EIC2 Allentown, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1849. Circulation near fl'ooo. V. B. PALMER, Esq., N. W. corner of Third and Chesnut streets, Philadelphia, and 169 NaS sau street, (Tribune Buildings,) New York, is our authorized Agent for receiving advertise. ments and subscriptions to the tehigh Register and collecting and receipting for the same. New Post Offices -``The Post Master General has established among others the following Post Offices in Le high 'county, to wit:— . 4/eicnsack, in Upper Milford township; and DOid Gc4nian, Esq., appointed Post Master' Saigersciffe, in Heidelberg township, and Pe ter U p ., Esq., appointed Post Nlaster. ..alechanicsboro, in South Whitehall township, and A. J. Scagreaves, Esq., appointed Post Master.• The office at Ruchsville, in North Whitehall, and Stahler's in Upper Milford, were discontin ued. The office at Germansville in Heidel berg, was again remoi•ed to the old place at Saegersville, in said township. Public Schools The opening of the four• male and four fe male Schools commenced on Monday the 3d instant, and on Monday last, the 10th instant, two additional female Schools were opened, so that wo have now in 'successful operation six female and four male Schools. The south west School house, is occupied by Mr. Good and Mr: Slemmer, and by Miss McKee, bliss Spinner, Miss Kemmdrer, and Miss Ilaberack er. Tho north east School house is occupied by Mr. Moss and Mr. Valkenburg ; and by Miss Young and Miss Reeser. One morAnale school is yet required, and we trust arrangements will be made by the enter prising Directors to that effect. We would sug,- gest the appointment of a general superintendant of the Schools. We are far behind the progres sive spirit of the times in this important 'natter. In all the larger towns inrthe State this is done, and we have no doubt if the Directors would, move in this matter, it would meet the approba tion of all the Mends of common School educa- Telegraph Company. At a meeting of the "Philadelphia and Wilkesbarre Telegraph Company," held at Doylestown, Bucks county, at the house of Mr. Lewis Appel, on Tuesday the 4th instant, for the .purpoSe of electing officers of the company for the ensuing year, to wit:— President, George H. Hart, Esq., of Philadel phia ; Treasurer, John Titus, Esq., of Philalel phia; Secretary, C. H. Samson, of Allentown; Directors, J. G. Fell, of Philadelphia, C. E. Dubois, of Doylestown, Wm. Firmston, of Easton, C. R. Heber, of Nuzareth,P. H. Gwpp, of Bethlehem, Eli J. Saeger, of Allentown, D. Thomas, of Craneville, Asa Packer, of Mauch Chunk, A. Pardee, of Hazleton and H. M. Ful ler, of Wilkesbarre. There will be offices established at each of the places indicated us residences of directors. A meeting of the directors of the Company will be held at the house of L. Appel, in Doylestown, on Thursday the 13th inst., to establish the rate of charges, and make other necessary arrange ments for the prosecution of the work. We shall now soon be . itr. the receipt of Telegraphic despatches, from all parts of the United States. Musk Melo n How fortunate! Who would not be a printer! Again we have to record the receipt of an enor mous Musk.mcfon, neatly packed in a box and received by Stage from our much respected friend James A. Rice, Esq., of Bethlehem. Wo invited a nutnber of our neighbors to partake of the melon, and they With us pro. —notinced it of a most delicious flavor. The lit tle devils in the office too were in extacies, 'and the onslaught they made upon the men• ater, was a "caution to Moses." Indeed it was one of the melims, and we challenge, not Bethlehem and Allentown, but the whole State to beat it. Our friend calls it a real "ThYor 11/rfort" and says it is the second largest one of 9, the gross weight of which was 99 pounds. The largest weighing 15 pounds • 1 ounce, the one received by us, weighed 113 - pounds and measured two feet eleven inches in circumference. The seed was obtained by our friend from the West Indies. We haim not the least - doubt but what these melons would have taken the premium at the Hor ticultural exhibition at Philadelphia, had they been presented. llow about those fine Peach es, Grapes, &c., friend James? The Crops. • -The farmers of Lehigh county, have the present season been favored with most excel lent crops thus far, and from present Cppearan zoo' the corn crop promises to be quite a full one. The potato crop will also be an abund ' ant one. 'ln some sections however, the corn and potatoes have suffered severely from dniught, Particularly in the counties oftaneas ter, Dauphin, &c. In Lehigh we have reason to be thankful to the ."glorious Giver of all things" for the many blessings he has seen fit • to bestow upon us. • ( . 114-Aaturtlay last, a young man nanied Au , gattus 4 Gassier, who was in the act of whip ' pirig . antulQ? by 'some misstep fell into theca-- mbar Ettlttpn and drowned. Ile was brought • up to East Allitntown, where his body was inter ' 'red the follortAng Sunday. The funeral was at • tended by a lat concourse of friends and ac quaintances. f was only 18 years of age. lIE RIMIZSIM President Taylor arrived in New York on Fiiday last, at an;. early hour, and after .tak ing breakfast at a private mansion, left. that City itt the 9, o'clock train - for Philadelphia. A telegraphic deiipittcVVras ittimediately sent to Philadelpbja, that the General was corning During the morning Mr: Meredith and Mr. Reverdy Johnson proceeded up the Delaware in the Steamer "State Rights" for the purpose of receiving him, and as they returned, the Steamer passed along the wharves, as far down as the Navy Yard, the General standing upon the Upper deck. The crowd was immense, and wherever he could be-seen, cheer upon cheer rose from the air. The "Robert Morris" which was ready to receive the President, was boarded by tile Committee from the Councils, and Benjamin Gerhard, Esq., as,Chairman re ceived and addressed the President as fol- lows: "We are a committee of the Councils oJI Philadelphia, who, were appointed in their names, and ht the names of their fellow cit- , izens, to tender to you the hospitalities of the city, and invite you to become its guest. We regret that you were unable to accept our' invitation, from our desire to have you among us; but we regret this refusal the more, from the cause of it. We hope that on your return to Washington City, rest will soon re store you to health, and that you will then af ' ford us another opportunity of receiving you as a guest—a respect and honor which we were desirous to show you as your sincere friends, and as a duty which we owe to the Chief Magistrate of the Nation." Drowned Movements of Gen. Taylor The crowd about the President was so great, that Mr. Gerhard could speak only a few : words, and in reply to his remarks, the President spoke in substance as follows: "I thank you, sir, and the gentlemen of the committee,. and the City Councils, for the kind ness yon have expressed to me. It would have given me great pleaithe to have visited Jut r honored city—a city, too, which f:ptrfiot for get has, in an especial manner /honored me. 1 hope, sir, that I shall be et7bled to visit Phil adelphia upon another au. au early occasion, and regret my present inzanlity to do so." The interchange of eotirtesies was necessarily very brief, and after the Committee •had per formed its duty and left the boat, the Reber Morris sped on her way to New Castle. Flattery—" Soft There are as many ways of operating upon the minds and spirits of men, as there is vari• ely of human mind itself. Among no class of men is there a greater variety of talent, or more inienuity displayed in working upon the feel ings and prejudices of men, than among poli• ticians. We are sometimes amused and at other times disgusted with the simple man reuvering resorted to in trying to fire the zeal of parties. Among the most insinuating and probably effective, though least philosophical and useful, is that of "flattery" or more famil iarly called "soft-soaping." It is the only kind of argument used by partizan journals and speakers, on various occasions, when directed to diStricts where the party strongly predomi nates. Instead of addressing the understanding, discussing the principles and measures which divide parties, pointing out the local and gene ral virtues of the dividing principles, we have a long string of flattery, only calculated to dis ease and contract the mind, instead of contrib uting to its expansion and healthy growth. Ap peals are only made to their "strength," to their "consistent party support," to their "glorious majorities," without endeavoring to give a "why or wherefure," their vote should contin no to be cast as formerly. These kind of "pus sy pussy," arguments, aro frequently very ef fective, but not the lessbaneful. We can, like all classes at lower animals, by a process of drilling and coaxing, be brought into a• certain routine of duties, but a most prominent mark of manliness that elevates us to the higher scale of being in the creation, is that power of mind to comprehend why °erections should be shaped in a certain course,—to give a rea son for performing our duty in the way we do. Adulation, intended to create a mere excitation through which an act to be performed, ape •rates only upon the lower senses, and in prinr eiple is similar to that used to control the brute creation, and has just as small elevating effect upon the minds of men, es upon animals. All that is necessary in operating with the flattery process on the voter : is a little care to not give a "surfeit" at.d to cover up any judicious appeals to their vanity. • Canadian Independence The movement says the Daily News, in be- i half of Canadian In dependence, has become more marked and open., Mr. 11. 11. Wilson, who has been for some years prominently con nected with provincial polities, has issued the prospectus of a new semi-weekly paper to he called the "Canadian Independent," which he proposes to issue at Hamilton and Toronto— chiefly designed "to promote, by peaceable r4eans, separation from the Mother Country." In Lower Canada the *HIM in favor of inde pendence is almost unanimous, and the public press has taken the lead in. its advocacy. In Upper Canada a large proportion of the inhab itants are said to entertain similar sentiments, although, hone their subserviency to party pur -1 poses, the jounials avoid the subject. The opinion is also expressed that the English Gov ernment will concede 'independence when ever it shall be asked by a majority of the =1 Inflammatory Ithemnatism.—A gentleman is Lili es us to publish the following, for the relief of suffering humanity. Ile says he..has known a number of cures by it, and all of whom within a short time: half an ounce of alum, hall an ounce of put• verized saltpetre, put iii half a pint•of sweet oil. Bathe the parts affected, when a sound cure will be speedily effectual. • • roe the Lehigh*Regtster. Difference between Wale and Fe- male Education Boys and girls,require a different treatment. This is demanded by the radical difference of the iwo sexes in their physical and psychical character, and by the different spheres of action, into which they are.called. The characteristic property of the' male is strength, that of the female quickness and ex citability of the original poWers. During the first years of existence, when the mind is al most exclusively engaged with the external world, these characteristic differences develope themselves very slightly and require no great diirersity of treatment. Generally those differ ences do not appear clearly and decidedly be- fore the seventh year. "The following contrasts show themselves gradually in the two sexes: 1. The perception of the boy is stronger and firmer ;'that of the girl more delicate and sub tile; the former accordingly forms at an early period conceptions, ideas Ste the latter is satis fied, with simple contemplations of the object; and whilst reason soon shows . her predominan cy in the former, imagination asserts her rights iu the littler. 2. The boy soon works his way to a certain de gree of independence, and tries to enforce his own will; for which reason he also becomes so easily dissatisfied, refractory, and ranitern ; the girl on the contrary is happy in relying upon the strength and wisdom of others, she submits to the force of circumstances and yields, where she meets with decision. 3. The boy is contest, perseveringand inflex ible, the gitl cheerful, candid and resigned ;he soon forms fixed inclinations, whilst she is eas ily influenced by transient impressions and changing passions. 4. The education of the boy is deeper, more solid and comprehensive; that of the girl quick ocer, but more limited ; in him we find therefore bold elevation, deep reflection, a spir it of close inqbiry, and great entequise ; in her on the other hand quirk corn prehintsion and , assimilation, a correct judgement in everything external. 5. The boy in the consciousness of his strength is generally bold, rash, noisy, imprudent and careless; the gill considerate and modest." Those radical differences in the sexes condi tion to a great degree their sphere of action— their calling in lile. Man is created for the world ; woman principally for the house. Man is called to the administration of state affairs, the investigation of the vast regions ofscience, the carrying on of commerce and trades. %Ve inal'', is the soul of the family and of the small er circles of society, the source of happiness to her husbattd,„the educator and guardian Of her children, and m this capacity she is excit ing an unbounded influence upon society in general. These considerations must necessarily deter mine the mode of proceeding in the education of the two sexes. Even in their physical train ing, the difference of their natures and their future calling should be kept in view; but much more so, in the developement of their :ninths and characters. The boy should be under strict discipline, being however made to feel, that the whole manner of treatment, be it ever so strict, is proceeding' frosn the purest motives, and the sincerest interest in his wellare. lie must be brought forward upon the theatre of life, but should be restrained, guided and guarded. The education of the beti should the beneficial influence of tlte Mother excepted be entirely in the hands of man. It is well for him to be educated in public institutions, where strict rules and order prevail and where impli cit obedience is required ; for he who has not learned to obey, will be incapable of self-gov ernment and of governing others. If this were kept in mind by parents and teachers, we should no doubt meet with fewer vain, boast ing, weak-minded and characterless spirits. In the education of girls, mildness should pre dominate ; harshness will always repulse and intimidate them. The mother is the best and most natural educator of her daughter, provid ed she possesses the requisite qualifications. Allentown, Sept. 6, 1849. K. Boatmen's Riot The sentence of the court in the•ease of the Commonwealth vs. Brelsford, Riddle, Glossier, Merwart, %Void, Johnson, and others, charged with riot on the Lehigh canal, Was of a mitiga ted character. The Commonwealth's counsel stating that the object was not to ihflict punish ment upon the offenders, so much, _as the vin dication of the violation of the law. Maxwell and Porter, for the Commonwealth, Mae, Ree der, Brown, Sitgieaves, for Defendants. The Court sentenced Thomas Brolsford, con victed on a previous indictment, and on the one under consideration, to pay a fine of E• 250, the costs of prosecution and cuter into re cognisance in the sum of $5OO with surety to keep the peace for the term of five years. Williamson Diddle and Henry Glessner, each to pay a fine of $5O, the WM* of prosecu tion, and enter into recognisance in the sum of $250, with surety to keep the peace for tire term of five years. Bernard Morwart to pay a fine of $25, to pay the costa of prosecution • atid, enter into recognisance in the 'sum of $250, with surety 'to keep the peace for the 'forte of five years. . 'Edward Ward, to pay a fine of '320 and costs of prosecution. . Thomas Johnson, alias nippy, to pay a fine of S2O and costs of prosecution. Samuel. Nixon .(colored) plead guilty to a participation in the riots and was sentenced to fifteen days imprisonment. . • John Tierney plead guilty and was ordered ,to be taken to , the House of •Refugq; John Kri.39 plead guiltflothe charge of as- . sfsting his brother to escape front prison. Sen tenced tethreo months iniprisOnment and a line of one dollar, Reported for the Register. EXtlßOdiniLTy Yield.•" Court Proceedings. Our friend, Dav id•Carlysle, Esq., of Baltimore FIRST WEEK. county, has placed in our hands a memorandum': On Thursday morning of last week, his Honor of the yield of 2 acres of land belonging to Jno. Judge Jones, appeared and took his seat upon the Fisher,•Esq., Cashier of the -Westrninster 'Debt, bench. The following cases in the sessions, Carroll county; Md., which we think has seldom were disposed of during the week. been excelled: Cornnennrowlfh vs. Solomon Seibert. Forn. and I acre of timothy weighed 5i tons and 122 Has. Defendent resisted the charge on the ground I novas. that the prosecutrix had been mistaken as to titbi t, : acre, 1 timothy, and English grass, tons time. But the Jury returned a verdict of guilty, and 6O iietuals. and sentenced the defendent to pay a sum amount- The tend wits measured by the County survey ling in gross to $.235; and the costs. I or, and the product carefully weighed the 3d day Commonwealth vs. Josiah Miller. Larceny.— after cropping. Mr. Fisher thinks that the whole The defendant was brought into court on the field of 10 acres would have • yielded a larger charge of stealing a hopple. It appeared that average product. the hopple had been taken and sold and pawned This is not the only evidence of the productive with an inkeeper fur liquor. Defendant was - ness of Mr. Fisher's farm. He. has a sow which found guilty. has had four litters, each just seven months apart, Commonwealth vs. Joseph Nonnemacher. As the smallest of which was 10, and the largest 22 sault and Battery. The defendant was charg pigs. We did not learn that the sow was of any ed by Conrad Rader, the prosecutor, of having particular breed. He has also a cow, 6 years struck him several times at a certain publi c old, which has had five calves. If any other far gathering in the country. It appears that the mer can,beat this, we should-like to hear of it.— prosecutor took occasion to tantalize the deceit- American Manner. dank by some insinuations reflecting upon'a mem ber of his family, which the defendant resented with hia,fist, and in which the prosecutor got the worst of it. The Jury returned a verdict of guil ty; and the Court sentenced the defendant to pay a fine of one cent, and the costs of prosecution. Commonwealth vs. Geo. Aud.enried. Resisting the execution of process. It appeared in evidence that Mr. Audenried was moving the goods of a certain person against whom the constable had an attachment execution. Some contention oc. cured between the defendant and the constable,but the constable did not obtain the goods. The Ju ry returned a verdict of guilty. The court sen. tenced the defendant to pay a fine of one dollar and costs of prosecution. Commonwealth vs Louisa tinaliss. Misdemea nor. The defendant was accused of having at tempted to poison a little girl and the family with which the limit girl lived. This girl was very young, not over six or seven years. It appeared from the evidence that the defendant had placed in the hands of this child a phial containing a white substance and told her to put it in her cof fee, that it would 'make it taste so good, and that the child should not tell the rest of the family. The phial was found to contain arsenic. The principle testimony was that of the child. The Jury returned a verdict of not guilty. Commonwealth vs. A. J. For. and Bas. The Jury returned a verdict—guilty of the first named offence but not of the last. Court sen tenced him to pay a fine of five dollars and costs of prosecution. Comniontecidt4 vs. Edwin Dirfendcrfur. For. and Bas., The Jury in this case returned a ver dict of guilty. The Court sentenced him to pay the usual penalty. The Cause of Hungary By the latest news from Europe, which we give in another column, it will be seen that tie Spirit of Liberty is crushed in Hungary. But as the character of the news is of such a nature, and having come to us entirely through the channels of the enemy, we are loth to believe the same to its full extent. The impression is gaining ground that Gem- gey has proved false to his country, and that Russian gold has influenced his treacherous con duct. Kossuth'it is said has fled to Turkey, this however, is unsupported, and if we mistake not, he will be more active than ever. His efficient force was 173,000, drduct Georgeys surrender of 40,000, would still leave a very efficient force of 133,000 enough to flog the Russians out of the country. The next news from Europe will per- haps give a different account. Mt us therefore hope for the best. The Cuban Expedition The United States District Attorney for the district of New York has most effectually frus: trated the intentions of parties who have been planning a secret invasion Of Cuba. The Sea ! Gull lies at anchor under the bows of the frigate North Carolina, in charge of Passed Midship• I man Spicer and a guard of marines. So soon as I storage room can be obtained, her cargo, consist ing of muskets, ammunition, etc., will be land. ed, and the vessel restored to the possession of the owners, upon their giving bond that she shall not be employed . in any illegal expedition. The steamship New Orleans is in charge of a I guard of marines, under command of Lieutenant Broome. She has on board a large quantity of bread, beans, water and coal; and on Saturday last, a very considerable number of tin pots and plates, such as are in use ilt the army, were found in the bold. It is presumed. also, that arms are concealed beneath the coal. She was completely stowed, and might have seed on any voyage at four hours' notice. T4,Ploridit has not yet been sejzed. noltlen's Dollar Magazine.— The September number of Holden's is on our table, and is iu no w•ay inferior to its former numbers. Its miscellaneous selections are of the highest or der, chaste inifinstructive. Delaware County .—The Republican states that the Commissioners of Delaware county, have divided the new town plot into lots which will be sold at public sale. The time and place, will be made known in, due time, we suppose in our ad vertising columns. The new Court House and . Jail have been contracted for at $32,000. The contractors are Messrs. Josepl*rey, John Wil liamson, and Joseph Lawson. • Good Busincsa.- 7 Doctors:fees at the mines in California, arc a hundred dollars a visit. A phy sician from Westchester, in New Yorkfitme,hits established himself on the §acratnegp!, ka', a s log: cabin, one half of which he mews:* if*, and the other as a hospital,rand, it that.,he re ceives as much gold daily as the average of twert ty miners. Franee.-- , The National Expenditure of France has bean increased 510,000,000 a year since the revolution. It is not to be wondered at, when zit° salary .pititl to the individual Louis Napoleon.is F 240,000 per annum, though the constitution lim its it to $120,000. In the course of 1848 France added Mamie two 'millions sterling to the animal cbarge or Ixer debt% S i ,Test for Good, I l imestorui. The best lime for 'agricultural purposes is that which is lightest, whitest, and softest to the touch; the purest and strongest lime is al ways found to he the lightest. ' lf, then, by calcination, limestone loses much of its weight by the process; if the lime shells are extreme ly light, and require, for slaking them fully, a large portion of water; if there are a consider able time before they begin to fall; if, during the process of burning, the limestone is not disposed to run or become vitrified;. if it in creases very much in bulk by slaking, and-the lime is of a pure white, and fine and light to the touch, it may be seq.down as very good, and should be used in preference to other lime not possessing the same qualities. AmeriCan Tobacco in England. It appears from the last returns made to the British Par liament, that there had.been imported into that Kingdom during the year 1848, of Tobacco 28,304,134 pounds—from which the Govern • mentihad derived a revenue of 4,365,238 pounds sterling, or 21;627,727 dollars. in other words, Great Britain levies a duty of between seventy nine and eighty cents per pound on our Tobac co, which, tiller a year's labor, did not yield the planter more than an average of SOME, four or live cents per pound. Excellent Whitewash The editor of the Horticulturist, in answer to the queries of a correspondent, gives the follow ing recipe for a whitewash. We have publish ed a good many recipes for this purpose, but be lieve we have never publiShed this. He recom mends it as most excellent, as a cheap and dura ble wash for wooden fences and buildings. lie thinks that it owes its durability to the white vit riol which it contains. Take a barrel and slake a bushel of freshly burned lime in it, by covering the lime with boil ing water. After it is slaked, add cold water enough to bring it to the consistence of good whitewash. Then dissolve in water, and add one pound of white vitriol (sulphrate of zinc) and one quart of fine salt. To give this wash a cream color, add one half pound of yellow ochre, in powder. To give it a fawn color, add one fourth of a pound of Indian red. To make a handsome gray stone color,. add one half pound of French blue, and I fourth pound of Indian red. A drab will be made by adding one half pound of burnt sienna, and one fourth pound of Veni tian red. For brick or stone, instead of one bushel of lime, use a half bushel of lime and half bushel of hydraulic cement.—Scienfifie Amer- MB Go/I.—The gold of California will have a great effect upon matrimony. It is.understood that the generality of young ladies now decline to en gage themselves, prefering to wait a year or two when the crowd returns from the diggins, at which time each one expects to catch a fatty thou sand dollarcr. Armbruster heard from!—We learn dial Joseph Armbruster, whose escape from our County Pri son we noticed last week ; was seen at the White House, in New Jersey, on the morning of the ad inst. • lie was clothed in nothing but his shirt and pantaloetia', having lost his hat as he jump ed out of the Jail window. 'He took the early train of cars to New York. Armbruster left a wife and several children at Mauch Chunk, who will now, probably forever, be deprived of their husband and father.—:Eastins Ark,ms. Independent City .Tickel.—We learn that , the Democrats of Philadelphia city will not run a mun icipal ticket this fall. They have resolved to hive their support to an independent tiplcit which is now being formed. Joel Jones Esq. it is under stood, will be the nominee for Mayor. lasurredion in Cuba—lt was currently reported in Havanna on the 27th of August, that St. Jago de Cuba, Trinidad, Cienfuegos, and Puerto Prin cipe, and the Unmet)'lrian regiment, on the south side of the island, are in a state of insurrection against the authorities of Cuba. How, much truth there may be in the rumor remains to be seen. Certain it is that the Cuban Government believed in them, and was preparing to meet them. Three regiments, at the'date of our infor mation, were about to march to the quarter of the reported insurrection. Convention of lkirs.—A convention is to be held at Nashville,(Tenn:)rat the troth inst., fur the purpose of examining into the claims of the descendants of Wm. Augustine Jennings, late of Virginia, as heirs to the estate of Wm. lea nings, who died intestate in. Suffolk, England, in 1799, leaving an immense property; now estima. ted at some . $40,000,000, consisting of, divers bank and other stocks, mottgages and land Prop erty, &c., still unsettled, and lying in the hands of the British Government, subject to the claim and control of the heirs. „Most of the claimants reside in l'ennespe, Mississippi, Virgjtua aid • M . " September lOtb was the anniversary of. reray's Yiewcy on Lake Due. t . , hem the. , IlirtirPfaident has - not yet recovered front fatigue rittendint upon his recent tour. He is re. ported to be very weak an 4 feeble. rarThereire only -three ways of getting out of a scrape—write out, back out, but the best way is to keep out. "'Men of thought and then of action, are not often men of great> tongue. The most profound thinkers, have been indifferent speakers. or Hon. John C. Clarke arrived in Washing. ton on Monday, to enter upon the duties of his at% ice as nest Auditor of the Treasury. rlrMarried people should study each other's weak points, as skaters look outfor weak parts; in the ice, in order to keep out of them. EV".I suppose,' saidita qttackorhile feeling the' pulse of a patient, 'that you think me a fool 1"-- Sir,' replied the'sick man, percieve you con discover a imsn's thoughts by his pulse!' IV - We love that which is natural—admire that which is acquired—and detest that which artificial. . • c 2 Many of the Methodist Episcopal Church. es in Baltimore have lately received considerac. ble accessions to theirumbms. F24Fhe Nel.e . VorkliEvening fink compote" the number of slpve•holders in the United State.l, at one hundred thousand. re - Dr. Franklin used to say that rich widows. were the . only piece of secumf-hand goods tYnu sold at prime cost. tar Two-shilling pieces, called/mins; arc now coined at the English mint. A proclamation has been issued by the Queen declaring-them a law ful tender. LT - Dr. Franklin, in speaking of education says: "If a man empties his purse into his head no one can take it from him." !'The Lehigh Herald is the . title of a new Whig paper just commenced at Allentown, by .1. D. °magnum and .Eliar Keiper. This makes the, 7th paper published' in this Borough, 4 Ger man and 3 English. L""Will the galvanic ring . cure depressiony asked a lady. "What has caused the cp plaint, mem t" asked the doctor. "The los tmy bus. mounifully replied the lady. "hen you had better get a Wedding ring, answe the doc tor. Valuable Recipes. Hunk—lf you keep your hens confined, donot neglect to provide them liberally with Meat.--IN their summer rangings, bugs, worms, grasshop pers, and flies, constitute their chief fond, and when debarred, from these, they are required to be otherwise supplied. A very remarkable in dication of the want of this species of lurid is to be seen in the avklity with Which they devour fish rad, and indeed any fleshy matter that is presen ted. When there is a scarcity of meat, as is fre quently the case at partictildi seasons of the year, we have recourse to the scaly treasnres of oqr ponds and streams and find almost excellent sub. stitute. To Cure Swelling qf Ike 'Throat i n lltigir—,Taka of Molasses one half a pint, and aiablesputinful of hog's lard; to this add of briniestunica.piece an inch in length. Melt it over the fire. and cold or in a liquid state, drench the hog with it; and nine times out of ten it will be found to have the desired effect. My hog, were affected with this disease during the past year, and I found the above to be effective when all things had fail- ed. Fotds.—A farmer may keep a hundred fowl* n his barn, may suffer themlo trample upon and destroy his mows of wheat and other grains, and still have few eggs than the cottager who keeps a single dozen, who provides secret nests, chalk eggs, pounded bricks, plenty of Indian corn, lime, water, and gravel fur them ; and who takes care that his hens are not disturbed 'about their nests. Three chalk eggs in a nest are better than a sin gle nest egg, and large eggs please them. I have often smiled to see them fondle around and lay into a nest of goose eggs. Pullets will commence laying earlier in life, where nests And eggs are plenty, and where other hens are cackling around them. Sure Cure fur the Dyseniery.—A correspondent of the Plainfield Union says, that Peach tree bark and Elder bark, of each equal quantities—the out ward bark of both to be scraped olf and thrown away, the inward bark of both to be boiled and made into a strong tea, to be drank very freely from the first stage of the complaint until cured. It will, not hurt any one to drink as freely as he can. We are informed drat the good citizens of Williams township have considerable excite ment among them, about a tremendous Snake that has his quarters. in their neighborhood. which in size and letigth, exceeds any thing of the kind that has ever been seen in this section , of country. The same snake has been seen by ten different 'individuals within (he last fifteen • years. so that it must he an old customer, grown ton very large size. We learn front a respects. ble Farmer, whose word fur truth and veracity...;; cannot be questioned, that he was ploughing in his Corn field a few weeks ago, and with the tention of finding a cool shady place, for hiswa , ter cask, he walked towards one corner of the. field, which was filled with stones nod bushes, When he came within ten feet he saw the snake moving off—its head hail already disappeared and the body, which was all coilednp on a heap. filled a piece of ground at least twelve feel in dr. cumferenie. Another gentleman, who had partly seen it once or twice before, took his gun ono day and went in search of it, with the intention of shooting it, it he chanced to meet it again. Turning a corner, he came upon it suddenly, but • was so astonished and frightened at its size, that ht forgot he badta gun in his hand! This man; as well as all the others, who. have seen it, testify that the snake is at least takeet in length and as thick as a good sized man's leg! It was traced through a field of oats some time since, by a. track as would have been made by a bog. We have no doubt this statement will be disbelieved by.many persons, but it can be substantiated by a number of respectable citizens of Williams township, whose timid can at . any time be relied c a t . We presume ,it in he an old black snake, which has grown very large, as this species of snakes do.—Eartud Arauq. . . t .~ „ • x.-1,7•:;‘ . , . A Monster Snake ! •! ‘ t