IIt\TINGDO'N JOURNAL ifauttlg actuopaper—Eleboti , V t 0 ectictat futctliantrt, ablicrttoing, Volttico,Eiteraturr, Pitoratitp, Xrto, *tic nrco, Agit ttititire, aiititocntott, tcr., kr. "CEr cca Ll Za>.= Qz) PUBLISHED DT, JAMES CLARK: c02 , 335.a-mszS The ' , locum At" will be published every Wed• neaday 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 discontintied till all ar roarages arc paid. Advertisements not exceeding ono square, will be inaertedthree times for $1 00, and for every subse iitiont insertion 25 cents. If no definite orders are given as to the time an advertisement is to be continu ed, it will be kept in till ordered out, and charged ac cordingly. POE TRY. "To charm the languid hours of solitude lie oft invites her to the Muse's lore." BIT MOTHER. UT YAUNT solinseTzu Give nte my old neat, mother, , With my head upon thy knee ; I've passed through many a changing scene, Since thus I sat by thee. Oh! let me look into thine eyes— Their meek, soft loving light Falls like a gleam of holiness, Upon my heart to-night. I've not been long an-ay, mother; Few suns have rose and set, flince lust the tear drop en thy check My lips in kisses met ; 'Tie hut a little time, I know, But very long it moths, Though every night I come to thee, Dear mother, in my dreams. The world litiA ribdly dealt, mother, By the ctillti alcili lovest no well! Thy prayer■ have circled round her path, And 'twas their holy epclt Which mado that pith no dearly bright, k.Vhich strewed the Rios there, %Villelt gave the light and cast the balt, On every breath of air. k t,ear a happy heart, titotlii, A happier never beat ; And even now new buds of hope Are bursting at my feet, Oh mother! life may be ti IL, if sorb nn n Mg are given, Wtilo at the . portals time jVhat are the TRUTIIII of Heaven I bear a hippy heart, mother; Yet, when fond eyes I ore, And Lear soft tones and winding I ever think of thee, And then, the tear my spirits weep■ Unbidden Flla nay eyes; And, like a homeless dole, I ldng Unto thy Verna to fly. Then, lam Very inothih I am very sad and Ion.; Oh ! there's no heart whore inmost fold Opes to MO like thine own : Though runny smiles wreathe hloominglijas, While love tones meet my oar; My mother, one fond glance of thine Were thousand times more dear. Then, with a closer clasp, mother, Now hold me to thy heart ; I'd feel it beating 'gainst my own Once more before we part. And mother, to thin love-lit spot, When I ern far away, Come oft—roo orr thou canst hot tome— And for thy darling pray. Love and Romanee.—The folloWing is the pret tiest little romantic story we have Met With for some I (IMO : "Thomas A. Becket inherited a romantic turn or mind from his mother, whose story is a singular one. Ilia father, Gilbert becket, a flourishing cit fifth, had been in his youth a soldierin the crusades and behig taken prisoher, became slave to an Emir, or Saracen prince. By degreee lie bbtaihed the confidence of his master, and *es admitted to his company, where he met a paraoh who became more attached to him. This was the tmir's daughter. tthether by her means or not, dots not tippeir, but lifter so time he contrived to escape: the lady with I heart followed him. She khetv, they say, b Words df his latiglinge, tehdon and Gilbert, by repeating the former, she obtained a passage ill a itaso, Strllrell ih England, and found her trusting way to the Metropolis. She theft tddk her other talisman, and it cht born street to street, pronouncing 'Gilbert.' A crowd cdllected Shout her wherever she went, asking, or teurse, ti thOU sand questions and to all she had but one dhawer— , Gilbert! Gilbert !!' Site found her faith ih it Alf ficient. Chance on her determination to go ttirongh every street, brought her at last to the one in which he who had won her heart in slavery, was living in good condition. The crowd drew the family to the window; his servant recognized her, and Gilbert Becket took to his arms and his bridal bed his far tome princess with her solitary fond word." • ""Boon AM a LION."—One of the beet jokes of the soasOn is told by the amiable Jim Gornes,of ions°. rial notoriety. A. Southern Adonis, no way cele brated for his personal attractions, on completing a somewhat protracted toilet ono morning, turned to his servant, and inquired. How do I look, Glenn! 'Plendid, massa,"plondid, was ebony's delighted answer. Do you think 111 do, Caesar! (giving him a piece of silver.) Guy, Massa, nebor sea you look so fierce in all my hfo, you look jie' no bold ea a lion. Why what do you know about a lion! you nev etosaw one, Caesar. Neber see a lion, Mas,iid Guy, I see Massa Pay. ton's Jim ride ono ober to mill ebery day. No. you foul, a donkey. Cci't Liolp Masla—you link jis like him. U;)(2l. i , M'a_WLl-)cLEUEIS' UEI I .3a atiElaCteecr Hannibal and Napoleon. The just pride and elegant flattery of the French historians has often led them to compare Napo leon's passage of the Great St. Bernard to Hanni bal's passage of !he Pennine Allis: bui Ileac:Mt de: tracting frera the a/ell:earned farms of the Ficiach general, it may safely be affirmed that his achieve ment will bear no sort of comparison with that of the Carthaginian hero. When Napoleon began ; tho ascent of the AlpafivM,Martigni, on the shores of the Rhone, above the lake of Geneva, lie found , the panne of the mountains cleared by the niece- , cant transit of two thousand years. The road, im practicable for carriages, war very good for home- , men end foot passengers, and was daily traversed , by great number. of both in every season of the year. Comfortable villages, on the ascent and the descent, afforded easy accommodation to the 46 . 1,,: vied soldiers both by night and by ' day; amp le stores of the monks at the summit. and the provi dent foresight of the French generals, had provided a meal to every man and horse that palmed. No hostile troops opposed their passage: the gune were drawn up in sledges made of hollowed firs; and in four days from the time that they began the ascent from the banks of the Rhone the French troops, without loosing a man, stood on the Doria Bakes, the increasing waters of which flowed towards the Po, amidst the gardens and vineyards, and under the sun of Italy. But the ease was very different, when Hannibal mimed from the shores of the Du- ran. to the banks of the Po. The mountain side, not cleared by centuries of laborious industry, pre sented a continual forest, furrowed at every hollow by headlong Alpine torrents; bridges there were none to cross these perpetually recurring obstacles; provisions, scanty at all times in those elevated sot ; itudes, were then nowhere to be found, having been hid by the affrighted inhabitants on the approach of the invaders; and a powerful army of mountaineers ticcurild. entrance of the defiles, defended with desperate valour the gates of their country, and when dispersed by the superior discipline and arms of Hannibal's soldiers, still beset the ridge. above their line of march, dttd harraseed his troops by cclitittual nOstilily. When s tlie wood-region was passed, and the vanguard emerged into the open petual snow, fresh difficulties awaited them. The turf, from the gliding dowit of newly fallen snow on those steep declivities, Wris no slipjnery, dint it woo often scarcely possible for the men to keep their feet; the beasts of burden lost their footing at every step, and rolled down in great numbers into the abysses beneath; the elephants becaroo restive amidst privations and a climate to which they %Teri: totally unaccustomed; and the strength of the sol diers, worn out with incessant marching and fight ing, began to sink before the continued toil of the ascent. Horrors, formidable to all, hilt in an espe cial manner terrible to African eeldiem, awaited _ _ them at the summit. It was now the end of Octo ber; winter in all its sevetiV hod already set in on those lolly Soliludes; the moniatain sides, silent end melancholy eVen . at the height of rummer, *lien enamelled with floWers and cloaca with flocks, pre. rented then an unbroken sheet of show; the blue lakes which ate intersperesed over the level valley at their fat, were frozen river, and tthdistinguisha ble from the rest of the dreary expariae,and a bound less mass of snowy peaks arose on all sides, pre- venting apparently an impassable barrier to their further progress. But It. was then ihdt the greatness of Monitial shone forth in all its lustre. 'that great general," Kays Arnold, "Who felt that he now stood victori- Qua on the ramparts of Italy, and that rib torrent which rolled before him was carrying its waters to the ric:i plains of Cisalpino Gaul, endeavored to kindle his soldiers with his own spirit of hope. He called them together; he pointed out to them the valley beneath, to which the descent seemed to be but the work of a mornent. 'That valley,' he said, is Italy; it leads us to the country of our friends tho Gauls, and yonder is our way to Borne!" His eyes were eagerly fixed en that paint of the hori zon, and as he gazed, the ffisiance between seemed to vanish, till he could almost fancy that he was crossing the 'Fiber and assailing the Capital." Such were the difficulties of the passage and the descent on the other aide, that Hannibal lost thirty three thousand men from the time he left the Pyre. debit till he entered the plains of Northern Italy; and he arrived on the Po with only twelve thou hantl ikftleEitii% eight thousand Spanish infantry, and elk tlithisatid horse: Napoleon's army who fought at Marengo was Milb iirerity•nine thouifind, Wit he had lost no mon hi the pissnr;r: cf the hips, end ottlY a tsitlr ill the diflitillt plump :Wogs the precipices of Mont AlbaredO, OtrPOilte the fort of Bard, in the valley of the boria BaltdEtt It is ridic ulous, after this, to compare the passegts of the Alps by Napoleon to their crossing by itannibui.-- Blackwood's Magazine. PROFITABLE WORK.—While a sort of Erin was employed in excavating a cellar in Savannah a short time ago, he came upon a depusite of ninety•six doubloons, I which were supposed to have been de posited there for safe keeping by the for• mer occupant of the house. It is said that • shortly after the dis:overy, he was taken suddenly with violent pains, dropped the spade, anti started for home, and that since that time nothing has been heard of him. _____ A BLACK MAN him been etrikingly defin, ' , God's image set in ebony. The Two Foxes, Mrs. Child, in her ..Letters from New York," vouches for the authenticity of the following curi outtininent in iistUrel history: "He (the narrator) was one day in the fields, neat a stream where several geese were swimming. Preiently, hb observed one disappear under the water, with a saden jerk. While he looked for her to tier again, he saw a fox emerge from the water, and trot off to the wood, with the unfortu nate geese ih his Month'. He chanced to go in a direction where it was easy for the man to Watch his movement,. He carried his burden to a ra cess tinder art overhanging rock. Here ha scratch es away a mass of dry leaves, scooped a hole, hid his treasure within, and covered it up very careful ly. Then off he went to the stream again, entered soitle lielaiice behind the flock of geese, end floated noiselessly along, witli inerely the tip' f his nose visible above the surface. But this time, he was not ela ibrtehate in his maw:en:tree. The gbeie, by some accident, took the alarni end Clew away with hittd eacklitig. The fox, finding hirdself defeated, walked off it a direction opposite 16 the 'place where his victim wee belied: tlio man uncovered the hole, put the goose in his basket, replaced the leaves careftilly, elid stood patiently at a distance, to watch further prciceedinfs. The my thief was soon seen returning with nn6ther fa}, that he hail invited to dine With him. Tlicy trotted Along right merrily, swirigirld• iheii tails, sanding the air, and smacking their lips, in anticipation or a rich repast. When they arrived under the Pock , ReY nard eagerly ...retched away the leaves, inn 10, his dinner had disappeared! Ito lOoked dl hie com panion, end plainly caw by hi, erilinteairce, the; he more than niisdoubted whether any goose was ever there, as pretended. He evidently considered his friend's hospitality a sham, and himself insult ed. His contemptuous expression woe more than the mortified fox could bear. Though conscious of generous intentions, he felt that all assurances to that effect would be regarded as lies. Appear i ances were certainly very much against him; for I hi, tail slunk between his legs end he held his Ihead down, looking sideways with a sneak glance at Ida disappointed companion. Indignant at what l'o P r re n nWlh‘Polfiatle ° P . aiiees, " ii;affended guest seized his unfortunate host, and cuffed him most (unmercifully. Poor Ileynard bore the infliction with the utmost patience, and sneaked off, as if conscious that he bad received no more than might 'be naturally expected under the circumstances." The Bible The Bible is the only book which God has ever sent, the only one he ever will send into the world. All other books are frail and transient as time, since they are only !lie registern Of 'nine ; but the Bible is durable as eternity. All other works are weak and imperfect, like the author, men; but the Bible is replete with infinite power and perfection, like its author, God. Every other volume is limited in its usefulness end influence ; but the Bible comes forth conquering and to conquer. The Bible only, of all myriads of books the world has seen, is equelly interesting and important to all mankind. Its tidings, whether of peace or of woe, arc the same to the poor as to the rich,the miss and the powerful. Among the most remarkable of its attributes is justice; for it looks with impartial eyes on kings and on slaves, on the chief and the soldier, on philosophers and peaSants, on the elequentand the dumb.Erom all it exacist he same obedience to in; commandments, promising to the good the reward of loyalty, but denouncing to the evil tho awful con• sequences of rebellion. Nor arc purity and liolineoe; the Wwdom and he nevolence of the Scriptures less conspicuous. In Bain they tie ldok elsewhere for the true models of character, for the models of the husband and the wife, the pared and the child', the, patriot and the scholar, the philanthropist and the ehristian, the private cit izen and the ruler of the nation. Whatever shell be their respective lots, whether poverty or wealth, prosperity or adversity, social influence or solitary station, the Bible is their only fountain of truth— their only source of virtue end greatness, of honor and tel City. Here,then, let us repose our trust—here let us look for our beacon of safety t—and whether sun shine or gloom, the storm or calm, the beauty and wealth of spring, or the nakedness and desolation of winter may be our portion—supported and gui ded by the Bible, all must be Well with twin TIME fdr alt ihall be well with .34 in EctweiTi. A CAREFUL SPOUSF.-At a polytechnic exhibition in Liverpool, got up by the Mechanics' Institute, a newly married man expressed a deterthinatioti to "go down in the . diving bell." " Oh don't my thar,s i eirlaimed the bride, " it must he tlaiigerons.' 3 The bridegrOoth was obstinate ; and, at length, finding her entreaties unavailing, his lovely Ileautrice sank her demand into a coinpromise. " If you will go down,.my dear," said she, "and peril your wife's happiness, let me beg of you to go down in your old coat." Newton said, ' , Endeavor to be first in your trade or profession, whatever it may be." And this, by the way, is the secret of success and ex cellence. It matters comparatively little what that trade, or occupation or profession may lee, provided it is useful Facts for Forty Millions. Ma. EDITOR:—Can you make room in some corner of your paper, for a few facts which I have collected with some labor, and which, I thirik, sUri ously concerning the working people of the An glo-Saxon race I The national debts of sixteen of the European Governments, at the closest estimate that can be made, amount in our currency, to $lO, 305, 000,- 000; all incurred for the expenses of war. This sum embraces merely the orrearage, not what has been paid, for carrying on war. The average of this amount is $63,25 a head to the whole popula tion of those 16 nations. The interest of this vast sum nearly equals a tax of One Dollar on every inhabitant of the Globe. Since the Reformation (!!) Great Britian has I been engaged 65 years, in the prosecution of seven wars; for which she expended, in our currency, $B, 982, 120,000. It has been estimated by our Missionaries that a school of 50 heathen children; eh the continent of India, would only coat $l5Ol per annum. Then thin sum expended by a Chris thin nation in 05 years in carrying on war with other Christian nations, if applied to the education of the heathen, would have schooled 46,002,154 children per for 65 yearn! Allowing 5 years to each scholar, then 598,808,000 children thight !TV been educated for the money that Great Britian dral s ned from the sources and channels of her wealth am: industry, to waste in ware, every one of which degraded her People in every quality 6r their condition. From 1793 to 1015,-1 period of 22 years— Great Britian, France and Austria expended $7,- 330,000,000 in war. The infereq of Ihiß Bum, at 6 pot cent would have supported 30,000 Missiona ries among tho heathen during the whole period of 22 years, in which these chiiitian nations were en diiged ih dohig the devil's Work on each other.— The aggredate amount would have given 5 year, schooling to 988, 6G6,666 ,pagan children on tho Lancasterian plan. The interest for one month, at the ahoio rate, would build rail road at $25,000 per mile. Consulting the boat actiCritles I cn comiiiand, I find that the aggregate amount of the expendi -14, 189:3, , 1'789 to March Now—patriotic Americans! will you not this reflectingly I—of this vast sum there belie been expended only $148,620,055 far civil purposes, °Tx bracing the Civil List, Foreign Intercourse, and the Miscellaneous expenses. Then it follows that $962. 755, 680 have been lavished upon repara tions for war in tune of peaco, within a little more than half a century, by this model Republic ! ! ! Another fact t From Jan. 1, 1836, to March 3, 18- 43, the war expenses of this Government ware $153,954,881 ! ! I—five millions more than all the civil expenses of the Government from 1789 to 1943 ! ! !--Another fact : From 1916 to 1834,1 eighteen years, our national expenses amounted to $463,915,756; and of this sum, nearly $400,000, 000 went in one way and another for war, and on !y 664,000,000 for all other objec!a! being twenty two millions a year for war, and about three mil lions and a half—less than one sixth of the whole —for the peaceful operations of a government that itself on its pacific policy ! If we take into accourit all the expenses and all the losses of to this country, it will he found to have wasted for or, in sixty years, some two or three thousand millions of dollars ! 13tRRITT W'tti:Tut, Aug. 9, 1845. The Messenger of Love. he nit of training carrier pigeons is not un known to Orientals. The practice, which may be I traced to the ark of Noah, in beautifully described in Genesis, is continued at ConstantirMple. Per sons going upon pilgrimage■ or making journeys inland, sometimes employ these birds to carry back accounts of their health or progress during the tint , day.. The practice was much in vogue with the Arabe and Saracens for political and warlike pur poses. The first inventor of communication' by means of these airy travellers is said to have been a native of Pagdad, who trained pigeone tor the Abasside Kaliph, Yezid 111, in order that he might swiftly correspond, when absent, with a favorite { slave, named Djebada, of whom he was tenderly enamoured. The devotint St this prince to hie I lovely captive was carried to most romantic end fatal extremes. The plague chancing to break out in Bagdad, this lady woe among its victim:. No sooner did the dread apparition of the black dog arise before the unfortunate girl, and no acorn.. did the fatal humors, indicative of the malady, eVpear Upon her person, than the devoted Vezid clasped her to his heart; then, waiting upon her as a watch ful nurse, be remained at hoe side until the angel of death struck the last blow: After closing her eyes frith hie cent hands, he cite hhiiselfliesida the body and continued three days in thic state, refusing food and consolation. At length his vizors and courtiers, emplciying respectful force, tore him from the miserable remains, which were committed to earth with regal pomp. Being an advocate for the maintenance of quarantines, upon a modified and judicious system, and thence a participator in the doctrines of contagionists, I am not loth to express satisfaction et the corroborative results of the Ka liph's violent tenderness. From the had of his fa vorite's rest Yezid was removed to his own, where he died, as the poets of Arabia affirm, of a broken heart; but, in fact ho had taken the infection, and followed Djebeeta to the tomb en the ninth day.— Porn,str . , manner! .ftt.cTurks ig 1.11. Interesting Facts. The potation o. the earth is estimated et ono thousand zillions. Thirty millions die annually, eighty-tWie thousand daily, three thousand hundred and twenty-one every hour, and fifty-sov en every Minute. A bushel of wheel weighing 62 pounds, con tains 660,01 1 / kernels. In Greece it Wes the Cllsto:ii at ineels fer . the two sexes always to eat seriously. . . . . - . The Romans lay on couches at their dining tables, on their left arnis, eating with their right: Noah's Ark was 946 English feet long, 91 broad, and 5t high. The walls of Nineveh were 100 feet high, end thick enough for thrite chariot. abreast. Babylon was GO mime within the walls, which were 76 feet thick and 300 feet high. A clean akin ia as necessary to health, as food. Vinegar boiled w.th myrth cr camphor sprinkled in a room, corrects putridity. Hops entwine to the left, and beans, to the right. Gold may be beaten into leaves eo thin, that 280,0(10 would he only an inch thick. The earth is 7,91 G miles in diameter, and 24,880 miles round. Forests of standing trees have been diseoyeted in Yorkshire England, and in Ireland, imbedded hi stone. 'Phere is iron enough in the blood of 42 men, to make fifty horse shoes, each weighing half a pound. A man is taller in the morning by half an inch, than he is at night. Water is the only universal medicine; by it all diseases may be alleviated or cured. About the age of 35, it is said, the lean man be comes falter, and the fat man leaner. The atoms composing a man, are believed to be changed every forty. days, and the bones in a few months. Fossil retoldns on the Ohio, prove that it was once covered by the sea. When the sea is bide color, it is deep water; and when green, shallow. A map of China, made one ihoUsand years be fore Christ, is still iri existence. The 14th of January, on au overage of years, is the coldest day in the year. In water, sound passes at Ole sate of 8,508 feet per second. In air, 1,545 feet per second. In the Arctic regions, when the thermonicter is below zero, persons cart converse at more than a mile distant. Dr. Jamieson asserts that he heard every word of a sermon at the distance of two A Itar.il used for meesdring horses, is four inches. Ezekiel's reed was 18 feet 11 1.8 inches long. Vne bones% f birds ere V,1r0;4. P , en %ttle an air iiistead ofparrow. A single house fly produces in one season, 20,- 080,320! The flea jumps 200 tines ils Ct4n length, equal to a quarter of a mile for a man. Tito black ostrich stands 7 feet high. In the human body there are 240 bones. Good Land at 38 cents per Acre. NVO commehd the following statement, which, in the main, we know to be true, to the attention of emigrants. It is copied from the Kalamazoo Tele graph:—"At the present rate of State Warrants, (70 cents on a dollar,) any one with $l5 in his pocket, may go to the Land Office in Marshall, and secure 40 acres of land, equal to any in this or any other State—an investment, if improved, suffi cient to support a family. Ye who think of emi grating to Texas or Oregon, now is the time to make a better choice. Come to Michigan, where you can buy, at 311 cents per acre, any quantity of level, rich, well-watered and timbered lands--a single tree on each worth more than the price of 40 acres. Here you will find milk, school-houses , post-otlices, clearings and settlements in the imme diate vicinity of these State lands—plenty of work, and good pay, for yourselves and families, and plenty of everything to eat, drink, .d 11-cl; is no exaggeration—we state facts from personal knowledge, haring visited the lands selected by the State in Kent, Ottawa, Ailegart, Harry end Kala mazoo counties. In the latter, from 20,000 to 40,- 000 acres were selected of the choicest quality, be ing a part of an "Indian Reservation," cor:seqiient ly kept out of market during the great speculation of '3G and '37. Some of these lands lie within ten or twelve Miles of this village, the tritirric Mtic cf a railioad travel west, for yearn to come. Young men, and farmers of New England and New York, here in a field for your enterprise, which can be oc cupied.almost without money or price: The OM :Oer on the land will pay for clearing, even if con verted into ashes; and then what crops! We chal lenge the world to heat Michigan this year in wheat er earn, either in quantity or quality. Come, then, to the West, where you may enjoy health and happiness, and in a few years you will prize the land which has coat you 37i cents an acre, at as many dollars--and cheap at that. A perfect title can be !tad to SO acres of choice land for $3O, if, as is alleged, State scrip can be bought for 30 cents on the dollar; $lOO tit railroad scrip giVea the holder his pick of lots. At 50 cents an acre, with the ad vantage of the railway to bring produce to Detroit, the chance is a good one. Princrra'a Eamon.--An advertiser haying iient in a card headed 'Abdominal Supporters: the prin ter had it inserted Aboniinabk Supporter. Too Bon.—A premium being lately offered by an agricultural &neje) , for the beat mode of irriga tion, and the latter word being made irritation by a mistake of the printer, a respectable farmer sent his wife to claim the prize. Why is a woman after she is married, like fifty dollars given away by John Jacob Astor! Ans. She is not mised. "This is a aturing seen'," as the chap said to his Roeetheart when ha found her aturiing apple Futter, `CS;:JPIlam)Ilcs. ef.eCL)O3 [Prom Me Southern Cultivator.] Wheat Sttr4, a Substitute Fodder. This is the seaman wheat is got out, and I regret to see the straw is thrown out to make minure.— I once had a meadow of thirty acres, producing good grow, (feather clover, and is broad leafed blue grass,) all of which made a very fine quality of hay, To save the trouble of feeding, and to furnish shelter for my cattle, I put forks in the ground, and on them placed poles of such rive and at such dis tance apart that the cattle could draw the hay down from b - ...lwsers those poles, which were placed' by the height cI the forks, so as to admit the cattle free ly to walk und e r the frame, as I will call it. On this frame I stacked my hay. I stacked wheat straw in thti same way, gener ally on the poorest spots of the field. My cattle were turned in and permitted to feed themselves,. end st pleasure, to use the stacks as shelters, of which they soon learved the advantages. I found my cattle would are the stacks of hay as shelter, but would not eat of ilia !lily, so long os the straw lasted, whirls proved to me, if they !visit proper taste that th 4 straw Was:Mire valuable than the hay. My' horses and mules were furnished with hay alone, in the &Wile, on which they showed health and usual thrift. This experiment for some years was observed, end regularly this preference was shown for the straw by the cattle; and they impro ved and looked better while enjoying the feed on straw, than when they were confined to hay alone, which was as soon as the straw was consumed. I have stover tried to feed the straw alone to' hems, but I would nut hesitate to rosy, it is worth more than foodder. 'fry it; save your own straw; it will feed and sustain cattle, horses and mules, and ultimately snake manure more valuable than by the slovenly process of throwing it out to rot. D. REINHARDT bansiquis, §. C:, June 1845. tidying . Lace a Sinner f . tereral years ago , in ll'orth Ceroline, iihere it cs not customary for the tavern keepers to charge the minister any (hint, for lodging and refreshments, a reicher preaurningly etoliped at a tavern one even ing, made himself comfortable during the night, lord soon carne running up to the stage, and said, there was some one in there who had not settled hie bill"—the passengers all said they had but the preacher, who underatciod he never charged minis ters any thing. "What, you a minister of the gati pel, a man of God," cried the innkeeper, “you came to my house last night, you eat down at the table without asking a blessing; I lit you up to your room, and you went to bed without praying to your Maker, (for I staid there until you had undressed) you rose and washed without prayers, its your breakfast without saying grace, and as you ran. to my house like a sinner, and sat end drank Eke a' sinner, you have got to pay like a sinner." Old, But GOod, William the Fourth, late _King of England, When Prince of Wales, and during: hie eervice off the coast of Canada, made an 'cxctirsion into Upper Canada, and crossed over into Vermont. Ile en tered a tailor's shop, and or: seeing the tailor'. wife, an exceedingly Beautiful woman, he, without rare many, ravished a kiss froni th'e lady and remarked: 'There! noW tell your country-women that the son of the King or Erighithi, has kissed a Yankee tin lor's *lfr." tinho;ipily for him, her husband, the tailor, atthat moment eppered from the bock room, and being a stout fellow, gave the scion of royalty a tremendous kick, exclaiming: "There! now go and tell your country•womea, that a Yankee tailor has kicked th'e con of the King of England."- - Fho Prince sloped. ItOFTON AND NM.' YOSK.—While the real and personal property of Boston ias increased snme twenty millions of dol. lars, in the last three years, that of New York has diminished by fifteen millions. Beau - urea Coviraniimiv.-I.ife l s evening, we may rent assurc!, will take its character from the day which has preceded it, and if we would close our career in the comfort of religion. hope, we must prepare for it by early and continuous religious habit. UMBIIELLAS. - The Phila. Inquirer says—"Um 'trellis are like the fleeting hems of youth—when gone they never come back—like the dew on the mountain—the summer-dried river—the spray of the fountain—they are gone and forever." ( - iv, !qr.—Sonic philosopher gives goOd advice in the following quaint style: "Ye who aro eating the apple-dumplings sod molasses of wealth, should not fcrget those who are sucking tho herring-bone of poverty." iit',4lll.o.—We sees good deal is said shout lacing in the papers. NVe should suppose the weather WO.; too hot for anything to run except tallow candles. PErmyrteira.--The followiog definitions are not found in any of the ancient dictionaries. Honesty—Obsolete; it term formerly need to de, note a men who had paid for hie newspaper and the coat on hie back. Indepertd,r,--Owing fifty thousand doltais which !tut toyer intynd Tn.,