BY S. B. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 1857. VOL. o.-NO. 43. Fur the Raftsman's Journal THE SIWBEAM. BV JITRRHA SIAT. The Sunbeam came down on n mission of loro, To thiscold, dump world of nurs, I saw it first in the garden walks, And Iicard it 'ruoug the flowers. '"I coiae," it sting, "from tLe land above, The drooping flower to cheer; Perrhance they will raise their hanging heads, . V'hen they feel uiy presence here." As it sang and dr7wfl T saw them raise, Each languid ind weeping face. And it kissed them all as on it passed And beauty was in that place. Thus, methonght. a sunbeam from kind hearts, The Eartba drooping one's might save, Ere they sink to riso again no more, In dark sorrow's stormy wave. tray Garden, June. Sift. T II E QUALITY. AX AMUSING STOKT. "I reckon," said old Mrs. Placide, whilst making her first visit to the old Edgarton cot tage, "you haint seen many of yorr neighbors yet V - "No ma'am," said Laura, "we have been here so long, and none have been to see ns un til you. We were beginning to feel like un welcome intruders. But I suppose they were much attached to the people who lived here before us, and dislike seeing strangers in the place of their old friends." "Oh no! that ain't it; they was afeard to come." Afraid !" said Lanra, surprised ; "afraid of what ?" "Well, we have heard you was all quality, if you was broke, and afeard we would get our selves in the wrong box. We've soed them elephants and knows what they is," sho con tinued nodding her head knowingly. "Why, 1 did not suppose," said Laura, smi ling, "that we had anything so formidable in this quiet little nook, and I am sorry that our neighbors should make such bug bears of us, and suppose us wanting in civility to them." "Oh, we wasn't aminding the civility. The quality lays that on so thick one minute till you begin to rub your eyes and wonder who you is thinks sure you must be the Pope of Rome's wife j then they push you one side be fore yon know it, like as if you wasn't fitten to to tote their puppy dog. But they's sich a sight o' trouble when folks begin to have any thing to do with 'em. Now, thar's the Feath ercords. They lives eight miles off, but the quality is a sorter restless creeter that's allers wnderin' about outer their range. Well,they 's mighty fine, and you see my daughter Betsy Baker likes fine things, and took to 'em migh tily. She was powerful anxious for 'em to come and see her, so one Sunday she seed 'em all at meetin', and axes 'em to come and take dinner the next Saturday. Well, they all stood up thar in the meetin' house and talked a pow er of dictionary talk about "exceedingly," ard "exquisitely," an "interchangin' of rural hos pitality ;" but whether they was a coniin' in or no, Betsy she couldn't make out. But how somever, Betsy 'lowed she had better be on the safe side, so kept up a mighty fixin' all the week. When Saturday came she had ev erything as fine as a bride's cake, 'cepting the dinner. Betsy 'lowed she wouldn't put that on till she made sure if they was a commin'. She had been working hard all the morning, her and tbc niggers, a reddin' up the house and dressin' up their sleeves. But when the lercner clock come and no quality.. Betsy give 'em out, aud they all took oil their Sun day clothes and wer.t to gittin' every day din ner. They had to hurry mightily, but it was ready arter a wl.ile. The hands was workin' close to the house, so Betsy just hollered to 'cm to come to their dinner. Arter the din ner was all over, and every thing sot to rights on' the niggers s t to work, nie and Betsy sot ilown to cool and sew. 'Bout four o'clock Bar ney Baker he ctpuc back from the courthouse, Bays he, "Betsy, did them hired men come in to dinner ?" "Law," says Betsy, "I was so ta ken up expecting them Featbercord folks to dinner that I forgot all about your hirin' Jim zni Bill Jones to split rails, and bcin' as they's to far off, I reckon I didn't blow the horn." "Confound the quality," says Barney, "they's u'.i just qualified for the luncrtickersylum,and reckon you will go along with 'em just to be M ith the quality when they" go," an' he jerked .down the horn and he blowed a blast you wo'd fcthought all the stages that ever run was 'ri ven thar at onst. Jnst then we heard a migh ,ty fuss in the front yard, and when we locked thar was a fine carriage full o' women, with .horses hitched up with fishin' seins, a cavortin' about over the yard ; and one o the puffed up niggers they had dreesed up like soldgcrs, a aet tin' on a bench outside the carriage, was -bounced off like an injin rubber ball. I tho't the creeter was killed, and run to him, but he ;umpcd right up before me, and made sich a bow, you never seed the like of it, jest Jike it was a part of his milishus drill, and says he "Mrs. Feathercord, Miss Featbercord, Miss Netty and Miss Angeline Feathercord." By that time Barney had got the horses quiet,and says I, "You Mr.Flunkey had better open the door and leltin them folks out, stidder stand in' here makin' manners," so he did it. Its well he told me who they wur, for such a car go of folks I never did see before. They had the back o' their heads kivered with artificial flowers all fixed in little flounces, and little silk fans in tlxir hands they called sunshades ; I reckon tbey wa'nt much acquainted with the sun, or they wouldn't tho't he was a mind in' purty little things. Then they had floun ces all over their frock tails, aud all over their capes they called "talmers ;" and they was be llounced from the top of their head to the bot tom of their feet and all the flounces pinted like windin' sheets only a heap finer. Betsy had run back as soon as she had got the first glimpse, cause she had on a mighty dirty froc'i, but she put a new white satin shr.wl all over her, and then she looked as fine as any of 'cm, and axed 'em to walk in and take seats, and set down and be seated. Arter a while she told 'em she was a lookin' for 'em all mornin'. "Oh," said old Mis. Feathercord "we were engaged to be here to dinner ; and we never dine before four, and It wants some minutes to that now," takin' out her fine gold watch, though the clock was starin' right afore her. Betsy looked as blank as if she had run for sheriff and didn't get a vote. But she run right to the kitchen, and the way she ballow'd up Dilce, and Alice, and Dina, and the whole tuckin of 'cm from the tater patch, and the wash tub, and ironin' board, and all quarters wa'nt slow. Soon as I got the quality all settled I went out to help poor Betsy. I was sorry for her. Sich a sight as the kitchen was ! Thar was half-picked turkeys, half picked chickens, ev ery body running round all sides at onct. Says I, "Betsy, honey, do let me help you." Says Betsy, "Law, mar, what ken you do 1 Do pray go long in the house and talk to them ladies, and keep 'em from pryin' about; but for the Lord sake, mar, don't talk nothing lowlife." "Well," says I, "Betsy, I will try to talk anything you want me to." Says she, "Talk about the fashions, and Washington, and whar they went to last winter." So I goes in, and says I, "You all seed any new fashions this year V Says one of 'em, holdin' her head up mighty high, "We always receive from our manta-maker and milliner the latest styles." "Well, now," says I, "I thought you wouldn't a spiled yourselves that away, your own selves , an' lo an' behole, its that mancher-maker woman. She sent you all these outlandish jimecracks and thought you don't know no better." I don't know what made Betsy think they'd like to talk about fashions, for they didn't, I was cute enough to see that in a minute; so I tried Washington. Says I, " Fou was to Washington last winter ?" Says one mighty brisk, "Yes, we wont to see our uncle take his scat in Congress as an Hon orable Representative." "Well," says I, "if I ain't clean beat ! So Jake Feathercord is a rsagr:se man ! Well, if he ken make speech es as fast as he can lay bricks, he's a glib one. But I don't approvo of people leavin' off a good trade ari'takin' up with what they know notfiin' at all about. Now Jake was a mighty good brick layer." "You are mistaken, Ma'am," says she ; "my uncle is the Hon. Jacobi Feathercord." Says I, "I reckon I aint mistaken. Old Jake never had but two sons, Zuke, your pap py, and young J;dte." Well, if you believe it, Betsy was out of it again they wuz noways anxious about Wash ington ; so I picked up a mighty lino little shiny snuffbox, lyin' in one of their laps, an' saysjl, "This is a newTashion snuff box ; migh ty purty." "It's not a snuff box," says she, right off short; "it's a card case." Bless rae, I looked right up to the top of the room. 'ine ioru neip your poor soul," says- I, "why you aint eighteen years old, and are carryin' your cards about to play an' gamble with all day long." "They're not playing cards," says she. "Well," says I, "do let me see them." She showed 'me one; 'twas nothing on the Lord's yearth bnt a piece of white pasteboard, with 'Miss Netty Feathercord' writ on it. Says I, "what docs you do with these things ? 'Twant worth while to fetch 'em here ; we all knowed you. And your nigger in the uniform told us all o' your names afore you could get a chance to tell 'em yourselves." Says the, "When we wish to pay calls, if we do not feel like going in ourselves, or the per sons we are calling on arc out or do not wish to receive the company, we just send our ser vant to the door with one of these, which is equivalent to a visit, We bad some calls to make on the way here this morning." "Wei!," says I, "you all don't set much store by each others' company, ef a nigger in a soger's jacket an' a piece of pasteboard does as well," and I put it mighty softly, athinkin, "you better make a snuffbox of it." "Well, I tried mighty hard to entertain for poor Betsy. I told 'em all about blue dye and coperas dye, and how wuz the best way to set hens, an' which eggs would hatch pullets an' which roosters, an' how to keep a dog from a suckin' of 'em, an' all about Betsy's baby a havin' the measles an' hoopin-cough both at once. But ef you believe me, they never heerd a word I was sayin ! So I run through and let 'em alone. We was all a settin' up be havin with all our might, when Betsy came to the door an' axed 'em all to walk out to din ner. It was a powerful relief all round. When we got to the dinner room, thar was a mighty nice dinner spread out. and thar stood Barney, an' Bill an' Jim Jones, ready to set down. The quality looked at Jim an' Bill, then look ed at each other, and looked lor all the world like they had never been axed to eat dinner before, an' didn't know whether to set down or not. Barney he knowed what they wus ar ter, but I didn't. So says he, "Ladies, take seats, an' set down an' help yourselves. Bill, you an Jim set down an' fall to. These gen tlemen, ladies, are my friends." Bill an' Jim did set right down an' fall to, shure enough ; they never cared a mite ef the quality had a stood over 'em and stared at them a month. The quality seemed like they wus a gwine back in the ball room. But they give another look at the dinner, an' I reckon they wus as hungry as Bill and Jim wus, for they sot right down sort o' desprit, and got theirselves help ed. Presently one on 'em looked at one o' the nigger gals an' says, "Girl, hand me the celery." Dilce locked at Betsy mighty hard ; Betsey frowned at Dilce, an' looked like she knew all about it, an' says, "Hand the salt-cellar." Dilce handed the salt-cellar. "No," says the quality gal, "I asked for the celery," and sho looked fight hard in the plate o' raw shellotcs. Dilce jerked up that and handed it to her. "Them is shellotes," says Barney. The quality gal turned her nose right up at Betsy's shellotes, which never done her no harm, an' says, "I thought they were celery." "I'm very sorry," says poor Betsy, "I didn't know you preferred celery to shellotes." "You needn't trouble yourself to be sorry, wife," says Barney, "we hain't got no salary, and taint your fault they don't grow here." Arter a while one on 'em had eat everything out of her plate right clean, an' says she, "Mr. Baker, I believe I will change my plate, and take a bit of that goose." "Certainly, mam," says Barney mighty po lite. So he cuts off a nice piece and lays it on his own plate, what was full of all sorts o' things, and swaps plates with Miss Feather cord. Well, the notionate woman wouldn't eat a bite of Barney's dinner arter she got it, an' I didn't know what made Barney look so solem, like he was a doin' mischief. Come to find out, he knowed all the time that she want ed a right clean plate to eat that piece of goose off-er. Arter they had all made a mighty hearty dinner, the old lady tuk her hands and done 'em so at Dilce, like she wanted 'em rubbed. Well, the niggers had been ruonin' round the table all the time an' Dilce was bent on show in' how smart she was. So she flew at the old soul's hands an' set to rubbin' 'em like all pos sessed ; but Miss Feathercord jerked 'em a way, an' says she, "I wanted a finger-basin." Poor Betsy, she was tuck all aback agin. But she is a mighty smart woman, ef she is my daughter, and don't often be put out. She 'membered in a minute the little porringer she keeps on the top shelf to give people chicken soup in. So she filled it with water, and hand ed it to Miss Feathercord. She washed her hands in it, an' all round her mouth, and then tuck a mouthful an' washed out the inside of her mouth, an' spit it all back in the porringer. Thinks I, you don't git me to eat any more chicken soup out of that quality finger-hasin. The rest o' the quality, when they seed thar was no more porringers comin', all washed their hands in their tumblers. I looked with all my eyes to see 'em drink the water, .when fhey was done an' spit it back in the tumbler ; but as good luck would have it they didn't ; I know it would a made Barney mighty mad to had to smash up all them new tumblers arter the quality had used 'em ; and for my part, I can't see what they bedaub theirselves with everything they eat fur, and can't git up from tho table till they are washed. 'Twould a been a heap less trouble to poor Betsy ef they had a kept their hands under the table cloth, and a let the niggers a fed 'em. By tho time the dinner doins wus over it was putty late. Wo tho't shuro they was a gwine to stay all night. But fust thing we knowed, they axed fur their hats. (That's what they call them poseys they war on their beads.) Barney told 'em they better stay, that 'twas dangerous to rido eight miles over that rough road after dark. "Oh," says one, "we never go out before dark if we can avoid it ; old Sol's too ardent beams are too overpowering." " Yes," says another, "and the gentle moon light is so soft and beautiful." "And," said another, poetical and soul inspiring." "And," says t'other . the twinkling stars looked like the ever, matching eyes of our guardian angels." Barney looked like he thought it was his du ty to warn 'em and to ax 'cm to stay all night, but seemed mightily relieved when they wouldn't be warned. lie told 'em there wasn't no moon ; but they said them an' their coach man an' bosses an' carriage was all used to ri din' about at night ; so they fixed on their head-gear and took their little sun fans an' started. Poor Betsy was hard at work to the last a gittin their supper, for she was bound to have that in time. "Well, wife," said Barney, "I don't know which looks the jadedest, you or my par of old oxen that Ben Gill has been workin' most to death." I don't think, Mr. Baker," says Betsy, "you have much respect for your wife, to compare her to your old oxen." Says he, " Whether I have respect for her or not, I am gwine to take care of her, and you've got to let them quality alone. I don't tsje nothing in 'cm that my wife should be a kil lin' up herself a boot-lickin' this way. "Yes," says I, "to say nothin' of all the poultry that's been killed." We all went to bed "pretty soon, cause you see the quality had pretty nigh used us up. But we wa'nt done with 'em yet. Way 'long in the night I heard a great beatin' at the front door. I jumped up, got a light, and went to see what was to pay, an' as I live, thar stood cno of those nigger soldgers, a bowin', and a scrapin' soon as he got sight o' me. "Th? Lord bless my soul," says I, "is your missus sent you here to fetch one of them vis itin' cards this time of night ?" He bowed agin and says, "Mrs. Featbercord presents her respects to Mr. Baker, and would be much obliged could he lend his assistance. The coachman being deceived by the darkness of the night, was so unfortunate as to run off the side of the causeway and upset tho car. riage in the swamp." I seized him by the collar and give him sicb a shaken, uniform an' all, jest like I was ma kin up a feather bed. Says I, "You impudent captain general you, why didn't you say so at onct T What did you stand a bowin' an' talk in' quality talk tome fur, and all your misscs scs a slasbin' about heels over head in Cow Swamp t" Barney heerd me a talkin' to a strange man, an' come tumblin' down stars, rolled up in a blanket, an' when he saw me collarin' of the fine nigger, says he, "Mother, jest turn that fellar over to me." Says I, "Barney, go right up stairs an' get into some close directly and start off. Them quality women and their flunky nigger, an' bosses, an' carriage, an' little sun fans, an' po seys, an' snuff-boxes, an' visitin' canls, is keeled over in Cow Swamp." "Of course," says Barney, "so much for git tin soul-inspired, an' trustin' to the moonshine of a dark night, and starry eyes of guarjin an gels." But he hurried off; an' 1 give the nig ger another shake, jest to remind him I hart holt of him yit. "Now," says I, "run for yenr life to that fust nigger house you come to, and tell Dan, without no palaverin', mind you, to jump right up, and get the carry-all ready, and his master's boss, and you help an' have it ready right away." I let him go, an' you would a thought I had shot him off. I put a pile of blankets in the carry-all, and Barney and Dan went down five miles to Cow Pond and fished 'em all out an' carried 'em home ; and we've washed our hands of them quality ever since. Well, its most dark. Good-bye honey. You're mighty pleasant company. I've en joyed myself powerful. For the Raftsman's Journal. CHANGE. BV ELLA H. Changing, is indellibly inscribed on every object beneath the broad blue canopy of Hea ven. Tho saffron tints which illuminate the oriental morning ; the imposing beauty of the noon-day sun ; the rosy clouds of evening, aro subject alike to mutability. The verdant grass, the fragile flowers, the stalwart trees, the blooming meadow, the quaking forest, the dancing rill, the murmuring river, the foaming ocean all arc changing. To-day clouds may obscuro the beauty of the rising sun ; to-morrow those clouds will have passed away, and the brilliant luminary bursts upon our enrap tured gaze in all its golden glory. So it is in the intellectual, as well as the physical world. . Tho restless mind of man is primarily as unsculptured marble, pliable to any impression which the skillful artist may choose to engrave an impress which cannot be erased, though the storm of adversity may beat in all its fury. It is an incondite mass till education tunes the heart's lyre and rears it to the attention of the great and good. The untutored mind of a child is snsceptible to any magnanimity which the being of reflec tion may wish to inculcate ; and that as infal lible as the frail barque of hnmanity, and fades only with the intellect. Line after lino is indited on tho page of imagination and mem ory, till the unthinking, defenceless child be comes the thoughtful, powerful man of refine ment, intellect, greatness, education and hon or. We, too, are changing : we are fast pass ing away ; the thoughts, the feelings, the sen timents that predominated over us yesterday, have fled, and others, new and strange, which rule our hearts to-day, may exert no influence on action to-morrow. It is well that empires and kingdoms, forests and fields, flowers and fruit, streamlets and seas, as well as thought and opinions change. Were they always the same, the human mind, fond of variety, wjuld soon weary of the monotony. Now we may bask in the sunlight of Friendship, and rejoice in the smiles of prosperity and happiness ; to morrow dark clouds may dim the lustre of our social horizon ; we may be called to shed the bitter tear of sympathy or sorrow over the ru ins of some beloved object or admired friend, to see our cherished hopes drowned in the vor tex of oblivion. Let us be preparing for a more glorious, a happier, better, greater change, one that will sever the galling fetters which bind us to Earth, try to forget the sor row, the wrecks of mutability in the past, and live in the enjoyment of the present, ever re membering there are bright and elevating, as well as gloomy changes in life's varying drama. Fleming, Centre Co., Pa. THE SAM) IIILLER WHAT SLAVERY DOES FOR TUK rOOK WHITE JIAX. A correspondent of Life Illustrated, trav elling in South Carolina, thus describes the condition of that miserable class of whites called Sand hitlers, whom the employment of Slave labor by the wealthiest class has driven into vagabondage. Between the "low country," of South Caro lina lies the middle, or Sand-hill region. A large portion of this tract, which varies from ten to thirty miles covered with forests of pine interspersed here and there with a variety of other trees. Where it is under cultivation, the principal crop is cotton. But the land is not generally fertile, and much of it is likely to remain for a long time, a partial wilder ness. The country itself presents few interesting features, but it is the home of a singular race of people, to whom I may profitably devote a few paragraphs of description. In travelling through the "middle country." I often passed the rade, squalid cabins of the Sand-hillers. All the inmates usually flocked to the door of their windowless domicils to stare at me and such a lank scrawny, filthy set of beings I never beheld elsewhere not even in the "puilieus" of the -'Five Points." Their complexion is a ghastly yellowish white, without the faintest tinge of wholesome red. Tho hair of the adults is generally sandy and that of th children nearly as white as cotton. The children are even paler, if pos sible thau the adults, and often paiufully hag gard and sickly looking. They are entirely uneducated, and semi-barbarian In all their habits, very dull, stupid and in a general social position far below the slave population around them. In fact the negroes look down upon them with mingled feelings of pity and contempt. They are quar tered on lands belonging to others either with or without their consent. They sometimes cul tivate or rather plant a small patch of ground near their cabins, raising a little corn and a few cabbages, melons and sweet potatoes. The agricultural operations never extend any be yond this. Corn bread, pork and cabbage, (fried in lard) seemed to be their principal articles of diet. To procure the latter, and whatever clothes they require, they make shingles or baskets or gather pine knots, or wild berries which they sell in tho villages, but beyond what is required to supply their very limited actual necessities they will not work for. Their principal employments are hunting and fishing, and their standard amusement, drinking whiskey and fighting. Their dress is as primitive as their habits. The women and children invariably go bare headed, bare-footed and bare-legged, their only garments apparently being a coarse cal ico dress. The men wear a cotton shirt and trousers of the coarse home-spun cloth of the country, with the addition sometimes of an up per garment too rude and shapeless to be named or described. I one day met a migrating family of these miserable people. On a most sorry, lank, and almost fleshless substitute for a horse, were packed the entire household effects of the family, consisting of a bed and a few cooking utensils. Two small children occupied the top of the pack. Two larger ones, each load ed with a bundle, trudged behind the mother, who appeared not more than seventeen years of age. The lather a wild sinister looking fel loe, walked in advance of the rest with his long rifle on his shoulder, and his hunting pouch by his side. A correspondent of one of the city dallies thus describes an encounter with a Sand-hill family : "Here, on the road, we met a family who have been in town. A little girl of ten years old, with a coarse fragment of dress on, is sit ting on the backbone of a moving skeleton of a horse, which has the additional task of trail ing along a rickety specimen of a wagon in which is seated a man a real outside squalid barbarian, maudlin and obfusticated with bald faced whiskey with a child four or five years old by bis side. Behind this a haggard look ing boy upon another skeleton of a horse is coming. What alow outlandish, low wheeled cart the horse is polling! .There aits the old woman and her grown up daughter, with noth ing on apparently, except a very dirty bonnet, a coarse and dirty gown. The daughter has a basket by her side, and the old woman holds fast to a suspicious looking stone jug, of half a gallon measure, corked with a corn cob. You can bet your life on it, that is a jug of whiskey. The family have been to the vil lage with a couple of one horse loads of pine knots used for light wood. They have pro bably sold them for a dollar, half of which has doubtless gone for whiskey, and now they are getting home. Degraded as they are, you see it is the man who is helpless and the woman who has the care of the jug, and conducts the important expedition. There are hundreds such people dispersed through these Sand hills. You see the whoie of this party are bare-legged and bare-footed. And how bony and brown they are I And it is a curious fact, that in the temperate countries, the children of all semi-barbarous white people (except Sir Henry Buhner's pack of red headed Celts,) and all Anglo-Saxon back-woods, or " or prairie people, have cotton-headed or flaxen-headed children. Low indeed is the lowest class of the white people in the sourthern States, bnt nowhere else have I found them so degraded as in South' Carolina. "Poor buckrah," poor wnito. folks," are the terms by which the negroe designate thm, and in the "poor" a great detl is meant in this connection. It includes not only pecuniary poverty, but ignorance, boorishncss and general degradation. The Southern negro never applies the word to any one who has the manners and bearing of a gentleman, however light his purse. "Poor white man" is an object he looks down upon- an object of pity or contempt." This sketch very well offsets the beggarly description given by Southern journals of Northern mechanics and laborers with this difference. The condition of the latter (thef mechanics) is too independent and prosperous to be tolerated by the aristocratic' feelings of the slave-drivers who seek to drag them to a level with their fclavea ; while tho Sand-hillers are the low, degraded and barbarian product of Slavery domination the remainder in this problem of "Southern Society." AGRICULTURAL. Importance ok Land Draining. We have recently travelled over considerable portions of the country, says the Valley Farmer, and noticed in many places that the wheat crop has been more or less winter-killed. This-is owing, in the first place, to late sowing, in con sequence of the dry, unfavorable weather at the proper time of sowing; and when winter set in, the plants were small, with weak slen der roots ; the earth has since been filled with moisture, and the succeeding lrosts have, in some unfavorable locations, entirely killed out the wheat. The corn crop is a very important one to the American farmer. Upon the flat and other' wise wet lands, corn is usually retarded in its growth several weeks in consequence of the excessive moisture in tbc soil during its early growth. Corn is a tropical plant and requires great heat to insure a quick and vigorous growth, but while the excess of water is pass- ing off by the slow process of evaporation, the) natural warmth of the soil is reduced thereby, eight or ten degrees, and the consequence is, for the first month or more the corn makes a slow, sickly growth ; whereas, upon a drained soil it starts vigorously with tho commence ment of warm weather, and becomes well root- ed and far advanced towards maturity before the drouth of summer sets in. What is true of corn, is also true in a greater or less degree of other crops. It is an established philc sophical fact, that every gallon of water that is carried off by evaporation from the soil, re quires as much heat as would raise five and a half gallons from the freezing to the boiling point, fo that it may be clearly seen that the immense amount of water that must necessa rily escape from such lands by evaporation, carries with it a groat amount of heat, when it is most required by the growing crop. Within the last few years, there has been a very marked improvement in the varions de partments of agriculture in the United States, and we know of none more important that now demands the attention of the American far mer than that of land draining. In a few States, nnder-draining has been adopted to some extent, and the result has been an in crease in the yield of crops cultivated lrom one hundred to two hundred per cent. At the prices to which corn and wheat have advanced, and which are now likely to be sustained, this increase of product will pay all the cost of draining in from one to three years frequent ly in one year ; nor is the increased produc tiveness all the advantages that result froui draining. The soil is less likely to wash and run into the valleys during heavy rains, andl the health and longevity of the inhabitants iu the drained districts are greatly promoted. It is the excess of stagnant water in the soil, which on only escape by the slow process cf evaporation, that causes much of the billions di seases that prevail in our country during wet seasons. Another advantage is, drained laud is better prepared to withstand the effects of drouth than that which has been saturated with water and firmly packed during winter and spring. . Tne Brooklyn Daily Time suggetts the ap pointment of Phineas T. Barnum to the Gov ernorship of Utah. It contends that duplicity is more needed there than force, and thinks before a year would pass, Baranm would hav the Mormons conquered, Brigbam Young a prisoner, and put in a cage, to show around the country! There is a story in Washington that in con sequence of the declining state of his health. Gen- Cass will soon withdraw from the head of the State Department, and that Governoi Walker will be recalled from Kansas to fill the place of the great Michigander. A man named Daily, for attempting to- com mit suicide in Hendricks county, IndL, has been sentenced to the penitentiary fer three years, and disenfranchised for ten years. Dr. Conyers, of London, dissected a person who died for love, and found an impression of a lad hia heart ou art a jewel. That' 8 80.