ill VIDILIMIII =0 TOWANDA: Wombat) .ftlh:truism October b. 18111. 'llia MAK Med. The following letter from Lewis ZA`NER, Esq„con tains the particulars of the discovery of the remains of the little daughter of Mrs. Williams, whose ab sence we gave an account of some weeks since.— It will be seen that the fears of the parents have been realized, and the unfortunate child has proba bly wandered through the wilderness, until fatigue and• hunger overpowered her, and Death came to end 'der sufferings. None but a parent can re alize the distress and anguish such an occurrence creates—the be wildering fears—the half -relinquieh ed hopes--the fearful watching. and search, until at last, even the remotest hope is abandoned to the dreary gloom of the.certainty that all chance of re covery is hopeleis. We notice almost every weak, in our exchanges, the particulars of some such dis. tiessing occurrence, and it is a bright spot in hu man nature, to observe how ready the community ire to sympathize with the afflicted in such cases, and to endeavor by diligent and interesting search, to return the lost to the arms from which they have wandered • F.. 0. GOODRICH :-Sir-A child of Mrs. Williams disappeared from Laporte on the 29th of June last. Diligent search was made then, and at many sub sequent times, but all in_ vain, until yesterday alter •ncon, some of the remains were accidently found by Mr. Foust in coming to Laporte from his house. They were about a mile and a half north of here.— Several persons from Laporte returned with him to make search for and recover the remains. All that were found, and the clothes which were identified by the mother, were buried in the bury ing ground at Laporte this afternoon. I was called upon for the purpose of holding an Inquest, but on account of tee entire decay of the body, it was thought better to dispense with it. Laporte, Sullivan count', Pa. Sept. 17th, 1846. TO PAIDIERVZ RED CAA' APPLT!.—.Take red or Siberian crab apples when they are quite ripe and -the seeds are black. Walsh and wipa them. and put them into a kettle with sufficient water to co ver them. Simmer them very slowly till you find that the skin will come off easily. Then take them out and peel and core them ; extract the cores care fully with a small knife, so as not to break the ap ples. Then weigh them, then to every pound of crab apples allow a pound and i half of loaf-sugar and a half pint of water. Put the sugar and water , into a preserving kettle, and when they are melted together, eel it over the fire and let it boil. After skimming it once, put in the crab apples, adding a little cochineal powder rubbed with a knife into a very small quantity of white brandy till it is dissol ed. This will greatly improve the color oldie ail ples. Cover them and let them boil till clear and tenders Skimming the syrup when necessary. Then spread them out on dishes, and when they are cold, put them ilto glass jars and pour the syrup over them. e The flavour will be greatly improved by boiling w4th them in the 'syrup, a due pro )onion of lemon juice and the peel of the lemons pared thin so as to leave the yellow part only. If you use lemon. juice put a small quantity of water to thesugare-- Allow one large lemon or two smaller ones to•each pound of crab apples. If you find after they have been kept awhile, the syrup inclines to become dty or candied, give it an other boil with the arab apples in 'it, adding a tea-, cup full of water to about three or four pounds of the sweatatest Ter Fine llwrismscse.--Do you remember what your feelings were after you bad spoken the first unkind word to your husband ! Did you not feel ashamed and grieved, and yet too proud toad mit it ! That pride was, is, and ever will be, your evil genius ! It is the temper which labors inces santly to destroy your peace—which c h ea t s you with an evil delusion, that your husband deserved your auger, when he really most required your ,love. It is the cancer which feeds upon thine glad and uuspeakeahla ,eisfations you heft en the first pressure of his had end lip, and will not leave them till their ashes corrode your affections, blight your moral vision, and blunt your sense of right and wrong. Never Rem!' that yours is a lor ry calling ! Never foiget the manner in which the duties of that calling can alone be properly fulfilled. If your husband is hasty, your example of patience will chide, as well as teach him. Your recrimina tions will drive him from you. Your violence may alienate his heart, and your neglect impel him to desperation. Your soothing will redeem him— your softness may subdue him; and the good-na tured twinkle of those eyes, now filling beautifully with priceless tears, will make him all your own. Toe Wzrourc Rtsaii;—The nn is ibe emblem of Utley ; whenever it is looted epee, the ewer riage vow should be remembered. The %means have ivend ambient. not se Al gnetifid Wigs feel ings of wedded pairs, which they make me alit their teenier rites. The bride, on her wedding day, is clowned with a garbed at wonnweed.-im• plying not olly the bitterness or birds of the mar riage state, bet the duty of married woman to trit• umph over these difficulties, and thus make them what they really can be made, a crown or emblem of victory. Gamaress rx Womar.—Of all the graces which adorn and give dignity to the female character, none, perhaps, has a happier influenee than that of gentlenese. Not only does the cultitivaticm of this virtue give peace and tranquility to the mind of its possessor, bet its sweetness is imparted to all who ace brought within its sphere.. So amiable, and so attractive, is gentleness—soc.h a beautiful attribute of the human heart, and so prepossessing in the eyes of all sensible beholders--that the only won der is, that it is. not more generally esteemed and practised, 'especially by those whom it would the ,tuost adorned. ' THE BRADF I D REP I RTE ft is my intention to. ao justice to the living and the dead; and, in writingthese papers, I shall avoid all partizan bias or feeling. I mean to mite of An drew Jackson, the man, the statesman, and soldier, but not of Andrew Jackson the partizan and leader of one of the most powerful parties that ever exist 'lin this country. The first time I had any intercourse with this ce lebrated man, was in the year 1821. As 'I was crossing the Esplanade, in the city of Nashville, on a very warm and sultry day in the month of June, I met him near the State linage, aceompanied by Doctor Bronough, his then military surgeon and friend, and two or three other individuals of emi nence. He stopped me, somewhat abruptly, and said to me, " I will thank you, young man, to sign this paper. It is * remonstrance against chattering a score or more of Banks. Come, my young friend, don't hesitate ; step over the way to Stephen Can. trell's store, sign it at once, and whatever is to be done must be done quickly. There's no time to be lost, if we expect to nip these banking swind ling schemes in the bud I" I was half inclined to offer some opposition' to the loan of my signature ; bat, as I was satisfied that the General was right, I did "step over the way to Stephen Cantrell's store;" and then and there signed the remonstrance, The General was very much excited, for be had not band all on whom he called to be pliant to his will ; not a few had paused to discuss the merits of the banking question—a question to him at all times, and in all its phrases, superlatively odious. When I had re corded my signature, he was pleased to say tome, II yen have done that today, young gentleman, which will through life redound to your honor !" With this remark, he departed on his mission of remonstrance. 'He obtained a large number of sig natures in the city of Nashville and the adjacent county; and, having prepared himself fur any em ergency that might 'occur, he proceeded to Mar freesborough, where the 'Legislature of Tennessee was in session, and in person presented the remon strance to the speaker, at the bar of the House. of Representatives. He took the liberty to exercise this strange privilege of - Parliament, inasmuch as the Freedom of the House had been voted him by an anterior legislature.' The odious bank bill was under discussion at the time the remonstrance was presented, and Gen. Jackson took the liberty topre sent his views on the subject. He denounced it as an abomination, a scheme to swindle and defraud and, handing up his remonstrance, he stated its na ture and contents; and adder', if any man voted for the bill then pending, he would be guilty of trea son to the trusts confided to him by his constituen cy, and if indicted, a jurt. of twelve men would find him guilty of wilful and corrupt perjury. I was at'Murfreesboroogh at the time this scene transpired, but did not happen to be in the Legisla ture at the moment. The utmost excitement fol lowed it, as a matter of course; but it was of that description that produced a death-like silence.— Some moments elapsed before the Assembly reco vered itself; when two of its members, Adam Hunts man, and e man named Miller, ion and protested against the action of General Jackson, and the en tire pros ling. They protested rather in behalf of the dignity of the Legislative body, whose legiti mate fuhetions, they alleged, bad been invaded, rather than in defence of the bank bill. Both, how ever, had ultimate cause to regret the course they had adopted ; for the rapidly increasing popularity of theMemel absorbed every thing and demolish -sod every thing that 'opposed it. Mr. Miller, I be lieve, never politically recovered from the shock his conduct provoked; bat Mr. Huntsman, by re• moving to a distant portion of the State, where be ultimately became an advocate of Genet)] *lt son's fortunes and political creed, ultimately restor ed himself, and subsequsedy reached the Ameri can Congress, where he sustained the General's administration, though he professed to be a Judge White man. Whatever might have been said, or whatever was said, in reference to the bold and somewhat arbitrary course of conduct General Jackson par"- ed on the occasion in question, it was, beyond all possible doubt, the means of saving Tennessee from the distress, absolute misery, and approximating anarchy, that bad already been inflicted on Ken tucky and Ohio, by the banking mania that had be• set them, and which had already began todevelop Welt. in all its blighting consequences and depra vity. In the year tigle, the former State had, by the paring of a single act, established two-and.bny " Independent Banks"Tas they were Galled, and planted them in different and remote sections. The 144 1 further out of the w 4 they could be located, the better it suited 'valence and designee, those who managed' ' ' Several of them were in pla. cos that were almost inaccessible. I recollect mse althorn remarkably well. It was called the Bask of Ihubereville, act perpetied to exist in the lows of Ilarbersvyle, in Knox dainty. It had bees is operation a few months only, when I became pa. sorted of a (kepis on it, drawn by Col. Richard M. !chaser., of avowal hundred dollars. irate anx ious to obain its Squidatie' n, sad not beige able le negotiate it; with 'any of the banks arks:ikon; " in the settlements," I mounted my horse, and procee. dud towards the town of Barbersville. It was soon out, amid the peaks of that part of the Allegheny range of mountains that are known as the Cumber- land Ridge; but, on coming within some tea miles I of it, I found myself entirely oil the legitimate track, for there was nothing but a bridle path, that led from the main road to the city of Barbersville ; and .the main mad itself would w.arcely have been re cognized as a road, if the traveller were not assur. ed that such was the fad, by the erection of a pub lic land mark. After wandering; now this way and ; thet a the bet ter part of the day in the widener of the moun tains, T accidentally MI into the company of a moun taineer, who with his rifle and his pme on his PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, FL, BY E. O'HARA GOODRICH. .., . &adder, - was stunting le *home, which, be fn. focused me, walla the vicinity of lhattemedle. In consideration of a dm& from Nay limk, the mern consented to be my pier : and after wandering through a someunien of glades ) lbw that were %- meted with the occasional tangesof towering ddb, and deep and scant* penetrable forests, we teach ed the city, of my seatelt. It eastained a log build leg, oreupied as a jag ; a grist mato' nevem, a blacksmith's shop, and a plows and stook*, and a whipping pest. he oath. tepobeio' n might have amounted to thirty or forty, - peetibly fifty per, —lt wits to leas when I arrived le Wend to any kind of business,—especially, was I behind bank ing boors, and bank,and therefore made up my mind to wait t ill Ft morning, ere I . at tempted to do anything. In the mean time, I :vad at myself el a beautiful moonlight night, and a va cant hoar, to look at the Elephants of the magnifi cent city of Subersville. The first object that awa kened my curiosity, was the building occupied by the " President, Directors, • and Company of the Bank of Bathersville." I vris indebted to the cour tesy of the only servant that was in the hotel, for a personal' inspection of the maxi& of the edifi.ve.--- It was composed of _tound logs, dove-tailed togeth er at the ends, and was, I should think, about fif teen feet long, by six or eight in width, and might have been six or seven feet high. And this was the banking house that had already inundated the State of Kentucky with a series of beautiful bank notes, fegraved by Murray, Draper, Fairman, and Company, of every denomination, from one dollar to one thousand. To me, the edifice was an deo lute novelty, though it did not seem to awaken the especial wonder of my conductor, the bonder. The jail was indeed a curiosity, in architecture as well as Utility. It was composed of legs, erect• ed on a superstructure and base of the same mate rial, perched at least five-and-twenty feet in the air. It was approached bv„ a ladder, which its keeper put up and took away, as necessity, convenience, or his caprice dictated. The main door was confi ned by placing the - shaft of a tree, some fifty feet in length, against it, butt-end foremast, while the smaller end rested on the ground. The great weight of the shaft rendered it a formidable means of se curity and confinement, for it took at least a dozen men to move it. That it Aid afford abundant means of confinement, was proved by the fact, that at the time I saw it, it contained two incamenued victims under sentence of death for mustier. Having seen quite as much of Barbersviile as I desired, I went to bed, slop soundly, and the next morning, at 10 o'clock, I called en Col. Joseph Eve, the President, and Mr. Benjamin Tuggle, the Cashier, of the Bank of Bashersville, and asked them to liquidate the claim I presented. Col. Joseph Eve was a good looking man, and seemed to be in possession of some of the qualities of civilization ; but Mr. Benjamin Toggle, Cashier, was a very different kind of personage. He was blind of an eye ; his face bore definite marks of many a bloody affray ; and the haft and hilt of the long bowie knifa that protruded from his bosom, made quite an unfavorable impression on my fan cy. Col. Eve looked at the cheque I presented, and remarked that although Col. Johnson's claim on the bank was a good one, he could not tell what to do with it, until he had a meeting, of the honorable board of directors. To facilitate the object of my visit as rapidly as possible, he said be would call a meeting of that important body at ones. Hereupon, Mr. Joseph Eve applied a hunter's born to bis mouth, a Aid blinr• blue se had sal dryad," that it reached the very peeks el the mountains, and summoned the directors to attend to the business of the bank ! in ell geed time, the it twelve " made their apporinee. They were clad in beating shirts mil moccasins, and looked very moth like twelve men who had no especial awake indeed@ of heedful new. A consecution took place its side el the banking home, which did net hat lon, before Col. Joseph Eve toe& his appmenes, and informed me the directory had decided that they omald'nt pay any teen Cheques for Col. Johnson. Wifh this annunciation t was eat very wall pleas ed, and was pomading to descent .en the iamb maims I had subjected myself is, by making a journey to Barbersville, when I was very decided ly bade to 14 shut op," by Mr. Benjamin Toggle, who accompanied the mandate with an imitation that if I were not satisfied, and %neigh: proper 'to grumble, I might Sod myself 'bung up to the team and strongest sapling thus could be found in Knox county. And, ea I was sat dieposed.to submit my. self to any each poems of elevation and eminence, I very summarily paid what little debts I bad eon. nursed in the city of Betheranrille, end made the best of my way to the setdements. This Bank of Berbersville mils! lair ample the two and forty that the Logi den 1 Itentalft latinebed iota esirenes, i a single n e west; end whirl, aka haviingiopesid a tho gene pm*, 1111 the skid epees of at or aka ineauto, twenty matinee of mar preinisem par, nil hod the foundation of yeas eleutioavieliteml, betaidp and rain—gildna op the Ow, and eseed tantaelty Ira aneetiorms ways of a edam. It was to maid tido yogi" of Mating, to pew Net the peepie °O'Toole's.' and stiataii Gaped awed* of the state, that &mold Jackson took the ultra steps that destingnished him, at Mulfreesbor ough, in the yew 1821. Had be not done what was at the time a subject of denunciation, and which bee, within the tact five lean, been made the abject et reds criticism, repast& and esetigm. lion, Tennessee would, beyond *doubt, have run into the wild-and ruinous Mows, of hankies that desecrated Kentucky. A Brum non Inc nut Wzrt—The Rt. Rev. Dr. Meis, Bishop of Vancouver, in Oregon, arrived on the 22d ult. at Dubuque, lowa. lb is on his way to Europe, and lei Walla, the bead of twigs. don on the Columbia river, on the 20th of March last, eiossing the Rocky Mountains on foot, the snow being in many places 20. feet deep. DIXIMUCTIOX Mil AZT sonata." plecothe ralrawr ant holy @Mk The Mowing snide from the lAbledripliiir Ledger eastehui some instractive maser. It shows that 'the Booth sapper% itself either by slave labor, or by salaried oeirea. The time has arrived whew the slave bowed nowt prepare for a ehange. Fore la bor will orpplant slave labor as one as tomorrows sum will vies: When the federal Constitution was presented to the people by the Convention of 17117, every State in the Union eneeping Massachnetts, held slaves. Little Rhode Wand held more than 1000 ; Column Beat, nearly WOO ; New York, 25,0e0; New Jer sey, 12,000, and Pennsylvania 4000. Yet masons had already been adopted by N. Hampshire, Rhode Wand, Connecticut and Pennsylvania for the speedy abolition of slavery, and steps wets in preparation for it which aeon followed, in New York and New Jersey. In Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and North Coolie the most enlightened portion of the people, all the political leaders, regarded slavery with hos tile feelings and looked forward to its extinction at no remote period. And every ooe of these States was opposed to any extension of this institution be yond the rigions which it then occupied. South Carolina and Geoqpi stood alone in contending for the slave trade, and the prepetnation of slavery.— And even they did not look beyond its perpetua tion within their own boundaries. They do not seem at early period to have thought of its exten sion. But after the aequisition of Louisiana, they began to see, though not every clearly, an instru ment of political power in the extension of slavery. Mississippi and Alabama had already been ceded to the Union, under as provision for the security of slavery, and were regarded as prospective slave States. Lonsiina was extensive enought for sever al Stites, and already contained slaves.—And thus, in Mississippi and Alabana,and the States that would rise in Lonnie's*, they began to see a balance to the five new Bee States of the Northwestern Territory, and perhaps enough to arm the slave States with a majority in Congress. . This policy was fully developed and almost plainly avowed, when Missoun applied for admiss ion ; and since that time the slave-holding interest if the South have been indefatigable in striving to extend slavery as an instrument of political power. But why abould the: South desire the control of the federal Government ! In former days, national Banks and high Tariffs furnished the answers to Mine questions.- And though these questions are settled for the present, and may not soon be reviv ed, yet while slavery endures we mug expect a ilaissrence of opinion upon national policy between the free and slave States. But waiving these ques tions as thing, of the part, and if of the future, not of the present, we proceed to mention a new element of difierence between the Bee and slave States, which impels the latter to seek control of the fede ral Government This is the executive patronage. Once inconsiderable, it has become extensive, and now operates upon the South like that oldie British Government upon the English aristocracy. The army, the navy, the judiciary, the salaried °Moen al Washington, are now regarded by southern poli &am as an important provision for the slave-bold ing interest All this results from the peculiar constitution J slavery, espeeially in South Carolina, Louisiana, sad ewe Abets of the slave &sites. The sate government callooth Carolina is an arida:secy.— Seffrage is extensive. But eligibility being depen dent on a [ergs amount of property, the , legislative and executive power, and the representation in either Rouse at Cowen, must be confined to a rich oligarchy. Avicuhure, conducted by slavery, though requiring careful superintendence, doss not require that of the owner. The wealthy plan ter is not confined to his business, like the merchant or the farmer of the free States. Depending on agents 'and overseers, he can find leisure for poli tics, and thus converts them into a node, a source of profit, as well as of ambition. And as slavery always exhausts every community in which it predominates, end consequently , as slave-holding aristocracies decay, they seek in office the income and position which Abair wealth once adorned.— Seems we find the members of decayed southern famifies,once wealthy as well as datinguishedlcen *sally besieging Presidents for office, and contin ually preferred, by slave-holding Presidente„to citi zens of the free States. We must also consider the bidden°. of primogeniture, necessarily fostered by slavery. The sole foundation of slavery is agri culture, and the preservation of a family • depends upon keeping the landed mate Undivided. This compels younger sons to serA 'atones ; and as they are adenoma for politics, the end of their seats Inuit he solerim—ie maintenance from the Treeenti. Thus has eseinsive perenage boom an inspetant tar oigitand4 dame in southern polities; and teem this mosses tips selicitide elate siamobsidiog Masse Minx, asw Stens, to seek nitiintien as an Minimise he measpraing the pease at the Wind Ciimeismone. The remuly. ellsoims Arnaldo, et mesh. Forepart tio the pm*, winnow end tarsier is Fecrietilit, Psi re„Grogmes shush/ net, wield ispite the isesielingeskieenny of apewednl Seemenent in the onaesioe et limey. In the army and navy, warrants for West Point and for midshipmen are appointed among the Stater, and promotions are regular. Bat when new general officers are to be appointed, as in theists war, why are net the House of Reprosanagives as competent to nominate as the President I And why cannot the House nominate to doe flenatektreir minions, and audios', registers sled eentail i lors of the Tames ey I And judicial dims I Thi esbjectis worthy of tossideration. A hirm To Lovrats.—There is nothing that tends to keep the fire of love bwning brightly MO mar riage so ansch as those little mentions which, be. fore marriage, yon mosider it round be almost in ezetatable in you to fey*. Husbands, bear this in mind ! bassos( Xamid Vii■ The body?' of • hat (beaver) is generally made of one part et 44 led" wool, three parts Saxony f and eight parts tabbies fur. The mixing or working up of these mannish is an operation which depends my much Ontbe dexterity of the workman, and years ellen* practice are required to make a man placing. The wool and fur am laid on a bench, brat separately, and then together. The workman takes a matitinesometlung like &large Violin bow; this is suspended fruit the ceiling by the middle, stew inches above the bench. The wrakinan, by means of a Unall piece darned, mime the eni his a bown'to vibrate quickly against the particleti of wool and for. This operation, continued fo some time,, effectually opens the Clotted emssee, and lays open all the fibres ; these flying upwards by the nankin of the string, are, by the manual and wnoderfil dexterity of the workman, caught in their descent in a peculiar manner, and laid in a soft layer of equable thickness. This operation, appa. rently so simple and easy to be enacted; is in real ity very dincnk, and only to be learned by con stant practiee. The enterer shell of 'metal batons is mitred by mates-et aptatnpingiotess; Winstead of a puma', a curved polished surface is wed. The workmen employed to stamp the, little bitsofeopper, acquire such dexterity, that they frequently stamp twelve 'hundred loan boor, or newly thirty in a minute.— This dexterity is truly wonderful, when it is con sidered that each he of copper is put into the die separateiy, to belstaroped with a peas moved by the hand, and 6mtily removed from the die. The quickness with; which the hands and fingers , most bereaved to do 1,728 in an hoar, must be very greats In type-founding, when the metal has been pour ed into the mould, the workman, by a, peculiar turn of hi band, or rasher jerk, manses the metal to be shaken, into all the minute interstices of the mould. • Ia mannfisctoring imitative pearls, the glass bead forming the pearl has two boles in its exterior; the liquid, made from a pearl-like powder, is inserted into the hollow of a bead by a tube, and by a pecu liar twist of the hand, the single drop intrisluced is caused to spread itself over the whole surim, of the interior, without any superfluity or deficiency being occasioned. In waxing the corks of blacking bottles, much cleverness is displayed. The wax is melted in an open dish, and without brush, ladle, or other appli .aiiite, the workman waxes each cork neatly and ex peditiously, simply by turning the bottle upside down, and dipping the cork into the melted wax. Praitice has enabled the men to do it im neatly, that sanely any wax is allowedeto touch the but. de. Again, to tura the bottle to its proper position, without spilling any of the wax, is apparently an exceedingly simple matter; but it is only by a pe culiar movement of the wrist and hand, impossible to describe and difficult to imitate, that it is proper. ly effected, One man can seal•one hundred dozen in an hour. . In push* and affixing labels on the blacking bottles, much dexterity is displayed. As one man can paste as many labels as two can affix, groups of Ibis. are employed in this department. In pasting the actually is shown by the final much of the laugh, which jediathelshel off the beep, and which is conga in the lot band of the workmand and laid This is done so rapidly, That tb. three fold • of pasting, jerking staid laying aside, is repeated so less than two thousand times in an boor. rim affixing of the labels is a very neat and dexteroue operation ; to the watchful spectators the bottle is sow* taken up in the band, ere it is set down labelled. In pocking the bottles into calks inech names is displayed. The heads certain kinds of pins are formed by a coil or two d hie Wire friar:fad at one end. This is cat off boss a long end fixed in a lathe; the workman eats offend at two tams of the coil, gui ded eatitely by his eye ; and such is the manual dexterity displayed in the aperetion, that a work man will cut od 20,000 or 30,000 heads, without making la single Wanks as to the number of turns in each. An expert workman can fasten on from 10000 to 14000 of these heeds in a day. The reader will frequently have seen the papers in which pins are stock forum convenience Glade : children can paper boat 30,000 to 40,000 in a day, although each pia inviting's separate and distinct Operation. • The pointing of pins and needles is dole solely by band. The workless bolds thing or forty pins. length in his hand, *mad oat likes fan ; and wen &dal Omer ity is shown in bringing earth pan to the Agee, and presenting story point °kites:none. ferineets its riedieg , action. elestping the gnome in the heeds of needles, the gossadtar ate Asia SAO Medea in as boor, ahheelithe hes to idiot soh topasto wire at away Sew. Is penehimg 5s eye.hdes Wombs. shako, who se the aponowie mphw mit damigr, as to be ebb is pooh ow human Bair sod thread it with enather, for the senterasent alien L.d app " marine' needles kr sale, the is. miss empleged con mat and paper 3,000 in an hoar! Taal Saw or Herrorass.—No trait of charac ter is lone valuable in a lady than the porse3ssion of a stint temper. Home never can be made hap pyeti*ert it. Those who understand this secret, live it. that .they are the envy of their blend People wonder their boons me in such good Ordet—eheir husbands so snentive—titeir chi'. dren each real "darlings." A sweet temper bas a sorxrdng influence over the minds of a whole fa mily. Wherever it is *Ad, in the wife or the mother, yen Omen's kindness and vises predomi nating over the natural feelings of a bad heed. It is more wadeable than gold; iteeptivietes mots than bean*, and to the close oflifa it retains all its frisk nese and power. :•J 2M/IMI ~ r x. _~~ . . , • ,i. :..p+R.. fill . _ _ _ A God Mats Lik The beauty of a holy life tometures the mosiet. oguent and efficient :peosuiuive in religio n ,. which one human being Can address to another. We have many ways otjdoing goal to our fellow-cre;.- tures ; but pone on efficarkios as-leading* yin n ois, uprtht, and weThonlered life. The seen but si lent beauty. of holiness, speaks more. eloquently pt God and duty than the tongues of inert and angrds. Let parents remember this. The best ittheritance a parent can hapreath to ochild is a vittOons . ample, a legacy of hallowed remembrances and associations! The beauty of holiness beaming through the life of a loved relative or friend, MOM effectual to strengthen- Poch as do stand' in virtue's way, and rains up th ese that are bowed down, than p recept , command, entreaty or war ning: Christianity, itself, I believe, owes -by far the greater part to its moral power, not to the iee cepts or parables of Christ, but to hi own ch.uac ter. The beauty of that holiness Which - 4 en shrined in the four brief biographies of the Man of Nazareth, has done more, and' wilt do more, than all the other agencies pot together.. It has done more to make his religion of the human heart, thin all that has ever been preached or written on the evidences of Christianity. . As mamma am or Goco.—Gne hundred miles in extent, has been discovered in California, on America Fork and Feather rivers, tributaries of the Sacremento, near Monterey. Mr. Colton, the Alacakle of Monterey, states that the gold is f.mnd in the 061 3, in grains resembling squirrel shot, flattened on Some grains weigh an ounce each. It is got by washing out the Sand .in any v e ssel, from a tea saucer to a swarming pan. A single person can gather an ounce or two a day, and some even -a hundred dollars worth. Two thousand whites and as many Indians are un the ground. All the Americans, settlements are deserted, and burning nearly suspended. The women' only re main in the settlements. &dins and - captains, de sert the ships to go to the gold region, and laborers refuse ten dollars a day to work on the farms. Mr. Colton says One man, who resides hest door to me i gathetd five hundred dollars worth in six days. He has ohe lump which weighs an ounce. A trough such as You' feed pigs in, will bring in the gold region fifty dollars. Put a piece ef sheet iron, punched with holes, on it, and it will bring a hundred. My friend J. It. paid sixteen dollars - for a little basket, and his - companion 6ve twenty for a chamber pot—all to wash out thegold in." More than twenty thousand dollars worth had been collected. Gov. Mason Ad his aid had gone to the district which is five days journey from Monterey. a The natives have gone for gold, the sailors have ruin from the ships, and the soldiers from their camps,. for the same purpose. The last Vessel that left the coast was obliged to ship an en-. tire new crew, and pay each fifty dollars a month. No one can be hired to dig gold short of sixteen or twenty dollars a day—he prefers working on his own hook—he may make less than that, but he has a chance of making much more. There flour is worth $32 per barrel; 15 lbs of Boston crackers in tin boxes, SIO a box; a cotton shirt Sp; boards $5OO per 100 feet. A carpenter can get 1;100 per day. Mr. L. paid 'for a common cradle trough 12 feet by 3 wide, to wash gold. earth - in $l5O. Less than aday's work to make it • Mt Potts or Ravvroc.—There is nothing more foolish, nor mote productive of misery to yourself, than revenge. Banish all malignant and revenge ful thoughts. They make the best face look ugly. If your revenge be not . satisfied, it wit give you torment now ; if it be, it will give you greater here after. None is a, greater self-tormentor than. a ma licious and revengeful person, who toms the poison of his own temper upon himself. The Christian precept in this ease is, " Let not the sun go down upon your wrath;" and this precept, Plutarch tells us, the Pythagoreans practised in I literal sense— " If at any time ' ili in a passion, they broke nut into opprobrious lan age, before the sun set they•gave one another their hands, and with them a discharge from all injuries and so, with mutual reconcilia tion, parted Meld s ." t & MIRTH AND 11V1SDox.=- 4- tobotly can deny th at , there is truth in !the oldsaang, " h is good to be merry and . vial." Not only is this simple truth, but sound philaiophy. It is an excellent thing to be mirthful, when you can ; to smile at what amu - sea You ; to hat what is ludicrous ; lail in short, to look at the sun y side of things, and even. in the gloom and cold of winter, to recollect that thole is / 4 a good time ' ming," kvhen the sunshine and warmth of the. 400 rioussuinmeriwill make all things glad. Thus, wren while we enjoy ourselves, we may be '‘ wisal in doing so.. We may be exercis ing that hopeful practical philosophy which makes the best of - the ipresent, and looks cheeringly for ward at the futtire, with ite rich promise. - Row Smasatsibliss &Ono - Es.—Some of the most feringuished rtatoralists Of the world believe that spiders have this art of crossing streams of waters on bridgaiof their own making. Mr. Spencer re lates the follow4ng curious. fact. t: Having placed a large, full-grdwn spider, on a cane_ upright in the miditof a stream of water, he saw it descend the cane several times, and remount. when it arrived at the surface of the water. Soddenly he lost sight Of it wholly; brit a few minutes afterwards, to his great astonishment, he perceived it quietly purtmi ing its own way on the other side Of the stream. Having spun two threads along the cane it had but one of them; vihich carried by the viind, had -be come attached to some object on the bank, and so served the Bp' et u a . liridge across the water„ - to be eternally shaken a' out, but - *gloats their beautiful iokira lamb of life. Mee are worms are no, in thenoise A New . Ye k paper calla the ceremony .of Vol"' ladies sin each other, a dreadful - wade of the raw mritezial: • r== }; - LSO