0 6 o SS ni/t)otqb-on . BY JAS, CLARK, The Days of Childhood. A SONG..-BY C. D. STEWART. The pleasant days of Childhood, How swiftly have they flown, Like young flowers in the wildwcod, When Autumn's winds have blown; They're gone, they're gone forever, They will no more rertirn Though Memory holds them in the heart Like aahes in the umn. The happy days of Childhood, When innocence and glee With gentle fingers turned the heart To music wild and free; They're gone, they're gone forever, Like rivers to the main, Their dancing waves of joy and mirth Will ne'er return again. The holy days of Childhood, 'Ere evil thoughts came near, When in the heart no sin was found, And on the check no tear ; They're gone, they're gone forever, Like font-prints on the shore, Washed out by Time's relentless waves, They will return no more. The pleasant, holy, happy days, Life's only blossom time, Where are your buds which promise gave Of flowers in Summer's prime 7 Though gone, though gone forever, Ye haunt the heart and brain, And Memory keeps ye to annoint Life's after years of pain. BIBLE PRESENTATION TO GEN TAILOR. At the Presbyterian Ladies' Fair at Frankfort, Ky,, on the 14th ultimo, Gen. Taylor being present by invitation, w•as presented with a magnificent copy of the Bible, and the Constitution of the United States in the same volume. Rev. Mr. Robinson, on presenting the volume made the-following remarks: Gen. Taylor : I am requested by the ladies of my charge, to present to you this noble specimen of American nrt— n volume containing the Bible•and the Constitution of the United States. It is intended as a slight token of their reverence for a man in whose life they trace many resemblances to the Heroes of Sacred History, wham God , called, unwilling, from modest privacy, to un - - sought honors, and to be a nation,s ben efactor. It is a token, also, of their af fection for the Chieftain who led their sons and are to the fi eld of glory. They are willing to confess, sir, that the taste which selected such n token for a public man, may savor a little of the Puritanism of their great ancestry yet they are sure, that in many aspects, this is n gift, not more appropriate to be given by them, than to be received by one who holds your position before the world. The Bible and the Constitution ! It is our religion and our polities, and, therefore a fit offering, from American people, to an elect American President. The Bible and the Constitution ! What nobler gift to a statesman, than the Constitution of Heaven and the Consti tution of the greatest nation which Hea ven has wit upon the earth ! The Bible and the Constitution ! It is no incongruous union. It is but the Sa cred Text with its best political com mentary. Had the Bible not been rec ognized, there could have been no Con stitution. It was only minds imbued with the principles of the one, which could have conceived of, and it'orked out the great problem which is solved in the other. he Bible and the Constitution!— Surely worthy to be the symbol borne before one who is going to take the Chair of Washington, and under a vow to make Washington his model, and the Constitution his only rule of political action. Sir, the prayers to Heaven, in your behalf, of those whom I represent, and of all the wise and gond in our country, will be fully answered, ,if controlled by the holy precCpts of this Book, and thereby enabled to rule, alike unawed .by fear and unallttred by flattery, your administration end us auspiciously as it is to begin ; and if then, when the toils and honors of life are closing, support ed by its Holy consolation, you shall •die as peacefully as you have lived glo riously. To which Gen. Taylor responded : I accept with gratitude and pleasure your gift of this inestimable volume.— It was for the love of the truths of this great and good Book that our fathers abandoned their native shores, for the wilderness. Animated by its lofty prim cipies, they toiled and suffered till the desert blossomed as the rose. These same truths sustained them in their res olution to become a free nation. And guided by the wisdom of this Book, they founded a government under which we have grown from three millions to more than twenty millions of people,' and from being but as a stock on the borders of this continent, we have spread from the Atlantic to the Pacific. I trust that their 'principles of liberty may extend, if without bloodshed, front the northern to the southern extremities of the con tinent. If there were in that Book nothing but its great precept : "All things what soever ye would that men should do untp you, do you even so to them,"' and that precept were obeyed, our govern ment might extend over the whole con tinent. Accept, sir, my sincere thanks for the kind manner in which you have dis charged this duty, and expressing again my. sincerest thanks to the ladies for their beautiful gift--I pray that health, peace and prosperity may long be con•. tinned to them. Meeting between Gen. Taylor and Gen. Cass. WASpINGTON, Mardi 1, 184.9 Gen. Cass paid Generl Taylor a visit to-day about noon. The meeting cf these distinguished gentlemen_ was of the most agreeable and happy character. We will endeavor to give a description of it. General Cass, accompanied by Sena tor Fitzgerald, came into the office of the hotel and inquired of our friend Willard if Gen. Taylor was receiving company. Ile was told he was, and asked to walk up to his apartments, which he accordingly did. Gen. Tay lor nt the moment, was seated, speaking to a gentleman, and did not at firstsper ceive Gen. Cruks's entrance. Upon turn ing round, Ice at once recognised him, and coming forward, grasped his visit or's hand in both his own, and shook it most cordially, Gen. Cass apparently be ing egnally friendly. Gen. TA MOR-Ah, General, how do you do Z lam very glad, indeed to sec • . Gun. Cass (who, it appears, did not know the President elect by sight.)— Thank you General, 1 am very glad to I see you. (shaking hands all the time) By the way General, you had the ad vantage of me (alluding to his recogni zing him first) That's twice you've had the advantage of the ! (This was said with great drollery, and caused the LGeneral and every one present to laugh heartily.) GEN. TAYLOR—Yes, that's true; but you know the battle's not always to the strong, ch 1 Gen. Cass—That's a fact. (Laughter.) How do you feel sir 1 Gen. TAYLOR—WeII, pretty well, ' thank you, except that I have two or three ribs stove in, that's alt; I sup pose that's merely a circumstance, how ever. (This evidently unintentional hit caused the most immoderate laugh . ter, in which Senator Cass joined as heartily as any one. When he could get his face straight, he continued the conversation.) . _ _ Gen. Cass—Ah, indeed ; lam very sort, to hear it, where did it happen Gen. TAYLOR—At Madison. You see the Indianians felt a little sore about one of my reports, and asked me to pay them a visit. Of course I complied, to show I had no feeling against them. Well, I got on board of a small boat at Madison, to go to Frankfort, and just as she was about to start, I stepped out of the saloon, which was brilliantly lighted up, to speak to a friend. It ap pears a large black trunk had been pla ced in the passage, and, in the transi tion from the glare of the saloon, I did not perceive it, and the first thing I knew, I thought both my legs, my arms and all my ribs were stove in. (Laugh ter) I'm nearly well now however. Gen. Cass—l am very glad you are indeed. General allow me to introduce my friend, Mr. Fitzgerald, of the Sen. ate. G en. TaitLoa— (shah ing hands)—How do you do sir very glad to see you. I think I have had some correspondence with yo+► before Mr. FITZGERALD assented. Gen CAss—l will do myself the plea. sure of calling on you again, General. Good morning. Gcn: i AYLOR-DO call again, and oft en ; I shall always be happy to see you. Here they both shook .hands and Gen. Cass retired. In the passage a gentleman met Gem Cass and remarked— Well, General, in all the Stateswhere I stumped it, you got the vote. Gen. CAss (laughing)—Well, my friend lam very much obliged to you —but, I wish you had stumped it in two or three more 1 In the sketch which we have given of the meeting of the President elect and his unsuccessful competitor, we are aware we have failed in giving an ade quate idea of the scene. It was the manner, more than the words, which pleased every one. Gen. Taylor if not a sincere man, must be a finished diplo matist, and we do not think he has ever been accused of possessing that accom plishment.--.N. Y. Herald. flours of Sleep. :nature require, five, Custoin'aives seven ; Laziness take. nine, And Wickedness eleven HUNTINGDON, PA,, TUESDAY,' MARCH 13, 1849 A ?dart:Laicld Anecdote. These marshes, hundreds of acres of which belong to Mr. Webster, are re nowned for being the resort of the sari o.is wild fowl that delight in marsh bottoms; so much so, that many sports men go all the way from Boston, some twenty-eight or thirty miles, for the express purpose of shooting. A laughable occurrence took place there one dny which would have been a rich scene for Louis Philipp's pointer. A couple of young bucks from the city, whose chief business it was to kill tine by killing game, or anything else that crime in their way, took a trip one fine Summer's dny to the Marshfield marsh es, to shoot snipes, dull care, &c. In their eager pursuit of game, they nn consciously become surrounded; by the noiseless tide on a little island. What to do they knew not, being merely am ateur sportsmen and not dressed of course for business, with their dandy broirands, Ste. on—when, as hick, who' sometimes fortunately for such, supplied the place of brains, would have it, a stout, rohilstions individual, _some six feet high or more, hove in sight. The new comer was evidently a sportsman like themselves, only more so--4mt, un like them, had a form as well as address thnt meant something.—He was clad in coarse habiliments; with slouched hat, and all the accoutrements befitting his occonation ; and when his manly strides had brought him within hailing distance of the two bucks, sonic forty years his juniors, they began most lustily to call upon him to help them from their isola ted condition ; which they no doubt con sidered " dem'd awkward." " Hulloa, old daddy," said one "give ns a lift will ye, on those brawny shoul ders of yourn, and put us on yen con tinent, from whence we incontinently came hither in our excessive zeal for the demnation foine birds." "Oh cer tainly," exclaimed the hero of the blous and hat, and boldly stepped into the creek, and one by one, even as Emus did his father the old Anchises on his shoulders bear, bore them to the main land once more, on arriving at which, they assnred their kind bearer that he was " devlish clever," and should not go unrewarded—and suiting the action to ' the word, slipped a "quarter" into his hnnd, with an air that seemed to say , " There, fellow, take that and be happy." But much to their surprise the " fellow" utterly refused it, whereupon the dun. dies began to fumble their pockets for more change, but the hunter of the moors resolutely refused all compensation. " Well then," says one of them, " let us know, my foine fellew, who to.thanlcl" " My name is Daniel Webster," said he. I'll venture to say they immediately felt called upon to make for the interior of the " continent." Webster himself was amply repaid for all his trouble by the pleasure he has enjoyed in relating the adventure to his friends. AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS OF TUE UNI TED STATEs.—According to the last re port of the Patent Office, the sum total of the agricultural products of the Uni ted States for 1848 are stated as follows Bushels of wheat, 126,364,600; bush els of barley, 6,220,050 ; bushels of , oats, 185,500,000; bushels of rye, 32,952,500 bushels of buckwheat, 12,538,000; bush els of Indian corn, 588,' 50,000; bush els of potatoes,• 114,475,000; tons of hay, 15,735,000; tons of hemp, 20,330; rolls of tobacco, 218,909,000; pounds of cotton, 1,066,000,000; pounds of rice, 119,. 99,500 ; pounds of sugar, 200,000,000. The largest quantity of wheat was raised by Ohio : bushels 20,- 000,000, largest quantity of barley by New York, bushels 4,300,000; lamest quantity of oats by Ohio, bushels 30,- 000,000; largest quantity of rye by Pennsylvania, bushels 13,500,000; lar gest quantity of bucktirheat by Penn sylvania, 3,800,000 ; largest quantity of Indian corn by. Tennessee, bushels, 76,- 300,000; largest quantity of potatoes by New York, bushels . 27,000,000 ; lar gest quantity of hny by same State; tons 4,200,000; in tobacco Kentucky took the lend, having raised rolls there of 68,000,000; cotton Mississippi, lbs. 245,000,000; rice South Carolina, lbs. 90,000,000, sugar Louisiana, lbs. 200,- 000,000. [ Dan Marble tells a story about a Yankee tailor, who was dunning a man for the amount of his bill. The man said "he was sorry, very sorry, very sorry indeed that he could'nt pay it." " Well," said the other, " I took yoil for a man that would be sorry, but if you are sorrier than I am, then I'll quit." lry- A young woman in a town in Massachusetts, thus addressed a young man John, you have been paying your distresses to me long enough. I want to know what your contentions are, I don't moan to be kept in expense any longer." Übe of Straw and Litter on Grass Lands. "Some experiments have been made in Cornwall, with top-dressing land with straw, which I refer to, us at least' highly curious; and which 'deserves no tice, as possible to lead to most impOr tent practical results. They rest upon highly respectable authority. The sub ject has been frequently referred to in the public papers, beta detailed state ment has been given by the Secretary of the Cornwall Experimental Club and published in a late Journal of the Roy al Agricultural Society, from which I shall abridge the account. Fibrous Covering, or Gurneyism.— Mr. G. Gurney observed that, " if a bush or . other fibrous matter were left lying in a field of grass, the vegetable beneath it would soon be observed to be finer or fresher than that around it. This was a fact known to every one, but the al.-fen cy by which this increase of growth was brought about, evidently involving some great and important but unknown principle, bad never been trivestigated. Flags, rushes, straw, bushes, or in short, any fibrous coveting, would produce a similar alio. Reeds, or wheaten straw applied over grass, at the rate of about a load to a load and a half per acre, would, in a short time, increase the quantity of grass to art incredible ex tent. The various grasses under it would be found to be healthy, anti rap passing through the stages of ma , turity, some growing, 'some flowering, some seeding, Part .of a field of grass placed under this operation for one mouth had increased in weight, over the remaining portion left uncovered, at the' Irate of nearly three to one. The green grass from the part untouched, cut at the end of the month, weighed two thou ' sand two hundred and seven pounds per nere; that of the portion placed under the operation weighed five thousand eight, hundred and severity pounds per acre. The grass . was weighed as it came from the scythe. During this pe riod there was not a drop of rain ; and guano, nitrate of soda, lime, shell-sand, wood-ashes, and other manures, tried against it, possibly from the drought, produced, during this period, no very visible action. In this experiment, the fibrous covering was laid on the 15th of April. and the grass cut and weighed the 30th of May. Half of a hayfield was covered on the 2d of May ; sud a month after, I had cut and weighed, re spectively, the portions of the field cov ered and uncovered, and found that the one weighed three thousand four hun dred and sixty. pounds per acre, whilst the other weighed only nine hundred and seventy pounds. As to the length of the grasses in the respective pieces, the trefoil in one case measured three and one-half inches, whilst in the other it only measured an inch ; cfover six inches, in the other one and one-half." He found, me malting the two samples of grass.into hay, that the proportionate loss of weight was the same in each parcel, and the difference would be, that in the one case he should get ahree tons to an acre, and in the other only Another most important circumstance in the case was, that when "a certain quantity of stall dung would double the quantity of grass in a given time, when laid •on•in the usual way, that it would increase it six times, when properly treated with fibrous aoyering." I These are certainly very curious ex ' pernnents, and they have been repeated successfully by various " For an individual. to satisfy himself, a bundle of 'straw, say forty pounds, strew ed lightly over two or three rods of grow ing grass, would in . a very 411 time show the effect when raked off. In the experiments made, nll gave Uniform re sults, when conducted • fairly. Some used too much covering, but generally too little. All these experiments show ed that the action was general ; that the difference in increase of growth, in a given time, was in proportion to the nat ural fertility of the soil." "The practical instructions for the use of fibrous covering are few, but es- seetial to profitable results. Straw of wheat, oats, or rushes, is to be lightly and evenly laid over grass, in the por tion of about a ton to a ton and a half per acre. At the end of a fortnight it must be raked up in heaps like hay-. cocks, the grass eaten off by cattle, and the covering again relaid. This is ne cessary in the growing season, other wise the herbage will grow through, by which the action will cease; the grass will also become entangled with the covering. If the land is good, the grass may generally be eaten off by cattle be fore the covering is relaid ; if not at the end of the next fortnight, (more or less depending on the richness of the land, the season, and the weather,) it sheuld be done, and the covering relaid again ; and repeated at about these periods through the season. If straw be the ta , - 3 f 4 \ material used, it will last through the whole slimmer. In the autumn it is the practice to rake it off when dry, carry it away, andlstack it for winter litter.— Ground under the action of fibrors cov ering, we find from our returns, will keep three times the quantity of cattle as ground not so trented. This experience seems in keeping with our experiments on weight and measure, of the produce thus obtained." Importance of a Happy. Homes The main endeavor of those who de sire their children's spiritual welfare, should be to provide them with a happy house. It is vain to expect that young persons can be brought to love what is not amiable in itself. If religion be pre sented to them disfigured and deformed, us it often is, how can it be imagined that they will prefer it to the smiles and blandishments of the world'? If, at each return of the family circle, they are met with moping melancholy, and dismal looks—if fireside squabbles, and petty provocations—if a constant wear and tear of rudeness, unkindness and affronts which make up in multitude what that• want in magnitude--if this be the task prepared to satisfy the ardent longings of the youthful soul for pleasure,_ no wonder that it should fly to forbidden paths, and take refuge wherever it can, from so comfortless and int lerlble a scene. It was not of a cheerless home like this, that the prodigal bethought to him self, when he said E "How many hired servants of my father have bread enough arid to spare, and I perish with hunger." It was the remembrance of a father's house that haunted him in his exile, and followed him through all the stages of his misery ; it was the image of home drawn upon his heart, and wrought into the texture of his soul ; it was the mag ic influence of that thought, the rising of that solitary star in the darkness of the hour of his extremity—it was this which struck out of the last spark of hie ,vithin him, which converted memory into hope, and hope into the great and endless comfort of spirits who have wandered from God--" I will-arise" and go to'my lather," evc. Rut it was more immediately to our point to observe, that it was the sweet attractions of home, and blessing of such a father, as presided over it, which kept the elder son from ever seeking amid the dangers of the world, that repose which he found in the bosom of a happy fancily.—Rev. H. Woodward. Questions !Well Answered. A sophist, wishing to puzzle Thule,, one of the wise - men of Greece, propo sed to hint in a rapid succession the fol lowing questions. The ph:losopher re plied to them all, without the least hesi tation, and with how much propriety and precision our readers can judge for themselves. • What is the oldest of things ? God—because he always existed. What is the most beautiful The world—because it is the work of God: What is the greatest of all things'? Space—because it contains all that is created. What is the quickest of all thingsl Thought—because in a moment it can fly to the end of the universe. What is the strongest 1 Necessity—because it makes men face all dangeie of life. . _ Whil s t' is the most difficult'? To know thyself. What is the most constant of all things Hope—because it still remains in man after he has lost every thing elsel SCOTT ANI , WELusoroN.—The London cor respondent of the New York Morning. Star, says: "I was lately in a company at a fash ionable party, at the west end of the town, when the subject of the Ameri can army in connection with Mexico, was broached , and I can assure yon that ample justice was done American prowess. It was asserted by a leading member of government, that the Duke of Wellington thought Geri. Scott the greatest military genius of the day, and the Duke it is well known, is any thing but a flatterer." EXPRESSIVE.—The following private letter from a young officer in the army,. who went throtigh all the battles of Icxico, from Vora Cruz to the capital, and who was incessantly engaged in them by day and night, furnishes a gra phie description of tilt. , difficulties of crossing the Isthmus : _ " My - Dear G :-1 have just arrived at Panama. I thought I "saw the elephant" in Mexico, but he wasn't there. He lives here. Your's affectionately." I never yet found pride in a noblefia ture, nor humility in an unworthy friend. VOL, XIV, NO, 9 ICEMAN PROGRESS IN ENGLAND. Macaulay's descriptions of English life and manners two centuries ago, show that with all thillleviis which ant ascribed to the civilization of the pres ent day, a great aggregate improvement has taken place. There is no species of progress more auspicious of happy results than that which denotes an in crease of human feeling end proves that men are becoming more considerate of one another. The following sketch is no less instructive than it is graphically drawn :-- "Still more important is the benefit which all orders of society, and espe cially the lower orders, have derived from the modifying influence of civili zation on the natural character. The ground work of that character has in deed been the same through many gen erations, in the sense in which the ground work of the character . Of an in dividual may be said to be the same, when he is a rude, a thoughtless school boy, and when lie is a refined end ac complished man. It is pleasing to re flect that the public mind of England has softened while it has ripened, and that we have, in the course of ages, be come not only a wiser, but also a kinder people. There is scarcely a page of the history of the lighter literature of the 17th century, which does not contain some proof that our ancestors were less humane than their posterity. The dis cipline of workshops, of schools, of pri vate families, though not more efficient than at present, was infinitely harsher. Masters, well-born and bred, were in the habit of beating their servants. Peda gogues knew no way of imparting knowledge but by beating their pupils. Husbands, .of, decent station s were not ashamed to bent their wives. The im placability of hostile factions was such ns we can hardly conceive. Whigs were disposed to murmur, because Stafford was suffered to die without seeing his bowels burned before his face. As lit , de. mercy was , shown by tl e populace to sufferers of an humbler rank. If an offender was put into the pillory, it was well if he escaped with life frotn the shower of brick bats and paving stones. If he was tied to the cart's tail, the crowd pressed round him, imploring the hang man to giVe it to the fellow well, mid make him bowl. Gentlemen arranged • parties of pleasure to Bridewejl on court days, for the purpose of seeing the wo men who beat hemp there, whipped.— A man pressed to death for refusing to plead, a woman burned for coining, ex cited less sympathy than is now felt for • a gallant horse or an over-driven ox.— Fights, compared with which n boxing match is a refined and humane specta cle, were among the favorite diversions of a large part of the town. Multitudes assembled to see gladiators hack each • other to pieces with deadly weapons, and shouted when one of the combat ' ants lost a finger or an eye. The pris ms were bells on earth, seminaries of every crime and of every disease, At the assizes, the lean and yelfoW culprits brought with them from their cells to the dock an atmosphere of stench and pestilence, which sometimes avenged ' them signally on bench, bar, and jury. But on all this misery society looked with profound indifference. Nowhere mould be found that sensitive and rest. less compassion which has, in our time, extended a powerful protection to the factory child, to the Hindow widow, to the negro slave, which pries into the stores and water casks of every emi grant ship, which winces at every lash laid on the back of a 411rd:en soldier, - which xvill not suffer the thief in the hulks to be ill-fed or over-worked, and which has repeatedly endeavored to save the life even of the murderer. "It is true that compassion„like all other feelings, ought to he under the government of reason, and has, for want of such government pro lured some ri diculous and some deplorable effects.— But the more we study the annals of the past, the more shall we rejoice that we live in a merCiftd age, in an age in which cruelty is abhorred, and in which pain, even when deserved, is ,inflicted reluctantly and from a sense of duty. Every class, doubtless, has gained large ly by this great moral change, but the class which has gained most is the poor est, the dependent, and the most de fenceless. Witere is Gbdi A Bishop once said to the rottig tie Chnteuneof, "it yOu will tell to where God is, I will give you an orange."— "If you will tell me where heir. not, 1 will give you two," was the child's an saver. The poet beautifully answers the question—" Where is God-1" t 4 Iu the sue, thr ninon, thr sky. On the tiountein"tvilitand high In the thunder, In the rein, In the grove, the %rood; the plain In thp little 4irds that sing: evrrvt;iiiz.”