=ZI=Z sTLILOI I .III3 lIZQ TOWANDA: liTchesban Mariann, Srptember 1818. ti !For the Btedtbrd Reporter) Thoughts on Slatery.—No. 2 33Y J. F. G.V.LAY ('ould we take the tenor of a portion ofthe pub. 'iett press at the north as a true criterion for our we must suppose the south the Eden of die wlttld, whose people have partaken of the tree of kiowlehe uninjured by the curse originally pro %Allred upon mankind. We heltr them prate of hor talented sons, her enchanting scenery, her gold •en sunsets, the land of the " Palmetto and vine,•• weihe Minerva Venus and Ceres arranged in their most bewitching charms, propitiously invite the obcerver to - adore. IVllat is the true secret of such holiest and disinterested devotion to the south and southern interests? Why are ceriain southern edi tors ready to pour upon men of the north who dare to stand, up for the rights of freemen, anatherilas so deep as to bury them lower than the inhabitants of Herculaneum and Pompeii were buried beneath the ashes of the Volcano'? But when•southeramen and even southern:States, loudly blow the blast of discord and disunion, all is trumpeted to the north souim detetminhion, and that as a con sequence the north must yield----or else reproved in terms so mild as to' resemble more the gentle cliides of some love-sick swain to his inamorata titan men holding the palladium of 'liberty to their }Lands and willing that the scales of justice between northern and southern' interests sl ould be impar tially balanced. Why has there always been such sneaking devol,ion to the south? Why such ardent atiection for the slave power ? Why eueh a base betrayal of the rights of freemen ? It is easily ex plained. If the great " Ruler of all events . ' receiv ed one half the devotion that is paid to the divini ties of Wealth and Power, the reformation would in , tarnjc extend from pole to Tole. The adage. s• touch a man's interest and you touch hiy life. is so true that in .ninety-nine cases out of a lladreil it never fails ; hence this enigma is easily salved : The south makes it the interest of men to advocate her peculiar institution, and few (espe cially °thee hunters) can %sitlArtanil the temptation, tlie south %yell knOwing this fact always mana7e t keep the control of the public heasury in her own poiver. the institution of 51.1.% cry serves to con .s.ii,iate her interests; so that upon any point where in F. oudiern dictation is concerned, 'the names of flemocrat and Whig- are instantly merged for their ~n erd welfare.• They are thus , called 'to operate our diet( interest in one unbroken phalanx ; while .a the north if any attempt to merge the. spirit of -Nifty for the general welfare, it is looked upon as an avert act of treaßon. The south can go unani trt u+ her interests, knowing that a large per- i,on oft e north dare not lift their liead: , from the part? - -to path, and always triiimphing from the lact that site is always united, the north always dix fil ed—therefore, they arc not only enabled:to het the power into their own hands but to keep it when obtained.- Our Executive having the control of “1 , n1:1 thirty of the public money annually, 1- enabled to %sield a power wholly at valiance with the genius and policy of our government ; it t is for him to purchase interests with our gnkl.— N - What man can withstand the temptation of liend- Mg implicitly to the executive Vall i when I , y that executive lie can be nominated to an (Alice which will enable Vim to surfeithirnself at the public pap The south is thus einibleil In carry out her its-ign at her wil/. True . nomittaiion: , be, t onfi; by thif Senate ; but the southern part of time-Seriate and ever has been namipoient in power, always con-14s ring when their interests are at stake, to de feat in man who is lint winery, in • bow down and cant-lop to their southern Jlniocb. But should maii be entionated I.y the executive tor a pulitec office. and the snirthem Senafe not a_ , ,llrPti of his fidelity to her interests, he .must be laid upon the table, - until ho is enabled to give the most ample, assurance, that the south and her interests were his t• first Inve.." Bet let rd aye, partittularly take a view of the condition of tic great mass of the peiipie to the States where .I•lrPry gaits. It has been supposed by many that • rine ement against slavery extension originated catire:y from sympathy for the situ(' . bet' is the de.:railation of the as hoe man of whieh we more paructilaily cempfain—a degradation forced upon ;ern by the institution of slavery None of the ryiespriegt, of hum u nature •there stimulate men honest eNertitins to make themselves a comps . brace for life, the balance between labor arid its rewards being hilly destroyed. Suppose a young man to start there with an honest heart and strong I detrtrmined by lnilu-try to make himself a condonable home; lie r , OeS to the man of wealth • and asks to labor and receive its appropriate re . ward: suppose he asks as a compensation for his Fervices the same that is obtained by thousands of young men here. What would be the reply' B ach•-a grice, saysthe man of wealth. would be en tirt•ly incompatible with your labor; I have,_he otitinues, one hur,dred slaves who do all the la bor I require, sad the only remuneration which they obtain is therely their clothing and board, and how can you e.xpect to obtain your price when all the labor which i require, ran be obtained fot corn paratirely nothing. True, he says, I am. willing to hire you, but in such an event I should expect that )oer tither will cost me no more than the labor of my slaves. Thus it is with the masses of the south, 4 , 1.1 tints it will ever be increasing with the in crease of slavery as long as it shall continue to ex to. No opportunity is given tea man of the north to march boldly into the forest and hew himself a home. Slavery deprives him of this privilege- by creating a land monopoly which at once virtually deprives httu of the privilege of trading real estate, and then reduces. him almoit to the condition of a pau per, by depriving him of the advantage of a fair 1. J aye...Ll/111)11 tut /11.5 /al or. Beautiful system this 1:420- :: , . I. . .., . , . .._ . . BRA . • ••.„..u„.._ ,''' • 4. ' . . 1 . 1 . . ,„... ... i .- tr.., -7 A ..4. ~,,.., 1--- - - A : • . . & .. . 1 .0.... _ . . What can be expecteit.from - an instill:llion that fur nishes no reward to honest industry. Politicians may prate of the degradation of the masses in En. pe, but even now tlie seeds are sown, which when matured, reduces the poor to a condition as degra detlas the Poolah of India. Once deprive a mart of that sacred principle guarantied by Our laws, of " the right to acquire and enjoy property," and en terprise stand powerless and still, industry gaisheg and hangs her head, virtue forsa• kes'ltcr path and roafris in " wandering mazes lost," and ruin stalks triumphant over all. And this will. ever continue to be the fate t l i tr all who wantonly violate the most sacred principle'o( Nature's laws, written in characters of living light, which declare that "the laborer is worthy of his hire.•' If these were all its evils, perhaps they might be overcome, but as we examine the " pe. euliar institution" more closely, its fearful deformi ty becomes more apparent. The blacks are consi dered the n ost degraded. race on, earth, and what. ever labor is performed by slaves becomes a grace, in which the moment a white man partici pates, he becomes rtritceptteriminis, and is degrad ed accordingly. The wealthy slave-holder is the ono who gives tone to the community there, and lie practicing upon principle of total abstinence from lalxn~ the whole community who looks up to him in all matters pertaining to the affairs of political economy, are impressed with the idea that labor is disgraceful', and hence the moment a man attempts to get an honest livelihood by labor, he is imme diately- sunk ten de:zrees berms zero. In some parts of the south this punctilio is carried so fir that if a stranger in travelling through their country as sists himself in the discharge of any small duty, the epithet of '• Yankee" is sneeringly applied, and the silk-stocking gentry instantly cut his acquaint nace. The only incentive to labor there is poverty, and ilisgraite; and can it for a moment be suppos ed that where the motives for industry fail that man will labor except under the strongest necessi ty ! These remarks are entirely justified by facts. Every one striving to maintain himself independ en t of labor, it cannet be successfully denied that a large class of southern whites are reduced •-o low in the scale of ex istence. by the direct agency of slavery. as to he ready to embark in any scheme which will enabled them to earn their bread with out the '• sweat of their brows." First a necessity firilaziness is created, and then matured by habit, until the whole south presents a shocking sperm-. cle of human degradation.. which may yet combine with the slave power and enable retributive jus tice to tell a fearful tale. It may be asked why this. degraded class of whites do not take thrlpower in to their own hands and overturn a systein so preg nant with ruin! This is the very thing which the slave holder fears, and, therekre, he duds it never tary (already having thia?power in his-own hands) to enact a law prescribing a heavy property quali fication which precludes the greater part of the mass from haling the privilege of the elective fran chise. It free suffrage was tolerated at'the south, slavery woutd - soots "sleep its last sleep"--those voices now stifled and smothered would speak in tones of thunder at the ballot box, and proclaim to the tyrant that the sliackk:s have fallen from their 'limbs and they are free. One thing more. linwev. er, is necessary to enable the slave holder to form his system of subjugation complete; he has learn ed from experience the truth of the 'proverb, that knowledge is power," and ennsequently their State departments refuse all aid to the establish-' ment of common schools,* titus giving. the last cruel thrust to the welfare of b i e r so s. What more is II Pre —a y to crush the victim alteady a long he Heath the of the make! What de-rrarlatrnt so deep a= IL: attempt to rinencli the ininfortal her ref the min.!? % 1,1 , -wed IT !hi; cruelty imposed volt his race. lie a-k- to extend his slavery to mil lion• of miles of territory, where the font print of a slave has never yet been ''Forbid it omni potent heaven the ifuhallowed project must be condemned. A storm is arising in the northern States whose thunder!! at Buffalo have been dis tinctly heard, and our 'watchword V. at '• free soil shall the lice," will echo fr o m where the Atlantic rolls her waves, '• till lost in murmurs of the Paci• fie sea." The Democracy of Old Bradford, who have ever nobly height for principles and freedom, when asked In perpetuate the t extensien of slavery, will give a rebuke so startling thatibosdernissaries of the south will see of truth, that this land -louse crated to freedom nn the battle field of German town, has remained untarnished to her sons.— " There is no retreat but in submission and slave ry." " The Rubicon is passeil".—" the Ides of ?ditch are come." Our own .Wilmot was the first to rebuke the giant strides of slavery, and those hardy sons of Bradford will ever be found where their 'duty calls them, .shoulder to shoulder in the holy cause of freedom, - and with a voice which shall be beard from Florida to Maine, proclaim to slavery that "thus tar thou shall gn and no father, but here shall thy proud waves be staid.•' Wei Ang• Qittb, 1548. Svoctrnms.—The first knit stocking sent to Eng land was during the reign of Henry VITI. And Queen Elizabeth received a pair of knit silk stock ings as a valuable present. It is said that this state ly queen pressed her royal feet on fresh - hay (in 'her palace chamber) instead of carpets, which pro baihly were not invented till about the time of her stocking-loom not having been invent ed till i 589, by William Lee, of England, then ve• ry imperfect and not in gotteral use fot a length of time. Last year a was quite corarnonjo see a tioHtting stecking weaver plying his tratle on his por table stockingloom, in some of the public streets of Lotbton. At first, it was novel and money was ... made by it, but a lately patented loom to be driven by steam will soon drip:lw the band stocking loom out of the market. • Tl' ter.r-rol" ttne nevele eon only speak fergns newel hon of n purl of the southern Stales, only hut vreeurn , s GCltilat VI their inetnutsons tbut each Ili the cue iu ull 7 ;~~~-~~~ f'pi~ •. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA, BRADYORD COUNTY, PA., BY T. O'MEARA (1000R.ICII: y ft z~ " , 'W;tf,:li - 4 44 &WINDLESS Or DENCNCIATION PROM ANT Qt !WEL" The bedlam %let The following beautiful story is literally true and was first published in a lecture delivered by Will iam Tracy. Esq., of Utica, on the early history of Oneida county. One of the first settlers in Western New York was Judge IV—, who established himself , at Whitcstown, abaht four miles from' Utica. He brought his family with hire, among whom wag a widdowed daughter with an only child—a fine buy about four year old. Yon wilt recollect the coun try around was as unbroken forest, and this was the dorhain of the savage tribes. 311,1,e W—sass- the necessity of keeping on good terms with the Indians, fur, as he was nearly alone c he was completely at their mercy. Accor dingly' he took every opportunity to assure them of his kindly feeling, and to secure their good will in return. Several chiefs came to ace him. and allap peared pacific.. But there was one thing that troub led him an aged chief of the Oneida tribe, and of great influence, who resided at the distance of a dozen miles, had jiot yet been to see him, nor could lie ascertain the views and feelings of the sa chem in respect to this settlement in that region. At last he sent a message, and the answer was that the chief would visit him on the morrow ! True to Ins appointment, the sachem Arne; Judge W—received him with marks of respect, and introduced his wife - ,lris daughter and little boy. The interview. ihatfellowed was interesting. Upon its restilt the Judge was convinced his security might depend, and he was therefore exceedingly anxious to make a favorable impression upon the distin?!nished chief. He expressed his desire to set_ tie in - this country, to live on termi of amity and good fellowship with the Indians, and to be' useful to them by introducing among them the arts ofeiv ilization. The chief heard him out, and then said ;- .' Bro ther you ask much and, you promise much, what pledge can you give for your faith? The white man's word may be good to the white man, yet it is wind when spoken to the Indian." " 1 have put my life in your' hands," said the Judge," is not that an evidence of my good inter slop? I have placed confidence in the Indian and will not believe that he will abuse orrbetrsy the trust that is thus reposed!' i• So much is well, - replied the chief; "the Indi an will repay confidence, if he will trust You. Let this Loy - . , 0 with me to my wigwam—l will bring him back in three days with an answer." If an arrow had pierced the bosom of the mother she could not bare felt a deeper pang than went to her heart ; as the Indian made this proposal. She sprang forward, and running. to the boy, who stood at the sideof the sachetii looking into his lace with pleased wonder and admiration, she encircled him in her aims, and pressing him to her bosom, was about to fly from the room. A gloomy and omi nous frown came over the sachem's brow but he did not speak. But not so with Judge 'IV , he knew that the suerezqi of the enterprise, the lives of his family depended epon the decision of a moment Stay, my daughter," he said, ', bring back the be!, beseech you. lie is not morelto you than to me. I would not risk a hair of his head.. But, my child he must ea with the chief. God gill watch over 111111! lie will be as safe 111 the sachem's wigwam as beneath our own roof." The agonizing mother tieiitated for a moment, she then slowly returned, played the boy on the knee of the el:iota:id knee!ing at his feet, burst into a flood of tears. The gloom passed from the sachem's hmw but he said not a word. He arose and departed. I Kb: l W not attempt to describe the agony of the mother for the ensuing three days. She was ag,ita trd by contending hopes and fears. In the night she awoke from her sleep seeming to 'hear the ,creams oldie child calling on its mother for help.' But the time wore slowly away—and the third day came. Ilow slowly did the hours pass.— The tymmitig waited away ; noon arrived, yet they came not: There was a gloom over the whole household. The mother was Tale and silent.— Judge 1C walked the floor to and fm, going every few minutes to the door, and looking through the opening in the forest towards the sachem's abode: Asthe last rays of the setting sun were tbmtim upon the tops of thetrees around, the eagle feathers of the chief were seen dancing above the basher :S die 4stanoc. Ile rapidly advanced--and the little boy ut,,hi side. He was gaily attired as a young. chief—hie. feet being dressed in moccasins 'a fine beaver skin was on his shoulders, and eagle leathers were Ruck in his hair. He was in excel lent spirits, and so proud was he of his new honors that he seemed two inches taller than he was be. fore. He was soon in his mother's atrise, and inihat brief minute sho seemed to pass from death to We: . t was a happy meeting--too happy for me to des cribe. "The white man has conquered ?" said the sach em; "hereafter let us be friends. You have trus ted an Indian, he will repay you with confidence and friendship " Ile was as good as his word ; and Judge W-- lived for many years in peace with the Indian tribes, and succeeded in laying the foundation of a flourishing and prosperous community. ROMANTIC AND FANTASTIC litookEreci: was the fault of other times and other t•,ountries ; here I crave more and more every day_to Atal men uofei►ered by the constant excitement of the world, whether literary ; commercial, or fashionable; men who, while they are alive to all that is around theM, feel also who is above them. SUCCESS IN LIFE depends less upon a man • him self, than upon a multitude of pally contingencies, which he caimoi wrote, although it is with himself, in some measure, to render them available. k TORRE IS A WANT OF SISIPLIC3TY and nobleness about a great person whose condescension is fully telt at the time ' 44 4 El= (litim the Public Ledger] • TO 'THE IRISH LEAGUE—FREEDOWS APaPEAL Arise from your chains, if still remain One spark of that ancient spirit ' Your forefathers osimAd, when free from stain, Was the land yon now inherit; On her snit's of old she looked with pride, For ever they stood to aid her, Then raise your war-err--God's on your side, And down with tbe tritisb enslaver! Remember proud " Linster's stern old brave." ; How he-rent the mail asunder Of" three base Danes"—freely kies e d his grave When Victory rolled her thunder; 8o count not the despot's venal host § He firm and true to your leader— Be tree; or nobly give up the ghost, (As he did,) with the list invader! Oh! if the base traitor stains your race, . And add to the chains of his nation, May his name no shrine—his sou! no peatf Receive, but fell desecration ; • Then'up in your might, like, freedom bold. And avenge yo'r country's sorrow— Strike home, as did your fathers W' old, And the rays of liberty borrow! Mao Ike Iri-flag—u Orange, Green and 81ue, 4 Wave proudly o'er " Blittnis Lion," United be, and only true, And I see yooropptessors flying; Remember, Go/unabta—the world at heart Deplore poor old Erin's :•tory, • Oh, neer from your holy alliance depart, And Freedom will light you to glory! REGULAR Enncsriox, we think, is nntarorable to vigor and originality cf understanding. Like civ• ilization, it makes society more intelligent and agreeable ; but it levels the distinctions of nature It strent , thens and assists the feenle, but it deprives the strong of his triumph, and casts down the hopes of the aspiring. It accomplishes this, riot only by training op the mind in an habitual veneration for authorities, but by leading us to bestow a dis proportionate dezree of attention upon studies that are only valuable:as key a or instruments for the un derstanding., they come at last to be regarded as ultimate objects of pursuit; and the:means or pin cation are absurdly mistaken for its ends. How many pouerful understandings have bi.erri)bt in Dialectics of Aristotle !And of how much good phi losophy are we daily defrauded by the p;eposter- OUA error of taking a knowledge of prosody for use ful learning! The mind of man who has escaped this training will as least hate fair play. It'lialev. 'or other errors he May have fallen into, lie will be safe at least fmm these infatuations ;and it - he thinks ptoper, alter he grows up, to sluily Greek, it will probably be for soine better purpose than to be come critically acquainted with its dialects. His prejudices will be those of a man, not of a school. boy ; and his speculations and conclusions xi - ill' be independent of the maxims of tutors and the oracles of literary patrons.—Lord firry. Besury.—Beauty is, after all, a mere matter of opinion; and the utility of the object to which the term is applied, often constitutes with the applicant its propriety. Having always esteemed the land scape, visible from a favorite shrubbery walk, as really beautiful, I was one day this summer annoy ed to find it hidden by some linen hung Quito dry in the nearest intervening field, and which, inter natty, I determined was the ugliest object ever pre sented to human eyes ; but I was, em long, led to think differently, and to meditate on the different conceptions and standards of beauty entertained by individuals, according to the various influences of birth, education, profession, and circumstances, by the simple incident of a maid servant entering the walk to deliver a message to me, and exclaimed : " Ho, beautiful that linen looks! Did you ever see, a finer sight!" t; So. then," I thought," that has, beauty to her which is positively ugly to me; the application is general, and the inference obvi ous; wherefore, I will murmur no more," TRUTH LICD SENTOICST.--Truth Li al ways COTISig. tent with itself, and needs nothing to help it out; it is always near at hand, and fits upon our lips, and is ready to drop out before we are aware; whereas, a lie is troublesome, and sets a man's invention upon the rack, and one trick needs a weat many more to make it good. it is like building upon a false foundation, which continually stands in need of props to shore it up, and proves at last more chargeable than to have raised a substantial buil ding at first upon a-true and solid foundation ; foi sincerity is firm and substantial, and there is noth. ing hollow or unsound in it, and because it is_plain and open fears no discovery, of which the crafty man is always in danger ; and *hen he -thinks he walks in the dark, all his pretences are so trans.: parent that he that runs may read them ; he is the last man that finds himself to be found out ; and, whilst he lakes it for granted that he makes fools of others, he readers himself ridiculous. IT is A COMMON WEASSMS with men in power, who have used dissimulation successfully, to form a passion for the use of it. Dupes, to their love of duping, their pride is flattered by it. He who fan cies he must be perpetually stooping to the prejudi ces of his fellow-ereateres f is perpetually reminding and reassuriag himself of his vast superiority over them ;but no greatness can long coexist with de. ceit ; the whole faculties of men must be exerted in order to noble energies ; and he whois not eamest ly sincere, lives but in bait he beirsg—eaf-mraita ted, self-proscribed, Tun Drer...—The Beet is a native of the sea-emst Of the sobth' oT *trope. It takes its name from the shape of its seed-vessel, which, when it swells with the feed, has the Cram of the letter Beta-of the Greek illphalSet.' There are several' varieties in cultivation for ertßnaly perposes, of which 'the most essential sorts are the Long Blood and the turnip Rooted. The last is the earliest variety, and takes its name front the form of the root, its quality be ing decided by the richness of color and closeness of the grain. There are several other sorts which come more under the notice of the agriculturist, such as Sugar Beet, Nlartgel-Wurzel,. Src ::* -, PP> ti r, I ■t W. a. iSlN'ilt A Scene of the Willow. I passed on, find sick at heart and wearied with my journey, entered a well known inn called the litiq's Arms, in Leadenhall street—where I retired early to my chamber, in hope to procure some little rest, of which I moll so greatly in need. Irti*abottl . midnight I was aroused from .rtrtY bed by the most dreadful oaths and execrations which proceeded, I found from the room beneath me wherein, as I af terwards learned ; a company of profane young men assembled every night, and, unconcerned as to the calamity around them or peradventure In despera tion, thus strangely .and distractedly ,prepared for their Owrf deriths , Hke unto.seafren in foundering slops, by drinking to exce.-S of maddening liquors The sound of their ;4vild merriment still ring,sin my, ears, whilst I east abglance back on the horrors of that awful night. 6! the mercy and forbearance of the t . I arose from bed, and looked from my rasetuent; the night was dark and oppressivewith heat, but it was not the heat of sum trier. The air seemed too thick to breathe, and I felt a sense of sullocation as I inhaled it; while there was a burning glow in tho dense-and stagnant mass, which, as I opened the window, 'truck upon' my ' face 'like the:Nast from a furnace. A little removed (rum the house, at the corner of the street, one of those large fires was burning, which the, phySicians had ordered to -be lighted in the vain hope of pair 'dying the a t mosphere. A long ricifil of black smoke rose slowly frobt its smouldering, ashes, and ever and anon flames broke forth with a lurid glare upon the opposite buildings, diselosirig the red crosses marked on those buildings where 'the pia zee raged; and I could also dimly discerl; at inter- vats mutlled figures, and Ilea; the hollow sounding, steps of the watchmen, who, with the wands of office in their hands, paced slowly before tbeinfeet ed dwellings. As 1 stood gazing anti almost be wilde;red,by the solitariness, and awful glance of the scene, my senses' were recalled by the heavy strokes of a distant bell,•which, blended with other sounds, soon fell more distinct!) on the ear. A cart, pre4ded by two or three men bearing torches came rural ling along, and stopped under the %vie dow at which 1 stood ; whereupon an involuntary exclamation of horror burst from me, as my eye fell on a dense heap of human bodies within it. and Inany were destitute of the slightest coverin. The bell again sounded, and one of the butlers sent forth the di3mal cry of " Bring out your dead.- At this moment I heard the casement of the lower room open, and the dissolute wretches, who were still at their cups, shouted back in answer, mocking the tones of the men. ' Call again, ye death's heads! we'll be ready . by to-morrow night!'' and thereupon followed such oaths and bandying ribald jeSts, that I was fain to hurry from the win dow, and falling upon my knees, to pour out my soul before my God !—Oh ! how I groaned in spirit for the Wickne.ss of men ! It once brought upon the fair earth the floods of the 'clelege—then the tire from heaven fell upon the cities of the plain —and now it seemed to me that the angel of the Lord was sweeping with an uprooting pestilence another and even a worse city, which could scar cely reckon upon a remnant of ,everr ten righteous inhabitants! The rainbow of promise 'seemed to hive departed from the skies and m righteous Lot remained to stay, with supplications, the wrath ofthe Holy One! TRANk , mlsslos OE 110TION, SPELL, AND rOWEI: Wheels are the most beautiful as welLas the riroit economical means of transmitting power front the main driver to the minutest points of connected machinery. No &it - en part of machinery can exert more power than is in the main driver—there is always a loss however small by friction (resist ance.) And whenever friction or resistauce is entire: ly overcome in a machine then we may look for perpetual motion, and not before. Cog wheels are used in the transsmission of power and speeds, to the rotary motion of which as PSrbank says, "we are to auribute the great superiority of modem over an cient mechanism." In factories the belt and' pul ley have justly supplanted the old cog wheel movements,but there are,other small machines such as lathes and clocks, that are much better operated by cog *heels than other mechanical means. it a great number of shafts are wanted to be Illtriven and o n ly a small space to pack ibe machinery, cog wheels are the best for this purpose. Comeosr rot% WitesT.—Tate 6 loads of marsh mail, or scrapings of roads, )0 hundred Weight of straw, (if cut so much the better) 10 'bushels of lime, I bushel of bone dust, the finer ground the betten4—ntii the whole well together, forth it into a cone-like pile so as to turn the rain ; every three or four weeks between the time of making and that of using it, turn it over with aboiels t so that the' mixture of the several constitnents may be per fected; and the deeompasition of the straw be uni form. lafirst puuing these matters together, if the earthly materials be dry, they must moistened with water, or what would be better a miatere of say 10 :Tamps of urine, three times that quantity of water The above proportions are intended loran acre of ground, and we hare no doubt would insure a good .crop of wheat.--aAmtrertni Fanner. THE CAR • or carrot, says an eminent phy. ician, "is a most wholesome culinary root: it strengthens 1 nourishes the body, and is Very be nifiehtt far 'consumptive persons." Caivots are ge nerally sOrxel boifeJ , vitt; meats, yet they make an excellent imminent in soups, and fohn, we var told, a very agreeable pt.-tiding. As an agricultural root, they are not surpassed for feinting cattle; hor ses %%till do pore' work and look better on them than any other Thisvele able is unpposeil lobelia been introduc ed into .Europe front the Island of Crete; since which it hat{ (gently improveit. Maine half devien leading varieties are cultivated for 4upplying the kitchen reg,ntarlfat all seasons of the year. IT Is CERTAINLY VERY MODERATE in ITNIVIIO Cov et those things chiefly which they. cannot; possibly clioy for Ion; .ott o ,•'% 4 4, 4 i. 43. '4410n..0 Q • .4- 4 : 74 . 44 %145 4 444W . . ; Misreibixtion: rug Isricr.riu•lt• l '.l--llnCethe time of Pan: t el vin' ths den of hotel, to - Which despoils:li - bed doomed him for' his icligion, ana his th r ee friends tearlessly eneoupterim - . , the ,seven-fold heated fur nace, conscientious Jews have hien-noted tor - their invincible intrepidity and perseverance ; "hough not for similar Oergenstrations of Divine Inver and pro e.httrir late Occasion, the,Empeter of Ras sia was reviewing his_deet, when two sailors par eXiited hih attention, both by this precision with which they perform . ed several dificult mancen vreS, and by the agility mid daring which they dis played. The emperor Wet so Mach IReatierl " that be immediately errim'oted one to be a captain, the other he appointed lieutenant o$ the spot. The men, however, were lew;g, andere is 4 1 r. s. uCke forbidding Jews to wear an epaulette. The admi ral of the fleet, who stood by. knowing, that lit - ey were JewA,stated.the difficulty to his iniiperialymj eF•ty. " th'e eniperor,f does not signify in the "lea-it—they' shall 'immediately em= brace the Greek religion of course." Whi:n . this de termination was communicat e d to the two • young men, knotting that remonstrance or refusal would be iri• vain, they requested the.•emperor's premiss ' ion to exhibit still more of their mancevares, ai he had not seen all they could do. This being gran ted, they ascended the topmast, embraced, and locked in each other's areas, !brew themselves iuto the sea, and t 7 isappeared for ever. • THE more we are destitute of opportunities Tor indulging our feeling - 5, as is the case when we live in uncongenial socit' the more we are apt to crisp and harden oar outward manner s to save our real feelings from exposure. The I believe that some of the most delicate-Minded men get to appear thor oughly i.•.orirse, froM their unsuccessful efforts to mask their real nature. And I have known 'men ili.sacirreeahlyforward from their shyiiess But doubt whether a man does not soffet' from a habit of pelf-constraint, a-te whether his feelings do not beeome really, as well as apparently. chilled. Ti is an immense blessing to be perfectly callous to ridicule ; or ; which. comes to the same thing, to ha conscious thoroughly that , what.we have in us of no ble and delicate, is not ridiculous to any•but fools n :II laugh, wise men will, do well to let them.---:. A-1 if:ALOCST.—Jealousy is that pain which a man feels front the apprehension Hint he is not egnaTly beloved by the person %thorn he entirely •loves. Now, because our inward passions and inclinations can never make themselves visible, it is' impossi ble fora jealous man to he thorinighly cured-of his suspicions. H is thoitttti hang atbest in a state of doubtfulness and uncertainty, and are never capa ble of receiving any &nisi-act - ton on the advanta geous edc, so that his Mon - tiles are-most -success ful who they discover nothing. Ills plea:ures arise from ins disappointments, and his lite is spent in the pursuit of a secret that destroys -his happiness it he chance to find it. VSNER or DOINC SERritt To OTRI:10 1 . When your endeavors are directed towards doing good to an individual, in other words, to do him a service. if there be any option as to the mode or way, consider and observe what mode is tnost to his taste. If you serve him as you think and say in a way which is yours, and not his, the value of mu- service may, by an indefinite amoupt, be thus reduced. If the action of serving a man, not in the way he wishes to be served, St; carried to a' cer tain length, it becomes tyranny, not benificence ; an exercise of power for the satisfaction of the self regarding affections. rot an act of ben?ficenco lot the gratification of the sympathetic or social of e.e tions.—hremy Bentham. Reniove Ivor Chide a man fur being angry when he is angry, what will you get by it: save soitte of the fearn of his overflowing rage cast upon you? As Uoil is said to have conk down in the cool of the day to. reprove. Adam, so likewise should we come in the cool reason of a man's p4e sion, whet all, is quiet and temperate within, - for then tliere'is the greatest probabilhy of sightly id tfueucing, him. Wittiri-En you sre great event develop° or ro- . produce!tsictf irafriug a long . .series of ages,. and amidst many vagying,circurnstances, never ascribe it to force. 'Force plays a great and daily part in 403 man affairs; but it is not their 7rinciple, their sa -11 prerne imputs ; above force, and - the part which it plays, there soars always some moral' valise which decides of thinv as a whole.--Goizot.. N E tr ntiltosn.—A pew kind or di.mcrpti. has -been discovered . in large quantities in Siberia. The stone reFernUe's the 'Renaudfiery' much, but is lighter and not so hard, although harder Chian gran ite. Specimens have been depoi.ited in the Impe rial Nlustum at St. Peteri•burg. MANT A Nr.l!: is first led' to agitate the world, in order that the world's opinion may react upon one or two obscure persons, of inert sympathy, perhaps incapable of forming a judgment fur .themsebhYs, but whom he Feet ttaily, and whom he is bent upon inspiring with a just estimation of his merits. Lazy rich girls malte rich men poor, while in bastrions poor girls make poor men rich. lien:tear her this, ye affected fair ones, whose, antipatty to putting luinds tutocold water IS always getting your h/lSb3t)ti n S into hot. PicNir.—This word is in almost evel - perton's mouth, and we ebrefe'ss terstmit etirikeitt about its origin. Richardson gives , it no place; Walker ni•Oes no mnininit oil ; Jcihnson is silent abOnt it, and the new and revised edition of Webster throws this light upon it and no more-="Originally, oW entertainment at *V&A' entli person contributed soiree dish or article for the general table. The term is nbw applied to an entertainment carried with them by a party on ati execitgnu of pleasing into the countfy, and also to the party itself—N. Y Com Ado. ::.J KT.llllltrair .tita