HUNTINGDON JOURNAL ffainfin anuopaper—Debottly to general. *Matti:trim, ntitertirsing, Votttito, atterature, Rrto, *drum, agriculture, anutocntent, fizr,,Szt. 4 QP`aaa,, a Ectp. C13d0.0 PUBLISHED EY JAMES CLARK. ( ?:2 az.maGm. The "Jounkat." will be published every Wed nesday morning, at $2 00 a year, if paid in advance, and if not paid within six months, $2 50. No subscription received for a shorter period than 'six months, nor any paper discontinued till all ar 'rearages are paid. Advertisements not exceeding one square, will be insetted three times for $1 00, and for every subse 'quern insertion 25 cents. If no definite orders are given as to the time an advertisement in to be continu ed, it will be kept in till ordered rut, , ind charged ac eOrdingly. POM'I'RT. "To charm the languid hours of solitude lio oft inviter her to the Muse's lore." SPEAK GENTLY. Speak gently !—it is better far To rule by love, than fear— Speak gently—let not harsh words mar The good we might do here! Speak gently !—Love doth whisper low The vows that true hearts bind ; And gently Friendship's accents flow; Affection's voice is kind. Speak gently to the little child, Its love be sure to gain ; Teach it in accents soft and mild It may not long remain. Speak gently to the young, for they Will have enough to bear, Pass through this Zile as best they may, "Pis full of anxious care ! peak gently to tho aged one. Grieve not the care-worn heart, Thu sands of life are nearly run, Lot such in peace depart. Elpeak gently, kinkly to the poor; Let no harsh tone bo heard ; They hare enough they niust endure, Without an unkind word! Speak gently to the erring—know, They have toiled in vain ; Perchance unkindnea made them ao ; Oh, win them back again ! Speak gently !—He who gave his life To bend man's stubborn will, When elements were in fierce strife, Said to them, " Peace, be still." Speak gently !—'tie a little thing Dropped in the heart's deep well; The good, tho joy which it may bring, Eternity shall tell. PRAYER. Go when the morning ehineth, Go when the moon is bright, Go when the eve declineth, Go in the hush of night; Go with pure mind and feeling, Fling earthly thoughts away, And in thy chamber kneeling, Do thou in secret pray. Remember all who love thee, All who are loved by thee. Pray for those who hate thee, If any such there be. Then for thyself in meekness, A blessing humbly claim. And link with each petition Thy Great Redeemer's name, Or if 'tis ere denied thee In solitude to pray, Should holy thought. come o'er thee When friends are round thy way; E'en then the silent breathing Of thy spirit raised above, Will reach His throne of glory, Who is Mercy, Truth and Love, Ohl not a joy or blessing, With this can we compare, The power that he has given us, To pour out our souls in prayer! When thou pirest in sadness, Before his footstool fall, And remember in thy gladness, His grace who gave the all. NEW Doo Sronv.—A Brussels paper states, l that a nobleman, for a wager, rode round the whole boulevard of that city, in a light two wheeled car mige, drawn by 18 small Scotch terriers. harnessed vlx abreast. He drove them with whip and reins at full speed, followed by all the fashionable and sporting men of that city, accomplishing the task in 33 minutes. After it was over, the charioteer coolly released the dogs from their harness, wrapped each of them in a small blanket, and carefully lai , l them in his own carriage, into which one or his grooms also stepped, and returned with them to his lordship's residence. The nobleman himself walk ed home, having pocketed £OOO by his feat. Lovc.—Charles Lever, in his new work of St. Patrick'. Eve,' remarks on the tender passion as follows :—The game of love is the same, whether the players be clod in velvet or in hodden gray.— Beneath the gilded ceilings of a palace, or the low ly rafters of a cabin, there are the same. jealousies, and distrusts, and desponding. ; for after ell, the stake is human happiness, whether he who risks it be a peer or a peasant!' (Cr We find the following notice. of marriages in one of our exchanges: Al! Right—Mr. Levi All, to Mien Jane Wright. Not so.--It a Wright All! !:':ort and Sweet.—Mr. James Short, to Miss EcuLn.) Wrong again—lt's all Short ! GtOg Aland.—Mr. John Going, to Miss A. . And egaln.—A Hood io VoilE IZ9IM3Li-I:2l3DaU3l:lEllia a.E2142.e.). From Arthur's Ladies' MagaL-ine for July. How to Correct a Husband's Faults, BY FANNY ORA, Now just look at you, Mr. Jones ! I declare ! it gives me a chill to see you go to a drawer. What do you want Tell me! and I will get it for you. Mrs. Jones springs to the side of her husband, who has gone to the bureau for something, and pushes him away. There now ! Just look at the hurra's nest you have made! What do you want, Mr. Jones 1' The husband throws en angry look upon his wife mutters something that she cannot understand, and then turus away and leaves the room. 4 It is too bad !' scolds Mrs. Jones, to herself, com mencing the work of restoring to order the drawer her husband had thrown all topsy turvy. I never saw such a man ! He has no kind of order about him ; sod then, if I speak a word, he goes off into a huff. But I won't have my things forever in con fusion.' In the meantime, Mr. Jones, in a pet, leaves the house, and goes to the store without the clean pock et handkerchief for which he had been in search.— Half the afternoon passes before he gets over his ill humor, and then he does not feel happy. Mrs. Jones is by no means comfortable in mind. She is sorry that she spoke so roughly, although she does not acknowledge, even to herself, that she has done wrong, for every now and then she utters, half aloud some censure againgt the careless habits that were annoying and inexcusable. They had been mar ried five years, and all that time Mre. Jones had complained, but to no good purpose. Sometimes the husband would get angry, and sometimes he would laugh at his wifo ; but he made no effort to reform himself, Mr. Jones, why Will you do so?' sold Mrs. Jones on the evening of the same day, 'you aro the most trying man alive. Pity you hadn't a chance to try another,' retort ed Mr. Jones, sarcastically. The offence given was a careless overturning of Mrs. Jones' work basket, and tho scattering of nee dles, cotton, scissors, wax, and a dozen little etcet eras about the floor. The reply of Mr. Jones hurt his wife. It seemed unkind. He had brought home a now book which he intended reading, but the faro cf m.. tones look• wf Rr , Q r,o „r,„ n~ar ,ue work basket that he felt no disposition to read to her, but con tented. himself with enjoying the book to himself. It must be said that Mr. Jones was a very trying man indeed, as his wife had alleged. He could open closets and drawers as handy as any one, but the thought of shutting either never entered his mind. The frequent reproofs of his wife, such as— , Had you any doors in the House where you were raised or Please to shut that drawer, will you, Mr. Jones!' or 'You are the moot disorderly man in exiotenee 4 lou are enough to try the patience of a saint, Mr. Jones!' produced no good effects. In fact, Mr. Jones seemed to grow worse and worse every day instead of better. Tho naturul habits of order and regularity which his wife possessed, were not respected in the least degree. Ho drew his boots in the parlor, and left them in the middle of the floor —put his hat on the piano, instead of hanging it on the rack in the passage—left his shaving appa ratus on the dressing table or bureau—splashed tho water about and soiled the wall paper in washing, and spite of all that could be said to him, would neglect to take the soap out of the basin—spattered every thing around him with blacking when he brushed his boots—and did a hundred other careless things, that gave his wife a world of trouble, which annoyed her safely, and kept her scolding, which worried him a good deal ; but hawser for a single moment made him think seriously of reforming his bad habits. One day he came into dinner. It was a hot day. He went up into the chamber where his wife was sitting, and threw himself into a large rocking bed right in the midst of half a dozen lace collars new ly done up—and kicked off his boots with such en. ergy that one of them landed upon the bureau, and the other its the clothes basket, soiling a white dress I just from the ironing table. Poor Mrs. Jones was 1 , grievously tired. The husband expected a storm, but no storm broke. Ho looked at hie wife, as she lifted his hat from the bed and put it on the mantel piece, and took his boots and put thorn in a closet from which she brought out his slippers and placed them beside him, but he did not understand the ex pression of her face exactly, nor feel comfortable abort it. Mrs. Jones did not seem angry but hurt.— After she had handed him his slippers, she took the soiled dress from the clothes basket, over which she had spent nearly half an hour at the ironing table, and attempted to remove the dirt which the boot had left upon it. But she tried in vain. The pure white muslin was hopelessly soiled, and would have to go to the washing tub before it would be again fit to wear. If you knew,Henry,' she said in a voice that touched her husbands feeling, as she laid aside the dress, how much trouble you giro me 'sometimes, I am sure you would be more particular.' 'Do I really give you much trouble, Jane?' Mr. Jones asked, as if a new idea had broken its upon his mind. 'I am sure lam sorry for it.' Indeed you do. If you would only be more thoughtful, you would save me a great deal, I shall have to wash out the dress myself, now the washer woman is gone, end I een't tra,t ` 4 •211y With ;; /pent nearly half an hour in ironing it to day, as Dl u it is, 'I am Very sorry indeed, ism It was a careless trick in me, I must confess ; and if you will for give me, I will promise not to offend you again.' All this was new. Both Mr. and Mrs. Jones felt surprised at themselves and at each other. He had offended and she did not get angry I she lied been annoyed and he was really sorry for what he had done. Light broke into both their minds, and bolls made an instant resolution to be more careful in future of their words and actions towards each other; and they were more careful. When Mr. Jones offended, as he still too often did, his wife checked the instane impulse she felt to upbraid him. He perceived this, and appreciating her self-denial, compelled Iliumlf in consequence, to bo more or derly in his habits. A few years wrought so great a change in Mr. Jones that to use an hyperbole, ho hardly knew himself. He could shut a closet door as vrellas open it—he could got a handkerchief, or any thing else from the drawer, without turning it upside down—could hang his hat upon the rack and put Isis boots away when ho took them off.— In fact he could be as orderly as any one, and with out feeling that it involved any great self-denial to do so. K.SINA.—Tho Yankee Blade' which as sharp and keen as ono of genuine Damascus man ufacture, thus comments upon kissing. We ap peal to the experience of all our readers who know any thing of kissingdoin, if he has not cut right into kissing—skillfully dissected the science of the thing:—Pic. The sweetness of kissing (quoth this Yankee Blade) depends with us altogether on the slyness of the thing. 'fake our word for it, the stolen draghts are the most delicious. We would rather be cut up into cat-fish bait' thankiss a girl in com pany. Besides there is great danger in the promis cuous kissing which is indulged in at parties. Ten to one, if your lips do not, at the very moment after they have been revelling to the most ecstatic enjoy ment, come pop ! upon those of some old maid, so sour that you cannot get the taste of the biters out of your mouth for a week. No, no! kissing in public is not the way to manage the thing; it des troys the reverence with which man delights to wrap the wondrous sex, and none but a bungler I will resort to it. if vs. —6l, 4 -kiss m all Its raciness—a kiss at once delicate, airy and spirituelle, yet ono that will cause every pulse in your body to thrill with ecstacy —get your little charmer into a corner of a sofa, before a cozy fire of a freezing night—steal your arm round her waist--take her hand gently in your own--and then, drawing her gently towards you, kiss her with a long sweet kiss, as if you were a bee sucking honey from a flower." There 'a true kissing for you, The Teeth. nr MII9. LICUI• X. CHILD, The prevalence of defective teeth in this country, is the general subject of remark by foreigners, and whoever has travelled in Spain and Portugal is struck with the superior soundness and whiteness of teeth in those countries. Nobody used to have an offensive breath. A careful removal of substances from between the teeth, rinsing the mouth after meals, and a bit of charcoal held in the mouth after meals, will always cure a bad breath. A lump of charcoal hold in the mouth, two or threo times a week, and slowly chewed, has a won derful power to preserve the teeth and purify the breath. A dear friend of ours had, when about twenty years of age, a front tooth that turned back gradu ally, crumbled, and so broke off piecemeal. By frequent chewing charcoal, the progress of decay was not only arrested, but nature eat vigorously to work to restore the breach, and the crumbled por tion grew again, till the whole tooth was as sound as befure ! This I know to bo a fact. Every one knows that charcoal is an anti-putre- scent, and is used in boxing up animal or vegetable substances, to keep them from decay. Upon the came chemical principle, it tends to preserve the teeth and sweeten the breath. There is no danger in swallowing it: on the contrary, small quantities have a healthful effect on the inward system, particularly when the body is suffering from that class of complaints peculiarly incident to summer. It would not be wise to swal low that, or any gritty substance, in large quanti titles, or very frequently,: but once or twice a week a little would bo salutary rather than otherwise. A bit of charcoal as big as a cherry, merely held in the mouth a few hours without chewing, has a good effect. At first most people dislike to chew it, but use soon renders it far from disagreeable. Those who aro troubled with an offensive breach might chew it very often, and swallow it but seldom. It is peculiarly important to clean and rinse the mouth thoroughly before going to bed, otherwise a great deal of the destructive acid will form during the night. If these hints induce only one person to takebet ter care of the teeth, I shall be more than rewarded for the trouble of writing. lam continually pain ed to see young people losing their teeth merely for the want of a few simple precautions ; and one cannot enter a stage or a steam ear without finding the atmosphere polluted end rendered absolutely un healthy for the lungs to breathe, when a proper use of water and charcoal might render it as wholesome and pleasant as a breeze of Eden. 'Puma PARTIEs.—The Pitteburg Gazette° M an nrticle on the tendencies of third parties, and their apparently leading oSject, the prostration of the Whig party, charges the Liberty party with having effected the annexation of Texas, and say., "so long as a single slave soils the burning plains of Texas, or lifts his manacled hands on her sunny hills, a voice comes up in the stern accents of truth to the leaders of the inis•named Liberty' party -ITni. I , B GAL!" From the Philadelphia Inquirer. Never Give Up. "Never give up! it is wiser and better, Always to hope than once to despair, Fling °tithe load of Doubt's cankaring fetter, And break the dark spell of tyrannical care; I\everglee tip! or the burthen may sink you— Providence kindly has mingled the cup, And in all trials or troubles bethink you, The watchword of life must be, Never give up!" We recently published a capital song, entitled 'Never gi-e up! A passage is quoted above. There iv manly energy in the doctrine that we should not permit ourselves to be overcome by common place or evert extraordinary reverses of fortune. 'Never soy die'—'never give up'—are capital mottoes with regard to enterprise, business, add the things of this life generally. If we give way to depression of spinte, and at the first reverse abandon the chase of fortune as hopeless, we will eon sink into despondency, gloom, idleness, and perhaps vice. But let us determine that, come what may, wo will still struggle en, that while life anti health remain we will still make an effort to achieve independence, and in a majority olcaaes, sooner or later, success will come. A friend stepped into our office a day or two ago, and in the course of conversation related an incident well calculated to illustrate the force and propriety of energy and perseverance. He had visited Washington a few weeks before, and while standing on Pennsylvania avenue, gazing at 10 1 / 1 0 object of interest, ho was accosted by a stranger, as ono ho had seen and known in years gone by. All.—inquired the other—when end where! After some conversation, in the course of which a degree of confidence was inspired between the par ties it turned out that the stranger had reference to a period of twenty years before in Philadelphia-- that he was then a poor boy, about seven years old, and was in the habit of visiting the work-shop at which the other was engaged, for the purpose of collecting chips and shaving. The kind manner of the apprentice had made a favcrable impression upon the heart and mind of the then bare-footed urchin, and although a period of nearly a quarter of a century had elapsed, he recognized his friend of his early days at a glance, and was anxious in Basis way to testify his appreciation of the kind-1 nese rendered in et,s h....a his linyhood. After some further conversation, he gave a brief outline of his history. Before be was eight years of age, his fattier, who was wretchedly poor, died in the Alms House, and the little fellow was com pelled to bog cold victuals from door to door, in order to prevent the family from starving. Still he had correct principles, and was anxious to make a respectable figure in the world. He accordingly indentured himself to a houeo-carpenter, and while engaged in learning the business, he obtained a copy of the Life of Franklin, which he studied with great attention, as he said, to acquire a knowl edge of proper habits of economy, and not with any notion of brenming a philosopher. He persevered, became master of his trade, worked with success as! a journeyman, removed to Washington, and in 1836 had accumulated enough to build two or three houses. A balance was still duo on them, however, and the troubles of 1837 coining on, ad. varsity overtook him, hie property was sold by the Sheriff; and he was again reduced to poverty. But ho remembered his boyhood, the destitution of that period of his life, the manner in which he had over come adversity by perseverance; and he determined rime to give up. His worldly wealth consisted of one bed and a little furniture, and with this niggardly provision for such an undertaking, he consulted his better half, (for, liko a wise man, he had married the mo ment he felt able to take care of a wife,) who was a true and brave hearted woman, and they deter mined to make en effort to obtain sneer two board ers. Two young friends agreed to assist them in the way proposed, and to these was awarded the only bed in the house, while the husband and wife purchased a few bundles of straw, upon which they slept soundly for many a month. Slowly and gradually fortune brightened again, employ ment was procured, eavinge were laid by, the jour imam became a master carpenter, ha obtained one or two contracts from Government, and al though not yet thirty years of age, he is in easy and independent, if not in affluent circumstances. Ho concluded his brief story by romaiking that it would afford him infinite pleasure, if the old friend to whom he had thus strangely introduced himself, after an absence of more than twenty years, would, while he remained in Washington, make his house his home. He said that there were still many recollections of his early years, which he cherished with delight, and that on a recent visit to Philadelphia, he had wandered over the haunts of his childhood, and endeavored to learn something of the history of his youthful companions—most of them, like himself, children of distress and poverty. In the majority of cativo, the results were melan choly. Poor, friendless, end to some extent, de- I , aerted—but few had wrestled with and risen above the untoward circumstances by which they had been surrounded. There were cases, however, in which patience, perseverance and constant appeals to and dependence upon Providence, had lifted the orphan, the outcast and the beggar from a lowly condition of penury and trial, and rendered them good citizens, devoted husbands, kind parcels, use ful and valuable members of society. But, he added, the doctrine of all who are depressed,—of .he ehild , en of toil and misfortune, no matter how dark tho present may seem, should be—persevere , porsevere—nercr give up. For who, he contin ued—who may read the future--who may foretell the events of a single year! And ho was right. In the language of a deep thinker--'duties are ours, but events are God's.' 'Clouds and darkness' may lower to-day—but sunshine and prosperity may brighten and beautify to•motrow. Let us struggle on then--let us never despair. "Never give up! there are chances and changes Helping the hopeful a hundred to one, And, through tiro chaos, High wisdom arranges Ever success-1f you'll only hope on; Never give up! for the wisest iv boldest, Knowing that Providence mingles the cup, And of all maxims the beet as the oldest, Is the true watchword ofnevcr give up." Broom Corn and Mustard A travelling correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette thus writes: "Between Chilicotho and Circleville I new about 1200 scree of broom corn, as fine looking as any I had ever known. This is grown by a company, consisting, of a father and two sons, fur export in its raw state to England, where it is admitted near ly or quite free of duty, The sone are here, and attend to its cultivation and shipment. The fath er resides in England, and receives it and ban it manufactured. It is said to be a good speculation. Near Chiheath.) I visited a field of 1.5 acres in mustard, The seed sown is of a peculiar kind, and I secured a small package of it for the Cincin nati Horticultural Society, It is said to he much better than either the English or ordinary Ameri con varieties. A large crop of it was grown last season in Muskingum county, the yield being with in a fraction of 14 bushels to the acre. If as pun gent and good an article as represented, and it cer tainly scents to be so, its value in Cincinnati mar ket at this time would ho $3 00 a 3 50 per bushel. Take the medium, $3 25 and you have $45 50 as the yield of an acre of good land put down in rata tart] seed. Is not the crop worth trying? The experiment to which I have referred in Rose coun ty, is making by an enterprising cajun of Chili cothe—a member of the craft editorial. For cart ous reasons which he stated, the trial is not a fair I one. In those portion. of the field which he wee able to pay good attention to the weeding, the crop, ceedir..lookc well, and he anticipates getting about 10 bushels to the acre. rive. ail- i.... L....- ter crop for small farmers than either wheat or corn, being $32 50 per acre. I hope some of our agri cultural friends will '•experiment" a little in this matter. There is no sense in bringing from Eng- land what we can en well grow here. Igo in for raising our own mustard, as well as manufacturing our own cloth., According to my view, our true independence is entire independence. From the United Stales Gazette. Moralizing on Clouds. We marked a few days since for publication, a little anecdote, which atruck us as worthy of remem brance.—We have mislsid the paper, and forgot ten the names, but it was something like the fol lowing. A lady went to some benevolent gentlemen to solicit an important favor for a child. The favor was promptly granted. "I will go home," said the lady, "and when the child gets large enough, I will teach him to thank you for your kindness." "I ant but the cloud," said the Doctor, "that gives the shower; let him thank the Being above the clouds that gives the means." This is the story, with the omission of names, and the probable less of a good deal of grace in tho narrative. But it struck us that the good doctor had been eminently felicitous in his choice of illus tration. The good gifts that kind-hearted men bestow, come down upon the recipients with fresh ness and benificence, like the out-pouring of the summer cloud upon tho parched earth. We look upward, and bless the well stored magazine whence descend the means of delight, .d tho cause of our gratitude. There is a power, however, beyond, that gathers into the granaries of the skies, the liar• vests of moisture that the earth sends up, snd in His own time, "compels" the clouds, that they give back their treasures. We mark not this, mark not the mighty "hand" that works these wonders, but as we gaze upwards, the vehicle of blessings I dims our sight, and shortens our survey, and we thank the cloud, because we gee it; and forget the power beyond, the power whose intercepted light makes gorgeous the upper surface of the storm elm- I riot; and whose absence, or whose presence unap• parent, gives darkness, like the shadow of death, to that pillary cloud whence descends the bleseing. But the good man, the man of liberal heart and open hand, is indeed like the cloud that sends down the former and the latter rain, that gives here and there the shower which invigorates, cheers and nourishes. He feels the warmth above him, and owns the influence by the trenemission of his sup plied store. He goes and gives out of hts means, to cheer the desolate and the famished, and returns to see the fruits of his benefits to others, as the clouds after the rain. Bountiful, rich, and abun dantly useful, is the man of open hand, who, like the summer cloud, comes suddenly, and gives when most needed; comes in the warmth of day, comes without a chill, comes without token of preparation, and gives down the means of good, without the evidence of inability to retain blessings in the gift and in the manner, going forth with no evidence of exhaustion, passing onward so if to revenue the blessing to thou3and,, living and helping to live. `Q;eaa.ca?D.a:z. 5. - "( 31). 4±,CDZa. The clouds that gather with the cast wind, that come thickening tip the sky, that darken for &ye before they rain and seem to hays their contents shaken out by the violence of the gale, and the chills which it imparts—clouds that chill all be neath them, end make the herbage look winter-like, es it takes almost reluctantly and thanklessly the descending storm; clouds that are wasted by the moisture they comic—they, too, like the giving man, like the man who bas treasured up the sa vings of a hard life; and when they can no longer be retained for himself, when they must cease to be his, then with sigh's at the separation of soul and body, that le; money and himself, with the sound of trumpets, to make a virtue of necessity, he pours down open others, without a single warning smile of true benevolence, all that he has, and all that he is.—lio sees no benefit springing from his last sac rifice, and there is no expression of gratitude for the course which he hue given to that which he could neve tain. . . . Whei: . the summer cloud that has poured out its bounties upon the grateful earth passes on, the pleasure which if has given is doubled by the hope which it imparts, that it will renew its blessing. We see in the distance the bow of promise, gem ming its exhaustless skirts, and the blessings which it is giving to others, become the means of hope to us. So the man of habitue' benevolence gives assurance to the afflicted ones that his hand is not to be staid, by the continuance of his active geodes.se to the sufferers; and, to change the fig ures, we ore, by his attention to them, assured of a renewal of his goodness to us, just as the hour cry of the distant watchman lets us know that in our tarn our safety shall be provided for. now 1 /INY GET 6UltirCltlilliPS out WEsT.—We have heard of alt sorts of contrivances for obtaining subscribers for newspapers, but a friend of ours gives us the following anecdote, as a smatter of fact, which we consider a novel way of increasing a subscription list, at all events! A new daily paper was started some years ago, in a city not a thousand miles from If —t. The proprietors found it "held sledding" at first, and were utilized to resort to the custom in those "diggins"—of employing at, agent to prowl around among the Hoosiers and vvolversoes. to colleet names. and obtain the an. The agent was known as roe "stout, bullying cuss" of the Ga zette—and his chief recommendations were first rate qualifications fur drinking, and much better for fighting. John entered a bar-room one day, where he met a brawny looking fellow demolishing a "brandy smasher," whom he immediately joined at the bar. "I'll take mine hot," says John. The liquor was swallowed, and the stianger paid the bill. "Subscribe to the --- Gazette, air?" "No," bawled the other. "No," inquired .I(.lm,..iihy not?" "Oh, d—n your Gazette." "‘Vill you he kind enough to say that again, friend?" coolly replied John. ~ .Say it? yes; d-n your Gazette." "Will you subscribe for the Gazette." "Mt? IN 0t by a damn sight. It is the meanest print in town. " , It's what?" "Yes"--continued the stranger, and the next minute he was sprawling on the shop-floor, John coming down on lop. John gave him another "feeler," and then asked him if he would subscribe for the Gazette! "No, I wont"— Whack, whack came the blows, thick • er and faster, John insi,ting that the poor devil should "subscribe," as a condition of gettiti , 4 up again, alive. The sufferer finally give in. "Let me up, I say." )ou subscribe?" “y e o, 'And pay in advance?" "Yes." John let him up—took his five dollars, wrote a receipt, and coolly walked out of the shop, with "I guess friend you'll like the Gazette." TRIAL or SFANIBII PIRATE/.—The trial of ten Portugese and Spaniards charged with piracy, end with the murder of ten Englishmen belonging to her Majesty's ship Wasp, can))) on at the Exeter assize., on tho 29th ult. before Mr. Baron Platt, and a jury composed partly of foreigner.. The trial lasted two days. On the second day the jury retired, and, after an absence of an hour returned in to court with a verdict of guilty against Majaval, Serve, Alves, Ribiero, Francisco, Martinos, end Jo aquin); and not guilty as regarded, Dos Santos, Manocl, end Jose Antonio. Tho learned judge then passed sentence of death, leaving them no hopes on this side of the grave. Preservation of Manures and destruction of the E i gluvia.—ln a letter to the celebrated French chemist, Mr. Dumas, M. Schalterman says he finds by experiment, that the application of sulphate of iron, or green coppers., at once fixes the ammonia, flying oil from putrefying manures, and destroy. their odor. It will have almost instant effect upon the foulest faecal matters. It is applied either in solution or solid. It will not only preserve the contents of sewers, ceeipel: public privies, &c. in the most valuable state fib s _ rieulture, but render these inocuous, both or , Th e ing filled, and in the proem of emptyith4 t , action of copperas is so energetic that )1 . mt ents man finds that if mined with the Cs, the mus of a ress real or privy for a few 'odor. may be removed without any s,