lALriiE sx. NEW SERIES. TK3 BEDFORD GAZETTE IS TU BUSHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING BY .MEYERS &. BEATORD, At the following term?, to wit: £1.50 per annum, CASH, in advance. $2.0?) " if paid within the year. $2.50 " " if not paid within the year. e~7~,V0 subscription taken for less than si* months. E7°"No paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid,unless at the option of the publishers. It has j-f-en decided by the Cnited States Courts, that the steppage of a newspaper without the payment of ar irat.iges, is prima farir evidence ol fraud and is a criminal offence. ££yThe courts have decided that persons are ac r 'aide for the subscription price of newspapers, ,1 t: } teke them from the po*t office, whether they subscribe for them, or not. jj o 1 11 g. "THE BATTLE 0? BLENHEIM." In all probability a sanguinary conflict is now raiing in Southern Europe. The fair valleys of Italy will be devastated bv fire and sword ; and the iron hand of war will /all heavy upon the peaceful and helpless. It seems to us that SOCTHEY'S /.> nous lyric, "the Battle of Blen heim,"' ill be good reading this morning ; and we therefore print it : It was on a surnrn-r evening ; Old Rasper's work was done, And he before his cottage door Was sitting in the sun ; And by him sported on the green His fittle grandchild Whilhelmine. she saw I er brother Peterkin Roll something large and round, Which he beside the rivulet In playing there, had found tie came to ask what he had found, That was so largp, and smooth, and round. Old Kaper took it from the boy Who stood expectant by ; And then the old man shook bis head, And with a natural sigh, • "Tis some poor fellow's skull," said he, ' Who fell in the great victory. "1 find theari : n the garden, For there's many here about t Aril often when I go to plough, '1 he ploughshare turns them out ; for many thousand men," said he '•Were slain in that great Victory. 1 ' "Now tei! tis what 'twas aff about,"' Young Peterkin, he cries ; And little Whilhelmine looks up With wond.T wafting eyes i - v ilWi' 1 " ••'arJ 2 h f. war, And what tWey fought ea-fch Wr. "v *• "it v?s the English,"Kaper cried, "Who put the T ranch to route j Tut what th-v fought each other for, 1 could net well tnake out ; Put every body said," quoth he. " J bat 'twas a famous victory." "My father lived at Blenheim then, Yon little stream hard by : They burnt bis dwelling to the ground, And he was forced to fly ; Vo with as wife and ch;!J he fled Nor had he where to rest his bead. "With fire and sword the country round Was wasted far and wide And many a ciiitding mother there, And new bom baby died; But things like that, you know, must be At every famous victory. "They say it was a shocking sight, After the field was won : For many thousand bodies here Lay rotting in the sun ; Put things like that, you know, mut be Altera famous victory. "Great praise the Duke of Marlhro' won, And our good prince Eugene." "Why. twasa very wicked thing !" Said little Whilhelmine. "Jsav—nay—my little girl," quoth he. "It was a famous victory. "And every body praised the Duke Who this groat fight did win." * Cut what good came of it at last T Quoth little Peterkin. "Why fun? I cannot tell," said he, "But 'twas a famous victory." T.'-.NADO. A special dispatch to the St. Louis Republican, M=v 27th, from Jackson ville Morgan county, Illinois, states that yesterday*, a most violent and destructive tor nado swept over the country, about halt a mile >outh ol the city, desolating everything that Hv in its path. Sixteen persons were killed, while a large number were severely wounded, a portion of whom cannot recover. Many houses and other buildings were torn into atoms by the furv of the whirl wind, others were overturned, and still more unroofed, and otherwise shattered by the blast. The cattle in the field were killed in £ rL ' at numbers, and crops destroyed. Ihe damage to property o! all kinds can hardly be estima te*!. AUSTRIA CONFISCATING THE CHURCII PROP ERTY. —Austria has commenced playing the same game that is now being pursued in Mex ico, and was also pursued by I ranee during the Revolution, and by England at the time o! the Reformation. The Emperor, it is said, has commenced a confiscation of Church property for war purposes. The wealth of the monas teries in .Austria is said be immense, and as every other means of revenue ha? been ex hausted, this is the onlv resource left to carry cn the war. It is stated that representations had been made in Rome which will preyent such a proceeding being denounced in that quarter. MM CONDEMNED OCT OE HIS OWN MOCTII. O The charge mad? by Forney & Co. agains' Mr. Buchanan i.<, that he has been false [to the Cincinnati platform and his own pledges on the subject of slavery in the territories. ° The position of Mr. Buchanan upon which this charge is based may be stated} in a few words. He holds that slavery exists in the territories under the Constitution [of the United States, and that the peejJe of the territories must de cide for themselves whether or not thev will have slavery t chen they come to form a Stale constitution, preparatory to admission into the Union. We have italicized the words which containhhe issue between the President and l.is revilers. It is because Mr. Buchanan de nies to the territorial legislature the power to abolish slavery, and pledges himselt to sustain the decision of the Supreme Court in the Dred Scott cae, that he is now charged by Colonel Forney and his associates with being false tu the doctrines of popular sovereignty, and, there fore, unworthy of the confidence of the Demo cratic part}'. We state the case plainly and distinctly, that we may do no injustice to any one in the proof and comments we are about to submit to our readers. On the 15th of August, 1857, Mr. Buchan an addressed to Prof. Silliman and his clerical associates his celebrated letter on the Kansas question. In that letter it became necessary to discuss the very question which forms the basis of the present issue; and it is.presented in the following clear and unequivocal lan guage : "Slavery existed at that period, and still ex ists in Kansas, under the Constitution of the United States. This point has at last been fi nally decided by the highest tribunal known to our laws. How it could ever have been seri ously doubted is a mystery. If a confedera tion of sovereign States acquire a new territo ry at the expense of their common blood and tiensure, sun ly one set of the partners can have no right to exclude the oilier from its en joyment by prohibiting them from taking into it whatsoever is recognised to be proneitv by the common constitution. But when the peo ple—the bona file residents ol such territory— proceed to frame a State constitution, then.it is their right to decide the important question for themselves, whether they will continue, modi fy, or abolish slavery. To them, and to them ilone, does this question belong, tree from all r or°ign interference." Every r- > tidy,? ader will admit that this ex .in'ct f' 4k; eriitories under tne Constitution ot the I nited states. 2. That the power to abolish it by the people of the territories could only be exercised when they come to form a State constitution. 3. That the decision of the Supreme Court in the Dred Scott case had aflii med these doctrines, and that such decision was in strict conformity to the individual opinions of Mr. Buchanan on the subject. It is not prptended that the Presi dent has, since the writing of that letter, an nounced a single principle which is not fully set forth in the extract which we have quoted. In fact, it was but the repetition of principles which tie had very clearly foreshadowed in his Inaugural Address. In a few days after the appearance of the letter, from which the fore going extract is taken, it made its appearance in the columns of Col. Forney's Philadelphia Press, accompanied by an editorial, from which we take the following paragraph : "A public man who is fortunate in his friends is an object of envy to his opponents. But Mr. Buchanan is fortunate in his enemies—emi nently fortunate, in that they have furnished him an opportunity of appealing against an in sane sectionalism, at a critical period like the present, to the whole country. The Executive is compelled, both by custom and by courtesy, to he silent in the midst of calumny. He must standby and see his motives impugned and his sincerity suspected, and refrain from the utter ance of that word which, spoken from him, would blow his assailants into the air. But there are proper exceptions to every general rule, and in this case the exception enables a good man to rebuke, in the language of the simple tiuth, a most unwarrantable and gratui tous indignity to himself and a gross libel upon history. We do not think that the annals of controversy can furnish a more complete reply to a dogmatic assumption of superior patriotism and pietv than that contained in Mr. Buchan an's response to these Connecticut meddler-, The country owes them thanks, for the first time in many years—thanks for exposing their vain and vapid sophistry to the irresistible ar tillery of the President's old-fashioned Pennsyl vania logic and common sense." We appeal to the honest and intelligent peo ple of Pennsylvania, and the whole country, to say if there could have been written a more full, complete, and unequivocal endorsement of the doctrines and principles for which Mr. Bu chanan is now so bitterly assailed, than is con tained in the language used by Col. Forney on that occasion ? At that time Col. Forney wrote in the spirit of friendship, and he spoke the words of truth. It was an honest, perhaps impulsive, homage to the patriot and statesman whom he had not then learned to hate and abuse. What has Mr. Buchanan done or said since that time to justify the change which has come over the feelings and opinions of Ids for mer eulogist? We defy the most searching caviller to produce a single principle or doc trine announced by him on this vexed subject which is not contained either in his Inaugural or the Silliman letter. That our readers may have the whole ques tion before them, as it was before Col. Forney when he penned the article from which s\e quote, we incorporate the following paragraph from the President's Inaugural, which, it must be borne in mind, had previously been aunoun BEDFORD, PA., FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 10, 1859. red to the country at the very moment of his entering upon the dutiesofhis olfice : "What a happy conception, then, was it for Congress, to apply this simple rule—that the will of the majority shall govern—to the set tlement of the question of domestic slavery in ! the territories! Congress is neither 'to legis late slavery into any Territory or State, nor to exclude it therefrom,' &.O. As a natural con sequence, Congress has also prescribed that when the Teriitory of Kansas shall be admit ted as a State, it 'shall be received into the Union with or without slavery, as their con stitution may prescribe at the lime of their ad mission.' "A difference of opinion has arisen as to the point of time when the people of a territory shall decide this question tor themselves. "This i*-, happily, a matter of but little prac tical importance. Besides, it is a judicial ques tion which legitimately belongs to the Su preme Court of the United States, before whom it is now pending, and will, it is understood, be speedily and finally settled. To their de cision, in common with all good citizens, I shall cheerfully submit, whatever this mav be, though it has ever been my individual opinion that, under the Neb raska Kansas act, the appro priate period will be when the number of ac tual residents in the territory shall justify the formation of a constitution with a view to its admission as a State into the Union." Take these doctrines, thus approved and de fended by Col. Forney in language of unboun ded and enthusiastic eulogy, and compare them with the principles which he and his associates lately proclaimed atHarirsburg, and then say who has stood firm and true. For the purpose of making the comparison, we leproduce one of the resolutions of that body. It is as fol lows : Resolved, In the language "of Stephen A. Douglas, "i7 matters not what ten/ the Supreme Court hereof ter decide as to the abstract question whether slavery may or mat/ not go into a Ter ritory under the constitution; the people have 'he lawful means to introduce it or exclude it, is they please, for the reason that slavery can not ezist a day or an hour anywhere unless it is supported by local police refutations. Those police regulations can only be established bv local legislation; and if the people are oppo sed to slavery, they will elect representatives lo that body who will, by unfriendly legisla tion, effectually prevent the introduction of ii into their midst. If, on the contrary, they are for it, their legislation will favor its extension. Hence, no matter what the decision of the Su preme Court may be on the abstract question, still the right of the people to make a slav- free Tern'ory is nerfget an-' Will Col. Forney attempt to reconcile the doctrines of the Silliman letter and his own editorial with the principles ol the toregoing resolutions? Mr. Buchanan and his friends stand now where they stood then. Col. For ney, at that time, said they were right, and, with the pride of a true Pennsylvania Demo crat, he called upon the National Democracy everywhere to rally to lite support ot "//ic President's old fashioned Pennsylvania logic and common sense." But the scene has chan ged. The language of praise and adulation has given way to abuse, vituperation, and calumny. One thing is certain, there has been no change on the part of Mr. Buchanan. The record which we this day place before our readers is conclusive upon that point. Those who may be curious to know the causes which have wrought this wonderful metamorphosis may pur sue the inquiry. For ourselves, we are con tent to place the (acts before the country, and wait the judgment which honest and candid men shall pronounce upon them. A single word more—applicable not only to Col. Forney, but to many others who now as sail the President for his doctrines and princi ples on the question of popular sovereignty : Why is it ttiat these men never uttered a word of complaint, or interposed a word of dissent, at the time there announcements were first made by the President ? Then it was all right. Then the President was a patriot and a statesman. No words of praise were foo strong and no adulation 100 fulsome for them to indulge in. The files of the different depart ments groan under the accumulated weight of their urgent appeals for oihee and patronage for themselves and friends. Now, if these prin ciples—which we nave shown were as distinct ly avowed at that time as they ever have been since—are so monstrous and so false to the doctrines of the Democratic party and the for mer pledges of the President, we call upon those men to answer to their own consciences and to the country, how it was that they were not only willing, but anxious, to receive oflice, patronage, and lavor from a man who had thus proven so false and treacherous? We leave them to answer the question, and the country to passjudgment upon their answer.—Constitu tion. Forney and Hie Silliman Letter. When we published our article of the 21th inst., we had only an extract from the editori al of Colonel Forney, in which he endorsed the President's Silliman letter. Since then we have have procured the entire article, and desire further light on the subject. Let it be borne in mind that Mr. Buchanan, in his letter to Professor Silliman and his associates, announced the following doctrines : 1 Slavery exists in the territories under the Constitution of the United Slates. 2. The territorial legislature cannot abolish it, as that power can only be exercised by the people of the territories when they come to form a State constitution. 3. These principles, having been finally decided by the Supreme Court in ; the Drtd Scott case, should be maintained in j good faith by all law-abiding citizens. Such | were the doctrines of the Silliman letter ; and I in publishing that letter in his paper, Forney Freedom of Thought and Opinion. makes the following editorial comments : "At midnight of yesterday evening, just a: we were preparing logo to press, the telegrapl brought us the following correspondence be tween President Buchanan and forty threi citizensot Connecticut,( most of them, we be lieve, clergymen,) headed by the somewha famous Professor B. Silliman, of Yale College New Haven. We cannot allow these remarka ble papers to go before our readers without ex pressing our own sentiments upon one or tw< of the points presented. "A public man who is fortunate in hi friends is an object of envy to his opponents.— ; But Sir. Buchanan is fortunate in Iris enemies ■ eminently fortunate, in that they have turnishei j him an opportunity of appealing against an insani | sectionalism, at a critical period like the present to the whole country. The exeuutive is com pelled, botii bv custom and by courtesy, to b< silent in the midst of calumny. He must stani by and see his motives impugned and his sin cerity suspected, and retrain from tlx utterance of that word which, spoken fron him, would blow his assailants into the air.— But there are proper exceptions to the genea ' rule, and, in this case, the exception enable/ a good man to rebuke, in the language of the simple truth, a most unwarantable and gratuilou. indignity to himself, and a gross libel upor history. We do not think that the annals o : controversy can furnish a more complete repU to a dogmatic assumption of superior patriotism and piety than that contained in Mr. Buchan an's lesponseto these Connecticut meddlers.— The country owes them thanks for the first time in many years—thanks for exposing their vain and vapid sophistry to the irresistible artillery t the President's old fashioned Pennsylvania logic and common sense. "There is that in the President's letter which appeals to higher emotions than party ; feelings. When he wrote his great Oregon lettter, now ten years ago, he struck a chord in every patriotic heart, and was answered by an outburst of unusual enthusiasm and praise. And so it will be now. lie sheds aiong the dark pathway that has led into our Kansas troubles a flood of light. He dissipates a thousand falsehoods in an instant. He fortifies his own portion. He invigorates the friends of the Constitution. He deprives sectionalism ot the only weapons left in its armorv ol expedients. He puts the stamp of authoritative denial upon its statements ; and says tc its misrepresentations, 'Thus far shall thou go and no farther.' To the thousands of hones! men, ot every party, who want peace and ar end to agitation, such a voice from the Execu tive will be welcomed with gratitude. "But we have no time lor further comment .Mills* vviuie nit i i President, under the inspiration which his patriotic letter had produced. Days and week: passed over his head, and no change wa: wrought in the opinions so honestly entertainer and franklv spoken. There was to Mr. For ney's mind, at that time, no violation o popular sovereignty, no betrayal oftheCincinna ti platform—no want of fidelity to Democratic principles— in holding the doctrine that slavery existed in the territories under the Constitution of the United States : and that the time tor the people to decide whether or not they would have slavery was when they formed their State constitution ; and that the decision of the Supreme Court in the Dred ; Scott case should be respected, and in good faith carried out. He then saw and felt that I Mr. Buchanan had "shed along the dark i pathway that has ted into our Kansas troubles a. tiood of light" He then read, in till! masterly letter of the President, the evidence ot patriotism, ability, and statesmanship, 'v3 thousand falsehoods " had been dissipated, in an instant, "bv the old Pennsylvania logic and common sense of the President."— The positions of Mr. Buchanan on this distrac ting question had been "firtified, 1 the friends of the constitution "invigorated," and "sec tionalism deprived of the only weapons left in its armorv of expedients." \veil and truly did he declare, in tiiis outburst of honest and enthusiastic endorsement, that "to the thousand of honest men, of every party, who want : peace and an end to agitation, such a voice from the. Executive will be welcomed with a raid a tie." This was the language of truthful prophecy. That voice and those principles have spoken peace and quiet to a distracted country, and put an end to a useless and wicked agitation, and the patriotic people ot all parties and all sections do welcome these results with grateful heaits. But Mr. Forney does not join in this generous 1 and universal feeling with the democracy.— ! The friend has become the rcviler. Disappointed, ' chagrined, and mortified, he turns his back not j onlv upon former friends, but upon iiis own solemn declartions and would dig up trom the grave the foul imputations of "these Con j necticut meddlers," and seek to sanctify with i his embittered resentments that which his own i ppn has pronounced false, arrogant, and ' calumnious. It would seem that forney has studied, to some puipose, the idea that the President "must stand by and see his motives impugnpd and his sincerity suspected, and refrain from the utterance of that word which, spoken from him, would blow his assailants into air." In this case there is no necessity for the speaking of that magic word ; and we leave the victim to that bitter remorse and. humiliation which he has wantonly brought upon himself. —Constitution. !EF~"What a fine gentleman !" exclaimed a young lady, when walking out with her beau, as a slim six-footer passed by. "Yes," re torted the beau, who was rather corpulent, "If he W'as much 'finer' we would not be able to see him." Fashionable intelligence—Long dresses make clean crossings. THE EVILS OF SCIENCE. Science has wrought out immense advantages for mankind, and we are therefore a[>t to re gard the "triumphs of science, - ' as we term them, as yielding only benefits. But, like the tree of "the knowledge of good and evil," sci ence yields a two-fold crop; and, although the good predominates, the evil is so extensive as to do much harm. We may see the evidence of this every day. The art of photography gladdens millions of hearts by faithful pictures of loved ones, while it ministers to that appre ciation of the beautiful which is found in every breast by its marvellous delineations ol other natural objects. Yet this exquisite art Enables the counterfeiter to imitate with exact faithful ness the bills of any bank he may select; thus putting it in his power to rob the community of thousands of dollars, and making hirn more to be dreaded than an anny of highwaymen, since he operates in secret and his mischief is wide-spread. A knowledge of chprnistrv has become indispensable for the comfort of civiii 7.pd communities; but by it the very food and drink we consume are in many instances con verted into slow poisons in order to enrich un scrupulous men. Pure wines are almost an anomaly. Large manufactories are. established to make a spurious article, and from whiskey, cider, low-cost wine, or some other cheap ma terial, are produced, by means of drugs and dye-woods, all the varieties of wine 3 from Jo hannisberg to Port. To speak of the "spark ling wine" is almost a figure of speech, while to say "generous wine" would be quite ridicu lous, since anything "simonpure" is rarelv to bp found outside o( the wine-grower's private cellar. It requires some confidence to sit down fo the most tempting dinner, since a late writer in lire Knickerbocker declares that our flour con tains alum, bone-dust, powder flints, and plaster of Paris; our bread, in addition, chalk, pipe clay, carbon, ammonia, sulphate of copper, and sulphate of zinc; our sugar, among other 'light' ingredients, lead, iron, sand; our cocoa and chocolate, Venitian red, red ochre, lard, (allow: our tea, besides half a hundred kinds of leaves, chrome yellow, soapstone, Prussian blue, a.-se nite of copper, potash, and similar "wholesome" substances; our pickles , even, salts of copper; our honey, pipe-clay; and our vinegar, sul phuric acid ! In vain would "good digestion wait on appetite" alter a meal in which such delicacies formed part of the feast. In sulphuric ether science gave to suffering humanity a balm of sovereign power. It robs wounds of their pain, prolongs life, and trans forms the knife of the surgeon from an instru ment of torment into a harmless tool. But in comn^ ! l-iunOi h .f..-'?' ous depraved this bene lates time and space, and human life, too, as we learn, at a fearful cost every year. The sewing machine lightens the burdpns of many housewives and cheapens clothing for the mil lions: but hundreds of women in our shoe-man ufacturing towns have been deprived by it of a light and profitable source of employment, while their poor sisters in the cities, who "stitch,stitch, stitch," till body and mind are weary and faint, are driven to a still fiercer struggle for bread, and perchance to a life of crime and misery. Science can save life; it is employed to destroy it. Happiness is promo ted by it, and misery caused by it, but only be cause man is unscrupulous and abuses it. The good ol science overpoweringly predominates, but it is well sometimes to look at the obverse side. EDITORIAL SCRIMMAGE. — The Black Republi cans ol Quincy, Illinois, lately engaged a six feet fellow to assail Mr. Brooks, editor of the Herald , published there. The following is Mr. Brooks's account of the fracas, the correct ness of which is verified by other statements : "About five o'clock in the afternoon, as we were passing the Whia office, this dirty scoun drel Sheremberg, who had been harbored there all day, ran out and struck us with a stick.— VVe turned upon the cowardly dog and chased him more than a half a block, down Hampshire street. The dirtv whelp outran us. He went in the direction of Pike's Peak. Up to the hour that our paper went to press—ten o'clock, last night, we were unable to hear otf him.— Our opinion is that he had better continue to run— better not stop—it will certainly be belter for his health ! He left his hat behind, which his filends can have by calling at our office. And this is the fellow—this cowardly, skulking, running dog, that the Black Republi cans of "this city put up to fight their battles for them ! We feel 100 good humored to abuse the poor devil this morning. His cowardly assault, and his still more cowardly flight are the butt of ridicule and contempt ol his own persona! and political friends. In order that our readers abroad may understand and appreci ate the cowardly scoundrel as he deserves, we will state in conclusion, that he is a man over six feet in height—but just as cowardly as he j 3 high— this long-legged puppy, after thus assaulting us, in a most sneaking and cowardly manner, absolutely, in the presence of a hundred persons, took to his heels and ran ! Go it ! Scheremberg ! Brooks is alter you ! —and he'll catch you, too, notwithstanding the length of your legs." Scheremberg's fleetness was accelerated by the erroneous impression that Brooks was after him with a knife ol disagreeable length. KF"One pretty Sabbath morning, recently, while Henry Ward Beecher was on his way to church, he lound the sidewalk occupied by a number of boys playing marbles, upon which he exclaimed: "What, boys, playing mar bles on the Sabbath day 1 Why, you Lighten me!" Upon which a hardened little sinner looked up and answered: "Frightened, ha! why don't you run, then *" WHOLE XI HUE It 83. THE TIME TO CUT WHE.IT. This has been made a matter of careful ex periment in England, and much more depends upon ii than is .generally supposed. From a very careful series of experiments made in England, in 1810-41, by Mr. John Hanman, ol \orkshire, with a view of deter mining the proper period of reaping wheat, it was decided that the best time for performing the operation is, when it is in a "raw" slate, or when the straw, as seen from a distance, appears green, but, closely examined, is found to be approximating to yellow, and the grain itself, being separated from the chaff is pulpy and solt, but not in the milky stage. This gen tleman has shown that, at least six dollars°per acre is lost by allowing the wheat to become ripe before it is cut, and, at the same time, its quality is not so good. The chief advantages derived from this me thod, are stated to be greater weight of grain to a given space of ground, which produces more flour, of a superior quality; the straw con tains more nutritive matter, and is better rel ished by animals; and there is a better oppor tunity of securing the crop, and a saving in so doing, as there is less waste in mowing or reap ing the wheat by the dropping out of the seed. | It will be seen in this matter, how much a farmer's success depends upon an accurate knowledge of his business. Even in so small an item as the cutting of grain, the owner of fif ty acres would lose three hundred dollars, bv harvesting a few days too late. There are ma ny other farm operations in which accurate knowledge is quite as important. Is it any wonder so many ol our farmers do not make money when there are a hundred holes in their pockets through which the money is dripping out in dollars, dimes, and cents. The whole year is a scene of prodigal waste, for want of a It'.tie knowledge. Wood is wasted for a good stove, or a tight house. Ashes is wasted for a want ola dry place to put them. Fodder is wastrd for want of a tight barn to shelter cat tle in the winter nights. Manures are wasted for want of a barn cellar, and sheds and absor bents. Labor'is wasir i for want of manure to produce maximum crops. Is it strange with all these leaks, that (he farmer's till does not fill up Erpeumenls „ twenty years ago —I think it was in the fall of IS3S—we had a piece of land containing about ' three-fourths of an acre. It had been mowed a long time, and needed plowing. We began to plow it in the fall, late in November. We used one pair of oxen and two horses, and plowed it deep. We plowed around the whole piece, and when it was about half done, there came a ; snow storm and the remainder was left until j spring. We then finished plowing it with one 1 pair of horses, and of course it was plowed a bout hall as deep as that done in the tail. We harrowed it. manured all alike and planted it with corn. The crop was good,but we could not see anv difference between the deep fall plowing and the shallow spring plowing. A lew years afterwards— l thing it was in 1845 —we had a piece of land an acre or more which had been mowed several years, and the grass was run out. It needed plowing, and as we had seen deep plowing highly recommen ded, we concluded to try it. We had a great plougti and plenty ot team. We hitched on two or three yoke of oxen and two horses, and turned it over deeper than 1 ever plowed any land before or sine. It was probably plowed from ten to sixteen inches deep. We harrow pd, manured and planted as usual with corn. The hoeing was very easy. The sod was tur ned unifer so rlpep, that no one would mistrust that it was sod land. The crop was good.— We did not perceive that it was either better or worse than we have raised on the same land with the same quantity of manure, before and also since that timp, when we have plowed it from four to six inches deep.— Country Gent. EFFECTS OF THE GRASSHOPPERS* It will be remembered that the grasshoppers destroped nearly everything green, in portions of our State, last year. In Chester county, ex cept in limited portions they were not so bacf. In many places in Bucks county, as we learn front the Intelligencer, where the grasshoppers were so destructive last summer and autumn, the farmers have been obliged to plough up their wheat stubble, as the young clover and timothy had been entirely destroyed by the ra venous pests. In most cases the fields have been plowed with the intention of planting them with corn, which seems to be the best use that can be made out of the ground. A few have sown them with oats and grass seed. Where the grasshoppers prevailed last summer, the crop of grass this season will generally be lighl, as they seem to have done a permanent injury to the grass. In the tisualty productive agricultural district known as "Holland, ' in Northampton township, nearly every farmer has broken up his wheat stubble for corn, the grass having been entirely killed by the grasshoppers. CABBAGES. To secure true solid heads on those stocks that manifest a dispsition to grow to what are known as "long shanks," take a penknife and and stab it through the stock about the middle insert a small piece of wood to keep the incision t open, which will check the growth. VOL. 2, NO. 45.