i . OFFIC ON THE S2 per anniiiri IN ADVANCE CHARACTER IS AS IMPORTANT TO STATES AS IT IS TO INDIVIDUALS, AND, THE GLORY OF THE ONE IS THE COMMON PROPERTY OF THE OTHER. WEST SIDE OF TRADE STREE ;t W h E. A. YAfSH, Editors and Proprietors, i CHARLOTTE, N. C, TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1860. EIGHTH VOLUMENUMBER 408. A t X . . . 7 i If M 'FfH THE 9 (3PnbIished every TuesdajVo) BY WILLIAM J. & EDWIN A. YATES, EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS. If paid in advance, If paid within 3 months,. $2 00 .. 2 50 if i ..r. .... miMiinn r.fthe viar ............ 3 00 4y-Any person sending- us fire kkw subscribers, accompanied by the advance subscription (10) will receive a iith copy gratis for one year. ggjT Subscribers and other who may wish to fend money to us, can do so by mail, at our risk. Transient advertisements must be paid for in advance. tsay Advertisements not marked on the manuscript for a specific time, wili be inserted until forbid, and charged accordingly. SAMUEL P. SMITH, Attorney mid CoiniM-lor at Law, CHARLOTTE, N. C, Will attend prottly and diligently to collecting and remitting all claims intrusted to his care. Special attention given to the writing of Deeds, Con veyances, Ac. OFFICE, with Wh. Joiixsto.v, Esq. jfgjf-During hours of business, niav be found in the Court House, (.'Hire No. I, adjoining the clerk's office. January 10, 18CO J. A. FOX Attorney x Hsdir, CHARLOTTE, N. C. GEXEIIAL COLLECTISG AC EST. Office at flu-Court House, I door to the left, down stairs. Wm. J. Kerr, A T T O IS i E V A T A V, CHARLOTTE, X. C., Will practice in the Coiiutv and Superior Courts of Mecklenburg. Cii'iob and Cabarrus counties. Opfick in the Brawlcy building opposite Kerr's Hotel. January 24, 1600 y J. M. MILLER, M. D., Practitioner of Medicine and Surgery May 10th. Office oppnite Kerr's Hotel. ROBERT GIBBON, M. D., n 1 1 of jii:iicii: AXI Offict Xo. 2 Irtcins corner, CHARLOTTE, N. C. December 14, 1839. JAS. T. DAVIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CHARLOTTE, N. C, Will practice in the Courts of Mecklenburg and the adjoining counties. The collection of claims promptly attended to. March 14, 139 y rOLLOK B. LF.E. WSt. H. KEUlt. LEE & KERR. ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW, AND SOLICITOUS IX CHANCERY, Memphis, Tennessee. B& Office over the (Javoso Bank, on the Corner of Main and Madison Streets. tj3S Time of Holding Courts : Chiscert 4th Monday in May and Nov. CiacriT 3d Monday in Jan.. May and September. t oMMOK Law 1st Mondav in March. Julv mid Nov'r. Criminal 2d Monday in February, June and October Cuitteiks Litti-riT Court, Auk. id Monday iu May ana November. Jan. 3d, 18G0. t ft. W. BECK WITH Has constantly on hand WATCHES, JEWELRY, PLATED WARE, &C, Of the best English and American manufacturers. Call and examine Ii is stock before purchasing elsewhere Watch crystals put in for 23 cents each. November 8, 1839 y PEA MEAL We keep at our Steam Flouring Mill in this place Tea Meal for feeding cows and stovk. Also, we have en haad at all times, Family, Extra, Superfine and coarse Flour. We warrant our family flour. Corn Meal and Grits can ahvavs be had at the mill. "J. WILKES X- CO. April 19, 1859 The subscriber will pav the Beef cattle. highest cash prices for Those having Pork Hogs for sale would do well to five me a call kind of stock. as I am desirous of purchasing that J. L. STOUT, Town Butcher. October 11, 1S5 NEGROES WANTED. I wasit to buy Negro Boys anc. Girl from 12 to 18 jears o.d, for which the highest prices iu cash will be paid. May 17, 1&59 SAML. A. HARRIS. COTTON SAW GINS, Of the best quality, with 10 inch saws, moveable chilled ribs and tinned brush, and all other nccearv improvements delivered at any Railroad station in the State at $2 per saw. These Gin took the premium at the S. C. State Fair in 1858 and 1859. Planters wishing to purchase Gins of the snbscirber will do well to send their orders early, as there is gen erally a crowd of work late in the season. J. M. ELLIOTT, March 20, I860. 6ui Winnsboro, S. C. Attention, FARMERS ! ""gy .- The MAGIC PLOW, (patent- Vea by J. P. Harris of Mississippi,) ! "Pfsses the advantage of combining ! Four Plows in one. It can be laid five times and sharp- j ucu tve umes witnout the aid of a Blacksmith. It can be used the whole season without any additional expense For sale at the Hardware Store of Cochrane bample. March 27, 180 tf ANOTHER SOUTHER! MOVEM EflT CUBAN SEGA II MANUFACTORY. Segars and Tobacco Leaf direct from Cuba. JOHN S. WILEY has returned to Charlotte from Cuba, where he bought a large and varied assortment of SEGARS, SNCF, TOBACCO, &c, for this market, and is now opening some celebrated brands of Segars, among which may be found the following : El Rico Habana, Mucha El Littleto, Concha's Malos, Rio Ho::dro, Flor del Tumas, Lasbelas Gnstou. He manufactures Segars from the 'best Havana To bacco; and keeps the best Smoking and chewing Tobac co, . Lynchburg and .Tarkish. Brands ; Maccabas, Rap- nee and pore Scotch Snuffs; Powhatan Pipe?, snnflF Boxes, Matches, Blacking, Ac; Meersbaun Segar Hold ers and Pipes. He respectfully invites the public to call at the Cn- ban Segar Factory nearly opposite the Mansion House January 3, 180 i. .AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. Implements of my manufacture can be found at the Hardware Store ot COCHRANE & SAMPLE in Char lotte. Among the various implements for Agricultural purposes is Wcstingbouse's combined Thresher and Winnower. J. H. THOMPSON, Jan 31, 1860 6m Tyro, Davidson co. THRESHING MACHINES. The subscriber i3 still Agent for the sale of the celebrated and much admired combined improved THRESHER AND WIXNXOVVER, manufactured by Wheeler, Mehck & Co., Albany, X. Y. These Machines will thresh and clean from 150 to 230 bushels of wheat per dav, with less work and less waste than anv other machines known in North Caro lina. Prices at the Shop, viz : Railway Chain Horse Power, $120 Lever, (superior) 100 Improved Combined Thresher aud Winnower, 125 Terni3 cash, or approved note on interest. Warrant ed to give satisfaction or no sale. Delivered at any Railroad Depot at the above prices charges and transportation only to be added. Addres J. B. TROY, Troy's Store, March G, 1SG0. 3m Montgomery co, N C. LOWRIE'S I receive all the New Pub lications as fast as they come for ward from the Press; and keep constantly on hand a large lot of hchoof. Academy and College TEXT-BOOKS, and many useful reference and recreative works. I also keep a very large stock of Stationery, plain and fancy. Having made an arrangement with the Southworth Paper Manufacturing Company, I am en abled to sell paper at the same prices by the whole sale for w hich it can be bought la the Northern cities, freight added. P. J I OWRIE. Fb. 15, 1860. llARTFOKD F1KE INSURANCE CO., HARTFORD, Conn. Incorporated A. D. 1810. Charter Perpetual. Authorized capital $1,000,000 Capital paid in 500,000 Surplus 300,000 ASSETS JANUARY 1, 1859. Cash on hand and in Bank StSjS 22 Cash in hand of Agents and in transit, 54,827 09 Real Estate unencumbered (cash value) 15,000 00 Bills receivable, amply secured 73,174 55 2,404 Shares Bank Stock in Hartford, 230,413 00 2,200 " 44 44 New York, 197,750 Oo 710 " " 44 Boston, 74,620 00 100 shares Bank of the State of Missouri, 10,000 0" State and city Bonds, 6 per cents, 74,245 00 Rail Road Stocks, 16,250 00 United States' Treasury Notes, 14,035 00 $803,769 86 DIRECTORS. Charles Boswell, Henry Kcney, H. Huntington, Albert Day, James Goodvin Job Allyn, John P. Brace, Charles J. Russ. Calvin Day, Timo. C Allyx, Secretaru, II. ni'XTiXGTOji, President. C. C. Lyman, Assistant Secii Wm. X. Bowers, Actuary. This old and reliable company, established for near ly fifty years, continues to Insure against loss or dam age by Fire uu dwellings, furniture, warehouses, stores, merchandise, mills, manufactories, and most other kinds of property, on its usual satisfaetorj- terms. Particular attention given toi nsuringFarm Property, consisting of Dwellings, Barns and Out-buildings con nected, and Furniture, Live Stock, Hay, Grain, Farming Utensils, Ac. contained in the same, for a term of three to five years at low rates of premium. Applications for Insurance mar be made to the un dersigned, the duly authorized Agent for Charlotte and vicinity. Losses equitably adjusted at this Agency, and paid immediately, upon satisfactory proofs, in funds current in the cities of S'eie York or Boston, as the assured may prefer. E. NYE HUTCHISON, June 28, 1859. y Agent at Charlotte. ForxDED 1852. chartered 1854. Located corner of Baltimore and Charles streets, BALTIMORE, Md. The largest, most elegantly furnished, and popular Commercial College in the Uuited States. Students in attendance from nearly every State in the Union. Every voung man should write immcdintelv for one of those large and beautiful Ornamental Circulars, re presenting the exterior and interior view of the Balti more Commercial College, Penmanship, Ac, which will be sent by return mail, free of charge, with Cata logue containing list of students, terms of tuition, opin ions of the Press on our new system ot liook-keeping, &c. Faculty. E. K. LOSIER, Principal Lecturer on the Science of Accounts, Business, Customs, etc. J. M. PHILLIPS. Professor of Book-Keeping aud com mercial calculations. II. H. DAYIES, Associate Professor of Book-Keeping. N. C. JOHNSON. Professor of Penmanship. S. T. WILLIAMS, E.q. Mercantile Law. REV. E. Y. REESE, D. D.. commercial Ethics. Trcsteks. Hon John P Kennedy, Hon Joshua Yansant, Hon Thomas Swann Wm H Keighlcr, Esq. Jacob Trust, Esq. William Knabe, Esq. The time usually required to complete the full j course, from eight to twelve weeks. Large circulars and catalogues stating terms, 4c. sent bv mail free of charge. Address E. K. LOSIER, Baltimore, Md. May 10, 1859 y-pd WHEAT! The subscriber is prepared to purchase the new crop of Wheat at the highest market price. Farmers will find it to their advantage to call at the CHAR LOTTE STEAM MILLS before selling. JXO. WILKES. July 1858 tf KINDRED HEARTS. There are hopes that never blossom, There are joys too soon o'ercast, Smiles that light the pensive bosom, Smiles that beam too bright to last. Transient as the summer flower, Fleeting as the twilight's ray? Joy shines out its little hour, Then forever fades away. But where kindred hearts, united, Feel the immortal fires glow, They are happy, although blighted - Every other hope below I ... Then teach me never to forget it Tell it to each passing day Bind it to my heart, and let it Cheer this life's uneven way. Care may shroud the soul in sadness, Yet, despite the present pain, Do we not in future gladness, Oft deceived, still hope again ? Memory, in the darkest hour, Loves to trace each by-gone scene Thus if joys' a fleeting flower, Hope is still an evergreen. Money I Want, and MONEY I must have ! Do you owe Jonas Rudasill? If so, come and pay him. He has many drafts upon him everyday for lumber and labor. These are cash articles. Men can't work without eating flour, bacon lard, Ac, are cash articles. I cannot do work withou lumber; and have to pay for what I get, on delivery I have large amounts due me for work done; some have been due for a long time, and I now most positively say those accouuts must be closed. I still continue to carry on the business at my old stand, and have for sale Sash Doors, Blinds, Ac, and can manufacture anything in that line to order at short notice. Orders respectfully solicited, and I promise to sell cheap for cash as I have always done, and for cash onlv. JONAS RUDASILL. March 27, I860 3t PROVISIONS. The subscriber keeps always on hand Corn Meal Flour, Dried Fruit, Eggs, Ac. Also, Tobacco, Snuff, Segars, Ac Ac, which he will sell at the lowest prices for cash. M. S. OZMENT, Feb 28th. Second door above the Jail fLOTMSG MANUFACTORY, AT THE 3VE 2E3 O JEL I RIU OF FILLINGS, SPRINGS A CO. E have found it NECESSARY TO ADD A Merchant Tailoring: Department To our large and extensive Ready-made Clothing House, and we respectfully invite our Frieuds and Patrons to call and examine our Stock of FRENCH, ENGLISH, AND GERMAN m Cloths, Black, French and Germm DOESKIN CASSIMERES, French, English and American FANCY CASSIMERES A beautiful lot of FINE SILK VESTINGS, Black and Colored. All of which have just been received, and are of the latest styles. A good Stock of Rock Island Cassimcres kept constantly on hand. We have secured the services of Mr D. L. KLA, as Cutter, who is well known as a master of the art. Orders trom a distance solicited. HrO$ Call and see us. E. FULLINGS, JNO. M. SPRINGS, JNO. P. HEATH. Feb. 21, 1860. tf NOTICE, My norse, Young Brimmer, can be found the present season, on Mondays ana luesdays at r. liianKin- shipp's, near Wright's Ferry; Wednesdays, at R. W McDowell s, near the lorkrule road: lhursdays, at J. B. Stewart's, six miles from Charlotte on the Provi dence road: and on r rida3-s and Saturdays, at W. r. Robinson's, near Morrow's Turnout. Persons can call aud judge for themselves of the qualities of this Horse. A. Ei. UOKDO.N. March 27, 18G0. 6t-pd MRS. WINSL0W, An experienced Nurse and Female Physician, presents to the attention ot mothers, tier SOOTHING SIRUP, For Children Teething:, which greatly facilitates the process of teething, by softening the gums, reducing all inflamation will allay all pain and spasmodic action, and is Sure ! Ilesiilafe the Bowels. Depend up'on it, mothers, it will give rest to yourselves, and relief and health to your infants. We have put up and sold this article for over ten years, and cax say, ix confidence axd truth, of it, what we have ne ver been able to say of any other MRS. WINSLOU'S SOOTH I NO medicine ney- ER HAS IT FAILED, IN A SINGLE IN FECT A CURE, used. Never STANCE, TO EF- when timely d we know an instance of dis- one who used it. On the contrary, with its operations, and speak in satisfaction b any all are delighted terms of commendation of its magical effects and medi cal virtues. We speak in this matter " What wk do know," after ten years' experience, and pledge our repu tation for the fulfillment of what we here declare. In almost every instance where the infant is suffering from pain and exhaustion, relief will be found in fifteen or twenty minutes after the syrup is administered. This valuable preparation is the prescription of one of the most EXPERIENCED and SKILLFUL NURSES in New England, and has been used with'never-failing success iu thousands of cases. It not only relieves the child from pain, but invigor ates the stomach and bowels, corrects acidity, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. It will al most instantly relieve Griping in the Bowels, and wind colic, and overcomes con- vulsions, which, remedied, end in lieve it the best REMEDY IN roit CIIILDRCX Xcetliiiig. if not speedily death. We be and SUREST THE WORLD, in all cases of Dysentery and Diarrhoea in Children, whether it arises from teething, or from any other cause. We would say to every mother who has a child suffer Ing from any of the foregoing complaints Do not let j Yora prejudices, nor the prejudices of others, stand j between you and your suffering child, and the relief j that will be sure yes. absolutely sure to follow the use of this medicine, if timely used. Full directions I for using will accompany each bottle. None genuine j unless the fac-simile of CURTIS k PERKINS, New i York, is on the ontside wrapper. Sold by Druggists throughout the world. Principal Office, 13 Cedar street, X. Y. Price only 23 cents per Bottle. "8 For sale by E. NYE HUTCHISON k CO., and by F. SCARR. March 20 I860, y A LIST OP WONDERS. Among the thousands of marvelous inventions which American genius has produced, within the last few years, are the following, compiled in an abstract from the Patent Office Report. Read them over, and then say, if you can, that there is nothing new cruder the sun : The report explains the principle of the celebrated Hobb lock. Its "unpickability'' depends upon a secondary or false set of tumblers which prevent instruments used in picking from reaching the real ones Moreover, the lock is powder proof, ad may be loaded through the key hoUnd fired off till the burglar is tired of "his fruitless work, or fear that the explosions will bring to view his experiments more witnesses than he desires. Doors and shutters have been patented that cannot be broken through with either pick or sledge-hammer. The burglar's "occupation's gone." A harpoon is described which makes the whale kill himself. The more he pulls the line, the deeper goes the harpoon. An ice-making machine has been patented which is worked by a steam-engine. In an experimental trial, it froze several bottles of sherry, and produced blocks of ice the size of a cubic foot when the thermometer was up to eighty degrees. It is calculated that for every ton of coal put into the furnace, it will make a ton of ice. F rom Dr. I)ale's examiner's report, we gather some idea of the value of patents. A man who had made a slight improvement in straw-cutters, took a model of his machine through the Western Suites, and after a tour of eight months, returned with forty thousand dollars. Another man had a machine to thrash and clean grain, which in fifteen months he sold- for sixty thousand dollars. These are ordinary cases while such inventions as the telegraph, the planing machine, the Iudia rubber patents, are worth millions each. Examiner Lane's report describes new electrical inventions. Among these is an electrical whaling apparatus, by which the whale is literally 'shocked to death." Another is an electro-magnetic alarm, which rings bells and displays signals in case of fire and burglars. Another is an electric clock, which wakes you up, tells you what time it is, and lights a lamp for you at any hour you please. There is a "sound gatherer," a sort of huge ear-truuipet, to be placed in front of a locomotive, bringing to the engineer's ears all the noise ahead; perfectly distitict, notwithstanding the noL . of the train. There is an invention that picks up pins from a confused heap, turns them around with their heads up. aud sticks them in papers in regular rows. Another goes through the whole process of cigar making, taking in leaves and turning out finished cigars. One machine cuts cheese; another scoure knives and forks; another rocks the cradle; and seven or eight take in washing and ironing. There is a parlor chair patented that cannot be tipped back on two legs,and a railway chair that can be tipped back in any position, without any legs at all. Another patent is for a machine that counts passengers in an omnibus and takes their fares. When a very fat gentleman gets iq, it counts two, and charges double. There are a variety of guns patented that load themselves; a fishing line that adjusts its own bait, and a rat trap that throws away the rat, and then baits itself and stands in the corner for another. There is a machine, also, by which a man prints, instead of writes, his thoughts. It is played like a piano-forte. And speaking of pianos, it is esti mated that nine thousand are made every year in the United States, giving constant employment to one thousand nine hundred persons, ana costing over two millions of dollars. Baltimore Exchanqe. 51b Ward's Trip to Pekin. The story was extensively published in English and American papers that Mr Ward and his suit were conveyed to Pekin in a box, closed on all sides, so that they could get no view of the country. The correspond ent of the Journal of Commerce, a clergyman, denies the story in toto, and ascribes it to English "ealousy at Mr Ward's complete success, which proved that their attack on the Peiho forts was needless and barbarous. The writer says: "Instead of one great 'box' for the whole party, there was a carriage for each individual, servants and all, while some besides had horses which they rode at their pleasure, and then entered their car riages followed in the train, used Ly the attendant mandarins and officers who made our escort, and as many more nearly for baggage and other purposes. Shut up in a cage, from which we could see only the sky and the sun, when the front and sides of the car riages were open ! Deprived ot ail liberty and ob servation, when at each stopping place for lodgings or for dinner all wandered about the towns and villages as they pleased, without the least restraint, and wheu Mr Ward left the handsome junk the finest the Government could command whenever he pleased and his suit with him, and walked for miles every day along the river, and strolled into the towns and villages which lined the banks as freely and securely as though they had been at home. Proportions of the Human Figure. The proportions of the human figure are strictly mathe matical. The whole figure is six times the length of the foot. Whether the form be slender or not, this rule holds good. Any deviation from it is s departure from the highest beauty of proportion. 1 he Greeks made all their statues according to this rule. The face, from the highest point of the brehead where the hair begins, to the end of the chin, is one-tenth the whole length of the stature. The hand, from the wrist to the middle finger, is the same. The chest is a fourth. From the top of the chest to the highest point of the forehead, is a seventh. If the length of the face, from the roots of the hair to the chin, be divided into three equal parts, the first division determines where the eyebrows meet, and the second the place of the nostrils. The navel is the center point of the hu man body; and if a man should lie on his back with his arms extended, the periphery of the circle which might be described around him, with the navel for its center, would touch the extremities of his hands and feet. The height, from the iet to the top of the head, is the same as the distance from the other extremity when the arms are ex tended. These are the general measures of the species. Adulteration op Liquors. On Wednesday last Dr. Hiram Cox, Liquor Inspector of Cincin nati, lectured in New York, at the request of li quor dealers of that city. In some tests made be fore the audience, a specimen of "genuine Otard brandy" yielded prussic acid. A sample of port wine yielded sulphuric acid (oil of vitriol), and another of sherry did the same. The Times say : . The lecturer said that he had been Liquor In spector of Hamilton county, Ohio, for five years and during that time had analyzed 2,679 samples of every possible variety of liquors, Including wiues and malt liquors. , Out of thia Biubbe ho . only tound dou samples that were really pure, 2ot) were merely mixed liquors, with alcohol, &c, and in the balance were found sulphuric acid, red pepper stramonium, strychnine, and almost every variety of poison.' In Philadelphia he analyzed samples from some thirty different stores of wines; ales and brandies. In one case of lager beer, he found sul pnuric acid, albumen, sulphate ot iron, salt and water, but not a solitary per centage of malt, or the flavor of hops. In the city he did not find drop of pure brandy. Imitations were made there which would deceive the best connoi&eurs, and yet so pernicious that a pint would eat through the coats of the stomach and destroy a man, and this appeared onpnst mortem examinations. A'gentle- man ottered him 51,500 if he found a drop that was not pure brandy in a bottle he presented him, $30,000 worth of which he had in bon J. He agreed to analyze it, and the merchant, offered S500 He analyzed it, and did not find a drop of brandy, but all whiskey, rot-gut, nitric ether, pepper, &c. and yet it was marked "Pure Cognac Brandy." He put a piece ot iron into some of it, and the re suit was, it was beautiful corroded. ink, and the iron was A Father Outwitted by His Son. Wheeling Intelligencer is responsible for the lowing: The fol We noticed, a few mornings ago, the elopement ot a young couple from liarnsville, Ohio, who came here to the Metcalf House, and went to West Alexander in a hurry, and got married. It seems that the father of the young man, who lives near Barnsville, had been courting his present daughter- in-law for some time, and recentlv engaged himself to her. Having great confidence in the judgment ot his son, he concluded to send him down in the countrv where the young lady resided, to take look at her before the solemnization of the marriage contract. The son went down, and returning, an nounced himself as highly pleased with the young woman, but counseled a short delay. He wanted time to learn more of his "mother-in-law," and continued to visit her, apparently for that purpose. The old man's surprise, when tie found that his son had eloped with the girh and victimized his (the son's) confiding parent, may be imagined A Frenchman, wishing to speak of the cream of the English poets, forgot the word and said, "de butter of poets." - Awful Alternative. The last will of a queer old miser who lias just died is much talked of at Vienna. He cut off all his nearest relatives, and made a very distant one, an extremely hand some young girl, sole heiress of his considerable property. So far there is nothing extraordinary; but there is a condition added to it. The testator was a hunch back, and had a club-foot, which defects probablv had obstructed many attempts of his to marry, lie has made it, therefore, a condi tion, sine qua non, that the heiress is to get the property only when she marries a man shaped as he was. She is, besides, to live in a convent three months in each year to pray for his soul. The heirs-at-law have attacked this odd last will on the plea that when it was made the testator must evidently have been mad- As there is, however, no equity jurisdiction in Austria, they may find their task not an easy one. Wedlock in the West. Youths in the West are thus exhorted to marry by one of our western Journals: A good wife is the best, most faithful compan ion you can have by your side while performing the journey of life. She can smooth your linen and your cares for you; mend your trowsers and your manners; sweeten your moments as well as 3'our tea and coffee; rufle, perhaps, your shirt bosom but not your temper, les! and if you are too confoundedly lazy or proud to do such work your self, she will carry swill to the hogs, chop wood, and dig potatoes for dinner. He love for her husband is such that she will do anything to please him, except to receive company in her evcry-day clothes. Get married, I repeat, you must. Con centrate your affections upon one object, and don't distribute them, crumb by crumb, amongst a host of Susans, Elizas, Betseys, Peggies, and Mollies, allowing each scarcely enough to nibble at. Get married, aud have some one to cheer you us you journey through this vale of tears somebody to scour up your dull moments, and keep your whole life, and whatever linen you possess, in some sort of Sunday-go-to-meeting order. Excessive Cleanliness. Even cleanliness can be exaggerated, as in the case of the Pharisees, and the late Duke of Queenbury, who would wash in nothing but milk. Our own Queen uses dis tilled water only for her toilet; but this is not a case in point, since it is for the sake of her health, I believe, with her. A sad case however, was that of the lovely Princess Alexandriana of Bavaria, who died mad of over-cleanliness. It began by extreme scrupulousness. At dinner she would minutely examine her plate, and if she saw the slightest . speck on it, would send for another. She would then turn the napkin round and round to examine every corner, and often rise from the table because she thought she was not served pro perly in this respect. At last it became a mono mania, till, on plates, napkins, dishes, table-cloth, and eveything else, she believed she saw nothing bat dirt. It weighed on her mind, poor thingj she could not be clean enough, and it drove her into insanity - English Hand-book of Etiquette: Mr Forsythe, editor of the Mobile Register, and late United States Minister to Mexico, has been appointed by the Governor of Alabama commis sioner, under the act of the recent Legislature, for the promotion of direct trade with Europe. The salary is $4,500. Fighting in Washington. A scene occurr ed in Washington on Saturday between Van Wyck, of New York, and Hindman, of Arkansas, which is thus described in a despatch: This forenoon, Messrs Van Wyck, of New York, (who charged the Southern people with deliberate ly burning their slaves, and the Southerners sanc tioning this cruelty,) Stewart, of Pa , arid Lovejoy, of 111., stood upon the steps of the National Hotel. Mr Hindman, of Arkansas, approaching the steps, Mr Yan Wyck offered his hand, and addressed Mr H., who immediately struck at Mr Van Wyck, exclaiming, in intense anger, "how dare yoa speakw to me, youd d Son of a b h."--Mutual friends immediately closed in and the two members of Congress yere separated. No blow was struck, but the affray has excited great feeling. Another gives this version of the difficulty:' Mr Van Wyck meeting Mr Hindman on the ave nue, held out his hand in friendly recognition, when Mr Hindman refused to take it, saying "Yoa d d scoundrel, you have delivered a speech not only insulting to every southern man, but to every gentleman," at the same time raising; his hand as if to strike him. For the last few weeks, it is said, there has been an increase of bad feeling between northern and southern members. With many, only the cold and formal recognition exists, while others do not ' speak at all. Mr Van Wyck's attack upon what he termed the inhumanity of the whole South has made him especially obnoxious. Kansas. The Democrats of the House will it is said oppose the admission of Kansas nnder the Wyandotte Constitution, for the reason that the proposed State boundaries include a direct viola tiou of the law and a solemn compact with the Cherokee Nation, whose lands would be located within said lines. California News. A correspondent writing irom Alba, near V irgima city, on the zytn, says r ' There has been almost every mineral in the world discovered here; gold, silver, lead, copperas, . an timony, bismuth, plumbago, etc., and lead and copper almost in their pure state. Already there are mines of silver being developed for GO miles in length and 15 in breadth." Very exciting accounts continue to be received from the new gold mines of Southern Oregon. The quartz found at Gold Hill, near Jacksonville, was the richest ever discovered on this coast. A ledge has been opened in two places, and two men have already taken out $50,000 worth of gold front one of them, with only the ordinary mining imple ments. On the 5th 875,000 worth of rock was taken from the other. The California Senate had passed a bill appro priating 6G0,000 to the company constructing the first line of telegraph from California to the Mississippi, and $40,000 to the second line. Joseph Smith, Jr. Effort to place him at the head of Mormonism. A correspondent of the St. Louis Republican, writing trom Nauvoo, under date of the 15th inst., says: Joseph Smith, Jr., son of the Prophet, is here, as also the other members of the family. Joseph is understood among tne saints to oe tne successor of his father in his prophetic office, and it is hint ed among the would-be wise ones that he is about to assume the robes of his sacred office Be that as it may, it is true that he is now entertaining a dele gation from Salt Lake, who are using every per suasion in their power to convince the young prophet that he is called of God forthwith to assume the office and to proceed to Salt Lake, and take the head of the Mormon Council. Joseph is a man of good strong sense, and should he undertake the station, I have no doubt would endeavor to make a reform among his people. He is decidedly against polygamy, in favor of obedience to law, and opposed, in any form, to milking the gentiles. It is to be hoped that he will undertake the task, and succeed in making Salt Lake the home of upright and law-abiding citizens, instead of a den of thieves. Cause of Insanity. Dr. Ronnev. for manv years past the Resident Physician of the New York: City Lunatic Asylum, in speaking of the pre disposing or existing causes of insanity, remarks as follows : Misdirected education, by cultivating a particular acuity or faculties, at the expense of the others, and thus destroying the balance between them, ays the foundation of derangement for any slight exciting cause. 1 be high culture of the reasoning powers, with an entire neglect of the moral, produces an intellectual, but a bad man, while the cultivation of the uheart" at the expense of the "head," produces a man of feeling the fanatic. The emotions hold an important place in the production . of our happiness, and if they become morbidly sensitive and particularly separated from intellectu al control, the harmonious action of a well-balanced t mind no longer exists, ror the perfection of the mental faculties, the physical organs must also be developed. . Marryino Mania. The Boston correspon dent of the Springfield Republican relates two cu rious occurrences which took place in a town in Middlesex County. In the first case, a young man, who had slight attacks of abe ration of mind, and who had during the day been reading one of An drew Jackson Davis' books of plagiarisms, went, about midnight, to a neighboring house, called np the mistress of it, and asked to see a young lady, a school teacher, who was boarding there. She was called, and he said he had -been directed by the spirit of George Washington to marry her, and had come for that purpose. The young man was taken care of, and has been sent to an asylum ' for the insane. , On th same evening another young man called upon one of the clergymen of the town and request ed that he would go with him three or four miles to a house where another young lady, also a school teacher, boarded, for they were going to be married and wanted bis services. Arrived there, the teach er was informed of his errand, and received the summons with unmistakable symptoms of surprise, and the clergyman soon saw how the matter stood. The seeond young man is also in an asylum for the insane. The truth of these remarkable coinciden ces are vouched for by persons cognizant of the facts.- ' - , ..." ' ' . What good would centuries do the man who only knows how to waste his time? 4 J