~,,pOO2-xv,velerm TOZNEEIB MEO HT todnicabag !Rousing, Mmicidla 1. 1810. Irma Chsaben. Joarsial.l like hatival awl lis Casmosea. ► Mane Sa Navarro. It was a fine afternoon in the spring of 1834; the birds were cheerfully singing on the bees, the flocks and herds contentedly cropping the young herbage, and the air was perfimierl with odors.— Not only did the face of nature brightly smile, but some festive caret iny was evidently about to be performed in the village of --, in Navame.— Nnivibere of yotmg girls was seated at the cothge doors, weaving garlands of spring flowers, whilst several youths looked on and encouraged them.— Here and there an old man, wrapped in a rusty brown cloak almost as ancient as himself, stood observing the juvenile groups; and on the thresh old 01 a miserable hovel satsn aged woman sing ing a wild air, aocompanied* uncouth gestures; but whether they betokened joy. grief, or anger, it worifd have been difficult for a stranger to deter mine. • At length the damsels rose. each bearing in her hand the blooming wreath she had entwined, and the whole party proceeded to a small Arta, or square, in front of the church, where, waving their chaplets gracefully, they danced to, the sound of a largetamborine and the mountain-ripe, called the I, pieta. the tones of which strongly resemble those of the bagpipes. Nor was the human voice want ing ; the harsh and discordant chant of the bledame ; was again beard ; and by her side a lean rickety ! boy. of about fourteen, with wiry flaxen betide look, and unmeaning grin, beat time by clap- I ping his hands. The dancers became more and Mare animated every moment; the fine hair of the young women, which had hitherto been plaited and arranged with natural good taste, was by some sudden process, allowed to fall loosely on their shoulders ; and at the same monient each maiden ; placed a chaplet on her head, the young men sling ing large garlands across their breasts, like the 'broad ribbons of chivalric orders. At the conclusion of the dance, the great gates of church were thrown open ; at the eastern end the altar, rftlilersilatit from the effect of nntner ous large wax candles, had an imposing appear ance. The cnra, or priest, halted in richly-embroi dereti -stood under the i.onico,..asisl spreading forth his hands, bestowed a blessing on the pecpee, who knelt reverentially to receive it. While this act of devotion was in prcgress, a load creaking sound was heard„ and presently a' small body of men • mowed advancing along the road which runs doers by the square. Their heads were revered with the flat cap called La floina ; they wore coarse brown cloth jackets, and loose white I, harm trousers, theit waists being encircled with broad red 'molten sashes, below which, and ~ in fiont were strapped their cayman,. of cartridge-pouches: instead of shoes t.‘ey had alpargatas, er hempen sandals : they were armed with muskets and bay onets without mabberds were sleek in their belts. I This vanguard was followed by four grains, each drawn by two oxen, guided by* a peasant bearing a long staff, with a goad at one end. The oxen moved very slowly, the emakin sound being pro. 'awed by the egolutions of the lieatryiwoodar axle• trees of the grains, which were followed by awry& , larger party, clothed and armed in the same man ner as that in advance, the whole being command ed by an.ofFicer in uniform. Three et the bullock cars contained each a new bronze mortar of mode rate size the touts was laden with ammunition bates. On their arrival in the plata, the molt tut covaged their heads, knelt. and tereited the ptieat'a benediction. The assemblage then ram; the tam borine and mottntain-pipe stick up; the old wo man.rvume.l her discordant sang; the half-witted urchin clapped his lean hands .more vehemently than ere,; the young men and maidens mooed to. wards the trains with a soleam . daming step; and, the girls, decimated the holm and wicks of 'lien with the waraths they had been gracefully waging dining the dace; whilst the youths encir cled the mortars with the large mixed, ; the while ceremony being performed with the utmost mans *ix.= , Meanwhile, the priest had retired to the interior of the churl' : het When all the evainernents were i completed—the oxen adorned with their ecririn honocr standing patiently in the sun, and the mur derous bronze artillery docked with sweet and peaceful florets—he again came forth, preceded by a youthful acolyte (-Amin a lava saver cross, elevated on a stall apparently of the same metal.— By his side was another boy wearing a wallet fir seek, over which was a white muslin timic; he hove a silver cacao, whieb, when ibis Mk proem. eon had reached the wains, be threw up inter the air. and then drew it beck again by its aver ehain, rnakin the white smoke ofibe incense cloud over the mortars, and around the heads of the oxen ; af. ter which the priest sprinkled them with holy gra ter. The ins-ant this ceremony was. completed, there mew a general shomingof Ma Curios (*IWO! tl re Ia Reh.„..•ioa I Sucece to the new mortars!— Death to the Christioos r itimidst.lbese firmest cheers the brinock.ears movedee. eeroned as 6e f.ve the yoarq men accompanying them as a guard of honor a little way beyond the limas of the cdl 3 ,• r m on parting, the soldiers cried—:' To Die tetic to E.l'izondo F-' and sow enterirca =mum ;urge, they disappeared. The Say after this scene there was annidendie atnaian in the silage. Sereral Githersof tamilies who had been absent Seim as scon, annehed . to Don Carlos' army, or otherwise connected with it, Turned. They biorght amounts of the Telma id ttte Carro4 chief, Zinualseannuy, born before Flt rondo ; and rt waswhisperetd that the anartanswhich his passed thnenh on the previous day, mid bad been welcomed with so mix pomp. leers ail en t!zet: way back. 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F. of about thirty, his features, though handionae,bore i The plaza was new crowded with num, woman, a "mg stamp of reinahatt: and-die expression of and children; Moldy aherwards no sideloesosp i his large irrey eyes, set is a face the coke ofwhich appeared, foamed byes error's guard . The for um-Only a abide retnoved from black, was sopa. user-approached the gmentl, and reported that, is edit as * tender it ;minket to meet their gam— pursuant* of his orders, leery home 114,, been The suangern codeine was unlike that of the lite aesucheakand that, to the best of his knowledge, vamps peasants. He wore a jacket of dark his. mu the ma t e i n b i bi t , - al , who ree d hi , the oil . velveteen, open, displaying a waistcoat of thsenne [loge were now vedpe n t ..,--- • h e from - lersz. 7wigi material, adorned with three rotes of large open. is L e i th eta the women and worked dyer beeene, banging loosely ; his Wes- e hodr ea ,o. a dd ea t . chols were of cause dolt cloth, with silver buoons Thi, o r d er p, poly executed , ll* men he . down the outer seams; he also wore a bine won- lag dm up in a rine beta,. Mina. It was a e d sa s h, and hempen sandals. Round his bead ; sump; an anxious scene: the elderly men stood, was a omen handkerchief of bright and earietered-i4e ancient Romans, with their . cloaks Omni colors, tied behind, with two long ends hanging about them in every variety of pictinesque drape. down ; - above the handkerchief appeared-* cone- ry ; some of their younger companiOns were dras shaped black hearer bat, with a narrew brim MM. red in brown woolen jackets, their snow-white shirt ed up all round; the front of the hat was ornamen- , collari falling on their shot:dikes ; ethos in short led with three tarnished tinsel stars--green, ruby ; blue smock-frocks, confined round the waist by and yellow—stock on a strip of rusty black velvet. ; broad girdles of bright mixed colors. AU wore the His thick neck was bate and from constant expo- ; picturesque boina, but of soiled hues—blue, white sore to the min and weather as dark as his face.— 1 or red. He wee a gitano, or gipsey. I The women and children formed a gloomy "I am sent by Zninalacarreguy," said this man, background to this singular picture: they were far "to tell you that the mortars are on their way back, more numerous than the men, one or more of ev and that they must be concealed in this neighbor- , cry family have joined the Cachet party. The hood ; all, therefore, most unite in conveying them ' young girls, who only forty-eight hours before had to a place of safety. • The general', orders are, that 1 1 been weaving chaplets with so much glee and en- ; every man yxoceed instantly 16 meet them; they ; ergy, now stood motionless, some looking fixedly must not re-entel the village ; your privileges, your on Mimi, others their hands clasped, and their beau. lives, even, depend on promptitude and energy ; ` tifid eyes raised towards heaven, appeared absorb. the koly guns must be placed in security? led in prayer. The old women, crouched on the This appeal met with a ready echo in the breast I ground, plied her knining-needles with, great dill of - every hearer ; - tor the whole population of the genre : her lips moved rapidly, Ns trio poi a d eo. 'Village had identified themselves with the fate of ; caped from them ; and she had - in flutrtd herself consecrated astilLery,. All the men immediately as to place herself as to be able to pert through sallied forth with Zamalamnegurs messenger.— the asl ie ht separation between two of the men - who They had oat proceeded far along the road, before stood before her. the u-ell-known creaking of the bullock-can loth- Mina now advanced a few paces in front 'of his cited that the objects they had se forth to meet staff-officers, and thus addressed the villagers : were approaching ; they soon appeared, lore*, " I know that, two days :to, three Mortars pan , however, 01 their gay adornments. ed through your village on their way to pizon do, The guano immediately addressed himielf fed* and that, yesterday they were brought back. I al officer in command of the mere : and after a brief so know that they hare been concealed in this vi parley, three of the village elders were summoned artily with the knowledge of the inhabitants: where to join in the consehation. Much animated die- are they ?” course ensued, accompanied by that lively goalies- Not a syllable was uttered in reply halm by which the Spaniards are charaetetized. 7 - The remit was, that the waits were drawn along a , by-mad to a field, under the guidance of the villa- , gem. the gipsy and the escort Rdlowirt. Oct arriv ing at the centre of the field, the oxen were taken out of the wain, which being tilted np, the mor tars glided easily to the ground. The peasants had , brought with them the large hoes used by the bus ; badmen of Navarre, sand having dug trenches of 1 about three feet deep, the mortars, which only the day before were adorned with garlands, and sent with t hoots and viva% to be employed against the Christihre, were now buried in the earth in solemn silence. The oxen were again yokbd to the waists and led to the high road, whence they departed in an opposite direction : the escort took the shortest route to the mountains, and the villagers hastened to regain their homes. The gipry proceeded to the residence of the cum, with whom he was dra wled for some time; be then went to the small yenta, or village inn. After his departure, the al , estate. was summoned to attend the cora; they held [ a tong conference, at the eonclawion whereof the alcalde visited every home, and made a commis nicatim of solemn import to its inmates. Tow-aids evening several finie_greeps were as sernbled is the plaza, and bekne the home doors. They conversed energetkally,and, on separating, at nightfall, their countenanees and manner indica ted that a definitive and decided resolution had I been Universally adopted upon some highly inter easing and important matter. The following morning, jest as the mine were Bearing away five* the summits of the neighbor ing mountains, General Mina entered the village, having marched during the greater part of thetitht. He had previously canoed the place to be surroun ded by his troops, in order to prevent the escape of any of the inhabitants. Attended by his staff ; be rode to the plaza, whither the whole population were summoned by the crazy drum and drawling voice of the prmoneto, or public crier. The people who only two days before bad his teaed to the same spot with dancing impend exult ing eye, cheered by the tainboaine and mountain pipe, now erg one by me mot of their dwellings with ferarfpl oaken looks ; and wended their un willing way towards the plain. . Irma eyed them sharply as they emerged from the - narrow avenues; but his weather-beaten face did not betrayany inward emotion. By his side stood the eura, deemed in a moy-black camock, balding between both beads his °Hoeg abovel-bst, and pressing its sides within the smallest getable ; compass. His emetenence wee ghastly, sod his small jet-black eye peered flan beneath that half closed lice, first at the Tenets as they glided into the'pima. and• then askance at the general, who had y questioned him closely with regard to the mane's, be had been assumed the villa . rohintardy.eens tad waisted in anewleng to coo t e ; vey to Elienrekr—shen in possession of the queen's ' bees, and foetified--for the perpose of bombard 'mg it. lie had also beset. of the ceremoey of de cermet and tejoieirot over the mortars, and of their subsequent conersalmeitt, with the conuivance and aid of the cura'S parishioners. The priest, however, pretended to be totally t natant of the meter. n S.enbr - General,e be [mid, -' the curs of will never sancfion , rebellion against his rthiful sovereign." As sacs as 4.llfte words had ertaped his Bps, a toad ctappiag of kands was heard immeirsmely be hind him. rpon terturg mama, the cora !MCAT' ed the idiot tad, who toughed in his fame, and trail ed his half-dislonmed legs along, in gates pee imi tation of dancing.. ' Thocumlooked anti hied ; the myrtles of his mete becnMe soddenly contracted =am Mil " Where are the gunsr cried Mina, with a loud rake and irritated manner—"the mortars you deco: rated with garlands, because you supposed they were shortly to be used against the weft forcesr' The people continued silent. Whilst this was going on—.he eyes of the staff officers sad the troops being all fixed on the genet al and the villagers—the ears had managed to glide into a narrow alley by the side of the chinch, (at the back of, which, by a strings ovens old, no sentinel had been placed.) then darting down a lane, he crossed a rivulet at the end. and planed into a dell covered with brushwood ; thence through paths well known to hitn,he bent his course to wants a mall town about a league off, where he knew there was a Carlin garrison. Mina, finding he could not make any impress. ion on the determined people before him, turned sharply roan I with the intention of commanding the ens to use his influence to indore them,to give him the information he required; not seeing him, . be said " Where is the cure Search the church!— search his house To the fanner there was not a tivirg being ; and at the latter only the.arna, or house-keeper, a go 41- looking young woman, who declared that sire hod not seen his rereince shice he was summoned to the general's presence early in the mowing. This being telexes' to Miss he shrugged his shoulders, and proceeded once mote to harrazgoe the nialtitude "Well," he said, " Too appear re solved to refuse giving me the Minimalism I ash far: now listen to the mice of Moe, who never premises north:ennuis in vain. IC in one quar terof an hoar by this tratch,(drawing it from his pocket,) the place where the Catfist mortars are 'bidden be not divulged, 1 will decimate the men now before me. Every tenth man shall be instant ly shot: decide for yourselves." • It was a fearful quarter of an boar. Each man joined by a female—a mother. wife ; sister, or one to whom his heart was dented : the only individ ual unnoticed by any of the women was the gipsy. He was a stranger in the village, and Wenger to a nee for which there was no sympathy on the part of the Navarrese, although its members were at that early period of the civil war employed on im putant missions by the Carlin chielkairok He stood alone with his arms folded, and was apparently in a gate of abstraction. The dram sus beat—the quarter of an boar had elapsed.: the soldiers again began to separate the men from the women. In the cockatoo, the idiot bo7 crept up to the gipsy, sad roused him from hie reverie by saying in a half whisper, "Hoy Senor Claim ! stand last on the line, and yon are sate. , The stranger looted intently loran instant at-the who rubbed the palms of his hands together, and ;tanned confidently towards the .extremity of the line of men now aimed formed. The gipsy contrived to place himself - the last. Silence hard n been commanded and eleained, 3Tma said, "'This is the hot tresenent—eonfernitas or deeimabon." We 'answer, no riga. - "'Smartt, do your ditty," said the general. Immediately a non-corninissiooed officer began counting aloes the fine. On arriving at the tenth man, he was made, to stand forth. The scr2eant then went txt reckoning is like manner. Pow glom were Elms selected.. meant recommit eed counting. There were but nine left, the ~*pny being the ninth. The rank was closed * up Again, and the five oven were left standing about a yard in firm of the others.. An officer and eightoddigo sow masebbi into the mine AU* plum i_aredthe villager, who had the unenviable ieeeedosey in this =armful selection, was led to tbtrigotiorai, who thus addressed him . Berea! the bitlic-phice f i latamsolAr isacselkaatiox now ixr acirres."` t L aid you are safe. I shook% rejoin: it your life coukl be 'pared." "Senior," ',plied the prieoner, aline young min, "1 know it not." Mina rode to the front of the line of linnets and said, " Will-any cf you confess and ietve this r ?" " - The mortars did not pen Minuet the wiliest on their-cetera," tried the men. Mina them sods to the mat, Mal emestimeed the women. "General, general, - they shrieked together," ire know nothing of the maxim Spare bun spare him ; -be merciful far the lore of God r This reply—this appal formetey—had scarce ly been sent forth em a young and benotihd wo. men rushed from the group, and falling on her knees before Mina, exclaimed in nnpioring ac- cents, aSpare, ob ppm my brother ! tie was all yesterday in the mountains cutting wood, and did mit wet= tiU shin nightfall." "Them is no remedy," replied Mina, u unless the acne be disclosed." Five minutes after Minis return to the root where his staff were assembled, the young Than was led to the wall of a house fronting the plain; his arms were pinioned, and shankerthief was tied over his fare. He was then shot dead by four aol diem, who all fired at one and at the same instant. Three more shared a similar fate, after every . deavor to induce-theta or the other villagers togive informatiatteoneernim the maims. They all met their fate with the heroic calmness and dignity The fifth was au old man. Ilia anziookeye had followed each of his fellow captives to the death- nation. His own tarn was now at band. :Mete lay the bleeding corpses of his young companions, and be was interrogated as they had been previous ly to the execution. " 1 call Gad to witness," cried the aged man, " that know nothing of the mat ter. I confess to baring been present when the mortars passed through on their way to Elizondo, hut I was not here when they were brought lock " Tie true, tis true," shouted the people, for getting in the fearful excitement of the moment, that they were condemning thenisslces by this de claration. " Then save his life by confessing," answered Mina." "We hare nought to ainfeas," Francium is innocent," was t h e universal reply, to which sop. ceedel a sepuktharal silence. • As the old man was being coadneted towards the wall where lay the four dead bodies, he parsed close to Mina'sharce; and at the moment when his arms were about to be tied behind bun by two soldiers, be broke from them, and casting 'himself on his knees, clasped the general's thigh with both his shrivelled hands, crying, " For the love of the Holy Virgin, spare me, spare me ! Oh ! by the a/- relation you bore your own father, we the lire of an and parent. I never saw the mortars' alter they left the village the first day.:" Mina moved not.: has rice appeared as though it had been chiselled out of a Hoek of frown stone. The two soldiers is vain endeavored to loosen the old man's hand from Mina's thigh ; be clung to I and panted it with all the *meet of desp4alicut: At length. however, by dint of repeated efforts, he was gemmed, and having been taken in a state of exhamtion to the fetal wall, be speedily fell, pierc ed by the deadly belle's. Ater this acrid execerion, VW said, in a . load voice, " Now let the last man in the line be bungle forward." • Mina had observed immediately after the old nil= lager had been shot, that an interchange of glan ces 101 l of meaning took place between the gips) , and the half-wined boy; and surmised, all at once, that the stranger might be influenced by the fear of death to dilute the semi. On bearing the order for his being brought for ward, the guano's swarthy completion assumed -a deep yellow tinge, and he trembled from head to foot. " You have bat five mit:keen to fire un less the 'nectars be fowl," said byes, addressing the gimes. The moral bonstniction of the girls; was of a very difevent.natete to that of the peasantry of the withers perinea of Spode, although be had been a undoes hired agent of the Carfist junta in *brim,/ up the people to the pitch of enthusiasm to which the Navarme had been slunk at this period, un der the idea that all their rig,hec privfines, and re ligious okierwarsees were at make; and could only be secured by the annihilation of the Chtistin' os. He had expected to escape by means of the posi tion in which be hail eastrieed to phew himself on the line of vill.vers, and had, therefore remained silent during the previous interrogations bet now finding that the very manniarret he had put in prac tice to !are his life, had, on the contrary, bcoight him mike voaro et destniction, be imt all command over himself. In tremulous oeeents he be I permk*dati to speak privately to thereneral. He was led, tannin from fright, to the side of his have. Mina was obliged to ao thaw to his almost inaudible whisper, doubly indis tiuct by the chattering of his "Senor Mina, I my. general, - be munered, "1 I divulge thes_se cast will you take me with you I Will you protect me from the renewed the iillagersr " I wi11, 71 answered Mita. " Tbms--sitiad a party oftelt with scene 00' news, dome the lane to the led the:chew* mid when they arrive at a spot where there are thine evergreen ix**. let &eastern hue a field to 'tire right; in the centre of 1 they will see a heap of manure: let that be removal; then let them dg about three bet deep, aid they will find the mec um" Nrma iossaotly gars swims to the -above' eßect; and duriog the absence of the party.—about hill an hoer--s solemn Amen niggled in the plain_ The Onno stood clan to Mina's bonne with downcast eyea r tiongh ocaniondirbo- glared tattle* at the Taw% who all regarded halo with anewacieg amity- At leniph a scream armed han the exploring .t F s, MEE pasty;mitl bikornted knit that dieittottars bad been found. 'a Our We is spared," stria the' general to the tremtl _ gipsy,crand your Oman shaal be re speeted.-4on toat b . with us." • It took the grater part of the day to pi thy mor tars exhurned and placed in *Mock cars press ed from the iXibabitants, who were also oompelled to dig up the guns and hoist them into the wain the, owners oti which were towed to guide the oxen, under a straw guard. • !* • The k ,Wespsing transitive, the leading features of which ar4 traced from facts, displays the indomila- Lie spirit a the Nam:mese peasantry. Head-ren ding it is"to reflect upon the frightful evils at , civil war which none an fully conceive bat thou' who have besM eye-witnesses of them. Ccoutsirs,--As the fired of all evils, as the .source of all calnmity, is the beginning of pain, *sold, 0 dapghter lof Eve, the bewitching charm of curiosity. Seek toot to know what is improper for thee; thirst netiafter prohibited knowledge; for happier is she wbo but knoweth a little, than she wtio is acquai rt a with too much. • - . , Rem _ ber thy mother, the daughter of heaven; arayed ' the whitest robes of - innocence! forget not the consequences of her disobedience. How nth bevies , in the bowers of Paradise, feasting ,n the the Irnicions grape of gladness, than wandering in the wilderness of care, to chew the bitter weed of repentance. . Be thou contented, therefore, with knoirledge. i fining li# thee ; for in the acquaintance of many tainv liOth not wisdom, but the knowledge of that which ii meet . Let th threshold of thy neighbor's door secure her Gun ly, let her wind3w tempt not thine eye to see, northe open casement thine ear to hear the secrets 0f her home. The prying eye is a foe to i.self, and the listen ing ear will hear itself slandered. . • Art thou inquisitive- after deeds Of scandal nod reproof, inquire of thyself, ma thou kilt find em. ployment within. 1 Art on a vir gi n, sloth the blocm of health glow 1 lively GO thy cheek, study not to know the ways of man. As the way of a serpent in the grass, or a travel kr overt the waste, in a dark night, so the w-aye of man a+ dangerous and hard to find ont. Thy ,Inorance ochis cunning may lay thee open to his deceit i but the knowledge thereof Maw be the etcrsequence of thy being deceived. Leant, therefore, 0 women, what thou shonlaeg know, -fore thou seekest farther knowle!ig,e. With ors Fist Facers met Sracsc The Fetich, originally, was a poisonous -almond. His fleshy it was then used to poison arrows, and it was fix this purpose laundered into Persia. The trans.planand cultivation, however, rot only re moved itpoisonous qualities, but produced the dehrions fruit we now enjoy. The Nectarine and Apricot are natural hylxida ticms between the peach and plum. The Cherry was originally a berry-hie fnfd, and cultivation has given each berry a separate stem, and Unproved its quality ; the common rommurd is the original of met of the present kind of cherries. The common Will Pear is even inferior to the (Atoka pear; bat still by eakivation, it has come to tank arming oar finest fruit. The cabbage originally came from Germany, and_ is nothing more than common sea kale. Its cul tivation has pmdaced the present cabbage, and its different acclimating", the different kirKli Tbile its by uct lardations ' - with other similar plants has pro d the Cauliflower. shows the benefit of cultivation in the veget able acrid ; bat the change which cultivation has effected in the mind of man is indefinitely greater. —.4.0u-ican Apiculture/is!. LoV's Wises—Str. Coleman, in liiiagricultural address a short time since, illustraied the folly of female edocation by an annulate. A p u Tar i t i man who had kw a while remained in that memo state designated by a " half pairnf scLiecer, - at fait seriously determined he would procure him a wife. He got the " refusal' of one who was beaufitn: and fashionably accomplished, and took pon her trial to his bow e. Soon teaming that the low nothing either box to darn , a stockitns, or boil potato, at road a piece of beef, he returned het to her father's borfse. as having been weighed in the balinee and found Wanting. A suit was conimeaced by the good lady, but the husband, al letri that she was not " np to the sample,'' an P of course the obligation to retain the commodity was not Ibiadirg. The jury inflicted a fine of a few dot -1„ _' bat be would base given a Somme ra th er than not to be liberated- from sach'ao irksome enage t "As well might the firmer have . the cir i ' Venus de 31eacrwis placed - in his kitchen.:' mid theocatar, "as were Of our modem fashionable —47.--"kkk.v.iii.d be, " would be l at better to have Let's wife standing there for she might answer one useful porposie; she might Qessza•Wosurs's Samos.—Sly dem bimodal There are three things that I very moth wonder aL The fine is that children eboold be so foolish as to throw up stones, - brickbats; and dubs into fruit uses to riereir down fruit : if they would only let it alone it n ould fall itself. !The second 4that men should ger to war and.kill one another; if they wotdd on ly, let one another alone they would die tbernseir‘ And the third and Ime thin which I trondirr at, * that youtv. men should be so unwise m to go after yourq, women ; Aw it they would say atbocce the yormg, watt= cad come aver them. ME ivoopilcir I:M3 HIS t5.035' 'Scrrow--Sorne witty dap, arho "knows the napes, shrewdly says that botriee is a science by itselL sod west beenended to by those who wed& by turning and twist' in! thenwelres, keepitc in the iamb* of intim. Bow very tereiently to a ea ten of &dans no e l respecafally to a hundred thee sands, cownettiady to fifty thaetand„ civilly to ten thootand, and news know porerty by figle. . ~ , ,-~ mih littirso Li* dent or IL ,c fester. lng (Let:doion of al Vt. The owtiers three years Mope, , ehinecr, an mat . one ride. Abolt 4' doing our country 6231 building is 10 , bur Staidi in hal; buildings for 63,..• other- o t reratioas The first coatract • went, Was for 10,1 another, and much nary, althom.h.the tnni out SOO rifles • der.. They furnace Im:ince. -• for the railroad. • * * o can iron, drawn f proper length anti rolled and welded merthat mates this operation. the drawn to. prevent iron annealing.. The barrel, th process of " nut straighteuin,g 7 all the last more is ascertained to . 1 shadow_ The ne; and in.vection b merit. They are der, two balls If they stand this of finishing, insitl chines at the rat, machine. They cess of skill Lc, make it s inspected, and c smallest pcssdde Snicks are been seasoned have seen Mr. C a tolerable rd tm .1, pass a:weigh sis ifferent machin es ; and i rifle, before it is comp ete in all its parts, passes throtr„th more than one h'. mired different machines ; a great -share of which aie the inception of improvement of Mr. Lawrenc4. If he wants a certain thing, he first invents a m4cliine to do it, and then sets it to work as a man would a boy. The most sinnlar machine is the rine tremens the " letting machine.'' a t it performs' sev difficult and delicee'operations with a faci li ty , d ease that is perfectly astonishing ; It cuts out the p, _to receive the barrel, =wed lock, patch bos r jblin plate, guard strap, side hate, bawl ering, kc., so . enact that they require no hand labor. - The mortniin_ is of brass, finished nearly com plete by machi • . The lock iVork is breed in dies. It aft , . pa-vesthronh a great vilely of machines, . comics' z out in the most perfect shape. These . hines altetrate most effectually the stirpring, yantages of " Yankee irgentrity. . Each piece, ,11 fit in amy of . the runnerons Ages made • the several Parts that are at random, ar IREN when tx . inspl the other in w racrrzcnott ticated gate, the frog of trio which they i by the straw boards of wh leaves the is alawma es , a few whole "'e 1.4- 4,4 '- _c "' ---$: ':' . ' :::.; 7 ' .x r f: ; ?: * ' ; - : 1 1 -- '.,.. . .. *,', . - •:; 1 - ' . .`;;.`...f.".. ,-.. -' 44 ;rV.-" f1 4 4 ..k . ' 4 . :6'lf ( I r• • - - - ZRINVEAIIa • •? Nouf- ZEE iir link V' m "la — 49010 . is , - E.-4 ne. ergives the following interest irileinniaufactery, at , siitd?or, ' Menced their beildings &fai t 11l esPeaded. ini itoilAiNi.44 / 1*; •ds. St s,ooa,befurethey made . 000 or 'their ' tiflei have been mice in Mexico. Their ,piet- I ter:l.lolg aad 44 wide, ald it. They have several other their work, and the variotts .nnectel with their business. l ith the ,United Staten Govern. 1 rifles. They, however, have larger contract, made fait Jan; rst is not yet completed. They '. r mouth, all io complete or i• 100 artinuts, besides 35 in the 1 : 1 . aking email:l.7 and. carriages. Ilie barrel is made from Ameri :m flat bars into " scalp=,'' of the 1 • kness, These scalps are 'lieu I. round.a steel rod andera ham .7o blows per minute. During • has to be frequently with becoming welded. With 'the tl formed, next goes though the ring," • trirning, rimming. and f which are curious enough, fait ! Warty so, as it is done, or rathel, I'• done, by the eye observing a step is passing through a trial persons appointed by Govern loaded with 180. grains of pow. two wads, and fired each twice . they pass on to tie process which is done by rifling -ma !el one barrel. per hour to each afterwar.hi pass through the pre which requires grew. care end eed perfectly. Again they are • ry few rejected =account of the defects in the material. * • ke from black walnut, which has me years before working. If you nit' last machine, you - will have if the first process. These stacks There is no such thing as tryint to make them match each other. e are thrown ter and taken ranted td make the gm, and sn that they need no aheration what. conitandy employed three United in the mtablishrnent,. The ride', do not vary twang:lmi each kora v.. I. Bass.--Beee in their =dames vin,; sufficient protection against, in the thick sides of the trees "t. A like pioteetice was affmle4 tires formerly used; but the thin hires are now generally made, so much exposed, .that multitudes , hire perish with the cold, and not s.. Burying diem in the ground m into eellars; hare been .pracuaed and carying sh wish good - I • but these methods-are incon often adopted. A method wloch 1 • years adopted, 1 have found very soecewful. My bee hater is so !, it two tout of hires, one fronting other the oppc*im. 1 placig my %valeta and have for per convenient Lima as to a 4 one gray and hives elat -or between and months of straw about bees and the pry ken late maw lest of - bees : but i and have n inches apart, anal fill the spaces them with straw, leaving the hires aeobstrocted. I leave the hives late in the /Trigg, tat the brood - wig be kvoted hoes 1 have generally wok pea .should enter in and maters the e Geed clean tbreoW. wheat straw. Isoffeved any rejlay from it. T111:23 Camnars.:—Ocie of the frig • icaltaralist * to endeavor to gle- I the class to 'which he behavt. d me only by intell4ence and faith ;4tia is room injurious popnbatics - than for what it eaßod then 'ovantimr, Mai as dikes members ef ta *amide bread to ahem. education ;leas nee and implores the Isryvs, the physician, intelltent the man, nitcousi the more Fume's I dt6es of the. rare himself And this caii =I ~ i ll , : , eich ba‘ a saw-• wads bar it es cab& Agidain esiiinta dome witiO vacs Dr. burry:" iraceit ,