; jj IL AR per ANNUM invariably in advance. TOWANDA: ftsrsday Morning, January 6, 1859. I rrr^TFTTTTTTTriv? I ill i! : !| s § "* !j i •j4J *V I 3 4 "(i 7.' i i i,i ii i: 1314 i.i to ii t: is 14 13 is F 1 1 - 17 I* 19,3>31,25 1 :i 34 56,27 2S J4 35 56,47 ss, was I VII.. ™J.FT 3I ..1_1... ...|_|_ Li Ij J 3! 3 MJT j... I 2 3 4 3. 6 4 - - ?|. II 15 J 7 ;IO II 15 13 J IJ 14.13 IS 17 L 19 114 13 16|17 LVL9 50 * -I 2 3 54 53 56 31 55 25124 33 56,57 j ™ 4 - - 9 10 II 15 i 4 3 6 7, Si 9 10 I j ift IS 16 17 14 19 'II 15 13,14 IS 16 !7 ••-53 34 53 36 I* 19 30 51 53 53*51 j j- a 30 si j* 5i I *Mj®C. j ,r, ; 1,36 74 9 ;5 3 4'6171 J •l IISIS M I 910 ll ls'l3 14 13 • . ■' .*• 51 55 33 IS 17 13 I? 5o 51 55 i :3*r s< si:i3,*;rtAs In . J'Ji, . 1 -- 44-; I S J 4 s s 7 V. i; l sj S 4|i II 14 IS 14 ,6 71 S 9 10 II IS 1 M 17 I- 19 >1 51 13 14 IS 16 17 I- 19 " 33 34 33 56 57 53 ' 3 51 2 53 54 53 56 I f 54*3: n SM.aS.J_JZ W ' 1 2 3 4 the. j 1 2' 3 i 7 S 9 I ' II , 4 3 6 7 S 9 I" 13 ' 1 II 13 16 17 14 U 15 13 14 13 IS 17 Ii I 1 7315353 34 53 1419?>51 253 54 - 34 39 V ■■ 23 5S r M 59 30 31 .ertttttb ipottrn. THE JOLLY MARINER. It fitjolly mariner At ever hove a loj ; He rr hi* trvwtrn. wide and free. j And always ate hi* prog. AaJ Wrv-ed his eves, in sailor wise. .And net or shirked Uia £Tug. Up .[*'4u this jolly mariner. Whil*t walking uj> and down The briny sea has pickled me, VaJ done me very brown ; Iv.t here I true*, in these here clothes, A-craifinj; in the townl" T:*• tir>t at all these curious things. That chanced his eye to meet, thi* utidaunteu manner Went sailing up the street, tte* tripping with a little cane, V dandy ail complete !*• He stopped—that jolly mariner- Lad eyed the stranger well: • What that may I*." he said, say* he, "Is ai re than 1 can tell; Kit ne'er before, on sea or ahore, Was such a heavy swell !** He met a lady in her hoops. And thus she heard him hail • ' Vow blow me tisrht- but there's a sight To manage in a gale I 1 never saw so small a craft With such a spread o* sail. tserve the craft before and aft - She'd make a pretty pruee !** And there in that improper way . He spoke about his eyes. Which mariners are wont to use. lr. sneer or surprise. He saw a plumber on a roof. Who made a mighty din si ptnate. ahoy !" the rover cried, I: makes a sailor grin To see yvu copper-bottoming Your upper-decks with tin' " He met a yellow-bear\W man, Aad asked aU>ut the way : Ihit sc word could he make out llf what the chap would y. Unless be meant to call him name* By screaming " Nix furstay V Up spoke this jolly mariner. Ami to the man said he : •* I have'nt sailed these thirty year* I (ton the stormy sea To tear the shame of scch a name As 1 have heard front thee!"* " So lake th4t that-and laid h.m Aat. Rut soon the man arose. And beat the jolly mari-er A crass the jolly nose. Till he was fain, from very pain. To yield him to the blows. Twaa then this jolly mariner. A wretched jolly tar. Wbhed he was in a jolly boat Upon the sea afar. Or ndinit fast, before the blast. Upon a single spar! Twa# then thisjcdlT mariner Returned acio the ship. And told unto the wondering et*w The story of his trip, W.ih many oaths aad curses, too. Up-a his wk-ked lip ! A* V ;>;c< so this mariner la tnwfnl words haraagaed - K - umbers might be shivered . aad His W ward scuppers daaged. (A disiSle curse, and vawLly worm T .12 being shcH or hanged ') If ever he—aad here agaia A dn-adful oath he swoee - 1: ever he. except at sea, spAe any stranger more. Or t * son of wvmething—went U rutsiag ob. the shree ! T r Bxidr? OF Moscow.—Bayard Taylor. 3 u exceedingly interesting letter from Moscow T *s to account of the great bells of that city —tag largest ai.d most costly in the work!, Tie R: have a peculiar praoki for large The largest among them, which is on '•> c r of the Kremlin, was cast by order of * Edpress Annie, in 1730, and weighs ooe iMnrd and twenty too* It t* tweoty-ooe high, and twenty-one feet in diameter at bottom. It cost ooe militoa and a half :i Winr*. There is another beii near it which tear sixty-four tooa. It takes three fa to ntsg iu tougae. It is only rung three = a year, then all hells are silenl. It is *ld out uiv share of the business to my partner, spent a year or more or looking at two or three score ot coun try places, and at last tound one that uiy wife and myself were considerably pleased with. Fine double house, four acres beautifully shaded, vegetable garden not to be beat, and soil of a superior quality. The place is still in my pos session,but before 1 would iro atal liveou it.l'd give it away; yes. Aleck, I'd sink in the mid die of the Dead Sea. But lam getting a little ahead of my story. For two or three months matters and thiogs went on we!!, becaase I'had something to attend to ir. making a few little improvements about the house, and in furnish ing a number of the doors with locks of my own inveution ; but as the whole premises were iu excellent repair when 1 bought theui, I soon came to a point where there was nothing to look after but the cultivation of the garden. I was not long though iu makiug the discovery that I had uo genius or taste either for diggiug around roots, or pulling up weeds, and so as wife didn't wish the garden to ruu to waste. 1 employed a regular English gardener to carry the thing handsomely through. "Weli, I don't mind the expenses he put me too in the way of guano, new fangled gardeu tools, and patent wateriug apparatus ; for 1 bad fully expected to spend aiouey, and thanks to our previous ecooomj, we had money to spend ; but, Aleck, it was really very auiusmg to sec what the fruit aol vegetables raised from the garden stood us in. Makiug use of the little arithmetic I was master of. I recollect that 1 cyphered up the cost of svjuie of the ta ble fix ins, and the result was—encumbers, sev enteen ceuts a piece : green peas, a dollar and and three quarters for a half peck ; currauts, fifty cents a quart ; raspberries, thirty cents a pint : beets, fourteen cents each, and every thing else in proportion. AII this I cared no thing about ; but somehow I felt out of my gearing in not having the right kiud of empioy useut Wife did ber best to coax aie into gen tlemanly ways ; had the old mechanhal griuie all thoroughly scrubbed oat of my bands— finger na;K cleaned out and rounded —so as to make it appear that 1 had never done manual labor. "Then we mast go behind a coople of M or gan ponies which I had purchased, and to make fashionable calls in the day time on those who had called on us ; and my wife wanted me to soften down my voice and to be particu iar about my grammar, and the I talk ed ou; but sometimes forgetting mysei' I would revel in the proud memory of the iixks and keys I bad haudled in banp*er days and com meoee a history of my exploits in that iiue, when my wife woithl look as tbousrh she was going to sink through the floor. In fact she wished to keep a perpetual lock ou my lip (so far as our antecedents were concerned ) with the kev in ber pocket. But I sighed for the shop, and time hnug $o heavily on my band, thai an hour spent in stopid Hstlessness about the bouse seemed longer to me than a day did. wheu I had orders ahead for locks, aad was driving hard to get them fiuished at a certain time My youngest brother, who is a college bred mac. and a lawyer, sent me, at my request, a fine collection of books on many imaginable subjects, so that my library outabooe that of the parson and indeed any other man in the place ; bat I found I had no more uste to s: down and read them than I had for trimming currant busheo. Time was. after I had finished a hard day's labor at the shop, whea an hour at books was a real saiace. and I also be :ie*ed an ocrasioo of improvement. Theu 1 envied these whese leisure allowed the® to fesst oo PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. books perpetually ; but the mistake 1 made was in failing to discriminate between mental habits and requirements of the professed stu dent as those of the working man. "In this wretched condition did time at my country seat drag heavily along. Visiting w as a perfect bore, for not feeling the slighest iuterest in soch masculine topics as corn.grubs and manure, and caring less for the femiuine ones of dress and local gossip, I did not know what to talk about. Books set me to sleep, and not having the society of my two boys, who were off at a boarding school. I became fully satisfied that "nothing to do" was equal to having everything to suffer. " My most delightful place of resort was a blacksmith's shop some two miles from the house, where occasionally I would handle the hammer, and clang a little on the anvil, but my wife making the discovery one day that my hands were getting grimy again, I was obliged to own up to the cause of it, and this to my sorrow was succeeded by a positive prohibition ou her part from my taking any further exer cise at forge. After this, when I would some time ride past the shop behind my prancing Morgan horse, the tears would start in my eyes at my being debarred the only emlpoyment which was in the least adapted to my taste or capacity. " But, Cousin Aleck, to shorten my story, wife perceiving my uuhappiness was increasing, at last consented to move back to town, and let me resume my business. I had no difficulty in renewing my engagement with my old part ner, and hence you see me hard at work and happier thau the President. lam perfectly able, in a pecuniary point of view, to live with out work, but I have learned to mv satisfac tion two important truths : First, that we nev er enjoy ourselves so well as when we are use fully employed ; and secoud, that there is no occupation on the whole globe for which we arc so well fitted, as that to which we have been so long accustomed, and which has heuce become to us, as it were a second nature." 1 was much pleased with the good sense of " my wife's cousin" as evinced in the small sec tion of his autobiography which he had given me, and very soon after he had finished it, we reached his dwelling. If his shop was dingy i there was no diuginess here. The edifice was built on the Philadelphia style, having a large dining room back of the two parlors, and a noble kitchen in the rear of the dining room. The w hole floor, as well as the airy and pleas aut bed rooms above stairs, were probably adorned with a better description of turuiture than was owued by the Governor of Pennsyl vania. Everything was in perfect order, and although the blacksmith's wife was rather up pish in her notiuus, I soon perceived she was a caiwtul housekeeper, and that my frieud was proud of his house, and proud of his two sous who had come from boarding school to speud the vacation. I found that these lads were quite intelligent aad that they were both intended for the learned professions. While oue of them enter tained me with some music on a parlor organ, the worthy smith begged me to excuse him for a few moments, after which he appeared in perfectly clean linen, an i a suit of dainty black We supped at a table spread wiih the utmost profusion, and in the evening some company 1 eomiug in, conversation and music filled up the passing hour. I was deeply interested, and concluded that "my wife's cousin," the lock smith and bell hanger, was a wise man, and that unwittingly he had discovered the true ; philosopher's stone. Daily work was to him as necessary as his daily bread, and the toil of , the shop ouly served to enhance the pleasures and recreations of a refined ami happy home. Ou taking ray leave, I realized that I had been taught a valuable lesson : Employment is the healthy lot of life. ni ' be that would seek happiness m a slate of per petual repose, betrays a profound ignorance of the beneficent laws which govern his beiug. SIJGTTT MISCONCEPTION*.—Numerous are the ' blunders of freshly imported servants, but the one we are now alwat to re'ate. which occur red recently at Buffalo city, appears to be the latest. A family eugaged the services of a aervant gir! who breathed the sweet accents of the Green Isle of the sea. and whose single hearted simplicity was only equalled by her good nature and anxiety to please. '* Old Whity," was a venerable charger and uad won the right of indulgence by years ot faithful service, and being a favorite, was al lowed the free aud unrestricted range of the back yard. Ooe day Bridget was directed to do the ironing, and hang the different articles on the clothes-horse iu the rear of the house She proceeded cheerfully with her duty, aud after it was completed, ber mistress weut be low to ascertain how well the task was doue Bndirvt looked weary and oat of patience. i "Did you put thea all on the horse ?" inqui red the lady. "Faith I did. and a mighty troublesome sea son I had with him. sure. What with bob bing his bead, and frf*ksn- his tail, the clothes kent sliding off. bet 1 fixed the cravthur, so 1 . did" Oppressed by a well defined foreboding, her mistress hastened to the back yard, aud there s:d "Old Whity" looking extremely sheep ish, enveloped in sheets and pillow case* : long stock, ngs hanging pendant from his ears; shirts Led around bis neck by the arm, making him , look like an overgrown lad with a b;bon. *L e his stump of a uul served for a staff, fixni which numerous cambric handkerchiefs diop ' ped sadly and fodont Bridget had "fixed the craythar." for she had fastened the baiter to a high limb of a picm tree, and • Old Whity" • could hardly move his head. The old horse now secured in the barn on ironing day. j Ax Irish lady in her will ordered her body to be opened after ber death, as she was afraid s of being beried aire. Piccs gentleman—"My boy !my boy— roa should not go fishing cm the Sabbath "It cmnN be no barm, sir ; I ar'tst catched aoth tag r " RESARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANT QUARTER." A Boy's Trials. The Springfield Republican has a capital article on this subject. Here are some ex tracts : HIS REGULATIONS WITH THE " OLD iIAX." We suppose that the hrst severe trial a boy has to undergo is to submit his will to the old man, whom he is taught to consider his father. To be restrained in doors at night, to be for bidden to go in swimming five times a day, or to be hindered from pinching the rest of the children for fnu, is an interference with natu ! ral inalienable rights, every way injurious to the feeling. And then, when upon some over | whelming temptation, the boy asserts his inde pendence of parental control, and receives a "tanning," with a switch, from a quince bush, either upon his back or bare feet, it becomes really a very serious thing. We never coufd see that the smart of an operation like this was at all assuaged by the affectionate assurance that it was bestowed out of pure love. SITTING WITH THE GIRLS. The next great trial of the boy is to be obliged by a cruel master to sit with the girls at school. This usually comes before the de veiopement of those undeniable affiuities which, in after life, would tend to make the puoish meut more endurable. To be pointed out as a "gal boy," to be smiled at grimly by the mas ter, who is so far delighted with his own in effable pleasantry as to give the little boys license to laugh loud, and to be placed by the side of a girl who had no handkerchief, and no knowledge of the use of that article, is, we submit, a trial of no meau magnitude. Yet we have been there and have been obliged to "sit close, with big Rachel, laughing and blushing till we came to hate her name. We wonder where the overgrown frowzy creature is now, and what the condition of her head uow is f* THE FIRST LONG TAILED COAT. We do not believe that auv boy ever put on his first long tailed coat without a sense of shame. He first twists his buck half off looking at it in the glass, and then when he steqr* out of doors it seems to hiin as if all creation was iu a broad grin. The sun laughs iu the sky ; the cows turn to look at him ; there are faces at every window ; his very shadow mocks hitn. Wheu he walks by the cottage where Jaue lives,he dare not look up for his life. The very boards creak with consciousness of the strange spectacle, and the old pair of pantaloons that stop a light in the garret window, noi with derision. If he is obliged to pass a group of men and boys, the trial assumes its most terri fic stage. His legs get all mixed up with em barrassment, aud the tisp of the dangling ap pendage is felt upon them, moved by the wind ot his own agitation ; he could not feel worse were it a dish , loth, worn as a badge of disgrace. It is a happy time for him wheu he gets to church and sits down with the coat tails under him ; but he is still apprehensive with think ing of the Snnday-sdiool. and wonders if auv of the children will ask him to " swicg his long tai! blue." GOI.VG HOME WITH THE CIRLS The entrance into society maybe said to take place after boyhood has jmssed awav, yet a multitude take the initiative before their beards are presentable. It is a great trial, either to a tender or a rough age. For an .overgrown boy to go to a door, knowiug that there a do zen girts inside, and to knock or ring with ab solute certainty that in two minutes all their eyes will be ujou him. is a severe test of cour age. To go before these girls and make a sat isfactory tour of the rooni without stepping on their toes, and theu to si; down and dispose of one's hands without putting tbem into one's pockets, is an achievemeut which few boys can boast. If a boy can go so far as :o measure off tape with oue of these girls, and cut it short at each end, he may stand a cbauee to jass a pleasant evening, but let him cot Sitter him self that all the trials of the evening are over. There comes at last the breaking up The dear girls don their hoods and look saucy, and mischievous, and unitnpressihle. as if tliej did not wish any one to go with thetn Then comes the pinch, and the boy that has the most pluck makes np to the prettiest girl, his heart in his throat, ami i.is tongue clinging to the roof of his mouth, and crooking his elbow, stam mers out the words : " Shall I see you home?" She toocln-s ber fingers to his arm, and ti.ey walk home aboct a foot a part, feeling as awk ward as a couple of gixsllnga. As soon as she is safe inside ier oa doom, he struts home, aud thinks he has reaiiy been and gone and doce it. Sleep comes to him a; last, with dream* of Caroline and Calico, and he awak ens in the morning and finds the doors of life open to him. and the pigs squealing few their breakfast. OONCLTOIXG REFLECTIONS. We have passed over churning, and'earning the catechism, because we are fearful of making this article too knig, although we might have talked of the butter that would not be persua ded to come, and perplexities of literary tarn of mind, aud head that measured seven and a quarter when a>ked what the chief eud of man was. Boyhood is a green passage in man** ex perience in more senses than ooe It is a pleasant u>;ng to think over and laugh about now, thoagh it was serous eoough tbeo. Many of our present trial* are as ridiru oos as those which now tooch the risibles in the recollec tion. and when we go to the other work! and look upon this, and upon infancy of the soul through which we passed here, we have no doubt that we shall gnu over the trials which we experienced when w m>l our fortunes.wheD our m ils were swept away or bcrnel and when we d:da*t get elected to the Legislature. Men are but boys of larger growth. Condemn no man for not thinking as you think. Let every oae enjoy the tali aad free liberty of thiakiag for himsetf. Let eTrj man use his own judgment, since every maa most girt an account of himself to God Ab hoc ertrj approach, hi any kind of degree to the spirit of persecution. If you cacao: rea son or persuade a man into the truth, neve: attempt to force him iato it- If love will act -rxrVi hhs. leave hJs. to God. ifce Jadrt of a!! -Ji' TT-.dry The Salt Trade of Syracuse. I The experience of the season about closing . shows conclusively that the element of wealth ; lying in the lap of onr beautiful valley, and evolved by the enterprise and labor of our - citizens, is but temj>orari!y affected by ail the \ mutations of the monied world, and can never ibe permanently depressed. The great commer . I cial revulsion of the last year was, to some ex r tent, felt in the trade of our great staple, the , amount falling off laigely from the figures of . i the previous season, but the necessities of the ) country for this great article of commoa eon . sumption could not be denied, and with a con . tinued depression in the general business of the k country, we have, in the history of the salt trade this year, a proof of the stability, and, i with proper exertions, the aunual growing in | crease ot the demand. j; A few statistics of.our business will not be . misplaced here ; we, ourselves, are not aware of the great extent and importance of the trade: Let us loijk at the figures and fac's. The books of inspection show that since the . Ist of Jauuary last, we have sent from the re . serration over 6,600,090 bushels of salt. Of < this amount, probably 5,300,000 has been made i bv boiling, and 1,5*00,000 by solar evapora tion. This amount will easily reach 2,000,000 within the year. To make this qnantity of salt, there is aper ; mauent investment nearly as follows : 3;*) Salt Blocks, or boiling works, worth $ 300.000 SOO acres solar vati. $2.000.00u i 12.JU0.000 Two-thirds at least of this investment is with in the limits of our city, Saliua producing 3,200.000 bushels, and Syracuse producing 1,500,000, these two districts withiu the ctlv I and Liverjiool, and decides adjoining, bciug the four official inspection district-:. The annual expenses are nearly as follows : Cash paid for labor in boiling 1110.000 * Making coarse salt 'jj.OOo ! " " " Packing a.,000 '* ** ** 1.200.M0 barrels 31~.00<) " 2 ,0.000 yards cloth for bags 1..,000 j *• '• •• Unci. 130.000 cords wood UiO.Ouo :| Duties to State "O.OOC Annual repairs and taxes includ ing interest 4A0.000 SI -VJO.OOU The sales are 1,400,000 barrels at S2 i>_ ....51, 750,000 Deduct exjienses of Superinten dence and sale 70 000 SljfcttjMO Xett profit $150,000 The price above has been nearlv uniform for years,leaving us but comparatively a.small return of the amount of capital invested, but iabor being wealth, we are adding annually to the prosperity of our city, and in a far greater ratio than if the profits were larger aud the cost of labor legs. Of this great amonnt of salt, about 4,500,- 000 bushels has been shipped through Oswego, and finds its market partly in the Canada*, but most on the upper lakes. Buffalo has received and sbip|*u about 1,500,000 i.u*hels; the remainder has been absorbed iu this State aud Pennsylvania. Odr salt through the Ohio canals, finds its way too. and has the trade of the country within 50 miles of the Ohio, and is >ome?imes successfully forced to the Ohio River, where it comes into com;etilion with the Kanawa salt, an article produced at ale w figure ; but being an imperfect article, it is gradually giving way to our superiority at even a large difference in cost against us at th? point of contact. In this connection it may be well for our pee pie to look away from the mere manufac ture of salt into the great questions of the meant of its distribution and the supply of fuel for its future production. A junction canal about 16 miies ic length, connecting the Chemung Canal at Ktinira,witii the North Branch Canal of Peunsjlratda, was this vear used for the first time and through it we nave already received an instalment of our future fuel, aud sent back in return our salt Tni* trade is destined to be a very important one when we take iuto consideration the fact that the destruction of and the con sequent scarcity of available fuel has already induced the trial of coal, resultirg in the proof that the change to its use can be easilv and advantageously made. We now consume the enoraoas quantity of 160,000 cords of wood annually. &:,d as matter of ecooomv, we cast soon forego its use. and take coal in its **ead I'his. in the event of no futore increase iu the quantity of sait produced, will require over 1.000 boat loads of coal of 100 tons each, for salt fuel alone per year, and will open for u> a great trade in salt.— Spracase DcUy Jc urnal. HE MP*VT MEAN TO BE MFAX. —A writer in the Burlington Sentinel says that in one of the back towns of a a eghboring State, where j it is the custom for the district school teacher to " board round," the foi.owing incident oc curred, aud is vouched for by the LigLeat au thority ; A year or two ago an allotment '■eing made jin the usual maaier for the ber.rfit of the *< ho :-tri*re*s. t hanpeced that the ptoto ro of oue atari was two days and a hilt". TV si'- down to dinner on the *. ; rd day, ar j was beg nnirg to eat. when ihe Man of the Hou*e addressed her as follow* : j "Madame. I suppose your loa*dtsc t'me oat when you have eaten hit a dn.ncr ; !•: as I don : want to be m*A~: about it. you icay eat, tfyoa choose, as much gs usual." How beaut.fa and exalted are the folio* ng sentiments of D< W.U Clinton : " Pleasure is shadow, wealth is raaitr. trd power a pageant ; but is via* ir in eeKtymett. perretua in fame, calim ted in space, and iukiie a duration, in the perfoasnct | of its sacred offices it fears no dagger, i o j expenses, oattts no exertioa. It scales the nxmtaia, koks into the volcano, dive* into the ocean, perforate* the earth, eorirries the gk>he. explores the sea aid bad. cot templates the distant, ascends the sablime No piac* too remote for :ts grasp, no hex-ec to exalted fcr its reach VOL. XIX.—NO. 31. MAKING A NEEDLE —I wonder if any little . girl who may rend this, erer thought how many | people are all tbe time at work, making the I thing* she every day use*. What can be more common, and. yon may think, moreaimpie thau a needle? Yet. if yon do not know it, I cms tell yon that it takes a great many persona to make a needle, and a great deal of time, too. Let us take a peep into the needie manufac tory. In going over the premises, we most pass hither and thither, and walk into the next s'reet and back again, and take a drive to a mill, in order to see the whole process We find one chamber of the shop is hang around with coils of bright wire of all thick nesses, from the stoot kind used for codfish hooks, to that of the finest cambric needles.— lu a room below, bits of wire, the length of two needles, are cot by a rast pair of shears fixed into the wall. A bundle has been cat 1 off; the hits need straigbteuiog, for they just [ came off from the coils. The bundle is thrown into a red-hot furnace, ' and then taken out and roiled backward and forward on a table till the wires are straight. This process is called "rubbing straight." Wa : now see a mill for grinding needles. We go down into the basement and find a needle pointer seated on his bench. He takes up two dozen or so of the wires and rolls them between bis thumb and fingers with their ends on a grind ' stone, firAt one end and then the other. Wa have now tbe wires traight, and pointed at both ends. Next is & machine which flattens and gntters the head of ten thousaud needles ian hour. Obserre the little gutters at tbe head of your needle. Next comes the punch j ing of the eye, and the boy who does it punches eight thousand an hour, and he does it so fast your eyes can hardly keep pace with him. The >plitting follows, which is running a fine wire through a dozen, perhaps, of these twin ueo . dies. A woman, with a little anril befere ber, files betweea the heads, arid separates them. They are now complete leedles, but rough and rusty, and, w hat is worse, they easily bend. A poor needle, yoa will say; but tbe hardening cornea uext. They are heated in a furnace, and wbeu red-hot are thrown into a pan of cold water Next they must be tempered, and this done by rolling them backwards and forward on a me tallic plate. Tie polishing still remains to ba done. Ou a very coarse cloth, needles am spread to the number of forty or fifty thousand. Emery dust is strewed over them, oil is sprink led, and soft soap is dashed in spoonfuls over the doth ; the cloth is then rolled np with several others of the same kind, thrown into a wasb-jK)t, to roll to and fro for twelve hours or ui-jre. They come out dirty euoogh, bat after a rinsing iu clean hot water, and tossing in sawdast, they look ss bright as can be, and are ready to be sorted and put np for sale.— i But the sorting and doing up iu papers, vou cau imagine, is quite a work by itself. TECHNICAL Vi OKDS —In reading, we fre quently come across words which we are unac quainted, a-.d which are necessary to give ua a full idea of the subject To deviate this dif ficulty, we give a definition of some of tba more common words : A firkin of hotter yi iba A -ack of COALS - A tn& of straw. St - A tart f hemp ... ...... 33 *• A *ark of flour I*o - A q .intat 100 - A piggot of -tee! 120 ** A lßb*ofk3jr 'jt, - Aha* AObaak. A Mi-Jerkin la gvH. A iwrrv! *6 - A a >g&ead jg A paacbcus tvi - Engbsh prices-curreut often -p?ak of tba price of wheat par •pmrttr— to reduce this to barrel-., multiply the price by seven, and di vide by twelve, aud it will give the price,at tbe same rate, by the barrel. Thus : If wheat is quoted at 56 shillings a quarter, multiply 56 by 7, aid d.ride by 12. aud it give tbe price, 32 sL-.liugs S pence a barrel. Oku Farmer. SHAWLS. —The passion for shawls—says a : ate writer—aai.-ng all women everywhere, in remarkable. In one country, the shawls may IJ* from tbe head l.ke a veil; in another, it from the shoulders ; in another, it w knotted around the io us Uke a sah ; in TC( another, it is swathed round the body like a sl.iri. W.jertver worn a; ail, it is ape: arti cle of dress. At the Russian Court, ladies jadge one an other by their hav|j as by their QiaiDOoik Iu Frai.ce, the bridegroom wins favor by a judi cious g.ft iT his kind. In Giro and Damia i as, the gift of a shawl will cause almost as much heart burning in the harem as the intro duction of a new wife Iu Eng*aodjbedacgh ter of the house spends the whole of her first oaartcra allowance in tbe ponrhaseof a shawl Tbe Paris gris-tte and the London dressmaker go to their work with the little shawl pinned neatly at the waist. The least gir-drinkrcoverw her rags with the rem-ant of tba shawl of bet ter days. T e peasant's daughter bays a cot ton si aw', w.th a gar honW. for her wedding; and i; wa-.'ie? and dyes until having wrapped a I t er babies in it, it is finally dyed black to signa xe her widowhood. The maiden aunt, gr w-.ng eideriv. takes to wearing a shawl ia tue h ase in mid-winter; ana tbe aged grand two'her would no more tfii:k of going a.thowt it at any seasou than withoat ber cap. make a pretty g-'rfs cheek red. pay her a swr-et compliment. To redden those of an impudent nun, slap them. Goo is !he fhrht. wii-b. though never n. makes everyth t g visible, and attires them iu cv'r*. Net OAJ. thine eye receives iu Uam*. but tliiae Le-rr: its warmth. CHABLS* LATE*. :a ooe of hi* stories.tells e4 a das--icg taoirkloai who boded hi* ha mm