania, for S17o,- 000, and wliou they shall have completed the lirancli railroad, tliirty miles in leugtli, from the ore to tbs East Tennessee & Vir ginia Railroad, no doubt tlie iron world will Ijegiu to hear of the deposit in a practical way. A very AsicieESS rViiSi iu I?Ijssi3sissi>i. About eighteen miles from Port Gibson, mid one mile from Braiulywine Siirings, on the place of Mr. O’Qum, tl'.e existence of a great number of blocks of cut- stone has been known for an in definite time, and the people in the noig'liborhood have used them for prop.s for their houses, Mr Janies (luge, Jr., went out there a few days ago to explore, and had a specimen stone brought in to town. It is about three feet long, by about twenty indies square, resembling in .shape a bar of soap. It is probably a native sand stone. Mr. Gage took this block himself from beneath the roots of a large pine tree. It formed a portion of a wall about twenty feet broad on the top, lyliidi 3Ir, Gage traced for a dis tance of two luiiidred and fifty yards. The inference tliat one would naturally draw from this siiperiicial view is that this must have been a city' wall, but deoj exploration might show it to be a portion of a fort, temple or other building. Anyway, its antiquity is probably immense, antedating the history of the red men.—J’ort Gibson Standard. C^iieap €ai>iSa5. We often hear men com|dain- ing of the w'unt of ‘capital’ with which to prosecute business and make their way in the world—to support themselves and families and reach a (mmpetenc}' in world ly store. You will see them lounging on stieet corners, sitting at the tavern or post office, whit tling chairs ami goods-boxes, or in their offices propping their feet iqion the table or ' window-sills, repining over the lack of starting ca]jital—buiiding air-castles and laying sclieines, like Col. Sellers, with “millions in them” if only the capital -was at liand with which to }!rosecute and develop them. Arid all the while there is ‘capital’ witliin their reach ;—not money resources, perhaps, but capital more necessary and pow erful than money and muefi clieaper—capital without ■which money i.s of little avail. Every m.on with a modiciun ot sense and good health can be readily furnished ■with cajiital it he would only utilize it. A good name is the starting point—not an ans- tocratic name with tlie accumula ted dignity and importance that attaches to an illustrious f unily, , but a na;ne among one’s neigh bors for sobriety and lionest}’—a name that when mentioned elicits respect because of the virtue and wortli of him who boars it. Any one can acquire tliis capital b}’ careful conversation and upriglit conduct among Ins fellow-inon, and wlion acquired is an invalua ble means to success in business. llonoskV, scrupulous, unbending honesty in dealing, in buying and selling, lliougb it may somor times require the sacrifice of some temporary advantage and gain, -will in the end bring ])utronage and prosperity, if conjoined with other qualities. Attention to business, punctu- alit\- in meeting engagements, fi delity in keep'ing promises, ener gy and seal in the prosecution of what the baud finds to do, econ- om}" in expenditures, politeness toward equals, inferiors and su- ]ieriors in age, experience and station, are all elements of capital stock witliin the power of every one to seize and use. Nature, the great capitalist, furnislies these to all her children, without usury, only requiring that they shall be employed and culti\’ated.—llcd- eigh Christian Advocate. Cloves are the unopened flov.'- ei’s of a small evergreen tree tliat resembles in appearance the laurel or the bay. It is a native ot the Molucca or S])ice Islands, but has been carried to all the warmer parts of the world, ami it is now cultivated in the tropical regions of America. The flowers are small in size, and grow in large num bers, in clusters, to the very end of the brancbe.s. The cloves wo use are the fio'rvers gatherd before they are opened, and while they are still green. After being gathered they are smoked ]jy a wood fire, and then dried in the sun. IXicli clove consists of two parts—of a round head, which is the four petals, or leaves, or flow ers rolled up, inclosing a number of small stalks or filaments ; the other part of the clove is termina ted with four points, and is, in fact, the flower-cup of tlio unripe seed-vessel. All these parts may be distinctly seen if a few cloves are soaked for a short time in hot water, when the leaves of the flow ers soften, and readily unroll Both the taste and the smell of cloves depend on tlie quantity of oil they contain. Sometimes the oil is separated form the cloves before they are sold, and the odor and taste are, in consequence, much weakened. Emerson discourses as follows : “Show us an intelligent family 0[f- boA’s and girls, and wo shall ^ho\y- you a famil}^ where newspapers and periodicals are }il.‘ntifiiL No body, who lias lieeu without these silent, ],'rivate tutors, can know- thoir educational ]■)ower for good and for evil. Have you never tlionglit of the innumerable topics, of discussion whicli they suggest at the breakfast table, the most important jiublic measures with which, thus oaii\" our children become familiml}’’ acquainted ; groat jdiilantiiropic questions of t)io day, to which unconsciously their attention is awakened, and the general spirit of intelligence which is evoked by these 'quiet visitors f Anything that makes home pleasant, cheerful andcha'.i t)'^ thins the haunts of vice, and the thousand and one avenues ot temptation, should certainly be rogiirded, when Ave consider its influence on the mind of the young as a great moral and social blessing.” ISeasliiag' lor tJic Young*. I’liere is in market a flood of literature that is fitonlj^ for kind ling fires, that should never be read; and there is a flood, also, of pure, fine, high-toned literature for men and Avomen, for boys, an^ girls, for the old and youiig, for- tlie intellectual and unintelleptual, but discrimination must beusediq selecticui, aud fevA^ cliildreii are capable of inaking a AAdiolesome choice in liooks. Their- habits, and tastes in reading must be formed, if formed ariglit, by wise and judicious counselors. A boy or girl accustomed to eat at a cleaiq ovderl}-, Avellfuriiished table will luive no appetite for food that is filthy, unwliolosome, illcocked, and Avill s.tarvvM long before Im Avill feed on it. Just, so a young person Avhose intel-. lectual appetite has fieen stimu lated and gratified by intimate acquaintance AAutli pure and noble Avriters Avi; I loathe tlie produc-. tious of vicious and depraved au- thora. A quiet reproof Avas adroitly glAmii by Dr. Bethune to the Rev. Dr. 'fyng in a }datform meeting in Philadelphia, A. \), 1878. Dh Tyng had introduced liiinself to us by assuring us of his firmness as an Episcopalian; that in his birth, baptism, confirmation, &g., he had been an Episcopalian; that he expected to ii\'e, mid die, and go to heaven an Episcopa- liuH, and to be an Episco])aliau in heaven. Dr. Bethune, being iutrucuced, said; -‘As for myself, lam nolliing buta Refurniod D Li t cl i m an. 1 ex]) oct to live and die a Refbrined Dutchman ; but Avlien I got to heaAum, I sluill be an Ejuscopalian, fori am determined te be Avith brotlur Tvng. In Cashmero 100,QOO person^ are employed in the sIiaAvl manu facture. fl’iie AveuAmrs are all men, and most of the spinners Avomen. The real Cashmere tl'.road is made fi’on> dovAui, net the hair, of the Tliibet goat. TId§ doAvn, or avooI, is all carried to Cliasmere for manufactrire, the business being under such strict governmental control that no real Avool can bo sold, or smuggled in to any other province pf India, Fine shaAvls are made iii other jirovinbes and sold as genuiqa Cashmere, but are an inferior ap-: .tide. These shawls, are of tAvp kinds: one is made by AA^pavin^ snicill pieces and seAving tlipm to gether, the other by ombroidoj> ing the pattern on a jJ.ain cloth, The Aveaving of a shaAij of ordinary pattern occupies three AvcaAmrs three months; the more elaborate ones from twelve tq fifieen months. Trqe ])letj is not a morose, buj, a clieerful thing; Avlpl^t it niake^ us ju}'fi}l3 ii tleli\mrs us from frivT olity ; 3’et it causes us to be plea.^- clllt.