4 . . - ' ik` A . Vrg . :\ l v. . . I ' 1 I WIL.a. era ir,, r. - t=r -. , --.•-. alp tet)igi) ftegister. Bil A Ile.ntown, Pa. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 90, 1849. Circulation near 2000. 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 Lehigh Register and collecting and receipting for the same. Ott—A number of advertisernents were una voidably crowded out of our columns to-day, they will however, appear in our next. We further beg the indulgence of our readers for a a few weeks more, when the advertisements will slaken off, and we again' will be able to give the usual quantity of leading matter in the "Register." 112rWe would respectfully recommend the attention of Capitalists, to the very large amount of Real Estate offered in to-days paper. The already large and continued increase of our circulation throughout Lehigh, Northamp ton and Bucks counties, makes it one of the best and most profitable advertising journals in the d istrict. Good News We are highly gratified to be able to inform our readers, that the law passer) at the last ses sion of 'our Legislature, to create a Sinking Fund, for the gradual redemption of our State debt, has been put in practical operation dur ing the past week. The commissioners of the Pennsylvania Sinking Fund, have purchased $113,500 of the State Loans, at a cost of $lOO, 000, being a profit to the State of $13,000. Having thus invested the amount in hand, they are now out of the market. The good work of the redemption of the public debt having thus commenced under favorable auspices, it can not be doubted that it will be steadily perse-1 vered in, and that the credit of the State will never again be questioned. The payment oil interest in gold and silver, and a system twin- ; ally established and in operation for the grad ual liquidation of the principal, afford a basis I for credit as proud and solid as it is worthy of our noble old Commonwealth. Gold Dollars We hear every one ask, how is it that when 350,000 gold dollars have gone through. the mint, so few are in circulation? We answer, that they are coaxed and abducted into the vaults of the banks, where they quietly lie, as no bank will put these popular little coins into circulation, when they can get rid of the rags which people in business aro forced to take as a circulating medium. The government should have directed the superintendents of the mint to allow persons not connected with banks to hale the amount they require, in exchange for gold, silver, or Treasury notes. If the golden dollar is coined for the benefit of the people, why should not the people have the use of them? ; Iron Trade The London Mining Journal, of the 25th of August last, contains the-following remarks on the condition of the tiritiih IrOn Trade: "The iron trade may safely be declared in a very promising condition, and both the home and the foreign trade has improved considera bly. It is understood that large orders forrails were received from the, United States by the last steamer from America, and that our pros pects in that quarter are much more cheering. The strike among the colliers in South Stafford shire has already caused considerable incon , verdence; and it is to be hoped, on account of the autumn shipments, that these differences may speedily be settled. Prices remain much the same as last week, with a firm market:— Welsh bars are held firm at £5 5s to £5 10s." While such a cheering prospect to the for eign iron master, and the British laborer is opened toiltem, what is the condition of the -iron manufacturer in our country. We hearof Rolling mills being closed for want of ortlets. Furnaces out of blast, and a large number of hard working laborers, who desired a comfor table subsistence from their operatives, have either their wages reduced or are distnissed from employment, because foreign pig iron, rail road iron, and every variety of the manu factures of iron are imported at lower prices than they can be manufactured here. National Sohool Convention At the suggestion of several State Superin tendents and other influential friends of the cause of popular education in different sections of the Union, the meeting of the National Con vention of the friends of Common Schools, which was to have taken place in Philadelphiaon the 7...!(1 inst., has been postponed to the 17th of October on account of the prevalence of the cholera thrpughout the country. Officers of Conventions or Associations which have appointed delegates, will please forward to the Corresponding Secretary the names of ptr sons appointed as delTgates. Byorderoftocal Committee of Arningements . JOS. R. CHANDLER; Chairman: Alfred E. Might, Cor. Sec. Voice of the Men oftho Revolution. It was contemplated by the early founders of the Republic, that Canada should form a part of the United States, as appears from the fol lowing article, specially inserted in the old ar ticles of confederation of 1776 : drtide 11. Canada, according to this confer'. aration, and joining in the measures of the United States, shill he refrained into, and en tiiled to all the advantages of this Union; but no oth er colon/ shell he admitted into the shme, unless Pneh admission, be agreed to by the nine States. • ESE Nominations in Northampton The Northampton county Convention of Del egates, for the purpose of forming a ticket to be supported by the Democratic party at the ensuing election, assembled at the house of Mr. Daniel Riegel, in Nazareth, on Tuesday las!, and after mature deliberation, nominated the following Scnator—,-Gen. Conrad Shimer, of .Hanover .Assembly—Hon. James M. Porter, of Easton. " Mich. Meyers, of Bethlehem tsp. Treasurer—John Davis, of Easton. Commissioner—Philip Lerch, of Forks. Geti. Shimer, is favorably known, in old Northampton, he is fresh from the ranks of the people, and if we are right, never held a civil office in his life: As the Senator belongs to Northampton the Democracy of Lehigh will unanimously confirm the nomination. Hon. James M. Porter, wild is nominated on the Representative ticket, has filled a number of civil stations, and all with a view to the public good, and honor to himself. As a pub lic benefactor, no one can 'be named, who has done more for Easton or Northampton county, than Judge Porter. In the Reform Convention where the Whig party was so able represented by Thaddeus Stevens, Mm. Merredith, John Sargent and other prominent men, Judge Por- ter, was looked upon as the leader of the Dem ocracy, and upon. nil questions of importance to the pally, he stood in the front rank as its able delender. It is then no matter of surprise to us, that the Democracy of Northampton has made choice of so able a m ember of theirparly for . the Legi:dature. F:=7 "We are authorized to say, that Alexander E. Brown, Esq. of Easton, is a Volunteer Can didate for the State Senate. A New Science. Farming is now_a science. It is no longer a blind plodding of labor, but the whole busi ness is reduced to system, and a crop of any particular grain may be relied on with as much certainty from an analyzation of soil and the character of manure used, as may any demon stration in. Euclid, or as the effect of any par, titular medicine on the human system. If a farmer wishes to grow wheat on his land, he ascertains by chemical tests what it is compos ed of. This done, by similar means he analy zes a portion of the soil whereon he purposes to grow it, and whatever of the component parts suited for Wheat is not finnid in it, he pro, mires and spreads upon his land. A field may have in abundance all the requisites for pro- , during wheat but one, and, lacking that, will be unproductive. By science it has been dis covered that butter and beef are in the grass and the fruits ; that the cow is only the mane-; fact urer ; yielding all the while only what they eat. The farmer who refuses to follow the science, will. perhaps, at great cost, add those ingredients of which there are already enough ; but that will not cause a crop to grow. A tru ly scientific farmer knows little of poor land. All land is good to him, for he knows how to doctor it to produetiveness. Land that would only produce a very poor crop has been made ,to yield a very large one, by simply spreading upon it one or two deficient substances—lime of oyster shells, ashes even of anthracite coal, fish-bones, charcoal dust, tan, &c. Every thing, it has been fully demonstrated, is composed of ingredients which must be had for the repro duction of itself, and many other things. Emit trees often cease to bear because the soil has become exhausted of one or two of the ingre dients which compose their fruit. Give them but these, and they will at once yield fruit as abundantly as ever. One crop exhausts one set of ingredients ; and another to some extent a different set; and so farmers perhaps often leapt the fact without knowing the cause, that the same crop should not be grown for succes sive years iet the same land. Yet there is no difficulty in growing the same crop time with out end, if only the exhausted ingredients are supplied. Much has been learned as to the' time of euttinggrain and of curitighay. It has been fully demonstrated that the quantity of flour is increased, the quality improved, and waste of shattering prevented, by cutting grain catty ; and the fact is equally well ascertained that grass may be cured and improved by the addition of a small portion of salt to the mow or stack after half the exposure to the sun for medy deemed necessary, thus measurably les sening the labor of handling as well as narrow ing the danger of damage by exposure to rains. Science to agriculture has developed wonders in the rapabilities of the ground, which have been from the creation unobserved. Men are only astonished at the lack of vision of heed lessness that prevented them from earlier see-! ing and appreciating the thousands of advan tages that surround them. Put theadvantages of science as applied to agriculture can hardly as yet be estimated. It is as yet but the light that shows us the unexplored darkness. The capacities of the earth have hardly begun tobe developed, and the human family ItSrdly be gun'to exist, either in numbers or individual enjoyments. Evidently no sort of conception has been formed in the minds of more than a few, of the swarming millions which this earth is capable of sustaining in luxurious plenty. Land and labor have been brought so igno rantly together that nothing comparatively has been the product. The meagre, stunted crops which have so poorly repaid the labor of the farmer, have exhibited the measure of man's ignorance rather than of the earth's barrenness. Let no farmer hereafter, who would conceal his awn ignorance, laugh. at the information contained in book-farming. Read, read all, and read attentively.—D. .Nnespaper. Capt. Thomas Loeser.—This gentleman, who served as commander of the Reading Artiller ists during the Mexican war, died suddenly in . Philadelphia, at the American Hotel, on Wed nesday last. He was one of those noble spir its, always true to his friends and to every dictate of honor—who had but one enemy, and that %yap "timself to himself." For the Lehigh Register. Female Education. It is to be greatly deplored, when boys grow up without thorough religious training; but a woman without piety is a real moral pest. Her principles will be impressed upon herchildren much more certainly and deeply, than those of the father; on 'which account her influence for good or for evil is incalculable, History leach ! es us sufficiently, how true this is. The best and most distinguished men of all times owed most to their mothers; hence the great venera tion for their mothers exhibited by such men as our own great Washington, Franklin, &c. And yet, not near as much has been done for the education of woman, as for thht of man. Whether this is owing to a want of proper es timation of her calling, we venture not to de cide. Even in our country, where she ranks so highly, great improvements are necessary in her education. It is true, considerable atten tion is paid to the subject, but very wrong no tions in regard to it, have here and there be come prevalent. Among vs female educ'ation not seldom wants substance and thoroughness, whilst matters of secondary importance receive undue attention. The same is the case in other countries; but with us it should occur least, professing as we do, such high regard for the female sex, and the more we, as republi cans, should prefer the true solid worth, to the mere external and accidental advantages,pf a person. Sincere piety, true morality, a cheer ful, pure heart, self regard and a high respect for her calling, ought to be aimed at in the ed ucation of woman in all the walks of life. Ev ery girl should be well instructed in female work, 'and as well as the boy, in all the branch es taught in a good common school. A more extensive education, however, is desirable for all, and fin many it is indispensi ble. Where may this be obtained? You an swer, no doubt, in "Young Ladies' Semina ries," and you are right. Far he it from us. to undervalue their advantages; and yet do we take the liberty of saying, that it would be a much greater task for us, to select a suitable Institute for the education of a daughter, than for that of a son. Seminaries, however fash ionable they may be, where young ladies are merely educated fertile parlor, where they im bibe more taste for reading novels than loruse ful employments, where they are taught to overrate themselves and to underrate every body else, are a real curse ; and we do hope and pray, that they may become rarer from year to year. It is particularly important, that solidity in character and acquirements should be aimed at, in the schools for ladies of the higher('lass es. Besides the branches taught in every good' common school, the following should be thor oughly taught in every Seminary for "Young Ladies": Biblical History; Christian morals; History, that of our own country in particular; Geography; Science of health; what is most important and useful in Botany ; at least so much of Natural Philosophy, as will enable them to judge correctly and intelligently of the usual phenomena in Nature; fine'Ladies' work, Drawing, Vocal Music and Piano. Foreign languages may be taught 100; but if it be done as superficially, as frequent instances indicate„ they would better not be taught at all. If the surrounding influences have a great agency in aiding or obviating the efforts of the education in general, those influences are cer- tainly particulatly strong in their bearing upon female education ; the gill learns more from intercourse, than the boy does. It is, therefore very important, who the educators of the girl are. They are called upon to educate particu larly :(although not exclusiVely) for the family circle, and should, on that account, represent family life in its most attractive and most prop er form. In the female Semioary, the cordial ity of the parental house should strongly pre• domina'e. Ilowever willing we are to grant to the ladies a peculiar fitness for conducting the education of their own sex, it still seems to us, that man's influence is also needed in it God has thus ordained it in the family, why should it not be proper elsewhere? Whoever has a good girls' sehool-al home, may consider himself fortunate; particularly if a mother pre• sides over the family, whose abilities qualify, and whose circumstances allow her to super intend the edneatien of the daughters. K. Allentown, Sept. 16, 1849. The Plough, °Loom and Anvil The September number of this truly popu lar Agricultural periodical is received. W cheerfully recommend this excellent monthly journal to the Farmer, the Manufacturer and Mechanic, its contents will more than re-pay the liberal price of Subscription. Address J. S. Skinner, No: 81. Dock street, S 3 per annum, where two unite E 5, and where 5 unite $lO. A new race cf Peop . le.—A new race of people have been recently found in the interior of Af rica, which partakes somewhat of the marvel lous. The men are represented to be tall and powerful!) , built, smutting seven to seven and a half English feet in height, and black in col or, although destitute of the usual character of negroes in features. filehemit Ali sent an ex pedition np to the White Nile in search of gold, and there found this race of people, fifteen hun dred of whom, aimed to the teeth, came down to the shore of the river, where the vessel lay. The name of the kingdom is Buri, and its cap ital Patenia. They raise wheat, tobacco, &c., and manufactnre their own weapons. They are probably the ancient Ethiopians spoken or in the Scripture. • Bedford Tl•easury Robbed Again.—The Trensu ry of Bedford county has been' robbed a second time. We learn from the Bedford Gazette, that the Treasury was robbed last week of $248. The robbers broke into the Court Ilouse,carried the iron safe for some distance from the town,and broke it open, expecting a large haul, but they only obtained the sure above stated. • . • 41hZ • =-``...IC ,:su. • . Late and Important From Washington. French Minister Disinissed! lIIS PASPOKTS SENT TO 111311 a War apprehended: By Special Telegraphic Despatch of the Phila • dclphia North American IVAsni;GToN,Feb. 18,1849 After a protracted anti important corres pondence between the French Minister and the Department of State, Lellers of Dismis sal and Passports, were communicated to M. Poussin, on Friday last, the 14th inst. The whole subject of dispute has been before the French Government, and its course has been such as to justify the prompt and decided action of our Government. • It depends upon France to determine whether war shall grow out of this difficul ty or not. Certainly the United States will not retract or re-consider its position. - * - A Inter despatch gives the particulars of the difficulty, which appears to have ari sen during the late Mexican war, from a claim in behalf of a Frenchman, named M. Porte, then. residing in the city of Mexico. More next week. Carbon County Nominations The democratic delegates elected by the ditrer eat townships in the county of Carbon, met in convention, on Monday the 3d inst., at the Public house ofJobn Lentz in Mauch Chunk, and nom inated the following ticket. For Assembly—Robert Klotz. Sheriff—lsaac Ripple. Prothonotary—Dennis Bowman. Register and Recorder—Oliv er Musslematt. Commissioner John Hot n, Esq. Treasurer—James R. Struthers. Auditor—Lewis Haney. W. H. Butler Esq , is appointed the delegate to meet the delegates in Lehigh county, at their county convention, to inform them of the nomi nation of Robert Klotz. A resolution was also passed, concuring in the nomination (lithe candidate selected by the Dem ocratic convention of Lehigh co_unty, for the Leg islature, and respectfully recommend the person so nominated, to the united support of the Democ racy of Carbon L-V — The Whigs at their County meeting re solved to support none but Volunteer Candidates for the different offices. • The Pacific Railroad. There is now,says the New York Tribune, we apprehend but little difference of opinion in this cutintry as to the necssity of building a railroad to the Pacific. The Press of all sections and of All parties has of late given much space to the discussion of the subje a ct, with singular unanimi ty as to its pressing Importance.--There are of course opposing views as to the route which should be chosen, and the Manner in which the road should be built, but with scarce - an excep tion, all agree that it must be built. And there is no reason to doubt that in this instance, at least the Press speaks the conviction of the peo ple. This being the case, there should be no unneces sary loss of time in setting the enterprise on foot. Not only its magnitude demands that it should be begun as promptly as may be, in or der that its inestimable benefits may the sooner be poured upon onr country and the world ; there is even greater weight in the fact that the wood lands, which must furnish an important part of its materials, are rapidly passing out of the hands of the Government, and that once deprived of their timber, the road will cost vast sums of mon ey which can be saved if the matter is taken hold of in time. For this reason, if for no other, we ragard it as absolutely indispensable that Congress should act on the subject at its next session, and we welcome every movement which is calculated to strengthen the force of public opinion in that direction. A National Convention has been called at'St. Louis on Monday the 15th October next, for the purpose of discussing the great scheme and ta king means to help it forward. We have receiv ed the Circular which the Committee of the Peo ple of St. Louis have sent abroad by way of invi tation to be, present. It states in terms by no means exaggerated, the advantages which the whole country and the world must certainly de rive from the opening of such a highway for the Coaunerce of the Western part of this Continent and . Asia; goes at some length intolhe reasons for regarding the undertaking as an eminently practical and necessary one, notwithstanding its gigantic proportions; and cencludes by inviting iMegates from every part of every State and Ter ritory to take part in the Convention, and pledg es the hospitality of the city for theit entertain ment. This Convention ought to:be fully attended, and we urge upon the people everywhere the du ty of seeing that they are represented at it. We do not now enter into the question of where the road would start from, nor according to whose plan it should be constructed; those points we may consider hereafter; at any rate they will properly come np before the Convention, where 'we trust each will be discnssed• with thorough. ness and freedom from sectional and party spiv it, as is 'due to the important nature of the work. For the present let the matter in hand be to make sure that the Convention contain the right men from all quarters.. As for the details of the en terprise they are matters of less instant impor tance. What is first wanted is for the People unitedly, that is irresistibly, to declare that the Road must now be built. • California Life and Manners The journals are filled with lotus from fornia, which furnish some interesting extracts: Life in Colifornia.—Life in San Francisco is exciting and amusing. There is almost a total absence of female society. It is no place for the presence of ladies, and Will not be for some time to come. You can thereforeconceive the entire freedom from restraint. For instaneb„good board being at $2l a week, and ordinary at $l6, many prefer providing and cooking for themselves. You may see these "independents" walking along the streets every morning with a beef-steak in one hand and a loaf in the other, whistling, "away with melancholy,V and other ratted airs. Now these gentlemen fare well;. they buy their beef at 12 cents a pound, delicious salted salmon at the same, bread at 25 cents a loaf, and coffee and sugar reasonably cheap. Thus their per diem expenses do not exceed 75 cent's. And they are those who make money; for although clerks have $5,000 salarieS, and laborers 6,8, and $lO a day, still the cost of board, and wash ing at $6 and $8 per dozen, leaves a very small margin fur profit. It is actually economising to throw away clothes when a change is necessary, and then buy new, prices of clothing have so fal len. Gambling.—Extract from a lette'r dated San Francisco, July 30th. This is one of the strangest places in. Christ endom. I know many men, who were models of piety, morality, and all that sort of thing, when they first arrived here, and who are now most desperate gamblers and drunkards. I think that many who left New York to better their•fortunes, will wish they had remained at home. Gold dig ging is opt of the question with some of them— they cannot and will not follow it, and it requires more capital fur a Man to do business here than in the States. Many have already returned from the mines, finding themselves unequal to the work, and are about returning home. It is men tioned as an indication of the wildness of the gambling spirit that $lOO,OOO had changed hands at a monte bank on the turn of a single card. A New York gambler is said to have lost $lO,OOO the night before the California sailed. The Reading California Associalion.—Letters have been received at Reading from members of the Reading California Association, dated San Francisco, July 29th, 1849, whither they arrived on the 14th of July, in the steamer California, in seven days from San Bias. They paid $l2O each for passage in the steerage. The goods shipped for the Company by the Cape Horn route, had not yet reached the party to whom they were consigned at San Francisco. A home sick man.—A correspondent of the Baltimore Sun gives the following as his expe- MIMES I have conversed with few of the recently ar rived passengers, from either the States or Ore j• gon, but who are home sick. Many are now re turning. others are making preparations ro fol low suit. Some are dying, while many look quite broken hearted, and curse the first discov• erer of gold in these diggins. The fact is, eve ry thing has been overdrawn. Lever writers have been interested, or run-toad enthusiastics ; "they onlx tell of the survivors' toil in their new lands—their number arid success—but who can number the hearts which broke in silence of their parting, or after their departure." It is true, I have occasionally met with permit's who re- I ;rani this country as only second to Paradise, but have always found them persons with whom I desire the least possible acquaintance. The country is overstocked with gamblers and rum mills, who carry bn their operations every hour in the day, and every day in the week. 'Pricy are generally connected, to fleece the un wary, and ,many a poor devil will walk in with his buck skin purse well filled with dust and next day he is penniless, hunting a conveyance to the mines, and swearing like a trooper at his luck. Hut I have never seen an Oregon man in any such scrapes. 'Alley compose a very large pinion of the miners, and are decidedly, taking them in a body, the best portion of the community: Labor the Mines :—A digger at the ()alum bia mines says: I have tried gold digging fur the first time and find it very hard work. On these bars, which have been thrown up by the rapid current, the sand and rockk are sometimes piled up over the gold from one to four feet, and have to be remov. ed before you get it. We moved today rocks weighing from 500 to 6110 lbs. and tons or sand, to get about 50 bushels of dirt, out of which we got 3} minces—better luck than common. The whole amount of our digging for two weeks is two pounds—ptetty fair for new hands. 'Gloomy Accounts:—The Boston Journal pub lishes extracts of a letter dated at San Francis co, July Bth, of which the subjoined is. a Money appears to be of no acctrunt. You can hardly pass a person that has not his thousands in gold, carried in a small bag. Yesterday I saw a man just from the mines. He had with him a bag containing about $7OllO. I enquired of him how long he was in getting it, and he said ein one week !" Some of the pieces were. as large as a medium sized bean, and from that down to dust, and perfectly clean. I have seen a great many breast pins made of a piece of gold just as it came from the mines, weighing from two to three ounces. Gamblers are doing a great business. I went into several of their houses, and saw a man lose $20,000 in one evening. After losing it, he very quietly said,-:Well,I shall have to go' up to the mines again." SearciN of Women.—A correspondent of the Baltimore Argus, says. This country is sadly deficient in the Creator's lase, best gift to man, and you will be conferring an everlasting favor on me, if you hill just send me one of those red flannel unmentionables that is hanging behind the door of my bed-room. We had a wedding in Sacramento city on the 12th, and a regular blow out it was—a Muster of citi zens and strangers. They kept ii up so late that I doubt very much if they have all got home yet. To such an extent is the veneration for the fair sex carried here, that I have seen a party of Ore gonians stop and have a dance around an old caat•ofl bonnet. Prices of Products.—On het arrival, the Rime a; from Boston, was Wattled by a man who of . eted $5 per bdslrel fat potatoes. They have been sold as high as $lO. Milk sold for $2,50 er gallon ;it has been as high as $3. The Pres 1. nt was offered $l2 per pound for saleratus ;it can now be bought f0r51,25. A frame building, 36 by 20. covered with rough boards, well situa ted, rents far $5OO per month ; a room, 20 feet square, for $2OO. Slavery andSbeirly.-431avery, it is said, cannot be introduced. Two or three churches are es tablished. There is no theatre; but many think a well r. , gulated one would be, of serviCe. For the want of some place of amusement, many now visit the gaMbling houses, who otherwise proba bly would not. Gambling is carried on to a great extent. It is no uncommo n thing to see 20Doun— ces of gold hazarded upon a card. 'Fables cov ered with gold and silver coin meet you at every direction. -- - Gleanings froni the Mail. r'"There were exported from Liverpool to• Philadelphia, from the 20th to the 28th ult., 250 Mils Pig Iron ; 133 do Bars, - and 12 tons troops: C-uk'•"Everybody has his own theatre, in which: he is manager, actor, prompter, playwright. box-keeper, door-keeper, all in one,and audience.- . - into the bargain," ' • L.V - ..What's that?" asked a schoolmaster, point ing to X. "It's daddy's name." "No, you block head, it's X."..Taint X nuthcr.lt's daddy's name for Iv'e seen him write it many a time. re Much valuable information is derived from persons who visit families for the purpose of seeing and hearing all they can respecting the domestic arrangements of their neighbors. I It is very silly to pay for rum to drink when water costs nothing and is healthier. re 'There are upwards of 10,000 tailors in. New York and Brooklyn. C... - o — foin Flyer. the pugilist, appeared at Syra cuse, so as to exhibit during the State Fair, but the authorities forbade all pugilistic exhibitions, and be had to leave. .'One line, and one fr : aught with instruction includes the secret of final success—be prudent, he patient, and be pet severing. r. , -(30 to strangers for charily, to acquaint ances, for advice, and to relatives for nothing— and you will always have a supply. .. Butter Making Rutter intended for winter use, should be made either in September or October. During these months the weather is sufficiently cool, and the 'quality of the food in the fields and pastures more suitable than when the season is more ad vanced. Very good butter may be made in No vember, but though (or family use it may be as good as that made during the two preceeding months, it is not so admirable for marketing. One of the principle reasons why there is so much bad butter in the country, is thus lucidly explained by a writer on this subject: -The principal cause of failure ill make good butter that may be kept for a, long time, is the neglect to separate the buttermilk entirely from the butter. Some dairy women are afraid to let . any cold water touch the butter, for fear of wash ing nut the goodness—as if water and .boner could commingle. We object to touching the hurter with the hands—some partiCles will thug he melted and thus injute the whole. All* wooden paddle is best. o When the butter is gathered in the churn, that is, ashen it separates from the butter.milk„ and forms lumps, the butter-milk should all be drawn off, and cold water should be adiled; then the whole must be agitated or churned, and this water must then he drawn off, and so on till the water ceases to look white. “This serves to harden the butter. and to work out the alk. If any liquid is finally left in the butter, this liquid will be nearly all water, and you have suit touter or "brine” in your butter, rather than butter•tnilk, which becomes tainted it, three oi four days of hot weather. Pure brine will not taint the butter, but butter-milk will." , By proper care in making and working butter, our farmers might render their part of dairy bu siness exceedingly profitable. Extra butter al ' ways cocain:tit& a good price. Dairy women frequently complain that the milk of cows led on turnips and cabbages, produce butter ofa bad Cla vor—so bail indeed, that the articlb is unsalea• ble,•and unfit for use. The disagreeable conse quences emanating from the practice of feeding these vegetables to cows, may be wholly obvia ted by feeding' them to the animals after milking at night, and allowing them a liberal supply of Mr. Clay's Nep:o, Levi.—lt appears that while• the Hon. Henry Clay was visiting Newport, Rhode Island, lately some abolitionists coaxed his servant, Levi, to run away, by giving him $3OO. When he arrived at Boston, his new friends offered Levi a sailor's berth, at so much per month ; but out of his first earnings he was required to pay back the $3OO. Levi demurred to this, and so the bargain fell through,-the ne gro giving hack the $3OO and going back to his master at Newport. He wouldn't take his free dom fornothing, nt. how they could fix ii. Some of the papers have denied the truth of these in cidents, but they are strictly true. Fixtune's enanges.—A few days since a young gentleman related to'us the following: He said that his mother was speaking in the evening at the social home circle,, of fortune's changes, and remarked. "that in her girlhood, at a social par ty, were there was music and dancing, a young blue eyed, light haired boy asked her to dance. She refused, and thciught him rather presuming as he was the son of a blacksmith, and she the daughter of Capt.— a militia captain. There was a difference in their social position. That boy is the present Governor of Alassachuselle:' The arrival of two German Republiams.—oolo - Henry Ney and Villechatup of the German Republican army, arrived at Boston in the brig Chenamus, frum Gibraltar. They escaped over the mountains disguised as sailors, and after un-. dergoing great hardships, succeeded in getting to, Gibraltar. One of them was carried on board; the Chenamus in a sack. • Indian Odd Pe lqtos.—ln the Cherokee Advo cam of the 16th ult., we find that Cherokee Lodge No. 21 was orgabised, and the officers installed, by the M. W. Grand Maater, on 'the 12th.