TERMS OF THE GLOBE. Per annum in advance fix months Three months A failure to notify a diBeontinnance at the expiration of the terns fittlideribed fur will be con,idered a new engage ment. • - • ' TERMS OF ADVERTISiNO, I insc•rtion. 2 In. :; an. Four lines.or less, $ 25 37 1 A ...... $ 50 One square; (12 lines,) ' 50 75 100 Two" squares, 1 00 1 50 2 00 Three.squares, 1 00 2 2; 3 00 Over three week and' less than three months, 25 cents per square for each insertion. 3 months. 6 months. 12 months. .$l. 50 43 00 $5 00 3 00 5 00 7 00 5 00 8 00 10 00 7 00 10 00 ..J5 00 . 9 00 13 00 2O 00 ,12 00 10 00 24 00 20 00 30 00 50 00 Six lines or less, Ono square, Two squares, Three squares,... Four squares,.... Ilalf a column,.. One column, Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines one year, 4:3 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, Advertisements not marked with the number of..inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and ebatged ae ,•erding to these terms. O_Nigin3ll. Vtitttp:. 'Written for The Globe TILE BLIND GIRL. 331 B*l"ti The wide, Wide world is dark to me, The cheering sun is gone; • The moon that once shone pleasantly, And through the clouds ran on, No longer cheers my gloomy path, Nor beams of pity sends. The twinkling stars—a mighty train, That crown the azure vault, From Vesper comes, till Venus wanes, Have left me in this world of night; No more, to me, they'll e'er be bright, For I, alasl am blind. The rainbow on the purple clouds, Penciled by more than mortal skill, Her glowing hues, a mist enshrouds; The mowing brooks, the laughing rill, The playful lambkins on the hill Have channs for me no longer now, For I, alas, ant blind. They say the flowers are blooming now. The flowers I loved so well; They say the Moss and Lily grow, In the wild wood, and the dell. I love those flowers, for oh I they tell, Of loved ones now no more. 0! lead nu) to my mother's grave, That mother once so dear, Thi God hat!' taken, God who gave So, though this world be dark and drear, My eyes be sealed for ever here, They'll open soon in Heaven. Sad amtilejected, here 'I roam, I have no friendg, I have no home, My noble sire in battle died; And Willie, once our dither's pride, They buried in the deep, blue sea, And left me here to mourn. Oh! brother, father, mother dear. Look on me in my WOO; _From yon bright world, so fair and clear, And tell me now, before 5 go, That which I long so much to know, Are any blind in ILearen ? An angel Nvhispered, as she slept, Coate, sister, come, thy toil is o'er, Thy prayer.; arc heard, thou oft Last wept Now xvelrome to the sacred shore. Where friends are waiting safely o'er The cold and stormy sea. Beneath a willow's spreading bows They laid the gentle dead: And o'er the tomb, the frag'lt'ilt rose. 131001115 Iwnaing, o'er her limiii is head, And whilst the sacred earth we tread, The blind girl sees, in Heaven Written fir IThe Globe 'rum JUVENILE PIC N/C. MIME See the beaming - , smiling faces, As they gaily march along,— ec their arttes-, pleasing graces, Hear the music of their song. Little prattlers, tiny elve , ;-- Sparkling eyes, merry fAVeS, nappy,,happy, in theniselves. Move along With sprightly paces Buoyant steps, lovely ginner's, Beaming forth from every eye, Nimble tip-toe, quickened prancts As the distant grove they spy. Hark ! what sounds it I*(` these. Coming from the distant As earth note, earl' stanza flows, 'Pi the rippling, gliding, rill, See the flAive-board surrounded, Hear, the tinkling bell call lbrtia, tr.,rder, in each note is sounded— Mark : the beaming, modest worth Lang-promised, sure reward, Fur the ntudions days a.). hon., They have spent in lessons hard, Amid the guns of rrasaning power, litlistrlianeolls ClO PlifiCat. THE GERMANS OF PENNSYLVA NIA. BY THE REV. E. W. 11171" PER So deeply is the State of Pennsylvania in debted for her pfosperity to the GERMAN por tion of her citizens, that we feel that an arti cle devoted to them will not he out of place in this meridian, where they comprise so large a part of the population. The German character once employed the pen of the learn ed and enlightened Tacitus, one of the first historians of antiquity. They evidently in herit all the virtues ascribed by this author to their ancestors, with few of their vices, which Christianity . has in a great measure banished from among them. These ances tors migrated chiefly from the Palatinate, from Alsace, Swabia, Saxony, and Switzer land, with an admixture of natives of every principality and dukedom. in. Germany.— When we reflect, at this day, that the stock of most of these bold pioneers in the settle ment of Pennsylvania, consisted only of a few pieces of gold or silver coin, a chest of clothing, a Bible, and a Psalter, and that now their descendants are scattered nearly over the whole West, and own the most im mense possessions, we are forcibly struck with the miraculous changes wrought in the.pro gress of time by an Overruling and Divine liand. Hit were possible to. determine the • relative proportions of these sums, the con trast would form such a monument of hu man INDUSTRY and ECONOMY as has seldom been witnessed in any age or country on the face of the earth. The principal • part of the Germans of Pennsylvania are Farmers—hardy and in dustrious tillers of the soil—the most noble of all the secular occupations whichcan engage the attention of man. More skitrul cultiva tors of the earth, too, we hazard nothingin saying, can be found nowhere in this 'coun try, or any other, between the rising and the petting of the sun. The Germans set a great value upon patri monial property, This useful principle in human nature prevents much .folly and vice in young people. It moreover lends to last jug and extensive advantages in the improve ment of a farm ; for • what , inducement can .be stronger in a parent to plant an orchard, -to preserve forest trees, or to build a commo dious and durable house, than the idea, that - they will be possessed by a succession of gen erations, who shall inherit his blood and name? What strikes a traveller through our Ger man counties most forcibly, is their mam moth barns, called in their own language ,Schweitzer Sauter. Indeed, it is their invari able custom, in settling a new tract of land, EMI WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL. XII, OE first to provide large and suitable accommo dations for their horses and cattle, before they expend much money in building a house for themselves. No feature in their charact er speaks so loudly in behalf of their human ity, as this willingness to suffer discomfort themselves, rather than impose it on the dumb and uncomplaining beasts. They be lieve with king Solomon, that "a righteous man regardeth the life of his beast." But from - this let it not be inferred, that their dwellings are deficient in the comforts of life. The reverse is true. No class, so emphatical ly as they, live '"on the fat of the land,"—and nome boasts of so many and such substantial domestic enjoyments. Another fact, which never fails to rivet the attention of a stranger, is the extraordinary size and strength of their horses. A German horse is known in every part of the State.— Ile seems to "feel with las lord" the pleasure and pride of good and bountiful living. It is a well-established fact, that the German .hor ses of Pennsylvania perform double the amount of labor of the New England or Southern breed, from the fact that they are more plentifully fed. For the same reason, their cows yield double the quantity of milk, and of a quality vastly superior. In a word a German farm can be distin guished from the f:rins of the other citizens, by the superior size of their barns—the plain but compact construction of their dwellings —the height of their enclosures—the extent of their orchards—the fertility of their fields —the luxuriance of their meadows—the gi ant strength of their cattle—and by a gener al appearance of plenty and prosperity in all that belongs to them. The favorable influence of Agriculture, as conducted by the Germans, in extending hu man happiness, is manifested by the joy they express upon the birth of a child. No dread of poverty, nor distrust of Providence from an increasing family, depress the spirits . 9S these industrious and frugal people. Upon the birth of a son, they exult in the gift of a ploughman or a wagoner; and upon the birth -of a daughter, they rejoice in the addition of a spinster or milk-maid, to their family.— happy state of human society ! What blessing can Civilization confer; that can .atone fur the, ancient and patriarchal pleas ure of raising up a numerous and healthy family of children to labor for their parents, fOr themselves, and - fur their country ; and finally to partake of, the knowledge and happiness which are annexed to existence, both inthe life that now is, and in that which is to come. The joy of parei&; upon the birth of a child, is the grateful echo of creating goodness. May the hills and val leys of Pennsylvania be forever vocal with songs of joy upon these occasions ! They are the infallible signs of comparative inno cence, absolute industry, wealth, and happi ness in the State. AC.lbr.3ll \, The German Mechanic, too, is a most use ful and enterprising citizen, possessing all the traits of character in common with the Farmer. His first ambition, on starting into life is to become a Freeholder, so as not to in a rented house—and the highest tem poral delight he can enjoy springs from his ability to declare : "This house is vell own." Admirable equality that, which renders him afraid of Debt, that prolific source of Misery, and Want, and Crime ! "The borrower is servent to the lender." "Owe no man any thing, except to love him." But the genius of the Germans of Penn sylvania is not confined to Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts. Many of them have ac quired great wealth, too, by foreign and do mestic commerce. But another fact which speaks louder in their praise, than any other, is this, that they are particularly attentive to the religious ed ucation of their children, and to the estab lishment and support of the Christian Reli gion. For this purpose they make the exec- tion of a School House and a Place of Wor ship thefirst objects of their care. But they do not stop here. They take great pains to introduce in their offspring, not only habits of labor, but a lore of. it. In this they submit to the irreversible sen tence pronounced upon man, in such a man ner as to convert, the wrath of Heaven into private and public happiness. "To FEAR GOD AND TO LOVE WORK" are thefirst lessons they teach to their children. • As members of Civil Government, too, the Germans are, in the mose exalted sense, pa triotic and useful. Strongly attached to the principles of our free institutions, and con tributing largely to the public revenue, they constitute the "bone and sinew" of the State. Many of them have become ethinent in the Science of Government, and they have fur nished some of our most distinguished States men, who have served in the highest Execu tory and Legislative offices. We will be con tent with reference, to a single illustrious ex ample, the revered Simom. SNYDER, whose name has become the very synonyme of ster ling sense, unflinching honesty, and far see ing sagacity—and whose administration of the Chief Magistracy of Pennsylvania, for a period of nine years, is referred to, at the present day, by men of all parties, as a very model of good government. The Germans of Pennsylvania, to their credit be it spoken, never besiege the Gov ernment for favors in their domestic pursuits. They are never known to crowd the ligisla tire halls clamorous for special . privileges, and rely for wealth and prosperity, not on Acts of Assembly, but on their own daily toil , and industry. They are, .perhaps, the only class of people who practically regard government, its objects and its functions, in their true light. All that they desire. from Government is to be let alone. As neighbors, they arc extremely kind, and friendly. They frequently.. assist each other by loans of money for a short time, without interest. But, to secure their confi dence, it is necessary to be punctual, as they never lend money a second time to one who has once violated his obligation. We have heard it remarked, that during the War of In dependence there were very few instances of any of them discharging a bond or a debt, in depreciated paper money These are some of the traits of character n ,,... : 7.,;:::::. .,... „.... .: ,:: .4 . 7:-...., ; ' ~ ..e l';' - i.,',.. 1' ) .. '..,..i'', 't,: : .. r..., ~.., ~.....:.,: ..2,..5.:: v- ',:g .. '-.:.:,,5 ~., . . . . ..---'. . which have raised the Germans of Pennsyl vania to a degree of moral and political ele vation surpassed by no other race of men in the world. From this proud spectacle we may learn to prize knowledge and industry in Agriculture, coupled with a due obser vance of Christian duty, as the basis both of domestic happiness and national prosperity. A young phisician, who, after having -re ceived his diploma from one of our Medical Colleges, finding that there was no chance of gaining a livelihood by the practice of his profession in the place of his nativity, conclu ded to pack up his tools and emigrate to the Land of Gold on the Pacific. Herehe found no better encouragement in the practice of medicine, for which he had been duly pre pared, and licensed. As a last resort, lie turned miner, and exchanged the scalpel for the pick-axe. In a recent letter to a friend at home, he embodies a sort of valedictory sermon to his last pursuit, which is well worth perusal. We copy it for the edifica tion of our readers : ' "Why will ye dig ?" Sons of man for the I light of whose presence my spirit yearneth and my bowels grumbleth, dost thou ask me why? Is it not written that fortune smiles upon fools ? And for the sake of these smiles, hath not thy servant been making a fool, yea, an ass of himself, in vain? For five years and ten days he has sojourned in this place—he has dived into the water—he has torn ancient rocks from their resting place, and removed them afar off—he has likewise torn his breeches in parts not to be spoken of!—he has rooted into the mud like unto a swine. Ills beard hath grown long —the skin upon his hands and face hath changed its color until he is now likened un to a wild beast, and his garments arc rent and soiled, so that "sackcloth and ashes" would be as line as linen and purple to him. He would fain feed on husks, but there are none. Yes, he who in times past was wont to fare sumptuously, and to grumble over great er delicacies than were piled upon the table of Dives, now snuffs with gladness, the fra grance of pork and beans, and gnashes his teeth impatiently over a frying slapj ack. lle bolted a raw onion with unspeakable avidity. Potato skins fear his presence, beef vanish es from before him, and dogs look in vain for the bones., Me sighs for the flesh pots of ill Egypt, and mourns over the barrenness of the land. In his sleep, nevertheleSs, the good angel of the past deigns to visit him, and delightful visions are opened to his recol lection, for a delicious - "bill of fare" floats before the mind of the dreamer, and he or ders "oysters and terrapins for six," only to awaken to his infernal slapjacks and molas ses.' All this bath thy servant endured. Is he not then a fool, an abomination in the sight of wisdom ? And is it not unto such only, that fortune dispenses her favors ? Yet she bath deserted me. I approach her and she fieeth ! I "double on her trail," and she tur neth away ! I await her coming and she stands still ! I secrete myself in her path, and seize her unawares! But she ghdetli off, as though I had' caught a hog by his greased tail! Sic transit, I exclaim, and with a sick heart I revile poverty and curse fortune.' Lo! are not these evils? And wherefore should they be visited upon thy servant?— Surely he bath not sinned as other men sin neth. He bath not coveted his neighbor's ox, nor his ass, nor his man-servant nor his maid-servant—for be it known unto thee, that there are no maid-servants here. lle has abided by the "Law and the Prophets," but the profits have not abided by him! Nov, therefore, I renounce these diggings —I absquatulate the premises—"l vamose the ranch"—l take off—l put out—l go 7-1 slope = l depart without scrip or provender, taking no heed for the morrow, for the mor row takes no care of me. Ere five days shall have passed, the shirt-tail of thy servant will be waving in the breeze of the Nevada. A remnant of it will be nailed upon the high est mountain that he crosses, an emblem of the extremity to which a man may be redu ced in the land of Ophir. Yet think not, oh! Elisha, that I would rend my garment for this alone. Verily, I say unto thee, an evil genius bath long pursued me. She hath fol lowed so close upon my footsteps that every thread and fibre of my shirt-tail are familiar to her eye. And if, in her pursuit of me, she should gaze upon this relic in the solitary fastness of the mountain she will at once re cognize it, and believe Inc to have been torn and destroyed by a wild beast, she will re trace her steps, and thus I will escape her. I go hence, Elisha, unto the town of Sono ra., where it has been prophesied that thy servant will heal the sick, and prosper with amazing prosperity. As Moses reared the serpent in the• wilderness, for the children of Israel to look upon and lie cured of their in firmities, so will I elevate my tin among the Gentiles, that they may gaze upon it and be made whole. Their offerings of gold and sil ver will be acceptable unto me ; and if they live not afterwards, peradventure they may find treasures in Heaven. THIS 1VI),I. DO.—Marshal, spare that dog, touch not a single hair; he worries many a hog front out his muddy lair. Oh ! when he was•a pup, so frisky and so plump, he lap ped his milk from a cup, when hungry—at a jump,* •,And then his funny tricks, so funny in their place, so full of canine licks, upon your hands and face. You will surely let him live ! 0 ! do not kill him—dead ; he wags his narrative and prays for life—not lead. , Go get the muzzle now, and put upon his mouth and stop that bow-bow-bow! and tendency to drought. lie is our children's pet, companion of their joy ; you will not kill him yet, and thus their hopes destroy. No, Marshall, spare that pup, touch not *a single hair '• 0 ! put your pistol up and go away from there.—Bqralo llepbliucan„ XIS-, l —lt is stated that coffee can be success fully cultivated in the south part of Califor nia, and that it will eventually become au article of export from. that State. HUNTINGDON, PAR, JULY 9, 1856. •A Miner's Sermon -PERSEVERE.- "Americans Must Rule America." In a former article, under the above cap tion, we endeavored to show how the Know- Nothing faction had misled and stultified the public mind, by the adoption of the specious motto, as their line of action, that "Ameri cans must rule America ;" and, per con sequence, that none but native born citizens should hold office. We now propose a few reflections upon the manner in which their doctrines were - carried out—the outrages that were perpetrated under the mask of an affected and intense Americanism—and the infamies that finally brought down upon the whole vile concern the indignant scorn and reprobation of every right-minded man in the country. We believe that Know-Nothing-ism, with all its various adjuncts and instincts, had its origin in a deadly and malignant hatred of the Democratic party. When it first exhibit ed its hideous crest, the Democracy were in the ascendant in almost every State of the Union. It had just before issued from a na tional contest in which it had achieved a most signal and overwhelming triumph. Th.e people, with almost unparalleled una nimity, had endorsed both the domestic and foreign policy which it had. inaugurated and established, and there seemed nowhere a dis position to disturb, but rather to acquiesce in the adjustment of the before disputed questions which had formed the basis of par tizan antagonism and of strife. The Whig party, even by its most renowned advocates and champions, was admitted to be dead and buried, and the policy which it had for years persistently strove to fasten upon the government, was regarded as an obsolete idea—a thinc , of the past, beyond all hope of resurrection. The victorious Democracy had possession of the whole peliticalfield—itsstar was in the as cendant everywhere and it promised to have un disputed sway, and to ensure the traminility of the country, for long years to come. But an Unseen enemy was on its track, plotting and scheming, and devising means for its over throw. How was this herculean Lask to be ac complished.? Where was the brain, fertile enough in expedients, .or the heart black enough in malignity, to attempt its execu tion? But in some depraved mind it was concocted. Native Americanism was signifi cant and suggestive. It was seen that this organization, built upon proscription of for eign-born citizens and hostility to the Cath olic religion, had been successful in certain localities—had triumphed over a Democracy that resisted and repelled its narrow and selfish creed—and, in a moment, the worst of the opposition leaders, sought to widen its influence, to try its strength upon a broader field, and to array the Protestant mind of the country against the Democratic party— to arouse the most dangerous projudices that could afflict the land—to set class against class, and religion against religion, even at the risk of a bloody internecine war. When this monster had taken shape and form, un der the auspices of that seeresy, and of those oaths and obligations that made it so formid able, and banded its confederates to: , ' et I w-N it was christened Knoothingism. When -we look back and contemplate the atrocities that stained its career, and the mischief it wrought, we involuntarily exclaim: -"Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer cloud, Without our special wonder?" When it arose, it seemed as though anoth er Pandora's box had been opened. to scatter its evils and to shower its plagues upon a doomed community. In the name of patriot ism, it dealt the most deadly blows against personal and political liberty. In the name of Religion, and under the pretence of doing God service, it roasted men and women in the flames of their own dwellings, and laughed and shouted amid the dreadful sat urnalia of blood and carnage. It invoked the ruffian hand to shed innocent blood, and applauded and commemorated the deed. It' apotheosized professional bullies, and wrapped the sacred folds of the American flag around the bodies of those who had met a violent death in violating the laws, and whose lives, like that of the Ishmaelite, had been a constant warfare against society. Had the Democratic party not met and overthrown this monster, what now untold and unknown evils might have been in store for the country! It is true that honorable, patriotic and law-abiding men of all parties,. turned away from it with loathing and con tempt; but it was left to the Democratic par ty to grapple with it single-handed, and strangle it to death. It is gradually disap pearing from the'face of the land ;-its death moans are growing 'hinter and fainter, and when we know that not a vestige of it is left, we shall feel as though sonic fearful and overshadowing nightmare had been dispelled from the broad breast of the country.—Run sylvanian. rta., The American. Register, the Know- Nothing organ of Lancaster, is down like a "thousand of brick" on the nomination .of Fremont. It calls him "a, certain John C. Fremont, .of Rocky mountain grass-hopper celebrity"—and says; " he has been hereto fore a perfect political blank"—" a young man thrust upon the people of the United States for the highest office in the gift ,of a free people, without experience or any par ticular qualification to recommend hini. Again--" Every true patriot will regret that both the New York and. Philadelphia Con ventions did not nominate Millard Fillmore, the only man who stands a particle of chance Of defeating Buchanan. Inr,.Hugh Smith, a laborer, of Hollidays burg, attempted to commit suicide by drown ing, a few days ago. He was rescued a few minutes after lie made the plunge. Life vas nearly extinct, but through the skilful exer tions of Dr. Conrad he was resuscitated. 11; was laboring under mental aberration. Corn intended for seed ought to be preserved on the cob, and not kept in bulk. This is especially true of the white flint vari ety, the cob of which-is very succulent. Germany is rich in the fune of its gifted children, especially in those. who possessed great musical genius. What other countries can boast of such names as Beethoven, Han del, Mozart ? Beethoven, the sublime mas ter stands a king among artists of every land; Handel has made his name sacred through the beauty and grandeur of his oratorios ; and Mozart, the wonderful child and no less wonderful man, whose chief characteristic was the universality of his musical power, may well stand in the ranks of those whom all ages honor. The world is better and' happier that such as these have lived in it and enriched it with their labors. That which was best and great est within their own souls, they wrought in to living melodies, to which the world lis tens, and while it listens is purified and hal lowed. Mozart was born at Salzburg, in 1756. lie lived but thirty-six yea - is, 3 -et his whole life was devoted-to his art. At the age of six years he began to compose music, and from that time until his death, he went from capi tol to capitol of Europe, giving to the world his sublime works, as one by one they were produced. Ile was every where received with enthusiasm, though much that he composed was not fully appreciated until a later period, when the artificial music which he did not imitate was becoming obsolete. his style was peculiarly his oWn. His genius, too rich and varied to be confined to conventionalities and customs, broke away from them and' deligh ted itself with new and splendid creations.— His talent was notconfined to any one branch of the art. In the solemn symphony, the delicate romance, the brilliant- opera, ho was equally successful, and who ha,s not heard of his last and greatest work, his Requiem'? Connected with this is a legend which is often told, yet always thrtlling to the.lovers of _the marvelous. It is said that a mysteri ous stranger visited Mozart a short time be fore his death, and ordered a requiem to be composed for some unknown person,. Ile ap pointed the day on which it should be finish ed, and then went away, not having revealed his name. Mozart wrote it as he had prom ised, pouring into it sonic of his greatest ideas, and adorning it with the richest strangerpasSa n•esbut the never returned, and the requiem was performed soon after at - the bur ial of the author. Mrs. liemans has made this_the theme of a beautiful poem, in which she attributes to Mozart the 'conSeiousness that a supernatural visitor had commissioned him to write his own requium. 4 'A requiem I and for whom ? For beamy in its bloom ? For valor fallen, a broken rose, or sword ? A dirge till* king, or chief. With pomp of stately grief, Banner, and torch, amid Waving plume deplored 2 Not so—lt is not s , )! That warning voice I know! From otllCr worlds a strange. nlysteri..us 5010111 flowral air It called lilt' to prepalc, And my heart answered Secretly—nly own r The legend, though prohahly it has little or no finrodation, is very beautiful, throwing, as it does, a ludo of mystery over the death of one whose life was so fruitful in the grandest works of genius. In his joy and in his sorrow, man loves to surround himself with plants ;mil flowers.— Ile crowns the bride with sweet myrtle or the pure orange blossoms ; the laurel speaks to him of glory and renown ; the palm-branch of glorious hopes fbr the future. And when the loved one departs, he turns again to the flowers of the earth mid the trees of the for est, to srieve with them and to give expres sion of his sorrow. Prom the South Sea to the icy North, from East to West, grief finds the same simple but touching expression.— The mourning.peasant of Normandy burns the lowly straw bed on which his friend ex pired before his hut, and the round black spot, as it contrasts with the green turf by its side, remains long aim humble but eloquent epitaph of him who left no other record be hind. In peaceful villages we see neithjr gorgeous monuments, nor lofty trees rising in honor of the dead—and, we fear as frequent ly in praise of the living—but, sweeter far, the graves are covered with green sod or hum ble flowers. "We adorn graves," says gen tle Evelyn, "with flowers and redolent plants, just emblems of the life of those fading beau ties, whose roots being buried in dishonor, , rise again in glory." The Japanese deck with flowers their "eter nal inhnsion," and the Turks perforate the mauumental slabs spread on those who shall be seen no more, in order that a natural growth of bloom shall spring up through the - apertures, and that the bud so nourished by the grave, and set free to the winds of heav en, shall shed their fragrance and strew their petals around the Moslem's "city of silence." The western traveler gazed with deep sympa thy upon the grave of the Chinese ; it is a simple, conical mound of ettrth, but over it spread and twine wild roses, and cover it with a mass of pure white blossoms ; or it is crowned in simple majesty, with a tall plant of waving grass. Our cities, also, now love to bury the dead where woods unfold their massive foliage and breathe an air of heaven --their better taste has made the green grove and the velvet lawn sacred to the memory of 'those that are gone to the realms of peace. Profanity is the least excusable of all vices because it has not even the poor apology of self interest to defend it. It gratifies no appetite and subserves no end, and must, therefore spring alone from the most crimi nal thoughtlessness, or from.unmitigated de pravity. A practice thus characterized by DO virtue and furnished with no excuse, springing .from the two worst conditions of the human heart, absolute vacuity or to tal repletion with wickedness, is too mon7 strous to be loved and too worthless to be practiced, and . should be hated by every good• man, and avoided by all. Riht and duty arc like two palm trees, which bear fruit only when growing side by side: Editor and Proprietor NO, 3. Moi art. Flowers poniotic econert Valuable Receipts FILLET, OR ROUND OF BEEF—SPICED.-Get the ribs of beef. Have ready pounded and sifted some cloves, mace, - alspice, pepper, a low coriander seeds, a little saltpetre ; and hay salt ; mix all well together, rub your beef well, then tie it tightly up into, a good, round fillet ; let it lie for a day or two, then put it into the oven to set the meat, after which place it in a stewpan with a little sec ond stock.; put fat bacon at the bottom of the stewpan, and half a pint of - port wine, stew it about two hours, according to the size ; make a very good sauce s reduce the li quor, and take off all the fat until sufficient to make the sauce, which you will add to some good cooley, with chopped dressed mushrooms ; season with cayenne pepper and salt; if approved of, add some hot pickles of different colors, the last thing; in the sauce, Add a dust of sugar to your sauce, BRANDY. Pcnotxe.---Take some dried cherzi ries or jar-raisins, stoned, and line a mould with them, add some thin slices of French roll, and a layer of - ratafias or macaroons, then repeat the layers of fruit; rolls, and cakes, till the mould, is full, pouring in at intervals two glasses of brandy. Beat four eggs, whites and yolks separately, add to them a pint of milk or cream slightly sweet ened, half a nutmeg, and the rind, of half a lemon grated, pour it into the mould, and when it has penetrated the solid, flotir cloth, tie it tight over, and boil an hour. Be careful to keep the Mould the right side up-: wards. AN EFFECTUAL METTIOD OF RENQVIk'C TU TASTE OF GARLIC, OR WILD 0:sZION FROM MILK —When the milk is new from the cow, pour one q uart of boiling water into every gallon of milk; stir it through, and put the whole in= to broad shallow dishes, so that it will not be above two inches deep. Let these dishes be placed on au open shelf, that the vapor may pass freely and entirely away. When themilk has stood in this manner twelve hours, it may be put into a churn altogether, or only the cream, as may be most agreeable to the taste or practice of the operator. Milk from cows that have pastured on garlic, (or wild onion,) when managed in tins_ way, will be quite sweet. HORN-AIL—A REMEM".—Last spring one of my cows bad the horn-ail or distemper very bad, and I thought I should lose her in spite of all I could do. I tried the different remedies I could hear of, but without effect. At last I thought 1 would try something new, and took a small sack, filled it with common salt, and bound it between her horns, and then poured on sharp vinegar until it was perfectly wet. I wet it three or four times a day until she got well, which was in a very short L. W., Conquest, IV, Y., in Rural _,-linerican. HOW TO eIIOOSE BEEF.—True well-fed beef may be known by the texture and color ; the lean will exhibit an open grain of deep coral red, and. the fat will appear nf a healthy, oily smoothness, rather inclining to white than yellow ; the suet firm and white. Yellow fat is a test of meat of an inferior quality, Heifer beef is but little inferior to ox - beef,- the lean is of acloser grain, the red paler, and the fat -wham Cow beef may be detected by the same signs, save that the older the beast the texture of the meat will appear closer, and the flesh coarser to the sight, as well as harder to the touch. Fog- NE 17 RA LC IC TROUBLES.—The applica tion of towels, wrung out in hot water, to the IZ)rehead and temples, is represented to be an efficacious and speedy remedy for headaches arising from neuralgic--affections. Fon Cno;vs.—Seth Leo,. of Connecticut, says IR: gels rid of the crows by the fol Towing easy method : "Ile takes a small piece' of fresh meat, or meat that. has hen fresh recently, foi the' nearer it is to carrion the better, as crows are not very nice.in these matters, punches it full of small holes, into each of which he puts a small' quantity of strychnine, and hangs tluk meat in a tree near where the crows are known to frequent." Eleven died an ignomini ous death one morning: hioly TO lioii, POTATOES.—In Ireland pota , : toes are boiled to perfection ; the humblest peasant places his potatoes on his table better cooked than could half the cooks in London, trying their best. Potatoes should always be boiled in their "jackets ;" peeling a pota, to before boiling is offering apremium for wa ter to run through it, and making themwaxy and unpalatable ; they should be thoroughly washed and put into cold water. In Ireland they always nick a piece of the skin off be- - fore they place them in the pot ; the water is heated, but never allowad to boil ; cold water should be added as soon as the water commences boiling, and it should thus be checked until the potatoes are done,. the skins will not then be broken or cracked un- ; til the potato is thorou,ghlydon s e; pour the wa ter off completely, and let the skinE be thoroughly dry before peeling. I l Emos Punm.No.--. 7 80il four lemons peeled thin, till they are soft, rub them through a hair sieve, and preserve the fine pulp; pour some boiling milk or cream, in which a stick of cinnamon has been boiled, over a pound of Naphs biscuits, two ounces of fresh butter, and a little nutmeg. When cold, add to them the pulp of the - lemons, and. eight, eggs well beaten ; mix all together, and sweeten, and, if liked, add some brandy. = Make a good puff paste, edge . a dish with it, put in the mixtures, ornament the top with strings of paste, and bake it in a moderate ; oven. POTATO SpUr.—Alruost every farmer's household is fond of soup for supper. I will now write a few "home-spun" lines on mal kin.. a cheap and palatable soup from the potato.' I take good sound potatoes, peel and cut them in pieces small enough to be eaten with a spoon. After haying them well ria l sed, I boil them .with enough water to leaye thein in a state of soup; adding salt to my taste. When they ;Ire cooked,' take about two tablespoonfuls of flour, with belles much lard, and•fry it in a pan, stirring it with - a spoOn until changed to a brown (not black color) color. I then stir in it with the potatoes t after which it is ready for the table.--Rtiza : • -•, bah, Cow 11Em,.-- r }Laving cleaned the feet,' bone them, boil them, and stew them in a rich brown gravy - ; servo with Indian Or e if plainly cooked, boil until enough. ; then serve them on a napkin, with milted butter ? flavored with a spoonful of vinegar, and one of mustard. Lemon pickle may be with them.