70132311721 =0 M=M N 57 X 153 Xl9 WEDNESDAY. JUNE ,17, 1840 [For the Bradford Reporter.] To Eden, on Ha Eighteenth Bitth-day. Dear Helen! while the glowing tints are seen Upon thy cheek, the blossoms of eighteen, While thy young heartwith joy ecstatic burns, As to survey new scenes thy bright eye turns ; Oh ! hear this accent from the word of truth. Remember thy Creator in thy youth. From vanity turn oil thy brilliant gaze, To where the Bible pours its brighter mo— lts rays celestial! where the Heavenly voice Bids the free'd captive 'in ita God rejoice. Behold what dealing honors wait the just, Those spirits faithful to their sacred trust! A crown, a kingdom they will soon possess, For Christ has promis'd and can do no less Than give possession—firm his word remains, And truth eternal still his oath sustains. Oh! be entreated by these humble lays, Agtin they bid thee turn thy brilliant gaze Frain scenes of folly—see the glories bright That shroud the Savior in yon world of light, And of that glory thou may'st soon partake If ihou wilt labor; serf for his sake, let the pulsations of that bosom young, And the sweet accents of that youthful tongue To Christ be given—as golden apples glow, word well spok'n, who its worth can know I The sweet simplicity of blooming youth, Be it devoted to the cause of truth, To virtue, science, science heav'nly fair Like ble-t religion will reward thy care; How lovely is the mind on which they shine— They every ficling. every thought refine— Above the fogs of sense it shines afar In worth sublime, a mild resplendent star. My much lov'd niece! and dost thou not admire Tho , e stars of beauty ? does thy soul aspire To follow in their train, tho distant far, Anil be to earth a bliss diffusing star. 14 , , . 1, I'd [Written for the Bradford Reporter.] on st Trrt s and Flowertna Shrubs of Bradford ' County. xv..nd•mn e. spare that tree Ea tmong the earintis departments 5..,m- few saajerta are inure interesting '3 , 1:1•••• • :/1:11.1:1. 1 11 ..1 plants. Na hor :rte o‘rr aq Tier tvorki, has not only t • of to trlt All ininuent principle by I. rn di:c.l t.i product. us like; but she h•ts duparunents of her general kus4.lo.n. c..st au.,. trhtelt, we should at first sorrel, would tend termination, go directly to the disseminatiou of . ! , y the feeds of plant.; that each sporie4 1.071,A, .vv 10.1; un,l ,Ithough there are seine it+raucr•~ rte phi it this seems to be produced by citlii•r rnearis—as by cuttings and laying.; in the willow, vin?, and some or her e?sr•as; yet for the general distribution and wide-spread di.e . .rttiation of most members of the vegetable kingdom, wr Foto.t look to the seed alone some of the grains, and those vegetable products nihieh mart uses fur his food or other necessary comforts, he has in a measure disseminated and protected; 'but still it is questionable whether this care and assistance to nature • is equal to the destruction he has caused in those Windh he considers us.•leas. In mod instances, tar ,11-per4ion of semi , - is entirely spontaneous add with- nut 11 , 110.1 n aid. Tae mountain's height, and the ocean'4 birm iiii barrier, and climate and soil 'alone pre- eta, vs, ry .peens from being the product of iirery rutin- =ME Illant‘ darer greatly in the number of weal% they pro der, «bile same seem hardly able to maintain their taol, sa il•w: a re their seeds and so winch are they cx- t.i de.trumion, other.: seem to produce them by mt nat., am! threaten to overrun creation with their own Front Co. straws of . a single barley seed. Isom') corn, have been produced at a single growth; a het I iif.poppv has produced 32000, and a tobacco pant many tunes that number. Yet these are but units c..nyarril with many species rthnge seeds are invisible, um. intrilite to I , e numbered. l'he atmosphere is filled isah the seeds of the mushrooms without their being ay.sthle to us, ItOihey await only favorable situations to e .. rmlnite—live their ephemeral life, shed their seeds and Sene plints bare their seeds attached to a downy Pail. whiet they 11. i it along the air and are thereby carried Otheres are an ennstMetcd all to throw nut their seed, with a jerk when ripe. Some reek which are hoarier, have wings attached to them. L e which they float alma the air to a consi.lerahle dia tm.,; and °theta are eloacly sealed up and seem nllO for a long river ',it, or even an ocean voyage. Othes a, tws, are :iced with hooks,. by which they attach them sods, to arty moving thing with wills h they come in ointart, arid are thus carried far from their parent plant. Birds, too, though at first thought, they seem flitted only td prey upon .1..61,6 by devouring their seeds, yet are an important part in their disseminations. The Dutch at one time, in order to monopolise the nutmeg trade, rot down all the tree's in the Spice Islands that they could not watch. Cut these were in a few yearsi re. Oenished, by the birds carrying the seed from one island to another. There are some of the means by which the wed s of various plants are distributed over different sec tions of the globe. But .till there are boundaries beyond which various P l ant. do not appear—these are fired by climate. Many Planta may gradually become habituated to higher or laser temperature than is natural to them ; but there are bound s am to these changes, which the art of man can not overcome. Nature here in ton atntng foi him,ws thrirbabits refuse to yield, and it is only by but house protectio n that they will thrive at all if carried from a hot to a cold climate, while if carried front a cold to a hot are, they droop and die with all his art to save them. Ittf Forest trees which are indigenous to our county, Vehaps no one is so wide-spread as the Pine and others .r the same genus (Pinus.) This genus embraces a great number of species, most of which are evergreens. The must important species in THE BRADFORD REPORTER. our county is the White Pine (Pintas Slorbus.) The tall conical trunk of this tree as it stands in our forest, with its tuft of green leaves at its top, gives it an enliven• log appearance in winter, and in summer it at proudly lifts its head to catch "the lightnings and the breeze."— The leaves of this tree are bound up in little bunches or fives, on short stems—are slender—four or five inches long—and thickly crowded on the branches. The seeds are small black specks, which are found closely folded up at the foot of each scale of the cone, or pine bud—as they am sometimes called. This is one of the tallest trees of the American forest, it being said often to attain the height of two hundred feet, and six or seven feet in diameter. The trunk of the White pine is seldom branched, nor where it grows in thick forests has it any limbs for two thirds of its length, and those of its top are short and vaticinate. The bark of this tree when young. is smooth and green, and often looks as if polished, but when the tree becomes old, it splits and becomes ragged, but does not fall ofi• to scales like that of other pines. For timber, this is the most important tree in the forests of our county, and probably in the United States. More than nine-tenths of all the lumber sawed in this county, is the white pine, and from it large quantities of shingles are annually manufactured and sent by our river to more southern markets. Its defects are, its little strength—the feeble bold it gives nails, and its liability to swell in a humid atmosphere. But these are compen i sated by its being light, soft, and comparatively free from knots--durable, and little liable to split when exposed to the sun. The sap-wood of this tree is very thin and resinous, and the heart-wood only is valuable for lumber. It is used for all kinds of wood work in house building, for the frames of Mahogany furniture, for masts, and ■ anety of other purposes. We have few trees in our forest so well adapted to ornamental culture as the white pine. When young, in open situations, its trunk is short and branches thick and bushy. In winter its deep green contrasts finely with the naked branches of deciduous trees, and there is ever a solemn music in the fitful moaning of its branches as as they are stirred by the breeze. It is easily cultivated, and were it sot so common in our wilds„would he sought for as an ornamental tree. But there is a strange pro- pensity in us to undervalue what ie easily procured, and we often pass by the truly beautiful without giving it a passing notice, and give our best exertions to obtain what would be prized less, were it less rare. The Pitch Pine (Finns Rigida) is also found plen tifully in our county. This tree has longer and broader Irave•s, which. grow in threes—its cones are of a pyramid. QM al shape, are longer than those of the white pine, its bark is thicker, darker and more deeply furrowed, and much more of the surface of the tree is covered with branches. which renders the wood extremely knotty.— The sapwood of this tree is thick and very resinous, atilt.) compact as to be much heavier than the white pine. It is from this tree that the pitch and lampblack of commerce are obtained, and it is superior to all other kinds of pine as a fuel. For most purposes, however, II is of less value as a timber than other kinds of pine. ft grows abundant on light gravelly toils, but in ouch situations, never attains a large size. It is, however, sometime found in swamps along with the red ce dar, to the height of seventy or eighty feet. The Yellow Pine (P. Mitwt) is a species that some what resemble the pitch pine in size and shape. Its leaves, however, grow in pairs, and are hollowed on their under surface; its cones are oval and armed with long spines ;—the concentric circles of the wood in a given space are much more numerous than in the pitch pine; the sap-wood is thin, and heart-wood is compact and slightly resinous. Long experience has proved the ex cellence and durability of this wood, and it is much sought after for flooring. There ate a number 4N:other species of this genus in our county, which the limits of this article do not oillmv mr tO dcxribc Towanda, June 12, Iµl6 Fear not, beloved, though clouds may lower, Whilst rainbow visions melt away, Faith's holy star has still a power That may the deepest midnight sway. Fear not! I take a prophet's tone, Our lute nen neither wane nor set; My heart grows strong in trust—Mine Own, We shall be happy yet! What! though long anxious years have passed, Since this true heart was vowed to thine, There comes, for us, a light at last : Whavo beam upon our path loth shine. We who have loved 'midst double and fears, Yet never with one hour's regret, There comes a jiiy to gild our tears-- We shall be happy yet! Ay, by the wandering hinds, that find A home beyond the mountain wave. Though many a wave and storm combined To bow them to an ocean grave— ' By Summer suns that brightly rise Though erat in mournful tears they ret, By all Line . S hopeful prophecies, We shall be happy yet! THE GOODNESS OF G,OD.—Whatever we en joy is purely a free gift frrim our Creator ; but mat we enjoy no more, can never sure he deem ed an injury, or a just-reason to question his in finite benevolence. All our happiness is owing to his goodness ; but that it in no greater. in owing only to ourselves, that is. to our not hay ingany inherent right to any happiness, or even to any Existence at all. This is no more to he imputed to (cod. than the wants of a beggar to the peison who has relieved him ; that he hail something. was owing to his benefactor ; hut that he had no nrore. only to his own original poverty. (•o Ci.csNst: TILE TEETH AND IMPROVE THE Bucivrit.—l'u four (tuners of fresh prepared water add one drachm of Peruvian Bark. and wash the teeth with this water. in the morning and evening, before breakfast and after supper. It will effectually destroy the tarter op the teeth and remove the offensive smell arising from those that are decayad. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. 0. & H. P. GOODRICH. We Mall be Happy Yet. I=l " RBOARDIXEII OF DENUNCIATION FROX ANT QUARTER." Marshal Mural. Extract from the review of a French work in the American Review, purporting to be a his tory of the private and public lifts of Marshal Murat : His three distinguishing characteristics were high chivalric courage, great skill as a general, and almost unparalleled coolness in the hour of extreme peril. Added to all this, Nature had lavished her gifts on the mere physical man.— His form was tall and finely proportioned—his tread like that of a king—his face striking and noble, while his piercing glance few men could bear. This was Murat od foot. but place him on horseback, and he was still more imposing. He never mounted a steed that was not-worthy of the boldest knight of ancient days, and his in comparable seat made both horse and rider an object of universal admiration. The English invariably condemned the theatrical costume he always wore, as an evidence of his folly, but we think it is all in keeping_ with his character.— He was not a man of deep thought and compact mind, but he was oiental in his taste and loved every thing gorgeous and imposing. He usually wore a rich Polish dress, with the collar orna mented with gold brocade ; ample pantaloons, scarlet oi purple, and embroidered with 'gold, boots of yellow leather, while a straightdiamond hilted sword, like that worn by the Humans, completed his dashing exterior. He wore hea vy black whiskers, long black locks which streamed over fiery blue eves. On his head he wore a three cornered chapeau, from which rose a magnificent white plume that bent under the prolusion of ostrich feathers, while beside it and in the same gold band, towered away a splen did heron plume. Over all this brilliAt cos tume, he wore in cold weather a pelisse of green velvet, lined and fringed with the molest sables. Neither did he forget his horse in his gorgeous appareling, but had him adorned with the rich Turkish stirrup and bridle, and almost covered with azure colored trappings. Had all this fine ry been piled on a diminntive man, or an indif ferent rider like Bonaparte, it would have ap peared ridiculous ; but on the splendid charger, and still more majestic figure and hearing of Mu rat, it scented all in place and keeping. The dazzling exterior always made him a mark for the enemy's bullets, in battle, and it is a wonder that so conspicous an object was never shot down. Perhaps there never was a greater con trast between two men, than between Murat and Napoleon. when they rode together along the lines previous to battle. The square figure, plain three cornered hat, leather breeches, brown summit. and careless suit of Napoleon, were the direct counterpart of the magnificent display and imposing attitude ofhis chivalric bto ther-in-la w. To see Murat decked out in his extravagant costume at a review, might create a smile, but whoever once saw that gaily capar isoned steed with its commanding rider, in the front rank of battle, plunging like a thunderbolt through the broken ranks ; or watched the Po gress of that towering white plume, as floating high over the heads of thousands that struggled behind it—a constant mark to the cannon halls that whistled like hailstones around it—never felt like smiling again at Murat. Especially would he forget those gilded trappings when he saw him return from a charge, with his diamond hiked sword dripping with blond, his gay uni from riddled with balls and singed and blackened with powder, while his strong war horse was streaked with foam and blood, and reeking with sweat. The white plume was the banner of the host ho led, and while it continued fluttering over the field of the slain, hope was never relin quished. Many a time has Napoleon seen it glancing like a beam of light to the charge, and watched its progress like the star of his destiny, as it struggled for a while in the hottest of the light, and then smiled in joy as he beheld it burst through the thick rank of infantry, scattering them from his path like chair before the wind. We said, the three great distinguishing traits of Murat were high chivalric courage. great skill as a general, and wonderful coolness in the hour of danger. Napoleon once said, that in battle he was probably the bravest man in the world. There was something more than mere success to him in battle. He invested with a sort of glo ry in itself—threw ap air of romance about it all, and fought frequently, we believe, almost in an imaginary world. The device on his sword, so like the knights of old—his very costume copied from those warriors who lived in more chivalric days. and his heroic manner and bear ing, as he led his Loops into battle, prove him to be wholly unlike all other generals of that time. In his person, at least, he restored the nays of knighthood. He himself unconsciously lets out this peculiarity, in speaking of his battle on Mount Tabor, with the Turks. Ott the top of this bill. Kleber, with 5000 men, found him self hemmed in by 30,000 Turks. Fifteen thou sand cavalry first came thundering down on this hand of 5000, aranged in the form of a square. For six hours they maintained that unequal corn ' bat, when Napoleon arrived with succor on a neighboring hill. As he looked down on Mount Tabor, lie could see nothing but a countless mul titude covering the summit of the hill, and sway ing and teasing amid the smoke that curtained them in. It was only by , the steady volleys and simultaneous flashes of musketry, that he could distinguish where his own bruie soldiers main tained their ground. The shot of a /Attar, twelve ponder. which he fired towani tire moun tain, first anntrunced to his exhausted country. men that relief was at hand.. Theirranks then. for the first time, ceased actimg on the defensive. and extending themselves. charged bayonets.— It was against. such terrible odds Murat loved to tight, and in this engagement he outdid him self. He regarded it the greatest battle he fought. Once he was nearly alone in the centre of large body of Turkish cavalry. All around. nothing was visible but a mass of turbaned heath' and flashing scimetars, except in the centre, where was seen a single white plume tossing like a rent banner over the throng. Fora while the battle thickened where it stooped and rose, as Murat's strung war-hinse reared and plunged amid the sabre strokes that fell like lightning on every side—and then the multitude surged back, as a single rider burst through, covered with his own blond and that of his foes, and his arm red to the elbow, that grasped Iris dripping sword. His' steed staggered under him. and seemed ready to fall, while the blood poured in streams from its sides. Bet Murat's eye seemed to burn with fourfold lustre ; and, with a shout those who surrounded him never forgot to their latest day, wheeled his exhausted steed on the foe, and at the head of a body of his own caval ry, trampled everything down that opposed his progress. Speaking of this terrible fight, Murat said that in the !antes' (ail he thought of Christ, and his transfiguration on the same spot nearly two thousand years before, and it gave him ten fold courage and strength. Covered with wounds, he was promoted in rank, on the spot. This single fact throws a flood of light on Mu rat's character, and shows what visions of glory often rose before him in battle. giving to his whole movement and aspect, a geatness and dig nity that could not be assumed. None could appreciate this chivalrous bearing of Murat more than the wild Cossacks. In the memorable Russian campaign. he was called from his throne at Naples to take command of the cavalry, and performed prodigies of valor in that disastrous war. When this steeples and towers of Moscow at length rose on the sight. Murat looked on his soiled and battle-worn gar ments, declared them unbecoming so great an occasion as the triumphal entrance into the Rus sian capital, and retired and dressed himself in his most magnificent costume, and thus appar elled rode at the head of his squadrons into the desertedcity. The Cossacks had - never seen a man that would compare with Murat in the splendor of his garb, the beauty of his horsemanship. and more than all, in his incredible daring in battle. Those wild children of the desert would often atop, amazed and in silent admiration as they saw him dash, single-haned, into the thickest of their ranks, and scatter a score of their most, re nowned warners from Ins path, as if he weie a bolt from heaven. His effect upon these chil dren of nature. and the prodigies he wrought among them, seem to belong to the age of ro mance rather than to practical times. They never saw hint on his magnificent steed, sweep ing to the charge, his tall white plume stream ing behind him, without sending up a a shout of admiration before they closed in conflict. In approaching Moscow. Murat, with a few troops. had left Gjatz somewhtt in advance of the grand army. and finding hiniself constantly annoyed by the hordes of Cossacks that hover ed around him, now wheeling away in the dis tance, and now dashing up to his columns, com pelling them to .deploy, lost all patience and obeying one of those chivalric impales that so often hurled him into the most desperate straits, put spur to his horse, and galloping all alone up to the astonished squadrons, halted right in front of them and cried out ht a tone of command Clear the way. reptiles." Awed by his man ner and voice, they immediately dispersed.— During the armistice while the Russiaos were evacuating Moscow, these sons of the wilder ness flocked by thousands around him. As they saw him reining his high spirited steed towards them they sent up a shout ofsapplause, and rush• ed forward to gaze on one they had seen carry ing such terrors through their ranks. They called him their .` Hetman"—the highest honor they could confer on him—and kept up an in cessant jargon as they examined him and his richly cAparisoned horse. They wonld now point to his steed—now to his costume, and then to his white plume—while they (ably re coiled before his piercing glance.. Murat was so much pleased by the homage of those simple hearted warriors, that he ditiuibuted among them the money he had, all he could borrow from the officers about him, and finally his watch, and then the watches of his friends. He had-made many presents to them before ; for often, in bat tle, he would select out the most distinguished Cossack warrior, and plungin! directly in the midst of the enemy. engage him single handed, take him prisoner, and afterwards dismiss him with a gold chain about his neck or some rich ornament attached to his person. FACTS FOR TIIE CORIOUS.—If a tallow can. dle be' placed in a gun. and shot Pt a door. it will go through without sustaining any injury; and if a musket ball be fired into water, it will not only rebound. but be flattened as if fired against a solid - substance. A musket ball may he fired through a pane of glass. making the hole the size of the ball without cracking the glass ; if suspended by a thread, it will make no difference. and the thread will not even vibrate. Cork, if sunk 200 feet in the ocean,. will not rise on account of the pressure of the water. In the arctic regions. when the ther mometer is below zero, persons ran converse more than a mile distant, Dr. Jamieson as lens that he heard every word of a sermon at the distance of two miles. A SPITTING YANKEE UAPTAIN.—A captain recently arrived at Paris. say! a French jotir nal, repaired to one of our medical celebrities. After waiting for half an hour in a magnificent parlor, his turn came, and he was introduced into the docter's etutly, in no wise inferior to to the parlor in splendor. Our captain recent• Iv from the New World, commenced spitting upon the floor in the American style. The doctor, amazed, his hands in his pockets. and eye - fixed, awaited his client's explanation of his visit. •• Monsieur." said the sailor. I am trou bled with indigestion; what shall I dti to be rid of it I" " 'death r' answered the enraged physi cian. " instead of spitting an my carpet. keep your saliva to moisten your food. COXPASSlON.—Cninpassion is an emotion of which we ought never to be ashamed. Grace ful, particularly in youth. is the tear of sympa thy; and the heart that melts at the tale of wit. %lie should not permit case and indulgence to contract our siTections, and wrap ins up in Bel fish enjoyment ; but we should -accustom our selves to think of the distresses of human Itfe. of the solitary cottage, the dying parent, and the weeping orphan.. 00111EST1c8.—Chilldren shouldthe required to treat domestics with propriety. Those whom the comforts of a family so essentially depend. are entitled to kindness and sympathy. Song of the Volunteers. • OW Dan Mace The Mexicans are on our soil, In war they wish us to embroil; They've tried their best and worst to vex us By murdering our brave men in Texas. Chorus—We're on our way to Rio Grande. On our way to Rio Grande, On our way to Rio Grande, And with arms they'll foxd us handy ' We are the boys who fear no none, We'll leave behind us all our joys To punish those balfsavage scamps, Who've slain our brethren in their campy. Chorus—We're on our way to Mammon's, On our way to Matamoras, On our way to Mammon', And we'll drive them all before us. They've slaughtered Porter, Kain and Crime— Most deeply we deplore their logo— Thome bloody deeds we'll make them rue. .And pay them off for old and new ! We're on our way, to Matamoros. We'll craw the famous Rio Grande, Engage the satiate hand to hand, And punish them for all their sins By stripping riff their yellow skins. We're on our way, &e. Meanwhile our brethren in the west Will for our nation do their best, And when they've ended their long journey Our flag we'll float in California. We're on oar way, The world is wide. our views are huge, We're sailing on in Freedom's barge, Our God is good and we are brave, From tyranny the world we'll save. We're on our way. &r. We have a mission to fulfil, And every drop of blood we'll grill, Unless the tyrants of our race Come quail before our eagle's face. We're on our way, dm. He is thrice armed whose quarrel's just, And we fight now because we must, And any force that would us stop, Down to the earth must swirly drop. We're on our way, &c. John Bull may meddle if he please, But he had better keep at ease, For we are strong by sea and land— If he don't mind we'll have old Ireland! Were on our way, &c. So every honest volunteer May now come forth—the coast is dear; We ask no odd; btit we am bent On having this whole continent. We're on our way, &c. • We go for equal rights and laws, We'll bravely fight in Freedom's cause, And though the world may take the field, To tyrants we will never yield. We're on our way, &c. The God of War, the mighty Mars, - Has smiled upon our stripes and stars; And s p ite of any ugly rumors We'll vanquish all the Montezumas! We're on our way to Matamoros! On our way to Matamoros, On our way to Matamoros, And we'll conquer all before us! I Word to Mechanics. Should circumstances oblige you to ask for credit. be careful to whom you apply. as a creditor who is himself "in the screws." may seriously injure you. Never ask credit for small sums in different places—better owe what you are obliged to at one place, or as few as possible. Every man to whom you are indebted five dollars, will trouble you quite as much as the one to whom you owe an hundred. There fore it will be much easier to deal with one man than with twenty. Give short credits. and collect promptly. He dilligent—faithful to your word—te-n -perate—just governed in all cases by moral principle—and ' you may defy a portion of com munity who regard mechanics one or two de grees below those individuals who have a liv ing afforded them without labor—but that por tion is small and weak. No man of sense, no true gentleman, ever drew this line. In point of science, moral virtue, and even practical politeness, the operative mechanics of the United States are second to no class of people. The work-shop has produced as many great men as the College Hell—it has done as much to develope intellect as hoarded wealth. The individual. therefore. who stands tin in the face of the world, and judges his fellow citizens by their ability to subsist without la bor, must be destitute of one or two very ne cessary qualifications—Experience and Com mon Sense. With those on hii side, he would be enabled to see that intellect makes the man and the operation of moral cause upon that in. iellect, the gentleman. Elihu Boffin. by self. instniction, at the age of thirty, acquired•fifty different languages, and that, too, whilst he was laboring over the forge and anvil from six to twelve hours daily. Finally, observe two rules—begin and keep on—will be sufficient to learn or do anything. PAT ' S RtatitriEss.—Pat called on a lady and gentleman. in whose employment lie was en. gaged, fur the purpose of getting some tea and tobacco. •• I bad a Brame, vet honor, last night," said he to the gentleman. What was it, Pat 1" 6. Why. I dreampt that yer honor made me a present of a ping of tobacco, and her lady ship there, heaven bless her! gave me some lay for the nude wife!" Ah, Pat. but dreams go by contraries, you know." Faith. and• they may he that." said Pat without the least hesitation. - "so it is your ladyship is to give me the tobacco and his hon or the tav !" GEN. TAYLOR. among the spoils fonnil some very excellent chart. of Mexico—roads, mnuntains. rivers, defiles. &c.—The very guide su much wanted. CAPT. MAY. who took Gen. La Vega, is one of one of the six sons of Dr. May. of Washing ton. who all stand six feet font' inches in Thin shoes. The Manufacture of "Yankee Mete." I know of no article of masufaeture which so well illustrates the principle of the division of labor, as the :Manufacture of clocks. & in or der that you may understand that, I will give you a little in detail, the manner of Belting up clocks, as practiced in this city. In the first place, the case which, as you observe, is veneered with mahogany. constitutes' an en tirely separate business by itself. Cases are made by machinery, propelled by steam.— The steam is raised mostly by the shavings, saw dust. and refuse lumber, which would be useless for any thing but fuel. The pine stuff is sawed off the right length and wiath by 'steam saws—it is also planed by the same power.— The pieces intended far the front of the case, are sawed long enough, so that one piece is sufficient for the sides, top and bottom.— These long pieces are run through a machine which gives them what is called the 0 G shape., One machine, with a boy to tend it. forms enough for fifteen hundred cases a day. .The thin mahogany veneering, which by the way is brought of the mahogany dealers, ready sawed, is then put on with glue, and pressed down with screw presses till the glue is cold. It then adheres with as much firmness as though a part of the same growth. The lone peices, after being polished. are then ass ed into four pieces suitable for the side and ends. and with a level to match each other. The pieces for the door are sawed in the same way, and the pieces are then glued and matched to gether without any more labor in fitting. The whole case is turned out and delivered, for seventy cents. The painted glass in the lower part of the door constitutes an entirely different branCh of the business, carried on in different premises, and often in different towns, and is mostly done by females. and costs from five to eight cents completed. The upper. or face glass, costs by the box two cents—making the whole • I' case with . glass cost on an average, say seventy eight cents. The malting of the bells or sound ing wire, is another distinct business, which is also subdivided into three parts—the draw ing the wire, the casting the stand, as it is call ed, upon which the wire is fastened by a screw, and lastly the tempering and bending the wire. Each of these branches is an entirely distinct business, and never done on the same premises, or in the same town, the steel wire being im ported from England. The finished bell costs three and one-half cents. 'fhe making of the screws is still another business by itself.— We now come to the dill. This too constitutes an independent branch of business, and after getting out the plate of the right size and thick ness, is painted and figured mostly by females. The plain dials cost five cents each. The weights are cast and delivered at ten cents .a pair, the casting of which is also a business by itself. We now come to the brass running part. or movements as it is usually called.- The brass is made by melting together copper and zinc, in certain proportions, and casting them in bars, alter which it is rolled down to proper thicknesses for the different parts. This is done by the brass manufacturers, from whom the clock maker purchases. The back and front brass frame work of the movement is struck out in the form you see, by a Machine which is moved by steam or water power, and moves with great rapidity. striking out one at every blow. The wheels are !track out in the same way. The turning the iron shafts on pinions of the wheels, and the putting together of the parts when completed, are branches allotted to dif ferent hands who work constantly on some particular part, though under the same roof.— The steel verge which is moved by the teeth of the crown wheel on the front, of the move ment, and -to which verge the pendulum -is attached, constitutes ,a branch of the business by itself. and is carried on upon other premises. often miles distant. The making of the poin ters and of the brass pendulum balls, is each a distind business. The movements completed. including the cords, pointers, pendulum, &c., are sold to the dealers, who put them in cases for seventy cents. The cost of putting the movement into the case and putting the whole in complete ticking order, is, say three and a half cents. making th ewhole cost of the clock, completed, one dollar and seventy cents, , The docks were formerly sold at twenty-five dol lars each, and are now usually sold vt about one dollar and eighty-seven and a half cents, not boxed, or two dollars boxed, six in 'a box. It might be argued. that an great improvements in machinery. and the reduction in the prices of clocks, would reduce the price of labor to very low standard. and throw many workmen out of employ. Such is not the fact. The reduction in price has increased the sale a, hundred fold, and eonsenently given employ. ment to a still greater number of workmen without reducing their wages. They are now exported to Norway4weeden. Russia. Eng land. France, Calcutta. China, the Sandwich Islands, Canada. and, in fact, to every part of the earth where there is civilization enough to tell the time of tlay by a clock. In giving you this statement. I have left nut of the account the making of the paint. varnish, &e.. which constitute still further subdivisions of labor. I am unable to give you the number of firms engaged in the clock business in this city, or the amount of capital employed. Among the foremost are Sperry & Shaw.Conrtland street, in this city—two live Yankees, who a few years since took it into their heads that a tar nal sight" of clocks might he sold m John Bull. They freighted a ship and set sail. he speculation proved profitable. 'and resulted In a large export trade to England. Hail two, men come from the moon, the won der and curiosity excited could not have been oreatet. Indeed, they were considered luna tics. and their clocks ditto. Their cargo of clocks, however, were soon set ticking, end their well filled pockets obviated all necessity fur a resort to tick its order to get home again. I remain your humble and Obedient servant. SAMUEL SUCK, Cot/maker. LE 27411181624 110