TERMS OF THE GLOBE. Per annam in advance Six months Three months A failure to notify a discontinuance at the expiration of the term subscribed for will be considered a new engage ment. TERNS OF ADVERTISING 1 insertion. 2 do. 3 do. Four lines or less, . $ 25... ...... $ 37 1 ,4 $ 50 Ono square, (12 lines,) 50 75 1 00 Two squares, 1 00 1 50 2 00 Three squares, 1 50 2 25 3 00 Over three week and less than three months, 25 cents per square for each insertion. 3 mouths. 6 months. 12 months. $1 50 4,3 00 $5 00 3 00 5 00 .. 7 00 5 00 8 00 10 00 7 00 10 00 .15 00 Six lines or less, One square, Two s quares,.... Three squares,... Four squares,. Half a column, One column, 0 0 00 30 00.... ..... .50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, one year, $^ 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. Original VO NEXT SABBATH VLL BE HOME. Lines written on the death rf Lawrence S. Leattor EEMEM The Sabbath belle were pealing Calls to the house of player, Where humble saints low kneeling, Implore a Father's care. The joyful sound came ringing To a dying christian's ear; With heart of Heaven all singing, Ho lay without a fear. His oyes with hope full 'beaming, He raised toward Heaven's high dome And eried—"'twas not mere dreaming— Next Sabbath I'll be home." The bell of time was tolling The close of rest's sweet day, When chariot wheels swift rolling, Carried that saint away. His earthly Sabbath ending, The Sabbatif of Heaven began ; His yoke with angels blending, Now livid immortal man. Mi“eliancolts `ltetus. GEN. SAM. DALE [From the Wa,hington States and. Union.] The Life and Times of Gen. Sam. Dale, the Mississippi partisan, has recently been issued from the press, under the editorship of Lion. J. F. 11. Claibourne, of Mississippi. It is a most interesting work, full of startling inci dents, with a running commentary on men and things of the day in which the " parti san" lived. Below we give his impression of men and things about IVaz,hington—such as existed there in his day and generation: About this time I resolved to visit Wash ington city, to attend to my claim for a large amount due me for corn and other supplies furnished to the troops in the service of the United States at various time.:, and on the expedition to Fort Dale, in Butler county.— On arriving I put up at Brown's Hotel, and next day went to the quarters of the Ala bama delegation. The third day, Col. Win. R. King, of the Senate, brought me word that President Jackson desired to see me.— " Tell Dale," said he to Col. King, " that if 1 had as little.to da as he has, I should have been to see him before now." The general was walking in the lawn in front of his man sion as we approached. lie advanced - and grasped me warmly by the hand. "No ixtroduction is needed," said the Col. "Oh, no," said the Genera!, shaking my band again, " I shall never forget Sam Dale!' We walked up into his reception room, and I was introduced to CJI. Benton and five or six other distinguished men. They were all very civil and invited me to visit them. They were talking " Yallification," the engroAsing subject at that period, and the President, turning to me, said, " Gen. Dale, if this thing goes on, our country will be like a bag of meal with both ends open. Pick it up in the middle or otherwise, and it will run out. I must tic the bag and save the country."— The company now took leave, but when I rose to retire with Col. King, the General detained me, and directed his servant to refuse all vis itors until 1 o'clock. He talked over our campaigns, and then of the business that brought Inc to Washington. He then said, " Sam, you have been true to your country, but you have made one mistake in life. You are now old and solitary, and without a bo som friend or family to comfort you. God called mine away. But all I have achieved —fame, power, everything—l would exchange if she could be restored to me for a moment. The iron man trembled with emotion, and for some time covered his face with his hands, and tears dropped on his knee. I was deeply affected myself. lle took two or three turns across the room, and then abruptly said— " Dale, they are trying me,,hcre; you will witness it ; but, by the God of heaven, I will uphold the laws." I understood him to be referring to nullifi cation again, his mind having evidently re curred to it, and I expressed the hope that things would go right. "'They shall go right, sir," lie exclaimed, passionately, shivering his pipe upon the ta ble. He calmed down after this, and showed me his collection of pipes, many of a most costly and curious kind, sent to him from every quarter, his propensity for smoking being well known. " These," said he, " will do to look at. I still smoke my corn-cob, Sam, as you and I have often done together; it is the sweetest and best pipe." When I rose to take leave, he pressed me to accept a room there. "I can talk to you at night; in the day lam busy." I declined on the plea of business, but dined with him several times—always—no Matter what dig nitaries were present-,--setting at his right hand. He ate very sparingly, only taking a single glass of wine, though his table was magnificent. When we parted for the last time, he said, "My friend, farewell; we shall see each other no more—let us meet in heav en." I could only answer him with tears, for I felt that we should meet no more on earth. The Alabama delegation each invited me to a formal dinner, and introduced me very generally to the members. Mr. Calhoun was particularly kind. It was from him that I first received the assurance that the nullifica tion trouble would be settled. He was a man of simple manners, very plain in his attire, of the most moral habits, intensely intellec tual, something of an enthusiast, and, if per sonally ambitious, equally ambitious for the glory of his country. His style of speaking was peculiar—fluent, often vehement, but wholly without ornament; he rarely used a figure of speech ; his gestures were few and simple, but he spoke with his eyes—they were full of concentrated fire, and' looked you through ; he was earnest in everything. He found his way very soon to my heart, and I ....$1 50 .... 75 .... 50 9 00 13 00 .12 00 16 00 WILLIAX LEWIS, 20 00 24 00 VOL. XV. LSE then and now deeply regret the dissensions sowed by intriguers between him and Gener al Jackson. When I visited Col. Benton at 5 o'clock in the evening, I was conducted to him in a room where he was surrounded by his children and their school books. He was teaching them himself. That very day he had presented an elaborate report to the Senate, the result of laborious research, and had pronounced a powerful speech—yet there he was, with French and Spanish grammars, globes, and slate and pencil, instructing his children in the rudiments. He employed no teacher.— The next morning I was strolling, at sunrise, in the Capitol grounds, when whom should I see but the Colonel and his little ones. Sha king me by the hand he said, " These are my pickaninnies, General—my only treasures. I bring them every morning among the flow ers, sir, it teaches them to love God—love God, sir." I was struck with the labor this great man performed ; and yet he never seem ed to be fatigued. He was not a man of con ciliatory mariner, and seemed to me to be al ways braced up for an attack. He spoke with a sort of snarl—a protracted sneer upon his face—but with great emphasis and vigor. His manner toward his opponents and espe cially his looks, were absolutely insulting ; but it was well known that he was ready to stand by to whatever he said or did. It was wonderful how he and Mr. Clay avoided per sonal collision ; they hated each other mor tally at one period ; they spoke very harsh and cutting things in debate ; but were proud, ambitious, obstinate and imperative ; both were fearless of consequences, and though habitually irascible and impetuous, perfectly collected in moments of emergency. They differed on almost every point, and only agreed on one—both hated Mr. Calhoun. As an orator, Mr. Clay never had his equal in Congress. I would liken him, from what I have heard, to Mr. Pitt. No single speech of that consummate orator and statesman ever made produced the impression made by Sheridan in his celebrated oration on the im peachment of Hastings -, no speech of Mr. Clay's may be compared with the great ora tion of Webster in reply to - Hayne ; but, for a series of parliamentary speeches and par liamentary triumph, no British orator may be compared with Pitt, and no American with Clay. To a very high order of intellect they both united a bold temperament, indomita ble resolution, and the faculty of command —the highest faculty of all. Mr. Webster, with brilliant genius, with a wit less studied if not so sparkling as Sheridan, and with or atorical kifts nuasurpassed in ancient or mod ern times, was of a convivial, not of a reso lute temperament, and was deficient in nerve and firmness. The want of these was felt throughout his career, and enabled others to succeed when he should have triumphed. As a companion, especially after dinner, he was most delightful ; at other times he was satur nine and repulsive. Mr. Clay was haughty, and only cordial to his friends. Col. Benton was stiff with every one. Mr. Calhoun was affable and conciliating, and never failed to attract the young, but inr grace of manner, fur the just medium of dig nity and affability, and for the capacity of influencing men, no one of these great men, nor all of them together, may be compared with General Jackson. The untutored sav age regarded him as a sort of avenging deity; the rough back woodsman followed hun with fearless confidence ; the theories of politi cians and jnrieonsults fell before his intuitive perceptions ; systems and statesmen were ex tinguished together; no measure and no man survived his opposition, and the verdict of mankind awards him precedence over all.— He had faults, but they are lost in the lustre of his character; he was too arbitrary and passionate, and too apt to embrace the cause of his friends without inquiring iutu its - jus tice. But these were faults incidental, per haps, to his frontier life and military train ing, and to the injustice he had experienced from his opponents. I saw Blair of the Globe, Amos Kendall and Col. Jo. Gales, of the _National _Wall gamer. Blair has the hardest face I ever in spected. The late General Glasscock, of Au gusta, one of the noblest hearted men that ever lived, taild use that a mess of Georgia and Kentucky members, dining together one day, ordered an oyster supper fur thirty, to be paid for by the mess that produced, for the occasion, the ugliest man from their re spective States. The evening came and the company assembled, and Georgia presented a fellow not naturally ugly, but who had the knack of throwing his features all on one side. Kentucky was in a peck of trouble.— The man' they had ,cooped up for a week, was so hopelessly drunk that he could not stand on his legs. At the last moment, a happy thought occurred to Albert G. Haws. He jumped in a hack, drove to the Globe office, and brought Blair down as an invited guest. Just as he entered, looking his prettiest, Haws sung out, "Blair, look as nature made you, and the oysters are ours!" It is hardly necessary to add that Georgia paid for the oysters. The first time I saw Blair, about 11 o'clock at night, he was writing an editorial on his knee. He read it to Col. King and myself. It was a thundering attack on Mr. Calhoun —what is called a "slasher"—for something that had been said that morning in the Sen ate. Col. King begged him to soften it.— "No," said Blair, "et it tear his insides out." With all this concealed fire, Ire was a man of singular mildness of manners. He invited me to an elegant dinner at his splendid man sion, crowded with distinguished guests. He entertained liberally and without affectation, and I was charmed with the beauty and the kindness of his fascinating wife. Amos Kendall, of whom I had heard so much, as the champion of the Democracy, I found a little, stooped-up man, cadaverous as a corpse, rather taciturn, unpretending in manner, but of wonderful resources and tal en t. Col. Jo. Gales is a John Bull, they tell me, by birth and in sentiment, and he has the hearty look of one. But if so, how came the Bulls to burn' his office during the war ? 1 The Intelligencer, I well remember, stood up A .4.7% • • • el;. t•A' * ;144 A. 4 'Or 7:ce, *-17.* 92 *O. manfully for the country, and often have I and my comrades, in 1813-14, when hungry and desponding, and beset with danger, been cheered up by a stray fragment of his paper. Col. Gales shook me cordially by the hand, and invited me to dine with him. Being com pelled to decline, he insisted on my taking a drink out of his canteen—the very best old rye ever tasted. The same evening he sent a dozen to my quarters—large, honest, square sided, high shouldered bottles, that we rarely see now a days. The printers at Washington all live in princely style: spacious dwellings, pictures, statuary, Parisian furniture, sumptuous ta bles, choice wines Nothing in the metrop olis astonished me so much. A printer in the South usually lives in a little box of a house not big enough for furniture ; his pic tures and statues are his wife and children ; his office is a mere shanty, stuck full of glue and paste, and all sorts of traps ; he works in his shirt sleeves, with the assistance, some times of a little, ragged, turbulent dare-devil of a boy ; he toils night and day, often never paid and half starved, making great men out of small subjects, and often receiving for it abuses and ingratitude; the most gener ous fellows in the world—ready to give you half they have, though they seldom get much to give. In Washington, they drink Port, Maderia, and old rye, with us, they seldom get higher than rot-gut ! I am a farmer, and so was my father be fore rne. I have not followed in his foot steps in the way of managing the farm, be cause I have taken agricultural papers, and have learned much that was not his to know, and what's more, the railroad has come with in three miles of me, so that the old farm upon which my father toiled so many years, is worth five times what it was in his day.— I am not one of the kind of men who croak and grumble about old times. I enjoy mod ern times, and would not give up my ma chines, and go back to the old way of doing things by hand, for any money. I often won der if my father can look down from heaven, and see the mowers and reapers fly over the old places where he toiled and sweat. I can not. help chuckling to myself, as I sit in my sulky, and ride over the old familiar places, cutting down the grass, and raking it up again, like half-a-dozen men ; to think my boys can go to school all the year round, and never need suffer from the want of learning, as I do even to this day. My wife is up to the times", too, and likes to give her family a good chance in the world. She is a good manager, rising early, and ri sing to some purpose. I owe half of my pros perity to her help and counsel. My boys arc growing up healthy, sensible young fel lows. The two oldest harness up the old mare and go to the Academy, three miles off, and, except a little while during hay and harvest, they do not lose a day all the year round. The only thing that troubles me is My daughters. Nancy, the oldest, is a fine, handsome, smart girl of nineteen. She went to the district school till she was sixteen, and then she had learned all there was to learn there. So we concluded to send her to Mrs. Drake's Seminary ; about fifty miles off.— She did get along there amazingly. In two years she had learned a pile, and besides had painted beautiful pictures enough to cover our parlor walls, (though I must confess I suspect her teacher gave her a lift at that now and then.) She could sing equal to our parson's wife, and can start the tunes in meeting when the Squire's away. She knew the French for everything around the house, and understood botany, chemistry, natural philosophy, and more things than I could mention. While she was at Mrs. Drake's she only came home at Fall and Spring vacations, and then was so busy sowing and getting ready to go back again that her mother did not think it worth while to set her to work. Well, last Spring she came home fur good, and a joyful day it was to me. I felt happy to think I had a daughter who had a good education in her head, and spry, healthy hands to work.— But, Mr. Editor, she is a spoiled girl, for aught I can see, but her mother thinks she will come to after awhile. She can't bear to see me in my shirt sleeves no matter how clean and white, but insists upon my wearing a linen duster ; for she has learned that " it is disgusting to eat with a man in his shirt sleeves." She is right down ashamed of her mother's hands, be cause they show that she has been a,•hard working woman all her life. Our home-made striped carpets that have always been my pride, " are not fit to be seen." She won't let Bob or Dick run about bare-footed, for she says they look like beggars. She has written their names in their spelling books Robbie and Dickie, and written hers Nancie Smythe. She says she would rather not eat with servants—that is, our hired man and woman, who have lived with us six years, and were born and raised on the next farm. It makes her sick to smell pork and cabbage. She has not forgotten how to milk ; but if anybody rides by when she is milking, she gets behind the cow and hides her head, as if she was stealing the milk. I have stood these things without saying much until last Sun day; . when she insisted upon our hired peo ple sitting up in the gallery, because we needed all our pew room. I hired two pews, to have room fur all. I knew she expected two boarding school mis ses to make a visit, and was planning to get our men-folks out of sight. I bolted out at this, and had a regular blow up, and told Nancy she was getting rather too big-feeling entirely for a farmer's daughter. She staid at home from church and cried all day. I hate crying women more than a long drought, so I shan't scold her again. I don't want to be hard on the girl, but what urn I to do ? I am willing to let her feed the chickens in gloves, and spell all our names wrong, and just as lief have the boys wear shoes ; but when it comes to overturning, everything and being ashamed of her father, mother and home, lam discouraged. I have bought her a piano,, and let her learn music two years, for she is naturally musical. She came near HUNTINGDON, PA., APRIL 11, 1860. Farmers' Girls 4 „4,- . .„..4 , ..... : , - . ..r..e.,..›= . • ~ ~..„. /eY lie: i ti;4 1 e.A .,, ,. 1 ti , 5.-- ( ....:., r 0, , , , :, --,-..• .., ..., , ..,,, • -, -: ,, E-e., it:-. - ifil , 44 1 "I . > , '"..•,..0„, -PERSEVERE.- fainting one night, when the Squire's son, just out of college, and a whiskered chap from the city were here; because I said : " Come Nance, give us a tune on the piany." I saw something wrong, but couldn't guess what, for I had on my duster, and wasn't tipping my hair back, (a vulgar trick, Nancy calls it.) The nest day my wife told me what was to pay. I must say I like my old fash ioned way of pronouncing as well as her new fashion way of spelling, And only this morning after breakfast when her ma told her to shake the table cloth, what does she do but take it way through the long hall and out the back door, for fear some one would see her shake it in the same place where she had for ten years. I have got a new boiight en carpet for the parlor, and now she wants the front windows cut down to the floor. Yesterday she came to me to know if she might "teach district school." "No," said I, "why do you want to teach ? I am able to keep six girls like you, if I had them. No, I can't think of your teachint,." Upon this she began to cry again, and I c stand wo man's tears, so I said, teach !'• and she is going to teach 'Winter and Summer, in a lit tle bit of a school house, not as good as my pig house, for fear she will get tanned and freckled, and spoiling her hands helping her mother. Now, Mr. Editor, I have given up Nancy, but I have three fine girls growing up. I am able and willing to give them all a good education, ibr I believe in it, in spite of 'the dreadful blunder I have made. I would like to know if you can tell me of any place where a farmer's daughter can get a good education and not lose her senses. I can't stand it to have our other girls get too big fur our old-fashioned farm house; I want them sensible, well informed women, but I set down my foot against having them all turn school teachers. An Oleaginous Correspondent The following from a facetious correspon dent of the Sandusky Register, who writes to that paper from the oil region in Trumbull county, Ohio, is about as slippery a corres pondence as we have seen lately : " I arrived here at a very late hour last night, on an oil train, and may as well have come on train oil, as we were sixteen hours behind time. All the trains were behind time, I learn, owing to the accumulation of oil on the track at this end of the road. The oil fries out of the ground and lubricates the rails for a great distance. lire shouldn't ar rived here at all, if the passengers hadn't got out and sprinkled the track with cigar ashes. I slipped out of bed—nobody arises' here; we all slip into bed, and slip out—at an early hour this morning, and began my investiga tions. I found a section embracing fourteen thousand acres of land, chuck full of oil springs. Drilling is unnecessary here, as the oil boils up in springs, sometimes to the height of twenty-five feet, and is caught in tin pails as it comes down. On a hut day, I am told, it is no unusual thing to see the wo men frying doughnuts in these jets of oil.— The balls of dough are dropped into the jets, where they are tossed about like corks in a fountain, until they are fried by the beat of the sun. The only species of tree which abounds here is the slippery elm. These trees are so slippery a squirrel can't climb them without dipping his paws in Spalding's Prepared Glue, a small bottle of which he always carries suspended about his neck.— There are a few maple trees here, but no su gar is made, as nothing but oil runs out when they are tapped. There is one considerable sized creek running through Trumbull coun ty which is all oil. It was discovered a short time ago in a singular manner. Three boys went in to bathe, and when they came out were so greasy that they couldn't stay in their clothes. As fast as they slipped them on they would slip off again, and one of the lads,. in a heedless moment, narrowly es caped slipping out of his skin. On reaching home, their parents, being exceedingly fru gal, wrung them out and extracted fourteen gallons of pure oil from the three boys ! A Melancholy Sight---A Wreck Passing along the street our eye fell on a man sitting in front of a groggery. His coun tenance seemed familiar, and we turned to ward him for a moment, but seeing who he was, we instinctively turned away, in the hope that we might spare his feelings. This person we often met a few years ago. He was then a young man in active business, with fine prospects ahead. He was a member of the church, and, so far as we could judge, his way was open to usefulness and honor. But alas ! how is he fallen ! " How is the gold become dim ! How is the most fine gold changed !" We saw him, who might have sat among the elders of the land, a poor, stu pified, besotted drunkard. His fare was cov ered with those signals of distress that pro claim a ship-wreck of all character and hap piness—a -ship-wreck infinitely more sad to behold than when one stands on the beach to witness a majestic vessel, laden with the wealth of India or China, dashed into pieces upon the rooks. We could have wept at the sight. How mournful the fact, that proud and noble Philadelphia can furnish hundreds, aye thousands of such spectacles ! How was this destruction wrought ? How was this temple, that might have resounded with the praises of God, defaced and polluted? All our readers can answer the question in a general way. No doubt he became a drunk ard by degrees. Perhaps only an occasional glass was first taken for tho sake of good fel lowship ; perhaps it was at the request of some fair friend who called him lover. Lit tle by little it grew upon him. As a sermon or the sight of a drunkard suggested to him his danger, he was wont to persuade himself that he could quit whenever he chose. But insensibly the habit was formed, which, like a boa-constricter, now holds him within its resistless coil. While yet a moderate drink er, he forged the chain that now binds him down to the earth—a chain, that he strives, in vain, to break. Jeremiah alludes in strong language to the tremendous power of evil habits—" Can the Ethiopean change his skin or the leopard his spots ? then may ye also Editor and Proprietor. do good who are accustomed to do evil." Have we the ear of any one who indulges his appetite for strong drink a little? Let us ask him to pause at once. Now is the time, while the maelstrom is afar off. If you wait until you are once within its vortex you will certainly be swallowed up unless by a sort of miracle you escape. Had this poor man stop ped in time—rather had he never begun—he might have been a leading man in his calling, esteemed by all, useful and happy. As it is, he is clothed with shame and feeds on sor row— Unfit for earth, unclooined for Heaven; Darkness above, despair beneath. Young man, what are your habits ? Do you tamper with the cup ? Do you feel and desire for it ? Do you allow yourself to go to the bar of the fashionable saloon or associate with those who do ? Be assured you are in danger. Why not stand on the safe ground as to this most alarming wide-spread sin ? Remember that, as he who goes not upon the water cannot be drowned, so he who totally abstains from intoxicating drinks as a bever age cannot live the drunkard's life nor die the drunkard's death. " Wine is a mocker, and strong drink is raging ; and whosoever is deceived thereby is not wise." " Look not thou upon the wine when it is red, when it giveth its color in the cup, when it moveth itself aright." fax ite fanitti. Origin of Fruits, etc We find the following in an address, deliv ered by Dr. Charles T. Jackson, of Boston, before the Plymouth Agricultural Society : It is the glory of your noble art, that it possesses almost creative powers. Not only has every seed been made to pro duce " after its kind," but also to yield still other kinds ; not indeed new species, but va rieties so improved that they cannot by all the skill of science be identified with the wild plants from which they originated. Who can point out the native or original wild grasses, from which our cereal grains have been pro duced ? Botanists have suggested that they must have had such origins, but they have not been able to identify the particular spe cies of grasses from which wheat, barley, rye and oats, have been derived. Our large, plump, juicy, and mellow ap ples, are all said to have originated from the bitter and sour wild crab apple, which dif fers so much from them that it is difficult for us to conceive how those rich fruits were de rived from so bumble an origin. From an insignificant and almost tasteless wild fruit, originated all our numerous vari eties of delicious pears. Our large, plump, and luscious peach, would blush at seeing its dry, withered and bitter father; and our juicy plums would be slow (sloe)* to recognise theirs. The apricot and nectarine cannot boast of the excellence of their ancestors. The apricot is said to be a variety of the peach. From nauseous and poison weeds have many of our garden vegetables sprung. The tender and juicy asparagus is supposed to have been, originally, a hitter and disagreea ble plant, growing upon the sandy shores of the sea. The cabbage, with its head full of tender and highly nutritious leaves, was originally a weed g rowing in meadows by the sea shore, and the delicate cauliflower has no better parentage. Our mealy potato belongs to the same fam ily with the deadly nightshade, and in its wild state, was an insignificant plant, with little tubers not worth digging from the earth, or of eating when they were dug. The onion was a nauseous shore plant, growina t -, in the sand like its relation the me dicinal squills. Parsnips, turnips, and carrots, in their wild state, were also strong, unpalatable roots, unfit for food. From small beginnings came our plump, cereal grains, our rich, juicy, and delicious fruits, our nutritious esculents, and savory garden vegetables. Who, as it were, created wheat, barley and rye, or first put the wild fruits and vegeta bles in the way of improvement, we may nev er know. The ancients ascribed these creations to mythological de'les, and thus did the far mers injustice, unless indeed they meant by their fables to defy them, and exalt their la bors. I would suggest to you that it is highly probable that the wild rice of the hikes and rivers in the north-w6tern portions of the United States, which is a highly nutritious grain and very prolific, now feeding myriads of wild geese, ducks, pigeons and other birds, and supplying winter food to the Indian hun ter, might be advantageously introduced into our flowed meadows, and be improved by cul tivation. The wild sea-kale has been suc cessfully cultivated in Europe, and is now extensively used for food. Progress is a law of nature. From the earliest dawn of creation, there has been a constant series of improvements in progress. Geology reveals that the lower order of sen sitive beings gave way to those of a higher grade, until the last term of physical crea tion was attained in the creation of man, whose improvement, as a rational creature, and an immortal soul, is still destined to be onward and upward. *The common plum is said to have been derived from the sloe. The nectarine is con sidered by some botanists as a distinct spe cies ; but there can be no doubt on this point, as the peach itself is nothing more than an improved or fleshy almond which bears a similar relation to the peach and nectarine, as the crab does to the apple,-and the sloe to the plum. A FOREIGNER, ivho had mixed among many nations, - was asked if he had observed any particular quality in our species that might be considered universal. He replied, "Me tink dat all men love lazy. TARRING SEED CORN.—Writing to the New England Farmer, R. Mansfield thus speaks of the benefit of tarring seed corn, a process. frequently recommended : " Tar applied to seed corn before it is plan ted, certainly will prevent the crows destroy ing it. For more than forty years I have not been able to detect a single failure, wherever it was done correctly. Not one person in ten would probably be successful in their first endeavor in tarring corn ; to be known, the operation must be seen. One man dare not use boiling water, so be fails ; another de stroys the vitality of the kernel by too great a degree of heat long continued. I have known parts of fields destroyed by poisonous manures, when this single fact was over looked, and tar, or the birds, was erroneously supposed to be the cause. Could some pres ident of an agricultural society, or some pat tern farmer be induced to try the experiment of tarring seed corn, I doubt not that in less than ten years scarecrows would be among the missing." The editor of the Farmer adds the proper mode of tarring as follows : " Our neighbors practice in this way ; they fill a pail half-full of boiling water, add about half a pint of common tar—coal tar is just as good—stir it until the tar is melted and thoroughly min gled with the water, then add the corn, stir ring it well for about ten minutes ; or until it is completely covered with the tar. Take the corn out and roll it in plaster or fine ash es, and the process is completed." AsornEa MonE.—R. A. Dawson, in the same - paper tells " how to prevent crows from pulling up corn" in this wise " Take two ounces of nitre to a peck of corn ; dissolve the nitre in half the quantity of boiling water wanted to cover the corn, then add as much beef brine, and soak the corn from twelve to twenty-four hours, then roll in plaster or ashes. I have followed this plan for more than five years, and have suffered no loss from crows." NO. 42. TICE Crtow.—ln an article on winter birds, we have this defence in the AI/antic Month/y: "Ile consumes in the course of the year vast quantities of grubs, worms, and noxious vermin; he is a valuable scavenger, and clears the land of offensive masses of deceased an imal substances ; he hunts the grain fields, and pulls out and devours the under-ground caterpillars, whenever he perceives the signs of their operations, as evinced by the wilted stalks ; he destroys mice, young rats, lizards, and the serpent ; lastly, he is a volunteer sen tinel about the farm, and drives the hawk from its enclosure, thus preventing greater mischief than that of which he himself is guilty. It is chiefly during seed time and harvest that the depredations of the crow are committed ; during the remainder of the year we witness only his services, and so highly are these services appreciated by those who have written of birds that I cannot name an ornithologists who does not plead in his be half." liortx-An.--Dr. Dadd, in his late excellent work on the Disease of Cattle, treats with great severity the confrnon opinion that nearly every disease which attacks cattle is the "born ail," or " hollow horn," or else " tail-ail"--- the coldness or heat which these parts exhibit when the animal is sick, being only symptoms. We lately had a valuable cow taken sick, and kind neighbors directed the horns to be bored, the tail to be shortened-in, &c. We suspected the trouble to arise from accidentally eating too much grain, producing indigestion, and attendant evils, and accordingly administered half a pint of freshly pounded, fresh charcoal mixed with a quart of water, and poured down the animal's throat by means of a junk bottle. This is one of the best, most efficient safe and certain remedies we ever used for such diseases. It can scarcely in any case do injury. In the present instance the hollow born and tail-ail were soon cured.—Country Gentleman. PROFITS OF SHEEP RAISING.-J. W. Wor chester, of Pittsfield, Lorain county, Ohio, gives the following statement, showing how wool-growing pays those who manage it as it should be. " Last season I clipped 250 sheep ; the wool sold for $532. I have sold within the year 74 sheep, which is equal to the num ber of lambs raised, for SSI4, making $1306, My sheep are of the Spanish .Merino breed, and mostly ewes; a few bucks and wethers. I have kept sheep for the last twenty years, and consider it the most profitable business a farmer can engage in." Samuel Toms, of Elyria, Ohio, says. " I keep on my farm 80 sheep ; my sale of wool amounting to $lO5 ; sold 10 fat sheep, $9O; fifteen ewes, one ram, $3lO ; three ewe lambs, one ram, $lO4 ; pre miums at National State and County Fairs, $4lO. I have now on hand SO sheep—my flock is of the pure South-Down and Leices tershire breeds mostly South-downs." SOIL FOR PUTTING.—DO not neglect to get enough of this together before frost conies, to last all winter. The complicated compost heaps some writers are fond of expatiating on, are all a myth and worse, for many of the keaps would not grow a weed hardly. If you can get good maiden loam from an old pasture, cut two or three inches deep only, laid together long enough to rot the sod, at,d a quantity of the soil from the wools—that which has quite a sandy nature, gray rather than black is best—you hare then the main ingredients for all ordinary plant growing.— A few might require the loam to be nearer approaching to clay than others ; otherwise it is the best base for a compost heap that can be obtained. Decayed leaves from the gar den can be substituted for the soil from the woods, if the latter cannot be obtained, but the ibrmer is the healthier of the two.—Edgar ,wanders. PRESERVING HAMS THROUGH SLIMMER.- Make a number of cotton bags, a little larger than your hams ; after the hams are well smoked, place them in the bags ; then get the best kind of sweet, well-made hay, cut it with your hands press it well around the hams in the bag ; tie the bags with good strings, put on a card of the year to show their age, and hang them up in a garret or some dry room, and they will bang five years, and will be better for boiling than on the day you hung them up. This method costs but little, and the bags will last forty years. No flies or bugs will trouble the hams if the hay is well pressed around them ; the sweating of the hams will be taken up by the hay, and the hay will impart a fine flavor to the hams.— The hams should be treated in this way be fore the hot weather sets in.—South. Farmer. A CAT lll.Nr.—When a cat is seen to catch a chicken, tie it round her neck, and make her wear it two or three days. - Fasten it se curely, for she will make incredible efforts to get rid of it. Be firm for that time, and the cat is cured—she will never again desire to touch a bird. This is what we do with our own cats, and what we recommend to our neighbors ; and when they try the experi ment, they and their pets are secure from re, proach and dancer henceforth. Try it,