THE WHOLE ART OF GOVERNMENT CONSISTS IN THE ART OF BEING HONEST. JEFFERSON,. " '. . : ; , VOL. 13. STROUDSBTJRG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1S53. -- No 21. Published Iy Theodore ohoo!i. TSRMS Two dollars per annnum in advanceTwo dollars and a quarter, hair yearly and if not -paid co lore the end of the year, Two doltarsanda half. Those who Tcceirethcir papers by a carrier or stage drivers -e)nploycJ by the proprietor, "will be charged 37 1-2 cents, per year, extra. No mipers diteoiuinueduntilnllarrcarngesare paid, creep; :u uie option oj tne suitor. Emh teen raeS a li'inral discount mucin to X'earlr adi erasers. IO All letters addressed to the Editor must be post pttnl. " J O K PRINTING. Ilarinp a general assortment of large, elegant, plain aiiu ornamental Type, w e are prepared to execute every description of ,j. vxy. a. is.A.n.dWi u.i.&u &u . r-,-1c. fliKuilirs. Jlill IIr:iiU Notes. Ulnnlc RereintS : justices, Leai aa other nniis. Pamphlets, &c. printed with neatness and despatch, ou reasonable ierms, , AT TIIJ2 OFFICE OF THE .FefJersoiiinu Itepiiblica.ii VlllfP ftf 1 Sl'Oken ailC Of 4rlaSSe Y London Correspondent of Peaboii's rics black currants, black haws, rice and " 'in -it n .i American Chronicle, gives an account of a singular accident that recently happen- aAhr hnn of M Mnlliere of Paris ouestion now universally asked in eve- : r ' ry society in arans is, -nave you suua J j j j ... . t.- i tt ' the Drosen wmuow i xais reiers to an accident of a very ordinary nature, fol- . , - , i , mi r i 1otrrl however bv an inPnitelv imnrob- able result which occurred in Hue de la ' ' J J L Bourse. 31. Mollierc a bootmaker in that street, has had fortune 'thrust upon him' by a cart knocking against his shop win- dow. Bather late at niCht a restive horse hnrtoA a cirt acrainst the Iron shnifPM of the shop front, with such force that a pane . of plate slass immediately behind the part '!! A. X ' . struck was cracked into a thousands i" "r ir-ii:.' r. x 0f 0 ,1 11 n p ,1 secure the addres; or tne owner or the horse and cart, and in the morning he wa3 about to send for a glazier, whose i -ii i i !i i . i j - ii . Din ne woumjiave cnargea to tne person rePonsible for the trespass upon his prop- e HHut his erty; but this window wa3 cracked m such a manner as no window ever was beiore, i m- ir i. x, x ' and M. Molhere observed that every passer , , , look a1 it and exc'airrpd j rL - - , 4 flow curious V 'How extraordinary !' During the whole day a crowd was col lected in front of the house. It then oc curred to M. Molliere that since his bro ken window appeared to possess such at tractions for the public, it might answer his purpose to make the public pay lor - - the gratification ot their curiosit Ac- ... I ' , i . , , P , . . , irea one irance per neaa ior aaraission io , . his shop.. Visitors flocked to the exhihi- uon, and in a few hours tne tame ot it spread far and wide. Not a single parti- cle of glass had fallen out, but the cracks ...3?.x? r xi. x :xi, .ir..i ' ramaung irom tue ucuLrc xux ivuuuuiu regularity were so numerous that the pane presented the appearance of a gigantic cobweb. Seen from the interior of the shop by gas light it reflects the prismatic .1 n.?Xl ni.fi.nni.!inoi.IT 1. Villi 1 nfT OTlfl , . . J , , : mav be comnared to a peacocks tail. j x X A speculator has offered the enormous sum of 4000f. for the purchase of the fra- f ,Fr ,. , , i, . fused. M.Molhere calculates that he shall receive that sum from Parisians alone, and that afterwards the pane may be re moved in its iron frame, and carried round the provinces. This event has made more sensation than any other that has occur red in Paris since New Year's day. The excitement is on the increase. Crowds,too poor to pay the admission money stand nli..( X 1. t- o11r nttni" tlio etnrr uuuuii cue uuusv; vua viw J j , x. 4. , . , , n and mathematical students m the Quar-, tier Latin are working problems, in the confident hope of finding out how to crack another window in the same way. Smart Girls. A young gentleman ineeting a handsome milkmaid, said, 'what . fe x , t a -ii will you take for yourself and your milk, my dear?' The girl instantly replied,' . e f ,j . . m,. ten leagues in an hour; and a Canary fal 'yourself and a gold ring, sir. This was ; 6 ' good, but the girl at the boarding nouse 1 , was better. A gentleman was called in and was shown over a suit of rooms by a very pretty girl. Are you to be let with the rooms V inquired he. 'No, sir, I ,ani io be let alone she answered Martin Ghuzzlewit said: "A werb sig nifies to be, to do, or to suffer, (which is all tho grammar, and enough too, as ever I was taught ;) and if there's a werb alive, I'm it. jFor I'm a bein' sometimes a-do-in' an' continually a sufferinV An &d lady once said that her idea of a great man was "a man who was keer ful of his clothes, doD't drink sperits, kin read the Bible without spelling the words, and eat a oold dinner on -waslrday tosave the wiramQn folks the trouble of cooking?' MINNESOTA. Bev. H. 31. Nichols, who is now in Min- nesota prospecting for a, colony that in- te.nd to emigrate from 3Iassachusctts in the Spring, tells some magnificent stories country,in letters written to He says the sleighing is excellent, but the air is dry, with no wind to cause any drifts of snow. The clearness and dryness of the atmos - phere render the climate favorable to J those of a consumptive constitution, and thnn there is so mnrth eleefrieifcv m the J air that a person cannot feel languid. 1 Speakinp; of wild fruit, he says : "Cranberries, blackberries, strawber- ' ries, raspberies whortleberries, plums, cherries, grapes, crab apples, goose-ber- oeans, ail grow wiia, anu some oi tneui in the greatest abundance. And beside these there is the m'do or Dacotah potato, i . -i? ; .i i ana two sPccies ol turnips, wnicn grow tviia ana are niucii useu dv tue J.nuians 11 t i. .1 i i . t t - - - , - , . , , Tflr innEI. & i tipsinna, or Dacotah turnips, grow in UUC or lliuse tasi uameu. LUC i size trom Jcar to ycarj increasing with ev- .... . . . cry summer that passes over it. Apples vmi uounsu nere, ii grown in tne nrst place in a northern climate, and nurse- ries are now growing in at. raw, wnere . r,. , , Persons can suPP'y themselves with grat- ted trees at a cheap rate. Quinces will well here, butjt is not yet fully proved whether peaches will flourish here or not. whether peaches will flourish here or not. ,r , .11 i.. i i xi...l -vueions oi au Kinus grow luxunauuy, 'indeed, the accounts of the vine race are such as to challenge the strongest faith of sneh as to Rhallenfre the strongest laith or O O t.j. r ,i t :j. .n i ber truth Troma : man of veracU a the ! presenSergoant atAras oY the House of Kepresentatives, that a squash, raised xUof ! woo nn. my Eastern friends. I have it as a so- Til it ri.i.i i" 1 1 i : it'iiiis vh i . : rt i i ber truth, from a man, of veracity, the ot fYfinresentaLivtJS. luiiii u suuusij. litiscu - :r . ; , u& ullull y av ; . . ?Ue t0 'T11 11' lTJ t n ' 'Tr two men to load it into a wagon, rolling, it up an inclined plane. Cucumbers have T,pp rrron here eijrht and nine feetlon been grown nere eignt, ana nine ieeciong, and pumpkins measuring three feet in di- auieter. ; "Garden Vegetables surpass anything' ever known at the East. Onions, so large I 1.1.-- : x - a i l i i . eabbages, the solid head two and a half iney cauuoo ocpui in u uour uurrei wjioi feet in diameter: beets, six inches in di- ameter; carrots, three feet and a half long; ' 13 ti ruta-baga turnips, so large mat one win . . i .if -ii not c0 jnto a haif bushel. Now I am a- ware that many ot your readers will call tM a fish storv ' and pass it by. I can ? assure them, however, that these are the 1 ' , . .lt. , j statements oi sooer ana trutuiui men, auu are wlia. hag actuauy been done here. 3very one cannot not do it; but th And if you don't in4i J?.in Man has the power of imitating almost every motion, but that of flight. To ef fect these he has, in his maturity and health ,60 bones in his head, 60 in his thighs and legs, 62 m his arms and hands, .b ' . . and 67 in his trunk. He has also 434 muscles. His heart makes 64 pulsations in a minute, and therefore 3,840 in an hour, 92,160 in a day. There are also m 5 ' , . ; r c , . three complete circuiuuuus ui ma wuuu in the short space of an hour. In res pect to the comparative speed of anima ted beings and of impelled bodies, it may be remarked that'size and construction seem to have little influence, nor has com- v , , , i i narativc strength, though one body giving, any quantity of motion to another is said to lose so much of its own. The sloth is X " . . ii i j x :x by no means a small animal, and yet it J , ,; can travel only ou paces a uay ; a worm crawls only five inches in 50 seconds; but t a. lady-bird can uy iju,uuu,uuu uuiea- ! own length in less than an noun An ' elk can run a mile and a half in seven ' minutes ; an antelope a mile, in a minute; the wild mure of Tartary has a speed e- J. , cull Utxix c UU icavu n.w iuaLuup jxx uuu . . short space of 16 hours. A violent wind travels 20 miles in an hour, sound, 1,142 English feet in a second. ."Having Examined the city, Mr. Giles, what do you think of it ?" " Why, sir, I don't know but I do think all but the lawyers are a pack of rogues "Indeed ! And what of the lawyers, Mr. Giles?" ''Why, as for them, I'm sure they be." A man appeared at the City Hall, Bos ton, the other day, for a marriage certif icate, giviug as his occupation "Rat, Mice, and Cockroach Catcher." His intended, he said, followed the sanie business. It takes all sorts, and conditions to iiiake . world. , do this; everyplace wiU .,. , . wi,;cb WOuld not' of some of the friendly inhabitants of ry of three hundred thousand dollars. ously practised. I have recently travel- ese are real occurences. r at;-d:i7 ni nc.xi :x But in this a?e of f?old the mercenary ed through Ohio, Indiana. Illinois and believe it enmo and see " dO except in an -age oi goiu. x-xiuwuiv- ,uu uua! uasijc, lumuai; tu- . . . , L , . , , i i at-1 - - j iu i t i. i Deiieeit, come ana see. i o t .:,: j sp rit is an clement not to be overlooked; Michigan, and although I have seen lo- 0ne cannot faii t0 can to mind the "0Slty impelled me onward, and posses- I . . . hnftnr . hn i cal:t: here . lar - amminfc pnn , A Extravagance and Folly The New York Journal of Commerce says: 3Ien who were here in 1836 and ' saw the abounding 'wealth,5 splendid equipages, brilliant funiture, magnificent. parties, &c. of that day, and who, a year or two afterwards, saw a large part of those foolish spenthrifts bankrupt and J ruined, cannot avoid such reminiscences , when they see the far greater cxtrava- gance of the present day. They cannot help asking themselves if the end will not hatha same. A New York correspon- delit of the Boston Transcript notes a I. . ... a r . . i few items ot this extravagance in the words following: Allusion was made in a former letter to the lavish prodigality with which money was expended in this city upon holelsand.of Minersville, and about fifteen north- j x tt rL.-iT i x t . 4. c n.:n tt mi :x. I siuru. uFu luuuer mvebugauou, x find that in respect to extravagance in other matters the New Yorkers are now : -.'a r u r x: mi. . m uuvuuuu ui uu xuiuiur umes. xuu ragBjuuuiawui;, num tuu muij uuiuugu v i j ii j.:i r : x . ivi uuwv uuu uuawv aitiuius iui unvutt " ,iu: c i xi. . ix: uiiuiuuifs iui cucuua tuu ciuuiutiuu nuiuu a . . , . ,, , exists between the rival hotels up town.- a matter oi curiosity to your reaaers, f nil ! 11 il f l a rew oi tne iasmoname styles oi parior uiuamcut m uu swicu. vug ui mc latest patterns of parlor tables les or lio-ht 'a. j : .i . -ixi.- T...A .1 maue cuB uoa rrencn porcetam, set in a gut irame ana stand. These are yery beautiful; the prices ranges from 8200 to 8300 each ac- cording to the value of the painting, cording to the value of the painting. T7Mnl, nn,nlo;n nnlnnfnl nc x .u a.u v,1UuiUuvU. 8.u Ui- tures for the mantel are imported and C-ii fr cisn n c- eion oJ- . . A pair f bronzed niantel candelabra, with a clock for a centre piece, are for sale at $800 a set. An importer stated i. i, j i,i r x, 1 ilUlU 1U1 v?X-Vf u Ulll r ww v. imuwm,i uuuwu ; "c uau B uuw "uua 83'00- . i 4 xi .ii. i ' ucd-at So00,'would be a rich mantel or- nament. 1 his clock has no hands. The , , hour and minutes are denoted by figures' rhich rcvoivc a modern whist coun tCr. Une urn Hero nave a fma"e - clock tor which they ask l,auu. Two birds come out and sing from the clock eacjj jj0un Bronzed vases with bas reliefs are . plenty at 8300 each. Porcelain tea sets of thirty-six pieces are held at 8180 a ... , . And so one could go through the common illustration suggested by the up-! set list ot household articles ot elegance ana nowever, notwiiustanamg tne warninc; the story to add. that the lady had a dow- its compared with any that l Had previ- pish tendency of all property in this city, ' than mJ advisers, I resolved to take . lady wifch so many hogsheads of sugar ( no place in the west where the same num and to state that we are now witnessing a naked eJc observation of this vast fur- or so many bales of cotton or so many , ber of days work, or the same expendi- .i . i ., ' iirnll orTif1irinTini noorvnna A 'nnnrr larl v t.nre will nrinrr larger retnrns in tho nm. tli Virillinnt. nenrmt nf tr,n rnnVPt- t.r,e no le ss certain descent of the valueless stick may not be so agreeable, particularly if it should hit us or one near to us. Twooty-four gas burnes in a bed-room twelve feet square, decorated porcelain spittoons, and seven hundred dollar bed. e . ' . , fXM'orinrrs in fi tt avntio mftrirfor onn ntf.ponf. wyj fnr n timo rill t cnnli mottiiro n to cVinrt. duration from the very nature of things, Physicians in India raise blisters with J " red-hot iron, and dress them with cayene T , , , , pepper. If such treatment don't make a ( " man 'smart.' we don't know-of anything that will. One of the favorite catharties is made of pills of gunpowder twelve r i . . ft are given ior a aose; a minute alter thev are down, a ooal of fire is adminis- w tered. when a movement in the particles takes place that either eradicates the di-1 Upon gaining the summit of the tower-' from whooping-cough: ' sease or the invalid-commonly the latter 1 ing mountain, a most desolate yet inter-! Our congressional orators are never esting picture presents itself. The sur- troubled with shortness of breath, altho' Durin- the recent cold weather, a c3'e c rc " cith- flatulence is not uncommon. , o iu wxv ucawxvx, "(er cracked, burnt, or broken into (Snorm-. ,. ' lL ,. , young Indian and several white boys' 0Us and fearful depths by the approach' -Dyers are subject to the blues and scar were skating on the ice in the Passaic ( of the fires to thc upper stratum; roots . let fever, and clock-makers to the tic river, at Bellville, N. J., when one of the j and trunks of the lofty trees are charred douloureux. number broke through, which so fright-! and Manned, mingling their pyroliginc-1 Glaziers are never without pains. . , . . i ous odor with the sulplmrious vapors -r . xi i- ened the others that they all fled except from the hofc caves and cPevicM arouJdt Brewers are constantly ailing. the Indian boy, who immediately ran to j The calcined bones of birds, reptiles, and 1 Edltors are carried off with 'an idea' the assistance of his drowning comrade small quadrupeds, lie here and there,half in their heads, but nothing in their pock and succeeded in dragging him out just mixed with the mineral ashes, to 'fill up ets. as be was sinking. A few days after this J Wasted view, while amidst the vast scene Poct3 ascend to tha realms of lue , , , i of desolation may be seen a solitary wood- e i i occurrence, while engaged m the 6ame-flowerj B1)ringin-; from this ctnal ed on imaginary yapors, and die among sport on a pond at Bloomfield, the same 'hot-bed,' and presenting in the uncon- strangers at the Insane Asylums. accident happened to another boy. All of his comrades again fled from the spot, with the exception of the heroic Indian boy, who seized a long pole and extended it to the lad, thus a second time rescuing one whom others had deserted in fear. He is the son of Maungwadaus, who, with Ghief Kopway, is engaged in lectur iug on the maniio'r3 and .customs of the Indians. ( - :.; ; . A Burning Mountain "We read with no small degree of inter est an article in 'Scott's Weekly' from the pen of a Mr. Silas S. Steel, on what he terms the 'Bnrning Mountain' at Coal Castle, in this State. The existence of a burning mountain in our own State, we must confess, is something quite new to us. Yet the writer states that this stu pendous mountain-bed of burning 'au- thracite has been for the last thirteen years, glaring and smoking through the hot and cavernous crevices', formed by its outward combustion, and casting forth its coulds of vapor and sulphurous lava. This mountain embraces a portion of Broad 3Iountain, at Coal Castle, a small mining settlement about five miles north west from Schuylkill-Haven. The writer adds : " The approach to this'vast couldron of: ! An..:tn x,. xl. i:i.. i t. -Ci I , w " I c.V.i;n V . :n i. t, , , , , built by the Delaware. Company, exclu- oumiuic, xuuiuhuh uic uul i un' x iiu u uuh., ' siveiy ior coai cars, turougu lUme-iim rt 1 it- 1 vxap, a icngwiy anu stupenaous gorge, xmcu mui 10. iouiw, uuu rets, which seem to reach into the clouds, 1 i x i. auu m wu j:,.t u UUM miming Upon arriving at Goal -the obliging mining operativ out to the visitor the Fiery Mountain. J5r.miM rl o v Anrfr nn nln,wU lm indications of combustion will themselves I fio fnllw snfSpJont. to noint. nnt itn 1nfnt;rn ' It is here necessary to apprize the travel- ' ler and the curious in general, that an as - cent to this mountain is deemed an ex- I 1 xt, u uwi. v-v j j t, . au,uutui, uuu m faCt that maD Prti0nS f itS SUrfaCe aro I .,-.w-7 . , . J . ' shell ; crevices and chasms are continual- . . ly opening, and in many places there is no visible sign of combustion coal consumed, up to the very superstra- turn of earth, which is liable from the 8:P - cipitate everytumg upon its surrace, aown into its unfathomable cave of fire. Perhaps, the most secure way to effect an examination, is to cross -the narrow gap, over to one of the opposite eleva- tion, and by the aid of a spy-glass sur- vey its cracked and smoking points. sinS less ponderosity and perhaps more nace Ot antUraCltC, anU set OUt On tUe . .ii- . , toilsome ascent,- pulling my corpms up-1 ( ward rock by rock, clump by clump, and j tree by tree. At about thirty feet from t ' tho baf.i foul"If "" of - bubbUng and smoking thr,ouSfh irregular opening in the earth, and of a temperate sufficiently hot to' , n .,. scald my nngers. The stream at this. 1 n nn.rnl .1 x i: u ' rouSp,au .jaupuuu. ing a iew ieet further upward, a lava-like ! fluid came hissing and oozinir out, em- Dedding tue gravel of the soil in its sul- l : ; i: ,i i t luo a',u ilCW traces Of Vegetation as happened tOl 1 1; TO;fu;n :f rDn m,t nfil;n here nartieulnrlv arrested hv an iaiatifife """'I"" UH1.UHU11 HUH rumbling, and, on applying my ear to1 thc aP-rture, a roaring and crackling was 'sufficiently audible to indicate a most ac - :? " IIVCJ. 11 11U tive, if not violent state of combustion' I TO;f.iin unr,nnrf..i n mnt nr;. ' some unknown Quarter. genial atmosphere, a mockery of bloom.' lo-wards the southward brow of tho Honesty Tamed Up. It is said that mountain, I observed a deep and lengthy Professor Anderson, at present in Charles opening, formed by a huge rock, having ton, has. received a letter from Louis JSTa beenrent asunder by action of the fire; poleon Emperor of the French, inclosing and the edge of each division being hung a check for 130, which he borrowed some with lengthy rows of stalactites of sulphur, years since from the professor in London, hanging like irregular teeth, gavo.it the accompanied with a present of a diamond appearance of a vast and hideous mouth, ring, and an invitation to visit Paris. which belehdd forth its hot and noxious ' This will bo cheering news to "all who breath from the flawing lungs below. By' were the Emperor's creditors in the times means of a lengthy pole, formed of a tree,' that tried his soul. a companion and myself succeeded in ! dragging up from this 'jaw-bone furnace,' i if I may be allowed the term, a portion of the interior matter in a state of fusion i a part of which I leave for your ex-' amination. Finding the earth in this locality in-, mode of. cultivation adopted and exact re clined toyicltl like bending ic'p, and the penditnres except, manure, incurred in soles of our feet becoming uncomfortably raj. fcwcnt acrca of corQ Every far warm, we made our descent carefully, yet I ... . . . , TI it -:i,i ir.r.A, n in.,, mer will read with interest. He say?: as. rapidly as possible, towards (Joal uas- j J tic, considerably scorched, scratched and , The land must be entirely clear from fatigued, yet gratified .and instructed by stumps, stones or any tiling shat will ob- our clambering journey over the Fiery struct the drag or cultivator. Sod ground Mountain. t which was used in this case, is decidedly preferred. Col. Fuller, of the N. Y. Mirror, has The earliest warm weather in the spring been for some time sojourning at the . should be iuiprovedfor drawing on the Soui. ' Below will be found an- extract manure. from one of hi3 rich and racy letters from N. Orleans : At the risk of Being charged with a lack of gallantry, f shall venture to state ! that the Southern ladies paint like Jeze- bels. isrows, ch.eeKs, lips anu neciis near nnlnnliln mnrts nf hnllr mid " nink san - r. r i cers. To an unsonhistisated taste, this giving the he to . . ..... o Nature is simply discus-' married woman should be i i i . . r- . irj- t ttmrlo hv jf jiHifn siitniniif: frnnnrl tor rii- , vorpn T ?nv it "hol.Ik- is T intend j Q IT i j , --"- " b - T- '.1111 T 1 i. The Quadroon ladles of New Orleans I - - .. . - . escite both a feeling of admiration and lux-.j'j .lunuuiuuu xui uicu ywnnu- ! nicnis ana Dcauty commiseration ior tue unnatural ana uu upon them by the laws of Louisiana. A, unnatural ana uinust conaiuon entanea j maQ canno(. , V jLally marrv a Ouadron wo - Castle, any of. man, unless he is able to swear that he has 1 husked, I put the ears in an out door coy ives will point blade blood in his veins. As many of ' cred crib which admits the freef passage , these women are not only very white but ' very bcaulltul and lllgnlV aCCOmpiISUed, resistance to their charms is no easy mat - ' ter. an(j as love is not apt to be control - 1. 1 ' t. ' : ' 1- . 71 7 " I 1 j of this absurd state of things ' P- IKrJti c JJJq j,enJLtions 01 J . .ii t . it ni i "a or tno Deneaictions oi tne unurcn. Th niotber f th irl consent3 to a tern - Pory arrangemenf, provided her daugh- tL : J..:..i..?j :xt. ' fxi,i x a i rvu,.o - nJ,,,; J aa a couple of slaves, with a promise on . i. x xu ,ir i,c!i-.ov.ri t i 1S - Bachelors, to say nothing of Northern Benedicts, to be under the necessity of .q hic. a man go madlv ; rierhans I should say truly in love -vyith a beautiful quadroon, that in order to marry her, he injected a little black hnnrJ into his veins nrocured from "" ?t P .! one of' and then took the requisite ' rmntinl n-itli trtereV.v fnl fillinnr the letter ' fthe j It may spoil the romance of ; room is askei to be introduced to a young , "a""" "jw 0--j witn more ciiarma oi uuisu tauu puisuu, overheard an ungBllant fellow remarking the other evening upon the number of freckles on her face, when she turned up- SSTf r Md a ncg.ofo, cunjf.ccUe ! .,, r,,f1 ItifiillCa! 1'aCISi Merchants cenerally die of the bilious. printers of the typhus, and brokers of re- 1 . Jsr ' mittcnt fevers. Masons usually go off with stone, gray - ' i i Most tiilors leare f ne world" in fits Most tailors leave tue world in nts though their customers rarely do Disappointed actors ussually die of ( mortiflcation. 1 Seamstress Seamstresses suffer much from stitch- :n xilfl I Tbc cbildren of C0c3 arc never - iree where " iaor . 64v . i 1U. Husking, cribbing, setting up . iittiu iuauiuuo ii uuu uuuwuuu. j.u ; stalks . not a very uncommon thintr for Northern 1 1 cuii: 'ci ka Qiqrintitiucil. Twenty Acres of Corn. M. C. Crapst, of "Lockport, N. gives in the Journal of that place, the ; rioxr eight inches deep, roil Hard, then ! drag and cultivate the ground till it is nnc as an onion bed. When the ground is ! thus prepared, no danger need be appre- bended from the wire worm. Tlie corn ' p ucyuuu uanu uum 1U: : before it comes to the surface. Mark the ground each way m straight rows just feet apart. This gives 4,840 hills to the "crc, of a fraction more than bb hills to f tl.-i Ki,ol,ol tne UUStiei. t , , . ... , . I la H. nlnntitirr iiTif-I i h a nrnnnH m cr ; warm that the corn will come up within eight days. Putin trom 5 to b kernels m I -i , n. 1 . ; a mil ana roll the grouna alter planting. j v..vw , -auuut nmc i Ua, ,tca pun uji iiiigi; m-cua mab wu u iuuu Cut up when the small as well as the . larjce ears are sufficiently glazed. When ; of the air. ITEMS OF EXPENDITURE TO EACII ACRE. 1 p, ! i" pw!DS ! - -flowing, 16 loads manure, 82.00 2.00 3. Boiling, dragging, and (Saliva ting before planting, 1.33 31 4. Marking out before planting, j 5. Seed corn, 19 cts.; planting, 75 cts., 94 6 R 1Hn aft Dlautinr andrthin ! ' nt 4 7o T CulSn; e'ach wav thrce tiraes j ! ' VultlvatinS eacb way three tiraes, 1,1- unmg Vieeu&, 9 Quttin up &c L .. 1.13 1.13 4.30 market 77 cts. 2.31 7.00 12. Interest of money on land, Total, 823.84 RECEIPTS. 77 bushels corn atoC cts per bush. 43.31 Stalks, 7.00 Clear profit, 26.47 Clearing irom acres, 3529.40 The mode of culture described nlinm 1 saves labor; and adds largely to the prof- I raised with the same labor, I have seen ---- J" " .o "-e- r ducer than in this county. How to Raise fruit every Year. If rightly understood, few trees unles3 absolutely dead or rotten, need occupy ground without yielding a plenteous crop. Afr a long and varied series of experi ments, I gradually adopted the follwing mode; as soon as the winter had sufficient ly disappeared, and before the sap as cends, I examine my trees ; every dead bough is lopped off, then after the san j has risen sufficiently to show where the lii mi it. .. blossoms will be, I cut away all the oth- jer branches having none on, and also tho extremity of every-limb the lower part bears a considerable number of buds, thus, concrecating the sap of thc tree upon and destitute of fruit. You may think this injures thc trees, but it does not; for you will find trees laden with fruit which for- 1 meriy yielded nothing. Of course all .i ,i , . . . ouitsr wen Jinowq precautions must De at tended to; such as cutting out worms from the maturation of its fruits, and sa ving what would be useless expenditure of strength. In the quince, apricot, and peach trees, this is very apt to bo too lux uriant, in leaves and destitute of fruit. Sensible Doctor. A handsome young widow applied to a physician to relieve her of.three distressing complaints with which she was. afflicted. 'In tho first place' said she 'I have little or no appetite. What shall I take for that?' Far that, madam, you should take air and exercise.' 'And, Doctor, I am quite fidgety at night, and ajraid to lie alone. What shall I take for that?' 'For that, madam, I can only recom mend that you take a husband!' 'Fie! Doctor. But I have the blue3 terribly. What shall I take for that?' 'For that, madam, you have besides taking air, exercise, and. a husband, to take tho newspaper. . oonsiore uoctor j kill V j i!ia 'XX