--'... 1 ,.. - 4.. ;:. - ;•.. . , z. ,... ,..: I i. ,..; Jt ' ,':Z \'':•. • i Orti.: ,"4:';‘ 4 •‘o. :-.?, • ; ; •=1;Z: - ' -..,;-* - i = .:. • t.?'. w.,.. ' ''. i . at - • 11/I' l '4:/4 v"....,...:. itsl nc. - . ...-.1.;~. e•-•:!... ..„--,,,5• Ske '4,':2 ~,." F `75.7.7 ,' ~,,,,, "f ; f, 4 2.1 , 1 '':: -I '." I 4, ..,„,, ~,,„ ,87. ,„: - ' ,, - 4 .11., , .., 54' . ''..:..1::. -,:,,, ~,,,, . t . !' l . ~ .::,v . .v.., ,, .: 1 .. 1.: . • , 1.... ' .:,,...' . 0 ' • 1,,:. N . t . ...t 4: 4' .4 . . e..., :V,. I . 1 ....:. ?;V: 7 r 4- ~,0,,. . '!...,,, .. --... fi , ~.,, ''''- It ' 44 , ' 1 4 ' i. ,. . -‘,..' -.IV, 1 1 -' ; .' i '''; .-443-.,.., 0., .... 4 '''' P: 4..„„ ,/ X:. -5e , F.• .. g .. 4, , ` ,, i ' s. . - ';1;` 57. ' :' . 1 . ,41., 0..;', ,itt Ki * a '5.. , 7 , - v., '"-1 --,...-4.,• , %, ~,•: • . ::. ?,..,,:. / ;,..,,_._ •,-;., .. ~: • , 4er'. 3,'......:.. .44):::::'''' L . . . '.''' . s • -- - - r A . li 2: , ' .' C ' f ' ' 7. "` : f ,', . . • '''-' 4: . 4 6 . r ' ' ' '1'5•01.:t',„...-:;,:z..,.„ -1: '- -;•,.!,r -,......;:-.-:-,:,..', ..,,:,.., \ l / 4,.. :„, i c. ... ,:, • , BY W. LEWIS. The Vermonter's Wife, OR AN UNPROFITABLE TRIP TO THE GOLD REGIONS. 'I think,' said Mr. Dana, as he pushed back his chair from the breakfast table, and looked hard at his wife, a pretty little woman with large, blue eyes, rl think that I should like to go to California and try my luck. Darn it all, every body is going about here. Do you think you could spare me for a year, Nel131" Mrs. Dana made no immediate reply, she appeared to be very busy turning' out a cup of tea, although a keeper observed that her husband would have noticed art uncommon tremulousness in her hands, as Mr. Dana ceased speaking. 'I think I might do well there,' the hus band coDtinued, as though speaking to him self?' 'Are you not doing well here on your farm?' the wife asked at length. 'l'm making a living, perhaps, but its only by hard work. . Now, if I should go to Cali fornia, ar.d be lucky, why, we could have a great many more cornfotts than we are bless ed with at present.' 'We have everything that we could wish for to make us contented, and I'm sure I sigh for no luxuries, excepting what we can well afford,' Mrs. Dana replied. 'Yes, we have enough to eat, and clothes to wear, but we can't buy lots of good furni ture, and have a piano, like Squire Bolton.— Darn it, I want to he rich as he is, and then I should be contented,' Mr. Dana said, rising from his chair, and walking back and forth in the kitchen with energy. 'Mr. Bolton is far from being happy, with all his wealth,' said the wife. 'Well, I k.iow that; but then who could be contented with such a wife at he has? She's either crazy half the time, or else—' 'Hush!' cried Mrs. Dana, with a reproach ful look; 'remember if she has faults, so have we all.' `But what I meant, Nelly, is that if he had such a Wife as I've got, and with his wealth, he couldn't help being happy.' `And " yet you want to leave a wife you -think so highly of,' Mrs. Dana said, with a reproachful look. 'But don't you see that it is for your com fort and benefit in the end. You know, Neily, that nothing in the world would induce me to quit you, unless it was the hope of making a fortune in a short time; 'I wouldn't be gone longer than a year, and if I liked the coun try, and I thought you would be contented there, Pd semi for you.' The young wile strove hard to retain her - composure, as she asked— 'And what will you du with the farm while gone?' I=, will get my youngest l-rother to come and live here and carry it on. You shall be left in fall charge, Nelly, with power to do as you please.' 'Give me a week to think of it,' the wife replied; 'at the end of that time make up my mind whether to consent to your going or not.' Mr. Dana was too well pleased to obtain even this concession, to argue any further that day, and after bidding his wifd read the accounts in the newspaper, onntaining the latest news from California, he st,irte.l off to his work. Mr. Dana owned a farm of about one hun dred acres, near the town of ' Windsor, Ver.,. mont. He was a young man, and a person of considerable energy. and had, during his minority, saved a small sum of money, which he had safely deposited in the saving's bank, until such time as he should wish to use it. After he became of age, he had added to his capital, and when he thought he should like Jane Perkins for a wife, and proposed to her, and was accepted, he bought the farm which we find him occupying; and was doing as well as any young farmer in the neighbor hood. He had been married two years when the gold fever of 1848 and '49 broke out, sweep ing off thousands of our must industrious mechanics and farmers, and leaving many a hearth-stone desolate, and many a wife to mourn an absent husband. How few have returned with their antici pations fulfilled? Thousands who left the New England States, expecting to win a competency in a: short time, have been glad to work their passage back in some slow sail ing tub, while others, too proud to return empty-handed, have toiled on, barely gaining a livelihood, and now rest from their cares and troubles by the banks of some river, with nothing but a rude board to mark their grave. After Mr. Dana left-his wife, she washed her dishes and put them away, and sat - down to read the glowing accounts of the gold dis coveries. The more she read, the more fascinated did she become, until she at last came to the conclusisn _that if she were a man, she would be tempteVii try her luck. Twice during the forenoon did she peruse the paper, and each time her resolution of not consenting to her husband's departure grew weaker, until she finally made up her mind, if he asked her consent again she would give it. Mrs. Dana was a woman of considerable mind. Ever since she was a child she had been obliged to labor, and by her contact with the world she had acquired knowledgd of business, which did net, however, impair or detract from the natural modesty of a good gwornan's heart or mind. A week had not passed before the husband again alluded to the subject uppermost in his mind. A company was about to leave Wind., sor, and many of the young men of the town were enrolling their names. Mr. Dana thought that it would be a good chance for him, as he would have acquaintances to lend a helping hand in case he was taken sick.— His wife thought the same thing, and deligh ted her husband by giving her consent to his going. • They were not aware of the selfishness ex hibited in the gold regions, - where each man struggled for himself, and though it waste of time to help his feverish friend to a cup of cold water, or make him a mess of gruel, to keep WM from starving. Mr; Dana's arrangements were soon made. He had some money on hand, and with it, he determined to cross the Isthmus, in company with' his townsmen, as he thought he could make enough in a weeks time ; after his arri val, to pay his passage. They wrote to enga g e steerage berths, and received answer that the steamer would sail on such a day, and that they must be prompt ly on the spat. This news caused the party to hurry their arrangements, and the day be fore they were to start, Mr. Dana requested his wife to accompany him to a lawyer's. 'Pm going a long journey,' he said, 'and may , be gone longer than I anticipate. I shall leave you the farm, to do with it - as you please. If you get tired of carrying it on, sell it to the best advantage; I shall make money enough while gone to buy a larger one when I return. But I hardly think I shall live on a farm when I come back. We'll get one cf the grand new houses in town, and live like 'Squire Bolton.' His wife thought at the time that there might be a failure in his schemes; but she was hopeful, and would not say any thing to dash his bright anticipations. The day of parting came, and with it tears and mournful looks; but it was not until Dana had left the house, never perhaps to re turn, that the young wife felt the loneliness of her condition: Fora week or two she was low-spirited and sad, but as she received letters from her husband in New York, written in a lively vein, and bidding hero be of good cheer, as he should certainly rejoin her in tae course of a year, she became more composed and re con tiled to his absence. We will not follow him in the crowded steamship, nor cross the Isthmus, where he narrowly escaped drowning, while ascending the river; nor will We tell of his arrival at San Francisco, and departure for the mines, where he worked in the bed of the river, and was quite fortunate, until attacked with the fever and ague, which roasted him. at one moment and froze him the next. He would lie in his tent, and wish that the gentle hands of his wife could wipe the mois ture_ fiom his brow, or cover him with blan kets when shivering with cold. All of his adventures might be written out, and perhaps Mr. Dana will, some day, give the world an account of his doimzs in the land of gold.— They will, possibly, serve_ as a warning to other husbands, and thus prevent many a heart from mourning for the absent. Mr. Dana's fever got no better, and at last fhe doctor told him he had better seek a change of climate, 'as he might shake himself to death. Dana thoUght the same thing; for it appeared to him, when the chills came on, that every bate in his body would be wrenched apart, and when the fever returned, ho imagined himself in an oven. He considered the subject, one day, and de termined to start for home. A team was to leave next day for-Sacramento city, and, as soon as his resolution was formed, he engaged a passage, sold off all of his clothes, excepting enough to reach Vermont, and foUnd that he was the master of a capital of only five hun dred dollars, after working is the mines for four months. To be sure, his sickness had cost him a large sum, and his doctor's bill was frightful to contemplate. He started the next day for home. He de termined to live a farmer and die one, if the Lord spared his life. He had seen enough of the gold mines, and as he was going in the cart, and jolted over the uneven roads, he thought what a n inny he had been, to leave a comforthble home, and a loving wife, for the sake of trying to accumulate a fortune. The "offing of the cart may have benefitted him, for the fever rapidly left him, and by the time he reached San Francisco, he felt like a new 'man. He had a mind to turn bsck and try it again, but he thought of his wife, and nature and love conquered. He went imme diately to the office of the steamship compa ny, and e S ecuied a passage fer home. It was a cold b!ustei tug day in the middle of winter when Danda reached Windsor.— He pulled his cap over his eyes to prevent be ing recognized, and then started on foot, to his home. He had heard from his wife but once since hehad been absent, and he hardly dared to hope that shewas well. He quickened his pace, and came in sight of the house in which he had spent so many happy hours. He glanced over his farm, and saw that everything , appeared to be well cared for. The stone walls were in good order, the barns• looked neat and well repair ed, and just as - he was thinkint , that his wife arid brother had done remarkably well, the train on which he had - ridden from Boston whizzed past, directly across his, farm. He groaned in anguish at the sight. His beauti ful meadow was ruined, he thought, and it was all owing to his wild goose chase for a fortune. His wife could not be expected to know how to attend to such things, and he had no doubt but what the ra-ilroad company had swindled her. He , approached the house and knocked tim idly at the door. It was opened, and there stood his wife, as handsome as ever, but she looked at him with surprise. He had forgot ten that he had not shaved since he left her. He spoke and held out his hand, then- his arms. There was a shriek, and then the lat ter were well filled. Two hours afterwards they were talking seriously and solely upon matters of business. 'I am sorry that the railroad passes over our meadows,' he said, 'it renders it almoSt use less.' =They have the right of way, but it has not injured ' as much as you think,' she replied. 'I don't suppose they paid you more than one hundred dollars for the land.' 'There is where you are mistaken. They gave me twelve hundred dollars for merely the right of way.' 'I suppose they paid you in stoeleP Dana said, suprised to think she had got so large a sum. 'Yes, they gave me part stock and part cash,' the wile replied, trying not to look tri umphant. 'And the stock, what is that worth, a mere song, I suppose.' 4 sold mine the very day I received it, at ITUXTINGDON, JAXUARY 80, 1856. an advance. It is not worth so much per share now. I thought I had better have the money than to trust to an uncertainty.' The husband was slightly astonished. He had received for a narrow strip of land as much as he had gtven for the whole farm. 'And what did you do with the money, Nelly?' took six hundred and bought the rich meadow of 'Squire Bolton's. You remember how you used to wish you owned it?' Dana did remember_ perfectly well. He had thought of the land when in California, and Was in hopes of getting back with money enough to buy it. 'The other six hundred and fifty I placed in the saving's bank, where it is at interest.' 'You are the best wife in the State,' the husband cried, with admiration. But I have not given a full account of . my stewardship as yet. You remember the forest to pines on the hill just back of the meadow?' Dana nodded an assent. He was wander ing what was to come now. 'Well, there is no longer any forest there. I sold every tree just as it 51.00,1. 1 'Why, who was a fool enough to buy Nile wood?' Dana asked with a laugh. 'The railroad company. They must have wood to get up steam. They gave me four hundred dollars for the privilege of chopping down the trees, and [ was glad to get rid of them, for the purpose of making a sheep pas ture?' 'A sheep pasture?' cried the husband in as tonishment. 'Yes, it makes a very fine one. I bought one hundred and fifty sheep, and then had some money left, which I added to that in the bank. Last summer I sold four hundred pounds of wool, at forty cents per pound. 'That amounts to one hundred and 'sixty dollars,' said Dana, after a sligt:t calculation. 'Precisely without counting the increase of lambs, I think I did very well by that Italie.' 'You are a better manager than I am, Net ly; Hereafter you shall be the head of the house.' 'Thank you, but 1 am perfectly contented to.resign, now that you have arrived.' 'Then you have no more wonderful bar &ains to relate?-' he asked. 'Yes,' she replied, with a slight hesitancy, cf have made one more trade, but perhaps it is one that will displease you. 'What, after my hearty welcome? You can do nothing in future; that I'll not approve of. Remember, Netly, I've returned poor in pock et, and none too well in health.' 'I will take such excellent care of yOu that your health will be quite restored 'by fqtri;rg, and aS4 . Cir , -being , poor, why that is absurd, when'Yoti r - have*lood farm, well stocked, and nearly a thOuand dollars in the bank.' 'Besides a treasure of a wife.' 'Thank you. But will you step into the parlor and see my latest trade?' Dana followed his wife, and as she open ed the door, she pointed significantly to a dark object in one corner of the room. 'A piano!' cried the astonished husband. 'Yes, a good, well toned piano. But be fore you express your surprise let me tell you how I earned it. I sold all the butter that I made during the last nine months, and inves ted the proceeds in an instrument that I knew you longed for, and, to tell the truth, I was rather anxious to own myself, but I never said so, and until I found myself able I never thought of buying one. Now, are you an gry?' 'Angry?' Mr. Dana has never expressed a' wish to roam again. He is perfectly satisfied that he can find more happiness on his farm, and in the society of his wife, than he could if sur rounded by all the gold mines of California. Beautiful and True. In a late article in Frazer's Magazine; this brief but beautiful passage occurs: "Educa tion does not commence with the alphabet.— It begins with a mother's look—with a fath er's smile of approbation or a sign of reproof— with a sister's gentle pressure of the hand, or a brother's noble act. of forbearance—with handfulls of flowers in green and daisy mead ow—with bird's nests admired but not touch ed—with creeping ants and almost impercep tible emmets--with humming bees and glass beehives—with pleasant walks in shady lanes, and with thoughts directet in sweet and kindly tones, and words to mature to acts of benevolence, to deeds Of virtue, and to the sense of all good, in God . himself." LET THE PEOPLE RULE.—The following is one of the resolutions adopted by the Ohio Democratic State Convention, which met at Columbus on the Bth: Resolved, That slavery (being the creature of positive law, cannot exist without it,) is a domestic institution, and that Congress has neither the power to legislate it into any ter ritory or State, nor to exclude it therefrom, but to leave the people thereof perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institu tions in their own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States. SITE SELECTED.—The Secretary of the Treasury has selected as the site of the near Custom House, Post Office, and United 'States Court, to be erected in Detroit, Mich., a lot at the corner of Lamed and Griswold streets, the property of Henry Barnard. The price the Government is to pay for it is' $24,000. Cuprous ELCTEMENT.—The Chicago Dem ocrat of Tuesday says that a woman arrived in that place a few days 'previous, with the dead body of her husband, which she was ta king East for burial. On the route, she fell in with a young man and, on the arrival of the cars at Chicago, they went off together, leaving the deaf body of the husband in the depot, where it has remained since. A NEW variety of Wheat from Chili., has been received ,by the Commissioners of Pat ents. This wheat is very.productive—a crop of five hundred bushels having-been raised from thirty-four bushels of seed. The power of faith will often ,shine forth the most where the character, is naturally weak. There is less to intercept and inter fere with its workings. Dr. Kane. A SKETCH BY Diti.''WlLLlADel ELDER. When a man's lifels heroic, and his name has passed into history, the world wants to know him personally, intimately. The "grave and reverend chronicler," passing over his beginnings, presents him abruptly in his full-grown greatness; men render the admiration earned, but the sympathetic em- elation awakened is concerned to know how he grew into his maturity of excellence.— This curiosity is not an idleness of the fancy, but a personal interest in the facts that springs out of those aspirations which put every man upon the fulfillment of his own destiny. How came this man to excel— what was in him—what happened to (level lop it? "Some men are born great; some achieve greatness; some have greatness thrust upon them." flow came this man by it 2 - In it within my reach also and, by what means? History provokes us with such queries as these : Biography answers them. Doctor Elisha Kent Kane is not quite thir ty-four years old, yet he has done more than circumnavigate the globe; he has visited and traversed lndia, Africa, Europe, South Amer ica, the islands of the Pacific, and twice pen etrated the Attic region to the highest lati tude attained by civilized man. He has en countered the extremest perils of sea and land, in every climate of the globe ; he has dischar ged in turn the severest duties of the soldier and the seamen ; attached to the United States Navy as a surgeon, he is nevertheless, enga ged at one time in the coast survey of the tropical ocean, and in a month or two, we find him exploring the frigid zone; and all the while that his personal experiences had the character of romantic adventure, he was pushing them in the spirit of scientific and philanthropic enterprise. As a boy, his instinctive bent impelled him to the indulgence and enjoy ment of such ad ventures as were best fitted to train him for the work before him. His collegiate studies suffered some postponement while his phy-si ! cal qualities pressed for their necessary train ing and discipline. It " was almost in the spirit of truancy that he explored the Blue Mountains of Virginia, as a student of geolo gy, under the guidance of Professor Rodgers and cultivated, at once, his hardihood of vi tal energy and those elements of natural sci ence which were to qualify him for his after services in the field of physical geography.-- But, in due time he returned to the pursuit of literature, and achieved the usual honors, as well as though his college studies had suf fered no diversion—his muscles and nerves were educated, and his brain lost nothing by the indirectness of ifs development, but was rather corroborated for all the uses which it, has served since. He graduated at the Uni versity of Pennsylvania—first, in its collegi ate, and eterwards, in is medical, depart ment. His special relishes is study indica- ' ted his natural drift : chemistry and surgery: natural science in its most intimate converse with. substance, and the remedial art in its most heroic function. He went out from his Alma Mater a good classical scholar, a good chemest, mineralogist, astronomer, and sur geon. But he lacked, or thought he lacked robustness of frame and soundness of health. He solicited an appointment in the navy, arid upon his admission, demanded active service. He was appointed upon the diplomatic staff as surgeon to the first American Ernbassay to China. This position gave him opportunity to explore the Philippine Islands which he effected mainly on foot. He was the first man who descended into the crater of Tael ; lowered more than a hundred feet by a bam boo rope from the overhanging ?cliff, and clambering down some seven hundred more through the scorim, he made a topographical sketch of the interior of this great volcano, collected a bottle of sulphurous acid from the very mouth of the crater; and although he was drawn up almost senseless, he brought with him his portrait of this hideous cavern, and the specimens which it afforded. Before he had returned from this trip, he had ascended the Himalayas, and triangula ted Greece, on fool.; he had visited Ceylon, the Upper ile, and all the mythologic re gion of Egypt ; traversing the route, and ma king the acquaintace of the learned Lepsius, who was then prosecuting his archmological researches. At home again, when the Mexican war broke out, he asked to be removed from the Philadelphia Navy Yard to the field of a more congenial service ;but the government sent him to the Coast of Africa. Here he visited the slave factories, from Cape Mount to the river Bonny, and through the infamous Da ouza - , -- got access to the baracoons of Dahom,.. ey, and contracted, besides, the Coast Fever, from the effects of which he has never entire ly recovered. From Africa he returned before the close of the Mexican war, and believing that his constitution was broken, and his health rap idly going, he called upon President Polk, and demanded an opportunity for service that might crowd the little remnant of his life with achievmentl in keeping with his ambi tion; the President, just then embarrassed by a temporary non-intercourse with General Scott, charged the Doctor with despatches to the General, of great mornant and urgency; which must be carried through a region occu pied by the enemy. This embassy was mar ked by an adventure so romantic, and so il lustrative of the character of the man, that we are tempted to detail it. On his way to the Gulf he secured a horse in Kentucky, such as a knight errant would have chosen for the compannio and sharer of his adventures. Landed at Vera Cruz, he asked for an escort! to convey him to the capital but the officer in command had no troopers to spare—he must wait,-or he must accept, instead, a band of ruffian Mexicans, called the Spy Company, who had taken to the business of treason and trickery for a livelihood. He accepted them, and went forward.—Near Puebla his troops encountered a body of Mexicans escorting a number of distinguished officers to Orizaba, among whom were Major General Gaona, Governor of Puebla; his son, Maximilian, and General Torejon, who commanded - the bril liant charge of horse at Buena Vista. The surprise was mutial, but the Spy Company had the advantage of the ground. At the first instant of the discovery, and before the rascals fully comprehended their involve ment, the Doctor shouted in Spanish, "Bravo! the capital adven:nre, Colonel, form your line for the charge !" And down they went upon the enemy ; Kane and his gallant Ken tucky charger. ahead. Understanding the principle that sends a tallow candle through a plank, and that a momentum of a body is its weight multiplied by its velocity, he dash ed through the opposing force, an turning to engage after breaking their line, it e found himself fairly surrounded, and two of the en emy giving him their especial attention.— One of these was disposed of in an instant by rearing his horse who, with a blow of his fore foot, floored his man; and wheeling sud denly, the Doctor gave the other a sword wound, which opened the external iliac ar tery, and put him hors de combat. This sub ject of the Doctor's military surgery was the young Maximilian. The brief melee termi nated with a cry from the Mexicans, "We surrender." Two of the officers made a dash for an escape, the Doctor pursued them, but soon gave up the chase. When he returned, he found his ruffians preparing to massacre the prisoners. As he galloped past the young officer whom he had wounded, he heard him cry, "Senor save my father." A group of the guerrilla guards were dashing upon the Mexicans, huddled together, with their lan-, ces in rest. He threw himself before them —one of them transfixed his horse, another gave him a severe wound in the groin. He killed the first lieutenant, wounded the sec ond-lieutenant, and blew a part of the col°. nel's beard of with the last charge of his six shooter; then grappling with him, and using his fists, he brought the party to terms.— The lives of the prisoners were saved and the Doctor received their swords. As soon as General Gaona could reach his son, who lay at a little distance from the scene of the last struggle, the Doctor found him sitting by him receiving his last adieus. Shifting the soldier and resuming the surgeon, he secured the artery, and put the wounded man in con dition to travel. The ambulance got up for the occasion, contained at once the wounded Maximilian ; the wounded second-lieutenant, and the man that had prepared them for slow traveling, himself on his litter, from the lance wound received in defence of his prisoners! When they ieached Puebla, the Doctor's wound proved the worst in the party. He was taken to the government house but the old General, in gratitude for his generous services, had him conveyed to his own house. General Childs, American commander at Puebla, hearing of the generosity of his pris oner, discharged him without making any terms, and the old general became the princi pal nurse of his captor and benefactor divi ding his attentions between him and his son, who lay wounded in an adjoining room.— I This illness of our hero was long and doubt ful, and he was reported dead to his friends at home. When he recovered and returned, he was employed in the Coast Survey. While en-- gaged in this service, the government by its correspondence with Lady Franklin became committed for an attempt at the rescue of Sir John and his ill-starred companions in Arctic discovery. Nothing could be better address ed to the Doctor's governing sentiments than this adventure. The enterprise of Sir John can exactly in the current of one of his own enthusiasm—the service of natural science combined with heroic personal effort; and ad ded to this that sort of patriotism which charges itself with its own full share in the execution of national engagements of honor; and besides this cordial assumption of his country's debts and duties, there was no lit tle force in the appeal of a noble brave spiri ted woman to the chivalry of the American navy. He was "bathing in the tepid waters of the Gulf of Mexico, on thq, 12th of May, 1850," when he received his telegraphic order to proceed forthwith to New York, for duty up on the Arctic expedition. In nine days from that date he was beyond the limits of the United States on his dismal voyage to the North Pole. Of the first American expedi tion, as Is well known to the public, he was the surgeon, the naturalist, and the historian. It returned disappointed of its main object. after a winter in the regions of eternal ice and a fifteen months' absence. Scarcely allowing himself a day to recov er from the hardships of this cruise, he set on foot the second attempt, from which he has returned, after verifying by actual obser vation the long questioned existence of an open sea beyond the latitude of 82', and be -3 and the temperature, also, ofloo' below the freezin ,, point. His "Personal Narrat;ve," published early in 1853, recounts the adven tures of the first voyage, and discovers his di versified qualifications for such an enterprise. The last voyage occupied two winters ir. the highest latitudes, and two years and a half of tmintermitted labor, with the risks and responsibilities attendant. He is now prepa ring the history for publication. But that part of it which best reports his own personal agency, and would most justly present the man to the,reader, will of course be suppress ed. We would gladly supply it, but as yet this is impossible to us. His journal is pri vate property, the extracts which we may ex pect will be only too shy of egotism, and his companions have not spoken yet, as some day they will speak, of his conduct throughout the terrible struggles which together they endu red. To form anything like an adequate esti mate of this last achievement, it is to be re collected that his whole company amounted to but twenty meh,-and that of this corps or crew he was the commander, in naval_phiase; and when we are apprised that his portfolio of scenery. sketched on the spot in pencil, and in water colors kept fluid over a spirit lamp, amount to over three hundred sketch es, we have a hint of the extent and variety of the offices he filled on this voyage. He was in tact the surgeon, sailing-master, as tronomer and naturalist„ - as well as captain and leader of the expedition. This man of all work, and desperate, da ring and successful doing, is in height about five feet seven inches; in weight, say one VOL. 11, NO. 32, hundred and thirty pounds or so, if health and rest would but give him leave to fill up natural measure. His complexion is fair, his hair brown, and his eyes dark gray with a hawk look. He is a hunter by every gift and grace and instinct that makes up the charac ter ; an excellent shot, -4nd a brilliant horse man. He has escaped with whole bones from all his adventures, but he has sevetal wounds which are tronblesome; and, with such general health as his, most men v , ould call themselves invalids, and live on furtoi,oh from all the active duties of life: yet he has won the distinction being the first civilized man to stand in latitude i:l2 - 30' arid gaze up on the open Polar Sea—to repch the nother most point of land on the globe—to ieport the lowest temperature ever endured—the heaviest sledge journeys ever performed—and the wildest life that civilized man has suc cessfully undergone ; and to return after all to tell the story of his adventures. The secret spring of all this energy is itt his religious enthusiasm—discovered ;dike in the generous spirit of his adventures in pur suit of science; in his enthusiastic fidelity to duty, and in his heroic maintenance of the point of honor in all his intercourse with men. In his department there is that mixture of , shyness and frankness, simplicity and fastid-- 1 iousness, sandwiched rather than blended, which marks the man of genius, awl the monk of industry. He seems confident in himself but not of himself. His manner is remarkable for celerity of movement, alert attentiveness, quickness of comprehension, rapidity of ut terance and sententious compactness of dic-: Lion, which arise from a habitue! watchtuleess aaainst the betrayal of his own enthusiasms. He seems to fear that he is timing you and is always discovering his un willingness •"to sit" for your admiration.- If you question him about the handsome official acknowledge ments of his services by the British and Amer ican governments, or in any endeavor to turn him upon his own gallant achievements, he hurries you away from the subject to some point of scientific interest which he preshmes will more concern and engage yourself ; or-he says or does something that makes you think he is occupied with his ow:: inferiority in some matter which your conversation pre sents to him. ()he is obliged to struggle with him to maintain the tone of respect -which his character and achievements deserve; and when the interview is over, a feeling of'disap• pointment remains for the failure in your c'- fort to ransack the man as you wished, and to render the tribute w hich you owed him. We wish we could be :tire that he will not, in his forthcoming work, give us 'the drama without its hero ; or we wish that the expe , dition and its hero had a chronicler as worthy as he would be were he not the principal char acter in the story. Dr. Kane's Narrative of the 'Expedition,. now preparing, and nn process of publication by Messrs Childs &. Peterson of Philadelphia will embtace the important discoveries made in the frozen regions far beyond the reach of all the predecessors of the American explor ing party, and their perilous adventures, crowded with romantic incidents, which, in the language of the secretary of the Navy, "not only excite our wonder, but borrow a novel grandeur from the truly benevolent con siderations which animated and net ved hiirr to his task."—Graham's Magazine, Feb., 1856. THE SCHOOL MASTER OF OUR REPUBLIC: —Whet: our republic rose, Noah 'Webstet-b , .. came its school master. There had ne‘tr been a great nation with a universal lang,ua ,, e without dialects. The Yorksbireman cant,6t now talk with a man from Cornwall. Tire peasant of the Liguarian Appenines, drives; his goats home at evening, over hills tLat look down on six provinces, none of wlrl,se dialects he can speak. Heie, five thousai:Ll miles change not the sound of a word.— Around every fireside, and from every tribime, in every field of labor, and every factory of toil, is heard the same tongue. We owe it to Webster. He has done for us more than Alfred did for England, or Cadmus for Greeco. His books have educated three generations.— They are forever multiplying his innumera ble army of thinkers, who will transmit his name from age to age.—Glances ct the tropolis. ALL FUDGE.--At the County Know Noth ing public meeting, held at Uniontown, on Wednesday night of last week, .the speakers declared that the secrecy of the order had new been abandoned; but, before the meeting ad journed "Sam" showed his cloven focit. A motion was made to appoint Dr. Smith Fuj- , ler, with the concurrence of Washington and Greene counties, a congressional delegate to the Philadelphia Convention, where- upon Mr. Veech arose and said, that the meeting had no power to act in the matter, that the council managed such affairs !! So the mat ter ended. Secrecy is abandoned with a yen t„cieance.—Deniocratic Sentinal. THERE are, in the United States, 750 pa per mills in actual operation, havicg 2.000 engines, and producing in the year 270,000,- 000 pounds of paper, which is worth, at ten cents a pound, 27,000,000. To produce this quantity of paper, 405,000,000 pounds of rags are required, 1 pounds of rags being necessary to make erre pound of paper. The cost of manufacturing aside from. labor and rags, is 54,050,000. ACORNS WILL KILL CATTLE.-R. J. Lam born, of county, Pa., lost fifteen head of bullocks, worth a thousand dollars, asit was thought, from eating acorus, the' tannic acid of which produced constpation, and a disease riQembling dry murrain. Wild chei ry leaves, which contain prussic acid, will produce the same effect. Cure :'Mix a pint of molasses with a pint of melted lard, and pour down the animal's throat. 'lf the body is much bloated, add soapsuds:• g::7`' At a late celebration of the old bache lors at Bloomington the following toast wao drank : 'The fair—saints in church—angels in ter ballroom—and devils in the kitchen' m