it h sr 5f f p a. iu. mite m The whGlb art. ok GovERNMENacptfsisTs in. the art of being aoNEST.Jefferson. fKUit " f I - STRO'UDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1850. No.13 S? ycKvo- SSra Tse -A0 r,e,?eive thcir nwfhV i carrier or stage drivers employed by the proprie papers nv -y , rflllts. ner lear. extra. Jc -nanert discontinued ontu an i arrearages arc paid, except rytdvertisements not exceeding one square (sixteen lines) wUbc inserted three 'weeks for one dollar, and twenty-five cents for even- subsequent insertion. The charge for one and three insertions the -same. A liberal discount made to yearly a(IAUlettcrs addressed to the Editor must be post-paid. JOB PRINTING. Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and orna mental Typo, we are prepared to execute every description of Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes Blank Receipts, -JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER BLANKS, ! PAMPHLETS, &c. Trinted with neatness and despatch, on reasonableteims ; ' AT THE OFFICE OF THE ; jTcTfcrsoiiiaii Republican. ' Fiotn Frazer's Magazine. The Sepulchre. There manhood lies ! Lift up the pall !. ,.. llqwlike the tree struck jdown to earth In. its green, pride, the mighty fall, , ;f .sAVhom life hath flattered with its wealth ! ,. Life is a Voyage 'to our graves, . :-. i Its promises, like smiling waves, Invite us onward to the-seaf Where all is .hidden treachery. t'v' ? .i What stated beauty slumbers there I , , ...JButmark those ,floNY.ets,lpale, as.the. brow Which they have wreathed ; if death could spare A victim, he had pitied now ; To-day she hoped to be a bzide To-day, 'twas told her lover died ! Here 'Death has revelled in his power, The riot of life's fairest hour. . Loolc on that little cherub's face "l-rWhose budding smile is fixed ,'byjdeath ; itow short indeed has been its;race;! . . ... . .A cloud sail'd by, the sun, a' breath' Dfd jrentlv creep across a bed - '' - n . , Of flowers its spirit then had fled, A -morning star a moment bright , . . Then melting into Heaven's own light.- . . Behold the picture of decay, 'Where nature wearried sank to rest! Full four :scote "years have'passed -away, " 'iJYet did he, like a lingering guest,"' Go from life's banquet with a sign, That lie, alas ! so soon should die Dur youth has not-desTres so vain; rf As creep into an age of pain. ., But there how mournfully serene That childless widow'3' mother's look To her the -world a"waste,hastbeen, . - r r- -On rie-VTiom it pitied, yet forsook Galm'as the moon's ligbt, which no storms Raging benaeth it, can deform, T)fd Ber afflicted spirit shine Above i Tier earthly woes dfnnc ! . ; , -i Thus Death deals with 'mortality; m a.. -flitke flowers, some gathered in ttfeir "prime"; Others were scarcely said lo be "Just numbered with the things of time ; With life worn out some grieve to die, " To end their griefs here others fly. ' r Life is but that which woke ivbreatn Look here and tell me, what is death 1 Seedli.vo Potatoes. Mr. James Whartenby , of Bristol township, this county, received the first premium for white patatoes at the late exhibition pfthe Phildelphia Society ; and it is worthy of re mark that two years ago, Mr. W. received the pre mium from the society for the best Seedling Pota toes of the same variety. This potato has never been affected by the rot, thus establishing the fact, in some degree, that starting again from the seed i in :the cultivation of this all-important vegetable, is a protection against the disease from which the crop has so greatly suffered for several years past,, and particularly this year, in this region of coun try: Will our farmers take the hint, and actupon it another year ! Ed .' Germaritown Telegraph: '' '- . 3 Treatment of Scarlet Fever. T J Important PREscRiPTioK'Dr. 'LTtidsly, of Washington, strongly recommends the mode' of treatment of scralet fever, resorted to by Dr. Schneemann, physician id. the King of Hanover; Jtfis as follows, and exceedingly simple : , Treatment of Scarlet Fever by Inunction. , , '' ' From the first day of the illness, and as s.opnas wef are pertain of its natur,e;1 the patient must jbe rubbed morning and .evening -over the. whole Jiody with fa niece of bacon,1 in such a manner that, with . ... the excepUqn of the-. head, a covering of fat is ev ery where appldd. "Jji order -to make the rubbing ih somewhat . caserj jit jsbest to take apiece of bacon the size of the hand, choosing a part still armed with the rind,l thatVe msiy have a firm graps. On the soft side of this piece slits dfe to'be made, in order to allow th'e'oozihg .out of the fat; The rubbing must be thoroughly performed, and hoMoo quickly, in order that the k'in.frnay be regularly saturated with the fat. rTJie .beneficial xesults of the application are soon obvious; with a .rapidity bordering on magic, al, teveq . the. jmos,t .painful symptoms of the disease.tare-allayed ;;quiet sleep, good humor, appetite trfti'unf, and there remain's1 only the impatiences -qUiffthesickoomT ' JUT If'attari'fiqq poof to', take a newspape or send his children school, 'how many ' 'dogs: shall he keep ? -Wtf x - t 4 Having the' Small jPox-ltiferuallr. . The following caseofhyppc hondria has never appeared in print. It occurred in the private prac tice of Dr. Todd, the first physician to the retreat of the Insane, in Hartford, Connecticut. : The subject of it was a robust, hard laboring man, by trade a mason. He had, as he believed, been exposed to the contagion of small-pox. Un der the impression that a spare diet would essen tially mitigate the virulence of the disease from a full diet, in which animal food formed a large portion, he restricted himself to one entirely vege table, and this in. so limited a quantity as hardly sufficient to sustain life. This change in his mode of living, combined with the depressing influence of fear, from anticipation of a loathsome and fatal disease, soon reduced his once athletic frame, and involved him in all the horrors of hypochondria. The time soon arrived, when according to his cal culations, the small pox ought to make its appear ance, but not a 3pdt or pimple could he find on himself. A new cause of apprehension now took possession of his mind ; viz : that he had the dis ease internally, and that it was preying upon and destroying his system. Under this impression he consulted a physician, who, after listening to the history of his case, and making a careful examin ation assured him that his apprehensions were en tirely groundless, and existed only in his imagin- ation. This conclusion was far from being satisfactory to the hypochondriac. He was not thus easily to be reasoned out of his senses. The physician was dismissed as one wanting in skill to discov er and understand the nature of his complaint. A second and a third were called, and both con curred in the decision of the first one. But the patient as is common in such a:ase, would soon erbelieve the whole fraternity at fault, than him self, the subject of mental hallucination, rejected all medical advice, confined himself to his room, and resigned himself to his fate. In the the mean lime his robust form had become attenuated almost to skin and bone. His friends now became seri ously alarmed at his condition. The reputation of Dr. Todd, then residing in Farmington although in early life, had spread into the neighboring Towns, and his peculiar talent for the manage meat of mental diseases, which so eminently qual lfied him to take charge ot the insane, had in nu merous instances been manifested. A brother of the oatient called on Dr. Todd, stated his case, and assured him the patient's con fidence in the faculty was gone, and that it was without his knowledge he was consulted. A plan was soon arranged by which the doctor should hap. pen 'to pass the house of the patient and he called in as if by accident. The next day Dr. Todd was seen driving at his usual rapid rate through the street where, the patient resided ; he "was hailed by. the messenger, in a tone of voice overheard by the. sick person, requested to call and see his brother wha'had for some time been suffering from ill7 health. The doctor alighted and was sodrf introduced to the 'patient, but was received without any recogni tion or act of civility, hbr even raising his eyes to look at him, nor could he by any kind attention of enquiries, elicit a word from his sullen and des pairing patient. With a tact peculiar to himself, the doctor com menced a very minute and careful examination of the patient first looking carefully into his ears, his nose and his eyes; then rising hastily from his seat, he commenced walking the room as if in the utmost astonishment, and could ha fly credit his senses, at the same time ejaculating in an under tone; Is it possible 1 Who could ever have thought it ? Can it be!1 Then resuming his place by the side of the pa tient, he went through an examination still more minute. Again leaveing' his seat he continued msA soliloquy It is a fact! There can be no mistake and yet the like cannot be found oh the record of med- icirie. By this time the patients attention wasf aroused, aticf breaking through his taciturnity he exclaimed: What! what! what is it, Dr. Todd? 'Why, I sir, something very singular in your case; but l am under no obligation to you for the discov? ery, I wil keep it to myself, More, than that, it is much as a physician's reputation; is worth even in orlr-incn tin nnlninn' ' J 'Doctor,' said the patienV I' must ' know it I will do any thing: iii my power you ask me', if you will only tell me.' Well, sir,' replied the doctor, if Pteff'you it must ever be a profound secret between ourselves.' To this the patient xeadily assented. A Tlion inrvnii innst It now that vnn bavp ihft ; ' J ,' J ; . r , " small pox internally.' 'J l! H J.) .( In an instant with all the strength he could-com- mand, the patient. sprang. from, his-chair, and seiz ing the doctor by the hand he exclaimed : ' You are. the" doctor for me! This'-isust what Ihave been telling-the' doctors; but hot one of them would believe a word of it! Now,1 is there any lemedy for such a case I Is there any hope or mef" ' ' ;( T think t'.oc 'Butmarlc rh.e everything depends upon .closely adhereing to .jmy directions. There are .three wjty s by which this disease , may . be eradicatedr-one is by jnaensible perspiration ; another by internal jerhedies.; and the third by bringing it out on the surface in the form of an eruption.' , 'Lot it 'be the last one,1 was 'the quick 'response of-tHe patient. 'Let hie1 :haver the ocular proof (of . . . . , ,.J yl -t.O - I ne patient was ordered to resume a course or nutritious diet," by which he rapidly regained health and trerigthittihe same time taking some harmless medical preparations, which the doctor assured him, would ;iq due, season, bring. forth the the eruption. When the specified time arrived, the doctor directed the housekeeper to strew the patients1 bed with cowhage, an article known to most persons, for producing, an eruption, accom panied with intolerable itching when applied to the skin. His bed was' so prepared on the night in which the doctor's skill was to be tested, and the patient retired, to - rest. He had not ... lpng been in bed, when, to his; great satisfaction, the itching commenced, but wishing, to be fully assured that all was right, he immediately called for a, light, and found the surface of his body an entire blotch. Satisfied with the proof, he endured the suffering patiently till morning. Soon after he resumed his business and was never troubled again with the small pox internally. Hartfort Chronicle' The Duration of the Earth, AS INTIMATED BY ASTRONOMY. The following views, by a correspondent of the Puritan Recorder, upon the, "Duration of the Earth," as indicated by Astronomy, will be read, we think, with much interest.1 The evidence which geology affords of the great intiquity of the earth, turns thought to the evi dence which astronomy furnishes of its future con tinuance. From the many striking resemblances between the bodies that compose the solar system, we infer for them a common origin and a common destiny. The earth, then, will probably live while the system lives, and no longer. What its partic ular destiny may be, and by what means brought about, we stop not here to inquire. Our only pur pose now, is to consider some intimations furnish ed us by the system itself, that it is fashioned for a long duration. This is indicated by the im mense length of some of the periods involved in this system. According to the commonly received chronolo gy, the planet Neptune has had but thirty-six of his years since the creation of our race. If the analogy between the earth and that planet holds good, then the first generation of his inhabitant is hardly yet passed away. Some comets have not yet had one year since the date of Adam's crea tion. But there aie periods of greater length still The earth's Perihelion is slowly creeping around the orbit from West to East, at a rate which will require 111,000 years to complete the circuit. The Perihelion of Murcury is moving in a similar manner, at a rate which will requite 200,000 years to complete it. Uther planets exhibit the same movement Now if all the planets in the system were arranged along in a line on the same side of j eacn 0,her marking the spot some British the sun and all in their Perihelia, i. e., all in that gquare had occupied when exposed for hours point of their orbits which is nearest the sun, and, . j r r uu.. then all their orbits set revolving according to their ! he murderous fire of a French battery.,--presentlaws of motion, millions of years must e- Outside, lancer, and cuirassier wore scattered lapse ere all of them would meet again under the same circumstances -to hold their family festival preparatory to another revolution of the same length. The earths' orbit is now an ellipse, but. is slow- i t . '-, r' iy oecommE circular,--mia av us presem raiu ui change, will become a perfect circle in about half' iau a million of years from this time. Then it will be- intermingled : and the heavy Norman horse of gin to resume its eliptical form, becoming more the Imperial Guard were interspersed wnh the and more eliptical for some millions of years, 1 grey chargers which had carried Albyn's chiv when having attained the maximum of elipticity, ' airy. Here the Highlander and trailleur lay it will begin again to shape itself into a, circle. Corresponding with this change and caused by it, iB a change of the period of the moon's revolution. Its period is now slowly shortning; its motion in revolution, nf rnnrap. inprpnQinor nnrt thiQ. ratfi nf increase is such as will make it 'train a little more than its diameterin a thousand years. Thishort- ening of her period and increase of velocity will J continue until the earth's orbit becomes a perfects circle, and then she will slowly reverse her move-j meats and gradually return to her former condi- From the mutual attraction of Jupiter and Sa- turn, their orbits are pasainir through similar chanees. the orbit of one-bocominfr more and morel elliptical while, from the same cause, that of the other becomes' more and more circular, in conse quence of which motions, the period of one is lengthening, whilehat of the other is shortening. This oscillation requires more than 70,000 years for its completion. The sun has what is" called a " proper motion," i. e., the sun, with all his dependent household, is sweeping thro' space at the rate of 422,000 miles per day or nearly half its own diameter. It is 11? . 1 " f m . supposed by some good astronomers that all. thed stars have a-sitmlar movement; all revolving to gether in the plane of the milky way, about some common centre ; that the orbit described by bur sun in this grand march, is so large, that this, in conceivably rapid motion continued' for years, forms practically a straight litre; in other words, the, orbit is so large that the arc of it decribed since this motion was first observed, is so short in comparison With the, whole orbitfJ as to seem to be no arc at all. At least, no instruments are, as yet, accurate enough to detect and measure its rate of ucviauuM iruui a zuruigui nne. iierscneii' inti mates that the elements of this orbit may perhaps be determined after 30 or 40 years observation with the nicest instruments. Of course; many millions of, years must p'ass, ere this vast circuit can oe tuny described by, the sun. We granj there is some little of conjecture at-- tacnmg to tnis last illustration wjjich belongs not vj any ui me previous ones ; ana yet u is mucn jn keeping with those demonstrated' facts, that it carl hardly be calt improbable'. ' Althougn these periods are inconceivably long, stjj.1 they jare;nope. the less rieriodsl They are as iruiy perioas,?as it tney .were. completed jn one, day or one hpur,. The fact that our life, is short in cuijipanauu auu inui vve cannot in ,Qur Dest estate, have any adequate conception, of thegi, is' ho more of an objection, to their existence than it, is an . ob jection to the length of Nentune's period. that in- acuta uie uiicr a iey uuuis existence, auu wiuiuui fiiijr uuiijuuiu witiCyviuil Ul all IIUUUICU uIIU oiaijt- iour yeuis existences From the movements of the heavenly 'bodies through .a tceftajn part of tlieiV orbits (or, of their os cillations, science determjnes,wjthtthe grQajetjex' actness ;tj?e fact,jthatf after certain poipt in.de Darture is pained, the bnrlv will infallibly return to its former conditioil 'and; place. On itsVfautifujiy 1-othfnThnr' anil VYiiel naUtraf!ritirr lhi nor'tnrhijtrnTlrf1! caused by its-departurethe' harriionv' and stabili-s tV of the whole system 'denehd. : " 'J Jow jnark the cbpclusion. For the same good4 aison,thajt,we say the ,earh ,cpuld,pot have beenj made and set rotating. peely. to cause, finypj.i hundred ;Jayi, or vv'as nyt'set reaving ar.ound.the, isun to cauao onl one oriwc yeaispor perhaps 4 only a. $ mall part, of one year for these good rea sons do ve 'say 'that these unmeasured and almost immeasurable periods were intended by the Crea tor to be described, gone through with, and boubt less. many Aimes, repeated ere the.great chronome-; ter runs down. Our ideas of the perfection of his workmanship are shocked by any other conclusion. Our minds refuse to admit the idea of a period or an orbit, or an oscillation only partially completed. In the language of Professor Mitchell we say; "The en tire system forms one grand complicated piece of celestial machinery ; circle within circle, wheel within wheel, cycle within cycle; revolution so swift as to be completed in a few hours move ment so sloy that their mighty periods, are only counted by millions, of yeais. Are we to believe that the Divine Architect constructed this admira bly adjusted system to wear out and to fall to ru ins even, before one single revolution of its com plex scheme of wheels had been, performed 1 At the end of a vast period, amounting to many millions of years, the entire range of fluctuation will have been accomplished ; the entire system, planets, orbits, inclinations, eccentricities, perihe lia and nodes will have gained their original values. and places, and the great bell of eternity will then sound One I Waterloo at Noon THE DAY AFTER THE BATTLE. On a surface of two square miles, it was as certained that fifiy thousand men and horses were lying ! The luxurious crop of ripe grain which had covered ihe field of battle, was re duced to litter, and beaten into the earth ; and the surface, troddpn down by the cavelry, and furrowed deeply by the cannon wheels, strewn with many a relict of the fight. Helmets and. cuirasses, shattered firearms and broken swords; all the variety of military ornaments ; lancers' caps and Highland bonnets : uniforms of every color, plume and pennon; musical instruments, the anaratus of artillery, drums, busies ; but good-Gtid ! why dwell on the harrowing ptc ture of a foughten field T each and every rti inous display bore the testimony to the misery of such' a battle. Could the melancholy appcarence of this scene of death be height ened, it would be by witnessing the researches of the living, amidst its desolation, for the ob ject of their love. Mothers, wives and chil dren, for days were occupied in that mournful duty ; and the confusion of the corpses, friend and foe intermingled as they were, often ren dered the attempt at recognizing individuals difficult, and in some cases impossible In many places the dead lav four feet deep upon thickly on the earth. Madly attempting to force the serried bayo'hets of -the British, they , had fallen in the bootless essay, by the muskets of the, inner files Farther on you traced the spot where the cavalry of France and England . PU J T,..,, side by side, together ; and the heavy dragoon, with green Erin s badge upon his helme', wa grappling in death with the Polish lancer. On the summit of the Ttdg, where the ground was, cumbered with dead and trodden fetlock deep in mud and gore, by the frequent rush of rival cavalry, the thick strewn, .corpses of the Imperial Guard,, pointed out the spot where Napoleon had been defeated. Here, in column, (haJ fayorQj corps? on whom hisJ Jasl Qhance! r?9ed' hfd been annihilated ; and the advance aild PG of ,he Guard was traceable by a mass of fallen rrenchmen. In the hollow be low, the last struRglo of p'rance had been vain ly made ; for there the Old Guard, when the middle battalions had been forced back, at tempted to meet the Briiiah, and' afford time for their disorganiAed companions to rally- Here the British left, which had converged upon the French centre,. had come up ;-r-and here the. bayonet closed the contest. MaxweWs Victories of the British Army. ITlicc Power. A gentleman in Kirkaldy, Scotland, has trained a couple of mice and invented' machin ery enabling them to spin cotton yarn. They have been employed about' two months. The work isidone on the tread mill principle. It is so constructed that the common house mouse is enabled J.o make atonement to society for, past offences, by twisi.i.ng, twiriingand reeling from I Op to J 26 threads per . day. To com pjete thi", ihe Iiltle pedestrian . has to run 10 1-2 miles. A half-penny's worth of pat meal at lad per .peck, servos one oi n.eae ireau wheef cnlprits for the long period of fiVe weeks. In 'that time it makes 1.10 threads per day.- At this rate a mouse earns 9d. every fiv weeks," which is 7s. 6d. per annum. Take 6d. off for hoardand Is. for machinery, there will arise 6s. clear profit from 'every; inouse anh'ualjy, The mouse employer was going to' mane an application for the lease of an old empty house, which will hold lep thousand mouse iriilf. suf ficient, room being left far keepers, and spnie- Iw.rwtrofl 'nanialnrt AHnwlTier for Tent, maS iflrs: interest ahd'm&chirierv., there will be balarfce of $ 1 M'ti.D p'r,apnurn. To Tpujjlen ffio.lV JErlhowi Watfi, It is a bad1 plan to put noweirthdh' wae' iti to boiling-hot wafer ; ft should st,befpriipig'c:di into cdld water, and placed aVer1 a 'fire wljtfre' it wifl'beW moderalely the'tiQilihs. point, anil i hen be'permftted to coq( again Tfiis prqpess. greatly promotes the .toughness and duraoimy Ofqpmmop e.ar'tjienfiw.are!, iwhicK is generally objectionable fpr doniesinc uses on aocounl' of Ii8 'iragiiiy . ' 'i'iie'giMi&irig uij mo, niuu ui waio will remian'uhWnred'by 'the boiling, if a hand- iful of rye or w.lieat brail be aTdeto the water, (aifd prepaf'ii5 tb wjthstand sugess'fuHyl and lor a long nmo, ine action oi aciu or sau. Xud Serous. A young itinerant preacher, in the constant habit of declaiming a great deal about the ere-' ation, and especially about the getiing up of man, whenever he wiahcd to display his native eloquence to good advantage, was one day holding forth to a mixed congregation in' a country school house. Becoming warm, and., enthusiastic as he pioceeded, it was not long before he reached his favorite theme, and star-; ted off in something like the following style: 44 And when the world was created, and the beasts of the field, and fowls of the air, and pronounced very good, God said, let us make man. And he formed man afier his own like ness, and declared him the noblest of all the works of his hands ! and he made woman also, and fashioned her in the exact image of man, with a little variation "Thank' the Lord for the variation " shouted an old sinner, who tat over in the amen corner of ihe room, at this interesting juncture of the discourse. The effect was perfectly ludicrous and irre sistable. The preacher dropped the subject where he was interrupted, and was never heard to allude to it during a subsequent ministry, of forty years. A love-born swain broke a wibh-bo'ne his 'heart's queen,' somewhere up in Hampshire. with New Neow, what d'ye wish, Sally V demanded' Jonathan, with a tender grin of expectation. 1 wish I was handsome,' replied the fair damsel, 'handsome as as Queen Victory V t ' Jerusalem ! what a wish,' replied Jonathan, ' when you are handsome 'nuff, neow ! But I'll tell ye what I wish, Sally I wish you was locked in my arms, and the key was lost !' A. Snake Story An old deacon in Yankee land once told us a story. He was standing ono day beside a frog pond we have his own word for it, and saw agarter snake attack an enormous buil-frog.. The snake seized upon oneoflho bull-frog's hind legs, and the frog to be on a par with his snakesliip, caught him by the tail, when both commenced swallowing one anoth er, and continued this operation until nothing was left of either of them ! Theman who would cheat a printer is too mean to receive a passing grunt from a hog.; there is a moral pestilence continually around him. His mind is filled with wickedness, and when he goes home he flogs his wife if he has sufficiant courage. His children are ignorant and malicious for they never care to read the stolen paper. The dogs stop wagging their tails when he passes by them. Reader, do you know such a creature ? A man in Michigan, not long since,f com mitted suicide by drowning. As thb body could not be found, the coroner held an inquest on his hat and jacket, found on the bank of 'th'e' lake. Verdict " Found empty." The Cow Tree. On the parched side of a rock iu Venezuela grows a tree with dry and leathery foliage, its large woody rootB scarcely penetrating; into the ground. For several months in the year the leaves are moistered by a shower ; its branch es look as if they were dead and withered ; ,buf when the trunk is bored, a bland and nour ishing milk flows from it. It is at sunrise that the vegetable fountain flows freely. At that time, the blacks and natives are seen coming from all parts provided wiih bowls to receive the milk, which grows yellow and thickens at its surface. Some empiy their vessels on the spot, while others carry them to their children. One imagines he sees the family of a shepherd, who is distributing the milk of his flock. It is named the polo tie vac or the cow tree. JCure of the Eyes. Looking into ihe fire is very injurious to the eyes, particularly a coal fife. The stimulus of light snd heat ir nited soon destroy the eyes. Reading" in twT lighi is very injurious to the eyes, as they are obliged to make great exertion. Reading or sewing with a side light, injures the eyes, as both should be exposed to an equal degree of light. The reason is; the sympathy between the eyes is so great, that if the pupil of one is dilated by being .kept partially in ihcshade, thet one that is mqs.v exposed cannot contract itself. sufficiently for protection, and will ultimately be injured. Those who wish to preserve their sight, should" preserve their general health .ftby rnrrecr habits, and give their eyes just ' work enough, with a due degree of light. , A Productive " FA,n."M." One of -ourijin-,. dustrious townsmen, in West Chester, whpjias been in the habit of supplying our table, occa , 8ionaIJy with vegetahles, has furnished. us fwnhff, the following esiiiriate of the income derived fjrom his " farm." It will serve to show ' how 1 nrnflnoti vr ' a little farm well tilled" mav be- " - ' . : f come. His " larm" is, indeed, notoing .more than' a edi'den. Of ab'ou one-sixth of an acre.- He" has- sold the pYesiBnt seasoti $ 1 5 worth? of potatoes ; ne nas yuu neau oi cauuagu wumu certts a headi $49 : $4 worth of onions ;u his 4 'turnips $5.; and .he has'saold 50 cents worth5 of ' beeiU tie. has besides, ten busnels oi potafbb ' rpsered fpr hU own winter useraBtJsother tee- ,etabe jn proportion, 'J hitf w.iltake $69;50t as the product of his sales the present seasen, upon a single "farm," over and above what hfas, been required to ptqyiytpn his. own family! This, is not consitlej.e.d by. him as an exjraordt.-.. nary crop. , j jm prp.duqt pi his cabbage pajicrj , has usually: paid his rei, . .His garden. beqtl ciillii.aieiHraiher as a past'ima. haii otejrwi . vise, and has pot!. seriously iriierfred withtthe nursuit of his usual business. Village Record