1X1018 OF TIIIJ " AMKRC'IAX." H. B. MASSKR, Piumkhshii ab JOSEPH EISEI.Y. S Paiirairross. . a. mIMSSEN, Editor, I Office in Cinti-e Allen. " r"'r " 11 lt' er'$ Shirt. THE" AMEKIUAV fiublUhJ every Satur day at TWO bOI.I.AUd or annum to bp paid hnlf ye..rly in advance. iNd paper iliscuuiin ucil till iLt arrearage are paid. No subscription receive.il for lc period than six month. All communication or letleta on busite' relating to the. office, to iimure attention, must I POST PAID. Til Coireleu fonplei Jenny is prwir, unci I am poor, Yet we will wed no say no more ; And should the bairns yon mention come, A few thnt marry hut have some, No i1milt 1'iit hp:v'n will stnnd our friend, And lircnd h welt a rhihtren send. Ho fires the hin. in firmi'r'a vard, To live alone she fim'ii it h:iri! ; I'vp kn'iwn her w nry cv'ry cl In search of rorn nmonct the s'rawr ; ltnl when in qte t nf nicer fo.l, Hie clocks nmnneal li-r cliirjiinc liroml ; With j..y I've seen that self imc hen Thnt scra'clt'd fur nne. could vrnttrh for Im ; These are the thoughts which make mo wit line To take my C'rt without a hiring ; 1 And f.ir the nlf tme eatnte.d'ye see, Jenny' resolved to marry me. Itnclicloi-M. An lone cloud in Autumn evca, A J tee without in Icivc, A a t-liirt w.tl.oni t's cctr fuch are bachelor. A creature of another sphere, A thine thnt have no hnsincs hi re, A ttic in.-i.-ten io-, 'ii clear. Such are !achi lor. Vhen lo, a 'tit in fabled bower, A bt'inrs horn fiir happier hour, A buttei flies on favored fl.iwer, Sui It are mnnic.l men. l'toni the Slrtifirnvilh' Union. Srlrnllflc. Mr. William Cock, of Ttrownvillc, Pa., fa ther of Judge ("nek of this county, has made a discovery, which is thought to be of great im portance, partielarly to surveyors. It is des cribed as follows : To find the area of a circle or plat of land by weight and rule of three, draw the plat on pnstelronrd,on a scale of any number of perches to the inch, then cut a piece an inch square out of it, which will be the number of perches to the inch of the plat, then with gold scales weigh the inch and find the number of grains, then cut out the plat and weigh it with the inch piece in it then say as the number of grains is to the number of porches in the inch piece, so is the number of groins in the pint to the area required. Or, it may be done by drawing a square round the pint ami cut it out and weigh it, then cut nut tin plat and weigli it, and work it by the rule of three after measuring the squnre, but the first phn is thought to be the best, because it will lake the least fifurea The discoverer was first imtiresserf with the ido i of calculating areas by weighing from the following incident : He was altout selling '2 acres of land in Ttrownvillc to two men which had fourteen cor ners to it; and to be divided into two equal parts to suit them, he drew the plut on paste- bourd and cut it as near equal as he could, and afterwards adjusted them in the scales, by cut ting ftiin the heaviest and placing the piece in the scale with the light one until finding an equilibrium in the two parts; and this result so simply obtained, led him to extend its appli cation to the metir-urntion of snperfices. lie has sent to the l'uteut Office to have liis right ofiliseovery secured. The Brownsville JVeir, in speaking of this discovery, says : "We recollect last spring of seeing a description of an archotypc the paten ed invention of Mr. Thomas Wood of Smith field, Jefferson count v, Ohio, for which the Franklin Institute of Pennsylvania, presented him with a silver modal, and why is not Mr Cock entitled to a gold one 1" Sir Aillt)' Cooper. fTr" The N. Y. Tribune contains the following notice of Ihia gre it English f-u'eeen : "My receipt," says he, "for the first year was jC'i rs. ; the second JCJO; the third jCil; the fourth JCIK5 ; the fifth 100 ; the sixth JL-JOO ; the seventh JCV.M ; the e iglitli JCGIO the nil th JtlKHI," Hut his practice afterwards became more lu crative than that of any Surgeon that ever liv ed. In 115 It is professional receipts were Xil.tKK). Through all his active life he was in his dissecting room al 0 in the morning, at 8 dressed for the day, and at the service of gratuitous patients til halt past 0 ; at 10 his rooms were thronged with paticnb till 1, when often forced to escape the cruwd by a back door, he lectured at Cuy'e till 2, then rushed across the street to deliver his anatomical lecture at 3 he went again to bis di-sccting room ; at half past, rode on bis rounds, giving the post, boy "three pence a mile for bad driving, four pence for good and sixpence if they would drive like tha devil." till 7; then be took dinner, regulating hi diet upon the principle that after such labor be "could digest any thing but saw dust" Slept just ten minutes, then lectured and was on bis visiting till 12 and often till o'clock. Thr waatho usual industry by which his whole active life was mirktJ. Absolute acquiescence in the decision of th majority, the vital principle of Republic, from which Ily Mnsncr & VAseiy. history OP r.AOV HAMILTON, rpatched l.ady Hamilton in a fast railing ver Few heroines of fiction have been the rub- sel to Lord Nelson, with letters and orders re jects of rnch sinking vicifsittidrs a Emmy I.y- yoking the treaty of capitulation. The Queen on. Horn of the lowest parentage, her father unknown, licr birth-place some obscure part of Wales, rite was reared in alject poverty and corrupt habits. The first sixteen years of her life were pilled in an irregular and degraded f xistence, often in want of bread to niftain Iter, Yet in these unfavorable circumMancer, he n grew into maturity, a prodigy of beauty. The rprightlittesa of her mind and vivacity of Iter disposition .cem to have equalled her person- nl charms. 1IT attractions were now of too high an order to remain concealed. The artists sought her out, that they might give to the marble and the canvass the impressions of such I wonderful loveliness. She became the model of the goddess Ijjen. The Eticcessof the copy extended the reputation of the original. The celebrated painter, Homney, reproduced her as that he could release the English from the ob Venus, Cleopatra, and as Frinc. Others made ligations which they had contracted by the if hr-ra Sibvl. a I.edn. a Talia : and some a penitent Alagdelene. In the next step of her career, she met with and captivated Charles Grenville, of the no ble family of Warw ick. Deranged with pas ... ... , .mi I... I sion. "( runn wmi ueautv. nesouiriino espouse i her ; but overwhelmed with debt, and without the menns of support, it was necessary to reek the assistance and consent of his uncle. Sir William Ua.nilton, then minister of (Jreat Britain, at this court. She was despatched as the sm,liant to obtain both the one and the o- ther; the infatunted lover believing thnt her found erudition, distinguished in war, and be nppearance would be, on bis part, a sufficient loved and respected in peace, was among those nnoloov for scckini? so extraordinary an union, The old uncle lost in such raptures as over whelmed every other consideration. lie paid the debt of his nephew, and married bis bt' trot hod. Being now my lady, and the wife of a minis tor. a biilliant career opened before her. To the astonishment of all, she moved in the high region of society to which she was now entitled to takes conspicuous part, as if she had been accustomed to it from early years. The grace o nature is superior to that of art. Her histo ry was, of course, the subject of much remark, and it was not to be expected thai a court, one of the most exclusive of Europe, should receive her with more attention than her position im periously demanded. Queen Caroline, the daughter of the celebrated Marie Thereto of Austria, and the sister of the unfortunate Marie Antoinette of France, met this brilliant "par-I venue" with coldness and hauteur. But these were destined to continue but a short time, Die Queen soon found it necessary to yield to the fortunes of this extraordinary woman. .i - - r. i .t.. .llllllliri Pl.tjlli; in HIV Ulilllin nno nu' ..ifm-fc- ed. Iinl Nelson appears, a conquering hero; his brow bound with the fresh laurels be had just gathered at Abonkir. lie had blasted the prospects of Napoleon in the East. He came to Naples, raw Ijuly Hamilton, and was con quered, lie had braved the battle and the breeze-filled Europe with his fame-to strike hi, n inWio,ts!v to this modern Svren. In her presence, he was feeble as an infant : spell hound, he gazed, received the subtle poison; and stood within the charmed circle, vanquish ed and a victim, The conqueror, to whom the veteran diplo matist and the illustrious warrior had sttrren dered, was now to rubdue the court. The ta - gacious Queen snw that she might exert an important itiHuence on the fate of Italy, and perhaps of Europe. The English admiral w as her slave the English minister was her hus- band. She soon became the subject of the most assiduous ami distinguished attentions, In the theatre, and the public exhibition, she wasoftcn seated by the side of the Qieen. In the palace, she was received in its most secret recesses, entertained as a friend, admitted to the roval table, an honor in this court reserved to princess of the blood ; and report said, that the imperial offspring of Austria, the Queen of the Two Sicilies, often occupied the same chamber and laved her limb in the same bath with her who had been but recently a poor va- grant, houseless, penny let and unknown. At the flight of the royal family to Sicily, upon the approach of Championnet, he ac- companied tin in, embarked in the same vessel, shured the sarno adventures, and the same as- Pylln)i When the information w as received ly the court at Palermo that the republican were conquered, and that Naples hud surrendered lo Cardinal Undo and the Allied Powers, the plea- sore ol this news was embittered by the fuel that terms bad been granted to the vanquished, A treaty of capitualation bad been made, which etipulated for the security of their lives, the protection of their property, and the power of emigration to those who preferred it. The King and the Queen believed it degrading to treat with rebels. Besides, tho power of tak- ing vengeance on their rebellious subjects was thus wrested from them, at the moment they were anticipating ita full grandeur. They de - UNBUMY AMBMCAN. AND SIIAMOKIN JOURNAL; Wmbm-r, Noriliumbcrland Co. besought her as a friend to we Iter exertion to persuade 1iril Nelson to cancel the treaty. She raid, to you, my lady, we shall owe the dignity rf (be crown go, solicit; may the wjnd.s and the waver favor yon." She dopart- ed, and arrived on ltonrd the ship of the admiral ,e was entering the port of Naples. He cottld not resist the fair amhissadress yielded to Iter wishes, and sncraficed thnt good name, to which he had devoted a life of heroism. To her lie surrendered his own glory, lct rayed the honor of his country, abandoned the interests nf humanity, and drew upon himself, th.i cen cure ond the room of the civilized world Whatever power the King of the Two Sicilies my have bad to disavow and annul the actsof his own commander, it cannot bo pretended signature of the treaty of capitulation. It was violated, and doubtless would never have been so, but for the unfortunate ascendency of Ijidy Hamilton. Those who laid down thpirarms, relying upon the faith of treaties, suffered the ntinthmpnt nf felons. Many perished by the h"nl of t1i Tizzaroni. The chief were, for the most part, bung and thrown into the sea. Cancciola, the admiral of the fleet, a prince by birth, endowed by nature with the highest mialities, which had beencult.vated and adorned by the most finished education, and most pro- who suiierco; me penalties oi treason. After his execution, fifty pounds weight of iron was fastened to his feet, and then bis corpse was committed to the great deep. A few days after the King arrived in the harbor, when, looking over the side of bis vessel, be saw a movement in the water, ond something approaching the ship. In a few moments he discovered it was a corpse ; which moved rapidly towards the vessel, with its bead elevated out of the water, and the body erect. He exclaimed, "Caracci ola !" and turned away, horror stricken. Then as ifconfounded he said, "Why, what wants the dead V The chaplain, who stood near, re plied, "One would say that be came to demand Christian sepultre." "Let him have it, 'said the King, and retired to bis apartments. It i . . , . i . .i - -i t. was taKen up ami interred in me cnurcn oi Santa Maria on the Santa Lucia Inly Hamilton had now reacted her re nith. She was to descend with nearly the same rapidity. The next year, Sir William Hamilton was recalled from his mission, and returned to England. She accompanied him, and I xrd Nelson followed. In a short time. her husband died, and Lord Nelson wat killed at Trafalgar. Site soon expended, in a hie of dissipation and extravagance, the fortune which had been given to her by her husband ami par amour. She wnsa'fiin reduced to want the necessaries of life, and perished in the deepest '" F"' .: - j t . ... : i :i r. . r..!..: ;.. F ranee. Jjifci A oArfcn. fXj N. P. Willi, the correspondent of the Na tional Intelligencer, give the following account of Count D'Orsty, who i ckitowledteJ to be the beau ideal of dandy inm; "D"Ou8ay. There is a report going the I round nf the papers that Count D'Orsay, the preat king of dandy-doom, is nltoiit to visit this country. I do not believe it, for a star more completely unsphered than D'Orsay would be jn Vankee-lund can hardly have been seen in its travels by the lute "enterprising" comet. If he should come at all it would be to commence backwoodsman at the start, for he is a man suited only to extremes of civilization. Press D'Orsay how you would, he could 'not put his jnt the street of a city without a crowd ,ct ,in- jL. s an unusally tall man w ith a herculean bust, but otherwise a'olule symme- (ry 0f person, and w ith till his look of personal s;rt.ngth is almost femininely beautiful in lace, BI i . unoaralelciI crace and style in every not on jjis cn.spicious personal appearance nmiie jt jmpuaHble for linn to walk the streets of lutidon. He was never seen by those out of doors except in bis cabriolet, and even that purlial view drew all eyes after bun for half a mile. But be would make a splendid "trupper," and backwoodsman. lk'isthe"aJiniwbleCngh- ton" ol all mauiy exercise me oen uoxer, i.ie best fencer, the bet ritlu-hot, the bel liorne- man, the boldcbt sportsman ut every thing. Aud for tlw look of thorough bttnhomvue and frank good fellowship, I never saw his equal. Every man loves him who sees him. But between the lavish splendor of the expensive and privi- leged circles in which he baa always moved, and the law hssness and wild dangers of a life in the backwoods, I can imagine no sphere en- durable by D Orsay, and, intloi-d, no position a I - .... chievable. Lucifer, "just come downf" with bis wings on, would hardly be more a marvel in Broadway, and hardly more out ol place in 1 New-York society." there I- no app. al hut to force, the vital principle and Va. Saturday, April 1.1, is i'3. The Wlne-rJIooii. . Who hath woe 1 Who hath sorrow t Who both contentions! Who hath wounds without cause ! Who bath redness of eyes ? They that tarry long at the wine! TlMfJjat go to reek mixed wine! Itok not thoii noon the w ine when it is red, when it giveth its COMU R IN THE (TP when it inoveth itself aright At the lat it biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder. Ti Xoi.rmu. Almut fifteen years ago a woman left Pbila- delphia and settled ;n Natchez, and commenced the humble business of n hitxter, by sellinij apples, candv, Ac., at the comer of the streets, After a time she obtained a small shop and went into the retail business, and advanced from step to step, and now she is supposed lobe worth (hrrc huixhrd thovsand Mar, ami is doitt? an extensive wholesale business. She is the ow nor of about a dozen bouses. She arrived at Natchez tilone, a poor and friendless woman, and has accumulated her creat wealth by her own exertion anil industry. Tho following is triven asan illustration of her character : About fi.ur years airo she dime to the determination to obtain a husband, nnri it seems, she supposed money was all sufficient to accomplish that de sirable object. One day asa judge of the court, who is an old bachelor, was passing her dwel ling, she called h:in in and informed him that she wanted him to count some money for her. The Judge, at her request, stepped into her . I counting room, where she had one bnmlred tbn.ts.nH .loll.irs lvin.r ttnon the table. When th. I...1.TP Wl finishe,! mnntimr the Inro .;, rIip infnrtnpil him in fitiitn n business nmnnor. that he could have the control of it,. he wovht takc hrr with it. The decision of tho Judsre in the case, was that the money was a truly desirable object, bill the incumbrance too great ; and of course the lady was nonsuited. Btt KWASii for Waiix Get a pound of blue vitriol, and have it powdered. Two quarts ot lime. J ake six cents worth ot pine, noil it in a quart of soft water till thnrotijblv dissol- ved. Put the powdered vitriol into a wooden bucket, and w hen the oltte water is cold pour it on the vitriol, and mix and stir it well. When the vitriol is dissolved in the pine water, stir in bv degrees the two quarts of lime. Then trv ! the tint of mixture bv dinpinrr a piece of white paper into it, and when it dries you enn jndcre if it is the color yon watit. If too pale etir in a li'tlemore powdered vitriol. It is well to provide an extra quantity of these articles, in case a little more of one or the other should be required on trial of the co lor. Mi Lrslir'n Minrmine. A stirs An Pt.rrrR.- Secure a snmilv of .te bushels of the former ami one of the-lattpr, r J 1 fir every acre of corn joit mean to plant, so that you may be able to put a pill on each hill of corn. Small as this quantity may appear, it w-ill make a difference of 25 per cent, in the vield of vour corn. To Clkan Win rrwvsii Biii'Murs. Wash off with cold water the lime from the bristles of tho brush, and scrub well with a hard senile bing brush the part where the bristles are fix ed into the wood. This should be done as soon as you have finished tho w hitewashing for the day. It is far better than to let them lie in soak all night Tim: Yeh.ow (Ylokimi rou Walls Pro cure one pound of chrome yellow, and three pounds nf whilinj. Mix and prind them all together and then add a quart of water, and stir the whole vetv hard. If vou find it too thick, add water till yon get the desired consis tence. This makes a beautiful yellow approach ing to a lemon color. liKxrrtT or orn Manci atorifsj to tus I'akmim. Te Kochesler Democrat states that Pie manufacturers of New England lsnt year used over two hundred thousand barrels of flour, in making starch and sizing for their gouU being a Urger quantity of (lour than was exported lo England in the same time. The manufacturers of the- single State of Mas sachusetU, during the same time, consumed more Western flour than was exported to all foreign countries ! Is it not clearly the interest of the farmers of tho Wet to foster manufactu rers! .V. 1". Tribune. History tells us of illustrbus villains: but there never was an illustrious miser In nature. immediate parent of despotism. Jarraaao. Vol. 3 o. 29 Whole No, 133. An t'Rly fuilonifn "Don't ruroN ko Extras.'' A wager was made a few days since on boird a steamboat, between a couple of jokers, one of whom point ing to an extremely ugly man, bet a bottle ot wine that an uglier customer could not bo pro duced. The other, who bad recti one of the firemen as he passed on board the boat a man whose face was screwed out of its shape at once took up the bet and started down etairs for his man. The joker bad had an impediment in his speech, but he nevertheless made known hi business to the fireman, and obtained bis consent to show himself to decide the wager. When inside the social hall, the ugly man. whose nose as on one side of his face and his eyes on the other, began to screw and work them about, to give his face a greater degree of ugliness. "S-s-top," said his backer, "D-o-n t put on n-n-no extras. St-st-nnd jest as the I,ord made yon you cni'i be beat .''' The o- titer acknowledged that he had lost, and paid the wager. JV. O. Pie. Rett). We know one Leonard Jones who pot up a sect of "Live Forevers," and actually had followers who believed they would never die. They had an establishment in the lower P"rt of Kentucky, and were getting along quite well until an epidemic thinned off the believers, Jones afterwards tried to form a sect of "Non- Katers," and got some disciples to this 6chool. They were to ent less and less every day until they entirely lived upon nothing. He marie a bold effort to conform to his own creed, until he happened to stop at the Gait House, in I-ouia- ville, two years ago, where a roast turkey so moved his bowels that be fel. from grace into the grace of the sauce pan, and subsequently turned Mormon, and perhaps Millerite since. X. O. Dec In China there are but few good roads " " " MiiiivAtif C tvt . t f K ia itrvin a li rati .Ha Pmu;a 1 ' 1 ' lo l"psc u,ry Mac" " I t' -ti. a ii wmu .8 lavorao.e, maieriQi.y .lua u.utr progre, I i kf :u. . -h...i , u.. "vmg a,os. muusi :.. ...uu , u.o plains Of Sere .ntt, where l-p Chinese drove With saiN d wind their cany wagon light." A curious fact is thus told in one of our ex change papers : "take a string that will reach iust twice round the neck of a lady let her yi ,rtl.nn11IP.w, hrr IHli-niiJ ihrn if U)p nonf(t wi) 8)i ov,.r hcr hf,;ilj , ,he ,,nc) i )f fhp nrck) jt -w R CPrl.lin indication that she married or otiolit to be." Now don't stran- ole your-clvm, young ladies, in testing its truth. When Abernethy was consulted by a young lady, he said, "How con you expect to bo well when you squeeze your waist to the size of a quart pot ! Co! go home ! leave offyour stays; burn them, and here, take this shilling, buy a skippieg-ropc at the first toy shop you come to, and use it frequently every day you will then be able to eat like a tational being. President Joe Smith, of Nauvoo City, mar ries the girls and fellows preaches sells tape and molasses candy writes verses for the "Times and Seasons," and makes laws for the Mormons. A poor scamp left hi wife in a great rage de claring she'd never see his faco again, till he was rich enough to cotno back in a carriage. lie kept his wjrd, for in less than two hours, he was brought home drunk, on a wheel-barrow. "Pray, Miss C. (said a gentleman the other evening) why is it that the ladies are so fond of oficrrx .'" "Mow stupid ! (replied Miss C.) is it not perfectly natural and proper that a la dy should like a good oTi r, air f Yawningsmny be excited by taking hold of the long, and opening them several times. Ol course, those upon whom the trick is practised, inu-t not be aware of your design. The Chinese have a saying, thut an unlucky word dropped from the tongue, cannot be brought back by a coach and six hordes. Literakv Cimosirv. It will be observed that the following line w ill read both ways. "Lewd did I live &. evil I did dwcL '." Citiditv is the desire for gold. CujiiJWy is the desire for love. Cti-idity is the desire for liquor. In language, all are spelled alike in life all are spelled differently. -V. Y. Aurora. Be slow in choosing a friend, and slower to change him; courteous to all; intimate with fe w ; slight no man for his poverty, nor esteem anyone fbi his wealth. Woman's love is a beautiful flower that pu rifies by its sweetest fragrance the tainted air of man's existence. Variety is the spice of life," as the printer exclaimed when he knocked the form into pi. imei:s ov .tnvrnTisi. t square 1 insertion, . fO M I do 3 do . . . . 0 M I do 3 da . . . I OH Etrery miWqucnt inacrli, n, 0 W Yearly Advertisement! one column, f 25 hlf column, l 8, three qunrr, fUj two square, f 9 ; one qure, f 5. Half-yearly J one column, flH i half column, $13 t three square, ft j two square, f 5 ; one square, $3 AO. Advertisement left without direction a to the lenqth of time they are lo be published, will twi continued until ordered out, and charged accord ingly. C3!itcen line make a square. Debuting Roelety. "I move that the question bo read." Secre tary reads "Which is the truest (science, mes merism or phrenology 1" "Mr. President : the question has neither negative nor affirmative." President "No matter Dr. Jipga for me. merism Captain Jcwkea for phrenology." Mr. Stunder "I would ask, Mr. President, if the question doea not entrench itself against the constitution ! We are not to discuss re ligion nor politics in this society ; now, free knowledge is a sectarian pint, and if we are a goin' to discuM that, I shall withdraw from this) society." President "The word has a different mean ing in the question, and has alluBion to tho protuberantie devil-opmcntsof the cranny-uin." Stnmp "All this is outer order, there aint no quest ion afore the mcetin'." President "Dr. Jiggs, will you open !" Dr. Jigps "Mr. President : I have not en tered these walls this evening, prepared to speak on this question; I ttr-rah am ur-rali in favor of mesmerism, as I understand it: Mesmerism is a kind of somnolence, and is men tioned by Tycho Brahe, when he said, 'Blessed be that man who invented sleep.' Under tha magnet ic influence of mesmeric sleep, man haa travelled through the abstruse regions of of Mr. President the chimerical atmosphere of the most unbounded metapyaical incongruities; he has analyzed time and space, and soared into the mysteries of ease and existence, like like like anything ! My opponent, will, no doubt, extend his ferocious mouth against my argument, but, sir, my argument is based on the experiments of Collyer, and the philosophy ofDods! Sir, 1 say, sir ! mcsmcrifem is the key which oversets the dipnet of time, and dis closes to human visiology the intricacies of miraculous interpositions. But phrenology, sir, "what is it ! the child of gall end bitterness. It maps out the human skull like a terrestial globe and its professors, to keep good the re semblance, have whirled their brains on their axes, and eqtial-kuocktialized their exuberances on the oxpital and piratical bones. I reserve my remaining remarks for the rejoinder." President "Captain Jowkes." Jew kos "I aint prepared to say nothin' on this question at least no--bnt then senc I hcarn the doctor, I would ray a few words on the ideas chalked down here on my hat. Phre nology is the science of tho knowledge box, and knowledge is free : hence phrenology. But mesmerism is the science of sleep. It says that one man can put another to sleep ; so can opium. It deduces man then to the level of a pizonotts drug. My antagonist has mado use of a great many long words, and his speech would go twice around the world and tie." Stump "I call the capt'n to order lor per sonalities." Jcwkes "Didn't the doctor call my moutli ferocious? Retaliation is the first law of na ture. He needn't ray nothing about mouth! Jest look at his, Mr. President; it goes clear round, and makes the top of his cranny-um, as he calls it, an island. Mesmerism and its sup porters are humbugs, sir yes, air, himdics, sir. They pick out a sleepy-headed fat boy, who drops asleep of himself, and pretend that they willed it, when they couldn't a helped it if they tried. I conclude, air, by moving the question." President "Those in favor of mesmerism, hands up 14. Phrenology, bands up 11; a tie. Gentlemen, you have decided that one science is just as true as the other. The socie ty is 'journed." It does not cost a man any thing to be civil to his fellow men. And it is better to have tho good of even a dog than to provoke "him to acts of madness. We are always on the safe side, when we are civil and courteous. Whoever has nothing more than modesty and talent, has a slim capital and must burst. It takes plenty of brass, a good stock of impu dence, and a thimble full ot brains, to gel through the world. Stay at home at night, improve yourself by reading, or instructive conversation, and retire to bed early. It is said that however well young ladies may be versed in crammer, but very few of them can decline matrimony. All men wish to be happier than they can be ; yet most men might easily be happier than they really are. At the working man's house hutiger looks in but dares not enter ; nor will the bail if! or con stable enter; fur industry pays debts, but des pair increaseth them. Avarice and ambition are the two elements that enter into the composition of all crimes. Ambition is boundless, and avarice insatiable. One cannot associate with a vile person one hour, w ithout receiving some injury. Why is a bar-room like a balloon ! .Because ho who enters it is very apt to get nigh.