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ADVICE RV BERNARD LEON ilrwhers! there 13 more of know!edg,e In the word than we c mt re tch; Ages were too short for le truing All that Na:nre't; book c m teach ; Wor!d4 of science though we conquer, Words before us s;tit arise; "rwere to he a God' to fithom Lifu's abundant toys eriec Ce t•e we, ihen, thi, foo ish strivinz ht al! know edge to exee: ; Leta though we know but. little, Know it treil. Brothers! there is much of labor )n the earth, and years are few; There is more of work around us, Than our feeb'et hands can do. Ever dreathing, ever p!anntng,. (Ink]; the .slle moments run; Death too oft but comes to find us NVith our labor scarce begun. Seize we, then, the mighty present— Let our deeds the fthure tea; ix: us, though we do but little, Do it well! MACHINE DEMOCRATS The following extract from "Our Parties and Politics," in Putnam's Monthly for September, is the best description of a class of subservient men who call .themselves democrats that we have ever seen. [Eds. Journal : The other class of Democrats, whom we. denominate the t•fficial or machine democrats, because they move and talk as they are wound up, mean as they appear, yet constitute, in reality, a distinct and powerful body in the state. It is trot a new remark we believe, that successful parties suck in and collect about them large squads of !speculating politicians, who care nothing for truth or righteousness, while they have a ravenous appetite for distinction and provender. They arc not precisely camp-followers, be cause they sometimes fight in the fines, but their interest in the come t is determined rather by the pros' ect of booty than by any convictions tl may be imagined to entertain. Like Bunyan's By-ends, who followed Re ligion for the silver slippers she wto e, they are patriots,, because it is prdfit able to be pat . In other words, they are democrats because the dent ocrats are generally in the ascendant, which means, in .office. Sometimes they slip round to the wings, when the wings have a sure look for ,11C- CeSS ; but they find it safer in the Aryng run, to be on the other side. „,,,, & No men tore noisy than they in shGting tine usual rallying cries, none more glib in the common-places of electioneer ing, and none so apparently 'earnest and sincere. But at. heart they are among the greediest and shabbiest of scoundrels. It is upon their shoulders that incompetent and bad men are borne to places of high trust, and from them that the Prtutorian guards of . republics are selected in the hour of their eclipse and hastening decay. This class of democrats (their in nate flunkeyism would inake them monarchists or satraps in other lati tudes) flourish the best in those calm times when no great controversy agi tates, the nation, and 'no important emergency awakens strong and burn ing passions. In crises which call for lofty ambitions and abilities, they are. shriveled and consunied by the heat of them, :DA sink out of the way till the fiery storm is past. But in periJds of comparative public indifference or reaction, when there are few who care to watch them, they swarm like mag gots in a carrion. As the reins of power at those times are apt to hill into the hands of little men—of a Ty ler or Pierce, for instance—the golden, hour for narrow intellects and base hearts has attired. The art of admin: istration at once degenerates into mere trickery or management. Toads crawl into the seats of the eagles. Public policy fluctuates between the awkwardness of conscious incompe tence- and the blustering arrogance of bullyism. The possession of office becomes a badge, either of imbecility, or cunoing,. or insolence. It is won by services that elsewhere would warrant a halter, and it is conferred, not as the need of patriotic, deserts, but as the wages of supple and mer cenary eervices. They who dispense JOUR patronage, do. so in the conviction of Walpole, • that evet y man has his price, and they who receive it, take it with a full knowledge that the stamp of venality is on every-token of silver. Superiors.in plaCe are not superiors' in merit, only .superiors in craft and recklessness; while in Criors don the. gilt lace and plush of their Official varleti In without a _blush thOr checks, or a sense of shame at their hearts. Government, in short, is On vetted into a vast conspiracy of place men, managed by the adroiter villains of the set, controlling elections, dic tating legi=lotion, defeating reforms, and infusing gradually its own menial and muck-worm spirit into the very body of the community. The masses' even, under the paralysis of i.uch dmoination, seem to be rendered in sen.-ibie to the usual influences-of hon or and virtuous principle; are dead ened almost to the heroic examples of, their fathers; lose the inspititing ditions •of an 'earlier greatness ~and• grandeur of conduct; and virtually, fl if not actually- sink into slaves. Then, schemers of wrong riot in the impu nity of license, and projectsofgigantic wickedness are broached, which, a few years befbre, would have caused a shiver of indignation to run like a gathering earthquake through the whole land. .But fora completer-pic ture, a tableau virant of the degrada tions of functionarism, of the sordure and meanness of stipendiary democ racy,—the worst form of official cor ruption, since the best wine makes the sourest vinegar—let us say it) the words of Wren's epitaph . , Cl - Let - it- SPICE! • $l.OO 1.2 The Pro-Slavery Party, sometimes called. the Southern Party, we are unwilling to speak of by this name, because we carefully di:tinguini be tween its southern members, who are the propagandi •ts of slavery, and those gentlemen of the south who simply wish their peculiar domestic system to be let alone ; while we do out dis tityrui--h tween them and their north ern conljt ors,—dough-faCes are they bight,—who are their superservicable instruments. The first distinction we make, .because we know that titer' are large ntunbers of intelligent and conscientious people at the south, who do not believe that slavery is a good or a finality; on the contrary, who feel that it is a burden at best, and a sad and dreadful - inheritance; who are anxious to manage it wisely, with a view to its ultimate extinction; z nd, consequently, %%:ould dread to see it . trengthened Jr extended, ho)king - with h ipe and Chri tian prayer to the day when the combined influences of modern industriali.m, and Democracy, and Ch i.tianity, shall have relieved them of their painful weight of re- But we Jo not make the second - unction, because the •mo•t efficient, and by far the most despicable, branch of the Pro-Slavery Patty, is that which, educated at,the north, under all the genial inspirations of a free condition of cxi t.enee, and without the necessity of an ernharass ing ilvolvement, still voluntarily ca=ts itself at the feet of Slavery, to eat the dirt of its footmarki, and lick the sores on its liritbs. For the first class of slaveholders, we cherish not only a profound synipathy, but a genuihe admiration and esteem ; we have ftietids among them whose excellen cies of character are themes f 4 medi tation and gratitude; and to the pro pagators of the :•ystem, even. we can atti i but e entic e hi ne. ty of purpose, though a mistaken one ; but, fur its cringing and adulatory northern syco phants we have no feeling but one of unmitigated pity and contempt. Could they be transfered, fins a time, to the experience of the pour creatures whose fetters they help to bind, the Most generous mind could hardly regard the change as less than a just and happy retribution. • PArAcv.—Five of the States . of the Union were otiginally settled by Papi-ts, namely Maryland, Florida, Louisiana, Testis, . and California; the whole northern frontier, from' the mouth of the St. Lawrence to. Fond du Lac has ever. been exposed to the influence of Popery from Canada, and Hurst of the towns on that frontier, were settled by Papigs; . and yet in -Maryland there are about SOO Prot estant churches to 65 Papal. Of 152 chuiches in Florida, only five are papal; Loui , ititta has .123 Protestant and 55 papal churches. Texas has but 13 papal chnrches,and 131 Prot estant; while Protestant influence is greatly predominant in California. The inference to be drawn from thiese facts is that however bold and coufi. dent Romanism may be it has no principle of vitality to sustain and give it the prei - iminence it seeks. • God sends meat, the devil sends cooks, and dyspepsia sends—the doctor. DEVOTED TO THE PRINCIPLES OF DEMOCRACY, AND THE DISSEMINATION .OF MORALITY : UTERAP:II,.E, AND NEWS COUDERSPORT, POTTER COUNTY, PA.. SEPTEMBER' 29, 18,54. From t he F,vening Register THE NORTH AND THE SOUTH." In another part of our paper will be found an article with. the above captioni-to which we desire especially to call the attention of our readers. It is from the Sentinel, published in Columbus, Georgia, and it contains acknowledgments of further weakness, such as never before, as we think, have appeared in any of the pro-slavery journal.. For thirty years the people Of the North have been forced to bear patiently-with threats of secession, to he effected at any moment when they shall fail to acquiesce in .the edicts of the slave drivers of the South, and during the whole of that period, the slave power has been 'permitted to dictate the whole policy of. the I.lnion. At its command Florida and Teias have been purchased, and war 'made . Upon a weak neighbor, at a cost of many thousands of men and many millions of dollari; fur the ostensible purpose of settling the boundaries of the latter. At its command; numerous bills for the' . eiehnsing of our rivers and the ii!rmation- of harbors, have been vetoed; sometimes by the South and at others by the Executive. At its command, the free laborers of the North have been deprived of protec tion, and the mills, furnaces. and minec at which they were accustomed to work, and in which the farmers were accustomed to find the markets for their produce, leave been sold out by the Shmitll Any delay in regiqer ing the decrees of the South, brought with it the threats 12f §eces4on, to which alone was due .the passage of the several .acts of 1850, including the grant. of no less than ten millions of. dollars to Texas, and the Fugitive Slave Act, by which, men were to be deprived of all property in themselves, with • a facility and disregard of legal form that would not have been per mitted in regard to a claim in relatino to property in a pocket handkerchief. Emboldened by all this, the South has happily been induced to take one step from them in the road tawardS hing the entire .and perfect control of the 300,000 slave owners over the lives, liberties, and destinies f the people of the North; and this it has done, because led to believe that this, too, would be borne as have all the past usurpations r;fthe slave power. In this, however, it has miscalculated. " Tread upon a worm and it will turn," says the proverb; and in this case, at least. it has proved to be true. The worm has turned, and the people who have long been trodden upon now spew themselves determined to con tinue together fir the assertion Of their rights, as the majority of the nation, to have some control of its policy. Everywhere, Whigs, free soilers, dem ocrats, anti-slavery men, and know-' nothings. are seen to be laying aside all minor points of difference, and arraying themselves for a contest, a routrance, with the slave power.— Everywhereit is felt that the time has. come for a settlement of the treat -rfue-tion, whether the government is to he adminigered in the interest of 300,000 slaveholders, or of the eighteen millions of white people, who own themselve , , and sell their own labor, and that all that is required for a settle ment of the question in favor _of the flee laborers,. is that combination of eff, st which is now taking place. What is the consequence] For an answer, let our readers look to the article to which'we have already called their attention. In it they will find abundant signals of distress, but no• detianc6—plenty of abuse of those " wretches" who so thr "defy the laws of God and man" as to desire that Kansas may be a flee 'State, but no threats of dissolution. The time tbr that, as is now thormighry e ct the South, has gone by. The' day of thrther " seCession" is over, because the BoLit4 has aiiitikened .to the fact that it is.the South that is. really prof ited'by the Union, and that its contin uance as a mere matter of pecuniary profit is not to he desired. Instead of Lthreats of disunion, we have here calls for 'union with the ° Democrats," who have al ways been the "Northern allies" of the slave drivers of the South. • The institution of slaVery must, as we have been told, " topple to the ground," covering "with its frag;- ments" all the glorious Southern land, whence fhr . the laA thirty years• have issued decrees undo which the area of slavery 'has been Sc) widely ex tended, and the rights of free men so often annihilated. All this, we ar told, can - be accomplished "if the North" is peitnitted to beCorne united. To prevent this, the South mut-t labor to buy • back its "Northern-allies ;" without them it is undone. r If they will come, it is, says the. Sentinel, necessary that they tfictivelves . shonld name their price: if they will but " enli-t under the Southern' banner," " the South will not inquire 'into their "'antecedents," nor will it "question their motives." Iftliey desire" Spoils," they shall have them, except: rho, de , Sire lead them to "strip: the dead." Men. with such desires are to be found —as is 'here said, and we believe"- it. Among the [sham] Democracy -Who stood by:the Nelninka bill, and with their aid the Scluth is certain of victo ry—Will, we doubt not, continue-until the approaching elections shall fully undeceiv6 them. ; We have called the attention of Ont. readers to the expression elSouthern opinion, because we have reasons ,to believe it expresses fully the present . sta,e of. the Southern mind, in which alarm is now'becoming almost uni~'er sal. Until now it has been believed that there was no self-respect at the North, tlat the South might do what' it would; but new SOuthern men are beginning to see that 'thel'e is a north ; and that it is•prepating to make it'44f felt' by repudiating the dough-flees' that 'have been accustomed..tol strip both the dead and the-living in,snarch for "'spoils",permitted by the South to all Who proWd themselves: bad enough to co-operate in the i.!XtelSiOli of the area,ofsirvery--:and now all this alarm for the .future. They now. see their weakness, so no fear of threats ; they cry pcixari. Instead of disunion they now call for union at any sacrifice of honesty and integrity among their late allies. We commend theSe facts ; to the careful consideration of such. of our readors as may he disposed to see, in the present movement at . the'Nnrth, anything tending towards disunion. They are, hi short, calculatcd!to lead them to the eoncluson at which we our- Selves long since arrived; that such a movement alotie, that 'we - can look for perpetuation of the . Union. All the present schemes for fu.rther - exttin,ion at Northern cost, look to ward dissolirtion ; and those who lend their aid toile accompliAment of those schemes, are the real Disunioaists. It was time that the South should he waked up from its dreams of :further supremacy—thatAt I .should be taught that there really is - a North capable of subisting and of prospering by it elf= and that that North, while di :posed to respect the rights of the South, was fully determined to insist tipOn having its own rights respected ; and the more effectual now the Measures adopted }Or satisfying it that such 'is the determination of Northern :men, the longer will be the duration of the Union. THE NORTH'_ ND THE SOUTH. e sve acquiesced, as we were bound to do as State Righas men, in :be decision of the Georgia Com:mien is hereby the Compro mise of 1S51) wits accepted us . fina.ity on the Slavery question, we are and have. atv.•ai s been convinced that the civi izat.on of the Nor.h and the Sou hit wagon . ): ic, and will sooner or later result in de..ti.v fend between the seczions. Prior to the tieeis.int of , the. Georgia Convention, we and the party with - which we ac ed, advised the Son It to lay down an unite/Linn on this liarassing!sub . ect.' and require the Nor h to :.ecept, it r•nd hos avert former the dangers which threatened the int• real peace, of the. Soult Mid the sta. bitity of. lie Union from is cease:es, agiim ion; inul, if the Nor.h ref:Used to eie.d to our pi=t, reasomb e, and consiiittlional dentands, to secede peaceab y front the Union.; Our coon se,s were disregarded, the patriotic men who need Wt.h us were denounced as' trai.or-', and the Compromise was accepted instead as a pinty. And such- dtina.ity ! No Soo er was the great .cardinal* principle of the Compro mise applied, in subsequent •legislation, to the Nebraska bill than all the Sunni tiering tire Atio.ition burst , n o t afresh, and the w 11We Nor hem horizon now b.tzes with the lurid light of Abolitionism. Am - prece ing exci ement which has , pre vai ea at the North on this painful stikect, as compared to this, is as the gen !e swmi of the ocean, when fanned by es ening zeph; rs, to the fierce waves which :ash the heaven' , when swept by the wing of the Lem, est. '1 he im wre cites defy the laws of bo It God and man and deltise 4,te rise of any o her means in ca ying out their nefarious purposes than brain: and balls. • Ev .n .he b'essings which the Uniop .has poured upon the North, in go:den flood, tin it es ery rocky hill and Promontory, h,oofus like a garden, are denied to have come' front this source ; the c osest• and latest pol.ical ties are broken asunder wi.honi a regre.; the who!e rank mid fi e of the i Wing party Nor.h h ice marched, wi It co ors flvittg.and drums bea.ing he I'ngiive's March, in.o : the •Abo.i.. tion c..nm; and mose on .their] b ee s, presses a good.y number of ho.lii the :oti. and third Democracy, nut . ' , confident, of =decent. they badly proclaim t he-r fixed purpose to acquire the control of the Government, and, %vie d its immese power to the builitig - up of .he North, and the..pulLng down of the .Soulli until the .nstitution of Satveryi shadtopp,e,co .e ground, -..nd cover wilt fragineu.s all this gm m miens Sou he rid in ; w Inch ..re the gra% es of our fathers end the' inheriiance of our-flute ones. , And what is more and worse, .hey aro able to accomplish it if the North is . united, There - are but two ientedies. •One has been repudia ed, The Mher: has before he d.ont. to our Son hern breihren, and Ala - ho!ds out ,0 spi.e of, the scotis; of Tie Ala- tame Journal and • the li.bored witticisms of Toe Chronicle and Sentinel. 'I he ; SOLI.II . 311112 • unite in serried rank, and Move Ile an etn • hauled host, with'fixed Lod without , a disconland fooL-fain ul,on the foe.. But even then we wilt be , Ou%-fitinked and, over- powered. We must hare .NortLern allies. If .hey wi.i 'ertist under our banner we wid, not. stop to inquire their • timecetleu e, tint ques.iort heir ruct.ives.i If •liey idesire.s[ni.s e. .hem iirip,.the dead. They nece, , . r March in the van; and this .s guaran ee enough' of theii.fidelity. But 3iherettre there allied theY are the Dethocracy:wlto snood by the Nebraska Bill With their aid the Sori:11 is certain ,of victory. Will :the xvh:gs of: the South tell us' why they cUittiot "coalesce with. there.? ; Ei==tEIENT OF KANSAS The settlement of Kansas is now in rapid progress, but the accounts which +me receive from the scene of action are sn contradictory that it is difficult to fcutn any definite idea as to the prepiniderating character of the emi grati4, We have published every thing:which came to hand on-the sub ject, in order, that our readers; - if they please, may 'draw their own c.onclu -sions,: as we find it impossible to-an ive at any satisfactory result ourselVes. If we may believe all that we findin the Southern journals, there is not the shaddw a doubt that Kansas i 4 des -tined; to become a slave State. One extinct, said to bp', front,a.letter writ ten in 'Kansas Jane I;sth by a gentle. man ;of Lexington, Kentucky; thus pronounces:. " "From the great rush to Kansas, I _am not unwarranted it saying, that in one year atier -the, mgt nization there, Will be 50,000 persops within her bor ders, and in less . than - three' years she tvili fornr a new-Star irr the American gulaiy. The people are clamorous for the extinguishment of the military reservation, and it will certainly he done very-Soon. 'With as rich hind as any One call desire; a fine climate, sin . - ficient trinantity of-wood, coal in bun dunce, a :country well watered, and with -.au industrious, intelligent, and enterpi ising / populatiOn, Kansas, .be= fore, many years, .be one of the first' States in the Valley of the Mis sissippi. ,Nn doubt it be organized very soon --it will be a shive . State, and pet-Sons would safe 'in' carrying Slai-es with them' thither, as mim - ber3 are , already there. • Kansas River is in the center of the ,Teriitorylarger than the Kentucky River, and is navi gable thr,l7o or 200 miles." This is evidently written to stimu, late Southern emigrittion; and as it furnishes no details, its positive asser tions will not pass for much. But, a more plausible statement is the follow ing, said to be from a paper called the Enteiprise, publisLed at Springfield, "Dr. White, of this city, has just returned from Kansas Territory. He de. 7 :etilfes the country as exceedingly heautiftil and fertile, and believes =t will 'not be long berme it enters into the Uttion as a fine and populous §tate. He informs, us that .people from 1111 i• SOUI A rk;insa:;, Kentucky, and other States, are flocking into the new Ter ritory so nuinerou•.ly, that it will pot fail to be secured to tiouthern influence and institutions. At the Weston and other ferries . along the riN ers border ing the Territory, emigrants arrive if) such crowds that boats carry them fiver. day and night; and disputes fe quently ari.itt as.to'who shalt have the next chance to go over. Wherever vettlements are made, registers are appointed, who faithlidly rem d every first claim made to lands, that no dis turbance will hereafter occur concern ing preanption rigl.ts. The Courts are required to sustain this very ex cellent yegulation; and everything in_ the flfrmatiou of settlements progres ses in an orderiv; and laudable man- EMS Coming, as this information does, frbrii a citizen of a free State, appal. - - dfifly unprejudiced, it hears with it the impress of truth, though the paper which gives it' publicity is unlhmitiar in this latitude. A letter from Kaitsas, to the N. N": rferald, contains the following' para graph: .; " The . amount of immigration, in the -way of nt - etcf.7.and cattle, is sur ini,ing. ThouSatids and thousands are .pouring in from all portions of the union, but more especially from Itlis sonri, Kentucky, and' Tennessee. It seems to be a purptweTrepanse to have it a Slave State.. There is •a . itory ;abroad that at the ferries., over the ...tissouri river they have a cos, tied, and a committee to ask ea chimmigrant !what animal that! is. If he. says "A eow," all ,well—he goes over. But it he answers "A 46w,'. they turn him buck." . • This is a repetition of the old story. That - there is a large 'emigration from Missouri and Arkansas we can readily.. believe, lin we have .seen in the pa-. pers of that .region' every evidence of it.: But the papers (4 - Kentucky, Tennessee,' and Virginia have fur nished us with no indications• of the prevalence of an emigration fever in that section; AS 1: - cgaiars the carrying of slaveS from MiSsouri**to 'Kansas, •there are bor 87,000 in the State,• and if the punii , hed accounts he correct, there is some' danger 'of-Missouri tie ing: left a free State byild3 movtmetn. Large autiliierA-bf• sltiv'es. are - sent to the more - Southern marketS; - where they bring higher prices than in Mis- son ri, others are taken with their own er's to Tex' as,'and the ellect during the last few,years has been to produce a decrease of the slave population •of Missouri. What, then, will be 'the result, if, in addition, such swarms of slaveholdint:,r Missourians emigrate to • Ktuisas I . This suggests a doubt as to the truth of the accounts, and. on this be;id ive find numermr; letters front Kan , aS to the Nrirtliet wpapers, which say that they ate publiFhed with view to discourage lice emigration. A recent paragiaplt in the Glasgow nines, in chronicling fact that the roads are crowded with emigrants all hound for the teriitory, asserts that the majority lire Northerners. A cit izen of Wayite county, Ohio, named . John Gabrel, who is now in Kansas, locating, land, writes to the Canton, Ohio, Trankript of June 25th, to the following eflect: "A Slas;eltolding Junto haYe 'deter mined not to permit 'ony i hnti-slavery people to settle in that teutitery. The Government functiqaries are all slav holders, or devoted 4o its extension. " Mr. Vanderslice, Indian agent among the loWas and Kickapoiv., about thirty miles west orSt. Joseph, had heard that an agent for a Free Soil company was in St. Joseph, who 'in tended to locate a whole township of Free Soilers in Kansas, who were from Ohio and Penn::ylyania, and that there' were 26,000 emigrants from Massachusetts. Therefore this fellow and his gang ordered the agent 'out of the Territory, ,under the 'penally of lynching; hut the man fearlessly fin ished his busitit•ss. "Mr. Gruble says that :Vanderslice ordered him out of with all the'Eree Soilers and Abolitionists, in the 01051 indignant maiMer, not with standing four-fifths of all that are set , tled in the territory are poor people, and should vote against the- introduc tion of slavery. "lie says that every emigrant is closely cross-qutstioned a 5 to hi-; po litical rentiment , :, and fiercely threat-. coed ‘‘ith the vcogeance of fie myr- - midotns of sitlyrry if he is tinctured with Frcc Soilism." It seems to be clear, however, that there are many persons in Kansas locating. land who seemed determined, by a, species of terrori-m, to drive away Northern emigrants. Lynching is freely talked of; and lhe-e tactics have nut been without : effect on f , utne timid people who have arrived there. One contrLry effect it, howevec,has been to lien: oil' the fil•-t expedition of the New-Englund Emi . ?ratten Aid Company. This pally stalled from Bo•ton on the 17th, Monday last,-and killrereke acression -kVoteester,- Buttoo, and other place , on the route. It is the pioneer company, to - make preparations lin. 11,10 larger. convoys which will follow. It will carry out all the 'requisite tent•i and . i. 04114 for summer cut aminnent. We doubt not that there will be a con , ideralde end grut ion from_the adjacent sla - ve St:2les to Kan-n- , , but, thus far, they have beeu settlers of limited means, and without slaves. Belbre Gov. Reeder nets out, there will he towns flninded, t, land cleared, cabins built, and fully tea thousand settlers.—Pillshurg Dispatch. FACTS IN HUSII~N LIFE The number of languages spoken in the World amount, to 3061. The inhabitants of she globe profess more than 1000 different reli , zions. The number of men is about equal to the number of wctnen. The average of human lire is. about 33 years. One quarter die- previous 'to the age of seven years; one !mil before reaching 17; and those who pass this'aze on. • joy •a felicity reih , ed to one half* the htunun species. To every 1,000 per sons only one reaches 100 years of life; • to every 100 . only 6 reach the a7e, of 63; and not more than one in 300 lives to SO years of age. There are' on earth, 1,000,000,000 inliald tauts, and of these, 1;33,333,333 din every year, 01,521 every day, 3,730 "every hour, and GO every, minute, or iine - every s:econa. These losses are -about balkneed by an equal number of births. The married are not long , er lived than the single, and above all. those who observe a :obey and industriouS Conduct. - Tall men live longer than short ones. Worsen Love more chances of life in their favor pre vious. to being fifty years of age, than men, but fewer afterwards... The num ber of: marriages is, in proportion of 75 to .every 100 individuals. Mar !riages are more frequent after the equinoxes; that is dining: the Months of June and December. Those born in the spring are generally roore• ro btist than ethers. Births: and deaths are more frequent . by'night than day. The nmnber'of men capable of; bear ing arm. is calculated to be eue : titrtlt of the reguh - ,ti on. • Ur Great aches from little toe corns grow NO. 20.