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( 4 & THE CAROLINA SPARTA TV by cavis & trimmer. Deuotctr to Southern ttigljts, Politics, agriculture, unlr iHisccUntnjT ^ t2 per anhxth voi,. xiii. spartanburg, s. c., tilurs d a y?october 30, 1856. ~ nn"~ THE CAROLINA SP ATtTAW IMlfMDi/mi nc BY CAVIS & TRIMMIBfi. b, T- 0. P. VERNON, Associate Editor. Price Two Dollars per annum in advance, ??r "p $*2.50 at the eud of the year. If not paid until after the year expire* Jit.00. U Payment will be considered in advance if mndc within three months. j No subeoription taken for less than six months. Money may b<5 remitted through postmasters at ^ oar risk. V Advertisements inserted nt the usunl rates, and Contracts made on reasonable terms. /j The Spartan uireulutes largely over this and djo uinz districts, and offers an ndmiruble medium to our friends to reach customers. Job work of all kinds promptly oxccutod. Blanks, Law and Equity, continually on hand n, or primed to order. $ CAROLINA SPARTAN. 5 To a Itlistress?In tier Hoops. R ^JIY TAUNTON DEAN. m Adored and divinest of creature*, \\ My affection you never can douht, Bat life is two-fold, any the preachers? H The world of within and without. The law of a loser's nllc-<ri:iiio.. I --- Is beauty, not fashion or |>ridc, | ] And the heart may be shocked from obedience By what's a mere world of outside. J( Your path's like the course of a comet, Requiring n very wide berth; And whatever'a thoicin must fly from it, j ' If it be to tlie ends of tlio earth. It is fear makes a coward of affection, And so terribly great me your charms I have said, on the fullest reflection, You can never return to my arms! I?ve at best is a hazardous venture, I \ And 'twere folly to follow a day Au angel who never can enter I _ The straight and the narrow way. i \\ To wonder is certainly humane, And lite only conclusion is this: i // That in sncli a whole world of a woman, There is something inoro than a miss ! , jr. So nec' pt the farewells of a lover. Whose heart may be yours till ho dies, Though his littlo attention* are over, And he trembles at one ol your sighs?(size;) 'J" But let me not call you cold-hearted, Fori know thru your nature is warm, And the process by which we are parted Is purely a matter of form J [Boston Post. An tiik imTSTn south. n Friends and fellow citizens! Providence has cast |> our lot together as one people. Thin Union has ,j made u? power ul, sate, and respected the world y:1 over. We have prospered under it beyond all ex- ?t ample or precedent. We shall continue prosperout if wo do not despise our own mercies. There dr is no reason why we of the North should wage a a? perpetual warfare against the South. Tin y have not wronged nr. but have faithlully fulfilled their // part of thv stipulations of the national oonipaet llave we done the same towards lltcmT Sltonld |J, the Black Republicans gel into |s?wer, they woul I ! instantly rcp.-al the lugitivi* slave law, o|- so nunaid |', it us to render it iiluperalire. In e tlier ease tin y . would deliberately violate a stinulutioii ol the Con ! II stituiioti, deemed tut iui|Kiriunt bv tin* South, th.it without it tin* Union could not have h.-eti tonne.I. Tn ? is n in itto of It'mt*fv, innl i-aiin t be si guim-ud. The delinernte ami continual violation ut u 10 stipul itiiiti "I a covenant is virtually a breach |.n ot the ?vIk?U*. How mucli Iwtier to live up to our cllgag incuts until honorably disohnrj;cd trom them. \\ As tricn im, the Swill are tnva nalilo tn us Ah cnont ?.*. ? they could do us vast ini*etii?-r, in v:iriou? |*'i way*. Wain between us iiud tlicin wnulil bo nfi t-qU' iil mid iim bloody us lu tvvitrii .1 U'lc.l and the \\ Tetl 'FriboK. Ill short, both section* wool i be, in n important sense, uu lone. The I'nion cannot // bo maintained by force, as projo e.l l?y tbe Ula-k Republicans. It must tie voluntary?the result of mutual kiinlness, respect, and good will. Kvery ? offensive word, every wanton necusotioil evety breach of brotherly kindness, manifested by one ? section of the country towards another, is a blow J? nailed at the f' n <olt lit tile States. And wh it a torrcnt of vilhtieution of the South has been belched // forth by Northern presses and pulpits within the an p tsl five years! What misrepresentations! What uiiohariiableness! Why, tln-re is not a foreign nil* Y lion on the face of the earth that we have treated i ? half so badly within the same period. All foreign 1 ''* nations put together luive not lu ? n subjected to a \ N" tithe of the iiIiukc which has been heaped upon l'1 our bK-threu of the S iuth?our isunpatriots, who ri have stood by us Nhouldt-r to shoulder in every J war. and who are ready to stand by us to the death. *'1 The South has not changed its relations to slavery | "I since the Union was formed. They stand where Ml they were. It is the-North that has changed. Or | P1 rather, a portion of the North, now combined tin_1 .1 ?l i tilt s ? ... . 1 ** ?icr mc huukii ii.uiir t?i - iM-ptioiicatt*. ' it mth*m* 1,1 Black Republican* who are making war upon their '> partners, whom they have vowed to love and elier- 1,1 ish. li is they who are sowing dimension* and w lie 'it-burnings all over the land, which it will take ' years, if not centuries, to heal. Fellow citzen*! : " merchants of New York! will any of you helpsut-h a party into power? In the days of the Revolution tM and of its glorious results (the U nion under w Inch we *>' live and prosper,) the merchants were lorentost in making peuuuiary sacrifiees to secure its uceninI plishinent. Will the merchants of this day, and of *' this commercial emporium, aid in destroying the I" temple which their fathers reared ni such an cnor , 111 L mous cost of blood Slid treasure? Will they not ' A I rather frown down the treason of the traitors by J [ rolling up such a majority for the only man who has > !>' any chance of defeating the Black Republican can- 4V I dulate, us shall carry dismay into the hearts of all w sectionalssts, and show to the world that New York w city at least is duloriniiud to stand by "the l*n on, | w one and indivisible, now and forever." Wesotni to heur the shout from 40,0(10 or 50,000 citizvm ol this metropolis, like the voice of m-ny waters, 0 "Ay! Ay: the Union, now and forever, one and 1,1 indivisible. Down with the Sectionalists, under whatever flag they sail. Down witli them." Amen: | so let it be.?N. Y. Journal of Commerce. I National Americanism in Pennsylvania ? j ' The following resolutions passed the Fillmore and Douetson Executive Stale Committee October 17, I . by a majority of 20 in the ooinmittee, composed ol " Rt*olctJ, That we deem it inexpedient to mnke 1 any alteration in the Fillmore aud Itonelson electaral ticket in this State, and we are firmly convinced '* that any intorlt.-oneo with it would be the means of '? giving the State to Mr. Buchanan instead of defeat* ing him. Reaolvtd, Tlist we decline to accept either of 1 1 the propositions of the North American Stale Cert tral Committee, satisfied that the electoral ticket already in tho field is the only one on which all op |( ^r- Buchsnau oan saooeosfully unite, nnd ^ pledging it to the uncompromising opposition and . ' defeat, under any and all circumstances, of his dec- ?T t,0mi | rins action renders sny further union of the Fremont and Fillmer* parties >n Pennsylvania im- ,, possible Xh? orlglr.ul electoral ticket wiii bo ran. j j NaaaASKA TaaaiToaY.->Qov? rnor Izard,of Nc- !" or ask.t, in pnrsusncs of an set of ths Territorial !n Assembly, has iaauod a proclamation for an eleotion " to be held in the several counties in that Territory nr on the first Tuesday in November, for thirteen fr members of the Council, thirty-five member# of the r House of Representatives, and three County Com- 1 ' i/nsstoners for each oounty. The Mt. Sterling (Ky.) Whig of Friday last fe ftjn that it had been anow'ug in tbst place f ur t?*r> tj or three da}# presents rr ) / v? iuu uiiuiou.i i unu* As fur iu heard from the following member* ba?c ;cu returned to tho Legislature by tho recent cctionst abbf.vili.e District.?Senate?I. F. Marmil; Iluu.it?A. M. Smith, S. MoGowan, T. hoinsou, J. K. Vmice and U. A. GrtftinAnderson District ?House?G. Seaborn, B. arily, A. Broyles and 8. G. Earle. Barnwell District.?House?S. II. Evans, . E Tobn, D. 11. Rice and J. J. Ryan. Chesterfield District.?House ?Alexander icQucen, English. Clarendu*.?House?S. W. Nelson lid J. . R cluirdson. Jr. Cuesi*kr District.?Senate? Sam'l MeAli'cy; 'ouse?C. D. Milton, W. P. Gill, and J. 11. filooii. Christ Church.?Senate?Thomas M. Wag- , ?r; House? D. Bailey. Darlinoton District.? Senate?J. P. Ziin- t or man; House?D. G. Wood, R. L. lluri and 11. Wilds. Kdgefiki.d District.?House?'A. W. Car- I 1 le, Jus. Black well, M C. M. I Iiinininnd, W. ! rcsjg. Robert Mcrriweather and Abram Joni-s. | Fairfield.?Senate?N. A. Pony ; House? . B. Roylston, 11. II. Clmkcnnd Wm. Bratton. Greknvile Di?tiwct?Senate?J. L. West- 1 orelaiid ; House?J. \V. 8iok?s, B. F. Perry, i f. A. Mooiicy und Nathaniel Morgan. Korrv District.?Senate?Janus Bcaly, ouse?W. J. Graham. Kkhriiaw District?Senate ?Jntncs Chcs- | 1 it. Junior; House ? Win. M. Shannon nnd A. ) . Boy km. ^ i 1 I AtinENB District.?House?A. C. Fuller, ' 1 lludtfcns, II. Curler and C. P. Sullivan. 1 1 Lancaster District.?Senate?George MeC. . 1 ^ithers|ioon ; House?W. C. Cnuthcn and J. I . K. B.Ik Lexixoton.? Senate?John Fox ; House?G. . lull.-r and Jacob Sivygart. Maiii.nono Disrnicr?House?A. G. ?!ohnn and P. 11. Melxiurin. Maiiimv I)irroirr ?V#nn/^ ? Ui-nmniin (suiiau ouse?W. S. Mullins, l<evi I/'ji'tl and John ' . mi:Cull. Xkwdkrrt.- Senate--A. C. Gnrlin^ton: limine ' L. J. Jour*, T. II. Iluthcrlurd an J G. G. D?- j ! ralr. J . Orange Parish.?Senate?Donald H. Barton; ouse?I?r. J. II. O'Cuiii nnd John II. Folder. I 1 Piukni District?House?J. A. Doyle, J. A. mli y, Jr., and .1. II Ani'drr. Pkimck William*?House?Williatu F. Wi- ' f nnd George I*. Elliot. Richland District.? #/????VVndo Ilsmp- ' i, Jr., Win. Wallace, \V. S. Goodivynnnd Allen ' Green. Spartanburg District?House?.I. \V. Mil- 1 .J. Win-niith, O. E. El wards, Jarner Furrow J O. |\ Kiilo. ' Sumter District.?House?j. T. Gri-cn, J. . Blinding nini A. C. Spain. St. 1'iiiLirsAMi St. Michaels?Senate?\v. 1 . I'oru r ; limine?II Veinloii, J. Johnson, Jr , Simmon*, T. Y. Simmons, Jr., \V. G. I)eas*nre, N. M ichill, E. McCraJy, F D llieli- ' iron, J. G. Blum, C. G. Mriniiiinscr, .1. .J. I leas, II. King, E. M. Whiting, J. J. Pope, I ' ., J. J MeCartcr, J. .1. IVlligrcw, F. Dune i ' I II, \\ . S. \ uiuiir. St. james Santkk.? Senate?A. Mnxyik ; j ou.se.? A. .1. McCit-II.ui St. Srr.ruE.N* Parish.? Senate?Piter P. niteau; House ? P. K. Poreher. St. I'ai'u Parimi?Colleton.? Senate ?15. rry; House.?J. C. Wlndev. St. Aniirkwi Parish.? Senate?\v. 1. Bull; i ' in/M-W. W. McD-d. Sr. Matthew*.? House?Oliu m. D.intz'er. ' St. George's Parish.?House ? Will.am M. in!i-r Sr J\mks Goose grkkk. ? Senate ? Win. Mil r.l; House?Joseph Murray. St Johns Colleton.?House ? e. Bryan and 'ill am I'M.iic*. sr Thomas a\u St Dennis?House?j, k i nnntt. Sr Bartholomew*?House ?Carlos Tiaccv. 1 (i Green itiiJ Jiw DilBmu*. St. Peters. ? Senat ?AipiJIn II Johnston; tt ..^. r> u .?..a ii... i> t> .. St lliLCNt.?limine?l..sci?h I >. 1 *? !>? . St I.ukk ?Semite?U. L. Tdliuj hast: lluu*c I tanning Kirk I'mon District.?Senate?J, F. flint; llouee J. M. Gudbcrry, Robert Realty ntnt Thus. II. I.T. York District.?Senate ?R. li. Mv'-aw; au*e?I. C. Chamber*1, W . C. Hlack, A. N\ hite ill KI ward Moore. This Soundings for tiik Ati.anticTclkgrapii. ' 'I lie following account, u rltrii h\ nit nfliivr of ) e United Stntir t>l<nuier Arctic, in relation lotlir innlines lor the Atlillilie It-legrnph, addressed to e editor ol tile lllustlilted I.mdon Nriia, will be ad with interest: ' Not a single rook lias been met witli, lint a | or* . It? of {{ravel or Rind lias been brought up but it pears us it Nature bad |iiovided u bed Vn I as a >ow lutuU,' to use Maury's own words,for the ex ess purpose of iccciving a telegraph cable. "Ideal. Rvrrytunn sajs that lie is satisfied thnt e It ad, with the sounding apparatus. lias frequentburitd itself tell or fifteen feet deep ill th > soft nterinl, and h<* doubts tint tliat tbe cable w.ll like- , i?c sink, and unbed itself in n similar manner. | lie greatest depth attained has been two thousand id seventy futboins, about two and a third miles; i it |n-rha|Mi the most remarkable and at the same lie the most satisfactory result is the perfect eon nation winch these oouodiuga fcive of tlie opiiuoti l.t. Maury as to the existence of u groat fiat or vel at the bottom ol the ocean, unparalleled l.y ty thing on the surface ol the earth, mid which he opnMca to name 'The Telegraph Plateau ' Km mre than thirteen hundred mile* the bottom of the ilantie, in the direc line ol our track, is found by lese soundings to present an almost unbroken tevi I ; ain. Nature bus thus placed no obstacle in the ay of this great undertaking which may not by I lutiou* perseverance be overcome; nay, rather, (it j e except the enormous length of the cable winch I ill he I'eOlliredt it Would m-oni ihnl llo? l>oo ?.. I-. I lie.wed ley the Atl.inlic cable presents absolutely wer engitji-ei ing difficulties than tin shorter route hough more em 11 pici, from the nature o( *' hut m) on which the M call terra Ilea I) cable must be id." Tiib Work ofo.nk I>av.?The Huston Travc'r says tlut the Associated Press of the Un'lcil i fates are making the most extensive and tliorigh preparations p. collect from all parts of the moil this side of the Itot-ky Mountains the result the Presidential election on the fourth day of next lonth. In the State of Pennsylvania, for instnncc, ere is a very largo extent of territory with, in my places, had roads. In this State alone swell thousand dollars will be expended, and if there no failure of agents, a decisive indication ol le result there will, at an early hour tho next , orning, be obtained. The same may he said ot 10 great State of New York. As soon, therefore, i the |K>'ls close on the fourth day ol November rxt, in all parts of the Union the work will begin, j orses, locomotives and electric telegraph will col ct and carry to a common centre the returns of ic various Stales, where they will be put into shape id again transmitted to eveiy State and city ol the < jiion traversed by tho telegraphic wire. YVxtbr Paoor Tissues?Payne, the celebrated ! retieli chemist, ha* given tins reccipe tor renderg tissues water-proof: Dissolve two pounds and a tlf of alum in four gallons of water; dissolve, also, a se|>arntc vessel, the same weight of ncetate of ad in tho same quantity of water. When both 0 thoroughly dissolved, mix the solutions togcthand when the sulphate of lead resulting from is mixturo has been peroipiutcd to the bottom of ic vessel umtei the lorni of powder, pour of)' the ilulion and piungo into it the tissue to be render1 water proof. Wash and rub it well during a w minutes, and hang it in the air to dry. Twrn- j r thousand tissues aro now being prepared in this i uinner for ihs French si my Jinn i twnni lvajiia r^uvtlvn.? /i it /i i'irrim now awaits in breathless suspense?if the noise ol a thousand mase-meetitig orstots can he so iescrib ed?the g.ent event of the election, and Pennsylvania is the principal battle ground on which tin1 eontcst is being fought. "Mass meetings are held in all parts ol the State," rays our correspondent, "and all the mist available stump orators are imI orted in, with appointments made lor them week* ahead." If Pennsylvania is true to its history, it* vote ought not to be undecided in sueli a contest ai the present one, and Williutn Petin, the (Junker, ought to tie allowed to speak out of the grave in favor of the nou-extentioiiist candidate. Some letters have appeared in our columns lately to the edict that we have been mistaken in supposing that the northern States are so serious on the slavery question, and that these Slat<-s w ill never do anything which will Involve the si ghest risk ol a dissolution of the Un'on, mul that those whu spread tins.- reports about them are abolitionist fanatics. The general purport of these letters is, that "the North" loves the Union first and freedom next, and that, while it will welcome any relief ol slavery that comes without the slightest political danger, it will never make political sacrifices tor it. Such a view of the |?oliey of "the North" makes very little difference between the Northern, or the Republican, and the democratic parly. The il< ni ncratic pniy docj not like slavery in itself, hut it allies itself with t for the sake of the American Union and American greatness. The Union is, according to this account, the first eons delation with nil the great American parties; find, so long as llic Union is bolstered up. we lire told that "the North" is, niter nil, comparatively cool nnd indifferent on the question of slavery. Rut ilio very facts >f the last American Congress and the temporary dead lock tell a d ffi icnt woiy from thi?, and we hope the foithcoming Presidential election will teli the same.? /^miloii Timet. October I. The Presidential Ki.kction ?The f llowing is nsumnmiy ol the laws atnl constitutional requirements in the election ol a President nnd Vice President: 1. Klectors elected on the first Tuesday after the first Monday of November. 2. Rhetors meet on the fust Wednesday in 1 >c:cinbcr and cast their votes. They then sign three . criitieates?send a messenger with one copy to the President ol the Senate at Washington befo: e tin irst Wednesday in January?another by mail to die same person, mid the third deliver to the Untied States Dinlr.cl Judge where electors nicet. 3. Knelt State piovohs by law for filling any vacancy III the Hoard ot Klectors occasioned by nb cncc, death, or res gnat on. Such of the electors is are present are generally authorized to fill tiny rnenncy. t. The Governor gives notice to electors of their L-Uction before the fiist Wednesday in December. 5. On the second Wednesday in February, Coiigrcss shall be in sessi. >i ami o|h-u the returns. The President of the Senate shall, ill the presetici* ol the lloufc ol Ueprescuintivfs, opt n the eer ifieatc ol -eturus, and count the votes. The person liaviug [he greatest number of votes 'or President, if such [lumber be a majority of the whole number of decors. shall be President. v ii in> [m ir.hi n.is n mijoiiiy ns noove, the jhoico is to be made from the lliree highest returnlmI. Tlie tncnibera of the II-mum-, by State*, form ihcnuclvcs into IClcctoial Committees, and the majority dcWrmile wliicli IS tn bo the choice of the state?each Slate having only one vote. 7. If intiher of the candidates pit a in ijoritv of llie States beli.vc the dlli ol March, then the \ tooIVi s dent shall act is l'i. * dent. 8. It the people do not elect through the I 111. e lors a Vice l'lesidetit, then the Senate of the 1 ailed Stan s shall in.-lie the clccti.nl tr-mi the tv\ . I. all est candidate! return. .1 to them by the clcvlots. A srnmct.k Man. ? The Unit, .hilm M. Halts, ill declining t i accept a challenge fioin U. A. I'lV* nr, esq , ta light a duel, m.ikt s the fallowilia s, ns bh remarks: "Your I fe could Hot he the valui "fa pin's p.. nt in me, and I -nil sure I should derive no comfort I out making y ui site a widow or your child: ill latheiless ? there hire I have tin ihsite to t. ke it ; wlnst uiy own life is tot only of value to me, tut il.dsp lisatile to the silppait and Itapp.iters ol my lamily, nit I I hope to be ns- In) to n.y eotintry iherc'ore I am not d r(w#ed to place it at your dis pub.il.11 The Pociry of (.'onimene. The lion. Kdwnid Everett, whose l?ri 1 limitt genius give> a golden tinge <>f | ?.o11 \ lo everything it touches, ilius speaks ul Commerce in his laie beautiful speech at tlie Penbody testimonial : "Track its Iiistory for a moment from the earliest period. In the infancy of the world its caravans, like gigantic bilk worms, went creeping through the arid wastes of Asia and Africa w ilh ihe:* intiiiitcMin d legs, arid hound the human family logcthei in those vast regions as they hind it together uow. Its colonial establishments scattered the ( recian culture all round the shores of tin Mediterranean, and earned the adventurerof Tyre and Carthage to tire Noith of En rope and the South ot Africa. I he- walled cities of the middle ages prevented the art> and refinements of life from hving trampled out of existence under the iron heel of the feudal powers. The ilatisc Towns were the bulwark of liberty and property in the north and west of Europe tor ages. The germ of the representative system spring from the municipal franchises of the bor ouglis. At the revival of letters the nmr chant princes of Florence received the fugitive arts of Greece into their palaces. Tin spirit of commercial adventure produced that movement in tho fifteenth century which carried Columbus to America, and Vasco di Oama around the Capo of Good Hope. The deep foundations of tho mod ern system of international law were laid in interests and rights of commerce, and tin necessity of protecting them. "Commerce sprinkled the treasures of the newly found Indies throughout ih< Western nations; it nerved the ami of cm and religious liberty in the I'roiesianl world ? it gradually rallied the cujoiiia system of Europe to the nils of the cartl and with it the elements of future iridepen dent, civilized republican governments it I... -I I 1 ? - o . i?..i ?> in ml oil III we lIHt'll C>ll IIIU pUSl Wliat in it that gives vigor to the eivili/.a tion of the present day but the world widt extension of commercial intercourse, bt which all tho products of the enrth and o the ocean, 01 the soil, tho mine, of tin loom, of the foigo, of bounteous nature creative ait and untiring industry, art brought l?y the agencies ol commerce inl< the universal mailed of demand and supply No matter in what region a desirable pro duct is bestowe I on man by a liberal pro* idence, or fabricated by human skill; it ma; clothe tho hills of China with its fragran foliage; it may glitter in the golden sand of California; it may wallow in tho depth cf tho Arctic seas; it may ripen and wdiitci in tho fertile plains of the sunny South; i may spring forth fiont the flying shuttlos c Manche&lur in England, or Manchester ii America?tho great w,orld magnate c commerce attracts it alike, and gathers i all up for the setvico of map " lsrauiiucs in me untied siaies. Among llie multitudinous peoples tli make up the American public, tlicro ' ; none ;notu surrounded with intercut tin 1 that portion compiling tlio children of 1 ' J rael. In a very few years the insignifica i I part which they once constituted lias increii > I cd to perhaps over a quarter of a inillio 1 mostly, it is believed of German birth, at | j at the | resent lime they have synagogu in all of our larger cities, to which, in obec j enco to their ancient laws, the devo throng at festive seasons such as that whit they havojust celebrated. They are amor i the most frugal of our city population, ni , in most instances exhibit a capacity hi emulation for good citizenship unexcelh by any class among u*. Iu the city Baltimore tlrcy have four synagogues, hi ! a large number of those who adhere to tl ' ancient custom* are scattered through oi 1 midst. Adhering rigidly to the landman of a faith that was founded in holinc when the Chaldean worshipped the "lie of heaven*' in the alluvial plains of Me* potainia and Kgypl grovelled in itsinfam around the muddy idols of the Nile, tin I possess a hond of union which, while it c etnpts them from degenerating into a laetit to ho used politically or socially by the rl signing of other organizations, facilitat that united and intelligent action in in* ters of their own welfare which has bc? I taught them by the persecutions of pa , ngc*. resulting alike from the lawlessnc i ofclamoiing mobs, atid the harsh hand ! avaricious despotism. In this is possih : to be found the reason why the children j Israel have so truthfully discerned ai ' firmly resisted the blandishments of at I political party which tended to bring the as a clfl?s into a conflict of national prej I dices. We can bear chceiful tustiinoi I that they avoided any such alliances in oi midst, and if we may be allowed to aigi ' from their conduct here what, by parilv < reasoning, it must be elsew here, there is i ' class of our people, compiisiug so large proportion of adopted citizens, whoexeici ilie franchise legally vested in them with mere sin>? e aim to the welfare of the coin try which has opened its doors to their pe scented tace, and which they have chore as the home of their adoption. jsul our ot'jcct in pursuing these rcfl?* lions was not to uttor a pan.gyric on 01 IIebrew fellow citizens, but to place befo the reader a brief glimpse of tlieir c?>iul lion in the l.'nited States fo-m a conleu porary journal, the New York Hxpies Thai paper remarks: "Hidden away, as it were, behind ll great ma.*s of our Christian inhabitant llier is a very large population of Jew i people shut up nhun*t III themselves, p' serving their own customs, practicing lire | own sublime and glorious religion, an j keeping up quietly, hut l.iitlifitllv, the cei 1 monies ami trailiti ns that have conie dow to thorn for their forefathers. Observii their Salrhath, when all the test of m popul ition i> lui?i!\ engaged iit trallic at business. the lew* hoe hut few Chrisliai as visitors to tlo-ir places of worship; at the svnag >g io> tetnaitiiirg close 1 tip Sundav, when people so disposed usual investigate the religious ceremonies of tin neighbor*, hut a small portion of our eil zens comparatively know ati\thing abo the very iinei< sting Jewislr ceremonial la , . ,, ? ami practices. ' lire number of Jews in the h'niti Stales exceeds a quarter of a million, at in tlie State of New \ ork there are abo forty thousand, of whom neatly se\e i eighths reside in the Empire City. I I e.siiniatu i? arrived at not hv any censusthe taking of which is forbidden in ll Jewish law?but by lire amount of unlea encd bread consumed at the season of ll l'a-sover. At that time, for one week, i Jew is peruiuit I ioavetre 1 hrcii 1 lie I ';? ?> >ver 11r n 1 > baked i 11 I ?rj>n lie ovens, and is ilea It mil tu all apply ii families at the rate of live pounds for eve mail, woman ami cliihl. My the law tie ate all i>1?1 ig? 1 to eat it, ami we understHi that hnl very few ?j ihaps not five litl dr ' in the whole country ?neglect to fulfil tin obligations in this particular. Thercfoi by the amount of I'assovcr bread con-niiu it is very easy to compute the number the faithful children of Israel iu the con try." "In New York city the Jews pos<u twenty synagogues, besides one in NV li nn-burg and one in Urooklvn. Sevan of tliese synagogues, for size and architect I ral beauty, will hear comparison v> i111 t eh arches of the Christian denomin niol The principal ones are situated m I'rosl tiieen, Noifolk, \\ ooster, Clinton ami Kr I' w el fill stieets. In West 28ih street tin I is a huge ami \\? il condncte-l .lewisli lb pitiil, ami ahly taught schools are attach to several of the s; nagoguiM.? lioltitrw American. Tiik Crvrtt.u. Si x,? All scientific in I have maintained that there must he a ? ? I tral point, if not a centra! suit, aroii I vvhiili the whole universe revolves. Mat i ler, who is unmiesMotiubly one of the gre e>l astrouomeis ever known, has given ll . pubject his special attention; and he I f come to the conclusion tliat^ Aloyane, t principal Mar in the group known an i s 1 'leiades, now occupies the centre of gra < iv, and i-t at present the grand cent I Min around wlncli llio whole Mairy o a verse revolves. Tliis is one of the most , : teiesling and important astronomical ; i nouneemeiiU ever made, though it is v< > likely that, hut for tlie eminent seienl I position of the author, it would he treal ' as visionary. Another interesting Ma tnnnl in tins Conuexioti is made by ' Thompson, one of the physicists who, w t Car not, Soulo, Met er, and others, has lat s Iv contiihuted toward establishing the n s lions between heat and mechanical foi ii and who has extended his researches to t heat emitted hy tlio sun; which hem, >f observes, corres|ioii<ls to a development ii mechanical force, which, in tlie space if about one hundred years, is equivalent t the whole active force requiicd to prod | movement of v] the planet*. r An Elegant Cuisine.?The annexed account of a splendid kitchen we obtain from the Paris cot re; pondent of one of the Eastern papers. The French lady must be | some such character as Theresa in the Wil t l helm Meister of Goethe, who therein poet; iscs housewifery at a most extravagant rate: (i ! There resides in the Rue de la Ohausaee i(j d'Anlin, in Pari*, a worthy lady who makes a single apaitmetil in her house more eleII gaiit than all the rest combined. This ?t g'and apartment i*?the kitchen. Wheneeer this lady receives company, all sorts ol ingenious dIhiis are formed and every de> scriplion of little artilices employed to inI iluce their guests, without ac.ually asking >(j them, to have a peep at llii* den, generally o|- kept as much as possible in the back ground ( I for obvious reasons. (Nothing is so dia gutting to a true epicure as the smell ol j cookery.) In most bouses, therefore, the l_, kitchen is as far distant from '.he drawing^ ! rro-.i as possible. lu this instance, on the contrary, the local topography is so arranged, that many persons wishing to go out, mistake the door, and just as they are about hastily ' backing out. are accosted by the most dai zling of cooks, who cries, with a smiling >n 1 . i ^ i air, ' It's the kitchen. Monsieur, (or Mad ame,) there's no harm ! Walk in, if you please !" I'v this time the glance of the i visitor has taken in all sorts of unexpected t things hung around the room,and he is in s I duced to enter this curious boudoir kitchen, j The walls and the floor are composed of . mosaic bricks of numerous colors, the pre j- vailing being blue and w hite. Gas burn ers issue from rare and beautiful china , saucers, or burn through the artificial wicks j of antique lamps. |( The dressers and closets aie covered with ^ burtiisbed copper, and contain the thousand i ami otic ulfiisils of the cuisine, all shining j I I ' e? with dazzling polish; the kitchen giil being a Highland las^, who spares neither biick dust nor muscle in keeping up the proud I i*luiI. ?I ioit f.>? ? !? ? I -- ' ? ^ .. , viviniHir^ ?M 111*1 lUllUHY. What is most surprising in litis model -k kitchen is to see the sauce pans and gridirons, bright as so many new matches, hung up with rose colored ribbons. Evidcntly these utensils consume more ribbon 1 than even Mndame's bonnet. c A short time ago the friends of the pro (r piietro.sa of this simple establishment beggod her to give a breakfast in this elegant U kitchen. She consented on one condition: j the guests should, themselves, cook the bicakfast they weio to est, and afterwards j they weie to wash the dishes and put everything ba< k in the same order in w hich they 10 . ... . * found it. The stipulation was stoically ac' ; cepted. Two ladies who have four to five hundred thousand francs a year to spend, the lady of an admiral, a duchess, and the j wives of twofou-ign ministers, were present on the occasion and took part in the novel proceedings. The dish washing of these fashionable butleillies must have been amusn 'na* Tiik Tomb ok Pizauuo.?In the crypt under the high altar are deposited the re' " mains of the celebrated Pizarro, who was assassinated in the Palace hard by. A ' small piece of silver, which 1 dropped into ' the hand of the attending sacii&tan, procur! t-d me admission into the crypt. Descending a few steps, I entered a small place, u some twenty feet long, quite light and whitewashed, and which smell ami looked 'J so much like a coiufoitable wine cellar, that I caught myself more than once looking ut round for the bins and bottles. The first . object 1 saw was a large square tomb, sur"" mounted by the reel figure of an ahbott, and clo-c bv. in a narrow nneninrr in the j|(, i wall, 1 noticed what R|vpeared u> me to Ik1 a collection ?.f dusty lag*, hut a closer in< u sp.-ction prove 1 that tliis was nil that re mained of the renowned conqueror of Peru, ( Me ha* slili <?n hi in the clothes and shoe? which lie wore at the time ol his a-sassiiiH lion. < ?f course his hotly is nothing hut n , v skeleton covered with dried flesh and skin, 1 ! so that no features are discernible. Tin ' j body is covered with the remains of what V was white linen, swathed round liitll, bul " the dust of centuries has collected on it. anil 'j" turned it to a light brown color, and it al ' inost pulverizes when touched. The body is placet! on a narrow pieco of plank, in a sloping position, and has been placed in this hole merely t ? put it out of the way The folks in Lima do not think anything of the remains of poor l'izarro, and I dart 1 say that a little money, judiciously invest ed, would procure for anv curiositv huntet the whole of his remains.?A Iiambltfron Sidney to Southampton. ?*t I *1,1 * ,rt, Tiik Htsos ok Saturn*.--In the recently >s i?-ued work entitled "The New Theory o t.(j Creation and Deluge," it is stated that it ii >rf probable that the lings which surioum Saturn are composed of water, snow, o ice, which at some future time may desceix en ' an I deluge that planet, a- ours was ilehlgci n in the days t>t Noah. It would now ap nd pear that such ail event is likely to taki hI place sooner than was anticipated; for Si at- David lire writer says that Mr. Otto 8tuv< his and Mr. Bond have lately studied with tli ias great Munich telescope, at the Observatory he ' of Pulk twny, the third ring of Saturn he which Mr. Ram-tle anil Mr. Bond discover vi ( <! io be fluid; ami tlial these astronomer ral are of opinion that this fluid ring is not c ni verv recent formation; that it is not subjec in- to rapid change, and they have come loth ? ' extraordinary couelusiotr thai the inne t> border of the ring has since the limo <i die Hoggins been gradually approaching t led tlio bodv of Saturn, and that we may ex ite- pect. sooner or later, perhaps in a dozen r ilr years, to ste the rings united with tiro bod dli of lire j.buret. An English Miskk.? Daniel Dance ce- when he had ?3,000 a-year, used to heg l',e | pinch of anuff from all his fnemls, am hr* when his box was full, bartered its contenl for a tallow candle. But bis partimonioi ot ingenuity appears contemptible in corr to | pari>on with that of the Russian miser, wli uc* learned to baik tliat he might avoid the e: ! pcrtse of k*?ping * | Lafayette.? During his encampment in the neighborhood of Philadelphia, Washi ington whs repeatedly at dial city, making himself acquainted with the military capa, bilities of the place,' and its surrounding | country, and directing the construction of fortifications on the rircr. In one of these visits he became acquainti o*l with the young Marquis de Layfaelle, who had recently arrived from France in i company with a number of Fiench, Gerj man and Polish officers, among whom was F Baron de Kalb. The Marquis wai not . quite twenty years of ago?he had already been married nearly three years to a lady of rank and fortune. Full of the romance of liberty, he had torn himself from his I youthful bride, turned his hack upon the gayeliea and splendors of a court, and, in f defiance of impediments and difficulties f . multiplied in his path, had made his way to America to join its hazardous fortunes. lie sent in his letters of recommendation to Mr. Lovell, chairman of the committee ol foreign affairs, and applied the next day i at the door of Congress to know his success. Mr. Love'I answered that Congress was embarrassed bv a number of foreign applications, many without merit. Lafayi etle immediately sent in I lie following note: "After my sacrifices, 1 have the right to ask i! two favors: one is to serve at my own expense; i he other is to commence by serving as a volunteer." This simple ap|>eal had its effect; it called attention to his peculiar case, and Congress resolved on the 31st of July, that, in consideration of his zeal, his illustrious family and connections, he should have the rank of Major tieneral in the army of the I'nited States. It was at a pub lie dinner where a number of members of Congress were present that Lafayette first saw Washington, lie immediately knew him, he said, from the officers who *ur roiin<b-<l bim tiv lii? i> ...........1!- - 1 I ? ...? V 111111 n i n 11 i ^ nil nnu person. When llm pnrty wait brexkin : up. Washington look liim aside, complimented Ikiin in u giacious manner on his disinterested zeal and the genero?ity of hid con duct, and invited him to make hi. headquarter, his home. "I cannot promise you the luxuries of a court," said he. "put as \ I \ou have Itccome an American soldier, you ' I xs ill doubtless acco ninodale yourself to the j f.tre of an American army." Singulak Whale Kioiit.?A whale six- : I ty two feel long was picked up at sea al?oui j three weeks ago, and taken ashore at Nybster, some twelve miles from Wick. It j seems that the whale was not diifled dead ! from the Greenland Seas, hut that he had fallen in single combat with another mons j ' ler of the *ea?. The conflict, which took I ' place about a mile and a half from the shore, and which was witnessed from the land b; | a number of fishermen and others, is de- ' scribed as having been protracted and bloody. The two motis'ers ko, t battling with each other, at times with their heads and at times with their tails, raising a trc mendous spray for a distance of many yards. After a fierce and close encounter they would each retreat for a considerable dis- j tance, and after a brio.' rest would again ' meet in collision, approaching each other ( with locomotive speed at the rate of some i i tWOMV t>r thirtv mile. ?n limit- f ?t> .??- ! covering from the stunning effects of such j an attack they would again resume the fight, rising up into the water, springing tip fie.::: ten to twenty feet, an J coming down ' on each oilier with fearful violence. Mean- i while, the sea f?>r some distance round about had assumed a red color, indicating i that an immense quantity of blood had been ' shed. For two hours the battle was proi longed; at the close of which one of the whales became motionless, and the other j retired from the field of battle. Next . morning the whale referred to was found ! not far from the spot whero tho engagei incut took place, and from various marks j i on his body, including a broken jaw bone, | i j there is no reason to doubt that he was one , i of the two belligerents of the previous af | ternoon.?\<>rlhcm [Scotland) l?n*iyn. (rKSCRAL ToUTLKHKN's FaTUSR IN* L.vw. | ?Mow iik I,uvk* his DAiGiirs.it.? A letj ter from Moscow, published in the London (Jlobe, says: You perhaps know the pret j tv story about Todllebeii's wife and father ! i in-law. The latter, a rich merchant of the name of Hanf, did not much like his daughter's marriage with the vound cadet of en. ginecrs. I>uring the siege of Sebastopol, : however, thick and fast came the tidings r I which blotted out the lieutenant, the Cap- ' j tain, the colonel, and gave Hanf a general for a son in law. "Daughter, I love Tod- j tleben for your sake." s'?ys the worthy nrer. I chant. Suddenly Hanf himself w ts creaC ted a baron by Nicholas, in consideration of the son in law's services. The new noble I ; forthwith had an inscription attached to t the front of his dwelling, froin which lie re I ; moved Ins business, (it had till then heen carried on there;) the inscription ran thus: "Mouse of the Maron Hanf." One day two , ' officers called at Todtleben's and asked "Was M * lame at home?" entering before p the maid servant knew what to reply. The p wife happened to be coming d >wn stairs at the moment; the offices bowed low, and one of them said, "Excuse our s i-it; it is to ~ ,?ii i... i l r .1. _ >uu <tv/ icii Jt/Iii iiMi*umiu it lilt* Grand Duke Con-tantine, und my brother f here, the Grand Duke Nicholas could nol t leave the crpitnl wrthout offering our re, spec*.* and congratulations to hi) wife." They then withdrew. \\ lien the father in( law heard this *?'d lie, "Daughter, I love Q yon still better for the sake of Todtlehen." j., A Dutchman whose dictionary definition of the word rnmblrr, :?s near as he cotdd recollect, was vaynkonrf, dining with Johnson, and wishing to show his re*|wet for the { author of The Rambler,' dr ink his health ' in the>e words?Your health, Mr. Yaga rbon'1, it. ts A innn praising porter said it was tortis eellent a beverage that it always made him t- I fat. **! have seen the lime.** ?aid another, iO "when it alwavs made yon lean." "When!" t- asked the eulogist. "Last night nguinst a wall" Many Indie* have two face*, one to sleep in, and the other to show in company. The first is generally reserved for cold uiutlon and a husband, and the other for company and balls. Did wives take half the trouble to please their husband* that they do strangers, the demand for divorces would "experience a change." The most treacherous glass in nature is a "glass of brandy"?it reflect* back death instead of your image. A Wirx'e Bills.?Vol. 8th of Cuebing's Reports contains an opinion on a case where a mesmeric physician sued a husband for service rendered the wife in his absence. It is to tho etfect that "the law doe* not recognise the dreams, visions, or revelations ofa woman in the mesmoric sleep, as neceesalies for a wife, for which the hiuband, without his consent, can be made to pay. These are fancy articles, which those who have money of their own to dispose of may purchase if tliev think proper; but tbey are not necessaries, known to the law, for which the wife can pledge the credit of her husband." Artificial Ice.?An ice machine has just been completed at tbe Cuyahoga iron wotks, Cleveland, Obio, which is capable of producing one ton of solid crystal ice in twenty hour*. A trial lias recently been made with the above result while tbe mercury stood at 80 degrees in the apartment. The estimated expense of manufacturing ice by such a machine is 85 per ton, or onefourth of a cent per pound. "Tins Animal," said an itinerant showman, "is the royal African hyena, measuring fourteen feet from the tip of his none to the end of his tail, aud the same length back again, making in all twenty-eight !e?t. He cries in the woods in the night wason like a human beinir in disir.-n* ?in,t t1.?? *!? CI - I _ ??" vour? ail that come to *1iis assistance?a sad instnfice of ilie depravity of human na? tn re." The Origin or a Fashion.?There U a smile going round Europe, (my* the Daily News,) at the simplicity of the ladies of England, France, and America, in their u-nrahip of Parish fashions. Because a beautiful young Empress found it convenient to revive the fashion of full petticoats, what must old dowagers and young maidens do but copy the dress without the excuse! A contemporary tells a good joke about a verdant limb of the law, who resided upon Nanticoke Creek, an ind the absence of the pastor acted as clerk. He had a strange way of manufacturing words when at a loss for the right one. Well, upon a certain occasion, when ho deemed his services in request, he undertook to give out a hymn, in which the word Moxology' occurred; as he could not get hold of the word, he requested the congregation to sing 'four verses and a tockdnlojer." A Rotal Matiress.?The ex King Louis of Bavaria, who recently attained his seventieth year, was, a few days ago, waited on at his chateau at Ludwigshahe, in the Palatinate, by a deputation frcra Strasburg, in which place he was born, who paid their respects to him on the occasion.. The King received them most kindly, promised to vi.-il their city, and related to them a curious circumstance. At the time of his birth, in August, 1TSC. his father, who was then only Prince des Deux Pont*, commanded the Alsace regiment in the service of France, which was in the garrison at Strasburg; and, a few days after the birth, he was astonished to see that all his grenadiers had cut off tbeir beards and moustaches. On inquiring why they had done so, one of the men stepped forward and said that they had determined to beg his acceptance of a velvet mattress for the new born prince, and that they had stufled it with their beards and moustache*! I have the mattress still," cried the King, 'and will show it to you!" The matlre*a was pr- duced, and the King added. "I do not think that there is in tho world a bed which can be called more strictly military than that!"' Ka.TiK.siso Tcbkets.?Tl;c alimentary properties of charcoal me very gieat; indeed, it luis been asserted lliat domestic fowls inay be fattened on it without any other food, and that, too, in n shatter time than on the most nutritious gmiuv in an experiment made to test the value of the article, four turkeys were taken and confined in >? {>en, and fed on meal, boiled potatoes and oats. Four others of tho same brood were Also confined nt the same time in another pen, and fed daily on the same hi tides, but with ouo pint of very finely pulverised charcoal mixed with their meal and potatoes; they had also a plentiful supply of broken charcoal in their pen. Tho eight were killed on the same day, and there was a disTerence of one and a half pounds each in favor of the fowls which i had been supplied with the charcoal/ they being much the fatter and the meat greatly superior in point of tenderness and flavor. This would appear to establish, beyond a doubt, the benefit of charcoal for fattening purposes. Tilt Aktios or the Widows.?"Do yon think moire antique becoming on a widow!'* said the young widow to Mrs, Partington, as she exhibited a mourning dress elaborateI IV tl imined and k l<.\nn*l nif ihs 1?Im! rnAila The old Ittily scanned her attentively Q through her glasses before the answered; "More antic!" tlrid the at length, nml Iter finger was raised up like a note of exclamation. "I should think lo?l nnlio vonld he nv>re becoming in n widow. Widows more antic mult be them spoke of br Paul to Tun??thy, who wax wanton and will marry* Well, well, let Vm. thnt.gh where a woman ( ha* oirce married with a congealing and warm hear:"?looking straight at the rigid profile of the corporal on the wall?"and one that beats resp??n*ibil:tf to her own, I she will newer want to enter the naaritlrsft tat* a^fxin."