The niliiinal of the government of Kiev cou- g,,,,,,.| we juilginoni of the infeiior court; but In .4-5i-celv three weeks from his at-quiltal, .lo:it:hiiii Kryiis1.loftbre:itlivil his last. Tliree tl'otll§lllPl’9 were the fruits of his marriage with Jiilizi. and these are still living with their liusb.i:ids in fie-sarnliia. Oi‘ one thing we may ll0 certain, from the po- rusal ufiliis ii:irr.i‘.ive, that in is country where wills iii.-iy beau easily forged, and lllll|’ilt'l’l com- miueil by the pu-ivcrfiil with such impunity ; wheie doctors, priests. and jailers may be so easily bribed, and j:i.oice so easily l»litided—-that In 3 country uheie, in one word, such circunistriiii-es as I have above described could take place in the manner they did, there can be little authority in the law to inspire coiifidence or to cominairl res- ct——therc can be little force in the tlit-eats of justice to deter the rich from committing criuics, when, if dittected’ they can so easily transfer them to the shoulders of the poor. '|'Al'l'.Att nn:i\o'rit:s.—- Madame lloumaire de Hi-ll gives the following account of the daughters of n Tartar Princess, Adel Bey, who still lives in the neighbourhood oi‘ lia|ttcheserai:—‘linagine, reader, the most ex- quisite sultsn-.ts, of whom poetry and painting have ever tried to convey an idea, and still your cori- ception will fall short of the enchanting models had then before me. There were three of them, all equally beautiful and graceful. Two were clad in tutiics of crimson brocade, adorncd in front with broad gold-lace; the tunics were open, and disclosed beneath them cashmere robes with very tight sleeves terminating in gold fringes. The youngest wore a tunic of azure blue brocade. with silver ornaments: this was the only ditler- cnence between her dress and that of her sisters. All three had magnificent black hair escaping in countless tresses from a fez of silver fill.-agree, act like a diadem over their ivory forlieads; they were gold embroidered slippers and wide trousers dmwu close at the ankle. l had never beheld skins so dazzling fair, eyelashes so long, or so dl." licate s bloom of youth. The calm repose that sat on the counteiiatices of these lovely creatures had never been disturbed by any prof-.uie glance. Nu look but their mother's had ever told them they were beautiful; and this thought gave them an expressible cliarm in my eyes. It is not in our Europe, where women, exposed to the gaze of crowds, so soon addict themselves to ooquetry, that the imagination could conceive such a type of beauty. The features of our young girls are too soon altered by the vivacity of their impres- sions, to allow the eye of the artist to discover in them that divine charm of purity and innocence with wliicli I was so struck in beliolding my 'l‘ar- tar princesses. After embracing ine. th:y retired to the end of the room. where they reruained standing in those graceful Oriental attitudes which no woman in Europe could imitate. A de- sen attendants, muffled in white muslin, were ga- thered round the door. gazing with respectful cu- riosity. 'l'lieir profiles, shown in relief on a darlr ground, added to the picturesque character of the scene.’-—Trnv¢ls in the Crimea, by H. D. Sey- mour. M. P‘ - nlzononizmo raorittwiizs or corrrat. The Lonlon ilfcdical Gazelle gives the result *1-if numerous experiineiits with roasted coffee, prov- lng that it is the most owerful meatis. not only of rendering animal and vegetable eflluvia inno- cuous. but of actually destroying them. A room in which meat in an advanced degree ufdecompo- sitinn had been kept for some time, was instantly deprived of all smell, on an 0 en coffee-roaster being carried ihrougli it, containing a pound of coffee newly rossii-il. In another room exposed to the t.'flltl\lIt ti-=m.~iiiiic.l by the clearing out of a cess-pool, so iliut sulpliurreted hydrogen and Immouizi in !_'l'.‘-til quaiitiiies could he chcuiically detected, the stimuli vino completely removed ‘ within half a miiiiiie, on the employment ofthree ounces of fresh roasted codes; whilst the other parts of the house were permanently cleared of the same smell by being simply traversed with the coffee-roaster, although the cleansing of the cess-pool continued several hours after. The best mode of using the codes as a disinfectant, is to dry the raw bean, pound it in a mortar, and then toast the powder on a moderately heated iro late until it assumes a dark-brown tint, when it it is fit for use. Then sprinkle it in sinks or cess- pools, or lay it on a plate in the room which you wish to have purified. Coffee ac’ or cofl'ee oil acts more readily in minute qnantities.—Yar- look of Fact: Tit: soar-run-r.—'l‘hs Vienna journals an- nounces that :1 firm of California has sent home is that city some seeds of the soap-plant. It grows wild in California, rising to the height of about -s (not. The plant fades away in the month of * Nsy,.snr_l inside each is a ball of natural soap, superior it is asserted, to any that can be manufac- tuicd. Mntstorru Ari-r.irs.—-A couple of apples V were shown to us yesterday by It friend wliieli nre decidedly greitt specimens. The lm-gr-.r one measures 14?} inches in circum- fcrence, and weighs ‘.l2'ounces, and both are well proportioned. They were brought to this city -from Alton, Illinois, amd will, HASZAR.D’S GAZE CHI\'r.ttl Fu-.'ertat.s.--M. Hue, in his ontertuiiiing work on the Cl|llIt,'SP, says that at it fuiiei-til, the ltlt'.’l iind women usseinliti in:-nzpnrnte ttpnrtinunts, and until the time comes tit wiiich it is settled they shall grieve, they emoltt-, drink, littigli, and gossip with such nu nir ofcuri-le.-is enjoy- ment, that it stranger would suppose they were the most contented and linppiest people in the world. But when tlte ncurcst relat- tion infui-ms the men that the hour has arrived, their coiivei-srition ccuses, their fiici.-s bi.-come lugulirious, they surround the coffin, and the lnmcntutions begin. The most pzitliciic speeches are nddressed to the dead; every one speaks his oivn sorrowful monologue, interrupted by subs and gr-onus, and sprinkled with it profusion ofgcnuine tent-e. But at it given signal the wliole scene abruptly changes again. the tears are diied up, the performers do not even stop to finish a sub or a groan, but they trike tlicii- pipes, and lo! then again nre these incoinpni-able Chinese laughing, gossiping, and drinking tea, The port of the women is, if possible, played with still greater perfection. Their grief has such nnappenrnnce ofsincerity, their sighs are so agonizing, their tours so abundant, their voices so broken with sobs, that notwith- standing the certainty that the whole nffuir is a purely fictitious re resentation, the beholder can hardly he p being affected by it. Saniso C.s'r'ri.r:.-Salt your cattle often after turning them to grass. The change from dry feed to green, succulent mutter dcniuiids this. Ashes mixed with salt should be given to slieep—clini-coal and salt to swine. Tni: Onnzcr or PLOUGlllNG.—Tlt0 ob- ject of ploughing is not fully understood and considered by the majority of those who perform the work; if it were, it would he inoro fuitlifully done. It is not alone to kill the weeds and grass, nor even to furnish rt seed-bed of t'resli-turned soil l'Jl"plIlllllng or sowing—noi- anything which looks merely to the inversion of the sod—wliiclt coristi- totes good ploughing. Large plouglis turn- ing it wide and shallow furrow, show it lurge day's work—but the work is imperfectly accomplished, when the trite object of ploughing is considered. The chief value of ploughing is the preparation it gives the soil for giving to the plants sown orplnnted, the elements of growth and fruitfulness. It should thoroughly pulverize nnd loosen the texture of the soil, and admit a. free circulation ofair and moisture, which, by chemical action, disintegrntes or breaks down the stony and mineral portions of the seine, so that they may be more readily dissolved nnd taken up by the roots. lot is soil thus plouglicd—-—thus prepared for yielding its support to vegetable life—planls can appropriate from for and near, the nu- triincnt needed for their growth. It is dis- solved nnd ready for their u.~io—not hidden in unbroken cloth; or slunibciiug in an undisturbed subsoil—but uwuits their act- ing in II. friable and pencti-able state, where every hungry rootlet sent out to gather nourishment for its parent plant, may find and appropriate it. lt is truly wonderful howl'ull of roots, the soil of u cornfield becomes, and if that soil is fine and deep, the deeper and closer together will the fibres permeate and intersect it. This is true of all other crops, and while the leaves and fruit depend so intimately on the vigour and extent of these roots, these facts should always be taken into consideration among the objects of ploughing. Fineness nnd cpth of soil are requisite in order to're- ccive the full benefit of the Insnures applied. It is not fertilizing food in its crude state which assists vegetation-it must first become intimately mixed with or be- cause in facts part of the soil. Barn-yard ma- nure, cspccinlly, seems of little worth, while forming visible layers between the clods of a half-ploughed soil—-it is if dry and coarse, rather shunned tlisn sought by the roots sent out to forage for suitable food. lfa well prepared soil has any strength or vii-toe, it will yield it readily; and poor land in good tiltli is often inoie productive than better soils loss perfectly prepared. The influences of air and moisture have l freedom to work, and they are no t~lll;1’t_‘[lll'dS in gathering tncutisto suppect the wants of for the utilization of the waste slag of our we understand, be exhibited at the Horti- vegetation. I - - oottsral Irlsll neat Saturday.-'--Bouon Cour. ‘lovers of genuine Cognac say to this? ‘bus, Ohio, an ingenious individual has dis- TTE, SEPTEMBER 22. SCH-'..\'C.'l AND ART.‘-3. (From C/iani.5cr.r’.r Er/inlurgh Journal.) Attention is again dircctt-d to carbonic- acid liutlis, its in beneficial rcincdy for lIl|l~lC|tlu'll' CtIllll‘i'l('ll0llS, dehility, and weak eyes: the cm-utivu effects in some lllSlf}HCt‘S. tire rciiinikolili-. Ill. Her-pin I'("p'Pl‘lS, that, at Moi-it-iiliud he pliiccd his tstilf lrg in :1.‘ bath of the gas, and, after the first ll--iv, uiiiiutcs, experienced it glow and Iingliug,[ next it cupioiis pcrspiraition, and in time thof joint l)t"(:t|lllt.‘ supple M. Bnudcns, of Marseilles, protests against amputation for frost-bite. If left to itself, he argues that nature will separate the living from the dcnd portions, neither too little nor too much. Of3l)0'l frost-bitten soldii-rs landed. at that port, 300 were cured by being left, to nature, nnd are now tnucli less disincm-Q beietl and lame than those who underivt-tit nmputulion. Professor Bierordt, of Frank-, fort, has invented 0. machine to record the beating ofthe pulse. The arm is placed in» a kind of crndle, which keeps it steady; ll lover rests by one end on the artery, and at every beat a pencil, on the opposite end, marks ti cylinder of paper. lftlie pulse be regular, a regular zigzag line is produced; if irregular, the line is full of breaks and, jerks. M. Pierre offers it few observations on the forage and nlimcnt of cattle. He finds four times us much nzote in the upper parts of plniits as in the loivcr, the quan- tity diminishing downwards to the roots; and that nftcr-maths tire richer in nzote than first CI‘0pS-l‘t‘SUll5 confirmed by the experiments of Boussingnult. Among matters communicated to the Academic, is the description of it machine for making wutcr boil without fire: fticlion is the tneniis employed lllr‘-lCtlll offuel. The Socii-te d’Agricu|ture are publishing :1 few simple facts nbout oats, with it view to bring this grain into use tliroughout Franco generally, as eti article of diet. They give informntion as to the way in which porridge should be made, and draw ntti.-ntiori to the fact, that in Brittany, the peasants iiinko n pnlutnlile pottngo of oatmeal and vegctnblesi mixed. It is shown that the crops of oats may be doubled, and that horses may be fed very much riiore ccouoinicnlly than at present. The grape dist-use has led to ex- pei-imonts being tried with other fruits; and in Sicily, the Indian fig is found to innke excellent wine. It will surprise mnny readers to hear that, owing to the scarcity of material for'muking brandy, the Fiench hnve for months past imported whisky and gin from England, in enormous quantities, for conversion into brandy. What will the The demand is so great and pressing, that the ordinary means of shipment proving iii- suflicient, casks of the above-proofspirits have been scnt~by rail to Folkstone for triinsport across the Channel. One more added to the lit of mystificntions for John Bull and his valorous allies. The Eastern Archipelago Company are building it fleet of scretv-steamers, each 1000 tons burden, hoping to find ample trade in the region front which they take their name. The sultan of Borneo has made them ll. grant of I50 miles ofterritor on the main and on Labuan, where coal- tnincs are to be worked. Among islands so amazingly productive, the results can hardly fail to be satisfactory. At Colum- covercd it way of lining the axle-boxes of railway-carriages with glass, the operation i being accomplished while both are in a state of fusion; and, as is said, with the advantage of increased durability and di- miniahed friction. Should such prove to be the case, after sufficient trial, we may ac- cept the discovery as a real improvement. In another quarter, a stone-planing ma- chine has been contrived, which. with it rotating cutter fixed on u revolving arm, puts it smooth face on it slab of eight feet sii er-ficics in seven minutes. And in Phila- dciphis, cast iron has been laid down its pavement for the side-walks of the streets. The plates are l‘.’. feet long, 3 feet 6 inches wide, and fiths of an inch thick. \Vhcre they cover it cellar, tlioy are wurmcd from beneath in winter, to melt the snow and keep them dry. So for the metal is con- sidered to be pref‘:-.r-nblc to stone. We gtliink it liltoly,:that the compntiy just formed suited for paiviiig purposes than either iron or stone. Licbig has just pulilislit-«l tt method of iiinkiii" lircnd tliiit will not readily turns sour, rind that is inert: ni.ti-itioiis than ordi- niiry bri-aid. ‘Puro flour,’ he says, ‘is not all that is it-ipiiu-d for ltllltlflllflllttll; there “unis tlic iidiliiioii of n simillqiitiiitity of lime.’ It is to eating bi-i-aid di.-lit-tent in lime that some ofthe tllSt'na't:S of prisoners nud cliililron are due. By mixing the flour with uciik liiiic-tvnier, not onlv does it be- come more viuti-iiious, according to the views ofthe celebrated chemist, but there is an increase of8 pr-r cent. in the quantity of bread. It is well known, that the bakers of Belgium make inferior flour into palata- ble breud by mixing it with sulphate of coppi.-r—-at hurtful substance; while lime in the small proportions contemplated, vgiuld be harmless, if not beneficial. In this re- spect, the method of decorticntiiig when: proposed at Paris by M. Sibille may be worth notice. He makes u. wash of out part lime, three parts carbonate of soda, six parts boiling-water, mixed to chews strength of three degrees by the alkalimetcr, in which the grain being soaked for two or tlirce minutes, it crimes out with the outer husk perfectly removed, leaving the wheat bright and clean, and its germinating quali- tics uninjured. Sopliisticators of food are not tolerated so patiently in France as in our moral country. The furnters, in some places, had for years been accustomed to put it few drops of oil on the shovel with which they ttirncd their wheat; the grntn bud in conseqiii-rice rt. lustrous, lively up- pi.-ni-niico, nnd fetched a higher price in the rnurket. The tribunal of Chartres has, ll0\l‘c\ or now pronounced the use of oil to be a l'i-add punislinblo by I00 francs fine, and forfeiture ofthe wheat. liusii Gu.i.Aivrrtv.-—-A correspondent of the New York Times relates an instance of Irish gullnutry which can scarcely find. I pnriillel. As Mr. Howard A. Hiiglios, II lrislmiun residing in Truro, Mass., was lying at the Burlington City Hotel, liuving had both of his arms broken and sustained other 8t‘l'l0tlS injuries, from the Burlington Railway accident, one of a. number of ladies who were ministering to his relief, asked him if he could tell, where he was injured internally? He replied, that when so many bright eyes were looking at him, he was sure, that he was injured about the region ofthe hcnrt. LASTING IMPRESSIOMS. You may gaze upon an object Till its likeness you rcliiin, And through distance, and t rough darkness. You bu-hold that form again : ~ So I pondered on thy goodness 'l‘ilI there grew about riiy henrt Many never-dying feelings Which make up its better part. You may listen to a measure, Till its sentiment mid tone Find it hiding-place wiiliin you, And the song becomes your own : ' So I treasured up thy sayings, And now, in my own, I find The echoes of thy accents. The reflections of thy iuind 2 There nre perfumes we remember ‘Vhcti their sources are no more; There are fltivonra that will linger When the banqueting is o'er : So, the chiirnis thy presence yielded lluve outlived lhv honey’d lotentla. And my soul. that feasted freely, ‘win partake of them on amt. t Ports :1. G. II. Larrzn rnost BenMuna.—By the British brig Lady Chapman, arrived yesterday, have received Hamilton papers to August 29th. The Bermudian of the last date con- tains intelligcnce to the llth ult., from Deinernra, to the effect that "the yellow fever had broken out with great virulence at tlihe Island of Bcrbadoes, and at the Dutch colony of Surinam." The number of deaths at Bnrbadoes had reached thirty it day. Demerarn was unusually healthy. The new sugar crop had just commenced, and it large number of vessels were lying in the Deincrnru rivcr waiting for cargoes. Grunt dissatisfacti-.iii, says .Ut‘lTIt'l'nl'll Gaz- i-tte, exists nt the refusal of the Colonial h'liiii~u.cr of (iicut Bi-itnin to sanction on at-rnii-geincnt for n free intorclintige ufcomo m..rlitioa lt(‘l.\V(.‘l'fi Cnniiiln mid the \\'est ludics.—4\'ctl Yuri; Journal of Commerce, irontvorks, will find their slabs of slag better b'CP£s 4s