~~- ~.. =lin II 1.111570 2 =Hi TOW AisTDA: gaumbin atorninn, illarcf) gO, krltrtril Vottni. (From the National Era.) THE PEACE OF EUROPE. it 1. G. WHITTILIt b Great peate in gurapt t Order reigns troth Tiber's bills to Danube plains r 1,30 say her kings and priests; No say The lying prophets of our day. Go lay to earth a listening earl The tramp of measured marches hear, The rolling of the cannon's wheel, The sbutled musket's murderous peal, The night alarm, the sentry's call, The quick-eared spy in hat and hai4 , From Poles sea to , . . The dying groans of e xiled l melt. The bolted cell, the galley's chain*, • The scaffold smoking with its stains, - Order—the hush of brooding slaves ! Peace—an the dungeon-vaults and graves! Oh Fisher ! with thy world-wide ner And ‘nctvs in every water set, Whose fabled keys of heaven and hell Dolt hard the patriot's prison cell, And open wide the banquet hall Where kings and priests bold carnival ! Weak va ' sal tricked in royal guise, Boy Kaiser with thy lip of lies; Base gambler for Napoleon's crown, - Barnacle on his dead renown! There, Bourbon Neapolitan, Crowned scandal. loathed of God and man; And than, fell spider of the North ! Stretching thy giant feelers forth, Within whose web the-freedom dies • Of nations, eaten up like dies; Speak. Prince and Kaiser, Priest and Czar, If this be Peace, pray what is War White Angel of the Lord! unmeet - That soil accurs'd for thy pure feet, Serer in Slavery's desert flows The fountain of thy charmed repose, ' So tyrant's hand thy chaplet weaves Of lutes and of olive-leaves, Not with the wicked shalt thou dwell, Thus saint the Eternal. Oracle ; Thy home is witb the pure and free, Stern herald of thy better day, Before thee, to prepare thy way, The Baptist Shade of Liberty, Gray. scared, and hairy -robed, must press With bleeding feet the wilderness ! Oh ! that its voice might pierce the ear Of princes, trembling while they hear A cry as of the Hebrew seer ; Rereirr f Gov's CINGDON DnAwrra 711/1.11! Malaga Raisins—How Prepared. the editor of the Rochester Advertiser, while American Consul nt Tangiers, made an exenrsion through the south of Spain, and in the course of his lama passed through the country in the •icintty of taiage. where the most delicious raistne are grown. Ile thus de tribes the very simple maner in which the choice.' rai.ins are prepared a- . You have often partaken of the Malaga raieins, the most delicious, of all preserved fruits, and so have our countrymen ; but every, one !bay riot know how they are prepared. Tne process 111 the most simple imaginable. As soon as the grapes begin to ripen, the vine-dressers pass through the sme-vard arid cut the dusters off from the vines, and leave them on the naked ground, turning them aver daily until the heat of the sun and the warmth of:he earth upon which they lie, have baked and dried them. when they are gathered up, put into' boles and are ready for use. This it all the won der and mystery there is in preparing this delicious • (not. To my inquiry why they did not place leaves or some clean dry substance of the kind upon the ground, for the fruit to lie upon, I was told that the - naked ground was much better, that, in fact, the line favor of the Iron was dependent more upon the warmth of the earth than the mere extetnal heat of the sun. Care has to be taken, however, that the keit does not get wet while undergoing this process. Bat as it seldom rains during the summer or vint age in this country, it is very rarely that the trait has to be taken up kefore dried. The vintage, or season for gathering the fruit, commences the middle of August.—Now—in April vine•dressers are busily engaged hoeing, digging, and hitting them up, very much as the farmers in the Statetdo their cos, potatoes, Am. 'They GA* for the palpate hoes somewhat resembling s pick ax, excepting that the outside has throb lonVrongs with which they loosen the earth very The soil generally resembles a light end sandy loam, and does not appear capable elf producing scarcely any vegetation. But the grape and-olive, ynu kt.ow, will flourish where almost 'any, other vegetable wilt starve and perish. In all diatTartpf the South at Spain through which I traveled; from Cadiz to Malaga, Granada, &c:, this same barren, sterile appearance of soil is ripparent upon mount- It! and uplands The general sutlaeo of the' country is not merely undulating, but mountains , to a far greatet degree, titan 1-had any idea. 1:do 'e"IY believe atm these arid hills and mountainous comprise nine-tenths of the land in the province of Andalusia, and that the fertilespots—the vegas or v alleys--constitute only one-tenth. But these latter are-tge gardens of Spain. ATTAHOT Ileses—How n is manr..—The rems , nf ( iitavipoor, on the river Ganges, are cultivated in enormous fields of hundreds of acres. The delight ftli War Born these fields can be smelled at 7 miles distance on the river. The valuable article of corn-. tome known as the attar of roses is made there in ‘'tte following, manner :•-On 40 pounds of Wiea Poured 50 pounds of water, and they are then orm- , tilled over a slow fire, and 30 pounds of me water obtained. This rose water is then poured over 40 Paands of fresh roses, and from dial is dist,illedlo Pounds of rose water this is then' exposidln dm' Cold night air, and in the morning, a small gsinfil of c . 011 Ls found on the surface. F lom' 80 PO* s .of ` O3 O, about 200,000 in number : of ;The ellifilqa an ounce and a half oil is obtained ; and eeen f ollavi 4tpuor, it costs 40 rupees (120) an ounce. ------- —..„:----. i-. 1 , . ~ -- :::1". •,a 1 e . . -tr. i • e.' ..- - .:1.11,.v.cit , .....-tivimium.fl4 ariv.0..! ,,, - - 5-••••4-0' ' r .f -'2 Rail : . - . .. -4 ' ,4 „ ..0, ,, • _. - ..... 1 % . Y'' t7l N-. , u,,..41 I , lm it,, , ,,,- at ,rilig i ,ri : 01 ~11: I - „ , . -! .id i.` :ait X it. 1 . 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' 1: ''''.'':.:':.. ; tti:i. iii: ' i 7^;ie'i , )• :;; : irf.'l - ; a... , :- . ; : e.4 it i ''' . l 'lls. i'iiiii;;; , ..iii.:r.. ! . 1.:1-4114 ' 1111=1121:1 • • I ...tcp•ll.4tlll,l ki!!-, • .I“: •i•• t 11 4 ,.g.; ; !, c , 0 71 ~„11 , , „„, „„ 1 c;; ir.RO f y i i irrox rßox ANT rioa 6 - • t.; , • r% Wee. , .....•••• hrt II; .• k • i • • •••,,,,,,12.311-LL-' . 2.• , L , •••12 • .'{ "I ' ; =I =I , -:.isomardmili:Ritewalcanuarrativ.c? _ . . 16'10%45116g pap* lam iktiorffhiribohltivpoe the mielieOPPi RiTffs *,beelN feed at;the Acid: ee!i ; 4 1 )0_,1 634 _,etrtr*.IIII• eikliilt.tf Notice M the S olid Yodlotts abd-Pdicrisidopia living Forms of the Matter floating with the water•oflbe *did If W Teei 41 1 ; , Qt AltelPitith Vie „fivevtrells a~Zay ,at lie rate 0f , 13,701 0 000,232,701..cubi0 kat a , year: ')The• 5050thpirti:or4,100,000,000 tied of din volutie is Mud ? In this mud are pond 112 different' 4 1 37 Ai lolithariss, 2 palythames, and • Amaral unformed species. A comparison of thelinsiselpiii with vief 'o9liee an the, Nile Ovee Ike i fo l olei The gillitek,r* gebOi z AA. at; the rate of 609,000 -cubio'leef a ;second; Malkfis siasippi, 437,111 cubic few . *second; Nileo7?,lSf; cublaket . yedOrfil. ' the , ihe' 3 1 1 0*.i0Fife ee e dYee-lerge illFt'el:!ilePanges at . high water, and two and a half times as large as that of the Nile. - Thepropertitins of solid matter contained in the rivets Ilre as follows : : - " • In the qatigeti, Bpcnbielii: ; ajiedeind ; in , ihe Mis sifisippi, 147 cubic feel in a second ; in, the Nile, I.3tcubio feet in a second.. $o (bathe MississtrOi is by far the purest river of the three.' Finally, or gapio lire enfant in the:turbid portions of the rivers in the following portions: In the Ganges, animal microscopic life forms one third to one-totuth of the mud—giving from 139 to 187 cubic feet of animaculae in a second. In the it format from one4wentketb to one-tenth, gir ing trout six to thirteen cubio feet of worms in' a second. In -the Missiisippi, it forms from'one-fiiA tieth to a thirtOttitil, giving the Fathers of Wiite , ri from two, to four cubic feet of animated mud, which it rolls by Memphis, evettsecond of its life. It has been noticed for •fe lot, twenty yearithat the climate of the -temperate zone is gradually be.; coming more eqnabley and that-of die late ' the ex— tremes of heat and cold in winter and summer are decidedly less severe. A circumstance, somewhat corroborative of this theo7 Is Earthquake are coming North. We are being treated ,W an ac quaintance with some . of the monopolies of the tor rid zone. They have felt a 'arias* shock at Bor deaux, where never, in memory of man, was one ever felt before. It lasted eight seconds and did a remarkable deal of work, considering the time it ! had to do it in. It began' with an explosion-and ' finished ,with three rise:illations front :Youth to North. Pictures trembling ppm - the walls; tumblers off from shelves awl-broke ; • the glass winilowt of the churches shivered into splititers ; clocks that were piing were stopped and others tharhad stop ; ped. were set going. It was two o'clock , at night, and the horizon was a lurid red, as it the last rays of a conflagration was still lingering in the atmos phere. In the surrounding country, the cattle Were as frightened as the men, and uttered murmurs and e.omplaiuts. , at M tIING THE ITTEL-7/HW . young titan are , acquainted with.tbis.very familliateipression,and that too by sad experience. • Now' we knew that this nothing of getting the mitten" is by no means as agreeitble wilt' is cracked qp be, and it piOdn- Ceti no very pleasant sensation in the.mind of the ardent lover. When in answer to the anxious " Mies, will you accept of my company," she ;gays half good finmoredly, f shaitt, none bill thoie who have been similarly situated,, can form any conjec• cure of that peculiar sensation, which it naturally creates. The victim feels—oh dear' he feels all over. He would gladly change places ivith,irfink turtle or a bullfrog, ler then he, miglu And some' friendly hiding place wherewith to conceal his de voted• head. The soul seems rot a moment, t 6 se crete itself somewhere between the torid zones; and the beets that but a few'ineinents befo r e hi:san ded like the deer of the forest, is now endeavoring to hi.le its blushing lace between the ,fiver and the kidneys. However, it be is a ra;ut tit sound sense he will attach no blame to the fair one who has thus repulsed and thwarted bis'desigu, but after a few mements . perMrbation ofmind„ he wilt come to the , naturaide conclusion ,that, if she Joni : want to go home with him he certainly eareenotbing about , her company. ' Aad furthert7nore, alt it 'ecirnmonly takes two to'inake a bargain - and as Itie I Wally makes a .proposition, we e think it perfectly jest that -she exercises. he owe liberty and-choice in all inch matters. : VuLGAIUTT -.We.woold guard the yoongagainst the use dl every word 'that is net perferly'proper.., Vse oo 'yrofahe that vronkl.put t ie blush Jo the most leaseive...!- You know. not the , tendency of. habitually using in. , decent and profane language. It may neverberob.','• literated our bearis. ,Whpa'yOrt, grc#,. uj you god ,at tongue's.epdtsome,eapressiins which.yon•would not use fn any moneY.' , : Wants one you learned when quite young: By heiitg Care ful you wilsave Yourself a of trouble, and mortification anti sorrow. Geed meti haveia, ken sick and.becrome Jackal& thesemotnente they have used the most vile and indecentlinguago ititagiaable. 'Wharf infcireted utit ellei a' reale tion to health, they had no ideit of the pain t ey had given their friends irtrataiiiiidiey hadlearned • anti 4fßeatleJ‘ibe4 o eVierliees i cilikiheed3r i a d though years, had pissed ',since ahoy, bed spoken ca bad word; the earliest 'impreisieris had been indeli 'rtOL are iioPlettie,oo„OPYßlS.ei‘faPPagerawli Pry J.kiegtace yourselves. , t-,.1 - . A Pooe Etaszeser4-1. 4 .' A !worthy-but:prot minim' ter r a writes* t iriend'ltom the t otintryi ifte4neelek st,totifiiitVoili;;; 401 a the t :rawrjM l4lol,4gt4 t the eatilsketmoWdeblige himat•woo!dvarbistfin ten dareenv the taith - -bf • Atkallartf.' -Tfie'dighie rettima went ittliA:AlerAeltC3* : 'endorser Oa Qom must Rai 019 the age. ' . 04.(1.3 , 1„rfosi;;,,A_Alu-ti , 4lstfte gy. , ftt. 'kqt ' • "' • t•di: vll . . • • t.' 1:1 1 ; , }r. IV. F. , . `a 41,y`tt . !PI .niit MNIEMB! - - , DAI -I AI:"'TOWMA" ;; ! t' t an k , • .: 4V 115111 /9 4 1 44F1.1' 1 94.1. , !:4, , aisle& Mr'4llß • In old tin ee, just p er : , 03enatory...0 the .;New • Netherlands had been wrested from the bands of :their High; Miglitirielia . Iftittelilteneral 'of Holland; Secondreild wbile it was as yet, in afilititptiet etate; the: piolthre. was a `tk4 l 4 l i4-inexianpica..„ nese . wove piratical ro , ,vers-of the deep, tabu rnedasadverk ib ihrteir of 'pease aniengithielpiii . thibreentethiiiilin4Ankisb metcf ti s b `f 440'4, Recces, io the harbor of MaaboutheN4and.rof,the laxity of the scarcely organized gosermitemOrr mike it a blintif ienilezvbol'wfille)ber . Tho . 1 0 . 0*2!, ,I'ool 0 Crewe trltAnee..deemadene,,:* 'rumples el eeerytotantry.'aed Clime, !night basset), , sweimeabigi.in. open d4i . itheut = iber stets* - albs burgh'; bttitbeethi . 44144 away tb it keit:Oahu:l4h plan gr ,. at beltpiicq; . l4 ; the Wary merchant, and then squandering: theiz , 'pine-, in 1 Means • drinking; .gensbling, shoottagl and astounding Abe rielighbOrhoial with; sud4eAbtavii and raman ,revelry. ktJejigitt.'itie, indignation, of government: was aroused * and it was .determined , to , :ferret. an this. ; 'vermin brood from the colonies.' 'Great caristertik: trotttriolfPlaeer among the pirritekint finding inlieit is purinit 'them, and their, obl beanie ' to ,places They secreted their• , money and jewels in lonely out of the way places ; buritathem about the teild Shares' of ibe rivers and see: cairn, and dispersed thernsehres„ over ithe face of ~the country. , . I • . • , Am• • ong the agents employed to - Want them' 'by sea was the veriovrn'eC Captain - Kidd. He bed, isiOg. been a hardy, a4t%,.r.turer,.a, kind of equivocal bord erer, ball-44er, ball -muggier, - with' a tolerable dash of the pickaroon. He had traded for some lime rimont tie pirates' lerking'abant tie `seas in a little rakish, rnOquito,,luilt !easel, prying into ail kinds()apiece., as busy as a Mother: 'Cory's chicken in a gale of•wind.- • • Thls'netrdescript personage crag pitched upon hy governmen't as,tho very intuijo command a vessel fitted out to,cruise aphis the piratea,, since he knew all their haunts and lurking :pleces--acting upon the shrewd Old, maxim bf losetting a '"rogue to catch a rogee." Xidil accordingly sailed, frem New York in the Adventurer galley, gallantly arm. en and duly commissioned, and steered his course to the fdadeiras, to lionavista,te Madagascar, end, cruised at the entrance' ofthe, tied ,See. , Instead, however, of making War upon the pirates, he turn turned pirate himself—captured friend or foe--en riched himself with the - Spoils - 1A a t ealday inaia man, manned by Moors, 'though Commanded by un Englishman ; ,and•having disposed id his prize, had the hardihood -to return to Bosh:6, laden with his wealth ) with a crew' of his,ionratles pi his keels. . , Ills. fame had., preceded hititi The alarm was given of the re-appestaneer , bithie'colphtire - of the ocean. Measures trere,falian (Or hi , e, i.Vat he had dine; it is saiddo hut, the greater , pan of his ireasurets. 'He 'even atienitited to draw his sword and defend himself wheniarrested bdt 'Was secured and throivit intO . Prison;'with sevend‘of hie fol'owers. They were oarried to Rogland ,in a fri gate, where they were tried; condemned, and hang. ed tit Execution- Dock. Kuldilied hard, lot the rope with Whi6h he was'fintlied up broke with lila weight, a 1 1 1 1 .119 1,9.19141119 the g 9 491111 ibe las tied/op a second time, andeflectnally ; from whence arose the stary.of his having been taloa hung'. Such is the main, putlipe.ofgidorp history ;, it hail gire.tt an., innerneraftie progeny of traditions. The circumstance of his having buried great treasures of gold end 'jewelli' after returning from Iris cruising let the brainiOf all the, goo pee. pleng . ifiecoOt in a fermept. There were, traits oa suipors t cif otal sums Mood bent i and there; sometimes in one pan of the country { eometitnes , another; •at trees ;arid merit bearing rnysterititie marks, doubtle:sii„intlicatini the apois 'Oltere. ore 14' quoins fuoutlwiilt liatarish char, aatent, the plunder-el Kiddla eastern' prizei- but, which the . common "people' Took ; tbr diabolical .of thakic InsC4ioni„, ' Some meorted the spoils to bate been buried in !Wintry ansettle4 fiscal, about Plymouth and‘Cepii Coll Slat* otheritarts'ol . thg eseter?i, rkd various isiticeriln:LlngratiafOrtnni, - haF,q,*eß row" Ipui r intwo been masscied , 'by ,talirentatoet money.diners t • „rl4/11 t r -,, M11 19 , 'Tars ONG) $1 4 ., Jewet t ja PC'ent Cora., manication-ton.,Boaton paperp,/ s.daughter: of ihs Daniel of•hisiotp,elier; VC: balitirti der r Leh!' hi hetti:,earit.': ,e - ppeOtigtri : ; ri. grad Tut 1.41 413 1 .4 tP:Plitlift,ber heitri 111411,fhe Aggilkad in-this wretched stem until about eighteen YearA of age; wlierran %dials .dootor chanced to - see 'ter; thepother„ Ma. B. 'thitthti qqit of opie# a L tt~t`totiat o ; .qap tier; d rewire,' as follbwr. DifiJe fly .onion, and from • the _canto lake -omit piece the size of ichommon wialnyti:; "fill - thirtavi= ty with a treats to ; eq(44, in , il P 04!gt(!) 1 4 , 0 ; Tots 01 qutot par; nntityou come to thet 'portion eligtm •Iy colored or pen it rate& by the mbriceni 'much tip. 'the hai f antr*of thiftilyreirc Poitrite , i;O:Ehlo:'l:hio ( 1 4:°rti1 13 -PIO42O I, :Pf (464 PRiVi IeOI9 PP 4 .6 ermailerAno tlaughterilltaci to. bed •which viverfow eansiderehte pain which - lasted for,sidielifie.':`'fieloielifo,i iii tiVitif.. . VPl . M.Minqat I#IIPRI *P4 .6e4tikitifeyihat•AtiJminetell-hf Ahertintlantl noise !of cod oft pit ion ! stor toorflovineamtp,mid for Inrre than threa ,t y_ialiji4t*hettkifitkl,o ;#rii entirely Te:iNia,"tdificcOak'jiti; l it S:pooo4 f tl 4 , ArM4l ,lBl , 4 1 4,4*2,bctin PlußfOsieil Ttlib. gut faltillY for many years, the case is so FratifYing that t cen: c'ef*a9 ) A ferianypteci dikir 44 . 4 known,” ir.ra';llo ;.r 4'4l^ • ; A ; „ D IP, II e„9„ -ti l f „. „ }1.4 ' 413T 'CIIFIA4.Ii: t' UM ...framed, A.-D..1.771, Whemeenimd ,, Butgeyne comedown hem' thellonhvolitnl Width` Mighty - at: my ebt.le - grio shag delablynent,,M dettolatiThe, cOuntry meowed, 10.4Mplutt themselves with-the. aped. •.: • Bennington enwpartieulady markedgis etriatiect of thelietitigainicki,' his Atte Oa futitAlientegeetul befebtorroe miles west of the town, where he fintifiedurongly t :his tear beimetenu utiles beelr.‘ The inhabitants cif Beimingtonitere meet alarmed ; the militia be lea bad been eine the, OR htel, awned; holeeeery they formed a finis:between the town and the etrenty,-within aboulthree miles of them,- and by some mans got 'lntelligence of the lay flag epee to deetrotthe Mien. The inhetiitante were oCinetesiotionsNia *mid to the VIP get elation cad mtertioes. &manual was held, and it was determined not best to wait the enemy's apeetetell, halo ed skit and'altaek 'tent in" the* 'strong held. Ever,! Mtatit;tiblti (Obeat: arms went limb to the The women and cbildten were paraded atom the Main street, with the carts And wagonti loaded - with Their ferbiline and effects a lh* night . leif,cito,the r aoticin, • ntela,9e in case -the enemy rivalled. Thus matters were dispos, etlr when the important day arose which was• to decide thutate of Benningreb.' General Seek, arid the iitnerirs With him, Considering everything e% risk upon die exertions of their little band of invin cible*, es they afterwards proved, made suchludi. cicalt•' 4l4 eneelOttels, and each an rutaxpected and spirited attack' upOn the enemy, in their . works, that they at.oncp, .by .The crowning, aid .c.f suspicious heaven, forcediherri from their lineyand redoubts, killed and taptivated neatly the whole of Their par ty: " iithabitanteheinf the ,attack, aii4 waited to lute, the issue titiih a diststlistliug anxiety, not to be conceived, much less vspreseed. The firing ceased ; and, lo comic( Notre in taste", `an in foams and as be approached, he firing his hat into the air, end announcing to the .trembling mull titude the joyful tidings of success and victory !-- "The day-is oncown I the enemy arciianquished, and you are all Vary soog after then eyes vieie gratified with kiting the intended authors of theirdestructioni led captive through the streets, and secured under guard in their meeting house. Not}; Mole" now tudd Or heard, scarcely,, but elude. 14Ms of, praiee to God for their deliverance,- and mutual congratulaiions of each other: • - But they haitsearcely enktiredtlietelicity befoni their hopes Wire . alt blasted by prirspects of the deepesi distress.. 111 telinge trom every quarter, in quick succession, crowded in upon them.' The ac tion to the northward is reneWedl 'An:express ar- Nies - with 'an accede! Thai a strong reinforce. Meet had engaged Col. Benicia', and that he was fined to. , fiee • before them.: At the earns time a patrol fronted from thefouthstaniwiat intelligence diet a pAity of,lhfi enemy, consisting or a thousand men, were epee the, (own from-that- quarter. At the tamer time the , ptisimert Made an iestreection in the meeting-001e: Whit . it:sad reierse of ke fpne 1. from,ihe most flattering prospecte, afonee.re duced'iti a situation beset , with ills, and environed round withAlangev and with darkness, without* gleam ot hope left But He whO 'Meet' the Jai , into night, anti night into tlay, for nictitate', did pot t9rAHO:albeni...,Tll6—iniard,..bss ceeruome soon reduced, the Insurgents to order. A second patrol from the southward Contradicted the report of the fonder. Col. (Varner fortunately came up to the assistaece, ofCal. Hernek,.iu an advantageous situation. They engaged and, vanquished the ene my,a second time. Thus were their tears again diepelled, arid their despendhig spirits revived to joy:end:to ,praise r . And now 'they bad Teirure.,to at. teed MOD kifi,ed and wounded., • •• A good old gentleman; who had two:tons in the field,- whose furrowed cheeks and .silver' toils ad. did vitnerribleness to his hoary brews, being tolil that he was unfortunate in one of his.sons, replied, ", What! has he • mishelutved !'did he desert his post or atirink from thit cheree,l7, a 1‘19 ) ,ir," said the ieforMant, worse.. Than th at 'heis , among the stein l'he fell contending, mightily in the camel' , r,(LThen am satisfied," -replied the' Integrable AM ; ,hrand lar him before thei l tlift teisntp t it* be hold and eurvey)he trailing ofmy 800 i ORS vbiC,h the empire was brought in and laid be. fora him..l3e then calbrlort bowl of Witter end a napkin, led With his own Miele 'washes the: gore from his well Corpres, tifeetrtg w Ptitelar 13 1 401 a. Complacency, as the Wiesen , eft ; relied itOgitieh - had - neverfett*OT perietMC~d..°" l ' • . -- ,"*Ke4ntiful le death when Panted by urinal ttplfrrectovs 0141;4004 which is phed Incomes man tiy.thoweriumpheet to fait; when by telling we titre to eancireist,' honor and intritoriality - ..., 11 1., a qa tiPYOr'ant•Pr. bet eons to imitate eft,Pliehl4e4Sample,flunl to become rivals for such distirgmished glory-640 stand feeble' the hear of her ?distreise.' strnobia'teridielde tier Came, ilia t •• 1,••• 1 • • er.4 1 4.. . vil roused to,aitenthe pub.. tic disputations held at the AoadetnyTtres - .once sat& if hit' utidetstito4l_tatia::' . g l 'Nfi,!' replied the, i tf gut - 1,4:4401M his 'br seeing whO is angry firat:". 41,1, y_'. bourn iript kgmiqe ofat r, Oio•pihlmitinB ti ke loquenceE9P, the great,: nerirtgiltitcreinlfyL I .48 Noureir•ee," replied n , loaf. er—u I tract a sack at II at% bestirs' your coat wiL2mireLT: i n. PAS ohl mad we heard to exclaim whiles sitib 1 at fiettiteettns,bibir day:: 7 'o l :l;..esP,figitOirfikill '', :.IC"l"°•,.'iAdMif:Flf.ifiP6rl44l"-‘lO-16tkii 4084, i°4441116•4104ttnt.. 0 , 40 UFO aOltdroevapil. wily `airnilliefiketa isinglispinfriltosul tredve bioanirl ki : .cir i4l ill . ii4lalasla„de,l 7 all in;',if's :-. , Li pole, who, is the length of a Ilungarian I" t ~.~: t WM Sr•'• '". 1 tla igril , IN; 7-P • :4. g, r:lu • ifteitelg it itteikiteelene: '' . lteeiteieninO'since IA at ' - Pat' the waetilOweeiflkSefing-Chittn. fill within the passenger .tutin -on the e p r seriulroad 'arrived...ate resent tethuty; And most ("fete knowledge wtrett small taillege and : itto ppingtat the. depot, it lovely we-now possess hai been obtained:Arians' As last couple got out and:inquired the" way to Thee min: fifteen sears, - AS foreign interemirse tenernes motel idtifr'a" O' fettle:himAte hnoseJohn'made'known frequent and unrestricted with this country, w - eirhett the rite undoubtedly-become better and-better acquainted oftholy wedlitek performed. The reverend. gee- with itiebistory and the character ot its 'inhabitants'. homes teas just teravingto perform it ser vice di n , The -recent senlements,and great increase of traria other kind, and suggested that the parses-shotilti dn.,out Pricifigehorss.will opeu it. more. direct tom. WailWail.th.Jetitni; But was In a hurry' and the municatien with China and reeder , whatever ,con: MiniSter thinking he ; neeld make a,shortcase of it, cent that people fat mere imereenpg and import. consented .to , tarry; „nut the, ni e lsgroom ..-was_ not ant to America. The antiquity of that nation, tree quite teady.- litsnrunk Was en the , platfonaii - and log ite history by a tTeettrerie3 of events back,in saih lite,tiddreetfinie the 4 mlthistetn:: • ' ••• thisigsse ortablif. its treat e,ttent of territory and Soreion litst."lUilp Me A . 1111402' f , rewires"; its literature and its arta; its govern: On getting it into the house he added.- - meta and ifs immenseimpulanori, estimated at up " Just map mitt up o wn s e d i r i t; nee es h e er Wardsnf 200',000,f0 canstitnte objects of extraies dresies? - ttirlian7„ o , l 4o . Binary interest. Itassing . .. these tomes, the N. T. said bb tka•YPl4n4T, l o/ ii - sPit t nat:4. l4 'tiosientleds Vatra!*anid - hlerthanicailanees ate eutnect vitally ',spine you inst.& ulastainst and help -.Elizibetb r inteMatingle country ,on the eve of banishing dress." , . • _ , ! . • . its borders the evils of intemperance ;-ee &ingot:lab ae'retinestarlionld bi denied. the TCA COP. The iadp ' wriii',o!Cair • .The, earliiit knowledge we hive Of the Take r an she wisalacut to descend she bethought thertteif l i nta,er Tea-tree as cultivated in China,..is some that John's wedding cr."rig" was in' herlizink, surd where about 350 years after the Christian ere. Its elle would thank the young kitty if she wa l la fairy" botanicar affinities relate it to the Camelia, and it it intrilehati.ioein end Olt We l to ge i res ay; l • ' grows equally in mountainous and level district The rig was reseerdingly taken into an .djoiaing but is eintivated to most advantage in a light rocky chamber, and the. bridegroom showed -*here' he Wit It is sown by potting several Beetle into a might Make ready. ' This occupied lime. - ',Rut, hike in nursery beds, these are then transplanted in length the parties deseendet, end,lalCino rheir , in s ; tows tour reef apart. They begin to yield leaves lions, the tweeze was about i ncernm e c o. Ate is three years atter, but the plant does not attain its instant John filed off to-•a diritant•part of the room, tali size until six or seven years. IV eh Care it where the young lady was sitting' and Said le hers- thiives' fifteen or twenty yeari, bin the leaves grow ° "Come now, spode you juitiLm and stand up side hardand harsh after the seventh year. The tea. of glizsabede, it wilt make her, feel better." . t, shretiresembles that of the broad tented mYttleOind t The ladytacieessiten. --The t wo o va seen eus h, a flo wer veriiike the wild rose. Them are &tier , oner flesN'and - the clergyman fit It Wit 4x em' but although it has been a matter of , Pee • „2, air of coama, that the' heppis cee t ae wou ld ph e , the deep whether the 'different kiods were distinct later, train and _proceed on their way that sPeCies cir only varieties-it is knowiAc to be a fat - t But all harry was new over. • The• parties seated that there are only two species, the green and the themeelves and seemed at home. At length Jdhe black. The rest are mere combinations of dies. epyingtt niann, said to thiyOung,ladY, still in the two in proportions, or changes vrrou la by diner. teems- - ence of soil, culture, situation and degrees of tent. • "Come now, spose you'aine us a tuns on that perature, similar to our common fruits. thing theta." The black tea is grown in the maritime prov in:- . The lady camplied tit was a sentimental tereg, ea, of FonKien and Canton. green tea is grown in and the bridegroom wes in raptures, . . the provinces of Xiaguare Kiang si, and Cite-Kiang sr Neves heard such' a right acorn good thing i n The annual produce of a shrub of large size is from all my life; and now spose you go right through it 15 to 20. ozs , while the average yield about G Dun ; agi!! cee, tied 1000 'rivate . yards contain from 300 to 1 . 1 wait repeated..., about thin timeabe car whistle 400 Plants. There are about three crops.annually announced theapproaeb of the twin. They wq ," l gathered, the first about the middle of April, which informed; bet John said - he had - no thought of going, consists of the eaily buds,-and is by far the most from such n confounded geed placer that night.- esteemed for its aromatic qualities and fine flavor. They aleyedi in .the morning they tea, the e a r ly The most superior tea of the first picking hears the train, and just as they were leaving, the generous appelation of the Flowery Pekoe." Because the and grateful bridegroom "slippeda silver dollar into !eaves are covered ivi:h a -title white down. The the hand - of the clergyman, lila: eyes opening and Second crop is picked six weeks afterwards, and glisteeiqg like the tieing sun. the third crop about the end of May or beginning of "There, said , he,•take that, I'm going Tip to.— June. We It avefieati of four crops occasionally,, I've a brother there;. he's going to be married, HI but as the third crop, of leaves yield tea of lead : turn, ried down here, 'far you do the tin n i n g ) strength and flavor, a lonith we apprehend iitrasit handsome,"in the picking men, women anti children - season , ' are employed. end the leaves are stripped by hand !els from the branches, as rapidly as enssible, and thrown into baskets suspended from the neck, end and conveyed to the drying houses. .Friteratonesnts7.Cie...s.e...f.-ss LOC., Le,. ' l / 2 • pounds pet nay, for which be reeelvesabont sic cents. 'The leaves after being gathered are Y. care 'acetet I and placed on bamboo frames, and assorted ten lit the wind to sotten and dry, v.:l'in they ire tubbed and rotted until red spots begin to appear, • I When they are tested by having boiled' water pour ed over Them to obiretve whether the leaves tutu yellow. The green tea is less highly dried than the black and on this account it is supposed, that the termer. by retaining its naturel juiees, leas _a greiter efleCt upon the nervous system. It is a vulgar error in attribute the stimulating qualities of green tca to its being dried upon copper, aqd this error has been refined by the , best chemists of Europe, who huge Analyzed it, and been unable to detect a particle of the insetete of copper. ,Butthe Chinese do adulter ate teas but it, is ,the eiviltzed traders that have taught Mein. The usual method is - by mixing the first, second, and third gatherings, and_ passing oil sticks insteatief leaves. In Consequence of the de mend for green tea, the Ilong.merchanis and agents not the grotters 3 adulterate the black by giving it a green appearance by neeeping it in iedigri-blue and similar poisonous ingredient/I use English months ants etijl farther deteriorate this plant by a plentitui admisture of sloe and other leaves, with ditcolot, Asoistirlroor air Plarrsso Mho B —Th e Ca-- rtadians talc:pi an' lager:ions plan for Uncovering the trees that are stored with. honey, They Galin' a number ofi the flatware in the (crest. aval,earati.a i........doirrycrrtartnertlerthThilitsvhibh is a honey edr..b,'ltndlif the little' Squire eglass, large,enough to atfmit the light into every. part., • When the bees seem qratiated with honey,. two or three are ailirwedlo, escape;' and the'•direction which they trike`iitattentj4o3i:iiaolo;iinfil they become lost in the ,disianue." Tile 'winter then pro. reeds towanlsthe spot where they•thaappear, and hbrating one or two more of the Awe captives, he also marksiheircourse. • • This process is repeateil until the other bees, tn. stead of following,the same direction as their pre• decessora, take the' direct opposite-course, by which the hunter is convinced that be has oversho t the nbiect of his,ptuittit..„ . is a well. known hiet that ifyou take a bee from a flower situated at any' given distance south of the tree'to Which the belongs, and' earl it in the closest . confinement to an equal distance on the north side of .the tree, he when tiberetekir fly in a circle for a moment, and then make his course di. recta hialsweef . home, Without deljattitg in the Ine.ll l 3'thi t;gittl- ' *a Pr , fell. ‘' Thua ars hunter ,is very soon able to detect -the tree which eonteint the honey; then by ;lacing on heated' 'Wilt a , pieta!' 01 honeycomb; the odor, ilbgt Melting, ii_la,stmitgAnd alluring as to entice the' bees to aorna•doirn kens their citadel. tlFhen thti-tree iwcittlorinithetittentity,ofhoney fohnd' iteeicarttiif trunk" seldom hills to corn pensatillie limner to his pessevStatlce. .„Tur. Ditty or - larsacv,—As the infant begins to discriminate between the objects around, it soon cliff-Users oniCennitintance (tun ever smiles upon it with peculiar benignity. When it wakes from its slop, there is a watchful form ever bent over ifs cradle.' 11 - startled by some unhappy dretn, - a guardtati,anget Seems ever. ready, to soothe its tears. It cold v ibat.ministeringspirit brings ita warmth ; if hungry, she "feeds in pain, she relieves it ;if happy ihe r careitaei,ii...!ln:loy of ' fOriovv,, in Weal or,tvoe, Ale >r the..first,ohier,l of its Ittonglite. Her presence iaitaheaven, Themother is the deity of iufancy.• ettroi'Vealth; hrinOr,:atfalator i 'lisay , bomb:trim #lYy:!ii4il:* ,caul ti~ioti bfryt tocik . #4; virtue-is dirk:Wok. Jot iodaitry labor ; andrer •tuiriy i t*Orthib - triiiPliillt lo' purtlideriltat 11;00. • . i irrirAheittii,sciassolbarntuy beings en 'Nadi who .ntsryrpfetierlyfieticritlitialetr tOW"if , "-ii• 'elasiAk'ietWiP"Nr, 41!1•4 eviing+o l- / heir farbprOVE!lithiresstienbsui , blinSessilapitting : i in for themselver. .I 4, vor+.') c. 7 . f t ti v 'th 1 hiliOte I,' . '4 1 1141 , 01i: ; . ,‘' .f$ ing Tatter. The scieetific mode of pros ing the finer teas at Canton, is to perif small quantity into a cap, pour on it pure spring water at hul boiling point ; place the saucer above the cup, filling it also with boiling water to increase the heat ; after a sufficient time elapsed for the leaves to unfold themselves, to ex amine the appearance, cOlor v and flavor of the infu sion brit this test only suited to the initiated. Teas Shp* be chosen for their agreeable flow bright ness of color, and uniformity .of laat, for it the teal NJ:lichen it partially destroys the flavor.. 11'llett the tea-pot they should. draw of a light coin( ) and .e clear and free from scum Tle.se t.•cts which draw dad( , can not be good, and sl there is much scum, there is a suspicion that they ate adulterated. Tea should have clear soh water poured on to ii. boiling hot, and • :not he suffered to stand Inerier than necessary toabstract the montane qualifiers of the leaf._. .Grcen lea requires about fitter', minutes —black from ten in twelve: Tea: when Purchased. • should be enclosed-in.a ea:niter that will carefully delude :the air.. ale itoaFtiof.; to .kristotle of the greatpet , a of h . .. 5 ~cnuomx-,Ttkat vt.tiot to : ,61 , bui tie - Ake/J . 9u 4,llwv . e_ . to 6! Of th.tt -44reat r,c.?011,4504 6, ~1 • ;' r "rr' • " , 4Atte. gmt;lanet, , yottaiii th, detentfett Nras gernieriiito,htniivitk4ottioiieen , btt that-lr' , ?t moan .a man that pay% hia bal, the tt..t ttene , ' prevented to 114112 1.7 4 4 '‘ , 40 % . 4 ;l' ;t:44:44;1144,,,::0 -- 41 1 4 I fit 1 : ') 1 ..ir e . 4 • - 11 ,