BY WM. BREWSTER, TERMS The "llnrrmonott JOURNAL" is published at t he following rates : If paid in advance $1,50 If paid within six months after the time of subscribing 1,75 If paid at the end of the yenr 2,00 , . And two dollars and fifty cents if not paid till after the expiration of the year. No subscription will be taken for a less period than six months, and no paper will he discontinued, except at the , option of the Editor, until all arrearages are paid. Subscribers living in distant countics,or in other States, will be required to pay invariably in advance. 67. The above terms will be rigidly adhered to iu all cases. ADVERTISEMENTS Will be charged at the following rates 1 insertion. 2 do. 3 do. Six lines or less. $ 25 $ 37} $ 50 One square, (lb lines,) 50 75 1 00 Two " (32 •' ) 100 150 200 Three " (48 " ) 150 225 300 Busineg men advertising by the Quarter, mar Year or Year, will be charged the following rates: 3 mo. 0 mo. 12 mu. One square. S 3 00 $5 00 $8 00 Two squares, 5 00 8 00 12 00 Three squares, 750 10 00 15 00 Four squares, 900 14 00 23 00 Five squares, 15 00 25 00 38 00 Ten squares, 25 00 40 00 60 00 Business Curds not exceeding six lines, one year, $4 00. JOH WORK: h sheet r handbills, 30 copies or legs, CC CI ft CC IC CC CI ft t• ti Ilt.axscs, foolscap or less, per single quire, 1 50 .‘ 4 or snore quires, per " 1 00 Cr Extra charges will be made for heavy Composition. Car All letters on business must be roar rAsu to secure attention...oj) Prarienin. Duetsche Advertisement. BY C. TOYER WOLFE. Mine horse he sloped. and I'm avraid, He hash peen daken, orstolen, or strayed, Mine big pluck, dat looks so sphry, 'Pout fourteen oder twelve hands high. He hash peen cot shoot four feets pluck, Two legs pefore and two pehind— Pe sure you keeps all dis in mind. Ile's pluck all der slat isb drue, All but his face, slat's pluck too; He drots and ganters, vauks and pares; And out•vauka Pelsebub in drams. And ven he callops in de street, He yanks upon his legs and feet, Von leg goes down and den de oder, And always follows von onoder; He has dwo ears smite 'pen his head, Bote ob derv's ceder white or red, But bet' alike—shuts von you see; Mt plucker den de oder pe; He's cot dwo eyes dat looks von vay, Only lie loose von toiler day; And ven you cant to duke a ride. Shump on his pack on totter side; And it is shut[ goupel drue, be eve vats plied vill not see you. His tail's pehind him. long and shleck, Only I cut him off last veek, And derefore 'as not any more As half so long as von pefore. He cocks his ear and looks so gay, And vill not start or run nosy, But ven he starts and makes von spring, And shuinps about like every sling; He rides about mit sham. and cart, I never see such a horse for shmart; And sometimes he goes on de road, Mit out nopody for his load, But pug of corn, and take de track, Mit little poy upon his pack. Mine horse is not so werry old, Not half so young as ven he's foaled; And ven be callop, rear, or Amain, His head cum all pefore him plump; And den his tail goes all pehind, Put sometimes veil he takes a mind, Gets mad and turns all round, pe sum, Vy, den his tail goes all pefore. Whoever viii mine plank horse got, Shall pay ten toilers on de shpot, And if lie pring de tief alive, Vy, den he pays one twentyfive. ,1§1DE32711 ar_t2MT.B. Appeal from Jerusalem to the Congrega• tions of Great Britain and America. Dated Jerusalem, Sebat, 5611, addressed to Sir Moses Montefiore, London : The LAMENT OF THE AFFLICTED.—YO sunk ken gates of Zion be exalted, and receive with. in the portals thereof your elders and your war dens, who, trumpet-tongued, shall proclaim that the staff of bread is broken and the stay of wa ter is wasted. Assemble, ye scribes, and publish the histo ry of famine and pestilence, that it may swiftly be borne to the remotest communities of Israel, and become the written messenger of the die. tress of the in•dwellers of Zion; that it may thereby awaken a nation's sympathies; and of misery has dried up the sources of eloquence wherewith to sustain your appeal, supplicate the Almighty that He in Ills mercy may in cline the hearts of your brethern of the house of Jacob to hasten to relieve .the anguish of your drooping spirits. Brethern of the house of Israel, who sojourn in happy England or America; ye wardens of their synagogues anti ministers in their courts; ye worshippers, who rehearse the past glories of your nationality and hope, in the fullness of time, for the effulgence of its future; ye children of mercy and of love, whose shield is the shield of the patriarchs; ye people peculiar to God, sons of Judah and Benjamin, on you we call by the ties of religion and brothdrhood to arouse yourselves and save from annihilation the rem nant of the faithful watchers of Zion and Jeru• salem. Suffering—true source of eloquence—be thine the pen to trace the scenes that haunt the streets and homesteads of Jerusalem, so that the torpor of our brethern may be shaken off, and their earnest sympathies awakened. We lack the power to give even a faint idea of the misery we are enduring; every heart has become sick, every tongue stricken dumb; the words "What shall we say, what shall we do?" cling to the roof of our mouth from their oft re petition, Behold we are utterly prostrated—both in mind and body, incompetent to proclaim the severity of the visitation that is consuming us. W know not whether the contemplation of tingboti " I SEE NO STAR ABOVE THE HORIZON, PROMISING LIGHT TO GUIDE US, BUT TILE INTELLIGENT, PATRIOTIU, UNITED WlllO PARTY OP THE UNITED STATES."-EWEBSTER. the morrow is not more fearful than the reality of to•day and the retrospection of yesterday; whether to weep for present troubles, or mourn the past sufferings. Starvation and pestilence walk hand in hand, and the wail of the poor, the widow and the orphan is borne on the air. It is difficult to say whose sufferings are the greater, the miseries of those born under the sun of Judea, or of the holy pilgrims front dis tant lands. All classes of society, all grades and conditions, have become united in the brotherhood of woe; heads of synagogues and their pious servitors, learned rabbis and their scholates mix in the crowd to supplicate and beg a mouldy crust. Even that assistance which has hitherto reached us from our broth ern in the Russian and Turkish dominions, is now, in consequence of the war cut off. The dearth has raised the price of food to an enormous height, and its results are a state of anarchy and confusion, in which every man's hand is raised against his brother, and violence is becoming rife in the land. For who can en• duce with uncomplaining fortitude that horrible death, death by famine; and see day by day the wife of his youth and the children of Isis love sink into the grave without ass effort to relieve them. Brethern! if you could but witness the misery we are enduring, the widow running to and fro, asking the refuse of food for her starving or• phans: and men profoundly learned in the law, formerly through their abundant charity the stay of the commuLity, now wandering up and down the streets of Jerusalem, seeking alms, ay, seeking bread, your hearts would melt in compassion. Brethern! believe that our tale is free from exaggeration. We have not, we cannot fully impress you with the frightful reality of our condition. Our miserable circumstances can be corroborated by every dweller in, or pilgrim to, the Holy Land. The misery we endure is augmented by the worst anticipation, for the circumstances under which we now suffer may be seized by our Ira• (lacers as being most opportune for the dowel. opulent of their plans, and what may not ensue when furnished multitudes are tempted by the bribe of food? For already, dreadful to relate, the father tramcs for the sale of his child to the stranger, so that his offspring may be spared death from starvation. For be it known that the sufferrings of our nation here, in all the frightful horrors which at present exist, have never been surpassed. S 1 25 1 50 To you, men of Israel, dwellers among all nations and in every clime, we supplicate to hasten relief to famishing multitudes. Let our cry reach all, be sacred to all, receive attention from all. You, Prince of the Holy Land, great in Isra el and noble among the nations; you, Sir Mo ses Monte!lore, be the beacon of our hopes, as in days of old. Let your hand be again sup ported by the pious Judith, and from your con joint example may the men and women of the house of Israel be cheered and strengthened. Brethern 1 remember we are the children of one God. The tree of our genealogy spreads its roots to the turthe.,t East, and the uttermost West, and bears the fruit of brotherhood. By the love we bear to the God of Israel, by the associations dour common nationality, turn towards the land of the rising sun, towards Je rusalem and Zion, and remember whence the law emanateth and the word goeth forth. "Pray for the peace of Jerusalem, for they that love her shall prosper." More favored ones, your brethern turn to you to ask a brother's aid, and may your response bring peace to Is rael and to Zion. Amen. Jerusalem, Sebat, 5614. IfiglNG A WOMAN; OR, The Troubles of a Moustache. Who do you think has come back to our nil. loge? said Fanny Alleyne to a party of young friends, who had assembled at her house to talk over to-morrow's contemplated pie nie. And as no ono answered, but a dozen of voices sim ultaneously cried, do tell, she added, who but Charlie Weaver, and with such a moustache, she exclaimed; clapping her hands as the idea was full of glee;—and it looks for all the world as if Charlie had a little stiff brush pasted un• der his nose. For my part I can't comprehend what he wears it for unless he thinks himself handsome and adopts it as a protection to keep the girls kora kissing him. And again she clapped her hands, her eyes fairly flushing with fun. I haven't seen him yet, said Emily Rogers; but does he look queer? '?•hey say moustaches are all the fashion among young men who move in guild society—foreign counts always wear them, you know. Miss Rogers had spent years inn fashionable boarding school, where she tried to learn French, but had succeeded only in learning fully, and su she considered herself au excellent judge of all things pertaining to make. She bud a cousin, moreover, who was travelling in Germany and wrute her a long letter about the German counts whom she met at German watering places. Miss Rogers had, therefore, a weakness for moustaches, big beards and foreign customs in general. Foreign counts always wear them, do they? said Fanny. And so do barbers. Fur my part, when I was in London last winter, I hardly knew whether it was u wig maker or a dandy that was coming down street; and I always supposed it was the first, till the animal raised his hat, and then I knew he must he one of the human planes that 1 was accustomed to dunce with at the assemblies. For my part, retorted Miss Rogers, making the second effort to stand her ground, I rather admire a handsome moustache; some men suit it so well. Yes, the moustache is a fortunate thing to some men, said Fanny, mischievously, for those that can't grow hair. The laugh was against Miss Rogers, who, HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1854. accordingly, paused and kept silent. The en trance of a fresh visitor now changed the con versation, and in five minutes Charlie Weaver and his moustaches were forgotten. In fact, the girls were too busy talking about the pie. nic to devote much time to anything else. In about an hour they seperated, full of the con templated excursion. The morning dawned brilliantly, with every prospect of a bright day. At six o'clock, be. fore the dew was well off the gr ass, the picnic began to assemble, and before seven all conve ned in a beautiful grove, about a mile beyond the village. The girls were a joyous, happy set, blessed with good health, fond of exhilarating sports, and by no means infected with any of the maw kish affectationa of the city. For instance, they were not afraid of waking their feet large by exercise, or of spoiling their hands by household work. They liked a hear ty dance, were fond of a good laugh, and even some of them at least sad romps. But they were an excellent set, for all that; with fine graceful figures, rosy cheeks, and sparkling eyes. and a constant flow of spirits. lam sore any one of them was worth a dozen of the faded beauties, who, with chalk-li.ie faces, lustreless eyes, and stooping shoulder, mope about town ball-rooms. A few, indeed, were infected with a mania for French manners, and thought for eign counts divine; and of these Miss Rogers was acknowledged leader. Among the beaux, Charlie Weaver shone, or fancied he shone conspicuous. His coat was of the latest cut; his vest spread out in vast amplitude; and his boots were of varnished leather, made on red morocco—yes, positively on red morocco leggings. But his moustache —that was the crowning glory. It was between a yellow and a brown, stiff as a hair brush, and grew beneath his nose like a forest of rushes under the side of a hill. Charlie was evidently proud of his moustache. He often stroked it complacently when talking with the ladies.— He trimmed it with great care, every morning; and lie was never in a room fur five minutes where there was a mirror without looking at the charming excrescence. Charles Weaver—or as the girls familiarly termed him, Charlie Weaver—had been a sen sible young man until he went to London to study medicin4. He there caught the mous tache rabids, a madness I verily believe as in fectious among young men, as hydrophobia is among dogs. Nature was a little obstinate at first; for only down grew where Charlie bed wished fur bristles; but, by dint of frequent oil ing and shaving, and much time and money spent on various hair preparations, he succeed ed at last in obtaining Isis heart;s desire. That day was the proudest of his life. In his secret heart he believed all the girls of the place would be in love with him before a week. And now be was at the pic-nic, shining, res plendent in that moustache. He first address ed himself to Fanny; she had always been bis favorite; but she-was now full of mischief, and soon detecting the conceit of Charlie, resolved that he should suffer• for it. So Fanny, without actually driving him oft' altogether, kept him at a respectable distance, taking care to give him but few smiles, and then only when she saw him beginning to move away. In this there is something of coquetery, we must admit; but vanity in the male can only be matched by co quetery in woman. Oh, come let us have a game at Copenhagen, said Fanny, at last giving a wicked glance at Charlie. We have danced and sung and pro menaded, and eaten and drank; we have done everything that sensible people can be expect ed to do. Now let us, for once, be children again. What say you, girls? Miss Rogers was the first to speak. Pursing up her acid.looking multi), and drawing her thin figure to its full height, said: Copenhagen I lam astonished at you, Miss Alleyne. Copenhagen for young Indies like ourselves! Why it is not played now by young ladies. Our grandmothers used to play at it, and thought it not vulgar, said Fanny. However, I want a good romp, and I vote for Copenhagen. Funny had a purpose of her own to serve, besides she enjoyed the reputation of cluing as she pleased; and truth to tell, when she now proposed Copenhagen, many approved that would not have dared to suggest. As for the gentlemen, they all with one voice cried out for it except Charlie. And what do you say, Mr. Weaver, demure. ly asked Fanny. You are silent I see. Have you ibrgotten how to hold buttercups under the girl's chins, twirl the platter at pawns, or catch a partner at Copenhagen? Copenhagen! said he, as if trying to recollect. I believe that's the game where the gentlemen kiss the girls, is it not? Exactly so, replied Fanny; that is if they can. And if I play at Copenhagen, and catch you, you will play fair and let me kiss you, inquired Charlie. The question was rather pointed, and Fanny blushed a little, but she answered resolutely: As I said before—lf you can. 'Poe honor, then, said Charlie, I'll play, and take care to get the kiss. I never object to kissing pretty girls. The party soon entered into the spirit of the game. • There was a good-deal of dodging, shuffling, and pretty screaming, mingled now and then with some loud kissing. One large, fat young man especially, always kissed with a noise like the report of a pistol. He rarely succeeded in touchin;; a young lady's cheek, being rather awkward; while the girls, one and all, dodged like wild pigeons, and Fanny said, she took it flying. As for Funny, the mina, no one as yet had kissed her. Being the prettiest girl on the ground, and by all odds the merriest, a dozen at least had tried to touch her hands, in order to entitle them to a struggle at least for the kiss. Now, that's not exactly fair, 3lisx Alleync, drawled out Charlie. Mind, if I succeed in touching your right hand when I am in the ring, you must play fair. Any lady can get recently published by Ticknor, Reed & Fields, off if they lift up the rope in that manner. we copy the following chapter on sleep:] I promised you I'd play fair—to you at least, I have already shown that sleep is one of the said Fanny, without oven a blush, and I mean wisest regulations of nature, to check and mod. to keep my word. There, catch me if you can. crate at fixed periods, the incessant and hope. She slightly touched his hand while he was tunas stream of vital consumption. It forms. still pluming himself on her flattering speech, as it were, stations for our physical and moral and whiz! like an express locomotive she was existence; and we thereby obtain the happiness at the other aide of the ring, and fairly nut of it, of being daily re-born, and of passing every Oh I'll have revenge, said Charlie Weaver, morning, through a state of annihilation into shaking his bead at her; I did not see what you a new and refreshed life. Without this contin was at. Charlie instantly sprang forward, and ual change—this incessant renovation, how would have placed an arm around her person. wretched and insipid would not life be; end But Fanny drew herself up with a wonderful how depressed our mental as well as physical quick assumption of dignity, stepped a pace sensation 1 The greatest philosopher of the back and said—Not so fast, Mr. Weaver, we present age, says, therefore, with justice—Take country bred girls are not over fastidious, I front man hope and sleep, and he will be the know, but we don't allow young men to put most wretched being on earth. their arms around us. I How unwisely, then, do those act who ima. A peal of laughter broke from the crowd.-- gine that by taking as little sleep as possible Her look was so serious, as much in contrast' they prolong their existence. They obtain with her mirth, so the whole thing was hien. their end neither in intensive nor extensive life. pressibly ridiculous. Charlie drew back abash. i They will, indeed, spend more hours with their ed for a moment, but recovering himself, he eyes open, but will never enjoy life in the pro• said— I per sense of the word, nor that freshness and This is a breach of your agreement. You I energy of mind which are the certain cense• said, Miss Alleyne, you would play fair. You! quences of sound and sufficient sleep, and said if I became entitled to it by the laws of which stamp a like character on all underta• the game, I might kiss you. kings and actions. 0, I mean to keep my word, said Fanny, But sufficient sleep is necessary, not only for coolly, but you were about to put your arms I intensive life, but also for extensive, in regard around me, and there was no stipulation about Ito its support and duration. Nothing acceler. that, was there? I ales consumption su much, nothing wastes us Then there was another general laugh.— so much before the time, and renders us old as Charlie was forced to acknowledge that Fanny a want of it. The physical effects of sleep are, was right. that it retards all the vital movements, collects You were to kiss me—if you could, that was the vital power, and restores what has been lost the bargain, was it not? in the course of the day; and that it separates She looked seriously around the circle; all from us what is useless and pernicious. It is, confessed that she was right. Yes, said Char• las it were, a daily crisis, during which all se• lie, that was right. I eretions are performed in the greatest tranquil. She folded her arms, stood straight up, and itv, and with the utmost perfections. • looking him full in the fuce, said ; un, , Continued watching unites all the properties then. I 1 destructive of life; incessant wasting of the vi- She had stood in the meantime, without mu• till power and of the organs, acceleration of ring a muscle of her face, and serious as a 1 consumption, and prevention of restoration. judge about to pronounce sentence of death.— i We must not, however, on this account, be. She suffered Charlie to come within a foot of lieve that too long continued sleep is one of the her, when she suddenly raised her finger and best means for preserving life. Long sleep drew back again. accumulates too great an abundance of perni . Remember, said she, you aro to kiss use if cious juices, makes the organs too flaccid and you can. unfit for use, and in this manner can shorten To be sure, be said; but fair play requires life also. that you stood still. If you keep receding in In a word, no one should sleep less than six, this way, of course I can't kiss you. nor more than eight hours. This nay be es lie spoke in a pique—indeed, half anger,— i tabtished as a general rule. He found himself a sort of a butt, and began I To those who wish to enjoy sound and peace to see somewhat through Fanny's behaviour.—i ful repose, and to obtain the whole end of sleep, He discovered that she woo not so desperately I recommend the following observations: its love with him as her conduct had led him to I 1. 'The place where one sleeps must be quiet suppose. He was already taken terribly down. I and obscure. The less our senses are acted But if Ido stand still, said Funny, and her upon by external impressions, the more per• eves began to resume a roguish look, you can't fectly can the soul rest. One may see front kiss me, and you know you can't. this how improper the custom is of having a Only stand still, and you'll see, retorted he, candle burning in one's bed•cbantbcr during recovering his spirits; and he mentally added, the night. and I'll kiss you in as hsndsome a fashion as 2. People ought always, to reflect that their ever a gentleman kissed a lady. l bed-chamber is a place in which they pass a No you won't and you can't, Charlie, said great part of their lives; at least, they do not Fanny, calling him by the familiar name tar remain in any place so lung in the same situa the first time that 'day. and she spoke in a tion. It is of the utmost importance, therefore, wheedling tone; it is a mile and more from the that this place should contain pure, sound air. edge of that moustache to the mouth under- A sleeping apartment must, consequently, be neuth, and you never could get your lips to roomy and high; neither inhabited nor heated mine, if you were to try for a week. during the day; and the windows ought always I wish you could have heard the peal of to be kept open, except in the night time. laughter burst forth, as Fanny, with a demure, 3. One should eat little, and only cold food provoking air said these words. The old woods for supper, and always some hours before going rocked with the echo. The fat young man, I to bed. have already told you of, rushed to the edge of 4. When a-bed, one should not lie in a forced the crowd, threw himself on the grass, and or constrained position, but almost horizontal; rolled there in agonies of laughter. The girls, the head excepted, which ought to be a little one and all, held their handkerchiefs to their raised. Nothing is snore prejudicial than to mouths. Fanny only was polite. There she lie in bed half sitting. The body then forms stood demurely regarding, Charlie, with not a an angle: circulation in the stomach is checked vestige of laugh on her face, except a roguish and the spine is always very much compressed. _ . . . _ working of the corners of her mouth. I By this custom, one of the principal ends of The butt of all this regarded her for a sec• sleep, a free and uninterrupted circulation of ond, anger and shame mounted blood red to the blood, is defeated; and in infancy and youth his forehead. He tried, at first, to brave it deformity and crookedness aro often its cone out, but the attempt was in vain; and at last, I quences. with an audible oath, he turned his back on his I 5. All the cares and burden of the day must fair tormentor, and rushed madly away I be laid aside with one's clothes; none of them Our village was never troubled with a mous- must be carried to bed with us; and in this res tache after that. The ridicule that followed pect, one by custom may obtain very great Charlie, when Fanny's jest became known, power over the thoughts. I am acquainted drove him from the place, and no successor has with no practice more destructive than that of over ventured to spm•t a moustache there since. I studying in bed, and of reading till one falls Occasionally a travelling dandy stops at the asleep. By these means the soul is pot into inn for a night's rest, and on such occasions a too great activity, at a period when everything moustache may be seen for an hour or two in conspires to allow it perfect rest; and it is 'nat. the quiet street, but at other times the article oral that the ideas, thus excited, should wander is as scarce as money in a Printer's pocket.— and float through the brain during the night. Fanny is somewhat sobered since the day of I It is not enough to sleep physically; man must the pic.nic. Several years have passed, and sleep also spiritually. Such a disturbed sleep the once merry maiden is now a sedate matron. is as insufficient as its opposite—that is, when She married a rising young lawyer, and imme- our spiritual part sleeps, but not our corporeal; diately took her place at. the head of fashion; I such, for example, as sleep in a jolting carriage for her wit, as well as her beauty, gave her a un a journey. preeminence which all acknowledted. To ti. One circumstance, in particular, I must this day, however, she laughs heartily, when not here omit to mention. Many believe that the story of Charlie's discomfiture is told. it is entirely the same if one sleeps these seven Miss Rogers, after all her affectations, was hours either in the day or the night time. Peo forced to put up with the fist young man, who pie give themselves up, therefore, at night, as makes a very worthy husband for her, though long as they think proper, either to study or he kisses as boisterously as ever. pleasure; and imagine that they make every thing even when they sleep in the forenoon those hours which they sat up after• midnight. But I must request every one, who regards Isis health, to beware of so seducing an error. It is certainly not the same whether one sleeps seven hours by day or by night; and two hours' sound sleep before midnight are of more bene fit to the body than four hours in the day. My reasons are as follows: That period of tweutyfoar hours, formed by the regular revolutions of our earth, its which all its inhabitants partake, is particularly dis tinguished in the physical economy of man.— This regular period is apparent in all diseases; and all the other assail periods, so wonderful in our physical history, are by it in reality do• tersniued. It is, as it were, the unity of our natural chronology. Now, it is observed, that the more the cud or Vmsc 1 c - iesta coincides A JAIL BIRD.—Some days ago, a gentletaun visiting a jail in Cincinnati, heard one of the female convicts singing with gaiety and spirit. "Ah, my canary bird;" said be, looking through the bars of her cell. "Your canary," she re• plied; "if so, I wish you would hang the cage where I could get a little sunshine." DISPARITY or FORTT;E.—Au old gentleman once said, in speaking of the bad consequences of disparity of fortune, especially on the wife's side, in marriage, that when he married, he had twenty cents, and his wife twenty-five, and that she was throwing out this extra five cents to hint ever afterwards. Re— A mother in San Francisco cured her little boy of swearing by washing out his mouth with soop suds every time ho bad profane words to it. SLEEP. [From ITufeland's "Art of Prolonging Life," with the conclusion of the day, the more is the pulsation accelerated, and a feverish state is produced, or the so-called evening fever, to which every man is subject. The accession of new chyle to the blood, may, in all probability, , contribute something towards this fever, though it is not the only cause; for we find it in sick people, who have neither eat nor drank. It is more owing, without doubt; to the absence of the sun, and to that revolution in the atmos phere which is connected with it. This even ing fever is the reason why nervous people find themselves more fit for labor at night than du ring the day. To become active, they must have an artificial stimulus; and the evening fe ver supplies the place of wine. But one may easily perceive that this is an unnatural state; and the consequences are the same as those of every simple fever—lassitude, sleep, and a cri sis, by the perspiration which takes place du ring that sleep. It may, with propriety, there fore be said, that all men every night have a critical perspiration, more perceptible in some, and less so in others, by which whatever use less or pernicious particles have been imbibed by our bodies, or created in them during the day, are secreted and removed. This daily crisis necessary to every man, is particularly requisite for his support; and the proper period of it is when the fever has attained to its high est degree, that is, the period when the son is in the nadir, consequently, midnight. What du those, then, who disobey this voice of Na. ture which calls for rest at the above period, and who employ this fever, which should be the means of secreting and purifying our jui ces, to enable them to increase their activity and exertion? By neglecting the critical pe riod, they destroy the whole crisis of so much importance; and, though they go to bed to. wards morning, cannot certainly obtain, on that account, the full benefit of sleep, as the critical period is past. They will never have a perfect, but an imperfect crisis; and what that means is well known to physicians. Their hod ies also will never be completely purified. How clearly is this proved by the infirmities, rheu matic pains, and swollen feet, the unavoidable consequences of such lucubration. Besides, the eyes stiffer more by this custom; fur one labors, then, the whole summer through with candle light, which is not necessary for thosewho employ the morning. And, lastly, those who spend the night in la hot, and the morning in sleep, lose that time which is the most beautiful and the best fitted for labor. After every sleep we are renovated, in the most proper sense of the word; we are; in the morning, always taller than at night; we have then more pliability, powers, and juices; in s word, more of the characteristies:olyouth; while, at night, our bodies are drier and more exhausted, and the properties of old age then prevail. One, therefore, may consider each day as a sketch, in miniature of human life, in which the morning represents youth; noon, manhood; and evening, old age. Who would not then employ the youthful part of each day for labor, rather thus begin his work in the evening, the period of old age and debility?— In the morning, all nature appears freshest and most engaging; the mind at that period is also clearest, and possesses most strength and energy. It is not, as at eight.worn out, and rendered unequal by the multifarious impres sions of the day, by business and fatigue; it is then more edgiest, and possesses its natural powers. This is the period of new mental cre ation, of clear conceptions and exalted ideas. Never does man enjoy the sensation of his ex istence so purely and in so great perfection as in a beautiful morning. He who neglects this period, neglects the youth of his life. Cork Cork is nothing more or less than the bark of an evergreen oak, growing principally in Spain and other countries bordering the Med. iterancan; in English gardens it is only a cu• riosity. When the cork•tree is about fifteen years old, the bark has attained a thickness and quality suitable for manufacturing pup°. aes; and after stripping, a farther growth of eight years produces a second crop; and so on at intervals of eight years, to the extent of even ten or twelve crops. The bark is stripped from the tree, in pieces of two or three inches in thickness, of considerable length, and of such width as to retain the curved form of the trunk when it has been stripped. The bark peeler or cutter makes a slit in the bark with a knife, perpendicularly from the top of the trunk to the bottom; he makes another incision, parallel to, and at some distance from the former; and two shorter horizontal cuts at the top and hot. tom. For stripping off the piece thus isolated, he uses a kind of knife with two handles and a curved blade. Sometimes, after the cuts have been made, he leaves the tree to throw off the bark by the spontaneous action of the vegeta' tion within the trunk. The detached pieces are soaked in water, and are placed over a fire when nearly dry; they are, in fact, scorched a little on both sides, and acquire a somewhat more compact texture by this scorching. In order to get rid of the curvature, and to bring them fiat, they are pressed down with weights while yet hot. A HAPPY OLD FARMEIL—Said a venerable farmer, 80 years of age, to a relative who late ly visited him—"l have lived on this farm more than half a century, I have tto desire to change my residence as long as I lieu ou earth. I have no wish to be any richer than I now am. I have worshipped the God of my fathers with the same people for more than 40 years. Du ring that poriod 1 have scarcely ever been ab- sent from the sanctuary on the Sabbath, and never lost more than one communion season. 1 have Dever been confined to my bed of sick ness for a single day. The blessings of God have been richly spread around me, and I have made up my Mind long ago, that if I wished to bo any happier, I mud have more religion. ear Aviio la it that a woman frequently giieb her rounteunnee to, and yet never takes ? Thciitpall Pox. VOL. 19. NO. 26. Peculiarities of the Laplanders. Matthias Alexander Castren, a Swede, has recently published a volume of travels in Lap land, in which he gives to the world the peculi arities of the Lap.' Among other Matters, they seem to have a great love for religious exerci ses. Mr. Castrin describes the Enare Laps as engaged for twenty-four hours together, in list. ening to sermons, praying, &c. He also men. Lions their great affection toward their wives. `One husband assured me that daring thirty years of wedlock, no worse world had passed between himself and wife than gloddadsham; or 'my little bird.' A peculiarity of the female Laps is given in the following extract. It strikes us that it is a funny kind of timidity, and we do not wonder that the Lapland husbands are so careful to use only the kindest language to their wives, since they are so easily, and terribly frightened, or that they pass twenty-four hours at a stretch in praying to be delivered from devils. I had often, on my journey through Lapland been warned, to be cautious in my dealings with the Russian Lap, and especially with the female sex, on account of a strange propensity among them, to sudden fit of phrenzy accom panied by the loss of conciousness and control over their actions. I treated these reports at first as fables of the ordinary kind applied to the people in question. I fell in, however, one day, in a village of Russian Lapmark, with some Karelians and two Russian traders.— These repeated the warning above mentioned, advising me never to frighten a Lap woman, for in their opinion this was a ‘res capitalis.' With reference to this caution, one of the Hare. liens told me the following, I was once, said he, when a boy, fishing out at sea, when I met with a boat rowed by Laplanders. Among them was a woman with a child at her breast. Upon seeing me in a dress unusual to her, she became so beside herself with fear, that she flung the child into the sen. Another Karelian related how he was once in the society of Terski Laps: We were talking of different matters when a sound was heard like the the blow of a hammer on the outside of the wall. On the instant all the Laps present fell flat on the floor, and after some gesticulations with hands and feet, be came stiff and immovable as corpses. After a while they recovered and behaved as if nothing unusual had happened. To convince me of the truth of this, and other such taler, one of the Russians proposed to show me evidence of the timidity of the Lap women. He began by put ting out et the way knives, axes, and any other mischevious implements which happened to be at hand. He then came suddenly behind a wo man present, and clapped his hands. She sprung up like a fury and scratched, kicked, and pummelled the aggressor to our edification. After this exercise she sunk exhausted on a bench, and recovered with difficulty, her breath and senses. Having regained the latter, she declared her•self determined not to be so frightened again, In fact a second experiment only produced a piercing shriek. While she was priding her , self on this success, the other Russian flung a pocket book, so that it passed just before her eyes, and ran instantly out of the room. The lady hereupon flew at every one present in succession, flinging one to the ground, dishing another against the wall, beating them, and tearing their hair out by handful's. I sat in a corner waiting my turn to come. I saw at last with horror her wild glance fixed on me. She was on the point of printing her nails in my face, when two stout men in a fortunate mo ment seized her, and she sank fainting into their arms. It was the opinion of my compan ions that my spectacles had especially excited her phrenzy. I cannot Pray for Father any More! She knelt at the accustomed hour, to thank God for the mercies of the day, and pray for care through the coming night; then. as usual, came the earnest "God bless dear mother, and" —but the prayer was stilled ! the little hands unclasped, and a look of agony and wonder met the mother's eye, as the words of hopeless sorrow burst from the lips of the kneeling child, "I cannot pray for father any more!" Since her little lips had been able to form the dear name, she had prayed for a blessing upon it; it had followed close after mother's name, for he had said that must come first; and now to say the familiar prayer, and leave her father out ! No wonder that the new thought seemed too much for the childish mind to receive. I waited for some momenta, that she might conquer her emotion, and then urged her to go on. Her pleading eyes met mine, and with a voice that faltered too much, almost, for utter- ance, she said, "0, mother, I cannot leave him all out, let me say 'thank God that I had a dear father once I' so I eau still go on, and keep him in my prayers." And so she always does, and my stricken heart learned a lesson from the loving ingenuity of toy child, Remember to thank God for mercies pax' as well es to ask blessings for the future.—Prelb' LOUIS NAPOLEON AND THE. SrLTAN DESCEN DED FROM AMERICAN ANCESTORS.—It is assert ed that the grandmothers of Louis Napoleon and the Sultan were both natives of the Island of Martinique, in the West Indies, and were in timate friends in their childhood. One of them was Josephine, afterwards Empress of France, whose daughter Hortense married the King of Holland. and became the mother of the pres ent French Emperor. The other lady was a Miss "Miss S. quitted the Island of Martinique sometime before her friend. But the vessel was attacked and taken by the Algeriue Con stairs, and the crew and passengers were made prisoners. But this Corsair ship was in turn attacked and pillaged by Timis pirates, and Miss S. was carried by them to Constantinople, and offered for sale as a slave. Her extraordi nary beauty and accomplishments found her a purchaser in•the Sultan himself, and she soon became the chief lady.of the Seraglio and Sul. taneas of Turkey. Mehteoad IL was her son, and the present Sultan, OW is the 3on of Mahmoud." • ' . '