LEWIS BUBG CHRONICLE JJY 0. N. WORDEN & J. R. CORNELIUS. II. C. IIICKOK, CoRnEsroyDijm Editor. Cbf ffmisbarg (Cljronirlf. " TKID.iV, MAY 4, 1S55. "Hatred to Eaglanl" la as much a disease, as Hydrophobia ; I Md the victim of animosity to the staid enormons sarr,:ri(:e of llfe. The fonn(3ations jgftter land, is about as capable of being of St. Petersburg were laid by levies of men reasoned with, as a subject of the dog- who perished by hundreds of thousands in rcasuuiii n. , j o , Ihe work- , hendred thousand died of bite. The Chronicle ol tbe Otu ult. bas I famine on,v The civilization of the Russian twe articles full of this national virus capital is not more than skin deep." e in Poetry, by a play-writer warned j That b Russia a gigantic, spy-infested Bokeb, and the other by our usually so- despotism, blind, souless, careless of every W-sided correspondent, "S. II. F." j thing but its own aggrandizement, and "Anglo-American" having taken the lat- resolved foa that at any cost, without Icr iuto custody, we deliver him over lo regard to the happiness of the people or bis tender mercies. their improvement in anything which J?ctf, tbe geit'cmcn,who'e attacks upoa ; does not tend directly to increase the pfior little England appeared sitaultane- j tnsrtial power and the brute force in the ously, base the occasion for their diatribes 1 hand of one irresponsible man a man upon the charge that English recruiting- j whose Will is Law, and who in the use of officers were beating up volunteers for the j his unfailing resources the Knout and Eastern War, fro our Atlantic cities; Siberia can only bc,as Talleyrand declar ed Mr. Buker from that fact pours ferth ; id, "tempered by assassination" aid ameli a volley of invective against England, as a ; orated by poison ! rtiof of its "helple.e shame and helpless I What England is. in manners and morals, W ia- We interpret the circumstance i the ppiness and intelligence of rr. r peo. ' . ... , pie, m her constitutional government and her very differently. e take it is as a proof . hjh state of ,ea, ibeny jn ,he arls and rjf the progress of the English people in sciences in short, in every thing which ood sense, in patriotism, and in power. enrrV's and elevates human kature let Ms In good Knur, because in former days the i tory speak. Her monarch never does, never bounty, the drum, the gaudy tinsel, and j dares thwl,t the M of ,he Parliament ; the l :..; .! )... Parliament does not trample upon theprayers the tntoaticattoi? trap were almoit always i . ... . . , : rf the people. A CaHmt unsupported by Par- able to gam sufficient recru.ts to tbc , liament ieBS . a ParliaiIieilt doubtful of armies, in any contests now, it would ' the arprovai f i!s constituency, is disso-rd! ecm that with all these combined, the The liberty and power ef the people will com young men of England are not such fools ' pare favorably uT;h any nation on earths the as to volunteer to be shot at for 6 or 8 ' United States not excepted. Our President cents per day, and the recruiting officers ! and Congress will not resign their power un . . . . . . til cfffnclled to do soby the torceof elections, are trying America tw a more promising ' , ,, , . . . J is , ! no matter how they may be condemned by the eld I It pairxrtUm, for England never j Toice of ,e people That England has gre lacked men for her own defence, and now vjOUs faults, is not denied ; but considering grants supplies for any amottnt to defend ' her adrantages, the Cnited States h greater a wek neighbor from a worse than Gothic sim ; and contrasted with Russia, England invasion. In ;wtcer, because the day has ' 5s itnmeasuralsly her superior, in every par- been when Kugtisbmen were forcibly itn- "Je'irable. ,, , , , , England has found that Raglan and other pressed to fill the army and taty.whetl.er I rf hef 0&ct ence fcraye ani, aclive) are they would or not; whereas now they can now poor leaders in war t the l-aited States lot be thus dragged from home to a for- ' learned the same lesson in the case of Hull, eign soil or aa undesired service.. In Dearborn, Wilkinson, Smyt, Ac. Our short every respect, we d-em this all.gcd fact annals confess more disa;trca. campaigns en indisputable proof that the rights and the intelligence of the people of England , .... i . I ioua war, and instil into their ignorant ; breasts the fire of fanaticism, still, the people of Russia bavo no heart for it In addition to the other evidence before the public, Dicktni Household f irdt notiera recent publication, in 350 pages, of the observations of an intelligent English lady who baa just returned from a ten j years' domestic aojourn in Russia. We j ., . ! extract a few proofs of the actual state of j affairs in Russia: I -It is hard for as in this country to conceive ! the misery attending the terrible conscriptions ,u..u i.... .1.. - i. . r.i. i i which plague the subjects of the Russian em- pire. Except recruits, hardly a young man it to been in any of the villages; the post j roads are all being mended by women and girls. Men taken Irom their homes and fam- ; il.es, leave behind them broken ties and the j foundation of a dreadful mass of vice and im- I morality. It is fearful enough under ordinary ! circumstances. 'True communism,' said a ' Russian noble, -is to be found only in Russia.' : One morning a poor woman went crvine ' bitterly to the Englishwoman, saving that her two nephews had just been forced from her house to go into the army. I tried" we ' leave the relater of these things to speak in ner own impressive words "I tried to con sole her, saying that they would return when the war was over; but this only made her more distressed. 'Ko, no!' exclaimed she, in the deepest sorrow, 'they will never come back any more ; the Russians are bea'en in everyplace.' Until latelv the lower clases were always convinced that the Emperor's troops were invincible ; but it seems by what she said, that even they have got to know something of the trnth. A foreigner in St. Petersburg informed me that he had gone to see the recruits that morning, but there did not seem to be much patriotism among them; there was nothing but sobs aed tears to be seen among those who were pronounced lit for service, whilst the rejected ones were frantic with delight, and bowed and crossed themselves with the greatest gratitude." Reviews were being held almost daily when the English woman left, and she was told that on one occasion, when reviewing troops des tined for the South, the Emperor was struck wiia the forlorn and dejected air of the poor jeep hom he was sending to the siauehter. 'Hold your heads up !" he exclaimed angnlv; -why do you look so miserable! There is Botning to cause you to be so !" -Bat w d;d not mean to tell about the war. The vast empire over which the Czar has rule is in a half-civilized it would be almost ore correct to say in an uncivilised state. eM ?v,sabI "vers roll useless through Hnie wilds. Except the excellent roads "H'"I, St Petersburg with Moscow and ,' ,..". and a few fragments of road ' 'ves in the immediate vicinity Thai.?. Ihere "o toads to Bwsia are increasing, ana tuai me uovernmcni rous naliouSiis tru(.. she shas in the "man is yielding more ! more of power and ' ifest AMiny" of the -Anglo Saxon" race ; Justice to them. I but the United Slates hat improved upon her Now, w wold institute tee inquiry, ' example byre annexing" parts of a neighbo- what is the condition of the RuKsian peo-, sistcr "public! , . . 9 t u.. I England has emancipated millions of pie in the same respect 7 Russia has not " . 1 r, , , r . , . . slaves ; she is constantly softening the op- the aympathy of any nation, although pressiun of ttcase ia her dominions . and family connections an odious Oligarchy t ,Bf r.ranants ofher owa feudal systeia are -may yet make the Government of l'rus- j crumbling away year by year. America has aia throw its atrength on the side of Rus j bought new slave territory ; has fwtM for Bi'a. In the Cnited States, journals like ' more slave territory f has tir!,t!r4 tacred com the rennyhanian may pretend to favor lPae" 10 ?in more slave territory ; and u n , r t l t now engaged in every low and piratical plan taeKusjiaucau.se: ana a few infected, . , , , ., , ,,: ;. ' ' to tteal more slave territory ! Our nation is eccentne persons, like Senator Douglass, ' abrijsingi and not extending, human liberty ! Mr. Boker, &c, may allow their chronic j r politics, England not only has enlarged hatred to England to degenerate into love 1 power in every Court in Europe, fn Asia, in for Russia. Uu, after all, the World re- Africa, in South America,but the TariiTLaws wrds Russia as a heartless, grasping, op- f cur 0n coan'ry-'he rebel daughter - C j i . have been adjusted (by "English haters par pressive, God-defying power. And not-, ' V . i ., ,. , ,. .i. exeellrnee) exactly to her liking I Withstanding the Emperor in bis capacity j A few years a?o olr p(.of.le wf n jea,oa$ as Head of the Greek Church (!) has done j of lhe b- s Banlc because Englishmen owned his best and his worst to make his sub- j a few thousands of its shares. Xow. Eng. jects believe they are required in arelig- lishn-.en control whole Banks and Railroads I The rapid travrW vtio follows one of the : two pood roa Is and sees only the show places ; of Russian civilization, may be very much i drceived. Yet even here he is deceived only i by a show. The ere it buildings thai appear j so massive are of stuccoed brick, and even the erandeur of the strays, like that infinitely ereater work, the Pvramids, is allied closely asainsl S"n " i to own of bootless tilts against Russia. " - " ' Thai Pnfrlnnit Hri.!lnnprps" ftireifrn. harha- in the United Staies ; and many or the state ' nAprnmontc are tivtnir with the monev lojtn. ed from the "rag barons" of England. Notwithstanding all this, hatred of England is the stock in trade of half our political dem agogues most c f whom do not know when they are playing directly into her hands. For seventy years, on the Fourth of July, and nearly alt public occasions, this hatred has beett "shed hy profound statesmen and tlniuent orators. In many an 'Advocate of u'My and thonsands of debating srhoo the British Lion has been almost weekly seiztd chained, killed, and disembowelled : , . ... ,. ,,.,,;. r and yet "he lives, and his roar is that ol a J , ,'. . , monarch among bis kind. 1 he fast-anchored Isle still smiles serenely; "her drum beats around the worl l. and on her dominions the . ' SU" . ,, . . ...,. Mr-Bo'"' " mn ,n P0"1"!? wim true "poetic liceu-5" the infamy and the decrepitude of Great B.itain. One Jog TarxauLL, in his famoas work Fir gal," : . , , "''OL"'8 "u" ,sr fanci' a' mav see'1 b' ,he tUS quotations from that book i M Fcr K?8 ttffit, time D-iUiu rce, The urror of enci.clisj rue; llrr hrroeti rnlrii the tloodj plain, f ler roD'i'rtnc aten-nrJ ?wnl the malnt Tbe diffr reut palm her triumphs grace, vt arms in Knr, ot arte in pe; VnharrMs'd by maternal care, Kach nainc piof ioce fljurib,d fair ; Whole various wealth with liberal band, Ht far oVrpakl the twreot land. But though hrirht her nun might shine, Trea quickly haetirg to d" line ; With feeble raye, trm wealt t' arduagv The damp tuat chill tt a ero of age. "For ftate.i, like man, are doom'd aa well, Th' inlmiltiea of ac9tnfeel ; Aod from their difrent fotinjof empira, Are aeir'd with erery deep diat.mpee. rVtme atatea high ferera have made head hi, Whirb nou(Ut could eure but Mtpit.ua bleedings Wbi'e olhera bare grown UuU tad ioz. ( r fi a'd In hapleaa idiory ; Or tnrn'd demon iaee, to belaboor, fcah p- n-efnl uablr-nt and neighbour t Or v a'd with bepor.Midriac flte, Kare broke their atreDgtu and lort their wlla. Thoa now, while hoary yeara prera.iL, Oood mother Britain eeen'd to tail ; iter hack bent, crippled with the Trriht, Of age and debt, aod care, of sta'a : for debta he ow'd. and thi;e o larire. Tliat twice her wealth ecnld not dtneharaw ; And now 'twas thought, ao hteh they'd (rows, PHe'd break, and ronie upfn tba towa ; Her arm, of nations owes V. dread, tha aearee coaild lift abore her head I Her 6aen'd ears t'tWM all their hope) The final trcmp perhaps mUrht opa ; Po roaa: they'd been hi strpid mood, fAhnt to tbe hearing of all go.); Urim dealh had put her in his aeroU, Ixmn on '.be execution roll 1 And Oaltle erowe, aa she grew weatcar, tVcam to whet their beaks to pick bar. And now. ber pew'rs decaying taat. Her grand elimart'rie had she past t And jutt Ilka all old women elea, fall m tba vapours morh by spella. btranaa whinufca on ber fkney struck, And gave her brain dlamel ahock I Her mem'ry falls, ber Judgment ends, ho,ulta forgot beg Dwjewst ftranxtt , riHaw ot Uist all ber fjriner eenae and knowledge. And filled fiut fur Bedlam eil l,are ; Of all tbe puw'r she once ri'taiu'd. Conceit and pride alone remaitrd. As hre. wYeri talfiUtt;, was ao modest. To faii'ty le Should draw a guddtw i At madmen, traw wbo Ionic have slept 0&, Will etrle tliem. Jupiter, or Neptune ; &o liritbin, 'miUkt br aire so flighty, Kow took a wbim to be almighty i t'rg'd on todep'rate beihtr. of frenry, Atlirm'd her own oaMiipotf ncy ; Mould rather rain ll her raie, Than 'bate supremacy an are ; AeHum'd all ri;ht diiine, as grown, Te.e cburrh'e hrad, like grxal pope JaB ; Pworc all the World should bow aud skip, To ber alm:ghty gondysliip ; Auath'nutii U ra -li unl-mevrr. And ruw'd to lire and rule forerer. Ilrr servants faumour'd every wbim. And cwn'd at once ber powrr supreme; fer follies pleased Hi all their etages, For sake of legaevs and wages ; In Sirpfitn's f'AorW th.-n iu state too, hat up her golden calf to pray to ; Prociaim'd it pow'r and riKbt divine, And rall'd for worship at its shnue. And fyr poor heretics to burn us. Bade North prepare hi. firry furnace ; Frrack barcalns with tbrltomiah charctet, Infallibility to purebnse ; at wide for ftry the door, Made friends with itabel's s-arlet wh&ra t Join'd both the matron firm iu dan, ho sinters made a b-tir- fwinn ; No wonder tiien.ere thia was over. That she should make her children suffer. She first, without pretence of rearon. Ciaim'd rigit whate'er e-e sd to seise on t Aud with determined resolution. To put ber claims in execution ; eVtit fire and sword, and culled it. lenity, Rarv'd us. aud chri-tcn'd it hunianVy. For she, her cae grown drsprralr. Mistook the plainest things in nature; Had install use of eye or wils. Took siav'ry for the MM of rights : Trembled at Whigs and derm d them foat. And stopp'd at ioynlty her nose ; Styi'd hrr own children brats and caitiffs, Aud knew not us from ch Indian natives. What though with supplicating prayer. We brgir'd our lives and goods sbe'd scare ; ot valuer Vows, with sillier call, :iijatrsBropbet rals'd to Ileal : A worshipp'd stock, of god or goddess, Had better beard aud undcr-tood ua. So one Kgyi tiaos at the Nile, Ador'd their guardian crocodile ; Who heard them first with kindest Ktr, And ate them to reward th-ir prayVj And could be talk, as kuifs cau do. Had maile as gracious spervhes too." (England was emphatically "fieniei rr.i7i)' or sick woman, of those days ) Such a bera ting as that, one would suppose might be the last of "good mother Britain" or anybody else. But, since twat time, there is no depart ment of power, no source of domestic com fort,' ia which Great Britain has not incra?T!d. Learning wisdom from the Revolution of '70, she now has more, and more contented, Col onies, soon to be Independent States more commerce, more manufactures, more terri tory, more wallli, as an Empire; and her people have more civil and religious privi leges, more and better means cf livelihood, more intellecteal and moral culture, and the average of their property, and of their long evity, has increased. The "failure" has been in the poet's thetotic, and not la cfd Eng land. W. Speech of Kr. Buchanan, AT THE SEAMAN'S HOSl'lTAL SOCIETY lllNNEIi IX LONDON. The thirty-fourth anniversary dinner of this moat bcncvolcrjt society was given , March 28tb, at the London Tavcrn.nnder the presideucy of the Eight Honorable j Viscount I'alruergton. Amongst the , guest.-', about odc hundred and fifty in 1 number, was Mr. Buchanan, thn .ncrioe,a ; Mio inter. After the usual preliminary toasts had j been responded to, tbe Chairman, in the : cour.-e of hia remarks. taM : "I rejoice to ; see on mj right hand the most dieting-! uished minister of tbe United Status, i (Loud cheers.) We certainly caa not I claim him as an Euglishman, hut we will , not acknowledge him to be wholly a for-, eigner. (Cheers.) IIoropre3cuts,iudecd, only another member of our own family, j (Cheers.) I trust that the identity which j prevails between us, in that medium cf i ideas which is called language, may long ' continue to imply an identity of sentiment and feeling ; and that when he returns to j his native land he will be aMe to bear 1 with him the expression of esteem and : admiration and friendship which the peo ple of this country entertain towards his j countrymen.and that he will diffuse among ; them those sentiments which I am confi- j dent they entertain towards us." (Loud j cheers.) Mr. Buchanan, the American Minister, j in responding to the toast, observed, "I j can truly sty that I do cot find myself a stranger in a strange land. (Cheurs.) ' We speak the fatno language wc read i tbe same books in loth countries we ; worship God according to the dictates of our conscience, and there is nose to maka 1 TU afraid. (Cheers.) Life, liberty an j '' property re equally protected in both ! countries. Wo hava bcth a free press, I, public opinion has fill eftuy, tail '.'rs jpcai , a language which can never le spoken ia ' any country whsrj poli'.ical servitude i .ista. (Cheers.) A stranger coming to England most tsjreatly struck -.ril'a yoar i noble charities, which are of the most munificent character. I know of no coun-1 try that ought to be rnore careful of their I seamen tLnn the mother country and cur- J selves. We are certainly more t;nsicTy i engaged in commerce tuaa any other two j countries cf tls world, r nu I hope, whilit there must necessarily le compctitica be tween us, that compel i'.ion will be an honorable onc,aniI that it will be a friend ly one. (Cheers.) God kaows the world is witie enough for the commence of both countries. Let ns, therefore, encourage ach other insto&d of evincing a narrow and jealoni spirit. (Cheers.) Ifo other two nations enjoy half so much commer cial intercourse, and if ever there should be a war between tte kindred nrtions which God in hia mercy forbid (load cheers) the suspension of commerce be tween them for one year would injuia both to a greater extent than war has ever in flicted upon any other nation. (Lear, hear.) We have,tbercfore,every interest, every inclination, and every feeiiog to re main friends, and to preserve amicable relation! for ever. Wt lometinM com fcroisbnrfl, Mm (Conntp, plain of each other we are, in fact, both complaining nations occasionally (laugh ter) but I can say with the most perfect truth that there exists in my own country an undercurrent of kindly and gracious 'fceliug towards the mother country, and that, if ever the time should arrive hen it will become necessary to develope that feeling, it would exhibit itself to the as tonishment even of the peoplo of Eng land. (Loud cheers.) irom Ihe .Vcas rn-t l?xrrfr of RtgiiUr. Andrew Marshall. Savan.nait, April 11, 1853. On Sabbath morning I attended divine service with the Presbyterian church, of which the RiV. Dr. Preston is pastor : he was absent, and his p'tce was supplied by a New England minister. In the afternoon I determined to hear Andrew Marshall, the veteran pastor of the African Baptist church. This soldier cf tho cross has a world-wide fame, and a Very interesting notice of his pulpit servi ces may be found in Sir Charles Lycll's travels. Mr. Marshall preaches in a fair old building, in its interior much resemb ling a NcwEogland country meutiug house. The audience, without exception, was well dressed. The preacher was 99 years old, on last Christmas day, aud is therefore now in his 100th year, llis voice has groat sweetness and power ; he read his hymns without spectacles and such reading 1 in sober truth, I know no Northern "Doctor" that can read as woll. It was rca 1 as Stsughton used toread, and those who remember that style of giving out psalmody, will long to hear Andrew Marshall. I came to church expecting to hear a wreck of a negro preacher- I foend in the pulpit a waster in Israel. Age has not touched his facul ties, his mind is as vivaeiou, and its work ings are as true and faithful as arc the in tellects of men of thirty or forty years of age;. He preached for an hour an exposi tory sermon on the man cut of whom Christ expelled the devils who wcrir per mitted to go into the herd of swine. The sermon will remain in my memory associ ated with the discourses ef great men. The exposition Was scriptural, argumentative, fall of imagination, and abounding in wit, yet in all keeping with the place. I was reminded all through the sermon cf three great preachers in the old country, each eminent in his peculiar way. I refer to Rowland II ill, Christmas Evans and Wil liam Jay. Marshall has much cf the wit which eorruscated from the dak of Surrey Chnpnl, tetilo eke graphic tketching of the Welsh Demosthenes, and the admira ble colloquial style of Jay, are found all through his sermon. He made more points of power in that hour than t have heard in any sermon for five years. I re gard him as the most astonishing preacher I have ever listened to, when his age, his social position, and his illiteracy are all considered. No pulpit in New York or Bos ton but would have been honored by such a sermon : tbe limits of a letter will nut permit me to give an outline, but it will live in my memory, and its illustrations would have been a stock in trade for a tyro in theology and many a sprig of divinity. Mr. Marshall's voice is euphonious, his manner dignified. Nothing but his white bair indicates his &ge and I should nover hare supposed him over sixty-five, had I not been informed. I must not f.trgct his prayer; it was man talking with God, re verently wrestling with God. He saw tho portals of the city he had been often at its gates, and it seemed as he knew the holy ones. Among the hearers were several white ladies and gentlemen, and I was glad to meet there with tho Hon. Francis Gran ger and his daughter. They both unite with me in my high appreciation of the preacher, and Mr. Gianger told me thai te thought the reading cf the bymn was tee of the most iroprcesivc exhibitions of sacred oratory lie had ever witnessed. . Mr.Mar.hall then a Mare drove C ec 'til Washington from Vir'.ait to Savan nah, sad Le observed that during the en liro journoy he never saw him smile. THl7DOOM ED SOLL. There Is a tiaic, we kr.our not when, A point, we '--now not whe.e, Th.-t marks the ;stiny of men To glory or despair. There is a lin?, ly us unseen, That crossiith every path. The hidtien boundary between God's patience ani his wrath. To pass thitt limit is to die, To die as if by stealth t It does not quench the beaming eye, O.- pale the glow of health. TliJ Conscience may be still at ease, The spirus light and gar; That which is pleasing, still may pleisf, And care be thrust away. But on that forehead God has set, Indelibly, a mark, Unseen by man, for man as yet Is blind and in the dark. And yet ths doomed mail's path below Like Eden may have bloomed Be did not, does not, will not know Or feel that he is doomed. O, where is this mysterious bottrne By which ourpath is crossed. Beyond which, God himself haih sworn That he who foes is lost 1 How far may we go on in sin How long will God forbear I Where does hope end ! and where begin The confines of despair ! An answer from the skies is sent i "Yi tist ism Gun Biraar, U'aiLt it catisa T0-D4T, airaax A eaaea vera aava" pcMMiua. Self Education. The education, moral ami intrllninnl,nf j every individual, mu.tle thief j hit own work. There is a prevailing and fatal mistake upon this subject. It seems to be supposed that a young man must be sent tht to grammar school and then ,0 t-.he must of course become a scholar, ti- , , ., . . . anil thr rut ml 14 nnt to immrino ri 13 to rr.. r. . 1 WCCKl,nau uy rejiriniing me lonowiris; rr- occasion 1 prof '.se 10 enter loiiy into the become the mere passive recipient of in- ( rr.arks of Trcf. Marts, made at a meetin- of j Lest modes of culture. Thee cf course struction, as he is of the light and tho at-1 the New Vork Farmers' Club. It is so com- must differ in different p.trts of tbe eous mosphcre which snrronds him. But this plete an exposition rf the subject, that little try. The -same eulturc which will aorwer dream of indolence must be awafcen-d to l"! e ''. al 1 " wM ab"J-n:!- j t tho small farmers of the Atlantis , . . . . , A. . ., i pav the tiidious r-erusal of f.r orn-sr.'winf seaboard would be impracticable in'tha the important truth, that, if you a.-pire to ' . , , 1 1 .1 r ,,. . i friends. Even if ihev do nt a.l. ; t in detail imincn.-e caru-ucWs cf the far et To' excellence, you must become active and . t,e mL.lno,,s flf ciTe h,rc rr ro,e,i, they 1 there tho aniouut t labor which may be vigorous co-operatorj with yo"r teachors, ! ma. Sl; ,pt ,jr.-;K,y,c, irU!cat. d to their judiciously un J proiitabiy applied would and work out your own distinction with au cwn methods. t!iou;li we s-e Lut li:t which i be inipracticalle here; and hence it will ardor that cannot be quenched, a perseve- may ntg-nera!ly te cntned out in fall. The be necessary to state the rr.ctfcaJs appli rance that considers nothing done while j recoiuinenda:ion to ;. out the insulTicient caMe to different districts. Lau lat 5200 anything yet remains to be done. j "f b"rn-at'1 ,na'",r ' the mo" 1 W V" anJ at w:T0 car'LOt ew isujvuiiig j, 1 m u c u ui. I conceillra,e4 fertilizers, s-j'h as Guano aid ally be luanured alike.evcc although their Koly upon it that the ancients rrerc , f 1p,rf,hi;.h,w rf Pms so reasonable j c nstiutits and requirements may be tha right. t iot:s fn-tnos fiior j if, ar.J is so completely sustained by 1 farce ; for the cheaper land; are S3 far both ia morals and intellect, e; give the i eiperiic?nt, that we are s!ad to Cud socae of ' freffi the manufucturiug districts thai ia fiual shade to our owe characters, and thus our emerprisin; cult.' . stjrs it-i resolved 1. ' sotue cies the necessary ameBiIments tl b come crsphat-cally the architects of cir . ,-r 1 1 n . , ! own fortune, how else shou.J it happen gentlemen, that young men who have had I precisely the same opportunities, should be continually presenting us with different results, and rushing to such opposite des- tinies J Difference in talent Will not solve v. jrrr : : favor of the di?apf ointcd caniiJat ' may ee issuing from the j same -school nay, from the 1 x 1 - t e 1 t I one ts admitted to be a genius of high j order, the other scarcely above the point of mediocrity 5 yet, you .hall see the ..... , , . genius pemh.ug in poverty, obscurity and wretchedness ; while cn the other band, ! Son shall observe the mediocre plodding i;. , , .v. 1 -n f r- ; his slow but sure way tp the bill of lite bless'.ng to his country, v- t,.,. ,: 1 f,r,;r,.ai1v gaining steauiast looting at every suT,au j f - - - - from tLU aisturlance by the plow d ' mounting at fcnfth to eminence and dis- j r "' , ,be growth of this crop, if partially . ..... v- -. . noistare at east f.-:ra tlie ereater detfh. - i; r . r . tiuction, an ernamcnt to nis lamuy, a; - , luer.-eu in wai-r, ior itiiiir su'pirs -vov., " J fer; hut me prosp-ct ol pr.ces wi.l well war- ,hat ,Le Cl,rrJ r0))tg f hfx,v . their own. The? are tue architects or , vant more than usual corns. And if rtoroog ; 8WCd of tncir r.r,fcr a!jlreat The AfcTm their own fortuues. The best seminary ( tillage prevents skimming over so creat an , ett Inj(t.s 0f culture td-ip".cd, should ai of learning that caa open its portals to extent of surface, we think those who have to ' wavs en)brace such manipulation as wi'l yon, can do no core than afford to you 1 hal " ;!erI ba:ter aov twenty.fire gire the greatest aniouut of disturbance r . t . . cents a pound, as well as corn at a dollar Ir) the .r. mtt th. ,... n. re .., the opportunity of instruction ; but it v .' , ,, . ,. , . ; ? , , a , U1 " aru-'unt 0 ora- i . . i . i a i . i .u J must depend at last .on yourselves.wheth - ! er you are instructed or cot, or to what point you will push your instruction. And of this be assured I speak from ob- ' servation. a vri-iin trnth. thrc is no fK- ' cdlenre vithot $r"rt labrr. It il th" 'if of Fte frnro which uu power of gctii- us can save you. Geuius unexcrted is ! like a poor moth that flutters arorjr.d a 1 caudle -.i'.l it scorches itself to death. If : eeuius be desirable at all, it is o'tuv of I that great and magnanimous kind, wiiL-h i th. condor of South Atnerica.nitchcs from !the summit of Cbimborao abov- the I , , , ... ,r . ; ; clouds, and sustains ttseli at pleasure m ! that empyrean region, with an energy ' rather invigorated than Weakened ly the j effort. It is in this capacity fur hiph at.J ' Ion "-continued exertion this careering f , t,,,v f;, i ' SHU aiUH'SaCll'IIIU Liiti .'li.i.vi;jtuii . u mu let and those long reaches of thought tha. rini-ll hricht hiirfr fnm th rs a-tl n:cli, I r dir.- into tl.e bnnno i.f tl- Wlirn Ctli-ira-a liur rnull actf-x rt-sli '.be r-cwtJ: And drag up ilrcwisi h uur by tbi l-?k?. This is the prowess, and those the ha?o;" achievements which are" to e-jrr-l yotir names among tbe great rtca of tie c'l'.h But how are you to gain the ccrve, the courage for enterprises of this pith acd moment 7 I will te!! yoc rj T"i!o rb , taincd that noc sijno t enas ; for tills :nsl be vof.r work, net that cf vos;' t'achen. '. Be you not wanting to yor.rselven, sn 1 you will accomplish all that jour p-rer.'.?, friends and country have a right to ex pect. Win. Row We Fay Our Soidiora The regular army ncr focists of about j 10,000 men 'M t tho militia force of 2,250,- . "t .i. ?' . j c. k ere are in the I uited States the j 037. There astounding number of 120,000 gentlemen who iold commicsions in the military s?r- vice, and a.-c, therefore, in the enjoyment of military titles. The pay of a private soldier in the army of the United States is ?llamonth, "and fou3," but if he cnlicts for a second term of Cve years, he gets ?2 mere. The pay of a M.jor General is rather better, lie is entitled to t-200 a month, ,, .. ... ., , , fifteen rations dr,ly, three horses, and four scrvacts. I.ut c generally takes his rations, horses and servants in the Ce seen that tho valtta cf this crop, iustead arises tie necessity in part for the prescEca form of money, which raises Li3 Lionthly of being S-io0,0'j0, 00 per nnnuni. aii ati0fthrsi alVaiies. Analy sis hows thai stipend to 575. The pay of bis aid-do-! this time, may be s increased by proper i corn requires potash, shii, litre, nia-rne-camr, rappowng fcim to commute fcr the clture b? ,BC ,at D0'!t . that each or these U Pab!a of ,'LtZ KnKM and two avnrsnt i hc B?ces317 fl'r hI CoTa M 44 i t""S s.lex solnbb and rr fx w...-., to which ha is entitled, amounts to "I a montn. The civ of a Erioadier-Cencral, includ - iun commuUttion for twelve rations, three t,, .r-rvnnt,. 24), 50 ner UUIOVJ sla, uvsv. ai'V-j- - r I month. A. Coloccl of dragoens or artil lery, f 183 j Co!ocel of infantry ?1G6 j Lieutenant Colonel of infantry, ? 129 j Captain, 79 50 ; Second Lieut. 364 50 j Surgeon General, 1208 33 ; Surgeon of ten Tears' service, tl22 ; Assistant Sur geon of five years aemce, IDS 50 As - eistant Surgcan of less than five years' service, 81 83. All officers above the rank of Captain are allowed one or more horses and servants, or an equivalent in money. One ration goes for twenty eents; one horse, 8 a montbj one servant 115 50 TWELFTH TEAR $1.00 ter Year, always in- Advance. ! Till! FA KM: The sKarrtfH The Orchard. Writttn for ths Lewisburg Chrcr-icls. Indian Cttn. Considering the great importance of th ; e.T n.P. have thnortt that as the a- 1 so T" ',' a,,han''' , .?.? . occupy our agricultural :.riuce oruvr, mis 1 .1 .1 r t i ir. ,-c an extensive tr.al of them the present season nrt;de ,hich VM :n , a t of or ,ers ; . . .. , cprn v j have fl,aoJ a nutll!,,r of uw.a advocates j ?f .hallow plou-htn; for tht c:o-!. V."e h.ive j ourselves seen m a few induces very ?,od vieids on land nlohnl onlv four or five 1 1. ... t - 1 1 V , , , ' 1 , . well known fact. t!t its r o.s. prown in a j thoro,, ;!, y mehew s,L can !,e traced by toe T t " -P ' 'c,anJ :e m.crnsct ne .ruiiia fo.lu-.v them much fur- , f if 1(,v are B ,0 be hc, d , d;. sccnd , Even if , lhe Bonri.hlnenl in a ' , , . , , par.rcnlar so, lies immediately at trr- jr - ' ' . . r eTnensire limn tht nf a sunprfiria! charac - i i ' 3 . ta,,e iS gaiMj Dy smin? Bore ccrn from . fe.A.er acre5. a- l letting ih? ret of the farms ; ' -o to grass." j JNDIAJ CORN'. The subject of the day, Tn.liai, tV.rn. is bv fir the nost iretnrtan: V i Indies, D jt never one nr.ico sc-'uic m ur t . , . - , . . r a s- 101 ' . . ,, , , i f'r this crH), ntu.-: bo evident to '! r.-.nv frt lh (hi i.v n .iiiokmi, nr K:ti- ir . I ' .,icu iy ai.i. walls of th-. , - , ,.,,,, h: D,.n bf,,er to i Ut u .,he cf this plant shall bosom nf the I . . , , , , tic sriouen of, it wi.i be evident tt if 4 uosotn ui tire nave ri,,asheJ deeper. hat can be tue . ' . ' . . . 113 sn. of whom I l .' ..... , i. ... . ' I'lor-atiic rc-qmremenf, received rrinciDa- I -i --'ari,irv !a i I S'.'Uc;t vh'th has been presented to the ; clCJ 111 eoiuer tuan it-en, it wiii tiepas.t considcratioa of this Club. It may be said .moisture, therefore corn grown on qb to be the staple and peculiar crop of our : solleJ lan;1 free frncl exec.-s of water never ivuutry. To "it re are indebted, in a very ? ,rora drought. '1 he after cultivation prcat defM for our present properity. j airing the growth of the crop should be The export of this crop is fast beoomini: SUCu as ,0 render the surface at all times the IluJra of famine turouchoutt the world, ! Whenever Europe is sttort of fool Arueri - ' ' reauy to supply the deficiency . 1 St l . . .fl Vu :ae " corn crop: anuevery American should feal a revcretre for the ,KQ f .t otbcK x p; iut j, Ua-itiial and none so well suited to ' ;hc varieties of our ciimate ; for anywhere , 'etTseu the 4'M decree of north intitf ie "O'1 2 cr:-pondinj parallel sonth, it miiy '.'.! ?-owu in tho greatest perfection. Its i , i- t I .;M i.:t:on has r.r.ii.jci'i) iiiii".n-rr- n viri'-ti'.-s, i-uitcd to every Lied of soil ry .'ogrveoi temperature, v e luxe it sj.'.cJ to summer.-, , varying l;oa tlree re hud it in tbe North t? sit cioith'.: thus we I re -.uir.t'.r o-t ba.l the tune tr its growth i also aware tli?.t I received from your icsti t!:at is re.i'iiMe in thi South, and s'ill in ' tuticn a premium f . r a ccrn crop raised If c'c' !"c :-''ty wc find kinds appropriated to the use of atnendtnentscostinir les tHn $3 ti: : 'forent length of the suitituers. We peraere but wttivh had the previous yrar re may say of the- Indian Corn cr vp of Ame- i fuseicorn ; and that this crop was raised on ri.-a fbM Mr. W'-bster said of the Turnip ; soil which had by analysis b-en found to cut. cf Kn-lmJ, that "its failure for tune be ab?eut froui toe suil and required bv S'l.-.ciivoyrvs would aearly bankrupt the ! the crop. The details of that experiment a' on " Fortunsiclv, however, by the , have been rnblished manv tinira. I will. r-.-rit irrprovemftits iu agriculture we a.e ; csal -1? J iu tbe growth ot tLis crop aluiort ro e-iy uraugtit aua to leaner every t ario-1 ty of soil? suitable for the production of: maximum qi'anfrrs. It is the food of both , man rrd animals; and c-vcu its stalks, by j rr. per treatment, have beca rendered equal : 'altte to the wiwlelabor and expense of - ra:..ing ths crop, la itwcare indebted for OBr S1(. b,cr B5..ct;fal ,1irr,;v 0rBrk. M j to jtef as an rtio10 of food. By it every frecTt:?". in our bread country is enablrd to u:e tmats almost a? freely as the rcattf,ic:t citiiH; and not, l.'ie the peasantry cf surope, couPced to use to a great decree vegttabii fu?d alorc. V.'e can cbry the CO-ltnanu.ri Ji "to mtl-tttetha CZ that triads ., corn." The Ir.dii-a com crop of the ! United States, at this time, exceed 7 iO. - OOO.Cl'O of bushels per annum ; and when we member the fact that the average crop of tho country does not exceed 25 '.'tsho.'s . that pftro ,00 .... ..... t.Mn Pr0'r.e.t.;t can rcaJ.ilv the plant or our country, ana tuo olive ; hracoh mi-ht wi'-h propiiety be taken I trom the claw ot oir rational en:ntem,an'i j ; the Indiaa com piant Fuostituted in its F,ae''- Joc r:w well eaid in hia cd . " "H:isty Pawg My son; rfr.mr'iiJ!r i U rriTftii r,s No m?rit c.n.m : I nt'-f m li in th-A My rth-r totsMt tut hrouvh his Imcth r-frfrT. V r thf b!j R-hlf wT Khtnifd oVr wilh mil-; rpm thc. win,! ballli.VTriit i?.r . p.5. ?fi. ."inri'v fr.tt-n n;-rtrnjf frua him att?s:; Tiy rr.ti(slti.')a rir.i tnr tiiMl nrn, And bene maul.. of lu iima "er. I will not tire thj ciul) with enumerat ing statistics re'atinir to !::is cron. It is 1 suficient to know that tbo number of ho ' o . fattened on oorn in the t'nited States is scarcely less than the number of its inha- bitasfs, and that the q nr.t-.ry oi i uu now exported to Europe, and I am sorry to say, again returned tu us in large quantities as olive oil, after purEeatinr.. ' fi gr,t te to frro e'er' f rf ' !! WHOLE NUMBER, 577. sugar estates ul tho cst I.Jj, IslauJ; ami elsewhere are ina'miy sustained by tin ue of American eon nioit. When Congregi ntk'mtn, sh:t becofeie o&vin. ed of the necessity cf a J'partmont of Agriculture, the farmers tLiouvbotit 'h L'uitcii States may then know tb.6 reins by which a few of their number are Cr?" ("w tt!cs tr'f ni me country per aero. Uu tiio WuaCnt . . - . .. . j be used as manure for the sail ciDnot hi ob taiued.aud scarcity Ubir rori iir. s the Use I of tools by horsepower in r!aciof any other I mode of culture, and that of the irPl ; aud nm.,t ixpeditions LinJ. It is known I 'j th wj have oLacrTcJ closely, that I tUl! rjutf uf th;; corn plant, iu soil dre" ;'h'fe "amifieatiori ! W,U zenV "i ct, and hence i:v. in uisiny goil--. fru.ii the sub-scil. rtn- s u;; d difiatca,iun MCC -. sMs y,, cannot le tr.fitably ctrp!nved i, tho" ., e ' ., . -, . . , prew.h cf ctrrn withunt thoruBSh drainage; (f un .1 surplus water ceases to occupy ; e fr- tetrecn te partic.es of the , eariu, atmospheie cainot ttiter. J.orcan ,; the pujVcruU.nt c,)ndltioD of ,he . urinp; im- vater ' . .1 .... uurteator Ln tuo n'trtinLe i cause iuera io5eu.e in so comract a form . moii to iuc r'hjts oi coru, r.en"e ire on ri- , Bai preparation ef the ?,'il before plS j 6holl!.i he a3 t0 gc(.urL. tblJ mrost mef j low condition, and to the greatest d, pth. i T1"3 wiI1 1"' Frfeot security from drou-h', Wiicrever air C"J eircala'e ittionff narti- penrabie to the atmosphere aud free of ! parasitic growth, 1 The importance of i our subject must be .- . . : my exeuso or tittting thus micu'dy ints . d' tail. Ot what is the tLdian c-ro plan , wtl.nc; ar, e.ti,l3 obtained ? what trv ins ,t hi adapted tf supply stteh as are mi-sin from the soil ? It is well known to you t,,at I have fa'.j reliance ia the doctrine cf a 'Jing ts the I soil sueh constituents i f crn u mav to - . - mission fr.ni it an.? I.,- .-. ...... t'. J proper conditions and nete-sary stiuiulantf . ,.,r tttir apprsrriattoa, tbv they will t" taken v.p ly the punt and that success 'a certain under sueh treatment. You aM ' therefore, refer iu brief to" the analyse? of the crm crop. Voti are ail aware thaS these are di-rent in uiflcrent stages cf prowth, and they have been so often pub lished that t would Le nr.neofssary 13 tmat of ther.i separately. I shall ther-f.ro, apeak cf the necessary enstiturnts of the j soil for tho entire crrp.le'iou cf the era r-op, erabriciasr ail its Et tiris ofpr-wtb. v,.,, ,r.v rl.l.t'le. ,w ,h.i .i,Artv- j 0f the corn stalk h-- a coating cf siiics, j vyhich gives strength to the siaik. Indeed 1 t to h found ihroughout tas stalk, j loaves and grain, and wh' a insufficient iu quantity, a perfect organism of the f.Ir.nS ! cannot le maintained. The s'uira is th. i haa nftflnt. the base of eommon an.I. an 1 1 a, fo-m 1 in some soils is insolablo and ' cannot be appropriated for the ne nf tha j plant. When, hoievcr, t!-.e soil has a j s.T.ciont amount of alkaii -h whieh bava the r"-.ver to ccmbine wi'h iiica. an 1 thus u 80iuUe the pbnt P,n re. and .riwtiristo i; ml from th; appropriation ; ben.'e sons 'JVlKient in rr,iash. lime, or mida caa cIiora be made to produce a fail cru crop, and in oi!s Wuicu are ctj ui-ii:: -"uj"-tuent3, the ue of barn-varj manure with out their separate addition, will not give full com crop. Arcnrij? the rcrr'sary constituents of com, pho-phorio acid is tho most iciportant; thus we find that Lotelier in his analysis of the aih of the kernel states, that 50 p?r cent. i phosphoric acid, 30 per cent, potash and sola, and a trace of sulphurio arid. A minute as amount of sulphuric acid may sesa , it is most necessary for the rest cf crop. But the phosphori" a(.;j j njj, important of all. Fields, wh!ch have fer nished for a erries of yrars the fool fof (Trowing animals and tndjh c"Ts.noriarl ly became dnudcd rf phtsphrtc ti r 4rrt r'.s . I the necessity of deep and subsoil rlr.wirr