May apple, and present a most striking landscape to | boatable branches. By those large marshy ponds, the traveller, as he skirts them in a steamboat. Such is the south front. With few exceptions the interior is one vast level. The prairies which distinguish some of the western states, are here very prominent features of the country, having the usual distinction of high and low, swampy and alluvial. For a wide extent on the north front of the state, between the Wabash and Lake Michigan, the country is generally an extended plain, alternately prairie and timbered land, with considerable swamps and small lakes, and ponds. Every traveller has spoken with admiration of the beauty and fertility of the prairies along the course of the Wabash, particularly near Fort Harrison. It is said no part of the western world can probably show greater extents of rich land in one body, than that portion of the White River country, of which Indianapolis is the centre. Now that Indiana is all surveyed, it is found that it possesses as large a proportion of first rate lands as any in the west. With a few exceptions of wide prairies, the divisions of timbered and prairie lands are more happily balanced than elsewhere. Many rich prairies are long and narrow, so that the whole can be taken up, and timber be accessible by all the settlers. There are hundreds of prairies only large enough for a few farms, and even in the large ones, occur those beautiful islands of timbered land, which form such a distinguishing feature of the prospect. The great extents of fertile land, and the happy distribution of springs and rivers, may be one cause of the unexampled rapidity with which this state has peopled, and another reason may be, that being a non-slaveholding state, and next in position beyond Ohio, it was happily situated to arrest the tide of emigration, that set beyond Ohio, after that state was nearly filled. Indiana is fertile in corn, rye, oats, barley, wheat, and the usual farm products of the eastern states, though some of the vast prairies and rich bottoms are too rich for wheat, until the natural wild luxuriance of the soil has been reduced by cropping. Upland rice has been attempted with success, while some of the warm and sheltered vallies have yielded in favorable years, considerable crops of cotton. No country can exceed this in its adaptedness for rearing the finest fruits and fruit bearing shrubs. Wild berries are abun. dant, and in some of the prairies strawberries are large and fine. For all the objects of farming, and raising grain, flour, hemp, tobacco, cattle, sheep, swine, horses, &c., the emigrant could not desire a better country than may be found in Indiana. In the rich bottoms of the southern parts, the reed cane and the large ginseng are abundant. The high and rolling regions of this state are as healthy as the same kinds of land in other parts of the United States. The wet prairies and swampy lands, are however subject to fever and ague, and bilious complaints, but that the settlers in general have found the state, taken as a whole, favorable to health, the astonishing increase of the population bears ample testimo. ny. The winters are mild compared with New Eng. land, or even Pennsylvania. Winter commences about Christmas, and lasts seldom more than six weeks in the northern parts, snow sometimes, though rarely, falls a foot and a half in depth. Peach trees are generally in blossom in March, and the forests begin o be green from the 5th to the 15th of April. Vast numbers of flowering shrubs are in full flower before they are in leaf, which gives an inexpressible charm to the early appearance of spring. Although Indiana has not so great an extent of inland navigation as Illinois, the amount of that naviga. tion is very great. Many of its waters interlock with those of the Illinois. It possesses the whole extent of the noble Wabash, and White River and its numerous which at once discharge into Lakes Michiganand Erie, on the one hand, and the Gulf of Mexico on the other, with a small expense of money and labor, the lakes will be united by canals with the Ohio and Illinois. The state is alive to the importance of internal improvement, and a navigable canal already connects the White Water, by the Big Miami, with the Ohio at Cincinnati. This state, so rapidly becoming populous, will soon dispute the points of population and importance with Ohio, and will no doubt, ere long emulate the enterprises, the canals, and public works of its model. By the lakes, its northern frontier is already connected with Canada and New York. The whole extent of inland navigation now exceeds 5,000 miles. It would not comport with our limits so well as with our inclination, to give the statistics of the principal towns. We are compelled to mention only a few.Lawrenceburg, the seat of justice for the county of Dearborn, stands on the bank of the Ohio, 23 miles below Cincinnati. The ancient village was situated too low, so that it was not uncommon for the water to rise four or five feet above the foundations of the houses, in which case the inhabitants retreated to the upper story, and drove their domestic animals to the hills. Visits and tea parties were projected in the inundated town, and the vehicles of transport were skiffs and periogues. The period of flood became a time of carnival, and the running water was supposed to conduce to health, carrying off the vegetable and animal matter. New Lawrenceburg has been built on the second bank, and few places have made more rapid progress. Many of the new houses are handsome, and make a fine show from the river. It has several manufactories, and a population exceeding 1,000. Aurora is 13 miles below, and has 70 or 80 houses. Vevay is 45 miles below Cincinnati. It contains between 2 and 300 houses, a court house, jail, academy, printing office, issuing a weekly paper, a branch of the Bank of Indiana, and other public buildings. Mr. J. J. Dufour was the patriarch of the place, and the Swiss emigrants under his direction, commenced here the successful cultivation of the vine-Vevay presenting at this time the largest vineyard in the Union. The industrious Swiss make large quantities of straw bonnets. Madison is the most populous and one of the pleasantest towns, and is the landing place for the imports of the Ohio. It has 25 drygoods stores, doing a large business. A line of stages passes through it-it has two printing offices, and issues a respectable weekly gazette. It has an Insurance company, and application has been made for a branch of the United States Bank, which will no doubt be granted, if that institution is rechartered; whether it will be located at Madison, Lawrenceburg, or Indianapolis, remains to be determined. Madison is particularly noted for the quantity of pork barrelled there, and contains from 2,000 to 3,000 inhabitants. New London and Charlestown are smaller villages. Jeffersonville is opposite Louisville, on a high bank, and has many handsome houses. The broad rapid river, forming whitening sheets and cascades at the falls, the display of steam. boats, and the whole noble prospect, combine to render the scenery of this village uncommonly rich and diversified. It has a land office, post office, printing office, and some other public buildings. In 1819 a ca. nal was commenced to go round the falls of Ohio, on the Indiana side at Jeffersonville, which, if it had been completed, would have been of great importance to the place, but the one now completed at Louisville, has done away with the necessity of a second. ClarksAille is a small place, just below where there is, or was a good ferry. New Albany is four miles below Jeffersonville, where many steamboats that cannot pass the falls, are laid up for repair. It has a convenient ship yard, and is a busy and thriving village having 1,900 | the forests in all directions. We should note thou inhabitants. Vincennes is, after Kaskaskia, the oldest town in the western world, having been settled in 1735, by French emigrants from Canada. It is 150 miles above the mouth of the Wabash, and 54 from the nearest point of the Ohio, and contains 1,500 inhabitants. The plat of the town is a level, and laid off very regularly. This important place is accessible by steamboats for the greater part of the year. Most of the inhabitants have an air of ease and affluence, and Vincennes furnishes a pleasant and literary society. Harmony is 54 miles below Vincennes; the history of its settlement by Rapp, its subsequent purchase by Mr. Maclure and Ro. bert Owen, with the failure of their Quixotic plans of happiness, and even of earthly immortality, are well known. The "Social System" has been abandoned, but some of the Owenites still linger there. The town of Harrison presents the anomaly of being in two states!-part in Ohio and part in Indiana. Richmond is a thriving place of 1,500 inhabitants. Indianapolis, the capital, is on the west bank of White River, in the centre of one of the most extensive and fertile bodies of land in the western worldnearly central to the state, and at a point accessible to steamboats. No river in America in proportion to its size and extent, waters greater bodies of fertile land than White River. The country about this town has been settled with remarkable rapidity. But a few years since it was a dense deep forest, where the traveller now sees the buildings of a metropolis, compact streets and squares of brick buildings, manufactories, mechanic shops, printing offices, business and bustle. It will probably become one of the largest towns between Cincinnati and the Mississippi, having over 1,800 inhabitants already. as for In 1820 the population of Indiana was only 147,000 -in 1830 it exceeded 344,000, and it now is considera. bly more than 400,000-an increase unexampled even in the west. The people are distinguished for their progress in making farms and villages, as well their intelligence and respectability. The soil of the Upper Wabash is of the richest quality, being black, deep, friable, and extremely productive. The face of the country is undergoing great changes, which seem to work by enchantment. Four or five years ago it had only been trodden by savages, or the animals of the wilderness. The opening of the New York canal, has caused the Lake Michigan front to be viewed as a maritime shore, and the most important front of the state. Numerous portages between the Ohio and Mississippi and the Lakes, are found in Indiana-more than twenty have been practised, and through one, canoes have passed from the Ohio to Lake Erie. These will eventually be the routes of canals, and of great importance. Indiana has many curious subterranean caves. In one Epsom salts is found in lumps, varying from one to ten pounds; the floors and walls are covered with it in the form of a frost, which, when removed, is speedily reproduced. Nitre is also formed. The National Road is laid out, and some part of it made through the state from east to west, passing through Indianapolis. The spirit of regard for schools, religious societies and institutions connected with them, which has so honorably distinguished the legislation of Ohio, has displayed itself in this growing state. There is a large body of the society of Friends in Indiana, who, as likewise in Ohio, have had their moral influence. If we could, says Mr. Flint, present a scenic map of this state, exhibiting its present condition, it would present us a grand and interesting view of deep forests, wide and flowering prairies, dotted with thousands of log cabins; and in the villages, brick houses rising beside them. We should see chasms cut out of sands of dead trees surrounding the incipient settlements. On the edges of the prairies we should remark cabins or houses, sending up their smokes. We should see vast droves of cattle, ruminating in the vicinity in the shade. There would be a singular blending of nature and art; and to give interest to the scene, the bark hovels of the Indians in many places, would remain intermixed with the habitations of the whites. But the most pleasing part of the picture would be to see independent and respectable yeomen presiding over these great changes. The young children would be seen playing about the rustic establishments, full fed and happy, sure presages of the numbers, healthfulness, and independence of the coming generation. Here we reluctantly take leave for the present of this interesting state, and in our next shall probably give some notice of Michigan, which we are so soon to hail as a sister state. MY HUSBAND. Who early took me for his wife, Who shar'd with me, in ev'ry woe, Who hear'd the voice of love divine, Who now in dust has laid his head, Who has resign'd his spirit free, Who waits, in hope, that glorious day, Who shall attend the angel's sound, Whom shali I meet, at God's right hand, With whom, in heavenly worship sweet, THE MAHOGANY TREE. THE MAHOGANY TREE. One of the greatest vegetable curiosities in this section of the country, is a large mahogany tree at Bartram's garden (now Carr's,) a short distance from Grays ferry on the Schuylkill. It is of enormous size, and has been valued as it stands at $2500. It was brought by Bartram from the South on one of his expeditions, and is unquestionably the largest tree of the kind in North America. The account of the first introduction of mabogany to England is curious. A physician of the name of Gibbons was building a house in Covent Garden in 1724, when he received a present of some mahogany planks from his brother, a West India captain, and he desired his carpenter to work up the wood. The carpenter had no tool hard enough to touch it, and the planks were laid aside. The doctor's wife after the house was finised wanted a candle box, but the cabinet maker who was applied to, to work the planks, also complained his tools were too soft. But he persevered, and the candle box was completed after a rude fashion, but it was so much admired that the physician resolved to have a mahogany bureau, and when it was finished, all the people of fashion came to see it. The cabinet maker procured some planks and made a fortune. From that time the use of mahogany furniture went forward, and the drawers and bureaus of walnut and pear wood were su 181 perseded in the houses of the rich. In 1829 the importation of mahogany to England exceeded 1900 tons. The common mahogany tree (Sevitenia mahagoni) is one of the most majestic trees of the whole world. There are trees of greater height than the mahogany, but in Cuba and Honduras, this tree during a growth of two centuries expands to such a gigantic trunk, throws out such massive arms, and spreads the shade of its shining green leaves over such a vast surface, that even the proudest English oaks appear insignificant in comparison. A single log sometimes weighs six or seven tons. It grows in the most inaccessible situations, and a great part of the expense consists in the labor of getting it to market. Gangs of slaves of from 20 to 50 persons, commanded by a captain, and accompanied by a huntsman, whose duty it is to search out trees, set out in August from Honduras, and fixing on an abundant neighborhood, a sufficient number of trees are felled to employ the gang during the season. The tree is cut about ten feet from the ground. The trunk is the most valuable, but for omamental purposes the limbs are preferred. The making the roads upon which the wood is to be transported, is estimated at two thirds of the labor and expense of mahogany cutting. Fire is resorted to, to clear the way; bridges of great strength have to be constructed, and miles of road made to a single tree, from which sometimes one, and sometimes three or four logs are obtained. Oxen, in teams of eight to twelve pair, are employed to transport the logs; the largest one ever cut in Honduras was 17 feet long, and 57 inches broad; depth 64 inches, measuring 5,168 superficial feet, and weighing 15 tons. Each truck requires two drivers, sixteen men to cut food for the animals, and twelve to load. The heat is so great that the labor of loading has to be done in the night. The logs are pushed up an inclined plane by bodily exertion, without any further mechanical aid. The river reached, the logs marked with the owner's name are pitched into the stream. When the rivers in June are swelled the logs float down a distance of 200 miles, followed by the gangs in canoes, to disengage them from the overhanging branches of trees, until they are stopped by a boom near the mouth of the river. Each gang now separates its own cutting by the marks, and form them into rafts, in which state they are brought to the wharves of the proprietors, taken out of the water and undergo a second process of the axe, to make the surface smooth. The split ends, occasioned by being dashed against the rocks, are sawed off, and they are ready for shipping. The process of veneering is of recent origin; by it nine tenths of the wood is saved, being glued on to pine and other woods. It is sawed in Philadelphia into thin veneers by steam, a process of reducing and yet saving appearances, which will no doubt sometime be applied to marble for building even to a greater extent than at present. No man can possibly improve in any company, for which he has no respect enough to be under some degree of restraint. Written for the Casket. AN ELEGY On the fate of the unfortunate Jane M' Crea. What tribute-gifts thy memory mourn'd should crown, No mystic rites from holy tongues were thine, Bent o'er thy wreck, and form'd thy humble grave. But unforgetful grief her debt hath paid, And maiden-trains from rural hamlets nigh, But vain may roll the poet's tuneful line, Fate's bleeding victim! not alone to die, The glow of fancy, and the charm of fame; Among the unfortunate Moriscoes who were forced to quit Spain in 1610, there was a very rich farmer. As the object of the government was, to hurry the Moriscoes out of the country And prompts the heart, while feeling's flame shall burn, without allowing them to remove their property, Thy name to cherish, and thy fate to mourn. many buried their money and jewels, in hopes of returning from Africa at a future period.Muley Hassem, according to our popular tradition, had contrived a vault under the close porch of his house. Distrusting his Christian neighbors, he had there accumulated great quantities of gold and pearls, which upon his quitting the country, were laid under a spell by another Morisco, deeply versed in the secret arts. The jealousy of the Spaniards, and the severe penalties enacted against such of the exiles as should Thou fairly featur'd, and celestial soul'd, While Fame doth teach from Sappho's saddening tale, return, precluded Muley Hassem, from all oppor How little life can spurn'd in love avail; From the Saturday Evening Post. THE DREAMS OF YOUTH.. Delusive, childhood, are thy golden dreams, When fancy sports among elysian bowers, Through which meander many chrystal streams, With margin decked with rainbow tinted flowers. The world seems lovely to the young in years, Bereft of thorns the path of life appears. But soon departs the rosy morn of youth, No more we rove beneath unclouded skies, By mingling in the stir and strife of men, We linger fondly o'er departed years, When blossoms perfume in our pathway shed; How few are living whom in youth we knew, The voiceless tomb, their last inheritance, Conceals their forms forever from our view. Our dreams of pleasure vanish, when we know That life is but a pilgrimage of woe. AVON BARD. tunities of recovering his treasure. He died intrusting the secret to an only daughter, who having grown up at Seville, was perfectly acquainted with the spot under the charm. Fatima married, and was soon left a widow, with a daughter, whom she taught Spanish, hoping to make her pass for a native of the Peninsula. Urged by the approach of poverty which sharpened sharpened the the desire to make use of the secret intrusted to Fatima, and her daughter Zuleima, embarked in the vessel of a Corsair, and were landed secretly in a cove near Huelva. Dressed in the costume of the peasantry, and having assumed Christian names, both mother and daughter made their way to Seville on foot, or by an occasional conveyance which offered on the road. To avoid suspicion, they gave out that they were returning from the performance of a vow to a celebrated image of the Virgin near Moguer. I will not tire you with details as to the means, by which Fatima, obtained a place for herself and daughter, in the family then occupying her paternal house. Her constant endeavors to please her master and mistress, succeeded to the utmost of her wishes; the beauty and innocence of Zuleima, then only fourteen, needed no studied efforts to obtain the affection of the whole family. When Fatima thought that the time was come, she prepared her daughter for the important, and awful task, of recovering the concealed treasure, of which she had constantly talked to her since the child could understand her meaning. The winter came on, the family moved to the first floor as usual; and Fatima asked to be allowed one of the ground floor rooms for herself and Zuleima. About the middle of December, when the periodical rains threatened to make the Guadalquiver overflow its banks, and scarcely a soul stirred out after sunset, Fatima, provided, with a rope and basket, anxiously awaited the hour of midnight to commence her incantation. Her daughter stood trembling by her side in the porch, to which they had groped their way in the dark. The large bell of th of the cathedral clock, whose sound had a most startling effect, in the dead silence of the night, tolled the hour, and the melancholy peal of supplication followed for about two minutes. All now was still except the wind and rain.Fatima, unlocking with some difficulty the cold hands of her daughter out of her's struck with a flint, and lighted a green taper, not more than |