u 1 I.JL-1J. LJ.I-JIJJ.JU..H. rulers or AnymTisiivG. I square 1 insertion, 0 HO 1 do 2 do . . . . 0 TS 1 do 3 d, . . 1 00 F.vry subtequrnt insertion, 0 W Yearly Advertisement : one column, $85 j half column, I R, three squares, f 12; two squares, f9 ; one aqowre, $5. Half-yearly i one column, f 18 half column, $12 t three squares, f 8 ; tw squares, $5; one square, $3 M. AiKertisements left without directions at to Ihe lenirth of time they are to be published, will be emit m lied mrtii ordered out, and charged accord ingly. C,fiiteen lines maVe a square. TERMS OF THE AMEMCAX'" SUNBTOY AMlfflCAN. AND SHAMOKIN JOURNAL; H. B. MASSF.R, JOSEPH EISELY. PumtHHRRS A SB S PHomiKTOItl. ti. n.'jnjssErii Ketnor. Office in Centre Alley, in the rear vf . tt. Mas ter's Stare. THE" AMEiOAN" is published every Satur day at TWO DOLLARS per annum to be paid half yenriy in advance. No (taper discontin ued till all arrearages are paid. No subscriptions received for a lew period than si mojitbji. All communications or letter on business relating to the office, to insure attention, must be POST PA1L. Absolute acquiescence in the decisions of the majority, ihe vital principle of Republic, from which there is no appeal but to force, the vital primiple and imuwdiate pareat of despotism. Jerntaso. By Masncr & Elscly Simbiiry, Xorlliumbcrlana Co. ra. Saturday, May 1, is 1 1. oU lXo. 32 Whole Xo, iss. From the Phil. Daily Sun. All Old Reminisce nse. Mwlllemill. Tor sale at Auction go'ing. gone'!!! On this day mouth at halt past one. A splendid '-Lot of Multieaulis'' Early in the rnmini; Full, is Expected to arrive by Steam ("Great Western."' or the "llritish Queen,") Also five thousand munds of "Ejiss," Put up" in white Mulberry kegs; Tire assortment will he complete., From fifteen inches, to eight feet : Selected by a connoisseur AVlio for a trifle will '-insure"' Soon utter landin;, they'll be sold For the best otters made "in cold ;"' Cannot negotiate for "paper." Fnless secured by "Iiond an! Mortgage" fftiriding as firm as Unssian cordage : Or "St-'rlinj; Hills'' at 'Current rates'" Drawn by "the Tank T'nitcd Stares-,'' Or firs rate honsrs. which we know; For inrtaiire, Prime. Ward Kiiia Sc Co. In this selection will be found Some specimens the most rcnnw"3:. TitW-'d tram the seed, direct froir, China Imported in "(lie Ajjripinu" Ti"rub. "on these here leaves" what feed. Will spin their cocoons -with vast speed; There's no mi-take vmi'll find 'ein, Peelers. 'AN ell wort'mhe 4u.ti-,- i. all deuleis 'J'ltK COMMON SCI H))LS. : aiv .IUS1UU' JVOANE. j "W-efTilerly tepndiate, as unwortliy, not o1 tfreemon only, but of awn, ttie narrow notion tthat there is i Ms an eiliicalion for the po;r, as such. Has God provided lor lUeiunr a coarser earth, a thinner air e. 'pa"ler sky ! Xt?f it : the glorious sun pour down las golden flood , s-clroerTly upon the jvv.ir man's hoviV., as upon .the rich man's iV.ac.e .' lls'.e iKt the ctta-! ger's children as keen tu-mse f all tle ln.'sfi- nesa, -verdure, fragrance, melody, m.i beauty of j luxuriant nature h.s the pa!e kms of Kings! : Or is .it -911 the inindV.iiit ljol has stamped the ) imprint of a baser birth, so that the ;( iiinnV : :hild knows, with hti in'xiTn certainly, that his : lot is tocimvL, not to climb ? j It if not so. Cuvl Iir i.r. 4one it. Man cannot do it. Mind is immortal. Mind is im perial. It bears no mark of high or low, o! rich or poor. It -no bound of time er place, 1 of rank or circumstance. It asks but freedom. It requires but light. It ishraicu boru,unt! it : aspires to heaven. Weakness does not enteeWe , it. l'overty cannot repress it. OitTicullics do ; Vut stimulate its rigsw. And the p'tor tallow- i chandler's son that sets vpallthe night to reiki) the book .hwb an apprentice lends him lest tljf maler"s eye should miss it it the morning, s-ball sland and treat jib k'mgs, shall arkl new . provinceo to the bmnin of science, shall hind i the 1ig.tning with a lieinpen cnrrl, and bring it harmless from the skies. The Common School "is eninmoii, not as infi-rior, not as the srhixd for ' poor men's chi1drin, but as the light and air aro , coiuiuon. It ought to be the best school, be. cajsc it is the first school; and in all works the beginning is one hnlf. Who dors iot know j the vaU; to a community of a plentiful supply ! of the pure clement of water. And infinitely' wore thai) this is the inrtructioii of the Cum-1 moil School, for it is the fountain at w hirh the mind drmks, and is retreshed and strengthened i U'e w,sal1 ' "I'-nff-Uwold woman was fur its career of usefulness and glory." ' talkl" 'l)",)t I'ergar.iin and the fro-t, and I was ; jes: raisin my colTee cup to my mouth when I Snow ki Si.i:n;niNo. The Portland, Me..) heerd Kesiah scream out 'Oh my Ird ! the Bulletin f.S nun-day, says: 'During the past baby! the baby!' and whap it come rite down winter we have had rigilmi snow storms, and stairs unto the floor. Lightuin couldn't knock something like five feet of snow has fallen on a ed me oft my seat quicker down went the cof level. And for the space of about four months fee, and over went the table with oil the vit we have had excellent sleighing. The last ties Mary screamed, and old Miss Stallins snow, we have hud, fell on the 3tllh of March, . fainted rite away in her cheer I was so blind yet the streets are now dry and dusty. We ' couldn't hardly see, but I never breathed a never knew a more steady winter we never j breath til I grabbed it up in my arms and run knew a mure sudden cbange from winter to round the house two or three times. Yore I had summer. ! the heart to look at the noor little thini' tu see Tub Kino or Swum: v. Appropos de ta touage, it is aflirmed that the King of Sweden's physicians were greatly astonished the other day, on bleeding 1 1 Majesty, to find the word "l.ioerte : r.iraute : ou la Mori " verv leiriblv I ctaincd on his arm, J hey could not recover from their amazement. Charles John has been so long a King that it is forgotton that he began by being a mere hero, and he iu so good a King that one cannot persuade oneself that he was formerly eo good a Republican. But how strange a King tattooed with liberty! Our whole age is exhibited in I hat approachment : liberty, equality, or death ! Yet it ii with such mottoes that one reaches a throne in our days. Madame M. Girarden. "If you were to have your choice, John, what death should you rather die!" "Well, I don't know I should like to try five or six before deciding." From the New York Spirit of the Times. OmuiXAL. LKTTKK FROM TIIK GEOIW Ki MA.TOK. How Mtsrs K esi aii, Arnii.-Fooi.Er) tiim ! Pinevii.le, April 5, l!?4! To Mr. Porter Dear Sir Ever sense I redd that piece in your pnper, wliar you fed you would walk a hundred miles, just to shake Lands with we, I've been monstrous anxious to pit a qnainted with you. Hut its sich a terri ble long ways to New York, and Cotton's down so low, ! don't much think Til ever Imvo tho pleasure of sccin you in the world. Hut there's one consolation we literary men's got over . common people, and Ihnt is, weenn lormnain lances and friendships by our writens without i ever seeing one another, ami bein as some of us ' flint no great beauties, perhaps it's as good a j way as enny. I'm told yowr a monstrous grate long gander-longed feller, and you may bebo- ruination ngly for all I know ; but thisonc thing J I'm certair. of you must be a smart man, ami a man of First-rale taste, r you would' like i my ritens so much. I would rit yon a letter i before, but the fact ic, sense last February, I j hnint hud much time for nothing. The baby's i hern cross as the mischief with the hives, and ; .Mary, site's been nilin a good deal, and then con ; know this time of yeaT we planters is all busy ; fi'ini for the crop.. ; Nothing uncommon haini io'k place drri here lately, only totherday fl catasterfy hap pened in our family that come monstrous nigh puttin an rend to the whole generation of us. ! I never was so near sheered out of my senses r.'y-ity1 in my born days, and I -dau'l 'blicve old M iss Slallins ever will git over it, if she v.-is ! to live a thousand years:. But I'll tell yon nil ' about it. i last Monday morning ll of .is got up well ' mid hearty as could be, and 1 sot in our Toom w ith Mary, and played with the baby till lrrcak fast time, little thinkin what was gwiuc to hap-'-. -pr-n so soon. The little feller was jiimpin and crrrwrn so, I could hardly hold him in my arms, ai d sprainin his Ikt'Ie month and laughin just J bke he knnw'd everything we sod to him. ; Ilinieby out Prissy come to tell ustneakfart was rrddy, and we all went intotother rom to eat, cept sister Kesiah, who fed she would stay and take-cure ol little iknry Clay, till we was done. Mary's so cntvf.il she won't trust tire baby with none of the niggers a single minit, and she's al ways dreadful oneasy wlssn Kesiah's go it, olio's so wild and so caTc-less. Wei!, we a-M sot down to breakfast, and Ke si'iiIl, slw scampered up stairs to her rom with the buliy, jump. si it up. and l.issin it, and tulkin to it as lottd as she could. 'Now sis, do be careful of my precious little dariin,' ses Mary, loud as shecould to her, whoa she was gwine up stairs. Oh, cat your breakfast, child, and don't be so tarditied 'Uit the baby,' sesold Miss Stallius 'you don't low yourself a minil's peace w hen it's outo" yo'.u sight.' 'That's a fact,' ses sister Callins, She won't let nobody do iiutlim for little Henry but her sell". 1 know I wouJii'ul be so cmiy 'tiuut ho child ofiniiic. 'Well, but you know sister K'u is so careless, I'm always so Ira id she'll let it swalier soinc- ! thing, or git a fall some way.' I 'Tut, tut, ses the old woman, 'they aint no sense iu being all the time scared to drill 'bout j nothin. People's got enough to do in this wot Id i to bear the trouble when it comes, 'thout stud- i.ym it up. I akc some of them good hot corn muffins,' 6csshe, 'tbry's mighty nice.' if it was (led. I Jly this time the galls was holt of me holler i ing 'April Fool ! April Fool !' is hard as they could, and when I come to look, I hud nothing in my arms but a bundle of rags with htilu Hen ry Clay's clolhes on. I shuck all over like I had the ager, and felt a monstrous sight more like cuss'u thin laugh, in. 'April Fool, dignotion !' ses I 'fun's fun ; Fin dud blamed if there's any fun in sich do ins;' and I was jest gwine to blow out a little, when I heard Mury scrcamia for me to come to her mother. When we got in the dinin room, thor the old woman was keeled over in her cheer, with her eyes sot in her head and a corn muffin stickin in her mouth. Mary was takin on at a terrible rate, and all she could do was jest to clap her hands and holler Oil mother's dying! mother's dying? whar'a the baby! Oh, my poor mother ! Oh, my dariin baby '.' I luck Mary and 'sph.incd it all o her atwl tried to qtiiet tire poor gall, and the galls got at the old woman ; but it took all sort of rubbin, and ever so much nssatcdrty and camfire and bartson and burnt lien's leathers, lo bring her too, and then she wouldn't stay bring to morc'n a minit 'she'd keel over again, and I do 'blive if they hrj-diiXtrrmg little Henry Clay down so she could see and leel him and he.vr him sipialt, she never would get hersensesagin. She aint more'ii hnlf ot herself yit. All the galls kin do they can't tnake her understand the April FikiI Jr-isine., and she won't let nobody else but herself nurse the habyecer sense. As soon as 1 had time to think a little, I was so monstrous glad that it warn't no worse, I could'ntstay mad with the galls, lbit I tell yon what 1 w&s terrible rathy for a few minits. Imn't believe in this April fool in. Last year the galls devil'd mc nltnostr-o deth with their nonsense, sowin np'.he legs of my trowsers, burin holes in the water gourd, so I wet wy shirt all over when I went to drink, and lit ml in the handle of (he tongs, and cuttin the cow hide buttons of the cheers ks?so I fell through rm wnrn i went to set nown, aim an sicu oevii- i ment. I knew the Hible srs thers a tunc j all things; but I think the least a body has tn no witn i.xii iiusmess nt any tune the better lor em. I in monstrous tired of such doins mys.-lt, and i I didn't think the galls had got ther fill of April fool i n this time. I'd try to it it a tilinyiKvek, next year what tiidn"t1iae no first tiny of A pril in ii. No more from your friend, till death, Jo. Jo.m:. P. S. I seed in yoarpper 'totl er (lay that some of tli everlastin eternal John Smiths had been castin some insinuations on my wile's character. I red it to Mary and sIkj's been be tried the human subject. The process is poutin bout it ever sense. She ses he's a nas- not entirely I ml before ihe public as yet, hot I y mean wrvtch, to be pr.stcrn himself 'bout j had the honor, iu t-ompuiy with a friend, of i what 5.m't consarn him, and castin slurs on de- ' sit ng the pro!'ess.r. cent people ; and if she only know'd who he I shnl! (juc a slight Je.-eriplion of oiie of the was, she'd scald It in 'bominable ugly eyes out nf (niter rooms containing some of Ins prepara tion. I told Iter it wasn't no use to try to do j tions. Previous to entering, we were furnish that, for the Mfssissippy wraild'nt begin to ! ed w ith an Ind a rubber bag, to w hieli w as at drown all the mean scamps that go by that i Inched a mask with class ryes. This was put name. I wish you would jest tell your Pitts- j on to prevent the temperature of the room from burg correspondent that we're decent christain ! being varied the slightest degree by our breath while people out here in tJonrgia, and he musn't i ing. It was an nirrular room, lighted from the wonder if we t a little smarter than his people, top (,v the urn's ravs, from which the het was who live way up thar in the fork whar they ! rntirelv disengaged by its passage through it swaller more coal smoke in a year than would ; glass, ic, colored by theoxid id' copper, (a late busta balloon, and whur they're so black and dirrovrry, and very valuable to the proli sor.) dirty that would take six months bleachin to , Tim room is shelved all around, and contains make 'tin pa?s for white folks. J.J. j nearly one thousand specimens of animals, &c. One was a Swedish girl, aned, from appearince, WostDKRTrL HrAR Sixmv. Cen. Gilliam alxi.it nineteen years ; she was consigned to the and his Oregon Emigrating Company ore en- professor by onlerol the Government to experi cuutpod mi the s-iuth sle of the Missouri J liver : ment upon, having been found guilty of murder-oppn-ite lo Cb pie's lauding. A capital stury of ing her child. With the exception of slight this Gen. Gilliam is told ; It was in the winter time, some years ago; the snow was upon llie ground, and the wea ther was excessively cold, and freezing very hard. Gen. Gilliam's bogs were in a pasture near by his cahin where he slept. lie was woke up one night by the squealing of his hogs and the barking of his dogs. Ilehastily sprung from his lusl iu his shirt tail snatched up his rifle, and without stopping to put on shoe, boot, or storking, vest, coat, or trowsers, the I leneral ran out to rutch a shot at the bear. The dogs were chasing tho varmint, and would occasion ally seir.e him and pull him down, and haven little fight. The General, in the excitement of the moment, thoughtlessly followed on, hop ing every moment to get a ihol at the bear. As the bear passed on through Ihe neighbor hood, every house was aiouse.l by the barking of the doi's, and the shouting of the pursuing ,,rf t,,i( nuil all the dogs far and wide gather- j 1V-' u ,irrl u,"t outs.de ed in and joined in the chase. Ou went the liuduw of u toot, of the great Oregon ! There bear on went the dogs and on went the chi- ,'nt osuch indu idiif.l. Talk about treaty or valric General Gilliam, with nothing upon his i 'Mipation to a country over which the great A nakedness hut his shift. Daylight at length ; m-rican eagie lias llown ! I scorn treaty . ecu broke, and the bear took to a tree, upon which pal ion ! bang treaty occupation. Who wants the General finally shot him. This ended llie J a parcel of low flung', 'outside barbarians' to go sHrt, and when the General coolly reckoned in cahoot w nh us, and share alike a piece of up his latitude and longitude, he found that he ' land thalnlwajs was and always will be ours ! WKtffttrn mile from the log cabin where he left his warm and comlortuble bed some two or three hours hetore. 1 le found that the skin of his legs all below his shirt was frost-bitten, and eventually peeled oil" and his feel were very badly frozen, lie was laid up for the balance of the winter but he ultimately recovered, al though it was many mouths afterward. Such is the leader of this company tu Oregon. He was one among the few officers of Missouri vol unteers in the Fiord ia w ar, of whom (Jen. Tay lor made a fav orable report in his account of the battle of Ochechobo. Mt siOAi.. 'Smith,' said a New York Judge, when about to rentence a culprit but jot arri ved iu the country, 'Smith, I shall have to send you to Sing Sing.' 'Don't, Judge,' said Smith, 'I have a very bad cold just at this particular time, and I would rather be excused froiu sing ing until I get over my hoarseness, if ii' all the same lo you,' Eitbaormnary Discovery. The follow ing is an extract of a letter from n young Ame rican now travelling in Europe, which vc ropy from the Baton Hogvm (Ii) (nz-tte. We l-now nothing n the range of science to ruwal tiie discovery mentioned, except indeed some of the wonderful discoveries in Mesmerism. Professor Von (irusselbach, ."if.Stockhnlm, hxs very lately brought to a state of perfection the art of producing a torpor nf the whole system, by the application of co'.-d of different degrees of intensity, proceeding from a lesser to a great er, so as to cause the buniaii body to become perfectly torpid witlsiut permanent injury t.iany organ or tissue of the frame. In tfus state they may remain for n great numbered years, ami aaiii, after a s'-eep of ngrs, be awakened to existence, as fresh Rnd blooming as they were when they first sunk into their Ingorific slum ber. The attention of Vrre learned professor was first led lo the subject by finding a toad t'liclos ed in a M fragment of calcareous rock ten Icet in diameter, uiieh, when taken out, show ed mieuuivocal siiis of'life : but it was sunnoH C( ,lllt ,1C con,.ll!lsion nnSed by (!a-ting the Tork orra!ij(rl,.j i, lntl, j fcw hmus a'er. The npiiiin-1 ol Rir.ci tlmithizen, who is grobs to ,. Kjnp f Swedi-n, was, rhat it mtt (... i,(.rl. ;.. ,i,..t ;.,, f, a, i,.ns, ,,,., llllM,salI v,,)r. aMl,is calculations were drawn fr-i different layers of strata by which it was surrounded. From this bin, the prol'es sr procenh-cl to make rxperimeii-s ; and, alter a painful and laborious rotirsv of experiments j for the last twi'iilv-iiine venrs nfhis lite, he l.s ! lit last sneeei ded in peifrrting his girat diseo- very. No less (hsn sixty t'iis:iiid Teti'es, 'shell fish, Ac, wire xprrininiied on bet! re paleness, she appeared as if asleep, although she has been in a state of eoiiiph to torpor tor two vears. lie intends, beavs, to ro.-u-riato : her in live more years, and convince the world , ol the soundness o! Ins Wonderful disCoVeiv. I The professor, to gratify us, look n small snake I out of his cabinet into another room, hud al ! though il appeared lo ut to be perfectly dead : and rigid hs marble, by application ol a mixture i of cayenne pepper and brandy, it showed mime ; dm to signs of life, and was apparently as urtive j as ever it was in u lew minutes, although lie- protessor tisNtircd us il hud been in a state of I torpor fur six years. ! Tut: Qi'estuin Si;tii.ii. The editors of llie Picayune give us the follow ing extracts ; from an Oregon war speech, recently delivered ; III the "Fur West." ' "Whar, I say wmii, is the individual who j .utiody Some people talk ns though lliey were a fleered of Lngli.ud. Wiiu'm hlli-ered .' Ihivn't we lu li'd her tw ice, and can't we lick her again ! Lick her ! yes ! je.-l as easy as a bar can rhp ilou n a fresh peeled sapling'. Some skerry folks talk about the navy of the English, but w ho cares tor the navy ! Others say that she is the mistrkss ol the ocean. Suppose she is aint we the masters of il ! Can't w e cut canal from the Mississippi to the Mammoth Cave of Kentucky, turn nil the water into it, ami dry up the ocean in three weeks! Whar, then, would lie the navy ? Il would be mi w iiak ! There never would be any Atlantic Ocean if it hadn't to been tor the Mississippi, nor never w ill bo alter we've turned the waters of that big drink into tho Mammoth Cave ! When that's dune, jou'll see all their steam ships and their sail ships they spluge so much about lying high and dry, flounderiu' like so many turtles left ashore at low tide. That's tho way we'll fix 'cm. Who' alYtxrtd." Twrlrt Renanns for Pitying your Debts. 77ic Christian's Reasons. 1. The Christian member of society pays his debts, first, because ho is ordered to bi so in the Bible, where we trc told to 'Render unto Cre.ar the thwgs that are Cesar's and fo God the tvmgs that are God's,' and to '0ec no mm anything.' 2. The Christian nearethe Eighth Command ment every Snnday, 'Thrni Bliatt not steal,' and tlelranding a man of his dtie is stealing ; for tlie tradesman lends upon faith and honor, and dorc wot give. IV The Christian pays regularly all he owes, because Ik is a friend to justice and merry; he wishes horn to love and succour his neigblior, tind will not have tho ruin of others on his conscience. I 77? Patriot's Reasons. 1. The patriot knows that one act of justice is wi rth fix of charity that justice helps the worthy and corrects the unworthy, while char ity too often succors hit the latter. TV The patriot considers the evils that ensne from the more wealthy man leaving his poorer neighbor unpaid ; that by that means all the steps of the great ladder f society are broken, the first ruin beginning w ith the merchant, who can no longer pay hia workmen, and continuing to the workman's chiM, who is deprived of clolhes, food, or instruction ; or to the nged fa ther and mntliT, left to die on the bed of straw. 0. The patriot pays his debts from a love of his country ; knowing that the nrglect of so doing brings on Chartish, and a hatred of the upner ranks. 7. Tit" patriot also pays, because the system of rmn-pnymcnt, pursued to a certain extent, would bring a general bankruptcy on the na t on. The Mutt of the World's Reason's for paying his Dilits. w. The man of the world pays because he is convinced that honesty is the best policy. 9. The man of the world pays because he knows that curses will go with his name, if he dors not pay, inslead of good will and goo.1 woiks, which last he secures with a certain class by paying. 10. The man of the worldly calculation is -ware, that by the immediate payment of his debt, as fast as they a-e incurred, he purchases a peace ot minn, anil peromes acquainted witti Ins income, his means, and resources. 11. The man ot the world w ishes for a com fortable old age. anil knows that he has but lit tle chance of it from his surrounding family, un less he trains up his children iu order and eco nomy. l'J. The man of the world knows the full force of the term 'being an honest man' that it will carry him through political vnlees ami family disputes, and he cannot make claim to that name if he is the ruin of others. Ai.PAriu. Probably few ladies who wear and admire the beautiful fabric called Alpaeha, a re a ware of the source of its production. The A'picha i a wool-hearing animal, indigenious to South America, and is one nf four, varieties, which bear general points of resemblances to each other. The Llama, one ot these varieties, has been long known, and often described ; but it is only within a few years that tho Alpaeha has been considered of sufficient importance to merit particular notice. Nine tenths of the wool of the Alpicln is bla. k, the remainder being partly white, red and grizzled. It is of a very long staple, often reaching twelve inches, anil resembles soft g'ossy ba r which character is not lost by dye ing. The Indians in the South American mountains manufiicture nearly ell their cloth ing from this wool, and are enabled to appear in black dresses, without tho aid of a dyer. Moth the Llama and Alpaeha are, perhaps, even mere valuable to the natives as beasts of bur den then wool-bearing animals, and the obsti nacy of them, when irritated, is well known. The importance of thisanimal lias already been considered by the Kuglish, in their hat, woollen and stuff trade, and an essay on the subject has been published by Dr. Hamilton, of London. I. in which some of these details are collected. The wool is so remarkable, being a jet black, glossy, silk like hair, that it is fitted fur the pro duction ot texile fabrics difi'ering from all others, occupying a medium position between wool and silk. It is now mingled with other materials in such a singular manner, that while a partic ular dye will affert those, it will leave the Al pach wool with its original black color, and thus give rise to great diversity. Sum r: i n i mi i on tiik Tyi-oh. ' of my ex istence, give me two M -braces,' said the prill ter to his sw eet-heait. She immediately made a m him and planted her (tt" between hi li. 'Such an outrage,' said Faust, looking ff ul her, 'is without a ' The following is not a bad specimen of the havoc soiiietine a made by those who write roinpliiuentai v notes in the third person : "Mr. I A ............. I. IU .,lll....llt Ij. l. II 7I,.IA I S,-M tun ........ ... ( . w ,.n . got a lint whioh is not his, if he have got a hat which is not yours, no doubl they are the tx- I pecttd out." New Artict.I! or Foob for Animal. Mr. E. Rich of Troy, N. II , lias enrnmnnicated to the Kcene Sentinel, the result of some erpr ments made by liim on the value of the tops of tho common Comfrey, f Symytnm officinale, J as food Tor cattle. Two CHttrngs in June and September, yielding six ton per acreof pood fodder, and the root which should be harvested only eirrce in two years, producing 2,400 bush els per acre. Experience allowed both top and root to be very palatable and nutritions. Mr. Robinson, near Portsmouth, hr.s al) tried tlw plant for this purpose, and finds his stock of all descriptions to cat the stocks when cut tro-t greedily. Ilis product, was at the rate tf eight tons per acre. T his was on moist gT umd, which seems tlm beet adapted toth rrowth of the plant. Mr. Il.'s plants were in rows 15 inches apart. This, wc think, in r'rch ground wouM hie too close planting. Comfrey is easi ly propagated by "cutting the roots into seta, as is dono with the potatoe. It may prove ono of our most valuable plants for animals but fur ther experiments are necessary. They can ei sily bo made. Soaking Corn in Miriate or Ammonia. I). Samuel Weber gives an account in the N. E. Farmer, of eeveTal experiments which be made last season with muriate ammonia. He dissolved a small piece of the common solam monic of the druggist, estimated at 4 or 5 grains, in about a half a coffee cup of water, and threw into the solution a liamKul of corn, which, after having remiincd 4 to 5 hours, was planted. He planted this soaked corn in hills. side by side with that which was not soaked, lie made four different experiments, which are reported in considerable detail. In all cases, the soaked seed produced considerably the best yield general ly at least one-third more. The kind was light and dry and for several of the ex periments he purposely took the poorest spots. The corn suffered with drouth : but in all ca?ee that from the soaked seed manifested a decided superiority ; so much indeed, that it was no ticed by strangers, who knew of no diflerence in the seed. Napoleon ano his Son. Whether seated! by the chimney on his favorite sofa, he was en gaged in reading an important document, or whether he went to his bureau to 6-gn ifc snatch, his son seated on his knee or pressed to his bosom, was never a moment from bun. Sometimes he would lie diwn on tho floor !: side his beloved son, playing with him like an other child, attentive to every thing that Could please or amuse him. The Emperor had a sort of oppnratus for trying military manoeuvres : it consisted of pieces nf wood fashionhd to repre sent battallions, regiments and divisions. When he wanted to try some new combinationaof troops he used to arrange these pieces on the carpet. While ho was occupied with the disposition of these tmmcrtivres which might ensure the suc cess of a battle, the child lying by his si lu would often overthriw his troops nnd put into confusion his orderof battle, perhaps at soma critical moment. Pint the Emoeror wo-il I re. commence arranging his ni'-n with the utmost good humor. MenttaFs Recclltctwns. Tiik Fork and the Potatoe Phssm is one of the most amiable and nccommod .ting creatures in the world ; but tlien there is a li nut to amiability it-elt i.s a person foiim!, the other day, who was one of Phasm's nearest neightjors at a table of a public house in ll.isei ty. The individual, for several J ivs, had been '... !..:.. ,i... i.-.:... . ii ii .... su iuii.1' .iiii i y oi tuu iiaun oi iiuutiinitf i iirll, instead ot the waiters, for "tins, that, and the other" article, ou the t ilde, that the latter le pan to feel "wolty," not only "ub mt tho head and shoulders," hut all over, and was ready for almo-t any kind of a "flare hp" wit!ihi-b. An opportanity was finally ofTi-red. "I'll trou ble you," said Phasm's torinenter, at the same time giving him his fork, "to stick lay fork in to that potatoe." "No trouble at all, sir," said Phasin, plunging tho fork into the potatoe, are! there leaving it "I'll trouble you for my fork now, if you please." "No trouble at all," re plied Phasm, pulling the fork out of the potntor and returning it ! Phasm says that he has no been troubled by that chap since. Ronton Ti anscript. A friend of ours nets upon the same princ pie in carving, whenever be is hailed with a re quest to give a very small piece an affronting insinuation that he does not know how large si ce of turkey or mutton to put on a lady'. plate. Ho cuts as small a piece as one pom' of the fork w ill take up. There is generally a second call, foroue "somewhat larger." .V V. Advertiser. Unm'stimed Dm eition. The editor of th. L'n it ed States Gazette, after describing the tin gnlar custom prevailing at Tunis, of falteninj young women who are about to bo married, five that, 'theif of the Tunisian bride t'sfat, but j those w ho hustle up their (laughters for the niurket, wem to be guilty of a deception a j great as the butcher who blgwsuy his veal f