Br HENRY J. STABLE, 37T" YEAR. TERMS OF THE COMPILER. le: -The Republican Compiler is publislied every Monday morning,, by ii ENRY Srani.,E, at 51,73 per annum if ,paid adefince—S 9 ,oo paid in advance. No sub per annum if not scr iption.discontinued, unless at the option Of at_blisher, until all .a.rrearages are paid'. Am - EivrisENlENTs inserted at the usual rates. - done, -neatly, cheaply-, and' ii ith dispatch. • Office on. South Baltimore street, direct ly BArcite Watnpler's -Tinning Establishment, nyl. a. half squares from the Court House. etioice ti)actri). PADDLE YOUR OWN CANOE. BY 3125., SlltAll T. BOLTON Voyager upon life's sea, To yourbelf be true, Awl whore'er your lot rna.y be, Paddle your min canoe._ Neer, though the winds may rave,: Falter nor look' back, , But upon the darkest Leave a" shining track. Nobly dare the wildest storm, stem the hardest gale, Bravo of heart and strong of, arm, You will never When the world is cold and dark, Beep an end in view, nd towards ihe beacon . mark Puddle your plrn ranee To the Filent t,hore, From. its sunny source had gone To return no more. Then let not an hour's .delay, Cheat you of your due: But while it is called to-day, Paddle your own canoe. If your birth denied you wealth, lofty state- and power, 11 °nest fame .and hardy health Are a better 'dower; But if these will not suffice, Golden gaitipursue; And to w•in the glittering prize, Paddle your own canoe. Would you wrest the wealth of faTe From the hand of Fate; Would you write a deathless n' e, • With the good and great ; - Would you bless your fellow men ?_ Heart and soul imbue With the holy task, and then Paddle your 'An canoe_ Would 3•nu crush the tyrant Wrong, In the world's free fight, With a spirit brave and strong, Battle for the Right ; And - to-break the-chains- that-bind The many to the few— To enfianchise slavi,h mind,..' Paddle your ow•n canoe_ Nothing great is lightly- won, Is:othing won is lost,— Every good deed nobly done, -Will repay the cost. Leave to Heaven, in bumble trust, All you will to do; But if You succeed, you must Paddle your own canoe. Zelectllaun. The Sumner is Ended. In commenting upon the eventful summer from which we have just emerged, the N. Y. Mirror says that "it has been a hard and a hot one.. Fires, failures, diseage and death, have brought lasses and mourning to thousands— the calamity of short crops and high prices makes the poor man look• anxiously to the coming winter. Many who began the season in the fulness of health and beauty, have perish ed with the' early flowers, and hundreds who went abroad decked in the gay colors of joy and hope are now robed in the sombre attire of grief and mourning. Autumn has come to limy a heart, even in the spring-time of life, and the earth has become to thousands'of its pilgrims literally 'the valley of the shadow of death. They who have passed through this trying season unscathed by sickness and mis fortune—whom the Death Angel has not even brushed with his wings, should make their lives a hymn of thanksgiving to:the Infinite Cod who has dealt with them so gently and so graciously !—lnstead of looking on the dark side of the future,, they should look up in grate ful confidence to the Reaper whose sickle has left them to flourish a little longer in the field while thousands, as full of health and prOise as they, have-been cut down and withered in an hour." THE TONGU.-.-1 must confess, says Addi son, I am so wonderfully charmed with the music of this little instrument that I would by no means discourage it. All that lamatis to cure it of several disagreeable notes—and in particular of those little jai-rings and disson ances which arise from anger, censoriousness, and rssipping. In' short, I would have it tuned by good nature, truth, discretion, and si nceri NEWSPAPERS IN" inE W4)m..6.—The following, is supposed to be the number of newspapers-in the world :-10 in Austria. 14 in Africa, 24 in Spain, 26 in Portugal, :;() to Asia, 65 iti,Bel; glum, 8,5 in Denmark, 60 in Rus , iia and Po- land, 3:20 in othei 6ermanic States, 500 in Great Britain. Ireland and S,;otland, and 2000 in the United States, or about twice as nianv iNhis country as ali other nations. This n::::,oiints for tht superiority of our people in point of intellt_ fzenec to every other pe4le on the tzlol-e. Ar Impr - DE.rx FE - I.7.evw —A lecturer dawn citilues w:do - vis as wives." 3 Sandhi iiirmsga rr--=-Iruntrui to Irilitirs, 3grirulturi, litinturr, ',Arts unt t •krirurrs, T . TIt 31finkrts, diirtrral 'lotourstir ruih*intriligrtrr, 3tturtisina, 3unoriarnt, r. MEZE Live Within. Your Means. We don't like . stinginess. We don't like economy, when it comes down 'to rags and starvation.. We have no' sympathy with the notion that the_poor man should hitch himself to a post and stand still; while the rest of the wor moves . na&s-11-u-tylt-o-i-ba-E -denylimsell every amnsgulent, every_ 1 ttXury every recreation, every comfort, that lie may get rich.,‘ It is no man's duty to make an ice berg of himself, to shut his eyes and ears to the sufferings of his fellows, and to deny him self the enjoyment that results from generous actions merely that he may hoard wealth for his, heirs _to quarrel about. But _-there is an economy which is 'every man's duty, and which is especially commendable- in the man who struggles with poverty—an- economy which is consistent with happiness, and which must be practised if the poor man_would se em-, independence. It is almost every man's privilege, and it be comes his duty to live within-his means ; not u to, latit within them. • 'Wealth does not make the man, we adltnit, and should never be taken ;nto the account in our judgment of ►men : but competence should always be -secured when it can be, by the practice of economy and self-denial to only -a tolerable extent: It should be secured, not so- much for others to look upon, or to raise us in the. estimation of as -to sPrnire the consciousness of inde- pendence and the constant satisfaction which is derived froin its acquirement and possession. We should like tb impress this singlefact upon -the mind of every laboring man who may peruse this short article—that it is possi ble for him to rise above Poverty ; and that the path to independence, though beset - with toils and S - elf-sacrifice, is much pleasanter to the traveler than any one be can enter upon. The man who feels that he is , earning some thing more than he spending, will walk the street with a much lighter heart, and enter his borne with a much more cheerful coun tenance. than he who spends as he goes, Orfalls gradually behind his necessities in acquiring the means of meeting them. The man who is everybody's debtor is every - body's slave, and in a worse condition than he who serves a single master. Fur the sake of the present, then. as well as for the future, we should most earnestly urge upon every working man 'to live within his means— Let him lay by- something_ evety day —if but a_penny—itis better than nothing ; infinitely better than running in debt a penny a day or a penny a week. If he can earn one dollar a day let him try fairly and faithfully the experiment of living on ninety cents. lle will like it. "People will laugh." Let them laugh. "They will call me stingy." Better call you stingy, than say you do not pay your debts. "They will wonder why I do not have better furniture, live in a finer house, and attend concerts and the playhouse." Let them won der for a while—it won't hurt you. By-and by you can have a fine house and tine furniture of.your own, and they will wonder again, and come billing and cooing around you iil.e so many pleased fools. Try the experiment. Live within your means. The Philosophy of Rain To understand the philosophy of this beau ti ful and often sublime phenomenon, so often witnessed since the creation of the world, and so essential Co the very existence of plants „Wild animals, a few facts derived from observation, and a long train of experimen ts, must be re membered. 1. Were the atmosphere every where at all times of a uniform temperature, we should never ha\'e rain,-or hail, or snow. The'water absorbed by evaporaticin from the sea and the earth's' surface, would descend in an im perceptible vapor, or cease to be absorbed by the air when it was once fully saturated. .2. The absorbing power of the atmosphere, and consequently its capacity to retain humidi ty, i 6 proportionately greater in warm than in cold air. 3. The air nearest the surface of the earth is warmer than it is in the region of the clouds. The higher we ascend from the earth the 'colder do we find the atmosphere. hence the perpe tual snow on very high mountains in the hot test climates. Now when by continued evaporation, the air is highly saturated with vapor, though it be invisible, and .the sky cloudless, if its temperature is suddenly reduced, by cold cur rents descending from above, or rushing from a higher to a low latitude, or by the motion of a saturated air to a aide' . latitude, its capaci ty to retain moisture is 'diminished, cloud:, are funned, and the result is rain. It condenses as it cools, and like a sponge filled with water, and compressed, pours out the water which its diminished capacity cannot hold. How singu lar, yet - how :•iinple- the philosophy_ of rain ! What but Omniscience could have devised such an admirable arrangement for watering the earth ! . _ Neht - altali Perklns, of Top311(-1d, Me., it is said. recently gathered from a singe._ apple tree_upon his farm one hundred bushels of-apples. - r.,.'The New Hampshlre PutrirA reports th since the first of June last, four of the Refire sentati-resin th - &New Hampshire Lt-zii,lature have died GETTYSBURG, PA.: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2 - 0, 1854. A Great Shot. The "best shot ever made," that we have heard of, was that of an old hunter, who told us the story, but for the perfect accuracy of whose statements «•e will not vouch. Our fiiend, the hunter, was , standing•nn the ak—of theme iaoa rircr,--r-i-lk in hiuld r _ii_nd! spied on the opposite shore a noble deer. ciupon which he fired. At the iristanthe touched the trigger, an enormous fish leaped from the water 4 ,2 _ and received the ball through the gills rthe deer dropped dead in his tracks. The'hcinter took a canoe, which, as fortune] was in a smiling mood, happened to be near, secured the fish, which. had ceased to flounce “Wirt was once engaged in the trial of a and was floating with the current, and,landed cause in which one of the most material wit at shot where his prize—the deer--had nesses on the other side was notorious for his fallen. °it . examining the animal he found gulibility. By . way of--ribmwini,pcp_this: trait that the ball had passed through him, and in the witness, and thus impairing histesti looking in the direction it had taken, he dis- loony, Wirt asked him if he had ever o read c it ed a dead deer, also slain by the indomi- Riley's Narrative, and if so. whether be thought table bullet, and, presently saw that it had it'was true. ,"011,yes," said the witness, "I've buried itself in an old poplar, and, from the 1 read it, and I believe every word ()fit !"—The hole it had piei•ced, gushed . a stream of honey on the other side perceiving the advan as bright as gold. He stooped to gather a stick i tag gained by his opponent, here interposed to-stop-this waste of sW - Ce'iness, and his hand the question you ever read Wirt's life rested on - La, rabbit, which he lifted and then of Henry, and it.'so;do you believe iL is true ?" dashed to the ground in anger, 'when lo ! have read it," replied the simple witness. smote a flock of quails, killing's number of Elf I .41boroughly disgusted with the excess of success which had come u on him; he took nod care of his game, and, in due Season, of the honey also.—Cincinnali Commercial. A New York pill doctor, who advertised in a Cincinnati paper, asked the editor to give him a puff. The editor, good-natured, wrote a "first rate notice," from which we make the following extract : • "One single pill worn in each pocket, will instantly give ease and elasticity to the tight ' esiNpantaloons. A little quantity create an appetite in the most delicate stomach, or physic a horse. They will also be found to give a. rich flavor to apple-dumplings, and a peculiar zest to pickled oysters ; they will thicken soup, redu,ce • ulent person, and are an excellent it for mouse-traps. One pill dissolved in a ucket of water will he found a perfectly water-pronf lining for canal em bankments ; placed in steamboat boilers, they will effectually prevent their bursting, and greatly increase the speed of the boats. As for -their-medic-al ies, they _j e u.stly_en tit 1 to be called—Mid/amen/um Gracia Probalum,! e., a remedy approved by-grace—for they effectually cool St. Anthony's fire and stop St. Vitus's da^nce ; they purify the pimples in the small pox, and eradicate the red gum in teeth ing, they reduce white swelling and cure the black jaundice, blue devils, yellow, scarlet, or. any other fever ; they cure also the thrush in chihlren. and pip in hens, the staggers in horses, and the nightmare in owls. But further enumeration is unnecessary ; suffice it to say that this medicine is a combination upon new principles discovered by the present Proprie tor's immortal grandmother, and are an excep-, lion to all rules of science,.commop sense, and experience ; 'so that while they are the nfost powerful agent in nature, revolutionizing tire whole animal economy, and eradicating • the mosrineurable diseases, they :are at the same time a perfectly innocent preparation, and may he taken with entire safety by the nursing in fant—powerful all harmless." AsoTHEM 'MEDICAL PRIZE QI. - ESTION.—The N. York Academy of Medicine, through the lib erality of a few of its members, offers a prize of $lOO for the best essay- on "The Nature and Treatment of Cholera Infantum." to be pres ented during the ensuing year. The trial for the prize is not restricted to the fellows, but is open to the profession throughout tl try. _ _ VIOLATING THE LIQUOR' LAW.—Zachariali Porter, of the Cambridge ( Mass.) Cattle Marke.. Ilotel, has been convicted in the court of com mon pleas in Lowell, on nineteen cases, for sel ling liquor, eighteen of which were on appeal. The fine of and imprisoninent for four years is thus confirmed. The matter will - now go before the supreme court on exception. REsfartfcAßLE.—At the burial of Alarshal do St. Arnaud the flags of Prince auf.J., of England, for the first time in. history, covered the same and-Musselman cannon resounded in sign of grief at the funeral of a christian general. NontEEsT.—William Walker. of Lon don, has bequeathed £l.OOO to the poor of his native city, Perth,' the income to he expended In blankets, coals and oatmeal, in the month of November in each 3ear, forever. Blum; EN Box Es. --"Mr. Witness. you have said that while walking with an umbrella over your head, you fell into this reservoir awl were badly injured. - 1)i , 1 you break any bones, sir, at that tiwe ?" "I did, sir." " What iknes?" "Wiathboncs, sir !" _ When a stranger treats me with want of respect," said a poor philosopher, -I comfort he slights, but my old shaggy coat 'and which co say the truth,„ have no particular claim for admiration. S 3 if m; hat and coat choo.e to fret about it, let them Lut nothing to me." ter" Don't hurry," exclaimed the man who was going to be hung, to the crowd w.h - ch lowed him, "there'll be no fun till I get there." . - TRUTU IS AIIgIITY, AND WILL PREVAIL A Powerful 'Puff. We find in an exchange paper an anecdote of the late Win. Wirt, tha.ris too good to be lost. Wirt's life of Patrick Henry, as every reader of that biography knows, is excessive in its laudation orthe great Virginia - orator : in fact,. ' lived to'whorn such swelling:and varied strains lof penegyrie could - bejustlfaii4Wd, ns Wit continindly resorts to in depicting the cliarac• ter of Henry. In' illustration 'of this trait the following -story current in Eastern Virginia, said to be true to the letter, is told. "but 1 can't say I believe it ; no, no, that's I wore tl►an I can swallow !" Wirt was "es- Em the recent trial of Portman, at Covington, Ky.., one of the jurymen returned was asked - by the prosecution Him had any ‘.conscientious scru ples about inflicting the death penalty ?" ••Scruples ?" "Yes, tiir, conscientious svupl. es." The juryman scratched his head, and thought deeply for a moment. "Yes, sir, I have scru "Scruples," suggested the attorney. , "Yes, sir, I have conscientious scruples." "Will you explain the nature olypur scru ples to,the Court," said the lawyer. "My scru ples," . sa id - the juryman, facing His Honor, "is Martha Dutchman ought in be hung, and I'm infur He was ordered to "stand aside for cause." Co-aPERATON - OF TIM WIFEL—No Mall ever prospered in the world without the co-opera tion of his wife. If she unites in nvitual en deavors, or rewards his labors with an endear ing smileovith what confidence will be resort - t - o - itis - m-erc-,h-a-ndise-or-hisfartu i -tly-ever—lantUr sail upon seas, meet difficulty . and encounter danger, if he knows that he is not spending his strength in vain. but that his labor will - be re warded-by tho sweets of home ! Solicitude•and disappointment enter the history of every man's life, and he is bulshalf pros ided fbr this voyage who finds but an associate , for happy hours, - while for his months of darkness and distress no sympathising" partner is prepared. LAM; E PRO DUCE Pawl B E ES. —John Ross, an experienced apiarist of Warren, Mass., has a hive of bees, from which he has taken during the past year two hundred and forty founds of extra honey. The bees were fed upon a pre paration made liyininself, and by the use of which they do far be cum than when left to col lect their own food. .TIIOROGGIILY PATRIOTIC.—The Paliatna4tar, giving the incidents of the reee - nt . earthqtmke.• there, says : ''( - pat iotic individual rushed to his consul's residence, and.claimed the pro tection of his national flag. In vain a friend told him ,he would be no safer there—that eWrthquakes respect no flag. 'Ell be d—d if they shunt ours, trough,' he replied. 'lf any earthquake dare touch that flag, tile Whole Union would rise to put it down.' " -117'Life is - a lemonade made up of different ingredients—fortune, that's the water—misfor tune, that's.the lemon—and good fortune; which is the sugar. It is rather pleasant when the in gredients are not disproportionately mixed, but it is an unpleasant dose when the lemon is ex cessive, or the super abundant water makes it mawkish and pall upon the appetite. PENNSYLVANIANS FOlt KANSAS.—The Penn sylvania Company, numbering about' 150 per sons, left Conneautville on the Ist inst. They were joined at Rochester, by another branch of the company from Cambria county. A CENT) NARIAN.—An old lady. named Sarah and aged one hundred and seven years, recently died at, New Liberia, La. She was born in the city of New York, on the 25th of December, 17-16. _rr_7one boy in a shop is as ;rood as a man. Two boys, however, are worse than none at all. If there be but. one boy in a room he is quiet -and sedate as a t-,naker. Introduce another, and ground and lofty tumbling and sotnersets over the stove-are in order from dark. Ca"-Buys," said a village pedagogue other day, "what is the tneanisvg of all that noise in the schor,l!". "It Bill Sikes. sir, ~v-ho-i --:.1;--t-h~ --I "cmme up here. William. if you have- turned into a locomotive, it is high time, you were switched off." thcni alis.Q now ? ztrolLin to his teacher. "Whit fc.ll , ,ws (bo racqui, my der'" "Why, Pant, and Luke, and Deuteronomy and them.": A clergyman who vas in the habit of preach ing- in different inirt's of the country, was not long since DA an inn, where he observed a horse jockey trying totitke in a simple gentleman, by imposing upon him a broliemninded, horse for a sound one s The parson knew the bud char- a , :ter of the jockey, and taking the gentlemal othe--per.sche was dealing with. .The.geutletnan finally de clined to purchase, and the jockey, quite net tled. observed— "Parson, I had much rather hear you preaeb, than see you. privately interfere in bargains be tween man and Man, in this way." replied the parson, •'lf you were where you ought to have been, last Sunday, 'you'rniEtit have heard me preach." gyman. A large collection of rare foreign birds and poultry, which had been on exhibition at Bar num's museum, in New York, during the week. was sold at public auction on Saturday. The stock was imported by Mr. Giles, of Connecti cut, for himself and, others, and was brought over in 'the steamship Washington. Among the bidders was Tom Thumb, who was-perched upon the top of a caget.antt attraetAmas melt attention as the golden pheasant. - A pair of NM white swans, and a •pnir of -Japanese peacacts were bid off at one hundred dollars each. • A pair of 3lnUdarin docks brought oue hundred and fifty dollars, and a black swan the stun of one hundred &Mars. „7tlany very beautiful fowls, which Were said to be worth forty dol lars a pair, were knocked down at two dollars and a half. The entire rot. offered, it is said, cost seventeen hundred dollars.- MEM Trt,Wifscavm; p . A . r.—The. following States and cities have designated the days named for the purpose of general thanksgiving : NOvember 123d.- I .llaryland, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Louisiana, Florida, Wiscon sin. and NUW Jersey, and thu cities of Wash ington, Norfolk and Portsmouth., November 30111.—ANne; New Hampshire, New :York, Tndiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Massa chusetts, Ithodo Island, IllinoiS,Aichigan and Connecticut. "DIED lti nii. Ilmtsgss."—Rev. Joshua T. -Russel, a Baptist cicEgytnan at Jackson, Ails-. sissippl, recently closed a very eloquent address before the-Mble Society with these words : ‘..llillions who are now around the Throne of God, singing the song of Moses - and the La►hb, have been saved by the influence of this Wok." While uttering these words, ho looked up as if he had a vit - iien of w hat he descri bed, and paused a moment, and s!tying, "1 have (lode," sat down, and was immediately seized with a fatal attack of apoplexy. Tickatun Tuttocun.—At present human in genuity scents to be taxed to the utmost to suggest means by which the lives of passengers may be preserved, - even if a vessel goes down at boa. The last, and perhaps the best,' we find in the Boston Transcript. ft is the sug gestion of an (‘ld sea captain, and contemplates s. suflicieut number of Life boats to accommo date the passengers and crew, each boat to be provided with a compass, water and food, and to he numbered and placed under the cothmnnd of an officer of a vessel. As each person taketi passage in the vessel, he is also ticketed for a position in one of - the life boats, so that, in case of accident, each one knows where he belongs. N MIER 01' SLAVES IN THE Woll.l.l).—The African Institution of Paris—an association for the diffusion ,of civilization and Christian light Diu Africa --has recently issued a circular which shows that dm nurribiz of blacks held in sla very in different countries is seven and a half millions, of which 3,095,000 arc in the United States, 3,250,000 in Brazil, 900,000 in the Spanish colonies, 05.000 in the l)utch colonies, 140,000 in the republics of Central America, and 80,000 in European establishments in Af BM '"Well, Sambu, is your master a good farmer ?" ' , Yes, sah, he berry good farrner:makes tvio crops in one year !" "How is that, San)lx) ?" Why,) he stilt; his hay in de fall, and makes money once ; den in de spring he sells all de hides ob de cattle dat die for want oh de hay, and dus make money twice !" C - 7 - I'hey write . home that there are flea.s enough in Turkey to darn up the llogpliorus, The Turks wear them for lining fur their g, _ .. _ o . .... .... , . . .... . _ __ . - _._—___.. -.-_ _ ,' noes and Indiana. and o,lio anl New Ilitinp :::"^Ladies who have a disposition to punish' shire, the same characters show themselves their husbands, should bear in mind that a' by uninistakatile signs. They have generally ori npt histories, sourtempers, 811(1 it 'hatred said an little , sunshine will melt an icicle much quicker e . ,of all politicians wore honest than thk.i.useives. Ulan ar(vrtilar northeaster.- . some of them ma y succ e d, for a brief pe,iml, ill --- ;,/—"Slianghin Chicken," is the t itl e of a ' getting places oiice ims-e at tht‘ paol l c ;. , r jo, and in satisfying a little their personal resent new \reel:ly puoliNhed at i...),Jyton, On:a, by the: medt s ; but they will Ini‘e snore 1.4.411/z, and i Shanghai Company. - , cub/ pu uishments. —..:::(ha ton ( Maine) drgu.s. , sed-ite-ta “Where was that ?” inquired the jockey. "Iu the STATE PmsoN," retorted the _cler- -- Great Sale of Choice Fowls. ri - "llere, fellow, hold this horse." "Does he kick ?" "Kick I no ; take hold of him." "Does he bite ?" "Bite I no ; take hold of the bridle, I say." "Does it take two to hold him." "So I" "Then hold him yourself." MEM tWO DOLLARS A-YEAR. We live in an age when the whole world seems ultra:, and thns'we find Congress spend ing thousands of dollars for-improvement in the telescope, and nothing for the _Our state legislators will vote half a million of public funds for a geological survey, which is .ut Temo t-he-fat-m• um ing a much less amount, would be more home diately useful. is true that the farmer, from a geological survey,' may know the rocks, the debris of v; Bich has formed the soil, and if every farmer _- would read it, and every' geologist so write it as to render it applicable to his use, he might abstract this best of inforination from it. But we all know that_ farmers do not read•geolog kat reports, and we equally well know. that they are not made in such a manner as to ren der them suited to' their nsi a ' They are so scokastic in their character, and so general in their application, that the agri culturist neither comprehends them, nor. does he find Sufficient - pertinent matter to call forth his admiration. - ----. An agricultural survey, strictlyso, would give " a synopsis of the rocks from which the - soils were formed, by an occasional analisisof the soil, and it Would doubtless contain the I_proper- rectit insfor_the.supply_of_the_deilcien , cies. It would settle all the;mooted.questions f-the-drt-3r=—y kind of soil to raise every kind of crop, would soon bo known; 'the use of:all known ant ndmhts on-different soils would readily be understood for each operator in making - a report of the results of his experiments, would doubtless, by a refer ence to such a survey, give 'a detail of the emu position of his soil with a proximate accuracy, at least,. which would enable others to judge af: the value of the amendments used for the crop raised on soils differing but slightly in their chemical constituents._ It would soon be known what kind of soils are test suited to each of the staple crops, and when 'we received a report of two .cropii raised with the sawn) amendments, but. at different depths (if tion, .we should know why.they differed,in re sult. Such a survey would furnish all:the ne cessary .statistics, so that then . amount of Crops and their relative proportions to each Woiltdibe known. We,ebould have some basis for far avers to depend upon in deciding what crops they should raise. The'effect oftlimate on the liffere-utarops—tunl the di frerecitki4aSA . rthik, would be clearly understood, and .cite class'of implements used in the different districts Would be knoWn to -all. To the llorticalturist it would be - invaluable. . - We now know that the same kind of (mit which on on kind of soi lis of superior quality, failS entirely on another, butt we do not as well know the caoses why. 'All these would Soon be arrived at . by the assistance of agricultural surveys. - The natural history 'of the country, at least in its utilitarian application, would be-, fairly sot forth : for those snaking the survey would be brought into direct contact with the farmers, and all facts relating to Eaton could thus be practically ascertained. Indeed: the oft repeated question,-llc4 shall agricultural knowledge be disseminated ?" would be' an. swered by such reports. We should not long find that one or more farmers in each district could raise a hundred bushels to the acre 4 for the means by which the greater crop could be raised .would become generally known, and where it arises from peculiarities in composi tion of the soil, the amendments necessary to produce similarity to the degree required, would be ascertained. • Indeed,_such reports, instead Op finding their way to the upper shelves of large and unread libraries, would be so valuable to the farmer, that every farmer's boy could use them as a text book, and instead of being stimulated to study those things that are of remote useful= ness, he would apply his observation to the more useful area of the farm.—Working Disappointed Politicians. It is a striking feature of the political cam- ' paign this fidl, that in almost every state in, Union disappointed and decayed politicians have enjoyed a kind of jubilee. Those who have been gorged with office, and allowed to retire, and men who for any reason have been laid on the shelf in their respective localities, have taken occasion this year to emerge from their hiding-places, and at once to gratify their private revenges, and make a new effort for a fresh share of spoils. Wherever the fusion movement has prevailed these men have been among its prime leaders ; wherever the secret order has been organized they hive been sachems in the tribe : wherever the anti-Ne braska war cry has .been popular they have almost split their throats by joining in it. In the hour of calm and repose they were quiet as the grave, or, if they attempted to make mischief, they were restrained by the people, who knew their histories. But, with the con fusion and efxcitement of 1854, they have - gloried in the opportunity to show themselves, and even claim now to be, _the most pure and p a tri o tic and worst used persons the republic ever had., It is unnecessary to call names in order to describe them. In.thc Morrill ranks of this State, in the Pollock ranks of Pennsvl - ' , •: ••a ranks of Phi NO. 8. e purposes o