u fit 1 TBI (FlVRMIWA WATOHMAM i ? " i t " ii u u ii y- y i it I m I m , w . , I I m : i I yi . i r - if - u f - s i w f i a I T ' - W fcJ I j -J. -11 JL uU ! W W -A- " ll V V U U X W LI 1 V II I .... ; j , ; - H i - I ' . ; - ; t , S . ; . 1 'i - i . . V 1 11 i l i -i. i t a - i U0(hiT Letter from Major Downing. i : i; Am tiIk roA to tiii: war, -iU :(. M'.. SLACrr-. 1847. 4 riroAjfV w : Impose you'll be Jjrtly tlisnp'nff0 ind m away off fVwhin on ;to the seat of war, and 5Wwl 10 sit ymiwn comc 'hiVgh ti.'AinC'on. IJut you must'nt blametrie fVfl -fif IcouWii't'lp it ; the President ouUf'( let ni call::; he said I was get-x ?iu!tp toohtck ttjith you. writing: let r iu "and; all t(it. And when he, PokcnJjoul th le'f's he looked kind of SindlUowriconiiderahle spunk. SiiVh'V'Major J Mining, I have put a wmvI .oK'coiilMnjCc in you as a friend I imv aminiiiratiou ;; and if you are a lfrlinutOi't'ou P?usKel Gales and Sea Vhpbut of their way and havt BRUNER & JAMES, Editors f Proprietors. " A CHECK UPON ALL TOCR Rl'LEKS. Do THIS, AND LlBtRTY IS SAFI." Gen'l. Hurrifon. NEW SERIES, NUMBER 17, OF VOLUME IV. SALISBURY, C TIRgY, AUGUST 26, 1847 Richie himself. hp ketched the should come in tut Mr; As he opened the door Xsound of the tvo!ast words the President Was saying.; : " Mistakes and blunders !" says Mr. Rich ie, says he : jwhatj have you got something more of Scott and I ay lor s blundering iri Mexico ? says the Presi- tve X . I - i i A 1 ioimng niuir; lu-uay 1 - t i f L I -m a - -m v oetir. i was ouy lening Major Uowning how their bfundeb there have came pret- ty near ruinjng tbe country, and how it is u" -i i .: -.1 .i .r i -l fn no i in em inev arp i anw. . i . i. . 1 . . wuuii, i?- rI j n --j r- ; arsoiuieiy necessary to get the statt out miwtfieWK.ng ,e,.ers eternally ; ofbeir. ,mnds sohow ror other before. Vcfcn,atjmJy:administration, all weathers. .Ufc try. t -kiVp 'Kings ever so snug: iiWJJiy nyipUnk eve so deep, they are icrcto'dtg .them!, all Up, lug thin into the hifiWifcflnd blaie em all over the coanlff.' tnfoUnd their picturs, they are W iat!tn)ublesrrie customers an ad raw'fiitoiicvei hatj ; they've come pret Cv ncSP"1 m5' ,uo or three times. i i i ' . jl jOHiHu my ii ityiu, i w.tru jou not At!iick"wii tiUles and Seaton V'i ! t.r ii i , ' OI WHICH UIIUII iiiem, rffJO'k l. UloneJ, you know I am a ; roun(J and do the busi irot into about ;eva;r, .j Rut 1 don'tjiknow as that. ne!d jnake. trie Ijreali: wjtlr Cales andvea- IV . .. i I ..' .11 f ' . I i : j. y e l ot- 'ij-oiu;; :. menus o long, ii id bo kind of;liard for me to ivj; 'em .fuin ; ind t ddn't hardly think they are Vo bad! us you thing lor. ' Thev tnav UpieaiijtQ juo you sp mucti tiurt when they quite finish the job. I'm going now to try one more pjan. Mr. Richie ; but be careful that you don't say any thing about it in the Uriion, and blow it all up. I tried once to sencj Col. Renton on for the same purpose, anil Congress blowed that up. Then I isentfTrist on for the same purpose, and Scott has blowed him up. Now I'm going to; send Major Downing, not as a regular Chaplain,-but as a sort of watch upon them, you know, to work iness up before any Scott ith and and knock up a bargain with him I doti't care what he gives. 1 tie., tact is, iMr. jttichie. tne coun try needs peace, and 111 jhave peace, cost what it will. j j An excellent idea, say? Mr. Richie ; an excellent plan, sir I'm for peace at all hazards, if it is to be found any where in ...t f ri inn ;ii t i iiur mmiiiiiiivi r'.inwi xiv . i i i t - , , i ,,0(,.V knows it. He istnl to go to ffidS: i . V..." . , no1' Taylor, nor hAve anjf thing to.lo.u r ",u".V.'rt . , J 'em, but work his way iinto Mexico, ;u " T Jl ; ?r " I rrn Mfrl.f n n Anna tti wis scrane. vou ve Af .- . . a. - r - ! . ..I t T .; ! , x . 5 . . t .wexico inai is, m we can get noia 01 u lVyr?;rrr " v ' , helbrc Scott or Taylor does. And I think y pui uieiu ititto knov in because they think folks . WlliU MTUIII Ull. ,l I . 1 tlCII- 4 r. S C( jnnkitimeil puts things into .v paper l fulls lli ip k don't do you no goud. TbePreid'elit give it wo or three hard upon hjs cud o( tobacco, and says V Vw MKi'oif, tlrat's too tru it must be Lnfsd ? afnl it Janiipys me beyond all VUcncu. i Uut thru I -have to loigive it pvrcnoow ii oecauhe ir. lucme uon i; Vif it S Th old uehtletiian is always ry (of it, aiid ajwavls willing to take it :k. , Anil tljen lie'sluch a tulf old fel- , !roft2li !the federal sts, I cant have a Vrt to scold at him much about his mis- iirs and hlutiders. . dl, say i I. LoloneJ, being you ve na- lJ ffderallks. Mwaot to kiuw if any ' wp j.miniJtis i really supposeu to he ftny v tiete in tie country ntw-a-V Hff ing isieli awful accounts about in the. Liiitm panef all thtftime, 1 in- rt-J nil 'lie wiry ajong through New ! gUml. u-hece tliey vised to be the thick- j .n1 1 couldn't get track of one ; and n asked the (folks: if there was any ir4lisjis;Hhy wieie,;;in thein quarters, ; ) 41 MJirted atiue iind said they tlidn t uUai! sorti'of Critters they was.1 pUgot to DoUniii'gville I asked on- '..1.1.1.1 JO. t! . . .--J ii iiuvhioui ii. ue saut, in tus youn tilu;re used to be considerable inyot jeri;iboul,but they wasn't thought le 3inrtus, for they never was much vrMightiug. . lJuti he said he guess- Itrva all died out! lonir aro. for he Mtcfcine across onel tiis twenty years. . VUiomei, sas j; how is it they are Ulick ii Mr. Richie's naner all the Afthatpif give me! a very knowing al ol nilooU, and lowered his voice n'Mrnost to a Whisper ; and says he, W. I'jl tell you hoWMhat is. When IVIUIIIO Wilt a VnilMv mmi u lisi-( tn or Downing is just the man for it a prifse, reward, and constantly aroused enthtisi-as(n--bu where then is iBe stock of health which 'should have! been laid up during these years for !a whole life ? Exhausted gone. The franie not half developed, the muscular powers lejeble, the strength infantile, the vital system impaired, the nerves shattered, with what prospects for a wife or a mother does the girl enter upon life4" From the Home Journal. THE SUITORS. ' Wealth sought the bower of Beauty, Dress d like a modern beau ; Just then, Love, Health, and Duty ook up their hats to go. Wealth such a cordial welcome met, As made the others grieve, Sd Duly shunn'd the gay coquette; iiove, pouting, took French leave He did liove, pouting, took French leave. .j. j Old Time, the friend of Duty, true stanch democratic republican; and whatever he doeskvill go for the benefit of tie Admihist ration. Now the country's shins are. aching pretty bad with the war. if! we can fix up fa good smooth peace right off; arid not! let Scott nor Taylor have any hand in it, who knows, Mr. President, but it might make our Admin istration so popular that you and I might both be elected to serve another four years ? Rut when is the Major to start ? Right otf to-night, says the President, or,' rather, in the morning before daylight belore any bodjr in Washington finds out that he has go back from Downing villc I have. forbi his calling at the In telligencer office, and I idon't wan't they should find out or mistrust that he's been here. If they should get wind of the move ment, they would pe sure to throw some constitutional difficulty in the va', and try to make a bad, botch; of the business. The President sjiot mie into his room, and charged ine not to leave the house, w hile he sent for Mr. Buchanan and Mr. Marcy to fixjup my private instructions. AVhile he was gone, Mr, Richie fixed me lip a nice little bundle of private instruc tions too. on his own hook, moddled, he ! said, on the Virginia Resolutions of 9S. Presently the President came back with my budget nil ready, and give me my in- Istructions, arid filled my; pockets with ra tions, and told me how to draw whenever 1 wanted money j and before daylight I ! was oira good piece on the road to the I AVar I m ' '";. I To-day I met a man going on to carry i letters to the Government from Gineral Scott's side of the) war, and I madehim -stop a little whilej to take this letteV to ! you ; for I was afraid you might begin to think 1 was dead. He says Scott isauite FEMALE TRAINING. A correspondent of the New JJfork Conjmer cial Advertiser offers some valuable sugges. tions, pointing out the errors which prevail Sn our system of Female Education, and the treat ment and habits proper to give vigor of cdnsti. lution to those whose health and, happiness are so dear to every family, and so important We extract from the article tbe following passages ; I am not partial to large schools. They merge the eccentricities of individual charac ter too much in the mass. They mould all in tellect too frequently upon one model, j They cramp and restrain and force and blind j. the mind, until it becomes what the shrubbery is said to have been in the garden of Louis iKlV vne grande perfection deV Industrie sitr jVa ture. I have now in my mind's eye a school, containing Ihtleshort of a hundred pupils, where the laws of Draco would be merciful compared with those which are in operation, j The piincipal himself told me that he ' regarded the happiness of girls at school as incompatible with thorough mental training., J have no doubt of his sincerity; for I have never seen a set of girls so miserable as were all wiih whom I conversed in his School. Every emptionWru'eh springs spontaneously in the mind of the pupil; especially if it be of a gladsome nature,! he seems to regard as a tare sown by the enemy, which he and his coadjutors are most diligent, ly to weed out. The life and spirit of 'girlhood is crushed ; its buoyancy and mirthfulneps he believes must arise from a sinful nature and is subdued; its social aflectious but so imjnyj incentives to temptation, and they are para.; lyzed With fear. The culture of the mind is the one great, and prevailing and all absorbing ph.! ject of the institution To this every thing must bend every tew, every custom, every thought, every effort, every energy ofhody and soul ; and to this they do bend those toiling .girls, through the cold days of winter land the long hot hours of summer ; in the morning and in the night, in their rising up and in their Jy. nations are in favor of Gun Cotton, and that, jng down, until the freshness of youth has been ! notwithstanding the serious charges I have to Next call'd to see the fair ; He: laid his hand on Beauty, And left her in despair, Wealth vanish'd ! Last went rosy Health And she was doom'd to prove Thkt those who Duty Blight for Wealth, Can never hope for Love j; ' Ah, no ' ! Can never hope for Love. ; G. P. M. 'roin the bpirit of the Tim, GUN COTTON , ! Mr. Editor: The opinions and expertm. pin,on with reucA: ofscientiHc men upon the subject of Gun Cof.'Vupf !.ior al,',,,d,,s' innn hoc. lto .. koi',. (W ..'ui: "TtVwary of the SI a great vafiety of forms, but as a reportiof the experience of a sportsman, on this head, may be s'oqiet hiing of a novelty, I have concluded to send the (p lowing Results of my own observa tions and i;asoningsi And in order to get rid of the susjlicion of the bias of judgment which is-so comtnon against innovations and the in troduction f new thing?, I would preface my remarks with the assurance that all my incli mass, had entered with much of the powr of a buck shot, and in still further confirmation of this hurtful property, of the colt rin it willle found upon inspection, that almost all the shot thrown by it are jagged and battered into a thousand forms, as though in their expulsion from the barrel they are driven, together and abraded a gainst each other with excessive violence. It has occurred to me that perhaps the cause of !h may be the quickness of the discharge, which of course would have the effect to jam the shot together, this bruising all from the ire menduus pressure causing some of the pellets to cohere. But what is the remedy or expedi. ent T Hie labor est : I have thus above briefly stated 4 my quarrel' with Gun Cotton. No other virion o.ixlitie -The frothing and foaming ni the commonly imputed lo the mad t!o so According to Mr. Youatt. an error frequently takes place i fl cases of c epilepsy or nausea, but in rabies exi a very slight degree. . 1 The dog affected with rabies is ! means always ferocious. This is c the case, but in many instances tl mal suffers and dies with patience quiet. I ' The symptoms however, are too v to be detected by the inexperience I son. To all such tbe best advice is to vent their dogs as far as possible fr : risk of contagion in street fights ai d , rels;.to be very careful of them i; are ill, unless with a plain and well derstood disease ; and particularly t stain fiom the practice of allowii: : dog to lick the hands or face, by v. dirty habit the rabid infection has been conveyed into the sjsteoi The point of greatest importance ever is, what measures to take in c. being bitten by a dog! under sus; circumstances. Fortunately, the pre live course is simple and afe. The rabid poison is of a peculiar n While the virus,of the rattlesnake h through the Whole system in a few utes, and most other poisons product were noticed by me, but I have been informed by a gentleman that while in the act of putting I T.. Pns prouuet the cotton down bis gun with the tod it Mnll short period, the po.sonoi: AaA i ,:..j.u-- .. cipie mirouucca ov tne one oi a tn; iiiuiiavMs-u.n.i.w.iuiiruiiiiKUrClWaj ,. ' . .1 " , . , that tL wad w nut nnon ih .-oiton .nA I's inactive in the wound for, WCCi. were both driven ranidlv throush the barrel to. eve" months, before it becomes at gether, suffice nt heat being evolved by the compression of the air to cause the explosion. m . a. 31uch the safer way is to pnt the cotton home before the introduction of the wad, though il and danger is prevented. no mention this accident as a caution to tbe un wary. i ! .; M ' i : The- result to which I have 'come from the above facts is that Gun Cotton upon its present conditions, cannot be used with the same fit. ness as gun-powder in the shot gun, for the purpose of field sports. I hare adopted this o. ance, on account ot the vastly in many respects, of this new "TtVuary of the sportsman. But at the same tlfne, wve gucij :3 my conclusion. I Mill have doubt that in i short thnn llipse iinnfrfr. into the system and produces its v Consequently if the bitten part be n ; ca immediately, the poison goes v. n TLere are however, two object! ing the knife in this process. ( lost in study, and the character becomes an au tomaton, performing its parr in learning, as the body does in their calisthenies, to the authori tativo command of a master. I j "The end of all this easily seen. Brilliant semi-annual examinations, at which governors and judges .and doctors of divinity sing pslams to the glory ot female education; annual re ports paraded in newspapers before the world in which the great men of the land testify to the 1 freedom from smoke and dirtiness : then too prefer against it, I still think it possesses so ma- pyrotechnies the Gun Cotton is unrivalled" and uy lupnoiiuif s auu superior (piaiuies inai it is one of ihe;prime inducements to niy sending you this article that it may luckily attract the attention of able and more experienced exper imentalists jto this subject. ; The articles in wbte-h Gun Cotten excels are at once perceptible, are also of unquestionable mportancel It. is only necessary to specify its wonders which thorough training can evolve from the female mind ; public addresses, laud ed consecrations, advertised religious; excite ments schedules of distinguished patrons, pic torial views of buildings and grounds and beau- the recoil of the un and the noise of the ex:lo. sion are in a measure done away with ; no tri fling advantages on a hard, hot day's fag. Other superiorities might be readily enumera ted, but these already mentioned would, in my estimation iplace the new discovery far in rank usin the pain and extent of the wound, t!. er is the danger that the knife itself. removing the bitten spot, may carry poison to a deeper place, and lcav": fatal inoculation there. Mr.-Youatt's practice has been to terise the wound 'thoroughly i with caustic. Let this, sharpened to a be applied carefully and thoroughly : ery recess and sinuosity of the v. where the teeth or saliva of the a: could possibly have penetrated. Thi form an eschar, hard, dry, and iiu a compound of the animal fibre ar;u caustic, in which the virus is wrap; ; and from it cannot be separated. . short time dead matter sloughs awn v, the virus is carried off with it. Pre. to applying the caustic, it will ofte:. : i .i experiments have demonstrated its fitness to to enlarge me wounu, Ili.i throw the ball with precision and power. May I 7 P.art ma' be fwrly-got at ; and ; the time be not far off when we can employ it ! , ,rst eschar has sloughed off, it wi to the destruction of the winged game. Reflect, 1 a.dv,sable, to apply the ; caustic a ire Mr. Editor, how much would be aded to the t,me lo destroy any part that may pleasure of the hunt ; no noise ; no recoil ; no have received the full benefit of the : filth ! Why the very birds, themselves, in the operation, or that may possibly have 1 midst of their dying agonies, would experience ! inoculated more byr it. . i . a sort of joy at the thought that they were slain I This carefully done,; the patient ; in so genteel a way. I1. . j leel perlectly sate. I he poisonwill I been removed, and no danger can rei Mr. louatt himself has been repeal . a i lions Will Ue removed, nnd when !hn triall hnr,. pen in the estimation of the men of ihe gun, this valuable improvement will be second only to the invention of the percussion cap, and iii order to accelerate this occurrence 1 do trust the sporting world will give some attention to this subject, for it is only by an accumulation of results of vaiied experiments that the de sired end is to be attained. There is no doubt that already for the purposes of blasting and tiful scenery around cannot forever blind the parents of the risins generation to the tor- rible evils of such a system of education. Rre the deficiencies which more than Learning indeed attained, hrtlliant scholars nre balance such preeminent advantages Tkkntox, August 9th, 1S17. dVotc bu the. Editor. We insert the above clear article with great pleasure, as it is evi- ! bitten by rabid dogs, and other vcfcrir dently written by a person who writes under- 1 surgeons also, but after pursuing UI i i i.i . . . i . i n i .t .. above its great rival, gun powder. What then fiai 0,nS'.' a"u recuroa ,,,e opmu.ns lo wn.cn ; yuu, nuuc recu xunenueu, iney : I Counter- onnni uii mo sutriiiii ui r i t:rillieili S. irii rnuicij sruuir a tUllllUCIICC JU s ? As I That these opinions are the fair deductions from i by the event, as well as by "expend .,nMh,;;itw WpoJ.iaiA K.,t (,, .Ul,mL if have found them, fhev are. briefly, as follows: u,e experiments, we are not prepareu to stale. . . . . . . . . . . . I I'l C . . . . I . I C ...1" I 1 war or sportin of Mexico, but Mr. Tnst is disposed to wait and see if he can't make a bargain! 1.4 ll.l II I t J . . : Iheaerallst;, and took a good deal Wril ab1 . Tt 1 rfst. business,; and lltridWtU Ji .i. .1... wants to push right on and take the city a .. i .i " . rkl aviAii hut f I n I net is ilicnncnH ft tnt'S OrhlS VriMtli nil cnmlniiimi lfil.- ltO hi Im'nwl !...v.l I... O alV'iUur Uot., .... v w ta Annas men. l shai pushta I,.! : I .1 . : Inner nc tact nc I tan nl trot mtrt lha niHr tnes the. way with old people. t. . ; e. - vjr . . I -. - 'I n,' VlpYIKn it nnccihla hulnlia VAntt tinner fst used to have the name of a "i f',"-" -y"lt MfieWr: 1 riiv lii .v,o mm.l 1 n once get hold of banta An- g V TT 1 (fc llllll II V ' XsWIIIIII.SVV tlllU UI i , i..w .i .. i . i i . i r ... i .. na, i nave no uoupt l shall maKe a trade. , ' I dun t L tin w vpt uihoilm. I oKnll ..l- city of Mexico ; it on the news; I get three times,when Ministration. ! U lt6 ;'l Wt kno w!n v man. No mat- Lr,rrccs Was gathe ring to o verth raw fSaiihts'jration, Mir.i Richie somehow l"UOZtfl.J.f ' . . .... i., tired at! me. the din't seem to -itj uo when 1 called to him to fire beiNvould rouse tip and touch off a, I 'M' Ayhen they lire crackers on the 4,uiyj and did about as much exc- 0.1 . At hint I fniM nut n ivav tk-.f Wike theld veteran fight like ti tflntul linl.l J i ..ii i i. I -iix uum ijii kh n iiiiiuwirr ii a t'ving;him a notion at any time that 'as lighting Withf federalists. ; Since fWeuhat discovery he's been more te!j AVhcncver.l see the enemy inching himself around m. nn,l KriUo-. l; 0Hihattcnt-s to firei'tnto my admin- foot, and a Ii ttJV !W nilVe w do is to whisper in outside of tli r-wclne d ear and say, M r. Richie, the mclli of! federalism ; you may depend iJlVereis; federalists nbroad some- ii c i Yin a minute vouVe ho idea with old gelutleman flies round. the character which oughl to have been mould- ! . I he first important defect which I noticed in ed during the years of study? What of the ; the cotton was its want of power. What 1 mean social affections which should have been de- by this is that I could not obtain in my gun suf. veloped, and cultivated, and trained for Ihe hap- 1 ticient pow'pr to throw the shot with the force piness of others ; what of the heart, whith the of common powder. This is owing to the fact Stream which is to flow from it, beautifying aiid that only a pertain quantity of the cotton will ex gladdening home ; what of self respeetland self ' pkde in tK gun, so that any excess beyond that reliance, and above all, of self.thought, so ne ,s projected in its unconsumed state. In my cessary to the future mother of the family ; nay, first experiments I usctTthe cotion manulactur What of the health the foundation of all use- ed in Massachusetts, but this ai tide is altogeth fulness in life if it is to be sacrificed in the : er a 44 Yankee notion," tit only to sell. Afier f iot set. or. if not saerineenL made at all times wards 1 wias provided with the fabric of the subordinate to the one great purpose! of-edu- Messrs. -Ije n nig, of Philadelphia, which I found qating the mind ? ! ..- i vastly superior, and with this, in a great number ! " Nd one who has been abroad can fail to of trials, I found the strength of a load i.e. as hotiee the physical feebleness of American wo- large a mass of it as could be converted to go hien in the higher classes, in comparison with the'; in my gun, was, when common powder, as two women of England or the continent. (With e- is to. three. It may be well to add that on oual intellect. sDriuhliness and health lin child, these occasions I used a gun of fifteen bore, I hood and early youth, and w ith more lof beau- a"d my criterion of the force each discharge practjce nas Deen among tbe c 1 tv at the very time when the health should he was by ascertaining how many leaves of paper .. ' . amonfr "horses most firmi the intellect biihtest, and beauty in 'he shot perforated n . I . I. . I ' . r I i vnriiilir iC tvintltjtrl 1 i'i iinuliliA tn ni'iLa iYif ' . ' . ... i " .. i. uj:,i.....,u we are considering me ooserver remaiKs tne .-vmerican women lo , tunmicunciiiuicpun uwuiuiuumuiui, have failed. An intelligent physician1 said the ' and do not now consider this difficulty insur other day that every fourth woman kept her '; perable, fur ihe expedient at once suggested it good health till she was forty ; every foUr hiiii- self of such a construction of the gun that ihe dredth woman her good looks. Without insis- fire of the tap will be driven into the centre of ting upon the truth of so broad an assertion, the 'be charge so that an explosion of a large quan- fact is universally admitted that American wo- Wy ot thejeotton. will take place. L pon tins plan, 1 am! intormed that, a gun is being made tried on inferior animals. The advice, given not byjquacb indeed, it is the judgment of a gotxl sportsman to whom the above has been subjected, and by practitioners of skill and experi who has promised us a answer to it, that our an(J foumej as wi be'cknowledgr . . friend M. is in error, and that gun Cotton ... Ms ; reasonahe groUnds. is worthy to be t v 11 11 i and remembered bv nil. as rointinL' HYDI'OPIIOBIA. This singular disease is in the minds of most persons invested with so much ob scurity and dread, and its prevention or cure so ill understood, that we are con vinced that we are doing the public ser vice in publishing the only reliable infor mation on the subject we have met with. It is taken from Mr. Youatt's work on The Dog, a book of excellent .authority by a celebrated veterinary surgeon, whose canine fam- i I q? miinti oc nmnnff li t r1 nilfl VVnn Although I reported to a , J . . , . A:nr.n nas n;tu inucii f xpci iciitc uu uiu ui.ui. 1.. - . l.. .i.i -in....; Lii 0 , ,i -4 . t r - . men uccouib premauiteiy oiu. .Allowing ail bcott s roadjor laylorsj road to go to-the; that is said about the influence of climate, diet Will depend a little un- on tfie Way. Two or 1 1 have been stopping to rest, I ha'ye beeti looking over my pri. vate instructions. They are fust rate, es pecially Mr Richie's -v.- - I remain jour old friend, and the Presi dent's private. Embasseder, MAJOR JACK DOWNING ,r0 vVfhaling Guns. We saw yesterday, at the store1. of Capt. E. W. Gardner, a very curious contriyance for killing w hales. It is a short' gun, weighing some twenty Uvej poundsthe stock being of solid brass from which a harpoon is to be fired into the animal. ;: The handle of the harpoon ) goes into the; barrel of the gun, about a. ne is fastened to it of course the gun I- by which the whale is to be held. - . There is also a bomb lance, for the pur pose of killirig the! animal. The instru-j ment is loaded with powder, and a slow m.iteb iv ' ft nir. ihti maora7.ine" through tts; his heaviest Mms nnd sets bi ilio i...m,ii.. ti.u in. I -Ki,-I fw. int it. WKjy ir ,-par. His shots! fly gun. Whed the lance is fired, in about KrP :urt anifometimes knock down half it miiiutb the fire reaches the powder in the heail of the instrument, which in stantly explodes, k Ming the animal outT right.- 'At le;ast th s is what the article is intended to do. . The wholt apparatus is certainly very ingenious ; - ijvh'ether or not it is really an improvement Qti tHe present mode of kill ing whales, is more than we are able to saw That is a Question which : must De settled by the whalemen themselves. I-: 1 c Ji.i uress, eany cares, eve, in prooucing tnis mere is still much wanting much that is unsolved, in bringing about so universal and disastrous a result. I believe this will be found; to be an injudicous early education, and in this almost alone. The childhood of English and French women is spent in play. Their girlhood is physical and menial exercise combined, the former always taking the precedence, and al ways insisted upon even if it be to ! the entire neglect of the other. ! "The English girl spends more! than one- half 01' her waking hours in physical amuse ments, which tend to develop, and invigorate ; and ripen the bodily powers. She rides, walks, drives, rows upon the water, runs, dances, plays, swings, jumps the rope, throws the ball, hurls the quoit, draws the bow, keeps up the shuttle cock, and all this without having it forever im pressed upon her mind that she fis thereby! in Philadelphia, so that we will soon hear the result of tle experiment. This the first partic ular in which I find fault with this new aid of ihe sportsman, but if this wwe its only failing I make no question, but in the course of a lew years pow. der would be placed among ihe " things that have beeii." Unfortunately I find other vices which appear tome more difficult of cure. I come now to my second objection to Gun Cotton. It is this: It has a tendency to throw the W in masses. This result is sur prising, but nevertheless indubitable. I do not mean to say that this phenomenon is noticable in all cases but it will be found to exist very ; often. It is in vain for the sceptical to suppose ! thau'lhis peculiarity may have been the fault of the gun; for this, lo a viriety, is not the fact, for the fowling piece employed by me in my experiments was one which has been used by me constantly for several years, and 1 have nev. er known it to exhibit any disposition to ball Hydrophobia, or Rabies as Mr. Youatt calls it, appears to be a species of inflam matory disease in the dog, affecting chiefly the mouth, throat and stomach. Its pri mitive origin unknown, it now appears to arise, from contagion, communicated by the bite of a diseased animal, by his lick in, or any means by which the froth or spume of "his mouth may come in contact with wounds, scratches, or other places not protected by a sound skin. Its symptoms in the dog are various. He appears often to be laboring under a certain preventive for one of the I dreaded diseases to which human!; liable. ! ? With regard to dogB 'which have. ! bitten by rabid animals, Mr.jYouati' vice is in all cases to destroy the rn. I the concealment which! the hair nil!: the skin of the dog, there can" rsv certainty that there may not. i.lu 1 greatest care, remain ' another . 1 !: scratch w hich has not been perceivi ! treated, and the life of the animal i. worth the risk attending it. ,: With man himself, this difficulty it. king sure of the extent of the injury dently does exist. : j; We may mention in concluding, tl. persons bitten by a rabid dog; even v. out medical treatment, but a small portion are likrly to be infected. J Hunter mentions a case, where of t i persons bitten.'only one suffurcj froru malady. Probably four-fifths of the sons injured, escape without ill c quences,- a fact which explains th parent success in some cases of mpir remedies administered in ignorance. Second Presbyterian t'hurcli. We took advantage of an hour's a species of insanity, exceedingly restless, sure, on Monday evening, to. visit th; i l II !.L L. ;.. . l...'lti.l. nl llAn ...... ?H rtl 9nnmtrts 4 in1 Otten IOllOWing Willi nib tc mu.iiiiii. ui iutr, uuw in rau .iUgitoj, in imaginary ob"iects,his countenance chang- , with the Uev. Mr. Hoge, who we . p. . J J . . t ....ii i - ...i . t 'l.ni wasting her time. Shs does this every day,' the shot, and if any person is desirous of testing . . . . ... ... . ! . t i.i . , i J yM,e W kill or beat off the f'I'l HiAi eVs $f. ministration so per "i HJiV!1 H mokc that the Vn, j Uall. tKi4lirne where to kej!?eVhUeMr.Ilichieisa fire ml. to m? admtnUf ?t!ail ft Mistakes and blunders. ' mu ine ilnAii . I i . i i mv until it becomes a habit, which she! will follow up through life. Her frame, as a necessary consequence, is larger, her muscularsystem bet. ter developed, her strength more enduring, and the whole tone of her mind healthier. She may not know as much at the age of seventeen as does the American girl; -as a general thing she does not, but the growth of her intellect has been stimulated by no hot. house culture, and though maturity comes later, jit will last proportionally longer. Eight hours each day of mental application, for girls between the ages of ten and nineteen years, oi ten hours each day, as is required at the school of which 1 have spoKen, wnn; two uours iur j meats, o? for religious duties, and the remainder for sleep Ing and physical exercise, are enough to break down the strongest constitution, . j'. J j Stimuli may enable the physical energtei to supdIv whatis needed until the f end of the course the t timuli i of competitiori, ambition, the cotton in this respect, let him put up a load of shot irf catridge form, t. e. in an envelope of strong paper and fire it from his gun. Now I have, that record of these cat ridges with powder restoring to every expedient my engeiiuity could suggest to make the shot fly closely, and pre venra scatter, and in no instance could I per ceive any differnce from the results of an ordi. nary load!, while with the cotton in an avarage twice out! of three limes my gun charged with cratridge projected the shot like a bullet through an inch-and-a-quarter board at a distance of twenty.fiye yards. Of course it is to be under stood that nothing like this, as a general; thing, occurs when the load with the cotton is in the common1 mode, with loose shot, though even un der these; conditions in one case such was ed with sometimes a vacant expression, at other times one of terror, and the eyes unusually bright and dazzling. A de praved appetite is a frequent symptom. The dog refuses his usual food, often with an evident expression of disgust; and sometimes after seizing and partly chew-. ing it, drops it, from palsy ot the organs of mastication. In this last symptom im plicit confidence may be placed, the an imal in which it appears is decidedly ra bid. He often devours all sorts of filth. The saliva becomes viscid," glutinous, and adhesive, clings to the throat and corners of the mouth, and the dog attempts todis. lodge it with his paws. To.thissucceeds ah insatiable thirst. The dog that retains power over his jaws continues to lap, while the animal whose jaw and tongue are paralysed, plunges his muzzle into the will be its pastor, when it sliall have ! completed. We were highly grail with what we saw, and though we' ignorant even of ihe technical phrn Architecture, it requires neither b ar fingers' nor wise hands,' nor as erupt; measurement of beauty by the plum!; and tape-string, to arrive at the cu sion, that when it shall have lieen t pleted. its effect will be j highly str. whether viewed within or without. It is purely gothic, without ajiy ; ture whatever of anv thin? foreign to style, chasteness of design 'having 1 scrupulously followed throughout. I ; act dimensions we do not kjiow, bi.t learn that it will accommodate eight dred persons with ease. l:sj walls a massive thickness and strength. A u nn -tern front, is to rise in the 1 water up tahis eyes, to get water into of 112 feet from the ground, an I t - . ; 1 U . (1 I-.l I,.. fmir tiinnnrlffS. I ninnr - the drv a inuamea jaws u mruai. 11 v i. e T a r ,ui ,t;oac hoinrv ul. 1 dwiirned for each of the lour corn lience lilcau;UI tma '"b - - i tit i Mays characterised bv dread of water in the main edifice, and theAvJioWj l.u.l the do', it u marked by a Uiirst perfectly externally, is to be painted of a sto: unauenchable. Though in cases of hydro- lor. i ne w inooNs.xor, hci mv u.n-! bAhia in th human subiect. there is of- finished in tne uomic siy e.ktiiai is t was the 1 . - lirolAf M, - .,it states havinir the panes and the wood into v ect, but in almost every experiment which I f" . . . , lhpy Rre inserted cut into tbe arclt kara mnta uMth i bo nnitiin 1 rMroi vort th that in me raoio uog mere is no w i . j m...w ovm uiau I . . i- .-j.. . ,i:m.,it ;n uh low- , cu inr 10 lunt oruer me a scalier was. irregular, and in places some of anct iu - . - , strenath which the buildili' IU lilg IUVIU WIIV vhi " - j ..II the pelle s, welded or bared together in a solid p pea rat in its in II !i ! ! 1 I' s