PRICE $2 PER TEAR In Adranc. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. A FAMILY PAPEft-DEYOTH) TO POLITICS, L1TERATUBE, AGRICULTURE, MANUFACTURES, MINING, ANt NEWS. RUFUS M. HEREON, Publisher. ROBERT P. WARING, EdiUr. "ije iaff0 -Distittft as t 33illow3 hut one ns tije $nv NO. VOL. 3. CHARLOTTE, N. C., FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 29, 1854. a. tlloimy at iAttc, OSSce ii Loner gun's Brick Building, 2nd floor. CHARLOTTE, N. C. THOMAS TROTTER & SOS HA t plot opened a sphndid slock of W ATCHES and JEWELRY, SILVErt & PLATED WARE and FANCY GOODS of all kinds. XT' No. 5, Oran :te Row. Oct. 27,1854. Htf J. B. F. BOONE, WHOLESALE AN D RETAIL DEALER IN SOOTS & B10M, SOLE M.F.aTitUR. tMF SMLMJtTS, LINING AND BINDING SKINS, SHOE TOOLS OF K V Eft Y DESCRIPTION, Charlotte, N. C. Oct. 20. 1854. I j ELMS &, JOHNSON. Forwarding and Conimission Merchants. no. io Vendue range, CHARLESTON 9. C. W. W. ELMS. C. JOHNSON. June 23, 64. 4lf. B . HAMILTON. H. M . GATES HAMILTON & OATES, c o nn i s 8 1 o n 11 1 : n i s r a , Voi ntr of Riehardtun and Laurel Streets, COLUMBIA, S. C. June 9 1854 1 y I. ITZXHOUK. C. H. AVKftlLL. T. STKXHOIMI. JL Co., fORWARDING& COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Jt'v. 2 lluiue Street, CHARLESTON S. C. REV KB , TO Hand, Wl tarns & Wilcox, I . . j K J. Dulin, K. Harrion & Co. J I Wil !iain, Dixon & Co. Charlotte. N . 1 ' B.JK."handler, Chatanooga. Aug. Ii; '54 6m FACTORS & COMMISSION MERGHANTS, jYu. 1 m! 2 Atlantic M"ha CHARLESTON, S. C. ry Iib'-r.il arivanct-a ma 'e on CniHigntTWm. 1 Sj-Tii! att'-ntioii gtlrefl to the sale of Floor, Corn, A ' . an.1 tro'n o r ! tij experience in the busim , we frV outi.lut of civinj sat is taction. M.rrb Is. 5L 34 ! v Dry Goods in Charleston, So. Ca. IMPORTERS OF DRY GOODS, Km. 239 ana '-ii 1 K-njj street, corner of Market Sirstt. CHARLESTON, S. V. ftaotatioa Vf.iolens, Blai.kitH, Arc, Cartirtins and ("urtaisi SIteriK. tBilks) asd Kicfa MaaAiHaa urt Shawls. Wrtsr v'a M rch 17. 1."4 loaks. ii. Our Tri.i 34-lj IlKOIJA BY JENNINGS 6 . KERR. Ltarlotie, C January 28, loo. 28tf WINDOW SHADES, H TAI OOOI, H ITKASSES A X l AT GREAT BARGAINS. WIIE - 11 has in stare, of his nun Bsanafaefarc awd ruBortattos rannsMU stock ! WINDOW , SILIES, tiill rmcr! I..-r llaMgini, Xalraac, Satm Dtlainev, Damask, L .ee ami M !n Curlaiiis, Taacla, Leoj, Ac. AH which arc fi' r-d t prices Init trr :. pp."- ciated hv all t lo;e buyrr am; rCMMMtftcal hoUic-keejrs. II. U KINSMAN 177 Kinjr si. M;.r 24. T4 ly Ch wlt-ston, S. C. " Miain Machineij," (lOftyiSH PUMPS, I.tttm and Forcing, fornish J Crusb'Ts, Stanutat Stewp Ki.gir.es, and general Mining work, male by Tii. subscribers at short notice LANG. COOK & CO., Uuilion Marhinc Work, Refer to Itud on, N . Y. Jas. J. H..le, Now-Yoik. june 1, l."t t1-y Norris Worits, Kofi isiou THE subscribers maenfactnrc Mining Maebiaeiy, a f How?, viz: Tub Cokmisb PcwriKe Emgi, high and I w pressure Pasnpi BC, Mampine anil Hoisting Kti m Ejusirb; Cokmmi Prars, Stabs, Cri siikks, Wis ;mif.s, ls Blocks, Ptrt-LBYsW all fz-s, and every varitv ol" Marhinerv tor Mining purposes. THOMAS. CORSON & WEST. juns 2, 1So4 45-ly MEDICAL NOTICE. TR. P. C. CALDWELL has associated his non. Dr. J JOSEPH W. CALDWELL, with bin in the Prac ticc of .Medicine. Odi-p, 9nd utory in Kims' new brick building, near the Coarthoaac. March 24, 1654. 35-tf N. B. All persons indehtcd to me by accounts are requested to settle the same at an early da'. Mar 24 P. C. CALDWELL. The American Hotel, CHARLOTTE, N. C. I BEG to announce to my Iri.-nds, the public, ?nd pres ent patrons of the above Hotel, that 1 have leased the same for a term of years from the 1st of January next. Aftsr which time, the entire property will be thorough ly reps;red and renovated, and the house kept in first class style. Tins Il.itel is near the Depot, and pleasant ly situated, rendering it a desirable house for travellers and families. Dec 16, 1853. 22t C. M. RAY. MARCH & SHARP, AUCTIONEERS and COMMISSION MERCHANTS, COLT'MBIA, S. C., VT""1LL attend to the sale of all kinds of Merchandise, rrouuee, fee. Also, Kea; aud Persona Property. Or purchase and sell Slaves, fcc, on Commission. Sales Hom No. 12.) Richardson street, and imme diately opposite the United States Hotel. eb J, ISot TBOS. U. .MARCH. J. M. E. SHAItr. Livery and BY S. Sales Stable, H. hi: t. inc stand roraacrij occupied bv R. Morrison, in Charlotte. Horses fed. hired and sold. Good ac cinimodations for Drovers. The custom of hi friends ad the public eenorally soliaitcd. Feb-mry 17. 1851. fO-r What I Live for. I lire for those who love me, Whose heart are kind and trut For the heaven that smiles above me, Ad awaits my spirit too; For all human ties that bind me ; Ftrr the task by God assigned me ; For the bright hopes that bind me; And the good that I can do. 1 live to learn their story Who've suffered for my sake; To emulate their glory And follow in thttr wake; Bards, patriots, martyrs, sages, The noble of all apes. Whose deeds crowdsHistory's pages. And Time's great volume make. I live to hold communion With all that is divine ; To feci there is a union Twist Nature's heart and mine ; To profit by afflict irn, Reap truths from fields of fiction, Grow wiser from conviction, And fulfil each grand design. I live to hail that season By gifted minds foretold, When man shall live by reason And not alone by gold ; Wiien man to man united ; And every wrong thing righted, The whole world shall be lighted As EJen was of old. I live for those who love me, For those who know me true. For the Heaven that smiles above me, Afd awaits mv spirit too; Fot tho cause that lacks assistance. For the wrong that needs resistance. For the future in tho distance, And the good that I can do. Beaulirul Trnllis. My morning haunts are, where they should be, at home ; not sleeping, or concortimr the surfeits of an irregular feast, but tip and stiring ; in win ter, often ere the sounJ of any bell awakes men to labor or to devotion ; in summer, as oft Wit h the bird that first rises, or not much tardier, to rend good authors, or cause them to be read, nil the attention be weary or memory have its full freight. i 1 rannot prnise a fugitive and cloistered virtue ! unexercised and unhrealhed, that never sallies out . and Ti her adversary, hut slinks out of the rare, j where that immortal garlnnd is to be run for, not I u ithout dut and heat. This was the reason why j our nge. and serious poet, Spenser, describing true j temperance under the person of Guion, brings j him in with his palmer through the cave of niam ; mon and the bower of earthly bliss, that he might ! see and know, and yet abstain, i Piayer is the peace of our spirit, the stillness ' of our thoughts, the evenness ol recoiled ion, the seat of mediia'ion, the rest of our cares, aud the : calm cf our tempest ; prayer is the issue of a ! quiet mind, of untroubled I Imtighis, it is thedaugli ; icr ol charity, and the sister of meekness; and lie that prays to God with an angry (that is, with a troubled and discomposed) spirit, is like him that retires into a butUe to meditaie, and sels up his I cloMit in the ou'-quarlers of :in army. Cheerfulness unit a festival spirit fills the soul full of harmony it cmp ises music for chuiches and heart.: it makes aud publishes glorifications of- God ; it produces thankfulness uud serves the end of charitv ; and, wlieti the oil of gladness runs over, it maaes blight and t.ill emissions of light nod holy fires, reaching op to a cloud, aud making joy round about ; and, therefore, such it is so inm cen', and may be so pious and full of j lily advantage, whatsoever can innocently min- i isier to this holy joy dues set forward the work of j ; religion and charity. And, indeed, charily itself, i . which is the vertical top of all religion, is nothing ! : else but an union of joys concentrated in the j hi nn, and reflected from ail (he angles of our life j and intercourse. It is, a rejoicing in God, a glad- j ; t.es in our p.eifj Ivors' good, a pleasure in doing mmJ, a rejoining with him ; and without love we i cannot have an i y at all. Oar infancy is full of folly ; youth, of disorder : : nnd toil ; nge, of infirmity. Each time halh his burden, and that which may justly work our weari ness ; vet infancy loagelh after youth ; and youth j after more age ; and ho that is very old, as he is j :i child fr simplicity, no he would be for years;. ' I account old age the best of the three ; partly, j for tliHt it hath passed through the folly and dis- i order of thp others ; partly, for that the inconven- ! iences of this are but bodily, with a bettered state , of fhe mind ; nnd partly, for that it is nearest to j dissolution. There is nothing more miserable i ban an old man that' would be young again, h ! was an answer worthy the commendations ol Pe trarch, and that which argued a mind truly phi losophical of him. who, when his friend bemoan ed his age appearing in his while temples, telling him he was sorry to see him look so old, replied : "Nay, be sorry rather that ever I was young, to he a fool." Extracts from Various Authors. Taking Things Easy, is very hard but very philosophical. We have tried it, and can speak from experience, though wc eannot always live up lo the ' take it easy ' doctrine. But there is no mistake about it, that if a man wishes to enjoy himself he must take the world mixed as it is with a thousand shades and a thousand spots of on shine a cloud here and there a bright sky a storm to-day and a calm to-morrow the chill piercing wind of autumn, and the bland reviving breath of summer. In n word, Make thing9 as they come.' if you don't you are a fool. A snar lino man hs about as much comfort as the fel low who was confined to an overcoat of this tles. The liar is invaribly and universally despised and abandoned, besides being disowned, he has no domett jc consolation which he can oppose to the censurers of mankind ; he can retire to no fratur- ; nity where his crimes may aland in place of vir- j tues, but he is given up to the hisses ii the multi- j tude, without friend and whhout npnh'giit. A Wonderful Story. We notice in the European papers a fact so ex traordinary, that we ceuld hardly give credit fo it, if it was not endorsed by men of the highest standing in Berlin and Vienna. A very wealihy lady had by a first ma.Ttage twin sons, to whom she was devotedly attached. Their health being delicate she decided upon leaving Germany. By, the advice of the most eminent physicians she fixed her residence m Italy ; there, under the in fluence of the fine climate, they grew, but pre served the nervous impressibility which in their youth had put their lives in danger. Their like ness to each other was truly surprising. Both devoted themselves to the fine arts, painting espe cially. When sixteen years old they were con sidered as masters ; but about that time a crisis took place in the disease attacking both. Tho physicians decided that the young men must sepa rate; they objected for a long time, but at last overcome by the supplications of their mother, they left no chance to decide which one should depart. It fell upon Alfred, and he started to visit Greece and the East, to be absent about a year. Regularly were transmitted by him to his mother and brother left behind, pictures, sketches, &c, of interesting and beautiful scenes in his travels. But these pictures, taker! from nature, were so ex actly the counterpart ol what had been painted by the brother at home during the same time, that they could not be distinguished the one Irom the other. While in Upper Egypt, Alfred died, and the physicians wrote to the mother an account ol the circumstances attending his death. Upon the same day, and at t he same hour, the brother in Italy also dit:d. The same circumstances attended his death the last words uttered were the same. The distracted mother returned to Germany. Two years after she again gave birth to twin sons, the exact counterparts of those she had lost. She gave to them the same names. The same symp toms of feeble health showed themselves, and change of climato was again ordered. The mother repaired to Spain. The twin sons again devoted themselves to painting. When sixteen they were also taken sick, and a separation was ordered. The mother for a time resisted, but finaily con sented that one of them should visit the south of Spain. Chance again designated Alfred as the one that should go. The same phenomenon was again witnessed. What was painted by one in Cadiz was reproduced by the other in Barcelona or Cadiz. Upon ihe very day that Alfred was about p return lo his mother and brother he was suddenly taken ill and died. At tho very same moment the brother died in the arms ol his mother, both pronouncing (he same words their brothers had pronounced twenty rears before. Tbis story is published in the German papers for a verity. The Courier des Etais Unis, from which we translate it, vouches for the respecta bility of those by whom it is endorsed. An Eastern Apologue. Abdullah sat at his morning meal, when there alighted on the rim of his goblet a little fly. It sipped an atom of syrup, and was gone. But it came not morning, and the next, and the next again, till at last the scholar noticed it. Not quite a common fly, il seemed lo know that it was beautiful, an j it soon grew verv bold. Anelo! ( a great wonder: it became daily larger, and yet larger, there could be oiscerned in the size as of a locust, fhe appearance as of a man. From an hi.nd-breadth it readied the stature of a cubit; and stil'. so winning wete its ways, that it found more and rnoro favor with this son of infa'uation. It frisked like a satyr, and it sang like a peri, nnd like a moth of the evening it danced on the ceil ing, and, like the king's gift, whithersoever it (urred it prospered. The eyes of the simple one were blinded, so that he could not in all this per ceive the subtlety of an evil gin. Therefore, the lying spirit waxed bolder and yet- bolder, and whatsoever his soul des red of dainty incuts he freely took; and when the scholar waxed wroth, I and said, " I his is my daily portion Irom the ta ble of the mufti ; there is not enough for thee and me," the dog-fiiCi d dtceiver played some pleasant trick, and caused the silly one to smile. Until, in process of time, the scholar perceived that, as his guest grew stronger and stronger, he himself waxed weaker and weaker. Now, also, there arose frequent strife betwixt ihe demon and his dupe, and at last tha youth smote the find so sure that he departed for a season. And when he was gone, Abdullah re joiced and said, " I have triumphed over mine enemv ; and whatsoever lime it pleaseth me, I shall smite him so that he die. Is he not alto gether in miue own power?" But aber not many days the gin came baek ng;iin, nnl thi Mm ho was arrayed in goodly garments, and he brought a present in his hand ; and he spake o( the days i of their friendship, nnd he looked so mild and fee ble, that his smooth words wrought upon this dove without a heart and saying, "Is he not a liitle one?" he received him again into his chamber. On the morrow, when Abdallah came not into the assembly of studious youth, the mufti said, "Wherefore tarrieth the son of Abdul? Per chance ho sleepeth." Therefore, they repaired even to the chamber, but to their knocking he made no answer. Wherefore the mufti opened the door, and lo ! there lay on the divan the dead bodv ol his disciple, flis visage was black and swollen, and on his '.hroat was the pressure of a finger broader tlian the palm of a mighty man. All the stuff, the gold, and the changes of raiment, belonging id the hapless one, were gone, and in the soft earth of the garden were seen the foot sds ol a eiant. The mufti measured one of ihe prints, and behold! it was six cubils lone;. Reader, canst thou expound the riddle '. is it the Bottle or the Betting-book ? Is it the Billiard table or the Theatre ? Is it smoking ? Is it Lizi ness? 'Is it Novel-reading ? But know thai an evil habit is an elf constantly expanding. It may come in at t?H kej-hob, but ii will soon grow ton biff for ihe house. Know, also, ihat no evil habi; can take ihe life of your soul, unless you yourself nourish it and cherish it, and by feeding it with your own vitality give it a strength greater than your own. Arthur's Magazine. . . Wo unto them that rise up early in the morn . .i ru. ... ,. . I q o mat mrv may aaaia suung uium , iu.u vsu tinue until nighi, till wine inflame them Death of Crockett. The following is a graphic sketch of the last moments of a brave man : "Colonel Crockett, wounded and closely pur sued by a number of the enemy, retreated into the church, felling them as they approached. Uc stationed himself in a niche, in the corner, deter mined to face the foe to the last and sell his life dearly; with his rifle and a superabundance of side arms, he hewed and shot them down with the same awful certainty that wad wont to character ize his indomitable spirit. His position rendered access to him utterly impossible, except by a direct and close approach in front ; after some eight or ten of them were laid before him, a feeling of awe seemed to seize hold of the assailants. One ol them who could speak a little broken English, probably preferring to have the signal honor of capturing so noble a specimen of American valor to present to bis 'dear master,' said to Crockett, 'surrender! senior.' A flash of the most sove reign scourge darted from the fiery eye, and as it pierced that ol the enemy, he seemed to be trans fixed. In a voice of thunder Crockett answered, 'surrender! No! I am an American,' and as he spoke he sent a ball through the heart of the par alyzed foe. He appeared for a moment like a wounded tiger, strengthened and buoyed by each additional wound ; now hewing them down with his well-tried sword next dealing death with his fire-arms. His person was literally drenched with his own blood; his strength must soon yield to its loss. Yet such physical power wrought to the highest degree of excitement can perform incredi ble prodigies. This was the last concentrated energy of a powerful man, aroused, animated, and guided by one of the noblest attributes of man love of liberty. He knew for what his life was about to be sacrificed ; thai devastation and butchery would follow the footsteps of his heart less foes, that woman would be sacrificed to sati ate the desires of the conquerer; and, feeling the holy inspiratien of a dying patriot, he fought manfully till the loss of blood and approach of death stayed his upraised arm ; his rifle was broken to pieces, his pistols feW to the floor, and nothing but his faithful sword was left. In the agony of death, with a terrible grasp, he brought this last weapon upon the head of the nearest as sailant, and fell victoriously across his body into the arms of death. In this corner of the church there were twenty-six dad Mexicans, and no other American having fought or fallen at that point, it is considered beyond all reasonable doubt, that all of them fell by the hand of Tennessee's favorite son ! All were now dead, not a man left to relate the wonderful deeds of this illustrious band of heroes! Not a companion left to rear a monument to their memory ! But, ah ! no monu- j ment is required to perpetuate their fame. So long as freedom has an aJjrJing place in America, will their heroic deeds and proud names be held sacred !" Learning to Spell. Bad snellinc is discred itable. Every youug man should be a master of his native tongue. He that will not learn lo spell the language that is on his tongue and. before his eyes every hour shows no great aptitude for the duties of an intelligent observing man. Bad spell ing is therefore a discreditable indication. It in dicates a blundering man s man that cannot see with eyes open. Accordingly, we have known the application of more than one young man made with great display of penmanship and paradu of references, rejected for his bad spelling. Bad spelling is a very bad indication. He who runs may read it. A bright school-boy, utterly inca pable of appreciating your stories of science, art, and literature, can see your blunders. You will find it hard to inspire that boy with any great respect for your attainments. Bid spelling is therefore a mortifying and inconvenient defect. We have known men thrown into very prominent positions so ashamed of their deficiency in this re spect, that they never venture to send a letter until it has been revised by a friend. This was, to say the least of it, sufficiently inconvenient. We say Hgain, learn to spell. Keep your eyes open when you read, and if any word is spelt differently from your mode, ascertain which is right. Keen vour dictionary before you ; and in writing, wh"never you have ihe least misgiving about the spelling of a word, look at it at once, and remember it. Do not let your laziness get the better of you. Expanding the Chest. Those in wealthy circumstances, or who pursue sedentary employ, ment within doors, generally use their Jungs but very little, breathe but very little into the chest, and thus independently of positions, contract a wretchedly narrow smalt cites, a.,d Uy ih foun dation for ihe loss of health and beauty. All this can be perfectly obviated by a little attention to tho manner of breathing. Recollect the lungs are like a bladder in their construction, and can be stretched open to double their ordinary size, with perfect immunity from consumption. The agent, and the only agent required, is the common air we breathe, supposing, however, that no obstacle exists external to ihe chest, such as lacing, or tying it around with sbiys, or tight dress or hav ing shoulders lay upon it. On rising in tht morn ing, place yourself in an erect posture, your chest throw n back, and shoulders entirely off the chest ; now inhale or suck all ihe air you can, so as to fill the chest to the very bottom of it, so that no more can be got in ; now hold j-our breath and -i rr si"i inrow your arms on Demon, noiomg in your breath as long as you please. Done in a cold room is better ; because fhe air is much denser, and will act more powerfully in expanding the chest. Exercising the chest in this manner, it will enlarge the capacity and size of the lungs. Common School Advocate. A rather singular Marriage Contract was n few days since entered into in Tennessee. The wife is worth a cool fifty thousand. The husband is ihe rightful owner of a magnificent goalee. The contract was as follows : Art. 1st. The husband is to have no interest in the wife s estate. Art 2d. He is not to coiled any debts of the concern. Art. 3d. The beloved huaband is not to chastise or control any of her servants without the wife's consent. Art. 4ln. The husband binds himself to pay the wife one hundred and fifty dollars per annum for board and to huve his gruus. iodgics The Snow of Age We have just stumbled upon the following pret ty piece of mosaic, lying amid a multitude of those less attractive : "Wo snow (alls lighter than the nnow ol age ; but none is heavier, for it never melts." The figure is by no means novel, but the clos ing part of the sentence is new as well as emphat ic. The scriptures represent age by the almond tree, which bears blossoms of the purest white. "The almond tree shall flourish," the head shall be hoary. Dickens says of one of his charac ters, w hose hair was turning grey, that it looked as if Time had lightly plashed his snows upon it in passing. "ft never melts" no, never. Age is inexora ble ; its wheels must move onward, they know not any retrograde movement. The old man may set and sing "I would I were a boy again," but he grows older as he sings. He may reap of the elixir of youth, but he cannot find it : he may sigh for the secret of the alchemy which is able to make him young again, but sighing brings it not. He may gaze backward with an eye of long ing upon the rosy schemes of early years, but as one who gazes on his home from the deck of a departing ship, every moment carrying him fur ther and further away. Poor old man ! he has little more to do than die. "It never melts. The snow of winter comes and sheds its white blossoms upon valley and mountain, but soon the sweet spring follows and smiles it all away. Not so with that upon the brow of the loitering veteran ; there is no Spring whose warmth can penetrate its eiernal frost. It catne tostay;its single flankes fell unnoticed, and now ii is drilled there. We shall see it increase until we see the old man in his grave; there it shall be absorbed by the eternal darkness, for" there is no age in Heaven. Yet why speak of agein a mournful strain? ft is beautiful, honorable and eloquent. Should we sigh at the proximity of death, when life and the world are 60 full of emptiness? Let the old exult because ihey are old, if any must weep, let it be the young, at the long succession of cares thai are before them. Welcome the snow, for it is the emblem of peace and of rest. It is but a temporial crown, which shall fall at the gates of Paradise, to be replaced by a brighter and a bet ter. The Effects of Chloroform. The case of Dr. Beale is eliciting many interesting facts in re lation to the singular effects of chloroform. The Syracuse Chronicle, referring to the trial of Beale, says : Besides the case in proof before the court, we have heard of a similar case in this city, in which ihe lady was under impressions similar to those of Miss Mudge, during an operation, but which were known to be erroneous, as the room was full of people. A writer in the Newark Advertiser mentions a patient suffering under "delirium tremens," with great nervous excitement, but with a clear mind, and adds : I poured a teaspoonful of chloroform upon a white cambric handkerchief, nnd for about three minutes applied it to his mouth and nose. Insen sibility was the immediate consequence, but after the lape of five minutes he recovered, and de clared himself completely exhausted from a chase of a half mile that he supposed I had given him. I could not convince him thai I had not driven him down the basement stairs, out of the area door, down the street, around the several blocks, keep, ing close at his side the whole way. I called his attention to the fact that he was not dressed, and therefore it was absurb ; but he could r.ot be per suaded ; and during the rest of the illness, and since his entire recovery, he has persisted in be lieving that the race was absolutely taken, and was the result of the chloroform. I think it not unlikely that he would swear to it before a court off justice Jo-day, notwithstanding my assurances, is closely questioned. Influence of the Physician. How many thousand faces must have passt-d before the doc tor's eyes ; how many pi'iable tales of wo musi have been poured into his ears; vhht awful se crets must find a repository beneath that black satin waistcoat ! Wu may lie to the lawyer, we , may lie to ihe confessor, but to the doctor we can not lie. The murder must out. The prodigal, pressed for an account of his debts, will keep one back ; the penitent will hide some sin from lib ghostly director; but from the doctor wc can hide nothing, or we die. He is our greatest master h'-ro on earlh. The successful tyrant crouches before him like a hound: the srornfnl hrmy bows ihe knee; the stern worldly man clings des perately to him as the anchor that will hold him from drifting into the dark sea that hath no limits The doctor knows no rank. The mutilated beg gar in St. Celsus's accident ward may bo a more interesting case to him than the sick duchess. He laughs at wealth it may be rendered intolerable by disease. He values not youth it may be ripe for the lomb, as hay for the sickle. He makes light of power it cannot cure an ache nor avert a tw ing of gout. He only knows, acknowledges, values, respects two things Life and Death. Household Words. The Honev-Moon. Why is tha first mon'h after marriage called the " honey-moon ?" Doubt less on account of ihe sweet lunacy which con- trois the heads of ihe parties during that brief pe. j nod. What a pity that they should ever get ! quite ra-ioual again I that sentimentality should j give place to sentiment, sentiment lo sense, love yield to logic, aud fietion to fact, till ihe ' happy pair are reoucen irom ine r.aen romance to the Sahara of reality from Heaven to earth and perhups a peg lower! Strange as il may seem, there have been couples who hove quarrelled in the first month of matrimony, and have got back to their astonished parents before the gcod mother had fairly done weeping (and rejoicing too) at her daughter's departure. Their ' honey-moon" sour ed at the full ol the horn, and became a moon of vinegar instead. A bad omen that! There Was much sense and propriety in the text which an aneient clergyman chose for a wedding sermon. It was taken from the Psalms of Da- id, and reads thus ; " And let there be peace while Vie moon en durcth r Business before Consrcss. Upon the tables of the two Houses of Congress, at the close of the last session, a large amount ol business incomplete, much of which had received the sanction of either on or the other Houses, and will of course, be among the first business to now claim attention. The National Intel hgenoer enumerates among business of this description the following measures : 1 ; 4 ' The Homestead bill, which is now before the ' House, with Mr. Hooter's substitute as an amend ment. The Texas debt bill, as passed by the Senate. The Senate bill to provide payment for French spoliation prior lo 1800. The Ocean Mail Steamer bill, with the amend ment of the House direction notice to be given of ihe termination of the contract. The bill to establish a mail hue to Shanghai by way ol the Sandwich Islands. The bill to establish the Ramsey mail roule from New Orleans by bhe way of Very Cruz to Acupulco. The bill to cstab'ish a subterranean line qj tele graph to the Pacific. The bill to provide a weekly mail to California.- The bill to increase the rates of postage and require prepayment of letters. The Senate bill to provide for half pay to revo lutionary officers or their legal representatives. The bill to extend the-benefits of the bounty land system to the officers, soldiers, seamen, Sic, of ihe war of 1812. Various bills granting lands for the consn-Qc' lion of railroads ; and, Mr. Bennett's Land bill, granting lands equally to the several Slates to and in the construction of railroads and for the support of Schools. The Japanese Trade, il is already ascertained by official reports, is embarrassed by serious diffi culty as to the relative value in exchange of American and Japanese money. The Philadel phia American says : It will be recollected that Silos E. Burrows re ported, as tho result of his recent merchaniile expedition thither, fhut he was charged twenty einht dollars a ton for coal, and that evemlmiK tlse was proportionally so high that nothing was I to be made bv commerce there. This was attribu ted to the Japanese jealousy of foreigners, nnd their dsiro lo get rid of our people in that way. It seems, however, that there is another cause. Our gold and silver coiu are at an enormous dis count mi Japan, for the reason thai those motals are plenty there, and ihe Japanese do not want them. The discount on silver is 0(5 3 per cent., so that an American dollar is there only worth 33j cents. The discount on g'dd is greater than this. When Commodore Perry was last at Simoua he appointed a committee, consisting of Pursers Speiden and Kldredge, to confer with a similar committee of Japanese, in reference to the rate or exchange and currency between the two nation,, in the irade at the ports opened, and to settle tho price of the cou! to be delivered at Simoda. Tho report of this conference, as made by the Ameri can committee, is published in ihe Friend of Chi na. From it we learn that no result was arrived at, as the Japanese had their minds made up be forehand to adhere to their own exorbitant dis. counts and prices, and the Americans could not, of course, assent to them. Ancient Inhabitants of Nebraska. On the Upper Missouri there exists a tract of country known by the name of te Mauvaises Terres, or bad lands : at one time probably the bottom' of an immense take, in which perished thousands of ant. mals having now no representatives on earth. It appears that the waters ol this immense pond were removed by some convulsion of naiure or other ; aud the sediment at the bottom became in durated. The portion of the valley thus excavated firms a surface of ninety miles in length and thirty in breadth. The remains of animib which have lived and breathed long before the advent of man on earth are here found in such abundance as to form of thu inlet an immense cemetery of vertebrata. The bones are said to be comrden-l v petrified, and their cavities filled wilh silicious matler. . Ihey are preserved in various degrees of integrity, some mst beauiiltilly perfect; and others broken. Two remarkable species of rhinoceros the first ever found in America were discovered here, and also a sort of panther, smaller than the present variety, and likewise a number ol strange animals with lAng name 5 unliUo anything winch man ever saw alive. We know, then, that there were once individuals in Nebraska as curious and as strangely shaped, and as pugnacious as any squatter whom the present greut rush of immigra lion will carry thither. Cheap and Excellent Candles. Mr. Hol brook : The following receipt I copied from newspaper, some twelve months since. I have tried it twice, and find it all that it is cracked up 10 be. I have no doubt that it would hare been wonh more than $20 to me if I had known it twenty years ago. Most fanners have a surplus of stale fat and dirty grease, which can be made info good candles at a trifling expense. I kept both tallow and lard candles through rh last summer, the lard candles Rtandinr th. saw best, and burning quite as well, and giving a good a light as the tallow ones. I have never seen it in the New England Farmer; perhaps it ho - fa assu UTTD L I - been published there, notwithstanding. I suboiit 1 be following direction for making good candies from lard : For twelve lbs. of lard, lake one lb. of snlipeire and one lb. of nlumr mix them and pulverize them ; dissolve the salt petre and alum wiih a gill of boiling water; pour the compound into the Isrd before it is quite aft melted; stir the whole until it boils; skim off whatrises; let it simmer until the waier is all boiled out, or till it ceases to throw off steam ; pour off the lard at soco as it is done, and clean the boiler while it is hot. If the candlrs are to be run, you may commence immediately; jf to be dipped, let the lard cool first to a cake', and then treat it as you would tallow. B aspect fully yours, Alanbox Pahm. . lie.