(Lip Xrijigl) - - - ALLENTOWN, PA -WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER. 22, WA. tr7v. B. PALMER, Esq., N. W. corner of Third and Chestnut streets, Philadelphia, is our autheiticatgd• Agent for receiving advertise mentsiuul.subseriptions to the Lehigh Register. I=lEltELC3 Ol7 . 4l .ix. The office of the LEHIGH RE GISTER has been, removed to the building formerly occupied by the Allentown Democrat,' two doors trbove the Reformed Church, and diirectly opposite Moser's Drug . Store. • rl'To-morrow being Thanksgiving Day. re ligious services will take place in the German Reformed Church in the morning at 10 o'clock, and in the Lutheran Church iu the evening at 7 o'clock. Robbery. On Saturday last a man was arrested under very suspicious circumstances on the charge of stealing a sum of money from the bar-drawer of the Farmer's hotel. Re was taken before Justice Ruhe, where an investig,ation took place, but owing to a want of sufficient proof he was discharged from custody. That:Awl-ON-lug Day. To-morrow is the day set apart' by Gov. Thgler as a day of public thanksgiving for the people of Pennsylvania. IVe hope this beautiful edstonrcrilr be duly observed by our citizens, with a sincere desire to recognize and celebrate the goodness of that Providence by which ice have been so signally preserved during the last year from the fearful scourges which have af flicted other portions of our country. In our State, with the exception of a few communities, the blessings of health have prevailed. Surely we•are under the weightiest obligations_to praise the divine clemency that has so kindly spared us. _ _ _ To subscribers Last week we had a paper returned to us by a I'. M. stating that it had been refused. Poi the benefit of persons who arc disposed to dis• continue their payee, we will again state, that we are in the habit of stopping our paper only when the back dues are paid. It is said that a man who would cheat a printer " has a charac tar so black that charcoal would make a White mark on him," and yet there arc persons who after reading our paper ever since we took pos session of the establishment, have the " cheek" to go to the P. M. and request him to send it back to the office of publication, without paying us a red cent: for the time they have had it.— For the benefit of such we here give TIIE LAW OF NEWSPAPERS. 1. Subscribers who do not give express no . lice to the contrary , are.considered as wiring to continue their subscription. 2. If subscribers order the discontinuance of their newspapers, the publisher may continue to send them until all arrearages arc paid. S. If s ubscribers neglect or refuse to take their papers out of the offices to which they arc directed, they are held responsible until they have settled the bills and ordered them discon- tinned. 4. If subscribers remove to other places with out informing the publishers and the newspa pers arc sent to the former direction, they are held responsible. ' 5. The Courts have derided that refusing to take • newspapers from the office, or removing and leaving them uncalled fw, is primitfacie evidence of intentional fraud. G. The United States Courts have also re peatedly decided that a Post Master who neg- Teets to perform his duty by giving seasonable notice, as required by the Post Office Depart tnent, of the neglect of a person to take from the office newspapers addressed to him, renders the Post Master liable to the publisher for the sub- beription price lirllgloud lte v iv al. Last Sabbath evening the first of a series of Telig,ious meetings to revive religion took place in the Methodist Episcopal Church. The pastor announced that all who were disposal to be so lions and who would behave in an orderly and becoming manner were welcome to attend.— The meetings are gerlikally well attended, and arc no doubt productive of much good. During the revival last winter a large number of per sons of both sexes were brought under the in fluence of the religion, and the accession of mem bers to the Church was very numerous. The Lehigh Valley Belleau... - The work on this improvement is progress ing rapidly to completion. The rails are laid from Mauch Chunk down to the foot of the l'Carrows, and the grading is so far done as to afford' no cause for the Contractors' delaying the laying of the rails to the dam below the Le high Gap. The grading from South Easton to Bethlehem is nearly completed, and if the rocky section just above Bethlehem were out of the way, there would be nothing to prevent the rails being bad from Catasauqua to South Easton. That rocky section and the ono at Kuntz's dam afford the only obstacles to the whole work being completed and iu running order by the first of January. Sinking Spring Insurance Company , The Sinking Spring Mutual Fire Insurance • Company, at their annual meeting on the 6th inst., at Housum's Mid, in Reading, elected thh following board of Managers for the ensu ing year, viz : Jacob Bright, John L. Fisher, Ocorge K. Bang, Solomon Kerby,D. Ilousum. A t a yon John,,Van Reed, George Merkle, and John B. Reber, of Berks county : Dr. John W. Gleninger and Samuel Becker, of Lebanon county end 'Dr. David 0. Moser arid Joshua • • Lehi _h county. TO PARENTS. We commend the following excellent extract to the particular attention of parents. We are confident that there are very many who may profit by its perusal :--It makes one less hope d of the future to pass through our streets of an evening and listen to the rude and profane speeches which proceed from crowds of boys, who ought, at such times, to be under the home roof. Parents do not realiZe the responsibility which rests upon them in these matters. They forget that the future character of their children is almost entirely under their control. We be lieve that in most eases the parent may mould the character of his chila as he will. and if, when the child arrives at manhood, he is a source of sorrow and disgrace to the parent, the only con solation which the parent can obtain, is that it is his or her own work. The parent may, even in a town such as this, select the intimate companions of his children. Be should, at least, know the character of those with Whom/ they associate on terinsof inti Macy. There are children whose very companionship is pollution. well _expect that your children may roll in the iiiud without being bedaubed, as that they may mingle with bad boys, as com panions, and not be in some degree debased.— Boys OCT ATthiz have lovber een f an obser l - yes lam a sym pathizing o boys. like to see them happy, cheerful, gleesome. In deed I Cali, hardly understand how a high-toned, useful man can be the ripened fruit of a boy who had not enjoyed a full share of the glad privileges due to youth. But while I watch with a heavy jealous eye all rights and customs which infringe upon the proper rights of boys, I sin equally apprehensive lest parents who arc not fore-thoughtfull, and who have not habi tuated themselves to close observations upon this subject, permit their sons indulgeucies which arc almost certain to result in their de moralization, if not in their total ruin : and, among the habits which I have observed tend ing most surely to ruin, I know of none more prominent than that of parents permitting their sons to be in the streets after nightfall. It is ruinous to their morals in all instances, they acq . uiri! under the cover of night, an unhealth ful state of mind—bad, vulgar, inituoral, and profane language, islaseene practices, criminal sentiments, a lawless turd riotous tearing. Ili deed, it is in the street after nightfall that ) the boys principally acquire the edneatiou of the bad, and capacity for becoming rowdy, dissolute and criminal men. Parents, shoal, in this par ticular have a rigid and inflexible rule, that will not permit a 'son, under any circumstances Whatever, to go into the streets after nightfall, with a view of engaging in out-door sports, or to meet other boys for social ehanoe occupation. A right rule of this kind, invariably adhered to, will soon deaden the desire front such danger ous practices.. Boys should be taught to have ideasnres around the fatally centre table, in reading. in conversation, and in quiet amusements. Boys arc seen in the streets after nightfall, behaving in a manner entirely destructive of all good morals. Fathers and mothers keep your child ren home at night and ce that yon take pains to make your homes pleasant, attractive, and profitable to them. WINTER. We can see standing not very " afar off" old Winter, as if in doubt as to the propriety of an immediate approach. Ile looks like an absent mindtd man undecided what to. do, but still moodily Wending his way on. fie is not a very , warm friend of ours, thoogh on many occasions he has been quite an intimate acquaintance:— We deprecate his ,advent more particularly on account of his noisy friend Dorcas, who delights in making thc)iieliest places his head-quarters. We can already feel his chilling breath, render ed more unpleasant from his arctic diet. Conic on, old fellow—well laugh at your, folly—sport on your frozen breath with a merry jingle of bells, and dance and dream to the music of your midnight howlings. We would rejoice ,if every one whom he visits could welcome his approach with a gladsome smile, being in all readineSs to associate with him for a few monthi. As Bar mini would say, let us " love God and be met . : ry"—winter or no winter. The Newspaper. The newspaper is the chronicle of civlization —thelcommon reservoir into which every strcav pours its living waters, and at which every nit. may come to drink. I 6 is the newspaper that gives to liberty its practical life, its constant observathis perpetual vigilance, its unre 'axing activit ~ The newspaper informs legis lation of publ co&on, and informs the people. of the acts of legislation. And this is not all. The newspaper teems with the most practical morality ; in its reports of crime and puinish ment you find a daily warning against tempta _tion ; nor a single trial of a wretched 'outcast or a trembling felon, that does not preach to us the awful lesson how impudence leads to error, how error conducts to guilt, how guilt reaps its bitter fruit of anguish and depredation. The newspaper is the familiar bond that binds to gether man and man—no matter what may be aistance of climate or the dial:l.mm of race. CASs ON CLAv.—General, Cass in his recent 1 speech at Detroit, in reply to the attack made on hint by the Richmond Enquirer, thus alludes to Mr.' Clay :-- 7 " I hold the name of Mr. Clay in the great est reverence, and rank hint with the wisest and purest patriots whose services are written upon the history of our country, and whose memory is indelibly impressed upon the hearts of our countrymen. Such men as Mr. Clay may unite ; they ever conspire. In the stormy pe riod of 1850 it was my pride to co-operate with him, an add my feeble contribution to his gigantic efforts in behalf of the integrity and perpetuity of the constitution." —_ . • it:7"A French gardener has discovered tha by panting his hot-house with gas tar, the is sects so destructive to- plants and fruit, die. Villainous Fraud. The Cincinnati Enquireenarrates the follow ing distressing afFair that occurred on Thursday evening last, near Osborne, Ohio: It appears that about threo' years since a farmer named William Ricketts left his family to seek his fortune in the gold mines or Califor nia. About seven mouths since Mrs. R. re ceived infOrmation from a person representing himself as coining direct from San Francisco that her husband bad died. The wife believed the story and manifested much distress of mind upon the receipt of the intelligence. 'Her in formant, whose name is William T. Gaylord,_ manifested much sympathy for Mrs. 11. in her bereavement, and frequently visited the house to condole with her in her affliction. The un suspecting wife, appreciating the kindness of Gaylord, tendered him the hospitalities of her house and. home. Gaylord, with an apparent indifference, declined the offer, but finally pro-. posed to accept the same on condition of mar riage. The astonished Mrs. It. at first declined, but afterwards agreed to let the matter stand open until Gaylord should call again. In the interim Gaylord abstracted from the post offlee all letters directed to Mrs. Ricketts and one from her husband ho opened, perused, and de stroyed: The letter stated that he did not in tend to return home for three years, but was very anxious to see his wife. Gaylord- again called on Mrs. Ricketts and insisted upon an answer to Lis proposition. Mrs. li., after a few 'moments' reflection, consented to the union, anti tlic time for their marriage was set. The day came, they were married, and by their mar riage Mr. Gaylord came into possession of a . rarm valued at several thousand dollars. Soon after their marriage Mr. Gaylord pro his wife to sell out and move to Kan sas, and there locate for life. The wife con sented, and thofarm t - as advertised for sale at a sacrifice. The advertisement was seen by Mr. Ricketts in San Francisco. Enraged and cha grined, Mr. 11. took the first steamer and ar rived in Osborne on Wednesday evening last.— m r . R. made diligent inquiries, and learned the facts as above stated. Arming himself with a knife and a brace of pistols, he went to his house about 10 o'clock at night. All was quiet. Ricketts rapped at the door •streral times. It was filially opened by Mrs. Gaylord, and Rick etts entered. Mrs. G. threw on her di - ess, and, lighting the candle, turned to look upon the stranger who had come at such an unseasona ble hour of. the night. A shriek, and the ex pression of ' Great God ! Ricketts is that you?' followed, and the astonished, affrighted wife fell insensible to Ow tloor. Gaylord, who was in an adjoining room, rushed out to sec what had lump - Ricketts inunediately seized him by the iroat and plunged the knife into his side, and lien went to where his unfortunate wife was Lying cut her on the shoulder and neck, and left the premises. The wife reowering, informed the neighbors of what hail transpired, and im mediate search was made for Ricketts. Relies undoubtedly made a successful escape. Gay lord was lying very low when last heard from, and the probability is that he must die. :22111 mom MUM US ( 'Tribute of gek:pect. The. Philadelphia Daily Sun in speaking of to death of I:'..;o,trr W. llamt - ms, a brother of Ile lion. Samuel A: 'Bridges, pays the follow ng marked tante tpfrespect to the deceased • " Yew persons sere more extensively known to the travelling putlic than this courteous gentleman, who has been so Tong connected with the various hotels in our city, and his amenity of manners, rendered him an universal favorite. He died - on Monday morning, after having suffered at intervals for many years from the effects of hereditary gout. During his frequent painful prostrations, and - with the full knowledge that his disease must eventually ter minate fatally, he has evinced a resignation and cheerfulness, which have surprised his friends. Lately he has been partially relieved from pain, as the terrible ravager became seated in his head, and unconsciousness providentially inter vened. His death will be sincerely mourned by the many he endeared to him by his manly qualities, and the patrons of "Jones' Hotel" Will miss the pleasant smile and hospitable manner that were wont to greet them. We sympathise with Col. John West in the loss of the partner alai whoM he has so long been A : connected ; and to whom he was attached with almost fraternal fondness. ,an PArrazoWALL.s.--3 Md.—Many lives have been lost from the laziness o ignorance of paper-hangers, who have laid on the paper above another, instead of tearing off the old one before hanging the new. There was a very handsome house near one of the best provincial .towns in England, which could never keep its tenants, and at last stood empty., and became worthless, because a detestable fever seized `.upon eveiy family that lived in it. A ready: witted observer promised the owner to find out ' the cause. lle traced the mischief to one room, and presently conjectured what was the matter there. Ile let a slip of glass into the wall, and found it, the next day, dimmed with a footed condensed vapor. Ile tore down a of paper, and discovered abundant cause for any amount of fever. For generations, the walls had been papered afresh, without the removal of anything underneath ; and there was the •ntrid size, and the fermented old papers, Ladies deep• A thorough clearance put an end to the fever, and restored the value of the house Yorsia AIfERICA Aru:sm.—The Board of Education in New York have instructed the su perintendent to inquire and report upon the expediency of keeping the public schools open on Saturday, just as on other days of the week. The boys are all up in alarm at this proposed innovation. The matter is a subject of serious discussion. It is argued that there will be no use for the toys, marbles, sleds and fishing lines, hereafter, if the Saturday afternoon holi day is to be abridged, and strong intimations are given out that they will have their holiday atisfactious out of Sonday. Singular Sureide , Early yesterday morning - , says the St. Louis Republican of the 3d instant, the body of a young man, genteelly dressed, was timnd on the levee, between Myrtle nd Elm streets. Ile was about five feet seven inches high, had on a black cloth overcoat, black cloth pants, patent leather shoes, gingham shirt, and black 'silk handkerchief. The cause of his death is ex plained in the following letter, written in the French language, which was found upon his person : " 1 beseech the person who finds my body not I to make inquiry, for the act was mine—l am I my own murderer. My name is Francis Henry de Longuille. I was born. in Paris on the 4th day of April; 1828. My family were in the great enterprise of 1849. I was married to a rare spirit, and I thought my happiness would . always contidue. I left my =five land with a small family in the month of May, and arrived in New Orleans the 24th of July, 1854. But alas! after tasting of happiness for fifteen days, a great fatality overtook me. My dear be- Loved wife was attacked with cholera, and, after two hours of great suffering, she died. She was hardly enshrouded when my little boy, aged three years, died of the same disease. My dis tress was great, but God had left me a little girl, thirteen months old, which gave me strength to resist the misfortune that had oc curred to me, and in this little innocent I could see the likeness of my beloved wife, and I could ask no more of Cod but to live for my child. But God Was willing again to afilici by taking everything thas was left for me in this world. On the 20th of October last I had the misfor tune to close the eyes of my treasure. my child pacing nothing to condole nw. I resolved to qui life myself. Let no one •blame me, for Life wa: a burden." STATTSTICg OF LIQUOR. 31ANCFACTUTM IN TITS UNITED STATES.—From the last census we glean the Mowing importnnt s facis relative to the quantities of grain malted or;diitilled., ° per annum, in the United States. Bushels of Corn distilled, 11,067,661 Bushels of Rye distilled, ?k,14:,92.7 Bushels of Oats distilled, • .56.517 Bushels of Apples distilled, 526.840 Bushels of Bailey distilled, 3,78'7.195 Tuns of paps malted, 1 . 94 llog,sheads of Molasses distilled, GI .175 The aggregate value of these products. at average prices, will not vary much from $14,- 60,727. What a waste! The capital employed in the entire country in liquor manufacture is $8,334.254 Number of workmen employed 5,457 Ratio of Distilled Grains, compared with (pundit,/ crotrii. 7 —Of „Corm there is distillk , bushel in 54 : of Rye, I bushel in ,5 : of Oats, bushel in 2,1118 ; of 11.11:ky, there is. malted bushels in 5. 1 From these product.; are marmfitetured: Of Whi5key,42.13::.95 7 allo.kis, Of Nurre, Of Ale. • 6.5( ti OW 1 .777.924 barrels. The aggregate value of these liquors. ai wholesale prices, wM be about r.:419.946.5 97 . Besides the above. there are made 211.221 gitllons of wine, and an inconceivable arrxinnt of " batl-„liquors," that dr l aw heavily for their constituents neon domestic and foreign drug: , in their manufacture, but which are tort cotmteil in the manufacture. Sixurt..in Ciu - sE or fh:Avn--The Des Arc (Ark.) Citizen, of the 20th ult., says :—We have been shown an extract of a letter from a gentleman residinkpear Lawrenceville. Monroe county, in which he states that Aaron McMul lin, awl some ten or twelve years, was killed by the bite of a rattlesnake under the following ' circumstances : It seems that the head of the snake had been severed from its body and laid on a log. The little fellow had forgotten the head was there, and laid his arm in its mouth, which WAS instantly closed on it, and was only disengaged by pulling it off with his other hand, tearing a vein and an artery of his arm. Ile died in 24 hours from the effects of the bite. Twining IVAitsno:.—A short time since, a young man, residing a few miles from Syra cuse, New York, canie to that city, imbibed a quantity of whiskey, and under its influence went home and into his father's barrel fitctory, where he insisted on putting a block through the machine. In doing so he got both wrists under the blade, which severed his hands from his arms, so that they barely hang by the skin. Too much besotted to know what liad happen ed, he went to the brook to wash off the blood, when he discovered his terrible condition—for attempting to use his hands, they dropped from his arms. Thus mutilated he met his mother in the door, who swooned at the fearful sight. To cut BuAss.--- , lf brass is corroded wit ox de—green or black—it can be removed by rubbing it with some diluted acid, such as sul phuric. This is rubbed on the brass with a cloth or sponge, and the brass then washed in ' hot water. After this the brass must be well rubbed with rotten-stone, and sweet oil, and finished with whiting or tripoli. Some persons use oxolic acid dissolved in water, instead of sulphuric acid, for the above-named purpose, and it is indeed more convenient, byit it is very poisonous, and is therefore danges to keep in houses where there arc children. CLItE FOR RINGISON'E.--I noticed in the Cul tivator for May 15th, an inquiry for the cure for a ringbone in a colt, and answer, take high wines of cider or brandy, add saltpetre as much as will dissolve, and wash the ringbone two or three times a day: One of my' neighbors cured one of three or four years standing, by the ap i .lication a few times. , . Cue :calcium can Rica Jsux.--Boil and press the fruit, strain the juice, and by degrees mix it with as much ground rice as will, when boiled, thicken to a jelly, boil it gently ; stir- ring it, andswecten to your taste; put,it into a basin or form, and serve with cream or milk Ages of Different Antmnls. A bear rarely lives more than twenty years is dog lives twenty years : a ifix fourteen or six teen ; lions sometimes live to the age of seventy. .The average of cats is fifteen years rt a squirrel .and hare seven or eight years : rabbits* seven. Elephants have been known to live to the age of four hundred years. When Alexander the Great had crmquered one Porus, King of India, he took .ft great elephant, which had fought valiently for the king, named hint Ajax, dedi cated him to the swn. and then Et him go with this inscription . : " Mexauder, the son of Ju piter. Lath dedicated Ajax to the sun." This elephant was found with this inscription three hundred and fifty years; after. Ph o rt have been known to live to the age of thirty years; the rhinoceros to twenty. A horse has been known to live to the age of sixty-two, but aver ages twenty-five or thirty. Camels sometimes live to the age of one hundred. Stags are long lived. Sleep seldom exceed, the age of ten. Cows live about fifteen years. redrer consid ers it probable that, wliales live one thousand years. The dolphin and porpoise attain the age of thirty. An eagle died at Vienna at the age of hundred and four years. Ravens frequently _he age of one hundred years. Swans ,ave been known to live three hundred years, and the tortoise a hundred and seven. FM Coon Aov ten TO Yot'su LAnws.—Trust not to uncertain riches, but prepare yourself for every emergency in life. am to work, and not be dependent pon s rva is to make your ,read :—sweep you floors and ,darn your own Ab • 1 things, do not esteem too .iv tbose(lniorable young men who sustain keinsclves and their aged parents by the work f their own hands. while you care for and re- Nive into your company those lazy popinjays; who never lift a finger to help themselves. so long as they can keep body and soul together and get sufficient to live in fashion. If you are wise you will look at this subject as we do, and when you are old enough to become wives, you will prefer the hottest mechanic, with not a cent to continence life, to the fashionable loafer, with a capital of ten thousand dollars. Whenever we hear remarked, " such a yonng lady has married a fortune," we always tremble for her pros , erity. P.iches kft to children by wealthy parents often become a curse instead of a bles sing,. Young woman, remember this, and in stead of sounding, the purses ofyour lovers, and axamining the cut of their coat, look into their .tabits and their 'hearts. Mark if they have tildes and can depend upon themselves ; sec if hey have that which will lead them to Took bove a butterfly eaist cum Talk not of the Alfa' white skin and the soft delicate hand to splendid form and fine appearance of tog gentlemen. Let not those foolish con erat ions crempy your thoughts. MEM ME Pin t..t ara.rmv AND NEW Yonx.—The Mile; lel phians Alvin t hat t heir city cent aim; more uhaliit ants than New Yok; although the cen -ais'pla,!eS the latter place one hundred tho sand ahead. Tie rem v anian says Philua delphia has t went y• four thousand more houses, and casts four thousand more votes than New York. It adds : Great efforts were of course made in New York, while the marshal was taking the census, to run the number of inhabitants up to the highest possible frg . nre, in order to claim pre cedence of Philadelphia. With this object iu view, the entire number of seanien on board all the vocals ill port. dining the several months the census was in the hands of the marshal, whether connected with foreign commerce or otherwise. was counted on board their vessels, again, in addition to being reckone . d at Unir various places of residence. The transient pop ulation in the numerous hotels and private houses were taken into the account, and each head of a family was made to constitute a family that the number of families 'MOt bear some ap proximation to the aggregate population, ac cording to the usual mode of making the calcu lation. The floating population of New York cannot amount to less titan one hundred thou sand daily. The permanent population is not now, and we doubt much whether it ever has equalled that of Philadelphia. The grtiter vote in the latter city, and the larger number of ti:iuses, plainly indicate the truth of this asser ion, and however mortifying, it may be to the, ride of the New Yorkers, they cannot avoid to convincing testimony of these two clear BEN BF:A(7TV, 110 W OBTAINED Alm now PRESEBVED. —The true foundation of beauty in woman is exercise in the fresh air. No cosmentic is equal to this. English ladies of rank are celebrated, allover therworld„ for their splendid rersons and their brilliant complexions ; and they arc pro verbial for their, attention to walking and rid ing. The sallow cheeks, stooping figures, sus ceptibility to cold, and almost to constant ill health,which prevail among the American wives and daughters generally, are to be attributed almost entirely 'to their sedentary life. A man can no more become beautiful, or remain so, without healthful exercise in the open air lan a plant can thrive without light. LOOM:011YR SEWS IN TRH LRMILI STAMM There are forty establishments in the United States engaged in the manufacture of LoComo tive Engines. These shops, it is estimated; turn out in busy times, at least 1200 locomotives in a year. Above 9000 hands are employed,. whose wages aro about $3,500,000 per annum. The iron consumed exceeds '45,000 tons annu ally. The value of the products of these Works is full $10,000,000 per annum Soto°Ls Axe COLLEGES.—The federal gov ertunent has granted over forty-eight millions of acres of land for school purposes, and over four millions for universities. Maine has a larger proportion of scholars at school than any other State or country in the world. Denmark exceeds the United States; the United . States exceeds all other countries, even including the ME flutti n 4, cfluitirti. lon eau-learn an old maid's disposition fir her household gods. If she has seven kittents,, five poodle dogs, hair a dozen cages of ca-nary, birds, several images of the virgin, and a Lou- , quet or two of hollyhocks, make np your mintr that she is as sweet and' happy as a bee in et honeysuckle. iltd if she tolerates none of these institutions, and fills her apartments With pic tures of forked satans, whoppered jawetr fogies, and disres of sour-krout. put it. down that she is as cross aS•the letter X, and as sour" as, a pickle keg. • ['One pair of pigs. according to Alinutt, will increase in six years oite hundred and nine teen thousand one 1 dyed and sixty nine— taking the increase at fourteen times per annum. A pair of sheep in the same time would be but. • sixty-four. 1 71 -- There are about 3000 Negroes 'entitled to .. vote in New York city under the provision 05-- the State Constitution, which requires at colored roan to have been three years a citizen, snit - possessed of firehold estate of the value of $259 over and above all debts and incumbrances - charged thereon, and upon which a tax shall have been paid. trot between Mac and Know Nothing. aver the Cambridge course, on Friday. drew an immense concourse of spectators; said to be • the largest number ever before gathered on the track. The betting was very spirited, Mac the favorite. Ile won the trot in two heats, dise tancing, his competitor. Time, first heat, 2,35; second heat, 2,30. Western editor, in an answer to a complaint of a patron that he did not give news= enough, advises him, when news was scarce, to read the Bible which he had no doubt would be " new " to him. rTlu ship New Era, of Bath, Me.; from Bremen, with about four hundred passengers Went to shore in a dense fog on the night of the 12th inst., off Deal, on the 'jersey shore. The ship was wrecked and 200 victims found a wa-. tery grave. There were in 1775 thirty-five newspa pers in the United States circulating annually nearly five hundred millions of copies. Of the newspapers in 1854, 855 are Whig, and .745 democratic. r - i - The New York Sun has imported paper from France. paying a duty of thirty per cent., and three. per cent. more for freightage, and then getting a better and cheaper article than. that made at home. 77 - An affray &cured at Lawrenceville, Ps., last week, in which it appears that seven Irish men assaulted an Ameiican by the name of Hol- Ileing,.arnied with a revolver, he fired upon' them, killing four of the number. Ile immediate- - /3- gave himself gp to the authorities. :":7 - Two fine ships—the ' New Era,' and the '—were t'. within the past week • ---, Frarfill loss of life attended the destruction or .IL‘‘e , s ' these yei,SCIS. ::::,,—::,r Territory is two hundred and severe miles wide, and averageesix hundred miles in length—capable of division into three States of the size of Ohio. rr,.=) - The entire delegation in the next Congress,. from, Ohio; twenty-one in number, are anti-:Ke- Imisha, and have been elected by majorities of from two to seven votes. . C.T7The whipping post is still in use in Covington, Kentucky. Lawrence Ilant was publicly whipped in that place last week, for . stealing caps. 1 - _- - A benevolent man. who prates his wiser to save time by throwing it away on foolish calculations, has discovered that in forty years' a snuff tidier devotes twenty-four months to blowing his nose ! (CT"— My son,' said Mr. Smith to his little' boy, who was devouring an egg, (it was Mr:. Smith's desire to instruct his boy. .My son;_ do you know that chickens' come out of eggs !" • Aii do they Wier?' said the young hopeful,.. I thought that eggs came out of chickens !' J -Duriur, the last nine months over 26,000' ' persons were added to the population of Califor nia via San Francisco, and one half of them . were Chinese ! Ca 'Vermonters live to a great age as is well known. There are two men so old, that they have forgotten who they are, and there ars no neighbors who can remember. (o — Dan Rice was "stuck " for the nice little stun of 53,500 the other day by the court at. Albany, in his libel suit with his rivaleirces proprietor, Mr. Spaulding. 13:7 - The man who is too poor to take a paper has bought a slab-sided dog, an old shot, gun, and a twenty shilling gold watch. -He educates., his children in the street, and boards his shang-, . hais on his neighbors. Li - The young ladies of Vermont, it is said. still continue to kiss the lips of young temper ance men to see whether they have been tamper ing with toddy. • . 11:71Vhat is the difference between a bare head and a hair bed I The one flees foe shelter L ths 'other is a shelter tbrireas IrrA dandy is generally suppose:l'W be about' ono-fourth walking-stick, and the rint --ki' IL ,gloves and hair: *. 11:711.any young ladies make fools of them , ' serves beithe looking-glass--niany young. men . ,by the drinking-glass. ' • S op of Mount Washington. . [l:7Waitted—A good strong adhesive plaster. to make busy-bodies stick to their own lani- ness. B :7-A New York Fireman—two and a half cords of noise three and a half yards of red. flannel. moldier of culprits in jail in.Eng,- land new esceeds twenty thousand. tr7Where' the world rebuketh, there look thou for the excellent. , . . Satiirday_last,.no less tban 1490 im migrants arrived at New York, in four ships.