LEWISBURG CHRONICLE BY O. N. AVORDEN & J. An IsDF.rnxDF.xT Family yr I. a J I sickening and indiscriminate adula VLllC VtIjVUlllClC tioas of everything American, which : l it 3 il FRIDAY, FEII. 1, 1S36. How lon will our Republic survive? j m a 17177. ' 1 never yet tolerated a free and prospe rous Republic and the former steal thy but now undisguised encroach ments of Slavery, which ever has been und ever must be a cancer eating into the very vitals of true Republicanism often cause the anxious thought to arise in the bosom of the reflecting patriot, Will the American Republic ,1. r ,h n,,mPrn.M llonublics , whose wrecks are strewn along the chores of tho past? Th"i3 question will nirutn rroont. itsplf nn rnnliiv the opinion of Ex-Gov. Louis Kos- sco(red at b7 Presidents and Senators, sum-forwarded to the 'Chhoxicle' ad fere h thousands in the pro by a friend-as contained in the 1 ksscdly Free States. Blood has been lollowins extracts from a letter to the New Yokk Times, dated London, Jan. 8, 1S56. T 1 , lor om, Bat musing in solitude at the niiduight hour of the year 1855 to me a year of hard ship, friendless, joyless, sad and I have read the future lu the mirror 01 tne past. Mv impression is. that the Tear 1S5C will not pass without great revolutionary j conimotious iu Europe. The camp of the ! Governineuts remains divided, lu vain ( has Cabiurt diplomacy loaded itself with ' ' 3 ,i :, r one atrocious crime more the crime ot having sacrificed Kars to the speculation ; of paving the road for an 'Austrian peace' ! by affording to the Czar the prestige of a than the Aliies'in their success at Scbas-1 topol just as Saguntum is more glorious 1 by its fall than its victor by conquering it. j ,telbie; Jrirf ! fd treasures of nationsin an aimless war, j but the nations will awake, and one of, those tremendous commotions which mark an era in history, will shake to its very foundation this our old world. Such is my presentiment Out if the signs of time do not belie ns, the prospects of America are not brighter, if not gloomier. We have our despots, you have Slavery. This is the worst of the two; With us, natious will stand against tyrants, with you, the nation will stand divided in itself, and brother will raise hand against brother, in irreconcilable antagouism. For the first time in your history ,(which, by its shortness, should warn from prcGdcnce,) ! will the 1'residential election turn excius-1 ively on the issuo of Slavery that stain : on your escutcheon, that curse on your necJrUy. A sore trial it will prove,forsooth. I Slavery will, in all probability, carry the j day. The slave-holding interest stands ' compact; not so their opponents; social 1 and material interests divide their tamp The slave-holding interest is sure of some . auxiliary supplement from that quarter, j Their victory is more than probable. However, the election is not a solution; it ! is but symptom, and nothing more; it ;u j but fuel added to flame. Thrice already, since the Constitution was framed.in 1787, ! thrice already this question has been com- j promised. But compromises between prin- j ciplcs can not last. It is but a palliative. The sickness recurs.and either I am greatly mistaken, or else it will not bear another I compromise. Either Freedom or Slavery: ! the two can not go long together. May ; jn each council chamber, the Urpitri.i the Almighty eye watch in mercy over j CAS pABTY will call every true friend your trials ! Kossi'Tn. We have never regarded Kossuth i as a prophet, or as a man of superior judgment, however much we apprcci- j tion3bcBt orpedandthe' pi ague spot ate h.s patriotism, his intelligence and, itsclf confincd t0 thc Sutcs whore it las virtues. But we place h.8 sunni-1 cxi for hcm to . or to guff interest. Certainly, never was a people bet ter situated for carrying out thc great Republican principle of Equal Rights and Sclf-Governmcnt, than the Amer- j ican people. This, however, is no sure indication of the perpetuity of even the form of our Government ; much less does it insure that the true spirit of Republicanism will be perpetuated. The Jews as a nation were certainly i as much favored as we are ; yet they j relapsed into idolatry, and rebelled repcatcdly. in their forty years' jour ney. After their settlement in beau teous and bounteous Palestine, they also soon required Kings, by whose opprcssion and misrule their Union of States or Tribes was broken, foreign nations warred successfully against them, and they were finally dispersed and blotted from the list of nations. The philosophical histories of Greece and Rome illustrate the general truth that favorable circumstances arc no security for Repubhcanism.when men are bent on foreign conquest regard their personal aggrandizement above the common weal and live in dailv j violation of the first principles of the rights of man. Mexico and thc South ! American Republics (so called) havcj i,r 1 i i ii.. . f ' abolished personal slavery ; yet the . general ignorance, depravity of inor- j als, and other s.gns of Romanism, arc . demonstrated in their unprosperous, ; unhappy, and turbulent condition ""And thou, Capernaum, which art exalted unto heaven, shalt be cast d'?W)l Q Jjg.?'trVntwilhctanflinor thai K. CORNELIUS. and News Journal. are uucuasmgiv uuciuu up uu uic uui of national vanity by 4th of July ora- tors, 'prophesy-unto us-smooth things' preachers, and editorial demagogues, iha tiniK ta tliif irf 93 ft nAnnm nrp cA tho same fallen nature as those Jews and the Republics which have flour ished and faded before us. The same love of ease, of wealth, of station and of power, which have in all ags " made man the enemy of man," are found in a most prolific soil Ameri can hearts. Those who fought for "the IXAI.IEXABI.E ri?ht Of ALL MEN to Lib- tJ. a,c not all dead : yet there arc already over Three Millions of Slaves in our land. The principles at the foundation of Republicanism, arc lu 10.ICU "" ling people, and the Supreme Execu tive power of the Nation ha3 been prostituted to aid the illegal, outrag eous, and antt-ivv.ui;o(in crusade to extend an accursed institution over territory which had been for one gen- eraiion ueuicaieu io rruuuuu., iui ever," by a solemn compact. Ja the light of the past and view- in what nov g0;n on before Otir D . . ... eves certaiulv our L nion may soon ..- ,. . be sundered ; Republicanism MAT be banished in name as it already is in fuct from iaf tic Confederacy ; and Oligarchy may pave the way for a military despotism like that of Russia, or plunge us into a sea of jntestiuc warfare liko that of St; I lningo, or sueh.ns France passed through before she sought comparat- lve rest under iron heeled NAroi.EON' Yet, let "Hope spring eternal in the human breast." It is the part of Men and of Christians to desire and work for what is best and right, looking for the promised time when "All Oim. thai) .. and undent Fraud shall fall, Triumphant Justice lift al'ft her anks 1'eao o'er Ui'' w.irM hrT olive naDti rxUd, And nuite-robed lnnocrno. trufla hasten deaarnd.' It is our life-long duty, firmly and cooly to resist not only the open but the secret machinations of the Slave Oligarchy, which lias so long been strengtheuins itself by the acquisition of aQV tcri-itorv-, and now seeks to . in, blot out all compromises and all laws instituted to stay the ravages of an cvjl whose always-changing, ever-new cr j3) "Give GIVE ! Yield YIELD !" 3lioii f ' . , . , resistance to Slavery aggression sho d be THE 'National' question of the next call)pain y'e arc aware that the wire.pullcr3 0f Slavery are carefully j preparing to entrap all the voters in cither its 'DEMOCBATIC' or 'AMERICAN party net. They expect to mould both thosc tjC3 to ticir wiUg We HopE , . , thcir Plan3 luay be frustrated by one or both. But should Slavery triumph of Liberty to its standard. With it, mnlliaPnffWfiB:nna-njn:ta. wa fal.ritilfl HOPE Ulfi ILlfrnE WTllllll iri And after all, the solution of thc J J g great question is with thc omnipotent Ruler of thc Universe. While we may Jtly fear that our individual as well as national ingratitude and misdeeds may be visited upon us in civil war or kingly tyranny. ..still let us, as men and as Christians, hope and pray and vote that the blessings hitherto enjoy e(1 l7 ns. ma7 bc continued to tho ale3t posterity that America may be in,ieeu lU0 8iar OI nPe ine wo"u and become an example that may be safely followed by all the nations of men. Literary Tbifles. There are fre- quently men who get up ingenious little devices about words or letters, j The letter " E " is most used of any, ' but the following stanzas has every ; letter in thc Alphabet except "E:" A jovial swain may rack his brain, And tax his fancy's might, To quiz in vain, for 'lis most plain That what I say is right." But the following couplet has Es in ! ja abundance, and no other vowel : (0!, the t com.mei.t.) "Persevere, be perfect men, Ever kceP P''" ten" William OLDYS.an Englishman.left following for an Epitaph : In won! and Will i a friend to yon, And 0nefriendOl0. onh a hundred new." JoHS concIudcsh;g defcnce d of k; ; thns: .wilnes, my ntme, ,( ansis.nmti lt You'll find ii reads. No auxn is a B. The following line reads backwards and forwards the same : LEWISBURG, UNION CO., PA., FRIDAY, For the Lewlabnrf Chronlcla. A PARAPHRASE. BV LR BLANC. Trr imrtb wan taI1, darkDi wu on the dHpt Knrth, without drm, ww one cb-v.tie li-p. Till iM own lifrath mnvrd oVr llti mighty tide, Aud Mid, Lat Ugbt from darkBPM now dif id. Light ea.11Hl h Put, and darfcnne railed h Niirht, And hfftTna he mtvlfi. but not for mortal' oigbt; hry land callil t- Karth, watrrs miiwl h Svuf, All, all thing with liia firat grvat plan agrm-a. Th aarth wa nw, IU aurface varra was dry, When Um1 lrhfld by t;lcin oVr hlx y That K-ntle n-riliyrn hroui;ltt no ojomiiit wind, From off the barren hilla which lay behind. II- spake : Printt f rth, O Earth! tha flow'reti bir, And till with halmy lr prance all the air; And , O fruitful Trwl lrimc forth your kind : Tito fprn forth tree with graoeful tinea entwined. Two (treat tiwfitn w friran. tor day and night, (The ont that ruM llw day, the greater IikU : The yum be mwif, which till the faulted fekica Far, tar beyond the rvach of mortal eye. Earth, fviui an ! ky were made at his command, tea broach t fi.rth ltvinx thinifS as did the land; He made the mighty wliale, tha wan'a kiug. The winged fowl, and eery living thtug. Etith for tha ai he made, and there confined. To increase and multiply, each tlteir kind , The beaxt of the fi-ld, and the hirt of aon That aiog in ueltiug nutca the air along. Ttien made he Man to rule o'er land, and era Aud created thin, whate'er tbone thing might bo Man he made, hi intake wv like his own. Of earth created be hiin fleah and bune. Man wm9 mad a, and in Elen' gnrden placed. All was icood, for nought by din had been defaced; lint man wan yet alone, and 'twas not good To be alone, fur man in silence aloud. Then made he Woman woman, wond'mns fair, For Kden's garden, and man's joys to attars; V bile wraed in sleep profound, from out man's side Was woman made-mau's helpmeet, and bis pride. - V- .1P 'Mid orange erore. and wtftiy pviruuieu atrt No cause bad tley to mourn, no ctuw to weep, lieaveuly were their dreams, and peaceful was their sleep. All shrub and flowers in Eden's garden grew, Some yieliiM fruit, some yielded odors too; All lbtn?s lent made mot pleasant to the tight, And fit for fvod, the hungry to invite. Of all the trees whHi In that garden grew, ttnt one did (mhI deny the loviug two; T4-te not it fruit. f-aid he.) hut pays it by. For fcbouldst thou cat thereof tlwu it surely die. Then Satan rame. and with the serpent's smile Kirt from th- rinlit the woman did brsuiie; Nw est thin fruit, said be.) no uire refrain, 1'bou shall not die. but lasting kuowlcde gain. Then towards the frail she eaU her lontring eyes, Next toward- theewil tree r he quick I v Hi-, Mte plut-k th teniptine fruit fruni off its tough, fche eats, and gires to man he cats it now. (Fain wouM I lift my to,. In holder strains, In harmonious lay, oVr Kden's plains. Our Parent' dveds rehersa, tht tr dreadful fall, Aud by some magic power dirpel theu all.) From Kden's garden they were driven out, Aud K len's walls were guarded 'round atoot By cherubim were guarded, night and day. And flaming swords they wielded erery way. flod commanded Adam the ground to till. To sow the ground with seed for 'twas hi will That man should plant, and reap the substance, now, Ja which to lire, with swt-at upon bis brvw. A Good Recommendation. "Please, sir, Jun't you want a cabin boy?" "I Jo want a cabin boy, my lad, but what's that to you t A littlo chap like you ain't fit for the berth." "0. sir. I'm real strone. I can do a irrcat deal of work, if I aiu't so verv old." i "Rut what are vou here for 1 You 1 don't look like a city boy. Ran away from i home, hey V "O no, indeed, air ; m7 f.thot died, and ! my mother is, very poor, and I want to j do something to help her. She let me come." ' "Well, sonny, where arc your letters of ! recommendation ? Can't take any boy i without those." j ii - j tv:h:. v.j thought of iU being necessary to have let ters from bis minister, or bis teachers, or from some proper person to prove to strangers that he was an honest aud good boy. Now what should he do ?- He stood in deep thought, the Captain meanwhile watching the working of his expressive face. At length ho put his hand into his bosom and drew out his littlo Bible, and without one word put it into the Captain's band. The Captain opened to the blank page and read : "William Gbaiiam, presented as a reward for regular and punctual attendance at Sabbath School, and for bis blameless conduct there and elsewhere. From his Sunday School Teacher." Capt. M'Leod was not a pious man, but he could not consider the case before him with a heart unmoved. The littlo father less child, standing humbly before him, referring him to the testimony of his Sun day School teacher, as it was given in his little Bible, touched a tender spot in the breast of the noble seamen, and, clapping Willie heartily on the shoulder, he said t "You are thc boy for me ; you shall sail with me ; and, if you are as good a lad as I think you arc, your pockets shan't be empty when you go back to your good mother .The Grand Jurors of Monroe coun ty, at the December Term of Court, made the following unique presentment t To the Honorable the Judges of the Court of Common Pleas of tho county of Monroe. We, the Grand Inquest for said county, beg leave, in pursuance of the able charge of the Court, and in accordance with our oath, to report : That nearly every per son in said county of Monroe are passing and receiving small notes of Banks of other States, and are, therefore, in our opinion indictable 'the present Inquest not accepted. JOHN DE YOUNG, Foreman. Capt Abel De Forest, a soldier of tho Revolution, died at Bingbaintoo, on the j 24th ult, aged ninety-four years and eight months. He was for a time captain of a West India vessel, and he who afterward became Commodore Hull was one of his hands. A citizen of Lebaaon, in Connecticut, has recovered a verdict against tho town, of 92,500 damages, sustained to himself from being thrown down an embankment, j for want of a suitable tailing along the The Arctic Hero. The following complimentary resolu tions passed the Legislature of this State, unanimously. Tbcy were offered in the House by Hon. E. Joy Morris of Phila delphia : Whereas, Doctor Elisda Kent Kane, a citizen of the State of Pennsylvania, by his explorations and discoveries in the Arctic Regions, and by the energy, intre pidity, perseverance and other qualities ex hibited by him in conducting the recent Expedition nnder his command, has not only made valuable additions to human knowledge, but has attested the benevo lence which prompted and the skill which guided said Expedition in such manner as to call forth official acknowledgements and honorable mention from foreign govern ments. Therefore, Me it Kttohed, That the Senate and House of Rcpiesentatives of the Common wealth of Pennsylvania, do also recognize the services rendered by said Expedition, and the gallant conduct displayed in its management ; and do hereby tender their thanks to Dr. Kane and to the officers and crew under his command. lietolivd, That we concur with the See crctary of the Navy in commending the results of these Expeditions as worthy the attention and patronage of government ; and further, that the Governor be reques ted to transmit copy of these resolutions io D. Kne, and to the Senate and House of Representatives of tk United States. Dr. Kane. Graham's Magazine con tains a long and well written sketch of Dr. Kane, by Dr. Win. Elder, which is a well deserved tribute to the enterprising char acter and useful labors of this gentleman, whose romantic adventures and philan thropic enterprises form an honorable ' chapter in the history of this country, as well as in his own life. Dr. Kane went a surgeon in the first American embassy to China, and while absent explored tho 1'hillippian Island on foot. He was the first man who descended into the enter of Tael ; lowered more than a hundred feet by a bamboo rope, from the over-hanging j cliff, and, clambering down some seven hundred more through the ecorioc, be made a topographical sketch of the interior of this great volcano. Before he returned from this trip, he had ascended the Hima layas, and triangulated Greece on foot ; he had visited Ceylon, the upper Nile, and all the mythologie region of Egypt. He has been in Africa ; was sent to-'Mexico during the wa with despatches to Gen Scott ; was employed in the Coast Survey, &o Gulf of Mexico,' and finally has ; penetrated the waters of the Arctic Ocean further north than any former navigator. His "Tersonal Narrative," published early in 1853, recounts the adventures of the Crit oyce nd discovers bis diversified qualifications for such an enterprise. The 1"' 1 occupied two winters in the "'gest latitudes, and two years and a half unremitted labor, with the risks and reptionaibilities attendant. He is now preparing the history for publication. Dr. Kane's Narrative of the Expedition, now preparing and in course of publication by Messrs. Childs & Peterson, of Philadel phia, will embrace the important discover rics made in the frozen regions far beyond the reach of all the predecessors of the American exploring party, and their peril- ous adventures, crowded with romantic incidents, which, in the language of the Secretary of the Navy, " not only excite our wonder, but borrow a novel grandeur from the truly benevolent considerations which animated and nerved him to his task." Wolves in Iowa Two Pertom De- toured. Owing to the cxtremo cold wea ther for some time past, the wolves in Pottawattomie county have become dan gerous neighbors. Poultry yards and sheep-folds hare been robbed to a frightful extent, and in several instances the hun gry beasts have not been inclined to spare the human species. About three weeks ago, a man was returning from a prayer meeting, accompanied by his two dangh' ters, one sixteen and the other twenty-three years of age. They were all riding the same horse, when suddenly a pack of tim ber wolves assailed them, and being nnable to escape by flight, they attempted to de fend themselves. But the ferocious brutes attacked the horse, rendering him unman agcable. The oldest daughter Was partly thrown and partly dragged to the ground, and instantlv devoured. This enabled the father and tho other daughter to escape. Several neighbors were soon mustered, but upon repairing to the spot nothing was found but one shoe, and a very few rem' nants of the unfortunate girl's clothing. A boy about thirteen years old left his father's houso to get water at a spring, which was about half a mile distant, since which time nothing has been seen of him Tho nail was found near the spring, also some marks of blood and a lock or two of hair. Several persons have been chased by these savage monsters. Keokuk 1'ust, nth. j , A Usefbi. Himt. The difference be tween rising every morning at six, and at eight, in the course of forty years amounts to 29,200 hours, or three years, one hun dred and twenty-one days: and sixteen hours a day for exactly ten years of life were added, where we may command eight hours every day for the cultivation of oar minds, and fox the dispatch of busiscis. FEBRUARY 1, 185G. THE ENGLISH AMD Per (Cnfllisrlj nnh ADAM'S FALL. Mr. White, the temperance lecturer, told the following anecdote in one of bis addresses, to illustrate the influence of a bad example in the formation of habits ruinons in their effect : Adam and Mary his wife, who lived in one of the old Stales, were very good members of the church, good sort of folks any way, and Mary thought a great deal of the minister, and the minister thought a good deal of a glass of gocd todily. Whenever the minister called to make Mary a visit, which was pretty often, she contrived to have him a glass of lodJy made, and the minister never refused the toddy. After a while Adam got to following the example of the minister to such an extent that he became a drunkard drank up everything he had and all he could get. Mary and he became very poor in consequence of his following the min ister's example so closely, but the good minis ter continued his visits, and poor Mary con tinued still to give the glass of toddy. One day he called in and told Mary that he was going away for a week should return on Friday and handed her a book containing the catechism, and told her when he returned he should expect she would be able to answer some of the questions. Mary said yes, and laid the book away very carefully. But Mary, like a good many other church members, thought no more of her book until the Friday that the good minister was to return. "What shall Hot" says she, "the minister U u Ym her. tn-Jay. and I have not looked in the book he gave me. How can I answer the questions?" I can tell yon." said Adam, eive me a quarter and let me go over to Smith's and get some good rum, and you can answer his , questions with toddy." j Mary took the advice gave Adam a quar-1 trran4a jnft. and off he slar'ed. After get-j ting his jug filled and on his way back, Adam concluded to taste the rum. One taste bro't on another, until he tumbled over a pile of i rocks, broke the jug, and lost all the rum. I But Adam managed to stacger home. j As soon as he got in the house, Mary in ! quired anxiously for the jug of rum. " Where : is the jug of rum, Adam?" Poor Adam man i aged to stammer out " that he had stnmbled , over a pile of rocks and broke the jug, and I lost the rum." Mary was in a fix Adam' drunk the minister coming the rum gone l and the questions unlearned. But here comes the minister ! It would n't do for the i man of God to see Adam drunk ; so she, for ' the want of a better place to bide him, sent him nnder the bed. By the time he was fairly nnder, in came the minister. After sitting a few moments, he asked Mary if she thought she could answer the question -How did Adam fall?" Mary turned her head first one way and then another, and finally stammered out ' He felt over a pile of rocks .'" It was now the minister's turn to look blank, but he ventured another question i ' Where did he hide himself after his fall 1" j t'irfer the bed. sir ! "There, Adam, you may come out, he knows all about it." The good minister retired not evea waiting for a glass of toddy. Georgia (the " Empire State of the South") has increased in population less than 0,000 the past five years, and is still under One Million. (We see it stated, by the way, that the Southern manufacto ries of coarse cottons, &., are failing, or forced to abandon their work. Would it be strange, if we should vjain see the Southern States coming up and demanding the establishment of the Protective sys tem?) r An Aoed PriscseH. An Italian newspaper states that a native of Savoy, who was condemnod at the age of 41 to the French galleys for life, has just been liberated, at the ego of 121. It is said that he has a little property in Savoy, the interest on which has been accumulating exactly 100 years. The old fellow enjoys perfect health, although he stoops so much that his face nearly touches his knees. Brought him Back. 'A Mrs. Little field had her lover, who was going to Nic aragua, on the Star of the West, arrested the other day in order that she might not lose him. Sho did not wish him to be come an agriculturist in Central America, He bad a little-field to cultivate at homo. Mammoth Lovb Lettib. A New England gentleman in California, who cor responds with a young lady of Fall Kiver, sent to his friend a letter, which arrived in the mails of the George Law, on the 23th ult, and which comprises one hundred and forty-six paget of letter paper. Most of the Democratic Conventions of Indiana recommend Jesse D. Bright for President Like Douglass and Brodhcad, he is allied by marriage to the slaveholding interest Nine Irishmen have been arrested in Cincinnati, charged with being implicated in a, design for a filibustering expedition , upon Ireland. maw." YEAR XII....WIIOLE NUMBER, C16. At $1,00 Per GEE MAN READER. Pcntsrr (tstx. ADAM'S FAIJ- Hr. White, dor Temperance Vorleser. er raelte die folgende Anrkdote, in einer seiner Adressen, in den Einflnss voa einem btrsen Beispiele in der Enstehung vod Angewohnhei ten, die verderblich in ihrer Wtrkung sind.zn erlaeutern. Adam und Mary seine Fran, welche in ein em von den alien Hlaalen wohnten, waren sehr gute Mitglieder von den Kircbe, eiue gute Art Leule in jeder Beziehung, nnd Mary dachte sehr viel von dtm Minister, nnd der Minister daehtesehrviel von einem guten Ulas Pomca. Zu jeder Zeit, wenn den Mioi.tcr vor.prach und einen fiesuch mac lite, welches zieoilich ofl geschah, machte sie es meeglicb em Ulas Puusch fuer ihn fertig zu haben, nnd der Min ister schlug den Punsch auch niemals ab. Nach einiger Zeit folgte Adam dem Beispiels des Ministers zu einer solchea Ansdehnung, dasz er xu einem Trunkenbolde wurde, der alles vertrank was er hatte und alles was er bekommen kunnte. Mary nnd er wurden demzufulge, dasz er dem BeUpiele des Minis ters zu geoau folgte sehr arm, aber der gute Minister setzte seine Besuehe fort und die arme Mary gab fortwvhrend noch des Glas Punscb. Eines Tages sprach er Tor nnd sagte Mary, dasz er fuer cine Woe he fort ginge und ban digte ihr ein Buch, den Catechismus euihalt end, ein und sagte ihr, wenn er zurueckkehre. wuer.le er erwarten, dasz sie fashig sei, einige Fragen zu beantworten, Mary sagte ja, und legte das Buch sehr sohrfellig weg. Aber Mary, gleich vielen anderen Kirehen Mitzlie- acta, aacnie mcht mehr an inr xtucn nix rrei- tags wo der gute Minister zurueckkehrte. " Was soil ich ihun," sagie sie, "der Minis ter wird heute bier sein und ich babe noch nicht in das Buch gesehen, welches er mir gab. Wie kann ich die Fragen beantworten ?" Ich kann dir es sagen," sagte Adam, " gebe mir ein Viertel nnd lass mich hinueber zu Smith's genen und etwu galea Ham Uekora men nnd du kannst se ne Fragen nut Punsch beantworten." Mary befolgte den Rath gab Adam cinen Viertel nnd einen Krng nnd ab ging er, Nach dem er seines Krug gefuelt gekommea nnd anf seinem Ruekkwege war. beschloss Adam den Rum zu versuehen. Ein Versuch fuebrte tu einem anderen, bis er aeber einen Haufen Steine stolperte und den Krug zerbrach, den ganzen Rum verlierend. Adam aber fuehrte es aus and taumelie nach Hanse. So bald er ia das Hans kam, fragte Mary ecngstlich nach derJCrug mil Rum. Wo ist die Krug mil Rum, Adam !" Der arme Adam bewerksteiligte cs anszustammeln, "dasz er ueber einen Haufen Steine ge.tolpert sei, und die Krug verbrochen nnd den Rum verloren hxtte." Mary war in einer neblen Lage Adam betrunten der Minister kommend der Rum fort und die Fragea ungelernt, Aber hier kommt der Minister ! Es wuerde nicht fuer den Macn Gottes thun, Adam betrnnken k sehen, so sie, in Ermangelung eines bes seren Platzes,ihn zu vergen, landie ihn nnter das Betu Zu der Zeit als er vcellig unter war, kam der Minister herein. Nacndem cr einige Augenbllcke da sasz, fragte er Mary, ob sie glaube, dasz sie die Fragea beantworten kccnneti Wie ist Adam gefallen !" Mary drehte ihren Kopf znerst den einen ilann den audern Weg, zuletzl stammelte sie aus t " Er fid ueber einen JIaufrn Sttine .'" Es war nun die Reihe an dem Minister ver- wirrt auszusehea, aber er wagte eune anderc Frages " Wo hiclt er sich aach seines Falle ver- borgen ?' " Infer dem Bttte, lltrr f " Da, Adam, du magst herans kommen, er weisz alles." Der gute Minister enlfernlesich nicht ein- mal auf ein Glas Punsch wartend. THE FARM The fiardrm The Orchard. New -York Premium Farms for 1854. The last volume of the Transaction of the Xeto-Yurk State Agricultural Society, contains an account of the farm manage ment of W. P. OttIey, Phelps, Ontario Co., and of G. W. Corrm, Amenia, Dutchess County, N. Y., to whom the So ciety awarded the first and second premi ums on farms. Tux SOIL. Mr. Ottlcys farm contains 100 acres soil, a gravelly loam and muck, with a tincture of clay ; subsoil about the same with a lighter color, and porous. Mr. O. sayst "1 consider the best mode of improving my soil is a three year lay of clover, turn ing it under about the month of June for wheat, or the first of May for corn, with the application of barnyard manure." Is cot clover apt to die out tho third year ? and would it not, therefore, be bet ter to plow it up the second instead of tha third year, as there would be more clover to turu under J lt thu is cropping the land too heavily with grain crops, the bar Icy, instead of being followed by wheat, could be seeded down for a year or two , with clover. Will our readers give us tbeir experience on this point!1 Mr. O. usually plows from seven to ten inches deep. He has used tho "sub-soil plow," as it is termed in the report, but which, as we learned by corresponding with Mr. Ottley, is in reality the Michigan JouUe plow a very different implement from the true subsoil plow, which only breaks np the subsoil without bringing it to the surface. TU first crop after the tuboilinj tea unusuallif light, but the suc ceeding crops were productive, and the re uU. on tU whili satufaeto Mr. Q. Year, always in Apyakce. has not tried true subsoiling, but intends to do so, and thinks that he will obtain in this way the benefits arising from a deep soil without diminution of crop the first year. THE CROPS. Mr. Ottley's methed of cultivating com is a follows : "Take a tbreo year lay of clover, cover it with manure, if possible, break it np immediately before planting with a doubla plow, eight inches deep, harrow with light harrow to avoid tearing up turf, then drill three and a half feet in width of row, to gether with ashes and plaster : then roll, and as soon as up pass through with one horse cultivator. Continue to cultivate till the middle of June; hoe once; rat up about the first of September, five rows into one, shocks large, as the stalks will be of a better quality; husk during fall; product usually fifty bushel per acre." Is it better to jot corn in drills, as as above, or bills, three and a half feet each way, four kernels in the hill, horse hoeing each way ? ''Barley is sown on corn stubble, plow, ed as early as possible ; seed drilled in, two and a half bushels per acre, from the) first of May. Product from twenty-fire to fifty bushels per acre." The method of cultivating land for wheat is not given, except when it if sown after barley, when it is as follows : Plow as soon as the barley is off, with A oahl- plow, from eight to ten inches deep, in lands two rods wide : barrow fine just before the time to sow, drill in the seed, two bushels per acre ; clean out furrowa and water furrows. Product usually front twenty-five to thirty-five bushels per acre. Clover and timothy seed are sown with the wheat. OaU are drilled after corn as soon as the land can be got in good order, three bushels of seed per acre ; cut when fully ripe with reaping saachiue, bind and stock the same as wheat. Product about seventy-five bushels per acre. Potatoes and carrots are cultivated as follows : One potato in each hill, split; plant as early as possible, harvest when fully ripe. Usually plant but one acre in corn-field ; use no manure ; hoe once ; produce light, owing to the prevalent disease. "Carrots sow thick in drills eighteen inches apart; plow ground, manure high, with rotted manure, sow the first of June, hoe as soon as up ; continue to hoe and thin out till the weeds cease to trouble. Product from COO to SOO bushels per acre." DRAINING. Mr. Ottley also obtained the second pre mium for experiments in draining, them being none offered which were considered worthy of the first premium. Surely this is not a true indication of the estimation in which underdraining is held in tho great State of New-York I Mr. O. laid 200 rods of stone drains in nine acres, and the result was quite satisfactory. lie) says : "The increased value of the land, taking the field (twelve acres) together, I esti mate at $5 per acre annually, better than before its being drained. It is safe reck oning that draining will pay for itsclf with interest of cost in two years." Mr. O. also laid down 100 rods of tile underdraios, from two to two and a half feet deep, and four inches wide at the bot tom. The cost was, fur digging, 12 eta. per rod ; tile on ground, ltt cts. per rod ; laying and filling, 3 cents ; total, 31 i cts. per rod. The drain laid with stone, cost, fur digging, 20 cents, and for laying the stone and filling, 20 cents; total, 40 cents per rod, or 8j cents more than the tile drains. Unnecessarily high as is the price of tiles, it pays better to use them than stones in most cases. Genesee Farmer. Taste of Turnips In Oilk. Perhaps few things of like slight impor tance bave produced moro wide-spread an noyance than the taste of turnips in milk and butter, from cows fed with this root. There, is a plain and easy remedy for thin, which ought to be more widely known, one which I met some ten years ago, su ing that "grain fed regularly to milch cows with turnips wouid prevent tbeir milk from tasting of the turnips." When I had occasion to try it, I gave each eow four quarts per day of wheat bran, wet in cold water, night and morning, in addition to the turnips fed them. Perhaps a less quantity of bran would answer as well, but it cost us ouly five cents per bifcjicl, so I fed thus liberally. Not the slightest taste of turnips could be perceived, and we sold the butter (care fully made, of course,) to steady custo mers in Nashville, for from ten to fifteen cents above the market price pretty con clusive evidence as to its quality. And further, one of thc same cows had, some years before, been fed with turnips alone, aud the milk and butter were strongly tainted with the tajte of them ; now tbey produce no such effect I fiud on the trial than any other grain will answer as well as wheat bran John C. Hoit, na Fbelbyville, Tenn., November, 13i.-. Rural Xtie-Verier. - - - - ' -. ... 'Lewd I did live evil did I dwell,' 1