'iij'-U'-i; .;! i . i: f - ii !' ' . HgSjfE il)DHES3 Of THE LADIES s i Vnu-flattennziyouuiai - ,. I If kheeks Which Vie With winter snows, ilife knelling &s, ohr witching smile; " plWhfeWbVerf' Sorrow ban beguile ;:fc:s -S i-J :." W - fat pohiaa 4r'OQr ,ovely brca8t . -J 'i " tocyanglsrmightiesiretoreait ... ! :'r';-iSin iW'thUarw nneeasared may. - . . .: :si:l.JJi,i-rtJt marked attentions" PT lL:-, 1ien visit rbuarid WOO, s.i-.vJ ! - J u- IW stuatinn f .'to VOU lOO, iK-iltaliLJ .ii ,,r wianiriir. charm.. --a .,.v f . it I ft 1 rakiithlttli! you the marriage vow ; -TOW! wfc&e. thrilling glance you praise; Hvilklwrd Oil yoiiftheir fondest rays Vs r ' U I &ui Wei' nfecjka, iand bTcasts of snow, , ; ( ;M) V . jv hssblrid'si fond embrace would know,r ;,. . 1 fwnfe chkertuJIy' pur inmost soul ' , w l I IvVolUlWaylownhiaiweeieontroL ;; ' f'VOli'aeloHJ ;:taotigh cold and chffl, Vi !.:'-R3wH(ll4teMvi iome uitv still' " V' ' -r, 3- . rr;a it wi:a"i j .. . li; iMaitb eoiie amends for errorjpast, ... Bf wedding fere the year De Xh$thii$ eecure abmc bli98, before lYofir earthly Journey ahaU be o er. fYPwe;f-at we need not caJJ, " ','3.. hajja -thiw pnlainj you lik'd the state , f jPrO lUU iq Wlliuug wis " U Id whi4hj yo Jived veryjate, r C jV-Stnow indeed you want a spouse,-.?' i 2V; wmthi, children and the house; a eachjone therefore choose some staid 20 3areraweetmpred, smart old maid. ' 'M Mil i 4:,f U -2 t ; . i j - 7 Urf.'::ifeV5p?P yon oe wise, , s ,fiX r ib feam oh at briee and take icrif.' l '? , .u."n!prffJa you'll wcio in Tainjnc - j tj lAie'll .jfrntJorA out airs again j - i H-i" 0 ;ApRtsut;if oU bachelors r J- d ml - jPrefcr their jblhkets and their furs, . ::!' jti.jxvep for kndl ufthonored lie.; 4& .i s Student'i Manual, 1 I HABITS. ,f-'-.T ; o; tivjite perseverance; ; By pefeterance. ' I mean a steadfas nsi' in jJitirspipg thetsame, study, and ca ryiriar out the satnetplans Irora week. t welki! iSbraefwill read or hear of a nla wkjme)vp with greait success unu ai once conciuae, inai we mSm.nF w Plan adopte uitpoui consiwjranon, inen iaiKeo aDOUt 1 Ut onsiaeranon, men talked aboi ast4 Ime ;affairi indina few days thrown 1 :ff-ti: out aasoorMis it becomes i irUspm6i:as riVMeW habit will in a shorr h , u is tam iaswe, i once Knew a man, t t nr-. .. v-j ?rj . nnrl immpnifttp v 'bhaialtariugiplk pver his dbp in. oe reaa mat a very learnea man Tisei aladriiire Bjackstpne : at once hV all, iiia" purchases, Blackstonef s ;C4jriiitari-1 'Tpese. he began to read avu firrcat easrerness : out. hannenimr to ifft that Oliver Ellsworth was in the hblt ibf getting most of his iriformatidri irom conversation, la lact wnicn l doubtv ceisaamto1 savj' that a collecre- full nf snrh WTOWiHPP lnto .ne wou)d j rtl! HlT?r reai luaeni. - lae j ma tiAyao is jpqrpeiuaiiy nesitatmg wniCh tping he ivill do first, will do n MT&e man who resolves, but suffers 6 1 h waslipr 'dropping fBlackstone, and gb- I magonlpy cdnyeirealiori ! It is hardlyrne- Wf'esl&iiofi':ojbe changed :by, the tot' Waisb'-untual, that, when these assb :coie gestiPii of a friend, who fluc; . CK"onia:itj.Ke;was .uniformly''thefe' when t tupf r:Mnf bn to. opinion,, from pri tluj Jiour of meeting had arrived, and was toanridiyee '.; .'evje.ly-&6mt i'b -tte ; compass,' with every R We are all so indolent bv nature and brlthfof:ca6t accomplish n steod of beiris i nrbcressi ve in anv thidsr. , ; 1., ' I . " V TO' ai st stationary, and more PrWalyoy dejin all. . It is only the man who; lariidi into his pursuits that ETea.tf 01iairtvJvhirh :T,nwn nsjnhia irk Cajrictq tjfku itereoco-who first ;ifW&?l5eP resolves firmly, arid xnei ecuies pLS purpose with inflexible raefWmaye Whose peityl 7ncH"Tn9iar1Ilt a weaker spirit, lJfj advance to eminence in any line. IijlbV way illustration, tjib cabaipii; ai student.- tie commences the iStP tbf the dead languages : presently "fiiMdd 'H ri:iw .iiui u: u : r f 3 j '"I . . s r iwwiui huv icna uiiii ue is wasi- BpfeiWjhat, instead of obsolete MMhMch better employ him- Slfiffi'ft ideas. He changes MWa and sete tb work 'at the mathe- inatics frhen' domes ariothpr' filAW9 grave and sapient fabe. WMther he intend to !?ilMmi:ra riot, ihe JflPl is tim and that, for ?hf Pmbf :ft -common mathenitt-ilite-jenoifgh of the mathftmnt . lie WOWS nD !his Euclid, and arldro ftm FPZW rpiinquisneu on some equM P4MSri rind thus UTepTnt ia manrihg his plans. ' Yon rahtr if pcrf ftvejthef folly df this course : and the :.s-.Pfvcv oi it 4v me, nxing on A'nui- a; 'Kabit' bf indecision. sufEeiftn J r fairest prospects. Nov o wiselv. but nrmlv: ra g!lreriUtlhbidupon ft with heroic 5UtMii and4 the Alos and Pvwnees nilink befbreilvbu-. ; Thft fiariuriffiwiir;b mWy03' but stPifed' F HPrigemeir! plaris, ; are, yet 'employed nM ery jtrofitable business;of .chattg plapsi If Jet your motto be; PeW Q vinccs: l Practise UDon iU arid -vwjs;-3w.- uuiiencK lii which il win i Sr'A,. iln me are in dahirer of jlsg plani 'ia1 themselves very ; gooC bv hab5t m: buiting oflf till to-morrow TWil '-.-.I. if r . . . ...I-" may. De oone 10-aay. ti ;i nat "letter; IS" to-morrow : that . re- 'oi! mi friend: may. be , attended sto Mtl1- no Joser rfor. to pne sucn lempuuion, is tne yielding up theiwhole cita- mmm ny : rThat a notaj and thfct may be recorded JnMriy iy; mm 5 a If .( I it!i- i I I 1 i I 1 m .A... . I ! - l i f :,...' m - - i in ..jj vi i l litai , i x m. i i l l m j v -au iVfli 1 1 I M M .ra-jr 1 r- - . n. . I . I I I 1 1 . f I I I 1 1 - 1 I . I INERa & JAMES, ; i) i - 4 jtoiyotbi fMeryviioup snouia: oe - persever ingly filled i tip. n But this is not. alL t It is f riot siiffifietiti to iake forybur piottb, with5 the imSnBrtdl iGrOtitis, N Horn tuit f but- le ir be telted up'aecordiiigtb Some planut UDbut without rariy plan; V l lt istoishing to seef wiwat per s'ypaie.tlarid inllejribiUty of purppse $6seM4$'fcY& n pil'we;bbe'cjfc,: t pprsiuf4JftiTO coristitai, ted fth ir I gaes&ChWlesll.tIwas; frequentlyl j bri Tiis ; horsej. for twenty-four hours at! 'orice r and thus he traversed most of kis! dominions His officers .were J aU tireBOTiit; JconsenueWlylbritheJte part, pejrfornied thesej journeys;ehtire lyimlouelKl On brie: of t hese exeursionsV his poor Horse fell dead under liim.; Without any-urieasiness the monarch stripped the dead hbrseland marched 'off with the sad dle, bridle! laridpistolsn on his back, v At the net iiiiji;he fond afiorse in the sta bly tpf il jtiiind 'anirnediateljf harnes sed him, arid was just makingolT, iwheri; the bTier; ame out, and called him 4 to account rfdr' stealing his property The monarch replied," that he took the horse because he ,was tired of carrying the sad dle himself.! This riot satisfying: thb owh-? ef thfeiljBW 'swonlslaricl '4 VbuI61havie, shed bloody royal or plebian, had : not the guard; foclej tip anoj informed the owner thathisysw This wri4 jbiit a siriglb specimeri of the un tiring lrseirerance with which that am- Wiiuyai - ii: iLtu' nn:x Uo iii.U Jl siuucuin a msa eminence in a lew vears. m-i i r - 1 v - OuJM if t - J''!: W m?,Ui habit of punctuality. ; r ;, u nere i$ jioiman imne: wbo micht not ' and yet there are any thing like the de- they ought to' attain. :, it It Is Vtlyi (easier to be a littlelate in get tingi intoj thy rrecitationroorii, ! and!a little liri ppiib every thing; It Js" jnojt so ea' sy j io ojftjlprompt, .punctual character ; bujt it li ja Srait otnestiriiable vdlue to yourself aric to thewprldt The punctu aacanijdoiwice asjnuchj at least, as aripmer ndii, rwith-twice the ease and L satisfaction1! tohimself; arid with -equal sausiacnoni jo otners. rne late lord Chan- j ceiior oi s ingiana. iienry isrougham, i while a! kingdom seemed to be restine- on hid dimildnK . rV. m.Ae;iAi in of jlordl anal the court of chancery ; who gaVe atldierice daily to barristers, fourid time tofwrife reviews, tb be at the head of fat least ten associations which were Dublishfner worlds nf nspfnl IrnnWlArlo-A byhabij thit we feel it a luxury tb find a man of . real, undeviating punctuality. We love I to Eean upon such a man. and wel are willing to purchase such a staff at almost aiiy price. It shows, at least, that he jhas bonquered himself oome seem. to be, afraid of cherishing iisStulgarv arid is below the ambition of a naui., lesi h Doraer upon a virtue tnat great rnlndJ br the attention of one who plan! is fefth1 more' tharii a 'week, filled ha greater! (virtues upon which he may J gave strict orders never to be allowed to preuirii j Vas the mind of Blackstone j sleep later than four in the morning. Pe Of a loW order ? Did he cultivate nunc- ter the Great, whether at Work in the I tuality because he had not great traits of cnaracter on wnicn to rely i Yet, when ai me anvii as a ciacK-smitn, or on me wasdIringevenhis celebrated lec- f throne of! Russia, always rose before day tures, he wjis never known to make his light, " I am" says he, " for making my audiencj wait even aminute ; and he ! life as long as I can, and therefore sleep could riffeit be Inade to think well of any ;-as little jas pbssible." Dodridge f makes! one who was notoriously defective in this"j the following striking andj sensible re virtue, i Thie reader will be pleased with marks oni this subject ; I Will here re the follbwnirifi' notice of Mr. Brewer, af- ! cord the observation, which I have found a. 1 f 1.: ! LL i ti -i i r terwards a valuable! minister of the gos pel. While a' student, he wris alwavs tnown to op punquat in aitenaing tne Ithft tutor's hoiTSA- t T'Iia r!ti lectures I a dents boartfed in neighboring families, ana at stated hours met for recitation. -)ne mprtiing, the clock struck Seven, and all rose tijj Jfor prayeiy "according to cus tom.; Tbe jitorj, looking round, and bb serying thriijMr. Brewer was absent, paused awhile. Seeing him now enter the room.1 he thus addressed him : -u Sir. the cldck; has struck, and we were ready id! begin jtlut, as you were absent, we supposjed itiiwas too fast, and therefore he clockAvas actually too fast by some! minutes, f It is no great virtue 1 to be punctual in Paying a considerable debt, though, even here, too many fail!; but it is the t every anaveviery hour occurrences, in which jWf W apt to fail. I arii too late now,'but t isonly once. I have not been prompt in fulfilling my plans to-day ; but snnrps nis mi!p nnn nooii t... ixieeV;a:a ymPt py !be want of puhctuaUty hi one who failed nly five minutes, and" that wnouy unnecessarily, lie punctual in erJ.mnyou determine I to riseat suchan jSoiirJ ben the , floor at, the mo mentj.j If you deterrnineto do aojmuch jbefore beakfast, besure to daittiif to rnCet ;a socidty or. a circle otfriends, be jthere at ibe moment ; We'are apt to be wuy; mj.u.tjuumj tueungs oi, societies, j&ef eeciaIy if ve have any thing to do. -m pfOW .ALL OVEj Jj, There is grat ignity .inilbpmgli ! for," said pn who was in ' thi Ijbabit, and whe ;had n6fmucE":bf whihe need be Vain, railess jitwas thiswarit' of jpromptM ness.An assembly will -bp -gladtoseb you after having waited for ybd;butthey would'HaVepeCn1 morei gladseeyofiL at youriribstfi Vheil there are two things foryotfjto'db, bnebf which 1wit be done,' arid'melbther is K;wnaf yori veryj mrich ifei-i rc to do, be sure arid begin, tiie foriner first Ijor exMnpleVybu may ?very niuch tw'to'cbniplSe thelsheet which ; you arg npw.,)yritmgii and for jnany,; reasons you -may svjsH it ' but you must'recite thiireye-! riing; 4Nowj iltheway ifbr.iybu ;to Jdb,' is, now to jsjtbp virig?and prepare for reci tation, else" you, will write so long, ttali not only yourpreparation in 'study. wjU be slighted, but you will felso ibel in "daifes eer of not being punctual. . . The - want of theTobsdrvarice of this rule, very frequent ly prevents bur being punctual in our du- ties. :1 V'j.'4- . (.. J-.t,t ,!-;. T I 1 'f - ' Ta I Few ever lycdo a great age andfew; er 'stfll became distinguished,4 who were not in the habit of early rising. You rise I late and of cburseget about 'yoUr- busl- nessat a late, nour, ana every iming goes wrong ialll day. . Franklin sdys, that he who rist s la(ie! may trot1 all day, land riot have oi ertaken his business atr night. Dean Swift rivers, " thai, he Inever knew any triai t come to greatness and eminence who lay in bed of a morning.? I' I beUc ve that, with, other (degeneracies of our dt Lys5tbrywill prove that late rising is a ' prominent one. tJfri the four teenth c jntury, the shops in! Paris ' were universally open at four in the. morning; I now, not till long after seven, j Then, the King oi r rancejituneu out at pigat o ciock. in the morning, and retired o his cham ber 'at the same honr in the evening. In the i time of Henry VIII seven! ' in the morning! waS the fashionable J breakfast hourtein the dinner hour. ; In the time of Elizabeth, the nobility, fashionables, and, students, 1 dined at 1 1 o'clock, arid supped between five and six in the after- nooiv j W-'- j 1 Buffon gives us the history of his wri ting in a few words. In my jouth, I was very fond! of sleep : irobbed me of a" great deal of my time ; but j my poor Joseph (his servant) was of great service in enabling me to overcome lit I promis ed to give Joseph a crown! j every time that he would make me get lipj at six. -Next morning, he did not fail to wake me and to torment me ; but he only received abuse. Thejnext day after, he did same, with no better success ; arid I was oblig ed to confessj at noon, that I had lost my time., I told him that he did not know how to manage his. business y he ought to think of !my I promise, and riot! mind my threats. The day following, he employ ! I begged for indulgerice I bid ed force him begone -I stormed but Joseph per sisted. I was therefore obliged") to com ply ; and be was rewarded every day for the abuse which he suffered aij the mo ment when I jawoke, by thanks, accompa nied with a crown, which bA received a- bout an hourafter. Yes, am indebted to poor Joseph for ten or a dozen of the vo- lumes of mv works" Frederick II. of Prussia, even after ase and infirmities had increased upon him. docks at London as a ship-carpenter, or of great use to myself, arid to which, I may say, that? the! production f qfj this work (Commeritary bri the New Testament) and most of my other writings, is .owing, viz. that the difference between rising at five and atseyen o'clock in the j morning, for the space) of forty years, supposing a man to go to bed rit the same hour at night, i& nearly equivalent to the addition of teri years to a man's. life.w j 1 I In order to rise early, I would earnest ly recorniriend an early hour for! retiring. There are many other reasons for this. l.ciuicr juur cjics liur j uui ucattu aic sw Hkely to bedestroyed. Nature seems to: have rsb fitted j things, that we ought to rest in the early part of the night ; Doct. D wight used to tell his students that one hour .of sleep! before midnight is worth more thanTtwo hours Jafter that time."-;-Let it be a ruleith you; and scrupulous ly adhered to, that your light shall be ex tinguished by ten o clock in the evening. You may then rise at five, arid have se jveri hours; to rest,' which is about what na- ture Teauires.-i!-"i-"': ' -uut now snail you lorrn tne nanit oi get ting up so! early t: Suppose you 50 to bed! to-night lat tten r you hav ! teenaccus-! tomedto sit iip ; later : ; forj arihour you cannot' sleep ; ' arid when the clock strike five, youwill be in" a fine sleep. ' , I rephv that, if you ever hope to J do .any thing fn this world tiiehabitOTttibe jrrried, ard, theesoonelr it is donKtbe(l betterj If , any money could purchase the habit no price would.be 1 too great Whin! the wjUer commenced n the practice 4n earnest, - he procured an old clock, at th expense 0! . Do THIS, AOT if;"',"i7 ,t .h. 13 1V. OeifL' Uttrrwm. about td'b'ollarsL. Sriay be placed 'erever rou please.) jj He then f prmed a little Vriae&He ijwttcl.wlntby a jeight anottlstwrijlimrbug bflwhich! were four arms t of wire, at the ends of which were as many brass buttons. v As, metweigpx Went aowjL, me,sePrc voiving buttons jstWckagairias beltr Thsetitipj sucha rtxjaendoias, ringing, that there' was . nbmbr sleep. All this was connected with the? wooden clock in the distant room, by. rrieans of wir es. . He has nad the1 honor to instruct othe rs of his set a' ringing. V: Somee a small alarm MVA4 vaxa-aA n wvavu clbcEtbi brill Jtliejin-jaiudl tSwHat'itey sri aeTO i would 1)e stronger 'itillcoiild it be made strike ;ripta;iight djbuild a fijre. By mis, of some : sucu .process, vou inusn oe regularly wake'd at ari early hour. . The students in Yale , and .Amherst Colleges, have,- generally the alarm-clockJ After you arebrice. awaked, bje sure to use the firetf consciousness in 'getting upon thet1 floor. 5 If you allow yourself to parley a moment,' sleep, like an armed man, will probably seize upon vbU. and Vouri resolu- tion is gone, your hopes your habits destroyed.' are dashed, and Need vou be re- minded here, that the young man who, is in the habit of early rising, will arid must be iUhhahit of 'retiftg early, and, of course, will put himself! out of the way of many" temptations ; arid dangers which come under, the veil of midnight.; Not a few feet that the rules' of academies, or colleges,' which call therji up early, are ra ther a :i hardship. iTheyj transgress them when theyf dare. Finding the stolen wa ters sweety they do all in their power du ring vacations, and at fother times! to pre vent themselves fromjfprming, the habit of early 'rising. Thelbught not to' feel or do so.' :The business! of life, a ike re quire' early rising ;; and; you are ycur own enemy ,if you cherish the feeling that this is a burden. It ought to be a matter, of gratitude that such regulations prevail in r"rT yj" , v i V our seminaries, une pi me mosteeieDrai brated writers of England was lately I asked hbw it was that he wrote sp much ; ana yei irom ten in tne, lorenoon was at leisure through the dayi " Because I be gin to write at three O'clock in the morn-ing,n- was the reply. Most confidently do I believe6, that he who from his jputh is in the habit of rising- early, will be much mbre likely to live to old age, more likely to be a distinguished arid useful man, and more likely to pass a life that is peaceful and pleasant. I dwell upon this point, because ; a love tor the bed is too frequent- ly a besetmg sin ot students, and a sin which spori requires the strength of a ca- ; (To he-continued.) I I I V -'Tf- , From the New- York Tribune! GO FORTH INTO THE FIELDS !" We offended a number, months ago.bY blunt ly telling bur young men that too many of them are trying tq live by selling goods, and that the cure for their complaint is tp be tound in going bo na Jide to work. We are Impelled to repeat the provocation.' ( ! ! "! i. ! Ll. i ii-i. ii i: i health, vigor, and virtue, is generally regarded .:u : t,nii ni.n li is a sore evu mai luuur, u cssmiai 10 vrllXA OtCl j jjtcii uavrew " v Lvr0 iiufc iiicj live by straight-forward hard work are almost uniformly seeking to escape from their condi- jtjon. EverobstantiaAriuy farmlr, whose life is or might be among the happiest, is apt to tram his darling son lor a prolessiOn or put - . il - ;.' J9 m 1 him into a store. He libdably wishes to put him forward in the worlds but he does riot think "that half the time and etpense bestowed in ma- king him an average lawyer or aocior would j The wite ot Yankee faullivanv tlfe box suffice to make him an eminently intelligent and . er was accidentally burnt to death, in scientific farmer, a model and blessing to the i ew York, on Thursday, 25th April, by whole country.; Vhy will not our thnlty form- j her clothes taking fire.! p.r think ftf this 1 The s world is surfeited with ; 1 1 middling lawyers and doctors the gorge even of Iowa rises at the prospect of a newj batch of either ; o tolerable clerymert there is certain- ly no lack, as the multitude without societies bears witness ; and yet I here is tne ojWest, the most essential, and the noblest of employments, on which Es to-day making more rapid strides and affords a. more promising' field fori intellec tual powet than any other, comparative ly shunn. ed and neglected. Of good, thoroughly educa ted, at oncef scientific (arid practical farmers, there is no where a i superabundance.. Every where therejis i need of this class to introduce new processes and improye old ones, to natur alize and bring to perfection the plants, grains, fruits, &c.', we still import; from abroad when we might better produce them at hone to In troduce a proper rotation and diversification of crop tO prove and teach how to pro luce pro fitably themost grain to the acre in short, to make agriculture the pleasing, attracti ve, enno bling' pursuit it was providentially designed to be. frhere is no broader field of usefulness--no surer road to honorable eminence. The time will come when, of the men of the hu t genera-, tion, Arthur Young will be moro"wid ly honor ed than Napoleon j But while the tn e farmer shouldbe the most thoroughly educatet I and well intarrrterl man lin the country, there are manv Of our old f fiu-mers. eveni Itvhowill cheerfully 1 impend a thousand dollars )qi!'o'sFV'iforf it Drdfessiob.'ife 'krato'lariiidred each to cd-l ucato the three lor four ilessl favored who are td be tanners. I mere ; nunareas oi acres ana ncicr iw mw a jlktu& . On agriculture, though peyiwoala not eotlnten- But we rejoice to believe the world is mend ing in this regard. . j ITjere are farmen yet who persist.in crowaing then sonstnto tap arejrmewuvate ; T know of iome ancoi a doctor or ciercvmaii wao naa gmaiea no i pocaets, ana tney nave seveim umw mpir-ine or therOCT- Wha a wb Uon'f erew GrJVhen dversity ie i-iT -JLJ. : :-t.;a t. )4;UrJ 11 I imnr raiM. It, nreveritsl hot only SERIES, ! tV'' nun NU1MBER; 3, . 1. r ."i . -I I? f, T .A . , glutted professiftisor into trade, but the current is turning'.0 We knoSij that 'our best city people are looking for places lor their, sons with Farm- years in . this jcitj, and saTe'd something consid erable : by thQ way.t ha just f purchased a; farm onf which to ;fetue (educate his sons for good fanners. ,11 is in.- epsy circumstances,1 and deems thisjhe hest riroTession he catTsive them. and jft is pghtj jTherjp are, hundred, sUentj preparing xo go anq uq UKewise.r.-i.d?: . , tWWi W?n once mprp wour young: men something like it most come, at last,' for the 'prospect is globmy, --Tere. are,- and,' though the disease is abating, will long be, too, many young men ambitious to. wear, kid gloves and chat across the cbuiter with ladies. If there were to-day employment lor twenty thousand additional clerks in pun city, there would in two' months he many. more oung men here in want of clerkships than at present.. .cThe ' supply of embryo merchants, eiceds the demand fright fully,, and wi continue! to do so. ! To come here looking for a clerkship J is to enter into a com petition with ten thousand to "see which can. starve longesw rven u youwere sure oi a piace at oncej you would act unwiielylin taking it. Trade is limited and capricious, j'but' the boun ties of nature are steadl and inexhaustible. v -There are thousandalin all our cities who are well employed and in good circumstance's ; We say, let these continue, if they are content, and feel certain that the Wqrld is better tor their dailyjdoings. There, aj-e other tens of thous ands who must stay he rip, as things aro, having no means to. go-else whcre, no skill in any arts but jthose peculiar to ciitjf life, an4 a very limited knowledge ; these, must" stay, unless something should transpire out of the. common course oi e vents. There are other tens of thousands an nually arrivingfrom Europe, whin, however val uable acquisitions to thej country,' must contrib-. ute to glut the marl, et and depress the price of labor of alf kinds in ' otrcity rsome of these must remain here till the can obtain means and knowledge to go elsewhere. . Jt for young men from our own happier agricultural districts i .v .i it.s i L.;i 10 crowu iihu ie quics or into jVUiages, f m f f,clf the.bkeisi madness ! inhumanity Jo the jfdesUtute moral suicide. Wk;i n',.int.a f out states are, a I l cc on,l n 4 waste of marts of trade overflow wih eager seekers for employment, let all es- cape from our cities who can, and alijvho have opportunities to labor, and live in the country re solve to stay there, j j ' ' rrrt Taken as BallasL-The Boston Mail understands that two sailors came! over in the " steering balloon Victoria," n three days from England, taken on board as ballast to be thrown over, in ca.se they wished to keep the balloon from going down to drinkj .jj Vessels ana. Lives fast. A letter re ceived in Boston,, dated Chicago, Illinois, March 30lh, say s l4early i all the citi zens are in mourning jfor the loss of five sail of vessels belonging to this port, in the heavy gales of the last teri days. Two of them foundered with jail hands sixteen souls every one of yhom had a large family." ! Round the World. -The Natchez, which arrivrl fit. NfW Ynrlr hn Sntiirrla v from Canton, left New Yorkj for Valparaiso on - . s . - the 24 th ofJ une la$t, and has made the voyage round the wbrld in nine months ; and twentv-six da-s. one month and fi?h- - j J ' r. o teen days of which the yessel was on the West coast of South Aiperica. ' 'Sudden Diath.MA Dririiel ! Storer, j rp. , . Maa iw twi t?;i f a. lL.n,IjL-iTXLLi3LLl Ub Llllv I A Ul LOlllUULU ILAIl , A . , k A -.r "T" T"! Zll" f I0!1 Vay ?Tcum " ATUt ana eXr i Pired I A deputation from America is, travers- t ing Scotland, soliciting funds to build a College in one of the! Western States; while a deputation of iScotcb cleiymen 1 is at the same time traversing America ior 1 unas to support a iree cnurcn in Scot land. y. j " I Thf Pittsfielil Sun . describes a case re cently decided in Berkshire, in which Ilen drick Eastland I sued and claimed dama ges of the"Assessors of Egremont, for neg lecting to tax him ! j Herr Driesbach has been fined, 85 and costs for that leopard affair in Baltimore; The boy has rqcover and the beast is as Micajah Pendleton died recently in Nelson county, Va. aged 89. i He Was, it is said, the founder of the iirst American temperance society. Texas. lessrs. v an i ' Buren and Ben- ton has each 'published a letter, in which they take ground against the annexationJ of Texas. Somebody says, p the south ought to hoist thie Tyler! and Texas flag, and nail it to thi mast" ! ' The Ute of a fiattttfe'--The most simple and con venient remedy, says correspondent of the Macon Mes enger, hickory I ever heard of was aiunu A piece uie size of a ' hickory nut, dissolved ia water and drank, orthewed and swallowed, is sumcieni. nave jwu muvvmij for sayr gnakeswho always have fthem. rfovided with it in their wona uao iyr u-. , assails yoa. don't sympathy for your misfortnnes, but ah all oflert of kiatance. : people of benevolent feelings are repulsed by year snappishness They are obliged to kand ffar off. lest yoa bite them. Take themauercalinlr. and like 4 christian.' And then God will help and jtfm fcllow-men, also. vrrr-weonij imcuiix wing w una w. pistes of alaridc r,!and sentenced to be confined to hard to insfrtct ibbm ia agrjcpWar they should be bbon BJackwrs ttsland foV two WoiithW made his' 1 instnicted.; An old ft fend who has lired many tLjUJin tJ J.iM-Li-2--tL K i . t r ina lt Vim Wa tried mBT tlmerort men and doirs. and f :ll V "I jineamtrowtheNeTork nit tnnl nnr fP th l.r.... 1 . . fuiuaiost prepectatye assem-t ' W.TexMto the United State Aat ere tookplMe.! 1 I ?iU 1Bwar-Tabemacle on the 25th- uit. A&ert Ganatini presided; and rat taking tthc chair,irf-t JfJ?J. wleiddiiinst'a ( "pfotneejif tnej (roneat rf thk "eemntr iint j . inviolate ittjarj'stitiom not oniy with Mexico j ' l. ,IU?;f Ti""?1? f tr 110111 WanceUoT. Aeav wu ucxi iirna 10 ue meeting denouncing th md.- iuauu Kvuiuicuucu uia ppeecn, xne notonoua. Uwexs.shouting un4 hurrains fol John V. rCdl&mnl wnitbl I 1 ivi- i ,oniy responded to;by about1theriame pitiful nj 1 tUmptible number, r. The police kterferirig; order'waV -sc restored, after 'which every Uung ' wenioolnj SuW i 'nkmost harmony, and,with but one opinion prevailing thai of. pppoeition to the seizing the territory owned by at1 Foreign, Grernment, Vith whom we are' at peace--4ni "j. whh, wheerx wtj have entered into solemn Treaties of friendship, Just to make jwlitical capital for John Tyleri or any other mjuwl ,M.,,ff ';: v-. -' Iff FOX TOS. WATCnXAK. v,..-' ' j THE tTEXA.8 TREATYU k bjkr il This new httmbug of Capt. Tyler's, meanly begged forf and secredjIVrosecttted as if suspected to be odious, isri now claimed to be a most popular Locofoco measure, and mounted as a hpbby by the lesser luminaries of that po litical party. ; Tne Alecklenburg Jeficnwnian wiu chart acteristic consistency, says that the latemeeting in Char lotte on the suyect,was without distinction of party, that the Democracy! were entirely in favor bf the measure ;' that the advertisement calling: the meeting. Only invited those frieadly to the1 adoption of the treaty : consequnl--. ly, the opposing Whigs had no businesslnTthei meeting. The no-party cnaracter of the meeting is adroitly "ex plained by calling it a Tyler meeting, after the nami of a partizaa without a party a shallow trkk, quite worthy; of its contrivers. But the democratic Speakers at the, same meeting assumed divers falae-pbaitipas and contra- i treaty provides ;fbr the retrocession of the country of Tex as to the United States, by which is meant to be asserted Government. : (This position', if npt falsef is extremely! doubtful. Thei treaty with Spain in 1819, by which It is t pretended that Texaa was ceded away, was the same by which Florida Was acquired, and the boundary west, of the Mississippi between the Spanish provinces, arid Louis iana established at the Sabine. .This being the first thnaT that such boundary was ever pretended to be settled; orV located at any point. It is scarcely possible to believe j 13 that any thing on the other side of the Sabine could have been ceded, and when the U. States acquired Louisiana,-1 it was by purchase from Bonaparte without a- specificfl-7 tion of boundary : and his afterassertion of the size : of the French claim in the country amounted to nothing for he often claimed much mom. than he had any right to,' and frequently took possession of much more than' he ? couldhoUV, 1 ' -,. (' ii$)'fr Again, it was assumedthat ceding away the country of Texas by the treaty of 1819, was contrary to the con-',; stkution, and was therefore void. . If this be a fact, where is the necessity! or utility of a Texian- treaty to take iti back again I .Willliot this treaty be as void as the form- , er one 1 If the present treaty be valid in any way oif fori any purpose there is no kind of necessity for waking; t ha i dormant claim jthat has rested quesent for mor than J20 years, by calling the treaty retrocession. Ifthe United t States ceded the country to Spain in 1819, that title was good and complete, and Spain has never parted with it- ' willingly, but was robbed by ATexico, and in turn iUextco; was robbed by jlndependent Texas : t'len the title uii4erH the present treaty is derived by receiving stolen property!" upon an original contract, that the United States once' sold the propetiy to a parly from whom it has been pjti dered. Wheaf we admit the original savage-rule of forceiY to prevail, we might as well take advantage bf it apd take ' the eountry ojf Texas by force as to take it otherwise from : 1 those who have forcibly taken it from the right owners ; ' besides it is a cheaper mode of acquisition, than; to paya!r Texian debt of an uncertain amount and an indemnity to Mexico, alsoj uncertain in amount ; and further, to1 re ! I commend the ffrcible taking, we shall thereby escape the i ' imputation of hat odious Federal notion of assuming t State debts, ortn any manner assisting State credit, and, more particularjyTavor and encourage the Locofoco doc If trine of repudiating state debts. , -;l It was also assumed as an undoubted fact, that the pub-:, , lie debt of Texts is about seven millions of dollars,: this . may be true' if (the scale of depreciation as applied to the f 1 current value off the paper promises be taken as the stand ard of estimating he amount.; which standard is ten in the hundred or jahout ninety per cent less than its nomi nal value, does 'the treaty stipulate that this debt shall be discharged at tike rate of depreciation T if not, the debt 1 becomes entire for its nominal amount, that is, ten times , f greater than itsjeurrent value. Then the land titles sell at something like twelve and a half cents per acre, and this treaty, of atlnexation cannot extinguish those titles 4 tlioi tinvo K0011SH liKrnllv rrantirl tn inrlivirtimla Vinf th i Atnlianwtil va lnki sf rmOA lanrla urill Anltf AnMsisi r tViik Kaii ..W V. ..w. .. J was v ...w. . .M VWUj. , Will .MW j j, . efit of speculators, and leave but a barren sovereignty to 1 result to the United States as the legitimate consequence'1 9 of annexation.j Still those lands tire relied upon to fur i nish a fund sufficient to pay off the Texian debt, a most. :t untdir and unieasonaoie conjeciure ; ior -aitnougn.! tne country is large;, and the land wide, still a great portion of it is occupied by extensive prairies that render it val- ueless either for. habitation or cultivation. But another ; -formidable objection to this annexation is its probable W '' - - - i tendency to inrire the southern slaveholding states.! the- t country will form or is expected to form, good market 1 for 8laTes eUhe to e,raig""J" r -peculator, and they.ft 19 one way or we inner, wm uc uuwir luiiitri uvui uxo , I southern atlantic states, so as greatly to diminish the ef- fective Ja boring -power and consequently the wealth of j those states ; this decrease xf slaves may result in the : ' manumission or banishment of the balance, and so add , ', some three or foiu to the list.of free states iivjhe course . -of a few years, j Besides this the great increase in' th1--product of cotton from this full tide of emigration to Tex-1 as, must necessarily much diminish its already depressed , price in all the markets of the world, and so render1 UW ; great staple, of the south a useless article to those who ; have heretofore considered the it standard of (wealth and7; subsistence. In this vie wrf the case, the natural con clusion is that the treaty of annexation ought to be re... j jected now and forever. ' Z. j 3ir. Tan Buren and Texas. The Washing. f ton Ulobe of Saturday evening contains a letj , ter from 3Ir.i Van Buren, on the subject; of the A proposed antteiationLof Texas, to the tTmoru! j The letter occupies five columns and a half of? the Globe, and is in reply to a letter from theUJ Hon W. H.i Hammet, asking his views and : opinions on thi3 iinpbrtant subject Mr. Van; es of Gen. Jackson and hi3 cabinet, discusses the policy an4 impolicy fiho annexation ali. lodes to the Improbability of Texas becoming ;t a British colonv. and intimates, without jeXki ,1, w uic.eMwii jsiiijc,-t vuier speecnes were. de livered fai'opposldon And strong resolutions passed, 'iustj ivnr.' r..l:- .. .!-''. .' . .t ' t ' I nresslv declarinor it. that he is uiUavprabie to S I armekatidn.:i!lle says,l.h4Wevcr; that (theiubi .i : ject I pi so mucu unporuwiw, "'f i and lirisheaof the people of thereot States shrmld be consulted and it tne result snouia. be favorable i to annexauoti, jjBe wri trusted viih the, Executive powert ne wouw now ' itioj his ditty to carryout the view j of th4f 4nti8titulonailr exDressett iV s K ! TUiJ S2,b -JTakit three" carrots and grai -j.. - . . . , . i.i .a salt, if convemek t Boil loroughly, strain, anadi suf-1 fickmi beeswax lo make a paste. This isamosvinval ; sl, and cover wun iara, wuuoui nable ointment er aalve, for cut. rf. irer t vfr;I ,:..-y:; I hate Ughtl4cing and loose wnversauoa, , If : : Abandant gaf,and JUtle tu ei Jv.l in bed and snores lA meeting,; I Wfcawha. talkingand ulkahUe tin I ! TheseLthings !l bate, yet more I hate jo see, t r J f I tTbi nriater cheated ef hia bu&tir&yitt f- it H. lllite ijv?.;; 5i ISfVv T I' A 1 :s;1 ss r J : it: 4f