' ; - - .- ... ' ' - -rVr- r ." - .""'N.- . .A- yi.trtpi?'jZ--gjff lit j f . 175- BY McKEE d ATKIN. . ' 1 ' . 1 ..' . ! . . -r j. v. Tw4 Dou.AM and Fim Cum porwinum in ' advance, or Thru Doixam within the jreefrr -:i j No paper will be diacontinued,' except at the ' option ot toe ruumoera, nnui au arrearaet art ' Adrertlaemente Ineerted et Pn Douutm pef tnuare, of twelve' tinea or lee, for toe hrat, and XwiT-nv Ckjits fot sack continoanco. Tbe number of, inaertiona detiied rauat be marked on the margin, or the advertiaeineot will be continu ed till forbid, end' charged .according!?! Court fA Mrtll nliamMri IwiiJ.Iim maw nmI .m t- T IHU BHdjUUS VI WVWSUtlWU S1U IIIVUI "theniq every iown and vilrogdjsays some writer ( ' in' the Junages. or poverty and , disease, that rise up in every placet 'n the cores of broktn-jjearted wives and hapless innocents that crowdevel-y mart in bur land, the yoQng men oLpur country see beons that should warn them bf the threatening danger that gathers around the inebriating cup." Young men are the flower of , the country the hope of the land. ' They are soon to assume important stations in the afEwrs of men. To them must be trans, mitted nil that is sacred in our government. But if they ere intemperate, what a curse will they bo to their country and to sue cecdin generations! They should take warning by the calamities that have befullen those who have preceded them. '' With a commendable spirit worty of all emulation, many of them have become the bold advo cates of total abstinence. Go on, we bid vouGod speed. Thus much by way of introdoctton to the following beautiful and touching nppeal to pung men, which we select from the Christian Mirror : -"" A atraneer stood upon the shore of the rniEhty ocean that laves the coast of Hoi- " . . . t-ji.-i .1.-1 : .u. lanu. - A storm nau oroKen me uurrior iiiai confined its tremendous power within limits prescribed by man ; the tides swept over the Jand,' burying in one undistinguished ruin, the labor nnd hopes of mnny years. Yet the possessors of thuse once fair fields did not sit down in hopeless despondency. Before the traveller left that scene of deso lation, the young and old were banded to gethewith the" firm purpose -of nwking the oceart retreat before them. The stran ger looked on with unbelioving wonder as he saw man in, all his .weakness daring to contend with' that clement on which his mightiest efforts had never yet left a trace' of a foot-step. He left them, and when sfter the lapse of a few months he returned, the waters hod disappeared, and verdure and beauty again bloomed in that region which ocean lately claimed as his own do. main. ! .What had accomplished this won derful result 1 United, persevering efforts. Young men, such a task is yours. A tide more (desolating has swept over our own fair lojid, whelming beneath its dark nd turbid waters not national and individual wealth alone, but the domestic altar, the sweet charities of home, the-cheerful fire, sides of America. Here end there this degrading vice has been stayed ; but if is -igaia rising in Its fearful powerr menacing destruction to all we hold deor. ; " Dreadful port of obaervation, - ' Made darker every hour." 7 " When the assiduous wife and tender- hearted mother watches its desolating pro. gress, and waits with agony of spirit, the moment when, the last barrier between h'er and utter hopeless misery is swept away ; she sees how fuinl and jeeble are the efforts to stay its course, and as she presses her little ones to her bospmher soul sickens at the thought that those innocent ones in whom are garnered tip all her earthly hopes, ma tread in the footsteps of her wo. " Friends, tell her not of such Befriend ," Tor her appealing looks are turned to you. one knows full well that you are 10 iorm the character and habits of our community, and that you wiflarise in your strength and I tire reformation or every arunKara.on tonsecrate to the cause of tcrhperonce theearth. - - - -- - - . - pride and vigor of your fearless and elastic spirits, or -the warnings ot tne ageu nu the united influences of the physician," the jurist and the pastor wilr be unavailing. Much indeed has been already done. But tsk that trembling mother whose firsUborn on,- her hope and stay, had been enticed to taste the fatal cup that has already car ried desolation into her heart and her home, nd she will tell vou that muehvet remains Wbfl dotie. She' looks to you and shall the aooeal be made in vain 1 You did never Jet refuse to respond tolho call rf your tountrr; or of sufferingoppressed huma- wty." Here then is a cause wormy 01 ireo. toem ot oatriots. of those who would with. out hmimtinn nlfMtrri their - lives, their ISrlunes, and their sacred honor,' in-defence Uheit native land." '. 'A. QOOO KEASOIf POK QJtJITTWO THB SUM riDK. A tavern-keeper irt lenselaer ounty, N. Y., after being engaged 1h the WnesjjexeraLyearsabaudoned the trafr s,and was observed to , feel deep regret hnever the subject was allude to. A ttend inquired the carJse2lJ will M Juv" "id be $ and opening his account book, he id. "Here are fort v. four names of men, ho have all been my customers, most of; ""nWor years thirty-two or tnese men, fmy certain knowledge now He jnthe wunkard's grave! -Ten of the remaining '; A ltxmtllr, Cnfemla. Some men are not 90 far bat to t aenw of duty ai to lei the idmohiiions of con. cience go entirely , linheedod. .f.i in in stance we ubmit the following confessloa of a rumseller.' It i light shining out of darkness. L God grant lhat none of our readers may ever be rutnaellers ; Sixteen years ago'I was the owner of a distillery and was doing a large business fn the way of destruction and death. AU though the' business was at that time com. paratively respectabre,!!!! acknowledge that there was seldom a time I did not feel. in A greater or less degree, . a sense of wronjz.doinff. "In Proportion as this fee inr increased, my interest fn business declined. and the consequence was a failure, which brought ' me Into reduced -circumstances. I then commenced the retail grocery trade. including liquor of all sorts, and continued in this for some time, but Could never get rid of a feeling of meanness, which seemed to me to attach itself to a business which I knew to be the cause of poverty and mis. eryvv; z-ii -r.-' ' u it happened on one occasion, late at night in winter, a neighbor whom I knew to be very intemperate, caljed as usual with his jug, for a quart of poiton. After it was filled and paid for, he asked me in an imploring way, if I would trust him for a loaf of bread. I replied in the negative, but told him I would take back the rum in exchange for a loaf. This, however, he promptly refused to do, and soon left the store. : -. " My pity was awakened, and thinking his family might be in distress, I went into the house, snd sucoecded in inducing my wife to go into theiFmiserable hovel and ascer. . -; i. a!" 'j-. . r .1 . 1..' nt taip 111 cvuaiuon 01 iiib iamiiy. .one soon returned with the sad idle of misery. - The drunken husband lay streched and senseless upon a heap of dirty straw in a corner of the hovel, while the wife was bending over a single" coal of fire, the remnant of the ast stick or wood, and striving to quell the cries of their half-starved and half-froz. en children. The storm howled fearfully without, and I thought of their miserable Condition and fell that 1 was the cause of it all. It was enough. My eyes were opened, and I made an everlasting vow that 1 would never iatte or sell another drop. rimnks to God, who has enabled me to keep that vow inviolable to this dny. I now feel it my duty to use all the influence I may ever have, to promote the glorious caus? of Temperance, and if possible, to make restitution for some of the misery I have caused. Butthis 1 can only hope to do in part, and must look to God for for giveness." - - The Washlugtoniaui Movement. This has indeed been one of tfie most wonderful works with which the world has ever been, blessed. Commencing with six intemperate men, at Baltimore, in April, 1840, it has spread over the country until it has been the means of reclaiming more than 100,000 drunkrrds and pouring upon theirs retched families the richest blessings. Euchr-reclaimed man hasr with" a hearT grateful for his restoration, stretched out a hand toward a laden brother and, ny tne relation.of his experience, once as an out cast and now as a restored man, interested his feelings and brought him to sign the pledge. il hove travelled," says John H. W. Hawkins, one of this number, ."since March, 1841, over 17,000 miles, and de livered over 700 addresses, and am doing all I' can in my weakness, for the poor drunkard. . I have witnessed many Very many, happy scenes of reformation. My labor has been very great. But what is it fori Thanks J)e,U-God, for the thought, it Is for the reformation of the poor drunk, ard and the ultimate salvatian of his soul." Of the many thousands reclaimed, few comparatively have relapsed ; -while many liave become useful husbands, fathers, citi zens, and even consistent and valuable members of Christian churches. Every philanthropist, patriot, and christian-must bid it onward until it shall result in the, en- What can be more painful to the feeling of all the true friends of the .temperance cause, than to be compelled to see any of their brethren break through or violate tne sacredness of the pledge! and yet. too fre qucnttydo. we hear of Washingtoaians among us who having engaged in this en. temrise. and for a season have done well, maintaining strict fidelity to the pledge, but iin anjanguarded'hour they have been over. taken all their good resolutions crusneu m hone fatal misstep causing again the wife, father, mother, or children, to pui on sbck. elothand go up and down upon the earth destitute and forlorn, or .loiiow r ao un irruatv orrnvfl a arm or father. Wcan most deeply sympathise with 111 such; and we would to heaven that our" avmnathv could brine them again to recti tudeaod fidelity, to sobriety, happiness and neace. Yet all these will be of but little use so long as they will associate with ine briates. l nev muat bywu mg iviutm" J ,i ZldTvif away from. fr-olaces where liquor is sold: hence we frZvJnJJ briates. They must ajrojdjhecompany jof associate ToolyVitK ihe temperate and yir- tnnna. In the words ol bolomon, r 1 ney that Folk with the wise shall be wise ; but fiWenrnnanion of fools shall be destroyed." ,tal mLX iamnnrato and there L nO irUlT WIW bio ivniirv.-.-,- 1 1 .1 J is no greater, human 1 tony inan qruuacuuww Tht Prairie. BY P. THOMAS ' Nof the least remarkable features in the Great Western Valley, are. the prairies, which are found In every direction over the face of its vast teritory.-' Tbey are of two amas, tne swelling or rolling, and the level and flat. . The former consists of un. dulating fields, broken into swells or reach as of various lengths and breadths, ex tending "sometimes to an altitude of sixty or seventy feet. .Between thew swells are loughs j or " aloos," which are gefierally marshy,' nd hi many instances contain mall lakes or -pools,'; land some that are rfrv exhibit tha antMarnrfl'nr fnnnl' unA answer a similar purpose in carrying off water into tne caverns oeneatn, tne exis tence of which' is indicated by the soil above. The flat prairies are plains ef rich alluvion, grown with long lank grass, and occasionally presenting a lake, and often studded here and there with groves of wild crab apple,' and clusters of forest" trees, that look like emerald . isles in a sea of waving green. J The prairies ane of various extent, from a mile to hundreds of miles. The largest are in the far off-west the home of the buffalo and the red hunter.- Wherever they are partly cultivated, as moat of them are in the " States," and where the annua) fires are discontinued, they soon grow up with timber. Their soil is, with very few exceptions, entirely alluvial, and yields immense crops of Indian corn and other coarse grain. When they exist in the neighborhood of settlements, they afford excellent pasturage for horses and cattle, and fine ranges for swine, and are travers. ed by herds of deer, the number of .which increases near tho plantations, When not in to close proximity, as their -greatest enemies', the black and prairie wolves, de. crease as cultivation advances. Wild tur kies, ducks, 'prairie fowls or grouse, quails and rabbits, also abound on the prairies, and afford great amusement to sportsmen. Numerous other animals, as the gopher, theoposum, the racoon, Ate., are foundiu them or On the borders. The wavfarer over these wide savan nahs will sometimes be startled by a sound as of hounds in the hunt, and anon, a noble buck "of ten tines" will leap past him, followed by a pack of hungry wolves, yelp. ing-uf they run ia hot pursuit r but he will look in vain for the sportsmen of the held, and he can but fancy that invisible hunters, " Honed on the viewlest eourien of the air," are tracking their game, and urging the wild chase. " Some theorists believe the prairies to have been, very anciently, the beds of the lakes or of the sea; this opinion finds ar guments in the alluvious character of their soil, and in the marine, shells that are in variably found imbedded m the limestone of adjacent bluff ' . When the grass is thoroughly ripe, in the fall, towards the close of November, most of the prairies are burned. The fire sometimes originates by accident, but more often from the jdesign of the hunters, to facilitate them in the destruction of game. The dry grass, which is often as high as the head of a man on hotseback, burns with fierce and teririble.apidiry, and extends the flames for miles in a few minutes, im pressing the beholder with the idea of a general conflagration. If the Wind chances to be high, tufts' of the burning materials dart like flaming meteorsthrough the'air, and, far as the eye can reach, a pall of blac1T8mbke'stretchet-to the horizon and overhangs the scene J while all below is lighted un. and brazing witn turious inten sity, and ever and anbn, flaming wisps of grass nuau up, rcvuivmg ouy vuwiuj glowing atmosphere, and lending to the imagination a semblance of convict-spirits tossing in the lake if -fife. The birds, startled and bewildered, scream wildly, and tumbkand roll about .above the flames ; the affrighted deer leaps from its covert and courses madly away and the terrified wolf, forgetful of . the chase, runs howling in an adverse direction. ;Nf When an experienced hunter finds him. self UDon a' prairie to which fire has been applied", he immediately kindles a fire near him, tas oia tne 01a trapper m vuupcru novel of the " Prairie,") and the wind bears the flames onward burning a path before himT which ho follows to a place of safety, and thus escapes ahorrible fate, that buf lor nis sngacuy jwouiu iuto uviu A prairie on fire can sometimes be seen at a distance of fifty miles. The fire con tinues until the grass ia all consumed, and not unfrequently, it is carriea Dy tne wina into the adjacent forest, which it blasts and rtnvnitntea until checked by a water course. Early, in the spring the prairies renew their verdant Clothing, and long before their next autumnal-burning, all vestages of the pre. cedine conflagrations are, gone, unless, perhapasome worm-eaten ana wpics wee, . 1 1 . . in nnn 01 me lsianu-imo iuicio, show ,-by its blacdened trunk", and leafless branches, that the names nave oeen uro. In nd possible condition can thejraines r, . i , .. w"hou exciting feehngs of a pe. culiar and lively interest. They are glo riously beautiful ng to thetimes and seasons jo which they . kv,M,l When viewed in the broad nUr of dav. ther seem' like large lakes ntlv undulatintr in the breeze, ahd their .riponted flowers flash in the sun, like phosphorescent sparkles on the surface of the waters. ocen, oy ylh-lJJ-?t: Mar jtalm. and placid a the lagunea of x cnice, ana tne- oeno Ider a most wondiirs Wry they do not reflect back the starry ,f rones of the sky above theov ; In storms, ciouas that hang oyer them seem r e eome more near Uwertb1faao is their, wonf? utjther places, and the lightning sweeps cipsoly jo. their surface,' as if to mow them with a fiery scythe, while, -aa the blast blows throughthem. the tall rrass bends oa, surges Delore it aqd gives forth a shijl whistling sound s if every iibre wr b a barpstring of JEolufj In tho Wring, thr j put fortu their rich .verdure, siossfc with the early wild flowers bf monv hues. spreading a gorgeous carpeting," which ao l urkisli laDnc can equar ; At this season, in., the ewly dawn, while the mists hang upon their borders curling infolds like curtains through which the morning sheds a softened light j." half revealed, hnlf concealed,' by the vapory shadows that float fitfully over the scene they appear now light r now shaded, and present a pa. norama ever varying, brightening and darkening; until the mists foil up, and the uncurtained sun reveals himself in his full rising. In the "summer, the long grass stoops and swells with every breath of the breezelike the waves of. the heaving ocean, and the bright blossoms seem to dance and laugh in the sunshine,' as they toss their gaudy heads to the rustling music of the passing wind. .The prairies are, however, most beautiful when tbe first tints of autumn are upon them; when their lovely (lowers, in ten thousand varieties, are decked in their gorgeous foliage ; when the gold and purple blossoms are contrasted with the emerald-green surface and silver linings of their rich leaves, and all the hues of the iris, in every modification,- throw them selves on all sides, to dazzle, bewilder and amaze. .Bleak, desolate and lonely as a Siberian waste, the prairie exhibits itself in winter pathless and trackless, one vast ex panse of snow seemingly spread out to irt. finity, like the winding sheet of a world. 1 he traveller ot the Hqpky Mountains may" rise with the early morning from the centre of one of the great prairies, and pursue his solitary journey until the setting of the sun, and yet not reach its confines, which recede into the dim, distant horizon, that seems its only boundary. He, how ever, will hear the busy hum of the boe, and mark the myriads of parti-colored but. tertliesiand other uisects, that flit around l, ...mi 1 I I J . r .1 i .r upon the hunt and he will see troops of wild horses speeding over the plain, shaking the earth with their unshod hoofs tossing their free Jrianes, like streamers to the wind," andjanorting fiercely with unbridled nostrils ; ihe fleet deer wilt now and then dart by him ; the wolf will rouse from his lair, nnu iook asKHiice anu growi aijiim; and tbe. little prairie dog will run to the top of its'tiny mound and bark afhim, before it retreats to ijs den within it. No human being may be the companion of the travel, leria. tholinmcnseoHtudey yet ..will he feel that he is not alone the wide expanse is populous with myriads of creatures, and in the emphatic language ot the red man, The Great Spirit is on the Frame.' The Grave. The grave is the ordeal of true affection": t is there that the divine phssion of the soul manifests superiority to the" instinctive impulse of mere animal attachment. I he latter must. bo continually, refreshed and kept alive by the presence of its-object; but the love jhat is seated in thesoul can' live on long remcmberance. The mere inclinations of Sense languish and: decline, with the charms which excited them, and turn with shuddering- disgust from the dis mal precincts of the, tomb;, .but it is thence that truly spiritual affection arises, purified from every sensual . desire, and returns like a holy flame to illume and sanctify the heart of the survivor.' Tbe sorrow of the dead is the only sor- row from which. we refuse to be divorced. Every other wound we seek to heal eve. ry other affliction we cherish and brood over in solitude. Where is the mother who Would willincW forget the infant that perish ed like a blossom from her arms, though every recollection is a pang T Where, is jthe child that would willingly forget the most tender of parents, though to remem ber be but to lament 1 Who. even in the hour of agony, would forget the friend over whom he mourns t Who, even when the tomb is closing upon ibe-cmains ,9 her he most loved ; when ne tecis nis neart, as it were, crushed in the closing of its portal, would accept of consolation' that must be bought by forgetfulness 7 No, the love which survives the tomb is one of the noblest attributes of the soul.- If it has its woes, it has likewise its delights; and whcn-lhe overwhelming bursts of grief is calmed into the gentle tear of recollection ; when the sudden anguish and the eonvul sive agony over the present ruins of all that we most loved, is sottenea away into pensive meditation on all that it was in the davs of its loveliness wbo would root out such a sorrow from the heort T Though it moy sometimes throw e passing cloud over the bright hour of gaiety, or spread a deep er sadness over the hour of gloom, yet who would exchange it, even for thesong of nleaaure. or the burst of revelry 1 'Wo, there is a.yoice from the tomb sweeter than one-.' Theie is a rememberance If the dead to which we turn even from the charms oliheHving: Oh, the grayel-lhe grave Uln Z',r7 ,, T.t Ilthrinaing the mouth after meals, and a buffalo,;graz.ng jft the, djstance, and theJ 0 charcal he,d in ,ho moulh 1, It hurries every error covert every de fecl-H5xtioguiehe reeenlmeotl From its peaceful boeom spring Twne but -fond re grets and tender reCollecticms. !io can look down ypon the grave, even ' an ene(. my, and not feel a jmpjuocttottt -throb, that he should evef have war rod. with, tha poor handful.of earth that lie rnoalderjng oeiore rum washmgtm Irving ,:v- Thm Teeth. 'V y .The prevalence of defective teeth in tliis country is the general subject ibf remark oy roreigners; end wboevvr t.eHed (a Spaiu-snd lbrtugl; is stkiek; wkh-the superior Bountfliess and whtreieo ofleeth n those countries. Though not a cleanly people in other respects, they "wash their teethbften, andby means of tooth-picks, carefully" remove an substances from be tween them, after meals. A little silver porcupine,with holes all over its back to in sert tooth-picks, is a common ornament on the diojng-table of Spain and Portugal. The general use of them creates so large a demand, that students at Coimbra some, times support themselves by wbitling tooth picks, which are sold, tied in small bunches, like matches. They are made of willows on account of its toughness and pliability. Tooth-picks of metal are too hard, and are apt to injure the gums. Thore is the some objection, in n less degree, to quills. But willow tooth. picks are preferable to all others; and they have the advantage of being the most cleanly, for they generally break in the using, and are thrown away Few sights are more offensive to a person of any refinement, than a tooth-pick that has been much used ; it is moreover un cleanly, and, therefore, not healthy for the teeth, food a!lowed to remain between the' teeth, particularly animal food, is very destructive; it should be carefully removed after every meal, and the mouth thorough ly rinsed. This may seem to many like a great talk about a small matter, but these are simple precautions' to take, and very slight trouble, compared with the agony of aching teeth, or a breath so offensive that your best friend does not wish to sit near you. A bad breath is such a detestable thing, that it might be a sufficient 'reason for not marrying a person with, otherwise agreeable qualities. It is moreover, per fectly inexcusable to transform oneself inloJ a walking sepWclrfe. Nobody needs to have an offensive breath. A careful re- moval of, substances from between the ways cure a bad breath. Uharcoal used as a dentifrice, (that is, rubbed on in powder, with, a brush) is apt to injure the enamel ; but a lump of it held in the mouth, two or three times ' week and slowly chewed, has wondertul power to preserve the teeth and purify the breath. The action is pure. ly chemical. It counteracts the acid aris ingfrom a disordered stomach, or food de. caying about the gums ; and it is this acid which destroys the teeth. . A dear-friend of mine, had, when about twenty years of age, a front tooth that turned black gradu ally, crumbled, hiid broke off piecemeal. By trequcntly chewing charcoal , the pro gress of decay was not only arrested but nature set vigorously to work to restore the breach, and jho crumbled portion grew againrtill the whole tooth was as sound as before !,. lhis I know to be a fact. Everyone knows that charcoal is an antiputrescent, and is used in boxing up nnimtffa dr. vegetable substances, to kcej them from decay. Upon the same chemi cal principle wit tends to pr esc rye the teeth , and fcweetcp the breath, . - There is no danger in swallowing it; on the contrary , small quantities have a health ful effect on the inward system, particularly when the body is suffering from that class I of complaints peeultarly.jncKlent to sum mer. . It would not be wise to swallow that, or any gritty substance, in large quantities, orvery frequently ; buf once or twice a week a little would be salutary, rather than otherwise.-A bif-of charcoal, as big as a cherry, merely held in the mouth a few hours, without chewing, has a good effect. At first, most people, dislike, to chew It," but use soon renders it far from disagreea blef. Those who are troubled with an of fensive breath, might chew it very often, and swallow it but seldom. It is peculiar. ly important to cleans and rinse the mouth thoroughly before going to bed ; otherwise, a great deal of the destructive acid will iorm uuring 1110 iiigui. . , If these hints induce only one person to take better care of the teeth, I shall be more than rewarded for the trouble of writing;- I am continually pained to seo young peo- pie losing their teeth merely for want ot a few simple precautions: and one cannot en ter stage or steam car without finding the atmosphere polluted, and rendered bdk lutejy unhealthy for the lungs to breathe, when a proper use ol water ana cnarcoai might render it os peasant and as whole some as a breeze of Eden; . - Judge Story , in a late charge "to a grand jury in Rhode Island, said" Carry with you, in your neans, gentlemen, to me grave, the principle that next to the duty you owe to uoo, mere is none nigner anu more sacred man mat wnicn you owe iu your country F.nncATioN. A wealthy farmer in Ken tucky savs, " I would rather be taxed for "the education of the boy, than the igno. ranee of the man. For one or the other, I am compel'edjo be.r...-:i-.. , B.NOWlEDGEtOF,UlIWS.--ACCOrding to riinv. fire for a lonir tima waa unlnoain to - - - ............ fJ ...-...v., n Euxodos, the celebrated astrononmr, show, ed it to lhem they were absolutely in ropf" f The Persian? Phoeniciaos, dreekaVand, several nthnr nntinns. nk tna,rtm ihot , . " T . neealfir. wrt witlimit llm naAnf fiMtiha Chinese confessed the nma of lhelr nm. (Tdnilnp .'Primnnnin. Vflo tIt.lnw..!. ..,1. other ancient authors, sneak 'of nation . 6U,II,V ,V...,.W..,M1.- .I.VH.- iui.iv.hi who, at the time they wrote, knew eat tiie ci aiw-ar ma luu iearai ii.-ractm ot itic mito King ore. iq wieaaiq py eoverai modern nations. The inhabitants of the Marian Islands, which were discovered in 1521. had no idea of fire. Never was astonishment greater than tluiirfwhnlhey saw it "on the descent of'jMnahrHqn tn one of their aiunus. .ai nrsi i . r.i.iirvsa it to be some fcitld of an aninml thnt fytod itself to, and fed upon the, wood. The inhabitants of Hie Philippine ernd-anary Islands. were tormcrly equally-ignorant. Africa pre. scnts, even in our days, some nations in this deplorable state. Parks' Chemical Essays. The Working Mechanic We cannot say too much in behalf of the working mo chanic, who is constantly striving to make . himself ktiown, not only in becoajuig pro. ficient in his business, but who is every day raising hjcnsclf to eminence by this course of his habits. A young man who has no thingo depend upon but his character and the labor of his own hands, fo' his elevation in the world, can, notwithstanding, arrive at the highest grade of nation! honor. And when we remark thus, we are happy to place to the credit of the mechanic, tho fact that he ranks with that class of citizens who are" tho most likely, with judcious management to become the welcome pos. scssors of American popularity in every grade and form it assumes. Roger Sher. man waa once seated upon n shoemaker's bench, end it was there, doubtless, that he first ruminated upon his first "adventures. Are you a young mechanic T Determine, at once, to trace his history, and resolve to make yoursplf a greater man even, than Roger Sherman"'. -lmffam 'Farmer and Mechanic. Major General Anthony Waywe A remarkably intelligent lady, who recollect, ed this distinguished officer before the reyo. lutionary war when serving in a civil cepa. city ns an officer of the country, gave some years since, this sketch of him: 1 was then a little girl of nine or ten years old, but I remember him well as he appeared at my father's, with several oilier persons, on bii. siness of the county. His form and figuro werelrffSle his ..manner graceful and I remember as he used to ascend the place where the commissioners sat, there was a lightness of step and a dignity in his air, very composing, which I shall never forget. At the table, M r. Wayne carved the turkey; 1 can see him as if it were nqwx tucking in tho ruffles that were over hisliahds, for he dressed in the most elegant fashion of the olden times, and when ho applied the carving knife, the bird seemed to fall apart wjthout effort. He was aman teverein . ap,flrcatronhMe business was transacting ; but that TB-ver he was full of humor, and sang his song with the merriest of the company- . . .Marriage. I never knew n mnrriago expressly for money, that did not end un happily. Yet managing mothers end heart, less daughters ere continually olaying tho same unlucky game. I believe "that men more frequently marry for love than wo. men, because they have a free choirel I am atraid to- conjeciuro now large a portion of women marry, because they think they will. not have a better rhance, and dread .. 1 t.'vl . ' o C. doubt, sometimes prove tolerably comforta ble, but a greater number would have been -far happier single. 1M may judge by my ebservatiorrof soeK matters, marrying for . a home is a most "tiresome way of getting. nainn - no noil m a n r - n inn '- mnpn.im, - win a living. Mrs. Child.' . At Berlin and Lbndon tho longest day has sixteen and a half hours. At Stock?, holm and Upsal thdfungest has eighteen and a half hours, and the shortest five and a nnit. ai iiamuurpn, uamzic, onu oiet linabe longest day has eighteen hours, and the shortest seven.. At fet. letersburgh and Tobolsk the longest has nineteen and the shortest iivc hours; nt Toronto in Eng land, the longest day has twenty ' ne and a half hour's and the shortest two and n, half; at Wnndobus, in Norway,-the day I . r .1 !! f H .. . .i .V I I . .1 . without inleruption, and nt Ppitzbergen the longest da lasts three arjd a half months. Useftl hints. Never entera sick room in a state ot perspiration, asujie moment you become cool your pares absorb. Do not approach contagious diseases with an empty stomach ; nor sit between the sick and tbe fire, because the heat attracts the thin vanor. ...... -, The day closes in darkness, the year fades in desolation, and man sleeps in the dust, but there is a morning and a spring time for all- Youth that is cut dowa-in iu IriuAlintxafl - liltA a mnnnrph flnwtfr: shall .V . . , - ... -. ..w . bloom afresh in the garden of God,, and age thnt shines in righteousness, till it sinka beneath the sod, shall rise again in glory, I like the sun m the firmament. ,. . lwva are now living c6nnrrngdot : 1 lroy Aquarian.