LEWISBUBG BY O. N. WORDEN & J. R. CORNELIUS. As Independent- Familt and News Journal. l,e Chronicle. fripay, march as, isr,e. For th Ltwlstmrg Chronicle. Common Schools in Central Fenn'a. The avenge condition of the schools in this part of the State is not behind that of any portion of it of equal extent, but is verj far behind that of some localities. The second, if not tba first teachers' in stitute ever held in the State, wag that of Center county, and many of the members of that body have become emphatically teachers of teachers, widening and exten ding the most beneficial influences. While teachers were a scattered flock:, they were unnoticed if not despised. But onion has given them strength. And the devotion and disinterestedness which they bave manifested as a body ; the anxiety they have shown not to shun, but to se cure superintendence; the more than sub mission the gladness with which they bave received and met all the onerous ex aminations and investigations which ac company it, have taken people by surprUa, and eioited their admiration. It was more than was expected from that proverbially lasy, weak, aud fit-for-nothing-else portion of the community our whilom school masters. Among the good consequences are better pay of taxes and of salaries, greater con sideration shown for teachers and their trying labors, visits to schools, and better attendance. The Union Graded Schools of Lock Haven are probably the best in any of the central counties, aud unexcelled in the State. II. L. Diiffenbacb, late Deputy Superintendent, who is as sagacious as constant and thorough in all be undertakes, and devoted to reform aud the correctiou of abuse, is Superintendent of the couuty and a Director in the borough. He and Lis associates in tbe board, bave selected teachers of the very first natural and ac quired endowment; they board with bim ; and the unanimity and skill that prevail in those schools is beyond praise. Truaut ry and street-education are effectually pre vented by the superior attraction of the delightfully pleasant schools, and if they continue in their present auspicious condi tion until tbe present scholars become the ruling ' Touug America' of tbe town, Lock Haven will be a model town in all respects. All teachers who can do so, should visit those sehools and spend a day in tbe rooms, in close study of the neat ness, order, system, diligenoe, happiness and progress that prevail there. W. BOALSBUBQ, IV CALIFORNIA. We are indebted to Mr. John Chamberlin I for a copy of the San Francisco Erening Bulletin received by the last steamer. It is I mostly filled with notices of the gigantic frauds there perpetrated, and the gambling j and other crimes which riot in that fair land. ! Tbe following communication in the same j paper confirms our opinion that California notwithstanding its advantages contains the most truly wretched population of any semi civilued country on earth. Lacib. Chron. "Come over and help us." ('name over and help us," was tbe call of tbe perishing Macedonian to tbe Apos- tie Faul. "Come over and help us is the despairing cry of full fifteen hundred young men of San Francisco, who yet re ceive no aid. You, Mr. King, wield a pen potent for good, can not you suggest some remedy ? The morning papers, if appealed to, will proffer their universal panacea the mines. There all may obtain work at three dollars per diem. 'Tie false, 'tis a patent, un blushing, cruel, unmitigated lie. Thirty five dollars a month is the highest paid, and not one in ten is fortunate enough to obtain work on those or any other terms. Oh, but you can work yourself for your self. Gentlemen, it is a fallacy. The pan and the crevioiug knife are no longer the sole necessary capital of the miner. Fifty dollars to reach the mines, fifty mors to prospect, an hundred and fifty for tools and support this is the minimum. Gen tlemen, we do not possess it Fifteen hun dred of us have nothing. Many are intel ligent, many educated, many talented, but what avails it T We bave not the means to exercise or display these advantages. We were better without them. We bave honest hands, and what we ask, what we demand, is the inalienable right of every freemen tbe right to labor. Thirty-five dollar a month and "found," or three dollars a day is the average remuneration of manual labor in San Francisco at pre sent. Give us employment at half those rates barely sufficient to furnish food and co ver our nakedness and we will thank you. Soma of ns are starving. Some, with name I confess it, have resorted to crime to prooure a livelihood. Some subsist on the dole of charity, some upon tbe remains of former credit, support repugnant to very honorable mind and daily becoming more precarious. One, I know, has ter minated bis calamities by suicide. I my self have remained for days without other food than the sweepinga of the markets, and am now incurring liabilities which avary day increases mj inability to discharge But enough. My pen is a feeble one, but it has spoken the unvarnished truth. Men of San Francisco, citiiens of El Do rado, listen to our plaint We have ex hausted our energies.and now lie prostrate. Devise some plan for our relief. Give ear to our petition as the Father of Mercies may give ear to yours. Editor of tbe Bulletin, give ns your in fluence and advice not tbe soulless, truth less, stereotype cant of the morning pa pers, bnt something warm and gushing from your own noble heart. "Come over and belp us." Help, or we perish ! D. tyThe incident commemorated in the fol lowing lines, appeared in a recent country newspaper, and was there given as a fact. "FOR MOTHER'S SAKE." BY EM ELI Mi 8. SMITH. A father and his little son One winter's day were sailing, Fast from their way the light of day In cloud and gloom was failing. And fiercely 'round their lonely bark Tbe stormy winds were wailing. They knew that peril hovered near. They prayed, "O Heaven, deliver!" Bui a wilder blast came howling past, And soon, with sob and shiver, They struggled h, jrv erasp Of that dark, rushing river. "Cling fast to me, my darling child," An anguished voice was crying. While, silvery-clear, o'er tempests drear, Knse softer notes, replying : "O mind not me, my father dear I'm not afraid of dying. "Oli, mind me nnt, but tare yourself. For Mother's take, dear Father ! Leave me, and hasten to the shore. Or who will comfort Mother ?" The an eel forms that ever wait, I 'd seen, on man attendant. Flew up, o'erjoyed, to heaven's bright gate. And there, on pa;e resplendent, Hizh over those of heroes bold, And martyrs famed in story. They wrote the name of that brave boy, And wreathed it 'round with glory. God bless the child !" aye, He did bless That noble self-denial. And safely bore him to the shore Through tempest, toil and trial ; Soon, in their bright and traaquil borne, Son, sire, and that dear mother. For whose sweet sake so much was done, la raptaie met each other! Amos Lawrence and Mr. Barn am. The lives of Amos Lawrence and P. T. Barnum, both written by themselves,both histories of men who began life poor, and bave risen to wealth and ranked high as capitalists, may suggest some interesting aud useful comparison between the two men, and their different methods of pro cedure, with tbe final result. Mr. Barnum as a man of undoubted energy and enterprise, as a liberal, popu lar man of great sagacity and business powers, deserves credit But the publica tion of bis life did the world no good, and did him much harm in tbe eyes of all thiuking men. It seemed to put a pre mium, not upon useful industry, but upon humbug. The principle which it inculca ted, as the foundation of his own success, was eminently dangerous to the morals of all young men of unsettled principles who should read it Had Mr. Barnum contin- j ucd prosperous, the effect would have been more disastrous than it will now be. He boasted that he bad made his money by puffing, and made speeches in favor of humbug as the surest and best road to fortune. He had built a palace at Iranis tan that cost him 8150,000; began to build a city at East Bridgeport ; erected hotels and workshops costing nearly $-00,-000 ; built a free bridge which alone cost him $10,000, and owned all tbe land around. Thus be humbugged the world, and humbugged himself, into the belief that he was immensely wealthy, while co vering the whole of the property with mortgages that it may never pay off. Then in turn it would seem that be was humbugged by a Yankee Cloci-Pedling Company, swept clean, and is now a bank rupt, penniless, aud little Tom Thumb, whom be established, is now a bigger man than he iu a pecuniary point of view, and talks, it is said, of coming to his res cue. There only needs this additional chapter added to his life, and then the stories of the sea serpent, the woolly horse and all the rest, would convey their own proper moral to the numberless young men who otherwise might be apt to sup pose that humbug is, after all, tbe best and easiest way to wake a fortune. One remark more before we part with Mr. Barnum. He baa many valuable qualities ; be will push forward in what he undertakes manfully. If be is wise now, and will amend in one particular, he may become a great man. Let bim re tain all bis energy and boldness ; let him awaken public attention to bis schemes ; let him advertize and draw crowds aa be can, and thus combine as cany wills and as much capital on bis projects aa he can, but let him abandon all bumbog.and stiok to the truth. He can do this, if he will. Success may be a little slower, but it will onlv be tbe more sure. Let bim make bis ground all solid, and then, if be will, let him pride himself on that as much as hitherto on humbug. The fact is, that when men once suspect that there is lie or a sham somewhere, tbey never believe then is solidity and truth anywhere, and this suspicion and distrust cause a with' holding of confidence that is fatal to any publio man. Ha has declared that there : -r 1 - .t tVa bottom LEWISBURG, UNION CO., PI, FRIDAY, of bis various humbugs, after all ; so that be never failed to give the publio their money's worth for their money, although he may have pretended to give them great deal more. Hence it was that men even liked to be humbugged by Barnum. But let him enly now adhere to this idea of giving people their money's worth, and abjure the pretence of any more than he solidly and fairly performs, and success may yet be bis. That enterprise at East Bridgeport, of building a free bridge, may bave been a little ahead of the time, or of bis real capital, but it was doubtless a lib eral and wise movement, and increased the value of his lands far more than it cost His plans of advertising have given an impulse to enterprise and to movement for making mammoth combinations that haa dune the country immense good. Thou sands owe their fortunes to imitating Bar num in this particular. In the Life of Amos Lawrence, of Bos ton, we see some of tbe very highest ele ments of mercantile success developing tb.mselves. Euterprising on a gigantio scale, liberal beyond any man of his day, be carefully avoided debt He never, when a yg ut & Satnrday night close around him, without having every account settled up; bad no mortgages on any property he every made, to be fore closed as soon as he got into a tight place. He tells us how he cut himself clear from all expensive and bad habits, from drink and from smoking, and from tbe company of the idle, and those who oared not to improve their minds. This man made money, literally by the million, and he Ic-pt it. Yet he was absolutely princely in his liberality. He gave away many hundreds of thousands of dollars, and this not merely to public charities, but private ly and unostentatiously, because be loved to give. At one time a minister of ano ther denomination, with whom he was bnt little acquainted, being about to travel in Europe, he "took the liberty to enclose a check for a thousand dollars," to assist in defraying bis expenses. And he was con stantly doing such things. He has left one of tbe largest fortunes of New Eng land, all made by himself, and s family nobly trained in tbe exalted principles which distinguished him. Public Ledger- Sunday Labor. In December last, William Lotz and others, were brought before a Justice of the Peace, in Mifflin Co., Pa., and summa rily convicted under our Act of Assembly of 1794, for having violated the Sabbath day, in doing the work necessary to keep in blast tbe furnace of Ettiog Graff & Co. The case was taken to the Common Pleas on a writ of Certiorari, where Judge Wil son delivered an elaborate opinion, rever sing the decision of the Justice. The Judge says he is persuaded that the stop page of tbe blast furnaces twenty-four hours out of every seven days, would be essentially fatal to the manufacture of iron in this country. We bave read the opin ion carefully, and might be convinced by its reasonings, did not facts show Judjje Wilson to be mistaken. The ronton Reg ister, published in the heart of the iron re gion of Ohio, thus comments on his deci sion : "Light can not havo entered 'Mifflin county, Pa,' or if it has it can not bave shone upon the eyes of Judge Wilson. Robert Hamilton, of Pine Grove Furnace, in this county, many -years since, clearly demonstrated that a blast furnace can 'stop twenty-four hours out of scvon days' with out injuries consequent, &c, and Piue Grove Furnace has stopped on the Sab bath ever since Deo. 20, 184 4. It is need less to add, perhaps, that Pine Grove has been one of the moat successful furnaces in this iron region.- Of the other eleven furnaces in this county, two have not been in blast for more than a year ; of tbe re maining nine, all, we believe, stopped on the Sabbath last season. ' Some of the furnace companies leave the matter with the principal hands, to stop or not as they please." The experiment, if such it can now be called, of stopping a furnace on the Sab bath, baa been successfully tried much nearer Judge Wilson's home than Law rence county, Ohio. Martin Bell, Esq., of Sabbath Rest, Blair Co., Pa., for the last seven years has regularly avoided working about bis furnace on tbe Sabbath, and is convinced that he has gained by it in a pecuniary point of view, as well as morally. These facts reverse Judge Wil son's theology as easily aa be reversed the Justice's law. But, throwing the reli gious question out of view, we believe one day's rest out of every seven is a striot ne cessitythat it is a great physilogioal fact, that "the Sabbath was made for man." Johnstown Echo. Congressional. Washisoto.v, March 20. gCwATK. The Senate was crowded to suffocation. A large number of ladies bad come in early, crowding the gallery and pre-oceupying the reporters seats, thus rendering note-taking next to impos sible, in consequence of the dense pressure on the reporters. The two Senators from Illinois were to speak on the two Reports relative to Kansas. After some unimportant business, Mr, Douglas proceeded to reply to Mr.Trum bull. Mr. D. regarded bis colleague's opening tbe debate on the Kansas report, tbe other day, as a violation of that courtesy which gives the Chairman of a committee that privilege. Among other points in tbe mi nority report on Kansas affairs, be referred to the charge that the Legislature of Kan sas was a spurious body, and elected by fraudulent and illegal votes, and the peo ple of Kansas as invaded and conquered by armed Missourians. Mr. Douglas said it was admitted that in seven districts there was illegal voting, and Gov. Reeder denied the members their certificates for that reason ; but in the other fifteen dis tricts, there was no protest, nor proofs of illegal voting. Then, admitting, for the sake of argument, that tbe allegation was true as to seven districts, there was a clear majority of the Legislature legally elected, and hence tbeir acts were binding. Tbe majority report shows the fact that, after the Legislature assembled at Pawnoe and organized, a resolution was adopted, by which every person whomsoever was au thorised to contest tbe right of any mem boi W.Uing a seat, on giving notice to the sitting member. This was more than three months after the alleged invasion. If the people were so much intimidated as has been said, it was to be supposed tbey would have recovered from tbeir fright in the course of three months. But at that time no man was found who desired to contest the seats of any of the fifteen members ; and it was universally admitted that the fact that Gov. Reeder had given these certificates was conclusive regarding tbeir election. Gov. Reeder, however, has no doubt of the illegality of the election of those fif teen, but, as there was no one in those districts to make the contest within the time required, it was not his province to reject tbem on mere rumor. It will be recollected, too, that the spurious members turned out all the Free Soil members, who, at tbe second election, were sent from the " seven" contested districts, leaving only one Free Soil member, and he refused to . T)ia iH of " contesting" tbe ma- jorily of members before tbe very majority iUeltU of one stnpe.ana juage ana jury in their own ease! is a piece of impudence worthy of Douglas only. Ed. Chron. Mr. Douglas charged that the minority had suppressed the evidence in order to make out a case. That report declared tbe Topeka Convention justifiable, on the ground that, under a clause in the Consti tution, the people had a right to assemble peaoeably for the redress of tbeir grievan ces. Mr. Douglas characterized the To peka Convention aa aa act of rebellion, and should it result in a bloody iwsue, it would be high treason, and the traitors ought to be banged. Mr. Trumbull, in replying, said be bad learned most of bis Democracy from Mr. D., and had little thought, at tbe time, that he was cherishing " Black Republi canism," with which Mr. Douglas had re cently charged him. He was sitting at the people's gate, and would not bow down and worship his colleague ; and if, on the scaffold erected by Mr. Douglas for bim, there thuuld be found another hang ing, it would not be bis Mr. Trumbull's fault. As to the absurd proposition of his colleague that both should now resign their office, he had only to say that tbe people had sanctioned bim, recently ; first, by electing him a Representative, aud then a Senator. That certainly was a modest proposition. Let tbe Senator himself re sien. and if. after coins back to his con stituents, be should be re-elected, be fMr. Trumbull would join bim in a resignation. Thus tbey would stand on equal terms. The people of Illinois stand ou tbe Dem ocratic platform, erected by the aid of Mr. Douglas, and others, in 1850. The prop osition to resign, reminded Mr. Trumbull of the unsuccessful client in Court Hav ing lost hit cast, he teas ready and asked fur a new trial. Laughter. Mr. Trumbull maintained that the Kan sas Legislature was fraudently elected. He said : My colleague speaks of baugiug traitors, and thinks they may he found without going to Kansas. If the people there have committed errors, is it not in consequence of falling into my colleague's lead 7 Has it not been proclaimed in the majority report, that tbe people shall sot tie their affairs in their own way T If they committed an error, no one was more instrumental in bringing it about than my colleague. After replying to other points, be said that when the question here was threaten ing civil war and disunion, and the peace and happiness of thirty millions at stake, and tbe cause of republicanism throughout tbe world involved, into what insignifi cance do these petty squabbles sink I As a member of the Senate, he hoped never to be drawn into them again. Cassius M. Clay's Failure. The Cincinnati Gazette has been shown a pri vate letter from Mr. Clay with reference to bis failure, notioed a few days since. He says his creditors bave allowed him to go oa, and he will be able to pay all bis debts snd have a handsome estate left. He did not lose a dollar this season in the pork trade. CiBONICLE MARCH 28, 1856. Casslni IS. Clav. A Southern correspondent of tbe Nor thern Christian Advocate, gives the follow ing as Cassius M. Clay's mode of manage ing the Kentucky audiences by "moral suasion." He sends an appointment to a given place to leoture at a certain time; perhaps some of the natives will send word that he will not be permitted to lecture there ; he sends back word that he will lecture there according to previous notice. The time comes, a great crowd is collected to hear the mob ; presently tbe lecturer comes. He passes directly through tbe crowd, mounts tbe forum, waves bis band for at tention, all eyes are turned towards the speaker. He commenoes with a flrm.clear, and decided tone of voice tbe following remarks : Gentlemen, (says be,) I bave a few pre liminaries to settle previous to entering upon the main subject for discussion. I want to make three short appeals to three classes of persons, (when he holds up a small Bible.) There gentleman, says he, is the great charter record of human rights on which all law and equality is based, deserving the name of law, this is my ap peal to the religious part of society, and lays it down on tbe stand before him. Then he holds up tbe Constitution of the United States. Here gentlemen, says he, is the bond of our Union, the noble Con stitution of onr glorious Republic, which says that all men are bora fro and jul, with certain inalienable rights, ic, ic. This is an appeal to gentlemen, to patriots and to all Americana, and he places it with his Bible before him. Then he puts his hand into his pocket, and brings out an enormous six shooter, holding it betore the audience, he aaya s and hr, geatle men.is a six shooter.every barrel of which is heavily loaded with powder and cold lead. This is my appeal to mobocrats,and I will blow its contents through tbe heart of the first man who offers to lay his hands on me to silence me in my native State, or gag free speech in my presence. This he lays down upon the stand, with bis two former appeals, ready for action, then he commences a perfect storm against the peculiar institutions, enough to wring the sweat of old Kentucky from every pore. By this time are all awed into submissive sileuce. .. "The Mother or Presidents." The political ascendency of Virginia and the activity of her leading men, are strikingly exemplified in tbe fact that in no iustance has there been a Presidential election, ex cept once, in 1328, when there was not one of her native born citizens in the field either for the first or second office in the gift of the people. Tbe exception was when Jackson and Calhoun ran against Adams and Rush. It is estimated by somebody that the clergy cost the United States six million dollars per year; the criminals, twelve millions ; the dogs, ten millions ; and the lawyers, thirty-five millions. Laugh at no man for his pug nose you can't tell what may turn vp. THE FARM The Ciardrn Tlie Orchard. Dr. Darlington on the Use of Lime. " The quantity of lime per acre which can be used advantageously varies with the condition and original character of the soil. Highly improved land will "bear a heavier dressing than poor laud. On a soil of medium condition, the usual dress ing is forty or fifty bushels per acre. A deep rich soil or limestone land in the great valley, will receive seventy to eighty (and I am told even one hundred) bushels to the acre, with advantage. Ou very poor land, twenty to thirty bushels per acre is deemed most advantageous to com mence with. It is usually repeated every five or six years, i. e., every time the field comes in turn to be broken up with the plow ; and as the land improves, the quan tity of lime is increased. The prevailing practice here is to plow down the sod or lay in the fall or early in the spring ; har row it once, and then spread the lime, (previously slaked to a powder) preparato ry to plowing the field in corn. Every field iu rotation, receives this kind of dressing; and as our farms are mostly di vided into about half a dozen fields, the dressing, of course, comes once in six years, more or less, according to the num ber of tbe fields. Some enterprising far mers, however, give their fields an inter mediate dressing on tbe sod, after they come into grass ; which I consider an ex cellent practice, tending rapidly to improve tbe condition of the land." In speaking of the state in which tbe lime is applied, Dr. Darlington says ; " It is usually obtained in a caustic state from the kilns, deposited in heaps in the fields where it is to be spread, and water sufficient to slake it to a powder is then thrown upon it As soon as slaked it is loaded into carta, and men with shov els distribute it as equally as possible over tbe ground. It is generally considered best to put it on the ground wh 1 fresh, or warm. a. r" ' d certainly easier to spread it equally while j YEAR XII....WIIOLE NUMBER, 624. At $1,50 Per in a light pulverized state, than after it gets much wet with rains. I am inclined to think, too, it is better for the land ap plied fresh from the kiln." In answer to a question put to bim as " to what crop lime is most advantageous ly applied," and " at what seasons," Dr. Darlington remarks : ' It is usually applied, a already inti mated, to the crop of Indian corn, in the spring of the year. Occasionally it is applied preparatory to sowing wheat in autumn. When used as a top-dressing, on tbe sod, it is generally applied in the fall say November. The prevailing im pression is, that it is most advantageously applied to the Indian oorn erop ; aud hence tbe general practice. But the truth is, it is highly advantageous at any and at all seasons, and our shrewd old farmers have a saying: Get your lime on for your corn crop if you can but be sure that you get it on the land some time in tbe year." The mode of spreading and incorpora ting the lime, he describes as follows : " The lime is spread as equally as possi ble over the field, and tbe ground is well harrowed iu different directions, in order to incorporate the lime with the boil." Farmers' Work for Early Spring. March, fitful as it is, briugs its duties. If the frost should get out of the ground, tbe latter part of the month, you can commence trenchtxo the garden. Do it thoroughly, and work in horee manure, if you have it, to the depth of two feet Tbe temperature of the soil is raised by the fermenting mannre, and all excess of mois- the seeds. t'i.:.... M. ,t,. fn, Mrl . ,....... Jnian A.til Kflll' i i, ' . crops, suu iof a KVWU u si." - ' crop the same season. Seed Sowiso, quite likely, will be pos sible the last of the month. Radishes, in as early a. the ground is in a condition " " broadcast as equally as possi u. l.j M..t- ..- .-..t 1.1. .n ! "We, reserving a small quantity of tha i r . v, sow early. Peas may also be sown tbi I nn.tli Tha 17-ii-lv .TunA ftiwl TVinca A 1- IUUUIHi ' J bert are good varieties. Onions may be set out for rarripes,ar.d for seed. This is a good crop to grow ' with carrots sowing the latter between j the rows about the first of J uoe, and leave I the ground to tbe succession crop. ! Cakti.no out Makers should be at 1 tended to this month. It is an advantage ' to cart out upon the frozen ground at least ! a part of the barn cellar stores. Make the beaps large, and cover tbem with loam, mixed with plaster of Paris to prevent j evaporation. Do not spread tbe manure ' until you are ready to plow it in. Cellars and Oct-houses should now be attended to. The filth and waste mat - 1 ter that has accumulated from tho winter store of vegetables should now be remov- I ed. Sort over the potatoes, reserving the i the middling size for seed. Sell what you 1 have to dispose of. Clear up the poultry bouse. Tut eleau fresh hay tntathe nfsts. , evaporates from tbe surface, and they aro Feed the poultry with cooked vegetables, , ready for the table. The result willaston mixed with warm meal, aud a little fresh J i,u those who try it for the first time, and meat occasionally. they will never return to the old method Clover Seed can be best own toward 0f boiling them with the tkins on." the latter part of this month, when the snow is gono, and before frezing nights are over. Sow it upon the sliphtly frozen cround, on a calm morning. The surface j of the soil is then cra.-ked into crevices, j into which the seeds fall, and when thaw i ing takes place they are covered in a most ; perfect manner. A crop of clover plowed j under when it is at its full prowth, or just at the time of blooming, w one of the. cheapest and best fertilizer. Plaster can also be sown this month upon o.a pastures, , p. ...wuKr. . i i . i .i . n.. so.Is that show its eUects, it is a procaine investment ! Implements AsnTooLf. Let all tliee ' . - . : i n j j e i ' in orJer- 1,0 U now- If ou ,:,rt n? : na ov itniniin ntrftin nn,i srfs ir pvurrniuti' good tools, bny them, aud have toem al. rcad- Sheep will need special attention. Let mem nave a piacnoi snciivrfiu .imiuu: : can resort in the cold storms iu this month. Give them an occasional lutrs of root? cut Cue, or a little grain. Yocno Stock should also have partic ular attention. The first year of an ani mal's life is its most important year. Do not turn them out into the wooui or P - ' - tures, as soon as the snow is off. There is very little nourishment in the shadow of a snow bank. Milk Cows. Good food and plenty of it, brings large fine calves, udders, and brimming pails of milk in summer; meal and cut feed with roots will pay. liuEEMXO Sows. Take care of tbe ex pectant mothers. Give them plenty of room, and keep them in good thriving condition. They should not be allowed to fatten. A little animal food occasion ally, and a little salt in the feed is of ad vantage a short time before they drop tbeir voung. Look well to the atyes. Working Oxes. Tbey must have full feed in order to perform the labors. A pair of cattle in full flesh make light work of plowing. l'LANTisa T' '5 ,b """"a "'is month, and get the bones and compost. A bole six feet across and two feet deep, will pav better than any sma!!" Loir. If Year, always is Adtanck. you can find bones readily, put in a bushel to a tree, scattering them in with the com post They will pay interest for twenty years to come. Plant some shade trees this spring without fail. Hiri.no Labor is attended to this month. Be sure and have enough of it Farmers err in employing too small a force. If they bave work enough, it is just a good economy to hire three men for tua season, as it is to hire one. Secure the best labor, even if you have to pay mora for it HOT REUS. Some gardeners make their beds -m tha level ground, but it is always safest to make them in pits from eighteen inches to twe feet deep ; in order to do this, tha pits should be dug in autumn, or a heap of dang may be deposited on the gTOund intended for the beds before the frosts set in, and good earth may be obUiaed from the pits without difficulty. Tbe frames should be made of giol sound planks ; the back plaaks may ba two feet wide, an 1 the end ones may be so sloped as to make fifteen-inch plauk da for the front A fraoi ealcuUted for four sashes, of three feet iu width by six in length, as above described, should be near ly tuin.-a foet long, anl about six broil at the to,-. The frime being sat over the pit, anl properly fatened. fresh dung BhoulJ bo spread regularly in the pit to the depth of twenty or twenty-four inches; if tbe dung be in a good beating condition, cover it six or eight inches deep with mould, then ! 'J on the Esne8 an V10 t&e e& froni the inclemency of the weather. In two or three days the rank steam will pass o;T; .... . . I : t.-n 1. MMMim tn stir tha m-vi! 1 1 L Wilt lULli wo u.... ..j before the seed ba sown, to prevuut tha growth of yonng weeds that may be ger- ! minaiins then sow the seed either in shal- ; warm mould to b sown lightly over tha , , , , -. secLBruIyman's Gardiner' Assistant. How to Cook Potatoes. Potatoes will, in a month, become with crcd, or raxy, aa J wben the cook does no fully understand how to Vil a potato and, few of them do tha favorite vegetaMo falls very mnch in onr estimation. A paper in yankee land, bas published a :ecret iu boiling old potatoes, communicated to it ty a " ermont woman, who, it s;:y-t, j " has surprised ns by making old potatoes : as good as new, dry, mealy, and fresh, and ; disclosed to us the process she puts tliem, 1 through to effect a desirable result Tha j potatoes are pared and put to soak in coM ; water from four to six hours ; then dropped . into water which is already boilitig au ' essential point; and a little salt added ti i mter improves them. Take them from , the fire the moment they are done; pour 1 off all the water, let them stand uncovered , iu the kettle over the fire till the water We hop? all our housekeeper readers, will try this plan prove it and enjuy the luxury. Cheap and Excellent Candles. The following receipe I bave tried twice, and liud it ail that it is cracked up to be. I bave no doubt that it would have been worth more than J20 to me,if I had Viowu i it twenty years ago. Most farmers have ISUl.US Ol Millie Ul Uil.J cm be made into good candles at a trilling ...?. e . 4 .i;..- ...... .. -i.:..i. expense. j fc bn(h falw anJ krJ j, t fc Mm I staiiding tii j heat Lost, aul burning quito as well, and eivinu as good liuut as t.iiiov . . . . j ones. DirtUioiis t-r makiDi: goo 1 can- die, from lard :-For 11 lbs. of lard, take j jr of-fallpu,rP) ,nJ oue lb. of ,;um . I mix and pu'.vt-riz ", then dissolve thum ia j j f b ., WilUr;ronr tUa C0IU. pi'uud iuto the lard before it is rpito all niel:cd; ttir the whole until it boi!; skim off what rises; let it simmer U'i!il the wi. ter is all boiled out, tr till it ceases t i tLruw oiT steam ; pour tlT the lard as 0n as it is douc, and clean the boiler while it is hot. And it the caudles are to be ruu j iiu uny commiDce immediately ; if M U dipped, let the lard cool first to a cuke, and then treat it as you would tallow. Sprits of Turpentine for Ulack Kntrt. Mr. A. K. Porter, la a communication, ly bim in the Sew England Farmrr, re commends th application of spirits of tur pentine as a remedy for the Llaei knot in plum trees. lie siys that a friend ft nsp.l it in tha following manner. He was at work in bis garlen and abaut to cut down a pluiub tree t!-. :t wai h-ilf cov ered with bUct knot '-Havin-" si: 1 ha "some spirits of turpentiue on band, ho bethought hinwIf to make an expeiiuier.t on this tree bci"'ro destroying it. He cut the knots with a sharp kuifc down to tha wood, and made a thorough application to turpentine. Months passcd,the tree lived, liiJ well, aud u.3 black knoi was destroy, ed. Since then he bus been very sueecsa. fill with thin remedy, and so have o'.hfiJ who tare fcll jwcd bis evr 'Is.' was pwuvipiw ii'iucp'j