AMERICAN. rUICES or ATEllTI3ICt. lirriCC IK KIHIT SThF.KT, XKAR DEER. THE " AM ERICA IS" id published rvcry Satur day at TWO DOLLARS per annum to be paid half yearly in advance. No paper discontin ued till all arrearages ate paid. No subscriptions received fur a leaa period than six moth. All coinmunicationa or letters on business relating to the office, to insure attention, must be POST PAID. AND SI I AMOK IN JOURNAL. Absolute acquiescence in the decisions of the majority, the vital principle of Republics, from which thrre i no appeal but to force, the vital principle ami immediaie parent ot diMpmsm. Urrmaov Ily Itlasser K llMcly. Sunbiiry, IVorlliumberlaml C o. Pa. Saturday, April , 1st". Toi. 11 vo. wnu. TURNS Of THE " AMERICAX." HENRY B. MAS8ER, PuausHKaa ard JOSEPH E1SEI.Y. 5 PnoranTOKg. It. B. n.taSEU, Editor. 8TOBMI lore t O Love I lit JAXKS MACK. I.ove ! O I.ove ! to every heart What a blessed thing thou art, When beauty is levelling Thy soft and ardent feeling ! II rows blushing, t'hwks flushing, Ey s shining, Arms twining. Hands pressing, I.ips raresing, lliisoms meeting, Hearts beating ; Love! O Live! lo every heart What a blessed thing thou an ! Ere six months pass over, Happy bride and hnppy lover Hoteliers, linkers, Mantumnker, Doctor solemn With a column Of excuses Shock the senses ! Quite undoing Turtle cooing, Love ! O Love ! to every henit What a bUsed thing thou art ! By the time that two years Have brought their 'happy new years' Wife and mother, In a pother ; Husband surly, Huily-lmrly, Cherubs squalling, Rawling, brawling, Kicking, fit'hlinp, Screaming, biting ; I.ove ! O Love ! to every heart What a blessed thing thou art ! From the N. Y. American. The Count. Young Kitty fell tn love one day, With one whose jetty curls Soft as the head wherein they lay, Had caught a score of girls. He wore a curl'd moustache two chain- On one of w hich were hung A gist's, as useletw as his I'tuiiis, And idle as his tongue. An ebon stick of monstrous size, And glo ry as his hair, He lugg'd about for exercise When e'ei he took the air : Its rich and massy golden head, Although no br.uns it hid, Contain'd more seme, mo rumor said, Than its vain ownei's did. Tho' in the Mream of love, elite Fair Kify lay, and liult'd, She only nibh'.eil at the bait Nhe was not fiirly nirk'il. And soon another prize appeai'd, Leva handotne and more cold. But yet for that the trill r sieeiM, Fur there she taw some gold. And Kit was caught at last, and told Her "swell" that he might e" 'You've spoken of, he's thou-n me gold," Said she taid he "just so, But what's his money ! dirty trash! Why. cus his small amount ! (Irtiriuu ! look at my moustache ! Why, demme, I'm a Count .'" From the Brooklyn Daily Scwi. Pnlggs lo Moll-, 0 Molly you ate w. riy good, Yen you ae wcrry clever, But ven a feller wexes you By jingn you gay I nuer Scid sich a wi'lrnl indiwid Ual as you do grow, And then I 'spose you don't look like A wixen, Moll, oh, no ! Though toiliei night you snub' J me ull, And trod upon my corn, And though you tried to git a ox To hook me vith his horn, 1 love je, Moll; I'd kits ye, Moll, Though you should hold a pin Bitween your lech, you cruel gal, And stick it in my chin. I like you werry much I does, UccdU-c your cheeks is red, Anl eyes as vicked vons as cv F.r vos sol in a bead, And 'cause you've got the puttiel lit tle nose as could be tlow'd, And warious other causes vii h I would'nt tell if I kuow'd, The reason y I writes you, Moll, In this 'ere Daily AVw-a, Is Vauau a nont I'm thinkin' on When you d. es me abuse; 60 if you vill go foi to go. To cut ud them Vre rigs. Vy then perhaps, you'll st-e cut down, Hniogs. sour iisiivi u The IiOtidoD Patriot, a religious paper, states the case of a widow who has three children, whom short time ago she used to send to school. Distress however became so pressing that she could no longer afford this, and took the two eldest away to assist in earn ing their living. Soon afterwards she took a wuv the remaining one, for the same purpose, Hnd when remonstrated with by her friend on the cruelty of fending a child two and twenty ..L. .1.1 f l.luir ronliml thllt the Ctltlll W8S lituuin viu lu iu.", ..r-- ..bin in a wi tk to earn a loaf , and that if they had not that loaf they must starve, A cimu 01 two and tmenty months old vnt to lutx.r to earn a loafof bread, and hundreds of thousands of dollars spent on the, christening ofa baby prince. From the Charleston Courier. Gen, Hamilton In Itrply to Santa Anna.- Charleston, S, C, March 21. To his Excellency Don Antonio Lopez ie Santa Anxa, President of the Republic of Mexico Sir : Although I have not had the honor to receive, in manuscript, the letter which you addressed tnc, through the gazettes of Mexico, under date of the 18th of February, I feel too sensibly this distinction not to make my ac knowledgments through a similar medium- However gross the violation of confidence, of which your Excellency has been guilty, in publishing a letter marked confidential, (which teal you yourself have recognised,) I shall take no exception to your employing the occasion of vaunting your own honesty, and catering fir a popularity of which you may stand greatly in need" When I offered you nn indemnity of five millions of dollars, for a pacificat ion and boun dary, between the Republics of Texaa and Mexico, 1 acted under a commission, w hich was unrevoked by the Government of the former, and under which 1 had negotiated a treaty of mediation with tho Government of her Britan nic Majesty, providing for the payment of this sum, for the same objects. The supplementary offer of two hundred thousand dollars for contingencies and secret service, were todefray the cost of running the boundary line, the expense of the rehptctive le gations, and for srerrt neriirc. You arc too disciplined a veteran in the poli tics of your own country, nut to know the ne cessity and vulue of tins last item. Vet you have thought proper, it appears, to pay yourself the compliment of supposing that I designed this money should be insinuated as a bribe to yourself. I assure your Excellency that I am too well aware of the spotless integrity tf Don Antonio lipcz de Santa Anna, President of the Republic of Mexico, to have hazarded such nn experiment on the virgin purity of your Excellency's honor. If your Excellency can perceive 'impudence and audacity' in a friendly oiler of peace, and a pledge of my exertions to induce a gallant eo ple to pay five millions of dollars for a realm which they hud already won, by every title a just revolution and a victorious sword could confer, I am quite content to sutler tinder the reproach of having less modesty than yourscfl. After thus discourteously disposing of my self, your Excellency is pleased to lavish upon the people, to w hose mercy and magnanimity you owe your life, the grossest abuse. In the course of which, you say that there never was 'a more scandalous robbery' than the forcible possession of the tcrritmy of Texas, by its pre sent settlers. Had you forgotten, Sir, the charters and guarantees, under the faith of which Stephen Ai ktin brought this colony into Texas, which life, liberty and property were so rcandalously violated by your own government ! And this too, towards a man, who rcscmbh:d in the pu rity of his own life and in the wisdom and moderation of his character, the venerated founder of the State of Pennsyluanio. The colonies of the Anglo American race were in troduced to protect you 1 own Mexican settle ments from the hordes of the Camanchee Indi ans, from whom in spite of their vaunted brav ry, your troops had so ingloriousdy fled. Are you not aware that one of the cau.-es of the revolution of Texas, was your own usurpa tion ? Your tyrannical overthrow of the Con stitution oflVJH, ond with it the federative system, of which as an integral portion of the State of'Cohulia, Texas was a member 1 Have you forgotten that by the establishment of a central despotism on the ruins of this system furnished the ctt'zer.s of Texas a sltongcr jus tification for revolution than is to be found in the causes which led to the resistance of the thirteen North American colonics to the injus tice of their parent State! After inviting tho young Hercules into your country, you attempt ed, perfidiously, to stifle him in his cradle, and you have reaped the full harvest of the conse quences. You say, sir, that when you commenced your memo'able campaign, in ISMi, it was illustrat ed by a seriesof victories, until theuccourrence of what you are pleased to call the unfortunate 'accident' of San Jacinto lour victories, sir, il history is not a greater novelist than the most authentic of your bul lelins, consisted in your beleagtiriug, with 1 well appointed corps of three thousand men, a post defended by some one hundred, who kept your whole force for several days at bay, the capture of which found every man gloriously slaughtered at his post in the still more re markable gallantry of miudering in cold blood five hundred brave men, under the unfortunate Fannin, who had laid down their arms to a force ofs x times their number, under the faith of a capitulation which even a horJo of Culuiuc Tarter would have ropectr-d. At San Jacinto you were defeated by the 'accident' ofyour having more than to men to one of the band, who were led by the bene factor to whom you owe your life, and by the still more marvellous 'accident of his having killed in yonr ranka more than his whole force, and captured an amount of prisoners who out numbered the victors. These your Excellency must admit arc such remarkable 'accident in the history of war, that neither Marshal Saxe in his reveries, or the great Conde in his strat egy, lias made the sural lest provision for their occurrence. Your Excellency, not content with affording me the instructive history of your campaign, has been pleased to touch a chord, which you well knew would vibrate most sensitively throughout the civilized world, when you are pleased to announce, that one of the objects of your meditated crusade against Texa9, isto extirpate domestic slavery. Before you com mence your march for this purpose, had you not better emancipate the miserable victims of compulsory labor in your own country, who arc slaves in every thing but the terms nomi nal bondage, and who would be in a condition of qualified freedom, if they had half tho tempo ral comforts of the blacks of Texas. Do yon suppose, when, debauched by power, you are riding roiighshxl over the miserable victims of your own ambition and cupidity, you can hood wink and deceive any other thun those victims of fanatscism who frequent Exeter Hall; to be plucked by tax-gatherers more cormorant than your own exciseman at home ! This flimsy ex pedient to gain popular favour, is really un worthy the good sense of one of your disciplined knowledge of the world, and comes with a truly scasonablclgrace from a man of your known regard lor the value of human lite and liberty. If your letter, sir, is commenced in the pur pic light of the aurora boreal is, it. concludes in thunder, darkness and defiance. Texas, with I iiui fimt 1 1'. . n 1 1 tier .11,11 iiinaoiianis, u trie nas ever so many, is tlirnateitedwith the very extremity of the vengeance of eight millions of the most gallant people under the sun ! I take no exception to your arrogating for your subjects even the title of the vanquishers of the conquerors of the world, or your disput ing with the inhabitants of I lie celestial empire the largest possible manufacture of liombatt. All that I have to say is, that you had belter make another experimental campaign and perhaps the 'accident may, this time, turn the other way, 1 can nssure yon, that allium 'I exus begins in her successliil industry to blossom like a rose, you will find that you have a more stumpy road to travel, than even du ring your last visit, however much tint visit may have been illustrated by a series ofbril liant victories. Rut all badinage aside, let me, in conclusion, say one word to your Excellency, in sober earn est. You are pleased to say that 'Texas will find great advantage in covering herself with the Mexican flag,' and that I, 'who possess the talents of a Statesman, must think seriously of this stco.' I 'thank you for the compliment If I could lay any claim to the forecast of prophets, who arc so likely, nevertheless, to be at fault, I would in reply venture to give you counsel and that is to make peace with Tex as with the least possible delay. The policy which I have recommended hitherto towards your country, has been pacific, as every public man in Texas very well knows. For three years I have strenuously opposed an invasion oT your territory. My treaties in Europe have looked to a guarantee of the integrity of your soil, under the faith of a public compact ; by w hich the respective poundaries between the two countries might be clearly ascertained deemed this most consistent with the interests of the country I represented, and the cause of humanity. I dcsireH that your people might be left free to cultivate the arts of peace, and you to make every imaginable experiment in the amelioration of their moral condition. I am sure the people of Texas would have been con tent that you should ha vo taken a Constitution out of every 'pigeon hole' in the Cabinet of tho 'Abbe Sieyes,' from the 'dry acidulous meta physics' of the German theorists, down to the self regulating political ethics of Rodea Owen. For I knew that to establish her own institu tions, and develope her own resources, all that Texas wanted was a little breathing time elbow-room ahe has, enough. Rut you seem to have willed it differently, and to have tlecided that your young neighbor shall fulfil her destiny some fifty years sooner than she otherwise would have done. In re sponse to this determination on your part, 1 be lieve there is but one sentiment in the country which I have so rwently left, and that is em bodied in the brief declaration, 'if it ' I moreover believe, that the only feeling of ap prehension that is felt at your resolve, (and I mention this to you as a secret, in ti e most friendly confidence,) in hst you may not tome yourself at the head if ymir tin incMt. Al though theTexinns, like the Presbyterian Par son, have no 'courage to hool of,' yet I am sure they will give you cordial reception, in con sideration of those unrequited claims to their gratitude which you have left so largely in ar rear since jour last visit. As to the humble individual who addresses you, although entitled to the honors of Citizen ship in Texas, it is not necessary that I should peak of my position. Would to God you had accepted the olive branch, which, as her bub!ic minister; I offered you in both the spirit of peace and ftiendship, and that you had humanely at tempted to staunch the wounds of your own country, bleeding at every porr. You have. however, disdained this offer in terms of the highest personal indignity to myself, and pub lic affront to the country. You accuse me of the impudence of having offered you tilver, 1 will not be guilty of the gasconade of offering you steel ; but whr-n you do come, I hope I may hear the neighing of your warsteed on the Ranks of the Rio Bravo. 1 have the honor lo subscribe myself, With dun consideration, Your Excellency ,s most obedient servent, J. HAMILTON'. HAST A.A. This personage, says the New Orleans Cresent City, is procuring a hirgc space in the eye of the public at present, and, as we hap pen to have an intimate knowledge of the "Na poleon of the South," we will endeavor to give our reuders a brief account of the impression received on a first introduction: We attended a ball given in the city of Mex ico, in ISt1", and during the evening, w ere for mally introduced to the '-conqueror of San Juan de Ulloa !" as he was then familiarly de nominated. He is a man about five feet ten inches in height, with an intelligent co'intc nance, and has, doubtless, suent his leisure hours in deep study. He sioke with great flu ency, the French, Spanish, and English languag es, during the evening, frequently expressed to us the pleasure he felt in meeting an Ameri can, 'lour country saved me. said he. from the grasp ofa desperate gang of Texatis, and the favors I then received, will be remcai- bered while life exists." He spent the evening with Mr. L. , a clerk in a mercantile house in the city, and an American of the fust water. To this young man, he expressed his admiration of the Amer icans, and said they were the only people on the earth, who could successfully resist the encroachment of Great Britain. "You arc a people who fear nothing," said he, "and you can do any thing you desire You have only to say you will do a thing, and it is accomplished !" In the course of conversation, he alluded to his defeat in Texas, and said. "I have fought men all my life, but I never came in contact with devils before! They completely annihilated me, and had I been in command of ten thousand men, I believe I would have been conquered ! 'You are the only nation," said he, "that cun bid defiance to the world.. You do not value your lives, and I am satisfied you can accomplish any thing you attempt,' The above is a faithiul account of an even ing spent in the company of a man who has triumphed over every obstacle in his path to grettucss, and wrote his name on the imperish able alter ot fame. , That he is "a cold-blooded tyrant is most true," but he has a thorough knowledge of Mexican character, and his movements arn tinged more by policy than justice. He stands on a precipice, and knows full well that any deviation from the barbaioua customs of his countrymen, will be visited vyith summary in dignation. He consider it hie duty, therefore, to conciliate till parti'nnd so far he has suc ceeded admirably. I,8 future fate is entirely problematical, and we shall leave him for the present, with promise to "seive up" by and j hyo, a number of incidents connected with his j History. The following a peech credited i the dollar Democrat is a perfect specimen in itself: 'Fel-lah Cit-ah-zens! Oim foil lee kwee dating lhoe Ilotu ! I om Jeni-tnc ! The On-ah the (Jlorah ! ond the Digni-lah ! of Misis-see-puh ! all re Mi ah ! thot their Pce-pal pay those ilmz! Kit ! they do split (Mere I'd luh ! fetch me soie wal-ah ! in a clean tnin blah ! O1111 liir put ting the Missis-sipah I'nioii Hank in lee-kwah-datum ! 1 am dem me ! Onah among thrives! is my mot-tah ! Felluh cttalueus, Oim flat tah'd by your attention I am split inoi whis kalis! t live no more to say to the awjenee ! I .el's lik-whar ! (Hero some half a dozen bank foM Net up a devil ofa clatter with their canes and high- her I'd boots. 'I say, Dill, what makes that fellow so bald headed!' 'Why don't yoti hi hair all turned the other wuy, and cornea out of his chin ! 'Oh ! my sins ! so it hi hut 1 say I wqr dcr if it had hard work petting through?' Iliriilarn ofa Woman nndrr an Insult. It would seem by the following extract from a letter by Miss Clifton, the actress, that the story of her receiving an insult from nameless libertine is true. The encounter in which that magnificent looking woman tri umphed, must have been quite superior to any of the mimic scenes in which she is said to make n figure on the stage. The poor fellow has been taught a wholesome lesson : "A few nights since," s'ie says, "after I had retired to my room, and my servant had loft my room about an hour, I heard a knock at the door. Supposing that the girl had returned, I opened the door, when one of the bloods about town presented himself, and said he wanted to speak to me, which request you may suppose I did not grant, but was preiaring to slam the door in his face, w hen hesiezed me by the arm and endeavored lo drag me along the corridor to his room, which was a few doors off. My spirit did not quail, and in the struggle which ensued the getit'eman (!) dropped his cane, which I seized, and used it over his luck and shoulders in the most handsome manner. Of course, he beat a retreat, and I returned to my quarters, with his cane as a trophy of my vic tory. I he atTair got wind the next day, and has mode quite a sensation. Of courso he apo logized attributed the intrusion to liquor, which is the root of all evil and wanted to hush the mutter up. A" rumor, with her thou sand tongues, may give different vcrsionsof the story, I send the facts to you, lo use if necessa ry." The memorial of the Huston shoe dealers and manufactures, to Congress, asking for protec tion, thus alludes to its effect upon the industry of the gentler sex. Itsayf There is one class, however, on which the weight of this calamity will fall with peculiar severity. That class is the women of our country, who get their living, as many hundreds of thousands now do, with great comfort and respectability, by the work of their own hands. This large and interesting class, heretofore not overpaid for their service.--, must not only ex perience a great falling off in price, but in many instances, an alisolute annihilation of de mand for their labor. They cannot subsist, if compelled lo work in competition with the la boring classes of Europe, who receive from four to six cents per day for their services. Men, when driven from one employment, may seek it in another ; and if work cannot lie had at home, they may go abroad. If it cannot be obtained on the land, it may be found osi the sea. But it is not so with women. They arc far more dependent und helpless; and when throw 11 out of employ, are involved in inevitable distress 1 ' r :.. .1.:., and suflerinrr. There are in this Common wealth, as ollicially ascertained, about 40,000 women employed in different manufctures ; 15 000 of whom are engaged in the manufac ture of shoes. How gteat then must be the whole number employed in the United States; and what an amount of privation and uuflerinj; must be involved in the turning out of employ, or in employing at halt price, this immense number of industrious women ! Humanity re coils at the contemplation of such scenes, and yet come they must, and come they will, un less Congress, ip, t.,e spirit of wisdom and jus tice, shall discriminate in favor of their indus try in the duties laid for tho support ofCJovern tn"at Were there no other motive than that arising from this view of the eibject, it would alone be sufficient to justify the most vigorous exertions. The liondon Correspondent of the New York Commercial thus alludes to one of the viMtsof the King of Prussia among the public institutions of the Metropolis On Monday he visited Newgate in company with Mrs. Fry and others. The party was conducted by the Coveiior to the female ward, where the prisoners were assembled. The I King made many inquiries concerning the j stati' of tin; prison, vh.-lher the inmates recei ! ved religious instruction, and on beiug answer ed in tho atlirmat.ve, ho expressed himself much gratified. After Mrs. Fry had conversed with muny of the prisoner, she read thceighth j ehap'et of Horn 11, end then offered an extem poraneous prayer. She krr It an example j which tho King iiimndilely followed. Af 1 ter this interview, tsking Mis. Fry by the arm, ihe King left tor the residence of Mm Fry. tiii.i.mi TohW. The giils who remain torpid 111 their girlhood, cold as the reflection of a moon in well, are prel'y sure to repay them selves for such illlmied sobriety by a glowing meridian, ten years aftar date. I detest even virtues that are unnatural. I hate a matronly miss. The cat should begin by being a kitten. Cecil, a Peer. Nr.u nil h. "Oh, mother! a bee has stung me '."said a beautiful girl as she came running in from the garden, "Never mind, child," re plies tht mother, "it nut-took thtt fwa fluwir." I square 1 insertion, . . . fn so 1 Jo 2 do . . . 0 7ft t do 3 dj - - . I 00 Kery subsequent inertii n, - 0 8.ri Yearly AJveitiapments, (with the privilege ot alteration) one column (25 half column, (18, three squares, $12 ( two squares, f9; one square. Without the privilege of alteration a liberal discount will be made. Advertisements lelt without di reft ions as to tla length of time the are 10 be published, will be continued until ordered out, and charged accord ingly. CjT"!ixteen lines make a square. Lancaster Coujcrr Silk. We have seen a lot of reeled silk, raised by Mr. John Summy of Warwick township, which js deserving of especial notice, as a sample of what may I e done by perseverance and proper management. There are upwards of one hundred xunds of silk in this lot, of as line ;i quality and as neatly prepared, as any we have ever seen. The day is not far distant when protection to Arncri' can industry and the new formation of home interests and home feelings which arc now agitating the country, will ren der the production of silk a profitable and pleasant occupation. Lancaster Herald. Pkaiils. Pearls are the morbid sc crelionsof an oyster. Several specie of bivalved shellfish produce tbem; but the greater number, the finest and the largest, are procured from the Melea grina margartitifera Lamarck, a native of the sea, and of various coasts. The pearls are situated either in the body of the oyster, or they lie loose between it and the shell, or lastly, they are fixed to the latter by a kind of neck; and it is said they do not appear until the animal has reached its fourth year. Ceylon continues to be, as it was in the time of the Romans, the most productive oT these ornaments. In the last century several of great size were found in the rivers of the counties of Jyronc and Donegal, in Ireland. Coffee in the United States and Great Britain. It is stated that while the annual consumption of coflee in Great Britain, with a population of up wards of twenty -five millions, is but twentyfive millions of pounds, the ave rage annual consumption, for the last six years, in the United States has beeu eighty six millions. At the same rate the consumption in Great Britain should, have been one hundred and thirty-three instead of twenty-five millions. Christiaxitv in China. The insti tute of missions in Berlin has received tidings of the celebrated German mis sionnry, Gufylall", dated from I'ckin, the 20th of November last. At that period he was aided in his apostolic labors by seventeen Chinese, (to whom six others were shortly to be added,) who having 1 learned 1 iiiisuanitv trom tntn, anuem- vitiate as missionaries; two of hi? pu pils, of Japan origin, were teaching I . J . ,. I the ( liiucsc nt Mucao ; and his two nieces, resident also in the latter place, had converted upwards of 140 Chinese women, all belonging to the higher clas ses. Here GutzlatT has addressed to '.he Missionaries' Institute thirty-eight volumes in the Chinese tongue, contain ing works relating to the Christian wor ship, printed at Pekin, Canton, and other cities of China ; and the Royal Library ol Berlin has received from him manu script copies of nine very rare Chinesa woAs, giving fhc description ofa great number of monuments anciently exist ing in the celestial empire, but of w hi:h few or no traces now remain. Destriction of Lltheh's Oak. Letters from Meiningen speak of the de struction, in a violent tempest, by which that country had been visited, of one of its curious monuments, the old oak of Luther, planted on the Gth May, 1521. L.A . t ,n,i lf M-At'I..IIC flair u" si'"1 I'"- ,yMV"V f IIIU gltUl ICIUllllCI lliIU UCl II Kliiu UIIU conducted to the castle of YVartzburgh. Notwithstanding its great age, the tree was still vigorous, and spread its leafy branches over a wide rircumference. Its relies were carried in solemn pro cession to thechuich of Steinach, w here they have been deposited in a vault, and the Grand duke has given orders for lha erection, on the spot w here they grew, ofa Gothic fountain, to be surrounded by trees, and bear an inscription com' rriemorating the event which the tree, itself has ceased to recotd.- Exchange. Worse-Fly. The eye ol the com mon house-fly is fixed so as to enable its prominent organs of vision to view accurately the objects around in every direction; it is furnished with 8000 hexagonal faces, all calculated to con vey perfect images to the optic nerve, nil slightly convex, all acting as so ma ny cornea sttOO included within a space no larger than the head ofa pin ! all hexagonal all of tho lest possible, form to prevent a waste of space! This is so wonderful, that it would staggtr elief, if not vouched for by being the result of the microscopical researches of Mich ir en as 1 .bv. u.V.CMjiI', uid Otheif : equally cuui.i lit.