v it fei!!" .'lfj .'.." The whole art ok Government consists in the art of being' honest. Jefferson. OL. 10. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH 7, L80O. No?) 9. it v Published by Theodore Scltoch. TERMS Two dollars per annum in advance Two dollars and a quarter, Jialf yearly and if not paid before the end of the year, Two dollars and a half. Those who receive their papers by a carrier or stage drivers employed bv the proprie tor, will be charged 37 1-2 cents, per yeaV, extra. No paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at the option of the Editor. rr"7VAdvirH:fmfints not exceeding nnp sniinro sixteen lines) will be inserted three weeks for one dollar, and twenty-five , cents for every subsequent insertion. The charge for one and tnrce luiuruuu uie same, a liucrai discount mum, v j advertisers IOAU letters addressed to the Editor must be post-paid. JOB PRINTING. Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and orna mental Type, we are prepared to execute every description of Cards, Circulars, Bill Hedas, Moles, IS lank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER RL.ANKS, PAMPHLETS, &c. Trintcd with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms AT THE OFFICE OF THE Teffersoiiinii Republican. Beauty, Wit, and Gold. " In her bower a lady dwelt, At her feet three lovers knelt ; Each adored the lady much, Each essayed her heart to touch ; One had wit and one had gold, One was cast in beauty's mould; Guess -which was it won the prize, Tongue, or purse, or handsome eyes I First began the handsome man, Peeping proudly o'er her fan, Red his lips and white his skin; Could such beauty fail to win Then stept forth the man of gold, Cash he counted, coin he told ; Wealth, the burden of the tale, Could such golden projects fail ! Then the man of wit and sense, Woo'd her with his eloquence ; Now she heard him with a sigh, Then she blush'd scarce knowing why, Then she smiled to hear him speak, Then a tear was on her cheek. Beauty vanish, gold depart. Wit hath won the lady's heart.'' DISTRUST: OR THE VICTIM OF VOLUNTARY WIDOWHOOD. List.and I will tell you a story of real life as. it occurred in our midst. The heroine of my story i - v.l.-i- j .: i , eo " - . ! think, oi tins place; at an events ner 101 in nie' must eaily have been cast among us. Many in 1 " this Fair Room have taken her by the hand ; for, prprv hMrth-stnnfl she was a wP.lrnmfi miest. rendered so by her brilliant manner, and engaging, lorely disposition. Everybody loved Dora Ham merslev, for she loved everybody. She had been a widow nine years when I first made nuaintance. and a more iovelv woman i noint of view it has never been mv lotto meet ! with. I often wondered at her oerversitv in re- maining single, when I knew, with the world, that j x.- uj :. ii.. ; nn!,. ir. Ua. Bile liau 1L su laigcijr in puun nut viui uw- j come an interesting wife, but a most useful mem-! 10 ber of society. She always parried mv persua-! dared not make open inquiry; for in the eyes of the sion, by saying that she dreaded the dominion of a ! rid 1 was a widow and m? Poor cl,ild an orPhan' step-father over her only child, a sweet little girl So wel1 have 1 Pla;ed mV Part in b.vpocracy, that of some ten summers. I noticed at the time,, des- j n0 "c has ever dreamed of my husband's exis pite her efforts to conceal it, that the poor woman i tence- was immeasurably wretched. She was not in! " I believe that 1 knew, and loved you, loo, for love, for she was a woman of too finely a balanced nearly four years and that brings me to nearly a mind ever to sit down and mope on an unrequitted j widowhood of thirteen years. I had almost out passion. Her beautiful blameless life had been j lived the hope of ever again seeing my husband, passed among us, with the exception of the five ; when about three weeks since I received a small years of her married life, which had been spent note from him, announcing that he was in Mobile, elsewhere. It was during a brief visit she paid and most anxious to see the child of his youth Mobile in 18 while at her father's house, she that he would call on me the evening of that day. heard of her husband's death. I shall never for- as an old friend of the family, promising under get the shock it occasioned me, more for Dora's , sake, who I knew to be so ardently attached to him. Time heals every wound, and I knew, in the common course of things, she must long since have ceased to grieve for her husband's death. ; The announcement, at last, that she was about to ' i r- i .t. r tA leave iuuune jurevei, auu ociiic lti hjo est, uiiuit , the large circle of her friends with astonishment, j What! leave the dear friends, where she had -been' so petted, so caressed, for a home in a strange oi large maniy crispy cuns : i ever woum i nave land-far from the scene of her childhood! Well recognized the husband of my youth in the fine might we all wonder. I determined, with my looking middle-aged man I presented to my daugh husband's permission, to ask an explanation of this' ter as the friend of her father. I had prepared strange resolve. She was to perform her last pil- j her to receive him affectionately, and the warm grimage to the graves of her parents, who were welcome she extended, assuring him that any one interred in the old grave-yard, head of Church who had known her father should have the warm street. Thither we went together, and after saun-i est corner of her heart, was beyond conception lering through the old arenas anon stopping to painful to both of us. They had a long and inter listen to the wind, as it swept in Eolian strains j csting conversation. He inquired about her stud through the over-hanging gloomy pines-weWhed ies, and seemed pleased with the progress she at last an old broken wall, and bidding her sit , had made, making her promise (wilh my permis down beside me, I took both her hands in mine' sion) to correspond with him under the assumed and imolored her. bv mv oast friendship and my , name of Dunslow. While in conversation with his present devotion to her interests, to frankly tell me the cause of her unhappiness. T nm so alad vnn hrn touched uDon this sub- : ject,"said she, hesitatingly, "for oh, I know that I tated during the whole interview, and when I gave would be so much happier if some one else beside j him my note to read, the strong man shook like an myself knew the terrible secret of my past life. ague fit. Yes," she said, " I will tell you all without reser-1 " He scanned it several times walked the floor vatiqn; .but we must enter - into solemn compact in terrible agitation looked at mo once with the .first.'' ! concentrated agony of a'life of human suffering V Anything in reason, Dora, and which it is in ' and approaching Ada gave her a miniature of him my power to perform, 1 will most willingly do." self, which he said she must keep for her father's : . Will von nmmiqe not to hato me 7" she con-' sake as well as his own kissed her several times m,1;vp1v xnUhoA Will vnu nromisc. bv the W w J WWWVWU J I that vnu will still love mo ac vnu hnvfl hithorm Anne, t" ' "I will still continue to love you, Dora, though you had committed murder. There now, will that assurance satisfy you' i She kissed me affectionately and began the re cital of her griefs. " Mind your promise not to interrupt me," she said. 44 You will remember," she continued, "that I was married early in life to one whom I more man idolized, and went to Louisiana to live. It was dunnc the last months or the five vearq that! . ' u,e ia1 """is oi we ne jears mat I .owiumuuu hi uiai smie. mat uie seeds ot mv n tpr unhappiness were sown. I was young, Emily, j ; and was too prone to put faith in all I saw and heard. It has only been through the two last years of my intimacy with you, that I have learned what a good wife should be. Oh, Emily, Emily, the precious pearls that I have cast from me, and trampled in the dust, because I knew not their val ue ! Will you believe it, my friend, that my 'hus band is now alive and the father of a large family in one of the West India Islands. It was my own fault," she continued, as I was about to interrupt her. 1 listened to evil counsel, Emily, and I learned to distrust my husband. Yes, I learned to distrust, and at last to hate (or at least thought I did) that husband who had always lavished upon me every kindness. I never quarrelled with him. No, I was ioo innately proud for that ; but I al lowed myself to brood upon my silent, growing hate, and, oh, there is no feeling on this earth that so nigh wraps the brain to madness as the hate born of jealousy. You know my frank, open dis position, Emily. So I went to him, and with my mouth in the dust, asked for a separation. Oh, never did the poor doomsacked victim of the Bos- phorus beg for life, as I for the blessed privilege j of going from his presence forever with our only ! cniiu. lie tried to reason with me. but 1 was mad. Emily, and have been mad since. I asked for nothing but my child, and pleaded with an earn estness which he saw it was useless to resist. So, Emily, I will pass on to the announcement of my widowhood when I went forth to the world a hypocrite in widow's weeds. My husband wroto to me three times during the first year of our sep aration, imploring me by every precious tie to permit him even by stealth to look once more upon the face of his child. To every entreaty I returned a cold, stern, hard answer, and for all this I have dearly bitten the dust since. The years sped on which returned no more, and my child began to expand into a loveliness which was almost super human. Strange as it may appear to you, I again , j . , ,. learned to love my husband through his child. ! When she spoke to me it was her father's voice, every lineament was his, and I so loved my child that I afrain loved mv husband through her. s, inB,fe, ftn - m , ,,-, it i.'"n " ,, ,, " "h 7 - ' nevertheless true. 1 knew that he was alive, for it -lit "gu any every ear i nave received a smau por- 1 I ; I it H,U1SIU" UU1 '"u-iii.- 'UUS u.muuwi. hands. This, with the little patrimony received from my father, enabled me to live far above want actually affording many of the little luxuiies of her ac ! life You litlle know how 1 yearned to look once in everv!mnrc uPon m-v husband 8 face- 0h Em,1-V. 1 thoughl if I could only see him, all might be made UV- i wab prepireu iu uumulc mjacu u.c t i ... t i.i. if : t, dusi' lhal 1 iniShl be taken back t0 his heart once more, l Knew not wnere io aiieci even a leuer nm, and like a poor condemned criminal 1 . ... . - . . -r any circumstances not to reveal himself to Ada. ... .... ,,! existence is shortly to bo terminated. He has of that day were so "laden paced! i .. , i r o i t . , , , T , - , t lived many years in vain, defying God and ro ; with seven o clock. I parted with . . hjs m He stee,ed hia h c,osp(j ,i I . - -.1. I- t. 1-1 o Oh ! the hours At last he came my husband, a tall slight hgure, witn ngnt oiue eyes, and dari: curling hair and l snook nanos with him after a lapse of thirteen years, a perfect. TnHtnn in rnmnlpxion. an pnlnropfl rnhnst fifnirn ' - 1 a - n eyes somewhat darker, and his hair, instead of grey, was as black as night, lying in thick masses f 1 ll XT 11 1 t child, I had written a few lines, stating my earn. est recantation of my former errors, and earnestly asking lor a reconciliation, tie was ternoiy agi- and bidding her farewell, asked me to take a walk v II hnlrnnv. " Dora." he said, as he ! i.. vrarc aon vnu nassed , Vnn unw how earn - h " frmsvmr (urMc ',,,,J ""I'1"-"') J f a deaf ear and a hard heart to all my solicitations. You were the victim I too well know, Dora, of a wicked conspiracy. Had you but listened to the counsel contained in the last letter I wrote you, twelve years ago, all would have been well ; as it is, you sowed the seeds of your own unhappiness, by distrusting your husband, and, at best,' have reaped but Dead Sea fruit. I grieve for you I grieve more for my daughter, who must go forth to the world without a father's protecting arm. After your rejection of all overtures on my part, I went to the West Indies, obtained a divorce from yourself, and married a Spanish woman, who could not speak one word of English . By my last marriage I have three children, all daughters. You will often hear from me through my child. God bless you, madam !" And, without even one kiss, Emily, my husband vanished from my sight. One affectionate, kindly caress, would have been so little to him, and such a precious remembrance to me ! May be, this is what men call retribu tion." Slowly we pursued our way homewards, and I ceased to wonder at those eccentricities in my friend, which formed the comments of so many. Dora Hammersley left Mobile some years since, and settled in the west. Her daughter, as every body tells me, is worthy of her mother has mar ried well, and moves with her among the first wo men in the nation. Cutting it Thick. Many years since, there did dwell in a cer tain town, not a hundred miles from that far famed place where orthodox divines are filled up for lheir profession and calling, a certain D. D., notorious for his parsimonioufciiess, which occasionly run into the wildest ex tremes. " Like a peach that's got the yallcrs, With its meancss busting' out." llosea Bigelow. nn it,;. r ,i,;;(., .i i v,... o uuu.u. w. um-mj tuuu mmu a hat store in the ciiy, and after running over; the wares, selected an ordinary-looking hat put it on his reverend head ogled himself in ihe glass then asked the very lowest nrice of it telling the vender that if he could get it cheap enough he thought he might buy it. " But said the halter, "that hat is not good enough tor you io wearhere is what you want," showing one of his beat beavers. 1 ,s ,ne Desl I can afford, though," returned theoioian " Well, ihere, doctor I'll make you a pres- ent of that best beaver, if you'll wear it and tell . . ' ' vnnr friends wlnc mrp it m fmm T' warrant you 11 send me customers enough to ( get my money back with interest you are preiiy extensively acquainted." 'Fhnnk rnn ttinriL- -rn I" cntt itio Annlnr M HI' lit. j vW 1 11 II 1 1 It JUU . OUIU I 11 V va'Viw his eyes gleaming with pleasure at raising a castor so cheaply "how much may this bea- ver be worth?" ' " We sell that kind of hat for eight dollars," , replied the man of nap. "And ihe other V continu cd the reverend j gentleman " Three." I " 0 of sermons put on the beaver . iuukcu iu uie mass luo ui uic uucc-uundi 1 l. . Jl nai. " 1 think, sir, said he taking, oil the bea ver, and holding it in one hand as he donned the cheap "tile" ' I think, sir, that this hat will answer my purpose full as well as the best." " Bui you'd betier lake the best one, sir, it costs you no more." " B-u-t h-u-t," replied the parson hesita tingly "I didn't know but per-haps you ! would a9 lief I would take the cheap one---and leave the oilier and perhaps you would not mind giving me the difference in a five dollar bill." The Death of a Sisinct. Come with me to yonder apartment. Stretched upon a bed lies a man whose eartly eves an( turMed a deaf ear lo ihe invitations 0f hjm wno was able to succour and to save JT0 love was sufficient to arrest him and bring him tn ihp. prnsi Tim unrvnnl nf find nnintml i - - - i j him to the coming wrath, ihe deep misery of the second death, iho vengeance of the Lion oi tne inoe oi juuau, me nour oi ueain, uic res urrection, the day of judgment, and a future ex istence beyond ihe grave. But all was in vain. Nothing was able to penetrate his sealed con science. Now, behold him near his latter end. Death has doomed his victim, and rapidly is he accomplishing his woik. Writhing and moaning under the lashes of a guilty con science, ho curses his God, he blasphemes his Maker, and .raises his arm in impious defiance againsi approaching vengeance. The future is dark and dreary to him. No ray of light breaks through it lo afford one moment of consolation. Rapidly wasting away, his soul becomes more distressed. Satan is ready for his prey No kind angles wait to waft his spirit to realms of peace. No Saviour stands by to btippori and lead him through the dark valley. No music, save that anticipated in the pit of despair, strikes upon his ear. And now the brittle thread of life is almost broken. A few more beatings of the pulse, and time with him shall be no more on earth. Hi3 friends in vain listen for some evidence that at the eleventh hour he may have been accepted. Hark! that long drawn breath ! The spirit has laken its flight; but, 0 ! to the regions of utter despair. The door of mercy is now forever closed. The spirit will never more thrive, the atoning blood ,)f Christ hat e no efficacy, rorever anu tor- ll . . I PVr must he tve m eternal misery, without i ilin sliuhlnst alleviaMon of his tortures. .1 he ! mobt harrowinc accuaiion will ha, yo. .kh.ew vuur Mt.r', ss ill but did . nut. Correspondence of the Newark Daily Advertiser. A Glimpse at HavanaSociety, Customs, etc, Havana, Jan. 10th, 1850. Entering Havana from the sea, the appearance of the port and fortification is quite Malta-like. Facing the Gulf of Mexico to the north, and its coral-bound shores washed by the current of the gulf-stream, the narrow entrance to the harbor is defended, on its eastern side by the strong fortifi cation called the Moro, whilst the opposite point is crowned by the castle of la Punta. The Moro stands upon a high bluff, fronting both sea-ward, island, and the city, and with its strong batteries commands the entrance to the port. A long line of solid fortifications, the Cabana, also extends from the land side of the Moro, far up, and paral lel to the harbor, reaching a point nearly opposite the centre of the city. The harbor here expands into a bay of considerable size, shaped like a Ire foil, with from four to six fathoms of water, and of sufficient capacity to float the navies of the world. Of couise it is perfectly secure in all weathers. Steamers come to anchor beyond the sailing ves sels, and after the visits of the health and custom house officers, and the regulation of pass-port3, passengers are permitted to land on the quays of the city, being the west, or right-hand side of the harbor. Havana proper is a walled town, but, beyond the barriers, stretches in a westerly direction; the suburbs being far more extensive than the interior city. To an American, the appearance of the streets and houses is singular. The former are narrow, of width nearly sufficient for the passage of two carriages, whilst the side-walks are scarce ly broad enough for pedestrians in single life. The houses are of all shapes, sizes and heights from the low, one-story, scolluped eaved bodego, with its dirty front, up to the four-story morisco nalarp nf thp nnnrfp. Universal 1 v flip Inwpr win. 1 J1 , wilh a lalUce WOrk of iron, whilst the upper stories lead out upon pro- ! jecting balconies. As to color, light blue seems the predominant taste, but many fronts are painted white, yellow or brown, with crimson cornices, sills and archi traves. Tiles are mostly used for roofing. Al . this, together with the ueep windows and huse gateways, (instead of doors,) you may imagine strikes an American stranrrelv unices an American strangely T'hfi Inrcrpr hnnspsi nrp hmlf in tho fnrm nf n . nlw..Rminwl uu ,h eta!vaBe n.,; nn .i,. j . , , b ! (nnrr Inn nnr nrc nnH hori rnnmo tn nmnnra thit 'in . ! K" leside,a,um of a tropical cliraate-ven.ila- tion, have windows running from the ceiling to the floor, (some 18 or 26 feet,) both on the street and court, and floored wilh marble or stone, are cooler than one would suppose. Carpels are not in com mon use; grates unnecessary. The ladies seldom, if ever, walk the streets. They remain in their iron cages the greater part of the day, seated on 9ofa or arm chair, gazing indolently at the passers by. Flirtations are sometimes carried on with the lover in the street, the mistress behind the lattice, and a watchful mamma asleep in her chair; or if an accepted suitor, the balcony proves a conve nient place, for sweet recitals of anticipated joys. A Yolanta ! Yes, they ride in a machine which goes by that name, and also goes on two high wheels, propelled by one, two, or three horses, with a postillion and such a postillion ! Figure to yourself a jet-black shining negro, with a com ical cap, short jacket of blue, embroidered wilh silver lace and red worsted, white pantaloons, and boots that out-rival the seven-leagued ones of nursery tales, projecting far up above the knees, and laced a tight fit, to shins as spindley as those of a Cuban negro the black polish quite throwing the negro's face into a dark comparison- this fig uge, armed with a long whip, and heavily spurred, is seated astride a diminutive pony, whose heavy harness alone seems burthen enough for his puny frame. Then comes the volanta 23 feet in length from stem to stern, with wheels six feet in diame ter a gig it is in general shape, placed upon two long poles, the wheels some distanco behind the body, and the ends of the shafts resting upon the pony. You enter, a pair of you, palanquin fashion, the blue triangular curtain in. front drawn up, and lean ing back in Spanish indolence, away go postilion, blue jacket and jack boots, in sort of swaying, rocking motion, quite easy in itself, but particular ly hard to describe, especially that of turning a corner. Well, the Senoras, and Senoritas, and Creoles, and Negresses, ride in these volanta-ve-hicles, and having a seat only for two, would bo very convenient for a pair of lovers, (only they are never allowed to ride together,) but are deci dedly inconvenient for a travelling party, or a family. Al the Plaza do Armas, each evening, from eight to nine, the band plays in front of the captain gen eral's (Alcoy) palace, and the fair Habaneros, seated in their " lengthy" carriages, veiled, fan in hand, dressed in white,' and unbonneted, ('tis Jan uary too,) kill an hour in listlessly listening to the wild aiies of old Spain. The custom here does not admit ot giving evening parties; such enter tainments are unknown, and the opera, a ride on the Pasco, a call on a friend, or the music at the Plaza, are the acknowledged modes of " killing the enemy." The gentlemen are remarkably neat in their dresswhite pantaloons, white waistcoats, (always spotless.) and black dress coats, with ja panned shoes, being the style at present. Their usual rendezvous, of an evening, is the famous Confiteria Dominica, where delicious ices, sher bets, creams, sherry cobblers, choccolate, &c, may-be had. The poiice regulations of the, city rerquire ...that all ihall be in their houses ity 14 P. M,., pd' vry few people are seen in the streets after that hour. The watchmen are numerous and efficient ; they go armed with a long lance, a pair of horseman's pistols, and carry a huge lantern ; patrolling the streets faithfully and well, and crying out the hour and half-hour, the state of the weather, (always proceeded by a shrill whistle,) in such hoarse, dis cordant tones, that, for the first few nights after our arrival, sleep was a stranger lo us. A dollar, I remember, boldly administered, bribed the one on our square, for three or four nights, to yelp his infernal veil on the corner below. At 0 A. M. most of the inhabitants are out of their beds, blinds openf-a cup of coffee served, and the business of the city commences. Breakfast at Irom 11 to 3, lounge, dine, and ride out to the suburbs, (most delightful drives,) returning in time for opera or calls. The Paseos, outside the walls, are public gardens of very considerable size, laid out in parallelograms, and planted with the usual variety of tropical trees, plants, palmettos, cotton wood, coa-coa-nut, oleander, banana, &c, form ing three parallel roads for horsemen and carriages, and two for pedestrians. The foliage is very lux uriant, and, m the afternoon, all classes resort to these delightful promenades. When you consider that the thermometer here, at midday, in the month of January ranges from 80 to 85 degrees, you can beltet understand how absolutely necessary the shady walks and the cool breezes of these charm ing Pasoes, become to the comfort and health of the heated denizen of the city. 1 he palaces, or mansions, of the few grandees, are large, but not so imposing as those of the Eu ropean nobility, lheir style of architecture is the same as that of other Habanero houses, paint ed perhaps more gaily and beautifully, end clearer and more perfect in their general economy. 1 he Captain General s city palace, fronting the Plaza-de-Armas, occupies one whole sido of the square. The great Tacon Theatre, situate a short dis tance outside the walls, is, in every respect, the beau ideal of an opera house. You enter the first tier and parquette from the level oi the street, and find the interior as large almost as the famous San Carlos of Naples. Five tiers of boxes and a par quette, with stalls for 600. The lattice work in front of each box is light and graceful, and so open that the dresses and pretty small feet of the Senoras are seen to bewitching advantage. The decora tions of guilt are costly, and the frescos and side ornaments of ihe proscenium exceedingly beauti ful. Each box seats six persons, (thirteen dolls;) the broad lobbies extend completely round the cir cle, and an excellent ventilation is procured by means of stationary blinds in each box, looking out upon the lobbies, and through which any one is privileged to gaze at the fair atidfat Senoritas. 1 counted a dozen gentlemen peeping through the blinds of the box of Senoritas E., the "belle of Havana." A magnificent cut glass chandelier, lighted with gas, and numerous smaller ones from the boxes, give a brilliant light to this brilliant house. A corps of soldiers, some eighty or ninety, are always dispatched to preserve order at the opera; they are stationed in the lobbies and on the landing places. As lor the boauty gathered there, it don't compare with our Astor Place. The dresses are mostly white, and of materials suited to the warmth of the climate. The juanty opera cloak and snowy white furs are unknown ; diamonds in glittering profusion, head dresses simple, and the fans! Yes, the coquettish fans, of costly and rare workman ship, are used as only Spanish women can use them. The small hands that generally toy with these airy playthings, belong to brunettes, with the smooth, oily complexion peculiar to the inhabitants of Spain or Italy; the hair and eyes are invariably black. A fair skin is not uncommon, with dark eyes and hair, and, in fact, color is somewhat pro miscuous in these latitudes. Past twenty, obesity prevails to a heavy extent the indolent habits of the ladies, doubtless, being the cause. The Ta con can challengo any opera house in the world in the dimensions of its female audience, and the whole house will seat 5,000 persons. The street has its swarms of negro urchins, (white children are seldom seen in the thorough fares,) and offensive as it is, hundieds of them are daily seen, free from any artificial covering. Living i3 expensive. The rent for an ordinary house is fifty ounces ($850) per annum, and from that up to two and three thousand dollars this in cludes the stable on the ground floor, where the volanta and hoise are kept, literally under your very nose. Meat, (I won't describe the dirty, fil thy markets,) such as it is, 20c the pound; fish, red, yellow, blue and green, 16 to lSc; good butter not to be had; bread excellent, but dear; wines cheap, fruils, ditto; carriage and horses, $2 per hour, and last not least, ice 81 per hundred. Clothing, of light stuff, sells at moderate prices. Good board, at a boarding house, there being no such " institu tion" as a hotel, cannot be procured for less than 82.50 per day the fare miserable two in a room, and musquitoes and . Washing 81 50 per dozen. The cheapest thing here is man. A good, lively, likely negro, young and strong, is marketa ble for 30 ounces (8510,) and if bred aB a waiter, cook, or coachman, will bring a few ounces more. They all appear well fed and happy in the city, and on Sundays, with kettle drums, hollow logs, calabashes and fifes, dance their fandangos along the barriers in true African style. The burial of the dead at the Campo Santo, ia the most shocking scene about Havana. Picture to yourself the unattended corpse, brought in a wooden box to the grave, and tumbled, shrouded but coffinless, into the pit provided for it ! The poorer classes are wrapped in the most miserable rags, and frequently bodies are left for hours naked on the ground, and covered with vermin, awaiting the tardy movements of the burier. Sculls and bones also lie exposed on the surface, and poor hu manity in this christian city, receives not at the grave the sober, decent respect paid to the dead by the North American Indian. Yours, &c, S. Destroying Briars. A writer of much experience gives his view as to ihe besi mode of destroying briars, which prove so great a pest to many otherwise excel lent farms. He has tried every conceivable mode. Culling off and "hoeing out he has re pealed over and over again, without the lea-t successas the more he cut and hoed, the more thrifty ihey sprung up. But finally, he put the grouud in with clover, thickly sown. The briars appeared next season an uiual, but they were sickly ; sheep were then turned iu to pasture an the clover and that was the com plete extirpation oj the briars. Thi ii an easy ,modo for moil farmers to try ; the wrneris j conhden! that hrur and a su confident that clover is the greitt iMiemy of ho ro cxtirjiaior. , '