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-We will eUMg to se Pillar of the Temple of our Liberfles, and If Is mues fall, we wli Perish amidas she tains. vbev 4 t84.9 Ageftel vot os,8.Ccttr4,14.q.a IEDOZIpUBLU ADVEBTISIER at W. .DURISOE.PROPRIETOlO. TERMS. Thee Dollarsperanaum, Irpaid in edewue amaThre Dellas and Filly Cents. if not pail beare the * ation of Sax Months from th ida Sahus( . oud Por Dollars if ae Ysi' i twelwe Months. Subscriber. ou 6taeawi are requited to pay in adesae. te aSii*a received for less than o gVV, and nop per isconaued until all arrear a are p ' ,except at the option of the Pub -An sabenipliss will be continued unle. @haWs Edeued befoe the 6zpiration of the Procuring 6we Subscribers anC V rsq tsible for thesame,Shallreceive , ith copy gretis. "AdesildassattcoDpicuously inserted at 62 esto per square.(8 lnes, orless, ) for the fira inertion, and 431 cents, for eacb continamace 'lass bliished Monthly, orqnarterly wiil be ' i 1 per square for esetS insertaOn. Ad vsrtiementa ntot haviug the number of inser tione maried on them, will be continued unt crdeed out, and charged accordingly. - 'All ybrork done for persons laving at a dIstance, must be pad fOr at the time the wor) is done, er'the p'ayment seeured in the village Allessafeati s aemddressed to the Editor impsd wil be promptly and strictly auend .t~o. MISOELLANEOUS. - LAWYERS. . We hare once or twice already express ott oer views, burdy. in regard to the inoral 9bligations of Practitioners of the Law. Wbile We kn.ow no ebaracter so worty o( estne as the able, open. up ightlibersl Lawyer, of all small crea tares tfe Penifogger is to us the very smallest, and if criminal, he is the most criminal, because be does wrong, when his education peculiarly fits hium ao know rigL. The Lawyer, who is a knave. itt so frum deliberate calculatiou and preme ditated choice, and hence, from abe nature of his profession, which deals in forws and technicalsties remote from connon appre hension, he is the mos dangerous of all heaves. In no pursuit are ibo tenaptatisms to roguery and meanness so great as in she Lawnor an anyts it so easy to bide them from &~o detection of all but Lawyers, hence nose has been ever so distinguished gressagess and, fiaished rascality. The oaly safety for the public. when they find - out a knavish Lawyer. is to mark and drasb bim with the weight of general scorn. Once he betray., let him never be trued again. _ We invite aenaion to the jonowing remarks'of an eminent Judge now living, which bo:b Lawyers and Clients would do well to lay up. They wil bear reading over many times. Pros the Loadox Legal Obserr. DUTIES OF ATTORNEYS. The following charge of Mr. Justice Willis, in the Supreme Court at Mel bourne, respecting the duties of an attor nay, is extracted from the Sydney Herald e!2th May last: "I have unfortunately more than once bad occasion to cenaure the conduct of - some a the atorneyw of this cour, a..d have recently been compelled to strike one of the rolls (or refusing to explauin certain transactous with has cta. witich appear ed @t we dishonorable and unjust. Ia nay be well, therefore, if I avail nayself Of this ocasion, when apphcations have beeq made by genallemen to pracuCe in that branch of the profession. candidly to state what I conceive to be the duty of an at torney, solicitor and proctor Of Tbis court. I repudiate the common doctrine that it is.mertorious in a lawyer @like islexi bly to support the cause of his client, be it good or biad. An attorney ought I ahink. to tne utmost of his ability, to acquaint himself with the merats of evern case in which he is consultred. He should dis -courage suits foar frivolous and trivial do manads. He should never aitacht himnself to persons who, froma a pretended zenl egainst imposition or oppressaon, or through a pertinacious humor and an un reasonable jealousy of their most maintuo -rights, are iavolved in perpetual conten tion. Ho sh~iuld not, in deference to a weakthy or puwerfuil client, mucha less ror the sake of gain, under take a cause which domes not appear so he just. excepat the fact ' nwhich the merits turn, s uncertain, or the construction of law is doutstful ; and less still shoaski he support the best cause by falsehood, or prevarication, or suppres stun of ithe truth, or by laying ac unadue mtess on suspeetad evidence. He ought ~not to encourar*'r'(if avoidable) produce. bold and daring witnesses, dispaaed to make free with truth, that they may ensure v-c r~. He should sever overawe nor intimiate the adverse party. or take an - advantage of an oversight in his counsel or attorney, or of want of form in the pleadings, unless where te stantds on the defensive, andl the attack on has chtent i-, notorisi Injurious. Ho ought, not to mislead'uer -Impose oe the court, it in hia power, nor 'tlthe cause, nor enhance the ensts, thouW theb expense of his ad versary; no rappecal froms adecisio, unls he ls persuaded in his coosesure, and ad iIsed by his conel. tbai (what mnay some * times happen through the fall ibility of alI humaa :judicaturey tte determinaiom i erreoeous in poius of substantial justice. Snail insht eases as soon as judgment is -givener-the decree pronounced. ho should persuade his client to aquiesce : nay, i uhih tbs suit Is depeading. he receivet -esm~1stbeshat his elosents denand or do - * - fence" feI-oeaded, he should advise biam .s drqojp iatae with its ad ver esiy'; ad emeiveary be poor, el ha innen ininred be kneinehisjunsarighi widtheid or impeached, to make him ample teparationa. Should the decision be in fa vor of his client. but appear to Ie a hard i though just senene, he ouglht not to en- i courage him to take the utmost advantage I o the rigor or power of the law, while I equity or poverty call for compassion or abatemnat. I in criminal cases he should act with spirit and resolution against hardened and I I daring olfenders, but should be very cau tious not to injure nor oppress, and much more so not to add insult io severity. Process of law is ot-en slow, in order to p reserve the unwary or unskilful fromi be- . i tng surprise.i. and to afflrd the fuirer op portunity of bringing truth to light; but delays should never be indulged in where I a decision can be speedily obtained with-- a out deroatig fromni just;ce. In giving I advice on mortgages or purchases. or in g say money transactions, an attorney I should discourage every undue advantage of the ignorant. unwary. or necesritous.- a When the debtor is insolvent, the attorney should promote equality in payment.- r Where the debtor is unfortunate, the atior- C ney should dispose the creditor' to show 6 favor and compassion. Where debtor a shows himself to have been a designing vilrain. the attorney should shun all on- c necessary connection and communication with him. In settlements and nibrer fami- h ly transactions, secresy is more especially requisite. Great attention should be had C in disposing of estates by wills. so that no h creditor may remain for any length of time P unsatisfied, and that pence and harmony a miy be preserved among the children and a relatives of the testator. Care should be b taken at all times, and especially when d the testator's facutiies are in any wise im- d paired, to procure witnesses of unloubted to reputation to the execution of the will. t1 There are other matters within the scope A of an atoruey's duiv. which witho-at par ticulerising, will he best performed by his observing the golden rule of do toothers n4 a he would be done by. Thus will attornoy% :o free the profession from the reproach - ath m which unworthy members have stained it, S and be a lessing instead ofa curse to !he el community; the orinment and not the gi bane of society ; the faithful guardians of b the laws of their country. and best suppor- rn tors of our courts of justice Thai there al are many excellent attorneys I am able to d, testify, but that there are others of a very al different stamp, I am reluctantly bound to admit. It will always be my care. how ever, to support the upright, and uproot it the bad, and thus endeavour to preserve , without blemish or diorder the most , powerful engine for putoing the law% under L which we live into salutary oprration." a Freao he Rcester .Adeertiser. A DADY IN A - FIX." i OIL TUE FAaSNKS's DAUGH'TE. c Sometime in June last. a respectable and shriving farsuer, having an unexpected ' call to the city, did nout stop to '-clean ump" -in other words, to cham..te his dress fur his Sunday fixings-but hurried fl just a, ot he was, not apprehending that he aaa I likely to disturb the more ret-fied olfacto a ries of any tody by the negleci-.nuch less subject himseif to the ridicule of auv of the city hipeds. It so happened that his daughter, a beautiful creature, fmor-- i good sense than pride, was staying here at a friend's, at the time, but did not expect to see her father on that day, -or did he intend calling on her. The farmer, h: after perforinany. the more important bus- A ness that called him to the city, wen' into a store. whaerf he was immediately 6--lec ted by one of the clerks as the sub-ject of d sundry small polatoo quiizzing. taut of 0 which the victim appeared most Luarvel. it' 'iusly uncoanscious.0 A's good or ill lack would have it, nll p" the time this interesting sport beina enjoy- ' ed by this vender of fancy articles, the fr doaughter of the quizzed' was in the store ai with a large group ofhersex, and soan t' became conasciuous not only of the retsee Ii of her father, but als-, of the very laughable cl experimentt beitng essayed upon him. in i a tmomeut her face was in a glow, while cI her eyes flushed out uniwauted brilliatacy, n~ barn these were imeaeia'ely isucceeded by, s a marble like palene-ss. -hier maouth be- 5e camea more rigidly comprese'ed-ls glance el half p.awful, tal seot-rufot, a an 'areeted * towards the clerk, and Luciuda TI. was a' herself againa. The (ather pha.-ed on ci withoaut having~ disovered his daughter a nor did she seem desirous oaf maaking bitt d consins of her presence-why. was the 0 best known io herself. The evening following the ineidents , already .netrrated, there was a gay undt d. select party assemabled at she d welling of f~ one of our cilizens, etmoni wi.ich might rf have been seen the beautil Lujciuda and Y the magntanimous esperimnenter on the e sUpptoed credulity of her father. I' it would not have taken even a casual ii observer long to have discorvere.l that ih Lucinda's beauty of feature and no less 0. beautiful figure, had ,nade a most danger- na tos assault )n the heart of sh, aforesaid eC clerk. ludeed, before the conclusion of le the party, lie seemed. and decidedly was % a gone case-and the chances ucre nine- ml ty-ninie to Otto. but for the permission - i some day subsequeontly granted to call on ber at hter f(other's in the country, we rt should hayc l~eeen called on to chronicle aaother "Seam Patch's catastrophe." We 'will jus- slip over the occurrences of two long week.', and quietly seat o r- i solves wherewe please, provided the place y elected gives us a fair view of our eleuk and his esarmer. Well, there 'they are e eted each ala window of the Ano dwell- a ing of farmer T -....E Our hero of the scissors and yard-stick is looking unutterable at Lucinda, while a larcasmti smile playing round her lips. makes.him deem himself "monarch of all is surveos." It was a moment of deep uieret-'but suddenly the silence is roken by Lucinda who pointing with her aper finger towards the road, exclaims -"See, Mr. L.. what a queer looking nun there is making towards the house." "Delightful!" rejoined tle lover, "the dentical old fellow who affirded me no ittle amusement in the ciity the other day. -Never saw sucb a laughable old codger a my life! As I am a christian he is taing right into the parlor!" Sure enough to did come right in. and no sooner bud se entered the room than Lucinda rose, tnd turning it her lover. with overtrained politeness said, '-Permit me. Mr. L.. to nake you acquainted with toy father, who vas so fortunate as to conduce so greatly D vour amusement in the ety a few weeks i'o." Had ise waters of (otarrio conse ooming up the falls, thus appallingly eversing the order of nature, the lover oulu not have been more cotpletely tupified then ie was by this announce ment. His nether jaw fell down bolow his rava3-his eyes became fixed, anti so rild and haggard was bit look, that even a would not have known himself had a irror been held up to nature. This ould not last. The triumph of the beauty ad come, and the lover was but too sinfully sensible of it, therefore mastering 11 his courage, he rose anti without even nod, darted from the house-leaped into is buggy. and in a moment raised such a ust as to shut him sotn view. Scarcely id he breathe for the first mile of his flight; uo about midway of the second. te so far fostered his feelings as its tnttter. in a !oebegone tone. "bit. by thunder!" Novel Mode of Evading the Lw.-At camp meeting in Msssuchuseits, an igei.:ius tmode of retailing liqtor t a, devi d. A boat was drawn up in tte canal at auth Hiadley, and it was given out thtat se intended to make a trip at sir and a warter cents each psemwi. When the at was full, it woul sail down a few Kil, Until it got into tie next cooutatv when I on board wtere served with a lIaIss of rink. The boat would theu return fur other load. egroes.-We know of no set of beings i our connunity so happy and care free a the darkies-just enough to keep them eek and shiney, wish plenty of bacon to -ep govod their brawny prosportiOns. and master as a dernier resort in ca-e of sick ess. There is many a poor white devil Ito would like to -ltook black in Ite face" i these hard times. and would gladly ex tance market accomomolations and im unities for the comforttahle fixins of btud e.-Thero is nothing richer than their ill toned yow ! yow ! in chorus- anti eir negro songs. as they break upon the illness ofotar deserted city. is full of rude 1taught melodv. which is kept up day id uight-di-tsertationts are carried on by lem, ani disputtions deep hut decent. -eet us morning. noton and evenings. into Retorms and Repeal are taken tlp itn eir order. utnd discussed with all the rabity oh do white aemme.'-They ettn ct tore not for car-, the yellow (ever - the devil, tso that they "isat, a little ob sie ard ciren'utlattion its dere pocket." palachicola WI'atchnan. Inreluntary Balloonin.-The Curittr 'a Etats Units for Saturday relates a curi s itncident which occurred tiear Pari". con-equeuce of a balloon starting on its sn bootk, withotut the enttsenit or the ptro *;tsr. A large cneonrse of people hadi membled to see an aeronut take flight the regitos uf upper air, but, unafortutn elv, before he too~k his seat in she car, e ae:-ostat got lotose nnd thte grapipling ok, which was dangling ftom the tna ine, hitched inato tihe inadescribables u'f a y was gazing openmutuhed as thue as nding mass, and carried him up willy uly. 'rte women, as a matter osf cours'e, reamed atnd fainted, but the lad, whto, ems to have been a he no in is way asped the rutpe tightly with Isis handls ad eet. and with an awful rent in his oresaid, was introduceed by his ittflaied impatnin ino the upper circles. A fter short voyage the. balhtuon descendled and .ptonited thse little fellow safe and sountd No'el Premium--Amng the premisums sriutesd at an annual exhihition of a male Academy to Georgetowns was one .aumenllenace in the art tof cookittg. The mu;; lady's nau,e is nut given. We oultd like to contribute our mite in mak . it kntton and huoldi it up so the asdmtira t sf othertt. It is titme for a reaction in e system of education. wshsch would lead so to believe that youn: ladies would user expect to be housekeeper. sr moth -, akhough the asame inspection would 'ave no dsttht th t they were Ittoking ftor ad soshining tn soctety, and practisiug e arts of beau-catching. Thbe ornamnhs has its place, and will always keeps it;t to useful needs expansion in vat ious di ectios. Frederick Citi:en. Urful Hints-Neyer onter a sick mom a a state of perspiration, as .ho momen' on become cool your pores absorb. Do t approach contagious diseases with ans py stomach; nor sit between the sick uth rbecami the heat aturacts the bin vanor.. Dipping.-The tiolci vocabulary of ibis country, has become enriched with the new and elegant word "dipping." A lady or a mis chews the end of a stick until she converts it into a kind of brush or fibrous mop, whic I she then proceeds to did into snutf, with which she rubs her teeth and gums. At frst she presses the powdered weed with a gentle hand, but becoming ensmored, at last touche so deeply as to consume a bottle of sanfd in a week. Whole families and whole schools of girls are said, with number of cleanly exceptions, to be given to this me theod of titallating their nervous systems; and many by the time they are full grown, have become so thorouably impregnated with the powder, that their apparel 'night hang in a hot room the whole sumnier, without being touched by the mots. We know of but two advantages from this habit. Ist. It may render thetm in sensible to the breatb of the other sex, who begin time use of tobacco with the study of grammer. 2d. It can be na'I- a substitute for whiskey (now falliig into discredit) by those who are in affliction. Thus we are told by a gentleman, that he lately saw a mother seated at the bed side of her expiring son, with an open dish of snuff on ibe table among his medici.es, into which she plunged her dipper" as of ten as she sighed; and when the tears of grief rolled down liar cheeks, they ming led with streams of snuff-colored saliva from the corners of her mouth. It seems hard-hearted to condemn a custom fraught .vith such comfurts, but we are compel led to say that it is not without many op posing effects. It our inquiries into the diseases of the sex in the south, we have already collected satisfactory evidence, that "dipping" is the cause oi some and an aggravation of many more. We mi;:ht refer to its elTect on their breath, compleii. n,nd cleauliness. but this we shall leave in the hands of the geulenen who are intitediately intetested.-Medi Cal Journal. A necdole.---A plain unlettered man from the t.ack country, in ilth State of Al alamna. came to Tuscaloosa, and on the Sabbath went early to church. lie had been acrustomed to attend meetings in school houses 2nd private dwellings. %%where eachi line appropriated to tbem selves, tie first csonveiout sent which they found unoccupied. 1ie selected therefore a seat in a convenient slip, and awaited patienily the assenibling of the congregation. The services commenced. Preseniy the music of a full-toned organ bust open upon his astonished ear; lie had never heard one before. At the sante time the gentlemen who owned :he slip came up the aisle. As lie approached the dlor of the slip. he mentioned to the couniryman iso come nut, in order to give pldce to the lady. This movement the countryman did -ot comtipreheid, ani from the situation of the gentlemian ansi lady, associated, it was in his mind with the music, he imniediately concluded that a csiillion or French poura contra dance, or sone other dance, was intended. Rising partly Crom his sent. he said to the gentlettan, who was still bec'.ning in him -Excuse me if you please-I don't dance." In a town some fifty niies from Boston, the members of a religious society were in the habit of holding confereice meetings in the church, at which they tmade a kind faudible confession, technically called re Pounting sne's - experience " A very pi Ous member of the church, Mr. D- . wits in the habit of inviting his neighbour Mr. L----, who was tint a memiber. to attend those meetiegs. at one of which Mr. D--- got up and stated to the cosigre gaton that he was a great sinner-that he sinnmed daily, and with his eyes open-that Ite wilfully and know ingly sinned-that goodness dwelt not in him-ibat he was asholutely andI totally depraved-that no thing but the hstundless mercy and infintite goodness of God could save hint from rternal d.iannaiio's. A fter this confession of Mr. D --, Mr. L--, who had by accident been pilaced op-in the "atnxin seat," was called upont to recount lie "e1 perietnce." lie nrose and with imnperwur able gravity. smatedh thai hr- had very little to sasy of nimself, but the brethtren would re-member that lie had lived for five-and t" enty yeamrs the nearest nighbsir of Mlr. D-.--,- that he kntew him well--imore intimately so than tany othesr man-and it gave htism great pteasure. because he could dot it with entire ctnceriiy, ro confirm the truth of all brother D-- had confessed of himself. When Mr. L sai diow n under t he visible and audible smiles of the whole erngrecatioin. the patr-tn not exepted. Mr. D. went up to bim atnd said, '' You are a rascal and a in: ; and Ill lick you when you get out of church."-Bosten Post. We heard a ms. boasting of his temper ate habits. t he other dlay, and sayitng that he never drank except wchen het tented ait and that he should itn spite of all the tern perance men in the world, for it was aceor ding to 'he ad'ice of hisi physician. We recommnetd the man to sign the Pledge imtmediately, atnd get his physician to do the same, ansd then they would never w ant tt.-rwS~IUoifh. Knowing the world is but knowing its nimberless vices and folies, and what do we get by thati Of such kntowledlge we m say say, '-he that increaseth it, increases sorrow." But it is fashionable, and pret ty, and destructive, to know the world, and there foremem fly fram tbe sameness ofpurity into the varieties of profligaey. AGRICULTURAL. Turning Cattle ito Fields-Tbe pte tice of turning cattle into ields, sier the crop has been gathered, .is considered by many planters as so injurious to the land, that they will not even allow cross fences, for fear of being tempted to do so. That the tramping of stock on some lands is in jurious, there can be o doubt; but we think it is far from being an universal rule. Stiff lands are, of course, rendered more stif and tenacious by the hoofs of stock, but what is injudicious to such lands is of ten decidedly beneficial to loose, porions soils ; and we think tbis is one oftihose ca ses. One of the very best planters we know in the upcountry, never permits his stock to run in his fields, and we have no doubt but that his practice is correct, for he plants estiN'land ; while on the other hand, we know another who plants light. porous lands in the low-couniry. who gives his stock the run of his fields, to im prove hie land by tramping. as well as to improve them. Our object in mentioning these opposite practices, by excellent planters, a to show the importance of slu dying the character of the soil we culti vate, before adopting what may have pro ved a most successful practiceon the part of others. It is true, with regard to this particular practice, there is another point to be considered, whether the gleaning of' of all the vegetable mater from fields, does not exhaust the soil more than is te paid by the feeding of the stock in this way. We have heard many intelligent planters contend that it does, and it does not become us to say that such is not the case. But we think it would require very few loads of manure to make up all that a hundred head of cattle would glean out of a field, unless the vegetable matter was turnesd under in a green state, which no plahier. with a full cotton crop can find tinue to do. And if the stock are penned at night on dry straw and leaves, after running in the fields during the day, the planter will have far more than enough to re-pay what they have taken from his ields, be-ides what he will gain hy the improved condition of his stock.-Colum ia Planter. The editor of the Natchez Free Trader discusses Lard Oil in the following atrain. Lard Oil.-Cincinnati has eclipsed Connecticut in.Yankee inventions. Horn dints,. basswood hams, and pine-knit nut mnegs, for usefulness, must now give place to the oleaginous properties of the much vaunted -land whale." Some philologist at the ea.et, defining the word Cincinnati, learnedly said that "it was an earnest ex hortation to Nathaniel to sin twice !" and Cincinnati. or some of the Natty's who live there, have sinned twice in selling us vtilansus lard oil that %ill either resist combustion with the stupid .obstinacy ora crubiy Jack, or horn otit all at once, like a brush-heap.-We have twice trusted to its illuminations. but sball be led by its light no mnre, Having had the most ex rellent opportunity through weeks of un rest and sickness, to watch the glineu ing lairp of a fever chambei, we speak knowingly ; and -more in sorrow than in anger" we pronounce the Lard Oil we have used a ,swinish humbug. It would iputter. growl, squeak, crust over, and An ou at midnight-and when it did burn. iried with the lard lemps and their hea ters or burners, a lamp holding a gallon. would not have Pond the night -- t.' But its inost usual feature was to r pudiate rom btsionu altogether, or burn . unwil lingly as a live pig would have done. In deed, we should porefer a lively pig, dipped in turpentime, and lighted at his candel oxtremiity, to the lamp: A friend of ours, not long since at Cin einnati, was amused to see great numbers rf stwine going down into the river at te levee andi bubbling for the coast ol' rood thrown from steam boats. Some of the old swine had attained a marvellous ca pacity of keeiping under water a long time, sernding up huhbles to indicate where they were explorintg for food. Our friend sup posed it a desperate attempt on she part of ste hogs to become aquatic animals and be in every respect "very like a whale." We learn that candles, made from land, nr from lard Ity the Fuench chemical pro rest, were very much liked in the nor thternt cities last winter.-svere sold one third cheaper than sperm. and burn: clear er anud banger ; hut the lard oil we have had in the South needs more science to its manufacture. A New Orleans merchant, who has a propensity sometimes so draw oa his im agintation for his facts, declares that a con signmentt of lard oil made to him was so imaperfoctly rendered itso oil that he was alarmed one day by the squealing of pigs in the casks which, upon examin stion, proved that the oil hod gone hack to the origtnal pigs again. Noel Method of Making Salt-We are inaformead that in digging one of the salt wells of the Kanawha, a vein of carburet ed Hydrogen (imlaammable gas) was struck, and that she gas comes up in large quantities, mixed with the salt water. Trhe proprietor has contrived to separate te gas from the water ; and while the water is conveyed iato the hoillers through one set of pipes, the gas is conveyed ine another set under the boilers, where it is inflamed, and evaporates the water ! Thus the same well yields thle water so make salt, and thte fuel to evaporate it! We are informed that salt is actually manufactured at thIs well, at the nets cost of two nts pe hAttA! If natu- co tinues to yield this double product. this well will be wonb more than a silver mane. -CiciuEaai Ckronick SBlacksmith's Work.-As many ofour farmers have blacksmith's shops of their own, the following directions for Working steel and making. edged aoils.. plain and simple as they are, may be of great value to them, if caserally enjoined upon their smith, who are frequently grea bunglers in this kind of work.- Sbaureris Pdtekr. "Working Cast .Steel.-We have re cedetly obtained informatin op this subject from The most ,skillful and celebrated workman in the U. Siates, Capt. J. ill1, of Billerica, .luss. We were a little sur prised to learn the difference in the man agenent of cast steel, from that of the German. There is something yet remaining mys terious. with regard to the nature and naa agenieni of this article; which no cyelope dia or other vehicle of idtelligence have as yet. developed. .. .The proces of manufacturing cast steel, it is not our purpose at present to des cribe, but it is evidently composed. of r lined iron and carbon in very nice propor nons. In the process of shaping i into mutting blades and other aricles .it is hea led and animered in ihe manner of other steel, when tempered for this purpose. i is first heated to full cherry red, and plun ted into water till cold. It may then be ld ovei a moderate charcoal fre, until he color of any part which has been filed >r made bright after hardening, changes to a poudish orange color. . This is the temper for cutting tools, Sat if a spring temper is required, it is heated aver the charcoal till the color approacies i blue, or rather blue Inclined to red. Aaq* tither case when the steel is brought to liow these colors, it is to be plnged in ul-common lamp or linseed oil-which Nill not areet the color. If the steel is to be rendered sot for urning or cutting, it must lie heated to a ull red, and luft to cool is partially igni ed charcoal; in this way it may be made o soft as to be cut or turned intoshape as easily as copper, or even common Pew. ier. But the most etrious and peculiar pro .ess is that of welding. In welding irot' s white heat is indispensable. as every bo. Jy knows; but not so with east steel n hen the se,-l is to be wclded te iron ueitber are to be heated above a full cher. ry red. The two parts are to be previ rausly lashed or girded together, and in that condition heated: they have they them unly to be immersed in calcined borax, or to have prepared borax (borati of soda.1 sprinkled over the joint, are Meidy to ad aere by being hamaietd iogeber. The borax for this purpose is to be pre pared, by being previnusly heated to a fult red, and kept tested till it becomes a soft owder like four What ilie chemical efleet ofthe calcined borax o the, metalid sairfaces is not perfectly unlerstood farther than that is affinity for oxygen such as to deprive be jointed surfaces of any portion oxygen which might piivent a ready scion of the orfaces. When small pieces of steel are to be velded, thpy are io be heated to the full hlserry red. and iimmerced in the calcined Or'il and then to be hammered together. Ti most extraordinary point in the >tcras is the fact, that ir the steel is bui' k little oveheated, it will immediately -rack into fragments;'hul by a shifted pro :ess and with the use of borax, the de. ecs may be healed and rerndered sound d solid. We have witnessed the fact,' hat by a j'dicious management, it fine emperec cutting edge of cast steel may he sent, warped and hammnereef, add its ahape materially changed without break ng oar afecaing~iheq(mp,er, Alore m'ay' be s'aid. on'tisr stibj'ec ist a uture enmber, but we close for the pre want with the remark, that even Anderson !c Co,., the celbrated manufalturers of east .teel, are evidently unancqpainted with alf he merits of. its.. pealuks gtioperties--~ &auer, Mochaic." To our mind, hardl'y atsy thing is mee-. er than ill-wall inwarads uomap on account if his being bprn in..a litnd disiant firom ur own. Over the circumstances of parentaage, or nativity, we can of course tone of us have any .control. .That our' Amerraa fathers acted s ell and nobly-. tist they exhibited higb eourage and. gen-, wuus preserverance--ara reflections whicit ire dear to us, and which is is not unprp liuble to keep constantly alive, and before thae existing and growing generations. But that cue gho is a man like ourselves, with he same capacities, and the same good andl bad point, of character, should be the abject of our prejudice andI dislike merely secsuse he camne intio life, three, four, or Sve thousand mile distant'from where we live, is gross absurdity. The pr'cious PearL-Religion in a fe. malne secures all her interests. It graces bet character, promotes her peace, endears her friendship, seeures esteem, and adds rn dignity and worth indescribable to all ber deeds. How pleasant, wham the ab ment husband can think of home. and re Sect that angels watch the place! When about to leave her a widow, how conso- * ling. if her charueter, is such, thtat she" can lean on the widow'. Od, and put bee . children under the guardianship of Him, who is the father of the fatherless! Then quits the world calm and happy. supper ted by the hope that be shall meet thent all in heaven.