BY HENRY J. STAMM 37T H YEAR. TER) S-OE-T-RE-COM-P- W•The Republican Coutpi kr, is published every Monday morning, - by HENRY J.SrAn LE, at $1,75 per annum if paid in advance-2,00 per annum if not paid in advance. No sub scription discontinued, ,unless at the option of the publisher, until all arrearages are paid.. A.DVERTISEMNSTS' inserted at the usual rates. diSpatch. lie - Office on South Baltimore street, direct ly opposite Wampler's Tinning Establi&hiuent, one and a half squares from the Court House.. kfl)oire poctrn. THE CRICKET. BY FIADAgSAH ______The_cricket. he dwells in the cold. cold At the font of the old oak tree, And all through the lengthened autumn night A merry song sings he, ' Re whistles a clear and merry tune ' By the sober light of the silver moon. The winds may moan With a. hollow tone All through the leaves of the rustling tree, The clouds may fly Through the deep blue sky, The flowers may droop and the brooklet sigh, - ' But never a fig cares he. Re whistles a.clear and merry tune By the sober light of the silver moon, . All through the lengthened autumn night, And never a fig cares he. There's a tiny cricket within thy heart, And a pleasant sougv - sings he; Ile "sings of the mercies and goodness of God That hourly fall upon - thee. - Let him whistle loud and clear, Never drown him in a tear; , There's darkness enough on earth, I trow, Without the gloom of a gloomy brow ; Darkness enough in the home of the poor That never comes to thy lofty door. Forth with a smile, Their woe to beguile; Forth •to lighten the heavy gloom. Forth to brighten the clouded home; Cheer up the soul that is shrouded in night; Tell it in tones of love. Of hope. on earth: and a land all bright— The land of Life and Love. And never fret, That you cannot get Just what you want %%bile you travel bore. This is not your lasting sphere; Trials, exations, Are but temptations; Use them:aright, and they'll help you along In the narrow road That leads to t+od. Use them aright, and they'll help you along. Never fret You'll conquer yet. Then let Lim whistle loud and clear, Never drown him in a tear, But all through the length of trouble's night, Let him sing his Merry song.. Sclect A Marvelous Story of a Picture. 'An original picture of Charles 1., which was supposed to have been lost in the time of the Commonwealth, when, to prevent discovery of the portrait.. they reduced it in size by cutting it, has been found in Barnstable. It was painted by Vandyck in 1640, when the king was forty years of age. one"year• before the painter died. This painting had, fora great many years, been thrown about as valueless ; It'was so black - it could scarcely be perceived 'what it represented, and the frame was so rot ten that it broke away as it hung: For the 'la'st-ten years it was in the possession of Mr. Ward. at the Seven Stars, Anchor Lane, and when he left the house and sold off, Mr. W. Lewis, furniture broker, Silver street, bought it and took it home. It was thrown about for a long time under a heap of rubbish .: at last it was picked up and ordered to be with a scrubbing-brush, and when done it was hung up in his ware-rooms to dry. Several people passed and re-passed, who asked the price of it; but thought tifey would consider the matter. At last Mr. Taylor saw.it and bought it for 2s. Within a week he was offered £2O for it. That gave Mr. Taylor an idea of the value of it. He then took it to the National Gallery, to know if there was such a painting m;ssing, and had answer that there was, but :finding that it had to go through a process to bring-it there, he returned to Barnstable :again with it,!and since that he has been offered as much as £2,000. But it is considered worth £20,- 000, being one of the most valuable paintings known. A. HORRIBLE MEAT STORY-GIBBS THE Pm nym named ;John Jenkins was tried in New York city last week, for selling "Plat ed Veal." The Witness in the case described 4 'plated veal" to be manufactured by putting apiece of fat pork where the kidney ought to be, in calves so yount , or starved that from them you could not get fat enough to grease a jack knife with. Some butchers call it "bob veal." Jenkins was found guilty and fined $lO. But the most interesting part of the trial was the evidence of one George Pessinger, who said, under oath : "I can produce a woman in Wil liamsburg that cosked steaks from the thigh of the pirate Gibbs, who was hung, and people ate and pronounced them the finest they ever ate, being under the4rnpression that it was the flesh of an animal." Pessinger said it was at a hotel in the Bowery, kept by the husband of the woman referred . to, at an affair called a "Tackle," in which every person participating contributed some article of food to be prepared for the dinner. This place was a resort for medical students, and the body of - Gibbs having been handed over to the medical faculty for dissection, a wag of a student conceived the idea Of playing ow a joke upon the participants at the "Tackle." He accordingly procured some slices of the remains of the pirate, which were cooked and passed off as the flesh of some ani mal —those who partook pronouncing it most delicious. JAPAN' STEEL—When Commodore Perry Ciii7iit - TVlllialiTCbtoliel - tOlt, - 6f i - stot fame, sent out by him-about fourteen hundred dol lars' worth of his improved firearms, to be dis tributed as presents to the Japanese Officials. In return, the Emperor sent him several very old-fashioned. clumsy looking, but curiously mounted and finished arquebu , :es, or wall guns, -- and- several—six-m . ls_ _The__Commodore_ states that' the Japan blade is, equal if not superior to the celebrated Damascus blade. with which a man's leg could be sliced off like a cucumber. (1 - At a social party one evening the ques tion was' put "w hat is Icligiou ?" "Religion," replied one of the party, —religion k au insu rance against fire in the next world, for which honesty is the best policy." ir,a - A fresh crater has recently opened in Mt. Ve4nrius, from which an eruption 1, looked for, - on account of the threatening, wspeci, of the .3, Sandhi 31m5painr----Vtuntrb :qgrirultrar, litrrnturr, arts nu ,frinurs, JrX 31 1 -firkrtg, &Nitta Ilumrstir nub . Arrigu 3utrlligrurt, 3burriising, r.autnsrmtitt, skt. Mil Tffrfl a-rtittes-Mother. It Was the fate of the father of Lamartine, the great living French poet and orator, to be mixed up with the first French Revolution. During the stormy period, he, with a great number of his compatriots, was immured in prison at Macon. He was not there long, - be 7 fore his wife, and her child, took lodgings op osite the window of the cell which enclosed the repu lican. e soon rew Its attention to herself and his child, which though he could not speak to her for fear of the sentinel, recon ciled)iim in some measure to his captivity, and lessened the burden of his woes. ""My moth er," says Lamartine, “carried me every day in her arms to the garret window, showed me to ma father, gave me nourishment before him, made me stretch out my little hands towards the bars of his prison, then pressing my fore head to her breast, she almost devoured rue with kisses in the sight of the prisoner, and seemed - thus to waft him mentally all the car- esses which she lavished on me." At last she hit on the happy expedient of conveying him letters in the following manner:—She procur ed a bow and some arrows, and tying a letter to a thread, she shot the arrow, to which was attached to the other end of the thread, into the window - of the prisoner's cell. In this way she sent him pens, ink and paper. He, then, by the same ingenius expedient, sent love-let ters to her. Thus the separated husband and wife were enabled to correspond, to cheer each other's hopes, and sustain each other in their misfortunes. This was all done at night time, when the scrutinizing eyes of the sentinels re mained in happy ignorance of the medium of communication.. Success having inspired cour age, the lady,-with the assistance of the arrow and. thread, afterwards conveyed a file. to the captive, with which he silently filed through one of the bars of his prison, and then restored it to its place. On the next evening, when there was no moonlight, a stout cord was fast ened to the thread and transmitted to the pris oner.—The rope was firmly fastened on the one end to a beam in the garret of the lady,' and the other end to the bars of the cell ; then, summoning up all his courage, the prisoner glided along the rope, above the heads of the sentinels ; he cressed the street, and found himself in the arms of his wife and beside the cradle of his child. Such an adventure requir ed the hero's courage and the philosopher's caution, none but those who were personally interested in it can ever imagine the feelings which must have agitated their hearts ! From time to time, when the night was dark, the knotted cord would glide from window to win dow,' and the prisoner would,pass from knot to knot, and enjoy delightful- hours of converse with her whom he loved best on earth. Schamyl, the Circassian Chief, and-his Schamyl has recently been rejoiced by the return of his son, who, eleven years ago, when of tender age, was taken prisoner by the Rus sians. Since then Schamyl had not heard of the boy, and long ago gave Jahn up for lost. It appears. however, that when - lie was captur ed, the Russian general; Prince Woronzoff, sent him to St. Petersburg, where the late Emperor took a liking to the lad, and it happened last year that Schamyl, in sonic sudden surprise, took several Russian ladies prisoners, amongst whom was the Princess Techarawaddy. The Governor-General of Tiflis sent a flag of truce to demand the release, offering a large sum of money, and the liberty of several Circassian ladies who had been made prisoners by the Russians. But Schamyl replied that if his son were alive, and the Russians would restore him, he . would release all the lady captiiTs. The Emperor Nicholas sent for young Schamyl, and the exchange took place in the end of Jan uary. Young Schamyl has returned to his overjoyed father an accomplishea cavalier, with a comparatively civilized education. The fol lowing is related by one of the Prussian officers of the 6th Cuirassiers, (Emperor of Russia,) who were sent, in the year 1842, to St. Peters burg as a deputation from the regiment, to con gratulate the Czar on his having been five-and twenty years colonel of that corps. Nicholas. who received the officers with marked distinc tion, took them, in person, to inspect his differ ent military establishments, and amongst oth ers, to the School for Cadets, where all the lads were drawn up in the long hall. The Emper or, closely followed by the Prussian officers, walked down the line, when he suddenly stop ped before one of the youngest cadets, patted his cheeks with both hands, and then lifting him up, ki.q,sedhnn most affectionately. Then turn ing to the Prtissiiins, he said, "Gentlemen, you will never guess who this lad is. lie is the son of my most hitter enemy, the Circassian chief tain, Schamyl. who has placed him under my care Thr his education." LEGISLATIVE Stmool.uurs.—At the closing session of the late Louisiana Legislature, in the evening, the members amused themselves 14 rolling the stationery and documents into balls and pelting each other, not sparing the speak er and clerks. Having used up the lighter materials, they threw volumes of books across the house, and whenever a head was hit there was uproarious laughter. In the course of the night they sang strange songs, and, by the help of a negro with a cracked fiddle, got up a ...stag dance.'' The confusion grew worse till mid night, when they adjourned. A member said the only trouble was, they were all drunk three hours too soon. AGE - OF THE - WOE I.D. —Sir Charles Lvell, the eminent English Geologist, believes" that it must have taken 67,000 years to form the delta of the Mississippi, and 35,000 years for the Niagara river to Corm its present channel from the Falls to Queenstown. Nearly all the eminent geologists believe this, and they con . 'der-tlter-have-facts-txr-provtr-itTSO-ShunE, that they cannot be gainsayed. A Got.DEN Cow.—A Devon cow in Lafayette township, New Jersey, in fourteen days yield ed 684 pounds of n, ilk, from which 31.) pounds of butter were made. This is an average of 49 pounds of milk a day. It is expected, when grass cafi — be slie will exceed the above. IMPOIITED SNAKES I'S' UNCLE SAM'S POSSES- In the 31st of March, two boa con -trie tors. one alive and the other dead, were found in, the calar of the oldcustom house in Phila delphia. The live one was about six feet in length, and was immediately killed. flow these reptiles came in such a place is a mystety. ryTbere is a very general complaint in Louisiana of the prospects of the sugar crop. Heavy frosts, cold weather and the absence of rain, have seriously affected the eaue. Son ° GETTYSBURG, PA.: MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1855. Ite - Sense - of - Strstice The boys attending one of our public schools, of the average age of seven years, bad, in their play of bat and ball, broken one of the neigh bor's windows : but no clew to the offender could be obtained.. as he would not confess, nor would any of his associates expose . The case troubled the. governess, and on the occasion of a I t e school she privately and briefly stated the circumstance, and wished him, in -- -some remarks to the school, to advert to - the principle involved in the case.. 1 _ The address to the schoolliad• reference, principally, to the conduct of boys in the streets and in their. sports. The principles of recti tude and kindness which should govern them everywhere—even when alone, and when they thought no eye could see, and there was no one present to observe. The school seemed deeply interested in the remarks. , A v_ery shor_t_titne aft er_the_iisitorift_the_j school, a little boy arose in his seat, and said: 1 11.1iss'L—, I batted the ball that broke Air. L—'s window. Another boy threw the ball, and [ batted it anti struck the window. I am willing to pay for'it." , There was a deathlike silence in the school as the boy was speaking, and it continued a minute after he had closed. "But it won't be -right for .to pay the whole for the glass," said another boy, rising in his seat, "all of us that were playing should pay something, because we were all engaged alike in the play ; 111 pay my par . :, !" "And L" “And I.” A thrill of pleasure seemed to run through the school at this display of correct feeling.— The teacher's heart was touched, and she felt more than ever the responsibility. of her charge. ]Mason and Dixon's Line. What was the origin of it ? We hear it.fre quently-splcen of as connected with slavery, and as originally relating to that subject. Nothing can be further from the truth ; at the time that line was established, slavery existed on both sides of it. •A brief account of its or igin may be of some interest. As early as the year 1682, a dispute arose between William Penn and Lord'Baltimore respecting the con struction of their—respective grants, of what now form the States of Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland. Lord Baltimore claimed to and included the 40th degree of north latitude; and William Penn mildly, yet firmly, resisted the -claim. The debatable land was one de gree of 69 miles on south of Pennsylvania ; and extended west as far- as the State itself. The matter was finally brought into, the Court of- Chancery in England, and after tedious delays, an the_lsth day_ of May, 1750,_ Lord Chancellor Hardwick made a decree, awarding costs ird Baltimore, and directing that commissioners should be appointed to mark the boundaries between the two parties. The Commissioners appointed met at New Castle on the 15th day of November, 1755, and not being able to agree, separated. After a fur ther litigation and delay, the ,whole matter was settled by the mutual agreement between the surviving heirs of the original litigants. Tn the year 1761, Mr. Charles Mason, of the Royal ObSetratory, was sent to Pennsylvania, with all the needful astronomical instruments to measure a degree of latitude. That duty he performed, and a report of his proceedings was made to the Royal Society of London, ter, the year 1767. This Mr. Mason and Jeremiah Dixon were appointed to tun the line in dis pute. which appears to have.been done in con formity with the Lord Chancellor's decree. This is the famous ''Mason and Dixon's and the boundary between Pennsylvania on the south and Maryland on - the north. Any one desirous of more detailed information will find it in Douglas' History of America, published in Boston in 1751 ; Proud's History of Penn sylvania, the *emoirs of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, and 1 Vesay's Reports, 352. Penn., Lord Baltimore. Little did the actors in this matter think that in after times, the line estalAished with so much trouble and ex pense, would ever be connected with a subject calculated to shake a great nation to its centre. APOLOGY TO "OLD Ntcnot.As."—Rowland Hill. the eccentric clergyman, was always ex cessively annoyed at the least noise when lie was preaching. In the middle of his discourse one Sunday there was a commotion in the gal lery, whereupon Mr. Hill called out—" What's the matter there?- The devil seems to have got among you ?" A plain country-looking man immediately started to his feet, and ad dressing Mr. Hill in' reply, said: "No, sir, it aren't the devil as is doing it ; it's a fat woman wot's fainted ; and she's a werry fat 'tin, sir, as don't seem likely to come to again in a hurry." "Oh, thht's it, is it 4" observed Mr. Hill, drawing his hand across his chin ; "then I beg the lady's pardon—and the devil's, too." 1 2:7-"What is chew bread, aunt ?" said Tke, who was reading the Bible consecutively, and tearing out the leaves as l►e went. along, so as not to lose the place. "Why, Isaac," said Mrs. Partington, "shoe bread is that, which people ea► n by making shoes. There is plenty of it in Lynn." ii - " Margery. what did you do with that tallow Air. Jones greased his bouts with this morning ?" "•Please, warm, I baked the griddle cakes with it." "Lucky you did, Miss, I thought you had wasted it." Rather a nice arrangement. ..r.73lrs. &Dikes says the reason children are so bad this generation, is owing to the wearing of gaiter shoes, instead of the old I fashioned slippers. Mothers find it too much trouble to n e_gaiktrsso_syhip_cbildren,_so_ I they go unpunished ; but when she was a child, the way the old slipper used to do its duty ' was a caution. ri Greek, according to Dr. Baird, is not to be classed among the dead languages; as the language of the modern Greeks differs no more -titat spoken-in the_ time of )cratts, than the English spoken in the present day differs from that of Spenser, or his coternporaries. ,117 - A distinguished Parisian physic - ian wines to a friend in the West, who is in deli cate health :—"Talie to yourself a young. healthy, virtuous. and amiable wife: It will do you -more good in one winter than all the mineral water in America for twenty years." A comicAi. ScENs.—A tall ladder leaning against a buuse---a negro at the top, and. a hog scratching himself against the bottom. • 'way --g'way dar ! Your "TEETH IS MIGHTY, AND WILL PREVAIL." To Restrain the Sale of Intoxicating Liquors. 2. SECTION I. Be it etinaled, P., That frOm and after the first day of October next, it shall be unlawful to keep or maintain any house, room or place where vinous, - spirituous, malt or brewed liquors, or any admixtures thereof, Pr* cold and crcPpt, os biovinnitor vided :, and all laws or prirfs of laws inconsis tea—vath the provisions of this act, be and the same-are hereby repealed. - Sscr. 2. That if any person or persons within this Commonwealth, shall keep for sale and sell, or in connection with any other busi ness or profitable employment give, receiving therefor any price, profit or advantage, by any measure whatever, and at the same time voluntarily afford a place or any other con venience or inducement, by which the same may be used as a beverage, any vinous, spirit uous.—tualt,or-brewed-li quor—orany whin iYt ure_ thereof, he, she or they, or any one aiding, abetting or assisting therein, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction shall be sentenced to pay a fine not exceeding fifty dollars, and undergo imprisonment not exceeding one month : and for a second or any subsequent offence, shall pay, a fine not exceed ing one hundred dollars, and undergo imprison= went not exceeding three months. SECT. 3. That if any two or more persons conspire or act. together. by which one may sell and the other provide a place or other convenience for drinkifig, with intent to evade the provisions of this . act,_ each one so offending, upon conviction, 0101 "be punished as provid ed in the second section of this act. SECT. 4. That it shall be unlawful for any person to sell, or keep for sale, any vinous, spirituous, malt or brewed liquors, or any ad mixtures thereof, in cases not hereinfore pro hibited, in a less quantity than one quart, nor without license granted by the court of quar ter sessions of the proper county. on petition presented for that purpose. to be advertised ac cording to the first section of the act of the 29th of March, 1841, supplementary to the various acts relating to tavern licenses ; but no such license shall Ue granted to other than citizens of the Unired States, of temperate habits and good repute for honesty : Provided, Tlmt no certificate shall be ,requited or published as mentioned in the' act herein referred to : Pro vided, That no license for the sale of liquors as aforesaid, shall be hereafter granted to the keeper of any hotel, inn, or tavern, restaurant; eating house,_ oyster house or cellar. theatre, or other places of entertainment, amtitranent or refreshment. SscT. 5. That the said Court, by their rules. shall fix a time at which applications for said licenses shall be heard, at which time all persons making objections shall be heard, SECT. 6. That it shall not be lawful for the clerk of said court to issue any license as aforesaid, until the applicant shall have filed the bond hereinafter required, and the certifi cate of the city receiver, or county treasurer, that the license fee has been paid to him. Swr. 7. That the appraisers .of licenses under this act shall he appointed as provided by existing laws, except: in the city of Phila delphia, where on the passage of this act, and thereafter at the beginning of every year, three reputable and temperate persons shall be ap pointed by the court-of quarter sessions to ap praise dealers in spirituous, vinous, malt or brewed liquors aforesaid, and of distillers and brewers, and to do and perform all duties now enjoined by law not inconsistent herewith and said appraisers shall be citizens of the United States. in no manner connected with, or interested in the liquor business, and shall be compensated as now provided by law. SECT. 8. That no license shall be granted without the paymert to the receiver of taxes of the city of Philadelphia, and to the treasurers of the other counties of the State for the use of the Commonwealth, three times the amount now fixed by law to be paid by venders of spirituous, vinous, or malt liquois, or brewers and distillers: Provided, That, no license shall be granted I . OT a less-sum than thirty dollars. Src'r. 9. That the bond required to he taken of all persons who shall receive a license to sell spirituous, vinous, malt, or brewed liquors, or any admixtures thereof, hall bti in one thous sand. dollars, conditioned for the faithful ob servance of nil the laws of this Commonwealth relating to the business of vending such li quors, with two sufficient sureties and war rant of Attorney to confess judgment ; which bond shall be npprored by one of the judges of he court of quarter sessions of the peace of the proper county, and to he filed in said court ; and whenever any forfeiture or fine shall have been recovered against the principal therein, it shall be lawful for the district attorney of the propel county, to enter judgn►ent against the obligors in said bond, and proceed to col lect the same off the said principal or sureties. Sscr. 10. That every person licensed to sell spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors as aforesaid, sha IT frame his license under glass, and place the same so that it may at all times be conspicuous in his chief place of making sales ; and no license shall authorize sales by any person who shall neglect this requirement nor shall any license authorize the sale of any spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors on Sunday. Sixtr. 11. That any sale made of any spirituous, vinous or malt, liquors contrary to this act, shall be taken to be a misden►ca nor, and upon conviction of the offence in the court of quarter sessions of the proper county, shall be punished in the manner prescribed by the second section of this SEG-r. 12. That the provisions of. this act, as to appraisement and license, shall not ex tend to importers who shall vend or dispose of said liquors in the original eases or packages as imported, nor to duly _commissioned auc -tioneers seltiog--at-padic. , _v_tudue-ox-entery nor to brewers or distillers selling in quanti• ties not less than five gallons, nor shall any thing herein contained prohibit the sale by druggists of any admixtures of intoxicating liquors as medicines. Sec-r. 13. 1 hat it Shall he the duty of every cons ta-ble-of-every-to rnughT-townnhi-per ward withinthis - Commonweal th; at - every term of the mit tof q 'tarter sessions of each respective county, to make return on oath or affirmation, whether within his knowledge there is any place within his bath wick, kept and main tained in violation of this act; and it shall be the especial duty of the judges of the said courts to see that this return is faithfully made ; and if any person shall make known to such con stable the name or names of any one who shall lave violated this act, with the names of wit nesses who can prove the fact, it shall be his duty to make return thereof on oath or affirma tion to the court, and upon his wilful failure ()Ao-do.-he—sha4l-be-Acemed g1.14y, demeanor, and upon indictment ind,conviction. shall be sentenced to imprisonment in the jail of the county for a period not less than e, nor more than three months, and pay ta Tine not exceeding fifty dollars. .. SECT-15. Iliat-this act .shalLnot int erfere with any persons bolding a license heretofore granted, until the time for which the same was 11 have _ piredl - nor - shall - any licenseswhich may be granted beforeKtlie first day 9f July next, authorize the sere of said ligners, or any admixtures thercof..after the first day of October next, contrary to the pro visions of this act. Mules and Their Treatment. ' The Mule is one of the indispensables of a cotton plantation. He pasts less, consumes less, works better and lasts longer than the horse. Everything dint' concerns - tho• Mule, orejs_of_intexest_to_the_cotton—planter We present our readers below with two articles on the subject, the first is a communication from Mark R. Cockrill, of Tenn., to the Louis .eille Journal; the other is a contribution to our own columns from the pen of our friend. Rusti cus, who,' though under his twin me de plume, has not so much celebrity as M. Cockrill, is, like that gentleman, an intelligent and practi cal planter. We commend both articles to the consideration of our tendera, as embodying suggestions of interest and value. Mr. Cockrill writes, principally, on the se lection of Mules, and says The mule is the great field laborer in the commanding staples of the South, cotton, su gar, and rice ; and as_he is one of __the _annual exports of 'Tennessee, and as he will continue to be so, he is destined to hold even . a higher position than heretofore among the live-stock of the State. Jacks of excessive heavy Wm, or improper pampering, are generally lazy, or soon become so by labor, and become .very slow : their driver may force them on, but in a few steps they take their slow natural steps again. Such mules are therefore almost worth less, and should not be bred Wit can be avoid ed. The most perfect are not to be expected from the excessively large coarse-boned jacks, or excessive high feeding, but from the laws of nature carried out to 'the greatest perfection by skillful breeding and feeding. An error has existed for many years, and stilt exists. concerning the size of mules. Size has been made a measure of value in the mule, almost regardless of form-and spirit, -and-so--it has- been in their sire, the jack. I have been employing mule teams for twen ty-five years in the' cultivation of cotton in Mississippi, and my teams now number one hundred. - In this time I have used every va riety of the mule (except the most inferior kind) . that has ever been grown. At the commencement of planting operations, I adopted-the prevalent error, that- size was the measure of value, and pursued it for many years, much to My prejudice. By long trial, • and by comparing the relative performance:4 and lastingness of the large teams which I have Used, aided by observation and reflec tion. I ant fully satisfied that the medium sized mule, full of .apirit and action.; with a neat firm- leg and a round body, with his levers set right for easy motion, his •head and cars up, ready to move at the word, is the animal of most value of this kind. The laws of nature cannot be violated with ' impunity. The jack, when grown within the scope of these laws, is a small animal. The mule is a medium between the jack and the horse. Both the jack and the triu!e by a hot bed growth may, be forced to be large animals, But in this forcing process, now more exten sively pursued by KentuOky than any other State,-what has been gained, and what lost They have gained large hone, coarse animals of large size, and at nn early age fUll of defects. and soon ready to decay, because subject to disease and large consumers of food.' They. have lost symmetry, spirit, action, lasting endurance, and permanent value. • The 'error that I especially aim at, is the abandonment of almost everything else for size. The best combination of the requisite qualities in the mule is not found in the production of a hot-bed policy, which, by constant feeding, with everything that will hasten growth; brings out a large, coarse, forced, overgrown, awkward animal, who decays as fast as he has been grown. When he is designed for the valleys of the southern rivers, where his ser vice is active and his rations not very select, he wants more game, more spirit and action, more symmetry and not too much size. hence our Tennessee mules, the produce of spirited jacks, are really more valuable to the southern planters than the produce of- Kentucky under her present system. This no doubt to some extent is the fault of the purchasers, South, who have not generally discovered their error. They demand large sizes, and pay in proportion to size ; and this in pan explains the policy of Kentucky. My opinion is, that size in a mule is nothing after they reach fifteen hands high. and" that many under that height come up to the standard val ue, fitted for cotton plantations. • When compared to the blood horse, the mule' is unfit for the saddle, pleasure carriage, or any harness requiring rapid motion. His sire is an -animal of slothful tendencies, of slow motion generally. and. hence the necessity to improving this quality - in the jack. Give him spirit adaction, and stamina rather than great height. One conforms to the laws of nature. and the other violates them. ' - The Spanish and Maltese jacks have spirit generally, and for that reason are valuable as a cross : but. they come to us without stamina, and with a'contracted chest. These faults must be remedied by proper crossing. before they will produce the mule best suited for us. not froth hear-say. I have purchased and grown all the mules which I have driven for twenty-five years in Mississippi. I have had an opportunity of knowing what they have done, and these opinions are the result of perienee. This knowledge would have been -of-service-to--me-in-the-commencement_of_ business.--and-I--communicate-it-for my the -benefit of those_ wtio may adopt my opinion hereafter. 31.Aus. R. COMMA,. Nashville, Tenn., 1854. I We append the corutuu►,ication from our own correspondent : . SELECTION OF I'iITLES. A medium sized, compact mule, possessing a broad chest, deep flank, and flat boiled legS, is preferable for all plantation work. It will plow as 'much, draw as much, keep in better uniform condition, preserve its symthetry of figure much longer, and, in short, be more ac tive and energetic, than one smaller or larger. TWO DOLLARS A-YEAIL . NT-11+: a horse, is more apt to move too fast thin..i.* slow. and hence balking is rare in handling, young mules. In harnessing a racing mule •„, for the purpose of breaking it, it is necessary to secure it with good strong ropes, as if it once gets loose, it will not: foget_it.,_ and make ref_• peated efforts to effect its escape. Gentle treat-' ment and kind words accomplish more Than , -harsh *lig - lig - 0T - and care should be observed . against the chains becoming entangled about• its legs; as it begets a habit of kicking, and - permanent injury is often inflicted. All strik- ing about the head should be.avoided, as apart from any damage that may ensue, it renders a mule foolish about'bridling it and consider- , able loss of time is afterwards experienced ; care should be observed* in the first attempt to, • ride it. 'Two or more hands should attend it., , ' and the rider shoUld mount quickly and main tain his hold, if possible, as if he ,is once throWn off, the mule becomes more restless, d----will—redoubter-its7-eltortsLTagaiust—being ,E ridden. Carelessitess or; ,cowardice, •in this : respect., , often renders a mule objectionable for, plants,- tion purposes, as it haS to be led to.end from the field, and, will not permit ; any burden to, be placed on its back.. It is bettcr to break a , mule to a wagon.rather than :a-p)ow,:for eral reasons. ft can be secured.. and,,sti. the same time, be allowed more freedom. erne:. Lion, as it. is - d illicult to carry, the wagon :And team -in its efforts to run.: It is' sooner quieted',„ ; • by the conduct of 'the remaining mules and' more readily adapts itself-to , their uniform ) . speed.. It ;earns to pull more steady,from fact of there being fewer stoppages than. With, the plow. When the plow hangs against a met or stump, the mule is made to halt and back,. for the purpose of extricating it,.and.aCquires the habit , of 'stopping whenever. the' wheels of. the wagon strike any obstacle, and the,pell becomes heavier than usual: - and thus renders, „; the labor greater on the other- portion .of .; team.. 'When broke. to the wagon, where these,,, 4 ,, stoppages are less frequent, it learns to . pit,ll.- more uniformly, and exerts- its strength witla o ,,; more certainty, when occasion requires it s '.3lisery loves company," and all young mules work better with others than alone,. and are much. easier broken. G.EI§IBRAL AFTER T nEATMENT .— MuIes should be stabled in preference to' standing. under -a shelter, which is no better than an -open lot. All experience teaches that animals,-well lifP• tected front:the weather, thrive, better, live, en., l rditi food, work better, and are hetter calculated to endure 'hardship and "fatigue thin,. those, that receive. but little attention in the way of , comfort." When compelled- to. stand under, a shelter and eat . at a common /rough, the. weak: and. timid are imposed on by the:stronger,,(ax among mules,. "might makes, right") driven from beneath the shelter anilaivay, from the.. . trough, and, consequently, become- KOHN!, '.,, and look badly. If a mule is fatignedand,6o,,,-, disposed to eat as soon as it is turned into the , lot, it loses all opportunity of eating afterwards,,,., as the other mules wile ba,apt, to consume , 'the provisions. ' These reasons, in additiOn.t& exposure to all kinds of weather, rendert; sbel ter very objectionable. When stabled, . these-, objections are overcome. Each Mule has. its stall ;'and_if one goes into - .the stable, fatigued. ; it reposes quietly tilldictated. by.its :appetite.; to eat, and receives . fewer kicks and bruises ' after working all day, freedom of action insure& rest much quicker thanconfinement,and,lience.. mules should be provided with, largo stalls ,(77 by 9 feet) -and not be. haltered, unless prove refractory and spiteful as, this seldom ; extends beyond one or, n two in umber, 'they should be haltered. Strict. attention inuntbe paid to currying and rubbing mules,, while tivating the crop, particUlarly, and thiashoulil always be done before they eat. When they, come in, from: the ,field..like men„ swirl& lalbor s , they feel disposed to rest awhile and caol',be.! fore eating. 'this result. is quiCkened , by aura ' Tying and rubbing them well. and they a much better condition to receive their,food. than when suffered. to remain,heated and wet . with perspiration, and cool,by , gradual evapo-,- ratioti. They should .be well., curried and , rubbed twice during the day, and, in no in stance, should the hands be allowed• to attend '. anything before the mules. Attention must be observed to-collars and harness. in order ,to prevent their shoulders and backs being galled, and the hair rubbed off their, sides and legs.".. The blinds of bridles (when used) must -be no a - ticed closely, or injury may be done to their eyes. When a portion only of the mules are at work, and it becomes necessary to change and. rest them, the change should be made at the dinner hour. If it is made, early - in the, morning, the mules are necessarily compelled, to work all day, with an intermission only of„ an hour or_ two - at dinner time. When made at 12 o'clock, they work during the, evening, . rest through the night and proceed till 12.. o'clock, next day. In this way, they will stand' a press much better. Salt and ashes should be kept in their troughs continually. Instinct dictates the amount of salt they shall consume, and, when supplied only at stated periods. - they may require it before they get,it. The-3 ashes are an alkali—they prevent colic. in a great measure, and give tone to the. stomach. Poplar poles (green,) thrown into the lot during spring, serve to stimulate their appetite and act. as a tonic. Resin pounded and given in- the proportion of a teaspoon full - to each mule, 'weekly during the nanith of February or March, acts upon the kidueys--opens the pores of the skin, and makes them shed kind- , ly and early: Give it in-meal or mix it with salt and ashes. A teaspoonfull of copperas given occasionally, in the same way, acts as a tonic and vermifuge. ..When working to the wagon, similar rules should be observed. Each plow hand should be supplied with a curry-comb and rubbing , chat', and-it--is-ecoreaniy-to---purchase--the-best----:----- curry-comb the market affords._ Soil 'f the South:]' SPLENDID HOTEL BUILT FROM BRANDRETR'S PILL§.--A large and handsome first class hotel of brown stone, splendidly furnished, owned and-built by the-famous pill maker, -Dr. Bran d reth was-opened-last- week-in-New -York.= It_ is situated at the corner of Broadvray and Ca nal street. The Doctor has sickened millions of people in his day, but we presume the new - eating shop is to be conducted on the opposite plan. The hotel is cal led the Brandreth House, which name will afford the guests airuitful subject fur jokes for some time. rr The intimation that Sebastopol is mined, and ready to-be:blown up when the allies en ter, is probably without truth, as the city ill Wilt almost entirely upon solid rock. The - , women have all left the city. NO. 30. RusTrcusr ES