CHRONICLE LEWISBUEG BY O. N. WOIiDEN & An Ijcdei'en'pext Family SIjc (Cl)ronic 1c . FRIDAY, JIM. 20, IMG. To the Editors of the Lewisburg Chronicle : Mmai. EiiiTomi : We lucked in your laM paper lor a proper rehuke of the premeditated insult of the "Argus" to those who aitei'nVd the gathering in University Hall in conilem- r . .. - .. .., i.irnTk tie lh Klai' Power upon the infant Slate f Kanas, ai.a upon the person of ihe truly II. n. C. Sumner. 1 Hrjg and dwell with infinite conipla Ilul we were disappointed in our expectation, , ' .. . ... and therefore ask for a short space to einrc-s 1 tency upon her greatness. Nations, like nr opinions thro' vour columns. The ri;us Mated that -Some ma'iciotis per-ons circulated the story that there would he a mt&er show at the Hill. This a.s a matter of course was not correct." Well.sirs, the phrase used is without doubt used reproachlully.an.t it -not comet inqiiir.'-) ' (the people concerned very naturally inqini vhv was it endorsed hy publication ! It it had been uttered only orVly and privately hy : "some malicious persons, what nmsi they he who three days afterwards publish an admit ted untruth and send it on the wings of ihe wind through the public press 1 If il he "ma-; iTcious" to invent, what must ,. be to ?,ve . currency to, a false, opprobrious charge ! We . are inclined to believe that the -malicious" i inventors of the stupid stigma were ventrilo quists, who made Ihe very statement which they deliberately promulgate! Or, if it were rver ottered, either as a joke or maliciously, it need not be reprated.when known not to be I true j and hence we charge that the responsi- I bilily is not shifted upon an unknown 'scape- I Boat, but is incurred by those who endorse it ; by putting it in print for an evident purpose. Having participated in said meeting (which by the way was far the most orderly and im-1 posing political demonstration ever witnessed in our community.) we beg leave to add that it was no "nigger show," but that the actors nd spectators were at least as white both in , character and complexion as either of the ; gentlemen who spread the miserable charge. ' Me saw no "nigger mere, unless u.se oe . ,; fa , undul:lti ,Le fields arc enclosed thus designated who year by vearcarrv out the " wishes of ihe slave Power, apologize for Op-! with rank, bushy hedges,along which trees pression, and are so hide-bound by party fet-1 are growing in a sort of careless order, iru ters lhat they flare not indulge one generous . , , impnlse or breathe a wish for the freedom ,.f I""" " landscape a sort of grove onr brother man everywhere. We, however. ' like appearance. The merry month of May did see the beloved Governor of our good I old ; can make ,he nonieli,gt country l00k hap-liberty-lovingCommonwealth, and we did hear J r his spontaneous and noble defence of those py, but England needs not its vernal orna riglus for which our fathers struggled and suf-1 in,.Bts ; eucQ a sceuery, even bleak De ferei. We did see presiding over the meeting ' .... ., . the honored head ,'t our University, assisted "ber must have its charms, , hilst in by gentlemen who have honorably represented ; Ireland a farmer's life seems the most un our country in the halls of the Gen. n.l As- durable, here it is the very picture cf sembly. in the State (senate, and on tne floor of ; Congress. We saw the educated Professors, ! independence and comfort, pearly all the with their families, and most of the indents, j Irih land-owners live in England. They there. We did see the Ladies of the Female j ..... . c . , . Institute, and in addition five or s hundred let tne,r ""mease farms to speculators.wbo x the most intelligent and accomplished l.a- practice unscrupulous extortion upnn the dies ef the town and vicinity. We saw Cler- peasanfli j sub-letting. They give them cvnien. Farmers, Mechanics, Merchants, men . . , , ... . ... who earn their daily bread by their daily toil, miserable apologies of dwellings, in which who ated with the meeting. A respectable a Buffaloe Valley farmer would scruple to onTpany from neighboring town played j . . . . . . VWAniL1" "nigger" music. Solemn prayer was)lT.5Wo the Majesty on hirh lor proiee i al ffWdance iu these troublous tunes. A speeVivW supassing power was delivered in manly style and sustained by incontrovertible documentary evidence, advocatin the risbis both natural and constitutional of White Free men, and vindicating our fellow citizens fn.m Peno'a and elsewhere in their lawful and lau dable efforts to found a Free State upon the broad and fertile plains of the Ka where "niggerism" should never vex or enre ihem. ! These were the actors these the spectators. ! The only "nigger show" was in the editorial columns of the Argus, whose gratuitous insult j was to a people who have ever been generous and friendly to Ihem. Truly, what a degrading influence has Party Fealty, when it prompts to the utterance of a "malicious storv" when ! il is a falsehood and designedly a slm !! i W e pass to notice the plea pm in t.y the Editors, that we should noi judge the whole Souih by ihe conduct of Mr. Brooks. II .we- ver plausible this may appear as a g. neral proposition,!! can miiue urgeu in ine presrni case. Atl the Southern Congressmen shield him thus far; the Southern newspapers, pub lic meetings, and even Governors applaud his flagitious act; and we may therefore truly sav lhat he did but act out Slavery despotism, and is fully endorsed by the South. One word as to ihe resolutions adapted hy the meeting. The Editors say they "reiterate the sentiments of the Republican partv." We have never seen the Platform of that Party, but if it accords with ihose resolutions it will receive the cordial assent of all the Northern Whigs and of tens cf thousands of Northern Democrats. Would it be asking too much of the Editors to publish those resolutions for the information of their numerous readers " MAN V. Rrniarkt. If we had two daily papor, we might pay attention to many more subjects than we can find room fur in our 1 England is in temperance where the Uni miscellaneous sheet. We dislike contro- ted States wero twenty years ago. The versies, and since our local contests were j bar is the most prominent thing in all the decided have endeavored to avoid them. hotels. You can seldom dine without The expression which arouses our corres- pondent, did not surprise us in lact, we are surprised at nothing in that sheet since 1 it declared the Chronicle a "ymfUy NEUTRAL paper. j igger-worsbiping is its synonym for liberty-loving. Where U.S. troops can not be had to "crush out" freemen where the pistol and gutta per-, cha canes can not be used to frown down ft .. w I - - it freedom of speech there epithets and degrading comparisons like the above will be used, plantation-fashion, by those who opeily boast of their political affinity with slave-owners and slave-drivers ! "llcbcla" and similar degrading epithets were cm ployed by the friends of King George in '76, precisely in the spirit they are by the friends of Pierce, Douglas & Co. in '50. As to the endorsemunt of Bully Brooks by the South it is true we know of no Buchanan paper which condemns him ; but it is right to say that several religious and independent journals, and also half a dzen American journals, have had the courage to join Senator Crittenden and CoL Benton in denouncing the dastard. "Many" will have "a good time" indu cing the Argut to copy any Republican declaration of principles and aims. It may continue to retail the wild rant of Garris on ian ultia Abolition ists, aud falsely try to identify them with the sober Republican party; but when it fairly gives the party's views, we shall also expect to find in it mom news from Kansas which does not throw all the blame of the civil wax upon Ft Stat settlers I J. R. CORNELIUS. ani News Jouk.vaL. European Correspondence, Corresl-ODdelife of the Lewigtturg Chronicle. London, May 23, 1856. The English, like the Americans, are somewhat given to national vanity. They Lave become so accustomed to their natio n.l nre. that thev cease to pain them. J ncy are uauuuauy unuu iu iucir mv o individuals, can not "see themselves as others see them." England has sores which her political physicians can not heal, diseases which all the virtues of her uuri- "'cd M"g"a Cliarta can not reach. She has abolished Atrican slavery ill her tcrri- . gbe g t(J hcr Irijb . ' r Bfiteii nutw tltti kemtilanee of frweiloin. ami ' t,8rmits petty tyrants to lord it over her 1 , . . .. . . most generous and loyal subjects w.th unblushing cruelty. A ilh a national debt , ,...! - thousand millions of Hounds J sterling, equal to fivo times as many dol lars, her people must submit to an enor mous taxation. The latter is about the ouly sore that extorts from them an occas ' ional groan. Still, Great Britain is one of I the greatest countries in the world great in her mineral, moral and intellectual resources, great in her history, great in her present power, and has the prospect of a great and brilliant future. English couutry-sccocry is surpassingly beautiful. The earth's surface is mostly the landlords in England, thus draining the money from the country, and subject ing it to a periodical impoverishing pro cess. Hut in England it is fa otherwise. Here, their very appearance is an eloquent reflection of their prosperity. Florid, oval, sleek-looking gentlemen, facsimiles of English couutry 's(jiiires,wlinse faces speak good wishes tocverybody.and whose bodily : dimensions are an honor to the soil that . supports them. Men that will leave their j mark in any crowd. In Ireland, farmers ; have a meagre, pi.iful appearance, approa- i ching more nearly to the shape of a lino, , the F..,uuol 0f a roj. Ijere tliey approach , ' ' ' ' , the t-hape of an egg, the symbol of sub- stauce. To be sure, some of them complain of hard times. Oue whom I met, regretted the conduct of American farmers, who glut the British market with their corn. He Faid be had lost a thousand dollars a year . fjr the last two years. Out even this was to his credit, for it requires a farmer of some calibre to endure such a loss. The English generally look remarkably healthy. Both sexes seem to retain the flush and vigor of health far beyond the noon of life. Whether this be owing to good habits, good climate, good living, or all together, I am unable clearly to ascer tain. With the sterner sex, I think wiuc and beer are entitled to some of the praise. having glasses beside your plate.and being asked what you wish to dnnk.taking itTor j granted that every person will drink some kinJ of iiq,lor. Almost every hotel has a ! i rootn furnished with tables and pipes, , where you can find a group during all nourg of the day, quaffing their favorite beverage in copious potions. In making friends, esncciallv amnntj commercial and ... . . . . . . legal gentlemen, a person is constantly assailed by the bottle. The lower classes carry the bottle with them, and in travel ing on tbe cars tbey would sometimes urge me,with an importunity worthy of a belter cause, to "take a little." Drinking here is not only connived at but approved of by the mass of profession Christians. But , - t j a withal, I have not met with many persons perceptibly drunk, which may be owing to their skill and habit in the art of drinking. The diet of the English is, generally, more simple than with ns, and witbal abundantly nutrient. Tbey have not such an endless diversity of dishes, and live not so much on the frothy exuberance of pas tries and desserts. Their climate is more uniform, not subject to those frequent and sudden transitions of beat and cold which often operate so fatally on the human system. Their sky possesses a remarkable facility to rain. Some one has aptly called it a weeping ty. Surely iu lach rymal nerves must be very excitable, for it rains often when there is no perceptible cause, and without the slightest prelimio ary emotions, to the great discomfort of unsuspecting travelers. LEWISBURG, UNION CO., PA., FRIDAY, I still remember how my heart kindled with indignation when I first read Dickens' description of the extensive and filthy use of tobacco in America. I then thought bis picture, an exaggeration, verging on falsehood, but I am now inclined to think that he was not very far from the mark. Tobacco is used with greater moderation in his country. Very few chew. In Scotland and Ireland, they snuff most im moderately. I saw a man take a pinch while sitting at the communion table, and an eminent Scottish divine consulted his box on Ihe pulpit during service. Tho box and the pipe are used to stimulate convi vial intercourse. Even among the better classes in Ireland, they still pass around the pipe of peace. Sometimes while a ..mi. nnnni.pci.a t n.nt llll KOniA ntlfl Wll ill r ... ..nuin hi emiibintr ntensil and nass it b --- r around, caeh one taking a whiff in his turn. In Scutlaud the box performs the same so cial office. As liurns has it, "Th tuntin ph1. w m'H An hautlnl nmuil i' tigbt uii will." The English are proverbial for their ex clusivencss. Tho Scotch and Irish are very accessible, but these are constitution ally unsociable. I met with happy excep tions, but these are not very numerous. These are non-conductors for the inter change of social sympathies. You can ride with them in the same car for a whole day, as yn-i vould with so many Egyptian mummies who.-" organs of speech had been palsied by IL3 hand of death for "000 years. io Carta iv use to 'ry mum. aucir social apathy is impregnable. Occasion ally you will meet one arouud whom flows a sort of mysterious dread inspiring atmos phere, that makes you feel uucomfurtable in his presence, and breathe more easily as soon as you get out of it In walking j through the streets of Windsor I was re peatcdly reminded of the characters in Sliak.spear's "Merry Wives of Wiudsor." I met with Fallstaffs that seemed to cor respond precisely with the original "Sir John," bundles of lustful self-indulgence, bloated, blubbering beer spunges, whom their merry friends of the other sex might easily have rolled iuto the river. Tbey grow indigenous all over England. Great Britain, on the whole, seems to be a happily governed country, Ireland al ways excepted. The difficulty with all good governments is to keep the golden mean, governing neither too little nor too much, for one is just as bad as the other. Governing power is the ballast of the ship of State ; where there is too much, there j can be no healthy progress ; where there is too little, the ship is in danger of being al8uea lo lucces ,u luu ' It has become fashionable for Ameri cans to speak of all European powers as beinir finlelv iiriheld bv bavnnets. What tfce condition of olncrf u ig . ,.. of Euanj. ller eub. j c : jecta don't need bayonets, and they would I be great fools to provoke tbctn. Why j these Englishmen discuss their rights as j freemen, aud denounce oppression,in their parks and parlors, publicly and privately, ! in a truly democratic style. If Parliament An1ni.9 nnon their rights, it is soon driven to a peuitent retreat by meetings and memorials, which it is wise enough to respect. The I'ress is untrammelled. The periodicals abound with talcut and critical acumen. They dissect the actions of publio men with unsparing rigor, aud hold them up to public execration or favor. The rights of suffrage are of course some what limited. Ouly those poscssing a certain amount of property can vote, but this is so small that few comparatively are excluded. The most discreditable feature of the British Government, most unworthy of so great a nation, is that which imposes the Bupport 0f tne Established Church upon Dissenters. It is little in keeping with lcr vt0(eci Ee!1i for freedom of conscience . hnmB unJ .br0.d. inland has nerne- O trated enough religious coercions and cru elties to furnish the whole world with prac tical illustrations of their enormity and folly. Though she has long since aban doned tbe fiendish policy of Henry VIII, that inclination of all that is detestable in human nature, she still deliberately retains a vestige of tbe old stigma, at which com ing iges will point the finger of abhorrence auc .-?orn. 1 auve just been here long enough to learn that the street arrangements of Lon don are an enormous tax upon the energy and patience of a curious traveler. But, "perseverantia omnia viucit; which be ing interpreted, you know, means that per severance will take a man over London. The lovely metropolis of Buffalo Valley makes no such exorbitant demands oa its visitors. There, if yon wish to see a friend, yott can simply turn a corner ot two and yon have him. But here I raafi must be fortunate if ie can reach a friend's ia less than four or five miles, and then not find h im. After being jolted about la cab, and crawling through narrow wind ing alleys to cross-streets confronting all the filth and vileoess flourishing there, be will require some nerve to1 attempt it a second time. But then, it would of coarse be tery silly to expect London to be as decent and desirable metropolis as Lew- is burg. iNAHAH. Rust of Arkansaw. Coward of the Capitol t Giant body stunted soul! Breaker of all honest law ! Back, we say, to Arkansaw! Oh, what valor, to waylay That pale scholar, worn and gray! Was it not a hero's deed To make the printer's temple bleed t There's a greater power than yours i Muscle rots, but thought endures ; There's a hand lhat will redress- Tis the power of the Press, And it stands above the law, "rving, Men of Arkansaw! Blush and cower 'tis but just. For your Slate is stained wuh Ruttf Sew Western Correspondence. Corraqioniieaoe ot the benbbarg Chronicle. Chicago, 111., June 6, 185fj. Dear Crbonicle Cbipngo is truly an enterprising and flourishing city a regular specimen of Young America's go-aheada-tivencss and may, we think, be justly styled the Maoio ClTT, for everything connecteoVwith it appears to have' gwie up as it were by magic. But a few years ago this spot, where now so extensive a business of every kind is carried on where now all is hurry, activity and con fusion was on3 wide extended prairie, very little known to any others than the red men ; here, where now stand these princely mansions these magnificent.tow ering palaces of the wealthy could then be seen but the few scattered cabins of the daring pioneers; in short, the little village of e;ghteeB or tweDtT Jear9 sga js B0W the beautiful and prosperous city of ninety or a hundred thousand inhabitants. Property here has increased in value with such astonishing rapidity, that per sous, who came hither not long ago with no greater expectation than that of gain h mMm of , for lheir fanliies find themselves suddenly become immense. Ijr withy ; and this, not through any hard labor or shrewd management on their' own part, but their wealth having been forced npoa them, in a manner, in conse quence of the increase in value of the lauds tbey were at first compelled to take up in order to pursue their respective occupa tions. Among such we find the early far mers, dairy-men, brewer s,and many others worth their tent and hundred! of thou sands; in fact, there are not a few in Chicago who can boast their million ; and altogether there are more wealthy men in this than in any other city of its size aud population iu the United States. As ex amples of this increase in the value of Uai we were to Jay ghown Bumerous otg which eight years ago sold for three or four hundred dollars each, and now are worth from 81500 to $3000 per foot 1 The city is situated on both sides of the Chicago river, at its entrance into lake Michigan, upon a plain sufficiently eleva ted to prevent its being overflowed, the streets are laid out at right angles, running nearly north and south and east and west, and are from two to five miles long,aflord ing a most beautiful sight from one end towards the other. Tbey are generally very wide ; in many instances are adorned with small grass plats and shaded with rows of trees placed between tbe side-walks and the streets, and in most cases the houses aro so built as to allow room for planting trees and shrubbery in front of them, thus serving very much to beautify the city. Being situated on so level plain and on comparatively low gjound, the city would naturally appear to be rather un healthy on account of the stagnant water in the streets and gutters, but this is about being remedied by their raising tbe streets by filling them up, and by digging sewers and drains. I started out this morning to see the 'elephants' of the place, and went first to tbe depot of tbe Illinois Central Railroad Company, a building of vast extent aud astonishing dimensions, surpassing every thing of the kind I bad ever beheld. It is built of large blocks of stone, called Athens marble, (from the place where it is obtained,) which very much resembles marble, is easily worked, and is very dura ble j and the roof is supported not by pil lars or columns, which would be very much in the way, but by enormous iron bars firmly and wonderfully arranged. The building was erected at great cost upon ground some distance from the main shore which has been "made" at immense labor and expense by hauling it thither from different parts of the city. The railroad here runs a considerable distance on the lake upon plies driven ifl, tbe Company not having been able, at least without pay ing an enormous sum, to procure the right of way along the shore. Hear this railroad depot, there is a large six-story grain depot of forwarding house, of which kind then are abont twenty in the city, in which grain is raised to tbe Uppermost story by means of steam eleva tors, and it there weighed, before it is shipped, oa scales capable of weighing five hundred bushels at time. Some idea may be formed of the grain shipped from this city from the fact that It ta Dot nnu sua! for one of these houses to load on an average one vessel per day carrying fre quently about 16,000 bushels each. The next buildings of importance visi ted were the Marine Hospital Merchant's fxohange, Covt House, and the Bioh JUNE 20, 1856. mond House, the last one just being built of Athens marble, which, in this instance is almost equal in appearance to the finest imported marble. We also visited the old Barracks, or fortifications, consisting of a brick maga sine and three or four log buildings, erec ted, about tho year 1812, for the protec tion of the settlers against the English and Indians, one of which was, subsequently to tbe war, used as a government Land office, but more recently was occupied aa a boarding house. These, we were sorry to see, were abeut being torn away in or der to make rootn for the extension of a street aud the wideniug of the river at that place. There were several cannon and cannon carriages remaining in these build ings, which appeared as if they had seen but few, if any battles. We had thought of giving yon some description of this giant city of the west, but that is impossible, aa it would be to give you a correct idea of the surprising energy and astonishing prosperity of its inhabitants. Already have the people of Chicago all tho comforts and enjoyments of our eastern cities, and everything else that could be desired. They are well sup plied with schools and churches their pri vate residencej,especially those along Mich igan Avenue, would grace any of our American cities -their hotels, such as the Fremont and the Richmond Houses, are equal to any in the land their manufac turing establishments are pre-eminently extensive their traveling facilities are numerous and they have all the advan tages of an able "editorial community" and an intelligent society: At tbe rate of growth and prosperity at which Chicago is no advancing, it ia difficult to say what she may yet become, however, certain it ia that at no distant day she can justly claim the name of "the New Tuik o h. U cial advantages are far superior to any of our inland cities; there are Said to be fourteen main,and upwards of thirty branch railroads approaching ber and pouring their tribute into her lap; and tbe farm ing region on her west, northwest, and southwest, is almost boundless in extent, exceedingly fertile, and so beautiful that it would tax the intellectual abilities of a Sbakspeare for description. This noon we bad a very severe hail storm of about fifteen minutes' continu ance, during which time bail stones fell of the size of common walnuts, or perhaps of a greater size. During the storm a gen tleman fooled a party of bystanders pretty badly by taking from a pitcher a lump of ice almost as large as his fist, and making them believe it bad fallen from above. Truly yours, &o. PHL elected for the Lewisborz Chronicle. Interesting Statistics 1. The number of Soldiers furnished by the American States during tbe Revolution, and the population of each State in 17 SO. 2. Principle battles of the Revolution, and their several dates. REVOLUTION ART STATES. Mo. of Soklivrs 1,4'J7 67,097 5,908 81,115'J 17,781 10,720 5,078 171,610 2,380 3,812 26,079 7,463 6,417 2,580 surK-sl Pop. id 1TN0. 141.8U1 475,257 011,110 28S.H1 840,120 181,430 431,373 New Hampshire Massachusetts, Rhode lslauj, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Penusylvauia, States now Free Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, ",3751 4'J 073 .9 ..Li North Carolina, South Caroliua, Georgia, States now Slave 82,518 49,345 1,565,500 Total 220,991 3,448.881 Free Slate Soldiers a iwuye 1 to II of pop. Massachusetts had 1 to 7 do Slave States, average 1 to S2 do South Carolina, had 1 to o3 do Massachusetts ALONE had 17,000 more Patriots in the Revolution than xth the six now Slave States, together. Mr. Sumner was right iu his rebuke of the frothy ebullitions of the South Carolinians, and no wonder they could only answer by a brutal assault for telling the truth. II. BATTLES OF THE REVOLUTION Where Sroglit. Mualh Vfr. Lexington, April, June, August, October,' December, January, August, September, October, June, August, March, July, August, January, March, 1775 1775 1770 1770 1770 Hunker UiUj Flatbush, White Plains, Trenton, Princeton, 1777 1777 1777 1777 1778 1778 1779 1779 1781 1781 1781 1781 Bennington, Brandy wine Saratoga, Moumouth, Rhode Island, Briar Creek, Stony Point; Camden, CowrxnSj Guilford, Eutaw Springs, September, The surrender of Cornwallia at York- town, October, 1781, closed the war; prisoners, 7,073. ata-The Sonth furnished a much larger proportion of Officers than of Soldiers,and in most of the battles at the South were Troops from the North and East. Wm. Over&ild Jr. of Easton is appoint ed Supervisor of tha Delaware Division, eioe Mr- Evans, dee'd. At 1,o0 Fer THE FATJM The Garden The Orchard. For the Leeuburg Chronicle. Chickens. As every farmer and poultry-raiser ought to have a clear idea of the best varieties of the Chicken, let me give you a sketch of them, beginning with the largest. The Cuittauosos are the largest vari ety of the chicken tribe yet known, and of a greyish white or striped color. Their flesh is rather coarse and dark, and serves bust for soup. They are good egg layers, but unsteady and poor hatchers. The Suanuhais are nearly ts large as tbe C'hittagongs, but are of a yellow er red or reddish-yellow color. They are also good layers as well as hatchers. The Chittagonge and S'uanghais are call ed so after certain places in Asia from whence they were imported into Europe and America.and how far to our advantage will soon appear. The Dokkiso chicken, so called affsr the town of Dorkiug in the county of Sur rey in England, where it abounds in great perfection, was originally of a white or yellowish white color.bnt is now, through repeated crossings, found of all colore. It is a long and large bodied, short-legged, and handsome variety, with five claws or toes on each foot, and two spurs on each leg of the male or cock. It is a great lay er of large eggs, od yields a fine flesh of or inclining towards a yellowish color. Tbe Poland varieryj so called after Po land in Europe, tbe place of its origin, ia a deep aud plump-bodied fowl cf a shining black color, with a tuft or crown of white feathers on the head of both the cock and the hen. Ii fattetis easily, and lays an abundance cf large eggs, and yields a flesh similar in quality pt rather superior to that cf tbe Dorking. The Poland hens are sometimes called "everlasting layers" on account of the great numoor or egj t.wk they lay. aud their disinclination to sit and hatch eggs, for tbey are apt to leave the hutching of their eggs to bent of other breeds. The DcTCtt variety, so called after the Dutch in irope with whom it originated, is smaller of size than the Poland. but has still longer plumes, so large indeed that their feathers ought to be cropped or cut off occasionally or they will get into their i i , i . , ! 1 T t ..... k L..J I eyes ana oiina ioem. im xsuwu mwu are also famous egg-layers. The Esolish oa Commo Dunghill fowl is of a middle size, and a white or yellow and sometimes grayish or dark col or, being the result of creeses between our European or American breeds, and omo regard it as the hardiest and most useful ot all varieties, as lays eggs .r.y, auu ... .... -. t t i - i i latrens easily, ma wueu pciiuibiBu u plenty of which is, air and exercise yields a flesh in me opinion oi manr, most delicate and high flavored of all tbe chicken meats. Their eggs are of medium sie. The darkeolored fowls are said to j be the hardiest and best of this var.ety, as the pure white dung hill fowl is the weak- est and lays the fewest eggs. The Game fowl is of an erect and rath- er small and slender form, and of a r.ch, Khowy color, particularly the male or cock, tne prevailing co.or . u.... .... s red, but it is offen dark-grey, mealy-grey or red-dun. This variety lays small and line flavored eggs, and yields a flesh that 1,880,331 is beautifully white aud of superior rich 69,908 0ess of flavor. But it is difficult to rear 81,812 ; .u:, ,ree,l on aecouut of their Duenaciuua " j disposition, which causes them to fight and ! uuut each cther a!most toon 18 theJ are out of the shell and teatserea. Ana bad boys and men eneocrage this mticnio - vous disposition. How true the sayings of Scrip' ure, "It as sport to a fool to do mischief!" The BanTAJI so called because it carte from the kingdom of Uantara in a, n the smallest of all me cnicxen trices, ana is remarkable for its grotesque appearance and being generally covered with feathers down to its toes, and of a pure white er black or oauftecn colof. It yields a deli cate flesh and its bens are good layers and nurses, and hence are useful to hatch tbe eggs of other hens, and also of partridges and pheasants: There are various other breeds of the chicken, but those just described aro con sidered tbe best and tenet profitable. The Chittagongs and Shanghais were so popu lar for a few yeas past, especially in our Eastern States, ss to have g-.ven rise Id a very great excitement ia their favor,ealled "the Hen Fever." But the farmers of those State are now complaing of its effects, for they tell us that the Chitta gongs and Shanghais lay far fewer eggs than tbe same number of our old and com mon hens nsed to do, so that many fami lies have not ouly raised these new breeds at aa expense of several dollars a pound, bat have even been obliged to buy rggs for their own family use. And hence our old varieties, such as the Dorkings, Po- landers and Common fJuoghill, are coming racidly into favor again, as they are found not only to lay more eggs, but foroisb a finer and richer flesh than the Chittagongs and Shaaghais so that tba Chittagonge and Shanghais have, like tbe Morus-Mul-titaalises, had their day. Oar own trie- - m Tear, always is Adtante. ties of thj chicken may,'loubtk'SS,bc muclt improved in size, beauty and excellence by judicious cross-breeding and manager inent. And if this be done, their posessor' need not envy his fanciful neighbor whose) heavier purse may euablj htm to purchase! Chiltagougs and Shanghais at enormoui prices. In conclusion I wsulil observe, be car' ful 1. That yon do not keep.if you live id town, too large a stock on band, (a dozed of full grown fjwls being enough for an ordinary family) an! r-Kiew it every year1 or second year, as old heoi are not as good layers as young ones. 2. That you have but one rooster for1 every dozen hens, and supply bis place with a young rooster,say every third year. 3. That you clean and whitewash tlicir roosts at least twi: a year,as this is neces sary fur their comfort and health. 4. That they have plenty of pure freU water to drink, and a sufficiency of lime; burnt bones, charcoal, ashes, aand, aud gravel to est, as these are necessary to cor rect acidity of the stomach and form the ' shells of their eggs. 5. That you give tliem aa occasional supply of animal food after the insect sea sou is over, as this will make them lay better. C. That you do sot feed them too much or strongly, or they will get too fat to lay, in fact so fat as to die. 7. That in fattening one or more sep erated from the rest f.-: thie purpose, yoit change their food every other day, be lhat food corn meal, oats, buckwheat, barley, corn, boiled potatoes, or whatever it may. 8. That none but fresh eggs are pnt under your hens for hatching. 9. That your hens are set hatching early in the season, as the early broods will, if well taken care of. generally de the best, and o. Tva yoor chicks an d young pul lets are kept ia a dry and warm place, especially in cold, rainy weather, as this is necessary for their life and vigorous health. Leisure Moments. Kortb'd Co., May, 1856. Hints for June. Should that fickle jade, the weather, array herself in summer garb, banish ta polar regions ber frigidity and wear a beaming, sunshiny countenance, constant attention to growing crops will be neces sity on the part of the gardener during the present month. The time to " lay down the shovel and the bee" will be past, and labor, steady and unceasing, become thj order of the season. While on the sub ject of implements, we would remind those using them, that poor t'.ols are dear though ; Tha iuppoted hy a m.nv Ia Ka en instrument in tliA ttin. j ruction of which linle mecuacicai Ul i n intrpnuitv is needed, should be nronerlv made, justly proportioned, neither too light nor too heavy. This is the more impor ted es von have to carrv it throoirh the d u is t0 be life(1 B thousand or mora M(J tQ(j Buch ia tha morning will attain the dimensions of a u Cmrrjing much d;amefi mMJ eleTer f,Uowi . f(J, beU;nJ if resiwMibilitv ia this res- pect. As the season is backward, much can be done towards having a full supply of vegetables, by the exercise of j'idicious forethought iu the selections of such va rieties of see I as arrive earliest at maluri- j fy This action must, however, receive i the aid of clean aud careful culture. The wcp),4 mU3t be feept d(,,0the insect en- 1 .m;es ejt.rminjt and nourishment for ; the knU gupri;c!j bountifully and at all iimet w: "n neeuva. rnouia me wut exhibh any cf the peculiarities of tha " heated term," it ia advisable to spply . , , r, , l .1 . 1 - , (fcij fooJ in yi form. Beets sown this month will ripen by winter. Tbey will be found more tender at. J less stringy than those planted earlier: If there are vacancies in the rows already up transplant or deposit fresh seed. The trnDp!anting of K.bbag!, oauli- fbwers, tomatoes, etc., can now be per- j rjrrr,ed quite readily. It will be found advantageous lo dip their roots into mud as soon as tbey are moved the moisturo thus obtained enabling them to better withstand heat The ground iu which all vegetables are to be replanted, should receive a thorough stirring, provided it is dry enough to pulverize freely through, the agency of the spade. Cucumber and melon vines need carei and watering lest the uags foreclose, and these luxuries take the form of invisibility. At the close of the menlh the plants will need hoeing and thinning; if tte ground is rich, three or four are sufacient lor a hill. . , , 4 Look over the orchards and destroy that warm's nests eradisate the grass and weeds that may be growing atound the) roots of young trees and your reward shall be " fruit in due season." Watchfulness) i required until the fruit ripens. Tue New York PyuiH says that there1 is a firm in that city the name of which is) Lay, Hatch & Co., and that tbe ekikf at presumed to all Shanghai