. t KfHlllfij lite tt : : ;1 BY S. Ii. ROW. CLEARFIELD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1856. NO. 47. :. VOL, 2.- For th Raftsman's Journal. MNKSt KY J.U. CAZIER, ut council mr, kins tewutort. Tbe j eharm 1b all ws tuutl : Tha eotling wtn.i lh waving (riu ; And the ( dowers look u and smile Id fragrant welooino as they paaa. Aod suntaor rloul coma o'er th sky, An4 mnrmur with the freight tby bear : vb ! why should skknM com to lunr Th pleasure of a boint so fair T ,Iow oft wo struggle on and deem . Tbat juat before v lit the goal. Where orrow wl'l not eotno to blight Kacii tioye ouch ufo of the tool Wkere, fr a chrrUbad time at leaet, We nay have rest, and quint joj ; Atnl swt, antwinluc luTt to blew )ur droam of lifo without alloy And Cod aoma talisman to turn Each pain to ioy, while borne along The currtnl of Life's mighty stream, With "purpose high, aud spirit strong.'' And a our changing faucy bring liar treasures !u some othar form, Lika eolor on a thunder-cloud, Wo tba bow, but feci tbv ttorui. Ob. why, alas! should ever thus. Home poifonad air, aoma brooding ill, Where'er wa go, in all this world, Spread lta dark ibadow o'er ua still. It la, that wa may know bow peace From thia dark world, by ain, is driven It la, that wa in a learn to make Our home our (brine of lore, in htaven ! COLONEL J. C. FKEMONT. From Sartain,$ Magazine, 9 October 1820. BT PROFESSOR RH.OADS. Since tbe mission of Ilini who came into the world to suffer that mankind, might find re demption, the three greatest events that hate occurred, are connected with the rise and pro grcsa of our own happy country ; the discov ery of America, the American Revolution, and the establishment of the American empire on the coast of the FaciQc Ocean ; the last dstin ed to be, in its effects, by uo means the least important of the three. When the announcement was made to the as tonished nations of Europe of the existence of a new world far off over the wild waves of the western sea, a new principle introduced into tho general mind a new impulse, which chang ed entirely tbe industrial relations and habits ol the people, am produced eflects,even upon th extentaod permanency of empires,to which luo.o of the conquests of Macedonia andGreece were but trifles. The overthrow of tbeRoman power, by the northern barbarians, sinks into insignificance, when Us effects are contrasted with those of the enunciation in the Declara tion of American Independence, and the prac tical application in the Constitution of the U nited States, of the feat truths of the Lroth--rbo3d and equality cf man. And now, the discovery of tbe bright scads and rich racks of California, and the Issue thence of a golden stream to irrigate tbe nations, is destined to wield a mightier and far more permanent in fluecco than the impulse which raised France to be for a time mistress of Europe. And not only wer? these event greater in power than those with which I have compared them, they were also better in kind. On the one hand t find a train cf woe and desolation ; on the oth er, of happiness and prosperity. The great ness of the old world was the handmaid of ig norance and tyranny ; that of the new led to civilization and liberty. Each great event is personified in a great man of corresponding character. Alexander led Greece and Mace don to conquest; Aleric extinguished the flick ering light of Roman refinement ; with Napo leon, France "rose, reigned and fell Colum bus marked a pathway to a new-found world ; Washington guided and sustained the patriots who consecrated that world to the advance ment of human rights and human welfare ; and Fremont lifted the veil which, since time first began, had bidden from view the real EI Dorado. I purpose to introduce to the reader a short sketch of the life of the latter ; the others belong to past time, and history has made up its record of their deeds. Jomr Charles Fbemoxt was bcrn in South Carolina in January, 1813, and ia consequent ly at this time (18-50,) a few months over thirty-seven years of age. When he was but four years old he was left an orphan by the death of his father, who, as the name indicates, was a native of France. Tho direction of his ed ucation, therefore, devolved entirely upon his another, and his career in active life has shown that she lacked neither inclination or ability to direct it aright. , Notwithstanding her limi ted means, she managed to support her son at .Charlesron College, where he distinguished himself by his industry and upright deport ment. He graduated in 1830. About this time ' he became a teacher of Mathematics,- and bend means, not only for his own support,but Also to contribute .to that of his mother and Jjcr latnily. While discharging faithfully the arduous and responsible duties which were in cumbent upon him as teacher, he still found time to attend to those of a student ; and with that indomitable energy aad pcrscverence which have marked bis whole career, he devo ted every leisure moment to perfecting him aelf in the science of civil engineering. In this pursuit, be was aided by the natural bent of his mind and talents peculiarly adapted to Jibe subject. Having attracted the attention and secured tho confidence and support of men .of influence, he obtained the situation of as sistant to Nicollet in the survey of the coun ty around the head waters of the Mississippi. In this work he was engaged about four years, during tho firs: half of tbe time in the ardu ous but interesting labors of the field, collect- i ing information, making surrcys.observatlons, Sec, and during the last half in digesting and arranging the matter collected, aud iu prcpar- iiig an accurate and valuable map of the coun try. IT j had now added practice to theory, aud experience to euthuslastn and love of ad venture. Uo had prepared himself for thoso great and wonderful expeditions and scientific researches by which ho has since acquired im perishable renown. The flrUof these expeditious ho made in 1813,under tho authority of tho United States, At the head of a small party of frontiersmen, he eutcrcd tho wilds west of Missouri and Iowa, and pursued his course to the Rocky MounUirs. Tho main object of his expedi tion was to discover and explore a more prac ticable route over them than was then known. In this bo was completely successful and tho comparative case with which thousands of pilgrims to the golden ahrine of California have passed in safety through the mountain barrier,testifles to the correctness of his judg ment iu pointing out the South Pass as the proper place, and to the care and skill with which he explored and laid down the route. Upon his return,"ho prepared a report replete with tho most valuable information, not only respecting the geography of the country thro' which he had passed, but also in relation to its climate, to its geological characteristics, to the principle points of its military susceptib:i ities, locations for forts, &c, to its mineral wealth, to its rich grasses and its beautiful flowers contributions in short new and valua ble to almost every department of science. This report was printed by the Senate of the United States, and has since been translated into various foreign languages, attracting at tention and admiration from the learned in ev ery quarter of the globe. With men of Fremont's energy arid enthu siasm, success acts merely us a stimulant to further cxerfion. As soon therefore as one expedition is concluded, we find him planning another more extensive and more hazardous. In the spring of 1813, he started upon his grand expedition, which has gained for him self the .gratitudo of the votaries .of science everywhere, and for his country the great gold-bearing region of the west. Uis orders directed him to co-operate with the naval ex ploring expedition under Wilkes, in making a scientific examination of the basin of the Co lumbia River, the upper districts being allot ted to him. and the tide-v.ater regions to Wilkes. Iu May he left tL frontiers of Mis souri, and scaling the moatitr.'ns south of the South Pass, followed the windings of Bear River, until, in September, be arrived at the Great Salt Lake. Despite the warnings of the Indians, who iinsiccd, that as the lake had no outlet for its waters, a great whirlpool must exist in the centre, he and bis companions trusted themselves upon jts waters in a frail boat of India-rubber cloth, and spent a nijrht .pfjft'.one of its island,, where, doubtless, foot tu man bad never trod before. Upon the shot of this jnhttir sea, the poor deluded Mormons, driven by violence from their hard earned possessions in l!linois,estab!ished their city of refuge, about four years after the visit of the gallant Fremont. After occupying a bout a week in making Ktdi partial explora tion of this strange and interesting region as the lateness of the season would permit, our explorers p?irsued their course through Ore gon, niakiDg tbe observations directed by the government orders,and inNovember arrived at Fort Vancouver, the goal of their journey. The active mind of Fremont could not endure the thought of returning upon the same track, lie detcrmiaued to seek new scenes and discoveries through the vrst region to the south of him, of which table had told such wonders, but where civilized man had never penetrated, and of which tbe only sources of knowledge heretofore had been the wild and romantic but often contradictory stories of the Utah -and his kindred races, and of the hall blood hunters who frequented Fort Hall. Our adventurers, twenty-five in number, ac cordingly plunged without hesitation into the wilderness. They feared not. The men had confidence in Fremont, and he, under God, had confidence in himself- Nothing, perhaps, shows more clearly the varied powers of his mind, aud his fertility in resources, than the success of this expedition, undertaken at the approach, and executed in the depth of win ter. Of the sway which be exercised over the minds of his men, we need no better evidence than the fact that they bore all the trials, the sufferings, and the hazards of this winter jour ney, almost without a murmur. For nine months the little band and its noble leader were unheard of by their friends. Many a heart ached with doubt, and many a lip paled with apprehension for the fate of a husband, a brother, or a son, thus daring unknown perils At length' the news of their safety, and of their glorious achievements, sent a thrill of joy through the hearts, not only of their im mediate relatives, but also of the whole na tion. Three thousand five hundred miles had the weary wayfarers travelled. They had cros sed the mighty, snowy Sierra, they had ex plored the wonderful valley through which roll tbe golden floods of tbe Sacramento and tbe San Joaquin, they bad skirted the great inte rior basin of California, and examined its pro minent ieaturcs,and they had returned in safe ty to their happy homes, proud of themselves, and proud of their beloved leader. Immedi ately after his return, Fremont proceeded to Washington, to submit his report and to pro- pale it lor publication. When the war broke out butween tho United States and Mexico, it foand him again on the shores of the Pacific. He had entrusted the oversight of the publica tion of his great report to other hands, and sought again the country of his many labors, for the purpose of exploring the western sloje ot the mountains which lie between the Sacra mento valley and the Pacific. The limits of this artlclo will not admit of even a condensed account of his services during the war. Suf fice it to say, they wero but ill rewarded. "He had been cxploier, conqueror, peacema ker", governor in California; and, the victim of a quarrel between two commanders, like Columbus, ho was brought homo a prisoner." Being condemned by a court-martial, he re fused indignantly a proffered pardon, and de termined to continue his explorations with his own resources, and as a private individual. He set out to seek a favorable road to San Francisco. Overtaken by terrible snow-storms among tho mountains, he lost all his mules, and many of his men, and arrived at Santa Fe in tbe most destitute and suffering condition. Still he did not despair. The assistance of the honest frontiers-men, enabled him to pur sue his journey, and after surmounting every difficulty, he again arrived in the valley of the Sacramento. He now, for the first time in his life, began to look well to his own interest, and in a lew years he has amassed great wealth. He did not, however, devote himself wholly to gain, but found time to render valuable nid in organization of the young noble Pacific State, which evinced her gratitude and her confidence by appointing him one of her first two Senators to the Congress of our country. We will merely add to the foregoing sketch that a short term of two years fell to his lot, and, owing to the delay in the admission of the State, he sat in the Senate only one short session. On the expiration of his term the politic! control of the State had passed into new hands, of which a striking proof was giv en in the choice of John B. Weller, a decided pro-slavery man, as his successor in theSenate. Mr. Fremont now devoted himself to devel oping the resources of his California estate, which had been discovered to be rich in gold ; but, in addition to the loss of his commission, as the only reward he had realized for his ser vices in California, he now found himself greatly annoyed by claims against him for sup plies which, during his campaign inCalifornia, had been furnished to tho United States on his private credit. During a visit to London he was arrested on one of these claims, and it was only aftor great delay that the Govern ment of the United States was finally induced to relieve him from further annoyance by the payment of these debts. In maintaining his right to tbe Mariposa property, he was also o bliged to encounter many on the part of the Government which resisted his claim, but fi nally, by repeated decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States he triumphed over all of them. Two Urchins Selecting a Profession. "Joe, when you grow up do you Biean to be a lawyer or keep a confectionary store V - "I havn't made up my mind, Tom, but ma wants me to be a minister." "Oh, don't be a minister, Joe, for you can't go to circuses then." "I know that, Tom, but a minister, ma, says, is the best profession. You know Mrs. Love grew adores Mr. Prettyfaee, and wouldn't you like to be adored, Tom " 7 . "Perhaps I should; but then you can't drive fast horses." - "Oh, yes you can ; ministers drive fast hor ses now-a-days ; and besides that, Tom, when they have a bilious attack, the worshippers send them on a foreign tour j then he gets re membered in wills, and often has nice pre sents ; and ma says it won't bo long before ev ery minister has a country scat, and a colle gian to write . his sermons. Won't that be high?" . ; - , :,. f .. ;. Tom acquiesced, and the juveniles indulg ed in another game of marbles. Wash foe Scsbcrn. Take 2 drachms of borax, 1 drachm of Roman alum, 1 drachm of camphor, half an ounce of sugar candy and a pound of ox-gall. Mix and stir well for ten minutes or so, and repeat this, stirrirg three or four times a-day for a for a fortnight, till it appears clear and transparent. Strain through blotting paper, and bottle up for use. - New York citt sends an average of 1,300 unpaid letters per month to the dead letter of fice at Washington, not one reaching its desti nation. Persons writing letters shonld be as careful to prepay as to address them. - - "Shure, and it wasn't poverty that drnv me from the ould counthry," said Miehael the other day, "for my father had twenty-one yoke of oxen and a cow, and they gave milk the year round." ' - - :' "' - A lad, 13 years old, with an old rusty sword in his hand, drove a burglar out of a house in New Castle, Lawrence county, a few days ago. It is stated that John Van Boren is ahout to wed the only daughter of the late John C Calhoun. " x --'. CLEARFIELD, PA., JULY 9, 185tJ. .. i . KANSAS. Extratti from a Letter t to a gentleman in Clear . field County, dated Cockcil Citt, Kansas Ter., May 27, '56. Dear Frikxdi In yesterday's letter I gavo you a short account of tho affair at Lawrence. The details you must seek in tbe paper, for I cannot writo them not in the ''Banner & Ad vocate," however : you will find no account of them there! .But yoa may, perhaps, in the "Tribune." But Grcely, you say, is a Presi denVmakcr. , Well now, brother, possibly ho is ; but somehow ho does tell the truth about Kansas ; for ho. keeps a correspondent here who represents things just as they are, till the hearts of the people thrill with gratitude, and turn to tho Tribune as their truest earthly friend, which shall yet break the spell of the sorceress, and cast our shackles off. Don't think that I mean to chide you, George, for your opiuion of the Tribune, but believe me, Grcely is right in respect to slavery. " It is tho one question, which if lost to us, all else is lost. Don't think that I mean by the term slavery, negro slavery alone. The race of the enslaved is only incidental. We here, who have been accustomed to so high a degree of liberty, are in imminent danger of a servitude more abject and more hateful than Europeau despotism more abject, because we were so free, and more hateful because our oppressors have not even the glitter of royalty but are bandits and drunkards. The whole Territory is to be subjected to a complete guerilla sur veillance, intolerable to bear. Spies are in ev ery settlement. Many of our best men are in prison. Our stronghold is sacked not by the superior strength of our enemy, however, but by United States authority, which they (the peo ple) would not resist. Since this occurrence, a terrible gloom has settled upon all the land. Tbe enemy is rampant the highways are un safe murder is abroad, and anarchy reigns. Beneath all these brooding elements a civil war is warming into life. The North, per haps, will think that things are going on pret ty quietly here, now that our best presses are destroyed, emigration stopped, and communi cations generally interrupted. They will not hear much from us, except the Missouri ver sion ot matters. And as for ourselves, what shall we do J Our numbers are by no means insignificant ; but we are mostly poor-toopoor to live well much too poor to fight. Yet in view of all these disadvantages, I believe the general sentiment is to place our property, our lives, and our dearest honor by the altar of lib erty, and resist every encroachment upon those rights, with which the constitution of these United States and the God of nature have en dowed us : and we appeal to every lover of lib erty throughout the land to render us speedy assistance, and protection in the use of these blood-bought and priceless treasures. Shall we appeal in vain I Mutt me die here unpilicd and unheard I Or, what is worse, must wo be shorn or everything which makes life more than a brutish existence : of everything which goes to dispel the gloomy cloud that floats be tween us and eternity I Oh ! Brothers of the North, wo appeal unto you. Shall it be in vain 7 But I almost forgot that I am only wri ting to a few persons. However, you can do something wake up your neighborhood. We must have the next President favorable to us, or we shall be lost. Labor for that. .... I do not anticipate that there would be much fighting uot that the Southerners lack war- like qualities, but they are under no necessity to fight, but can go whenever they please. They are contending to enslave us,, while wo are contending for Freedom and for existence. But you may think that the President would send the military to drive off such a force. Then why don't he send them to drive off or disperse the Georgians and Alabamians, who are causing this trouble? Let him do this, and wc will be satisfied. Our friends could then settle together, and make themselves homes in this beautiful country. . . . . . The President is chief in this wickcdnes., and holds over ns the terror of U. S. anthority to enable a reckless banditti to rob and destroy us with impunity. This is the way in which wo are to be subdued. This is the way in which the plots of Douglass, Atchison and Stringfcllow are to be executed. Must it be so much longer? . . .' , . You will think it strange that I should have so far overcome my repugnance to war, as to be wishing lor revolvers. ,: Think rather how great must have been the wrongs which have driven me to it. Not that all Kansas is actu ally destroyed, for it would be an absurdity to talk of fighting if it were. But the eastern part of tbe Territory has, in many instances, suffered terribly from the "President's Bandit ti," and the whole of it is kept in a state of anxiety and suspense ; which things have a tendency to harden our hearts. I deplore this, bnt so it is. Our teams from this place have not as yet been robbed, brft only stopped and searohed for arms. Individuals, on this road, have also had their arms taken from them. In view of this condition of affairs, I could not make up my mind to forsake Kansas in the time of her danger ; neither could I think of staying here and idly looking on until we are completely gagged and bound beneath an in tolerable and hopeless oppression. The only alternative, theD, which I can see, ig to fight. It is a sad one indeed, and 1 pray God to for give me if I be wrong in my conclusion, i It is with relief that I cast off from my mind the prospect of strife for a moment, to speak ot the ready-made, and exuberantly fertile and beautiful farms with which nature has pro vided us. Wc have had plenty of rain thro April and the foro part of May, and the couu try wears a very luxuriant appearance. We sowod no rye, but that among the wheat head ed early in May. The wheat is very promis ing. Tho prairie grass has long been in head. On the uplands it is a little shorter than timo thy, and waving in tho summer breeze, w ith its sprinkling of superb flowers, it presents a scene of magnificence of exquisite and thril ling, yet boundless bcauly together with an impression of exhaustless fertility, that wins the mind for a time from its sorrows, and leads captive all the faculties of the heart. You may think me extravagant in this description, but I assure you I am not. I have endeavored to inform you truly and faithfully respecting the appearance and prosjects of the country. I have represented its shadows permit me al so to reflect its sunlight its promise its joy. There has been but little sickness this season, except the remains of last August's ague, from which we are recovering. 'Then thcro has been plenty of rain this spring, which has put everything forward. Besides the insects which were very numerous last spring, seem to have been demolished by the cold winter. Crick ets are scarce, and grasshoppers aro 'nowhere. Moreover tho thunderstorms have been milder this season moro like thoso of tho eastern States and not of such a terrible, tho' mag Lificcut, character as those we witnessed List year. In addition to alt these encourage ments, an impression takes possession of tho mind, and keeps possession of it, that a very little labor will produce an abundant living, together with all the luxuries of life," if we feel dispofed to . indulge in them. Yon will cease then to wonder that wc love Kansas too dearly perhaps for our spiritual welfare far too dearly lor the danger which menaces her to drive us from her, I was conversing lately with the wife of a neighbor, who has been mourning th?,t they were not back in Pennsyl vania. Well, she received a letter from a sister-in-law, who did return last winter, in which she regrets that she i not again in Kansas, and this lady here, in view of the danger of being driven out by the Southerners, says that she "just begins to love Kansas, aud that she did not think that she wouhl cling to it as she now does, and that she could not possibly" l-c con tented in Pennsylvania again." The fact is she' has hitherto considered onlv their imme diate trouble, and the care of a large family ; but now she begins to awaken to the latent weaith which surrounds her. ; Jnne2d. Trouble thickens upon us. Bu ford's company is an . avowed ha;id of rvl-bcrs. At all events, we begin to lcel their presence in that character. Our citizens on the road ara now ' robbed ol money, -as well as arms. Spies are scouring the country t' ascertain where a descent can be profitably made. And the government sustains the banditti. It docs not disperse the robbers, but it disperses tho gatherings ot Fiee State men, by' means of a few soldiers," which they will not fight, and then leaves them at the mercy of the enemy. A Free State man recently expostulated with the Governor, and entreated him to protect us against these outrages, telliug him that tlicy must inevitably end iu eivil war. ''Then tear it is, by God!" was the reply. Since that he has been somewhat softened, I understand, by an apprehension that the free rucn, driven to desperation, might speak to him in another manner. In addition to all this, the Missou rians aro now making another irruption into tho Territory. ! The immediate pretext is that the fVec men are committing outrages on the opposite party. In one cas, some rash free state men did notify man to leave. He -left accordingly, and took several other pro-slavery families with him, telling all sorts of horri ble stories as they went. Next we heard that there bad been a fight in another place, and several killed on both sides. Then wc heard that the killed were all on one side, the free men having called tbcm out and shot them in cold blood, they having previously threatened to burn these free men at the stake. The fi nal account, however, is, that they were en deavoring to hang a free man, and had one end of the rope round his neck, and the other over tbe limb of a tree, when the thing happened. But I cannot write every thing, j 1 am not ex pecting to fight immediately, if it be possible to avoid it ; and yet any letter which you may got from me now, may be the last one.- I can not tell, but would continually rest upon th pity of Hira who has hitherto been to me . a refuge and a shield.- You have my prayers, brother ; let me also have yours not so much that God will spare my life, as that he will keep my soul from evil unto the eud. , . The survey has been suspended, I am told, iu con.teqnence of the "lower House's'' ooa concuirence ia paying for it. . I wish you would petition it to adhere to its position, and strike out any provision for paying for it at the "present from the general appropriation bill, nelp us every wy you can. Oh! how I would like to see you. ... If I had had a deed for my land, early in the spring, I should have been very apt to have picked huckleberries on the AUeghenies tlii sntnmer. But as it is I cannot leave that is, I do not expect to nnloss I ara driven off. I cannot think of abandoning the causo of trecdofa for Kansas, (ill (he last hope is gonei and when that time comes I can leave my na tive land forever, with only tho wesaory of what it has been, to stir in my tOMm one lin gering regret.- Your own devoted friend. JOHN. AN APDREflS,' Dclircn I by Hon. John . Hoyt, to the Crutre Conuty .f jr iV nltural Society, Oct. 185i. coxcxryiojc.- We vfrif fit the next pface, consider soino of the inorganic elements, which' enter into th substance of plants, and arc found in the ashT And wc will first notice fine, which is very abundant in nattnc,thcrc being few portions of the earth wh'cTr will not furnish a sufficient supply for a'grlcuftnraf purposes." The farmer. before applying lime to his land, shonld have it reduced to atoms as fine as possible, which can be done in no nrore cifetifious, or cheap er way, than bycxjclling the Carbonic acid gas by burning. After which, by the applica tion cf water, ot by exposure to the air, it falls into a ffnc powder, tri burning, it loses about llper cent ol its weight. It then has a great affinity for acids, snch as sulphuric, oxalic, which are so much in excess in tnany regions and fields as to render them crrproductive, pro ducing; Sorrcff and what is commonly called wild and sour grasses. The sulphuric acid, or oil of vitriol, is formed in nature, and, is com posed' of atoms' of oxygen and sulphur, whil uniting with lime, form's gypsnm or plaster of Paris and the oxalic acid, composed of oxygen and carbon forming oxalate of lime, these new compounds formed by the lime and acids, ar not unfavorable to vegefafiori. Where these acids, as well as humic and py roligneous acid, are too abundant in the soil, they prevent tho decomposition tT the dead vegetable matter, and of course are not in a fit state to be food for tho plants. Hence th great utility of applying fresh burnt lime, to take np a ortion of those acids, and the con sequent decomposition of dead vegetable mat ter, makiirg it more fertile, not so much from the arWunt of lime entering into the composi tion of the vegetable, as from its power in ncntr.di7.ing the soil. We have seen by the above table that the ash of the grains, have bnt a small per centage of lime as in Indian corn 1-10 of one percent., wheat 29-10 per cent, rye the same, and 40-10 in oat?, while we ob serve 8 and 5-10 in wheat straw and in hay nearly 23 per cent. Hence we m.vy conclude tht lime is more favorable to the growth of the stallr and loaves of plants than to the growth of their seeds. Lime by its acrid quality; when fresh burned, would have the effect t destroy tho larvc of insects, and thus by their decomposition, i urease the amount of ammo nia and phosphorus in the soil. It would ap pear, that the application of lime to grass lands would be most profitable when permitted tn lie a suftVicnt time, to decompose or promote the decomposition of the dead vegetable mat ter, and otherwise neutralize tho soil; and this method would be still lctf..T, ifwe plough down the cff'P of grass (as the lime facilitates its growth making a greater amount 6f manure) and then sow with wheat or other grain. In the use of lime in farming, it ia now behoved best to use smaller quantities to the acre than formerly and repeat every few years ; say 30 or l bushels to the acre, spread and left near the surface, f,,r has a constant tendency to sink lower in the soil. We will next notice potas,h, which of all sub stances found in the ash of pfcrnfs, is the most uniformly a:d equally distributed. By the above table we aee that Indian corn cottons 23 per cent., the ash of wheat 29 per cenf., rye 32, and oats 27 per cent, of potash and soda, ami potatoes 51 1 percent., turnips 42, and hay 18. Potash and soda arc nearly allied to each other, properties- and povrerj tbfjf be ing alkalies. Potash must be in considerable quantity in the earth. The farmer will add it to the soil, when he applies wood ashes, min eral coal aslies, and' all decayed vegetable sub stances. Salt pctre is the nitrate f pottsh, but too expensive to be largely used. Common salt is a muriate of soda, by applying which to our fields we have soda; and we have mere, for the muriatic acid is composed of chlorine and hydrogen, so by the dccompositrn of the acid, we have chlorine, which is in the ash of most pl.uits, though not largely. There is a fair proporticu" of uftgntsi in the ash of corn, wheat, &c, but it was former ly thought unfavorable to vegetation. Th farmer need not seek to apply it to his field, for it is abundant ia tbe soil 'in many clays, and is from 30 to 40 per cent, f som lime stones, and 50 cr more per cent., in that which is called hydraulic liuie. . Phosphoric acid is a very importar-t element In the grains and grosses and aovi set eJtist in a free state in nature, but is found united to potash, soda, lime, ac, forming phosphates and in these states are taken upas food for plants, and is absolutely ncccssaiy fcr -heir healthy growth and perfection. The farmer can increase this clement, on his fields by adding decayed vegetable matter, and decomposed dead animal and insect nat ter, in which it is most abundant. Some com posts are made containing a great per cent, of phosphoric acid, and fixed ammonia, which. Jifinundtr en Fcurth pogt.