UL . n. 1 Jo H. C. mCKOK, Editor. 0. N. WORDEJV, Printer. Volame VIII, PanttT 11 LEWISBURG, UNION COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, . JUNE 18, 1851. LEWI SB M 0 GL AIT 1 3T DBF! XII SWT FAX1LT JOCHXAL. Issued on Wednesday mornings at Lewisburg. Union county, Pennsylvania TSRWS.$IJM per year, for cash actually In advance: f 1.75, if paid within tlirw- month ; $J,OU ii paid within a year; $250 rf nnt paid before the T.-ar Hvh: 6 cent for mnl number, tiubmriptionn tor six month or !. to be paid in advance. IMsconti nuances optional with the Publisher, wpt when the y-r u paid up. aarerawmenn nnnatotur inserteti at no cents per square, on wack, f i lour weoks, $i a yiu-: two Wiitni, $1 for aix month t, $7 fr a year. Mercantile tvlwrtu luvnta, not exceeding one fourth of a eulumu. J 10. JOB WORK and a.mal adrertiaemenU to be paid for when handed in or deiiw ml. Communication aoli-it-d on all utyt of genera iiilvici nu m iHuu uec nu m party or mwianan con vest, i All letters muit omw pot-paM, rcnitanied hy the real addresl of ttw wtHt, to i-wive attention. vThose rciauns exclusively m tue n tonal leartnii-ut, to be dirueted to HtRT O. IIickoc. F.i Mitor and those on DUMUeM t O. S. WoRIiCJI. Wrr,r. Office on Market ntrevt, iHwn pWrwvi and Third, orer tlis Post-OUioe. o. N. V0U1KX, i'roprkfir. LwU?yBB5SBW naaaaaa For the Tjewittniy Chronicle. TO THE FIRST ROSE OF SPRING. ST J. O. FREEZE, A thousand welcomes to thee, bonny row With what resistleax power dost thou bring The cherished, half forgotten days of yore, Brightly again l-i"ore me. Hem repose, And while thy fr&irranee thou dost round me ding, let uney rerel in youth's scenes ouoe more. Tie gentle pressure of a lovine, hand The ailv'ry malic of m maiden's voice The cny, yet burning, half reluctant kiss (0 who its power persuasive can withstand ? The walk the dewy ere how these rejoice 3iy heart. Such memories are brought by this. Then welcome, thou first row of earliest spring, The dews of morn like genu upon thee lie. And sparkle in the sunlhrht brilliantly ; Tho' silent, thou of nature seem'st to sing, Spreading tlyr Llu-diing b-auti.-s to Uie .ky, While round thee, modest buds hang lovingly. Soon will the sun unfold them with his rays, And one by one, npnn the parent stem Display their charms beneath an open sky: With burning ardour will he on them gaic. His warming morning kiss will be to them : At noon they'll droop, and by the evening die I Bat not so thou ! Til b.-ar thee hence, fweet rose Still thou wilt wither, and thy color lade, And all my care cannot preserve thy bloom: But I will cherish thee, tv do th.we I loved when young, and when thou art decayed, A simple verse sli.it mark thy mod-it tomb. BuoajBUKo, Fa. Death of Children. With our present imperfect knowledge of the art of life, and our disregard of the laws of health, we are compelled to witness the terrible fact that a large proportion of au the mortality of our race, occurs with children of a tender age. It is the buds and blossoms hat death tramples to dust, when T i "-"-? j'-yv r and if Lis shafts are aimed Iiko-at all, they tell with greatest effuct upon the lit tle ones. And if his blows fall tfiickest and hardest upon the core of the family circle nearest the heart of the parent the wounds inflicted there are most deep and lasting. There is in all this checkered world, tio sorrow like that of tire parent bereft of children. David of old said "1 am distressed for thee, my brother Jona than;" but over the dead body of his re bellious child, he cried, ' would God I had died for thee, O Absalom, my son, my son !" Only those who have drank this cup can realize its bitterness. The sym pathy of friends, though grateful to those who are bereaved, falls far short of the ob ject for which it is kindly intended. There is no consolation to be derived from earth, and the power of religion itself only en ables us to bear the wound which even it can not heal. How many mothers there are, whose thoughts under all the circum stances of their lives, are every moment flying to the graves where sleep theirlittle ones. How many a father is there, who, since he first rose from the dust in which he was prostrated by the blow which struck from his side a darling little son, has cov ered the bleeding wound from sight, and whose very life depends upon hiding it from himself and the world who is obliged with resolute nerve, to hold the grief that would wrestle with his spirit at arm's length, lest it should hourly prostrate him in the dust who must constantly drive away from the windows of his soul, the little pleading face which would come back to commune with its earthly father; must ever unclasp those little fingers from the casement, that the too dearly loved form may drop into the darkness without, or, must else turn and flee from himself, and strive in the whirl of the outer world to escape the haunting vision with which he ever longs to conflnune, butilares not who prays and waits for the time to come when he ean bear an interview with the little lost one, and yield himself up fully to the sweet memories of the past, when they lived and were happy together. IIow many go about with smiling faces, and plunge fiercely into excitements, while the parental feeling is dammed up in their bosoms, ready to overwhelm them with agony. There are griefs, and this is one of their mightiest, too deep for tears, too heavy to bear, and from which we must fly when possible with which we must struggle as best we may when they come upon us in the lone watches of the night, and for which our best consolation is, Uat some time death will cure them, by bring ing us into the presence of those who have "gone before,. Yank Blade. -.; .. Idleness is emptiness ; where it is, there the doors are thrown open, and the devils troop in. : ' ' - Correspondence of the Lewisburg Chronicle. Jottings Down by the Way. NO. II. Athens, Pa., June 9, 1851. A company of twenty-seven souls on and in one of those inelegant and incommodi ous structures which, preceded by two for lorn-looking mules, constituted the " train of cars " which took us from all Williams port, afforded ample material for observa tion, opportunity for the "perfect work" of patience, food for reflection, and occa sion for congratulation when the " ark " accomplished its journey ' and landed its crew safe at Ralston. In our case, a ma jority were of that nondescript species de nominated " Yankees," in Dutchdom, and of the sub-di vision "watermen." One of these had a fiddle, which ever and anon spoke in mingled tones of joy and sorrow, according as the car advanced faster or slower. Another had a little black bottle, which he circulated as a propcllant "steam power, whenever the " mule power advance seemed to lack in spirit. The completion of the projected Improve ments on the North and West Branch with the Hank Koads which will be soon found leading to them down every considerable valley, will render " Yankee watcrmen,' creatures of history. A laborious, jovial set of men, but generally " living from hand to mouth," and taking their " largest liberty " (once or twice a year) when they "go down the river " an era as important to them as ever was " battalion day " in old Berks the change will be of no dis advantage, either in a moral or pecuniary point of view. 1 have mingled with them in their homes, and in their scenes of la . bor, and can bear testimony to the general intcllicence. honestv. and ho-nitalitv f even the roughest in appearance ; at the same time, I have always condemned their - ' l W exccsses,and in too many cases their crimes, which have rendered them odious to the more sober, unchanging citizens of Central Pennsylvania. Many of these watermen, both"Pennamites'' and " Yorkers," are unexceptionable in their deportment abroad as well as at home, while others, with the swaggering, silly air of rowdies in our towns, affect a character which belongs not to attract notoriety, and to keep up a repu tation more allowable in the past than at the present. Our company complained most of all on this trip, that the bread of the Dutch was miserable batches of dough, harder to pass their stomachs than their money was to pass inspection that they had hardly seen a christian-looking potato on their "tower," but had been " nauseated tew death at ev ery tavern " by cabbages and sausages in " some outlandish form or 'nother " that thoy could get no hams, or any smoked meat excepting flabby, fat flitch, or as they called it " fritth, which we had to 6oi7 in cn(7fisk to get it fresh enough to worry down." In short, they declared they never gave worse money than the grub they got, (a hint which I give gratis to our inn-keep ers.) Their sorrows were all forgotten,how- ever, and they revenged themselves for past aggravations, on reaching the first public house in Bradford county, (Kings bcry's, Canton Corners,) where in addition to coffee and steak, potato after potato disappeared from the table in rapid suc cession, and " more " were called for where the bread was pronounced both pal atable and passable in deeds more poten tial and indicative than words and where one large, fleshy, juicy, sweet, fresh, cod fish, (brought by the N. Y. & Erie Rail road, here 35 miles distant) only three days from the ocean, was by acclamation voted worth all the tiny, bony, "nothin else staple of Trout Kun, Ralston, and inter mediate cities. Taking up a newspaper at one of our stopping places, I copied the following scrap, worthy of attention by farmers : " Mr. Jacob Loop states, through the Genessee Farmer, that he formerly sowed unripe seed-wheat, and always had smut Latterly, he lets his wheat for seed stand till it gets fully ripe, and has.no smut. Such was the practice of our older farmers generally. Canton, Troy, Springfield, and Smith- nl.l. in Bradford, are all crowing, and that. too. rapidly, (for country communi ties.) This county of nearly 50,000 in habitants, is by the Erie Railroad now wedded to New York City in all its com mercial and social interests. The money obtained " below," for millions and mil lions of lumber from this ranee of coun ties, is expended for goods in New York. The travel formerly verging towards Phil adelphia, now tends northward. . Northern and Eastern small notes circulate here, in perfect defiance of the Iawa of the Key stone State. I know one mercantile tablishment, which has sprung up in three or four years, and now sella good to the amount of 820,000 per year; and others sell from $20,000 to $50,000 per year, all of which have bid good-bye to Philadel phia excevt in teBini them lumber, and occasionally honoring their "old friends," with a visit, via New York. The Williamsport 6i Elmira Railroad may somewhat change this state of things, so unnatural both geographically and po litically, (for, with proper facilities, trade and travel would go Southerly.) The Trojans seem to care but little whether the Road goes through their Borough ; and it is thought by many its best course would be from the Lycoming down the Towanda creek, (which head near together,) thence up the Susquehanna, 15 miles to Athens or " Tioga Point," striking the Erie Road on the State Line, at Waverly or " Fac tory ville," 18 miles nearer New York than at Elmira, and by a road but 8 miles fur ther than through Troy to Elmira. Mr. Gouder has been at Towanda and Athens, examining the route, and I understand a grant was obtained from the last Legisla ture, permitting the change. Elmira of course would object to any new terminus. in I but can not prevent it if the Company deem it advisable. "Our cares are all today; our joys an all tolay; And in a word, our lira, what is it but Tonus i" There is some philosophy in the above couplet, which I found in the hand-writing ot a youth, written after hearing a dis course on the reality of our being the sufficiency of the day for its evils and the folly of borrowing trouble of the morrow. " Time is the warp of life 0 tell The young, the wise, to weave it well 1" That is an admirable taste which has 11. . .. - i iea to a cnange in tue colors used for rre- serving and beautifying buildings in the : . I country, and in the change of forms in dwellings. One storey residences are more j1"' ana "" costjy than two TJ uM?& Lere land ifi !..""" u"ace m ola- ular,D? trhita in t.l. give place to ireutler hues, which are more pleasing to tho eve, and better harmonize with the livery of nature, whether in its richest bloom or "in sober russet clad." There is also much more convenience and elegance in the con struction and furnishing of dwellings, (and room for more, of ioiA improvements and dwellings) in the weary " overland journey" from VV llliamsport to Athens. --Farming lands, even 10 and 15 miles back from the Erie Road, find them1-: ! since the construction oi tnai improvement. The best farms arc worth not more than $30 or $35 per acre, now ; yet there Nor thern counties may, not many years hence, rival the Southern counties, just as some of the "hill towns" here, which 40 or 50 years since were held as worthless, are now equal to those so much valued fori their river flatts. Grass grows here, spon taneously aud luxuriantly, furnishing ma terial for cheese and butter in abundance ; fruit can be raised easily ; and the com pletion of the Canal will furnish more of our lime, to aid the various means for augmenting wheat and other crops. Indeed, the capacity of our whole coun try for improvement in agriculture, is un known. Horace Greeley writes that in England, farming lands sell from $300 to 500 per acre, even when one-tenth the income is forfeited to a forced priesthood, and under other taxes which an American would think absolutely insupportable. There is as good if not better land in Amcr- iea, than in England ; and under as close and wise culture, and ' with the markets we may make for ourselves, who can cal culate the advance of our country in agri cultural improvement ? Iscoa. SlnpilarBible Prophecy, Bearing upon mormomsm. The seventeenth chapter of Jeremiah, fifth and sixth verses, reads as follows: "Thus saith the Lord, cursed be the man that trustcth in man, and maketh flesh his asm, and whose heart departeth from the Lord. i "For he shall be like the beast in the desert, and shall not see when good Com eth, but shall inhabit the parched places tit the wilderness, tit a salt land, and ncl nhabited" The above verses have a remarkable bearing, to say the least of them, upon the great settlement of Mormon ism at the "Salt Lake." That country has always been a "wilderness, in a salt land, and not inhabited," until the followers of Joe Smith, who "trusted in man, and made flesh their arm of support," settled there from their wanderings. The country, for a great distance around the present abode of these people, is encrusted with pure salt, of sufficient thickness to bear the weight of man ; and the lake whereby they abide is world-renowned for its saline qual ities. The declaration of the Old Testa ment prophet is literally verified in the locality towards which Mormonism, both of the Old and New World, is now rapidly converging Camden Democrat. More than a million of Dollars, in Bank notes, we learn, pass through the Philad elphia Post Oflice every month. We had no idea the amount was so large and un der all circumstances, the losses from dep redations of all kinds, miscarriages, and mistakes, may be regarded as very slight From the Pennsyli-anlan. n nut. a. t. contan. Atthepaeeof,rtrecht,lnniS,tbBogllhOovernmont instated on compensation from the Spanish Government for having violated a contract which the Snanlsh Oonrm. ment had establuhed the unqualified and exclusive privi- uriuan uuTerumeuc 01 importing slaves into her West India colonies ! That was not than mumuit w ifuuuc munn out n m now. I ajluae lo it to show that the Introduction of slavery into the Southern States, Mm uo w ue fiami upon tue generation mat actueved the uiueueauence or una country. wiasYCB. EmjtAiro! the proud and bright, the sea-girt Bom Of every virtue every vice the home; Fierce and Insatiate as her subject tea; The mock'd world's foe; and yet gnat, bravo and free! As drum to drum, o'er lorded earth and tea Soands round the girdled world her mriUe. So shriek to answering shriek still dogs her way. Proclaiming England's crimes and England's sway. Thou busiest merchant fat th' inhuman trade. Who coined up blood and gold from crashed hearts mad, nose motto" Freedom and the Trade In Slaves!" Rang through thy streets-and echoed o'er thy wave ; Who, in dark treaties, still secured the rivht Which o'er the Western world has east a blirfit : And brought thy freights of flesh, 'neath whin and chain. ara our young brow with the curse of Cain I Thou canst reproach us thou I with pious tone. Canst taunt us with the wrongs which thou hast done Ilast done, and would do, though thy victim's cry Should rouse the bolts that slumber in th sky t Wo conscious pang th wrong thy bosom lent. Till the trade ceased to yield the out par cent, N'or ceased thy bonds to press the mint slave's veins, Until his freedom added to thy gain. Thou dartt revile as I who, when India's sua Shine, but not smiles, upon a realm undone. Bast, wolf-like, Iapp'd up blood; bast mocked at trust; And built an empire on aa empire's dnst I Oo, look through history's crime, and thou wilt se That Borne, the Robberden, was meek to the. Millions untold have fed thy lust and wrath. And their wan shades now shriek along thy path. And thou nvilst us! Harkl another .hel.k Rings o'er the earth and pales creation's cheek. Us China! calmest, meekest child of time ; .. .... centuries have r - ' w"",. erth -Tt could boast poi wnere lutt of rule its po rule its DOWer had but. Strong, yet unthreat'ning ; strange to wrong or fear; ' never cose tne world a tear! She has banned none; and Where's the robber band Would carry war and woe to such a land f Where, but beneath the red cross that has waved Its crimson folds o'er isles and realms enslaved I Where, but with those, who prate of mercy still, Ev'n while they prate, in cold blood h.i. ..t .-. ine paltry pretext! China dared deny The right to poison would not eat and die. Woe, then, to China I Let the red croos wave Above the realm, a desert and a gravel Let war and famine spread their baleful aightl A nd England, o'er the ruin, preach of right I Thou waited wall! Thou gory robber! Thou Of merry tsik'st, with murder on thy brow : And utterMit words ef peace the pure and good! While thy Up bubble with thy brother's blood 1 Extraordinary Escape. The last Abingdon Virginian contains the following account : ' The Children of Mr. George Hickan, a rrWrwrtnwravaiw neat tile uiuuui m htuauiusiwja BlliaUUie. AU Uireil geuntrvw, one of them, a boy about eight or ten years of age, pushed , his little brother, about four years old, headlong over the edge and down into the deep, dark pit be low. It was some time after the child was missed, before any certain information could be drawn from the others as to what had become of him ; and it was only by threats of severe punishment, that final ly overcame their fear and extorted from him who did the deed a confession of what had happened. An effort was made imme diately to ascertain 4he situation of the little fellow and afford him relief, if he was not beyond its power. Ropes were tied together with a stone attached to one end, and an attempt was made to fathom the depth beneath, but more than sixty feet of rope were employed in vain, no bot tom could be reached. A lighted candle was then let down, but its light gave no hopeful indication except that the pit was free of choke-damp, or impure sir, as far down as the candle descended. Night came on and all further efforts had to be for the time abandoned On the next day farther trials were made of the depth of the pit, but with no better success. In des pair, the frantic parents were about to give up all hopes of recovery or rcleiving their little innocent, and preparations were being made to close up the mouth of the pit, to prevent a like occurrence in future, when it was suggested and agreed upon that another and a final effort should be made by letting some individual down by ropes to examine the nature of the abyss and asceitain if there was any encourage ment for further efforts to be found below. A brother of the lost child undertook the fearful task. Cords were fastened around his waist and limbs, and one to his wrist, by which he might indicate to those above his wishes cither to descend or to be drawn up. He was swung off and slowly lowered, until having gone to the depth of about 50 feet, he looked below him, and there shone through the thick darkness two glistening eyes intently looking upward. In another moment he was standing on a shelf or angle in the shaft with the child clasped to his bosom. He fastened the little fellow securely to his own body, and Did ding bim take the rope firmly in his hands, the signal was given to draw np. The child held convulsively to the rope, and in a few minutes they rose within view of the hundred anxious spectators, who bad as sembled to witness tie result ; and when the first glimpse of the little fellow alive caught their eager gase,screams an dshonts of joy from the excited multitude 4 tuiea the air, andbig teats of sympathy started from the eyes of every beholder. After the first paroxysms of delight had subided,tbe child wan examined to see if it had sustai ned any injury and extraordiai-r to tell, J with the exception of a little braise on back of its head, it was perfectly found and unhurt. The only complaint that it made was that it was hungry, being nearly 27 hours -under the ground. To inquiries made of it, it replied that it aaw a light, and heard it thunder. From the nature of tho pit, it appears that the little fellow had fallen a perpendicular distance of 40 feet, upon a slope or bend in the shaft,and from that place had alided down 20 feet farther to the spot where he was found lea ning against a sort of pillar or wall, and gazing upward. How he escaped in stant destruction is bevond au ac count. The Coxditos or Mexico. Rumors of a revolution are rife in Mexico. The Government seems to be at its wit's ends, and Congress is no better off. After spen ding many months in a vain endeavor to devise ways and "means for replenishing" their exhausted exchequer, they now find themselves in a worse condition than at first The only practicable measure, that of removing the prohibitions," or restric tions which now paralyze the industry and commerce of the country, has been set aside. For some time the Chambers have been engaged in discussing the expediency of granting the President extraordinary powers, bo that he may be able to raise funds in his own way, without any neces sity for recourse to Congress. This meas ure at last passed the Senate, and was, at the last accounts, still under discussion in the Chamber of Deputies. A Committee of that body had reported in favor of it, and there is little doubt that it passed on the last day of the session. This would make Arista a virtual dictator, and will open the door for the attempts of other as pirants. In fact, the country seems to be in a very distracted condition, and rapidly approaching a state of anarchy similar to that which preceded the war with the Uni ted States. a mm ? iu?2. IT CIUKLU aUCXeT. A traveller threogk a durty road, ' : ""Tu baek beneaffls bourns. - - - -The Aur mouse loved Ks dangling twigs. The birds sweet music bore ; . . . It stood a glory In its place -A blessing evermore! k little spring had lest It way . : - Amid the grass and fern ; A pairing stranger scooped a wen Where weary men might turn; Be wall'd it in, and hung with car A ladle at the brink lie thought not of toe deed he did. But thought that toil mii:ht drink. He passed again and lo 1 the well, . - By sumtnera never dried. Had coaled ten thousand parched tongues, And saved a life bc&iuef A dreamer dropped a random thought; Twas old, and yet twas new A simple fancy of the brain, Kut strong in being true. Kehone upon a genial mind, Awl lo! its light became A lamp of life a beacon ray , A monitory flame. The tliought was small, the Issue great - A watch-fire on the hill It sneds its radiance far adowa. And chcen the valley stilL . A nameless man, amid the crowd That thronged the daily mart, Let fall a word of H'-pe and Love, , Unstudied, bom th heart; ' . ; ; A whisper on the tumult thrown . A transitory breath v .' It raised a brother from the earth, , It saved a onl from death. O germ ! O fount! O work of level . . it thought at random east! - -A Ye were but little at the first, But mighty at the last 1 - - The Exemption Law The Credit system.. . ; : -In a suit in the court of common pleas of Philadelphia county to recover property sold by the sheriff, in alleged violation of the provision of three hundred dollar bx- emption law, Judge Parsons is represented to have said that, "All the Jaws that Bad been passed by the legislature for a um ber of years back, to protect a poor man en a. rptrosrade from civilization. For- merly a poor man could get credit ; now he could get none. Nobody would trust him." o With all due deference to the better judgment of Judge Parsons, we think Le is wrong in his opinion of the enects oi the three hundred dollar law, and the law abolishing imprisonment for debt (which we suppose is included m the measures ne alludes to) upon the interests of the poor We admit that there are cases, an which credit is desirable and necessary for the poor man, and that there are also cases in which he is deprived of it by the ope ration of the laws in question, but as a general rule, deprivation of .credit is, in our opinion, an advantage rather than an injury to the poor man. " Man wants bnt little here below," . and none but those who have tried it are aware oi how little a man can get along upon who limits his ex penditures to his actual wants. This the poor man who has no credit is compelled to do, and gets along-, if not so comfortably as he might upon a ' larger income, much more independently, aye and in the . end more comfortably than he would do by seeking to increase his income by the use of his credit, but in reality only increasing his wants and anticipating future earnings, which when the time comet for their re- the i ceipt and necessary expenditure, are al- ready appropriated. To the business man the credit system is unquestionably beneficial, when used and not abused as it too often is ; but our own experience is, that to the workinz man the day laborer, the journeyman mechanic, to any one who works for day wajres. it is mucu more likely to piove injurious, and ... - w - .that tue le33 ticv na7e do with it, the Dciier. The very assertion (no doubt of its be ing a fact) that the enactment cf the laws abolishing imprisonment for debt and ex empting a limited amount of property, the bare necessaries of life, from execution and sale, operates to prevent the poor man from obtaining credit, should show him the nature and operations of that credit, and of the friendship of those who will only credit him on such conditions. We could not easily be persuaded to re- g.ru mat man as a incna, or as doing a 1.1 . f . . . . friendly act, who would allow us to pur chase from him on credit, articles either of real or imaginary necessity with the de termination if we should be unable to pay at the stipulated time, to raise the money by stripping our home of its comforts, taking the beds from under our wife and children, and the bread from their mouths, or, failing in this, to compel payment by consigning our body to a prison. Far from it ; but on the contrary, when the means are used that often are used, to in duce men to contract debts, by the pur chase of articles that are not necessary, by the assurance that " the seller don't want money,' relying upon the strong arm of the law to enforce payment when he does want it, we look upon the seducer as the poor man's worst enemy, and the laws that aid him in the enforcement of his claims as relics of barbarism, that should not be suffered to disgrace the statute books of a free people. "Owe no man anything" was the wise injunction of the great apostle, and well would it be if all who acknowl edge its inspired source would obey the precept For the working man the cash system is the best, the only safe system, and it would be well if those who nrofess so mneh UVBSIJT MS ire ulnuumve ' mm vuij .. .,im.mp, ges hewmfli rfenve rrtfta its AWjrWr- s stead of plundering him of half his earn ings by means of orders, trade prices, semi-occasional payments, and the other machinery of the credit system. Cash payments and sound currency will conduce more than anything else to the comfort, prosperity and independence of the work ing classes. Taid for their labor in cash they will purchase what they want, aud only what they want, upon the best terms, if paid in a sound currency, which they can lay by with an assurance that it will not depreciate or become worthless in a day, a month, or a year. Ashinplaster currency has the same effect in leading the poor man to dissipate his earnings that the credit system has ; in the one case he is induced by the desire of possession, which he is tempted by the cupidity of 'the vender to gratify, to anti cipate his earnings, and for the possession of that which he does not really need, de prive himself at a future day of the ability to procure that, for want of whicli himself and family must suffer privation ; an( in the other case he purchases aa unnecessary article, that he may have soma value for that which he fears will -trovc valueless before he has occasion to. spend it neces sarily. The legislature of Michigan, we believe, have abolished all laws for the collection of debts, and we are of the opinion that they have don e wisely. The great blessing of the credit system is the impetus it gives to business, the facilities it affords for in creased production, and over production appears to be the very "error of the times," the fruitful cause of all the evils that op press labor and improviBh capital. If the effeot is really so injurious, the cause can not be beneficial. We do not believe that the rapid increase of the comforts and nec essaries of life is necessarily an evil; the evil lies only in their imperfect distribu tion; but wo do believe that the desire for I gain, the disposition to expand all kind of business operations, to multiply factories, funiaces, forges, and even farms, needs no artificial or legislative stimulus, but that the interests of all concerned would be ultimately enhanced by occasionally putting on the break,as theaction of the le gislature of Michigan will most assuredly do. Harrubttry Keystone. Though sometimes, small evils, like in visible insects, inflict pains, and a single hair m&v stop a vast machine, vet the chief secret of comfort lies in not suffering trifles to vex one, and in prudently culti vating an under-growth of small pleasures - - Mil nnea a1.in ! are let OU B1UGU vol J K jv long leases. ' Uifintereetednees is the very ioui or -Jr" , -'' virtue. ....,-. She l?G3C2C2. rrom the Pannsylvasm Fara limine! On Oep Flowing. . Mr. Editor : The business of fanning differs materially from other pursuita ia that it confines pno more to his boa, and his own broad acres, and allows less leisure to travel and collect from the practice of other hints for Cis own management, than the merchant manufacturer, or even me chanic. This disadvantage can oalr bo remedied ia one way, by the urculatioai of agricultural periodicals Eke the "Farm Journal," which, in tact, are nnthJnj mm than the practice and eiehee of rood fiknav- mg recorded in a book, certainly not the less valuable on that account; sod tans reaching many a corner of the kad other wise inacceasible. The fatal prejudice against look farming, which is only ob servations oo culture printed instead of spoken, has, in a great eVjeasote, passed away, and our practical farmers now sod their true interests to consist not only ia reading agricultural journals, but in writ ing for thenv Among other innovations ea old systems brought about in this way, the heading of this article b one. I hare aonurvW seen the observation that there is some ex cuse for the yearly renter ef a tarsi t plough shallow, but none for the owner of the soiL The one wants to get all he can, even at the expense of the had, the latter permanently to improve, while cropping it. I doubt whether it is to the advantage of either renter or owner to plough shallow. In the spring of 1844, 1 broke ud a stiff souior corn, with a heavy plough, (Proa ty's 5J) drawn by two yoke of oxen, to th a depth of nearly eighteen inches. I then fol lowed immediately behind with a subsoil plough, which stirred up the subsoil to the depth of six or seven inehes more. After the ploughing and harrowing were finkked, a stick could be pushed down ia nearly every part of it, to the depth of fouateea or fifteen inches of loose earth. . It was well ploughed and the experiment was a bir one. We may remember that that sum--mer was a very dry one. -. Not oalj were, our pasture fields burnt ap sad hare, bat Enriand iTT-IIilT . Cattle: wathr. in the fill. Tr f.u.;'fT.fUy tsii saI I was told it had beea a common remark of the neighbors and passers-by, how grejfs and luxuriant it eeatinued throrigh the season, compared with others aroandi it. This was aa instance of the beoeft of deep ploughing ia a dry season, and I hold it would have been equally perceptible ia a ' very wet eae.. The depth of soil, would have allowed the superabandant moisture to pass off, and thus relieve the roots of growing crops. In we er dry seasons, in rich or poor land, I eeatend for deep plow ing. To be urc ia an exhausted soil. or in a naturally deficient one, very deep ploughmg is not to be at once adopted, but the tysim is correct, each year to go a little deeper. ' 5 "' ; It is s prising to soe the practice of many Sinners, working for years, plough ing, nutnuriug, and planting but four or ova inches deep, fearful of toavhing the hard yellow substratum. Ask the ques tion, and it will be admitted, that if there was twelve inches of depth as rich as four inches, it would be a fine thing; bat how to accomplish this, unless by plowing and ' turning it up to the influence of the at mosphere, would be difficult to answer The larger the source from whence grow ing crops derive their nutriment, of coarse the larger the crop. A given amount of surface representing tea inches deep of ' good sou, of coarse supplies more food to plants, than the same amount of surface only four - inches deep. " A fear is often expressed of burying out of reach by deep plowing, the shallow surface soil, bat the advantage of turning ap the hard sub stratum to the influence of ht ran and air and atmospheric gases, and its conse quent speedy melioration is tost sight of. ' Deep and thorough plouzhmir, thorough pulverisation of the particles of soil, allow- : ing of the free admission of air between " them, coupled with the use of plaster and ' lime on the surface, and repeated narrow- in gs or stirrings, will soon render productive and profitable a subsoil hitherto valueless, and thus greatly augment the supplies and sources of food for plants. . : fASciuui Morris. West Chester Pa., 6th mo. 6, 1851. Sixotjlar Freak or Nsttjbx The Fairfax (Va.) News states, oa the premie es of Mr. Cyrus Burson, 8 miles from Al exandria, two fowls, truely "half chicken and half turkeys," have been hatched iron, the eggs of a turkey. They are both alive. Paper Carpet? TCindnaati Noa pareil says that a Mr. L. Howard has ditv covered a process by which sarpets eaa be prepared from ordinary wal paper, pissed upon canvass and vanuaaed, whinhailasja. are nest and durable, and which ean bat uaoroeaai men ww pnees wa. we taisk they wl!l come mto extensive use- . , ' . .,.' .- -t ;.. , !.(. t : 1