froNa *l7 , 7.10 ~a ~_.~`~:J:~JAs WEDNESDAY. JUNE 10._ 1846 [Wnttrn for the Bradt - on! Reporter.) forst Tuts and Flowering Shrubs of Bradford County. Wocxtraan! spatv that tree." , The p r ovisions which nature makes for the preserve propogation of organized bodies, is worthy of e:l in vesirpiion of the curious. The principle of cacse of vitality, has never been opened to our view :5 a my-dery which is locked up in the unfathomable i,v.trry .d Deity. But the laws which govern organ'zed. lss:les, whether animal or vegetable, in the various clAnzrs ohwh they undergo in their dilrerent stages of devay. are open to our inspection, and can sto,lird and comprehended by us. pursuit can be mote worthy of a rational mind, t".su to invesugste nature's worts, and 'see the various etauaos of her laws, Deity has stamped His perfec ,,ns on all we see about us, and has clothed us with ,-ovos to read these perfections an His works, and He ~a,ras that homage of the heart which they alone can who read and understand. While we admire the irtnsture. there is a Voice which says to us - I . 7.dronardest thou what thou rustiest." The book of Is the hook of God. It is the revelation of His •Vo MiTlVell by his hand on all His works; and 'e •le reselstion of His will calls us to obey, Him, irve:stion of Nature calls us to adore Him. , Me works of Deity, there is something in the by is hich the vegetable world is kept inexistence carious stages of germination, growth and de pr, nhich intkes us at once with wonder ■nd admira tsvy. Who that sees the lofty Oak, standing the mon cf the I,rest, would suspect, bad neither he nor .4' en ,t , en. that at had its birth (roman acorn like those ;L.lrinches t Whocoukl trace its changes back to :5 mil M:inning! let that acorn alone, had not life I ,lm."l"hcre was a Hind that gave it the sunbeam's ant warmth, the Heaven's dew and rain, and •eiurt to the It to the first acorn given, it sprang to . two- mode of elistence then g-ave it new wants v. at tst its 11,tht and heat, its dew and rain, it sought - tett red I,ara the earth food cat its future greatztetsk. it,. roots w a ar-•uth to de•olur the earth o. and'each leaf misted to purify and roOt devoured. There to a prilieess ti.• r• throu.th vihtch the whole vegetable Log ,t s 7 s. Rendrsuan and hie, decay and death, are order. It lives to die, and dies to hes-- •• ,!.) zee rraw,71..14,it Vre. too. hare our 0[1441 115 our ell.tetwe as de pendent, and our end as eer- chanze that keeps the lirtng wadi in si we eat nue have been the tievh • r-t, , r tt:e nur:lmect of worms; the blush that we on the cheek of beauty. or the hue of the Lips that our own, may hare mantled the petal of the tlto= ed on the serpent's scale or &why tongue.- 7:e n-sr that glistens in the loveliest eye has came from ^ , IS, and whe•her this held in decay;: a drop of poisvm :- , 0 for:, treally Una, a dew drop from some lovely or a ...he tray from some An g er, eye man knows , s--cares 'COL him the bush of maiden's cheek,. hp, Is briutifut. whatever it once has beta—and the tear. he feels a kindred sympathy whaterec nay tu‘e been its remote source. Bat Iles.rs. Editors, I hare diirressed from the subject "tie r‘mmuutcstions, and if I hare incurred your , Lsi'essere 'cy eo d.ing, I will flee for shelter to the gru‘es of our wo, , dlands, and either" win you to ;11.121ar with • wreath of wad-wood dowers, of chap. to te etrei of id humor with a description of some azr fore-A trees. • We hare &mow; our orihi hills, some trees crhere •ist9es is the on±y reresentative of its genus in snJ (mm these, I will se.leet a few fur de. '0 LL th.,rt:de- k.S [Sorb:is A ozericcna: is a favorite Z !tee, it ;moors from ten b) tweets I , rzortirs and that sumterhat tte c•al non a.ll of the genus has a rcseaNallce to the =S. E: ts inerefvre cia-ssrl in the genus P . 5,-.7 by .• 1.-ve pots oat is leaven eativ in May and dowers me: ;ittaag. kale-ales hare a eua:kraoa stack like "are: of the ciazae or butternut, aenl like them they Ina wane small !cadets which are attached pei , le or stmt. The leidiets are pointed r n.-tched on their edges, sad 1 3= 41 on fi Ater of the Nloantsia Ash, is white, '5l `....7trs Trhrch Sun' irt c:tts:ers thrmir.h the wire ' dart mi,o7 potpie_ It Is the (mit of this tree vau....s it to .t.e ' = MA idalirel. Its dU.tierli ate beauLfulfv wtth the white =nee ' , KJ= Itt nee easii)- cultiratei five: its berries. the Net. It groa - s npi3:y• •ad it imas: any soiL It L-I.7tits to the eleventh -3-33 oiler of the Linn-ran ststra. -~ ~.i-Crr r. Cc Sta::•43:ea same six eta: grows along ocr streams, t . as a Li=e'xa'm-: eerie in Mae. Its dowers are a alsd hang in clue.ers like the wilJ cherry let leaves-we m area. oval mad I+Oirr•.ed ai 'Th-em , tT. It is a I•itto6,me orna=mtal tree a: - •`.sc;! it is cot ofett f - oand euhivamd for that htlaav to the fifth duo and third order of Lttzean s4mem. PrAte Ash :instioryZarn — Frcrinettm) Le: rased the low graied." of oar county, .0.1 is sae a the men abose mentioned. The 4ti tree is corared with prickles at spine s. the 3 izaeate rne tSe Motranin ash. leeSete °Tal and h+.l)srn i ; pow in umbels on each " traaM. The dowers yenta greenish white. " u `ktlivla is The heirk of this tree is iscagezt It he:o' no to 'Yemen:ie.:hi dam 0 - ne dthe Lmm.a.a sense= Ars'aer rnaj tree or 5..h.n35 Swain in the "le:VI -`enn nr ors esenty, is the Leather Woad Thu ;mese:. about the be4htuf Int feet. *la its ',hype.. It Somers in V.sy.beCo„-e. 'eaves keit The dswm -: ! aa! 3r..,4 haaches of tan cr w.Ln ct the s~= rae fruit of this . 111 --` 4 e' 4l , rei beery. Every part of taw nee 4 , ' 4 l Unitt,. le ts been ,1 cuda.les. and the Z,l4' beLags tbrr ithiss ani 6. - st 4 1 4 41% sal is sai s rsAr..., csZei Home wand. • • . • • . REPORTER„ . , ~„.. ...•„ E _• .• Along the streams of our county, we have, too, the Watch Hazel Ilamaintlis Virginica.) A singular characteristic of this shrub, a, that it puts out flowers in the fall, which perfect their fruit in the spring. Its flow ers are ye:lowish, and not showy ;—they would scarcely be noticed, did they not clothe their branches in the depth of winter, when all other vegetation appears asleep or dead. The leaves of this shrub are long, notched on their edges, and covered with fine hairs beneath. It is called witch hazel, because the divining or mineral rod, which was once the cause of so much superstitious folly, was made from its branches. It is not uncommon still to find people who believe in its powers, and who are willing to work by torch tight at the suggestion of some ignorant impostor, who knows as little of the science of minerals, as he does of the language of the luau in the Moon. This shrub belongs to the fourth class and third order of the Linnean system. H. Towantla.June 5, 1816. I hare ut in chambers rich and high, When the haughtiest brow was smoothed in mills. When kindness warmed proud Beauty's eye, And Art displayed its softest wiles; But the fonts* wild was my delight, At dawning gny and gathering night; More j.:y had I in my leafy hall. Than in fretted roof and storied wall. I have knelt at the incense-shrine of Praise, When a thousand voices chanted deep, When the organ pealed, and the torches' blaze Saw some in uiumph, some to weep; But higher rites have I partaken, When Heaven with the tempest's wing was shaken, When . the forest blazed, and the lightning's dart Quailed all but the wandering exile's bean. In climes of softer air I've been, And sat in bowers when the now was blown, When the leaf was yet in its freshest green, And with one to love till then unknown ; But deeper raptures I have felt, When by her rocky couch I knelt, Who crossed for me the stormy main, Content in one fond heart to reign. THRILLLIEG NARR4TIVE. JAMES MORGAN, a native of Maryland, mar ried at an early age, soon after sealed neat Bry. an's S:ation in the wilds of Kentucky. Like most pioneers of the West, he had cut down.the rave, built a cabin, deadened the timber...en closed a held with a worm fence, and planted some cora. I; was on the 7th of August, 1783. The sun had descended, a pleasant breeze was playing tarou. , h the surrounding-wood, the cane bowed under its influence; and the broad green leaVes of the 'corn waved in the air. MORGAN bad seated himself in the doOr of his cabin, with his infant on his knee. His young and happy wife had laid aside her spinning wheel, and was busi ly engaged in preparing the frugal meal. That afternoon he had acctdentally found a bundle of letters, which he had finished reading to his wife, before he had taken his seat at the door. It was correspondence in which they acknowledged an early and ardent attachment for each other, and the perusal left evident traces of joy in the coun tenances of both ; the little infant, ton, seemed to pat take of its parent's feelings. by his cheer ful smi!es.„ p'ayful humor, and infantile caresses. While thus agreeably employed, the repoit of a ride was heard . ; another followed in quick sue= cession. Morgan sprang to his feet, his wife ran to the door, and they simultaneously ex e:aimed. Indians." The door was immediately barred. and the next moment their fears were realized by a•bold and spirited enact of a small party of Indians.— The cabin could not be uccesefully defended, and time was precious. Morgan. coot, brave and prompt, soon derided. White he was in the act of concealing his wife ender the floor. a mo ther's feelings overcame her—she arose, seized her infant, but was afraid that its cries would betray her pace of concealment-=gazed silent ly upon it—a momentary struggle between life and affection took p ati. She once more presed tier child to her agitated bosom, and again kissed it with impassioned tenderness. The infant, alarmed at the profusion of tears that fell upon its cheeks, looked up in its mother's face, threw his little arms around her neck and wept aloud. In the name of Heaven, Eliza, re lease the child, or be lost.", said the husband, io a'soft, imploring tone, as he forced the infant (rum his wife ; he hastily took up his gun, knife and hatchet, ran to the ladder that led to his eharuber. and drew, it up after him. In a mo ment the door was burst open and the savages entered. By this time. Morgan had secured his child in a bag, and lashed it to his back ; then throw tug off sortie clapboards from the cabin's roof. he resolutely leaped to the ground. He was as sailed by two Indians. As the first approached. he knocked ban down with he butt end of his gun. The other advanced with up lifted loam hawk ; Morgan let fall his eon and chased in.— Tlae savage made a blow. missed, but severed the cord that bound the infant to his back, and it fell. The coolest over the child now became warm and fierce, and war carried on with knives only. The robust and athletic Morgan got the ascendancy, both were badly cut and bled freely. but the stabs of the white man were better and deeper, and the savage soon sunk to the earth in death. Morgan hastily took up his child and hurried off. is sa.atber The Indians in the house. busily engaged in drinking and plundering. were not apprised of the contest in the yard. until the one that had been knocked down gave signs ofretunaing life, and called them to the scene of action. Mor rell was discovered immediately pursued, and a dog put upon his trail. Operated upon by all the feelings of a husband and a father. hemored with all the speed of a hunted sta i r. and soon out stripped the Indians, but the dog kept in dose pursuit. Finding it impossible to outrun the, cunning animal , trained hunts of this kind. he halted and waited until it came within a few yards of him. Erred and brought him to the ground. Iu a short time he reached the hoes to of hi s broth er, who resided near 1315-ant's station at Lex ington, where he left the child. and the two PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. 0. & H. P. GOODRICH. The Exile's Song. asimitzturas OF OENTINCIATION !ROO ANT Qtritua.r brothers set out for the dwelling. As they ap proached. light broke upon his view—his step quickened. aid his fears increased, and the most agonizing apprehensions crowded upon his mind. Emerging from the canebrake. he be held his house in Asides, and almost binned to the ground. "My wife !" said he, as he pres sed one hand to Lis foreheah, and grasped the fence with the other. to support his tottering frame. He gazed on the. ruin and desolation before him, advanced a few steps and sunk ex hausted to the earth. Morning caine--the luminary of heaven arose, and found him seated near the almost expiring embers. In his right hand he Nelda small stick with which he was tracing the name of Eliza on the ground, and his left hand lay on hi,s fa vorite dog, that lay by his aide, looking first on the ruins, and then on his master, with evident signs of grief. Morgan arose. The two broth ers now made search and found some bones burned to ashes, which they carefully gathered. and silently consigned to their mother earth, be neath the wide branches of a venerable oak, consecrated by the purest and holiest recollec tions. Several days after this. Morgan was engaged in the desperate battle of the Blue Licks. The Indians came off victors, and the surviving whites returned stems the Licking. pursued by the ene my for a distance of six and thirty miles. - Morgan was amongst the last who crossed the river, and was in the rear until the hill was descended. As soon as he saw the Indians re appear on the ridge, he felt and saw his wrongs, and recollected the lovely object of his affections. While in the act of leaping from his saddle, he received a ball in the thigh and fell. An In dian sprang upon him. seized him by the hair. and applied the scalping knife. At this moment h • cast op his eyes and recognized the handket chief that bound the head of the savage, and which he knew to be his wife's. This added renewed strength to his body, and increased his activity to fury. He quickly threw his left arm round the Indian, and with a death-like grasp hugged him to his bosom, plunged his knife in to his side, and he expired in his arms. Re leasing himself from the savage, Morgan crawl ed tinder a small oak, on an elevated piece' of ground a short distance from him. The scene of action shifted, and he remained undiscovered and unscalped, an anxious spectator of the battle. It was now midnight. The savage hand had after taking all the scalps they could find, left the battle ground. Morgan was seated on the ' foot of the oak.ita trunk supported his head.— The rugged and uneven ground that surrounded him was covered with the slain, the once white and projecting rocks, bleached with the sun and ri.in for centuries, were crimsoned with blood that had warmed the heart and animated the bos om of the soldier. The pale glimmering of the moon occasionally threw a faint light upon the mangled bodies of the dead, then a passing cloud enveloped all in darkness. and gave additional honor to the feeble crtes.of a few still lingering in the last agonies of the protracted death. ren dered doubly appalling by the hoarse growl of the bear, the loud howl of the wolf, the shrill and varied notes of the wild cat and panther, feeding on the dead and dying. Morgan beheld the scene with heart rending sensations and looked forward in the apathy of despair to his own end. A large ferocious looking bear, covered all Over with blood, now approached him ; he threw himself on the ground, silently commend ed his soul to heaven, and in breathless anxiety awaited his fate. The satiated animal passed without noticing him. Morgan raised his head —was about to offer thanks for his unexpected preservation, when the cry of a pack of wolves opened upon him, and awakened him to a sense of danger. He placed his bands over his eyes. fell upon his face, and in silent agony awaited his fate. He now heard a rustling in the bush es. steps approached. a cold chill ran over him. imagination, creative. busy imagination. was actively employed ; his limbs in all probability be torn from him and he ' Toured alive. He felt a much—the vital spark was almost extin guished—another touch more violent than the first, and he was turned over. The cold sweat ran down in torrents—his hands were for-ed from his face—the moon passed under a cloud —a faint ray beamed upon him—his eyes invol untarily opened and be beheld his wile, who.' in a scarce audible voice exclaimed, •• My bus- • band ! my husband !" and fell upon his bosom. . Monran now learned from his wife. that Icier the Indians enteted the house, they found some spiri:s and drank frevly ; an sin - re:don soon took p . ace—nne of them received a mortal stab, and : his blood ran through the floor on her. Beier/m i g t to be the blood of her husband. she shrieked aloud and betrayed her place of coa cealment. She was immediately taken and i bound. The party. after setting fire to the house, proceeded to Bryant's station. On the day of the battle of the Blue Licks. a horse. with 3 saddle :ad bridle lashed by her, which she knew to be her husband's. During the action. the prisoners were left unguarded. made their escape. and lay cancelled beneath some bushes under the bank of the river. After the Indians had returned from the pursuit. and left the battle-ground, she with some other persons who had escaped with her. determined to make search for their friends. and if owthe field andliving. to sere them if pos sible from the beasts of prey. After searching for some time. and almost diespairingof success. she fortunately &covered him. The party of Colonel Logan Com! Morgan and his wire, and restored them to their friends. their infant and their homes. POPTTNG Tag QUESTION, -4 bashful wooer not long since. 'wishing to pupil's question.clid it in the fullest,* singular manner—taking up the lades eat. be said. pussy. may I have Tour mistress!" It was ariawered by the lady, who said, "say yes, pussy." , - A Coe, from the mown-. stopping at rinser our hotea, being asked br - the waiter whether he would hare green or kaaek tea. replied... he didn't care a darn what color it ten, so it had plenty of einem& in IL" &collections of !aka. The My of Mexico—The President's Palace —The Cathedral—Streets and Buildings in Mexico. Mexico was colonized just one hundred years before Massachusetts. Her first settlers were the noblest spirits of Spain hiller Augus tan age, the epoch of Cervantes. Cones, Pizar ro, Columbus, Gunzalvaed Cordova, Cardin al, Yinseues, and the great and good Isabella. Massachusetts was settled by the poor Pilgrams of Plymouth. who carried with them nothing but their own hardy virtues and indomitable energy. Mexico, with a rich soil. and * cli mate adapted to the production of every thing which grows out of the earth. ai.d possessing every metal used by man—Massa ,husetts with a sterile soil and ungenial cliinats , and no sin gle article for exportation but ice and rock— how have these blessings, profusely given by Providence. been improved on the one hand. and obstacles overcome on the other! What is now the respective condition of the two countries ! In productive industry, wide spread diffusion of knowledge. public nistituti in of every kind. general happiness, and continually increasing prosperity ; in letters, ans, morals. religon ; in everything which makes a people great, there is not in the world, and there never was in the world, such a commonwealth as Massachusetts. " There she is ! look at her! and Mexico." The city of Mexico is said to be the finest built city on the American continent. lu some respects it certinly is so. In the principal streets the.houses are all constructed according to the strictest architectural rules. The founda tions of the city were laid. and the first building was erected by Cones, who did everything well which he attempted—from building a house or writing a couplet. or to conquering an empire. Many of the finest buildings in Melt e') are still owned by his descendants. The public square is said to be unsurpassed by any in the world ; it contains some twelve or fifteen acres paved with stone. The cathedral covers one entire side, the palace another ; the western side is ocui ied by a row of very high and substantial houses, die second stories of which project into the street the width of the pave ment; the lower stories are occupied by the principal retail merchants of the. city. The most of these houses are built by Cones, who with his characteristic sagacity and an avarice which equally characterized hini in the latter part of his life, selected the best portion of the city for him self. The President's Place. formerly the Palace of the Victory, is an immense building of three stories high, about five hundred feet in length. and three hundred and fifty feet wide ; it stands on the site of the palace of Montezuma. It is difficult to conceive of so much stone and mortar being put together in a less tasteful and imposing shape ; it has much more the appear ance of a cotton factory or a penitentiary. than what it really is ; the windows are small and a parapet wall runs the whole length of the buil ding, with nothing to relieve the monotony of its appearnce except some very indifferent or namental work in the centre; there are no doors in the front either of the second or third ' stories—nothing but disproportionately small windows. and too many of them ; the three doors, and there are only three in the lower story. are destitute of all .architectural beauty or ornament. Only - a very small part of this palace is appropriated to the residence of the President ; all the public offices are here. inclu ding those of the heads of the different depart ments, ministers of war. foreign - relations, finance and justice, the public treasury, ite. ez.c. The halls of the House of Deputies and of the Senate are also in the same building, and last andleast the botanic garden. After pass ing through all sorts of filth and dirt on the basement story foci come to a dark narrow passage which conducts you to a massive door. which when you have succeeded in openin g , you enter an apartment enclosed with hig h on every side but open at the top, and certain ly not exceeding eighty feet square. and this is the botanic garden of the palace of Mexi co ; a few shrubs and plants and the celebrated manita-tree, are all that it contains. I have rarely in my life seen a mure gloomy and desolate looking place. It is much more like a prison than a garden. A decrepit, palsied old man. said to be more than a hundred years old, is the superintendent of the establishment no tit e could have been selected more in keep ing with the general dilapidation and dreariness of this melancholy affair. But the Cathedral, which occupies the site of the great idol temple of Moutezume, offers a striking contract. It is five hundred feet long by four hundred and twenty wide. It would be superfluous to add another to the many descriptions of this famous building which have already been published. Like all the other churches in Mexico, tt 111 built in' the Gothic style. The walls, of several feet thick ness, are made of upbeat's stone and lime.— Upon entering it, one if apt to recall the wild fictions of the Arabian Nights ; it seems as if the wealth of empires was collected there.— The clergy in Mexico ao not, for obvious rea sorts, desire that their wealth should be made known to its full extent; they are. therefore. not disposed to give very full information upon the subject, or to exhibit the gold and silver vessels, vases, precious stones, and other forms of wealth quite enough is exhibited to strike the beholder with wonder. The first object that presents itself on entering the cathedral is the altar, near the centre of the building; it is made of highly-polished silver, and coveted with a profusion of ornaments of pure gold.— On each side of this altar runs a balustrade, enclosing a space about eight fret wide and eighty or a hundred feet long. The balustrades are about four feet high. and four inches thick in the large.t part ; tie har.drail from six to eight inches wide. Upon the top of this handrail, at the distance of six or eight feet apart, are human images. beautifully wrought. and about two feet high. All of these, the balustrade, handrail, and images, are made of af i eompomid of gold. silver:Ld copper—mom valuable than silre:: I was told that au offer bad been made, to t this balustrade. and replace it with aniiiher of ex actly the same size and- workmanship .1 pure ! silver, and to give half a million of dollars , besides. There is much more of the church I should think. in all of it. not less than three hundred feet. As you walk through the building. on either side there are different appartnients. all tilled, from the floor to the ceiling, with p.ontings. statues, vases, huge candlesticks, Waiters, and a thousand other articles. made of gold or glitter. This. too, is only the every day cli,play rtf articles of least value; the more costly are stored away in chests and flows. What must it be when all these are brought out, with the immense quantities of precious stone which the church is known to pOsvess ! Anil this is only one of the .churches of the city of Mexico. where there are between sixty and eight• others. and some of them po ing little less wealth than the cathedral ; and it must also be remembered, that all the other large cities. such as Puebla, Guadalajara. Guanajunto, Zacatecas, Durango, San Louts Potosi. have each a pro portionate nuusber of equally gorgeous estab lishments. It would be the wildest and most random conjecture to attempt an estimate of the amount of the precious metals thus withdrawn from the usual currency of the world. and wasted in these barbaric ornaments. as incom patible with good taste as they are with the humility which was the most striking feature in the character of the founder of our religion. whose chosen instruments were the low and humble, and who himself regarded as the high est evidence of his divine initsion. the fact that •• to the poor the gospel was preached." Ido not doubt but there is enough of the precious metals in the different churches in Mexico to relieve sensibly the pressure upon the curren- Foley of the world, which has _resulted from the diminished productions of the mines, and the increased quantity which has been appro priated to purposes of luxury, and to pay the cost of such more tasteful decorations in archi lure and statury made of mohogany. But me immense wealth which is thus col lected in 4he churches, is not by any means all. even the larger portion, of the wealth of the Mexican churn and clergy. They own very mapy of the finest houses in Mexico and other cities (the rents of which must be enormous.) besides valuable real estates all over the Re public. Almost every person leaves a bequest in his will for masses for his soul. which con stitutes an incumbrance on the estate, and thus nearly all the estates of the small proprietors are mortgaged to the church. The property held by the church is mortchain isestimated at fifty millions. Mexico tr, I believe, the only country where the church property remains untouched entire ly. Some small amount has been recently realized from the sale of the estates of the ban ished Jesuits ; but with that exception. no President, however hard pressed, (and there is no osy in the year that they are not hard pressed.) has ever dared to encroach upon that which is regarded is consecrated property. with the exception of Gomez Parries. who, in 1834. proposed to the Legislative chambers to confiscate" allthe .church property. and the measure would, no doubt, have been adopted, but for a revolution which overthrow the ad ministration. The streets of Mexico are uncommonly wide, much more so than is necessary. con- Indenng that they are not obstructed. as in our cities. by drays sad wagons. The side-walks are uncommonly narrow. The streets are all paved with round stone; the side walks with very rough fiat ones. The houses on the prin cipal streets are all two sod three stories high. The elevation of the rooms, from the fluor to the ceiling, eighteen and twenty feet, gives to a house of two stories a greater height than we are accustomed to see in houses of three.— The roofs are all terraced, and have a parapet walls of three or four feet high. answering all the purposes of a breast work, a use to com monly made of them in the frequent revolutions , to which that unfortunate country seems to he forever destined. The walls are built of rough stones of all shapes and sizes, and large quan tities of lime mortar. They are' very thick; and in larger edifices of much greater massive ness. The foundations oPmost of the largest • are made with piles. Even these foundations Pre very insecure, and it is surprising that they are not more so, with such an immense weight of stone upon such an unsteady foundation.— The streets cross each other at right angles, di viding the whole city into squares. Each one of these squares is called a street, and his a separate name; a serious inconvenience to a stranger in the city. Instead of designating the street in its whole extent by one naine.ard . numbering the houses. each side of very square has a different name, and names which sound. to Protestanteani. very much like a vio lauon of the Third Article of the Heealogue such as the street of Jests, and the street of the Holy Ghost. A gentleman will tell you that he lives in the Holy Ghost, or that fie lives in Jesus; certainly not always true. if taken in the sense in which our preacher, use the words. In most of these streets there is a , church. which gives name to the street in which it stands. In many insurova these chutches , and convents) that of San Augustine for exam- pie) covers the whole square. not with separ ate buildings, but one single edifice. with the; patio or court, an open space in the centre. A Tsunsn Siam' lately came or' at New Orleans, for five hundred dollars a side. h continued, accordtne to the Advertiser. for , thirteen hangs; the 'rivals heing a Frenchman arid a Kentuckian. Thebv-standers and jolg. ' es were talked to sleep and when they waked op in the monun,e , they toned the Frenchman dead, and the Kentuckian whispering in his ear. IfirsAN GLoat.—There: armed at MU England, not - Since. a Dutch vessel. ns►iZatel by a man. his wife. and four daughters. laden with hones gathered from the battle fields of Napoleon, to be sold bre* bushel for ma inn to grow turnips. RE [FtLu' the Qilumbiati Wilt 'than LOTC bit Still!' Wilt thou love her ;liU,..whea the sunny curls, • That over her bosom now, . - Wid be laced with the silver threads*, age. -; And her step falls awl snd :bowl : - • " Wilt thou love her still, when the oarnmer's sautes-, Oa her lips no longer live I - '• I will love hes stn. . With right good still!' Thou wilt love her still then our cherished one To thy sheltering in= we give. Wilt thou love her still, when hirehang;ittr,eyeil, Haie grown dim with sorrow's rain, • When the broom that beats against thine own - Throbs slow with the weight of yon ; When her silvery laugh rings out no mate, And vanished her youthful chums? '• With free good will, 1 shall love her still!" Thon wilt love ber then ant dean* one We give to thy loving 111.11 i. Remember, no grief has she env known, . . Her spirit is tight and free; ' None either wrlth fannies! step, has pest Its innermost shades, but thee! Then, wilt love her slid, when the thoughts of poi* In their blushing bloom depart ' Through good and ill, I will love her still r Thoo wilt love her still ! then our darling take To the joy of thy noble heart! Remember, for thee does she Ming Immo The friends of her early days. No longer to meet their approving looks, Nor their fond unfeigned praise. Forgive her. then, if the seats fall fast, Ar 4 promise to love her well. t'l will love her still, With right good will r Thou wilt love her still 1 . 1 then with peaceful' stag We our sobbing sorrow quell. When her father is dead, wed the emerald sod Lies soft on her mother's breast; When her brother's voice is no longer heard, And her sisters' hushed to rest— Wilt thou lose her din for to Out she look; Her star on life's troubled lea! "I will love her still, Through good and ill!" With the marriage sow on her youthful Bp, Then, we give our child to thee' 111011 LtrING AND MEAN THTNELNO.—How muck nicer people are in their persons than in their minds. How anxious are they to .wear the appzarance of wealth and taste in the things of outward show, while their intellects are pov erty and meanness. See one of the apes of fashion, with his cozeombries and Ostentation of lnruty. IFIO clothes must be made by the best tiller, his horse must be of the best blood, hO wives of the finest flavor, his cookery of the high est zest ; but his reading is of the poorest frivoli ties, or as the lowest and most despicable nil rarity. in the enjoyment of the animal &nee, he is an epicure, but a pig Lea elean laden e4m pared with his mind, and pig would ell. good an 1 bad sweet and foul alike, bropis mind has no tali except for the most worthless gal sir. The pig has no discrimmination. and a tr at apperitr ; the mind which we • describe -bas m t the apology of voracity : it is satisfied with Inkt little, but that morale of the worst sect, and eve ry thing of a better quality is rejected with as- Pot: If we could but see men's mind as we see their bodies. what a spectacle of nakedness. der titutioq. deformities and disease it would be.— What hideous dwarfs and cripples, whit dirty and revolting craving, and all these in connex ion with the most exquisite care and pampering of the borlv:: If many a conceited coxcomb cock! see his own mind he would see the mean est object the world can present. It is not with hercary in its most degraded state that it is to be compaird, for the beggar has wants. is dusatis sith his state, has wishes for enjoyment above his lot. but the pauper of intellect is con tent with his poverty it is his choice to feed on carrion, he e.g. relish nothing else ;he has no desire beyond his filthy fare. Yet he flat ters himself that he is a superior being. he takes to himself the merit of his tailor. his wine Met chant, his enarh maker. his upholster and his cook ; hut if the thing were turned inside out. if that concealed, nasty corner, his mind, were ex posed to view. how degrading would be the ii bibitiun.—Taira Edintimg Magazine. EARTH!.—The earth's chemical classifiention of bodies and enbAiances are frequently broken up and changed. in consegnence of new diseov cries in the progress of science. Many articles w hi c h were formerly soppreval to be. simple substances. and clamed under the heads (earths. and alkalies, are now known to be metallic oxi de : and on this acentintsome considerit reason able m suppose all the different earths. to have metalic bases, although some of them have nev er vet been reduced to a pure metallic state.— The substance which are now generally known as earths. are Lime. Alurnme, Sdes, Magttesia. Barites. Strontites„ Ittria. Glueira. and &moo. Most of the earths possesses some peculiar pro perties. by which each is completely distinguish ed from another. Lurk. it usually found combined with carbon ic acid. in marble and limestone. By burning. or heating these, the ratan/ie. acid is driven off; and the lime is rendered tmre. Pure lime is ca pable of absorbing one-fourth of its weight of water. and et• remain perfectly day ; thus be comina a hydrate of lima. Aternsy. or pore clay derives it name from alum. which is a ezdp.hura:e f altun:ne. Co-n -mon rises consists' of almnine mixed with some where:a-mils, sni eerier By enntainjt small quanti ty of iron. which gives it a red color whets barred. as in bricks and pottery. . Suss. is pure dint, or rock errstal it ahomads in white belch sand, and is the primes-- pi! ingredirst m the composition of glass, 1 I resists the action of all acids, except the Ho- I on:. Fl , - SEM MMUS tAk