CHRONICLE LEWI RG SB BY 0. N. WORDEN AS ISDErEJIDEST FAMILY f ox ini uwuBcmo csuxicu. To tbe fcovcd ones at Home! Lived ones ! I think of ye When fir.1 my eyes behold The glowing tints of the morning sua From the radiant east unfold. And banish from the shrouded earth The gloomy, Ehostly msht O then 1 thinU of ye, loved ones! In memory so bright! Loved ones ! I think of ye When the sunbeams touch in pride The quiet, glistening face Of the Cedar't gentle tide ; And when Auroras goldeu rays In midday glow appear, 0 then I think of ye, loved ones I To memory so dear. Loved ones ! I think of ye When the sun is sinking low. And last upon the mountain tops Reflects his fading gluwj And when the twilight' sacred hour In stillness draweth near, 1 think of ye, beloved ones ! Your memory doth cheer. Loved ones '. I think or ye When wintry winds may Wow And all ihis proud and lovely vale, With t'ittany. shroud in snow; And when I view the rising height Of Twtey from afar. Thy memory, beloved ones ! Is like a golden star. Loved ones ! I think of ye When midnight's hour draws nigh. And stars sheil forth their silvery dikes In gladness from on high ; And when o'er all the firmament Grim darkness spreads her pall, Kind memory, beloved ones ! Still cherishes ye all. Loved ones ! though far away, Yet do ve think of me 1 Whene'er I bend the knee in prayer. Then most I tlunk of ye. And when sweet slumber seals my eyes. And drives away the tear. E'en then I think of ye, loved ones! In dreams so strangely dear. THE CimOMDLE. MOXD4Y, M.tltCII 1, " The King can do no Wrong." Throughout the Free States just now, there is a wonderful unity of effort among the Buchanan men to prevent all freedom of thought and action on the absorbing Kansas issuo. The following, from last week's Union Argus, is a fair specimen of the sentiments advanced : "Mr. Buchanan and his able Cabinet, com posed of the WISEST and BEST men of the , natioa, ae hot uiui to tan on so simple and plain a question as the expediency of admitting Kansas as a State t and that Demo crat who utn t.i oicn opinitm up against tieirt, must not only have great confidence in his own ability, but MUST Have &nr. OTHER OBJECT in view besides the peace and wel fare of Kansas and his country." Look at the letter and the spirit of the above 30 insulting to the manliness of every intelligent American and say if they do not betray tho very animus of old fashioned Toryism and Kingcraft? The truth is, Buchanan and his slavery-prop-tgating Cabinet are only men no wiser, but moro ambitious and less disinterested than the masses. They have a right as freemen to "set up their opinion against" President, King, or any one else, without being snubbed for their temerity by a party alare who controls a press, or denounced as acting from bad motives. Were the base and servile spirit of tho Argut and its kindred sheets embodied in the form .. , u: . f : Ot taw, tne rcienuess, . , Napoleon over the press and the speech of France, would be felt in America. But People will Tblnk J 'W. G. S." of llushtown, North'd Co., T n ' - , writes respecting m.L.Dewart s vote for ; the Kansas Elections Investigation, to the j editor of the Sunbury Gazette Yon tell vour readers that a majority of his nnnused to that voie. iSov, air. I ask you how you know that fact ? Do , you .appose .nav "3-" ': ' ! know so little ot utmocrauc y.u..., deny an investigation into irauu .mira u, . a set of unprincipled cut-throats who want to I deprive eight-tenths of the prople of Kansas of j the right lo form their own Constitution 1 That is plain talk.from an old fashioned j Democrat, who voted honestly for "Buch-! anan and Free Kansas," and who will rtmi, speah, and write, on that or any other question, despite the sneers and the anathemas of partisan editors or Cabinets. Thcro are tens of thousands like him, yet! More "GIFTS:" The following rare inducement" are copied from an "enter prising" Dentist's Circular, hailing from Bloomington, 111. : BENEVOLCXTIssTiTCTiox-.DrJ.rayne, Dentist, having once more opened an olbce in Uloomington.will perform operations on teeth at ereatly reduced prices. A beau tiful SILVER CL"t will be presented to the person having the greatest number of teeth otracted and a splendid UOLU WATCH will be awarded to the one having the 6nest aet of artificial teeth inserted. Teeth extracted for SI per duzea." jgyThis is about equal to tho achctuo of the "agent" recently in Lcwisburg who offered splendid premiums!!! to the lucky persons who should buy the most of his tx-tra-or-dinary Pills 1 (recommended, ke taid, by troops of Clergymen and Law yers in Philad.) "Levi J. North, the great circus rider, is the Democratic candidate for Alderman in the Third Ward, Chicago." Levi is a capital Leoompton Democrat ; be can turn a somerset as quickly as bis party ! Together tbey will "Wlrt rat ttvl torn aVint ana So jot s ana iroua, vbtJ turn about tha further South they Tho Turks have that 'tbe devil tempts other nun, but that ii! ; uin Jotspt !hc cWii.'' 1 R. CORNELIUS, NEWS JOURNAL. The Most Audacious Falsehood, j Mr. Green s U. S. Senate bill for the ; unconditional almission of Kansas under i the Lecotnpton Constitution, begins thus : j "Whereas, the people of tho Territory . of Kansas, by their representative! in Con- ventiou assembled at Lecompton j did ri Jnr themselves a j Constitution and Stale Government, re- j publican in form, and the said Convention j ' . . i - 1 1.1. has, in their name ana Otiiaij assea ine : Congress of the U. S. to admit the .terri tory into the Union," e. We take it upon ourselves to say that there was never a fouler fasehood a more black and blistering lie penned, than tho foregoing 1 The Lecialaturo which called tho Le- compton Convention, it is well known.was j not elected by tho people of Kansas, but j of Missouri. Tho Convention itself was i not elected by tho people of Kansas only a small portion of her people taking any part, and must of the votes under a fraudulent apportionment being from non citizens. The people of Kansas at a fair election held on the 4th January,caU ed by an honest chosen Legislature, gave 10,000 majority against that Lecompton Constitution. That Legislature has sol emnly protested against said Constitution, as not the set nor the choice of the people of Kansas, and has declared itself in favor of tho punishment of any citizen who shall attempt to force it over tho heads of the people ! In face of all these facts, the assertion . that thc people of Kansas ask Congress : for admission under that Constitution, is a palpable fasehood an unblushing 1 fit only for the last net tn the drama which has been bad faith, deceit, and oppression from its inception. Sevk.v Witnesses. George Bancroft hH JLt th. Anti Leeomnton'meetine in ! that city, and in so doing presents seven witnesses against Lecotnpton, as follows : ; ery over the free territories of this llepub The circumstautial evidence of the Le- lie. compton Convention ; tho Kansas Press ; I Resolved, That the proceedings of this the Kansas Delegate in Congress; the so- j Convention bo signed by the Chairman ries of Kansas Governors four in one aD(j Secretary thereof, and that tho same year ; the Kansas Legislature ; the Kan- be b,isbcd ; aU lbe -imnan of this sas People. All, all, he maintains and : ,..-. P , . . . . ' '. . n , Sinto fnnndlv tn the cause of freedom. with truth, declaro that the reopie 01 , Kansas rt'iect the Locomnton Constitution. ! - fTh. Kansas Senate, after rejecting the hill oassed bv the House of Deleeatcs.im-1 posing the penalty of death upon any offi cer acting under the Lecompton Constitu tion, unanimously adopted the following resolution : "Iiesolceft, That in the event ot such ad- ilC' l.c ' ' , & .. - - misioc. we. in behalf of the people of the ; Territory, as reflecting their fixed and un-1 publicaii9 of the State consulted with some alterable determination upon this subject, iofthe pr;nc;pai Anti-Lecompton Demo will view the same as a declaration of, . , r, . ,. . , , . ... f war; and relying upon the justice of our who are bound to ns by their sympathies ! iinitnii ipnnrrrn ni hiiiinb : and interest, both East and West, wo will j co into the fight, despite tho dispari tv i our position,for extermination or success. WnAT Douglas Sats. A Kansas correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette writes as follows : One of our prominent Free State men, who has just returned from Washington, had several long interviews with Douglas while there. He states that during ono of them the following dialogue took place : JTmsa! .Vm. There is one thing, Judge Uouulas. hich you should clearly under , Kansas.intcnd to use every j Lecompton Constitution. But, if these all regular ana leen menus iu imu. fail, and the Administration persists in forcing the infamous measure upon i us contrary to the wuhcs of nine-tenths of ' J ' not tulmf , the out. nfrc We shaI1 not stop t0 think of the Union.or anything else. We will fipht the Jlissourians.tho devil.or the United States troocs. Douglas Or COURSE, YOU WILL TOO OUGHT TO I New Anti-Slavery Book. We learn that an octavo volume of 450 pages, from the pen of Mrs C.W.Denison, thc popular authoress, is now in press, and will bo im mediately issued in New York, by A. B. Burdich, 8 Spruce street. It is called "Old HErsr," and will contain ten orig inal illustrations. A friend is already cn- gaged in dramatizing the work, for popn- lar representation. It touches on some features of slavery not developed by Amer- ican authors, and bids fair to have a wide circulation in tho Free States, and in Eu - Mr. D n believe accompanied busbaud in bis official sojourn io the her West Indies under the Administration of Pres. Pulk, and we suppose understands tho Slavery question, in its domestic rela tions, practically. sb"""T. C L," in behalf of an associa tion of New York Literati (doubtless in some Grub street attic oners to give "3 an editorial on anything desired, for So per column! Well, we propose a condi tional bargain: write us a column weekly, for a mootb,showing that every delinquent patron of other days should "pay up," and if it prove 50 per cent efficacious, wo will pay 810 a column ; if not efficacious to that amouDt, nothing Joke. A New Yorker sends us, as an evidence of the"iroprovcmentof the times," a lot of advertisements worth 30 or $10, for which be odors a batch of brass rings, galvanized "gold" pencils, pictures, and a magazine all worth about 85 to any one who wants them. He must think country papers are bard np to bite at eieh tempt ing baits ! LEWISBDRG, UNION CO., PA., FRIDAY, Ullioil MoVCIIlCIlt. . Pennsylv'a Republican Convention, Convention of Delegates representing tue c;ry 0f Philadelphia and many of the conntjCsof this Commonwealth, assembled n . Ho,cl irarriliuurg on Monday, oo . The Convention organized by appoint- - T .. ....... ri.tiPB Pan nf T 1. II- mg juun i.-nr., .-.t , phin Co., Chairman, and UEft.ij.KINO, ot , Cambiia Co., fcceretary. Various propositons were discussed be fore tho Convention, nil of which were fi nally referred to a committee of seven, and tho Convention adjourned till half past eight in tho evening. After a full and free interchange of opinions among tho delegates, the follow ing Preamble and Resolutions were intro duced, read, fully difcussed, adopted and ordered to be published : Whereas, It is desirable that all oppos ed to the misrule of tho National Adniin-istr-t'.on,and especially to its atrocious at tempt to force Slavery upon Kansas against the will of the people, should unite at tho ensuing election on the State and County tickets, without regard to differen- i ccs of opinion on other subject, and with-1 out regard to the made or farm of effecting said object : therefore, j Resolved, That the State Committee, of . which Lemuel TodJ Erq., is Chairman, be j requested to call a Convention of all those -I,. (r.-,t... i wining 10 uuuu iu t:u. mc w, . to DC neia ai uarriauurg, ou auiue uaj uuv Danio is Tommy uoyie, anu i want papa oorK.r ii.. it firo of Jiy tL j i tc tii dinner." The hunting Rcsohol, That such call should distinct- j party ,t jaat found him.when one wrapped ly state that, in thus inviting, no individ- j h;m p ; warm blankets, mounted a fleet al or party is expected to sacrifice any . horse, and took him to his agonized, dis . . . . . principle, nor to approve 01 any principle i of thoso with whom he acts, saving "n;y , earnest and rrac"'cal P1 desjnti.m and the extension of human justico and right. aX A. FISHER, CUirmam. Geo. S. Kino, ixcretary. Washington, Feb. 23. The action of the Republicans assembled in State Con- vention yesterday at Uarrisburg, Pa., is i udicious. I learned from a genie- deemed man who was present that the loading Ke- crats ociore ine vouveuuuu Convention. su a r - i that they would not proceed to tako any scti0n against the Lecompton Constitution as Republicans, but adjourn sine die, with instructions to their State Central Com. mittee to call a Convention, at an early day, of all those opposed to the Lecomp ton fraud. This will be done, and thc Convention will, crohablv, bo held some time durinc the last of Juno. This ae- tion of the Recublicana meets the wishes of tho Anti-Lccompton Democrats of , ing his advertising during the dull sca Pcnnsvlvania, and is viewed by the Anti- i son, being interrogated by the editor in Lecompton Democrats of the House of Representatives from Pennsylvania as a wise movement in tho right direction. Evening Post. Snyder County, Organizing. Pursuant to notice, the American Re publican County CoromUt.ee mot in Mid dieburg, tho County Seat, on Tuesday, tho 23d Feb., and Resolved, That the Party stand as firm as they did in the days of VTebsteb and Clay. Re solved,Tht out principles arc thc same as they were then. Col. Jerk. Klecksep. of Centcrv'e was appointed Chairman of the committee 5 and Jacob Aurand of Middleburg, Sec retary. A Patriarch Gone. The Bnnesdale. Democrat notices the deatn at iiinion, Wayne Co., P.., on the 12th nit , of Ml. j chael Grennell, aged cite hundred and six yean. A native of Saybrook, Ct, he 1 was a soldier of the Revolution, and csca- ; ped unharmed. Settled in Wayne county j in 1S23, whero be leaves three children born during the Revolution. He was a long time a devout and consistent member of the Baptist church, and shared largely in the confidence and respect of his fellow citizens. Ono grandson, (Judge Virgil Grennell) signed the present Constitution of Pennsylvania, and two great grandsons 1 virnil M. Blandinc and Mvron Grennell) i v . . . .t-r- t were students of the University at Lowis bnrg. He lived to see the population of these then Colonics increase from abont one to thirty millions of people, and was followed to his honored grave bjjive gen erations of descendants. "How do you and your friends feel now ?" said an exultant politician in one of our western States to rather irritable member of the defeated party. "I sap pose," said tho latter, "we feci just as Lasarus did wben he was licked by dogs." "Sal," said one girl to another, "I am so glad I bare no beau now " "Why 7" anked the other. "'C I ein cat n many Msions as I !? Coplnl fur tbeCmoncu by IT Mint Utr-woos LINES...DY MRS. XEAL. rw ben thinking f my faults till my heart is tilt to break, llvw very many art the foes, how ft w the friends 1 make: And it ill, within my hidden heart, lintre nffrtiion lit ; The prictttu gift of Awma tore, i wtU know htm to prut. If tftn those I tort tin most, hart not on thought for me; Hftm ItyJriny up for kindly smiles, ind'Jfcmce I tne; Andthen thr pleasant words that rw upon my liphtire died, Leaving me mournfully to cnuh my $vrrtw and my pridr. J strir that J may not offrnd, I ehtck each mxrelest word, J seek to hide from oVter tan dark tales my own hart heard; J would nrtt err by a thought, add to another's grif. j-dKl.eiilwJaKylra,trfioijitrinjri. Adoflrnasyrti'jrfidmQodbrigiftriig9wildandc, R'icjI it, my togtmcst i aam to guard whattvr Imny y. A word which in itsdf it naught, it madt to Mem tmi-ind, Kindtho'U for ml m41 art duzjrl,r ttarifjr r-iiirj Jvi. lam Umrty, my lowly; my heart it throbbing fan And tttart art gathering in my eyu f-n-foliu that art fast; Ttt know I that by tufftring the fpirit it mad, purt. So I would Calmly bemr tht pain Old until I titould endnrt. TnE Lost Boy. On the last day of January, near Waterville, N. Y., a little Irish boy of five years was sent to call his father to dinner, and the distance being small he went into a wood, alone, and clad only in thin cotton. He lost his way. His father oamo home in the afternoon, when the alarm was given, and fifty men soon started to hunt for him, all that eve ning, and that night. The next day he wa9 foand, eight miks distant. He had Dccn seen, the evening before, standing still, as if glued to the earth was taken to a house, but could not speak or see. After reviving, and partaking of some f0Qit ue began to sob as if his heart would break, but all the kind strangers who had ... ,, ...ri ti it- i0Una him couiu get oui 01 mm, wa v -'J traded mother. Her joy at receiving Uim, unharmed, instead of his lifeless little corse, can neither be described or under gtooj Dy ny out a mother. Suicidk. Our Washington correspon dent informs us that one of these terrible eases of suicido which have of late become so common, forms st present a sifbject of conversation in all circles in that city. A man named James Buchanan, somewhat advanced io years, and dwelling, if we are oorreclly informed, in a tenement called the "White House," recently ent bis throat, while busied with a "gonge," which had been sharpened np to what is known as a menage. Only t few minutes conversing in tones of hilarity with seve ral Southern Senators, after which he went to bis workshop. In two hours af ter, the dreadful deed was dono. An in quest was held by Coroner Sam and a lot of Republicans, but tho most searching investigation failed to show what motive Buchanan bad for the rash aot. The jury gave as a verdict : "The deceased came to bis end by cutting his throat with a Mes sage, while laboring under an attack of political insanity." Xew York German Paper. Hint to Advertisers. The leading I partner in a house, who was rapidly posh ! regard to the pol cy, replied, Tbo very time of all other to crowd, sir; give us the field when few advertisers occupy it, and we caro not how hard the times are ; it pays us well at all time?, because we know bow far to go, but especially it pays us in times like the present, when the most of business men in onr line have taken their hooks out of the water, think ing no bites to be bad ; we are satisfied that nothing has kept us a constant run of trade for the last ninety days but push ing our notices through this dull season." Lord Paeon is said to have frequently told the following anecdote : A proud, lazy yonng fellow once came to an old man who sold broom-besoms at Buxton, and asked to have one on credit ; to whom the old man said : "Friend, hast thou no money ? Borrow of thy back,and borrow of thy belly ; they'll never ask tbee again ; I shall be dunning thee every day." Tns Best Place; for Babies. "Mother," said a little three year old, whoso nose had been "put out of joint" by tbo recent arrival of a baby brother, "Mother, if the baby Bhould die, would it go to Heaven ?" "Certainly, my child," responded the parent. "Then, I think heaven is the best place for him," was the affectionate sister's conclusion 1 The Xew England Courant Benjamin Franklin's newspaper in 1720, contained the following advertisement : "Jurt published and sold by the Printer kermf," ,,'Hoor-ED Petticoats Arraigned aud Condemned by the Light of Nature and Law of God. Price 3uV A courtly negro recently sent a reply to an invitation, in which be "regretted that circumstances repugnant to the ac quiesce would prevent bis acooptanco to the invite." A glutton continually adds fuel to the firo, and all the pbysio in the world can not extinguish it The man who was "movod to tears" complains of the dampness of the preroi r, and wishes ti b roord baci again MARCH 5, 1858. H A P P Y N A N C Y THE TRUE SECRET. There once lived io an old brown cottage so small that it looked liko a chicken coop, a solitary woman. She tended her little 1 1. n t . .1 .nn f . - Unirn Kt.A b , f , -ii . i was known evcrywhere.frotn village to til- , , , ...r x- l l2e. by the cognomen of "Happy Nancy." She bad no money, no family, no relatives; she was half blind, quite lame, and very crooked. There was no comeliness in her; and vet there in that homely, deformed, Jw body, the great Ood, who loves to bring strength out of weakness, set His roya! seal. "Well Nancy, singing again ?" would i the chance visitor say, as he lounged at . her door. "La ! yes, I'm for ever at it I don't I know what ceonle will think." she would I - .:t. say, wuu m buuuj siuuc. ..mi.- .u .ii .j... I 1, uy. LUC V 1. IUIUA, - 111. , 1 i -' - ' ' J do, that you are very happy "La t well, that's a fact, happy as the day is long." I am just as "I wish you'd tell me your sceret.Xon cy; you are all alone, yon work bard, you have nothing very pleasant surrounding you what is the reason you're so happy? "Perhaps it's because I havn't got any body but God," replied the good creature, looking np. "You see, rich folks like you depend upon their familcs and bouses ; d,' onf tn keen thinking of their business, of their wives and children, and stances, will be sufficient to plant one acre ' farmer who had a large piece of swampy then they're always mighty afraid of trou-! of ground ; and the product will ba equal ; bod, with a pond at a certain point of it. blcs ahead. I aint got anything to trou-1 in amount to that produced from twenty ; Ue sank a abaft of a few feet, at tha Wo mjaclf .Vs 7 . ' I leava j bushel, nf be whole or any right place, near the pond L e., be dog it all to the Lord. I think, well, if He i number of potatoes to each hill are plant-1 a hole through the potter's clay that un can keep this great world in such good : " (Sco S- Aricu1' Et'P- of 1?49' derlaid the soil. The pond soon disap- ordcr, the sun rolling day after day, and the stars night after eight, make the gar den things como np the same, season after season, He can certainly take care of such a poo, simple thing as I am; and so, ' , , .T.... ' you see, I leave it all to the Lord,and the Lord takes care of me." "Well, but, Xancy, aupposo a frost should come after your fruit trees are all in blossom, and your little plants out ; ; suppose " "But I don't suppose; I sever can snpposc ; I don't want to suppose, except that the Lord will do everything right. That's what makes you people unhappy ; you're all the time supposing. Now, why can't you wait till the suppose comes, as I do, and then make the best of it ?" .. .i. i v :,f- -- ... rprrain voo'll get to heaven, while many of us, wilo our wordiy wisdom, will have to stay out." "There you are at it, again," said Nan cy, shaking ber bead, "always looking out for soma black cloud. Why, if I was you, I'd keep the devil at arm's length, instead of taking bim right into my heart ; he'll do you a desperate sight of mischief." She was right We do take the de mons of care, of distrust, of melancholy foreboding, of ingratitude, right into our hearts, and pet and cherish the ugly mon sters, till we assimilate to their likeness. We canker every pleasure with this gloo my fear of ill j we seldom trust that pleas ures will enter, or hail them when they come. Instead of that, we smother them nndcr the blanket of apprehension, and choke them with our misanthropy. It would be well for ns to imitate nap py Nancy, and "never suppose." If you see a c.ouu, aou .suppose s go.ng m ecolding will follow. Do whatever yonr hands find to do, and there leave it. Be more childlike toward the great Father who created you ; learn to confide in His wisdom, and not yonr own, and abovo all, "wait till the tuppose comes and then make the best of it." Depend upon it, earth wonld seom an- Eden, if you would follow Happy Nancy's rule, and never give place in your bosom to imaginary evils. Salem Register. Lunatic HosriTAL. Thc Seventh An nual Report of the Trustees of the State Lnnatis Hospital, at Harrisburg, has been sent to us. Under the care of the Trustees, and the excellent Superinten dent, Dr. Cnrwen, the institution is admi rably fulfilling tbe hopes of its projectors. During the year 1857, there were admit ted 143 patients, discharged 1'26, leaving 250 under care at the closo of the year. Of the latter, 150 are supported by the public authorities, and 100 by their friends. Of the discharged, 25 were cur ed, 32 improved, 44 stationary, and 25 died. Tbe capacity of tho institution is for S00 patients, and this is regarded at the largest number that should ever be collected in one hospital. In view of this, the Superintendent thinks that it will shortly become necessary to erect an other hospital in tbe western part of the State. The report announces that the new water works for the institution have been completed, and admirably answer their purpose. Tho Atlantie Telegraph Company pub lish a report to the shareholders. It will renuite additional capital to pay for the 700 miles of cable now making. The report enloeises the seal of Cyrus W. Field and ;, .crv honefnl of success. Mr. Field his v.- .,..-nd Genera! Mancr of thf ISCU J I ---- aw , Coeip"y. UJAllUi-.iift - -J At $V0 Per Yfar, always is Advance. THE FAnlVI 1 j . ; The Garden The Orchard. n tm uirutt dnosiru. Potato Culture---No. 2. Many persons bsve felt a curii'y to ! knot? which part of the potato is the best . ' " , . for seed, whether its middle portion or its . , butt or seed end. And this eurioaity has i led to the following experiments. j In 1847, Charles Lee, of Yates county, ' i v v.-i. 1 . -1 ...1 -.L.i. ,..i.i..a .ml , , , , . ... e.i.-' T.n Vn,l..ni4 nrtii unit nii inttincrs Cif Ihn ; " 1 Long Pink Eyes and large Flesh Colored i varieties, in hills and in rows of equal j length on the same ground, manured and cultivated exactly alike, tbu, to wit : 2ioiiUiloBi riok-yw, a wholt r-'lmth htt do OO 1 , w 2 wrt mnnm do to do do Ikro Srvb-COlortil a ouut"a do 1 do do 2 teed onda 4o do An1 ho infirmo n thftt on harvesting the ' - - - - o Mnn K ... ..tnni.he in not fcaini? able I "- - - o ..... .. . . i to discover tne slighcst diiurence Detween j i o - the rows in any respect, either as it re-! 8iDniDK ' ,he ,0P d 8rftinB on,7 08 garded-the quantity or the quality produ ! lbird of thc trea eo,U ced by these different planting,. And be I mo'e t0 g0!d "iad f frBlt th assures us that he on each returning spring ' Poor i tne -t-fceuon and the income era repeated the same experiment and with j e n-f uld jITter- the same result nntil 1850, and then adds : J Drainage. 'Is will be seen that when the 'seed-; A correspondent of the Lancaster Tr end' merely answered for secd,that at least ' prrsi savs : "I see a gcod deal in the ag-two-thirds of this valuable esculent is ricultural papers upon drainage draiosga saved; and I may safely say that four ; of swamp hud. None of them seem to go i bushels of seed under ordinary circum- P- iuu ) So John Brown, of Belknap county, - Hampshire, planted one row of potatoes i "., " B, , 7 ,. . .,,P1M- lb0 (er couIJ not tricklo PinJ Pta' BD,J 7rZtl b&h PUer'' Q This WM nothing but seed-ends of the same potato , Mn . . . - .. v. nnt that tho seed ends being so cut as to retain about the one-third part of the entire po - tato. And he at the samo time and on the same ground planted two similar rows V.mi ino u.uj, w. H 1 the butt and seed-ends of the Peach Blos f t. i. . . Kalnv nil r, f nrt 11 -1 1 l.nffth I Vlth som potato. And the yield of potatoes in each row in pounds weight was as follows : Fink Eyes butt-ends 17 pounds. do seed-ends 170 do P.Blossom butt-rads 225 do do seed-ends 1S9 do Thus showing, that, in his case, the butt-end aced produced the largest yield. ! IXUM " j . .. ' much larger potatoes mau .uJ-. - seed end ones and also appeared to ripen 1 from about a week to ten days earlier than j the other a result corresponding exactly with a like experiment previously made by bim. (Seo U.S.Ag Rep 1S55 p. 218 ) . j ..w it r . n auiSm.j v j VrV in -ritina for the Dollar Newspaper Phil, recently flS7 savs he took twelve pound Pink Eye potatoes and after i dividing them into fix parcels as nearly as be could, cut and planted them as fol lows, to wit : No. 1, consistirg of two whole potatoes into two hills, one in each hill. No. 2, potatoes were cut into two pieces, crosswise, and planted half a potato to each bill. No. 3, potatoes were cut lengthwise and planted like No. 2. No. 4, potatoes were cut into qnartcrs length wise and planted two quarters to a hill 1 and six inches apart in tbo hill. o. 5, quarterC(1 anJ p!anlcd ono quarter to each hill, and No. 6, pota toes were cut into twenty pieces and plan ted one piece to each bill. And the yield of stalks and potatoes of these plantings on tbe same ground and under the same culture was as follows, to wit : Ns. EtalVa. 1. 33 Wei;ht 61 HJlbS. IS SO 33 36 i Butt ends, IS i nds. 1S). . 37 1 nd.SSj40 31 j CS ' Tup end 3. 47 81 4. f- 6. 4 6. 62 383 90 ss I -3 620 130 And then by way of comment he adds : "From the above it is plain to see that those who use large, whole potatoes use too much seed. At the same time I plan led two Meshanick", weighing nineteen ounces each. One I planted whole; tbe other I cut into seventeen pieces, and planted one piece in a billighteen inches apart, lbe result wa, tho whole one pro duced thirty-seven stains, lorty tnrce pota toes, weighing eleven pounds. Tha cut one produced forty-five stalks, seventy seven potatoes, weighing twenty-eight pounds." Now from this experiment of W. II., we sco that tbe butt end and seed-end cut tings of the potato produced nearly tbe same amount of yield, thus corroborating the above experimental result of Mr. Lee and we also see, what is a very impor tant subject of consideration for our pota to growers, that the increase of tbe potato crop was exactly in proportion to thc smaUneu or number of pieces tba potatoes were cut into for seed. So let our West Branch farmers now nrepare themselves to test these questions still farther by their own experiments next scasnn. Fer hsos it mav be proper to say that the butt ends are the big ends of tha potato, the ends immediately connected with tha roots, while tbe set d ends are the small end,th ends containing the mist eye or buds. Pre. 195" TXllX Bha-H Improving Old Orchards. Break ap the ground, and if it la not thought best to let it lie fallow, then give it a coat of manure aud raise some kind of hoed crop upon it. If possible, mulch the roots of the tree with old a'raw or clip. Once a year, at least, scrub tea trunks with wet ley, or potanh wafer, to remove the moss and rout the insects) which barbor there. Then, as to pnio ning, there is often enough to do, bat it k. : , I, a ;.,!. T, will . . . . .. ... . nut Answer In mflnnt ih I reft with rorjffD " nailed boots, and axe in hand, bade away like a woodsman felling a forest. Trtad on the limbs carefully, so as not to start the bark. Use a fine.toothed pruning saw ; thin out the branches so as to leave an open symmetrical head, and whera I large branches must be takcnon, cover I the wounds with grafting wax, or a aolu- . r , ,i t,on of gum-sheilac. If the fruit is of io- . .. . . . , f..rmp nnulilT. craft in ehoieer aorta, he- to thc bottom of the subject. I knew ' peared ; he added a few little drains IO i that gbafr ind ,he 8wamp itJ ; d Th( pBiIo50ph cf it WM nolr a,wlys tfae canse ? u uon wy 1 fcrtiielnore 90 aay 0f the rest 0f i f.rmr,.rtn!, an immansa intrt upon the expense of drainiog. Query : would not most pieces of swampy land, with a few shafts judiciously sunk through the clay, become the same T Some would need but one, others several. Land is so dear here, and there is so much such land, that if this view be true, it is of im mense importance even tn thoso who merely rent" Cutting and Preserving Graft. Yft- the beat time m .. t and wuicu is u, , j . - them T Tbey may be cut at any time during winter, or even before, if growth has ctaa ed. We have preserved late summer cut . , . j it . t. - 1 i tUdS, wnien Has maiurea wen, u to - . fll -P fPnDE- an 'eu lucnl "T"' grft8- Such kinds as are liable to bo injured by the cold of winter, would gei cut late io autumn, or before the usual ad vent of tbe severest days. For preserving them, we prefer to plaoo them in successive layers of damp moss the grafts being previously tied in small bundles. Damp sand (not wet) answers a good purpose. In either east) tbey may be laid in boxes io a cellar. Another, and a good way, is to fasten them in a box open at the top, without any packing, and then bury the bosr, grafts and all, inverted, on a dry spot The earth preserve their moisture, bat does not touch them. Lice os Calves The best -resort that I have ever fonnd to rid my calves of lice, is very simple, easy, and only this r take a few dry ashes from the stovo ; rub them well into the hair of the animals, and all thoso troublesome little creature will soon become harmless and disappear. Calves, or any other animal to which ash es are applied, should be kept dry for a few davs- CAmoLic Cui'scn ox Drcnkeness. Bishop Bayley, tbe Catholic bishop of New Jersey, has issued a manifesto bring ing the machinery cf the church to bear against tbe vice of druukeness. His let tcr on tho subject has been read in all ths j eburobes, in which he calls attention to two classes tne drunkards toemseives, and the dealers in liqnor. Leaving tho psstors the choice of thc particular means to be used, bo snggests that each should keep a list of thc drunkards and liqnor dealers in his church. He ssys : "I am determined to make use of the most severe measures against all who are addicted to this scandalous and deitrue live vice ; and if they continue in the practice cf it tbey must do it as ontcast from the Catholic Church, who bave no right to the name of Catbolio while they live.nor to Christian burial when they die.' Gales & Seaton, of th National -telligencer, Washington, partners for forty fire years io tbe publishing business, have never had a difference of opinion on p litieal questions, and never a jar or mis understanding of any sort They hav never known a division of interest ; from their common eoffer each his always drawn whatever he cb.-wo, nd for moro than thirty years pa' hti neT,f .. . ..-Vmr. of arrwints betwa Dnrn m I them 3 t 1 foPv MMArJ r