6u m 11, W IC4 H IT 0. B. O00DLANDER & CO. PRINCIPLES, not MEN. TERMS $1 25 per Annum, if paid In f.vanc NKWSF.K1ES VOL l.-NO CG. VOL. XXXI. WHOLE NO 1618. CLKAHFI F.LI), PA. WKDNKSHAV, MAUCIl 27, I HO sT .... "Tha Salt if you Tlcase." Everybody has a partiality for dinner, nd one of the most frequent expression at dinner table it the ono which forms our title, and in order that our reader may know something of the substance (hey r using, we will toll them a few fuels bout salt. This is a chemical compound, cf twenty-three parts, by weight, of a beautifully silyer-wbito but toft nifltal nailed (odium, discovered by Sir II. Davy in 1307, and thirty five parts of a pungent rellowish preen grass, called chlorine, discovered by Se.ht'cle, in 1774 ; these two combined firm this, the most widely dif fused and useful of any one compound in the world. U is fo'ind in the sea, and in the rock, from which our principal sup-UiS-n of tl,e frontiers, or boundary, for ply comet. The most wonderful deposits ' tho Impose of taking in return. m in Poland and Uungar, where it is! In Iheir origin they had reference to luanied like a rock, one 'of tho Polish "Pacific injuries in enpturinp. cletaininpor mines having been worked since 1251. I withholding the property of individual,. ! In lin. nf HnnM ntul taattoil rtnlv in Hi Thete Tolish salt mines have heard the ;roan of many a poor captive, and have ..... Ik. I,.-, n.n..;... nf !,... , ... , , , , , though formal hostilities might bo the nan ; for, until Iatolv, the'- were worked ... . wo ... , . . ' . , ultimate result. Some consider them 'a entirely by the stato prisoners of Austria, i . , , . , , , , ' species of hostilities, an imperfect war,' Russia, or Foland, whichever happened . ., , r . . , , ,. , ., but strictly, they aro not a 'breach of the to b in power at the lime ; and onco tho ,. .. , , .,, , .. . , , . . . pence between nntionr., though a forcible nenaer, or tancieJ hindranco to some . ... . . , , . . , redress of injury is contemplated. The itber pcron s advancement, was let down ..,',, t ,., , . ' . . force may not inaptly be likened to a inio mm ud'u riiiiM.iii prison, 110 never saw the light of day again. So salt has its liistory as well as science. Other large ieposits are found in Cheshire, EnglanJ, where the water is forced down by pipes into the rait, and is again pumped up as !rine, which is evaporated and the salt obtained. To such an ixter.t has this Keen carried, that one town in the "Bait country," as it is railed, has scarcely an upright house in it, all tho foundations having sunk with tho ground, to fill the cavity left by the extracted salt. the Salmon Mountains, in Oregon, ar ca- priety of resorting to this method of pable of r.flording largo quantities of the obtaining satisfaction agiinst France, tame material. The brine springs of Ka- I.etteis of marque and reprisal, howev linaand .Syracuse are well known, and er, with reference to operations at sea, IYom about forty gallons of their trine one were not known till a much later period jmhel ufdiilt i- obtained. Thero are also when thu increase in the number of 'xte-nsive salt springs m uino. inennne niaritinio powers, and the advance of t purnpea t p Horn wells made in the rocK cor,lmerco, cave rise to their necessity. In nd into which it flows and luns into boilers. Thsse boilers are large iron ket lien set in brickwork, and when fires are lighted under tl em, the brine is quickly of war, often deem it advisable to cany rivaporttej. I he moment the brine be- lrger crews than usunl, and more or less 51ns to boil, it Incomes turbid, from the of an armament, for purposes of defense, compounds of tune that it conlains, and Und not unfreq.jently lako out letters of which are s uulle in cold, but not in hot marque, with the view, if opportunity water; those first .50 diments are taken out offers, to indemnify themselves for the with (ndles called 'oil tern ladles.' and the increased ris-k ad expenne of a voyage salt being next deposited from the brine by taking prizes. Privateers, cr vessels la carried away to drain and dry. The fitted out at privafe expense, for the pur remaining liquid contains a great quantity p0.0 of cruising against an enemy's com- uf, magnesia, in various forms, and gives it rnerco, are commissioned by letters of the name of 'bittern,' from tho taite rnarque. The terrr is now applied, in a peculiar to magnesia in et cry form. general sens?, lo the authority under .'But how did this salt coma into the which all lawful private armed ships 1 Ook V is the natural query, and the won' ac t. dcr seems greater, when wc reeolloct that In the United States, the power of salt bedsaro found in nearly every one of granting letters of marque and reprisal is the strata composing the earth's crust. vested, by the Constitution, in Congress. This fact proves another, that as the mas In the war of 1812, th:s po ver was exet jcrity of these salt beds have come from cised in the act of June, 1812, declaring the Wise 9 left in the hollows of the rocks war, ard provision made for the guidance ry the recpdenceof the sfa, the sea has, and regulation of parties" applying for through all the geologic ages, been as salt such a commission, and of vessels as it is to day. Let us take ihe Great Rait sailing under Ihem, by the acts of June Lake as an illustration ; it being the livr-t 20,1811. These acts were temporary in gest salt Lko in the world, but by 1:0 their design, and are now obsolete. means the only onp, as such inland mas Special legislation would be required upon ses of saline water are found over the any future occasion which called for a whole earth : but as this is the greatest in , renewed exercise of this power, extent, it w'll form tho best ex-j It would be a violation of the Neutrality ample. Itissituated at nn elevation of Act of April 20, 181?, for an American 4.200 feet above the sea. on the Kocky j tessel to be commissioned by a letter of Mountains, and has an areaof 2,000 square inarquo in the service of any foreign wiles ; ret, high as it is, 'once upon a power against a nation with whom we are time, tut the story-books of our juvenoL ! at peace, or for any vessel to be fitted out ity used to say, it was part of tho sea, and armed in any of our ports for the which retired, by the upheaval of the rocks, and thai great basin took its salt water up with it. There aro also however, salt rocks taking their place in regular goologic series with other rocks, inter-j .,,.,! I,lir.,n r.,1 ... t . UlOrS, Udell a W IIOIO 11 IB Ol I OB BllUg.yUl- - J - . - --. - . .... WDIUIJ v., i 1 1 U, 1 1 . 1 . and carboniferous strata; theo wo can only account for, as we do for other stra ticded rock, vis: that they were de posited from their solution in water, or carried mechanically to tho spot where now found by that ever mobile liquid. t. A Nct to Crack. A certain aged and respectable femsde in the apple trade purchased stock at several times as fol lows: SO apples at 2 for 1c Sl apples at 3 for lo.- amounting to ISe. mounting to lOo: ' '.Total He. 60 applet at S fur 2o. amounting to 24c Believing the rate in each case to be thsxsatue, 5 for 2o, she is at a loss to kuow "ty the first 60 cost lc more than tbt last. Who can tell herf Letters of Marqn Their Origin and What They Mean. Letters of Marque (says the Richmond . Whi,) are extraordinary commissions, granted by public authority to owners of . a vessel, authorizing such vessel to make capture and prize of the persons, ships and property of another nation which has comtniueu injuries, out neglects or rtu- ses to give proper redress thciefor. The vessel itself which bears such commission is sometimes called a letter of Marque. The term marque is derived from the Anglo-Saxon mearca bound or boundary. Letters of marque and reprisal, as they are more fully termed, signify literally, therefore, commissions authorizing the party injured, cr his agerjs. Their issue was not regarded as a declaration of war, redress for rent, which, in a measure, is a remedy placed in thehands of the injured party the landlord himself. It is unnecessary to trace the modifica tion and regulation to which letters of marque have been subjected from their erigin to the present day. Repria1s between nation and nation, as one means of obtaining justice, are of very ancient origin, and have their foundation in the nature of the relations of different powers. UP , Though not of frequent occurrence now, jet as late as 1834, President Jackson, in In Virginia there are beds of salt, and lii8 Annual Message, suggested the pro modern practice they are seldom, if ever, issued till war has been declared, or is in immediate prospect. Merchants, in time purpose of cruising under letters of mirque against a friendly power. Take Aback One of the ridiculous mishaps which will sometimes befall sol- f . t r t i-!M..r.t- . 1 tired military of New Orleans on the day of the Twiggs reception. They were drawn up along the street in front of a building in course of construction, and close in their rear was a long mortar bed, two feet deep, with that plastic composi tion, ready for the workmen. The space between tho files for the passage of the C&rriflfroa ttpmtr ralKoi narpnw Ilia nfliior ordered his men to take a step tHck.! They did so, and about Uenty feet of j sogers inBtantftneoubly disappeared from' sight backwards, the tront file, in close order, prereoting the rear rank from recovering themselves when their heels them "" llJ'e"c"y. o that they stumbled oaint the tnortar bed. They m bo rand 8ft,n- lso b,etter V'. were submerged, and every soldier of h wa,,teJ of ,Lo dePre9'ed condition of them had Lis pretty uniform spoiled the country than fhee same letters. They took cabs and absquatulated instan- gtirThe virtue of others is always a tel ler, i ror to the wicked. Washington and the Czar. The Oovernorof South Carolina, on the 2,t ultimo, in reilvtonn address from tll6 Commander or the "Pic-ken Cadets," rel(Uo( lll0 followine interetine fuels: " I romembor while in a distant court of Europe, and at tho most despotic of all Governments, (hat on a memorable oeca- gion T visited (he magnificent cardens that .surround Pelerhr.fr, ...... ct. .The carders and crounds were dedicated to the enjoyment and peaceful pursuits of the greatest and most brilliant of courts. On a remote island of these magnificent grounds that had been set aside for the private enjoyment and private walks of the Etiperor and Empress, a tree was pointed out tome in that gRrden, cnlti vated by particular and devoted bands, surrounded by wire wicket work, and flowers flourishing all around it. There stood on one branch of the tree a large brans plate, and on one sido of that plate, in Germen.and on (he other in Sclavonic, wa written, 'This tieewas planted in 1839, by Nicholas, from an accrn that grew near the tomb of the great Washing ton.' This was the inscription upon that tree, placed there by one of the most ab. solute rulers that ever swayed the sceptre of empire. And yet in his private, se. eluded gardens, he paid this deep and heartfelt tribute to the memory of tjio greatest and purest man the world ever saw. lie did not take an accrn from near the tomb of the great Elizabeth ; nor did he take it from the garden of the'Tuillerf. ies, grown in the time of Louis XIV.; nor did be take it from the tomb of tho great Napoleon ; nor did he take it from the garden of the Cajsars, near Homo; but he took an acorn from the tomb of a pure and mighty man, in the wilds of America, who had planted tho seeds of a govern ment consecrated lo the freedom and in dependence of nations, whose every prin ciple ras directly at war with tho prinri- pies of its own government; and yet so great were Ihe virtues and integrity cf Washington, that even this mighty mon arch, in private and secret, paid to him his heartfelt and deep tribute. The tree' was watereu ami i-uumuru nun mine t 1 1 ..1 .;. t. . . care than any of the trees in that garden, It was flourishing and green, and I trust in God it will continue to flourish fresh and green until its branches shall over spread the civilized world. I have also seen tho Cossack of the Pon and the Volga ; I have seen (he Lancers of Jwi'si.i. and 1 have seen the Tartar and the Arab in the wildsof the interior ; and yet, not- withstanding their semi barbarian life, ....... ,1,.., rtrt..i'nrca la miftitr Wn.ll ' initon in tnni' tents ri nigni. thn." tents rt night. There is, no portion of the wcrld that has not heard hi name, and love ami admire his great and manly trulhfulness and virtue." Office Hunting in Washington. A late telegraphic despatch from Wash ington says : " The past week has brought to us Rome of the strangest looking beings ever seen in this city. Their appearance indicates an) th ing but civilize J life.whilo their arts in piying in and about the dif ferent departments and private rooms, clearly show them to be unfit for civil ized society. Where th?y came from, or who they belong to, nobody seems to know. Thoyaie seen in the halls and ante rooms awaiting their turn for an in terview with the Secretaries, They arc also seen at the Capitol, on the streets, and in tbo White llrue ; f.nd at all times and on all occasions, they carry with them their little half-worn out carpet bag, from which they take, during the time they are compelled to wait for the Secret aries, their little bundle of refreshment, which they quietly munch. So far as asceitidned, these gentlemen are applicants for clerk, ships in the Departments here, having letters and petitions to the Secretaries, signed by the local clergy, their friends and townsmen, and tho schoolmasters of their districts who in nearly every case is the author of their petitions. One man cslkd upon Mr. Chase yesterday, having with him his wife and children, and ex pected, as he expressed it, to bo set right to work. Ho eame from Indiana. 1'he children, the wife, and the baggage, were all up to the Secretary's olliee. The clerks are much annoyed by these people, who seem to have the impression that they have a pertect right to pry into every book o r paper comingwithin their grasp. Te application, for ofOce per letters con- . . , , Treasury Department Gve extra clerks have been engaged to open and slow them Tho way Banks evade the Usury Laws. The banks havn a pluu o simple and eflectual for evading the usury laws that It is not probable that they would g:.vo one cent to have these laws repealed. When the market rateof intercut is 14 per emit a year, Ihe pl.-m j for a mer chant to get notes discounted at 7 per cunt fordouble the amount of money that I, n ,i. "! to tie carried lo 111s credit, on condition that he is to draw out but half of it : thus if he gets $5,000 from the bunk ha nays interest on $10, 000. The way tho bank mangei to have its customers leave a portion of the money carried to their credit, is this. Several merchants ofl'er notes at the bank for discount, und when they call lo know whether the directors have decided to lake the notes and piytho money for them (after taking out tho interest,) one merchant finds that his paper has been discounted, while the ollerings of unotli er have been declined, Tho unsuccessful applicant calls on tho cashier and asks him : " Mr. Chandler, why was not my paper d(ne to-day ; were not Ihe names satisfac tory ? " The cashier replies, " The ditcctors found no fault with the names, Mr. fiintin, uut wo no., applications .or a., o. were bettor than y.-uis, and we fell bound to give them the preference." l'.y the " accounts being letter " is meant that these firir.s have larger mins to the credit of their accounts, on which they are paying intere-.t, lut which they have left with the bank to be loaned to somebody else, Ihus enabling the bank lo pet double interest on its funds. Most merchants living in cities, expect, when they hire money, to pay the market rate of interest, but the obstruction of the usury laws work a serious ineonvc- ni(M1(, jn borrowers, especially when dealing with banks, as they can use only a portion of their receivables, having to leave a portion with the banks merely for the pui pose of evading the usury laws. ... . . . We never knew a usury law in any j community which was not system itically M.t generally evaded; and the ineonve. nience and expense of thn.evasions always fall upon the borrower.- S icnilfic Amer. Mevoiiv of the F.i.n'iiAM.- A female 'elephant, belonging to a gontlemnn at. Calcutta, who was ordeiod from the up 'per country to Chittagong, on t lie route , thither, broke loose troin hor keeper, aid making her way to ihe woods, was Inst. 'I I.. 1 ..r.. mn.la .oa' avmiGi I t'ini i 1 ' cute himsell, which the master 01 ih" an' imal would not lister, to, but branded the man with carelessness, or something worse ; for it. was iritnntly supjiosed that he sold thn elephant. Ho was tried for it, and condemned to work on the roar! for life, and his wife and children were sold for hlaves. About twelve years af terwards, tins man, who was known to be well acquainted with breaking elephants, was sent into the country with a party to assist in catching wild oves. They came upon a herd, and ibis man fancied he saw among the group his long lost elephant, for which he had been condemned- He resolved 10 approach it nor could the strongest remonstrances of Ihe party dis suade him f om Ihe attempt. Having reached the animal, he spoke to her, wheu she immodiatolv recognized his voieejshe waved her trunk in tho air, as a token of salutation, and spontaneously laid down and allowed him to mount her neck. She afterwar' agisted in taking other el ephants, and decoyed three young ones, to which she had given birth in her ab sence. The keeper returned, and the singular circumstances attending the re covery being told he regained his charac ter and. as a recmomnrnso for his tin' merited sufleiing. had a pension settled on him for life. This elephant was aftor- ward in possession of Warren Hastings, when Governor-General of Hlmloslan. Pupnlur Xiitural History. Cue ati so Goivo Ov. Somo years ago a gamo of poker was being played in this place. Jim C was in it, ami during the game contrived lo steal tho four aces and lay them on his knee, to bo playod at ihe proper time, Tho player u iio sat next to him siw the move, and slipped the aces from their hiding place, pulling four other cards in their stead. When Jim's turn eame to deal, he called on all hands to go it blind. " I'll go over all of you." W hen all wero in deep enough to suit him, ho reached for his aces, and brought up something else. Throwing his cuds on the table, in a tone of indig nation he exclaimed t "Gentlemen, I can't play in this game ; there's choating going on 1 " "Charity Ectrins at Home." A bill has passAil (he House of Pepre- sfntatives st Ilnrrisburg, appropriating thirty thousand dollars for tho relief of the peopbiof Kunius. They people afore. said may need it helping hand and they may not. In either case, however, it strikes us that tho House has gone a f reat ways to discover obieotx p' honi nnce when starvation is btunding ut their own door. For inttince: In February, 1RC0, there were nine thousand persons etn ployed in the wholesale clothing manu- factories of this city. Now there are but eighteen hundred. In February, 1?00. there were eighty. five hundred boot and shoemakers engaged by wholesale houses in that lino. Now there are less than a thousand. Tho same startling contrasts j0u tho wharf, from the dimmed super are to bo found in the tatting, lace and scription of whirh they made out the tassel, cotton and other leading factories, words "cartridges" and " Ticltens." A large proportion of the most thrifty F;red with zeal, they seized the incendbv. and careful of this tortior. or our indus- J ry, and reported a shipment of nrois pre- trial classes, have been robbed of the men- j vyntod. Thu'owner appeared, however, cv laid by, by Ihe failure of other saving and explained to their luminous under funds ; and, it. may be safely said, at least standing that " cartridges and Pickens" ono-half of the unemployed men and women o"" this city alone are now vibia ting betw?en moderate poverty and ex treme starvation. All this may bo merely 'artificial.' No- my JO ..u... 1 The enawinps of hunger and the humiliation attendant upon real want may not be deemed by our Legislature of the least moment, when . . applied hour own JlMPU, anu, therefore, they may consider themselves notified m voting uii'uiu'us 01 inepuuiic money 10 "loubttul objects or chanty abroad ; but it is a popular ami a Christian belief that 'chant v begins at home.' If it be true 1 Hint 'he who neglects his own household is worse than an infidel,' then, indeed, is the present Republican Legislature be-, yond 'saving grace.' PhUa. Transcript. Timhst worse TiiiS Hunger. Tho dis- turbanco to tho general nystoiij which i.i known by the name of reging thirst, is far more terrible then tlutof starvation, and for this reason : During the abstinence from food, the oiganism can still live ' . ...... .1 . .... 1 ...... , upon us own sunsiancc ; out uunng aosn- nenec from liquid, the organism has 110 such source of supply within itself. Men have neen known to endure absolute pri vation of food for some weeks, but three davs of absolute privation from drink (unle s in a moi.-t atmosphere) is, per..' haps, tho limit of endurance. Thirst is j the most atrocious (ort uro ovrr invented by oriental tyrants. It is that which ino-t effectually tamos animals. Mr. Est-1 ley, when he had a refractory horse, al-' ways used thirst as tho most effective pow er of cnercim, giving a little water as the. rcwa-d for cv ry act of obedience. The' histories of shipwrecks paint fearful pic tures of tho sufl'erine from thirst; and one of the most appalling: cates known js the celebrated imprisonment of one hun dred and forty-sii men in the Black Hole of Calcu tta. Blackwood. Payivo Fost Ori tcEi. Tho follcwing 1'W'' ?,I0WS t,ie leading post office? that ' r',M revenus over and above their ex- penses : N'ew York, Xew York. St. Louis. Missouri. IWtor., Massachusetts, rhiliide'phia. Prnnsylvania. Sun Fransisco. California. Cincinnati, Oh'o. Memphis, Tennessee. New Orleans, Louisiana. Wilmington, Ielnware, Albnnv, New Yerk. Louisville. Kentucky. Ivtrnit, Michigan. Washington, 1. C, Ilufbilo. New York. Chicago, Illinois. Toledo. Ohio. Nashville. Tennessee liichmond, Virginia. Montgomery, Alabama. Itiilii-nore, Maryland. I'ittsburgh, Pennsylvania. SOO.Oo.l S3 2-2.7!S 05 1'J.tfU CI I5.37S 52 11.329 57 9.2.14 30 5.1W f)l 9.00 30 4.9.17 30 -',700 21 4.f.is7 04 4,11.1 57 3.9M0 10 3.533 82 3.Mi 97 2.970 20 2.907 70 1-7 .7 1 "Jl 2.43S 07 2.343 99 2.217 83 I y' tn our County Court," writes an , J.tern friend, " one of our smart young laWycrs was well come up with tho other ,.. sitness in a cisc o! assault and I battery, was asked by the junior counsel, 'How far was you, sir, from tho purliss when tho allosed assault took p ace? " " Four feot livo inches and a half," was tho answer promptly given. " Ah I " fiercely demanded the !a yor, " how came you to be so very exact cs all this?" " Eecauso," said the witness, very cool ly, " I expected that some confounded fool would likely as not ask me, and so I went and measured it." ISSf Value the friendship of him who stands by you in storm ; swarms of in- sects will surround you in sunshine. jgyA sermon in four words, on the vanity of earthly possession? "Shrouds 'have no pockets." MISCELLANEOUS ITIMS. yAs a sleambout was uboul to start from Cincinnati, one day, a younji man came on board, loading a blushing dam sel ly the band, and approne!.;ng the po lite clei k, said in a suppressed voico: " I say. me and my wife hcv just got married, and I'm looking for acorn mo 'Kinking ft. r a berth 1" hastily inquir ed the clerk, passing tickotsout toanoth er pass -nger. " A Li, :!, t thunder and lightning, no," g isped the astonished man, "wo hain't but just married ; we want a place tg stay all night, jxu know." isaJf-Vanily Fair, relates an extrnordi-. nary irstance of New York detective igilunce. The police discovered ft box should read " partridges and chickens." C-jy-A beautiful girl stepped into a shop to buy a pair of mitts. " How much are they ? " Why," said the gallant but im pudent clerk, loft id giuing upon her j ovea nd rubv t:n5, .. vou ,hM , ., r , . ,, ,, ,, ,. ,. I . . , nn- mit(a ... ' , , , ., , T 1 hor eyes spoke daggers, 1 ana as I see I ive crotjjt jjer0i cjmrg0 U cn your ibookSi!ind let me kno,vnlien you collect and sits hastily tripped out. Bis-Orange or lemon juice left upon a knife or other piece of iron, will, in a few days, produce a stain so nearly resem bling that caused by blood ai to deceive the most careful observer ; and not many years ago, in Paris, a man was nearly con victed of murder, owing to a kuife being found i.i his poiossion with what was j pionouncod by sovoral witnesses to bo blood, but afterwards diucovcred to bo gimply lemon juice. Bsa5Con tent men t produces, in sonia measure, all those effects which the alche. .1 ... .0n .;i,ou ,,, ,!. 1,. -.-.iu thn philosnplicr's stone; and if it does not 'bring ri'cl,CSi it duos the same thing by banishing the desire of them. If it cant not remove the disquiet i:d arising from a man's mind, body, or fortuco, it makes him easy under them. BaT-Joy is heightened by exultant strains of music, but grief w eased only by low ones. "A sweet, sad measure " is the balm of a wounded spirit. Music lightens toil. The sailor pulls cheerily for bis song. jJC2r-Lndy Bless ington s.iid : ' The separation of friends by tie nth less tert rible than two hearts that have lovod, but Lave ceased to sympathise, wh"o memory is still recalling what they once were to each other." JiaTSaid an astronomer to a bright eyed girl, when talking of rau.bows: 'LMdycit ever see a lunar bow, Miss?'' " I have scii a bow by moonlight, if that' what you mean," was tho sly r.joinder. teg An Iribbman being asked what ho came to Amorica for, said: By the pow ers! you may be suro that it wasn't for want, for I had plenty of that fit home." Query. Mr. A., and Mr. B., are widow ers, each having ono daughter. Mr. A marries Mr. t's daughter, and Mr. 11 marries Mr. A'a daughter. What ielatior, will their children be to each oilier. JCfcaTdt is the vice of the unlearned to suppose that the knowledge cf books is of no account, end tho vice of scholars t think there it no olhar knowledge wortl. having. Serf" A notice of a fctoaruboat explosion ends as follows : "Tno o.rp'ain swam ashore. i did th chambermaid. She was insured for $75, . 000, and loaded with iron." ' R-irDesth is the only subject npoi. which everybody speaks and writf- without a possibility of having experienc ed what he undertakes to discuss. CaTdf -i lsehood pa-alyzed the tonguo what a death-liuo sib.nco would pcrvado society. oT'It is very possible to bo too witt" to bfl earnest, and too earnest to b witty. fcaTTho Maine Senate has passed tbt bill to reppal UieTersonal Liberiy Act, by a vote of yeas seventeen, nays ten. ayIIow to learn all your defects -, quarrel with your best friend. BfitTlt requires great virtue to supporj bad fortune far greater to support goor. JkajrNevor waste a long explanation I upon one who aannol take, a bint.