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PONDRETTE.-The manufacture of this new species of manure will introduce an invaluable improvement into the economy of both city and country.

Messrs. Payen and Buran, of Paris, have discovered a composition which disinfects human excrement and all animal substances, and renders them the most fertilizing manure, perfectly free from any obnoxious odor, and in a pulverized state, now manufacture it on a large scale in France, where it is generally used. The enterprising Mr. D. K. Minor of New-York is now using his efforts to introduce the manufacture of pondrette into that city; thereby converting one of the greatest nuisances of a crowded metropolis into a source of revenue, and at the same time essentially benefiting agriculture. An extract from a report made to the Horticultural Society of Paris, by the Viscount Debonnaire de Gif, states that, "The result of my examination of the effect produced by this new manure in horticultural proceedings is this: that this pulverized compound appears to hasten the development of vegetables, and consequently accelerates their fructification; that it does not possess the bad quality of containing the seeds of weeds; that it improves by degrees the soil, and produces more abundant crops; and it can, consequently, be applied to garden plants, which exhaust the soil; nor does it impart any disagreeable flavor to fruits or vegetables. It likewise adds considerably to the growth and beauty of the dahlia and other bulbous roots. The facility of its conveyance is also a great recommendation."

THE SOUTH AMERICAN CURE FOR THE HYDROPHOBIA.-This dreadful disease is extremely common in violent heats of summer. The wild beasts in a country but ill supplied with streams, and in the long summer with all those streams dried up, tear their flesh in agony with this disease: the wolves and all of the dog kind are the especial sufferers; but the jaguars, or tigers, and perhaps all that roam the sandy plains, are seized with this fury; accidents are, of course, common among the hunters, herdsmen, and the people of the lower ranks in general; but they excite comparatively little terror from the frequency and simplicity of the cure. This is effected by taking two or three doses of a powdered root, which seems something of the hellebore genus. This root throws the patient into the most copious perspiration; the second day generally completes the cure, though the patient remains weak for a time. This is better than smothering between two mattrasses, or killing with laudanum, after six weeks agony of suspense and a week of frenzy. It is remarkable, that this root acts in the same manner as the only medicines which have been found as a palliative of this terrible disease in Europe. Sudorifics alone seem to have produced any effect here; and some instances of the singular force of the vapor bath in quieting the paroxysms, have been given within these few years, which may lead to a more skilful treatment. Blackwood's Magazine says "That all this, however, has been told to English surgeons already; the root in question has even been brought to England and administered; but, as is reported, without effect. Still, while we know how hard it is to convince any man, even an hospital surgeon, against his will, what slight circumstances may be taken advantage of, and what important ones may be neglected, where the mind of the experimentalist is not in favor of the operation; we must suspend our belief that the root which had so plainly wrought its cure in South America becomes utterly useless in crossing the Atlantic. We hope that trials will continue to be made. The man who shall succeed in bringing the hydrophobia within the power of European medicine, will deserve the highest gratitude of Europe, and would doubtless receive the most valuable testimonials of the liberality of England."

Western Trade of PennsylvanIA.-New-York will have to be on the qui vive, or the Key-Stone state will steal such a march upon her as not to be overtaken. From the 1st April to 1st Oct. 1836, there were exported from Pittsburg, east on the canal of Bacon, 3,619,000 lbs.; Lard, 210,455 do; Flour, 39,378 bbls; Feathers, 49,875 lbs; Deer Skins, 85,472 do.; Tobacco, 4,144,525 do.; Woo',

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816,177 do. The amount in bulk of various articles of merchandize, sent from Pittsburg down the Ohio, or brought to it, during the year 1836, is estimated at 146,400 tons. The tonnage of the various steam boats subject to wharfage for the same time, amounted to 74,734 tons. 30,000,000 feet of lumber are annually brought down the Alleghany, and sent down the Ohio.

CHALK AND WATER.-Such is the great thickness of the chalk formation on the left bank of the Seine, that in boring for water they have reached the great depth of 1200 French feet, which is equal to 1305 English, without success. [If they persist in boring, and get down to 2000 feet, the water will come up at a heat of thirty-five degrees, so as to supply the warm baths without fuel.]

TIDES.-According to recent and accurate observations, the tide wave travels from the Cape of Good Hope to Gibraltar, a distance of nearly 5000 miles, in the incredibly short period of 12 hours, which is at the rate of above 400 miles an hour. The same wave requires 12 hours to reach Edinburgh from Gibraltar, a distance of about 1900 miles, and proceeds with a velocity of 160 miles an hour; whereas that from Edinburgh to London, only 500 miles, requires the same time of 12 hours, and goes at the rate of 42 miles an hour. These retardations in the rate of velocity of the tide wave are occasioned by the obstruction it receives from the coast it comes in contact with. At Liverpool it is found that a fall of one tenth of an inch in the barometer raises the tide one inch, which is a beautiful illustration of the law of gravitation.

ANOTHER MOON HOAX.-A narrative detailing the discovery, in the interior of New Holland, of a highly civilized people remotely descended from the English, has been published in England under the editorship of Lady Mary Fox. This work, says an English paper, on many accounts, is likely to excite the greatest

attention.

A SIXTH CONTINENT.-An extraordinary phenomenon, presented in the Southern Ocean, may render our settlements in New South Wales of still more eminent importance. A sixth continent is in the very act of growth before our eyes! The Pacific is spotted with islands through the immense space of nearly fifty degrees of longitude and as many of latitude. Every one of these islands seems to be merely a central spot for the formation of coral banks, which, by a perpetual progress, are rising from the unfathomable depths of the sea.

The union of a few

of these masses of rock shapes itself into an island; the seeds of plants are carried to it by the birds or by the waves; and from the moment that it overtops the waters it is covered with vegetation. The new island constitutes, in its turn, a centre of growth to another circle. The great powers of nature appear to be still in peculiar activity in this region; and to her tardier process she sometimes takes the assistance of the volcano and earthquake. From the south of New Zealand to the North of the Sandwich Islands, the waters absolutely teem with those future seats of civilization. Still the coral insect, the diminutive builder of these mighty piles, is at work; the ocean is intersected with myriads of those lines of foundation; and when the rocky superstructure shall have excluded the sea, then will come the dominion of man.-Liverpool Paper.

STATISTICS.-The yearly value of the whole agricultural produce of England and Wales may be estimated at about 132,000,000l., and that of Scotland at about 23,000,0007., making a gross sum of about 155,000,000l. Now, deducting from the amount 12,000,000l. for the value of seed, and the sums required to keep up the stock of horses, &c., we have the sum of 143,000,000l. as representing the

entire value of the various articles of agricultural produce annually consumed by man. At present, (1836,) the population of Great Britain may be taken at 18,000,000, which consequently gives 8., or so, for the average annual consumption of each individual. The annual value of the agricultural produce of Ireland does not exceed 45,000,000l. Now, if we deduct 6,000,000l. for the value of seed, and of the sums required to replace horses, &c., 3,500,000l. for the value remitted in the shape of rent, &c. to absentee proprietors, we have 35,500,000l. pounds to be distributed among the resident population; which, as the latter may be taken at about 8,500,000, gives nearly 4. 3s. to each.

The number of young men in France liable to be drawn for the army, in 1834, contained 326,298 names; that for 1833 was made up of 285,805 names. The following is a comparative statement of the state of education of these two classes:

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ANCIENT AND MODERN DEMOCRACIES.-"We should remove some very important prejudices from our minds, if we could once subscribe to a fact plain in itself, but which the contests of modern party have utterly obscured-that in the mere forms of their government the Greek republics cannot fairly be pressed into the service of those who in existing times would attest the evils, or proclaim the benefits, of constitutions purely democratic. In the first place they were not democracies, even in their most democratic shape; the vast majority of the workingclasses were the enslaved population. And therefore, to increase the popular tendencies of the republic was, in fact, only to increase the liberties of the few. We may fairly doubt whether the worst evils of the ancient republics, in the separation of ranks and the war between rich and poor, were not the necessary results of slavery. We may doubt, with equal probability, whether much of the lofty spirit, and the universal passion for public affairs, whence emanated the enterprise, the competition, the patriotism, and the glory of the ancient cities, could have existed without a subordinate race to carry on the drudgeries of daily life. It is clear, also, that much of the intellectual greatness of the several states arose from the exceeding smallness of their territories, the concentration of internal power, and the perpetual emulation with neighboring and kindred states nearly equal in civilization; it is clear, too, that much of the vicious parts of their character, and yet much of their more brilliant, arose from the absence of the PRESS. Their intellectual state was that of men talked to, not written to. Their imagination was perpetually called forth—their deliberative reason rarely; they were the fitting audience for an orator, whose art is effective in proportion to the impulse and the passion of those he addresses.

"Nor must it be forgotten that the representative system, which is the proper conductor of the democratic action, if not wholly unknown to the Greeks, and if unconsciously practised in the Spartan ephoralty, was at least never existent in the more democratic states. And assemblies of the whole people are compatible only with those small nations of which the city is the country. Thus, it would be impossible for us to propose the abstract constitution of any ancient state as a warning or an example to modern countries which possess territories large in extent, which subsist without a slave population, which substitute representative councils for popular assemblies, and which direct the intellectual tastes and political habits of a people, not by oratory and conversation, but through the more calm and dispassionate medium of the press. This principle settled, it may perhaps be generally conceded, that on comparing the democracies of Greece with all other contemporary forms of government, we find them the most favorable to mental cultivation-not more exposed than others to internal revolutions-usually in fact, more durable, more mild and civilized in their laws; and that the worst, tyranny of the Demus, whether at home or abroad, never equalled that of an oligarchy or a single ruler. That in which the ancient republics are properly a model to us, consists not in the form, but the spirit of their legislation. They teach us that patriotism is best promoted by bringing all classes into public and constant intercourse, that intellect is most luxuriant wherever the competition is

widest and most unfettered, and that legislators can create no rewards and invent no penalties equal to those which are silently engendered by society itself, while it maintains, elaborated into a system, the desire of glory and the dread of shame."

The above is from Mr. Bulwer's Letters from Athens lately published by the Harpers, a work in which the popular author has put forth some of his best reflections in his happiest style.

CHEAP BREAD. The following extract from Barton's tables on the Poor-law system, shows the importance of cheap bread in sustaining life. The return comprises seven manufacturing districts in England, distinct from each other. Price of wheat per qr.

Years.

1801,

118s. 3d.

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Deaths.

55,965

44,794

48,108

54,864

EFFECTS OF EMIGRATION.—In the majority of European nations, the disturbing effect of migration is scarcely sensible; Ireland is, probably, the only exception. North America gains from migration just what Great Britain and Ireland together lose from migration. The average gain to North America, previous to 1820, is stated not to have exceeded ten thousand annually; but since that year the numbers emigrating to the Canadas and the United States have greatly increased. During the five years 1825-29, North America received from Great Britain and Ireland 23,047 people annually; during the five years 1830-35, the average number was 73,442 annually. During the four years 1829-32, the mean number of emigrants arriving annually at New-York and Quebec was 57,053, of which there were from England and Wales 23,851, from Ireland 27,241, and from Scotland 5961. We may say then of England and Wales alone, that the annual loss from emigration was 4000 previous to 1820, 9000 at the year 1827, and 30,000 at the year 1832. The mean annual increase of the population of England and Wales, from 1820 to 1830, was 180,000. Taking the mean annual number of emigrants at this period to have been 8000, it will form less than the 22d part of the excess of births over deaths. The mean number of births at the same period having been not less than 450,000 annually, the loss from emigration was not more than the 55th part of this number. During the ten years 1820-30, the population of England and Wales must have been diminishing from migration, if the number of emigrants from Ireland did not quite amount to eight thousand annually.-Edmonds on Population.

AMERICAN ANTHOLOGY.-We are happy to learn, from a prospectus issued from the publishing establishment of Wiley and Putnam, that several capable persons have addressed themselves to the task of collecting the fugitive poetry of the country, with the intention of intermingling it with choice pieces by writers of established reputation, so as to make up several volumes, under the title of " American Anthology." Some of the best things that were ever written have been composed by those who have thrown off an occasional copy of verses, and then abandoned the muse entirely. Our newspapers abound with these waifs of genius, many of which, like the following beautiful lines from the Providence Journal, should be snatched from the waters of oblivion, and preserved in such a volume.

GO FORTH INTO THE FIELDS.-BY W. J. P.

"The world is too much with us."-WORDSWORTH.

Go forth into the fields,

Ye denizens of the pent city's mart!

Go forth, and know the gladness nature yields
To the care-wearied heart.

Leave ye the feverish strife,
The jostling, eager, self-devoted throng:
Ten thousand voices, waked anew to life,
Call you with sweetest song.

Hark! from each fresh clad bough,
Or blissful soaring in the golden air,
Bright birds, with joyous music, bid you now
To spring's loved haunts repair.

The silvery gleaming rills

Lure with soft murmurs from the grassy lea;
Or gaily dancing down the sunny hills,
Call loudly in their glee!

And the young, wanton breeze,

With breath all odorous from her blossomy chase,
In voice low whispering, 'mong the embowering trees,
Woos you to her embrace."

Go-breathe the air of heaven,

Where violets meekly smile upon your way;
Or on some pine-crowned summit, tempest riven,
Your wandering footsteps stray.

Seek ye the solemn wood,

Whose giant trunks a verdant roof uprear,
And listen, while the roar of some far flood
Thrills the young leaves with fear!

Stand by the tranquil lake,

Sleeping 'mid willowy banks of emerald dye,
Save when the wild bird's wing its surface break,
Chequering the mirrored sky--

And if within your breast,

Hallowed to Nature's touch one chord remain;
If aught save worldly honors find you blest,
Ör hope of sordid gain ;-

A strange delight shall thrill,

A quiet joy brood o'er you like a dove;
Earth's placid beauty shall your bosom fill,
Stirring its depths with love.

O, in the calm, still hours,

The holy Sabbath hours, when sleeps the air,
And heaven and earth, decked with her beauteous flowers,
Lie hushed in breathless prayer,—

Pass ye the proud fane by,

The vaulted aisles, by flaunting folly trod,
And, 'neath the temple of the uplifted sky,
Go forth, and worship God !"

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