LEWIS awWWVW-i - BY 0. N. WORDEN J. & II. C. IIIC&OK, CoSnESrtJXDixG EdItoi. pennsylvania Common Schools. We ire indebted to the Deputy Secrct- n..irnK fnr an earfu COPT of the try, . , . lUwrt of Hon. Charles A. Black, late the Report was ton"""""'- . ernor5.h Jan. last, it has but just issued from the press I The new Superintendents f0f Public Schools and Public Printing) U1 resmlatc these nutters, here after, in better time, Reports like this can be and should be frintcd and distnb- ,.A W,, the General Assembly meets, in order that Legislators and the Tenplo may hate time carefully to cxamiae them ..ii. A t !: action when the , ana oe yir Representatives of the People have met. The Report proper embraces 20 pages, The Report proper em uraces i-a.-, with an Append. of 160 pages containing ,Vn, V, extended Reports from Conn- more or .ess lIlc"" . ' .. . . ty Superintendent, ae. " . ... . t. - 'll.i n .... , allanlicnv Luzerne, Somerset, and In w ! "'6 . , , ,. , ., have not b:en nearJ iroui lurougu uir Supcriulendents. From a cursory cxamination.we believe the Report should be widely circulated.and would have a good influence upon the pub lic mind. The present universal School System was commenced in this State, now twenty Bnptnntenden. o. - , If you have a heart ol PenwjlTama. - of iro0) fct us lilko . the School iearcuuv- - - burban residences of years ig under the administration of of humanity, it is impossible to relieve all. Gov. WOLF, but was efficiently advanced j Hut, while the most heart-rending dis nader G jv. RiT.VEa, whoie 'right hand' tress is everywhere teen, extravagince and Ben were and still are those champions of folly still reign unchecked money that Cjaimon School Education Thaddcus would hush the wail of woe that comes up Sevens and Thomas H. Bnrrowcs. The from the noisome dens where starvation succeeding Governors have aUo all been and pestilence dwell, is lavished on the firm friends of the system.which may now most useless baubles, and in the most os be considered as the established policy of tentatious extravagance, and the pleadings the State, only to be changed by being ! of charity are drowned in the din of fash more strengthened and consolidated. j ion anJ dissipation. Although it is twenty years since the j Look at those heavy fulds of costly silks system was established, our Report is foil sweeping by those rich furs, the sight of for 17 years only. We give a comparison which sends ft genial warmth through the of two years the it A and last to show frame tfc&t jeweled arm helping the train the change wrought in 17 years i across nasty guttert why, sir, that bundle 1836 1853 of Bilks and furs, jewels and feathers, No. of Districts f7 1,5a 1 Ji'o. of Schoals o,J;4 w.oUT Time Schools were open 4 m. 3d. Ko. of Teachers 3,394 Average monthly Salary of Male Teachers $18,34 Do. Female Teachers 1 1 .06 Ko. of Scholars 1C9.C04 Aver. So. pet School 41 Aver, cost Teaching per Scholar per Mouth 81,03 State Appropriation 93,070 474,555 j 42 1 1,29 ll,:m Tax levied 207,105 1,021,337 Exp. frrSchMl Houses 111.803 147.5M Oilier annual expenses 193,972 815,901 These are visible rcsalts. The influence of this increased means of knowledge in j harmonizing discordant e'ements, quicke ning the dormant intcl'ecl;, and sowing the seeds of good morals and truth, can never be folly estimated, but certainly bas but begun to be developed. We believe it will also be found, that daring the pist twenty years, the number , and how many starving women and child of Private Schools, Seminaries, Academies ' drcn the sum total would make comfortable and Colleges bas increased in a corrospon-, through these dreary winter months, and ding ratio with Public Schools. If so, we . see if we arc not an extravagant and hard doubt wbethe any State in the Uuinn 1 hearted people, deserves the credit of making more sacrifi-1 " Man's inhumanity to mas. , j , j Makee countless thousands menrn," ecs for the great cause of Lducation.than M j surc,y thcre j9 a sj)e(,.c. of inhumarjUy thestajj old Keystone. j in thig thougntess waste and forgetfulness ,t- .in i r.t. c . j , of our suffering fellow-creatures. "from the Report ot the Superintendent I em i af Cumberland couDty it appears that Ex- But they are not all forgotten. Through Gov. Ritner, although now over 70 years ' unwholesome lanes, and among the haunts of age, retains an undiminished interest in of misery, the Good Samaritan is continu the cause, and cheers the heart of the tea- a' traced : sometimes in the form of cneroi nis district tv vi.uine tiim once a , week. Query Will the Directors visit the schools once a month '! SFtom iJijflaiJtijjiw. (Correrpondeure of the Lel.burj Chroni'lc. 1'iiiLAD., FKb. 9, 1855. Dear Chronicle : It is so long since I have written your name, that it seems almost new to me, and yet I look fur your familiar face with ax inner, inWoct ..i. week as we do for " Harper" at the end everJ daJi enough to make a Tery hard of each month. Let me congratulate you neart sorrowful. No matter how unworthy on your improved appearance ; you deserve ! l!"7 m!,y be ttey are our ftf,low mcnian1 success. The fact that you can afford a ! susceptible of suffering as much as our tiew dress in the midst of such hard times, ' selves. Oh 1 jou are happy in the evidence taat you do succeed : and that I "Junior" look vou wear. r)reei(i all iuc oi grey-nair-brccdiug troubles. Yon may thank your stars, who are so SJ- . . - ' sappily removed from this boilin g pot of , "r,"j,f.u".,B,t qu,c,,y '""""s your urns, me some snug harque ri ding safely upon the broad ocean while man, a noble hull is being battered to pieces among the breakers that Lah the treacherous coast. But, We will be very likely to present the same ialeideseopie change, of aspect. The sun which today reacted from face,, bright W. b conscious prosperity, may to-morrow l npo itLe refltx of crushed spirits, and Unkmpt hopes. Such i, the tide we ride pon; such the wave, which engulph ttousands. The last new ye.r dagwned Pon unparalleled prosperity; this, lighted J ren ", Md the nsual rejoieing gowned in At of hud Hard time r'-Th, mM of bui5neii B7 ret the ery, he h:m. It. CORNELIUS, ! -..If - l. . .1-... . iiga f hp. nntent l DCII m UaUAIUUla - i I ... . ... . I 1 spell to put on nis creditor wim uuw , and pineb hit unfortunate debtor with the other, nay even fall under the sheriff' hammer; but not ly him is hard times full. The law gives him an allowance, his Children are fed and clothed, and be has sympathy and friends ; he knows notb- ! iug of hard times ! . stone and nerves . stroll among the su tho mechanic and ' laborer. Cut why should we go to seek ! them J we can see them at our very doors. Look at that strong man with Li small : market basket, as be passes from door to door ; he is no drunkard ; bis face is intel ligent, and the look of sorrow speaks of a heart within that urges him on in bis work of lore, while the frosty wind whistled around Lis thinly clad frame. lie is stri ving to earn a supper for his wife and lit- lie ones, oy selling appies ; i.ong out ui i i T -a -r ! work, reduced to starvation, vet too proud - , . : . - e' V" T. ? 'lll'c he is Striving so awkward- i . ..n IV ' c-v 1 1. - - w . ( , .i,and. At ev . . . , . cry turn, in every sireci, me same ioon ui cry turn, in every street, j distress ; the same traces of Lard times, arc seen ; the cry of " give ! give!" comes upcontiuually, from little outcast children i and miserable women mothers ! Philan i thropy bas a wide Geld too wide for all ' to fed ber influence, for notwithstanding the noble efforts that are made in behalf ; would bring five hundred dollars under the j hammer. What a contrast to the shiver- " J1' ing wretch seated on that icy step, ber one ' j hand extended for charity, while the oth 1 19 25 er clasps the folds of that tattered garment 12.03 around her famished babe! Lock at that line of splendid equipages, nd liveried menials, that line the curbs ' in front of those haunts of extravagance and pride, the fashionable stores of Ches nut St. or Broadway those " furnishing undertakers" where the fortunes and hopes of thousands are " laid out" ind coffioed and buried and then talk of hard times! Or, let us step into the Opera a moment; it is Grisi and Mario's night. Look around this parquette, and those two tiers of box es ; all these, save only the press, have paid Three Dollars a bead. Try to esti mate the value of that display of velvets, fdrs, jewel?, white kids and lorgnettes : . 4 t , . f,,. iw cf C ' i gentle woman ; alleviating the sufferings I of the destitute, providiog for their tempo ral wants, and leading them by kindness to lives of reform, distributing alms with one band, and bearing in the other the bread of life. Perhaps I have moralised long ctlongh; l"f really, the number of wretches one is eonrelled to turn away from bis door couolr' But there tre strong bopes that an antidote for all our trials bas been found, thanks to the good pleasure of bis restored i,n.. p;n vine nnrl tiA infallible con- I lfltt,& VI UU uw.Mtvw auw - - ception," the neglect of which has no doubt caused us as many woes as "Achilles the son of Pelcus" ever caused the Greeks. The latest news, which is, that the Wee ping Virgin of Rimini is en route for our shores, (if like her sister of Guadaloupe she does not positively refuse to land,) together with a winking Madonna, and a number of relics, should be enough to ensure a national thanksgiving. The fact . ... , j i is, we don i deserve so mucu grace, uu if we are at all benefited, it will be the greatest wonder. I ought not to conclude this long epistle without congratulating you on being able to have a representative of your owl at the seat of government also, congratula ting tho representative. If the Governor is a candidate next time, I'll certainly rota for him. Yours, S. II F. BUBG rfoatja-Hit Lrry M'Mallen wu elrk la a. ttora Where dry (romla tty wholesale were fold: The. anoet of hia baeinesa waa aweepng the Boor, And ktioekiag the boxe afout at the door; Of writing and readioK be knew nothing more Than the colt that U half a year old. Kow a rich widow lady from Tip pareen tent To purchase aome merehandixe rare. And to packing: it up in a box Larry went. But. a little bit corned, and wid labor o'erapent, He atilmMed ard fell In a box that waa meant for different delcrli'tton of ware. All night be lay anug In a beautiful drama, Till morning erawlvd over the eky ; then to nail np the boxm the carpenter came, According to ordcra he fastened the earne. And the place waa ao dark that nobody could blame If Larry he did not eepy. Then the Mlow who marked all the boxei drew litgb, And a bad piece of bunlnexa he made, Fr ha wrt" on the box In which Larry did lie ''Fo Mas. Xat-entur: taKb Ctax aero Kxr ami.1 Ala tr poor Larry, how aonB would be die j If that acttrry command were obejed I The box waa nt on by the railroad lb baste, ! In the widow'a fine dwelling it eat, i And the widow, who bad a mechanical taste. . Keit ltci . it,b ,nd 4UickT nDCUc4 MuIHd, ho roared like a terrified buu, " Orh ! amithereetis, what are je at f rhe widow was horribly frfchtened at fin At what seemed an lufernal machine, Flxpectlng to ace fifty fiends from it burst 1 The wido homo,, ,r.,hte.e. .. A, . mn mm p.iM.u.m.n. ..!. . i, k,i o J But when she discovered a nun was the worst. 1 u" f-m wm " di, ber doubu wen dupemd. cr fears were all ended, her doubu were And her rapture waa plain to be seen. " OchI Molly, look here I" thus she cried to her maid, "Come see what the marcbints have Bent I 1 wrote for such things aa a widder might nade, Ahd tiith but the fellows bare strictly obeyed, bad luck to me now but I'U aee them weU paid, for they give me intire content!' ''Where am IT" says Larry. "Faix.darUnt, you're here," The widow replied with a amile. Cries the lad, " So I am, sure enough ; but I fear I hare Bent the wrong box." " Never mind it, my dear. Said Mistress SI'Laughlin, and gave him n leer That cut to his heart like a file. " It's happy I am, then,'1 M'MullIn rejoined, If the goods suit your ladyship's taflte. If naritooda you wanted, you'll aartinly find That I'll suit you at once, for I'm that very kind." "Very well, then," Bays she, "that 'a the goods to my Baud: And now let ua send fur the Praiel!1 The Little Sitters. " You were not here yesterday," said the gentle teacher of the little village school, as she placed her band kindly on the curly bead of one of her pupils. It was recess time, but the little girl address ed had not gone to frolic away the ten minutes, nor even left her seat, but sat absorbed in what seemed a fruitless at tempt to make herself master of a sum in long division. lier face and neck crimsoned at the re mark of her teacher, but looking np she seemed somewhat reassured by the kind glance that met her and answered, "No ma'am, I was not, but sister Nelly was." "I remember there was a little girl, who called herself Nelly Gray, came in yester day, but I did not know she waa your sis ter. But why did yon not come ? You seem to love study very much." "It was not because I didn't wan't to," was the earnest answer, and then paused and the deep flush again tinged that fair brow ; "but," she continued, after a mo ment of painful embarrassment, "mother can not spare both of us conveniently, and so we are going to take turns, I'm going to school one day and sister the next, and to-nigbt I'm to teach Nelly all I bare learn ed to day, and to-morrow night, she will teach me all that she learns while here. It's the only way we can think of getting along, and we want to study very touch, so as to some tim keep school ourselves-, nd take care of mother, because she has to work very bard to take care of us.' With genuine delicacy, Miss M. forbore to question the child further, but sat down beside hcr,and in a moment explained the rule over which she was puxzlmg her young brain, so that the difficult sum waa easily finished. "You had better go out and take the air a moment, you have studied very hard to-day," said the teacher, as the little girl put aside her slate. "I had rather not I might tear toy dress I will stand by the window and watch the rest." There was such a peculiar tone in the voice of ber pupil as she said, "I might tear my dress," that Miss M. was led in stinctively to notice it It was nothing but a ninepenny print of a deep hue, but it was neatly made and had never yet been washed. And while looking at it she re membered that during the whole previous fortnight that Mary Gray had attended school regularly, she had never teen her wear but that one dress. "She is a thought ful little girl," said she to herself, "and does not want to make her mother any trouble I wish I'd more such scholars.' The next morning Mary wat absent, but her sister occupied her teat There waa something to interesting in the two little sisters, the one eleven and other eighteen months younger, agreeing to at tend school by turns, that Miss M. could not forbear observing them very closely. They were pretty faced children, of deli cate forms and fairy-like hands and feet the elder with lustrous eyes and chest nut curls, the younger with orbs like the sky of June, ber white neck veiled by a wealth of golden ringlets. She observed in both the same close attention to their studies, and as Mary had tarried within during play time, to did Nelly, and upon speaking to her as the had to her litter, be received, too, the same answer, "I might tear my dress." The reply caused Miss I to notice the fcDisbarg, HoIjjb (twiti), garb of tbe sister, She saw at once it was the same piece aa Mary's and upon scru tinising it very eloeely, she became cer tain it was the time dress. It did not fit quite io pretty on Nelly, and waa too long for ber, too, and she was evidently ill at ease when the noticed her friendly teacher looking at tbe bright pink flowers that were so thickly set on the white ground. Tbe discovery was one that could not but interest a heart so trnly benevolent aa that which pulsated in the bosom of the school teacher. She ascertained the residence of their mother, and tbongb sorely shortened herself of a narrow purse, that same night, having found at the only store in the place a few yards of the same material, purchased a dress for little Nelly, and sent it to her in such a way that tbe donor could not be detected. Very bright and happy looked Mary Gray on Friday morniug as she entered the school at an early hour. She waited only to place her books in neat order in her desk, ere she approached Miss M. and whispered in a voice that laughed in spite of her efforts to make it low, and deferen tial : "After thii week sister Nelly is coming to school every day, and O, I am so glad 1" "That is very good news," replied tho teacher, kindly. "Nelly is fond of her bojks, I see, and I am happy to know that she ean have an opportunity to study ber books every day. Then she continued, a little good natured mischief encircling her eyes and dimpling her sweet lips ! "But how can your mother spare you both con veniently r" "O, yes, ma'am, yes, ma'am, she can now. Something happened she didn't ex pect, and she is glad to have us come as we are to do so." She hesitated a moment, but her young heart was filled to the brim with joy, and when a child is happy it is as natural to tell the cause aa it is for a bird to warbie when the sun shines. So out of tbe fulness of ber heart she spoke and told her teacher this little story : She and ber sister wete the only child ren of a very poor widow, whose health was so delicate that it was almost impossi ble to support herself and daughters. She was obliged to keep them ont of school all winter, because they had no clothes to wear, but told tbeffl if they eonld earn enough by doing odd chores for the neigh bors to bny each of them a hew dress, they might go in the spring. Very earnestly had the little girls improved their stray chances, and very carefully hoarded the copper eoim which had usually repaid them. Tbey had a calico dress, when Nelly was taken sick, and as tbe mother had no money beforehand, her own treas ure had to be expended in the purchase of medicine. "O, I did feel so bad when school open ed and Nelly could not go, because she bad no dress," said Mary. "I told mother I wouldn't go either, but she said I had better, for I could teach sister lome, and it would be better than cs schooling. I stood it for a fortnight, bat Nelly's face seemed all the time looking at me on the way to school and I couldn't be happy a bit, so I finally thought of a Way by which we could both go, and I told mother I would come one day, and the next I would lend Nelly my dress and she might come, and that's the way we done this week. Rut last night Somebody tent sister a dress just like mine, and now she can come too. O, if I only knew who it was, I would get down Oh my knees and thank them, and so would Nelly. But we don't know, and so we've done all we eonld for them we've prayed for themand 0, Miss M. we are all so glad now. Ain't you too ?" "Indeed I am," wat the emphatic an swer. And when on the following Mon day, little Nelly, ita the new pink dress, entered the school room her face radiant as a rose in sunshine and approaching the teacher's table, exclaimed in tones as mu sical ae those of a freed fountain, "I am to glad !" Miss M. felt as she never felt before that it is more blessed to give than to receive. No million-aire, when he saw his name in publio prints, lauded for his thousand-dollar charities, wu ever to hap py aa the poor school teacher, who wore her gloves half a summer longer than she ought, and thereby tared enough to bny that poor little girl a calico dress. Ourait Time Tatirr IUtbs. The Wheeling Argus publishes the following copy of a record of Ohio county court : At a court held for Ohio eounty, on Monday, the 6th day of June, 180. Present Solomon Hedges, Ed. Robinson, James Miller, and Zaebariah Sprigg,gent The court proceeded to settle the rates for ordinary keepers. Ordered, that the ordi nary keepers of this county, sell at tbe following rates : For half a pint of whiskey, 6 dollars " 1 dinner, 6 do " Lodging with clean sheet, 3 do " One bores to bsy ons night, 6 do M Pasturage one night, 4 do " One gallon of corn, 6 do " One gallon of oats, 4 do " i pint of whiskey with sugar,6 do " 1 quart of strong beer, 4 do Tbe currency we suppose, of course, was the old Continental money, which the ol dest inhabitants Informs ut was "not worth much " CHBON flrititsylmia. Tbe Beautiful Quadroon, The Detroit (Michigan) Christian Her ald, of the 28th nit, says that twenty, eight chattels arrived in that city during the previous ten days by way of the under-ground railroad s "The case which has excited especial in terest is tbat of a beautiful quadroon girl of nineteen. She escaped from Kentucky, after having been sold for 3 1,500 to a sprig of chivalry, who designed to take ber to New Orleans and eousign her to a fate at which decency and humanity sicken. Soon after her escape, he offered a reward of five hundred dollars for her recovery, and de clared be Would have her if be bad to " put one foot in bell." Such was her beauty tbat she would readily have brought from 32,500 to 13,000 in tbe New Orleans Market Zilla has, however, been rescued from the embrace of this putrid monster. She is safe in Canada hae entered a school, and is preparing herself to become a teacher. Cure for ScrofUla. Nicholas Loogwcrth the great Catawba wine man, of Cincinnati, publishes the following in tbe Commercial of that city. Put 2 ounces of Aquafortis on a plate, on which you have two copper cents. Let it remain from eighteen to twenty-four hours. Then add 4 ounces of clear strong vinegar. Put cents and all in a large mouthed bottle, and keep it corked. Be gin by putting four drops io a tea-spoon full of tain water, and apply it to tbe sore. Make the application three times a day, with a soft hair pencil, or one made of rags. If very painful, put more water. If not too painful, put less. As the sore heals apply it weaker. I request all edi tors, in all parts of the Union, and abroad, to copy this and to republish it quar terly or yearly, tt may save many lives. N. Lonoworth. Cincinnati, Nov. 18, 1854. THE The GarIem FARM s The Orchaurd. A View of American Agriculture. CHAPTER tIL Eg vjhatPtortutttheEarthUimpoveruJted: There are three principal ways in which the natural fruitfulness of the earth may be seriously impaired. 1. By removing its natural products; as when a prairie is annually mown for a se ries of years, and all the hay removed, and no manure or other fertiliser returned. In arope, where forest culture k practiced, experience has shown that to remove the leaves tbat annually fall upon the ground to rot and form mould over the roots of trees, is sure to impoverish the land and injure its valuable products. These leaves, as well as prairie grass, contain both earthy minerals Called inorgxnic matter, and combustible elements usually designat ed by the term organic matter. In burn ing over prairie-, the latter portion of the plants consumed is alone removed from tbe soil; their utha remain on tbe ground where tbe plants grew. Pastures are deteriorated by tbe loss of the grass carried off in the stomachs of domestic ani mals. 2. Soils are impoverished by tiflago without cropping, or removing any plant whatever. No fact in agriculture is more important than this : All tillare is purely an artificial and withal a most Unnatural operation. Nature never ploughs, nor hdes the earth to promote the growth of vegetation. Her highest productiveness is the result of laws, which every farmer should carefully study and learn to follow, in the renovation of cultivated fields. Although all tillage is a mechanical pro cess, yet itt effects are both chemical and physical on the soil. So far as the chemi cal resulti of tillage are concerned, they are quite independent of all crops and oth er plants. It ia not so easy a task as some may suppose to explain, in a few plain words, the several ehanges wrought in the mould and inorganic part of soils, by the plough, spade, and hoe. Tbe mechanical and physical effects of tillage are very ob vious to every cultivator. The earth is wtellatBfd rendered exceedingly porous and admirably fitted not only to absorb at fherie air, and all gaseous bodies, but to eamdente tbem in the inumerable pores of the friable mass. The same causes which increase the fertility of a fallowed field exhaust the toil, if long continued, although no crop should be grown upon it If, however, a crop of weeds, grass, peas, or elover be grown and allowed to die and rot on the ground or be ploughed In, the oil will be enriched by the operation. But if a field be annually ploughed and boed, at for a crop of corn, tobacco, cotton, or sugar-cane for twenty-five years, and no plant whatever be allowed to grow on itt tnrface, the mechanical and chemical changes, associated as they must be with tbe leachings and washings of innumerable rains, would result in removing from the surfase of the earth nearly or quite all of its vegetable mould and the soluble mine ral food of plants. To test this principle in nature, suppose a farmer were to apply twenty-five loads of well rotted stable ma nure upon an acre of land, and plough, harrow, and boa the ground twenty-five years, as for crops ef com or cotton, but plant nothing and permit neither grass not weeds to grow taereoa. Would any of the dissolved elements of tbit manure re main the? length of time in the rarfaee ICL ELEVENTH YEAR,.... WHOLE NUMBER, 566. 11.50 per Year, soil 1 Certainly not If manure will de compose end disappear like wood consumed in a fire-place, may not vegetable mould do so likewise? And if tbe mineral known as common salt and salts of lime and pot ash will readily dissolve on the ground in rain water, and pass in a state of solu tion deep into the earth and reappear in springs, wells, and rivulets, may not simi lar minerals naturally in the soil, and ren dered soluble by tillage, be also dissolved and washed out of the mellow ground into the compact sub-soil, or into swamps,rivers, and the ocean f The principal object of ploughing and hoeing ia to increase the quantity of avail able food for the crop ; but while the plants are present in the soil and growing, it is by no means certain that all the ma nure or other fertiliser applied to the land, or all tho elements of the crop natur ally in the soil, enter the roots of cultivat ed plants, and appear at the harvest. Under certain circumstances, the loss by leaching and solar inuflences is very large. In producing small crops of corn, cotton, wheat, and other plants, tbe waste of raw material is far greater in proportion to the harvest, than in large crops whose roots and foliage cover the surface both io and above the soil universally. Small corn or cotton plants, and these quite distant ooe from another, greatly favor the volati aation of all volatile substances and the washing away of all soluble elements. 3. Tillage and cropping exhaust land faster than it can be done in any other way short of carting off the surface soil in amass. The degree of injury inflicted by this operation is very variable t not only on different fields, and soils, but on tbe same surface at different times aad seaeons. A light, open, sandy soil that has no clay foundation will not bear ploughing and cropping so long, with so small deteriora tion, as the same soil with a clay sub-soil. Light, sandy soils abound in North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland,Geor gia, and South Caralina, and most of these when fresh yield fair crops. Their red day lands are not so easily worked, but are more enduring and generally more produc tive, The limestone soils of the Cherokee eountry, of Tennessee, Kentucky, Missou ri, and other States ,are altogether different from any formed from the debrU of grani tic, metamorphic, and sand rockst It is impossible to form an intelligent opinion of the exhaustion of a soil by any given amount of tillage and cropping, without knowing something of the parent rvcis from which the earth Was derived, and something of its physical and chemical properties. A knowledge of the principles of geology and chemistry is invaluable to one who desires to understand in advance what are the natural capabilities of any arable land; and what elements of erops it is most likely to have ia too small a quan tity. It often happens that a soil partakes tery little of the character of the rock that lies but twenty or thirty inches below its Surface. Tbis is owing to tbe circumstance tbat a different kind of rock bas furnished the earthy matter deposited above the solid strata. In several Counties in Western New York, the soft Medina soft sandstone has been comminuted and carried by tidal currents, glaciers, icebergs, or some other moving force, many miles southward, and spread over iime-rocks, hundreds of feet higher than the parent sandstone, both ge ologically and typographically. Although resting on lime-rock, these soils often lack lime to a degree. The durability of a soil is governed, in an eminent degree, by its texture and by grometrie properties. Tenacious clay lands retain fertilising salts with peculiar and remarkable affinity. When Well drained and thouroughly tilled, they yield up their nutritive constituent as fast as is profitable. Where one has but a small surface to operate on, tbe ap plication of clay to sandy soils is very use ful. The deeper and more thoroughly one cultivates bis land, removes all that it pro duces, and makes no adequate restitution, the faster will he impair the natural capa bilitiea of his soil. No matter with what skill and science a farmer extracts immense crop from his Gelds; the larger the amount of potash, soda, magnesia, soluble flint, phosphorus, sulphur, chlorine, and orga nised nitrogen, caried off in crops, tbe poorer his land must become, unless a part of all these mgredients be returned to the earth whenoe they were taken. It ia impossible to lay, with any ap proximation to the truth, in the present infancy of agricultural science, bow much of the inorganic food of plants may be aafely removed from year to year in grass, milk, meat, or grain, in cotton or tobacco, from an acre of common fair land, with out detriment. A little of dissolved sand, lime, potash, magnesia, sulphur, mould, and phosphorus may be spared from the poorest toils, without injury ; while some to abound in the elements of crops as to furnish an amount twenty times larger, without exhausting the supply of earthy minerals. This point will be farther dis euTslinthn'fupr rl alwats in Adtaxci. Frost at t Hanurc We know of no treatment ao directly beneficial for almost every class of soils, at tbat of throwing np land in narrow ridge in the fH or early winter. There are few : soils worth cultivating at all, that do not contain more or less materials which ean -be made available to plants by the com- bined action of air and frost. Take two plots of heavy soils, side by -side, and let one lie unmoved till spring, while the other is deeply plowed in autumn, ; and the result will be very visible in tho spring crop. But tbe manner of plowing is important To secure the greatest ad vantage, a single furrow should be thrown , up and another back furrowed directly upon ! it so as to produce a high ridge, then an other ridge is to be made in tbe same man ner with a deep dead furrow between tho two. The process Is to be continued thus through the whole field, so that when finished it will present a surface of high ridges and deep dead furrows succeeding each other, about once in two or two and a half feet If prepared in this way, the frost will penetrate far downward, loosen ing and disintegrating the soil below tho furrows, while the ridget will crumble down, and as they will not hold water,th air will circulate freely through tbem, de composing tbe mineral portions, and eon veyiog in ammonia, and other gases. This operation will be equal to ten or more load of good manure upon clay or compact soil. In the spring it will only be necessary to run a plow once or twice through tho ' centre of each ridge, and then level th whole down with a heavy harrow. , Another advantage in this process is, that when land is thus prepared it dries out and warms several days earlier in th spring. Again, there are some soils that are exhausted upon tbe surface, but which, contain poi-oaous substances in the sub soil. If tbis sub-soil is thrown up in eon tart with the air and frost during the winter, these poisonous compounds, usual ly protosulphate of iron or manganese,wili be destroyed or changed to a harmless form, during the winter. Tbe above practice is especially to b recommended in the garden. One of the most successful cultivators of an acre of ground in our acquaintance, digs it up in ; the fall to the depth of three or four feet, making deep trenches and high ridge so ' tbat the whole acre appears to be covered 1 high winrows of bay placed close together. -' We strongly urge every farmer who ha ' not tried this method, to lay out his plan now for experiment in this way, on a lerg ' er or smaller scale, during the present sea -son.- American Agricultnritt. Good Stanure, best stock for ParaerSt ' A Farmer " well to do" in the world, ' asked us the other day what we considered. , the best stock in which to invest his sur I plus funds, whether Railroad, Bank, or State Stocks J We told him he had better . apply bis surplus funds to the manufac ture of a good manure heap, and let Rail road, Bank, and State Stocks alone. We consider it the height of fully for a farmer to meddle with fancy stocks when be hae any waste or unimproved land, or build- ' ing, or fences that need repairing, with which to use his surplus money. The dabbling in stocks or interest money ha always been the result of short-sightedness on the part of the farming community, es pecially when the money might be mora usefully ec ployed in hiring men to im-' prove and put their lands in the highest possible state of cultivation, instead of. half or quarter tilling tbem, aa th vast majority of farmers do at present Our agricultural friends need waking np on ' this point, and to be thoroughly aroused to tbe fact that it don't pay to work after the manner in which their grandfather! did before them, for " old fogyism" is ss un profitable to tbem as any other class of community. Wake np, and see if it ia'nt SO ' Arto Brunswick Fredonian. Winter Batter. In many parts of our eountry tho art of making good butter in winter is very im perfectly understood, and bv some dairy women thought to be entirely impossible. But it can be done in December as Well as , in May. The plan of doing it is tbis : the cows should be stabled and fed on sweet bay and other provender. Instead of keep-1 ing the milk in a warm place it should be . put in a cold one, and no matter how soon it freetes, because freeting it will separate ' the cream mnch more perfectly tban il will rise without th atmospherie tempo- . rature, and it can then be taken off with less trouble. And when the cream ia churned the churn should not be placed very near a fire ; tbe ordinary heat of a ' kitchen would be sufficient Too much warmth destroys both tbe complexion and -the flavor of butter. In tbe win er, hat ' ter, it is evident, requires more time in ehorning than in summer, but when pa tience assists the laborer, the task is mac' no task at all. Butter cared with half an ounce of M t, quarter ounce of aalpetre, quarter eune of moist tugar pounded, used in the propor tion of an ounce to each pound of nutter will be found t keep good a lorger time, . and hare feWdriicttuB-crttai when , silted in Bi -sHnr-rr r '-ry.