BY S. B. ROW. VOL. 3.-1TO. 41 CLEARFIELD, PA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1857. THE DYING BOY'S REQUEST. Coo closer, oloaer, sister dear, I en't aee theo now ; My eyo is dull, my sight 13 drear, : Sister, is this death upon my blow ? Bark ! to notes so soft and grand, - They fill me with delight; They nreep along the airy strand, Like beanty on the light. Thy hand to me, kind mother, dear, Xliy touch so soft, give me again ; Thy gentle voice, so sweet, mother dear, - Oh let me hear its mellow strain, For soon your darling will no more Listen to your tones of love ; Sooa heil sing God's praises o'er, la a nobler strain above. . Weep not for me. when I am gone. Parents dear, kind sister, brother ; Then a brighter day will dawn, And I'll do happy with another ; One who has watched over me, With more than parental love ; One who will watch over thee, And guido thee to a world abovo. Oh. be gentle, heed His teachings, If you would be happy here ; And when time and care are over, Have a home in higher sphere ; Think I am there, and it may prove, A beacon hope to guide you on Through life, as on you move O'er its thorny path when I am gono. T II E LADY'S TEST. AX IXf ERESTI50 SKETCH. During the time of chivalry, when young pa lodins presented themselves in crowds as can didates for the honor and advantage of obtain ing rich ladies in marriage, and were never disheartened at any test, however scvere,wbich was required of them by their mistresses; in theso same times, which, happily for suitors, are now no more, there lived a young lady of rank, who was alike renowned for the antiqui ty of her family, her enormous wealth, and her enchanting beanty. She was courted by three brave knights at once ; but neither of them was to her t.iste, and what made matters more distressing was, that their assiduity deprived her of the moments she would willingly have consecrated to the sole object of her affections. Ilildevert, the mau of her affections was infe rior to her rank, and she naturally presumed that innumerable obstacles would be raised as soon as she would communicate to her proud parents the name of her lover ; but she was firmly resolved rather to renounce all matri monial engagements, than wed any one but him. Ilildevert was a very handsome yonns man, who filled, in the castle of her fathcr,thc office of Secretary. The young lady bad grown up by his side, and he had probably without being aware of it, planted in her heart the seeds of the tender sentiments which had af terwards taken so deep a root there ; nor could she at the same time forget, that when her fa ther, conformablo to the pious custom of the age, had quitted his dominions to fight beneath the Christian standard at Palestine, Ilildevert had by his bravery, saved her parental roof from the rage of banditti who had attacked it. During a certain winter season, when the three knights came regularly to woo this lady, she resolved to get clear of these importunate lovers at once, and forever. She announced, according to the custom of the time, that a test sheuld decide to which of the three the preference was due ; a declaration which sat isfied at once her parents and her lovers. The lady reserved to herself exclusively the right of naming what the test should be, of prepar ing it, if necessary, and of being present when it was executed. Tradition, however, has not concealed from us the fact that she was assis ted in the execution of her design by Ililde vert, and an old faithful servant. When all the preparations wero completed, she desired the first of her suitors to be called, and ad dressed him thus : "Sly father has, for some time had his coffin preparsdan order to remind him that his terra of life was drawing to a close. To-night I will order the coffin to be placed in the hall. Put yonrsclf in it like a dead man, and don't you stir at all, whatever yon may behold. These commands obeyed, I will know that you really love me." "Charming lady, (replied the knight) can it bo difficult for him to act the part or a dead man, who is at every instant ready to expose himself to death for those bright eyes T Com mand what you please, you will find your lover unshaken to bis latest breath." The young lady afterwards spoke in these terms to the second of her suitors : " Wc have a dead man in the castle, whose corpse will be laid in the hall to-night ; do me the favor to watch by its side, in order to pre Tent the occurrence of any accident. It is absolutely necessary that yon conduct your self with resolution, and maintain your post Ly the side of the coffin, whatever may chance to happen. By a strict fulfilment of theso con ditions, I shall be enabled to judge of the sin teritv of yonr love for me." " What command has issued from that love ly mouth I (replied the knight.) This slender test my very squire would willingly undergo for a breakfast ; and wherein can it possibly of- fer any difficulty to one who is ready to brave death that he may find favor in your sight ?" The lady then took the remaining one of her suitor's aside : I intend (said she) to amuse myself at the expense of a man,who has undertaken to watch a corpse to-night, and who boasts and pique's himself prodigiously upon his courage. Dis guise yourself as a devil, and I have a dress prepared ior you. At the hour when spectres r said to visit the earth, go and endeavor to make him quit his post. But remember to maintain yourself resolutely in your own, whatever may happen , for by this I shall form my judgment of tho ardor of your pas sion for me." "What! adorable lady I is such infant sport as this all that you require of my bravery and love 7 No matter, your pleasure is my law ; and tince it has taken this turn, should Luci fer himself guard the coffin, I would J make him yield his post to me." As soon as night set in, a large coffin cover ed with black, was brought into the castle hall. Wax tapers and all the appointments of death, were placed around. The knightoJwJiom the first part was assigned, arrayigi linen sbrocd, placed himself in the coflfrria the presence of the lady, and clasped his hands firmly together ; a crucifix was placed on his head, which rested on a pillow, was crowned with flowers. The vivid tint of death disguis ed bis countenance, and the lady, after con sidering him in this situation and feigning to shudder with horror at the spectacle, gave him strict injunctions not to open his eyes, or give the least signs of animation. The second knight began by doing ample honor to the splendid supper to which he had been Invited. He was full of gaycty and spir it and laughed heartily with the rest of the guests at the current tales of sorcerers and spirits, and swearing that from his very youth he hai scoffed at the Idea of ghosts. As soon as tho appointed hour arrived, he walked cour ageously towards the hall, where the lady was awaiting his arrival,with the old warder of the castle. She inducted him to his post, givins. however, at the same time, full liberty to walk or sit stillto read in a word, to employ him self in ahy way he thought proper, providing only that he should not lose sight of the coipse, and that he should defend it from whoever might approach the coffin. When the lady and the warder had retired the most profound silence reigned throughout the hall. The knight began to scrutinize it in every part, and at last exclaimed, "what will not ore render a man capable of !" then throw- ng himself into a chair near the coffin, he fix ed his eyes upon the corpse, and the sight of this object caused an involuntary shudder to per'le nrs wnuiu irame; xur m iirnrncr mt. or, who counterfeited the dead man, played his part well, and his pale and lived counte nance resembled that of one in whom life had become extinct, so much that the most dis trustful eye would have been deceived. His head, too, half raised, appeared as though it would advance toward the rash man who star ed so fixedly upon him.and drag him with him to tho tomb, which already gaped for all that death had left him of mortality. The knight withdrew his gaze from the hideous object be fore him ; snuffed the lights and began to read an ancient family chronicle. In this occupa tion, he became so busied in the relation of a seige of some town in Italy, that he forgot the dead man in his coffin ; and sharing the heroic sentiments of the brave knights whose deeds rivetted his attention, he became, like the first knight, prepared to pimh the adventure to its close. The lady, who, with her lover and the old warder, was observing, frotna neighboring a- partment, what passed in the hall, began to en- terta in some misgivings respecting the success of her stratagem, when the hour of one struck loudlv on her ear. Instantly the knight was heard to approach the hall. He struck a tremendous blow upon the door of tie hall at the very moment when the knight who was pouring over the chronicle, was engaged in his imagination, in cutting his way through a breach by the side of his gal lant ancestors. The noise made him instant ly leap from his chair, as though the hand of him who struck had caught him suddenly by the hair. "Who goes there 7" he exclaimed. No answer was returned, and the silence which followed sinco the blow, was only interrnpted by the echo of his voice. The guardian knight seized a taper, and drew near the door with a design of opening it but changing his pur pose, he stopped, listened attentively, and was about to repeat his question, when a second blow, louder than the first, was heard. "Come in, I tell you !" exclaimed the guardian knight, and then stepping back a few paces, in order that ho might keep his eye upon the corpse which remained tranquil and motionless. The guardian knight placed his taper on the floor,drew his sword,and marched with length ened strides towards the door. A third blow. compared with which the other were really gentle, shook the door at the same instant the two sides flew open, and 'Satan' entered It is well known that in bodies of ignorance such as that in which this adventure took place the d-1 was firmly believed in by the in habitants of Europe. The people, the knights and even the princes themselves, believed that he assumed all sorts of torms for the purpose of tormenting mankind. Upon this occasion he appeared in the gnise of a tall and robust man, whoso firm steps shook the flooring of the hall. His powerful arm brandishing abea vy lance, and he cast a look full of fury upon the guardian knight, and another upon the corpse ; and in spite of the glittering sword of the former, he walked firmly towards the cof fin. The gnardian knight defended his post raosi valiantly, and the issue was doubtful whm thndead man forsrot what be had to play. The danger to which he found himself exposed, from tho sturdy blows which rattled by his coffin, and his curiosity to behold the fray, induced him to raise himself in his coffin and open his eyes ; but no sooner did he be hold the frightful enemy of souls, than be leaped from the coffin, and prepared to flee At the sight of a corpse in flight, the two combattants lost all courage the d-l made for the door, and the guardian took refuge in neighboring chamber. The young lady, accompanied by the wit ness of her success, entered the hall which wrung with bursts of laughter ; and, recalling the three knights, who dared hardly raise their eyes for shame, she reminded them of thci contract and bade them recollect, that both the laws of gallantry and knighthood forbade them again to press their suit. The knights took a hasty departure from the castle, and Ilildevert was soon afterwards united to the object of his affection. "So mote it be !" A ' HARD SHELL" SERJION. The following, together with the well known sermon on the "Harp of a thousand Strings," has been lately published in Eng land as a veritable specimen of the pulpit or atory of the backwoods of tho United States "Beloved brcethering : I'm the man what preached the sarmon which has been printed in the papers from the tex, 'And he played on a harp uv a thousand strings spcrrits uv just men made perfeck.' I mout as well say I don't take pride in things of that sort, for, in the language of my tex for tu day I'm an orful sinner, (he chief among ten thousand, and the one altergethcr luvly. Them is the words which you'll find in Gennesec. I'm gwinc to preach without notes, 'kase I can't write, and 'kase I couldn't read itef I could; my notes are bank notes, of which I have pocketful, and notes of hand, which I shall give to our square to collect, when I gets back to Indianny, fur I'm an orful sinner, the chief among ten thousand, and the one alter gether luvly. "This tex, my brecthering, can be divided nto three pieces fust second third. Fust, I'm an orful sinner. That means you indi- widually, not mo personally. Thar ar more slua nvi lit. a 1 1 . 2fi- catch the ague, when a little spirit will keep you in good health 'tis a sin to steal, unless you 'steal awile away' 'tis a sin to swear, un less you swear and sin not 'tis a sin to lie, nnli-u vou lie low and keep dark. PriJe is sin. Sum is proud of their books ; now I ain't, though I'vo the gift and the grit to speas in Sum is proud of their larniu ; thank God, I've none to be proud of for I'm an orful sis ner, the chief among ten thousand, and tie one altergethcr luvly. "Second. 'Chief among ten thousand? Thar is different kinds of chiefs. Thar's th mischicr, the chief of sinners, and the Cayug Chief. The mischief means the Old Boj what keeps the fire office below, and lets poe folks suffer in the cold here on airth. Tb chief of sinners means you, you wharf rat, arter-dc melons, amflebuss animals, what lie here about the canawl. Look at them eb hosses rise up in judgement agin you, high f bone, low of flesh, tufl' hides and short m cl ones, near the crows cawing, fur they kn that whar the canawl is thar will the crowsb gathered. The Cayuga Chief is a feller wtt pitches into my frens the spirit-deaicrs, ai my other frens, the State Prison officers. is one uv your cold watur men who goes f the prohibition law that Governor Seyme vetoed. If 'twarnt Sunday, I should boor for Seymour fur I'm an orful sinner, the cbf among ten thousand and the one altcrgetjr luvly. 1 "Tlmrdlv. 'Alterzcther luvly.' DifleJt things is luvly. When my boat swims litia duck. I sav she am luvly when my 3 gives me no curtain lectures, (she has the jl of the tongue as well as myself,) I say slit. luvly when the wind don't blow, and it d;t rain, and it don't do nothin,I fay the dayjn luvly fur I'm an orful sinner,the chief awg ten thousand, and the one altergether luv j "In concision, brcethering, if that bigje uv stuns wus one stun, what a big stun would be; ef you, my breethering, werae bruther, what a big bruther you'd be ; atf my big bruther should fling that big stun.o the canawl, what a great big splash that wd make fur I'm an orful sinner, the chii ruong ten thousand, and the one altcrgtr luvly. I "My breethering, I want to give noticdr give noticdr this place t 1st four, w I uv all the as will be some carryings on at Sunday afternoon at half-past shall prove the doctrin' that uv in the world, the hard shells am the thiit and the best fur I'm an orful sinnerte chief among ten thousand, and the one t- gether luvly. I "I shall prove that book larnin' ain't oj, my brecthering, that ritin' sermons andgj' a celery for um is a sin that deserves indf fication for I'm an orful sinner, the chj mong ten thousand, and the one altergjr luvly. I "Brcethering, let us liquor, and thd memberimr the words of the pj: Bo sure yon're light, then go ahead." 1 " " " ' rra- a lnveletter is a check on tho baf imagination, payable at Sight. WHAT ADDISOU SAID ABOUT. HOOPS "Joseph Addison wrote a sataricle article in the Tatler, about a century and a half ago. with the design of showing up hoops to the laughter of the town. Tho wits of the present day have all had their 'dig' at the same ener mous topic, but we have seen nothing yet that in dryness and quaintness of humor will equal that of Addison. It is rather odd, it may be added, that a fashion, which was ridiculed out of existence so long ago, should spread itself in the middle of the nineteenth century, and that the same war which Addison and the otb er satirists of his age waged against it should all have to be fought over again. Though the following may be of no particular avail as an argument, it is nevertheless very funny read ing, and as- such is worth puttin into the pa per. Addison in describing the trial or a young lady whom ho has arraigned in his court of high humor : "Tho court being prepared for proceedings on the cause of the petticoat, I gave order to bring in a criminal, who was taken up as she went out of the puppet-show, about three nights ago, and was now standing in the street with a great concourse of people after her Word was brought me, that she had endeavor ed twice or thrice to come in, but could not do so by reason of her peticoat, which was too large for the entrance of my house, though had ordered both the folding-doors to be thrown open for its reception. Upon this I desired the jury of matrons, who stood at my right hand, to inform themselves of her con dition, and know whether there was any pri vate reason why she might not make her ap pearance scperate from her peticoat. . This was managed with rrreat discretion, and had such an effect, that on the return of the ver diet from the bench of matrons, 1 issued out an order forthwith, that the criminal should be stripped of her incumbrances until she ba came little enough to enter my house.' I had before given directions for an engine of sever al legs, that could contract or open itself like the top of an umbrella, in order to place the peticoat upon it, by which means I might leis urely take a survey of it, as it should appear in its proper dimensions. This was all done ncoordinarlv, and forthwith, upon the closing of the engine, me peucuao u i..ght into court. I then directed the machine to be et upon the table, and dilated in such a manner as to show the garment in its utmost circum ference ; but my great hall was too narrow foj the experiment ; for, before it was half un folded, it described so immoderate a circle, that the lower part of it brushed upon my face as I sat in my chair of judicature. I then in quired for the person who belonged to the pet- tcoat, and to my great surprise, was directed to a very beautiful young damsel, with so pretty a face and form, that I bid her come out of the crowd, and seated her upon a little crook at my left hand. "My pretty maid," said I, "do yon own yourself to have been the inhabitant of the garment before us V. "The girl, I found, had good sense, and told me with a smile, that 'notwithstanding it was her own petticoat, she would be very glad to see an example made of it, and that she wore it for no other reason but that she bad a mind to look as big and burly as other persons of her quality ; that she had kept out of it as long as she could, and until she began to look little in the eves of her acauaintance : that, if she had laid it aside, people would think that she was not made like other women.' "I always gave great allowance to the fair sex upon account of tho fashion, and therefore was not displeased with the defense of my pretty criminal. I then ordered tho vestment which stood before us to be drawn upby a pully to the top of my great hall, and after ward to be spread open by the engine it was placed upon, in such a manner that it formed I a very splendid and ample canopy over our heads, and covered the whole court of judica ture with a kind ot silken rotunda, in its form not unlike the cupola of St. Paul's. I enter ed upon the whole causo with great satisfac tion, as I sat under the shadow of it.' "Addison then goes on to tell how the coun sel for the petticoat were called in, and an swered the popular objections thereto called with 'great strength and solidify of arguments' and an extensive amount of 'florid harangues,' in the perpetration of which we detect no signs of a falung-ofr in the present race of lawyers. One great argument was, that the business of woollen manufacturers derived vast benefits from the calumniated fashion. The counsel also read a petition of the rope makers in which they say 'that the demand for cords and the price of them were much risen since this fashion came up.' A third solid reason was founded on an appeal from the Greenland traders, which went on to ' show that the use of hoops occasioned an enormous increase in the consumption of whalebone, and that large additional revenues accrued to that branch of the British trade. Addison finally decides the case by pronouncing the petticoat a forfeiture, but disclaims all hostility to 'proper ornaments of the fair sex.' He says "On the contrary, as the hand of nature has poured on them such a profusion of charms and graces, and sent them intoi the world more amiable and finished than the rest of her works, so I would have them bestow upon thctxselres all the additional beauties that art -cm snnnlv them with, provided it does not interfere with, disguise or prevent those of nature. "I consider women a beautiful romantic animal, that may be adorned with furs and feathers, pearls and diamonds, ores and silks. Tho lynx (hall cast its skin at her feet to make beta tippet; the pea-cock parrot and swan shall pay contributions to her muff; the sea shall te searched for shells, and the rocks for gems ; and every part of nature furnish out its share toward the embellishment of a creature that is the most consumats work of it. All this I shall indulge them in ; but as for the petticoat I have been speaking of, I neither can nor will allow it." . A Cabgo or Iaisu Girls. The City of Mobile, Capt. Marshal, sailed from Liverpool for New York on the 2Cth ult., freighted with over 900 passengers. Among these are a par ty of 120 young women and 14 men, members Of 133 different families, the expenses of whose immigration are defrayed by public subscrip tion from nearly 4,000 different persons, the majority of whom are laborers and servant girls, to a fund entitled the "Irish Pioneer Em igration Fend." The object of tho institution of this fund is to raise the wages and other wise better the condition of poor families in the poorest districts of Ireland by the assisted emigration to the United States or Canada of one member of each family, specially selected on account of good character and industrious habits, in t!ie expectation that the person so assisted wiU not only better their own condi tion, but will according to the usual generous practice of Irish emigrants, also send for, or otherwise greatly help, the rest of the family in Ireland. "Can't Afford It." A short time ago we were under the necessity of making a purchase of some potatoes, when we accidentally met a farmer coming into town with a load. We asked him the price it suited us and we told him we would take two or three bags, as we wanted some for planting. They were un loaded and we paid him, at the same time asked him if he took a newspaper, to which he replied that he got "one from Philadel puia, c utwn that he ongilt t0 tafce a county paj-er, particularly the Journal as it would bo to his interest. He responded by saying that be "could not afford it." The fact is he did not know tho price of potatoes in town, and if he sold the whole load at the same price he sold to us, he must have lost enough on his potatoes to pay for a county paper three or four years. We dont wish to make anv fur ther comments as the facts are plain. Law rence Journal. E?-Uncle Sam, after carrying on business for the past eiglit s ears, having three wars, buying tenitory from Franco and Mexico, building railroads, speculating in a bank and trading with all creation, comes out with a. snug little balance on hand of twenty-two mil lions, enough to setup several millionaires, and which makes Sam a millionaire among na tions, bince our revolution England has quadrupled her national debt, and the other nations of Europe have run up a score nearly n proportion, while Sam has paid off bis debts bought real estate, and has money laid by for I a rainy day. Crossing the PtAixs.We learn from the Greenfield (Mo.) Southwester that emigration to California is greatly on the increase in that part of the State never before having been greater, if equalled, unless in the year 18-51-52. As many as twenty wagons a week have passed through Greenfield this spring, bound for California ; and it Is thought that seven mousanci Dead or cattle have gone from that county, and twice as many from Greene. Cal- fornia is a great State, and will wellrepav the agricultural emigrants tTT-The Newark Daily Advertiser of Mon- I day evening says j The crop of strawberries J in Jnew Jersey, this year, has been unusually large. The steamboat Keyport took to New I 1 ork on Saturday, 933 barrels, each barrel con- J taining abott 200 baskets, making 180,600 baskets, which sold on an average for 31 c. ! per basket, making $6,531 for a single trip une DasKei contained only three berries, that measurcu o incnes eacn in circumference. ino aeason uu oniy just commenced. 3-1 he Vineyard (Mass.) Gazette, says that auringthe Spring months there have been I taken from the Matakeset creek, in Edgartown, IU08 barrels, or 604,800 herrings, worth, av. eraging the prices at which they sold, at $4 per barrel. $4232. ' The present year's catch is about equal to hair of somo former years, when herring were plenty. At the other creeks in town, about $600 worth of herring have been taken this Spring. IF" A Mormon Elder who was preaching the beauties of Mormonism in Sheffield, England, praising Brigaani Young as a saint, and every thing else that was good, was pushed from his rostrum by the inhabitants, and ducked under the town pump. . .: ET-Near Lancaster,. S. C, last week, ins storm the hs.ll drifted in torn 0 places to the depth of focr feet. AGRICULTURAL. Scmxir Management of Sheep. la the spring do not turn your sheep into the pasture) until it is well op, or until it is ankle hrgh, so as to bavo something to shade (he ground ; keep yonr sheep close and feed hay and grain of sums kind they will eat it well if kept from grass. When put upon pasture, have three or more fleld asd change them often, ao that their pasture" maiy be sweet. 1 have known a neighbor loose three' hundred sheep out of six hundred in one summer. He divi ded them into three large fields, with no hade except what the fence on the south side of each field made. The sheep if along the fence, and when the nose fly came, the sheep were to be seen running with their noses to the ground fighting the fly, and eating only just enough la keep life in them. The sheep did net go more than eight or ten rods from the fence, and this was eaten close to the ground, when there was plenty of pasture on the north side of the field ; as a consequence, the sheep poisoned them selves in their own filth. The fly laid its eggs in the nostrils of the sheep, and they soon, died in great numbers of "worm in the head." Now, you would ask, how should he sat a his sheep 1 He should have put theat all into one field and forced them to go farther from the fence ; and about two or three days after the first shower be should have changed them to another field. Whenever you see your sheep run with their noses down to the ground dr've them to your farthest pasture; the fly will stay about where the sheep have lain. Keep changing them from field to field and you will not be troubled; With woni la tho head." Correspondent of the Gtnntssee Farmer. Wur Dkw Hcrts Sheep. From time-immemorial it has been a precept with shepherds not to let the sheep turn out upon the dewy grass, or graze in damp of marshy regions. Why the dew injures sheep no one could un derstand, although the fact was well estab lished. Sicbald, the great comparative anat omist, has explained the mystery In his treatise on Entozoa. The eggs of these creatures, ho states, are deposited in the bodies of cattle, and then voided. They lie until the rain washes them into the earth, or the- farmer flings them in manure upon the sotL The hu midity serves todcvelope them ; they fix them selves against the moist grass, and with it the sheep carry these tiny entozoa Into their stomach ; once there, tho business is soon ac complished. Thus it is that damp seasons are prejudicial to ncep, multiplying tire diseases of the lungs and live? fo which these animals are sulject. Ciccmber Bugs. Most gardeners are much annoyed by cucumber bugs, which alike prey upon the cucumber, melon, pumpkin, and squash the latter beimr its favorite. Various plans ImVe been devised for tbeir protection. such as soot, &c. A method which has been practised with nearly entire success, is to form a mixture of equal parts of finely rround I black nenner and vlivat flr.nr nri ,, plants, while the dew is upon them with this mixture, using an ordinary flour or pepper box. It is a fact generally known, that black pepper is so obnoxious to most insects, that few will approach or stay in its presence. The object of the flour is to combine with the pep per, and with the water of dew, to form a paste, which adheres to the leaves for many days, nn less washed oft by heavy rains, in which rasa the application should bo renewed. Wuen Does Wool Gaow 71 answer, when it is wanted to cover the sheep and keep it warm. From the time the sheen ! chrwi until the frost comes you can see tho shape of every clip of the shears ; when the frost and cold weather come, it grows out immediately. Now, if you wish for a heavy clip, feed when the wool is growing. If you have say extra feed, then is the time to use if The wool draws very bard upon the carcass, and growing out fast deceives almost every farmer. They think their sheep are doing well when they are gwnS poor. I can make an additional pound of wol u itn 01,0 hushel ef corn, and my sheep wm 'terwards winter one bushel of corn easier. Let yonr sheep get poor while the W00' 18 growing, and yon cannot recruit them unt" thc net snmmer.J. D. Chamberlain, farmer. To Make a Evergeee flsnw now.rf If you have an Evergreen, or Norway Spruce, Balsam Fir, American Spruce, or any of the pfnes, and desire to make it rrow more com pact, just pinch out the bud from evenr lead- inS branch, all around and over it. Repeat this process again next year, at this time, and your evergreen will continue thereafter to grow thickly. Increase or Fisa is the Ohio. The Wells- burgh Herald notes the ery perceptible In crease of fish in the Ohio river, since the with drawal of so many steam boats. Fish were un usually abundant last spring, and this season more so. The boats, the tleraU says, are iror.rm.d tn. have disturbed tho fish in their sbatrnln fen erations, and their number were front that cause, doubtless diminished!. U-The Montreal IPi t.. of French Canadian young men are loaving that city and Lower Canada, this season for California, Minnesota, and other principle points in the Great West. , As many as 009 unnared and ftfty have gone in a single com Pny.