The southern Whig. (Athens, Ga.) 1833-1850, August 29, 1850, Image 1

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•T9 BY LAMrKIll A ADAMS* j. ,, 'X-+ %yx; . . ■ ©swQifiis it® iPSJLairasSj iLflTfsSiaif®as aas s&ssia&ii. aaTsiEMSBiffl^i. : j Ten»s -TWO D0LLAB8 tan, NEW SERIES—i r 0L. IU., N0.4. ATHENS, THURSDAY, AUG. 29, 1850. university Of GEORGIA lisrart - VOLUME XVIII. HUMBER 21 ADVERTISEMENTS. NEW GOODS. T. H. WILSON, H AS moved hi* old *U«ck to the room on College Avenue recently occupied by A. Alexaxder A Oo^erbenhei* now exhibiting * HelemtitJ a-.ortnxmt at STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS, HARD- a fiuih and NEW SPUING J JX DIES’ FANCY DUE Mh Bervige.assorted, ptamurul & 4t.4 do" Grenadine*, French . •IfOURJYMJYG GOODS, ■r in grant vnriety; Ribbon*, Laces, Shawl*, Ilandl chief*. Ac, Superior Brussel* Lace Cape*, f 5 to $1 Embroidered Mu*Jin Cant* and Collar*; Silk, Linen and C**tton H«**c nnd Gloves; Kid Glove* and Fancy' Mid. GENTLEMENS DRESS GOODS OwsisUnr of superior Italian Cloth*. Cabman French Drop d*Ete, Csmblett Coating*. Lmena Oiorham; Superior Light Ca*imere< and Linen Dn ing*“ pfann awl fancy Cloth*, *Ca*#inM?re and Ve*tin ef every style, Ac. Hats, Gaps, Boots and S^ocs = A let of well assorted Iky* 1 and MUsc*’Hat* and Bonnet* Tan! if' new and fashionable Bonnet#, Shoe- and Clove*. Beside* the aboT« article*, they br ve a full supply •f all kinda of staple and fancy dry good*. that art called for in this market. Also a large and well as sorted letof HARDWARE AND CUTLERY, Smiths', Carpenters', and Tanners' Tools, Saddles, Bridles, and Harness, Leath er, Oil-Cloth, Carpeting, Mat- - tingt Carriage Trimmings, and Horse Nettings. —ALSO— A L1BCE LOT OF GROCERIES. INDIGO. PEPPER. GINGER, SPICE. COP PER AS, BLUE STONE, FINE TEAS, COF FEE. SUGAR, SALT, MOLASSES, _ POWDER, LEAD AND SHOT. f^They are also the agent* for the Car* Conn'_ IrofrWorks, and keep constantly on hand a full supply •f enacting awl rolled iron from tliat c * All of which are offered at price* either for cash or approrid credit. Selected poetnj. [The following exquisite poet gifted women of our time, will linger , in tlie’yt ery reader.] under circumstances the most affecting, when the energies and softer feelings of >ftiiemost woman were alike called forth; when ing stranger. He fhtpd with her Co|. Fitznllan’s solicitor; that. gentleman, suspicious of the warm feeding evinced soldier of the Legion 1st dying in Algiers, here was lack of womans nursing, there was dearth ut a comrade stood betide him, while liis • life-blood ebbed away. And bent with pitying glance*, to bear wbat be might The dying soldier faltered, as he took that comrade's hand. And he said, “In the proud and fearless soldier become by his friend for th$fair Spanard; had dependent on her he had protected; laid * * «•--? » on the bed of sickness, far from the af fectionate hands that woold have sooth ed, t he tender eyes that would have wept over his pillow. Isadora became his # nurse, soothed with unremitting care j lover’s reasons for wishing hisleilers te* the solitude and weariness of a sick {stored, originated in his fear of a legal rrmin ; and when again able to bear | use being made of them. Her dark eye the fresh air of heaven, her arm was flashed fire, her cheek, burnt with emo- Takc alive land: mine. Mge and a token to some distant friend* of For I wa* born at Tethny brother* and companion#, when they meet . and crowd uronud, 1 To hear my mournful story, in the pica sunt vineyard we fought the battle bravely—and when thi lay we# done, uauy n corpse lay glnutly pale beneath the set nids11 be dead and dying, were some grown old leath-wound on their gallant breast, the last of nine were young—and suddenly beheld life’i iioro decline— And one had come from Bingen—fair Bingen on th< Tolltny mother that her other son* shall comfort hci old age, it bird, that thought bia hot j nnd wild; And when ho died, and left oa to divido hi* scanty hoard; 1 let them take wlial’er they would—but kept fathers *wnrd; Aud with boyish love I hung it where the bright light On the cottage wall at Bingen—calm Bingen Tell my drooping bead, C P f° r tnd sob with ! marching home again, with vitb a calm and stead- her was a soldier too, aud not afraid 1 mrade seek her -love, I ask her in m Aud to hang the old swonl i sword aud mine,) For the houor of old Bingen—dear Bingei er meal, drink, fire, lodging, nor suffer any whose heart the Lord woold sfir up for our relief to have any access* to us. Seventeen or eighteen have perish ed within those noisome -gaols within ployed a professional man: for he! these six years; some of us had notone was aware that the letters he had writ-1 penny about us when we were sent to ten would give Isadora strong claims j prison, nor anything to procure a main- upon him. He arrived^at the moment tenance for ourselves ahd families but when she first comprehended that her interesting pa- the support of her tienl. With Fitzallan the day of romance is over; a man above thirty cannot enter into the .wild vision* of an enthu siastic girl; flattered by the attachment which Isadoras very looks betrayed, he trifled with her; regardlessnr thought less of the young ami innocent heart that confided so fearlessly. Loye has no power to look forward—the delicious consciousness of the present, a faint but delightful shadow of the past, form its eternity; the possibility of separa tion never entered the mind of his Spanish love, till Fitzallan’s instant re turn to England became necessary.— They parted with all those gentle vows' which are such sweet anchors for hope to rest on in absence—but alas, such frail ones! For a lime her English lov er wrote very regularly. . That philos opher knew the human heart, who said, “I would separate from my mistress for the sake of writing to her. A word a look, may be Ibrgotton, but a letter is a lasting memorial of affection. The correspondence soon slackened-on his part. Isadora tending the last mo ments of a beloved parent, had not lion, her heart-beat Became audible, she hastily caught the letters and threw them into the flames. “You have per formed your mission,” aitid she; “leave the room instantly.**'‘Her force was now exhausted, she sank hack on the sofa. The lenderassidoities of Edward at length restored her to some degree of composure. It was luxury to have her feelings entered into; to share sor row is to sooth it. She told him of hopes blighted forever; of founded affection ; of the heart sickness which had paled her cheek, had worn to tr shadow her once symmetrical forin. She had in her band a few withered leaves. “Tt is,” said she, “the image of my fate; this rose fell from my hair one evening; Fitzallan placed it in his bosom; by moonlight I saw it thrown aside; it was faded, but to me it was precio is from even that momentary caress; I have to this day cherished it. ^re not our des tinies told by this flower? His was the bloom, the sweetness of love; my part was the dead and scentless leaf;” Edward now became her constant companion; she found in him a kind and affectionate brother. At length he . , spoke of love. Isadora replied by thought for self; but when that father’s {throwing back her long dark hair with eyes were closed, and her tears hadj a hand whose dazzling whiteness was fallen on the companion of her infancy, j all that remained of its former beautv, the orphan looked around for comfort, and bade.'him look on her pale and facl- consolaiion, and felt, for the first time,i e d countenance, and there seek his an- her loneliness and the sickness of hope 1 swer- deferred. Fear succeeded expectat’ our labor; not only we ourselves, but our wives and children, are undone, and starved.” After reciting some of their worst oppressions, he concludes with an appeal worthy alike of a patriot and an Englishman,, and in the fearless spirit of St. Paul himself—* That which we crave for us all is the liberty to dto openly, or liveopenly in the land of our nativity; if we-deser$fc death, let us not be closely murdered? yea starved to death with hunger and cold, and sti fled in loathsome dungeons.* The latter petition alone was heard. Barrow and Greenwood, with several Dr. Warren, ofBoston, lately commu nicated the following among oiher inter esting particulars in regard.to the Sia mese twins:— The connecting substance is very her—uot a ulster—in the happy day* nown her by the merriment that •par lor coquetry—too fond for idle scorning; CONFECTIONS! ICE CREAM AND I C E M Oil, friend ' I fear the lightest heart i AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Tdi'S.^SnisiuTny 1 <r„ , H52SL SSSfS.ISSs’smSaS: & jsfek AP-rt - gWMraUy, tlmt be i« now at hi* old stand. on Juck*oo- X dreamld Irtnod with her, and saw the yellow sun- ■teM*. fin* door m rear of Mr. Hoggin*'* tore, where light thine In i«offering lor mala a complete assortment of every 0 u the vine-clad bin* of Bingen—foir Bingen on the thing u> hi* line of bovine#*; Cake ~ * teU#-, v the bine Rhine i .Bk 1 particular attention given tu Ladies, for a ■eparato room. He will keep a con this delightful article; also, Ico Lemon; ante by any quantity. ’'Order# for parties and from I * *e in tbc best manner, at *hort n J uj>. and .apply ,.f weep along—I heard, i used to ring—in chora ■ A 1850. S E WISE IN TIME!—’TIS FOLLY TO DEFER AFFLICTED READ—Thousand# era suffering i disease from which there i# no difficulty in being permanently and »pecdily relieved, provided the right mean* bo used. A* every vice ha# it* own puni.-b- ment, so it would seem every disease ha* it* reread/. Thi* i* true, and tln-re is nothing in tliis life not* certain than tiiat tlie AMERICAN COM- FOUND k the most speedy ami certain remedy for all dt—asen of a delicate character, known to the WrU. Adapted to every stage of the disease, sex and eanetitatioo, at all times and season*, there h • Doing chorns sounded, throngh the i , detention from business nor restrie- » in diet; from the certain ami speedy relief it gives, now tha most popular remedy of the day. Ten . . n««y or the i * hare been cured effectually tec tha past year. Prepared by a practical physician. acMMNmy each boula. IF CAUTION.—Ask for the American Compound anapnrehase only of the Agent*. 294 Market-street, »- ^ R WARE, Athene, Geo. Jy. Philadelphia, Sept 27,18 ^ NEW SPRING GOODS, fin Sfc Bn. Pritebn.rd, t®. S AVING Tcinove-lt * thi store un<!cr Uia Centra Hotel, lately occxqiioi by Winfrey A Morrison 1 be happy to see her f tends and th%I«die* gene' raDr sit her new stand. Her aMOttaeat of Fancy Goods, Bonnets, Ribbon*, Ac, Ac,are as desirable and -rill be sold a* cheap as tteryean^bej^^ht in any other store in the place. CLOTHING AT REDUCED RATES !! THE season being almost over for selling clothing, I A have reduced the rate* of bit clothing, in order that I may sell thd meat of it, oeforo I go North, .(which will be on the first of August.) Therefore, all ptnoes wishing articles in.my line, will p’ease call and- •vaminc my stock, which will be sold a* low as the Gltebougbt by the yard. Do not foil togire w r «. LIFE INSURANCE. IHE SOUTHEHX UCTUAli' IICSURANE COMPAXT u™ no. ben in Ufa »nwfcrnnynj. In thi* time . . Tbej Wt« i-u«i 1,, Pelidnr • - inured ♦480.000 00 isli w« ak— (J»g ( i grasps x child dying look—he sighed and ceased to lift him, but the spark of life foreign land was n rose up slowly, and calmly she d of the battle-field with bloody Yea, calmly on that dreadful scene, her pale light i the to speak; s comrade beul had fled— e soldier of the Legion i On the red i ittisccllanji. Isidore—A Tale of a Broken llearf lit the churchyard of •••'• there is a grave covered with a plain slab of white marble, wita no other inscription than I'friJlIn I fear, noi for his fidelity, but his safety; he again laid on a bed of sickness, and Isadnre far away. She dwelt on the idea till it became a present reality; suspense was agony ; at length she re solved to visit England. She sailed, aud after a quick voyage reached the land; a wanderer seeking for happi- Yes, I shall wed, but my bridal wreaths will, be cypress, my bed the grave, my spouse the huhgry worm !” Edward gazed on her face and read conviction ; but still his heart clung to her with all the devntedness of love, which hopes even in despair, and amid the wreck of every promise of happi- grasps even at the unstable wave. ness, which, like the shadow thrown by One evening she leaned by a window, ihe lily on llie wnter. Mill eludes tho;g, 7 ,i„g on the gtn«r»o»-iHty of a grasp. Il was nol thus in the gmves o! j summers sunset; the rich Color of her Arrngnn, she looked forward to the cheek which reflected the carnation of British shore; il was then the promised the west, the intense light of her soft home of a beloved anti happy bride. but radiant black eyes, excited almost The day after her arrival in London, hope ; could the hand of death be she drove to her ageni* (for her father, j w ) ia , was so beautiful? For the first time she asked for her lute ; hitherto she had shrunk from the £l)e jfarmcr. New method of Preserving Butter# A physician who has traveled through ... Switzerland describes a process of pre strong, and has no great sensibility; serv,n S butter ns adopted in that enun- il can be severely handled^■’ without j which he states to be far jwe- causing pain. No pulsating vessel can ; *° ■ English plan of salting, be felt in it. The slightest motion of j J « ie process is ns follows:—Into one is immediately , followed by the' a . c,ea « copper pan (better, ito doubt* other in the same directionv so that the * ,nne “) P ul ^ n y quantity of butter, say same wish seems to influence both; ‘wenty pounds to forty pound*. this is quite involuntary, or a habit formed by necessity. They always faee in one direction, standing neatly side by side, and cannot*.without in convenience face in opposite directions. One is Vathet inieUectual v^an the other; the most intellectual being rather irritable, the other being ex- extremely amiable. The connection between these twins might afford some interesting observa- others, were brought before the'Arch-j lions in physiology, therapeutics, and bishop of Canterbury, and other mem-j pathology. There is doubtless a con- bers/of the court of high commission, | nection by minute blood vessels, absor- but they refused to take the oath, that. bents, anti nervous filaments, which is, to convict themselves upon their| might transmit the action of medicines own extorted f testimony. They were ! and the causes of disease. As far as then indicted for publishing seditious | known, any indisposition of one extends pamphlets, tending to the slander of the | to the other; they are inclined to sleep queen and government. They denied ' and eat at the same time, and in the same the charge of disloyalty, showed no re- ; quantity, and-perform in the same man- gret, and sought no mercy : their quar-; ner other similar acts. It is supposed rel, they said, was not with the queen . that when they are asleep, touching and her government, but with the hier-1 one awakens both, but when awake, archy and the church. They were, of an impulse given to.one does not affect course, convicted. Ballot, one of the the other. The slightest movement of number, confessed his fault, and, with one is so soon perceived by the other, two others who were only accessories,, that a careless observer might think was reprieved and sent back to prison, | they acted simultaneously. No part where.two of them died; the third was j seems to have a perception common to banished.. Barrow and Greenwood both, except the middle of the connec- were, condemned to die. They were brought in a cart to Tyburn, in order that the sight of the gallows might’ter- rify them into submission, and alarm their followers.* but they remained un moved, and were taken back to New gale. A fortnight afterwards they were carried a second time to Tyburn, and there hanged.—Marsdens History of the Early Puritans. during the troubles in Spain, had secur ed some property in the English funds,) hoping from him to gain some intelli gence of the colonel. Passing through a very crowded street, her coach becom ing entangled in the press, occasioned a short stoppage. Gazing round in that mood, when, anxious to escape the ini- __ _ presstens within, the eye unvoluniarily j , r y.»» She mingled her voice with the seeks for others without, her attention , (ones, so faint, so sad, but so sweet, it became attracted to an elegant equip- j wag like the song of a spirit ns the con- page. Could she be mistaken?— nPV * , c fuding murmur died away. She sunk er, in that form—it was surely Fitxal- back exhausted ; Edward for a moment lan! Well she remembered that grace- supported her head on his' sholder; at fuld bend, that air of protection with length he parted the thick curls off*her which he supported his companion.— | f ace , and timidly pressed her lip; he Autcdduviau Remains. This low alluvial region of Georgia is full of the remains of animals that roamed among the scenery of an ante- deluvian world. Within a lew years past.jhe foggil remains of. the Megathe rium and other enormous creatures have been brought to light. During the past week, while excavating for a J without the other, his puls well at the new brickyard of Messrs, j |, e quickened, while the latter changed. They breathe also exactly together. This harmony in corporal functions would lead us to ask if there be a simi lar harmony in the intellectual func- if they are identically the same ting substance, and its neighborhood ; for when an impression is made at this part, it is fell by both, while beyond this space it is felt only by the one of the side to which it is applied. From the limited vascular and nerv ous connection that can be discovered. Dr. Warren supposes that the influ ence of medicine, transmiied from one to the other, would be inconsiderable ; and the same would apply to most dis eases—lor instance, a slight fever would not extend from one to the other; while diseases, communicable through the ab sorbents or capillaries, (as small pox) would be readily. transmitted.' The beatings of.both hearts, coincide exact ly, as also the*- pulses 5 *under ordinary circumstances; if one exerts himself alone will Turner and others, at the depth of some twenty-three or twenty-four feet below (he surface, the palatal hone, with teeth attached, of an animal that must have !» <>l music; Filznilnu I,ml loved ftronglv resembled ihe Tapir was dim il ; to her il was ihe knell of deported i lnlerr f - Such is the resemblance sug- love. She waked a few melancholy j S e51ed ^ one "• our ,n . emls ; , “ r L w « do notes. “These sounds,” suid she, .. „ re noi profess in he acquainted with,these fraught with lender recollections;! f ub J ec, . s ““'selves. This rapir. we be lie vesperhvmn of my own enun- 1, “ ve - 13 !orae "' nes c » lled llle “ s " ul " The agitnted Spaniard just caught a glimpse of her slight and delicate fig ure, of eyes blue as a spring sky, of a ckeek o! sun set; and, ere her sup- prise allowed the power of movement, the carriage was out of sight. Her en treaties to be allowed to alight, being attributed to fear, were answered by assurance that she was safe. Gradual ly becoming more-composed, she bade the coachman inquire w.ho lived * u ~ started from her thrilling^ouch-—it was his last kiss—Isadorc hail expired in his arms! The Tioae» of Good Queen Bess. . All the opponents of the Queen were treated with horrible and vindictive se verity; many Romish priests were exe cuted wiih a revolting barbarism ; great er numbers were exiled mid imprisoned. English law, if we do not prostitute the house opposite. It was the name she! name in applying it to such transactions, longed to hear—Col. Fitzallan. She! knew little but revenge and cruelty.— returned back home, and with h treniu- 1 The political trials of this reign, it has “Isadora d’Eroiilo aged nineteen.*’ These few words speak history to the _ _ heart; they tell of a. beautiful flower huts hand traced a lew lines,' telling j been well observed by a gr^ living- withered, far from its accustomed soil, l him how she bad wept his silence, and writer, the historian of the Engish con- in the spring clay ol its blossom; they tell the Tale of ii ynuug and' unhappy stranger, dying in n foreign country, re mote from every earthly association, her last moments uusootbed by vfiectionate solicitude, no tender voice, whose lighted sound btealhed happy memories, no eye of fondness, on which the fainting mouruer might look for sympathy—her _ r . .. w very ashes separated' from their uative dnw, she caught the sight of a militaryl been Calvin's. share of infamy earth.- • man —she heard his steps on the stairs i burnings of Servetus the Socinian, “Might. I not Jancy my self a hero of;—a gentleman entered, but it was not i does not stand alone. In 15S4, fiction Y”'said Col. Fitzallan, bending Fitzallan. Too soon she learned his John Lewes Was burned at Norwich fn I wept eutreniiiig him to come and say she 1 stitiition, are, with scarcely an excep- was still his owu Isadore. Tlie eveu- 1 lion, disgraceful to humanity. And all ing passed drearily ; hut he came not. i religious offences were then political.— Was he indispensably- engaged ? Had Justice, like a bird oUprcjr. wa? ever on he not received her note t-r^-Any suppo- the win«; and if it stooped or swerved sition but intentional delay. - The next p little from its course, It was to slake morning the/same fervid anxiety op-j its appetite for blood upon some harm- pressed her; at length she heard the [ less victim as it passed along in quest door opeu, and, springing loa the win-[of greater prey. ^ Whatever^ may hav gracefully as he caught the snow white hand which had just arranged hui sling. •‘Fair Indyi henceforth I vow myself your true and JoyaF knight, and-thus pledge my heart’s first homage!” press ing the -yielding fingers gently to his lips. . Alas! thought Isadora, a blush, J*..*7 ik Oop»P*o^» ao- fUKSovUmssum. ! lovt$ not passionately-.as 1 love, or bs Jdvli'iffiA - *• HJJJ. could m.t triflff ihusr a light coinpli- - C ' P - lfcc "' incut never breuthc.l h. W. U E. N. BUTLER, ’~ rt - BEADY MADE CLOTHING, dore was at that age when the deeper tenderness of woman first deepens the gsyeiy of childhood, likehhe rich tint that dyes the rose' ns it expands into — summer, loveliness.. Addried .By . her __ _ g'SatrarI • fa l her t. {or sbo had her mother’s voice GAINS for ca.h. at theWridc store, fonoerlj oremted- ant ^ l°Bk, and Came a sweet remem- SiL’n-dii t>rlDCC ”f fti* youth’, sole; warm dream r of buppincu, of that-love nhose joy y 6eef ! ■ % gMOKED^Betf. freri* anti^ firm. j«ft received and saP SUMMCY.TRAMMELL»t CO. » cloud oi care. mission; he whom she had loved, so i denying tins Gmlhead of Christ, and trusted, bad wedded another—the lady.; other heresies. Iu the-next year John she saw- the day before was his wile; | Hilton, a priest, was required to make and 'unwillmg'to see her himself, be bad charged a friend -to communicate the fatal intelligence. Edward B— gazed with enthusias tic admiration on the beautiful creatare, whose pale lips, end scalding tears, which forced their way throngh the long 'dark eye-lashes, belied the firm ness her woman’s pride taught her to assume. Shame, deep shame, thought be, on the cold, -die mercenary spirit which could thus turn the warm feel ings of-a fond and trusting girl into poisoned arrows, could thus embitter the first .sweet flower.of affection. He took her hand in silence—he felt that consolation in a case of tbe‘ kiud was bul tnockery. They parted, the one persons. There is no reason to suppose that their intellectual operations are any more the same than they would be in any two persons, confined togeiher, American Hog,” its ordinary length educated under similar circumstances, being about four feet. ' Some other frag- and with similar habits and tastes, tnents of bones were also brought up; J Then would come the question wheth but as the remains were mostly in the | er |hey cou | d be separated with safety, wall of a well, into which the water was 1 Perhaps such an operation would not fast springing, those portions only were ! jj e necessarily fatal, but the perito- disturbed which were embraced within . uium may be continuous from one to the circular space dug. The boue in t he other, and the opening of ibis creat question, but for the teeth attached, cav ity might be attended with danger- would be mistaken for the tongue of an ous syrnplom3 . Should one die before animals Il is completely silicated. | other, it should be immediately per- Only two or three feet below the spot j f orme( j t bul no sur geon would l»e justi- wheretn these remains are deposited, fiet j in attempting suefi an operation to the workmen passed through a layer of j f ree ;hem from a mere inconvenience ; coarse sand aud rolled quartz pebbles. | w } 1 j c |, inconvenience, if we • may be- Here, perhaps, the waves of some an- j lieve , he reporIS G f their domestic nf- broke f a ; rsanc | flourishing condition, in world ly goods, is after all of no very great importance. The Oldest Republic on Earth.— The American Quarterly Review con- leiter from G. W. Irving, giv- and place it over a gentle fire, so tht»t it may melt slowly, ahd let ihe heat be so graduated, that the melted mass does not come to the boil Jn le^s than nbooC two hours; Dur ing all this time the but* ter must tiff fneq»K^|lyATiwed,"4ay once in about five or ten minute.?, so that the whole mass may be thoroughly inter mixed, anti the'top and bottom change pieces from time to time. „ When the melted mass" boils, the fire is to be so regulated as to keep the butter at a gentle boil, for about two hours more, the stirring bei ng cominued^but not nec- . essarliy so frequently as Wfore. The vessel is then to be removed from the ire and set aside to cool ami settle, still padually ; this process of pooling is opposed to require about two hours. The melted mass is then, whil^stiU li quid, to be carefully poured into the crock or jar in which it is to be kept. In the process of cooling there is depos ited a whitish cheesy sciliment, propor tioned to the quantity of butter, which lo be carefully prevented from inter mixing with the preserved butter. But ter so prepared will last for years per- fectly good, without any particular pre caution being taken to keep4t from tljd air, or without the slightest addition of salt* Winter Cabbage. From the first of July to the first of September, cabbage seed of all the late varieties may be put in the ground for winter use. Winter Cabbage seed may be planted with the early fall turnips, and they will head finely if the soil is good, without transplanting. It is just easy to have firm head cabbage, as have the long blue collard, and who does not prefer it? In transplanting fail cabbage, let the soil be rich and mel low, and plant up to the first leaf on the stalk. The common collard can be made to head finely; by taking off’ the tap root and planting it deep. The great enemy of the fall cabbage is the-green worm. We have found a free use of lime and ashes dusted into the head, to be a great preventive, but a coop of chickens is the surest remedy. We find that the cabbage, like the turnip seed, matures earlier by being raised in a higher latitude. There are few plants that enter so largely into the daily con sumption of our people, as the cabbage tribe, an«l when it is. so easy to raise the blanched and delicate leaf, who will hereafter eat the lough anti stringy collard.—Col. Esq. Rotating of Crops.—Edmund Ruf fin, Esq., of Marlbourne, Vn., a success ful farmer and well-known writer on the subject of Agriculture, gives the fol lowing as a rotation which be hits prac ticed with advantage : 1st year—Corn ( on grass land, grazed the preceding year until July or August ot»ly)-and secondary crop of peas,plaot- ed or sown among the growing corn. 2d year—Peas, sown broad-cast, and plowed under in September, for 3d year—Wheat on pea-fallow—clo ver sown. 4th year—Clover—(which receives all the stable and barn-yard manure,)— first growth mown, where fit, nnd 8e* corn! plowed under in August and Sep tember, for 5th year—Wheat on clover fallow. 6th year—Pasture, from spring until the wheat fields are cleared to admit the grazing stock.—Albany Cultivator. departed ffretl knew ^ ^ or sting of sorrow;-a word of anger: despair oyer the expired embers, the seemed to Don Fernando a sacrilege i other to nurse the first sparkles of hope, against the dead, and bis own melag- j The next morning, scarcely aware what eholy constancy gave a reality to the , he was doing, or of the motive which solemn abjuration of the same opin ion. This be did in the presence of the convocation ; and it is probable that his office alone saved him from the death, n! Lewes. He did penance by standing at St. Paul’s Cross during the scjrmon, bearing the 'significant faggot on his shoulder. Cop pin and Thacker, two clergymen, of Suffiilk, were ‘imprisoned five years, and afterwards banged at Bury Saint Edmunds, as Brownists;— Brown’s wriling being first burned in their presence; The persecution raged for ten years. In J592 a congregation of Brownists being discovered in Lon don, fifty-six were imprisoned ; where they died, said their indignant historian Neal, like rotten sheep.'* Their .chief leader * and martyr, Barrow, a gentle man ol good family, addressed a suppli- fl.- March 28. oraMM. . romanticiooagimngs of his child. She! actuated him, (for who. seeks to ana- ., JERRY **00‘S, now love ! Fitzallan witjrall the fervor ] yS c love’s earliest sensation?) Ed« cient and mystei; upon the shore, or what is more proba ble, some mountain torrent rising in a primitive region, may have rolled its waters over this locality, beating for ward these small rounded masses which always attest the abrasion by being moved about in contact with each other. • a 9 | (e « c | ] 0 f his visit to San Marina. The animal whose remains are here | a sma „ Republic in Italy, between tbc noticed may- have washed himself in • Appenwis, the Po, amt the Adriatic.— these primitive waters, and he was per-j The lerr ; tor y of this State is only forty chance-overwhelmed in the convulsion , mi j es j n c i rcum ferqnce. an d its popula- A writer in one of our late exchanges, which called forth the physical changes , lioo a b ou t 70,000. 1 The Republic was after eulogising the cow pea"very: high- now apparent. Whnl a “■ j f„ um i e d more ihan 1400 year ngn on ,he leresling inlelligence would the hutory mnra , princi pl es , i n ,lu«tryand equality, of one of these pebbles affmd? j anJ has preserveI | i, s liberty ami ii.de- III digging the Brunswick canal, some j denc £ amilUl aI1 tho war , and dis- yeors since, numerous interesting; re- | which have rage d around il. Bo- matns were d.stnterred, whichLyrlt has I naparle respected it, and sent an eml.as- nottced in h.s second tour. Tins author: M ,, his S e„,i me nts of frien.l- rnade an excursion with several , hip and fralernilv. It is governed by gentlemen from Savannah in the S. i.. a Ca lain Re gc '„t, chosen every six dlrecltun, and classic ground for ' m „ nl ,„ by lhe re persentatives of the geologist, for on Its N. W. end where t. ; , (sixlv-six tit number,) who are a low cliff from two to six feel in height,: eharen every'six months by the people, no less than three skeletons of the huge The , aMa , he | arm houses are Megatherium have been dug up, be- jneat , lh e fields well cultivated ; on all sides the remains of the Mylodpn, e-lt-, sides are se en comlort and peace, the Ithus-Prtmogetiius, Mastodon Gigante-:. cffecl nf morality , simplicity os. and a species of the ox tribe. The- , ib '' and justice. bones occur id a dark, peaty soil or j * marsh mud, above which is & stratum | Among the Jews at Gibralies- there The Cow Pea vr. Clover. Iy, caps the climax as follows “ It is found that the cow pea answers every purpose, in the southern culture that the clover does at the north. As food for the human family it is pre-eminently superior.** No doubt of it. Since when the human family turned out to grass? We only know of one. We have heard of “ pigs in clover,” but never before understood il was consid ered valuable as *-• food for tbc hunan family.” There U ho doubt in our minds, that the cow pea is cf equal value to the South as a fertiliser, and food for stock, as the clover is at the North. The great wonder is, that it is not more generally cultivated.—Am. Ag f three or four feet thick of sand, charged • Q slran ge custom when a death with-oxide of iron, and below them, i curs ; n a bouse ; and this consists in and beneath the sea level* occurs sand : pouring away all the water contained containing a great' nnrnber oi marine ^ j n any vessel, the superstition being fossil shells—all belonging, to species , lbal the angel of death may have wash- which still inhabit the neighboring coast, e( { his sword therein, showing how moderi) is the date, geo logical ly : speaking, of the extinct mals, since they were evidently poste rior to the existing raoluscous fa ana of the sea.—Savannah Republican. “You are rather late ibis morning, William,** said good Mr.Risewithihesun to a laggard apprentice, who came at a late hour. “ Yes sir, but * belter late than never,* is^an old saying.” replied William, ... 6W «. - - Suel will beicept perfectly sweet and cation to Parliament, in which he says, good the year round, iffinely chopped| maJler , „ u an axiom of fat n, 0 “These bloody men” (the High Conn and packed .closely in a jar, with ,he ‘ wonb , ,h oa eh it may not be so old.” ■ of Commission) “will allow us nenh- top covered with molasses. Pcofxts of Fruit Culture.—S. B. Parsons in his- recent address before the New Haven Horticultural Society, state* that within a few miles of his residence there is an orchard of about 20 acres, producing S2000 .a year the vegetables between the trees paying the cost ofcul- tivation—that the vineyard* ol Dr. Un derhill, on Croton' Point, are said to yield a net profit of some $4000 per annum—that two cherry trees of hit own yielded often, $30—and* that the Better never lauf* said the „* ro fits of the great Newtown Pippin an axiom of far more orc hard of R. L. Pelf ft tE so put, are some $8,000 per annum. ~ '