_._ • ,:.,: w;.-~-;..--cam: =1.20 TOW A NDA: Alorninn, giant 13, 185/4. :=:lltritt 45utttg. WHO IS MY NEIGHBOR' tghbor 1 It is be whom thou t power to aid and bless, , aching heart ar burning brow soothing hand may press. itthbor Tis the fainting poor ) lose eye with Want is dim. hunger sends from door to thou and succor him, leie.hhnr Tis that weary .mart, nciQe ”am are at theirhrm, Inc with cares. and pain— thou am' comfort _ .eighhor ? ' Tie the heart bereft e yeach'y gem and orphan. helpkss left— ;nail and shelter them.- • rtehtinr ? Yonder toiling:slave, •irrini in thiaehr and limb, •e!i.ipe+ are 311 beyond the gravg— i,,,iti and ransom him. er thou meeest a buman form . firered than thine owu. ..,ioe( 'us thy neighbor worm, ht brother. or thy son. :.”-not, pas , not, heedless by th.iti rant redeem 1 ',real:lnc heart from mi-ery-- , shareiby lot with him. :.i Itfgival For rho Bradford Reporter. Itomatice Or Wyaloslng I‘. e b,•au'f of the landscape ; the quiet val• ow 1) evellastmg hilh ; green pastures, Iced aces bending beneath their pre 'e! F ; frith pass plats and luxuriant gar. to every rustic house. Unruffled by r. the blue lake rests like a cloud ;Inc . !! the deeperriiiii, shadows, unourober- A.tiver: hlossom on its bauk•, and droop to gazenpon their motored lovelt .le spotteil fawn comae down to quail the ligers— till startled by the night tarts away. less swift perhaps than fled 1 , 1; tint yet his light toot (-rushes not the Gracefully the willow bends above acid every sigh ie arr,sw•ered lrofil within ,r.owte c rverns, (or immortal echo haunts ! oil the soft hnzle disturbs the .t wi• r.; e it:tlotigs the notes ere yet they -per. ' waves are chartnell to silence. and , 1 01.9 •fieir flight, white movie steals rtern.9 !cue nu tile air of evening. 0 ! r e ring., at the , lone hour. And is thalVe -1 from tie Like ? No 'Os adark broweil ..rging In the elestant roars. Her unbound arn , 07,1 her like the raven plame ol (-1,4 s :Mulder hangs a painted quiver ; tj:l'•kri feaCtleA part way to the bea.l. , Ain. •!.e ante s the lenwhentog shad. plies the slender oar, while the scattered is-ties en We mellow moon-hearns. The ,)e.2141.4 ..wrftly towards the shore, and s sew erei it h..neatfr the overhanging P,Pp feelo 21 (Airy Wen .66m of at, fore.t. bnu4lis a• e l l e t i c0 ,,,,py above; and the delicate ,•1 - 'tie bri,ey cur klea are hall hidden by dces ti,e maiden enter lids retreat, that .0 y 0 ,102 Is not startled from tier slam- Fre cautiously around—solitude firityitre. Her iow peculiar whistle is an: from the other share. A young gid trips over ihe broken bridge, and stands beside he violet eye. fair cheek, and finely mould of one ; and the flashing eye, and queen of the wirer, bespeak them children ct itterent t yet are they - sister spirits—for neatti nierior of the mountain maid, theresleeps of tenderness, which meths but to be roused !comes resistless in its might i casting up 'ospo.lie or, the surface. But the heart of may he likened to the finely strung ~'ken cords yield melody to every = r.ane the here, when the tired world is tweet foreetfutriess they come to hold inton well Jehovah ; with unseen angels .n the beautiful in nature. And what hour to inspire devotion, as the holy midnight 11 on a mound of moss, they heed not the time. %%Teem's, weaves a garland, and it round the sunny head testing upon her bo- the a lii!e F ee accept this, and wear it at as Indian maiden's gift ? for another `)"!- , 'il•hee the pale warrior's bride. Bright tl}e hall closed Os, yet they are ovettiuw ul iniense gladness. nd a Ihwket unperi•eived by either, stands }Cunt Moliaut chieftain. What tti iwrth'er here? ah, the venorned dart of tahk;es in ht soul; shall she whom he % en. be given to another ? •his proud nature ' a ""I "By the light of yon pale star, she otity mine's .Taking this vow, he strides as noiseless as he came. • fleecy clouds are last changing to crimson, rich folds are edged with lines of gold. ra SpllllkieS with rosy light the dpwy lawn i te att.stel!alions vanish in the heavens as she - ..es tram the east. yon white conazet.mbowered among the the woodbine climbs the latticed parch, and lra:•ran: breath of the myrtle is walled through open casement. 'Tis the bridal morn of Wa '" I Yet why that anxious glance --~.~::.:~-.-xe .._::..ter,-~:,.:s~~~: MVMM==UMMusim . • . —•:.-• 1 ,k..; !•,:•.; "0 . .: A" t.i ,: 1' •.1:-11 Q: : ; x , i .r . s. . :!: - : ' ^ 2 e. - - i" i... A 1 l'. . t .' .;. .'.l' . ;: "i - •' - f .7: ,r“: 1:,. : -;;,.. j . , 1..,...14 1 :- : '. , 1 7. „.i7.' :, .- ' _ I , ... .. . . 7 - .7,4. . .. ,.. : • :i , ~, , . v, .., I .7 - ;, : :•'. :; :- T .. ,, S l': -1 ( -- ; 1 ",• , :• :.., , ; I , ~: ~...1 ::::, .., •:, • •.„_, ....,, ,„,..,........:•,,, .1, • .4.,::._.., • , . • . ;): .. •..,. 4, , .y.i..., ...,...,. ~„; „.. ... . .... ...., " , . 4 • . , wards the mountain 1 She has watched long, but oh! how vainly, for his coming. Listen—the neighing of a steed she tears, and thinks he must be near. It is his war horse, byi where the ritlerl the affrighted beast rushes madly down the hill side, across the lawn, and stops not till he gains the wicket ; now stooping his .curved neck, until the long, mane sweeps the earth ; he rears into the air, and falls. The stricken girl heeds mu the warn. ing voice that would recall her, but onward speeds used the path is gained by which he must have conie. 0, stay thy footsteps weary one s nor yet dis pel the mystic tail before thee; for this aide.amid the darkling gloom, one trembling ray is seen, while the other is a blank. But pass we' now to other scenes. When the earlisst birds warble their matin of praise, Wacou sta strung her bow and left the wigwam fur the chase. While sporting on the way she heard a wail of mortal agony, borne upwards from a dark ravine below.' I-ler Jog trio, caught the sound and trusting to it:s guidance, she followed down the precipice. and lot. a picture darker than the shades of night was there—stretched bleier* on the dewy grass ; a white man lay. His sword was broken, and his white plume was cruntioned with life drops from his heart. But where is be whose soul is stained with guilt? fled? No he lingeos near, as if 'mere not enough to take the boon roan cannot give, but would bear away the trophies of his triumph. His dark eye beaming with untold hate, a moment rested on the fallen toe, ut d ere he heard a rustling leaf, a low voice spake, begone dark demon '—without a second bidding lie obeyed, and the mountain maid was left ,h ors W nth death. She gathered water from the brook to woo de parting. life; and as she raised the shining hair Isom s brow, stern anguish shook her frame, for the pate lips parted, and he Littered, "Tell her I was not fain, but fate delayed me." The white Rose shall know all—hts iptitt heard the promise, and went forth to real ujum the bosom of us Maker. She comes, that youthful mounter. and kneeling by the dead invokes a portion of the strength that faileM not The buds ol hope are clashed, but from their ruins a higher, holier, faith springs up, v hose oicetese reaches heaven. This her first great sorrow w ill shield tier from another. As the shades of death close -round her, "Igo' she cries, " for angels call the home, and he too, strikes a golden lyre to welcome my approach. I go—my soul-loved sister tare thee well " And like the paling stars of morning, Ito passes from earth away. .No tear be dims Waconsta's eye, yet bitter is the r tnh wrung horn her bosom, as she beholds the unrest blossom 01 the wilderness thus early withered. Sad bridal day, ...ad but glorious, sweet be their gentle slumbers, peace waves her whitei wrng over them, while through the branches of the pines, /ire wind breathes a low complaint • tt. M. r. SCOLDING PEOPL6.—There is a very unanimous eotiviction among ail classes of persons that a Feold in the household one of the most uncomlortable nusances with which a family can be plagued.— This being so universally agreed upon, it is a won der that scolding people are not afraid to risk them• -elves in our families—Mat they do riot hide them selves from human observation The trouble seems to be that sc Ids seldom suspect themselves 7fbe ing scolds- They t!ri not see themselves as Gibers see them, or they would betake themselves to the woods nr to the wilderness. It is a g,e.tt misfortune to have children reared ire the presence arid under the influence of a scold The effect of the everlasting complaining and fault finding of such persons is to make the young, who hear it, unarniable, malicious, callous-hearted, and they nfteu tale pleasure in doing the same things for which they receive such tongue-lashings. As they are always getting the blame of wrong-doing whether they deserve it or not, they might as well do wrong as righ', They lose all ambition to strive for the favorable opinion of the fault finder, since they see they always strive in vain. Thus a scold in a family is not only a most uncomfortable nui sance, but a corrupter of the morals and a destroy er of all the finer feelings of the children, Open your heart to sympathy. but close it to des pondency. The cower which opens to receive the dew, shuts against rain. Girls, never. run away from your parents till you are lore the Young man You elope with won't run away from you. This advice is worth a year't sub scription, but:we give it grans. MisaDubois says the, first time a young man squeezed her dress, she 'felt as if she was in the land that rainbows come from. How poetic a little hugging makes people ! • ' You have stolen my soul, divine one!' exclaim• claimed Mr. Sickly to his adored. I Pardon me, responded' the lady, I am not in •he habit of picking up little things.' • A student of medicine from Boston, while attend letttureet in London, observrAl that " the king's evil had been but hide known in the Untted States ,stoce the Revolution." An old sea captain used to say he didn't care how he dressed when abtoad, because nobooy knew him.' And he din's care how he dressed wren at home, because every body knew him.' The eilitor of one of the Aldine papers says that he has had a pair of boots given him which were awtight that they came very near making him a Universalist, because he received his punishment as he went along- • He that visits the sick in hopes of alegaoy, let him be never so Irie•ully it•, all other cases, I look upon him in this to be no better than a raven, that watches a weak sheep only to peck out his eyes. A Shoemaker, fining enamored of a young girt, while urging his kit, assured her that he loved her, as he did his own !PA, and that she would find him true to the last I • it is a sad house when. the hers crows lovd 7 or than the cock ' ,SATURDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. !‘,4ESARDLESS CI? ..DERUNCIATIOZI molt ANY QUARTER." itkc Lrrtir fOring 14stioro of Dr. D. Le Motfr• of the .11usfotli Pond • Malt Phismsfasilifth The lecture of Dr. E. K. Kane, at the_ Musical Fund Hall, on the subject of the arctic Exploring Expedition in Search of Sir John Franklin, was attended by a very large and highly appreciative audience, and was listened to by , all with evident feelings of sincere satisfaction. Dr. Kane commene. ed by saying that he ought, perhaps, to apologize for coming before•euch an audience with R'Subjeet no better prepared thin his was, for 1 was less to impart new facts that the various pans of his lecture bad been thrown together, than to claim sympathy for the lost, and demonstrate the possibility of a further search for them proving successful. It was hard, he said, for those who were blessed with the realization of springtime and summer, and a regu lar sun decking the world in gaiety, to realize the long unchanging night of the arctic zone ; and he hail little hope of succeeding ir. picturing, even faintly, to their minds, its trig' lily and its grandeur. Directing the attention of the audience to maps he had prepared, illustrating the position of the. chief bays and inlets of the legion explored, he sketch ed hurriedly their vast area, coast lines, &c., as the extent of the rivers emptying into them, which exceed in volume the Amazon, and elated the en. trances to this vast archipelago to be first through Behrinim straits, second from theAtlatilic, and thud througn Baffin's Bay. In all departmen.s of human labor results [mint. seen were daily being achieve& and so also had it been with reference m these explorations. With-. out passingp discuss the important object to be attained by the exploration of the arctic cegion, or the earlier efforts towards it, is was sufficient in say that Great Dwain always prominent if riot foremost In enterprises of this character, determined upon still further effort and the Erebus . and Terror were accordingly fired nut, and Sir John Franklin select ed to r °mutant( them. No better selection could hive been made. His former vo) azt,es bail already given to him a high character as an explorer, and his fame waq not confined only to the eonrory of his birth, but was as wide as the world which he had berrefitied by his discoveries. He united, al. so, to the perseverance and daring specially requir ed for such an enterprise, many excellent traits of character, and was still remembered among the Indians as the white chief who would not kill a mosquito. To for her illustrate, in some degree, he character of Sir John Franklin, he cited his ex ploration of the river Coppermine, and the many perils and privations of Mat voyage—their sickness and destitution—the thermometer many degrees below tern—their rescue from many danders—'he filial return, and the debt of gratitude to which they were emitted. Passing on to the sailing of Sir John Franklin. in Nay, 1846, in the Erebus and Termr, for that region from which he had tint returned, he spoke again of the immense area, of :he seas explored, and through which Sir John Franklin must pass, equalling the whole of the U States east of the AL leAenies, and said that these, although sometimes nearly clear, were mare often lilled . with immense masses and fields of flaming ice, which formel the chief danger the adventurer tad to encounter. Time passed, and when MP year 1850 had arriv ed and these lost men haul been five years In the ice, will scarrely a word of intellezence front them from the outset, the civilized world rose in rhorr behaft. Great Britain' lamented a worthy citisten ; humanity every where felt for Lis fellows. As most always happens, one daring, mind came for a ant to concentrate and direct the eflurts prompt. ed by a common feeling, towards a rescue of the lost navigators. It was Lady Franklin, the wife of the missing navigator, and who, while others doubt ed,' kept her eyes constantly and hopefully turned towards the frozen regions, expecting her liusband's return, and by her devotion arousing a still deeper interest in his fate. Great Britain, Denmaik, and theiGneed States, all participated heartily iu these One Ciii7.1.31 of the United Stales, a resident of New York whose name is inscribed on the latthest extremity of land yet discovered and recorded in the Arctic region, Henry Grinnell, offered to fit out art exped'tion for the search at his own expense, asking only of Congress the permission to sail un der the country's flag. The permission was grant. ed in the true spirit in Which the appliration wa. made, and the dlthiance and &sate were tutted lout They set sail fromNete York on the 23J ol May, 1820: 25 days after they descried the rugged mountains of Greenland, and in a very short time thereafter were embedded in the ice of that tritzen region The expedition liucily penetrated as tar as Wellington Channel. and it was here they made their first discovery. On the morning of the 27th of August, when some how or other they had come into close quarters with a part of the English expe. diner' under Sir John Rosa, and while the officers of the Advance were in conversation with Captain Peony, a good named Seotchman named Andrew rushed into their presence, hall oat of breath. ex • " Graves, Capt, Penny. waves !" Ile would not attempt to describe the effect which this annotincement prodtwerl, nor the tomulitions feel ings it excited. They proceeded anxiously to the place pointed out and lound there three graves, the head boards mieked "Sacred to the memory of Franklib's dead " The bodies were covered with piles of stone, as their protection from wild beasts acrd birds, for to dig in that region was impossible hard lumen as the ground was to the depth of sev eral feet. Upon one of:the tomb-stones was this text, from Joshua : " Choose ye this day whom ye will serve ;" upon another,—"Thus scnth the Lord rf hosts, remitter your-wayi." Near one of the graves was the carcass of a'fpx, and from one ear of the skull sprang a email flower, an 4 this was the only, evide -.ce of vegetation that marked the locality. He then described the position of this point of land Or beach, and the view ittoinmalided :of the Wet.' .ling.on Channel, thirdiattint land tides and piled masses of ice in some directions, and in others the the'vague; vast, and unexplored regions to which probability has assigned. Sir John Franklin's expe dition. Upon the hill side twit to the graves was the remains of a blacksmith shop, and mechanical implements, while strewed in various directions over an area of nearly tbreis mites, were numerous empty meat cans, fragments of wood and metal, pieces of clothing, and other evidence of unknown humanity. The newest of the graves bore the date cf April, 1816, and it was evident that iw the bay before them now called Franklin's Bay, the missing expedition had passed the winter. But there was not the rdightest record or other evidence of his de panure to be found, although it was the custom of all Arctic voyagers to leave some such evidence of record in 'some conspicuow4 place. They searched very where, but nothing could be found. But, the lecturer continaed, mysterious as had ; been the departure ofSir John Franklin trotn this point, Providence had ordained that we should fol low in his footsteps. in a fe'vr days alter this dis covery we were Irozen in at the mouth of this chan nel, and drifted rapidly North. He described in detail the motion of the vessel timing this drift, which was such as to prevent fire on board—the therrriomeier being many degrees below zero, and ice forming on the table as they set at their simple meals They &died in this mxnner to latitntle 75 0 2Y, the highest point ever attained by keel of Christian ship, of Which there is record, and the highest point of .land they descried, they named "Grinnell's Land," after the patron of the enter prise. They were borne along like tiny specks up on a vast floating raft, incapable ofresimance, and s even without ihe poor consolation of leaving on the chilly discernable shore some record of their position and course. They spoke little to one another. but their thoughts were nevertheless busy Where lies FiUtiklitt's expedition gone? May it not be possible that we are to be (billed in the same dir ec t i on ? Such and other like queries were ever preseri! to their minds and now, he continued of ter sortie further remarks, may not the same wind whicircarritid us to this point have blown upon him a few days longer, and carried his vessel into nn open sea, of the 'existence of which there is abundant reason to believe, and from which it may be impossible for them unaided to return. He re-' garile,l this as having been Sir John Franklin's course. and said it was now six years since he had passed the recorded frontier of this world. The impointio question that presents itself was the pos. sthilry of his having cur vived. Ho believed with mart others that Sir John Franklin did still survive —Tint ice which destroyed the vessels in these re gions, slwitya proved the refuge of the crews, and it was a little remarkable that seldom, ifever, was both a vessel and the crew lost. In the great des. itucti,iii of vessels in 1832, when a large number ol ve-sr'ls were destroyed, treacly 1,000 men were thus lir own upon the tee, am] out of the whole 9tont.or only seven perished. Moreover, vessels genet:,:ly avoid the same proximity, so as to avoid the s.i:lie danger, lie did not think, therefore, that the brims and Terror were both destroyed with their crews ; for if the vessels even were destroy ed their crews mitt still survive. He spoke of the it...mimes of the region aril the means of ens mining life, and again declared his belief that there still a. 1.. hope' High as they were to the North, the tit': leer went still farther. there was also an abendance of etwl. In four days the united vessels sat ivietity.two polar bears. and without special eller or pursuit of them, succeeded in killing four. Titer(' are, beside these, an abundance of foxes and hates ; and on the w hole, he had rather take his chances orsupporting solitary life unaided in the Polar :.one, than in the center of civilized Europe Another question was, can Europeans resist the ef fects of the climate of this region, the scurvy, &i 7, lie sail the evidence was that Europeans have resisted it, and he cited the European residents of Spitzbergen, where for many years they have . lived in hots and 'subsisted Upon the flesh of the P.ilar hears, the walrus and seals. He had 'seen aso far within the A.e t- i gior, an old Dane, Who for sixty nut of eighty years, had lived in sight of snow, and excepting the brown bread of the Baltic had lived mainly upon the flesh of the seal and deer; He cite] the endurance of Sir John Rose, in nits of his expeditions, and the fact that when res cued, he hid traveled over nine hundred miles Into these statements he compressed his ideas, tl.ki 'either search for the lost expe lition was not one of those thinga which a sound argument should reject. He then again revertei o his former view' that a few hours more, perhaps; of the wind which carried them to the extreme North, may have car ried Sir John Franklin's expedition into a farther region and into currents out of which unaided there was no escape, and tin means of communication with other voyagers who may not pass into that te• BM He then depicted, with great vividness and much eloquence, the position of the two vessels in the im mense field of ice, as they were, nn the lalal - 19e camber, in the. centre of Lancaster Sound. We shall riot aitempt.ni lollow him in hia delicate and adistic limning It was a picture drawn with maa tarty skill. nml presenting vividly in all, all the per ils, arid sufferinga, and alarms of the Acrtic voyager rite vessels, mere specks upon the field of ice—the Rescue abandoned—the keel of the Advance lanai seven or eight feet, causing fears that ahe migh capsize—drifting at the rate often mites a day, and towards an unkttaw,u reiSOß—daylight departed and undeviating night-closed in around them—the thermometer 40° below zero, or le below the common freezing paint—here their position was at once one of extreme anfiering peal anti .con slant alarm. • fie presented to the mind the glaring, lanterns from the Lech of theta?, at noonday and at mid• night—the faint, Jar off glimmering, of that dal that never esme—the shadow* of men harnessed to sledgeej preparing-their muscles fop greater entlur• 'ince in cue of need—their knapietksßrepared for the ern( r4vney t , and their stores VetT uPO'n the ice ; when soddettly a noise, like the twang of n bow, ii heard, and an officer, taking a lantern, proceeds to some distance, - and, returning, refoils ri break in the WC floomafter there is another break, and an other, and then, far off, a long black lino tsvisible, gradually widening, and shortly hom it appears the frost smoke. Then again the ice is closed, and as the floating masses, moving in diverse directions. meet, every variety of strange and familiar unite to heard. Now, like the whining of a puppy : then, like the calls of distress., and then, again like boom ing cannon. The ice, generally, about five feet thick, and much resembling glass, which before was level, is now piled in ridges, and as the mass es are forced upon each other, every variety of noise increases. Now, low and plaintive ; now, shriek ing wildly, gradually rising to a . climax of fearful intensity under which all language ceases, and then dying away into the softest cadence—noises so marked and oftentimes so regular, that they were regarded and called the pulses, of the ice, and frum these voices of the ice they were E.' enerally capable of judging of its movements. Such is a taint sketch of his picture of the polar y inter and its alarms, until they entered Baffin's Bay. Stretched upon ti.e ice in their buffalo robes, an officer calls upon them to hasten np. The ice voices have been renewed with tearful intensity, the air is tilted . with shrieks and howls The lee is in great commotion. On comes the crest. The crushed ice piled high b the meeting of the flows, gradually nears the brig —all feel the trembling motion—the vessel trem• bles from the force of the continued shock, On it came, now only six yards horn the verasel-.--no word is onered—now three yards—now six feet All wait with trembling lips, when suddenly the noise arid motion cease. They wait for the move ment to be renewed, but no renewal came, and fire months afterwards that immense ridge was stilt there, and the vessel also there, a monument of God's protecting care and man's weakness. He then, iu conclusion, recurred again to the idea of an open sea to the Northward of Grinnell Land, into which Sir John Franklin had found his way, acil urged the probability that 3 or 400 miles of further progress in that direction would have brought them into it ; and shall it be, he asked, that these 300 miles shall defy the world It cannot be.— The search was not yet done, and would not be abandoned ; but they must now trust more to ener gy and less to their vessels. Depots must be es tablished at proper points, and the country around searched by land .parties. This he believed was clearly feasible, and he sled the explorations or Lout. who performed a sledge trip of upwards of 700 miles , earryi g his provisions. &c., with him. This view was forcing itself upon the mil ds of all, and was g,eneraliy admitted among the officers of the English expeditions. The posi tion of Sir:Jahn Franklin had been nearly ascer tained. It had been demonstrated that he had pro ceeded to the North West and he (Dr. K ) believ ed that there existed in that direction an open . sea, 'open the year round. lie took the grormil that all search most hereaf er be on foot, and that the search could not now be abandoned. The call for its con tinuance :tomes out from the full heart of humanity. One of the objects for its continuance—humanity's object—was to ascertain the fate of these men, and if they have perished, to record their names upon a tomb. Glancing briefly at-the encouraging results of the last two years, he said the object of Str Join; Franklin had been to discover a North-west pas sage, and the discovery we old / _zavesznocie his name immortal. tVe have a more sacred duty, but cne alike honorable. We have stained the 'ileitis of Mexico with blood to obtain more perishab!ii ho nors, and' men shrink and die upon the banks of the Sacramento in pursuit ocgold ; but good deed.: yield brighter laurels thin. War, and humanity's tn• umphs are more to be valued than gold. ' Many passages of the lecture were heartily np planded, and at 1:6 conclusion the applause lasted several minutes. It was delivered with great mo desty and without pretension to oratory; but it was nevertheless listened to throughout with 'unalloyed ea tislaction, and many portions of it, indeed, *ere marked with the truest eloquence because simple and unaffected. Conez--Its Nature, Cousumptioa & ['se. The coffee plant is a nativeof Yemen, in Arabia; the time of its introduction into Europe is unknown; it is mentioned in a work, published in 1573, by a German physician named L. Ran wolf!. The Tur ks have coffee hoves, m which they meet to eip their brown liquid, and chat toiether like Etqlr-hriten in their alehouses. Coßee-tioums am common in Germany. and were at one time more- common in England than at the present moment. , The first coffee house opened in Laudon wa4 by a merchant of Turkey, named Edwards; ibis was in 1652 Coffee was in public use before that time in France When Coffee was first introduced into Britain it met with the most furious opposition trom old and young, grave and gay, men and, women fair. to 1764, the women in England petitioned Patti iment against allevring the use of coffee, in which petition i' was stated, " that, men,"by its use, became Ike t desert of Arabi., and that it'its use was One -t -ad in, the offspring of migh y Angio-Sarno ancee tors would dwindle into a succession of apes and pigmies ; and on a domestic message a husband would stop on the way to think a couple of cup• of caste." Here we see the fair sex wire jealous for the honor of good old English ale ; and the question is. were they not right. Coffee, however, had and Still has its advocates; it has keen stated by them, that wherever it has been introduced,. drunkenness has heroine less frequent, and the people more g.ber We have no statistics to prove _or disprove ihi., statement, but it may bs.justly assumed to be true In the reign of Charles Il i codee houses wLre shnitip in London by proclamattorw o was ruled, "the retaling oicoffee nourished sedi tion, spread lie*, seanat ised , weal men i and might be censideted a eomm6nnnifinte." . Ty act occasioned I let disturbauc4," and sperMis- " x: .. .:40- 0' C I V 4, -,4.- . - 1 , -•,, n -o‹.. . 1 , 7 , ..; , ..4. t.:.'f:- ~...V '2, - _:'-; ....;:•,4 -- $ ',.A 2 _ - . , Mai pion was giyeri open 'll2'e , ffect-Fictkesagtiiti,bnt the landlonibl7erefinbli In keep seditiou• vipers On (twi t permisui. .The coffee-houses had become p club houses. - lour different kinds of coffee arc nstsi---Mtiele, winch k the.be-t, 4 , nrreq flown the Persian Gulf, Loin Arabia ; itstberlies aro r.F a m,iWtin sire, clean and plump, al,d of aliglit ;greettisli-alive hue; it sells dearer than any other. The nest beet is Ja va. which is grown in the island of that name. and uis col ivated by the Dotch. The other are Brazilian and West Iniik coffee, which e, very similar. A field of coffee in full bloom is a sig!it worth going to Jarnaira to see. The quality and effects of coffee differ according to the manner iu which it is roasted. It must be roasted with great care and, not nver-done. The Turks toast it in an him spoon, and roast its jus before they are gnin4 to u4o it. This is the best plan, as coffee loses its flavor if exposed after being roast. d. The reason of this is evident ; the roast ing brings out he essential oil to the surf:tee. this is volatile, and is the fie aromatic quality of tqe bean; it therefore soon evaporates when exposed to the atmosphere. To roast tollee arii;ht it should be done by an invention patented a tow years ago in England; it ron.ists in utsing a eTper drum, silver. ed inside, into which are Waited the beaus, and the drum made to revolve above the fire, until the beaus are done. It is best rot to nser-roasi them. The peculiar principle of coffee is the caffein, which was discovered by Reh:c,ue; in I• 421 iii is a very at tire yr.r.ciple, a rf affects the urinary or gans. Water saturated with coffee was first used by Grindul, in the RtlsEilitt Ilya ital of Dorbat, iu the treatment of intern.i . .lent fevers, it was also gir. en ra a powder ; nix. In eighty cases, not one re. misled 115 effects. lionxrp.atioc ptac.cioners also use it wt h success. As an article of diet, and as n hevera4e, coffee has become quite a favorite, if ue M 3 .% judge from the quantity consumed, No less than 141,986,89$ lbs were imported into the Bolted S ates in 1850 ; the vole of this was 311 215 C/53 country in the world consume., so much coffee, in proportion• to lie inhabitants, as ours. Thus, last year the ave- rage amount of coffee consumed by arch roan, we man, and child. was over 7 pounds. The enn• sumption of coffee-I,as greatly increascd in En;- land, and it does not appear that the fears of the old English matrons abort t!:eir sons becoming moot keys by its use are yet realised. Coffee is now very weneially :Neil by ail Euro. pent as well as the old 'Forks, and almost all American tamilies, for a breakfast beverage. It, effects upon the hum the system may Le peculiar s but general use has not yet develeped anything ea• iraordittary prodirced by it, except it may be the healthy appearance and reggeil s!reng !I of some miners, who use it in large quantities TH9 fact was brought bafn-e the Academy of Sci ences in 'Paris last year In some a - mies and Ita• vies coffee has been wisely Plitttitated for g op ; it v - otild he well if this were the ease in everrsingle instance. In cold weathervoffee is r o t agreeable and safe stimulant 1 was noticed that these French soldiers who had saved some coffee and sugar der- Mg the terrible retreat from Moscow. stood the eat much better titan those who had none. ery family Flirtuhl hr.; their own bents an d roast and grind them, for much of our ground coffee 19 11190 adul , emed %rid] roasted corn and peas These ailulteraliore are not the lest un!tealthy ; buot there ir vervhry u, rr - rmyrinery pirrrg. roe corn instead o! coffee, rwid it anybody wi , hes 11 adoPerate their own c •ffee, why they can do it to suit the miter ce. Coffey arrer!s the nerves o! some pe , •plo in a most singular manner, by making them nervrtis and fe• verith. Nn person so aff .0 ki should use it A• genera! thing, for almost every person, we believe it it a healthy and pleasant bevetaze. In England all the coflce is a..int rested wi h yellow dock root, ground np along with the hearts ; the law allows of his adulteration, and yet, for all :hi., the coffees there sells for about double the price it does in the U States. When we refleLt upon Ole great quantity of e 3 fee now consumed. by to every year, now that Vl* consurocrioit Hi+ increased from a little over luor millions of r minds in ITDO, to over one hunt and forty-bur mii io is of pounds in ISSO, we C 3111: nt t shut our eyes the f`eemi i; nece.si'y of grew. e3fTee for ow - Re:reel Our southern Saps ran sr re'y rare glad coltre; :Ley beat the world for ro• o nrd rice, b 1 of which were io'roduceil fruni foreign countries; and cofi,c, we think, can Le a. roc •essfuPty cultivated as these have been.— S:itiltjfic /m rican. OrtrraN or DaNana —The dance, which et f4e present day IA SO much admired as a diversion, ores in its origin a sort of tr. 3 st , ery and ceremony. The Jews, to whom, Girl titroclf gave lawn an eery. monies, introduced it it their festivals--and the Pagans afrer them, consecrated it to their divini •iorr. After the p ISS3g4 of the Red Sea, Moserrand Nliriarn, his sister to return thanks to the Alrui4ll - for the preservation of the people, and the deka of the F.gyrdi n r.lhatrnerl in the Red Fe r, arranged tyro great dance., will rott4in o.e was for the men, rich'. the • ,, her for the women. I hey danced, singing the ~ ,b-tanre thoTa:teen chapter or Ex°. .lus i and pcd , ornle,l a g,arrecni baP“t A Scs•tAt.r PRA Tra.—..l bat:km - KO-M . 3n abOilt to eticnitiver a bear in t he la - ear, arid dittttisting 00-n strength a li Cie, made ing very yen- .ible pi aye r : "0, Lo ! here'a a pill; to he one of the areal e4t bear fighis 1 oil ever flia see! 11;f ) L *rd ! help me—brtifyne c ii ' tl Op - me, for Gals cilie dot help the bear!'' !I feel,' said an 41 lady, Fee got about through with this INofiti. I oitaitt'i en joy mu c k ma . • outtbl., oottsuffet much more comlort; Never apo:o4ise Fr 4 long letter— you °elp add to its length. ;3ae~~a ~•>a~~.~re~aw~.~~..~ . annliMML EL E 3