JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN Thursday. December 5, 1850. To ur Patrons. -We are preparing ourselves for Court, which begins in Stroudsburg on Monday the 23d inst. by making out the bills of all our delinquent sub rcribers, so that if any of them should call upon us, we will be able to settle with them, without detaining them scarcely a moment. Many of our subscribers are largely in arrears, and some of them, have not paid us a penny since we com menced publishing the JefFersonian. To such, in particular, we make an earnest appeal, thai they will'do us justice, and no longer detain from us the trifle which they owe, and which we are so much in need of. This is the last time we can ask them for it. We have already waited too long; und ,we do hope no one will impose upon us the unpleasant duty of placing their accounts in the hands, of a Justice of the Peace for collection. The Brother Jonathan. A curious fact relative to the rapid and enor mous sale of the Christmas and New Years Broth er Jonathan has just been stated in some of the papers. It appears that two editions were first got ready for sale, one of 20,000, and one of 21.250 copies. It was less than ten days after the first sheet came from the press, when every copy f these two first editions were exhausted ! We venture to say that a demand like this was never before know in newspaper annals. The Jonathan this year is really the richest and most elegant pictorial sheet we ever saw. Wilson & Co. New York, are the publishers. Delaware and Cobb's Gap Rail Road. Our readers are aware that the subject of a Rail Road through North Eastern Pennsylvania, open ing a communication between that highly produc tive region and New York, or some other mart on the sea board, has been much mooted for the last few years'. The feasibility of the route, the per manent and secure investment of capital in the contemplated road, and the enhancement in the valuation of property, has long been apparent to ihe minds of ohservers, from the fact that the vast accumulations of Coal and Lumber and other sur plus of produce of North Eastern Pennsylvania, would seek a market through this channel. But from the want of a sufficient amount of Capital te enterprise had almost been forgotten. We are happy to state, however, that recent sieps have been taken in the matter, which reduces it to a certainly, that the enterprise, fraught with so much interest to ihe people of this region of country, will be promptly and vigorously pushed forward to completion. Indeed, the present time is remarkably auspicious, a9 there is a large amount of capital in the country seeking profitable invest ment. The Books for the subscription of Stock of said Road, were opened on the 2Sth of Novem ber, at the American Hotel, in Stroudsburg. The who'e amount of Stock was taken, being 18,000 shares, amounting to $900,000, on which the sum of Five Dollars per share was paid amounting to S90,000. These are cerlainly gratifying prelimin aries. Taking this as an earnest, we may safely predict what we, who have been shut up be liind the mountains for so many years, will soon enjoy, as it were, a new existence, that in the course of two years the rushing train will rumble ihrough our fertile valleys and awake the echo that has slumbered for so many years in our deep moun tain gorges. Congress. This body of the collected wisdom met on Mon day last. The Presidents message reached this place yesterday, and occupies about five columns oftheJV. Y. Tribune. The message is a very able document; decided, but conciliatory in its lone; strongly conservative in its character, and characterized -by an earnest devotion to the Union. In reference to the Tariff, the President recom mends the substitution of specific for the ad valorem duties; and if this cannot be accomplished, that, at all events, a home valuation shall be adopted. He advises, also, the appointment of ambulatory ap praisers, to exercise a general supervision, with a view to uniformity in the rates of levying duties, as well as to prevent frauds which under our pres ent.system, operate to, lessen the amount of reve nue, while, at the same time, they are of serious injury to the home manufacturer. The iron and coal interests are specially considered ; and Inter nal Improvements, and other subjects of national concern and importance, are fully -and wisely dis cussed. The message will appear in next week's Repub lican. State Agricultural SoctETr. A. State Con vention will be held in Harrisburg, on the third Tuesday of January next, for the purpose of pro moting the establishment of a State Agricultural Society. A number of the counties have alreadv chosen delegates. The project originated in some of the northern counties. Should not our farmers make arrangements to have Monroe represented. Pennsylvania, with an unsurpassed soil, is far be hind other Northern States jn agricultural science. A weaver in Bradford has been for some time employed weaving in a piece of cloth the whole -ef-tbe New Testament, He has lately completed the four Gospels, and has made some advance in the Acts of the Apostles, Remains of a Giant. A human skeleton of unusual size has been discovered in Harsi inus county, N. J , buried in oyster shells of immense tize. It was in a sitting posture when found, and la doubtless the frame of an Indian of olden time. It must have been eight feet in height. Tho hkull measures fifteen inches .from the roo,l of the nosjo over the lop xo b pj ha.se $f , i he tec jjilai n e , a n d i a t yno !tt in crrnttc$ftrtuco containing, a full sel,oj tt'a, &y?fi fcouflti, sjtifl wlrite. " '. The Teeth. . Friend ScHoch : As whatever pertains to the generalgood receives from you a sanction and sup port, I purpose to make an effort through your col umns, with your consent, to call the attention of your readers to the consideration of a subject which, more than any other of equal moment remains shrouded in darkness and ignorance. I know and appreciate it as a privilege and duly, to be instru mental in guarding my fellows against some of the evils to which they are subject. There is no part of personal comfort, appearance arid cleanliness, so shamefully neglected as the teeih. It is not so surprising, however, from the fact that but very little has ever been said or writ ten, for general circulation, concerning this de partment. The efforts of the profession have prin cipally been aimed in another direction, and con fined to its own members. Why this has been the case, is probably because Dental Science has not till of late been brought to any very high state of perfection: and also because it might be consid ered presuming too great ignorance to direct the attention of an individual to a matter so much un der his own control, and so palpably for his own in terest to heed. Visible proof is written upon the countenances of ninety-nine individuals in every hundred of a serious and sad demand for an in crease and scattering of information regarding this important part of the animal economy. And it is from the members of the profession that we would naturally look for the emanation of what few scattering rays of light may have been collect ed for the benefit of science and society. Trusting they may not prove altogether useless and uninteresting to the reader, the writer propo ses giving a few brief chapters on the teeth. In doing which, he will endeavor to be as concise and comprehensive as possible, and not weary the rea der with stulliloquence. Many whether superstitious or not, the writer will not pretend to say count those who cherish the beauty and desire the perfection of the teeth, as being actuated by motives of vanity and pride. The supposition that vanity has anything to do with it, is too glaringly erroneous to merit com ment. If it is pride, it is a holy pride; a pride taught us by Deity ; planted in our natures by the Creator ; stamped upon the countenance of Na ture; and fostered by the votarys of purity, excel lence and virtue. " The countenance is the thea tre on which the soul exhibits itself:" the mouth is the most expressive feature of the face : but when minus the dental organs, it loses its proper expression ; in fact, it has no definite expression at all. Its beautiful symetry is wholy destroyed, and its offices are not performed. "If the sculptor, the painter, or the poet," says Mr. Pleasants, " would invest the production of his genious wiih those forms of horror at which humanity shudders and recoils, he perfectly com prehends the art of giving to his allegorical per sonages an array of teeth, black with tartar, muti lated with gangrene, broken by violence, or wrest- ed by distortion. Should Envy present herself in the group, her parted lips would disclose but a single fang. Should Malice approach to perse cute his victim, his teeth would be turned away as by the violence of his passion. Thus the wrinkled witch, the smoky gipsy, the fortune-telling hag, and the freebooter of the seas, would lose the proper expression of their distincive charac ters if supplied with perfect, regular and beauti ful sets of teeth. On the other hand, the skillful artist, who would exhibit the amiable and worthy passions in all their loveliness and attraction, bes tows untiring labor in the exhibition of perfect arches of teeth, white as monumental alabaster, and regular as the crystal columns in the palace of Odin, inhabited by the virgins of the Vallallah. Jf he exhibits Beauty in her smiles, a colonade of pearls contribute to the enchantment. If he shows us Love, with music on her lips, the emblematic purity of her teeth must lend its tributary charms. Thus the ideal Venus of the polished Greeks, as well as the living Beauty in the hamlet of Ciicas sia, would cease to please on the discovery of sen sible defect in these important organs." o. a. j. Slanderous. Judge Parson3, in Philadelphia, is said to have asserted, in the decision of a late contested elec tion case, that there 'are hundreds of election offi cers in Pennsylvania who can neither read nor write.1 The Lancaster Examiner thus refutes the the slander: The statement that there are hundreds of Elec tion Judges in Pennsylvania who can neither read nor write is a slander upon the citizens of the State, as base as it is false. For our own part we have never known or, before this, heard of such a case, and do not believe that Judge Parsons can point to one. We do not remember a certain Superintendent of the Common Schools of Pennsylvania, who held his office in about 1839 or 40, we think, who was accused of being unable to spell, and some of whose specimens of orthography were exposed in the Legislature. That Superintendent was Anson V. Parsons who now gives encouragement, from the Bench, to ignorance, in the face of law and common reason. The curiosity of the exhibition to which the Ex aminer alludes was not confined altogether to the beauties of the orthography. It was quite as rich in grammatical and rheotorical points of view. The judge should not be too much blamed for his ig norance. He was brought up in Barkharastead, a place not to be found on the maps, and would him self have been as little known, had not that far seeing man into character and judicial qualifica tions, David R Porter, elevated him from Jersey Shore, where he was engaged in a prudent and appetential business, to the office of Secretary of the Commonwealth, and finally to the bench in Philadelphia. His career has been brilliant ; and he is now exerting himself to sustain it by appeal ing to the Cades who will soon exercise the Judge making power. Cold Water vs. Lightning. Mr. Kingston, of Babylon, Illinois, was struck by lightning a few weeks since and was left dead to all external ap pearances, but his wife, a shrewd woman, took a bucket of cold water and poured it on his breast, when he revived and is doing well. Let no one forget the efficacy of cold water in cases like this. Ealing Their Enemies. The Choctaw Intel- ngencer says tnai a oatue nas occurred between .me yyicnetaw and lonkeway Indians. The Ton- 1 kew.ays roasted and eat one of their enemies. They aro.said to be inclined to cannibalism and Jpok with fond -eyeappnthpse who are fat- and, sleek. ITIorris & Essex Railroad Extension. We are indebted to the SecretaryqJ. C Garth waite, Esq., for an early copy of the Report of the. Survey of the proposed extension .of the Morris and Essex Railroad from Dover' toTlheDelaware Water Gap. The report is from the pen of Mr. Bassenger, theJEngineecoLtheCompany, and, is minute, in its details. The Company thinks it cannot fail to satisfy any one that the construction, of the pro posed road is practicable, and that the investment would be profitable. We quote -from the Report first in regard urthe Route : v The-line- of the proposed. extentibn? commences at thepresent.tterminus of the road ;of .the Compa ny in the flourishine: village, of. Dover ; running thence a Westerly direction to, Standhopej a dis tance of nine miles,-from, which place it follows the South Slope .of the valley of the Musconetcong river to a point about sixand a half .miles from Standhope, where the ri ver is crossed ; from this point the line continues along, the South-west slope of the valley to, within about one mile of Hackettstown, where it passes into the valley of the Pequest river: It then descends the, valley of the Pequest on the Southerly side of the river to near Buttsville, where .it crosses the river, and continues in. aiwesterly direction to Beaver Brook; thence in a North-western course through Voss Gap into the valley of the, Delaware riven thence the line follows the valley of the Delaware to the Water Gap. A branch from the main line at Bea ver brook can be constructed to the village of Bel- videre, distance about two miles. At Waterloo the line will connect with the Sus sex Mine Railroad, running from, that place to Newton, the county town of Sussex ; this portion of this road between Waterloo and Andover mines is now being constructed, and it is understood the remainder will be when the proposed extension of the Morris and Essex, Railroad is made. The distance from Dover to Belvidere, including the branch, 3-2 miles ; the curves are represented as favorable, and no grade exceeds fifty feet per mile. Mr. Bassinger, after a careful instrumen tal survey and location of the line, estimates the total cost of the road from Dover to the Water Gap, at one million of dollars. The, estimated cost of the road from Dover to Belvidere, includ ing the equipments of the same $800,000, giving an average cost of $25,000 per mile ; the road to be constructed in the most substantial and dura ble manner. The sum mentioned is believed to be amply sufficient to complete the road and put it in working order with all the necessary engines, cars, buildings, water-stations &c, &c. The estimate made by the .Engineer based, up on information derived at the several points on the line of road from Dover to Belvidere, of the num ber of passengers and tons of freight that would be daily transported, oyer the road, yields a nett revenue of more than nine per cent, on the cost of the road. The Report concludes with the remark, that "it is for the Stockholders of the Morris and Essex Railroad Company to say whether they will aid in an enterprise so beneficial to them, or permit oth er roads to reap such benefit. A map accompa nies the Report. -Newark Eagle. A New Project of Barnum. Great importa tion of Elephants Tom Thumb and Jenny Lind. The active mind of Barnum is always teeming with some new project to add to his fortune. He has chartered a vessel which is now on Ijer yvay to the East Indies, or probably on her way home, with twelve huge elephants which are to perform in a mammoth movable circus, which is to be car ried from city to city. The elephats are to bear towers on their back after the manner of the East and each of these towers are to contain a museum. General Tom Thumb is engaged as a part of this speculation, and the dwarf will exhibit in his per- son an extraordinary contrast with the giant brutes of the forest. The spectacle will just come in season, after the departure of Jenny Lind, and the public appetite begins to crave for a new excite ment. We may mention in passing that Tom Thumb came from Bridgeport last week, to hear Jenny Lind sing and to pay his respects to the great cantatrice. He was delighted with her, and she no doubt, was highly amused with Tom. We learn that, the General is to be at the Museum du ring the entire of the ensuing week. Sus. Reg. Sickness in California, is an expensive business. The fee bill agreed upon by the San Francisco Medical Society, is published with their bye-laws, and fixes the price of a single visit from a physician (who is not a regulat at tendant) at S32 ; from the regular attendeng physician$16; and $10 for every mile travelled from the city ; when detained, for each hour $32; for a written opinion or advice, $50 to $100 ; for a visit at night, $100f for an opinion involving a question of law $150 ; for a post mortem examination in case of legal investiga tion, $200 ; do. made at the family's request, $100 ; certificate of the state, of the patient's health, $250; for vaccination, $32; case of or dinary labor, $150; application of forcep,$300; operation of turning, $500; removing alone from the bladder, $500 to 1000 ; for amputation of a leg or arm, $300 ; extirpation of tumors, $100 to 1000 ; for trephining, $1000 ; operations on the eye, $100 to $1000. The San Francisco Herald, speaking of the effects of these high rates on medical gentlemen of the States, says: We beg them not to be deceived, however, by the showy appearence of the above rates; there arc, unfortunately, many physicians in this city, skillful and able as any of the Medical Society who would be glad to earn $500 a month, even though they had to perform every day the strange sounding operations lo which that sum is affixed. Lusus Nature. A chicken was Jately hutched on the farm of Mr. Meynel, Northaller ton, Englnad, with two heads, three eyes, and one wing. The bird haa been stuffed, and is now in the possession of Mr. Coates, solicitor, Northallerton. l,ord Byron is said to have marked that lhe greatest trial to; a,.woman's, beauty is, the ttn graceful act of, eating, eeas." , Somo Yankee emarks iat.the.po?,coiJd never have seen, a ladv hangiggWPn Pyj& t'cej&'io a blazing tfo corn cob The Next President. A little less than two years will bring us'to an other Presidential election, and although'theeo ple have scarcely begun to think of candidates, thejkind souls dffho 'would gladly takelhe trouble of thinking off their hands are hard at work ar ranging and engineering for their several favor ites. We do not pretend to know all, nor half, that is doing to bring this or that aspirant favora bly before the public, but there are some efforts so palpable that, they cannot well be mistaken. And as the Oppositipn'have just now an apparent as cendency in popular regard, it is but natural that there should ba more anxiety, more maneuvering, with reference lo'their nomination than to that of the Whigs. Had the recent elections generally gone our way, the case would haye-been quite dif ferent. Gen Lewis Cass evidently imagines himself still a prominent candidate for the next Baltimore nomination, and therein he is grievously mistaken, or we are. He was never truly a popular man, and defeated candidates are not favorites with 'the Democracy.' On the subject of Slavery he has managed to repel the North without winning the confidence of the Slavery Propaganda of the South. He has a few influential supporters, and only a few, though a good many seem to favor him in pursuance of their own selfish ends. Thus Gen. Cameron arid his clique are using hi name in Pennsylvania to nip Mr. Buchanan's aspira tions; but, that accomplished, you will not find them seriously supporting a candidate who lost their State by so large a majority in '48, Gener al Scott could beat Gen. Cass in Pennsylvania ; so could John McLean, so (we think) could al most any Whig Statesman. The General's recent defeat in his own Michigan, in the election of two Whig Free Soil Members of Congress out of three, expressly on the ground oftheir hosti lity to 'Peace measures,' was calculated to injure his prospects had they not already been past praying for. We consider his chance to lose the Baltimore nomin ation fully equal to that of any other man who is looking for it. Mr. Buchanan will have no better luck. He is a light stick at best for a; mainmast, popular in his own, State, and with no strength abroad but a little he has acquired at the South by offering in effect to run the Missouri Compromise line through to the Pacific. But even he seemed unwilling to stipulato for the positive legalization of Slavery ! South of that line, so that his offer did really sat- isfy the Propaganda, while it wa3 calculated to prejudice him seriously at the North. We con- j sider 'Old Buck' an' impossible candidate, Nor has Col. Bunion any real look for the nom ination. The 'Free Soil Democrats,' whether of the John Van Buren or John Wonlworth school, 'go in to win,' and will take care to have a candi date with whom they can win. Now Col. Ben ton is utterly detested by the entire Southern 'De mocracy.' Though he always voted against the Wilmot Proviso and is himself a slaveholder, yet his sentiments with regard to 1 the peculiar insti tution' are of the old-fashioned JefFersonian stamp and not at all of the Calhoun order. South Caro lina would vote for Webster any day to defeat Benton. Now the two Johns and their dissciples mean, to talk Free Soil yet succeed by the South ern vote, and they are well aware that Col. Ben ton is unavailing. His name may be used in Wis consin, Northern Illinois; &c. to elect Delegates, but when they come to vote in earnest they will not vote for him. Col. Isaac P. Walker, Senator from Wiscon sin, is the candidate of 'the Young Democracy' the men with whom Democracy is not a mere catchword but a practical and fruitful reality. The earnest Land Reforms are enthusiastic in his favor, and he can hardly fail to ha"e some X'otes in the Convention. But he won't be nominated the Slavery Propaganda and old Fogyism in gen eral will be a great deal too strong for that in any National Convention. The men who live on the products of their own labor, and only ask to have that product fully secured to them, are not 'up to' the packing of Baltimore Conventions not many of them can afford even to attend. Senator Wal ker must tarry at Jericho for a while yet. We have supposed Judge Levi Vvoodburv of New-Hampshire would stand well for the next nomination. He is a man of goood abilities, fair character,' anti-Proviso and Southern in his bear ings, and would make a respectable President We think he would run better than any one we have named belore him. Yet he does not seem to be set forward much by recent operations, nor even to be cordially supported in his own State, while there exists a general prejudice against ta king a candidate for President ofTthe bench of the Supreme Court which will weigh against him. His chance just now seems slender indeed. Nor do we believe Col.-Wm, O Butler of Ken tucky destined to be the candidate, thouch our in telligent New-Hampshire correspondent considers him the favorite with the party managers m New England. Col. Butler was beaten as a candidate for Governor in 1814 (though he made a great run) and beaten again for Vive-President under Cass in '48. To set him up now for President would be giving him more than his share of the luxury of being flogged. He is a man of right in tentions and good social standing, but of moderate abilities, with nothing but some average fighting to recommend him. He can't co in. The 'lucky holder, of the winning ticket in the Baltimore lottery seems now to be no oilier than Gen. Sam Houston of Texas. Sam has seen a great variety of fortune, and must have been a very obstinate blockhead not to have learned some thing in the course of his protracted and multiform experience He is a ladies' man, an Indian fighter, ' the hero of San Jacinto,' a good stump orator, Southern born, yet does not deem it ne cessary to make himself ridiculous in his show of devotion to slavery, was a zealous and efficient compromiser, and -could by skillful 'talking up,' be made popular with -'the b'hoys.' His reputa tion has some holes m it which could hardly fail to win attention in a canvass, and thereupon a ve ry effective appeal might be made in his behalf to the sympathies of all undergoing like persecution In short, we consider Gen. Sam the man most likely to be nominated at Baltimore and with a fair chance of success. South Carolina will not touch him ; and he can never be a favorite with the Southern anti-Compromisers; but he may make a very fair run without them. He is certainly not a candidate to our. taste, but ' the Democracy will not break their hearts on that account 'and we con sider him about as well adapted to the genius and tastes of 'the party' as any candidate yet proposed. We are preparing to hear without amazement that Gen. Sam Houston is the regular Democratic' can didate for next President, and to announce that John Van Buren and D. S. Dickinson will address the united Democracy in advocacy of his election. If they do it first at some convenient locality, we mean to be among their auditors. Tribune. Dry feet. We give our readers a recipe for making boots water proof which is worth more than our subscription price to any person, who will try it. Moisture generally penetrates the soles of boots the upper leather is not easily wet and is easily dried. To render the sole impervious to water, order your boot-makor to cut pieces of canvass in the proper shape, dip them intmelted pitch or lar, and lay thorn upon the jniier.soles .before putting on the other soles of the.booifl. This simple process will ensure dry feet without making the boot clumsy. Wo b?ve triad this oxne.riment, and woujd, ad.viso ajl whose soles are amtcted with cold or damp neas to db The same. i anhee Blade. Singular Sect ill Paris. The police has just arrested several mem bers of an illicit society of an extraordinary character, which was in the habit of meeting at No. 9 Rue de l'Orillon. h was a sort of religious sect styling itself " Les Beguins," or "Anabaptistes," or "Muliplianis the supreme head of this sect, named Digonnet, and honor ed by his adherents with the surname of " Lo Bon Dieu," had established the supreme seat at St. Jean de Bonnefonds (Loire.) A person named G., had imported this pretended religion into Paris, and succeeded in making a certain number of proselytes of each sex, who had, nevertheless, been on the decrease during ihe last few months, on account of the vigilance of the police, who had already driven the sectari ans from one of their haunts at Belleville. The Beguins have a creed which differs on many points from the various persuasions generally known. One of their tenets enjoins them not to work and not to care about the morrow ; marrige is allowed, but only on condition of a rigid observance of chastity between man and wife ; on the contrary, young girls are taught to give way, without opposition, to every temp tation such being the will of Le Bon Dieo Digonnet. Religious meetings take place sev eral times a week, and on Saturday the secta rians are bound to repair to the place of meet ing, when the high priest opens the proceedings by communicating to ihe believers the letters he has received. The president then preaches a sermon, in which he generally enjoins per fect faith in the God Digonnet ; after which hymnB are chanted, ending in a genernl cry of " Light for ever 1 Down with modesty !" At that moment all the lights are suddenly put out, and the meeting remains in complete ob scurity for the space of about twenty minutes. At the end of that time light is restored, and the president recommends believers to give up their superfluities, not to work, &c. Being apprised thai the police had its eye upon them, their songs had of late lost a good deal of their intensity, and mattresses bad been set upagainst the windows. Neveitheless, the police pene trated, on the night of the 12th, into their place of meeting, where they found 38 persons, wearing the insignia of the sect, which consists, in the case of women, of caps trimmed with red and white crape ; and for men of a black cord crowning iheir foreheads. There were eight men present, two boys, eleven women, six girls, of from J5 to 25 years of age, one of 13, and two little girls of the age of 7 to 9. The house was searched and many papers, pamphlets, insignia, &c , were seized. Galig nanis Messenger. A Champion of Woman's Rights. The Lowell Offering furnishes an interesting account of Miss Weber, a young Belgian lady, who stands pre-eminent among the advocates of woman's rights. Her practice is in accord ance with her theory, and she wears male at tire and carries on a farm. She h handsome, only 24 years old, dresses in the Parisian fash ion of black dress coat and pants, with buff vest. Her doieuse of the practice is racy. The nether garment (she says) was first worn in the bifurcated form by the women of an cient Judea. The exclusive claim which man o pertenactously maintains to the use of this garment, is arbitrary, without a solitary argu ment to support it, not even that of prior usage. Nature never intended that the sexes should be distinguished by apparel. The beard which she assigned to man is the natural token of his sex. (Miss Weber may not only take our hat, but pants also.) She claims in addi tion every civil, political, and ecclesiastical right for women, and it said that her every word, look and action is characterized with the moat refined womanly delicacy. Homage to a dead Hero. As the funeral train conveying the dead body of the lamented Gen. Taylor was proceeding slowly and solemnly through the western cities, it is relaied, that the inhabitants of the places through which it passed, had by no means forgotten the old hero, who had in the lat ter part of his life played a part equally honorable to his country, humanity and him self. They gahered round the mournful hearse, and paid the last sad honors to his re mains, with the spontaneous emotions of unaf fected and irrepressible sorrow. One occasion, in particular, was distinguished by a touching event. There was at one place a military es cort of honor. When the trumpet sounded, Old Whitey, who was in the procession, instantly roused up at the well known sound of battle, and seemed rejoicing that he had returned once moro to the glorious strife of war. His nostrils were distended, his ears erect, and his whole body was animated with new energy and life. The sounds and sights of glorious martial fields were present to him ai that mo ment, and possibly the expectation of seeing once again the form of his illustrious master. The scene thrilled every heart. Ii was a mo ment of deep emotion, and eyes were wet that wore unaccustomed to tears. Important to Tanners of Leather. Henry W. Ellsworth, Esq., says the Lafayette Journal, has shown us several specimens of leather, which were tanned, under his own eyes, in the space of ten rninntes, by a process of which Marion Hibbard, of Rochester, New York, is tho inventor. The statement may seem almost incredible, when it is considered that six, ten or eight months are required to tan leather by ihu ordinary process. Mr. Ellsworth has in his possession a pair of boots and a pair of shoes made from a raw hide in less than a day and a half, tanned by his new process. The leather is tanned by a com pound of chemicals, and in time and materials is a saving of at least five thousand per cent over the present slow mothod of making leath er. The right, says the Journal, for Connecticut and Massachusetts was sold for $500,000 ; Ohio for $150,000 ; Michigan for $100,000. This undoubtedly is one of the greatest im provements of the age. Blowing out a Candle. There is one small fact in domestic economy which is not gener ally known, but which is useful as saving time, trouble, and temper, If a candle be blown out holding ii above you, the wick will not smoul der down, and nty, therefore, bo easily lighted ngnm ; uui nuiuwn upon uownwartis, the con trary is thu case. ' A